Nkrumah Bonner's 74* leads West Indies' fightback on a slow day

Abu Jayed and Taijul Islam picked up two wickets each for Bangladesh

Sreshth Shah11-Feb-2021Stumps The first day of the second Test in Dhaka would make neither side too happy. But neither would it make them too sad.West Indies had the opportunity to dominate after lunch, having made 84 for 1 in the morning session. Their early advantage dissipated when Bangladesh’s seam bowlers struck thrice in a post-lunch session that saw only 62 runs scored. But after tea, West Indies’ middle order displayed enough grit to absorb everything Bangladesh threw at them, restoring parity to the contest after 90 overs. At stumps, the visitors finished day one on 223 for 5, the least number of runs scored on the first day of any Test at the venue.There were three stars on the day. Nkrumah Bonner, unbeaten on 74, was West Indies’ rescuer-in-chief. Swing bowler Abu Jayed (2 for 46) – who replaced Mustafizur Rahman in the XI – was the stand-out quick. And left-arm orthodox spinner Taijul Islam (2 for 64) earned his rewards by exerting control and ensuring pressure was never released from one end.After West Indies opted to bat, openers Kraigg Brathwaite (47) and John Campbell (36) put on 66 for the first wicket, with the latter doing the bulk of the scoring in the partnership. With Brathwaite holding up one end, Campbell was more attacking, hitting five fours and a six before his dismissal in the 21st over.Related

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The dismissal, on its part, was a contentious one. Taijul, introduced as second change and in his first spell, got a full ball to angle in from around the stumps and hit Campbell’s front leg. Umpire Sharfuddoula then raised his finger but Campbell reviewed. TV umpire Gazi Sohel checked if the ball grazed the bottom edge of the bat during Campbell’s sweep but felt there was no bat involved despite the tiniest of spikes on UltraEdge. The spike, however, could also have been generated by other sounds picked up by the stump mic and he upheld the on-field decision. A few balls later, a seemingly dissatisfied West Indies coach Phil Simmons could be seen talking to the reserve umpire Masudur Rahman near the boundary line, perhaps wanting to know more about how the TV umpire reached his decision.That was the only moment of joy for Bangladesh in the first session where they otherwise struggled with the ball. Jayed, the lone frontline seamer, was wayward in his first spell. Although he got the ball to swing away from the right-hand batsmen, his inconsistent lines early on allowed Brathwaite and Campbell to begin positively.Mehidy Hasan Miraz, who shared the new ball, occasionally missed his lengths and was regularly put away behind square on either side too. Like Miraz, first-change Nayeem Hasan found turn but didn’t challenge either batsman’s edge. Full balls were defended by Brathwaite, but when the same was offered to Campbell, he attacked the ‘V’ down the ground.But Jayed redeemed himself in the second session when he went back to his most potent delivery – the full ball. His stock ball in the early 130kphs was not troubling West Indies in the morning, but in the afternoon, he looked to pitch the ball, now significantly older, up to the batsmen. That troubled No. 3 Shayne Moseley for enough time, such that when Jayed offered a full and wide ball from around the stumps in the 34th over, he was tempted to drive. But the loose, off-balanced shot from Moseley ended in an inside edge onto leg stump, out for 7.That brought in Mayers, the double-centurion from the first Test. He looked comfortable against spin, but Jayed’s persistence with the around-the-stumps angle earned him a second wicket. It was another full and wide ball, with a hint of swing, that brought out the drive from Mayers and resulted in an edge to Sarkar at wide first slip for 5.Sandwiched between the two Jayed wickets was Kraigg Brathwaite’s dismissal, who was out three short of a 21st Test fifty. Part-timer Soumya Sarkar – who replaced the injured Shadman Islam in the line-up – was rewarded when Brathwaite tried to cut a ball that was too close to his body, only to edge it to Najmul Hassan Shanto at first slip. Those three wickets meant West Indies slipped from 84 for 1 to 142 for 4.But West Indies fought back thereafter, courtesy a 62-run fifth-wicket stand between Bonner and Jermaine Blackwood (28). They ensured West Indies did not lose a fourth wicket in the post-lunch session by adding 30 before the break, and after tea nudged the spinners around to keep the run rate ticking. The longer they batted, the more comfortable they looked. But Blackwood then played Taijul with hard hands in the 72nd over, and the full ball popped off the bat in the air for the spinner to hold on to a return catch. It was a dismissal that came against the run of play, reducing West Indies to 178 for 5.That brought Bonner’s contribution to the fore even more. Early on, he played the spin bowlers with ease and was not in a hurry to look for boundaries. He patiently dead-batted balls that were not in his scoring zone, and when the bowlers erred, he put them away. That template, of selecting his shots on the merit of each delivery, took him to his second successive fifty.But there were still 18 overs to go when Blackwood was dismissed though, and in Da Silva, Bonner found a partner who had the temperament to see off the day without any more casualties. Together they looked to find the gaps, picking up singles and twos with minimal risk. Bonner was also incorrectly deemed lbw late in the 79th over, but he swiftly reviewed to have the decision overturned.Bonner and Da Silva seemed unperturbed against the second new ball too. Jayed’s late, short spell brought no wickets. That made Bangladesh captain Mominul Haque go back to spin from both ends. With extra bounce and significant turn from the rough, the batsmen reined in their attacking shots to see off the day with five wickets still in the bank. It was an attritional day of Test cricket, a classic of sorts. Both teams had to work hard for their rewards and will believe that whichever team dominates the first session of day two could get a stranglehold on this contest.

Inaugural Euro T20 Slam cancelled at two weeks' notice

ESPNcricinfo understands that projected costs of temporary stadium seating and broadcast facilities at three venues in three countries were a key factor

Peter Della Penna14-Aug-2019The inaugural season of the Euro T20 Slam has been cancelled, just two weeks before the tournament had been scheduled to start.Speculation had been rampant of late that the tournament could be cancelled and that turned into reality on Wednesday evening as tournament organisers, led by Gurmeet Singh’s Bombay Sports Limited and Woods Entertainment, the same group in charge of the Global T20 Canada, had run into increasing financial difficulties in recent weeks.A player protest at the Global T20 Canada occurred on August 7 over unpaid wages, bringing the organisers under intense pressure. Sources have also stated that some player salaries and Player-of-the-Match award prize payments as well as vendors and event contractors from the 2018 edition of the tournament have still gone unpaid.On the back of the Global T20 Canada final on Sunday, financial and logistical issues continued to mount for the Euro T20 Slam leading to an emergency board meeting on August 13 between organisers and the sponsoring member boards of Cricket Ireland, Cricket Scotland and the KNCB of the Netherlands to address concerns held by the three host boards. Multiple sources confirmed to ESPNcricinfo on August 14 that the projected logistical-cost overruns of having to build temporary stadium seating and broadcast facilities at three venues in three countries were a key factor in the tournament being scrapped.The tournament’s organisers released a statement saying that “the board of the Euro T20 Slam, funding partners and franchise owners of this exciting new T20 tournament have reluctantly come to the decision that staging of the event will not be possible in 2019”, but did not expand upon the specifics behind the decision. The league tweeted a later statement citing “unforeseen circumstances”.Various marquee players had been drafted to play in the league, including Rashid Khan, Eoin Morgan, Dale Steyn, Babar Azam and Faf du Plessis. According to multiple sources, players from the three host nations were told as early as Tuesday that the tournament was likely to be cancelled, as well as event vendors including television production staff. But it is understood that most overseas players had been unaware of the tournament’s cancellation before the statement was issued.Hours earlier, both Peter Trego and Ben Cutting – who had been signed by the Rotterdam and Amsterdam franchises respectively – had tweeted about preparations for the tournament. The Euro T20 Slam’s official account tweeted only six hours before the cancellation was confirmed that Ross Taylor had signed as a replacement player.The dates for the Euro T20 Slam had been in direct competition with the Caribbean Premier League, with the latter due to start on September 4. Many marquee players who were CPL representatives in the past several years – including Rashid Khan, Shane Watson, Imran Tahir, Martin Guptill, Chris Lynn and Luke Ronchi – and who had submitted their names for both the CPL and Euro T20 Slam drafts this year, eventually opted to withdraw from CPL consideration to commit to the Euro T20 Slam.Warren Deutrom, the chief executive of Cricket Ireland, said the board was “deeply disappointed”.”However, we fully empathise with the rationale that has led to the tournament’s postponement,” Deutrom said. “The excitement and energy that the Euro T20 Slam had generated since it was announced has demonstrated a high level of interest amongst the Irish public in seeing world-class cricket hosted here in Ireland. We hope that the interest will carry on until 2020 when the Slam will finally get underway.”We will continue to engage with the event organisers to ensure all commitments are met to their fullest extent, including any receivables owing to Cricket Ireland itself. We will additionally be seeking increased comfort that the organisers will be able to avoid a repeat of this year’s challenges in future editions.”Malcolm Cannon, the chief executive of Cricket Scotland, said: “While this was a very difficult decision to make at this late stage, we believe that it is the right one and one which leaves us with a great opportunity to launch the Euro T20 Slam next year with its deserved noise level.”Betty Timmer, chair of the KNCB, said: “It is extremely disappointing that the Euro T20 Slam is not going ahead in 2019. With the scheduled opening games only two weeks away the KNCB was looking forward to this exciting new event that would have brought cricket much closer to the Dutch fans.”

