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Angel nearly answers WA's prayers

A defiant Greg Blewett century was enough for South Australia to hold WA to a draw after Warriors paceman Jo Angel etched his name further into Australian first class record books today.The Redbacks finished at 8-277 at the close of the four-day match, some 45 runs short of the target set by WA with Blewett (112) and Paul Wilson (nought)finishing at the crease.But evergreen Angel (4-49) was nearly able to answer WA’s prayers in the second last over of the day claiming the scalps of Mike Smith (43) and Ryan Harris withconsecutive balls.However he was unable to take a hat-trick with Wilson keeping him out before Blewett saw off Brad Williams (1-83) in the final over at the WACA Ground.The 30-year-old Blewett was rock solid throughout his five-hour knock displaying plenty of patience to guide the Redbacks to safety.The evergreen Angel moved into second position on the all-time list of wicket-takers in domestic first class cricket when he dismissed Chris Davies for his second wicket of the innings.He has now taken 387 wickets in Pura Cup/Sheffield Shield matches to also become the leading WA wicket-taker after passing Terry Alderman’s mark of 384scalps today.However Blewett’s and Angel’s brilliant performances overshadowed Warriors’ Chris Rogers two unbeaten centuries as the 24-year-old looked to lock up amiddle-order spot in the Warriors line-up next summer.Rogers (102no) punched the air earlier today as he backed up his maiden first class century (101no) with another ton by driving Redbacks quick Smith (4-69) for four.It made him the first WA batsman to score two unbeaten hundreds in a domestic first class match as he finished the last Pura Cup match of the season with a flurry of runs.He finished the Pura Cup season with 411 runs from four matches at an average of 82.2.The Redbacks and the Warriors were both playing for pride today because the spots in next week’s final had already been decided with Queensland meetingTasmania at the Gabba.For the record today’s result meant WA finished third in the competition while SA was fourth.

Fairbrother makes Somerset pay for sloppy effort in the field

Neil Fairbrother punished Somerset for a dreadful fielding display as Lancashire closed in on victory in the CricInfo Championship first division match at Taunton.By the close of the second day, Somerset were 106-6 in their second innings, needing 68 to make Lancashire bat again.It should have been a lot different. But Somerset dropped eight chances in the field and allowed Fairbrother and Gary Keedy to accumulate 98 for the last wicket, which stretched the total to 378.Fairbrother played superbly and, although he was dropped on 93, 105 and 130, all the chances came from attacking shots when last man Keedy was with him at the crease.He reached his hundred from 138 deliveries and finished with 179 not out from 201 balls. There were 27 fours, a six over long on and a five in his innings.Keedy, who batted with a runner after he injured his back in the opening overs of Friday’s play, offered admirable support, although he contributed only eight to the partnership.Somerset’s fielding was in sharp contrast to Lancashire, who have held nearly everything that has come their way so far.Another costly lapse for Somerset came in the morning session when Joe Scuderi was dropped on nine by Graham Rose at slip.Scuderi unleashed some handsome off side drives in his 48 before Keith Parsons bowled him. And his stand of 83 in 20 overs with Fairbrother put Lancashire in command.Somerset’s misery was completed by some poor batting second time around. Skipper Jamie Cox and Mike Burns departed within three overs, then Fairbrother returned to the spotlight by grasping fine catches to remove Peter Bowler and Keith Parsons off Mike Smethurst.Rob Turner also fell to Smethurst, who finished the day with 3-13 from nine overs, while Rose was caught at square leg off Scuderi.Piran Holloway has restored some pride for Somerset, with an unbeaten 52, while former Middlesex man Richard Johnson bowled well in the Lancashire innings to return 5-107 on his debut.But Lancashire look odds on to gain a victory that would put them in good heart ahead of this week’s meeting with champions Surrey.

