India break blockathon to win series 3-0

India broke past stubborn stonewalling from an AB de Villiers-led South African line-up to wrap up a 337-run win in the Delhi Test and take the series 3-0

The Report by Karthik Krishnaswamy07-Dec-2015
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details1:40

Manjrekar: India spinners will finally get the credit they deserve

The scorecard will say South Africa were bowled out for 143, another low score in series where they only passed 200 once in seven attempts. It will say India won by 337 runs to complete a 3-0 series win. But for anyone who didn’t witness the Delhi Test, it will take a closer reading to appreciate the extent of South Africa’s fourth-innings defiance and India’s struggle to bowl them out. Between them, India’s four specialist bowlers sent down 136.1 overs, bowled 87 maidens against a set of batsmen who had made up their minds to block everything.In the end, South Africa simply had too much to do. AB de Villiers played out 297 balls, Hashim Amla 244, and Temba Bavuma and Faf du Plessis ate up a fair share of deliveries in a concerted effort of stonewalling. But to do so for more than five sessions was simply too much of an ask on a slow Feroz Shah Kotla surface that began deteriorating halfway through the final day.Having lost only five wickets in 138 overs until tea on day five, South Africa lost their last five wickets in the space of 27 balls. Umesh Yadav, bowling fast and reversing the ball appreciably, bowled Dane Vilas and Kyle Abbott, and had Dane Piedt caught behind by Wriddhiman Saha diving in front of first slip. But the big wicket was that of de Villiers, who had been at the crease since early in the final session of day four. Having defended resolutely and taken a series of painful blows on the glove, he wasn’t able to keep out an R Ashwin offbreak that spat at him from a good length. The ball popped off that much-battered glove and settled in leg slip’s hands.It was only fitting that Ashwin, the best bowler on either side right through the series, ended the match with another five-for, bowling Morne Morkel as he shouldered arms to a ball that drifted into him through the air and spun less than expected. He ended the series with 31 wickets and his fifth Man-of-the-Series award.Till his dismissal, de Villiers had been a picture of calm at the crease, his footwork precise but not extravagant, moving him into compact positions from where he watched the ball closely and defended at the last possible moment. He was not getting as close to the pitch of the ball as Amla had consistently done, and there were more edges as a result. However, his hands were impeccably soft, and the ball died a painless death a short distance from the bat and well away from the close-in fielders.If anything, his approach possibly made the pitch look better to bat on than it actually was. A number of deliveries misbehaved in one way or another over the course of the day, but De Villiers minimised their danger by playing almost impossibly late, and refusing entirely to go hard at the ball.The one bowler who consistently worried him was Umesh Yadav. In two overs close to the lunch break, he got the ball to rear at de Villiers three times. Twice he knocked his bat out of his hands, smacking his top glove once and his bottom glove on the other occasion. When he came back into the attack late in the second session, he hit his glove with another lifter, either side of balls that jagged in, kept low, and struck him on the unprotected part of the knee.India had a 72-over-old ball at the start of the day, and the first eight overs were shared among the two seamers – who tried, with little success, to unsettle Amla and de Villiers from around the wicket – the occasional leg-rollers of Virat Kohli, and the never-before-seen legbreaks of Cheteshwar Pujara. India were waiting to bring their spinners on when the second new ball was available. With the pitch slowing down considerably, they were banking on getting some life out of it with a harder ball with a prominent seam.Jadeja produced the wicket-taking ball in his third over, drawing Amla forward with flight, and getting the ball to drift into him and spin away sharply. For once, Amla’s front-foot stride was short and insufficient to get close to the pitch of the ball, which beat his outside edge and clipped the outside of his off stump.An air of expectation hung around the middle during the course of Jadeja’s next few overs, with the allrounder producing a loud lbw shout by beating du Plessis with a slider and then producing an edge that fell just short of slip.Eventually, du Plessis settled down, proving himself a worthy recipient of South Africa’s blocking baton. Amla had taken 46 balls to get off the mark, and de Villiers 33. Du Plessis bested both of them, taking 53 balls to get his first run, a pushed single into the covers off an Ashwin full toss.By then, Ashwin had tried everything – a fuller length to try and exploit footmarks outside the off stump, only to be stymied by the South Africans’ refusal to drive, legbreaks and carrom balls, and a switch to around the wicket.At the other end, Jadeja produced an unceasingly metronomic performance. He kept wheeling in, kept attacking the stumps, and the batsmen kept defending stubbornly. His figures at the start of the day were 23-16-10-0. At lunch, they were 35-28-10-1.Having last conceded a run in his 19th over, bowled during the final session of day four, Jadeja threatened Bapu Nadkarni’s 51-year-old record of 21 successive maidens until he sent down a short ball in his 37th; it sat up off the pitch, so slow it almost demanded that du Plessis punch it through the vacant mid-on region.By that time, though, the pitch was beginning to show increasing signs of wear. Turn and bounce from Ashwin produced an appeal for a slip catch off de Villiers in the 117th over, but the ball had lobbed off pad, not bat. In his next over, Ashwin spun one from wide outside off and across the stumps; de Villiers’ pad was in the way but the ball was clearly missing the stumps.Jadeja then ripped one past du Plessis’ outside edge. Perhaps this prompted his front pad to move a little further across in defence than normal, when Jadeja produced a delivery of similar line and length later in the over. It slid on with the arm, though, and struck that pad low, right in front of the stumps. For the second time in the day, Jadeja had been the irresistible force to dislodge an immovable South African.JP Duminy was the new man in. For the first time since the fourth over of South Africa’s innings, when he had dismissed Dean Elgar, Ashwin bowled at a left-hander. There was a tangible edginess to Duminy’s footwork while he faced Ashwin; he moved a fair distance sideways, but barely an inch forward or back.He shuffled all the way across his stumps twice in a row to balls bowled from around the wicket. The first slid on with the angle, past leg stump. The second one straightened just enough to hit Duminy’s front pad as he looked to play around it. All of the Feroz Shah Kotla appealed, and Bruce Oxenford slowly raised his finger. He was struck in line with the stumps, but it was a tight call on whether it straightened enough to hit the stumps; it would have probably hit some part of leg stump.

Steyn a chance to play at SuperSport Park

Dale Steyn could still make an appearance in South Africa’s ongoing Test series against England, which he is currently sitting out of with a shoulder injury

Firdose Moonda14-Jan-2016Dale Steyn could still make an appearance in South Africa’s ongoing Test series against England, which he is currently sitting out of with a shoulder injury. Steyn posted a picture on Twitter of himself in a hyperbaric chamber, which he is using to speed up his recovery.
“Boring, but healing,” Steyn posted, along with a collage of photographs including Scar Tissue, the autobiography of vocalist Anthony Kiedis, which he is reading during sessions.Steyn initially posted that he would spend a fortnight in the chamber, which would rule him out of the fourth Test, but then corrected himself and confirmed he would only need a week of treatment. That period ends on the eve of the Centurion game, which begins on January 22. Steyn will not have much time to get overs in the legs before the game, but he should be bowling fit by the time the ODIs start, on February 3.
Should Steyn not recover in time for the SuperSport Park Test, he would have missed six of South Africa’s eight Tests this season. In the two he played, Steyn broke down both times, first with a groin injury in Mohali, which kept him out of the remaining three Tests in India, and then with a shoulder injury in Durban which forced him out of the New Year’s Test and the ongoing Wanderers Test.South Africa have had to search their reserves in Steyn’s absence and have given two debuts to two bowlers in their last two games. Chris Morris was capped at Newlands and Hardus Viljoen at the Wanderers.

