Hohns awarded Queensland Cricket life membership

Trevor Hohns, the chairman of the National Selection Panel, has been awarded life membership of Queensland Cricket at the 2003 Annual General Meeting.The delegate council appointed Hohns as the latest Life Member in honour of his exemplary service to the sport as a player, coach and administrator.A star schoolboy performer for Sandgate-Redcliffe, he made his first grade debut as a teenager in 1969-70 and his first class debut for Queensland in 1972-73.He became a regular member of the Queensland team and made his State captaincy debut in 1982.Hohns toured South Africa as part of two “unofficial” Australian tours, in 1985-86 and 1986-87, taking 9-125 in the third international in Durban on the 1986-87 tour.After serving a two-year ban from first class cricket, he made his national debut against the West Indies in Sydney in 1988-89 and played five Tests on the 1989 tour of England that saw Australia regain the Ashes. He took 17 wickets at 34.11 on that tour.Hohns returned to lead Queensland in the 1990-91 season, his final in first class cricket. He is one of the members of the Queensland 100 Club, playing 120 first class games for his State.In all, he scored 5210 career first class runs and took 288 wickets in his 152 matches.He became a national selector in 1993 and became Chairman of the National Selection Panel in 1995.Hohns served as a Queensland Cricket Vice-President from 1992 until 2002. He was a also a member of the Queensland Cricket Executive Committee in 1987 and 1988.Queensland Cricket President Damien Mullins SC praised Hohns’ professionalism and dedication, singling out his willingness to stay active in coaching juniors at a grass-roots level while dealing with the expectations of serving as a National selector.Tonight’s meeting was told that Queensland Cricket had recorded a profit of $338,204 in the wake of last season’s lucrative Ashes Test and One Day International Series in Australia.

Australians secure draw on entertaining last day

New Zealand’s Academy was unable to complete a victory over their Australian counterparts at Lincoln Green, near Christchurch today.The Australians held out for a draw to finish the game 275/8, still 55 runs short of victory.George Bailey played an outstanding innings to score 101 and keep his side right in the hunt. But when he was out with 10 of the last 15 overs remaining, the Australians put up the shutters and held on for the draw.Earlier, the McCullum brothers, Brendon and Nathan, led New Zealand’s recovery with a fine 125-run seventh wicket partnership in 107 minutes. Brendon hit 80 off 94 balls which included nine fours and three sixes while Nathan scored 66 off 88 balls with one six and 10 fours.Chris Cairns hit 34 off 42 balls, including eight boundaries. New Zealand declared their second innings on 290/8, leaving the Australian Academy a target of 330. Steven Crook and Xavier Doherty each took two for 33 for the visitors.Some exciting play followed in the run chase. Two superb pieces of out-fielding from Taraia Robin and Sam Whiteman produced bonus run outs as batsmen attempted risky second runs.At tea the Australians were 108/4 but immediately after the break Beau Casson and Bailey launched a fearsome assault which gave their side every chance of a come from behind win.Casson scored 50 off 65 balls, including eight fours and one six, but no sooner had he achieved the milestone than he played a poor shot to Nathan McCullum’s bowling.But Bailey continued on in dominating form and when the last 15 overs started with 96 runs still required for victory, he was 81 not out scored off 99 balls.Nathan McCullum took some punishment as the Australians used their feet to get down the wicket to his off-spinners but he gained Casson’s wicket to partially ebb the Australian tide. McCullum finished with three for 92 and Wade Cornelius followed his first innings five wicket bag with two for 39.

Taylor, spinners deliver big England win

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details1:41

Taylor ton sets up England win

England clawed their way back into the ODI series against Australia with a 93-run victory at Old Trafford.A maiden international century from Man of the Match James Taylor provided the bedrock of England’s total of 300, before their spinners went to work on a dry surface, claiming 5 for 73 between them in 20 overs. Moeen Ali finished with career-best ODI figures while Adil Rashid has never bowled better in an England shirt.It was England’s first win in eight ODIs against Australia and only their second in 13. It means the sides go to Headingley with the series poised at 2-1 with two to play.There are, as ever, some caveats. It was an important toss that England won, with the pitch turning considerably by the end, while Australia were missing seven of the XI that played in the World Cup final a few months ago and are very much a team in transition. But, with a couple of obvious additions – David Warner and James Faulkner in particular – it may not be far from the side that represents them in the 2019 World Cup. Both these teams are in a redevelopment phase.Australia will also reflect that they had opportunities to bowl England out far more cheaply. Eoin Morgan was missed – a relatively simple stumping chance to Matthew Wade off the impressive debutant Ashton Agar – when he had 15 and Taylor would have been given out leg before off Glenn Maxwell for 41 had Australia utilised their DRS referral.It was, in some ways, a slightly old-fashioned performance from England. Taylor, demonstrating the leadership qualities that saw him promoted to the vice-captaincy for this game, faced 47 dot balls in his innings and only managed one boundary in his first 50 runs.But, while he never threatened to score at a run a ball and never threatened to be pretty, he manoeuvred the ball well, scampered 47 singles and, even when his colleagues failed and the innings faltered, kept his head and ensured his side posted a competitive total. It was, for its unruffled calm, its maturity and its judgement, almost Jonathan Trott-esque.James Taylor celebrates his maiden ODI hundred•Getty Images

And, if the total was a little less than seemed probable at one stage, it still required a record run chase. The highest successful chase in an ODI at Old Trafford is 285, but that was in a 55-over a side game. In a 50-over game, it is 242.Still, when England were 205 for 2 with 17 overs to go, it seemed a score of something approaching 350 was possible. But Australia’s new-look attack bowled with impressive control and maturity and England managed only 100 runs for the loss of six wickets in the final 18 overs of their innings. The ball became much more difficult to time as it aged.Perhaps for that reason, the most fluent batting in either innings came from the opening batsmen, Jason Roy and Aaron Finch. At one stage Roy, mixing touch and power in a manner that speaks volumes for his development as a batsman, took a jaded-looking Mitchell Starc for four boundaries in five balls.But batting at the other end appeared far less straightforward. Alex Hales, timing the ball sweetly enough but unable to pierce the field, managed 9 from 31 balls before clipping to midwicket and when Roy was lured down the pitch and drawn into a miscued drive, it seemed England’s momentum would falter.After a torrid start against the hostile Pat Cummins, Morgan helped Taylor add 119 in 18 overs and provide the platform for England’s total. While he looked uncomfortable against Cummins’ short ball – the bowler was clocked at almost 96 mph – he eventually found something approaching fluency.But after he fell, slogging the first ball of a new spell from Maxwell to mid-on, the anticipated acceleration never came. Stokes’ increasingly torturous innings was ended by a top-edged sweep to mid-on, Jonny Bairstow was run out by a brilliant direct hit from Smith, Moeen top-edged an attempted pull and Liam Plunkett was run out after over-committing while backing up to Taylor.While Taylor reached his century in the penultimate over of the innings – fittingly enough, brought up with a scrambled single – it was left to Chris Woakes’ late slogging to help England reach 300.Australia rarely threatened their target. While Finch, recalled after injury, looked in sublime form, Joe Burns horribly mistimed to mid-off and the spinners choked the innings into submission on a surface proving them with plenty of assistance. Smith was brilliantly caught by Steven Finn at midwicket – a full length diving effort – as he attempted to skip down the pitch and flick him through the leg side and Finch, frustrated by Rashid’s turn, control and variations, holed out to long-on.Maxwell flourished briefly but, after two successive reverse-sweeps for four, his attempt at a third resulted only in a top edge to the keeper and George Bailey’s uncomfortable innings ended when he slogged a full toss to deep midwicket.Victory was all but assured by the time Roy, at deep midwicket, appeared to have misjudged a tough chance but then dived backwards to cling on to an outstanding, one-handed, juggling catch.Maybe, in the long term, this is a performance that will confuse the England management. It remains hard to see a place for Taylor in the side once Joe Root returns and the continuing struggles of Stokes with the bat are a concern. But selectors would rather leave out good players than include inadequate ones and, after a couple of chastening defeats, this was a performance that not only kept the series alive, but will encourage a developing side that they are on the right track.

Spinners check Hyderabad's promising start

Irfan Pathan gave Baroda the breakthrough and improved with each over bowled © AFP

On a paata Uppal track, Baroda’s spinners absorbed the impact of a 131-run opening stand between Ravi Teja and Daniel Manohar and bounced back to restrict Hyderabad to 220 for 4 by the end of the first day’s play. The significance of the spinners, the left-arm-right-arm combo of Rajesh Pawar and Yusuf Pathan, was very crucial in keeping the hosts to that score, after Teja – in keeping with his season form – and Manohar dominated the opening session and set the platform for an imposing first-day’s total.Pawar and Yusuf sent down 52 overs for 107 runs and picked up three wickets to restore parity after the hosts began so well. But it was the other Pathan, Irfan senior, who gave the opening to the spinners by luring Teja to edge a loose drive for 71 from 118 balls. Irfan’s first spell read 7-0-35-0, and he recovered from Teja’s blitz and got better as the day progressed.Both Yusuf and Pawar applied the squeeze effectively and Hyderabad could only muster 55 in 32 overs after lunch before losing three more wickets in the last session for 43 runs. Yusuf sent down one miserly over after another, getting some bounce with his quick offspin while Pawar slowed the pace, gave the ball air, and tried to beat the batsmen in flight.As the day wore on both, Pawar in particular, got it to turn. Manohar was strangled by spin in the second session; he got into trouble on a few occasions, failing to keep his drives down and kept short cover and bowler interested. Pawar finally struck, luring him to drive one back low to his left. The Hyderabad gates were ajar and Baroda broke through.Mohammad Shakeer, on debut, swaggered in under an old-fashioned floppy hat and tried to live up to the billing of being an attacking batsman. He went for a slog sweep off his first delivery, and missed, but continued to attempt big shots. He swatted an Irfan bouncer, slashed him twice to the deep point boundary and cut Pawar for another four. But it was this same aggression which consumed him, as he top-edged a slog sweep to the wicketkeeper.Soon Yusuf got one to turn and jump at Arjun Yadav, who stabbed it behind the wicket and Baroda finished the day on top. Earlier, however, it looked a different ball game altogether when Teja unfurled an array of strokes to give a great start to the hosts. He impressed in his 164-minute stay in the middle and is likely to be a very valuable player for Hyderabad in the years to come. He was relaxed at the crease, moving his feet nicely and looked comfortable on front and back foot. He started off with a crisp on-the-up punch off Irfan through mid-off before the bumper barrage began.

Ravi Teja continued his season form, but fell at an inopportune time for Hyderabad © Cricinfo Ltd.

Since the comatose pitch offered no swing or seam movement, Irfan decided to change the angle and length for Teja. He went around the stumps and punctuated full-length deliveries outside off with a few bouncers. After Teja nonchalantly pulled a couple to the boundary Irfan deployed an in-out field. A deep square leg was brought in, in addition to fine leg and a short leg. More bouncers came and Teja, mindful of the two catching men, chose to defend.A couple were fended away to the off side but for the most part he was composed. There was a glimpse of the Hyderbadi wrists too when he late cut Irfan to the third man boundary. He had scored 24 runs from 26 balls in Irfan’s first spell and had seized the early advantage for the hosts.However, twelve balls into the post-lunch session he threw it away as he chased an Irfan delivery that was well outside off and shaping away. Yet again, as eight fifties and one hundred show, he has been dismissed after getting a start. “He has to work on the conversion rate. He has the talent, the shots, brilliant attitude and the future looks really bright,” Vivek Jaisimha, Hyderabad’s coach, said. “It’s up to him how far he can go.”In a game that is likely to be decided by the first-innings lead, Hyderabad could well end up paying for his shot selection.

Butcher extends Surrey contract

Butcher will remain at The Oval until 2008 © Getty Images

Mark Butcher, the Surrey captain, has extended his contract with the club to keep him at The Oval until at least the end of the 2008 season.”Securing Mark’s services until the end of 2008 is great news for the club,” said Alan Butcher, Mark’s father and Surrey’s cricket manager. “Having his leadership is a huge bonus as he is very well respected by all of the squad, not to mention his invaluable contributions with the bat.” Butcher was instrumental in leading Surrey back into Division One of the Championship last season, scoring 1418 runs at 59.08.In addition to Butcher, Surrey also extended the contracts of Neil Sake, Jade Dernbach, Richard Clinton and Stewart Walters.

Mixed reception for Stanford cash

The Jamaica Cricket Association is holding its hands over committing to the Stanford 2020 competition and the proposed US$280,000 to be allocated to each territorial board. However, the Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board (T&TCB) has no such qualms and they are moving ahead.”We will welcome any funding for development,” T&TCB general secretary Forbes Persaud said yesterday following a meeting between board officials and chairman of the 2020 organising committee, former West Indies fast bowler Andy Roberts, at the National Cricket Centre in Balmain, Couva.Roberts was in Trinidad as part of the series of visits through the islands by members of the 2020 board of directors-comprising 14 West Indies cricket legends-to assess the facilities and appraise the regional boards about the tournament and to discuss the disbursement of funds. However, Roberts’ visit coincided with a media release on Monday by the West Indies Cricket Board which issued a caution about the tournament, the brainchild of Antigua-based American businessman Allen Stanford.”The generous offer of assistance, which is proposed, is to be welcomed,” the WICB statement said in part. “But if it is Mr. Stanford’s desire to genuinely assist in the development of cricket, we would expect this to be progressed in conjunction with existing Caribbean initiatives, which are well advanced….”Visits to our respective territories have been made by envoys of Mr Stanford and we have indicated general interest in his proposal to offer funding. But we have made it clear that we expect these arrangements to be pursued through our collective participation at the level of the West Indies Cricket Board. Anything else would suggest an attempt to create duplication and division within West Indies cricket, which we do not believe is Mr Stanford’s intention.” The statement was signed by the six territorial boards, including the T&TCB. And in a Caribbean Media Coporation (CMC) report yesterday, JCA president Jackie Hendriks said his board, also one of the signatories to the statement, supported the board’s position. He added that Jamaica would adopt a wait and see approach.”Speaking for Jamaica, certainly when we heard about it we were asked to send some of our programmes to them which we did but we made it very clear that we could do nothing until the West Indies Cricket Board sanctioned the whole initiative and this is so up to now,” Hendriks said. “My understanding is that efforts have been made by the president of the West Indies Board [Ken Gordon] to get in touch with Mr Stanford without any success so therefore we are waiting to see exactly the outcome of any discussions between the West Indies Board and Mr Stanford.”However, yesterday, the T&TCB adopted a slightly different position. “After the meeting today, we have a clear picture as to what the whole thing is all about,” said Persaud, who along with second vice-president Azim Bassarath and T&T senior team manager and T&TCB executive member Omar Khan held talks with Roberts. Board president Deryck Murray is out of the country. The WICB did say they have an interest in the whole project. (So) at this stage we will be putting forward our proposals to the organisers by the end of the week with respect to how we would be using the funds.”Under the Stanford proposal, US$100,000 is to be used to develop cricketing infrastructure, while the remaining US$180,000 is to go towards player development and team preparation for next year’s 2020 series.The cash-strapped T&TCB currently has a bank overdraft of $279,000 and a debt to the WICB of $1.5m which was a loan to help with the construction of the National Cricket Centre.

Dhawan's 121 frustrates Karnataka

Elite Group
ScorecardShikhar Dhawan, who turned 19 a week ago, struck an unbeaten 121 to guide Delhi to 205 for 4 at the Jamia Millia Cricket Ground in New Delhi. His maiden hundred contained 10 fours and two sixes, and held the Delhi innings together. However, the batsmen maintained a dour rate of scoring: Aakash Chopra’s 15 came in 95 minutes, while Abhinav Bali required 186 balls for his 43. Sunil Joshi was Karnataka’s most successful bowler, taking 3 for 48. He created a flutter by dismissing Mithun Manhas and Sarandeep Singh in the space of three balls towards the end of the day.
ScorecardParthiv Patel’s 87 off 221 balls was the saving grace for Gujarat at the Wankhede Stadium today as Ramesh Powar bundled out half the side to end with 5 for 66. He took over after Usman Malvi, a right-arm seamer, had dismissed both openers with only 21 on the board. Parthiv shared useful partnerships with Niraj Patel and Kirat Damani, but the rest of the support cast did not stay long enough. Gujarat survived the whole day and ended with 210 for 8, but it was Mumbai’s day all the way.
ScorecardAmit Pagnis (93) narrowly missed out on a hundred, but with Sanjay Bangar (63), he did enough to put Railways in a commanding position. Their opening stand of 163 took the team to 255 for 5, and helped later batsmen ride over a three-wicket burst by Yogesh Golwalkar that gave Madhya Pradesh some hope in Indore.
ScorecardAndhra Pradesh pressed ten bowlers into action and had something to show for it as they restricted Bengal to 206 for 6 at Visakhapatnam. After Arindam Das (59) and Deep Dasgupta (48) put on 82 for the first wicket, Bengal lost the plot quickly and found themselves at 133 for 5. Laxmi Ratan Shukla steadied the innings with an unbeaten 51 to frustrate Andhra in the final session.
ScorecardHyderabad reached 236 for 8 primarily due to the efforts of Vinay Kumar (66) and Arjun Yadav (55), who put on 91 for the fifth wicket after Uttar Pradesh had reduced them to 82 for 4 at the Gymkhana Ground in Hyderabad. Shalabh Srivastava claimed 3 for 63 while Praveen Gupta ended with 3 for 40 – all middle-order victims.
ScorecardVikram Singh struck with the sixth ball of the morning to remove Sivaramakrishnan Vidyut, and Tamil Nadu struggled after that, ending the day on 191 for 7 against Punjab at Chennai. Singh and Amit Uniyal did most of the damage, taking three wickets each. Tamil Nadu were reduced to 100 for 7, but Kuthethurshri Vasudevdas (59 not out) and Mumbai Srinivas (36 not out) put on 91 runs to avert immediate disaster.
ScorecardIqbal Siddiqui ran through Assam at Aurangabad, claiming 5 for 68 in 22 overs to bundle them out for 201. Maharashtra reached 22 for 0 by the day’s end, still 179 runs behind. At one stage, Assam were 27 for 5 and then 40 for 6, before fighting efforts from the lower order, led by Gokul Sharma, who made 77 in only his second game, took them to respectability.

Super Smith passes 1000 runs for the season

Day 1 report
Frizzell County Championship Division One
Division One TableKent 384 for 4 (Smith 203, Walker 92*) v Lancashire
Scorecard
Ed Smith continued his hot streak of form for Kent with his third Championship century in a row, as he became the first batsman to pass 1000 runs for the season. Smith took only 114 balls to reach three figures, while his double-hundred came off 255 deliveries. His 196-run third-wicket partnership with Matthew Walker (92 not out) ensured that Kent ended the first day on top. Lancashire were without England’s Andrew Flintoff and James Anderson, and their attack melted in the Stanley Park sun. Eight bowlers in all were used with Carl Hooper wheeling through 37 overs to finish with 2 for 104, while the former England legspinning hope Chris Schofield had a nightmare spell, throwing down a host of looping full tosses and long-hops.Warwickshire 315 for 7 (Brown 113, Frost 84) v Middlesex
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An enterprising 209-run stand for the sixth wicket between Tony Frost (84) and Dougie Brown (113) rescued Warwickshire from a perilous 100 for 5 at Southgate. Middlesex struck back in the closing stages, dismissing both Brown and Frost with the total on 309, but Warwickshire ended the first day at a relatively safe 315 for 7 with honours just about even.Sussex 51 for 0 v Leicestershire 320 (DeFreitas 103, Mushtaq Ahmed 5-93)
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Phil DeFreitas scored a 116-ball hundred to lift Leicestershire to 320, after they had slumped to 127 for 5. It was DeFreitas’s tenth first-class century and he added 96 for the seventh wicket with Jeremy Snape (36) and 69 with Charlie Dagnall (15 not out) for the ninth. For Sussex, Mushtaq Ahmed continued to weave his magic as he wrecked Leicestershire’s middle order with 5 for 93, and poor old DeFreitas was wrecked too as he had to take time out to recover when Sussex began their reply.Frizzell County Championship Division Two
Division Two TableYorkshire 340 for 6 (McGrath 86, White 82*) v Durham
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Anthony McGrath enjoyed his return to county cricket with 86, as Yorkshire ended the first day on a comfortable 340 for 6. Steve Harmison did the early damage with the ball, dismissing both Yorkshire openers cheaply, but McGrath began the recovery which was carried forward by an undefeated 143-run stand between Craig White (82 not out) and Andrew Gray (60 not out). Shoaib Akhtar, however, had a quiet day as he finished wicketless from his 14 overs.Glamorgan 436 for 9 (Maynard 129, Dale 123) v Hampshire
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Adrian Dale (123) and Matthew Maynard (129) both scored centuries against a Hampshire attack sorely missing Wasim Akram. They were also without their senior spinner, Shaun Udal, and had to draft in Richard Hindley, an offspinner from a local league club. Hindley finished with 0 for 46 from 9 overs as all the bowlers struggled to keep the Glamorgan under control. Dale and Maynard led the way and shared a partnership of 129 for the fourth wicket as Glamorgan raced along at more than four an over and brought up the highest total of the season at The Rose Bowl.Worcestershire 155 for 6 v Derbyshire 163 (Mason 5-43)
Scorecard
Sixteen wickets tumbled in 101 overs of play as Derbyshire hit back after being bowled out for a paltry 163. Mohammad Kaif top-scored for Derbyshire with 31, but Michael Mason’s 5 for 43 gave Worcestershire the early advantage after they had lost the toss. By close of play, Dominic Cork had dismissed Worcestershire’s top three, and with Graeme Welch chipping in with a couple of wickets, Derbyshire were back in the game.

England travel to Zimbabwe with hope and expectation


Harare Sports Club
Photo © ECC

It might be thought that a trip to Zimbabwe is exactly what the beleagueredEngland one-day squad needs to get back to winning ways. They have notenjoyed a very successful time of late, finding themselves at what they hopewill be the end of an eleven-match losing run. However, when you takeEngland’s record against Zimbabwe into account, they might not be able tojustify any inherent optimism.The overall record, going back to 1991/2 at a time when Zimbabwe had yet toattain Test status, is played 16, won 9, lost 7. However, that tally isboosted by three wins in the NatWest Series in England in the summer of2000. Outside England, the record tilts six-five in favour of Zimbabwe.That includes the infamous first meeting in Albury in the 1991/92 World Cupin Australia when, in one of the great upsets in the limited-overs game,minnows Zimbabwe managed to overcome the eventual finalists by 9 runs. Thepattern was to be repeated for some time, as in the first six meetingsbetween the sides going through until 1996/97, England won only won match.That was at Brisbane in 1994/95 in the Benson and Hedges World Series event.Even when it comes to margins of victory, Zimbabwe hold the statisticalupper hand. To their credit they have wins by 131 runs in Harare in 1996/97and by 104 runs in Cape Town three years later. England’s biggest margin ofvictory is 85 runs on the last occasion the teams met in Harare a couple ofwinters ago.That 1996/97 series marked one of the worst tours England have ever had. Notonly did they lose the one-day series three-nil, but they could only drawthe Test series when neither side could force a win. England might have comeclosest to achieving a result, but their hosts were not over-impressed withthe reaction of coach David Lloyd. His “we flippin’ murdered ’em” commentmust go down as one of the most insensitive of all time and did nothing toendear an already discredited touring party to the locals.So why is it going to be different for England this time around? The fact isthat in recent times they have enjoyed much the better of the exchanges.Only one defeat at the hands of Zimbabwe in the last eight meetings sayssomething about the way the balance of power has shifted.Despite the run of poor form since meeting Zimababwe last time, England willbe expecting to maintain their sequence against the host country. There areserious problems facing Zimbabwe at home, to the extent that a number ofM.P.s have suggested that the tour should not go ahead. It nearly did not.It was only lengthy negotiations between the ECB and ZCU that securedaccreditation for all members of the British media party that allowed thetour to go ahead.On the field, too, Zimbabwe have had problems. They were thrashed by SouthAfrica in the first ODI last weekend, and despite the enduring excellence ofAndy Flower’s batting and other useful performers in the Zimbabwean line-up,there is not the same threat as there was. Take out top performers likeMurray Goodwin and Neil Johnson, both of whom have retired frominternational cricket, and the lack of depth in the game becomes all tooevident. Having said that, there are few occasions on which any Zimbabweanteam has not given of its all, and the sight of the three lions of Englanddoes seem to enliven them.England are trying to realign their strategy and team composition when timeto do so before the 2003 World Cup is running out. There are new faces inthe English squad, familiar faces, and recalled faces. What England aretrying to do is find a balance that will allow them to compete with the bestin the world. They singularly failed to do so last summer.Certainly this team looks sharper in the field than some put out recently.If the standards can be maintained, if runs can be scored at a decent rateand if the bowlers can find a line and length that does not allow oppositionbatsmen free hits every over, there is no reason why England should not makedefinite progress towards achieving their aim.It says something for the attitude of all concerned that the need for actionwas appreciated. It is one thing to bemoan poor performances but quiteanother to do something about reversing the situation. It would have beenall too easy to point to a busy winter involving tours to India and NewZealand and concentrate on an improving Test record. That has not happened,and even if the likes of Australia, South Africa and Pakistan are way out infront of England in the race for World Cup honours. England have not givenup yet. The tortoise might yet give the hares a run for their money.

We didn't do anything special with the ball – Khawaja

Australia A bowled out South Africa A for 171, but there was no fearsome fast-bowling display nor were the spinners particularly spiteful. It simply looked like a decent bowling attack keeping to their disciplines and waiting for the opposition to make mistakes.And there were plenty of those. Dean Elgar and Reeza Hendricks, the set batsmen, holed out in the deep on 28 and 43 respectively. Cody Chetty charged at the 20th ball he faced and dragged it onto his stumps. Theunis de Bruyn pushed a half-hearted drive straight to short cover and Dane Vilas was strangled down the leg side. Five of the top-six batsmen contributed to their own dismissals and left the team at 141 for 5.”We didn’t do anything special with the ball,” Australia A captain Usman Khawaja said. “We bowled straight, guys hit a good length. In all honesty, and I’m not trying to sledge South Africa, but they just didn’t play up to their best. They didn’t play very well today and we played well enough to be all over them and use that momentum to get wickets nice and quick.”Their middle order sort of let them down a little bit today, that was probably the only difference.” Evidence of that is in the fact that there were five single-digit partnerships and only one that went past 29.Hendricks, who was South Africa A’s top-scorer with 43, admitted they did not cope with a slow and low pitch. Seven of the XI were playing competitive cricket for the first time since March, Lonwabo Tsotsobe’s absence stretches to last December and although Vilas made his Test debut last week, he did not get to bat.”I think we didn’t execute well today and it just didn’t come off for us. Obviously, we tried to get the runs because we were bogged down which led to false shots which obviously got us out caught.”We are not used to this back home where pitches have more bounce and are quicker. But here it’s a bit slow, and a bit lower. Just a few things we need to adapt to [in our games]. Playing the ball late, it is turning more than it does back home as well.”But now we know what it’s all about. We’ve experienced it today and so come Sunday and the next games, hopefully we can do well. “Creating that kind of pressure and lulling batsmen into false shots, though, is only possible if bowlers keep to their disciplines. And Australia A did. All five used went at under 4.50 an over and legspinner Cameron Boyce was especially good at shifting the momentum back to Australia A after a 73-run opening stand.He dismissed a solid-looking Elgar with lack of pace and loopy flight. The batsman was looking for an easy single with a chip over short midwicket and instead found himself playing too early and lobbing a catch to long-on rushing in. Boyce was introduced in the 11th over when South Africa A were 47 for 0, bowled his full quota in one spell and by the time it was done in the 29th, the score had barely snailed past 100.”The reason I gave him 10 overs was he was just bowling so well and I just said keep bowling,” Khawaja said. “Hopefully he’ll take wickets, legspinners usually take wickets more times than not so I just kept him going. And [Ashton] Agar at the other end was bowling really well too. And then the quicks came on and it was reversing a little bit. Just all in all, it was a very good bowling performance.”So why couldn’t South Africa A reciprocate the template when they bowled? The simple answer was that Khawaja and his opening partner Joe Burns adapted to conditions a lot better. They put on 142 without breaking a sweat. In the 14th over, when legspinner Eddie Leie was introduced, Australia A were 76 for 0 and the required rate was 2.59.”By the time [Eddie] Leie came on and Dean [Elgar] bowled, the game was just about over anyway,” Khawaja said.

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