ICC finalises dates for 2009 Champions Trophy

BCCI reschedules Champions League
  • The BCCI has pushed back the Twenty20 Champions League and its ODI home series against Australia by around two weeks each to accommodate the postponed ICC Champions Trophy that will be held next year from September 24 to October 5.
  • The Indian board, which is organising the Champions League in partnership with Cricket Australia and Cricket South Africa, is likely to hold the second edition of the multi-domestic team tournament from October 8 to 23 next year, sources said. The India-Australia one-day series might be held almost immediately afterwards, from October 25 to November 12, they added.
  • The Champions League’s 2009 edition was originally slotted for September 25 to October 10, but those dates now clash with those of the Champions Trophy for which the revised schedule were announced after the ICC board meeting in Dubai today. The India-Australia clash next year had previously been scheduled to begin from October 13. “The new dates for the Champions League are firm and final and have been approved by the ICC board,” the sources said. The first edition of the Champions League is scheduled to be held this year from December 3 to 10 in Mumbai, Bangalore and Chennai.

The ICC will hold the postponed Champions Trophy between September 24 and October 5, 2009, it was decided during the second day of its board meeting in Dubai. The announcement ends months of uncertainty about the event which was originally scheduled for September this year in Pakistan but was postponed after several participating countries refused to travel over security fears in the country.The new dates were formalised after detailed discussions between Haroon Lorgat, the ICC chief executive, and officials of various national boards, many of whom will have now have to adjust their international programme to accommodate the event. The ICC, too, has had to make an adjustment of its own to accommodate the event, shortening its duration from the original 17 days to 12, including a reserve day for the final.The ICC also said the event will be held in one city, possibly to ensure foolproof security arrangements, though Pakistan’s fate as host will be decided only after a review following India’s tour of the country in early 2009. Lahore and Karachi were the original venues.David Morgan, the ICC president, welcomed the decision to find a place for the tournament despite an increasingly packed Future Tours Program (FTP) and Lorgat thanked the participating countries for their cooperation. “I’m hugely encouraged by the spirit of togetherness and teamwork shown by our members in ensuring we have found a place for the Champions Trophy in next year’s calendar,” Lorgat said.The ICC board’s decision means the BCCI, which had originally refused to adjust its international programme to allow the postponed event, will have to reschedule the second edition of the Twenty20 Champions League, which had originally been slotted for September 25-October 10. India has also tentatively scheduled a seven-ODI home series against Australia to start from October 13 next year.N Srinivasan, the BCCI secretary, said that “there will be no clash of dates”. “The new programme takes into account a provision for the Champions League also,” Srinivasan told Cricinfo.According to Lorgat, for whom the result of today’s decision is an achievement of sorts considering the initial opposition to the new window, the tournament needed to be held as it is “vitally important for the world game”.The Champions Trophy is expected to rake in around USD 40 million, most of which will be redeployed for the development of the game. “The tournament, with its new format of the top eight teams playing in a short, sharp event, is vitally important for the world game because it allows those members, as well as the developing cricket world, to grow the sport,” Lorgat said.

Marsh and Ronchi to debut

Shaun Marsh in the nets ahead of his Twenty20 international debut © Getty Images
 

Shaun Marsh says it was an emotional moment when he was told he would be making his Twenty20 international debut in Barbados, fulfilling his dream of following his father Geoff into the national team. Marsh and his Western Australian team-mate Luke Ronchi will both play their first matches for Australia against West Indies on Friday.Australia have confirmed that Nathan Bracken is the only one of the one-day specialists who have joined the squad in the Caribbean who will not play in the Twenty20 match. Brad Haddin will sit out to give his broken finger a chance to recover and Andrew Symonds is being rested after having back spasms in the third Test.Marsh said it was a memorable moment when he was told of his inclusion. “There were a few emotions,” Marsh told . “Obviously I’ve worked hard for it and I just can’t wait to represent my country. I’ve been dreaming about this for a long time, to be over here and be in the change rooms with all the guys has just been fantastic so far.”Marsh has already received high praise from the captain Ricky Ponting, who said the thing he is most looking forward to in the Twenty20 match is watching Marsh bat. Ponting will be leading a relatively inexperienced international side with Bracken, Haddin, Symonds and Stuart Clark the four men to sit out, although it will be an XI with significant batting depth.West Indies are already without their captain Chris Gayle for the match and they could also lose their stand-in leader Ramnaresh Sarwan, who is nursing a groin injury he sustained during the third Test. If Sarwan is unavailable, Dwayne Bravo would be likely to lead the side, although the coach John Dyson said it was still possible Sarwan would play.”We’re just waiting to see what condition it is in [before the game],” Dyson told . “It’s nothing major. We are mindful that we have five one-days coming up. In this Twenty20 form of the game it can be fairly hectic.”Australia Shaun Marsh, Michael Clarke, Ricky Ponting (capt), Shane Watson, Michael Hussey, David Hussey, Cameron White, James Hopes, Luke Ronchi (wk), Brett Lee, Mitchell Johnson.West Indies (from) Xavier Marshall, Andre Fletcher, William Perkins, Ramnaresh Sarwan (capt), Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Kieron Pollard, Dwayne Bravo, Denesh Ramdin (wk), Darren Sammy, Jerome Taylor, Sulieman Benn, Daren Powell, Fidel Edwards, Kemar Roach.

Atkins and Taylor set record in thrashing

Scorecard

Sarah Taylor works the ball away during her century © Getty Images
 

Caroline Atkins and Sarah Taylor set a new world record for a partnership in women’s ODIs as England inflicted another crushing 225-run defeat on South Africa at Lord’s. England’s openers added 268 in a commanding display with both registering centuries and South Africa were overwhelmed, sinking for 85 in their chase.Atkins and Taylor put the visitors to the sword despite conditions that favoured the bowlers early on. Both went along at almost identical pace, Atkins the first to three figures off 117 balls and Taylor following shortly after off 118 deliveries. For Atkins it was her maiden ODI century in her 33rd match, while for Taylor it was the second and lifted her average over 40.Chances were few and far between for South Africa, but they did miss one opportunity to remove Taylor in the 21st over. The opening stand went past the previous record of 258, also an opening stand, set by Reshma Gandhi and Mithali Raj, for India against Ireland back in 1999. The fun was eventually ended when Atkins was bowled by Susan Benade, but England powered on to reach 310 for 3.South Africa never had a prayer of reaching the target and collapsed in a heap against Katherine Brunt, who claimed a career-best 5 for 25 and was on a hat-trick early in the innings.

Puttick and Bruyns help Western Province and Border to wins

Western Province and Border moved closer to the top of their respective groups with wins against Eastern Province and Griqualand West in the second round of the Standard Bank Cup.In Cape Town Western Province’s Andrew Puttick batted through the innings in scoring his maiden limited overs century out of a total of 231for the loss of two wickets. Opening the innings the young 21-year-old left-hander ended undefeated on 113 off 132 balls including 12 fours and a big six off the bowling of Mornantau Hayward. Puttick was also involved in a 147 run partnership with captain HD Ackerman who contributed 74 off 93 balls.Eastern Province chasing 232 for their first win in the tournament, started off well with Carl Bradfield (22) and Michael Price (34) laying a foundation with a 50 run partnership before a middle order collapse left the visitors on 72 for five wickets.Two wickets apiece for Charl Willoughby and Renier Munnik broke the back of the Jumbos innings putting the remaining batsmen under tremendous pressure and a position that the Jumbos could not recover from. Munnik took a further wicket to end on 3/37.James Bryant tried hard but he fought a lone battle ending on 58*. Together with Garnet Kruger, scoring his highest limited overs score of 20*, they took Eastern Province to 213/8 and denied Western Province the bonus point.Border Bears and Griqualand West Diamonds, both with the chance of moving to the top of Pool A, met in East London where the visitors won the toss and elected to field first.After losing the early wicket of Burton de Wett for one, Border soon recovered with Mark Bruyns (55) holding up one end allowing pinch hitter Tyron Henderson to post a quick 26 off 20 balls including four boundaries.A 53 off 59 balls from Steven Pope and an undefeated 48 from Pieter Strydom, whose first boundary sailed over the ropes for the only six of the innings, maintained the Border run rate at five runs an over.Two run outs from Craig Sugden and Laden Gamiet caused some jitters in the dressing room before a run-a-ball 23 from Justin Kreusch saw Border reach 221 for seven wickets in the allotted 45 overs.Griqualand West started off well with Pieter Koortzen and Loots Bosman putting together a 49 run partnership for the first wicket before Bosman, playing an uncharacteristic subdued innings, was caught for 24 and Koortzen run out for 35.Wickets fell at regular intervals but Wendell Bossenger (33) and Adrian McLaren (32) gave the visitors a glimmer of hope with a 58 run partnership in 45 balls, this after Strydom has captured three cheap wickets.At the end Griqualand West were bowled out for 203 in 43.5 overs leaving Border with a 18 run win, but no bonus point.

