Still no play for Boland and Strikers

After two days of rain, the players in the Supersport Series match betweenBoland and the Highveld Strikers woke up to a sunny day on Sunday and musthave expected to get on the field and finally start the match.But when they arrived at Boland Park, the outfield resembled a marsh, as theheavy rain over the past two days failed to drain sufficiently.The umpires took the decision that play would be impossible at any stageduring the day and informed the captains that they will try again on Monday.The weather has made a result impossible unless the sides attempt tocontrive a finish and forfeit an innings. That is unlikely though, given thecurrent cricket match-fixing scandal, as neither team will want to appear tobe manufacturing a result.Play, hopefully, will start on Monday, which may appear to be an exercise infutility, but is still of importance. The Highveld Strikers urgently needpoints and if they could pick up two or three bonus points, it would aidtheir slim chances of qualifying for the Super Eight phase of thecompetition.

Frustrating day as rain is the winner at Northampton

Rain allowed only 55 minutes’ play on the second day of the Division One contest between Northamptonshire and Kent at Wantage Road.The hosts progressed from 228-4 overnight to 277-5, losing the wicket of Tony Penberthy (77) in adding 49 runs.An overnight deluge ruled out any cricket until 12.30pm, and in the third over of the day Ben Trott had Penberthy caught behind without adding to his Wednesday night score. The Cornishman had struck 15 fours in his three-hour stay.Graeme Swann and Toby Bailey – unbeaten on 28 and 20 respectively – secured a second batting bonus point for Northants, and guided their side to 269-5 at lunch.Only three more overs were bowled after the break when more rain drove the players from the field and prompted an early tea.Umpires Peter Willey and George Sharp planned to inspect the conditions at 4pm, but by that stage the skies were darkening again and they decided that nothing more could be done.

Ajmal has contract suspended after outburst

Saeed Ajmal has had his PCB contract suspended following his recent outburst about the testing procedures for suspect actions where he accused the ICC of double standards.Ajmal was given a category B deal earlier this year in the latest batch of central contacts having been demoted from the top level following his difficult return to international cricket after remodelling his action.”Why just target the off-spinners?”Ajmal asked in interviews with Zainab Abbas on Dunya News and with Geo Super. “Why not the left-arm spinners, legspinners or fast bowlers?”I can tell you that I have been through this bowling assessment process so many times and have watched and studied this issue so closely that I can vouch that if tests were carried out, there would be many other bowlers whose bowling actions would exceed the 15 degrees extension limit.”Shaharyar Khan, the PCB chairman, said: “I am disappointed what Saeed said recently and we have taken a minimum action against him by suspending [his contract] and held his monthly retainer. We have also asked him to write to us about why he talked like that. We have always supported him, helped him throughout in his tough time and even hired Saqlain Mushtaq to work on his action.”Ajmal has not played for Pakistan since April when he took one wicket in two ODIs against Bangladesh and was also wicketless in a T20. During the 2015 English season he struggled for Worcestershire in the County Championship, claiming 16 wickets at 55.62.

Rudolph century boosts Yorkshire

First Division

Essex’s innings ends as Danish Kaneria is caught by Eoin Morgan at Lord’s © Cricinfo
 

Jacques Rudolph’s century propelled Yorkshire to a handy 339 for 6 against leaders Somerset at Taunton, although he was nipped out just before the close for 155, one of a trio for Ian Blackwell. Rudolph and Gerard Brophy shared a fourth-wicket stand worth 130 before falling within 15 runs of each other. Somerset welcomed back Andy Caddick after his shoulder injury but he finished with 0 for 70 off 16 overs.Callum Thorp’s 5 for 64 was the highlight of a bowler’s day for Durham at Chester-le-Street, his third first-class five-for in 27 matches. The Harmison brothers cleaned up the other five between them, Stephen with two and Ben with 3 for 25. Michael Carberry and Sean Ervine both made fifties to push Hampshire‘s total to 239 but they should have done much better as their last eight wickets contributed only 80. Durham lost Mark Stoneman in reaching 59 for 2 and could have been in even more trouble had Michael Di Venuto not survived a claim for a catch at slip when he had made 6.The opening day of Kent‘s tussle with Sussex was lost to the rain at Canterbury. Having had to shift the FP Trophy quarter-final away from the ground on Wednesday, it was still not fit for play on Friday after steady drizzle throughout the morning. Play was abandoned at 3pm.To find out how Lancashire fared against Nottinghamshire, read John Ward’s report from Old Trafford.

Second Division

Charl Langeveldt and Graham Wagg took four wickets each as Derbyshire bowled out Worcestershire for a lowly 151 at Chesterfield. The visitors, who won the toss, were indebted to No. 10 Steve Magoffin’s 33 for lifting them from 101 for 9 to something slightly less paltry. Langeveldt claimed the key wicket of Vikram Solanki, superbly caught at second slip, then Graeme Hick dragged Jonathan Clare into his stumps. Clare could have had another, but spilled a tough return catch off Ben Smith, although wickets were never far away.Stand-in captain Ian Westwood batted all day to make an unbeaten 139 as Warwickshire reached 278 for 4 against Glamorgan at Cardiff. He and Navdeep Poonia (37) put on 119 for the first wicket and though Michael Powell fell on the same score, Westwood, drop by Robert Croft at first slip off Alex Wharf when on 70, remained resolute.Fifties from Marcus North and Alex Gidman lifted Gloucestershire from a stumbling 77 for 2 to a sturdier 258 for 4 against Northamptonshire at Northampton, with North still unbeaten on 84, after reaching his fifty off 88 balls following an indifferent run of form. The Kolpak pair of Johan wan der Wath and Andrew Hall did the damage alongside Johann Louw. It needed a team effort to remove Hamish Marshall, who edged to second slip only for David Sales to fumble the chance. However, Hall was alert at first slip to take the rebound.To read Martin Williamson’s report on how Middlesex‘s Tim Murtagh took six wickets to knock Essex over for 161 – all ten wickets being catches – click here.

Captain's knock by Ronnie Irani

A good innings from skipper Ronnie Irani who made 95, helped Essex torecover from 13 for three to make 292 all out in 103.2 overs againstfellow Division Two County Championship promotion hopefuls Glamorganat Southend on the first day today.Irani (95) and Stuart Law (70) put together a partnership of 111 forthe fourth wicket before Law fell to Robert Croft. Irani was out toDean Cosker, the left arm spinner.The other impressive performer for Essex was the debutant James Foster(52) who fell to Steve Watkin. For Glamorgan, Watkin, Croft and DarrenThomas took three wickets each.In reply, Glamorgan were 40 for 1 with Steve James being the batsmandismissed for 30 by Ashley Cowan. In the process he crossed 1000 runsfor the season.

Rogers ton boosts Victoria's hopes


ScorecardChris Rogers scored his 72nd first-class hundred•Getty Images

Victoria significantly boosted their chances of claiming the Sheffield Shield title by batting through day three in Hobart, where play was shortened due to bad light and rain. Chris Rogers scored a century in what is likely to be his last first-class match in Australia, and critically for Western Australia only three wickets fell throughout the day.As the home team, Victoria would be comfortable with a draw, which would give them the title, and they were in no hurry to move the score along too quickly on the third day. Western Australia now have two days in which to claim the remaining seven wickets of Victoria’s first innings, bat again to build a lead, and then skittle the Bushrangers a second time.Victoria started the day at 0 for 135 and the openers added a further 50 before the first wicket fell, that of Rogers, who was lbw trying to sweep Ashton Agar for 112. It was the 72nd first-class hundred for Rogers, who has indicated he is likely to retire after this year’s Ashes tour, at least from cricket in Australia, and his efforts have increased the chances of him going out a Shield winner.His opening partner Rob Quiney followed soon afterwards, caught at short midwicket off Nathan Coulter-Nile for 69, and David Hussey made 33 before he was lbw to Simon Mackin. However, Western Australia missed a golden opportunity to get rid of Marcus Stoinis, who on 21 was put down at short midwicket by Marcus Harris off the bowling of Andrew Tye.Rain and then bad light cut into play in the final session of the day, and Victoria went to stumps on 3 for 288, with Stoinis on 43 and Peter Handscomb on 16. They trailed Western Australia by 133 runs, but wickets were the key factor for the Warriors.

East Zone, South Zone remain on top with draws

South Zone continued to be second on the points table after their drawn game against Central Zone in Fatullah. South Zone have 33 points, the same as East Zone, who are on top.Batting first, Central Zone were bowled out for 413 runs with Rony Talukdar (106) getting to his seventh first-class hundred before he was caught behind off Mustafizur Rahman. His dismissal, however, sparked a collapse that saw them lurch to 262 for 8, before a 137-run ninth-wicket stand between Mosharraf Hossain (89) and Elias Sunny (58*) helped them towards 400.In reply, South Zone saw centuries from Shahriar Nafees, Mosaddek Hossain and Sohag Gazi to post 541. Nafees made 161 with 19 fours and a six while Mosaddek struck ten fours and seven sixes during his 153. Gazi, coming in at No. 8, struck a brisk 106 off 108.Mosharraf backed his 89 with 7 for 173, using his left-arm spin, and was later named Man of the Match. When Mosharraf dismissed Abdur Razzak, he became the fifth Bangladeshi bowler to take 300 first-class wickets. The others are Enamul Haque jnr, Elias, Mohammad Sharif and Razzak.South Zone’s 128-run lead meant that Central Zone had to bat out the last four hours on the fourth day to safety. They crawled to 69 for 4 in 56 overs. Razzak took 3 for 20 while Mustafizur took the other wicket.Rain marred the fourth day’s play as the match between East Zone and North Zone ended in a draw in Chittagong.Batting first, East Zone racked up 473 thanks to Alok Kapali’s 228 and Asif Ahmed’s 103. It was Kapali’s second double-hundred in first-class cricket, having batted for more than eight hours.North Zone opener Junaid Siddique nearly followed-up with a double-century of his own but fell seven runs short. North Zone were bowled out for 384 with no other batsman scoring more than 35. Junaid struck 17 fours and two sixes during his near eight-hour effort.Play began only at 1.45pm on the fourth day and East Zone reached 106 for 4 as the game petered out to a draw.

New Zealand chairman steps down

Sir John Anderson is set to retire as the chairman of New Zealand Cricket at tomorrow’s AGM after 13 years in the post.”Since 1995 Sir John has paved the way forward for a resurgence in cricket in New Zealand and his governance during that time has revitalised the sport and its finances, and has seen NZC successfully manage its way through some turbulent issues,” Justin Vaughan, New Zealand Cricket’s CEO, said. “His leadership will be missed.”Anderson, 63, was appointed chairman in 1995 and subsequently became the country’s representative on the ICC board, a position he now relinquishes. A board member, Alan Isaac, will take over Anderson’s position during the interim until a replacement is formally elected on September 29.In addition, Chris Moller, the former chief executive of New Zealand Rugby Union, has been appointed as a NZC board director. The board also recommended that Don Neely, the president of NZC, who has concluded his second one-year term, be re-elected for a final term.

Scottish first minister wants TV coverage of ODI

Alex Salmond, the Scottish first minister, has urged the BBC to reconsider its decision not to cover the first-ever ODI between Scotland and England at the Grange in August.Salmond is a cricket fan and believes that the BBC does not do enough to cover sport outside major events such as rugby’s Six Nations Championships, football’s European Championships and Wimbledon. He said it was “hugely disappointing” that the BBC had chosen to snub the historic cricketing contest in Scotland on August 18, which is likely to feature stars such as Kevin Pietersen, Paul Collingwood and possibly Andrew Flintoff.It is, according to the Cricket Scotland chief executive, Roddy Smith “the biggest match we have ever staged” and is expected to draw a capacity crowd of 6000.Salmond will be there in person, but intends to raise the matter at Holyrood this week and has the support of Margo MacDonald, the chairperson of the parliament’s Cross-Party Sports group.”This is an important sporting event in Scotland and television and radio should be rising to the occasion,” said Salmond. “It would be hugely disappointing if it came and went without being broadcast and it should certainly be shown, given the widespread and growing interest in the game throughout Scotland.”MacDonald, who is the honorary patron of Edinburgh CC has already written to the BBC to express her dismay at the decision. Cricinfo has a copy of her letter, which spells out her belief that BBC Scotland should stop obsessing over football and provide a better service to licence payers.”Whilst appreciating the massive commitment to the Olympic Games, I still think that BBC Scotland has a duty to cover important sporting events in their own country,” said MacDonald. “This cricket match, I believe, could act as an effective catalyst in persuading youngsters in particular to engage in a sport in which Scotland is growing its own heroes and role models.”It seems strange, to say the least, that the BBC should not deem this one-day event worthy of coverage. This is a historic, ground-breaking occasion, and I intend to fight this decision.”The BBC has been widely criticised for its failure to cover the recent Scotland rugby tour of Argentina, where they beat the Pumas for the first time since 1990. Salmond and MacDonald have no intention of allowing the Corporation to show a similar lack of interest in the cricket.

Taylor responds in kind to England's aggression


Scorecard and ball-by-ball commentary

Brendon McCullum is expertly held by Paul Collingwood at first slip © Getty Images
 

Ross Taylor is many things: gifted, certainly; confident of course. Predictable? Perhaps not. Yet on a day which saw four New Zealand wickets fall, his breathless 67 has given his side the edge when England had their tails up. When bad light forced an early close, New Zealand had reached a reasonably comfortable 202 for 4 with Taylor not-out.His 52-ball fifty, his fourth in Tests, staved off a resurgent afternoon bowling performance England who, led by the tireless Ryan Sidebottom, reduced New Zealand from a solid 80 without loss to a shaky 123 for 4. What made Taylor’s performance all the more impressive was its speed and range of strokes; as ever, he was in top gear from the off, and while his detractors must find it infuriating when a crunching drive finds extra cover’s gleeful hands, they can’t complain on days like today when the gaps were threaded with such precision and panache. Brendon McCullum had fallen for 11, and Jacob Oram batted like a blindman in a hurricane. New Zealand needed Taylor, and he duly responded.He was indebted to New Zealand’s openers, however. In the past four years, the team has tried 14 different pairs at the top of the order – never with any consistent success – but, at last, they might have found one. For now, at least. Jamie How and Aaron Redmond’s attacking partnership was New Zealand’s first of fifty or more since How and Craig Cumming in 2006, and their highest since Stephen Fleming and Mark Richardson put on 163 at Trent Bridge four years ago. Little evidence was seen of Redmond’s stickability at Lord’s, but there was plenty this morning. Indeed, perhaps the most telling aspect of the passage was the pair’s dismissive attitude of Monty Panesar, who took 18 cheap wickets in two Tests at the ground prior to today, who was introduced after just 37 unimpressive minutes of mediocre fast bowling. The Old Trafford pitch, famed for its pace, played like a pudding.Panesar was hurried into the attack, but in spite of his excellent record at the ground, not even he could stem the flow of runs – even with the grip he gained. This, though, was due in part to a clear policy of attack from both batsmen, Remond lifting him over the top for a brutal four before How swept him over midwicket, nearly for six. New Zealand weren’t just staving off England’s attack: they were dominating, and How brought up his third fifty from 75 balls with a calm tuck off his hip. Panesar was nullified and muted. So was a perplexed Michael Vaughan.Enter Sidebottom and, for the umpteenth time since his remarkable international renaissance last year, the game was suddenly changed. Replacing Stuart Broad 20 minutes before lunch, Sidebottom brought himself around the wicket and found several deliveries to move away from Redmond. But, in a brilliant set-up, he moved one back into the right-hander who fatally shouldered arms, the ball clipping his off bail. England weren’t done yet: in Sidebottom’s next over, again around the wicket, he straightened one from wide of the crease into Marshall’s pads, and England had their second wicket to levy the balance.Whatever England enjoyed for lunch clearly did the trick. Anderson – so insipid in the morning – bowled with genuine hostility and fire, removing How for 64 with a fine outswinger. McCullum threatened, as he always will, clattering Panesar over the top. However, Panesar out-thought him with a wonderfully flighted delivery that stopped on McCullum, his thick edge parrying off Tim Ambrose’s gloves to Paul Collingwood at first slip who held a skilful catch to his right. New Zealand’s promising start had been ripped apart from 80 without loss to a precarious 123 for 4.The real excitement came from Anderson, though. On a pitch greased up by persistent Manchester drizzle, he tore into Daniel Flynn and Taylor and although he leaked runs, no batsman looked comfortable against him. A vicious, straight bouncer hurried onto Flynn who couldn’t snap his head out of the way, the ball hammering into (and removing) his left front tooth. It was a ferocious, bloody blow and he was forced to retire. Most intriguingly of all, Oram – masterful at Lord’s last week – was similarly nervous and incompetent against Anderson’s continued barrage of short-pitched brutes. Time after time he fended bouncers off his gloves (one of which cannoned off his helmet) and, as tea approached, he looked remarkably hapless for a man fresh from a Test hundred at Lord’s.What a contrast it was, then, to see Taylor pound his way to fifty. A straight drive off Anderson oozed class; a firm cut off Panesar demonstrated his feet were moving nicely; his natural petulant aggression came through with a monstrous pull over midwicket before two memorable cuts, hit with astonishing power, took him to fifty. Broad, like Anderson, was guilty of overpitching and Taylor – unlike any of his team-mates – had found sublime timing upon which to capitalise. His and Oram’s fifth-wicket fifty came from 75 momentum-grasping balls.Manchester’s mizzle threatened for much of the afternoon and eventually bad light called off play shortly before tea. New Zealand go into the second day with their noses just about in front, keenly aware of the need for a big first innings.