Clint McKay joins Yorkshire for Twenty20s

Clint McKay, the Australia and Victoria fast bowler, has been signed up by Yorkshire for this season’s Twenty20 competition in England

Cricinfo staff21-May-2010Clint McKay, the Australia and Victoria fast bowler, has been signed up by Yorkshire for this season’s Twenty20 competition in England. He is Yorkshire’s second overseas signing for the tournament, after Herschelle Gibbs.”I am really excited about coming to Yorkshire and playing in a young side that has enjoyed such a positive start to the season,” McKay said. “I’ve heard a lot about the setup at Headingley Carnegie and I’m really looking forward to experiencing the atmosphere of Twenty20 cricket in the UK. I cannot wait to get started.”McKay was part of Victoria’s Sheffield Shield winning team last season, taking 33 wickets at 21.42. He’s played ten ODIs for Australia, taking 22 wickets at an impressive average of 18.31 and has also represented them in a Test, against West Indies in Perth last year.

Galle Test to be Muralitharan's last

Muttiah Muralitharan, the leading wicket-taker in Tests and ODIs, will retire from Test cricket after the first Test against India in Galle

Cricinfo staff06-Jul-2010Muttiah Muralitharan, the leading wicket-taker in Tests and ODIs, will retire from Test cricket after the first Test against India in Galle, which begins on July 18. While he will not play the subsequent tri-series, and will pick and choose which ODIs to play in, Murali will be available for selection if the team needs him for the 2011 World Cup, which Sri Lanka is co-hosting.Cricinfo has learnt that Murali met Aravinda de Silva, the chairman of selectors, and captain Kumar Sangakkara over the weekend to discuss his future. He was asked to consider playing the full series against India, but he was unsure about being at his best if bowled heavily throughout the series.”Murali has been thinking for some time about the right time to go,” a source close to the offspinner told Cricinfo. “All along he has been determined to go while he is still performing rather than just hanging on. He made the decision last week after the Asia Cup and met with the selectors and captain over the weekend to explain to them his position. He is really keen to play on to the World Cup but at the same time he does not want to stand in the way of younger talent. So he will see how things go over the next few months.”Kushil Gunasekara, Murali’s manager, said the unscheduled Test series against India had made Murali fast track his decision to retire. “The selectors want Murali to be around just in case they don’t find a suitable replacement for him for the 2011 World Cup,” he said. “They probably want the spinners to work around Murali.”Murali also considered a stint in county cricket, playing for Surrey, but that is unlikely because Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) doesn’t want him to play too much cricket before the World Cup. Cricinfo also learnt that the selectors and management have privately communicated their desire for him to play on until the World Cup, counting on his experience in the big tournament.About a year ago, Murali had announced he would retire after the home series against West Indies late this year, but in last November he said he could advance the Test retirement. “I am 37 years old and I can’t bowl as much as those days because I get tired after 15-16 overs,” he had told Cricinfo then. “But I will try and play a little bit of one-day cricket – that’s only 10 overs to bowl. If I find everything is not going well I might retire from both forms of the game before the World Cup.”Murali has taken 792 wickets in 132 Tests and 515 wickets in 337 ODIs. Galle will be an interesting shot at retiring with 800 Test wickets.

Pushed to the margins, Prior takes centre stage

Matt Prior has had a rough time of it of late, so his superb, fighting 102 not out was quite a statement of intent

Andrew Miller at Trent Bridge31-Jul-2010This 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.”

