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  • India win toss and bowl in 3rd Australia ODI

    India win toss and bowl in 3rd Australia ODI

    India won the toss and opted to bowl in the third and final one-day international against Australia in Melbourne on Friday.

    The winner will take the series after Australia won the opening match in Sydney by 34 runs and India levelling with a six-wicket win in Adelaide.

    Australia made two changes with leg-spinner Adam Zampa coming in for Nathan Lyon and speedster Billy Stanlake replacing Jason Behrendorff, who has a sore back.

    Saeed Khan/AFP

    India made three changes to their team with Mohammed Siraj making way for ODI debutant Vijay Shankar, wrist-spinner Yuzvendra Chahal for Kuldeep Yadav and all-rounder Kedar Jadhav for Ambati Rayudu.

    “It’s quite overcast. It’s going to be stop-start, with the rain around, and as a batsman we are never in, so that’s the idea,” India captain Virat Kohli said.

    “We’ve had a good tour and we want to finish on a high.

    “Levelling the series was important, now both the teams are set up for the decider. All the boys are motivated for the game.”

    Australian skipper Aaron Finch said he would have chosen to bowl if he had won the toss.

    “There might be a touch of moisture but it’s still a good surface,” he said.

    “It’s been an exciting couple of weeks, a great win in Sydney and a really good game in Adelaide. We’re ready to go for the series decider.”

    Australia: Aaron Finch (capt), Alex Carey, Usman Khawaja, Shaun Marsh, Peter Handscomb, Marcus Stoinis, Glenn Maxwell, Jhye Richardson, Billy Stanlake, Peter Siddle, Adam Zampa.

    India: Rohit Sharma, Shikhar Dhawan, Virat Kohli(capt), MS Dhoni, Kedar Jadhav, Dinesh Karthik, Vijay Shankar, Ravindra Jadeja, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Mohammed Shami, Yuzvendra Chahal.

  • Dhoni finishes off job to clinch ODI series for India

    Dhoni finishes off job to clinch ODI series for India

    Master finisher Mahendra Singh Dhoni eased India to a seven-wicket victory to clinch their one-day international series against Australia in Melbourne on Friday.

    The unflappable veteran wicketkeeper hit his third half-century of the three-game series to again prove the difference after his match-winning knock in the second game in Adelaide.

    Jewel Samad/AFP

    The 37-year-old wicketkeeper-batsman kept his usual cool during an unbeaten 87 off 114 balls as India chased down Australia’s 230 with four balls to spare at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

    It consummated a hugely-successful tour of Australia where Virat Kohli’s team also claimed an historic first-ever 2-1 Test series win down under.

    Dhoni was given tremendous support from Kedar Jadhav with a belligerent unbeaten 61 from 57 balls in a match-winning 121-run stand.

    India wrapped up the ODI series after losing the opening match in Sydney by 34 runs before levelling with a six-wicket win in Adelaide to set up the decider in Melbourne.

    Dhoni, a much-loved sporting hero back home, captained India to a World Cup win in 2011. He quit Tests in 2014, and stepped down as the limited-overs skipper three years later.

    Kohli looked set for another big score before he was caught behind off Jhye Richardson for 46 off 62 balls in the 30th over leaving his side at 113 for three.

    Dhoni and Jadhav took up where Kohli left off guiding their team to a convincing victory.

    India leg-spinner Yuzvendra Chahal earlier captured the best figures by any bowler in one-day cricket in Australia to restrict the home side to just 230.

    Chahal, playing in his first match in the series after coming in for Test wrist-spinner Kuldeep Yadav, mesmerised the Australians with his six for 42.

    Chahal shares the record with fellow Indian Ajit Agarkar, who claimed the same figures against Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in 2004.

    Only Peter Handscomb showed any appreciable fight for Australia with his 58 off 63 balls before he became one of Chahal’s victims.

    It was an underwhelming batting performance by the Australians, who managed just 17 boundaries before they were bowled out with eight balls left.

    Australia’s openers again failed to get a start and Alex Carey was out in the third over when he got a nick off Bhuvneshwar Kumar and was taken by Kohli at second slip for five.

    His partner Aaron Finch followed six overs later again to Kumar trapped leg before wicket for 14.

    Shaun Marsh and Usman Khawaja steadied the innings before Adelaide centurion Marsh was smartly stumped by Dhoni off a wide down the leg-side from Chahal for 39.

    Khawaja followed three balls later when he got a thick leading edge and offered Chahal a return catch for 34.

    Marcus Stoinis lasted 20 balls before he became Chahal’s third victim, caught at slip by Rohit Sharma for 10, leaving Australia rocking at 123 for five in the 30th over.

    Glenn Maxwell hit a breezy 26 off 19 balls before Mohammed Shami enticed him to pull with a short-pitched delivery to Kumar sprinting in from the deep to take a diving catch.

    Richardson played against the spin and chipped the ball to short midwicket where Jadhav took the chance for 16 giving Chahal his fourth wicket.

    Handscomb was trapped plumb in front of his stumps by Chahal in the 46th over and Australia’s innings rattled to a quick close.

    Adam Zampa charged down the wicket to Chahal and holed out to Vijay Shankar at long-on for eight and Billy Stanlake was bowled by Shami for a duck.

  • Cricket Australia work to fix Gabba lights ahead of Test

    Cricket Australia work to fix Gabba lights ahead of Test

    Cricket Australia was Friday desperately working to find out why floodlights failed in a Big Bash League game at the Gabba, barely a week away from the venue hosting a day-night Test against Sri Lanka.

    The match between Brisbane Heat and Sydney Thunder on Thursday evening was abandoned after the lights went out in parts of the ground, leaving players and fans fuming.

    Paul Ellis/AFP

    “We are now working with Stadiums Queensland to investigate why this occurred, and to ensure there will be no further issues at future matches,” said CA official Anthony Everard in a statement.

    The sport’s governing body said under its terms, refunds for fans were not applicable due to 23 overs being played, but offered them free tickets to the Test match in Brisbane next week.

    Thunder coach Shane Bond earlier urged a review of the rules after the farcical scenes.

    His team had plundered 186 for four in the Twenty20 competition on Thursday evening, anchored by a century from veteran Shane Watson.

    In reply, the Heat were reeling at 10 for two in pursuit when two floodlights failed in one part of the Gabba.

    After an hour of waiting the match was abandoned and the points split, but Bond felt the lighting was sufficient to carry on.

    “There are grounds around the world that have worse lighting even with this light tower out, so that was disappointing,” he told reporters.

    “It’s a bad look for the competition and I think there needs to be some reflection or review … particularly when you have the ability to finish a game of cricket.”

    Bond said the match could have been reduced to a 15-over game “which I think everyone would’ve been happy with”. 

    “We made an offer. We said we would in good faith play the entire (rest of the) game and bowl only our spinners.

    “But then the excuse from the match referee and umpires was that conditions were now unsafe.”

    Queensland Cricket chief Max Walters said the safety of patrons at the game was their key concern in areas of the stadium with no lights.

    “Queensland Cricket will continue to work with the venue to ensure patron comfort and safety for all of our events in the future,” he said.

  • Agar ruled out of Big Bash league due to broken finger

    Agar ruled out of Big Bash league due to broken finger

    Geoff Caddick/AFP

    Perth Scorchers have been dealt a scorching blow in the Big Bash League as their star spinner Ashton Agar has been ruled out for the season with a finger fracture. He had suffered a similar injury in 2017 during Australia’s tour to India which kept him out of the game for 16 months. Perth Scorchers have roped in young off-singer Will Bosisto as his replacement. 

    “Ash Agar unfortunately suffered a fracture dislocation to his right index finger whilst fielding at training yesterday,” Nick Jones, Scorchers’ sports medicine manager, said. “Ash sustained an intra-articular fracture that will require surgical repair. We expect that Ash will undergo surgery in the coming days, and as a result will be unavailable for the remainder of the BBL.” 

    Although Agar has only picked up five wickets in eight matches, his economy rate of just over seven has helped the Scorchers this year. The team from Perth are currently 7th on the table with the bulk of the tournament already played. 

  • Warner to return to Australia after elbow injury

    Warner to return to Australia after elbow injury

    Banned Australian batsman David Warner will return home from Bangladesh to have an injured elbow assessed, Cricket Australia said Thursday.

    The extent of the injury is not yet known, but it raises concerns of a stint on the sidelines for the explosive opener alongside disgraced teammate Steve Smith, as the pair face a disrupted return to international cricket.

    Steve Christo/AFP

    Warner, who continues to serve his 12-month suspension from the national team for his role in the ball-tampering scandal in South Africa, reportedly injured the elbow during a flamboyant knock for the Sylhet Sixers in the Bangladesh Premier League on Wednesday.

    He will return to Australia next Monday, after two more matches in the Bangladesh Twenty20 competition.

    “While the extent of the injury remains unknown, Warner will continue to play for the Sylhet Sixers before he departs, meaning he will feature in matches on the 18th and 19th,” Cricket Australia’s official news site reported.

    The injury just days after former captain Steve Smith returned to Australia to have elbow surgery following an injury he sustained while playing in the same Bangladesh tournament.

    Smith is expected to be in a brace for six weeks before undergoing extensive rehabilitation.

    The disgraced pair still have three months of their suspensions left to run over the incident last March that rocked the game.

    The injuries could prove a major blow to the national side, with the star batsmen facing the prospect of less match-time in the lead up to their expected return to the national side ahead of the World Cup in late May.

    Fox News reported that Warner injured the elbow during his creative unbeaten 61 off 36 balls for Sylhet against the Rangpur Riders.

    The left-hander switched to a right-handed stance while facing a spell from Chris Gayle, smashing the West Indies superstar back over his head for six.

  • Pakistan seek change of fortune against South Africa

    Pakistan seek change of fortune against South Africa

    Pakistan will seek a change of fortune when they play South Africa in the first of five one-day internationals at St George’s Park on Saturday.

    The tourists were mauled in a recent Test series, with none of the three matches going beyond lunch on the fourth day, but have reason to be optimistic in the 50-overs game where fast short-pitched bowling will likely not be a decisive factor.

    Karim Sahib/AFP

    For both teams, the series is an important step towards the Cricket World Cup in England and Wales later this year.

    “We’re certainly a far better white-ball team than we are a Test unit at the minute,” said Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur after the third Test on Monday.

    That seems a reasonable assessment as Pakistan have shown their ability in one-day cricket, notably when they won the Champions Trophy in England in 2017. Since the start of that tournament, during which they beat South Africa in a rain-shortened match, they have compiled a 17-10 winning record.

    Pakistan’s batting will be strengthened by the inclusion of Mohammad Hafeez, who retired from Test cricket at the end of last year, and Shoaib Malik, while they have a capable attack in which spinners Shadab Khan and Imad Wasim could play key roles.

    Fakhar Zaman, the aggressive left-handed opening batsman, was exposed against the short ball in the Tests, being dropped after scoring only 32 runs in four innings, but has hit 1275 runs at an average of 57.95 in one-day internationals, scored at close to a run a ball.

    South Africa have based their World Cup plans on picking four specialist bowlers but have yet to settle on a batting all-rounder to fill the crucial number seven position.

    They announced a squad for the first two matches only. Since the squad was announced, it was decided to rest wicketkeeper-batsman Quinton de Kock and fast bowler Dale Steyn.

    The changes provide opening batsman Aiden Markram with another opportunity to shine in a format in which he has yet to assert himself, while fast bowler Duanne Olivier was rewarded for his man of the series performances in the Tests with a first one-day call-up.

    Port Elizabeth usually has one of the slowest pitches in South Africa, which should suit the tourists. In their most recent appearance at the ground, in November 2013, they clinched their only one-day series win in South Africa.

    Squads

    South Africa: Faf du Plessis (capt), Hashim Amla, Reeza Hendricks, Imran Tahir, Heinrich Klaasen (wkt), Aiden Markram, David Miller, Duanne Olivier, Dane Paterson, Andile Phehlukwayo, Dwaine Pretorius, Kagiso Rabada, Tabraiz Shamsi, Rassie van der Dussen

    Pakistan: Sarfraz Ahmed (capt, wkt), Babar Azam, Faheem Ashraf, Fakhar Zaman, Hasan Ali, Hussain Talat, Imad Wasim, Imam-ul-Haq, Mohammad Amir, Mohammad Hafeez, Mohammad Rizwan (wkt), Shadab Khan, Shaheen Afridi, Shan Masood, Shoaib Malik, Usman Khan

  • New Zealand bring back heavyweights for India series

    New Zealand bring back heavyweights for India series

    New Zealand have assembled their strongest possible line up for the one-day series against India starting next week in what will be their toughest workout ahead of the World Cup.

    Tom Latham and Colin de Grandhomme, who were rested during the 3-0 sweep against Sri Lanka, were named Thursday in a 14-man squad for the first three games of the five-match series which starts next Wednesday. 

    Indranil Mukherjee/AFP

    Captain Kane Williamson and bowling spearhead Trent Boult, who sat out the Twenty20 against Sri Lanka last Friday, are back in the squad as is Mitchell Santner who made the Twenty20 after being sidelined by injury for 10 months. 

    India and New Zealand are ranked second and third in the world, and coach Gary Stead said the composition of the squad reflected World Cup planning while also giving themselves the best possible chance of winning the series against Virat Kohli’s tourists.

    “Our two main priorities have been to select and prepare a squad capable of winning what is shaping as a massive series against India, and gathering as much information as possible ahead of the World Cup,” Stead said. 

    “Tom and Colin are experienced players in this format and will offer quality in their respective roles.” 

    New Zealand squad: Kane Williamson (capt), Trent Boult, Doug Bracewell, Colin de Grandhomme, Lockie Ferguson, Martin Guptill, Matt Henry, Tom Latham, Colin Munro, Henry Nicholls, Mitchell Santner, Ish Sodhi, Tim Southee, Ross Taylor

  • N Srinivasan: “BCCI in complete disarray.”

    N Srinivasan: “BCCI in complete disarray.”

    The Indian team may be performing brilliantly and on the cusp of breaking records on the pitch, but off it their cricket administration seems to be in complete disarray. From unjustified selection snubs to infighting amongst members, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) seems to have a lot of problems. 

    Mal Fairclough/AFP

    A major contributor for this mess has been former chairman N Srinivasan who said recently in an interview with the Times of India that the BCCI is in complete disarray at the moment with him being blamed unjustly for it. 

    Speaking to Times of India, he said “There is nobody to take decisions, rules are being changed in domestic cricket to suit personal needs, there are no committees (disciplinary, technical, etc) in place. From what had been a strong administrative policy that the BCCI had put in place, it’s all being destroyed slowly. “

    Srinivasan also feels that the current BCCI have let their stronghold and authority towards the ICC (International Cricket Council) slip since his stepping down. “While I was in BCCI, I just did my job and if people appreciate it now, I’m happy. I did the same when I went to ICC. For the first time, I got India its due recognition in the committee of nations. Unfortunately, things have been frittered away by subsequent events and people” said Srinivasan.

    The India Cements CEO also feels the current Indian cricket administrators are in it for personal gains and not for the betterment of the sport. “We worked very hard to promote the game – from all aspects. We were never there for self-publicity. I was hardly seen on public platforms when I served BCCI. Now, the difference is that there are individuals who are here to see what they can find for themselves. It’s more about them and not the game.“

  • Law warns England not to take West Indies lightly

    Law warns England not to take West Indies lightly

    Former West Indies coach Stuart Law believes England could come unstuck during their upcoming Test series in the Caribbean if they “underestimate” their hosts.

    Law accepts England, now third in the International Cricket Council rankings to the West Indies’ eighth, will be “red-hot favourites” to win a three-match series that starts next week in Barbados.

    Lindsey Parnaby/AFP

    Now the coach of English county side Middlesex, having stepped down from his West Indies post in part to spend more time with his UK-based wife and son, Law was in charge when the tourists stunned England to win the second Test at Headingley two years ago soon after being thrashed inside three days at Edgbaston in the inaugural day/night Test in Britain.

    “Don’t underestimate the home team,” said Law on Wednesday.

    “A lot of that group played in that Test match at Headingley, so if England aren’t on their game, West Indies have got the team to make an upset.”

    The 50-year-old former Australia batsman added: “It should be reasonably comfortable for England on paper but out on the ground, there’s a few guys there with a point to prove and opportunities to cement a place for a long time in the West Indies set-up, so I wouldn’t discount them.”

    In 2017, West Indies batsman Shai Hope became the first cricketer to score hundred in both innings of a first-class match at Headingley — with team-mate Kraigg Brathwaite just five runs short of achieveing the same feat — as the tourists won by five wickets on England captain Joe Root’s Yorkshire home ground.

     ‘Euphoria’ 

    Fast bowler Shannon Gabriel and Jason Holder, still the West Indies captain, impressed with the ball.

    Victory saw the West Indies level a three-match series at 1-1, a matter of days after an innings and 209 run hammering by Root’s men in Birmingham.

    England won the third Test at Lord’s by nine wickets to complete a 2-1 series win but the West Indies had defied many pundits’ predictions by avoiding a whitewash.

    “I think the euphoria of a first Test win in England for 17 years was something I think that’s still celebrated in the Caribbean,” recalled Law.” 

    “But some of the kids who stuck their hand up in that match, they really gained a lot.

    “Jason Holder and Shannon Gabriel – those guys bowled their hearts out.”

    There were just four days between the end of West Indies’ embarrassing display at Edgbaston and the start of their Headingley triumph, with Law insisting he hadn’t done a lot to revive their spirits.

    “I didn’t have to say much,” he recalled. “We sat down in the dressing room on ‘day five’, the Test match had ended on day three, day two really. 

    “They (the players) just had it out, they had a meeting.

    “They all gave a very honest account of where they were during that Test match. 

    “They got abuse from back home —  you should have read some of the social media posts. It was tough for them. 

    “I didn’t have to say too much, point them in the right direction, tell them you can either go one of two ways — ‘we can lose the series 3-0 or we can stand up and fight. What do you want to do?’ And fight they did.”

  • England fast bowler Stone ruled out of West Indies tour

    England fast bowler Stone ruled out of West Indies tour

    England pace bowler Olly Stone will miss the tour of the West Indies after suffering a back injury.

    Stone has been hampered by stiffness in his lower left back since taking part in a practice session on Sunday.

    Ishara S.Kodikara/AFP

    The 25-year-old went for scans in Barbados that confirmed the extent of the injury was serious enough to rule him out of the Tests against the West Indies.

    Stone had hoped to make his Test debut in the three-match series, but the Warwickshire seamer will have to wait for his maiden five-day appearance.

    “Following the result of scans, Olly Stone has sustained a bone stress injury to the left lower back. He will return home from the Caribbean later this week and have further tests in the UK,” a statement from the England and Wales Cricket Board said on Wednesday.

    Stone impressed with his speed and hostility during four appearances in England’s one-day series win against Sri Lanka in October.

    But the back problem is the latest injury blow for Stone, who saw his promising career interrupted for 18 months with an anterior cruciate ligament problem.

    He has been restricted to just 34 first-class matches since debuting in 2012.

    Ashley Giles, previously director of cricket at Warwickshire and recently appointed to the equivalent role with the ECB, warned selectors last year not to work Stone too hard.

    He described the player as a “Ferrari” and cautioned against his over-use.

    England have yet to name a replacement but the likes of Jamie Overton, Jamie Porter and Mark Wood are likely to come under consideration by selectors.