India focus on experiments with Ireland series on the line

Virat Kohli wants to try different players in different roles as India’s tour of the United Kingdom gathers steam

The Preview by Varun Shetty28-Jun-20181:58

Chopra: Bhuvneshwar, Pandya need to do more

Big picture

There were two particular things in evidence in the first T20I. The more obvious of them was India’s complete difference in class to their opponents Ireland. At no point, other than when catches were being dropped in both innings, did the match come close to being a contest.The second visible feature was that India were definitely in the game to experiment. The inclusions of Suresh Raina and Manish Pandey, at the expense of Dinesh Karthik – who single-handedly won them their last T20I – was the first sign of that. Sending Raina up at No. 3 (he was the only batsman other than the openers padded up during the national anthem) instead of at No. 4, that big batting void of India’s across limited-overs formats, all but confirmed this. And with only one game before the England series, we might see this experimental trend extend. Virat Kohli said at the toss that India were trying to get used to the “cool winds” in this part of the world, and more of their players might be given a chance to do that, particularly those who will be sticking around for all of India’s tour of the UK.Ireland weren’t above experimenting either. It is, after all, the time for their next generation to take over. James Shannon and Simi Singh were offered significant batting roles and that isn’t likely to change any time soon. With top-quality cricket hard to come by as the cricket world debates inclusion, they’re likely to treat this game like India would – a practice match. Irish prime minister Leo Varadkar, expected to be at the game on Friday, will have to settle for that.

Form guide

Ireland LTWLL (last five completed matches, most recent first)
India WWWWW
Rohit Sharma works the ball into the leg side•Cricket Ireland

In the spotlight

KL Rahul is likely to get a shot at the opening position on Friday and it won’t feel any different than all the other times he’s played for India. There will remain a sense that he has to score big just to keep his place in the XI. At least among his fans. Rahul himself is no longer obsessed with perfection in the shorter formats, a reality brought about by a sensational last IPL season. More assured, more mature, the spotlight may finally be what he uses to make runs, rather than score points.After a superb season playing ODIs in India against Afghanistan last year, Andy Balbirnie‘s stature as Ireland’s middle-order mainstay had grown. But he hasn’t been able to bring that reputation to bear in T20Is. Mind you, he did make 74 just a few innings ago in the tri-series in the Netherlands, but in nine other innings, Balbirnie has only 98 runs to his name.

Team news

Unless they’re tempted to bring in fast bowler Joshua Little, Ireland are expected to play the same XI.Ireland (probable) 1 Paul Stirling, 2 William Porterfield, 3 Andy Balbirnie, 4 Simi Singh, 5 Gary Wilson (capt), 6 Kevin O’Brien, 7 Stuart Thompson, 8 Stuart Poynter (wk), 9 George Dockrell, 10 Boyd Rankin, 11 Joshua LittleKohli made no secret of the fact that India will be looking to rotate their squad around. This could mean wholesale changes in all departments. Rohit Sharma is expected to sit out.India (probable) 1 KL Rahul, 2 Shikhar Dhawan, 3 Virat Kohli (capt), 4 Suresh Raina, 5 MS Dhoni (wk), 6 Manish Pandey/Dinesh Karthik, 7 Hardik Pandya, 8 Bhuvneshwar Kumar/Umesh Yadav, 9 Kuldeep Yadav, 10 Yuzvendra Chahal, 11 Jasprit Bumrah/Siddarth Kaul

Pitch conditions

There is no change expected in the pitch or conditions. It continues to be a high for Ireland, in terms of weather, and the flat pitch is expected to stay as dry as it did throughout the opening game.

Stats and trivia

  • Shikhar Dhawan is 42 runs away from becoming the sixth Indian to 1,000 T20I runs.
  • Since June 2010, Suresh Raina has made only international fifty in this format.

Quotes

‘We’ve already announced we will experiment with the middle order a lot. Even in the next few T20 games, even in England, we will look to throw in guys and surprise the opposition. It presents an opportunity for those lower down the order to go in and bat at the top. In the next games, we will play the guys who didn’t play today.’

“We don’t have to get ourselves up for anything. Playing in front of 9000 people in Malahide on days like this against the best T20 side probably in the world – if you cannot get up for that you cannot get up for anything else. We have got ourselves down but we will be back up Friday.”

USACA's changes 'seriously undermine' their chances – Richardson

ICC chief executive David Richardson has delivered scathing criticism of the leadership of the USACA in a strongly-worded letter

Peter Della Penna10-May-2017ICC chief executive David Richardson has delivered scathing criticism of the leadership of the USA Cricket Association (USACA) in a strongly-worded letter outlining the reasons for the ICC Board’s decision to table a resolution for expelling the board. The USACA is in danger of being expelled as an Associate Member of the ICC at the annual conference in June. Richardson also warned the USACA that if it follows through on its threats to commence legal action in an attempt to block or overturn an eventual expulsion, “you should be in no doubt that the ICC will defend its position vigorously.”The letter from Richardson was addressed to USACA president Gladstone Dainty days after the recent ICC Board meeting in Dubai in which, the chief executive said, there was a 13-0 vote to table the resolution for expulsion, with the West Indies Cricket Board choosing to abstain from voting on the matter. Richardson said that the USACA’s refusal to ratify an ICC-approved constitution was the last straw among the issues they did not remedy as laid out in the 39 terms and conditions for reinstatement.”If USACA had adopted the ICC-approved constitution, thereby creating a sustainable governance framework that the entire US cricket community could unite behind, then perhaps USACA’s other failures, including its failure to satisfy the other reinstatement conditions, could have been forgiven,” Richardson wrote. “But without the ICC-approved constitution to offer hope of a new beginning, what is left is a string of unsatisfied reinstatement conditions, which are serious enough when considered in isolation, but when taken together are more than enough, in the view of the ICC Board, to warrant the proposal to bring USACA’s membership in the ICC to an end.”Several elements of the constitution the USACA approved at its April 8 SGM rankled with Richardson and the ICC. The USACA version would allow the incumbent board to remain in power until March, rather than expediting elections for September, and the USACA also insisted on overseeing their own elections rather than having outside oversight from ICC Americas, ICC Legal & Audit plus an independent auditor. In reply, Richardson said that “is clearly not justified given the sorry history of previous elections to the USACA board.”The incumbent USACA board also wanted to maintain decision-making authority over who would be allowed to vote, something Richardson said was severely problematic given the board’s history of election controversy. As a result, they could not see how such governance would bring the US cricket community together.”The ICC Board considers that the changes that USACA has made to the ICC-approved constitution seriously undermine, if not destroy altogether, USACA’s chances of uniting that community,” Richardson wrote. “Far from offering the prospect of a fresh start under the guidance of an independent leader free from any political affiliation and history, the amended constitution will be perceived by the many disaffected members of the US cricket community as perpetuating the power and influence of the incumbent USACA board and current USACA members, who lost the trust and confidence of their peers many years ago. It is the view of the ICC Board that the wounds of the past will not be healed, they will be perpetuated; and the ICC Board’s imperative of uniting the US cricket community behind the ‘new’ USACA will be entirely undermined.”Richardson said the USACA’s current membership base represented a minority interest in stakeholders, making them unfit to continue as the national governing body. He also criticised them for failing to provide evidence refuting allegations that “ghost leagues” had been given member status in order to influence victories for incumbent candidates in previous elections, and highlighted concerns that the same practice had been carried out at the April 8 SGM.”USACA appears to have done little to extend its membership base beyond its traditional power base of leagues in New York, New Jersey and Florida,” Richardson wrote. “USACA appears to have done little or nothing in terms of development programs, either at national or at regional level, whether for men’s senior cricket, for youth cricket, for female cricket, for coach/umpire training, or otherwise.”There have been allegations of serious improprieties tainting each of the past five elections to the USACA board of directors (in 2003, 2005, 2008, 2012, and 2015), including repeated and persistent allegations of granting of votes to ‘ghost leagues’, in order to keep the incumbents in power.”One of the conditions fixed in 2015 by the ICC Board for reinstatement of USACA to ICC membership was that it produce evidence refuting these allegations. Despite repeated requests, however, the USACA board has failed to provide any such evidence, without any good reason or excuse. In such circumstances, it is not difficult to understand why there is apparently so little trust and confidence in USACA among the US cricket community.”Richardson went on to criticise the behaviour of USACA’s board members for their unwillingness to meet in good faith to rectify the litany of issues. He specifically called out the USACA’s leadership for its response to the ICC-approved constitution by “openly disparaging the integrity of the ICC Board, myself as ICC CEO and other members of ICC management (including describing the ICC-approved constitution as ‘the apartheid document’, imposed by the ICC ‘so they can discriminate against blacks’).”Contrary to what the USACA communicated in messages to its membership base about what was needed to be done to lift the suspension, Richardson said a host of other issues were a cause for concern. He pointed out that the board failed to stop USACA vice-president Owen Grey from initiating legal action last year on behalf of USACA in an attempt to stop Caribbean Premier League matches from going forward in Florida. The lawsuit was eventually dismissed but Richardson said the ICC was forced to accumulate unnecessary legal fees of its own to fight the action in court.”Ultimately, it does not matter why the US cricket community has been so fractured and disunited,” Richardson wrote. “This state of affairs is unacceptable and must be remedied, whatever the reasons.”

