The South Africa Cricket Board has announced contracts for 18 players for the period from May 2004 to April 2005. The categories under which the players will be contracted will be announced after the domestic season.Alan Dawson and Mfuneko Ngam, who were contracted for the 2003-04 season, have not been offered new contracts, while Gary Kirsten opted out by announcing his intention to retire after the tour of New Zealand.Contracted players 1 Paul Adams, 2 Nicky Boje, 3 Mark Boucher, 4 Boeta Dippenaar, 5 Herschelle Gibbs, 6 Andrew Hall, 7 Jacques Kallis, 8 Lance Klusener, 9 Neil McKenzie, 10 Andre Nel, 11 Makhaya Ntini, 12 Robin Peterson, 13 Shaun Pollock, 14 Ashwell Prince, 15 Jacques Rudolph, 16 Graeme Smith, 17 Martin van Jaarsveld, 18 Monde Zondeki.Garnett Kruger, Albie Morkel and Justin Ontong were shortlisted for national contracts.
SYDNEY, Feb 3 AAP – Steve Waugh today supported the suggestion one-day internationals could be played at Sydney’s major Olympic venue after unveiling the pitch for cricket’s first game at Telstra Stadium.Both NSW captain Waugh and Blues paceman Stuart Clark suggested the manufactured pitch would produce plenty of runs for the ING Cup clash with South Australia on Sunday week.Although a renowned cricketing traditionalist, Waugh had no objections to one-day internationals being played at Telstra Stadium rather than the SCG.He said one-day matches didn’t have the same tradition as Tests where the established venues were concerned and therefore couldn’t see any reason why they shouldn’t be moved to other grounds.”It’s a great venue, players want to play at the best possible venues and this looks fantastic,” Waugh said from the middle of Telstra Stadium today.”They want to play in front of big crowds, so if it fits the bill, then why not?” said Waugh, who watched Olympic events at the stadium in 2000.NSW Cricket Association chief executive officer and former Australian representative David Gilbert suggested it was common sense to play some one-day internationals because its capacity was almost twice of the SCG.However, the Australian Cricket Board is contracted to playing one-day internationals at the SCG for the next couple of seasons.Waugh said the dimensions of Telstra Stadium reminded him of Adelaide Oval and said he thought the Olympic arena would be “one of the great venues to play cricket”.The centre wicket developed by Strathayr Turf Systems weighs approximately 32 tonnes with the pitch containing the same Oberon Creek soil used in most Sydney pitches, including the SCG.”The pitch looks good. It’s nice and flat, that’s the main thing with one-day cricket,” Waugh said.”It’s obviously a while to go before the match, but I think if they roll it and get a bit of hardness, there should be plenty of runs there.”Waugh described the outfield as “fantastic” and said the first game at the venue would be “a great experience for all the players, it’s something we will never forget.”Already used to playing on drop-in pitches in international cricket, especially in Melbourne, Waugh had no reservations about such wickets and didn’t approach them any differently to standard strips.”In some ways you are almost guaranteed a good quality pitch because they are looked after and have been worked on for a long while and all they’ve got to do is drop it on, so there’s no problem at all from a playing point of view.”
One of the key reasons for the success of the MRF Pace Foundation inrecent years is the manner in which the foundation follows up on itswards. Unlike many other academies, the MRF Pace Foundation tracks thecricketing growth of their trainees right from the beginning onwards.Even after Dennis Lillee finishes his stint in Chennai and heads backto Australia, he is in constant touch with TA Sekhar, head coach atthe Foundation. The latest stint at the academy began on the June 20and concluded on June 28. There were several new aspects to this camp,and several advancements from the last time around.The first major difference was the use of a software known as ‘SiliconCoach.’ The high tech aid helps caches dissect a bowler’s action rightdown to the basics. “This software determines injury mechanisms,creates split screen presentations, calculates distances, speeds andangles and provides rapid feedback for trainees and coaches,”described Lillee. The former Aussie quick went on to add, “Thesoftware compares techniques of elite and novice performers andprovides qualitative and quantitative comparison before and afterintervention.”But there was more to the camp than just the introduction of a new bitof technology. Troy Cooley, fitness expert and assistant coach at theAustralian Cricket Academy, was in Chennai for the second year insuccession. The former Tasmanian fast bowler performed some standardphysical tests on the trainees. The test he performed was the same oneused back home in Australia. It was good news for the lads at theFoundation as the results showed that the gap in fitness levelsbetween trainees in India and Australia was narrowing fast.When Lillee came to Chennai last in February, he selected 15 wards totrain at the Pace Foundation. Although encouraged by the results,Lillee was firm in his belief that these youngsters would have totrain much harder in order to achieve higher honours. The list of 15has been pruned to 12 and the training programme continues in rightearnest.The list of 12 trainees hand picked by Lillee to continue at the MRFPace Foundation are: Ishan Malhotra (Punjab), Tinu Yohannen (Kerala),Sujoy Parul (Bengal), G Chaita (Karnataka), Prashanth Chandran(Kerala), Chandrasekhar Atram (Vidarbha), Baburao Yadav (Vidarbha),Abhishek Choudhury (Delhi), Harish Puri (Punjab), Irfan Pathan(Vadodara), KS Veeranan (Tamil Nadu) and Avishkar Salvi (Mumbai).
