Devonian opening partnership looking likely for the Cidermen

With the new cricket season fast approaching it is looking increasingly likely that the Somerset opening partnership will be Peter Bowler and Matt Wood.Bowler who turns forty in July is the senior professional on the staff, having previously had spells with both Derbyshire and Leicestershire before moving west in 1995, whilst Wood is just twenty two and the youngest member of the first team.Both players have a very strong association with the West Country because they were both born in Devon.Matt Wood was born in Exeter and is well known in Devon cricketing circles, having played for Exmouth Cricket Club where his father Jim Wood is chairman, and Devon County Cricket Club. Peter Bowler was also born in the county at Plymouth, where his father was posted in the Australian Navy, so both players are Devonians.Last season Jamie Cox and Matt Wood were the championship openers for Somerset, but with the Tasmanian announcing that he wants to drop down the order in his final season with the county, Peter Bowler is relishing the opportunity of going back to opening.He told me: " I may be in my fortieth year but I am fitter than ever and I am still hungry for the game. If anything I am even more enthusiastic about the game, and the longer that I play the more I enjoy it .I’m delighted to be back at the top of the order opening the innings again because I think that is where I play my best cricket, going out and facing the new ball."What did he think about opening the innings with a player who was eighteen years his junior. He told me: "I want to finish my career at the top and I think that Wood and Bowler will be a very successful opening partnership for the club. Matt is a very talented young player, and will continue to improve. I expect him to score more centuries in his career than I have and I think that he is someone who could well be looking at an Academy place next winter, I rate him very highly indeed."Matt Wood told me: "I like batting with Peter Bowler. We shared partnerships against Kent both at Canterbury and here at Taunton, when I made my big score and he was a great help with advice and encouragement out in the middle. He has also helped me a great deal technically with my game so I am delighted at the prospect of opening for Somerset with him."Commenting on the prospect of having two Devon born players opening the innings for Somerset, chief executive Peter Anderson said: "Having emigrated to the West Country in 1959 and married locally in Devon I regard myself as a Devonian, although some of the locals in Beer would question that!"He continued: " I know the local cricket scene well, and of course it’s a great fillip for Devon cricket to dine out on the possible Bowler and Wood opening partnership, but it is rather a strange partnership. Mr `Tough Guy’, Peter Bowler who you would always want in your team is totally different from Matt Wood who says nothing but lets his talent do the talking. If they are successful I will win in two ways because I support two teams- Somerset and Devon."

Acfield resigns as Essex chairman

David Acfield has announced his resignation as Chairman of Essex County Cricket Club. David, who is 54, played for the Club between 1966 and 1986 and succeeded Doug Insole as the Club’s chairman in 1993. David has been having increasing difficulty juggling his business and cricketing commitments, and feels the time is right to hand the future direction of the Club over to another.On the announcement of his departure, David Acfield commented: “In the present circumstances it is in the best interest of the Club for someone else to take over the reins. The role of chairman in the modern game has become increasingly time consuming, and for many years I have tried to balance the conflicting demands of my various responsibilities in cricket, whilst holding down a full-time job. Unfortunately the situation has become impossible to sustain.”He continued: “After 35 years involvement with Essex it will be a huge wrench but I will, of course, be available to help the Club in any less demanding role. I would urge all of our members and supporters to get behind the players and committee at this difficult time, so that the Club can prosper once again.”David Acfield will remain on the ECB Management Board, and will continue with his committee responsibilities at both the MCC and ICC.On hearing the news of David’s resignation, Club President Doug Insole said: “David has made a huge contribution to Essex cricket in both playing and administrative capacities. He was an integral part of the great team of the 1980s, and since his retirement has worked tirelessly to further the Club’s cause off the field. We fully respect his decision, but sincerely hope that this will not be the end of David’s involvement with the Club.”The Essex Executive committee will meet in the near future to appoint David Acfield’s successor.David EastChief Executive

A move to Liverpool would certainly give England man the platform to grow into a top star

Don’t worry Liverpool fans, we’ve got some more news in the Transfer Tavern for you. 

After his dreadful display in the Champions League final, it’s safe to say that Loris Karius’ career at Liverpool might just be over. Ever since he joined the club, the German goalkeeper has never cemented himself in the Liverpool side. With that said, following Stoke’s relegation to the Championship, the Merseyside club should target, Jack Butland.

If Liverpool are to win a title this year, Jurgen Klopp must sign a top-class goalkeeper. Loris Karius has had his chance but continually failed to come up with the goods, and as for Simon Mignolet, if he’s second to Karius, then that tells you what Klopp thinks of him.

Although he’s second to Jordan Pickford for England, Jack Butland still remains one of the bets goalkeeping talents in the country.

