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Bell relieved with return to form

Another piece in the jigsaw that makes up the England team fell into place with the return to form of Ian Bell

George Dobell at Edgbaston03-May-2012
ScorecardIan Bell was the only batsman to master the conditions at Edgbaston•Getty Images

Another piece in the jigsaw that makes up the England team fell into place with the return to form of Ian Bell. Bell overcame challenging conditions and a demanding pace attack to register his first first-class century since his double hundred against India at The Oval last August; 20 innings ago. On a pitch where no other batsman has managed to move beyond the 30s, that represents a fine effort.While Bell was never in serious danger of losing his England place ahead of the series against West Indies, he needed this innings. After a chastening tour of the UAE, where he averaged just 8.50 in the Test series, he had managed just 34 runs in his first three Championship innings of the season. In 16 of his last 20 first-class innings, he has failed to reach 20 and this may well prove his final first-class knock ahead of the first Test at Lord’s. His confidence, understandably, had diminished.He was not, perhaps, at his most fluent for the first half of this innings. He was dropped twice – on 51 and 59 – and survived a very confident leg-before appeal from Mitchell Claydon when he had 61. As the ball softened and his confidence grew, however, he began to settle and produced some high-quality strokes. One hook off Graham Onions bore the hallmark of class, as did a perfect cover drive off the same bowler. And, while there may be some doubt about his ability to deal with top-class spin after his travails against Saeed Ajmal, his treatment of Ian Blackwell, a perfectly respectable left-arm spinner who was once deemed good enough for Test cricket, bordered on the dismissive. Bell brought up his century – the 39th of his first-class career – by cutting a Blackwell delivery to the boundary, having earlier skipped down the wicket and driven the same bowler for six over long-off.”That was a bit of a relief,” Bell said afterwards. “That kind of innings will certainly help me. It counts for nothing going into the Test series, but it will give me some comfort to have spent some time at the crease. I haven’t had enough of it over the winter. I’d be out within the first few minutes.”It was a tough winter. It wasn’t for a lack of effort, but every run I got seemed to be hard work. In the summer before when everything was going nicely runs seemed to be easy to come across and those balls that I was nicking were going into gaps. Hopefully I’ve turned a corner now.”That’s what we can expect against the West Indies. It doesn’t look as if the weather will improve, so we’ll be facing a good seam attack on green pitches. Durham have one of the better seam attacks, so it’s nice to do well against them in these conditions. It gives you a lot of confidence.”Technique isn’t something I have to worry about too much. I wouldn’t say I’ve lost confidence – the last three years, going back to Cape Town, has given me lots of good stuff to draw upon – but I want to get better at playing in the subcontinent and I know there are areas – such as playing against spin – where I want to get better. I feel I’m a good player of spin in England and most places, but batting at five in the subcontinent is hard work. I’ve learned some tough lessons.”I just haven’t have enough time at the crease. I’m netted out, to be honest. I’ve had enough time in the net. It’s scoring runs that helps your confidence and your form. I feel I’ve just been scratching around. It started in the UAE, but even here, in the last two games, I just didn’t feel the rhythm was there. Even the 50 I made in Sri Lanka, on a really good batting wicket, felt like hard work.”In the last six months I haven’t been finding the gaps or timing the ball nicely. I did that today as the ball got a little softer and a little wetter. I was going forward and back nicely, too, whereas in the winter I was getting stuck in the crease a bit.”Bell’s work ethic cannot be faulted. Whereas Mark Ramprakash has complained that the early season conditions have made batting “a lottery”, Bell asked the England management to allow him to play an extra Championship game – he was originally scheduled to play just two – and feels that time spent batting in such conditions will serve him well. He will also forgo his time off next week to come and face his team-mate Chris Woakes, who is just about fit to resume bowling, in the middle at Edgbaston.”Batting is going to be hard, but you can’t sit here and complain about it,” he said. “There’s no point moaning. You can get a lot out of batting in these conditions. You’re not always going to play on flat wickets, so it’s good to play on challenging surfaces where things are in the bowlers’ favour. You can’t always live in the comfort zone.”Bell’s century helped Warwickshire build a dominant position in this game. Only 22 overs were possible on another rain-reduced day but Tim Ambrose, cutting as enthusiastically as ever, helped Bell extend their overnight partnership to 87 before Blackwell, carrying a shoulder injury that may well require surgery, struck twice in two balls. Ambrose, at least, could count himself unfortunate: his cut shot thumped into the thigh of Ben Stokes at silly-point and deflected to slip, before Rikki Clarke, back instead of forward, simply missed one. To have earned a first innings lead having been, at one stage, for 14 for 4 underlined once again the depth of Warwickshire’s batting. It is, however, the depth of the puddles at Edgbaston that may thwart them.

