McCullum backs New Zealand to compete

“If we can bowl well tomorrow and set about chasing 350 on the final two days, then we have every opportunity” © Getty Images
 

New Zealand may have produced a flawless performance in the first Test at Hamilton, but on the second day at Wellington the cracks in their confidence began to show. With James Anderson leading the way with 5 for 73, they were dismissed for 198 and conceded a hefty first-innings lead of 144. But their wicketkeeper, Brendon McCullum, remains confident that – with three days of the match remaining – there is still plenty time for a turnaround.”It wasn’t how we had that part of the day planned out,” said McCullum. “But in saying that we have the opportunity to come back tomorrow and resurrect the mistakes we made today. To win this Test match we knew we’d have to bat well once and, whether it’s the first or second turn, it doesn’t matter. If we can bowl well tomorrow and set about chasing 350 on the final two days, then we have every opportunity.”To achieve that aim, however, New Zealand will need to better the efforts that England’s bowlers put in, and McCullum conceded that it would be a tough act to follow. “Our batting wasn’t as good as it should have been, but in saying that I thought they bowled very well,” he said. “I think the previous day we went past the bat a lot, but we were never in play. We probably bowled a touch short and they bowled that little bit fuller which brought the nicks into play.”The pick of the bowlers was Anderson, who endured some rough treatment in the recent one-day series, but found his form during a state game for Auckland last week. “I think Jimmy is a fine bowler,” said McCullum. “The game for Auckland helped, but he is a quality bowler and we knew the one-day series is different.”In one-dayers you try and be aggressive and try and dominate his style of bowling, but in the Test version, where he has a wicket that is conducive to where he likes to land a ball, he was always going to be tough to play. I thought he was brilliant. We didn’t play as we could, but in saying that I’ll take nothing away from the way he bowled.”He did, however, admit he was slightly surprised to be facing him at all, after Matthew Hoggard was dropped on the eve of the match following his one-wicket display at Hamilton. “I was surprised Hoggard didn’t play,” said McCullum. “He has been a fantastic bowler for England for a long, long time and he’s had probably just one below-par performance in a while. It was pleasing not to see him in the opposition, but when you can call Stuart Broad and Anderson then you’re not too bad.”Anderson’s only moment of discomfort came when McCullum and Daniel Vettori climbed into a counterattack midway through New Zealand’s innings. He was taken for 15 in one over that was reminiscent of the one-dayers, but McCullum paid England an extra complement when asked about his tactics during that period, and admitted he was trying to play in the manner of his opposite number, Tim Ambrose.

 
 
I was surprised Hoggard didn’t play. He has been a fantastic bowler for England for a long, long time and he’s had probably just one below-par performance in a while.
 

“You have to be aggressive when you’re in a situation like that,” he said. “Playing on a wicket like that, when the bowler can land the ball in the right place for long enough, he’ll eventually have your number. I thought that if I could come out and be aggressive and hopefully knock them off their length a little bit, then the good balls would be a lot fewer and further between. Obviously it was short and sweet.” He made 25 from 21 balls before edging Broad to first slip.At the halfway mark of the match, the single biggest difference between the sides is the 164-run partnership between Ambrose and Paul Collingwood. Though Ambrose added only five runs to his overnight 97, he did enough to bring up his maiden Test century, and McCullum said it was richly deserved.We were pretty happy at 136 for 5, so to have that counterattack and the way they did it was outstanding,” he said. “It really changed the momentum of the game. When we kept beating the bat a lot I thought there was an opportunity to deny him, but he deserved to score a hundred for the way he played. The intent he came out with, and the courage to play that way when things aren’t that rosy on the scoreboard is a fantastic effort. I’m sure he’ll cherish it for a long time.”All in all, New Zealand are up against it in this Test, but McCullum said it was not for want of effort on their part. “We’re playing a very good Test team,” he said. “The opposition are allowed to play well. It would have been crazy to turn up here and expect to turn out a below-par effort, and still carry out a victory. There is certainly no complacency in our camp.”We talked long and hard about the need to dominate form the word go and, to England’s credit, they have done that to us. But the game has still got a long distance to travel and it’s about us maintaining the belief that we can get a result out of the game. If we didn’t genuinely believe we were capable of winning this game, we may as well not turn up tomorrow.”

Bodi hundred takes KwaZulu-Natal to easy win

Goolam Bodi delivered his career best performances with bat and ball to guide Natal to an impressive nine-wicket win with al of six overs to spare. Man-of-the-match Bodi took two for 30 off seven overs and then scored a chanceless 106 not out off 118 balls with 11 fours and three sixes as Natal replied to Eastern Province’s 217 for eight with 219 for one in 39 overs.The home side bowled tightly in the second half of the innings to curb an EP total that seemed headed for 250. Much of the credit for that effort will go to Jon Kent, who took four for 29, also his career best.Bodi’s analysis would have been rather more impressive had he not conceded 16 runs in his seventh and last over, in which he also dismissed Dave Callaghan. Kent, meanwhile, snuffed out EP’s budding momentum by bowling Murray Creed and having Robin Peterson caught behind four balls apart in the 29th over.Not for the first time, EP’s batting was held together by veteran Callaghan, whose 73 off 106 balls with seven fours and two sixes was his 26th domestic limited overs half-century. Callaghan shared in both major partnerships of the innings, the 57 off 76 balls he put on with James Bryant for the third wicket, and the 51 off 66 he and Shafiek Abrahams scored for the seventh.Bodi then put the seal on a memorable evening for him with a seamless innings. The bulk of his runs came in a solid opening stand of 178 shared with Doug Watson, whose well crafted 72 came off 104 balls and included five fours and a six. The partnership ended in the 35th over when Watson drove straight but firmly back to left-arm spinner Peterson.Bodi and Wade Wingfield finished the job with their unbroken partnership of 41, and while the EP attack would have been improved by the addition of the injured Mfuneko Ngam and Justin Kemp, who is in the national squad, it is doubtful whether even their presence would have stopped the home side on the night.

Buoyant Bangladesh ready for West Indies' pace challenge

The day before the two sides first met this year, a member of Bangladesh’s coaching staff was looking at the West Indies pace bowlers quite intently during practice at the National Cricket Academy ground. Exactly a month later, on the eve of the Under-19 World Cup semi-final between the two teams, the focus still remains on pace bowling.West Indies’ new-ball attack has been one of the highlights of this tournament, particularly the sight of the beanpole Alzarri Joseph steaming in and consistently hitting high speeds. He has also generated movement to trouble the opposition. Joseph and Chemar Holder, the injured Obed McCoy’s replacement, put Pakistan under early pressure in the quarter-final, which West Indies won by five wickets.Apart from Joseph and Chemar, West Indies also have Keemo Paul, Odean Smith, Ryan John and Shamar Springer as pace options in their squad.Bangladesh crushed West Indies 3-0 last month, but they need to have a second look at their bowling attack and sharpen up during training sessions. Much of it has revolved around tackling the short balls, which have been regularly directed at the throat by the net bowlers.Bangladesh coach Mizanur Rahman was wary of the threat posed by Joseph, but believed that a solid top-order platform could help his side post a good total.”[Alzarri] Joseph is one of the best bowlers of this tournament,” Mizanur said. “But we have plan against all their bowlers. We hope the video session we had will work in our favour. We know him [Joseph] quite well having played against them in three matches before the U-19 World Cup. We are prepared to face him.””Their strength is the pace attack so if our top order does their job, it becomes easier for the middle and lower-order batsmen. If we can make around 230 to 250 or even more, it will be defendable.”West Indies captain Shimron Hetmyer, meanwhile, has drawn confidence from having the fastest bowler in the tournament, especially in conditions that offer little help to the quicks.”It is a good feeling to be in a team with express pacers in the last two years,” Hetmyer said. “I think we had one pacer in the last World Cup that really went all the way through the tournament, and there was [Kagiso] Rabada from South Africa who was the fastest bowler in the tournament.”This year being in the team with the fastest bowler is a big boost for us. Playing in the sub-continent, which people don’t really with pace pitches and so far the pacers have done well for us.”Joseph has turned heads back home, in the Caribbean, as well with veteran commentator and writer Tony Cozier earmarking him a special talent. Joseph hails from the All Saints Village in Antigua, and has been trained by former West Indies pacer Winston Benjamin in addition to taking tips from the legendary Andy Roberts.Alzarri Joseph has impressed in the Under-19 World Cup by moving the ball at speeds north of 140kph•International Cricket Council

Bangladesh captain Mehedi Hasan Miraz, however, has played down the pace threat, saying the hosts were more comfortable against pace, something that they thrived on while playing in South Africa last year.”We like playing fast bowlers,” Miraz said. “Playing against less pace, there’s a chance of mistiming the ball. We are always confident facing pace. We have done well in South Africa, and also against West Indies. We haven’t faced a really pacy bowling attack yet in this tournament, which has caused problems for our openers.”The second semi-final will also be Bangladesh’s first match against a Full Member since the tournament opener against South Africa on January 27. Miraz took confidence from Bangladesh’s hard-fought win against Nepal, and the manner in which his team bounced back against Sri Lanka in the Youth ODI series last year. Bangladesh rebounded from 2-0 down to seal that series 3-2.”We have the belief to turn around from any situation,” Miraz said.” We don’t think negatively. I enjoy playing in the situation that we faced in the last game [against Nepal]. We won three games on the bounce after losing the first two in Sri Lanka last year. Having taken that much pressure in those conditions, has only done good for our confidence.”West Indies coach Graeme West, too, was not short of confidence ahead of the big game. He has said that West Indies were encouraged by how the Sri Lankan seamers zipped the ball around to test India’s top order in the first semi-final on Tuesday.”We watched the game yesterday and we’re encouraged to see the ball get through,” West said. “The seamers both sides were effective in the first 10 overs. Anyone that would have watched the Pakistan game, will see where one of our strengths lies with the new ball attack. And we got to look to that to really make early inroads into the Bangladesh batting.”West also said that the next challenge for Joseph would be to continue bowling with control, instead of focusing too much on pace.”He’s been very successful and he’s bowled really well,” West said. “We need to make sure that he continues to perform at that level, not to get too carried away. If he starts looking at how fast he’s bowling as opposed to where he’s looking to land the ball, then he might lose some of his potential.”

Khawaja in, Warner out on paternity leave

Usman Khawaja has been drafted into the Australian squad for the second and third ODIs against India as cover for David Warner, who goes on paternity leave. Warner and his wife Candice are expecting their second child very soon.Warner had said the baby was due towards the end of January during a media interaction after the Sydney Test against West Indies. “I’m just looking forward to playing the first couple of one-dayers first and obviously I’ll be by the phone to wait for that phone call.”Now that it’s arrived Australia have swapped one in-form left-handed opener for another. Khawaja has been stunning over the last few months in competitive cricket. Four of his last seven innings in Test and Big Bash League cricket have been hundreds. He hit them back-to-back against New Zealand in Brisbane and Perth, but missed out on the Day-Night Test in Adelaide with a hamstring injury. A century in the BBL on his return proved there was no lingering discomfort and then plundered 144 and 56 in the Melbourne Test against West Indies a few days later.”Usman has been in fantastic form this season and was unlucky to miss out on a place in our squad for the ODI Series in the first place,” national selector Rod Marsh said. “This call-up is a reward for that form and it is great to have someone of his quality to step into the squad in David’s absence. We wish both David and Candice well and look forward to welcoming David back into the squad when circumstances allow.”Khawaja will join the Australian side in Brisbane, where the second ODI takes place on January 15. He will not be available for Sydney Thunder duty during this time.

Panesar addresses issues in bid for comeback

Monty Panesar, England’s forgotten spin bowler, is preparing to speak out about the mental illness that led to his high-profile departures from Sussex and Essex, and says he has not given up hope of an England recall one day.At the age of 33, and with 167 wickets in 50 Tests already to his name, Panesar ought to be in the prime of his international career, not least given the otherwise barren state of English spin bowling, as evidenced by the shortcomings of Moeen Ali, Adil Rashid and Samit Patel in the recent series against Pakistan.Instead, he is without a county going into the 2016 season, having been released by Essex at the end of last summer. He played just three first-class matches in a miserable 2016 season, including one, against Kent in April in which he did not bowl in either innings.His increasingly erratic behaviour included time-keeping issues, for which he was disciplined by the club, and criticism for his attitude in the field, for which he was at one stage given a dressing-down in front of his team-mates.Panesar’s failure to settle at Essex followed on from his departure from Sussex in 2013 where, in the wake of a bitter and painful divorce from his wife, he hit the headlines on one particularly lurid night out in Brighton by urinating on a bouncer at a nightclub.However, in a bid to battle his way back into the sport, Panesar has been working with a team of four professionals – a performance coach, a hypnotherapist, a psychiatrist and a psychotherapist – and hopes that his recognition of his issues is the first step towards resolving them.”For a long time I was in denial that I had a problem,” Panesar told The Times. “It was in my first session with the hypnotherapist that I began to realise that something was wrong and that I needed help.”The best way to describe it is that I have suffered from feelings of paranoia, and that these feelings were linked to my performances on the field. The worse things went, the lower my confidence went, the more paranoid I became. Things spiralled downhill so that I began to think my team-mates were all against me.”Panesar recounted one occasion in which he stormed out of a gym session after being out-performed by James Foster, the club captain, and some of his younger team-mates.”I remember thinking that they were all out to get me and then when I calmed down I was, like, ‘These guys are my team-mates, why am I thinking like that?'”Panesar’s obsessional nature impacted on his lifestyle on tour as well, where he would often retreat from his team-mates outside of matches.”I’d be in my room a lot, always thinking about cricket and bowling. I found I got on with most players, but I didn’t have any particularly close friends,” he said.”Those that I spent most time with were often tied up with my job: the wicketkeepers I’d work with, my bowling partners.”Panesar’s absence from the sport is particularly poignant given what an integral member of the team he ought to be right now. On the 2012 tour of the UAE, he claimed 14 wickets in two Tests against Pakistan, including five-wicket hauls in consecutive second innings, providing precisely the sort of impact that England’s spinners lacked on their most recent tour last month.”One part of me thought, I should be the one out there bowling 30 or 40 overs a day going for two an over,” he said. “But then another part of me was saying, ‘Come on, Monty, you’ve not helped yourself.'”

Bangladesh finalise tri-series itinerary

Hardly a week after the Indian Premier League (IPL) concludes on June 1, India, Pakistan and Bangladesh square off in a short tri-series in Bangladesh beginning June 8. Each team plays the other once, with the final on June 14. All matches will be played at the Sher-e-Bangla Stadium in Mirpur. No practice matches have been scheduled for the visiting teams.The tri-series will serve as a warm-up for the Asia Cup in Pakistan which commences on June 24. The series is an add-on to India’s punishing schedule, which includes a three-Test and five ODI tour to Sri Lanka after the Asia Cup concludes on July 6.Bangladesh last hosted a tri-series featuring the same teams in early 1998. India edged out Pakistan in a thriller in the best-of-three finals at the Bangabandhu National Stadium in Dhaka.ScheduleJune 8 – Bangladesh v Pakistan (Mirpur)
June 10 – India v Pakistan (Mirpur)
June 12 – Bangladesh v India (Mirpur)
June 14 – Final (Mirpur)
June 15 – Reserve day

Katich hits form but misses century


Scorecard

Andrew Symonds scored 86 in Australia’s first-innings 396 © Getty Images
 

Simon Katich struck form at the right time, but he was unable to seal his return to national colours with a century as he fell three runs short on the second day of the tour match against a Jamaica XI. With Michael Clarke missing the first Test due to family reasons, Katich confirmed his place as the Australians completed a strong warm-up by posting 396.Katich took his time once he resumed on 35 and kept the innings together after losing Phil Jaques for 48, Ricky Ponting for 17 and Michael Hussey for 19. While Ponting and Hussey missed out on long stays, Andrew Symonds and Brad Haddin took advantage of the conditions with half-centuries in an energetic 145-run stand.Symonds collected 86 while Haddin, who will make his Test debut at Sabina Park on Thursday, picked up a confidence-boosting 64. However, the day was most important for Katich, especially after Brad Hodge, the other contender to replace Clarke, did not make a major impact.Katich seemed set for three figures, but he missed the milestone when aiming the spinner Lorenzo Ingram towards midwicket, where Xavier Marshall collected a fine diving take in the outfield. Donovan Sinclair was the most successful bowler, finishing off the innings with 3 for 14, while Andre Russell and Nikita Miller picked up two each.Katich was pleased to make use of his only opportunity to get used to the Caribbean conditions before the first Test. “It was just nice to get out there and play some cricket, get a few runs and spend some time out in the middle,” Katich told .”It’s always disappointing not to get a hundred, but that’s the way it goes, and at the end of the day, it was nice to spend some time out of the middle and get a few runs, so I can’t complain too much. It’s just nice to be able to go out there and know I’m playing well and have confidence in my game.”The hosts reached 11 for 0 at the close, and in their brief stint in the field the Australians wore their baggy green caps after being criticised for having a sponsor’s hat on during the first innings. Cricket Australia said that because Haddin did not yet have a baggy green – he will receive it on the first morning of the Kingston Test – the team decided in the interests of uniformity to wear their blue training caps, which bear the sponsor’s logo.But following some media criticism the board said in the future a ‘fitted green’ cap may be developed so that players who have not yet represented Australia in Test cricket can have a similar look to their Test counterparts. Haddin wore a white hat on the second day.

Nel hit by penalty points

Andre Nel has received six penalty points under the ECB’s code of conduct for two offences during Essex’s Championship match against Derbyshire.Nel was reported by umpires Tim Robinson and Richard Illingworth for two separate level two breaches of the code, each of which attracts three penalty points. The first offence was using obscene language or making an obscene gesture and the second was “throwing the ball at or near a player, umpire or official in an inappropriate and dangerous manner”.Nel took three wickets in the match, but Essex couldn’t defend 266 on the final day after setting up a run chase. He claimed 1 for 78 in the second innings off 18 overs.The points remain on Nel’s record for two years. The accumulation of nine or more penalty points in any two-year period will result in an automatic suspension.

Players blocked from leaving Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe Cricket faces another tricky player situation with some contracted players reportedly opting to play league cricket overseas instead of the Logan Cup.Fears for an impasse arose after the players were reported to have been denied permission by managing director Ozias Bvute and team manager Givemore Makoni to be excused from the competition. On being receiving the news, they then applied for leave, which also was turned down.Some players are said to have played in the last leg of the Standard Bank Pro20 in South Africa under protest as they were already supposed to be at clubs in the UK where the season started last week. Their unease was compounded by the board allowing Tatenda Taibu to miss the whole of the Logan Cup to play in the Indian Premier League, even missing the last matches in South Africa’s Standard Bank Pro20.”The guys do not want to do anything that jeopardises their contracts with ZC,” on of those affected said. “But ZC must realise that the guys will not gain anything from playing in the Logan Cup. Club cricket in England is far better than our first-class game. Surely other upcoming players should be happy to get the opportunity to play in the Logan Cup. Perhaps ZC fear for the standards … we do not have a large player base.”Last year Bvute banned players from going to Europe for the summer season, on that occasion holding back payments owed from the World Cup as an incentive for them to remain in Zimbabwe. Nevertheless. Brendan Taylor ignored the ban and moved north, although he was drafted straight back into the national side on his return.

Rickelton 113 in vain as DSG hang on in high-scoring thriller against MICT

The fourth edition of the SA20 kicked off with a thriller as MI Cape Town (MICT) began their title defence with a narrow loss to last year’s bottom team Durban’s Super Giants (DSG) in a run-fest. In front of a packed Newlands crowd, there were 449 runs scored in the game, the second-highest match aggregate in an SA20 game.Asked to complete the highest successful chase of the tournament, MICT’s charge was led by Ryan Rickelton, who was dropped from South Africa’s T20I squad to face India, but recorded his highest T20 score. Rickelton’s 113 came off 63 balls and included 11 sixes, the most in an SA20 innings, and has flung his name back into the T20 World Cup conversation.Despite his efforts, DSG’s inexperienced seamers held their nerve. Kwena Maphaka and Eathan Bosch defended 31 runs off the last two overs while MICT still had six wickets in hand. They lost 3 for 15 in the last two overs to ensure DSG’s 232 for 7 was enough.DSG’s total was built on Devon Conway and Kane Williamson’s 96-run partnership for the first wicket. Conway went on to score 64, before MICT clawed their way back. They took 3 for 41, before explosive stands of 32 off 19 balls between Heinrich Klaasen and Aiden Markram, 34 off 18 between Markram and Evan Jones, and 29 in 10 balls between Jones and David Wiese saw DSG top 230.Devon Conway smashed a blistering fifty•Sportzpics

In response, MICT lost Rassie van der Dussen at the end of the third over with the score at 22, and needed big hitters. Rickelton reached his highest score in the format and his second hundred to keep them in the hunt almost until the end. He shared a 60-run stand with Reeza Hendricks, before Jason Smith all but stole the show. Smith dominated a 76-run third-wicket stand with Rickelton, and the pair scored at a shade under 17 runs an over for the four-and-a-half overs they were together.At one stage, MICT were ahead of where DSG had been. When Smith was dismissed, MICT needed 75 runs from the last six overs. By the time the last three overs came, they needed 49 runs. But MICT eventually fell 15 runs short.

