Paine falls cheaply on first-class return as Queensland take charge

The former Australia captain is back after a gap of 18 months

AAP06-Oct-2022Tim Paine made 6 and pouched a sharp catch in his cricket return as Queensland owned day one of their Sheffield Shield clash against Tasmania in Brisbane.Sent in by Queensland captain Usman Khawaja in gloomy conditions, Tasmania limped to 5 for 59 to bring the former Test skipper to the crease shortly after lunch on day one.Paine got off the mark with a crisp straight drive for three, but was caught by Matthew Renshaw after edging a cut shot off former team-mate Gurinder Sandhu in a 19-ball stay.Related

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Tasmania fell to 8 for 93 but scraped to 147 thanks to offspinner Jarrod Freeman’s 44 off 65 balls at the redeveloped Allan Border Field.A modest crowd watched as Michael Neser struck with the third ball of the innings, Caleb Jewell’s attempted cover drive finding Matt Renshaw at first slip. Mark Steketee had Tim Ward and Ben McDermott edging behind the wicket on his way to a four-wicket haul.Joe Burns (35) then showed his class to pilot Queensland’s reply, the former Test opener driving and pulling with authority as the hosts finished the day 1 for 70. Marnus Labuschagne was also solid, unbeaten on 26 when bad light stopped play about 10 minutes before stumps was scheduled.Paine looked sharp behind the stumps, diving low to his left for a catch to dismiss Renshaw. He had not played at the top level since April last year following revelations of a 2017 text-message controversy.Mark Steketee claimed four wickets•Getty Images

He took a summer-long break from the sport but has been training with the Tasmania squad and made a successful return in Hobart grade action last Sunday.Paine, who shared a laugh with Labuschagne as they left the field, had earlier received a warm welcome by the hosts when embraced by Queensland assistant and former Test quick Andy Bichel before play.The 22-year-old Freeman was just five when Paine first played for Tasmania in 2005.”It’s pretty surreal, pretty special,” he said of sharing the field with Paine and fellow Test veterans Peter Siddle and Jackson Bird. “With Painey behind the stumps it boosts you 10, 20 per cent and they know what they’re talking about.”He’s one of the best keepers in the world still, would silly not to have him in the side in that aspect. He’s bounced back and showed he’s not done yet, he’s got something to give.”Speaking to media nearby as part of Australia’s T20 squad, fellow former captain Steven Smith said Paine would “absolutely” be welcomed back by players into the national fold.”I’m sure he’s excited,” Smith said. “It’s great to see him back doing what he loves; he’s just down the road so I wish him all the best in this game. Phone’s always on so if he’s around [to catch up], yeah no reason why not.”Spinner Mitchell Swepson wasn’t named to play for Queensland after being called into Australia’s T20 squad to face England on Sunday in Perth.

Kevin O'Brien, Ireland's hero of Bangalore, retires from ODI cricket

Allrounder steps down from 50-over format but will continue in Tests and T20Is

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Jun-2021Kevin O’Brien, the Ireland allrounder whose record-breaking hundred stunned England at the 2011 World Cup, has announced his retirement from the 50-over format.O’Brien, 37, will carry on playing at Test and T20I level, but has chosen to bow out of the format in which he made his debut against England as a 22-year-old in 2006, in Ireland’s first full ODI. He went on to make 3618 runs from 153 ODIs, and claim 114 wickets, the most by any Ireland bowler. His 68 outfield catches is another national record, while he played 95 of his matches alongside his elder brother, Niall, who retired in 2018.”After 15 years playing for Ireland, I feel now is the right time to step away and retire from ODI cricket,” O’Brien said. “It has been an honour and a privilege to represent my country 153 times. The memories I take from them will last a lifetime”.Those memories include appearances at three World Cups, including the 2007 event in the Caribbean, the moment when Ireland truly made their mark on international cricket.Their historic victory over Pakistan at Sabina Park sent shockwaves through the sport, and O’Brien played an integral role in Ireland’s tense run-chase, digging in from an unbeaten 16 from 52 balls to guard against a collapse before the captain Trent Johnston struck the winning six to seal a three-wicket win.However, it was four years later at the 2011 event in India that O’Brien played the innings for which he will forever be remembered – a breath-taking knock of 113 from 63 balls in Bangalore, including a century from 50 balls that remains the fastest in World Cup history.Replying to England’s imposing total of 327 for 8, Ireland had slumped to 106 for 4 when he arrived at the crease, which soon became 111 for 5. But he responded to the adversity with an outrageous counterattack, cracking 13 fours and six sixes, before falling in the penultimate over with 11 runs still needed. However, John Mooney kept his cool to seal the chase, with Johnston again unbeaten at the other end.Related

