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Naved-ul-Hasan loses father

Naved-ul-Hasan Rana: sad loss© Getty Images

Pakistan’s joy at reaching the final of the VB Series has been tempered by the news that Rana Naved-ul-Hasan’s father has died. Rana Mehdi Hasan, 60, had been suffering from a lung infection and passed away during the match.It is the second time in as many matches for Pakistan that one of the squad has suffered in this way – after Sunday’s victory over Australia, Younis Khan flew home to attend the funeral of his father, and was said to be “shattered” as he departed from Perth Airport.A spokesman for the Pakistan Cricket Board expressed his condolences in a statement. “We realize that you were far away on national duty on the tragic day and fully share your grief. May Allah Almighty bless the departed soul and give you and your family the strength to bear this loss.”The burial will take place on Wednesday in his home town of Sheikhupura. Naved’s mother has asked her son not to return home, but to continue on the tour and take part in the finals.

'Australia A tour was in doubt' – PCB

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) admitted that the Australian A team’s tour to Pakistan, which ended last week, was at one point under threat after two bomb blasts in Lahore.Shaharyar Khan, chairman PCB, told journalists at a press function in Lahore, “The PCB moved very carefully to persuade the Australians to continue their tour because such bomb blasts are minor incidents and there is nothing serious.”The chairman revealed that the Australians expressed considerable concern over the bomb blasts as they were under the impression that Lahore was among the safest cities in Pakistan.He added, however, that their security was not in doubt and that the board would intensify their security arrangements further. Shaharyar also reiterated that no concerns had been raised by the England and Wales Cricket Board about security for their tour of Pakistan after the bomb blasts.Shaharyar said, “I am going to attend the ICC meetings next month and will have bilateral meetings with English, Indian and Sri Lankan counterparts and I will try to satisfy the England board, if needed, to assure them of their safe stay in Pakistan.”The bomb blast occurred just before the three-match one-day series began and killed six people, injuring a further 30. Australia A eventually won the one-day series 2-1 but lost the two four-day match series 1-0.

Dyson to prepare team for New Zealand tour

John Dyson: on the last lap as the Sri Lankan coach?© Getty Images

John Dyson will be back on March 1 to continue his role as the coach of the Sri Lankan team before their Test tour to New Zealand in April. Mohan de Silva, the president of Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC), said that Dyson had agreed to return to Sri Lanka and complete his contract which ends on March 31 and prepare the team for the two Tests against New Zealand.Dyson angered a section of the SLC top brass when he back to Sydney straight after the cancellation of the New Zealand tour, following the tsunami disaster, without informing them. The SLC’s ExCo was divided on whether they should retain Dyson and give him a fresh contract or look for someone else to replace him.However the issue appears to have thinned out following Dyson’s talks with de Silva and Duleep Mendis in Australia recently. de Silva said that SLC have offered new terms in the contract which Dyson hopes to discuss with SLC officials when he is here. Depending on the outcome of the discussions Dyson’s contract could be extended to anything from one year to until the 2007 World Cup in West Indies.Dyson, the former Australian opener, had succeeded Dav Whatmore after signing a 19-month contract in September 1, 2003. Within that period of time Sri Lanka improved their rankings in both forms of the game, moving from seventh to fifth in Tests and leaped from seventh to second place in the one-dayers.Sri Lanka are due to play New Zealand in two Tests at Napier and Wellington, apart from a three-day warm-up game from March 26. The national cricket selectors named a pool of 24 players for training from which the final squad will be selected. These players will be involved in SLC’s provincial tournament which gets underway tomorrow and ends with the final at Dambulla on March 6.

Queen's Park Oval gets a thumbs-up

The Queen’s Park Oval, one of 11 venues in line to host matches during the 2007 World Cup, has been given the thumbs-up by the International Cricket Council’s Venue Assessment Team ,which is currently in the Caribbean. The 13-member team includes Chris Dehring, managing director of the 2007 World Cup. The group started their evaluation on Monday, and had already visited St Lucia, St Vincent and Grenada prior to landing in Trinidad.Willie Rodriguez, president of the Queen’s Park Oval Club, said that the team left the venue satisfied with what they had seen. “At this early stage, it is fair to say that the presentation was very commendable,” he said. “We had a clip from Tourism and Industrial Development Company that gave us a broad span of what Trinidad and Tobago is all about, and it was quite impressive. The walk around the Oval was also met with very positive responses. So at this early stage, I think it is fair to say that they are quite satisfied with what they have seen.”Rodriguez, a former Test legspinner who has also been a selector and manager of the West Indian team, added that he expected the stadium facilities to be further improved – the Geddes Grant Stand will be replaced by a new structure later this year, and the famous Trini Posse Stand would also be rebuilt. The pavilion is also set to be refurbished, and Rodriguez said that there would be a vote on whether to admit female members at the end of June.The ICC team also met Roger Boynes, the sports minister, and David O’Brien, chairman of the Technical Bid Committee. Boynes once again reiterated Trinidad and Tobago’s preparedness to host the event. “As they go about verifying our capabilities, I want to let them know that they will be exposed to the culture, food, beautiful people, that makes us unique in the world,” he said. “We are ready, we are opening our arms to the entire team, as we prepare to lay the foundation for World Cup 2007 in the region and in particular Trinidad and Tobago.”Dehring was also confident about West Indies’ ability to host the tournament. “The types of presentation and the level of preparedness the countries have demonstrated so far speak volumes for the kind of work that has gone in,” he said. “And I believe that we are the best prepared region to have hosted the World Cup.”The evaluation will span two months, and the ICC will announce on July 4 which countries have been given the right to host World Cup matches. The awarding of individual fixtures will be done in Montego Bay on July 13.

Nazir special brings Sialkot back

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Imran Nazir swung Sialkot back into contention with a fine hundred © Getty Images

The second day of the match between the domestic champions from India and Pakistan ran along similar lines to the first. Uttar Pradesh’s bowlers reduced Sialkot to 96 for 6 but Imran Nazir’s cavalier century from No.7 boosted them to a competitive 261. UP ended the day on 14 for no loss with an overall lead of 69.Nazir had initially opened the innings but was forced to retire after just two balls because of a shoulder injury sustained during fielding. He returned to the middle after the top order capitulated to some disciplined bowling and outstanding catching from Uttar Pradesh. Sialkot’s batsmen were guilty of the same error committed by UP’s top order on the first day: they were too hasty on a slow pitch that offered little bounce. As a result several wickets were lost to indiscreet shots.When Shoaib Malik departed for 24, one of many Sialkot batsmen who frittered starts, Nazir decided it was time to get a move on. He broke loose when given the chance while at the same time played his percentages to ensure minimum risk. He lofted Piyush Chawla, the young legspinner, down the ground repeatedly and got stuck into the fast bowlers. When his shoulder caused him any sort of discomfort, he merely gave it a short massage and continued pummelling the boundary hoardings. He steamed to his century off just 96 balls and formed the mainstay of a 122-run partnership with Tahir Mughal for the seventh wicket.UP had Sialkot by the scruff of the neck before Nazir arrived. In the first two sessions they bowled a tight line and forced the batsmen into mistakes. RP Singh, India’s left-arm seamer, got one to lift suddenly on a dead pitch and Shahid Yousuf, who had raced to 24 off 17 balls, nicked an attempted cut. Mansoor Ahmed had his middle stump uprooted by a shooter and Shezhad Malik was struck in front by another that kept low but they should have known better than to play back on a pitch with such low bounce. To compound Sialkot’s woes, Suresh Raina pulled off an acrobatic catch – diving one-handed to his left at cover – and Ravikant Shukla matched it at slip to dismiss Malik.Then began a spectacular fightback typified by Nazir’s flashing blade. Though the boundaries flowed from Nazir’s bat, Mughal’s support was invaluable. Once Mughal fell, deceived by Chawla’s googly, Asif followed and Sialkot were hobbling at 218 for 8. Nazir then proceeded to farm the strike and propelled the score to 261.Thirteen wickets fell on the day and three of those were of UP’s first innings which resumed on 268 for 7. Sialkot started perfectly when Sarfraz Ahmed snared Amir Khan with the second ball of the day. However, Rizwan Shamshad marshalled the tail and his innings of 84 helped UP cross the 300 run mark.In spite of Nazir’s innings UP ended the day with the upperhand. Their openers Rohit Prakash and Shivakant Shukla negotiated eight overs to see them through to stumps without any damage. They even managed to keep out Mohammad Asif who had recovered from a back problem that allowed him to bowl only 6.4 overs in the first innings.

