'I don't want to finish like this'

Changing places: Brad Hogg is the favourite to replace Stuart MacGill © Getty Images

Stuart MacGill has been buoyed by the message from Australia’s selectors that his career is not over if he misses the series against India. MacGill, who will have surgery on his right hand on Thursday, will be out for up to six weeks due to carpal tunnel syndrome and is looking to return for Australia’s tours to Pakistan and the West Indies.For two weeks MacGill has endured speculation over his future and he has held on to the thoughts of Andrew Hilditch, the chairman of selectors, who spoke to him before the Sri Lanka series when he was struggling to recover from a second knee operation. “Andrew Hilditch said to me: ‘If you don’t come up for the first Test I want you to know it’s not the end. We want you around for the next couple of years.’ That’s pretty important to me, really,” MacGill said in the .MacGill bowled badly in the second Test against Sri Lanka – he experienced severe numbness in his arm – but he does not want to retire. “At the moment my focus is on the tours,” he told the paper. “I don’t want to finish like this. I know that I can bowl well. Mentally I’m in a good spot. Unfortunately my body is not quite where it should be.”The absence of MacGill creates an opening for Brad Hogg, who has not played a Test since 2003. Hogg is the most likely contender for the spot in the Boxing Day Test, although talk remains of playing four fast bowlers in an attempt to unsettle the Indian batsmen.Hogg has performed strongly in one-day internationals and on the domestic circuit but is trying not to worry about a potential promotion. “I feel like I’m bowling the best I’ve ever bowled, but it’s just one of those things – if you get the nod you get the nod,” Hogg told . “If I think about [Test selection] I’m going to go downhill, so basically I can only keep doing what I’m doing and not worry about it.”Both slow bowlers, who are 36, were picked in the squad for the first Test against Sri Lanka, but Hogg was let go two days before the match began. The pair is set to jostle for a place if MacGill can recover from the operation.”I might miss out on playing India now, but I’ve got the chance of playing Test matches in India [later next year], which is something I’ve wanted to do for a long time,” MacGill said. “There is lots of cricket in front of me.” While the Australian medical staff said MacGill was out of the first two Tests against India, it is expected he will miss the entire series and come back for New South Wales in late January.MacGill has been waking up with numb hands, but was surprised when the condition continued into the day in Hobart. During the Test he bowled a series of full-tosses because he was struggling with his grip.”It was like the ends of my fingers were dead,” he said. “It was like you had to prick your fingers to see if they were still there.”

Final draft of players' contracts to be ready soon

The final draft of the BCCI players’ contracts is likely to be ready as soon as January 13. After it is decided which player is to receive what contract, the board will pass on the draft to the individual players. According to Niranjan Shah, the BCCI secretary, the board has decided to go in for a performance-linked structure.This comes after a couple of rounds of discussions between senior players and board officials. The BCCI had earlier formed a committee comprising Sharad Pawar, the BCCI president, N Srinivasan, the treasurer, Shashank Manohar, a vice-president and Shah, among others, to look into the matter of the players’ contracts.There has been some apprehension that handing out contracts directly linked to individual performance will cause players to worry more about their personal results than that of the team, but the board’s intentions are different. Players are likely to receive a flat fee for each Test and one-day international, and a bonus if the team wins. There will not be rewards for individual performances – runs scored or wickets taken.The amounts will differ for Tests and ODIs and will increase in the case of a series win. The board also proposes to reward away wins more than it does home wins. To show that they are serious the board is willing to fork out cash over and above the allocated 13% of the gross revenue of the board that goes towards payment of the national team’s wages, should India embark on a winning streak.One thing that will remain the same, however, is the gradation for players. An A-grade contract will come with an annual retainer fee of Rs 50 lakh ($100,000 approx), B with 35 lakh ($75,000 approx) and C with 15 lakh ($30,000). The criterion for a C contract is five Tests or fifteen ODIs.