The Athletic’s Phil Hay has delivered the latest update on Leeds United’s injury situation.
What’s the story?
With the international break having gotten underway, Jesse Marsch has the chance to pick the bones out from the club’s incredible triumph over Wolves – a game that saw them clinch all three points in the dying embers, but suffer a disastrous number of injuries.
And now, Hay has revealed what the club’s hopes are behind the scenes at Thorp Arch.
He said: “As new head coach Jesse Marsch went through them one by one post-match, he took solace from the fact that none of the individual knocks or strains appeared to be particularly severe. Regardless, Marsch always intended to give the squad a meaningful rest through the international break now underway.
“This two-week interlude has been perfectly timed after back-to-back wins and at a point in the season when so many players need some downtime. The 48 hours after Wolves were taken up with medical scans and decisions about who was fit enough to travel abroad for international duty.”
Much-needed boost for Leeds
While Marsch would undoubtedly have been on cloud nine following that dramatic late victory over Wolves at Molineux, his immediate attentions and concerns would have turned towards the club’s growing injury list.
Just when the American may have thought things had beginning to turn a corner – Patrick Bamford started the game, while Kalvin Phillips and Liam Cooper found themselves on the substitutes bench – it all took a shocking decline.
Bamford limped off and left inconsolable, while the likes of Illan Meslier, Diego Llorente and Mateusz Klich were all forced off with their own problems – that’s not to mention Stuart Dallas being absolutely crunched himself but fighting through it to stay on.
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So, news from Hay that none of those issues seem to be too severe, and that the squad will be given a “meaningful rest” over these coming two weeks is a perfectly timed boost for Marsch and one that will have him delighted.
AND in other news: Orta set for Leeds disaster as terms agreed for £63k-p/w “storm” who’s “a level above”
Career-best figures from medium-pacer Shakeel-ur-Rehman helped North West Frontier Province dismiss Sind for 149 and an unbeaten 68 from captain Younis Khan took the lead to 200 by stumps on day two in Karachi. Sind had resumed on 60 for 1 but Shakeel dealt quick blows to secure his side a 54-run lead.His first victim was opener Khalid Latif, caught behind for 17 from 75 balls to make it 79 for 2. Faisal Iqbal, the Pakistan international, was out for 1 and the dangerous Shahid Afridi was removed for an 18-ball 17. Naumanullah was then bowled for 47, the best contribution of the innings, and two swift strikes cut through the tail. Pind had proceeded to lose nine wickets for 89 runs.Rafatullah Mohmand and Yasir Hameed got NWFP’s second innings off to a solid start, adding 41, but a double-strike from Anwar Ali threatened to bring Sind back. Hameed hit 26 from 30 balls before he was trapped leg before by Anwar, a former Under-19 star. Riaz Kail suffered a similar fate for 4 as NWFP slipped to 51 for 2. That became 71 for 3 when Mohmand fell to Uzair-ul-Haq’s medium-pace, but Younis proved difficult to dislodge.Coming off two fifties against Zimbabwe and a one-match breather in the clean sweep, Younis rattled his way to an unbeaten 68 off 95 balls, with 13 boundaries, by the close of play. Offering solid support at the other end was Wajahatullah Wasti, the former Pakistan opener, with a sedate 14 from 81 balls. NWFP’s tail wagged in the first innings and further such contributions could be enough to seal Sind’s fate as this match progresses. Scorecard Salman Butt’s unbeaten 143-ball 135, in an opening stand of 191 with Mohammad Hafeez, gave Punjab a superb start to their first innings on day two in Lahore. Butt shrugged off an ordinary series against Zimbabwe by taking the Federal Areas attack to task – Punjab scored 219 for 1 at 4.56 runs an over – after Abdur Rehman and