SA name squads for third ODI and first Test

Graeme Smith will be rested for the final one-day international against Zimbabwe, and Nicky Boje will be his replacement as captain. He was rested due to a persistent ankle problem. South Africa also announced a full-strength Test squad, including Jacques Kallis, who was rested from the one-day side after a busy – and prolific – season.Smith was replaced by AB de Villiers, whose 47 in four one-dayers stand in stark contrast to his burgeoning Test career, in which he has accumulated 362 runs in 10 innings. Andrew Hall was replaced by Monde Zondeki, and Shaun Pollock, Makhaya Ntini and Andre Nel were also left out to recuperate before the first Test, which begins on March 4. Ashwell Price was also brought into the side for the final one-dayer.Squad for third ODI Adam Bacher, AB de Villiers, Jacques Rudolph, Herschelle Gibbs, Ashwell Prince, Justin Kemp, Mark Boucher (wk), Nicky Boje (capt), Albie Morkel, Charl Langeveldt, Monde Zondeki.Squad for first Test Graeme Smith (capt) Herschelle Gibbs, Jacques Rudolph, Jacques Kallis, AB de Villiers, Ashwell Prince, Mark Boucher (wk), Shaun Pollock, Nicky Boje, Makhaya Ntini, Andre Nel, Charl Langeveldt.

Kamal: 'The conditions were to blame'

Asim Kamal sweeps en route to an unbeaten 43© Getty Images

Pakistan made a shaky start on the first day of their tour game against the Board President’s XI in Dharamsala, closing on 165 for 5 after their batsmen failed to lay a solid foundation. Afterwards, Asim Kamal blamed the bleak conditions and the state of the wicket for their slow progress.”This wicket is slow and has a low bounce and the batsman can’t play many shots easily,” said Kamal, who was Pakistan’s leading batsman on the day with an unbeaten 43. But he acknowledged the fact his team would have to be ready for such slow wickets when the Tests gets underway next week. “Looking at it [the Dharamsala wicket] all of us are ready for the slow turners for the rest of the tour.”However, Kamal agreed that when on tours players have to be ready for these kind of varied conditions. “You’ve to be prepared to face different kind of wickets and situations when on a foreign tour.”Asked about the Board President’s bowling attack he made a dismissive remark, saying: “There was nothing extraordinary about the bowlers.”Kamal is fighting for a berth in the lower-middle order with Shoaib Malik, whose bowling action is currently under scrutiny from the ICC. But, according to their coach Bob Woolmer, he has a definite chance of making into the XI solely as a batsman. Kamal, who feels he comes up trumps when under pressure, left it to the team management to decide who was the best man for the job.Meanwhile, the Board President’s team suffered a setback when their offspinner, Ramesh Powar, suffered a finger injury on his bowling hand, while attempting to take a caught-and-bowled. He was treated by the Pakistan physio and is not likely to take any further part in the game.

Marsh: 'On the whole I was pleased'

England A’s tour of Sri Lanka ended in disappointment with well-worn criticism over fitness and a lack of technique again to the fore.Rod Marsh, the Academy director whose term of office ends in September, was keen to push the positives, but the manner of the defeats against A teams from Sri Lanka and Pakistan were a cause for worry. "I told them it would be tough,” he said. “The weather, the grounds and the opponents all wore them down physically and that took its toll on them mentally."When it comes to playing tough cricket, it does not get any worse than March in Sri Lanka and, on the whole, I was pleased with the way they coped. There were some terrific individual performances."I don’t think a few of them realised just how tough it is to play cricket in this part of the world. You can tell them a million times, but it is not until they actually play in this continual, oppressive heat that they find out what it’s really like. When you see guys struggling with dehydration, it makes you wonder how the Sri Lankans and Pakistanis cope with it."To win here takes a lot of discipline, with the whole squad pulling together at every stage of the tour. Perhaps we had a few guys who wished they weren’t here because it was too tough, but in the main I was very proud of the way they played until the last three games."

