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.

Clark's ten-wicket match earns Blues victory

Scorecard

Stuart Clark’s ten-wicket game earned him the Man of the Match award © Getty Images

Stuart Clark sparked another Western Australia collapse to lead New South Wales to a crushing win within three days at Perth. Clark finished with his first ten-wicket match in first-class cricket as Western Australia struggled to 209 and lost by 188 runs.His fast-bowling colleagues Mark Cameron and Doug Bollinger finished with better second-innings figures but it was Clark’s removal of both the openers in his first spell that set the Blues on target for victory. Following on from his first-innings 8 for 58, Clark had Justin Langer caught and Chris Rogers lbw as the Warriors began poorly in their unlikely chase of 398.When Rogers went it began another of the freefalls that had plagued Western Australia throughout the match as they lost 5 for 30 and their most dangerous batsmen departed. Aaron Heal (53) and Brett Dorey (43) offered resistance but Cameron’s 4 for 37 in just his second first-class game finished the demolition.Dorey had already played his part, taking 5 for 47 as New South Wales made 279 in their second innings. Brad Haddin top-scored with 70 but the Warriors’ disastrous first innings meant the Blues were always the favourites.It was an embarrassing home result for Western Australia, who boast one of the strongest batting line-ups in the Pura Cup. Both teams remain in contention for a place in the final but the loss could be a crushing blow for the Warriors, whose last two games will be away from home.

Gilchrist bats for regular opening partner

Phil Jaques: ‘I’ve just got to go out and do my business and hopefully I can’t be ignored’ © Getty Images

Adam Gilchrist, the stand-in captain, has called for a regular opening partnership to be established ahead of the 2007 World Cup and has thrown his weight behind Simon Katich. Gilchrist’s support has come after consistent calls for Phil Jaques, the New South Wales opener who made 94 on debut, to be given a regular place.”I think any team that’s settled is going to benefit from that regularity and being familiar with eachother,” Gilchrist said in . “For the best part of my career I’ve had two regular partners in Mark [Waugh] and then Matty [Hayden] and I’m starting to have batted a number of times with Kato [Katich].”You’d have to ask the selectors what they’re going to do with batting positions, but Simon has been very consistent since he’s come in as opener. He hasn’t nailed a big score, he knows that, but he’s certainly been the one that’s been the more consistent in getting the team off to a decent start. He’s getting comfortable in that position and learning it.”Everyone would like a regular batting line-up well and truly settled leading into the World Cup. It’s still 12 months away [so] there is still a fair bit of time to get that settled.”Katich is feeling tremendous pressure from the in-form Jaques. “[Opener] is where I’ve played for NSW, and that’s where I feel comfortable batting,” Katich said in the . “But obviously I’ve got to replicate that form for Australia. So far I’ve been relatively consistent but I haven’t got any big scores, which I need to do. That’s been frustrating. [Jaques] batted really well. Whether all three of us can coexist I’m not sure.”Jaques has been turning on the heat, averaging 104 and 56.55 in the ING and Pura cups this season, and with his 138 against Tasmania on Wednesday he became the first batsman in Australian domestic one-day history to hit four centuries in a summer. “I’ll just be working twice as hard.” Jaques told . “I’ve just got to go out and do my business and hopefully I can’t be ignored. I suppose the more runs you score the more the pressure mounts.”Michael Clarke is another contender for the opening job and has liked the role in his brief stints. “I do enjoy it,” Clarke told . “I enjoyed the VB series last summer when Matty Hayden and Gilly had a rest. Unfortunately it’s just too hard to get up there, the boys do so well there. Gilly and Kato have been fantastic. For me, I have to bide my time. I don’t mind batting six for Australia in the one-day team either.”

Pakistan agree to Ahmedabad one-dayer

Shaharyar Khan agrees to one extra one-dayer© AFP

The uncertainty over Pakistan’s tour to India has finally lifted with the Pakistan board agreeing to play an extra one-dayer at Ahmedabad, as proposed by the Indian board. Kolkata will now host a Test while Ahmedabad, where a Test was scheduled, will get the sixth one-dayer. However, the final schedule will be announced only after the Indian board resolved the TV rights issue, a delay that the PCB were willing to accomodate.In a press release issued today, the Pakistan board said that it understood the BCCI’s position with relation to postponement of the tour. “The PCB understands that the tour may have to be delayed by a few days in order to firm up administrative and logistical details.”The board also appointed Salim Altaf, who is the director of cricket operations of the PCB, as the manager of the team for the forthcoming tour of India. Asad Mustafa, who is currently PCB’s general manager of logistics, will be the assistant manager.It wasn’t yet revealed if this meant that Pakistan had also agreed to the BCCI’s decision to choose Kolkata as an alternate venue for the Test that had originally been allotted to Ahmedabad. Pakistan’s last Test there had been marred by crowd trouble, and their original request was for Mumbai. Chennai, with its famously sporting crowds, would also have been an acceptable choice to both teams.Meanwhile, the ICC has welcomed the resolution of the Ahmedabad issue. PTI reported Ehsan Mani, ICC’s president, as saying: “Everything was decided between the two boards. As it was a bilateral issue involving the boards of two countries, ICC could only play the role of a facilitator. Given the relations between Indian and Pakistan boards, I was confident of the issue being resolved amicably.”The issues over scheduling seem to be getting resolved, but the BCCI’s worries aren’t yet over. There’s still the TV rights to sort out.Also Read:Indian View – Can India match Pakistan’s grace and hospitality?

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.

Somerset feel very disappointed for Richard Johnson

Somerset Chief Executive Peter Anderson was back in his office for the first time today after the Christmas break.I spoke to the Chief Executive shortly after he had met with Richard Johnson, who was back at the County Ground after returning from India just before Christmas.The Somerset paceman was drafted into the squad after his county colleague Andy Caddick had withdrawn, and gave a good account of himself in the warm up match that he played in. However he was not selected for any of the matches in the three Test series.Richard, who celebrated his twenty seventh birthday at the end of December, has also been overlooked for the forthcoming England tour to India and New Zealand which starts later this month.Mr Anderson told me, “The club feels very disappointed for Richard Johnson who has been left out of the New Zealand trip.”The Chief Executive continued, “Coach Kevin Shine has been in touch with Duncan Fletcher to discuss his England prospects, but as is always the case all Richard can do is to keep bowling and produce the goods.””For Richard Johnson you have to feel disappointed, but from a Somerset point of view we gain,” Mr Anderson said.He continued, “Whilst Johnson will be doing his best next season for Somerset, the club are disturbed by Marcus Trescothick’s announcement that he may only be available for one game in 2002 on the basis that the workload for international cricketer’s is so great.”Mr Anderson went on, ” Undoubtedly the workload is great, but the England players seem to be obsessed by the amount of time that they are spending away from their homes and their loved ones.”He continued, “Some would say they are very well paid to put up with the inconvenience, and nobody forces them to go away and play for England.” The Chief continued, “Marcus’s suggestion is that player’s partners should have lengthy holidays at the E.C.B expense. If individuals miss their loved ones so much they can pay for it themselves.”Mr Anderson concluded, ” Somerset hope that Marcus’s fears are not realised and that he is available for more than one game in 2002.”

Cork's quick wicket


Cork once more amongst the wickets
Photo © Stamp Publicity

Dominic Cork showed spectators an early touch of what he had produced forEngland in the Test Match at Lord’s. In just his fifth over in the NatWest Trophy fourth-round match the Derbyshire skipper had Warwickshire opener Graeme Welch (11) caught by Karl Krikken on mid-on.The Bears batsmen had struggled from the start against Cork and Tim Munton.Cork almost broke through again when Luke Sutton failed to hold a catch behind the stumps from Mike Powell. Sutton was keeping wicket because Krikken hadexperienced a back spasm in practice and decided to play primarily as abatsman.That was after home captain Neil Smith had decided to bat on winning thetoss. Many of the early runs came from edged shots as the batsmen played and miss frequently, and it was such pressure which induced Welch to attempt to hit the ball over the covers. Ashley Giles seemed to be more confident as he cut Cork to the boundary. Scoring, though, was difficult as Munton, for whom Edgbaston had been his home-ground for 15 years, yielded just 10 runs from his opening six overs.Nevertheless Warwickshire survived their early trials and were relived to seeCork give way to Tom Lungley (1-25 in seven overs) with the score at 48-1.

Everton eye Real Madrid’s Luka Jovic

Everton may be forced into selling Brazilian forward and fan favourite Richarlison this summer, with the 24-year-old wanting to leave Goodison Park at the end of the season.

Should they attract a fee greater than his £49.5m Transfermarkt valuation, the Toffees could be set for a busy few months with incomings, particularly if they manage to secure their Premier League status for another season.

What’s the news?

According to Spanish media outlet Marca, Real Madrid striker Luka Jovic is already “packing his bags” ahead of his impending departure from the LaLiga side, and Everton, as well as Arsenal, could be his summer destination.

Having made just 17 appearances in all competitions for the club this season so far, the Serbian, who signed from Frankfurt for £56.7m back in July 2019, is desperate to move to a team that will give him regular game time.

Last week in the El Classico, Croatian midfielder Luka Modric was preferred by manager Carlo Ancelotti ahead of Jovic, who then potentially took a swipe at the Italian on Instagram.

Clinical scorer waiting to be let loose

In the season before moving to Madrid, Jovic scored 27 goals in 48 appearances in all competitions – as he became one of the most exciting talents in Europe, with Lionel Messi describing him as “a magical player who makes the impossible, possible.”

The 24-year-old has excellent technical ability, evident by the fact that according to FBRef, he ranks in the top 1% of strikers across Europe’s top five leagues and continental competitions for percentage of long passes per 90 (85%) and top 12% for passes completion percentage per 90 (79.1%).

Now rated at £16.2m according to Transfermarkt, he would likely be available on the cheap, with Madrid themselves looking to offload their deadwood in order to fund a move for global superstar Kylian Mbappe.

Should Everton give him the opportunity to shine, he is more than capable of realising his potential with a good run of games under his belt, and if manager Frank Lampard puts his trust and faith in the striker, he could return to his old clinical ways and become a hero at Goodison Park – in place of Richarlison.

FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast. FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast.


By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept Valnet’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.

Like the Brazilian, he has all the technical attributes to thrive on Merseyside.

In other news: Huge worry: Lampard facing first Everton disaster as worrying Finch Farm news emerges

Racial claims return in Zimbabwe selection

Sean Williams’ selection for the trip to South Africa is causing conflict © Getty Images

The selection problems that have frequented Zimbabwe over the past years have returned to haunt them again with the latest row being the make up of the team to travel to South Africa to play the SA Composite XI starting on Thursday in Paarl.Sources say the usual hardliners in Zimbabwe cricket, one being a member the team’s technical staff, and who are blamed for the devastating rebellion by 15 senior white players four years ago, are at it again – and it is feared to be racial this time around too.Our sources say the latest issue stems from the inclusion of batsman Sean Williams in the SA-bound side, a week after being declared to have recovered from a virus which has kept him out of action for some weeks.Williams’ inclusion, and the return of veteran spinner Ray Price, it is said, has irked some officials, who have accused selectors of bias, and arguing that “there are too many white players in the side again.”It is feared the latest politicking could scuttle coach Robin Brown’s work plan. Having to deal with some of the forces on a daily basis, Brown has had to contend with the hostility on a personal level, and particularly regarding Williams’ selection, which he is accused of influencing.The hardliners are accused in some quarters for wanting to impose their own players on selectors, with players from the all-powerful Takashinga club being heavily favoured in selection.Selection wars have contributed hugely to the downfall of the Zimbabwe team in recently years, with the height being the rebel issue which left the team hardly able to compete acceptably even against equal opposition.

Moin Khan released on bail over wife-beating

Moin Khan has been released on bail © Getty Images

Moin Khan, the former Pakistan captain and wicketkeeper, was freed on bail after a brief detention over a complaint that he beat up his wife at home.Moin, who lives in Karachi’s Clifton seaside area, was arrested early Tuesday morning after his wife, Tasneem Khan, lodged a complaint with a local police helpline. He was subsequently released in the evening after submitting a surety bond, local police officer Azad Khan said.”Moin was produced before a court and on a guarantee that he would not repeat the act he was released,” Khan said.The 35-year-old former wicketkeeper-batsman, who played 69 Tests and 219 one-day internationals for Pakistan, was quoted in , a Karachi-based Urdu daily, as saying that he committed the act “in extreme anger”.”It was a personal matter and I would like to solve it in consultation with my elders,” Moin reportedly added.