We didn't adjust to conditions quickly enough – Bravo

Gujarat Lions allrounder Dwayne Bravo admitted that his side’s batsmen failed to adapt to a slow pitch and the Test-match lines bowled by Sunrisers Hyderabad bowlers in Hyderabad on Friday

ESPNcricinfo staff07-May-2016Gujarat Lions allrounder Dwayne Bravo admitted that his side’s batsmen failed to adapt to the swing and a two-paced track, and the Test-match lines bowled by Sunrisers Hyderabad bowlers in Hyderabad on Friday. Lions suffered their third straight loss after being restricted to 126 for 6 by Sunrisers, who went on to win the match with five wickets to spare.In conditions that favoured swing, the Sunrisers seam attack of Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Ashish Nehra and Mustafizur Rahman stifled Lions. Bhuvneshwar and Mustafizur prised out Lions’ top order, leaving them at 26 for 3 at the end of the Powerplay, and it was only Aaron Finch’s unbeaten 42-ball 51 at No. 5 that lifted the score to 126. Bravo chipped in with 18 off 20 balls and shared a 45-run fifth-wicket partnership with Finch.”I think we didn’t adjust quickly. When you look at their IPL games, few of the games played here in Hyderabad, it’s always a high-scoring game. It’s a high-scoring venue,” Bravo said after the match. “So I think the batsmen maybe took it in mind that ‘okay, it’s another high-scoring game’, but it wasn’t. It was a different surface, the conditions were more challenging for batting and we, as batsmen, as international players, we didn’t adapt quickly enough.”Instead of trying to get 175-180, we could’ve easily tried to get 135-140 and it could’ve been a winning total. It’s a learning process and definitely we have to regroup as a team and adjust to all these situations because you can’t keep playing like every game you try to get 180 and 190, that’s not going to be possible.”The highest score by a team batting first at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium in Uppal in IPL 2016 so far has been 194, scored by Sunrisers against Royal Challengers Bangalore. In three of the six matches at the ground until now, teams batting first have scored 142 twice and 143 once, and Bravo stated that a total close to 146 would have been a match-winning one.”It was very good bowling. You’ve got to give credit where credit is due. I think the way Bhuvi bowled his first over… we all know once the condition is in his favour, it’s very difficult to play him. He’s one of the best swing bowlers in the world,” he said. “You’ve got to give credit. I think Ashish backs it up very well. They bowled well to us, they bowled Test-match areas.”The ball was doing a bit early on, so it was very difficult to score. To contain Dwayne Smith and Brendon McCullum, two of the world’s most dangerous players, definitely you’ve got to be doing something good. I think it was a very challenging wicket, but at the same time, we’re all professional cricketers, so we can’t give no excuses with our batting display. I think we were 20 runs short.”

Voges' dashed World Cup dream led to Ashes berth

Adam Voges reflects on how the frankness with Australia coach Darren Lehmann told him he was out of the World Cup squad allowed him to focus on securing a Test spot

Daniel Brettig06-Jul-20151:28

‘It’s been a long road to get here’ – Voges

“I’m done then, am I?”Through his tears, Adam Voges summoned the gumption to ask Darren Lehmann if his international hopes were completely snuffed out. It was Allan Border Medal night in January 2014, and outside Doltone House on Sydney’s Elizabeth Street, Lehmann had told Voges that he would not be figuring in the team’s 2015 World Cup plans.Up to that moment, virtually all of Voges’ opportunities to play for Australia had been in coloured clothing. His record showed he had seldom let the team down. So to hear he would not be considered for the squad that would compete for the game’s biggest trophy on home soil truly hurt. There was not much room for any other chances, but Voges had to ask the question.Stubbing out a cigarette, Lehmann replied. “No, you’re not done, there’s always opportunities.” It might have been a throwaway line from a selector to a jilted player, but it has turned out to be very true. Voges cast off any bitterness about missing a World Cup spot and forged ahead for West Australia. Eighteen months later he is set to play in the first Investec Ashes Test in Cardiff.”I didn’t think I’d ever let anyone down when I’d played one-day cricket,” Voges said. “I thought my performances statistically were good and I played in a lot of teams that won games, so from that point of view it was pretty disappointing. But Boof was very honest and I knew exactly where I stood at the end of it.”It took a little while I must admit, but I moved on and my focus from then was doing well for WA. I think during that conversation I said, ‘Well I’m done then am I’, and his answer was no, you’re not’.”So maybe there was that little glimmer of hope when I walked away from that, but he certainly didn’t shut the door that’s for sure. It was just an honest chat that we had. It hasn’t changed me or him as a person in any way. I think there’s still a mutual respect and a good relationship there. I’m sure it was a hard chat for him to have as well.”Lehmann’s frankness allowed Voges to focus on Western Australia, and a prolific 2014-15 season elbowed him onto the plane to the West Indies and England. In Dominica he showed the value of his calm, measured batting on the way to a memorable debut hundred, and in England his ability to soak up pressure and bat around more combustible teammates will be invaluable.Adam Voges ended a long wait for the baggy green with a century on debut in the Caribbean•Getty Images

