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Test return excites Zimbabwe coach

Alan Butcher, Zimbabwe’s coach, has said the team’s return to Test cricket, scheduled for August 2011, after six years of self-imposed exile will be “massive” for the team

ESPNcricinfo staff19-Mar-2011Alan Butcher, Zimbabwe’s coach, has said the team’s return to Test cricket, scheduled for August 2011, after six years of self-imposed exile will be “massive” for the team.”Our return to Test cricket is happening in August against Bangladesh,” Butcher told on the eve of Zimbabwe’s last match of the on-going World Cup. “I think after that Pakistan and New Zealand come to Zimbabwe to play one Test each and some ODIs. That’s going to be a massive thing for Zimbabwe.”After withdrawing from Tests in September 2005, Zimbabwe have struggled in ODIs, having won only 32 out of 107 matches in that time, with just five of those victories coming against Test playing nations apart from Bangladesh. Butcher said he was aware it would not be an easy road back into Test cricket for his side.”No doubt you might be wondering if we are going to be up for the challenge and the answer to that, honestly, is probably no. The only place to learn to play Test cricket is by actually doing that. There is no other place that can prepare you. So obviously we will be doing all that we can but I will be surprised if we can come out of it without some beatings in the initial stages. But I hope the players can learn from the experience.”Zimbabwe have struggled in the World Cup so far, having lost four out of their five matches. They take on Kenya in their final match on Sunday, at Eden Gardens, and Butcher is hoping for an improved performance. He had earlier pointed to Zimbabwe’s exile from Tests as one of the reasons his batsmen were struggling to play long innings and continued to stress that batting had been the team’s weakness”Our spin bowling has done a fantastic job, but our batting has been a disappointment. We have not given our spin attack enough chances to win us games. We’ve scored runs in the past, but it has just not worked out [this time].”Butcher had also stressed on the importance of developing new talent when Zimbabwe re-enter the Test arena, but he did mention Brendan Taylor, Tatenda Taibu, Ray Price and Graeme Cremer from the current crop of players as being important to the teams’ future. Zimbabwe’s opponents on Sunday, Kenya, have had their own problems through the World Cup, losing all their games so far. But Butcher said Zimbabwe wouldn’t be taking anything for granted.”We are making sure we do our homework and ensure that we give them [Kenya] as much respect as we gave other, big teams.”

Can Deccan ambush Tendulkar's birthday?

ESPNCricinfo previews the game between Deccan Chargers and Mumbai Indians

The Preview by Nitin Sundar23-Apr-2011Match factsSunday, April 24, Delhi
Start time 1600 (1030 GMT)Mumbai’s attack is not overly dependent on Lasith Malinga anymore•Associated PressBig pictureIt’s Sachin Tendulkar’s 38th birthday and he returns to the venue where he played the best ODI innings of 2009. That epic 175 against Australia resulted in defeat, a depressing addition to the list of Tendulkar masterclasses that went in vain. That night, the crowd returned home numbed by India’s brain-freeze in the end overs, wondering if they were destined to never see their team winning. The Uppal jinx was finally broken by Deccan Chargers when they beat Bangalore on April 14 – their first home win in four editions. Will their fans want that streak to continue, at the cost of denying India’s biggest icon victory on his birthday?Mumbai are coming off three easy wins, one shock defeat and one hard-fought victory. They have looked the most complete side in the tournament, and their star power has allowed them to carry a couple of passengers in almost every game. Their fielding effort against Chennai Super Kings must rank among the best ever put up by an IPL outfit. Not too many cover-drives can find a way past a cordon that includes Andrew Symonds, Kieron Pollard, Rohit Sharma and R Sathish. The batting has been consistent, and the bowling is shaking off its dependence on Lasith Malinga.After a sluggish start, Deccan have managed two wins in three games, and will go into the game quietly confident of an upset. Their methods have been in complete contrast to Mumbai’s: lesser-knowns like Bharat Chipli and Sunny Sohal have provided the spark, while the bigger signings have remained in the background. They will need to be at their best to put it past Mumbai.Form guide (most recent first)Deccan WLWLL (8th in points table)
Mumbai WWLWW (1st in points table)Team talkWho will open Mumbai’s innings with Tendulkar? Do they just draw lots before the toss? So far Davy Jacobs, James Franklin and R Sathish have been tried. Given how poor Franklin and Sathish were, Jacobs might fancy his chances of coming back into the XI. Deccan clicked like a cohesive unit against Delhi, and may want to retain that combination.Predict the playing XIs for this match. Play ESPNcricinfo Team selector.In the spotlightSome say it was a speed-gun conspiracy, but Ishant Sharma has clocked upwards of 150 kph on a few occasions in this IPL. The last time he managed such pace was in 2008 when he bullied Ricky Ponting with a delightful spell of seam bowling in Perth. Ishant’s faltered, fizzled and settled into a lesser role in recent times, but there is still hope for resurgence.Rohit Sharma played a gem against Chennai. It was the kind of innings that left his critics infuriated, since it once again highlighted the contrast between his international career and his IPL exploits. His feet move better, his shot selection is sharper and he just seems switched on when he’s playing this tournament. Will Rohit have another bounty season? And this time, will he carry on from there to bigger things?Prime numbersTendulkar is 81 runs away from Suresh Raina, who is the all-time highest IPL run-getter. Rohit is fifth in the list.Pragyan Ojha is the second-highest wicket-taker in IPLs. Amit Mishra is fifthThe chatter”Unbelievable fielding. Brillant catches. Superb ground-fielding. I thought the fielders created opportunities today.”

Sinking Punjab run into ruthless Mumbai

ESPNcricinfo previews the IPL match between Kings XI Punjab and Mumbai Indians in Mohali

The Preview by Nitin Sundar09-May-2011Match factsTuesday, May 10, Mohali
Start time 2000 (1430 GMT)Can Adam Gilchrist stop Sachin Tendulkar’s form team this time?•AFPBig PictureWhen Kings XI Punjab last won an IPL game – against Rajasthan Royals on April 21 – Osama Bin Laden was still alive, and Chris Gayle was yet to arrive in India. A lot has happened since, and it’s fair to say Adam Gilchrist’s men are running out of time.That win was Punjab’s third in succession, and since then they have slumped to five straight defeats, without stretching any of their opponents. Even Pune Warriors, coming off a mind-numbing seven consecutive losses, had no problems overcoming Punjab. Paul Valthaty’s season has unravelled after a strong opening, David Hussey has not pulled his weight in the middle order, and Gilchrist himself has been a big failure. He has five games left to turn things around, and even that may not be enough.Mumbai Indians are all but through to the play-offs. Their campaign has been typified by efficiency with the bat, ruthlessness with the ball and brilliance in the field. They will want to lift their batting, particularly in the first half of the innings, as they brace for the business end of the tournament. Aiden Blizzard displayed the sparkle Mumbai needs, in their win against Delhi Daredevils. Sachin Tendulkar has gone off the boil after beginning the season well, and he will be keen to revive his form against Punjab’s weak attack.The form guide might indicate otherwise, but don’t discount Punjab’s chances on Tuesday. No. 10 beating No. 1 is the sort of upset Twenty20, and the IPL in particular, is made for.Form guide (most recent first)Punjab: LLLLL (tenth in points table)
Mumbai: WWWLW (first in points table)Team talkDavid Hussey has scored 40 runs and gone wicketless in four games. Will Punjab drop him and include David Miller? Siddharth Chitnis and Mandeep Singh made up the numbers in the previous game, but Punjab’s lack of quality options might give these players another chance.Unless they want to rest Lasith Malinga or Harbhajan Singh, Mumbai have no reason to fiddle with their XI.Predict the playing XIs for this match. Play ESPNcricinfo Team selector.In the spotlightAdam Gilchrist is hopelessly out of form, but a player of his class is only a cut and a short-arm pull away from regaining touch. The last time these sides met, his old friend, Harbhajan Singh, nailed him for a duck in the first over. Expect Gilchrist to come out better equipped this time.If Gilchrist gets past Harbhajan, he will come up against the chalk and cheese of fast bowling: Lasith Malinga swerves them in very full or very short at blistering pace, while Munaf Patel lands them right in between those two lengths at a sedate trundle. Together, the pair has accounted for 36 scalps this season, and looks good for more.Prime numbers With 57 wickets, Malinga is one scalp away from tying with RP Singh as the highest wicket-taker in IPL history. RP Singh has played 53 games, while Malinga’s wickets have come in only 36 matches
Among batsmen with over 1000 IPL runs, only two average in excess of 40 – Tendulkar (41.48) and Shaun Marsh (52.20) The chatter”I took up cricket because of Sachin . So, obviously it’s a great achievement for me to be sharing a dressing room with him.”

Solid Mumbai await desperate Delhi

ESPNcricinfo previews the IPL match between Mumbai Indians and Delhi Daredevils in Mumbai

The Preview by Abhishek Purohit06-May-2011Match factsSaturday, May 7, Mumbai
Start time 2000 (1430 GMT)Can Virender Sehwag do it once again for Delhi?•AFPBig pictureVirender Sehwag has made 422 runs at a strike-rate of 178.81, the most in this IPL. Sachin Tendulkar is next, with 351 at 113.59. While Tendulkar might well reclaim the orange cap from Sehwag, the gaping difference between the strike-rates also reveals the gulf between Mumbai Indians and Delhi Daredevils. It has taken three outstanding performances from Sehwag to power his struggling side to three of their four wins. Tendulkar’s solidity has been enough for Mumbai’s strong bowling attack to defend par scores. Sehwag has had to be spectacular to make up for a misfiring batting line-up as well as a bowling unit lacking firepower.The three most successful Mumbai bowlers have taken 42 wickets at 6.07 runs per over; Delhi’s top three have 24 at 7.64. Mumbai must be one of the few Twenty20 sides whose batting serves the principal purpose of providing just enough cushion to their bowlers. What some may call a cautious approach has brought them seven wins in nine games, while even a furious churning of the playing XI hasn’t worked for Delhi.The two teams began their season facing each other at Feroz Shah Kotla, where Delhi ran in to Lasith Malinga who shot them out for 95. Their fortunes have followed the pattern of that game, and unless Sehwag can continue to fight adversity with another blinder, tomorrow could see Mumbai extend their stay at the top of the points table.Form guide (most recent first)Mumbai Indians: WWLWW (first in points table)
Delhi Daredevils: WLWLL (seventh in points table)
Team talkDelhi surprisingly left out David Warner for Aaron Finch against Deccan Chargers and he should return tomorrow. They could also consider playing S Nadeem or Roelof van der Merwe as spinning options to add some variety. Apart from that, there should not be too many changes to the XI that played against Deccan.Mumbai’s problem is about dealing with too much of a good thing. Tendulkar and Ambati Rayudu have been so efficient, and Rohit Sharma so effective when required, that the others have hardly been needed. The only time they were, against Rajasthan Royals on a difficult Jaipur surface, they managed 94. That, and the fact that the top order, especially Tendulkar, has preferred accumulation to acceleration, seem to be the only niggles for Mumbai.Predict the playing XIs for this match. Play ESPNcricinfo Team selector.In the spotlightMorne Morkel may have not had the impact of a Malinga, but he has been Delhi’s best bowler by quite a distance. The Wankhede Stadium pitch usually offers bounce, and Morkel with his natural short of a good length should enjoy it. Delhi’s chances will depend on how quickly they can get through to the Mumbai middle order, and Morkel will be crucial for that to happen.Munaf Patel has taken as many wickets as Harbhajan Singh, at a slightly better economy-rate. His role as second seamer behind Malinga has gone unnoticed, and as always, Munaf has gone about his job quietly. He has performed both roles admirably, taking wickets when needed as well as keeping batsmen in check. Expect more of the same tomorrow.Prime numbers Lasith Malinga’s strike-rate and average in this IPL are both under ten, and his economy rate is below six Mumbai and Delhi are among the four IPL teams who have an overall scoring rate exceeding eight an overThe chatter”If we go too hard, we can get out for 95 also. We have to decide based on the track.”

Sussex make light work of win

Sussex moved into the top half of the first division table after securing their third County Championship win of the season

21-May-2011ScorecardSussex moved into the top half of the first division table after securing their third County Championship win of the season today. They needed just 56 minutes to complete an eight-wicket victory over pre-season title favourites Somerset at Hove.Their win had been set up by a first-wicket stand of 201 between Chris Nash and Ed Joyce on the third day after Sussex had been set 272 to win. Nash, who resumed on 111 after completing his first century of the season, seemed in a rush to complete a quick victory as he took boundaries off Charl Willoughby and Steve Kirby, who opened the bowling for Somerset.Nash moved to 120 off 174 balls with his 16th four, a superbly timed back-foot force off Kirby which sped to the cover boundary. But he perished to the next delivery, although he could hardly do anything about a ball from Kirby which barely rose above ankle height as it clatteredinto his off stump. Nevertheless, Nash moved onto 656 Championship runs, fivemore than Joyce, after six games.Nash had added 35 in 10.2 overs with Luke Wells and, although cloud cover continued to encourage the Somerset seamers, Sussex slowly whittled away at their target. Goodwin drove successive deliveries through the covers off Gemaal Hussain to get the target down to single figures and then straight-drove Willoughby up the slope for successive fours to complete back-to-back home wins for his side.Goodwin finished unbeaten on 27 and Wells was 32 not out at the close.

Sehwag, Gambhir back in full-strength Test squad

Virender Sehwag, who is yet to fully recover after undergoing surgery on his shoulder, has made it to 17-man India squad for the Test series in England, but will miss the first two weeks of the tour to give him time to recuperate further

ESPNcricinfo staff02-Jul-2011Virender Sehwag, who is yet to fully recover after undergoing surgery on his shoulder, has made it to 17-man India squad for the Test series in England, but will miss the first two weeks of the tour to give him time to recuperate further.Sachin Tendulkar returned to the squad after skipping the West Indies tour to rest, while Gautam Gambhir, Zaheer Khan and Sreesanth made comebacks from injury breaks. Yuvraj Singh, who missed the West Indies tour with a chest infection, also forced his way back into the Test plans following his excellent performance in the World Cup. M Vijay and Virat Kohli, who have so far failed to impress in the West Indies Tests, were dropped, while Suresh Raina’s strong show in the same series helped him retain his place.Abhinav Mukund, who made a dogged 48 in Barbados on Friday, will travel to England as the reserve opener. Wriddhiman Saha was included as the back-up wicketkeeper, edging out Parthiv Patel. Cheteshwar Pujara is yet to recover from the knee injury he picked up in the IPL, and misses out once again.Munaf Patel made the squad despite missing the first two West Indies Tests with fitness issues. Ishant Sharma and Praveen Kumar, who have been among the wickets in the Caribbean, round off the pace attack, while Harbhajan Singh and Amit Mishra make up the spin department.The tour begins with a three-day warm-up match on July 15, with the first Test starting on July 21 at Lord’s.The squad: MS Dhoni (capt/wk), Gautam Gambhir (vice-capt), Virender Sehwag, Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, VVS Laxman, Yuvraj Singh, Suresh Raina, Abhinav Mukund, Wriddhiman Saha (wk), Harbhajan Singh, Amit Mishra, Zaheer Khan, Sreesanth, Munaf Patel, Ishant Sharma, Praveen Kumar

Dhoni should have been punished – Harper

Daryl Harper has rebuked the ICC’s failure to take any action against India captain MS Dhoni for criticising his umpiring decisions in the first Test against West Indies

Daniel Brettig14-Jul-2011Daryl Harper, the recently retired international umpire, has said the ICC’s failure to take any action against India captain MS Dhoni for criticising his decisions in the first Test against West Indies reflected the advent of “selective management” in cricket.This was the chief factor in his decision to quit prematurely from umpiring. He said he felt targeted by the Indian team during the game and was speaking out now on those incidents because the ICC “chose not to”.Harper, who retired before what would have been his 96th and final Test in Dominica, also revealed an incident that occurred after Praveen Kumar was removed from the attack for repeated running on the pitch in Kingston. Dhoni, Harper claimed, approached him after that and said, “We’ve had problems with you before, Daryl”, which the umpire interpreted as an attempt to intimidate.Dhoni’s more publicised remarks came after the Kingston Test, following a series of umpiring errors. “If the correct decisions were made the game would have finished much earlier and I would have been in the hotel by now,” he said at the post-match press conference. His criticism was described as “unfair” by the ICC general manager of cricket David Richardson, but neither he nor the presiding match referee Jeff Crowe elected to charge the Indian captain.”That was my opinion [that he should have been censured], those were inappropriate comments,” Harper told ESPNcricinfo from Adelaide after sending out a statement on Thursday, in which he explained his side of an episode that earned him heavy criticism in the Indian media. “Any suggestion that [went], ‘If the correct decisions had been made, I would’ve been in my hotel room a lot earlier’ – I think that’s definitely inappropriate.”Especially when only one decision in the match would have been reversed had it been a DRS situation. And I read yesterday that I made nine mistakes in the game, so yes I thought it was time someone spoke up because unfortunately the ICC choose not to.”I think there are other factors afoot that are infringing on the game and I think the game’s too valuable to allow that to happen. I’m not a politician, I’m not an administrator, I’m just an umpire, and it seems to me the treatment I was receiving from the Sabina Park Test was telling me that perhaps I shouldn’t treat everyone the same way, which is a system that’s worked pretty well for a long time.”Five days passed from the time my Test had finished, until the time I worked my way through an email from the ICC that listed a number of articles coming out of India. It wasn’t until then that I realised things were going a bit pear-shaped and I expected the controlling body would do the controlling.”If it happens on my watch I take care of it, but if it happens post-match – and I didn’t know about this for five days – as far as I was concerned it was up to the controlling body to look after that aspect and I don’t believe that was happening in any way.”Harper said he felt he had been singled out by Dhoni and his team in response to earlier incidents in which he had pulled up various members of the Indian team up for their on-field behaviour. Praveen was removed from the Indian attack for repeatedly running on the pitch, while Dhoni was admonished after the close-in fielder Abhinav Mukund charged at Harper’s colleague Ian Gould while appealing for a bat-pad catch.

It seems to me the treatment I was receiving from the Sabina Park Test was telling me that perhaps I shouldn’t treat everyone the same way, which is a system that’s worked pretty well for a long time.

“Praveen Kumar transgressed a number of times, and TV actually highlighted it with a red mat showing how many times he was running straight down the pitch,” Harper said. “One criticism I received on the field was that they thought I was particularly harsh on a player in his first Test match.”My comment to that would be a Test match is not a warm-up for anything higher, it is the pinnacle form of the game, why should someone playing their first game be any different to someone playing their last? On top of that he had played 52 ODIs for India, so he was hardly a new boy on the block.”Abhinav, one of the close-in fielders at one stage ran more than halfway up the pitch, charging towards Ian Gould holding the ball, appealing for a bat-pad catch, which Ian turned down. I simply made a point of coming in from square leg and drew Dhoni’s attention to the fact he was responsible for his team’s behaviour, he was responsible for upholding the spirit of the game.”He clearly didn’t like me admonishing him for that situation, he didn’t want to look at me, but I insisted the message had to be received before the next ball was bowled and the game continued. He reluctantly acknowledged I was on the planet and we moved on.”I’ve got no doubt that applying the laws of the game in those two situations in particular were quite probably at the base of the criticism, the unwarranted criticism.”Harper said Dhoni approached him following the Kumar incident and said, “we’ve had problems with you before, Daryl”, which the umpire interpreted as an attempt to intimidate.”I decided what he meant was that I was one umpire not influenced by any personalities or teams or boards,” said Harper. “He hadn’t been able to intimidate me, I think that was part of it.”Harper also criticised the ICC for a lack of support in the face of concerted pressure from India’s players and media, which ultimately led to him being hounded out of Test cricket a match earlier than he was scheduled to retire.”I’m disappointed for the game of cricket that management has allowed this to happen. I think there was basically a hive of inactivity in Dubai,” he said. “I think it would have been very simple to apply the code of conduct that umpires have to apply on the spur of the moment in every game they umpire.”There was a five-day period when those [codes] could have been applied – that’s enough time to play a whole Test match, let alone make a decision when you’re standing behind the stumps. Nothing happened, so I guess someone had to show some leadership when it came to such an important issue for the game’s future.”It’s a wonderful game and I don’t want to see it going down the tube by selective management. And I am also concerned about the lowering of standards of behaviour. I’ve never been willing to say ‘it’s just a sign of the times’. Cricket has survived too long to give in to that sort of behaviour and accept it as part and parcel of the 21st century.”Using the example of the three players charged under the ICC code of conduct in the Kingston Test, Harper said the two West Indians Darren Sammy and Ravi Rampaul had shown far more contrition than the Indian legspinner Amit Mishra, who was also sanctioned.”Three players were reported, and that’s above average. Two of them came into the umpire’s room afterwards, and they realised they were wrong in what they’d done,” Harper said. “They both apologised profusely, they were humbled, they came in and they expressed their disappointment with their actions, they didn’t avoid the issue, they owned up.”One, Darren Sammy, was reprimanded; Ravi Rampaul was fined 10% of his match fee, and those boys were apologetic. In the other case, the first player reported was Amit Mishra, and even on the fourth day of the game he was still adamant that he’d got a bad decision.”That couldn’t be confirmed either way by replays … but regardless of where it came from, for my money that guy missed the point. There’s no code of conduct for good decisions or bad decisions. The code of conduct is there to test out the strength of character, and on that occasion his character failed to respond in the appropriate way, and four days later he still hadn’t worked out that he’d breached the code of conduct and thought he was quite justified.”For me that’s very sad, and shows a total lack of [a grasp of] what the spirit of cricket is all about.”Harper is no stranger to controversy or criticism of his decisions, particularly since the introduction of the DRS. Nonetheless he had a long career at the top level before being removed from the ICC elite panel earlier this year. His tenure was to conclude with two more matches in the West Indies, but he ultimately called time on it one match early.”I was going to be on a hiding to nothing if I officiated in Dominica. It would have been all about my performance in my 96th Test,” Harper said in his statement. “I’m not sure if any more scrutiny was actually possible. I loved my role but I didn’t want to see the focus switch to me when it should centre on the players and the contest.”In an ICC media release to explain my withdrawal from the third Test, ICC Manager, Cricket Operations Dave Richardson wrote ‘the reality of the situation is that Daryl’s statistics show his correct decision percentage in Tests involving India is 96 per cent, which is considerably higher than the international average for top-level umpires’. If this type of support had been forthcoming before the horse had bolted, I would have stayed and officiated in my 96th Test match.”The ICC intend to make a presentation to Harper, recognising his contribution to the game, during the next Test match to be held at Adelaide Oval, his home ground. It will be played against India.

