Teams should look to play out 20 overs – Sehwag

Virender Sehwag has utilised his time away from the Indian team to prepare for the ICC World Twenty20 © AFP

Indian batsman Virender Sehwag has said that teams can consistently post over 200 in Twenty20 matches if they are prepared to bat out 20 overs. Speaking ahead of the Indian team’s departure for the ICC World Twenty20 in South Africa, Sehwag said that teams tend to get the strategy wrong by going for quick runs early, often getting bowled out before the allotted quota of overs.”The plan should be to play out the full 20 overs,” Sehwag told PTI. “A score of 200 is on the cards if a team plays out the full quota. I have seen this happen often in England where I have played this format.”Sehwag was ignored for the tour of England owing to a loss of form. He spoke about how he had been preparing himself for the tournament, simulating the conditions the Indians would expect in South Africa, in terms of the pace and bounce of the wickets.”I have been doing yoga,” he said. “I want to control my game and aggression during the match days and hopefully I will do well. I have been practicing with synthetic balls on cement courts to get used to the bounce. I have also practiced against yorker-length balls as bowlers tend to get thrashed to all parts of the park. Therefore they are bound to resort to bowling yorkers and bouncers.”Sehwag added that the spinners will have an important role to play, taking the pace off the ball to make the batsmen check their strokes. “Hitting slower balls would not be easy and spinners have been successful in this game. I would also like to contribute with my offbreaks.”Commenting on the team composition, Sehwag said India’s lack of experience at the Twenty20 level shouldn’t count against them as a few members of India’s young squad had been exposed to the format in England. He captained India in its only Twenty20 international, against South Africa in Johannesburg last December and won.”Only five or six of us have not been playing but at this level one should be able to play in the tournament straightaway,” he said. “It’s good that youngsters are getting chances which will stand them in good stead when they have to assume bigger responsibilities.”

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.

Pakistan announce strong A squad

Mohammad Sami: One of ten players in the A squad with Test experience © Getty Images

Ten players with Test experience have been included in a strong Pakistan A squad to take on Australia A in the first four-day match to be played at the Pindi Cricket Ground, which starts on September 11.Experienced players such as Mohammad Sami, Asim Kamal, Salman Butt, Yasir Hameed and Shoaib Malik find a place in the 15-man squad. A further eight players who have Test experience are among the 12 reserves picked for the series, including Arshad Khan and Imran Farhat.For the Pakistani selectors, the series is crucial as it allows them not only an opportunity to test promising young players but also to provide established players with some vital match practice as preparation for the series against England from October.Pakistan’s coach Bob Woolmer is in charge of the A squad and he will be assisted by former national team manager Haroon Rashid. The national team trainers Grant Compton and Daryl Lifson are also working with the team.The second and final four-day match will be played from September 17 at the same venue, before the two teams move to Lahore for four one-day internationals.Pakistan A squad 1Misbah-ul-Haq (capt), 2 Salman Butt, 3 Yasir Hameed, 4 Shoaib Malik, 5 Bazid Khan, 6 Asim Kamal, 7 Zulqarnain Haider (wk), 8 Imran Tahir, 9 Muhammad Sami, 10 Muhammad Asif, 11 Umar Gul, 12 Asher Zaidi, 13 Yasir Arafat, 14 Faisal Iqbal, 15 Muhammad Irshad.Reserves 1 Shahid Nazir, 2 Nomanullah, 3 Imran Farhat, 4 Mansoor Amjad, 5 Shahid Yousuf, 6 Yasir Ali, 7 Najaf Shah, 8 Muhammad Khalil, 9 Hasan Raza, 10 Taufeeq Umar, 11 Arshad Khan, 12 Rao Iftikhar Anjum.

Sri Lanka aim for series whitewash

Much to their disappointment, Sri Lanka may not have Marvan Atapattu available to lead them in the final match of this truimphant series© AFP

