Australia hear tips from rowing great

Australia have an aura about them © AFP

Australia have beaten England again, this time by getting Sir Steve Redgrave, the five-time Olympic rowing gold medallist, to speak to the team first. Redgrave, the Englishman, was staying in the same hotel as the Australians in Barbados and the team management, which is always keen for outside ideas, asked if he would talk to the side as it chases a third World Cup title in a row.”He spoke about the expectation of being a favourite, continually raising the bar, having the attitude of being a winner and preparing to win consistently,” an Australian team spokesman told AAP. “He said everyone would be looking at Australia because they had an aura about them.”Redgrave spent almost an hour with the group on a night when the Courier-Mail reported England had wanted him to speak to them. He is also expected to address Michael Vaughan’s squad, which beat Bangladesh on Wednesday to stay in the race for the semi-finals.”There are obviously a lot of parallels with the Australian team and Redgrave, who was basically never beaten in important competitions,” the spokesman said. “He also talked about dealing with adversity and national expectation.”Australia have won their opening six World Cup games and have not lost a match in the tournament since 1999, when Steve Waugh reversed a form slump to lead the team to victory at Lord’s. Ricky Ponting’s next match is against Ireland in Barbados on Friday.

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 .

'At least I had the opportunity to say goodbye'

‘My main focus today was to get the team a victory, see if we can set the tone for the next couple of months’ © Getty Images

On the emotions he went through
I wouldn’t say I was nervous. I came to the realisation a long time ago that this was going to be my last game. I had decided since Grenada. I know we still had a chance, but the World Cup was always going to be the last for me. I had prepared myself. It is a situation where you are playing a team game. My main focus today was to get the team a victory, see if we can set the tone for the next couple of months. We are playing against England and the guys can leave with some sort of a semblance of positivity in moving forward.I still think it was a very good game. But personally I was calm. I wanted to put an innings together. I wasn’t going to play any rash shot or anything. I just played each ball on its merit. But things didn’t work out. Unfortunately I got run-out. These things happen. But I felt good, I felt comfortable and as the day went on, I knew that I made the right decision. I knew that it was the right time to call it a day, to let the younger players take the West Indies. Maybe we can see some change in the near future.On his feelings for the Kensington Oval, the ground where he had constructed an epic 153 against Australia in 1999
[When] you are growing up, the West Indies were dominating cricket. But it was always a fight to win in Guyana, a fight to win in Trinidad. It sort of served the spinners well. But Barbados, Kensington Oval the tourists didn’t want to go there at all. It was the Mecca of cricket for the Caribbean. I really and truly wanted to play a Test match at the Kensington Oval and not just one Test match. I wanted to do really well. This venue is special. Today it was the second time I have played in the new stadium, but Kensington Oval is definitely for me the Mecca of cricket in the Caribbean. Letting it host the World Cup final is a very, very good idea by the West Indies Cricket Board and the organisers. I have had wonderful moments here.My 153 not out is classed as one of the best innings I have played, and I have enjoyed. I have enjoyed seeing no-one in stadium for four-five days and the West Indies got a victory against South Africa in 1992. That was also very special. I think that might have been my first match here. Even though the scene was unfortunate, I believe the spirit in the team and the fight we showed on that particular day was excellent. Kensington Oval would be one of the first places I would be traveling, just 35 minutes away from Trinidad, to see my next Test match.

Kensington Oval is definitely for me the Mecca of cricket in the Caribbean. Letting it host the World Cup final is a very, very good idea by the West Indies Cricket Board and the organisers

