Nielsen prepares to fix Australia's problems

Tim Nielsen wants to step up in an effort to show that his men are capable of combating Flintoff and Co, starting at Edgbaston on July 30

Peter English21-Jul-2009This tour is starting to feel eerily like 2005 for the Australians. After a strong first Test they were shocked to be outplayed in the second match, when their bowling spearhead was injured, another was badly out of form and Andrew Flintoff carried his country.Four years ago the coach John Buchanan stepped back to focus on the side’s strategic goals when the team was in a similar situation, allowing his assistants to take charge. Tim Nielsen won’t be following the method of his predecessor and wants to step up in an effort to show that his men are capable of combating Flintoff and Co, starting at Edgbaston on July 30.”My role is really to get to the front now and lead and ensure the group is still enjoying Test cricket,” Nielsen said. “You need to be careful that you don’t let it get too big or ugly, we’re two Tests into a five-Test series, and we’ve got a lot to play yet. We have to make sure we’re not letting the results drive how we’re preparing.”Nielsen’s priorities are re-tuning Mitchell Johnson into the world-beating bowler he was against South Africa earlier in the year, getting Brett Lee back to fitness and plotting the comeback from a 1-0 deficit. In 2005 McGrath missed both the games Australia lost and without Lee the visitors drew in Cardiff and were defeated at Lord’s.When asked whether Australia could win two out of three matches to take the series Nielsen responded with a determined “yeah”. He wants the side to remember their strong performance at Cardiff, where England’s last pair held on for 63 balls, and their responses to the early struggles in both first innings at Lord’s.”We fought pretty hard [in the second Test],” he said. “There are a lot of good signs and it’s not all doom and gloom. We lost a Test. It’s good in some regards, it gives us an opportunity to show how good we are.Nielsen said the team would “re-set and re-start” before Northampton and he also highlighted mental strength as an area to improve. “When you get behind against good quality teams, it’s totally a mind game,” he said. “We’ve shown that our skills are in order and our players are good enough. When you get under pressure the reason your skills fail is because your mind isn’t working as well as it should.”

Ndombele won’t be appreciated in PL

Sky Sports pundit Gary Neville has claimed Tanguy Ndombele will never ‘be appreciated’, despite his ‘fantastic’ ability with the ball.

The Lowdown: Back in Nuno plans

After failing to live up to the expectations of his 2019 move from Lyon and Ndombele’s unsuccessful attempt to leave Tottenham, the 24-year-old is now back in Nuno Espirito Santo’s team.

The midfielder missed the opening three Premier League games of the season after looking like he was out of favour under the new boss, but he played 62 minutes in Sunday’s 3-0 defeat to Chelsea.

On his return to action, Ndombele completed 33 of his 37 passes (89%), won four of his eight ground duels and made three tackles.

The Latest: Neville’s Ndombele claim

Speaking on Sky Sports [via HITC] following the Chelsea defeat, Neville has claimed Ndombele simply may not fit as a Premier League player, despite praising his talent.

The former Manchester United full-back said: “I don’t know what you make of him. I don’t think anybody does. He’s one of those players that you watch and you think he’s a fantastic, technical football player.

“He takes the ball in difficult situations, he dribbles with it, he beats people. And then you sort of don’t see him then for maybe four minutes, six minutes, eight minutes and wonder where he is.

“I watch Ndombele and think there’s a lot of players like him in Spain, in Italy. Sometimes they fit those leagues better. I don’t think he’ll ever be appreciated fully over here because he doesn’t fit into a position or a type.”

The Verdict: Problem for Nuno

Ndombele has been included in Nuno’s squad for the previous three games now, including Thursday’s Europa Conference League draw with Rennes, meaning his chance to shine in N17 is now.

As Neville correctly points out though, most top managers in England, including Nuno, expect a lot from their players off the ball that Ndombele simply may not provide.

There is no question the Frenchman is extremely talented, but in rigid tactical systems is there a place for such an enigmatic player? Neville is not so sure, and neither are we.