“I was batting the other day [in Chelmsford] and I came out and Warner was smacking them. Then he got out and Watto came in and he smacked them. Then he got out and Mitch Marsh came in and he smacked them,” Voges said. “I was quite happy doing my thing at the other end. If I can build partnerships with those guys then that’s what I try and focus on.”There will be times where I hopefully get a bit of a run on as well, and I’m certainly not there to just occupy balls. I’ll certainly be proactive and positive in the way that I play but those guys were on a different level the other day. I think that’s the art of batting, knowing when are the right times to attack and when a bloke is bowling well and you need to get through a tricky period. And knowing when you can cash in as well.”Generally, an Ashes is not considered the best time to include players with minimal Test match experience. However, Voges’ rich history of first-class matches, both in England and Australia, leaves him well placed to make an immediate impact, much as the opener Chris Rogers did in 2013.”I’ve learnt a bit of patience over the last few years,” Voges said. “My two young ones will be here tomorrow, and I think they’ve taught me patience pretty well. But I think it’s just experience – it’s going to be a big occasion, I’m sure there will be some nerves. You’d be disappointed if there weren’t.”But just going back and knowing I’ve played a lot of cricket now and just being able to go back on that experience and hopefully that will hold me in good stead.”That experience includes plenty of knowledge of England players. Stuart Broad, for one, was a team-mate with Nottingham. “Off the field, he’s a nice guy,” Voges said. “I’ve played a lot with him, I’ve always got along well with him. It’s always different when you walk across the white line, and we won’t be saying too much to each other I’m pretty sure. Once it’s all finished I’m sure we’ll have a beer afterwards but we’re here for business now, and that’s how it will be.”It’s the Ashes, we all grow up watching and is probably the most important Test series, so from that point of view, because of the occasion and how big it is, there’s always going to be a little bit of niggle in the heat of the moment, and that’s fine. Looking forward to getting out there.”

SLC seeks to clear air with ICC over interim committee

An interim committee to run Sri Lanka cricket that came into power yesterday is under scrutiny for breaching the ICC constitution. A nine-man team led by former Test opener Sidath Wettimuny, appointed by sports minister Navin Dissanayake, could run foul of the ICC’s stance on government interference in cricketing affairs, the penalties for which include suspension of the board in question.The committee was established because the posts held by the existing office-bearers, led by president Jayantha Dharmadasa, had become null and void. The laws governing all sports bodies in the country require annual elections to be held on or before March 31. SLC’s elections, however, were postponed until the end of April due to the World Cup, which ended on March 29.Dissanayake said he was in talks with the ICC to explain his stance after SLC received a letter from chief executive David Richardson that stated “such action [sports minister appointing an interim committee] could put Sri Lanka Cricket in breach of Article 2.9 (B) of ICC’s Articles of Association which states as follows: “Where a government interferes in the administration of cricket by a Member, including but not limited to interference in operational matters, the selection and management of teams, the appoint of coaches or support personnel, the Executive Board shall have the power to suspend or refuse to recognise that Member….””The ICC is not happy with interim committees, but we as a sovereign country have the power under the legislation to appoint one,” Dissanayake said “We will justify our stand with the ICC as we have grounds to appoint such a committee. Questions of suspension and all that are not serious issues, but we are addressing that. We are waiting to have talks with the chairman N Srinivasan.”We have already spoken to CEO David Richardson and we will be speaking to N Srinivasan today or tomorrow. After that myself, Sidath and a member of the interim committee will go and meet Srinivasan personally. We have a desire to go forward without any problems. We’ve had cordial relations with ICC. We have not got into confrontation with them at any time and whatever issues that have come up have been dealt through discussions.Dissanayake was confident an amicable resolution can be found. “We have laws governing our country and according to the laws of the country I have appointed an interim committee,” he said. “We are prepared to have discussions with the ICC and if they have any issues with it we are prepared to talk it out. As far as we are concerned I don’t see that we have a problem.”He said that more than half of Sri Lanka cricket’s history has been under interim committees. “It’s not something new, the appointing of interim committees,” he said. SLC was run by a series of nine government-appointed interim committees between 2004 and 2012. Though the board’s recent history has been characterised by government intervention, the ICC has not formally penalised the board so far, nor officially threatened suspension.

