Gauteng snatch home semi-final from Northerns

PointsTableGauteng 156 for 8 (Bacher 90*) beat Border 164 for 8 (Pope 77*, Kruger 3-21) by 7 wickets (D/L Method)
ScorecardGauteng, needing the win and a bonus point to get the prized home semi-final spot, sent Border in to bat on what appeared to be a difficult pitch. Border managed 164 in 45 overs due to an undefeated 77 from Steven Pope. No one else came to grips with some excellent bowling, the overcast conditions, and the slow pitch.Garnet Kruger took 3 for 21 in his nine overs and was well supported by all the bowlers with only Derek Crookes taking some stick, going for 18 runs in his final two overs.With 11 overs bowled, and Gauteng at 39 for 2, the rain had the players off the field for 84 nervous minutes before play resumed with a revised target set at 152 off 39 overs. More importantly, to achieve the bonus point the runs had to be scored in 31.2 overs.With wickets falling all around him Adam Bacher took it on his own shoulders to score a magnificent 90 off 91 balls, including 23 off his last seven balls, to take Gauteng to the win in 30.4 overs.North West 144 for 4 beat KwaZulu-Natal 142 (Coetsee 3-39) by 6wickets
ScorecardNorth West comfortably beat a lacklustre KwaZulu-Natal by a healthy six wickets, and moved above Free State at the bottom of the table.Batting first, Natal stuttered to 142, bowled out in 44 overs. Werner Coetsee, with a career best 3 for 29 was the pick of North West’s bowlers.In no great rush to chase the target, North West showed far more application, and cruised to a win in 31.5 overs to much appreciation and celebration from a small crowd.Griqualand West 244 for 3 (Bosman 99*, Hector 65) beat EasternProvince 171 (Jacobs 62, Kruis 3-22) by 73 runs
ScorecardGriqualand West, with something to prove, went after the Eastern Province bowling to score 244 for 3 in 45 overs, with Loods Bosman failing to score an impressive hundred by just one run. Running out of overs, his knock came off 57 balls after his 50 had come up in just 39 deliveries.Eastern Province recovered to 114 for 4 after being 15 for 3, with Arno Jacobs (62) and James Bryant (37) restoring some pride. Four run-outs then caused their downfall and handed the game to Griquas as they were bowled out for 171. Deon Kruis, in what was probably his last game, ended with 3 for 22.The win took Griqualand West, sponsored by De Beers, well above Free State in the table – a result worth its weight in diamonds.

Trescothick to skipper England in two day friendly

Shortly after the disappointment of losing to New Zealand in the fifth and deciding one day international Marcus Trescothick said, “I’m feeling very tired and looking forward to three days off.”Marcus said that today he was flying with the rest of the England squad to Dunedin ahead of the two day fixture against Otago which starts on Saturday March 2nd.”I’m going to be captain for the two-day match and I’m really looking forward to it,” he said.When he was asked if keeping wicket and opening the innings was detrimental to him he said, “I don’t think that doing the two jobs makes any difference to me at all.”Had he lost any weight because on the television shots of him keeping wicket he seemed to be looking thinner? Marcus said, “It’s possible that I have lost weight because I’ve been working very hard indeed.”How did he feel after the result of the fifth one day match. “Of course I’m disappointed but I’m looking forward to the three match test series which gets underway on March 13th, but before that I’m looking forward to skippering the side on Saturday.”During the one day series Marcus said that he had linked up with Somerset team mates Rob Turner and Keith Parsons who have been out watching the series along with a tour party as part of Rob’s benefit year activities. Rob and Keith and the rest of the party fly back to England today.Marcus is a regular reader of the Somerset Website so Good Luck from everybody back in England for the game on Saturday, and everybody hopes that you find a rich vein of form in time for the first test match.

