Mohali, Ahmedabad and Bangalore to host Pakistan Tests

The venues of the three Tests and five one-day internationals for Pakistan’s tour of India, which starts next month, have been announced. According to the rotation policy followed by the Indian board, Delhi, Mohali and Ahmedabad were in line to host the Tests. However, with Delhi’s Feroz Shah Kotla Stadium still undergoing renovation, Bangalore got the opportunity to stage its second Test of the season, having hosted the Australians in October.Pakistan, who will arrive on February 25, will also play a five-match one-day series in Kochi, Vishakapatnam, Kanpur, Jamshedpur and New Delhi. Though the dates for the matches have been announced, the order in which they will be played will be decided only after the Indian government cleared the itinerary.Ahmedabad could come under scrutiny from Pakistani security experts after the state of Gujarat was hit by communal riots as recently as three years ago. According to Kamal Morarka, chairman of the fixtures committee of the BCCI, “It is up to the government to consider since it is an India-Pakistan matter. A Pakistan security team will tour the venues before their cricket board gives its approval.”India currently have nine Test venues, with each ground given an opportunity on a rotation basis. Of these nine, six have already hosted a Test in the 2004-05 season – Bangalore, Chennai, Nagpur and Mumbai staged Tests against Australia, while South Africa played at Kanpur and Kolkata.The last time Pakistan toured India, in 1998-99, Delhi hosted a historic match in which Anil Kumble took all ten wickets in Pakistan’s second innings and guided India to a huge win. That was Pakistan’s second loss in four Tests in Delhi. Given their record in Bangalore – two draws and a win in three matches – Pakistan would be only too happy to skip Delhi and play in Bangalore instead.Pakistan will start the tour with a three-day warm-up game from February 27, while the first Test will start on March 4.

Zimbabwe announce 16-member squad

Another tough assignment for Taibu and his men © Getty Images

Tatenda Taibu will lead a 16-member squad in the upcoming tri-series, also involving New Zealand and India. The selectors named Heath Streak as the vice-captain and also included other former dissidents – Andy Blignaut, Craig Wishart and Stuart Carlisle.Zimbabwe will hope for an improved performance in the one-dayers after a thrashing at the hands of New Zealand in the two-Test series. The Zimbabwe Board XI for the warm-up match against New Zealand at Bulawayo on August 22 will be chosen from the same set – minus Taibu and Streak who will be returning after taking part in the Afro-Asian Cup in South Africa.Kevin Curran, the former Zimbabwe allrounder who recently replaced Phil Simmons as the coach, said he aimed to transform Zimbabwe into one of the top teams in one-day cricket. “I want all the team to rapidly improve by 5%,” he told AFP, “because that will impact on the team as a whole. I am a team man but also a really competitive person, and always have been. I want that to rub off and I’m sure it will.”The one-day series gets underway on August 24 with Zimbabwe taking on New Zealand in the opener at Bulawayo.Zimbabwe squad
1 Tatenda Taibu (capt), 2 Heath Streak (vice-capt), 3 Stuart Carlisle, 4 Chamunorwa Chibhabha, 5 Charles Coventry, 6 Keith Dabengwa, 7 Brendan Taylor, 8 Craig Wishart, 9 Andy Blignaut, 10 Gavin Ewing, 11 Blessing Mahwire, 12 Hamilton Masakadza, 13 Waddington Mwayenga, 14 Edward Rainsford, 15 Vusumuzi Sibanda, 16 Prosper Utseya.

Watson and Symonds return for Queensland

Shane Watson and Andrew Symonds will return to the Queensland team for their one-day match against Victoria on Friday at the Gabba. Both Watson and Symonds were in the Australian squad for the Chappell-Hadlee series against New Zealand, which ended last week. Aaron Nye and Daniel Payne have been omitted from the 12.Meanwhile, the selectors decided to leave out Martin Love from the line-up. Love had been forced to miss the earlier games after breaking his finger in the first ING Cup match of the season, but had been cleared to play last week.Queensland haven’t lost a one-day game this season and lead the points table six points clear of second-placed Tasmania, while Victoria are in third place.Squad
Jimmy Maher (capt), James Hopes, Clinton Perren, Shane Watson, Andrew Symonds, Craig Philipson, Chris Hartley, Andy Bichel, Ashley Noffke, Nathan Hauritz, Shane Jurgensen, Brendan Nash.

Pietersen carries on his good form

Scorecard


Kevin Pietersen: third hundred of the tour
© Getty Images

Kevin Pietersen continued his good form on England A’s tour of India with his third century, against South Zone at Gurgaon. He added 143 with Matt Prior, who scored a valuable 66, to help England A to close the opening day at 308 for 7.Pietersen scored 104 and went some way to rescuing England after they made a stumbling start. After being put in, they lost Scott Newman, Michael Lumb and Ed Smith before lunch.Newman and Smith made a solid start, putting on 50 before Newman was run out for 31. Lumb did not last long before he was caught off Sunil Joshi for 1, and Smith followed with the total on 98 when he was bowled by Narender Singh for 27.England A were 99 for 3 at lunch, but dominated the afternoon as Pietersen and Prior looked to attack. Pietersen, however, was caught off the final ball before tea.Prior followed for 66 soon after the break as three wickets went down for only two runs. England’s innings was in danger of a spectacular collapse, but Graham Napier put things back on track with 43 not out.

Mendis criticises South Africa's pull-out

Mendis: ‘The government put in place presidential-level security for the team, yet they [South Africa] were not convinced’ © AFP

Duleep Mendis, Sri Lanka Cricket’s chief executive, has criticised South Africa’s decision to pull out of the Unitech Cup following a bomb blast in Colombo on Monday. South Africa’s withdrawal came after an independent security assessment by a Dubai-based firm said that “the current risk to the team is at an unacceptable level”.”I am amazed at their decision to return home,” Mendis told AFP. “The government put in place presidential-level security for the team, yet they were not convinced. They took advice from a Dubai firm which is even more surprising. I did not see anyone from this firm in Colombo, yet they prepared a security report within 24 hours sitting in Dubai.”The South African Cricketers’ Association (SACA) issued a statement fully supporting the decision while saying that it was an extremely difficult one to make. “This has been a very tense last three days” said Tony Irish, the Chief Executive Officer of SACA. “Graeme Smith, Jacques Kallis and I have been in constant contact with the team in Colombo while the process necessary for making the decision has taken place. It has been a very difficult time for the players, especially having to deal with the uncertainty of the situation.””At the end of the day, you have to rely on what the security experts say and base the decisions on that. The team’s security consultants, Nicholls, Steyn and Associates, have been very thorough and the independent ICC security consultants concurred with their security assessment. One cannot underestimate the difficulty of this decision, but it does show that Cricket South Africa places the emphasis on where it should be, namely the safety of the players and the national team.”

Duminy takes Western Province to the top

Western Province has made sure of finishing at the top of the Standard Bank Cup table with a close win against Easterns at Newlands while Northerns, winning against Gauteng, can still finish on the same points but would have won fewer matches.The pace for the remaining two semi-finals hots up. Western Province (47 points) has finished its matches while Northerns (41) still has to face Free State at Centurion. Easterns (34) has a tough match against Border in Benoni while Gauteng (33) are at home to Border and away to KwaZulu-Natal.PointsTableWestern Province 244 for 6 (Ferreira 56, Duminy 88, Flusk 3-54) beat Easterns 235 for 5 (Z de Bruyn 68, Koenig 49, Seymore 41) by 9 runs
ScorecardWestern Province, batting first, came up against a determined Gareth Flusk who took the first three wickets of the innings leaving Province at 72 for 3 in the 17th over. At the end of the 35th over Lloyd Ferreira, scoring 56, and Jean-Paul Duminy, scoring 88, had taken the score to 169. The last ten overs added a further 75 to the total, setting Easterns 245 to win.A solid, but slow, opening partnership of 73 from Sven Koenig and Andre Seymore put Easterns under some pressure. Zander de Bruyn, Pierre de Bruyn and Darryll Cullinan took up the challenge and scoring at close to a run a ball brought Easterns to the brink of victory. Losing three wickets to run outs and needing 62 in the last five overs proved to be just too much. Northerns 206 for 3 (Petersen 50, de Villiers 59, van Jaarsveld 52*)beat Gauteng 205 (Harris 50, Thomas 4-31) by 7 wickets
ScorecardA collapse in the final ten overs saw Gauteng squander all the hard work done up front to be bowled out for 205 inside 45 overs. Having started off at a good pace they had laid a solid foundation of 180 for four when the final ten overs started. Losing six wickets for 25 runs virtually handed the game to Northerns. Alfonso Thomas, who had taken two early wickets, finished with four as he cleaned up the tail.Looking for a bonus point Alviro Petersen (50) and Abraham de Villiers (59) put on 85 for the first wicket and then de Villiers and Martin van Jaarsveld (52) put on 58 for the second wicket. Neil McKenzie and van Jaarsveld added a further 49 for Northerns to win in the 39th over.North West 248 for 6 (de Vos 65*, Rowley 62) beat FreeState 247 for 4 (van Wyk 107) by 4 wickets
ScorecardA magnificent 107 not out from Morne van Wyk boosted Free State hopes of a home win against North West in Bloemfontein. Scoring 247, with small contributions from the rest of the order and taking two early North West wickets, Free State seemed well on its way to a win.Then the tide turned. First there was a 73-run partnership between Ryan Bailey (41) and Davey Jacobs (41) that helped consolidate and then there was the match winning 102-run partnership between Dirkie de Vos (65) and Grant Rowley (62). Not having wona game since December 2002 North West had won twice in a weekend.

Lawson's action on the mend

The West Indies Cricket Board is expected to submit a review of the bowling action of the fast bowler Jermaine Lawson to the International Cricket Council by August 12.Lawson, 21, was reported to the ICC for a suspect bowling action during the fourth and final Test between West Indies and Australia in Antigua in May. His career-best figures of 7 for 78 had decimated Australia’s first innings, but he was unable to take any further part in a famous victory.”Jermaine has been carrying along very well with the remedial programme in Jamaica,” remarked Dr. Michael Seepersaud, the WICB’s chief cricket development officer, who is supervising the review process of Lawson’s bowling action.”The back problems that set back the remedial work on his bowling action are now over,” he added. “He’s free from pain, and substantial progress has been made to ensure his all-round biomechanical efficiency.”Next week, the WICB is expected to fly biomechanics specialist Dr. Paul Hurrion from Britain to conduct an assessment of Lawson. “Dr. Hurrion has worked in a similar capacity for the ICC with other bowlers,” said Dr Seepersaud. “He is highly recommended, so we are pleased to have him come and work with Jermaine. Once we have his analysis, we will convene the bowling committee and send our review to the ICC for their consideration.”Lawson has captured 29 wickets at 24.31 runs apiece in seven Tests to date. In addition to that seven-wicket haul at St John’s, he picked up a hat-trick in the preceding Test at Bridgetown.

Canada to play Windwards in Red Stripe opener

Canada will open its 2003-04 Red Stripe campaign with a match against the Windwards on October 2, 2003 in Jamaica. Canada will be hoping to match last year’s success in the competition. Their fixtures are:-

  • 2-Oct-2003 Canada vs Windwards
  • 4-Oct-2003 Trinidad vs Canada
  • 8-Oct-2003 Jamaica vs Canada
  • 11-Oct-2003 Canada vs Leewards XI
The top two teams in the group advance to the semi-finals on the 16 and 17 October, with the final on 19 October.

Crash Course

The Ricky Ponting of today is a new man: an inspiring leader, stirring speaker and fierce critic of sledging. This is the story of how he did it.


Ponting’s road to success has not always been an easy one
&copy Getty Images

It was one of the sadder sights of recent times. There was Australia’s best young cricketer, Ricky Ponting, his face marked by embarrassment and a black eye, seated at a bare table next to the Australian Cricket Board’s chief executive Malcolm Speed.Against the beautiful backdrop of Hobart’s harbour, Speed announced that Ponting had been suspended for two one-day internationals for misbehaving at a Sydney nightclub. Ponting admitted he had a drinking problem. He and Speed explained it wasn’t that Ponting drank too much too often, but that when he started drinking he found it hard to stop – and often got himself into compromising situations. Ponting said he would seek counselling.It looked at the time, January 1999, as if the board was hanging Ponting out to dry, when previously it had tried to protect players in trouble. We soon learned it had little choice. A Sydney newspaper was poised to publish photos of a drunk and dishevelled Ponting standing outside that nightclub with a group of people he didn’t know.Here was the classic morality tale of modern cricket. The wonder boy, seen by many as a future Test player from the time he was 12, had now been exposed as a flawed character with a destructive social problem, someone who had embarrassed the game and himself in public. Here, too, was someone regarded as a future Test captain, someone who was now jeopardising that future.That is how it appeared at the time. But when you talk to some of the people involved back then, you realise that few lost faith in Ponting’s ability to mend his ways and recover the lost ground. They knew their man pretty well. Ponting’s impressive past two years prove it.The following season the Australian vice-captaincy was up for grabs. Adam Gilchrist won a three-way “contest” over Shane Warne and Ponting, then 24. Although many insiders believed the latter two were better candidates in a pure cricketing sense, Gilchrist got the nod because of his impeccable public and private image. The board, wearied by the misbehaviour of some players – especially Warne – took the safe route.Ponting’s path to the captaincy had hit a roadblock, a crossroads. Not only was the nightclub affair the lowest point in his career and life – for the two have been much the same for a cricketer destined from an early age to play for Australia – it was also the turning point in that career.As Ponting underwent counselling and gradually straightened himself out, Warne continued to get into scrapes, forever damaging his leadership prospects. Gilchrist, meanwhile, found the triple duties of captaining, batting and wicketkeeping too onerous. Eventually Ponting got his chance.Even then his supporters in the highest levels of administration had to push his claims against the long entrenched view in New South Wales and Victoria that, as the senior states, the captaincy should be theirs by right. And yet since taking over the one-day side Ponting has commanded Australia to a World Cup victory, made consistently high scores and generally led in fine style. It has been quite a turnaround for a kid from the tough northern suburbs of Launceston.Ponting grew up in a sporting family and played cricket for an uncompromising club, Mowbray. What the Mowbray players lacked in subtlety and worldliness they made up for in grit. It was not the most sophisticated environment but it did help make Ponting a determined character, a fighter. One of the ways of life in that environment was for young players to be left to learn on their own. There was little advice from senior men about how a youngster should behave in public. The view was that this kid could play – so let him get on with it.In the short term that approach landed the young Ponting in trouble. Perhaps in the longer term it worked for the best. These days, those who watch him at close quarters say he is self-reliant, a quiet and close observer, who prefers to learn from watching rather than asking. They also say they never lost faith in his ability to come through 1999 and go on to better things.”It’s not obvious how Ricky learns,” says David Boon, the national selector and former Test batsman. “You don’t have to sit him down and go through things with him. He picks things up from watching and listening. You don’t see him do it but he’s learning all the time.”Boon is a key figure in this story – first as a figurehead to Ponting, and secondly as a former team-mate and colleague. Boon’s role in Tasmanian cricket cannot be overstated: he doesn’t have a statue of himself at Hobart’s Bellerive Oval for nothing. He was the first born-and-based Tasmanian Test player, the one whose ambitions and talents were not thwarted by the casual cricketing environment of the early 1980s.Like Ponting, Boon was a star from an early age, a kid destined to go places. But unlike other gifted Tasmanian players of that time, Boon kept his eye on the main game. He liked a joke and a drink but he never stopped being professional.There were few senior mentors in Tasmanian cricket when Boon was coming through, no former greats who might turn up to state training to have a word with the next generation. You had to do it pretty much on your own, and Boon broke new ground by doing exactly that. Denis Rogers, chairman of the Tasmanian Cricket Association and a former ACB chairman, cites Boon as a key factor in Ponting’s development.”Boonie is still Ricky’s hero,” says Rogers. “Not because they are necessarily close but because of what Ricky has seen Boonie do. David has been a major influence but it’s never what he says – it’s what he’s done, and how he went about doing it. David doesn’t say a lot but when he does talk people listen.”Boon, naturally, plays down this view. “I think Denis is exaggerating there,” he says. “Ricky and I talk quite a bit and we did play together for a while. But I don’t interfere in anything. I leave him to do his job, which he’s doing very well.” Boon says he didn’t take Ponting aside during that difficult period in 1999 because he had confidence in him.”I never doubted he would come through that episode,” says Boon. “He’s got plenty of strength of character. You have to remember he saw leaders like Allan Border, Mark Taylor and now Stephen [Waugh] up close, and I know he watched them and learned from them.”He’s always been an outstanding talent but not all talented players are leaders. Ricky has always shown leadership qualities. And it showed great guts to admit he had a problem with drinking. He had the perceptive skills to identify the problem and the guts to do something about it. People forget he was young and in the limelight, and when you’re young you do a few stupid things. As you get older you learn from your mistakes. Ricky realised he had to sort himself out – and I knew he would.”That enforced self-reliance during Ponting’s early years has turned into a positive in recent times. Boon says no player has been a particularly close influence on him. One of his strongest supporters, however, has been Trevor Hohns, the national chairman of selectors, who says Ponting stood out years ago as a “shining light”.”Apart from the fact that he was a fantastic player, to me he exuded enthusiasm,” Hohns says. “He’s had a deserved reputation as a good tactical thinker, and all of this was pinpointed a few years ago. I wouldn’t say we had long-term plans for him as early as 1999 but we did have our eye on him. Certainly in the past few years some of the rough edges have come off. He’s taken the right sort of advice from the right people and gone out of his way to make the best of himself.”Hohns notes that Ponting has had the same manager for several years, unusual in someone whose career rose so quickly. “I think Sam Halvorsen has been a good influence on Ricky and helped him adjust to the public exposure players face these days.” Ponting has had to deal with it more than most. From that tough club environment at Mowbray he graduated straight to the academy in Adelaide, making him perhaps the first fully fledged youngster to move through that exclusively cricket system.A feature of Ponting’s leadership has been his stance on sledging, which seems stronger than that of the Test captain Steve Waugh. When South Africa’s Graeme Smith went public about the crudity of Australia’s sledging, Waugh implied it was part of the rough-and-tumble of Test cricket. Ponting took a harder line. “I don’t mind a bit of the friendly banter and gamesmanship,” he said, “but I’ve said right from the word go that I don’t like, and won’t like, any real personal barrages towards anyone. And if that does happen I’ll be more than happy to pull the guys aside and let them know that’s not acceptable.”Hohns believes Ponting’s stronger condemnation of excessive sledging was influenced by those dark days of early 1999. “I think the origins of his views on sledging were influenced by that issue. It made him aware of the public view players are under. They’re just normal people like us but they have had to realise that they’re famous. If they do something wrong people will see it. He realised back then that, to some extent, he is public property.”After a series of minor and major disasters caused by the poor behaviour – or perceived poor behavior – of this Australian team, Ponting’s rise to the leadership has been an under-recognised positive story. Those people, like Hohns, who spotted his strength of character years ago are now seeing their faith repaid. Ponting is the best fieldsman in the game, one of the very best batsman and a World Cup-winning captain. He will soon be a fine Test captain.As Rogers says: “Ricky’s come a long, long way.”Mark Ray is a cricket author, journalist and former Tasmanian player.

<b>Twenty20 Ticket arrangements</b>

Twenty20 Cup Launch – 13th June 2003

Hampshire v Sussex

Tickets* All Allocated Seating – Adults £15, Senior Citizens & Juniors(U16) £10,Members Free* Everyone wishing to attend (including Hampshire Members) must book seats* Members priority up until 15th MayParking* Car Park Season ticket holders must book a space for this match* Members priority up until 15th May* Park & Ride Available £7 per carBOOK WITHOUT DELAY ON – 0870 243 0291Twenty20 Cup – 18th June 2003

Hampshire v Essex

Tickets* Ground admission tickets available in advance, Adults £10,Senior Citizens £10, Juniors (U16) £5,Members Free* Members do not need to bookParking* Car Park Season ticket holders – usual match day facility* Parking at the ground £5BOOK WITHOUT DELAY ON – 0870 243 0291Twenty20 Cup – 24th June 2003

Hampshire v Surrey

Tickets* Ground admission tickets available in advance, Adults £10,Senior Citizens £10, Juniors (U16) £5* Members do not need to bookParking* Car Park Season ticket holders – usual match day facility* Parking at the ground £5BOOK WITHOUT DELAY ON – 0870 243 0291

One Day International – Zimbabwe v South Africa 10th July 2003

* Tickets still available £25 for adults and £12.50 for Under 16’s* Some areas of the ground sold outBOOK WITHOUT DELAY ON – 0870 243 0291

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