Chanderpaul, Wright push Yorkshire to brink

An epic 193 from Shivnarine Chanderpaul, five wickets for Chris Wright and a superb all-round performance from Keith Barker sent Yorkshire crashing to defeat by an innings and 58 runs

25-Aug-2011
Scorecard
An epic 193 from Shivnarine Chanderpaul, five wickets for Chris Wright and a superb all-round performance from Keith Barker sent Yorkshire crashing to defeat by an innings and 58 runs on the third day of their Championship match with Warwickshire at Headingley. The emphatic victory pushed Warwickshire back into the title race, leaving them only three points behind leaders Lancashire, but it virtually condemned Yorkshire to Second Division cricket next season.Chanderpaul already stood on 167 and Barker 33 when Warwickshire began the day on 340 for 6 with a lead of 43, and they were in complete control by the time they were bowled out for 482.The hosts then collapsed to 127 all out in an effort devoid of the fight needed by a team battling to avoid relegationChanderpaul and Barker pair stayed very much in control as they slowly built on their overnight partnership of 76. The first hour produced 27 runs and the only loose shot of Chanderpaul’smarathon innings came when he mistimed a pull at Richard Pyrah and the ball ballooned into a safe space.After batting for seven hours and 20 minutes, the West Indian finally departed, prompting bowler Steven Patterson to punch the air in relief and delight. Chanderpaul dabbed outside off stump and was caught behind after receiving 306 balls and stroking 26 boundaries.His stand with Barker had produced 119 in 40 overs and runs began to flow more quickly with the appearance of Neil Carter, the eighth-wicket pair putting on 71 together in 16 overs. They kept each other company until shortly after lunch when Barker tamely drove Joe Root to Adil Rashid at cover, his 85 containing 11 fours and coming off 167 balls.Root’s offspin also brought him the last two wickets of Carter and Chris Metters to give him career-best figures of 3 for 33. Left-arm spinner David Wainwright also had three wickets, but there was no reward for the out-of-sorts Adil Rashid, whose leg-breaks cost him 90 runs from25 overs.Warwickshire’s 482 gave them a formidable lead of 185 and Yorkshire began to crumble from the first over, Barker’s fourth ball bringing the prize wicket of Jacques Rudolph who jabbed outside off stump and was well caught by Tim Ambrose.Root played an exquisite cover drive off Barker but four balls later he sliced a fierce drive to gully when he was splendidly caught two-handed by Ian Westwood. Things went from bad to worse as Anthony McGrath became the first of two victims in seven balls for Wright who was making a good impression on loan from Essex.McGrath, still not off the mark, edged his 16th ball into Ambrose’s gloves and Gary Ballance shuffled across his stumps to fall lbw, also without scoring. Tea came at 40 for 4 and the slump continued after the interval as Gerard Brophy was bowled by Wright aiming to hit through midwicket and opener Joe Sayers was lbw to a full ball from Barker for 25.Richard Pyrah went on the attack by smacking six boundaries in his 28 off 17 balls before driving Barker gently to James Troughton at mid-off and in the next over Wright struck twice by bowling Rashid and having Ryan Sidebottom caught at first slip by Varun Chopra.At 91 for 9, Yorkshire had avoided their lowest score of the season – 86 against Nottinghamshire at Headingley – and the last pair of Wainwright and Patterson survived until Patterson had his stumps knocked back at 127 in the 38th over.

West Indies sneak one-run win

West Indies Women sneaked home by one run against Pakistan Women in the rain-hit first Twenty20 international in St Andrew’s

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Sep-2011West Indies Women sneaked home by one run against Pakistan Women in the rain-hit first Twenty20 international in St Andrew’s.The first of four Twenty20s, the game was reduced to 18 overs a side as Pakistan chose to field. West Indies’ line-up did not click, opener Stafanie Taylor the top scorer with 24 – she was one of only three batsmen to get into double figures as the hosts managed only 90 for 8. The Pakistan bowlers shared the wickets around. Fast bowler Qanita Jalil was the pick, claiming 2 for 14 in a three-over spell.In a rain-marred chase, none of the Pakistan batsmen could get going either. The visitors were 56 for 3 in 11 overs, falling one short of the Duckworth/Lewis target.The second Twenty20 will be played at the same venue on September 7.

Ashes hero Dilley dies aged 52

The former England fast bowler, Graham Dilley, has died aged 52 after a short illness

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Oct-2011The former England fast bowler, Graham Dilley, has died aged 52 after a short illness.One of the quickest bowlers of his generation, with a memorable surge to the crease, Dilley took 138 Test wickets at 29.78 for his country but his best-remembered contribution to the England cause came with the bat – he made 56 supporting Ian Botham in a 117-run partnership which helped England to a famous Ashes Test win over Australia at Headingley in 1981.In a ten-year international career, Dilley played in 41 Tests and 36 ODIs. Remarkably, he finished on the winning side in just two of those Test appearances, but in an era of limited success for the England team, those two victories were among the most loudly acclaimed of the decade – in addition to Headingley, he also played a key role in the first Test of the 1986-87 Ashes triumph, at Brisbane, where his first-innings figures of 5 for 68 condemned Australia to the follow-on.In the entirety of his first-class career, Dilley claimed 648 wickets at 26.84 for Kent, Worcestershire, England and Natal, although his highlight was arguably the role he played in spearheading Worcestershire’s back-to-back County Championship title-winning sides in 1987 and 1988.”I had a lot of great times with him,” Botham told Sky Sports News. “He had a good sense of humour and always wanted to be a part of the party. He was quiet and reserved until you got to know him. It’s a very sad day. We both joined Worcestershire at the same time together, almost within minutes. We had a great run of about six trophies in five years.”Dilley’s international career was curtailed in 1989 by his decision to join Mike Gatting’s rebel tour of South Africa, but by that stage his jolting delivery stride had already taken a heavy toil on his knees. In his later years, he was troubled by osteo-arthritis, and he retired in 1992.In the immediate aftermath of retirement, Dilley suffered financial problems, but found a new lease of life after moving into coaching. He enjoyed spells as an assistant coach with England and then bowling coach to the England women’s team, before taking up a position as head cricket coach at Loughborough University. One of his pupils there was Monty Panesar, “So sad to hear my Uni coach passed away,” Panesar tweeted. “Great man and top coach. [He] did a lot for me.”A delighted Dilley when he made it two out of two by claiming the wickets of Gordon Greenidge and Faoud Bacchus off successive balls at Old Trafford in 1980•PA PhotosECB chief executive David Collier said: “Graham made a life-long contribution to the game of cricket at all levels and we are deeply saddened by the sad news this morning. He will be fondly remembered for his contributions both as a player and a coach.”Graham inspired many young cricketers through the University programme and was a highly respected coach to our representative teams. Few will forget his contribution during the historic Ashes win at Headingley in 1981 and the part he played in two Ashes series victories. Graham will be sadly missed by all his friends throughout cricket and ECB sends our deepest condolences to Graham’s family. ‘Hugh Morris, the managing director of the England team said: “This is very sad news for Graham’s many friends and colleagues in cricket both in this country and overseas. As well as being a bowler of the highest class, Graham made an immense contribution to our game as a coach and his ability to impart his knowledge and wisdom to future generations of young cricketers will be sorely missed. “

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