Bangladesh in danger of being forced to follow-on

Bangladesh are in danger of following-on after South Africa, declaring at 529/4, reduced the visitors to 153/7, still 176 runs behind the follow-on target.Gary Kirsten and Jacques Kallis started day two in a positive fashion. They scored runs freely in the first hour, before Kirsten, having just gone to his 150, slashed a catch to backward point ending a 81-run partnership.Ashwell Prince, the next man in, lasted eight balls before being well caught at backward point by Alok Kapali. South Africa were still in command at 448/4 despite losing two quick wickets.Kallis needing to score 29 runs to reach the double of 4,000 Test runs and 100 Test wickets achieved it with a classic cover drive that effortlessly went to the rope. This feat made him the fifth Test player, and second fastest behind Sir Garfield Sobers, to achieve the target. The other players who have accomplished this feat are Kapil Dev, Ian Botham and Carl Hooper. Kallis also became the third South African, behind Gary Kirsten and Daryll Cullinan, to pass the 4,000 runs mark.Martin van Jaarsveld and Kallis found that the bowling had improved and that runs were hard to come by. With the scoring rate going down, Mark Boucher decided that it was time to declare, 40 minutes after lunch, and get his bowlers out in the middle.The innings was closed on 529/4 with Kallis on 75 and Van Jaarsveld on 39.The first target for Bangladesh had to be the 329 to avoid the follow-on, but a disastrous start put them under a lot of pressure.Javed Omar was trapped leg before for seven. Al Sahariar, his partner, after clipping some neat fours off his legs, followed soon after for 18, when he could not avoid a short ball that deflected into the wickets off his arm, as Bangladesh were suddenly two down for 25.A good partnership of 66 runs followed between Habibul Bashar and Sanwar Hossain before Hossain gloved a catch to Boucher off Makhaya Ntini when on 31.Ntini at this stage took the heart out of the Bangladesh batting line-up. Bowling with pace and aggression, his second wicket came when Tushar Imran failed to control a lifter, only to be bowled off the body without scoring. Ntini followed it by enticing Bashar into an edged drive when the latter was on 38. The Bangladeshi mini-collapse left them at 100/5.Khaled Mashud was unlucky to be given out, caught off the shoulder for four before Alok Kapali, who was having some fun, was brilliantly caught by Kallis for 35 when he got a leading edge from a sweep.With Mohammad Rafique and Tapash Baisya, the last of the noted batsmen, not out at the close, Bangladesh are in grave danger of finding themselves batting for a second time on day three.

Astle innings pointed the way for New Zealand batsmen

Expect a better performance from New Zealand’s batsmen in the second National Bank Test with England after the lift they got from Nathan Astle’s display on the last day in Christchurch.That’s Craig McMillan’s feeling going into the Wellington match at the Basin Reserve, a ground that has been good for him in the past.”The knock that Nathan played was great.”It gave other guys a lift, some confidence after two or three pretty tough days where we had been behind the eight ball for most of the game after that first over that Cairnsy (Chris Cairns) bowled.”You could just see perhaps a little momentum that hopefully we can show on Thursday,” he said.The onus was on the more experienced players to lead the way, especially now that the firepower of Cairns had been lost.The senior batsmen in the side had failed to score enough runs in the first innings and had not achieved any of the game’s disciplines well enough, or for long enough, he said.”It’s a big game and it is going to take a big effort from everyone.”I love playing here, I’ve had some really good innings here and Hamilton are my two favourite grounds in terms of runs scored, I’ve had two of my Test hundreds here.”It’s a cricket ground, I enjoy the atmosphere, the people come in to watch us, it’s a good place to play cricket,” he said.In contrast to his home ground at Jade Stadium, he expected more people to turn out to watch the match.”The crowd was hugely disappointing in Christchurch. I was also disappointed with the one-day crowd. It is a rugby town.”But it disappoints me they don’t come out to watch especially when there are four or five Canterbury players in the side.”And after the success we’ve had all summer you wouldn’t think there would be many more reasons to come out and watch us.””In the end we didn’t play well so people may say that justified not coming to watch but in saying that they missed what from the first over to the last over was an enthralling Test match.”I’m sure those who did go along thoroughly enjoyed it.”I was disappointed as were most of the other guys.”Of the bowlers they had been up against there was respect for Matthew Hoggard who had shown he could be dangerous when the ball was swinging.”We played him better when it wasn’t swinging around and if it doesn’t continue to swing we will continue to play him well.”Take nothing away from him, he bowled well and to get seven wickets is a great achievement.”Hopefully if it does swing then the guys have made the necessary adjustments. You need to be a little more patient and a little more selective because all he really did was bowl in that channel.”He didn’t give us a lot to hit but because of the pressure they built by bowling dot balls, he didn’t go searching then we went searching and that was the difference.”When we bowled, we went searching and they didn’t have to go looking because we were serving it up to them and that is probably shown in the number of boundaries hit, especially in that partnership between (Andrew) Flintoff and (Graham) Thorpe.”We’ve got two days to turn it around.”It came back to basics and if you didn’t do them well then any side could knock you over”It starts in the nets here and that is what the guys have been trying to focus on.”If they can’t do in the nets then they are not going to do it out in the middle,” he said.

