Australia smash their way to an impressive 167-run win

Two blistering partnerships set up an outstanding Australian Academy score of 332/8 to shut New Zealand’s Academy out of their one-day match in Townsville yesterday.Darren Wotherspoon played the cornerstone innings of the game, of 126 runs off 118 balls.Coming together with the score 8/1 in the fourth over, Wotherspoon joined Chris Simpson in a 106-run stand off a withering 11.4 overs.Simpson was out for 87 scored off 53 balls with three sixes and 12 fours, when he gave Jamie How a catch from Mark Gillespie’s bowling off the last ball of the 15th over.Three runs later Joseph Yovich had Liam Buchanan caught for one, but it proved a short-lived breakthrough as George Bailey helped Wotherspoon add another 118 runs before Bailey was caught of Yovich’s bowling by Jeetan Patel for 43.Wotherspoon carried on to be the sixth wicket to fall for 285 with his score on 126 when the How/Gillespie combination got together again. Wotherspoon hit four sixes and six fours in his innings which allowed Australia to finish their 50 overs on 332.All the New Zealand bowlers suffered. The previously economical Kyle Mills was wicketless for 70 runs off his 10 overs. James McMillan had two for 60 off 10 and Gillespie three for 57 off eight overs.New Zealand set out with intent, getting to 32 in the seventh over but they lost the promoted Mills and How off successive balls, and then when Jesse Ryder, a key man in any assault, departed for 23 when the score had crawled through to 40 by the 12th over, the cause was lost.Rob Nicol took the chance to score 58 off 79 balls but the only other double figure contributions were 19 from Yovich and 15 from Stuart Mills and New Zealand were dismissed for 165 in the 40th over.Brett Geeves took two for 20 off seven overs, Aaron Bird two for 31 off eight and Simpson two for 42 off 10.

Warne's assault blows apart the record book

Australia’s leg-spinning maestro Shane Warne has sent out a huge warning to England as they prepare for the Ashes series, smashing more Test records in what has become a rejuvenation of his career against Pakistan.Pakistan were 47 runs behind Australia’s first-innings score of 444 with only two of their second innings wickets remaining in the third Test. Warne has three for 56 in the innings and Glenn McGrath three for 18.Playing in Sharjah, where the black gold of oil has created great wealth, Warne has bowled into a rich vein of his own and has smashed the Australian record for most wickets in a three-Test series.He has taken 27 wickets so far to move past Dennis Lillee, who took 23 in the 1979/80 series against England. Warne’s wickets have come at an incredible average of 12.66 runs per wicket.Warne has given himself every chance of becoming only the second player to take 500 wickets during the Ashes series, as he has now taken 477 wickets in his 104 Tests at an average of 25.73. Only West Indian Courtney Walsh has taken more Test wickets – 519.Warne has also moved into equal seventh place on the list of wickets taken in three-Test-match series, a position he shares with Pakistan’s Waqar Younis.Warne’s best figures in any series are the 34 he took on his first tour of England in 1993.If getting some respite from Warne is not enough, pace-man Glenn McGrath moved past the 400-mark in the same innings, only the second Australian to take that many wickets.McGrath, in his 87th Test, has now taken 403 wickets at 21.52.Those ahead of him are: Walsh, Warne, Kapil Dev (434), Richard Hadlee (431), Muttiah Muralitharan (430), Wasim Akram (414) and Curtly Ambrose (405).Most wickets for Australia in a three-Test series:

Runs  Wkts Avge342   27   12.66   SK Warne             Australia v Pakistan         2002/03388   23   16.86   DK Lillee            Australia v England          1979/80388   23   16.86   R Benaud             Australia v India            1956/57261   21   12.42   CTB Turner           Australia v England          1888438   21   20.85   GD McGrath           Australia v Sri Lanka        1995/96452   21   21.52   DK Lillee            Australia v India            1980/81540   21   25.71   DK Lillee            Australia v Pakistan         1976/77417   20   20.85   SK Warne             Australia v South Africa     1997/98442   20   22.10   SK Warne             Australia v South Africa     2001/02446   20   22.30   B Yardley            Australia v West Indies      1981/82Most wickets by all countries in three-Tests:Runs  Wkts  Avge203   35   5.80   GA Lohmann           England v South Africa       1895/96401   33  12.15   RJ Hadlee            New Zealand v Australia      1985/86545   32  17.03   Harbhajan Singh      India v Australia            2000/01294   30   9.80   M Muralitharan       Sri Lanka v Zimbabwe         2001/02437   30  14.56   Abdul Qadir          Pakistan v England           1987/88315   29  10.86   Waqar Younis         Pakistan v New Zealand       1990/91342   27  12.66   Shane Warne          Australia v Pakistan         2002/03373   27  13.81   Waqar Younis         Pakistan v Zimbabwe          1993/94270   26  10.38   C Blythe             England v South Africa       1907401   26  15.42   WPUJC Vaas           Sri Lanka v West Indies      2001/02

Donald expects Martin to shine

Country to county: Chris Martin will be staying in England after the Test series finishes after joining Warwickshire © Getty Images
 

Allan Donald has backed Chris Martin, the New Zealand opening bowler, to make a big impression with Warwickshire after agreeing to be their overseas player from the end of June.Martin has been left out of New Zealand’s one-day squad to face England and will join his new team after the Twenty20 Cup as a replacement for Monde Zondeki, who will link up with the South Africa tour. Warwickshire’s England players, Ian Bell and Tim Ambrose, have both spoken highly of Martin after facing him over the last few months.”Chris will make a massive difference,” Donald, Warwickshire’s bowling coach, told the . “We saw how well everybody bowled around Dale Steyn last season and it could be something similar.”I can’t think of anything better than to bowl alongside someone of Chris’s quality and experience. He has gained a lot of respect with a lot of people – the Aussies talk very highly of him. He will be a really exciting addition and he is a good bloke, a very humble sportsman. People will learn a lot from him.”Martin will hope to improve on Zondeki’s return of nine wickets in four Championship matches. Zondeki was signed to be a spearhead in a young Warwickshire attack, but it has not quite worked out that way.”I still feel Monde was just a couple of wickets away from bowling a side out,” Donald said. “But things happen for a reason and he quite simply didn’t fire at all. Maybe the English game just hit him straight between the eyes. You finish a four-day game then travel somewhere for a one-day game, then next time you open your eyes you are back at Edgbaston.”

SPCL1 – Goldstraw's six sinks Bashley challenge

Left-arm paceman Dan Goldstraw sank Bashley (Rydal) with season’s best figures of 6-26 as ECB Southern Electric Premier League champions BAT Sports toasted a 60-run victory at Southern Gardens.Goldstraw ripped out five of Bashley’s top six batsmen as the frail Foresters suffered another all-too-frequent batting collapse, tumbling to 47-8 and an eventual 85 all out after BAT had posted 145.It was a major disappointment for skipper Neil Taylor, whose Bashley side had clawed their way back into the game after BAT had eased to 139-4."We bowled well and caught our catches, taking BAT’s last six wickets for just six runs. But Dan (Goldstraw) was superb for them."The fact that he bowled two of our guys and trapped another three leg before is a testiment to how accurate he was," Taylor said.BAT looked to be heading towards a total around the 185 mark when Bashley broke through. Opener Damian Shirazi (57) and Chris Thomason (30) had shared a half-century fifth-wicket stand when Taylor (3-15) and Luke Ronchi (4-42), bowling medium-pace, broke the back of the innings.But BAT’s late collapse, which saw the defending champions sink from 139-4 to 145 all out, was just the start of a remarkable wicket fall.Bashley, masters of the collapse scene, were torn apart by Goldstraw, who removed Andy Sexton, Steve Latimore and Neil Thurgood before Kirk Stewart (2-33) bowled Ronchi.The visitors lurched to 11-4, 29-6 and 47-8 as a combined total of 14 wickets fell for only 53 runs.Shaun Lilley (23) and Dale Middleton (27) spard Bashley’s blushes before Goldstraw returned to the firing line to trap Ross Grierson leg before and end the agony at 85 all out.Stephen Snell and Dominic Carson produced the key knocks which guided Havant to a three-wicket win over South Wilts – and to top place in the table.Teenager Snell (71) lost four partners as Havant slipped to 78-4 chasing South Wilts’ 197 all out, but found a reliable ally in skipper Carson (43 not out) as the 2000 league champions gradually turned things around.Adam Smith (3-24) and Tom Caines (3-29) created an uncomfortable final journey as Havant, needing 34 off the final ten overs, got home in less than confident fashion.Caines (60) earlier produced a binding innings as South Wilts gradually recovered from two early blows by Mackie Hobson (4-64).The former Burridge all-rounder dropped anchor and received support from the enterprising Jamie Glasson (37), Simon Woodhouse (22) and Jon Nash before South Wilts lost their last four wickets for seven runs, reaching 179 (Mark Copping 3-30).Bournemouth aren’t getting much luck from the weather – a prolonged rain break effectively ending their chances of beating Calmore Sports at Chapel Gate.The Totton club escaped with a draw after Bournemouth – at 95-1 seemingly on course to better Calmore’s 160 all out – ran out of time."We lost 11 overs just at the vital stage," groaned Bournemouth skipper Matt Swarbrick, whose side have already been frustrated by three weather postponements this season."We were very well placed at 95-1, but the rain break meant that we really had to accelerate and that wasn’t easy on a pitch that was already soft after all the recent rain."James Elliott-Square (4-18) celebrated his first Premier League successes as Calmore, tied down by the nagging Jo Wilson, wobbled at 19-3 before teenager Mark Archer (47) and James Hibberd (39) began the repair work.David Kidner (3-29), enjoying his first bowl of the season, broke the stand but, after sending Calmore into deeper trouble at 131-9, suffered a recurence of his long-term back problem and withdrew from the attack.Evergreen Steve Brandes and South African Christof Bothma squeezed out 29 priceless runs as Calmore rallied to reach 160.With Tom Webley (38) and Swarbrick (37) prominent, Bournemouth eased themselves into a strong position.But the untimely rain break threw Bournemouth’s off the victory scent – wickets falling, three each to Bothma (3-35) and Hibberd (3-44) – as the Sports Club’s President’s Day ended in a soggy draw. Bournemouth closed at 131-8.Burridge’s rain saturated outfield caused the postponement of the key bottom-of-the-table clash with Liphook & Ripsley.

Hampshire lodge appeal over Championship penalty

Hampshire have lodged an appeal with the England and Wales Cricket Board over their eight County Championship point deduction enforced for the state of the pitch during the game with Lancashire last week.Having lodged the appeal within the 24-hour time limit permitted for appeals, Hampshire are now waiting on a time and place for the hearing, which will be heard in front of an ECB panel soon.

Somerset players report back for new season

At a very wet County Ground this morning the Somerset players reported back for pre-season training ahead of the start of the 2002 season next month.Before the start of the day Coach Kevin Shine told me: “All the players are in very good shape, and will be spending the day undergoing very specific fitness tests that have been set by Darren Veness and Andy Hurry. By the time that they go home this evening they will all be pretty tired!”The first week back in training for the players will be divided between spending time at the County Ground, using the extensive facilities at Millfield School at Street, as well as an excursion to another venue for a team-building exercise and some more strenuous physical exercises.I asked the Somerset Coach how he was feeling about things at this stage of the season. “It’s brilliant and everything is going really well. We’ve moved things on again which is what we needed to do, and everybody is feeling very confident and positive.”We have got quite a long pre-season this year, and we are using some different activities. It’s all a bit of a balancing act to keep the players sharp and challenged all the time.”Before rushing off to meet with the players in the dressing room he concluded: “By the time April 24th comes along we want them to be really geared up, hungry and fresh and totally prepared for the first match of the season.”

Sri Lanka reach highest-ever Test total at Lord's

England lost the important wicket of Marcus Trescothick after Sri Lanka declared on 555 for eight at Lord’s in the first Test. Although their bowlers kept to a more consistent line than yesterday, England again found wickets hard to come by as Marvan Atapattu (185) Aravinda de Silva (88) and Russel Arnold (50) kept the crowd entertained while amassing their team’s highest-ever Test total on this ground. England closed on 27 for one in reply.After a starting with a flourish (and two off-side boundaries) off Nuwan Zoysa, Trescothick was undone by a ball that left him down the slope, edging a catch to Sanath Jayasuriya at first slip. Michael Vaughan and Mark Butcher then saw England through to the close.This morning Atapattu picked up from where he left off last night, flicking the first ball from Hoggard to the mid-wicket boundary. He completed his 150 with a rasping cut, and Hussain then missed de Silva on 37 at first slip. It was academic, as Flintoff had over-stepped. Sri Lanka’s doyen of batsmen celebrated with a dreamy drive to the cover boundary.Hoggard replaced Caddick but was punished again by Atapattu, with boundaries through square leg and extra cover. The Sri Lankan opener was missed (on 163) in the same over, Flintoff failing to hold on to a low chance to his left at second slip. He then missed de Silva off Caddick in the next over, an edge from a flashing cut finishing at the third man boundary. On reaching his 50 de Silva enjoyed further good fortune, edging a flashing drive off Cork wide of second slip to the rope at third man.It took a short, leg-side delivery from Cork to break through, as Atapattu failed to get on top of a hook and Marcus Trescothick had plenty of time to position himself for the catch at long leg. Atapattu and de Silva had added 146 for the fourth wicket, just three runs short of Sri Lanka’s best against England. Atapattu’s 185 included 24 fours and came off 351 balls.The left-handed Arnold then resumed normal service, finding the cover boundary twice off Flintoff, then cutting another as the same bowler dropped short in his next over. Caddick’s return lasted just four overs for 20, including a fierce hook from de Silva, which was deflected several yards off a boundary board. As the sun broke through the haze Arnold responded warmly, taking two to third man with a delightful cut.A push to mid-wicket off Vaughan took Arnold through to 50 (87 balls, seven fours), and in celebration de Silva swept Vaughan behind square to the rope beneath the Father Time clock tower. Arnold perished as he had lived – in pursuit of quick runs – as an upper cut off Hoggard unerringly pinpointed the ubiquitous Trescothick, who again made no mistake at third man. The return of Cork resulted in de Silva (88) following Arnold back to the pavilion eight balls later. It was a soft dismissal, a short, leg-side delivery brushing the batsman’s glove on its way through to Stewart.Vaas fell for six, driving loosely at Cork for – guess who – Trescothick to pick up the catch at gully. Zoysa then delighted the crowd – doubtless arousing rather different sentiments in Hoggard – with a brace of hooked sixes into the Tavern in one over.Zoysa (28) was out in similar fashion to de Silva earlier in the day, getting an inside edge as he tried to glance an innocuous-looking delivery from Flintoff to give Stewart a straightforward catch. Tillekeratne and Buddika then saw Sri Lanka to 555 for eight before Jayasuriya declared. The England bowling figures did not make pleasurable reading.

ECB chief responds to criticism of two-Test series against Pakistan

The Chief Executive of the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB), Tim Lamb,today responded to media comment regarding the length of Pakistan’s currenttour to England.He said: “It is completely wrong to suggest that the ECB’s decision to hosttwo npower Test Matches against Pakistan this summer reflects poorly on thetourists.”Our original plan for this summer was to play a six-Test Ashes seriesagainst Australia only. However, following our new broadcasting deal withChannel Four and Sky in 1998, we agreed to expand the international matchprogramme to seven Test Matches per summer and introduce a triangularone-day tournament, the NatWest Series.”This enabled us to extend an invitation to another international side andthe Pakistan Cricket Board readily accepted our offer to play two npowerTests this summer and take part in the NatWest Series.”It would not have made cricketing or commercial sense for us to play aseven-Test series against one country and we firmly believe that the currentinternational match programme is in tune with what cricket fans want.”It should also be stressed that Pakistan’s tour this year was originallyintended to be an additional tour over and above the visit Pakistan were dueto make here in 2004 under the previous touring programme. This has now beenovertaken by the new ICC Test Cricket World Championship whereby eachcountry has to play each other twice home and away during a five-year periodand, as a consequence, Pakistan will now not tour here in 2004.”I can reassure Pakistan supporters that the ECB has the utmost respect fortheir team’s ability. They are one of the most exciting sides to watch inworld cricket and we will be looking to play a minimum of three Test Matchesand possibly four when Pakistan are next due to tour here again in 2006.”

Somerset to increase number of Queen's Golden Jubilee Award winners

Somerset County Cricket Club have been so overwhelmed by standard of the nominations for the Queen’s Golden Jubilee Award medals that they have decided to increase the number that are going to be presented.Originally it was planned to present just twelve of the medals to the most deserving individuals in Somerset who have dedicated their time in a voluntary capacity to one cricket club.Numerous nominations for the medals were received by Somerset Cricket Development Officer Andrew Moulding, but when it came down to deciding who the lucky recipients were going to be it proved to be an impossible task.Andrew Moulding told me: "The club has had a fantastic response to the Queen’s Golden Jubilee Award, and the level of nominations has been so impressive that it has been impossible to sort out the twelve most deserving cases."Mr Moulding continued: "They have all been fantastic applications, for instance one person who was nominated had given sixty six years of service to one club, fifty of which he had been on the committee. In his years with the club he had been a player, secretary, groundsman and umpire. That’s an impressive record, and there are any number that are just as impressive in their own ways."The Cricket Development Officer told me: "After discussion it has now been decided to increase the number of Queen’s Golden Jubilee Award medals from twelve to fifty, and even then it will still be a difficult choice to make!"The fifty medals will be produced locally and will be based upon a combination of the ideas put forward by the pupils of Year 9E at Heathfield School in Taunton, who were given the design of the medal as part of a project that they were undertaking with their teacher Mary Harding.The youngsters from Heathfield School who were involved in the project will be invited along to the County Ground on May 12th when the Queen’s Golden Jubilee Award medals will be presented.Somerset Chief Executive Peter Anderson told me: "The standard was so high that in the end we decided to present fifty medals, which makes symmetrical sense, one for each year of the Queen’s reign."

Carberry onslaught crushes Sussex

ScorecardMichael Carberry launched into the Sussex’s bowlers with a 36-ball 68•Getty Images

Hampshire remain on course for a domestic double in limited-overs cricket after Sussex’s semi-final frailties were exposed for the second week running. Despite a century of controlled aggression from Luke Wright, Hampshire shredded what could have been a testing chase with a 129-run stand inside the first 13 overs, to set up a repeat of their 2005 C&G Trophy final against Warwickshire.With FLt20 silverware already in the cabinet, there was a thought that one or two of the more ‘experienced’ members of the Hampshire side may have had a eye on some deckchair time by the seaside but even without the taped-up talisman of their T20 triumph, injured allrounder Dimitri Mascarenhas, there was no sign that the visitors had begun to build mental sandcastles. Rather it was Sussex, FLt20 semi-finalists and defeated at the same stage in this competition last year, who were left to rue another failure to launch.James Vince and Michael Carberry eviscerated the home attack with a calculated onslaught that took Hampshire more than halfway to their target, silencing the crowd and, in Carberry’s case, endangering a few of them too. “It looked difficult to score in the middle period so we had to do the early damage up front while the ball was hard and coming on to the bat,” he said.While Vince pierced the field with a series of back-foot drives, Carberry was a more muscular aggressor, smashing five sixes back down the ground. The biggest came via a huge mow that cleared the video screen on the north-east corner of the stadium, as the left-hander reached his fifty from 25 deliveries during a sequence of 6-4-4-4 against Chris Liddle.Carberry has been mentioned as a potential successor to Andrew Strauss at the top of England’s Test order and his Man of the Match performance, like Wright’s display in defeat, will not have gone unnoticed. He departed trying to smash a second six off Will Beer, underhitting by a matter of inches to be caught at long-on, before Vince fell to the same bowler one run later but Jimmy Adams and Simon Katich went about accumulating the further 90 required in the same unfussy manner of their t20 Finals Day contributions.”We’ve come into a fair amount of these games as the underdogs in various people’s eyes and that never does any harm,” Hampshire captain Adams said. “We’ve got guys capable of being match-winners and as a team there’s a belief we can do it. Today there were some standout performances that swung the game for us.”England’s south coast may often be characterised as a slumbering retirement destination but this was a feisty, energetic encounter between two sides with significant one-day pedigree. Recent t20 successes aside, Hampshire (in 2005) and Sussex (2006) were the last two winners of the C&G Trophy, while they contested the final of its successor, the FP Trophy, in 2009. Hampshire won that Lord’s encounter and repeated the trick by an even more comfortable margin here, despite the chasing given them by Wright.Wright has not played international cricket in over a year but he once again demonstrated his clean striking and the ability to clear the ropes – a much yearned-for quality among England batsmen – in a knock that provided more than half his side’s runs. He is timing his run of form into the World Twenty20 to perfection and although there will be competition from the likes of Jonny Bairstow and Jos Buttler when it comes to providing the middle-order gunpowder, his extra experience gained around the world, in the Big Bash league, IPL and South Africa’s domestic T20, stands him in good stead.”I suppose the silver lining is that I’ve got myself in good nick going into the Twenty20s, so fingers crossed I can push for a place and if I get a chance I can do well,” said Wright, a member of England’s successful 2010 team in the Caribbean. “The harder bit is getting in the XI and winning the title again.”In Sussex’s innings, Chris Nash started much the quicker of the openers and had scored 23 of the first 25 runs before Wright decided to even the ledger. With his spiky hair and slightly crooked grin there is a touch of anarchy to Wright’s appearance and he brought chaos where there had briefly been calm. David Griffiths, replacing Chris Wood, began with a maiden to Nash, while Wright had pottered his way to 7 from 16 balls when the two first collided – and it was the Hampshire seamer who came off significantly the worse.From the eighth over of the match, Wright carved four fours, all through the off side, then mugged Griffiths again in his next, smoking a six and a four back down the ground. To compound the bowler’s pain, with Wright on 35, Bilal Shafayat clutched at an aerial hook to deep square-leg like it was a bar of soap and put down a simple chance.Wright made sure it was an expensive fumble, reaching his second consecutive hundred in the competition and progressing to 122 before steering a short ball from Sean Ervine into the hands of Danny Briggs at short third-man. In all, Wright faced 19 deliveries from Griffiths and picked up 49 runs, including two of his three sixes. “Punk” may have been one of the one of the more repeatable words muttered by the bowler.Partnerships of 71 and 88 had put Sussex in a position, at 159 from 28 overs, to cause some real destruction but after Nash and Matt Prior had departed in the twenties, the middle order were quickly scattered like seagulls on the square. Sussex lost five wickets for four runs in 12 balls and Hampshire, having scrapped their way back into the game, once again proved that underdogs still know how to bite.

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