Littlejohn may seek help from former selectors – Buchanan

Former selectors such as Glenn Turner and Mark Greatbatch could still be involved in advising New Zealand’s new national selection manager, Kim Littlejohn, despite having been overlooked for the role themselves

Brydon Coverdale09-Sep-2011Former selectors such as Glenn Turner and Mark Greatbatch could still be involved in advising New Zealand’s new national selection manager, Kim Littlejohn, despite having been overlooked for the role themselves. New Zealand Cricket raised eyebrows on Friday with the appointment of Littlejohn, a former high-performance manager with Bowls Australia with only a small-time cricket background, to the newly-created role.However, NZC’s director of cricket, John Buchanan, wants to revolutionise the way teams are chosen in New Zealand, with Littlejohn set to centrally manage the selection process. Littlejohn and the coach John Wright will form a two-man selection panel, with Wright given the final decision on starting line-ups, while a network of coaches and experts will be put in place to help Littlejohn keep track of player form in domestic competitions.”If we talk about pulling together a New Zealand squad and then a team, basically it will require Kim to consult with all the provincial coaches, and also he will have an additional network of people which he’ll determine,” Buchanan told ESPNcricinfo. “That could be former selectors of the likes of Glenn Turner and Mark Greatbatch.”He may talk to other coaches or indeed umpires that he believes can provide him with current information on players, which will assist him and the current coach John Wright to select a squad for a tour. Once that squad is chosen by those two, it is then in the hands of the head coach to make the final team selections.”It is a bold move away from the traditional selection panel, which generally involved three former players watching domestic cricket and choosing squads themselves. The New Zealand board ratified Buchanan’s plan, and while he said there had been some initial reservations, he was pleased they had taken the chance to embrace change.”It’s only natural [to encounter doubts],” Buchanan said. “The board, like most people in cricket, are so used to how teams have been selected in the past, through selection panels. That’s understandable. But I think this person will demonstrate over time that through better systems and better processes we can provide a far more reliable and consistent selection process, selection feedback and assessment of playing performance.”I have to applaud my board for backing me on this one, because it is a leap of faith for them. It hasn’t been tried before. But I really am pretty confident in how it should work; that’s why I needed to find the right person to ensure that it will work, and I believe that Kim is the man that can do the job for us.”Buchanan said Littlejohn’s experience at lower levels of cricket – he played in Perth’s first-grade competition and professionally in England, as well as coaching with Melbourne University – was adequate for the managerial role. He compared Littlejohn’s appointment to his own surprise nomination as Australia’s head coach in 1999, despite having played only seven first-class games.”I was asked to coach an international cricket team without any international cricket experience. We’re now asking Kim to run a national selection system where he has great experience in high performance and systems and process management, but less experience in cricket. For me, one of the reasons I was chosen for the job was that I brought some objectivity; I brought some planning. That’s what I see in Kim, and that’s exactly what this role will require.”I think [his cricket background] is sufficient. He can have good conversations with coaches or former selectors or former players because of the amount of cricket background that he has. I think that is sufficient for the job. One of his key roles is his ability to harness the knowledge and experience of so many experts over here. I think he’s excellent at doing that.”Littlejohn had been a leading candidate for the role of New Zealand’s team manager, a job that instead went to Mike Sandle. He was also considered by Cricket Australia as a potential replacement for their team manager Steve Bernard, who stepped down earlier this year. Littlejohn is set to begin his new role on September 19.

Afghanistan ready to tour Pakistan – Khaliq Dad

Afghanistan seamer Khaliq Dad has leant his support to Pakistan, saying his side was ready to travel to the terror-hit country when other international teams were reluctant to play there

Cricinfo staff07-Sep-2010Afghanistan seamer Khaliq Dad has lent his support to Pakistan, saying his team was ready to travel to the terror-hit country though other international sides were reluctant to do so.Dad, who led Afghanistan’s youth team to victory in a club-level tournament in Karachi, said, “It is always fantastic to play in Pakistan and I sincerely hope that international cricket returns to this cricket-loving country.”Pakistan has been a no-go zone for international teams since a terrorist attack on the Sri Lankan team bus in Lahore last year. Following the attack, the ICC stripped Pakistan of its matches in the 2011 World Cup and forced them to play what would have been their home series in UAE, New Zealand and England.Dad also endorsed the growing interest for the game in Afghanistan, following the national side’s rise through the ranks from the lower divisions of the World Cricket League to playing in the 2010 World Twenty20. “You saw the talent in the team and this is because cricket is now a craze in Afghanistan. From south to west, we have more and more interest in the game and more academies have opened and more companies are coming into the game.”It may sound incredible, but I tell you girls are taking a big interest in cricket and, although the society restrictions mean women’s cricket will take some time, interest is huge,” he said.

Hammond's unbeaten 109 leads Gloucestershire into semi-finals

Hundred returnee makes light work of Lancashire to set up Leicestershire clash

ECB Reporters Network25-Aug-2023Miles Hammond blazed his way to a breathtaking maiden List-A century as Gloucestershire trounced Lancashire by eight wickets at Bristol to secure a place in the semi-finals of the Metro Bank One Day Cup.Chasing a modest 178 for victory, the home side reached their target with 25.1 overs to spare thanks to a hard-hitting 109 not out from Hammond, who shared in a match-winning stand of 125 with Ollie Price in a one-sided play-off contest.Lancashire’s bowlers simply had no answer as Hammond helped himself to six sixes and 11 fours in a whirlwind 85-ball knock, while Price contributed 39 in 43 balls to help Gloucestershire secure a last-four showdown against Leicestershire at the Grace Road next Tuesday.Hammond’s innings was made all the more remarkable because he has spent most of the last month running drinks for Birmingham Phoenix in the Hundred. He did not make an appearance for them all season, though was released to play two group games for Gloucestershire.

Gloucestershire’s bowlers had earlier set-up a fifth consecutive win in the 50-over competition, dismissing the Lancashire for a wholly inadequate 177 in 44.3 overs. David Payne, Paul van Meekeren, Anwar Ali and Price all claimed two wickets.Only Tom Aspinwall offered meaningful resistance, the teenager top-scoring with a career-best 47 and adding 75 for the eighth wicket with Tom Bailey on a day Lancashire and their supporters will want to forget in a hurry.Given that rain was forecast later in the day, Keaton Jennings’ decision to bat first raised more than a few eyebrows inside the Seat Unique Stadium, and Lancashire’s captain must surely have been questioning his judgment when his side slumped to 90 for 7 inside 24 overs.Although the slow nature of a pitch used 12 days earlier for the visit of Somerset offered a degree of mitigation, there was no excusing the lax manner in which the visitors contributed to their own downfall, too many batters falling to ill-judged forcing shots when the situation demanded circumspection.

At least Jennings did not fall into that category, Lancashire’s batting talisman succumbing to an excellent delivery from Payne, who provided the Gloucestershire attack with a welcome cutting edge as he returned from Hundred duty with Welsh Fire. Soon after, George Bell nervously edged a catch behind off Tom Price and Dane Villas top-edged a pull to midwicket and fell to van Meekeren while the shine remained on the ball.Ollie Price then lured George Balderson onto the front foot and took a straightforward return catch, while George Lavelle was bowled by Anwar Ali via an inside edge before rain intervened with Lancashire teetering on 84 for 5, their prospects now heavily dependent upon opening batter Luke Wells.But Wells failed to add to his 33 runs, attempting to play Price to midwicket and being expertly stumped by James Bracey in the first over following the resumption.And worse followed when Matthew Hurst played back to van Meekeren and was pinned lbw in his crease, at which point Lancashire’s recognised batters were back in the pavilion and Aspinwall and Bailey were required to pick up the pieces. In no position to take risks, these two settled for finding the gaps and running hard between the wickets, a strategy that enabled them to at least stage a recovery of sorts.

Having surpassed his previous highest score of 22, Aspinwall hoisted Tom Price over midwicket for six in a rare show of aggression to bring up the 50 partnership. But Gloucestershire remained patient and were finally rewarded when Bailey pulled Anwar to midwicket and departed for 29.Aspinwall scored 47 in 71 balls and dominated a stand of 75 in 17.3 overs with Bailey for the eighth wicket, but fell in the next over, steering a ball from van Meekeren to point and setting off in pursuit of a risky single, only to be run out by Ollie Price.Jack Morley’s dismissal summed up Lancashire’s innings, the last man offering the meekest of return catches to Payne as Lancashire were shot out with 5.3 overs unused.Defending a modest total, Lancashire needed to take early wickets, and Bailey obliged when bowling Bracey for 12 in the fourth over with the score on 21. But any thoughts of a spirited fightback were quickly extinguished as Hammond and new batter Ollie Price set about reaffirming Gloucestershire’s dominance in a forthright stand that took the game away from Lancashire.When seam failed to muster a breakthrough, skipper Jennings turned to spin, only for Morley to be severely mauled by Hammond, who struck him for a straight six in the eleventh before plundering 16 off his next over. Hammond’s fifth four, a reverse-sweep at the expense of Wells, took him to 50 in 45 balls, and he meted out similar treatment to Balderson, who was hoisted over deep mid-wicket for six as the home side realised three figures inside 15 overs.In outstanding form, Price scored at almost a run a ball despite playing second fiddle to Hammond, who showed every intention of completing the task in hand before the predicted early evening rain could arrive. By the time Price was caught at the wicket off Bell’s offbreaks, Gloucestershire were just about home and dry.Having eclipsed his previous highest score of 95, made against Sussex in 2019, Hammond raised his hundred via 82 balls, straight driving Aspinwall for his ninth four to bring an enthusiastic Bristol crowd to its feet.

Healy and Bates huge opening stand takes Sixers top

Renegades fought back from a poor start to the chase but the target was always out of reach

AAP30-Oct-2022A rejuvenated Alyssa Healy blasted the Sydney Sixers to a comprehensive 37-run victory over the Melbourne Renegades in Ballarat and to the top of the WBBL points table.Healy thumped three sixes in her 78 off 54 balls while fellow opener Suzie Bates crunched 66 off 47 to steer the Sixers to 3 for 188 at Eastern Oval.Healy, who entered the fixture with just 53 runs at 10.60 this season, combined with Bates for a match-winning 151-run first-wicket stand, before both fell to Renegades captain Sophie Molineux.Bates was grassed twice before finally holing out to Shabnim Ismail on the deep midwicket boundary, before Molineux struck again two balls later, bowling Healy around her legs.But Molineux’s double-strike failed to slow Sixers, who plundered 36 off the last three overs, through Ash Gardner, Erin Burns and captain Ellyse Perry.”It was nice to spend some time out there,” Healy said. “I’ve been waiting seven years to have a really good partnership with Suzie Bates.”The fact we could do that today and get our team off to a good start was really pleasing. I’ve been praying to some sort of higher power for a bit of luck and I got it today.”Renegades’ unlikely pursuit of the imposing target started poorly when English spinner Sophie Ecclestone, the world’s No.1 T20 bowler, sent Hayley Matthews and Courtney Webb packing early.When Lauren Cheatle enticed Molineux to Stella Campbell at mid-off, the hosts were reeling at 5 for 38, before a WBBL record sixth-wicket stand of 81 off 52 balls between Carly Leeson and Rhiann O’Donnell gave them an unlikely sniff.They were aided by a burst of shoddy bowling from Sixers after the drinks break, with Campbell sending down five straight wides to concede 22 off the 11th over and Perry carted for 24 off the 13th.Perry made amends with a spectacular, high-leaping catch at cover to send O’Donnell packing, ending Renegades’ resistance.

T10 League president steps down, citing lack of 'proper systems and monitoring'

Two months before the second edition, Salman Iqbal has distanced himself from the tournament and warned Pakistani players against taking part in it

Umar Farooq19-Sep-2018Salman Iqbal, the president of the T10 League, has stepped down from the position two months before the second edition of the tournament, citing “lack of transparency” and lack of “proper systems and monitoring”. He has distanced himself from the venture and warned Pakistani players against taking part in the league.Iqbal, owner of the ARY Group and the Pakistan Super League’s second-most expensive team, Karachi Kings, was a major investor and partner in the T10 League with the UAE-based businessman Shaji ul Mulk. The second edition is set to run from November 23 to December 2. Prominent players like Rashid Khan, Chris Lynn, Brendon McCullum and Andre Russell are among those who have committed to taking part this season. On Monday, the eight franchises – up from six last season – gathered in Dubai for a mini draft to pick their icon players and choose four players to retain from their 2017 squads.The T10 League, a 10-overs-a-side format introduced by private cricket organisers in Sharjah, made its debut late last year, and the success of its opening season has led to an increase from six teams to eight and from a 13-match tournament held over four days to a 28-game event over ten days. The organisers have also hiked the franchise fee from USD 400,000 to USD 1.2 million for the two new teams.”I am resigning from my the position of President T10 league and disassociating myself from all its operations,” Iqbal said in a statement issued on Tuesday. “The reason for my resignation is lack of transparency, unprofessionalism and no proper structure of the league which I have been persistently asking for and can no longer continue without the same.”Private cricket leagues that are not controlled by ICC and have independent players monitoring system, added with lack of policies and procedures may lead to numerous misconducts. I had joined the venture as I felt the need to represent Pakistan in this new format and promote cricket and Pakistani cricketers at different platforms.”Iqbal’s presence was a major factor behind the participation of top Pakistani players in the inaugural season of the T10 League. Originally, PCB wasn’t willing to allow their players to take part since the league directly clashed with the commercial interests of the PSL in the UAE. But Iqbal, despite having a stake in PSL, managed to convinced the then PCB chairman Najam Sethi to let them participate.The PCB thereafter defended the league publicly despite resistance from other PSL teams and went on to allow its 10 highest-paid contracted players to participate. The board also levied a fee of USD 400,000 from the league, and said it would be spent on game development in the country. Sethi also involved the PCB board of governors to lend their support for the T10 league following a request from the Emirates Cricket Board, which runs cricket in the UAE. ICC had also sanctioned the league conditionally.”My prime objective for the league was to safeguard the interest of Pakistani players and promote Pakistani cricket,” Iqbal’s statement said. “With current standing of the league, it is obvious that the league is heading in wrong direction and we can not allow Pakistani players to be misused for vested interests of foreign individuals. Proper systems and monitoring should be in place and controlled by ICC, which safeguards all players and sanctity of the game. I believe it is better for me to part ways with an unsupervised T10 league.”Shaji Ul Mulk, the T10 League chairman, has not responded to ESPNcricinfo’s attempts to contact him for a comment.

Vince leads the rabble's rebellion

Australian legend Matthew Hayden called England “no-hopers” and insisted he didn’t know who James Vince was. You learn something new every day

George Dobell in Brisbane23-Nov-2017The desire to prove his doubters wrong helped inspire James Vince on the first day of the Ashes.Vince, recalled to bat at No. 3 despite a modest season in county cricket, stroked an elegant 83 to ensure England gained a foothold in the first Test. And while he missed out on a maiden Test century, Vince hoped he had earned some respect from those who dismissed him ahead of the series.Matthew Hayden, in particular, should have sat up and taken notice, according to Vince. Hayden, the former Australia batsman, dismissed England as “no hopers” and “a rabble” ahead of the series and insisted he didn’t know who half the team – including Vince – were.It was a remarkable comment bearing in mind that Vince has played seven Tests previously – enough, you would think, for a cricket pundit to have taken notice before passing judgement – and it clearly irritated the England camp.Ben Stokes, the England all-rounder who is currently in England awaiting the outcome of a police investigation, had already called into question Hayden’s quality as a pundit as a result of the comments, while Vince has now revealed he was inspired by such doubters.”If he didn’t know who we were before the game, he probably does now,” Vince said of Hayden after sharing a stand of 125 with fellow “unknown” Mark Stoneman. It was more than England managed in any stand during the Ashes series of 2013-14.”Reading comments like that gives you the motivation to go out there and make a statement,” he said.”A few comments I’ve read said that I’m not ready for Test cricket, so hopefully I’ve proved a few people wrong. It all gives you more inspiration to prove people wrong.”While Vince admitted he was disappointed to miss out on a century – he was run-out by Nathan Lyon after attempting an unwise single – he was able to appreciate it was a good start on his return to Test cricket.”No matter what score you get you always want more,” he said. “It would have been nice to be there at the end of the day, but stuff like that happens in cricket.”It’s great to get off to a good start. If I could have my first go at Test cricket again, I would, but that’s in the past now. I’ve been focused on capitalising on this opportunity and nailing a place in the team. I felt reasonably calm considering the occasion. I tried to enjoy it and maintain focus. I didn’t want them to get on top of me and I thought I got the balance just about right.”I’m sure lying in bed I’ll have a few thoughts about missing out on a century, but if you’d offered me 80-odd before play, I’d have taken it. And we had spoken about getting overs in the bowlers’ legs – what with them only having three seamers – and if we can get through the new ball in the morning, we can built to 300, 350 even 400. The first hour in the morning will dictate how things go.”It was a disappointing way to go. It was a great piece of fielding, but in retrospect I wouldn’t take the run.”Vince defended England’s scoring rate – they scored at 2.43 runs per over – by explaining the pitch was slow and Australia bowled well throughout the day.”The lack of pace made scoring hard,” he said. “Conditions weren’t what we expected – there wasn’t much pace in the wicket, though the ball came on a bit better as the day wore on – and they bowled pretty well.”They would have wanted some more pace in the pitch. But they kept coming all day and the lack of pace made it hard to score runs when they hit their areas. We’ll see how they respond in the morning after all those overs in their legs today.”

Duleep Trophy omitted from 2015-16 calendar

While announcing the calendar for the forthcoming domestic season well in advance, the BCCI has omitted Duleep Trophy for 2015-16 season

Amol Karhadkar20-Jul-2015While announcing the calendar for the forthcoming domestic season well in advance, the BCCI has omitted Duleep Trophy for 2015-16 season. According to a top BCCI executive, the inter-zonal first-class tournament has been left out for only one year.

Groups for inter-state tournaments

Ranji Trophy
Group A: Odisha, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Assam, Bengal, Haryana, Vidarbha, Delhi, Karnataka
Group B: Tamil Nadu, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab, Mumbai, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, Baroda, Railways, Andhra
Group C: Jharkhand, Saurashtra, Hyderabad, Kerala, Himachal Pradesh, Tripura, Services, Goa, Jammu & Kashmir
Vijay Hazare Trophy (domestic one-day competition)
Group A: Punjab, Mumbai, Tamil Nadu, Assam, Rajasthan, Services, Hyderabad [Host association: Hyderabad]
Group B: Karnataka, Railways, Gujarat, Jammu & Kashmir, Jharkhand, Kerala, Haryana [Host association: Karnataka]
Group C: Odisha, Vidarbha, Delhi, Baroda, Andhra, Tripura, Maharashtra [Host association: Delhi]
Group D: Bengal, Goa, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Saurashtra, Madhya Pradesh [Host association: Saurashtra]
Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy (domestic T20 competition)
Group A: Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Hyderabad, Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Haryana, Vidarbha [Host association: Vidarbha]
Group B: Punjab, Rajasthan, Jharkhand, Saurashtra, Tripura, Kerala, Jammu & Kashmir [Host association: Kerala]
Group C: Madhya Pradesh, Andhra, Delhi, Railways, Baroda, Assam, Goa [Host association: Baroda]
Group D: Mumbai, Odisha, Karnataka, Services, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra [Host association: Odisha]

“It is not cancelled or removed. It is deferred to the start of the next season,” Dr MV Sridhar, general manager of cricket operations, BCCI, told ESPNcricinfo. “Since it has been decided to plan domestic calendar taking India’s international calendar into consideration, it was decided that rather than overlapping the Duleep Trophy with the World Twenty20 in March, it would be apt to postpone it to the start of the 2016-17 season. Since India are set to play 16 Test matches in 2016-17, first-class cricket would get priority and the Duleep Trophy will be played at the start of the season.”For the last three domestic seasons, Duleep Trophy served as the season-opening tournament in October. But with the BCCI opting to advance the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy to avoid a clash with the Indian Premier League, the Duleep Trophy was dropped out of the calendar.Whether cancelled, or removed or postponed, the fact remains that the BCCI has preferred to host one-day and T20 tournaments over the Duleep Trophy, which till early 2000s used to be India’s premier selection tournament. With the Indian team starting to play international cricket virtually round-the-clock, the Duleep Trophy lost its shine and became a platform for fringe players to make a case for selection.Duleep Trophy isn’t the only tournament to have borne the brunt of BCCI’s restructuring. The Deodhar Trophy will be played as a three-team tournament for the second season. The domestic one-day winning team will compete for the trophy against two teams chosen by the national selectors. It would mean that the NKP Salve Challenger Trophy is as good as scrapped. The last two editions of Challenger Trophy were played in the same format as the revised Deodhar Trophy.Even in the past, the BCCI has scrapped domestic tournaments for a season or two. After staging the inaugural Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy in 2006-07, the BCCI had not organised it for the next two years citing lack of a suitable slot in the calendar.

