Thursday, July 16, 2009

Shoaib in doubt for Sri Lanka ODIs

Will Shoaib Akhtar be included in the squad for the one-dayers against Sri Lanka? © Sohail Abbas
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Players/Officials: Shoaib Akhtar
Teams: Pakistan
Shoaib Akhtar's chances of making a comeback to the Pakistan team have suffered a blow after he failed to turn up for a fitness test at the National Cricket Academy in Lahore on Wednesday.
Interim chief selector Wasim Bari wanted to assess Shoaib's fitness before heading to Sri Lanka next week to discuss the composition of the squad for the upcoming one-day series with captain Younis Khan and coach Intikhab Alam. The five-ODI series starts on July 30 after the completion of the three Test matches.
"He has conveyed to us that since his mother is ill he can't leave Islamabad at this time," Bari said. Shoaib had missed last month's World Twenty20 due to a skin infection, and last represented Pakistan in the five-match ODI series against Australia two months ago. Last week, he had insisted he was back at full fitness, and claimed that he had "three to four good years left in him".
Shoaib, 33, has not been a regular member of the Pakistan side of late due to disciplinary issues and injury as well. He was involved in a tussle with the PCB after reportedly criticising the board publicly for not awarding him a central contract. Subsequently, upon his return to international cricket, he was dropped after a poor ODI series against Sri Lanka and again under-performed against Australia, taking three wickets with an average of over 50.

Paine century drives Australia A to series win

Australia A 316 for 5 (Paine 134, Ferguson 48) beat Pakistan A 301 (Latif 100, Ghani 53, Bollinger 3-53) by 15 runsScorecard
Tim Paine smashed 13 fours and five sixes © Getty Images
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Players/Officials: Khalid Latif Tim Paine
Matches: Australia A v Pakistan A at Brisbane
Series/Tournaments: Pakistan A tour of Australia
Teams: Australia Pakistan
Australia edged ahead of Pakistan in a high-scorer at the Allan Border Field to take the one-day series 2-1. Opener Tim Paine cracked 134 to steer his team to an imposing 316 before his counterpart Khalid Latif responded with an exact 100, which wasn't enough as Pakistan fell short by 15 runs.
Pakistan's decision to send the home team to bat backfired as the first two partnerships cost 66 and 108 runs respectively. Callum Ferguson supported Paine in the second-wicket stand with 48. Paine's century came off 124 balls, smashing 13 fours and five huge sixes before being dismissed by Fahad Masood. The Australian innings got a real boost between the 34th and 40th overs when Paine and Adam Voges added 69. Moises Henriques and Jason Krejza then pushed the score past 300 with cameos towards the end.
Pakistan got off to a quick start but lost two wickets before the fifth over. Two half-century partnerships, driven by Latif, put Pakistan on track but the chase lost momentum when Latif fell in the 33rd over to the left-arm spinner Jon Holland. Latif scored at more than a run-a-ball and his knock included ten fours and two sixes. Sheharyar Ghani made 53 before falling in the 40th over, but the steady fall of wickets hurt Pakistan's efforts in keeping with the asking rate.
Paine said he expected a high-scoring encounter. "I enjoyed batting today and it was good to put on some solid partnerships, firstly with David Warner and then with Ferg (Callum Ferguson) after that," Paine said after the match. "I thought 316 was a good score but we knew they would come at us hard, and we're just happy to come away with the win."
He also praised Latif's knock. "His (Khalid Latif) innings was first-class and really helped them through that middle part of the game and they got some momentum up so it was great when Dutchy (Jon Holland) was able to pick him up."
Pakistan round off their tour with a Twenty20 game at the same venue on Saturday.

WIPA asks national governments to step in

The West Indian players currently boycotting the series against Bangladesh have asked the Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM) to help solve the impasse with the WICB over player contracts. The West Indies Players' Association (WIPA) hopes that Guyana president Bharat Jagdeo, the current chairman of CARICOM's heads of government, will be able to intervene and resolve the dispute.
"We at WIPA are fully conscious of the importance of cricket to the economy and unity of the region, and the psyche of its peoples - matters in which you and other Heads of Governments are continuously and intrinsically involved," WIPA chief executive Dinanath Ramnarine wrote in a letter to Jagdeo. "Our players are deeply mindful of this responsibility they shoulder on behalf of this important group of stakeholders. It is, therefore, in this context that we at WIPA wish to have a speedy resolution to these issues."
A meeting between all three parties has reportedly been suggested though it is unclear whether the board has agreed.
CARICOM - a nodal organisation of the region's national governments - has in the past played a leading role in similar disputes, particularly when Keith Mitchell, the former Prime Minister of Grenada, was the chairman of the Heads' sub-committee on cricket.
Meanwhile, the WICB said it would start paying the players for the England tour and the home series against India according to agreements it believed it had already established. Although there are no contracts in place, payments will be made on the basis of verbal agreements and written undertakings the board had with WIPA.
"At present, the situation remains the same," WICB vice-president Dave Cameron told the Caribbean Media Corporation. "We are not going to negotiate under duress and that is final. What we have done, however, is to make arrangements to pay players for their services. Presently, the wages for the England tour and the India tour are being processed and we will get it to the players as soon as possible."
Cameron said payments for the ICC World Twenty20 would be made when the WICB received its money from the ICC. The next ICC event is the Champions Trophy in September, for which the selectors are due to pick a provisional squad of 30 soon.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Returning Yousuf becomes No. 1 Test batsman


Mohammad Yousuf plays a shot past the keeper, Pakistan v Sri Lanka, 1st Test, Galle, 2nd day, July 5, 2009
Mohammad Yousuf leads the rankings for the first time in his career © Associated Press
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Teams: England | Pakistan

Mohammad Yousuf made a seamless return to international cricket this week with a polished century in Galle, and his comeback has become sweeter still by reaching the top of the ICC Test rankings. This is the first time he has been officially ranked the leading Test batsman.

Yousuf, who hadn't represented Pakistan for nearly a year after signing up with the unsanctioned ICL, pushes his captain, Younis Khan, to second spot. Another player sliding in the rankings is Sri Lankan captain, Kumar Sangakkara, who slips two places to fifth. Mahela Jayawardene, at No.6, is the only other batsman from either side to feature in the top 20.

In the bowling charts, injured Sri Lankan offspinner Muttiah Muralitharan's lead over Dale Steyn at the top of the ranking was cut to two points.

And in the women's one-day bowling rankings, England left-arm spinner Holly Colvin jumps into the lead after taking seven wickets in the 4-0 rout of Australia. She takes over as No. 1 from India's fast bowler Jhulan Goswami. England, the world champions, now have five bowlers in the top ten.

Former players question team composition

Former Pakistan players have blamed the side's unexpected loss to Sri Lanka in the Galle Test on poor team composition, with Moin Khan and Sarfraz Nawaz questioning the absence of Fawad Alam, a left-hand batsman who also bowls left-arm spin, from the XI.

"[Alam] scored 80 odd runs in the warm-up game, he's also an excellent fielder and a player who can also bowl left-arm spin, I fail to understand why he was left out," Moin, a former captain, told AP.

Pakistan were set 168 to win the Test and began day four needing 97 with eight wickets in hand. They proceeded to lose all eight for 46 runs in the first session.

Former fast bowler Sarfraz criticised captain Younis Khan's decision to bring himself on in the first session of the Test and said key bowlers Abdul Razzaq and Danish Kaneria had been left out. "I was watching the [batting] collapse on television and told myself 'maybe its just a dream, the real match will begin afterwards,'" Nawaz said. "It was unbelievable the way our batting collapsed, I was not expecting such a performance. Where was Abdul Razzaq, where was Fawad Alam, where was Danish Kaneria?"

Ijaz Ahmed, the former Pakistan batsman, said there was a psychological problem with the side's batsmen when it came to chasing small totals and suggested a batting coach. "Both coaches [Intikhab Alam and Aaqib Javed] are bowlers so it leaves only captain Younis Khan and... vice-captain Misbah-ul-Haq to guide other batsmen," Ijaz told Geo TV. "I think we should have a batting coach who can teach the finer points of the game to our batsmen."

Murali doubtful for second Test


Muttiah Muralitharan bowls, Bangladesh v Sri Lanka, 1st Test, Mirpur, 1st day, December 26, 2008
Muttiah Muralitharan: Doubtful starter © AFP
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Series/Tournaments: Pakistan tour of Sri Lanka
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Muttiah Muralitharan is unlikely to be available for the second Test against Pakistan in Colombo starting this weekend as he has not fully recovered from a minor knee injury. "I have not yet recovered from the injury," Murali told DNA. "I don't think it will happen before the second Test, so I won't be available.

Murali was ruled out of the series opener in Galle after he hurt his patella tendon while training on the eve of the game and advised rest. Left-arm spinner Rangana Herath replaced Murali in Galle and went on to become the Man of the Match after taking 4 for 15 in Pakistan's second innings.

"It's a terrific win and a superb team performance," said Murali of Sri Lanka's improbable 50-run win in Galle. "Herath's performance was particularly very good. He is an experienced bowler and I'm very happy he has done well. I didn't give him any advice. He has been around for many years."

The second Test starts at the Premadasa on July 12.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Pakistan fined for slow over-rate

Younis Khan, the Pakistan captain, has been fined 10% of his match fees while the rest of the team received a 5% cut on their earnings, for maintaining a slow over-rate in the second innings of the Galle Test.

Match Referee Alan Hurst imposed the fines on Pakistan after they were found to have bowled one over short of the requisite amount after time allowances were taken into consideration.

As per the ICC Code of Conduct guidelines, individual players are fined 5% of their match fee for each over that is bowled beyond the allotted time limit, while the captain is fined double that amount.

Pakistan lost the Test after the dramatic collapse where they lost eight wickets for 46 runs in the first session on the fourth day.

Sangakkara keen to iron out glitches


Kumar Sangakkara is all smiles after winning his first Test as captain, Sri Lanka v Pakistan, 1st Test, Galle, 4th day, July 7, 2009
Kumar Sangakkara: "We've had one very good day today, other than that we were behind Pakistan." © AFP
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Sri Lankan captain Kumar Sangakkara is buoyant after his team's come-from-behind win against Pakistan at Galle, but has said there is a lot of work to be done, especially in the batting department.

"We fell very short of our expectations of what we can do. It's a great victory for us as a side but there are a lot of things we have to work on. We have to be very mindful of the fact that we can't get overconfident with one win. We've had one very good day today, other than that we were behind Pakistan," Sangakkara said after his team snatched a 50-run win in the first Test. It was a dream debut for Sangakkara as Test captain after taking over the mantle from Mahela Jayawardene.

"It was a great effort by everyone, especially with thinking and ideas. It was great to have Mahela in the side. He made a huge contribution especially through the crucial periods when little doubts arise in your mind. Mahela stepped up and he was very good with his advice and his thinking."

Sangakkara pinpointed the areas which demanded immediate attention. "We've got to figure out where our off stumps are, what our mindset should be when facing new bowlers we haven't seen before, how to be as patient as possible and how to work through tough phases. We have to work on these quickly," said Sangakkara.

With 97 runs to get and eight wickets in hand, Pakistan were in the driver's seat, entering the fourth day, but Sangakkara said they had never given up hope. "We knew if we were to have a chance the first five to six overs were going to be crucial," Sangakkara said. "We needed two to three wickets and we got them five down. We never expected it to happen so quickly. The way Rangana [Herath] and Thilan [Thushara] bowled was spot on. They put the balls in the right areas, they were patient and they worked very hard for their wickets."

One of the important decisions for Sri Lanka was the choice of bowlers to start off with on the fourth day. Sangakkara admitted he was tempted to go with fast bowlers from both ends. "The final over or two to [Mohammad] Yousuf swung the decision in favour of Rangana and Thilan," Sangakkara said.




We've got to figure out where our off stumps are, what our mindset should be when facing new bowlers we haven't seen before, how to be as patient as possible and how to work through tough phases




The two bowlers dealt telling blows, grabbing four wickets for just nine runs in their initial spells. "Thilan was a bit more disciplined in the second innings," Sangakkara said. "His key was to keep on bowling using his arms in the run up and try and hit the deck in the right areas. He was a lot more disciplined and thoughtful in the way he bowled. That was the major difference. He bowled very well in both innings but just that little change in mindset was the key."

"All credit to Rangana, he's been a magnificent performer in domestic cricket and in Test cricket for us, whenever he's had a look in. He has been very successful against Pakistan especially when we played in Pakistan. Rangana is in fact, the best Test spinner after Murali and Mendis."

What was most commendable was that Sri Lanka achieved the win without their two main strike bowlers, Muthiah Muralitharan and Chaminda Vaas. "It is an inexperienced attack but also a fresh attack," said Sangakkara. "The lack of experience was made up for by enthusiasm and a real hunger to do well and stay in the side. It showed through all the guys and they managed to hold their disciplines and lines well."

"At some point or the other we have to come to terms with the fact that we can't always have the legends playing and winning matches for us. The things Murali and Vaasy have done especially bowling in partnerships its going to be very hard for anyone to come and match those performances. But there are a lot of people who are on the right track maybe they won't reach the same standing in world cricket as those two but I think they will still win us a lot of games."

Sri Lanka bowlers pull off improbable win

Sri Lanka 292 (Paranavitana 72, Aamer 3-74, Younis 2-23) and 217 (Ajmal 3-34, Aamer 3-38, Younis 2-27) beat Pakistan 342 (Yousuf 112, Misbah 56, Kulasekara 4-71) and 117 (Herath 4-15, Thushara 2-21, Mendis 2-27) by 50 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out


Thilan Thushara belts out an appeal, Pakistan v Sri Lanka, 1st Test, Galle, 4th day, July 7, 2009
Thushara bowled a dream spell, giving away just 12 runs in eight overs and picking two wickets © AFP

During a collapse of Pakistani proportions, the incredible Galle Test took a complete U-turn and decisively went Sri Lanka's way. Pakistan started the day needing 97 with eight wickets in hand after Salman Butt and first-innings centurion Mohammad Yousuf had looked good negotiating the last half hour yesterday. But Thilan Thushara and Rangana Herath bowled exceptional spells of varied left-arm bowling to help Sri Lanka take the last eight wickets for just 46.

Pakistan's trouble against left-arm spinners are well documented - even Herath's previous best bowling in Tests had come against Pakistan - and he started the slide with his first ball of the day. Yousuf pretended to play a shot, but the bowl went straight on to get the lbw. A brain freeze from Butt followed, and he holed out to long leg. No run added, two wickets taken, game on.

Though he got just two wickets today, Thushara did the main job. Not a single loose delivery was offered in an eight-over spell during which he beat the batsmen so often that a ball hitting the middle of the bat could make it to a highlights package. Thushara got the ball to move both ways, seaming it away and swinging it in. Kumar Sangakkara read the situation perfectly, employing in-and-out fields, not giving easy release through boundaries, nor singles without an element of maneuvering. With Thushara bowling as he was, maneuvering was not going to come easy.

Thushara got Shoaib Malik with one that moved away, bringing in the last capable batsman, Kamran Akmal. Akmal is quite capable of running away with small chases with fluent doubt-free batting, but nothing loose was on offer. Even when Akmal got a square-cut going the result was just a single because of the field. Nervously Misbah-ul-Haq and Akmal survived 21 deliveries, adding just eight, that too thanks to a misfield that went for four.

Thushara struck again at that time, getting the ball to tail in and trap Akmal lbw. Misbah didn't feel too comfortable either and fell trying to steal a leg-bye off a big lbw appeal. It was the fifth ball of the Thushara over, and he could have been trying to retain the strike, but there was never a run in it.

By the time Thushara and Herath were done with their first spells, Pakistan had lost five wickets for 20 runs in 15 overs. There was no conceivable way then for the tail to get the remaining 77. Especially with Ajantha Mendis yet to bowl, who ended with his first ball a 10-run stand between Abdur Rauf and Umar Gul. The accurate carrom ball was just too good for Gul.

Mohammad Aamer hung around for a bit but Herath came back to finish the match minutes before lunch, ensuring Galle's reputation of being a tough venue to bat last at remained intact.

Short-term gain for long-term pain?


Rahul Dravid drags his kit bag, Auckland, March 13, 2009
Is Rahul Dravid being looked at merely as a stop-gap fix for India's short-ball woes? © AFP
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India's preliminary squad for the Champions Trophy included usual suspects, a handful of young hopefuls and one oddity - the reappearance of Rahul Dravid in India's 50-over plans. Dravid last played a one-day international in October 2007 and was jettisoned from the team after a torrid home series against Australia, in which he scored 51 runs in five innings.

He was out of form and looked out of place in an Indian team that had transformed into an athletic outfit filled with power-hitters after the World Twenty20 victory in South Africa. Since that defeat against Australia, India had a terrific run in ODIs, winning seven out of nine series: at home against Pakistan and England, in Australia, Sri Lanka, New Zealand, and the most recent one - in West Indies - was the fifth success in a row.

So, even though the pool of contenders for the tournament in South Africa is as large as 30, why is Dravid among them? Is his selection merely whimsical, to make up the numbers? Or is there reason and rationale behind a move that appears to be a step in a direction opposite to the one in which the one-day unit has progressed under MS Dhoni?

The key may lie in the answer to the question: what does Dravid possess that the current Indian middle order doesn't? He may not be endowed with bowler-shredding skills that the current middle order formed by Suresh Raina, Rohit Sharma and Yusuf Pathan possess but Dravid has a water-tight technique, one that has brought him success on various pitches, fast or slow, across the globe. And he has rarely been fragile against the short ball, a weakness currently dogging the Indian batting line-up. A weakness that caused them to crash out of the World Twenty20 in England and one that troubled them during the first two ODIs in the Caribbean.

Two of India's newest batting success stories, Rohit and Raina, have been most susceptible to the rising ball. They were prolific in the subcontinent, on small grounds and flat pitches in New Zealand, and on slower pitches during the IPL at the end of the domestic season in South Africa. On a spicy Lord's surface against England and West Indies bowlers targetting the body, however, Rohit and Raina had severe problems. They were pinned in their creases, given precious few balls to drive or cut, and eventually done in by deliveries that reared off a length, denying them time and space to play to their strengths.

Rohit and Raina were not alone in their struggle - Gautam Gambhir, who favours stepping out of his crease to alter the bowler's length, and Yusuf were also contained by the shorter line of attack. The malaise did not go away when India left England's shores either for several batsmen came undone against the rising delivery during the first two one-day internationals in West Indies.

The word has inevitably spread and bowlers everywhere will target the bodies of India's young brigade until each individual is able to make adjustments to overcome the problems caused by short-pitched bowling. There are only two months to go before the Champions Trophy kicks off, and the inclusion of Dravid in preliminary plans is possibly aimed at solidifying a batting order which will be tested on lively pitches at the start of the season in South Africa. He could be back-up - if the likes of Raina and Rohit fail to show sufficient improvement in form and technique.

His inclusion is a warning to the young batsmen who took over the slots occupied by the likes of Dravid, Sourav Ganguly and VVS Laxman. They took India to dizzy heights, winning the inaugural World Twenty20 and the CB Series in Australia but now their adaptability, which the aforementioned trio possessed in abundance, is being tested. Since Dravid was excluded from India's one-day plans, four batsmen have played five innings or more at No. 3, a position that belonged to Dravid in his prime. Of those four, only Gambhir has succeeded, averaging 44.35 in that position, while Raina (23), Yuvraj Singh (18) and Rohit (14.50) have been more comfortable lower down the order.

Dravid's inclusion, however, is likely to be a short-term solution, possibly aimed at papering over India's weaknesses for the Champions Trophy rather than a long-term answer. If he were to be selected, it would mean that possibly four out of India's squad will be on the wrong side of 30 - Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag and Zaheer Khan being the other three - marking a compromise by default on the standard of fielding that has lifted India's performances in recent times.

Whatever the reason behind the selection, the Indian selectors must convey their intentions to Dravid. They have to tell him what they expect from him and whether he is merely on stand-by in case India's current young batsmen continue to unravel on tougher pitches overseas against bowling attacks intent on exploiting their weaknesses. Since his exclusion from the limited-overs side, Dravid has moved on as a player and person, dividing his time between Test cricket, IPL and a young family. His inclusion among the 30 probables was a bolt from the blue, and it is likely that he was as surprised as the rest of us.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Australia's smiling assassin

Spot Mitchell Johnson out of his cricket gear and he could easily be mistaken as the lead singer of a multi-million selling emo rock band.

He has the boyish good looks, earrings, tattoos and pierced tongue - although the black eyeliner might be a step too far.

Johnson is a world away from his archetypal testosterone-fuelled fast bowler predecessors charged with intimidating England's batsmen during an Ashes summer.

Could you ever imagine Dennis Lillee, Merv Hughes or Glenn McGrath with a labret chin piercing? Let alone smiling at a batsmen after whizzing a snorter past his nose?

Verbal histrionics are not the 27-year-old's style but he shares the same instincts as his predecessors because the sight of batsmen sniffing leather really gets his blood pumping.

"That's what being a fast bowler is all about," said Johnson.

"I'm not verbal or in your face in the way that some guys are. I just try to let my bowling do the talking, with maybe a few short ones. You want them to feel uncomfortable."

Jacques Kallis is hit on the chin by a short Mitchell Johnson delivery
A Johnson bouncer cut Jacque Kallis' chin open in Durban

Which is exactly what he did during Australia's back-to-back Test series against South Africa, breaking the little finger of captain Graeme Smith's left and then right hand in the space of two months.

His first-innings 3-37 in Australia's 175-run second Test win in Durban in March - a victory which sealed the three-match series - was one of the most brutal spells of fast bowling in modern times.

After removing Neil McKenzie and Hashim Amla in the first over of South Africa's innings with fast, swinging deliveries and breaking Smith's digit, he floored the robust Jacques Kallis with a savage bouncer, opening a wound on his chin which required three stitches.

All this happened without spearhead Brett Lee, recuperating from foot and ankle injuries, as Johnson led Australia's most inexperienced Test bowling attack in years alongside Peter Siddle, Ben Hilfenhaus and Andrew McDonald.

"I really wanted to get up their batsmen and let them know we were here and seriously trying to win the match and the series," said Johnson, who took 16 wickets in three Tests at an average of 25.

"If they are coming out feeling uncomfortable, then you're on top. They will have that in their minds when they come out to bat.

"That's something I'm definitely going to take into my game more often."

If the swing's not there, I generally try to hit the deck hard
Mitchell Johnson

Men in blue helmets, beware.

Johnson was born in Townsville in the tropical climes of northern Queensland, famed as a rugby league stronghold.

Cricket never figured highly on the career aspirations of the young Johnson, who expected to follow many of his childhood friends into the Australian army.

The breakthrough came when he was 17 and attended a fast bowling camp in Townsville headed by Lillee, who was scouring the country for fresh talent.

It took just three deliveries from Johnson for Lillee to realise he had seen a "once in a lifetime" prospect.

"I rang Marshie [Rod Marsh, then head of the Australian cricket academy] and said: 'you've gotta get this kid in'," Lillee revealed.

Three days later, Johnson was on his way down to join Marsh's latest recruits in Adelaide, where he first became acquainted with Troy Cooley, now Australia's fast bowling coach and credited with inspiring England's pace quartet to Ashes success in 2005.

"Troy and I have known each other since I was 17 and I'm 27 now, so we've had a lot to do with each other," he said.

"The good thing about Troy is he will let you do what you need to do in a training session. He'll give you the space and time to figure out if something is wrong. If you don't, he'll mention it."

606: DEBATE
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After spending the entire 2006/07 Ashes series as 12th man, Johnson eventually earned his first cap against Sri Lanka last November, taking a respectable 2-47 in a crushing innings and 40 runs win in Brisbane.

While Johnson possessed pace in abundance, regularly clocking 90 mph plus, his one fallibility was his inability to swing the ball back into the right hander, the left-arm seamer's calling card.

South Africa coach Micky Arthur attempted to exploit this vulnerability by advising his batsmen to shuffle across to middle and off stumps to negate Johnson's natural angle from over the wicket.

However, those plans were quickly revised when Johnson's first ball in the first Test in Johannesburg swung back alarmingly into opener McKenzie's pads.

Johnson explained this development was not a new phenomenon, but a consequence of adjusting his bowling action, standing straighter in his delivery stride at the point of release rather from than a wider, slingier angle.

"For Queensland (in state cricket), I was swinging the ball a lot," he said.

"But when I started playing for Australia I lost my swing. I was bowling first change whereas back in Queensland I was taking the new ball and swinging it.

"I got a little confused at that time and was trying to hit the deck hard and not worry about swing.

"That's probably when my arm height changed and that's something I have realised over time and worked on with Troy, although it's still a work in progress.

Johnson's fiancée Jessica Bratich in Cape Town
Johnson's fiancee Jessica Bratich is a karate champion

"But if the swing is not there, I generally try to hit the deck hard."

It's not just Johnson's bowling that has grabbed headlines in the past 12 months.

He smashed 96 in Johannesburg in March before scoring his maiden Test hundred two matches later, a brutal 123 not out from just 103 balls, including five sixes, in Cape Town.

This was not lower-order slogging - these were proper cricket strokes played with immense power off both feet on both sides of the wicket, not too dissimilar to watching a left-handed Andrew Flintoff in full flow.

"I love batting. It's something I always work on, but I don't feel pressure to score runs," he said.

Don't be surprised to see Johnson ascend the batting order in the near future, but right now he is content in his current position.

"I really enjoy batting at eight, it's a really good slot to come in," he added.

Off the field, Johnson keeps the tabloids busy as one half of Australia's most prominent couple.

His fiancée, Jessica Bratich, an Australian karate champion, was recently voted as Australia's hottest Wag by a lads' magazine, earning more column inches with her outfit for the Allan Border Medal dinner in February than the breadth of her sporting career.

But despite all the adulation, Johnson is unfazed by the attention on and off the field.

"I haven't put any pressure on myself with this leader of the attack business, I just keep doing the same things I have been doing," he said.

England have been warned.

Ponting Content With Ashes Build-Up

Australia captain Ricky Ponting is content with the way his side have built up for the opening Ashes Test in Cardiff starting on Wednesday.

He felt the tourists achieved plenty of positives from their drawn four-day game with England Lions at Worcester.

The likes of Brett Lee, Marcus North and Mike Hussey all rediscovered their form with either bat or ball ahead of the first game in the five-match series against Andrew Strauss' side.

Ponting said: "We got a lot out of this game - almost everyone except me - and it was really good preparation for us going into the Cardiff game.

"This wicket will be similar to the one we have to confront down there, so we couldn't have asked for much more as far as our preparation goes.

"Brett Lee really stood up for us in the first innings. Once the ball started to swing, we know he is as good as anyone in the world in terms of exploiting those conditions.

"Marcus North batted well in the second innings, and Mike Hussey looks terrific in both knocks, while Michael Clarke got some quality time in the middle yesterday.

"We have topped things up really well. I've been really happy with the way things have gone for the past month.

"We went out of the World Twenty20 really early and have had a long run-in to the first Test. It seems like an eternity, but our training has been spot-on.

"We can travel down to Cardiff happy with what we have done and the intensity automatically steps up when you play Test cricket."

Ponting, however, is aware that opener Phillip Hughes will have to come to terms with the short delivery after twice falling to Steve Harmison.

He said: "He will now have a good idea what to expect for the remainder of the tour.

"Phillip got out in a similar way in both innings, so he will have some work to do."

Lions captain Ian Bell believes Harmison will be close to earning a recall to the Test squad at Cardiff.

The Durham paceman bowled with plenty of aggression in both innings and finished with match figures of six for 135.

Bell said: "The England selectors would have had a tough meeting today certainly with the way Steve has bowled in this game, and he must be close to being selected.

"He and Graham Onions have bowled excellently in this match. I'm sure there will be some tough decisions to be made.

"Both have shown they would justify a place in the team. They were fantastic with the new ball.

"It was a very good workout for our young players, and the opening batsmen (Stephen Moore and Joe Denly) played fantastically well considering the amount of experience Australia have got.

"I thought we did ourselves justice and gave Australia a run for their money at times over the last four days."

SL make inroads but Pakistan resist

Lunch Pakistan 120 for 4 (Yousuf 29*, Misbah 16*, Kulasekara 2-25) trail Sri Lanka 292 by 172 runs

Another session, another exercise in evenness. And at another break, neither team sits in clear ascendancy. The nightwatchman Abdur Rauf looked like frustrating the Sri Lankan medium-pacers into tiring down on a hot and humid day, but they struck to remove both Rauf and Younis Khan to reduce Pakistan to 80 for 4. From there on, though, Mohammad Yousuf and Misbah-ul-Haq negotiated the rest of the session in a sound manner to restore the balance in the contest.

Angelo Mathews became the second debutant in the match to take a wicket in his first over, removing Younis just before the drinks break, but it was during the toil of the first hour that Sri Lanka kept Pakistan from running free. After two overs from Ajantha Mendis right at the top, both Nuwan Kulasekara and Thilan Thushara gave the batsmen a tough time. Playing and missing, prodding and nudging, Younis and Rauf survived and put together a sizeable partnership. What worked for them was that there wasn't as much seam movement as yesterday.

It was Rauf who, surprisingly, took the lead. By the time Younis cut Kulasekara for three in the sixth over - his first confident shot of the innings - he had faced the same number of deliveries as Rauf, 32, but scored 10 as opposed to Rauf's 19. Rauf showed the tendency to play inside the line of the ball, but the fatal edge came only after the two had added 50 for the third wicket, 31 of which Rauf contribued.

Just before the first hour turned over, Kumar Sangakkara brought Mathews on and Younis played at a wide delivery to end an unconvincing innings. Luckily for Pakistan, Yousuf and Misbah were more confident and comfortable than the men they replaced.

Yousuf did have three shouts against him early on in the piece, but wasn't close to getting out to any. He looked to counter Thushara's swing by moving outside the line of off stump, and a couple of flashy shots there got him boundaries too. Misbah, in his brief unbeaten stay, looked the most comfortable batsman on this pitch. He was neither beaten nor keen to hit the bowlers off rhythm. A statement of intent was issued to Mendis, though, when Misbah read a googly early and lofted him over midwicket.

Mendis didn't look like he had settled into any sort of rhythm, giving 22 in his five overs. Misbah and Yousuf had added 40 for the fifth wicket in 12 overs

ICC announces World Twenty20 venues

Pakistan will begin its title defence in the 2010 ICC World Twenty20 against Bangladesh at St. Lucia on May 1. The tournament will be staged at four venues - Barbados, Guyana, St Kitts and St Lucia - and the final will be played at the Kensington Oval in Barbados on May 16.

The 2007 World Cup, the premier 50-over tournament, was held in the West Indies and the World Twenty20 will present an opportunity to the island nations to set right some of the criticism directed at the 2007 tournament.

Haroon Lorgat, the ICC chief executive, was confident that the tournament would be a success among the spectators. "One measure of success will be to fill the venues and to try to achieve this we have worked hard with the West Indies Cricket Board to ensure the ticket prices are extremely competitive," he said.

"In Barbados, Guyana, St Kitts and St Lucia we have four outstanding venues, something that was shown in 2007 when they hosted matches in the ICC Cricket World Cup, and we know that West Indian spectators enjoy the format as they have already embraced Twenty20 at domestic level."

The tournament will also see women's matches played alongside the men, a concept that was used in the recently concluded World Twenty20 in England. "I'm delighted we have retained the men's and women's tournaments in one event with the respective semi-finals and finals being played on the same days at the same venues," said Lorgat. "This will again provide women's cricket with a great platform to showcase the talents of the top players."

In an effort to spread out major tournaments so two important events are not held close to each other, the ICC has decided to host the Twenty20 World Cup in 2010, between the Champions Trophy in October 2009 and the World Cup to be held in 2011.

Akmal century revives Pakistan A

Australia A 230 and 0 for 44 trail Pakistan A 333 (Akmal 129, Ahmed 61, Iqbal 52, Bollinger 5-82) by 58 runs

Umar Akmal continued his love for Australian attacks and pitches, rattling off his second hundred in consecutive matches to give Pakistan A the initiative in Townsville. Pakistan had resumed the day on 5 for 47 after Doug Bollinger's rampage on the first evening, but Akmal's defiance and half-centuries to Fahad Iqbal and Sarfraz Ahmed took them to a strong 333.

Bollinger snapped up his fifth wicket in the morning but the home side were in for a lot of toil with Akmal, who hit 129 from just 145 deliveries, leading Pakistan's reply. He tucked into the attack, despite Pakistan's precarious situation, and thumped 14 fours and three sixes to help avert an innings defeat.

Akmal's innings was not the only significant contribution. Ahmed (61) and Iqbal (52) forged a 161-run partnership for the sixth wicket to further lift Pakistan to a strong position. The offspinner Jason Krejza had the best figures for Australia A, taking 2 for 76 from 18.2 overs.

In the 21 overs remaining, Australia scored 44 without loss. They are 58 behind Pakistan. Ryan Broad was unbeaten on 22 with Michael Klinger on 16.

Friday, July 3, 2009

India snatch lead with last-over win.

India 159 for 4 (Karthik 47, Dhoni 46*, Gambhir 44) beat West Indies 185 for 7 (Sarwan 62, Nehra 3-21) by six wickets (D/L method).

MS Dhoni and India kept their nerve on a frustrating day of rain delays to take a 2-1 series lead in St Lucia. It was still anybody's game when India needed 11 off the final over, but Dhoni slammed the second ball over deep midwicket to put the visitors on course for victory.

India threatened to lose their way in the chase after a solid start provided by Dinesh Karthik before Dhoni hauled them past the line. The rain-breaks initially readjusted their target to 195 in 27 overs before a further shower reduced it to 159 in 22 overs.

When Karthik fell after a fine 47 India needed a relatively comfortable 111 from 89 balls, and at the next rain-break they needed 64 from 51 balls with nine wickets in hand, but a succession of wickets left India requiring 34 in four overs. It came down to the last over. Curiously, Chris Gayle turned to Jerome Taylor, who had a poor game, instead of Ravi Rampaul, who had bowled a pretty decent 20th over. Dhoni killed the contest in the second ball with a six over deep midwicket. He picked the slower one and used his bottom-hand to swipe it with the wind over midwicket boundary. Dhoni and Yusuf Pathan got the remaining four runs with a ball to spare.

Dhoni had shepherded the tail end of the chase calmly, taking care to preserve his wicket even as his partners deserted him. Yuvraj Singh holed out to long-on and Rohit Sharma swung to deep midwicket but Dhoni hung around, hitting the occasional four to make sure the game didn't get away from India. And he effectively finished the game with that six in the last over. However, it was Karthik who set the platform with a fine knock, with a little bit of help from West Indies.

On this soft track, West Indies erred by bowling short to Karthik, who, unlike a few of his team-mates, likes playing the pull shot. It was slightly surprising that Jerome Taylor didn't repeat his first delivery - a gem that was full and shaped away late past the outside edge - to Karthik again during his opening spell. It was that delivery that had got Karthik in the previous game too but that length was rarely seen today.

Karthik looked in fine touch, unfurling several spanking pulls and cuts. He started with a pull, followed it with a caressed extra-cover drive before playing a fierce upper cut over backward point for three consecutive boundaries against Taylor. Karthik never let the momentum slip after that. Even Dwayne Bravo bowled short at him and Karthik pulled him for a four and a stunning six. In between, he kept the singles and twos coming. It was a polished performance which was cut short by an unnecessary scramble for a single after Gambhir had cut straight to Rampaul at backward point.

Gambhir played a sedate hand today. He didn't look too comfortable at the start, almost ran himself out on three occasions, and hit his first boundary only in the 12th over. However, unlike in the recent past, he didn't try to hit his way out of trouble; he was willing to look ugly. He eventually fell, edging behind an attempted cut Sulieman Benn but Dhoni made sure India won the game.

Just as they tried gamely in the end of the chase to create a flutter, West Indies had earlier batted well to post a competitive total despite the frequent rain breaks. Dhoni won a crucial toss and made the obvious decision to bowl as no one knew how many overs the team batting first will get to play on a rainy day at St Lucia. West Indies rallied through a frenetic start provided by Gayle and a composed knock by Ramnaresh Sarwan to reach 185 for 7 at the end of their allotted 27 overs.

Gayle started like a runaway train, putting immense pressure on Ishant Sharma and Ashish Nehra. Time and again, Gayle thrust his back foot back and across, opened his stance and depending on the line, hit to the on or off side. The stand-out shot, though, was when he disregarded the line and swat-pulled an Ishant delivery from well outside off to deep midwicket. Gayle didn't spare Nehra too, lashing him through covers before unfurling a delicate flick shot. However, Gayle fell to Nehra first ball after a break for rain, edging a cut against a short and wide delivery.

Sarwan, though, kept the scorecard moving along by maneuvering the ball into the gaps for singles and twos. In between, he whipped and pulled Yuvraj to boundaries but ran himself out, turning back for the second run after tapping to square leg. He kept his cool and tried gamely to adjust to the new scenario provided by the frequent interruptions.

Sarwan was helped by a lovely cameo by Darren Bravo. His innings was filled with several delicious strokes that had a touch of Brian Lara. There were two fine sashays down the track against Yusuf Pathan for lofted boundaries but his best shot, and the shot of the day that evoked memories of that great left-hander, was a fabulous cover drive off RP Singh. Up went the bat as he crouched on his knees before swinging through the line of the length delivery up and over covers. Denesh Ramdin swung his bat in the end to finish the innings with a flourish but it was to prove insufficient in the end.

Playing Mendis won't be tough - Younis


Ajantha Mendis picked up one wicket in the tour game, Patron's XI v Sri Lankans, 1st day, Karachi, February 17, 2009
Younis Khan: "The wickets are similar to Pakistan. Although there is more grip on the Sri Lankan pitches, all pitches are flat" © AFP

Younis Khan, the Pakistan captain, has expressed confidence in his batsmen's ability to tackle the wiles of spinner Ajantha Mendis in the three-Test series starting at Galle on Saturday. Younis said his batsmen's familiarisation with Mendis is only not because the two teams have played each other often in the past year or so, but also because Pakistanis are used to playing spin at home.

"We have a lot of offspinners, left-arm spinners and legspinners," Younis said. "The wickets are similar to Pakistan. Although there is more grip on the Sri Lankan pitches, all pitches are flat. Why Sri Lanka and Pakistan are meeting each other so often is because of their good relationship. Both teams know each other's weaknesses. Because of our nature we compete with each other very well."

Younis lamented the abrupt ending to the last Test series between the two countries in Pakistan early this year. "It was turning out to be a nice series at that time especially the first Test when Sri Lanka scored something like 600 and we scored 700. That was a crucial time for us. I was the new captain and we had introduced a couple of youngsters. There was no need for this kind of ending, especially that Lahore incident. We will start where we finished off in Lahore. It's good for both teams."

Younis said he would miss Muttiah Muralitharan who has been ruled out of the series with a leg injury. "The last series I played against Murali, I pulled my hamstring stretching all the way trying to play him for two days. He is a fantastic bowler. Whenever Murali is under pressure he talks to you. When I scored 300 in Karachi he talked to me all the time chatting and laughing. I will miss him."

Younis stated that he always wanted to be positive and would go to the Test with three fast bowlers. "For the spinners' place I have the option of playing either Shoaib Malik, Danish Kaneria or Saeed Ajmal."

"Pakistan has not been playing a lot of Test cricket in the last few years. It's a good chance if one team can hold its nerves and win. The last series was close when suddenly we took five wickets. This wicket looks a good track, harder than the one at Karachi. It depends on the first session. If you have a good start you have a good chance of winning. It depends on how the batsmen and bowlers react to the wicket. Its 50-50 for both teams."

Several new faces likely in series opener

Match facts

July 4-8, 2009
Start time 10.00 (04.30 GMT)

The Big Picture


Kaushal Silva practices his wicketkeeping skills, Galle, July 3, 2009
Will Kaushal Silva make his Test debut? © AFP

Over the last four months, both sides have fought mental battles to rid all memories of the horrific Lahore attack; putting the past behind you and moving on is often easier said than done, though, and it will be a deeply emotional moment whenthey take the field for the first Test. They've played against each other, of course, most recently in the final of the ICC World Twenty20 less than a fortnight ago. Pakistan won that match but the hosts will look to settle the score in a completely different format.

There's a lot of change in the air. This will be Kumar Sangakkara's first Test series as captain. Pakistan had welcomed back one rebel ICL player, Abdul Razzaq, in England and now prepare for the return of another - Mohammad Yousuf, whose presence in the middle order will be invaluable.

Sri Lanka have already suffered a setback, with their lead spinner Muttiah Muralitharan missing the Test due to a knee injury. With Chaminda Vaas not included and Lasith Malinga unfit for Tests, their bowling could be a bit weak. Their batsman, though, will be expected to continue their ominous touch from the previous series, where they piled up scores of 644 and 606.

That series was a poor advertisement for Test cricket and the conditions, on paper, cannot promise anything entirely different now. Attacking cricket is the best way to encourage results and Pakistan have the incentive to push for it. A series win will see them jump up by two slots to snatch the No.4 ranking from their opponents.

Test form guide

(last five matches, most recent first)

Sri Lanka - DDWWW
Pakistan - DDDDL

Watch out for ...

Nuwan Kulasekara: In Vaas' absence, Kulasekara will take on a new role as the pace-bowling spearhead. He remains the No.1 bowler in ODIs and it remains to be seen if he can maintain that level of consistency in the Tests. His ability to bowl a stump-to-stump line and get the ball to skid through has fetched him several wickets. A promising Test future awaits.

Mohammad Yousuf: On reputation alone, Yousuf will walk into the line-up, despite the fact that he hasn't been with the team since November, or for that matter played a first-class match for the last 13 months. Pakistan's policy on ICL returnees was to review players on a case-by-case basis but they wasted no time in netting Yousuf as soon as he made himself available.

Team news

Hit by injuries, Sri Lanka may hand out a couple of Test caps. The allrounder Angelo Mathews and offspinner Suraj Randiv could make their debuts, although Rangana Herath, the 31-year-old left-arm spinner, is a frontrunner to take Murali's place. Another likely debutant is wicketkeeper Kaushal Silva, who's filling in for the injured Prasanna Jayawardene. If Mathews plays, either Sangakkara or Tillakaratne Dilshan will have to keep - both were practising their glovework on the eve of the match. The question is whether Sangakkara is willing to take on the additional responsibility of keeping wicket and batting high up the order.

Sri Lanka (likely) 1 Malinda Warnapura, 2 Tharanga Paranavitana, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (capt), 4 Mahela Jayawardene, 5 Thilan Samaraweera, 6 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 7 Angelo Mathews / Kaushal Silva, 8 Nuwan Kulasekara, 9 Thilan Thushara, 10 Ajantha Mendis, 11 Rangana Herath

More debuts in store from the other camp as well. Mohammad Aamer, the 17-year-old left-arm quick, could make his Test debut along with the right-arm seamer Abdur Rauf, since Pakistan have decided not to play Abdul Razzaq and risk him bowling long spells. Pakistan are very likely to play Yousuf. They may also go in with just one specialist spinner, and should they do so, Shoaib Malik can expect to do a lot of bowling. Another possible debutant is Saeed Ajmal, the offspinner, who had a good outing in the World Twenty20.

Pakistan (likely) 1 Salman Butt, 2 Khurram Manzoor, 3 Younis Khan (capt), 4 Mohammad Yousuf, 5 Misbah-ul-Haq / Faisal Iqbal, 6 Shoaib Malik, 7 Kamran Akmal (wk), 8 Danish Kaneria / Saeed Ajmal, 9 Umar Gul, 10 Mohammad Aamer, 11 Abdur Rauf

Pitch and conditions

Preparations were hit by rain over the last few days but on the eve of the Test, the sun was out. The covers came off after a very long time and the outfield looks lush green.

Stats and trivia

  • Sri Lanka have never won a Test series against Pakistan at home. In five meetings since 1986, Pakistan have claimed three series, including the previous meeting in 2006 which they won 1-0.

  • Pakistan trounced Sri Lanka by a massive innings and 163 runs the last time they met in Galle. Pakistan piled on four centuries and Razzaq took a hat-trick.

  • Sri Lanka's only victory in a Test at home against Pakistan came in March 1986.

  • Pakistan will miss the services of Mohammad Asif. In the previous Test between these two sides, in Kandy, he took 11 wickets and shot out the home side for 73 to set up the win in a low-scorer.

Quotes

"The shots you play in limited-overs cricket has to change in Test cricket. You definitely have more scoring opportunities in Tests. For some reason or the other, the mindset of the batsmen changes in whites. Mental strength, physical fitness and temperament plays a big part in Test. The side that is good on these accounts will win."
Kumar Sangakkara on the transition from Twenry20 to Tests

"Rustiness is not an excuse in cricket. We hadn't played much cricket, but we won the World Twenty20. India had played a lot of cricket, but they couldn't even make it to the last four. When we played Test cricket for the first time in 13 months, our team scored 700 and I scored 300. So it all depends on how we play on the day."
Younis Khan shrugs concerns of Pakistan being short of Test practice.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Pakistan says attempts to marginalise it in new FTP

Pakistan believes there were attempts to marginalise it, and other countries, in the draft of the next six-year international cricket programme but the plan is being reworked with a promise from the ICC that its interests will be protected.

"Yes, there were attempts to marginalise us [in the next tour programme]," the PCB's chief operating officer Salim Altaf told AFP. "The ICC was due to approve the Future Tours Programme (FTP) by June 25 but after our concerns it has gone back to the table. We hope our interests will be addressed, as the ICC has promised."

The ICC last week began chalking out an FTP that aims to provide a structured schedule of cricket for the ten member countries from 2012 to 2018. Teams have been wary of playing in Pakistan amid a wave of Taliban-linked attacks over two years, and in the past year the ICC moved the Champions Trophy 2008 out of Pakistan, after several teams refused to travel there, and stripped it of its World Cup matches after a deadly attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore in March.

It is believed, however, that a number of sides, including South Africa, promised Pakistan that they would be willing to play them "anytime, anywhere [on neutral venues] and honour all their contractual commitments" in the next FTP. England, where Pakistan will next year play several off-shore Tests, has also been helpful; the recent meeting has seen the PCB attempt to repair relations with members of the ICC as well as the governing body itself.

However, board officials believe that a "cartel" of the big four countries - Australia, South Africa, India and England - is building up, which will marginalise Pakistan and other, less profitable countries, raising concerns of a two-tiered cricket world of the haves and have-nots. This is one of the main objections that has been raised and is likely to now cause delays before the FTP is ratified.

"We have raised the issue with the ICC and said to them that there is a cartel building up of four countries and no cartel is ever a good thing," an official present at the meetings told Cricinfo. "They [the group of four] wanted to reduce the number of ICC events to two in four years also. The ICC is abdicating their responsibility here but they are now realising it at least."

It has also been learnt that there are no scheduled series between India and Pakistan in the FTP post-2012, indicating that relations between the BCCI and the PCB have yet to improve. The two boards have been close in recent years, but a change in administration within the PCB and a change in the political atmosphere between the two governments has changed that. The PCB's legal case against the ICC over the 2011 World Cup - set to continue now in the disputes resolution committee under Michael Beloff - has further fractured the relationship. The BCCI, say officials, has pointed to the uncertain political ties between the two countries as a reason for not scheduling any tours.

Mathews eyes third-seamer's slot

Angelo Mathews, who made a name for himself playing for Sri Lanka in the ICC World Twenty20, has said his intentions of shaping into a genuine allrounder motivated him to focus more on his bowling. Mathews capped a run-heavy domestic season with a call-up to the Test squad - for the first time in his career - in the series against Pakistan and is now eyeing the third seamer's slot in Galle, the venue of the first Test.

"Kumar Sangakkara wants me to improve on my bowling and if I play I could be the first-change bowler," Mathews told Cricinfo. "[Chaminda] Vaas has been helping me a lot."

Mathews said recently that he didn't bowl much in the past because of aches and pains and instead concentrated on his batting. He was the leading run-getter in the Inter-Provincial tournament but an ordinary season with the ball made him reassess his skills and potential. He spent the off-season period before the World Twenty20 working on his fitness and, in the nets, on his bowling.

"I wanted to be a genuine allrounder, I have been contributing a lot with the bat in the recent past," Mathews said. "I worked really hard on my fitness and spent a lot of time with my fast bowling coach. With the help of the seniors I improved a lot. I divided my training time into three parts each day and my focus was to improve each time."

Mathews was the surprise package in the closing stages of the World Twenty20, when captain Kumar Sangakkara's decision to unleash him with the new ball proved to be a masterstroke. In the semi-final against West Indies, Mathews bowled Xavier Marshall, Lendl Simmons and Dwayne Bravo to leave them reeling at 1 for 3 in the first over of the chase, a position from which they never recovered. The fact that he was an unknown entity, Mathews feels, worked in his favour.

"None of the batsmen had seen much of me before and didn't know what to expect," he said. "Chris Gayle is a devastating batsman and I just told myself that I was bowling to the batsman and not Gayle. The wickets were a little slow in England but the swing helped me. I didn't really expect to open the bowling in England."

He ended the tournament with five wickets in seven games and a reputation enhanced. However, his performance was the ball was in contrast to the domestic season just months earlier when he was hardly amongst the wickets. In the Inter Provincial first-class tournament, he took only one wicket in five games, and in the Premier League one-dayers, he went wicketless for 28 overs. He performed relatively better in the Twenty20 tournament, taking five wickets in as many games.

His A team coach in the last 12 months, Chandika Hathurusingha, recognised his potential as a bowler and was also instrumental in getting him into shape.

"He was not bowling much because of injuries, and we found he was not strengthening enough so we worked a lot in that area," Hathurusingha told Cricinfo. "He came into the A Team and he worked with me for about 12 months. We fast-tracked him from there."

The A tour of South Africa last August-September was when Mathews got more opportunities to bowl. He scored heavily, making 464 runs in seven games but managed only three wickets.

"During the A tour we used him quite a lot as a bowler," Hathurusingha said. "We placed a lot of emphasis on his all-round capabilities and we need players like him to maintain the balance in the team."

Hathurusingha, who's also part of the coaching staff of the national team, feels Mathews has the potential to develop into a genuine allrounder in the Test side but that process will still take time.

"He has to work on his fitness more than anything else. If he gets stronger, his speed will definitely improve. He is mentally very strong. What he needs to do is improve his sustainability. His progress was rapid over the last 12 months. I'm still working with him to advance his game both mentally and technically."

Million-rupee fine for Asif in Dubai detention case


Mohammad Asif at the Lahore airport after his deportation from the UAE, June 20, 2008
Mohammad Asif will be available for selection once he completes the IPL ban. © AFP

Mohammad Asif has been fined Rs 1 million (US$12,500) by the Pakistan board over his detention at Dubai airport for alleged drug possession. Asif, 26, was detained for 19 days in June last year while returning to Pakistan after playing in the inaugural edition of the IPL.

The matter was investigated by a three-member PCB committee headed by Wasim Bari, the interim chief selector, which submitted its recommendations to PCB chairman Ijaz Butt. "On the recommendation of the committee we have fined Asif one million rupees," a PCB statement said.

"Asif has accepted our decision and he feels he had made a mistake," Bari told AP. "It was our committee's unanimous decision that Asif should be handed a financial penalty as we took a number of things into account before deciding the penalty."

In documents in the possession of Cricinfo, prosecutors in Dubai confirmed that he was found with a small quantity of opium; he was ultimately let off without a charge, local authorities arguing that the offence was a 'trivial' one and a case not worth pursuing. The documents, though, clearly state that Asif was deported.

He is also banned from playing any form of cricket till September, after he tested positive for the banned anabolic steroid Nandrolone during the IPL last year. "Asif will be available for selection once he completes the IPL ban," the PCB release said.

That was the second time in brief international career he'd tested positive for the same steroid, after his transgression during the Champions Trophy in 2006. He was subsequently banned for one year while team-mate Shoaib Akhtar, was handed a two-year ban.

"I am delighted I will be considered for selection again but as far as the fine is concerned I will consult my lawyer about it. But the most important thing for me is to resume my career in September," Asif said

Asif has taken 51 wickets in 11 Tests since making his debut in Australia in 2005. He also has 36 wickets in 31 ODIs and 12 in his nine Twenty20 internationals.

I'd have picked Imran Nazir for World T20 - Bari


Imran Nazir swivels on one leg to steer a ball to the on side, Bangladesh v Pakistan, Group F, ICC World Twenty20, Cape Town, September 20, 2007
Wasim Bari: "The first five overs of a T20 game are crucial and Imran is an explosive player who could give us a much needed boost at the start of the innings" © Getty Images
Related Links

Wasim Bari, Pakistan's interim chairman of selectors, has said the batsman Imran Nazir would have been an automatic choice for the ICC World Twenty20 in England had he been a selector at the time the squad was being picked. Nazir joined the Pakistan exodus from the rebel ICL to make himself available for national selection - his ICL team-mate Abdul Razzaq got the nod - but missed out.

"If I'd had anything to do with the selection of the T20 squad then I'd have picked Imran Nazir," Bari told Pakpassion.net. "The first five overs of a T20 game are crucial and Imran is an explosive player who could give us a much needed boost at the start of the innings. Not to forget that he's a brilliant fielder and really lifts the team with his efforts."

Nazir had a very successful stint with the Lahore Badshahs in the ICL with his explosive batting setting up his team's title win last year. Bari said Nazir - who failed to make the Test squad for the ongoing tour of Sri Lanka - would be considered for the limited-over games.

"He was cleared on Tuesday over the discipline issue in the RBS Cup. That means that he is now in contention for selection in the ODIs and T20s vs Sri Lanka."

Asked why opener Nasir Jamshed was ignored, Bari said it was due to his fitness and not form. "Nasir has missed the last two tours he was selected for. He pulled a hamstring against Australia and was out with malaria against the West Indies (both in the UAE)," Bari said. "He needs to work hard on his overall fitness but he's still young and there's a lot of cricket to be played in the coming months. Nasir is still in the reckoning and his chance will come again. I saw his innings against India and he looks like a very good batsman."

Bari added that the allrounder Fawad Alam would also have to wait his turn to break into a packed middle order, though his skills and abilities to succeed in all three formats are not in doubt.

"All we can do is select Fawad Alam in the squad. How he is utilised in games and where he features in the team gameplan is a decision for the coach and the captain to make. His batting position is their decision and it's easy for us to forget that they also have to accommodate Yousuf, Younis, Malik, Kamran, Afridi, Misbah and now Razzaq.

"Fawad's time will come, sooner or later he will get the opportunity to bat higher up in the order. He's a very popular guy, the best fielder in the team, a very good runner between the wickets and a thinking cricketer who plays proper cricket shots."

Bari said even domestic giants like Saeed Bin Nasir would find it difficult to break into the middle order. Nasir, 29, was included in the Test squad against Bangladesh in 2003-04 but failed to get a game. He has scored over 6000 first-class runs and maintained 40-plus averages in the four-day and one-day matches. Bari disagreed that a strong domestic record would guarantee success at the international level.

"It also depends on who those runs were scored against. Most of the matches in our domestic cricket aren't of a very high standard, some are but on the whole the standard is quite poor. I'm not saying that Saeed isn't a good player. I've seen him bat and he is a very good player who's very consistent at domestic level."

Bari said he wasn't very keen on taking on a full-time role. The selector, who took over following Abdul Qadir's resignation earlier this month served two previous terms as chairman of selectors and was the PCB's director of human resources immediately before his latest appointment.

"At the moment I already have another job with the PCB and I've told them that they should look for a permanent selection committee to take over as soon as possible. I've done the job a couple of times before and I've done it for longer than anyone else. I'm not keen on taking it up again. As far as I know I'm only selecting the squad for Sri Lanka, so hopefully the new committee will be appointed before the next tour."

Draw despite brave SLC declaration

SLC XI 354 for 5 dec (Thirimanne 116, Kapugedera 115, Tharanga 50) and 137 for 2 dec (Paranavitana 48, Tharanga 44) drew with Pakistanis 400 for 8 dec (Fawad Alam 83, Manzoor 83, Butt 82, Suraj 4-120) and 54 for 4)


With little chance of an out-and-out result and rain threatening to mar proceedings, SLC XI captain Thilina Kandamby gave Pakistan their best shot at a win in the tour game, declaring at 137 for 2 and setting the visitors a tempting target of 83. However, a mini-collapse which saw Pakistan lose 4 for 29 put an end to the possibility of an outright result.

The Pakistanis would no doubt have their team strategy in place ahead of the first Test against Sri Lanka in Galle, with Fawad Alam looking in good touch and Salman Butt's welcome return to form. With both Mohammad Yousuf and Abdul Razzaq failing to impress, Fawad's success gives Younis Khan a good selection dilemma.

The third and final day began with Fawad continuing from where he left off the previous day. Confident strokeplay helped him bring up his half-century in quick time. Suraj Mohamed, who had picked up two catches and taken two crucial wickets on the second day, dismissed overnight batsman Faisal Iqbal in the sixth over of the day and removed Kamran Akmal three balls later. He then caught Razzaq to give Farveez Maharoof his first wicket of the match as Pakistan slid to 322 for 8. But Pakistan rode Fawad's superb innings, comprising six boundaries, to go past SLC XI's total and declared 55 runs ahead.

Openers Upul Tharanga and Tharanga Parnavitana ensured a steady start for SLC XI, putting on 66. But the introduction of spin yielded immediate results with Saeed Ajmal getting Upul caught behind. But Paranivitana held firm after missing out in the first innings, stringing together a 56-run partnership with wicketkeeper Kaushal Silva. Paranavitana though, was dismissed just short of his fifty, falling to Danish Kaneria before the heavens opened up, and Kandamby spiced up the game.

 
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