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.

Andhra Pradesh hold nerve in tight contest

Andhra Pradesh registered a tense five-run win over Tamil Nadu in their Ranji one-day match at Visakhapatnam on Saturday.Winning the toss, Andhra Pradesh decided to bat first and a third-wicket partnership of 95 runs between AS Pathak and Y Venugopal Rao formed the backbone of a final total of 260 for six. Pathak made 50 off 81 balls, while Venugopal Rao made 68 off 96 balls.Captain MSK Prasad scored 58 off 60 balls, but the real boost in the scoring rate came from RVC Prasad’s blistering 42 off 26 balls, with four fours and two sixes.Tamil Nadu lost Sridharan Sriram and Hemang Badani early, but Sridharan Sharath’s responsible knock kept his side in the hunt till the very final over. His 82 off 120 balls was well supported by skipper Robin Singh’s 50 off 56 balls.SV Saravanan’s 37 off 34 balls further down the order included some quick running, but Andhra Pradesh bowlers held their nerve to restrict Tamil Nadu to 255/7.

England v Zimbabwe – First Test, Day 1 Report

It was a momentous day for Zimbabwe, the minnows of Test cricket, at theHeadquarters of the game, as they embarked on their first ever Test series inEngland.This historical tour has been a long while coming; eight years and 41 Testsafter Zimbabwe were elevated to Test status. It will be remembered thatEngland had opposed their entry to the highest level of cricket until 1992.In view of that, it is of some significance to note that the relative newentrants to the international scene have maintained a parity in the resultsof their previous encounters with England at both levels of cricket.Indeed, at one stage, the sequence of victories, in the shorter version ofthe game, stood at 6-2 in favour of Zimbabwe. This was not merely aflattering margin, but in fact, arose from the dedication and hard work that Zimbabwe had put into their game. They would, no doubt, wish to forge ahead in the outcome of Tests as well.Despite the distraction of the current situation at home and the unwelcomingweather conditions that the tourists have had to endure from the start ofthis tour, the players have remained focused to the task in their endeavourto reverse the result of their 2-0 defeat last month in the Caribbean.However, on the evidence of their performance on the opening day of thisinaugural Test, it appears that it would be quite a toil for them to get thebetter of England, a side which occupies only one position above them at thebottom of the table in the unofficial world Test rankings. They certainly did not rise to the occasion; the first day of the Lord’s Test match has always been regarded as something special.To have lost three wickets in the first six overs before the total had evenreached double figures would indicate, perhaps, a loss of nerves. But it hasto be said their batting has had a look of deficiency, judging from their previous couple of Test series. It has been a major problem through adispiriting recent past.Just how brittle the batting has been was further exemplified in their failing to chase a meagre 93 to win a Test against West Indies only six weeks ago.Zimbabwe’s wretched performance with the bat today arose from a combination of a lack of application and poor shot selection.England’s pace bowlers, on the other hand, took advantage of the favourableovercast conditions on a pitch which had a bit of grass on it. Zimbabwe neverlooked like being able to make a recovery after Andy Caddick had inflicted the early damage to the innings, removing the first three wickets for 2 in a space of nine balls.His figures, however, were not quite as remarkable as Ed Giddins who, playingin only his second Test match, had a haul of 5 for 15 from seven overs.Zimbabwe, through a most inept batting performance, had made the England bowling appear unplayable.

Wolves eyeing Kilman contract talks

Wolves have started to make a habit of moving some of their key players out of the club over the past few years.

Diogo Jota headed to Liverpool in 2020, followed more recently by Adama Traore’s loan switch to Barcelona during the previous January transfer window.

With the upcoming summer transfer window in mind, it seems as though the Old Gold will look to take some precautions in making sure one of their current key figures doesn’t follow in Jota and Traore’s footsteps with a Molineux exit.

What’s the talk?

Speaking to GIVEMESPORT, journalist Pete O’Rourke had this to say about Max Kilman’s immediate future at Molineux and what Wolves could do to keep him at the club amid recent transfer links with fellow Premier League club Chelsea.