Warwickshire through in day of washouts

Omari Banks hooks Johann Louw in the abandoned match at Northampton © PA Sports
 

Midlands-West-Wales Division

Somerset are out of the Twenty20 Cup after a washout at Northampton ruined their last remaining hopes of qualification. They had to beat Northamptonshire to stand any chance, but when Justin Langer fell to the first ball of the match, their hopes took an early setback. Omari Banks revived their prospects with a hard-hitting 50 that featured six sixes, and he added 67 with Ben Phillips to lift his side from 67 for 6 to 137 for 9. Johann Louw took 3 for 24 to set his side up for a shot at victory, but after Niall O’Brien had launched their response with 14 from five deliveries, the match was abandoned with Northants on 20 for 2 after two overs.Warwickshire qualified at the top of their table and secured a home tie in the quarter-finals as the rain continued to blight Glamorgan’s campaign at Edgbaston. Glamorgan made a solid start, reaching 79 for 0 after 8.4 overs, but that was as good as the action got as they were condemned to their fourth no-result in nine matches. Richard Grant led the way with 39 from 23 balls and David Hemp matched him with 38 from 29, but rain had the final say.

North Division

No play at all was possible in Yorkshire’s clash with Leicestershire at Headingley, which means that their hopes of qualification will come down to the very final round. Yorkshire currently sit in third place in the table, one point ahead of Nottinghamshire in fourth, whom they play at Trent Bridge on Friday. If they win, and Lancashire slip up against the leaders, Durham, they will go through by virtue of their two wins in the Roses fixtures at Headingley and Old Trafford.

Midlands/West/Wales Division
Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
Warwickshire 9 6 0 1 2 15 +0.900 1002/130.3 949/140.0
Northamptonshire 9 5 3 0 1 11 +0.397 1332/155.2 1239/151.3
Somerset 9 3 4 0 2 8 +0.313 1209/140.0 1161/139.3
Glamorgan 9 2 3 0 4 8 -0.325 810/97.0 830/95.4
Worcestershire 9 3 5 0 1 7 -0.483 1198/156.5 1286/158.2
Gloucestershire 9 1 5 1 2 5 -0.931 990/138.4 1076/133.2
North Division
Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
Durham 9 6 1 1 1 14 +0.984 1013/122.4 982/135.0
Lancashire 9 6 3 0 0 12 +0.921 1361/171.4 1252/178.4
Yorkshire 9 4 3 1 1 10 -0.468 1099/144.4 1164/144.2
Nottinghamshire 9 4 4 0 1 9 +0.134 1128/150.3 1136/154.2
Derbyshire 9 3 6 0 0 6 -0.331 1154/163.0 1119/151.0
Leicestershire 9 1 7 0 1 3 -1.159 1048/160.0 1150/149.1
South Division
Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
Middlesex 9 7 2 0 0 14 +0.744 1272/159.0 1219/168.0
Essex 9 5 3 1 0 11 +0.734 1360/172.0 1241/173.0
Hampshire 9 5 3 1 0 11 -0.259 1431/177.1 1413/169.3
Kent 9 5 4 0 0 10 +0.419 1401/167.5 1332/168.0
Sussex 9 2 7 0 0 4 -0.680 1282/166.5 1454/173.5
Surrey 9 2 7 0 0 4 -0.935 1323/178.0 1410/168.3

Somerset Under 19's set to face Hampshire in ECB final

Somerset Under 19’s scored a comfortable victory over Essex at Uxbridge in the semi final of the ECB two day competition today.Batting first Somerset scored 383 for 9 yesterday in their allotted 100 overs. Luke Stokes top scored with 63, wicket-keeper Alistair Garnsworthy made an unbeaten 51 and Richard Timms made 43.Today Essex were bowled out for 164 to give Somerset victory by 219 runs and a place in the Under 19’s final where they will play against Hampshire at Nevil Road in Bristol starting on Sunday.Somerset player James Hildreth was clearly delighted with the result and told me: “It’s a real thrill to get to the final, and everybody is very pleased with the result, and looking forward to playing against Hampshire on Sunday.”

Hopes finishes off Tigers at Gabba

BRISBANE, Oct 27 AAP – Queensland all-rounder James Hopes continued his impressive one-day record as the Bulls reined in Tasmania’s batsmen in the ING Cup cricket clash at the Gabba today.Tasmania was bowled out for 174 in the 46th over, with Hopes claiming three wickets from his final five deliveries to finish with 4-34 from 8.5 overs.Hopes was on a hat-trick after dismissing Damien Wright (four) and Xavier Doherty with successive balls and he bowled Adam Griffith for a duck three balls later.The 24-year-old has been a handy addition to the Bulls’ one-day team, taking 16 wickets in last season’s competition.Zimbabwe-raised quick Scott Brant (3-35) started the rot for Tasmania when he claimed the key wicket of Australian all-rounder Shane Watson (eight), who was brilliantly caught by wicketkeeper Wade Seccombe.With opening batsman Michael DiVenuto (five) also failing, the Tigers lacked the top-order spark they needed after being sent in to bat in overcast conditions.Captain Jamie Cox revived the Tigers with an efficient knock of 78 from 91 balls, joining Sean Clingeleffer (24 from 51) in a 66-run stand for the seventh wicket.But Cox’s dismissal to Hopes, swatting a running catch for Nathan Hauritz at long off, left the Tigers in trouble.”We have a history of falling about 20 runs short so, with five guys in the shed and 10 overs left, we decided to have a go,” Cox said.”We did fight pretty hard but, with the lights on and the white ball to face, conditions were pretty difficult.”Off-spinner Hauritz (1-33 from seven overs) made a sound return in his first match in almost two months.Hauritz had been away with the Australian Test and one-day squads in Kenya, Sri Lanka and Sharjah and only returned to Brisbane on Friday morning.

Young Gladiators Day Saturday 1st June 2002

Gloucestershire County Cricket Club V Worcestershire County Cricket ClubFrizzell County ChampionshipFriday 31 May to Monday 3 JuneFREE ENTRANCE TO ALL UNDER 16S WHEN ACCOMPANIED BY AN ADULTYOUNG GLADIATORS DAY – SATURDAY 1ST JUNE 2002An opportunity for all Young Gladiators to meet the players.The players will be signing autographs and be available to pass on tips toYoung Gladiators on Saturday 1st June in the Boundary Edge Marquee. The players will be available throughout the day provided the match allows.

India were favourites, says Hussain

Nasser Hussain believes England have learned from Sachin Tendulkar’s example after he scored a century in the washed-out NatWest match between England and India at Chester-le-Street.India’s master batsman hit an unbeaten 105 and shared a record fourth-wicket stand of 169 with Rahul Dravid (82) to help his team post an impressive 285 for four after a shaky start.”We really learned how to go about a one-day innings and the little mastershowed us that,” Hussain said. “I had no complaints about our bowling or fielding because we were right in it at about 40 overs and then he just took the game away from us.””We’re very happy with what we did the other night, but we have to get our thinking caps on and work out how we’re going to beat India, both in the one-dayers and Test matches, and how we’re going to get through this batting line-up.”I would say that India were favourites when it ended because when a side gets 280, you’re up against it. We do have a long batting line-up and we were in a similar position to what they were, and it would have taken two special innings similar to what they produced.”Hussain also praised the umpires for doing all they could to contrive a re-start.”I think the two umpires played it pretty well,” he said. “They tried to get us back on twice, but in the end the rain just set in.”Meanwhile Tendulkar was delighted after finally reaching a hundred in a one-dayer against England.”It has been quite some time coming,” Tendulkar said. “The first one-dayer I played against England was back in 1990. I have got close before but somehow missed out. It is quite good that I have been able to achieve it now.”

Times of their lives for Tigers' two-of-a-kind

One bats at the top of the order; the other at the bottom. They’re both tall and they’re both right handers. They were both born in Queensland, both made their first-class debuts in Western Australia, and both are now at the heart of a stunning Tasmanian revival aimed at landing their adopted state its maiden first-class crown.It could be added that they were both born in April 1976 – in the very same week, in fact. Also that both of them enjoyed glittering underage careers, one captaining his state and the other even being chosen for two national teams.And that now, having risen from relative obscurity in the intervening years, they have both become key figures in the Tigers’ successful quest to head off Western Australia and appear in a Pura Cup Final this week in Queensland.But that would probably be over-emphasising the point that the careers of Michael Dighton and Shane Jurgensen are enjoying a remarkable symmetry at the moment.”We’d sort of been in the same situation for a while in the lead-up to this year in that we hadn’t been able to string any length of first-class games together,” says Dighton.”And this season again, things have been very similar for us. When we started off, we weren’t in the team. But we’ve both worked hard and worked our way in there.”Shane’s done really well ever since coming in. It’s been a great credit to him: he’s been very committed and he’s bowling the best I’ve ever seen him bowl – having played against him at underage level and in Perth grade cricket as well.”He’s in very good control of his game at the moment, he’s enjoying himself, and he’s doing really well. He’s got the hard job: he’s the one who’s got to consistently run in and bowl in the right areas all day and he’s done his job magnificently.”Though Jurgensen hit the national headlines last week when a hat-trick against New South Wales made him only the second Tasmanian bowler in history to perform the feat, both have also largely been unsung heroes this summer.Dighton’s blend of elegant strokeplay and patient defence has yielded a run of form that, by no coincidence, has snowballed with the team’s surge as a whole over recent months. And, where he has added steel to an uncharacteristically-labouring Tasmanian top order, Jurgensen has helped offer backbone to a rejuvenated pace attack.For a team that had been struggling to garner momentum prior to Christmas, their twin contributions have been manna from heaven.”I guess I wouldn’t have dreamed of it turning out the way it has done. It’s all fallen into place: I’m very comfortable here and I’ve settled in very well,” adds Dighton of the background to scores of 65, 124, 4, 76 and 84 in Tasmania’s four most important matches of the summer.”I had a bit of a point to prove to everyone in WA – that I thought I could play at this level – and it’s all worked out really well.”Though Jurgensen hasn’t been completely left in the shade when it comes to showcasing batting talents either. Part of the best lower order in the competition this season, he’s established himself as interstate cricket’s most dependable number eleven with a tally of 111 runs at the average of 22.20.He also featured in a phase of play widely identified as the turning point of Tasmania’s entire season: a rollicking 91-minute, 114-run last wicket partnership with David Saker that inspired their team to an innings win in a low-scoring match with Queensland in January.”A lot of belief came out of that hour and a half: a belief that, no matter what the situation, we can pull ourselves out of it,” remarks Jurgensen.”Basically, we’ve got 12 blokes who just want to have a real crack at playing first-class cricket. And 12 guys just having a ‘red hot dip’ for each other. We’re all about the same age; we’re all crazy; and we have a lot of fun together. We respect the opportunity that we’ve been given.”I still think we’re maybe not getting quite the respect we deserve from some sections of the public and the media. Which is probably good in a way – because it means there hasn’t been too much pressure on us.”The whole experience of coming to Tasmania has been one to savour,” he comments of a season that has yielded immeasurable satisfaction. As well as the small matter of 25 first-class wickets – the majority of them at crucial times – at an average of 21.52.”I was a bit of an early bloomer when I was playing youth cricket but the period between the under-19s and finally establishing myself in first-class cricket has been six years in the making.”And now, to add to it, we’re in a position where we can actually win something really significant.”Whatever happens in the remainder of this pair’s careers – and there are suddenly plenty of reasons to assume they will be long and distinguished – a special place in their histories has already been reserved for 2001-02. If the unthinkable happens and they are members of the first team that brings a national first-class title back to their new shores, they will also likely be afforded their own special place in many Tasmanians’ hearts.”When you first start playing cricket, you have a lot of personal goals but, all of a sudden, the most important thing is the team. Whether you’re in it or out of it, the team’s more important than anything,” says Jurgensen.”I obviously still want to do really well at an individual level but, for me, it’s moved on from that to realising that there’s now a fantastic opportunity for 12 guys to get together and do something that will mean a lot to Tasmania.””You do dream about playing in a Pura Cup Final. I wasn’t really all that close to a spot when WA played in their last few finals, and it’s remained a dream of mine ever since I’ve been a young cricketer,” observes Dighton.”I absolutely love Tasmania already; it’s a little bit quieter than Perth and that suits me a little bit more. The people have been fantastic and, as a place, it’s amazing.””All the guys in the Tasmanian squad have been fantastic to me; they’re a really good set of people and I haven’t had a problem with anyone. That’s made it easy.”And, most importantly, there’s a real good buzz about the group. We all really love each other’s company; we have fun and enjoy ourselves and it’s all turned around for us.”Tasmania’s spirit, and the close-knit connection between its players, has been contagious this season. Impossible not to discern, even from the sidelines. And, between its new team within a team, there lies an even more inextricable bond than most.

WI Fall Away

PORT-OF-SPAIN – There was drama all the way through that drained the emotions and left finger nails chewed to the quick.There was both the unexpected and the predictable and a bit of controversy to spice the ending. But the storyline on the final day of the second Test did not follow the script prescribed by the West Indies and the heroes were on the other side.Always striving to regain parity after India were sent in and compiled 262 for four on the opening day, the stoic West Indian effort finally exhausted itself just over an hour into the final session yesterday as they were dismissed for 275 in pursuit of a winning target of 313 to lose by 37 runs.An involved, colourful crowd of around 12 000, most heavily packed into the open Carib Stand, savoured every ball, willing the West Indies to an exceptional victory, but had to leave crest-fallen.They exploded at every boundary with the sound of a volcanic eruption. They booed in unison for the numerous roared Indian appeals, of which none was given.They applauded defensive blocks by the inadequate West Indian tailenders and cheered wildly even for Indian wides and no-balls.But they were also dumbfounded by the fall of their two likeliest match-winners, Brian Lara and Carl Hooper, in successive overs from the young left-arm swing bowler Asish Nehra an hour into the day and the customary collapse of the last six wickets for 38 that brought an end to an engrossing match.In the two hours, ten minutes in between, expectations were encouraged by an untroubled fifth wicket partnership of 73 between the two contrasting left-handers, Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Chris Gayle.It was the only significant West Indian resistance and, in the end, the flags fluttering highest and the faces wreathed in smiles were east, not West, Indian.They were celebrating India’s third victory in their 34 Tests since they first came to the Caribbean in 1953 and on the same Queen’s Park Oval where they gained their previous two, in 1971 and 1976.In those triumphs, their bowling heroes were the magical spinners with magical names, Prasanna, Bishen Bedi, Chandrasekhar and Venkataraghavan.This time, they decided swing and seam would be their key to success, excluding their celebrated leg-spinner Anil Kumble to accommodate three fast bowlers, Nehra, his fellow left-armer Zaheer Khan and the experienced Javagal Srinath.Villified at home, they were vindicated by the outcome.The 22-year-old Nehra, in his first match of the series, seized the initiative with the wickets of Lara in his first over and Hooper in his second after which it was obvious a West Indian victory would depend on Chanderpaul, short and slim, and Gayle, tall and powerful.They responded with level-headed play that threatened Indian captain Saurav Ganguly with a nervous breakdown but, with a low order that had managed an average of 14 runs from the last four wickets in the previous six Tests, they would have to bat to within a few runs of the target.They couldn’t manage it.The West Indies resumed 182 short of their goal at 131 for two with their fortunes seemingly dependent on the stand between Lara and Hooper.Lara was 40 at the start but it was immediately evident he was gripped by the tension of the moment.He had not managed a hundred in his eight previous Tests at the Queen’s Park Oval that has been his home ground for club and country and there was no better time to make the breakthrough.Yet his uncertainty was clear when he signalled to the usually bacchanalian "Trini Posse" Stand to mute its music even before facing a ball.He spent an uncharacteristically nervous hour adding seven when he sparred at Nehra’s fourth ball that left him with an angled bat and edged a catch to Rahul Dravid at first slip. The method of dismissal was similar to that in the first innings when Zaheer was the bowler.The Oval was as hushed as the nearby Lapayreuse Cemetery as Lara turned and headed back to the pavilion. It was to remain so for some time.Positive from the start, Hooper stroked three boundaries in moving from one to 22 but, in Nehra’s next over, was out of position for a pull shot, tugging the ball from outside low off-stump low to Shiv Sunder Das at mid-wicket.The Indians whopped with joy at their crucial successes that left the West Indies 164 for four with Chanderpaul and Gayle the last specialist batsmen to be followed by the shaky wicket-keeper Junior Murray and the four negligible fast bowlers.Chanderpaul, as aggressive from the start as he was in his first Test 140 at Bourda, and Gayle, 21 as he resumed his innings interrupted by forearm cramp the previous day, saw the West Indies through to lunch at 210 for four.The mood around the ground was altogether more optimistic as the pair batted through nine overs with the second new ball on resumption without alarm.Ganguly, by now chewing on his fingers and conversing with his bowlers after almost every ball, replaced Nehra with the less menacing Zaheer.The crowd’s roar after he sent his first ball so far outside Chanderpaul’s off-stump it was signalled wide immediately changed to shocked quiet when Gayle carelessly slapped the next delivery straight and chest-height to cover.The 22-year-old Jamaican batted with astute judgement for 176 balls all told for his 52, quick to put away the loose balls as his eight fours indicated. But his demise set off the almost inevitable after-shocks.Junior Murray, all pent-up nerves after the ducks in his previous two innings, got an ironic cheer when he got off the mark but promptly and ridiculously ran himself out – probably right out of the team.He charged down the pitch as Srinath’s delivery deflected fine on the leg-side and, as Chanderpaul turned him back, was well short on wicket-keeper Ajay Ratra’s return to Sunder Das by the stumps.Next ball, Dillon’s middle stump received an awful crack as he played back and the match was as good as over.Marlon Black spent 24 balls as Chanderpaul’s partner, then gloved Srinath’s lifter to short-leg, Adam Sanford’s ambitious drive at Nehra took leg-stump by way of inside edge in the over after tea and, after 55 minutes and 29 balls of solid forward defence, Cameron Cuffy steered Zaheer to gully to complete India’s victory.Chanderpaul remained until the end, unbeaten 67 after four and a half hours and 162 balls of solid resistance. But for a baffling decision on the television replay by third umpire, Eddie Nicholls, he, not Cuffy, would have been the last wicket and India would have won by 43 runs, not 37.Standing umpire Asoka deSilva sought Nicholls, verdict on whether Chanderpaul’s edge off Srinath was a bump-ball catch to the diving wicket-keeper Ratra. The Indians were aghast when the green light flashed to keep Chanderpaul in for several replays indicated an authentic dismissal.In the end, it was immaterial but it was a final exclamation mark to the generally ordinary standard of umpiring in the match.