Trescothick's heroics in vain as Pakistan win thrilling NatWest Series encounter

Marcus Trescothick’s heroic innings of 137 from only 142 balls, carried England to within three runs of victory in a breathtaking finish to their second clash with Pakistan in the NatWest series.Trescothick’s magnificent effort over nearly four hours took him within one run of equalling the highest individual score in limited overs Internationals at Lord’s. That record goes back to June 1979 when Vivian Richards hit an unbeaten 138 in the World Cup final.He did, however, in partnership with Owais Shah, go past the England fourth wicket record of 154 in One-Day cricket. The two hit 170 off 183 balls with Pakistan appearing to lose control of the game as both batsmen dominated the bowling.Their hundred stand came from 125 balls and the 150 from an even quicker rate off 163 as Shah sped to his half-century from 79 balls. His run-out, perhaps betraying some inexperience as he backed up too far to Trescothick with 46 still needed from 10 overs, precipitated a landslide of England wickets with seven falling for 44.The start of the England innings was disappointing as well when three wickets went down for 26 in ten overs. Nick Knight, who has been in such fine form in this competition, was the first to go, run out for one and after Alec Stewart, four, fell to a catch at point from his pull shot England were two down by the eighth over.After Shah’s dismissal, Trescothick added 20 to his score but lacked support from the middle and lower order. His brilliant innings, which contained three sixes and eleven fours, ended with a catch at deep mid-wicket, with Shahid Afridi holding on to the ball despite a collision which caused Shoaib Malik to leave the field.Trescothick’s was the penultimate wicket to fall, with England six short of their victory target. Finally with three required from the last ball Andy Caddick was stumped, leaving Pakistan winners by two runs and England suffering their eighth successive defeat, their worst sequence in limited overs cricket.Trescothick has now had the mixed fortune to hit three international centuries for England to date, and his team have lost on each occasion.Earlier, Pakistan had got off to a brisk start after being put in to bat in overcast conditions, scoring at the rate of four an over until Darren Gough trapped Saleem Elahi leg before wicket with the total on 28. Elahi, coming in for Saeed whose daughter has been taken ill, was one of two changes in the side from their previous match at Edgbaston with Shoaib Malik, the off-spinner replacing the unfit Shoaib Akhtar.England, also with two changes from the match against Australia, had Michael Vaughan back for Ally Brown and Andy Caddick replaced Robert Croft.Caddick’s eighth over proved most effective with Pakistan losing two important wickets. The departure of pinch hitter Afridi would have been a relief to the hosts. He looked dangerous for England. He slogged a six over long-on, going down the wicket in Alan Mullally’s first over and after the 50 had come up in the fourteenth over, he hit two consecutive boundaries off Caddick.But Caddick had him caught in the same over, for 30, as he tried to cut a ball – coming into him – too close to his body. Pakistan were 59 for two and a run later from a no-ball, Inzamam-ul-Haq misjudged a full toss on the leg stump and was bowled. Caddick had taken two for 33 in eight overs.Pakistan’s hundred came from 153 balls and after 25 overs they were 100 for three. The scoring rate fell considerably as the partnership between Youhana and Younis Khan progressed, to the extent that between the 23rd and 35th overs there were no boundaries hit.It was, nevertheless, a stand that Pakistan needed, and the two revived the innings, taking it to 140 before Younis, on 41, hit Dominic Cork to cover to be caught low by Nick Knight.Youhana, in partnership with Rashid Latif lifted the tempo. He reached his 50 from 89 balls with a four to extra-cover off Cork whose five overs at that stage went for 36. The fifty stand between Youhana and Latif came fast, from 48 balls, and when Latif was bowled by Mark Ealham for 23 from 26 balls, Pakistan were 190 for five.Youhana, scored more freely as the overs climbed into the forties, displaying some lovely strokes, mostly along the ground but on 81, off 119 balls, he played a lofted shot to mid-wicket where Owais Shah held the catch. It was off Mullally who, two overs earlier, had dismissed Abdur Razzaq when Pakistan were 195 for six.After Youhana’s excellent innings which ended on the total of 208, a late flourish from Azhar Mahmood took him to 27 not out from 21 balls as Pakistan reached 242 for eight. It proved to be a vital contribution.Afterwards England captain Alec Stewart was obviously disappointed, but tried to look on the bright side.”Today we’ve seen what a fine player Marcus Trescothick is and we’ve seen the emergence of Owais Shah,” said Stewart. “They were outstanding.”We’ve had two very close games in the last two days and it’s very disappointing to have lost them,” Stewart told Sky Sports.com TV. “We got ourselves in a winning position but at the end we couldn’t quite get home. We couldn’t quite finish the job off.”But England now find themselves adrift at the foot of the NatWest Series table, and on a record run of eight consecutive defeats stretching back to Lahore in October and encompassing the Sri Lanka tour.”It’s mathematically possible (to reach the final). We know it’s going to be hard but we need to hold our heads up high and show a bit of character.”Waqar Younis paid tribute to Trescothick’s great knock: “I think Marcus Trescothick played a magnificent innings. He made us look as though we were going to lose.”It was one of our best games of the tour. I am really happy with the way we bowled, and Yousuf Youhana played the best innings. All the game we fielded well and that’s possibly why we were the winners.”