Butland left Birmingham City’s academy for £3.5 million in 2013 and ever since he has gone to become one of Stoke’s best players.

Valued at £19.8 million by Transfermarkt, the England goalkeeper could well go for even less due to Stoke’s relegation. However, new boss Gary Rowett has confirmed that he will speak to the goalkeeper, whom he is very keen to keep at the club.

“Because Jack is a terrific goalkeeper and obviously with England at the moment everyone will speculate that because you’ve been relegated, of course he’s going to have to go, he’s going to want to go.”

“But the reality is – you’ve seen it with Joe Allen and others – people want to be at this club.”

He’s the ideal candidate to mind the nets at Anfield for years to come. A stoic presence between the sticks, Butland’s shot-stopping abilities and high concentrations levels would stand him in good stead in a team who largely dominate games, not giving him all that much to do until the inevitable defensive lapse.

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Clearly, he’s got a long way to go to wrestle the England No.1 jersey from Pickford, though a move to Liverpool could give him the platform to do exactly that.

Thoughts?

Sign by Sunday or stay out, IPL tells Australians

Australia’s retired players might get the go-ahead from Cricket Australia, but will a refusal for the rest lead to a revolt? © Getty Images
 

Australia’s cricketers have been issued an ultimatum by the Indian Premier League (IPL) – sign up by the Sunday deadline or stay out for three years. And in a move that might undermine Cricket Australia’s authority, Lalit Modi, the IPL chairman and commissioner, has indicated Australian players can take part in the tournament without “no objection certificates” from Cricket Australia, contrary to an earlier guideline that players needed permission from their respective national boards.”They [the players] are running out of time,” Modi told the . “I am not the type that won’t follow through with what I say: if the contracts are not signed and returned by Sunday the Australian players will not be allowed to take part in the IPL for three years. We are taking a list to owners on Monday.”Each franchise has a US$5 million cap for its team, and the contracts are for three years, so when they bid for players at the auction they will use up all of their cap – there will be no money to buy other players later. We will gladly take the Australian players without no objection certificates, we don’t want to go down that path but if we have to, we will.”The move comes on the heels of a tussle between the Indian board-run IPL and Cricket Australia over corporate issues. Cricket Australia is reluctant to let its contracted players appear for teams having competing sponsors to its own.Modi has stated continually that Cricket Australia’s demands over sponsor protection can’t be met, and this latest statement could increase the rift. A few Australian players such as Ricky Ponting and Andrew Symonds have also voiced their disappointment over Cricket Australia’s interference.With big money at stake, the tournament is too tempting for players to ignore, and many believe it could lead to an exodus. ”The cricket world is going to have to respond to the IPL given its magnitude,” the IPL’s Australian-based agent Neil Maxwell told the . ”I know [Australian Cricketers’ Association chief executive] Paul Marsh made the logical suggestion that ultimately there needs to be a six-week window carved out of the playing itinerary, the Future Tours Programme.”Otherwise players will be leaving. Players will be retiring. Unfortunately at the moment we have a conflict. If that is taken out, there won’t be conflict.” Australia’s international schedule clashes with the IPL, but the players might be free if the tour to Pakistan doesn’t happen.

Woolmer planned book on Pak experience

‘Rumours that Bob Woolmer was murdered because he was harbouring information on match-fixing or an association with corrupt bookmakers can be dismissed unequivocally,’ wrote Ivo Tenant, the author of his autobiography © Getty Images

Bob Woolmer had planned to write about his experiences as coach of Pakistan as part of a book based on his coaching experiences around the world. He had asked several writers to collaborate, including Ivo Tennant, co-author of Woolmer’s original autobiography, and Osman Samiuddin, Pakistan editor, cricinfo.com.Woolmer made Samiuddin the offer in an email on September 18 last yearand revealed that he only planned to write it after the World Cup. “I amgoing to write a book on my tenure as Pakistan coach,” Woolmer wrote toSamiuddin, “and wanted [a Pakistan collaborator – hopefully yourself] also an SA and English one as well so that I can cover probably one ofthe more interesting periods of my cricket career.”I shall only start after the World Cup but I need to show a lot of different perspectives and the culture correctly which is where I had hoped you would come in. I have not approached a publisher yet so not sure what is in it for anyone at the moment but I believe regardless of the money the story is worth telling [and] has to be told and in the correct way. I am not a name and shame guy just the honest facts. Let the puntermake up his mind etc. No hurry, but hoped you might be interested.”There has been fierce speculation surrounding the book, in particular that it was to reveal details of match-fixing. Tennant, who had already started working on the book, has denied the possibility, whereas Samiuddin had not discussed details. “We never discussed any specifics or details really,” Samiuddin said. “Pakistan was going through some controversies at the time with the Oval Test and the doping crisis and he always joked it was great material for the book.”Tennant, writing in , also rubbished the speculation. “Rumours that Bob Woolmer was murdered because he was harbouring information on match-fixing or an association with corrupt bookmakers can be dismissed unequivocally,” Tennant wrote.”As the co-author of his autobiography and its planned sequel, for which a publisher had still to be found, I can state that he had no intention of writing or publicising any such detail in either this or his book on coaching and sports science, which will be published in June.””He had no knowledge of Hansie Cronje’s involvement in match-fixing during his time as coach of South Africa, and, if there had been any such approach to his Pakistan players, he would have told them to report it immediately to the manager or the Board of Control”, Tennant wrote. “Doubtless he would then have informed the police himself. Above all, Woolmer was an honest man. He did not mix with dodgy individuals.”Woolmer also has another book, soon to be published and co-authored with Professor Tim Noakes, a sports scientist, on coaching titled, .According to a statement released by his family, the book pulls together all the years of experience Bob gained coaching around the world as well as his own unique cricketing philosophies. Noakes and the family have denied that the book has any details on match-fixing in it.Tragically, the final manuscript reached the West Indies the day after Bob died, the statement said.

