Clarke lost for words after awful display

“What can you do?” Michael Clarke and the Australians are almost out of answers on how to fix Australia’s regular batting collapses. There’s hard work and trusting your own game, Clarke said, but today that empty philosophy resulted in the hosts edging to 98 all out.Six months before that it was 88 in Leeds, and at the start of the year it was 127 against Pakistan at the SCG. Last year it was batting problems at Lord’s and The Oval that cost Australia the Ashes and after this meagre first innings they look headed towards another match and series defeat.The locals knew life was going to be difficult after they lost the toss on a seaming surface, but the day quickly unravelled as the batsmen ignored their pre-game discussions. “We had to work hard and be disciplined with our shot selection, we had to leave the ball well and stick to our plans,” Clarke said. “We weren’t at our best today.”Clarke top scored with 20 while Phillip Hughes (16) and Ricky Ponting (10) were the only other members of the top eight who reached double figures. Edging balls that needed to be left was a feature of the procession. “Our shot selection wasn’t great, no doubt,” Clarke said. “All our wickets were caught behind the wicket.”We certainly have no excuses, we played some poor shots today and didn’t show enough discipline. As we’ve seen, when the sun came out, it’s a really nice wicket to bat on.” England finished at 0 for 157 and the closest Australia came to a wicket was when Alastair Cook was given out lbw, a decision which was overturned when replays showed an inside edge.Clarke’s contribution took his series tally to 135, a haul boosted by 80 in the second innings in Adelaide, and a major reason why Australia are in such a bad position is because both the vice-captain and the captain are struggling. Ponting has only 93 for the campaign and the end of his career comes closer with each failure.Clarke, the leader in waiting as long as he starts to score heavily again, delivered a spirited defence of Ponting, who is carrying a broken finger. “Ricky has been a wonderful leader and an amazing player for a long time, his record in international cricket speaks for itself,” he said.”He’s copped a fair bit of criticism of late and no doubt he’d like to score more runs, as a lot of us would, but there’s no doubt Ricky should be the captain of Australia and the No.3 batter for Australia. Runs are around the corner for him. Every player in the room supports him. Hopefully in the second innings he can come out and score one of those double hundreds.”A century to Clarke would also be well timed, individually and for the side. “I thought I played okay today, I was happy I got to spend some time in the middle,” he said. “I was disappointed with my shot. I thought I was being quite disciplined till that shot. It’s something I’ve got to keep working on. Keep training, keep trying to get better.”Everyone in the Australian dressing room felt the same after such a poor performance on Boxing Day, which is such a grand cricket occasion. “We’re all disappointed, the batters especially,” Clarke said. “We knew it was going to be tough. Individually we’re all disappointed. Then the bowlers are disappointed because they couldn’t get a wicket. We’ve got to turn it around.”The situation was best summed up by Tim Nielsen, Australia’s coach, on Twitter: “That was a terrible day. Well behind the game now and nothing to do but fight our backsides off!” Nielsen, who has had the job since 2007, is in charge of providing the team with some of the right answers.

Edwards and Taylor not among World Cup probables

Legspinners Devendra Bishoo and Anthony Martin, fast bowler Jason Holder, and batsmen Jonathan Carter and Kirk Edwards are the uncapped players named in West Indies’ preliminary 30-man squad for the 2011 World Cup.The list also included former captain Ramnaresh Sarwan and wicketkeeper Denesh Ramdin, both of whom were excluded from the recent tour of Sri Lanka. Fast bowlers Fidel Edwards and Jerome Taylor, who have just begun their comeback from long-term injuries, were not included. Brendan Nash is the only player on a WICB central retainer contract left out of the mix.The squad will be trimmed by half for the tournament, which starts on February 19 in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and India.Squad: Lionel Baker, Adrian Barath, Carlton Baugh Jr, Sulieman Benn, Dave Bernard Jr, Tino Best, Devendra Bishoo, Darren Bravo, Dwayne Bravo, Jonathan Carter, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Kirk Edwards, Chris Gayle, Ryan Hinds, Jason Holder, Anthony Martin, Nikita Miller, Nelon Pascal, Kieron Pollard, Kieran Powell, Denesh Ramdin, Ravi Rampaul, Kemar Roach, Andre Russell, Darren Sammy, Ramnaresh Sarwan, Shane Shillingford, Devon Smith, Gavin Tonge, Devon Thomas.

Mashonaland Eagles ease to comfortable win

A fine all-round game for Ryan Butterworth secured Mashonaland Eagles a comfortable 31-run victory over Mountaineers in the Stanbic Bank 20 match in Harare.Butterworth was instrumental in helping Mashonaland recover from 67 for 5 in the 14th over to a far healthier 133 by slamming 41 not out from 24 balls before taking two wickets in a miserly spell that helped earn his side a second win in the tournament.After Andrew Hall had opted to make first use of the Harare pitch, Mashonaland slipped to 21 for 3 with English import Nick Compton falling to Tinashe Panyangara for 5 and Cephas Zhuwawo being castled by the wily offspin of Prosper Utseya. Wicketkeeper Regis Chakabva was the next to fall, run out by Mountaineers captain Hamilton Masakadza.Ryan ten Doeschate led a cautious recovery, taking 30 balls to make 17, with Greg Lamb scoring a similarly ponderous 17. It laid the platform for a late-innings assault from Butterworth and Forster Mutizwa. Butterworth struck five fours and a six while Mutizwa made 35 off 22 balls to carry the score to 133.Mountaineers were given a decent start by their openers until Butterworth struck with his seamers to remove Jonathan Beukes. Having worked their way to 54 for 2 at the halfway stage Mountaineers had the heart ripped out of their chase, losing three wickets in seven balls for the addition of four runs. Lamb had Sean Ervine caught behind and Timycen Maruma was run out next ball. Masakadza was then snared by Butterworth for 29 to complete the mid-innings collapse.All eyes were on former South African allrounder Lance Klusener and, while he was together with Utseya, Mountaineers were still in the game. But having struck two boundaries on his way to 22, he fell to fellow former South Africa allrounder Hall who rattled his stumps. Wickets kept tumbling around Utseya, and by the time he was ninth man out for 20, Mountaineers were out of the game.

Bell eager to prove himself down under

Ian Bell does not have many happy memories from his last trip to Australia, but an increased maturity in his batting since last winter’s tour of South Africa has led him to believe the upcoming Ashes series has arrived at the perfect time to prove himself down under.”In the past I haven’t performed as well as I should have against Australia, but I think I am an improved cricketer over the last 18 months or two years,” he said. “Being out in South Africa last winter was a massive boost for me and it has continued on from there.”Bell averaged 33.10 in 10 innings on England’s last Ashes trip, when Australia won 5-0, a slight improvement upon his career average of 25.68 in Tests against Australia, but believes his game has moved forward. “That’s in the past – over the last two or three years I have matured as a player,” he said. “This is coming at the right time for me.””That Test series was a massive learning curve,” he added. “It was disappointing, but a lot of the guys who were on it learnt a lot about how the best players in the world play and we were desperate to come back and improve after that series.”Improvement was evident on England’s tour of South Africa in 2009-10, Bell’s 313 runs at 44.71 in the Tests playing an important role in a drawn series. In four Tests against Bangladesh, home and away, Bell averaged 101.50 with two hundreds, but was then sidelined after breaking a bone in his foot while fielding in an ODI.Bell, who missed the Test series against Pakistan after breaking his foot in the one-day series against Bangladesh, proved his fitness towards the end of the season for Warwickshire and England and is now focused on the three warm-up matches beginning with Western Australia on Friday.”Hopefully I can do as much as I can in these warm-up games to keep pushing my case,” he said. “I’ve enjoyed the first few days out here and feel like I have been hitting the ball well and hopefully I will continue with that in the warm-up games. I am going to keep working hard in the next three weeks, get myself in good form and as ready and fit as possible.”

Under-pressure Clarke faces confident India

Match Facts

Sunday, October 17, Kochi
Start time 9:00 am (0330 GMT)Michael Clarke had a poor Test series. Will the ODIs bring a change in his fortunes?•Getty Images

The Big Picture

Michael Clarke will lead Australia in the ODIs, and he’ll feel the pressure. There has been an intense debate in Australia about the future, including captaincy. There appear to be three camps: Ponting loyalists, Clarke aficionados and the anyone-but-Clarke club. The third should worry Clarke. His poor performance in the Tests this tour has added more fuel to critics who believe Clarke rarely performs when the team needs it. Australian captains have been tough; Clarke is seen as a bit of a show pony by his critics. This three-match series will give him another opportunity to silence them.In India, there is no such debate. There are those who put MS Dhoni’s success down to luck but they haven’t reached a critical mass. And even they can’t put forward an alternative name for captain. Former India batsman Sanjay Manjrekar put it thus: “Dhoni is a guy who does things that are supposed to be done and leaves the rest to fate. He doesn’t try to control everything. That is his greatest strength.”The series will be a contest between two men – one itching to prove that he is the man for the future, and one whose future in the pantheon of successful Indian captains is already secure. If only the weather allows them. Australia haven’t been able to practice in Kochi, the venue of the first ODI. Their players, during this time, have been tweeting about spending their time in the gym and wishing the rain would stop.

Form guide

(most recent first)
India LWLWL
Australia WWLLL

Watch out for…

Just when Callum Ferguson was establishing himself in the ODI line-up and looking ahead to securing a place in the Tests, he twisted his knee in the Champions Trophy final and had to sit out for a while. The Champions League, the Twenty20 tournament in South Africa, was his comeback and he starred with two half-centuries, finishing fifth on the tournament run tally. The best thing going for him is that there seems to be almost no one in Australia who doesn’t rate him highly. This ODI series should help him kick-start his ambitions and others’ hopes.R Ashwin’s time has surely come. A stable head, calm temperament and rapidly developing skill-set puts him right up there in the reckoning for a spot in the playing XI. The all-round development has been visible: He developed a carrom ball and has now honed it to perfection, he uses the crease more intelligently and has already developed a reputation of bowling in the Powerplays. His development hasn’t gone unnoticed. “He is used to bowling in the Powerplays. He is an aggressive bowler, he has the variety and he is always ready to bowl whenever you throw the ball to him,” Dhoni said at the end of the Champions League. “He wants to perform; he has grown as a player over the last three IPLs.”

Team news

Shikhar Dhawan, the only surprise call-up in the Indian squad for the series, is likely to make his ODI debut.India (probable): 1 M Vijay, 2 Shikhar Dhawan, 3 Suresh Raina, 4 Yuvraj Singh, 5 Virat Kohli/Rohit Sharma, 6 MS Dhoni (capt and wk), 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 R Ashwin, 9 Praveen Kumar, 10 Ashish Nehra, 11 Munaf Patel.Doug Bollinger is the senior-most fast bowler in the squad but is yet to fully recover from the abdominal strain that ruled him out of the Bangalore Test. He hasn’t bowled since picking up the injury and it remains to be seen whether he will be fit for Sunday’s match. Fast bowler Mitchell Starc could make his debut in case Bollinger misses out.Australia (probable) 1 David Warner, 2 Tim Paine (wk), 3 Michael Clarke (capt), 4 Shaun Marsh/Callum Ferguson, 5 Michael Hussey, 6 Cameron White, 7 Steve Smith, 8 James Hopes, 9 Nathan Hauritz, 10 Clint McKay, 11 Doug Bollinger/Mitchell Starc.

Pitch and conditions

The unrelenting rain has put the first ODI under threat. We have to wait and watch whether it will clear up in time to allow some play. The consistent rain has affected the pitch preparations and it will be interesting to see how it plays.

Stats and trivia

  • India have a poor record of chasing against Australia: They have lost 34 games and won only 17 while batting second against them.
  • MS Dhoni has 225 ODI dismissals as a wicketkeeper and stands sixth in the all-time list. He needs nine more dismissals to go past Ian Healy.
  • Clarke averages 43.03 in ODIs but it dips against India: he averages 37.83 and has scored one hundred from 25 games against India. He averages 33.88 against the Indians in Australia while it jumps marginally to 38.57 in Indian conditions.

    Quotes

    “Boys are just looking at some video footage of the Indian players.”

    “We need this rain to stop asap … I am very frustrated.”