Night Tests could be 'several years away'

Day-night Test cricket could still be “several years” away, according to the head of the Kookaburra company, who believes a red ball is the only one that can last 80 overs

Cricinfo staff31-Jan-2010Day-night Test cricket could still be “several years” away, according to the head of the Kookaburra company, who believes a red ball is the only one that can last 80 overs. Cricket Australia have asked Kookaburra to deliver a ball that can be used for Test cricket under lights and a pink ball is being trialled over the next week in Futures League matches.The ICC and Cricket Australia are keen to hold day-night Tests as soon as possible but Rob Elliot, Kookaburra’s managing director, said the time-frame could be longer than the authorities wished. He said the main problem was trying to replicate the way a red ball wears over a day’s play.”I know CA are hoping it might be a couple of years, but in all honesty it could be several years,” Elliot told the . “We’ll be doing some trials, but it’s a bit open-ended. If we have to make some further changes, we’ll have to go through the process again and so it will go on until we can give the administrators something that they can live with.”I don’t believe any ball [other than red] has got 80 overs in it. It’s up to administrators to decide what they constitute as being acceptable and what’s not acceptable. It’s going to cost a lot of money and it has already cost a lot of money. I don’t think it’s going to be solved overnight.”The problem with a red ball is its visibility at night. Elliot suggested that one option could be to use two pink balls, one from each end, meaning that by the 80-over mark each ball would only have 40 overs of wear and tear.During the 1990s, yellow and orange balls were tested in Sheffield Shield games and Simon Katich last week said that when he faced the orange ball he felt it performed like a red ball. However, Elliot said the problem with the orange ball was that on television it appeared to develop a “comet-like tail that flared and sometimes got lost in the background”.A Futures League match between South Australia and Western Australia at Adelaide Oval starting on Tuesday will feature pink balls and play will run from 2.30pm to 9.30pm. In the same round of matches, a pink ball will be used in Brisbane for a day game and a white ball will be tested in Melbourne, also for a day game.

No reason why we can't score 400 tomorrow – Trevor Bayliss

Trevor Bayliss, the Sri Lanka coach, has said that setting India a target of “150 on a wearing wicket” was probably the best his team could hope for at this stage

Cricinfo staff04-Dec-2009Trevor Bayliss, the Sri Lanka coach, has said that setting India a target of “150 on a wearing wicket” was probably the best his team could hope for at this stage, after the hosts took a 333-run first innings lead on the third day in Mumbai.”From a win point of view, it just doesn’t look right at the moment but, on day one when there was a bit in the track, we made 366 for 8 having lost a few wickets in the middle,” Bayliss said. “If our top-order batters can get us off to a good start and bat for a long time there is no reason why we can’t score 400 in a day tomorrow. It needs some very hard work and the players I am sure are capable of doing it. Who knows what the wicket will be like on day five?”Sri Lanka had to bat out three overs after India’s declaration on 726 for 9 and they reached 11 for no loss at stumps. Bayliss said the team was looking to their “three big players” and hoped for solid contributions from Nos. 3, 4, and 5 – the out-of-form Kumar Sangakkara, Mahela Jayawardene and Thilan Samaraweera.Bayliss, however, said that he was happy the way Sri Lanka fought back today to capture eight Indian wickets, in a manner similar to the second Test in Kanpur. “I was very happy with the boys – the same as the second Test when we faced 417 for 2 and we came back the next day, taking 225 for 8. It would have been quite easy to have gone for a lot more runs than we did, but we stuck to it and showed a bit of fight and character. We were just up against unbelievable batting from [Virender] Sehwag.””The guys tried most things, different fields, bowling different sides of the wicket but [no matter] where they put the ball he [Sehwag] was skillful enough to put it away into the gaps. It was one of those days you needed 20 fielders out there.”Muttiah Muralitharan, who had gone wicketless and taking a hiding on the second day, made a comeback of sorts on day three. He dismissed Sehwag early and went on to take three more wickets, finishing with 195 for 4. “Murali is very philosophical about things. During his career this is not the first time it’s happened to him,” Bayliss said. “For a guy who has taken so many wickets it has not happened to him very often. He realises that’s what happens in Test cricket on good wickets against very good players. Today Murali got four wickets and showed that he is still able to take wickets at this level.”After a day on which an edge from Rahul Dravid and a close lbw shout against Sachin Tendulkar were both given not out, Bayliss said he did not know why the umpire review system was not being used in this series. Tillakaratne Dilshan, too, was erroneously given out bat-pad in the first innings soon after reaching his century.”The question that’s got to be asked is, why the referral system is being used in every other series barring this one, when the ICC said that it should be used after October 1,” Bayliss said. “No one’s explained to us yet why it’s not being used when it’s being used everywhere else in the world. If Dilshan was able to go and make a big score in the first innings, things might have been a bit different.”

Another Brookes barrage puts Worcestershire on victory trail

Allrounder takes match tally of sixes to 15 as visitors close in on rare Edgbaston win

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay24-Jul-2025 Warwickshire 184 and 55 for 2 need a further 338 runs to beat Worcestershire 333 and 243 (Brookes 87, Roderick 50) Ethan Brookes climbed into Warwickshire’s bowlers again, in record-breaking fashion, to keep Worcestershire on course for a vital Rothesay County Championship victory at Edgbaston.Of his side’s second-innings total of 243, Brookes’ share was a violent 87 from 137 balls. He struck seven sixes which, added to his eight in the first innings, amounted to 15 in the match – a record for any individual at Edgbaston, surpassing the 12 by Ian Botham for Somerset in 1985 and Dean Jones for Australia in 1989.The former Warwickshire allrounder’s barrage left his old team needing 393 to win and they closed the third day on 55 for 2 after losing both openers in the first four overs.Worcestershire resumed on the third morning on 31 without loss, already 180 ahead, but were pegged back by disciplined bowling. The opening partnership reached 80 in 32 overs before three wickets fell for 12 runs in 51 balls. Gareth Roderick (50 off 110) edged an expansive drive at Beau Webster. Jake Libby’s 149 minutes of toil for 25 ended when he pulled Ed Barnard to midwicket. Kashif Ali collected a tortuous 29-ball duck when he pulled Corey Rocchiccioli to short fine leg.As Warwickshire went on the defensive, Rocchiccioli bowling on or outside leg stump, Worcestershire’s batters appeared unsure how to handle such a big advantage. That advantage began to diminish as Ethan Bamber bowled Adam Hose and had Tom Taylor caught at point and Rocchiccioli’s leg-stump probing was rewarded when Brett D’Oliviera tickled a leg-side catch to wicketkeeper Kai Smith and Ben Allison nudged to leg slip.Seven wickets fell for 52 runs in 22 overs but Brookes defended diligently as he awaited support. It arrived from Bertie Foreman, who got the scoreboard moving again before edging Webster to second slip, and then Adam Finch. Having added 88 in the first innings, this time Brookes and Finch put on 91.The cricket descended into farce after tea as Warwickshire went ultra-negative. Rocchiccioli wheeled away while Olly Hannon-Dalby bowled far outside off stump to deny Brookes scope to seek the short boundary. Warwickshire’s supporters bore it stoically though if an opposing team had resorted to such tactics some forthright views would have emanated from the stands. The grim spectacle concluded when Brookes hoisted Barnard to deep fine leg and Finch sliced Webster to second slip,Warwickshire faced a target of 393 in a day plus 26 overs, weather permitting, and in moderate light, soon lost their openers. Rob Yates was trapped in front by a rapid shooter from Khurram Shahzad; Alex Davies chipped to midwicket. Dan Mousley and Zen Malik batted assiduously to the close but Worcestershire would be gutted, from this position, not to bank their first Championship win at Edgbaston since 1993.

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