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  • Pakistan bowlers force series decider after Sarfraz ban

    Pakistan bowlers force series decider after Sarfraz ban

    Pakistan shrugged off a four-match suspension imposed on captain Sarfraz Ahmed with a crushing eight-wicket win over South Africa in the fourth one-day international at the Wanderers Stadium on Sunday.

    The result levelled the five-match series at 2-2. The deciding match will be in Cape Town on Wednesday.

    Pakistan’s bowlers set up the win, bowling out South Africa for 164. Imam-ul-Haq made 71 before playing a loose shot when the scores were level as Pakistan cruised to victory with 18.3 overs to spare.

    Aamir Qureshi/AFP

    Stand-in captain Shoaib Malik said at the after-match presentation that Pakistan only found out after they arrived at the ground that Sarfraz had been banned under the International Cricket Council’s anti-racism code for remarks aimed at South African all-rounder Andile Phehlukwayo during the second match in Durban on Tuesday.

    The ban had still not been announced by the ICC when Malik walked out for the toss.

    Malik handled his bowlers and fielders astutely and South Africa were kept under pressure almost from the time he won the toss and sent them in on a pitch which had early life.

    “It is a great honour to represent your country, as a player or a captain,” said Malik. “When the responsibility comes you should make sure to give it your best shot.”

    Shaheen Shah Afridi made two early strikes before Hashim Amla (59) and captain Faf du Plessis (57) made half-centuries and put on 101 for the third wicket.

    Malik’s use of spinners Imad Wasim and Shadab Khan kept the scoring rate in check and both batsmen fell to the slow men before the fast bowlers returned.

    – Shinwari dismantles lower order –

    Mohammad Amir dismissed the dangerous David Miller before fellow left-arm fast bowler Usman Shinwari claimed four wickets in six balls. He finished with four for 35 and was named man of the match.

    Shinwari had Rassie van der Dussen caught behind for 18 and bowled Dale Steyn for a two-ball duck. Kagiso Rabada was caught behind first ball and Beuran Hendricks survived an appeal for leg before wicket with what Shinwari hoped was the hat-trick ball.

    The ball was crashing into the stumps but Shinwari acknowledged that umpire Bongani Jele had made the right decision because there was a faint inside edge.

    Du Plessis gave credit to Pakistan’s bowlers but said it was not a typical Wanderers pitch. “The ball spun quite a lot and was sticking in the surface,” he said. “But you have to adapt. They have fantastic bowlers and they are putting pressure on us.”

    Malik deflected praise for the way the Pakistan players had shown energy and commitment in the field. “Not just today, in the previous games as well,” he said. “You need a bit of luck to get across the line. We are all professionals and today our bowling attack did the job and they took wickets.”

    Imam, the top scorer in the series, looked in control from the start of Pakistan’s reply. He and Fakhar Zaman (44) put on 70 for the first wicket before he was joined by the in-form Babar Azam, who finished with 41 not out.

    It was South Africa’s first defeat in eight matches on what has become known as ‘Pink Day’ with their players and many spectators dressed in pink in aid of breast cancer awareness.

  • New Zealand recall Neesham, Astle to face India

    New Zealand recall Neesham, Astle to face India

    New Zealand have brought in all-rounder Jimmy Neesham and leg-spinner Todd Astle for the remaining two one-day internationals against India, after losing a third successive game in Mount Maunganui on Monday. 

    However, they have decided to persevere with openers Martin Guptill and Colin Monro, who have both struggled for runs.

    Micheal Bradley/AFP

    India took an unbeatable 3-0 lead in the series when they beat New Zealand by seven wickets with seven overs to spare in the third match.

    Guptill and Monro put on 10 for the first wicket following partnerships of 23 and five in the two matches before that. 

    Neesham returns to the side to replace all-rounder Doug Bracewell, while Astle comes in for Ish Sodhi as the leg-spinner.

    Astle, who has recovered from a knee injury which forced him out of New Zealand’s series against Pakistan in November, is also a capable lower order batsman in a side struggling for runs.

