Goodwin's mammoth knock ensures a draw

PERTH, Dec 11 AAP – Mighty Murray Goodwin’s marathon knock of 176 for Western Australia stymied Tasmania’s bid for its first outright win of the summer at the WACA Ground today.The former Zimbabwean Test batsman’s 442-minute innings ensured the Pura Cup match ended in a draw on the fourth day.Goodwin guided the Warriors to an eventual second innings total of 405 after they trailed the visitors by 127 runs on first innings.Stumps were drawn early after the dismissal of Michael Clark (26) with Paul Wilson unbeaten on ten.Right-hander Goodwin celebrated his 30th birthday with a composed display the inexperienced home team badly needed with seven players on Australian or Australia A duty.His place in the WA lineup had been questioned this summer after a below-par 2001/02 season but he demonstrated today that he was still a class act.He hit 28 fours in his 344-ball effort and brought up his third hundred in 30 four-day interstate matches for WA with a well-timed straight drive for four off Scott Kremerskothen’s bowling.Goodwin scratched around yesterday but, having survived, he flourished today with his highest score for WA and showed why he averaged just under 43 from 19 Tests for the African nation.Young Tasmanian left-arm spinner Xavier Doherty had the pick of the figures with 4-92 off 30.4 overs.But the result further reduced second-last Western Australia (6) and cellar dweller Tasmania’s (2) already slim hopes of making March’s Pura Cup final.After beginning the day at 4-135, the Warriors started slowly and were in early trouble at 5-175.Debutant Adam Voges (32) failed to further his ambitions at first-class level and Kade Harvey (17) was run out in a mix-up with Goodwin.Harvey attempted to take a second run off a misfield but left himself stranded at the same end as Goodwin.Just after lunch rookie wicketkeeper-batsman Luke Ronchi (33) became fast bowler Damien Wright’s (2-44) second scalp with WA leading by 100 runs.However another debutant Beau Casson entered and put his head down taking 46 minutes to record his first run.He and Goodwin put on a 123-run seventh wicket stand in two and a half hours to kill off the visitors’ hopes of adding another four points to the two collected in the first dig.

Chingoka urges ICC not to make political decision

Peter Chingoka: robust defence of Zimbabwe’s position © Getty Images
 

Peter Chingoka, Zimbabwe Cricket’s chairman, has written to all the members of the ICC executive claiming that any move to ban Zimbabwe would be made for political and not cricketing reasons.Chingoka, who faces a motion to discuss Zimbabwe’s status tabled by his friend and ICC president Ray Mali, pointed out that there were no moves to ban Zimbabwe from other international sporting events or organisations.He maintained what he has always said, that Zimbabwe Cricket was an apolitical organisation that could not be held responsible for the political turmoil inside the country.Earlier this week Cricket South Africa suspended all bilateral agreements with Zimbabwe Cricket, and England cancelled the proposed tour by Zimbabwe due in May 2009.Chingoka’s claims were attacked by a former senior administrator who worked closely with him on the board but did not want to be named for fear of his safety. “The reality is that nobody survives inside Zimbabwe today unless they are linked to the ruling elite, especially in an organisation with access to precious foreign currency. The board are heavily politicised and anyone who suggests otherwise is blind. Chingoka and his cronies are desperate to portray an image of a brave souls standing up for cricket against tremendous odds. The reality is the quite the opposite.”And a former Zimbabwe Test player, who also requested anonymity, was equally forthright. “The board has destroyed grassroots cricket here and all that is left is a paper-thin veneer of normality. These guys have caused the world game, not to mention the ICC, no end of embarrassment and they’ve not even done so in defence of cricket. It’s all about self interest. Nobody wants to play us, nobody wants to tour here. What’s the point of maintaining this charade?”No spokesman from Zimbabwe Cricket was prepared to speak to Cricinfo.

Salman, Naved hit centuries as Pakistan 'A' win series

FAISALABAD, Oct 1: Scintillating centuries by opener Salman Butt and stand-in skipper Naved Latif laid the foundation of Pakistan ‘A’s comprehensive one-day series victory over Sri Lanka ‘A’ here Tuesday.Pakistan ‘A’ cantered to a 92-run triumph in the second game of the three-match rubber at Iqbal Stadium, following their win by 51 runs in the opening tie at Multan last week.Salman (113) and Naved (116) helped Pakistan ‘A’ to a massive 326 for three in 50 overs. Sri Lanka ‘A’, in reply, were bowled out for 234 in 39.3 overs after being docked two overs for slow over rate.Electing to bat first on a easy paced strip, Pakistan ‘A’ sent the tourists on a leather chase as Salman Butt and wicket-keeper Kamran Akmal began with an opening partnership of 108 in 18.2 overs.Kamran fell after making 56 off 57 deliveries, hitting six fours and one six.Naved, who was deputising for Moin Khan, continued his fine form by smashing 116 off just 101 balls while putting on 172 for the second wicket with Salman.Salman, the 18-year-old left-hander, perished after making a 129-ball 113 which included 10 boundaries.Man-of-the-Match Naved, who made 89 off 83 balls in the Multan game, slammed four sixes and 10 fours before he caught by Sri Lankan captain Thilan Samaraweera off pacer Chamila Gamage.The only redeeming feature in the Sri Lankan innings was the batting of Jehan Mubarak, Naveed Nawaz and Kaushal Lokuarachchi. Mubarak and Nawaz hit fifties while adding 111 for the third wicket.Mubarak top-scored with 68 off 54 balls, stroking 11 fours and one six. Nawaz contributed 63 off 74 balls with the aid of four fours and one six.Late in the innings, Lokuarachchi struck a breezy 40. His 32-ball cameo was laced with five hits to the fence.Qaiser Abbas, the slow left-armer, claimed three for 52 – including the left-handed duo of Mubarak and Nawaz – while paceman Umar Gul and Babar Naeem chipped in with two wickets apiece for 38 and 32 runs respectively.

We must learn from the Australians – Hussain

England skipper Nasser Hussain cited poor batting on the second morning as a primary cause of England’s defeat in the second Ashes Test at Adelaide. The tourists were in an apparently strong position at the start of the second day, but failed to build on a promising start.”We had our chances on the first day,” Hussain said. “We put ourselves in a good position and then tossed it away to be honest. To lose seven for 30-odd on a pretty flat Adelaide wicket second day was pretty poor really.”Hussain singled out Michael Vaughan and Richard Dawson for praise for their performances in the Test.”Spirit is not bad in the camp. We know we are letting ourselves down, but we have some star players in our side, like Vaughan and Dawson. Those things lift us and hopefully there will be a few more of those moments in Perth.””We are really down to the bare minimum with players now. We have got to address the fitness situation of players and make sure that everyone who plays is fit and then just work at our own game.”We are playing against a fantastic side. You can’t take that away from them. We have got to try and win the small battle and not concentrate on the bigbattle.”In all three disciplines, they have shown if you play positive batting you get runs and if you put the ball in the right areas you get wickets, so I think we can all learn from this Australian side.”Meanwhile a delighted Australia captain Steve Waugh pointed to positive batting as a primary reason for his team’s success.”All round I thought we batted well, we scored quickly and put pressure on England,” Waugh enthused. “With our quality bowlers it does put pressure on their batsman in the second innings.”I was a bit worried with the rain coming and going; if England had hung on it could have been difficult,” Waugh admitted.”The dropped catches were not the best but we made enough chances to win the game. We haven’t really talked about it but in the last five Tests we’ve dropped about 20 chances.”Ricky Ponting was made Man of the Match award for his 154 – a career-best score against England and his fifth century in the last seven Tests.”Things are going really well,” said Ponting. “I’m batting as well as I ever have in my Test career. We were outplayed on the first day but we bounced back well.”

Foster breaks thumb

The Essex and England wicket-keeper James Foster today broke his left thumbwhile playing for his county against Glamorgan in the Frizzell CountyChampionship at Chelmsford.An X-ray this lunchtime on the injured thumb revealed a non-displaced fracture and, at this stage, it is anticipated that he will miss four to six weeks’ cricket.Foster will see a specialist tomorrow for a further assessment of the injurywhich took place while he was keeping wicket standing back to the bowling ofJohn Stephenson.The 22-year-old, who made his England Test debut last winter in India, returned to the Essex side at Southgate last week against Middlesex following a two-month lay-off with a fractured forearm.James Foster said: “This is a huge blow for me coming so soon after breaking my arm earlier in the season. The early indications are that I could be out for a while, but we will have a clearer idea once I have seen the specialisttomorrow.”

Collins alone shines

Pedro Collins gallantly fronted a spirited West Indies effort at damage control on the third day of the second Cable & Wireless Test yesterday.Yet it was still not enough to compensate for the batting recklessness of the previous afternoon that committed them to an unequal struggle for the remainder of the match and their position remained as daunting at the close as it was 24 hours earlier.Although they restricted New Zealand’s second innings to 243, it left them with a target of 474, a total never before achieved to win any Test.Openers Chris Gayle and Wavell Hinds nervously survived four overs at the end of the day but, on a wearing pitch and with their inconsistent batting, the West Indies would do well even to extend their purposeful opponents very far into the last day.Their most realistic hope of survival rests with the weather in the first month of the rainy season but the forecast is not favourable.For 28 overs on a sultry, overcast day, broken into four spells, Collins charged in with the George Challenor Stand at his back, harassing the batsmen with the stamina and nagging control, if not disconcerting bounce, of Joel Garner, the man whose name the end now bears.It was a responsibility thrust on his square shoulders by the absence for all but the first six overs of the day of Merv Dillon, the established leader of the attack.Dillon succumbed again to the lower back strain that obliged him to rest for a week before the match, restricting captain Carl Hooper to three green fast bowlers with 19 Tests between them.It proved a coming of age for Collins. The slim left-armer from Boscobel delivered exactly a third of the overs, making the ball move both ways as he added five wickets to the one he already had overnight for his best return in his 12 Tests, six for 76.But it would have required the kind of miracle Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh used to perform at Kensington to restore the West Indies to a position of near parity.A first innings deficit of 230 meant New Zealand had to be rolled over a second time round for not much over 150. At 88 for five, ten minutes after lunch, when Collins induced a second slip catch from Craig McMillan’s drive, it seemed possible.But, by then, Ramnaresh Sarwan had let two sharp chances off Collins spill to the turf, the second when Nathan Astle was 12, and Astle launched a blistering assault on the wayward Adam Sanford that changed the course of the innings.Sarwan’s first error denied Collins two wickets in two balls.The left-armer gained an lbw verdict as opener Lou Vincent padded away an inswinger 25 minutes into the day.Next ball, the left-handed Chris Harris pushed firmly to Sarwan’s right hand at short-leg where the most recent occupant was the sharp Wavell Hinds, but Sarwan couldn’t hold on to the catch that would have made New Zealand 11 for three.Harris was eventually trapped on the crease and lbw to Darren Powell at 48, soon after which Sarwan at cover spilled Astle’s firm, low drive off Collins to his right.It was not the happiest 22nd birthday for Sarwan, generally an outstanding fielder. What with his first ball duck in the first innings, he was unlikely to have celebrated it with champagne and an expensive dinner at Sandy Lane last night.Astle soon made Sarwan pay for the mistake.New Zealand were 69 for four when Hooper’s arm-ball finally removed the frustrating night-watchman Daryl Tuffey to a slip catch on the stroke of lunch.When Hooper mystifyingly replaced himself with Sanford immediately on resumption, Astle greeted the change by hammering the fast bowler for four boundaries in his first over, one in his second and two more in his third in which captain Stephen Fleming also helped himself to one.Sanford’s spell of three overs cost 35 and changed the course of the innings.Astle proceeded to gather a typically brisk 77 with 11 fours and Fleming, batting three places below the No.3 he occupied for his first innings hundred because of a stiff neck, got 34 as they put on 76.By the time Astle became another Collins victim to an edged catch, deflecting one angled across him to Brian Lara at first, and Fleming miscued a hook off Sanford that Wavell Hinds gathered in over his head in front of the Kensington Stand at square-leg, New Zealand were 181 for seven.By then Collins was on his haunches with exhaustion and the other bowlers, once more, couldn’t complete the job as the last three wickets yielded 62.Sanford did sneak one low through the left-handed Daniel Vettori’s defence to uproot the middle-stump at 205, and Collins’ bouncer with the second new ball gained him his first return of five Test wickets in an innings, courtesy of Robbie Hart’s gentle hook to square-leg.Unlike the West Indies bowlers, New Zealand’s can bat, as Tuffey and Vettori already showed. Now Ian Butler, the No.11, enforced the point with four handsome boundaries in 26 off 31 before he too fell to Collins.They were redundant runs for New Zealand already had a match-winning advantage. But it was further frustration for the weary West Indies who now face their two most difficult days of the season.

Yorkshire almost stumble in the gloom

Yorkshire beat Northamptonshire to pick up 19 points and go top of the CricInfo Championship table at Headingley yesterday, but victory was not achieved with the ease that they had expected.Having avoided the innings defeat, Northants stretched out their second innings to 255 which left Yorkshire to make 77 with a full day and a session to spare.In murky light, they got into big trouble against young pace bowler John Blain who claimed career-best figures of four for 34 and they made it with only four wickets to spare.Northants would probably have managed an even bigger score but for two destructive bursts by Matthew Hoggard who celebrated his inclusion in the Test squad by capturing five for 82.In his first spell of the day he had Mike Hussey and Jeff Cook both caught behind off consecutive balls and in his next over he bowled Russell Warren.Later on, Hoggard returned to make further inroads by knocking back the stumps of David Ripley and Blain with dynamic deliveries.Top-scorer for Northants was opener Mal Loye who reached his half-century in Michael Vaughan’s first over before the next ball lifted off a length and he gloved it to slip.Tony Penberthy (45), Kevin Innes (40) and Graeme Swann all made life difficult for Yorkshire by refusing to give in.Yorkshire got into trouble in Blain’s first over when he knocked back Scott Richardson’s middle stump with a yorker before bowling Matthew Wood with a similar delivery. Vaughan and Craig White both departed quickly as Yorkshire dipped to 43 for four and it was left to skipper David Byas and Michael Lumb to calm things down.They had taken Yorkshire to within four runs of victory when Lumb was trapped lbw by Penberthy and Blain struck again by bowling Gary Fellows, leaving Richard Blakey to hit the winning run.

Roll up, Roll up for the best Junior Sabres Bash ever

The best ever Junior Sabres Bash is all set to take place at the County Ground in Taunton on Easter Saturday morning.The Junior Sabres, who are the under 21 members of Somerset County Cricket Club have all been invited to attend the pre season bash, which this year is promising to be a very enjoyable occasion, and one that none of the youngsters will want to miss out on.One Dad was so keen for his children to attend the Junior Sabres Bash that earlier this week he signed them all up as club members just so that they could be there.Junior Sabres Membership Secretary Jo Betsworth told me this morning, “The Junior Sabres bash this year looks like being the biggest and best ever that we have staged.”No wonder that the youngsters are keen to be at the County Ground on Easter Saturday. Among the activities due to take place are the Coca Cola inflatable, face painting, bowl at a player, and a guest appearance by Professor Popcorn with his special brand of magic and entertainment.A large number of Junior Sabre members have already contacted Jo Betsworth to let her know that they are going along to the Junior Sabres Bash on Easter Saturday.However, so that all the final arrangements for the day can be made, it is important that anyone who intends being at the Junior Sabres Bash lets Jo know in advance.Remember, the Junior Sabres Bash is free, but is only open to Junior Sabre members of Somerset County Cricket Club.To find out more details and to register for the Junior Sabres Bash give Joanne Bestworth a call on 01823 272946.

Thilan Samaraweera sent as replacement for Muralitharan

Sri Lanka all-rounder Thilan Samaraweera has been sent as a replacement for the forthcoming NatWest triangular series after Muttiah Muralitharan was forced to withdraw from the tournament to protect his shoulder.Samaraweera, 25, an off-spinner and middle order batsman, had just returned to Sri Lanka having been a member of the Test squad.He was preferred to fellow off-spinner Kumar Dharmasena, 30, who has been aregular member of the Sri Lanka one-day squad in recent times.Samaraweera, who is better known in the longer form of the game having scoredtwo centuries and three fifties in his first 10 Tests, has played just eightODIs.Samaraweera is expected to arrive in England on Tuesday evening. Sri Lanka play their first game against England at Trent Bridge on Thursday.

WACA Chief Executive stands down

The Western Australian Cricket Association today announced its Chief Executive, Mike Allenby, will step down from the role with immediate effect.Allenby, who was appointed for a three-year term in 1998, will leave the WACA to pursue other business interests. Allenby took on the role at a time when the Association was facing a number of issues.He has been responsible for a number of significant changes during his term, including the restructuring of the events and cricket departments as well as an overhaul of the Association’s commercial activities. Allenby also played a pivotal role in the determination of the WACA redevelopment plan that is currently before the State Government for funding consideration.Some of Mike’s initiatives and achievements include:

  • Implementation of the WACA’s strategic plan;
  • Taking first class cricket to regional Western Australia;
  • The portable wicket innovation;
  • Initiated the Global Challenge Tournament.
WACA Finance and Administration Manager Rod Lillis has been appointed to cover the vacancy pending identification of a permanent replacement.”This is a crucial appointment for the WACA and the Executive (the WACA Board) will work hard to find the right person for what is now a very different job to that Mike was recruited for.” said WACA Chairman Charles Fear.”I have essentially completed the “change agent” role I was appointed to do” said Mike Allenby, “and it’s fair to say that the Executive and I have different views as to the way forward so I have decided pursue other interests””We would like to thank Mike for his work at the WACA and for his contribution over the past three years.” said Mr Fear “We wish him well in his future endeavours.”

Game
Register
Service
Bonus