NEWS ALERT

NEWS UPDATE : Asian Cricket Third Sri Lanka-Pakistan ODI abandoned due to rain COLOMBO: The third One-day International between Sri Lanka and Pakistan was abandoned due to rain here at the R Premadasa Stadium on Wednesday. The umpires made this decision after consulting ... Australia want to master all forms of game: Clarke SYDNEY: Australia's limited-overs tour of England and Ireland represents the start of a two-year campaign to make them the top nation in all three forms of the game, captain Michael Clarke said ... Bopara glad to be back for England SOUTHAMPTON, England: Ravi Bopara is eager to make up for lost times as he tries to revive his ... South Africa name unchanged squad for England series JOHANNESBURG: South Africa have kept faith with a winning formula by naming an unchanged squad for the three-Test series in England starting next month, Cricket South Africa (CSA) announced on ...


Saturday, March 05, 2011

Cricket World Cup: Afridi feared repeat of 2007 shock

Updated at: 1012 PST,  Friday, March 04, 2011
COLOMBO: Captain Shahid Afridi admitted that the 2007 World Cup disaster against Ireland weighed heavy on his mind when Canada gave his team a major fright, saying it served as a good wake-up call for Pakistan. Pakistan, bowled out for a paltry 184, were indebted to Afridi's one-man show, whose leg-breaks earned figures of 5-23 and helped his team avoid the kind of upset they suffered against Ireland in the Caribbean four years ago.In the end Pakistan pulled off a 46-run win on Thursday, their third in as many matches to give the 1992 champions six points and top position in Group A, ahead of Sri Lanka and defending champions Australia. "Yes, that match in 2007 was on my mind," said Afridi, of Pakistan's infamous three-wicket defeat to Ireland in Jamaica which led to his team's first round exit from the last World Cup."I know what would have happened had we lost against Canada," said Afridi, of the possible backlash from the millions of fans back home."But I told the players we must play for a win, that we should not be negative and work hard irrespective of the result."Afridi blamed poor batting for Pakistan's difficulties."I think there was poor shot selection and very poor batting," said Afridi of Pakistan's innings which was wrapped up in 43 overs."If we want to play good cricket against quality teams then we must improve this and wake up."Afridi said the third pitch employed at the R. Premadasa stadium was difficult to bat on."I think the condition of the pitch was such that we needed to bat with patience, but we didn't do that," said the captain of Pakistan's batting in which only Umar Akmal (48) and Misbah-ul-Haq (37) showed resistance. "It was a totally different pitch from the match we played against Sri Lanka. There were clouds overhead and the ball was stopping and moving."Afridi explained his plan to put the brakes on the Canadian innings worked well after Jimmy Hansra (43) and Zubin Surkar (27) took Canada to 104-3."Their number three and five batted sensibly," said Afridi of the fourth wicket partnership of 60. "My plan was to bowl maiden overs so that the asking rate climbed and that worked."Afridi, who is the leading wicket-taker in the tournament with 14, said he was enjoying his bowling."I am doing my level best for the team and it is turning well for me," he said.Pakistan next face New Zealand at Pallekele on March 8. (AFP)

Zimbabwe win toss, elect to bat against New Zealand

Updated at: 0841 PST,  Friday, March 04, 2011
AHMEDABAD: Zimbabwe captain Elton Chigumbura won the toss and elected to bat against New Zealand in their Group A match here at the Sardar Patel Stadium, Motera on Friday.Zimbabwe made two changes from the side which defeated Canada. Regis Chakabva Tinashe Panyangara have been brought in for the injured Sean Williams and Christopher Mpofu New Zealand, defeated by Australia in their last game, left out Jamie How in favour of seamer Kyle Mills. Each of the two teams has played two games, winning and losing apiece so far in the tournament.Teams today:New Zealand: Brendon McCullum (wk), Martin Guptill, Jesse Ryder, Ross Taylor, James Franklin, Scott Styris, Nathan McCullum, Daniel Vettori (captain), Kyle Mills, Tim Southee, Hamish BennettZimbabwe: Brendan Taylor, Charles Coventry, Tatendu Taibu (wk), Craig Ervine, Elton Chigumbura (captain), Regis Chakabva, Greg Lamb, Prosper Utseya, Graeme Cremer, Ray Price, Tinashe PanyangaraUmpires: Aleem Dar (PAK) and Marais Erasmus (SA), TV umpire: Rod Tucker (AUS)Match referee: Roshan Mahanama (SL). 

Friday, March 04, 2011

South Africa thrash Netherlands by 231 runs

Updated at: 1610 PST,  Thursday, March 03, 2011
MOHALI: South Africa defeated the Netherlands by a huge margin of 231 runs in their Group B match of the World Cup here at the Punjab Cricket Stadium, Chandigarh on Thursday.After South Africa piled up a massive total of 351-5, the Netherlands were bundled out for 120 in 34.5 overs.Except opener W Barresi who top scored with 44, no Dutch batsman could make any significant score.Leg-spinner Imran Tahir captured three wickets for 19 runs while Jaques Kallis and RJ Petersen claimed two wickets each for South Africa.Earlier, De Villiers scored a dazzling 134 for a second successive ton while Amla made 113 as the Proteas set a stiff target after being put in to bat in overcast conditions before a few thousand spectators in Mohali.The pair put on 221 runs, South Africa's best for the third wicket in a World Cup Amla completed his eighth one-day hundred off 121 balls, while de Villiers raced to his 11th ton off just 88 deliveries. The pair set the stage for the final onslaught, which saw South Africa plunder 136 in the last 10 overs. JP Duminy hammered 40 off just 15 balls with fours sixes and two fours.De Villiers, who scored an unbeaten century in the previous game against the West Indies, smashed seamer Bernard Loots for three successive sixes before hitting Ryan ten Doeschate for three fours in a row.Amla hit eight fours in his 130-ball knock before being caught at point off ten Doeschate and de Villiers was run out after striking four sixes and 13 fours in a 98-ball innings.The Netherlands had some success early on, removing skipper Graeme Smith (20) and Jacques Kallis (two) in the space of seven runs, with Loots and ten Doeschate taking one wicket apiece.But their joy proved short-lived as Amla and de Villiers dismantled their attack.

Pakistan slump to below par 184 against Canada

Updated at: 1830 PST,  Thursday, March 03, 2011
COLOMBO: Pakistan, one of the tournament favourites, slumped to a well below-par 184 off 43 overs against the unfancied Canada in their World Cup Group A match on Thursday.Winning the toss and taking first use of the pitch, Pakistan could not get their batting rhythm going and lost wickets at regular intervals.They slumped to 67-4 before Misbah-ul-Haq (37) and top scorer Umar Akmal (48) posted the best partnership of the innings with 73 for the fifth wicket.Once the stand was broken at 140, the rest of the Pakistan batting collapsed with the last five wickets tumbling for 19 runs unable to cope with the medium-pace and spin combination of Canada who had heavily lost their first two matches to Sri Lanka and Zimbawe.Canada lost their opening bowler Khurram Chohan who failed to complete his fourth over but he was not missed as the rest of the bowlers bowled a tight line and length.Medium-pacer Harvir Baidwan was the pick of the attack with three for 35 while Rizwan Cheema, Balaji Rao and Jimmy Hansra shared six wickets among them.Canada, whose only World Cup victory was over Bangladesh in 2003, will take on the relatively modest target against a Pakistan attack missing the resting Shoaib Akhtar.

Pakistan set 185-run target against Canada

Updated at: 1720 PST,  Thursday, March 03, 2011
COLOMBO: Pakistan set 185-run target for Canada during Group A day-night match here at the R Premadasa Stadium on Thursday.Earlier, Pakistan won the toss and elected to bat.

Pakistan reeling at 67 for four against Canada

Updated at: 1549 PST,  Thursday, March 03, 2011
COLOMBO: Pakistan lost their four top order batsmen for 72 runs after winning the toss and elected to bat against minnows Canada in their Group A day-night match of the World Cup 2011 here at the R Premadasa Stadium on Thursday.First to go was Mohammad Hafeez when Pakistan score was only 16. He was adjudged lbw off Henry Osinde for 11.Later, Ahmed Shahzad and Kamran Akmal took the score to 42 before Shahzad was gone for 12 caught Tyson Gordon off Harvir Baidwan.Veteran batsman Younis Khan could add only 13 runs along with Kamran when Harvir Baidwan struck again to get rid off Younis. He made only six and Pakistan were 55-3.Then, Kamran also departed for 16, caught by young Nitish Kumar off Rizwan Cheema.Now Pakistan were reeling at 67-4.in 15.3 overs.Pakistan replaced left-arm spinner Abdur Rehman, who has injured his abductor muscle, and rested paceman Shoaib Akhtar from the line-up that beat Sri Lanka in Colombo on Saturday.Their places were taken by off-spinner Saeed Ajmal and paceman Wahab Riaz -- both making their World Cup debuts.Canada, who lost to Zimbabwe in their last match, dropped out-of-form opener John Davison and brought in paceman Henry Osinde.

