Wickets tumble as Mumbai hold the edge

Scorecard
Sixteen wickets tumbled on the second day with Mumbai holding a slight edge in the Ranji Trophy semi-final at the Wankhede Stadium. Having bundled out Punjab for a paltry 126, Mumbai found themselves at a precarious 69 for 5, before Nishit Shetty eked out valuable runs late in the day and extended the lead to 237.Resuming on 42 for 2, Punjab were jolted at regular intervals by a the varied Mumbai attack. Sairaj Bahutule led the spin attack with a superb 4 for 20 and was backed up well by Nilesh Kulkarni (3 for 18) and Ramesh Powar (1 for 15). Dinesh Mongia, the Punjab captain, and Pankaj Dharmani shared a 40-run stand for the fifth wicket, but the lower order came apart in the face of spin.Gagandeep Singh was the most effective bowler for Punjab in the second innings as well and he pegged the top order back with three quick wickets. Rajesh Sharma, the offspinner, then weaved his web and pocketed three of the middle-order batsmen. But Shetty, the hero of Mumbai’s triumph in the 2003 final, raced to 33 off 41 balls and took the lead past 200.Punjab have two factors going in their favour. This season several teams have prospered when confronted with tricky fourth-innings targets even after collapsing in the first innings. Also, Yuvraj Singh, after making a duck yesterday, may decide to impose himself on the game and take Punjab to the final. To beat Mumbai in a knock-out game may require just that kind of magic.

Short-pitched attack planned – Tremlett

Chris Tremlett is aiming to put pressure on the England selectors during the summer (file photo) © Getty Images
 

Chris Tremlett has said New Zealand should be prepared for a short-pitched attack during the first Test after England Lions gave the batting line-up a working over on the second day at The Rose Bowl. There was one major exception for New Zealand as Aaron Redmond compiled a career-best 139, but Tremlett wasn’t overly convinced.Redmond took a blow from Graham Onions and also a couple of bruising hits on the body from Tremlett. “At times it didn’t look as though he fancied it too much so we got stuck into him but he’s got the bulk of their runs and has played well at the end of the day,” Tremlett said.”On a couple of occasions, the way he reacted to it, he didn’t look too comfortable against the short ball and I think that’s quite obvious from our point of view so we tested him. I’m sure those messages will go across to the boys for the first Test.”During the series in New Zealand the short ball was a tactic England tried with mixed results. Stuart Broad used it well in Napier, but sometimes it was overdone to players like Ross Taylor and Brendon McCullum who weren’t afraid to attack.Redmond, who is now in line for a Test debut at Lord’s, said the short stuff is nothing less than he expected. “It’s all part and parcel of being an opener. If I was a fast bowler I would run in and bowl short to any batsman, it’s just the way they are. It’s also good practice for the future games.”Tremlett has been accused of not always bending his back but he was the pick of the bowlers on the second day. Onions produced some nippy away swing, but it was the bounce from Tremlett that caught the attention, and not only of New Zealand’s batsmen. “I’m certainly happy with my first couple of spells from the Pavilion End, I lacked a bit of rhythm from the other end but it was generally a pretty good day,” he said. “It’s probably not the best I’ve bowled all season but it’s good to put my name in the hat.”He doesn’t believe, though, there is much of chance forcing his way into the Test line-up with James Anderson, Matthew Hoggard – who didn’t impress here despite three late wickets – and Andrew Flintoff vying for a place.”There’s lots of competition. Anderson got some wickets today so he’s obviously bowling well and in contention for the first Test. [Stuart] Broad and [Ryan] Sidebottom bowled well in New Zealand so their places probably aren’t up for grabs so it’s just about being consistent and knocking on the door. Realistically I probably don’t think I’ve got a chance of playing in the first Test and the other thing is that Freddie might be back as well.”However, last year a strong performance for the Lions against India earned him a call-up to the squad and he played all three Tests of that series, impressing at stages against the likes of Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid. A difficult winter followed where he wasn’t selected for the Sri Lanka tour and then got injured after being a late replacement for the Test party in New Zealand when places became available.”I’d only really been bowling in the nets and hadn’t a chance to play any games. Then unfortunately I got injured. It was disappointing that I had to go home, but if my body had held up there would been a good opportunity but hopefully I’ll get a game this summer.”Last year it [the Lions game] got me in the frame against India and then I got called up and played in the first Test. These matches are important and you try to do as well as you can. Hopefully it shows the selectors what you capable of and that you are on form.”

Gone with the wind … the end of an era

The TCA ground might not have satisfied everyone as a first-classvenue in recent years, but there must be an element of regretamong members that a 105-year occupation of a small piece of theQueen’s Domain is about to end, as far as inter-State andinternational cricket is concerned.The ground has had a fascinating history, and it seems appropriate to reflect on someof the events that it has witnessed in its time. As the Annual Report for 1981-82 revealed, the ground was opened in 1882 after the best part of ten years intermittent development. A gameagainst a Melbourne Cricket Club Eleven was arranged tocommemorate the event, the match ending in a particularly heavydefeat for the local Association. Tasmania, of course, haslearned to live with such reverses over the years, and in asimilar way, local administrators have had to accept the factthat the finances of the Association have not always allowed thedevelopment of the ground to proceed in a satisfactory way; manyof the Annual Reports often bemoaned the fact that variousprojects designed to improve the ground, even as basic aspainting and general maintenance, were not possible to implementbecause of the lack of funds.One of the early problems was the surface of the ground itself.Unsympathetically dry weather in those first few years resultedin the ground cutting up badly, allowing on one occasion EHButler to take 6 for 1 for the South against the North. Alliedto the this problem, which was only partially solved by importingmany yards of topsoil, was the one concerning the supply of waterto the ground. Initially, a windmill was tried, but this wasfound wanting, which might come as a surprise to the members ofthe 1979-80 English team, who had one day’s play abandonedbecause of a Force 10 gale in their match against Tasmania. Inthe 1885-86 season, the windmill was replaced by a hand-forcedpump system, which by definition seems to have been a ratherlabour-intensive device. Nevertheless no further complaints ofthe water supply reached the Annual Reports until after World WarOne, when a total prohibition of the use of water fornon-essential purposes resulted in the death of most of theground’s grass. Reference was made in 1947 to an improvement inthe water supply to the ground, but even so, the water pressurehas never been considered really satisfactory.The provision of suitable accommomdation for members and thepaying public has exercised the minds of many committees over theyears, and in its time, the ground has seen the coming and goingof many forms of seating. Curiously, two of the original standshave withstood the rigours of the elements and time, and surviveto the present day, albeit in modified form. The originalmembers’ stand was in place when the ground was opened in 1882,and in 1906, at a total cost of 1066/18/1, was pushed back toallow the construction of the brick structure at the front whichis familiar to all today as the HC Smith Stand. Gas was laid onat the same time as a concession to modernity;in 1926 electricitywas installed, the committee of the day expressing the hope thatthis would lead to sufficient lighting to allow “eveningtraining”. In 1940, the two ends of the stand were glassed in,but unfortunately the designers of this were inhibited by eithera lack of funds or imagination and failed to glass in the sidewhere it was really needed, namely, the front. In 1946, theoutside stairway on the southern side of the stand first gaveaccess to the top deck, and in 1950, the players’ viewing areasin the front of the dressing rooms were provided. The press,originally accommodated under the old scoreboard (which was builtin 1907), were relocated on the top deck of the stand in 1977,the year of Tasmania’s admission to the Sheffield Shield.The Ladies Stand was originally located on the southern side ofthe Members’ Stand, and was a slightly more grandiose affair thanit is now. In 1946, it was proposed to move it to its presentlocation, a scheme whose execution was accelerated by theintervention of the elements: a series of gales in May and June,1947 unroofed the structure, thus forcing the committee’s handsomewhat. A new cantilever roof was designed, but thenon-arrival of some of the materials meant that it was notcompleted until the 1948-49 season. The two concrete stands thatare now sited in its place were completed for the 1954-55 season,along with the entrance gates, turnstile houses and ticket boxes.The original turnstiles were acquired in 1885, more as a statussymbol than anything else, since the committee was moved to writein its Annual Report that “we have imported from England two ofNorton’s self-registering turnstiles, similar to those in use onthe Sydney Cricket Ground”! The suggested motivation for thepurchase is confirmed by the fact that they were not installedfor use for another five years.Up to World War One, the ground was more than just a cricketground. Two tennis courts (one grass, one asphalt) were openedwith the ground in 1882, and for many years, a memberschampionship was contested and faithfully reported in the AnnualReport. In 1887, the old pavilion that had been sited on theoriginal ground further down the hill, was dragged up to itspresent position and converted into a Skittle Alley for themembers’ pleasure. The novelty of this sport was evidentlyshortlived, for in 1898, it was then converted into changeroomsfor a cycling club. The latter group was originally catered forin 1891, when the committee were moved to report the expenditureof 46/14/0 on a new bicycle track, but added their “regret thatthey have not met with the good faith they expected from theRamblers’ Bicycle Club at whose request the work was undertaken -only three members of the Club have joined the Association of the15 who undertook the responsibility when negotiating with yourcommittee. “Football was tolerated at an early stage, despite this sportbeing the reason why the cricketers were keen to escape from theLower Ground in the first place. By the 1890s, winter Saturdayafternoons were taken up with baseball, and the 1896 AnnualReport announced that the “quoit pitch has been well patronisedon Wednesdays and Saturdays”. The ground even witnessed a”Japanese Sports Day” in 1902, on the occasion of the visit oftwo Japanese warships to Hobart. The gathering at the groundwere treated to the “novelty of Japanese wrestling, single-stickexecises (?) and other feats which proved very interesting to thepublic”. This was a year after, incidentally, the Association’sacquistion of a stone roller and a horse “with a view to economiclabour and making the work on the ground easier for the curator”.Bowls was the fad in the first decade of this century, and aconsiderable amount was spent on the bowling green and pavilionwhich were opened in November, 1911. The impending war, however,seemed to put a stop to all this frenetic activity and thingswere never quite the same afterwards. In 1932 the by-now disusedbowling green was converted into the present practice-wicketarea. The only other major sporting liaison since those far-offtimes has been with the Hobart Speed Coursing Club, which in 1935commenced a long and harmonious relationship with the cricketingfraternity. The greyhounds disappeared a few years ago, however,and now first class cricket is to follow suit. It is theAssociation’s hope that the ground can be retained for clubgames, but nonetheless, 1987 marks the end of an era for cricketin Hobart.

All-out attack: Gilchrist's top six

He says he didn’t know it at the time, but Adam Gilchrist’s 57-ball century against England in 2006-07 was the second-fastest in Test history © Getty Images
 

149* v Pakistan, Hobart, 1999-2000
It was one of the great comebacks after Australia fell to 5 for 126. They were chasing 369 for victory and the top order, boasting plenty of experience with the Waugh brothers, Michael Slater and Ricky Ponting, had failed. Gilchrist, on the other hand, was playing in only his second Test and he and Justin Langer combined for 238 in 59 overs to set up the win. His unbeaten 149 took just 163 deliveries, and featured 13 fours and a six. Steve Waugh later said he looked like he was playing in his own backyard. It was the first of many times that Gilchrist would turn a game on its head.204* v South Africa, Johannesburg, 2001-02
An emotional man, Gilchrist cried on reaching one of many milestones in the innings after being the victim of a vicious internet rumour. He was brutal throughout the performance which at the time was the fastest double-century in Test history, his 204 coming from 213 balls. Eight sixes were thrashed, most over midwicket, as he showed his amazing power in a performance that would remain his highest.122 v India, Mumbai, 2000-01
It was 99 for 5 when Gilchrist walked in. Only Matthew Hayden stood his ground in the hot cauldron as Harbhajan Singh ran amok. In a couple of hours he changed the face the game and the contest. Sweeping, cutting and lofting, he raced to an 84-ball century, the fastest by a visiting batsman on Indian soil. Even if he was playing his first Test in India, the foreign conditions didn’t matter. He took risks, survived clear chances and half chances, but never retreated.113 v Pakistan, Sydney, 2004-05
The scorecard shows Stuart MacGill as the Man of the Match and Ricky Ponting as the dominant batsman with 207, but it was Gilchrist’s 109-ball century that really wrested the match away from Pakistan. It was his 13th Test hundred – he passed Andy Flower’s record for a wicketkeeper-batsman – and featured scintillating striking towards the end. He brought up the milestone with a straight six off Shahid Afridi and had raced within reach thanks to consecutive sixes pulled off Mohammad Asif. For Yousuf Youhana and Shoaib Akhtar, who had also been part of the Pakistan team Gilchrist destroyed in Hobart five years earlier, there was a touch of déjà vu.102* v England, Perth, 2006-07
Only Viv Richards has reached a century faster than the 57 balls it took Gilchrist on his home ground in the 2006-07 Ashes. On a boiling Perth day he sizzled, taking to Monty Panesar (24 runs in an over that started with a dot) and Matthew Hoggard in a stunning burst, which included 12 fours and four sixes. Had he known about the record he could have broken it, but no message came from the dressing room, and he was glad he didn’t get there. “Viv deserves that mantle as the fastest hundred,” he said.149 v Sri Lanka, World Cup final, Bridgetown, 2006-07
It’s one thing to blast runs in any old ODI, but only the best of the best save their finest moments for the biggest stage. Gilchrist’s 149 in the World Cup final gave spectators reason to remember the match for pure cricketing brilliance, not its farcical finish in the dark. After morning drizzle made the fans nervously check their schedules for the reserve day, Gilchrist reminded them why they were there. He belted eight sixes in his 129-ball display, and for a while it seemed he could make 200 even in an innings reduced to 38 overs. He was so mesmerising that occasional boos came from the crowd when he gave the strike to Matthew Hayden. Squash ball or not, this was undoubtedly the pinnacle of a glittering ODI career.

Dillon bowls T&T to historic series win

Scorecard

Mervyn Dillon’s 5 for 36 helped T&T clinch an emphatic win © T&T Express

Carnival came three weeks early for the Trinidad and Tobago team as they captured their first major title in 21 years to lift the 2005-06 Carib Beer Cup. They completed an emphatic 264-run victory over Barbados on the fourth day of the match at the Carlton Sports Club on Sunday.Resuming the day on 112 for 6 in pursuit of 412 to win, Barbados, the pre-series leaders, were bowled out for 147. Mervyn Dillon, the West Indies opening bowler, took three of the last four wickets to finish the innings with 5 for 36 off 21 overs – and a match haul of 8 for 65 which won him the Man-of-the-Match award.”I think we were starved of an opportunity to play for a regional first-class title for so long, and now being in position to win a title that was our motivation here,” Daren Ganga, the T&T captain, told reporters. “When we won the regional limited-overs competition, ironically in Barbados in 2004, I vowed that T&T should take that type of momentum and win a four-day competition. We did not win the title the next year, but two years down the line we have achieved it, and I think it was a matter of self belief.”T&T entered the match last Thursday knowing only victory could give them the title because Barbados needed only one point to seal the deal. “I think we knew that we were the underdogs, and I think that was a great position in which to be coming into a final game, and the guys were up for the challenge from the word ‘Go!’,” Ganga said. “Even from the day before the match, we knew that if we played good cricket, we would come out with the Cup at the end of the day.”Although Barbados’ decision to put T&T into bat surprised Ganga, he was thrilled, since he believed a competitive total would have been challenging for the home team to chase. “We should have gotten more runs in the first innings, considering the start to the innings we had,” he said. “In retrospect, in our planning, we knew most regional teams struggle to chase totals to win games. This was our plan, no matter what total we got on the board. We wanted to put pressure on them on the last day, or the second-last day. We knew we had a chance and the guys played well. We are still surprised how meekly Barbados played, but they were never put under pressure for the entire competition, so I thought that if we were to do this, we would have a chance. Most regional teams when they are put under pressure, they crack, and we did this, and came out on top.”Ganga concluded that the title triumph is an achievement similar to T&T’s qualification for the 2006 FIFA World Cup Finals and the men’s indoor hockey World Championship.

Australia storm back after Salman Butt's century

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Salman Butt was the backbone of the Pakistan innings© Getty Images

Australia began the New Year with a new-look line-up, but it was a veteran and a returning legspinner who ensured that the first day ended in the old dominating fashion. As they had on Boxing Day, Pakistan stepped promisingly ahead as they were carried by Salman Butt’s first Test century, but the topple began in the third session, and Glenn McGrath and Stuart MacGill scattered seven wickets.MacGill, playing in only his ninth Test alongside Shane Warne, overshadowed the game’s greatest wicket-taker, and McGrath reminded Ricky Ponting that he was worth the wait with three. The two Big Macs dumped Pakistan from an envious 1 for 193 to a comparatively disastrous 9 for 292 before they accepted a bad-light offer with eight overs remaining.Ponting was handed five bowlers to play with in a test-tube attack as MacGill and Shane Watson replaced Michael Kasprowicz and Darren Lehmann for thisdead-rubber Test. But Ponting had too many toys in the opening sessions, and the crease was crowded with experiments. The backlog meant McGrath didn’t start his second spell until 4.07pm. He had been missed, and immediately leapt into Butt (4 for 241) before knocking back Naved-ul-Hasan (7 for 261) and Shoaib Akhtar (8 for 261) in a satisfying spell.The change in MacGill after his first wicket was extreme. Yasir Hameed welcomed him back for his first Test since Kandy last March with two fours in his first over, and after six he was leaking a run a ball. His day changed when Younis Khan drove him straight to McGrath (2 for 193), and from then on he again looked like a Test bowler with the sort of sharp spin that’s rarely spotted on a first-day pitch.Employing two slips at times and bowling in tandem with Warne after tea, MacGill watched Yousuf Youhana push a tame catch to Warne at first slip (3 for 209), forced Asim Kamal to slog to Jason Gillespie at mid-on (5 for 241), and picked up Shahid Afridi with a waist-high full-toss that flew to McGrath on thesquare-leg boundary. It was traditional legspin of big turn and the threat of wicket-taking bad balls. His fifth arrived with Danish Kaneria’s edge to Gilchrist, a fierce celebration and the knowledge that wickets in the Pura Cup do sometimes get noticed.While choosing MacGill was an instant success, judgment of the allrounder Watson, who became Australia’s 391st Test player, must wait until he hasshown both facets of his game. Pakistan made four changes – three down to injuries and illness – from Melbourne, and only Hameed provided batting value to a side that lost both previous Tests inside four days.Pakistan’s only positive after tea was Butt’s century, as they spoiled an ideal opportunity to post an intimidating first-day total. Hameed – who survived two reprieves in Gillespie’s first over when dropped by Warne and Gilchrist – and Butt upset a large home crowd expecting submission with bright and controlled resistance through a 102-run opening stand.Butt played the innings Pakistan had wanted from him all tour with a composed display when measured against those of his team-mates. The cheeky smile the moment after the ball trickled into the boundary showed the relief and joy of his maiden Test century.Unlike the rest of the order, Butt paced his innings and was rewarded for tempering his approach. Steady before lunch, he increased his tempo, first bringing up his half-century, and then his highest Test score as he sped towards three figures. At Melbourne he reached 70 as Pakistan briefly scared their rivals, and Australia were in a tight spot thanks to this talented 20-year-old. Pulling Warne to midwicket for his fifty, Butt accelerated to 82 with four boundaries, including three in an over behind point off Watson, before Warne and MacGill almost slowed him to distraction. The pair were stifling, but he managed to stay in control, although he almost departed to the ball that brought up his hundred, an ugly swipe which dropped centimetres short of the diving McGrath at deep square leg.The applause was deserved, but what Butt needed was another half-century in support. Instead he was part of the rush to the dressing-room instigated by twoAustralian bowlers desperate for recognition after waiting their turns.Peter English is Cricinfo’s Australasian editor.

Jayasuriya to retire after 2007 World Cup

Sanath Jayasuriya’s swansong will be at the 2007 World Cup © AFP

Sanath Jayasuriya will retire from all forms of cricket after the 2007 World Cup in the West Indies. He had earlier announced that the ongoing match against Pakistan at Kandy would be his last Test.”Not playing Test cricket will help me keep fit and allow me to play on until next year’s World Cup,” Jayasuriya told Reuters. “I will definitely retire from all cricket after that tournament. We are building a really good side for that tournament and I feel we have a real chance of winning, although we’ll have to work extremely hard and perform in all three departments of the game.”He said that the lead-up to his final Test had been emotional but felt that he had picked the right time to end his Test career. “It is sad having played for so long and having enjoyed so many good times with the team, but I feel my decision is good for Sri Lankan cricket as now is the right time to go,” said Jayasuriya. “I had been thinking about it for a while but I made a sudden decision after the first Test, as I felt the time had come for a youngster to be given a chance like I was.”I am fit and I am still performing. Now is the right time to hand over to a player that deserves a chance – I hope the youngster will make use of that. The gap between international and domestic cricket in Sri Lanka is very big and they need to have lots of experience to develop properly.”

Scotland fight to stay alive

Scotland go into their latest match of their Intercontinental Cup campaign acutely aware that nothing less than a win tomorrow against Namibia, who lead the table, will suffice if they’re to stay in the competition.Scotland are languishing in fifth place on 26 points. Although the weather hasn’t helped them this season – two draws were rained off – they nevertheless need to perform now if they’ve any hope of staying alive.”It is a must-win game for us,” Ryan Watson, the captain, admitted. “We have been hurt by the weather in previous fixtures and so it has not turned out how we wanted but we still have a chance.”They (Namibia) are in the middle of their season and have been doing well in the South African competition they play in so this match is going to be one hell of a challenge.”Ironically, having got on the road and away from the unpredictable Scottish weather, there is a chance that this four-day game in a region that boasts the famous Kalahari Desert could be interrupted by rain. There has been an unusually large amount of rainfall in the Windhoek area in recent weeks and the Met Office has predicted a mixture of sunshine and showers for the next few days.”There’s nothing we can do about that,” Watson said. “We have prepared well for this tour. We’ve been here for a week now and we had a good win over a Namibia Invitational XI. Ideally we would have had one more preparation game but I think we are ready to go. No excuses, we know it will be tough but we have a good side.”Without the services of Dougie Brown and Kyle Coetzer, the Scots will rely on the experience of Gavin Hamilton, Fraser Watts, Neil McCallum and the skipper for the majority of their runs while John Blain has been in good form with the ball.The pitch at the Wanderers Cricket Ground in Windhoek is normally a batsman’s dream but with all the rain that has been around, it is not known how it will play this time. It might even take a bit of spin and, in that case, Majid Haq could come to the fore for Scotland.In contrast to Scotland, Namibia’s confidence is high. Topping the ICC Intercontinental Cup table ahead of Kenya in second place and defending champion Ireland in third, Namibia are favourites to make the final but Louis Burger, the captain, refuses to get carried away.”Scotland is a really good team and we know it’s going to be a tough battle for us. They will come hard at us because they know they need full points from this game or they are probably out of contention,” Burger said.”But the atmosphere in our team is very good. Everyone is happy and confidence is high so we are not going to be a pushover either. We love this competition, we take it very seriously and before it started we targeted a place in the final. We know that if we can just focus on our game and do what we do well, we should be OK.”The Namibia squad reads like a list of in-form players. Gerri Snyman, Craig Williams, Jan-Berrie Burger and Bjorn Kotze are all in the runs while Louis Klazinga, Kola Burger and Snyman are all in a hot streak with ball in hand.SquadsNamibia: Louis Burger (capt), JB Burger, Raymond van Schoor, Gerri Snyman, Deon Kotze, Bjorn Kotze, Kola Burger, Tobias Verwey, Louis Klazinga, Craig Williams, Sean Silver, Sarel Burger, Nicolaas Scholtz.Scotland Ryan Watson (capt), Richard Berrington, John Blain, Gordon Drummond, Gavin Hamilton, Majid Haq, Omer Hussain, Dougie Lockhart, Neil McCallum, Dewald Nel, Glenn Rogers, Qasim Sheikh, Simon Smith, Fraser Watts, Sean Weeraratna, Craig Wright.

Team Mat Won Lost Tied Draw Aban Pts Quotient For Against
Namibia 4 4 0 0 0 0 68 1.311 2038/64 1895/78
Kenya 4 3 1 0 0 0 66 1.263 1822/63 1832/80
Ireland 3 2 0 0 1 0 49 2.408 1535/26 1226/50
Netherlands 4 2 2 0 0 0 34 0.926 1840/68 1811/62
Scotland 3 1 0 0 2 0 26 1.142 766/20 1040/31
Canada 4 1 3 0 0 0 26 0.981 2085/69 1909/62
U.A.E. 6 1 4 0 1 0 23 0.766 2458/104 2499/81
Bermuda 4 0 4 0 0 0 6 0.521 1657/80 1989/50

Bichel blitz stuns Victoria

Scorecard

Andy Bichel took four quick wickets to bring Queensland back into the game © Getty Images

Four quick wickets from Andy Bichel saw Queensland fight their way into the match after being bowled out for just 169 by Victoria on the opening day of the Pura Cup match at Brisbane. Bichel (4 for 31), began the rot by forcing Michael Klinger to edge behind in the fifth over, and followed that up by claiming the key scalps of Nick Jewell, David Hussey, and Cameron White as Victoria failed to capitalise on its fine work in the morning session.Earlier, White, the Victoria captain, got it right when he inserted Queensland on a greenish wicket and saw Michael Lewis (4 for 35) and Gerard Denton (4 for 58) rip through the opposition. Together, both fast bowlers delivered Victoria a strong start, Denton trapping Jimmy Maher, the Queensland captain, leg before for just 1 in the fourth over. Lewis was more lethal, dismissing Martin Love, Clinton Perren, and Craig Philipson in a fiery burst of 3 for 9 off eight overs.Queensland had done well to recover from 6 for 69 thanks to a 46-run partnership between Bichel and Christ Hartley, the wicketkeeper, before Lewis returned to trap Hartley in front of the wicket for 24. Bichel continued the repair work in a 42-run eighth wicket stand with Chris Simpson (32), taking Queensland beyond the 150 mark before Denton and Allan Wise (2 for 37) returned to wipe up the tail.Jon Moss and Adam Crosthwaite will have a tough task ahead of them on the second day as Victoria try and build a lead over Queensland.

Ian Harvey commits to Gloucestershire

Gloucestershire have announced that Ian Harvey has signed a contract to keep him at the county until the end of the summer.”It’s fantastic news to be back in the side for the rest of the season and it’s great to be offered the opportunity to stay on,” Harvey said. “I see this as a massive bonus for myself and my family, it is really good news, great for myself and great for the team. Hopefully we can continue our successful start to the season and get some more trophies in the cabinet.””Ian has made a terrific contribution both on and off the field for the first part of the season,” commented Tom Richardson, the county’s chief executive. “It’s really good to have him back in the team and we look forward to continuing the results of the season so far. Our supporters have been really pleased to see Ian back at the club and I am sure he will continue to add a lot of value to the side.”

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