Malinga hints at retirement after World T20

Despite producing a four-wicket haul to beat UAE, Sri Lanka captain Lasith Malinga said that he might consider announcing his retirement from T20 international cricket

Mohammad Isam in Mirpur25-Feb-20161:23

‘These are maybe my last few months’ – Malinga

Two wickets in his first over and two more in his second spell was how Lasith Malinga marked his comeback into competitive cricket after more than three months. Figures of 4 for 26 helped Sri Lanka beat the UAE by 14 runs but the performance didn’t entirely make him happy.Instead, Malinga said that he is on his last legs and might even consider announcing his retirement from T20Is. Towards the end of the post-match press conference, Malinga was asked if he would make a retirement announcement before the World T20 like Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara did in 2014.”There might be,” was Malinga’s response with a smile, before there was a long pause which eventually ended the briefing.He had earlier said that his international career is now at a stage from where he can’t really take long breaks, like he had to take after the knee injury that kept him out for the last three months.”I am playing [for] 12 years in the national team, I am 32 years old,” Malinga said. “I think if now I have an injury, it is hard to get rest. If I take rest for a year or more, that’s the end of my career. If I need to play for my country, I have to play tough cricket in the last few months or years. I don’t think I can fully recover from this injury but I try to manage this in future.”I don’t know how many months or years I will play. [At the] end of my career, I try to play maximum number of games for my national team or in the IPL. I want to play as long as possible, and at my best.”Malinga said that this has been a difficult comeback for him given that he hadn’t played a game since November last year, due to a knee injury which he said was similar to the one he suffered in 2008 that kept him out of cricket for nearly a year.”I am not happy [with my performance today],” Malinga said. “I haven’t bowled a single ball in the last three months. I just bowled in the nets in the last two days. I am happy with the result but I think I have to do more for the team. I will try my best in the next game. [This performance] is not my 100 percent, maybe 60-70 percent, but still I managed to bowl yorkers and slower balls. Team expects more than that from me.””I had a very bad injury in the knee. Same thing happened in 2008. I needed two years rest to recover. I had same injury in the other leg. This is not the right time to rest since we have the World T20. I am the experienced bowler in the T20 format. I have to use painkillers and injections, whatever I have to do [to play]. This is the end of my career so I want to do something for the team. I want to give my best in the last few years or maybe few months.”Coming back to the game, Malinga said that they were not too sure of the total they would have to put in front of the UAE as the pitch surprised them.”We were not prepared for this wicket in Bangladesh. This is a really good wicket. We didn’t know a target batting first. I am always saying we have to set a target. We got 129 so this is the best score for our team.”We had to minimise those boundaries to defend that total. Their bowlers did really well, there was movement off the wicket and bit of grass. We managed to do well because we have experienced bowlers like myself, Rangana [Herath] and [Nuwan] Kulasekara. I am really not disappointed with the batsmen. UAE is a good side. I never underestimated them.”

Key hundred sparks Kent

A quickfire century by Robert Key kept Kent’s YB40 campaign alive as they overcame Worcestershire by 39 runs at New Road

11-Aug-2013
ScorecardFabian Cowdrey continued to make a good impression for Kent•Getty Images

A quickfire century by Robert Key kept Kent’s YB40 campaign alive as they overcame Worcestershire by 39 runs at New Road.The former county captain made 112 from 93 balls – his eighth hundred in one-day competitions – and shared in an opening partnership of 182 in 26 overs with Sam Northeast (93).When 20-year-old Fabian Cowdrey hit a last-ball six to reach an unbeaten 52 on his List A debut, Kent had 289 for 6 on the board but in ideal batting conditions, the home side were dismissed in the final over for 250.Kent went on the rampage from the outset in their bid to move into second place behind Group A leaders Nottinghamshire. Northeast made the first big statement by driving Jack Shantry over long-on for six and the innings was only in the seventh over when Key took the total past 50 with three boundaries off Gareth Andrew.Key rarely needed to resort to strong-arm methods as he continued to find gaps in the field with unerring placement, but he did have an early let-off when Brett D’Oliviera dropped a difficult return chance.The opening pair went on to complete their third three-figure stand in the competition this season in the 15th over and Northeast moved on to his 50 from 46 balls when pulling Daryl Mitchell for only his fourth four.Key’s hundred arrived with his 12th four and he added two more before Ross Whiteley ran 25 yards round the boundary from long-on to take a well-judged catch.Worcestershire then began to pick up wickets, including Northeast when he cut a ball from Shantry to short third man, but Cowdrey – the third generation of his family to represent the county, after grandfather Colin and father and uncle Chris and Graham – treated the crowd to a glimpse of his considerable potential. An effortless straight six off Moeen Ali would have been a shot to savour in any form of the game.Worcestershire never looked like mounting a serious challenge after Moeen and Alexei Kervezee were caught on the mid-wicket boundary in the first five overs. There was just a glimmer of hope as Mitchell went beyond 50 for the fourth time in nine innings in this season’s group games, but wickets kept falling at regular intervals.Mitchell (68) was leg-before attempting to sweep Adam Riley and the same bowler removed the last major threat when Andrew was caught at mid-on after hitting two sixes in his 43 from 34 balls. However D’Oliveira and Ben Cox delayed the inevitable by putting on 54 in seven overs.

Essex openers finally find form

Essex strengthened their grip against Leicestershire at Chelmsford on day two. After centuries from Tom Westley and Jaik Mickleburgh lifted Essex to an imposing 434 for 3 declared, the visitors were reduced to 32 for 2 at the close.

02-Aug-2012
ScorecardTom Westley took his CB40 form into red-ball cricket•Getty Images

Essex strengthened their grip against Leicestershire at Chelmsford on day two. After centuries from Tom Westley and Jaik Mickleburgh lifted Essex to an imposing 434 for 3 declared, the visitors were reduced to 32 for 2 at the close.David Masters roared in to remove Greg Smith and Ned Eckersley as the visitors ended the day still 253 short of being asked to follow on.When Essex resumed on 161 without loss, Westley and Mickleburgh continued to find the gaps with relative ease without pressing the accelerator – the 200 was raised in the 67th over. It represented the first double-century opening stand for the county since Alastair Cook and Will Jefferson performed the feat in 2004 when Leicestershire were again on the receiving end.Shortly afterwards, Mickleburgh became the first batsman to move into three figures when he on-drove Michael Thornely to the long-on boundary to register his third century for the county. The milestone arrived from 195 balls and contained one six among Mickleburgh’s 13 boundaries.Westley was to celebrate his third ton for Essex with a quickly-taken single, an effort spanning 230 balls, 11 of which he despatched to the boundary. It was the first time two Essex openers had scored centuries in the same Championship innings since Cook and Jefferson put Leicestershire to the sword.The new ball was taken at 232 but it was a run-out 16 runs later that brought the visitors their first success of the match, Mickleburgh failing to regain his ground as Thornely threw down the stumps from short-cover after the batsman had been sent back. Mickleburgh’s innings of 126 was spread over 243 deliveries, including 14 fours and one six.Lunch was taken at 259 for 1, the morning session having produced 98 runs, and soon afterwards Westley’s fine effort was ended on 125 by medium-pacer Wayne White, who produced a delivery which kept low. Two deliveries later, rain arrived to cause an 80-minute hold-up and when play resumed Owais Shah and Mark Pettini saw Essex to 300 in the 98th over and a third batting point.Another stoppage after fewer than eight overs brought about an early tea at 308 for 2. When play did restart, Shah soon fell lbw to left-arm spinner Claude Henderson for 36, spread over 59 balls.The arrival of Ryan ten Doeschate brought about a welcome increase in the tempo. He quickly found the extra cover boundary and followed it with an off-driven six against Henderson to bring up the 350 in the 110th over. Another ten Doeschate six against the same bowler, this time an on-drive, inflicted further punishment on the toiling visiting attack.Pettini also scored freely enough to complete his half-century, containing five fours, from 60 balls before ten Doeschate’s third six against Henderson saw him to the milestone in 48 balls. The next landmark was the 100 partnership in 17 overs before the declaration arrived, with Pettini unbeaten on 72 from 89 balls. Ten Doeschate’s contribution to a stand of 120 was 63 in as many balls.Leicestershire were soon plunged into trouble when they replied. With only six runs on the board, Mickleburgh picked up a smart catch at short-leg to remove Smith and provide Masters with his first success against his former county. Two runs later, the fast bowler struck again as ten Doeschate held a catch above his head at short midwicket to remove Eckersley.

