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QEA final to be a day-night affair

The final of the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, Pakistan’s premier domestic first-class tournament, will be played under lights with the use of coloured balls, an unprecedented event for the format in Pakistan cricket

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Jan-2011The final of the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, Pakistan’s premier domestic first-class tournament, will be played under lights with the use of coloured balls, an unprecedented event in Pakistan first-class cricket.Dave Richardson, ICC’s general manager, cricket, expressed his support for the experiment. “This concept has been trialed in other countries and it is part of our wider policy of investigating the possibility of introducing day-night Test matches,” Richardson said. “Just like we need to find ways to promote and protect Test cricket, this initiative shows the intentions of the PCB to promote the longer form of the game in Pakistan and try to make cricket even more popular than it already is. We are very pleased with how this trial is to be implemented and we will be very interested in the results.”Pakistan International Airlines and Habib Bank Limited, will clash at the National Stadium in Karachi from January 13 for the five-day final after jointly topping the Division One table, tied on 57 points.First-class cricket has been played under lights in India before while the start of the English domestic season, in Abu Dhabi, featured pink balls. “This innovation is in line with the initiatives that the PCB has been taking to improve the standard of the domestic game in Pakistan,” Ijaz Butt, the board’s chairman, said in a release.”The success of this event will bode well for our domestic structure as it could have positive implications for holding matches during the summers in Pakistan,” Javed Miandad, former Pakistan captain and current director general of the PCB, said.The total prize money for the final is Rs.1.75 million, with the winner taking home Rs.1 million.

Jaggi, Tiwary set solid base for East

Jharkhand’s Ishank Jaggi and Bengal’s Manoj Tiwary got centuries for East Zone on the first day of their Duleep Trophy quarter-final against Central Zone in Cuttack

ESPNcricinfo staff19-Jan-2011
ScorecardJharkhand’s Ishank Jaggi and Bengal’s Manoj Tiwary got centuries for East Zone on the first day of their Duleep Trophy quarter-final against Central Zone in Cuttack. East finished the day well placed at 328 for 5 as they battled with Central for a chance to play South Zone in the semi-final.After being put in to bat, East lost opener Natraj Behera early to Rajasthan seamer Pankaj Singh, who finished with three wickets in the day. Jaggi and Tiwary then put East in the driver’s seat with a 208-run partnership, but Central got a foot back in to the match with three wickets in the last twelve overs of play.

Clinical South Africa surge into quarter-finals

The World Cup finally reached Eden Gardens, and the sparse crowd that turned up on an overcast day were treated to a JP Duminy special that lifted South Africa from the dumps, and set up a facile win

The Bulletin by Nitin Sundar15-Mar-2011
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsShot selection and selflessness epitomised JP Duminy’s fine innings•Getty Images

The World Cup finally reached Eden Gardens, and the sparse crowd that turned up on an overcast day were treated to a JP Duminy special that lifted South Africa from the dumps, and set up a facile win. Ireland’s effort began like a dream and ended like a nightmare as they showcased the inconsistency that holds back upwardly-mobile Associate teams. There was disciplined, if somewhat limited, bowling; there were breath-taking fielding efforts to go with grassed sitters; and there was the glaring inability to land the knockout punch, as they let things drift after hustling their opponents into a corner. Duminy was ready when they ran out of steam, and made them pay with a well-paced innings.If Dale Steyn doesn’t get you, Morne Morkel will, and Ireland found this out the hard way, chasing a tall score on a wicket with true bounce. Morkel removed the openers with his menacing lengths and the back-up bowlers, led by Robin Peterson, ensured there was no escape route for the middle order. Under lights, the game petered out into a mismatch, Ireland’s first in a spirited World Cup campaign, and confirmed South Africa’s entry into the quarters, while the jostling continues for the remaining spots from Group B.The one-sided finish seemed unlikely when Ireland’s trademark enthusiasm had reduced South Africa to 117 for 5 by the 27th over. Ireland’s initial brilliance was epitomised by two outstanding efforts on the field – first, George Dockrell moved rapidly to his left from a widish third man, tumbled, yet held on to a fierce upper cut from Hashim Amla. Then, John Mooney caught a struggling Graeme Smith short with a fierce pick up and throw from midwicket. Smith’s exit in the tenth over exposed South Africa’s middle order and they continued to wobble as Jacques Kallis was run out for the second successive innings, and Faf du Plessis guided tamely into the slips. Ironically, AB de Villiers’ replacement helped South Africa stem the rot that might have never set in if he had been playing. de Villiers’ absence allowed Morne van Wyk to bat at No. 3 and Colin Ingram at No. 7, and both batsmen played crucial hands to propel South Africa.

Smart Stats

  • The win is South Africa’s seventh by a margin of hundred or more runs in World Cups. The 131-run margin of defeat is Ireland’s biggest in World Cups, surpassing their 129-run loss to New Zealand in 2007.

  • Eden Gardens hosted its 23rd ODI, the most for any ground in India. It has hosted 14 day-night games, which is the third highest among all Indian grounds.

  • JP Duminy’s became the second batsman after Adam Gilchrist to be dismissed for 99 in a World Cup match. Overall, there have been 36 occasions when a player has been dismissed in the nineties in World Cups.

  • The 87-run stand between Duminy and Colin Ingram is the highest for the sixth wicket for South Africa in World Cups. The highest sixth-wicket stand for South Africa in ODIs is the 137 between Hansie Cronje and Shaun Pollock against Zimbabwe in 1997.

  • The 76 runs conceded by Trent Johnston in his ten overs is the highest by an Irish bowler in a World Cup (completed spell of ten overs). The highest number of runs conceded by an Irish bowler in ODIs is 95 in nine overs by Peter Connell against New Zealand in 2008.

  • Robin Peterson’s 3 for 32 is his third three-wicket haul and his second-best bowling performance in ODIs after his 3 for 22 against England in Chennai.

By his own admission, van Wyk’s batting is not “poetry in motion”, and his cameo at No. 3 justified that evaluation. His loose on-the-up drives without much foot movement left him prone to edges and soft dismissals, and he was lucky to escape twice, with Kevin O’Brien and Paul Stirling spilling straightforward chances. The reprieves had no impact on van Wyk, who kept backing himself to clear the infield, until George Dockrell slipped a perceptive arm-ball past him in the 16th over. van Wyk had by then provided the early momentum, that allowed Duminy and Ingram the time to settle in before turning things around.Duminy initially chose caution against Dockrell’s attacking line outside off, one that spinners have used to torment in him the past. He kept deflecting and nudging, lapping and steering for ones and twos, and his inventiveness inevitably led to the Irish dropping their guard. Ingram cashed in when they delivered loose deliveries, targeting the square fields with a series of powerful horizontal-bat shots. Johnston castled him in the 40th over, but by then South Africa had wrested control.In the meantime, Duminy had seamlessly shifted gears from nurdle to attack mode, and was on the verge of hitting overdrive. After 46 boundary-less balls, his first four came through the most audacious of reverse-sweeps. By the time he brought up his half-century, caressing Johnston into the covers, his strike-rate was nudging the 80s. Ingram’s dismissal forced him to reassess the situation, and he chose to delay the Powerplay to the absolute end.He had chugged along to 68 when the Powerplay came on by default in the 46th over. A couple of quiet overs from Mooney and Boyd Rankin suggested a whimpering finish. Duminy, however, lined up Trent Johnston for special treatment in the 49th over, dumping him for four and six over the leg side, before forcing another boundary to third man. With three balls to go, and 99 against his name, Duminy did not push the single. He instead looked for the straight six and perished in the outfield. In a sense, it was a fitting end to an innings that was all about shot selection and selflessness.

Match Timeline

We were 20 runs short – Ponting

Ricky Ponting, the Australia captain, said his side fell 15-20 runs short with the bat and then did not build enough pressure with the ball in their loss to India in Ahmedabad

Brydon Coverdale at Motera24-Mar-2011Ricky Ponting arrived in India in early February, confident that his team could win a fourth consecutive World Cup. Less than a week ago, Australia remained the only undefeated team in the tournament, and his hopes remained high. He will fly home a bitterly disappointed man, after Australia were knocked out in the quarter-finals by India in Ahmedabad.”I’m devastated,” Ponting said after the five-wicket defeat. “We came here with high expectations; we had a well organised group that had come off a good series of one-day cricket against England. We found it difficult at times getting a bit of momentum and continuity with the way our programme was set out, but that was no excuse.”We had plenty of time to train and we got to a stage where we thought we could win a game today [Thursday]. We weren’t far off, but just little critical moments are what cost us the game. We didn’t have enough high-quality partnerships and not enough pressure with the ball. It only takes a couple of those little moments for things to change.”Ponting certainly did his part with a captain’s hundred, but wickets kept falling throughout the Australian innings. There were only two half-century stands in the innings, between Ponting and Brad Haddin and later Ponting and David Hussey, and the visitors never quite got on top of the Indian attack. R Ashwin opened the bowling and immediately found some sharp spin, and the Australians knew they were in for a tough day.Ricky Ponting was “devastated” his team had failed to live up to his high expectations at the World Cup•AFP

“I thought we were 15 or 20 runs short with the bat,” Ponting said. “After we saw the first over Ashwin bowled and how much it spun, we said to ourselves than 250 or 260 looked like it would be a good total out there. As it turned out, we got that, but we probably could have got more. We couldn’t get a partnership going, we’d lose a wicket at a really bad time; we probably were one or two wickets too many down to be able to accelerate when we wanted to at about the 35-over mark.”They played well as a team today. You’ve just got to look through their batting card. [Gautam] Gambhir, [Sachin] Tendulkar, Yuvraj [Singh] all got fifties, and got them at a reasonable rate. Their bowling was steady. Zaheer [Khan] was good again today, especially right at the end of the innings in the Powerplay overs. I thought we played their spin pretty well today. It was a good combined effort by the Indian team and I think they’re going to be pretty hard to beat as this tournament wears on.”India head to Mohali to take on Pakistan in a semi-final, a match that Ponting believes the hosts will win, while the Australians will fly home. They will spend some time with their families before returning to the subcontinent in early April for their three-match one-day series against Bangladesh.

Kolkata set sights on top spot

ESPNcricinfo previews the IPL match between Kolkata Knight Riders and Kings XI Punjab in Kolkata

The Preview by Siddarth Ravindran29-Apr-2011

Match facts

Saturday, April 30, Kolkata
Start time 2000 (1430 GMT)Shaun Marsh has been one of the most consistent batsmen in IPLs•AFP

Big picture

Kolkata Knight Riders are the only team of the original eight to have not made the IPL semi-finals but seem to have assembled a squad capable of making it this time. The latest evidence of that came on Thursday against Delhi Daredevils. When their formidable batting stuttered, their bowlers stepped up to pull off a victory that brought their campaign back on track after two successive losses had brought back memories of dismal previous seasons. A win over Kings XI Punjab on Saturday could send them to the top of the table.Punjab’s bowlers have had a week’s rest since the pasting they received at Feroz Shah Kotla and now face another tough test as they come up against one of the strongest batting units in the tournament. Adam Gilchrist’s side were widely reckoned to be among the weakest before the start of the tournament but they have done surprisingly well so far, partly due to Paul Valthaty’s heroics.The reason Punjab aren’t in the top half of the table is that they have only played five matches, while everyone else have played at least seven. “We have to deal with what we are presented with in the schedule,” Gilchrist said. “We are very keen to play though it’s a little odd to have a full week break and then have nine games in the next 21 days.”

Form guide (most recent first)

Kolkata WLLWW (second in points table)
Punjab LWWWL (seventh in points table)

Team talk

Kolkata are still searching for a reliable wicketkeeper-batsman to partner Jacques Kallis at the top of the order. Their pool of candidates was reduced when Brad Haddin was ruled out of the tournament with a broken finger. Shreevats Goswami made some runs against Delhi but is yet to cement his spot. Kolkata also need to decide whether to retain the misfiring Eoin Morgan.Punjab have to sort out their bowling combination. They need to decide which Indian medium-pacer to pick along with Praveen Kumar. Shalabh Srivastava didn’t impress in his previous match, which could open the door for either Love Ablish or Vikramjeet Malik.Predict the playing XIs for this match. Play ESPNcricinfo Team selector.

In the spotlight

Shaun Marsh can make a credible case for being the most consistent batsman in IPLs – he has an astonishing ten 50-plus scores in 19 innings. His 95 was the outstanding innings in the runfest against Delhi, giving them a fright even after they posted the biggest total of the season.Kolkata brought back left-arm spinner Iqbal Abdulla for the game against Delhi, which proved a canny decision. With eight wickets, Abdulla is their joint top wicket-taker and his three strikes were instrumental in changing the course of the Kotla match on Thursday.

Prime numbers

  • Manoj Tiwary is averaging 97 after six innings this season
  • Paul Valthaty needs one more six to equal Yuvraj Singh for most sixes in the season

The chatter

“I think a lot of people get caught up in results. I don’t come into this game getting petrified that Kolkata won the last game.”

Guyana openers solid in draw

Half-centuries from both Guyana openers ensured a draw against the Pakistanis

ESPNcricinfo staff10-May-2011
ScorecardHalf-centuries from Trevon Griffith and Shemroy Barrington, and solid contributions from Narsingh Deonarine and Shivnarine Chanderpaul ensured Guyana’s two-day game against the Pakistanis in Georgetown petered out into a draw. Openers Griffith and Barrington made sure the Pakistani bowlers would have to earn their stripes as they added 77 together. Barrington, who eventually fell leg-before to Saeed Ajmal, was the top scorer with 58, while Griffith made 55.Chanderpaul, who was named in the squad for the first Test, and Deonarine backed up the openers with 44 and 40 respectively. Five bowlers picked up wickets, with only Umar Gul missing out. Ajmal was the most successful, with figures of 2 for 41 from 15 overs.

Cuts shouldn't stop with Katich – Warne

Shane Warne has said the Australian selectors should not have stopped with Simon Katich when they chose to remove ageing players.

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Jun-2011Shane Warne has said the Australian selectors should not have stopped with Simon Katich when they chose to remove ageing players from the list of Cricket Australia contracts.After Katich decided whether or not to continue playing and announced he would speak about his future at the SCG on Friday, Warne argued that other players – namely the 30-something trio of former captain Ricky Ponting, the middle-order batsman Mike Hussey and the wicketkeeper Brad Haddin – should also be making way.”Katich losing his contract was a bit disappointing because I think he’s been a true performer for a while. But I understand the logic of leaving him out,” Warne told the radio station .”The one thing about Cricket Australia I would say, and the current [group]; if you’re going to say you’re in transition, I think for the fans and the public and everyone out there who wants to support the Australian cricket team, let’s see some youngsters in there.”Don’t hang on to the older guys in there, say ‘we’re in transition, give us a bit of time’, but have 35 or 37-year-olds still playing Test cricket or one-day cricket. Get them in there, to get some experience and say ‘we’re in transition’.”Let’s stop sliding down to No. 5 in the world; [if] we keep playing the same players but saying ‘we’re in transition’, it doesn’t work.”Warne’s sentiments were pointed in their direction at the likes of Ponting and Hussey, and also an indication that he would like to see the new captain Michael Clarke granted the chance to build his own team.Katich, meanwhile, has taken time to reach his decision, which may involve cricket irrespective of whether or not he decides to play on. Paul Marsh, the chief executive of the Australian Cricketers’ Association, has said that for Katich to be lost to Australian cricket altogether would be “a bad outcome” for the game.Katich has, however, found support in former Australia opener Michael Slater, who unlike Warne, felt that Katich’s age was irrelevant given his consistent performance. “I think he has been appallingly hung … If his replacement (Phil Hughes) came in scoring hundreds and was red hot, then I can understand an injury stopping someone in their mid-30s,” Slater told the . “But that clearly hasn’t happened.”The system that is being reviewed at the moment around the country, what are they reviewing? The first thing they should be reviewing is the selectors and the selection process and I’d start with the chairman of selectors.”

Suppiah sets new T20 world record

Somerset spinner Arul Suppiah took world-record Twenty20 figures of 6 for 5 in his side’s five-wicket Friends Life t20 victory over Glamorgan at Cardiff

05-Jul-2011 98 by five wickets
ScorecardSomerset spinner Arul Suppiah took world-record Twenty20 figures of 6 for 5 in his side’s five-wicket Friends Life t20 victory over Glamorgan at Cardiff.The home side, who were put into bat by Somerset, had no answer to Suppiah and the other two spinners, Murali Kartik and Max Waller, as they were dismissed for just 98 – their second worst total in the tournament – in just 17.4 overs of an 18-overs-per-side contest which was reduced because of rain.Suppiah’s record figures, which bettered Sohail Tanvir’s 6 for 14 for Rajasthan against Chennai in Jaipur in May 2008, came from 3.4 overs as all 10 Glamorgan wickets fell to the Somerset spinners.In reply Somerset got over the winning line with 21 balls to spare, Kieron Pollard finishing unbeaten on 31 from 20 balls.On the turning pitch, which had been used for two previous t20 matches, the Welsh county’s first two wickets to fall came through attempted reverse sweeps.Captain Alviro Petersen was out for a duck to the fifth ball of the innings to Kartik’s slow left-armers – caught at extra cover – and Gareth Rees was trapped leg before wicket by Waller at the start of the sixth after smashing 34 from 20 balls including two sixes.From 41 for 2 Glamorgan sank to 54 for 3, Mark Cosgrove holing out to long-on off Waller having scored just nine from 15 balls. And with Kartik virtually unplayable on a spin-friendly surface Mark Wallace found himself stumped down the leg-side as Glamorgan stuttered to 72 for four.It did not get any better for the home side as Suppiah entered the attack and they were soon reduced to 83 for 7. Kartik finished with 2 for 15 from his four overs – he went for just 13 singles and a two – while Suppiah accounted for the last four wickets to fall as Glamorgan set Somerset 99 to win.The visitors also struggled on the tricky wicket and found themselves 44 for 4 within eight overs, Marcus Trescothick caught at short fine leg off Dean Cosker for 16. Robert Croft struck twice to remove both Peter Trego (11) and Kartik (11) before Pollard struck Simon Jones for three fours in an over to take the pressure off the Somerset chase.

Improved Derbyshire chase promotion

Mark Turner took the first five-wicket haul of his career as Derbyshire took control on the third day of their match with Division Two league leaders Northamptonshire at Wantage Road

George Dobell at Wantage Road22-Jul-2011
ScorecardUsually when Derbyshire are in the news, it’s because some halfwit is claiming they are just the sort of club which should be bull-dozed in an attempt to ‘improve the intensity’ of the county game.While that argument might not hold much water, Derbyshire haven’t always helped themselves. They have not produced an England player since Dominic Cork (who some might argue was a product of Staffordshire), have not played in the top division of the County Championship since 2000 – the first year of two divisions – and they are the only team in the land to never achieve promotion in either limited-overs or first-class cricket. They have, for a while, struggled to justify their existence. It’s harsh to state, but they’ve flirted with irrelevance.Perhaps, however, all that is starting to change. Just two months after they sacked their former director of cricket, Jon Morris, the signs are that the ‘new’ team is emerging as genuine promotion candidates. Indeed, if they win this game, they will have put themselves right in the thick of the promotion chase. It would not be too much of an exaggeration to state that their whole season could be defined by the final day of this game.The simple fact is this: going into the last day, they lead by 260 runs. While that might not sound too impressive, it should be understood that the pitch is showing increasing signs of uneven bounce and batting last could prove very tricky. Had 23 overs not been lost to rain and bad light on the end of the third day, their position would have been even stronger.If they do go on to win, they will be particularly grateful for the contribution of Mark Turner. The 26-year-old fast bowler, now with his third county, produced the first five-wicket haul of a first class career that began in 2005 to help earn his side an 89-run lead on first innings.While Turner has often bowled with pace, here he also demonstrated excellent control, claiming his last four wickets at the cost of just two runs, including a spell of three for none in 18 balls. The wickets of Niall O’Brien and Lee Daggett, stumps sent flying by swinging yorkers, were especially pleasing.Wes Durston also batted well. Durston, another former Somerset man, took several painful blows on the arms as the ball reared horribly, but thrashed a run-a-ball half-century to snuff out Northants’ hopes of a counter-attack. Hitting the ball with unusual power, Durston was
particularly severe on the spin of Rob White and James Middlebrook, plundering 41 off them in their four overs including an enormous straight six off the latter.Northants didn’t really help themselves. Chaminda Vaas, who is starting to look every one of his 37 years, has bowled 10 no-balls in this match, with the most costly of them inducing an edge from Wayne Madsen that was comfortably taken at slip. Madsen, on 7 at the time, went on to score 48 and added 87 with Durston.Daggett bowled well, however. Hitting a better length than his colleagues, he was able to exploit the uneven bounce and, with his first delivery, dismissed Martin Guptill, caught off the glove from a brute of a ball that reared, before Durston’s valuable innings was ended by a similar delivery.Northants’ season is also at something of a crossroads. Their lead at the top of the Division Two table – a lead that looked unassailable a few weeks ago – is starting to look precarious, with the team having surrendered their unbeaten record in all competitions and enduring a
horrible run of form in the FLt20.It appears increasingly unlikely that fast bowler Jack Brooks will be with them next year, too. Northants have now received five formal 28-day approaches from other counties keen to talk to Brooks and Martyn Moxon, Yorkshire’s director of cricket, was at Wantage Road on the third day to take a closer look.It was not, perhaps, the most distinguished performance of Brook’s season, but he has proved himself a decent performer over the last year or so and has bowled as well as anyone in county cricket this season. The clamour for his services also says something about the scarcity of fast bowlers in the county game at present.There was one more notable visitor at Wantage Road. Winston Davis, the former West Indies fast bowler who spent fours season with Northants between 1987 and 1990 returned to the club to attend the annual former players’ day.Sadly the years since have not been as kind to Davis as they might have been. Davis, who memorably took 7 for 51 against Australia in the 1983 World Cup, suffered horrific injuries after he fell from a tree in 1998 and was paralysed from the neck down. Needless to say, he
was afforded a very warm welcome on his return to the club.

'Give Lyon an extended run' – Berry

Nathan Lyon’s state coach, Darren Berry, hopes the offspinner is given an extended run in the Test side after being named in Australia’s squad to tour Sri Lanka

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Jul-2011Nathan Lyon’s state coach, Darren Berry, hopes the offspinner is given an extended run in the Test side after being named in Australia’s squad to tour Sri Lanka. Lyon was the most unexpected inclusion in the 15-man group, with only four first-class matches to his name, and he will compete with Michael Beer for the spinner’s spot in the three-Test series.Although Berry, Lyon’s mentor at South Australia, was wary of rushing the inexperienced spinner, he said it was a brave selection and he was confident Lyon could make the step up to Test cricket. However, given Australia’s recent history of discarding young spinners as quickly as they’ve been chosen, Berry said it was crucial that Lyon was not treated the same way.”I think that now they’ve shown their hand and they’ve been brave enough to pick him … they’ve got to give him every chance … not one or two Test matches and then say he’s not ready,” Berry said. “They’ve picked him, it’s their responsibility now and in Australian cricket we need to embrace this young spinner and give him an extended run.””He absolutely has the tools to be successful. He’s a very, very talented offspin bowler. He does the rare thing that not many offspinners do in the current day – he hangs the ball in the air and he has wonderful flight and variation. He’s an exciting talent. That said, no doubt Nathan this morning was quite shocked, as have many been, at his selection.”Shocked was an understatement. Lyon, 23, was not included in Australia A’s first-class matches against Zimbabwe recently, and although he performed well in the one-day matches on the trip, a Test promotion was not on his radar and the call from chairman of selectors Andrew Hilditch caught him off guard.”I looked down at the phone and saw Andrew’s name pop up and thought ‘geez, what is going on here’,” Lyon said. “It has certainly come out of the blue but I’m not going to knock it back, that is for sure.”The New South Wales fast bowler, Trent Copeland, was equally surprised at his call-up, which he described as “beyond belief”. He said he was looking forward to the challenge of facing Sri Lanka and he hoped that his successful Australia A tour of Zimbabwe would hold him in good stead for the possible step up to Test cricket.”Having played against Zimbabwe for the last month, and South Africa A in a few one-dayers as well, in Zimbabwean conditions which were quite flat, slow wickets, hopefully that gets us in tune for Sri Lanka, which are renowned to be quite flat as well,” Copeland said. “Not only that, we’re coming up against some top-notch cricketers.”To win a spot in Australia’s starting line-up, Copeland will have to wait for an injury or jump ahead of one of Mitchell Johnson, Peter Siddle or Ryan Harris, who are expected to have the front-running for the first Test in Galle. Harris had been one of Australia’s best bowlers during the Ashes until an ankle fracture ended his series, and he is keen to resume his place in the baggy green.”It’s been very frustrating getting the injuries in the first place,” Harris said. “That broken ankle came out of nowhere. I didn’t have any warning. That’s the frustrating part about it. It’s been a hard road back, but it’s been worth it. Anything’s worth it to play for Australia. It’s great to be back in there. My bowling is going well.”

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