Wahab Riaz combined to reduce the opposition from an overnight 301 for 4 to an eventual 383.Butt struck 24 fours and a six , or 75% of his score, to launch a stirring reply. With Hafeez, another opener with international experience, he defied a line-up that included Shoaib Akhtar, Sohail Tanvir and Yasir Arafat. Hafeez was a bit more relaxed in his approach, scoring 77 from 113 balls, but with his partner going all-out it suited the situation expertly. Butt ticked along at a strike rate of 94.40, doing plenty to keep this match from meandering to a draw. Punjab still trail by 164 but with the likes of Misbah-ul-Haq, Mohammad Yousuf and Kamran Akmal to follow Federal Areas may be in for a tough third day in the field.Earlier, Rehman, who has played two Tests and 11 ODIs, snared 4 for 86 with his left-arm spin to support opening bowler Riaz. Usman Saeed and Naved Ashraf were cut short after crossing fifty and there was little action from Federal Areas’ lower order. Riaz, who had handed a maiden ODI cap against Zimbabwe last month, took 4 for 112 to help Punjab maintain damage control. Then it was over to Butt.
Opener Malinda Warnapura ensured Sri Lanka A’s efficient bowling effort didn’t go to waste with a composed, unbeaten hundred to put his side 2-0 up over Bangladesh A at the P. Saravanamuttu Stadium in Colombo. The Sri Lankan bowlers bowled the tourists out for 206 in 45 overs, and overcame a top-order wobble to ease home in the 45th over.Bangladesh’s decision to bat came a cropper as they were quickly 10 for 3, Akalanka Ganegama and Ranga Dias, the opening bowlers, shared the early spoils as they accounted for openers Jahurul Islam and Mehrab Hossain jnr, and Nazimuddin, the No. 3. Ishara Amerasinghe, the right-arm medium-pacer, wasted little time in getting in on the act with the wicket of Nadif Chowdhury (25).Tushar Imran, the captain, was removed for 38 by Dias, Amerasinghe got Mahmudullah for 0, and it was then up to Farhad Reza and Saghir Hossain, the wicketkeeper, to salvage the job. In a solid display of hitting, Reza bailed Bangladesh out of further trouble with an 84-ball 82, with seven fours and three sixes. Hossain chipped in with 25, and the duo added 82 for the seventh wicket. Kaushal Lokuarachchi, the legspinner, picked up 3 for 57.Set 207 to win, Warnapura and Dilruwan Perera (46) added 91 before the slow left-arm combo of Enamul Haque jnr and Mehrab struck. Enamul trapped Perera lbw, and Mehrab got Chamara Kapugedera for 6. Mahmudullah, with his right-arm medium-pace, picked up Thilina Kandamby to leave Sri Lanka on 138 for 3, before he got Jehan Mubarak (21) to make it 179 for 2.Warnapura, however, was in good touch and moved onto his maiden List A hundred in the company of Lokuarachchi, who contributed an unbeaten 2 from 20 deliveries, to finish the game and give Sri Lanka an unassailable series lead with one to play.
A century from Hasan Raza was the anchor for Pakistan A’s 36-run victory over India A in the final of the EurAsia Series in Abu Dhabi.Pakistan came into the final on the back of a defeat when the two sides met in the group stage, but they deserved their win after outplaying India in all departments.Raza’s unbeaten 106, made off 112 balls, came at a time the innings had lost some momentum after the loss of two wickets in quick succession reduced them to 88 for 3. Raza found valuable support in Misbah-ul-Haq who made a vital 73 from 94 balls with four fours and a six. The pair, who came together at the end of 15th over, added 174 runs for the fourth-wicket which was only broken with Misbah’s run out in the penultimate over of the innings.India started badly, losing both openers six balls after they had laboured to 42 in the 11th over, but Venugopal Rao (69) and Reetinder Sodhi (70) put them back on course with a stand of 147 in 29 overs.The decisive moment came when Mansoor Amjad dismissed them both within four balls, and with an asking rate of ten-an-over and no set batsman at the crease, India folded, losing their last six wickets for 40 in six overs.