Easterns complete academic win

Easterns finally mopped-up a match they had controlled virtually from the outset, beating Boland by 139 runs in a meaningless exercise in first-class cricket in Paarl on Sunday.Resuming on their overnight 71-3, chasing an entirely notional 450 to win, Boland were dismissed for 310. Kudos for Easterns, but the silverware will be going elsewhere this season.Easterns were made to work hard, if not quite run up a serious sweat on the final day as they searched for the seven wickets they needed complete a routine victory. Resistor-in-chief was Louis Koen, the Boland captain reigning in his more innate attacking instincts in the cause of his side as he scored 66 in a little under four hours, an innings which included only five boundaries from a bat which is more used to causing mayhem than playing ‘though shall not pass’.There was also an entertaining ninth-wicket stand of 91 off just 110 balls between Bradley Player and Willem du Toit, but it was no more than a blip on the steady Easterns’ progress to victory. Man of the match Anthony Botha added three more wickets on the final day to give him figures of 6-106 in the Boland second innings. It was Botha’s unbeaten 49 on the second morning which helped Easterns past 300 and into a position of strength from which they never faltered.Botha put the ball in the right place and exacted just enough turn to keep wicket-keeper Dylan Jennings and Derek Crookes at first slip interested. Crookes picked up two catches of his bowling, while Jennings snapped up an edge from Justin Ontong to send the young all-rounder back to the pavilion for just 13.Ontong will now turn his attention from the South African domestic scene to his up-coming trip to the West Indies to hook up with the South African one-day squad. After scoring his maiden first-class century earlier in March, he is bursting with confidence and eager to make the next step. Watch this space.