Harris misses start of next season

Matthew Harris, the wicketkeeper for the Lions, will miss the opening match of the 2007 SuperSport Series after being found guilty of breaching the United Cricket Board code of conduct.Harris appeared before a disciplinary committee, chaired by Advocate Michael Kuper SC, at the UCB and Cricket South Africa head office in Johannesburg on Tuesday.The charges arose from incidents during the SuperSport match between the Warriors and Lions played at East London from February 23-26. Harris was charged and found guilty of contravening two clauses, one relating to showing dissent at an umpiring decision and the other of using crude or abrasive language.

Ponting aims to hit England early

Ricky Ponting: ‘There’s going to be a lot more pressure on everyone during this series just because it’s England’ © Getty Images

Ricky Ponting wants to dent England’s morale early and said the two one-day series would be crucial to gain a mental advantage ahead of the Ashes in July. Speaking ahead of the team’s departure from Brisbane, Ponting said it was crucial that the Australians dominated the one-dayers and created a few doubts in the minds of the Englishmen before the Test series.”It’s important that we get off to a good start in the one-day series,” Ponting said. “I’m not a big believer in taking momentum from a one-day series into a Test series, but if we can create some doubts in a couple of individuals’ minds then that’ll be good for us. Those guys obviously haven’t played much against Australia and I’ve heard different things that they think that could be a good thing for them.”Ponting acknowledged England’s fantastic run over the last year, but said some of their players might still have some apprehensions coming into the series. “The other thing is that they haven’t been successful against the best side in the world,” he said. “They’ll always have a few doubts in the back of their mind if they actually can compete against us.”He added that England wouldn’t gain too much out of their current two-Test series against Bangladesh. “It’s good for those guys to be playing some Test cricket at the moment but by the time we get there it’s coming towards the end of their summer, which will be a good time for us to play as well,” he said. “So they won’t take a lot out of that and we won’t take too much notice of what happens.”Ponting spoke of the hype surrounding the forthcoming series, but said the side was used to handling the pressures. “If our batsmen play as well as we can that’s going to be the key for us,” he said. “It’s up to us. There’s going to be a lot more pressure on everyone during this series just because it’s England. There’s no doubt about that, but the great thing about it from our side is that there’s been expectations on this team for five or six years. We go into every single series as favourite and this one’s going to be no different.”John Buchanan, the Australia coach, believed the offerings from the players taking part in the English County Championship – such as Shane Warne and Simon Katich – could prove crucial. “In terms of tactically preparing, and certainly preparing against some players that we may not have come up against regularly then the input of Shane or Simon or Michael Hussey, who have been over there, is always good,” he said. “Any little bit of information we can get is always valuable.”Australia begin their tour with a one-off Twenty20 match on June 13 before squaring off against England and Bangladesh in a triangular series. They play England three more times after that series in the lead-up to the opening Test at Lord’s that begins on July 21.

Bernard rescues turgid Jamaica

Jamiaca 215 for 6 (Bernard 69*) v Windward Islands
ScorecardDavid Bernard’s dogged unbeaten 69 dug Jamaica out of trouble on the first day of their Carib Beer Series semi-final against the Windward Islands at the Alpart Sports Club. Bernard came in with Jamaica struggling on 90 for 4 – they had been 88 for 1 – and his fourth fifty of the season helped them to 215 for 6 at the close.Jamaica were put into bat and lost a creasebound Chris Gayle to the second ball of the day, caught behind by Lindon James off Fernix Thomas. Maurice Kepple (39) and Donovan Pagon (45) added 88 for the second wicket in 42 overs before the mid-afternoon collapse in which three wickets fell in eight minutes.Kepple fell to a top-edged sweep off Shane Shillingford, in the next over Pagon chased a wide delivery from Deighton Butler and James took a tumbling catch low to his right. Tamar Lambert’s dismissal in the following over was unforgivable, lofting Shillingford to Butler at backward square-leg where he had been positioned moments earlier for just that shot.Although Bernard and Keith Hibbert steadied the ship until tea, Hibbert fell soon after the restart, bottom-edging Butler to give James his third catch of the innings (130 for 5). Carlton Baugh almost immediately had two reprieves, firstly bowled by a Rawl Lewis no-ball, and then dropped at second slip by Darren Sammy.Bernard, unflustered, kept his end ticking over and was never troubled in his three-hour stay at the wicket. He reached his fifty with a drive off the back foot, the best shot of an innings punctuated with some elegant stokes and immaculate footwork.Baugh, meanwhile, departed thanks to a poor call from him and a direct hit from Butler (170 for 6) but Bernard and Nehemiah Perry, a surprise inclusion in the side, kept the Windwards at bay until the close.

Biography: Craig Wishart

FULL NAME: Craig Brian Wishart
BORN: 9 January 1974, Harare
MAJOR TEAMS: Zimbabwe (since 1995/96), Mashonaland Under-24 (1993/94-1995/96), Mashonaland (1996/97-1998/99); Midlands (2000/01 to date).
Present club team: Alexandra
KNOWN AS: Craig Wishart. Nickname `Lionel’, `Wish’.
BATTING STYLE: Right Hand Bat
BOWLING STYLE: Right Arm Off-Breaks (changed from Medium Pace)
OCCUPATION: Professional Cricketer
FIRST-CLASS DEBUT: Zimbabwe B v Kent, at Old Hararians Sports Club, 30March 1993
TEST DEBUT: Inaugural Test v South Africa, at Harare Sports Club,1994/95
ODI DEBUT: 26 August 1996, v Australia, at Colombo (Singer WorldSeries)
BIOGRAPHY (revised January 2003)Craig Wishart was for several years one of Zimbabwe’s most promising young batsmen. Early in his career he was earmarked as a player for the future, but so far he has rarely lived up to his full potential. The fact that he has always been regarded as no more than a fringe player for the national side has also been a considerable handicap to a player who suffers from nerves and needs encouragement.Craig’s father was a well-known local cricketer who played much club and Logan Cup cricket, and also represented Rhodesia B during the early seventies, all in pre-first-class days. So Craig grew up with the game, and first played formal cricket during the Eagles holiday programme, run by George Goodwin, father of Murray, at the age of five. He was one of the youngest of a group containing players several years his senior, but his talent stood out. George Goodwin was also a family friend who invited Craig round to his house to play with his own sons, and gave him most of his early coaching. Craig looked the part of a batsman right from the start, and at the age of seven was batting Number Four for the Groombridge School colts team (consisting mainly of ten-year-olds) and making useful scores. He was always big for his age, and even then had the power and skill to outclass most of his seniors.The following year he moved to St John’s Preparatory School and was a leading light in a very strong team. He was well known for his consistently heavy scoring, but he remembers few details apart from taking all ten wickets in an innings with his `filthy little seamers’ in a match against Alfred Beit School in Harare; he cannot remember when he scored his first century. In his final year he was selected for the Partridges, the national primary schools team.Like so many other leading Zimbabwean players, his high-school years were spent at Falcon College, near Esigodeni. He was selected for the school first team when still in Form Three, played for the Fawns, the national Under-15 team, and then for Zimbabwe Schools in 1991. At about this time he made his highest score in any cricket to date, 198 not out against the Welsh school Darfed, out in Zimbabwe on tour.He was fortunate to be developing at the time when Zimbabwe cricket was just entering the Test arena and beginning to expand in other directions. This opened up new opportunities for young players like Craig, and he had the benefit of going on tours with the national Under-19 team to Denmark and Cape Town. Andy Pycroft was coach, and Craig particularly acknowledges all that he learnt from him. He produced a few good fifties, but already people were saying that he should be scoring more heavily.In club cricket, he played first for Harare Sports Club, and then moved to Alexandra Sports Club, known universally as Alex. He made his first-class debut at the close of the 1992/93 season, against the touring Kent county side, and impressed by making the top score of 65 in the first innings, off exactly 100 balls, showing his ability to hit the ball hard with 8 fours and 3 sixes.The following two seasons were busy ones for Craig, as the selectors had noted him as one to be encouraged and given all possible experience, and Craig found himself included in almost every team short of international level – Logan Cup for Mashonaland Under-24s, the Zimbabwe Board XI and most of the select teams to play the various tourists. He took a long time to find his feet. In 1993/94 he was usually out before reaching double figures, although he scored two good fifties; the following season he overcame that problem so well that only twice in 20 innings did he fail to reach 10, but only three times did he pass 50. He feels that at this stage he had not learnt to build an innings and tended to lose concentration or become impatient, while others suspect that he also tends to lack belief in his own outstanding ability. He can be very nervous at the start of an innings, but is learning to fight through that and is making fewer single-figure scores.Craig had now done enough to convince the selectors that he was ready for Test cricket, although unusually for a batsman he made his Test debut before he had scored a first-class century. He now felt he was really part of first-class cricket, although scores of 24 and 13 added to his reputation for failing to build on solid starts. He held out with determination for a while against Allan Donald, whom he rates as being in a class of his own as the best individual bowler he had faced at that stage.Craig has yet to establish himself fully in Test cricket; in his first six Tests his only score of substance was a praiseworthy 51 in Sri Lanka. Generally, though, he struggled against the Sri Lankan spinners on their home pitches, and even more so in Pakistan against Wasim and Waqar, whom he rates almost as highly as Donald. Waqar gave him particular problems and frequently trapped him lbw, failing to move his feet to swinging yorkers. He also recorded his first century in first-class cricket at last, in a Logan Cup match against Matabeleland in Bulawayo.Craig’s main aim now was to earn a regular Test place, and he was keen enough not to mind what place this was. After the England tour, when he was unable to gain selection, it became clear that the main vacancy in the Zimbabwean batting line-up was that of opening batsman, with Mark Dekker suffering a confidence crisis and Stuart Carlisle displaying a back-foot technical weakness. So Craig, after discussions with selector Andy Pycroft, was drafted in to open the innings. He is better suited to the middle order, but he was quite prepared to open the batting, and accepted that in this position there will be times he will score runs and times he will fail.He preferred opening in some ways, as it gave him less time to sit and wait and anticipate his innings. He changed his emphasis while batting, concentrating on taking the shine off the new ball and building a long innings instead of simply seeking to dominate. Now, however, after three seasons in that role, he decided to revert to the middle order. He says very definitely, "I do not like opening the batting and I do not think I’m an opening batsman either. I prefer the middle order. It gives me more time, the ball’s a little older and that’s where I prefer to bat."The 1996/97 season, Craig felt, was a very up-and-down one for him and his main need was to improve his shot selection, especially against the new ball. In one-day matches Andy Waller partnered Grant Flower for most of the season, but he retired after the triangular tournament in South Africa, opening the way for Craig to take his place in Sharjah. He found a great difference in his situation; batting was easier with the old ball, but on the other hand in the middle order it was harder to build an innings because of pressure of time. He would try to rush his innings more in this situation and hit the ball too much in the air. At this time, though, he was still finding his way, and four innings brought only 66 runs.During the off-season in 1997, Craig was very much at a loose end, as his contract with the Zimbabwe Cricket Union was at that time effective for only six months of the year. During the 1997/98 season he received more opportunities at international level but was still unable to make the most of them. He scored three forties in one-day cricket, two of them opening the batting, but realised that this was not good enough and he was still yielding to a tendency to throw his wicket away. He admitted to himself that he was not yet mentally tough enough, and did a lot of work with Andy Flower in the nets, talking with him and reading books he recommended. As a result he found himself fitter; he put more emphasis on training during the winter and early in the season and found himself tiring less quickly at the crease.Craig was one of the leading candidates to open the batting with Grant Flower against New Zealand at the start of the 1997/98 season. He scored a fine century in the opening Logan Cup match, but did not show consistency, and instead the place went to Gavin Rennie, who made it his own. He did not get an international match against the New Zealanders, but was selected for the tour to Kenya. Batting at number six or seven against weak opposition, his opportunities were limited, but some powerful hitting in partnership with Alistair Campbell brought victory in a tight, rain-affected finish against Kenya.Then came the disastrous tours to Sri Lanka and New Zealand. Craig lost his Test place after four failures in Sri Lanka, batting between numbers six to eight and being out three times cheaply to Muralitharan. On the other hand he regained his place as opener in the one-day team, beginning with a fine 45 against Sri Lanka and then enjoying mixed success in New Zealand. Back in Zimbabwe to face Pakistan, he lost his place there as well, as Alistair Campbell decided to open himself, and it looked almost back to square one.1998/99 therefore looked like a crucial season for Craig. He had a stroke of luck when Grant Flower broke a finger before the brief home series by India, leaving a vacancy for an opening batsman. Craig played in the first two one-day internationals with little success at number six while Trevor Madondo partnered Campbell; when Madondo failed, he was promoted to open again. He seized his chance with both hands.In the third match he opened with Campbell and stood firm despite losing his partner in the first over. He became rather bogged down in the twenties and, in desperation, played a couple of rash strokes. He got away with them, settled down and never looked back. The result was a fine 102, a rare century for Zimbabwe in a limited-overs match. Opening in the Test with Gavin Rennie, he played a vital role in Zimbabwe’s eventual victory with innings of 21 and 63, his Test highest now, in opening stands of 42 and 138. It should have been enough to ensure his place for a long time to come.Unfortunately for him, the return of Flower presented the selectors with a problem, and as the stand-in Craig had to yield his place to others again. He found himself back at six or seven in the order, going in with only ten or twelve overs left, scoring useful runs but getting himself out trying to force the pace because he had had no time to settle in. He did not do too badly in Sharjah, but was disappointed with the one-day series in Pakistan. Back at number seven in the Test team, he did little better, although his 28 with Zimbabwe’s second-best score in the Second Test. As a result he lost his place again, and also missed out on the World Cup.Craig has had some disappointing treatment from the selectors, and perhaps paid a heavy price for his inconsistency of the past. With several more established players in the side and promising youngsters trying to force their way in, his career was still uncertain and unfulfilled. He faced extra pressure every time he batted in the knowledge that his place was insecure and he was liable to lose it unless he struck oil immediately and continued to score heavily for so long that it became impossible to drop him.His situation became more difficult at the start of the 1999/2000 season with a first-ball dismissal at number three in the Singapore tournament, following which he was left out of the team for the next match, and then a long layoff from the game with a knee injury. Trevor Gripper and Trevor Madondo were enjoying success in his absence in the Test and one-day teams respectively, and it was clear that it would be very difficult for him to regain his place in the team. And then he had to face the pressure of knowing that his place is only as secure as his last innings.In and out of the one-day side, he passed 20 only once in nine matches that season. He played in the final Test match against Sri Lanka, opened with Grant Flower and failed in conditions favouring the seamers. He did go to West Indies, but was not selected for the Tests. In one-day matches he hit 45 against Pakistan but failed twice, shuttling between two and seven in the order.He thus lost his place in the team to tour England, but did go to Sri Lanka again, this time with the Zimbabwe A team. A superb century in the second unofficial Test was his only success, but without it he might have missed selection to England for the triangular tournament there that also included West Indies. He took a century off British Universities in a warm-up match and opened in the first two tournament matches without success. Then he injured a leg and was never again in the running as Guy Whittall took over the opening berth.His in-and-out selections continued against the New Zealand tourists at the start of 2000/01. He, along with his team-mates, believed he had been selected for the middle order in the First Test. On the morning of the match, though, he was told he was twelfth man, and the whole team believed that outside interference had insisted on David Mutendera playing instead. Guy Whittall was so incensed at this that he withdrew from the team on a matter of principle, although the Zimbabwe Cricket Union argued that there was merely a misunderstanding: the original list had not stated the twelfth man, as the players believed, and it had been decided to play an extra bowler instead of Craig. With the withdrawal of Whittall, Craig was back in the side, but had to be persuaded to play as he felt so aggrieved at the situation. Unsurprisingly, he failed. He also failed in the first one-day international, opening the batting, and was dropped for Doug Marillier, who was an instant success.So it was back to the Zimbabwe Board XI for Craig, and with something to prove he scored a fine century at number four against Northerns. He is still of course willing to open for the national side if required. "But on preference I’d rather not do it," he says. "I believe I’m a better middle-order player. I tend not to move my feet early on. When the ball’s a little bit older you can get away with it, and then once I’m in I try and make it count."But every time that it looked as if he had been forgotten, the selectors suddenly seemed to remember him again. Although still living in Harare, he signed for Midlands in the Logan Cup competition for 2000/01, and in his second match hit a dynamic 151 against Matabeleland. An impressive 68 against the Indian tourists in Mutare stayed in the selectors’ minds, and he was brought back to play in the one-day triangular tournament against India and West Indies in the winter of 2001.In his two matches he scored 46 and 71 at vital times, and this won him back his place in the two Tests against West Indies. He scored 36, 4 and 8, a combination likely to ensure that the selectors would forget about him again in a hurry. But in the second innings of the Harare Test, with Zimbabwe batting again 216 behind, he came in to bat at 118 for two. Batting as if without pressure, despite both the team’s and his personal situations, he dominated a 169-run partnership with Hamilton Masakadza, running to 93 off 178 balls and looking set for a maiden Test century. Then came a tragic aberration as he cut a ball, expecting a boundary, and was somehow caught in mid-pitch as the return came in, to be run out.He failed against South Africa, but did not miss out as Zimbabwe played in Bangladesh for the first time. In the First Test he scored 94, only to be run out again in an incident he says was as bad as the one against West Indies. But in the Second Test, at Chittagong, he made no mistake. His first Test century, 114, came off 143 balls.Again, though, it was the same old story. Along with most others, he had a bad tour of Sri Lanka against Muralitharan; once again he lost his Test and one-day place for the tour to India. An injury cost him the start of the 2002/03 season, but he did score a Logan Cup century and returned to the national one-day team against Kenya. Against weak opposition, though, his only chance was an innings of 20 not out.Rather surprisingly, considering the vagaries of the selectors, he was selected in the World Cup fifteen, which he had missed in 1999. The selectors dropped Alistair Campbell and wanted Craig to open again, although it was some time since he had done so. He had some practice for Midlands in the new inter-provincial one-day tournament and for Zimbabwe A in their brief three-match series against South Africa A, generally making a good start, only to get out soon after reaching double figures. However, a seventy in the final match against South Africa A and a century against Mashonaland should enable him the start the World Cup with some confidence – in himself, if not in the selectors.One of Craig’s best innings was his 53 in his second official one-day international, against India during the Singer World Series in Sri Lanka in 1996/97, when he came in at a vital time and shared in a fine partnership with Andy Flower. He also feels justifiable pride in his fifty in the Test in Sri Lanka on a viciously turning pitch, when he successfully batted with application over a long period of time. However, that innings was spoilt for him by the timing and manner of his dismissal, when he lobbed an easy catch to mid-on and blames this error for Zimbabwe’s failure to avoid the follow-on.Craig also developed briefly as an `occasional’ bowler in first-class cricket, still bowling seamers and taking useful wickets at times. In 1994/95 he startled everybody, not least himself, by taking nine wickets in a Logan Cup match against Matabeleland, which shows that the potential for better things is there. After experiencing frequent shin soreness, though, he has changed to bowling off-breaks, although at present he feels it is wise to concentrate on his batting and has done less bowling recently.Craig names Dave Houghton as his cricket mentor and role model, and particularly admires the way he so often comes up with the goods when under pressure, admitting that he still tends to get too hyped-up himself in pressure situations. Craig looks to mould himself on Houghton and learn from the way he occupies the crease and handles the bowlers. He also finds Andy Flower very helpful and willing to give him useful tips.Craig used to play rugby and hockey at school, but now devotes his full attention to cricket. For relaxation he enjoys fishing.Most memorable match: I scored 102 in a one-day international against India, which is the most memorable time of my life. Also getting my first Test hundred in Bangladesh.Worst match: In Sri Lanka, when we were bowled out for 38 – that was horrific!Best innings: I think the ninety I got in Bangladesh was the best innings I’ve played in a Test match, because we were about 20 for three or four and I steadied the ship. But unfortunately I had a horrific run-out and couldn’t get to the three figures – fault of my own. It was better than my 94 against West Indies in Harare, and the run-out was the same, so there were two real horrific ones.Best piece of bowling: Nine wickets in a match for Young Mashonaland at Alexandra Sports Club (1995/96) – I’ve hardly bowled since! A couple of filthy seamers, maybe!Most difficult bowler faced: Wasim Akram! He swings the ball both ways, reverse swing, slower balls, and he’s left-arm – definitely the hardest bowler to face.Best captain played under: Andy Flower was the best leader.Best opposing captain: Probably Hansie Cronje at the time. I really enjoyed the way he managed to rally his team to produce the goods.Favourite ground: I love batting at Queens (Bulawayo).Favourite country to tour: Unfortunately I haven’t been to Australia, which is probably the best one, but of the countries I have been to, New Zealand – that’s a lovely place.Most sporting opponents: Probably the South Africans.Best friends in other international teams: The Indians. They’re not bad blokes off the field; you can talk to them and they’re quite relaxed. Rahul Dravid is a hell of a nice guy.Young players for the future: I think Sean Ervine is going to be a good cricketer, and obviously Tatenda Taibu. He’s improving daily, he has a lot of energy and I think he’ll do really well. He’s got a perfect opportunity being a little wicket-keeper/batsman to have a long career.Most desirable change to the game: I think there are so many good changes that have already been made. The only thing maybe is the referral for lbws. If they are going to use the third umpire for everything else, why not use it for lbw, to get it 100 per cent correct?Funniest moment: The funniest thing I have seen was when Guy Whittall got out at one of the Aussie grounds. The changing room was on the opposite side, and he put his head down and walked all the way to the other side. When he looked up the crowd was screaming at him, and he had to walk all the way round the boundary back to the changing room!

