Iqbal wants legends to cross borders

Legendary cricketers can perform the role of sporting ambassadors between Pakistan and India, according to Asif Iqbal, former captain of Pakistan.”I think there should be tours of sporting ambassadors to Pakistan and India which can pave the way for a revival of cricket between the two neighbours who have so many things in common,” he said. “The likes of Hanif Mohammad, Zaheer Abbas and Imran Khan should tour India and take feedback from people, and India’s Sunil Gavaskar, Bishen Bedi and Kapil Dev should come to Pakistan…”Iqbal himself was born in India, and made his first-class debut for Hyderabad in 1959 before migrating to Pakistan in 1962.India’s Minister for Sports, Vikram Verma, had recently announced that two one-day games on a home-and-away basis could be played in September.It’s now 13 years since India made a full Test tour of Pakistan, which has prompted many old-timers to recall the 17-year freeze that existed from 1961 to 1978.

Centurion Magiet, Puttick give WP a solid start to season

Taking advantage of the absence of South African stars, two Province young guns Rashaad Magiet(115 not out) and Andrew Puttick(85) gave their side a solid start on the opening day of the 3-day friendly against North West in Potchestroom on Thursday.WP were asked to bat after captain HD Ackerman lost the toss in cold and grey conditions. When bad light ended play some 13 overs before the scheduled close close WP reached 270 for the loss of Graeme Smith(55) and Puttick who made a well struck 85. Considering that this was WP’s first outdoor session of the season credit must go to the Province batters who seemed on form from the start.The match continues on Friday and Saturday.

Full scorecard;R.Magiet not out 115G.Smith ct Bula b Mazibuko 55A.Puttick ct Bula b Dreyer 85J.Mclean not out 7Extras 8Total 270/2

Hampshire off bottom as Vince leads charge

ScorecardJames Vince helped Hampshire rattle of the required runs for victory (file photo)•Getty Images

Hampshire climbed off the foot of the Division One table and now face a crucial match at Taunton starting on Wednesday. A seven-wicket win against Durham at Chester-le-Street left them only five points behind Somerset in the battle to avoid the second relegation spot.Captain James Vince knuckled down to survive a testing start and waited for the right ball to put away in guiding Hampshire to their target of 163 with an unbeaten 76. He was helped by Liam Dawson, who contributed 34 to the unbroken stand of 82 as the last 64 runs came off 6.3 overs.Hampshire might have to seek their third successive win without Fidel Edwards, however, after he retired with a hamstring injury after taking 4 for 43.Rain prevented play before lunch and Durham didn’t hang around when they resumed their second innings on 126 for 6, 88 ahead, adding 74 in 15.3 overs before they were all out for 200.Gareth Berg took two wickets in two balls in the fourth over, having Ryan Pringle caught behind for 13 and John Hastings lbw. Umpire Jeremy Lloyds took several seconds to give the second decision.Left-hander James Weighell hit two fours off Ryan McLaren in reaching 20 before Edwards came on and yorked him with his first ball. The West Indian retired after bowling eight balls, although his exit did allow Ryan Stevenson to claim his maiden first-class wicket. He had Graham Onions caught at point by Jimmy Adams, ending a last-wicket stand of 36 in 28 balls.Chris Rushworth made an unbeaten 33 off 34 balls, hooking and driving Berg for two sixes prior to trying to add to his 85 first-class wickets this season.He had to wait until the 12th over, when Michael Carberry was on 21 and there had been 11 extras, before Adams shouldered arms and was bowled for 3.Rushworth also troubled Vince but the total advanced to 75 before Carberry fell for 39 when he skied a pull off Onions and Michael Richardson ran 25 yards to hold a tumbling catch at square leg. The wicketkeeper then held a regulation catch off Onions to send back Will Smith for 1, but the new-ball pair had bowled 11 overs each by that stage.Onions kept going for two more overs but was clearly flagging in his 13th, and the double change took the pressure off. After conceding only one run in his first two overs, Hastings’ next two cost 19. Weighell opened up with a maiden and was hit for three fours in his second over, one off a thick edge, as Vince passed 50 off 54 balls with 11 boundaries.Weighell wasn’t helped by four overthrows in his next over, which cost nine, and when Rushworth returned Dawson pulled him for six as Durham slumped meekly to their fourth successive home defeat.

England ponders six-region option

Kent, the Twenty20 holders, could form part of a South region, under new proposals for the EPL © Getty Images
 

If England is to create a viable Twenty20 competition to rival the Indian Premier League, then the 18 first-class counties are going to have to bite the bullet and merge into six regional sides. That is the message from Sean Morris, the new chief executive of the Professional Cricketers’ Association, who believes that without adaptation, English cricket faces being second-best to India for evermore.”This is a great opportunity for English cricket, an unbelievable chance for England to reassert itself,” Morris told The Guardian. “I just hope we take it. India, a big competitor, has got first to the market. Considering that we invented Twenty20, they should not have got there first. It is important that we act quickly.”Morris’s proposal is expected to be discussed at a meeting of the England & Wales Cricket Board on May 26, but plans are already in full swing following a week of talks with Allen Stanford, the Texan billionaire whose patronage has given English cricket renewed confidence as it seeks to respond to the threat of the IPL. Stanford told the BBC on Thursday that he believed that England was not only better placed to take the lead in Twenty20 cricket, but that the game could eventually overtake football as the world’s most popular sport.Should the regional plan come to fruition, there could be some enticing amalgamations on the cards. Lancashire and Yorkshire could be thrown in together with Durham as a Northern region, with Surrey, Middlesex and Essex all uniting under the London banner. Such a proposal may be anathema to the die-hard fans of the counties involved, but Morris cited the example of South African rugby, where traditional Currie Cup rivals have combined to form potent Super 14 franchises.”This is the biggest opportunity we will ever get to restructure,” said Morris. His argument is that, without reducing the number of competing sides, the talent on display would be spread too thinly, and the prospect of attracting the big-name players would diminish. “When you look at the broadcasting deal that will drive it and for sponsorship partners and for fans, does playing 18 teams really stack up? We need to have a product that is exportable back to India, because that is where the money is.”Stanford is willing to invest heavily in the scheme, but has effectively set the ECB a deadline of 2010 to get the competition up and running. “If I was to make a more aggressive bet I would say 2009. But no later than 2010 or they’ve missed the boat,” he told BBC Sport. “We all know that and I don’t think the British are going to miss the boat.”Potential regional sides

North Yorkshire, Lancashire, Durham
London Surrey, Middlesex, Essex
South Hampshire, Kent, Sussex
Wales and West Glamorgan, Gloucestershire, Somerset
West Midlands Warwickshire, Worcestershire, Northants
East Midlands Nottinghamshire, Leicestershire, Derbyshire

Nepal announce warm-up squad for ACC

Nepal have announced an 18-member squad for a preparatory camp ahead of the the ACC women’s tournament in Malaysia starting July 11. Nepal had organised their first-ever national championship in June in a bid to pick a team for the tournament. Four teams – Baitadi, Nepalganj, Bhairahawa and Kathmandu – competed in the championship.Eight players from Nepalganj, the strongest side in the domestic circuit, four from Bhairahawa and three each from Baitadi and Kathmandu made it to the camp. What is unique about these sides is that many of their players are national-level athletes in other sports.Nary Thapa, the Nepalganj captain, is also the national badminton captain. Keshari Chaudhary, who has broken national records in high jump and triple jump, is also part of the Nepalganj side while Madhu Thapa, a Bhairahawa player, has played football for Nepal at the U-19 Asian Championship Qualifying Round.Last year Nepal, along with Singapore, won the ICC Global Development Award and Nepalganj received recognition for its initiative for women’s cricket. According to the ACC website, currently 1000 schoolgirls are registered to play cricket in the region.Arun Aryal, the Nepal chief coach, is optimistic about his team’s chances at the ACC tournament. “All the nations have just started women’s cricket, so I think all are at the same level,” Aryal told . “It won’t be surprising if we win the event.”Hong Kong, China, UAE, Malaysia, Bangladesh, Singapore and Thailand are also part of the tournament. Nepal’s first game – 30-over per side – is against Thailand on July 12.Preparatory squad Nary Thapa Magar, Manisha Rawal, Mamata Thapa, Samjhana Sharma, Binu Buda Magar, Keshari Chaudhary, Trishna Singh, Sita Rana, Nira Rajopadhyay, Radhika Thapa, Samikchhya Aryal, Madhu Thapa, Saraswoti Lamgade, Susmita Chaudhary, Nitu Thapa, Janaki Bhatta, Maya Rawal, Ritu Kanaujiya

Sussex book their place in the C&G final

Points TablesCarl Hopkinson led Sussex to a place in the final of the C&G Trophy on August 26 with a five wicket victory over holders Hampshire at Hove. His unbeaten 69 helped Sussex seal their first appearance in a major final for 13 years.Hopkinson and Mike Yardy (41) shared a crucial fifth-wicket stand of 95 in 19 overs as Sussex, set 255 to win, got home with seven balls to spare at Hove.Sussex skipper Chris Adams paid tribute to his team. “I can’t give enough credit to the youngsters in the side. It’s going to be a great day out for us so bring on whoever.”Sussex, who qualify for the final without having to win their last Southern Conference game against Gloucestershire, started strongly with Matt Prior (54) sharing an opening stand of 95 with Richard Montgomerie (44) in 16 overs. But the hosts later slipped to 120 for 4 with Adams, Murray Goodwin and Montgomerie all falling in the space of five overs.Hampshire, who chose to bat, were bowled out for 254 with three balls of their innings remaining. Michael Carberry and Sean Ervine had given them a solid start by sharing in a second-wicket stand of 106 in only a dozen overs.Hampshire, who needed to win to have any chance of reaching the final, lost Dominic Thornely and Greg Lamb cheaply before Dimitri Mascarenhas (42) and Nic Pothas (43*) took them past the 250 mark by sharing a sixth-wicket stand of 73 in 12 overs. But the innings ended tamely with Kirtley bowling Shane Warne, Shaun Udal and James Tomlinson for ducks in his final over.In the Northern Conference, Leicestershire eased to a four-wicket victory against Yorkshire at Grace Road, with a comfortable 8.2 overs to spare. After being sent into the field, Leicestershire’s bowlers hunted in a pack, each of them snaring a wicket to dismiss Yorkshire for 185.Alamgir Sheriyar continued to impress for his new/old county, trapping Craig White lbw with the very first ball of the innings. Matthew Wood followed quickly after and wickets continued to tumble regularly.David Masters was the pick of the bowlers, scalping 2 for a measly 22 from ten overs. Only Andrew Gale offered any resistance, stirring a minor storm with 63.There was no urgency in Leicestershire’s innings, but neither was there any need for them to hurry and they knocked off the runs in inevitable fashion, Tim New leading the charge with 51.

de Villiers enhances his claims

Titans 353 (de Villiers 124, Cullinan 99, Peterson 5-118, Kops 4-74) lead Warriors 165 (Steyn 5-30, Mbhalati 3-37) and 0 for 0 by 188 runs
ScorecardWicketkeeper-batsman AB de Villiers scored his second hundred of the season as the Titans pushed towards a lead over the Warriors at Buffalo Park. With his name already being bandied about for higher honours, this innings will do him no harm at all.After an early start to the second day, the Titans needed only four overs to take the final Warrior wickets, with Dale Steyn taking the first five-wicket haul of his career to reduce Warriors to 165.De Villiers opened the Titans innings, and showed scant regard for the likes of Makhaya Ntini and Mornantau Hayward, scoring a chanceless 124 as wickets fell around him. At 91 for 3, Daryll Cullinan came to the crease and together the pair added 123 before de Villiers gave Brent Kops his third wicket. Cullinan showed that he is still the fluent strokemaker of old, while Albie Morkel once again slapped the ball to all parts of the ground.Morkel tried once too often to clear the field, holing out for64, and Cullinan chipped a catch to midwicket for an excellent 99. Robin Peterson cashed in with 5 for 118 as the Titans looked for extra bonus points, while Brent Kops walked off with a tidy 4 for 74 as the Titans ended on 353, a lead of 188.The Warriors managed to face one over, without scoring, when lightintervened.Western Province Boland 206 (Kruis 5-57) v Eagles 202 for 5 (Willoughby3-50)
ScorecardCon de Lange top scored for Western Province Boland with 43, asthey nursed their score along to 206 at Newlands. DeonKruis, the Eagles seamer, took his second five-wicket haul of theseason as he picked up three of the last five wickets to fall.On a difficult pitch, the Eagles made a good start through a stand of 52 between Davey Jacobs and Gerhardus Liebenberg, but they then collapsed to 102 for 5 before Boeta Dippenaar and Nicky Boje got things back on track. They took the score to 202 for 5 with Dippenaar on 66 and Boje on 48 when stumps was called.Lions 361 for 8 (McKenzie 100, Hall 51*, Benkenstein 3-27) v Dolphins
ScorecardAndrew Hall put some spark into a rain-dampened match between the Dolphins and the Lions at Durban. After a morning where runs had been at a premium, Hall came out and showed that the pitch was conducive to scoring runs, stroking his way to 64 off 100 balls. HD Ackerman had scored a painfully slow 48 in 287 minutes while Neil McKenzie laboured his way to 100 in 387 minutes. Together they added 144 in 63.2 overs.It was Dale Benkenstein who engineered the breakthrough as he took three wickets before rain mercifully forced the players off the field for 65 minutes. On resumption Hall and David Terbrugge put on 113 for the ninth wicket with Terbrugge passing his previous best of 35 before bad light ended play with the Lions on a tedious 361 for 8.

Players ready to revolt on overseas quotas

Martyn Ball: ‘The players in this country are very upset’© Getty Images

A report in today’s Times claims that the Professional Cricketers’ Association (PCA) is so angry with the decision to allow two overseas players per county in 2005 that its members are considering strike action.On Tuesday, the First Class Forum announced that there would be no change to the number of overseas players in 2005, even though it had been widely expected that it would be cut to one per county, which was the recommendation of the Cricket Advisory Committee (CAC).”These people [the CAC] have done a lot of research for the good of the game and the county chairmen have refused to take note,” Martyn Ball, the PCA chairman, told the newspaper. “The players in this country are very upset about that.”The PCA has campaigned long and hard on the issue. It is worried about the number of foreign players appearing in domestic cricket, a situation exacerbated by the European Union laws on rights to work which have enabled many overseas-based players to gain domestic qualification courtesy of their ancestry.At the PCA’s AGM last month, there was an overwhelming vote to reduce the number of official overseas players. “It became very heated,” Ball, who plays for Gloucestershire, explained. “Some wanted to look at taking union action and discussed the possibility of withholding labour from televised matches. But we took legal advice and decided against it.” But now he admitted that might be a possibility. “I’m not saying we’ll be taking action, but we’ll look at our position and I’m not discounting it.”While there is a degree of self-interest in the PCA’s stand – overseas players, it claims, prevent talented English players from coming through – Ball was eager to highlight the effect on the national side, and on England’s finances.”It seems ludicrous that, while we’re also taking massive steps to strengthen the grass roots and build academies, so much money is going on overseas players,” he said. “The game in this country needs a strong, vibrant England team, but if we continue to limit the opportunities for our best young players, it’s always going to be a struggle to compete for the Ashes or the World Cup.”

Zimbabwe make steady progress

It was an interesting day’s cricket at New Road as Worcestershire played the Zimbabweans. The first session belonged to the county, the second to the tourists, and the third, more even, went slightly in favour of the county. In reply to Worcestershire’s 262 all out, the Zimbabweans were 69 for 3 at the close.The Zimbabwean tourists were treated to the renowned Worcester ground at its best on the first morning of their match against a side purporting to represent the county but, as usual against touring teams, without many of its leading players. The sun was shining warmly, the breeze was light and the scenery delightful.The pitch, however, was a second-hand one, having been used before and with a definite worn patch at one end – not very satisfactory. The groundsman said that the usual flooding of the River Severn had not reached as far as the square this year and so there were fewer difficulties in early-season preparation.Worcester is now the home of Graeme Hick, but he opted not to play against his former countrymen. The county won the toss and decided to bat.Play began quietly, with some solid batting by Stephen Peters and Anurag Singh against some variable seam bowling by the Zimbabweans. Andy Blignaut, erratic at first, settled down and took the first wicket, when Singh (14) edged a ball to the left of gully, from where Grant Flower took a good diving catch. Peters quickly followed for 18, trying to shoulder arms to Blignaut, but instead knocking the ball right on to his middle stump. Worcestershire were 42 for 2.After a brief, tidy opening spell by Heath Streak, Douglas Hondo got some lift to give the batsmen occasional problems. Unfortunate, none of them had the consistent accuracy to impose pressure on the batsmen, who only had to wait for the bad ball to prosper. Travis Friend bowled little better than his disasters in Zimbabwe at the end of last season, still planting the ball all too frequently in the wrong half of the pitch.Vikram Solanki and Ben Smith were soon stroking the ball sweetly and picking up runs with ease, and Solanki slashed a long hop from Friend over third man for six. Fasting off the plethora of short deliveries and driving sweetly when the bowlers overpitched, Solanki raced to his fifty off 45 balls during the course of four boundaries in an over off Hondo.Friend’s disastrous spell came to an end with 43 runs off four overs – only for him to change ends, plant his first ball halfway down the pitch and present Smith with another boundary. Zimbabwe’s chances were not improved when Streak left the field, reportedly with a slight back strain. At lunch Worcestershire were firmly in the driving seat at 155 for 2.In rather more cloudy conditions after lunch, Worcestershire soon lost the wicket of Solanki, who appeared to throw it away; he leapt down the pitch to try to hit Raymond Price over the top and was easily stumped by Tatenda Taibu. The third-wicket stand had added 129, and this crucial wicket proved to be the turning point of the innings.Smith, less flamboyant than Solanki, went on to reach his fifty off 76 balls. Kadeer Ali (10) never looked quite comfortable before he was caught at the wicket off Douglas Hondo in a remarkable over. Smith (53) fell in the same way two balls later, and then Gareth Batty was yorked first ball. Hero Hondo had taken three wickets in five balls, and Worcestershire were suddenly 188 for 6.South African Andrew Hall led an aggressive recovery, in company with the more cautious James Pipe, until he gloved an attempted sweep off Flower and provided Taibu with his fourth catch of the innings, for 34. Again wickets came in threes, as Kabir Ali was foolishly run out by some distance without scoring, and a leading edge from Pipe (15) resulted in a fine diving return catch by Flower (241 for 9).The last-wicket stand never lacked interest, as at first both Matthew Mason and Mark Harrity looked ready to get out at any moment. There was a dropped catch, a fluffed possible run-out, and then the boundaries, some of them rather rustic, began to come off the spinners. Finally another agricultural heave by Harrity (16) gave Taibu his fourth catch and brought the innings to an end for 262, with Mason unbeaten on 4.Hondo, with 3 for 53, returned the best figures, while Blignaut and left-arm spinners Price and Flower took two wickets each.It was then Zimbabwe’s turn for suicidal batting, with the run-out of Dion Ebrahim off the first ball of the innings. Looking for a quick single for a push past the bowler, he was turned back too late by Mark Vermeulen and was left stranded. They are not the best-matched of opening pairs, as Ebrahim is a quick runner who nevertheless does not find it easy to work the ball for singles, while Vermeulen would far rather hit leisurely boundaries than hard-working singles.Vermeulen scored only 11 before edging Kabeer Ali to second slip, leaving Stuart Carlisle and Grant Flower to counter the bowling of Kabeer and Harrity, who looked more dangerous than their own bowlers. Flower was caught at third slip off a no-ball after a painfully long time without scoring. Both batsmen battled for survival, beaten several times, and Carlisle survived another mix-up as negotiations broke down over a quick single, and then a dropped catch in the gully.Gradually the runs began to come, although both batsmen struggled. Flower finally fell for a painful 18, caught low in the slips off Matt Mason (58 for 3). Carlisle (29) and Barney Rogers (1) survived until the close.

Croft and Cosker lift Glamorgan against Surrey

A ninth-wicket partnership of 77 in 17 overs between Robert Croft and Dean Cosker lifted Glamorgan from a gloomy 170-8 and helped them secure two batting points on the rain-interrupted opening day of the CricInfo Championship match against Surrey in Cardiff.Glamorgan were eventually dismissed for 258 in 74.4 overs but the rain that had already cost 23 overs of the day then returned to wash out the final four overs of play and save Surrey from what could have been a testing few minutes.In theory at least, Surrey began the day needing a further four points to ensure against joining Glamorgan in the second division next season and they set off strongly after Steve James had won the toss and chosen to bat first under heavy skies.Ben Hollioake, who shared the new ball with Martin Bicknell, sent back Jimmy Maher and Ian Thomas in successive overs and Bicknell then accounted for James and Adrian Dale to reduce Glamorgan to 62-4 in the 21st over.Michael Powell and Jonathan Hughes began the recovery with a partnership of 81 for the fifth wicket. Hughes, a 20-year-old right-hand bastman, played plenty of aggressive shots, including a straight six off Ian Salisbury, and showed few nerves on his Championship debut.Powell reached his half-century off 91 balls with five fours and had moved on to 56 when he edged Ed Giddins to first slip. Giddins, who did not bowl until the second over after lunch, then sent back Hughes for a well struck 38 off 66 balls, Mark Wallace and Darren Thomas to finish with 4-71 from 16 overs.It left Croft and Cosker to lift Glamorgan’s spirits with their encouraging late partnership and Croft was eventually unbeaten on 70 from 83 balls with eight fours and a six.

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