Warne backs Lara for runs

Brian Lara has stuck to the shadows for a while, but Shane Warne believes he will shine soon © Getty Images

Brian Lara has scored only 102 runs in four innings in West Indies’ series against Australia, but has a backer in Shane Warne, who has tipped him for big runs. “Lara has got at least one big innings in him somewhere and he hasn’t had that quite yet, so hopefully it’s [the] Test match after this one,” Warne said. “To me he is probably the most destructive player in my 15 years in cricket that I’ve played against.”Lara surpassed Steve Waugh as Test cricket’s second-highest scorer during the second match at Hobart, and is only 213 away from Allan Border’s tally of 11,174. Eight of his 30 hundreds have come against Australia, who were menaced by him as early as his fourth Test, when he struck a memorable 277 at the SCG. “I remember in that Sydney Test when he got 277,” said Warne. “If you didn’t run him out I think he would still be batting now. He was hitting the gaps every time.What prompted Warne to speak out for Lara was the sign of old form: a less shuffly, more assured approach. “He looked good in the second innings in Hobart, he looked a lot more settled, he wasn’t moving as much and he looked in ominous form, hopefully for us it’s not the game where he makes a big one.”Lara has looked back to his last Test at Adelaide for inspiration. “I remember playing the Youth World Cup semi-finals here in 1988 but, most importantly, my last Test match here I got 100,” he said in the . “It would be really nice to come to Adelaide again and get some runs finally. I’ve been here for two months and unable to get any sort or runs. I’m looking forward to it and optimistic that things can turn around for me.”

England touch down in Harare

Michael Vaughan hauls his luggae through Harare airport© Getty Images

The England side finally arrived in Harare at lunchtime along with many of the journalists whose ban had originally threatened the future of the tour.The welcome was low key, with nobody from Zimbabwe Cricket on hand to greet them. The squad were rushed through the airport and then driven to their city-centre hotel accompanied by a hefty police escort.Security round the hotel was equally heavy and one eyewitness described the atmosphere as “hostile”. He added that there were “many people in suits who are clearly government agents keeping an eye on journalists”.Earlier, England rejected a request from Zimbabwe Cricket to reschedule Friday’s opening one-day international at the Harare Cricket Club to Saturday. England’s late arrival meant the players and management felt they had insufficient time to prepare for a game so soon. Sources in Zimbabwe reported that there will now be two matches at Harare and two at Bulawayo, with the fifth game scrapped.Meanwhile, David Morgan, the beleaguered ECB chairman, defended his actions in visiting Harare. “I have certainly looked at what’s happening here. We have sympathy with the people here, but the ECB is in business. Our trade is cricket and the revenue part of our trade is international cricket,” Morgan told reporters. “In order to trade internationally, we have to play by the rules of the ICC, and the rules of ICC are such that member countries are not allowed to avoid tours as part of the Future Tours Programme for moral reasons.”

Vaughan appointed England captain as Hussain resigns


An emotional Nasser Hussain faces the media

Michael Vaughan has been appointed as England’s new Test captain after an emotional Nasser Hussain stood down at the end of the first Test at Edgbaston. Hussain keeps his place in the team for the second Test at Lord’s starting on Thursday, with England’s selectors naming an unchanged XI.Hussain, 35, explained that he had “grown tired” after four years as captain. This announcement comes less than five months after he resigned the one-day captaincy following England’s World Cup exit.Hussain told the post-match news conference at Edgbaston that he felt the time was right to hand over to Vaughan. “I feel it is coming to a slight change in era,” he said “I think Michael has shown in the last few months that he is a very capable leader and that’s what I have been waiting for. There are some good lads playing under him and the last thing they want is a tired leader.”It’s not the sort of job where you just take the cash and plod on and stand at mid-off. I’ve always felt it’s the sort of job where you have to give it everything. After last winter the stuff that went on off the field and on the field in Australia there were a lot of difficult times. I’ve tried to play these mental games but I found myself out there on Thursday not the kind of captain I wanted.”Hussain, who at times appeared close to tears, dismissed suggestions that he no longer had the full backing of his team-mates. “I never felt I had lost the team,” he insisted. “I never walked out on the field without everyone’s support. A lot of stuff has been written and spoken. I have always had 100% support. It has been nice to have had them [players] behind me.”The captaincy always affects your game. Every England captain will say that. As far as batting goes I am happy to take my chances. You get runs, you get picked, if not you go off to county cricket. I’ve taken the decision, now it’s up to others.”He insisted that he was keen to continue playing for England for as long as the selectors picked him. “I’ll play and get some runs but if David Graveney rings and says I’m not needed I’ll go off and do something else.”I had a chat with the chairman of selectors this morning, I left the coach out of it. Basically I just want to go back to being a batsman, picking my bat up and batting if I’m good enough to stay in the Test side. I’d love to carry on playing, I’d love to play 100 Test matches. I just want to be treated like how I’ve treated my players in the last few years.””I’ve had many highlights … any moments where we have won and been together have been good. Any little plan that comes off cheers you up.I have been thinking about this since the end of the World Cup. No one then knew who the real successor was – now we have seen Vaughan.”Asked how he would like to be remembered, Hussain said it was as “someone who tried his hardest at all times, someone whose players played for him, not someone who did it just because there was a few quid involved.”Hussain admitted that the wear-and-tear of the job had taken its toll.”Four-and-a-bit years in the job can be a bit repetitive and it tests you mentally. I just felt I wasn’t on the boil. I just felt it was time for someone else to do it.”He hinted that the split captaincy, with Vaughan leading the one-day side, had made his position harder. “It was very difficult for me – my style of captaincy had been about aggression. On my first day back it was very difficult for me to stand up there and do something different to Michael.”Review: The best England captain since Brearley
Wisden Comment

Patron's Trophy wrap-up after Round-5

At the end of the 5th round, Customs and NBP are at the top of the point?s table while PIA and HBL are running 2nd but KRL have slipped to 3rd position. The swings in fortunes are mostly due to international duty for the star players.NBP v ABL
National Bank won massively by an innings and 111 runs. NBP won the toss and put ABL to bat who managed only 266. Naved Latif and Humayun Farhat hit but Pakistan leggie Mushtaq Ahmed took 5 wickets. NBP reached a huge 514/9 and declared. NBP?s Sajid Ali played a captains knock of 104 runs. ABL, trailing by 248, were bowled out in their 2nd innings for 137 with Shabbir Ahmed and Zahid Saeed sharing 4 wickets each.Customs v ADBP
Customs defeated ADBP by 7 wickets. ADBP decided to bowl first after winning the toss. Customs did well and scored 400 with the help of all rounder Azhar Shafiq?s 89. ADBP replied with 137 and had to follow on reaching 372 runs in their 2nd innings. Waqar Ahmed a left arm pacer was their main destroyer and took 5 wickets in each innings. Customs had to score only 160 in their 2nd innings, duly achieved losing only 3 wickets.HBL v KRL
HBL defeated the Round-4 top team by 10 wickets. HBL won the toss bowled KRL out on a green wicket for a meagre 150. Ali Naqvi was top scorer with 89 while HBL?s Shahid Nazir took 5 wickets. KRL came back strongly and bowled HBL out for 196. In their 2nd innings KRL batsmen did not capitalize on their bowlers? effort and could only muster 109. HBL openers batted soundly and reached the easy target of 64 without loss.WAPDA v PWD
WAPDA won by 89 runs. PWD won the toss and put WAPDA in. WAPDA scored 286 runs with the help of Tariq Aziz?s century and bowled PWD out for 231. Bilal Asad was the top scorer with 91, while Kashif Raza of WAPDA took 4 wickets. WAPDA only managed 141 runs in the 2nd innings and gave PWD a target of 197. However, inexperienced PWD could not handle the pressure and were all out at 107. Raees Amjad was the match winner for WAPDA grabbing 5 wickets.PIA v SGCP
PIA scraped up 3 points because of their 1st innings 3 run lead in a drawn match against SGCP. PIA were put in after losing the toss and reached 379. Ghulam Ali was top scorer with 90, while SGCP?s Azhar Abbas took 5 wickets. The SGCP batsmen fought well and were finally bowled out just 3 runs short of PIA?s total. Kamran Sajid and Fareed Butt led for SGCP with 109 and 81 respectively, while Fazl-e-Akbar took 5 wickets. PIA batted slowly to reach 251 helped by Nadeem Khan?s match saving innings of 90. With little time left, SGCP had to score 255 and at close of play, had made 49 losing 1 wicket.

Essex top order seal efficient chase

ScorecardReece Topley’s four wickets kept Hampshire on the back foot•Getty Images

Essex batsmen Mark Pettini, Nick Browne and Tom Westley all scored fifties as the Eagles eased to a six-wicket win against Hampshire at the Ageas Bowl.The top three all collected half centuries as Essex chased down 209 simply and moved above Hampshire in Group B of the Royal London Cup. Reece Topley, 4 for 26, was the pick of the bowlers as Hampshire had two collapses.After losing the toss and bowling Hampshire out for 209, Essex openers Pettini and Browne sprayed the home side’s attack around the Ageas Bowl.Browne, on just his fifth List A appearance, had previously only scored nine format runs but freely spread the ball around – reaching fifty in 47 balls, including nine boundaries. He departed for 69, bowled by former team-mate Liam Dawson, after a 122-run opening stand.Pettini batted slower than his partner but reached his half century in 74 balls as Essex never got out of first gear in an easy chase. The batsman got Essex to within 43 within victory before he was stumped off Will SmithWestley got himself in quickly and smashed Mason Crane for back-to-back boundaries and completed a trio of top three fifties, from 50 balls.Westley charged Crane to be stumped by Wheater and Jesse Ryder was bowled but Ravi Bopara and Ryan ten Doeschate saw the visitors home with 48 balls to spare.Earlier the home side had rushed to 31 in six overs before Michael Carberry was caught cutting to point in a staccato 6 from 19.The next delivery, opening partner Jimmy Adams was out in odd circumstances, as he clipped his own wicket with his trailing foot while attempting to steer down the leg side after a lively 23.Vince was bowled by Jamie Porter two overs later and three balls later Wheater, against his former county was castled in an instant replay of the skippers wicket.Hampshire had scored just five runs in 19 balls for the four early wickets to leave them up against it.Joe Gatting and Dawson attempted to add some much needed runs as the pair put on 32 runs, with the former top edging over the top four for but Topley had his revenge next ball when he fired straight to Bopara at mid-on.Where Gatting failed Smith succeeded, moving past 50 for the sixth wicket with Dawson from 71 balls. Dawson scored his 2000th List A run before he reached a ninth format fifty in 69 balls in a classy knock.Smith followed his partner to the landmark in six balls fewer as the Hampshire middle order rebuilt after a stodgy start The duo collected a 100-run partnership from 123 balls before Smith was caught behind attempting to cut to end the 124 run stand.That wicket started a 32-ball collapse where Hampshire fell from 192 for 5 to 209 all out. Chris Wood was run out by almost the length of the pitch in a horrible mix up with Dawson before Topley comprehensively bowled Crane.Dawson, was dismissed top edging a hook short to Browne at short fine leg – for a magnificent 85 – before Fidel Edwards was the final man to go when he mistimed a pull to Pettini to give Topley his fourth wicket.

Stokes assault wrests initiative after Rabada fires

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Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsOn a day when the whole of Melbourne seemed to have descended on the MCG to witness a domestic T20 derby, Test cricket needed an enticing day to reassure its admirers that it still had a great future as well as a glorious past. It found it at Newlands, packed to the brim and looking at its most resplendent as England made decent first use of an excellent batting strip in the second Test.Around 12,000 England supporters were among the 20,195 in Cape Town, enough to encourage predictions that this Test will set record attendances in the city if it lasts the course. There was no tablecloth over Table Mountain, but the batsmen had napkins in place. The travelling supporters soaked up the rays and wondered whether England’s first hundred would be logged before the sunburn really began to set in. The sunburn won, although a late spurt by Ben Stokes, 74 not out at the close, provided some heat of its own.By the time the second new ball was immediately taken, England, at 271 for 5, had been slightly tentative, held at three an over. But Stokes’ immediate joust against Chris Morris, South Africa’s debutant seamer, brought four boundaries in an over. Stokes muscled his way past 50 and, in leage with Jonny Bairstow, 46 runs came in seven overs before overtime elapsed with three overs still unused.

Rabada’s home comforts

Despite an estimated 12,000 England supporters at Newlands, including the Barmy Army, South Africa still feel at home at home, as of course they should.

“Well the Barmy Army haven’t been singing that much,” said Kagiso Rabada, who claimed three wickets on the opening day. “I haven’t felt their presence too much but I know that they are there. “Even when they do sing, I still feel like I am at home. It’s our backyard.”

Unlike on previous visits, the Barmy Army have not come out with any cleverly-worded tunes against the South African players (“He’s got his head on upside-down,” was a favourite for Hashim Amla) or even the exchange rate. When England last toured here, a pound could buy about 16 Rands and the Barmy Army would begin with “We’ve got one rand to the pound…” to the tune of Ten Green Bottles. Now, it is almost 23 Rands to the pound but they are seemingly too coy to crow about it.

Instead, they have begun every Test with a rendition of and there were some England supporters crying out for Joe “Roooooooooooooot,” through the day, but many of the cheers were from the South African contingent, especially with Rabada in full flow.

“The South Africans supporters were magnificent today,” he said. “I didn’t feel like I was away.” And he shouldn’t.

Newlands is also sold out for the next two days, although South Africa may feel they will have to play better to keep the supporters on their side. Firdose Moonda

It was a bountiful pitch, showing decent pace and bounce, encouraging presumptuous thoughts of 500, but it was a long time before England fully availed themselves of its pleasures. Barring a bad second morning, England now have a golden opportunity to build on their 241-run win against South Africa in the opening Test in Durban.After waving goodbye to a problematic 2015, South Africa must have been encouraged by the gameness shown by their four frontline bowlers, which partially compensated for a morning session in which they bowled too short and too straight.Most exciting of all, though, were the flashes of potential from Kagiso Rabada, a 20-year-old quick who took three top-order wickets on his home Test debut, dislodging Alastair Cook before lunch and removing Nick Compton and James Taylor, first ball, in successive balls either side of tea.At 20, Rabada looks a considerable prospect. Newlands might have been a demanding challenge for a bowler whose natural length looked a bit shorter than the Philander-style probing demanded on such a surface, but it sure beat his only other experience of Test cricket last year as he toiled away on India’s calculated turners.Newlands carries dangers for a visiting side batting first – there again, there are generally dangers whatever they do, such has been South Africa’s dominance here against all but Australia – but recent hot weather had stripped most of the first-session threat out of the surface.Morris, who had shed tears when awarded his first Test cap before start of play, was given the new ball ahead of Rabada. A conservative move perhaps, and not entirely convincing considering that Morris’ international career has been spent as a one-day specialist and that his fate against the tourists in a warm-up match in Pietermaritzburg was the return 0 for 93 in the match.Rabada’s opening lines were also fluffed: full and fast followed by short and wide, both deliveries despatched to the boundary by Hales. With the likelihood that Dale Steyn and Philander might return by the end of the series, Rabada knew he had to earn another opportunity. He worked up enough pace to strike Hales on the back, had good control of the seam and looked at the graceful and athletic end of the fast-bowling template.Cook was a big first wicket for Rabada, departing before lunch to a wonderful catch at third slip by Morris, flinging himself low to his left.England edged towards a position of strength in a second-wicket stand of 74 between Hales and Compton, a somewhat idiosyncratic affair in which both batsmen played in fits and starts, two batsmen seeking the right tempo, but coming from different directions: Hales a dasher trying to be responsible, Compton a painstaking soul aware that his innings must not lose impetus.Hales never looked entirely comfortable, encapsulated by three slightly streaky boundaries off Rabada soon after lunch to take him to his maiden Test fifty, but he will rightly regard it as an important staging post nonetheless. It was a good ball that dismissed him, Morkel finding bounce from a good length around off stump and de Villiers diving across Dean Elgar at first slip to hold the catch.Compton’s first three runs encompassed 38 balls, leading one contributor to ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball service to remark memorably that he had “the highest ratio of handsome dashing looks to handsome dashing strokeplay.”Ben Stokes took the attack to South Africa in the closing overs•Getty Images

He found impetus with a favourite get-out shot – a paddle sweep against the offspin of Dane Piedt – and then to general surprise drove him straight for six. There was considerable irony in the fact that his third Test six took him level with his grandfather Denis, who managed the same number in 78 Tests but was much treasured for being a great entertainer. You made your own fun in the 1950s.Rabada, who bowled a combative pre-tea spell, removed Compton with what became the last ball before tea when he pulled a short ball sweetly enough but straight to Temba Bavuma at midwicket. A first-baller for James Taylor, pushing at a wide one, gave the bowler two in two.The stage looked set for Root, who had made 13 Test half-centuries in a prolific 2015, but to his frustration had repeatedly failed to deliver a big one when well set. He survived on 13, a devilishly difficult chance off Morkel which Morris, this time diving to his left from gully, let slip through his fingers. He was fortunate again during Rabada’s pre-tea assault when he was done for pace on a pull shot and the ball lobbed up safely from his incomplete stroke.There were also enough of Root’s usual delicacies on show – the best a pull against Rabada – to suggest the omens for South Africa were not good, but the New Year retained old habits and, as soon as another half-century was stored away, he gave the persevering Morris a first Test wicket when he chopped him to the wicketkeeper. It has been a common mode of dismissal when well set.Hashim Amla was reluctant to go for the jugular with only four frontline bowlers and the second new ball only 12 overs away: understandable but probably mistaken. Instead, Stiaan van Zyl trundled in, time was generally wasted and by the time South Africa did meaningfully seek late wickets, Stokes crashed all around him. How South Africa, a bowler light, would value someone like him.

Devastating Noffke leads humiliation of Tigers

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Ashley Noffke’s 5 for 33 reminded Tasmania their historic Pura Cup triumph was in the past © Getty Images

Ashley Noffke and Queensland’s inexperienced openers unveiled a new era as they demoralised Tasmania, almost claiming first-innings points on day one of the Tigers’ title defence. Noffke showed there will be life after Michael Kasprowicz and Andy Bichel, who are both injured, stepping up with 5 for 33 as Tasmania fell for 158.Greg Moller and Ryan Broad then immediately justified Jimmy Maher’s decision to drop himself to No. 4 and expose younger Bulls to the new ball, carrying the score to 0 for 136 at stumps. Moller, who debuted last summer and was in his fourth game, was the dominant partner with 75 while Broad, playing his eighth match, reached 57.Queensland fielded a wildly inexperienced side with Kasprowicz (calf), Bichel (shoulder) and Chris Hartley (wrist) ruled out. Noffke led the green attack – Maher was the side’s next most prolific bowler with ten first-class wickets – on a surface with similar-coloured tinges. Chris Swan, the Gold Coast swing bowler in his second match, collected Michael Di Venuto in the second over before Noffke captured the next five wickets.Giving up only 15 runs in 12 overs before lunch, Noffke had Michael Dighton lbw before picking up a wicket in each of his next three overs. Tim Paine was bowled, George Bailey was caught at third slip by Aaron Nye and Dan Marsh edged a short ball to the debutant wicketkeeper Murray Bragg.After lunch Noffke took care of Birt for 36 and Swan and Ben Cutting, who is playing his first game, chipped in to finish off the Tigers and collect two wickets each. In contrast the more experienced Tasmania attack had no impact, although it was led by the same men who rattled Queensland in Wednesday’s FR Cup game, and the Bulls came within 23 runs of a first-innings lead at the close.

Tail wags New South Wales to testing target

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Queensland have been set a difficult chase of 325 for victory after letting the New South Wales tail off the hook at the Gabba. The Blues were struggling at 7 for 185 before the final three wickets put on 123, including 68 between Beau Casson and the No. 11 Doug Bollinger, to set the Bulls a target that has been reached only four times in Brisbane.Jimmy Maher, who received a short ball in the throat, and Lachlan Stevens cut the margin by 12 runs at stumps to ensure an exciting final day. Andy Bichel collected four wickets and the debutant Chris Swan was impressive with 3 for 56 as the Bulls restricted New South Wales’ progress after 40s to Ed Cowan, Aaron O’Brien and Brad Haddin.However, Casson’s 52 and Bollinger’s 31 not out could prove crucial to the result. “I think 999,999 times out of a million Dougy Bollinger would have been clean bowled or caught behind, he averages 0.8 against us here I think,” Maher told . “Today he had a day out.”

Pietersen's injury to be monitored

Kevin Pietersen was forced to leave the field with an attack of cramp in his leg © Getty Images

Kevin Pietersen, who is currently playing for the World XI in the ICC Super Series, left the field towards the end of Australia’s innings with cramp in his leg. But David Graveney has dismissed suggestions that England would have preferred three of their key players – Pietersen, Andrew Flintoff and Steve Harmison – to miss the series, ahead of their forthcoming tour to Pakistan.”He’s a fit young lad,” Graveney told . “I think it is a great occasion for our lads to be involved in. We’ll be keeping fingers crossed he has not suffered serious injury.”At the post-match conference, Shaun Pollock, Pietersen’s captain for the series, said: “He [Pietersen] wasn’t sure whether it was cramp or a tear. It was still a bit sore when he went out to bat which is why he had a runner. he will have a scan tomorrow and if it’s a tear he will be in doubt for the third game but if it’s cramp he should be ok.”Pietersen, despite still being new to international cricket, is already an integral part of the England one-day and Test teams. He finished the Ashes series as England’s leading scorer with 473 runs, including a remarkable innings of 158 in the final Test at The Oval.

Tikolo's ton gives Kenya a draw

ScorecardSteve Tikolo warmed up for the ICC Champions Trophy with a superb innings of 156 which allowed Kenya to frustrate India A in the final first-class match of their tour at the Simba Union. In response to India A’s massive total of 492, Kenya made 356 before both captains agreed to a stalemate with 20 overs remaining in the day’s play.Tikolo’s knock spanned 286 balls, and a third-wicket partnership of 151 with Morris Ouma ensured that Kenya wouldn’t suffer the indignity of the follow on. Ouma made 58 before being bowled by Sridharan Sriram.There were also useful contributions from Lameck Onyango – whose 48 took just 41 balls and included four towering sixes off Ramesh Powar – and Kennedy Obuya (23). The improved batting display would have greatly encouraged the Kenyans, whose preparation for the Champions Trophy has been plagued by indifferent form, and the loss of Maurice Odumbe – banned for allegedly fixing matches.For India A, it was a satisfactory conclusion to a tour that included an emphatic victory in the Tri Series that also featured Pakistan A. In Mahendra Dhoni and Shib Shankar Paul, they unearthed two talents who will surely be contending for a senior slot soon. As for Tikolo and his team, they have been grouped along with India and Pakistan in the Champions Trophy, and will play their first match on September 11, against India at the Rose Bowl in Southampton.

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