Yousuf double-century confirms draw

ScorecardPredictably, the loss of the entire third day’s play to rain condemned this match to a draw, and a rather dreary one Lancashire made of it, too. Roses matches do not lend themselves to contrived finishes, and there was little the players could do to give the match any meaning beyond the acquisition of bonus points – except that Lancashire might have looked to score a little more enterprisingly than they did.The chief culprit, if he could be described as such, was the Pakistani batsman Mohammad Yousuf, who began the day needing seven more runs to reach his first century for Lancashire. Play started on time on a dry but cloudy day, and it took Yousuf 36 minutes to move from 93 to 100, which came off 189 balls. Eventually he gratefully accepted a full toss from Richard Pyrah and hit it to the point boundary for four.His overnight partner, Paul Horton, had already passed 150, but on 152 he appeared to take his eye off a shorter, faster ball from Adil Rashid and had his middle stump knocked back. The two had put on 258 runs together, which equalled the Lancashire record for any partnership against Yorkshire, compiled by Horton himself and Stuart Law in the same fixture last year.Harry Makepeace might have smiled down in pleasure as Yousuf ground his way to a double-century, which, in the traditional spirit of Roses cricket, took him most of the day and included 36 runs off 85 balls before lunch. Perhaps this is an ungracious and exaggerated criticism of an innings of great concentration and application, scored at better than three an over – but having said that, a draw was certain and he showed few of the magnificent strokes of which he is capable. Yorkshire paid a heavy price for dropping him early in his innings, and he was dropped again on 168 by a sprinting substitute fielder from mid-off. He did see his team through to its fifth batting point, their only real objective of the day, but the real flair of the man rarely showed through.More understandable was Steven Croft’s efforts to score his maiden century. He began with some panache and played some handsome strokes through the covers especially, but slowed almost to a halt as he approached three figures, having already shared with his partner a record fifth-wicket stand of 197 for Lancashire against Yorkshire (beating 136 by Frank Hayes and Bernard Reidy in 1980). In particular, he struggled against the spin of Rashid, who eventually claimed his wicket for 96.Yorkshire’s bowling resources suffered considerably from the loss of their captain, Darren Gough, suffering from “stiffness and niggles”. Tim Bresnan bowled superbly at times, frequently beating the bat, but he was denied the luck he deserved. Rashid was grateful for the reluctance of the batsmen to dominate him, and was able to toss the ball high with impunity, experimenting with spin and his googly; he had a good workout of 46 overs for 133 runs and his two wickets. None of the other bowlers looked threatening, although Ben Sanderson claimed his first wicket in first-class cricket, having the unfortunate No. 5, ‘Faf’ du Plessis, who had to wait a very long time to get to the crease, caught at slip without scoring.After Lancashire reached 400, it was just a matter of time, and the teams – and umpire Peter Willey, apparently – were so keen to call it a day that the declaration came after Jacques Rudolph, captaining Yorkshire on the field, bowled just two balls of an over. Some individuals, mostly batsmen, will have good memories of this match, but by most it will soon be forgotten, its potential destroyed by a day of rain.

World Cup planning and strategy time being lost in NZ

Time lost throughout October, due to pay negotiations between New Zealand Cricket and the Players’ Association, may yet prove an Achilles’ heel for New Zealand and its World Cup aspirations in South Africa later in the summer.Valuable time for coaches and players to formulate match plans, and an overall strategy, has been lost in this period because of the lack of communication between coaches and players as a result of the players withdrawing their services.Based on past experience, especially in 1992 and 1999, but probably also on other occasions, time is now of the essence.With this in mind, CricInfo New Zealand approached Martin Crowe, the captain of the successful and innovative campaign in 1992 which so captured the mind of New Zealanders, to ask what he would do now to ensure New Zealand was at peak pitch to make a full-scale assault on cricket’s Holy Grail.Crowe, who is recovering from knee surgery resulting from the injury that forced him out of international cricket in 1995/96, welcomed the chance to take part in the exercise.”I’ve always believed a World Cup campaign has to come from a long way back and I haven’t felt anything similar has been happening this year. It may have, but I have not been aware of it.”I know that in 1999 they did do that with a War Room and an identification of what they needed to do.”Our record of winning only four of our last 21 games is of serious concern, and not acceptable from a team of the standard and capabilities of our side.”It may be because of this players’ strike, but despite that, this is World Cup year. It is what the whole season has been designed for with seven One-Day Internationals against India.”I still feel there is a lot of experimentation going on after the debacle in Sri Lanka, even in the win over Bangladesh,” he said.Crowe said that taking part in the project was a useful exercise and he admitted to getting itchy feet as a result of it.Crowe in the past has worked with New Zealand players both individually and with the team but said he had not been involved since the VB Series in Australia earlier this year.While he hadn’t included the thought in his plan for CricInfo, Crowe said he thought there should be some consideration given to taking a fielding coach into the side this year and it might be worth asking former coach Steve Rixon to find someone suitable for the side.

Muralitharan out of NatWest Series

Muttiah Muralitharan has pulled out of the Sri Lankan squad that will take part in the forthcoming NatWest Series of one-day internationals against England and India starting on June 27th at Trent Bridge.The off-spinner has been suffering from a shoulder injury that kept him out of the first Test at Lord’s and he was not fully fit for the matches that followed at Edgbaston and Old Trafford. Nevertheless, he bowled 64 overs in Birmingham and took five wickets, while he delivered another 62 overs in Manchester and took another three wickets. Despite his considerable efforts, Sri Lanka lost both matches.Now the Sri Lankan tour management are worried about the effect on his future fitness if he continues to play while carrying the injury and have decided that he should return home to prepare for the forthcoming series against Bangladesh. A replacement player has been requested.Chandra Schaffter, the tour manager, said: “The team management have decided to send Murali back to Sri Lanka. We did not feel he was fit enough to risk playing in a one-day tournament.”Physiotherapist Alex Kontouri added: “There’s no problem with him batting or bowling, but there would be a risk with him diving in the field.”Better news for the Sri Lankans is that Marvan Atapattu’s injured finger is making enough progress for him to be able to play against Gloucestershire in Bristol on Sunday, while pace bowler Nuwan Zoysa’s groin is not yet one hundred per cent but he should be fit enough to play in that game as well having come through a test against West Indies A at Hove on Wednesday.

Hampshire Cricketers to wear numbered shirts in Championship

Hampshire Cricket will break with tradition once again this summer – by wearing football-style shirts in the Frizzell County Championship.Chairman Rod Bransgrove has already succeeded in turning Hampshire County Cricket Club into Hampshire Cricket, the cricketing arm of the county circuit’s first public limited company.And last month a public offering of shares was made in Rose Bowl plc with Bransgrove and chief executive Graham Walker hopeful of raising £5 million.But the decision to wear named and numbered shirts in the four-day game is not unprecedented.Lancashire had them on the back of special fleece shirts last year and pioneered the idea with safety pins more than 50 years ago.Now Robin Smith’s men will follow suit, although traditionalists will be pleased to know that the woollen jumpers will remain the same as the names would become unreadable once put through the wash!Chairman Rod Bransgrove first unveiled the plan at the AGM two months ago but Hampshire Cricket have now been given the go-ahead by the ECB and the players will wear the shirts for the first time when they begin the season at Kent in 13 days’ time.Director of cricket Tim Tremlett said: “Lancashire used numbered shirts in the championship last year where it went down particularly well with members and players.”I gather they are used a lot in South Africa as well and they have obviously been a success in the one day game.”Players are quite hard to distinguish from the stands and batsmen can be particularly hard to make out when they are wearing helmets so this should be a great help to spectators.”It also means that the players will have no excuse for picking up the wrong shirt in the dressing room!”

Tips from Gavaskar and Tendulkar helped me a lot: Das

Valuable tips from legendary cricketer Sunil Gavaskar and batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar helped India’s new opener Shiv Sundar Das tighten up his batting in the recently concluded Test series against the mighty Australians. “Gavaskar advised me to take the leg-stump guard and I followed the suggestion in the third Test at Chennai making 84 in the first innings”, Das told PTI here.”Till the Kolkata Test, I used to take a middle-stump guard, but Gavaskar pointed out that it left my leg stump exposed,” he said. The little master, Das said, advised him that as an opener, if he could play out the first one hour of the match, it would become easier in the subsequent hours. “It helped me immensely in the series decider.” Das met Gavaskar at a function at Chennai before the start of the third Test.Das had also been seeking advice from Tendulkar about the strategy he should follow against the Australians. “Tendulkar provided me psychological support and advised me to play my natural game without bothering about the bowling”, he said. Describing Glenn Mcgrath and Jason Gillespie as two of the best bowlers in the world today, the short-statured opener said Tendulkar often helped him prepare psychologically as to how to face their initial spells. Das along with lanky medium pacer Debasish Mohanty have been included in the list of 26 probables for the forthcoming tour of Zimbabwe.Das, the Orissa Ranji team skipper, said he learnt a lot during the series against the Aussies and was looking forward to the tour of Zimbabwe. “Many thought the series against Australia would be a litmus test for me. But I feel I have passed that test”, he said adding, “the way I faced the Australian attack, both pace and spin, gave me a lot of satisfaction”. Das said he batted with a positive approach throughout the series. “I had prepared by watching some of the Australians on the video and also watched their series against West Indies”.Regarding his back-foot strokes and negotiation of deliveries pitched outside the off-stump, which earned him kudos from cricket watchers, Das said he had benefitted immensely by practising on matting wickets at the club, under-16 and under-19 level in Bhubaneswar which had no turf wicket. “You get more bounce on such surface and that experience is paying dividends now”, he said.Besides, his one and a half month special training at the Australian academy, where he faced bowling machines, helped him hone his skills. Asked if he felt disappointed after getting out on 84 at Chennai, Das said “a century against the Australians would have definitely given me great satisfaction”. On his routine during his stay here, Das said besides regular practice, he was watching his own cassettes of the just concluded Test series and trying to iron out the mistakes. The team physio Andrew Leipus had also given a schedule for physical training to the players, he said.

Project to Develop Galle International Cricket Stadium

The Board of Control for Cricket in Sri Lanka will shortly launch a project to modernize and develop the Galle International Cricket Stadium, to fulfill a long-felt need to bring this Test venue’s facilities up to international standards.The project, which is expected to cost between 40 and 50 million rupees, includes a new grandstand with modern facilities, including seating for 250 spectators, a media box with a capacity for 140 media persons, dressing rooms for teams, separate catering areas, air-conditioned VIP areas, and boxes for the 3rd Umpire and Match Referee.The new grandstand will be built in the area that is presently occupied by the Galle Cricket Club and Southern Province Cricket Association offices, which will be demolished. The new building will house the offices of the Galle CC and SPCA.The project is scheduled for completion prior to the visit of the New Zealand in May 2003 for a Test series. Sri Lanka is also expected to host tours of the English and Australian teams next year.A separate project will see a new scoreboard constructed at this stadium at the same time.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus