Monday, October 29, 2007

South Africa bat first against Pakistan


LAHORE, Pakistan (Reuters) - South Africa won the toss and decided to bat in the fifth and final one-day international against Pakistan at Gaddafi stadium on Monday.South Africa retained the same team but Pakistan made several changes, with bowler Shoaib Akhtar returning to the side after serving a 13-match ban.Akhtar has appeared in just one test and four one-dayers in the last 20 months due to fitness and discipline problems.Pakistan also brought back pacer Sohail Tanvir and opener Imran Nazir. Together with Akhtar, they replaced Mohammad Asif, Umar Gul and Yasir Hameed.This is the fifth time Pakistan has changed its opening combination in the series which is tied at two all.

Teams:South Africa: Graeme Smith (capt), Herschelle Gibbs, Jacques Kallis, AB de Villiers, Mark Boucher, Shaun Pollock, Albie Morkel, Johan Botha, Makhaya Ntini, Jean-Paul Duminy. Andre Nel. 12th man Justin Kemp.Pakistan: Shoaib Malik (capt), Imran Nazir, Mohammad Yousuf, Younis Khan, Shahid Afridi, Kamran Akmal, Misbah-ul Haq, Shoaib Akhtar, Rao Iftikhar, Sohail Tanvir, Abdul Rehman, 12th man Salman Butt.Umpires: Billy Bowden (New Zealand) and Nadeem Ghouri (Pakistan)
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Shane Warne gets his way over shorter working day


The ECB has bowed to pressure from Shane Warne in his column in The Times — and other players — by announcing a drastic reduction in the number of overs bowled in the LV County Championship. From next season, the minimum overs in a day will be 96 rather than 104, bringing the county game much closer to the quota of 90 overs a day in Test cricket. The change will no doubt be justified on that criterion, ignoring that Test cricketers once played well in excess of 100 overs a day without a murmur. From 2008, there will be three two-hour sessions on all four days of matches that go the distance, starting at 11am and finishing at 6pm. Hitherto, these were the scheduled hours for the final day only, but “overtime” on the first three days has become the norm and because most Test days also overrun their scheduled course, with all manner of excuses being made for the shortfall and fines for slow over-rates gradually becoming a rarity, the county game will likely become less productive, too, in respect of the overs bowled.
Captains deliberating over field placements and bowling changes — with Warne, of Hampshire, among the most fastidious — are probably the main reasons for the slower rate. Others are bowlers posing after runs have been scored off them or a wicket has been narrowly missed, but batsmen play their part, too, fiddling with equipment, calling for a drink or meeting in mid-pitch for a conference with their partners. Fashions in the game change and those that apply in televised international cricket simply filter down through the various levels. It is a safe bet that, on the village green, far fewer overs are bowled on Saturday afternoons than was once the case.

Over-rate penalties will be doubled next season to one point for each over not bowled, but this is the thin end of the wedge and there will be no going back in the foreseeable future. Spectators who remember the game as it was will feel short-changed up to a point, but it is equally true that they see far more runs scored per over than they once did, the consequence of more powerful bats, shorter boundaries, a generally more adventurous approach from batsmen, the reluctance of captains to use a third man and, perhaps, bowling that is prepared to buy wickets rather than work for them through remorseless accuracy. Over-rates have declined inexorably, but run-scoring has compensated, despite a mixed history. In 1948, the Australia touring team famously made 721 all out on the first day from the 129 overs bowled in six hours by Essex: a rollicking rate all round. But the pace of the game has always been dictated by the character of the players. England, for example, needed 106 overs of the first day of the Georgetown Test against West Indies in 1953-54 to make 153 for two because Len Hutton waited for the second day to reach his hundred. By contrast, in the scintillating Lord’s Test of 1930, 505.4 overs were bowled in a little less than four days while 1,601 runs were scored. Despite totals of 425, 729 and 375 in the first three innings of the match (England, Australia, England), the scoring rate was only 3.1 runs an over, no more than an average rate now. Yet 126 overs were bowled in a day in that Bradman-dominated match, 30 more than have now been ordained for county cricket. In a series of adjustments, the ECB also decided to abandon the experiment in the 2007 Friends Provident Trophy that allowed three referrals to the third umpire in televised matches. They could hardly have done otherwise after the unwritten agreement between players and umpires more or less to ignore the idea. No decision was overturned and the umpires were spared embarrassment, but the experiment was invalid, which is a pity. An ECB statement said: “Subsequent to results from other referral trials, ECB should actively work with broadcasters and other parties towards technology and systems that will assist in increasing the number of correct decisions.”

The use of floodlights in the county championship is also to be discontinued. There were occasions last season when lights were turned on only for play to be suspended subsequently. “Floodlights and a red ball simply don’t work,” a statement added. On weather-interrupted days in the championship next season, a maximum of 30 minutes of time lost during the day’s play can be made up, except on the last day. No time will be carried forward from previous days. In the one-day competitions, penalties for inadequate pitches have been doubled to two points for a “poor” pitch and four points for one that is ruled “unfit”. If penalties cannot be applied in the season they are incurred, they are to be carried forward. Times of change across the board Other decisions— Further trials of an open microphone system with umpires to be conducted in the Friends Provident Trophy (FPT). — Playing conditions to confirm that once the batsman has indicated what shot he is going to play (ie, the reverse sweep), fielders should be allowed to change position as they see fit. A submission to be made to MCC for consideration within Law. — “Dead” LV County Championship matches should be allowed to finish (with the consent of both captains) at the start of the last hour regardless of the number of overs remaining to be bowled. — The white ball should be replaced automatically in FPT matches at the end of the 34th over. Any loss of the replacement ball would come from the normal box of spares. No such ball change is recommended in NatWest Pro40. — Powerplays in the FPT to be adopted as per ICC playing conditions. In NatWest Pro40, fielding restrictions to remain at the first 15 overs. ECB to raise with ICC whether the positioning of fielders within 15 yards in front of the batsman fulfils the intent of the regulation. — Guidelines for wides to be marked in all domestic one-day cricket as per international matches. — The Most Wins tiebreaker should be removed in the Twenty20 Cup. The tiebreaker that analyses the points gained in matches between teams that finish on equal points to be reintroduced instead in all one-day competitions. — The reserve day in knockout rounds in the FPT to be used in the same way as in the Twenty20 Cup. Twenty overs to constitute a match in knockout FPT games. — ECB Cricket Department to investigate the use of coloured gloves and armguards. — If a county plays a match at a neutral venue (with particular reference to another County HQ), any resulting pitch penalty is applied to the “home” team and not to the county hosting the match.
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Thick-skinned Murali has bigger fish to fry


Controversial Sri Lankan spinner Muttiah Muralitharan says he will not be too concerned about anticipated heckling from the crowd during next month's two-Test series against Australia.Cricket Australia is expected to increase security at the Test matches in Brisbane and Hobart, with the first Test getting under way at the Gabba next Thursday.Muralitharan's often questioned bowling action has been cleared by the International Cricket Council but he says he still expects no-ball calls from some people in the crowd."I can't change anybody's opinion, they can say whatever they [want to] say," said Muralitharan, currently playing for Sri Lanka in a warm-up match against a Cricket Australia Chairman's XI in Adelaide.Muralitharan needs just nine more wickets to overtake Shane Warne's world record Test tally of 708, but he says the milestone is not in his focus.He says he is more concerned with beating Australia as this will be Sri Lanka's best chance to do it.Australia will be without retired trio Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath and Justin Langer and Muralitharan says several veterans in his team are highly motivated to win an away series against Australia before they retire.

"Nine wickets is not in my mind because I want to try to win a match for Sri Lanka," hesaid."This is the best chance because you won't see in a few years time Sanath (Jayasuriya) playing or Marvan Attapattu or me, or so many others playing."Australia captain Ricky Pointing has appealed against racial taunting of the Sri Lankans following the treatment Andrew Symonds received during the recent one-day series in India.However he has questioned the level of security which surrounded Muralitharan when he arrived in Australia last week.Muralitharan was escorted through Adelaide airport by Australian Federal Police upon his arrival on Wednesday and Ponting says it was an overreaction."I must admit I couldn't understand that the other day," he said."I saw some armed guards getting with him when he arrived in Adelaide and that sort of thing - I don't think it's quite that bad."There'll be a few jibes from the crowd at different times but that's what you expect when you play. There's nothing different when we go anywhere around the world.".