He said: “I’m sure there will be contract talks, maybe in the summer, just to improve his terms and bring him more in line with the other top earners at Molineux.

“It would show his reward for the progress that he’s made for the club as well.”

Fans will be buzzing

Since arriving at the Midlands club back in the 2018 summer window on a free transfer from Maidenhead United, the 24-year-old has gone on to make himself a pivotal figure for the Old Gold.

He has amassed 63 senior appearances in a Wolves shirt across all competitions, chipping in with one goal and two assists along the way.

Taking into account how the Englishman has managed to tackle more opposition players (49) this season than any other Wolves centre-back and make more blocks (48) than any player in Bruno Lage’s squad, it’s safe to say that the £8.1m-rated man has played a big part in the Old Gold’s decent defensive record in this campaign.

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Additionally, with Kilman being younger than his fellow centre-backs Conor Coady, Romain Saiss and Willy Boly, it would make sense that the club would be desperate to keep hold of him as he has the potential longevity ahead of him to be a long-term feature at Molineux for the foreseeable future.

With all of that in mind, it’s safe to suggest that a lot of fans connected with the Midlands club would be delighted to see the defender put pen to paper on a new deal that would ward off any potential interest from elsewhere.

In other news: 49 tackles won: “Phenomenal” Wolves gem has been Lage’s “standout” player this season – opinion

Leeds tracking Timo Hubers

Leeds United are tracking FC Koln defender Timo Hubers ahead of a possible summer swoop, according to The Daily Mail.

The Lowdown: Hubers profiled

The 25-year-old has established himself as a regular in the Bundesliga over recent months, starting 12 of the last 13 league games for Koln.

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His contract runs until 2023, and the 6 foot 2 centre-back appears to be at the peak of his powers with a career-high £2.7m Transfermarkt valuation.

He was named as a substitute against Jesse Marsch’s RB Leipzig earlier in the season, and it seems as if the new Leeds manager could be working with the German next season.

The Latest: Leeds interest on Hubers

The Daily Mail shared a transfer story on Hubers on Monday, name-checking Leeds with an interest.

Premier League rivals Crystal Palace, Newcastle, Southampton and West Ham are also tracking the defender, who could be on the move for just £6m over the coming months.

The Verdict: Defensive shake-up?

The Whites have had a season to forget when it comes to goals conceded, shipping 68 in 31 games, so Victor Orta and Marsch could be interested in shaking up the club’s defensive ranks.

Neither Marcelo Bielsa nor Marsch have had a settled centre-back pairing all season, with recent reports suggesting that Robin Koch could be on the way out in the summer.

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Should that be the case, Hubers could be viewed as a possible replacement, with the aerially strong Koln brute also capable of covering at full-back and in a holding midfield role.

In other news: ‘Bad news from Elland Road…’ – Big Leeds injury update now emerges on Joe Gelhardt

PIA and SNGPL post early wins

Group A

A resolute display by the Multan batsmen lifted their team’s score considerably against Karachi Whites at the United Bank Limited (UBL) Sports Complex. Facing a Whites total of 391, Multan made a strong reply by reaching 274 for the loss of five wickets by the close of play. They are, however, still 117 behind Whites and will have to continue in the same vein if they intend to save the match or at least gain the three first-innings lead points. Debutant Rameez Alam made a valuable 60, off 166 balls in almost four and a quarter hours with the help of four fours. With Ansar Javed (24), he first added 54 for the third wicket and another 81 for the fourth with Naved Yasin, whose 49 came off 92 balls with seven fours. Sohaib Maqsood and wicketkeeper Gulraiz Sadaf later posted 115 for the unbroken sixth-wicket stand. The 20-year-old Sohaib scored his maiden half-century, making 85 off 98 balls in a little over two hours with seven fours and three sixes. Gulraiz, who has recently represented the Pakistan Under-19 team, was unbeaten at 32 at stumps.Habib Bank Limited (HBL) needed another 283 to win against Water and Power Development Authority (WAPDA) with seven wickets in hand at the Sheikhupura Stadium. After WAPDA, third placed in the table behind HBL and National Bank of Pakistan (NBP), had acquired a crucial 56 runs first-innings lead, they scored 274 in their second innings getting an overall lead of 330. Habib Bank slid to 48 for 3 in their second innings. Althoug slow left-armer Aslam Qureshi took 5 for 57 yesterday to complete a match haul of 10 for 85, the WAPDA batsmen flourished. There were three individual half-centuries, of which Tariq Aziz’s 68 was the highest. From 48 for 5, Tariq and Sarfraz Ahmed (52) lifted WAPDA with a sixth-wicket stand of 95. Nawaz Sardar (42) and Farooq Iqbal (51) added 75 runs for the eighth.At Iqbal Stadium, Faisalabad required another 118 to win with all ten second innings wickets in hand, after having bowled Hyderabad out for a poor 160 in their second innings. Seamer Asad Zarar took 10 wickets in the match for Faisalabad, with figures of 5 for 67 and 5 for 47.Spurred by a maiden first-class century by opener Hasnain Abbas (117), Pakistan Customs made 382 for 7 in their second innings, setting Sialkot a target of 303 at the Jinnah Stadium in Sialkot. Sialkot were at 19 for 1 at stumps. Hasnain’s first-wicket partnership with offspinner Murtaza Hussain, who came in as the night-watchman, yielded 164 runs. Murtaza scored 56 and later, Rehan Rafiq contributed 55.

Group B

Abbottabad piled on the agony, as they reached a total of 432 for 9 in their first innings against Karachi Blues, here at the Abbottabad Cricket Stadium. Blues had earlier made an impressive 363 in their first innings, to which Abbottabad had replied with 198 for 4 by the close on the second day. Although they made a total in excess of 400, Abbottabad however were actually only 69 ahead of the visitors. Riaz Kail reached his maiden first-class century, his 112 coming off 201 balls with 20 fours. With Mohammad Kashif his fifth-wicket stand was worth 104. Kashif, with 72 off 162 balls with ten fours and later Iftikhar Mahmood, with a splendid 88 not out with ten boundaries, both achieved their highest first-class scores. Iftikhar was involved in several useful partnerships with the tailenders. Blues’ left-arm spinner Azam Hussain sent down as many as 60 overs in the Abbottabad innings and picked up 4 for 128.Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) jumped up to the first spot again as they defeated then table leaders Islamabad by a whopping innings and 169 runs, inside three days at the Diamond Cricket Club Ground in Islamabad. Facing a PIA first-innings total of 404 for 8 declared, Islamabad crashed to poor scores of 126 and 109 in reply after being forced to follow-on. PIA’s seamer Aizaz Cheema was at his devastating best, taking 7 for 24 in the first and 4 for 48 in the second innings to attain a match haul of 11 wickets for a mere 77 runs. Former Pakistan Under-19 star Anwar Ali, after having made his career-best score of 74 on the second day, helped Aizaz bundle out Islamabad with figures of 5 for 25 runs in just eight overs with his right-arm fast-medium.At the Arbab Niaz Stadium in Peshawar, Sui Northern Gas Pipeline (SNGPL) also gained the same number of points as PIA and Islamabad – 36 each – as they comfortably defeated Peshawar by ten wickets with a day to spare. Facing a first-innings deficit of 140, Peshawar were bowled out for 154 and that gave SNGPL a target of just 15 to win. Seamer Imran Ali excelled for the winners with 5 for 78.Although they lost eight second innings wickets for 175 runs at the Mirpur Cricket Stadium, Rawalpindi enhanced their overall lead against Lahore Shalimar to 312 with a full day to go.The Zarai Taraqiati Bank Limited (ZTBL) openers had a field day against an ineffective Quetta bowling attack, at the Khan Research Laboratories (KRL) Stadium in Rawalpindi, as they compiled 265 runs. Quetta had earlier piled up a massive score of 460 for 9 declared. ZTBL opener Afaq Rahim from Mirpur scored his sixth hundred and his highest, as he made an unbeaten 151 off 288 balls in 353 minutes with 20 fours. Umar Javed, with an unbeaten 101 off 246 balls that included six fours and a six, incidentally scored his maiden century in first-class cricket. ZTBL, however, are still 195 behind Quetta.