Pakistan win toss, bat against Canada

Updated at: 1337 PST,  Thursday, March 03, 2011
COLOMBO: Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi has won the toss and decided to bat against Canada in their Group A day-night match of the World Cup 2011 here at the R Premadasa Stadium on Thursday. Pakistan replaced left-arm spinner Abdur Rehman, who has injured his abductor muscle, and rested paceman Shoaib Akhtar from the line-up that beat Sri Lanka in Colombo on Saturday.Their places were taken by off-spinner Saeed Ajmal and paceman Wahab Riaz -- both making their World Cup debuts.Canada, who lost to Zimbabwe in their last match, dropped out-of-form opener John Davison and brought in paceman Henry Osinde.Teams: Pakistan: Shahid Afridi (captain), Misbah-ul-Haq, Mohammad Hafeez, Kamran Akmal, Younis Khan, Umar Akmal, Abdul Razzaq, Saeed Ajmal, Umar Gul, Wahab Riaz, Ahmed Shahzad.Canada: Ashish Bagai (captain), Rizwan Cheema, Harvir Baidwan, Nitish Kumar, Tyson Gordon, Henry Osinde, Ruvindu Gunasekera, Khurram Chohan, Jimmy Hansra, Zubin Surkari, Balaji Rao.

Tons by Amla, de Villiers steer Proteas to 351-5

Updated at: 1246 PST,  Thursday, March 03, 2011
MOHALI: Hashim Amla and AB de Villiers hit brilliant centuries to help South Africa reach a mammoth total of 351 for the loss of five wickets against the Netherlands in their Group B match of the World Cup here at the Punjab Cricket Stadium, Chandigarh on Thursday De Villiers scored a dazzling 134 for a second successive ton while Amla made 113 as the Proteas set a stiff target after being put in to bat in overcast conditions before a few thousand spectators in Mohali.The pair put on 221 runs, South Africa's best for the third wicket in a World Cup.Amla completed his eighth one-day hundred off 121 balls, while de Villiers raced to his 11th ton off just 88 deliveries. The pair set the stage for the final onslaught, which saw South Africa plunder 136 in the last 10 overs. JP Duminy hammered 40 off just 15 balls with fours sixes and two fours.De Villiers, who scored an unbeaten century in the previous game against the West Indies, smashed seamer Bernard Loots for three successive sixes before hitting Ryan ten Doeschate for three fours in a row.Amla hit eight fours in his 130-ball knock before being caught at point off ten Doeschate and de Villiers was run out after striking four sixes and 13 fours in a 98-ball innings.The Netherlands had some success early on, removing skipper Graeme Smith (20) and Jacques Kallis (two) in the space of seven runs, with Loots and ten Doeschate taking one wicket apiece.But their joy proved short-lived as Amla and de Villiers dismantled their attack South Africa, who defeated the West Indies in their opening match, are seeking their second successive victory while the Netherlands have lost both of their games.South Africa made one change from the side that played the first game, replacing off-spinner Johan Botha with Morne van Wyk. 

Netherlands win toss, put Proteas into bat

Updated at: 0853 PST,  Thursday, March 03, 2011
MOHALI: Netherlands captain Peter Borren won the toss against South Africa and elected to field in overcast conditions in their Group B match in the World Cup here at the Punjab Cricket Association Stadium, Mohali on Thursday.South Africa, who defeated the West Indies in their opening match, are seeking their second successive victory while the Netherlands have lost both of their games.South Africa made one change from the side that played the first game, replacing off-spinner Johan Botha with Morne van Wyk.Teams:South Africa: Graeme Smith (captain), Hashim Amla, AB de Villiers, Jacques Kallis, JP Duminy, Faf du Plessis, Morne Morkel, Robin Peterson, Dale Steyn, Imran Tahir, Morne van Wyk.Netherlands: Peter Borren (captain), Wesley Barresi, Mudassar Bukhari, Tom Cooper, Tom de Grooth, Alexei Kervezee, Bernard Loots, Pieter Seelaar, Ryan ten Doeschate, Berend Westdijk, Bas Zuiderent.Umpires: Asoka de Silva (SL) and Richard Kettleborough (ENG), TV umpire: Simon Taufel (AUS)Match referee: Jeff Crowe (NZ)

Cricket WC: Pakistan to meet lowly Canada today

Updated at: 0603 PST,  Thursday, March 03, 2011
COLOMBO: John Davison, the veteran Canadian batsman, hoped on Wednesday that his under-achieving team will find Pakistan napping in their World Cup game here at the R Premadasa Stadium on Thursday (today).“There is no point in playing a match without having any hopes of winning it,” said the 40-year-old, who shined for Canada in 2003 and 2007 World Cups but has begun this tournament with back-to-back ducks against Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe.“Pakistan are a great side but we will go into tomorrow’s match hoping that we do well and they have a poor day. They’ve had poor days in the past.”Davison, Canada’s most experienced player, said that the biggest challenge for his team will be to read Pakistan’s spinners. “The biggest challenge is to read their spinners because of the conditions here,” he said.Davison hoped that he will regain his form against the Pakistanis. “It’s probably a mental thing,” said Davison referring to his poor form. “I got a very good ball against Sri lanka while against Zimbabwe. I should have waited for a while before going for my shots,” said Davison, who has scored 766 runs from 29 One-day Internationals including a stunning 76-ball 111 in the 2003 World Cup against the West Indies at Centurion.

Thursday, March 03, 2011

Kevin’s record ton helps Ireland stun England

Updated at: 2205 PST,  Wednesday, March 02, 2011
BANGALORE: Kevin O’Brien’s record century helped Ireland to hand England a humiliating three-wicket defeat with five balls remaining in their World Cup Group B match here at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium on Wednesday.Chasing a huge total of 328 runs, Ireland set a World Cup record of achieving the highest winning target as they finished on 329 for seven to pull off the sensational victory with five balls to spare.The previous highest successful run chase was 313 made by Sri Lanka against Zimbabwe in the 1992 World Cup.The main architect of the Ireland’s astonishing victory was Kevin O’Brien, who made his second One-day International century from only 50 balls – the fastest ever hundred in World Cups. He broke the previous fastest century record off 66 balls made by Australia’s Matthew Hayden against South Africa at St Kitts in 2007.O'Brien's whirlwind innings of 113 off 63 balls, including six sixes and 13 fours, ended when he was run out going for a second run by Stuart Broad's throw to wicketkeeper Matt Prior.He was ably supported by Alex Cusack who made 47. Both added 162 runs for the sixth wicket partnership. Earlier, England piled up 327 runs for the loss of seven wickets after captain Andrew Strauss won the toss.Strauss and Kevin Pietersen opened the innings and provided a good start of 91 runs before Strauss was bowled by George Dockrell for 34.Pietersen also went after getting his 22nd one-day international half-century, caught behind off Paul Stirling for 59. Later, Jonathan Trott and Ian Bell got together to take England to 278, adding 167 runs for the third wicket.Then, John Mooney and Trent Johnston struck back and began sending England batsmen to pavilion at regular short intervals. First to go was Bell caught Stirling b Mooney for his 86-ball 81 with eight fours and a six.The runs later, Trott was bowled by Mooney for 92, eight short of his fourth ODI hundred. His 92-ball innings was laced with nine boundaries Paul Collingwood could make only 16 from 11 balls and he was also dismissed by Mooney who later got Tim Bresnan out for three.