Bangalore push to retain Gayle

Royal Challengers Bangalore are working on retaining Chris Gayle for the 2012 IPL even though his one-year term with them as an injury-replacement player has expired

Tariq Engineer19-Jul-2011Royal Challengers Bangalore are working on retaining Chris Gayle for the 2012 IPL even though his one-year term with them as an injury-replacement player has expired. Sidhartha Mallya, one of Bangalore’s franchise directors and the owner’s son, told ESPNcricinfo, “There are ways to keep Chris [Gayle]. We are obviously working on it and looking at every possible opportunity.”Gayle was the architect of a complete turnaround for Bangalore in 2011, arresting a four-match losing streak and setting up a record seven-match victory run that eventually led Bangalore to the final.Under current IPL rules, contracts for replacement players last only for a single year on the premise that the injured player will be available the following season. Replacement players such as Gayle must go into an auction where all the franchises would be able to bid for them. Gayle’s explosive performances with the bat – he was IPL2011’s leading run scorer, and had a strike rate of 183.13 – are expected to trigger a bidding war should he be put into an auction.Mallya, however, said the Bangalore franchise had been in touch with IPL management about the possibility of keeping Gayle, but would only know for certain after the Champions League Twenty20 in September whether they can hang on to him. The IPL, Mallya said, won’t give out the guidelines until the Champions League is up. (Sundar Raman, the IPL’s chief executive, did not respond to an email asking if the league was considering new guidelines).Gayle, in 2011, also helped Bangalore’s fans come to terms with the departures of Rahul Dravid and Ross Taylor, two favourites who were not retained by the franchise. “There was a lot of backlash but there was [also] a lot of backlash when Shah Rukh Khan didn’t keep Sourav Ganguly,” Mallya said. “Ross Taylor was a big favourite for Bangalore. The crowd loved him and we thought that would have an effect but when you have players like Chris Gayle and [AB] de Villiers, it was easy for the fans to get over that and they have taken to the new side very well.”Off the field, Mallya said he was not worried by the drop in television ratings this season because, he felt, there was naturally going to be a lag in the wake of India’s successful World Cup campaign. He also felt that shuffling the players every few years while allowing teams to retain a four-man core was a good system. “Then it doesn’t become like an English Premier League where only one or two teams will keep winning. It makes it (the IPL) even and it makes it open.”Mallya also said that he was satisfied with the amount of input franchises had in the running of the league, “We do get a voice. We are heard… After the season finished, Peter Griffiths of IMG came and spoke to us all. He took our feedback on the season. He was more than happy to listen to us about what our feelings were. Because at the end of the day they want to do what’s best for the league, best for us and best for everyone moving forward. “Bangalore were one of the first franchises to embrace social networking and reach out to fans through contests and competitions and now have more than 100,000 followers on their website and over 12,000 followers on Twitter. What they are still working out is how to get merchandising revenue on a firm footing given that such a short season makes it difficult to generate consistent sales. “I know it is difficult to sell premium jerseys because they are a lot of money,” Mallya said. “It is replica jerseys and replica stuff. It is finding a balance of what people want and I think we are still in the process of finding that balance of what people want and going forward I am sure we will be able to give people what they desire.”One potential boost for Bangalore is the Champions League, which gives them a second tournament with which to create fan interest and excitement, as well as pad the bottom line. “It will be huge not only from a financial point of view but from a prestige point of view. I would love to win it. It is the best 10 teams in the world, domestic teams in the world, competing and it would be a great honour for us.”Sidhartha Mallya was speaking as an ambassador of Kingfisher beer

Anderson declines ICC vice-president request

Sir John Anderson does not want to be the next ICC vice-president in a decision that further complicates the search for a suitable candidate