On life outside cricket
I have played for a pretty long time. I have put together something like 430 matches for the West Indies. I have enjoyed it. I know it must come to an end at some point in time, and yes I have thought about it. For my daughter to spend a lot more time with her. I have got a few business interests that has been during this genesis period and hopefully I will be able to spend more time with it and move on with life. I don’t see myself regretting this decision. I have enjoyed my time and I will enjoy my life after cricket.On what has changed
First of all, our one-day game was actually not progressing quite well. Before the World Cup, we got to the final in Malaysia and the ICC Champions Trophy. We had a little bit of a hiccup in Pakistan and India for a few one-day games. But I thought we were well set for leaving the World Cup a successful team if not winning the World Cup, but getting at least to the semi-finals or the finals. I thought it was the right time to leave the team on a high and move forward and see what we can do in the Test arena. But the results didn’t turn out as expected. So, West Indies cricket is at a stage where change is necessary. We are, most likely, going to have a young captain, someone under the age of 30 years, and he will need to mould this team with the support that he needs.I just thought there is no need for me to be out there. Physically there is nothing much I can do to help at present, and as I said I have unconditional love for West Indies cricket and I am looking forward to playing a part at any point of time. I would like to have a bit of a break though, away from the game. You know, it’s just a matter of allowing the team that change that is needed. Maybe this is just one of it. Maybe there is a lot more to take place. But I just see no reason for me to carry on at this present time.On his message to youngsters
Just to play the game with passion and commitment. I think it is important. When I started playing cricket, I had a great love for it through my dad. He saw life vicariously through myself. He had six other boys and they all played a bit of cricket. But I think they stopped at club level or village level. Maybe when I first picked up the bat, the sort of support I had from him was tremendous. It’s the commitment that is needed from the youngsters, but most importantly, for anyone to get anywhere, the parents need to play a very important part. The support that I got from my parents – the late Pearl and Bunty – was tremendous, and also my sister Agnes, who took me to Harvard Coaching Clinic. I have so much to thank them for.Yes I want to see the youngsters with passion and commitment, but I think the need the support from their parents, from school masters and wherever they can get it from to play the game and to get anywhere at all.On whether he has come full circle with respect to his captaincy
I am not going to dwell too much on that. That’s now history. What I have to do is just wish the team and the new captain all the best, and try to persuade the West Indies Cricket Board to ensure that the captain and the team have the support that is necessary from them. You might see 11 individuals out there and of course we are criticised all the time after we have a bad performance. But West Indies cricket goes deep and unless we lay a proper foundation, you know you are going to get that sort of performance out in the middle where, on one day we are spectacular and can score 418 runs to win a Test match in fourth innings, and the next day we can’t score 60.About that captaincy thing, I have no reason to be worried about it anymore. I just want to move on. My support is always going to be there. I have had an open-door policy with the players. They all know my number and they can call me at any point in time, for anything at all and I will be there to support them.On his future plans
That is stuff that I have not really thought about. There is a book in the pipeline, but it is going to take some time. But first of all, I just want to move back a little bit, relax and wake up tomorrow, or next week or two weeks from now, knowing I can do what I want. I can pick my daughter up and take her to school and do many different things that I haven’t been able to do in the past. The future is there and I will have a lot of opportunities in front of me. But there is no reason to rush into anything at this present time.Change anything about your career?
No. I have learnt from all my experiences. It’s been a passage of life where I have enjoyed, and now I am going into a new chapter. Whatever has happened, negative or positive, it is going to have an impact on my decision making in the future. I wouldn’t change anything at all. There are things that I am sorry for, and there are things that I have rejoiced over. But that’s life. My life has been played out in public, so be it. But it’s been a great learning experience and I am still full of life, I still want to do a lot of different things.I am going to go back and see how I handle different situations, try to move on and see if I can do things differently in the future.On the things he’s sorry for
There are many things I am sorry for. There is no need to express any now, but you try your best and sometimes your best is not good enough. I think the 10-12 years I have spent in the decline of West Indies cricket have been really, really tough.

‘The hardest thing for me is not achieving what I set out to do from the very beginning – to be a part of a successful team over a long period of time’ © Getty Images

I have gone to each and every single tour, very optimistic of our chances of changing things. But things did not happen.The West Indies people need a strong West Indies team. Unfortunately we have not been able to produce that for quite some time. But at some point in time, we are going to see West Indies right back on top, and I will be standing 70 or 80 yards away, applauding that team.It’s been a tough ride and it’s been a tough career. Unfortunately, not a lot of successes, but these things happen. I just got to move on.On his family members at the game
Quite a few. Brothers, sister and Sydney I came across. I don’t know who else. Maybe I will see them back at the hotel. But I didn’t pay for any flights.On team selection
I don’t know anything about any selection. I know I sat with the selectors in Antigua to pick the team for England, and of course I picked myself. That’s all I know at this present time. I have informed the president that I want to move on with my life. So I think I have done the right things and allowed them an opportunity to move ahead with West Indies cricket.On whether Sarwan is the ideal man to lead the team
He has been around for quite some time. He has been vice-captain under two captains – myself and Shivnarine Chanderpaul. And of course he would have gained a lot of experience over a period of time. But let’s see who the West Indies Cricket Board put in charge. I am going to be in full support of that individual, and whatever help I can give. I am only a phone call away. I don’t want to persuade that decision. It is up to them. They have been watching for quite some time and they would know exactly what’s the right decision to make.On memories of his 375 and 400 against England and now retiring after playing them
That was not the plan. I think it is just a coincidence. It is a nice way to actually go out. I have been playing with quite a few great players. I saw Viv Richards, Gordon Greenidge – all these guys wanted to go that little extra step. Unfortunately they were not granted the opportunity to. For me to call the shot today, at least I had the opportunity to say goodbye officially and when I wanted to. If it was England, or Australia in the finals, whoever it was didn’t matter. I am really happy. I had the opportunity to say goodbye to my fans and people who have supported me over the years.

am just happy to have played for the West Indies and to be here today and telling you all about it. I don’t know what the future holds on the cricket field. You just got to wait and see

On achieving personal goals
As I said, one of the hardest questions I have had to answer over the years is, “How do you make 400?”, “What were you thinking about going to 375?” These are really difficult questions. I think that was just destiny. The man above decided on those things. The most unfortunate thing for me or the hardest thing for me in cricket is not achieving what I set out to do from the very beginning – to be a part of a successful team over a long period of time. I had a little taste of it when I started in 1989, and up till 1995. The last 12 years have been very disappointing. That in itself is the sort of disappointment I have had, nothing individually really. I am just very thankful to be able to break all those records. It has been a great honour to play for the West Indies, to hold a bat and to spend 17 years in international cricket. That is something I am proud of.On how the game has progressed
Australia have really grabbed hold of the game, both at the Test level and one-day game. They have gone in front and set the standards. A lot of people have tried to get to them but haven’t been able to. But I think the game is in good hands. There are a lot of very good players out there. The standard of the game is still very good. I know the ICC has tried to cut back on a lot of different things, but it is still a game that people need to be entertained. I have played my part and I feel the future of cricket is good.I think the inclusion of the Twenty20 game is also something that is special, and people are going to enjoy that. A new group of spectators are going to come out and watch that part of the game. I think it is moving in the right direction and I just want to wish it continues to do so. There are a few unfortunate things that have happened in the past, but it has happened with the other sports. Maybe because you are in cricket, you feel it a lot. But I think the game is going to carry on. It has been around for quite some time and I don’t see it stopping now.

‘I just want to move back a little bit, relax and wake up tomorrow, or next week or two weeks from now, knowing I can do what I want’ © Getty Images

