Queens Golden Jubilee Day hailed a great success by Somerset

Everybody at Somerset County Cricket Club has hailed the Queens Golden Jubilee Day as a great success.From the time that the day began in the morning with the Jubilee Service at St James Church, where John Barclay was the guest preacher to the time that the last ball was bowled, from which Steffan Jones could sadly only manage to score two runs, everyone who attended enjoyed the day.Thankfully the weather was perfect for such an event, in fact too hot for the club’s new dragon mascot who on a couple of occasions had to sit in the shade to get his energy back! The large a crowd of nearly 5000 people helped to make the occasion one to remember.The County Ground also looked a picture, with celebratory flags flying all around the ground and bunting adorning the front of the Colin Atkinson Pavilion.Before the start of the match the players and the crowd all gave three cheers for the Queen, and during the tea interval the fifty recipients of the Golden Jubilee awards were presented with their medals.Somerset chief executive Peter Anderson was delighted with the Golden Jubilee Day and this morning told me: "What a fantastic cricket match to celebrate the Queen’s Golden Jubilee. As always there had to be a loser, and it’s just a pity that it had to be Somerset, though the boys played well chasing a very big target."The chief concluded: "On behalf of the club I would like to thank everybody who attended match and everybody who helped in anyway to make it such a success, cricket was the winner on the day."

Undermanned New Zealand forced to toil


Scorecard

Iain O’Brien ended the day with 2 for 56 © Getty Images
 

New Zealand’s fast bowlers wanted to get plenty of overs under their belts in their only tour match and they got their wish as Dominic Thornely and his New South Wales colleagues batted throughout the second day. At stumps New South Wales had a lead of 43 and were 6 for 309, with the teenager Steven Smith on 47 and Daniel Smith on 5.It was a frustrating day for the New Zealanders, who lost Jesse Ryder to a mystery illness and Brendon McCullum to back spasms. Aaron Redmond took the gloves when McCullum failed to emerge after tea, although New Zealand’s manager Lindsay Crocker said resting McCullum was only a precautionary measure.”He’s had a bit of stiffness in the back for the last couple of days, and in that session he experienced a bit of a spasm in the back,” Crocker told . New Zealand are hopeful McCullum will be able to return to the four-day match and Gareth Hopkins, the squad’s backup gloveman, will still fly to Australia early next week as originally planned.To add to New Zealand’s woes they dropped four chances in the field and allowed three New South Wales batsmen to post half-centuries, in stark contrast to the one-man show from Jamie How on the first day. They picked up three wickets in the first session but the breakthroughs became less frequent later in the day as Thornely (85) and Steven Smith combined for a 101-run partnership.Thornely, the captain of a very youthful New South Wales side, was only carrying on the good work that had started with two of his young colleagues. Phillip Hughes, 19, continued his excellent start to the season and made a fluent 64 before he edged a wide delivery behind off Iain O’Brien.O’Brien was the most dangerous bowler early and before lunch he also picked up Peter Forrest, who was caught in the gully for 26. Chris Martin had already made a strike when he had Usman Khawaja caught behind for 5 and the visitors went to the first break with some momentum.But Moises Henriques, the allrounder who spent time with Australia’s squad in Darwin in September, began to show his potential with his first half-century at first-class level. Henriques struck six fours in his 55 before he edged to slip off Daniel Vettori.It was the only success for New Zealand in the middle session but a wicket each to Martin and Tim Southee provided slightly more joy after tea. At least the fast men, who did not have much opportunity to bowl in the recent Test series in Bangladesh, were getting a decent workout ahead of Thursday’s first Test in Brisbane.