Voges holds key to WA's survival

Scorecard

Adam Voges brought up his hundred from 101 balls, but his work is only half done for Western Australia © Getty Images

Western Australia face an uphill battle to avoid falling to their fifth defeat of the season, as Queensland continued their control of the match on the third day at Perth.Starting the day on 9 for 419, Michael Kasprowicz helped Daniel Doran put on 73 for the final wicket, to pile the misery on Western Australia’s shoulders. Queensland were eventually dismissed for 470 and, buoyed by their late run-flurry, were convinced they had Justin Langer caught behind off Andy Bichel, but the decision was turned down.Langer went on to score 51, and with Clint Heron put on 64 for the first wicket before Doran bowled him for 15. Langer, threatening a big score, was run out after making his fifty and Western Australia slipped to 3 for 103.Adam Voges and Shaun Marsh then put on a crucial 110-run stand, but Marsh fell to Kasprowicz shortly after tea and, although Voges remains unbeaten on 119, Western Australia lead by just four runs going into the final day.Western Australia coach Wayne Clark cited his team’s poor performances on the opening days of matches as the key reason to their disappointing season. “That’s been our downfall a couple of times this year, just our first day,” Clark told AAP. “Especially batting at the WACA. We’ve had a couple of ordinary days and you’re on the back foot from then on. It’s unfortunate on a wicket that’s proving to be a pretty good batting wicket.”Despite his disappointment, Clark remained optimistic of a positive outcome. “We’ve still got wickets in hand,” he said. “Hopefully we can post a bit of a score that will give them a few little butterflies. Who knows?”

Waqar rejects coaching role

Waqar Younis: ‘It would have been a great honour, but I think they never wanted me’© Getty Images

Waqar Younis’s spell as Pakistan’s bowling coach has ended before it even began.Yesterday, Waqar told reporters that he wanted the role for the long term. “If it is only for the India series,” he said, “it will be waste of time.”But that cut no ice with the Pakistan Cricket Board who rejected his suggestions, insisting the appointment was for the one series only.Waqare, who was believed to be asking for a two-year deal as well as compensation for the loss of income as a commentator, was not interested in the PCB’s terms. “It would have been a great honour, but I think they never wanted me, ” he told reporters. “There was no mention of the money when I talked to the PCB, but I wanted a long-term contract because you need time to work on bowlers.”

Ramesh and Dasgupta in 20-man probables list


L Balaji: in contention for a berth to Australia
© AFP

The Indian selectors sprung a surprise, naming only a 20-man probables list for the four-match Test series in Australia. Announcing the line-up, SK Nair, secretary of the Indian board, said that the final squad of 16 would be named after India’s TVS Cup match against New Zealand at Hyderabad on Saturday.The list of probables includes Sadagoppan Ramesh as the third opener, while Deep Dasgupta has been named as the second wicketkeeper. There is no place in the squad for Sanjay Bangar, though. Among the other fringe players who made the list were Murali Kartik, Irfan Pathan, Aavishkar Salvi and L Balaji.The selectors also announced that Salvi would replace Ashish Nehra in the ODI squad for the Hyderabad match, and for the final, if India qualify. Nehra has been asked to play in Delhi’s Ranji Trophy match against Mumbai, which starts on November 15.The probables
Sourav Ganguly (capt), Akash Chopra, Virender Sehwag, Sachin Tendulkar, VVS Laxman, Rahul Dravid, Sadagoppan Ramesh, Hemang Badani, Yuvraj Singh, Deep Dasgupta (wk), Parthiv Patel (wk), Harbhajan Singh, Anil Kumble, Ajit Agarkar, Zaheer Khan, Ashish Nehra, Murali Kartik, Aavishkar Salvi, Irfan Pathan, L Balaji.ODI squad for rest of the TVS Cup
Sourav Ganguly (capt), Virender Sehwag, Sachin Tendulkar, VVS Laxman, Rahul Dravid (wk), Yuvraj Singh, Mohammad Kaif, Ajit Agarkar, Parthiv Patel (wk), Harbhajan Singh, Anil Kumble, Zaheer Khan, Aavishkar Salvi, Murali Kartik.

Fletcher plays down Gough speculation


DarrenGough
Photo CricInfo

The England coach, Duncan Fletcher, has declined to comment on suggestions that Darren Gough may be asked to stay in New Zealand for the forthcoming Test series.The Yorkshire fast bowler was left out of the Test squad for New Zealand, along with Surrey’s Alec Stewart, after both players had made themselves unavailable for the tour of India before Christmas.”It has not been discussed,” Fletcher told a news conference earlier today. “It’s a complex issue and any movement has got to come from the chairman of the selection committee, David Graveney.”Fletcher has expressed concern over the form of Andy Caddick, who has only taken one wicket on the tour so far at a cost of 155 runs in three one-day matches, including figures of nought for 51 off 7.3 overs in the first one-day international at Christchurch, which New Zealand won by four wickets.”Caddick is not bowling too well,” Fletcher said. “He’s lost some oomph and we have to look at that area. Andy had a break from cricket for six months and at 32 it can take a long time to get back and perform.”By contrast, Gough took four wickets in two overs as England almost managed to turn the Christchurch game on its head on Wednesday.

Venter bags a ton as Strikers struggle

Kosie Venter scored an undefeated 112, his fourth first-class century, for Free State before the Highveld Strikers reached the close of the third day of their SuperSport Series match at Goodyear Park on Sunday on 23 without loss in their second innings. The Strikers are still 134 in arrears.Venter was at the wicket for more than five-and-a-half hours during which he faced 179 balls and hit nine fours and a six.Free State declared their second innings, scored in reply to the visitors’ 368, at 525 for seven.The visitors faced 8.3 of the 16 overs they were scheduled to before bad light ended play.The home side resumed on 177 for two, and Louis Wilkinson and Wiaan Smit took their third-wicket partnership to 184 before Wilkinson, on 99 and itching to reach what would have been his eighth century, drove directly at Walter Masimula at mid-on and set off on an ill-fated run.Masimula’s aim at the bowler’s end stumps was true and Wilkinson was run out. Adam Bacher dropped Smit at point off the next ball, but it did not prove a costly error as he was caught behind off Ottis Gibson nine runs later for 88.Venter and Morne van Wyk then embarked on a fifth-wicket stand that was to stretch to 86 runs before Van Wyk was trapped in front by Masimula for 49.Sturdy batting by Gerard Brophy, Herman Bakkes and Rasjeed Lewis, who all advanced well into double figures, only added to the visitors’ frustration.To Strikers captain Clive Eksteen went the cold comfort of being the only bowler in his side to claim more than one wicket, with his return of two for 123 off 44 overs.

Celtic could be set for Dembele windfall

Celtic will be entitled to some of the money if Manchester United buy Moussa Dembele from Lyon, Football Scotland’s Matthew Elder writes.

The lowdown

Celtic signed Dembele on a free transfer from Fulham in 2016 and he went on to make 94 appearances for the club, scoring 51 goals and providing 18 assists.

In 2018, they agreed to sell him to Lyon for £19.8million, a deal that remains one of the most lucrative in their history.

The Daily Mail reported this week that Manchester United are now eyeing the Frenchman, with no guarantee that Marcus Rashford, Cristiano Ronaldo or Anthony Martial will be at Old Trafford next season.

United are aware that Dembele would qualify as a homegrown player following his stint at Celtic, offering another incentive.

The latest

Elder says that Celtic insist on sell-on clauses when they sell players, and they could now see the benefit of that strategy.

He thinks Lyon may be inclined to cash in on Dembele this summer because he’ll be entering the final year of his contract.

The portion of the proceeds which The Hoops are due to receive isn’t specified.

The verdict

The Mail claim that Lyon could ask for £25million for Dembele, and so Celtic would be in line to bank a fairly considerable amount of money, even if the clause is only along the lines of ten per cent.

The club can be very pleased with their transfer dealings in this instance, having banked a huge sum in the first place for a player who didn’t cost them a penny.

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And now they’re due to reap the rewards of some long-term thinking and firm negotiation.

With Jeremie Frimpong, who also has a sell-on clause, a target for Bayern Munich, Celtic’s coffers could be nicely boosted by external dealings this summer.

In other news, Celtic have received a fitness boost. 

Sahil Kukreja leads Mumbai's fightback


Scorecard

Sahil Kukreja’s unbeaten 89 brought Mumbai back in the game © Cricinfo Ltd.

Sahil Kukreja hit a belligerent 89 to turn this match on its head and put Mumbai back in the reckoning against Delhi at the Wankhede Stadium on Saturday. With the match at the halfway stage, Mumbai have a 69-run lead and will relish the chance of bowling on a fourth-day pitch.The day revolved largely around Kukreja, who has had an impressive start to the season, with two centuries in the lead-up to the Ranji Trophy, against Karachi Urbans in the Mohammad Nissar Trophy and Rest of India in the Irani Trophy.This was a spotless innings but for one chance when he was on 79, debutant Narinder Singh failing to collect an easy return catch on the fifth ball of his first over. He punished Pradeep Sangwan, Delhi’s first innings hero with the ball, who was wayward and was hit for a cover-driven boundary, then opened the face of the bat to glide him past point. Another cover drive, off Ishant Sharma, showed Kukreja’s desire to make amends for his first innings failure, where he could only make four runs.A wicket at the other end could have put some pressure on Kukreja but Delhi were luckless. Aakash Chopra, a usually dependable close-in fielder, couldn’t hold to an easy chance offered by Ajinkya Rahane when the batsman was on four and Mumbai were 23.That only seemed to spur Kukreja on and he hit Sangwan for three boundaries – a straight drive, a steer past third man and a wristy on-drive off an incoming delivery through midwicket – in the same over. Virender Sehwag brought on the spin but Kukreja was equally at ease, pulling the legspinner, Chaitanya Nanda, past midwicket for a four followed by a steer that beat the point fielder and then a flick past midwicket for three runs. Another flick for a single in the next over brought up his half-century, studded with nine boundaries.Mumbai went in to tea at 80 for no loss but the break seemed to have revived Sangwan and he soon found his rhythm. He troubled the batsmen by moving the ball away, keeping them on their toes with the odd short one and suddenly snaking in the dangerous incoming delivery. Rahane took a shy at an angled delivery from Sangwan and the umpire, GA Pratap, convinced by the noise, raised his finger even before the wicketkeeper, Puneet Bisht, completed the catch. Rahane looked aghast for a second before walking off.The tempers started to flare in the previous over when Kukreja played a leg-break from Nanda that spun off the surface; the ensuing noise had the entire Delhi team appealing but the umpire, SK Tarapore, wasn’t convinced. Gambhir was seen exchanging words with Kukreja till the umpires came and calmed them down.Mumbai would have settled for the loss of one wicket but Prashant Naik, who was settling down, didn’t offer a shot to a Singh delivery that seemed to be holding the line and umpire Tarapore raised his finger.It was a late reward for Delhi, who’d seen their advantage of the first day steadily slip away through the day. Aavishkar Salvi and Abhishek Nayar bowled a tight line that Gambhir and Rajat Bhatia, the overnight batsmen, found difficult to break through. Gambhir opened his day’s account in a streaky fashion trying to cut past square, but the leading edge sneaked between gully and fourth slip. A steer past slips off Salvi took Delhi past Mumbai’s total but they lost Gambhir soon after when he was beaten by the movement Nayar got off the wicket and hit in line of the stumps. He’d added eight runs to his overnight 81 and his mood was not helped by the send-off – he turned back a few times on his way to the dressing room and even pointed his bat towards one of the Mumbai players.Delhi had one more partnership – Bisht and Bhatia putting on 63 runs for the sixth wicket – before Ajit Agarkar wrapped up the lower order and tail.With Kukreja middling everything and Amol Muzumdar unbeaten on two, Mumbai have a good opportunity to turn this game around and set things up for Ramesh Powar to make use of the final day pitch.

Pathan bats Baroda into the semi-finals

Scorecard

Irfan continued his form as a batsman with an unbeaten 82 to take Baroda to the semi-finals of the Ranji Trophy. With the ball, he remained lacklustre, getting 3 for 167 in the match © AFP

One match into his rehabilitation at the Ranji Trophy level, things haven’t changed much for Irfan Pathan junior. He failed to get into rhythm with the ball but his batting, when Baroda were in danger of losing the match, would have done a specialist Ranji batsman proud. His aggressive 82 – off 100 balls, with six sixes and three fours – took Baroda from 52 for 4 to a successful chase of 172 and a spot in the semi-finals.Starting the day at 17 for 1, Baroda faced sensible bowling from Uttar Pradesh, whose plan was to make Baroda graft for every run. Helped by their superior fielding, UP gave away only 35 runs in the first 15.4 overs, as three Baroda batsmen panicked and gave their wickets away. In walked Pathan, to shouts of ‘get him, he’s under pressure’, from the UP bench, two of them being former India team-mates. He had four overs to negotiate before lunch, and he looked good in those four overs.After lunch Pathan first picked on the most successful and threatening UP bowler, Praveen Kumar. He walked down the wicket, much like Matthew Hayden does, made room and lofted Kumar over extra-cover for his first six. In the next over, he stepped out to Piyush Chawla and lofted him for another six, this time into the sightscreen.These were followed by singles, revealing a plan to the onslaught. In the next over Pathan hit perhaps the shot of the match: Just a punch from the back foot, no follow-through of the bat involved. It sped through the covers for four, and announced the presence of a good batsman at the crease. That was not the end of the onslaught; he took a four to extra-cover, and a six over wide long-on from Chawla’s next over.In a matter of four overs the game had turned on its head, but then Jacob Martin played an irresponsible shot – a loopy square cut straight to point. This is when Pathan’s experience of having played in tight situations at international level came in handy. He started taking most of the strike, either running a single on the fifth or sixth ball, or clearing the field that had come up for the last two deliveries of the over.Himanshu Jadhav did not score off the first 25 balls he faced, yet the scoring rate did not fall; the tension in the dressing-room did not resurface. Pathan slowed down as he moved beyond his fifty and once he had brought Baroda close enough, he shifted gears again. He hit Kumar for back-to-back sixes over extra-cover, the second one of which was caught superbly by Umang Patel, former Baroda offspinner, sitting in the stands. Chawla was hit for another huge one over cow corner. Winning runs, though, quite fittingly, came from Jadhav’s square cut. Jadhav had been given out obstructing the field in the first innings and Baroda were not pleased that UP had gone for the appeal.Baroda defended their lead in the points table of Super League Group A and UP moved one step closer to relegation. With Tamil Nadu tied with UP at four points, the final league match – against different opponents – will be a close fight for the bottom-of-the-table.Today, though, was largely about Pathan, the best batsman on either side. Yet he will know that there’s more to his return from South Africa. At the end of the day he told Neo Sports that just bowling in the nets had not been helping him and he needed longer spells in match conditions. He was not happy with his bowling in the first innings, but said he had improved through the match. At times he was pleased with the swing he got, especially in the three-over spell before lunch on day three. But happy as he is with his batting, he knows it will take some time to regain the bowling form.Six-hitters Inc.If going for sixes were an objectionable addiction, Atul Bedade would have been an important member of Six-hitters’ Anonymous. Twelve years after having played his last ODI and three years after retiring from all cricket, Bedade is now a Baroda selector and, watching his side play here, he remembers how he hit 12 sixes in his 91-ball 150 against Punjab in 1993-94; six-hitting, it can be safely said, fascinates him as a topic. He chats about Amol Muzumdar’s batting and moves on to Sachin Tendulkar’s captaincy and how he expected everyone to perform at his standards. These expectations were the main reason he did not do as well as a captain as he could have. Brian Lara had a similar attitude in his first stint but he has matured and now understand his players better. Put it to him that he handles players like Chris Gayle much better now and Bedade’s eyes light up. Pointing towards the pitch, he says, “Only two people have hit the ball out of the ground from there, Gayle and I. He had ruined L Balaji’s debut. I loved that innings. What a guy he (Gayle) is… I remember their team coming here, they visited my office. And Gayle came and sat with his feet on my granite table. I have never let anybody else do that…”Wanted: Bride for PathanBeing dropped from the side means different things for different people. For Irfan Pathan it apparently means an opportunity for his mother to get him married. According to a local newspaper, Bapor Samachar (meaning Afternoon News), Pathan’s mother has in the past tried to meet two prospective brides but Pathan has managed to talk her out of it. Now, though, she seems quite determined, the paper reports in a news item that’s accompanied by a picture which has Pathan’s face superimposed on the body of a man sitting on a horse.This reporter showed the paper to Yusuf Pathan, who believes that, by virtue of being two years older and still unmarried, he should get the first go. Yusuf sees the paper and, laughing, says, “They write anything.” If Yusuf’s reaction is anything to go by, the BCCI need not worry about making travel arrangements for Pathan and Mrs Pathan on the next tour. If Mr Pathan makes it back to the team, that is.Baroda, the city-state
Vadodara, home to the Baroda Ranji team, is one of three city teams in the Ranji Trophy, the others being Hyderabad and Mumbai – and with an area of 148.22 square kilometers, the smallest of the lot. Yet it boasts a proud Ranji history, having won it five times – the last in 2000-01 – and three times being runners-up. That’s a better record from some full-fledged states, with bigger catchment areas, and attracts cricketers from pretty far afield. Players such as Abhimanyu Chauhan, the former Baroda Under-19 captain who moved here from Chattisgarh to further his cricket ambitions. Chauhan explains how, despite being a single-city team, Baroda do consistently well. They have six grounds which, he says, are all very good. The infrastructure is even better. The club rivalry here is intense too. Alembic, run by Kiran More, and Hindu Gymkhana have a history of intense rivalry. The corporate cricket here is strong too, with Alembic, IPCL (Indian Petrochemicals Corporation Limited), and GSFC (Gujarat State Fertilizers and Chemicals Ltd) being the three major teams. The corporate cricket, according to Chauhan, provides the contests and also the finances. And you just wonder what if Baroda, Gujarat, and Saurashtra played as one state team.