Irish hero O'Brien hails greatest innings

Updated at: 2348 PST,  Wednesday, March 02, 2011
BANGALORE: Batting hero Kevin O'Brien Wednesday hailed the greatest innings of his life after his 113 off just 63 balls propelled Ireland to a famous World Cup win over England.O'Brien came to the crease with Ireland struggling on 106 for four chasing a mammoth 327 for eight and flayed the English attack, striking six sixes in a 50-ball century, the fastest World Cup ton of all time.In an astonishing display of power-hitting he obliterated the previous record held by Australia's Matthew Hayden, who hit 100 off 66 balls against South Africa at St Kitts in the 2007 tournament."I don't think it's quite sunk in," said 26-year-old O'Brien, after another famous win to follow Ireland's shock World Cup triumph over Pakistan in 2007. "It's probably the best innings I've ever played. I just hit the ball pretty well and got a bit of luck and things went my way. I just kept going and kept attacking."When we were 111-5 I said to myself we could have just pottered around and got 220 off 50 overs for eight or nine and the game would have been pretty boring to watch."But I just chanced my arm and said I was going to be as positive as I can and got a few away and didn't look back."O'Brien praised his team-mates, saying they had stuck at their task in the field, restricting England towards the end of their innings."We restricted them to a target that we felt we could chase. We saw the game last week, England and India. It's a high-scoring ground and a great wicket."Irish skipper William Porterfield hailed the "greatest" day for Irish cricket."We believed in ourselves. We had a bit of an upset the other night when we should have knocked off 200 against Bangladesh but to bounce back the way that the lads have bounced back, especially after losing a few early wickets and being 111-5, was a great effort," he said."It will be a good party back home but it's still only one game we've won from two."We've still got four games left in this tournament so we'll be looking to put in a performance like that every game and you never know from there. We've still got a great chance of qualifying for the second phase."

England amass 327-8 against Ireland

Updated at: 1801 PST,  Wednesday, March 02, 2011
BANGALORE: England utilizing the advantage of batting pitch piled up 327 runs for the loss of seven wickets against Ireland in their Group B match here at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium on Wednesday.After captain Andrew Strauss won the toss and elected to bat, he and Kevin Pietersen opened the innings and provided a good start of 91 runs before Strauss was bowled by George Dockrell for 34.Pietersen also went after getting his 22nd one-day international half-century, caught behind off Paul Stirling for 59. Later, Jonathan Trott and Ian Bell got together to take England to 278, adding 167 runs for the third wicket.Then, John Mooney and Trent Johnston struck back and began sending England batsmen to pavilion at regular short intervals. First to go was Bell caught Stirling b Mooney for his 86-ball 81 with eight fours and a six.The runs later, Trott was bowled by Mooney for 92, eight short of his fourth ODI hundred. His 92-ball innings was laced with nine boundaries.Paul Collingwood could make only 16 from 11 balls and he was also dismissed by Mooney who later got Tim Bresnan out for three. Johnston also captured two wickets, dismissing Matt Prior for six and Michael Yardy for four while Graeme Swann remained not out on nine. Mooney finished on four for 63 and Johnston claimed two wickets.England are looking to keep up their unbeaten run at the tournament after beating Netherlands and holding favourites India to a nail-biting tie. Ireland are seeking their first win in this tournament after going down to co-hosts Bangladesh by 27 runs in their opening match.Fast bowler Stuart Broad returned from illness and replaced fellow seamer Ajmal Shahzad in the only change to the England side that dramatically tied its previous group game with co-hosts India on Sunday.That meant swing specialist James Anderson kept his place despite conceding 91 runs against India -- the most by an England bowler in any World Cup match.Ireland, who lost their opener to Bangladesh by 27 runs, brought in Australia-born all-rounder Alex Cusack for Andrew White and batsman Gary Wilson came in for seamer Andre Botha, who injured his groin during the warm-up.

England win toss, bat against Ireland

Updated at: 1335 PST,  Wednesday, March 02, 2011
BANGALORE: England captain Andrew Strauss has won the toss and elected to bat against Ireland in their Group B match here at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium on WednesdayEngland will be looking to keep up their unbeaten run at the tournament after beating Netherlands and holding favourites India to a nail-biting tie. Fast bowler Stuart Broad returned from illness and replaced fellow seamer Ajmal Shahzad in the only change to the England side that dramatically tied its previous group game with co-hosts India on Sunday.That meant swing specialist James Anderson kept his place despite conceding 91 runs against India -- the most by an England bowler in any World Cup match.Ireland, who lost their opener to Bangladesh by 27 runs, brought in Australia-born all-rounder Alex Cusack for Andrew White and batsman Gary Wilson came in for seamer Andre Botha, who injured his groin during the warm-up.Ireland's Ed Joyce was playing against England for the first time since reverting to the land of his birth after his international career with England ended following the 2007 World Cup. This was Ireland's first all-professional team, with seven players -- captain William Porterfield, Boyd Rankin, Paul Stirling, Joyce, Niall O'Brien, George Dockrell and Wilson -- all signed by English counties, while the other four were on Irish contracts.Teams: England: Andrew Strauss (captain), Kevin Pietersen, Jonathan Trott, Ian Bell, Paul Collingwood, Matt Prior (wk), Michael Yardy, Tim Bresnan, Stuart Broad, Graeme Swann, James AndersonIreland: William Porterfield (captain), Paul Stirling, Ed Joyce, Niall O'Brien (wk), Alex Cusack, Kevin O'Brien, Gary Wilson, John Mooney, Trent Johnston, George Dockrell, Boyd Rankin.

Butt seeks inquiry into India-England match prediction

Updated at: 0307 PST,  Wednesday, March 02, 2011
LAHORE: PCB Chairman Ijaz Butt has asked for the strict inquiry into the predication of India-England match that the counter was going to ‘tie’. He urged the matter would be taken up in an ICC meeting to be held in Mumbai, Geo News reported.In a gathering here, the PCB chief spoke positive about the fate of Pakistan cricket team in mega event. He said Pakistan, though going great, but still need improvement in fielding and bowling sections.To a question, Butt denied considering the matter of Shoaib Malik, saying that his issue would be taken up in a meeting of PCB’s Integrity Committee on March 4 The announcement of award of central contract to 19 players would be soon made, he said, being angry over prediction of India-England match result by a former Australian bowler Shane Warne He said the matter should be strictly dealt with and we are going to discuss this issue in ICC’s meeting in Mumbai.

Wednesday, March 02, 2011

Arthur backs Hussey

Updated at: 0122 PST,  Wednesday, March 02, 2011
Western Australian coach Mickey Arthur says Michael Hussey shouldn't be the player under pressure to move on after Australia's underwhelming summer.Thirty-five-year-old Hussey was one of the few stars for Australia in the 3-1 Ashes defeat, but that hasn't stopped his position coming under scrutiny after a serious hamstring injury kept him out of the World Cup squad.In the Ashes, Hussey was Australia's highest run-scorer with 570 at 63.33, a figure made even more remarkable by the fact he didn't score well in the last two Tests.He is also the world's No.4 One-Day International batsman according to the latest ICC rankings released on Monday evening.Hussey will get a chance to test his hamstring when Western Australia take on Queensland in Thursday's Sheffield Shield clash, along with Shaun Marsh, another hamstring victim who's also been named in the WA side.Arthur believes the man known as Mr Cricket will soon demonstrate to all that there's plenty of life left in the old dog."After the summer he's had ... he certainly wouldn't be the one that I'd be putting under pressure at the moment," Arthur said on Tuesday morning in Perth."There's absolutely no doubt he's got a lot of cricket left in him, no doubt.""I do think that it probably is time to change for Australia, I do think that they are going to get to a situation where they probably need to blood some younger players.""If they're serious about going and winning the 2013 Ashes, there's no doubt about that.""But with all the young players that you have, you need some experience to guide them.""If you haven't got that experience through the middle, those young guys are going to get put under some serious pressure."Arthur was coaching South Africa during the 2008-09 summer, when the Proteas defeated Australia 2-1, the coach remembering former Australian opener Matthew Hayden being put under extreme pressure to retire at the time after a run of poor form.But Arthur doesn't believe Hussey should simply go quietly in order to avoid such a situation happening again."(Some) players are of the opinion that if I'm good enough I should be playing and if you don't want me drop me," Arthur said."It's certainly not a bad way to do it because if you're performing well then you're putting the selectors under some serious pressure you know.""If you retire, you almost make the selector's decision a lot easier.""(But) guys know exactly where they're at in their career, they know what their hunger for the game is, they're in the best positions to make that decision.""Huss's hunger for the game is still as it was I think when he was an 18-year-old, so I wouldn't say Huss is certainly anywhere near retirement at the moment."Arthur said he wasn't certain under what ICC provision Australia could take Hussey to the World Cup after he was replaced in the initial squad, but said if he did come in to replace the injured Doug Bollinger he would be fit to fire."Huss will be ready," Arthur declared. "He'll be ready to go if he gets an opportunity and he certainly won't let anybody down."

Australia deny ICC probe

Updated at: 0122 PST,  Wednesday, March 02, 2011
Australian officials have laughed off suggestions that the team is under investigation by the ICC for slow batting against Zimbabwe.Australia won the match easily but openers Shane Watson and Brad Haddin struggled to put runs on the board during the first 15 overs in the Group A game at the Sardar Patel Stadium in Ahmedabad.The pair put on 28 runs in 11 overs and 53 in the first 15 when two of the three power-plays were used."The slow rate of scoring in the first two overs was scrutinised by the ICC anti-corruption and security unit," Indianexpress.com website said in a report from the national wire service, Press Trust of India."Sources aware of developments said the ICC ACSU (Anti-Corruption Security Unit) had carried out a quiet review of the match after questions were raised over the slow start taken by Watson and Haddin.""With the spectre of spot-fixing now looming over international cricket following the bans on three Pakistani players for spot-fixing last year on the England tour, sources said the ICC ACSU was keeping a vigilant eye on all matches in the World Cup and the slow start by the Australian openers caught their attention."Australia coach Tim Nielsen said after the Zimbabwe match he saw nothing wrong in the openers' slow approach."I thought they played well in game one. Everyone had this perception that they went slowly. But if Zimbabwe were going to be competitive against us, they needed to take early wickets with their spinners. We're playing the way we think is the right way to play," Nielsen said.On Tuesday, Haddin and team manager Steve Bernard described the claims as 'ludicrous'."It's quite a laughable story. It's a joke," Haddin told reporters during a net session at the SSC in Colombo."We just got off the mark a bit slowly.""It's the most ludicrous thing I've ever heard in my life … that a team could be none for five after two overs and that's suspicious?" Bernard said."I think it's the silliest thing I've heard this week, and I've heard a lot of silly things since I've been here.""At the start of any campaign, on a fresh track that the guys weren't used to, it took a bit of time (to adjust), but 260-odd was a pretty good score."

Pakistan trio lodge appeals

Updated at: 1623 PST,  Tuesday, March 01, 2011
Pakistan trio Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir have filed appeals to the Court of Arbitration for Sport against bans for spot-fixing.Butt was banned for 10 years, with five of them suspended, after being found guilty of corruption by an International Cricket Council tribunal.Mohammad Asif was handed a seven-year ban, with two of them suspended, while Amir was banned for five years.All three men have denied wrongdoing in a Test match against England.The players were accused of spot-fixing in the fourth Test at Lord's in August 2010.They were banned after newspaper The News of the World reported no balls were bowled at specific points in England's innings after a payment was made to a businessman.Former captain Butt said in a statement: "This is to confirm that today my legal team served a statement of appeal."Amir's lawyer Shahid Karim said he filed his client's appeal on Friday."The process is now to set to motion, we have challenged the judgment of the tribunal on various grounds," Karim said.A CAS statement read: "The Court of Arbitration for Sport has registered the appeals filed by Mohammad Asif, Mohammad Amir and Salman Butt against the International Cricket Council (ICC) Anti-Corruption Tribunal's decision.""The cases will be handled in accordance with the procedural rules set out in the code of sports-related arbitration.""The parties will first exchange written submissions and will then be heard at a hearing, the date of which will be fixed at a later stage.""The CAS will not comment any further on these matters until a panel of arbitrators has been constituted and a procedural calendar established."In a separate development, the players are due to appear at City of Westminster Magistrates' Court on March 17 to face charges of conspiracy to obtain and accept corrupt payments and conspiracy to cheat.

Bell's LBW review explained

Updated at: 1623 PST,  Tuesday, March 01, 2011
Here's an explanation of how the Decision Review System (DRS) worked in the case of the leg-before appeal against Ian Bell on 27 February in the game between India and England at Bengaluru. * The greater the distance between point of impact and the stumps and the shorter the distance between point of pitching and the point of impact, the more difficult it is for the technology to provide an accurate projection.* For this reason the playing conditions provide that in the case of a not out lbw decision where the distance between point of impact and the stumps is greater than 250 cm and/or the distance between point of pitching and point of impact with the pad is less than 40cm (as will be indicated in the Hawkeye graphics and with the attached being an example), the umpires are not obliged to follow the normal rules for using Hawkeye to determine whether the batsman is out or not and shall have a discretion in determining whether or not to overturn their original not out decision.* In exercising this discretion they are required, in consultation with the third umpire, to take into account normal cricketing principles for determining lbw decisions.
What are these normal cricket principles?
These are a combination of factors:* The distance between point of pitching and point of impact (the shorter this distance, the more difficult it is to be certain that the ball will go onto hit the stumps and thus the more unlikely it will be that the umpire will change his not out decision).* The distance from point of impact to the stumps (the greater this distance, the more unlikely it will be that the umpire will change his decision)* Where the ball is predicted to hit the stumps (the further this point from the centre of middle stump, the more unlikely it will be that the umpire will change his decision).But it is a combination of the above factors that must be taken into account by the umpire in consultation with the third umpire.E.g. If the batsman double steps and gets hit on the pad 4 metre down the wicket, the umpire will not change his not out decision even if the ball is predicted to be hitting the middle of middle stump, especially if there was only a short distance between the points of pitching and impact on the pad.There have been two instances in ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 where a not out leg-before decision has been reviewed by the fielding side where the point of impact was more than 2.5 metres from the stumps. In both these cases:
* the distance from point of pitching to point of impact was approximately the same
* the distance between point of impact and the stumps was just over 2.5 metres
* The ball was predicted to hit the stumps slap bang between off and middle stump about 3/4 of the way up.

Tuesday, March 01, 2011

Malinga picks up second World Cup hat-trick

Updated at: 1739 PST,  Tuesday, March 01, 2011
COLOMBO: Spearhead Lasith Malinga took his second career World Cup hat-trick when he collected six wickets as Sri Lanka dismissed Kenya for 142 in their World Cup clash here at the R Premadasa Stadium on Tuesday.Malinga had Tanmay Mishra lbw with the final ball of the 42nd over and then clean-bowled Peter Ongondo and Shem Ngoche with the first two of the 44th. Malinga became the first bowler to pick up two hat-tricks in World Cups. He took four wickets in four balls against South Africa in the 2007 World Cup,The 27-year-old speedster, who missed his side's opening two matches with a sore back, finished with six for 38 as the Kenyans were dismissed for 142.It is the second hat-trick of the 2011 World Cup after Kemar Roach took the last three Canadian wickets in West Indies' victory in Group B on Monday.

Kenya bowled out for 142 by Sri Lanka

Updated at: 1830 PST,  Tuesday, March 01, 2011
COLOMBO: Fit-again fast bowler Lasith Malinga took four wickets in six balls, including his second World Cup hat-trick, to dismiss Kenya for 142 in a Group A match in Colombo on Tuesday.The 27-year sling-action bowler, who missed Sri Lanka's opening two matches due to a back strain, trapped Tanmay Mishra (nought) lbw with the last ball of his seventh over.At the start of his next over he clean-bowled Peter Ongondo and Shem Ngoche in successive balls to complete his hat-trick.Malinga then bowled Elijah Otieno to complete a career-best 6-38 in his 7.4 overs, improving on his figures of 5-34 against Pakistan at Dambulla last year.Malinga's ferocious bowling derailed Kenya, who opted to bat, after they were on course for a total of around 200 following half-centuries from brothers David Obuya (51) and Collins Obuya (52).Kenya, shot out for 69 against New Zealand and 112 in their match against Pakistan, started disastrously with Nuwan Kulasekara dismissing opener Morris Ouma (one) in the second over before Malinga had Seren Waters (three) lbw in the next.Collins Obuya, whose five wickets helped Kenya upset Sri Lanka at the 2003 World Cup, hit four boundaries during his sedate 100-ball knock. His elder brother David hit three fours during his 106-ball innings.But Malinga, who also took a World Cup hat-trick against South Africa in the 2007 World Cup, dismissed Collins Obuya in his second spell before destroying the tail.Malinga's hat-trick is the seventh in all World Cup matches and came just a day after West Indian Kemar Roach recorded a hat-trick against the Netherlands in New Delhi.

Jayawardene mulls action over corruption allegation

Updated at: 1708 PST,  Tuesday, March 01, 2011
COLOMBO: Sri Lanka's former skipper Mahela Jayawardene is reportedly considering suing a state-run television network for hinting he may have helped fix a World Cup match against Pakistan.Jayawardene, who lost his middle stump for just two runs in a game that Sri Lanka lost by 11 runs, was mulling legal action against the station for implying he was guilty of corruption, the BBC said.Jayawardene's manager told a news agency on Tuesday that they were not commenting because "a formal process has been initiated."The state television commentary said a local businessman had placed a $18,000 bet on Sri Lanka losing the game.The TV channel speculated over whether Jayawardene and Thilan amaraweera, dismissed for one, had "changed the game" by getting out cheaply and said the outcome would have been different had the pair scored more runs.Despite high hopes coming into the match, 1996 champions Sri Lanka fell short of Pakistan's total of 277-7, leaving thousands at a packed R. Premadasa stadium in Colombo devastated.Governing body Sri Lanka Cricket said they had not received a formal complaint from the two players."We are not aware of the issue," Sri Lanka Cricket chief executive officer Ajith Jayasekera said.Three Pakistan Test players -- Salman Butt and pace bowlers Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Aamer -- were last month banned on charges of corruption relating to last year's Lord's Test against England.Many Sri Lankan players have been investigated by the International Cricket Council over match-fixing in the past.

Kenya win toss, elect to bat against Sri Lanka

Updated at: 1342 PST,  Tuesday, March 01, 2011
COLOMBO: Kenya captain Jimmy Kamande won the toss and elected to bat first against Sri Lanka in their third Group A match of the World Cup here at the R Premadasa Stadium on Tuesday.Teams: Sri Lanka: Tillakaratne Dilshan, Upul Tharanga, Kumar Sangakkara (captain & wk), Mahela Jayawardene, Chamara Silva, Thilan Samaraweera, Angelo Mathews, Nuwan Kulasekara, Lasith Malinga, Ajantha Mendis, Muttiah Muralitharan. Kenya: Maurice Ouma (wk), Seren Waters, Colins Obuya, DO Obuya, Steve Tikolo, Tanmay Mishra, Jimmy Kamande (captain), Nehemiah Odhiambo, Shem Ngoche, Elijah Otieno, PJ Ongondo.

Malinga ready for return to add to Kenya's problems

Updated at: 1017 PST,  Tuesday, March 01, 2011
COLOMBO: Sri Lanka are expected to welcome the return of fast bowler Lasith Malinga to their ranks when they meet Kenya on Tuesday in a World Cup Group A match.Sri Lanka's bowling lacked the penetration on Saturday to stop Pakistan from running up a competitive total of 277-7 and the lost the contest by 11 runs.Malinga has been nursing a sore back in the past fortnight but coach Trevor Bayliss said that he was available for selection for the Kenyan game."Malinga's physio told us that the first two weeks were the most important," said Bayliss."The first two weeks are up tomorrow since he got injured. He is fit and it's up to the selectors to select him or not for tomorrow."Malinga is a key component in the Sri Lanka bowling line-up having built up his reputation at the last World Cup by becoming the only bowler to capture four wickets off four balls in the match against South Africa.Sri Lanka will be looking to redeem themselves having come off second best against Pakistan.One of the key areas Sri Lanka will be concentrating on is building up partnerships in their batting which let them down after a decent start during their run chase.Sri Lanka will stick to their original batting line-up and if there are any changes it is going to be in the bowling where either Nuwan Kulasekara or Thisara Perera may have to make way for Malinga.Sri Lanka may also rest Muttiah Muralitharan, the master spinner who has been so far disappointing, and play their other two spinners Ajantha Mendis and Rangana Herath.Kenya, well beaten in their first two matches by New Zealand (10 wickets) and Pakistan (205 runs), are looking for some redemption with suggestions from a recent Reuters interview of splits between the senior players and coach."We can't continue doing the same thing all the time. Tomorrow we have the third game against another top side. We have got to work on that and try to get a good result out there," Kenyan captain Jimmy Kamande said. (Reuters)

Cricket WC: Hurt Sri Lanka ready to down Kenya

Updated at: 0830 PST,  Tuesday, March 01, 2011
COLOMBO: Sri Lanka are expected to welcome the return of fast bowler Lasith Malinga to their ranks when they meet Kenya on Tuesday in a World Cup Group A match Sri Lanka's bowling lacked the penetration on Saturday to stop Pakistan from running up a competitive total of 277-7 and the lost the contest by 11 runs.Malinga has been nursing a sore back in the past fortnight but coach Trevor Bayliss said that he was available for selection for the Kenyan game."Malinga's physio told us that the first two weeks were the most important," said Bayliss."The first two weeks are up tomorrow since he got injured. He is fit and it's up to the selectors to select him or not for tomorrow."Malinga is a key component in the Sri Lanka bowling line-up having built up his reputation at the last World Cup by becoming the only bowler to capture four wickets off four balls in the match against South Africa.Sri Lanka will be looking to redeem themselves having come off second best against Pakistan.One of the key areas Sri Lanka will be concentrating on is building up partnerships in their batting which let them down after a decent start during their run chase.Sri Lanka will stick to their original batting line-up and if there are any changes it is going to be in the bowling where either Nuwan Kulasekara or Thisara Perera may have to make way for Malinga. Sri Lanka may also rest Muttiah Muralitharan, the master spinner who has been so far disappointing, and play their other two spinners Ajantha Mendis and Rangana Herath.Kenya, well beaten in their first two matches by New Zealand (10 wickets) and Pakistan (205 runs), are looking for some redemption with suggestions from a recent Reuters interview LDE71P0B7 of splits between the senior players and coach."We can't continue doing the same thing all the time. Tomorrow we have the third game against another top side. We have got to work on that and try to get a good result out there," Kenyan captain Jimmy Kamande said. (Reuters)

Cricket World Cup: Roach hat-trick as WI beat Netherlands

Updated at: 2021 PST,  Monday, February 28, 2011
NEW DELHI: Kemar Roach grabbed six wickets, including a hat-trick, while Kieron Pollard smashed 60 off 27 balls to help West Indies thrash the Netherlands by 215 runs in the World Cup on Monday.Kemar Roach recorded the first hat-trick of the 2011 World Cup against the Netherlands. He removed Pieter Seelaar, Bernard Loots and Berend Westdijk off the last three deliveries of the match to lead West Indies to a 215-run victory.Pollard built on the platform laid by Chris Gayle, who made 80, as the Caribbean side posted 330-8 before bowling out their hapless opponents for 115 off 31.3 overs in the Group B game at the Feroz Shah Kotla stadium.The West Indies' total was the highest at the ground, which is coming off a 12-month suspension over a dangerous playing surface.The Netherlands hardly posed any threat in the lop-sided encounter, crumbling to 36-5 by the 11th over after early strikes from Roach, who took 6-27, and left-arm spinner Sulieman Benn (3-28).Roach, 22, returned to collect only the sixth World Cup hat-trick and the first of this tournament, sealing an emphatic win for the former world champions.Dutch hope Ryan ten Doeschate, who scored 119 against England, failed to repeat his magic this time, trapped leg before wicket for seven by Benn.Tom Cooper provided the only resistance with an unbeaten 55 off 72 balls.Earlier, Gayle put on 100 runs for the opening wicket with Devon Smith (53) after the West Indies were put in to bat on a placid wicket in the day-night clash.Pollard, who plays for Mumbai Indians in the Indian Premier League, hammered five fours and four sixes on his way to the third-fastest World Cup half-century before Ramnaresh Sarwan chipped in with a 42-ball 49.Gayle overcame a subdued start to unleash seven fours and two sixes in his 110-ball knock, which was cut short by ten Doeschate (1-77) during a batting powerplay.Smith scored at a quicker pace than his more famous partner, racing to his fourth one-day half-century off 45 balls with the help of nine fours.Just when Smith looked set to go on to a bigger score, he edged behind off medium-pacer Bernard Loots to give the Netherlands their first breakthrough in the 17th over.The promising Darren Bravo, with 30, then joined in the party briefly, dispatching Australian-born Cooper to the stands before hitting another six off left-arm spinner Pieter Seelaar who finished with 3-45.But Seelaar took his revenge in his very next over, tempting Bravo to charge down the pitch and offer a simple catch to Alexei Kervezee at long-on.Kervezee also took two more catches which accounted for Gayle and captain Darren Sammy, who made just six, in an otherwise sloppy performance in the field by the non-Test playing nation.The win put life back into the West Indies campaign after they lost to South Africa in their opener.For Netherlands, it was the second defeat on the trot after the six-wicket reversal against England in Nagpur last week.Complete scoreboard of the World Cup Group B match between the West Indies and the Netherlands at the Feroz Shah Kotla stadium on Monday:
  • West Indies:
  • D. Smith c Barresi b Loots 53
  • C. Gayle c Kervezee b ten Doeschate 80
  • D. Bravo c Kervezee b Seelaar 30
  • R. Sarwan lbw b Westdijk 49
  • K. Pollard c ten Doeschate b Bukhari 60
  • D. Sammy c Kervezee b Seelaar 6
  • S. Chanderpaul b Seelaar 4
  • D. Thomas lbw b Bukhari 13
  • N. Miller not out 11
  • S. Benn not out 3
  • Extras (b3, lb3, w14, nb1) 21
  • Total (for eight wickets; 50 overs) 330
  • Fall of wickets: 1-100 (Smith), 2-168 (Bravo), 3-196 (Gayle), 4-261 (Sarwan), 5-278 (Sammy), 6-290 (Chanderpaul), 7-312 (Pollard), 8-326 (Thomas).
  • Bowling: Bukhari 10-1-65-2 (w1), Westdijk 7-0-56-1 (w4), ten Doeschate 10-0-77-1 (nb1, w4), Loots 7-0-44-1 (w1), Cooper 6-0-37-0 (w4), Seelaar 10-1-45-3.
  • Netherlands:
  • A. Kervezee st Thomas b Benn 14
  • W. Barresi c Gayle b Roach 0
  • T. Cooper not out 55
  • R. ten Doeschate lbw b Benn 7
  • B. Zuiderent b Roach 1
  • T. de Grooth lbw b Benn 1
  • P. Borren c Pollard b Sammy 10
  • Mudassar Bukhari b Roach 24
  • P. Seelar lbw b Roach 1
  • B. Loots lbw b Roach 0
  • B. Westdijk b Roach 0
  • Extras (lb2) 2
  • Total (all out; 31.3 overs) 115
  • Fall of wickets: 1-2 (Barresi), 2-26 (Kervezee), 3-34 (ten Doeschate), 4-35 (Zuiderent), 5-36 (de Grooth), 6-56 (Borren), 7-113 (Bukhari), 8-115 (Seelaar), 9-115 (Loots), 10-115 (Westdijk)
  • Bowling: Benn 8-1-28-3, Roach 8.3-0-27-6, Miller 7-0-23-0, Sammy 7-0-33-1, Pollard 1-0-2-0.
  • Result: West Indies won by 215 runs
  • Toss: The Netherlands
  • Umpires: Amish Saheba (IND) and Simon Taufel (AUS)
  • TV Umpire: Richard Kettleborough (ENG)
  • Match referee: Jeff Crowe (NZL)