I know the first class game has suffered – the Sheffield Shield and even here in the Caribbean. In county cricket, a lot of the international players are not playing. If there is one thing I would like to see improve in cricket, it is the first-class level. I think that should be raised a level where it is very competitive and very attractive.If you look at football, international football is big. But when you talk about club football, that’s on par. The coaches and managers don’t want their players to play for their country because they have a big cup match or something like that.I would like to see county cricket or Sheffield Shield, or cricket in South Africa or the West Indies come to a level very close to Test cricket that you’re going to have a wider base of players, more players to look at, and maybe more fans coming out to support that level of the game. At present, that is where cricket is struggling. Our first-class level is not that great and maybe this is the end product where our Test cricket isn’t very good, our one-day game isn’t very good. Maybe we need to lift the standards of our one-day game.On his plans of playing county cricket
I just need to walk out of this room and think; go home and relax for a little while. I am not writing anything off. But at this present time, I am just happy to have played for the West Indies and to be here today and telling you all about it. I don’t know what the future holds on the cricket field. You just got to wait and see.On whether it’s been a frustrating journey
It has been very disappointing. It has been frustrating. That is what I played the game for – to play with a team that was successful. I just wasn’t able to do that for the last 12 years or so. I had some real glimpse of hope and on many occasions. I think this team has got so much talent. The things that we have achieved sometimes, no other team has done it. It’s just we can’t put it together consistently. Maybe the change that is happening now might help that in the future.On Twenty20 cricket
You are asking someone who likes Test cricket more than anything else. So to go to even the shortest version of the game now and say that it is going to dominate in a few years is hard for me to say. I hope not. What I would like to see is a turnout like this for a Test match in the Caribbean.The Twenty20 game is around now and it is three hours, and people like that. It has brought out spectators who have actually never come to cricket before, and they love it. But I hope we don’t lose any form of the game – we don’t lose the 50-over game or Test cricket because of it.On his toughest opponents and his favourite batsmen
Australia is definitely the toughest team that I’ve played against and after that series in 1995 they have beaten us every single time except maybe in 1999 when we drew the series but they still carried away the Frank Worrell Trophy. Sachin Tendulkar is definitely a top-class batsman but you know the fact that we retract. I think I appreciate all batsmen what they are playing to the table. I love all of them, I love to see them bat. There’s [Rahul] Dravid. You want someone to bat for their life, you want Dravid to bat for your life, you want Kallis to bat for your life. Ricky Ponting is an amazing player. Sarwan is very special, There’s Chris Gayle, I have seen a few innings and he has gone on to score 100 or 150.Message for Tendulkar
Sachin is an outstanding player and he knows what he has to do. It’s been a disappointing World Cup for him as well but he has a couple of years left. I am sure he might be in line for another World Cup. There is not much I can tell Sachin other than to keep enjoying it and it was a pleasure to spend time on and off the field and whenever I have had the opportunity. I will be there to see him batting because he is a special player.

TV anchorman Peter West dies

Peter West, for many years the avuncular anchorman for the BBC’s televised cricket, died this morning at his home in Bath after a long illness. He was 83, and is survived by his wife Pauline, a daughter and two sons.He took his first steps in journalism in 1945, after his war was cut short by back trouble. He started in radio two years later, and graduated to the TV screen in 1951, by which time he was also editing the new Playfair Cricket Annual. It wasn’t just cricket: West covered everything from the Olympics to rugby and Wimbledon, via Come Dancing, which he hosted for 15 years.West was unflappable, whether trying to interview Ted Dexter in a thunderstorm (“Are you all right, Ted?” “Yes, but I think I’ve just been struck by lightning”) or quizzing the umpire Tommy Spencer on the top of the pavilion at The Oval, cunningly seated next to a huge speaker that kept broadcasting the teatime scores at inconvenient moments in the discussion.He was the front man for the BBC’s cricket coverage until the end of the 1986 season, when Tony Lewis took over. West then wrote an autobiography, and covered Mike Gatting’s 1986-87 “Grand Slam” tour of Australia for the Daily Telegraph.More recently he was able to reassure a newspaper which had referred to “the late Peter West” that rumours of his demise were exaggerated. Now, sadly, they are not.

