ROUNDUP_17MAY1997
ENGLAND will call on the services of an 18-year-old rookie leg-spinner and a former Australian Test player in an effort to give themselves a better chance of unravelling the mysteries of Shane Warne
17-May-1997
Saturday 17 May 1997
About Cricket: England batsmen call for help from teenage spin
doctor
By Clive Ellis
ENGLAND will call on the services of an 18-year-old rookie
leg-spinner and a former Australian Test player in an effort to
give themselves a better chance of unravelling the mysteries
of Shane Warne.
Chris Schofield has been plucked out of the Central
Lancashire League to bowl at England`s batsmen before the Texaco
Trophy series and the first Test at Edgbaston.
Schofield, who plays for Littleborough and has been offered a
contract by Lancashire for the rest of the season, will spend a
day in the nets at Headingley next week and two at Edgbaston
trying to convince .
"It will be good experience for me and if I bowl well it will
give them some valuable batting practice," he said modestly.
"I was delighted when the England coach David Lloyd rang me and
asked me to help."
The Australian element in England`s net preparation is Peter
Sleep, Lancashire`s second XI coach, who played 14 Tests
between 1978 and 1989.
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WHEN Dickie Bird speaks the world listens, so when the great man
complained that he couldn`t see the pavilion clock at the King`s
School ground in Gloucester last year something just had to be
done.
Former pupil David Courtney, who runs a cricket goods company
in Cheltenham, has donated a new clock and Ronald Kelly,
recently retired as a governor, has arranged for a dormer to
be installed in the pavilion so that the new timepiece can be
suitably housed. The only element which will be missing,
when the clock is officially "opened" next Wednesday before the
start of the championship match against Essex, will be Bird
himself.
The school had hoped that he would be in attendance, but he is
on duty at Edgbaston, so David Constant and Barrie Leadbeter
will have to give the umpires` seal of approval.
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PAKISTAN captain Wasim Akram was so moved by the death of 12-
year-old Yasin Ghodiwallah, after being hit by a cricket
ball, in east London last week that he has written to the boy`s
parents to offer his condolences.
Wasim has also invited Yasin`s family to meet him and watch him
in action for Lancashire.
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IT is one of those quirky quiz questions: who won the gold
medal on the only occasion that cricket featured in the Olympic
Games?
The answer is Britain, or more specifically the Devon County
Wanderers, though new research suggests that the side who beat
All Paris in 1900 never received their gold medals . . probably
did not even know that they had taken part in the Olympics.
Clifford Jiggens explains, in the current edition of the
Journal of the Cricket Society, that the match was billed as
part of the Paris World Fair, and further suggests that it was
one of the events tagged on to the Olympic results 12 years
after it had taken place.
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THEY take their cricket seriously in India. Thirty fans in the
western city of Aurangabad were so incensed when their beloved
Mohammad Azharuddin was dropped from the party for the
Independence Cup that they went on a hunger strike.
Prime Minister Inder Kumar Gujral was also asked to
intervene, but the Indian board responded sternly that they were
outside government control.
Sachin Tendulkar, who succeeded Azharuddin as India`s captain,
hinted yesterday that there would be no easy way back. "He is a
great batsman who can come back into the team by making runs,"
said Tendulkar sternly.
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RAJ MARU`S 13 years of cheerful service to Hampshire are being
recognised by a benefit next year, prompting a fond reminiscence
from team-mate Kevan James on a radio programme at the
weekend.
A few years back Maru was taken to one side by captain Mark
Nicholas and told that, at 5ft 6in, he would never achieve
the bounce to be effective.
The following morning the Hampshire players turned up at
Southampton to find Maru hanging upside down from
scaffolding in a belated effort to increase his stature.
The height of optimism one might say . . .
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)