Watson ordered home to prepare for Tests

Shane Watson’s special case status has been underlined by Cricket Australia’s decision to unilaterally withdraw him from the latter stages of the Champions League Twenty20 in South Africa. Nonetheless, Australia’s Test captain Michael Clarke has reminded Watson that he is not indispensable by bluntly pointing out that last summer’s 4-0 defeat of India was achieved without him.The conflicting demands of the 21st century game were writ large across CA’s season launch in Sydney on Monday, as Test match notables including Watson, Ben Hilfenhaus, Pat Cummins and Mitchell Starc were conspicuous by their absence due to the CLT20 in South Africa. Watson’s early return from the event in order to prepare for the home Tests against South Africa had been whispered about for some days, before being confirmed amid a flurry of conversations around the launch.Having taken part in the Sydney Sixers’ opening victory over Chennai Super Kings in Johannesburg, Watson will play two more matches against Yorkshire and Lions before flying home ahead of the Sixers’ final group game against Mumbai. He will then spend time resting and then training with the game’s longest form in mind, with possible warm-up matches in the Futures League and Sydney grade competition in late October.Watson will likely have one first-class fixture before the first Test. There is an Australia A tour match against the South Africans from November 2-4 in Sydney, and a Sheffield Shield game for New South Wales in Brisbane from November 2-5, though that fixture may be moved forward depending on the Sixers’ fortunes in the CLT20.”We are reviewing his load and circumstance very closely … I think it’s reasonably well known that it’s likely he won’t see the tournament out,” CA chief executive James Sutherland said. “We’re concerned about Shane. His injury record is unfortunate and what that tells us is that we need to monitor him and manage him very carefully and we are.”I don’t know the specifics but the priority will be for him to get himself right as possible. That’s one, to give him a little bit of a break, then give him a little bit of therapy and whatever else he needs. But then also to really focus on getting him right to play Test cricket which he hasn’t played for a long time – which most of our players haven’t played for a long time … give him the opportunity to play a Shield game and at least play with the red ball.”Watson broke down with a hamstring injury in November last year during a Test tour of South Africa, and his subsequent recovery took so long – setback by a calf complaint – that he did not play in any of the home Tests against New Zealand and India. Clarke said that while he wanted to avoid a repeat scenario this summer, he said Watson had to be performing strongly to keep his spot in the Test team, irrespective of his feats during the World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka.”Watto didn’t play one Test last summer, so we don’t want that to happen again, we want to manage him as well as we can, but in saying that Watto’s no different to any other player, he’s got to be performing to be picked in that team,” Clarke said. “We beat India 4-0 without him last summer, he is a big player for Australian cricket, but he needs to be performing.”Stuart Clark, the Sixers’ general manager, expressed his frustration at the decision. ”We’re disappointed by it all. They want Shane to prepare for Test cricket. I understand those reasons – I just wish someone had told me this 15 months ago,” Clark told .”Cricket Australia made it very evident when we said what are the value in Australian players [to us]? They said they can play cricket in the Champions League. That was obviously not conveyed to the high-performance team who don’t give two hoots about the Champions League.”Australia’s management of players coming out of the CLT20 into Test series has been fraught with problems in the past, most notably Michael Hussey and Doug Bollinger having all of two days to prepare for the first Test in India in 2010 following their time at the tournament with Chennai Super Kings. This year CA have sent the bowling coach Ali de Winter to the event in order to monitor the likes of Hilfenhaus, Starc, Cummins and Watson, also commissioning him to thrust a red ball into their hands to prepare for the summer to come.”We’ve got Ali de Winter over there, I know they’re bowling with a red ball at training, bowling longer spells,” Clarke said. “That’s the thing where it is so difficult for a bowler compared to a batter. Bowling four overs in a day compared to coming back and playing a Test match where you’ve got to bowl 30 overs in a day – no wonder guys get injured.”So we’re trying to manage it as well as we possibly can. Whether we like it or not, that’s the way the game’s gone, Champions League is here to stay, IPL is here to stay, it’s just about trying to manage individual players. The priority is, first Test of the summer, trying to get your best XI players onto the field.”

Rowledge through to last 16 of Village Knock-out

Rowledge have put their Southern Electric Premier League Division 2 relegation worries aside by reaching the last 16 of the National Village Championship, sponsored by The Cricketer magazine.Their reward for an 11-run win over Sparsholt is a seventh round home tie with Buckinghamshire champions, Dinton on July 21.David Lloyd was the inspiration behind the Sparsholt victory, hitting 95 of a Rowledge total of 190-6, before taking 3-21as the Winchester club slipped to 179 all out (Tim Richings 41).Ian Stuart did his level best for Sparsholt, top scoring with 63 and returning a respectable 3-34.

SEC Cup – First finalist confirmed as Bashley crush B.A.T.

Bashley (Rydal) have reached the final of the Southern Electric Contracting Cup and will play either South Wilts or Rowledge at the Hampshire Rose Bowl on Friday August 2, 5.45pm.Bashley beat BAT Sports by six wickets in the semi-final at Southern Gardens – the reigning Premier League champions crashing from 36-0 to 46-7 in an amazing mid-innings spell.Neil Taylor (5-10) clean bowled four batsmen after Michael Watson (24) and Richard Kenway (15) had provided a sound start.Terry Rawlins (22 not out), Richard Dibden (16) and Simon Preston (16 not out) rallied, but a score of 104-8 off 23 overs was never likely to be enough.Bashley batted consistently, with Luke Ronchi’s 36 not out leading the New Forest club to the final.Premier Division 2 club Rowledge beat Burridge by 50 runs in the weather delayed quarter-final.David Lloyd (52), Chris Yates junior (34) and Jeff Annings (27) led Rowledge to 152-6 before the Yates uncle and nephew combination sank Burridge for 102 (Roger Cawte 34).Chris senior grabbed 4-19 and his 21-year old nephew 3-28.

Memorable Sheffield Shield/Pura Cup Final moments

Outstanding moments, incidents and performances in the 19-year history of interstate first-class finals in Australia:1. Queensland v South Australia, Sheffield Shield Final 1994-95, Brisbane:After 63 years in the title wilderness, Queensland’s innings and 101 run win over South Australia in 1994-95 was as much an unrestrained expression of state pride as a match of cricket. All roads led to the ‘Gabba as an aggregate attendance of 47,296 basked in an early South Australian batting collapse; merciless batting from Trevor Barsby, Martin Love and Allan Border; and a methodical Queensland bowling and fielding effort in the game’s dying stages. It was close to Border’s last first-class match and, though Paul Nobes and Darren Webber offered spirited resistance, there was little doubt about which way it would end once the Bulls had reached a first innings score of 3/479 on the match’s third day. A catch by Carl Rackemann at backward point at 3:52pm on the final afternoon ushered in unprecedented scenes of celebration.2. South Australia v Western Australia, Sheffield Shield Final 1995-96, Adelaide:South Australia’s attainment, against the odds, of a draw in the 1995-96 Sheffield Shield Final against Western Australia surely ranks as one of the most amazing finishes to a match in Australian history. In front of a crowd estimated at close to 15000, last wicket pair Shane George and Peter McIntyre outlasted a desperate Western Australian attack for a period that spanned 40 minutes and 59 balls in order to save the match, give their state its first Sheffield Shield for 14 years, and usher in scenes of wild jubilation. The South Australians had devoted themselves to the task of merely protecting their eight remaining wickets on the last day but were in early bother when nightwatchman Jason Gillespie fell to a catch at the wicket and Darren Lehmann to a controversial lbw decision. Captain Jamie Siddons stayed at the wicket for 166 minutes while he played one scoring shot, though; more than an hour was eaten up by Tim May’s duck; and Greg Blewett and James Brayshaw also spent long periods at the crease. George and McIntyre were later drawn into celebrating with delirious intent after their twin vigil capped the Redbacks’ strategy of defiance. Earlier, Adam Gilchrist had reasserted his credentials as one of Australian domestic cricket’s most outstanding players by producing a breathtaking unbeaten 189 (from 187 balls) in Western Australia’s first innings.3. New South Wales v Queensland, Sheffield Shield Final 1984-85, Sydney:It was only the third interstate first-class final ever played but few if any of the deciders played since that time have been more dramatic or more closely tinged with tension. New South Wales’ one wicket win over Queensland in the Sheffield Shield Final in 1984-85 owed much to superb swing and seam bowling from import player Imran Khan and an outstanding opening partnership in the first innings between John Dyson and Steve Smith. Fine spin bowling late in the match from Murray Bennett also assisted immeasurably. But, most of all, it relied on a nerveless, unbroken union of 14 runs for the tenth wicket between Peter Clifford and Dave Gilbert. Clifford, who ironically later relocated to Queensland, played the hand of his career in holding the home team’s second innings together as it pursued a victory target of 220. Experienced pair Trevor Hohns and Carl Rackemann were the biggest threats to the Blues’ hopes – a first innings century and outstanding bowling on the match’s final day the defining features of their respective games. In emotional scenes, Clifford departed the SCG a hero while the Queenslanders were left to rue how desperately close they had come to securing their state’s first-ever first-class crown. It would be another decade before they finally laid the ghost to rest.4. Queensland v Victoria, Pura Milk Cup Final 1999-2000, Brisbane:The blood of Victorians still boils when they’re reminded of umpire Steve Davis’ rejection of a caught behind appeal against Queensland captain Stuart Law at a pivotal moment late on the opening day of the Pura Cup Final of 1999-2000. Law’s score was on 76 at the time and replays confirmed initial impressions that the right hander had emphatically outside edged a delivery from left arm paceman Mathew Inness. It helped Law continue on to register his maiden first-class hundred of the season and to join with twin centurion Martin Love in definitively batting the visitors out of the game. Albeit that swing bowler Andy Bichel’s clinical destruction of the Victorian upper and middle order later had just as much effect on the result.5. Queensland v Victoria, Pura Cup Final 2000-01, Brisbane:Twelve months on, an association between a Brisbane finals match, Stuart Law, and a controversial decision was playing on Victorian minds again when an outstanding attempt at a catch at third slip by Michael Klinger was ruled invalid. As Law walked out to bat early on the fifth morning, the