KCA on the rack as clubs back Cricket Kenya

Ramesh Bhallah: resigned as team manager and selector© Cricinfo

Cricket Kenya, the new body created at the weekend by Ochillo Ayacko, the sports minister, came one step closer to assuming full control of Kenyan cricket after the country’s two largest provincial organisations, the Nairobi Provincial Cricket Association (NPCA) and Coast Cricket Association (CCA), voted overwhelmingly to back it in preference to the existing Kenyan Cricket Association.At a meeting in Mombasa, the CCA’s ten member clubs voted 8-0 to support CK, with two abstentions, while in Nairobi, 19 of the NPCA’s affiliated clubs chose to do the same. Perhaps most tellingly, Ruaraka, always seen as a stronghold of the KCA, also backed the new organisation.It is believed that Ayacko will contact the ICC on Wednesday morning and, armed with the support of the government and now almost all of Kenya’s stakeholder clubs, request that CK and not the KCA be recognised as being the official representatives of Kenyan cricket. In the face of such overwhelming support, it is hard to see how the ICC can do anything but agree.If the last few days had been bad for the KCA executive, then today things got even worse as another senior executive – Ramesh Bhallah, the team manager and a selector – resigned, citing (according to the KCA) “pressure of work and personal commitments”. However, Cricinfo knows that he has been increasingly at odds with the executive and has sought to distance himself from the board in recent weeks.Bhalla’s departure leaves Sharad Ghai, the KCA’s chairman, increasingly isolated. Of his once rock-solid support within the board, only a handful remain loyal, and in the face of such massive opposition, his position appears untenable. If the ICC agrees to the minister’s request, the KCA and Ghai, with no money and few friends, could be rendered utterly irrelevant anyway.Earlier, the KCA’s selectors had been due to name the squad for the Intercontinental Cup tie against Namibia at Windhoek match this morning, but it soon became clear that some had deep reservations as to their authority to pick a side to represent the country against such a backdrop, and also with so many leading players either unavailable or on strike.Officially, the naming of the squad was delayed to allow the availability of certain individuals to be confirmed, but Cricinfo understands that it is unlikely that any announcement will be made until Ayacko has spoken to the ICC.Perhaps the most telling sign that change was on the way was that a number of the striking players, who have steadfastly refused to play while the KCA and Ghai were in charge, have resumed training. All have said that they will play for the new board for free.”We are happy to resume training under the government and we’ll be training here on a daily basis,” Kennedy Otieno, the former vice-captain, told the East African Standard. “At the moment we have no coach but we believe the minister is working on something. But with or without a coach, we shall continue training. We all know what to do.”Ravi Shah, probably the best batsman outside Test cricket, was absent from that group, nor did he appear with the depleted KCA-sanctioned squad preparing under coach Mudassar Nazar. “I have played cricket and will continue playing despite whoever selects me,” he said. “But at the moment I am not training because I have a knee injury.”Within days, Cricket Kenya is expected to name a full-strength squad to face Namibia for the Intercontinental Cup tie at Windhoek.Meanwhile, at the KCA offices at Nairobi Gymkhana, two other officials – Harilal Shah, the vice-chairman, and Jasmeer Singh, the communications manager, were held for four hours by more than a dozen coaching staff who claimed they had not been paid. The KCA is widely believed to be bankrupt, and Cricinfo has evidence that it cannot meet even its most vital commitments.Finally, on Wednesday morning a Mombasa court is due to start hearing a case brought jointly by the NPCA and CCA against the KCA over the board’s constitution.

Zimbabwe left out of Test rankings

Zimbabwe have dropped out of the ICC Test Championship as a result of them only playing eight Tests in the last three years. Test match rankings have historically been based on a minimum of 10 Tests played by each country over the three to four-year period.At the top of the table, Australia have stretched their lead and are now 26 rating points clear of second-placed England. Sri Lanka are another eight points further back having moved up two places to third position, and South Africa are also up two places from sixth spot to fourth. Pakistan are the big loser after the update having dropped three places from third to sixth.The annual update is carried out to ensure the LG ICC Test Championship table continues to reflect recent form with older results being discarded. As such, the new table only includes results from series completed after August 1, 2004.The update is always scheduled to take place on August 1 each year, but as no series are set to finish ahead of that date, it can be carried out now. By updating the table now it means that England and India will know what progress they can make before their series starts on Thursday.

Team Matches Points Rating
Australia 25 3534 141
England 32 3671 115
Sri Lanka 25 2673 107
South Africa 27 2759 102
India 25 2547 102
Pakistan 26 2573 99
New Zealand 15 1481 99
West Indies 24 1717 72
Bangladesh 18 65 4

Murali considers legal action after Bedi jibe

Muttiah Muralitharan celebrated his 700th Test wicket last month © AFP

Muttiah Muralitharan is reported to be considering taking legal action against Bishan Bedi after Bedi made disparaging comments about his bowling action. A letter of demand has already been sent to Bedi claiming Rs. 750 million (US $7 million) in damages for defamation.Three leading Sri Lanka lawyers, including a president’s counsel, have teamed up and offered their help. If the letter of demand is not answered then legal action will be taken in either Sri Lanka or India.Bedi is a long-time critic of Muralitharan and has a history of attacking his records. Last week he compared him to a “shot putter” and went on to say that “Murali will complete 1000 Test wickets but they would count as mere run-outs in my eyes”.It seems that Bedi has crossed the line this time. Yesterday, Kushal Gunasekara, Muralitharan’s agent, told Indian television that, “Murali is hurt over Bedi’s remarks. We are working with a team of lawyers. His integrity has been challenged. Restraint in speech is very important.”Bedi is indulging in character assassination. The remarks are disrespectful and unjustified.” The lawyers hired by Gunasekara told Sri Lanka’s : “We are writing a letter to Bedi and if needed, he will be dragged into a court of law”.Last week, Kangadaran Madivanan, Sri Lanka Cricket’s secretary, attacked Bedi, calling his remarks “defamatory”. Muralitharan’s action has been cleared by the ICC on more than one occasion.

