Neser injury and Tasmania's batters put pressure on Queensland's final bid

Caleb Jewell and Beau Webster put Tasmania in a strong position

AAP14-Mar-2023Queensland’s decision to send Tasmania in to bat at Bellerive Oval failed to pay dividends thanks to half-centuries from Caleb Jewell and Beau Webster.The in-form Jewell seemed set for a third century is as many outings for Tasmania, only to fall for 98 after a 228-ball innings.Webster ended the day unbeaten on 91, having struck 11 boundaries in a 157-ball knock. He was joined at the crease by Tim Paine, on 41 not out.Queensland, who are in a tense battle with Victoria for a spot in next week’s Shield final, commenced the day disastrously with the loss of strike bowler Michael Neser.The Test paceman was ruled out minutes before the start after suffering an ankle injury during the warm-up, with Liam Guthrie coming into the side in his place. To compounded Queensland’s woes, Mark Steketee could only manage 10 overs before limping off with a hip problem.Jewell, having hit three figures in his last Shield and One-Day Cup outings, fell to the new ball after edging a Guthrie delivery to Joe Burns at first slip.The 25-year-old left-hander had shared in two century partnerships, putting on 104 with Jake Doran (58) for the second wicket, and then 120 with Webster for the fifth.Left-armer Guthrie made the most of his eleventh-hour inclusion and made a double breakthrough after lunch, with two wickets in three balls knocking over Mac Wright and captain Jordan Silk for a duck.Steketee, the Shield’s second-highest wicket-taker after Neser, struck in just the third over removing Tim Ward for 2, but had little further joy despite the green-tinged wicket.Second-placed Queensland must at least equal Victoria’s result against Western Australia in Perth if they are to secure a spot in the season decider.

Australia prepared for bubble life amid Covid 'nervousness'

The proximity of the ODI World Cup has added the complexity of the Ashes series

Andrew McGlashan12-Jan-2022Australia’s players are willing to do whatever it takes to ensure the Women’s Ashes runs safely and ensure no one misses the ODI World Cup amid the Covid-19 cases that have exploded over the last month.The squad will be back under tight biosecure restrictions during the multi-format contest – the schedule for which was recently amended – but there remains the risk that if a player catches Covid towards the end of the series that they would miss the World Cup, starting March 4, due there being only one opportunity for the group to travel to New Zealand.Australia’s players, who are split across 15 in the main Ashes squad and 15 in an Australia A group, will start arriving in Adelaide from Thursday with the whole group assembled by January 17 leaving just three days to prepare for the first T20I.Restrictions on what they can do are expected to be tighter than the men’s Ashes which has operated at Cricket Australia’s level four protocols with players largely confined to their hotel outside of matches.Related

  • Women's Ashes: Tightrope walk for teams with 'scattered' preparations leaving them undercooked

  • Women's Ashes schedule adjusted to allow for World Cup quarantine

  • Women's Ashes walks Covid tightrope ahead of World Cup

  • Alana King beats Amanda-Jade Wellington to place in Australia's Ashes squad

“In order to get the Ashes up and running we do need to follow some protocols and try and keep everyone as safe as possible,” captain Meg Lanning said. “We are certainly willing to do that and do whatever we need to to get the games up.”Heading into this bubble the risk of catching Covid is significantly increased than what it perhaps was even six months ago. That is a slight difference heading into this series and that World Cup on the back end is something everyone wants to be a part of and certainly doesn’t want to miss.”There is, I guess, that little bit of nervousness but having chatted to the medical staff and all the support staff they are putting everything in place that’s possible to keep the bubble very secure and minimise the risk of getting Covid. Very confident that everything is in place that needs to be and hopefully everyone can stay safe.”Already one player has been caught up in Covid with Katie Mack, who is part of the Australia A squad thanks to an outstanding season for Adelaide Strikers, isolating for seven days after her partner tested positive. Mack is currently awaiting her PCR result and if she remains negative during isolation is hopeful of still joining the squad for the T20s against England A with the worst case being she will only be able to play the ODIs next month.”I’d feel pretty lucky if I could still get there and play all the games, that’s the best-case scenario,” Mack said. “Worst-case scenario is I test positive in a couple of days and have to do [another] seven days isolation from there. It’s not ideal, but Covid’s not ideal in anyone’s life at the moment, so it would be pretty hard for me to say I’ve got it tough.”Australia’s selectors are planning for the possibility that Covid will hit the Ashes in some form with players in the A squad on notice that a call-up may come at any time. Still, on a day-to-day basis the squads will be kept separate to minimise the risk if a case emerges.Covid has had a significant impact on the women’s game in recent weeks with a raft of postponements in the WNCL which has limited players’ preparation ahead of the Ashes although Lanning believed it was a prudent measure not to carry on with those matches.Lanning herself opted to take a break after the WBBL knowing that this intense period of cricket with the Ashes and World Cup lay ahead. With a return to bubble life, which players had hoped was behind them, she is pleased she took the chance to step away.”I felt after WBBL that a break would benefit me a lot and having come back to training it has done wonders,” she said. “It’s not ideal to miss games but think the timing of that was perfect for me, to mentally more than anything switch off.”

Fans allowed to attend first-class cricket for first time since March as pilot scheme extended

Surrey, Warwickshire’s Willis Trophy fixtures opened up to members

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Jul-2020Fans will be permitted to attend first-class cricket for the first time since March this weekend, with the first two days of Surrey and Warwickshire’s opening Bob Willis Trophy matches opened up to spectators.The fixtures are both part of the second phase of UK government pilot events, and each ground will be allowed to host up to 2,500 fans following trials at pre-season matches. 1,000 fans were permitted at The Oval for Surrey’s friendly against Middlesex on Sunday and Monday, with the same number allowed at Edgbaston for Warwickshire’s match against Worcestershire on Tuesday.ALSO READ: Cricket comes home as spectators make cautious return to The OvalFor the time being, tickets will be limited to members, with both counties releasing further details on their websites for those keen to attend. Social-distancing measures will remain in place, but the move will continue to raise hopes that fans will be able to attend T20 Blast games when the competition starts on August 27. Surrey’s opening match is also against Middlesex, while Warwickshire will host Northamptonshire.Neil Snowball, the ECB’s managing director of county cricket, said: “We’re all excited about the start of the county cricket season, and of course we all miss not being able to go and watch as we normally would. These two pilots are an important step in testing the Government guidance and ensuring we can safely open our grounds again.”The government is officially aiming for fans to be able to return to stadiums from October 1, but Surrey’s chief executive Richard Gould has suggested that date represents a target to be beaten.Speaking on Sunday during the Oval trial match, Gould also warned that the current social-distancing requirements that limit clubs to 30% capacity within any given area of seating is not sustainable in the long term.”We need to be back to normal next summer,” Gould said. “If we’re not back to normal next summer, the structure, not just of our sports but all sports will have to significantly change.”If we don’t get crowds back in at some stage then many more clubs will become part-time organisations and I just don’t think we can afford that as a sport or as a country in terms of cultural output.”

Jasprit Bumrah could feature as Mumbai Indians look to get their season on track

The fast bowler bowled at full tilt on the eve of the match in Bengaluru, easing concerns over the left shoulder injury he sustained against Delhi Daredevils

The Preview by Ankur Dhawan27-Mar-20193:31

Hodge: Shimron Hetmyer should bat at No. 3 for Bengaluru

Big Picture

How boringly predictable. Chennai Super Kings are on top, Delhi Capitals have exorcised the ‘Daredevils’ but not the inconsistency, and those two perennial poor starters, Royal Challengers Bangalore and Mumbai Indians, have played to their reputation by going down in their opening encounters. For Royal Challengers, that familiar feeling of here we go again lingers, and for Mumbai the loss could almost be seen as a good omen, given their history of dramatic comebacks. You may point out – correctly – that it’s too early to write eulogies or prophesy a come-from-behind title win. Perhaps Royal Challengers were done in by a dreadful pitch, and Mumbai by one man’s brilliance. Either way, it’s time to find out if there is more to the teams than first met the eye.In the literal sense of team combinations, that seems unlikely at this stage. There were concerns about Jasprit Bumrah’s fitness after he toppled over his shoulder in the last match and did not come out to bat later, but he bowled at full tilt on the eve of the match in Bengaluru and, according to the team management, has recovered sufficiently. Mumbai will also have the services of Lasith Malinga sooner than expected, with the Sri Lankan quick joining the team tonight, but he is likely to be considered for selection only for the next match. The only concern for Mumbai might be a seemingly ageing side – they fielded five players over the age of 30 last match – but Super Kings have already shown the worth of experience in this format.Royal Challengers, on the other hand, would be chuffed to be back home, at least as far as the pitch is concerned. Virat Kohli recently likened it to the “old”, batting-friendly Bengaluru surface, albeit before going on to lose that high-scoring match against Australia. Ironically, the XI that looked a spinner short in the crushing defeat in Chennai could be the ideal combination on a traditional Chinnaswamy pitch, with a good mix of quicks and spinners, in addition to a strong batting line-up.

Likely XIs

Royal Challengers Bangalore: 1 Virat Kohli (capt), 2 Parthjv Patel (wk), 3 Moeen Ali, 4 AB de Villiers, 5 Shimron Hetmyer, 6 Shivam Dube, 7 Colin de Grandhomme, 8 Navdeep Saini, 9 Yuzvendra Chahal, 10 Umesh Yadav, 11 Mohammed SirajMumbai Indians: 1 Rohit Sharma (capt), 2 Quinton de Kock (wk), 3 Suryakumar Yadav, 4 Yuvraj Singh, 5 Kieron Pollard, 6 Hardik Pandya, 7 Krunal Pandya, 8 Ben Cutting, 9 Mitchell McClenaghan, 10 Rasikh Salam, 11 Jasprit BumrahA pensive RCB side wait to take the field•BCCI

Strategy punt

  • Moeen Ali averages 27.75 and scores at a strike-rate of 148.56 as an opener. Those are his best returns in any batting position in T20s. Royal Chalengers have only tried him in that position once, against Delhi Daredevils last year. A quick swap with Virat Kohli could help Royal Challengers utilise Moeen best, besides giving the middle-order a more solid look, leaving Kohl to negotiate the tougher middle overs along with AB de Villiers.
  • Krunal Pandya has had AB de Villiers’ number from the first time he bowled to him in the IPL. On that occasion he had him stumped off a beauty, which dragged de Villiers’ back heel out of the crease and spun away to leave Parthiv Patel to whip the bails off. If anyone thought it was a fluke, Krunal repeated the feat the next three times he bowled to de Villiers, dismissing him on all those occasions as well. Overall, his record against de Villiers is an impressive four dismissals in as many innings, while conceding 33 off 32 balls. Regardless of the situation, don’t be surprised if Krunal is thrown the ball as soon as de Villiers comes out to bat.

Stats that matter

  • Before losing the away match against Royal Challengers last year, Mumbai had beaten them in five successive meetings, their second-best winning streak against any opposition in the IPL, after the ongoing eight-match run against Kolkata Knight Riders.
  • In completed matches, Royal Challengers are marginally better chasing than batting first at home, having won 19 out of 35 matches when they’ve chased as opposed to losing 24 of the 42 times they have batted first. However, RCB have never beaten Mumbai batting second at home.
  • AB de Villiers needs 38 runs to become the 10th player to score 4000-plus runs in the IPL.
  • Virat Kohli needs 46 runs to become the second player after Suresh Raina to score 5000-plus runs in the IPL

Chapman not part of Hong Kong's World Cup qualifier squad

Mark Chapman was left out of the 15-man squad, after he made himself unavailable for selection due to his commitments with Auckland in New Zealand’s domestic competitions

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Feb-2018Babar Hayat will lead Hong Kong at next month’s World Cup qualifiers in Zimbabwe, while batsman Mark Chapman was left out of the 15-man squad, after he made himself unavailable for selection due to his commitments with Auckland in New Zealand’s domestic competitions. Anshy Rath was named vice-captain.

Hong Kong squad

Babar Hayat (capt), Anshy Rath, Nizakat Khan, Scott McKechnie, Simandeep Singh, Ahsan Ali Abbasi, Ehsan Khan, Aizaz Khan, Tanwir Afzal, Ehsan Nawaz, Nadeem Ahmed, Tanveer Ahmed, Christopher Carter, Shahid Wasif, Waqas Barkat
Reserves: Haroon Arshad, Kyle Christie, Waqas Khan, Kinchit Shah, Raag Kapur

Chapman, who has not played for Hong Kong since the 2016 World T20 in India, recently missed out on selection for New Zealand’s T20I squad against Pakistan and Australia. After strong performances in the Super Smash T20 competition, Chapman smashed 117 off 104 balls on Sunday against Wellington in the Ford Trophy, New Zealand’s 50-overs competition.The squad leaves for South Africa next week, where they will play in a quadrangular tournament with Ireland, Netherlands and Scotland, starting on February 14. Thereafter, the team will proceed to Zimbabwe, where they play the tournament’s opening match against Scotland on March 6.Hong Kong coach Simon Cook said he was pleased with the squad’s “balance”, and that those selected were rewarded for their performances over the past 12 months. With four Test teams – Ireland, Afghanistan, Zimbabwe and West Indies – playing in the World Cup qualifiers, Cook said that the team will look to embrace the challenge following their third-place finish in the recently-concluded World Cricket League championship.

Franks steps up to Nottinghamshire assistant role

Paul Franks, the Nottinghamshire allrounder, has been promoted from his role as second-team captain and academy coach to become Peter Moores’ first-team assistant

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Nov-2016Paul Franks, the Nottinghamshire allrounder, has been promoted from his role as second-team captain and academy coach to become Peter Moores’ first-team assistant.Franks, 37, whose playing career at Trent Bridge began in 1997, retired from the first-class game as a player in 2015, and went on to take his ECB Level 4 coaching qualification.He won the Second XI Championship in 2015 before furthering his experience with stints coaching the United Arab Emirates.”Paul has been taking steps into coaching for a number of years,” said Nottinghamshire’s director of cricket, Mick Newell. “We’ve encouraged him in that and now we feel he’s ready for this extra responsibility.”Not only is Paul an impressive young coach, he’s also part of the fabric of the club, having achieved so much during his time as a player.”Nottinghamshire will start the 2017 season in division two after a disappointing campaign last summer that led to relegation and brought about the end of Newell’s 14-and-a-half year tenure as head coach.Moores, who joined the club as a batting consultant in the wake of his departure from the England job in May 2015, stepped into the vacancy in September. And now Franks steps into the assistant role vacated by Wayne Noon, the former wicketkeeper who announced last week that he was ending his 23-year association with the club.”Peter has worked with lots of coaches in both county and international cricket – and he’s very been very impressed with what he’s seen from Paul,” said Newell.”Having played alongside our senior players, and been hugely involved in the development of the younger generation, he’s well placed to get the best out of that group of players.”

Uncapped Rabbi picked for Zimbabwe ODIs

Pace bowler Kamrul Islam Rabbi is the only newcomer in the 14-member Bangladesh squad for the first two ODIs against Zimbabwe on November 7 and 9, in Mirpur

Mohammad Isam01-Nov-20151:40

Isam: Rabbi is a future prospect

Pace bowler Kamrul Islam Rabbi is the only uncapped player in the 14-member Bangladesh squad for the first two ODIs against Zimbabwe on November 7 and 9, in Mirpur. Mashrafe Mortaza will captain the side after recovering from the after effects of dengue fever last month. Shakib Al Hasan was also available for the full series against Zimbabwe, though his wife is expecting their first child this month.Al-Amin Hossain, meanwhile, made a comeback after nearly a year. He last played an ODI last November, and though he was picked in the World Cup squad this year, he was sent home midway through the tournament for breaking a team curfew.

Bangladesh ODI squad changes

IN: Al-Amin Hossain, Kamrul Islam Rabbi
OUT: Anamul Haque, Rubel Hossain

Rabbi has been developing into a steady performer in domestic cricket for the last seven years. Besides becoming the captain of the Barisal Division’s first-class team last season, he has also been a regular with the Bangladesh A team, and bowled well for Victoria Sporting Club in the List A Dhaka Premier League last season, taking 15 wickets at an average of 25.33 from 11 matches.During the recent short tour of South Africa with the A team, both Al-Amin and Rabbi were the standout performers. Al-Amin claimed figures of 5 for 45 against Northerns while Rabbi took four wickets against Gauteng.There was, however, no place for Anamul Haque and Rubel Hossain, who were part of Bangladesh’s last ODI squad, against South Africa in July. Anamul had not played a game during that series but he was in the 18-man preliminary squad that was announced in late October, while Rubel has not recovered from his calf muscle injury suffered during Bangladesh A’s tour to India in September.Squad for the first two ODIs: Mashrafe Mortaza(capt), Tamim Iqbal, Liton Das, Soumya Sarkar, Shakib Al Hasan, Mushfiqur Rahim (wk), Mahmudullah, Sabbir Rahman, Nasir Hossain, Arafat Sunny, Jubair Hossain, Mustafizur Rahman, Al-Amin Hossain, Kamrul Islam Rabbi

Dexter strikes telling blows

Not many people included Neil Dexter in their list of daunting seamers. Yet Dexter, a gentle medium-pacer who had never taken more than three wickets in a first-class innings before today, produced a remarkable spell of five wickets for 13 runs in 21 ball

George Dobell at Trent Bridge12-Apr-2013
ScorecardNeil Dexter was an unlikely destroyer of the Nottinghamshire batting•Middlesex CCC

Ahead of this season it was accepted by most observers that Middlesex had a daunting seam attack that could, on its day, hurt any opposition. By the time they play their next game, against Derbyshire at home, they could have Steven Finn, James Harris, Toby Roland-Jones, Tim Murtagh and Corey Collymore fighting over places.But not many people included Neil Dexter in their list of daunting seamers. Yet Dexter, a gentle medium-pacer who had never taken more than three wickets in a first-class innings before today, produced a remarkable spell of 5 for 13 in 21 balls to give his side an outstanding opportunity of striking an early blow in the race for the County Championship title.In a match full of punch and counter punch, Dexter may have struck the decisive blow with a spell of bowling that reduced Nottinghamshire to 93 for 8 in their second innings – a lead of just 28 runs. It was a session of cricket that was as unlikely as it was entertaining.Dexter may well not have bowled had Middlesex been at full strength. As it was, though, James Harris did not take the field when Nottinghamshire began their second innings due to a minor hamstring strain and, after long opening spells from Murtagh and Roland-Jones, during which Ed Cowan, stuck in the crease, lost his off stump to one that nipped back and Michael Lumb completed a pair after planting his front foot and missing another that nipped back, Middlesex were obliged to turn to Gareth Berg – described as 80 percent fit – and Dexter.While it was Berg who made the initial breakthrough – Alex Hales edging a beauty that left him late – it was Dexter who proved the destroyer. Perhaps his first couple of wickets owed a little to fortune: Samit Patel, quite recklessly, attempted a furious pull that resulted in a top edge to midwicket, before James Taylor tried to cut a short, wide ball only for it to die on him and result in a thin edge to the keeper. Andy Flower, the England coach who had just arrived at the ground to chat to Stuart Broad, cannot have been impressed.But from then on, Dexter bowled with skill and discipline. Riki Wessels, batting with a runner due to a hamstring strain, edged a good one that left him before Chris Read, set up by outswing, left one that came back in off the seam. Ajmal Shahzad also followed an outswinger. At that stage, a result in three days seemed likely.Dexter remains as club captain but, after a loss of form and some personal issues last year, stepped down from the Championship position. While he insisted he wants “to take over captaincy in the near future” he also admitted that he was “a lot more relaxed cricketer without the burden of leadership”.The one blot on Dexter’s day was the failure to catch Andre Adams when the batsman had 28. Running in from the square leg boundary, Dexter appeared to have a tricky chance off Roland-Jones under control only to spill it as he hit the ground. It may yet prove a costly miss.Adams, in typically belligerent style, thumped his way to a half-century in 37 balls. He pulled the next two deliveries he received after his reprieve – both from the unfortunate and flagging Roland-Jones for six and, in partnership with the increasingly elegant Luke Fletcher added 89 runs for Nottinghamshire’s ninth wicket. While Adams thrashed at anything close to him, Fletcher showed some genuine class and hinted that, in time, he could move a couple of places up the order. The lead, 107 by the close, should still not be enough, but Middlesex will be far more nervous than they might have been when they begin their fourth-innings pursuit.”Chasing 100 can be pretty nasty,” Adams said afterwards. “There are still dents in the wicket and the ball is moving about in the air and off the pitch. If we set them somewhere between 150 and 170, we have a real chance. Anything over 120 could be a bit tricky. They will be nervous.”The story of Adams’ arrival at Nottinghamshire is remarkable. By 2007, he had decided to give up on cricket. “I wanted to do anything but play cricket,” he said. “I hated it.”So when he received a phone call from an agent saying he had been offered a county contract, he was quick to turn it down. “I said I wasn’t interested,” Adams told ESPNcricinfo. “But then the next morning he called again and said ‘I’ve sorted it’. I didn’t know what to think.”But it’s been the best decision I’ve ever made; the best mistake I’ve ever made. I would only ever have come to Nottinghamshire anyway, as I knew a few of the lads and I had played club cricket here. It’s been great.”Earlier John Simpson was left stranded three short of what would have been his first Championship century since April 2011. Although Simpson eased the second ball of the day through midwicket for four, he then became bogged down against an improved Nottinghamshire attack and took 53 deliveries over his next 16 runs.All the while wickets were falling at the other end. Ollie Rayner, Harris and Toby Roland-Jones were also seduced into driving at balls that left them and Simpson, on 97 when the last wicket fell, made the selfless decision not to farm the strike when the last man Murtagh came to the crease. While Simpson could be forgiven for cursing under his breath when Murtagh fell to a footless waft, he could feel satisfied at the strong position he had earned his team.

Can you feel it? Gibson can

There is a feeling around the Caribbean that the downtrodden West Indies may finally be building a team that inspires confidence

Daniel Brettig in Barbados05-Apr-2012Australian visitors hear it at customs in Barbados airport, or in cars, bars and on the streets. Locals hear it on cricket radio shows, read it in the newspapers and discuss it themselves, with caution but growing enthusiasm. It is a belief the downtrodden West Indies may finally be building a team that inspires confidence, the likes of which their coach Ottis Gibson has not felt since his childhood.Those heady days, when the best team in the world was drawn from the islands of the Caribbean, have receded into sepia-toned memory. But there were moments in a surprisingly tight Test series in India late last year, and over the past month in tied ODI and Twenty20 bouts against the Australians, that indicated West Indies are no longer so predisposed to the backward steps that typified most of the past decade or more.A sound measure of the resurgence is a Test series against Michael Clarke’s increasingly accomplished team. Gibson was unsure if he could label this his men’s best chance to win a series against Australia since they last held the Frank Worrell Trophy after the 1992-93 tour down under, but agreed the development of the squad led by Darren Sammy had been significant.”We’ve been growing as a group of players for the last 12 months,” Gibson said. “We won in Bangladesh, we got beaten in India but the brand of cricket that we played, there were occasions that we dominated India in India which has not happened for a very long time. I don’t believe that many teams go there and do that, even though we weren’t strong enough to win that series.”We’ve just had a fantastic one-day and Twenty20 series against them [Australia], one that we look back now and believe we should have won. Everybody’s full of confidence. There’s an air of confidence as well when you walk around the streets of the Caribbean at the moment, where two years ago or probably even 12 months ago the average man in the street was not so enthusiastic about the performances of the team.”In the last month or so there’s a lot being said and there’s an energy that I can remember as a child growing up. People are starting to want to watch the team again and it’s because the team is starting to be competitive. You can see a togetherness on the field and if we can maintain that sort of focus and keep that togetherness going, this would be a good series for us.”As he ran his eye across a team that remains youthful but is starting to take on a more robust shape, Gibson rolled off the names of Darren Bravo, Kirk Edwards, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Ravi Rampaul, Fidel Edwards, Kemar Roach, Devendra Bishoo and the captain Sammy. They are the kinds of players and characters to build a team from.”I think Duncan Fletcher made mention of it [after the India series], the fact the team was starting to gel together,” Gibson said. “I think over the last 12 months our bowling attack has been as good as most around the world. They got a lot of wickets for us in all forms of cricket to be honest, especially Test cricket, so we know what we’ll get from our bowling. Hopefully our batting will continue the form that they showed in India.”Bishoo’s spin will pose the right questions on dry surfaces, while in Roach the hosts have the first fast bowler in years to have unsettled Ricky Ponting – probing for weaknesses that others later followed up as the then Australian captain struggled through an extended trough of run-making.”Everybody’s looking forward to getting stuck in, you know? This is the exciting thing about it,” Gibson said. “There’s competition for places now and that breeds the sort of environment that we’re looking to create. Kemar, if he gets the opportunity first up with the new ball in his hand, I’m sure he’s looking forward to it. Likewise I’m sure Ricky will be looking to get back at Kemar.”That’s a duel that people will be looking forward to seeing. But there’s others, Bishoo, the impact he’d had on international cricket since he started. He only started his international career exactly a year ago and he’s had 12 months and been outstanding for us. Ravi Rampaul has been exceptional as well and we know what we’ll get from Fidel every day.”The Aussies have got a very good pace attack as well. [James] Pattinson’s done well, [Peter] Siddle – he’s a workhorse for the team. We know a lot about each other but it comes down to us feeling the energy of the fans and taking the momentum from the one-day series and being able to transfer that into the Test series.”It has been said that no plan survives first contact with the enemy, but the mood in the Caribbean is unmistakeable – the West Indies will compete in this series, and have the chance to do even better than that.

Cricket needs independent governance – Wisden

World cricket must adopt independent commissions in the vein of Australian football in order to stay relevant, the Wisden Almanack editor Scyld Berry has said

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Apr-2011World cricket must adopt independent commissions in the vein of Australian football in order to stay relevant, the editor Scyld Berry has said.In his editor’s notes for the 2011 edition of the Almanack, Berry observed the growth of Australian Rules to outstrip cricket as Australia’s national game as proof of the need for a change to outdated executive structures. The game’s administrators adopted an independent commission in 1993 and have flourished into near nationwide dominance in the ensuring 18 years.”Now the Victorian Football League is the Australian Football League, thriving nationwide and attracting young elite athletes with its average salary of $A230,000 (about £150,000), twice that of the state cricketer, and with 800 jobs available – eight times as many as in professional cricket,” Berry wrote.”The offspring has taken over the parent, because the constitution of Cricket Australia is the same as in the 19th century. In the same way the constitutions of most Test-playing countries, as well as the ICC’s, are unfit for modern purpose.”Berry’s words arrived at a time when Australian cricket is undergoing two reviews, one into the performance of the national team, chaired by Don Argus, and another into the administration of the game that will involve the corporate governance experts Colin Carter and David Crawford.The governance review could result in a serious shake-up of Cricket Australia’s structure, which includes an unusual arrangement at board level. As founding members, Victoria, New South Wales and South Australia each have three votes on the board, but Western Australia and Queensland receive two each, and Tasmania just one.Crawford has a history of instigating major overhauls. Crawford was responsible for a 1992 report that brought about the creation of the AFL Commission, and in 2003 he recommended the formation of the Football Federation of Australia.A more recent Crawford report commissioned by the Australian government suggested a review of the way funding was divided between Olympic and non-Olympic sports, and met strong opposition from the Australian Olympic Committee. Carter is the president of the Geelong Football Club and spent 15 years as an AFL commissioner.”I don’t want to pre-empt what it is going to say,” Jack Clarke, the CA chairman, said when announcing the reviews in February. “The basis on which David Crawford and Colin Carter have been engaged is that they will provide a report to the board. The timing of that is not exact yet, it’s up to the board then to decide which of those issues we do and do not go forward with.”Berry also pointed out the negative influence of incumbent politicians as members of national cricket boards and at the executive table of the International Cricket Council. “At the highest level of administration, politicians are taking over, which cannot be healthy,” Berry wrote.”There may be something to be said for a former politician, such as John Howard, becoming an administrator, as he tried to do in the election for the ICC presidency; but precious little for active politicians. They have too little time for the game and too many vested interests.”Former ICC chief executive Malcolm Speed has expressed similar views about the most effective future governance of the game in his recently released memoirs, .

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