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Compton survives Chapple test

Nick Compton survived a working over by Glen Chapple as Somerset reached 87 for 3 between the showers

George Dobell at Taunton28-Apr-2012Nick Compton was again unbeaten as Somerset began their first innings on day three•Getty Images

It was a day that could be seen as a microcosm of the season as a whole so far: wickets fell regularly amid the showers but Nick Compton survived. Compton has now passed 700 first-class runs this season, faced more than 1,400 deliveries and averages 143. He is not so much nudging the selectors as grabbing them by the throat and roaring in their faces.He did not have things all his own way here, though. Glen Chapple, generating good pace and gaining a little seam movement, uncovered an uncertainty rarely seen this season to date. Twice outsides edges from Compton’s bat dropped in front of the slip cordon and once Compton’s inside edge just missed his leg stump on its way to the fine-leg boundary. There was also a leg-before appeal that must have been perilously close. But he survived and later produced two boundaries in successive balls – one a flowing cover drive – off Sajid Mahmood.Such was Chapple’s desire to dismiss Compton early, he was lured into a ten-over opening spell. Very good it was, too, producing the wickets of stand-in opener Lewis Gregory, drawn into pushing at one he could have left, and Arul Suppiah, driving expansively and beaten through the gate. But it also meant Chapple was unable to return for a second spell for some time and, in his absence, batting was an altogether more straightforward business.James Hildreth, sweeping Simon Kerrigan’s left-arm spin sweetly, flattered briefly before playing across a straight one, but Compton looked untroubled against all but Chapple.Earlier Vernon Philander claimed his second five-wicket haul in three Championship games for Somerset, but could not stop Lancashire claiming full batting bonus points. It took only nine balls for Somerset to finish off Lancashire – Kerrigan caught in the gully fending at one from Philander – but by then the fifth point was secure.Such incidentals may not seem important now but, bearing in mind the competitive nature of the Championship title race in recent years, points earned in such situations may yet prove vital. Somerset supporters will long be pained by memories of 2010 when they finished level on points with Nottinghamshire, but missed out on the title because Nottinghamshire had won one more game.

BCB to give contracts to 120 players

In the first major step to decentralise the game in the country, the Bangladesh Cricket Board has decided to give contracts to 120 cricketers from January next year

Mohammad Isam01-Jul-2012In the first major step to decentralise the game in the country, the Bangladesh Cricket Board has decided to give contracts to 120 cricketers from January next year. The proposal is to give one-year contracts to 15 players from each of the eight designated regions – Barisal, Khulna, Rajshahi, Chittagong, Sylhet, Rangpur, Dhaka and Dhaka Metropolis – to decentralise the game from its present Dhaka-centric state.BCB president Mustafa Kamal made the radical announcement after an emergency board meeting. “We have decided to bring 120 cricketers under our umbrella by giving them contracts, which will include the national team players,” Kamal said. “The aim is for grassroots development so there will be 15 cricketers from each of the eight regions. It will be effective from January next year, and we will also cover their insurance premium.”Kamal also informed that the board will spend Bangladeshi taka 35 million (US $ 430,000 approx.) annually on the contracts. The payment scale will depend on experience (one-four, five-seven and seven-plus years) while the selection will be based completely on performance.Though Kamal didn’t confirm any connection between this decision and the proposed franchise-based four-day competition from next season, it is apparent that these 120 cricketers will form the core of the first-class players in the tournament.The board will also appoint eight former cricketers, preferably those who have played for Bangladesh, as cricket operations managers. “They will be salaried by the BCB but under one condition, they have to be former players from the region,” Kamal said. “For example, someone from Rajshahi will be the operations manager for that region, not that of Sylhet, so that he can coordinate with everyone in that region.”

Taylor keeps his focus after England call

James Taylor moved to an unbeaten 163 after his England Test call, but Sussex have given themselves a chance of saving the match against Notts

Jon Culley at Trent Bridge29-Jul-2012
ScorecardJames Taylor ended unbeaten on 163 after being given a Test call up•Getty Images

It is not the same kind of mental strength he will need if he is asked to face Dale Steyn and company at Headingley but James Taylor passed one test of temperament at the first time of asking after trotting down the pavilion steps on Sunday morning.In between walking off at 106 not out on Saturday and attempting to pick up where he had left off he had a lot to be excited about: a first Championship century as a Nottinghamshire batsman, then a phone call telling him he was the man nominated to replace Ravi Bopara in the 13 for the second Test. He would not have slept especially well. Yet there was not a hint of distraction in his approach to the job in hand, which was specifically to bat Sussex out of the game.And inasmuch as he was still batting when Chris Read decided a lead of 349 was enough for his bowlers to be let loose on Sussex for a second time he fulfilled the task. He was 163 not out, having added 57 off 63 balls to his overnight score with no chances offered.How many more chances he will have to score centuries in his Nottinghamshire shirt remains to be seen. Stuart Broad, the county’s last major recruit from Leicestershire, has played in only 11 Championship matches in five seasons since arriving at Trent Bridge, never more than three in one season. If Taylor is as successful as Broad has been since England called on him for the first time he will become a similarly occasional participant. At least Taylor has played 10 times already and, furthermore, as a batsman, he should need fewer rests.Taylor and Voges added 77 to the overnight total in little more than an hour, leaving their partnership unbroken at 148 and heralding a day in which, rarely this summer – apart from when there has been no play at all – no wickets fell. It was not a day without interruption as a band of showers swept through during the afternoon but 70 overs were bowled, at the end of which Nottinghamshire were left to contemplate how they might bowl Sussex out in three sessions, rather than five and a half.Sussex might not be the threat to Nottinghamshire’s title aspirations that Warwickshire clearly are but they have a strong record at Trent Bridge, winning three of their last four first-class matches here, and in Chris Nash and Ed Joyce, who have become a solid opening partnership, two batsmen who have prospered against them individually.Nash finished on 79 from 160 balls. He had scored 57 or higher in seven of his last 10 Championship innings against Nottinghamshire and twice gone on to score a century, including 128 at Hove earlier this season. Joyce, meanwhile, might draw encouragement from recalling that the two highest scores of his career have been against Nottinghamshire – 192 for Middlesex in 2005, 183 for Sussex in 2009.On a pitch that behaved as benignly as it has for Taylor and Michael Lumb on day two, and with no spinner to give the ball a particular rip, they had things largely their own way. Samit Patel is a decent slow left-arm bowler who gives little away but he does not turn the ball hugely.Even Andre Adams, the leading wicket-taker in the country with 52, could not interrupt their progress and Harry Gurney, in particular, took some punishment at the hands of Nash, whose drives were timed superbly and went for seven of Nash’s 14 boundaries.Intriguingly, Nottinghamshire finished the day level on points with Warwickshire, both needing to take 10 wickets on the final day.

Edwards seeks unanimous vote for CA board change

Wally Edwards, the Cricket Australia chairman, will be seeking a unanimous vote in favour of governance change when the game’s Australian custodians sit down in Melbourne on Friday to continue the march towards independent board directors

Daniel Brettig16-Aug-2012Wally Edwards, the Cricket Australia chairman, will be seeking a unanimous vote in favour of governance change when the game’s Australian custodians sit down for an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) in Melbourne on Friday to continue the march towards independent board directors.South Australia has remained outspoken in its opposition to the proposal for non-state-aligned CA directors put forward by the Crawford and Carter Governance review and accepted by the other states, however the measures will go through even if the SACA again raises a dissenting voice at the EGM tomorrow.Edwards said his strong preference was for a unanimous vote to ensure the path towards a new governance model would be smooth and united.”I’d prefer it to be unanimous obviously, we have to go forward as a united business and that’s what we’re trying to achieve, a one business mentality right across Australian cricket,” Edwards told ESPNcricinfo. “That’s the next phase after governance, to make it a better business and be more efficient, more dynamic, and deliver more services for less dollars – set the business up for the next 50 years.”We know where they [SA] stand, I don’t expect them to change their position between now and the members meeting. What we’re voting on is something they agree with fundamentally so we’ll just wait and see whether they decide if they want to vote no or yes. Hopefully we’ve got enough votes to get it through.”Edwards revealed that the SACA had used the ICC’s governance model – itself in a state of some discussion following the raft of changes recommended by Lord Woolf’s governance review – as a reason why it was opposed to the prohibition of CA board directors also holding positions on state association boards.”They think it’s a better system, that’s their belief and you have to accept that,” Edwards said. “They think it’s a better system to have someone connected from their board to the CA board and they use the ICC as an example of that of course, where we are connected.”I can understand where they’re coming from. They pretty well agree with everything else that we’re doing. It’s just a fundamental disagreement there and that’s their right.”Irrespective of SA’s opposition, the wheels for change are very likely to gather motion at the meeting, where the board will also consider the plans devised to select its first three independent directors in October.A nominations committee will decide on the trio, with the committee to be composed of two state board chairmen, two businessmen not formally associated with Australian cricket in any way, and Edwards.

Court suggests arbitration in Deccan Chargers' hearing

The Bombay High Court has suggested arbitration as a means of resolving the dispute between Deccan Chronicles Holdings Limited, the owners of Deccan Chargers, and the BCCI

Nagraj Gollapudi24-Sep-2012The Bombay High Court has suggested arbitration as a means of resolving the dispute between Deccan Chronicles Holdings Limited, the owners of Deccan Chargers, and the BCCI. The court is hearing a petition on the termination of Chargers’ IPL contract and reserved its judgement till Tuesday.The petition had been filed last week and is being heard by Justice SJ Kathawala. Today, in one of many suggestions to both DCHL and the Indian board, Kathawala offered both parties the choice to seek a solution to the dispute via the arbitration route through mutual consent.The Chargers’ counsel was happy with the suggestion, but the BCCI’s lawyer sought another day. The judge did point out to both counsels that in failing to decide on a mutually agreed upon arbitrator, the court had the right to appoint one in its discretion. “The judge had a many things to say and suggest. That does not mean that is the final decision. Our counsel would argue all points tomorrow,” a BCCI official said.Two other IPL franchises – Kings XI Punjab and Rajasthan Royals – have already gone to court over termination of their IPL contract, and benefited from the decision of court-appointed arbitrators.The BCCI had in 2010 cancelled the two franchises’ contracts over alleged violations. But both challenged the expulsion in the Bombay High Court and got a reprieve after the arbitrator stayed the termination, allowing Kings XI and Rajasthan a re-entry into the IPL.

Narine is T&T's Cricketer of the Year

The T&T Cricket Board (TTCB) has named West Indies offspinner Sunil Narine the T&T Cricketer of the Year

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Sep-2012The T&T Cricket Board (TTCB) has named West Indies offspinner Sunil Narine the T&T Cricketer of the Year. The honour comes a day after Narine was named the Emerging Player of the Year award at the ICC Awards in Colombo.Narine took 31 wickets in three first-class regional four-day games in February this year, enabling him to beat T&T captain Denesh Ramdin, left-arm spinner Kavesh Kantasingh, and bastmen Darren Bravo and Kieron Pollard for the award. His 8 for 17 in the second innings against Combined Campuses and Colleges are his career-best first-class bowling figures in an innings – he finished with 13 wickets in the match.Narine also took 15 wickets in the Regional Super50, being the highest-wicket taker of the tournament, and took seven wickets in six matches in the Caribbean Twenty20 tournament.T&T’s Five National Cricketers of the Year were Narine, Darren Bravo, Shannon Gabriel, Ramdin, Pollard and Kantasingh.West Indies’ captain Merissa Aguilleira was adjudged the Women’s Player of the Year.

At least three bids expected for new IPL franchise

For the second time in as many months, the BCCI’s mandarins will assemble on Thursday in an attempt to find a new franchise owner for the IPL

Amol Karhadkar24-Oct-2012For the second time in as many months, the BCCI’s mandarins will assemble in an attempt to find a new franchise owner for the IPL on Thursday. Their last attempt was foiled when the owners of Deccan Chargers rejected the sole bid by PVP Ventures to take over the then beleaguered (and now terminated) Hyderabad franchise on September 13, and the BCCI would be hoping Thursday does not see a repeat.Despite several litigation issues that have dogged the league over the last year and the departure of its title sponsor, it is unlikely the new invitation to tender – floated by the board on October 14 after India’s Supreme Court upheld Chargers’ termination – will pass without any serious bidders. When the BCCI top brass meet in Mumbai on Thursday, they would be hoping to have “at least three” bidders for the new IPL team that would feature in at least five editions of the tournament from the 2013 season. “Around half a dozen tender documents have been bought by prospective owners, so it cannot be said that the response has been negative,” a BCCI insider told ESPNcricinfo.It is important to note that a lower base price has been set for the new team, a factor that is expected to draw more interest from bidders. When the Sahara group bought the Pune franchise in 2010, the base price was $225m (about Rs 1035 crore by 2010 rates) for 10 years (about Rs 103 crore per year). It was learnt that this time, the BCCI has set the base price at Rs 60 crore ($11.2 million) per year for a period of five years.Though the BCCI bigwigs were tightlipped over the expected winning bid amount, a market expert, requesting anonymity, said he “won’t be surprised if the winning bid is around Rs 600 crore ($112 million) for five years”.Recently, hours before the Chargers’ termination, a Mumbai-based realty firm, the Kamla Landmarc group had offered to buy Chargers for Rs 1250 crore ($231.5 million) payable over ten years, the amount being confirmed by Ajay Vazirani, senior partner of Hariani & Co, legal advisors to the Landmarc group.”If the base price is lowered, then it will certainly become an investor-friendly entity,” said Prahlad Kakkar, a leading ad filmmaker in Mumbai. “What has been happening till now is the cost of the team is so high that the only option to make money is to sell the team. A lowered base price suddenly makes it more viable for a lot of investors.”The BCCI tender had invited bids with respect to 12 cities: Ahmedabad, Cuttack, Dharamsala, Hyderabad, Indore, Kanpur, Kochi, Nagpur, Noida, Rajkot, Ranchi and Vizag. Among those who will most likely submit their bids are PVP Ventures, whose efforts to buy Chargers last month went in vain. It is also possible that the Ahmedabad-based Adani group, with interests in shipping, mining and agriculture, and Noida-based Jaypee group, who are infrastructure specialists and currently own the Indian F1 track, could end up bidding for their home cities.The BCCI has imposed stringent measures when it comes to the termination clause by adding a performance deposit, which the owners of the team forfeit should they fail to pay their bank guarantee.On Thursday, the IPL governing council will also discuss several issues around IPL 2013, including, it is believed, the fate of the Chargers players. The governing council could decide to send all those players back into the auction pool.

Powell firming up opening spot

The solid batting during the lunch session between Kieran Powell and Shivnarine Chanderpaul hurt Bangladesh’s chances badly

Mohammad Isam in Mirpur13-Nov-2012Two hundreds in a day are more likely to grab headlines, but it was the partnership of the centurions that lifted West Indies from trouble and placed them in a commanding position at the end of the first day’s play in Mirpur.Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Kieran Powell added 125 runs for the fourth wicket, which wasn’t even the highest partnership on the day, but it was their solidity that stood between Bangladesh and dominance. Powell was dismissed for 117 after a four-hour stay in the crease, hitting 18 boundaries and a six. Chanderpaul remained unbeaten on 123 off 195 balls with the help of 17 fours, having reached his 26th Test century.Before lunch however, the situation was different. Bangladesh were celebrating after West Indies lost their third wicket. It gave the home side momentum going into the second session. But the pair batted until the tea break, unperturbed, with West Indies scoring 121 more without the loss of any wickets. They, however, didn’t slow the scoring rate, batting at a slightly higher pace than the first session, which included Chris Gayle’s 17-ball 24.What makes the partnership more important were the efforts Bangladesh made between lunch and tea. The home side had to wait in the face of Gayle’s early onslaught, but once they got rid of him and took two more wickets, they went for the kill. Captain Mushfiqur Rahim rotated his bowlers quite regularly, and the bowlers changed angles a number of times. The fielders worked hard too, but neither Chanderpaul nor Powell yielded as the latter went on to score his second Test hundred.Later Powell said he found it comforting to bat with the Chanderpaul, who is in the 18th year of an illustrious international career.”I think batting with any senior player is easy. Shiv has lots of experience, something like 145 Test matches,” Powell said after the day’s play. “He takes all the pressure off you and lets you play the normal game. He keeps talking to you.”The age difference between the pair is around 16 years, a non-issue for Chanderpaul, who has been known to take young batsmen under his wing. “He’s just telling me to be patient, stay positive, look to rotate the strike and put away the bad balls, and play straight,” Powell said.It is only natural for Powell to have batted, among the senior batsmen, more frequently with Gayle. It was only the third time for him to bat with Chanderpaul and it was obvious who suited him more, especially when playing a long innings.”Both are different players. Chris [Gayle] is more of a power player. Shiv is more about manoeuvring the ball. You have to give him the strike and keep it flowing (when you bat with Chris) but with Shiv you have to maneuver and build a steady partnership.”Powell has had to fight for his spot with the likes of Kirk Edwards, Adrian Barath and Kraigg Brathwaite. With Gayle returning to the team after his clash with the WICB, it was one out of four who would get a place, but Powell got in after his century and big opening partnership against New Zealand in July. This innings, too, would put him right ahead in the race.”I can’t really say if I’m going ahead, you would have to ask the selectors,” he said. “I’m just trying to strengthen my case each and every day. The more centuries you have, the better it is. I want to control what I can.”

Devdhar, Waghmode dominate Maharashtra

A wrap of the opening day of the eighth round of Ranji Trophy matches in Group B

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Dec-2012
ScorecardTwo partnerships, of 66 and 92 runs respectively, carried Uttar Pradesh to 279 for 6 amid regular wickets against Tamil Nadu on the opening day in Chennai. Captain Mohammad Kaif, for whom this season has been productive in terms of runs, scored a half-century before falling to offspinner Malolan Rangarajan, who claimed three wickets. Kaif’s stand with Umang Sharma took their side to 123 for 2, but then four wickets fell for 64 runs. In trouble at 187 for 6, Ali Murtaza and Prashant Gupta added a further 92 runs before stumps.Tamil Nadu’s M Vijay took his third wicket in first-class wicket in the two overs he bowled.
ScorecardAn unbeaten 172-run partnership between Kedar Devdhar and Aditya Waghmode took Baroda to a strong 256 for 3 against Maharashtra in Pune. Baroda started their innings poorly with two quick wickets falling to seamer Shrikant Mundhe before the 10th over of the match. But opener Saurabh Wakaskar stuck with No. 3 Waghmode to add 70, before falling for 50 to spinner Akshay Darekar. Devdhar, the next batsman in, dominated the stand with Waghmode to reach a hundred before stumps. Waghmode ended the day with an unbeaten 87.
ScorecardOdisha’s combined bowling effort, led by medium-pacer Biplab Samantray, reduced Vidarbha to 188 for 8 on the first day in Cuttack. Five batsmen got starts, but no one scored more than 40. The innings was based on two productive stands, for the fourth wicket worth 74 between Amol Umarhande and Hemang Badani, and for the sixth wicket worth 49 between Gaurav Upadhyaya and captain Sairaj Bahutule.The scoring was slow throughout the day. Basant Mohanty, who bowled the maximum number of overs of all the bowlers, registered an economy rate of 1.06.
ScorecardHubli and its 31 degrees sunshine provided Haryana a stark contrast from the chilly, foggy north Indian towns where they have played much of the season, but for the first two sessions against Karnataka their batting floundered just as it has so often over the past two months. The several thousand fans who turned up to see the first first-class match in Hubli for a couple of decades would have returned home a happier lot had it not been for Amit Mishra and Jayant Yadav’s 125-run eighth wicket stand that lifted Haryana to 293 for 7.Read more of the report here.

'I'm the legend now' – Samuels

Marlon Samuels has accused Shane Warne of “desperate” behaviour after escaping with a reprimand for his part in an ugly confrontation with Warne during the Big Bash League

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Jan-2013Marlon Samuels has accused Shane Warne of “desperate” behaviour unbecoming for a legend of the game after escaping with a reprimand for his part in an ugly confrontation with Warne during the Big Bash League.Samuels also called for BBL organisers to adopt a more disciplined attitude towards player behaviour to ensure the right example was set to the family audience that the tournament is so anxious to attract.”It’s not a war, it’s a game,” he said. “We’re here to entertain people, but we’re here to show love to one another as cricketers as well.”Samuels was found guilty of unbecoming behaviour in his confrontation with Warne during the Melbourne derby between the Renegades and the Stars on January 6. He threw his bat away in frustration after he was struck on the body by a return from Warne, but the BBL’s Code of Conduct commissioner John Price ruled that he had received “extreme provocation”.Samuels has been recuperating in Australia after suffering a severe facial injury when he failed to hook a bouncer from Lasith Malinga in the same match, but it was his stand-off with Warne which remained on his mind as he spoke about the affair for the first time to .”There were a lot of kids in the ground – Twenty20 is about family – so I couldn’t afford to react in a very bad way,” he said. “I was able to come out on top with him behaving the way that he was behaving. He’s supposed to be a legend in Australia. What he did was give me the stripes so I am the legend now.”Warne’s aggressive outburst, which involved swearing, finger jabbing and tugging at Samuels’ shirt, originated from an incident much earlier in the game in which Samuels seemed to have physically hampered David Hussey’s attempts to take a second run. But the charge arising from that incident – that he “engaged in deliberate or inappropriate physical contact with a player or official” – was dismissed.Warne served a one-game suspension, and was fined $4500, for his clash with Melbourne Renegades player Marlon Samuels. He was fined for a second time on Monday, this time for breaching the CA Code of Behaviour when he handed the captaincy to James Faulkner in an effort to avoid a ban for slow over rates in the semi-final against the Perth Scorchers.Samuels said Warne had gone too far in trying to unsettle him. ”You can talk in a game and try to get into someone’s head, but you don’t get physical. That’s what he did. He took it to the next level, which was just way overboard. He was a very desperate man doing desperate things. That’s not the way you go about it when you’re the face of the tournament with kids looking on.”Samuels was infuriated that only Malinga among the Stars side checked on his welfare as he left the field bleeding from an eye wound, but he praised the support he had received from the Renegades and vowed that he would only represent them in the BBL. From the ugliest of incidents came a rare sign of player loyalty in the money-buys-all world of Twenty20.”This tournament is a very good tournament, but whoever’s running the tournament has to take some positive steps by showing more discipline,” he said. ”The behaviour is poor. Every game you have people in other people’s face. Remember, T20 is for family and kids. You’re trying to pull a big crowd. It’s not a boxing game.”The same BBL commission cleared Darren Berry, the Adelaide Strikers coach, of unbecoming behaviour when he confronted Samuels earlier in the tournament and offered a pointed critique of the West Indian’s bowling action.

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