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“That innings alone probably gave many of us the opportunity to become professional cricketers in Ireland,” Andrew Balbirnie, Ireland’s captain, said. “I think everyone within Irish cricket owes a huge amount to Kevin O’Brien for what he’s done for the sport in this country.”We’re losing a big personality in the ODI squad, and a really good friend, but this is not the end of Kevin O’Brien and I look forward to seeing what he can do in the other two formats.”O’Brien featured again for Ireland at the 2015 World Cup, but the team missed out on qualification in 2019, and his form in recent campaigns has slipped away. He made a highest score of 31 in 11 ODIs since the start of 2020, and has decided the time is right to cut back his commitments.”This has not been an easy decision, but after ongoing consideration I don’t feel I can contribute to the ODI team as much as I have in the past,” he said. “The hunger and love for the ODI format is no longer the same as it was and it wouldn’t be fair to continue to play while no longer feeling at 100%.”I’ve had some unbelievable moments with the team since 2006 – the three World Cups, the personal successes and spending time travelling and playing all over the world, but I will now shift my focus and remain fully committed to T20 cricket – with two World Cups in the next 18 months – and hoping to add to my three caps in Test cricket.”The first of those T20 campaigns looks set to take place in the UAE in October and November, while O’Brien also holds out hope of adding to his three Test caps – having become, in May 2018, the first Test centurion for Ireland, after making 118 in the country’s maiden Test against Pakistan at Malahide.Graham Ford, Ireland’s head coach, added: “Kevin has played an enormous role in the development of Irish cricket and has delivered regularly on the world stage – particularly in the ODI format.”It’s been a pleasure to work with him as part of the ODI squad, and he has been a true role model for many teammates over the years.
“I look forward to continuing to work with Kevin in other formats, and while his decision to step away from ODI cricket is sad, he can do so in the knowledge that he leaves an indelible legacy on the ODI game in Ireland and around the world.”

Farce, tragedy, comedy, fury – how rain loves to wreck cricket's biggest stages

When cricket’s attempts to fight back against its oldest foe come a spectacular cropper

Andrew Miller05-Mar-2020The miserable circumstances of England’s elimination from the Women’s T20 World Cup – knocked out of their semi-final at Sydney without a ball being bowled, on the same day that Australia scraped through in a later match at the same venue – bring to mind other high-profile occasions when cricket’s attempts to fight back against its oldest foe have come a spectacular cropper:

Richie Benaud is rightly praised for many things in his illustrious career. He was a formidable legspinning allrounder in a 63-Test career, and an innovative, attack-minded Ashes-winning captain. He was the voice of cricket for three decades, and its moral arbiter too. But if there was one blot on his copybook, it was his endorsement of the 1992 World Cup rain rules. They were an utter turkey.Their logic was sound in principle. Rightly recognising, as the Duckworth-Lewis method later would, that it’s easier to pace your innings when you have a target in your sights than when you are batting blind, Benaud backed the notion of discounting the least-productive overs of the side batting first when setting a rain-adjusted target.This ploy, however, didn’t work so well when the chase was all but over, and on the biggest stage yet, at Sydney … in March … in a World Cup semi-final … (sound familiar yet?), the system malfunctioned grotesquely thanks principally to a 12-minute shower, but also to Meyrick Pringle’s supremely economical and self-immolating spell of 9-2-36-2.When South Africa left the field, they needed a tantalising 22 from 13 balls, with Dave Richardson and Brian McMillan poised for glory. When they returned, they needed 21 from 1 (initially misreported as 22 from 1 on the big screen). McMillan duly patted a lobdown from Chris Lewis for a single and stalked off with a face like thunder, while England sheepishly counted their blessings.In some respects, South Africa had only themselves to blame, given that their fielding stint had over-run so terribly (with rain always in the air) that England’s own innings had been truncated at the 45-over mark. But there was schadenfreude to be had in the final at the MCG three days later, when England were outgunned by the champions Pakistan – who owed their qualification to the washout point they had scrounged after being bowled out for 74 in their group-stage encounter.What’s often forgotten in that farrago was that England, 24 for 1 after eight overs when the rain came, had not even been guaranteed winners that day … their adjusted target had been an awkward 64 from 16 overs, after the combined analyses of Derek Pringle (8.2-5-8-3), Ian Botham (10-4-12-2) and Dermot Reeve (5-3-2-1) had all but bowled Pakistan back into contention. Marvellous.Sanath Jayasuriya of Sri Lanka and Saurav Ganguly of India share the trophy•Clive Mason/Getty Images

First, the good news. For the 2002 Champions Trophy – the second iteration of their newly minted fundraising knock-out competition – the ICC had all their contingencies in place. They’d arranged a reserve day for the final, and they had a widely respected (if utterly baffling) new rain rule in operation, with the Duckworth-Lewis method having been unveiled in 1997 and officially adopted by the board two years later. They even had a dream final in prospect – the hosts, Sri Lanka, against the regional giants, India – Murali v Tendulkar, Jayasuriya v Kumble. So far, so good.Unfortunately, two fatal flaws intervened to derail the narrative. Firstly, the organisers in their eternal wisdom, decided to schedule their global jamboree in late September, slap-bang in the middle of the Sri Lankan monsoon. Secondly, they decided to make their final a day-night affair, thereby guaranteeing that the evening rain (by which you can set your watch, as England know all too well from their last visit in October 2018) was sure to start gathering towards the end of the mid-innings break.And then, to cap it all off, the ICC decided that, no, they wouldn’t attempt either a shortened game, or a day game, or a single game spread over two consecutive afternoons. Nope, the solution they settled on was for two entirely different matches, with two nigh-on-identical upshots.Sri Lanka won the first toss, and posted a respectable 244 for 5 before India reached 14 for 0 after two overs when the rains arrived. Twenty-four hours later, Sri Lanka won the second toss too, reached 222 for 7; India responded with 38 for 1 in eight. The Champions Trophy duly finished with no outright champion, but with one side having batted for 100 overs, and the other for 10. You couldn’t make it up.A frustrated Pollock, South Africa v Sri Lanka, World Cup, 2002/03•Shaun Botterill/Getty Images

So, those aforementioned Duckworth-Lewis tables, eh? A bit confusing, but somehow, like a stern “because I said so!” from a mildly irate parent, the presumed logic of D/L’s inner workings seemed to brook any real argument. And surely, for South Africa, proud hosts of the World Cup for the first time, and still not entirely over the misery of 1992 (let alone 1999…) it had to be an improvement on the rank injustice of the system that preceded it?Wrong! Because as any number-cruncher will tell you, there’s no solving stupid. User error is the bane of statisticians worldwide, and with South Africa’s campaign on the line, a crumpled “D/L par sheet” (eh? Whazzat?), uneasily interpreted by the coach Eric Simons and relayed to the crease by the 12th man, Nicky Boje, wasn’t quite the clarity that their embattled batsmen needed.Tension was rife under brooding skies in Durban. South Africa’s initial target of 268 was daunting enough in such conditions, but at 149 for 5 in the 30th over, the pressure was becoming intolerable. Mark Boucher and the captain, Shaun Pollock, dug in for a 63-run stand that spanned 80 deliveries – with Pollock’s 25 from 37 played out to a chorus of “hopes of the nation” chirps from Kumar Sangakkara behind the stumps. But when he was run out with 57 still needed from 45, the permutations began to engulf the hosts.Not only did Pollock’s departure cause the D/L par score to leap – one fewer wicket in hand meant an extra handful of runs required to get on top of the rate – it also required a near ball-by-ball update of the requirement as Boucher battled to keep South Africa on course. Boje was eventually entrusted with the precious sheet itself, and was ready to deliver to the middle at the end of the 45th over, but it was too late to correct a fatal misinterpretation of the target.With 46 runs needed from 32 balls, and rain so imminent he could smell it, Boucher crashed Muttiah Muralitharan for a six over long on to drag South Africa to what he believed was a winning total of 229. Kingsmead was ecstatic as he pumped his fists and doggedly blotted out the final ball of the over, preserving his wicket first and foremost before sprinting for the pavilion as the covers were hustled on …”Boucher was given the message of 229,” said Pollock afterwards, as the significance of the ‘par’ in ‘par score of 229’ slowly dawned on him. “So he was pretty happy when he got that. You can look at all the ifs and buts but in the end it doesn’t help much.”And so the manner in which the dream died proved to be iconically galling – an amalgam of South Africa’s worst World Cup nightmares: Elimination via rain-affected tie, as if their ghosts of their two semi-final exits had fallen in love and bred a vengeful, homewrecking poltergeist.Dimly fades the Cup: the two captains and the umpires discuss the light rules at the dingy end of the final•Getty Images

User error, mark two. For all that it’s fun to point and laugh at players who make a meal of the rain rules, it’s really not their primary job. For the umpires to cause such a cock-up, however, and on the biggest stage of all, is another thing entirely.The shemozzle that shamed the 2007 World Cup final was a fitting epitaph for a tournament that over-reached itself through sheer greed. The bloated corporatisation of what ought to have been a joyous carnival of cricket created instead an embittered local cricket scene, priced out of their own tournament, and turfed out of their favoured old haunts, such as the Antigua Recreation Ground and Bourda in Guyana, in favour of soul-less out-of-town carbuncles that to this day have never come close to replicating the homespun vibe of Chicky’s Disco and the Mound.And so, when the weather gods decided to teach the organisers a lesson by raining for four hours on their final parade, the ICC’s reaction was to over-reach itself for the benefit of the global TV audience.At least, with a reserve day in place, they learnt some lessons from 2002 by beginning the match with a reduction in overs. Unfortunately, they over-estimated the teams’ abilities to cram a 38-overs-a-side match into Barbados’s six remaining hours of daylight.At least in attempting to do so, there was time for one undeniable treat – a stunning 149 from 104 balls from Adam Gilchrist, an innings of exemplary poise and power that rightly dominates the highlights to this day and will forever distract from the nonsense that followed it. On his watch, the game was up, notwithstanding a gutsy pair of fifties from Jayasuriya and Sangakkara, and Sri Lanka were ready and waiting to shake hands when daylight duly ran out with five overs of the game left unbowled.The umpires, however, weren’t so easily swayed. Rudi Koertzen, who wasn’t even the standing umpire, began loudly insisting that the show had to go out, despite Ricky Ponting’s protestations that they’d bowled 20 overs to constitute a match and “Look mate, we’ve finished the game.”But no. “When light is used in the calculations of a day’s play, it doesn’t necessarily mean it is the end of a day’s play,” explained Jeff Crowe, the match referee, who must wonder what the sun gets up to all night, the lazy glowing orb. Instead, the players went through the motions for 18 more deliveries before finally the plug was pulled in light so bad that no-one in the stadium could see the final ball, let alone a glitzy and utterly futile closing ceremony.

Warner to resume batting in a month, after elbow surgery

David Warner will get around a month’s batting practice ahead of his return from the Newlands scandal ban that ends on March 28

Daniel Brettig23-Jan-2019David Warner will get around a month’s batting practice ahead of his return from the Newlands scandal ban, after clean-up surgery to his elbow did not uncover as many issues as those experienced by the former Australia captain Steven Smith.In surgery following his return home from the Bangladesh Premier League, Warner was hopeful of regaining a full range of movement in the elbow after a series of problems in recent years.ALSO READ: Steven Smith international return date in doubt due to elbow surgeryNevertheless, the procedure was less involved and not as serious as the one undertaken by Smith, who will be in a race against time to be fit to play when the duos’ bans expire at the end of March, most likely in the midst of an ODI series against Pakistan.”David Warner underwent surgery yesterday to remove a bone spur and loose bone in his elbow that was causing an inflamed joint,” a CA spokesman said.”David will undergo rehabilitation in which we expect him to be able to begin moving his arm by the end of the week, and within 3-4 weeks resume batting, with his return to playing to be determined soon after that.”Australia’s captain Tim Paine and coach Justin Langer have more or less conceded that both banned batsmen will be recalled the instant they are eligible, after the minimal batting depth in the national system was ruthlessly exppsed at home by India.”I spoke to them both last night actually,” Langer told on Tuesday. “I think Davey is going to get a clean-up, I don’t think Davey’s is as serious as Steve’s was. That said, Steve is in a brace for the next 5-6 weeks I think.”What we do know about them is, they haven’t been good players, they’ve been great players for Australia.”We are obviously monitoring them very closely and we are hopeful they will be getting themselves fit and strong and putting their name up for selection. It’s an exciting time coming up.”

Prior rubbishes Lyon's 'scared' claim

Nathan Lyon has suggested Matt Prior “wanted to fly home” during the 2013-14 Ashes because he was intimidated by Mitchell Johnson

George Dobell in Brisbane20-Nov-2017Matt Prior has dismissed claims he wanted to fly home from the last Ashes tour because he was scared of Mitchell Johnson’s bowling as “laughable”.The claims were made by Nathan Lyon who suggested the entire England team were terrified of Johnson during the 2013-14 series and said he “nearly had to push a couple of the guys back towards the stumps” from his fielding position at leg slip.Lyon, the Australian offspinner, was particularly critical of Prior whom he accused of “wanting to fly home” ahead of the Perth Test. Lyon went on to say he hoped Australia would end the careers of more England players in this series.”Seeing Mitchell Johnson scare all the Poms was unbelievable,” Lyon said. “I was at leg slip and I nearly had to push a couple of the guys back towards the stumps. It was good fun.”Leading into Perth we knew that they were broken. We knew Matt Prior wanted to fly home before the game started and he was one of the senior players. He was scared.”Prior, who was dropped after the third Test, said Lyon’s comments were “completely ridiculous” and untrue.”If that was the case and I was scared, why didn’t I go home then?” Prior said. “I have no idea where this has come from. It’s completely ridiculous and all I can do is laugh. It is wholeheartedly untrue.”I stayed out there and what hurt me more was that I was dropped for the last two Tests because I wasn’t playing well.”I hope the first Test goes well for Nathan. I will be watching with interest to see how he goes. He has other things to worry about rather than thinking about me. I hope he lets his cricket do the talking now.”Lyon also stated that Australia’s current attack was better and quicker than the one that inflicted a 5-0 whitewash upon England in 2013-14.”They are quicker,” Lyon said of Mitchell Starc and Pat Cummins. “In the nets, definitely. I saw Steve Smith land on his backside the other day. Johnson didn’t do that.”I’m not getting in the nets to face them because they are bowling way too quick for my liking. They are class bowlers.”But the best bowler in the world is Josh Hazlewood. He can swing the new ball in and out, he can seam it, he can bowl fast, he can bowl a nice bouncer, he can reverse an old ball. His consistency, the pace he bowls at and the way he controls the game is incredible. In my book he’s the No. 1 bowler in the world.”Lyon went on to raise a few more spectres from the 2013-14 series in Australia, when Kevin Pietersen and Graeme Swann were among the long-standing members of the England dressing room whose careers finished, while the coach, Andy Flower, also stepped down.”I know Joe Root got dropped last time when he was here, so it’d be good to get him dropped again,” Lyon said. “If we can start by opening up that crack, it’s pretty crucial. There’s a lot of scars for the English guys, especially coming over here, especially when we have two guys bowling 150kph and not just one now.”Could we end some careers? I hope so.”

England's youngsters put absentees on notice

England’s inexperienced one-day side has been lauded for overcoming a ‘daunting’ experience to halt Bangladesh’s run of six home series win in a row

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Oct-20161:16

England youngsters impress in Bangladesh

England’s inexperienced one-day side has been lauded for overcoming a ‘daunting’ experience to halt Bangladesh’s run of six home series win in a row.Having already been without Alex Hales, Joe Root and Eoin Morgan from their first-choice batting order, Jason Roy was ruled out of the deciding match in Chittagong. However, stepping seamlessly into the breach, Sam Billings struck his maiden ODI fifty while Ben Duckett made his second in his debut series.England also had to respond to the heated conclusion to the second match in Mirpur where Jos Buttler reacted angrily to Bangladesh’s celebrations of his wicket before Ben Stokes and Tamim Iqbal confronted each other during the post-match handshakes. Alongside the unprecedented security which has accompanied the team’s every move, and the partisan home support, there has been plenty for the squad to deal with.”For some of us who have been around for a little while it’s still been quite an interesting, daunting trip,” Paul Farbrace, the assistant coach, said. “There’s been a lot around this tour – whether we should come or not come, whether the players would come. You get here and you see the guns and SWAT team. That’s quite a lot for young blokes to take on board. The ones who have come will go away with a series win in a spicy series, but for a lot of young blokes it’s been a good learning experience too.”On field there are huge positives and, in the end, it is probably a good thing that some didn’t come. When you think about it, last night four of the top six who don’t regularly play chased down a very tricky score. We felt we were very capable of getting it, but it did take some decent batting to get there. To win, but win it with a few different players, as well as the off-field experience, that can only be good.”Farbrace said that Morgan will “definitely” captain the one-day side in India next January, but he praised the way that Buttler had dealt with the various pressures of the leadership experience – not least the lessons learnt from his reaction in Mirpur which led to a rap on the knuckles from the ICC but strong support from former England captains Michael Vaughan and Nasser Hussain.”Morgs is the leader, but it’s been great that Jos has had the experience,” Farbrace said. “He will definitely be captain in India. There can’t be any way around it. He deserves it. His team is continually improving, and he has definitely been the leader and allowed so many guys to play that way.”On and off the field, we have seen Jos has more to him than others thought. He doesn’t say a great deal, but when he does, people listen. The cricket challenge is only one side. He has been very impressive with everything he dealt with, even the skirmishes in that second game, the way he dealt with that was very good. It was a great learning experience for him.”The emotional side of it he has found quite tough, and selection is tough too. You go from being one of the lads with mates in the team, to knocking on their door and saying you’re not playing. I don’t think you could get a tougher series to start off with as captain, because there has been as much said about the off-the-field stuff as on the field.”Stokes was named Man of the Series after sealing the decisive chase with a calm, unbeaten 47 to follow his maiden ODI century in the second match. He also made a telling intervention in the field during the opening game when he pulled the team together as the match was slipping away. His maturing role with the bat – he has averaged 49.00 this year in ODIs – was vital in a young batting order.”Stokes is a leader, wherever he goes, people want to go with him.” Farbrace said. “That’s why he can get involved in some spats. We saw last night, he was not getting out and losing that game. He was determined to see it home. The two innings here, are two of his best for England in white-ball cricket. The 100 was about as mature as I’ve seen him play.”

Shahadat temporarily suspended by BCB

BCB president Nazmul Hassan has said Shahadat Hossain is likely to be kept out of cricket until a decision is reached on the Women and Children Repression Prevention Act case against him

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Sep-2015BCB president Nazmul Hassan has said fast bowler Shahadat Hossain is likely to be kept out of cricket until a decision is reached on the Women and Children Repression Prevention Act case against him. Hassan said Shahadat had come looking for him but he did not meet the fast bowler.ESPNcricinfo also learned from a BCB source that Shahadat had been temporarily suspended by the board.Hassan did not specify when or where Shahadat tried to meet him. Dhaka police have been looking for the fast bowler for the last five days but have not been able to find him. Shahadat and his wife are wanted on charges of allegedly assaulting their housemaid.”Unless the investigation ends or there is a decision on the matter, BCB doesn’t want to keep any attachment with him,” Hassan said. “We are quiet, and we will remain quiet. He is more than likely to stay outside cricket.”There is no reason to give Shahadat Hossain any leeway, it is quite clear. I don’t know whether you know this, but he came to see me. I didn’t meet him. What would I have told him? I don’t have anything to do. It is totally up to the law of the land.”

Sandhu, Hazlewood set up NSW win

Gurinder Sandhu and Josh Hazlewood gave New South Wales a chance of reaching the Sheffield Shield final by routing South Australia’s batting to set up an eight-wicket victory

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Mar-2013
ScorecardGurinder Sandhu and Josh Hazlewood gave New South Wales a chance of reaching the Sheffield Shield final by routing South Australia’s batting to set up an eight-wicket victory for the Blues inside three days at the Sydney Cricket Ground.The result pushes the Blues momentarily to the top of the Shield table, but they may be passed by Victoria, Tasmania, Western Australia or Queensland pending the outcomes of the two remaining matches.SA resumed with six wickets in hand and a lead they hoped to build on, but the Redbacks were unable to organise any real resistance from the moment Jake Brown fell to Gurinder Sandhu without addition to his overnight score.The hosts were left with a mere 91 to get and marched to their target swiftly, aided by a flashy 41 from Nic Maddinson that featured five sixes. SA’s only consolation after losing their final two games outright to slip from contention was Chadd Sayers’ competition-leading tally of 48 wickets.

Clinical T&T defend Caribbean T20 title

Trinidad & Tobago put in a clinical performance against Jamaica in the final to win their second consecutive Caribbean T20 title, and once again qualify for the lucrative Champions League T20

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Jan-2012Trinidad & Tobago put in a clinical performance against Jamaica in the final to win their second consecutive Caribbean T20 title, and once again qualify for the lucrative Champions League T20. Dwayne Bravo played a sensible innings to take T&T towards a decent total; Kieron Pollard, in one 26-run over, changed that from a decent total to a strong one; and then the miserly T&T spinners, along with Ravi Rampaul, choked Jamaica to make sure the victory was by a thumping margin.Dwayne Bravo’s innings was a crucial one, as it held together an innings that showed signs of falling apart. Lendl Simmons and Darren Bravo had both been dismissed by the seventh over: Simmons was beaten in the flight by legspinner Odean Brown and edged to the keeper, and Darren Bravo also edged, while poking at an Andre Russell delivery.Dwayne Bravo showed immediate intent by pulling Russell for four in the ninth over, but lost both Adrian Barath and Denesh Ramdin at the other end in quick succession. Barath was stumped, trying to loft Brown over long-off, and Ramdin, who replaced Daren Ganga as captain before the tournament, was bowled by a Brown flipper.At that stage, T&T were 65 for 4 in 11.1 overs and in trouble. Dwayne Bravo reacted by lofting Brown for six and then hitting another six off Nikita Miller two overs later. He mixed caution and aggression, rotating the strike in between the big shots and was helped by the fact that Sunil Narine, at the other end, was scoring at a quick rate. Narine rushed to 22 off 15 balls, hitting two sixes, both heaves to the leg side off David Bernard’s medium pace.Pollard, who was later named Man of the Series, was initially happy to play second fiddle to Dwayne Bravo. He was dropped in the 18th over, by Marlon Samuels off Krishmar Santokie. It was the second catch Jamaica had dropped – Shawn Findlay put down a sitter to let Dwayne Bravo off the hook when he was on just 20 – and they would regret them both. Santokie, who should have had Pollard’s wicket, was subjected to a mauling by him in the final over of the innings. The second ball was driven for four past cover, and the next three were bludgeoned for sixes: one over long-on, one over long-off and one to midwicket. By the end of it, Santokie, the leading wicket-taker in the tournament, had gone for 42 from his four overs.Chasing a big total, Jamaica had to get off to a quick start. Instead, they managed only five runs off the first two overs and lost a wicket in the most careless of manners in the third. Nkrumah Bonner, at the non-striker’s end, wanted a single when Danza Hyatt played the ball to Pollard in the circle, and could not get back in time when Hyatt declined the run. The next over, bowled by Ravi Rampaul, was a maiden, and the required run-rate had already shot up above 10 runs per over.Samuel Badree got rid of Marlon Samuels with a googly, he and Narine go through a few miserly overs, and when Dwayne Bravo had Hyatt caught in the deep in the eighth over, the match ended as a contest. Carlton Baugh played a few impressive strokes towards the end, including successive sixes off Rampaul to slightly spoil what would have been outstanding figures, but by that stage the required-rate had reached unachievable proportions.The margin in the end was an emphatic 63 runs, giving T&T revenge for their loss to Jamaica in final of the Regional Super50 tournament in October last year, and reinforcing their reputation as the best Twenty20 side in the Caribbean.”We have a great bunch of players in this team and a superb support staff and that is what did it for us. We are known as the Red Force and we showed we are a true force. We didn’t get it right in the first match, the Windwards gave us a kick up the backside, but we came back as a good strong force against Leewards and against Guyana as we found our range,” Denesh Ramdin said.”After that it was smooth sailing because we know we have match-winners in all departments. We actually thought that Jamaica would have been stronger in the final but our bowlers did a fantastic job in the first six overs and that squeezed them. After that we knew we had the trophy in our hands.”In the third-place playoff, Windward Islands thumped Barbados by seven wickets, with 13 balls to spare. Barbados chose to bat and were dealt severe blows in the second over, as Delorn Johnson knocked over three of their top four to reduce them to 4 for 3. Jonathan Carter and Alcindo Holder attempted to rebuild the innings with a steady stand of 68 from just under 12 overs. However another collapse ensued after Holder was run out and Barbados were bowled out for 101.Windward Islands lost Johnson Charles off the first ball of their chase, but Andre Fletcher and Devon Smith put them back on course with a 67-run partnership. After the pair was dismissed in quick succession, Miles Bascombe and Tade Carmichael steered them home without much drama.

New Zealand seek stability amid the shambles

ESPNcricinfo previews the sixth and final ODI between New Zealand and Pakistan in Auckland

The Preview by Nitin Sundar04-Feb-2011

Match Facts

February 5, Auckland

Start time 12:00 (23:00 GMT)
New Zealand’s decision to bench Tim Southee for the fifth ODI was inexplicable•AFP

Big Picture

Write off Pakistan’s World Cup chances at your own peril. Despite having setbacks hurled at them from every corner, they have managed to recreate the flair that epitomised their cricket in the 1990s and early 2000s. The manner in which they have won the series also highlights the depth and balance their squad possesses.The Christchurch win was old-school Pakistan: keep wickets in hand and explode in the slog overs. In Napier, Misbah-ul-Haq executed a perfectly calibrated run-chase, while in Hamilton, relentlessly attacking bowling in the middle overs and enterprising fielding won the game. The fast-bowling department is potent and full of variety and the openers are in good touch, with a century apiece in the last two games. Everything is falling into place, including Shoaib Akhtar’s perfect lengths while hitting speeds of 150 kph. There is a visible unity in the ranks that makes a mockery of the rumoured cliques within the set-up. And now they even know who will lead them in the World Cup.With the series in the bag, Pakistan may want to test their reserve strength in Auckland. New Zealand, on the other hand, don’t seem to have clarity on their first-choice XI. Tim Southee – the one bowler who has tormented Pakistan throughout the tour – was benched for the must-win game in Hamilton. The batsmen have hurtled along listlessly, expressing themselves more freely on Twitter than at the crease. Jesse Ryder has struggled with injury and off-field distractions, Jamie How has stuttered against pace and accuracy. Brendon McCullum’s push down the order has not yet worked, and Ross Taylor is taking time time to find his range. Can New Zealand stumble upon stability amidst this shambles?

Form guide

(Last five completed games)
New Zealand: LLLWL
Pakistan: WWWLL

Players to watch out for …

His pace may have gone down, but Jacob Oram has returned well as a bowler, following his troubles with a knee injury. His batting, however, is yet to make an impact in this series. His last half-century came in February last year, against Bangladesh. The last time he passed fifty against top opposition, though, was in June 2008 against England. Can he find his form ahead of the World Cup?Abdul Razzaq has made the new ball his own, allowing Pakistan to retain their express fast bowlers for the latter stages of the innings. He has whistled in at around 130 kph, kept them short of a length to deny scoring opportunities, and got the odd legcutter to nip away and create havoc. His batting, however, is yet to create the damage he is known for. If he finds his groove on Saturday, New Zealand’s bowlers could be in for some pain.

Team news

Mohammad Hafeez’s bowling exploits have rendered Saeed Ajmal redundant. Given Ajmal’s variations, he may have a bigger role to play in the World Cup, and could get a game here. Will Sohail Tanvir get another chance to rediscover his late swing?
Pakistan (probable): 1 Ahmed Shehzad, 2 Mohammad Hafeez, 3 Kamran Akmal (wk), 4 Younis Khan, 5 Misbah-ul-Haq, 6 Umar Akmal, 7 Shahid Afridi (capt), 8 Abdul Razzaq, 9 Wahab Riaz / Sohail Tanvir, 10 Umar Gul , 11 Shoaib Akhtar / Saeed Ajmal
New Zealand will hope for Daniel Vettori’s recovery in time for the match. Unless Southee is being kept fresh for the World Cup, he should figure in the starting XI.
New Zealand (probable): 1 Jesse Ryder, 2 Martin Guptill, 3 Jamie How, 4 Ross Taylor, 5 Scott Styris, 6 James Franklin, 7 Brendon McCullum (wk), 8 Daniel Vettori (capt) / Nathan McCullum, 9 Jacob Oram, 10 Tim Southee / Hamish Bennett, 11 Kyle Mills.

Stats and trivia

  • This is Pakistan’s first bilateral ODI series win since November 2008. That series, against the West Indies, was also the last time Younis Khan scored a century
  • Misbah-ul-Haq leads the run-charts for this series with 203 runs

Quotes

“It doesn’t make a difference whether Misbah leads the side or I lead the side because we both are playing for our country”

“I am not a fan of rotation. You try to pick your strongest side. It gives you the best chance of winning and getting some momentum going.”

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