In other news, this former Spurs boss has blasted Ndombele for this one thing during the Chelsea game. Find out more here.

Liverpool fans fume at Origi latest

A number of Liverpool supporters are fuming after an update regarding Divock Origi’s future at Anfield, with the Belgian set to stay put.

The Reds don’t look like they will be making any new signings this summer, with Ibrahima Konate proving to be the only addition in the entire window.

It is a decision that is unlikely to go down well, with many fans of the opinion that reinforcements are needed in certain areas of the pitch.

[freshpress-quiz id=“359326”]

Origi is a player who has become an increasingly peripheral figure at Anfield, providing some huge moments back in 2018/19 but doing very little since then.

Despite this, it looks as though the Belgian is set to stay with the Reds beyond this summer, according to Sky Sports News [via Anfield Edition on Twitter], who say he wants to fight for his place.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/latest-liverpool-transfer-news-2/” title=”Latest Liverpool transfer news!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=“none”]

Liverpool fans unhappy at Origi claim

These Liverpool fans took to Twitter to show their unhappiness at the rumour, with one fan calling it a ‘joke’.

“We’re honestly so dusted”

Credit: @LFCYussef

“We are an actual embarrassment”

Credit: @the_only_ish

“I have given up on new signings at this point but they are really making us watch Divock ball for another year as well”

Credit: @eeerik1

“He can’t even make the bench anymore, we had 2 goalkeepers on the bench ahead of him”

Credit: @LfcMerx

“Fight? Joke. He’s running his contract down”

Credit: @mark_gilbertson

“Are we even a serious club?”

Credit: @mirxnn7

In other news, one Liverpool player could leave in the final hours of deadline day. Find out who it is here.

Liverpool suffer huge selection setback

Liverpool have suffered a huge blow ahead of their Premier League fixture with Leeds United over the weekend after their Brazilian contingent were ruled out of action.

What’s the story?

Alisson Becker, Fabinho and Roberto Firmino have been banned for a short period of time after the Anfield outfit’s hierarchy refused to release them for international duty due to quarantine rules for red-listed countries by the UK Government.

A report in the Liverpool ECHO stated that: “The club have received notification from FIFA that the Brazilian FA has asked the governing body to invoke their five-day rule, which sees players who fail to link up for national team duty then banned for a brief period from featuring for their clubs.

“With Brazil’s final match of the current break taking place in the early hours of Friday morning UK time, it means Alisson, Fabinho and Firmino – who in any case is hampered by a hamstring problem – will miss the Premier League trip to Leeds United on Sunday.”

Jurgen Klopp will be fuming

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp will undoubtedly be fuming at this latest revelation as he will be forced to contend with the absence of two key players due to football politics.

Although Firmino is currently injured and would have been fit to play, Alisson and Fabinho have featured heavily in the club’s opening three league encounters of the season, and their enforced omissions from the starting line-up will significantly weaken the 19-time English champions.

After picking up a very respectable seven points from a possible nine in the opening weeks of the current campaign, Liverpool will be hoping to continue their good form at Elland Road on Sunday.

However, that task has now become significantly harder after their first-choice goalkeeper and key defensive midfielder have been ordered to stay at home.

And, in other news…Liverpool eye £86m move for “spectacular footballer”, fans will be buzzing 

Dominant Australia take control

Ricky Ponting and Shane Watson compiled more in a single second-wicket stand of 119 than England’s entire line-up managed in 33.5 overs