List of players sold and unsold at IPL auction 2016

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Feb-2016

Sold players

Kevin Pietersen (Base price INR 2 crores) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 3.5 croresDwayne Smith (Base price INR 50 lakhs) – sold to Gujarat Lions INR 2.3 croresIshant Sharma (Base price INR 2 crores) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 3.8 croresShane Watson (Base price INR 2 crores) – sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 9.5 croresAshish Nehra (Base price INR 2 crores) – sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 5.5 croresYuvraj Singh (Base price INR 2 crores) – sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 7 croresDale Steyn (Base price INR 1.5 crores) – sold to Gujarat Lions INR 2.3 croresSanju Samson (Base price INR 2 crores) – sold to Delhi Daredevils INR 4.2 croresJos Buttler (Base price INR 1.5 crores) – sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 3.8 croresDinesh Karthik (Base price INR 2 crores) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 2.3 croresIrfan Pathan (Base price INR 1 crore) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 1 croreChris Morris (Base price INR 50 lakhs) – sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 7 croresColin Munro (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 30 lakhsStuart Binny (Base price INR 2 crores) – sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 2 croresMitchell Marsh (Base price INR 2 crores) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 4.8 croresDhawal Kulkarni (Base price INR 2 crores) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 2 croresJohn Hastings (Base price INR 1 crores) – sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 1.3 croresPraveen Kumar (Base price INR 50 lakhs) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 3.5 croresTim Southee (Base price INR 1 crore) – sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 2.5 croresMohit Sharma (Base price INR 1.5 crores) – sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 6.5 croreCarlos Brathwaite (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 4.2 croresMarcus Stoinis (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 55 lakhsMustafizur Rahman (Base price INR 50 lakhs) – sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 1.4 croresJaydev Unadkat (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 1.6 croresKyle Abbott (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 2.1 croresBarinder Sran (Base price INR 50 lakh) – sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 1.2 croresAbhimanyu Mithun (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 30 lakhsRP Singh (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 30 lakhsTravis Head (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 50 lakhsSachin Baby (Base price INt 10 lakh) – sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 10 LakhKarun Nair (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 4 crore Paras Dogra (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 10 lakhIshan Kishan (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 35 lakhRishabh Pant (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 1.9 croreEklavya Dwivedi (Base price INR 20 lakh) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 1 croreAditya Tare (Base price INR 20 lakh) – sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 1.2 croreIqbal Abdulla (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 10 lakhDeepak Hooda (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 4.2 croreAnkit Sharma (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 10 lakhPawan Negi (base price INR 30 lakh) – sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 8.5 croreRajat Bhatia (base price INR 30 lakh) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants INR 60 lakhPradeep Sangwan (Base price INR 20 lakh) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 20 lakhNathu Singh (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 3.2 croresIshwar Pandey (Base price INR 20 lakh) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 20 lakhAnkit Rajpoot (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 1.5 crorePravin Tambe (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 20 lakhShivil Kaushik (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 10 lakhSarabjit Ladda (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 10 lakhM Ashwin (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 4.5 croreKC Cariappa (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 80 lakhAaron Finch (Base price INR 1 crore) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 1 crore (second round)Sam Billings (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 30 lakh (second round)T Suman (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 10 lakh (second round)Ankush Bains (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 10 lakh (second round)Umang Sharma (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 10 lakh (second round)Peter Handscomb – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 30 lakh (second round)Jitesh Sharma (Base price INR 10 lakh) sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 10 lakh (second round)Armaan Jaffer (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 10 lakh (second round)Jason Holder (Base price INR 50 lakhs) sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 70 lakh (second round)Thisara Perera (Base price INR 1 crore) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 1 crore (second round)Ben Cutting (Base price INR 50 lakhs) – sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 50 lakh (second round)Andrew Tye (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 50 lakh (second round)Praveen Dubey (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore at INR 35 lakh (second round)R Sathish (base price INR 20 lakh) – sold to Kolkata Knight Riders for INR 20 lakhVijay Shankar (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Sunrisers Hyderabad for INR 35 lakhShadab Jakati (base price INR 20 lakh) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 20 lakhAkshay Karnewar (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 10 lakhAkshdeep Nath (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 10 lakhManan Sharma (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Kolkata Knight Riders at INR 10 lakhBaba Aparajith (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 10 lakhDeepak Chahar (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Rising Pune Supegiants for INR 10 lakhKishore Kamath (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 1.4 croresPardeep Sahu (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 10 lakhKrunal Pandya (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 2 croresDeepak Punia (base price INR lakh) – sold to Mumbai Indians for INR 10 lakhSwapnil Singh (base price 10 lakh) – sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 10 lakhKhaleel Ahmed (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 10 lakhJaydev Shah (base price INR 20 lakh) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 20 lakhPratyush Singh (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 10 lakhAshok Dinda (Base price INR 50 lakhs) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 50 lakhKane Richardson (Base price INR 2 crores) – sold to Royal Challengers Banglore for INR 2 croreSamuel Badree (Base price INR 50 lakhs) – sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 50 lakhJoel Paris (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 30 lakhScott Boland (Base price INR 50 lakh) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 50 lakhVikramjeet Malik (Base price INR 20 lakh) – sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 20 lakhPawan Suyal (Base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 10 lakhAdam Zampa (Base price INR 30 lakh) – sold to Rising Pune Super Giants for INR 30 lakhAmit Mishra (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Gujarat Lions for INR 10 lakhJaskaran Singh (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Rising Pune Supergiants for INR 10 lakhChama Milind (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 10 lakhVikas Tokas (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Royal Challengers Bangalore at INR 10 lakhFarhaan Behardien (Base price INR 30 lakhs) – sold to Kings XI Punjab for INR 30 lakh (round three)Akhil Herwadkar (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 10 lakhMahipal Lomror (base price INR 10 lakh) – sold to Delhi Daredevils for INR 10 lakh

Unsold players

Martin Guptill (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Rilee Rossouw (Base price INR 1 crore)Cheteshwar Pujara (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Hashim Amla (Base price INR 1 crore)George Bailey (Base price INR 1 crore)S Badrinath (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Mahela Jayawardene (Base price INR 1.5 crores)Michael Hussey (Base price INR 2 crores)Usman Khawaja (Base price INR 1 crore)Shane Dowrich (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Mushfiqur Rahim (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Johnson Charles (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Brad Haddin (Base price INR 1.5 crores)Morne van Wyk (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Ben Dunk (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Cameron Bancroft (Base price INR 10 lakhs)Manoj Tiwary (Base price INR 1 crore)Ravi Bopara (Base price INR 1 crore)Tillakaratne Dilshan (Base price INR 1.5 crores)Darren Sammy (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Sachithra Senanayake (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Veerasammy Permaul (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Nathan Lyon (Base price INR 1 crore)Devendra Bishoo (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Michael Beer (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Ajantha Mendis (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Sulieman Benn (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Rahul Sharma (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Cameron Boyce (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Pragyan Ojha (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Joe Burns (Base price INR 1 crore)David Hussey (Base price INR 1 crore)Darren Bravo (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Adam Voges (Base price INR 1 crore)Nic Maddinson (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Owais Shah (Base price INR 1 crore)Abhinav Mukund (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Doug Bracewell (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Chris Jordan (Base price INR 1 crore)Wayne Parnell (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Grant Elliott (Base price INR 30 lakhs)James Neesham (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Sean Abbott (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Abhishek Nayar (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Munaf Patel (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Beuran Hendricks (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Lahiru Thirimanne (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Richard Levi (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Cameron White (Base price INR 1.5 crores)Tamim Iqbal (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Marlon Samuels (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Dean Elgar (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Reeza Hendricks (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Nathan McCullum (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Jeevan Mendis (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Vernon Philander (Base price INR 50 lakhs)Rusty Theron (Base price INR 30 lakhs)Shehan Jayasuriya (Base price INR 30 lakh)Rayad Emrit (Base price INR 30 lakh)Anton Devcich (Base price INR 30 lakh)Johan Botha (Base price INR 50 lakh)Ashton Agar (Base price INR 50 lakh)Robin Peterson (Base price INR 50 lakh)Fidel Edwards (Base price INR 50 lakh)Jerome Taylor (Base price INR 50 lakh)Parvinder Awana (Base price INR 30 lakh)Sudeep Tyagi (Base price INR 30 lakh)Shaun Tait (Base price INR 1.5 crores)Pankaj Singh (Base price INR 30 lakh)Nuwan Kulasekara (Base price INR 50 lakh)Ben Laughlin (Base price INR 30 lakh)Krishmar Santokie (Base price INR 30 lakh)Isuru Udana (Base price INR 30 lakh)Soumya Sarkar (Base price INR 30 lakh)Dilruwan Perera (Base price INR 50 lakh)Narsingh Deonarine (Base price INR 30 lakh)Henry Davids (Base price INR 50 lakh)Milinda Siriwardana (Base price INR 30 lakh)Dilshan Munaweera (Base price INR 30 lakh)Christopher Barnwell (Base price INR 30 lakh)Seekuge Prasanna (Base price INR 30 lakh)George Worker (Base price INR 30 lakh)Dasun Shanaka (Base price INR 30 lakh)Taskin Ahmed (Base price INR 30 lakh)Shannon Gabriel (Base price INR 50 lakh)Dushmantha Chameera (Base price INR 30 lakh)Hardus Viljoen (Base price INR 30 lakh)Mthokozisi Shezi (Base price INR 1 crore)Tino Best (Base price INR 30 lakh)Jackson Bird (Base price INR 50 lakh)Mithun Manhas (Base price INR 30 lakh)Ankit Bawne (Base price INR 10 lakh)Himanshu Rana (Base price INR 10 lakh)Debabrata Das (Base price INR 10 lakh)Aiden Blizzard (Base price INR 30 lakh)Pinal Shah (Base price INR 10 lakh)CM Gautam (Base price INR 20 lakh)Dishank Yagnik (Base price INR 10 lakh)Manvinder Bisla (Base price INR 10 lakh)Padmanabhan Prasanth (Base price INR 10 lakh)Kevin O’Brien (Base price INR 30 lakh)Kevon Cooper (Base price INR 30 lakh)C Stephen (Base price INR 10 lakh)Domnic Muthuswami (Base price INR 10 lakh)Veer Pratap Singh (Base price INR 10 lakh)Harmeet Singh (Base price INR 10 lakh)Aswin Crist (Base price INR 10 lakh)Rahul Shukla (Base price INR 10 lakh)Siddharth Trivedi (Base price INR 10 lakh)KK Jiyas (Base price INR 10 lakh)Hardik Patel (Base price INR 10 lakh)Rahil Shah (Base price INR 10 lakh)Bharghav Bhatt (Base price INR 10 lakh)Karanveer Singh (Base price INR 10 lakh)Arun Karthik (Base price INR 10 lakh)Evin Lewis (Base price INR 20 lakh)Alex Ross (Base price INR 20 lakh)Apoorv Wankhade (Base price INR 10 lakh)Prashant Gupta (Base price INR 10 lakh)Rahul Tewatia (Base price INR 10 lakh)Rohan Prem (base price INR 10 lakh)Dinesh Salunkhe (base price INR 10 lakh)Ravi Jangid (base price INR 10 lakh)Gurinder Singh (base price INR 10 lakh)James Pattinson (Base price INR 1.5 crores)Pankaj Jaswal (base price INR 10 lakh)Navdeep Saini (base price INR 10 lakh)Saurabh Kumar (base price INR 10 lakhRishi Arothe (INR 10 lakh)Baltej Singh (base price INr 10 lakh)Kshitiz Sharma (base price INR 10 lakh)

Leicestershire secure £1 million loan for redevelopment

Leicestershire County Cricket Club has secured a £1 million loan from the city council to improve its facilities in time for next year’s Women’s World Cup

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Feb-2016Leicestershire County Cricket Club has secured a £1 million loan from the city council to improve its facilities in time for next year’s Women’s World Cup.The loan, which will be repaid in full from Leicestershire’s ECB grant in 2018, will be serviced at a 5% interest rate and secured by a formal legal agreement between the club and the ECB.It follows Leicester City Council’s lifting, in February 2014, of a 50-year-old covenant that had previously restricted development at the club. The club was granted permission, in January, to install permanent floodlights, which they hope will be in place by the start of this season’s NatWest T20 Blast in May.Grace Road was named earlier this month as one of the five venues for the Women’s World Cup, alongside Taunton, Derby, Bristol and Lord’s, which will host the final on July 23.”We have a robust business plan and want to improve the experience of coming to the Fischer County Ground, Grace Road as quickly as we can,” said Wasim Khan, Leicestershire’s chief executive.”Our plans include improving public Wi-Fi, increasing the number of quality food and drink outlets to reduce queuing, and developing our existing stands all around the ground. We also want to restore the Maurice Burrows Balcony to give supporters a great view of the action.”It’s imperative that we drive forward these plans as quickly as possible, as we are hosting major match days in the next two years, including our popular NatWest T20 Blast games and the ICC Women’s World Cup in 2017. That event will help inspire a generation of young cricket supporters and will encourage more female cricketers to take up sport in the city of Leicester.Despite ongoing concerns about the level of debt that the club has accumulated in recent seasons, Leicester’s City Mayor, Peter Soulsby, said that he recognised the wide-reaching benefits of investing in sports facilities.”The cricket club has ambitious plans which will help to attract more people to attend matches, and will raise the profile of the club and the city across the country,” Soulsby said. “Having successful sports clubs brings major benefits to the city, as the recent success of Leicester City Football Club has shown. By providing this loan the council can help the cricket club to fast-track its improvements, and we will earn interest on the repayment.”Five per cent interest is more than we would get if we left the money in the bank,” Soulsby told the Leicester Mercury. “We are intensely aware that other well-meaning councils have had their fingers burned when they have made loans to sports clubs. [But] we have done all the due diligence on this and the loan is secured.”

Emotional Sammy disappointed by lack of WICB support

West Indies captain Darren Sammy’s emotional speech at the presentation ceremony after his team won the World T20 final against England at Eden Gardens

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Apr-2016I want to thank the almighty, because without him nothing is possible. We have a pastor in the team in Andre Fletcher, he keeps on praying. We are a praying team. I’m really happy for this win and it’s something we are going to cherish for a long time.I’ve said we have 15 match-winners. Nobody gave us a chance but every game somebody stepped up and took responsibility. To see Carlos [Brathwaite] play like that in his debut World Cup, it’s just tremendous. It shows the depth we have in the Caribbean in T20 cricket and hopefully with the right structure and development our cricket will continue to improve in one-day and Test cricket.We started this journey … we all know we had … people were wondering whether we would play this tournament. We had a lot of issues, we felt disrespected by our board, Mark Nicholas described our team as a team with no brains. All these things before the tournament just brought this team together. I really want to thank these 15 men, the ability to just put all those adversities aside and to come out and play this type of cricket in front of such passionate fans, it’s just tremendous.I personally also want to thank the coaching staff, coach Phil, he’s been through a lot, and to come here and the way he’s coached the team, he’s just brilliant. All the other coaching staff, who have done their part. We had a new manager in this tournament in Rawl Lewis, he had never managed any team before. He came here, we were at a camp in Dubai, but we had no uniforms, no printed … he left Dubai, went to Kolkata, that’s where he started. The trouble he went to, to get us in this uniform … I got to give credit to the entire team here, it was us in our own little circle, this win we dedicate it to all our fans in the Caribbean.Lastly I really want to thank the heads of CARICOM, throughout this tournament they have been supporting the team, we’ve got emails, we’ve got phone calls, Prime Minister [Keith] Mitchell [from Grenada]. He sent a very inspiring email for the team this morning … and I’m yet to hear from our own cricket board. That is very disappointing.For today, I’m going to celebrate with these 15 men and coaching staff. I don’t know when I’m going to be playing with these guys again because we don’t get selected for one-day cricket. We don’t know when we’re going to be playing T20. So this win, I want to thank you my team, I want to thank you coaching staff … everybody know West Indies are champion!

SLC wishes to retain de Silva's services

Sri Lanka Cricket wishes to retain outgoing chief selector Aravinda de Silva as an “advisor of cricket affairs” – a new loosely-defined position, in which he will be expected to work with the new selectors and national team management

Andrew Fidel Fernando12-Apr-2016Sri Lanka Cricket wishes to retain outgoing chief selector Aravinda de Silva as an “advisor of cricket affairs” – a new loosely-defined position, in which he will be expected to work with the new selectors and national team management. De Silva will step down as chief selector at the end of the month to focus on his business interests, but the board has asked that he stay involved in this consulting role.”We all know of Aravinda de Silva’s experience, his knowledge and his ability to work constructively with people around him,” SLC president Thilanga Sumathipala said. “So we have made this request of him, because our cricket needs to tap into those resources.”SLC also re-appointed Charith Senanayake as team manager for the tour to England, and Australia’s tour of Sri Lanka in July and August. Senanayake had most recently been manager in early 2013, before he was ousted from that role by the Upali Dhardmadasa-led board at the time.Jerome Jayaratne, who had performed the duties of team manager during the World T20 and Asia Cup, will now be free to focus on his role as assistant coach.

Leach takes four as Surrey collapse

Jack Leach was the bowling hero on the first day of Somerset’s Specsavers’ County Championship game against Surrey at Taunton. He picked up four wickets in his 18 overs as Surrey finished the day on 236 for 8

ECB Reporters Network28-May-2016
ScorecardJack Leach put Surrey in a spin•Getty Images

Jack Leach was the bowling hero on the first day of Somerset’s Specsavers’ County Championship game against Surrey at Taunton. He picked up four wickets in his 18 overs as Surrey finished the day on 236 for 8.Having chosen to bat first, Surrey made a quickfire start before losing their first wicket, at 26, when Rory Burns was caught at second slip by Marcus Trescothick off the bowling of Craig Overton.Arun Harinath followed with the score on 70, once again caught by Trescothick at slip, this time off the bowling of Jim Allenby.It was turning out to be a morning of mixed fortunes for Allenby who had earlier dropped Kumar Sangakkara at slip off Jamie Overton. Still, the former Glamorgan allrounder did strike shortly before lunch when trapping Gary Wilson lbw for 12 at 90 for 3.Sangakkara looked in decent touch until the first over after lunch when he offered a return catch that bowler Tim Groenewald gratefully accepted.Left-handers Steven Davies and Zafar Ansari played well, thereafter, adding 85 for the fourth wicket in even time. However, having been dropped at short leg by Trescothick earlier in his innings, Davies eventually played around a Leach delivery, from the River End, and was given out lbw, for 49, off 119 balls.Then, off the final ball before tea, Ansari, who struck four boundary fours and a six over long-on, off Leach, offered a catch to Trescothick at short leg to leave Surrey on 201 for 6.Leach picked up a third wicket, that of Tom Curran, caught at slip by Allenby for 0 and shortly after sent back captain Gareth Batty, lbw for 0. At that stage, Surrey had lost four wickets for no runs in 28 minutes.Ben Foakes and Mathew Pillans dug in after tea and together rescued what was a rather desperate situation, for Surrey. They added an unbeaten 35 for the ninth wicket when the players were forced off the field due to rain, thunder and lightning.

BCB pays Kalabagan and Cricket Coaching School players

The BCB has paid the players of Dhaka Premier League clubs Kalabagan Cricket Academy (KCA) and Cricket Coaching School (CCS) their dues on Wednesday

Mohammad Isam29-Jun-2016The BCB has paid the players of Dhaka Premier League clubs Kalabagan Cricket Academy (KCA) and Cricket Coaching School (CCS) their dues on Wednesday, a week after the deadline it had issued for payments to be made had passed. Players from Victoria Sporting Club and Brothers Union, however, remained unpaid and were in the dark leading into the Eid holidays.The board paid the KCA players 30% and the CCS players 52% of their total payment, completing the 60% they were supposed to be paid by June 9, when the league’s first phase ended. The BCB had instructed the clubs to pay the players 30% of their full payment before the start of the league, the next 30% at the end of the first phase, and the remaining 40% six weeks after the end of the Super League on June 22.Players and officials from Abahani Limited, Gazi Group Cricketers, Kalabagan Krira Chakra, Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club, Legends of Rupganj, Prime Bank Cricket Club and Prime Doleshwar Sporting Club confirmed they had received 60% of their payment, and were awaiting the rest in the next five weeks. Some of the Mohammedan Sporting Club players were waiting for the second installment but most of the players had been paid the amount due.CCS captain Rajin Saleh said he received a check from an officer of CCDM, the BCB standing committee that runs the capital’s leagues. He said he received 52% of his total payment from the board, in addition to the 8% he had received from CCS during the league.”The BCB has paid the CCS players today,” Rajin said. “We are quite relieved because now we have at least the first 60% of the payment. We will tell the club that if they pay us another 10%, we will let go of the remaining money.”KCA captain Mahmudul Hasan also confirmed that many of his team-mates had received cheques from the board. BCB director Jalal Yunus said the BCB considered paying players from these two clubs first because of their plight during the league. He also said that KCA and CCS would have to reimburse the BCB the full amount it paid on behalf of their clubs.”We have paid players from these two clubs as they have suffered the most during the league,” Yunus told ESPNcricinfo. “We have informed both clubs that they have to reimburse the BCB the exact payment. Otherwise we will have to take action against them.”However, the BCB and the players from Victoria and Brothers Union remained unaware about their payment. ESPNcricinfo learned that the clubs had told the board that they would make the payment themselves, but as of June 29 the players had not been given the remaining money.”The payment issue with Victoria and Brothers is unlikely to be resolved before Eid. The clubs told the BCB that they would pay the players but so far the players haven’t been paid,” a BCB official said. “I think the board will wait until after Eid before paying the players.”Brothers Union batsman Shahriar Nafees said they were owed 30% by the club. “The Brothers Union club authorities have assured us that they are going to pay us as soon as they have funds,” he said. “The BCB too have told us that they will do all they can to get the clubs to pay us. We also prefer that the clubs pay us. It has become quite difficult for many of the players, because Eid is coming up.”The situation is most difficult for the Victoria players. On June 14, they wanted to meet the BCB CEO Nizamuddin Chowdhury but were stopped by their club president Nisar Uddin Ahmed Kazal’s promise that they would be paid up to 60% by the next day. The payment was not made and it prompted the BCB president Nazmul Hassan to give the clubs the 72-hour deadline on June 19.

Lehmann yearns for variety in domestic pitches

Darren Lehmann has highlighted variety in domestic pitches as an important factor in producing players capable of performing in all conditions

Daniel Brettig09-Aug-2016As he ponders changes to Australia’s badly malfunctioning top order, coach Darren Lehmann has admitted that increasingly homogenised domestic pitches – and drop-in wickets at multipurpose stadiums – have played a role in stunting the adaptability of batsmen.When Lehmann and his contemporaries were learning their trade, each major venue had a pitch of unique character, from the bounce of Perth to the seam of Brisbane to Adelaide’s something-for-everyone, Sydney’s spin and Melbourne’s variable bounce. However the contrasts have diminished in recent years, not helped by the installation of drop-in pitches at the MCG, the Adelaide Oval and, soon, Perth’s new stadium.Another factor over time had been the preparation of increasingly friendly pitches for seam bowlers to aid each state’s bid for the Sheffield Shield, followed by a reverse directive from the team performance manager Pat Howard for flatter surfaces. While the number of runs scored in Australian first-class competition has risen, batsmen are clearly not facing the same challenges that so confounded them in Kandy and Galle.”I think we have said for a while that we would like the Shield wickets to go back a little bit in time where they are all different,” Lehmann said. “You had Perth which was grassy and bouncy and went through and swung, and Brisbane seamed and Adelaide reversed and spun and Sydney spun from day one.”All those things we would love to see happen, but the problem we’ve got now is we’ve got drop-ins at a couple of grounds, so it’s hard to do. You would love that to be the case but you are living in a different world and so it’s a bit harder. In terms of Test wickets, whatever we get we’ll trust the curators to do the best they can. I think you see it has been pretty fair in Australia for a couple of years but there is no reason it can’t improve either.”Groundsmen in Australia are hard at work trying to find ways to improve the variety of pitches they can prepare. Adelaide Oval’s head curator Damian Hough is at the forefront of experimentation with moveable surfaces, developing more porous drop-in trays that allow moisture to escape and so create the right environment for the pitch to deteriorate. Last year Adelaide provided a pitch made more or less to order for the use of the pink ball in the inaugural day/night Test.The desire to change and improve has been visible in the flurry of thoughts around the Australian team over the past few days, starting with a team decision to play more proactively in the second innings in Galle. This was most dramatically shown by Adam Voges, who repeatedly tried the reverse sweep to break up the line of the spinners, before falling to the same shot.”We have had those discussions already,” Lehmann said of the brainstorming that led to Voges’ innings. “It’s probably him going ‘I have to change’, thinking he can play a certain way, and change in other ways. So, that’s learning the game, isn’t it, and trying to adapt. But being proactive is the key to having good success in the subcontinent, not being reactive.”Lehmann said he agreed with the captain Steven Smith’s contention that the selectors needed to choose batsmen more suited to the prevailing conditions in future. However, he also added that if this were so, public and media perceptions needed to change, given the fact that no member of the current squad “deserved” to be missing from the Sri Lanka squad given their performances last summer.”Totally agree,” Lehmann said of Smith’s suggestion. “The interesting thing, though, if you have a look at our summer and the way our batters played, if we didn’t take any of those batters, how would we be viewed in the press? It’s always tough. We haven’t had the success, now we have to look outside the square.”Shaun Marsh is in contention to come into the Test XI for Colombo, as a top-order batsman with a decent record against spin and runs on his last visit to Sri Lanka in 2011. None of Joe Burns, Usman Khawaja or even Voges could have too many complaints were they omitted for the third Test, a decision Lehmann said would not count against their chances of being chosen again on more familiar home turf.”Everyone in the squad will be considered, that’s what happens when you don’t have the results you would like, we will need to have a look at the wicket, sum it up and go from there,” Lehmann said. “You don’t like dropping anyone, you feel for them when they don’t play as well as they would like. That’s the hardest thing as a coach and a selector – you have to make tough decisions sometimes.”We are playing a Test match in tough conditions; [we will] pick the best XI for that and then worry about the summer when we get home. It won’t hold against anyone, this is a squad that we think is right. Obviously results show different and say different but we have to make sure we are picking the best XI to play.”

Australia counter strongly after Chandimal ton

Dinesh Chandimal scored the seventh century of his Test career as Sri Lanka ground out the highest total of this series so far, posting 355 in the first innings in Colombo

The Report by Brydon Coverdale14-Aug-2016
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details0:58

By The Numbers – Starc registers another five-for

As a sign of what was to come, the first hour of this Test was less accurate than a horoscope. When Sri Lanka collapsed to 26 for 5, nobody would have predicted they would go on to the highest total of the series. Nor, for that matter, that Australia would then bat as well as they have at any time on this tour. But that was the case, for after those first five wickets tumbled in roughly an hour, the next 11 hours of the Test have brought only five more.On the second day, Dinesh Chandimal scored the seventh century of his Test career, an innings of immense patience that pushed – sometimes at the pace of a boulder up a hill – Sri Lanka to 355. Australia, in reply, had moved to 141 for 1 at the close of play. Only once in this series had an Australian scored a fifty, but now two did so in a session. Steven Smith was on 61 and Shaun Marsh was on 64, and their unbroken 120-run stand was comfortably Australia’s best of the series.There still remained plenty of work for Australia’s batsmen, particularly considering their allrounders begin at No.5, but at least they had started impressively. Marsh, included for the first time in this series at the expense of opener Joe Burns, looked relatively comfortable against Sri Lanka’s spinners. He used his feet well, worked the ball through leg and punished through off when given width. And, importantly, he often picked the turn out of the hand.There were nervous moments for Marsh, balls that turned past the bat, a big lbw review late in the day that showed the ball pitching outside leg, an edge that flew just past Kaushal Silva at silly point. Smith had luck too, when he defended Rangana Herath, and Silva at silly point hurled himself onto the pitch to drop a hard chance. Smith was on 30, and went on to complete an 88-ball fifty, along the way becoming the youngest Australian to reach 4000 runs in Tests.Smith used his feet and was strong through cover, even lifting a six over extra cover off Herath. Sri Lanka relied heavily on their spinners, Suranga Lakmal coming on as third change for just four overs of pace. Dilruwan Perera had taken the new ball and lobbed up a full toss first delivery of the innings, which David Warner dispatched for six. But on 11, Warner danced down the pitch to Dhananjaya de Silva and under-edged a catch behind.Sri Lanka had started the day at 214 for 5 and added a further 141 runs for the loss of their final five wickets. Or, to be more accurate, four wickets, for Herath retired hurt on 33 when he was struck in the groin by Josh Hazlewood. Herath’s batting has frustrated the Australians throughout this campaign, and by the time he gingerly walked off, Herath had made more runs in the entire series than any Australian but Smith.On the subject of records embarrassing to Australia, Chandimal occupied the crease for 356 deliveries during his innings, nearly 100 balls more (at that stage) than any Australian had survived in the whole series. His century came up from 281 deliveries. Having walked to the crease on the first morning at 24 for 4, Chandimal had to show some fight. He did that, his patience an example to the Australians of what could be achieved on a dry pitch.Chandimal and de Silva had rescued Sri Lanka from their extremely precarious first-morning position with a 211-run partnership, the highest sixth-wicket partnership in Test history from a score of five down for fewer than 50. De Silva moved on to 129 before he was drawn forward by Lyon’s length, and, deceived by the dip, inside-edged a catch to bat-pad.After de Silva’s departure, Chandimal carried on in his patient method and eventually brought up his century with a single worked behind square leg off Lyon. It was a fitting way for Chandimal to register his milestone, for the nudged and nurdled ones and twos had been such a key feature of his innings. At times, though, he was more expansive, as when he reverse-swept Lyon for a six.When Chandimal did provide a chance to the Australians, on 100, they failed to take it, Smith grassing an edge at slip off Jon Holland. Smith took three catches for the innings, but spilled two: at slip, he also put down Herath. Chandimal continued to accumulate while the tail-enders kept him company. Dilruwan Perera made a quick 16 before he holed out to long-off from the bowling of Holland.Herath then joined Chandimal and frustrated the Australians with three boundaries during a 73-run partnership that ended only when Herath retired hurt. Chandimal eventually was caught behind for 132, Peter Nevill taking a sharp chance off Mitchell Starc, and the innings wrapped up with Lakmal caught at gully. That wicket also went to Starc, who finished with 5 for 63. Remarkably, it was his third five-for of the series. A little more help, and it could have been a contest.