West Indies sign new sponsorship deal

West Indies have unveiled their new sponsor. Digicel, the Caribbean’s leading mobile-phone service, has signed a multi-million dollar five-year deal, with an option to renew, which will come into operation for the tour to Australia in 2004-05."Our partnership with Digicel represents a new era for the sponsorship of West Indies cricket," said Teddy Griffiths, the president of the West Indies Cricket Board. "We look forward to a long and rewarding partnership."Last month, the decline of West Indies cricket was underlined by the withdrawal of Cable & Wireless, their long-term sponsorship partners, who had been involved with the team for 19 years. But Digicel have accepted the challenge of taking on a side whose fortunes have been steadily falling in recent years."Digicel takes enormous pride in becoming the official main sponsor of the West Indies cricket team," said Denis O’Brien, the chairman of Digicel Group. "We believe in the future of the Caribbean and its cricket. Our intention is to enable West Indies cricket to get back to the top of world Test cricket and to success in the ICC Cricket World Cup 2007."We are delighted to make available this substantial sponsorship package to West Indies cricket," added O’Brien. "We will add new energy into West Indies cricket through our incentives and youth programmes. This will encourage more great performances and foster future cricket legends. We are excited about the future of cricket in the Caribbean. Our sponsorship will help enable West Indian cricket regain their dominance of the sport."

West Indies were well treated, says Irish board

The Irish Cricket Union has refuted allegations, made on a West Indian website and reported here, that the West Indian tourists received a less-than-warm welcome when they arrived in Belfast at the start of their UK tour.Peter Thompson, the Irish board’s chief executive, said: “No fewer than four officials of the Irish Cricket Union greeted our visitors on arrival at Belfast Airport, they left the airport by coach within half-an-hour of touchdown, and were at their city centre hotel 15 minutes later. Skipper Brian Lara and coach Gus Logie conducted a news conference for the Irish media in the hotel, much to the satisfaction of all concerned.”On departure five days later, the party was generous in its praise of Irish hospitality – apart, of course, from the six-wicket defeat in the second of the two Bank of Ireland one-day games.”The original article bemoaned the absence of any ECB officials to greet the tourists, but Andrew Walpole, the ECB’s media-relations officer, said at the time that both boards had jointly agreed there would be no official press conference on the West Indians’ arrival at Belfast, which is why the ECB didn’t send anyone there to meet them.

Scotland fall short in thriller

In today’s round of National League matches, Graham Napier picked up four quick wickets to send Kent crashing to a 35-run defeat to Essex at Colchester. Set 268 to win after 97 from the in-form Will Jefferson and 98 from Ronnie Irani, Kent were restricted to 232 for 7 despite half-centuries from Alex Loudon and Michael Bevan. Robert Croft powered Glamorgan to a 5-wicket win over Lancashire at Colwyn Bay with 106, and Northants slumped to 171 all out in pursuit of Hampshire’s 238 for 9.In Division Two, Scotland fell agonisingly short of Somerset’s 253 for 8 at Taunton. Scotland were bowled out for 246 with four balls still to be bowled in the last over despite an unbeaten 55 off just 40 balls from Yasir Arafat.National League Division One

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National League Division Two

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Chris Read agrees new three-year contract

Chris Read: three more summers at Trent Bridge© Getty Images

Chris Read has agreed a new three-year contract which will keep him at Trent Bridge until the end of the 2007 season.”Everyone would agree Chris is the best gloveman in the country, and his keeping this season has again been world class,” explained Mick Newell, the director of cricket. “He moved up our batting order to show the England selectors he has what it takes and he’s done that by scoring two hundreds and six half-centuries.”Read was dropped by England on the tour of the Caribbean in April, but impressed with his form for his country over the summer, scoring 807 runs at 50.43.

An uneasy calm

Harare Sports Club seems such an incongruous place to be at the centre of a highly controversial tour. Near the heart of the city, it is nevertheless lined by trees and situated in peaceful surroundings. The predominant colour is green, the light green of a beautifully maintained outfield and the dark green of the trees both inside and outside the ground. There was an air of tranquillity as Duncan Fletcher oversaw the England team training on the outfield yesterday.The tour that England faced with much trepidation has so far been totally uneventful. Andy Walpole, the team’s media liaison officer, and members of the press contingent whose dilemma had almost caused a last-minute abandonment, confirmed that the only unusual aspect so far was the heavy media attention they had received. There had been no demonstrations, no excessive security, no hostility from anybody they had met, and the only sign of discontent was some graffiti on a wall advising them to go home.But appearances can be deceptive. The immediate parallel that springs to mind is South Africa during the apartheid years. There, the opulent white areas were a world apart from the real life in Soweto, and it was easily possible to visit that country without encountering any evidence of the latter’s existence. Here in Zimbabwe, a visitor unaware of the plight of this beleaguered country can still come and go, in certain areas only, and leave the country under the impression that there is little wrong.But there is always another side of the coin. Just across the road, in fact. The main entrance to the club overlooks the high walls of State House, the personal dwelling place of Robert Mugabe, the ruler who continues to hold on to power against the will of the people and seems prepared to destroy his entire country so as to maintain that power. Unwary visitors wandering down the wrong side of that street have had traumatic experiences at the hands of the president’s security guards who patrol the area with itchy fingers on automatic weapons. The England team have been worried about the possibility of Mugabe meeting them and wanting to shake hands with them. They need not worry. There is a frightened little man hiding behind those walls, terrified as to what might happen to him should he lose power, and he will never dare venture anywhere he might be seen by ordinary Zimbabweans.It does not do to take the comparison with apartheid South Africa too far. Sport played its part in toppling apartheid, even though it took more than 20 years of boycotts to achieve its objective. No amount of sporting boycotts would have any significant effect on the Mugabe regime. A refusal by England to tour would have been a totally futile gesture politically. But, as Andy Flower has pointed out, the presence of England will once again bring the plight of this unhappy country under the world spotlight. Mugabe would prefer it to be forgotten, as was communist Albania for so many years.Robin Brown, the groundsman and the the man accused of deliberately sabotaging the pitch when Sri Lanka bowled the new-look Zimbabwe team out for 35 last April, is none too pleased by the changed programme, whereby the Harare matches will be played on Sunday and Wednesday instead of Friday and Sunday. A good cook cannot readily delay the moment his creations emerge from the oven by a few hours when it is half-ready, and expectant mothers are seriously inconvenienced if requested to hold on for a couple of days. Similarly Brown’s pitches were prepared with the original dates in mind, and the delay will not see them at their best. They will be slightly overbaked, and he estimates 250 rather than 300 will be a winning score. As long as there is no more sabotage …And so, under beautifully warm, sunny skies, England trained, and later in the day, so did Zimbabwe. England looked like a well-oiled machine, established in its regimen and looking impressive. Zimbabwe appeared a reasonable club side, not altogether used to heavy practice but deciding to give it a good shot anyway, with some laughs along the way. There was not the intensity of the Australians, but neither was there the laxity that the West Indians have shown at times. The traditional fabulous Zimbabwean fielding was not much in evidence. A team of callow youths will face England.Yet there is one factor that could make this match much closer than would appear likely on paper. England are basically playing under protest; they do not want to be there. Zimbabwe are fired with enthusiasm and eager to go, while England are simply eager to go home. One cannot expect the best possible performance from a team that does not want to be there, while a large dose of enthusiasm can cover a mass of inexperience and give a large rise to limited ability.It is very much a David and Goliath confrontation – except that this time David does not possess any artillery unknown to his opponent. Goliath should still win easily, but they might find David an awkward little customer in the process.And behind the scenes, Mugabe’s thugs continue to seek out supporters of the opposition, children continue to starve and the country’s economy continues in freefall as the government tries in the only ways it knows how to regain its long-lost support from the masses.Guilty though the English visitors may feel, they can do nothing to influence that situation. The best they can do is aim to give Mugabe’s cricket team – as it virtually is now, although the current players are not to blame for this – the biggest hiding they can muster.

'We need to play better and be smarter,' says Dravid

Rahul Dravid has called for improvements as India get ready to face South Africa in the first Test at Kanpur© Getty Images

With the Mumbai pitch fracas still fresh in people’s minds, all eyes were on the Green Park wicket at Kanpur, where South Africa face India in the first of the two Tests on Saturday (Nov 20). But Rahul Dravid and John Wright didn’t dwell too much on the importance of the pitch as they spoke to the media after the first net session.Dravid acknowledged that crystall-ballgazing about pitches was not one of his strong points. “I am not good at reading wickets,” he said, “but it doesn’t bother me much, as at the end of the day we have to do well whatever the wicket.” But Wright elaborated, feeling that it would take turn at some point during the game. “The wicket doesn’t have a great deal of pace in it – that’s the feeling you get while standing in the nets. It’s going to take turn at some point of time definitely, but when that will happen is hard to tell.”Wright denied that the team had a hand in giving instructions to the curators about the kind of pitch they wanted. “Not as far as we are aware of. The only thing we have asked right throughout the season was wickets that were good batting tracks. Obviously against Australia we didn’t want tracks with lots of sideways movement: if you get it, you get it, but not play into their hands.”Wright said India shouldn’t repeat what “we did at Nagpur”: what he wanted was a good pitch that would last five days and then “allow the match to take its course so that both sides have the opportunity. Once you start messing around you’ve got a problem.”Wright was confident that India would pick at least spinners, although he acknowledged that the combination of three spinners and one seamer had worked in the last Test against Australia at Mumbai. “Whether or not an extra one [spinner] will play we will only decide tomorrow. I will have to say that the three-one combination worked well in Mumbai in those conditions, but here it’s different. It was sunny yesterday, but with the mist out this morning you might need the extra seamer, so we will have to look into it.”Neither of them wanted to comment on the Sourav Ganguly affair, pointing out that “the ICC rules don’t allow us to speak on the issue”. Ganguly, in fact, popped in for an evening batting session, raising the possibility that Mohammad Kaif, the local hero, might miss out if Ganguly does turn out to be available for selection. Wright admitted: “It would be nice if Kaif could play, considering that he is a local boy. Obviously he has done a fantastic job this year by coming in and playing really hard – he has battled well in all conditions, and it’s a hard decision to make.”Dravid felt that teams these days are arriving in India well-prepared for action, and that they wouldn’t be able to take the South Africans lightly. “We will also have to improve our game and realise that just because we are playing at home we can’t bowl sides out. We need to play better and be smarter.”Aware that his batsmen have been finding it difficult to score runs, Wright said that he was assured of the class of his players. And he denied ever raising a doubt over the mental application of his players. “Where did you hear that?” he asked. “My point was about being hungry, and you would say that about any side. When you are playing at this level you need to have the hunger, the attitude. We have reached a stage where we need that hunger and that attitude that keeps the team going.”

Nine New Zealand players to turn out for state sides

Chris Cairns needed to recover after rolling an ankle in the first ODI at Auckland© Getty Images

Nine members of the New Zealand squad will turn out for their respective state sides in the domestic State Shield on Thursday, following the postponement of the one-dayer against Sri Lanka at Napier. The game has been rescheduled for January 11 as a mark of respect for the victims.Chris Cairns, Brendon McCullum and Kyle Mills will not participate in the domestic games because of injury concerns. Cairns rolled an ankle during the first ODI at Auckland, Mills suffered some stiffness in his back in the same game while McCullum will use the time for do rehab work on his injured knee.The New Zealand cricketers expressed their full support of the decision to postpone the second ODI. Ross Dykes, the acting team manager, said that the players’ thoughts were with the Sri Lankan team in their time of sorrow and grief. “The delay of a cricket match is inconsequential compared to what the people of Sri Lanka are going through,” he said. “So we will just fit in with what is required. Our sympathies are with the Sri Lankan team and their family and friends at this tragic time for them.”The New Zealand squad were scheduled to train when they reassembled in Queenstown on Friday afternoon. The selectors will still reselect the squad after the third match of the series, which will now be after the game at Jade Stadium on January 4, instead of Queenstown.

Shoaib Akhtar to return to Pakistan

Shoaib Akhtar: going home© Getty Images

Shoaib Akhtar will take no further part in the VB Series because the Pakistan Board wants to ensure his fitness in time for next month’s tour of India. He was told to return to Pakistan after the board made its decision yesterday.A press release by the PCB stated that Shoaib would be “placed on a specific fitness rehabilitation regime so that he operates at optimum capacity against India”. Shoaib sustained an injury that affected his back and upper legs during the Test series against Australia, after which he was ordered to take rest.Shoaib’s frequent injuries have been been the subject of much attention, not all of which has come from the game’s followers. Last year, after the series against India – in which Shoaib injured himself – a high-level inquiry was held in Pakistan over the team’s performance against India, and Shoaib’s commitment was questioned.

Lee will not play in Pura Cup final

Going somewhere?: Brett Lee and Michael Kasprowicz must wait for the Test team to be named before they can think about the Pura Cup final© Getty Images

Brett Lee will not now play for New South Wales in the Pura Cup final, after the possibility of a last-minute dash from Wellington to Brisbane was ruled out. Lee, who missed out on selection for the first Test at Christchurch, is expected to be named 12th man for the second Test as well, but a combination of inopportune flight times and NSW’s reluctance to risk his late arrival has meant the idea has been shelved.Lee starred in Australia’s one-day campaign but has been an irregular starter in Tests, and Cricket Australia confirmed that his lack of match practice was sufficient reason to grant permission for his appearance against Queensland in the final at the Gabba. But Brad Haddin, Trevor Bayliss and Brian Taber, NSW’s troika of captain, coach and chief selector, reasoned that if he could not arrive in time for the first day of the match, there was little point in having him at all.Trevor Hohns, the national selection chairman, originally said a decision would not be made until Australia’s team for Wellington was named, adding that no player could leave New Zealand until the Test had started. “We haven’t picked a side and that won’t be happening for a day or so and we don’t see any reason to change what is normal policy,” he said. “There are lots of things to be taken into account if somebody was to leave and obviously the captain and team management have to be satisfied that it’s okay.”

Bulls charge into home final against New South Wales

Western Australia 323 and 4 for 199 (Hussey 54) drew with
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Jimmy Maher and James Hopes celebrate the dismissal of Mike Hussey for 54© Getty Images

Queensland won the right to host the Pura Cup final after Wade Seccombe’s 84 pushed them to an unbeatable position against Western Australia at the Gabba. Western Australia needed an impossible 354 in the final session’s 36 overs to win and finished at 4 for 199 in a draw that ended their season. Queensland will play New South Wales at the Gabba starting from Friday.Michael Hussey, who finished with three wickets, reached 54 and Chris Rogers, Murray Goodwin and Marcus North each got 45, but they were never close to reaching the massive victory target. Western Australia were frustrated by Queensland batting through the first session with Seccombe, who reached his highest score of the season, sharing valuable partnerships with Mitchell Johnson and Joe Dawes.The Bulls received further good news when James Hopes cleared himself for the final after shaking off a hamstring strain suffered during the match. “I’ve got close to full power back close to 40 minutes after it so they are just saying you’re tearing scar tissue which sometimes happens, so there’s no new injury,” Hopes said.Queensland have not beaten New South Wales in five finals since 1984-85, the last loss coming two seasons ago when the Blues won by 246 runs at the Gabba.

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