Rain washes out second ODI


A frustrated Michael Vaughan looks round the soggy Premadasa Stadium
© Getty Images

The heavy rain which left the Premadasa Stadium in Colombo awash on Thursday continued throughout this morning and put pay to the second ODI between Sri Lanka and England, which was called off at 6.05pm local time without a ball being bowled.The umpires made three inspections throughout the day, but play never looked likely due to the sodden outfield and boggy wicket. Even though the rain stayed away in the afternoon, Daryl Hair described the pitch as “not up to scratch” and after consulting both captains, called the game off.Marvan Atapattu was the happier of the two captains, as it now means Sri Lanka can’t lose the three-match series. Michael Vaughan, on the other hand, expressed his frustration, but insisted England would be well prepared for the final match on Sunday – assuming it’s not washed out.”It would have been wrong to have played in these conditions, and they weren’t going to improve,” Vaughan said. “It’s like a bog out there, the covering obviously hasn’t worked, but I just hope the rain stays off and we can get a game on Sunday.”It’s very frustrating, but you can only control what’s put in front of you. We’ll practise tomorrow and make sure we’re fully prepared for the last game.” However, those who have experienced the late monsoon before warn that Sunday’s game is also under threat.

Asian Test Championship final to be held in Pakistan

The Asian Test Championship (ATC), which has lain quietly dormant for fivemonths, is set to spring back into action in March when Sri Lanka andPakistan contest the final.The final, tentatively scheduled for March 6-10, will also mark the returnof international cricket to Pakistan, as Sri Lanka’s cricket board haveagreed to become the first major international side to tour there after theSeptember 11 terrorist attacks in America.The second Asian Cricket Council (ACC) managed Test championship was dealt acruel blow before its commencement when India withdrew at the last momentciting political reasons.Without the prospect of a high profile clash between India and Pakistan, theACC was unable to find a title sponsor and international broadcaster,undermining its revenue raising objectives.Pakistan and Sri Lanka romped to thumping innings victories againstBangladesh in the opening two games played in September.With Pakistan and Sri Lanka’s place in the final already guaranteed, thefinal group game, originally penciled in for January 30 at Colombo, wasabandoned.Wasim Akram’s Pakistan won the inaugural ATC crown in March 1999 when theycrushed Sri Lanka by an innings and 175 runs in the final at Dhaka.

England romp to a 10-wicket win

Karachi, Oct 22: England geared up for the three-match one-dayinternational series with a 10-wicket victory over Pakistan A in aone-day match here on Sunday in front of empty enclosures.England raced to the victory target of 170 in just 29.4 overs byruthlessly destroying the second Pakistan string bowling. Theirfielding added to their miseries when they dropped Marcus Trescothickand Alec Stewart who eventually ended their agony by retiring hurt.The sufferer on both the occasions was paceman Mohammad Sami whodespite conceding 35 runs from his six overs, left a big impact. Hisfigures might have been different had Shiraz Haider picked up astraight forward catch at square-leg of Trescothick when he was 36 andHumayun Farhat held on to a regulation catch of Stewart when he was 8.Trecothick followed up his Friday’s 102 with 59 while Stewart hit 50.Trecothick, who capitalized from some very short of length bowling bycutting and pulling at will, struck five fours and three sixes in his55-ball innings. Stewart hit five boundaries in a 68-ball knock.The openers retirement provided some more batting practice to skipperNasser Hussain who finished with 31 off 44 balls.Earlier, Hussain deciding to field to get a taste of the Pakistansummer, did an exellent job in the field by making life difficult forthe Pakistan A batsmen. There was nothing unusual in their bowlingexcept they kept the ball in three sticks.It was disappointing to see the future Pakistan batsmen bat so poorly.Batsmen like Hasan Raza was bowled when he danced down the track,Salman Butt was caught behind while fishing around, Bazid Khan givingStewart his second catch while cutting. Experienced Ijaz Ahmad Junior,who last played a Test in 1995, was run-out with a direct throw fromHussain.Pakistan A headed for an embarrassing end to their innings when theyreached 92 for six before Naumanullah and Fahad Khan came to theirrescue by adding 66 runs for the seventh wicket from 81 balls. Naumanbatted with great courage and concentration to score a fluent 64 off88 balls. His innings included four boundaries and sixes off DarrenGough and Ashley Giles.Fahad remained unbeaten on a 50-ball 28.For England, the most encouraging news was the form and fitness shownby Warwickshire’s left-arm spinner Ashley Giles. Giles, who missed theICC knockout tournament because of calf injury, bagged three for 34from nine overs. Andrew Caddick was economical, successful andimpressive when he picked up three wickets for 15 runs from his quotaof 10 overs.England take on Pakistan on Tuesday in first of the three back-to-backone-day internationals.

Celtic: Pete O’Rourke makes Kyogo Furuhashi claim

Journalist Pete O’Rourke believes the continued injury absence of Celtic forward Kyogo Furuhashi is a ‘big loss’ in the title race, GiveMeSport report.

The Lowdown: Rangers return?

Furuhashi has played just 15 minutes of action in Celtic’s last 14 Scottish Premiership fixtures, with Ange Postecoglou admitting last month he was ‘nowhere near’ a return.

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However, Mark Guidi recently stated that the forward could return to the bench at the beginning of April in time for the trip to Ibrox. Postecoglou is yet to put a real timeframe regarding the summer signing, and O’Rourke feels his absence may have dented the club’s title hopes.

The Latest: O’Rourke’s comments

Talking to GiveMeSport, O’Rourke had this to say on Furuhashi, with the race for the Premiership title heating up in the crunch period of the campaign.

“To be without his goals, movement and his intelligence, has been a big loss for Celtic. If he was fully fit and firing, Celtic would be big favourites to go on and win the league, instead of the position they find themselves in right now.”

The Verdict: Furuhashi key?

If Furuhashi fails to return to full fitness before the season is out, you’d expect Postecoglou will have to rely on Daizen Maeda and Giorgos Giakoumakis in a central role. Combined, the pair have played 32 games in green and white, scoring 12 goals and failing to register an assist between them.

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Meanwhile, Furuhashi has contributed to 21 goals in 26 games, showing his availability could be key as Celtic look to get over the line and take back the Premiership title from their rivals.

In other news: ‘Seems that’ – Journo now drops more Parkhead exit news on ‘horrendous’ Celtic ‘waste of money’. 

KC Ibrahim dies aged 88

KC Ibrahim: 709 runs between dismissals in 1947-48 © Cricinfo

KC Ibrahim, who played four Tests for India against West Indies in 1948-49, has died at his home in Karachi. He was 88 and at the time of his death was India’s oldest living Test player.He made his Test debut in the first match of the 1948-49 series at home to West Indies, his sheer weight of runs the previous summer making him an automatic pick. Opening with Vinoo Mankad, he scored 85 and 44, but in his next six innings he made only 40 runs and he had retired by the time England toured in 1951-52.Ibrahim’s Mumbai team-mate, Madhav Mantri, said he was “a solid player and one who believed in staying at the wicket for as long as possible.” He captained the Mumbai side that won the Ranji Trophy in 1947-48 and Mantri described him as “a fine captain, someone who believed in backing his players.”A top-order batsman who sometimes opened, Ibrahim made his first-class debut in 1938-39 and from 1941-42 onwards scored heavily in domestic cricket. He began that season with an unbeaten 230 and ended with 117 in Bombay’s innings win in the Ranji Trophy final.He reached his peak in 1947-48 when he scored 1171 runs at 167.29, including four hundreds, a record that won him the Indian Cricketer of the Year award for the season. He started the season with scores of 218*, 36*, 234*, 77* and 144, a total of 709 runs without being dismissed. In the last three innings of the previous season his scores had been 2, 2 and 4. He moved to Karachi in 1950 and that marked the end of his first-class career.He was in poor health for the last few years of his life. During India’s 2006 tour to Pakistan, a couple of journalists went to visit him. One of them, Jasvinder Sidhu, from the Hindi daily , remembers: “He didn’t want us to photograph him. He said, ‘I don’t want my friends in Bombay and Delhi to see my current state. Tell them I’m fine.'”

Smith and de Villiers extend lead

Stumps
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

‘de Villiers played and missed plenty, but crunched some robust drives through the off side toreach 31 when play was called off’ © Getty Images

South Africa enjoyed the best of yet another truncated day as they built up a lead of 152 but some of their advantage was cut back when bad light stopped play at a little over 4.30 pm local time, much to Graeme Smith’s apparent displeasure. India were doubly fortunate because, had it not been for a rock-solid innings from VVS Laxman and some useful runs down the order from Sreesanth, they wouldn’t have reached their eventual 240, being reduced first to 123 for 5 and then 183 for 8.Laxman played the kind of innings that India have come to expect of him inthe recent past. He took blows on the body, left alone what he could,played with assurance when he did, and placed the highest possible priceon his wicket. He kept one end sealed, remaining not out on an even50 even as wickets fell at the other end.When the day began, overcast and cooler than the previous two, there wasstill the hope that Sachin Tendulkar, who had played some special shots onthe second day, would go on and make a big one and lead India out of thewoods. And the beginning was good, as Tendulkar brought up his firsthalf-century of 2006 with a classy drive back past the bowler. MakhayaNtini was in for some more punishment as a Tendulkar punch through pointraced away to the boundary. But he had the last laugh, as a ball just keptcoming in to Tendulkar as he attempted to force the ball to third-man andonly managed a nick to the keeper. Tendulkar, who had made 63, was just not inthe best position to play the shot.Sourav Ganguly defended the first ball he faced to the off side withoutmuch trouble but the second one sent him packing. Ntini banged the ballin short and it was angled across the body, and Ganguly appeared to pickthe ball up late, if at all, as he fended awkwardly, and only managed tospoon a catch to point. Ganguly gone for a duck and India were in troubleat 125 for 5.Mahendra Singh Dhoni walked out to bat in no position to showcase histalent, and had to knuckle down alongside Laxman and help India inchtowards safety. Andre Nel, however, made the mistake of pitching the ballup a touch too far, and Dhoni picked off consecutive cracking boundaries,through point and mid-off, but that was the exception rather than therule. Morne Morkel was similarly picked off for a brace of boundaries inone over, and all of a sudden Dhoni was scoring at a good pace.Shaun Pollock – who for reasons known only to his captain did not getthe new ball – made traditional misers look profligate as he rammed the ballthrough to the keeper with metronomic efficiency. In the whole innings,only four balls of his were scored off, and his bowling figuresscarcely did justice to the pressure he built up. Morkel, however,benefited, sending one down on a length that invited Dhoni to drive, andfound the edge, with AB de Villiers gobbling up the offering in the slipscordon. Dhoni had made 34 from only 39 balls with seven boundaries.Laxman, in the meantime, had batted more than three hours for a littlemore than twenty runs, and he would have been aghast as Anil Kumble,usually the most sensible of tail-end batsmen, had an expansive drive at aslightly wide ball from Morkel and edged to Boucher. The first wicket ondebut sent Morkel into celebration, but the second gave him timeto get used to the idea that he was playing for his country at the highestlevel.

VVS Laxman weathered a lot of short-pitched stuff to keep india in the reckoning © Getty Images

Sreesanth came out to bat with a steely look in his eyes and carved out 28in an invaluable 52-run partnership for the tenth wicket. He took a coupleof blows on the body, and initially played a couple of streaky shots tothe third-man region, but soon got into his groove and began to pound theball to all parts. He did not back away from the ball but managed to makegood contact with the straight bat and heaving across the line. He evenadvanced down the pitch to the fast bowlers, showing plenty of positiveintent.Laxman, after initially protecting Sreesanth, soon realised that therewere some useful runs to be had and rotated the strike. Laxman himself wassolid as a rock, and very little went past him as he resisted for as manyas 156 balls to be unbeaten on an even 50. Sreesanth’s merry swinging cameto an end when he played one shot too many and nicked to the keeper, andVRV Singh, after creaming one through cover, feathered Pollock to MarkBoucher behind the stumps.Having picked up a lead of 88 South Africa proceeded to ram the advantagehome as the openers, Graeme Smith and AB de Villiers, weathered a probingearly spell to rack up an unbeaten opening stand of 64. Smith, who hasbeen short of form and runs, was given a thorough working over by ZaheerKhan early on, but managed to keep his wicket intact. de Villiers playedand missed plenty, but crunched some robust drives through the off side toreach 31 when play was called off. South Africa, on 64 for no loss, with alead of 152, were right in control at the end of the third day.Short cuts
Highlight of the day: Mornè Morkel had bowled nine overs withoutsuggesting that he was ready for the step-up to Test level. One ball canchange all that, and the first of his 10th over jagged away a teeny bitafter pitching. Mahendra Singh Dhoni did his best with a flashing drive,as did AB de Villiers with a good low catch at second slip, and Morkelcould celebrate the first of what will be many wickets.

VRV Singh certainly put some ‘shoulder’ into this one © Getty Images

Lowlight of the day: The power outage overshadowed poor shot selectionfrom some of the Indians. Soon after tea, one of the cables supplyingpower to several parts of the city suffered a glitch, and an alreadygloomy Kingsmead became even darker with the floodlights shutting down.Normal service resumed only 37 minutes later, but by the time the playersemerged, only eight more balls were deemed possible.Shot of the day: Sreesanth hit one pristine off-drive off Andrew Hall, andwas so impressed himself that he held the pose even as he was running downthe pitch. Bat manufacturers the world over have been alerted.Ball of the day: Makhaya Ntini produced a snorter to Sourav Ganguly. Shortof a length and directed at the pectorals, it had Ganguly fendinghaplessly to gully. After all the talk of chin music, here was one noteheard loud and clear.Catch of the day: de Villiers’s effort to send back Dhoni was competentrather than spectacular, but on a day where every other catch was agimmie, it takes the unfinished cake.Message of the day: VRV Singh’s first attempt at a scoring shot was theretreat to leg and the wild swings. Having clattered an entertaining 29 atthe Wanderers, his one-shot repertoire has clearly captured theimagination. “Put some more shoulder into it,” yelled one wag from thegrassy bank, and sure enough the next ball was thumped through the coversfor four.Off the park: Mark Benson was resting in hospital after being takenunwell, and the two men in the middle – Asad Rauf and Ian Howell, thereplacement – were due to pay their colleague a visit on Thursday evening.In the vicinity of the commentary box, some moaned about Durban’sunsuitability as a venue at this time of year. Hardly a match has beencompleted here without the weather intervening in some way.

Jaques can be like Gilly – Waugh

Phil Jaques: ‘I’m not by the textbook and I’m going to play that way’ © Getty Images

Steve Waugh says Phil Jaques, the debutant opener, is the prototype for future Australian batsmen. Waugh, who captained Jaques at New South Wales, has told his former team-mate to play the same way that has earned him comparisons with Adam Gilchrist.”He can take attacks apart,” Waugh said in . “He is so powerful he can go over the top or through the field. He gets on a roll and keeps going. He’s unorthodox. He can catch bowlers by surprise and I think people will be surprised how powerfully he hits the ball.”Jaques, who will replace the injured Justin Langer, met his captain Ricky Ponting and vice-captain Adam Gilchrist for the first time this week and the team is excited. “He’s got his game in order and everyone I’ve spoken to or heard from says he’s a very, very good player,” Ponting said in . “I’m told that he has a slightly different technique and hits the ball in different areas to what most blokes do and seems to be a fairly attacking, aggressive player. It will be good to see him bat.”During Waugh’s last year of first-class cricket he felt Jaques was batting like Gilchrist. “In the long term, Australia is lucky to have a player like him coming through,” Waugh said. “He has the ability to win a match. He wants to have a career out of cricket but he also wants to enjoy it. He is the prototype for young players who want to play for Australia.”After knocking back offers to qualify for England, Jaques has no intention of changing his approach for Monday’s second Test. “It’s got me to where I am,” he said in . “I’m going to be playing my game on Boxing Day and have plenty of fun with it. I’m not by the textbook and I’m going to play that way.”

NSW on top despite Perren century

Scorecard

Clinton Perren made 103 but NSW continued to dominate© Getty Images

Clinton Perren played a lone hand for Queensland, scoring 103, but New South Wales were well on top at close of play on the third day at the Bankstown Oval. Perren’s century lifted Queensland to 259, but they were still 207 behind NSW, who chose not to enforce the follow-on. Batting again, they reached 2 for 47, stretching their lead to a comfortable 254.Perren was the only Queensland batsman to reach a half-century. The innings was also propped up by an unbeaten 40 from Andy Bichel.NSW suffered an early setback in their second innings when Phil Jaques, fresh from an unbeaten 240, was caught behind by Wade Seccombe off Joe Dawes for a duck. However, with a lead of 254, they were well-placed to add some quick runs on the fourth morning and then set the Bulls a stiff target in the last innings.

Majestic Majid

All Today’s Yesterdays – September 28 down the yearsSeptember 27 | September 291946
Birth of the regal Majid Khan, cousin of Imran, who was picked primarily as a bowler when he made his Test debut aged 18 but who was soon ensconced in the middle order by virtue of his scintillating strokeplay. He became the first Pakistani and the first person for 42 years to make a Test hundred before lunch against New Zealand at Karachi in 1976-77. But his most celebrated knocks came at a lower level: he led Punjab University to victory over Karachi with an unbeaten double-hundred after they had been 5 for 4, and he smashed 147 in 89 minutes for Pakistan against Glamorgan – who he later represented with distinction – in 1967, an innings that included 13 sixes, five in one over from the offspinner Roger Davis. A Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1970, Majid made almost 4000 runs in 63 Tests before becoming an ICC match referee and later Chief Executive of the PCB.1960
Birth of the little West Indian wizard Gus Logie. A brilliant short leg and a dangerous counter-attacker at No. 5 or 6, Logie specialised in the punchy, initiative-seizing cameo. In tandem with Jeff Dujon he was a regular pain in the neck for England, most notably at Lord’s in 1988 (when West Indies were 54 for 5) and at Trinidad in 1989-90 (when they were 29 for 5). A glorious, impish batsman of just 5 ft 4 ins, Logie played his last Test at Edgbaston in 1991 and finished with 2470 runs at 35.79.1971
Whatever happened to Matthew Elliott, who was born today? The top scorer on either side in the 1997 Ashes series with 556 runs, the tall, long-nosed Elliott looked a class act who was here to stay. But within a year of becoming a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1998, Elliott had played what may well be his last Test. Poor form certainly contributed to his demise – he made three ducks in six innings in the West Indies in 1998-99 – but he did himself few favours by getting on the wrong side of Steve Waugh during that tour. A gifted left-handed opener or No. 3 with all the shots in his locker, Elliott made three hundreds in his 20 Tests, including 199 at Headingley in 1997, when he was infamously dropped by Graham Thorpe off Mike Smith. He also played for Glamorgan in 2000, and, with great success, for Yorkshire in 2002.1996
In Nairobi, Muttiah Muralitharan and Romesh Kaluwitharana rained on Kenya’s parade. In the first official one-day international there, Murali took 4 for 18 and Kalu thrashed an 89-ball ton as Sri Lanka eased home by seven wickets, with almost 20 overs to spare, in the first match of the Kenya Centenary Cup.1973
England’s leading female legspinner was born. At the age of six Kathryn Leng, who was born today, informed her primary-school teacher that she would play cricket for England, and she was true to her word. Also a fine middle-order bat, Leng made history in 1999 when she became the first woman to play in the men’s Bradford League. She also became the first woman to play in a university match, for Leeds/Bradford UCCE, before earning a recall to the England women’s winter training squad ahead of their tour to India in January.1984
The first floodlit one-day international outside Australia took place at New Delhi, and Kepler Wessels broke the habit of a lifetime by playing some shots. His 107 – the only ODI hundred of his career – led Australia to a comfortable 48-run victory over India in the first of a five-match series.1999
Opening the innings, Lance Klusener smashed an unbeaten 101 as South Africa romped to a nine-wicket victory over Zimbabwe in their LG Cup match at Nairobi with 15 overs to spare. Apparently the ultimate pinch-hitter, Klusener has opened only nine times in ODIs. The reasons? As an opener, his 101 was preceded by a third-ball duck and followed by two first-ballers, a fearful waste of South Africa’s most lethal weapon. Unsurprisingly, he hasn’t opened since.1988
In the second Test in Faisalabad Javed Miandad was given out lbw for only the fourth time in 63 Test innings on home soil. But by then he had made 107, his 19th Test hundred, and denied Australia’s attempts to square the series. In all Miandad was given out leg-before only eight times in Tests in Pakistan and 25 times overseas.Other birthdays
1964 Irfan Bhatti (Pakistan)
1973 Colin Stuart (West Indies)

Pakistan looking for a clean sweep after crowd trouble mars second win in Dhaka

Pakistan have paved the way for a clean sweep over Bangladesh as they beat the hosts by the conclusive margin of 72 runs in the second one-day international of the Coca-Cola series held in BNS ground in Dhaka to take a 2-0 lead.Assisted by a swashbuckling knock from stalwart Yousuf Youhana, Pakistan piled up 281 for 5 after a disastrous start. At one stage the tourists were 48 for 4. But then Younis Khan and Yousuf Youhana compiled a 135-run stand to take the side out of danger. Younis made 73 before Enamul Haque removed him.Youhana and Razzak remained inseparable till the end, when Youhana had reached 112 and Razzak 48. Mohammed Sharif was the most successful among the local boys claiming 2 wickets for 59.Chasing a target of 282, the hosts made a flying start despite loosing Javed Belim early. Mehrab Hossain and Al-Sahariar were going well and put on a 59-run stand for the second wicket. Razzak finally broke the partnership by claiming the wicket of Mehrab.The game was halted when crowd troubled erupted in one of the stands. Shoaib Akhtar, who was fielding near deep fine leg, got hurt when one of the spectators hurled something at his head. He had to go to hospital to receive treatment as play was held up for some three-quarters of an hour.On the resumption, Bangladesh lost two wickets in quick succession, includingAl-Sahariar for 41.Among the batsmen, Tushar Imran, gave the spectators something to cheer as he struck six boundaries in his 65, despite the match turning out to be a one-sided affair.The lower order batsmen managed to remain to take the total to 209 after 50 overs. Both Shahid Afridi and Saqlain Mushtaq captured three wickets.Yousuf Youhana was adjudged the man-of-the-match for his brilliant innings of 112 from 108 balls with 12 fours and two sixes.