New Zealand complete best ever Test year

The threat of Tim Southee and Trent Boult confirmed Brendon McCullum’s Boxing Day assault as match-winning. Christchurch witnessed New Zealand’s fifth victory in 2014, marking it their best year in Test history

The Report by Alagappan Muthu29-Dec-2014
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsTim Southee’s short-ball tactic worked well against the tail•Getty Images

It had to be black magic. Tim Southee and Trent Boult were swinging a 70-over old ball on the fourth morning. Both ways. Their skill accounted for 13 of the 20 Sri Lankan wickets and confirmed Brendon McCullum’s Boxing Day assault as match winning. Christchurch witnessed New Zealand’s fifth victory in 2014, marking it their best year in Test history.A target of 105 appeared straightforward, but Sri Lanka created a few nervous moments for New Zealand along the way. A fluent Tom Latham was undone by a ripping turner from debutant offspinner Tharindu Kaushal and Hamish Rutherford was surprised by Shaminda Eranga’s extra bounce and lobbed a catch to gully.Sri Lanka strived hard for further inroads. Ross Taylor and Kane Williamson, though, were resolute and secured the Test in the seventh over after tea on the fourth day.The visitors had begun the day 10 runs behind and with five wickets in hand, and their best chance was if their captain Angelo Mathews could shepherd the tail. But even he was unprepared for the bouncer from Southee, feathering an edge to the keeper off a front-foot pull early in the morning.Kaushal, the night-watchman, managed a couple of pleasing strokes through square leg and cover off the front foot before a short ball in the off-stump corridor did him. He was caught in two minds and before he could pull the bat away, the edge flew to Mark Craig at second slip to give Southee his first strike of the morning.Dhammika Prasad was reluctant to get in line for most of his 17 balls and was not ready when Southee sprung the trap with the fuller length – twice. Ross Taylor grassed an absolute dolly, but before his face could grow red another came his way and he caught it.Sri Lanka did well to bat until lunch and their final-wicket pair even forced the umpires to take a half hour’s extension. The lead was 17 when Mathews was dismissed, but Eranga and Suranga Lakmal conjured 59 runs off 57 balls. Their clear-the-front-leg-and-swing tactic frustrated New Zealand as they either watched the ball skirt past the outside edge or skim to the cow-corner boundary. Boult broke through and earned himself and his fellow bowlers some well-deserved rest after 196 testing overs across the two innings.

De Villiers gets the inside track on Canberra

Though South Africa lost to Australia in Canberra, AB de Villiers was able to take away a solid gameplan for the World Cup when they would play Ireland here: batting the opposition out

Firdose Moonda19-Nov-2014On March 3rd, 2015, South Africa’s batsmen will be tasked with piling on enough runs to tower over Ireland in a World Cup group game at Manuka Oval. AB de Villiers already knows the game plan for that day because Australia did exactly that to beat his side by a comfortable 73 runs today.Nevermind that Australia’s victory gave them a 2-1 lead in a series South Africa are considering crucial for their World Cup preparation; learning about conditions in Canberra, where the visitors last played 17 years ago against an Australian Prime Minister’s XI, was more important.”It’s a slowish kind of deck, not an ideal wicket to play on against a team like Ireland,” de Villiers said. “Ideally we’d like to have pace and bounce so we can use our seam bowlers, which is one of our strengths. But on the other hand, the ability of our top six or seven batting line-up is also really good so that will be the plan: to bat Ireland out of the game when we play them here.”De Villiers’ conviction in his batsmen came despite losing six of them for 32 runs. Until then though, South Africa were on track for a chase of 330 – their openers put on 100 inside 18 overs, Hashim Amla went on to score a century, and de Villiers was playing with the kind of innovation that has sunk other teams in the past. But things changed.”I got out at a bad time,” de Villiers said. And then Amla got out in the next over. That left Farhaan Behardien and David Miller to control the chase, but with both being new at the crease de Villiers had reason to worry. “Throughout Australia’s innings, they never had two new batters at the crease. That was part of our game plan too,” he said. “On these kind of decks where it’s a bit slower, there’s a little bit of reverse swing, the ball was getting softer and a little green, when you get two new batters at the crease, the run rate is always going to slow down a bit.” So why then is de Villiers so sure that won’t happen to South Africa in three months’ time against Ireland?Because the person who usually bats in such situations was not around in this match. “JP [Duminy] plays a big part in our team. It really balances the team nicely when he’s here. His finishing abilities in that middle order is priceless,” de Villiers said.Duminy was ruled out of the series with a knee injury, but is expected to be fit when West Indies visit South Africa at the end of the year and the World Cup. His return would firm up a middle order that has been exposed for inexperience yet again but will not paper over problems concerning South Africa’s depth, which de Villiers does not believe are as serious as they appear.De Villiers expressed “full faith,” in Behardien and Miller to do the job if needed in future and while Miller has some record of doing so in the past, the vote of confidence in Behardien is surprising. He has 32 runs from three innings in this series and has been out for single-figures in four of his last six ODIs. But he chips in with a few overs, which de Villiers found particularly useful on the Canberra surface. “On these kind of wickets, you do tend to get away with the fifth bowler not being a full-time bowler,” he said. “He’s got good skill. I’ve got faith in him and his ability to perform for us, especially when we want to go with this balance, with the extra batter.”The bottom line though is that South Africa will not want to rely on an extra batsman who is actually more of a fill-in bowler at the World Cup and that may be the biggest lesson they take out of the Australian capital. De Villiers seemed to concede as much as he considered how to level the series in Melbourne, another of South Africa’s World Cup venues.”It’s very difficult to imitate World Cup games, but when you play for South Africa in any game, the competitive juices are there and you want to win. But there is something different in a World Cup. Its a bit more special and every game matters a lot to you. There’s no a room for mistakes. Here, you can get away with a bad game or two,” he said. “We’ll just have to put that right in Melbourne.”

فيديو | محمد النني يوجه رسالة لـ جماهير آرسنال وأرتيتا يعلق على عودته للمشاركة

بعث المصري محمد النني لاعب وسط آرسنال الإنجليزي، برسالة إلى جماهير فريقه بعد عودته للمشاركة مجددًا عقب غياب طويل للإصابة، وعلّق مدربه ميكيل أرتيتا على عودته.

ودفع ميكيل أرتيتا المدير الفني لـ آرسنال، بمحمد النني بديلاً في المباراة أمام برينتفورد، في الدقيقة 82، بكأس رابطة المحترفين الإنجليزية (كأس كاراباو).

وتعد تلك المشاركة الأولى لمحمد النني بعد غياب دام عدة أشهر للإصابة، وقال المصري في مقطع فيديو: “مرحبًا، شعور رائع للعب مجددًا مع آرسنال بعد إصابتي الطويلة، شكرًا لكم على دعمكم الليلة، أحبكم وأراكم قريبًا”.

وعلّق أرتيتا في تصريحات نشرها موقع آرسنال الرسمي عن عودة النني: “نعم، النني يستحق ذلك تمامًا، لقد كانت عملية طويلة جدًا بالنسبة له”.

وأضاف: “لقد خصص الكثير من الساعات والعمل (للعودة)، ونشيد أيضًا بجميع أطباء العلاج الطبيعي والقسم الطبي لأننا نحتاج إليه، إنه يجلب شيئًا خاصًا للفريق وأنا سعيد حقًا لأنه لعب بعض الدقائق اليوم”.

وتأهل آرسنال لدور الـ 16 من كأس كاراباو وأسفرت نتائج القرعة عن مواجهته لوست هام.

A rare away start as favourites for New Zealand

After their near-perfect performance in the first Test in Jamaica and West Indies’ recent hapless showings, New Zealand start the second Test in Port-of-Spain as favourites

The Preview by Siddarth Ravindran15-Jun-20142:12

Jamaica was a tough test for me- Kemar Roach

Match factsJune 16-20, 2014, Port of Spain
Start time 1000 (1400 GMT)Mark Craig will have to prove that his performance in the Kingston Test was not a one-off•Associated Press

Big PictureIt’s not often that New Zealand find themselves starting away Tests as favourites. But their near-perfect performance in Jamaica, and West Indies’ hapless recent showings confer Brendon McCullum’s men that unfamiliar status. Nearly everything they hoped for happened at Sabina Park – they got to bat first on a benign surface and racked up a score above the 450 they usually target, their inexperienced spinners thrived and there were significant contributions from a wide range of players as they remained on top right through the Test.One of their biggest problems during the superb recent run in Test matches has been a serious shortage of runs from their openers, but even that changed in Jamaica as Tom Latham put together two battling half-centuries in what was only his second Test. Their talented pace attack has been their biggest strength in the past couple of years, and with the middle-order regularly churning out centuries and even the spinners chipping in with wickets, New Zealand will fancy their chances of winning their first away Test series against a top-eight opposition since 2002.Two years ago when these teams faced off in the Caribbean, West Indies had swept aside New Zealand on their way to a six-Test winning run that lifted them to No. 5 in the rankings. Since that run, though, West Indies have lost three Tests by an innings, one by eight wickets, another by 186 runs and averted defeat in the remaining match only due to an over-my-dead-body double-century from Darren Bravo and rain.Before the series began, West Indies made the big change of bringing in a new captain, dispensing with Darren Sammy. Then they revamped the bowling for the first Test, with Sulieman Benn, Kemar Roach and Jerome Taylor making their comeback. For this game, it is the batting that is getting an overhaul, with Marlon Samuels and Kieran Powell left out and Kirk Edwards battling for his place. Will the large-scale changes bring about a turn in their fortunes?Form guide(Most recent first)
West Indies LLLDL
New Zealand WDWWWWatch out forMark Craig was a little-known offspinner with a middling record when New Zealand’s selectors punted on him for the Caribbean tour. He responded with four-wicket hauls in each innings of his debut Test at Sabina Park to win the Man-of-the-Match award and set up a famous victory. “I know Mark’s a good bowler, but I didn’t quite think he’d quite be as calm as he was from ball one,” New Zealand coach Mike Hesson said. “I thought it would take him a bit of time to settle, but he settled in right from the start and bowled a great first over and he was away.” Now the job for Craig is to prove that Jamaica wasn’t a one-off performance.It’s not very often that New Zealand’s spinners outbowl their counterparts in a Test. Sulieman Benn had complained about the flat nature of the Sabina Park track after the second day, only for West Indies to lose 20 wickets over the next two days. West Indies’ spinners need to turn in an improved performance in the second Test, despite facing bigger challenges; Shane Shillingford was nursing a niggle on the eve of the game and racing to get fit, and the track is expected to be more pacer-friendly. Still, whoever does play needs to do more against a line-up that is not traditionally known for its prowess against the turning ball.Team newsNew Zealand have already made one change to their side – dropping the woefully out of form Peter Fulton, and bringing in Hamish Rutherford. Depending on the nature of the track, they will also take a call on whether to pick an extra quick for the spinner Ish Sodhi.New Zealand: (probable) 1 Tom Latham, 2 Hamish Rutherford, 3 Kane Williamson, 4 Ross Taylor, 5 Brendon McCullum (capt), 6 Jimmy Neesham, 7 BJ Watling (wk), 8 Neil Wagner/Ish Sodhi, 9 Tim Southee, 10 Mark Craig , 11 Trent BoultShane Shillingford has a niggle, Ramdin said on the eve of the Test, so the team would have to wait on his fitness.* Either way, he said, he is mulling playing the extra quick. With Darren Sammy retired, and Dwayne Bravo injured, they are struggling to find an allrounder for the Test side. West Indies’ batting will have at least two changes as a result of the changes to their squad; Ramdin said he might play one of the two batsmen who were brought in after doing well for the Sagicor High Performance Centre, Jermaine Blackwood and Leon Johnson.West Indies: (probable) 1 Chris Gayle, 2 Kraigg Brathwaite, 3 Kirk Edwards, 4 Darren Bravo, 5 Shivnarine Chanderpaul, 6 Leon Johnson, 7 Denesh Ramdin (capt & wk), 8 Sulieman Benn, 9 Jerome Taylor, 10 Kemar Roach, 11 Shane Shillingford/Shannon GabrielPitch and conditionsOn Sunday, Kane Williamson suggested that there might be a bit more in it for the quicks than Kingston. Kemar Roach also said the pitch would aid the seamers, while Denesh Ramdin said he expected good carry for the bowlers on this track. “A bit more grass than Jamaica. The ball will edge and go to the slips area,” Ramdin said. Temperatures are expected to be in the low 30s, and rain is predicted over the next week.Stats and trivia Shivnarine Chanderpaul is tied with Steve Waugh on 46 unbeaten Test innings, the most by a specialist batsman. There are six others ahead of him in the overall list, but all of them are tailenders, including quintessential ones like Chris Martin, Muttiah Muralitharan and Courtney Walsh. The only person to score hundreds in his first three Tests is former India captain Mohammad Azharuddin. Jimmy Neesham can emulate him if he makes a century in Port-of-Spain. The player to have bowled the most overs in Test cricket in the current West Indies squad is Chris Gayle, with 1154.5 overs.Quotes”Adapting to the conditions was a focus and something we did very well in the first Test, something we want to continue doing well in this series.”
*3.45GMT, June 16: The team news was updated after Denesh Ramdin spoke on the eve of the game

Australia, South Africa in four-Test talks

Australia and South Africa are in talks to expand the size of their future Test series meetings from three matches to four, following the dramatic and high quality series completed at Newlands last week

Daniel Brettig11-Mar-2014

Australia and South Africa have played Test series of three matches in every meeting but one since the latter’s readmission•Getty Images

Australia and South Africa are in talks to expand the size of their future Test series meetings from three matches to four, following the dramatic and high quality series completed at Newlands last week.As part of the range of FTP agreements being negotiated between ICC Full Member nations following the approval of a series of resolutions that will bring fundamental changes to the way the game is run, Cricket Australia’s chairman Wally Edwards said there was a desire to recognise highly competitive match-ups by playing them over a longer duration.Australia’s 2-1 victory remained in doubt until the final half-hour of the series following an encounter of many fluctuations. Edwards is strong in his desire to see such contests become more frequent in world cricket, not only among the presently strong nations but also those looking to improve.”We’re talking to them at the moment about more,” Edwards told ESPNcricinfo during the Cape Town Test, during discussions with Cricket South Africa. “They deserve more, and you’ve got to recognise the quality of the cricket I think. I think it’s not a bad stepping stone to have recognised quality by another Test or two. That principle might come out.”Australia and South Africa have played Test series of three matches in every meeting but one since the latter’s readmission to international cricket in 1992. The previous series in South Africa in 2011 was shortened to two matches, a decision CA expressed some disappointment about at the time.Under the commitments made by Australia and England to play each of the top eight nations at home and away over an eight-year period, the boards will also work to find additional windows for fixtures against lower-ranked nations, which had been increasingly marginalised in recent years.Edwards acknowledged that Australia may consequently return to the scheduling of international matches in the Northern Territory and Queensland during the winter months in order to better accommodate their new obligations.”Half the challenge is fitting this in,” Edwards said. “But Test series have been getting quicker, more compressed because that’s life. It’s the way the world is, faster, closer and quicker. I think you always want a warm-up game or two, because one might be washed out, that’s why you’d want two. [But] this has been a very good series.”It is also believed that South Africa’s future series with India may also be played over four Tests, rather than the two their most recent encounter was shrunk down to following a period of considerable doubt about the BCCI consenting to tour at all.That stand-off was emblematic of the troubles Edwards had witnessed at the ICC since his arrival on the executive board as a reform-minded CA chairman in 2012.He has spoken to ESPNcricinfo about the pathway from the rejection of the Woolf Report to the current resolutions, and about the difficulty of achieving meaningful change at the ICC following his successful campaign to streamline Australian cricket’s governance and add independent voices to the CA board table.The full interview will be published later this week.

Australia stroll to series win

Australia cruised to a series-deciding seven-wicket win at the SCG, powered by David Warner’s 71 after a brilliant display in the field

The Report by Daniel Brettig at the SCG19-Jan-20140:00

Video report: No one knows why England still can’t win a game

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsAs Brad Haddin observed the day before this match, winning is a habit and so is losing. On the evidence of an SCG contest that ended with Australia wrapping up their second consecutive ODI series victory over England in the minimum three matches, the hosts’ predilection for the former is matched by their visitors’ weakness for the latter.Though less dramatic and perhaps less demoralising than James Faulkner’s Gabba heist had been, this defeat underlined England’s rut and Australia’s peak as well as any of the seven previous matches on the tour. Alastair Cook’s side won the toss on a pitch favouring the side batting first and made a swift start, yet found themselves fatally slowed as much by their own lack of conviction as Australia’s neat bowling and high class fielding.Australia’s chase was not quite perfect, as no batsman made a hundred and wickets were lost to loose strokes, but the belief surging through the team was demonstrated by the jaunty run rate pursued throughout, and best exemplified by the sight of David Warner swinging a six down the ground the over after Aaron Finch’s dismissal playing a similarly full-blooded stroke.David Warner gave Australia’s chase the ideal start and they never looked back•Getty Images

Warner perished when a century beckoned, but Shaun Marsh, Michael Clarke and Haddin had little trouble galloping to victory. They did so with a gaping 10 overs to spare, and could look proudly upon the fact they had done so without having any of Mitchell Johnson, George Bailey or Clint McKay in their XI.The only moment of unease arrived in late afternoon when Eoin Morgan’s lone English rearguard was terminated. His dismissal to a low return catch by Daniel Christian required a replay for confirmation after Morgan stood his ground, provoking an angry response from Clarke.England’s innings was otherwise characterised by a failure to convert starts into substantial scores, due in part to another exceptional fielding exhibition by Clarke’s men. Glenn Maxwell took a sharp catch at point to end Cook’s fluent 35, while Warner’s run out of Ian Bell and Clarke’s own catch to remove a becalmed Ben Stokes were truly outstanding.Xavier Doherty, Nathan Coulter-Nile, and Maxwell all delivered useful spells, though it was more of a struggle for James Pattinson in his first international appearance since last year’s Lord’s Test. Straining for effect but lacking rhythm, his six overs cost 41.Australia’s pursuit began with a lengthy delay while a sight screen issue was addressed, before Warner avoided being run out without facing a ball when Ravi Bopara’s throw missed the stumps while the opener was still well short of his ground, having been called through for a swift single by Finch. This hiccup did not prevent the score from mounting quickly, as Warner in particular found ideal timing for the slowish pitch.Finch was no less proactive, but his tendency to drive balls at a catchable height was to cost him once more, Bopara claiming the chance at cover. Warner was not perturbed in the slightest by the wicket, crashing Tim Bresnan over long off for six the very next over, and proceeding on his merry way at a pace that quickly shrank the target.Take fielder’s word on catches – Clarke

Michael Clarke wants a fielder’s word to be accepted on catches once more following an animated exchange with Jos Buttler over Eoin Morgan’s decision not to accept Daniel Christian’s assertion he had caught the left-hander during the third ODI in Sydney.
“I would like to see it get back to a bit of old-school cricket where you ask the fieldsman ‘did he catch it’ and if the fieldsman says yes you take his word,” Clarke said. “I think we’ve got so much technology in the game these days that if you say yes when you don’t catch it, that’s your reputation, the integrity of the game of cricket.
“There’s some occasions where you’re unsure and that’s what you do, you go to technology. But on a lot of occasions you know if you caught it and I’d like to see it go back to backing the players’ judgement.”
Clarke said he had argued with Buttler over that very issue, after England’s wicketkeeper had claimed a low catch off David Warner in Melbourne. Warner took Buttler’s word but was called back by the umpires.
“He was saying to me you’ve got to be consistent and I was saying what I think I’m saying here is extremely consistent,” Clarke said. “You told Dave Warner you caught it, Dave walked off the ground, it was the umpires that called him back. I’m saying the same today, if the batsman asked the bowler whoever caught the catch if he caught it, he said yes, I’d like to do the same.”

Marsh thus had time to get established, and their stand reaped a swift 78 before Warner shelled to cover while trying to repeat a boundary from the previous ball. Clarke kept the rate ticking at well above the requirement, gliding to a breezy 34 that was ended by perhaps the ball of the night – a Bopara inducker that perforated the captain’s attempted drive.Haddin gained a promotion in the order through the injury-enforced absence of Bailey, and delighted the healthy and hearty crowd of 37,823 by closing in on the target with a series of brazen blows. Marsh, building confidence with every run, applied the final touch with a pleasant flick over midwicket.Cook had played with hitherto unseen freedom, even striking his first six of the tour, but his dismissal with the total at 50 in the ninth over allowed Clarke to exert greater pressure and limit the flow of runs. The over before his dismissal Cook had been given lbw, playing across a skidder from Doherty, who had been introduced early by Clarke. But his review showed the ball to be skimming over the top of the stumps.Bell’s innings also promised much, but was ended by a stupendous direct hit from Warner, who threw the stumps down square of the wicket and halfway to the boundary. Stokes, promoted to No. 3, struggled in his new position, scratching his way to 15 without a boundary before perishing to a quite superb catch from Clarke, diving low to his right at square leg to intercept a flat and well-struck sweep shot.Gary Ballance and Bopara also made starts, before each erred slightly in their choice of stroke to be snapped up in the field. Coulter-Nile, who bowled tidily for his three wickets, coaxed Ballance to slice an airy cut shot to deep point, while Faulkner tempted Bopara into edging behind as he tried to glide the ball to third man.Morgan was left to pick up the pieces, striking a pair of compelling sixes over cover and down the ground before his miscalculation against Christian. When he dived to claim a return catch from a front edge centimetres from the turf Morgan stood his ground, resulting in an angry, finger-pointing confrontation involving Clarke and Jos Buttler.Umpires Simon Fry and Ranmore Martinesz moved between the pair to end the argument, after which time Morgan was given out upon consultation of replays to confirm Christian’s catch. In the opening match of the series Warner had walked for a low catch behind by Buttler, only to be recalled when the third umpire Kumar Dharmasena judged the ball to have bounced.While Tim Bresnan lifted the total at the finish, helping himself to a pair of sixes in Christian’s final over, 243 looked inadequate. Like so much that England have produced on this tour, it would prove to be nowhere near enough.

تقارير: لاعب جديد يرحل عن برشلونة خلال ساعات

كشفت شبكة “سكاي سبورتس”، هوية الراحل الجديد عن صفوف الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي برشلونة في الميركاتو الصيفي الحالي.

وكان برشلونة قد رحل عنه في الأسابيع الأخيرة مدافعه، صامويل أومتيتي، بعد فسخ تعاقده، ووقع بعد ذلك لصالح نادي ليل في الدوري الفرنسي.

اقرأ أيضًا | رئيس زينيت يؤكد انتقال مالكوم إلى الدوري السعودي.. وخبر سار لـ برشلونة

وبحسب فابرزيو رومانو عبر “تويتر” أن مدافع برشلونة الشاب، شادي رياض، في طريقه للانتقال إلى ريال بيتيس نهائيًا خلال ساعات.

ويحصل برشلونة على مبلغ قيمته 2.5 مليون يورو نظير الصفقة مع أولوية شرائه في المستقبل.

ووضع النادي الكتالوني في عقده مع ريال بيتيس نسبة من إعادة البيع في المستقبل أيضًا لأي ناد جديد.

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