Media boycott threatened over BCCI stance

Major news agencies could boycott the series between India and England in protest at restrictions imposed upon journalists by the BCCI

George Dobell13-Nov-2012Major news agencies could boycott the series between India and England in protest at restrictions imposed upon journalists by the BCCI.The News Media Coalition (NMC), which campaigns for media freedom around the world and represents a large number of media organisations, has issued a statement saying it “deplored” a decision by the India board to bar photo agencies such as Getty Images and Action Images. The BCCI have said they will supply their own images of the series, which starts with the first Test in Ahmedabad on Thursday, to be downloaded from their website.”The NMC, an international organisation which defends the ability of the press to inform the public with independent news material, has urged the BCCI to withdraw the policy which will hit media coverage, fans and the sponsors involved with teams,” a NMC statement read. “Getty Images and Action Images and Indian photographic agencies have been barred by the BCCI for this latest cricket series.”Agence France-Presse (AFP) announced they would suspend text and photo coverage unless the matter could be resolved ahead of the series. AFP stated that it “strongly believes the right of the media to cover news events without undue restrictions should be protected”, adding it hoped “the BCCI will lift its policy so news media and fans can continue to get independent coverage”.Reuters and the Associated Press also said they may be forced to suspend coverage. Other news organisations are considering their positions, fearing that the BCCI’s policy may set a precedent.”The BCCI has offered to make its own photographs available but this is no substitute for independent and objective press photography,” Andrew Moger, executive director of NMC, said. “Despite numerous opportunities, the BCCI has yet to explain why it is discriminating against photographic agencies or indeed whether other news sectors will be targeted. We deplore this move and insult to organisations which have supported cricket worldwide.”BCCI media manager Devendra Prabhudesai said the board was not seeking to bar news agencies. “The BCCI has a policy not to accredit photo syndication services like Getty Images and other similar foreign and domestic agencies,” he told AFP. “We have no such problems with AFP, AP or Reuters since their text and photo service is for editorial use only. We have already explained our stand to the News Media Coalition.”The episode is the latest dispute between the BCCI and media organisations in the run-up to the series. Sky TV, which owns the television rights for the tour in the UK, decided not to send its team of commentators to India after the BCCI demanded £500,000 for hosting them in the grounds. Sky refused to pay and will instead commentate from a live television feed in London.The BBC, which owns the rights for audio coverage in the UK, was also asked for an extra £50,000 but reached an agreement with the BCCI.

Delhi aiming for a last-day graft

Karnataka batting coach J Arunkumar defended his team’s decision to bat first on a grassy pitch, saying the batsmen had come out with a plan to bat positively after seeing off the new ball

Kanishkaa Balachandran at the Chinnaswamy Stadium10-Dec-2012Delhi’s chances of pulling off an outright win slumped when they were set a challenging 410 going into the final day in Bangalore. The loss of three quick wickets late in the evening has all but ruled out their pursuit for a victory, said their coach Vijay Dahiya. In the event of a draw, Delhi have the cushion of the first-innings lead which will give them three points.”No (thoughts of a win). To be honest, looking at the situation right now we have to take it session by session,” Dahiya said. “We have the first-innings lead. If it stops right here, we have three points.”On the second day, Delhi had struggled to dislodge the Karnataka opening pair of Robin Uthappa and KL Rahul, who extended their overnight stand to 140, setting the foundation for a healthy lead. Delhi had their moments in the opening session when they picked three wickets for no runs, including the openers. Karnataka were struggling at 167 for 4 at one stage but a partnership of 145 between Stuart Binny and Manish Pandey had handed the initiative back to Karnataka. Delhi failed to recover from that setback, and Dahiya admitted that his side had to take responsibility for letting things slip at a crucial stage.”We definitely missed a trick. We should have at least stopped the flow of runs,” Dahiya said. “They had a good partnership but mind you one of them (Pandey) didn’t look in good flow. We couldn’t check them, and their partnership was a big part of the game. If we had picked another wicket there, we would have put big pressure.”A setback for Delhi was Ashish Nehra’s no-show after bowling three overs in the morning. Though Nehra has struggled to maintain his fitness through the season, his absence today increased the responsibilities on the younger crop who couldn’t create enough pressure to pick up wickets. Dahiya said the team management decided to play it safe with Nehra, keeping his workload in mind.”He bowled his heart out in the first innings but he felt the strain so we didn’t want to take a chance with him,” Dahiya said. “He is fit now.”Having already lost two top-order wickets, plus a nightwatchman, Delhi will have to guard against losing wickets in a hurry in the morning session, as has been the trend over the first three days. The afternoon session has been the most productive for the batsmen and Dahiya said it was important Delhi keep that in mind. He said it was the kind of pitch that will always encourage positive strokeplay, instead of stonewalling.”The first session is always going to be tricky. The middle session is definitely a batsman’s session if you apply yourself,” he said. “That’s when the bowlers will have to work hard.”In this game you can’t just get into a shell, you have to keep playing your shots. They (Karnataka) scored so much so if you get into a shell they will keep coming at you. One good partnership, 150-odd runs and you could put them under pressure. In every session the average is about 130 runs. If there is a ball to be hit you have to hit it.”

Sreesanth motivated by 'darkest' days

Sreesanth, the India fast bowler, is using the recent experiences of the “darkest” days of his career as extra motivation to force his way back into the national team

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Jan-2013Sreesanth, the India fast bowler, is using recent experiences of the “darkest” days of his career as extra motivation to force his way back into the national team.Sreesanth, who will face England for India A on Sunday, was out of action for more than year after undergoing two operations on his toes to insert platinum nails which left him in a wheelchair as he recuperated. A quick bowler known for his aggression on the field, which sometimes spilled over the top, Sreesanth admitted to it being an emotional time for him where he even considered it might be the end of his career.”Who says men don’t cry? I used to sob like a baby as I was forced to move around in a wheelchair for two months after twin surgeries on my toes,” he told . “To be honest, I started thinking that probably, I won’t be able to play cricket again. It was such a scary thought. Those 14 months were the darkest phase of my life.”However, that drastic scenario did not emerge and he returned to cricket for Kerela, in the Ranji Trophy, during December. His three matches have brought nine wickets at 24, enough to earn him a place in the India A line-up to face England in their first warm-up match ahead of the one-day series.India are not flush with fast-bowling options at the moment. Zaheer Khan, dropped for the final Test against England, is seemingly coming to the end of his career and two talented young bowlers, Umesh Yadav and Varun Aaron, are currently injured. Ishant Sharma has become the senior quick, a role that he does not always convince in, although Bhuvneshwar Kumar has shown early promise.It all means, at 29, that there is still time for Sreesanth to return to the international stage. He played the last of his 27 Tests against England, at The Oval, in 2011 and his previous ODI was the World Cup final in Mumbai.”This is a fresh start for me,” he said. “I want to extract every ounce of enjoyment possible from the matches that I would play from now on. Be it for Kerala, India A or India, I don’t want to relax one bit. I have two platinum nails inserted in my big toes but I have a lot of fire in my belly.””Earlier, I used to think that there are days where I can relax. But now I know that life is fickle. You have to give your hundred per cent as long as it lasts.”Don’t, though, expect to see a mellowed fast bowler on the field. “Earlier, I had a 26-step run-up to the bowling crease but now I have reduced it to 23 steps. But I have not cut down on my pace. Even while playing for Kerala, I have consistently worked up a fair amount of pace. The only thing that I need right now is more consistency.”

Finn needs technical changes – Fraser

Steven Finn needs to stay committed to making adjustments to his bowling action to stop breaking the stumps in his delivery stride according to Angus Fraser

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Feb-2013England fast bowler Steven Finn needs to keep striving for a solution to his costly habit of breaking the stumps with his leg in his delivery stride if he is to become the complete international fast bowler, according to the man who helped him rise to international level.Angus Fraser, the former England seamer and now Middlesex director of cricket, acted as a mentor to Finn during his formative years and is anxious that his coaches at county and international level find an answer to the technical flaws in his action.The problem of colliding with the stumps came to the fore again during the one-day series in India, when it cost him the wicket of Suresh Raina at a crucial stage of the fourth ODI.Raina edged to slip but Steve Davis signalled dead-ball following a warning earlier in the series that the next time it happened the ball would not count. Davis had also been the umpire to first signal dead-ball for such an incident, during the Test against South Africa at Headingley, which again deprived Finn the wicket of Graeme Smith.Reports from New Zealand, where England are preparing for the Twenty20 series, are that Finn is working on some small changes to his approach and delivery, which may account for his expensive performances in the warm-ups, and Fraser believes the remedial work is a painful but necessary transition.”With his height, pace and bounce he could achieve anything and I would be surprised if he is not opening the bowling for England against Australia home and away – it is a problem that will reduce his effectiveness and which he needs to correct,” Fraser told the . “Taking away all the fuss and drama of him missing out on those wickets, I’m just as concerned about what makes him collide with the stumps and the effect it has on his bowling.”When Steven hits the stumps at his end, it is because he is jumping at an angle into them in his delivery. Then to avoid running on the pitch he has to jump out to compensate.”It will only take minor changes to correct, and time getting used to putting the feet and body in a slightly different position, but it is something he needs to work at and correct if he wants to become the complete package.”I used to hit the stumps with my bowling hand occasionally and it hurt. Ian Botham booted all three out once, I’m told, and Mark Ealham used to flick a bail out of its groove and catch it as he went past without breaking stride. But the kink in Steve’s delivery appears more acute.”Finn is now a key part of England’s attack in all formats, although injury meant he was restricted to just one Test in the recent series against India. He was the most impressive of England’s fast bowlers in the one-day series last month and is likely to share the new ball with his captain Stuart Broad in the Twenty20 series against New Zealand, which starts on Saturday in Auckland.This article was adjusted at 2200GMT on February 6, 2012, after Angus Fraser clarified his views

Teams set to continue World Cup bid

The World Cricket League Championship resumes this week with a crucial round five of matches for Associate nations that will go a long way to deciding who qualifies for the 2015 World Cup.

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Mar-2013The World Cricket League Championship resumes this week with a crucial round five of matches for Associate nations that will go a long way to deciding who qualifies for the 2015 World Cup.Two automatic places are available at the World Cup for the top-two finishers in the Championship table and with six matches to play, Ireland and Scotland are currently leading the race.Just four points separate the top four teams in the table and teams will be eager to add to their tally with 12 points available from the remaining matches.Leaders Ireland currently top the table with 13 points and will hope to extend their two-point advantage over second-placed Scotland. Ireland and Scotland both take on Asian countries in conditions more familiar to their opposition.Ireland face the UAE without fast-bowler Boyd Rankin for the first time. Rankin has ended his Ireland career to concentrate on playing county cricket and has ambitions to play Test cricket for England.Scotland have more changes to their squad with several current county players, and Neil Carter who ended his Warwickshire career last season, included for the first time. They play Afghanistan, whose strong showing in recent years has made them the fairytale story of Associate cricket. But they have never appeared at a World Cup before.Netherlands could be the big winners of round five. They play Namibia and are firm favorites for maximum points. They will be looking for Afghanistan to beat Scotland and hope UAE can take at least one victory from Ireland. That would put Netherlands into a strong position in the final two rounds of matches.Four games from round five will be streamed live by the ICC with both matches between Afghanistan and Scotland, and Ireland and UAE forming part of up to 18 matches that the ICC will stream live before the end of the World Cricket League Championship.Teams that don’t make it through to the world cup automatically can still qualify for the 2015 World Cup through the qualifying tournament next year.Alongside the World Cricket League, nations will be back in Intercontinental Cup action hoping to climb the table with the top two teams reaching the final at the end of the season.Fixtures
March 6, Afghanistan v Scotland, World Cricket League, Sharjah, *Streamed Live
March 8, Afghanistan v Scotland, World Cricket League, Sharjah, *Streamed Live
March 11, Kenya v Canada, World Cricket League, Dubai
March 12-15, Afghanistan v Scotland, Intercontinental Cup, Abu Dhabi
March 12-15, UAE v Ireland, Intercontinental Cup, Sharjah
March 13, Kenya v Canada, World Cricket League, Dubai
March 18-21 Kenya v Canada, Intercontinental Cup, Dubai
March 18, UAE v Ireland, World Cricket League, Sharjah, *Streamed Live
March 20, UAE v Ireland, World Cricket League, Sharjah, *Streamed Live
April 11-14, Namibia v Netherlands, Intercontinental Cup, Windhoek
April 16, Namibia v Netherlands, World Cricket League, Windhoek
April 18, Namibia v Netherlands, World Cricket League, Windhoek

Refocused Northants can make progress

With a change of management, Northants have reappraised and are in shape in more forward in 2013

George Dobell03-Apr-2013Last season 8th, CC Div 2; Group stages, T20; Sixth in Group C, CB402012 in a nutshell: A dire year. No team won fewer games in the Championship, the CB40 or the FLt20 in 2012 and the previous head coach, David Capel, paid for the failure with his job. While the red ball form was a disappointment – Northants had come close to winning promotion in 2011 – the white ball form was far worse as the club rely on limited-overs success to attract spectators. The bowling lacked incision, the batting lacked reliability and, crucially, in key passages of play, Northants seemed fragile. The failure precipitated some introspection at the club and, under the relatively new chief executive, David Smith, the club have reappraised their role in the game. There was a change of captaincy, the departure of some senior players – the club accepted they were unable to hold on to Jack Brooks and also released Chaminda Vaas, Rob White and Niall O’Brien.2013 prospects: It will take time to turn things round at Northants. Without the budget to compete in the transfer market, they must recruit and develop far more of their own players if they are to regain relevance. In the long-term, their on-field success may rely on the improvement in the off-field facilities that is designed to increase the club’s financial turnover significantly. Hosting concerts, conferences and improving community links are essential to the club’s futures. The early signs are positive, though: they have recruited wisely – Matt Spriegel and Steven Crook are reliable, affordable players with points to prove, while Azharullah is an intriguing fast-bowling addition – and they have two of the better players in the England U19 team, Olly Stone and Ben Duckett, who it is hoped will form the spine of the team for years to come. Others, like Rob Newton and Alex Wakely, should be moving into their prime while the likes of Luke Evans looks to have the raw materials to make a strong impression. Expectations need to be tempered but Northants should be able to make noticeable advances in 2013.Key player: Northants require far a greater contribution from Andrew Hall. Astute enough to have signed a long-term contract before the financial squeeze had hit – or before Northants had realised it had hit, anyway – Hall is far and away the most expensive player in the squad. To whom much is given, much is expected.Bright young thing: Ben Duckett may still be at school but, so promising is his keeping, that the club were keen to move Niall O’Brien on in order to provide more opportunity for the 18-year-old. Olly Stone, a 19-year-old seamer who claimed the best-ever bowling figures for England in an U19 Test of 11 for 79, is also one for the future.Captain/coach: With Hall having stepped down, Northants have two new captains this year. Stephen Peters is captain of the Championship side with Alex Wakely in charge of the limited-overs teams. The aim is to inject new energy into the squad and instil greater team unity and fight. Under the enthusiastic head coach, David Ripley, a burgeoning spirit seems to be building.Cricinfo’s verdict: Northants hit rock bottom last year, but it seems the experience has helped the club refocus on its role and responsibilities to the game. A determination to develop home-grown players will take time to come to fruition but, with young players offered opportunity and encouragement, the club should take the first steps on the road of progress in 2013.

NZ series more than Ashes entree – Hesson

New Zealand slipped into London almost unnoticed on Tuesday, minus their captain and senior batsman, but are determined to leave their mark on an English season where the main attraction is their trans-Tasman rivals.

Andrew McGlashan01-May-2013New Zealand slipped into London almost unnoticed on Tuesday, minus their captain Brendon McCullum and senior batsman Ross Taylor who are at the IPL, but are determined to leave their mark on an English season where the main attraction is their trans-Tasman rivals.”We don’t really have anything to do with the Ashes,” Kane Williamson, the captain in McCullum’s absence, said. It helps, no end, that the series played during March between these two teams was very competitive. Talk about flat pitches killing the game was off the mark – weather was the bigger factor in the first two Tests – and New Zealand came within one wicket of a famous victory in Auckland. That is enough for this return contest to be given the respect it deserves.Mike Hesson, the New Zealand coach, hopes his team can provide more than a footnote to the summer. “I can guarantee from our perspective these two Tests are massive for us. We are making progress as a side and we certainly wouldn’t like to be the entrée for the main course later on.”He was even keen to see the benefits in having two key players arrive late for the tour. McCullum and Taylor are due on May 7 or 8, ahead of the second warm-up match against England Lions at Grace Road. McCullum will still have a role to play in the early days of tour, albeit from thousands of miles away, and is in regular contact with Hesson.”I’m actually quite happy with it because with a squad of 15 it’s quite hard to get everyone a game,” he said. “Those guys, although they haven’t been playing a lot, they have been training a lot. To get our whole squad involved in those two warm-up games is critical for us. In previous tours we haven’t even had any warm-up matches so two is huge. There will be no complaints from us about being underdone.”It is nothing new for a touring side to arrive in England for the May Tests in dribs and drabs – Sri Lanka and West Indies have faced similar situations in recent years – and is unlikely to be the last time it happens. Perhaps there should be a sense of gratefulness, and relief, that McCullum and Taylor will be here in time for the Test series. They are both fascinating sub-plots to the series; McCullum’s leadership was a key part of the contest in New Zealand, while Taylor’s return to the set-up has been far from smooth.The abiding memory of the previous series was the dramatic final day where England survived nine wickets down through defiance from Matt Prior, Ian Bell and Stuart Broad – plus Monty Panesar’s desperate dive – and the feeling of a fantastic opportunity missed by New Zealand still lingers.”I’ve tried to forget about that game to be honest, especially the end of it,” Hesson admitted. “We felt we dominated but that’s the game. These two Tests will be tough in very different conditions. We gained a lot of confidence, but it was a series in isolation and we can’t get carried away.”After the upturn in their fortunes during March, there are unlikely to be many major selection headaches leading into the Test series. Hesson confirmed that Hamish Rutherford and Peter Fulton will continue their opening pairing even though Martin Guptill is in the squad again after injury, so the key decision may come down to whether they retain a spinner – Bruce Martin – in their XI or go with four quick bowlers. Doug Bracewell, who missed the home series after injuring his foot on a piece of glass, and Mark Gillespie are the extra pacemen in the squad.

Bell's groundwork sets up Anderson record

England and Australia were locking horns for the first time this summer and Edgbaston, basking in golden sunshine for its 100th international match, was able to celebrate the start of the sequence with an emphatic England victory

The report by David Hopps08-Jun-2013
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsEngland’s bowlers dominated Australia•ICC

England and Australia locked horns for the first time this summer and Edgbaston, basking in golden sunshine for its 100th international match, was able to celebrate the start of the sequence with an emphatic England victory. The Champions Trophy tie – or Ashes prelim, if you prefer – fell to England by 48 runs.Until England took control, it was a cagey, tactical affair – for the neutral perhaps the least enthralling match in the tournament so far. But who knows, it might be that England have already made an impact on the Ashes summer.Australia had imagined that a powerful statement in the Champions Trophy might be a catalyst, but their performance was limp, their captain Michael Clarke is injured, and their hold on the Champions Trophy – as ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball commentary put it “the last trinket on Australia’s mantelpiece” – is now in danger of falling into the fireplace.For much of the day the Edgbaston crowd was able to soak up the pleasurable sight of two of its own proceeding calmly along, although it was only when victory was achieved that confidence reigned that Ian Bell and Jonathan Trott, as two Warwickshire batsmen should, had perfectly assessed batting requirements.When Trott was caught at the wicket for 43 from 56 balls, chasing a wide one delivered around the wicket by the left-armer, Mitchell Starc, England’s second-wicket pair had put on 111 in 22 overs and uncertainty hung around the ground about whether their programmed approach, on a day when Alastair Cook’s decision to bat first was a straightforward one, would yield the desired outcome.Bell departed four overs later, his 91 occupying 115 balls, as James Faulkner bowled him with a straight ball which kept a little low, a fact the batsman communicated somewhat theatrically by falling to his knees after his stumps were broken. He has seemed slightly out of sorts in recent months, but this proved to be a match-winning innings of consummate judgment.

Australia fined

Australia were fined for maintaining a slow over-rate in their defeat to England in their Group A encounter at Edgbaston. Javagal Srinath, the match referee, found the side to be one over of the target at the end of the game, taking allowances into consideration. The captain George Bailey, who accepted the penalty without contest, was fined 20% of his match fee while his team-mates were docked 10%.

Bell’s contribution was neat and discerning, studded by occasionally pleasing drives, Trott occupied himself diligently in that self-absorbed way of his, his innings containing a solitary boundary.He was shaken out of his cocoon of contentment only once when he seemed entirely taken aback to find Australia’s keeper, Matthew Wade, raging at him after the pair got in a tangle as Wade chased an inaccurate return. A few minutes later, having contemplated the mix up, he allowed himself a slightly disturbing smile.England’s plan was to take advantage of the last 15 overs, beginning with the batting Powerplay. But batting Powerplays are not often to England’s tastes. It is as if they are contrary to the national character, resented for artificially intruding on the normal order of things, about as popular as a wind turbine in a Cotswold village, both having the potential to bring energy but often bringing resentment.Instead, they stalled. The late-order marauders, Eoin Morgan and Jos Buttler, fell cheaply within three balls of each other and it took a judicious 46 not out from 37 balls from Ravi Bopara to heal the breach. The average score at Edgbaston in ODIs was 224 but as the sun
blazed down, this was not an average batting day.Things might have turned out differently if Bell had been run-out without scoring. When Cook played Starc to backward point, David Warner pulled off a diving stop and sprung to his feet to throw down the stumps, with both batsmen at the wicketkeeper’s end. Cook was just in his ground and Bell was a yard alongside him, but the ball careered into the leg side and, much kerfuffle later, England had stolen two overthrows.Australia’s bowling attack sorely lacked a specialist spinner on such a gripping surface and, among the pace bowlers, Mitchell Starc was a disappointment.Then with the bat they never got going. David Warner and Shane Watson constitute as destructive an opening pair as exists in one-day cricket, but there was barely a whimper from either as they fell by the 15th over with the scoring rate barely three runs an over.Warner’s feet were fast as he carved at a ball angled across him from Stuart Broad and presented a diving catch to Buttler. Broad almost removed Watson, too, as a leading edge flew beyond Cook’s grasp, diving to his left at slip. But Watson soon fell, his inside edge caught by Cook at gully, after the ball arced gently off the pad.The balance of England’s side gave Australia a chance with fifth-bowling duties to be shared between Ravi Bopara and the callow offspin of Joe Root, the latter with only one ODI wicket to his name. But this was a somewhat abrasive pitch which aided their chances of survival release and Hughes, losing patience, tried to pull Root off a length and was lbw.The wicket which as good as confirmed England’s victory – Mitchell Marsh rattling one into Eoin Morgan’s midriff at backward point – also took James Anderson past Darren Gough as England’s leading wicket-taker in ODIs. Five balls later, Matthew Wade followed, albeit reluctantly, initially hoping that Hot Spot would not reveal his thin edge, then plotting an escape because the ball might have dropped short of Buttler’s gloves, but umpire Dharmasena’s decision was upheld.Bailey’s half-century tried to hold Australia together, but he was wading through sand and his desperate attempt to go big against James Tredwell’s offspin caused his downfall at long-on.No Finn, no Swann. It was easy to believe that England were deliberately keeping two of their most potent bowlers out of sight of the Australians ahead of the Investec Ashes series.England insisted that it was not the case. But they would, wouldn’t they?Swann had a none-too-serious sore back which had not prevented him bowling in the nets; Finn was omitted purely for reasons of form, perhaps influenced by the fact that now he is back on his long run, and comfortable with it, and the last thing England need is any long run, short run confusion ahead of the Ashes. Tim Bresnan’s ability to draw life from the dry surface, most marked when he cut one back to bowl Adam Voges, justified the choice.The Champions Trophy is a valid tournament in itself, not just some sort of Ashes points-scoring contest. That said, when Australia began their minimum of 13 meetings against England this summer with a gentle leg-stump half volley from Starc, which Cook flipped through backward square for four.The roars of approval from the Eric Hollies Stand possessed a significance that England supporters hoped would last all summer long. By the end of the day they were even more convinced that it would.

Petersen leads Somerset home

Alviro Petersen hit a match-winning half-century as Somerset made it maximum points from their first two Friends Life t20 games with a six-wicket victory over Northamptonshire at Taunton.

07-Jul-2013Somerset 155-4 (Petersen 64*, Trego 41, Willey 2-19) beat Northamptonshire 152-7 (Willey 47, Thomas 3-33) by three runs
ScorecardMarcus Trescothick has suffered two successive first-ballers for Somerset but he could celebrate victory all the same•Getty Images

Alviro Petersen hit a match-winning half-century as Somerset made it maximum points from their first two Friends Life t20 games with a six-wicket victory over Northamptonshire at Taunton.The hosts reached a target of 153 with seven balls to spare with Petersen finishing unbeaten on 64 off 35 balls having struck seven fours and two sixes.Peter Trego contributed 41 for the victors, while David Willey was the pick of the Northamptonshire attack with two for 19 from four overs.Willey was also the mainstay of his side’s batting after they had won the toss in glorious sunshine. He made 47, but the visitors found it difficult to gain momentum as Alfonso Thomas claimed 3 for 33.Yasir Arafat had set the tone for a tight Somerset bowling effort by making the first over of the Northants innings a maiden to Richard Levi. By the end of the six powerplay overs the visitors were 29 for one as Steve Kirby and Thomas maintained a grip.Former Somerset player Cameron White and skipper Alex Wakely both carelessly gifted catches to cover and it was left to Willey, who announced his intentions by pulling his first ball for Kirby over mid-wicket for six, to bolster the Northamptonshire total. He faced only 29 balls, hitting four fours and two sixes, but lacked support.Northamptonshire’s total looked 30 below par in such ideal batting conditions and Somerset paced their reply perfectly, despite losing skipper Marcus Trescothick for his second duck in as many games, caught at slip off a Willey lifter.It was 50 for two when Craig Kieswetter was caught at long-on to give Willey another wicket, but Trego and Petersen then added 40 in less than five overs while taking few risks.Trego was never at his most fluent and eventually fell lbw to the left-arm spin of Graeme White, having faced 42 balls and hit four boundaries and a six.Petersen scored off virtually every ball he faced and accelerated just when the situation demanded. Jos Buttler helped supply the finishing touch after James
Hildreth had been run out.

Fawad Ahmed named in Australia ODI squad

Fawad Ahmed is expected to make his long-awaited debut for Australia during the limited-overs series that follows the Ashes after being named in an 18-man squad at the expense of Xavier Doherty

Brydon Coverdale15-Aug-2013Fawad Ahmed is expected to make his long-awaited debut for Australia during the limited-overs series that follows the Ashes after being named in an 18-man squad at the expense of Xavier Doherty. Fast bowler Josh Hazlewood has also been included and should play his first ODI in three years, while Doherty and the allrounder Mitchell Marsh were the only players dropped from the squad that contested the Champions Trophy in June.The most fascinating inclusion is that of Ahmed, a legspinner who arrived in Australia in 2010 as an asylum seeker from Pakistan, where he had played ten first-class games over four years. Ahmed impressed for Victoria during the 2012-13 season and his Australian citizenship was fast-tracked this year in an effort to make him available for the Ashes, although he was ultimately not chosen in the Test squad.But Australia’s selectors remain keen on Ahmed as an international option and have been impressed by his bowling during the ongoing Australia A tour of Zimbabwe and South Africa. Although Ahmed has collected only two wickets in the five one-day games on the tour, the selectors believe he has bowled better than his figures indicate, and he will be the lead spinner alongside allrounder Glenn Maxwell in the limited-overs games in England.

Changes to Australia’s ODI squad from the Champions Trophy

  • In: Fawad Ahmed, Josh Hazlewood, Aaron Finch, Shaun Marsh, Steven Smith

  • Out: Xavier Doherty, Mitchell Marsh

“Fawad Ahmed gets his opportunity as the squad’s lead spinner,” the national selector John Inverarity said. “Fawad has been a consistent wicket-taker on the Australia A tour of Zimbabwe and South Africa. He is a mature and very good leg-spin bowler, and the national selection panel is keen to see how he fares in international competition … He has been bowling very well in South Africa and turning the ball and troubling the batsmen so we’re keen to have a look at him.”He takes Xavier Doherty’s place. Xavier has been a fine performer for Australia over the years. We haven’t selected the side for India, for the seven ODIs there in October, but it’s likely that both players will be on that tour. He [Doherty] is very much a known quantity and he’s a wonderful young man and a very good cricketer. He can be hopeful that further opportunities will come his way.”The 18-man squad will gather for the two Twenty20s against England that follow the Ashes and the group will then be trimmed to 15 for the one-off ODI against Scotland and five against England in September. While Mitchell Marsh was replaced by Steven Smith after having limited impact in the Champions Trophy, his brother Shaun was included and is likely to play in the T20s, but whether he remains part of the squad for the ODIs is unclear.The same can be said of Aaron Finch, who has been captain of Australia A during the African tour, while the rest of the batting line-up was largely as expected. However, there was no place for Nic Maddinson, the young New South Wales batsman who has played a number of eye-catching innings for Australia A in the British Isles and Africa over the past couple of months, including a remarkable 181 from 143 balls against Gloucestershire in Bristol.”While he hasn’t been selected in this squad, the national selection panel also notes the strong performances of Nic Maddinson in recent months for Australia A,” Inverarity said. “We look forward to him continuing to build on that good form and pressing his claims for higher honours in the future.”The pace attack will be led by the experienced Mitchell Johnson and Clint McKay, but also features younger talent including Nathan Coulter-Nile, who made his T20 international debut in February, and Hazlewood, who also reappeared in the national side via February’s T20 against West Indies. Hazlewood, 22, made his ODI debut in England in 2010 but has always been regarded by the selectors as a player to watch.”We’re looking forward to him showing his wares in international cricket again,” Inverarity said. “He made his debut for Australia in 2010 at the age of 19. Three years later he’s a stronger young man and a better bowler. He has been very impressive with his form in Zimbabwe and South Africa.”I’ve been talking with Andy Bichel, who’s the selector on duty in Zimbabwe and South Africa, and Josh has been very impressive, has bowled with good pace and good accuracy and has been moving the ball. I think it’s the right time for him to come through and join the international squad.”Squad Michael Clarke (ODI capt), George Bailey (T20 capt), Fawad Ahmed, Nathan Coulter-Nile, James Faulkner, Aaron Finch, Josh Hazlewood, Phillip Hughes, Mitchell Johnson, Shaun Marsh, Glenn Maxwell, Clint McKay, Steven Smith, Mitchell Starc, Adam Voges, Matthew Wade (wk), David Warner, Shane Watson.

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