Waller, Taylor shine as Rhinos beat Rocks

ScorecardA 135-run fifth-wicket stand between Malcolm Waller and Friday Kasteni and a surprise four-wicket haul by Brendan Taylor helped Mid West Rhinos prevail over Southern Rocks by 18 runs in Masvingo.Rhinos, put into bat, were reduced to 67 for 4 before Waller and Kasteni added 135 in 21 overs to lift their side to a competitive 239 for 8. Malcolm – son of the former Zimbabwe player Andy Waller – made his highest List A score of 94 off 82 deliveries before falling to Blessing Mahwire, who took 3 for 40. Kasteni, who made 52, got stuck after reaching his half-century and fell to Steve Tikolo.Rocks were in control of the chase as Tatenda Taibu and Craig Ervine took them to 107 for 2 in the 19th over. But once Taibu fell after making 56 off 64 deliveries, Rhinos captain Taylor – who had until then taken only 15 wickets in 147 List A games – struck telling blows with his offbreaks to dismiss Rocks for 221.

Hales revives Nottinghamshire's prospects

ScorecardChris Read played an important role alongside Alex Hales to steady Nottinghamshire•Getty Images

Given that rivals Yorkshire and Somerset may have to settle for draws in their respective matches, Division One leaders Nottinghamshire have an opportunity to make a decisive break in the title race here, which makes the state of the match when rain brought a premature end to the second day all the more fascinating.Lancashire, of course, are not out of contention themselves just yet, even if their prospects of leaping from fourth to first between now and September 16th require a healthy dose of optimism and some kind autumn weather.Nottinghamshire clearly had the better of things on day two here but it was a day which demonstrated how quickly the picture can change on this ground, especially when the ball begins to swing. Alex Hales and Chris Read, the two batsmen at the crease overnight, have done much already to keep their side in the game but will have gone to bed aware that they will probably need to do as much again on day three if Nottinghamshire are to gain the upper hand.With batting appreciably more difficult than it had appeared for much of the opening day, the unbeaten 87 from 21-year-old Hales that kept the leaders on an even keel as they sought to build a competitive reply to Lancashire’s 319 was a brave effort, even if he did have luck on his side on at least two occasions.He and Read had shared a partnership worth 84 when the rain sweeping up from the south arrived at tea. But with David Hussey gone and his replacement, Adam Voges, not due in England until next week, Nottinghamshire’s batting is below strength and if the fifth-wicket pair are parted early on day three, Lancashire will fancy themselves to run through the rest without suffering too much damage.As it stands, Nottinghamshire are still 141 behind, a margin which is no small matter. Knowing local conditions as they do, Nottinghamshire would have been more than happy to be close to 320 had they batted first.Yet Lancashire, out for 319, ought to have had more, swing or no swing. Decent total though it might have been, it hid a substantial collapse, the measure of which can be gauged by the fact that, before Shivnarine Chanderpaul was out on Tuesday, they were 280 for 2.But then they lost three wickets in eight balls during a calamitous last four overs on the first evening and continued on the same wobbly trajectory on the second morning, when they lost four more wickets in the space of 14 deliveries.The sum consequence, adding the two catastrophic passages together, was that they gave away their last seven wickets for 27 runs in the space of 56 balls.There was more success for Andre Adams, who laughed at being mentioned in the same breath as Sir Richard Hadlee, another New Zealander who did fairly well at Trent Bridge, on Monday evening, but can nonetheless be described nowadays as a fine bowler.He finished with two wickets in two balls on Monday, and while he could not complete the hat-trick it was not long before he was acknowledging more compliments from his team-mates as Luke Sutton edged to third slip.Ryan Sidebottom ended Mark Chilton’s five-hour 67 with an uncontestable leg-before, after which Adams removed Saj Mahmood and Kyle Hogg with the first and last balls of the 100th over to finish with 6 for 79, his best figures for Nottinghamshire.Now 35, Adams might consider his better years behind him, given that it is eight years since he won his only Test cap and three since the last of his appearances in the New Zealand one-day side. But lately he has flourished as a bowler with Nottinghamshire and his tally of 51 first-class wickets at 23.06 this year — his best for one season — follows 48 last summer. His dressing room neighbours at Trent Bridge might have more illustrious reputations but there is none who has made a more valuable contribution in the last couple of years.The downside to shooting out their opponents so quickly was that Nottinghamshire faced 19 overs before lunch in the same humid, overcast conditions, against a Lancashire attack no less proficient than theirs at exploiting them.It was no surprise that they lost Matt Wood, Mark Wagh and Samit Patel cheaply as Glen Chapple, Mahmood and Hogg took a wicket each, via two catches behind the stumps and one at second slip. Mahmood, who bowled a consistent line just outside off stump, might have had one or two more, with better luck.But the bowling lacked enough discipline in the afternoon and Hales and the wily Ali Brown put on 57 before Mahmood made another breakthrough, bringing one back to trap the latter in front.Hales, an opener who stands tall and bats straight, looks a decent prospect and packs a solid, attractive drive. He had some luck, though. He was dropped by Steven Croft at second slip on 78 off Tom Smith and by Smith at second slip off Hogg on 81. Hales acknowledged he had been fortunate, but also believes it could be a breakthrough innings in his first season as a regular in the Championship side.”I made a hundred against Hampshire earlier in the season but this is a massive game for us in terms of the Championship and this has been the highlight of my season so far,” he said. “If we can keep Lancashire from winning or even win it ourselves it will be a really valuable game.”You are never really in at Trent Bridge and I was dropped a couple of times but I hope I can cash in now and help the team.”

Dockrell stars on rainy first day

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Twelve wickets tumbled on a rainy first day of the Intercontinental Cup clash between Ireland and Netherlands in Dublin, the hosts closing the day 100 runs in arrears at 88 for 2. George Dockrell starred with the ball on his first-class debut after Netherlands captain Peter Borren opted to bat first, picking up 4 for 36 as the visitors were bowled out for 188.Dockrell was one of four Ireland players to make their first-class debuts in this game and another debutant, seamer Allan Eastwood, was the first to break through for Ireland. He had Eric Szwarczynski caught by captain Trent Johnston in the seventh over, before Johnston himself struck to extract Wilfred Diepeveen for an aggressive 41 and Nick Statham for a far more circumspect 18-ball duck as Netherlands slipped to 84 for 4 immediately after lunch.Ireland’s slow bowlers then took centre stage, Dockrell combining well with yet another first-class debutant, offspinner Albert van der Merwe, to pick up the remaining seven Dutch wickets. Dockrell had started by removing opener Tom de Grooth for a 92-ball 29, and followed up with the wickets of Wesley Barresi, Netherlands first-class debutant Tom Heggelman and, in the same over, No. 11 Mohammad Kashif, all lbw.Netherlands struck back quickly as Paul Stirling was rushed in a cut shot and edged to second slip and Maurits Jonkman trapped James Hall on the crease to reduce the hosts to 17 for 2. But Kevin O’Brien and Alex Cusack weathered the second rainbreak of the day and gained in confidence the longer they were at the crease, adding an unbeaten 71 for the third wicket to take Ireland to a relatively safe position at stumps.

Brooks seals Northamptonshire thrilling tie


ScorecardPaceman Jack Brooks took two runs off the final ball as the Northamptonshire Steelbacks incredibly sealed their third tie in this season’s Friends Provident t20 against the Nottinghamshire Outlaws at Wantage Road.Australia international David Hussey smashed 41 off 32 balls as the Outlaws recovered from 13 for three to post 144 for 7 off their 20 overs, with David Willey taking 3 for 33 for the hosts.Chaminda Vaas hammered 47 off 30 balls including six fours and one six before Brooks made two runs off the one ball he faced as the result between the two sides at Trent Bridge last month was repeated. Nottinghamshire won the toss and chose to bat, but they got off to an awful start when they lost their two openers in the fourth over.Alex Hales (3) launched Brooks high into the air and was caught at backward point by Willey before veteran Ali Brown (9) edged him to wicketkeeper Niall O’Brien two balls later.Matt Wood faced two balls without scoring before being caught behind by O’Brien off Chaminda Vaas, leaving the visitors on 13 for 3. Samit Patel and Hussey then led the recovery, adding 76 runs between them for the fourth wicket.Patel blasted 40 off 32 balls before he got underneath Willey’s delivery and was comfortably taken at extra cover by David Sales. Hussey then followed when he smashed Willey straight to Alex Wakely at long-off before the same bowler forced Steven Mullaney (12) to edge to O’Brien.Graeme White’s (2) attempted reverse sweep off Northants captain Andrew Hall in the final over went to Brooks at short third man, leaving Nottinghamshire skipper and wicketkeeper Chris Read unbeaten on 28.The Steelbacks chase got off to a solid start with Sales and Vaas making 40 together before Sales (9) edged a Darren Pattinson delivery on to his middle stump. Half-way into the hosts innings, O’Brien, who made 17, clouted Mullaney to Hussey at extra cover.Vaas was three short of his half-century when he went cheaply in the following over by top-edging Patel straight to Dirk Nannes at square leg. Nannes then trapped Wakely (19) lbw as the game moved towards a thrilling climax with Northants needing 38 from the last five overs.Chigumbura made 18 before his leg stump was taken out by White when his attempted reverse sweep went awry. The Steelbacks required ten as they moved into the final over, but they lost Hall (12), James Middlebrook (9) and Ben Howgego (1), all run out, before Brooks’ heroics.

Vaas carries Northamptonshire to first win

ScorecardChaminda Vaas starred with bat and ball as Northamptonshire finally broke their duck in this year’s Friends Provident t20 with a 21-run win over Worcestershire. He hit a fluent 54, including three huge sixes, as a makeshift opener as the hosts posted a total of 143 for 8 from their 22 overs.Vaas went on to grab two wickets with the ball as Northamptonshire ended a run of three straight defeats by restricting the visitors to 122 for 8. Worcestershire bowler Jack Shantry had been the pick of their attack, taking two for 24, but his batsmen badly let him down with Vaas and James Middlebrook doing the damage for Northants.Northamptonshire won the toss and chose to bat in glorious conditions and former New Zealand international Lou Vincent made a breezy 18 before hitting James Cameron to Shantry at mid on. Cameron then dropped Vaas twice, first at deep extra cover then deep midwicket, both off Australia spinner Steve Smith, as Vaas and Ireland wicketkeeper Niall O’Brien added 71 runs between them.Vaas went past 50 off 39 balls by smashing Gareth Andrew for six over mid-wicket but perished by blasting the same bowler to Smith at long off. O’Brien departed soon after when his off-stump was taken out by Moeen Ali before Northamptonshire captain Andrew Hall smashed stand-in Worcestershire captain Daryl Mitchell to Alexei Kervezee at deep midwicket.Shantry claimed two wickets in the 19th over by bowling Rob White for 13 before Nicky Boje tamely struck his first ball to Mitchell at extra cover. In the final over, David Willey was run out by Cameron at backward point before Smith caught Alex Wakely at long off against Andrew.Chasing 144, Worcestershire got off to a bad start when Jack Manuel, who was making his senior debut, made just three before launching Vaas to Boje at deep square-leg. Ex-skipper Boje then bowled Phil Jaques for 10 and an awful running mix-up in the ninth over involving Ali and Kervezee led to Boje running out the former for 19.Smith made nine before he hit James Middlebrook to Jack Brooks at deep cover and Vaas removed Kervezee’s middle stump to leave the visitors on 72 for 5. Worcestershire’s sorry procession continued when Cameron made just a single before he was bowled by Middlebrook as the spinner ended his impressive spell.Two more wickets fell in the last two overs with Mitchell hammering Hall to Brooks at deep midwicket and Andrew then struck his first ball to Vincent at extra cover.

Sehwag ruled out of Asia Cup

India have suffered a setback ahead of the Asia Cup final against Sri Lanka, as Virender Sehwag, the opener, has been ruled out of the tournament due to a strained hamstring.Sehwag sustained the injury during India’s chase against Pakistan in Dambulla and has been advised 10 days rest. Dinesh Karthik, the wicketkeeper batsman, has been called in as his replacement. Sehwag also missed the team’s practice session on Monday morning and will fly back to India on Tuesday.In an uncharacteristic innings where he laboured to 10 off 32 balls, Sehwag appeared to be in pain and sought the assistance of the physio. He eventually had to rely on the services of Suresh Raina as runner before being dismissed.Sehwag had also missed the World Twenty20 this year in the Caribbean due to a shoulder injury, and was rested for the subsequent tour of Zimbabwe. Similarly, in 2009, he hurt his shoulder during the IPL in South Africa, missing out on a place in India’s squad for the World Twenty20 in England.India take on Sri Lanka in a dead rubber on June 22, before the final on June 24.

Smith launches Twitter tirade at Kepler Wessels

Graeme Smith has launched a scathing attack on former South Africa captain and selector Kepler Wessels on Twitter and hit back at the criticism his side have received after being dumped out of the World Twenty20 in the Super Eights stage.”Find it amazing that kepler can sit and say should have picked a younger squad when he was 1 of the selectors who chose it!unbelievable!” Smith wrote on Twitter and followed it up with “Atleast we own up to playing poorly.but all these so called experts/ex players im not sure I see a winners medal hanging round there necks!”South Africa lost heavily to England and Pakistan to finish bottom of the table in their Super Eights group and have won just a single global event – the ICC Knockout in Dhaka 12 years ago – since their reintroduction to world cricket in 1992.Their recent failure prompted a clutch of former players to voice their concerns, with Graeme Pollock saying “The two run-chases, against England and Pakistan, were two of the most amateurish I’ve ever seen,” and former selector Hugh Page saying: “In every other side, there’s a young player – sometimes two – who will go after the bowling early in the innings, I’d like to more young players to be given an opportunity.”Though nobody has as yet called for his head, Smith has been in charge for seven years and is under pressure to turn things around soon. South Africa play West Indies in three Tests, four ODIs and two Twenty20s beginning May 19.

Essex struggle after Yorkshire marathon

ScorecardJonathan Bairstow continued his good start to the season with another fifty•PA Photos

Yorkshire recorded their highest score in a home match against Essex of 516 before astute bowling changes had the visitors in all sorts of trouble on the second day of their Championship encounter at Scarborough.Essex closed on 159 for 5 which meant they still required a further 208 to avoid the possibility of the follow-on and they have a lot of hard work in front of them if they are to prevent Yorkshire from strengthening their position at the top of the First Division table.Billy Godleman and Alastair Cook began the Essex reply and they appeared in little difficulty against some rather erratic new ball bowling from West Indian Tino Best and Oliver Hannon-Dalby.But a double bowling change by Yorkshire skipper Andrew Gale paid immediate dividends as Cook was lbw to Steven Patterson’s second ball and Cook suffered a similar fate off the final ball of leg-spinner Adil Rashid’s first over.Essex were 32 for 3 at tea and Best returned straight after the interval for John Maunders to slash his second ball to Richard Pyrah at backward point. Jaik Mickleburgh and Mark Pettini began to get Essex out of their difficulties but at 74 for 4 in 24 overs Gale called up Hannon-Dalby again and Mickleburgh leaned into his sixth delivery to become the third lbw victim of the innings so far.A stand of 61 between Pettini and James Foster was brought to an end in dramatic fashion by Best who took Pettini’s off-stump out of the ground. Yorkshire began the day on 313 for 3 and when their innings eventually closed it had overtaken their previous best in a home match against Essex of 512 for 9 declared at Sheffield’s Bramall Lane in 1928.Anthony McGrath (112) and Gale (89) resumed their fourth wicket stand of 163 but McGrath failed to add to his second consecutive century, being lbw to David Masters in the first over. Gale never wavered on his way to a faultless century off 168 balls with 14 fours and a six and partnered by Jonny Bairstow he guided Yorkshire to 354 for 4 and a fourth batting bonus point but at 370 for four in 110 overs they still missed out on a fifth point.The fifth wicket pair put on 76 in 17 overs before Gale was neatly stumped by Foster for 135 to bring left-arm spinner Tim Phillips his 100th dismissal in first-class cricket. Yorkshire were able to press on to a formidable score through well constructed half-centuries from Bairstow, whose 62 came off 112 balls with 11 fours, and Pyrah, who was last out for 61 from just 73 deliveries with six fours and a six.All five of Essex’s bowlers had the consolation of picking up at least one wicket, Chris Wright enjoying the best return of 3 for 97 but Ryan ten Doeschate also worked hard for his three for 117.

Jamaica beat Canada by four wickets

Jamaica made hard work of their Digicel-sponsored Jamaica Cricket Festival fifty-over contest against Canada, losing six wickets before labouring past the paltry target of 149 in the 29th over.Despite having a below-par score to defend, Canada made a contest out of the encounter and showed their intentions from the very first delivery in the Jamaican response, getting rid of opener Danza Hyatt who was caught in the slips by Harvir Baidwan off the bowling of Henry Osinde.The Canadians were at it again minutes later when Donovan Pagon was sent on his way, caught by Rizwan Cheema off Khurram Chohan, to leave the Jamaicans precariously poised at 3 for 2.Things looked even worse for the locals when Carlton Baugh and captain Tamar Lambert, who went for a first-ball duck, were sent packing with the score on 64. Opener Brenton Parchment was the saviour for the hosts with a responsible, unbeaten knock of 72 achieved at a run-a-ball, with ten fours. Hard-hitting lower-order batsman Andre Russell hastened the finish, crashing four boundaries in a rapid 19.Earlier in the day, David Bernard had Canada in trouble early, as the top three fell for single-figure scores. Captain Ashish Bagai stemmed the rot with a 64-ball 53, and he got some support from Usman Limbada and Sunil Dhaniram, before Odean Brown ran through the lower order. He finished with 4 for 33, as Canada folded for 148 in 41 overs.

'Banter' to continue, says McCullum

Brendon McCullum, the New Zealand wicketkeeper-batsman, has said the heated exchanges between players, like the one between Mitchell Johnson and Scott Styris in the first ODI in Napier, are likely to continue for the remainder of the series. Johnson and Styris bumped shoulders and appeared to clash heads in the 46th over of New Zealand’s chase, and were fined by the match referee as a result. But McCullum said the nature of the trans-Tasman rivalry made for an intense atmosphere on the field.”Australia is playing New Zealand, so it’s always going to be testy,” McCullum was quoted as saying in the . ”Both teams are playing for their countries, trying to win for their countries, and we’re always going to have banter out in the middle. What we saw [between Johnson and Styris] was two guys who are extremely passionate in trying to pull through for their country.”Both players had a talking to from the match referee, so that might suggest it went a little bit too far, it probably bordered on just stepping over the mark, but once we get out there again I’m sure the fight will come to the fore in both teams again.”I don’t think it’s a bad thing, to be honest. It shows everyone watching how much it means to us.”McCullum said Australia’s defeat in the first ODI, by two wickets, could prompt them to be more aggressive in the second game at Eden Park in Auckland. ”I guess that’s the way Australia always come out – they play hard but they try to push the rules as far as they can,” McCullum said. ”They’re obviously going to come back twice as hard now and we’re just going to have to step up again.”We want to be as aggressive and uncompromising as we can – in terms of our skill set. Any of those other things, we don’t try to instigate.”Michael Hussey, the Australian batsman, said his team was quite focussed on the cricket. ”I didn’t really see it, actually. I was stuck out on the boundary,” he said. ”It seemed like they bumped into each other but it’s been dealt with now. Most things that happen out in the middle, it’s best if they’re just left out in the middle. We’re certainly at our best when we’re just concentrating on our cricket.”However, Hussey added that outbursts similar to Johnson’s would continue. When asked if Johnson’s actions were out of character, he said: ”He’s a pretty passionate sort of guy, he plays the game hard, and out in the middle there are always going to be emotions. It’s happened throughout the history of the game and I’m sure it won’t be the last time. Fast bowlers are always pretty emotional sorts of guys. New Zealand’s approach hasn’t surprised us at all.”

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