Ashraful calls for full-time coach

‘There is a big difference between a permanent and temporary coach’: Ashraful © Getty Images

Mohammad Ashraful, Bangladesh’s captain, has called for the appointment of a full-time coach ahead of his side’s tour to New Zealand at the end of the year.”I feel we desperately need a permanent coach, whoever it may be, Shaun [Williams] or anyone else. There is a big difference between a permanent and temporary coach. You can’t expect teamwork with a temporary solution,” Ashraful told the .The Bangladesh Cricket Board has been looking for a national coach since Dav Whatmore refused a two-year contract extension after spending four years with the team. Interim coach Shaun Williams, who took over in June, was at the helm for a tour of Sri Lanka and the ICC World Twenty20 in South Africa. Neither of the two tours was successful for Bangladesh and the strategies of the team management have been criticised, especially after some haphazard batting in the Twenty20.National selector and former captain Akram Khan, who was part of the team management during the last two trips, also stressed on the need of a full-time coach. “I was only part of the selection process. I wasn’t involved in game planning,” he said. “Actually the captain and coach have the big role behind the planning. What I want to say is that we should have come out from the short-term solution immediately about the coach.”However, he expressed his satisfaction over the Twenty20 performance. “I think our performance was not bad because we fulfilled our target but the problem is that we were not consistent enough in any form of the game,” he said. “What I felt was that our team couldn’t play their natural game with the expectations getting higher.”Chief selector Rafiqul Alam also expressed his satisfaction over Bangladesh’s performance in South Africa. “The batting problems might remain in the Twenty20 format but what is most important is that nobody took us lightly. I believe if anybody is good in the five-day game then he will be okay in any format,” he said. “We have to shift our focus to the New Zealand trip and I think this year’s National Cricket League will be crucial for the players because we are trying many things to make it worthy including the financial encouragement.”Rafiqul also believed that the team needs a permanent coach. “A permanent coach is a very important part but as well as that, we have to find the right man for the job and in that case you have to compromise on time.”Responding to allegations that Ashraful had attitude problems during the Twenty20 and did not listen to anybody during the tour, Rabeed Imam, Bangladesh’s media manager, told Cricinfo: “Ashraful is a proactive skipper and he takes initiatives. He is confident enough to take decisions he feels are right and I don’t see any justifiable reason why some people should be critical of that. He’s also the senior-most pro in the side and has more experience at this level than any other player in the Twenty 20 team.”He has excellent working relationship with the coach, coaching staff and selectors and they can vouch for that. The players also find him easily approachable as most are his age or near about.”

Morkel signs for Yorkshire

Morne Morkel featured for South Africa in their recent 5-0 whitewashing of West Indies © Getty Images
 

Morne Morkel, the South Africa fast bowler, has signed for Yorkshire as cover for Rana Naved-ul-Hasan for the early part of the season.Morkel, who played for Kent last season in their Twenty20 campaign, had a reasonable one-day series against West Indies last week, picking up seven wickets in three games with a best of 4 for 36.”I am really pleased to have signed for Yorkshire,” Morkel said. “Although it is a short-term deal I am excited about the opportunity to play for such a historic and important club. The opportunity to play county cricket is one I couldn’t ignore.”I want to use the time I have with Yorkshire to help get the team off to a flying start and develop my own game. It will be great to play under a captain like Darren Gough and I know I can learn a lot from him about quick bowling.”Morkel has signed on a “week by week” contract until the availability of Naved-ul-Hasan – whose Pakistan board have expressed concerns over the amount of county cricket their internationals play – is confirmed.”Morne Morkel is a quality acquisition and a very talented prospect,” Stewart Regan, the Yorkshire chief executive, said. “We are pleased to have secured his services and he will provide excellent cover for Rana Naved during the first part of the season. He is highly regarded by Geoffrey Boycott who tells me that he can bowl very quickly indeed.”I’ve also spoken to Jacques Rudolph who has been impressed by Morne’s performances and is looking forward to playing with him at Headingley.”

Hayden hundred propels Australia to 213-run lead


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Matthew Hayden gave Australia the advantage with an innings of controlled aggression. © Getty Images
 

The last two days have been about razzle-dazzle batsmanship from high-quality practitioners of the art but the fourth day was more about absorbing, trench-warfare cricket as India’s spinners repeatedly chipped away at Australia on a wearing pitch. Innings of substance from Matthew Hayden and Michael Hussey put Australia in a good position to set a platform for the final day, as they ended with a lead of 213, with six wickets intact.The first session on the penultimate day was always going to be a crucial one and it was Australia who took first possession of the initiative, with Hayden and Phil Jaques blunting the Indian attack. It was Harbhajan Singh and Anil Kumble who were the real threats, teasing, flighting, turning and pushing through the ball on a pitch that was encouraging the spinners.Hayden and Jaques held their ground, but the runs did not come at the usual gallop that we have come to expect from Australia. In fact, when Jaques, after a partnership of 85 tried to force the pace with a big slog sweep off Kumble, he only managed an easy catch to Yuvraj Singh in the deep. Jaques had made 42, out-scoring Hayden for a time, and ensured that Australia wiped out the deficit without losing a wicket.When Ricky Ponting fell yet again to Harbhajan, off the very first ball the tormenting offspinner bowled to him, closing the face of the bat and edging straight to VVS Laxman at silly mid-off, the pressure was on the Australians. Harbhajan now has Ponting’s wicket eight times in Tests, and the celebrations that followed the latest issue, with Harbhajan running across the field and doing a soccer-style double roll on the turf, endeared him to his boisterous Indian fans at the SCG as much as it would have got under the skin of the Australian cricketers.Hussey joined Hayden out in the middle and the two used contrasting methods to handle the pressure the Indian spinners were applying. With plenty of rough created by the bowlers’ footmarks, the ball was gripping the surface and occasionally bouncing more than expected. This meant that the close-in catchers were kept constantly interested, though, to the chagrin of the Indian captain, not one checked defensive shot or edge went to hand.Hayden’s progress was further hampered when a niggling injury to his right thigh forced him to call for a runner and Ponting came out to do the job. Hussey, in the meantime, played late, using soft hands and often opening the face of the bat to place the ball past a fielder, while Hayden took the less delicate approach. He made room to cut, and when that method failed, relied heavily on first the conventional sweep and then the reverse-sweep. He brought up his half-century with one such powerful swat, but it was a high-risk option at the best of times.Hayden ground down the Indians, letting little pass by his broad bat, and brought up his 29th Test century with some ease, and coming as it did, on a fourth-day pitch, against two spinners bowling well, must rate highly among his efforts. But Hayden would die by his own sword, having put on 160 for the third wicket. He played the reverse-sweep to Kumble and this time there was a fielder at point, Wasim Jaffer, who held the ball head-high and cut short Hayden’s innings on 123.Off the very next ball Kumble struck again, and the man who is thought to be the heir to Ponting’s captaincy did something he will perhaps look back on and regret. Michael Clarke, played back to a Kumble googly that he did not pick – no shame in that, better batsmen than him have committed the same error – and cut straight to Rahul Dravid at slip. The catch was comfortably taken at knee height, and inexplicably, almost mockingly, Clarke stood his ground, waiting for the umpire to give him out. When the finger went up Australia were once again momentarily under pressure, having lost two quick wickets against the run of play.But the overall momentum was still with Australia, and when Andrew Symonds and Hussey ensured that there was no collapse, buckling down and applying themselves with admirable determination, India’s bowlers were once again kept at bay. When Ishant Sharma was thrown the ball late in the day, with the light not being the greatest after intermittent drizzle had caused stoppages, the batsmen accepted the offer from the umpires and walked off with the score on 282 for 4. Hussey, unbeaten on 87, will have to take fresh guard in pursuit of his century.This means Australia will bat again on the fifth morning, and be in a position to set India a target. What Ponting will have in mind is the fact that the series scoreline is 1-0, and an over-generous declaration in pursuit of a 16th straight win might be a dangerous strategy. Equally, with the spinners looking most threatening, Ponting will know Australia don’t quite have the same firepower in that department as the Indians.

West Indies lose strength and conditioning coach

Bryce Cavanagh, an Australian hired in April 2005, has resigned as West Indies’ strength and conditioning coach following the Test series against Pakistan.Cavanagh’s two-year contract was close to expiring but his sudden, premature exit was still a surprise. He has not been replaced for the remainder of the tour, and caribbeancricket.com reported that assistant coach David Moore will fill in as strength and conditioning coach in the interim.Cavanagh was hired to control of fitness level tests and required standards for players at first-class and international level.

Campbell leads resolute West Indian recovery

After two disappointing days at the WACA ground in Perth, West Indies’ batsmen have come out fighting on day three of the tour match against Western Australia today. Led by a defiant century from opener Sherwin Campbell (119), the West Indians have reached a second innings score of 6/266 by stumps, one that provides them with an overall lead of forty runs heading into the final day.Although the loss of the wickets of both Campbell and nightwatchman Mervyn Dillon (3) to the medium pace of Tom Moody (2/9) in the shadow of stumps provided a sour end, this was a heartening day for the tourists. With their experienced right hander offering the perfect prototype, virtually every one of their players who visited the crease today seemed intent on playing an innings loaded with resolve and application.The result was the generation of a succession of patient and disciplined partnerships. Nightwatchman Marlon Black (3) and Wavell Hinds (27) fell, and Campbell himself failed to score for well over an hour through one phase, but even through the first session, there was a strong hint of what was to come. Other than for the cross-batted, top-edged pull at a short Steve Nikitaras (1/66) delivery down the leg side which engineered Hinds’ demise, ill-disciplined strokes were minimal in number.Later in the day, Campbell received similarly fine support from experienced players Shivnarine Chanderpaul (43) and Jimmy Adams (41*). Chanderpaul did not look quite at his best, but fought doggedly against the Warriors’ attack until finally spooning a catch to square leg twenty-five minutes before tea. Adams survived one beseeching lbw shout against Brendon Julian (1/37) halfway through the final session and endured the misfortune of receiving two deliveries from the same bowler which barely did anything but run along the ground after pitching just short of a good length outside the line of off stump. Otherwise, though, he looked as sound in defence as ever against an attack which never really assumed a rating of anything exceeding steady.As for Campbell himself, he alternated between long periods of methodical defence and shorter bursts of attacking shotmaking, particularly through the off side. In fact, it was probably fitting that his century was raised with a forceful cover driven boundary. Before a first innings failure in this match, he had opened the tour with a century in the festival-style game at Lilac Hill earlier this week. With another seven hours at the crease now under his belt, this innings offered another welcome morale-boost as he continues his preparations for the upcoming Test series against Australia. Even more encouragingly, it clearly did so for the side as a whole as well.

Woeful Hampshire trounced by Durham again

Hampshire departed the north-east heading for the south-west tonight with their tails between their legs having seen their National League Division Two championship and promotion hopes take a hammering at the hands of Durham Dynamos at the Riverside.It capped off a disasterous five days for the south coast county, having been thrashed in the Championship the day before – it was no wonder they wanted to take the long trek to Taunton tonight instead of on Bank Holiday Monday.On a wicket that gave plenty of assistance to the quicker bowlers, Hawks skipper John Crawley won the toss and chose to take first use only to see the first four wickets disappear with only 34 on the board.Eighteen-year-old Liam Plunkett dismissed James Hamblin and Simon Katich, after the Australian had hammered Neil Killeen out of the attack with four fours in his 12-ball 18. However, the introduction of England paceman Stephen Harmison further dented Hampshire as only John Francis held firm.Reduced to 93-8, Chaminda Vaas showed some resistance with the bat with an unbeaten 28 once Francis (25) and Udal (16) had fallen. Spinner Graeme Bridge wrapped up the tail with 4-20 but 131 was never likely to be enough.And so it proved despite Vaas dispatching Martin Love and Ashley Thorpe in the space of two balls as Nicky Peng and the returning Paul Collingwood clocked up 91 for the third wicket to lead the side, starting the day second bottom of the table to a rare victory.Peng finished unbeaten on 56 while Collingwood smashed 48 to lead Durham to victory with nearly 20 overs to spare.

'Awkward situation' for hopeful Katich

Simon Katich’s amazing season with New South Wales put him on the West Indies tour. The absence of Michael Clarke may get him in the first Test team © Getty Images
 

Simon Katich says the prospect of regaining his place in the Test side in Michael Clarke’s absence is an “awkward situation”. Clarke appears to be out of contention for the first game, which starts in Jamaica on May 22, and Katich is the likely beneficiary of the batsman’s decision to stay home to help his fiancée Lara Bingle through the death of her father.Katich has come back into the Test squad for the first time since West Indies visited in 2005, having completed a record-breaking season of 1506 Pura Cup runs for New South Wales. He said a recall would be a reward for his work over the past three seasons, “but it is something of an awkward situation”.”It is very delicate,” he told AAP. “Obviously we don’t know when Pup is going to arrive, so it is a bit of an unfortunate situation.”The second Test in Antigua from May 30 appears to be the best option for Clarke, who was due to start his first Test tour as vice-captain until withdrawing last week. Brad Hodge, who was taking part in the Indian Premier League, has joined the party as a shadow player until Clarke arrives, but is only an outside chance of entering the first-team calculations.Australia’s only warm-up before the opening Test is the three-day affair against a Jamaica XI from Friday and Katich is likely to win a chance to impress. “It’s just a matter of hopefully playing the tour match and then hopefully getting some runs in that and putting my name up there for selectors to hopefully pick me,” Katich said. “I’ve been picked as the extra batsman and my role is to just make sure I’m ready to go if something happens, and that hasn’t changed.”Katich is determined to “grab the opportunity” and hopes to add to his 23 Tests. “I didn’t make the most of it the last time around,” Katich said. “I had plenty of opportunities to try and nail down a spot and I didn’t. If you don’t grab the opportunities when they’re there, you just don’t know when they will come back around.”

Flintoff fixes it for England … again

England 137 for 3 (Vaughan 37*, Flintoff 70*) beat Bangladesh 134 for 9 (Rajin Saleh 32, Johnson 3-22) by 7 wickets
Scorecard


Too hot to handle: Man of the Match Andrew Flintoff launches one of his four sixes
© Getty Images

England wrapped up an ultimately simple victory at the Bangabandhu Stadium in Dhaka, winning by seven wickets with 22.3 overs to spare after restricting Bangladesh to an inadequate 134 for 9. England thus took the short series 2-0. It could have been much worse: Bangladesh initially slumped to 7 for 4, and later on were 80 for 8 before the tailenders gave themselves something to bowl at. England lost three quick wickets as the ball zipped around under the floodlights, but then Andrew Flintoff came in and stopped the rot again.Entering after Paul Collingwood missed a big pull at Tapash Baisya and was bowled (37 for 3), Flintoff flicked his first ball behind square for four, eased his fourth through the covers for another, and smashed his seventh ball, off Mushfiqur Rahman, over long-on for six. He never looked back, depositing Rafique for two more sixes with effortless flicks that cleared the ropes at midwicket and wide long-on. The second one brought up his half-century, from only 37 balls, and he finished with 70 not out from 47 balls, with nine fours as well as those four sixes. For the second match running there was little argument over the destiny of the Man of the Match award, even if this time Flintoff was too unwell to collect it personally.Flintoff and Michael Vaughan, who dropped anchor at the other end after those early alarms, put on a round 100 for the fourth wicket. Vaughan survived a couple of close lbw shouts early on, but then played sensibly to shepherd his side home, and finished with a circumspect 37 from 69 balls.In many ways the match was a carbon copy of the first one, at Chittagong three days previously. Bangladesh’s top order struggled, but the tail gave the total some respectability: England lost three quick wickets, then Flintoff and a quieter partner finished things off quickly. There was one letoff for Flintoff this time, though. In the 20th over, he skyed Rahman to mid-off, where Moniruzzaman dropped a simple catch to complete a miserable debut – earlier he had departed for a duck after being called up as a surprise replacement for Bangladesh’s senior batsman, Habibul Bashar.


James Anderson celebrates dismissing Moniruzzaman, Bangladesh’s new No. 3
© Getty Images

England’s openers went cheaply again. In the third over, Vikram Solanki still hadn’t scored when Tapash brought one back and thumped him on the pads. Aleem Dar, the umpire, reprieved Solanki that time – but not next ball, when another inducker hit a little lower (5 for 1). Marcus Trescothick slapped Mushfiqur Rahman for one imperious four over the covers, but next ball he tried another aggressive force and only under-edged it into his stumps (19 for 2). But once Flintoff joined Vaughan, the fun was over for Bangladesh.Bangladesh’s batting, meanwhile, continues to disappoint hugely. England adopted a simple policy – bowl fast, short, and wide of off stump, and the early batsmen followed the ball like lemmings, giving catches as if at pre-match practice. There is an argument that the only way Bangladesh will improve is by exposure to top-flight cricket, but that one is beginning to wear thin. Their shot-selection today gave no indication that they had learnt anything at all in recent months.The game was as good as over before many of the large and vociferous crowd had taken their seats, as Bangladesh slumped to 7 for 4 inside nine overs. James Anderson and Richard Johnson feasted like foxes let loose in a chicken coop. With the first ball of Anderson’s second over Hannan Sarkar aimed an expansive slashed drive, and Collingwood in the covers took a good head-high catch (3 for 1). With the first ball of his third, Anderson bowled short of a length, outside off, Moniruzzaman offered a nondescript jab, and Chris Read held a straightforward catch (3 for 2).Johnson then got in on the act, thanks to yet another poor shot. The ball was again short and wide, Nafis Iqbal tried to hit the cover off it, and a delighted Read held the thin edge. Iqbal had made 4 – all the runs Bangladesh had scored off the bat at the time – and then Alok Kapali’s feeble waft gave Read his third catch (7 for 4). The crowd, a sea of flagwaving support at the start, began to make their displeasure known.Rahman and Rajin Saleh then steadied the ship with a fifth-wicket stand of 57, made from 20 overs, but it was pedestrian stuff. Khaled Mahmud, Bangladesh’s hapless captain (who had won the toss and batted, as he did at Chittagong), cut a lonely figure. He batted like a man without a clue, and was twice leg-before to Ashley Giles. The umpire let him off the first time – not that leaving him in the middle was an act of mercy – but he had to go shortly afterwards. Mahmud sloped off, with the derision of the spectators ringing in his ears (69 for 6).A spot of swatting from Rafique, who slapped four fours in his 27 not out, helped Bangladesh put on 54 for their last two wickets – but it was never going to be remotely enough.Steven Lynch is editor of Wisden Cricinfo.

New Zealand women forced to graft on first day

Close
ScorecardNew Zealand made a poor start to their one-off Test against India, ending the first day on 143 for 7. Asked to bat on a pitch that offered little suggestion of how it would play, they lost two key wickets to disappointing decisions, but were propped up by Katey Martin (46) and Haidee Tiffin (38 not out).Kate Pulford was given out caught behind in the first over of the match, even though her bat was well away from the ball (2 for 1). Then Maria Fahey, the other opener, was given out caught bat-pad when the ball went off her toe (21 for 2). The road to recovery was a slow grind and the scoring rate barely reached two runs per over throughout the 94 overs bowled.Martin, who was one of six New Zealand women making their Test debuts, settled in for the long haul. Maia Lewis, New Zealand’s captain, started aggressively but was caught off the bottom edge for only 9 (31 for 3).Martin was joined by Tiffen, and they grafted their way to 81 before Martin, in sight of a half-century on debut, played back to Neetu David, the left-arm spinner, and was caught behind. Her 46 came off 139 balls in 176 minutes of batting.The message was to build partnerships, but at every stage that one seemed to be developing, a wicket was lost. Tiffen produced a monumental display of control, given her natural attacking tendency, and by stumps she had batted for 264 minutes.The pick of the Indian bowlers was Nooshin Al Khadeer who took 3 for 36 from 27 overs. David took 2 for 37 from 29 overs.

'We have to be patient' – Wright

Anil Kumble is one of the three spinners playing for India at Kanpur© Getty Images

The thinking behind three spinners
It was not an easy call but Sourav [Ganguly] felt that was best way to get the 20 wickets. We need to take wickets early tomorrow.On the what challenge is
We have to be patient. The wicket is bit slower and some of the boys mentioned that they can beat them in the flight but can’t make much use of the bounce.Why Irfan Pathan was left out
Irfan has been out for a bit through injury and Zaheer [Khan] has bowled pretty well this year. He [Zaheer] has got a bit more pace, he’s been reversing ball the well and was the pick of the two based in the ODI against Pakistan last week.The way South Africa played…
Their application stood out today – they showed a lot of determination. We’re going to have to work particularly hard on this pitch which is on the slower side.…and his own charges
I was pleased with the way we stuck at it throughout the day; would have been nice to get a wicket in the final session.