Gayle pays price for outburst

Gayle’s animated performance cost him 30 percent of his match fee © Getty Images

Chris Gayle has been fined 30% of his match fee following an incident with Michael Clarke during West Indies’ win against Australia in Mumbai on Wednesday. Clarke was found not guitly and also rejected suggestions he called Gayle a “second-class citizen”.Gayle’s loud comments and animated demeanour during the 10-run victory were at odds with his usual placid self. The situation appeared to be getting the better of him at one stage and, when fielding off his own bowling, he hurled the ball back at Clarke to shy at the stumps but it went above the wicketkeeper for four overthrows. Gayle also followed Clarke down the pitch after one over and appeared to nudge him.”What started off as banter between the two players got out of hand and Chris Gayle went over the top in his reactions,” Mike Procter, the ICC match referee, said after the hearing. “We do not want robots on the field and we want to ensure players play with enthusiasm and passion. We saw a great deal of that during an excellent match on Wednesday but there is a line between what is acceptable and what is not and Chris crossed it.”Gayle was found guilty of a code one breach for failing to “conduct play within the spirit of the game”. Clarke was found not guilty of the same offence in a separate hearing in Mumbai.The Courier-Mail reported a West Indian “insider” saying Gayle was upset by being called a “second-class citizen”. However, Clarke dismissed the claim. “If anyone is second-class it’s me, I’m from Liverpool,” Clarke, who grew up in the working-class Sydney suburb, said. “I didn’t say that – I wouldn’t say that – and neither did any of my team-mates. Why Chris way fired up I’m not sure, I certainly know I didn’t say anything to Chris when he batted.”Ricky Ponting, who has been found guilty twice over the past year for poor on-field behaviour, was upset after the match that charges had not been laid immediately. “If there’s any consistency in the game that should be looked at,” Ponting said. He got his wish when the umpires Mark Benson and Rudi Koertzen changed their minds on Thursday morning.

England operating 'closed shop' policy

“The fact that Owais Shah is not there [in the one-day squad] is criminal,” says John Emburey © Getty Images

John Emburey has attacked the England selectors for failing to include Owais Shah in either the Test or one-day squads to tour Pakistan in October. Emburey, Shah’s coach at Middlesex, has accused the selectors of operating a “closed shop” policy.Shah has enjoyed a superb season for Middlesex, scoring over 2000 runs in both four-day and one-day competitions. Despite his omission from the senior side’s squads, he was however included in the National Academy squad. But Emburey feels this is scant reward for a young player who has performed so well all season.”The fact that he’s not there [in the one-day squad] to me is criminal. He’s going to have to bat like Don Bradman to play any better than he has done this year.” Emburey told .Emburey feels Shah has been ostracised because “his face doesn’t fit.” He added: “I think it’s a closed shop to be honest. I think they’ve got their people they want to bring on and his face doesn’t fit, as simple as that.”Shah, 26, last played for England in the 2002-03 one-day series against Australia. A solid season in 2003 saw him rewarded with the captaincy of Middlesex – but he was relieved of the captaincy in June 2004 following a string a poor results. A highly gifted and stylish batsman, Shah is one of many young England players who initially found county cricket an easy affair, only to fall by the wayside in recent years with inconsistent performances. However, consistency is one aspect Shah has improved upon as his statistics this season clearly demonstrate.”I hope someone actually speaks to him and tells him why he isn’t going and doesn’t use his little knee injury as an excuse,” added Emburey. “I want someone to be honest with the bloke – either the selectors or the coach.”I can understand there are no vacancies in the Test side for him because the batting is fairly solid and they have kept a squad of players together which has performed very well, and I think that’s right.”But I think their one-day cricket has been very inconsistent and there is a need to bring someone in which can add something to the team and make them better.”

Chris Read’s ability with the gloves has never been questioned. But are lower-order runs more important than safely-held catches? © Getty Images

Shah isn’t the only player whose omission has raised eyebrows. Chris Read was, yet again, not chosen for either squad; Matt Prior from Sussex, a counterattacking and aggressive batsman, is Geraint Jones’ wicketkeeping back-up. And of course, it was Jones who initially replaced Read two winters ago; Read had kept beautifully all winter, but in averaging just 15 with the bat in 11 Tests, England decided they needed a more punchy lower-order batsman.”The keeping side of things is always under scrutiny, but the ability to score runs has maybe overtaken that. My personal opinion is it might well go in a cycle,” he told .”We’ve seen Adam Gilchrist, who turned the art of the keeper-batter on its head by averaging 50-plus. A lot of the nations have tried to emulate that, probably with limited success. Now that Gilchrist is within two-to-three years of retirement, it will be interesting to see what Australia have up their sleeve and how the other countries react to that.”

Sangakkara seals emphatic victory

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Kumar Sangakkara: a matchwinning innings © Getty Images

Sri Lanka’s dream run continued in Dambulla with an emphatic display that oozed confidence. Despite making wholesale changes and resting four key players, including their captain, Marvan Atapattu, who scored a matchwinning 97 not out in the third match, they cantered past South Africa’s 235-run total with nearly four overs and seven wickets to spare, thanks to a controlled and stylish unbeaten 74 from Kumar Sangakkara.Sri Lanka’s run-chase started well with Sanath Jayasuriya teeing off with a cover-drive and a sweetly timed leg-side clip to the boundary after surviving a good lbw shout. But a mix-up while running between the wickets pushed them onto the back foot, as Jayasuriya, responding late to a hesitant call for a quick single to mid-off, was run out by two yards (14 for 1).Thereafter, Shaun Pollock and Jacques Kallis, who took the new ball in place of the discarded Alan Dawson, kept things tight as Avishka Gunawardene and Saman Jayantha, Atapattu’s nervous replacement, played and missed frequently, and struggled to dispatch the bad ball.Fortunately for Sri Lanka, South Africa were having another bad catching day. Gunawardene, on 13 and 32, was missed twice at slip by Jacques Kallis. Both chances were difficult: the first was a low diving effort and the second, off a full-blown square-cut, whizzed to his right.After 10 overs, Sri Lanka were 36 for 1, but, gradually, Gunawardene started to settle and find the boundary with meaty tonks over mid-on and forcing strokes through the off side. He reached his 11th one-day international fifty from 61 balls, and when drinks arrived, Sri Lanka were on target on 73 for 1.But, first ball after the break, Gunawardene wafted at a delivery fromMakhaya Ntini and feathered a catch to Mark Boucher – his 250th in one-dayers. He could have had victim No. 251 too, but was unable to hold onto a thin nick off Jayantha in Nicky Boje’s first over. Boje’s bad luck continued in his second over when Jayantha was perilously close to being out lbw.But after the let-offs, Jayantha started to relax. He had laboured for 48 balls before hitting his first boundary, but now began to strike theball more freely. When he bent down on one knee and swept a massive six over midwicket, he was rubbing salt in Boje’s wounds.Sangakkara had fewer qualms, and settled quickly into his stride, keeping things simple and rotating the strike without fuss. South Africa were fast losing control of the game as 65 runs were milked from 85 balls. By the time Jayantha skied a catch into the deep, having made 46 from 73 balls, Sri Lanka were trotting home comfortably (138 for 3).Mahela Jayawardene, Sri Lanka’s stand-in captain, andSangakkara finished off the job clinically with an unbroken 98-run stand from just 90 balls. Jayawardene ended up on 48 not out from 45 balls.

Graeme Smith led from the front, but Sri Lanka struck back hard© Getty Images

Earlier, Sri Lanka’s decision to field first with a new-look pace attack had been in danger of backfiring as South Africa galloped out of the blocks. But a mid-innings wobble, when three wickets fell for two runs, pegged the South Africans back. Shaun Pollock then nursed the South Africans back into the game with an intelligent 52 not out.In the absence of Chaminda Vaas and Nuwan Zoysa, the new ball was entrusted to Lasith Malinga and Dilhara Fernando, who were a touch wayward in their first spells as South Africa started rapidly with Graeme Smith and Herschelle Gibbs adding a run-a-ball 47 for the first wicket. Gibbs had made 27 when, not for the first time in the series, missed a pull and was bowled, the ball just clipping the off bail (47 for 1).Kallis strode out at No. 3 in his 200th game, as South Africa reverted to a more traditional top order, ending the experiment with pinch-hitters. He pulled a majestic six off Fernando but was then uncorked by a jaffa from Farveez Maharoof that nipped back sharply off the seam and crashed into off stump (61 for 2).Smith, facing growing pressure but apparently safe as captain until the end of the Champions Trophy, knuckled down with Jacques Ruldolph and scored freely off the part-time spinners. The pair added 52 runs in 65 balls. But just when the South Africans were taking full control, cruising on 113 for 2, Maharoof ran out Rudolph (24) with a swift pick-up and direct hit running in from cover.Smith, who had scored 46 from 64 balls with four fours, fell two overs later, when he missed a sweep off Kaushal Lokuarachchi, who has beenconfirmed as Muttiah Muralitharan’s replacement for the ICC ChampionsTrophy. Lokuarachchi needed just two balls to send back Jean-Paul Duminy, who shuffled across his stumps and was trapped plumb in front of the stumps (115 for 5).Pollock and Boucher scrapped hard and were able to consolidate, adding64 runs in 104 balls. They threatened a late-innings disintegration similar to Wednesday’s game, as Boucher was bowled and Lance Klusener (12) was stumped in the final 10 overs, but Pollock shepherded the team sensibly through till the end, squeezing 49 runs from the final five overs.The runs appeared crucial at the time, but Sri Lanka had read the pitch well in the morning. It was a beauty and with confidence sky-high, Sri Lanka clicked their 15th win in their last 16 matches. South Africa, meanwhile, have lost their last nine games and travel to Colombo looking forward to the end of a nightmare tour.

ICC welcomes resumption of Indo-Pak cricketing ties

The International Cricket Council (ICC) has welcomed the resumption of cricketing ties between India and Pakistan at the the under-19 and A levels. Ehsan Mani, the ICC president, hoped that this would lead to the revival of full-fledged international cricket between the two teams.”India and Pakistan on the cricket field is one of the world’s greatsporting rivalries,” said Mani. “The announcement that these two powerful cricketing nations will again meet on the field, albeit at a level below full international status, is a welcome step along the path to the resumption of full cricketing ties between the countries.”When these two teams met in the 2003 World Cup the passion that the match generated and its ability to have a positive impact on people in both nations was apparent.”Cricket, like all sport, has the capacity to promote understanding and generate goodwill and I would urge the political leaders in both countries to allow the game of cricket to assist in building relations between these two nations rather than being used for a political purpose.”Earlier, Pakistan had requested the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) to reschedule the four-nation under-19 tournament so that it won’t clash with other major matches to be played in Pakistan later this year. “We welcome India’s participation in the event as the first step towards resuming cricketing ties but want the event to be rescheduled from September to November this year,” said Lt Gen Tauqir Zia, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman.Pakistan, who have rarely been able to play home series since the attacks on the World Trade Center led to a war in Afghanistan, are slated to host Bangladesh, South Africa and New Zealand from August to November. “The Under-19 event will be overshadowed during this period. That’s why we have asked the ACC to reschedule it.”The Indian government has refused to allow the senior side to tour Pakistan, but its decision to send the U-19s for the four-nation event indicates a thaw in relations. “With the junior-level events, we hope there are bright chances of revival of bilateral series between the two countries next year,” said Zia, alluding to a rivalry that has been in cold storage since India hosted a series in 1999.

Cricket Council of the Americas information circular

INFORMATION BULLETIN – OCTOBER 29, 2001The objective of this circular is to keep all members awareof the progress we are making in the various areas of endeavour.Please consider these as you plan your various activities for the short and medium term.A: CRICKET COUNCIL OF THE AMERICAS INC. (CCAM Inc.)OrganisationalThe Cricket Council of the Americas has been officially incorporated as agreed at the inaugural meeting earlier this year. The offshore company has been incorporated in Antigua, with the registered office and address being that of the West Indies Cricket Board. There are some organisational matters that will require formalization and to facilitate these matters, I am suggesting a net meeting of the original parties. This will be to effectively wind up the old CCAM and transfer all assets and liabilities to the new entity, and to issue shares to all of the membership. I am proposing Friday November 9, 2001 at 11:30 DST (daylight saving time -east coast Canada). Details to be provided no later than Monday, November 5, 2001.Funding UpdateFunding of cricket in the region is severely capped. Discussions are close to conclusion in respect of a holistic package for the signature tournaments of CCAM over a 5-year period. It is envisaged that I shall be in a position to provide details within the next 30 days.Event StatusThe Americas Championship will be held March 7 – 17, 2002. At this stage, plans are progressing well and the next update will be issued on November 15, 2001.The Cricket Development Symposium and Under 13 Tournament has been rescheduled for late July 2002 at Disney in Orlando. Within the next few weeks, we hope to issue a revised programme and more details.The Americas Under 15 will be hosted by USACA, who have initiated plans for this tournament. The first bulletin on this tournament will be issued on November 30, 2001.B: UNDER 19A Combined Americas Team will compete in the 2002 WICB tournament. This tournament will consist of a three (3) day competition and a limited overs competition. The tournament will take place in August 2002 and will last for approximately 3 weeks. Additional details will be supplied at a later date.C: CRICKET ACADEMY PLACESThe West Indies Cricket Board has offered four (4) places in the Shell Cricket Academy of St. George’s University. Prospective candidates should submit application through their Associations and should reach the Regional office no later than November 16, 2001. The target age group is 18 to 23 years, and the Association must provide full educational and medical history as well as a comprehensive cricket history of the player. For further information, please contact me at your convenience. Other discussions are in progress to facilitate extra-regional places for regional players. Details will be supplied as they come to hand.D: MEMBERSHIP APPLICATIONSAffiliate applications have been initiated for the following countries, and are at varying stages of progress awaiting expedition by the relevant associations:

  1. Cuba
  2. Costa Rica
  3. Panama
  4. Chile
  5. Surinam
  6. Turks & Caicos
The Cayman Islands are re-applying for Associate membership, and have likewise been advised on the procedure for such. The final application is pending expedition by the Association. There are no other intended applications for Associate MembershipE: MISCELLANEOUSWithin the next few days, you would have noticed that the website has been revamped. I encourage you to assist in maintaining this site through the provision of articles, pictures and other pertinent information to her in a timely basis.

Wolves keen for Kilman to stay at Molineux

Wolves could be in for a busy summer transfer window as they gear up to see some of their current players leave the club with their contracts due to expire at the end of the season.

However, it seems as though the Midlands club have a plan in place to keep hold of one of their other squad players that has been mentioned with a move away from Molineux in recent weeks.

What’s the talk?

Speaking to GIVEMESPORT, journalist Dean Jones had this to say about the upcoming summer transfer window and what Wolves could do in regards to the future of Max Kilman, who has recently been linked with a move to fellow Premier League club Chelsea.

He said: “I think Wolves will probably price him out of the market at this stage if they possibly can. They’ll do what they did with Adama Traore last summer because he’s been so important to them.”

Fans buzzing

The defender joined the Old Gold back in the 2018 summer window on a free transfer from Maidenhead United and has gone on to make 62 senior appearances for the club across all competitions, scoring one goal and providing two assists along the way.

This season has seen the 24-year-old prove how vital he has become for Bruno Lage’s side by racking up more minutes in the league than any other outfield player, meaning that if he does indeed stay at Molineux, supporters will surely be buzzing.

Furthermore, he has racked up an overall performance rating of 6.93/10, making him the fourth-highest rated outfield figure in the squad according to WhoScored.

Taking into account what Jones had to say, if the Midlands club do try and price the centre-back out of a move this summer, it shows just how keen they are be to keep hold of him and how highly Lage rates him.

If the Englishman does end up staying, it would surely be a big thing for the fans to celebrate when you consider how good he’s been on the pitch in this campaign, contributing to an exceptionally good defensive record. Combine that with 99% of voters in a recent poll from Football FanCast declaring they’d been impressed with the defender this season and it’s clear he’s beginning to become a fan favourite.

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Given how young he is compared to his fellow defensive teammates as well such as Conor Coady, Romain Saiss and Willy Boly, Kilman certainly has the potential to be a long-term figure for Wolves if he ignores any potential interest in him from elsewhere and pledges his future to the club.

In other news: “I’m told…”: Journalist drops exciting Wolves transfer claim, Lage would love him – opinion

Hendricks anchors Knights victory

ScorecardAfter a strong start, Lions collapsed dramatically in their chase of 176, losing nine wickets for 73 runs to fall 29 short of Knights in Potchefstroom.Lions had raced to 73 for 0 in 8.5 overs, with openers Rassie van der Dussen and Devon Conway batting solidly. They needed 103 off 73 balls with all wickets intact, a fairly straightforward equation, before Conway was caught behind off Malusi Siboto for 36. That dismissal began the first part of the Lions collapse, in which three wickets fell for 15 runs. Offspinner Werner Coetsee dismissed Alviro Petersen and van der Dussen, who made 40 off 26 balls, in successive overs.From 88 for 3, Andre Malan and Thami Tsolekile took Lions to 122 for 3, but the run rate had slowed and they needed 54 off 25 balls. Siboto once again made the crucial strike for Knights, bowling Tsolekile for 20. The collapse was swift thereafter. Lions lost their next three wickets for one run in the space of five deliveries, with Shadley van Schalkwyk taking two off successive balls. The chase fizzled out and Lions ended with 146 for 9, with West Indian allrounder Andre Russell returning economical figures of 1 for 21 in four overs for Knights.Knights had also enjoyed a strong start after they had lost the toss, their openers Reeza Hendricks and Rilee Rossouw adding 90 in 10.3 overs. Rossouw made 46 off 29 balls, but Hendricks batted through the innings, remaining unbeaten on 72 off 56. Hendricks’ solidity at one end helped Knights overcome a period during which they lost three wickets for 26 runs. Wicketkeeper Tulemo Bodibe gave the innings a strong finish by smacking 22 off 9 balls, leading Knights to the match-winning total of 175 for 5.

Ashwin leads Tamil Nadu in revived Gopalan Trophy

R Ashwin has assumed Tamil Nadu’s captaincy after only four first-class matches © Cricinfo Ltd.

R Ashwin will lead Tamil Nadu in the MJ Gopalan trophy to be played in Colombo between September 26-29. The Tamil Nadu District Cricket Association (TNCA) has announced a 14-man squad for the match for this once-prestigious tournament which is being revived after a gap of six years. It was last conducted in 2001 in Chennai.When last played Tamil Nadu defeated a Colombo District Cricket Association side at the MA Chidambaram stadium in Chennai to win the trophy – which Gopalan himself attended, after which the tournament went into hibernation. In the interim, Gopalan had died aged 94 on December 21, 2003.The Gopalan trophy, named after MJ Gopalan, the double-international who represented India in both cricket and hockey, was once a fixture in the domestic calendar and has now been revived. The inaugural match was played in 1953 and became a regular fixture in Sri Lanka’s domestic calendar. But with Sri Lanka receiving Test status in 1983, the trophy was discontinued, only to be revived 17 years later in 2000.Tamil Nadu, in the absence of S Badrinath, who is with India A, and Dinesh Karthik, who is doing national duty, is led by Ashwin, an offspinner, who has played in four first-class matches claiming 31 wickets at an average of 16.93. He was also the recipient of the ‘CEAT India Bowler of the year’ award for 2006-07.The tournament was revived after a discussion between Bandula Warnapura, the chief executive of the Sri Lankan board, and N Srinivasan, the president of TNCA, on the sidelines of the Afro-Asia Cup held in June, according to a report in the , a Colombo-based newspaper.The Tamil Nadu team arrive in Colombo late on September 21 and play a two-day practice match starting on September 23. The four-day match for the MJ Gopalan trophy – in which Tamil Nadu will take on a Sri Lankan side comprising players from the A team and under-19 level, starts on September 26.Meanwhile, Napolean Einstein, the right-hand opening batsman has been included in the squad in place of S Anirudha, who will join the India A team for a three-match one-day series against South Africa A.Tamil Nadu squad
R Ashwin (Capt), K Vasudevadas (vice-captain), Napolean Einstein, M Vijay, Abhinav Mukund, R Srinivasan, E Suresh, H Gopinath (wk), S Suresh Kumar, C Ganapathy, R Avinash, R Naresh, P Amarnath, C Suresh
Coach: WV Raman
Manager: PC Prakash
Physio: PK Naveen Babu
Physical Trainer:Ramji Srinivasan

Late wobble hurts Lancashire

Division One

Dominic Cork picked up vital wickets for Lancashire on the third day against Durham © Getty Images

Third day
Lancashire made up for some of the lost time in their match against Durham at Old Trafford but face the prospect of dropping further vital bonus points. They managed to squeeze out the sixth Durham wicket – a second bowling point – before the 130-over cut-off mark through a fiery burst from Dominic Cork, who removed Gareth Breese and Ottis Gibson in two balls. Durham had managed four crucial batting points to aid their bid to stay out of the relegation slots. After losing Iain Sutcliffe early in their reply, Mal Loye upped Lancashire’s tempo with a positive 78 although runs never flowed quickly. Loye and Mark Chilton added 134, but a late collapse of 3 for 9 – include Stuart Law for a 51-ball 50, the most fluent innings of the match – means they face a tough task to claim full batting points. In a huge irony for a match dampened by the rain, sun stopped play with 11 overs remaining when the east-west facing pitch again causing problems. Luke Sutton and Glen Chapple took the umpire’s offer, although some Lancashire members were far from happy.Yorkshire are just about staying alive in their fight against relegation as they built a lead of 170 over Nottinghamshire Headingley . There two young legspinners, Mark Lawson and Adil Rashid, shared seven wickets as Nottinghamshire conceded a first-innings lead of 43. It would have been many more if it wasn’t for David Hussey’s fine 117 and some useful support from Graeme Swann and Paul Franks after they’d been 118 for 5. Yorkshire built steadily on their lead, although they could have done without the run out of Darren Lehmann who’d sped to 48 off 41 balls.Kent claimed the honours against Warwickshire at Edgbaston but the home side’s batsmen fought back after a poor start. Kent extended their innings to 421 with late flurries from Simon Cook and Min Patel, then reduced Warwickshire to 15 for 3 – Cook claiming two early wickets. Nick Knight, in his final Championship match, and Jonathan Trott steadied proceedings with a stand of 112 but Warwickshire stumbled again to 178 for 6 and the follow-on was a looming. However, Tim Ambrose and Heath Streak added 97 before Cook returned to take two more wickets before the close.

Division Two

Final dayAn impressive double century from Chris Rogers, to follow his first innings ton, guided Northamptonshire to a draw against Somerset at Taunton. Somerset entered the final day with high hopes of forcing a victory, but an opening stand of 151 between Rogers and Stephen Peters damped their optimism. Two quick wickets gave Somerset a chance, but Rogers just marched on. His century came off 181 balls and his second ton took another 100 deliveries. He became the first batsmen since Allan Lamb, in 1992, to score a century and a double in the same match. David Sales played aggressively for his 93, clubbing five sixes, as the bowlers toiled on another flat Taunton track. Although Sales missed his ton the match was safe by then.

Alex Gidman stays with Gloucestershire

Alex Gidman stays with Gloucestershire© Getty Images

Alex Gidman has signed a new contract that will keep him with Gloucestershire through to the end of 2007.Gidman, 23, scored 869 runs in all first-class matches last summer, and follows his team-mates Craig Spearman, Jon Lewis, Chris Taylor and Ian Fisher in staying at Bristol. Last winter Gidman was appointed as captain of England A for their tour of India, but suffered a hand injury which forced to return home without actually playing a match.”I am delighted to have committed to the club for three years,” he said, “and I very much look forward to striving as part of the team for more success in the future.”Gloucestershire have won seven one-day trophies in the past six years, including the C&G Trophy in 2003 and 2004 – both finals in which Gidman played.Tom Richardson, the Gloucestershire chief executive, added: “Alex Gidman has a wise head on young shoulders. He has the talent, the work ethic and the right attitude to be a major influence in this club for a considerable time.”

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