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News Roll
March 13, 2001
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England in Sri Lanka


The chairman of the England Cricket Board (ECB) Lord MacLaurin will be flying to Colombo before the start of the third Test to hold talks with the chairman of selectors David Graveney, coach Duncan Fletcher and skipper Nasser Hussain. This follows the rather acrimonious series that has been going on in Sri Lanka with both teams indulging in incessant appealing and slamming the umpires after some poor decisions were given. McLaurian said the ICC has already agreed to contract eight professional umpires, which would mean that no home umpire would stand in future Test matches. McLaurian would also be meeting the ICC president Malcolm Gray to see how better the umpires can be trained to operate more professionally.


Australia in India…


A complete surrender by India in all aspects of the game put the all-conquering Australians on top in the second Test at Kolkata and all set to score their 17th successive Test win. At close on the second day India was tottering at a 128-8 still needing 117 runs more to avoid the follow on.

The verbal duels continued. This time it was between the Indian skipper Sourav Ganguly and former Australian captain and now commentator and writer Ian Chappell. Chappell who has been of late criticising Ganguly's potentials as a captain and player was given a strong rejoinder by Ganguly in his own column in a newspaper that Chappell should restrict himself to comments about the game as such and not talk about inside information of which he has no first hand knowledge. Ganguly was referring to Chappell's comments that he is too arrogant and does not respect his teammates.



South Africa in West Indies


It was left to the old and the new as the run assault at the end of the fourth day's play at Georgetown by Carl Hooper and Ramnaresh Sarwan took the West Indies lead to 258. Hooper and Sarwan share an unbeaten 76 run stand in the first Test match as they were 31 and 71 not out respectively at close of play. All is set for an exciting last day's play and probably an end to West Indies losing streak.

Pakistan in New Zealand


One more player has been added to Pakistan's injury list on their tour of New Zealand. Having lost the one-day series, they went into the first Test losing their top players due to injury. With the youngsters coming true at Auckland the first Test was won (by 299 runs) in a convincing fashion. The latest addition to the injury list is all-rounder and pace bowler Abdur Razzaq, who will fly home following food poisoning and a kidney ailment. It now the turn of 26-year old fast bowler Mohammad Akram, the seventh player to be flown into New Zealand after injures struck the Pakistani team one after the another.

New Zealand skipper Stephen Fleming slammed the new portable pitch at Auckland, saying it cost them the match. Fleming said as captain of the home side it was difficult to go into a Test match with a pitch that was just nine days old and with no idea how it would play. Contrary to expectations, Fleming had won the toss and opted to bowl which raised many eyebrows. Fleming felt it was not a good idea to experiment with a new pitch for an important Test match.

After the crushing defeat in the first Test at Auckland a major reshuffle is on the cards for the New Zealand side. Debutant left-arm pace bowler of the first Test James Franklin, off spinner Paul Wiseman and 12th man Brooke Walker will be replaced by Chris Drum, Grant Bradburn and Jacob Oram. Bradburn (35) is making a comeback having last appeared for New Zealand in 1992 in Sri Lanka.

Fast bowler Mohammad Sami like all young fast bowlers in Pakistan attributed his success in the first Test to pace legends Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis. The twenty year old who shot out the New Zealand batsmen for just 131 in the second innings at Auckland said he learnt the art of reverse swing from the two fast bowlers. Coming on to bowl towards the 45th over Sami was able to reverse swing the ball much to the alarm of the New Zealand batsmen in much the same way that the former duo did.

Miscellaneous

If reports emerging from the Gulf are to be believed then India will not be participating in the tri-nation Sharjah tournament to be held from April 8 to 20. It has been rumored that the foreign ministry will not clear any tournament (tri-angular/quadrangular) in which Pakistan are participating, although they will be allowed to participate in World Cup tournaments. The Indian government will apply this rule to all sports. This cut off of sporting links follows the face off between the two countries in Kargil two years ago. (Interestingly the Indian national hockey team is currently participating in an international tournament at Dhaka, which also has Pakistan as one of the teams).

Former Pakistani leg-spinner Abdul Qadir has withdrawn from the PCB's three-member bowling committee to study the action of Shoaib Akhtar. Meanwhile, Qadir has also refused to accept an honorary coaching assignment at the Pakistan Cricket Academy. His argument is that if foreigners (with obvious reference to Geoff Boycott) were paid so handsomely, why shouldn't he be also paid, specially after having served the country with distinction.

Murray Goodwin, the former Zimbabwe middle-order batsman who left his country to play in Australia has been axed from the Western Australian state team following a complete batting slump. In seven matches for the state side he only managed 145 runs averaging 11.15 with just one score above 50 and 9 scores below 10. He was however persisted with because of his prolific form in the domestic one-day tournament that preceded the Shield matches. Earlier this year he had blasted a record 167 in just 138 runs against New South Wales at Perth, which was the highest ever individual score made in the Australian one-day domestic competition.

