Masakadzas star in Mountaineers win

A round-up of matches from the first day of the Zimbabwe domestic Twenty20 competition

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Oct-2012Mountaineers pulled off a tight win over Matabeleland Tuskers at the Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo, beating them by five runs and seal victory off the penultimate ball of the game. After being put in to bat, Hamilton Masakadza led the way, smashing 84 in 66 balls, hitting five fours and three sixes. Mountaineers lost an early wicket but Masakadza and Tino Mawoyo (54) added 107 for the second wicket. Masakadza remained unbeaten and stretched the score to 167.The Tuskers put up a good fight and were well placed at 103 for 2 in the 15th over. Craig Ervine top-scored with 71 at No.3, adding 50 with Charles Coventry for the second wicket and 53 Brian Chari for the third. Together with Keegan Meth, Ervine helped take the score to 149 for 3 in 18 overs. But, 19 needed to win off the last two, a collapse ensued. Shingirai Masakadza picked up three wickets in the 19th over, dismissing both Meth and Ervine, and the rest of the batting crumbled soon. Seven wickets were lost for 13 runs in 11 balls, and Tuskers folded for 162.Mashonaland Eagles beat Southern Rocks comfortably at the Harare Sports Club. After choosing to field, the Eagles bowlers bowled economically and restricted Rocks to 120 for 8. Ben Slater made 39 in 34 balls and Alester Maregwede chipped in with 30 off 25. But barring the pair, there was no significant contribution from the rest. The Eagles response began well, with the openers Cephas Zhuwao (49) and Chamu Chibhabha (46*) adding 89 for the first wicket. They scored quickly, too, in 12.1 overs, and those who followed just had to consolidate. Chibhabha stayed through to the finish, helping his team win with four overs to spare.

Warwickshire win secures top spot for final week

Warwickshire moved to the top of the County Championship and into pole position to win the competition for the first time since 2004

10-Sep-2011
ScorecardWarwickshire moved to the top of the County Championship and into pole position to win the competition for the first time since 2004 with a crushing innings and 114-run win over Nottinghamshire at Edgbaston.Warwickshire needed only 80 minutes to take Nottinghamshire’s last four wickets and romp to their ninth win of the season this morning, with seamer Chris Wright taking his second five-wicket haul in three matches since he joined on loan from Essex. Wright, who is in negotiations with Warwickshire about a contract for next season, has now taken 19 wickets since he arrived at Edgbaston.Only Alex Hales, who carried his bat for 106 out of Nottinghamshire’s 222, offered prolonged resistance but Warwickshire still climbed above previous leaders Durham, who sat out the penultimate round of matches. It represents a remarkable turnaround for Warwickshire who were battling relegation 12 months ago while Nottinghamshire were on their way to the title.But the roles were reversed here with Warwickshire completing only the fifth double over Nottinghamshire in their history following a nine-wicket success at Trent Bridge in May.The biggest threat to Warwickshire’s victory hopes was posed by the weather. There was light rain around when the players arrived at the ground and further showers were forcecast for midday.But the rain cleared in time to allow play to start on time and Warwickshire made an early breakthrough when Paul Franks thick edged Rikki Clarke’s sixth ball of the day to Chris Metters at third slip. Andre Adams came out with the intention of attacking and he managed to pull Wright for one four.But the former New Zealand all-rounder was bowled next bowl when he tried to repeat the stroke against Wright and succeeded only in bottom-edging into his stumps. Hales, the only Nottinghamshire batsman to play with any composure in the second innings, survived a confident lbw appeal from Clarke and then drove the same bowler through the covers for his first boundary of the morning.Darren Pattinson never looked comfortable, even though he twice flayed Clarke through mid off for boundaries, and he was eventually undone by a yorker from Wright which he failed to dig out. Hales turned down easy singles in his last-wicket partnership with Luke Fletcher to ensure that he farmed the strike and completed his third century of the season.He got there by off driving Wright for his 12th four from 169 balls after which Fletcher went for his shots, including a huge pulled six off Boyd Rankin. Warwickshire turned to Chris Metters to wrap up their first innings win over Nottinghamshire since 1966, and the slow left-armer struck with his fourth ball of the match when Fletcher drove a long hop to cover.

Fast bowlers thrive after North century

The Australians continued their dominance of the warm-up match against the Board President’s XI in Chandigarh by producing another powerful performance on the second day

Sidharth Monga in Chandigarh26-Sep-2010
ScorecardBen Hilfenhaus removed Gautam Gambhir early•AFP

The Australians continued to dominate their tour game against the Board President’s XI. After the openers, Simon Katich and Shane Watson, scored centuries on day one, Marcus North, who would have been under some pressure after he scored just 36 runs in four Test innings against Pakistan, scored 124 unbeaten runs in less than three hours to take the Australians past 500. Ben Hilfenhaus and Peter George then ran through the Board President’s XI top order to reduce them to 53 for 5 at one stage.The only matter of concern for the Australians would be Nathan Hauritz, their lead spinner, who was played with ease by the BP XI lower order. Piyush Chawla scored an unbeaten and entertaining 64 off 73, and made sure his side wasn’t embarrassingly bowled out in one session of play on a slow pitch.There was a scare for the Australians early on as Pragyan Ojha removed both Ricky Ponting and Michael Clarke in his second over of the day. Ponting played back to one that pitched on an in-between length, and seemed to suggest the ball stayed a bit low too. Clarke jumped out of the crease, found he wasn’t quite to the pitch of the ball, and was given bat-pad. Suddenly the quiet BP XI fielders became chirpy. The small crowd started cheering the spinners. Out came an extra set of shin pads, helmet, and abdomen guard. But North and Tim Paine thwarted it all in a 167-run partnership that ended when North was called back to give the rest a chance to bat.North is a notoriously nervous starter, and he seemed to make a conscious effort not do anything silly in the first 30-40 balls he played. It showed in how he let Paine do the early scoring, and only opened up when Chawla presented him with a long hop. In the next few overs, he pulled and drove Umesh Yadav for fours, and lofted Ojha over midwicket for another.Another period of acceleration was to come. There was a point when North was on 26 and Paine on 17. By the time Paine reached 19, North had moved to 49. He played almost all the shots except the straight drive. He wasn’t made to. The bowlers allowed him to stay on the back foot and cut and pull. When he drove, he drove through extra cover. The sweep was used sparingly: in fact he swept only thrice in scoring his first 59 runs.When he grew in confidence, he started sweeping and lofting more, and raced to his century. Paine provided the ideal solid base at the other end. He seemed to be enjoying tiring the bowlers down. After North ended his innings, though, the BP XI got quick consolation wickets, the last five falling for 11. Michael Hussey’s comeback will make sure the tail is not that long in the Test matches.The collapse at the top of BP XI innings was more spectacular. In his second over, Hilfenhaus surprised Gautam Gambhir and Ajinkya Rahane with extra bounce. Gambhir went back looking at the fingers of his right hand, and Rahane looking at some spot on the pitch. Peter George, known to be in the Glenn McGrath mould, started accurately, and removed a left-hand batsman, Shikhar Dhawan, with the first ball he bowled to him. It was a McGrathesque dismissal: the ball pitched around off, and took the edge of the hanging bat. He got Saurabh Tiwary caught-behind too, but that was a loose shot away from the body. Between those two dismissals, Mitchell Johnson squared Cheteshwar Pujara up with what seemed to be late movement away.At 55 for 5, though, spin was introduced. Chawla found it easier to negotiate and added 37 with Wriddhiman Saha. He used his feet a lot, and got to the pitch of the ball with ease, lofting both the spinners for a six each, including Steven Smith in his first over. That Smith’s over was bowled three overs before stumps didn’t stop Chawla from going after him. Between them, the Australian spinners bowled 11 overs for 66 runs, and couldn’t manage a maiden. Hauritz got one inside edge from Chawla that went fine of the wicketkeeper, and that was that.A No. 7 attacking their spinners with ease was the only worrying sign for the Australians over the last two days.

Penfold ruled out of Sri Lanka, Australia series

The seamer underwent surgery last week and will be sidelined for up to three months

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Feb-2025New Zealand seamer Molly Penfold has been ruled out for the remainder of the season with a knee injury meaning she will miss the series against Sri Lanka and Australia.Penfold, 23, sustaining a torn meniscus to her left knee while playing in the Hallyburton Johnstone Shield earlier this month and has undergone surgery with a recovery time of up to 12 weeks.Related

  • NZ replace injured Hayley Jensen with Fran Jonas for ODIs against Sri Lanka

  • Bella James ruled out of Sri Lanka ODIs; Down named replacement

  • NZ pick uncapped Illing, McLeod, Sharp for SL series; Plimmer back after injury

  • Sophie Devine to miss ODIs and T20Is against Sri Lanka

  • Athapaththu to leave WPL early to play for Sri Lanka

“We’re all gutted for Molly,” Ben Sawyer, the New Zealand head coach, said. “It’s a really unfortunate way for her summer to end, especially after strong contributions during the Rose Bowl series. The positive is that her recovery timelines should see her fit for our winter training schedule.”Penfold has taken nine wickets in 14 ODIs and seven in 10 T20Is. In the ODI series against Australia last December she took a career-best 4 for 42 in the second match at the Basin Reserve.New Zealand will also be without Sophie Devine for the Sri Lanka matches as she continues her break from the game with her participation against Australia yet to be confirmed.New Zealand play three ODIs and three T20Is against Sri Lanka next month followed by three T20Is against Australia.Chamari Athapaththu will leave the WPL early to take part in the tour but Amelia Kerr will remain in India.

Jonassen studies Jadeja ahead of India Test challenge

The left-arm spinner is hoping to be part of the side for the Mumbai encounter next month

AAP16-Nov-2023Left-arm spinner Jess Jonassen has been studying master of the art Ravindra Jadeja closely ahead of Australia’s Test against India next month.India will host Australia from December 21 in Mumbai, for the first time in a Test on home soil since 1984, and the 31-year-old Jonassen is leaving no stone unturned in her quest to make the most of the opportunity.Jonassen was named for Australia – along with fellow spinners Ashleigh Gardner, Alana King and Georgia Wareham – in the squad for the three-format tour that will also include three ODIs and T20Is.Related

  • Healy '100%' keen on Australia captaincy, lauds 'unmatched' Lanning

  • Healy and Brown named for India tour, Cheatle recalled, but no captain yet

  • 'My body's been through a lot' – Cheatle digs deep and earns Test chance

On Wednesday, Jonassen became the first player to pass 150 wickets in the WBBL, with her 4 for 20 for Brisbane Heat in the 53-run win over Hobart Hurricanes taking the veteran’s tally to 152.Indian left-armer Jadeja is a regular for India and Jonassen is a student of his wily ways.”Jadeja has just got incredible control of his pace into the same length. His ability to beat both sides of the bat is probably second to none,” Jonassen told AAP. “That is something I will be hoping to emulate myself when I can get over there to India. Hopefully I can have a few spells like he has had in his Test career.”I used to watch a lot of [former New Zealand spinner] Dan Vettori but in the current climate Jadeja is the bowler I look to. I have been watching him in the 50-over World Cup in India.”It is a bit different in the sense that [the men] bowl a bit quicker than we do but in some respects it is still very similar with what I am trying to execute and achieve.”Jonassen acknowledged competition for spinning spots on tour would be intense but is relishing the challenge”Whenever [selection] becomes official it is always exciting and always nice and I am really proud to be part of such an historic trip,” she said. “We have some really talented spinners in the squad and we are all going to be licking our lips to get the nod.”Ultimately the balance of the side will dictate that. We will keep a close eye on the India-England Test match that will be a week or so prior to ours at the same Mumbai venue. That will give us an idea of what conditions may be like for our game.”Jonassen had not taken a wicket in three WBBL games before the Hurricanes clash but found her rhythm and confidence in her best return of the season so far.”I was really clear about the role I wanted to play and the impact I wanted to have,” she said. “I haven’t felt like I have been bowling too badly, bar a couple of games. The wickets just weren’t necessarily there. This game…they were.”

Will Jacks, Sunil Narine get Oval Invincibles' season up and running

Welsh Fire slip to second successive defeat as Jacks comes up trumps on slow Cardiff pitch

ECB Reporters Network07-Aug-2022Will Jacks hit the highest individual score of the Hundred this summer as his 81 steered Oval Invincibles to a 39-run win over Welsh Fire at Sophia Gardens.Jacks batted from the first to the 99th ball to notch the joint second highest score in the men’s Hundred to join Colin Ingram and David Willey just behind Liam Livingstone’s current record high of 92.His late burst of sixes pushed Invincibles to 154 for 5 and enabled them to put their London derby defeat on Thursday behind them as they picked up their first win and condemned Fire to a second successive defeat.Related

  • Hales gives Rockets lift-off as composed half-century ices chase

  • Buttler's outfield test drive underlines his appetite for experimentation

  • Lyth, Brook take Superchargers home in tall chase

  • Hundred hurly-burly leaves captains under pressure like never before

  • Fire outperformed by fireworks as Hundred season starts with a squeak

Having won the toss, Fire sent in Invincibles and quickly added to the pain currently being felt by England star Jason Roy by sending him packing for a mere 10 runs off as many balls.If that was an improvement on his golden duck in the opening round of the Hundred against London Spirt, he showed his frustration at tickling the ball to short fine leg by tossing his bat in the air as he walked back to the pavilion.The pace attack of David Payne, Jake Ball and George Scrimshaw bowled tidily enough on a tricky wicket to initially restrict the run rate. Given they only took one wicket in their heavy defeat against the reigning champions, Southern Brave, in their opening game it didn’t take them long to improve on that.Scrimshaw returned the favour to Payne, who caught Roy, by catching the dangerous Rilee Rossouw at short third and all of a sudden it was 22 for 2 with two key batters back in the hutch.Sam Billings steadied the ship alongside Jacks until he left two balls after being struck in the box and taking a very necessary injury break. His departure, lbw to Ryan Higgins, made it 51 for 3 from 41 balls and put even more responsibility on the shoulders of Jacks.The opener, Surrey’s top scorer in the Blast, steered the side to 57 for 3 at the halfway mark, reached his half-century with a cracking four through extra cover off Payne and then went on the rampage with a series of boundaries.His 50 came up in 36 balls and he added a further 31 off his next nine deliveries before holing out on the boundary off the penultimate ball of the innings. A four off the last ball by Tom Curran meant the Invincibles had set a reasonable target of 154.Joe Clarke gave the home side a good start, punishing spinner Danny Briggs with successive sixes in his opening over. He would go onto top score with 37 as he enjoyed stands of 46 with Tom Banton and then 26 with Ben Duckett.But once he was caught in the deep aiming for another boundary off Tom Curran the writing was on the wall for Fire. They had only made 107 off 100 balls against the Brave and were eventually held to 119 for 6 as Sam and Tom Curran put on the squeeze, both conceding only 24 runs from their 20 balls each.Sunil Narine chipped in with three wickets as he conceded 21 runs off 20 balls.

Remaining India-England T20Is to be played behind closed doors

The decision is taken due to the increasing number of Covid cases in Ahmedabad

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Mar-2021The remaining three T20Is between India and England in Ahmedabad will be played behind closed doors “due to increasing number of Corona cases”. The BCCI and the Gujarat Cricket Association (GCA) made the decision on Monday after the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation ordered the closure of shops, malls, restaurants and salons after 10pm in eight wards of the city to control the spread of Covid-19. According to the corporation, the city had 530 active cases as of 11am on Monday.The GCA will refund the spectators who had purchased tickets for the games. Along with the T20Is, the three ODIs scheduled for March 23, 26 and 28 in Pune will also be played behind closed doors as per the instructions of the Maharashtra government.”Due to rise in number of Corona cases, we at GCA have decided in consultation with BCCI, the matches will be played (behind) closed doors and not allow the spectators in the ground during T20 internationals to be played between India and England at Ahmedabad,” GCA vice-president Dhanraj Nathwani said in a press release. “We will form the policy for refund of money to the spectators, who have already purchased the tickets for these three T20s. Those who have received complimentary tickets are requested not to visit the stadium.”The BCCI secretary Jay Shah said in a media release: “The decision was arrived at following detailed discussions with the state and local health authorities. The BCCI will continue to comply with all the regulations put in place to curb the spread of the Covid-19 virus and will always put the health and safety of its fans and stakeholders at the top.”The first two T20Is had seen crowds of over 66,000 each•Getty Images

All five T20Is of the series are being played at the refurbished stadium at Motera, Ahmedabad and the first two games saw crowds of 67,200 and 66,352 respectively. The ground has a capacity of close to 130,000 and the GCA allowed 50% crowd in the first two games.”Aside from meaning there will be considerably less noise in the stadium it doesn’t materially affect us as we remain in our bubble and even when crowds were in attendance we never came into contact with any of them, and the ball was sanitised whenever it was hit into the stands,” an ECB spokesperson said.England’s near-two-month-long tour began with the first two Tests in Chennai before the teams moved to Ahmedabad for the remaining two Tests and the T20I series. Crowds were allowed in the stadium from the second Test onwards with a maximum of 50% capacity.The T20I series is currently level 1-1. The remaining three matches will be played on March 16, 18 and 20.The Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad will also be hosting eight league games of the IPL from April 26 to May 8 in addition to the four playoff matches from May 25 to 30. The IPL will be played behind closed doors “to begin with”, the BCCI had said while announcing the schedule.

Langer backs Siddle as Hazlewood's likely replacement

James Pattinson, following his code-of-conduct sanctions, is the favourite to come into the XI at the MCG

Andrew McGlashan15-Dec-2019Peter Siddle’s Test ambitions live on after he was picked out by Australia coach Justin Langer as a potential replacement in the squad for the injured Josh Hazlewood.Hazlewood will miss the Boxing Day Test against New Zealand after suffering a hamstring strain in his second over in Perth and appears unlikely to be fit for the final Test in Sydney.James Pattinson, who was ruled out of contention for the opening Test of the season against Pakistan after his code-of-conduct suspension, is the favourite to come into the XI on his home ground at the MCG, and the uncapped Michael Neser is also part of the squad. However, there is likely to be reinforcements added to the squad with an eye on the workloads of Mitchell Starc and Pat Cummins.”We’ve started to think about it, the obvious one would be Peter Siddle,” Langer said when asked who could come into the squad. “He did a really good job in the Ashes, he’s bowling very well for Victoria and it’s at the MCG where he’s played a lot of cricket. We’ll see what happens the rest of this game and then make a decision.”Later, speaking to Channel Seven during the tea break, Langer suggested Australia could consider a five-man attack in Melbourne. “If the wicket’s been like it has the last few years we might even be able to play four quicks and a spinner,” he said. “There’s lots of combinations. Nice to see Marnus and Travis head bowling a few overs as well so that gives us a nice combination.”Siddle played in three of the Ashes series taking nine wickets but picked up an injury in the early stages of the final match at The Oval which hindered his performance. He is Victoria’s leading wicket-taker in the Sheffield Shield this season with 18 wickets at 19.77.Having enforced the follow-on in the second Test against Pakistan in Adelaide and now been reduced to two frontline quicks in Perth, Langer was conscious of the strain the bowling attack is under although there will be nine day gap before the Boxing Day Test.”It always makes you nervous when a bowler goes down,” Langer said. “You always think about the implications for this game but also the cumulative effect of a lot of overs. We also think back to the winter and what’s already been this summer, so they are things you keep in mind. We’ll go through the process and come up with the best solution.”It’s a shame for Josh; he’s built up so well during the Ashes. I feel for him. Hopefully it’s not too bad. He’s certainly out of Boxing Day and but we’ll have a look for Sydney. We’ll have a look at the end of this Test at how many overs the boys bowled, how long we were in there for the second innings and we’ll make a decision on who the next bowler is.”With the overs clocking up for the fast bowlers – and the potential for a second spinner to be needed in Sydney – the question of an allrounder has been raised again. However, options are limited with Mitchell Marsh only just beginning his comeback from the broken wrist he suffered when punching the dressing room wall and the highly-rated Cameron Green is unable to bowl due to a stress fracture of his back. Another Western Australia allrounder, Marcus Stoinis, has had promising returns in the Shield with 322 runs at 35.77 and 12 wickets at 27.25 but would appear a long shot.”There are a few injuries and there’s a great opportunity in Australian cricket for someone to put their hand up and knock really hard on the door to fill that gap,” Langer said. “There’s a lot of talk about allrounders but the truth is, whether it’s a club side, T20 side, Shield side, they all want an allrounder but there aren’t many of them around. And that’s okay, we just find different ways of winning.”Marsh, who will play the Perth Scorchers’ opening match of the BBL against the Sydney Sixers on Wednesday as a specialist batsman, and is at least a week away from bowling competitively, admitted his wrist may never be 100% again following a nine-week recovery. He also conceded he had tried to rush back too soon.”It’s been a long nine weeks, so looking forward to it,” Marsh said. “I’ve only had a couple of bowls, so it will take me a while to get going. It’s been slow but it’s feels good now. Injuries in sport you learn to deal with, but when you do it to yourself, it’s a bit different. We knew it was a ten-week injury but I wanted to get back in four. It’s natural as an athlete and I pushed really hard.”

