Anderson aims for Rose Bowl return

James Anderson is confident of being fit for the third Test against Sri Lanka, at the Rose Bowl, and is due to play for Lancashire in the Friends Life t20 next weekend in a bid to prove his fitness.Anderson picked up a grade one side strain during the first innings in Cardiff and was ruled out of the Lord’s encounter. Initial thoughts were that he would be unlikely for the rest of the Sri Lanka series, especially with England not wanting to risk a key bowler before India arrive, but Anderson is far more bullish about his situation.”The good news is that I feel fine,” Anderson told the . “I’m due to play a T20 match for Lancashire against Worcestershire on Sunday and if all goes well I will be fit for selection.”But it’s been a tough week because I can honestly say I haven’t felt a moment of discomfort since the diagnosis was made so I do believe I probably could have bowled in their second innings,” he added. “I fully understand the position of the medical staff; this is going to be a long summer and there was no point in taking a risk. But it may have been something that felt worse than it was because of the cold and windy weather.”Anderson looked in prime form in Cardiff as he took 3 for 66 before picking up his injury on the second afternoon although it didn’t stop him being the nightwatchman. Then, in his absence, England’s three-man attack completed a stunning victory on the final afternoon as Sri Lanka were skittled for 82.”I had mixed emotions as events unfolded on the last day in Cardiff,” Anderson said. “It was fantastic to see us doing so well, taking the wickets and winning but, at the same time, it was tough to watch them all celebrating and not be involved on the pitch.”

Australia to play three Tests, five ODIs in Sri Lanka

Itinerary of Australia’s tour of Sri Lanka

  • August 6: 1st T20, Pallekele

  • August 8: 2nd T20, Pallekele

  • August 10: First ODI, Pallekele

  • August 14: 2nd ODI, Hambantota

  • August 16: 3rd ODI, Hambantota

  • August 20: 4th ODI, Colombo

  • August 22: 5th ODI, Colombo

  • August 31-September 4: 1st Test, Galle

  • September 8-12: 2nd Test, Pallekele

  • September 16-20: 3rd Test, Colombo

Australia will play three Tests, five ODIs and two Twenty20 internationals when they tour Sri Lanka in August and September this year, the Sri Lanka board has announced.While the established centres at Galle and the Sinhalese Sports Club, Colombo, are set to host a Test each, Pallekele – situated just outside Kandy – has been awarded the second Test. Pallekele International Stadium, situated which was constructed in the build up to the World Cup, has hosted just one Test previously, when Sri Lanka took on West Indies in December 2010, but that game was badly affected by rain and ended without a single innings being completed.Pallekele will also host both T20 games and one ODI, while Sri Lanka’s other new stadium, Hambantota gets two ODIs. Hambantota was also built for the World Cup and hosted two games. However, the cost of constructing the stadiums left Sri Lanka Cricket in debt to the tune of $23 million, with the result that the board pledged the newly built stadiums plus the income from upcoming tours as collateral to raise funds to pay for the World Cup.

Australia maintain DRS resolve

Australia will push for the right to enforce umpire decision reviews in its home matches at the ICC’s executive board meeting in June, despite continued Indian opposition to the system.India’s scheduled visit to Australia during the 2011-12 summer, their first tour down under since the contentious 2008 Sydney Test match that led indirectly to the adoption of the DRS, adds plenty of currency to an issue that remains divisive even after the system’s use during the World Cup.The ICC cricket committee recommended in its meeting at Lord’s that home boards be granted the right to choose whether to employ the system or not, a state of affairs that would prevent the repeat of a situation when India and hosts Sri Lanka disagreed over its use last year.James Sutherland, the Cricket Australia chief executive, showed no public sign of deferring to India’s judgment following his board’s two-day meeting in Melbourne. “My personal view is strongly in support of DRS, as we know the current understanding is basically the DRS can be used by bilateral agreement of the two competing teams,” said Sutherland.”At this stage in spite of the recommendation of the cricket committee it does need to go through other bodies within the ICC in order for that to become an absolute requirement. I’m conscious of that, but certainly from a CA perspective we would be very keen for DRS to be in place for all international cricket.”An ICC plan to have BCCI officials observe the use of the DRS in Australia, during the Ashes last summer, fell through due to scheduling conflicts, but the World Cup provided a closer look for subcontinental administrators and players. There was consternation about the lbw reprieve won on a technicality by Ian Bell during India’s group match against England, but it must also be observed that Sachin Tendulkar was saved from an early dismissal in the semi-final against Pakistan by a similarly narrow DRS margin.”Obviously we all got a fair insight into that during the World Cup where the DRS system was in place for the World Cup, and that was in India,” said Sutherland.Tendulkar and the Indian captain MS Dhoni are thought to be the bulwark of Indian opposition to the system, a position that has been unchanged since Sri Lanka had much the better of the DRS during a series in Sri Lanka in late 2008.

Mahmood sparks Kent turnaround

ScorecardAzhar Mahmood took three quick wickets after a century opening stand by Gloucestershire•Getty Images

Half-centuries from Chris Taylor and Hamish Marshall helped Gloucestershire to edge towards a competitive 292 for 9 at the end of day one of their County Championship Division Two clash against Kent at Canterbury.Workers employed on the St Lawrence redevelopment project were content to get on with their chores throughout a turgid opening session that saw Gloucestershire post 94 runs without alarm after electing to take first use of a docile pitch.Kent gave a Championship debut to 18-year-old left-arm pace bowler Adam Ball, but the home attack barely beat the bat during the opening two hours as openers Ian Cockbain and Marshall set out to lay solid foundations.Ball, who played in last season’s Under-19 World Cup for England, was eventually introduced as third change and sparked the first appeal of the game after 85 minutes with one that nipped back to brush Marshall’s back pad, though the ball was going over the stumps.The cloud cover dissipated during the interval and in warmer conditions Kent emerged from their pristine new dressing rooms to bag 6 for 106 in the afternoon session, including an eight-ball purple patch of three for none by veteran Azhar Mahmood.The former Pakistan allrounder had Cockbain caught at slip for 34, bowled Richard Coughtrie via the face of his bat as he made a late and abortive bid to shoulder arms, then ended Marshall’s 131-ball stay for 72 after winning a leg before verdict.Gloucestershire’s new-look middle order continued to unravel when Darren Stevens returned to have Alex Gidman (24) caught at second slip and trap Jonathan Batty lbw for a six-ball duck with a shooting off-cutter. Seven overs later his sibling Will Gidman padded up to a James Tredwell arm ball that clipped off stump and sent the visitors to tea on 198 for 6.Former Gloucestershire skipper Taylor mounted a partial recovery in the final session as he and Ian Saxelby added 74 for the seventh wicket until the second new ball gave Kent’s attack a cutting edge.With 250 on the board Saxelby (28) fended one from Robbie Joseph low to gully. Next, Taylor’s 201-minute vigil ended for 71 when he played across the second ball of a new spell from Simon Cook to lose his leg stump. In his next over Cook ran one back up the slope to feather the inside edge of Jonathan Lewis’ bat and give wicketkeeper Geraint Jones his first catch.Cook finished with 2 for 40 and Stevens 2 for 36, but it was Mahmood’s post-lunch return of 3 for 52 that undoubtedly turned the course of the day’s events.

Warner and Marsh strike maiden centuries


ScorecardDavid Warner enjoys reaching triple-figures in the four-day format•Getty Images

David Warner’s maiden first-class century has kept alive New South Wales’ slim hopes of hosting the Sheffield Shield final. The Blues need full points from their match against Western Australia to have any chance of hosting the decider and at stumps on the second day, they were 5 for 248 in reply to the Warriors’ 382.Warner fell late in the day for 114, the first breakthrough for the debutant fast bowler Matt Dixon. At the close, Steve O’Keefe was yet to score and Ben Rohrer had 1, and the Blues needed another 135 runs to take first-innings points.Phillip Hughes made 54 and was the first to depart, one of three wickets for Nathan Coulter-Nile, who also picked up Phil Jaques (13) and Simon Katich for 1. Nic Maddinson chipped in with 44 before he was run-out by Mitchell Marsh, who earlier in the day had become Western Australia’s fourth-youngest centurion.Marsh, 19, beat his brother Shaun by 54 in reaching his maiden first-class ton and he finished with 111, a strong contribution in his 248-run stand with Marcus North. The Western Australia captain North made 158, while the teenager Pat Cummins had the best figures for the Blues, with 3 for 111.

England survive ten Doeschate brilliance

England 296 for 4 (Strauss 88, Trott 62) beat Netherlands 292 for 6 (ten Doeschate 119*, Cooper 47) by six wickets
ScorecardRyan ten Doeschate produced a breathtaking century to lift Netherlands to a massive total•Getty Images

Ryan ten Doeschate produced a scintillating 119 from 110 balls, and followed up with the brilliant bowling figures of 2 for 47 in ten overs, to give England one of the biggest frights of their international lives. However, his very best efforts were not quite enough to propel the Netherlands to an incredible victory in their World Cup opener at Nagpur.Faced with a massive target of 293, and humiliation on an even greater scale than they suffered at Lord’s two years ago, England responded with a determined batting performance under the floodlights, and thanks to composed half-centuries from Andrew Strauss and Jonathan Trott, they eventually reached safety with six wickets and eight balls to spare. However, the final margin of victory did no justice to the journey they were forced to undertake. Had England stumbled, it would surely have gone down as the greatest upset in World Cup history.The final overs were fraught with possibility, as England battled with a run-rate that barely dipped below seven an over, against a pumped-up team of performers who could mainline their adrenalin straight from that opening fixture of the World Twenty20. With 69 needed from the final ten overs, Trott was exquisitely stumped off a leg-side wide by Wesley Barresi, who had earlier launched the Dutch innings with a sparky cameo of 29 from 25 balls, and when the in-form Ian Bell was bowled middle stump by the final ball of ten Doeschate’s spell, Nagpur really was living up to its reputation as the City of Orange.That dismissal left England’s fate in the hands of Paul Collingwood, who has barely been able to buy an international run all winter, and Ravi Bopara, whose inclusion at the expense of the second spinner Michael Yardy contributed to their problems in the field, but for which he ultimately atoned with a vital 30 not out from 20 balls, including a soothing six over long-off from the first ball off the 49th over – the first of England’s innings.It was Collingwood who proved the key, however. He was England’s captain when they lost in 2009, and ten years earlier he had also been on the receiving end of a NatWest Trophy beating while playing for Durham in Amstelveen. The threat of a triple dose of humiliation compelled him to rediscover his fighting spirit, and he restored faith in both himself and his team with an unbeaten 30 from 23.It was all extraordinarily fraught. Whereas previous shocks have revolved around batting collapses in helpful conditions – think Ireland in Jamaica four years ago, or West Indies against Kenya in 1996 – this performance was all about the weight of runs that the derided Dutchmen were able to pile onto England’s shoulders. With Associate cricket in the spotlight like never before, following the decision to reduce the 2015 World Cup to 10 teams, and in light of the recent capitulations by Canada and Kenya in Group A, this was a performance that showed the sport’s second tier in the best and most timely light imaginable.ten Doeschate’s prowess in limited-overs cricket is hardly a secret – he averaged 54 in the CB40 last season, and weighed in with nine wickets, as Essex advanced to the semi-finals – but England had no answers to his watertight technique and a shot selection that started out composed before exploding in the closing overs with 52 runs coming from his last 26 deliveries. He came to the crease in the 12th over and though he took 12 balls to get off the mark, the value in gauging the pace of the wicket paid off handsomely.All told, ten Doeschate struck nine fours and three sixes in a 110-ball stay, the first of which came off a gentle full-toss from Kevin Pietersen, whose two overs were dispatched for 19 and highlighted England’s folly in omitting Yardy – Bopara’s medium-pace was not called upon. Swann, on his return to the team following the birth of his son Wilfred, was the pick of England’s bowlers with 2 for 35 in ten tidy overs, while Stuart Broad was menacing if a touch expensive in his first full international since the Adelaide Test in December. But ten Doeschate treated the rest of England’s attack with disdain, as he powered through to his fourth and highest century in 28 appearances for the Netherlands.After calling for the Powerplay in the 43rd over, ten Doeschate lost his fifth-wicket partner Tom de Grooth, the hero of Lord’s 2009, who was bowled by a Broad yorker for 28. But undeterred, he picked off consecutive boundaries from Tim Bresnan to move through the nineties, before reaching his first World Cup hundred from 98 balls and in remarkable fashion, as a sharp single to short fine leg turned into five overthrows when Trott’s shy ricocheted off the stumps and away to the ropes.On a night that belonged to the Dutchmen in spite of the final result, the nadir of England’s performance was reached in the final six overs of their bowling effort. Only last summer, England’s attack was touted as their likeliest route to World Cup glory, given how intricately each member of the attack knew their roles, and how quickly they were able to react to changing circumstances. However, the closing overs were a total shambles that would have disgraced a club side, given the breadth and variety of the errors that were committed.A foretaste of the chaos came in Swann’s seventh over, when ten Doeschate, on 47, launched a drive into no-man’s land behind the bowler’s arm, where James Anderson and Kevin Pietersen converged from mid-off and mid-on respectively, but stopped dead as the ball plugged harmlessly between them.Anderson’s day then went from bad to worse when he returned to the attack in the 46th over. His attempt at blockhole bowling resulted in two awful waist-high full-tosses, the second of which swung away down the leg side for four. Both were called as no-balls, and Anderson was very fortunate not to be withdrawn from the attack by the umpires. Or not as it happens, because the Dutch captain Peter Borren was delighted he remained. He belted three consecutive boundaries in a listless ninth over, to finish unbeaten on 35 from 24 balls.England’s embarrassment didn’t end there. Though Broad showed some fight to end ten Doeschate’s stay via a catch in the deep in the 49th over, he was denied the wicket of Borren in the same over when Collingwood at midwicket failed to take his required position inside the fielding circle. A no-ball was signalled, Borren was recalled, and there was still time for one more howler, as Swann shelled a sitter at third man to reprieve Mudassar Bukhari.Netherlands’ final total of 292 for 6 was their highest against a full-member nation, and the second highest by any Associate, beating the 230 they scored against England on this very day 15 years ago, at the 1996 World Cup. The hero that day was the 18-year-old Bas Zuiderent, who was the only Dutchman to miss out this time around, as he made 1 from 10 balls before becoming Swann’s second victim. It was scant consolation for England on a day that they could not allow to get any worse.The new opening pairing of Strauss and Pietersen went some way towards atoning for England’s earlier errors with a 105-run stand in 17.4 overs. They started with clear intent as Strauss snaffled three fours in the first over, from Mudassar Bukhari – two clips off the toes and a fortuitous under-edged cut past off stump, en route to 88 from 83 balls, while Pietersen’s first shot was a sweetly timed drive to a Berend Westdijk outswinger.On a slow deck, Pietersen’s instinct was to advance onto the front foot at every opportunity, and his timing seemed in fine fettle even though he kept picking out the fielders in a well-drilled Netherlands outfit. Strauss meanwhile hung back in his crease and took advantage of the Dutch inexperience to nudge and pull eight of his first nine boundaries behind square on the leg-side.However, as the hardness went out of the new ball and Barresi came up to the stumps to restrict Pietersen’s footwork, his returns tailed off appreciably. Having scored 29 from his first 31 balls, he made just 10 from his next 30, before Pieter Seelaar added his name to the list of left-arm spinners to have captured one of the more notable scalps in world cricket. A tempting delivery was tossed up outside off stump, and Pietersen failed to get his feet to the pitch as he poked an uppish drive to short cover.In the end humiliation was avoided, and given the lop-sided format of the World Cup, England have already made a significant stride towards the quarter-finals. But with the in-form Indians looming in Bangalore on Sunday, there is no room for another performance this poor. The world is watching and the likes of Virender Sehwag won’t be losing sleep.

Match Timeline

Bennett stars as New Zealand crush Kenya

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Hamish Bennett blew away the Kenyan top order•Getty Images

Hamish Bennett led New Zealand’s humiliation of a Kenya outfit clearly out of its depth, attacking the stumps with metronomic accuracy to rip out four quick wickets as the minnows capitulated for just 69 – their lowest World Cup total and the fifth worst overall. Tim Southee helped himself to three cheap wickets, while Jacob Oram also picked up three in three overs before Martin Guptill and Brendon McCullum eased their side to an unchallenged 10-wicket win.Kenya’s first showing at this tournament demonstrated both their lack of competency against good, but hardly exceptional, seam bowling and their incomprehension of the review system – borderline decisions were accepted without question and clear cut ones questioned out of sheer desperation.Jimmy Kamande called correctly at the toss and opted to bat on a pitch expected to help slow bowlers, but that was Kenya’s last success of the morning. The new ball barely deviated off the straight for Southee but Kenya’s young opening pair, perhaps over-awed by the occasion, remained nervously rooted to the crease. They had cobbled together just 14 runs – all in singles – when Southee nipped one off the seam to strike Alex Obanda in front of leg stump.Umpire Marais Erasmus’ decision initially looked a good one, but there was a hint that a review might have been in order. The Kenyans were, of course, unfamiliar with the UDRS but that provides no excuse for Obanda’s tame acceptance of his demise as replays showed that the ball would have gone over the top of the stumps by at least an inch or two.With the innings drifting swiftly into mediocrity Collins Obuya got going with a couple of meaty blows off Nathan McCullum, who opened the bowling from the other end, but just as he and Waters were starting to gain momentum Bennett was introduced and soon had the innings in disarray. First, he fired one full and straight at Waters, the ball shooting through at a low shin height to pin the batsman in front of his stumps.

Smart stats

  • Kenya’s total of 69 is by far their lowest in World Cup games – it’s their first sub-100 total in 24 games. They lasted 23.5 overs, which is the lowest for them.

  • It’s also the fifth-lowest total in World Cups. Canada’s 36 against Sri Lanka in 2003 is the lowest.

  • For the first time in a World Cup match, New Zealand dismissed a team for less than 100. The previous lowest against New Zealand in a full 50-over match had been Bangladesh’s 116 in 1999.

  • New Zealand won the match with 252 balls to spare, which is their most comprehensive World Cup win – and the third-best for all teams in World Cups – in terms of balls remaining. In all ODIs, it’s New Zealand’s second-most emphatic win.

  • Hamish Bennett’s 4 for 16 is his best ODI figures, bettering the 4 for 46 he had achieved against Pakistan in his previous ODI.

There would have been high hopes in the Kenyan camp of Steve Tikolo, their veteran batsman, sparking a revival but he was swiftly removed by a searing full delivery that burst through a lazy swish to make a mess of his stumps. With the ball keeping low and starting to nip off the seam Obuya was the next batsman to be rapped on the front pad, right in front of middle. Perhaps out of desperation, a completely superfluous review was called for but there was no second life for Obuya and the innings sank even further when Maurice Ouma was dispatched in identical fashion in Bennett’s next over to leave Kenya staring into the abyss at 49 for 5.That soon become 59 for 6, Jacob Oram finding the edge of Kamande’s bat to end his brief resistance, and with that the fight went from Kenya’s innings. Oram had Thomas Odoyo, who was fending at a rising delivery, easily caught by Jesse Ryder and Southee was on a hat-trick when he removed Nehemiah Odhiambo and Shem Ngoche with the last two balls of his sixth over. There was no second international hat-trick for him, however, with Elijah Otieno flicking Oram straight to midwicket shortly afterwards to end a miserable Kenyan innings.Guptill took the lead as New Zealand completed the formality of the chase in just eight overs, thrashing two enormous sixes and peppering the boundary almost at will in a 32-ball 39. An uninspired McCullum chipped in with a rapid 26 as Kenya at least attempted to remain upbeat in the field despite the futility of their efforts.While New Zealand would have been hoping for a successful start to their campaign, the ease of their win here is hardly the best preparation for sterner challenges ahead against the likes of Australia, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. For Kenya, things can only get better after a day they would dearly like to forget, though their performance won’t have done any favours to the argument that Associate nations deserve to be involved in future World Cups.

Match Timeline

Malik named Punjab captain for Pentagular tournament

Shoaib Malik, the former Pakistan captain who was left out of the World Cup squad, has been named captain of Punjab’s team for the upcoming Pentangular first-class tournament in Pakistan. Federal Areas, Sindh, Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa are the other four teams that will participate in a tournament that pits the top 75 players of the country against one another as provincial, rather than city-based or departmental sides.Malik was in prime form through the domestic season, scoring 799 runs at an average of 88.77 for Pakistan International Airlines in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy. He has been appointed captain ahead of Kamran Sajid, under whom he played in the PIA side. Sajid is also in the Punjab squad.Punjab have surprisingly left out Lahore Shalimar batsman Usman Salahuddin, the leading run-getter in Division Two of the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy during the 2010-11 season, as well as his team-mate, offspinner Saad Nasim, who was the leading wicket-taker in the recently concluded One Day National Cup Division Two. The two have been named in Punjab’s reserves.Former Pakistan captain Mohammad Yousuf, and Imran Farhat, who hit a century for Habib Bank Limited in their Faysal Bank One Day National Cup Division One match on Friday, are also in a strong Punjab side.Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have named Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited legspinner Yasir Shah as their captain, while Zarai Taraqiati Bank Limited seamer Iftikhar Anjum will captain Federal Areas.Balochistan and Sindh are yet to name their captains.

Rain washes out third day

West Indies A 216 for 1 (Brathwaite 117*, Babar 1-57) v Pakistan A
ScorecardOvernight and early morning rain in St. Vincent left the outfield waterlogged at the Arnos Vale Sports Complex, forcing the third day’s play between West Indies A and Pakistan A to be abandoned. West Indies A are presently 216 for 1 in their first innings and the match will certainly be drawn. There is more rain forecast for the final day.

Abbottabad tops table after third straight win

Abbottabad made it three wins out of three with a crushing defeat of Lahore Ravi by an innings and 106 runs at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore. The hosts needed another 200 runs to make Abbottabad bat again when play started, but never looked like getting them as they lost wickets at regular intervals. Mohammad Saad, who made 44, was the only batsman to go past 20, as Lahore were bowled out for 149. Three bowlers shared the wickets, with left-arm spinner Khalid Usman, who took 4 for 33, leading the way, while Ahmed Jamal and Mohammad Naeem took 3 for 24 and 3 for 63 respectively.Lahore Shalimar moved up to third in the points table after a comprehensive win by an innings and 20 runs over Quetta at the Lahore City Cricket Association Ground. Saad Nasim was in the thick of the action again, taking four more wickets to finish with 9 for 110 in the match. He was backed up by Asif Ghafoor, who was miserly in taking 3 for 33 from 19 overs. Sabir Hussain was the only batsman to offer any resistance, crafting a patient 53 from 176 balls, but got little support from the rest, as Quetta were bundled out for 210.State Bank of Pakistan drew their game against Hyderabad, but picked up three points by taking the first-innings lead at the Niaz Stadium in Hyderabad to stay second in the points table. Kashif Perez dismissed Naved Yasin before he could add to his overnight score of 102, but Gulraiz Sadaf (50) and Nayar Abbas (41) added 83 for the eighth wicket to take SBP past Hyderabad. Both eventually to Perez, who took 6 for 87, as HBL made 385, a lead of 59. Azeem Ghumman made his second-half century of the game, stroking 77 from 93 balls, with nine fours, as Hyderabad ended the final day on 158 for 4.Pakistan Television eked out a 38-run first-innings lead to pick up three points against Karachi Whites at the National Stadium in Karachi, as the match petered out in to a draw after the play was cancelled on the third as a mark of respect for politician Imran Farooq, who was killed in London and his body was brought to Karachi for the funeral. PT lost Yasim Murtaza early on the final day but Naeem Anjum and Junaid Nadir shared an eighth-wicket stand of 38 to give them the lead. Offspinner Atif Maqbool picked up five for 99, but it wasn’t enough to keep PT from picking up the points. Asiz Zarkir and Wajihuddin’s 116-run partnership was the highlight of Karachi’s second innings of 192 for 5, while Mohammad Ali took four wickets.