ICC issues warning to Australia over Zimbabwe tour

The ICC has flexed its muscles in the aftermath of John Howard’s offer to pay any fines levied as a result of Australia refusing to tour Zimbabwe.Howard, Australia’s prime minister, said last Friday that the government would pay any fine imposed by the ICC should Cricket Australia decide not to send a side to Zimbabwe later this year.On Monday, the ICC issued a blunt statement pointing out that the only reason for the board to refuse to tour would be “if there are circumstances likely to give rise to a serious risk of death or personal injury to the players and/or officials due to take part in the Tour concerned or in respect of which appropriate insurance is unavailable on reasonable terms, such circumstances constitute acceptable non-compliance.”It added that only a ban by the government on the tour would be acceptable, although that comment is made in the knowledge that outright bans on sides touring abroad is almost unknown in Australia.The ICC added that a fine of at least US$2 million could be imposed. It is possible that Zimbabwe Cricket could claim additional monies from Cricket Australia if it could prove extra losses as a result. Any fine would go straight into the coffers of the Zimbabwe board.The ICC statement only reiterates the position as already stated. Howard’s offer to pay any fine means that financial penalties by the ICC would not directly affect Australia, and it seems highly unlikely that any action such as a suspension could realistically be imposed on the No. 1 Test and ODI side.

Styris about to join Durham

Scott Styris, New Zealand’s leading run-scorer at the World Cup, will be playing county cricket from June 1 © Getty Images

Scott Styris will join Durham as an overseas player this week, bringing to three the number of New Zealand squad members in county cricket this season. Styris will be hoping for a less dramatic trip than last year, when he injured his back while playing for Middlesex.He aggravated the problem at the Champions Trophy and ended up missing the home series against Sri Lanka and the start of the CB Series. However, Lindsay Crocker, the New Zealand team manager, said he had no issue with Styris returning to England as he would be with Durham for only two months from June 1.”This year he goes away with a pretty good bill of health and we have no concerns,” Crocker said. “He’ll still have about six weeks off before our next competition which is the Twenty20 World Cup, so it’s a nice length of break for him.”Styris joins his former New Zealand team-mate Paul Wiseman at Durham, and he will be the county’s second overseas player alongside Australia’s Michael Di Venuto. Durham, who are second on the points table, will be hoping Styris brings with him the form that made him New Zealand’s leading run-scorer at the World Cup.”He took his cricket to a different level in the World Cup and he’s learned a lot, things like batting into the later stages of a match,” Crocker said. “He wants to keep that momentum going and keep putting the things he learned into practice.”Three New Zealanders are now listed as overseas players in the county competition. The others are Stephen Fleming, who is the captain of Nottinghamshire, and Hamish Marshall, who is at Gloucestershire.

Upul Tharanga suffers foot injury

Upul Tharanga has been ruled out of the first two Tests against Bangladesh after injuring his foot in a practice session.”Tharanga was hit on his foot by a Lasith Malinga delivery this morning”, Kangadaran Mathivanan, the secretary of the Sri Lankan board told AFP.Tharanga, the left handed opener, is now the second player to drop out of the original 15-man squad for the three-Tests after Marvan Atapattu, the former skipper, dropped out citing personal commitments.Mathivanan added that Sri Lanka A team members Thilan Samaraweera, Michael Vandort and Jehan Mubarak, who are engaged in a three-day warm-up match against Bangladesh; are in line to take Tharanga’s place.Sri Lanka host Bangladesh for three Tests and three ODIs. The first Test begins in Colombo on June 25.

Kaif to lead India A on African tour

The African tour is a good opportunity for Pathan to make a comeback to the Indian team © AFP

For Mohammad Kaif, who is to lead the India A team for the tour of Kenya and Zimbabwe, this will be a great opportunity to make a comeback to the national side. Both Kaif and Irfan Pathan, who too has been in the wilderness for sometime now, are in the list of 30 probables for the Twenty20 World Championship, also announced on Saturday.The squad for the African tour also includes the likes of Piyush Chawla and VRV Singh. Parthiv Patel has been named the vice-captain for the tour.Recently, Dennis Lillee, under whose watchful eyes Pathan underwent training at the MRF pace foundation in Chennai, said that the fast bowler was close to being back to his best. Pathan would be hoping to prove him right, and with a strong showing on this tour, he can stake a claim for a berth in the Indian team for the elusive spot of a bowling allrounder.Apart from Kaif and Pathan, this tour can prove to be a stepping stone for youngsters like Chawla, VRV Singh, Robin Uthappa and Rohit Sharma. Especially since Dilip Vengsarkar, the chairman of the selection committee, had recently said that the rotation policy is the way to go, keeping in mind the packed international schedule ahead.The last time the India A team had toured Zimbabwe and Kenya was in July-August 2004 and players like Gautam Gambhir , Munaf Patel , MS Dhoni and Dinesh Karthik, who played in that tour, subsequently went on to play for India.The team will be coached by Chandrakant Pandit, the former India wicketkeeper. Pandit guided Mumbai to consecutive Ranji Trophy triumphs in 2003 and 2004. In August 2005 he took over as Maharashtra’s coach.The squad
Mohammad Kaif (capt), Parthiv Patel, Robin Uthappa, Cheteshwar Pujara, S Badrinath, Rohit Sharma, Rajesh Pawar, Mahesh Rawat (wk), Piyush Chawla, Arjun Yadav, Pragyan Ojha, Irfan Pathan, V R V Singh, Yo Mahesh, Pankaj Singh, Niraj Patel

Powell buries his rib at Sophia Gardens

‘I am the only living person ever to have part of their body buried there’ © Cricinfo Ltd

It has been, not to put too fine a point on it, a hell of a few weeks for Glamorgan’s Mike Powell.Just over a month ago, he faced life-threatening complications following surgery on a blood clot which involved having a rib removed. Happily, he’s now recovering – and can see the lighter side of life, after having the rib buried at Sophia Gardens.It was his own idea, dreamt up during his time in hospital after doctors said he could keep the bone. He proposed the idea to the chief executive Mike Fatkin, not expecting him to agree.”He surprised me when he said ‘Yes’, but I was chuffed,” Powell told the . “I knew that a lot of people have had their ashes buried there, but I am the only living person ever to have part of their body buried there.”It felt quite weird when we buried it, but it was exciting. I am glad that part of me will be at Sophia Gardens for ever. That is my legacy to the club and it feels right.”The grass has not grown back properly yet, so everyone can see where it is, but I will always look out for it when I am fielding out there.”

Shoaib appeals against fine

Shoaib Akhtar is appealing against the fine imposed on him for a disciplinary breach © AFP

Shoaib Akhtar has appealed against the Rs 300,000 (US$5,000) fine handed to him by the Pakistan board last week for leaving the Karachi training camp early and failing to appear at the subsequent disciplinary hearing.”I have appealed against the fine because I think I was not given the chance to give my version of events,” Shoaib told . The fine was imposed last Wednesday after Shoaib failed to turn up for a hearing the day before. Shoaib maintains he was made aware of the hearing two days it had taken place.Shafqat Naghmi, PCB’s chief operating officer, held a meeting with Shoaib today to discuss the events of last week. On Friday, Shoaib reportedly clashed with board officials over the fine at Gaddafi Stadium. Naghmi told , “There appears to have been some miscommunication which was probably the cause of this incident. An appellate committee will be set up to look into his stance now.”Naghmi added that Shoaib had assured the board he was fit and looking forward to playing for Pakistan in the Twenty20 World Championship, dismissing some reports which said he had threatened to pull out of the tournament.

Williams injury a blow to Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe have been dealt a blow ahead of the ICC World Twenty20 when Sean Williams pulled a muscle in training.Williams pulled his right thigh on Monday and has not been able to do any training with the rest of the squad since then. A decision is still yet to be made on whether he will be on the plane when the squad leaves on Friday.Sources said newly appointed Zimbabwe coach Robin Brown is keen on takinghim to South Africa but it is still yet to be ascertained how long he would be out of action. Zimbabwe certainly need Williams, a left-handed top-order batsman, left-arm spinner and brilliant fielder at backward point.He recently recovered from a career-threatening back injury after extensive treatment in South Africa. He was thrown into the action in the three ODIs against South Africa and proved himself with a half century in the second match.

Kamande's heroics not enough for Kenya

Kenya 8 for 1 trail Canada 263 (Dhaniram 78, Bhatti 57, Kamande 4-56) by 255 runs
Scorecard

Jimmy Kamande; four wickets in ten balls, a run out … and all while recovering from a carjacking © Getty Images

Clichéd it might be, but the opening day of Kenya’s Intercontinental Cup tie against Canada at Nairobi Gymkhana was a see-saw affair. After a wretched middle-order collapse which left them 121 for 6, Canada recovered magnificently to close right back in the match.That Kenya were not in complete control was thanks to a seventh-wicket stand of 99 between Sunil Dhaniram and Umar Bhatti. Neither are slouches with the bat, but with Dhaniram attacking and Bhatti more cautious, they checked the Kenyans and then staged a solid recovery.On an overcast morning and with some dampness from overnight rain, Canada batted and made a good start, Abdul Jabbar breezily racing to 49 on his debut with some sumptuous drives in an opening stand of 68. Inexperience then got the better of him, and he perished trying to bring up his fifty by hitting offspinner Jimmy Kamnade over long-off.What followed was a complete collapse as Kamnade took 4 for 0 in ten balls. David Obuya held two catches close in front of the bat, while Mohammad Iqbal, who had been Jabbar’s subdued partner, drove tamely to mid-on. Kamande then ran out Ashif Mulla for good measure. This was all the more remarkable as Kamande was recovering from a head injury sustained when he was attacked by carjackers on Thursday night.At the other end, Hiren Varaiya was struggling, Qaiser Ali hitting him for three fours in eight balls, but Ali then opened up once too often and snicked high to point. to leave Canada on 121 for 6. Dhaniram had already started the counter-attack, picking Kamande off through the leg side. Bhatti had moments of luck, edging Thomas Odoyo perilously close to second slip and then top-edging Alfred Luseno over the keeper, but he also played some cracking square cuts.Kenya persevered with spin, strangling the partnership, and the pressure finally told when Dhaniram pulled Varaiya to mid-on. The slow men kept things tight – eight runs came from ten overs – but it was the return of the quicks that polished off the tail, the last three wickets falling in 14 balls.Kenya faced a tough 25 minutes and lost Maurice Ouma to the first ball. Ouma was criticised for his performances with the bat in South Africa, and his error of judgement here will hardly have mollified the selectors. But Canada’s pace attack missed a trick, opting to bombard nightwatchman Varaiya with bouncers rather than aim at his stumps. He ducked a few, took one in the ribs, and survived until the close.The last time they were here Canada struggled to acclimatise to the conditions and took several games to find their feet. Today, they found them inside two sessions.

Sarwan likely to miss KFC Cup semi-final

Ramnaresh Sarwan, the Guyana captain, is likely to miss out his team’s KFC Cup semi-final match against Jamaica on October 25 after he injured his ankle and is expected to be out of action for six weeks.Sarwan had pulled out of Guyana’s previous match against Trinidad and Trinidad on October 20 after he was injured during training. Expressing his disappointment over possibly missing the semi-final, Sarwan told the , “I trained very hard for this tournament after being out for a while with the shoulder injury and I was hoping to make a big contribution towards Guyana retaining the title.”Earlier this year, Sarwan missed most of West Indies’ tour of England – his first series as the national captain – when he injured his shoulder during the second Test at Headingley. “In a game like cricket you expect to pick up an injury here and there but today [Saturday] I was not even playing a match … just warming up with some touch rugby which I guess is just bad luck for me.”I am now hoping for some good news from the doctor regarding how soon I can resume training for the Zimbabwe and South Africa tours at year end.”

Full-time umpires introduced in New Zealand

Billy Bowden heads the new panel © Getty Images

New Zealand Cricket has moved to improve the standards of umpiring in the country by establishing an elite panel of eight officials. The development means umpires will be expected to be available on a full-time basis throughout the 2007-08 season.Brian Aldridge, the NZC umpires manager, said forming the panel was an important moment for the game in New Zealand. “Historically, umpiring has been a part-time leisure activity for individuals engaged in other careers,” he said. “This initiative points to a commitment to upgrade the standing, standards and professionalism of umpiring. Being engaged on a full-time basis, especially at first-class level, is expected to lift the standards of umpiring. “Billy Bowden is the only New Zealand umpire on the ICC’s elite panel while Gary Baxter and Tony Hill are the country’s representatives on the international group. Evan Watkin, who is registered with the ICC as a third official, joins the trio on New Zealand’s books along with Barry Frost, Phil Jones, David Quested and Derek Walker.

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