Chappell lays down law to Redbacks

Gaining respect from other states is at the top of the South Australian cricket team’s “to do” list as it attempts to erase the memory of a lacklustre last season.State cricket manager Greg Chappell laid down the law to his squad after it took the Pura Cup four day tournament’s wooden spoon and narrowly missed the final of the one-day competition in 2000-01.”At the moment South Australian cricket has very little respect,” Chappell told AAP.”We’ve had little blips on the radar where we’ve produced a group of players who have been good enough and desperate enough to win the competition.”But by and large, if you took a straw poll within the competition, we don’t have much respect and we never have.”The former Australian captain said his players needed to display the desire to be successful as well as good form.”If they meet that, they’ll be chosen, if they don’t, then they better start thinking about another career,” he said.”I don’t have any set ideas on who our first side is going to be.”Form is obviously going to count but commitment is also going to count.”As part of its mental preparation for the coming season, the Redbacks squad will take part in a training camp in Victoria on Wednesday and Thursday.The camp, conducted in the Hattah-Kulkyne National Park near Mildura, will focus on goal setting and team building.It will be the second year in a row the squad has taken part in the camp.The Redbacks have also called in a sports psychologist, who will be available to work with players throughout their season, which starts with a day-night limited overs match against Western Australia in Perth on October 12.Chappell said he had also spoken to players about publicity surrounding his contract negotiations earlier this year.”Within our group, it’s never been a huge issue,” Chappell said.After negotiations were resolved in May, SA Cricket Association chief executive Michael Deare said this summer would more than likely be Chappell’s last in charge of the Redbacks.Deare said due to other business interests, Chappell wanted to live in the eastern states this summer and commute to Adelaide to coach the Redbacks but the SACA found the proposal “totally unacceptable”.Chappell’s current contract expires at the end of March next year.

Championship cut gathers vital support

The prospect of a restructured county season – with a reduced Championship schedule and limited-overs cricket played in blocks – has come a step closer.ESPNcricinfo understands that the county chairmen, despite the wishes of the majority of their chief executives, agreed in principle to many of the proposals outlined by the ECB executive at a meeting at Lord’s on Wednesday afternoon.As a result, the ECB will take those proposals – including a 14-game Championship season – to the management board at the end of this month when they can expect them to be rubber-stamped. Other proposals include playing fewer T20 games on Friday nights.The aim of the proposals is to make more room in the schedule for more rest, recovery and practise. The ECB hope it will lead to an improvement in the standard of white-ball cricket, in particular, and aim for many of them to be introduced as early as 2016 in the hope they can help England progress in the 2017 Champions Trophy. The 2019 World Cup will, like the Champions Trophy, be played in England in relatively early summer.But the development is likely to cause conflict around the counties. Not only will the proposals affect the integrity of the County Championship in the short term – it seems likely that the 2016 season will feature an asymmetrical fixture list with counties no longer playing all other sides in their division home and away – but they will alter the schedule of the domestic T20 competition, the NatWest Blast.The Blast has been a success story for county cricket. Two years into a four-year experiment that features the majority of matches being played on Friday night, the competition has seen increased gates of around 20% this year alone.Under the new proposals, fewer games will be played on Fridays and more games will be played in a block. While those plans will be favoured by many players and coaches – who say it will improve the standard and reduce injuries – it may leave the competition at the mercy of poor weather and spectators asked to pay more in a short period of time to attend games.The fear from some in the county game is that by arresting the progress of the current domestic T20 competition, the ECB are preparing for the ground for a fresh attempt to introduce city-based cricket involving only eight sides. Some on the executive team insist that broadcasters will be willing to pay more for such a competition and that it will give the domestic game an opportunity to rebrand itself to a new audience.The current audience may be underwhelmed, though. County members have not been consulted on the current proposals and, as recently as Tuesday – when the ECB held the first of two meetings at Lord’s – the county chief executives rejected them. The reduction in the Championship programme will also reduce the possibilities of outground or festival cricket.”I expect a very negative reaction from our members,” one county official told ESPNcricinfo. “Much of the good work we have undertaken to drive up attendances will be undone.”Some of the more extreme proposals have been rejected, though. At one stage the ECB suggested that a 14-game Championship programme could be achieved next season by creating a top division of eight teams and a bottom division of 10 teams; a scenario that would have involved either three teams being relegated from the top division this season or one promoted from the bottom. The different sized divisions may still be introduced as early as 2017.The suggestion that city-based cricket could be introduced in either 50-over or T20 cricket has also been rejected for now. But it is clear that the ECB executive, led by new chief executive Tom Harrison and new chairman, Colin Graves, are determined to drive through change. This may well prove the first step in the most radical change to the domestic game since the introduction of T20 cricket in 2003.But with county chairmen and county chief executives split – even within individual counties – there may be some conflict ahead.

Lee breaks speed gun record

Brett Lee bowled the fastest delivery ever recorded by speed gun, clocking 157.4 kilometres per hour (kph) with a ball to South Africa’s Jacques Kallis on the first morning of the Second Test in Cape Town.The first ball of the 17th over just beat Pakistan’s Shoaib Akhtar’s 157.2 kph, which was registered in a one-day international against Australia at Cardiff in June 2001.Lee’s previous fastest recorded delivery was measured at 156 kph against South Africa in a one-day international in Johannesburg in the 1999-2000 season.A delivery from Jeff Thomson was timed at 158.4 kph back in the 1970s, but the timing technology used was different.Lee, 25, is playing in his 20th Test for Australia. Earlier in the opening session, the New South Wales speedster claimed his 78th Test wicket when Gary Kirsten edged to Mark Waugh.

'The best County Championship season ever'

The waiting game: Chris Adams relaxes with a beer after beating Worcestershire … only four-and-a-half hours to go © Getty Images

After four-and-a-half hours of waiting, Chris Adams punched the air with delight as Dominic Cork was bowled 60 miles away at The Oval. Sussex had won their third title in five years in what he described as “the best County Championship season ever”.Talking to Sky Sports, Adams said: “I’m just overwhelmed. We started the day needing five wickets, we got them and then we had to watch that. I’d say to Lancashire ‘you played well, you had a hard season, there’s no shame in your performance and you nearly did it’.”It’s been the most excruciating afternoon. We were panicking like hell in there. My team have been brilliant. They’ve been awesome on and off the field. The test of a true team is if you retain your trophy and we did it. You play 16 games of four-day cricket so the best team has to win, we proved that but only by the slimmest of margins. We got there by the skin of our teeth.”At The Oval, Mark Chilton, Lancashire’s captain, was in tears as he admitted that he had “never seen a changing room like it in my life.”I’m extremely proud of what our guys have achieved though. As captain I’m privileged to have seen the efforts they have put in. To get close to our target was a phenomenal effort but the lads are just broken. Our players have risen to an almighty challenge and to come so close is an enormous effort.”Mushtaq Ahmed, who took 13 wickets in the match and whose 90 wickets in the season were again instrumental in Sussex’s success, said: “I had an extra pray and asked Allah to give us another Championship. If you give 100% then Allah will always favour you.

He’s a fabulous character and he inspires so many of the other players. It’ll be a sad day when he goes Chris Adams on Mushtaq Ahmed Optional related link

“The people here are so kind and lovely. It’s a family club and I’d like to thank them. But you have to give 100% and the players cheer each other up and are united – when people are not doing well we back them up. You have to stay together when there are ups and downs. It’s a very special moment for Sussex but we’ve had to work hard for our win.”Adams singled out Mushtaq for praise. “He’s been bowled into the ground … not that he’ll mind. It’s not only his ability, it’s his commitment, his desire to keep bowling overs. He just turns up and keeps churning out the overs and waning to take wickets. He’s a fabulous character and he inspires so many of the other players. It’ll be a sad day when he goes.”

Lewis extends contract and earns benefit

Jon Lewis – things are going his way © Getty Images

Jon Lewis has extended his contract with Gloucestershire and will have a benefit next year, too. Lewis, who captains the side, will be in his 12th year at Bristol.This is the latest heartening news for Lewis, who earlier this year made his Test debut at the age of the 30, and has been named in England’s Champions Trophy squad for the tournament this month.I have always felt really proud to be a Gloucestershire player,” Lewis said, “and am looking forward to leading the team to more success on the field.”I wish to thank everyone for their continued support and am already looking forward to next season.”

Cronje book in huge demand

Although South African cricket has largely left the troubles of the Hansie Cronje era behind, there is still a fascination surrounding the whole matchfixing controversy if the sales of a new book are any indication. “The Hansie Cronje story: an authorised biography,” by Garth King is racing off bookshelves around the country.It was published on July 22 and rushed to the top of the non-fiction bestseller list in South Africa. In Bloemfontein, Cronje’s hometown, the book reportedly outsold Harry Potter during the first week.By the end of the first month it had sold 12,000 copies – unusual for a South African sports book – and at the end of this week 17,000 had left the shelves, prompting an extra print run of 8000.Esme Britz of the Cape Town-based publishers, Global Creative Studios, told Reuters: “When I arrived at my desk today I had another order for 300 copies waiting. Every day we get enquiries from the UK asking where they can buy the book, but it’s not available overseas yet. We’re trying to get someone over there to warehouse copies of the book for us before we sell it there.”However, despite the interest from the public, the South African cricket hierarchy are not racing to pick up their copies. Ali Bacher, who was the managing director of the United Cricket Board (UCB) when the Cronje story broke in 2000, said: “I have a copy, but I haven’t read it, I will one day.”Percy Sonn, who was UCB president at the time, told Reuters he had no interest in reading the book. Most of Cronje’s former team mates have said they haven’t read the book, except for Jonty Rhodes, who is a long-time supporter of Cronje’s.”After the first day of the King commission (the South African investigation into Cronje’s conduct) I couldn’t watch the rest,” Rhodes told Reuters. “So, while I was familiar with the ground covered in the rest of the book, I found that section interesting. I thought the book gave Hansie’s life a broad background, and the key for Frans [Cronje’s brother] and the rest of the family are the lessons of Hansie’s life.”

Tikolo to step down from captaincy

Steve Tikolo: ‘I think there are other players who are capable of stepping into the captain’s shoes’© Getty Images

Steve Tikolo, who led Kenya in the Champions Trophy, has said that he intends to resign from the captaincy following his side’s seven-wicket defeat against Pakistan at Edgbaston. Tikolo, 33, felt that it was time to move on and hand over the mantle to someone else while he remained in the team as a player.Kenya, a semi-finalist at last year’s World Cup, were bowled out for just 94 before Pakistan cruised to a seven wicket victory. The defeat meant that Kenya lost both their group matches, having succumbed by 98 runs against India last Saturday.Up until the match against India, Kenya had not played a one-dayer for 18 months and after today’s loss Tikolo said that the team was not due to play one of cricket’s leading nations again until the 2006 Champions Trophy.”I spoke to the selectors back at home and they said we’ll let the case rest until I get back home. I think there are other players who are capable of stepping into the captain’s shoes. I’ll be around. I’m not totally retiring from cricket. I’m still around. Immediately we get back home I’ll have another meeting with the selectors again.”Kenya’s next match is in the Inter-Continental Cup, a four-day competition for teams outside the elite Test nations, against Namibia in October. If they win that, they would qualify for the semi-finals in Sharjah.But a downcast Tikolo added, “With the scenario we have in Kenya, with a lack of games, we can’t feel optimistic anymore.”

Sabres off the mark in the National Cricket League after beating Outlaws at Taunton

Somerset Sabres are off the mark in National Cricket League Division Two after they beat Nottinghamshire Outlaws by 49 runs(Duckworth Lewis method)to give their supporters something to cheer about in the 45 over game.After being put into bat the Sabres at last found their Sunday batting form when they posted an enormous 293 for 4 from 35 overs, after the game had been shortened because of the rain, thanks to a fine century from Jamie Cox and valuable fifties from debutant Carl Gazzard and new boy James Bryant.The Sabres innings got off to a flying start with makeshift opener Gazzard, who was playing in place Aaron Laraman and Cox taking runs with ease. However after putting on 131in the 16th over Gazzard gave a catch to wicket-keeper Chris Read off his fellow Cornishman Charlie Shreck and was out for 58, which contained one magnificent six off Aussie Test bowler Stuart MacGill and nine fours.Keith Dutch bought up the 150 with a leg glance off Gareth Clough, and added a bright and breezy 26, before the players left the field for rain. First ball back after the break MacGill tempted Dutch to a give a catch to the wicket-keeper.New batsman James Bryant stood and watched as Cox hit MacGill for a six and a four over square leg and then saw his partner bring up the 200 in the next over.The Tasmanian went to his century in some style when he hit MacGill over the Ridley Stand into the St James Churchyard and had moved onto 110 to equal his National League highest when he went down the wicket to Clough to became another victim for wicket keeper Read. As he walked back to the pavilion he received a standing ovation from the good sized crowd.Bryant and Ian Blackwell added a swift 45, the left hander contributing 23 including six into the churchyard before he was bowled by Smith. Bryant went to his fifty with the first ball of the final over, by the end of which the Sabres had reached 293 for 4, by far their Sunday best so far this season.Chasing a revised total of 315 under the Duckworth Lewis method the Outlaws appeared to be cruising towards an unlikely victory as Jason Gallian (69) and Usman Afzaal (105) put on 161 in 17 overs for the third wicket. Gallian then fell to a superb catch by Simon Francis at long on who appeared almost from nowhere to take the chance.However from 201 for 3 the Outlaws collapsed to 265 all out, with Gareth Andrew and Francis ending with three wickets apiece to see the Sabres home to their first NCL victory of the season.At the end of the game coach Kevin Shine told me: ” After today’s match you have to say that the game is pushing the boundaries out, and you are left wondering what is a safe score to defend.”He continued: “However we did mount some scoreboard pressure after posting our total, which was not easy for our batters after the interruptions that there were in our innings.””Carl Gazzard had a fine debut, and took his chance when it came along which is what it is all about. It was great to see Jamie Cox back in that sort of form, and there were some responsible contributions from several of the others to set them a big total to chase. Then when we fielded we dealt with the pressure and took some vital catches,” he concluded.Regarding his first appearance for the county at this level Gazzard told me: “It was amazing really, and I must admit that I felt a bit nervous to start with, but I soon put that behind me. I only knew that I was playing late in the morning when Aaron Laraman dropped out, so I didn’t have much time to think about it.”He continued: “We had such a good start and Jamie was a great help to me, he kept me going. I tried to treat every ball on it’s merits, it didn’t matter to me who was bowling it , even though they had Test bowlers like Australian MacGill and South African Steven Elworthy.playing for them.””It was just a perfect start for me, and having got to where I did I would have liked to have gone on and got a hundred! However tomorrow I will be playing for the Seconds in a two day match at Bristol, and I will have another chance to score some more runs,” the youngster said.

Wallace whoops it up

After experiencing a disappointing 2001 Busta Cup season, formerBarbados captain Philo Wallace is hoping to finish the year incontrasting fashion by achieving two major goals.The hard-hitting right-hander, who turned 31 last month, told Sunsporthe is aiming to help Big B Spartan lift the Courts/Suzuki Division 1title, in addition to doing well in the Red Stripe Bowl regionallimited-overs tournament, if he is selected.Yesterday, he warmed up for both tasks with a chanceless century forSpartan against Caribbean Lumber YMPC.I am using this season to try and get Spartan into a winning position,if not to win the Division 1 competition, and help develop the youngcricketers we have at the club, Wallace said yesterday.At Big B Spartan, we have a very young side. We only have two guysover 30 Livingstone Puckerin and myself and all the others are under25; so a lot of the responsibility is on me and Puckerin. I decidedtoday I would carry the baton and I did.Wallace’s century an unbeaten 107 was the feature of an otherwisebleak day where the first two hours and 35 minutes were lost to rain.His innings lasted 205 minutes and included 13 threes and five fours.I am very pleased with the innings, Wallace said. I have been trainingvery hard for the last couple of weeks under the guidance of HendersonSpringer and Andrew Callender and Mr Griffith from the BDF, so it ispaying off.The former West Indies opener hinted he was not focussed heavily onthe Red Stripe Bowl at the moment, though he was making the necessarypreparation.You have to be selected to go to the Bowl and I don’t have a play so Ihave to work hard. Right now, I am working hard for my club and I amenjoying it, Wallace explained.If selected, we will go to Guyana and I will look to do well for mycountry.Wallace and Wayne Blackman gave Spartan a solid start after YMPC wereasked to bat, when play finally started 35 minutes after lunch.The duo posted 101, with the attractive Blackman scoring 49 beforebeing bowled by off-spinner William Lashley with the third ball of histhird over.When Corey Yearwood fell cheaply for one, Wallace added 28 withcaptain Puckerin before the former Barbados wicket-keeper /batsman wasdismissed for eight, with Spartan placed at 140 for three. Young DionLovell (12) added 49 with Wallace to carry Spartan to 189, beforeSpartan lost their next three wickets for just 11 runs.Lashley, who took two wickets in his 16th over, finished with threefor 44 while Powlett grabbed three for 62.Prediction: Spartan to gain first innings lead.

Shaun Marsh tunes up in case Test call comes

Australians 413 for 9 (S Marsh 101, Warner 101, Watson 61, M Marsh 53) v Derbyshire
ScorecardShaun Marsh retired after reaching his hundred•Getty Images

Derby’s low-slung county ground was once a place of indifferent achievement by Donald Bradman, who never made a hundred here in four innings. It was also first of the four counties Chris Rogers has called home, in an unpretentious part of the world he still regards fondly.Rogers, though, was not in Derby this day, still recovering from the inner ear problems that have affected his balance since he was struck on the side of the helmet by James Anderson at Lord’s. Instead, Shaun Marsh had the opportunity to audition for the role of opener in case of Rogers not recovering in time for the Edgbaston Test. He made the most of it by sculpting 101, thus pressing his case by bettering Bradman.David Warner also cantered to a hundred against a Derbyshire bowling attack that emulated the ensembles put out by Kent and Essex in proving to be diligent and persistent but not of international class. There was a significant omission from the hosts’ attack also, for the left-armer Mark Footitt, who journeyed to Spain for Trevor Bayliss’ orientation week with England, was not selected by way of resting.If England wanted to hide their intentions for the rest of the series, the Australians were somewhat less opaque. Apart from Marsh, the rest of the batting order favoured those who had played at Cardiff and Lord’s, leaving the rest in positions that looked very much those of reserves. Shane Watson was at seven behind Mitchell Marsh and Peter Nevill, and Brad Haddin as far down as eight.Watson and Haddin found themselves batting together in the final session, and Haddin at one point called for the physio Alex Kountouris to examine some apparent tightness or cramping around the left hamstring. After a brief consultation Haddin kept on batting, and he and Watson went on to add an entertaining 66.Much as he did against Sri Lanka during the World Cup after being dropped and recalled, Watson looked far less anxious and immeasurably more fluent than he had seemed earlier in the tour and particularly in Cardiff. Watson suffered from a virus during the Lord’s Test and lost his voice – his bat was rather more fluent here to remind all present of his talent, until a leg glance too fine made its way into the wicketkeeper’s gloves.Watson’s were runs the captain Michael Clarke would dearly have liked, after watching Warner and Marsh add a more or less untroubled 154 until the swifter of the pair reached his hundred and promptly retired. Clarke wore a helmet with the neck guard that had helped prevent Rogers from suffering a heavier blow from Anderson, and looked intent on a longer stay than he had managed in either of the first two Tests.But after 37 balls and one boundary, a well-pitched delivery from the 19-year-old debutant Will Davis found the outside edge and was snaffled by Tom Knight in the slips. Clarke’s present stiffness at the crease will be a source of some concern for the coach Darren Lehmann and his batting assistant Michael Di Venuto, for it is readily apparent that he is not merely out of runs but certainly out of form.Clarke’s exit also brought a low score for Adam Voges, who was pinned in front of his stumps by Davis and trudged off lbw. He too has struggled for a score of import thus far, though it must be said he has looked more comfortable at the crease than Clarke and twice edged useful deliveries behind. Nonetheless Voges will not want to wait too much longer than Edgbaston for a score beyond 50, lest Marsh find another way into the XI other than the opener’s path that may be left open by Rogers.

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