Kanitkar's century in vain as Railways take lead

Riding on a five wicket haul by Harvinder Singh, Railways took ahealthy 123-run first innings lead over hosts Maharashtra on the thirdday of the Ranji Trophy pre-quarter-final match at the Pune Clubground on Monday.Replying to the visitors’ total of 431, Maharashtra were bowled outfor 308 in 109.4 overs. Skipper Hrishikesh Kanitkar top scored with124. At stumps Railways in their second innings were 99/2 with SanjayBangar (42) and KS Parida (0) at the crease.The hosts resumed at 101/3. The overnight batsmen Kanitkar (43) andKaushik Aphale (3) added 72 runs for the fourth wicket off 37 overs.With both batsmen making merry, skipper Abhay Sharma turned toallrounder Sanjay Bangar who turned the tide in favour of Railwayswith a spectacular show of outswing bowling in the 71st over. First,he trapped Kaushik Aphale (37) leg before with the first ball and thencastled Mandar Sane (0) and wicketkeeper Sanjay Kondalkar (0) with thefifth and sixth balls. All three wickets fell with the score on 161.The sudden triple setback pushed Kanitkar into the defence mode as hedropped anchor at one end. The lower order played well around thesouthpaw helping in valuable partnerships. Satyen Lande (7) aided theskipper in adding 42 runs for the seventh wicket. All rounder IqbalSiddiqui (38) also gave good support in putting on 38 runs for theninth wicket. Kanitkar (124) battled hard before he was ninth out. Hefaced 240 deliveries with a dozen boundaries in his face savingcentury.Harvinder Singh cleaned out the Maharshtra top order bagging 5/95. Hewas well supported by Sanjay Bangar (3/58).In the second essay, Railways began with openers Sanjay Bangar(43 not out) and Amit Pagnis (13) playing with a mixture of balancedattack and defence. The openers raced away to 34 runs off six overs.Kanitkar then handed the ball to the experienced Mandar Sane and theleggie obliged picking up the prolific Pagnis in his second over.Siddiqui picked up the explosive T Singh (42) in the last ten minutesof play. Singh played 23 deliveries smashing six of them to the fenceand two over the top.

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