Gul signs for Gloucestershire

Gul was impressive against England in 2006, picking up 18 wickets in the four-match Test series © Getty Images

Umar Gul, the Pakistan fast bowler, has signed a one-year contract with Gloucestershire for 2007. Gul, 24, led Pakistan’s attack in the absence of Shoaib Akhtar against England in 2006 and was by some distance their best bowler, taking 18 wickets in the four-Test series.”I am very excited about joining a county steeped in such great history as Gloucestershire’s,” Gul told the club’s website. “I believe that with a lot of hard work we will be able to achieve many good things in the coming season.”Jon Lewis, the Gloucestershire captain, was delighted to have secured the services of such a promising fast bowler. “This is a massive boost for Gloucestershire cricket,” Lewis said. “Umar is a quality fast bowler and will bring a real cutting edge to our attack. Throughout this summer he was the most consistent and threatening Pakistani bowler in England. I have been watching him from close quarters during the summer and have been thoroughly impressed by his professionalism and appetite for the game.”Gul is currently in India for the Champions Trophy. Although he will be available to Gloucestershire for the entire 2007 season, he could miss the opening matches if selected for next year’s World Cup in the Caribbean.

Osinde destroys Cayman Islands

Scorecard

Ryan Bovell made a battling 44 but Cayman Islands collapsed for just 159 at Toronto © Getty Images

Osinde Henry, the medium-pacer, rattled the Cayman Island batting line-up with a seven-wicket haul as Canada were on course to a comprehensive victory in the Intercontinental Cup match at Toronto.Along with Umar Bhatti, the left-arm medium-pacer, Osinde destroyed the Cayman line-up in just 54.1 overs. Osinde finished with an impressive 7 for 53, his best figures, and the Caymans collapsed for 159, still trailing by 181 runs. Canada soon rattled up 151 in quick time in their second innings, with Qaiser Ali producing a steady 67 and set Caymans an improbable target of 333 in their final innings.The Caymans were in further trouble in their second innings and finished at 38 for 1 at the close of play.

Botham: give Hussain the chop

Ian Botham: says it’s time for someone else to have a go in England’s middle order© Getty Images

Ian Botham, the former England allrounder and now TV commentator, has called for Nasser Hussain to be axed from international cricket to let the younger players come through.Talking on BBC Five Live, Botham said, “It’s easier for someone to settle down with [Graham] Thorpe and [Mark] Butcher than if you lose three senior players simultaneously.” He continued, “If Thorpe, Butcher and Hussain choose to leave suddenly, then it’s very difficult for youngsters to come in. We should adopt the Australians’ approach and say, ‘Thanks a lot Nas, but now we’ve got to go forward’.”Hussain, 36, captained England in 45 Test matches between 1999 and 2003, and, along with Duncan Fletcher, was widely regarded as moving the side in the right direction.Having played 95 Tests, he has made it no secret he wants to make the 100 mark, and on England’s recent tour of the West Indies, he helped his side to a 3-0 win by scoring 197 runs at an average of 32.83. However Botham, never shy to air his views, believes the selectors should start looking ahead to the 2005 Ashes series, and that means no more Nasser.”Our target has to be the Australians and I don’t see Nasser playing a part against the Australians,” Botham added. “Despite everything he’s done for us, I think it’s time now for a [Andrew] Strauss, a [Paul] Collingwood or whoever to come in to that middle order.”

Lacklustre Pakistan need to rethink, regroup

JOHANNESBURG-Disappointing in the extreme as it was, the defeat against India at Centurion on Saturday is just the latest of setbacks for Pakistan. Having lost all three of their important games, they flew off to Bulawayo with long faces Sunday morning, hoping to muster a huge win against Zimbabwe to somehow grab the last Super Sixes slot from Group A.Leaving it to the last, and then qualifying through the net-run rate was what captain Waqar Younis eschewed. He did want to make it to the Super Sixes fair and square, all wrapped in glory by beating India after lacklustre displays against Australia and England. But making it through the `back door’ (as Waqar had described it before the Indian encounter), howsoever less palatable, is the only option left open to him now.And that too, if Australia retains its exalted status as the only team unbeaten so far in this World Cup against England on Sunday. When one wrote these lines, the match was on, and England after a bright start had faltered to 170-odd for six with seven overs remaining.So Australia was on course to full 24 points, and India was right behind them at 20 – both having made it to the next round. The scramble was now between England, Zimbabwe and Pakistan – the first two with 12 points, with Pakistan at eight.But victory against Zimbabwe, and four points emanating from it, would make it likely for Pakistan to edge the other contestants out. More so as Pakistan’s last game of the pool, would allow them to know exactly what was required while batting and bowling. But whether this Pakistan outfit is capable of achieving precise results is a point of conjecture.The ability surely is there – it is the execution and the mindset to perform against the odds which is in question.Only about four months ago, Pakistan had blanked Zimbabwe in all five games there, scoring above 300 runs in three matches. Though they would hope to put up a similarly emphatic performance in their last league game, who knows what is in store for them now. That series in any case seems to have taken place ages ago.Since then Pakistan has under-performed like never before, losing seven of their 10 matches. What is worse, their performance against minnows Namibia and Canada too has been at best scrappy, in one department or another. For instance, even Zimbabwe managed well over 300 runs against Namibia and Netherlands, while Pakistan could only make 250-odd apiece against both. Then the bowling has allowed the opposition off the hook on all occasions except India – when it received a spanking from the word go, allowing India to more or less finish the game by the 12th over by conceding 100 runs. Waqar had a two-wicket burst, and Afridi and Akhtar got a wicket apiece, but by then the horses had already bolted.The defeat against India has made one thing quite evident: Pakistan badly requires rethinking and regrouping. That is if they want to salvage a measure of pride, and go any further than the Super Sixes, if they reach there at all, that too with points in the bank against other qualifiers showing a blob.Coming back to the match against India, there is no denying that Sachin Tendulkar was in sublime form. But the fact of the matter is that the Pakistani bowlers bowled to his strengths, feeding him short and wide ball on both sides of the stumps and a string of half volleys. The Shoaib Akhtar delivery that bowled Tendulkar was the only one that ripped into his body, and the bowler was instantly rewarded with the wicket. Virender Sehwag has a known weakness against deliveries rearing off a length and aiming towards his rib cage. He didn’t get any until Waqar got lucky with him as he slashed on yet another wide one.That Waqar and Akhtar bowled poorly was understandable, but Akram, though he was more economical than the above mentioned duo, bowling with such singular lack of discipline was mind-boggling.Not that his admission is any consolation, but Waqar later admitted that the bowlers didn’t bowl according to the plan. For one over or two, that is understandable, but for the entire first half of the match? And what good is a plan that is forgotten the moment your key bowlers, the so-called match-winners, step on to the field.So far, there seemed to be little method in what Pakistan has done in this World Cup. There have been some individual performances that have stood out, none more than Saeed Anwar’s remarkable ton against India. But Pakistan has filed to fire as a team, in every department of the game.They need to get their act together to sustain them from now on. But would they?

Pakistan, Sri Lanka to play in Sharjah tournaments for next three years

Pakistan and Sri Lanka have agreed to play in Sharjah’s one-day cricket tournament for the next three years, say organisers.The twice-yearly Coca-Cola Cup suffered a setback in Aprilwhen the Indian government banned its national team from competingthere for three years.Media reports said the Sharjah tournament’s vulnerability topossible match-fixing may have caused the Indians to withdraw. Theevent attracts crowds mainly from Sharjah’s ex-patriot Indian andPakistani population.”Although I’m hopeful India will play here again, matchesinvolving Pakistan and Sri Lanka will create great interest,”said Zahid Noorani, chief executive of the Cricketers Benefit FundSeries, which runs the tournaments.The two countries contested a 30,000 sell-out final in April,when Sri Lanka won after Pakistan triumphed in all four of theirgroup matches. New Zealand had replaced India as the third team.The next event, involving Zimbabwe as the third nation, willrun from 26 October to 4 November, Noorani said. Prize money has beenincreased to US$250,000 from US$100,000, with the winner receivingUS$120,000 and the runner-up US$80,000, he said.The Emirates Cricket Board is holding an inquiry, headed byformer West Indies captain Clive Lloyd, into allegations of matchfixing at the Sharjah tournament and elsewhere in the U.A.E.

Aston Villa 0-0 Wolves – Match Review

Aston Villa and Wolves played out a dour Midlands derby with both clubs keeping up their unbeaten starts to the new season. A point sees Mick McCarthy’s side rise to the top of the Premier League for a few hours at least, with Villa moving into fourth.

Chances were few and far between at Villa Park as both sides seemed content to take a share of the spoils with Alex McLeish coming through his first derby game unscathed as manager of the hosts.

He will be very unhappy that his side failed to hit the target in the first half despite an attack boasting the likes of Darren Bent, Emile Heskey, Charles N’Zogbia and Gabriel Agbonlahor.

Heskey was guilty of wasting a glorious chance to open the scoring heading inches wide from an Agbonlahor cross. Wolves also had chances of their own with Stephen Hunt’s header being tipped wide by Shay Given.

The home side cranked up the pressure in the second half with Agbonlahor testing Wayne Hennessey with a low drive before Richard Dunne thought he had broken the deadlock only for his header to be nodded off the line by Wolves striker Kevin Doyle.

Come the final whistle both sides seemed pleased with a point which consolidated their strong start to the new campaign.

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No DRS until it becomes 'foolproof' – Manohar

Shashank Manohar, the BCCI president, has closed the door on the Decision Review System (DRS), saying that unless the system became “foolproof”, India’s stance would remain unchanged. Responding to questions from the public on BCCI’s Facebook account, Manohar said that India’s sole issue with DRS concerned lbw decisions. Manohar pointed out that he had raised this issue even during his first stint as BCCI president, between 2008 and 2011.”Actually telling you the truth, the BCCI was never against the DRS system right from the time of my earlier tenure,” Manohar said. “We had issues only regarding the leg before decisions to be decided by the DRS system. For everything else we were accepting the DRS system.”Manohar said that in his previous tenure as BCCI president, the ICC had asked India to accept DRS as a whole, which the board rejected.”At the ICC meeting, it was decided that either we accept the DRS system as a whole or we don’t accept a DRS system. We were not willing. And today also we are not willing to accept the DRS system for leg-before system because when you shoot it from a distance, a parallax develops and then you are not able to give the exact direction of the delivery.”Secondly, instead of the umpire imagining the bounce and the direction of the trajectory, it is the person sitting behind the camera who is going into the DRS. He is going to have his imagination put in the place of the umpire’s imagination with regard to the bounce.”According to Manohar, he had posed the same question concerning lbw decisions to the DRS manufacturers at an ICC executive board meeting back in 2011.”Even the person who has evolved this DRS system was not able to answer me and was not able to satisfy all the members of the ICC,” Manohar said. “And as you know, there are lot problems even in the DRS systems which are raised by various countries. Therefore unless and until the DRS system is foolproof with regards to leg-before decisions the BCCI will not accept it.”The BCCI has never favoured the DRS ever since its inception. Manohar’s reasoning is similar to his successor N Srinivasan, who served as BCCI president till 2013. Srinivasan consistently opposed the DRS, calling the referrals system “faulty” as there was a lot of luck involved, which he did not support.Manohar’s remarks are bound to hurt the ICC, which has remained optimistic. After the ICC’s annual conference in Barbados in June, Dave Richardson, the ICC’s CEO was confident that the “modern player was more amenable to new ideas and innovation.”A couple of those modern Indian players, including the country’s Test captain Virat Kohli and lead spinner R Ashwin, have expressed openness to the DRS without offering any in-depth view. Kohli had said that he would like to discuss the DRS with his team, while Ashwin had pointed out that he would not mind the DRS minus the predictive element.

Lancashire crash to 108-run defeat

ScorecardA match of fluctuating fortunes had a surprisingly tame finish, as Sussex moved to the top of the championship table with a 108-run victory at Liverpool. Lancashire, whose batting failed them dismally at the crunch, virtually surrendered their own championship hopes for another year.True to the pattern of this match, the balance during the morning session shifted from one side to the other. Sussex had finished the second day on 127 for 2, with Mike Yardy and Murray Goodwin firmly entrenched on 52 and 68 respectively. Both fell without adding to their overnight scores, Yardy caught down the leg side trying to glance a poor ball from Dominic Cork, and Goodwin caught in the slips off a fine delivery from Glen Chapple that moved away off the pitch.Their replacements, Chris Adams (42) and Carl Hopkinson (32), fought back well after a dogged start, taking their team through almost to lunch – before both fell in quick succession to Muttiah Muralitharan to bring Lancashire back to even terms again. Adams was caught on the midwicket boundary lofting a sweep, after being dropped off a similar stroke when 19. This proved to be a very significant miss. Who knows how the match might have gone had it been held?Andrew Flintoff did some more bowling during the morning session. He worked up an impressive pace, overdid the bouncers, and suffered several snicks to the boundary – which he took with wry good humour. He finished with the interesting figures of 8-5-26-0.Lancashire continued to fight back during the afternoon session, and the Sussexinnings steadily subsided for 268. With Lancashire requiring 242 to win, thematch was still finely balanced. Murali had the best bowling figures forLancashire, 3 for 120 off 31.2 overs, although he was less impressed himself as he inspected the scorebook. He bowled some of his usual magic balls, but was uncharacteristically inaccurate at times.A good finish looked assured as Mal Loye attacked the bowling confidently fromthe start of the Lancashire chase, and Adams, the Sussex captain, broughtMushtaq Ahmed on quickly, and kept him on. Both sides went at it hammer andtongs, but it was Lancashire who cracked. They reached 65 for 1 before the final twist of the match. It was supplied by the unsung Robin Martin-Jenkins, who had bowled erratically in the first innings: now, in quick succession, he had Brad Hodge caught at the wicket and produced a superb yorker to bowl Loye.Flintoff proved a big disappointment to his home crowd, as he failed to knuckledown and apply himself to the situation. Before tea he appeared to have acharmed life. His first scoring stroke would have been straight down thethroat of long-on had he been on the boundary instead of 20 yards inside, andthen a leading edge looped just clear of the off-side fielders. Immediatelyafter tea, he tried to pull Mushtaq and lobbed a simple catch off the top-edgeto backward point. He departed for 11, with some of the crowd making theirdisenchantment clear.As long as Stuart Law was there, Lancashire had hope. Unlike Flintoff,he tried to dig deep, but was caught at slip for 16 off the reliableNaved-ul-Hasan. Lancashire were now 97 for 5, and it was all downhillfrom here. The remaining batsmen showed little fight as the two Pakistani bowlers, in their different styles, worked their way down the list to bring their team an unexpectedlycomfortable victory. Mushtaq took four wickets and Naved three. Adams’sastute captaincy had much to do with it, but Lancashire had nobody toblame but themselves.

Frost announces retirement

Tony Frost, the Warwickshire wicketkeeper, has announced he will retire at the end of the season. He made his first-class debut in 1997 and spent the first part of his career as understudy to Keith Piper.Frost, 30, enjoyed an impressive first half to the 2006 season with a run of three half-centuries in three matches against Kent, Durham and Lancashire; his 96 against Durham turned into a match-winning innings. However, he has been struggling with injury over the last few weeks and his place has been taken by Tim Ambrose.Frost said: “There comes a time when you have to listen to what your body is telling you. I have had a fantastic career at Warwickshire and played with some of the great players. I am keen to stay involved in cricket and am delighted that the club is willing to assist me in developing both my coaching and groundsmanship skills going forward”.Mark Greatbatch, Warwickshire’s director of cricket added: “Frosty has done exceptionally well this season, performing under pressure when we most needed him. Everyone at the club wishes to thank him for his career – long dedication to the Bears and would join me in wishing him well for the future”.Frost’s first-class record stands at 3178 runs from 92 matches at an average of 28.12. He has a career-best of 135 not out and claimed 225 catches and 16 stumpings.

Broad and Miller rout Sri Lanka U-19

England U-19 125 for 2 (Denly 45) beat Sri Lanka U-19 124 (Broad 4-33, Miller 3-16) by eight wickets
ScorecardStuart Broad and Andrew Miller shared seven wickets between them as England’s Under-19 cricketers romped to an eight-wicket victory over their Sri Lankan counterparts, in the first one-day international at New Road.After winning the toss and bowling first in helpful conditions, England’s seamers were no match for the Sri Lankans, with Broad claiming all three of the first wickets to fall. Ben Harmison, Steve’s younger brother, then bowled Dilhan Cooray for 20, before Miller rampaged through the lower middle-order, taking three wickets for seven runs.Sri Lanka’s eventual total of 124 was no match for England, who wrapped up the game with 20 overs to spare. Joe Denly top-scored with 45, before Steven Davies and Harmison sealed the win with a third-wicket stand of 31.

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