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.

Norton Fredrick dies at 73

Norton Fredrick, the former Sri Lankan first-class cricketer, died on Wednesday at the age of 73 following a terminal illness at his home in Wattala

Sa'adi Thawfeeq10-Aug-2011Norton Fredrick, the former Sri Lankan first-class cricketer, died on Wednesday at the age of 73, following a terminal illness, at his home in Wattala, ten kilometres from Colombo. Fredrick played for the All Ceylon team before Sri Lanka had Test status, and also for Bloomfield Cricket and Athletic Club in Sri Lanka. Although stocky for a fast bowler, he had all the ingredients that make a good quick – a short temper and speed.Fredrick’s four-year career with Ceylon was short but he made a big impact, and earned the nickname Fiery Fred, which he shared with Fred Trueman. Although not an orthodox quick, he generated a great deal of pace; his most potent delivery was the inswinger bowled with a high-arm action with which he beat batsmen regularly and bowled them through the gate, often hitting the bails.His most memorable match was an unofficial Test for All Ceylon against India, played in Ahmedabad in 1965, in which he ripped through the Indian top order in both innings to set up a historic four-wicket win for his country. It was the first time All Ceylon had won in India and Sri Lanka have never won a Test in India since becoming a Test-playing nation.Fredrick took seven wickets in the match in Ahmedabad – 4 for 85 in the first innings and 3 for 24 in the second – and his victims were Dilip Sardesai (twice), India captain the Nawab of Pataudi (twice), Farokh Engineer, Abbas Ali Baig and Hanumant Singh, who according to Frederick was the best batsman in India at the time. India were bowled out for totals of 189 and 66.For a fast bowler, Fredrick suffered remarkably few injuries through his career. “I never suffered from cramps until I got one holding on to a return catch given by Indian batsman Chandu Borde. Only then did I know what a cramp was,” Fredrick once said. He maintained his physique by doing wind sprints after practice for about an hour and parallel bar exercises.Strangely enough Fredrick never played cricket for his school St Joseph’s College, Colombo in the ten years he was a student there because he bowled with a round-arm action. “I bowled so fast that I used to injure children at Under-13 and Under-14 level with a tennis ball. But when I went for first XI practices the coach said that I had a square-arm action and dropped me from the team,” he once recalled.It was when Fredrick joined the Prisons Department as a welfare officer that his cricket career really started to take shape. He joined Bloomfield in 1959, took five wickets in his first match for them and never looked back. He played eight years of Sara Trophy Division One cricket for Bloomfield, helping them win the title in 1963-64 by taking 57 wickets. In his entire career for Bloomfield he captured 183 wickets, at an average of 16.58.In the four years he represented Ceylon (1964-1968) Fredrick played against Australia, the MCC, India and Pakistan, opening the bowling with Darrell Lieversz and with Ian Pieris; he played under the leadership of CI Gunasekera and Michael Tissera. Due to family commitments he was forced to end his career in 1968. He was a Sri Lanka Cricket-appointed match referee in later years and had a road named after him called Norton Place in his neighbourhood in recognition of the social service he and his wife did for the community. He had two sons, one of whom was an army officer who died during the civil war in Sri Lanka.

Yardy hundred guides Sussex to draw

Sussex skipper Michael Yardy scored his first four-day hundred of the season to guide his side to a draw in their County Championship match against Division Two opponents Surrey

12-Aug-2010

ScorecardSussex skipper Michael Yardy scored his first four-day hundred of the season to guide his side to a draw in their County Championship match against Division Two opponents Surrey at Guildford. The left-hander got there in style with a maximum as Sussex reached 275 for 6 in their second innings, the players shaking hands with the visitors 200 in front.It was not enough to prevent his side losing their top-of-the-table status after Glamorgan’s win over Worcestershire put them a point clear, but Yardy will have been satisfied with the outcome after his side had been outplayed for large parts of the contest.Sussex began the final day 39 for 2 and still 36 runs in arrears and made the worst possible start when Chris Tremlett’s lifter flew off the shoulder of Michael Thornely’s bat and was taken in the gully off the first ball of the day. Ed Joyce and Murray Goodwin cleared the deficit but the lead was just seven runs when Ed Joyce was bowled round his legs sweeping the off-spin of Gareth Batty.Sussex suffered another blow just before lunch when Meaker, who was the pick of Surrey’s seam attack, yorked Murray Goodwin to leave Sussex 94 for 5, a lead of just 19. But that was Surrey’s last success for 32 overs as Yardy and Ben Brown, who was playing in only his fourth Championship game, turned things around.Yardy offered one chance on 19 but Matthew Spriegel, who had earlier dropped Goodwin at third slip before he had scored, failed to hold on to a low catch. He played with increasing confidence thereafter and Brown soon settled down to give him excellent support in a partnership of 108 in 32 overs, the highest of this low-scoring game.Surrey took the new ball as soon as it became available and Meaker quickly struck when Brown was caught behind driving loosely for 52, made off 96 balls with five fours.
There were still 32 overs remaining and Sussex’s lead was only 127 but Surrey’s hopes of quickly polishing off their tail after tea ebbed away as Yasir Arafat joined Yardy in another productive partnership.Yardy went to his hundred with his second six, struck down the ground off Meaker, and he finished unbeaten on 100 off 157 balls having added an unbeaten 73 for the seventh wicket.
Meaker finished with 4 for 86 but Surrey were hampered by the absence of Jade Dernbach who was forced off with a shoulder injury before returning to the attack later in the day.

Harry Brook rates innings-turning hundred as 'favourite so far'

Aggressive 91-ball century saves England from early collapse as NZ wobble in reply

Vithushan Ehantharajah06-Dec-2024Harry Brook has hailed his 123 on the opening day of the second Test against New Zealand in Wellington as the best of his eight Test hundreds, eclipsing the 317 he scored against Pakistan two months ago.Brook’s 115-ball innings – including a century from 91, his second-fastest in Tests – has put England in command at the Basin Reserve, with New Zealand closing on 86 for 5, 198 behind the tourists’ opening effort of 280. The 25-year-old arrived at 26 for 3 upon the fall of Joe Root and unleashed some audacious shots, including clouting Nathan Smith out of the ground for the first of three sixes over extra cover.It began immediately as a counterattack on a pitch that was seaming prodigiously. Having been dropped five times for his 171 last week in the first Test, Brook was chanceless throughout, until some slack running saw him run out by Smith on the stroke of tea.Nevertheless, Brook was so happy afterwards that he ranked it top of the charts for his meaningful scores so far. Including the history-busting knock against Pakistan in the first Test at Multan in October, when he became England’s first triple-centurion in 34 years, after Graham Gooch’s 333 against India in 1990.”I think that might be my favourite hundred so far,” said Brook at stumps. “I enjoyed that a lot.”It was just the circumstances really, it was 26 for 3 when I came in and the pitch was doing quite a bit. It was seaming and swinging and I’m just glad I put my attacking mode on and really took it to them and put them under pressure.”Obviously that pitch (Multan) was extremely flat. You could just lean on it and the outfield was so rapid it would go for four. Here in the situation of the game, the pitch, and the way I played…I felt like I was really putting them under a lot of pressure.”It’s a pretty special feeling. Most of the balls came out the middle of the bat. It feels good to be batting like that.”Related

  • Brook credits his hard hitting for Christchurch fortune

  • Over-rate penalties: Frustrated Stokes wants clear communication from ICC

  • Brook rises to No. 2 in Test batting rankings, closes gap with table-topper Root

  • Alastair Cook: Bethell's temperament can make up for lack of experience

  • Brook hundred repels New Zealand before Carse leads England surge

Two days ago, Brook moved to No.2 on the ICC Test batting rankings following his 171 in the first Test of this series, behind teammate Root, who was dismissed for just three here. And according to Nathan Smith, who was targeted by Brook and launched into the road with the first of three sixes over extra cover off his bowling, he deserves to be considered in such vaunted company.”He’s a crop of that new, young cricketers – those world-class ones; him, Rachin, the guy from India (Yashasvi Jaiswal),” said Smith. “You put those guys in the same category. He’s world class, right up there.”This was Brook’s seventh century overseas, taking his average away from home to 91.50 from 10 Tests. All of those have been played in either Pakistan (six) and New Zealand (four), and he has yet to play in India or Australia.”I’ve only played in two countries – if I go to another it might change,” said Brook. “The pitches in Pakistan are usually very nice to bat on. Here you get nice-paced pitches, quick and bouncy and I feel I can play a different array of shots.”Brook also signalled out Brydon Carse, the pick of England’s bowlers with 2 for 28, including the dismissal of Kane Williamson. He had Williamson bowled for 20 off a no-ball, before making amends with a delivery that left the legendary Black Cap and caught an edge through to Ollie Pope for 37. Carse then snared Daryl Mitchell late in the day with a lifter down the leg side to confirm England’s advantage going into day two.”I think the ball after he got the no-ball wicket was 92/93mph,” Brook said. “He was fairly angry. Every team needs a player like him, he bowls at 90mph, diving and taking that amazing catch and he can come out with the bat and smack his first ball for four. he’s a very valuable asset to us and an unbelievably good bloke.”

Jonny Bairstow ready for ODI reunion as World Cup prep begins in earnest

No concerns about cohesion, says England opener, as familiar faces gather for 2019 re-run

Matt Roller06-Sep-2023England are getting the band back together. They train in Cardiff on Thursday before the first of four ODIs against New Zealand which serve as preparation for their defence of the 50-over World Cup in India, and the core of their 2019 squad will return to a format they have only played sporadically over the last four years.Joe Root was in the nets at Trent Bridge before their six-wicket defeat in a low-key fourth T20I on Tuesday evening, while four other members of the side that lifted the trophy at Lord’s – Jason Roy, Ben Stokes, Chris Woakes and Mark Wood – will also return to the white-ball fold in Wales.It marks the start of their World Cup run-in. England have only played nine ODIs in the last 12 months and those games have been decidedly low-key, including three in Australia which started hours after their T20 World Cup celebrations had ended. They were proud to win 2-1 in Bangladesh in March, but none of their squad have played a 50-over game since.Their main challenge over the next nine days will be adapting to a format that they have hardly played. Between the 2015 and 2019 World Cups, England played 88 ODIs; in the last four years, they have played 36, and rarely with anything near a full-strength side. That reflects the global trend: only three of the 10 teams competing in India have played more in this cycle.”We’ll rock up to Cardiff and see all the lads: it’ll be just like normal,” said Jonny Bairstow, who missed England’s nine ODIs last winter through injury but was an automatic selection for their World Cup squad, given his prowess as a one-day opener. “It’s great to have a group that have got a wealth of experience coming back together.”Naturally, there’ll be conversations around, ‘well, you’re not playing much 50-over cricket together’ and all this stuff. But the guys have been playing Test cricket or T20 cricket… to have the skillset to play both of those is a skillset that you’re able to take both parts of into 50-over cricket. It can throw different bits at you.”It is going to be good fun. I don’t think there’s too much worry about cohesion, or people not having played together for two, six, 12, 18 months – whatever it may be. I don’t think that’s too much of a worry when the group has played together for seven or eight years. It’s one of those where you just fit back and you slot back into your roles.”Related

  • Rehan lines up Trent Bridge final after 'special' hometown game for England

  • England keep eyes on prize with World Cup(s) on horizon

  • Brydon Carse makes his mark on debut as England power to seven-wicket victory

  • Harry Brook quietly makes his case as England brace for World Cup buyer's remorse

There are four weeks until the same teams get the World Cup underway in Ahmedabad on October 5, and these four ODIs will be England’s most important preparation. They are likely to rest the vast majority of their first-choice squad for the three fixtures against Ireland later this month and their two warm-up matches in Guwahati will be relatively low-key.The World Cup is a long tournament in its current guise, and England learned four years ago that dropping a game or two early in a nine-match group stage is not terminal. “We’ll be able to call upon some tough experience we had during that competition,” Bairstow said.”It wasn’t just plain sailing: having to win four out of the last four games in order to win the competition. We’ll be able to call upon those experiences in the big moments in the big games during the World Cup.”Everyone wants to go back-to-back. It’s something you dream of. But we’re under no illusion that in India, it’s going to be very tough. There are some quality teams around the world. There will be some exciting games; there will be some upsets; there’s going to be some interesting pitches, I’m sure, at times. There will be different conditions around the country and it’ll be the team that adapts the best that gets the best results.”Bairstow also played down the severity of the injury that kept him off the field during New Zealand’s run-chase on Tuesday night, having experienced some pain in his right shoulder while batting. “We’ve got a lot of cricket ahead of us… it’s better to take slighty more precaution than not,” he said. “It’ll be absolutely fine.”

Welsh Fire appoint Mark Alleyne as men's assistant coach

Former England and Gloucestershire allrounder joins coaching team headed by Gary Kirsten

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Jun-2022Mark Alleyne, the former England and Gloucestershire allrounder, will join Welsh Fire as an assistant coach ahead of their upcoming men’s Hundred season.Alleyne, who represented England in 10 one-day internationals and captained Gloucestershire to nine one-day trophies in seven years, joins head coach Gary Kirsten and fellow assistants Matt Maynard and Jason Kerr to form Welsh Fire’s men’s coaching team.Alleyne works as a Test scout for the ECB and is Assistant Director of Sport at Marlborough College. He travelled with the England men’s T20I squad as a support coach during their recent tour of the Caribbean.”I’m delighted to be joining Welsh Fire and have the opportunity to work with Gary Kirsten and his coaching team,” Alleyne said.Related

  • Remembering Haringey Cricket College, the charity behind a generation of Black cricketers

  • Dewald Brevis, Tristan Stubbs on Hundred wildcard longlist

  • Ben McDermott eyes extended English summer after Australia omission

“It’s exciting to be able to work closely with elite players and hopefully I can use my experience to add extra value to what they do and help create a winning formula for Welsh Fire.”I loved watching The Hundred last year and it’s exciting to get involved in a competition that captured the imagination of fans and brought new audiences to cricket.”Mark Wallace, Welsh fire team manager, said: “Mark was one of the most forward-thinking and progressive players of his generation and is a great addition to the Welsh Fire coaching staff.”He is full of enthusiasm and knowing Mark he will bring plenty of new ideas to the table that will help take Welsh Fire to the next level.”Welsh Fire men’s side finished last year’s inaugural season in seventh place out of eight teams. They begin their 2022 campaign against defending champions Southern Brave at the Ageas Bowl in the opening match of the new season on August 3. They will then host Oval Invincibles on August 7. The women’s side get their season underway on August 13 in a double-header with Birmingham Phoenix at Sophia Gardens.

Chris Silverwood 'not worried' about Dom Bess

Offspinner produced an up and down performance in first Test

George Dobell10-Feb-2021Chris Silverwood insists he is “not worried” about Dom Bess, despite an up and down performance from the offspinner in the first Test in Chennai.Bess claimed five wickets in the match and contributed 59 with the bat across the two innings. But he also bowled 19 full tosses – 12 in the first innings and seven in the second – including a grim over which saw him bowl three in succession to Virat Kohli. Each of them was hit for four.But while Silverwood, the England coach, conceded Bess had endured “a bad day”, he did not believe there was any more significant problem than that.Related

  • Dom Bess and Jack Leach, a tale of two spinners

  • England's victory in India – Pretty much the perfect performance

  • Joe Root moves to No. 3 in Test batting rankings, Virat Kohli slips to fifth

  • No 'weakening' of England team, even with changes afoot – Chris Silverwood

“I think he just had a bad day, which can happen to anybody,” Silverwood said. “The top and bottom of that one is that we’ll get in the nets on Thursday and we’ll get bowling again and I’m sure he’ll get straight back on the bike. I’m not concerned at this moment in time. Did he have an attack of the yips? No, absolutely not.”I am not worried. I had a chat with him afterwards and he’s still in good spirits. Everybody has a bad day and I can accept that.”It’s not through lack of effort. We get to the nets, work hard again and find him some rhythm: I am sure he will be fine.”Bess’ record on the tour as a whole, which started with two Tests in Sri Lanka, is excellent. He has taken 17 wickets across the three Tests at an average of 22.41 as well as averaging 22.75 with the bat. While he would admit there has been an element of fortune about some of those wickets – he had Cheteshwar Pujara caught at midwicket in Chennai after his pull shot bounced off the back of the short-leg fielder – he has also produced some fine deliveries. Even on the final day in Chennai, he had Washington Sundar caught behind off a fast, sharply turning offbreak.But those full tosses are a worry and suggest problems in either temperament, technique or perhaps both. That leaves England having to decide whether it is better for Bess’ long-term future to stick with him for another game and risk the possibility of exposing him to further difficulties, or leaving him out and denting his confidence.Dom Bess had and up and down performance in Chennai•BCCI

One option would be for them to recall Moeen Ali for the second Test. But Moeen hasn’t played a first-class game since September (and a Test since August 2019) and may also be short of bowling having recently had to spend two weeks in isolation after being diagnosed with Covid-19 when England arrived in Sri Lanka.Silverwood, though, is adamant that he is a “viable option” for the second Test and will know he scored two centuries on England’s most recent Test tour of India.”Moeen has worked as hard as he can with the facilities we have,” Silverwood said. “Obviously he has not played in a game and we know that. We accept that those are the times we are in, but should he play, I would have every confidence in him.”The underlying issue with Bess is that he is having to learn his trade at the highest level. With County Championship cricket providing few opportunities for spin bowlers to play, let alone bowl the volume of overs they require, he is effectively gaining the experience he needs against the toughest opposition and under the glare of the brightest spotlight. With that in mind, the England management may decide the only way he will gain more experience is by bearing with him through the inevitable bumps in the road that will occur as he develops.If Silverwood had come to a conclusion on the issue, he was not sharing it on Wednesday. Instead, England will return to the nets on Thursday – the entire squad had a rest day following the Test – and perhaps make a decision after that training session.

Australia retain the Ashes as England fall short in gutsy rearguard

Australia have retained the Ashes on English soil for the first time since 2001, after digging deep into their reserves in the final hour at Old Trafford

The Report by Andrew Miller08-Sep-2019 Australia 497 for 8 (Smith 211, Labuschagne 67) and 186 for 6 dec (Smith 82) beat England 301 (Burns 81, Root 71) and 197 (Denly 53, Cummins 4-43) by 185 runs

Australia have retained the Ashes on English soil for the first time since 2001, after digging deep into their reserves in the final hour at Old Trafford to achieve the catharsis that eluded them at Headingley last week, and outlast another gallant bout of English resistance in yet another cliffhanging finish.This time, mere survival was the limit of England’s ambition, but as the tension tightened in another nail-shredding final session, it took an unlikely hero to unlock the resistance of a familiar cult figure. At 178 for 8 in the 76th over shortly after tea, Jack Leach – promoted to No.10 after his role in England’s third Test miracle – joined the nerveless Craig Overton, and saw off the new ball with guts and determination in a ninth-wicket stand that spanned the best part of 15 overs.So Tim Paine, Australia’s captain, chose an unlikely means to pick the lock. With men crowded round the bat, he tossed the ball to the part-time legspinner Marnus Labuschagne, who was given licence to give it a rip and see what he could achieve out of the ever-deepening footholes. Sure enough, he was able to spit one out of the rough and thump the left-hander’s glove for Matthew Wade to snaffle the crucial catch, to send Leach on his way for a valiant 12 from 51 balls.The resistance didn’t last much longer. Back came Australia’s senior seamers, and down – at the last – fell Overton, pinned on the knee by another nipbacker from Josh Hazlewood, and though he rolled the dice on England’s final review, it was all academic. Three reds on the big screen prompted an outpouring of Aussie joy – their shattering setback in Leeds last week a thing of the past as they pulled ahead 2-1 in the series with just next week’s fifth Test at The Oval to come. After waiting 18 years for success on English soil, the sweetness of this moment will do for now. But a series win is what this side deserves after outplaying their opponents on a far more consistent basis than the current scoreline implies.That England took it this deep, however, was a tribute to the depth of character that exists within their dressing room – even if the events of the past five days have exposed technical flaws that no amount of heart and tenacity can overcome.After the mess that Pat Cummins had made of England’s top order on the previous evening, bagging Rory Burns and Joe Root for back-to-back ducks, expectations were low when Joe Denly and Jason Roy resumed in the morning session with the score still stuck on a grim 18 for 2. And yet, in differing styles all the way down the batting card, England stitched together a tapestry of heroic cameos that added up to an absorbing day of sporting theatre, even if it couldn’t quite carry them over the line this time.The tone for the day was set in the first 80 minutes of a fraught but absorbing morning session, as Roy and Denly endured, with tenacity at first against the discipline of Cummins and Hazlewood, and then with more opportunistic intent as the spin of Nathan Lyon was coupled with Mitchell Starc’s less metronomic but potentially deadly left-arm line.There were moments of looseness from Denly in particular – a wild swipe at a wide one from Starc that skidded over the head of third slip took the biscuit – but it was Roy who was the first to succumb, bowled for the fifth time in ten Test innings as Cummins obliterated his off stump with a scorching inducker. For all that he had fought valiantly against that same hard-handed technique that had propelled England to World Cup glory just two months ago, the manner of Roy’s parting, after 67 balls of obduracy, was wearyingly familiar, as he pushed way ahead of his body, and buckled as the ball jagged back through the resultant gap.Six overs later, and England’s promising start was a distant memory, as Cummins accounted for the biggest scalp of the lot. As Ben Stokes showed in the early part of his Headingley miracle, he can stonewall with the best of them these days. And he did little wrong against the ball that eventually bagged him – save under-estimate the bounce that Cummins was able to extract from just back of a length, as it snagged the under-edge of an attempted leave. The umpire was unmoved, but Tim Paine had no doubt, and Stokes duly walked rather than wait for the inevitable review.Denly, however, was still in his bubble, and having taken England to lunch in partnership with Jonny Bairstow, he brought up his second fifty in as many first innings three overs after the break with a compact drive for four through mid-off off Cummins. The fact that he had now risen to become England’s best hope of salvation was perhaps an indictment of England’s selection more than anything else, but it was hard to dispute the grit on display.It wasn’t built to last, however, and on 53, Denly succumbed to the best ball of an otherwise underwhelming spell from Lyon, who appeared to be struggling with a cut on his spinning finger, and whose tight line on off stump had been consistently turning the ball safely past leg. This time, however, he offered more air on the widest line of his spell, and a ripper out of Starc’s footmarks thudded the glove en route to Labuschagne under the lid.At 93 for 5, the scoreline looked uncompromising, but the relative ease of England’s survival in the first three hours of play was all the incentive that Bairstow and Buttler needed to knuckle down and grind their way through the second hour of the session. With the ageing ball offering little in the way of assistance, Paine took to shuffling his pack, at one stage implementing nine bowling changes in 14 overs, including an early sighting of Labuschagne in tandem with Travis Head’s offspin, before Starc’s switch to the James Anderson End eventually reaped its reward. Bairstow, on 25 from 61 balls, was thumped on the pad flap, albeit deep in his crease, and sent on his way lbw – the subsequent review confirming the ball would have clipped the top of middle.In came Overton, the first of the bowlers and the beginning of the end, it seemed. Not so fast. Overton’s selection had raised several eyebrows before the match – but there was plenty that the selectors admired about his spirit in adversity on the tour of Australia and New Zealand two years ago, not least with the bat, where he made a gutsy 41 not out on debut at Adelaide, before top-scored from No.10 in the 58-all-out at Auckland.Sure enough, it wasn’t long before his solid stride down the track was negating Lyon’s threat, and he even managed to middle the ball from Cummins for which he was erroneously given out lbw for 7 – not that the third umpire, Ruchira Palliyaguruge, could decipher that fact from the technology at his disposal. Overton only survived when HawkEye subsequently showed he’d been struck outside the line.Australia by now were looking flat, but just as had been the case in the first innings at Edgbaston last month, a change of ball when the original went out of shape prompting an upsurge in threat. Steve Smith’s reaction on examining the replacement was revealing – we waved it aloft as if to say we’ve hit the jackpot here, and it wasn’t long before the ball was bending round corners – one screeching inswinger to Buttler was particularly unplayable.The breakthrough came via a cunning bluff from Hazlewood, who posted a pair of close catchers right under Buttler’s nose, to force him to think again about propping onto the front foot in seeing off the length ball. With half a mind on the rib-tickler too, Buttler allowed himself to hang back and shouldered arms to the wrong delivery – a beautiful nipbacker that cracked into the top of off.Out to the middle came Jofra Archer, whose allround talents may have their use one day. Today, however, was never going to be his day. Lyon took less than an over to pin him plumb lbw with one that grubbed after turning, to bring Leach back to face the music once again.The crowd roared for their cult hero, not least when the famous cloth came out of his pocket to wipe the steam off those ever-foggy spectacles, and there was steam coming out of Cummins’ ears soon afterwards, as he reverted to a round-the-wicket line and crashed a bouncer off Leach’s helmet.That approach, however, was a sign that the recently claimed new ball wasn’t quite having the impact they had hoped. Something more funky was required to dislodge England’s ninth-wicket pair, as thoughts became to turn very tentatively to that famous rearguard in Cardiff in 2009 – another series in which Australia were consistently the better team in spite of evidence to the contrary.Over to Marnus and his speculative leggies. And on now to The Oval, with all and nothing to play for. Australia dearly want and deserve a series win, but the retention of the urn was their primary objective. That has been gloriously achieved.

Darren Sammy on Steven Smith: Not right to 'keep kicking a man when he's down'

Sammy and Chris Gayle have asked that everyone move on from the Newlands ball-tampering controversy and let Smith and David Warner get on with their lives

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Jun-20180:32

Steven Smith returns to cricket

Darren Sammy has asked the media to move on from the Newlands ball-tampering controversy and get off Steven Smith’s back. Sammy is set to captain Smith on Thursday night, when they team up for Toronto Nationals against Vancouver Knights in the inaugural match of Global T20 Canada.Deposed Australia captain Smith and his erstwhile deputy David Warner are serving 12-month suspensions from international and state cricket and the Big Bash League for their role in the controversy. They are both set to play in Global T20 Canada, with Warner part of Winnipeg Hawks’ roster.Smith has been the subject of heightened media attention in Australia in recent weeks. On Tuesday, a photograph of Smith drinking a beer in a New York pub was splashed over the newspapers, with one headline saying, “Disgraced Smith a sad sight in New York”. At a media interaction on Wednesday night, Sammy mentioned this story and said it wasn’t right to “keep kicking a man when he’s down”.”As a Christian, you commit sins, there are punishments for your sins. [It] doesn’t mean everything is okay, but there’s always forgiveness after you’ve committed your sins and paid the price, and you move on. Like we said, they’ve done that. They’ve missed out on IPL, they’ve been sacked and all that stuff, but at the end of the day life goes on.”It’s truly up to you guys (the media). I saw an article, recently, about something in New York. That’s not called for. You’ve made your point. I think, as sportsmen, we want to do the right things, set the example for the next generation. We will make mistakes, but it doesn’t mean you’ve got to keep kicking a man when he’s down. That’s not the humane way to do things, and I think there’s a right to punish but there’s also a right to forgive and move on.”Chris Gayle, who will captain Vancouver Knights in Global T20 Canada, had tweeted his thoughts on the punishments handed out to Smith and Warner in the wake of the ball-tampering scandal, saying he felt a one-year suspension was “harsh”. He said he did not want to comment on it again, but asked that the two players be allowed to “go on with their lives”.”I’m not diverting to the situation,” Gayle said. “I’ve actually tweeted what I had to say about the situation, and decided I wasn’t going to comment on it again, just let the two guys be free.”They’ve already paid a penalty for what they’ve done, and just for them to go on with their lives and have some fun, just like any other cricketer, to fulfill and work for the family, and they can actually provide on the table for them. People make mistakes, you have to give people a chance, and everybody should have to try on from this situation, and rest it to the grave.”

Perry shakes off injury troubles for World Cup

Ellyse Perry has put an injury-blighted summer behind her ahead of the looming World Cup, and expects English conditions to aid Australia’s pace battery in their defence of the crown won in 2013

Daniel Brettig09-Jun-2017Ellyse Perry has put an injury-blighted summer behind her ahead of the looming World Cup, and expects English conditions to aid Australia’s pace battery in their defence of the crown won in 2013.The Australian women’s squad departs for England on Saturday, and Perry said the team’s Queensland-based preparation over the past five weeks was of the comprehensive nature now necessary for a tournament more competitive than ever before.”Every team’s going to be a real threat to us in this World Cup – there are no easy games,” Perry said. “The competition is going to be incredible and the added interest and publicity around the tournament as well, and the fact England always host really great tournaments mean it’s going to be awesome for us and for everyone involved.”It’s the biggest preparation I’ve ever been involved in, we had a bit of time after the New Zealand series in March and then we’ve had five weeks of camps up in Brisbane and on the Sunshine Coast as a group basically training and preparing. That’s been good, it was a mix of nets and fitness and then some games and scenarios towards the end. It’s been a really solid preparation.”Australia’s team is much changed from the combination that won in India four years ago, and Perry said much of the team’s planning and training had been based around ensuring the pace contingent, of which the 26-year-old is the spearhead, will be able to perform at the requisite high standard.”I think in any World Cup team you’ve got to have a really good balance between your spin and pace options, particularly going over to England where the ball swings and seams a bit more as well,” Perry said. “We’ve got a nice balance now, the pace unit probably had a fair bit of work to do over the past couple of months to get up to the standards that our spin unit was setting.”The 50-over format being every four years it definitely has an added element of being really special and those experiences in past tournaments always help. We’ve got quite an inexperienced squad with a blend of new faces as well, and I think everyone is really excited about that. In my recollection it’s going to be the biggest World Cup we’ve ever had in terms of how the game’s grown over the last couple of years.”A hamstring injury during the WBBL severely interrupted the latter half of Perry’s Australian summer, and on her return to the national side she was also affected by an elbow problem – ailments she was happy to say were now behind her. “I’m feeling great which has been really nice,” Perry said. “I had a bit of a disrupted end to the summer, but we had a month off and then the prep I’ve been able to do with the squad is great.”

Game
Register
Service
Bonus