Roach records first hat-trick of 2011 World Cup

Updated at: 2039 PST,  Monday, February 28, 2011
NEW DELHI: West Indies pace bowler Kemar Roach recorded the first hat-trick of the 2011 World Cup against the Netherlands in a Group B match on Monday.He removed Pieter Seelaar, Bernard Loots and Berend Westdijk off the last three deliveries of the match to lead West Indies to a 215-run victory.Team mate Sulieman Benn praised Roach, who finished with figures of six for 27 as the Dutch were skittled for 115."Brilliant man. His bowling tonight was exceptional, I'm really pleased for him," said Benn."I'm glad he got that hat-trick -- I'm really proud of him." (Reuters)

Cricket World Cup: Rehman out of Canada match

Updated at: 2007 PST,  Monday, February 28, 2011
COLOMBO: Pakistan will be without left-arm spinner Abdur Rehman in their World Cup match against Canada on Thursday after suffering a left leg muscle injury in the 11-run over Sri Lanka.Team manager Intikhab Alam said Rehman's injury will take five days to heal."Rehman sprained his leg while fielding in the match against Sri Lanka and had to put on a strapping in order to bowl. It's an adductor muscle rupture," Alam said.Rehman, who will be 31 on Tuesday, took one wicket in Pakistan's win against the 1996 champions in Colombo on Saturday."We don't want to risk Rehman and will wait for him to recover," said Alam, of the spinner who has 13 wickets in 17 one-day internationals.Alam said Rehman's place is likely to be taken by off-spinner Saeed Ajmal, who has yet to play in the tournament.Senior batsman Misbah-ul-Haq, who hurt his hamstring, may be rested, said Alam. (AFP)

Windies hammer Dutch bowlers for 330

Updated at: 1751 PST,  Monday, February 28, 2011
NEW DELHI: The West Indies batsmen hammered the Netherlands bowlers for a huge total of 330 runsfor eight wickets in their World Cup Group B day-night match here at the Feroz Shah Kotla stadium on Monday.Sent into bat by Netherlands captain Peter Borren, experienced batsman Chris Gayle opened the innings with Devon Smith for an exact 100-run partnership and then added another 68 with Darren Bravo. Smith made 53 from 51 balls with nine fours while Bravo scored 30 with two sixes.Later, Gayle was dismissed by Ryan ten Doeschate for 80, laced with two sixes and seven fours.Then, Ramnaresh Sarwan (49) and Kieron Pollard (60) got together to make 65 runs for the fourth wicket. Pollard struck four sixes.For the Netherlands, Pieter Seelar took three and Mudassar Bukhari got two wickets.The Dutch fielded the same side that lost to England by six wickets in their opening match in Nagpur.The West Indies brought in left-arm spinner Nikita Miller in place of injured all-rounder Dwayne Bravo.Bravo picked up a knee injury during his team's seven-wicket defeat to South Africa at the same venue last week.

Cricket World Cup: Shoaib too old for life in fast lane

Updated at: 1709 PST,  Monday, February 28, 2011
COLOMBO: Former tearaway Shoaib Akhtar admitted on Monday that age has dimmed his energy and desire to deliver the 100 mph toe-crunchers that once made him the world's most feared fast bowler.The charismatic but controversial Pakistan seamer, whose career has been plagued by injury and disciplinary problems, knows that, at 35, it is sense rather than speed that will get wickets."I left this race of bowling at 100 mph a long time ago. I am nearing 36 now and am more mature, so I am focusing (more) on getting wickets now than bowling fast," said Akhtar, who broke the 100 mph barrier at the 2003 World Cup.However, he added: "But I crossed 159 kmh (98 mph) the other day."Akhtar has played 162 ODIs with 246 wickets and 46 Tests, which yielded 178 wickets. (AFP)

Zimbabwe crush Canada by 175 runs

Updated at: 1612 PST,  Monday, February 28, 2011
NAGPUR: Zimbabwe recorded their first victory in the World Cup 2011 when they demolished Canada by a huge margin of 175 runs in their Group A match here at the Vidarbha Cricket Association Ground on Monday.Chasing 299, Canada were all out for 123 runs in 42.1 overs. Their main scorers were Zubin Surkari (26), Gunasekeara (24) and Jimmi Hansra (20).Ray Price (3-16) and Graeme Cremer (3-31) were the most successful bowlers for Zimbabwe,. This is Zimbabwe’s largest victory in World Cups and the fourth largest in One-day Internationals.Batting first after their captain Elton Chigumbura won the toss, Tatenda Taibu and Craig Ervine helped Zimbabwe set Canada a daunting 299-run target for victory.Taibu was unfortunate to miss his third ODI century by just two runs as he was dismissed by Balaji Rao for 98. He hit nine boundaries in his 99-ball innings.Craig Ervine also batted very well to make 85 from 81 balls with two sixes and six fours.He and Taibu made together 181 runs for the third wicket partnership which helped Zimbabwe compile a big score but no other batsman except Sean Williams (30), Graeme Cremer (26) and Prosper Utseya (22) could make any significant score.The 181-run partnership between Taibu and Craig Irvine is the highest partnership for Zimbabwe in World Cups, surpassing the 166-run stand between Grant Flower and Craig Wishart against Namibia in 2003.After skipper Elton Chigumbura won the toss and elected to bat, Zimbabwe lost both their openers for only seven runs before Taibu and Ervine came to rescue.Leg-spinner Balaji Rao was the most successful bowler capturing four for 57.while seamers Khurram Chohan and Harvir Baidwan claimed two wickets each.

Netherlands win toss, put Windies into bat

Updated at: 1333 PST,  Monday, February 28, 2011
NEW DELHI: Netherlands have won the toss and elected to field against West Indies in their Group B day-night match of the World Cup here at the Feroz Shah Kotla Ground on Monday.

Zimbabwe set 299-run target for Canada

Updated at: 1246 PST,  Monday, February 28, 2011
NAGPUR: Zimbabwe made a difficult target of 299 runs for Canada in their Group A match of the iCC Cricket World Cup 2011 here at the Vidarbha Cricket Association Ground on Monday After skipper Elton Chigumbura won the toss and decided to bat, Zimbabwe made 298-9 in the allotted 50 overs.Both sides lost their opening matches, Zimbabwe going down by seven wickets to Australia here while Canada suffered a 210-run mauling in Sri Lanka.

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Monday, February 28, 2011

ICC announces public ballot process for CWC tickets

Updated at: 0925 PST,  Monday, February 28, 2011
The ICC today announced the process for the public sale of tickets for the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 semi-finals in Colombo and Mohali on 29 and 30 March, respectively and the final to be held at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai on 2 April. When the tickets were initially programmed to go on sale on 21 February the demand was so great that the website was overloaded. Haroon Lorgat, the ICC Chief Executive, announced today in Bengaluru that there will be a public ballot system similar to that which is used in the majority of global sporting events. The ballot will open on Monday 28 February. Mr Lorgat said: "It was most unfortunate and no blame should be directed at Kyazoonga, the ICC's official ticketing partner, as no one could have anticipated that tens of millions people would be trying to access the site an hour before it went live. In truth Kyazoonga have been an innocent third party in all the issues we have had with ticketing. "In conjunction with the hosts, we have now agreed that a ballot system is the best means of releasing any available tickets for the semis and final. The high demand clearly proves the massive attraction of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 and format of 50 overs cricket." In dismissing media perceptions about a letter addressed to ICC President Mr Sharad Pawar, Mr Lorgat added: "To help resolve our ticketing challenges we have also engaged the offices of the ICC President Mr Pawar to assist us as he has done with several other issues related to World Cup planning." Mr Lorgat also reflected on the fact that two contractors had been arrested in Sri Lanka for selling tickets on the black market. Mr Lorgat said: "We will support and encourage the actions of Sri Lanka Cricket in having such persons arrested for black market selling. It must serve as a warning that we will not hesitate to take action against anyone who abuses the system and sells tickets illegally." The ballot process is as follows: STEP ONE
You may apply for the ICC CWC 2011 Ticket Public Ballot from 28 February 2011 to 6 March 2011.
You need to fill in a the Public Ballot application form at http://cwc2011ballot.kyazoonga.com A ticket limit of two tickets per applicant applies. Only one application per person. Please do not submit more than one form: Kyazoonga will void your applications. STEP TWO You will receive a Ballot Confirmation Number once you complete and submit your application. No up-front payment is required at this stage.STEP THREE Please read and follow the instructions carefully before completing the form. If you break any of the rules all tickets you may be offered will be cancelled. All Ballot applications must be submitted no later than 6 March 2011. STEP FOURThe draw will be made by computer on 10 March 2011 and successful applicants will be informed by email on 11 March 2011. If you have not heard from Kyazoonga by 12 March 2011, please assume that your application was not successful in the ballot. STEP FIVESuccessful applicants will be able to pay for their tickets through Kyazoonga's secure payment processing website where they will be shown the transaction amount and asked to pay online using credit card/debit card/net-banking. If your transaction is not successful, your place in the draw will be offered to the next polled applicant from the draw. STEP SIXU pon successful payment completion, you will receive a confirmation page and email. Please print the page and keep the email. You will receive your tickets from the third week of March 2011.

Qualifying begins for World Twenty20

Updated at: 0925 PST,  Monday, February 28, 2011
While Associate nations ponder a future that may not include being part of the World Cup, some of the game's least well-known nations take their first steps towards what they hope can ultimately be a place at the expanded 2012 World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka.Although the 2015 World Cup is set to be trimmed to 10 teams this has been balanced to some degree by the expansion of the Twenty20 event which will increase from the 12 sides that took part in 2010 to 16 for the next tournament.However, it is highly unlikely that the seven countries who begin the qualifying campaign on February 24 will reach the showpiece event next year. Cameroon, Gambia, Lesotho, Mali, Morocco, Rwanda and the Seychelles will play in an initial qualifier in Ghana at the end of this month.Sixteen teams will take part in the final global qualifier in UAE in early 2012 to decide the final places at the World Twenty20. The six Associate and Affiliate members with one-day international status - Afghanistan, Canada, Ireland, Kenya, the Netherlands and Scotland - have automatically qualified for the UAE event.Three teams from the Asia region, two teams from Africa, Americas and Europe, and one team from East Asia-Pacific will play in the global qualifying event.In 2010 in the Caribbean the two Associate and Affiliate nations involved were Ireland and Afghanistan. Although neither progressed to the Super Eights, Ireland caused England problems in Guyana and Afghanistan performed with great credit during their first global tournament.

Butt, Amir file appeals against bans

Updated at: 0925 PST,  Monday, February 28, 2011
Butt, Amir file appeals against bans Salman Butt and Mohammad Amir have filed appeals against their bans from the game with the Court of Arbitration of Sport (CAS) in Lausanne, Switzerland.Butt and Amir, along with Mohammad Asif, were found guilty of orchestrating three pre-planned, deliberate no-balls during the Lord's Test against England last August. The trio, who were provisionally suspended by the ICC in September, were given sanctions ranging from 5 to 10 years by an independent tribunal headed by Michael Beloff QC after a full hearing in Doha, Qatar in early January, with the verdicts being handed down on February 5."Today my legal team served a statement of appeal upon The Court of Arbitration of Sport (CAS) to appeal against the Tribunal's findings in relation to the Lords Test and the sanctions imposed at the recent Hearing in Doha. Full Grounds for the Appeal will be lodged in due course," a statement from Butt's lawyer, Yasin Patel, said.As captain at the time, Butt received the stiffest sentence, though the ban comes with a suspended sentence of five years. On the day the verdict was announced, Patel had indicated that the tribunal's recommendation to the ICC to revisit sanctions in their code was encouraging. "The tribunal's hands were tied by the ICC's code to a five-year minimum," he said. "Mr Butt is encouraged that the tribunal advised the ICC to change the code or revise the minimum term."Butt also confirmed that he would appear at a London court on March 17th for a hearing into the criminal charges he faces - along with Asif and Amir - into the same incident.Amir was given a straight five-year ban with no suspended sentence and had indicated his intention to appeal on the day the judgments came. "We have filed an appeal against the ban [on Friday]," Shahid Karim, Amir's lawyer, said. "The process is now set into motion. We have challenged the judgment on various grounds."Asif has so far not said whether he will file an appeal.

Zimbabwe win toss, bat against Canada

Updated at: 0903 PST,  Monday, February 28, 2011
NAGPUR: Zimbabwe skipper Elton Chigumbura won the toss and decided to bat in the World Cup Group A game against Canada on Monday.Both sides lost their opening matches, Zimbabwe going down by seven wickets to Australia here while Canada suffered a 210-run mauling in Sri Lanka. Zimbabwe Elton Chigumbura (capt), Brendan Taylor, Charles Coventry, Tatenda Taibu (wkt), Craig Ervine, Sean Williams, Greg Lamb, Prosper Utseya, Graeme Cremer, Raymond Price, Christopher Mpofu. Canada Nitish Kumar, John Davison, Ruvindu Gunasekera, Ashish Bagai (capt/wkt), Jimmy Hansra, Zubin Surkari, Tyson Gordon, Rizwan Cheema, Khurram Chohan, Harvir Baidwan, Balaji Rao Umpires: Asad Rauf (PAK) and Bruce Oxenford (AUS) TV umpire: Steve Davis (ENG) Match referee: Ranjan Madugalle (SRI).(AFP)

Afridi, his team fined for slow over rate

Updated at: 1848 PST,  Sunday, February 27, 2011
NEW DELHI: Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi has been fined 20 percent of his match fee and his team mates will lose 10 percent for their slow over rate in Saturday's 11-run win against Sri Lanka, the ICC said on Sunday.Match referee Chris Broad imposed the fine after Pakistan were one over short of their target at the end of the match in Colombo when time allowances were taken into consideration, the International Cricket Council said in a statement.According to the ICC Code of Conduct governing minor over-rate offences, players are fined 10 per cent of their match fees for every over their side fail to bowl in the allotted time while the captain is fined double that amount."The penalty was accepted by Pakistan without contest so there was no need for a hearing," the ICC statement read.Having beaten Kenya and Sri Lanka, Pakistan take on Canada in their next Group A fixture on Thursday.