Scorecard Kevin Pietersen failed to make the starting line-up because of his foot injury, spending his day signing autogrpahs for his new fans, and he watched his Hampshire team-mates endure a tough start to their Division One life. They won the toss, batted, and had been bowled out by tea. James Adams and Michael Brown opened with a stand of 63, but once Mark Hardinges had Adams caught behind wickets fell steadily to a disciplined Gloucestershire attack who kept the ball pitched up. Simon Katich offered the only real resistance, adding 48 with Shane Warne, but he received little support. John Lewis and Hardinges picked up three wickets each, while Steve Kirby claimed two, including Warne, on Championship debut for his new club. In reply, Gloucestershire’s openers progressed smoothly until Warne traped Craig Spearman lbw playing an ambitious sweep, and despite losing Phil Weston late in the day they remain firmly in control Scorecard Honours ended even on a truncated day at The Oval, after an unbroken sixth wicket stand of 52 between Michael Yardy and Matt Prior guided Sussex from an uncertain 119 for four. For a full report see Match of the day
Scorecard Ashley Giles began his season in fine style, taking 6 for 44 to help Warwickshire launch the defence of their title in impressive fashion. Glamorgan had engineered a promising position, reaching 138 for 2, before Giles intervened, relying on flight rather than gentle spin. His first wicket, Michael Powell, began a slump that saw Glamorgan lose 8 for 60. The big scalp was Matthew Elliott, bowled through the gate by Giles for 83, and the tail folded meekly. Nick Warren, a young right-arm seamer, weighted in with three wickets as Glamorgan failed to register a batting point. Warwickshire’s openers completed a very pleasing day for the champions, seeing out the final session without losing a wicket – Simon Jones’s six over costing 30 runs.
The row surrounding the future of Kevin Pietersen at Nottinghamshire has taken another turn with a report in today’s Daily Telegraph that he is now expected to stay at the county.Last month, Pietersen publicly stated that he had played his last game for Nottinghamshire. "I cannot play for Notts any more,” he said. “I have told them and if they do not allow me to leave I shall have to take legal action. A number of counties are interested in me. I would prefer to play in the First Division.”But with a year remaining on his four-year contract, Nottinghamshire have understandably been determined to hold on to Pietersen, one of England’s rising stars. Pietersen threatened legal action, the county responded by insisting that he had no grounds on which to base a legal case.And today, David Collier, Nottinghamshire’s chief executive, reinforced reports that Pietersen would honour the last year of his contract. “He has not indicated that he will not be fulfilling his obligations and we have heard nothing about an industrial tribunal," he told The Daily Telegraph. "We feel there is a principle at stake and even if any action were started we would vigorously defend our position.”Opinions among the county’s fans appears divided as to whether someone who is seen by many as a disruptive influence should stay, but almost everyone backs the county’s hard stand."Some believe they should banish a clearly unhappy and seemingly disruptive influence from their ranks, while others contend that the player might have been better handled," wrote the Nottinghamshire Evening Post. "Whatever the case, the hope remains that Pietersen will see sense, make up with Nottinghamshire and treat us all to another vintage summer. But don’t hold your breath"”Before he let his views be known, I was one of his top fans," one supporter told the paper. “I felt the Trent Bridge admission price was worth it just to see him bat. But now I wouldn’t go down the local park to watch him.”
The second phase of the Quaid-i-Azam Trophy National Cricket Championship will now commence from Wednesday (Jan 22) instead of Monday (Jan 20) with the eight pre-quarterfinals matches starting at various centres.Likewise, the quarterfinals will now be played from Jan 28, instead of Jan 26, according to Cricket Management Committee (CMC) which met at Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore on Friday evening with its chairman Iqbal Qasim presiding.The dates of semifinals and the final have also been changed. Now the semifinals will take place from Feb 3 with Feb 5 being declared rest day because of Kashmir Day. Originally, the semifinals were scheduled to commence from Feb 1.The five-day final will be played from Feb 17 at Gaddafi Stadium. Previously it was slated to begin from Feb 6.CMC, in a sensible move, has also made widespread alterations in the original list of venues to avoid incomplete matches owing to fog which virtually played havoc with preliminary round ties in Punjab.For example, now the Group-I winners will face the Group-II runners-up in the round of last 16 at National Stadium, Karachi instead of Gaddafi Stadium. In all, five matches of the knock-out stage will be played at different venues than previously announced centres.The first four teams of each of the four groups have qualified for the last 16 round.The schedule of matches is as follows:Pre-quarterfinals (Jan 22-25):Match 1: National Bank v Habib Bank at National Stadium, Karachi (Umpires: Salim Badar and Athar Zaidi. Match referee: Mahmood Rasheed).Match 2: Pakistan Customs v Wapda at KRL Stadium, Rawalpindi (Umpires: Aleem Dar and Nadeem Ghauri. Match referee: Khateeb Rizwan).Match 3: Allied Bank v KRL at UBL Sports Complex, Karachi (Umpires: Shakeel Khan and Riazuddin. Match referee: Munawwar Agha).Match 4: PIA v Bahawalpur at Pindi Cricket Stadium, Rawalpindi (Umpires: Mohammad Nazir Junior and Mian Aslam. Match referee: Khalid Niazi).Match 5: Faisalabad v Sialkot at Bahawalpur Stadium, Bahawalpur (Umpires: Siddique Khan and Rasheed Bhatti. Match referee: Saadat Ali).Match 6: Lahore Whites v Sargodha at Arbab Niaz Stadium, Peshawar (Zafar Iqbal Pasha and Ehtesham-ul-Haq. Match referee: Ishtiaq Ahmed).Match 7: Pak PWD v ZTBL at Aga Khan Gymkhana Ground, Karachi (Umpires: Afzaal Ahmed and Islam Khan. Match referee: Sadiq Mohammad).Match 8: Rawalpindi v Multan at Multan Cricket Stadium, Multan (Umpires: Asad Rauf and Zamir Haider. Match referee: Pervez Akhtar).Quarterfinals (Jan 28-31):First match: Winners of Match 1 v Winners of Match 3 at National Stadium, Karachi (Umpires: Islam Khan and Athar Zaidi. Match referee: Ilyas Khan).Second match: Winners of Match 2 v Winners of Match 4 at Pindi Cricket Stadium, Rawalpindi (Umpires: Iftikhar Malik and Rasheed Bhatti. Match referee: Abdul Sami Khan).Third match: Winners of Match 5 v Winners of Match 7 at UBL Sports Complex, Karachi (Umpires: Afzaal Ahmed and Riazuddin. Match referee: Fahimuddin Alvi).Fourth match: Winners of Match 6 v Winners of Match 8 at Arbab Niaz Stadium, Peshawar (Umpires: Siddique Khan and Iqbal Butt. Match referee: Farrukh Zaman).Semifinals (Feb 3-7):First semifinal: Winners of first match v Winners of third match at National Stadium, Karachi (Umpires: Salim Badar and Shakeel Khan. Match referee: Anwar Khan).Second semifinal: Winners of second match v Winners of fourth match at Mian Aslam and Athar Zaidi. Match referee: Azhar Khan).Final (Feb 17-21): At Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore (Umpires: Riazuddin and Asad Rauf. Match referee: Ehteshamuddin).Final Points Table(At the conclusion of the league phase.Tabulated under played, won, lost, drawn, points):Group-INational Bank 5 2 0 3 24Wapda 5 1 0 4 21Faisalabad 5 1 1 3 15Sargodha 5 1 1 3 15Servis Industries 5 0 2 3 3Lahore Blues 5 0 1 4 0Group-IIAllied Bank 5 4 0 1 51Bahawalpur 5 2 1 2 26Pak PWD 5 1 0 4 18Multan 5 1 2 2 12Karachi Whites 5 0 1 4 9Dadu 5 0 4 1 0Group-IIIPakistan Customs 5 1 0 4 18Habib Bank 5 1 0 4 12Lahore Whites 5 1 0 4 12Sialkot 5 0 1 4 6Sheikhupura 5 0 1 4 3Gujranwala 5 0 1 4 3Group-IVPIA 5 4 0 1 48KRL 5 3 0 2 42Rawalpindi 5 2 2 1 24ZTBL 5 1 2 2 15Karachi Blues 5 1 3 1 12Peshawar 5 0 4 1 3Note: Bahawalpur were docked one point for non-submission of captain’s report on umpires