Uttar PradeshAmir Khan c Mashood b Sarfraz 23 (269 for 8)
RP Singh b Mughal 15 (306 for 9)
Rizwan Shamshad lbw Rehman 84 (315 all out)
SialkotShahid Yousuf c Amir b RP Singh 24 (24 for 1)
Mansoor Amjad b Kumar 3 (15 for 2)
Majid Jehangir c Raina b Chawla 15 (45 for 3)
Abdur Rehman c Mashood b Kumar 0 (55 for 4)
Shezhad Malik lbw Srivastava 14 (89 for 5)
Shoaib Malik c Shukla b Srivastava 24 (96 for 6)
Tahir Mughal b Chawla 29 (218 for 7)
Mohammad Asif b Chawla 0 (218 for 8)
Sarfraz Ahmed b Kumar 4 (236 for 9)
Imran Nazir c Raina b RP Singh 123 (261 all out)

Central Zone skittled out for 154

North Zone 35 for 1 trail Central Zone 154 (Joginder 3-16, Bhandari 3-56) by 119 runs
Scorecard
Gagan Khoda, the Central Zone captain, must have regretted his decision to bat first as his team were skittled out for only 154 on the first day at Gurgaon. Khoda’s 46 saved his team further embarrassment that Central looked to be heading for when they were 64 for 5. Vineet Saxena (26) and Naman Ojha (25) prevent a complete disaster with their 43-run stand. Joginder Sharma, the medium pacer from Haryana, took 3 for 16 from his 14 overs and picked up the important wickets of Khoda (46) and Jai Prakash Yadav (3). Amit Bhandari, the medium pacer from Delhi, also picked up three wickets. North ended the day at 35 for 1, with Gautam Gambhir being the only casualty. He was bowled by Yadav after taking more than an hour to reach 4. Aakash Chopra and Yuvraj Singh were at the crease when stumps were drawn.

Renaissance men

Wisden Asia CricketBrian Close (England, 1976)
So much for respecting your elders. With England about to front up to West Indies’ all-new four-pronged pace attack, there was only one man to call – the masochistic Yorkshireman, Close, who was still up for a bit of rough and tumble at 45. Nine years after his last Test appearance, and a staggering 27 after his first, Close took one hell of a beating as Michael Holding, Andy Roberts and Co got stuck in. It would’ve been sickening if Close didn’t seem to be relishing it so much: he took to chesting short balls down like a centre-back. One gruesome evening at Old Trafford in particular, the Windies quicks painted Close’s body all the colours of the rainbow. And black.Wayne Larkins (England, 1989-90)
No more than a decent, if occasionally devastating, county batsman to most, Larkins had not played for England for over eight years and 85 Tests when Graham Gooch hand-picked him on his first tour as captain, to play against West Indies in their prime. In a rich, pre-Atherton era of duff England openers, it was still a major surprise: Ned Flanders seemed to have as good a chance as Larkins. Gooch said it was because Larkins had always been impressive against his county, Essex; closer inspection showed that Larkins had hardly scored a run against them. No matter, it worked: Larkins hit the winning runs in England’s historic victory in the first Test – their first against the West Indies in 16 yearsColin Cowdrey (England, 1974-75)
At the age of 42, and after 109 Tests of outstanding service, Cowdrey had earned the right to put his feet up. But when English fingers starting snapping and crackling like Rice Krispies in Australia, Cowdrey was flown down in an emergency. Four days later he was facing Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson at their most rampant on the Perth trampoline. Cowdrey couldn’t turn a tide that was already swimming violently against England – they were battered 4-1 – but as always he got in line and hung around, courageous to the last.Younis Ahmed (Pakistan, 1986-87)
Nobody has missed more consecutive Tests between appearances: 104, over a whopping 17 years spent serving a ban for touring South Africa. At 39, Younis came back into the hottest kitchen of all – Pakistan against India, in India. He lasted only two Tests. During the second, at Ahmedabad, he complained of back trouble, but instead of resting made his way to a discotheque. Imran Khan, the captain, made sure that it was his last game.Cyril Washbrook (England, 1956)
It was just another day at the office. But then Cyril Washbrook’s fellow England selectors asked him to leave the room. When Washbrook, aged 41 and out of Test cricket for over five years, returned, they asked him to return to the side for the third Test against Australia at Headingley following England’s defeat at Lord’s. He did, and coming to the crease at 17 for 3, struck a splendid 98, with England going on to an innings-victory.Bob Simpson (Australia, 1977-78)
At the age of 41, 10 years after his last Test appearance and nine years after he had retired from first-class cricket, Simpson was invited to captain, coach and cajole a young, Packer-gutted Australian side against India and West Indies. He thwacked 176 in his second Test back, and played spin as imperiously as ever, though his team went down in the Caribbean. Being a father figure to a group of young Aussies was good practice for Simpson: 10 years later he coached them to World Cup glory on the subcontinent.Carl Hooper (West Indies, 2000-2001)
Unlikely on any number of counts. First, that he’d quit international cricket two years earlier on the eve of the World Cup, when he was roundly castigated for leaving his country in the lurch. Second, that this most laconic, laissez-faire of men, once seemingly the antithesis of a team player, should return as captain. Yet for a time it worked: it was under Hooper that West Indies first saw light at the end of the tunnel. And it was telling that such an eternal underachiever should average 46 as captain as against 34 when not. Fate had another card left to play, however: the 2003 World Cup campaign, in which Hooper did very little wrong apart from lose the odd toss and fail to control the weather, turned out to be his last.Simon O’Donnell (Australia, 1988-89)
Most comebacks are dependent on selectorial whim. For O’Donnell, it was more serious than that. As a hard-hitting batsman and hard-to-hit death bowler he was a key member of Australia’s 1987 World Cup-winning squad. But after the tournament O’Donnell, in his mid-20s and in peak physical condition – he had earlier been offered professional terms to play Australian Rules football – was diagnosed with a cancerous lump on his ribs. Yet within a year he was back under the Baggy Green, and soon carting 74 off 29 balls in an Austral-Asia Cup semi-final. The cliché of the brave innings never seemed quite the same again.Fred Titmus (England, 1974-75)
Many cricketers have got down on one knee to slog-sweep; quite a few have played on one leg. But one toe? Titmus did. Aged 42, and seven years after he lost four toes in a sickening boating accident in the Caribbean – his left foot got stuck in a propeller – Titmus was recalled for his third Ashes tour. And though his offspin wasn’t especially successful, he stood up to Lillee and Thomson and crashed England’s highest score, 61, on the same Perth flyer that greeted Cowdrey, in his first Test back.Srinivas Venkataraghavan (India, 1982-83)
Dumped after the series against Australia in 1979-80, having gone nearly a decade without a Test five-for, it was a major surprise when Venkat returned, at 37, for a trip to the West Indies, partnering bowlers (Laxman Sivaramakrishnan and Maninder Singh) who hadn’t even been born when he made his Test debut. Venkat’s last five-for had been in the Caribbean, in 1970-71; this time around he offered control, as always, but struggled for penetration. The following winter he drifted off towards a successful umpiring career.Aasif Karim (Kenya, 2002-03)
Karim retired after captaining Kenya in their disappointing 1999 World Cup campaign, and as his insurance business took off he hardly touched a bat or ball for four years. But he was whistled up, Roger Milla-style, for the 2003 World Cup to give Kenya a bit of experience, and despite a portly, balding figure that was a picture of innocuousness, gave the otherwise omnipotent Australians the heebie-jeebies with a surreal spell of 3 for 7 off 8.2 overs in the Super Six match at Durban. They were the last wickets of his career; as Verbal Kint said of Keyser Soze, “Like that, he’s gone”. But Karim had had his 50 balls of fame, and when the romance of the World Cup is on the agenda, he will not be forgotten.The ExtrasBob Taylor (England, 1986)
Having retired from first-class cricket two years earlier Taylor was at Lord’s for the first Test against New Zealand, as host for the sponsors Cornhill. On the second day, however, he found himself keeping wicket at the age of 45 as a substitute for the injured Bruce French.Ian Bishop (West Indies, 1992-93 & 1995)
It got him in the end – ending a career of ridiculous promise at 30 – but Bishop overcame serious back trouble to come back twice, each time with a serious bang, first in the crunch series Down Under in 1992-93 and then in England in 1995.

Rain plays spoilsport on first day of tour game

Day 1 close Board President’s XI 23 for 0 (Chopra 9*, Sehwag 9*)
Scorecard


The covers being removed from the pitch at Visakhapatnam. Only 45 minutes play was possible on the first day © AFP

Only ten overs of play was possible on a severely truncated first day at Visakhapatnam, as New Zealand’s tour to India got off to a wet and gloomy start. Heavy rains over the last couple of days left the outfield too damp for play to start until after tea, and when the match did finally get underway at 3pm local time, the Board President’s XI could only bat for around 45 minutes before a sharp downpour sent the players scurrying back to the pavilion.In the brief passage of play which did happen, Virender Sehwag – opting to open the innings to get some practice at the top of the order before the Test series – and Akash Chopra put together 23 runs after Sehwag had elected to bat. Both openers were largely untroubled by New Zealand’s new-ball attack of Ian Butler and Michael Mason.Sehwag got off the mark in style, punching the first ball he faced, from Mason, down the ground for four. In Mason’s next over, Sehwag played a flashing cut over gully for four. Chopra was more circumspect, his only boundary coming off an outside edge which went along the ground and through the slip cordon. Apart from that stroke, Chopra was in control, playing close to his body and eschewing any risks.The Board President’s line-up excluded Wasim Jaffer, Amit Uniyal and Tinu Yohannan, while New Zealand left out Jacob Oram and Daryl Tuffey. Both Oram and Tuffey are likely to play in the Tests, and their omissions from this match were probably precautionary measures to ensure against injury on a ground where the run-up areas were still slightly damp.The match has now effectively been reduced to a two-day encounter, and with more rain forecast over the weekend, New Zealand might only be left with one warm-up game before the first Test. Both captains have, however, agreed to start 30 minutes earlier on the two remaining days to squeeze in as much play as possible. Whether the weather actually allows them to is another matter.

Bari replaces Sohail as Pakistan's chief selector


Aamer Sohail: no longer the man in charge
&copyAFP

Aamer Sohail has been sacked as the chairman of Pakistan’s national selection committee. Wasim Bari, a former Pakistan wicketkeeper, has been appointed as his replacement. Bari will head a panel that also consists of Iqbal Qasim, Sultan Rana and Ehtshamuddin. Qasim is also the convenor of the junior selection committee, and will be the link between the two committees.Bari had served as chief selector earlier, but was sacked following Pakistan’s poor performance in the 2003 World Cup. Tauqir Zia, then the chief of Pakistan’s board, had out a new team in charge of Pakistan cricket, with Sohail being chief selector, Rameez Raja being the chief executive and Javed Miandad being the coach.Strong divisions surfaced within this new team, however, with Sohail and Miandad squabbling openly and Inzamam-ul-Haq, Pakistan’s captain, taking Miandad’s side. Sohail was considered close to Zia, but his pitch in the extablishment was queered when Zia abruptly quit two months ago, and was replaced by Shaharyar Khan, a former diplomat.Bari’s reinstatement is expected to affect the composition of the team, and there is even the possibility that Waqar Younis may make yet another comeback.

Early start for C&G Trophy semi-finals

Channel 4 have successfully arranged for an early start to the semi-finals of the Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy. Both matches will now start at 10.15am, in an attempt to avoid a repeat of the situation in the first Test against Zimbabwe at Lord’s, when live transmission was cut on the dot of 6 o’clock.Gloucestershire’s match against Derbyshire will be broadcast live from Bristol on Thursday, August 7, with Worcestershire’s home tie against Lancashire following two days later. Reserve days have been allocated for both matches to avoid, if possible, the use of the Duckworth/Lewis system to engineer a result.Speaking after the Lord’s Test, Tim Lamb, the chief executive of the ECB, had expressed his disappointment at Channel 4’s failure to provide full coverage, and had raised the possibility of an earlier start to England Test matches, which have already been brought forward to 10.45am this year.”We are seriously considering [Channel 4’s] requirements and we will be discussing a 10.30am start as of from next year,” said Lamb. “It is very disappointing when we don’t see the end of play live on TV, but we are talking to Channel 4 in an atmosphere of cooperation and consultation. We understand the constraints they are working under in terms of scheduling, particularly when they are trying to attract that important early evening 18 to 34-year-old audience.”Thursday, August 7 Gloucestershire v Derbyshire at Bristol
Saturday, August 9 Worcestershire v Lancashire at WorcesterBoth matches begin at 10.15am

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