Atapattu reappointed as Sri Lanka's captain

Marvan Atapattu: reappointed as captain © CricInfo

Sri Lanka may not have a coach yet – although Jayantha Dharmadasa, the new chairman, has optimistically promised one by the week’s end – but they do now at least have a captain as Marvan Atapattu was reappointed on Thursday for the forthcoming series against West Indies and India.Atapattu’s reappointment was never in any doubt after an impressive year since taking the full Test captaincy from Hashan Tillakaratne last April and his early appointment is reaffirmation of his growing status as a firm, no-nonsense leader who will probably lead Sri Lanka until the 2007 World Cup.It was the second decision made by Sri Lanka’s new trimmed-down five-man selection panel this week after the announcement of a 25-man training pool for the A team series against West Indies that starts later this month. Their first potentially controversial task will be the appointment of a national training pool.However, Sri Lanka’s national team training will for the time being focus on physical fitness training with the physiotherapist CJ Clarke, the only remaining member of a three-man Australian management team headed by the coach, John Dyson, whose contract expired in April.Sri Lanka’s players have an opportunity to regroup and refresh before the start of a hectic 12-month schedule that kicks off with West Indies’ two-Test tour of Sri Lanka starting on July 15 at the Sinhalese Sports Club, and a tri-series with India beginning on August 1 (although schedule is still to be finalised).Sri Lanka are then due to play Bangladesh in September at home, India away in November for a full Test and ODI tour, New Zealand away in early January followed by the VB Series in Australia and a possible two-Test series, another Bangladesh series and the Asia Cup in February and, finally, Pakistan in March.The ICC has also announced that Mike Procter will be the ICC Match Referee for the West Indies tour, which will mark the return to international cricket of Muttiah Muralitharan after the lifting of the restrictions on his doosra.

Three Indian juniors to visit Australian academy

VRV Singh: red hot and promising © Cricinfo

Three of Indian cricket’s junior stars will begin a six-week stint at Australia’s renowned Centre of Excellence next week as part of the annual Border-Gavaskar scholarship. Vikram Rajvir Singh and Rudra Pratap Singh, both medium-pacers who played in the Under-19 World Cup in 2004, and Cheteshwar Pujara, the opener from Gujarat who impressed in the series against England Under-19, have been selected for the scholarship by a Board of Control for Cricket in India panel headed by Sunil Gavaskar, the former Indian captain.Vikram Singh had a promising start to his first-class career last season and made his mark for Punjab with 30 wickets in six first-class matches. Though just 20, he sent down some fiery spells and slowly emerged as one of the fastest bowlers in the country. Rudra Pratap Singh, who relies more on swing and accuracy, also had an impressive season, ending with 34 wickets in six games. Unlike these two, Pujara hasn’t yet made his first-class debut but he came to the spotlight with a fine 211 against the England Under-19 side. Now in its sixth year, the scholarships have been formative in the careers of several Indian Test cricketers like Mohammad Kaif, Shiv Sunder Das, Parthiv Patel, Lakshimiphathy Balaji and Gautam Gambir.During their stay at the Brisbane-based academy from June 20 to July 31 the players will receive specialist coaching and development support from some of Australia’s leading academy coaching staff headed by Tim Nielsen, the head coach. They will also participate in an emerging players tournament next month involving the New Zealand Cricket Academy, Australian Institute of Sport scholars and players from Karnataka.Trevor Robertson, the academy director, said the scholarships offered the young cricketers a tremendous opportunity to broaden their playing and personal experience. “Since the Border-Gavaskar scholarship was launched, we have seen a number of promising Indian players visit Australia to participate in some of our coaching programs and gain valuable experience under foreign playing conditions,” Robertson said in a Cricket Australia statement. “It’s a tremendous opportunity for the players and the three young Indian cricketers have been earmarked in their country as players of the future for India. The experience they will gain while at the Centre of Excellence will hopefully help their growth on a personal and playing level. Australia and India share a passion for cricket and we are pleased that through the Australia-India Council, we are able to provide an opportunity to host these talented cricketers.”The scholarship program was founded in 2000 as a joint initiative between Cricket Australia and the Australia-India Council (AIC). The scholarships are financially supported by the AIC, which was established in 1992 to strengthen and foster ties between Australia and India across a range of sectors, including sport. The Border-Gavaskar scholarship, named in honour of cricketing legends Allan Border and Sunil Gavaskar, is also supported by the Indian board.Previous Border-Gavaskar scholarship recipients
2000
Mohammad Kaif, Sridaran Sriram, Shiv Sunder Das2001
Deepak Chougule, Vinayak Mane, Parthiv Patel2002
Lakshimiphathy Balaji, Gautam Gambir, Thilak Naidu2003
Raiphi Vincent Gomez, Udit Brijesh Patel, Siddharth Trivedi2004
Shikhar Dhawan, Suresh Raina, Yalaka Venugopala Rao.

'The Australian in excelsis'

Keith Miller: Australian postwar legend© The Cricketer

Keith Miller, the most charismatic Australian cricketer of his generation, has died in a nursing home on the Mornington Peninsula, south of Melbourne. He was 84, and had been in poor health for some time.Miller enlivened the postwar years with his brilliant allround play, able to turn a match with an attacking innings, a fiery spell of bowling, or a superb piece of fielding. He is probably best remembered for his new-ball partnership with Ray Lindwall, but it was as a classical batsman that he first made his mark: the photograph (right) of Miller clipping a textbook square-drive adorned the office wall of the cricket-loving Australian prime minister Robert Menzies for many years.But “Nugget” – so-called because he was Australia’s “Golden Boy” – was more than a cricketer: along with his English soulmate Denis Compton he embodied the idea that there was more to life than cricket. Miller, who was named after two pioneer Australian aviators – Keith and Ross Smith – was a fighter pilot himself in the Second World War, and after some extremely close shaves was well aware of the importance of life. It meant that he could occasionally look disengaged on the field: at Southend in 1948, when the “Invincible” Australians were running up the record score of 721 in a day against Essex, Miller stepped away to his first ball and was bowled, since such an unequal contest held little excitement.This approach hardly endeared him to Don Bradman, the unyielding captain of that 1948 side who, possibly significantly, had not seen action during the war. Some mischievous hair-parting bouncers at the great man during Bradman’s valedictory testimonial match at home after the tour probably didn’t help either. Miller was initially ludicrously overlooked for Australia’s next overseas trip – to South Africa in 1949-50 – although he did eventually go, after an injury to another player and a petition from local fans. But with Bradman by then firmly at the helm of the Australian Board, Miller never did captain Australia, although he was a born leader who impressed for New South Wales in the Sheffield Shield, and would have been a better bet than Ian Johnson, who was persuaded out of retirement when Lindsay Hassett stood down. Miller did have an unusual approach to captaincy, though: he sometimes set his field by telling the other players “Scatter”. On another occasion, having omitted to nominate a 12th man, he found himself with 12 players on the field. He observed: “Well, one of you had better bugger off.”

Miller: unpredictable allrounder© The Cricketer

Miller started as a batsman, hitting 181 on his first-class debut, for Victoria against Tasmania at Melbourne in 1937-38. And he first made a mark on the international game in 1945, with a sparkling 105 in the first “Victory Test” at Lord’s, followed by a stroke-filled 185 there for the Dominions against England at the end of August. Miller made his official Test debut the following year, and went on to play 55 times for Australia, scoring 2958 runs at 36.97, with seven centuries, three of them against England and four against West Indies, whose captain, John Goddard, once sighed, “Give us Keith Miller and we’d beat the world.”Bradman’s strong side needed Miller more as a bowler than a batsman, and he ended up with 170 Test wickets, at the excellent average of 22.97. He was the perfect foil to the smooth, skiddy Lindwall: Miller would trundle in off a shortish run, but could send down a thunderbolt himself if he felt like it. Or a legspinner. Or a yorker. Or a bouncer, an overdose of which led to his being booed during the 1948 Trent Bridge Test: Miller simply sat down until the barracking had subsided. What few people realised was that he had trouble with his back throughout that tour – he often pressed an errant disc back into place at the base of his spine before somehow sending down another screamer.Despite this Miller remained a fearsome proposition as a bowler, grinning down the pitch at the discomfited batsman, and returning to his mark, flicking back his hair, which was on the long side for that short-back-and-sides era. In 1956, on his third and final tour of England, Miller was rising 37 and hoping not to do much bowling. But his pal Lindwall pulled out of the second Test at Lord’s, and his replacement Pat Crawford broke down in his fifth over. Miller shouldered the burden, bowling 34.1 overs in the first innings and 36 in the second, and took five wickets both times to set up Australia’s 181-run victory, their only one of that Jim Laker-dominated series. Miller had scored 109 in the 1953 Lord’s Test, and remains the only man to have his name on both the batting and bowling honours boards in the visitors’ dressing-room there.After his retirement Miller remained in the public eye. The social contacts he’d built up – there were unsubstantiated rumours of a fling with Princess Margaret – made him a living as a journalist and columnist, but he was happiest at the cricket or at the races. Late in life he struck up a friendship with Sir Paul Getty, and the two of them would chat unselfconsciously in the Getty box at Lord’s, or at the beautiful Wormsley ground, where the cricket on display – serious but spiced with grins and gins – was exactly the type Miller would have loved to play.Neville Cardus dubbed Miller “the Australian in excelsis”, a notion to which the noted Daily Mail sportswriter Ian Wooldridge heartily subscribed: “By God he was right.”Keith Miller’s death was announced shortly after the news filtered through of the demise of the actor Christopher Reeve in America. As Tim de Lisle, the former Wisden editor, pointed out: “The world has lost two Supermen in one day.”Steven Lynch is editor of Wisden Cricinfo.

New Zealand asks for Zimbabwe ban from internationals

Phil Goff: ‘The appalling human rights abuses taking place in Zimbabwe cannot be ignored’ © Cricinfo

New Zealand’s foreign minister has asked cricket’s world governing body to ban Zimbabwe from international tours because of what he called human-rights abuses by Robert Mugabe’s government.The New Zealand team is currently scheduled to tour Zimbabwe from next month and cannotcancel the tour without incurring a fine of at least US$2 million. “New Zealand Cricket may therefore be forced into a situation of having to tour Zimbabwe even if its members have moral objections to having to play cricket while, just kilometres from the grounds, people are having their homes destroyed and their basic human rights abused,” Phil Goff, the foreign minister, said in a letter to the International Cricket Council.In the letter released today, Goff asked the ICC to exclude Zimbabwe because of its demolition ofthousands of shacks and other homes that has left at least 200,000 people homeless. “The appalling human-rights abuses taking place in Zimbabwe cannot be ignored,” Goff said. “We are gravely concerned for the well-being of the people of Zimbabwe, and believe that it isextremely difficult to justify sporting tours going ahead in such circumstances.”He also asked the ICC to change its rules to allow any country to cancel a tour if gross human-rights abuses were occurring in the other country involved. The request had the overwhelming support of New Zealand parliamentarians and of the Australian government, he added.At its annual meeting last week, the ICC indicated it did not intend to change its rules toallow the New Zealand tour to Zimbabwe to be cancelled.

Australia under-19 squad selected for India tour

Moises Henriques, the New South Wales allrounder, has the chance to test himself in the subcontinent © Getty Images

An Australian under-19 side picked with the Youth World Cup in mind will play five one-day matches against India under-19 in September. Brian McFadyen, the coach, said the tour would give the 13-man squad valuable experience of the subcontinent’s conditions.McFadyen, the former Tasmania coach, said the trip would also offer the selectors a chance to look at the players for the World Cup. “The squad will certainly provide an insight into some of Australia’s most promising juniors,” he said. “We’re really looking forward to the tour and have selected a squad that we think is well balanced and capable of success.”Australia will begin with a three-day training camp at the Commonwealth Bank Centre of Excellence in Brisbane before travelling to India for matches at Faridabad, Mohali, Dharamshala and Delhi between September 18 and 28.Australia under-19 squad
Jackson Bird (NSW), Patrick Darwen (NSW), Aaron Finch (Vic), Ben Gledhill (Qld), Moises Henriques (NSW), Shannon Hurn (SA), Usman Khawaja (NSW), Jack McNamara (Vic), Graeme Skennar (Qld), Tom Stray (Vic), Chris Thompson (WA), David Warner (NSW), Philip Wells (NSW).

Australia to name Super Series squads after Ashes

Phil Jaques is in the reckoning for Australia’s Super Series Test squad © Getty Images

Cricket Australia said on Friday that it would name its Test squad and one-day international squad for the Super Series against a World XI after the Ashes Test series in England.Australia will play against a World XI team in three one-day international matches in Melbourne on October 5, 7 and 9 and a six-day Test match at the Sydney Cricket Ground from October 14-19.CA said that the squads of 13 for the Test, and 14 one-dayers will be selected from the following players:Test squad Ricky Ponting, Adam Gilchrist, Nathan Bracken, Stuart Clark, Michael Clarke, Daniel Cullen, Jason Gillespie, Brad Haddin, Matthew Hayden, Brad Hodge, Michael Hussey, Phil Jaques, Michael Kasprowicz, Simon Katich, Justin Langer, Brett Lee, Michael Lewis, Stuart MacGill, Damien Martyn, Glenn McGrath, Matthew Nicholson, Andrew Symonds, Shaun Tait, Shane Warne, Shane Watson.ODI squad Ricky Ponting, Adam Gilchrist, Nathan Bracken, Stuart Clark, Michael Clarke, Daniel Cullen, Jason Gillespie, Brad Haddin, Nathan Hauritz, Matthew Hayden, Brad Hodge, Brad Hogg, James Hopes, Michael Hussey, Mitchell Johnson, Michael Kasprowicz, Simon Katich, Brett Lee, Michael Lewis, Damien Martyn, Glenn McGrath, Marcus North, Andrew Symonds, Shaun Tait, Shane Watson, Cameron White, Damien Wright.

Zimbabwe board bans journalists from AGM

The players’ statement in fullZimbabwe Cricket took the unprecedented step of barring five journalists from its annual general meeting in Bulawayo today.Four local reporters and one from international agency AFP arrived at Queens Sports Club for the meeting only to find their entry blocked by Lovemore Banda, ZC’s communications and media manager. He told the five that they would have to wait for an official press conference later in the afternoon. However, the five refused to budge and two police officers were called to escort them out of the building.The move was all the more surprising as some of those ejected had been reminded less than 24 hours earlier that the meeting was taking place. And further confusion came when Ozias Bvute, the ZC managing director, told them that it was “not my decision.”It is likely that ZC banned the reporters as tough questions were expected in the light of yesterday’s statement issued on behalf of the country’s players which slated the board, accusing it of being “at best incompetent, and at worst, a bully”.

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