An all-Kiwi opening

There’s talk of the NZ20 starting in January 2027, but you could argue that it had its soft launch here, at the SA20 in 2025. Williamson and Conway opened the batting for DSG, and Trent Boult had the new ball for MICT as season four kicked off. Though Boult caused problems, the batters had the best of the opening exchanges.Boult delivered a peach of a first ball that beat Conway as it swung away, and then found Williamson’s inside edge which went for four. But the batters soon hit their straps. In Boult’s next over, Conway ramped him for four, and Williamson scythed one through point. The pair was 29 without loss after Boult’s first spell, and posted 68 by the end of the powerplay. With excellent running and pinpoint placement, their stand grew to 96, with the partnership ending at two short of the DSG record.Aiden Markram had two crucial partnerships•Sportzpics

Rashid in the field – from sublime to ridiculous

It was Rashid Khan who was responsible for the first wicket, when Williamson hit Tristan Luus over mid-off. Rashid ran back, almost to long-off, and took the catch over his shoulder to claim what could already be the catch of the tournament. But that was as good as it got for the MICT captain. He went on to put down three chances, albeit not all of them easy, in what quickly became a day for him to forget in the field.The first opportunity came when Markram, on 2, drove George Linde to Rashid at catching over but the latter seemed to lose the ball in the lights. In the next over, Klaasen, on 13, gave Rashid a chance in his follow through, but the ball hit his finger and he could not hold on. And then, at the start of the 17th over, Markram, who had moved to 16, got a leading edge off Boult, and Rashid charged in from mid-off but the ball hit his wrist and then his chest as he fell forward. Markram went on to plunder three boundaries off Corbin Bosch, and one off Linde, before he was eventually stumped for 35.

Rickelton finds form at his favourite ground

Rickelton started 2025 with a Test double hundred at Newlands, and three fifties in edition three of SA20 there, before losing his way as the year went on. He was dropped from South Africa’s T20I squad on their recent tour of India, and finished the ODI series with successive ducks. But on Friday, Rickelton showed signs of a return to form, albeit in a losing cause and with some luck.Rickelton’s first shots in anger were his sixes off Simon Harmer, but his best was a late cut off Eathan Bosch that was all timing. He went on to send Eathan Bosch over the ropes for two sixes, and slog swept Noor Ahmed for one. Rickelton found the gaps on both sides of the field, and took advantage of anything even slightly over pitched to get to 49 off 30 balls. He could have been out then when Noor reviewed an lbw call, but survived on impact, which was umpire’s call.Jason Smith’s counterattack gave his side hope in the big chase•Sportzpics

Rickelton went on to raise his bat to his 25th T20 half-century, and record his highest score in 26 innings since the last edition of the SA20. He also grew in confidence as his knock went on. He could have been out for 85 when he was caught off a no-ball from Maphaka, and went on to record his second century when he flat-batted Wiese over long-on for his tenth six. Rickelton should have been out off the next ball when he skied Wiese, but Eathan Bosch could not hold on. Rickelton finished on 113 when he hit Eathan Bosch to long-off.

Jason Smith’s cameo

Eyebrows were raised when Smith came in ahead of Nicholas Pooran. But by the time Smith had faced ten balls, he made sure people knew why. Smith raced to 32 in that time, with four fours and two sixes, and the pick of them was the hit off Maphaka in an over that cost the young left-armer 19 runs.Smith picked the slower ball, and hit it against the wind over deep-backward square to underline his intent. He managed one more big strike, a six over deep point off Eathan Bosch, before hitting the next ball tamely to Markram at mid-off. Smith departed for a 14-ball 41, and announced himself as an alternate finisher for this MICT outfit.

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