    Neesham starred with bat and ball against Sri Lanka earlier this month but was sidelined from the start of the India series by a hamstring strain. 

    “It’s great to welcome back the all-round skills of Jimmy and Todd and we’re looking forward to seeing what they can bring to the series,” selector Gavin Larsen said, as New Zealand works towards finalising its World Cup squad. 

    “We’re still looking to keep our options open with selections at this stage and ensure we continue to learn as much as we can about our players.” 

    New Zealand squad: Kane Williamson (pact), Todd Astle, Trent Boult, Colin De Grandhomme, Lockie Ferguson, Martin Guptill, Matt Henry, Tom Latham, Colin Munro, Jimmy Neesham, Henry Nicholls, Mitchell Santner, Tim Southee, Ross Taylor.

  • King Kohli bows out with India undefeated in New Zealand

    King Kohli bows out with India undefeated in New Zealand

     

    Virat Kohli bowed out of the New Zealand tour with India in an unbeatable position after a dominant seven-wicket win in the third one-day international in Mount Maunganui on Monday. 

    It put India 3-0 up and world player of the year Kohli said with the series wrapped up early it was time for him to step aside for the remaining two matches and the following Twenty20 series.

     

    Micheal Bradley/AFP

    “I couldn’t have for a better performance after the first two clinical performances and just the relentlessness of the side is something that really pleases me,” he said after India easily chased down New Zealand’s 243 with seven overs to spare.

    “I haven’t had a break for a long time. It’s been a very hectic Australian tour and now I go on a break very happy, 3-0 up, sealing the series and I can relax and enjoy my break.”

    Kohli’s 60 off 74 deliveries and a 113-run partnership with Rohit Sharma formed the backbone of India’s run chase.

    It gave the tourists back-to-back series wins against Australia and New Zealand and ensured they will be a force to be reckoned with in the World Cup later this year. 

    Sharma top-scored with 62 while Ambati Rayudu was unbeaten on 40 and Dinesh Karthik on 38.

     ‘Teaching us a lesson’ 

    While Rayudu was steering India home, the International Cricket Council announced he had been suspended from international bowling.

    The part-time spinner was cited for a suspect action after the first ODI against Australia two weeks ago.

    He has not bowled since on tour as India’s holding bowlers proved too much for Australia and New Zealand.

    “They are teaching us a lesson and we’re required to rise to the challenge,” New Zealand captain Kane Williamson said.

    “The quality they brought with the ball, in particular their consistency in what they’ve tried to do, they haven’t given you much and they’ve forced some mistakes.”

    New Zealand, batting first, posted their highest score and longest innings in the three matches so far but they still fell short of 50 overs, their last wicket falling with six balls remaining. 

    Ross Taylor (93) and Tom Latham (51) gave the innings credibility but proved no challenge for the visitors. 

    Sharma’s first wicket partnership of 39 ended when Shikhar Dhawan edged Trent Boult to the lone slip Taylor to be gone for 28.

    Kohli then joined Sharma and the pair swatted the attack around the ground in their century stand for the second wicket. 

    New Zealand, taking a leaf from the India playbook, brought two spinners into the match after the tourists’ spin twins Kuldeep Yadav and Yuzvendra Chahal took the bulk of the wickets in the first two matches. 

    Ish Sodhi proved expensive but Mitchell Santner was tight and finished with one for 45 after he cleverly deceived Sharma in the air and the India opener was stumped.

    Kohli, who averages a century every 5.6 innings, was due a big knock in New Zealand after posting 45 and 43 earlier in the series, but his attempt to drive Boult to the cover boundary was well caught by a leaping Henry Nicholls. 

    Boult proved the most economical of the New Zealand bowlers with two for 40.

    Disastrous start

    Mohammed Shami had earlier taken three for 41 while Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Hardik Pandya and Yuzvendra Chahal took two wickets apiece as India shared around the bowling honours in the New Zealand innings. 

    Only Taylor, and for a time Latham, offered any real resistance after another disastrous start by the top order. 

    Both openers were gone and New Zealand were two for 26 when Taylor went to the middle and Latham arrived at three for 59 with the dismissal of Kane Williamson (28). King

    Taylor and Latham mounted a rescue mission with a 119-run stand for the fourth wicket.

    But after Latham was dismissed for 51 it ignited a collapse in which the last six wickets fell for only 52 runs. 

    Hamilton hosts the fourth game in the series on Thursday.

  • India’s Rayudu suspended from bowling for suspect action

    India’s Rayudu suspended from bowling for suspect action

    India’s Ambati Rayudu has been suspended from international bowling two weeks after being reported for a suspect action, the International Cricket Council said Monday.

    The part-time spinner’s action was flagged by match officials, who cited concerns over its legality, after the first one-day international against Australia in Sydney on January 12.

    Marty Melville/AFP

    The 33-year-old middle-order batsman stayed in the Indian XI in the second match and also played a role in the team’s first three ODI wins in New Zealand.

    “The player elected not to submit to a test of his bowling action within the stipulated period of 14 days of being reported for a suspect action and therefore he has been suspended with immediate effect,” cricket’s world governing body said in a statement.

    “The suspension will remain in place until he is tested, and can demonstrate he is able to bowl with a legal action.”

    The sanction did not extend to domestic matches, the ICC added.

    Rayudu bowled just two overs of off-spin, giving away 13 runs, in the Sydney ODI. India lost the match but went on to clinch the three-match series 2-1.

    Rayudu hit an unbeaten 40 in Mount Maunganui on Monday as India took an unassailable 3-0 lead against New Zealand with two matches left to play.

  • Holder first West Indies all-rounder since Sobers to top ICC rankings

    Holder first West Indies all-rounder since Sobers to top ICC rankings

    Jason Holder has become the first West Indian since cricket great Garfield Sobers to be named as the world’s leading all-rounder following his superb display against England in Barbados.

    West Indies captain Holder struck a commanding 202 not out and also took two useful first-innings wickets on his Kensington Oval home ground in Bridgetown, Barbados to help his side complete a crushing 381-run win over England in the first Test.

    Randy Brooks/AFP

    Victory, secured with more than a day to spare, put the West Indies 1-0 up in a three-Test series. 

    The towering Holder’s man-of-the-match display saw him go ahead of Bangladesh’s Shakib-al-Hasan and India’s Ravindra Jadeja in the International Cricket Council’s all-rounder rankings, with England’s Ben Stokes still in fourth place.

    Although the rankings, which aim to take into account the quality of the opposition as well as a player’s raw figures, did not exist when Sobers was still playing, they have since been applied retrospectively to generations of former cricketers.

    Under that system Sobers — widely considered to be the best player cricket has known — last topped the rankings in 1974, the year of his retirement.

    Sobers made a cap presentation just before the first Test started, with the 82-year-old witnessing the impressive display of Holder, a fellow Bajan.

    Meanwhile West Indies chief executive Johnny Grave criticised what he said was a lack of respect shown to his side by former England captains Geoffrey Boycott and Andrew Flintoff.

    Boycott, in a pre-series newspaper column, labelled the West Indies as “very ordinary, very average cricketers” while Flintoff, like Holder a pace-bowling all-rounder, tweeted his disbelief at the Caribbean skipper’s double century.

    Grave, an Englishman who made his reputation in cricket administration with Surrey and the Professional Cricketers’ Association, was decidedly unimpressed.  

    “Former players have said some stuff I think is unwarranted and borderline disrespectful,” Grave told BBC Radio’s Test Match Special.

    “I saw Andrew Flintoff say he can’t believe Jason Holder got a double hundred, yet I think Jason Holder is a fantastic cricketer and has been performing so fantastically over the last 18 months — a brilliant captain.

    “Criticism of our players and suggestions that they’re not world-class is unfair. It doesn’t seem to happen when England play other opposition. I think it’s unwarranted and not true.

    “I’m hoping everyone gets to see that in the next few weeks of this series.”

  • Eight-wicket Chase stars as Windies humiliate England by 381 runs

    Eight-wicket Chase stars as Windies humiliate England by 381 runs

    Roston Chase proved the unlikely bowling hero as the off-spinner destroyed England with career-best figures of eight for 60 as the West Indies crushed the visitors by 381 runs to win the first Test at Kensington Oval on Saturday.

    Set the improbable target of 628 to win, the tourists slid to ignominious defeat in bright sunshine on the fourth day, losing their last six wickets for 31 runs either side of the tea interval to be dismissed for 246, ending a winning streak of five matches.

    Randy Brooks/AFP

    It was the largest margin of victory by the West Indies on home soil and third largest anywhere in their 91 years as a Test-playing nation.

    Chase made the most of a fourth day pitch showing more signs of wear but also benefited from poor shot selection by an England side that looked shell-shocked from the events of the previous two days when they were routed for just 77 in their first innings.

    They then saw the West Indies mass 415 for six declared in the second innings with captain Jason Holder starring with an unbeaten double-century and wicketkeeper-batsman Shane Dowrich contributing 116 not out in an unbroken seventh-wicket partnership of 295.

    It was left to stand-in wicketkeeper Shai Hope to complete the dismissal which sealed the result, stumping Sam Curran down the leg-side off Chase 40 minutes into the final session.

    “To come back the way we have as a team and for me personally after the last few months is really satisfying,” said Holder after victory was formalised. 

    “This is just the first Test of three and there is a lot of work to be done. Achieving consistency continues to be the key.”

    Given England’s dominance of Sri Lanka and their spinners in sub-continental conditions less than two months earlier, the manner of their capitulation would have been particularly surprising. 

    Not that it mattered in the least to Chase who reaped considerable reward to eclipse his previous best Test innings figures of five for 121 against India in Jamaica in just his second Test in 2016.

    We can do lot better’ 

    If West Indies expectations in the victory push on the fourth morning were that pace would replicate the devastation of the first innings, the lanky 26-year-old changed the narrative when he ended opening batsman Rory Burns’ quest for a maiden Test century off the final delivery before lunch.

    Burns top-scored for England with 84.

    Enjoying the conditions and England’s indecisiveness, he added the wickets of England skipper Joe Root, Ben Stokes and Moeen Ali, the off-spinning all-rounder suffering the indignity of a “pair” in the afternoon to end the tourists’ hopes of taking the match into a fifth day  

    Fast bowler Shannon Gabriel, who would have had the wicket of Root but was called for a no-ball when the batsman gloved a sharp lifter to Holder in the slips, made amends by dismissing Jonny Bairstow to a leg-side catch by Hope. 

    Another pacer, Alzarri Joseph, had taken the first wicket of the day when he broke an opening partnership of 85 by having Keaton Jennings caught by Holder at third slip for 14.

    In contrast to Holder’s outstanding performances in front of his home crowd, which earned him the man of the match award, this has been a miserable experience for Root.

    Reprieved by Gabriel’s front foot indiscretion, he failed to take full advantage of the let-off, eventually wafting outside the off-stump at Chase to give Darren Bravo a straightforward catch at slip to depart for 22.

    “We are a far better side than we have played in this match and we need to remember that going into the next match,” said disappointed Root.

    “We could have gone down a different route in team selection but the important factor is that we can do a lot better than this.”

    With Gabriel troubled by a foot injury and Chase settling into a wicket-taking groove, it was inevitable he would be persisted with in the final session and did not disappoint. 

    Jos Buttler fell to a diving catch by John Campell at short mid-on, Shimron Hetmyer somehow held on to a sharp chance at short-leg to remove Ben Foakes and Kraigg Brathwaite judged a catch well on the midwicket boundary to get rid of Adil Rashid before Hope administered the final flourish behind the stumps.

  • West Indies captain Taylor skips Pakistan tour over security concerns

    West Indies captain Taylor skips Pakistan tour over security concerns

    West Indies women’s captain Stafanie Taylor will miss her team’s three-match T20 international series in Pakistan which starts later this month over security concerns, Cricket West Indies (CWI) announced on Thursday.

    The 2016 World Twenty20 champions are set to play games in Karachi on January 31, February 1 and February 3.

    Indranil Mukherjee/AFP

    But all-rounder Taylor, one of the biggest stars in the women’s game, will only join the squad for the following one-day international series in the United Arab Emirates.

    “Following the detailed security plan from the PCB and the independent security assessment….Stafanie Taylor has opted out of touring Pakistan,” the CWI confirmed.

    Only a handful of international cricket matches have been played in Pakistan since an attack on the Sri Lankan men’s team bus in Lahore in 2009 which killed six police officers and two civilians and injured six members of the team.

    Zimbabwe played five games at Lahore in 2015, while Sri Lanka returned to the country for the first time since the attack in 2017 as efforts have increased to return regular internationals to Pakistan.

    “This tour is a further major step for our friends at the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) to bring their cricket back home, and we are pleased that our players and support staff have recognised this and agreed to play the T20Is in Pakistan,” CWI chief executive Johnny Grave said.

    Merissa Aguillera will take over as skipper from Taylor for the T20s as the West Indies look to bounce back from their semi-final loss on home soil to Australia in the World Twenty20 last November.

  • West Indies bat in first Test as England leave out Broad

    West Indies bat in first Test as England leave out Broad

    West Indies captain Jason Holder won the toss and chose to bat first against England at the start of the first Test in Barbados on Wednesday, as the visitors left out Stuart Broad.

    Seeking to get their campaign for a first Test series triumph in the Caribbean since 2004 off to a winning start, England opted to omit senior seam bowler Broad on a pitch expected to offer more assistance to spinners than previously anticipated.

    Randy Brooks/AFP

    Adil Rashid, one of England’s successful trio of spinners in the historic 3-0 series in Sri Lanka at the end of last year, takes Broad’s place in the final XI at the Kensington Oval.

    West Indies are giving a debut to John Campbell, the 25-year-old Jamaican who will open the batting with vice-captain Kraigg Brathwaite.

    In contrast to their opponents, the hosts go into the opening match of a three-game series with four frontline seamers as lanky pacer Alzarri Joseph, whose last Test was against England in Birmingham 17 months ago, makes a return to the team with left-arm spinner Jomel Warrican omitted.

    England are on a five-match winning streak while the West Indies have lost their last four Tests, in India and Bangladesh, all inside three days.

    Teams

    West Indies – Jason Holder (captain), Kraigg Brathwaite, John Campbell, Darren Bravo, Shai Hope, Shimron Hetmyer, Roston Chase, Shane Dowrich (wicketkeeper), Kemar Roach, Alzarri Joseph, Shannon Gabriel

    England – Joe Root (captain), Keaton Jennings, Rory Burns, Jonny Bairstow, Ben Stokes, Jos Buttler, Ben Foakes (wicketkeeper), Moeen Ali, Sam Curran, Adil Rashid, Jimmy Anderson

  • Van der Dussen leads South Africa to series-levelling victory

    Van der Dussen leads South Africa to series-levelling victory

    Hendrick ‘Rassie’ van der Dussen and Andile Phehlukwayo guided South Africa to a series-levelling win in a roller-coaster second one-day international against Pakistan at Kingsmead on Tuesday.

    The pair came together when South Africa were 80 for five in reply to Pakistan’s 203. They put on an unbeaten 127 as South Africa won by five wickets with eight overs to spare.

    Anesh Debiky/AFP

    Van der Dussen, 29, playing in his second one-day international, made an unbeaten 80 after scoring 93 on debut in South Africa’s five-wicket defeat in the first match in Port Elizabeth.

    “What you look for in new players is composure and calmness at the crease. We’re looking for big-match players. He’s smashing that door down for a permanent position in our strongest XI,” said South African captain Faf du Plessis.

    Phehlukwayo was named man-of-the-match after two career-best performances. He took four for 22 in Pakistan’s innings and then scored 69 not out to share Du Plessis’s praise for what he said was an outstanding partnership.

    The match went through several phases. An early finish seemed likely when Pakistan crashed to 112 for eight after being sent in to bat. But Hasan Ali, batting at number ten, hit a career-best 59 off 45 balls and helped captain Sarfraz Ahmed (41) put on 90 for the ninth wicket to enable Pakistan to reach 203.

    Left-arm fast bowler Shaheen Shah Afridi took wickets in each of his first three overs to reduce South Africa to 29 for three.

    Van der Dussen and David Miller (31) put on 51 for the fourth wicket but leg-spinner Shadab Khan struck with his second and third deliveries to swing the odds back towards Pakistan.

    Phehlukwayo seemed unable to read Shadab’s deliveries and a key moment came with his score on seven when he was given out leg before wicket to Shadab. He asked for a review which showed the ball was spinning past his leg stump.

    “There were too many soft wickets,” Sarfraz said of Pakistan’s top-order batting. “Hasan Ali batted very well. We had a chance at 80 for five. We needed one more wicket.”

    South Africa dominated the early exchanges.

    Four batsmen succumbed to short-pitched bowling from South Africa’s seam bowlers, while three fell to left-arm wrist spinner Tabraiz Shamsi.

    Kagiso Rabada started Pakistan’s slide when he dismissed Imam-ul-Haq and Babar Azam, both caught off mistimed pull shots against short deliveries on a pitch which was slow but with steep bounce when the ball was new.

    Fakhar Zaman and Shoaib Malik also fell to short balls.

  • Test specialist Pujara brushes off advertisers’ snubs

    Test specialist Pujara brushes off advertisers’ snubs

    India’s prolific batsman Cheteshwar Pujara has admitted his status as a Test specialist means he fails to bag lucrative endorsements — but said he doesn’t care. 

    Old-school Pujara was the hero in India’s historic first Test series win in Australia, amassing 521 runs including three centuries, but is regularly overshadowed by more glamorous teammates including captain Virat Kohli. 

    David Gray/AFP

    “Being a (specialist) Test cricketer, I accept that there haven’t been many endorsements. I am someone who doesn’t go after endorsements,” Pujara told The Indian Express daily in comments published Wednesday.

    “For me, the true thing is the love of the game. My father has taught me that I don’t just play for myself but for the entire country,” he said.

    “What I like is the appreciation from this country and from (the) cricketing fraternity, which is more than any endorsement I might get in my life,” he added.

    Pujara, 30, won man of the series in Australia, keeping the opposition bowlers at bay with his stubborn batting as he faced well over a thousand deliveries.

    India legend Sachin Tendulkar hailed Pujara’s “concentration and understanding of the game” and felt the efforts of the top-order batsman was the “difference between the two teams” Down Under.

    “The RESPECT you get as a cricketer for what @cheteshwar1 is doing in TEST CRICKET, is GREATER than any wonderfully skilful T20 innings. Youngsters – look, learn & listen!,” former England batsman Kevin Pietersen wrote on Twitter. 

    But unlike many Indian players who sign up with brands and become stars in a cricket-crazy nation, the unassuming Pujara returned from Australia to quietly get on with domestic cricket.

    In a list of India’s top 20 valuable celebrity brands published by advisory firm Duff & Phelps earlier this month, Kohli topped the list but Pujara was nowhere to be seen.

    Kohli, who has advertised everything from motorbikes to toothpaste to whisky, recently even became the face of a line of traditional clothing, “The Virat Collection”.

    Pujara has not been signed up by any Indian Premier League (IPL) team and is unlikely to be part of India’s one-day international side in this year’s World Cup in England and Wales.

    Pujara has scored 5,426 runs at an average of 51.18 in 68 Tests since making his debut in 2010. He has just played just five ODIs.