Hanuma Vihari, Ankit Bawne help India A seize the advantage

India A rode on Vihari’s unbeaten 138 and Bawne’s 80 to finish the first day on 322 for 4 in the second unofficial Test against South Africa A

The Report by Sreshth Shah in Alur10-Aug-2018Hanuma Vihari drives the ball square•PTI

After two sessions of domination by either side – first by South Africa A in the morning and then by India A in the afternoon – the hosts, led by Hanuma Vihari’s unbeaten 138 and a half-century from Ankit Bawne, moved into a commanding position. The duo’s 177-run partnership for the fourth wicket ensured that no matter how the day had started, India had the advantage at the close, reaching 322 for 4 at stumps on the opening day of the second four-day game in Alur.Asked to bat under overcast conditions, the India A openers Prithvi Shaw and Mayank Agarwal failed to recreate their wonderful form from the first unofficial Test. They had put on a 277-run stand in Bengaluru only last week, but both batsmen fell inside the first hour of play to South Africa’s new-ball bowlers, who utilised a strong cross-wind from the east to generate enough lateral movement early on. Stand-in captain Dane Piedt’s gamble – to make first use of the Alur surface – seemed to pay off as India stumbled to 18 for 2.Mayank, who smashed 220 last week, was out on the day’s fourth delivery, when a length ball from Duanne Olivier zipped away and took the outside edge of his attempted cover drive. From the other end, Anrich Nortje – in for the rested Beuran Hendricks – applied the pressure too, forcing Shaw to edge his front-foot drives – either over or past the slip cordon on three occasions – before having him caught behind when he tried to punch through the off side. Shreyas Iyer, the captain, then played a free-flowing innings of 39 – including six fours in 54 balls – but when he sliced a catch to cover in the 24th over, the visitors were well and truly on top as the umpires called for lunch.The South Africans were welcomed by team-mates and their support staff with a loud round of applause after a job well done in the day’s first couple of hours, but that’s where the visitors’ authority over the day’s proceedings ended. After lunch, Vihari and Bawne started cautiously, blocking out Olivier and Nortje’s new spells, but as soon as spin was introduced into the attack, the two batsmen began to hit their stride.Senuran Muthusamy, South Africa’s left-arm spinner with roots in Chennai, found ample support from the little crowd that had turned up at the KSCA Ground. But he failed to convert those cheers into a productive spell. Motivated, perhaps, by the shouts of “c’mon, Muthu” from the spectators, Muthusamy chose to toss the ball up with more regularity after lunch, and there began South Africa’s downfall.Neither Vihari nor Bawne was afraid to use his feet to Muthusamy and Piedt, driving and whipping anything that landed near the toes, and by tea, they had already put on 102 runs. The duo took particular liking to Piedt’s loopy offspinners, putting away anything that landed too full, including a sweep in the 44th over that brought up Vihari’s second 50-plus score of the series. When the teams walked in after the tea break, the momentum had completely shifted and so had the mood as the Indians welcomed the two unbeaten batsmen with thundering applause.After tea, it was more of the same from Vihari and Bawne. A drive to long-on brought up Bawne’s 29th first-class fifty. Vihari then took charge, crunching back-to-back boundaries, and soon navigated to his 15th first-class century, much to the delight of coach Rahul Dravid, who circumnavigated 13 times around the boundary-line between the lunch and tea sessions. The partnership was eventually broken in the 75th over by Piedt, with Bawne looking to repeat a six over long-on from the previous over. However, the ball sneaked under his bat and he was stumped for a well composed 80.With 15 overs to go in the day’s play, and the skies going dark once again, in came Srikar Bharat to give state-mate Vihari company. But the wicketkeeper-batsman looked tentative, top-edging a boundary over the keeper and thick-edging a drive down to third man at the start. Seeing this, South Africa took the new ball in the 82nd over, but Vihari and Bharat staved off the challenge, knocking around singles and twos while finding the occasional boundary. They posted a brisk, unbeaten 65-run stand by stumps to take India past 300.Earlier, Iyer’s 62-run stand with Vihari – who moved up two batting spots to No. 3 for this game – had helped India recover after a shaky start, following a spell of play that saw more runs come off the edges than off the middle. By the time Iyer was dismissed, the sun was beginning to peep out of the gloomy skies – much to the relief of the batting side. Nortje’s new-ball spell from the South End, and his return spell after lunch from the North End kept Shaw, Vihari, Iyer and Bawne on their toes, but his spell wasn’t penetrative enough to prise out another wicket. And having seen off the more dangerous Nortje and Olivier for the most part as the day, India walloped medium-pacer Mthiwekhaya Nabe for 46 in ten overs and Muthusamy for 51 off 12 to push the run rate up whenever it looked like flatlining.South Africa had made the surprising decision to rest their captain Khaya Zondo in lieu of Rassie van der Dussen while Nortke’s inclusion was the other change. For India, top-order batsman R Samarth was swapped out for Bawne, while Abhimanyu Easwaran, Shahbaz Nadeem and Rajneesh Gurbani were the other squad members left out.

