IPL 2020: 'Will be slightly easier to monitor ACU activity in the UAE,' says Ajit Singh

BCCI’s Anti-Corruption Unit head says shifting IPL 2020 away from India won’t hamper intelligence gathering

PTI26-Jul-2020Taking the IPL to the UAE would be quite a task logistically for the tournament organisers, but for BCCI Anti-Corruption Unit head Ajit Singh, the move will make monitoring the event “slightly easier” as it would be restricted to just three venues.IPL 2020 is set to start in the UAE on September 19 and the final will be held on November 8 or November 10, with three venues – Dubai, Sharjah and Abu Dhabi hosting the 60 games over 51 days.ALSO READ: IPL 2020: UAE board waits for India government nod to ‘ink the final deal’ with BCCI“In the UAE, it will be slightly easier doing [monitoring ACU activity] as there are only three grounds compared to eight venues in India,” Singh told .”That’s not an issue at all. Once the schedule comes, we will decide the workforce.”In 2014, the UAE hosted a part of the IPL because of general elections in India.Singh said currently there are “eight ACU officers who are on BCCI payrolls”.So, will that be enough for managing the work through 60 matches as well as keeping a tab on hotels? “It’s too early to comment on measures as we need to first check what kind of bio-security measures will be created,” Singh said. “We first need to see how things are taking shape there and we will deploy our men accordingly. In case, we need men, we will hire them.”With the ICC headquartered in Dubai, the BCCI, if need be, can take help of the global body, which has a huge team of ACU officials, according to senior a BCCI official.”If it is a private league that approaches ICC for hiring ACU officers and they agree to cover the event, then the league organisers bear the costs,” the official said.ALSO READ: IPL 2020 to start on September 19, final on November 8 or 10The BCCI might need extra workforce considering that each team will have one dedicated Integrity Officer as per rules.”It is the BCCI that will designate one Integrity Officer per team during the course of the IPL,” a senior franchise official said.” Now whether they will be a part of the bio-bubble (if created), we don’t know, but the Integrity Officer is completely their domain.”Matches held in the UAE have previously been vulnerable to the impact of bookies and fixers, but the ACU head is quite confident that they can prevent wrongdoing.”Whoever is involved (bookies/fixers) they are all inter-connected,” he said. “If we have our sources here, they also know how these bookies operate. If they get an information of this place, they will get an information of that place also. It’s not so much of an issue.”

Gareth Roderick's 98 puts Gloucestershire in the box seat in Bristol

Gloucestershire scored 350 in reply to Derbyshire’s 291 to gain the upper hand on day three

ECB Reporters Network13-Apr-2019
In-form Gareth Roderick narrowly missed out on a century as Gloucestershire scored 350 in reply to Derbyshire’s 291 to gain the upper hand on day three of the Specsavers County Championship match at Bristol.Following hard on the heels of his 115 in the opening fixture against Oxford MCCU a week earlier, the 27-year-old posted 98, adding 118 with Ryan Higgins for the sixth wicket, as Gloucestershire established a useful first-innings lead of 59.Roderick then took two catches behind the stumps as Derbyshire subsided to 18-2, before Wayne Madsen (41 not out) and Tom Lace (48 not out) ushered them to 97-2 at stumps, 38 ahead with eight second innings wickets in hand.Derbyshire will almost certainly have to bat for a further two sessions on the final day if they are to secure a draw and much will depend upon the experienced Madsen when he resumes his innings in the morning.Demonstrating the tenacity and patience required to score runs on a characteristically slow Bristol pitch, Roderick batted for five-and-a-half hours, faced 238 balls and accrued nine fours, in the process helping Gloucestershire bank three batting bonus points on another cold day at the County Ground.All-rounder Higgins also played his part, raising a forthright 74 from 104 balls and striking 12 fours on a day when the hosts made most of the running.Derbyshire’s bowlers stuck manfully to their task, Luis Reece claiming 3 for 60 and Logan van Beek 3 for 75 to keep their Second Division opponents in check.Resuming on 202 for 5, Gloucestershire had the better of the morning session, adding 88 runs for the loss of Higgins. The more aggressive of the two batsmen, Higgins was first to raise 50, attaining that landmark from 68 balls with his eighth four, a gloriously-timed cover drive at the expense of Ravi Rampaul.Content to wait for the bad ball and altogether more cirumspect in his approach, the more cautious Roderick attained the same milestone via 163 balls, driving Reece to the long-on boundary for his seventh four.Reece afforded Derbyshire temporary respite when bowling Higgins, but Graeme van Buuren and Roderick ensured Gloucestershire were just one run behind at lunch.Rampaul made a double breakthrough in the afternoon session, pinning van Buuren lbw for 15 and then inducing Josh Shaw to chip to mid-wicket for six as the home side slipped to 325 for 8.Dutch international van Beek claimed the key wicket of Roderick, who edged a catch behind, and then removed last man Harry Hankins to wrap-up the innings.Gloucestershire immediately applied new-ball pressure, Reece falling to the second ball of the innings, nicking a catch behind off Matt Taylor without scoring.Billy Godleman succumbed to Higgins in similar fashion, pursuing a ball that pitched outside off stump and offering up a routine catch behind for 6.But the watchful Madsen and Lace shut the door on Gloucestershire ambition thereafter, displaying impressive discipline to stage an unbroken alliance of 79.

Markram, Ngidi awarded CSA central contracts

Morne Morkel, Farhaan Behardien, Stephen Cook, Wayne Parnell and Aaron Phangiso have been left out of the 18-player contracts list

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Mar-2018South Africa have awarded national contracts to Aiden Markram and Lungi Ngidi for the 2018-19 season, while dropping Farhaan Behardien, Stephen Cook, Wayne Parnell and Aaron Phangiso. Morne Morkel, who will retire after the ongoing Test series against Australia was also excluded from the list.The total list has been cut from 21 players to 18 and applies to away tours to Sri Lanka and Australia, home series against Zimbabwe, Pakistan and Sri Lanka and the 2019 World Cup.Chiefly, the new contract list provides some certainty over the futures of South Africa’s senior players, many of whom were thought to be considering retirement at the end of current Australia Test series. AB de Villiers and Hashim Amla have been re-contracted along with Dale Steyn, who only played one match in the previous contract period.Steyn spent 13 months recovering from a shoulder injury between November 2016 and January 2017 before making his comeback in the New Year’s Test against India. He did not complete the match after picking up a heel injury and has been recovering since. He is expected to return for the third Test against Australia later this month but there remains uncertainty over his white-ball role. Coach Ottis Gibson had earlier suggested Steyn needed to play franchise limited-overs cricket before he would be considered for the World Cup squad.

Ins and outs

In: Aiden Markam, Lungi Ngidi
Out: Farhaan Behardien, Stephen Cook, Morne Morkel, Wayne Parnell, Aaron Phangiso

South Africa’s contracted player list appears to be focused on the tournament with Imran Tahir and JP Duminy likely to use it as a swansong. Behardien has not been given that same guarantee, both on paper and the field. He only played one of the six ODIs against India despite featuring among the top run-scorers in the domestic one-day cup, has not been contracted and it is unclear what his role may be going forward. His replacement, Khaya Zondo, was also not contracted.Chris Morris and Andile Phehlukwayo are the only two white-ball allrounders contracted with Parnell seemingly completely out of the picture. He has not played international cricket since the series against Bangladesh in October last year and has not featured at franchise level since January 12, almost two months ago.In Test terms, Dean Elgar and Vernon Philander are the only two contractees who feature in the longer-format only, though both have indicated they would like that to change. Temba Bavuma is also considered a Test player only, though he has played two ODIs.Markram, with seven caps to his name in both Tests and ODIs, makes up one half of South Africa future investment, with Ngidi the other. The pair both debuted in the 2017-18 summer and have enjoyed early success. Markram is being touted as a future leader across all formats, has three centuries in his first seven Tests and led South Africa in ODIs against India, while Ngidi has been tipped to take over from Morkel in Tests.Contracted players: Hashim Amla, Temba Bavuma, Quinton de Kock, AB de Villiers, JP Duminy, Faf du Plessis, Dean Elgar, Imran Tahir, Keshav Maharaj, Aiden Markram, David Miller, Chris Morris, Lungi Ngidi, Andile Phehlukwayo, Vernon Philander, Kagiso Rabada, Tabraiz Shamsi, Dale Steyn.

Pakistan look to defy history against new-look Australia

The visitors have not beaten Australia in Australia – in any format – for the last 15 games; but with a World Cup qualification battle looming, they need to overturn history

Brydon Coverdale12-Jan-2017

Match facts

January 13, 2017
Start time 1320 local (0320 GMT)1:12

Pakistan face an upward challenge in ODIs

Big Picture

After Pakistan’s losing streak last week extended to 12 consecutive Tests in Australia, they must be hoping that a change of format will bring a change of fortunes. Perhaps it will, though much remains stacked against them as they begin a series of five ODIs with the opener at the Gabba on Friday. Their record in ODIs against Australia in Australia isn’t a whole lot better than their Test history, having lost their last eight. In fact, across all formats, Pakistan have lost their last 15 games against Australia in Australia, their last win having come in an ODI at the WACA in 2005.Adding to the challenge for Pakistan, they are facing the No.1-ranked ODI side in the world, and are themselves ranked eighth. It is a precarious position for Pakistan, who are at serious risk of failing to qualify directly for the 2019 World Cup. The eight highest-ranked sides as at September 30 this year will earn automatic qualification, while the remainder will be forced to take part in the World Cup Qualifier in Bangladesh in 2018. Every ODI win in the next nine months is therefore critical for Pakistan.And they will begin this series with a weakened squad, having lost both Mohammad Irfan and Sarfraz Ahmed, who have both flown home to Pakistan for family reasons. But Australia also enter this series with a new-look side, which might give Pakistan a glimmer of hope. The tall and very raw fast bowler Billy Stanlake will make his debut at the Gabba, along with middle-order batsman Chris Lynn. And David Warner will have a new opening partner – Travis Head – after Aaron Finch was dropped. George Bailey has also been axed, and it means that for the first time since June 2012, Australia will play an ODI with neither Bailey nor Finch. Josh Hazlewood is also out of this first game, being rested after a heavy workload in the Tests.

Form guide

Australia: WWWLL (last five completed matches, most recent first)

Pakistan: WWWWL
After a difficult summer, Glenn Maxwell has finally broken into the playing XI•Getty Images

In the spotlight

It has been a difficult summer for Glenn Maxwell, who was named in the squad for the Chappell-Hadlee Series in December but was left out of all three games. Before the series, Maxwell had caused controversy with comments about batting behind Matthew Wade in Victoria’s Sheffield Shield side, and was fined by Australia’s team leadership group. But perhaps it’s a case of new year, new beginnings. Finally, he is back in Australia’s XI, and will play his first ODI since the tri-series in the West Indies last June. And expect him to be ahead of Wade in the batting order.Nearly two years have passed since Umar Akmal has played an ODI. His most recent appearance was in the World Cup quarter-final between Pakistan and Australia at Adelaide Oval in March 2015, a match best remembered for Wahab Riaz’s fiery battle with Shane Watson. But Umar is back in favour, and is coming off an innings of 54 from 39 balls in the tour match against a Cricket Australia XI at Allan Border Field on Tuesday. Having spent so long out of the ODI setup, he may just have something to prove.

Team news

Steven Smith confirmed Australia’s XI on the eve of the match, with Head named to open alongside Warner, and Lynn and Stanlake set to debut. Legspinner Adam Zampa and batsman Usman Khawaja miss out.Australia 1 David Warner, 2 Travis Head, 3 Steven Smith (capt), 4 Chris Lynn, 5 Mitchell Marsh, 6 Glenn Maxwell, 7 Matthew Wade (wk), 8 James Faulkner, 9 Pat Cummins, 10 Mitchell Starc, 11 Billy Stanlake.Mohammad Hafeez was a late addition to the squad and could be rushed in for the first game. With Sarfraz unavailable, Mohammad Rizwan is expected to take the gloves. The make-up of Pakistan’s attack is uncertain, though it is likely only one of Imad Wasim and Mohammad Nawaz will play.Pakistan (possible) 1 Azhar Ali (capt), 2 Sharjeel Khan, 3 Mohammad Hafeez, 4 Babar Azam, 5 Shoaib Malik, 6 Umar Akmal, 7 Mohammad Rizwan (wk), 8 Imad Wasim, 9 Mohammad Amir/Junaid Khan, 10 Wahab Riaz, 11 Hasan Ali.

Pitch and conditions

High scoring is possible at the Gabba – in the two most recent ODIs there, targets of 300-plus were successfully chased down. However, if the conditions suit, the ball can also swing around a lot – in 2013, Australia were rolled for 74 by Nuwan Kulasekara and the Sri Lankans in a Brisbane ODI. The forecast for Friday is for a hot day and a top of 34C.

Stats and trivia

  • Australia have dominated recent encounters between these sides, winning 16 of their past 20 ODIs against Pakistan
  • It may not quite match Australia’s Test record at the so-called Gabbatoir, but of their past nine completed ODIs at the ground, Australia have lost only one
  • Pakistan would need to win the series in order to move ahead of Bangladesh and into seventh position on the ODI rankings

Quotes

“It’s nice to have three guys who can get it up around 150kph – it’s never nice to face.”

Pollard ruled out of Ram Slam T20, BBL

West Indies allrounder Kieron Pollard will miss the remainder of Cape Cobras’ Ram Slam T20 Challenge after injuring his right knee during the clash against Knights in Paarl

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Nov-2015West Indies allrounder Kieron Pollard will miss the remainder of Cape Cobras’ Ram Slam T20 Challenge after injuring his right knee during the clash against Knights in Paarl.Pollard picked up the injury while turning quickly to field a ball, but despite experiencing discomfort, he returned to bat in the second innings, hammering 23 off 12 balls to power his team to a four-wicket win. A CSA release later confirmed that Pollard will return to the Caribbean on Wednesday for treatment.”We are severely disappointed about the loss of a stalwart like Kieron,” Paul Adams, Cobras’ coach, said. “Kieron has given his all. The fact that he went out to bat after he got injured, underlines his dedication and commitment to the team. He has been an inspiration to the whole squad.”Pollard was named the Ram Slam T20 Challenge player of the year during the 2014-15 season, as he ended the tournament with 14 wickets and 243 runs from 11 matches, helping Cobras to the title.The news also came as a blow to the Adelaide Strikers, who confirmed that Pollard was ruled out of the upcoming Big Bash League season, scheduled to begin next month. The Strikers, who announced the signing of England legspinner Adil Rashid last week, will now have to find another international signing to replace Pollard.”This is obviously terrible news and our first concern is that Kieron can make a full recovery from his injury,” Tim Nielsen, the SACA high performance general manager, said. “He’s become a regular at Adelaide Oval and I’m sure both our fans and players will be devastated not to see him in Strikers’ colours.”Kieron is a unique player because he has all-round ability as a batsman, bowler and fielder, so it’s going to be difficult to replace him but we’re investigating all options and will try to find the best fit for the team. Our first match against the Melbourne Stars is less than four weeks away now, so there’s a lot of work to do but we’re confident we can find a suitable replacement.”

Taylor pleased with Zimbabwe's progress

Brendan Taylor has given Zimbabwean Test cricket a pass mark after their drawn series against Bangladesh

Firdose Moonda in Harare29-Apr-2013Brendan Taylor has given Zimbabwean Test cricket a pass mark after their drawn series against Bangladesh. Although their dominance in the first game put the hosts in position to claim a series victory and set them up to win consecutive Tests for the first time in 12 years, Taylor regarded it as achievement enough that they shared honours overall.”We’ve gone forward, especially considering the way it went for us in West Indies,” Taylor said. “It does take character to win Test matches and we leveled it. It’s not the end of the world that we didn’t win. There’s still plenty of cricket to play and hopefully we will keep getting better.”Zimbabwe were blanked across all formats in West Indies a month ago but it was their Test defeats which stung hardest. Their batsmen were outspun by Shane Shillingford and Marlon Samuels and made to look like amateurs.Zimbabwe were desperate to overturn that and do some damage control to their reputations. Twin centuries from Taylor and a hundred from Hamilton Masakadza went some way to doing that but overall, Zimbabwe’s batting was what let them down. Their top order proved fragile and dented their hopes of saving the second Test, which Taylor said were still alive overnight.”We thought batting out the day was the more realistic goal. We felt if we could bat around Hamilton and take it hour by hour then we could get there,” he said. “But there were too many soft dismissals.”Taylor put Zimbabwe’s batting inconsistencies down to mindset rather than inability. “It’s our mental process. We practice really hard and technically we are ok but guys do work for a good solid hour and then find ways to get out. If we can all dig deep and find our ways to be a little sharper that will be good.”Despite the rest of the line-up making similar mistakes, Taylor was pleased with the progress they made overall. “Our middle order is looking strong again,” he said. Malcolm Waller scored a half-century, Graeme Cremer notched up his highest Test score and Keegan Meth and Shingi Masakadza are proving handy lower-order all-rounders.Taylor was particularly impressed with the showing of Shingi, the younger brother of Hamilton. He was Zimbabwe’s leading wicket-taker with 10 at an average of 16.80, accepted the job of nightwatchman and performed it well and contributed with the bat in his regular position as well. “I am very pleased with the way he bowled. He is one hell of a trier,” Taylor said. “He has got such a big heart and he never stops giving his best. If we had eleven of him, we’d have a pretty good side.”But not even Shingi could bowl as well as Zimbabwe hoped when they put Bangladesh in to bat on what they thought was a lively surface. It turned out to be a far tamer strip than the one on which the first Test was played on the same ground and the Bangladesh batsmen settled on it quickly.Taylor stood by his decision to try and make first use of it. “There was definitely enough for the fast bowlers. We didn’t hit the right areas consistently enough and we allowed them to score freely. It’s hard to come back from that. We didn’t back up anyone. Keegan Meth contained nicely from one end but Kyle Jarvis was trying too hard and we let the pressure go from the other end. Kyle still has a long to go as a bowler and I’m sure he will bounce back stronger.”Taylor thought the same of his whole team, who will have a healthy dose of Test cricket to measure themselves against this year, with incoming tours against Sri Lanka and Pakistan scheduled. “We knew we didn’t help ourselves in this match but we are growing,” Taylor said. “Bangladesh probably won two-thirds of the match and we had too many bad sessions. We were just outplayed but we will get better.”

Sarwan and Cobb end century wait

Ramnaresh Sarwan and Josh Cobb ended their century droughts as Leicestershire’s batsmen dominated

20-Apr-2012Leicestershire 318 for 7 (Sarwan 105, Cobb 105) v Derbyshire
ScorecardRamnaresh Sarwan and Josh Cobb ended their century droughts as Leicestershire’s batsmen dominated the second day of the County Championship match against Derbyshire at Derby.Sarwan celebrated a first-class hundred for the first time in 26 months while Cobb’s was his first since his maiden century four years ago. Sarwan was out for 105 after sharing a fourth wicket stand of 141 in 33 overs with Cobb who also made 105 as the visitors reached 318 for 7 before bad light ended play seven overs early.Leicestershire had been in trouble in the morning when they lost their second wicket to the 12th ball of the day with only 25 on the board. Tony Palladino claimed his 12th victim of the new season when Jacques Du Toit was caught behind down the leg side for 14 and both Greg Smith and Sarwan had to fight hard to stay in before rain forced an early lunch.Sarwan survived a fierce chance on 24 to Dan Redfern at extra cover three balls before the interval, but he did not give another until he had reached his first century for Leicestershire in his second match for the county.Smith helped him build a solid platform with 33 in three hours before he was bowled trying to cut David Wainwright but the tempo increased with the arrival of Cobb who took the attack to the bowlers. He pulled Wainwright for two sixes on his way to his first Championship fifty since 2010 and Sarwan also came down the pitch to loft Wes Durston over the long on boundary.Cobb pulled Wainwright for a third six after tea before Sarwan reached three figures from 183 balls when he tucked the left-arm spinner behind square for his 16th four. Derbyshire finally got rid of him when he pulled Ross Whiteley low to deep square-leg leaving Cobb to make his way to his first hundred since 2008.The 21-year-old got there when he steered the 155th ball he faced to the vacant third man boundary for his 12th four but he added only three more runs before he missed a big drive at Mark Footitt and was bowled.Derbyshire picked up another wicket when their former player Wayne White was caught behind cutting at Whiteley, but the day still belonged to Leicestershire although with more showers forecast for the weekend, the chances of a positive result in the match look slim.

Warwickshire docked eight points for poor pitch

Warwickshire have been penalised eight points after an ECB Pitch Panel deemed the pitch at Edgbaston for the Championship match against Worcestershire to be “poor.”

George Dobell at Edgbaston13-May-2011
Scorecard
Vikram Solanki was struck on the back of the head after ducking into a bouncer from Boyd Rankin•PA Photos

Warwickshire have been penalised eight points after an ECB Pitch Panel deemed the pitch at Edgbaston for the Championship match against Worcestershire to be “poor.”The panel, chaired by former Sussex and England seamer Tony Pigott, cited “excessive uneven bounce” as the main problem. Warwickshire could have been penalised 24 points had the panel found the pitch to be ‘unfit.’With Vikram Solanki taken to hospital after sustaining a fearful blow on the head and numerous other stoppages as batsmen took painful blows on the body, this game has been reduced to a farcical state by a pitch unsuited to professional cricket.Some will argue that conditions are not that bad. And it’s true, no doubt, that there were far more testing tracks in the days of uncovered pitches and helmetless batsmen. It may also be true that the techniques of modern batsmen are not what they once were. But make no mistake: this is an unusually poor pitch; certainly the worst that this writer has witnessed. The sight of a ball taking off from a length and clearing the wicket-keepers’ head by ten feet, as has happened here, is very rare.How has this happened? Well, the pitch was far too dry at the start. As a result, there were cracks in the surface that have widened as the match progressed. Any ball hitting them could rear or scuttle without any apparent pattern. Just about every batsman has sustained a blow at some stage and it is only due to good fortune and the excellence of modern protective equipment, that no-one has suffered a serious injury.Warwickshire had various factors to use in mitigation. They have just installed, on the insistence of the ECB, a new drainage system and new sand-based outfield to speed the drying process. They have also just built an enormous new stand. All these things, they argue, have changed conditions at the ground and altered the drying process. As a result, the groundstaff have misjudged the amount of watering required and the allowed the pitch to become too dry.Lessons will have been learned. There’s no reason to suggest there should be a problem by the time the Test against India begins here in August.That, Warwickshire say, is quite different to a director of cricket requesting a bowler-friendly track to aid his side. They also point out that there have been many games with lower scores and many games finishing in fewer overs.The shame of the pitch debacle is that it will detract attention from a quite outstanding debut from Chris Metters. Only one of Metters’ six wickets – the one he took from his first ball of the third day – was due to the poor wicket (Alan Richardson was powerless to withdraw his bat from one that spat and took the edge), with the other five the result of an immaculate line and length and a probing style that will bring him many more victims. He already has the best Championship innings analysis in the history of a Warwickshire man making his first-class debut. And, when he bowls in the second innings, he will be on a hat-trick.Perhaps, however, the pitch problem might highlight the excellence of Mohammad Yousuf’s contribution. He has been quite outstanding in this game. Yes, this Worcestershire attack is modest, but on this pitch, his first innings century and his second innings of 68 were almost unbelievably high scores.This game will be remembered more, however, for the sight of a highly-skilled, highly-experienced batsman clutching his head after ducking into a short-ball from Boyd Rankin. In truth, Solanki did not play the delivery terribly well, turning his head on the ball, and taking the blow just below the ear in an area unprotected by his helmet. The ball may well not have misbehaved, either, but Solanki was, understandably, reluctant to trust the capricious pitch and failed to commit to the shot he might have played in other circumstances. Thankfully, X-rays showed no serious injury and Solanki returned to the ground in the evening. He should be able to bat on the final day.Meanwhile Naqaash Tahir claimed three for eight in eight overs to suggest Worcestershire will get nowhere near their target of 328 to win. Tahir saw one take off and catch the edge of the helpless James Cameron’s bat, before Matt Pardoe was beaten by one that kept low and Alexei Kervezee was punished for planting his front foot by one that swung back into him. Had rain not robbed almost a session from the day, the match might well have finished on the third day. As it is, they resume on day four needing another 292 to win.Earlier Warwickshire declined to enforce the follow-on after Metters struck with the first delivery of the day. Instead, they extended their advantage to 327, with Yousuf again producing a masterclass of batsmanship.He had some fortune, however. No batsman, not Sobers or Bradman or Tendulkar, could have played the delivery that spat from a length and took the shoulder of Jonathan Trott’s bat, or indeed, the one that reared and took the edge of Varun Chopra’s bat to give Damien Wright his 400th first-class victim.Yousuf was simply fortunate enough not to receive such a ball. He did, however, take a horrid blow in the chest from one that nipped back, while Rikki Clarke fell to a tentative prod two balls after receiving one that cut back sharply and struck him in the body. Ian Bell prodded a return catch after receiving one that stopped on him.Trott, it should be noted, has now had four Championship innings and received three unplayable balls and a poor umpiring decision. Not perfect preparation for a Test series, is it?Ominously for Warwickshire, the Pitch Liaison Officers were ordered to take a stricter approach this year. But, it is worth noting that the umpires did not report this pitch. Instead, the ECB acted on the enquiry of a newspaper journalist covering the game and sent the PLOs as a consequence. Quite why the umpires didn’t report some concerns about the surface is hard to say.It’s believed to be more than 20 years since a Test ground was penalised for a sub-standard first-class pitch (Trent Bridge were penalised 25 points in 1989). It’s not the sort of history the new Edgbaston wanted to make.

Subtle anchor role weighs Clarke down

Michael Clarke deserves a chance to change and there is no rush for an overhaul of the Australian side

Peter English17-May-2010Michael Clarke is the best batsman by far in Australia’s Test team and comfortably the least productive in Twenty20s. He is also the captain and has led the side in 15 matches, winning 12 times and losing once. It was a big defeat – the World Twenty20 final – but his leadership is not what is in doubt. He is still being groomed for the Test captaincy and his current troubles will develop his experience base for Ricky Ponting’s role when the incumbent steps down.It is two years until the next global Twenty20 event and Clarke is unlikely to be there unless he transforms his batting approach of slicing gaps into more bombing of balls into grandstands. As Clarke understands, subtlety is not necessary in this format. By sprinting singles and finding regular twos, he thought he was doing the right thing by his team. He wasn’t.”I certainly know they [my performances] haven’t been up to scratch through this whole tournament and probably in Twenty20 cricket in general,” Clarke said after the final defeat in Barbados. “I’m sure the selectors will sit down and have a look and if I’m not the right guy for No. 3 and the captaincy then they’ll make that decision.”Australia need more of Clarke’s Christchurch outlook – he blasted 67 off 45 balls there in February – and less of his jogging in the Caribbean. In seven games he managed 92 runs at an average of 15.33 and a strike-rate of 80.70, making him the side’s modern-day incarnation of Geoff Marsh, the batting anchor of the 1980s. The next lowest strike-rate, including the bowlers, was Brad Haddin’s 102.08.He deserves a chance to change and there is no rush for an overall. This is not like the 50-over World Cup, which signals a clear-out as teams re-focus for an event four years ahead. Before the next World Twenty20 there are oodles of opportunities for players to emerge through the various domestic leagues. Except for Clarke.By being a Test and one-day master Clarke won’t be able to practise raising his short game. International Twenty20 engagements over the rest of the year are rare and there will be only three on offer for Australia during the home summer. New South Wales, his state side, are not in the Champions League, he doesn’t play in the IPL, and he won’t get to turn out in Australia’s Big Bash.If he can’t morph into a batting hare, a smooth transition will be much easier to achieve next year. Ponting, 35, will probably retire from ODIs at the end of the World Cup in April, having attempted a fourth win in a row, and Clarke can take over in a format he is at one with. That will allow him to shed the Twenty20 demands and let the regeneration of the T20 set-up to occur with a new leader. Cameron White is the current vice-captain but the personnel in this squad can alter so rapidly that Tasmania’s George Bailey might also be a contender.Until then Clarke must remember the strokes of his youth when he bats in Twenty20s. The drives over cover, the hooks in the air and the freedom of belting the ball without worrying about the consequences. This was the attitude that blew him into Test cricket with a century on debut in Bangalore – he hit four sixes to Adam Gilchrist’s three – and another one in his first game at home against New Zealand. At the Gabba he reached three figures with two pulled fours and a three in the over before lunch.At the time he was the breathtaking wonder boy of Australian cricket. After he was cut from the Test side a year later he eliminated those riskier elements, growing into the country’s most professional batsman, and hasn’t been able to re-programme them.”That’s the thing, if I play like that, that’s probably why I got dropped,” Clarke said in November. “You have your day in the sun sometimes then miss out five times.” One awesome day every six matches in Twenty20 means there is no talk of you getting the sack.

Ollie Robinson, Will Rhodes dismantle Sussex

Keeper-batter’s first List A century for Durham was followed by Will Rhodes’ maiden List A five-for

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay05-Aug-2025A brilliant century from Ollie Robinson and an excellent all-round effort from Will Rhodes led Durham to a 51-run victory over Sussex in the Metro Bank One Day Cup.Robinson’s counter-attacking century, which was his first List A ton for Durham, supported by a gutsy innings from Rhodes fired Durham to a total of 310 for 7 from their 50 overs, with Archie Lenham the pick of the Sussex bowlers.Sussex’s chase of 311 got off to a poor start as they found themselves 86 for 4 at one point, but middle order runs from Danny Lamb dragged his side back in the game.However, Rhodes secured Durham the opening day victory with his first ever List A five-wicket haul.Sussex won the toss at a sunny Roseworth Terrace and elected to bowl first and they got off to a great start as Alex Lees edged a Fynn Hudson-Prentice delivery behind to Charlie Tear in the opening over.Rhodes and Emilio Gay settled Durham down after the early loss and reached 50 in the powerplay as the former produced a crunching straight drive for four.Rhodes then reached his half-century from 43 balls on his List A debut for Durham, while Gay started to show some aggression as he took the aerial route to find the cover boundary.Gay then tried to launch a Jack Carson delivery down the ground for six, but he was caught well by Ari Karvelas for 34.
Sussex then struck again as Lamb bowled Colin Ackermann for 14 to leave things finely poised.Robinson joined Rhodes at the crease and looked to be proactive as he pulled a Lenham ball for four and he followed that up with a cut shot on the back foot that went for four.Rhodes then hit the first maximum of the day as he gave a Carson ball the treatment with a beautiful slog sweep.Robinson then got his fifty from 47 balls, getting to the milestone with a six, but Rhodes fell four short of his century as Lenham got him caught at deep square. Wickets then came like buses for Sussex as Lamb got Ben Raine for six.
Despite the wickets, Robinson kept the scoreboard ticking over and picked up another maximum as he pulled a Henry Crocombe ball over the ropes.Haydon Mustard, making his first appearance of the season, also looked to move Durham towards 300 as he picked up a couple of boundaries including a lovely cut shot.Mustard then fell for a lively 36, but Robinson reached his century off 78 balls to take his side to a big total.
The centurion fell for 100 exactly, Ari Karvelas picking up the wicket, but Durham reached 310 for seven at the end of their 50 overs.Tom Haines and Danial Ibrahim started Sussex’s chase of 311, but it got off to a bad start as Ibrahim was caught behind off the bowling of Codi Yusuf for two.Durham cranked up the pressure as George Drissell got Tom Clark caught behind for 14.Haines showed a glimpse of some aggression as he reverse swept Drissell for four, however, Tear departed for nine after he pulled a Mitch Killeen delivery straight to Yusuf in the deep.Killeen then struck again as he got Haines for 23 as he chipped one straight to Ackermann at mid-on.Hudson-Prentice was frustrating Durham and he took a liking to James Minto’s bowling as he smashed one over the square boundary and out of the ground.Durham got the big wicket of Hudson-Prentice for 43 as he went for a second run, but a throw came in from Yusuf and Robinson whipped the bails off with aplomb.Oli Carter then hammered one from Drissell down the ground for six and followed that up with a four off Minto.
Danny Lamb then hit Ben Raine for six to boost his team’s hopes and he backed that up with a tidy flick off his legs for four a few balls later.Lamb continued his charge, dragging his side back into the game with some powerful strokes and reached his fifty from 35 balls.However, Carter departed for 38 as Rhodes got him caught behind to halt Sussex’s momentum. Lamb continued his assault on the Durham attack as he pulled a Yusuf ball for four, but Rhodes got another wicket, getting Carson caught and bowled for four.Rhodes got his third, removing Lamb for an excellent 74 to leave Durham on the verge of victory.
Rhodes then wrapped things up for Durham to bowl Sussex out for 259 and he finished with figures of 5 for 30.

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