Report

Somerset end on a winning high

A round-up from the third day of the final round of matches in the County Championship's Division Two

Cricinfo staff
21-Sep-2007
Champions Somerset took half-an-hour to complete an innings-and-121-run win over second-placed Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge. Mike Munday took two of the three wickets to fall, finishing with career-best figures of 8 for 55 - he had never taken more than three wickets in a Championship innings before. Ryan Sidebottom fell for a duck and then Jason Gallian, in his final match for the county, batted at No. 10 because of a back problem and made 14. Ian Blackwell polished off the innings by bowling Paul Franks. Somerset, who set a second division record of 266 points, were presented with the trophy in front of the pavilion.
Essex finished their season with an emphatic 10-wicket win over Middlesex inside three sessions Chelmsford. Following on 194 in arrears, Middlesex resumed on 104 for 3 and soon lost Ed Smith, trapped lbw by Tony Palladino, and he should have had two in two but Tim Phillips at slip dropped Jamie Dalrymple. Eoin Morgan with Dalrymple and then Ben Scott kept Essex at bay while making 71 but Middlesex's last five wickets added only 21. Varun Chopra and Grant Flower knocked off the runs in 17.1 overs.
Derbyshire solidified their position against Northamptonshire securing a 223-run lead in the second innings at Derby, with seven wickets in hand. Resuming on 132 for 4, Northants added a further 101 runs before subsiding 147 runs behind at the turn. Jonathan Clare again impressed, with four wickets, and there were four too for Tom Lungley. Rain halted Derbyshire's second dart, and when they resumed they lost three wickets in a flurry: Paul Borrington, one short of a fifty opening stand with Steve Stubbings; then Hassan Adnan (4) and Greg Smith (8) both fell cheaply to Nicky Boje. Stubbings, though, is well placed on 46.
For the second day running there was no play in the match between Glamorgan and Gloucestershire at Cardiff .
Full post
Rain washes out third day as well

Heavy overnight rain washed out the third day of the second Test between India A and South Africa A in Dharamsala without a ball being bowled

Cricinfo staff
21-Sep-2007
Heavy overnight rain washed out the third day of the second Test between India A and South Africa A in Dharamsala without a ball being bowled. Umpires SK Tarapore and GA Pratap Kumar held their first inspection at 11.30 AM and decided to call off play. With a day left, South Africa's chances of squaring the series are virtually ruled out. They ended the first day in a good position at 264 for 4. No play was possible on the second day as well.
Full post
Faisal leads Pakistan's fightback

A late-order fightback by Sarfraz Ahmed and Mohammad Sami ensured Pakistan A ended the second day of the second Test against Australia A on 238 for 8 after resuming on 22 for 3

Cricinfo staff
20-Sep-2007


Faisal Iqbal's precious innings of 74 took Pakistan within reach of Australia's first-innings score © Getty Images
A late-order fightback by Sarfraz Ahmed and Mohammad Sami ensured Pakistan A ended the second day of the second Test against Australia A on 238 for 8 after resuming on 22 for 3.
The day did not start well for Pakistan as they lost their fourth wicket for the addition of only three runs when Khurram Manzoor, who was included in the team in place of Hasan Raza, became Doug Bollinger's second victim and Luke Ronchi's fourth catch of the innings. Naved Latif then formed an 86-run partnership for the fifth wicket with Faisal Iqbal, Pakistan's captain, as Pakistan crossed the 100-mark without any further loss.
Full post
Surrey dent Lancashire's title hopes

A round-up from the second day of the final round of matches in the County Championship's Division One

Lancashire's hopes of their first outright Championship title since 1934 are fading with every passing day at The Oval. Surrey declined to enforce the follow-on after dismissing them for 234 before extending their lead to 214.
Surrey bowled tidily as a collective, with Matt Nicholson and Chris Jordan particularly impressing. Nicholson exploited the early swinging conditions, and a lifting pitch, to remove Steven Croft for a duck and to trap Mark Chilton for 4. Stuart Law and Paul Horton rallied with 45 and 48 respectively, and it was left to VVS Laxman (53) and latterly Dominic Cork (46 not out) to limit the first-innings deficit.
Laxman batted with his customary authority until he fell, pulling hard to long leg off the rapidly emerging talent Jordan, who has slotted right into first-team cricket. Those in the know are already tipping him as Young Cricketer of the Year for 2008.
Like Nicholson, Jordan used the conditions to bowl with pace and hostility; his last two victims - Oliver Newby (0) and Gary Keedy (2) - were both beaten for pace and fended through to the keeper, although replays showed the ball had brushed Newby's arm. Cork was the lone battler and he enjoyed the challenge, even smacking an audacious six for good measure. But not for fun: Lancashire badly want this title.
Full post
Champions drive home their advantage

A round-up from the second day of the final round of matches in the County Championship's Division Two

Cricinfo staff
20-Sep-2007
When Somerset gained promotion, Andy Caddick looked back fondly on beating Nottinghamshire at Taunton earlier this season, saying it gave him a marker of the kind of opposition they could expect in the top flight. In which case, he will be delighted with another crushing day at Trent Bridge - Somerset piling up 469 to take a first-innings lead of 311. Marcus Trescothick and Ian Blackwell converted their seventies to hundreds, and there was also a century for Peter Trego. Nottinghamshire, though, weren't finished: their second innings got off to a solid start before Mike Munday removed both openers in successive overs.
Essex's seam bowling quartet took full advantage of a Chelmsford wicket that had more pace than normal. With the ball also swinging, Tony Palladino was the pick of the bowlers as he recorded a season's best 4 for 44 before claiming the wicket of Andrew Strauss for the second time in the day - caught by Varun Chopra at slip - after Middlesex were forced to follow on 194 runs behind.
Graham Wagg's seventh first-class fifty lifted Derbyshire from an overnight 93 for 3 to 382 against Northamptonshire at Derby. The lower order weighed in with significant contributions; all of them reaching double figures.
Gloucestershire's second day against Glamorgan at Cardiff was entirely lost to rain.
Full post
Inspired India evict South Africa

A sensational spell of 4 for 13 from Rudra Pratap Singh dumped South Africa out of the Twenty20 party as India romped to a comprehensive 37-run victory that sealed a place in the semi-final against Australia



RP Singh was sensational and provided India the much-needed cutting edge against a formidable South African batting line-up © Getty Images
A sensational spell of 4 for 13 from Rudra Pratap Singh dumped South Africa out of the Twenty20 party as India romped to a comprehensive 37-run victory that sealed a place in the semi-final against Australia. South Africa, previously unbeaten in the competition, again proved masters of the choke, falling 10 short of the 126 that would have taken them to the last four and eliminated New Zealand.
India, rocked by the withdrawal of Yuvraj Singh before the game with tendonitis of the left elbow, had struggled with the bat themselves, slipping to 33 for 3, but a tremendous 85-run partnership between Rohit Sharma and Mahendra Singh Dhoni propelled them to 153 for 5 on a well-grassed pitch of variable bounce.
Full post
Tepid Pakistan win by four wickets

Set 141 for victory, Pakistan eased home with four wickets and six balls to spare, after Bangladesh's slow bowlers induced a mid-innings wobble



Shahid Afridi was in his usual belligerent mood and nearly decapitated Mashrafe Mortaza with a straight lash © AFP
Bangladesh squandered a brilliant start by Junaid Siddique, the 19-year-old debutant who smashed 71 from just 49 balls, and Pakistan were indebted to a blazing innings from Shahid Afridi and a late cameo from Imran Nazir as they went into the semi-finals with a perfect record in the Super Eights. Set 141 for victory, Pakistan eased home with four wickets and six balls to spare, after Bangladesh's slow bowlers induced a mid-innings wobble.
Nazir's unbeaten 27 at the end made all the difference after a sloppy Pakistani display, and would have been especially satisfying after he had had to retire hurt three balls into the innings, struck flush on the unmentionables by a delivery from Mashrafe Mortaza. Having swung Mahmudullah for a six over square leg earlier, Nazir struck two fours off Mortaza to hasten the end.
Full post
Rains washes out second day's play

Persistent rain washed out the second day's play between India A and South Africa A in Dharamsala

Cricinfo staff
20-Sep-2007
Persistent rain washed out the second day's play between India A and South Africa A at the Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association stadium in Dharamsala. Heavy overnight rain and more rain in the morning left the outfield completely waterlogged and unfit for play.
Umpires S K Tarapore and G A Pratap Kumar had an initial inspection at 11 am before a heavy downpour forced them to call off play after a second inspection at 1 pm.
Full post
Clinical Australia cruise into the semi-finals

A match billed as a winner-takes-all contest was gruesomely one-sided as Australia crushed Sri Lanka by ten wickets



The rot starts here ... Brett Lee strikes to remove Sanath Jayasuriya with the third ball © Getty Images
A match billed as a winner-takes-all contest was as good as decided before latecomers had even taken their seats at Newlands. In that time Australia blew away Sri Lanka's top order, and though they made a recovery of sorts to reach 101, it was a dismal performance and Australia strolled to a ten-wicket win with almost half their overs intact. In Twenty20 terms, it was a massacre. At least there were not too many people inside the ground to witness their humiliation.
Adam Gilchrist decided to stick Sri Lanka in to take advantage of any lingering moisture - this was an almost unreasonably early start to meet the demands of TV - and the move paid off handsomely. The toss was important, but Sri Lanka contributed significantly to their own downfall.
Although Australia bowled and fielded superbly, much of the blame must rest on Sri Lanka's batsmen who approached the match with a naivety that almost suggested they had never played a Twenty20 game. In the main, they perished playing ugly heaves and mows. The format calls for big hitting - Sri Lanka decided to go for reckless slogging.
Full post
Pakistan A wobble after Ronchi century

A lively century from Luke Ronchi gave Australia A a respectable total before the Pakistan A top order threatened to disintegrate in the second Test at Lahore

Cricinfo staff
20-Sep-2007


Luke Ronchi was impressive for Western Australia last season and has continued to find plenty of runs in Pakistan © Getty Images
A lively century from Luke Ronchi gave Australia A a respectable total before the Pakistan A top order threatened to disintegrate in the second Test at Lahore. At stumps on the first day the home side was 22 for 3, still trailing Australia by 271 runs.
Khurram Manzoor was the only Pakistan batsman to get off the mark and he was unbeaten on 20 at the close, with Naved Latif yet to score. Doug Bollinger had Khalid Latif caught behind for 0 and James Hopes, who finished with 2 for 0, removed Yasir Hameed and Anwar Ali, each without scoring.
Full post

Showing 34981 - 34990 of 41670