Amazing to make fourth final – Jayawardene

Mahela Jayawardene has led Sri Lanka into the fourth major limited-overs final of his career – now all he has to do is win one

David Hopps in Colombo04-Oct-2012Mahela Jayawardene has led Sri Lanka into the fourth major limited-overs final of his career – now all he has to do is win one. He calls himself “blessed,” and he is, but he knows that only victory in Colombo on Sunday will silence complaints that Sri Lanka always fail at the final hurdle.Sri Lanka had to battle for their 16-run win against Pakistan after setting them a target of 140, which was distinctly vulnerable even on a slow, turning pitch at the Premadasa Stadium. The manner in which they did it deepened Jayawardene’s faith that this time their experience in the final will be different.Kumar Sangakkara, Tillakaratne Dilshan and Lasith Malinga have all joined their captain in suffering defeat in three previous finals, the worst of them coming last year when Sri Lanka were routed by India in the 2011 World Cup final in Mumbai, following defeats against Australia in Barbados in the 2007 World Cup, and a World Twenty20 loss against Pakistan at Lord’s in 2009.There was no time for Jayawardene to savour victory against Pakistan before he had to make light of talk of rising tension. “We are all really happy to be part of a very successful group over a period of time,” he said. “We have been blessed with four now – although I know we haven’t won anything. But four finals, it’s amazing. In one’s career you are lucky enough to play in one final.”They have all had to be approached in different ways. One final was in Barbados, one in England, one was in Mumbai. Now we are playing in Premadasa, so we will approach it differently.”I think experience-wise we are much better: Angelo Mathews, Ajantha Mendis were all pretty new when we lost against Pakistan and we have played a lot of Twenty20 since then. We play with a very positive mindset. We spoke at the start of the tournament that we would have to play on three different surfaces in Hambantota, Pallakele and now Colombo. We had to adapt. It is about handling tough situations better.”Jayawardene tonight was a captain who actually captained. There were none of the high jinks that entailed in the final Super Eights game against England in Pallakele he officially handed the captaincy to Sangakkara, so as to protect himself from a potential suspension for a second transgression for slow overrates, but then ran the show unofficially much as he always would.The likelihood is that the authorities – Sri Lanka Cricket, the ICC or most probably a bit of both – let it be known that further mischief would be frowned upon. That is the thing about a good trick – it is best not repeated.Mohammad Hafeez, Pakistan’s captain, felt around 150 was par on this pitch and repeatedly blamed his team’s defeat on a middle-order collapse. Jayawardene, by contrast, felt 140 was around par – “a score where we could challenge.” “The way we started, we probably fell short by about 15 or 20 runs, but Umar Gul bowled well and pulled us back.”Pakistan brought in an extra bowler so we had to adjust ourselves up front. Sohail Tanvir usually picks up wickets for them so we changed our game plan and tried to hold out for six overs and then we knew we could attack their spinners. Today it worked for us. Sometimes you may lose calls and it doesn’t work, but I think our situation has been pretty good in this tournament.”Chasing down runs is always going to be a tough call in a semi-final. Hafeez batted really well and guided them through the first 10 or so overs, but we knew they were a batter short today and we kept pressure on them.”

Arun Karthik ton secures draw, but Delhi take three points

Delhi came out of their Ranji Trophy match against Tamil Nadu with first-innings points that were hard-earned and well-deserved

Sharda Ugra at Feroz Shah Kotla27-Nov-2012
ScorecardKB Arun Karthik struck a century on the final day to secure a draw for Tamil Nadu•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Delhi came out of their Ranji Trophy match against Tamil Nadu with first-innings points that were hard-earned and well-deserved; of the two teams at the Kotla, Delhi were more purposeful and intense.Tamil Nadu spent the final day of the game following-on and holding out for a draw. They ensured there were no more dramas after they had been dismissed for 224 on Monday in reply to Delhi’s first-innings score of 555. Led by their opener, K B Arun Karthik, who scored his first Ranji century of the season, Tamil Nadu ended the day at 220 for 2 in 77 overs. Karthik was not out on 121 after a little over five hours of resolute but aggressive batting. It was a performance that Tamil Nadu could have done with 24 hours earlier.Karthik, who, in the company of Abhinav Mukund and Murali Vijay, is the least known of the Tamil Nadu triumvirate of openers and began his competitive career in Sri Lanka, held off a sustained first-session burst of seam and swing from Delhi’s attack, well aware that once the morning session was past, he could cash in. Five minutes before lunch, though, Abhinav Mukund drove uppishly against left-arm spinner Vikas Mishra to Rajat Bhatia at mid-off; on the other side of the break Tamil Nadu lost the wicket of Baba Aparajith to wobble a little at 117-2, but the calming presence of S Badrinath was quick to put an end to Delhi’s dreams of an outright win.With Badrinath striking the ball from the middle of his bat, Delhi accepted the sign that there was little point in their quick bowlers being forced to run in all afternoon. Karthik began facing the second rung of Delhi’s bowling, once he had held off Bhatia. As he neared a century, he was given an entire bowling sweet-shop to tuck to; first from Unmukt Chand and then even more delicious offerings in a few Vaibhav Rawal full tosses. He smacked Rawal twice towards the midwicket boundary with a bat-swing that would have made baseball legend Babe Ruth proud and leapt from his nineties to his fifth first-class century.Play was called off 30 minutes after tea at the start of the mandatory overs. Delhi captain Shikhar Dhawan said there were no regrets in his dressing room about having to field for two days running. “We had to give ourselves the chance to get seven points, plus we wanted our bowlers to have bowl in a second innings here; if we get into the quarters, this would have been a good experience for them.”Delhi have picked up three points from this game and Tamil Nadu just one; at the halfway stage for both teams, Delhi with 11 points from four games, are third behind surprise leaders Odisha and Baroda who have 13. Tamil Nadu have slipped to fifth with nine points from four games, UP on fourth with 10 points from three. Delhi now play three of their next four games away from home. Coach Vijay Dahiya believes if Delhi can get two outright wins from their next four games, they will have a “80 to 90 percent chance” of qualifying for the quarters.From December 1 to 4, Delhi will play Haryana in Lahli while Tamil Nadu travel to Vidarbha.

Asnodkar century gives Goa advantage

A round-up of the second day’s action of fourth round Group B matches in the Ranji Trophy

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Nov-2012
ScorecardAn unbeaten century from Rohit Asnodkar, batting at No. 7, and useful lower-order contributions led Goa to a strong first-innings total against Kerala in Malappuram. Overnight batsman Ravikant Shukla scored 87 and Asnodkar made his maiden first-class century in his 13th match. Goa declared on 512 for 8, giving themselves a strong chance of taking a first-innings lead. Kerala lost VA Jagadeesh for 19 before stumps.
ScorecardA century from AG Pradeep and fifties from Syed Sahabuddin and Rajesh Pawar led Andhra to a 237-run lead in the first innings against Jammu and Kashmir. Resuming on 118 for 4 on the second morning, Andhra lost Amol Muzumdar before a run was scored, and were further reduced to 163 for 6, before the lower order lifted them to 390. Ram Dayal took 5 for 63 for J&K, his maiden five-wicket haul.J&K had to face four overs before stumps and their openers scored 13 without being dismissed.
ScorecardA 154-run partnership between Himachal Pradesh’s openers, Aakash Chopra and Prashant Chopra, laid a solid platform for their team to take a first-innings lead against Jharkhand. Prashant, who was part of the India Under-19 team that won the World Cup, scored a century, while Aakash made 61. Himachal suffered a slide towards the end of the day, with three wickets falling for 21 runs, but trailed by only 35 runs.That batting effort came after fast bowler Rishi Dhawan took a career-best 6 for 63 to dismiss Jharkhand for 236. The visitors had begun the second day on 176 for 5 and Dhawan trapped Sunny Gupta lbw early. Saurabh Tiwary, who was 65 not out overnight, went on to make 102. He was the last man dismissed as Jharkhand lost five wickets for 60 runs on the second day.
ScorecardRajat Paliwal scored his second hundred in consecutive games to give Services the first-innings lead against Assam. Replying to Assam’s 182, Services began the second day on 11 for 0, and slipped to 113 for 6, with seamer Arup Das taking three wickets. Paliwal held one end up, making an unbeaten 143, and 20s from Suraj Yadav and Shadab Nazar led Services past 300. They ended the day on 302 for 8, ahead by 120 runs.

Notts confirm Cowan signing

Ed Cowan, the Australia opener, has been confirmed as Nottinghamshire’s overseas signing for the first half of the 2013 season

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Dec-2012Ed Cowan, the Australia opener, has been confirmed as Nottinghamshire’s overseas signing for the first half of the 2013 season. Cowan, who will likely feature in the Ashes against England later in the summer, will be available for seven rounds of the Championship, as well as eight CB40 matches.The move, first reported on ESPNcricinfo, will give Cowan extra time to get used to batting in English conditions ahead of the Ashes. Notts will be his second county, after a stint with Gloucestershire in 2012, and the 30-year-old has also played in England for Scotland and Oxford MCCU. He currently averages 34 in Test cricket after 11 matches, with one century.”I was very keen to play some Division One cricket and I’m pleased to have the opportunity to do that with Nottinghamshire,” Cowan said. “There are a lot of good players at the Club and Trent Bridge is a great venue so I’m hoping to make a good contribution on and off the field.”Nottinghamshire, who finished fifth in Division One in 2012, will look to recruit another overseas player after Cowan’s departure. Last season, Adam Voges filled the overseas role, while David Hussey had previously been linked with a return to the club.Notts’ director of cricket, Mike Newell, said: “Ed has an excellent record in Test cricket and there was an opportunity to sign him for a decent period given that a lot of Australian players were set to spend time in England on an A tour in preparation for the Ashes. Our priority was to find a player who we felt could score a good volume of runs in four day cricket but Ed has a good one day record as well and we’re confident that he can make a difference for us.”

India drop Sehwag, call up Pujara

India have dropped Virender Sehwag for the first three matches of the five-ODI series against England, which begins on January 11 in Rajkot

Amol Karhadkar06-Jan-2013India have dropped Virender Sehwag for the first three matches of the five-ODI series against England, which begins on January 11 in Rajkot. The decision came after Sehwag was left out of the XI that beat Pakistan in an ODI in Delhi earlier in the day. India gave a maiden limited-overs call-up to Cheteshwar Pujara, who scored 203 off 221 balls in a Ranji Trophy match last week.A BCCI source told ESPNcricinfo that this could well be the end of Sehwag’s limited-overs career. Sehwag has been dropped, said the source, because “he doesn’t figure in the plans for the 2015 World Cup”. Pujara has been brought in “to anchor the innings, especially in the wake of new rules”, which now allow a maximum of two bouncers per over and require a minimum of five fielders inside the circle at all times, which encourages more attacking bowling. The selectors have left it to the team management to decide Pujara’s batting position.Pujara’s inclusion was the only change to the squad that lost 1-2 to Pakistan, which meant MS Dhoni, India’s best batsman in the series, kept his captaincy despite calls from former selectors for fresh leadership. The sources said Dhoni’s captaincy didn’t go through much of a debate.Rohit Sharma was retained despite poor returns in ODIs of late. His last six scores were 5, 0, 0, 4, 4 and 4. Since the end of the series against West Indies in 2011, when he was the Man of the Series, Rohit has averaged 13 over 14 matches with one half-century. Rohit escaped the axe primarily because of “lack of alternatives”. He might not have made it had Manoj Tiwary been fit.Since his double-century against West Indies in December 2011, Sehwag has averaged 23 over 11 matches, including a top score of 96. Sehwag is possibly seen as the weaker fielder, which becomes significant keeping in mind the World Cup in Australia.Sehwag’s replacement, Pujara, is quick in the field and has been scoring runs. After his double-century that stunned Madhya Pradesh six days ago, Pujara said he knew his time was not far away. “That [ODI selection] is something that is not in my control,” Pujara had told ESPNcricinfo. “I have always performed in domestic one-dayers. I don’t need to worry about it. My time will come. One way or the other I will get my chance to play in the ODI team. I just need to keep performing.”The bowlers were all retained after they successfully defended 167 against Pakistan on Sunday, India’s fourth-lowest score batting first in an ODI win.Squad: MS Dhoni (capt), Cheteshwar Pujara, Gautam Gambhir, Virat Kohli, Yuvraj Singh, Rohit Sharma, Suresh Raina, Ravindra Jadeja, R Ashwin, Ishant Sharma, Ajinkya Rahane, Ashok Dinda, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Shami Ahmed, Amit Mishra.

Broad pleased with 'perfect' finale

Stuart Broad, England’s captain, described their final performance as “perfect” as they secured the T20 series 2-1

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Feb-2013England carried out a round tour from the sublime to the ridiculous and back again during the T20 series against New Zealand, which they secured 2-1 with a crushing ten-wicket victory in Wellington. Talk before the match had been of New Zealand comebacks but England produced the the ideal response to defeat in Hamilton, with the captain, Stuart Broad, describing their performance as “perfect” – though he needed to take a deep breath before deciding to insert New Zealand again.The pace bowlers’ use of a short length paid off and England took regular wickets, before Alex Hales and Michael Lumb peppered the boundaries to complete the highest successful chase without losing a wicket in T20 internationals. While in the second match, England’s batsmen struggled against a moving ball under lights, the only swing on offer in Wellington came in the form of another dramatic shift in fortunes between the teams.”All round, it was probably the most powerful [T20] performance I’ve seen from an England side really,” Broad said. “The result, and the way we adapted to the conditions with the ball, was brilliant. The fielding was strong as well, catches being held. It was a pretty perfect performance really.””We know early wickets kill you in Twenty20, so it was great to see the guys take their time and get used to the wicket a little bit for two or three overs … then once Alex Hales got going, it looked hard to stop him. Some of the sixes were huge. Lumby’s almost went out of the ground to finish the game.”Broad accepted responsibility for bowling first in Hamilton but his team justified the decision this time, continuing a run that has seen the chasing side win all five T20 internationals played at the Westpac Stadium. Having taken 4 for 24 in the first match in Auckland – then going for 53 in the second – Broad collected his second-best T20 figures of 3 for 15 to finish the series on a positive personal note ahead of England’s ODI and Test commitments.”After winning the toss and deciding to bowl – it took a little time to make that decision – it was important we put our wrongs right,” Broad said. “We hung into a heavy length, and the way we started with the ball, the tone we set, was fantastic. We probably kept them to 20 or 30 under par. But the power the two openers have shown there was pretty spectacular.”For Brendon McCullum, New Zealand’s captain, it was a return to lauding the opposition after his side was comprehensively outplayed. The batsmen could only manage three sixes in limping to 139 for 8 and then New Zealand’s sloppy series in the field continued as Hales was dropped twice early the England chase.”We were blown off the park tonight. [Our] batting, bowling and fielding was nowhere near the standards they need to be – and England were ruthless, and thoroughly deserved the series victory,” McCullum said. “There was some excellent hitting. We served them up … and I thought we bowled too straight; we weren’t able to get any swing whatsoever.”We were aware, once we were batting, we’d need to get somewhere near 170 – because it would skid on later – to be competitive. But in the end we probably needed 200, the way they played. We were just poor across the board, and they were excellent across the board; hence the gulf between the two teams.”

Bangladesh batting spots up for grabs

A gaping hole in the batting order stares at Bangladesh captain Mushfiqur Rahim, coach Shane Jurgensen and on-tour selector Habibul Bashar when they decide the final eleven of the first Test

Mohammad Isam in Galle06-Mar-2013A gaping hole in the batting order stares at Bangladesh captain Mushfiqur Rahim, coach Shane Jurgensen and on-tour selector Habibul Bashar when they decide the final eleven of the first Test against Sri Lanka.Of the four batting changes Bangladesh have to make – Shakib Al Hasan, Nazimuddin, Shahriar Nafees and Naeem Islam are all not in the squad – two places are still up for grabs two days ahead of the Galle Test.Jahurul Islam and Anamul Haque were not among the runs in the three-day match against a Sri Lanka Development Emerging Team.Last month, Akram Khan had mentioned the possibility of “one debutant” in the Test series, and it was assumed to be Anamul, a 20-year-old opening batsman who has been impressive in Under-19 and first-class cricket in the last three seasons.Anamul’s inadequate footwork has been a cause of concern, even though he has scored plenty of limited-overs runs recently. What has also hurt his case is the failure in the three-dayer, the only first-class innings before the Tests, which means his debut in whites could be delayed.Jahurul was Anamul’s opening partner in the three-dayer and he looked more assured of the two. He played three Tests in 2010, after which this could be his first chance. Domestic runs for Rajshahi Division and lately for North Zone and Duronto Rajshahi have brought him back into contention. Jahurul’s compact defense makes him the sort of batsman Tamim Iqbal has often missed at the other end, but the jury is still out on his place.Jurgensen said he was impressed with what he saw of Jahurul on the third morning. “He looked good until he got a good ball,” he said. “I think we still have some thinking to do before we make the selection.”Among the four who have to be replaced, Shakib is the biggest loss while those who take the place of the others could be given a longer run to establish themselves. Though Naeem made runs against West Indies, Nafees didn’t make any big scores in the series and Nazimuddin has been in poor form for most of the season.Bashar was happy to see Mohammad Ashraful and Mominul Haque among the runs in the practice match, but he is still unsure who would open with Tamim or bat at No. 3. “We have a few places up for grabs, but we are happy that two of them got runs,” Bashar said. “We are still thinking about the other opener’s place, but we know what we want. And the opening position and the No. 3 hasn’t been taken by someone regularly, so I think we have the options this time.”Both have spent enough time in the middle to get a feel of the weather here, as well as the wickets. The bowling attack will be vastly different, but I would still think scoring 102 or 99 is crucial ahead of a Test series.”Ashraful, a last-minute inclusion to replace Nafees, made 102 in Matara batting at No. 3 and has indicated that he would like to continue in this position. He is a natural stroke-player, though, and might have to curb his shot-making if he wants to play at No. 3.The selectors initially picked Mominul to fill Shakib’s position in the middle-order and that is likely to be a straight swap in the Test team as well. Mominul, a left-hand batsman, played the ODIs against West Indies and turned in a crucial performance in the series-deciding fifth game. His 99 in the three-dayer came at a brisk pace which impressed the selectors, although there were periods at the end of sessions when he lost his rhythm trying to find boundaries.There is likely to be a reshuffling in the batting line-up, with captain Mushfiqur Rahim coming up the order, though he is the wicketkeeper and his workload will be taken into account. It wouldn’t be surprising if Mahmudullah gets a promotion after showing confidence and good form against West Indies. Nasir Hossain is another slight worry for the team, given his lack of runs recently.Bashar’s other worry is the pace attack. Rubel Hossain went through 19 overs on the first day in Matara but Abul Hasan struggled to stay on the field after bowling six overs as he suffered from dehydration. “I think we need another practice match to test our pace bowlers,” he said. “We have
Shahadat Hossain as back-up so we are thinking of a right combination.”

Decision on Pune's home ground in a 'day or two'

A decision on Pune Warriors India’s home games in the upcoming IPL is set to be taken in the next couple of days, with negotiations currently on among all stakeholders

ESPNcricinfo staff04-Mar-2013A decision on Pune Warriors’ home games in the upcoming IPL is set to be taken in the next couple of days, with negotiations currently on among all stakeholders. The franchise hopes to play its matches at the Subrata Roy Sahara stadium in Pune which is currently the subject of dispute.”Both Sahara and MCA [Maharashtra Cricket Association] stuck to their guns, but with the IPL set to start in less than a month, the final decision will be made in a day or two,” a BCCI insider revealed after a meeting between IPL governing council Rajeev Shukla, MCA president Ajay Shirke and Abhijit Sarkar, corporate communications chief of the Sahara group and director of the group subsidiary that owns the Pune franchise. While Sarkar and Shukla met in New Delhi, Shirke joined them through video conference since he is in the Netherlands for business commitments.The Sahara group and the MCA have been in a dispute over title rights of the newly built stadium at Gahunje in the outskirts of Pune. After the MCA covered the name of the stadium that read ‘Subrata Roy Sahara Stadium’ in January for alleged default over payment of the contract, Sahara group officials moved the Bombay High Court over “termination of agreements”.Though the court case doesn’t have any direct relation with hosting of the Sahara-owned team’s home games in Pune, the business conglomerate has expressed its desire to play their home games at other venues. However, with no valid reason for shifting the games out of Pune, the IPL organisers find themselves in a quandary over the issue. With the IPL set to begin on April 3, time indeed is running out for them.

Prior helps England hold on for heart-stopping draw

It may not have been pretty, it may not have been assured and it may have owed rather more to fortune than they would have liked, but England’s last pair somehow clung on to seal a draw on the final day of the Test series against New Zealand in Auckland

The Report by George Dobell25-Mar-2013
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsThe last-wicket pair of Matt Prior and Monty Panesar safely negotiated the 19 balls they needed to•Getty Images

It may not have been pretty, it may not have been assured and it may have owed rather more to fortune than they would have liked, but England’s last pair somehow clung on to seal a draw on the final day of the Test series against New Zealand in Auckland. In a thrilling advert for virtues of Test cricket, Matt Prior and Monty Panesar played out the final 19 balls of the game to frustrate a deserving New Zealand.There were several occasions on a wonderfully absorbing final day when it appeared New Zealand’s victory was inevitable. When England lost Joe Root and Jonny Bairstow either side of lunch and when they lost Ian Bell the over before tea, it seemed New Zealand were on the brink of just their second home series victory over England – the first was in 1983-84 – and their first Test series victory over any top eight opposition since they defeated West Indies in 2006.But for all England’s faults – and there have been times in this series when they have looked a very modest outfit – they possess an admirable resilience. They have been outplayed for long tracts of this campaign but remain, as Leonard Cohen put it, as stubborn as those garbage bags that time cannot decay. Surviving for 143 overs might be considered not only a Dunkirk moment for England cricket, but as admirable in its own way as coming from behind to defeat India in India.There were several heroes for England. Stuart Broad, who tempered his attacking instincts so completely that it took him 62 deliveries to get off the mark, produced his longest Test innings since the Lord’s Test against India in July 2011, while Ian Bell resisted for just short of six hours in seeing England to the brink of the tea interval. But most of all there was Matt Prior who may have produced the definitive innings of his career to thwart an excellent New Zealand
seam attack that that threw everything they had at him on a pitch that remained true for batting to the end.Prior’s innings was, in many ways, odd. While his colleagues clung to the crease with the desperation of a climber sliding down a rockface, Prior played with a freedom that seemed to belie the match situation. Despite the fact that runs were irrelevant throughout the last day, he
rarely declined an opportunity to punish the loose delivery and reached his century – his seventh in Tests – from only 148 deliveries with his 18th four. The logic was simple: he reasoned it was better to play his natural, positive game than attempt something unfamiliar. His innings may be remembered alongside Mike Atherton’s unbeaten 185 in Johannesburg, in 1995, and Dennis Amiss’ 262 against West Indies in Kingston, in 1973-74, as one of England’s greatest match-saving contributions.But he, and England, enjoyed much fortune and many nervous moments on the road to safety. Most pertinently, Prior somehow saw the bails remain unmoved after the ball thumped into the stumps when he had scored 28. Struggling to deal with a brute of a bouncer from the wholehearted Neil Wagner, Prior saw the ball bounce, via the bat handle and his neck, onto the stumps but fail to dislodge a bail.Prior was also adjudged leg before to Tim Southee by umpire Rod Tucker when he had 16 – the Decision Review System showed a thick inside edge onto the pads – and on 20 he survived a loose top-edged pull off the same bowler. Neil Wagner, running back from midwicket, was unable to cling on to a desperately tough chance.Perhaps New Zealand may rue some missed chances, too. Both Bell and Jonny Bairstow were dropped in the over before lunch as Trent Boult, swinging the new ball back into the right-hander, brought tentative edges to the slip cordon from deliveries angled across the batsmen.
Bell, feeling for one angled across him that he could have left, was grateful to see Dean Brownlie, at fourth slip, put down a relatively straightforward chance, before, two balls later, Bairstow pushed hard at one some way from him and was fortunate to see Kane Williamson, in the gully, put down a sharp chance.Batting had appeared relatively straightforward for the first 100 minutes or so of the day. With no hope of scoring the further 391 runs they required to win the game when play resumed in the morning, Bell and Joe Root instead concentrated on occupation of the crease. The pair batted without much trouble for 28 overs, settling in as New Zealand used the seamers sparingly ahead of the second new ball.But everything changed once it was taken. New Zealand claimed the second new ball the moment it was available and, with its first delivery, Boult produced a beauty that swung back and struck a half forward Root on the pad in front of the stumps. Root and Bell discussed the worth of utilising a review under the Decision Review System, but decided, quite rightly, that the on-field umpire had made no mistake.Bairstow, with only two first-class innings behind him since August, was fortunate to survive his second delivery. Boult, with an inswinging yorker, appeared to strike Bairstow on the boot before it hit the bat in front of the stumps, but New Zealand did not appeal. Replays suggested that if they had, Bairstow would have been in some trouble.But he did not last long after lunch. Southee, bowling from wide of the crease, managed to make one bounce and straighten from just back of a good length to take Bairstow’s edge on its way to slip.Prior and Bell took England to the brink of tea. Bell, in particular, looked admirably solid and drew the sting out of the attack when they were armed with the new ball but, the over before the interval, he was drawn into feeling for one outside off stump from the wonderfully persistent Wagner and edged to third slip.If New Zealand’s seamers were impressive, their frontline spinner was not. Bruce Martin, perhaps feeling the pressure of expectation, struggled with his length and rarely found the turn that might have been anticipated. For much of the day he was out-bowled by the part-time offspinner, Kane Williamson.With only four overs to go and England seemingly safe, McCullum surprisingly brought Williamson back into the attack, perhaps with an eye to the trio of left-handers at the bottom of the order. It proved a masterstroke: Broad’s worthy defiance was ended when he prodded half forward and edged to slip before, two balls later, James Anderson fell in the same manner.While Panesar endured some nervous moments – he was perilously close to playing-on first ball and, comically, almost ran himself out when diving well short of his ground in attempting a sharp single to get off strike – Prior proved a calming influence, took control and saw his side to safety.A draw is, in many ways, a harsh reflection of New Zealand’s superiority in two of the three matches in the series. Their bowlers found swing, seam and spin that England’s did not and their batsmen displayed a balance between discipline and aggression that England could never manage. While McCullum was inventive and positive as captain, Alastair Cook was increasingly reactive and passive. Few would deny that New Zealand looked the better side.Perhaps McCullum should have declared earlier. But New Zealand can take heart from this performance. Their pursuit of victory may have been frustrated, but they showed themselves at least the equal of the No. 2 rated Test team and showed that, under McCullum’s leadership, they have the materials to rise in the rankings in the months and years ahead.

Lancs blunted by Nash hundred

Kent played out the final day with Brendan Nash continuing his strong early season form with an unbeaten hundred

Andrew McGlashan at Old Trafford27-Apr-2013
ScorecardJames Anderson troubled the Kent batsmen but ended up wicketless•Getty Images

On the evidence of this match, both Lancashire and Kent are going to struggle to take 20 wickets on a regular basis this season. Even if rain had not taken out two sessions a draw would still have been the likely result and Kent played out the final day with Brendan Nash continuing his strong early season form with an unbeaten hundred, although he had to work hard against James Anderson.Kent were on the edge of a wobble when Robert Key was given caught behind off Glen Chapple although the former captain was clearly unhappy with the decision and stomped off the field hitting his pad with his bat. Another quick wicket, with the deficit still more than 100, would have opened a door for Lancashire but it never came despite Anderson’s efforts.Last season, his first for Kent, Nash averaged over 47 – no mean feat in a wet summer – and his hundred in this innings followed three consecutive fifties to start the season. Nash innings rarely stick in the mind and there is more than a hint of Kent’s coach, Jimmy Adams, in the way he plays. There will not be much flamboyance, but he is providing plenty of substance to the top-order.James Tredwell, in his second game as Kent captain, knows his team can improve but he praised their resolve. “We faced a few challenges in this game and have come through them pretty well,” he said. “The first day was probably ideal bowling conditions in the end, having won the toss and had a bat, but we came through that with real fight, then again on this last day. Lancashire have a high-class bowling attack. It was really tough at times on the first day but the resolve was great.”The pitch was on the sluggish side, which did not help attempts to force the pace, but the way Lancashire batted late on the third day and into the final morning showed that brisk run-scoring was possible. Simon Katich, who fell to the first ball he faced today, Steven Croft and Chapple were able to play with freedom because of the platform they were given – so it is difficult to be too critical – but the bowling attack is going to need as much time as possible to force results.However, Gary Yates, Lancashire’s assistant coach, was delighted with the team’s approach. “We are pleased how we are playing, and frustrated that we lost quite a bit of time to the weather,” he said. “Maybe if we had more time we may have been able to force a result. But fair play to Kent, they batted well and we never really got into a position to force a victory.”We would like to have had at least one win, but we have played good disciplined cricket and if we continue to do that we will get rewarded with victories sooner rather than later.”Momentum can be picked up throughout the season and we have played really, really solid cricket. We have set up first-innings leads in both games and without the rain I think we would have set up victory in at least one of those games.”Most of Lancashire’s threat with the ball on the final day came from Anderson, who was outstanding, looking a class above the other bowlers (although Kyle Hogg and Matt Coles were excellent), as an England bowler should when he returns to county cricket. He conceded one run in his first seven overs, had Sam Northeast – a talented young opener – playing and missing at four balls in one over, hammered Michael Powell’s foot with a rapid yorker and had a high-quality contest with Nash yet still ended wicketless.Simon Kerrigan, the left-arm spinner, was Lancashire’s other main hope on the final day after the declaration following a heavy shower, which left 79 overs remaining in the game. He made the first breakthrough, taking Northeast’s off stump with a lovely delivery, but there was not a huge amount of assistance from the pitch and Nash played him excellently.

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