Dull draw ends Derbyshire's run of defeats

Derbyshire ended a run of three consecutive defeats in the County Championship as their Division Two match against Leicestershire at Derby ended in a tame draw

ECB Reporters Network28-May-2017
ScorecardPaul Horton scored a half-century as Leicestershire batted on•Getty Images

Derbyshire ended a run of three consecutive defeats in the County Championship as their Division Two match against Leicestershire at Derby ended in a tame draw.Leicestershire batted on in their second innings for 57 overs before declaring on 217 for 3, which included half centuries for openers Paul Horton and Harry Dearden. A target of 304 in 33 overs was never realistic and the inevitable draw was agreed with Derbyshire 42 without loss from 10 overs.There was always a chance the game would end in stalemate on such a lifeless pitch but the day began promisingly for Leicestershire, who took the last two Derbyshire wickets in 11 balls. Clint McKay struck with the third delivery of the day, which moved away just enough to take the edge of Rob Hemmings bat, and Tony Palladino gloved a pull to give Zak Chappell his fourth wicket.A lead of 86 was increased to 183 at lunch by Horton and Dearden, although Horton was given a life on 8 when he was dropped at first slip by Wayne Madsen off Tom Taylor.Horton completed his first fifty of the season before he was caught behind off Taylor and Dearden fell to a stunning piece of fielding by Billy Godleman, who threw the ball up at long-on to avoid taking it over the rope before completing the catch.He took a more straightforward one to dismiss Mark Cosgrove and give Jeevan Mendis his eighth wicket in the game but the Sri Lankan’s match figures of 8 for 283 were the most expensive in Derbyshire’s history.The game almost ground to a halt after Cosgrove’s departure with Colin Ackermann and Ned Eckersley scoring only 43 runs in 13 overs while Derbyshire slowed down the over rate.Leicestershire finally declared three overs after tea leaving Derbyshire to score at more than nine an over to pull off what would have been an astonishing victory and the players shook hands with 23 overs still to bowl.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus