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Moin hopes to return

Moin Khan has announced that he is ready for international cricket© AFP

Moin Khan has revealed his hopes of returning to the Pakistan side after regaining full fitness. Moin last played a Test in 2004 against Sri Lanka."I am making all these untiring efforts to represent my country again," said Moin after scoring a century for Pakistan International Airlines. "There has been nothing wrong with my performance as a wicketkeeper and a batsman during the current season. I am doing quite well and deserve to play again in the national team."A veteran of 69 Tests, Khan has scored 2741 runs at 28.55 and taken 128 catches besides 20 stumpings. He reckons that the forthcoming series with India will be challenging. "As I think both the teams’ chances would be even during the series and the team which plays better will win." He added that if Pakistan’s batting clicked, it would give them an edge over the Indians.Khan disagreed with the recent statements made by Sarfraz Nawaz, the former Test cricketer, suggesting that India’s spinners would whitewash Pakistan in the Test series. "Only Anil Kumble in the Indian team has more than 300 wickets while the rest of the bowlers are no more than average – like Harbhajan Singh and the other spinners haven’t got more than 100 to 150 wickets to their credit."He remarked that Danish Kaneria and Arshad Khan, who played well in the domestic first-class cricket, could play a vital role in the series. "I know the Indian batsman play the spinners with considerable ease but so could our batsmen."

Hussey stars in thriller against Victoria

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Victoria could not prevail despite Matthew Elliott’s aggressive fifty© Getty Images

Michael Hussey won the match award for his 60 in a rain-affected ING Cup game that seemed Victoria’s for much of the day, only for them to lose the plot and allow Western Australia to clinch victory by four runs.The game was shortened to a 24-over-a-side encounter after rain and a wet ground delayed the start. Cameron White then won the toss and chose to field. Soon Western Australia were 4 for 44, and White’s decision to insert the opposition was justified. However, Hussey scored runs rapidly, and he was aided by Kade Harvey, who made 19 in 19 balls. Hussey hit three fours and two sixes, and Jonathon Moss and White came in for severe punishment. Moss conceded 31 in four overs, while White gave away 35 in five.Victoria were on course for victory when rain came and affected the game further. They were 1 for 37 in 7.2 overs when their innings was reduced to 19 overs and the target to 108. Matthew Elliott reached his fifty and was partnered by Brad Hodge, who scored 28. However, both fell within three balls of each other (3 for 97). At that point, Victoria needed 11 runs in seven balls, a task that proved beyond them due to controlled bowling by Harvey, who conceded only three runs in the last over.

Zimbabwe board seeks peace with rebels

Zimbabwe Cricket has announced that it is setting up an independent committee to look into the possibility of the players who were at the centre of last year’s strike returning to the fold.Some of the rebels – Gavin Ewing and Barney Rogers for example – have already resumed playing, but others, led by Heath Streak, remain on the outside.ZC issued a statement saying that Addington Chinake, a legal advisor, would chair the committee and he will be joined by Jackie du Preez, the former Rhodesia and South Africa allrounder, and George Makings, a labour consultant.The stumbling block to a settlement would appear to the recent election of Ozias Bvute as ZC managing director, and Max Ebrahim’s role as chairman of selectors. Both men are deeply distrusted and were at the centre of many of the rebels’ grievances.It was an unhappy coincidence that ZC announced the forming of the committee at the same time the national side was slipping to defeat in Bangladesh.

Smith and Hinds revive West Indies

West Indies 311 for 9 (Smith 108, Hinds 84) v England
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Devon Smith on his way to his maiden Test hundred© Getty Images

In recent years, England have earned a reputation for being slow off the mark in crucial Test series, but at Sabina Park today, they fought toe-to-toe with West Indies in an enthralling opening gambit.England started and finished the day strongly. In the morning session, their pace attack struck hard and fast, grabbing all four of West Indies’ experienced batsmen inside the first session and a half, and later returned to make efficient inroads into the tail. But in between whiles they were beaten back by a fifth-wicket stand of 122 between Devon Smith and Ryan Hinds, two batsmen making their return to the team after lengthy absences, as West Indies closed on 311 for 9.Smith, in his first match since that world-record run-chase of 418 against Australia in Antigua last May, rode out the early storm to make a fine 108, his maiden Test century. It was a gritty effort laced with occasional panache. He took his fair share of blows as Andrew Flintoff cracked him on the shoulder blade and Steve Harmison on the helmet and box, but Smith responded with a litany of defiant boundaries, including several slashes over the covers with a keen eye and the minimum of footwork.He was eventually stumped by Chris Read after a lapse of judgment, as he swept at Ashley Giles and left his back foot trailing just outside his crease. It was a careless end to a superb knock, but Giles – who bounced back well after being milked for 20 runs in his first two overs – soon struck again to remove Hinds, whose bullish approach had been paying rich dividends, He was all set for a century of his own, when he chipped a tame sweep to Mark Butcher at short fine leg. Hinds was gone for 84, and West Indies had slipped to 281 for 6.Nonetheless, it was a position of strength when compared to their perilous start to the innings. On winning the toss, Lara had little hesitation in choosing to bat first, on a hard-baked but green-tinged track that was a far cry from the corrugated minefield that greeted England on their last trip to the Caribbean in 1997-98. He admitted at the time that the first hour would be crucial, and Matthew Hoggard and Steve Harmison exploited the early-morning conditions to good effect, each picking up a wicket inside the first 40 minutes.

Key wicket: a delighted Simon Jones celebrates the dismissal of Brian Lara© Getty Images

Harmison, back in the side after the back problems that scuppered his pre-Christmas trip to the subcontinent, was the first to strike. After feeling his way back into a decent rhythm, he produced an excellent full-length heavy ball that bounced more than Chris Gayle had expected and cannoned off his bat into the base of his middle stump. Three overs later, Hoggard – with a good line and inducking length – trapped Ramnaresh Sarwan lbw for an 11-ball duck, as he played all round a straight delivery that would have taken out middle-and-leg (22 for 2).The entire hopes of the Caribbean transferred to Lara’s shoulders, and he made an uneasy start to his innings, twice fencing Harmison through the slips for four. But Smith was growing in confidence at the other end, and the pair had added 51 for the third wicket when Simon Jones popped up to produce the golden moment of the day.With his 13th delivery, Jones forced Lara fence uncertainly at another well-directed ball, and Andrew Flintoff at second slip pouched the most effortless of catches. Jones’s celebration was exultant and heart-felt, and he looked close to tears as he hugged Flintoff. It has been a long and painful road to recovery, and he could not have wished for a more rewarding wicket.Soon after lunch, Chanderpaul prodded loosely at a wide delivery from Hoggard and inside-edged onto his leg stump (101 for 4), and Harmison roughed up Smith in a top-notch spell of aggression that demonstrated his eagerness for the task. But just as the floodgates seemed ready to be cranked open, Smith and Hinds carried the fight back to England’s bowlers, as West Indies regained the upper hand.But once Giles had made the breakthroughs, Jones struck for a second time to remove Ridley Jacobs, who had played well within himself for his 37. Thereafter, the new ball took over. Tino Best refused to go down without a fight, belting Giles for a straight six and swinging Hoggard for four behind square, but he was adjudged lbw to a Harmison yorker that might have missed leg, after Adam Sanford had been caught at first slip off Flintoff.England were unable to prise apart the last pair, although Harmison gave Fidel Edwards a shock when he slipped out a brutal beamer in the penultimate over of the day. It was totally accidental and Harmison apologized immediately, but he might not be relishing the prospect of batting too much after that.

Sri Lanka won't take Bangladesh lightly

Marvan Atapattu: back after injury and adds solidity to Sri Lanka’s middle order © AFP

Six teams have already made it to the main stage of the Champions Trophy,and over the next one week, six qualifying matches will decidewhich two teams out of Sri Lanka, West Indies, Bangladesh and Zimbabwewill join those six in the quarter-final stage.Sri Lanka and Bangladeshface off at Mohali today to set the tournament rolling, and while SriLanka will start as overwhelming favourites – not only to win this match,but also to qualify and cause some further damage in the main tournament -Habibul Bashar and his troops will believe they have a chance of pullingoff an upset and getting this tournament off to a sensational start.Bangladesh have only wonone out of 17 ODIs against Sri Lanka, but that win came veryrecently – in February this year atBogra – and having tasted success once, they will want to provethat wasn’t a flash in the pan. The first match is also perhaps the besttime for the underdog to catch the favourites by surprise.Going by Mahela Jayawardene’s and Tom Moody’s comments, though, it’sunlikely that the Sri Lankans will take Bangladesh lightly. That Bogradefeat will still be fresh – they’ve only played Bangladesh once since -but more importantly, they’ll have the services of three champion playerswho weren’t around for that game: Chaminda Vaas, Muttiah Muralitharan andMarvan Atapattu are all back in the line-up. Atapattu hasn’t played an ODIsince March 2006, and his return will be huge boost to the top order. SriLanka have also been in excellent form in ODIs of late, winning nine oftheir last 15 ODIs, including a clean sweep against England, and they’llbe keen to wipe out unpleasant memories of the 6-1 drubbing at the handsof India last year.Teams usually prefer to bat first after winning the toss in day-nightgames, but the dew factor at Mohali might make it difficult for thebowlers later in the evening. Daljit Singh, the curator, has promised apitch with pace and carry: “There is a lot of grass on the pitch thoughdry and not green,” he was quoted as telling .”The ball will carry through to the batsmen and seamer will be able toextract height, though it might be tough for the spinners as the ball mayskid.”Bangladesh
Aftab Ahmed, Rajin Saleh, Shahriar Nafees,Habibul Bashar (capt), Mohammad Ashraful, Abdur Razzak, Farhad Reza,Khaled Mashud (wk), Mashrafe Mortaza, Mehrab Hossain jnr, MohammadRafique, Saqibul Hasan Shahadat Hossain, Syed Rasel.Sri Lanka
Marvan Atapattu, Sanath Jayasuriya, Upul Tharanga, Kumar Sangakkara (wk), Mahela Jayawardene (capt), Tillakaratne Dilshan,Chamara Kapugedera, Farveez Maharoof, Chaminda Vaas, Malinga Bandara,Dilhara Fernando, Lasith Malinga, Muttiah Muralitharan, Ruchira Perera.

Sri Lanka A start with a loss

ScorecardSri Lanka A began their tour of South Africa on a sour note, losing to Pretoria University, the Club Championship winners, by five wickets at Willowmoore Park in Benoni.After winning the toss, Sri Lanka chose to bat and made a reasonable start until Avishka Gunawardena was trapped lbw by Tiens Lange for 17 (42 for 1).Jehan Mubarak and Michael Vandort then flayed the attack, adding a second-wicket stand of 192 before Vandort was dismissed for 108. Mubarak then followed him shortly to the pavilion for 104 as Sri Lanka ended on a healthy 276 for 4.Pretoria, not fazed by the daunting task ahead of them, opened with Jacques Rudolph and AB de Villiers, who put on 67 for the opening wicket before Rudolph departed for 24. De Villiers made 67.But the big partnership came between Kruger van Wyk, the captain, and Hein Malan. They added 121 and took Pretoria to a memorable win. Malan was out for 81 and Van Wyk finished unbeaten on 56 as they reached their target with eight balls to spare.Sri Lanka face South Africa A in a day-night match at The Potchefstroom Oval on Friday.

Sunny Singh shines for India

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Sunny Singh during his unbeaten 68

India won their second match of the Under-19 World Cup with what was, in the end, a comfortable 69-run win against New Zealand. Sunny Singh kept India A on track after a shaky start to help them post 215 before New Zealand slumped to 146 all out in their doomed run chase.The New Zealand bowlers began brightly as Brent Findlay ripped away India’s top-middle order to reduce them to 86 for 5. But Singh, who was dropped three times, came to India’s rescue with a well-paced 68 not out, including seven fours. He added 66 with Gaurav Dhiman, who made a brisk 38.New Zealand’s reply never got going, despite a steady 55 from the captain Bradley-John Watling. Wickets were shared around by the Indian bowlers, and as the batsmen fell at regular intervals, the New Zealand lower order failed to cope with the pressure. The last six wickets fell for only 14 runs as India went top of Group C.Robin Singh, India’s coach, said afterwards that he believes his side can still improve. “The team could have scored 260 to 270 runs. The pitch was a good batting strip but the batsmen played too many loose shots,” he said. “The bowlers bowled well, but there is still scope for improvement – the spinners bowled too fast.”Singh, who was named Man of the Match, said, “I was lucky, I was given two or three lives. I capitalized on the dropped chances and initially concentrated on taking singles. I was pleased with the final result.”

Lovett gets his chance for slipping St Cross

Hampshire Under-16 opener Jack Lovett is set for his senior St Cross Symondians debut at Lymington tomorrow (1pm) as the Winchester club seeks to retrieve lost ground at the top of Southern Electric Premier League, Division 2.Lovett has been in sparkling form for St Cross 2nd XI, who are pressing hard for Hampshire League promotion.He gets his big chance as St Cross bid to claw back the three-point lead Old Tauntonians & Romsey gained at the top last weekend.Dan Peacock (broken finger) could return to bolster a Lymington side that has lost six of its last seven matches and dropped into the bottom half of the table.OT’s, meanwhile, travel to enigmatic Hursley Park, who are capable of beating the best on their day.Knocked out of the National Village Championship at Findon last weekend, Easton & Martyr Worthy must beat lowly Gosport Borough if they are to keep their championship prospects alive.But they have a substantial 19-point gap to make up on St Cross, whom they beat by five wickets last week.On-song Burridge bid to make it five wins out of six at Purbrook, who broke their duck at the ninth attempt last week but remain bottom.Sparsholt have slipped back on to the lip of the relegation zone, but a win over United Services at Burnaby Road will ease their worries.

Nehra unlikely to play Tests against New Zealand

With just over three weeks to go before India’s first Test against New Zealand, question-marks continue to hang over the fitness levels of Ashish Nehra. While Nehra himself is confident that he will recover completely from the ankle injury which has forced him out of action since the World Cup, the Indian board officials are not so sure.Speaking to rediff.com, Nehra insisted: “We will have to watch how my injury heals, but I am sure to be fit for the series against New Zealand.” SK Nair, the BCCI secretary, however, stated that Nehra remained a doubt for the Test series, and might only regain full fitness before the triangular one-day tournament, which also features Australia and starts on October 23. Nair and Brijesh Patel, the chairman of the selection committee, quoted Andrew Leipus, the team physiotherapist, as saying that Nehra would not be ready for the Tests. “According to Leipus, Nehra is not fit to take part in the Test series against New Zealand,” said Patel.Nehra underwent surgery on his ankle in April, and has only recently started bowling in the nets.
If Nehra is indeed ruled out, it will surely be a blow to India’s seam attack, but the Indian team management would be well advised to take a conservative approach with his fitness. More than the home series against New Zealand, it is vital that Nehra be part of the Indian line-up for the tour of Australia. Running in on the hard surfaces of Australia will surely put plenty of strain on the ankle, and it is easy to visualise a half-fit Nehra breaking down again. Easing him back with a few one-dayers and some domestic games could well be in the best interest both of Nehra and the Indian team.

Sussex skittle Warwickshire to go top of the table

Day four of fourCounty Championship Division OneMiddlesex v Lancashire, Lord’s
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Middlesex maintained their unbeaten record this season on another rainy day at Lord’s. Only 27 overs were possible, in which time Andy Strauss and Sven Koenig continued to rebuild Middlesex’s road to recovery against Lancashire. Strauss doubled his overnight score to reach 100 not out, while Koenig also stood firm to reach 71 not out. Middlesex added 87 runs during the day, and were 85 behind Lancashire when the match was abandoned at tea.It was Lancashire’s third consecutive rain-affected draw.Warwickshire v Sussex, Edgbaston
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Melvyn Betts and Dougie Brown bowled Warwickshire to an unexpected and exciting win against Sussex at Edgbaston, which sent them top of Division One. Most people would have banked on the draw when Sussex started their second innings after lunch, but Warwickshire skittled them for 106 in the two sessions. Only three batsmen reached double-figures while Betts (5 for 43) and Brown (4 for 17) ripped through the innings as Sussex were routed by 234 runs. Earlier, England hopefuls Ian Bell and Jamie Troughton set up Warwickshire’s win with a century apiece, as Warwickshire declared their second innings on 285 for 7. It was Bell’s first championship hundred in two years and Troughton’s fifth of his first-class career.Division TwoGlamorgan v Gloucestershire, Cardiff
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Gloucestershire secured their second victory of the season with a six-wicket win over Glamorgan at Cardiff – despite some batting heroics from David Harrison and Michael Kasprowicz. After Jonathan Lewis and Ian Butler had reduced Glamorgan to 203 for 8, Harrison (66) and Kasprowicz (78) smashed a ninth-wicket stand of 140 which gave the sparse crowd some entertainment, and also ensured Gloucestershire batted again, needing a target of 95 from 25 overs. And Craig Spearman made sure they weren’t caught out by the time with a rapid 39 from 38 balls as Jonty Rhodes and Mark Alleyne carried Gloucestershire to victory with 10 overs to spare.Yorkshire v Derbyshire, Headingley
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Graeme Welch (4 for 74) and Mohammad Ali (3 for 26) led Derbyshire to their first win of the season with a 166-run victory over Yorkshire at Headingley – and justified Dominic Cork’s decision not to enforce the follow-on yesterday. A target of 407 was never going to be an option for Yorkshire, who tried to bat out the day for a draw. Resuming the day on 12 for 0, Welch started the path to victory when he bowled Michael Vaughan for 38, and then soon removed Anthony McGrath for 4. Wickets continued to tumble, and only Michael Lumb stood between Derbyshire and a well-deserved victory. But when he fell at the ninth wicket for a dogged 86 to Mohammad Ali, the work was done for Derbyshire, who moved up to second in the table, one place above Yorkshire.Worcestershire v Zimbabweans, Worcester
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