Crowe's career best leaves Hampshire in the bird.

Carl Crowe took a career best 4 for 55, and coupled with Vince Wells 4 for 54 it led Leicestershire to an unexpected victory after Hampshire had directed much of the play in the morning session.The early days luck soon deserted the home side, as they lost by 61 runs by 3:20 to stay bottom of the PPP healthcare County Championship Division I.Requiring 120 for victory after lunch, Hampshire soon lost the disappointing Laney who took a leading edge to offer up a return catch to Crowe. The prime wicket of Robin Smith fell soon after; when with an attempted drive at the off-spinner was caught at the second attempt. Adi Aymes who had led the way in Hampshire’s first innings battled out 55 minutes for 6. He was seventh out at 190, and the worm had turned against the home side.Dimitri Mascarenhas offered up some lusty blows, but his partners all fell, Stephenson edged Wells to the wicket-keeper, Udal was lbw to the same bowler playing back, and Alan Mullally proved why he is number eleven, with a second ball drive that was gobbled up by Ian Sutcliffe, to the glee of the Leicestershire side.This defeat was not the preparation Hampshire required before their biggest game of the season again Warwickshire in the Nat-West Semi-Final on Saturday. Robin Smith will have to pick up his teams morale, as they travel to Birmingham by coach.

Rahul, Varun star as Punjab gain lead

Rahul Arora’s unbeaten 112 and his fourth wicket partnership of 121runs with opener Varun Gupta (95) went a long way in clinching thevital first innings lead for Punjab against Saurashtra on the secondday of their Vijay Merchant Trophy knock out tournament quarterfinalat Kolkata on Saturday. Replying to Saurashtra’s score of 295, Punjabby brisk scoring, had made 312 for six wickets off 78 overs by stumps.Saurashtra had the comfort of some early wickets and at 69 for three,Punjab were not very comfortably placed. But Varun Gupta and RahulArora turned the innings around with their crucial association. Guptawas out at 190 after facing 135 balls and hitting 16 fours. Arorafound another valuable ally in Gaurav Gupta (28) with whom he added 46runs for the sixth wicket. And finally Arora and Tarun Kansh (44 notout) added 65 runs for the unbroken seventh wicket to steer Punjabahead. By close, Arora had batted four hours, faced 163 balls and hitten fours. Kansh, who dominated the unbroken stand, had faced 84 ballsand hit eight of them to the ropes.Earlier, Saurashtra resuming at Thursday’s score of 269 for eight(there was no play on Friday because of a bandh in the state) were allout after adding 26 runs. Amit Sinha, who came in at No 9 on Thursdayevening and resumed at 57, was last out for the top score of 75. Hefaced 144 balls and hit 12 fours. Vipul Sharma, who took both thewickets to fall on Saturday morning, finished with five for 43.

Lehmann and White to the rescue for Yorkshire against Notts

A stand of 113 in 20 overs between Darren Lehmann and Craig White laid the platform for Yorkshire Phoenix to win a tense day/night thriller against Nottinghamshire Outlaws at Trent Bridge by three wickets with just four balls to spare.The win broke a sequence of three successive defeats against the Outlaws in the national cricket league but they had to survive a few anxious moments before confirming the win which lifts them to within two points of Notts in fifth place in the Division One table.Lehmann’s partnership with White began with the Phoenix reply in ruins at 31-4 with Greg Smith and Nadeem Malik sharing the wickets.Batting under lights is never easy but for a 20-minute spell the two batsmen also had to contend with the off field distraction of smoke billowing from underneath the William Clarke Stand when the cooking range in one of the refreshment kiosks caught fire. The ringing of alarms, the arrival of the fire engines plus tannoy announcements to vacate the area would have tested the concentration of anyone.Lehmann proceeded to his 50 from 52 balls and White from 53 as they threatened to overhaul the useful Notts total. If anyone on the field would have wanted to dismiss Lehmann it would have been his great friend and South Australian team-mate Greg Blewett and it was he who had cause for celebration when he knocked back the left-handers off stump.White, though, found his new partner, skipper David Byas, in inspired form. His timing was immaculate from the off and his punchy midwicket drives propelled a 50 partnership in just eight overs.61 runs were needed from the last 10 overs and sensible strokeplay reduced that to 33 from six when Byas hoisted Gareth Clough to deep square leg where Paul Johnson took a well-judged catch.Two balls later the ground erupted for a catch of supreme athleticism. White, who’d made 73, slashed the same bowler powerfully to point. Kevin Pietersen threw his 6’5″ to his right to pluck a one handed catch inches from the ground. A better catch you will never see!Yorkshire weren’t finished though as Richard Blakey and Andy Gray scrambled ever closer and in a dramatic penultimate over 12 runs were scored to bring them within four of victory. Blakey drove Richard Logan to the extra cover boundary for the winning runs.Earlier there had been useful contributions from all of the Outlaws’ top six. Usman Afzaal top scored with 53 and both Blewett and Pietersen got into the 40’s as the home side reached 244-7 in their 45 overs.

Nair benefits from Pandey's attacking approach

Karun Nair has already been a part of the India Test squad. He has had a taste of the international circuit by spending time in the Indian dressing room after being picked for the third Test in Sri Lanka as M Vijay’s replacement, less than two months ago.Nair had been picked on the back of an unbeaten first-class century against South Africa A and a stellar 2014-15 season. Nair didn’t get an international debut and he is back to where he belonged – the Karnataka dressing room – to score more runs, more centuries, and register more wins for his side. His sixth first-class hundred and his third fifty-plus score in four first-class matches, including a 71 against Bangladesh A recently, placed Karnataka on top after two well-fought days against Bengal.”I wanted to start the season well and once you get starts…I got a start in the first game, I scored 30-odd and then couldn’t convert well. So it’s a relief of starting the season well and making it big,” Nair said.

Bhavane fit to bat on third day

Karnataka manager B Siddaramu said at the end of the second day’s play that No. 3 Shishir Bhavane, who had retired hurt on 32, was fit to bat on the third day as scans revealed there was no injury.
“He’s ok, he went to the hospital and he took an X-ray and CT scan. It’s only the impact when he got hit, no swelling, no fracture, he’s fit and ready to bat,” Siddaramu said. “He would have batted today but it’s good these two [Karun Nair and Shreyas Gopal] batted well and he’ll get one more day extra [to rest] and it will be slightly easier to bat.”
Bhavane was facing Ashok Dinda in the 27th over when a short ball climbed and hit him on the right wrist in the last over before lunch before Bhavane could drop his hands. Karnataka physio Sharavan came out and assessed Bhavane’s wrist before they walked off and the umpires ended the session there with only four balls left in the over.

Nair’s century today can be split into two parts – the supporing role and the lead role. The risk-free nature of his strokes did not change through the day but his partner and approach did. His first rescuing act was with Manish Pandey in a brisk partnership of 98 runs in 21 overs after the score was effectively 76 for 3, since Shishir Bhavane retired hurt, and Pandey dominated the stand with as many as nine fours. Nair said it was Pandey’s attacking approach that helped him bat without pressure.”Manish batted really well, he came out and batted very positively and that helped me also,” Nair said. “I got a lot of loose balls because of him playing positively. It was disappointing that he got out on 50-odd, still we are in a good position right now and we’d like to capitalise tomorrow.”There was no plan as to how to go about our partnership. Manish played his natural game, he scored off good balls and in between he received loose balls as well. The only plan was to bat throughout the day… Bat tight and straight.”Nair hopped into the driver’s seat once he saw Pandey and CM Gautam fall within half an hour. Karnataka were now 209 for 4 and unaware if Bhavane was going to bat again or not since he was sent to a hospital for scans after being hit on the wrist by a Ashok Dinda short ball. That did not perturb Nair and he marshaled Shreyas Gopal in the third session that went wicketless. In those two hours, Nair faced plenty of deliveries from spinners Pragyan Ojha and Manoj Tiwary, who pitched several ones outside the leg stump, only to see Nair play the ball late, use his feet to go back and forth, and find boundaries regularly.”I think I’ve been naturally like that [against the spinners],” Nair said. “I play spin naturally and haven’t done any special preparation as such, just the normal net sessions. It is one of my strengths but I think all-round I play quite well.”I was patient throughout, I didn’t play any rash shots, I was waiting for the loose balls and it all worked out well.”What also worked out well was that Karnataka got a lead by the end of the day with six wickets in hand as Bhavane was declared fit. Nair said they would look to bat the whole day on Saturday and the pitch had developed some cracks which could get worse by the end of the third day.”We should bat the whole day [tomorrow], we shouldn’t think about the runs, bat out the day and take whatever comes.”Pitch is right now good only. Outside the leg stump obviously the footmarks will be there but generally the pitch is good, the cracks are coming a little bit. Maybe tomorrow end of day it might become difficult to bat on, maybe till lunch or till tea it will still remain the same.”

Significant stumpings and a six

Shoaib Malik brought up his 1000th Test run with a six © AFP

Change of action
The third day Karachi pitch was hardly favourable for fluent batting, but Andre Nel’s change of actions in the fourth over would have made things a tad more difficult for the batsmen. He strode in with a normal delivery but then followed one up forming a semi-circle in the air from halfway through his run-up to the wicket. Ending up as a mix between Wasim Akram and Curtly Ambrose, Nel was cut away past point for four. He then tried a Waqar Younis; shielding the ball from the batsmen’s searching eyes as he leapt into his bowling stride with both hands together.Significant sixShoaib Malik was embedded in a spirited rearguard, inching his side towards the follow-on target. He brought his fifty up with a checked straight drive, celebrated it by driving the following ball through extra cover and in the next Paul Harris over, he jigged down the pitch to swat him for a huge straight six. The ball went missing temporarily but a nice way, nonetheless, to bring up your 1000th Test run, in your first Test as captain.Pierce this, Salman
With a four-man pace attack, South Africa started the innings with a half-umbrella field – a tactic often seen on bouncy pitches across the world. However, as Kallis strode in to bowl the 76th over of the innings, with the ball scuffed up by a dry outfield and a dusty pitch, Salman Butt was honoured with an 8-1 offside field; a slip, a fly slip, backward point, two short covers, short extra-cover, a normal cover and a mid-off. Spare some pity for the lone mid-on in the heat as Kallis duly responded with a wide outside off stump.Stumped
Mark Boucher doesn’t often get a chance to stump a batsman. Before this innings, he had only 16 from 102 Tests. But today he pulled off two in an innings: Malik and Umar Gul st Boucher b Harris. Stumping 17 brought him level with Ian Healy’s record for most dismissals and the next took him past it.Is that you Gordon?
Danish Kaneria is apparently working hard on his batting and to prove it he even managed his first first-class fifty this season, 65 for Essex in the County Championship. Many in Pakistan might not have seen that innings, so Kaneria decided to show everyone just what he was capable of in a little cameo at the end of Pakistan’s innings. First he stepped back and with a Caribbean flourish, flayed Andre Nel past point. But his best came soon after, when a short ball from Dale Steyn was pulled, while swivelling round and pivoting on one foot. Somewhere, Gordon Greenidge would’ve nodded his approval.

Zaheer, Shami not fully fit

Indian pace duo of Zaheer Khan and Mohammed Shami will continue to be sidelined due to minor injuries. The Delhi Daredevils management issued a media release confirming their injuries that ruled them out of the Daredevils’ first two games. The Daredevils, however, didn’t reveal the duo’s expected availability to bolster the pace departments.According to the statement, Zaheer has a niggle,while Shami has a minor knee injury and is consulting a specialist to chart a quick recovery process.”We look forward to the return of Zaheer and Shami to the playing XI. Thus far the bowling unit has stood up well and made the most of the opportunities. The most pleasing aspect of our bowling has been the performance of the spinners and the younger fast bowlers,” said Gary Kirsten, Daredevils head coach.The duo is unlikely to be available for their next game, in Pune against Kings XI Punjab on April 15.

Johnson backs Sandeep, Anureet

Australia fast bowler Mitchell Johnson has praised his team-mates Anureet Singh and Sandeep Sharma, saying the seamers have improved over the last two seasona.Sandeep was the highest wicket-taker for Kings XI Punjab in IPL 2014 and Johnson feels that the 21-year old, along with Anureet is only getting better.”I am really impressed with Sandeep and Anureet. They train really hard and always give it 100%,” Johnson told . “You can never doubt those guys when it comes to giving it their all. They are just getting more and more experienced and the more games they play the better for them.”It is really good to see them bowl the way they bowled against a quality side and going about what they needed to do as part of a bowling unit. Keeping things really simple has worked for them. I love seeing young guys like that who train really hard and it gives me a buzz.”Johnson was also confident that Anureet and Sandeep could perform well on flat pitches.”I would even trust them when it comes to bowling on a wicket where there isn’t going to be much of swing and movement. I still think they will be able to put the ball in the right areas and be able to hit the wicket hard. It is truly exciting and nice to see their progress.”

Would have preferred to play against Super Kings – Steyn

South Africa fast bowler Dale Steyn has said that he would have preferred to play in Sunrisers Hyderabad’s opening match against Chennai Super Kings but has accepted the team management’s decision to drop him. The bowler was left out of the side as Sunrisers went on to lose by 45 runs after conceding 209 but Steyn said he was not involved in the decision.In his syndicated column, which appeared in the , Steyn said: “There has been plenty of talk over the years about whether certain players should be `rested’ during the tournament and whether there should be a form of rotation going on. I’ve heard just about every argument there is, for and against. Fast bowlers traditionally need their workloads managed more than the other players but we only bowl four overs during a match so it’s perfectly understandable that people would expect us to play every game.”As I have said many times, it is often the unusual working hours and the travel which wear you down during the IPL far more than the cricket itself. I would have preferred to play in the opener, but I was not involved in the decision and will trust the management and coaches in whatever they decide is best for the team.”Perhaps the plan is to ease me into the tournament so, hopefully , I will be extra sharp a little later on. Or perhaps I’m simply not looking sharp enough at the moment and the other international players were looking better. But I accept the decision and will do everything for the good of Sunrisers.”

Auckland name predictable squad for series openers

Auckland, the defending State Championship holders, named a predictable squad of 14 to contest this year’s competition.Again under the leadership of Brooke Walker, the squad of 14 will be trimmed to 12 before next week’s first match for the side against Northern Districts in Gisborne.Auckland have come off a strong batting effort, especially from Tama Canning, who scored 105, and Tim McIntosh, who hit 77, in their warm-up match with ND at Eden Park’s outer oval.The squad has been named for the first three matches, the other games being against Wellington and Central Districts in Auckland and Blenheim respectively.The squad is: Brooke Walker (captain), Andre Adams, Tama Canning, Matt Horne, Rob Lynch, Richard Morgan, Rob Nicol, Tim McIntosh, Craig Pryor, Kyle Mills, Mark Richardson, Gareth Shaw, Lou Vincent, Reece Young.

England founder on Samuels' defiance

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details1:01

Dobell: Disciplined Samuels saves WI on Day 1

At the end of another day of hot, sweaty toil, West Indies had provided another show of the character that Phil Simmons hopes to instil in this side. The scene had moved from Antigua to Grenada but West Indies, thanks to an innings of discipline and application from Marlon Samuels, were once again feeling in the pink. England were left looking a little bit red and a little bit ragged, despite only having to get through 70 overs after rain cut the morning session in half.The portents had been more promising for England, after winning the toss and inserting West Indies in helpful conditions. Having called correctly, Alastair Cook then received a second stroke of luck, with the news that Jerome Taylor, who menaced England’s top three in the first Test, had been ruled out with a shoulder injury.When James Anderson produced a sonic-booming inswinger in his second over to remove Kraigg Brathwaite it appeared everyone had received the script. The sight of England’s leading Test wicket-taker bending the ball adroitly in either direction was doubly heartening for the tourists, after his struggle for lateral movement in Antigua.Chris Jordan, too, had an early success but England’s four-man seam attack was only intermittently probing. If their figures looked tidy enough, this was as much down to the batsmen not being required to play, as anything particularly unplayable. Cloud cover lingered until late in the day but the feeling persisted that their lengths had not been full enough to exploit it. A couple of dropped catches added to the sense of frustration.West Indies were in need of some doughty defiance and it came from an unexpected quarter. Samuels’ dismissal as they attempted to salvage the Antigua Test bore the mark of lazy profligacy so often associated with his batting but on this occasion he showed the stomach for a fight – noticeably so during some feisty exchanges with Ben Stokes in the evening session.Having taken 21 balls to get off the mark, Samuels battled through to his half-century and finished the day six runs shy of a seventh Test hundred, when bad light brought an early close. He spun the wheel on occasion – too much self-denial is not good for such a carefree soul – but was blessed by fortune, surviving an lbw review against the returning Moeen Ali on umpire’s call and then dropped by Cook at first slip on 32, driving at Jordan. By then, Cook surely knew his own luck had run out.England did succeed with a review against Jermaine Blackwood, shortly after Stuart Broad had missed a return chance off his own bowling, but Samuels opened up his shoulders during an unbroken sixth-wicket stand with his captain, Denesh Ramdin. From 44 off 139 balls, Samuels hit 50 from his next 47, his blade flashing in more familiar style; when their fifty partnership came up, Ramdin had contributed four.Marlon Samuels cut loose late in the day to finish unbeaten on 94•AFP

It was a position of relative security that looked unlikely earlier on. Dotted all over the hills surrounding the National Stadium in St George’s are houses built on stilts. With the ball darting around, the footing for West Indies’ batsmen was equally precarious. Runs were hard to come by and both openers fell before lunch; England claimed two more in the middle session, though this time they were firmly ascribed to batsman error.Darren Bravo had twice edged Anderson short of the cordon during his first spell – a sign that the pitch was not overly quick – but he buckled up and left well until inexplicably guiding Broad to slip after two hours of hard work in seeing off the new ball. Shivnarine Chanderpaul then scooped a full Stokes delivery into the hands of Moeen , diving forward at point, and West Indies were indeed wobbling at 74 for 4.Stokes had jarred his left knee while fielding midway through the second session but he was able to bowl and touched 90mph. His combative approach, mixing in the odd full toss and overzealous overthrow, was welcome, with England’s bowlers otherwise seemingly affected by the soporific atmosphere.They could be forgiven a certain amount of lethargy, having sent down 129.4 overs in the fourth innings in Antigua. Four days later they were back in the field, looking to make capital in conditions that were more receptive to swing bowling. The humidity and dampness of the surface, which placed a heavy tax on run-scoring, encouraged Cook to attack with the ball. Ramdin admitted he would have done the same.The teams had travelled south to the Windward Islands for the second Test and the more tropical conditions were in evidence as only an hour’s play was possible on a showery morning. Heavy overnight rain had cleared before the scheduled toss but further squally weather delayed the start by an hour and 45 minutes.The line of England’s attack was not as threatening as it could have been but they removed both openers inside 14 overs – though Devon Smith was perhaps unfortunate to be given out caught behind after appearing to hit the ground whilst driving.In Jordan’s second over, Smith was put down by Gary Ballance, stationed at leg gully for the flick off the pads – the chance was a sharp one but Ballance, having got one hand to the ball, might have been expected to hold on – but the batsman did not last much longer, given out attempting an expansive cover drive three balls later. He elected not to review and although replays suggested he had not hit it, without Hot Spot or the Snickometer, overturning the decision would not have been straightforward.There was no doubt about the delivery that cleaned up Brathwaite, which was vintage Anderson. His first over, a series of gentle outswingers, barely touched 80mph, although Brathwaite edged the final delivery on the bounce to second slip. Tired, Jimmy? No, just getting warmed up. He started his second over with a banana ball that nearly knocked Brathwaite off his feet, swerving in late from well outside off to hit middle and leg. Test wicket No. 385.That hinted at a potential clatter of wickets but there was little to rouse a healthy crowd, disappointed at the failure of Smith, the first Grenadian to play a Test at the ground. At least until Samuels’ riposte.

Kapali's new beginning

Alok Kapali takes the aerial route on the way to his maiden hundred © AFP
 

Alok Kapali’s dazzling 97-ball 115 against India on Saturday could well prove to be the watershed of his career. He couldn’t have chosen a better time to come good after he was recalled to the squad after close to two years as a replacement for the injured Aftab Ahmed in the Kitply Cup earlier this month.Kapali said he was confident coming into the Asia Cup considering his record while playing in Pakistan. “I had made some runs and taken a hat-trick when I was here the last time [in 2003]. I was just at the right place to start all over again,” Kapali told TigerCricket.com. “My late father believed in reincarnation and, from my cricket’s perspective, I hope this is a new beginning also.”He failed to get a berth in the squad during Dav Whatmore’s time as Bangladesh coach, but he blamed the situation on his own form. “I can’t blame Dav or anyone for that. I was not scoring runs and had to accept the fact that I was out of the Bangladesh team. I held no grudges. In fact, I always wished the team well when they were playing,” Kapali said. “When I was out of form, I spoke to coaches and players about what I should be doing. Maybe I tried too many things after listening to them. That did not help at all, and I became a confused cricketer.”Kapali, however, attributed the turn-around in his fortunes to himself. “I identified the weaknesses in my batting myself. There were slight changes I had to make technically,” he said. “Earlier I went across too much early on and that brought about my downfall often. I practised playing with a straight bat and made runs in the National Championship and the Dhaka Premier League this season.”There were two distinct phases in Kapali’s knock. He played with a defensive approach on the way to his first fifty, which came off 65 balls, after which he cut loose, needing only 21 balls more to reach his hundred.”All the while I was thinking of the team score and did not for once look at my score. I planned my innings and followed the team management’s instructions,” he said. “I knew that if I was there after 40 overs then I could play those big shots.”Rather than getting carried away, Kapali was focused on the challenges that lay ahead. “There is so much work to be done. I was out of the national set-up for a long time, almost two years, and now I need to earn my place again. I have to improve my fitness level also as I have not trained in the same pace as the national team. There is a lot of catching up to do.”

'Spare the CAB', Dalmiya tells Indian board

Dalmiya: ‘I believe all state associations should cooperate with and listen to the board. But at an individual level, they are welcome to fight me’ © AFP
 

Jagmohan Dalmiya, the newly-elected president of the Cricket Association of Bengal (CAB) has appealed to the BCCI not to let its fractious relationship with him affect his state association. Dalmiya has had a long-standing feud with the current BCCI administration, when he was arrested and later released on bail on charges of embezzlement relating to the 1996 World Cup.Dalmiya, a former president of both the ICC and the BCCI, defeated the incumbent, Prasun Mukherjee, to secure a seat on the Indian board on Tuesday.”There are two facades of cricket administration – collective and individual. At the collective level, the CAB doesn’t deserve to suffer because of my relationship with the board,” Dalmiya told the . “My message to them (BCCI) is – spare the CAB. Leave the state association alone. As the CAB president, I believe all state associations should cooperate with and listen to the board. But at an individual level, they are welcome to fight me. It is nothing new to me anyway.”After being ousted from the BCCI in 2006, he had an 18-month layoff from cricket administration, but Dalmiya said the determination to clear his name of all charges prompted him to contest the elections.”A lot of charges were made against me, one after another,” he said. “They (BCCI) tried to malign me with false charges. I had two options – either fight it out, or plain give up. I made up my mind that I would fight it out and get my name cleared of all those charges. That’s because what was at stake was not just my own name, but the image and standing of my family members, and all my business associates.”Now back at the helm, Dalmiya said his aim was to improve the standard of Bengal cricket, after a poor Ranji season.”We all know Bengal lost its Elite Group status in the Ranji Trophy last season. So I have to work out things to pull Bengal out of the Plate Division. For this, I have specific plans in mind but I want to discuss them with the CAB working committee first.”

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