Bouyant Middlesex barely break sweat

Middlesex 116 for 3 (Morgan 47) beat Essex 115 for 9 (Dexter 46, Murtagh 3-24) by seven wickets
Scorecard

Tim Murtagh led the Middlesex attack with 3 for 24 © Getty Images
 

Just now, Middlesex, who have done little but struggle in recent seasons, are finding cricket a rather easy game. After beating Hampshire on Wednesday, they cruised to a seven-wicket win over Essex at Lord’s with 19 balls to spare, a result which takes them to the giddy heights of the top of the South Division.Buoyed by three straight wins, Middlesex were tight in the field, capped by a string of good steepling catches, and batted with sense in a well-paced chase. Essex, however, will take nothing from a game where their batsmen perished to a series of swings and cross-batted swipes, and their fielding verged on the woeful.Essex’s innings never got out of first gear, and bar a slog-swept six from Neil Dexter, the only batsman to show any inkling of how to bat in this format, there was little to inspire a crowd of around 18,000. Ed Smith, the Middlesex captain, rotated his quick bowlers – there were five bowling changes in the first ten overs and 11 in all – and used his spinners to choke the life out of the middle overs.Tim Murtagh, Dirk Nannes and Tyron Henderson all mixed yorkers with deliveries just short of a length and the batsmen, who almost all opted not to use their feet to any purpose, showed little inclination to try to break the stranglehold. This allowed Smith to maintain attacking fields – as late as the tenth over there were two slips in place – and Shaun Udal and Murali Kartik added to the pressure with tight wicket-to-wicket bowling.Dexter played an excellent anchor innings but found nobody remotely likely to stay with him. Middlesex held all but one chance that came their way, the best being a running, diving catch at third man by the evergreen Udal, and fielded like a side who knew there was a multi-million pot at the end of the rainbow.Defending such a low total, Essex’s only hope was to take early wickets. As it was, they spilt five catches, four in the slips and even their ground fielding grew shabbier by the over.Andrew Strauss, who on Tuesday had joked he doubted he was high on any IPL wish-list, met his own expectations with a scratchy 11, dragging a drive into his stumps, but it was a success the bowlers failed to capitalise onEoin Morgan made a mockery of Essex’s earlier efforts, cracking a 36-ball 47 with some lovely strokeplay. He unleashed two textbook cuts that fizzed to the boundary and then lofted a six over extra cover. He deserved a fifty but was deprived by a misunderstanding with David Malan when the result was done and dusted.Smith was dropped three times, twice off routine catches at first slip by James Middlebrook, and did not seem hampered by a injury sustained when he slipped turning for a second run early in his innings. If anything, he batted better when hobbling with Strauss running for him.This was far from a Twenty20 classic – it was too one-sided for that. In all there were only 19 fours and two sixes. The crowd were subdued – the chilly evening did not help – and it was a far cry from the razzmatazz of the IPL.A fortnight ago disgruntled Middlesex members called for a special meeting to discuss the club’s plight. Since then the side has reeled off a series of wins and at this rate that evening could turn out to be more of a party. For now, at least, it’s happy days at Lord’s.

Smith targets England's insecurities

Paul Collingwood is back for England, but without much form behind him © Getty Images
 

After all the kerfuffle that surrounded England’s selection for the second Test at Headingley, a degree of normality has been resumed. Darren Pattinson has been whitewashed from the memory banks (although he may one day be resurrected as a pub-quiz question), and for all the scorn and excitement that greeted Steve Harmison’s return to the squad, he too has been deemed surplus to requirements.And so, despite the selectors’ best Buckaroo imitations, the side that takes the field against South Africa at Edgbaston on Wednesday will contain a solitary change from the team that was unchanged for a world-record six Tests in a row. A tired Stuart Broad makes way for the returning Paul Collingwood, and Ryan Sidebottom comes back in for the luckless Pattinson – who, in hindsight, was only included as insurance against the fitness of Broad’s man-for-man replacement, Andrew Flintoff. Surely the selectors could have found a simpler route from A to B.Graeme Smith certainly thinks so. After captaining South Africa through five often-turbulent years of transition, Smith has learnt all about the destabilising effect that surprise selections can have on a team. Even by the standards he has had to endure, however, Smith felt the Pattinson saga was a pretty poorly managed affair.”No-one really knew anything about him so, if things don’t go well, there is a point where [the selectors] are going to have to answer a lot of questions,” said Smith. “What has surprised us more is the indecisiveness around the England leadership. That has surprised a bit more than the actual selection.”After England’s ten-wicket defeat at Headingley, Michael Vaughan suggested that the “confusion” surrounding Pattinson’s selection had destabilised the team, a remark that caused the national selector, Geoff Miller, to seek a meeting for clear-the-air talks. “Just the calling in, and the discussions, and no-one taking responsibility for it. That surprised me a bit,” said Smith. “Inside the dressing room I don’t see how one guy making his debut can affect a dressing room that has been together for so long.”England, however, have done their best to draw a line under the events of last week, and the early unveiling of their third-Test team is a positive step after the mayhem of the first morning at Headingley. What is more, if there was any venue at which England could wish to regroup after such a dispiriting defeat, it would have to be Edgbaston – a ground that has long been a favourite of the players for the close proximity of the fans, and which assumed mythical properties after the legendary series-turning victory in the 2005 Ashes.For South Africa, however, Edgbaston holds some fond memories as well. It was here that Smith launched the 2003 series with his career-best 277, and just as he demonstrated with his second-innings hundred at Lord’s in the first Test, the prospect of living up to past glories does not faze him. His participation is, however, in some doubt because of the back problem he picked up while batting against Bangladesh A last week. If he does feature, England will doubtless target his lack of mobility should they end up bowling first tomorrow morning.

 
 
If we can create openings in the top-order, and get to Paul and Ian Bell as quickly as possible, it does allow us the opportunity to put them under pressureGraeme Smith on England’s unstable middle order
 

Smith admitted that, back in 2003, he had been unsure whether to bat or bowl first, and with a week of unsettled weather on the horizon, it promises to be another tough call tomorrow morning. Steve Rouse, the Warwickshire groundsman, pre-empted the omission of Harmison when he suggested that this would not be a surface for the hit-the-deck bowlers, and should Smith choose to bowl first for the third match running, Sidebottom and Anderson will be hopeful of exploiting the lateral movement that England failed to locate under clear blue skies at Headingley last week.South Africa’s pace attack offers a different sort of challenge, and one that England’s reinforced batting line-up will have to repel for the sake of the series. In the absence of Dale Steyn, who swings the ball at pace from a full length, they will rely on the bounce and aggression of Morne Morkel, Makhaya Ntini and Andre Nel, who will be as fired up as any player in the match in his first Test opportunity for six months. “Andre is an experienced bowler who’s done well over a period of time when he’s played,” said Smith, “and as a captain it’s nice to know you’ve got really good back-up coming into the squad.”The target for all South Africa’s bowlers will be England’s apparently brittle middle order, of which the recalled Collingwood is an integral part. Smith, though admiring of his fighting qualities, believed his team had seen enough already to unsettle him. “He thrives on pressure so we need to bowl well at him to create the chances from the weaknesses that we’ve worked out,” said Smith. “If we can create openings in the top-order, and get to Paul and Ian Bell as quickly as possible, it does allow us the opportunity to put them under pressure.”All series long, even back when England were fielding their six-match unchanged side, Smith and his team-mates were claiming that appearances were deceptive. The events of Headingley have reconfirmed the suspicion that England are not quite as sure of their strongest eleven as they would have their onlookers believe. In fact, the situation in recent weeks has not been dissimilar to the one that befell the South Africans themselves in the last series between the two teams in 2004-05 – when the likes of Mark Boucher were omitted in favour of such ephemeral players as Thami Tsolekile and Zander de Bruyn.”As an opposition team, every time you can see the other team is under pressure, it does benefit you,” said Smith. “We know if we can play really good cricket for the first couple of days at Birmingham, we can maybe open up some wounds and put some certain players under a lot of pressure in this Test.”

Eighteen clubs threaten Sri Lanka boycott

Sri Lanka’s domestic season is facing chaos after 18 clubs threatened to pull out of the Premier League unless Sri Lanka Cricket’s interim committee enforces the rules and relegates Badureliya SC to the league’s Tier B.The dispute came about after a decision was made that Badureliya, who finished bottom in last season’s competition, would not be demoted to the second division. The clubs have delayed the agreement of fixtures for the domestic season, and the league, which is due to start on October 22, is now facing postponement.The clubs have expressed fears that any move by the interim committee to ignore their protest could lead to first-class cricket coming to a complete standstill making national selection also an issue.Two weeks ago Ajith Jayasekera, the tournament committee chairman, and MahindaHalangoda, another member, resigned from their posts over the interim committee’s failure to relegate Badureliya SC.As a result, the five-member tournament committee is unable to function as it has been reduced to just three members.

Gray for revival of activities between Pakistan and India

Malcolm Gray, President of the International Council (ICC) hoped that his visit would help normalize cricket activities in Pakistan and its relations with India.Gray was talking to reporters on arrival here on Thursday to attend a two-day ICC Development Committee Meeting to be held in Lahore on Dec 7 and 8.The ICC chief who later flew to Islamabad in the afternoon said that he would be meeting President General Pervez Musharraf, Patron of the PCB, later in the evening. “This might be a small step and we at the ICC would love to see cricket relations between the two countries normalize so that we can resume our programmes.”Pakistan pins its hopes on Gray’s visit to restore normal cricket to the country badly hit in the post September events of last year and its deadlock of the cricket activities with its neighbour India.It may be noted that Pakistan has only staged two Tests since the post September 2001 events, which sparked security concerns in and around Pakistan.The ICC boss said that there were two separate issues of his visit, one is to attend the ICC Meeting and then to meet President Musharraf and the High Commissioners of Australia, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and South Africa.”I will discuss a wide-range of issues with the President, but security will be the top priority and then I will be able to get a better understanding about the security position in the country. I hope that as a result, International cricket will be back in Pakistan,” Gray went on to add.The West Indies and Australia refused to tour Pakistan due to security reasons and Pakistan was forced to play these series in neutral countries earlier this year.Before that the New Zealand team had to cut short their tour to Pakistan. in May, following a bomb blast which occurred outside their hotel in the port city of Karachi.Pakistan hopes that India will tour Pakistan in April-May next year, although India continues its boycott of bilateral cricket with its neighbour, alleging that Islamabad is responsible of creating trouble in Indian administered Kashmir.The South Asian giants whose cricket series generates great and frenzied interest on both sides of the border, have not met each other on the cricket field since June 2000, when Pakistan beat India in the Asia Cup in Dhaka.”We at the ICC have no powers to control relations between two feuding nations. However, we would do everything in our power to influence those relations which would be good for sports,” Gray said.India and Pakistan are due to meet each other in a World Cup match in South Africa in March next year. India will be bound to play since this is an ICC event. “We believe that sports can help relations improve India and Pakistan and hope the Indian Government will have the same view as well.Commenting on giving compensation to Pakistan over the financial losses incurred due to the cancelled tours, Gray said that he had no news on that front, that they should go through the legal process and if it has been processed legally there has been no actual hearing about that subject.When asked about the Indians not naming their provisional 30 players for the World Cup within the due dates the ICC Chief said that this is only a preliminary squad and is not important. He said the Indian squad will name their team in a few days.When asked how did the ICC react when Pakistan visited Zimbabwe for their series although some top teams thought it was just too dangerous to visit over there during the World Cup, Gray said that the ICC was most appreciative that Pakistan toured Zimbabwe under extreme security concerns.”I will encourage other countries to treat seriously the Pakistan claims to come here”, he said.When asked about the security conditions in Zimbabwe, Gray said that recently a delegation had visited Zimbabwe ahead of the World Cup and that security report has yet to be finalised.

Players' association will be key player in New Zealand cricket

Adam Parore
Photograph © CricInfo

New Zealand’s cricket players’ association is going to be a very significant factor in the short-to-medium term on the cricket scene here, according to retired wicket-keeper Adam Parore.In Christchurch to promote his recently-released book The Wicked-Keeper, Parore said the association was long overdue and would be crucial to matters of player fitness issues, scheduling and longevity of careers.”It will be nice for players to have a voice in issues that directly affect them. There is a huge wealth of knowledge among the players now and they are New Zealand Cricket’s [NZC] greatest resource,” he said.Parore didn’t think there would be an advocacy role for the Association in the event of a repetition of problems that occurred with coaching and management when Glenn Turner was appointed coach of the side for a second term.”That was more just a mistake, a bad choice, and I don’t think New Zealand Cricket would make that sort of mistake under the stewardship of Martin Snedden and his team,” he said.Changes to the administration of the game, stemming in part from the furore that developed firstly in South Africa under Geoff Howarth but after that in India and the West Indies under Turner, had also resulted in vastly better conditions for the players.”Expectations have increased too, but players are reasonably well looked after now. We are a long way along the line from 1994/95,” he said.Such was the state of the side now that if Turner returned as coach there wouldn’t be an issue with him now, he said.”There was a lack of maturity and experience, from me in particular, and it was a volatile mix,” Parore said.Despite some of the controversies of his career, Parore does have 201 wicket-keeping dismissals to his name and anyone looking to emulate that feat will have to have done the foundation work between the ages of 15 and 22 years.That’s the time he feels is vital for players to get their bodies in shape for the role required of them.It was to do with “muscle memory” so that further down the track the work load to maintain fitness did not have to be so great.As for the future, Parore believes any hopes New Zealand have of success in next year’s World Cup in South Africa are dependent on Chris Cairns.”If he is 100% fit then New Zealand are a good show,” he said.Having Shane Bond’s speed to call on was another asset.”He is a huge factor and the sole reason for our success in the one-day series in Australia. You have just got to bowl quick in that game,” he said.Having your typical 130kph out-swinger coming in and bowling didn’t really help at all, he added.The success against Australia last summer, both in the third Test at Perth, and in the one-day series, had been especially enjoyable.”They grew up flogging us and it was nice to see the same guys who had regarded us with derision being embarrassed for a change.”It was always great to play against an Australian side, but that tour, and especially that game in Perth, got to them. They weren’t particularly happy, you could see it in Steve Waugh’s body language,” he said.While victory didn’t come in the Test matches against Australia, Parore did get the chance to finish his career with a Test victory over England, at Eden Park, a match in which he had to plead with the selectors to be included.He promised them a good performance, after he had two ordinary Tests in the first two, and he did achieve that.Asked why a good performance wasn’t the goal all the time, he said, it came down to the opposition and what they allowed you to do.But as for now, it is back to the markets in his role as an investment advisor, safe in the knowledge that 10,000 copies of his book (sales of 3500 represent a best-seller in New Zealand) have been printed and demand has been exceptional.

Sri Lankan players agree to sign ICC contract

Sri Lanka will field a full strength side during the ICC Champions Trophyafter a last minute deal was struck between the Board of Control for Cricketin Sri Lanka (BCCSL) and the players, ending a potentially embarrassingdispute for the host nation.A BCCSL statement, issued from Colombo, said: “Discussions between the BCCSLand the Sri Lanka Cricketers’ Association (SLCA) regarding the participationof Sri Lankan cricketers in the ICC Champions Trophy 2002 were concludedsuccessfully today.”The players, represented by former Sri Lanka fast bowler Graeme Labrooy onbehalf of the SLCA, had demanded 30% of all revenue accrued by the BCCSLduring the tournament if they were to sign a controversial ICC contract.The ICC contract prevents the players from endorsing products that mightconflict with official ICC Champions Trophy sponsors for a period spanningnearly three months.The BCCSL, however, refused the players’ demands on Wednesday, claiming thatthe cricket board was facing a cash shortage in light of there being so fewincoming tours to Sri Lanka during the current financial year.Agreement was reached after the BCCSL promised to pay the players an”undisclosed lump sum” as compensation for the use of their player rights.Although the players failed to get the 30% that had been demanded, Labrooy was satisfied with the final outcome: "Both parties compromised and we reached a win-win situation with the players being fairly compensated, so we are happy."An more open dialogue with the cricketers is now expected in the future: "The players were hurt that their rights had been sold without proper consultation, now the board has agreed to be more open and we will discuss a longer term plan, including the ICC World Cup next year, after the tournament.According to Labrooy, the national players are not the main beneficiaries of the deal: "90 percent of money provided by the BCCSL in this agreement will be redistributed to Sri Lanka’s first class cricketers."The 12-team tournament starts on Sept 12 when Sri Lanka take on Pakistan.

Pakistan board eager for Asif to return

The Pakistan board are hoping that there’s a mistake in the case involving Mohammad Asif © AFP
 

The Pakistan Cricket Board is hoping to bring Mohammad Asif back to Pakistan as soon as possible from Dubai where he is detained, though they admit they are still in the dark about the case.Asif was detained by officials at the airport Sunday morning, according to Nadeem Akram, a senior PCB official, for possessing a contraband drug in his wallet. That sample has now been sent for tests and a meeting is underway between Asif’s lawyer and the public prosecutor.”Asif was detained on Sunday,” Shafqat Naghmi, the board’s chief operating officer, said while addressing a press conference at Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore. “We don’t have all the details right now about why he was. Authorities in Dubai are still investigating. We do know that it was about something Asif had in his possession. But we stress that no charges have yet been laid against him.”Naghmi said the board was hoping the case was a mistake of some kind, but owing to the gravity of the situation, the Pakistan Embassy in Dubai had been alerted. “We hope this has been some sort of mistake, but we have appointed legal counsel there from one of the best firms in Dubai.”The embassy has also been contacted. Nadeem Akram has been there since that night. We are just hoping that Asif gets back as soon as possible, hopefully in time for the Bangladesh tri-series.”Dubai’s laws on drug possession are among the strictest in the world and Naghmi warned that if Asif was found guilty, he would have to be dealt with according to the laws of the land. “The UAE government has a very straight procedure. If something is found in your possession an investigation begins straightaway. If he is found to be in possession, then he will be treated according to their laws.”If Asif does get out of the situation, it is inconceivable that he will not face any disciplinary action from the Pakistan board, though Naghmi said that wasn’t the priority right now. “First we just want him to be back in Pakistan. Only after he gets back and the situation is clearer will we look at that possibility and see. Right now there is no charge-sheet against him.”Speculation has predictably buzzed since the news broke, though Naghmi stressed that it was just that and nothing more. One local channel claimed to have spoken to Asif, who said that he had been implicated after getting into a drunken brawl with security officers at the airport. This was denied to Cricinfo by Akram, as well as Naghmi during the press conference.”This is all just speculation. We cannot hide stuff like this and remember there is no chargesheet yet. I have been told that what was found was some medicine given to him by a local Pakistani Hakeem.”

Fun day at the cricket

Gloucestershire Gladiators v Middlesex Crusaders
16 June 2002Events on the Day

  • Young Gladiators Day, Young Gladiators can meet the players forautographs
  • Maximus the Gladiator Mascot
  • Hit MS for Six
  • Galaxy 101 FM – Black Thunders
  • 37 Kingswood Drum & Bugle Marching Band will provide entertainmentduring the interval
  • Coaching Demonstrations during the interval and throughout the dayfor Young Gladiators
  • Gladiators Cheerleaders
  • James Huntley & Philip Young are displaying Steam Engines
  • Museum Open
  • Gladiator Boundary Edge Marquee will be open from 12 Noon to 3 p.m.for lunch
  • Karaoke in the Hammond Bar at the close of play