Queenslanders had stumbled to a score of 3/139 in pursuit of a target of 224 to win. His first ball was played off an edge low to a diving Klinger’s right but television replays failed to prove or disprove the Victorians’ unanimous belief that the catch had been legitimately taken only inches above the turf. Third umpire Peter Parker had no option but to rule that Law should be given the benefit of considerable doubt. The Queensland captain stood his ground, proceeded to play and miss repeatedly, was caught off a no ball, dropped twice, and was ultimately still at the crease when the Bulls secured a tension-packed win with only four wickets to spare. Victorian captain Paul Reiffel was later relieved of $200 of his match fee for dissent.6. Western Australia v New South Wales, Sheffield Shield Final 1991-92, Perth:Justin Langer has played many outstanding innings during his years with Western Australia, Middlesex and Australia. But, for sheer quality, there have been few to surpass the brilliant 149 that he crafted under enormous pressure against New South Wales in the 1991-92 Sheffield Shield Final. The then 21-year-old displayed remarkable poise, putting the memory of a car crash on the third morning of the match behind him and standing firm for more than six hours amid a series of dramatic batting collapses that threatened – in turn – to dash the victory hopes of each of the two teams. Western Australia had trailed by 19 runs on the first innings and then courted almost-certain disaster in crashing to 3/3 a second time. But it was from this point that the implacable Langer took command, and his second first-class century formed the backbone of crucial stands of 91 for the fourth wicket with Damien Martyn and 191 for the seventh with Tim Zoehrer. Requiring 326 for victory, New South Wales reached 2/202 at one point before succumbing to a collapse of their own that saw seven wickets tumble as only 42 runs were added. Less than a year passed before Langer was in his country’s Test team.7. Western Australia v New South Wales, Sheffield Shield Final 1982-83, Perth:Prior to the 1982-83 Sheffield Shield Final, Western Australian victories over New South Wales in Perth had become commonplace. For the majority of the opening four days of the inaugural first-class finals match in Australia, it again looked like the Sandgropers were destined to claim the spoils. But the visitors were fired by a remark from rival captain Kim Hughes on their way off the field on the fourth evening. They returned the following morning with renewed purpose and aggression, triggering a dramatic late collapse from their opponents that resulted in a shock 54-run win to the Blues. Trevor Chappell, a late inclusion in the team after selectors had agonised over the decision to omit fiery paceman Len Pascoe from the line-up, was the hero after he paired a haul of six wickets with a handy score of 33 in the second innings of a low-scoring match. It would be another 14 years before an away team again won a Sheffield Shield Final.8. Western Australia v Tasmania, Sheffield Shield Final 1997-98, Perth:Western Australia had only three first innings wickets in hand, and a lead of 112 over Tasmania, when Brendon Julian walked to the crease on the third morning of the Sheffield Shield Final of 1997-98. Just over two hours’ later, the game had effectively been whisked from Tasmania’s grasp; Julian cracked 119 runs off his own bat alone between lunch and tea in the midst of a brutal partnership of 136 with captain Tom Moody that ultimately helped swell the Warriors’ lead to an imposing 286 on the first innings. Jamie Cox had carried his bat in a brilliant performance in the first innings, and Michael Di Venuto cracked a sumptuous 189 in the second, but a fighting Tasmania could not avert a seven wicket defeat.9. Queensland v Western Australia, Sheffield Shield Final 1998-99, Brisbane::Not content with one effort at dismantling the hopes of a finals opponent, Brendon Julian was back to do it a second time when he joined with Simon Katich and Damien Martyn to topple Queensland in Brisbane in 1998-99. Wickets continued to fall quickly throughout the match on a generally good pitch but Julian’s all-conquering 84 – made from only 71 balls and including eight fours and four sixes – helped to give Western Australia an invaluable 160-run first innings lead. Martyn reaffirmed the edge, complementing four first innings wickets and a patient 85 with the vital scalp of Matthew Hayden from the very last delivery of the third day’s play. Katich and Queensland’s Andrew Symonds had earlier pressed their respective cases for Australian selection by trading first innings centuries.10. Victoria v New South Wales, Sheffield Shield Final 1990-91, Melbourne:A game marked by poor weather and poor batting was turned on its head when Jamie Siddons and Wayne Phillips joined in the magnificent, match-winning partnership that clinched Victoria’s 1990-91 Sheffield Shield Final triumph over New South Wales. All of the first day of the match was surrendered to persistent Melbourne rain but it ultimately failed to stop the Victorians’ charge toward what remains their state’s last first-class title and their only one since 1979-80. The hosts made a good start to the match, quickly dismissing the Blues for 223 once the rains cleared but they promptly handed back the advantage when Wayne Holdsworth and Phil Alley combined to wreck the top and middle order and send the Vics crashing to an even more sickly 119. The Victorians looked in hopeless trouble when their opponents registered a half-century stand to mark the opening of their second innings but hit back through persistent line and length bowling from Tony Dodemaide and captain Simon O’Donnell. The Blues again seemed to be in the box seat when Victoria slumped to 2/27 as it chased a score of 239 to win but the assessment rather ignored the skill, defiance and experience of Siddons and Phillips. Over close to five hours and under the most intense of pressures, they added an unbroken 212 runs together to decisively seal the issue.

Cheltenham and Gloucester launch campaign in Taunton town centre on Wednesday afternoon

Over the next few weeks the Cheltenham and Gloucester Trophy will be touring the country as part of a campaign to draw attention to the new cricket season and to highlight the building societies involvement in sponsoring the major limited over cricketing competition in this country.What more appropriate place could there be to launch the tour than in Taunton the county town of Somerset, the current holders of the Cheltenham and Gloucester Trophy.Between 1pm and 3pm on Wednesday afternoon two Somerset cricketers, Keith Dutch and Keith Parsons, will join officials from Cheltenham and Gloucester at their premises in North Street in Taunton town centre to launch the tour of the trophy.Somerset Chief Executive Peter Anderson told me: "We are delighted and honoured that Cheltenham and Gloucester have chosen to launch their campaign here in Taunton. We are also delighted that Cheltenham and Gloucester have chosen a town like Taunton in the middle of a rural area rather than a city for the launch."Mr Anderson continued: "It is fitting that Keith Dutch and Keith Parsons, the Somerset heroes of the semi-final and the final of last year’s Cheltenham and Gloucester Trophy victory, should both be in attendance on Wednesday."The Chief Executive concluded: "The players are very confident that winning one of the limited over competitions is well within their reach, and they will of course be doing their best to make sure that Somerset retain the Cheltenham and Gloucester Trophy this season."Somerset fans are invited to go along to the Cheltenham and Gloucester Building Society on Wednesday to catch a glimpse of the trophy and the stars that helped to win it for them.Those fans who turn up at the building society with the token from last week’s Somerset County Gazette will also be able to have their photograph taken with the trophy by a professional photographer free of charge.