SCORES AT A GLANCE


AUSTRALIA IN INDIA
2nd Test at Kolkata (2nd day)
Australia: 445 (M Slater 42, M Hayden 97, J Langer 58, SR Waugh 110, JN Gillespie 46; Harbhajan Singh 7-123)
India: 128-8 (VVS Laxman 26 not out; GD McGrath 3-13)

SOUTH AFRICA IN THE WEST INDIES
1st Test at Georgetown (4th day)
West Indies: 304 (C Gayle 81, M Samuels 40, B Lara 47, C Hooper 69; A Donald 2-31, L Klusener 2-31) 286-4 (C Gayle 44, M Samuels 51, BC Lara 45, R Sarwan 71 not out, C Hooper 31 not out)
South Africa: 332 (G Kirsten 150, J Kallis 50, M Boucher 52; M Dillon 3-64, D Ramnarine 3-105)

RANJI TROPHY KNOCKOUT ROUND-UP

ASSAM v KARNATAKA
1ST PRE-QUARTER FINAL at Guwahati (3rd day)
Assam: 321 (PK Das 95, S Saikia 49, Zakaria Zuffri 62, V Samant 55; D Ganesh 4-93, A Yalvigi 3- 92) 134 (Ganesh Kumar 50; D Ganesh 4-46, S Joshi 4-38)
Karnataka: 312 (Arun Kumar 64, B Rowland 66, VST Naidu 40, S Joshi 33, A Yalvigi 38 not out; G Dutta 3-64, Javed Zaman 4-68) 144-3 (Vijay Bhardwaj 41, B Akhil 51 not out)
Result: Karnataka won by seven wickets with two days to spare to reach the quarter final.

BARODA v BENGAL
2ND PRE-QUARTER FINAL at Baroda (3rd day)
Baroda: 467 (C Williams 86, J Martin 103, TB Arothe 57, A Bhoite 54, M Mewada 62; LR Shukla 4- 119, U Chatterjee 3-88) 133-2 (S Parab 35 not out; C Williams 32, J Martin 41 not out; LR Shukla 2-57)
Bengal: 247 (SJ Kalyani 48, RS Gavaskar 61, AK Das 32, U Chatterjee 52 not out; I Pathan sr. 4-59, I Pathan jr. 3-40)

PUNJAB v RAJASTHAN
3RD PRE-QUARTER FINAL at Mohali (3rd day)
Rajasthan: 111 (R Jhalani 22; Vineet Kumar 4-25, RS Sodhi 5-40) (G Khoda 40, R Kanwat 88, S Bhatia 53, Sanjeev Sharma 37; S Sanwal 3-127, Babloo Kumar 5-48)
Punjab: 429 (RS Ricky 40, V Rathour 39, P Dharmani 101, D Mongia 75, RS Sodhi 55; Sanjeev Sharma 5-84, M Aslam 3-52)
Result: Punjab won by an innings & 12 runs with two days to spare to reach the quarter final.

MAHARASHTRA v RAILWAYS
4TH PRE-QUARTER FINAL at Pune (3rd day)
Railways: 431 (A Pagnis 96, TP Singh 77, Yere Gowda 49, Abhay Sharma 59, S Khanolkar 76, KS Parida 32; MS Kulkarni 3-114; IR Siddiqui 3-90) 99-2 (S Bangar 43 not out, TP Singh 42)
Maharashtra: 308 (J Narse 40, H Kanitkar 124, K Aphale 37, IR Siddiqui 38; Harvinder Singh 5-95, S Bangar 3-58)

MADHYA PRADESH V HYDERABAD
5TH PRE-QUARTER FINAL at Indore (3rd day)
Madhya Pradesh:489 (HS Sodhi 87, M Ojha 41, A Khurasiya 30, D Bundela 144, Abbas Ali 57, Jai Prakash Yadav 44; Kanwaljit Singh 4-95, Shivaji Yadav 4-114)
Hyderabad: 300-4 (D Manohar 55, M Srinivas 107, Anirudh Singh 42, V Pratap 47 not out; RK Chauhan 2- 72)

TAMIL NADU V DELHI
6TH PRE-QUARTER FINAL at Chennai (3rd day)
Tamil Nadu: 592 (S Badrinath 32, S Sriram 38, C Hemanth Kumar 121, S Sharath 58, J Madangopal 54, Robin Singh sr. 63, Reuben Paul 35, MR Srinivas 41, S Vidyut 115; Robin Singh jr. 3-96, AK Suman 3-93)
Delhi: 354-7 (R Sanghvi 31, M Minhas 58, P Chawla 30, V Shewag 106, H Chaudhary 60 not out; MR Srinivas 3-103)

ORISSA V JAMMU & KASHMIR
7TH PRE-QUARTER FINAL at Cuttack (2nd day)
Orissa: 501 (RR Parida 220, PM Mullick 191; A Qayoom 3-79, Vijay Sharma 5-98)
Jammu & Kashmir: 102-4 (Kavaljit Singh 42 not out, A Barik 2-28)


Yesterday's News


Compiled by: Mohandas Menon