Hildreth ton overshadows Pietersen

Losing return: Kevin Pietersen was in the runs for Hampshire, but was outdone by a century from James Hildreth © PA Photos
 

North Division

Derbyshire held on for a notable one-run win against defending champions Durham at Derby, although Ben Harmison and last-man Neil Killeen almost engineered a terrific fight back when Killeen was run out by Rikki Clarke off the final ball trying to level the scores. At 147 for 7, needing more than a run-a-ball, Durham appeared out of contention, but the lower order chipped away at the target while Harmison held firm to set up the thriller. Phil Mustard (45) gave the chase a positive start before the batting fell away to Graham Wagg and Charl Langeveldt. Derbyshire’s total was mainly due to an opening stand of 132 from Chris Rogers (72) and Steve Stubbings (52) and although the middle order failed to capitalise against a strong Durham attack they had just enough. The match was twice delayed by the setting sun, a common problem at the ground because of the East-West facing pitch.

South/West Division

Kevin Pietersen’s return to action wasn’t enough to inspire Hampshire as they went down by six wickets to Somerset at The Rose Bowl as he was overshadowed by an unbeaten 90-ball 112 from James Hildreth, one of the rising talents in the game. Pietersen cracked 62 off 59 balls and Sean Ervine 55 off 36 deliveries, but Somerset had few problems chasing the runs down despite being without Justin Langer and the loss of stand-in captain Marcus Trescothick for 1. Hildreth added 159 for the third wicket with Zander de Bruyn (79) and he ensured a minor wobble against Greg Lamb’s offspin was nothing more than a blip as the winning runs came with nine balls to spare. Hampshire were handicapped when Shane Bond limped off after five overs with a calf strain.

North Division
Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
Lancashire 2 1 0 0 1 3 +4.794 74/11.5 73/50.0
Derbyshire 3 1 1 0 1 3 -0.324 330/74.0 354/74.0
Yorkshire 2 1 1 0 0 2 +0.270 334/74.0 314/74.0
Durham 2 1 1 0 0 2 +0.040 455/100.0 451/100.0
Scotland 1 0 1 0 0 0 -4.794 73/50.0 74/11.5
South/West Division
Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
Somerset 3 2 0 0 1 5 +0.244 511/96.1 507/100.0
Gloucestershire 2 1 0 0 1 3 +1.863 222/35.2 221/50.0
Worcestershire 2 0 1 0 1 1 -1.863 221/50.0 222/35.2
Glamorgan 1 0 0 0 1 1 0/0.0 0/0.0
Hampshire 2 0 2 0 0 0 -0.244 507/100.0 511/96.1

Smith furious over Nel's exclusion

Graeme Smith unhappy over the exclusion of Andre Nel, his matchwinner in the previous ODI © Getty Images

South African cricket found itself in the middle of yet another selection row when Graeme Smith, the captain, and Mickey Arthur, the coach, had a showdown with Haroon Lorgat, the convener of South Africa’s selection committee, just before the start of the Newlands game on Sunday over the exclusion of Andre Nel and the selection of Andrew Hall in his place.The tiff happened just 15 minutes before the toss and the matter was presumably on Smith’s mind as he walked out to open the innings. Significantly, he was dismissed off the second ball and could later be seen on the team balcony, a furious expression on his face. His mood could hardly have been lifted by his team’s top-order batting.Nel had starred in the crushing 157-run victory at Durban, scythingthrough the Indian middle order on his way to superb figures of 4 for 13.He hurt a finger yesterday, when a spike on his shoe made contact duringhis follow-through. But having passed a fitness test this morning, he wasalmost certain to play until Lorgat intervened.Smith reacted furiously, and Jacques Kallis and Gordon Templeton, the media manager, had to calm him down, before Mark Boucher also tried to make peace. At one stage, Kallis appeared to be waving Lorgat away.South African cricket has been routinely plagued by discord over selection policy between successive team managements and the national selectors.

Staddon elected provincial chairman

Stanley Staddon, a member of the Zimbabwe Cricket interim executive, has been elected as the new chairman of the Bulawayo Metropolitan Cricket Association chairman.Staddon was elected during an extraordinary meeting of the BMCA held at Queens Sports Club on Wednesday evening. He takes over a post that was left vacant early this month when Crispen Tsvarai stepped down.At the same meeting, Sam Ndlovu, headmaster of Mtshingwe Primary School, was elected vice-chairman. The other board members are Mpopoma High School headmaster Tivington Ncube and Entumbane Secondary School teacher Victor Mhlanga.Vumindaba Moyo, who was vice-chairman, stepped down as he is now a national team selector and cannot hold a post in a provincial association.Three nominations for the two vacant committee posts were presented with the candidates set to go through a vetting process.

Cash-strapped Kenya postpone series

The three-match one-day international series between Kenya and Bangladesh, originally set for Nairobi later this month, has been postponed by a further three weeks due to difficulty in raising funds to cover the costs of the trip.Cricket Kenya (CK) chief executive Tom Tikolo said they required about 13 million shillings (US$176,000) to host the Bangladeshi side, with half of the amount raised through television rights and the rest through sponsorship or Cricket Kenya.”We don’t have the money. But we are talking to a few sponsors,” said Tikolo. “We are still discussing with them and hopeful we will reach a deal within the next two weeks.”The series was initially scheduled for July 19, 21 and 23, but the matches will now be played on August 12, 13 and 15, the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) has since announced.Tikolo said CK had reached an agreement with the BCB to play the series in mid-August after Bangladesh complete their tour of Zimbabwe.However, he added Bangladesh would arrive in Kenya as scheduled on July 15 to hold their training and acclimatise for the five-match series against Zimbabwe which starts at Harare on July 29.

Gayle 105 powers huge Tallawahs win

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsFile photo: Chris Gayle drilled six fours and nine sixes during his century•Caribbean Premier League

Chris Gayle continued his rich vein of form in Twenty20 cricket, blasting 105 off just 57 deliveries to set up Jamaica Tallawah’s 50-run victory against Trinidad & Tobago at Sabina Park. Gayle’s assault, his seventh 50-plus score in nine matches, also lifted the hosts up to second in the table, level on points with Barbados Tridents, who have played a game more, while Red Steel were left rooted at the bottom.Gayle came into the match boasting scores of 92, 151*, 85*, 90*, 72* and 64* for Tallawahs and Somerset in the last couple of months, and he did not take long to get going on Thursday, swinging Jacques Kallis for six over long-on off just the fourth ball he faced. Gayle launched two more sixes in the next over, by Johan Botha, before carting three fours off an over from Dwayne Bravo as Tallawahs raced to 70 inside seven overs. Gayle’s opening partner Chadwick Walton contributed just 13 in that stand.Suliemann Benn briefly halted the flow of runs, dismissing both Chris Lynn and Mahela Jayawardene in the 11th over, but Gayle continued to shred the Red Steel bowling, hitting a total of six fours and nine sixes to end with a strike-rate of 184.21. Gayle received ample support from Jermaine Blackwood, with who he added 68 for the fifth wicket off just 42 balls. Gayle eventually fell in the 19th over, but Blackwood’s 28-ball 38 took the team to 180 for 6, Tallawah’s highest of the season. It also meant that Gayle had accounted for more than half his team’s score.Red Steel never really got going in the chase and lost wickets right from the off, with three top-order batsmen getting out for ducks. Kallis top-scored with 46, but received little by way of support from his team-mates, as Krishmar Santokie (3 for 27), Daniel Vettori (2 for 22) and Jerome Taylor (2 for 21) struck at regular intervals to keep the visitors to 130 for 9.

Border denies beer company conflict

Steve Rixon would like to replace Allan Border on the national panel © Getty Images

In seven years and two stints as a national selector Allan Border made many difficult decisions. Yesterday he reportedly chose between two beer companies as he stepped down suddenly from Andrew Hilditch’s panel only four months after being re-appointed.Border denies the brewing link to XXXX forced him to walk away and stressed it was his overall business commitments that would have prevented him from doing the job properly. He has kept his place on Cricket Australia’s board and will continue the search for John Buchanan’s replacement as national coach.”It had nothing to do with this decision,” Border said in . “I just had so much on my plate I felt I couldn’t do it justice because I wouldn’t have been able to do it 100 percent. I felt I owed it to the panel to make up my mind early. It was as simple as that.”XXXX, which is owned by Lion Nathan, has been a personal sponsor of Border’s since his playing days and one of his many summer appearances will be alongside Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson in a beach cricket series. The matches, which also involve England and West Indies in an ambush marketing exercise, will be played at the Gold Coast, Perth and Sydney in January and February, meaning Border could not fulfil his selector’s duties at two Pura Cup fixtures.Border’s apparent commercial conflict of interest occurred due to Cricket Australia’s deal with the Foster’s Group, which has supported the organisation since 1996-97. The brewing company secured a new deal with Cricket Australia in March but did not keep the naming rights for the annual tri-series.”We think ambush marketing is fairly un-Australian,” Geoff Donohue, a corporate affairs spokesman for the Foster’s Group, told the . “I will leave you to decide whether what they [XXXX] are doing with their current advertising campaigns is ambush marketing. I guess Allan has [resigned as a national selector] in pursuit of his own commercial interests.”Border is also a member of the Queensland Cricket board and a commentator for the television network . Cricket Australia will begin looking for a fourth selector this week with Steve Rixon, the former New Zealand and New South Wales coach, putting his hand up for the position. Two other wicketkeepers, Rod Marsh and Ian Healy, said they were not interested.

Bukhari four-for razes UAE for 73

ScorecardRight-arm pacer Mudassar Bukhari claimed career-best T20 figures of 4 for 7, as Netherlands routed UAE by 84 runs in Dubai. Bukhari’s burst and assistance from Michael Swart and Paul van Meekeren reduced UAE to 7 for 5 within four overs, the lowest five-down score in all T20Is.Mohammad Usman, the only UAE batsman to move into double figures, then launched a counterattack with an unbeaten 49 off 44 balls, including four fours and three sixes. However, it only offered scant consolation for UAE. Michael Rippon cleaned up the tail as they folded for 73 in 16.4 overs.The match, though, was set up by forties from Wesley Barresi and Peter Borren. The pair added 77 for the third wicket before they were dismissed in a space of three balls, in the 18th over. Earlier, opener Stephan Myburgh hit 35 off 26 balls to give Netherlands early impetus. They eventually finished with 157 for 5, which proved 84 too many for UAE.

Uganda wary of buoyant Argentina

Uganda will be confident of putting the seal on the latest stage of their much-publicised progress up the world rankings when they meet Argentina in the final of the World Cricket League Division Three in Darwin on Saturday.While Uganda were expected to make the final, Argentina have proved the surprise package, especially considering that they lost their opening game to outsiders Italy. They squeezed through the group stages and then beat the fancied Cayman Islands in the semi-finals.Joel Olweny, Uganda’s captain, said that, despite his side’s unbeaten record in the tournament, his team remained wary of Argentina’s capabilities. “We respect Argentina as opponents because by qualifying for the final they’ve proved that they deserve to be where they are,” he said. “And we’re aware about their progress to the final so we won’t take them lightly and will try to be as clinical as possible.”Uganda go into the game as the favourites, and they have far more experience. Six of their squad played in the 2006 Under-19 World Cup, and the team also participated in the 2005 ICC Trophy”It’s all about clicking together and producing a match-winning performance as we are neither short of experience at this level nor quality,” said Olweny. “I’m hoping that the batsmen will rise to the occasion and carry forward the good work done by the bowlers and fielders.”Argentina’s strength has been its bowling, with three of their team – Estaban MacDermott, Gary Savage and Diego Lord – in the top ten wicket takers.MacDermott said he hoped his bowlers will try to exploit any potential weaknesses in Uganda’s batting line up. “Our bowlers are in form and their batsmen are struggling. So it’s a straightforward strategy, I guess. But they have the experience of playing in big tournaments and have the ability to bounce back anytime,” he said. “We’ll give it our best shot in the final as we have nothing to lose. We have qualified for Division 2 and if we manage to win the final, it would be a perfect icing on the cake.”

Pitch doctoring of a different kind

Make no mistake, Adelaide has been the scene of concerted pitch doctoring this week. In departing from more than 140 years of history by scheduling a day-night Test, Cricket Australia have veered away from another tradition down under – letting the ground staff have full control over the preparation of the wicket.The Adelaide Oval turf for Friday’s Test has been micromanaged in consultation between CA, the oval’s curator Damian Hough, the broadcasters, ball manufacturers, and the players themselves. Faced with the reality of using a pink ball that lacks the durability of its red equivalent, the board, the venue and the players have agreed upon a surface offering more grass than usual in Adelaide, helping the ball to be preserved while also offering more movement to bowlers.Its qualities were tested when near-identical pitches were prepared for two Sheffield Shield matches in Adelaide earlier this season, the first a day-night affair between South Australia and New South Wales in which the likes of Steven Smith, David Warner, Mitchell Starc and Nathan Lyon all took part. There were some raised eyebrows about the way the pitch preparation has been decided more or less by committee, but positive feedback by the players about the way the surface played has allayed much of the earlier anxiety.”This match is three years in the making from an Australian cricket perspective,” CA’s head of operations Sean Cary told ESPNcricinfo. “We’ve had the three rounds of Sheffield Shield cricket, and we’ve tried to come up with the best conditions that are going to not impact the balance between bat and ball.”We don’t want either the bat or the ball to be in favour, but what we’ve done with Damian Hough, and he’s worked diligently in his wicket preparation, is to make sure the surrounds are favourable to the ball not being scuffed up as much.”We’re confident that what he’s learned from the last two Shield rounds, one day-night, one natural-light Shield round, the feedback he’s got from the captains, including Steve Smith the current Australian captain, is that they’ve been really complimentary towards his wickets, and they’ve said ‘we’d love to have this sort of wicket for a Test match’.”

Net bowler pinged on the head

A net bowler has been treated for a lacerated ear after being struck on the head during Australia’s training on Wednesday night. Mitchell Marsh batted in the nets and launched the pink ball straight back at the bowler, who was struck on the side of the head. Training was briefly halted and the bowler was treated for a lacerated ear by Australia’s team doctor, Peter Brukner.

For Hough’s part, he was less eager to paint this as a pitch prepared entirely to suit a cricket ball, but admitted its composition was out of step with Adelaide’s usual fare. “Leaving a bit of grass on it, we’re hoping it will assist the quicks, and the ball will come onto the bat nicely,” Hough said. “But having a bit of a coarse, thatchy grass should hopefully, going on the two games we have had so far and the pink ball Shield matches, it should be able to bite into that grass and get some spin.”As a former member of Hough’s ground staff, Lyon is uniquely placed to discuss the vagaries of the surface. He and his NSW spin bowling offsider Steve O’Keefe were pleasantly surprised by the amount of spin on offer via the even covering of grass, while also noting that pacemen and batsmen alike were able to prosper at times – although with the added possible difficulty of facing a brand new ball under lights.The presence of only two evenly grassed drop-in pitches alongside the Test strip has made for a decidedly lush square and outfield, meaning the game is unlikely to see much in the way of reverse swing. Adelaide is thus about to witness a very different Test match to what the Oval’s faithful are used to, both underfoot and overhead.”It’s a little bit different, a little bit more grass on it, a more even coverage and a thick bed of grass. There’s a little bit more there for everyone, it won’t be a typical flat Adelaide pitch that we are used to,” Lyon said. “In saying that we played here a couple of weeks ago and it was the perfect wicket.”Damian Hough is a great curator and produced that wicket for the Shield game and spoke to myself, Dave Warner and Steve Smith before and after the Shield game to get our feedback. I know we all gave positive feedback to Damian. The ball held up pretty well when we played here a few weeks ago, it doesn’t have that abrasive effect and it will be quite hard to get it to reverse. I dare say it will look after it pretty well.”As much as this match is a contest between Australia and New Zealand to decide the outcome of this series, it is also devised as a piece of advertising for the concept of day-night Tests. Cary noted the presence of a wide variety of cricket luminaries and administrators at the ground, with Pakistan already believed to be in talks with CA about taking part in another day-night match down under next summer.”We’re breaking the ice so to speak,” Cary said. “There’s going to be plenty of interest from other member boards around the world, we’ve got a number of CEOs from other countries here to witness this event, and I’m sure if they can see the positives, a full house at Adelaide Oval for the duration of the match and great viewing audiences at home, then I’m sure this will be a product other countries will be really interested in.”So it is that the Adelaide Oval wicket has been doctored by committee, though not for the usual reasons of trying to engineer a victory for the home side. Where usually such a practice would be cause for howls of derision from those Australians who believe each groundsman should be left to do his job in peace, this time around the endgame is more commercial than parochial.

Bollinger takes five in big win for Blues

Scorecard

Doug Bollinger finished with 5 for 38 © Getty Images

Luke Pomersbach’s maiden first-class century gave Western Australia a reason to cheer briefly before Doug Bollinger helped consign them to a 275-run loss to New South Wales. Bollinger played a part in ending what he started, finishing with 5 for 38 as the Blues grabbed the three wickets they needed and dismissed the Warriors for 193 before lunch.Bollinger had set up the victory with a hat-trick that cut Western Australia to 6 for 78 on day three and he returned on the final morning to have Steve Magoffin caught behind. Dominic Thornely made the outcome official when he bowled Ben Edmondson with his first ball, leaving Pomersbach unbeaten on 102 from 111 balls.Pomersbach’s resistance was aggressive – he clubbed 14 fours and three sixes – but he had too few partners remaining. Brett Dorey was the first to go on day four, giving Beau Casson his only wicket for the match. The comprehensive home loss gave Western Australia the worst possible start to the summer after they appointed a new coach and new captain during the off-season.

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