Unbeaten sides maintain hot form in cold Toronto

After several days of shimmering heat, the fourth day of action dawned cold and windy here at the ICC Trophy tournament in Toronto. But the break in the weather failed to bring a corresponding change in the form of four of the competition’s hottest teams: wins for unbeaten sides Bermuda, the Netherlands, Uganda and Argentina dominating the day’s events.The Netherlands’ seven-wicket success over Fiji at Ajax emphatically confirmed its status as one of the teams to watch in this year’s event. The Fijians lost a wicket just four balls into the match and never really recovered, surrendering their scalps at regular intervals to finish at a disappointing score of 127.While a far better return than the Fijians managed in a disastrous first outing against Scotland three days ago, it never seemed vaguely enough for their bowlers to defend. Andre van Troost (3/20) produced some outstanding bowling and, as good as they were, even his figures did not do full justice to how many times he beat the bat.Despite the early loss of Zulfiqar Ahmed (8) to an excellent yorker from Atunaisa Tawatatau (1/24), the Dutchmen duly made reasonably light work of their task, raising their win with forty-nine deliveries to spare. Although they were made to work hard for their runs, Robert van Oosterom (52) and Feiko Kloppenburg (40) went most of the way to securing the victory on their own with a composed partnership for the second wicket.Bermuda’s nine-wicket win over Papua New Guinea was similarly emphatic. The Papua New Guineans had secured a wonderful victory over the United States twenty-four hours earlier. But, as today’s match began, their batsmen failed to live up to the standard they had set for themselves in that win and their tally of 131 was never enough to challenge a team as powerful as Bermuda.After Herbert Bascombe (4/23) had led an outstanding all-round effort from Bermuda’s bowlers, batsmen Clay Smith (60) and Albert Steede (43) then secured the win with an unbroken century stand.Uganda continued its fairytale story at ICCT 2001 with a commanding six-wicket win over East and Central Africa in the all-African affair at Eglinton Flats. The Ugandans have formerly been a part of the East and Central African combine and only became a team in their own right in the lead-up to this event. But the continued good form of the leaders of Division Two’s Group B ensured that the match was largely devoid of the kind of emotional and spirited character that such a meeting might ordinarily have demanded.Junior Kwebiha (5/22) devastated the East and Central Africans during the morning, shattering the top order before a stabilising 99-run association between Virendra Kamania (55) and Feroz Munshi (26) helped swell the total to 170. An injury-plagued East and Central African attack fought bravely as Uganda replied but struggled to completely stifle the attractive strokeplay of Joel Olweny (59) and Charles Lwanga (48). Before a crowd that numbered close to 400, Kwebiha (39) then finished proceedings with a mighty six into the swamp beyond the mid wicket boundary.Having made a late arrival in Toronto after a series of difficulties in obtaining entry visas to Canada, Nepal suffered from another slow start as it replied to Gibraltar’s modest total of 133/6 at Malton. The Nepalese crashed to 52/5 on a rock-hard pitch at one point but had their cause brilliantly revived by Parash Luniya (36) and Kiran Agrawal (26) in a gritty stand of 58 runs for the sixth wicket.This was all after Gibraltar had also battled to come to terms with the prospect of scoring its runs quickly on Malton’s slow outfield, only Christian Rocca (54) standing out as it made its way to its score from a rain-reduced allotment of 43 overs.Bowlers dominated the match, the best figures being returned by Daniel Johnson (4/23) as he went close to powering Gibraltar to an unlikely win.The Argentine players and coaching staff ensured that, whatever happens in the remainder of this tournament, they will fondly remember events in Toronto. They still have their two hardest group games (on paper, at least) to come but, with three opening wins, have nearly doubled their entire previous total of wins in the history of ICC Trophy competition.Like the two which have come before it, the South Americans’ victory over a plucky French side was not secured until the very last over of the match. Although Marias Paterlini (57) played beautifully at the top of the order, Argentina’s innings lost impetus as a series of batsmen failed to capitalise fully on good starts.The final score of 220/5 from 40 overs came under threat from the Frenchmen throughout the afternoon session, particularly while Shabbir Hussain (86), George James (46) and Simon Hewitt (38) were in full flight. It was only when paceman Hernan Pereyra (3/34) snared three late wickets that the bowling side finally gained the upper hand.After rain had forced its players to cool their heels for 75 minutes at the start of the day, Malaysia prevailed comfortably by a margin of six wickets over Israel with as many as nineteen overs to spare. Unfortunately, the icy conditions under which the game was played also detracted from the spectacle.Invited to bat first, Israel at no stage found the conditions easy and lost wickets at regular intervals through the morning. Their captain, Isaac Massil (23), fought valiantly for his runs and Steven Shein (26) struck a few lusty blows but a score of 117/9 was not likely to seriously threaten a side regarded as one of the better combinations in Division Two.Albeit that there was a serious hiccup in the middle stages of the chase as four wickets tumbled for the addition of only 24 runs, the victory was duly achieved in comfortable fashion. The contributor in chief was opener Rakesh Madhavan (41).

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