Bulls find relief in Hopes century

Scorecard

Clinton Perren, the opener, looked in good touch but fell 14 short of a hundred© Getty Images

James Hopes made an aggressive century to lift Queensland from a moderate position to a strong one in the the Pura Cup match against Victoria at the Gabba. Hopes, who hit 14 fours and two sixes from 126 balls, turned the day the Bulls’ way after they were slipping at 5 for 186 before tea.Chris Hartley, the wicketkeeper, shared a 111-run partnership with Hopes before he was lbw to Cameron White for 50. Hopes, 26, departed with his second century and Queensland in good health after being caught by Peter Roach off Matthew Innes.Allan Wise grabbed four of the top five wickets as Victoria, who won the ING Cup match between the teams on Saturday, made regular indents, but he missed the wicket of Clinton Perren, who held the top-order together with 89.

ICC cuts awards shortlists

The shortlists for the ICC Awards has been narrowed down, with the top Indian players falling out of the race. Rahul Dravid, who won the inaugural award for Test Player and Player of the Year last season, fell out of the reckoning.Also slipping out of the running are Dravid’s team-mates Virender Sehwag, Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh who were all nominated in the Test Player of the Year category. Dinesh Karthik remained the lone Indian hope in the Emerging Player of Year section after the ICC pruned the list of nominations.”Of course I am disappointed. But then we have not had many matches this season, obviously performance matters,” Kumble told a media conference to announce the shortlist. “Personally I can do only what I can do, selection is not in my control.”Andrew Flintoff remains in contention for the ODI Player of the Year award, which he won last year, while also being nominated for the Player of the Year award. Adam Gilchrist still features in three categories while Shane Warne, Test cricket’s leading wicket-taker, remains in the running for Test Player award.Besides the players’ awards, there would also be team awards for Test and ODI teams of the year and Spirit of Cricket Award. The ICC Awards will be announced in Sydney on October 11 in between the Super Series ODIs and Test match.Kumble denied the upcoming Super Series would have lost a bit of sheen following Australia’s defeat in the Ashes series. “I don’t think so. Playing Australia in Australia is a tough proposition, they are still a good side. All the matches in Ashes were close, they will come back stronger.”Kumble said matches involving multi-national teams had their value. “It is an occasion to celebrate cricket itself. A player won’t get another opportunity to play in a World XI. You are playing the very best and it is an opportunity to showcase your talent. It is also a totally different feeling to have those you have played against in the same dressing room.”The shortlist of nominations for ICC AwardsPlayer of the Year Andrew Flintoff, Adam Gilchrist, Glenn McGrath, Inzamam-ul Haq and Jacques KallisTest Player Adam Gilchrist, Glenn McGrath, Shane Warne, Inzamam-ul Haq, Jacques KallisODI Player Andrew Flintoff, Kevin Pietersen, Adam Gilchrist, Brett Lee and Andrew SymondsEmerging Player Aftab Ahmed, Ian Bell, Dinesh Karthik, Kevin Pietersen and AB de Villiers

'Davison's absence gives others a chance' – Billcliff

Ian Billcliff, Canada’s captain, has said that John Davison’s absence would be felt during their ICC Intercontinental Cup semi-final against UAE at Sharjah, but that it would give others a chance to display their skills. He believed that the team’s sense of self was a strength, and though they had not played UAE much, they would reply on getting their basics right in order to win."John is obviously a very important player for us and has been our most successful performer in the qualifying matches so it goes without saying that he will be missed," said Billcliff. "But his absence gives some of the others a chance to shine. We’ve got some good players and I’m still confident we can do well."Billcliff said that the experience his team got in the tournament would be vital, and that facing different countries and conditions hurried their learning. "Any opportunity we have to play cricket against quality opposition is a great experience for us. Playing in different countries against varied opposition is a very steep learning curve, and what we have experienced so far is that the team that comes to terms with the conditions the quickest and executes their plans efficiently comes out on top."It [playing the three-day game] definitely has been helpful to learn to be able to build an innings and to be patient with the ball and build pressure. The experience will definitely benefit the team’s growth and I think that we have grown closer as a unit over the series of three-day games. The wearing pitch is the biggest factor. To be able to adapt one’s game as the match progresses is the key."We have had limited experience playing these teams so there will have to be a lot of input from various members of the team. There will be a fair bit of thinking on our feet but in the end it is a fairly simple game, and the team that executes the basics the best will win the tournament.

Harris keeps Canterbury above water

Canterbury 265 for 8 (Harris 78, Wiseman 51*) v Central Districts
ScorecardCanterbury might lead the State Championship, but their one-day conquerors, Central Districts, gave them a healthy welcome back to the four-day game at Rangiora today.The second round of the competition started with the top three teams beginning a series of games against the bottom-placed three teams, from which the two top sides will contest the final next month.Canterbury also had the disadvantage of being without one of the key runscorers this summer. Michael Papps, who is now part of the international one-day side, is now likely to miss the remainder of the championship programme. Aaron Redmond was promoted to opener for Canterbury, but he scored 1 and was out by the time 10 runs had been scored. It was left to Chris Harris, the perennial run gatherer, to restore the side’s fortunes as he scored 78 off 127 balls, an innings which included three sixes and nine fours. Paul Wiseman was unbeaten on 50 at stumps, the ninth half-century of his first-class career, while Regan West, the left-arm spinner, took 2 for 28 from his 20 overs.
ScorecardNorthern Districts, after a dreadful one-day season, attempted to confront their batting demons head on when choosing to bat first against Wellington at the Basin Reserve. The start had been delayed due to bad weather, and once play started it finished early.Nick Horsley provided early impetus to the innings with 30 off 44 balls, while Grant Robinson was 43 not out at stumps, and carrying much of ND’s hopes for setting Wellington a reasonable target. Iain O’Brien finished with 2 for 33, and Mark Gillespie 1 for 28 for Wellington.
ScorecardAuckland were asked to bat first at the revamped University Oval at Dunedin when play finally got started after the scheduled lunch break. Warren McSkimming took 2 for 32, while Jeff Wilson returned from his injury frustrations and bowled with fire to take 1 for 20. Matt Horne scored 35 while Aaron Barnes was 28 not out at stumps. Play ended early when bad light set in.

SCG keeps its spin as soil crisis solved

Stuart MacGill is so comfortable at the SCG he calls it “my house” © Getty Images

A soil shortage at the SCG threatened to end the pitch’s reputation as a spinner’s paradise, but the discovery of a new source of dirt will preserve the surface’s distinct characteristics. With the groundsman’s stores of Bulli soil dwindling and development covering over the previous hotspots, Tom Parker, the curator, learned the Wollongong Golf Club was reconfiguring its layout and had found two seams of the treasured product.The SCG Trust was able to remove about 2000 tonnes of the dirt, which will be enough to satisfy the nine pitches at the ground through to the next century. “Bulli soil has been in use at the SCG since day one and we’re talking of more than 150 years,” Parker said in The Australian. “It’s volcanic in nature with 65 percent clay content.”The soil is normally found at the base of the Illawarra escarpment [south of Sydney], but sadly a lot of the area is now built out. The high clay content in the soil makes the pitch set hard and provides true bounce.” It also lights up the eyes of the spinners and Shane Warne, Stuart MacGill, Bob Holland, Allan Border and Murray Bennett have starred in Sydney Tests. MacGill, who plays for New South Wales, even refers to the ground as “my house”.”This new stockpile of Bulli soil will certainly see me out in the job, good and proper,” Parker, 39, said. “We had originally acquired a very small quantity of Bulli soil from the same club not long after I first started here ten years ago. But that was only one-tenth of the soil we’ve managed to recover this time from the original 7000 tonnes of earth removed from the site.”The pitch for the fifth Ashes Test, which starts on January 2, is expected to be a typical Sydney wicket and the news is not good for the English batsmen who have struggled to play Warne and MacGill. “By the fourth, and certainly on the fifth day, it will break up and take spin,” Parker said. “It will take maximum spin for the likes of both Warne and MacGill to bowl in tandem against the Englishmen.”

Top Bulls for Redbacks

The XXXX Queensland Bulls will field a near full-strength ING Cup team against the Southern Redbacks on Wednesday at the Gabba.Australia `A’ players Martin Love and Wade Seccombe will play in the day/nighter and travel to Hobart on Thursday morning to prepare for the three-day tour match against India starting on Friday.Redbacks pace duo Shaun Tait and Paul Rofe will do likewise, enabling both teams to field their first choice line-ups.Bulls captain Jimmy Maher, Australian One Day star Andrew Symonds and pace spearhead Michael Kasprowicz will play their first domestic one-day games this season for Queensland.Former Queensland allrounder Mick Miller will play his first match for his adopted State this season, joining a powerful line-up that includes former Test batsmen Greg Blewett and Zimbabwean Andy Flower.Wednesday’s game starts at 2.30pm with gates opening at 1.30pm. Tickets are available at the gate.Both teams will also meet in the Pura Cup match at the Gabba starting on Friday. Queensland will name its Pura Cup team on Wednesday.XXXX Queensland Bulls: Jimmy Maher (c), Stuart Law, Martin Love, Andrew Symonds, Clinton Perren, Lee Carseldine, Wade Seccombe, James Hopes, Nathan Hauritz, Ashley Noffke, Michael Kasprowicz, Damien MacKenzieSouthern Redbacks: Greg Blewett (captain), Mark Cleary, Mark Cosgrove, John Davison, Shane Deitz, Andy Flower, Mark Higgs, Ben Johnson, Graham Manou, Mick Miller, Paul Rofe, Shaun Tait

Oram delighted with contribution as Kiwis battle at Kandy

Jacob Oram was delighted with his first major contribution with the bat inTest cricket on the third day of the second Test in Kandy.Oram scored a career best 74, sharing crucial partnerships with MarkRichardson and Robbie Hart, as New Zealand scored a respectable 305."It is nice to get a first milestone although I would have liked to got ahundred," he said afterwards. "It was tough against world-class bowlers indifferent conditions but I really enjoyed it."At 75 for 4 we were in a bit of trouble and it was a matter of getting apartnership going, so I was more than happy to just bide my time."Normally renowned for playing big shots, Oram believes he needed "to put hisend in the bin and put the shots away" to survive."I like to hit the ball hard and see the boundaries but you can’t do thatevery innings. I have been more consistent back home in first-class cricketbeing a bit more circumspect."Oram, 24, enjoyed the challenge of facing the world’s leading spinner,Muttiah Muralitharan, who claimed 3 for 90 in 34 overs."I did not want to die in the hole to Murali, which can happen if you justsit and wait, because sooner or later he is going to bowl you an unplayabledelivery – I therefore used the sweep as an option."Oram said New Zealand were still hopeful of forcing a win: "It is a matterof us getting early wickets tomorrow and then trying to progress as much aswe can with the bat before a final day declaration."

Steffan relishing prospect of quick return to Sofia Gardens

The Cidermen travel to Cardiff later today to take on Glamorgan in search of their first win in the Twenty20 Cup.Having lost their opening match in the new competition Somerset will be keen to get a favourable result tonight, and nobody more so than Steffan Jones who played at Sofia Gardens for Wales in their One Day International against England last weekend.The Welshman from Llanelli told me: "Every game my bowling is getting better, and at last it’s going right for me this season. Just when everybody else is going down with injury I’m starting to get going."He continued: "It will be a bit strange for me going back to play against the team who I played for last weekend and I expect that I’ll get a few jibes but I’m looking forward to the match this evening."Somerset coach Kevin Shine told me: "This is a competition that we think that we should do well in, and in our first game we played ourselves into a good position and then let it slip away.If we can get a grip of these situations then we can win this one tonight.With Aaron Laraman suffering from a side strain, all rounder Gareth Andrew comes into an otherwise unchanged team from the one that played on Friday evening.The full Somerset team will be – Jamie Cox, Mike Burns, Carl Gazzard, Ian Blackwell, Keith Parsons, Wes Durston, Keith Dutch, Simon Francis, Gareth Andrew, Rob Turner and Steffan Jones.

Lessons in life

James Anderson was the man to breathe life into English cricket until he ran out of steam against South Africa. Emma John finds out how he dealt with sudden celebrity status


Back in May James Anderson was so gilt-edged you could have floated him on the stockmarket. After two Tests against South Africa he looked like a dotcom disaster. It is fortunate that Anderson identifies his greatest asset as “being able to come back stronger”.Sitting in the Trent Bridge pavilion two days before the third Test Anderson has just returned to the England set-up from Lancashire’s last-over C&G semi-final defeat against Worcestershire. His appearance is as hale and hearty as ever but there is an exaggerated languor in his voice. He passes his hands over his face, rubs his eyes and the back of his neck. He looks tired. “I’m very, very tired,” he says.After the travel-play-travel of the NatWest Series Anderson had hoped for a week’s R&R but media obligations made it impossible. He wanted to find somewhere to live next season but there was no time to house-hunt and his parents had to choose somewhere for him. There has been scarcely time for an evening out. End-of-Test shebangs were curtailed affairs – “When you’ve lost, you don’t really want to stick around” – and Anderson’s own performances had fallen far short of those expected of him. It is no surprise he looks weary. He perks up only on mention of Glen Chapple, the surprise squad selection for that Trent Bridge Test. It is, he says with sudden energy, great to have him around. “I remember growing up watching Lancashire and wondering why he wasn’t in the England team then.”Rewind 12 months and opening the Lancashire bowling with Chapple was achievement enough for Anderson. He had still not come to terms with the fact that Peter Martin, the hero of his teens, was now polishing the ball for him. “He was the one guy that I really looked up to,” Anderson says. He talks of meeting him for the first time at a net session and sighs. “One of the Lancashire coaches said just listen to what he’s got to say. I didn’t know what to expect but he chatted with me as if I was a normal person. Now he texts me all the time saying well done. Weird.”The weirdness went on. He was chosen for the England Academy after only one county season but was called up to the England one-day squad the night before the Academy’s first fixture. “It was only when I started packing that it sunk in. I was rooming with Gordon Muchall from Durham and he asked me what I was doing because I’d only just unpacked. I said: `I’m joining the England squad.’ He didn’t believe me. He started laughing and told me to put my stuff back.”There followed an England debut (and getting beaten by Australia) and the World Cup (and getting beaten by Australia). He was asked to bowl the penultimate over of the nail-biting group match against Australia at Port Elizabeth ahead of Andy Caddick. It went for 12 runs. “It was probably the worst feeling I’ve ever had on a cricket field. Having fielded in front of the Barmy Army for most of the game, looking like we were going to win, then getting hit for 10 in two balls – which virtually won them the game – was horrible. Horrible.” Hot-footing it from the ground was a tempting option. “I really wanted to. But Nasser spoke to me after the game and he said stuff that was just perfect, just what I needed. I think if he hadn’t spoken to me I’d have maybe not come back the way I did this summer. That would have still been in the back of my mind.”Instead he took a five-for on Test debut against Zimbabwe and contributed star turns in England’s one-day tournaments. His hair – which had changed from blond highlights to a streak of red – became the talk of the tabloids. He was invited to the British Grand Prix to meet Michael Schumacher and, when he declined because of a pre-arranged birthday barbecue in his parents’ garden, Ferrari sent a helicopter to fly him to and from the race. No wonder his team-mates were giving him stick. We met for the first time the day before the NatWest Series final against South Africa. He said: “The boys say I `can’t do anything wrong’. Which isn’t true. It’s weird because I know that it’s not going to go on forever and that I’m going to go through a bad patch. But at the minute I just don’t want it to end.”The honeymoon period ended not with a whimper but a bang. He had the limelight snatched roughly from his grasp by Graeme Smith at Edgbaston. Until then even Anderson’s expensive first overs – his trademark flaw – had had a perverse charm, since he rarely failed to make up for them with wickets. But the Test series against South Africa held few magical moments for him. His inexperience was brutally exposed, not only by the batsmen but also C4’s analysts, whose graphics showed just how few of his deliveries were landing in the same spot. Michael Vaughan admitted before The Oval Test that Anderson would have been rested had injuries to others not prevented it.Anderson, however, says he was happy with the way he was bowling. “When you don’t take wickets people think you bowled badly but I had a dropped catch off Smith on eight [at Lord’s]. If you know you’re bowling well then you’ve just got to keep waiting till the luck is on your side.” He also refuses to blame nerves. “It’s lack of concentration. It takes me a while to get into the game, which it shouldn’t do. It’s one of the things I’m having to learn.” So is following the match: “I go to third man and just drift off.”


He responds to fair criticism with a maturity and a self-possession that critics have either ignored or simply not noticed.
© Getty Images

Commentators have been keen to detect a lack of confidence in Anderson’s on-field posture but it is more likely they are misconstruing a deeply laid-back demeanour. Whatever might be irritating him inside, he does not let it show. “Some of the England guys are so abrupt and they just come out with it, they say, `You’re annoying me’. I can’t do that. I keep quiet.” Photo shoots do not seem to be his bag, either. Forced to stand on a wobbly chair by a hotel pool, with befuddled, bikini-clad Americans looking on, Anderson is struck mute. The photographer struggles to prise a smile from his lips.”I don’t really like having my picture taken,” he claims. But he does not hold a grudge and by the time we sit to talk the laconic manner has fallen away and he is allowing himself a quiet giggle. At press conferences he can seem terse. The truth of the matter is that he likes to think about questions before answering them. He responds to fair criticism with a maturity and a self-possession that critics have either ignored or simply not noticed.The David Beckham comparisons, for instance, were flattering but beside the point. “I don’t want to be remembered as the David Beckham of cricket, I don’t want to be the next Darren Gough, I just want to be known as …” (he lowers his voice till it is scarcely audible) “… James Anderson.” One reason that Anderson – an Arsenal fan since he rejected the family homage to Burnley FC aged six because he preferred the red strip – changed his hair colour was that people thought he was emulating Beckham. Nor was the red streak a homage to Arsenal’s Freddie Ljungberg: “I just fancied a change. I didn’t do it because he had it.” Anderson does not wear trendy clothes to court publicity. He wears them because he likes them. When traditionalists like John Woodcock call him a “peacock”, they may assume that his bold appearance is a substitute for inner substance. They are wrong.At Burnley Cricket Club, on the fourth day of the Lord’s Test, the car park and driveways are full. Two weeks earlier 200 people came through the gate to watch Anderson captain his club side in a friendly, score a half-century and bowl a couple of overs of off-spin. Today, however, the cars are the usual overflow from Burnley FC’s Sunday fixture. The numbers in the pavilion swell halfway through Burnley’s innings as the football match finishes and spectators move from one ground to the other, sharing the scoreline and descriptions of each goal.Only a year and a bit ago Anderson was playing this same fixture against Rishton CC. He bowled Rishton’s pro Paul Adams before the rain swept in and ruined the match. Little could he or his team-mates know that within 13 months Anderson would again be bowling at Adams but watched by a couple more million people. Peter Holden, the Burnley scorer, certainly never thought such an achievement was possible when he was coaching the 14-year-old Anderson. “I’ll be completely honest, I’ve seen a lot of amateur cricket and I didn’t think James was any better than a lot of the lads we have,” he says. “But then when he was about 16 he put on a few inches in height and suddenly gained a yard of pace.”Anderson himself can offer no other explanation for the fact that, at 17, he found himself one of the quickest bowlers in the Lancashire league and picked for the Lancashire schools side. For the first time his childhood ambition to be a cricketer seemed a genuine possibility. A contract with Lancashire a year later forestalled any dilemmas about university or gap years. His talent was incubated in the Lancashire 2nd XI. For the darling of the ECB’s slimline system of excellence it is a surprisingly old-fashioned route.


© Getty Images

Burnley CC has been Anderson’s home from home since he could walk. It remains an important touchstone for a young man whisked straight from the family hearth to the frequent flyer lifestyle of the England team. From the cricket, the karaoke and the summer barbecues have sprung lasting childhood friendships. At the end of the brutal first day at Lord’s it was his former team-mates he called for support. They repay the compliment by keeping his feet firmly on the ground: the two pictures of him in the clubhouse are stationed outside the gents loo and by the slot machine. Charlie Griffith, the great West Indian quick who in 1964 took 144 wickets at 5.02 for the club, keeps pride of place opposite the bar. And cricket, says Anderson, is “the last thing we talk about. We just talk about the usual stuff. Girls, TV.”The older members of the club say he is shy. “If you try to engage him in a conversation, he’ll give you one word answers,” says one. But his peers know better. “When people first meet him they think he’s shy,” says Gareth, one of his closest mates. “But if you’ve known him for 10 years like we have you know he’s a bit of a loony.”An up-and-down summer did not scar Anderson’s popularity nor the long-term assessment of his talent. Seven wickets at Trent Bridge were enough to keep people in mind of what he can do and the reception he receives from England crowds indicates public support. There is support, too, from his captain. “We have to remember this is his first loss of form,” says Michael Vaughan. “He has never gone through a loss of form for Lancashire. It is a lot harder for him but he will be a stronger guy for it.” At the end of August he was voted the Cricket Writers’ Club Young Cricketer of the Year by an unprecedented unanimous vote. He received the award at a London dinner from the afore-mentioned Woodcock but by now the red streak was black (although he was threatening the return of the blond highlights). The red had gone partly because it had been unlucky for him and partly because he did not want to look like a footballer.His curious bowling action – he appears not to be looking where he is bowling the ball – also generates plenty of discussion; Bob Willis told viewers that Anderson can last only five years with his current action. “I’d not heard that,” he laughs. “Nah, I’m not worried. I’m working on stuff all the time actually, and our bowling coach [Troy Cooley] is big on biomechanics, so if I am going to get injuries he’ll tell me about it.” He says his pace comes from keeping his head down. “I’ve tried bowling with my head up all the way and it just floats out.” What about looking where he is bowling? “My eyes are shut when I deliver the ball anyway.”Not even at his lowest point for England did he want to get away, to return to county cricket for some extra schooling. “When all you’ve wanted to do is play for England, when you get there you don’t want to do anything else.” If anything, his problems have stemmed from trying too hard. “Some days it’s not so good and you just get angry and try and bowl faster and faster and you lose it.” With luck he has not lost anything so much as temporarily misplaced it.The October 2003 edition of The Wisden Cricketer is on sale at all good newsagents in the UK and Ireland, priced £3.25.Click here to subscribe.

Parliamentarians call for security for Indian team

NEW DELHI, Feb 18 AFP – The Indian parliament today called for security for the country’s cricket team which is facing the ire of fans after a poor showing at the World Cup.The subject came up for discussion in the lower house after disgruntled fans threw oil and paint at the house of batsman Mohammad Kaif on Sunday in the northern town of Allahabad.Members of his family, who were asleep during the incident, have requested security.The protest came after India lost to world champions Australia on Saturday and are now struggling to keep their place in the tournament.Security has also been stepped up around captain Sourav Ganguly’s sprawling residence in Kolkata, with pedestrians barred from walking on the pavement in front of it, witnesses said.Opposition Congress MP Priya Ranjan Dasmunshi demanded full security for top cricketers and their relatives.He said instead of fans deriding the team, “we should collectively pray for victory in the remaining matches.”Speaker Manohar Joshi agreed.”They should be given fullest protection so that their minds are free and they do better. We wish them good luck,” Joshi said.”We should send a message from this house telling them ‘cheer up boys’,” said communist party MP Roopchand Pal.Former cricketer and ruling BJP MP Kirti Azad said the heated debate on whether batsman Virendra Sehwag should open with Sachin Tendulkar instead of Ganguly who appears out of form, should be left to the cricketers.”Nothing should be done to put players under pressure,” Azad said. “The issue of who should open the innings and who should bat lower down should be left to the team management.”On Monday, President Abdul Kalam, in his session-opening speech to parliament, wished the cricket team every success – a comment which was met with derisive laughter from some MPs.

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