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Scotland aim for consistency

Scotland captain Gordon Drummond has said his side is aiming for consistency in results when they take on five other Associate and Affiliate sides in the ICC World Cricket League Division 1

Cricinfo staff22-Jun-2010Scotland captain Gordon Drummond has said his side is aiming for consistency in results when they take on five other Associate and Affiliate sides in the ICC World Cricket League Division 1 in Netherlands between July 1 and 10. They have retained only Gordon Goudie, Majid Haq and Neil McCallum from the side that participated last year in South Africa.”The target we have set for ourselves in the forthcoming event is to be as consistent as possible, day after day,” Drummond said. “We want to win every game as there is no point in winning one game and then being routed in the next. We realise that we are nearing the end of our rebuilding phase and most of the players are now pretty used to playing at this level. They know what sort of pressure there is at this stage and what they need to do to be at the top of their games.”Scotland travelled to Deventer last week where they played a first-class ICC Intercontinental 2009-10 match against the Netherlands, which was followed by an ODI. Scotland won the four-dayer by four wickets but lost the ODI by six.”Even though we’ll not be playing at the same ground, I don’t think the Netherlands will now be an alien place for some of our players as the tour will have given them some indication of the conditions they’re likely to face,” Drummond said. “It’s always handy to have first-hand information and I think we have managed to collect some valuable data.”Drummond said Ireland and Afghanistan would start as tournament favourites. “While I think every team will have an equal chance to win the tournament, Ireland and Afghanistan will start off as favourites due to their recent results.”Ireland is the benchmark for the Associate Member countries while Afghanistan has recently played some very exciting cricket. Both the sides played in the ICC World Twenty20 in the West Indies which should give them a lot of heart too. There’s no doubt that we’re disappointed at missing out on the ICC World Twenty20 2010 and the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011.”Every player wants to be part of global events of those magnitude and we’re no different. The experience of playing in those events would have helped in our development. However, we now have to ensure that we qualify for the next global events by doing well in the qualifying events whenever and wherever they are staged.”Squad: Gordon Drummond (capt), Richie Berrington, Ewan Chalmers, Josh Davey, Gordon Goudie, Majid Haq, Omer Hussain, Neil Laidlaw, Douglas Lockhart, Ross Lyons, Neil McCallum, Gregor Maiden, Preston Mommsen, Matthew Parker, Fraser Watts

Azhar Ali hopeful of Lord's debut

Azhar Ali, one of the rookie Pakistan batsmen selected for the tour of England, is hoping to make his Test debut at Lord’s

Cricinfo staff08-Jul-2010Azhar Ali, one of the rookie Pakistan batsmen selected for the tour of England, is hoping to make his Test debut at Lord’s where they face Australia in the first of two Tests starting July 13. The right-handed batsman from Lahore was in the reserves for the Asia Cup and this is his first tour with the senior team.Azhar is among three new faces in the Test squad and if picked for the first Test, he could be the first Pakistan batsman to debut at Lord’s after Shadab Kabir in 1996.”I have always dreamt of making my debut for Pakistan at Lord’s and as luck would have it, our opening Test is at Lord’s,” Azhar told . “I really hope that I am given the opportunity to debut at Lord’s, as it’s a ground steeped in tradition and history.”Azhar, 25, believes his patience and willingness to occupy the crease for long periods will help his cause.”I like to play long innings and have no problems in being patient at the crease,” Azhar said. “I know the opposition will be tough in England, but I am confident that I can provide Pakistan with stability and a degree of calmness and assurance at the top of the order. I have experience of conditions in England having played league cricket over here, so hopefully I can use that experience to my advantage”.Azhar added that he got useful advice on batting from former captain Javed Miandad during a camp last month. “Javed was watching the batsmen at the emerging players camp and he came over and talked to me about the importance of crease occupation, not letting the opposition bowlers force you out of your comfort zone and playing each delivery on merit,” Azhar said. “I think he liked what he saw in my batting and I will always be grateful for the advice he gave me”.Azhar was picked after scoring 445 runs in ten games with a personal best of 153 for Khan Research Laboratories in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy.

Essex trio disciplined

Essex players Tom Westley, Billy Godleman and Grant Flower have been punished by the club for breaches of discipline

Cricinfo staff19-Jul-2010Essex players Tom Westley, Billy Godleman and Grant Flower have been punished by the club for breaches of discipline.All three players reacted excessively to being given out, with Westley and Godleman both damaging property at Coggeshall Cricket Club in a Second XI match and Flower, the former Zimbabwe batsman, smashing his stumps down after being dismissed in a Friends Provident t20 game against Sussex.”The club takes these incidents extremely seriously and all the players have been severely reprimanded and fined,” said David East, the Essex chief executive. “In addition they have been warned regarding their future conduct and reminded of their responsibilities as ambassadors for Essex Cricket wherever they are playing.”

My report should have been fully implemented – Qayyum

The current controversy involving Pakistan players in England could have been averted had the recommendations made by the Qayyum Commission been fully implemented, a retired High Court judge has said

Cricinfo staff29-Aug-2010The current controversy involving Pakistan players in England could have been averted had the recommendations made by the Qayyum Commission been fully implemented, the retired High Court judge, who investigated the findings into match-fixing more than a decade ago, has said. The latest crisis was sparked by the arrest of a 35-year-old man Mazher Majeed, who was allegedly caught claiming to have bribed Pakistan’s bowlers to bowl no-balls during the fourth Test at Lord’s.Malik Mohammad Qayyum was appointed by the PCB in 1998 to examine allegations of match-fixing against suspected players. While many of his recommendations were upheld – two players were banned and several were fined – Qayyum claimed the PCB was not “strong enough” to implement others.”I suggested the Pakistan Cricket Board keep a tight vigil on the players and recommended some of the players should not be given any responsibility in team matters, but some of them are still involved in the team’s coaching,” Qayyum told . Among his recommendations was that players’ assets must be examined annually, though this too remained unimplemented.”It took me two long years and I summoned some 52 players and officials,
who all accepted match-fixing existed in cricket.”However, in an interview with Cricinfo in January 2006, Qayyum admitted he been lenient in his verdict on a couple of players, including Wasim Akram. “The quantum of punishment is more of one’s subjective decision, and I was lenient towards one or two of them,” he had said. “I had some soft corner for him [Wasim]. He was a very great player, a very great bowler and I was his fan, and therefore that thing did weigh with me.”

Caribbean T20 2011 to be played in January

The second edition of the Caribbean T20 tournament will be played in January 2011, barely six months after this year’s event

Cricinfo staff08-Sep-2010The second edition of the Caribbean T20 tournament will be played in January 2011, just over six months after this year’s event. The tournament was advanced so that the West Indian representative for Champions League 2011 can could be identified earlier.Guyana won the inaugural Caribbean T20, beating Barbados in the final on July 31, and qualified for the 2010 Champions League that gets underway on September 10.”We were informed by the officials of the Champions League that the regional tournament was played too late in the season,” West Indies Cricket Board director Baldath Mahabir explained. “They needed to know who would represent the West Indies at the tournament earlier and this was the major reason in bringing the tournament forward to January, to give them proper notice of our representatives.”The 2010 tournament was marred by poor weather, with three washouts in 16 games, however Mahabir was confident of better conditions following the rescheduling. “Rain affected the tournament this year because we were playing at the tail-end of the cricket season in Trinidad. In January the weather is expected to be much better and this is another plus.”

Kochi franchise remains mired in trouble

The BCCI’s deadline asking the franchise owners to register themselves as a company is only a week away but instead of sorting out the ownership wrangle, Kochi’s owners have entangled themselves in fresh problems

Nagraj Gollapudi15-Oct-2010Time is running out on Kochi, the most faction-ridden of all IPL franchises. The BCCI’s deadline asking the franchise owners to register themselves as a company is only a week away but instead of sorting out the ownership wrangle, Kochi’s owners have entangled themselves in fresh problems.Rendezvous Sports, led by Satyajitsinh Gaekwad, has made a fresh offer to buy the whole 25% of free equity, granted to them ‘for life’ when the franchise was set up earlier in the year. There has been no response to the offer in three weeks and an official involved in the discussions said, “Both factions have failed to resolve the dispute.”The biggest investors of the consortium, Mehul Shah of the Anchor group (26% ownership), had earlier offered Gaekwad and the other Rendezvous co-owners payment of 10% of the free equity in cash to exit the consortium.”They [Rendezvous] have made a fresh offer and are waiting for a response,” said one
of the Kochi officials involved in the emergency meetings.After an emergency IPL governing council meeting last Sunday, the BCCI served a show-cause notice to Kochi, giving the franchise 10 days to resolve the internal disputes which, Manohar said, had split the five-partner consortium into two groups. In the same meeting, the BCCI also terminated the contracts of Rajasthan Royals and Kings XI Punjab over their ownership patterns, thus indicating to Kochi that the consequences of inaction were severe.Rendezvous’ argument is that they took a risk in deciding to incur all the costs leading up to the bid until they won it, a proposal agreed to by the other investors in exchange of 25% of free equity. According to a Kochi insider, Rendezvous got the equity in consideration other than cash. “This was offered as per the unincorporated joint venture agreement made before the bid for Kochi,” he said, “with the responsibility to manage all the processes including outsourcing to win the bid.”It was Gaekwad who put up all of the Rs 4 crore (US$ 905,000) initial investment till the bid was won, the source said. “If they [Kochi] had lost the bid, the money would have been lost.” The terms of the sweat equity were offered in exchange of Gaekwad’s “intangible services” in the run-up to the bid along with the risk of losing Rs 4 crores.The other faction in the franchise, led by Anchor’s Shah, is against both the involvement of Rendezvous and the appointment of Gaekwad as CEO. The Kochi source revealed that the Shah group are offering Rendezvous 10% of the equity as an exit payment from the consortium. Rendezvous, however, had remained adamant: “Their latest offer is that they are willing to invest 100% of the free equity to save Kochi from falling apart.” This is an increase from Rendezvous’ initial offer of investing 15% of the equity to end the feud.The Kochi franchise has been controversial from its very inception in March. Rendezvous Sports World, a consortium of five companies, became the tenth IPL franchise after a successful bid of US$333.33m but almost immediately ran into trouble over the composition of its ownership, after the discovery of a few “secret partners” in the consortium. A new agreement was then signed by both the parties but fresh controversy broke when Lalit Modi, the then IPL chairman, made the ownership details public on his Twitter feed.Even then Modi had categorically questioned the 25% “free equity” granted to Rendezvous Sports. “25% of Kochi team is given free to Rendezvous sports for life. The same equity is non-dilutable in perpetuity. What does that mean?” Modi had asked. Kochi can either solve its problems within a week or face an even more troubled future.

Hashim Amla warns against complacency

Hashim Amla, the South Africa batsman, has warned against complacency following his team’s series wins over Zimbabwe in the two limited-overs formats at home

