Cricket Roundup: Atherton expects to play (15 June 1999)
Mike Atherton is expected to make his championship comeback for Lancashire against Surrey at the Oval today after completing his rehabilitation from a back injury
15-Jun-1999
15 June 1999
Cricket Roundup: Atherton expects to play
Richard Bright
Mike Atherton is expected to make his championship comeback for
Lancashire against Surrey at the Oval today after completing his
rehabilitation from a back injury.
Atherton has been included in a squad of 13 for the championship
match with leaders Surrey and, unless he suffers a last-minute
reaction from playing in a second XI game against Yorkshire last
week, when he made 156, he will play senior cricket for the first
time since last winter's Ashes tour.
Atherton missed the World Cup because of the chronic back condition
which has plagued him for several years and which recently put his
international career under threat.
But his performance in the second XI at Middlesbrough confirmed that
he still had the appetite. "I enjoyed the game, even though the
weather was far from ideal," Atherton said. "I spent valuable time in
the middle and up to now there has been no reaction. Hopefully I will
play at the Oval and get some more runs."
There is bad news for Hampshire's promising all-rounder Alex Morris,
who has been ruled out for a month after suffering a stress fracture
of the shin.
Brian Lara has been named Pricewaterhouse Coopers/Federation of
International Cricketers' Associations international cricketer of the
year. Jacques Kallis, the South African all-rounder, won the
international young player of the year title.
Lara scored 212 not out in the second Test against Australia at
Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica, on March 14. The innings saw him join
a select band of Test cricketers who have scored three double
centuries at the top level. His others were his world record Test
score of 375 against England in 1993-94 and his 277 against Australia
at Sydney in the 1992-93 season.
A new management team formally took charge of the crisis-ridden Sri
Lankan cricket board yesterday amid a deepening debate over the
future of Arjuna Ranatunga, the national side's captain.
An ad hoc panel appointed by sports minister S B Dissanayake have
assumed duties and a board spokesman said: "It is our ambition to
safeguard Sri Lankan cricket and its future."
The establishment of the panel came after the board were suspended by
Colombo District Court last week following a petition against
president Thilanga Sumathipala's election in March.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph