Record-eyeing Younis puts team first

It would be an injustice if the Sri Lankans don’t get to bat on the final day, says Younis Khan © AFP
 

After finishing the day at 306 not out, the obvious question to Younis Khan was whether he would aim to break Brian Lara’s record for the highest Test score. Although falling short of offering a clear-cut answer, he said the team will aim for bat for another 40-odd overs – which would give him enough time to reach 401 – before giving his bowlers some match practice before the second Test in Lahore.”I want to bat another 40-plus overs tomorrow and if I have a chance to come close to the record it’s fine, but the main target is to give some bowling to the bowlers,” Younis said after the day’s play. “In my mind I think our bowlers should bowl some overs tomorrow because they need some bowling before the second Test. We have youngsters like Yasir Arafat and Sohail Khan, and Umar Gul also needed some bowling.”Younis became the third Pakistan batsman after Hanif Mohammad and Inzamam-ul-Haq to reach a triple-hundred. He has himself been critical of the pitch, but Younis counted himself lucky to complete the achievement on a “cemented” track. “I dedicate this effort to my family, who have always prayed for me and backed me in difficult times, and my friends, team-mates.”With the pressure of avoiding the follow-on on them, Younis and the other Pakistan batsman adopted a cautious approach, and their 574 for 5 took 202 overs; in contrast Sri Lanka made 644 for 7 declared in 155.2. “On this wicket runs were not easy and that too against spinners like Murali [Muttiah Muralitharan] because the ball was skidding on it.”Younis has been at the crease for most of the innings. He arrived shortly before stumps on the second day, and managed to bat out two more. “I’m still feeling good and I have a couple of more hours of batting strength left in me and I will try my best. My body is in good shape,” he said. “My first target was to avoid the follow-on but now the target is to come on equal first-innings points with Sri Lanka. If we score 30-40 more than they did it will be good for us.”Younis said there was “nothing left in the game”, and he did not expect any fifth-day surprises. “The wicket is slow and the ball is breaking but it’s not like that it’s unplayable. The ball is not gripping and there’s nothing left in the wicket.”Younis also played a good host, saying that besides testing his bowlers, a declaration was due since otherwise it would be “an injustice to the Sri Lankans” who have fielded for 200-odd overs. “We can also come in this position in future,” he said. “Cricket’s charm should be there and we will give them around 40 to 50 overs to bat.”Younis may have tackled the likes of Murali and Ajantha Mendis during his innings, but he felt it did not match up to his match-winning 267 against India in Bangalore in 2005. “I think the Bangalore innings was more important because we won that match and managed to draw the series. I rate that innings more highly than this one.” Nor did he think it was better than Inzamam’s triple against New Zealand in Lahore in 2002. “Inzamam’s triple-century was made in intense heat. I played that match. He hit around 12-13 sixes [he hit nine]. He was out of form and was struggling. I watched that innings from the dressing room. Inzy ‘s innings was top-class.”I was lucky – it’s hot in Karachi but there’s a breeze in the afternoon which makes things good.”Younis could face a tricky call if he is close to 400 when a declaration is needed. “In my mind only the team plan matters if I come close to 400 I would give message to my team whether they want me to stay for couple of more overs. Records are not important for me; for me the team comes first.”

Malik does a U-turn on Shoaib

Shoaib Malik: “He is the same Shoaib [Akhtar] who used to run through batting line-ups in one spell of bowling” © AFP
 

Two days after seemingly calling time on Shoaib Akhtar’s international future, Pakistan captain Shoaib Malik has backtracked on his views that the team needed to “move on” beyond the fast bowler, who lacked commitment during their 129-run defeat to Sri Lanka in the second ODI at Karachi.Malik had called into question Shoaib’s commitment in the field and his fitness in maintaining speeds over ten overs. But ahead of the final ODI in Lahore, Malik surprisingly denied he had singled out anyone.”I don’t get personal against anyone,” he said. “I don’t think I named anyone individually. I definitely spoke about whoever could not field for 50 overs. It could be me or anyone who is selected in the 15-man squad.”Malik acknowledged that Shoaib’s lengthy absence from international cricket – he got his first taste of one-day cricket in 14 months during the two games in Karachi – had played a part in his sluggishness. Shoaib, who bowled only 13 overs, conceding 88 runs and taking only one wicket, also looked limited while fielding.”He is definitely struggling to get back into rhythm after spending so much time on the sidelines,” said Malik. “But he is the same Shoaib who used to run through batting line-ups in one spell of bowling.”Cricinfo has learnt that Malik’s initial comments had the backing of members of the team management. In discussions thereafter, with the management and selectors, Malik is said to have once again made clear his original views on Shoaib’s commitment.However, it is believed that senior board officials have chided Malik for his comments during the middle of a series, which would explain the subsequent backtracking in Lahore.Shoaib has so far refused to respond to the statements but appeared jovial during training before the series decider, joking with Muttiah Muralitharan and reporters.

Gambhir and Dravid light up gloomy day


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

Rahul Dravid took his time to turn a nervous start into an innings of confidence and resolve © Getty Images
 

This was a day of accumulation that offered little out-and-out entertainment – 179 runs and one wicket came off 72 overs – but one that belonged entirely to India. The gloomy weather, which accounted for 18 lost overs, was lifted by Gautam Gambhir’s fourth, and most watchful, Test century and – a sight to please every Indian fan – Rahul Dravid’s return to relative form in an innings of sweat, composure and immense character.Stuart Broad had struck a decisive blow on a distinctly chilly morning, removing the dangerous Virender Sehwag without scoring. Batting wasn’t easy in the first 45 minutes, especially when the bowlers hit a length just outside off stump. After ten overs India were 15 for 1 as both batsmen shunned all extravagance; 68 deliveries separated the first and second boundaries of the innings.Despite the movement, there was no nervousness, tension or half-measures from Gambhir. Clearly riding on the confidence of his role in the team during a successful year, he slipped into the sheet-anchor’s role commendably, secure in defence and curbing his tendency to attack. Having seen off Broad’s six testing opening overs, Gambhir took two fours off the seventh and gradually flourished against the rest of the attack. He motored along in the hope that the man at the other end would stick around to provide him company.This was a position Dravid used to revel in in times gone by, and today no situation could have been better laid for him. Somewhere between a loose push outside off stump in Chennai and taking strike in Mohali, a struggling Dravid took a step back to see what he had left.He had begun his innings in a slump that went beyond mere statistics and with India in early trouble on a tricky surface. Early dot-balls will always remain bogeys for Dravid and he played and missed and miscued a weak pull shot between two converging fielders. By lunch, he had inched his way to 11 from 53 balls and India had clawed back to something resembling a platform.As the footwork got more assured, so did Dravid and Gambhir’s strokeplay. Though not always timing the ball perfectly and a bit anxious while running between the wickets, Dravid gained confidence in spurts. He began with a flowing cover drive off Monty Panesar and an on-drive off Andrew Flintoff immediately after lunch, but the focus was clearly on getting well on top of the ball with a high elbow and the full face of the bat. Once settled, Dravid played his trademark shots: Broad was twice clipped through midwicket, Panesar driven exquisitely past three fielders on the off.

Smart Stats
  • Gautam Gambhir’s unbeaten 106 was his fourth Test century and his third this year. He went without a hundred in his first nine innings in 2008 but has scored three in his last six. He is currently the fourth-highest run-getter for India this year with 964 in eight Tests at an average of 68.85 – the highest for an Indian batsman this year.
  • Gambhir and Rahul Dravid were involved in a century-partnership for the third time, and the first time in India. They average 50.47 for their 959 runs together in 20 innings.
  • Dravid went past 8000 runs at No.3, the first batsman to do so. In the process, he overtook Ricky Ponting, who has 7992 runs at an average of 62.43.
  • This was Dravid’s first fifty in nine innings. He went without a fifty in nine innings earlier this year, starting from the second Test against South Africa in Ahmedabad in April to the the first innings of the final Test against Sri Lanka in Colombo in August.

This was Dravid’s 54th half-century, but in terms of pressure and nerves it could have felt like his first. The period from lunch to tea is often a segment of consolidation but for Dravid, those 32 overs between the two intervals allowed him time to turn a nervous start into an innings of confidence and resolve.Gambhir, meanwhile, drove down the ground and through cover, uppercut Broad over the slips twice, and deposited Graeme Swann for six. He had two lucky moments, both off Swann – a dropped catch by Collingwood when on 70 and, one run later, when he copped one on the pads, the ball seeming to have everything going for it except Daryl Harper’s consent. They were rare moments of fortune in what was otherwise a commanding innings.Three consecutive off-side doubles, each more aggressive than the last, took Gambhir to 99 and he duly raised a century off 214 balls with a trademark clip off the pads. In terms of balls faced, this was Gambhir’s slowest hundred but it will give him immense satisfaction. Stirringly, it continued his amorous relationship with the PCA Stadium.After Broad’s early success, England’s attack tapered off. Flintoff’s control kept a choke on the scoring, James Anderson didn’t make the batsmen play enough, and Panesar again struggled to find his rhythm. Swann was the slowest bowler, but also appeared the most dangerous. He again purchased turn, and was unlucky not to have Gambhir twice. England failed to maintain control, while Gambhir and Dravid ensured that Mohali, despite all the pre-match talk of a green tinge, and the first hour of play, lived up to its reputation of being a batsman’s track.

West Indies ease to 40-run win

ScorecardWest Indies made the perfect start to their tour of Sri Lanka with a win in the first ODI in Dambulla. Stacy Ann-King laid the foundation with her 70 and offspinners Afy Fletcher and Stefanie Taylor shared six wickets between them to ensure a comfortable 40-run win.Sri Lankan captain Shashikala Siriwardene looked to have made the correct decision to field first, as Sripali Weerakkody struck in the second over, trapping Deandra Dottin leg-before. Chamani Seneviratna then removed Juliana Nero as West Indies were reduced to 27 for 2 in the seventh over.As King held up one end, a steady trickle of wickets at the other saw West Indies struggle at 50 for 5. Weerakkody was the wrecker-in-chief picking up three wickets during the collapse.Useful stand with Danielle Small and Kiribyina Alexander saw King guiding the team to relative safety at 136, bringing up her half-century in the process.However, left-arm spinner Suwini de Alwis ensured there was no fightback by removing Alexander, Anisa Mohammed and King in three successive overs. King hit eight fours and two sixes in her 100-ball innings.It was Shanel Daley’s unbeaten 16 that helped West Indies to cross the 150-mark and finally finish on 167.Openers Dedunu Silva and Chamari Polgampola gave Sri Lanka a good start to their chase, but Fletcher dismissed Silva with 39 on the board; Siriwardene followed 12 runs later.Polgampola and Hiruka Fernando then looked to rebuild the innings, putting on 40 for the second wicket. But a dramatic collapse was to follow.Polgmapola was out lbw to Mohammed, who again struck in her next over, getting Fernando caught and bowled with the score 94 for 4. Taylor accounted for de Alwis and Eshani Kaushalya in successive balls as the momentum swung back in favour of the visitors.Taylor bowled Weerakoddy to end with figures of 8-2-10-3 as West Indies closed in on victory. Fletcher took the final wicket of Dilani Manodara to finish with 3 for 21 and wrap up the win, as Sri Lanka lost their last six wickets for 18 runs.

Dropped catches, and the spell of the day

Kamran Akmal scored 22 off 11 balls to propel Pakistan to 273 © AFP
 

An expensive dropped catch
Khurram Manzoor was dropped even before he got off the mark and this cost West Indies as he went on to add 85 with Younis Khan. In the fifth over he played an uppish square-drive off Daren Powell straight to point, where Nikita Miller messed up the catch. Manzoor went on to score 30, given one more life when on 6.The partnership that took it away
Manzoor’s wicket was hardly a breakthrough for the run-rate jumped up once Misbah-ul-Haq joined Younis in the middle. The two added 103 at more than five an over and guided Pakistan towards a competitive total. They scored at almost an even pace – Misbah getting 45 and Younis 51 in the partnershipThe cameo
Though Younis and Misbah built the platform for Pakistan, the total may have got stuck around the 250-mark had it not been for Kamran Akmal’s late hitting. He hit two sixes and a four in his 11-ball 22 that took his side to 273.Spell of the day
West Indies were on course at 167 for 1 when Shoaib Malik threw the ball back to Iftikhar Anjum, who had gone for 25 runs in his first three overs. This time Anjum derailed West Indies’ chase by taking three wickets in two overs. Sarwan misread the line to be bowled for 62, Shivnarine Chanderpaul popped a catch to midwicket and Xavier Marshall inside-edged the ball on to his stumps.The end
Though West Indies had lost six wickets and needed more than six an over to win, Gayle was still around. He had just hit Anjum for two sixes in an over that cost 19 runs when Umar Gul came to bowl the 44th over. The fourth ball was pitched fuller and while trying to dig it out, Gayle edged it to the keeper. There was some doubt over whether the ball bounced en route to Akmal and umpire Daryl Harper conferred with the third umpire before giving Gayle out. That wicket ended West Indies’ hopes of preventing a series whitewash; for the second time in the series Gayle ended with a century in a losing cause.

Groenewald leaves Edgbaston for Derby

Tim Groenewald has left Warwickshire to bolster Derbyshire’s squad for the 2009 season.Groenewald, 24 – a South African who is England-qualified – left Warwickshire by mutual consent, and his addition to the Derbyshire squad was met with excited anticipation by their head of cricket, John Morris.”I am delighted to have added to our squad with a talented cricketer who, like Garry Park, is of a good age with plenty of improvement left in him,” Morris said. “Tim is an ambitious cricketer who adds depth to our seam attack as well as being a dynamic talent with the bat. He is an excellent addition to our squad as we look forward to the 2009 season.”A big-hitting batsman and fast-medium bowler, Groenewald posted a career-best first-class score of 78 against Bangladesh A in July and his best bowling performance to date (5 for 24) came against Cambridge in May.”We fully understand that Tim is keen to make his mark in the game and he has been disappointed not to get more first-team cricket so it would be wrong of us to stand in his way at this stage of his career if he can get greater opportunities elsewhere,” said Ashley Giles, Warwickshire’s director of cricket. “We all join in wishing him well for his future with Derbyshire and a successful cricket career.”

Arendse angry at moves to oust him

Norman Arendse: ‘I was elected president at a meeting last year and that should be valid for three years’ © Getty Images
 

Cricket South Africa’s president Norman Arendse is facing moves to oust him according to media reports, even though he has two years of his term still to serve.Arendse, who has had a turbulent year, is set to be opposed by Gauteng’s president Mtutuzeli Nyoka at a special meeting called by the provinces on September 26.Arendse told the Beeld newspaper that he was particularly disappointed to learn that Ray Mali was linked with the group standing against him and had been nominated for the vice-president post.”When Mali became president of the ICC and people told him he wouldn’t make it because he didn’t have the experience, I was the one who stood by him and defended him,” Arendse said. “I can’t tell you how shocked I was when I heard in Dubai last week that he is now in the camp of those who want to get rid of me.”The opportunity to force change has come about because CSA is undergoing a restructuring for tax reasons and it will become a non-profit-making company. That process, Arendse claimed, was still in progress, but he was confident that he would be able to survive any challenges.”It would appear … the status quo will be maintained with regard to the office-bearers, who will serve for two years from the time the company is established. I was elected president at a meeting last year and that should be valid for three years. Now there are suddenly people who are going back on that which was agreed on.”

Ireland take series after washout

– no result
ScorecardKenya’s disappointing tour of the British Isles ended in a fittingly anticlimactic fashion when their third and final ODI against Ireland at Stormont was abandoned without a ball being bowled.After a week of heavy rain, the prospects of any play were slim, and after an 11 o’clock inspection the umpires decided that the bowlers’ run-ups at the City End were too soft for the match to commence.It was the second abandonment in three days at the Stormont ground – on Monday, the second ODI was washed out after only eight overs, which left Ireland as the victors in the three-match series, following their 33-run win in Sunday’s opening fixture.

Durham sense victory after 23 wickets fall

Division One

An extraordinary match took shape at Chester-le-Street as 23 wickets crashed on the second day – after 15 yesterday – with Kent facing defeat on 116 for 8 chasing 177 against Durham. Only bad light prevented a two-day finish and it had already been decided to convene an ECB pitch panel after the first-day tumble of wickets. They soon announced no action, but there has been torrential rain in recent days and the surface provided plenty of assistance throughout. Kent were humbled for 78 in their first innings before fighting back to remove Durham for 108 second time around. However, after adjusting their batting order and reaching 96 for 3 Kent lost five for 20 and it will be down to Martin van Jaarsveld to try and rescue the run chase. He is one of only two batsmen to pass 28 in the match following Ryan McLaren’s 44 off 61 balls after Kent’s second innings fell to 36 for 3. But Mark Davies continued a remarkable match, backing up his 5 for 21 in the first innings with four more wickets to leave Durham sensing victory. His haul had given Durham a crucial lead of 68, however the home side’s batting crumbled again against Robbie Joesph, who took a career-best 6 for 32. Geraint Jones took six catches, but Kent’s target of 177 would be the biggest total of the match. It looks a long way off.Adil Rashid took a career-best 7 for 107 as Hampshire and Yorkshire ended all-square on first innings at The Rose Bowl. There has been talk that Rashid has regressed as a bowler since he burst on the scene a couple of seasons ago, so this was a timely haul. Hampshire’s top four all made starts but failed to convert into something more substantial as Rashid began chipping away. On a slow pitch Rashid found big turn and at one stage was on a hat-trick after having Michael Lumb caught at silly point, then trapping Chris Benham by one which stayed low. Nic Pothas kept out the hat-trick ball but, he too, soon fell to Rashid. Only a last-wicket stand of 38 between David Balcombe and James Tomlinson allowed the home side to draw level. Tomlinson earlier played his part in wrapping up Yorkshire’s innings to end with 5 for 53. Jacques Rudolph was caught behind off Chris Tremlett for 89.Justin Langer and Marcus Trescothick brought Somerset right back into their match against Nottinghamshire at Taunton with an unbeaten opening stand of 114, more than the whole Somerset first innings. The second day was restricted to 45 overs by rain, but the game continued to progress as the visitors managed a lead of 124 with Chris Read hitting 74. Read put on 37 for the last wicket with Charlie Shreck, who contributed just 2 during a 53-minute stay. Langer and Trescothick played positively as they aimed to wipe off the deficit and Nottinghamshire’s bowlers found life much tougher.Click here for John Ward’s report of Lancashire against Sussex at Old Trafford

Division Two

Derbyshire fought hard to stay in contention against Worcestershire after Graeme Hick’s first-day onslaught at New Road, and are just 23 runs away from saving the follow-on, but Simon Jones kept the home side in control. Paul Borrington’s Championship best of 85 off 249 balls set a defiant tone, although he was dropped on 40 at slip shortly after a painful blow on the elbow. Greg Smith provided the other major contribution with a more aggressive 88. However, an incisive spell from Jones made crucial inroads as he removed both leading scorers, and Rikki Clarke for a second-ball duck, in the space of 10 balls. All three were caught behind by Steven Davies and even if Worcestershire can’t enforce the follow-on they are well-placed for a handsome lead.Steve Kirby’s four wickets have put Gloucestershire in control against Leicestershire at Cheltenham and given them hope of registering their first Championship win since beating the same opponents nearly a year ago. Leicestershire were in real trouble at 95 for 5 after HD Ackerman drove loosely at David Brown to give Steven Snell one of his five catches. The follow-on was looming, but a stand of 63 between the on-loan Tom Smith and Josh Cobb at least erased that problem. Gloucestershire suffered their own batting problems during the first session, falling from 271 for 5 to 315 all out. It meant eight wickets had gone for 87 after they’d been 228 for 2 on the first day. Jim Allenby and Dillon du Preez both ended with four wickets.Poor weather meant just 26.4 overs were possible at Colwyn Bay as Middlesex reached 58 for 2 in reply to Glamorgan’s 262. Jamie Dalrymple added three runs to finish on 106 as Alan Richardson ended with three wickets. The home side’s bowlers made early inroads with a wicket apiece for Adam Shantry and Richard Grant, who claimed the key scalp of Owais Shah, before the weather closed in.1st dayConsistent contributions from the Northamptonshire top order lifted them to a promising 292 for 5 against Warwickshire at Edgbaston. David Sales was the only one of the top five not to get a foothold on an innings, but the disappointment will be that no one went beyond Rob White’s 73. That was mainly due to the efforts of Ian Salisbury, who claimed four wickets to prevent Northamptonshire running away. Introduced as the sixth bowler, Salisbury broke through the opening stand of 96 when Niall O’Brien picked out deep midwicket shortly before lunch and he was soon followed by Stephen Peters, beaten by the turn as he came down the pitch. White, though, played positively and hit nine fours and three sixes until he top-edged a sweep. Rikki Wessels, who cracked a rapid half-century in the previous day’s Pro40, also chipped along at a fair rate but he was caught off top-edged pull for 61.

New Zealand denied win in tied thriller

Scorecard

Alex Wakely cracked 64 in England’s 237 during a thrilling match at Hove © Getty Images
 

New Zealand Under-19s were denied in their quest to level the three-match series against England, with a thrilling tie at Hove. Chasing 238, New Zealand appeared to be on course but Liam Dawson (5 for 39) caused mid-order panic before Luke Fletcher took the last wicket of the final ball.Alex Wakely spearheaded England’s 237, continuing his fine form with another fifty, and shared in a powerful opening partnership of 110 with Alex Hales. New Zealand’s opening bowlers, Andrew Mathieson and Greg Morgan both leaked boundaries, though Mathieson recovered with Wakely’s wicket – but not after he had crashed 64 from 47 balls.New Zealand fought back strongly thereafter, with their two spinners – Nick Beard and George Worker – seven wickets apiece as England’s innings fell away.Like England, New Zealand’s openers got off to a fine start in pursuit of 238 as Michael Bracewell (47) and Worker (41) put on 88, and there were useful contributions from Kane Williamson (28) and Fraser Colson (24). However, after William Beer broke through the top three, Dawson ran through the middle-order as New Zealand slipped to 185 for 8.Beard (23) and Morgan (32) gave New Zealand genuine hope, however, with a bristling 51-run stand as the tourists inched closer. But Morgan fell with two runs needed before Fletcher bowled Beard with the scores level, to record a memorable tie.