Age does not worry Katich and Co

Simon Katich turns 35 on Saturday but believes age will not be a factor as long as he continues to play well

Cricinfo staff19-Aug-2010Simon Katich turns 35 on Saturday but believes age will not be a factor as long as he continues to play well. Katich has been Australia’s most consistent batsman over the past year, but he, Ricky Ponting and Michael Hussey will all be in the old-age category for the India and Ashes series.”There’s a fair bit being made of that and you can’t hide from the fact that there are going to be three of us over 35 in the top four or five,” Katich told the Australian. “From my point of view I know I’m older but at the same time I’m as hungry as I’ve ever been. I’m enjoying playing cricket again and my attitude has been the same for the last two or three years.”Katich, who came back to the team in 2008, said he didn’t look too far ahead. “But at the same time I’m not going to think ,’just because I’m 35 it’s over’, because the last three years of my career have been the best,” he said. “As soon as you start assuming things because of your age you start worrying about the wrong things.”Since his recall in the West Indies, Katich has scored 2721 runs at 54.42, with eight centuries, in 29 Tests. In the nine matches before the Leeds game against Pakistan, he posted at least 50.He has two Tests against India to prepare for the Ashes, the main event of the Australian summer. “I’m confident with us playing in Australia, we know our conditions well and we’re looking forward to playing at home,” he said. “Hopefully that will hold us in good stead, but anything can happen.”Doug Bollinger is another player who has performed well in the Test side, taking 42 wickets in his past nine appearances, and he has supported Ricky Ponting’s push for a 5-0 Ashes victory. ”That is the benchmark we can set ourselves and if we can achieve that it would be brilliant,” he said in the Sydney Morning Herald. “Winning 5-0, especially at home, you wouldn’t see me for a couple of weeks, that would be awesome.”After becoming a regular in the team, Bollinger said he felt like part of the squad, although he struggled in the series against Pakistan. ”During the England tour, I was thinking one too many things, certain things crept into my game that shouldn’t have,” he said. ”I probably wasn’t getting as many wickets as I wanted, but that’s what happens in sport.”

Impossible to clean cricket completely – Hayden

Matthew Hayden, the former Australian opening batsman, has said it is practically impossible to completely eradicate corruption from cricket.

Cricinfo staff07-Sep-2010Matthew Hayden, the former Australian opener, has said it is practically impossible to completely eradicate corruption from the game of cricket.”The investment the game places in protection strategies to mitigate against corruption is minuscule compared to the vast geographic areas the game is played in and the level of illegal gambling activity,” Hayden told the . “It really is a runaway train.”Hayden said the only the way to counter the threat of gambling was for every individual player and administrator to decide to personally uphold the integrity of the game. “We play a great game, and as players we are honoured to uphold its integrity as a product.”Former Pakistan wicketkeeper Rashid Latif, who testified against some of his team-mates before Justice Qayyum’s commission, said the ICC’s Anti-Corruption and Security Unit (ACSU) was a toothless body that could not be counted upon to uncover fraud within the game. “The ACSU does not have the right to conduct raids or arrest people, what they only do is to ask players to avoid suspicious people.”The ACSU was formed in 2000 in the wake of the match-fixing scandal that ended former South African captain Hansi Cronje’s career. Its main purpose was to help ensure there would be no repeat of the Cronje case but Latif says it has largely failed in this regard.”These ex-policemen [ACSU officials] may have been very good in their field, but cricket is a different ball game altogether and only a cricketer can see an irregularity during a match.”

BCCI's Working Committee List for 2010-11

The BCCI’s various working committees and their members as decided during the annual general meeting

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Sep-201081st ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING OF BCCI
COMPOSITION OF WORKING COMMITTEE FOR 2010-11

