Putting Kerala on the cricket map

Sreesanth’s big wicket: Sachin Tendulkar walks back after being trapped in front in the second match of the Challenger Series at Mohali © Getty Images

On December 3, 2001, when he missed college to watch Tinu Yohannan make his Test debut at Mohali, in the process becoming the first Kerala player to play international cricket, little would S Sreesanth have imagined that three years later, he would stake his claim for a place in the Indian team at the same venue. Neither would too many people have imagined that a slightly built pace bowler from Kerala, a state more famous for its athletes and football stars, would end up as the Man of the Series in this season’s Challenger Trophy.If Yohannan put Quilon on the Indian cricket map, then Sreesanth has added Ernakulam to the list. Unlike Yohannan, though, whose physique was tailor-made for fast bowling, the bespectacled, baby-faced Sreesanth comes across like a student of mathematics. When he begins his run-up, the equation slightly changes. With a hustling, rhythmic run-up Sreesanth gathers his momentum, delivers with a side-on action, skids the ball through at disconcerting pace, and most importantly, swings it both ways. If you can hurry Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman, you can hurry most. The short delivery was used judiciously, the yorker skillfully. He ended with seven wickets and could have had many more if not for some poor umpiring and bad fortune.Until now Sreesanth was hardly anything more than an answer to a trivia question – who is the only Kerala bowler to have taken a Ranji Trophy hat-trick ? His rise, though, has been rapid, and since he plays for a weak side, unnoticed. Not too many bowlers get selected for the Duleep Trophy in their first season, like Sreesanth did in 2002-03 after snapping up 22 wickets in his first seven games. Playing for Plate B, he cranked up some surging pace and troubled experienced domestic stars like Wasim Jaffer and Hrishikesh Kanitkar.New Zealand arrived in India at the start of his second season and the tour game at Rajkot provided him with a chance to prove his worth. He was overshadowed by Munaf Patel, who bowled with fire, but Sreesanth’s 12.5 overs had a fair share of pace too. The honeymoon period, however, had come to an end. A hamstring injury forced him out on the first day and that turned out to be the start of a disappointing season in which he managed just 11 wickets in five games. Kerala played in the Elite group that season and he would have had to deal with batsmen of superior quality but Sreesanth admitted that getting back in shape was an irritating roadblock.A mystifying story did the rounds when Sreesanth missed five games in the Ranji Trophy that season. It was alleged that he was following an astrologer’s advice to stay away from cricket for a certain period of time, an absence that would help his career in the long run. Sreesanth rubbished this claim but it was indeed surprising to see him travel with the side, train before games and yet sit out. “I wasn’t match fit,” he said, “I was working in the nets to get back in shape.” However, if true, the story not only tells us a bit about the man’s beliefs but also reveals the power of the astrologer. Ever since, Sreesanth – who somehow found a place in that season’s Duleep Trophy squad despite such a lukewarm season – hasn’t looked back.Not only did he make headlines for some strong performances in domestic cricket, but he was being touted as a prospect in coaching circles. “Dennis Lillee and TA Sekhar were vital to my improvement,” Sreesanth told Cricinfo. “Lillee helped me change my action from mixed to more side-on and it was great to work with such a legend.” Greg Chappell spoke about him after watching him at the National Cricket Academy, while a few coaches around the country picked him out as one for the future. “I wasn’t so quick when I started off,” Sreesanth continued, “but I built it up gradually. As long as I can maintain my rhythm, I will get wickets.”Kerala’s finest batsman, Balan Pandit, was a hair’s breadth away from playing for India in 1955-56, while KN Ananthapadmanabhan, their best spinner, toiled away for 17 long years without gaining national recognition. Yohannan managed to break the barrier with pace, and despite lasting just three Tests, his impact on the next generation in Kerala, a state so beautiful that it’s often termed as `God’s own country’, might turn out to be his lasting legacy.

Dagnall defies Notts at Grace Road

Dimitri Mascarenhas: scored 52 from 22 balls as Hampshire won by 30 runs© Getty Images

There weren’t many close finishes in the latest round of Twenty20 Cup matches, as Kent, Leicestershire, Somerset, Derbyshire and Hampshire all collected the points in their matches.At Canterbury, an unbeaten 48 from Matthew Walker and 36 from Rob Key helped Kent to 163 for 6 against Sussex, who then bombed to 116 all out with Ian Butler taking 3 for 19 as Sussex went down by 47 runs. Darren Stevens hit a quick 31 in Leicestershire’s 150 for 7 at Grace Road, which was enough to beat Nottinghamshire. They crashed to 110 all out as Charlie Dagnall came up trumps with 4 for 22.A rapid 51 from only 32 balls by James Hildreth, along with 47 from Keith Dutch, boosted Somerset to 178 for 6 against Worcestershire at Taunton.An unbeaten half-century from David Leatherdale wasn’t good enough for Worcestershire, who were pegged back by Aaron Laraman. He finished with the impressive figures of 4 for 15.At the Rose Bowl, a blistering 52 from 22 balls by Dimitri Mascarenhas and a quick 46 from Michael Clarke helped Hampshire to victory against Middlesex. Hampshire posted a healthy 170 for 7, and Middlesex couldn’t keep up with the rate, despite an unbeaten 35 from Lance Klusener.James Bryant guided Derbyshire to victory against Durham at Chester-le-Street. After Durham struggled to 117 for 9, Bryant made sure the result was never in doubt with a run-a-ball 41 as Derbyshire cruised home with an over and a half to spare.
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Pakistan women allege bias over dismissals

Seven members of the Pakistan women’s cricket team who were dismissed from the national training camp have claimed that their removal was down to management bias and not cricket reasons. The camp is being run by the Pakistan Cricket Board ahead of next month’s World Cup qualifying tournament in the Netherlands.The seven called a press conference to express their unhappiness at what they saw as an unfair decision. The initial venue for the conference was the team’s hotel, but it was cancelled after the PCB allegedly put pressure on the hotel manager not to allow it to proceed. The seven instead issued written statements which alleged that they were removed not because of their performance but to allow girls from another region to be included.But an official denied the allegations, explaining that the seven were not good enough to play international cricket. He added that only one girl had been brought in to the squad, and that the overall number at the camp had been trimmed from 44 to 30.

Somerset Board Eleven travel to Lakenham to take on Norfolk

The Somerset Board Eleven set off for Lakenham today for their second round match on Thursday against Norfolk in the 2002 Cheltenham and Gloucester Trophy.Before they set off team manager Peter Robinson told me, “It will be a tough game. Norfolk are a strong team and have just won the 38 county competition and beaten Holland, so we will have our work cut out.”The Somerset team that travelled to Norwich is, Kevin Parsons (Captain)Brian Hoyle, Kevin Sedgebeer, Matt Bulbeck, Matt Dimond (all Taunton St Andrew’s), Matt Gitsham (Wembdon), Michael Coles, Steve Davis (both Bridgwater), Gareth Andrew and Rob Travers (both Glastonbury) and Joe Tucker (Keynsham).If the Somerset Board Eleven are successful they will host a first class county in the next round, which will be played next season.Friday is the reserve day for the game should it be unfinished tomorrow.

Bittersweet for Yorkshire as Middlesex end run

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Never underestimate enjoyment factor – Gillespie

Drenched in champagne glinting in the Lord’s sunshine, Andrew Gale proudly held aloft the County Championship trophy, a year to the day after the ECB had prevented him from doing so when Yorkshire were victorious last year. This was a triumph belated and deserved.Yet Gale considered it “bittersweet”. Blame Middlesex. They had displayed the temerity to ensure Gale’s celebrations came after an emphatic defeat, something that seemed unimaginable when Ryan Sidebottom consigned them to the wreckage of 0 for 3 one over into the opening day, or when Yorkshire secured a first innings lead of 193.”If you’re slightly off your game in this division that’s what happens,” Gale said. Here was a clarion cry from Middlesex, taking on the role of representative of the 17 counties – or at least the eight in the First Division – who do not sport the White Rose. The message was clear: the gap between Yorkshire and the rest is less insurmountable than a 26-match unbeaten run in Championship cricket, now at an end, suggests.Certainly that is the case when Toby Roland-Jones and James Harris summon performances as powerful as they mustered on the final two days against the champions. After adding 146 for the ninth wicket on the third day, now the two combined to decimate Yorkshire’s batting.Just as the final day of first-class cricket at Lord’s this season threatened to descend into a somnolent wait for Gale to lift the crown, Roland-Jones and Harris located late reverse swing and a lethal line just outside offstump.Devastation ensued. Five wickets fell in 29 balls, testament to the vim with which Roland-Jones and Harris bowled.Roland-Jones was particularly outstanding. Bounding in with pace and bounce, he bowled 21 overs of unerring intensity. He claimed 5 for 27, every wicket caught between keeper and fourth slip. On a pitch that had seemed increasingly pallid, Roland-Jones located a toxic cocktail of reverse swing away from the right-hander and lift outside offstump.”It’s something that’s been coming for a while. I’ve by no means been bowling badly, but just haven’t had that real match-deciding spell which can really define a bowler. It’s nice to feel that’s come at last,” Roland-Jones said. “It was probably the most rhythm I’ve had all year – running in just felt a little bit more effortless. I wasn’t really stretching or straining, and the line I bowled was telling.”Together with his maiden first-class century, the upshot was one of the most satisfying victories of his career and Roland-Jones’ finest individual performance: “I don’t think I’ve done anything that comes close.” On this evidence it would be folly were he not seriously considered for an England Lions recall.Harris was scarcely less impressive, Middlesex’s penultimate match of the season continuing his stirring revival as a cricketer. When he left Glamorgan three years ago, Harris was so in-demand that 11 counties attempted to sign him. He signed for Middlesex because Harris believed it would maximise his chances of playing Test cricket. The England selectors told Harris he needed to locate extra pace, so he went to the national academy in Loughborough in search of it.It did not work. All Harris achieved was to lose the swing that had enticed Middlesex in the first place. His confidence went too, and last year Harris even returned to Glamorgan on loan in an attempt to relocate it.Now he is the second highest wicket-taker in Division One, behind only Chris Rushworth. Harris showed why by swinging the new ball away from Adam Lyth and Gary Ballance just enough to invite the edge and then returning to aid Roland-Jones in the evisceration of Yorkshire’s batting.So crushing was this victory that it was enough to invite the question of how great the gulf between Yorkshire and the rest. “I wouldn’t say there’s a massive gap. We’ve just managed to play some very good cricket. We saw today – we got thumped so it’s hard for me to tell you how big the gap is,” Jason Gillespie said. Middlesex have now beaten Yorkshire at Lord’s in consecutive seasons, and were also tenacious in defeat at Headingley this year.A year ago Middlesex’s summer ended with a display of resolve at Old Trafford to protect their Division One status. In any context 2015 has been a quietly formidable in red ball cricket: 15 games have yielded seven victories and only one defeat. Middlesex have done it all while overcoming significant obstacles. Adam Voges’ late-blooming Test career upset their overseas plans, while the upshot of reinvigorating Steve Finn has been to lose him to England.No wonder there was such an air of contentment as the members lauded Middlesex’s efforts at Lord’s this season. Yorkshire remain county cricket’s outstanding team, but Middlesex, who were the last county to beat them in the Championship, also at Lord’s, now have only to navigate a trip to New Road to prove themselves most-deserving runners-up.

Cook and Root prosper as England tick more boxes

ScorecardIt is only the natural pessimism of England cricket followers – pessimism ingrained by years of hurt and humiliation – that could provoke the thought: the early part of this tour to South Africa is almost going well.A day after the last piece in their bowling plans fell into place, England saw their batsmen take the chance to find some form and confidence with a series of encouraging performances. Alastair Cook and Joe Root, with imperious centuries, dominate the scorecard, but the contributions of Alex Hales, who made an increasingly composed half-century, and Ben Stokes, who bullied the bowling, were equally pleasing.Yet, just as you know that things are about to go horribly awry in the Christmas Special when Dot Cotton says “Now nothing can stop this being the best Christmas ever” – a phrase that usually precipitates a fight, a shooting, a divorce and the appearance of Danny Dyer – the sense remains that life is about to become substantially more difficult. Dale Steyn, Hashim Amla, AB de Villiers et al. will surely offer sterner tests.

Root praises Hales’ role

Joe Root credited Alex Hales for helping lay the platform that England’s middle-order built upon to seize control of the match against South Africa A.
Hales overcame a tricky start to compile an elegant half-century, helping his captain post 112 for the first wicket in the process. It was a partnership that saw off the new ball, the bowlers at their freshest and allowed the likes of Root and Ben Stokes to accelerate towards a declaration with a first innings lead of 278.
Root believes Hales will have taken great confidence from the innings and suggested a strong opening partnership made life substantially easier for the middle-order.
“I think it’s vitally important,” Root said of Hales’ performance. “He played extremely well. It was the manner he did it: there were tough conditions last night. The ball was seaming and swinging around and they were runs made against a good attack. That will stand him in really good stead leading up to that first Test.
“The platform him and Cookie made laid the platform for guys like me and Ben to be more explosive at the end.”
Root was also delighted to make a century of his own. He has been dismissed with his score between 59 and 98 nine times in Test cricket this year and reiterated his desire to convert more of his good starts into the centuries that can shape games.
“Going on past 70, 80, when you get into that position as a Test cricketer you need to make big scores and that could be a factor in why we have struggled,” he said. “We’ve got guys in, laying the foundations and not going on. That’s something as a batter you want to make sure you’re improving on and it was nice today to go on and make sure I did get that hundred. It’s all about hundreds and setting games up so the guys have got the time and runs to play with when it comes to taking 20 wickets.”

But while it has become customary in recent times for touring teams to be presented with relatively weak opposition ahead of Test series – and it is true that, in Potchefstroom, England were up against a side some way below the standard expected in international cricket – that is not the case here. This South Africa A side contains several men who can consider themselves realistic options for the national team in the coming weeks, yet England have established a vast first-innings lead and will go into the first Test with confidence soaring. Every one of England’s Test top six has now made a half-century at least on the tour.To further raise England’s spirits, Steven Finn reported no repercussions after his exertions on the first day of this match and James Anderson looked fine while bowling in the middle during the intervals. Hales, too, reported no discomfort following a blow on the hand on the first day and Moeen Ali completed the day by producing a beauty to turn through the gap and bowl Reeza Hendricks.The one minor concern is the lack of time that England’s No. 7 and No. 8 – Jonny Bairstow and Moeen – have had in the middle. But, by the parameters of modern tours with their lack of preparation time, this warm-up period could hardly have gone better.Especially pleasing was the performance of Hales and Cook. England have struggled for a consistent opening partnership since 2011 and while some concerns remain about Hales’ ability to deal with the short ball or cope with the consistency of Test-class bowlers who will provide few scoring opportunities, he came through this test impressively in helping Cook post 112 for the first wicket.After an uncomfortable start on the first evening, Hales unveiled a series a glorious drives – two through extra cover and one through mid-on had the small crowd purring with pleasure – and generally ducked the short ball without too much trouble. While the manner of his dismissal – leaving a straight one for the second time on the tour – was not ideal, this was a generally encouraging effort against bowlers who were, initially at least, impressively hostile.Cook, meanwhile, looked almost completely untroubled in recording the 51st first-class century of his career. He has already scored more Test runs in a calendar year than any England captain in history. If he manages another 125 in the Boxing Day Test, he will surpass the record for any England batsman (1,481) set by Michael Vaughan in 2002. Both will have played 14 Tests in a year.He looks in the form to do it. Since being relieved of the ODI job, he has rediscovered much of the consistency that earned his reputation and here, as he seized on anything fractionally short or on his legs, he looked to have developed a slightly more aggressive approach. He hit two sixes, one a slow-sweep off a long-hop from left-arm spinner Keshav Maharaj and the other a pick-up pull off Marchant de Lange to bring up his century.De Lange may have lost just a little of the pace that rendered him such an intimidating prospect a few years ago – his action is markedly smoother – yet he remains unusually hostile and gained a bounce others could not. He has, no doubt, the class to play more Test cricket but it is hard to see how, bowling generally three and four over spells, he could fit into a three-man pace attack.While Nick Compton, beaten by a quicker delivery from the persevering Maharaj, and James Taylor, chipping a return catch back to the same bowler, missed out, Root looked in sparkling form. It is true that the pitch had eased and the bowlers tired by the time that he and Stokes, whose half-century took just 41 balls, added 104 in just 15 overs but the manner in which he swept, skipped down the pitch to drive and pulled when the seamers dropped short suggested he, too, was ready for the Boxing Day tussle.South Africa, as the world’s No. 1 rated side, remain favourites, but England have a confidence that belies the fact that they have lost three of their last four Tests.

Oram's touch and Jayasuriya's misses

Shane Bond came out a far second in the battle with Sanath Jayasuriya © Getty Images

The touch, and the thwack
Jacob Oram is renowned for his ability to give the ball a mighty thump,but here he showed he could be subtle as well. Of the third ball he faced,and the last in Sanath Jayasuriya’s spell, Oram conjured up a delicatereverse-sweep, merely tapping the ball lightly and helping it on its wayto the third-man boundary. Soon, though, he was back at his furious best:when Lasith Malinga got an attempted yorker wrong and pitched it in thehitting zone, punishment was immediate – a huge straight hit, whichbounced just in front of the sightscreen.Fielding woes for Sanath
Sanath Jayasuriya had a great time with bat and ball, but in the field hehad a rather forgettable day. Fielding at short fine leg, he reprievedBrendon McCullum in the second over, getting both hands to the ball butfailing to latch on to a mistimed pull. That was nothing to theembarrassment he would have felt after the first ball of the 18th over,when Oram’s slog gained more height than distance. Jayasuriya tried to getunder the swirler, but was never in control, and eventually stumbled, felland never even got a hand on the ball.Bond dismantled
Shane Bond v Sanath Jayasuriya was always likely to be a key contest, andthere’s no doubt who took the honours there. Jayasuriya flayed two foursthrough the off side in the first over, and then cracked two more foursover mid-off and square leg in Bond’s second over. Bond’s figures took afurther beating when Upul Tharanga joined in the fun and pulled a superbsix over fine leg. And when he dropped a clanger from Jayasuriya soonafter – cupping the ball in his hands and then spilling it – his miserywas complete.

Weekes retires from first-class cricket

After 16 years, Paul Weekes is hanging up his boots © Getty Images

Paul Weekes, Middlesex’s allrounder, is to retire at the end of their match against Kent at Canterbury. In May this year, he made it clear of his intention to move – making himself available for a possible loan – but no counties were forthcoming.”Paul has been an exceptional cricketer for the club,” Middlesex’s chief executive, Vinny Codrington, told BBC Sport. “His consistently excellent performances over the past two decades have made him a firm favourite of all those who love Middlesex cricket.”Weekes made his debut against the touring New Zealanders in 1990, has scored 11,000 first-class runs and taken 300 wickets. A mainstay of Middlesex’s lineup throughout the 1990s, his crab-like stance at the crease belies a left-hander who, while not the most elegant, scored quickly and enterprisingly. In 1996, against Somerset at Uxbridge, he became one of a select band of Middlesex players to have scored hundreds in both innings of a match (171* and 160). And, against Yorkshire last month, he struck his 20th first-class century.Playing in a strong Middlesex team during the 1990s – among the likes of Angus Fraser, Phil Tufnell, John Emburey and Mike Gatting – he couldn’t quite make the step-up to international honours, in spite touring India with England A in the mid-1990s. He also took two fine catches at short-leg, as substitute for England against the West Indies at Lord’s in 1995.