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Oct-2010Hashim Amla, the South Africa batsman, has warned against complacency following his team’s series wins over Zimbabwe in the two limited-overs formats at home. Amid South Africa’s success, Amla has been enjoying a prolific run. This year, he’s scored four centuries – including two this ODI series – and two fifties in nine games but has said the tour of the UAE where South Africa play Pakistan in all three formats will be a different challenge altogether.”We’re under no illusions about our performances here. Although it’s been a good start for us, we know against Pakistan it won’t be anything like this,” Amla said. “We know how tough it’s going to be there, but by the same token we’re just trying to get some good form going in the batting and bowling departments.”It’s a lovely feeling going into the last game knowing you’ve actually won the series and the mindset is to try and keep building especially before we take on Pakistan.”South Africa have been ruthless against the Zimbabwe bowlers this series but their own performance with the ball and in the field has been below-par, with the visitors posting scores of 250-plus in each of the ODIs. “Fortunately, batting-wise, we’ve done well, but still need to do a bit more work in the bowling department,” Amla said. “Fielding is a discipline like batting and bowling, and we’re gaining more and more ground with every game.”We have been a bit sloppy and dropped one or two catches, but we’d rather have it now than during a big series against India or Pakistan or even in the World Cup.”Yes, we’ve started slowly, but we’re building momentum and that’s how we’ve looked at this series against Zimbabwe. We’re under no illusion that we’re suddenly world-beaters after winning the series against Zimbabwe. We still have some tough times ahead of us against Pakistan who, on any given day, can be world-beaters themselves.”South Africa play Zimbabwe in a dead rubber, the final ODI of the series in Benoni, on Thursday. “Our batting has been consistent especially against such a big team like South Africa,” Elton Chigbumbura, the Zimbabwe captain, said. “We’re going in the right direction, but our bowlers need a lot more practice and need to gain more control.”South Africa have rested fast bowler Dale Steyn and allrounder Jacques Kallis for this series while Morne Morkel suffered an injury to his ankle early in the tour.

Investors pull the plug on Kochi

The investors behind the IPL’s Kochi franchise have decided to pull out of the venture and have informed the BCCI of this

Nagraj Gollapudi24-Nov-2010The investors behind the IPL’s Kochi franchise have decided to pull out of the venture and have informed the BCCI of this, ESPNcricinfo has learnt. Their decision comes three days before the expiry of the board’s deadline to the franchise to sort out its differences and – barring another twist in a long-running saga – could mean a final and irrevocable expulsion from the league.A letter of withdrawal was sent on Wednesday to Shashank Manohar, the BCCI president. Rajiv Shukla, a board vice-president, later confirmed the board had received “certain letters” from the consortium’s stakeholders.It leaves the IPL free to decide on how to fill the hole in the tournament – most likely by issuing a new tender inviting bids for the replacement team. This will be done on November 28, at the next governing council meeting in Nagpur, where the Kochi issue could meet its conclusion.The investors in the consortium – Anchor Earth, Parinee Developers, Rosy Blue and Film Wave -hold 74 per cent of the equity. The remaining 26% has been given to the Gaikwad family – Shailendra, his brother Ravi and their parents plus a few others, all part of Rendezvous Sports World – as free equity for services rendered in successfully bidding for the franchise.The two groups have been split down the middle over ownership issues almost since the franchise’s inception, a situation that severely undermined its credibility in the IPL’s eyes. The league’s governing council, at its emergency meeting on October 27, felt Kochi was far from resolving those issues and issued a notice asking both factions to explain why the franchise should not be scrapped.Satyajit Gaikwad, the CEO of Rendezvous, said at the time that the notice period was enough to build bridges with the investors, led by the Anchor group’s Mehul Shah. That no longer seems to be the case.An indication that the end was in sight came from the Twitter feed of Shashi Tharoor, the MP and former minister who had been closely identified with the consortium when it won the bid for the Kochi franchise. “That dream is over for now,” he tweeted on Wednesday. “Those who didn’t want a Kerala IPL team have finally succeeded. Some of us have paid a high price for trying.”

England's understated craftsman

The battle for the 2010 Ashes was won on the playing fields of Chittagong. That is the extraordinary conclusion that can be drawn from the performance of Tim Bresnan

Andrew Miller at the MCG28-Dec-2010The battle for the 2010 Ashes was won on the playing fields of Chittagong. That is the extraordinary conclusion that can be drawn from the performance of Tim Bresnan, a man whose unassuming demeanour and appetite for hard labour transformed him into England’s weapon of choice for an MCG wicket that lived up to its dour reputation. By the end of a day that he cautiously conceded was his best in England colours, Bresnan had transcended the conditions to bowl England to the brink of their first series win in Australia for 24 years.That’s quite some achievement for a man who, at one stage on this trip, was the squad’s fifth-choice seamer, with Ajmal Shahzad close to a call-up at Adelaide, and Chris Tremlett eventually plumped for in Perth. Today, however, he became the go-to man – a bowler with the stamina, skill and accuracy to make something from next to nothing on a wicket offering little swing for James Anderson and no reward for an excellent spell of bang-it-in old-ball bowling from Chris Tremlett.”We’ve had a good day of Test cricket,” said Bresnan, with habitual modesty. “We’ve done a lot of hard work, hopefully we’ll do the rest tomorrow and wrap up this win. I don’t know if I’ve played a major part, but we’ve bowled well again, bowled well in partnerships, and it doesn’t matter who really takes the wickets, it just happens today is my day. It’s a very good feeling.”It suits Bresnan’s style to be under-estimated, because beyond the flat Castleford vowels lies a serious competitor, and one who has been at the forefront of England’s thoughts ever since his unstinting performances on the deathly flat decks of Bangladesh back in March. Though he claimed just seven wickets at 32.28 in the two Tests, his stamina alone in sapping humidity and on soul-destroying surfaces impressed Andy Flower, who recognised the value of a player who would never allow himself to hide behind excuses.”You use the conditions you get given,” said Bresnan. “You go around the world and you get these wickets and you’re expected to do a job on them. I’m not saying this one is anywhere near as slow and has less bounce than Bangladesh, because when it kisses through it kisses through nicely and you could actually bowl a bouncer on it. But today the pitch wasn’t doing a great deal, so we had to rely on our skill, and the abrasiveness that came into play.”That was very much the case on a pudding of a pitch against Victoria a fortnight ago, where Bresnan was the only England seamer to claim a wicket in 78 overs. Despite that, he maintained his discipline at all costs, attacked the stumps with a hint of reverse swing on a still-lush outfield, and conceded his runs at barely three an over. It was all the evidence that Flower needed to give the promising but expensive Steven Finn a break from the front line, and bring in a man who could not have been more ready for action.”The way we’ve been preparing, especially me and the lads who haven’t been playing in the series, we’ve played the warm-up games and prepared as if we were going to play,” said Bresnan. “Andy sat us all down and said: ‘Listen, I’d be very surprised if we go with the same team through five Tests’. Obviously with it being so hard fought and close together, we knew there would be a chance for at least two or three of us playing, so we had to prepare as if we were playing.”Subtlety is not a trait that one associates with a personality as blunt as Bresnan, whose reaction on seeing the MCG for the first time a fortnight ago was to say: “S’alright. Headingley’s bigger…” But he’s a tradesman who knows how to use his tools, and the manner in which he chiselled England into a formidable position in both innings could not have been more perfectly carried out. All told in this contest he has the figures of 28-13-51-5, figures that any fast bowler in Ashes history would be proud to sport on their CV.In the first innings, Bresnan’s alliance with Tremlett forced the crucial early breakthroughs after two dropped catches had taken the venom out of Anderson’s first spell. Second-time around, England were haemorrhaging runs at more than five an over when he entered the attack in the 11th over. It was hardly a calamity, seeing as they had helped themselves to a first-innings lead of 415 – an Ashes record for a team batting second – but nevertheless, there was a job to be done and it was undertaken with matter-of-fact precision and a significant dollop of skill.It took him no time at all to knuckle down to locate his length, which barely changes from one pitch to the next – full, flat and zeroing onto the base of middle stump. He’s quicker than he is given credit for – the MCG speed gun reckoned he was the fastest of England’s three pacemen in both innings – and he has the sort of stamina that invites the usual clichés about Boxer the Animal Farm carthorse. But each of his three wickets in 18 deliveries were created by a subtle variation on a theme – hooping reverse swing to sucker Shane Watson; fractionally low bounce for the “dirty drag-on” that bowled Ricky Ponting, and a curvy stick-in-the-pitch outswinger to lure Mike Hussey into a fatal poke to cover.If England’s own supporters under-estimated Bresnan, then it’s hardly a surprise. He barely featured in his Test debut at Lord’s in May 2009, a match made memorable by the four wickets in seven balls that were scalped by his fellow new boy, Graham Onions, and though he followed up with a three-for at the fag-end of the following match at Chester-le-Street, the game was long since dead in every respect, with the crowds absent and an innings victory in the bag.And yet, if there’s any team that knows Bresnan’s capabilities, it is Australia, who not only faced and failed against his heavy balls in the World Twenty20 final in Barbados back in May, but also watched him play a starring role in the 3-2 ODI series win in England back in June. His bowling on that occasion may have gone under-rewarded, but his cool under fire enabled him to withstand a frantic finale to the third match at Old Trafford, where his 14 not out from 15 balls enabled England to scramble to a series-sealing one-wicket win.”I do like being under the pump, I think,” said Bresnan. “I do like the big occasion, and I do like being under pressure – I think it brings out the best in me – so why wouldn’t it be on Boxing Day in Australia?””It didn’t take me by surprise,” said Watson. “I’ve played with him in one-day cricket for the past year, really. He can bowl very well. He swings the new ball, he gets a bit of bounce as well, and the way he bowled today was brilliant. It was what I expected he was going to do, because he’s a high quality player and a high quality bowler. His first spell was very good, the ball was starting to go reverse. The spell this afternoon was very highly skilled. It was a lot of hard work out there.”It wasn’t so long ago that Bresnan was the butt of a few jokes for the size of his waistline, and on one unfortunate occasion, he got himself into trouble with a feisty response to a jibe from a supporter on Twitter. But the song that the Barmy Army devised for him in Bangladesh – “we’ve had a Garlic Nan, we’ve had a butter nan… but our favourite Nan … is Tim Bres-nan…” – did not get an airing today, perhaps because it hardly seemed relevant for such a frugal performance.And that Spartan attitude extended to his assessment of an incredibly significant day’s play for England. While Watson admitted that the Ashes had already been lost by Australia, Bresnan kept ploughing the same furrow that has kept both him and the squad as a whole battle-ready all series long. “We’ve still got the three wickets to get, so I’ll describe that tomorrow – if we do it,” he said. “We’ve still got a lot of hard work to do.”

Yorkshire will not bid for Ashes Test

Headingley will not host an Ashes Test in 2013 or 2015 after Yorkshire chairman and chief executive, Colin Graves, said it would represent too great a financial risk

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Feb-2011Headingley will not host an Ashes Test in 2013 or 2015 after Yorkshire chairman and chief executive, Colin Graves, said it would represent too great a financial risk.Yorkshire suffered a £2m loss for 2010, a figure that was contributed to by poor attendance figures for the Pakistan v Australia Test that was staged at Headingley last summer. The county has a staging agreement with the England and Wales Cricket Board that guarantees them a Test and a one-day international each year between 2012 and 2019. However, counties have to bid for the right to host Ashes matches.Graves, who succeeded Stewart Regan as chief executive, said the cost of bidding for a Test against England’s traditional foes was too high.”There’s no chance at all of us hosting an Ashes Test,” he told the . “For 2013 and 2015 we are not allocated an Ashes Test, we won’t be allocated one, and we are not going to bid for one to put ourselves at risk again. The figure is not fixed but it could cost anything between £1m and £2m to make a bid. I’m not putting between £1m and £2m at risk because it’s not worth it. I’d rather stick with what we’ve got.”The ECB, meanwhile, are reviewing the process by which they allocate major international fixtures. An ECB spokesperson said: “There is actually a board meeting today where we will be discussing the way major matches are allocated and the bidding process”It is something we are conscious of and we are aware it is something the grounds have concerns about.”There have been extensive discussions with both the international and non-international grounds over the way in which the process works and the management board will sit down and assess what the best options are going forward.”The bidding process was introduced because the building of new grounds at Chester-le-Street and Southampton and the redevelopment of Cardiff mean there are more venues vying to stage matches.

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