1. SHASHANK MANOHAR PRESIDENT2. N SRINIVASAN HONORARY SECRETARY, PRESIDENT ELECT3. SANJAY JAGDALE HONORARY JOINT SECRETARY4. M P PANDOVE HONORARY TREASURER5. ARUN JAITLEY VICE PRESIDENT (NORTH)6 SHIVLAL YADAV VICE PRESIDENT (SOUTH)7. ARINDAM GANGULY VICE PRESIDENT (EAST)8. NIRANJAN SHAH VICE PRESIDENT (WEST)9. RAJEEV SHUKLA VICE PRESIDENT (CENTRAL)10. DELHI & DISTRICT CRICKET ASSOCIATION, 11. TAMIL NADU CRICKET ASSOCIATION, 12. CRICKET ASSOCIATION OF BENGAL, 13. MUMBAI CRICKET ASSOCIATION,14. UTTAR PRADESH CRICKET ASSOCIATION (All Permanent Test Centres)
15. JAMMU &KASHMIR CRICKET ASSOCIATION (NORTH)
16. GOA CRICKET ASSOCIATION (SOUTH)
17. ORISSA CRICKET ASSOCIATION (EAST )
18. BARODA CRICKET ASSOCIATION (WEST )
19. RAILWAY SPORTS PROMOTION BOARD (CENTRAL)
20.. KARNATAKA STATE CRICKET ASSOCIATION, 21.. PUNJAB CRICKET ASSOCIATION, 22.. GUJARAT CRICKET ASSOCIATION, 23.. VIDARBHA CRICKET ASSOCIATION (All Staged Test Matches)
SENIOR TOURNAMENT COMMITTEE
1. MR.SHIVLAL YADAV CHAIRMAN/VICE PRESIDENT2. HARYANA CRICKET ASSOCIATION3. TAMIL NADU CRICKET ASSOCIATION4. ORISSA CRICKET ASSOCIATION5. BARODA CRICKET ASSOCIATION6. U P CRICKET ASSOCIATION7. MR. N SRINIVASAN HON. SECRETARY/CONVENORTECHNICAL COMMITTEE
1. MR.SUNIL GAVASKAR CHAIRMAN2. PREM THAKUR (NORTH)3. P R ASHOK ANAND (SOUTH)4. GOUTAM DASGUPTA (EAST )5 MADHAV RANADE (WEST )6 VIJAY NAIDU (CENTRAL)7 K SRIKKANTH (CHAIRMAN SENIOR SELECTION COMM)8. SOURAV GANGULY (FORMER TEST CRICKETER)9. V K RAMASWAMY (FORMER TEST UMPIRE)10. N SRINIVASAN HON. SECRETARY/CONVENORTOUR, PROGRAMME & FIXTURE COMMITTEE
1 ARUN JAITLEY CHAIRMAN2.. MD. ASLAM GONI (NORTH)3.. VINOD PHADKE (SOUTH)4.. BIKAS BARUAH (EAST)5 PARIMAL NATWANI (WEST )6.. PRAKASH DIXIT (CENTRAL)7 N SRINIVASAN HON. SECRETARY/CONVENORFINANCE COMMITTEE
1 JYOTIRADITYA M SCINDIA CHAIRMAN2.. ANURAG THAKUR (NORTH)3.. E VENKATRAM REDDY (SOUTH)4.. AMITABH CHOUDHARY (EAST)5.. SANJAY PATEL (WEST )6 SANJAY DIXIT (CENTRAL)7 M.P. PANDOVE HON. TREASURER/CONVENORJUNIOR CRICKET COMMITTEE
1. RAJEEV SHUKLA CHAIRMAN2. CAPTAIN (IN) U K THAPA – NORTH3. T R BALAKRISHNAN – SOUTH4. RAJIV SINGH – EAST5. DHIRAJ JOGANI – WEST6. ASHOK KUMAT – CENTRAL7. SANJAY JAGDALE – HON. JT. SECRETARY/CONVENORUMPIRES SUB-COMMITTEE
1. NIRANJAN SHAH – CHAIRMAN2.. ANIRUDH CHAUDHARY – (NORTH)3.. MONCHO FERRA – (SOUTH)4.. BISWARUP DEY – (EAST)5.. HEMANT WAINGANKAR – (WEST )6 SHUAIB AHMED – (CENTRAL)7.. S VENKATARAGHAVAN – DIRECTOR8. A V JAYAPRAKASH – RETD. TEST UMPIRE9.. SANJAY JAGDALE – HON. JT. SECRETARY/CONVENORVIZZY TROPHY COMMITTEE
1. ARINDAM GANGULY – CHAIRMAN / VICE PRESIDENT2.. APPAL RAJU – SOUTH3.. BABUL HORE – EAST4.. GURDEEP SINGH – (A.I.U.)5.. PROF. BEENA SHAH – (A.I.U.) / JOINT CONVENOR6.. SANJAY JAGDALE – HON. JT. SECRETARY/JOINT CONVENORWOMEN’S COMMITTEE
1 SHASHANK MANOHAR – CHAIRMAN2 SHASHI GUPTA – NORTH3 VIDYA YADAV – SOUTH4 ANURADHA MISRA – EAST5 SANGITA DABIR – CENTRAL6 SHUBHANGI KULKARNI – WEST7. N SRINIVASAN – HON.SECRETARY/CONVENORALL INDIA SENIOR SELECTION COMMITTEE