Australia's day

Close Australia 330 for 5 (Ponting 141, Langer 72, M Waugh 55)
ScorecardAustralia were in the ascendant for much of the first day of the series, as a blistering 141 from Ricky Ponting and half-centuries from Justin Langer and Mark Waugh put a depleted Pakistan firmly on the back foot. But Australia lost three key wickets in the last session, and the match had developed the hint of a contest when bad light stopped play with 13 overs remaining.The toss proved irrelevant. Steve Waugh opted to bat first and Waqar Younis indicated that he would have bowled first; the first over of the day seemed to bear out Waqar’s instincts. On a wicket affording good pace and bounce, he lured Matthew Hayden into mistiming a pull that ended safely in the hands of Imran Nazir at cover (5 for 1).But Pakistan – without Wasim Akram, Saeed Anwar, Inzamam-ul-Haq and Yousuf Youhana – then showed that as much as their batting inexperience would worry them, their bowling indiscipline is an equal threat to their chances. Waqar, Shoaib Akhtar, Abdul Razzaq and Mohammad Sami all had patches where they troubled the batsmen, but were inconsistent and paid for their profligacy.The finest sports cars can race at high speeds while appearing merely to cruise. So it was for Australia, as Ponting and Langer took Australia to 138 for 1 at lunch off just 26 overs. At no point did they appear to be making an effort to accelerate or score at a fast pace. They were merely clinical, playing out the good deliveries and unerringly punishing the poor ones.Ponting was especially severe on anything remotely loose and at one stage, when he hit four boundaries in the space of five minutes to bring up his fifty, it appeared that Pakistan were in for a nightmare of a day. Meanwhile Langer, a man known to bat in either first or fifth gear, was sailing along in third, but always looking likely to explode.Saqlain tested Langer with some tight bowling, though once Ponting got his eye in against him he played beautifully, using his feet to play some delectable straight-drives and flicks through midwicket. The two had added 183 when, against the run of play, Langer edged an awayswinger from Razzaq to Rashid Latif, who took a low diving catch (188 for 2). Langer had made 72.Mark Waugh started nervily as Shoaib was brought back into the attack, but got into his element soon enough, executing some typically graceful strokes square of the wicket on both sides. But it was Ponting who upped the tempo again, reaching his century by whipping Saqlain to the midwicket fence and then unleashing some belligerent strokes off both Shoaib and Saqlain.But just when it seemed that he could conceivably pass his Test-best 197 before the day was done, Ponting got out on 141, edging Waqar to Younis Khan at slip, thus ending an innings that looked unstoppable (272 for 3).Mark Waugh meanwhile moved on almost effortlessly to his fifty, playing with a languid grace that was all the more beautiful to watch because of the fragile nature of his Test career. This knock will buy him a few more chances though, and justifiably so, given the ease with which he played. He began tentatively but was delightful when he opened out, playing the pacemen with immaculate timing and placement, and taking a cue from Ponting in using his feet to Saqlain.In this instance though, Saqlain had the last word, deceiving Waugh with his loop when Waugh stepped out to get to the pitch of the ball, only to hit it straight back to the bowler (302 for 4). Waugh made 55.Steve Waugh and Damien Martyn then played with perhaps a touch more circumspection than was required, before Waugh (31) was beautifully deceived by Saqlain. He inside-edged a straighter one onto his pads, from where it flew to Younis at leg slip (329 for 5). The light was offered shortly afterwards, and gratefully accepted, but Pakistan, despite their late fightback, will still have a sleepless night ahead of them. Adam Gilchrist bats tomorrow.Teams
Pakistan
1 Imran Nazir, 2 Taufeeq Umar, 3 Younis Khan, 4 Misbah-ul-Haq, 5 Faisal Iqbal, 6 Abdul Razzaq, 7 Rashid Latif (wk), 8 Saqlain Mushtaq, 9 Waqar Younis (capt), 10 Shoaib Akhtar, 11 Mohammad SamiAustralia 1 Justin Langer, 2 Matthew Hayden, 3 Ricky Ponting, 4 Mark Waugh, 5 Steve Waugh (capt), 6 Damien Martyn, 7 Adam Gilchrist (wk), 8 Shane Warne, 9 Brett Lee, 10 Jason Gillespie, 11 Glenn McGrath

Davison: 'I should probably thank the ICC'

John Davison: the best since Laker© Getty Images

John Davison relaxed after his remarkable allround performance had helped Canada to a 104-run victory over USA in their Intercontinental Cup match at Fort Lauderdale and admitted that he should “probably should thank the ICC for giving this game first-class status”.Davison took 17 for 137 , the best first-class return since Jim Laker’s 19 for 90 for England against Australia at Manchester in 1956. His also made 84 in Canada’s first innings, the highest score of the match. The Intercontinental Cup is a new tournament introduced by the ICC to give international cricket’s second-string sides first-class experience.”To take so many wickets in any game of cricket is always terrific and it was a perfect wicket for spin bowling,” Davison told the Australian-based Advertiser. “I think too that we handled the pressure of three-day cricket perhaps a bit better than the US.”Davison admitted that he had been laid low with a stomach bug in the hours before the game, and was vomiting shortly before the start. “Certainly the heat didn’t help me too much,” he told the newspaper. “I lost quite a bit of weight during the game.”

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