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  • Thisara’s 140 in vain as New Zealand snatch ODI series

    Thisara’s 140 in vain as New Zealand snatch ODI series

    A rollicking maiden century by Sri Lanka’s Thisara Perera was ultimately in vain as New Zealand wrapped up the one-day series with a 21-run victory in the second ODI at Mount Maunganui.

    With Sri Lanka chasing New Zealand’s 319 for seven, they were on the ropes at 128 for seven when Perera opened up.

    He faced 74 deliveries and cracked 13 sixes and eight fours before he was the last wicket to fall and Sri Lanka were out for 298 with 22 balls remaining.

    Sri Lanka reached 112 for two when Ish Sodhi captured the wicket of Kusal Mendis for 20 to trigger a collapse which saw five wickets fall in six overs.

    But Perera refused to give up as he bludgeoned the New Zealand attack with brute force.

    He made 58 in a 75-run stand with Lasith Malinga for the eighth wicket and scored 45 of the 51 runs for the ninth wicket with Lakshan Sandakan.

    But when a seemingly impossible victory seemed on the cards Matt Henry had Perera caught by Trent Boult at long-on.

    Opener Danushka Gunathilaka played his part at the top of the order with 71 but elsewhere the Sri Lankan batsmen failed to fire. 

    It continued a dismal tour for Sri Lanka who also lost the Test series 1-0 and lost the first ODI by 45 runs. 

    When New Zealand won the toss and elected to bat, Sri Lanka had their tails up when they removed first-match centurion Martin Guptill and Kane Williamson cheaply to have New Zealand at 39 for two.

    But Ross Taylor (90) and Colin Munro (87) swung momentum New Zealand’s way with a 112-run stand for the third wicket, while all-rounder James Neesham lit up the tail with a whirlwind 64.

    Lasith Malinga was the pick of Sri Lankan bowlers with two for 45 while bowling for New Zealand Sodhi took three for 55.

    The final match in the series is in Nelson next Tuesday and the tour closes with a Twenty 20 match in Auckland on Friday.

     

    Feature picture courtesy: AFP

  • Struggling Australia throw away wickets in big run chase

    Struggling Australia throw away wickets in big run chase

    Australia blew a strong start with yet another top order batting collapse in Sydney Saturday, leaving themselves a mountain to climb to stay in the fourth and final Test against India.

    When play was abandoned half an hour early due to rain, they were 236 for six, still 386 behind with Peter Handscomb (28) and Pat Cummins (25) fighting a rearguard action after some soft dismissals plunged the hosts into deep trouble.

    Australia went to lunch at 122 for one but meekly surrendered soon afterwards, losing three wickets for 24 runs, with spinners Ravindra Jadeja and Kuldeep Yadav doing the damage.

    Yadav ended with 3-71 and Jadeja 2-62.

    While aggressive rookie opener Marcus Harris blazed a career-best 79, senior players Usman Khawaja, Shaun Marsh and skipper Tim Paine all failed to deliver when needed most.

    “I got a start and a few of us got a start but none of us went on to get a big score so it’s pretty simple to work out what went wrong,” said Harris.

    “We’re a young group and we’re trying to work it out and think on our feet but we’re playing against the number one side in the world, so it’s not like it’s an easy thing to do.”

    Despite the task ahead, Harris remained optimistic.

    “Obviously 600 is a big score to chase down or get a close deficit, but I think the more time we can occupy the crease, you never know what can happen.”

    India took a stranglehold on the match over the opening two days, compiling a huge 622 for seven declared on the back of centuries from irrepressible Cheteshwar Pujara and livewire Rishabh Pant.

    They lead 2-1 after victories in Adelaide and Melbourne and are fast closing in on a historic first-ever series win since they first toured Australia in 1947-48.

    Yadav said India’s fielding and catching practice was paying off.

    “I feel like we are the best side in the world now when it comes to fielding,” he said.

    Skipper Virat Kohli’s declaration left Khawaja and Harris to face 10 nervous overs before stumps on Friday, when they crawled to 24 without loss. 

    Khawaja was dropped on nought but failed to make the most of his second life.

    On a day when the Sydney Cricket Ground was a sea of pink to mark a breast cancer awareness initiative, he was dismissed for 27 after mistiming a shot off Yadav with Pujara taking an easy catch.

    Stuck in two figures 

    At the other end the diminutive Harris, who has shown flashes of brilliance in his short four-Test career, quickly found a groove with some crisp shots.

    He survived a close call on 24 when a diving KL Rahul narrowly missed a catch and reached his second Test 50 with a single before smacking three fours in one Yadav over. 

    Harris went to lunch on 77 but added just two more before chopping a Jadeja delivery onto his stumps, blowing a glorious chance to press on and make Australia’s first century of the series.

    So far, none of Australia’s batsmen has reached three figures over the four Tests, with Harris’ 79 the highest anyone has scored. In contrast, India have had a field day, compiling five centuries.

    Australia gambled by picking inexperienced allrounder Marnus Labuschagne to come in at number three and he settled in well, cracking seven boundaries in a stylish 38.

    But he was sent packing by a blinding reflex catch from Ajinkya Rahane at mid-wicket off Mohammed Shami’s bowling.

    Marsh scored a century in Sydney against England this time last year, but was out for eight, tickling an edge to Rahane at slip from a turning Jadeja ball.

    The day got worse when Travis Head was caught and bowled by Yadav just before tea for 20 and as storm clouds gathered overhead Yadav clean bowled Paine for five.

    It was left to Handscomb, recalled as a specialist in tackling spin, and paceman Cummins, who made a gutsy 63 in the third Melbourne Test, to try and repair the damage.

     

    Feature picture courtesy: AFP

  • South African pitches not good enough: Arthur

    South African pitches not good enough: Arthur

    Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur on Friday criticised the pitches for the first two Tests against South Africa, saying they were not good enough for Test cricket.

    With his team facing a series defeat after two days of the second Test at Newlands, Arthur said the quality of pitches had deteriorated in the ten years since he coached the South African team.

    On the back of a century by captain Faf du Plessis, South Africa built a winning position, reaching 382 for six, a first-innings lead of 205 runs. Du Plessis made a patient 103 and shared a fifth-wicket stand of 156 with Temba Bavuma (75). Quinton de Kock made a breezy 55 not out late in the day to reinforce South Africa’s dominance.

    Arthur acknowledged that the South African total did not back up his argument about the quality of the pitches but said he did not believe the pitches made for a fair contest.

    “I am disappointed. I haven’t been back to South Africa in a cricketing capacity since 2010. The standard of the wickets at Centurion and here hasn’t been good enough for Test cricket,” he said.

    He cited inconsistent bounce, with balls rearing out of cracks, which had led to seven stoppages for injuries to batsmen on Friday. 

    “I can understand it if it gets to day four or five because that’s what happens in Test cricket and so it should, but it shouldn’t make your first innings a lottery.”

    Arthur said Du Plessis and Bavuma deserved credit for the way they had batted in the conditions and added that the extra pace of the South African bowlers had been a big factor in Pakistan being bowled out for 177 on the first day.

    “The difference is that South Africa bowled at 145 (kilometres an hour) plus and we were at 135 today. Those 10 kilometres on a wicket like this make a significant difference.”

    — ‘Challenging and tricky’ —

    Bavuma said batting conditions had been “challenging and tricky but not impossible.”

    He added: “You’ve got to make peace with the fact that you’re going to take a few (balls) on the body.”

    Bavuma appeared to have been caught by Azhar Ali at first slip off Mohammad Abbas when he was on three. The on-field umpires gave a “soft” signal of “out” but asked for television umpire Sundaram Ravi to check whether there had been a clean catch. Ravi decided the ball had made contact with the ground while the catch was being taken.

    “I wasn’t 100 percent sure, which I was why I stood at the time,” said Bavuma.

    The incident was similar to one at a critical stage of the first Test in Centurion, also involving Azhar Ali, when Dean Elgar survived against Shaheen Shah Afridi after Wilson reversed the on-field decision.

    Arthur was fined a demerit point after going into the match referee’s room and criticising Wilson at Centurion but he said Azhar himself had not been sure whether he had made a clean catch. “It was different from last week,” said Arthur.

    Du Plessis, out for a pair during South Africa’s six-wicket win in the first Test in Centurion, showed patience and resolve in an innings lasting six minutes short of six hours. He faced 226 balls and hit 13 fours.

    He gave a chance on 96 when Sarfraz Ahmed, the Pakistan captain and wicketkeeper, could not hold a faint glance down the leg side off Abbas.

    Abbas bowled a probing line and length but had a largely luckless day, as did Mohammad Amir, who went past the edge of Du Plessis’ bat on several occasions.

    Bavuma, who hit a solitary Test century against England three seasons ago, made his 13th half-century before being caught behind off left-armer Afridi, bowling around the wicket. Bavuma faced 162 balls and hit ten fours.

    Afridi was the most expensive of the Pakistan bowlers, conceding 112 runs, but he picked up three of the four wickets that fell during the day, including that of Du Plessis on review after umpire Wilson failed to detect a faint edge.

    Feature picture courtesy: AFP

  • Pakistan avoid innings defeat, delay South Africa victory charge

    Pakistan avoid innings defeat, delay South Africa victory charge

    Half-centuries by Shan Masood, Asad Shafiq and Babar Azam enabled Pakistan to avoid an innings defeat and take the second Test against South Africa at Newlands into the fourth day.

    Pakistan were bowled out in the last over of the third day for 294 on Saturday, leaving South Africa 41 runs to win.

    A provision for an extra half-hour was not used because only 20 minutes or five overs of play would have been possible.

    Masood hit a composed 61 and Shafiq and Azam both played aggressively to score 88 and 72 respectively.

    Dale Steyn and Kagiso Rabada both took four wickets to get South Africa to the brink of victory.

    Steyn drew level with Richard Hadlee of New Zealand in tenth place on 431 wickets on the all-time Test wicket-takers list.

    Masood and Shafiq shared the most enterprising partnership of the match when they put on 132 in 132 minutes off 168 balls for the third wicket.

    Steyn broke the stand when Masood was caught behind by wicketkeeper Quinton de Kock and Philander followed up having Shafiq caught behind after a sparkling knock in which he hit 12 fours and a six in facing 118 balls.

    Shafiq had looked set to make his second century in successive appearances at Newlands after he made 111 in the 2012/13 fixture between the two countries.

    A mini-collapse followed but Azam batted well with the tail in scoring 72 off 87 balls.

    Azam was ninth out, caught at first slip off Rabada when Pakistan were only 16 runs ahead 15 minutes before the scheduled close.

    A second successive win for South Africa inside three days seemed likely when Mohammad Abbas was caught off Philander seven minutes and eight runs later when the extra half hour would have been enough to finish the match. 

    But after checking a replay, Philander was no-balled and Abbas and last man Shaheen Afridi took the game into the fourth day.

     

    Feature picture courtesy: AFP

  • Paine keeps sense of humour despite long day in the field

    Paine keeps sense of humour despite long day in the field

    Australian skipper Tim Paine proved he still had a sense of humour despite a gruelling day in the field Friday, tactfully answering an AFP journalist’s phone during a live press conference.

    The wicketkeeper could have been forgiven for wanting to get out of the room as fast as possible after 167 overs behind the stumps against India in the fourth Test in Sydney.

    But when a phone on the desk in front of him rang he picked it up and had chat with the reporter’s editor at the other end, leaving the media pack in stitches.

    “Tim Paine speaking,” he said. “Who is it, sorry? It’s Katie in Hong Kong. Who are you after?” he went on.

    “Ah Martin, he’s in the middle of a press conference at the moment. Can I get him to call you back?

    “No worries, I’ll tell him to check his emails. Thanks Katie, cheers.”

    Paine has proven before that he enjoys a laugh, engaging in some hilarious on-field banter during the four-Test series, including a cheeky sledge in the second Test in Perth to Murali Vijay about Indian captain Virat Kohli.

    “I know he’s your captain but you can’t seriously like him as a bloke,” he said.

    And at the Boxing Day Test in Melbourne he suggested young Indian wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant could babysit for him and his wife.

    “Fancy that, Pantsy? Extend your little Aussie holiday. Can you babysit? I’ll take the wife to the movies one night and you’ll look after the kids.”

    Despite the light-hearted press conference, Paine knows he has a mountain to climb on Saturday with India compiling a massive 622 for seven declared in Sydney.

     

    Feature picture courtesy: AFP

  • Bangladesh Premier League spends big to bash rival T20s

    Bangladesh Premier League spends big to bash rival T20s

    The Bangladesh Premier League starts this weekend with bad boy Australians Steve Smith and David Warner among foreign stars tempted by top-notch salaries that have made the BPL a leading Twenty20 tournament.

    The two, who are serving 12 month international bans for ball tampering, will clash when Warner leads the Sylhet Sixers against Smith’s Comilla Victorians in Dhaka on Sunday.

    Warner said the BPL is now “amongst the best”.

    South African big hitter AB de Villiers with West Indies’ Chris Gayle and England’s Alex Hales will be playing for defending champions Rangpur Riders.

    The league had feared an exodus to the rival Australian Big Bash League. Afghan leg-spin star Rashid Khan, New Zealand batsman Brendon McCullum and England’s Josh Buttler all played in the BPL last year but chose the Big Bash this time.

    But de Villiers and Nepalese spinner Sandeep Lamichhane — who will be in Warner’s team — are leaving the Big Bash to take part in the BPL. The Bangladesh tournament finishes February 8 which enables them to return to Australia if needed. 

    Gayle has become a BPL fixture in recent years, hitting a world record 18 sixes in his 69-ball 146 for Rangpur in last season’s final. But with each team allowed nine foreigners, compared to two for the Big Bash, there is a huge migrant contingent.

     No cap salary 

    West Indians Sunil Narine, Kieron Pollard, Andre Russell, Carlos Brathwaite, Evin Lewis and Sheldon Cottrell, Pakistan’s Shahid Afridi and Shoaib Malik and England’s Ian Bell are among other top names appearing for the seven teams.

    The salary cap for draft players is $200,000 but most of the foreigners negotiated non-draft individual deals for which there is no limit. The Bangladesh Cricket Board has not given details of payments. 

    The winners of the event will get just $240,000 in prize money, but much more in commercial fallout and prestige. So most of the teams have been spending big. 

    The presence of Smith and Warner, banned from internationals and Australian domestic cricket after admitting ball tampering in the South Africa-Australia test last March, has been a major draw however.

    “You look at the names in some of the other teams. They are not just here to watch me. I am just excited to be here and be a part of it,” said Warner.

    “At the moment, the BPL is starting against the BBL, at home. After this you have the Pakistan Super League and Indian Premier League.

    “Most players tell me that this is definitely up there with the best,” he added.

    Former Sri Lankan batsman Mahela Jayawardene, who will coach Khulna Titans echoed Warner. 

    “It is good for BPL to get all the good players. It is also good for the younger Bangladeshi players to play with those guys, to learn a lot,” he said

    High-profile coaches such as Australia’s Tom Moody, Pakistan’s Waqar Younis and South Africa’s Lance Kluesener have also been drawn.

    Moody and Waqar will coach Rangpur Riders and Sylhet Sixers respectively while Klusener will coach Rajshahi Kings. “It is great to have world-class players” in the BPL, said Moody.

    Bangladesh batsman Mushfiqur Rahim said the presence of the foreign stars brought prestige to the poor nation but also helped develop young home players.

    “It gives them the opportunity to learn,” he said.

    The BPL was dogged by match-fixing scandals and delayed pay for some foreign players after it started in 2011. After a one-year suspension in 2015 it has been staged without serious controversy.

     

    Feature picture courtesy: AFP

  • Southee to captain New Zealand T20 side

    Southee to captain New Zealand T20 side

    Tim Southee was named Friday to captain New Zealand in next week’s one-off Twenty20 match against Sri Lanka. 

    Regular skipper Kane Williamson is to be rested along with Trent Boult and Colin de Grandhomme.

    Southee, who has captained New Zealand twice before, admitted that leading a side in cricket’s shortest form can be a bit of a gamble. 

    “It’s about trying to stay a step ahead of the game and a little bit of guessing,” he said. 

    “The way T20 cricket goes it’s (about)trying to take a bit of a punt on what you think is going to happen.”

    All-rounder Jimmy Neesham and opener Martin Guptill, who starred when New Zealand won the first one-day international on Thursday, are also in the Twenty20 squad. 

    New Zealand: Tim Southee (capt), Lockie Ferguson, Martin Guptill, Scott Kuggeleijn, Colin Munro, Jimmy Neesham, Henry Nicholls, Glenn Phillips, Seth Rance, Mitchell Santner, Tim Seifert, Ish Sodhi, Ross Taylor.

     

    Feature picture courtesy: AFP

  • South Africa on top as bowlers, Markram hurt Pakistan

    South Africa on top as bowlers, Markram hurt Pakistan

    Duanne Olivier led another fast bowling assault on Pakistan’s batsmen as South Africa took control on the first day of the second Test at Newlands on Thursday. Olivier took four for 48 as Pakistan were bowled out for 177 after being sent in on a hard, green-tinged pitch.

    Aiden Markram struck an assured 78 as South Africa reached 123 for two at the close.

    Olivier followed up a match-winning performance in the first Test in Centurion, while Dale Steyn took three for 48.

    Captain Sarfraz Ahmed hit 56 and Shan Masood made 44 to lift an otherwise poor Pakistan batting performance.

    South Africa’s decision to pick an all-pace attack paid dividends with all four fast bowlers picking up wickets, with most of the Pakistan batsmen looking vulnerable against fast, short-pitched deliveries.

    Just like at Centurion, where he had match figures of 11 for 96, Olivier lived up to the “enforcer” tag given him by captain Faf du Plessis, regularly landing the ball in his own half of the pitch and making it rear up towards the batsmen.

    Unlike Centurion, the pitch itself was not a major factor in Pakistan’s collapse. It was hard and there was some green grass on the surface but the bounce was largely true and there was no exaggerated sideways movement.

    The only ball that misbehaved markedly was the last of the day when part-time seamer Shan Masood bowled Markram with a ball which nipped back and kept low.

    Azhar Ali, Pakistan’s most experienced batsman, fell to a short ball from Olivier for the third time in a row, fending tamely to first slip. Five of his teammates also were dismissed by short deliveries.

    Pakistan’s batting was put into perspective when Markram and Dean Elgar put on 56 for the first wicket at almost five runs an over.

    Mohammad Amir put a brake on the scoring by having Elgar caught behind during a second spell in which he conceded only eight runs in five overs but Markram and Hashim Amla steadily built a second-wicket stand of 67 off 109 balls.

    Markram, who had not reached 20 in his previous six Test innings, struck the ball firmly in reaching a half-century off 64 balls with 11 fours. He added another three fours and a straight six off leg-spinner Yasir Shah before being surprised by Masood at the end of the day after a 96-ball inning.

    Feature picture courtesy: AFP

  • Pujara, Pant centuries put India in command of Sydney Test

    Pujara, Pant centuries put India in command of Sydney Test

    A marathon century by Cheteshwar Pujara and a swashbuckling ton from Rishabh Pant all but ended Australia’s hopes of saving the series Friday as India built a massive 622 for seven declared in the final Sydney Test.

    India began the second day at 303 for four and proceeded to twist the knife against a demoralised home team that toiled in hot conditions with little joy.

    Unless Australia win, India will claim a first-ever series victory Down Under since they began touring here in 1947-48. They lead 2-1.

    Despite the tall task ahead, Australia skipper Tim Paine said they were not ready to throw in the towel.

    “We certainly won’t be doing that, we will be fighting as hard as we can for the next three days. Cricket’s one of those games, if you keep doing that it can turn really quickly,” he said.

    “But you’ve got to tip your cap to India. They have worked extremely hard for three-and-a-half Tests to get us to where they want us today.”

    The methodical Pujara made a masterful 193 off 373 balls while Pant stroked his highest Test score in an entertaining 159 not out. 

    Ravindra Jadeja chipped in with a lively 81 in a 204-run stand with Pant — a record seventh-wicket partnership at the Sydney Cricket Ground.

    Skipper Virat Kohli finally declared when Jadeja was out, with the tireless Nathan Lyon taking 4-178 off 57.2 gruelling overs.

    It left new-look Australian openers Marcus Harris (19) and Usman Khawaja (five) to negotiate 10 tricky overs before stumps after a torturous day in the field. They ended at 24 without loss. 

    “Every hundred I score is special for me because I have just started my career. But I don’t really think about hundreds, I only think about what the team needs from me,” said Pant, who expressed some sympathy for the Australian bowlers.

    “Obviously when you bowl for two days the body gets tired, but their body language was really good, they were pushing themselves and trying their level best.” 

    Calm and collected number three Pujara started the day 130 not out and picked up where he left off.

    He drove his second ball through the covers for three before once again dropping anchor, blocking and targeting only loose balls.

    Throughout his knock, he hardly played a false stroke in a demonstration of “old-school” Test batting, soaking up the pressure and counter-attacking when he saw an opportunity.

    Pujara brought up his 150 with a boundary and seemed destined for his fourth Test 200 before attempting to whip Lyon down the leg side. Instead, he lobbed the ball back into the spinner’s hands.

    At the other end chirpy wicketkeeper-batsman Pant plundered only his second Test century as he piled more pressure on a wilting Australian attack.

    The 21-year-old, in only his ninth Test, smashed eight boundaries in his ton and quickly passed his previous Test high of 114 against England last year, swinging his bat as he grew in confidence.

    He was ably supported by allrounder Jadeja who raced to a 10th Test 50, unleashing his trademark celebration of twirling his bat like a samurai sword.

    So desperate were Australia at this point that Khawaja was given a bowl — only the second time he has been called on in a Test.

    Jadeja was finally undone by a weary Lyon who could barely muster a celebration as he knocked the stumps over and Kohli called it a day.

    Earlier, Hanuma Vihari added only three to his overnight 39 before he misjudged a sweep off Lyon and the ball feathered his glove, with Marnus Labuschagne taking the catch.

    From the moment the coin landed in Kohli’s favour, the Test has taken on a predictable tone. Whichever team has won the toss in the series has batted first and gone on to win the match.

     

    Feature picture courtesy: AFP

  • Khawaja, Lyon recalled to Australian one-day squad

    Khawaja, Lyon recalled to Australian one-day squad

    Veterans Usman Khawaja, Peter Siddle, and Nathan Lyon were Friday recalled to a revamped Australian one-day squad to play India with an eye on the World Cup in England later this year.

    After a poor run in the limited overs format, selectors dropped Travis Head, Chris Lynn, D’Arcy Short, Ben McDermott and allrounder Ashton Agar.

    Bowling spearheads Mitch Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Pat Cummins are missing after being ordered to rest and prepare for two upcoming Tests against Sri Lanka.

    National selector Trevor Hohns said that after Australia lost to South Africa 2-1 at the start of the summer, a change was needed to turn things around.

    “With this in mind and the World Cup looming, we’ve selected players we feel provide us with the flexibility to play a variety of roles at different stages of a match,” he said.

    “The upcoming three-match series against India and the ODI tours of India and the UAE are important windows to put this into practice and to build a squad to help defend our World Cup title.”

    Seamer Siddle’s return was a surprise. He played his last one-day international in November 2010, but gets another chance with the country’s top fast bowlers unavailable.

    He will lead the attack alongside Jhye Richardson, Jason Behrendorff, and Billy Stanlake.

    “It’s wonderful to have Peter back in the squad for the first time since 2010,” said Hohns.

    “His white ball cricket has improved considerably the older he has got, and his selection is great reward for his professionalism and strong leadership qualities.”

    Khawaja returns after an almost two-year exile while Lyon replaces Agar after being overlooked for the recent South Africa series. Test players Mitch Marsh and Peter Handscomb were also included, with Aaron Finch captaining the side.

    “With a focus on improving our ability to post competitive totals we’ve recalled Usman Khawaja, Peter Handscomb and Mitch Marsh to the squad,” said Hohns.

    “Usman is a batsman we know can put vital runs on the board at the top of the order, and Peter is not only a fine player of spin bowling, he’s also a batsman we know can hold an innings together while keeping the scoreboard ticking over.

    “Mitch gives us another all-round option with his ability with both bat and ball.”

    Australia play three one-dayers against India, starting in Sydney on January 12 before moving to Adelaide and Melbourne.