The Bulletin by Andrew Miller at Headingley07-Aug-2009Australia 196 for 4 (Ponting 78, Watson 51) lead England 102 (Prior 37*, Siddle 5-21) by 94 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsMarcus North took a splendid catch at third slip to remove Andrew Strauss•PA PhotosRicky Ponting and Shane Watson compiled more in a single second-wicket stand of 119 than England’s entire line-up managed in 33.5 overs of abject surrender, as Australia built on the efforts of their four-man seam attack to seize control of the crucial fourth Test at Headingley. Though England battled back in the final session by claiming three wickets in as many overs, including Ponting for 78, nothing could gloss over their humiliation in the opening exchanges of the day. A single pitiful session could well have cost them their chance to reclaim the Ashes.Shorn of the services of Andrew Flintoff, whose damaged right knee failed to respond to treatment, and already lacking the aggression and presence that Kevin Pietersen brings to their middle-order, England went into a Test without either of their kingpin players for the first time since the tour of Bangladesh in October 2003, and duly played in a manner befitting their opponents of six years ago. They had been handed a late fitness scare when Matt Prior suffered a pre-toss back spasm, which required the toss to be delayed by ten minutes as England finalised their starting XI, and the bewilderment in their ranks was as plain as it had been at 5 o’clock that morning, when a fire alarm at the team hotel had left them shivering in the Leeds drizzle during a mass evacuation.For most of the summer, Australia have been the team seemingly lacking in direction, but with a sniff of uncertainty in their opponents’ ranks, they at last had a bowling attack to exploit the situation. The decision to recall Stuart Clark for his first Test of the summer, in place of the spinner Nathan Hauritz, was a gamble that paid rich dividends. He marked his comeback with a pre-lunch spell of 3 for 7 in 6.5 overs, while Peter Siddle followed up after the break with 4 for 3 in 14 balls, to finish with the stand-out figures of 5 for 21. Each of the four bowlers claimed at least one wicket, with Ben Hilfenhaus desperately unlucky not to have pinned Andrew Strauss lbw with the very first ball of the match.Ricky Ponting continued his outstanding form at Headingley with 78•Getty ImagesAs it turned out, Strauss survived a mere 17 balls before squirting a fat edge off Siddle to Marcus North at third slip, whose stunning one-handed reflex catch was the catalyst for the performance that followed. Strauss had spent the final minutes before the start fretting over the fitness of Prior, who injured his back while playing football in the warm-ups, leaving Jonathan Trott on the verge of a debut and Paul Collingwood pencilled in for the wicketkeeping duties, and his mind was evidently some way from the action in the middle. The confirmation of Flintoff’s lack of fitness ended up being the very least of his worries.In the event, the only England batsman to show any spine was none other than Prior, who was out in the middle at least two sessions sooner than he might have anticipated, but gritted his way to 37 not out from 43 balls before running out of partners. One other batsman managed double figures – Alastair Cook, who was the mainstay of a flimsy top order with 30 from 65 balls – while the middle-order triumvirate of Ravi Bopara, Ian Bell and Collingwood showed worrying shortcomings in temperament and technique respectively.Hilfenhaus accounted for Bopara, earning due reward for his line, length and consistent swing when Michael Hussey collected a loose back-foot punch in the gully, and at 16 for 2, the stage was hardly set for the fragile Bell to make his mark. Mitchell Johnson responded to his arrival with his best and most hostile spell of the series. Threatening to bend the ball back into the right-hander at will, and finding a superb line to complement his subtle changes of length, Johnson tormented Bell’s outside edge before slipping in a wicked bouncer that was gloved through to Brad Haddin.Next in the procession was Collingwood, whose returns have faded alarmingly since his match-saving performance at Cardiff in the first Test. He couldn’t negotiate Clark’s sharp outswing, which he prodded limply to Ponting at second slip for a fifth-ball duck, and Clark claimed his second scalp in the space of 11 balls when Cook’s resistance ended with a low edge to Michael Clarke at first slip.Prime Numbers33.5The number of overs England lasted in their first innings. It’s the lowest in the first innings in any match in which they’ve won the toss and chosen to bat. It’s also the least number of overs batted by a team in the first innings of a Test at Headingley. 102England’s total, which is their lowest in the first innings of a home Test since being bundled out for 77 against Australia at Lord’s in 1997. 4The number of ducks in England’s innings. Only three times have they had more ducks in an innings. 9.5The number of overs Peter Siddle bowled for his five-for. It’s the seventh occasion, since 1970, of an Australian bowler taking five wickets after bowling ten overs or less.105.25Ricky Ponting’s average at Headingley. In four innings, he has scores of 127, 144, 72 and 78.Prior did his best to rally the innings in his standard counter-punching style, but Stuart Broad found the going extremely tough in his over-promoted position of No. 7, and was extracted on the stroke of lunch when Katich at short leg scooped Clark’s third of the innings. Then it was over to Siddle to make mincemeat of a tail that had wagged regularly in the series so far, but was unable to make any headway at all with the momentum all in the bowlers’ favour. Graeme Swann laboured to a 15-ball duck which ended with a snick to first slip, while Harmison – back in the side at Flintoff’s expense – edged to the keeper to notch the 20th duck of his career, an England record he now shares with Mike Atherton.James Anderson did at least manage to extend his duckless run to 53 innings, but the scampered single that preserved his world record culminated in a leg injury that visibly reduced his subsequent effectiveness with the ball. He and Graham Onions were bounced from the crease in consecutive Siddle deliveries, whereupon Shane Watson clattered Anderson’s first two deliveries of the reply through point for a brace of fours in a style reminiscent of Michael Slater. Though Harmison responded by extracting Katich at leg gully with the fourth ball of his comeback, Ponting emerged to put his personal seal on the day with a smouldering and initiative-seizing cameo.Once again, Ponting came to the crease to a chorus of boos, but true to form, he turned the animosity to his advantage. Latching onto the slightest error in length, he pulled Onions’ first ball through midwicket for six, in an over that eventually went for 17 runs, as Australia’s fifty was brought up in just 39 deliveries. Ponting’s only let-off en route to his 63-ball half-century came on 32, when Bell missed a shy from the covers that would have run him out by five yards.For as long as he and Watson were in tandem, Australia’s dominance was absolute. Watson, revelling in his new opener’s role, cracked his third half-century in as many innings, and battered Harmison for four fours in nine balls as England’s bowlers completely forgot about the virtues of line and length. But then, almost without warning, they finally remembered to pitch the ball up, and with a hint of movement around that habitual 30-over mark, they succeeded in stemming the tide.First to strike was Onions, who pinned Watson lbw for 51 as he whipped across the line, whereupon Broad – for the first time this summer – opted to follow suit. Twice in four balls he angled the ball in from a full length, first to end Ponting’s stay on 78, and then to remove Hussey before he could get going. England created opportunities as the shadows lengthened, not least when Harmison, in a furious final spell, cracked Michael Clarke on the helmet and the glove from consecutive deliveries. But by the close, Australia’s hold on the Ashes was looking as sprightly as it has done since Cardiff.

It's very tough for NZ bowlers to stop me – Sehwag

Only Virender Sehwag can say that he felt sorry for the bowlers, without sounding arrogant. The arrogance is for on the field, which he showed a plenty of against New Zealand at Seddon Park today

Sidharth Monga in Hamilton11-Mar-2009
Virender Sehwag: “They [the New Zealand bowlers] are bowling into my body, and I’m playing my hook and flick shots to get boundaries. There is no other [effective] way they can bowl to me” © AFP
Only Virender Sehwag can say that he felt sorry for the bowlers, without sounding arrogant when he says it. The arrogance is limited to the time he spends on the field with bat in hand, and he showed plenty of that against New Zealand at Seddon Park today.It’s almost like Roger Federer wearing a champion’s jacket especially made for him by Nike, while walking out onto the centre court at Wimbledon. Anybody other than Federer would seem ridiculous in that. Anybody other than Sehwag would have sounded absurdly pompous saying that he left the bowlers helpless.”The wickets are good to bat on, and it’s very tough for them to stop me,” Sehwag said. “They are bowling into my body, and I’m playing my hook and flick shots to get boundaries. There is no other [effective] way they can bowl to me.”Imagine being a bowler. Check your limitations first: you can’t hit 140kmph regularly, you don’t have any help from the pitches, and the grounds are small. You start off with what you think is the best theoretical way to bowl to Sehwag: short and into the body. Sehwag clears his front leg, and pulls it ferociously into the stands over midwicket, sometimes from chest-high.”I played some good shots, especially the hook and pull shots, which I never expected from myself on these tracks,” he said. “I don’t know how it comes or where it comes from, but I managed to hit the [short] ball.”So you try and bowl fuller, looking for some swing. If you are Iain O’Brien bowling your first over in your comeback match, you almost get badly injured – the ball whizzes past your ear for four. If you are Kyle Mills and you manage a perfect short-of-driving length and get some shape away, the bat faces opens a bit and the ball flies over extra cover. If you are Ewen Thompson, making your debut, and dibbly-dobblying onto Sehwag’s pads, you get flicked over midwicket and then turned fine of fine leg. The backlift is high, the swing downwards clean and fast, and the ball makes its own way on the field.So you try and slow things down. If you are Daniel Vettori, the canniest left-arm spinner in the world, you get some respect, and even get a forward defensive stroke. But soon enough Sehwag jumps down the track, is beaten in the flight, but still lofts you over long-off to get to his century. And later he says: “That was a mistimed six, the only mis-hit.”Sehwag also admitted to edging a ball after reaching his century, that was dropped by wicketkeeper Peter McGlashan. “Before the 100 there was no chance for any bowler.”Sehwag-speakOn leaving a psychological scar on the bowlersYes, because they are now worried about our opening partnership. Gautam [Gambhir] batted very well and we will open in Test matches, so they have to think twice or thrice about where to bowl to this opening pair.On this being the best line-up he has played inYes, you can say that because we are a very young and talented side, and we can chase anything because we have belief in ourselves. If we chase around 350, we have batsmen who can hit the ball hard and score 50 in 30 balls or 100 in 60 balls, so we believe in ourselves.The psyche of such an explosive line-upWe’re not worried about getting out. If you’re worried about getting out and how you’ll get out, then you’ll not make runs. As a unit, you have what you think is a good plan – to not give Sehwag any width outside off. And you succeed, which shows how only six runs came behind square on the offside. But what you think is a weakness is not a frailty after all.The biggest part of Sehwag’s resurrection after being dropped from the 2007 World Cup squad has been his improved on-side play. The flicks during his hundred on Test debut in Bloemfontein are back. He has been hooking and pulling murderously. As a result you end up bowling a grand total of 20 dot balls to him.It’s obvious the opposition shoulders will droop. But that’s not new for Sehwag. “I have felt it a couple of times against Australia and South Africa, and against England also,” he says. “So it happens.”Just that it happens more often when Sehwag is batting. This is not the first time that it has been on display during this tour. But in the Twenty20s it happened for too brief a while. In the first two ODIs, when he scored match-winning half-centuries, he left the job unfinished. Today he finished his business, and because he came out unbeaten, he rated this as one of his best innings.Sehwag’s batting philosophy comes through from one of his old advertisements, where he professes, “The ball is supposed to live outside the boundary, send it there.” It is a simple thought that he goes about implementing in his own inimitable way. Just like he hits what he sees, he tells what he sees.He spoke what he saw today, and it didn’t sound boisterous. He spoke plain facts. You indeed felt sorry for the bowlers (except that they watched the spectacle from the best seat). They were indeed helpless and they didn’t know any effective way of bowling to him. On some days you just can’t do anything, except live with it.

IPL security agency faces time crunch

The elections in South Africa on April 22, four days after the IPL starts in the country, the crime rate in cities like Johannesburg and the limited time available are some of the key challenges facing the league’s security managers

Nagraj Gollapudi02-Apr-2009The elections in South Africa on April 22, four days after the IPL starts in the country, the crime rate in cities like Johannesburg and the limited time available are some of the key challenges facing the league’s security managers, according to Nicholls Steyn & Associates, who are handling the tournament’s security.Nicholls admitted that moving the tournament to South Africa was a good option from the security point of view because the situation in India had made it “very difficult ” to host the event there. Besides, Nicholls said they were not able to conduct a final assessment of the situation in India for the IPL because of the delays in final decisions.”We were waiting for the feedback from the Indian government about what resources could be made available,” Nicholls told Cricinfo. “There were a lot of delays caused in getting a decision, but we believe that it is a positive sign that those delays were caused because of the desire to keep security first. We were very aware of the fact the security measures that were provided had to be of the highest standards and there were many discussions to see if those required standards could be provided with the other things that were going in India at time.”The IPL’s security template in South Africa will borrow significantly from the World Twenty20 model and the plan during India’s tour of South Africa in 2006 as well as other international tours and events. The South African agency has enormous expertise in providing security to teams and players and is also the ICC’s security consultant. They were roped in by the IPL last year as their central player-security managers.”From the cricketing perspective, it is obviously disappointing [to shift the IPL] because everyone would’ve liked the event to happen in India,” Nicholls said. “But the situation and timing make it impossible to host it there, so from our perspective if it is not going to be in India then we believe that South Africa is a good choice.”Asked whether the firm was confident of providing security in India without central security forces, as the IPL had claimed in a letter to the Indian government, Nicholls said, “It is a difficult question to answer because while we may be told that we do not have central forces, we needed to assess what forces are then actually going to be available. We knew what had to be done and everyone at the IPL agreed that player security was an absolute priority but obviously we didn’t know exactly what the situation was until the decision came from the government.”In South Africa, though, time is the major challenge, Nicholls said. “There is not much time to put everything together. The good thing is South Africa hosted the Twenty20 World Cup in the recent past as well as other large tournaments so there is good history of doing that. We would have certainly liked longer duration for planning but that is just the way it is – we have an X amount of time to do it and we have got to get things in place in the time available. Fortunately we have an experienced team who know what has to be done and have done it before.”Nicholls declined to reveal numbers, in terms of security personnel employed, but confirmed that he would be working together with the South African government. Bangalore Challengers take on Deccan Chargers in Cape Town on April 22, election-day in South Africa, and Nicholls said that he understood that the matter of holding the game on that particular day had been discussed at the “highest” level.”That was something which has been discussed at a very high level,” Nicholls said. “It was a concern, but from my understanding it has been discussed with the South African government and their input was taken into account in planning the schedule.”The crime rate in cities like Johannesburg, which hosts eight IPL matches, Nicholls admitted, was something that would be taken into consideration. “Some countries have a higher terrorism threat and a low crime rate and in others it is reverse where the crime rate is higher,” he said. “Certainly the crime rate is something that has to be taken in consideration for any major event that happens in South Africa.”

Shakib powers Bangladesh to final

Shakib Al Hasan’s powerhouse batting and inspired bowling performances from vice-captain Mashrafe Mortaza and debutant Rubel Hossain ensured Bangladesh beat Sri Lanka in the third match of the tri-series and, more importantly, secured a place in the final

Cricinfo staff14-Jan-2009
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Naeem Islam and Man of the Match Shakib Al Hasan celebrate victory © PA Photos
Shakib Al Hasan’s powerhouse batting and inspired bowling performances from vice-captain Mashrafe Mortaza and debutant Rubel Hossain ensured Bangladesh beat Sri Lanka in the third match of the tri-series and, more importantly, secured a place in the final on Friday, where they will face the same opposition again.In a must-win match for them, reduced by bad light to 31 overs each, Bangladesh restricted Sri Lanka to 147 before Shakib’s 92 off 69 balls completed the win. A fourth-wicket stand of 91 between Shakib and captain Mohammad Ashraful helped them pick up the bonus point as well to end the hopes of Zimbabwe, the third team in the competition.Bangladesh got off to a disastrous start during their chase as Junaid Siddique was run out in the first over. Two overs later, lightning struck twice as Mushfiqur Rahim got a thick edge to Sangakkara off Thushara and Tamim Iqbal was caught short of his crease by Kapugedera direct-hit, attempting a suicidal run.The hosts were in deep trouble as the all-too-familiar story looked in the offing. Enter Shakib Al Hasan and Mohammad Ashraful.Both looked determined right from the start, as they tried to get Bangladesh on course. Mohammad Ashraful played the silent support role to Shakib Al Hasan, who came down severely on the bowlers – two boundaries each in successive overs from Thushara and Kulasekara setting the tone. Mathews was treated with similar disdain in his first over with a six and four as the run-rate crept above five.Shakib soon brought up his 50 off 45 balls and had plundered six boundaries and a six by then, and looking good for more. But just when the partnership was nearing 100, Ashraful fell, trying to hook a short one from Kulasekera as Jayasuriya pulled off a smart catch running across from fine leg.But Shakib continued unfettered and even Raqibul’s dismissal two overs later failed to curb the free-flowing strokes. He edged Bangladesh closer to the bonus point, hitting ten fours and two sixes during the blitz. Naeem ended the innings in perfect finish with a six off Mendis, as they registered their second win against Sri Lanka.Ashraful’s decision to field, paid off immediately with Mortaza striking twice in his first two overs, removing Upul Tharanga and Kumar Sangakkara. He then removed Sri Lanka’s top-scorer Sanath Jayasuriya, whose fifty was largely responsible for pushing the visitors to a somewhat respectable total.Jayasuriya’s 64-ball innings included seven boundaries, but failed to encourage the other batsmen as the middle and lower orders fell apart. Rubel helped himself to the spoils, ending with 4 for 33, and was responsible for the damage towards the end.
Bangladesh celebrate the dismissal of Kumar Sangakkara © PA Photos
The reduced overs resulted in a 6-3-3 Powerplay split, with a maximum of seven overs for any one bowler and six each for four others. Mortaza struck with the third ball of the morning, trapping Tharanga leg before. In his next over, he produced an identical delivery to castle Kumar Sangakkara.Rubel was given a hostile welcome to international cricket by Jayasuriya, who hit him for two fours in his first over and then got a life when Raqibul Hasan failed to pull off a catch off a short delivery from Mortaza.Bangladesh then opted for spin at both ends through Naeem Islam and Shakib Al Hasan. Naeem managed to break the stand in the 18th over when Jayawardene holed out to Rubel at deep-midwicket while attempting a slog sweep.Mortaza was then brought on soon after and had Jayasuriya caught and bowled shortly after bringing up his half-century as Sri Lanka found themselves in a spot of bother at 95 for 4.In a bizarre turn of events which followed, Sri Lanka then lost five wickets in a space of four overs – Jehan Mubarak was run out for 10, Angelo Mathews was caught by Mortaza at mid-on off Rubel, while Kapugedera chopped a Mahbubul Alam delivery on to his stumps.Rubel struck twice in the 29th over, to remove Nuwan Kulasekara and Thilan Thushara with the first and last deliveries. And he capped off the dream start getting Ajantha Mendis caught by Ashraful at short cover in the last over of the innings.

Assam and Himachal wrap up wins in style

A round-up of the third day’s play of the second round matches of the Ranji Plate League

Cricinfo staff13-Nov-2008
Scorecard
Tripura must have fancied their chances at Agartala when they set Assam 212 to win, having bowled them out for 195 the first time. But captain Rashmi Parida made amends for his duck earlier in the first innings, scoring 79 to lead the visitors to a five-wicket victory. Resuming at 96 for 5, Nishit Shetty took Tripura past the 150-run mark before falling to Ranjitkumar Mali after a well-made 55. Anand Katti added three more wickets to his kitty to finish with 4-63 as Tripura finished on 192, setting the visitors a competitive target. However, Parida’s innings, and a 91-run third-wicket stand with Jacob Martin, ended Tripura’s hopes. Jayanta Debnath’s 4-69 was not enough as Deepak Sharma (41) and Sarupam Purkayastha took Assam home.
Scorecard
Himachal Pradesh bagged maximum points after thrashing Kerala inside three days in Dharamshala. Resuming at 27 for 2, they lost Antony Sebastian two runs later in a top-order collapse engineered by Vikramjeet Malik (4-17). A seventh-wicket stand of 62 between Karimuttathu Rakesh and Vinan Nair was the highest of the innings and an unbeaten 41 from captain Sony Cheruvathur was not enough to stave off the heavy defeat.
Scorecard
Jharkhand made amends for following on with a strong performance by openers Subroto Ghosh and Manish Vardhan, the captain, in their second innings. While Ghosh hit a cautious 89, Vardhan provided able support with 44 but at stumps Jharkhand still trailed by 207 runs. They began the day on a miserable note, Haryana’s bowlers completed the rout by shooting them out for 113 in their first innings. Sachin Rana was the pick of the bowlers; he added two wickets on the third day to finish with 5 for 32.
Scorecard
Jammu & Kashmir’s seamers swung the momentum back in favour of the visitors as they had Goa reeling at Margao. Vijay Sharma accounted for three of Goa’s top four batsmen, while Samiullah Beigh and Pranav Mahajan picked up two wickets each. Manoj Joglekar brought up his century earlier in the day as Jammu & Kashmir looked to narrow the overnight lead of 166 runs but he lacked support for his 120 and J&K failed to press home the advantage.
Scorecard
Jatin Saxena and Shantanu Pitre’s defiant 70-run eighth-wicket partnership denied Bengal a lead against Madhya Pradesh in Gwalior. After Brijesh Tomar’s dismissal for 62, Saxena and Pitre (26) helped Madhya Pradesh finish with a lead of 68 runs. Ashok Dinda was the pick of the Bengal bowlers with 5 for 85. Bengal had a nightmare start with both openers, Anustup Majumdar and Shreevats Goswami, out without scoring in successive overs. However, Avik Chowdhury (45) and Wriddhiman Saha (50) steadied the innings but Bengal still have a lot of work to do to get something out of the match.
Scorecard
Faiz Faizal scored an unbeaten double hundred to give Vidarbha a firm grip on the match in Delhi. Faizal and Ranjit Paradkar (58) battered the Services bowling line up, as Vidarbha declared on 346 for 5. The target of 420 was always going to be an uphill task for Services, who collapsed for 77 in the first innings. Sumit Tomar scored a fluent 63 but three wickets before stumps put Vidarbha firmly in the driver’s seat.

UAE hold nerve in tense finish

A round-up of the second day’s matches in the ACC Under-19 women’s tournament in Thailand

Cricinfo staff15-Dec-2008
UAE beat Thailand by two runs © ACC
UAE bounced back from their defeat to Hong Kong and beat hosts Thailand in a close game at the ACC women’s Under-19 tournament at the Chiang Mai Gymkhana. An improved batting performance, led by captain Natasha Cherriath’s 21, took UAE to 100 after which 15-year old Samiya Salim reduced Thailand to 64 for 4 in 18 overs. But captain Naruemol Chaiwai’s 20-run partnership with Pundarika Prathanmitr kept Thailand in the hunt. However, the chase lost steam after Prathanmitr was run out at the start of the final over and UAE eventually won by two runs.Bhutan could not repeat their opening-day success and went down to a nine-wicket loss to Nepal at the Chiang Mai Gymkhana. No batsman managed double figures as Bhutan limped to 34 off their 25 overs. Sonu Khadka was Nepal’s most successful bowler with 2 for 3 in five overs. Opener Maya Rawat led the chase with an unbeaten 20 off 25 balls. This was Nepal’s second win in two days. Bhutan’s coach Damber S Gurung praised Nepal’s performance. “Everyone sees Nepal as a tough opponent,” Gurung was quoted as saying in Nepal’s .By conceding 43 extras China contributed significantly to Kuwait’s win at the Prem Oval in the first game of the tournament for the two sides. Kuwait lost three wickets in chasing down China’s 67; captain Priyada Murali’s 11 was the top score. Though their bowling was undisciplined, China did trouble Kuwait and kept a check on the runs scored off the bat. Opener Khansa Irfan batted 46 balls for her unbeaten 4 and Alina D’Silva took 20 balls for her 6. Kuwait were also guilty of boosting China’s score with extras – 30 in all. Murali took two wickets – both caught and bowled – for five runs.

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