Mathews suspended for two ODIs

Sri Lanka captain Angelo Mathews has been suspended for two ODIs and his team-mates have been fined 40% of their match fees for their slow over-rate in the final of the tri-series against India in Port-of-Spain

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Jul-2013Sri Lanka captain Angelo Mathews has been suspended for two ODIs and his team-mates have been fined 40% of their match fees for their slow over-rate in the final of the tri-series against India in Port-of-Spain.Match referee David Boon handed the suspension after Sri Lanka were found three overs short of their target at the end of the match, after time allowances were taken into consideration. Mathews accepted the suspension which avoided a formal hearing.In accordance with the ICC Code of Conduct, the captain receives two suspension points and his team-mates are fined 10% of their match fees for each of the first two overs short and 20% for every subsequent over they fail to bowl in the stipulated time. Two suspension points equate to a suspension for one Test or two ODIs.The suspension means Mathews will miss the first two of the five ODIs against South Africa on July 20 and 23 in Colombo.

Top cricketers threaten to pull out of Dhaka league

Top cricketers in Bangladesh have threatened to “stay away” from this season’s Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League after the BCB proposed a change in the players’ transfer system

Mohammad Isam17-Jun-2013Top cricketers in Bangladesh have threatened to “stay away” from this season’s Dhaka Premier Division Cricket League after the BCB proposed a change in the players’ transfer system. The Dhaka Premier League is a city-based domestic one-day competition and is the country’s most popular league.Cricketers’ Welfare Association of Bangladesh, the players’ body, announced the decision after a long discussion with the players on Monday afternoon. They complained about the lack of communication from the BCB, which announced on Sunday that the new system of player transfer – similar to the draft system that is used in American sports – will take place on June 23. The league is slated to begin on July 3.Former Bangladesh player Rajin Saleh read out CWAB’s letter, but Debabbrata Paul, the secretary, said that there was never any official discussion between the two sides, which was one of the reasons for their plan to stay away.”We gave our observations to the Cricket Committee of Dhaka Metropolis (CCDM) in a letter, but they never replied,” Paul said. “We got to know of it from the media that they will start a gradation and rotation policy. So today we took a decision after speaking to the players that we will stay away from the competition.”The BCB never sat with us, so we don’t really know where our differences are. There was no official discussion with them. I had a personal talk with Jalal Yunus, the CCDM chairman.”The main reason for the row is the new players’ transfer system, which replaces the traditional way in which the players negotiated a fee for one season with a Dhaka-based club to play in the tournament.Instead, the players were divided into categories according to a pay structure that started from Tk 22 lakh ($28,300 approximately) for the A+ group of players. A lottery would decide which club gets to pick first from the top category, and after all 12 clubs picked players from that particular category, the next pick would go to the club who selected last in the first category. From there it would proceed sequentially in the next categories.According to CWAB, clubs picking players was against the spirit of the competition and also curbed the players’ freedom to choose which club to play for.”The new system was forgoing the traditional way of players’ transfers and replacing it with a new system of grading and rotation,” CWAB’s statement said. “There was not only financial loss for the players, but professional freedom was hampered.”The BCB didn’t take any immediate action, merely saying that they want an official letter from CWAB. It is also not clear what action the BCB are likely to take against their contracted cricketers, including Mushfiqur Rahim and Mahmudullah, who have effectively opposed the board’s decision.Acting CEO Nizamuddin Ahmed said that they still haven’t received any word from the CWAB regarding their latest action. “We haven’t received the players’ decision formally. We will discuss the situation once we receive it.”Otherwise we have pitched a tentative date for the Premier League to start, which is on July 3. We have spoken to players and the players association informally.”

Careers are on the line – Lehmann

Darren Lehmann, the Australia coach, believes that some of the players could be playing for their careers come the fifth Ashes Test at The Oval

Brydon Coverdale13-Aug-2013Darren Lehmann, the Australia coach, has said that some members of the squad could be playing for their careers during the final Investec Ashes Test at The Oval next week. Lehmann said the loss at Chester-le-Street on Monday was “bloody hard” and that Australia should have won “quite comfortably” given the strong platform set by the openers Chris Rogers and David Warner, who contributed to a start of 147 for 1 in a chase of 299.But the loss of No.3 Usman Khawaja, lbw to Graeme Swann, then Michael Clarke to a ripper from Stuart Broad, Steven Smith hooking a bouncer down onto his stumps, and Shane Watson and Brad Haddin walking across their stumps to be lbw meant a collapse of 6 for 34, leaving far too much work for the tail. Lehmann said the continued failure of the Australians to stand up at the big moments meant there was much on the line at The Oval.”Yep. There is nothing wrong with that. I’m happy for you to write whatever you write there,” Lehmann said when asked if players could be playing for their careers. “To play for Australia, you have to perform to a level that’s acceptable to everyone in our team, and also the Australian public and the media, and at the moment we’re not doing that.”I think they’ve fought really hard and they’ve shown glimpses of challenging a really good side obviously, but we haven’t done that consistently enough. So we’ll back them as we have and we will continue to back them, but at the end of the day performances count.”From our point of view the blokes have got to learn. If they don’t learn we will find blokes that will … If they’re not, and making the same mistakes, then we’ve got to change, and that’s a simple fact of cricket and results.”The manner in which several of the Australians got themselves out during the chase was especially frustrating to Lehmann, who simply wanted his men to play straight. England’s bowlers, Stuart Broad in particular, bowled well after tea and dried up the runs, but Lehmann said several of the Australian batsmen had contributed just as much to their downfall.”Blokes are missing straight ones. That doesn’t help,” Lehmann said. “I thought Warner got a good ball, to be fair, Clarke got a ripper and probably Rogers got a decent ball. The rest should have played a lot straighter and they know that.”The one silver lining for Australia on the fourth day was the 109-run opening stand between Warner and Rogers, Australia’s best opening partnership in a Test chase since 1995. Warner played a mature innings that mixed defence with a desire to score, and Rogers added to his first-innings 110 with a tenacious 49, leaving them locked in as the opening combination for the time being.”The way they played today, yes,” Lehmann said when asked if Warner and Rogers could stay at the top for the next year or so. “Warner was very good today. I was very impressed with him today and Rogers has been probably the find of the tour for us, the way he has gone about it, and his demeanour off the field and what he brings to the playing group as an experienced player. So I have been really impressed with both of them.”So much so that when Lehmann was asked if Watson would be considered at The Oval if he was unable to bowl due to his hip/groin injury, he responded that “no-one’s guaranteed, apart from Michael Clarke and Chris Rogers, I would think”. The Australians travel to Northampton this week for a two-day tour match ahead of the final Test.

Mosharraf and Mahbubul plead not guilty

Left-arm spinner Mosharraf Hossain and fast bowler Mahbubul Alam, two of the nine charged by the ICC on alleged corruption during this season’s BPL, have formally pleaded not guilty

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Aug-2013Left-arm spinner Mosharraf Hossain and fast bowler Mahbubul Alam, two of the nine charged by the ICC on alleged corruption during this season’s BPL, have formally pleaded not guilty. The hearing would take place before an Anti-Corruption Tribunal, a 10-member panel headed by the former chief justice Mahmudul Amin Chowdhury.Mosharraf was charged for alleged match-fixing in Dhaka Gladiators’ February 2 BPL match against Chittagong Kings earlier this year. Mahbubul, his Gladiators team-mate, was accused of fixing the matches against Barisal Burners and Chittagong Kings. Both players have claimed their innocence, and their lawyers have termed the allegations “baseless”.”These are baseless allegations,” Barrister Noorus Sadik Chowdhury told the daily after submitting a hardcopy of their appeal to the BCB, having already e-mailed it to the ICC’s Anti-Corruption and Security Unit (ACSU).”There is no specific allegation made on the basis of any substantial evidence. Because they had made the allegation on the basis of doubt, it can always be questioned.”Noorus also questioned whether the ICC and the ACSU had the right to investigate, claiming it does not follow the BCB’s code of conduct.”We doubt, according to the disciplinary code, whether ACSU and ICC have the authority to investigate this case,” Noorus said. “We are still in doubt about that and will be trying to prove that. In the Anti-Corruption Code of the BCB for the participant there are specific sections, and under this code ACSU and ICC are not the authority. They are not authorized to frame charges or investigate.”Advocate Saifuzzaman Tuhin has said that they had asked the BCB to lift the ban on the players.”In other countries, the accused are permitted to play, but that is not the case here,” Tuhin said. “So whether there is any conspiracy needs to be determined. We asked [the BCB] to withdraw the ban on them.”Noorus added that the players have been in turmoil following the allegations. “They are in a depressed state, as both of them are promising players and this kind of allegation at this point of time always puts you in an awkward situation,’ Noorus said. “Nevertheless, they are confident. They are not devastated, but they are upset.”

BCCI floats tender for series-title sponsor

The BCCI has retained a base price of Rs 2 crore (approx. $320,000) per international match while inviting bids for a series-title sponsor for all the major matches played in India

Amol Karhadkar19-Sep-2013The BCCI has retained a base price of Rs 2 crore (approx. $320,000) per international match while inviting bids for a series-title sponsor for all the major matches played in India, in place of Bharti Airtel, the telecommunication company that decided not to renew its contract for the same.The board decided to float a tender for the period beginning October 1 to March 31, 2014, which includes at least 13 international matches. The winning bidder, though, will then get the first right to extend the agreement till March 31, 2018.After Bharti Airtel decided not to extend their contract, the BCCI’s marketing committee, which was presided over by president N Srinivasan in the absence of its chairman Farooq Abdullah, finalised the invitation to tender (ITT) document. The ITT will be available to “only corporate entities with a turnover of Rs 100 crore, for performance deposit of Rs 3 crore” at Rs 2 lakh. The bids will be opened in the presence of all the bidders on October 3.While the media statement issued by BCCI secretary Sanjay Patel didn’t specify the base price, a summary of the ITT document that was finalised at the meeting, accessed by ESPNcricinfo, recommended “to have the same base price of Rs 2 crore as the tender done in 2010”.While barring agents from representing corporate houses, the BCCI decided to allow consortia bids. “It is recommended that the consortia is allowed to bid for the title sponsor with consortia members nominating the title sponsor and other associate sponsor during the time of the bid,” the marketing committee suggested.Besides being awarded the title sponsorship of all the senior domestic tournaments barring the Challenger Trophy, which will be played in September, and the domestic Twenty20, the winning bidder will also be able to avail 28 other rights. Some of the prominent ones include: “Integration into the event logo and the use of all official marks; right to put up to 12 advertising boards of standard size (approx. 3ft x 20ft) in the stadium at all matches and the right to nominate the positioning of these 12 boards; exclusive branding on the stumps; and non-exclusive branding on the BCCI’s website”.The marketing committee also took into consideration the current title sponsorship deals of Cricket South Africa, Cricket Australia and the ECB. It noted that CA awards Test sponsorship for $2.4mn and ODI sponsorship for $0.8mn, the ECB awards Tests for $1.07mn and ODIs and T20s for $0.25mn, and CSA’s sponsorship is priced at $0.45mn per Test, $0.5mn per ODI and $0.3mn per T20.

Pat Howard reappointed for two years

Pat Howard has signed on for another two years as Australia’s executive general manager of team performance

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Apr-2015Pat Howard has signed on for another two years as Australia’s executive general manager of team performance.Howard was appointed in 2011 to the newly created role recommended by the Argus review and although his contract was due to end in June, his reappointment will now take his tenure through until at least 2017.”This recognises the outstanding job Pat is doing leading the team performance function at Cricket Australia,” Cricket Australia’s chief executive James Sutherland said. “Our men’s and women’s teams continue to succeed on the world stage while strong foundations are being built to achieve sustained success in all forms of the game.”Howard’s time at Cricket Australia has been eventful and he was part of the decision to sack Mickey Arthur as coach on the eve of the 2013 Ashes series in England.However, the team has enjoyed significant on-field success in the past two years – Australia currently hold the Ashes, World Cup and the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.The major challenge in the coming months, though, will be to sustain that performance away from home, with Test campaigns in West Indies, England and Bangladesh.

Devon, Cornwall excited by Championship debate

If the County Championship is extended to 21 teams and a Minor County needs to be elevated, a combined Devon and Cornwall team could be the answer

Tim Wigmore28-May-2015ECB discussions about whether the County Championship could be extended to include 21 teams in three divisions of seven have stirred the interest of Ireland and Scotland, who are eager to consider any opportunities to join England and Wales’ professional system. But even if agreements could be reached with both countries the ECB would still need to find a 21st Championship team – and that would mean persuading a Minor County to put their suspicions behind them and take the plunge.Twenty-three years after Durham became the 18th first-class county there might now be an opportunity for another minor county – or even two or three – to be elevated. The ECB’s chairman Colin Graves is known to be intrigued about whether a national pyramid‎ is possible of the sort that broke down football’s closed shop when the re-election system that largely protected the status quo was finally abandoned in 1986.The mood in cricket is much more conservative, with a number of leading minor counties doubting their potential to join the County Championship, but if the ECB take that route they could find salvation in the furthest south-west of the country where Cornwall and Devon officials believe they could potentially combine to field a joint side.

21st team: The Candidates

Devon/Cornwall
Strengths: Strong tradition of cricket, successful current sides – Devon or Cornwall have won eight of the past 21 Minor Counties Championships. And, in Truro, Exmouth and beyond, some of the most beautiful grounds in the country.
Weaknesses: A couple of hours further away than Taunton. To cultivate support in both counties, would probably need to play at several grounds.
Population: 1.6 million
Staffordshire
Strengths: Historically the best minor county – and the reigning champions.
Weaknesses: Lacks an obvious home ground – minor counties games are played over six or seven club grounds every year. Borders four first-class counties and might not inspire as much new talent as alternative sides. Already very successful at cultivating links with first-class counties.
Population: 1.1 million
Norfolk/Suffolk
Strengths: Have a good local following, with Norfolk-Suffolk matches on weekends often attracting 1000 spectators.
Weaknesses: It would be a “ridiculously long journey,” according to Kieron Tuck, the Norfolk Cricket Development Manager, who says the county has “less playing resources” than Durham did when they were elevated. The recent record of the two in the Minor Counties Championship – one shared title apiece since 1980 – is not stellar.
Population: 1.1 million.
Oxfordshire / Buckinghamshire
Strengths:
Some beautiful grounds, including Wormsley.
Weaknesses: Both counties doubt the viability of the idea. “For any pair of minor counties it would be a major challenge,” says Kevin Beaumont, the secretary of Buckinghamshire. A lack of potential spectators “could be a problem,” says Chris Clements, the chairman of Oxfordshire Cricket.
Population: 1.4 million

“It’s a brilliant idea. That could work for Devon and Cornwall – we would both be able to support that,” Sean Hooper, the chief executive of the Cornwall Cricket Board, says. To Jim Wood, the chairman of the Devon Cricket Board, the concept is “delightful”. “It’s a great idea but would need a lot of careful planning.”Hooper has long been motivated by the idea of Cornwall having a first-class side; as an undergraduate at Loughborough in the early 1990s, Hooper wrote his thesis on whether the county could emulate Durham in having a first-class county. “If Durham can do it why can’t Cornwall? What’s stopping us?”Population is perhaps the simplest answer – while Durham has a population of 902,500, Cornwall’s is only 536,000. But a combined team with Devon would cover a combined population of over 1.6 million. And, at a time when English cricket is trying to reconnect, Hooper believes that it would make cricket far more accessible to those in the West Country: it is 143 miles from Penzance to Taunton.”There’s nothing for our children to see in terms of first-class cricket. We’ve got to go two or three hours to Taunton to see a first-class cricketer. Anything that could bring that closer to Cornwall would be fantastic,” Hooper says.Worryingly for cricket, rugby has made big strides in Cornwall, benefiting from the success of the Cornish Pirates professional rugby side, who play in the second tier. “12-year-old children are training like professionals because they can see that they can realistically play rugby. They can see it as a real job opportunity,” Hooper says. “Because they don’t see any first-class cricket they don’t see it as a real aspiration.”Rugby as a profession is a real choice whereas cricket is still a far-fetched choice,” he says. “Some aspiring cricketers see professional rugby in Cornwall and they can see that as a real career and job route whereas they can’t see that with cricket. Anything that enabled us to have that would be great.” This is the most compelling argument in favour of extending, rather than reducing, the number of county sides: it could help discover more talent, and ultimately make cricket a more attractive option to talented young sportsmen. Indeed, it has been suggested that, by increasing the number of professional contracts on offer in Australia, the Big Bash League has made cricket a more enticing prospect to those who might otherwise have chosen Aussie Rules.Cornwall can already claim to boasting a strong cricket infrastructure. Ten of 11 in the side who won the Minor Counties Championship in 2012 played local schools cricket in the county.Since Durham’s elevation to first-class cricket, Devon have been the most successful minor county, winning seven of the last 21 Championships. They have also produced a notable series of players for Somerset, including the Overton twins and Lewis Gregory. But Guy Lavender, the chief executive of Somerset, said that the county is “not protectionist at all” over the rest of the Southwest and that it could even benefit from a rivalry with a Devon-Cornwall side. “We used to play Devon regularly and it was an incredibly popular fixture,” he says. “It would be very healthy to have opportunities for new counties to come into county cricket.”Still, a new team would face significant obstacles. The most obvious would be financial, and the challenge of fielding a team for 12 first-class fixtures. Perhaps the most realistic way to manage the challenge would be, as Hooper suggests, beginning life as semi-professional, with only a few of the most talented players awarded professional contracts. Splitting the costs between two counties, could also make the notion more feasible.Getting grounds ready to host six first-class games a season would also be a challenge. While Wood says there is “good infrastructure already” at the grounds, he says there would need to be “considerable” investment at them for the benefit of players and spectators. The grounds at Truro and Exmouth often hosted first-class opposition in county one-day competitions in the past, while Truro has also hosted women’s international cricket. And there certainly appears to be an audience who would embrace first-class cricket: attendances for minor counties games on Sundays in Cornwall and Devon can approach four figures. “For big games we’d get several thousand spectators,” Hooper believes. “We’d be able to be competitive very, very rapidly.”Among other minor counties, there is recognition of the flaws of the existing structure. “Half the counties in the UK are operating in a completely different way to the other two and there’s no interchange between the two,” Kieron Tuck, the Norfolk Cricket Development Manager, says. The County Championship is even more of a closed shop than the old Football League. Until 1986, the side that finished bottom had to apply for re-election to the league, and was almost invariably allowed to stay in: Hartlepool United were re-elected 14 times between 1924 and 1984.Besides a new team in the West Country, a Norfolk team (possibly a joint outfit with Suffolk) would seem the most realistic addition to the Championship; apart from Cornwall, Norfolk is the only other minor county not to border a first-class team. But Tuck is not optimistic about the idea.”I don’t think I’ve ever heard anyone say Norfolk should be a first-class county – it’s just not on the radar because the differences are so enormous between what you’d need and what we’d have. It’s just not possible realistically,” Tuck says. “You’re talking about a fundamental shift – from amateur cricket, which is what minor counties cricket basically is, to a professional format. It is a massive jump.”Based on playing strength – they are the current minor counties champions, and no side has won more titles than their 11 – Staffordshire certainly has a claim to join a 21-team structure. “If we had first-class status it would be a massive boost for the county,” Jason Britton, the Development Director of Staffordshire, says. But the financial and logistical hurdles are such they he “couldn’t put any timescale” on when the minor county could be elevated. “It would need significant investment and probably some sort of benefactor to move us into the situation we’d need to be in,” he says. “It’s a surprise that people are talking about it.”Although Staffordshire has a population of over one million, it is still served well by first-class counties, bordering Warwickshire, Worcestershire, Leicestershire and Derbyshire. Staffordshire have what Britton calls a “very strong relationship” with Derbyshire (six members of Derbyshire’s squad have strong links to Staffordshire), which it would be reluctant to jeopardise. Other minor counties also have similarly strong links: Chris Clements, the chairman of Oxfordshire Cricket, says there is a “pretty hot” pathway into the county game from the county, as Jack Brooks has proved, while Oxfordshire also benefit from Sussex providing coaching. “We wouldn’t want to put anything like that at risk,” he says.If minor counties are unable, even by merging, to form first-class sides, an alternative is to resurrect the Unicorns, an outfit made up of the best players outside the 18 counties who played in the 40-over competition from 2010 to 2013. “I’d love to see it as a Unicorns team – it would be an excellent thing,” Kevin Beaumont, the secretary of Buckinghamshire, says. “A representative team from the 20 minor counties would have a real chance of competing.” He also believes it could help players get contracts at the current 18 first-class counties. But, as the experience in the 40-over competition showed, a nomadic team suffers from a lack of identity. There is no precedent for a team without any geographical base thriving in a professional sports league.So, should the County Championship need a 21st team alongside the existing 18 first-class counties and sides from Ireland and Scotland, a combined Cornwall and Devon team is shaping up as the best option. It could tap into the deep love for the sport in the West Country and make cricket seem like a more viable career choice for talented children.Simultaneously, more could be done to cultivate cricket lovers in counties lacking professional teams. “One of the big shames is we lost the involvement in the one-day cup against the first-class counties,” Beaumont laments. “That was exposure for the players and brought cricket into some of the shires where it doesn’t exist. I’d love to see a competition like that resurrected.”

Australia complete 277-run demolition

Australia completed a 277-run demolition of West Indies inside four days at Sabina Park to win the Frank Worrell Trophy 2-0

The Report by George Binoy14-Jun-2015
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsMitchell Starc took 3 for 34 in the second innings•Getty Images

Australia completed a 277-run demolition of West Indies inside four days at Sabina Park to win the Frank Worrell Trophy 2-0. West Indies began the day with eight wickets in hand, but their resistance was feeble. The contest was all but over after they lost 5 for 56 in the first session, and they crumbled for 114 shortly after lunch.

Smart Stats

0.65 West Indies’ win-loss ratio at home over the last 10 years, the worst for any top-eight team. West Indies have played 41 home Test during this period, winning 11 and losing 17.
9 Number of times three out of West Indies’ top six batsmen have been dismissed for ducks in a Test innings. Five of those instances have come since 2000.
31 Runs scored by West Indies’ top six batsmen in the second innings, the second-fewest in a Test innings at home. The fewest runs scored is 24, also at Sabina Park, against England in 2004.
49 The eighth-wicket partnership between Veerasammy Permaul and Denesh Ramdin in the second innings, the highest in 24 years for West Indies against Australia in a home Test.
611 Balls faced (or 101.5 overs) by West Indies’ batsmen in this Test, the third-fewest against Australia when they have been bowled out twice. The fewest balls faced is 457 (or 76.1 overs) in Port of Spain in 1999.

Mitchell Starc had accounted for Kraigg Brathwaite and Rajendra Chandrika in the first over of the innings late on the third day, and he struck in the fifth over this morning. A full ball curled into Shane Dowrich after angling across him from over the wicket and brushed his front pad. Starc whipped around to appeal for lbw, not realising the ball had gone on to hit off stump. He had figures of 6-4-2-3.There was seam movement on offer in the morning and Josh Hazlewood bowled an impeccable length around off stump, moving the ball just enough to constantly trouble the batsmen. Darren Bravo eventually pushed forward with hard hands, and the deviation off the pitch caused the outside edge to carry to gully, where Shaun Marsh stooped to take a low catch. Shortly after, Hazlewood induced Jermaine Blackwood to play on to a delivery that nipped into the right-hander from a good length, and West Indies were 33 for 5.The partnership between 21-year old Shai Hope and Denesh Ramdin lasted nine overs before Mitchell Johnson let one rip from round the wicket. Hope pushed forward with a gap between bat and pad and the ball cut in to hit off stump. There was no resistance from Jason Holder this time; he fell clipping Shane Watson tamely to short midwicket.West Indies were 72 for 7 at lunch but Ramdin and Veerasammy Permaul kept Australia waiting after the break. Their partnership extended to 49 at 4.5 runs at over before Johnson broke through. He squared Ramdin up and Michael Clarke dived to his right at second slip to take a low catch.The offspinner Nathan Lyon had not been used much in the innings but in his seventh over he ended the match off consecutive deliveries. Kemar Roach popped a catch to short leg, before Jerome Taylor was bowled slogging across the line to bag a pair. West Indies had lost 20 wickets in 101.5 overs in the Test.

Gayle outdoes Samuels, Guptill in Tallawahs win

Chris Gayle’s red hot T20 form carried over to Warner Park in St Kitts on Tuesday night where his unbeaten 72 led Jamaica Tallawahs to a seven-wicket win against St Kitts & Nevis Patriots

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Jul-2015
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsChris Gayle struck six fours and two sixes•Caribbean Premier League

Chris Gayle’s red hot T20 form carried over to Warner Park in St Kitts where his unbeaten 72 led Jamaica Tallawahs to a seven-wicket win against St Kitts and Nevis Patriots. Australian import Chris Lynn pitched in with 52 as part of an 85-run partnership for the second wicket, which put Tallawahs on course to overhaul 160. Gayle finished the chase with a pulled four, taking his team to their second win of the season.Gayle’s aggressive knock, which included six fours two sixes, was not without shaky moments though. After drinks were taken with the score at 71 for 1 in 10, play resumed with Gayle, on 28, hitting the third ball of the 11th over from Marlon Samuels to long-on where Martin Guptill’s one-handed effort nearly produced a sensational catch.Gayle offered another chance on 49 to start off the 17th over bowled by Shahid Afridi and Tallawahs still needing 10 an over but Orlando Peters had trouble spotting a skier, running in from deep midwicket and nearly overrunning before eventually grassing the chance. Gayle then brought up his second successive half-century off 46 balls and carried on to add an unbroken 50-run stand inside five overs with Andre Russell.Having opted to bat, Patriots had posted a competitive score, with Guptill assembling half-century stands with Tonito Willett and Samuels for the second and third wickets. Guptill got off to a quick start, boosting the Patriots to 49 for 1 in six overs, but he went more than 11 overs without hitting a boundary – a streak that started in the sixth over – before a second six brought up his 50 off 47 balls.Krishmar Santokie accounted for Guptill two balls into the 18th over. Samuels and Afridi then took Patriots past 150 and Samuels brought up his own half-century with a six before Santokie wrapped up the innings, dismissing Samuels and Carlos Brathwaite off consecutive balls. Santokie ended with impressive figures of 4 for 37.

Ryder ten-for sends Glamorgan to first defeat

Glamorgan suffered their first Championship defeat of the summer as Essex crushed them by 248 runs in their Division Two match at Chelmsford

ECB/PA15-Jul-2015
ScorecardJesse Ryder completed a 10-wicket match haul to hand victory to Essex•Getty Images

Glamorgan suffered their first Championship defeat of the summer as Essex crushed them by 248 runs in their Division Two match at Chelmsford.After resuming on 110 for 1, having been left a target of 462, they were bowled out for 213 soon after lunch with only 18-year-old Aneurin Donald putting up much resistance. The teenager caught the eye with some fine strokes either side of the wicket before he tried to square cut a shoulder high delivery from David Masters and was caught behind by James Foster for 67.Donald’s fine innings contained seven fours and one six and served to underline the shortcomings of most of his colleagues. Admittedly, overcast conditions did provide the Essex bowlers with some assistance but not nearly as much as their efforts would imply.Poor shot-selection speeded Glamorgan’s demise and left Essex celebrating a third victory from their last four games. Fittingly it was Jesse Ryder who sealed the win by having Graham Wagg caught at long-off by Graham Napier.Wagg decided to hit out and struck two sixes on his way to 28 from 18 balls before Ryder had the last word. It gave Ryder 4 for 53 and a match haul of 10 for 100, only the second time in his career he has picked up a ten-wicket haul.The game from which Essex emerged with 21 points also provided captain Foster with personal satisfaction as he emerged with seven catches, five of them in the second innings. The first of those ended the resistance of his Glamorgan counterpart Jacques Rudolph, who added just 2 to his 45 before Ryder found the edge.This set the Welsh county on a slippery slope as seven wickets tumbled in the morning session for 72 despite Donald’s valiant attempts to keep his side’s interest in proceedings alive. But they quickly evaporated as Colin Ingram, Chris Cooke, Mark Wallace and Craig Meschede all departed within 12 overs, only Ingram managing to reach double figuresMasters, with 3 for 37, supplied Ryder with his main support while left-arm spinner Liam Dawson 2 for 34 and Jamie Porter, who ended with 1 for 41, shared the other wickets as Essex were able to avenge the 89-run defeat suffered in Cardiff earlier in the season. Glamorgan return to Wales with just three points and reflecting on a setback that put the brake on their promotion ambitions.

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