Serious challenge to Dainty's old guard

There will be a serious challenge to the existing Gladstone Dainty-led USA Cricket Association administration at next month’s executive board elections.Cricinfo has learned that a group of senior administrators is standing against the existing board and has already gained the backing of several regions. Sources suggest that they have the support of the majority of the regional presidents.California’s Ram Varadarajan is lined up to oppose Dainty as president. Varadarajan would not only bring his passion for cricket to the post but he has considerable business acumen as president and CEO of Arcot Systems, an authentication software company based in Sunnyvale, California. He is backed by John Aaron, a well-known and respected figure inside US cricket circles, as secretary and John Thickett as treasurer.The group has already underlined its credentials by launching a slick website outlining who they are and what they stand for. This is in direct contrast to the moribund USACA site which has become almost legendary for its lack of any meaningful information to stakeholders.”Our team is receiving endorsements every day from players, current and former administrations, and cricket lovers from across the length and breadth of the country,” a statement on the new site says. “This outpouring of support is a clear indication that cricket enthusiasts across America see a complete break from the current USACA management as a necessary step for the game to flourish here.”

Players to be consulted on Zimbabwe tour

John Howard has again voiced his “distaste” for Robert Mugabe © Getty Images

John Howard, the Australian prime minister, has said that his government will seek the opinion of the players on whether to tour Zimbabwe or not. Cricket Australia (CA) is under pressure to go ahead with the tour in September, with the prospect of being slapped with a massive fine by the ICC, while the Australian government has opposed the tour.”It is not in the interests of this country that the Australian cricket tour take place and we continue to discuss the matter with Cricket Australia and through them we continue to seek the views of the players,” Howard was quoted by .Howard had earlier called on the ICC to take action against Zimbabwe as the debate over the scheduled tour continues. Howard said his government was caught in a tight spot in this regard. “I am jammed between my distaste for the government getting involved in something like this and my even greater distaste for giving a propaganda victory to Robert Mugabe,” Howard said on Australian radio. The government has repeatedly said it wants the series cancelled but the potential for the ICC to fine CA has complicated matters.”I think the International Cricket Council has responsibilities, yes,” Howard said. “But they’re like any other body – they’re answerable to their constituent members.”Now, I think there is some evidence emerging that even in those countries that would be very reluctant to see the ICC do anything, that something ought to happen. How long can the international cricket community – not just Australia – go on doing things that give aid and comfort to somebody who has thus far been totally impervious to any entreaties?”Howard’s comments came the day after Alexander Downer, the foreign minister, met with CA to discuss the tour and the possible $US2 million fine. “Our secondary and quite important goal is to see that money we might have to pay as compensation to indemnify Cricket Australia doesn’t end up in [Mugabe’s] grubby hands, because that would be wrong,” Howard said.He also criticised the neighbouring African countries for not doing enough to put an end to the oppressive regime. “The failure of neighbouring African countries to force Mugabe out is a black mark against them because they should have forced him out long before now,” he was quoted by .

Rajshahi secure unique domestic double

Final points tableRajshahi secured their first National Cricket League title on Monday after their closest rivals, Chittagong, slumped to a six-wicket defeat at Barisal.Rajshahi, who thrashed defending champions Dhaka by ten wickets with a day to spare on Sunday, became the first team to complete the double of winning both one and four-day tournaments.They finished on 40 points with six wins in ten matches with Chittagong, who had led the competition at the end of the penultimate round, finishing runners-up in both events.Barisal’s win over Dhaka ensured they ended in third place – their best finish in the league.

Pollock to captain South Africa

Two years after his sacking, Pollock gets another chance to lead © Getty Images

With Graeme Smith suspended and Nicky Boje having returned home for health reasons, Shaun Pollock, who was sacked after South Africa’s failure at the 2003 World Cup, has been asked to lead the side for the final two one-day internationals against the West Indies.Smith earned himself a four-match suspension after repeatedly falling behind the over-rate. Having been docked 10 percent of his match fee in the second game at Jamaica, he was fined 30 percent in Barbados, and his failure to learn from past mistakes provoked the strictest response from Jeff Crowe, the ICC match referee.South Africa decided against an appeal after learning that the suspension could be extended to as many as eight matches.Smith has 24 hours in which to appeal but the team management decided not to lodge an appeal as the punishment could be increased to a suspension of eight games by the International Cricket Council. South Africa’s next assignment is a home series against New Zealand but Smith’s ban could kick in even during the ICC Super Series matches in Australia later this year, provided he gets selected for the World XI. Smith’s place at the top of the order will be taken by AB de Villiers, who was in magnificent form in the Test matches.

Agarkar five-for puts India on top

Close India 523 (Dravid 233, Laxman 148) and 37 for 0 need 193 more runs to beat Australia 556 and 196 (Agarkar 6-41)
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Ajit Agarkar blew Australia away with a his first Test 5-for
© AFP

An enthralling day’s cricket ended with India requiring just 193 more – with all ten wickets in hands – to pull off a stunning victory over Australia at the Adelaide Oval. After Rahul Dravid, with his 233, had steered the Indians to within 33 of Australia’s first-innings total, Ajit Agarkar turned in his career-best performance, taking 6 for 41 to bundle Australia out for 196. By close of play, the Indian openers had knocked off 37 from the original target of 230.On an increasingly wearing pitch, the Indian bowlers profited from bowling a good line and length, and allowing the footholds at the other end do the rest. The Australian batsmen responded to the challenge as they always do – coming hard at the bowlers and looking to dominate. However, the fourth-day track was no longer the batting beauty it was on days one and two – every time the ball pitched on the rough, it stopped, which made playing on the up fraught with danger. Four of the top six got starts, but they all fell playing one attacking stroke too many.India were helped by the start that Agarkar gave them with the new ball: Justin Langer was trapped in front by one which nipped back – a replica of his first-innings dismissal at the Gabba – while Ricky Ponting followed up his double-hundred with a duck, as Akash Chopra at gully snapped up an uppish back-foot drive (18 for 2). When Matthew Hayden scooped a drive to cover soon after lunch for 17, Australia were struggling at 44 for 3, and the lead was a mere 77.Then came the first of the two substantial partnerships in Australia’s innings, as Damien Martyn and Steve Waugh put together 55. Martyn uncorked some glorious cover-drives in another commanding display, and with Waugh overcoming a scratchy start and playing his trademark rasping square-drives, the Australian innings was back on track.Noticing that the drying track was increasingly aiding spin – even Anil Kumble’s legbreaks turned a great deal when they pitched on the rough – Sourav Ganguly brought on Sachin Tendulkar, and the move paid off spectacularly, as both Martyn (38) and Waugh (42) chased wide ones which spun off the footholds. Dravid held both catches – Martyn’s was a spectacular, one-handed effort, while Waugh’s was more straightforward – and suddenly Australia had slumped to 112 for 5 at tea.Adam Gilchrist then starred in the second mini-revival, bludgeoning a typically thunderous 43, off 45 balls. He survived a stumping chance off Kumble on 13, and made the Indians pay for it, tonking both Kumble and Tendulkar for sixes. His partnership with Simon Katich, who tackled the spinners and the pitch with plenty of confidence, had mounted 71 from a mere 15 overs when Gilchrist’s overconfidence did him in. Attempting to sweep a straight delivery from Kumble, he moved too far inside the line and found his leg stump knocked back (183 for 6).Agarkar then moved in for the kill, with a wicket in each of his last four overs, as Australia added just 13 more. The short ball, so profitable for Agarkar in this series, brought him more success when Katich holed out to Ashish Nehra at fine leg for 31, while the tail succumbed to old-fashioned line-and-length stuff.The Indian openers survived the ten overs left in the day with scarcely a scare, as Virender Sehwag thumped a couple of fours square of the wicket off the seamers, and clunked Stuart MacGill’s first ball – a full toss – to the midwicket fence. Chopra didn’t show any signs of nerves either, cover-driving Jason Gillespie and MacGill with superb timing.The events through the day completely overshadowed Dravid’s achievement earlier in the morning. Resuming on 199, he reached his double-hundred with the first ball of the day, cutting MacGill for four, and then pushed the Indian innings along to 523. He was the last man to fall, top-edging a catch to Andy Bichel off Gillespie, whose figures of 1 for 106 was scant reward for some lion-hearted bowling. It seemed then that Dravid’s innings would, at best, be a match-saving one. Now, it could well be a matchwinning effort.

Love pushes international claims

HOBART, Dec 20 AAP – Queensland’s Martin Love emphasised his claims for higher honours today by hitting 190 and virtually ensuring there can be only one winner in the Pura Cup match against Tasmania in Hobart.Love’s long innings, a masterpiece of concentration on a variable Bellerive Oval wicket, enabled Queensland to declare its first innings at 8-408.At stumps on the second day, after bad light ended play seven overs early, Tasmania was 2-50, with captain Jamie Cox 19 and Scott Mason 15.Love, 28, must surely be at the top of the queue to go to the West Indies in April as the reserve top order batsman.He’s already hit two double centuries against England this season – for Queensland and Australia A.Love is a serial Tiger tormenter. In his career he’s hit eight centuries against them, all but two over 150.But a double century eludes him. Three times he’s got to the 180s and today’s was his highest score.It wasn’t his most fluent innings and he had his share of luck, but it was head and shoulders above what anyone else could manage on a wicket that sometimes kept alarmingly low and made sweet timing almost impossible.He batted for 514 minutes, hit 28 fours, gave one tough chance last night on 103 and was bowled off a no ball shortly after play resumed this morning.Love and Lee Carseldine, resuming at 4-249, buried Tasmania’s hopes by batting through the morning session.When Carseldine finally went for 55 – the second highest score – just after lunch, they’d put on 156 runs.That started a mini collapse, which included Love when he sliced a drive to gully.The damage, all too late from Tasmania’s point of view, was done by two part-time bowlers, Scott Kremerskothen, who finished with 3-53, and Dan Marsh, 2-79.However some lusty hitting by Wade Seccombe (25 no) and Joe Dawes (19 no) took the Bulls past 400 and enabled Jimmy Maher to declare and leave Tasmania five tricky overs to survive before tea.Cox and Michael Di Venuto did that, but not much more.Di Venuto fell for three – perhaps unluckily given lbw – just after the break and Michael Dighton went shortly afterwards, bowled for eight by Ashley Noffke with a ball that kept outrageously low.However Cox and Mason batted on for a further hour in the growing gloom.

Eagles squash the Strikers' challenge

The Highveld Strikers, who had set their sights on winning the Standard Bank Cup after a dismal defence of their Supersport Series first-class title this season, took another step backwards in the limited overs format when they lost to Free State by six runs at Goodyear Park on Wednesday night.In a match reduced by rain to 42 overs a side, the Strikers twice seemed to be cruising to their target of 223. First, when Adam Bacher and debutant Marthinus Otto were fashioning a third-wicket stand of 66.Then Bacher, who top-scored with 40, and Otto, who got 25, were caught in the deep off consecutive deliveries from Morne van Wyk. Van Wyk is an occasional left-arm spinner and had only been employed in that role when the man originally picked for the job, Johannes Mokoenanyane, picked up a back injury in his fourth over.The Strikers’ ship had seemingly been righted when Nic Pothas and Ottis Gibson were together, adding 37 for the sixth wicket off less than five overs, but Gibson too was caught in the deep, at long-off by Herman Bakkes, having been put down off the previous ball at long-on by Gerhardus Liebenberg, and the innings crumbled.With Pothas trying to keep the strike, but unable to hit boundaries off some superb bowling from Dewald Pretorius and Victor Mpitsang when he had it, the asking rate grew and the wickets fell. Mpitsang had Geoffrey Toyana caught by twelfth man Andre Abrahams and then trapped Clive Eksteen in front in the space of three balls in the 41st over, an achievement that also pushed the runs required to 14 off the last.Neil Fusedale lasted two Pretorius deliveries after Pothas had, perhaps unwisely, taken a single off the first, and Pothas, having got back to strike as Fusedale was picking out Van Wyk at mid-on, couldn’t get the 12 required off the last three. Pretorius jammed the first one into his pads and he was unable to get it away, rendering the last two balls academic, provided he could avoid wides and no-balls, which he did.Van Wyk’s catch, two wickets and a superb 62 in Free State’s 222 for five earned him the man of the match award. The platform had been laid by Kosie Venter (89) and Andrew Gait (41), who put on 90 for the first wicket, and after the cheap dismissal of Wiaan Smit, Van Wyk helped Venter maintain the early momentum.

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