Sri Lanka could well be missing Marvan Atapattu, their captain, for the secondsuccessive game as they bid to finish on a high against South Africa, andcomplete a series whitewash on August 31 at the Sinhalese Sports Club.Atapattu’s young daughter, Sanjali, has been hospitalised with dengue fever,and Atapattu missed practice on Monday to be at her bedside.A late decision will be made on his inclusion in the side on Tuesday, but heis considered unlikely to play. His absence will be a major blow forhis team-mates, who would have wanted him to be there to complete a winning run in which his fresh and strong leadership had played a major part. MahelaJayawardene will captain, for the fourth time, if Atapattu does pull out.With or without their leader, Sri Lanka’s confidence is sky-high going intothe final game. Their selection, though, has been complicated by twindesires: to give as much exposure as possible to their back-up seamers beforethe ICC Champions Trophy, and to complete an emphatic clean sweep, maintaining momentum for the tournament in England.”The boys are very keen to finish it off on a winning note because we havedone so much of hard work,” Mahela Jayawardene told journalists afterpractice. “The Champions Trophy is very important for us but we are alsolooking to win all the matches to keep the confidence on a high.”The bowlers have put up their hands and been counted in the absence ofMurali [who will be back in the dressing room watching after his return fromAustralia], the fielding has been brilliant, and during tough situations theguys have dug deep,” said Jayawardene. “The challenge now is to maintain themomentum that has been created.”Sri Lanka will go into the game with three fast bowlers and their twospecialist legspinners. Nuwan Zoysa, rested for the last match in Dambulla,will come back into the team in place of Lasith Malinga, who proved waywardand expensive in Dambulla, especially during the final over of the innings,in which 15 runs were conceded.South Africa, meanwhile, could be forgiven for secretly looking forward tothe plane out of Sri Lanka. Just a few weeks into a new season, the coachand captain are facing increased criticism from back home after an abysmalrun that has now extended to nine successive defeats.Graeme Smith, as usual, spoke frankly about the team and his position atpre-match press. “The harder you try to get out of quicksand the further yousink,” he said of the team’s attempts to turn things around. He was equally philosophical about the growing personal criticism that he recieved. “At the top of the tree the wind always blows the strongest.”But Smith remains defiant and positive. He called a crisis meeting with thesenior players on Sunday and said that “stern words were had between players”.The onus, he believes, is now on the most experienced players to lead fromthe front and dig the side out of the hole before they equal the worstlosing run (10 matches under Keppler Wessels in 1994) in South Africa’shistory.”We decided to address a few issues again, especially within the seniorgroup,” Smith said after training. “The senior group have to take responsibility now. Their [Sri Lanka’s] senior players are outperforming ours, and that is the difference at the moment. The preparation and practice has been fine – it is about digging really deep to get ourselves out of this hole and putting in a performance for 100 overs.”South Africa are set to revert back to their pace-based attack on the moreseamer-friendly Sinhalese Sports Club pitch. Robin Peterson, expensive inDambulla, his first game of the tour, could be replaced by either AlanDawson or Charl Langeveldt, the fast bowler who was rushed over fromZimbabwe after Andre Nel flew home with a back injury.Probable teams
South Africa 1 Graeme Smith (capt), 2 Herschelle Gibbs, 3 Jacques Rudolph, 4 Jacques Kallis, 5 Shaun Pollock, 6 Jean-Paul Duminy, 7 Mark Boucher, 8 Lance Klusener, 9 Nicky Boje, 10 Charl Langeveldt, 11 Makhaya Ntini.Sri Lanka 1 Sanath Jayasuriya, 2 Avishka Gunawardene 3 Saman Jayantha, 4 Kumar Sangakkara (wk), 5 Mahela Jayawardene (capt), 6 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 7 Upul Chandana, 8 Farveez Maharoof, 9 Kaushal Lokuarachchi, 10 Dilhara Fernando,11 Nuwan Zoysa.

Super Six the right time to peak

The World Cup plot begins to thicken as the pool phase ends and the SuperSixes begins. Like Australia did four years ago, this is when you want tobegin peaking.There are only two changes to this Super Six from the last one. Sri Lankaand Kenya come in at the expense of South Africa and Pakistan. Pakistan miss out on qualifying for the next phase of the tournament for the first time since the inaugural World Cup in 1975.Kenya may be present due to the beneficiaries of circumstances outside theircontrol but in their next three games they have the chance to prove they arethere on bona fide grounds.Kenya are the Zimbabwe of four years ago. The surprise packet of thetournament and like Zimbabwe of four years ago they only require one victoryto advance to the semi finals.Notwithstanding the controversy and politics, Zimbabwe will be ecstatic theyhave made it to their second consecutive Super Sixes, proving that the lastone was no fluke.Australia are the red hot favourites. Like true champions, they are winningeven when they are not playing well or look like they are up to their necksin trouble. Their flexibility and versatility is the key. Which other teamin world cricket could be without players the calibre of Warne, the twoWaughs and Gillespie and find such wonderful replacements that you don’teven know they are gone?The Australians are playing like the West Indians of the first two WorldCups where the Calypso cricketers were on a different dimension. They wereuntouchable and defeating them was an impossible task. In the first WorldCup, Pakistan set the West Indies a challenging 267 runs to score from 60overs. At 166 for eight and later 203 for nine, it looked like a Pakistani victory, butDeryck Murray and Andy Roberts combined for a last wicket partnership of 64to steer the West Indies home with just two balls to spare.Australia’s victory against England at Port Elizabeth was reminiscent ofthis game.Advancing to the Super Sixes from Pool B was a struggle and it doesn’t getany easier for Pool B teams wishing to make it through to the final four.New Zealand and Sri Lanka have to play the two form teams of the tournament;Australia and India while Zimbabwe can make some ground on New Zealand andSri Lanka as they get to play Kenya.For New Zealand, Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka to qualify they basically need towin every one of their Super Six games.There is a lot to play for. Australia don’t just want to qualify for thesemi-finals, they want to finish first (or fourth) so they play in the daysemi-final at Port Elizabeth and avoid the crapshoot which faces the teamsin the day/night semi-final at Durban.After some confusion about the format four years ago when it was firstintroduced, the Super Sixes is now being embraced.It is a great system asit forces the top teams to play each other at least once. It also means thateach of the next nine games is an ‘eight point game’ and a must win one atthat. All this should mean for fantastic cricket as the remaining sixnations fight it out for cricket’s glittering prize.

Lankan squad for tri-series with India, New Zealand

The Sri Lankan selectors have made four changes to the one-day squadthat won the ARY Gold Trophy in Sharjah in April and have revealed achange of strategy for the forthcoming triangular series against Indiaand New Zealand.Five fast bowlers and only two specialist spinners have been picked inthe 15-man squad, an unusual combination on Sri Lanka pitches. Thefinal team is expected to include three fast bowlers.The new look squad, the first selected by the new five-man panel ofselectors, confirms that the team management and selectors are nowfocusing their attention on the 2003 World Cup, where it is felt thatSri Lanka will need the services of fast bowling all rounders.Suresh Perera and Dulip Liyanage have been marked out as fast bowlerscapable of scoring valuable runs in the lower middle order and theyhave been included in the squad in place of Akalanka Ganegama andThilan Samaraweera. The recall of 23-year-old Perera is based uponpotential, rather than hard statistics. In his last 11 ODIs heaverages just 10.6 and has only scored two half centuries in his 36match first class career. Nevertheless, he is clearly an excitingprospect, possessing the priceless potential to change the course of amatch with both bat or ball.Dulip Liyanage, no youngster at 29 years of age, is recalled after animpressive first class season for Colts CC, in which he averaged 22.7with the bat and claimed 38 wickets. He made his ODI and Test debutway back in 1992/3 before suffering from a debilitating ankle injury.Dilhara Fernando, Chaminda Vaas, and Nuwan Zoysa, subject to hisexpected recovery from an ankle injury, all retain their places in thesquad.All the fast bowlers can look forward to helpful conditions in thetournament, especially when they play India, as the curators have beenasked to leave more grass on the pitches. Slower pitches are, however,expected in the New Zealand games.Avishka Gunawardene and Chamara Silva are recalled after impressiveperformances against Pakistan A, in place of Tillakaratne Dilshan andIndika de Saram, both of whom have failed to grasp the opportunitiesgiven to them by previous selection committees.Tillakaratne Dilshan stormed onto the international scene 18 monthsago with an unbeaten Test century in his second game, but hasdisappointed thereafter, especially in the Test arena. In one-daycricket he has played 14 games, but has not batted in the top six onsix occasions and has never been given an opportunity to bat higher upthe order than number six.Indika de Saram, nearly 28, has now played in 15 ODIs, but has failedto pass fifty once and boasts a highest score of just 38 and anaverage of 16.63. He too, however, has often suffered from a lowlyposition in the batting order.Kumar Sangakkara retains his place in the squad though he has been inpoor form recently. With Romesh Kaluwitharan likely to take thegloves, Sangakkara will be forced to compete with Gunawardene andSilva for the final batting places.Should Sri Lanka opt to play seven batsmen and four bowlers, then bothGunawardene and Sangakkara will probably play ahead of Silva. However,they may well play six batsmen and ask Kumar Dharmasena, retaining hisplace despite a stiff challenge from Thilan Samaraweera, to bat atnumber seven. This would leave room for just one of the three.The squad:Sanath Jayasuriya (Capt), Marvan Atapattu (Vice Capt), RomeshKaluwitharana, Russel Arnold, Mahela Jayawardene, Kumar Sanagakkara,Avishka Gunawardene, Chamara Silva, Chaminda Vaas, Dulip Liyanage,Suresh Perera, Nuwan Zoysa, Kumar Dharmasena, Muttiah Muralitharan,Dilhara Fernando

Caption Competition: Neymar gets psyched

20-year-old Neymar, heavily linked with Chelsea this summer, has emerged as the next big thing on the conveyer belt of Brazilian talent, and on Saturday he’s likely to play an instrumental role in his country’s Olympic gold medal clash with Mexico.

It will be the young forward’s first major international final, though the man dubbed the future of Brazilian football has said he won’t approach the match differently to any other.

That may be the case on the training ground, but in the privacy of his Olympic accommodation he may deploy some unusual tactics to get psyched.

Can you come up with a funny caption for this picture?

Leave your suggestions in the comments section below…

This week you can win a copy of Chelsea FC: Double Champions! Season Review 2011/12 on DVD!

For Chelsea , 2011/12 was an incredible season that will live forever in the hearts and minds of players and fans alike.

The club completed an historic double, lifting The FA Cup and becoming newly crowned champions of Europe, lifting the coveted Champions League trophy following years of heartbreak, after beating four times winners Bayern Munich at their home ground in one of the most exciting Finals in recent times.

Every match and every goal from this unforgettable season are covered in this action-packed review, with bonus material thrown in, too.

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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.

Doshi signs for Warwickshire

Nayan Doshi, who walked out on Surrey last month, has signed for Warwickshire for the remainder of the summer.Doshi, 28, quit The Oval after becoming frustrated at the lack of first-team opportunities. He had become labeled as a one-day specialist, and was particularly effective in Twenty20 cricket where he had taken 53 wickets in 20 matches.Doshi was drafted straight into Warwickshire’s squad for their Championship match against Sussex at Hove but did not make the final XI after he was ruled ineligible by ECB umpires before the start of play on Wednesday.The ECB later said he was ineligible under Regulation 4.3 of the ECB conditions: “To transfer a registration between two first class counties in one season there must be agreement between the two first class counties involved.”Surrey released their own statement to say they had de-registered him as a player: “As such, Doshi is a free agent. We are awaiting advice from our lawyers as to the interpretation of all the issues involved, and will make a full statement on receipt of that advice.”

Anderson set for Glamorgan loan

James Anderson: heading to Wales for a week? © Getty Images

James Anderson is set to return to county action next week with a loan move to Glamorgan. He hasn’t played first-class cricket since England’s tour of India, but has been named in the Champions Trophy and Ashes squads and England are keen for him to prove his fitness before the winter.The ECB, to whom Anderson is centrally contracted, has a loan system in place which allows players to move to other counties of they can’t find a place in their own team. Usually this is for a minimum of four weeks, but the ECB has the power to amend this in special circumstances.Jim Cumbes, Lancashire’s chief executive, told the club website: “The ECB have discretionary powers which they can use to waive the regulations on loan players. Normally a loan has to be for a minimum of four weeks but this is an unusual case in which everyone wants to co-operate to help England and the player.”Earlier in the week Mike Watkinson, the Lancashire cricket manager, said: “The ECB remain keen for Jimmy to get some cricket in the final week. If that is with us they will be delighted about that, if not then I think they will be looking to create a situation where he can play some cricket. There is a lot of thought and consideration to go into it. If you’ve got a must-win game, do you play someone who hasn’t played for nine months?”It is something we have to think long and hard about, especially when you don’t have any guarantees he is going to go the full duration of the game and keep his fitness. My initial thoughts were that it would be unlikely.”Glamorgan, who face Gloucestershire in a relatively meaningless fixture, have said they are willing to entertain the idea. “We have got to look at the bigger picture. We have been asked and we would be happy to help,” Mike Fatkin, their CEO, said. “I think they have chosen our fixture because there are no promotion or relegation issues, although obviously we want to win.”

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