North Zone retain Duleep Trophy

North Zone duly completed the formalities on Sunday and retained the Duleep Trophy. They had virtually made sure of this on the third day of their game against Central Zone and about the only interest on the final day was whether they would underline their overwhelming superiority and go on to register an outright victory at the Feroze Shah Kotla grounds. However despite getting a first innings lead of 261 runs early on Sunday, they opted to bat again and at stumps were 233 for eight wickets off 56 overs with Yuvraj Singh helping himself to an aggressive 130.All the same, the individual honours on the final day were claimed by Yere Goud. The 29-year-old Railways veteran, who was 67 at close of play yesterday, remained unbeaten with 107. Out of the 69 runs that Central Zone scored today, Goud got 40. But he remained indebted to the last two batsmen Murali Kartik and Salabh Sriwastava who stayed with him long enough for him to get to the three figure mark. First, with Kartik (27) he added 42 runs for the ninth wicket off 15.3 overs. And then Sriwastava stood by him as he reached his hundred. The two pushed the score along by 39 runs in an association that lasted 13 overs and 46 minutes. By the time Sriwastava was bowled by Harbhajan Singh for five off the 42nd delivery he faced, Goud had reached his objective. The right hander batted five hours, faced 222 balls and hit 13 fours and two sixes.With North Zone opting to bat again, there was no competitive interest in the rest of the match. But Yuvraj Singh helped himself to a hundred which may do some good for his morale. He batted 3-1/2 hours, faced 145 balls and hit 16 fours and three sixes.North Zone finished their engagements with this fixture. Their tally of 23 points from four games cannot be reached. The only interest now in the final round of matches, commencing on February 1, is to see which team finishes runner-up. East Zone play West Zone and South Zone meet Central Zone in the two games. For the record, East have 13 points, Central 11, West nine and South eight, all from three games each.

Indian news round-up

‘Appropriate response’ to Bharti’s statement soon: PCBThe Pakistan Cricket Board said it would respond shortly to Union Sports Minister Uma Bharti’s statement that India would play Pakistan only in multinational tournaments. Talking to PTI over phone from Lahore on Monday, PCB’s Director Operations Brig. Munawar Rana said “We are considering an appropriate response.” Rana added that “Bharti’s statement had been taken note of by PCB which would react soon after consultations with the Government.”PCB has been keenly following the recent statements both by the BCCI and the Sports Minister over evolving a coherent policy towards playing Pakistan in bilateral, multinational as well as sponsored tournaments in Sharjah and Toronto. The Pakistan media recently had also given extensive coverage to former BCCI chief Raj Singh Dungarpur’s statement criticising the government’s decision not to send its team to Sharjah.India yet to confirm participation in indoor ODI matches: ACB The Australian Cricket Board (ACB) on Monday said in Melbourne that they are yet to receive confirmation from the BCCI to play an indoor one-day series in August as the Indians have a hectic schedule ahead of them this year. An ACB spokesman said “A number of things need to be sorted out … we’re still waiting to confirm the opposition.”History was made when Australia played South Africa in the Super Challenge series last August at Melbourne’s Colonial Stadium, the venue for the first official indoor international cricket match. The three-game series ended in a 1-1 draw, after the second match finished in a tie.MCA accepts Wadekar’s resignationThe Mumbai Cricket Association executive committee on Sunday accepted the resignation of Ajit Wadekar as the chairman of the selection committee. MCA’s joint secretary Prof. Ratnakar Shetty said in Mumbai that “Wadekar’s resignation has been accepted and the selection panel along with its chairman for the next season will be named at the end of next month.”Shetty said Wadekar had not given any reason for his resignation. “It was a simply worded letter asking us to relieve him as the chairman of the selection committee”.When contacted by PTI, the former Indian captain and coach said the reason behind the decision was the poor performance of the state side in this season’s edition of the Ranji Trophy tournament.

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