Peter English24-Jul-2010Sir John Anderson does not want to be the next ICC vice-president in a decision that further complicates the search for a suitable candidate after John Howard was rejected last month. Anderson, a former chairman of New Zealand Cricket, was seen as the smoothest second choice following the ICC board’s order that Australia and New Zealand find another option.Howard, 70, remains the candidate but Alan Isaac, the current New Zealand Cricket chairman, and his Australian counterpart Jack Clarke will continue discussions before a decision is expected after Cricket Australia’s board meeting on August 13. Clarke, an Adelaide solicitor, remains the man most likely to step into the ICC job, but there is the possibility of trying again with Howard, the former Australia prime minister.Anderson was New Zealand’s original choice for the role before an independent panel decided Howard was the best candidate as the countries’ joint nomination. The ICC board did not even vote in Singapore on Howard’s appointment, which would have included a two-year term as president from 2012, after members from six countries signaled their opposition.New Zealand Cricket’s board learned of Anderson’s decision on Friday. “Unfortunately Sir John advised me that he is not available to be considered as a possible nominee,” Isaac said.”The NZC board respects Sir John’s position and acknowledges the outstanding contribution he has made to the game of cricket. We have recommenced discussions with Cricket Australia around a proposed way forward.” Anderson took on more company director positions after being overlooked originally and is the chairman of an agriculture business.A decision does not have to be made until the end of August and neither side is chasing an urgent resolution to the drawn-out affair. The Australian board remains angry about the treatment of Howard, who was vetoed due to a mixture of his political links and lack of experience in cricket administration.The board members were briefed by Clarke at a special meeting on July 9, but decided to wait until next month to discuss potential candidates. James Sutherland, Cricket Australia’s chief executive, said the Howard decision was still “terribly disappointing”.”The process [of re-nominating a candidate] is something that needs to be done jointly between Cricket Australia and New Zealand Cricket,” he said. “In time we will have a chance to get together and talk about the next step. At the moment John Howard remains our nomination.”

India's stars descend upon Chennai as training begins for bumper Test season

Rohit and Kohli faced net bowlers on spin-friendly surfaces as India begin their run of ten Tests with two against Bangladesh next week

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Sep-20242:57

Takeaways: No Shami, Sarfaraz gets retained

India’s preparation for the long Test season ahead began on Friday with some new faces saying hello and some old ones saying, miss me? Virat Kohli is back on the red-ball grind for the first time in nearly nine months. Rishabh Pant looks ready to pick up where his Test career left off two years ago. And Gautam Gambhir was there overseeing it all as the team gears up to face Bangladesh (two Tests in September), New Zealand (three Tests in October) and Australia (five Tests in November-January).India’s Test squad arrived in Chennai on Thursday and took to training in batches. The captain Rohit Sharma addressed them in a huddle and was one of the first to get out there and take a hit. He was joined by Kohli as the two of them faced a series of net bowlers on specially prepared pitches at either end of the square in the MA Chidambaram Stadium.Related

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One had a black-soil base, with so many footmarks around the full and good length area that it almost looked scorched. The other had a red-soil base and it bore marks of selective watering; the short and good length area was pristine but everything fuller than that was roughed up. The centre wicket, though, was cordoned off and it seemed to contain a fair bit of grass. In previous years, India have tried to simulate fast-bowler friendly conditions in home Test matches to prepare for significant away tours.Rohit and Kohli worked alongside their top-order team-mates Yashasvi Jaiswal and Shubman Gill, who will be coming into the new season with plenty of confidence after coming-of-age performances against England earlier this year. All four of them alternated between the two nets and were fed a diet rich in left-arm spin. Tamil Nadu’s Ajith Ram and M Siddharth kept wheeling away in an attempt to mirror threat that Shakib Al Hasan will pose in the coming weeks. Varun Chakravarthy was there too, and so was Himanshu Singh, a 21-year-old offspinner from Mumbai who seems to have borrowed R Ashwin’s bowling action.

Soon it was time for India’s bowlers to have their fun and Jasprit Bumrah, who last played for India in the T20 World Cup final in June, did not hold back. Even if it is his second skill, he was majestic charging out of the crease to loft balls straight down the ground. In the afternoon, he indulged in some light fitness work and then chatted up the bowling coach Morne Morkel.The rookie fast bowlers had to clear a sterner workload. Yash Dayal, who is being groomed with an eye towards the Border-Gavaskar Trophy later in the year, had a productive session under the eyes of both Morkel and Gambhir. Aside from his ability to provide a left-arm angle, his effort ball has a habit of hitting fairly high on the bat.Pant provided one of the more thrilling moments of Friday’s session when he took Dayal on, after being beaten, with a remarkably casual pick-up shot off his hips. When he was in a life-threatening car crash in December 2022, the wicketkeeper was one of India’s leading batters in Test cricket. Although he has already made his return to the limited-overs format, and was part of the side that won the T20 World Cup, it will be a big moment, next Thursday, when he is back out there playing red-ball cricket.The first Test against Bangladesh in Chennai on September 19 is one of five home games that India have in their run into the World Test Championship final in June 2025. They are No. 1 on the points table currently and will be looking for somewhere in the region of five more wins from the 10 remaining games they have on their calendar to make a third successive final appearance.

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