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  • West Indies put England into bat as Paul replaces suspended Holder

    West Indies put England into bat as Paul replaces suspended Holder

    Rain briefly interrupted play on Saturday after West Indies put England in to bat in the third and final Test.

    England had made five runs without loss in the first 5.1 overs when rain drove the players off at Darren Sammy Stadium in St. Lucia.

    Play resumed after a brief delay.

    West Indies stand-in captain Kraigg Brathwaite won the toss and put England in on the first morning of the third and final Test in St Lucia.

    Randy Brooks/ AFP

    With regular skipper Jason Holder suspended from the match as a cumulative penalty for his team’s ongoing slow over-rate problems, all-rounder Keemo Paul returns to the team for his first match of the series in the home side’s only change from the second Test in Antigua.

    Leading 2-0 in the series and having reclaimed the Wisden Trophy following crushing victories in the first two matches, West Indies resisted the temptation to give fast bowler Oshane Thomas a debut on a pitch at the Darren Sammy Stadium reputed to be the paciest in the Caribbean.

    By contrast, England are seeking to avoid their first whitewash in a series against the West Indies since 1986 and have made two changes from the team thrashed by ten wickets a week earlier.

    Wicketkeeper-batsman Ben Foakes and young all-rounder Sam Curran are dropped with opening batsman Keaton Jennings recalled after missing the second Test while fast bowler Mark Wood, who was drafted into the touring party as replacemen.

  • Reprieved Stokes and Buttler lead England recovery

    Reprieved Stokes and Buttler lead England recovery

    Jos Buttler and Ben Stokes featured in England’s best partnership of a deeply disappointing series as they lifted their team to 231 for four at stumps on the opening day of the third and final Test against the West Indies on Saturday.

    Put in to bat by West Indies stand-in captain Kraigg Brathwaite, and seeking to regain some lost prestige after already surrendering the series and the Wisden Trophy, the fifth-wicket pair played with increasing fluency through an extended final session in putting on 124 runs to the close of play at the Darren Sammy Stadium.

    Randy Brooks/ AFP

    It was England’s first century partnership of the series with Buttler getting to 67 and Stokes reaching 62 at the close. 

    Both made the most of lucky escapes. 

    Buttler’s first scoring shot was an edge off Shannon Gabriel to which a leaping Shimron Hetmyer at second slip could only get his fingertips. 

    Stokes was caught and bowled on 52 by Alzarri Joseph and was already in the England dressing room when he got the call to return to the middle as the lanky fast bowler had delivered a no-ball.

    England’s contended mood at the end of the day was in sharp contrast to the situation just three hours earlier as Joe Root’s personal tale of batting woe on this disastrous Caribbean campaign continued.

    He fell to Joseph for the third consecutive innings just before the tea interval, wafting at an innocuous delivery from Joseph to give a simple catch to wicketkeeper Shane Dowrich.

    Root’s painstaking innings of 15 off 54 deliveries leaves him with a tally of just 54 runs from five innings, typifying England’s desperate struggles with the bat from their first innings of the series when they were routed at Kensington Oval for just 77 on the way to a 381-run mauling.

    Technical problems 

    Gabriel, the fastest of the West Indies bowlers, was the other wicket-taker in the afternoon session, removing Joe Denly with an lbw decision that again highlighted the technical deficiencies of many of England’s top-order batsmen.

    Yet while he lacks the pace of Gabriel, Joseph and Kemar Roach, Keemo Paul was the star with the ball for the hosts on day one, making an immediate impact with a wicket with the first ball he bowled in the morning.

    Drafted into the final eleven as replacement for regular skipper Jason Holder, Paul ended Keaton Jennings’ tortuous occupation of the crease when the opening batsman fell for the third time in three innings in the series to catches in the slip cordon. 

    Dropped earlier by Roston Chase at third slip off Roach, Jennings failed to make the most of the reprieve as the left-hander drove loosely at the seam bowling all-rounder’s opening delivery midway through the session to depart for eight off 43 balls via a Darren Bravo catch at first slip.

    Paul then removed the other opener, Rory Burns, leg-before for 29 early into the afternoon session.

    Jennings was dropped from the England eleven after failing in both innings of the first Test in Barbados, which allowed Denly to make his Test debut in Antigua. 

    He is one of two changes to the tourists’ eleven as left-handed all-rounder Sam Curran was omitted in preference for fast bowler Mark Wood.

    West Indies’ only change to the victorious team from the first two matches was forced by the International Cricket Council’s decision to ban Holder for a slow over rate.

  • New Zealand survive tight close to claim India T20 series 2-1

    New Zealand survive tight close to claim India T20 series 2-1

    Colin Munro’s explosive 72 set up a four-run win for New Zealand over India in a cliff-hanger finish to Sunday’s Twenty20 match in Hamilton, handing the hosts a 2-1 series victory.

    India looked to be on the ropes when they needed 47 off the last three overs. 

    Micheal Bradley/ AFP

    But Dinesh Karthik and Krunal Pandya together plundered 32 off overs 18 and 19 before Tim Southee restricted the duo to 11 in the 20th.

    “It was obviously touch-and-go there for us,” said Munro whose whirlwind knock at the start of the match laid the platform for New Zealand’s 212 for four with India 208 for six at the close.

    The morale-boosting victory for New Zealand gave captain Kane Williamson something to smile about after they were whipped 4-1 by India in the earlier one-day international series. 

    “It came down to the last couple of balls and it’s nice to come out on the right side,” he said.

    It was a more sombre mood in the India dressing after Rohit Sharma had won the toss and defied convention by not batting first in a series decider, saying his team preferred to chase regardless.

    “It was pretty disappointing to not get over that finishing line but I thought we fought really well till the end,” he said.  

    “We started off really well with the ODI series and we wanted to do well here with the T20.”

    It was a vital knock from Munro, whose position in the New Zealand side ahead of the World Cup had been in question after a string of failures in the ODI and Twenty20 matches against India. 

    But he was on song from the start of the decider, charging down the track to smack Bhuvneshwar Kumar over the rope with the first ball he faced to kick off a flying partnership with Tim Seifert.

    The pair raced to 80 in the eighth over when the lightning hands of MS Dhoni had Seifert stumped by a hair’s breadth for 43. 

    Munro’s belligerence saw him face just 40 balls in his innings, flaying the bowling with five fours and five sixes. He was removed by Kuldeep Yadav when he skied a ball to Hardik Pandya running in from long-on. 

    Kane Williamson (27) fell in the next over when he pulled a rising delivery from Khaleel Ahmed to Yadav at fine leg.

    Colin de Grandhomme chimed in with 30 off 16 to ensure New Zealand passed the critical 200 mark for the second time in the series.

    Vijay Shankar took an equally aggressive stance at the start of India’s chase and the visitors were up at the required run rate through the first half of their innings, but were unable to establish partnerships.

    Rishabh Pant belted a four and two sixes with his first three scoring shots and raced to 28 off 12 before he became debutant Blair Tickner’s first victim, swiping at a full toss that was caught at mid-wicket. 

    Sharma made 38, Hardik Pandya’s brief cameo produced 21 while MS Dhoni, feted as the master finisher, could only make two in a brief stay at the crease.

    With the game slipping away from India, Dinish Karthik pounded the boundaries with 33 off 16 deliveries while Krunal Pandya made 26 off 13 but they ended up four runs short.

    New Zealand next host Bangladesh in a series of three ODIs and three Tests.

  • Bangladesh’s Mashrafe confident of success in New Zealand

    Bangladesh’s Mashrafe confident of success in New Zealand

    Bangladesh skipper Mashrafe Mortaza is confident his team can break their drought in New Zealand during the upcoming series, even without their talismanic all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan.

    Shakib was ruled out of the upcoming three-match one-day international series at the eleventh hour, with a fracture to the little finger on his left hand.

    The all-rounder’s absence will make winning that much tougher for Bangladesh, who have not defeated New Zealand in any format during their previous four visits to the country.

    Munir uz Zaman/ AFP

    Bangladesh’s only win in New Zealand came in 2015 when they beat Scotland by six wickets in a World Cup group match at Nelson.    

    The ODI series starts in Napier on February 13.

    “It was already a big challenge. The loss of Shakib made it a bigger challenge,” Mashrafe told reporters before leaving for New Zealand on Sunday.

    “We have to play with a positive frame of mind,” he said.

    Mashrafe did not rule out winning the series against the hosts, despite their poor record in the country, saying it was “difficult but possible.” 

    “Mental strength” is crucial, he said, for his team to pull of a surprise win.

    The final stage of the Bangladesh Premier League Twenty20 tournament also lifted Mashrafe’s hopes for success, as he watched some of of the team’s batsmen return to form.

    Opener Tamim Iqbal struck 141 off 61 balls in the final of the tournament to help his Comilla Victorians beat Shakib’s Dhaka Dynamites by 17 runs for the title on Friday. 

    “The kind of wicket we got in the BPL semi-final and final — I think the wicket (in New Zealand) will be similar and flat,” Mashrafe said.

    “It’s a relief for us that the batsmen returned to form. The challenge is now for the bowlers.”  

    Bangladesh will play three Test matches, along with the ODIs, during their long visit to the country. The first Test is due to start on February 28 in Hamilton.

  • Australia’s refusal forced Pakistan to play ODIs in UAE

    Australia’s refusal forced Pakistan to play ODIs in UAE

    Pakistan cricket authorities were forced to schedule all five one-day internationals against Australia in the United Arab Emirates after the Aussies refused to visit the Asian country over security fears.

    Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) had invited Australia to play two of the five one-day internationals in Pakistan to further their attempts to revive international cricket at home, suspended since attacks on the Sri Lankan team bus in 2009.

    Farooq Naeem/ AFP

    Since then Pakistan have hosted finals of Pakistan Super League for the last two years and played matches against a World XI, Sri Lanka and the West Indies.

    A West Indies women’s team played three Twenty20 internationals in Karachi from January 31-February 3 this year.

    But Cricket Australia (CA) acted on their government’s advise not to tour Pakistan where no Australian senior team has played since 1998 over security fears.

    PCB director Zakir Khan showed disappointment over Australia’s refusal to tour.

    “The PCB was optimistic that it will be able to convince Australia to send its side for some matches after successfully staging high-profile bilateral international series,” said Khan. 

    “But we are disappointed for the enthusiastic and passionate cricket fans in Pakistan who will now have to wait for some more time before they can see Australia playing in our country.”

    The five-match series will kick off both team’s preparation for the World Cup to be held in England from May 30-July 14.

    Sharjah will host the first two matches on March 22 and 24 followed by matches in Abu Dhabi (March 27) and Dubai (March 29 and 31).

  • Australia can win World Cup with Smith and Warner: Ponting

    Australia can win World Cup with Smith and Warner: Ponting

    Australia can successfully defend its World Cup title in England this year with Steve Smith and David Warner back in the fray, newly-appointed assistant coach Ricky Ponting said Sunday.

    His upbeat assessment comes despite the misfiring team losing its two most recent ODI series at home, to India and South Africa.

    “Absolutely, I actually do,” said Ponting when asked in Melbourne if Australia could win the World Cup.

    William West/ AFP

    “India and England are probably the two standout teams right now but if you add Warner and Smith back into that lineup, I think that team looks as strong as any.

    “Conditions in England will suit our style of play,” added Ponting, who was appointed on Friday as assistant to coach Justin Langer for the World Cup, focusing on the batting group.

    The former national captain is hugely experienced in the one-day game, playing at five World Cups and winning at three.

    “I think I have a pretty good grasp on what it takes for tournaments like that,” he said.

    “Hopefully I can have an impact right from the start. The feedback from the boys has been positive.”

    Ponting, a close ally of Langer, will start after Australia’s upcoming one-day tours against India and Pakistan.

    Smith and Warner are available for selection again from March 29, when their one-year bans for ball-tampering expire. Cameron Bancroft, who was suspended for nine months, is already back playing.

    “Once we get Warner and Smith and Bancroft back into the fray, and looking ahead to the World Cup, I don’t think they’ll be too many better teams on paper.

    “You’ve got a lot of experience as well as a fair bit of youth going into that tournament,” he added.

    “Any team I’ve been a part of, we’ve always had a really good mix of youth and experience and this current group will certainly have that going into the World Cup.”

    Ponting, who played 375 one-dayers and 168 Tests, previously worked as an assistant with Australia’s Twenty20 side in 2017 and 2018.

    He also accompanied Langer during his first tour — to England — after taking over as head coach from Darren Lehmann last April following the tampering scandal in South Africa.

    Ponting suggested he could be available for the Twenty20 World Cup next year, although his commentating duties during the Australian summer made it hard for him to commit to Test cricket.

  • Pakistan’s Amir set for Essex return

    Pakistan’s Amir set for Essex return

    Pakistan fast bowler Mohammad Amir is set to join up with Essex again for a spell in the forthcoming domestic Twenty20 Blast competition, the English county announced Friday.

    The 26-year-old left-arm quick helped Essex win the first-class County Championship in 2017 during a stint that saw him take career-best figures of 10 for 72 against Yorkshire at Scarborough.

    Gianluigi Guercia/ AFP

    Amir will be available for eight games in this year’s Blast, including Essex’s opener against Middlesex at Lord’s on July 18.

    “I’m very excited to return to Chelmsford and re-join my Essex team-mates,” Amir told the county’s website. “I thoroughly enjoyed my time here in 2017 and I’m looking forward to playing my role in the club’s success this season.”

    Due to family commitments, Amir will miss the games against against Surrey and Kent while his final match for Essex is set to be against Glamorgan on August 16.

    Essex coach Anthony McGrath added: “Mo is one of the most exciting bowling talents in the world and I’m ecstatic he’s going to be back with us.”

    Amir’s career looked finished when he was given a five-year ban and jailed for involvement in a spot-fixing ‘sting’ during Pakistan’s 2010 Test against England at Lord’s.

    But he returned to international cricket in 2016 and has now played 36 Tests, 49 one-day internationals and 42 Twenty20s.

  • Coulter-Nile suffers vertigo bout during BBL game

    Coulter-Nile suffers vertigo bout during BBL game

    Nathan Coulter-Nile, who was picked this week for Australia’s one-day and Twenty20 tour of India, was taken to hospital Saturday after a bout of vertigo during a Big Bash League game.

    Tony Ashby/ AFP

    The Perth Scorchers fast bowler had delivered the fifth ball of his final over late in the Twenty20 match against the Adelaide Strikers when he signalled that all was not well.

    After consulting with Perth captain Mitchell Marsh, he bowled the sixth ball, which was hit for six, before sinking to his haunches and sitting on the ground.

    Scorchers physio Chris Quinnell said Coulter-Nile had suffered a “bad bout of vertigo”.

    “He was taken to hospital after the game as a precaution and will be monitored over the next few hours,” Quinnell said on the BBL website.

    Coulter-Nile’s inclusion in Australia’s squad for the India tour came after he was left out of recent home limited overs internationals with back issues.

  • Brisbane Heat part ways with coach Vettori

    Brisbane Heat part ways with coach Vettori

    The Big Bash League’s Brisbane Heat were on the lookout for a new coach Saturday after former New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori opted not to renew his contract.

    His decision came soon after fellow ex-Black Caps skipper Brendon McCullum confirmed that this would be his last season playing for the Heat in the Australian Twenty20 tournament.

    Marty Melville/ AFP

    Vettori has been coach since 2015 and will end his tenure when the season finishes. The Heat have won their last three games and remain in contention for the semi-finals.

    “I have loved my time at Brisbane, firstly as a player and then as coach, and the experience of being part of the growth of the BBL has been personally rewarding,” said Vettori.

    “I would like to thank the players for their efforts and wish them all the best in their respective careers.”

    Heat general manager Andrew McShea thanked both Vettori and McCullum for their time with the club.

    “It’s an end of an era for the Heat with both Brendon McCullum and now Dan leaving our club and we can only express our deepest gratitude to both men and their passion and dedication to the Heat during their time with us,” he said.

    “We will take this opportunity to review our planning and our structures and look to make a fresh start.”

  • Bangladesh’s Shakib ruled out of New Zealand ODIs

    Bangladesh’s Shakib ruled out of New Zealand ODIs

    Bangladesh suffered a fresh injury blow ahead of next week’s one-day international series against New Zealand Saturday, after the Bangladesh Cricket Board said all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan had been ruled out with a finger fracture.

    Shakib sustained the injury to his left ring finger while batting in the final of the sixth edition of Bangladesh Premier League Twenty20 tournament on Friday evening, said the BCB.

    Munir ul Zaman/ AFP

    An X-ray following the match confirmed a fracture, and the finger will “have to be immobilised for around three weeks,” said senior BCB physician Debashis Chowdhury.

    This was the second injury blow for Bangladesh ahead of the visit, which featured three one-day internationals and three Tests.

    Pace bowler Taskin Ahmed was earlier ruled out for the entire series with a torn ligament and had been replaced by Shafiul Islam for the ODIs and uncapped Ebadot Hossain for Test series.

    Several Bangladeshi cricketers have already left Dhaka for the three-match ODI series that starts in Napier on February 13.

    Shakib missed much of the action in 2018 following an injury to his left little finger.

    He was not fully fit until the home series against West Indies in November-December.   

    Bangladesh have not won any match against New Zealand in any format during their previous four visits.