1 K SRIKKANTH – SOUTH -CHAIRMAN2. YASHPAL SHARMA – NORTH3 C R VENKATRAMAN – EAST4 SURENDRA BHAVE – WEST5 NARENDRA HIRWANI – CENTRAL6 N SRINIVASAN – HON. SECRETARY / CONVENORALL INDIA JUNIOR SELECTION COMMITTEE
1 ABEY KURUVILLA – WEST -CHAIRMAN2 ARUN SHARMA – NORTH3 VENKA PRATAP – SOUTH4 RAJIB DEBBARMAN – EAST5 PREETAM GANDHE – CENTRAL6 SANJAY JAGDALE – HON. JT. SECRETARY / CONVENORALL INDIA WOMEN’S SELECTION COMMITTEE
1 VRINDA BHAGAT – WEST -CHAIRPERSON2. RESHMA GANDHI – NORTH3. SAVITHA NIRALA – SOUTH4 GARGI BANERJEE – EAST5 REETA DEY – CENTRAL6. N SRINIVASAN – HON. SECRETARY / CONVENORIPL GOVERNING COUNCIL COMMITTEE
CHIRAYU AMIN – CHAIRMANRAJEEV SHUKLA – UPCAARUN JAITLEY – DDCAANURAG THAKUR – HIMACHALRANJIB BISWAL – ORISSAAJAY SHIRKE – MAHARASTRATWO CRICKETERS – TO BE NOMINATED BY PRESIDENTALL OFFICE BEARERS OF BCCISPECIAL COMMITTEES DURING THE YEAR – 2010-11
LEGAL COMMITTEE
SHASHANK MANOHAR – CHAIRMANARUN JAITLEY – DDCANILLAY DUTTA – ASSAMANIRUDH CHAUDHARY – HARYANAD V SUBBARAO – ANDHRAPRATAP SATPATI – ORISSANATIONAL CRICKET ACADEMY BOARD
ANIL KUMBLE – CHAIRMANAJAY SHIRKE – VICE CHAIRMAN – MAHARASHTASANDEEP PATIL – DIRECTOR- NCARAKESH PARIKH – MEMBER – BARODASUNIL DEV – MEMBER -DDCAGROUP CAPT. D D DESHPANDE – MEMBER -VCAT C MATHEW – MEMBER -KERALACHIRARAJNA PAUL – MEMBER -TRIPURAALL OFFICE BEARERS OF BCCINCA CONSTRUCTION AND INFRASTRUCTURE COMMITTEE
AJAY SHIRKE – CHAIRMANC R LAXMINARAYAN – KSCAANSARI MIRZA -PRADEEP DESHMUKHSANJAY JAGDALE – HON.JT SECRETARY/ CONVENORCONSTITUTION REVIEW COMMITTEE
SHASHANK MANOHAR – CHAIRMANANIRUDH CHOUDHARY – HARYANAARUN JAITLEY – DDCAPROF. R S SHETTY – CAO -BCCIN SRINIVASAN – HONORARY SECRETARY/CONVENORMUSEUM COMMITTEE
ANIRUDH CHOUDHARY – CHAIRMANP D PATHAK – UTTAR PRADESHSANJIB KUMAR DUTTA – ORISSAANURAG THAKUR – HPCAM PRABHAKAR RAO – ANDHRAM R KRISHNA – KARNATAKAS.P. BANSAL – DDCAS VENKATESWARAN – HYDERABADK P KAJARIA – NCCSALEEM KHAN – JAMMU & KASHMIRPROF. R S SHETTY – CONVENORMEDIA COMMITTEE
RAJEEV SHUKLA – CHAIRMANG S WALIA – NORTH (PUNJAB)R N BABA – SOUTH (TNCA)PABITRA GAGOI – EAST (ASSAM)VINOD DESHPANDE – WEST (MUMBAI)RAJAN NAIR – CENTRAL (VIDARBHA)N SRINIVASAN – HONORARY SECRETARY /CONVENORMARKETING SUB-COMMITTEE
DR. FAROOQ ABHULLAH – CHAIRMANC P JOSHI – RAJASTHANGOUTAM ROY – ASSAMCHIRAYU AMIN – BARODADR. G GANGA RAJU – ANDHRAANIRUDH CHAUDHRY – HARYANADILIP CHUDGAR – MPCASAMARJIT GAIKWAD – BARODAANURAG THAKUR – HPCAS N WADIYAR – KSCAM M MISRA – UPCADAYANAND NARVEKAR – GOAARVIND CHOUDHARY – HARYANAC K KHANNA – DDCAD S CHALAPATHI – HYDERABADCHITRAK MITRA – CABBHARAT SHAH – SAURASHTRAALL OFFICE BEARERS OF BCCIGROUND & PITCHES COMMITTEE
VENKAT SUNDARAM – NORTH -CHAIRMANP R VISHWANATHAN – SOUTHRATUL DAS – EASTSUDHIR NAIK – WESTRAJIV GOKHALE – CENTRALN SRINIVASAN – HONORARY SECRETARY/CONVENORAFFILIATION COMMITTEE
ARUN JAITLEY – CHAIRMANASLAM GONI – JAMMU & KASHMIRSANJAY JAGDALE – HONORARY JT SECRETARYCRICKET DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE
DILIP VENGSARKAR – CHAIRMANCHETAN CHAUHAN – NORTHARSHAD AYUB – SOUTHPRANOB ROY – EASTPRASHANT VAIDHYA – CENTRALN SRINIVASAN – HONORARY SECRETARY/ CONVENOR

Afridi laments poor batting

Shahid Afridi has criticised his batsmen, himself included, following Pakistan’s 0-2 defeat in the Twenty20 series against South Africa in Abu Dhabi

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Oct-2010Shahid Afridi, the Pakistan captain, has criticised his batsmen and himself, following Pakistan’s 0-2 defeat in the Twenty20 series against South Africa in Abu Dhabi. Pakistan only managed 119 and 120 in their two innings, scores that were overhauled with little difficulty by South Africa. Afridi made 25 and 3 while the others, with the exception of Misbah-ul-Haq who is making a comeback in international cricket, struggled.”Our batting was a major let down. None of them did well,” Afridi said after the second game, which South Africa won by six wickets. “My performance was crucial for the team and I also failed to deliver.”But I am sure we can do far better in the ODIs, since I believe that we have players who have good temperament and can play the 50 overs comfortably.”There were encouraging signs in the bowling department, with the spinners proving economical. Mohammad Hafeez and Afridi conceded just 32 runs between them in eight overs in the second game while offspinner Saeed Ajmal conceded 18 in his four-over spell in the first. “Our bowlers really bowled well. The conditions suited the batsmen, but despite that, our bowlers stuck to a good line and bowled brilliantly,” Afridi said.Pakistan cricket, in the aftermath of the spot-fixing controversy, is going through troubled times and Afridi admitted there was pressure on players. “Yes the players are under pressure, but we have to put that aside and concentrate and keep ourselves focused,” he said.Johan Botha, South Africa’s Twenty20 captain, was hoping the team would continue its winning run in the ODI series that begins on Friday. “Pakistan is a very good team and they can bounce back in the ODIs. We will keep the momentum going and ensure that we keep working hard and try to win as many as matches possible.”

Balaji's four gives Tamil Nadu dominant start

A round-up of the first day of the first round of matches in the Super League of the Ranji Trophy

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Nov-2010L Balaji’s 12th first-class four-wicket haul helped Tamil Nadu bowl Assam out for 184 on the opening day at the MA Chidambaram Stadium. Assam began cautiously after TN chose to field on a pitch that had plenty of carry, and the openers had seen off 13.3 overs, adding 24 before debutant seamer Sunil Sam made the first breakthrough. Dheeraj Jadhav, Assam’s top-scorer last season, slashed and edged to the wicketkeeper. Sridharan Sriram, the left-hand batsman who hails from TN, could not make an impact against his old team-mates, and became Balaji’s first victim when he cut to gully. Parvez Aziz played offspinner R Ashwin with confidence and had moved to 36 with six boundaries. He also fought through a stream of bouncers before offering S Badrinath a catch off Balaji’s bowling. Badrinath had to dive low and to his left at second slip to take the chance. When star import Amol Muzumdar departed for a duck, nicking Balaji behind, TN sensed an opportunity to shoot Assam out for a low score. The spinners Aushik Srinivas and R Ashwin nipped three wickets between them, while a couple of run-outs added to Assam’s woes as they stumbled to a score under 200. TN’s openers Abhinav Mukund and Srikkanth Anirudha then batted with determination to take their side to 21 without loss by the close.Wasim Jaffer purred along to his 40th first-class century, while Rohit Sharma missed his ninth by seven runs as Mumbai launched their title defence by scoring 340 for 7 on the opening day at the Bandra Kurla Complex against Saurashtra. On a day that would have left both sides reasonably satisfied, there were several important individual performances that stood out. Dropping himself to No. 3 in the absence of the injured middle-order bulwark Ajinkya Rahane, Jaffer carried on his penchant for plundering domestic hundreds, after Jayesh Odedra’s double-strike. At the other end, with the selectors’ eye on his fitness and temperament, Rohit launched himself into the Saurashtra attack with typical elegance. His 93 came off 86 balls, with 14 fours and two sixes, leading Mumbai to 252 for 2 and in sight of a towering score. Then came the third most significant performance of the day, from another India hopeful. Ravindra Jadeja has had his place in the Indian questioned by all and sundry, and he responded with an incisive spell with the game threatening to run away. He dismissed Sharma, Abhishek Nayar and Ramesh Powar, leading Saurashtra’s resurgence in the evening session and left them with an opportunity to finish Mumbai’s innings early on the second day.For more on this match, click here.Opener Arindam Das’ seventh first-class century was the highlight of the opening day at the Feroz Shah Kotla as Bengal posted a dominant 313 for 2 against a Delhi attack that struggled for incisiveness. Ten months after the abandonment of an ODI due to an underprepared pitch, the Kotla track was at its benign best as Das settled down for a big innings, in Shreevats Goswami’s company. The pair raised 133 in 37.2 overs, giving the hosts a taste of what was to come before Goswami fell for 68, the first of Mithun Manhas’ two wickets. Abhishek Chowdhury was more cautious, but it did not affect Bengal’s speed of scoring as Das shifted gears upwards. Manoj Tiwary who came in at Chowdhury’s exit kept the momentum going with an unbeaten 47 off 80 balls. At the other end, Das, kicked on after reaching his ton and finished the day unbeaten on 150. His knock included 19 fours, and he looked good for more when stumps were drawn.For more on this match, click here.Yuvraj Singh managed a half-century but, like the rest of his top-order mates, was guilty of throwing away a start, as Uttar Pradesh held Punjab to 279 for 6 on the opening day at the Bhamashah Stadium in Meerut. Sarul Kanwar began in aggressive fashion after Punjab chose to bat, striking eight fours in his run-a-ball 42. However, after an opening stand worth 56, Praveen Kumar removed Kanwar and Ravi Inder Singh off successive overs, exposing Punjab’s middle order. Uday Kaul rebuilt in Yuvraj’s company, the pair raising 61 for the third wicket before a mini-collapse reduced Punjab to 143 for 5. Karan Goel rose to the occasion, and along with Vishwas Bhalla, lifted his side to respectability with a 72-run alliance. Piyush Chawla prised out Bhalla, but Harmeet Singh counterattacked with four fours and a six in his 29, taking Punjab to stumps along with Goel, who was unbeaten on 56.Gujarat‘s top order gave a good account of themselves without managing to dominate the Railways attack, leaving both sides on par at stumps on an attritional opening day at the Karnail Singh Stadium. Every Gujarat batsman got a start in a score of 234 for 4, but only one managed to reach fifty, while most bowlers gained respect without making enough entries in the wickets column. Jay Desai and Priyank Kirit Panchal ground out an opening stand of 58 in 28 overs before exiting on the same score. Niraj Patel and Parthiv Patel showed more urgency in a stand of 74, but both failed to kick on, as Gujarat found themselves unable to reap the rewards of solidity. That partnership, however, eased the pressure on the remaining batsmen. Bhavik Thaker, coming in at No. 5, did better than the top four, ensuring he crossed his half-century and remained unbeaten at stumps. His innings included two fours and a six off consecutive deliveries from Faiz Fazal. Debutant Pratharesh Parmar held up the other end with an undefeated 28 and the pair will want to push ahead on the second day. Parthiv praised his batsmen for their effort. “The wicket was green and two-paced,” he told the . “So, it was a challenge to play the first 30 overs and we did it.”Opening bowler Basanth Mohanty completed his sixth first-class five-wicket haul as Orissa bullied Baroda, reducing them to 99 for 9 on a curtailed day at the Barabati Stadium. After overnight rains delayed the start by half an hour, Orissa captain Shiv Sundar Das had no hesitation in bowling after winning the toss in damp, seamer-friendly conditions. Baroda’s batsmen, star players Yusuf Pathan and Ambati Rayudu included, had no answers against Basanth in an innings where only three batsmen managed to enter double-figures. Things could have been far worse for Baroda if not for Rakesh Solanki’s unbeaten 44. Debasis Mohanty, Alok Chandra Sahoo and Dhiraj Singh complemented Basanth’s efforts with a wicket apiece as Baroda derailed in shocking fashion.Himachal Pradesh‘s bowlers contained Haryana on the opening day, as the visitors crawled to 204 for 4 in Dharmasala. After choosing to field, the hosts started well, with seamer Jitendra Mehta removing Nitin Saini for five, but wickets were hard to come by after that. Rahul Dewan held vigil for 40 watchful overs, his 46 pushing the score to 88, before he perished against Ashok Thakur. Manav Sharma and Hemang Badani carried on in the same vein, their partnership of 74 spanning nearly 30 overs before Manav fell four short of his half-century. Badani brought up his 37th first-class fifty, and the first for Haryana, but more importantly, ensured he was unbeaten till the end.

Cricket Canada signs deal with Reebok

Cricket Canada has secured a high-profile sponsorship deal with Reebok which means the company will be the “official apparel supplier” for Canadian cricket

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Nov-2010Cricket Canada has secured a high-profile sponsorship deal with Reebok which means the company will be the “official apparel supplier” for Canadian cricket.The deal is reported to be a “multi-year” arrangement but no details have been given by Cricket Canada regarding its length or value.It includes of all Canada’s teams including the 2011 World Cup side, the Canada A Development Squad, the women’s program, the Under-19 and Under-15 sides, and Canada’s national championships.

India ready for Kingsmead Test

The day before arguably India’s biggest Test of 2010, Ms Dhoni said India treats every Test the same, and is focused on taking care of the small things

Sidharth Monga in Durban25-Dec-2010Christmas is in the air in Durban. If you haven’t been to a Boxing Day Test – and this correspondent hadn’t – you might find it almost surreal. Test cricket brings its own vibe with it; an anticipation and intensity that appears to be missing, at least on the surface. There is Christmas, there are “The Holidays”, and then there is the New Year. It is a time to relax, a time to enjoy, a time to take stock, and a time to look forward.Make no mistake about it, though: in less than 24 hours India’s biggest Test of the year will start, and perhaps this particular unit’s biggest too. It has been a year of success where they have held on to their No.1 ranking for 360 days, but they will know how seriously that tag will be taken if they find themselves 2-0 down on seaming tracks in a country that has forever been their nemesis.It was only yesterday, on a hot, humid, sapping day that MS Dhoni said – while walking out of the nets – that he was reminded of Chennai. However, just one look at the pitch is enough to tell you that the difference in playing conditions in Chennai and Durban is as wide as the Indian Ocean that separates the two cities. The pitch here is lush green – Gary Kirsten said that from the change room it looked the same colour as the outfield, and the overhead conditions – forecast to be cloudy for the duration of this Test – are sure to help swing and seam. For a city full of people of Indian origin, Kingsmead is a foreign island. Forget the six sixes that Yuvraj Singh hit here in an over in the World Twenty20. In Test cricket, India don’t even average half as much per wicket as Yuvraj managed in one T20 over. In five all-out innings here, they have managed 862 runs.Even in isolation, the conditions are going to present a supreme challenge to the batsmen who lasted 38.4 overs on a damp pitch in Centurion; in the context of the series, the challenge becomes huge. That said, there is nothing to suggest they can’t pass this test. Everyone knows these are better batsmen than a score of 136 all out on a testing pitch suggests. Coach Kirsten has said they needed, and still need, to apply themselves better on these kinds of surfaces. Preparation might have suffered for the first Test because of the absence of a warm-up game, but they have worked hard for this one.Out has gone the policy of having light training sessions on the eve of the game. On Christmas day, the Indian team was the group of hardest-working people in Durban. Zaheer Khan, a huge addition to the side, was the only man to opt out of the session, and this team has – with good results – let Zaheer prepare on his own for big matches. However, as if a reminder was needed that they are up against it, Gautam Gambhir’s injured left hand has worsened and M Vijay might well have to pad up on short notice once again.On the surface, though, keeping in with the festive spirit, India are not making this sound like it is their time of reckoning. It is understandable, too, for they don’t want to put any undue pressure on themselves. “Every game is big for us,” Dhoni said on the eve of the game. “As I always say, being No.1 or when you are on course to becoming No.1, every game is important. Irrespective of where you are playing in a particular series. Whether you are playing in the subcontinent or outside. We don’t consider one Test match more important than the others. By doing that, you can put additional pressure on yourself. We believe in taking care of small things, so we respect every Test.”When Dhoni was asked to look back at the last year, he again chose to focus on the details – the tailenders contributing more runs than they used to; the part-time bowlers chipping in with wickets. It all points to an admirable fighting spirit that this team prides itself on. Saving matches after a poor first innings, coming back from behind to win Tests, coming back from behind to level series, managing without a few key players.It is that spirit that they will collectively be dialling for, but the rest of the world will also be questioning their skills to do well in all conditions. Not that they have proven otherwise in the past, but this – before the series started – seemed their best chance to do so. If they can’t summon up the spirit and the skills over the next five days, the last three weeks of the year will have more to say about the team than the first 49.

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