Flintoff not in Duncan Fletcher's good books


Unless amnesty is declared between Andrew Flintoff and the England and Wales Cricket Board, it is unlikely that Flintoff will ever captain his country again. That will be one result of the revelations in a new book by Duncan Fletcher that the all-rounder's drinking on the Ashes tour to Australia last winter was out of control.Double act: Duncan Fletcher and Andrew Flintoff in happier times Fletcher, England's coach until last April, famously stripped Flintoff of the vice-captaincy following late-night drinking in St Lucia during the World Cup. But in his book Behind The Shades, due to be published on Nov 5, Fletcher reveals that Flintoff, the acting captain in Australia, was so hung-over from a drinking binge in Sydney in February that the team practice before a crucial one-day international against Australia had to be cut short.Ironically, England went on to win that game in the Commonwealth Bank series, the first in a four-match winning sequence under Flintoff that saw them unexpectedly lift the trophy.It seems that the incident, on what was a vexing and unhappy tour for him after the team's 5-0 pummelling in the Ashes, was not a one-off either. In an interview with a national newspaper, who have bought the serialisation rights for the book, Fletcher teasingly refers to "other things that I could have put in that would really have hurt people".

Drinking and cricket have long been easy bedfellows – too easy some would say. But what was tolerated in Ian Botham's pomp, where night-long sessions on cheap brandy in India were followed by swashbuckling centuries the next day, just does not wash now.Lucrative television and sponsorship deals have demanded new levels of behaviour from players, which is probably why Giles Clarke, the new ECB chairman, has insisted on a strict new code of behaviour.An iconoclast, Clarke has stated that all disciplinary matters, usually the remit of the coach until the Schofield Report spread the responsibility to include the ECB's new managing director of cricket, Hugh Morris, will now be taken very seriously indeed."Today's international stars can find fame and fortune playing for England," said Clarke during his induction speech last month. "But with that comes responsibility and accountability." That tough stance certainly does not bode well for any captaincy ambitions Flintoff may still harbour.Flintoff, who denies he has a drink problem, has distanced himself from any further revelations the book might have in store. Following a third operation on his troublesome left ankle last month he is spending seven weeks in the United States – a trip that is part holiday, part rehab.So far, any retort from the players' perspective has come from his best friend and team-mate Stephen Harmison, another target in Fletcher's cross-hairs.

"It's disappointing for these comments to be made," Harmison said yesterday. "Fred tried his heart out and could not have done more for the cause in Australia. But in this cruel world there is always someone who wants to knock and have a go and I find that sad."We must focus on the 2009 Ashes and not hark back to what happened 12 months ago, and that is especially true of Fred. He has got a massive amount to do to get back to the player he once was and the last thing he needs is to have to deal in ancient history."While many will dismiss Fletcher's criticisms of Flintoff as the revenge of an embittered man, the coach must also share in the blame. As the most powerful man in English cricket as well as the most mistrustful (his fellow selectors only found out about Flintoff's drinking escapades weeks later), he should have come down on Flintoff hard when he first erred.He certainly had the power to do so, but not it seems, the courage. As the book will reveal, his decision to do nothing was not based on giving Flintoff a second chance (or even a third one by then), but to deny the press, most of whom he loathed, a story.That reveals a man with a weaker will and worse judgment than Flintoff showed when drowning his sorrows in the first place.
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Test cricket not on Katich's radar


Simon Katich does not believe he is a serious contender for the Australian Test side, despite smashing a triple century for New South Wales against Queensland at the SCG yesterday.Katich blazed 306 to become the first batsman to post a triple century at the ground since Don Bradman's 452 not out in 1930.The whispers that Katich was a bolter for the Test side following the retirement of Justin Langer have now become murmurs, but the 32-year-old is not getting his hopes up."Not really, no not at all, because obviously the team is so settled," he said."Obviously they played so well in the last 12 months, so [I've] not even had a thought about that."Katich says it is an innings he will always cherish."I don't think I could have hit the ball much better than that, it was a very good wicket to bat on, a pretty good outfield and a short boundary one side so I certainly couldn't complain," he said.

Australia one-day spinner Brad Hogg is another who is not getting his hopes up of strutting onto the Gabba for the first Test against Sri Lanka next Thursday.Hogg is competing with Stuart MacGill to replace Shane Warne and had done his chances no harm, taking five wickets so far for Western Australia in its four-day match against Victoria at the MCG.Hogg is keen to impress the national selectors but is not getting ahead of himself."I'd love to play more Test cricket obviously, but I can't control that and it's up to the selectors to pick who they want to pick," he said.
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