Bristol development finally approved

Gloucestershire’s future in Bristol has been secured after planning permission for the development of Nevil Road was granted on appeal

Alex Winter30-May-2012Gloucestershire’s future in Bristol has been secured after planning permission for the development of Nevil Road was granted on appeal. The club’s revised plans were voted seven to three in favour by Bristol City Council.The original application was rejected in January, raising fears that the club would be forced out of Bristol – their home since the formation of the club in 1870. But the plans were scaled down and building can now start at the end of this season.The initial objection was about the height of of the apartment block at the Ashley Down end of the ground – the development that will fund the £10 million project. The design was reduced by a storey but still maintained 147 dwellings – the number necessary to make the apartment block financially viable – by lengthening the building. The sustainability of the building was also improved and three councillors accepted the amendments – a swing sufficient to see the application approved.Gloucestershire were aided at the council meeting by Paul Russell, the former chairman of Glamorgan who oversaw the transformation of Sophia Gardens into a Test ground, and Robert Griffiths QC, who was in charge of the proposed £400 million redevelopment of Lord’s before the project was scrapped. Griffiths was also involved in the rebuilding of Old Trafford.Development can now take place to bring Nevil Road up to ECB standards for international cricket. Gloucestershire have staged an international each year since 1999 – a match which generates £1 million for the local economy and is essential to the club’s business model.The delay in gaining permission saw Bristol stripped of an ODI against New Zealand, scheduled for 2013, together with budget constrictions that saw long-serving players Jon Lewis and Chris Taylor leave the county. The club was forced to turn to the city council for financial help and were granted a £400,000 bridging loan to help afford the professional services to remodel the planning application. But the financial pressure should now begin to ease and Gloucestershire hope to welcome India for an ODI in 2014.Around 7,000 permanent seats will be installed mostly on the side of the ground adjacent to City of Bristol College, with 10,000 temporary seats brought in for international matches. A world-class media centre will be built in a new pavilion, along with an improved business centre and cricketing facilities.Gloucestershire chief executive, Tom Richardson, was pleased the drawn-out process had finally been resolved. “We are very pleased that the committee has come to this decision as it finally allows us to realise our ambitions in bringing the very best of what cricket can offer to our home city.”We have many people to thank – it has been a long journey and a huge amount of hard work has gone into it, which in turn has been supported by residents across Bristol, including our local area of Bishopston. We can now look forward to making the next stage of our plans happen.”

Saxelby books quarter-final place

Ian Saxelby took two wickets as Gloucestershire booked their place in the quarter-finals of the Friends Life T20 with a rain-affected eight-wicket win over Northamptonshire.

08-Jul-2012
ScorecardIan Saxelby took two wickets as Gloucestershire booked their place in the quarter-finals of the Friends Life T20 with a rain-affected eight-wicket win over Northamptonshire.In their first match since the departure of head coach David Capel, Northamptonshire were reduced to 31 for four before rain curtailed their innings, with Saxelby taking two for six from two overs.The Gladiators were given a revised target of 23 from five overs and, unsurprisingly, this did not prove difficult as they took just 14 balls to reach it.It allowed them to overtake Warwickshire in the group standings after their defeat to Glamorgan to qualify alongside Somerset and Worcestershire.The result also means Northamptonshire finish bottom of the group with just a solitary win and they have now gone two years without a home victory in the competition.Gloucestershire won the toss and chose to field and they claimed the wicket of Northamptonshire captain Alex Wakely (two) in the second over when James Fuller took out his off stump.David Willey (five) followed by launching Saxelby to Gladiators captain Hamish Marshall at mid-on before Cameron White (four) edged the same man to wicketkeeper Jonathan Batty with the very next ball.The players were then taken off for rain at the end of the fifth over with the Steelbacks struggling on 14 for three and their hopes of a first home t20 win since July 2010 fading.Play resumed 45 minutes later with no overs lost but Rob Newton soon departed for 12 when he was caught and bowled by Muttiah Muralitharan.Rain again forced the players off, only this time it was more persistent and this meant the end of the hosts’ foundering innings.Chasing just 23 from the minimum five overs, Gloucestershire lost former New Zealand international Marshall from the first ball when he was trapped lbw by Willey.Willey then ran out Australia batsman Ed Cowan from point after an aborted single off David Burton in the second over.But the winning run came with the second ball of the third over via a leg bye from the thigh of Ian Cockbain off the bowling of Lee Daggett.

Pakistan bowlers set up another win

Pakistan Under-19s improved on their already impressive bowling performance in the first one-dayer to rout Australia Under-19s for 139, setting up a seven-wicket victory

ESPNcricinfo staff31-Jul-2012
ScorecardSaad Ali was unbeaten at the finish•Getty Images

Pakistan Under-19s improved on their already impressive bowling performance in the first one-dayer to rout Australia Under-19s for 139, setting up a seven-wicket victory that clinched the three-match series. A succession of useful contributions from the top-order batsmen allowed the visitors to reach the target with 15.2 overs to spare.Pakistan had dismissed Australia for 187 in the first match, after choosing to field, and Babar Azam asked the hosts to bat once again. Australia reached 14 before losing their first two wickets in the space of three runs. The promising Kurtis Patterson was run out for a duck.They slipped to 53 for 4 before Cameron Bancroft and Travis Head had a 52-run partnership. However, they too fell in quick succession and after that the end was swift. Fast bowler Zia-ul-Haq claimed 3 for 20 in seven overs, while Azizullah and Ehsan Adil conceded less than two runs per over.Australia’s bowlers struck at regular intervals but they needed to knife through the Pakistan line-up to pose a challenge and they were unable to do so. All of the top five batsmen got past 20 and Saad Ali raised the tempo, scoring 36 off 33 balls to secure victory in the 35th over.”We started quite well at the top with Peirson and Bancroft and we were quite aggressive but unfortunately in the batting side of things there wasn’t many positives after that,” Patterson said after the defeat. “The bowling was good early on, we bowled quite patiently but at the end of the day 139 is just not really enough.”We have gone two games in a row now where we have massively underachieved and especially today as the pitch was even better, to only get 140 on a flat wicket is really under par and we need to particularly work on our play to spin as well as our play to pace as well.”

Yorkshire still hope to have Bresnan

Yorkshire remain hopeful they will have Tim Bresnan available for the Friends Life t20 Finals Day

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Aug-2012Yorkshire remain hopeful they will have Tim Bresnan available for the Friends Life t20 Finals Day despite the ECB announcement on Wednesday that he would not be freed from England duty.Finals Day is staged in Cardiff on Saturday the day after England take on South Africa in the opening one-day international at the same ground. Jonny Bairstow has already been confirmed as being available for Yorkshire, while Craig Kieswetter, the Somerset wicketkeeper, is also allowed to play.”The club understands that Tim’s involvement in Finals Day depends on decisions to be made by the England management following the NatWest ODI on Friday,” a Yorkshire statement said. “The club remains hopeful that Tim will be able to represent Yorkshire on Finals Day but will also respect any decision made that furthers the chances of the England national side.”When Bresnan was left out of the final Test against South Africa he linked up with Yorkshire for their Championship match against Derbyshire and also played the CB40 against Sussex.The Friends Life t20 has endured a difficult season, especially during the group stages which were badly affected by the weather, and the appearance of England players would be an added attraction to the day. Matt Prior and Luke Wright will line up for Sussex while Danny Briggs, the left-arm spinner named in the World Twenty20 squad, is part of the Hampshire set up.The other significant availability news confirmed by the ECB is that Kevin Pietersen can play for Surrey for the remainder of the season but James Anderson will not be free for Lancashire’s final Championship match of the summer, against Surrey at Aigburth, where he would have gone head-to-head with Pietersen in what could be a relegation decider.Anderson was left out of the World Twenty20 squad so will end his international season after the one-day series against South Africa, but the ECB have opted to begin is time off straight away after that.Elsewhere, Andrew Strauss will see out the season with Middlesex after a short family break following the end of the Test series against South Africa. He will play Championship matches against Worcestershire and Lancashire.

Ireland warm-up with a win

Ireland showed useful form in their second warm-up game in Sri Lanka ahead of the ICC World Twenty20 which starts next week

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Sep-2012Ireland showed useful form in their second warm-up game in Sri Lanka ahead of the ICC World Twenty20 which starts next week. Phil Simmons’s men thumped a Sri Lanka A side by seven wickets with more than five overs to spare.Ireland had received a boost at the weekend when Australia slipped below them in the world rankings.
Sri Lanka A made 104-9, with Alex Cusack (3-11) and Boyd Rankin (2-13) the pick of the Ireland bowlers off their four over spells. Tim Murtagh took his first wicket in Ireland colours, going for 24 in his four over spell. Angelo Perera made 32 for the Sri Lanka A, and captain Thilana Kandamby, 21.Ed Joyce scored a rare T20 half-century, making 53 off 39 balls, while he and Kevin O’Brien – who thumped 28 off 19 balls – saw Ireland home. Sachithra Senanayake took 2 for 13 off three overs for the hosts.

Caribbean T20 undergoes format change

The format of the Caribbean T20 has been altered to increase the number of preliminary matches each team plays from four to six

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Oct-2012The format of the Caribbean T20 has been altered to increase the number of preliminary matches each team plays from four to six. As per the new format, the seven regional teams will play each other once and the team with most points at the end of the league stage will automatically qualify for the final. The other finalist will be decided after a playoff between the second and the third-placed teams. The winner of the tournament will also qualify for next year’s Champions League T20. The tournament will kick off on January 6 with a match between Trinidad & Tobago, the current champions, and Jamaica at the Queen’s Park Oval, Port of Spain and the final will be played on January 20 in St. Lucia.”This format will allow the regional teams to increase the number of matches in a form of the game that has become very popular around the world, and of which we are now world champions,” Roland Holder, the WICB cricket operations manager, said.Previously, the seven regional sides used to compete with three international teams in a ten-team tournament. The teams were divided into two groups, with each team playing four games before the knockouts.The schedule of the one-day regional tournament was also changed. The one-day matches will be spread throughout the season to reduce the possibility of the tournament getting affected by the hurricane season and will be played alongside the first-class matches.Next year’s Regional Super50 is set to begin on February 7 with the Regional 4-Day competition set to follow a couple of days later. Last season’s 50-over competition was held between October 19 and 29, but had three matches washed out and three others with overs reduced. The first-class competition ran from February to April without too much trouble from the weather.”In the last two or three seasons, by virtue of us playing the Regional Super50 in October/November, we have had several matches rained out,” Holder said. “We were in an unwelcome situation where a team made it into the semi-finals having played one match, which severely affected the competitiveness of the tournament.”Provisions have also been made to allow teams to change their squads between the four-day and 50-over competitions.12:30pm, October 25: This story has been updated.

Nasir celebration on hold after missing ton

Nasir Hossain was planning to celebrate his century in a manner that would have “stunned everyone”

Mohammad Isam in Mirpur16-Nov-2012Even before reaching his maiden Test century, Nasir Hossain was thinking of how to celebrate the milestone. He got very close, within four runs, before his attempt to push the ball into the covers took the edge to the waiting Chris Gayle at slip. The world remains unaware of how he would have saluted the hundred, though Nasir said it would have “stunned everyone”.”I made plans for my [century] celebration too early, so it is my bad luck that I got out on 96,” Nasir said. “I was trying to give [Shahadat Hossain] Rajib bhai as less strike as possible. After [Mahmudullah] Riyad bhai got out, I decided to bat aggressively. I think it was the right thing to do at that stage.”Nasir, however, enjoyed every bit of the freedom of coming in to bat at 362 for 5, a rarity for a Bangladesh No. 7, whose usual role is to stop a batting slide. On a wicket which he described as “beautiful”, Nasir capitalised by hammering six boundaries and four sixes. He added 121 runs for the seventh wicket with Mahmudullah before taking full charge of the 61-run ninth wicket stand with Shahadat Hossain. He had reached fifty off 99 balls, with a pulled boundary off Ravi Rampaul, but scored the next 43 runs off 37 deliveries.Known for his temperament and ability to close out games in limited overs cricket, Nasir is aware of what he is going to face at this position in the longer-format. “I told the coach that I might have to encounter the second new ball in that position so I would say I was well prepared to bat at No. 7, because I had done the hard yards in the nets.”But there is not much of a challenge in batting at this position. In the national team I am willing to bat anywhere and as in domestic cricket where my performance is counted, I bat up the order.”In the national team, Nasir will likely have to continue in the lower-middle order for a little while longer after Naeem Islam confirmed his place at No. 4 with a hundred and Mahmdullah weighed in with a half-century of his own.Nasir is going to turn 21 at the end of this month and he plays the part of an exuberant youngster. Last year, he had asked Mahmudullah how to celebrate just as he was approaching his first ODI century. This time he was itching to get to the three-figure mark. “I can’t tell you what it is, but it would have been something that stunned everyone.”

Sussex announce Brooks successor

Sussex have announced that Zac Toumazi, the former Hampshire commercial director, will succeed Dave Brooks as chief executive in January

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Dec-2012Sussex have announced that Zac Toumazi, the former Hampshire commercial director, will succeed Dave Brooks as chief executive in January.Toumazi has extensive experience in the financial sector, working for Citigroup and Goldman Sachs, before switching to cricket firstly with Surrey for six years and then with Hampshire from 2011.He will attempt to continue to move Sussex forward and build on the work of Brooks whose four years at Sussex saw the club win a one-day double In 2009 and Division Two of the County Championship in 2010.Since announcing he was leaving Sussex at the end of the year, Brooks has been appointed to the Guernsey Cricket Board.His successor at Sussex, Toumazi, will take over a financially healthy club, largely thanks to inheritance from former club president Spen Cama, and a recently development ground.”We are very pleased to appoint Zac,” Jim May, Sussex chairman, said. “We believe his commercial experience, cultural fit and passion for cricket give him the credentials to ensure that Sussex continues to lead the way both on and off the pitch.”Dave Brooks leaves us in great shape this month after four outstanding years. We had a very strong group of candidates who applied to succeed him.Toumazi said, “I am very excited. I look forward to working with the entire team taking Sussex forward whilst preserving the values that make it so special.”

Pakistan's visually impaired captain in mishap at team hotel

The captain of the visually challenged Pakistan cricket team, Zeshan Abbasi, who is in Bangalore to play the T20 Blind Cricket World Cup, was hospitalised on Saturday after accidentally drinking phenyl at the team hotel

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Dec-2012The captain of Pakistan’s visually challenged cricket team, Zeshan Abbasi, who is in Bangalore to play the T20 Blind Cricket World Cup, was hospitalised on Saturday after accidentally drinking phenyl at the team hotel. He was discharged later in the day, and was ‘absolutely fine’ according to the doctors.Abbasi had sipped the contents of a plastic bottle left on the table during breakfast, mistaking it for mineral water. He was taken to hospital, where was treated and kept under observation before being discharged a few hours later.”Abbasi was discharged at 4.30pm. He is absolutely fine”, the president of the hospital, Dr Shetty, was quoted as saying by . He said Abbasi had had an endoscopy and all the results were normal.Pakistan team manager Sultan Shah said the hotel had apologised for the incident, but they wanted it probed further. “We want to know from the hotel management, who have orally apologised to us, how such an incident happened and who is responsible for such negligence,” Shah said. “It has to be ensured that such incidents do not recur. Otherwise, we are happy with the arrangements here.”SP Nagesh, the president of the All Indian Cricket Association, also called for an investigation: “[The hotel must] tell us how such a lapse occurred. We are awaiting their reply.”

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