High-scoring India-England match tied

Updated at: 2213 PST,  Sunday, February 27, 2011
BANGALORE: India and England tied a thrilling World Cup clash here on Sunday in a high-scoring match which yielded 676 runs and was adorned by blistering centuries from Sachin Tendulkar and Andrew Strauss here at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium on Sunday.Chasing a huge target of 339 runs, England finished on 338 for eight having scored 13 off the last over when 14 were needed for victory. Captain Andrew Strauss was declared Man-of-the-Match who led from the front to steer England near to a certain victory with his career-best 158 from 145 balls with 16 fours and a six But Zaheer Khan's dramatic three-wicket burst turned the match back in India's favour when England needed 56 runs in 44 balls with eight wickets in hand.Earlier, India great Tendulkar's record-breaking 120 saw him become the first man to score five World Cup hundreds. Zaheer took three wickets for one run in six balls, including two in two, as England slumped from 281 for two to 285 for five.Tim Bresnan (14) revived England's innings before he was bowled by leg-spinner Piyush Chawla to leave his side 325 for eight and needing 14 off the last over from Munaf Patel.But Ajmal Shahzad launched Patel for six to leave England needing five from three balls in front of a frenzied crowd at the Chinnaswamy Stadium.Shahzad and Graeme Swann ran a single to make the target four from two. They ran two more to leave England requiring two for victory off the last ball.But they managed just a single to produce only the fourth tie in World Cup history. Strauss and Ian Bell (69) put on 170 for the third wicket before Zaheer had Bell holing out.Next ball he had Strauss lbw with a brilliant yorker to end the left-handed opener's 145-ball innings featuring a six and 18 fours that beat his previous one-day best of 154 against Bangladesh last year.Strauss's was the first hundred by an England captain at the World Cup and the highest score by an England batsman, beating the 137 made by Dennis Amiss against India in the competition's inaugural match at Lord's in 1975.England then needed 58 off 43 balls with two fresh batsmen at the crease but they were in the first over of the batting powerplay.Zaheer then bowled Paul Collingwood and finished with three for 64.There had been controversy when Strauss and Bell's partnership was worth just 52. Left-arm spinner Yuvraj Singh thought he had Bell lbw on review for 17, with replays showing the ball would have hit the stumps. Bell had started to walk off but because New Zealand umpire Billy Bowden's verdict was not out, the decision was returned to him by Australian replay official Rod Tucker and the Kiwi deemed Bell to be too far down the pitch.But he enraged India fans who had seen Bell 'dismissed' on the giant replay screens.An unruffled Strauss advanced to drive Yuvraj for a superb six before Bell completed a 45-ball fifty with a six when he swept leg-spinner Piyush Chawla. Bell was reprieved again on 68, with England 278 for two in the 42nd over, when he was dropped by slip Virat Kohli off Chawla.Earlier, Tendulkar had faced 115 balls with 10 fours and five sixes.Yuvraj ensured there was no respite for England with a quickfire 58.James Anderson conceded 91 runs in 9.5 overs to give the paceman the most expensive analysis by an England bowler at the World Cup, beating Derek Pringle's none for 83 against the West Indies at Gujranwala in 1987.But Bresnan picked up several late wickets to finish with career-best figures of five for 48.

India plunder 338 against hapless England

Updated at: 1802 PST,  Sunday, February 27, 2011
BANGALORE: Indian batsmen ruthlessly punished England bowlers to amass 338 runs in 49.5 overs in their crucial Group B match of the ICC World Cup here at the M.Chinnaswamy Stadium on Saturday.Winning the toss, India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni decided to bat first on an easy batting wicket.Virender Sehwag and Sachin Tendulkar opened the innings in style and made 46 in 7.5 overs before Sehwag got out for 35 made off 26 balls.Then, Tendulkar joined by Gautam Gambhir took the charge and thrashed England bowlers for a 134-run second wicket stand. Gambhir was bowled by Graeme Swann for 51 but it was Tendulkar who showed great stroke-play. The master-blaster, who had made 28 against Bangladesh in the opening match of the tournament, completed the much awaited hundred off 103 balls, hitting four towering sixes and seven marvelous boundaries.This was his fifth hundred in the World Cup, a record, and second against England. He along with Yuvraj Singh added another 56 runs before making an exit from the field, making 120 from 114 balls.Later, Yuvraj and Dhoni blasted 69 runs in 46 balls and both were dismissed off two successive deliveries from Tim Bresnan. Yuvraj went for 58 (50 balls) and Ddhoni 31(25 balls).However, India managed to set an difficult target of 339 runs for England and in this process lost three more wickets.Bresnan was the most successful bowler for England taking five wickets for 48 runs.

Cricket World Cup: Sri Lanka need Murali and Malinga to hit ground running

Updated at: 1652 PST,  Sunday, February 27, 2011
COLOMBO: If Sri Lanka are to have any chance of becoming the only Asian team to win two World Cups in the sub-continent, they need their two chief weapons, Lasith Malinga and Muttiah Muralitharan, to find their form -- fast.The co-hosts were one of the pre-tournament favourites to win the showpiece but Saturday's 11-run defeat by Pakistan exposed some glaring weaknesses in their bowling armoury.Muralitharan should have been trapping rival batsmen with his mystifying powers of flight and spin but has instead been leaking runs to rank outsiders such as Canada. In the first match he was the most expensive of the Sri Lankan attack.The off-spinner's figures of 2-38 at the cost of 4.22 against a bunch of part-timers in Hambantota was hardly the kind of stats the world's most prolific wicket-taker would want to shout about.He was the most economical of the Sri Lankan bowlers against Pakistan but having picked up only one wicket, his success rate would have hardly set Sri Lankan pulses racing.But at least Muralitharan is playing a part in all the action as the same cannot be said of Malinga.The 27-year-old, who made his name in the 2007 World Cup by claiming four wickets in four balls against South Africa, has not even tested one run-up to the pitch.SORE BACKHe was sidelined with a sore back against Canada but had been declared fit for the contest against Pakistan. However, Sri Lanka captain Kumar Sangakkara was not prepared to gamble on his fitness and chose to rest him for "the more difficult matches we have ahead" -- a strategy that backfired on Saturday.With showdowns against world champions Australia now less than a week away, the Sri Lankans know they can no longer waste time experimenting with their line-ups and plan to draft Malinga into action in their match against Kenya on Tuesday."We will consider him for the next game because we need to get him into his rhythm ahead of the game against Australia next Saturday," Sri Lanka's team manger Anura Tennekoon said."Malinga was rested as a precautionary measure. We don't want to take any chance with him because he is our key bowler.Malinga is fit but we don't want to take that extra one percent (risk with his fitness) and play him."Sangakkara acknowledged the presence of Malinga could have tipped the match in their favour, as in the end they lost by a fairly narrow margin after Pakistan amassed 277-7."We can say that we missed Lasith a bit. He is going to be back with us very shortly," he said.Luckily for Sri Lanka, one defeat is unlikely to dent their chances of progressing in the tournament, especially since Zimbabwe, Kenya and Canada are expected to be the teams that fall by the wayside in Group A.Its round-robin format means four teams from Group A will qualify for the knockout stages.While the bowling has been the obvious weak link, Sangakkara was also concerned with his team's batting even though they scored 332-7 in their first match and came very close to overhauling Pakistan's total.Going forward, Sangakkara wants to learn from their mistakes and said he wants his bowlers to pay more attention once on the field."A few things we can learn, maybe bowling a better line and length is important all the time," he said. "On a pitch like this, had we played better cricket and done basics especially in batting, we could have changed the result."If we had kept building partnerships, when we had that great start, I think it would have been a different story."It's pretty disappointing to be 10 (sic) runs short at the end." (Reuters)

Tendulkar smashes 47th ODI century

Updated at: 1643 PST,  Sunday, February 27, 2011
BANGALORE: Sachin Tendulkar smashed 47th century in his One-day International career, while playing against England in a Group B match of the ICC Cricket World Cup here at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium on Sunday.Tendulkar who had made 28 against Bangladesh in the opening match of the tournament, completed the much awaited hundred in 103 balls, hitting four towering sixes and seven marvelous boundaries.This was his fifth hundred in the World Cup and second against England.

India win toss, bat against England

Updated at: 1343 PST,  Sunday, February 27, 2011
BANGALORE: India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni has won the toss and elected to bat against England in their crucial Group B match of the ICC World Cup here at the M.Chinnaswamy Stadium on Saturday.India made one change from the team that beat fellow co-hosts Bangladesh by 87 runs in Dhaka, bringing in leg-spinner Piyush Chawla for wayward fast bowler Shanthakumaran Sreesanth.That gave India a second spinner alongside off-break bowler Harbhajan Singh.England made two switches from the side that scraped a six-wicket win over the Netherlands after fast bowler Stuart Broad was ruled out with illness, bringing in fellow seamer Ajmal Shahzad.They also dropped all-rounder Ravi Bopara and, like India, opted for a second spinner in left-armer Michael Yardy on a pitch expected to take turn. This match had originally been scheduled for Kolkata but was switched to Bangalore after International Cricket Council officials said work still needed to be done on the Eden Gardens ground to make it tournament ready.India: Virender Sehwag, Sachin Tendulkar, Gautam Gambhir, Virat Kohli, Yuvraj Singh, Mahendra Singh Dhoni (captain/wk), Yusuf Pathan, Harbhajan Singh, Zaheer Khan, Piyush Chawla, Munaf Patel England: Andrew Strauss (captain), Kevin Pietersen, Jonathan Trott, Ian Bell, Paul Collingwood, Matt Prior (wkt), Michael Yardy, Tim Bresnan, Graeme Swann, Ajmal Shahzad, James Anderson Umpires: Billy Bowden (NZ) and Marais Erasmus (SA), TV umpire: Rod Tucker (AUS)Match referee: Roshan Mahanama (SL)