Branson calls for Ashes to remain in Australia

Steve Waugh, Allan Border and Mark Taylor pose with the Ashes urn after it arrived on a flight from England © Getty Images

It has taken five Tests for the ritual debate to reach full flight, but the home of the Ashes has again become an issue of national importance. Sir Richard Branson’s company Virgin Atlantic is under contract to fly the urn back to England when the series ends, but in a comical performance, in which he was flanked by Ian Botham and Allan Border, he requested it stay in Australia.Branson’s push to end almost a century of tradition – the original sits in a glass cabinet at Lord’s – was upstaged when his seriously flawed account of the symbol was corrected by Gideon Haigh, the writer and historian. “In 1882 the idea was the Ashes were to come to Australia,” Branson said. “They would come home to England, but an England captain grabbed hold of them and kept them ever since.”(Click here for a history of the Ashes)Branson went on to say Marylebone Cricket Club’s view of the urn as a gift was “mistaken”. “I think it was originally a trophy, the Ashes were burned when England lost the 1882 game and it was turned into a trophy that the Australians took back to Australia. I think, I may be wrong, but they are re-writing history.””You’re re-writing history, you’re completely wrong,” Haigh said and then filled in the gaps during a two-minute precise. Border admitted Haigh had a “fair point”, but Branson’s errors continued with his repeated referral to MCC as “MMC”.However, Branson’s idea, which was hatched over dinner with Botham this week, has received strong and predictable support. Ricky Ponting said after the series was sealed in Perth that Australians should prevent the urn from getting on the plane and today John Howard, the prime minister, joined in.”I know there is a lot of tradition surrounding where it has been in the past but I don’t think there is any valid reason why it shouldn’t follow the outcome,” Howard said. “I’m sure it would be treated with immense care and reverence, and protected and left unbroken, and I can assure you that Australians have great warmth towards that symbol of cricket supremacy.”Botham said MCC would “probably throw out my membership” but he and Border, who is also a member, said the issue should go to a club vote. “The space at Lord’s should be left empty until we get them back,” Botham said. “There’s no excuse not to move them around.”The Australian push for the Ashes to stay Down Under grew during their 16-year reign from 1989, but it is rare for such high-profile English figures to support the move. “You’re playing for the Ashes,” Botham said. “To me it seems ridiculous. If you’re playing for the European Cup or the Ryder Cup you get the cup.”Just think of the fun it would have been in 1986-87, to be totally written off, to fly back with the urn on the plane. It would have been fantastic.” It might also have been broken.Border, who lifted replicas in three series wins, said it was the “biggest trophy in the game” and it was time Australia got “the real McCoy”. The only problem – and it’s a big one – is the Ashes are owned by MCC, who say they were never intended to be a trophy, and they have been reluctant for them to travel. The urn arrived in Australia in October to start a cross-country tour in the main capital-city museums and it will depart for England later this month.Branson said he would feel uncomfortable carrying the item back to London considering the result of the series. “We’ll fly it back if we can’t persuade MCC over the next two or three days,” he said. Good luck.

'All credit to the bowlers for taking 20 wickets' – Dravid

Rahul Dravid congratulated his bowlers – led by Anil Kumble – for taking 20 wickets on a good surface © Getty Images

Rahul Dravid, unusually aggressive when answering prickly or irritating questions at the post-match press conference after India beat Sri Lanka by 188 runs in the second Test at Delhi, laughed off suggestions that the Kotla was a lucky venue. Meanwhile Tom Moody found plenty of positives to take from the defeat, and Marvan Atapattu pin-pointed the first-innings collapse as the reason for his team’s defeat. Excerpts:Rahul DravidOn whether Delhi is a lucky groundI don’t think it is fair to call it a lucky ground. We are playing good cricket, and I am proud that we fought hard for this victory. This wasn’t a win that came easy or was totally one-sided. It was a hard-working win in a game of ups and downs, and all credit to the bowlers for taking 20 wickets on a reasonably good surface.On prospects at AhmedabadSri Lanka are a good side, and to beat them again, we will have to play well for five days in Ahmedabad too. We were very disappointed with our batting in Chennai, and even here in the first innings, we frittered a good position away on the second morning. But I am glad that in the second innings, we showed application. We have to do that every game, every innings. When you are up against quality bowlers like [Chaminda] Vaas and [Muttiah] Muralitharan, you can’t think of the previous innings. You begin every innings on zero and we need to bat with the same determination and concentration next time too.On whether he was able to declare when he did because he was comfortable with the lead or because he needed time to bowl out Sri LankaA bit of both. I was very comfortable with the fact that I had Anil [Kumble] and Harbhajan [Singh] in the side. They are two great spinners to have in the fourth innings of a Test match.On the selection dilemma caused by Yuvraj’s knockIt’s a happy problem to have, if it is a problem at all. It’s unfortunate that someone is going to miss out [with the return of Sehwag], and it will probably not be right on him, but that’s how international cricket is. It just shows us also that we can call on different players to do the job at different times, and it gives us a lot of heart.Tom MoodyWe have many positives coming out of this game. We let ourselves down in two small periods of the game. Late on the second evening, we lost numerous wickets from a commanding position in 45 minutes of madness. Then last evening, when we lost four wickets inside the last half hour, that’s when we sort of finally lost it. With more wickets in hand, we could have played out time, if not had a go at the target.

‘Murali is a wonderful bowler, but we can’t rely on him getting wickets every time’ – Tom Moody © Getty Images

On Indians negating Muralitharan in the second inningsThe first hurdle we tripped at was not capitalising on our start in the first innings. We should have had a lead of at least 100 on the first innings. Murali is a wonderful bowler, but we can’t rely on him getting wickets every time. He tried everything he could, gave it his all but they played him very well. There is nothing to say he didn’t give hundred percent.On his team’s batting collapseWe weren’t the only side that collapsed. It was a good wicket, no doubt, but it was always going to be tough for the new batsmen coming in. It was the downfall for us in both innings, just as it was India’s downfall in the first innings, when they lost seven for 45 on the second morning.Marvan AtapattuOn the turning point in the matchThe two sessions where we lost lots of wickets were towards the close of the day’s play. That’s where we need to concentrate better. I won’t be too critical about shot selection, it is more to do with lapses in concentration.On the pitchThe pitch was not unplayable. But it was slow and strokemaking was not that easy. It called for patience and concentration. That’s why India did a lot better in the second innings than the first.On the batting collapse in the first inningsBatting collapses do happen. We dominated for most of the second day until the last session, but lost the grip from then on. From there, it was a long haul.On Murali coming to bat with a runnerHe had a slight thigh strain, nothing serious. He should be okay for the third Test.

Enamul Haque Jnr fined for arguing with Brendan Taylor

Enamul Haque Jnr: fined© Getty Images

Enamul Haque Jnr has been fined 25% of his match fee for arguing with the batsman Brendan Taylor during Bangladesh’s one-day international with Zimbabwe at Chittagong.Taylor was officially reprimanded by the match referee for his part in the incident which arose as the pair collided when the 18-year-old spinner Haque tried to field off his own bowling. It was just Haque’s second one-day international for Bangladesh. He took no wickets in this match, but had taken 2 for 37 on his ODI debut in the previous match, which was also held at Chittagong.Bangladesh went on to win the game by 40 runs, a result which brought them right back into the five-match series: they now trail 2-1. The fourth match will be played this Saturday (Jan 29) at Dhaka.

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.

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