Sehwag backs Indian youngsters

India’s misfiring young batsmen are getting plenty of support from their seniors. Two days after captain MS Dhoni said he was not too concerned about the batting collapses in the Dambulla tri-series, Virender Sehwag has also backed his less-experienced team-mates to deliver.The quartet of Suresh Raina, Dinesh Karthik, Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli have managed just 94 runs between them through the tournament. But India are still in the final, on the back of two solo efforts from Sehwag which led to two victories.”When I was a youngster, it took me almost 50 to 70 innings to perform consistently, so we have to give more time to youngsters,” Sehwag said. “We are not worried about them too much because in Dambulla, everybody’s not scoring. We have to live with that and give youngsters some confidence and tell them to go out and spend some time at the wicket.”India’s batsmen have kept the opposition wicketkeepers and slip fielders busy, giving up nearly half their wickets to catches in that area. Dhoni had called for his batsmen to be more decisive with their stroke-selection, particularly to balls outside off. However, on Wednesday two of India’s top-order batsmen, Karthik and Kohli, fell wafting at precisely such deliveries.”It’s very easy to say that you should leave the ball or hit it according to its merit but it’s very difficult to react according to the merit of the ball,” Sehwag said. “When we were young, it would have been confusing whether to hit or leave. It used to be tempting to hit and we used to get out in that confusion. It’s important to either leave or play the balls outside off rather than defending them.”Sehwag, the only batsman from any of the three sides to come to terms with the seam and swing in Dambulla, advised caution in the early stages of the innings. India’s scores after 15 overs in their league matches were 54 for 5, 47 for 3, 56 for 3 and 81 for 4.”If you see off the first 10-15 overs, it becomes easier to bat. But those first few overs are difficult to survive,” he said. “If you see off the new ball [even] without scoring much in the first 15 overs, it helps the team a lot.”Saturday’s final could well be the last chance for the likes of Kohli and Rohit to press for a permanent place in the side, as senior batsmen including Sachin Tendulkar and Gautam Gambhir could return to the one-day team for the home series against Australia in October.

Afghanistan ready to tour Pakistan – Khaliq Dad

Afghanistan seamer Khaliq Dad has lent his support to Pakistan, saying his team was ready to travel to the terror-hit country though other international sides were reluctant to do so.Dad, who led Afghanistan’s youth team to victory in a club-level tournament in Karachi, said, “It is always fantastic to play in Pakistan and I sincerely hope that international cricket returns to this cricket-loving country.”Pakistan has been a no-go zone for international teams since a terrorist attack on the Sri Lankan team bus in Lahore last year. Following the attack, the ICC stripped Pakistan of its matches in the 2011 World Cup and forced them to play what would have been their home series in UAE, New Zealand and England.Dad also endorsed the growing interest for the game in Afghanistan, following the national side’s rise through the ranks from the lower divisions of the World Cricket League to playing in the 2010 World Twenty20. “You saw the talent in the team and this is because cricket is now a craze in Afghanistan. From south to west, we have more and more interest in the game and more academies have opened and more companies are coming into the game.”It may sound incredible, but I tell you girls are taking a big interest in cricket and, although the society restrictions mean women’s cricket will take some time, interest is huge,” he said.

Pushed to the margins, Prior takes centre stage

This has been a week in which Test cricket’s merits have been shown in vastly contrasting lights. On the one hand a shocking contest has dribbled to a conclusion in Colombo, with 17 wickets falling in five days at the SSC, including 10 batsmen passing fifty – five of them for a hundred, two of them for a double. At Trent Bridge, on the other hand, consecutive days have passed in which 15 and 13 wickets have tumbled, and all told, 18 batsmen to date have been dismissed in single figures.There’s no question whatsoever which of the two contests has been the most compelling, not even at a stage of the Trent Bridge game when only one team has the slightest hope of victory. At 15 for 3 overnight, Ladbrokes are offering odds of 2-1 for England to wrap up victory before lunch on the fourth day, but even if they do so, the effort that Matt Prior put into today’s magnificent unbeaten century will not be compromised by the eventual gulf between the sides.Prior has had a rough time of it of late. Through no great fault of his own, he’s been pushed to the margins of England’s wider squad planning, with Craig Kieswetter’s emergence leaving him in limbo in the limited-overs set-up. No-one in their right mind has seriously pedalled the notion that his Test berth is in the same sort of jeopardy, and yet, such is the nature of the England wicketkeeping position, the doubts require almost daily dispersal.Therefore, a superbly combative 102 not out, forged from a position of peril at 72 for 5, was quite some statement of intent. It was Prior’s third hundred in 32 Tests, and his first since Trinidad in March 2009, but by the close of play, his satisfaction derived from the manner in which he’d transformed his team’s position, rather than the fact he’d logged another statistic in his record-book.”I’m not a huge stats watcher, or a stat man,” he said. “I got a 93 in my last Test [against Bangladesh at Old Trafford], so it doesn’t feel that long ago that I contributed to the team. Whether it was important to show what I could do, I don’t know, but I went in in a position when the team needed me to get stuck in, and getting runs for the team was the important bit.”In fact, a century could hardly have been further from Prior’s thoughts for much of his innings, which began in the midst of yet another of Pakistan’s inspired bursts with the ball, as Umar Gul swiped three wickets in four overs to leave his team dreaming of an attainable run-chase. His most immediate concern was to atone for his part in the run-out of Eoin Morgan, and by the time he was joined by the No. 11, Steven Finn, he had a long, long way still to travel, on 63 not out.”I don’t know what happened there,” he said of the Morgan mix-up. “At that time, too many risky runs and singles wasn’t the best idea, so it was a bit of miscommunication really. I didn’t hear him say yes, he didn’t hear me say no, and we ended up looking at each other, with him halfway down the wicket and me thinking: ‘Oh my gosh, it’s happened again’. It is very disappointing to be involved in a run-out at any stage, especially when it involves arguably your best player of the moment, so I thought I’d best knuckle down here!”Knuckle down he did, with Finn proving to be the most obdurate of allies. While his stonewalling prowess came as a surprise and a delight to a packed Trent Bridge crowd who cheered every step towards England’s eventual declaration, Prior himself had no doubt whatsoever about Finn’s ability, having witnessed it at close quarters during a rare Championship appearance for Sussex against Middlesex at Uxbridge last week. With Morgan at the other end, Finn had blocked out 35 dot-balls in a 12-over partnership, to save the game with only two wickets standing.”It was thoroughly annoying,” Prior recalled. “But as he walked to the wicket today, I said something along the lines of ‘Same again today please mate!’ He did such a fantastic job, not only in the way he played, but what he contributed to the partnership in between overs, in terms of gameplans and all those things. He did all that was expected of him, and more.”Regardless of his faith in his team-mate, Prior still had to endure some nervy moments at the non-striker’s end, as he crept through the nineties – single by single – with many of his shots coming from the first ball of an over. “My gameplan was to look for twos and fours, but every run counted, I felt, especially when Finny came up to me to say he felt confident at holding up an end. It got a bit frustrating at the end because I wasn’t quite hitting the gaps, but I didn’t want to turn singles down.”That failure to work the angles is the precise reason why Prior’s spot in the one-day side has been passed across to Kieswetter, who may lack the subtlety of, say, Morgan, but tends to find the boundaries with a lot of bottom hand. In terms of pure batsmanship, however, there’s no comparison between the two men whatsoever. Kieswetter has time on his side and a talent to cultivate, but as a battler who can be backed to produce on demand, Prior’s place for the Ashes is utterly non-negotiable.”I’ve batted at six with success, and I’ve batted at seven, and I feel well placed to do the role in each, as long as we have the right balanced team to win the Test match,” he said. “International cricket is all about pressure and how you respond to it. I’ve not played a day for England as a batsman-keeper that’s not been under pressure, but I enjoy and thrive on it, and I embrace it rather than get nervous about it.”

Pakistan close in on rare Aussie victory

Close
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsSteven Smith produced a wonderful counterattacking half-century to revive Australia, before Pakistan’s batsmen restored order to the proceedings•Getty Images

Pakistan’s quest for their first Test victory over Australia since November 1995 was firmly on track by the close of an engrossing third day of the second Test at Headingley, thanks to a 110-run stand for the second wicket between Imran Farhat and Azhar Ali that soothed the nation’s brow after another day of seismic fluctuations, during which Australia’s never-say-die spirit shone through at the moments when their fortunes with both bat and ball were at an absolute nadir.After tasting defeat in each of their last 13 Tests against Australia, including the recent debacle at Sydney in which a first-innings lead of 206 proved insufficient to secure victory, Pakistan were often battling themselves as much as the 11 men in baggy greens, and it showed. First came the swishing blade of Steven Smith, whose brilliant 77 hoisted Australia’s lead from 47 with four wickets standing to a defendable 180. Then came the bustling Doug Bollinger, who claimed two wickets in two overs – including the top-scorer Farhat for 67 – to inject new urgency into the day’s closing overs.Such was the anxiety in Pakistan’s ranks that, when the umpires called time on the dot of 6.30pm, it was Australia’s captain, Ricky Ponting, who remained in the middle, hoping to be allowed to utilise the extra half-hour. It was as if he felt more confident of claiming seven wickets in that time than Pakistan’s not-out batsmen, Azhar and Umar Akmal, did of knocking off the remaining 40 runs for victory.Surely, not even Pakistan can find a way to lose from here, however, because in between their jitters, they produced enough moments of class to leave Australia’s own frailties brutally exposed. First came the precocious Mohammad Aamer, whose devastating pace and late swing accounted for three wickets in the first hour, including the overnight stalwart Ponting for 66. Then later came Farhat and Azhar, who accumulated with great discipline, and waited for Australia’s bowlers to feed them their runs. Shane Watson, so devastating on the second day, repeatedly drifted onto Farhat’s pads, while Mitchell Johnson’s sorry campaign continued with nine wicketless overs for 39.Farhat did require a large slice of luck in his innings, however, when Watson dropped a regulation edge at first slip off Bollinger when he had made just 4. It was a costly moment so early in an uncomfortable run-chase, and though Ben Hilfenhaus soon accounted for Farhat’s captain and opening partner, Salman Butt for 14, courtesy of a thick edge to second slip, too few of Australia’s frontline seamers were able to locate the right lengths for the conditions. Bollinger got it right in the end, but by then, the match was surely beyond them.The disappointment of impending defeat will not detract, however, from a remarkable coming-of-age from Australia’s 21-year-old legspinning allrounder, Smith, who seized centre stage during the afternoon session with an onslaught of breathtaking audacity. While he was teeing off en route to a career-best 77 from 100 balls, the shift in belief from one dressing room to the other was as palpable as it had been on this very ground back in 1981, when Australia had themselves been on the receiving end of a memorably uncompromising onslaught from a bullish young allrounder.While Smith has some way to go to match the feats of Ian Botham, the fearlessness and certainty of his strokeplay was straight out of the Beefster’s top drawer, as he cracked nine fours and consecutive straight sixes, each one in the arc from extra cover to midwicket. It was not mindless slogging, however – far from it. Australia’s situation when Smith came to the crease was too delicate for out-and-out recklessness, after Aamer’s morning breakthroughs and the devastating post-lunch extraction of Michael Clarke for 76 had reduced them to 217 for 6, a lead of 47.But with the horrors of Sydney still fresh in Pakistan’s memory banks, Smith joined forces with another Test tyro, Tim Paine, to begin the long haul towards a defendable total. Paine, who had top-scored with 17 during the first-day rout, cracked Aamer through the covers twice in two overs as Pakistan dallied with semi-defensive fields in anticipation of the second new ball, while Smith telegraphed his own bubbly confidence by advancing down the track to Danish Kaneria in defence as much as attack, before finally slotting him over long-off for an agenda-setting boundary.With the lead at 76, Paine’s purposeful stay ended in flaccid circumstances, as Kaneria tossed up a rank long-hop that nevertheless turned and bounced upon pitching, for Azhar Ali to collect a toe-ended cut in the covers. Smith’s response, however, belied his 21 years and one-Test experience, as he chose his shots with the expertise of a veteran, using the hardness of the new ball to gain full value for each of his full-blooded mows through the covers and midwicket.At the other end, Johnson escaped a king pair to help add 37 priceless runs for the eighth wicket, before Asif nailed him lbw on the line of leg stump, while Hilfenhaus built on his Test-best 56 not out at Lord’s to crack 17 from 16, including three fours in a single over from an over-reaching Aamer.But it was the arrival of the No. 11 Bollinger that really showcased Smith’s cricketing brain, as he farmed the strike with calm confidence to limit his colleague to nine runless deliveries in 5.4 overs, while at the same time carving 29 priceless runs from 25. Pakistan were visibly twitchy as tea was delayed to accommodate his mood-changing performance, and Umar Gul’s clear reaction was one of relief when Smith finally dragged a slower ball onto his off stump with the score on 349.Pakistan’s confidence is fickle at the best of times, but they had been flushed with belief in the first hour of the day, after Aamer had produced another precocious spell of fast and aggressive swing bowling to nip Australia’s second-innings revival in the bud. Overnight the Aussies had been trailing by 34 runs overnight with Clarke and Ponting well set in their third-wicket stand of 81. But it took just 16 deliveries for the vital breakthrough to be made, as Ponting slashed ambitiously at a booming outswinger from Aamer, and snicked a thin edge through to the keeper.Buoyed by the early wicket, Aamer surged onto the offensive and added his second only two overs later, as Hussey was deceived by a cutter that gripped the turf, leapt at his gloves and ballooned tantalisingly to Umar Akmal at second slip. And he made it three in four overs when Marcus North (0) poked flat-footedly from deep in the crease to detonate his own leg stump with a fat inside-edge.Clarke eventually brought Australia into credit in the same over that he brought up his half-century from 99 deliveries, and by lunch he had produced the most composed innings of the match to date to move to 76 not out, only for Asif to strike with his first ball after the break, a perfectly subtle outswinger that grazed the edge through to the keeper. It was a timely reminder of the gulf in class between the two sets of seamers on display in this game. And that, in the final analysis, will surely be the difference between these teams.

Onions 'hurting' as Ashes hopes fade

Six months ago Graham Onions was pencilled into England’s Ashes squad, but his hopes of taking on Australia in November are now hanging by a thread after the toughest time of his career which began with him being dropped before he developed knee and back injuries.Onions’ last act in an England shirt was to heroically survive the final over from Morne Morkel at Cape Town to secure the team a last-gasp draw for the second time in three Tests after he had fended off Makhaya Nitni at Centurion just over two weeks before. However, just days after his Newlands rearguard he was surprisingly omitted at Johannesburg and since then his year has gone from bad to worse.He arrived in Bangladesh with what started as a minor back problem but was later diagnosed as a stress reaction that could have developed into a fully blown stress fracture. Although that worst case scenario hasn’t occurred Onions, who also had surgery on his knee problem, hasn’t played this season and is unlikely to take the field before September, which leaves him precious little time to secure a berth to Australia amongst a crowded England pace attack.”The last few months have been massively frustrating,” he told Cricinfo. “When you’ve had a place in the team for a while and you lose it it’s hugely disappointing and hurts a lot. Before the injury everything had been like a dream for me, all I ever wanted to do was play for England, but the last six months have been tough. Now it’s about me channelling that frustration.”The rehabilitation is going well, but I can’t give you a definite answer of when I’ll be back,” he added. “I had a bit of a rest when I came back from Bangladesh, but probably tried to come back a little too early. It’s just a case of doing all I can and there are three our four Championship matches in September which I am aiming for. Fingers crossed by mid-August I will be bowling pain free.”In Onions’ absence England’s pace ranks have been swelled by the emergence of Steven Finn, Tim Bresnan and Ajmal Shahzad. Finn is a certainty for the Ashes after his impressive start to Test cricket, while both Bresnan and Shahzad have a good chance of travelling along with the established pair of Stuart Broad and James Anderson.There could be one more fast-bowling slot on the plane, but this England management team are unlikely to take a risk on anyone who has had a recent serious injury and Onions knows he faces a race against time.”It’s out my hands,” he said. “If I can play in September that’s as good as I can aim for at the moment. Then if I get wickets it’s up to the selectors to decide. That’s all I can ask for, and ask of myself. If I’m not fit I won’t be selected and that’s fair enough, but if I can take a few wickets I can give myself a chance.”But although it has hurt for Onions to watch others enjoy success for England, he has been very impressed with the recent performances of the bowling until. “It hasn’t just been Steven Finn, Shahzad has started well and Bresnan, who is a good friend, has done really well.”Now those three need to stay injury-free and keep winning games,” he added with a hint of ruefulness. “They are all producing the goods and the England team is a great place to be at the moment.”Sadly for Onions, he isn’t part of it at the moment and it could be a while before he finds his way back. Graham Onions officially marked the start of the npower Urban Cricket World Record Attempt in Nottingham, where 2010 children participated in a mass game of cricket to set a New World Record

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