Watson and McCallum rescue Scotland

ScorecardRyan Watson and Neil McCallum’s double-century stand helped Scotland make amends for their side’s lax fielding against Netherlands on the second day at Aberdeen. Scotland wobbled to 55 for 3, but Watson and McCallum combined to ease them past Netherlands’ 255, to take a lead of 22 with seven wickets in hand.McCallum, who has only one century at this level, was left in sight of a second on 97, while Watson was hunting down 150; he was on 141. The pair’s unbroken stand was worth 222 by the close.Geert-Marten Mol and Qasim Sheikh helped Netherlands to an encouraging start, with a wicket apiece, and the run-out of Omer Hussain for 8 helped further. But the bowlers had no means of breaking through the fourth pair’s defences, and Scotland are now handily placed to build a big lead heading into the third day.

Guernsey beat Jersey to claim Under-15 Championship

Guernsey secured their first ever title when they beat Jersey in the final of the European Under-15 Division 2 Championship in La Manga, Spain on Saturday.Jersey, who have already taken gold in both the U-19 and U-23 Division 2 Championships, could not overcome the 189-run target set by Guernsey, despite the side lacking Tim Ravenscroft, their star batsman who was in England scoring a century for Hampshire Under-17s.The two sides were the strongest throughout the competition, each winning all four group matches against the other eight teams. With the two islands being such close neighbours, the intense rivalry gave the encounter added spice, but one that did not detract from the excellent spirit in which a thoroughly competitive match was played at a truly impressive standard.Tim de la Haye, the Jersey captain, invited Guernsey to bat – a decision that paid instant dividends as Guernsey’s openers both fell, reducing them to 32 for 2. But then followed a championship-winning stand of 93 between Adam Hindle (48) and Thomas Kirk (29) who took Guernsey to 189 for 7 in their 35 overs.Jersey’s reply began poorly, with both their openers – Aidan McGuire and Bradley Rimeur – falling cheaply, and Joseph Mayes making only 11. The onus was on de la Haye, but he was left with a middle-order who had barely had any time in the middle over the past week – and had even less time to adapt to the match situation. Jersey fell short by 69 runs.Haye’s 46 was the highest score made against Guernsey in the whole tournament and included three massive sixes, two of which cleared the protective netting covering the ground’s straight boundaries. Guernsey’s bowlers did a great job, Matthew Renouf and Andrew Hutchinson bowled with immaculate lines and lengths. Thomas Kirk and Thomas Still both took three wickets.Meanwhile, Isle of Man beat Spain by seven wickets to take third place in the competition, reaching their target of 137 in 28.3 overs for the loss of three wickets. Belgium took fifth place, beating Italy by six wickets and in the seventh/eighth place play-off Germany beat Cyprus by 19 runs.In the match for ninth and 10th positions, Gibraltar beat France by 89 runs to take ninth place leaving France to claim the wooden spoon, but there was some consolation as the French took the MCC Spirit of Cricket Award.

Hogg's Test days are over – Jenner

Brad Hogg: “This is the first time they have given me an inkling that I am a huge chance of playing” © AFP

Brad Hogg has been lifted by the news his Test career is not over, but the spin coach Terry Jenner has warned Australia’s selectors not to be swayed by his exceptional one-day form. Jenner wants to protect his young prospects Dan Cullen and Cullen Bailey from an early elevation and is pushing for Stuart MacGill to replace Shane Warne.”No matter what you see [Hogg] bowl in the one-day arena his Test days are gone,” Jenner said in the Courier-Mail. “It’s common sense. When you bowl ten overs and you fire in two wrong’uns an over and bowl wicket to wicket they are either going to come at you because they have to or just work you for singles.”Australia’s first Test engagement without Warne is next month’s two-game series against Sri Lanka before a four-match contest with India starting on Boxing Day. “What Hoggy has done is exceptional, he is the best one-day spinner in the world, but that doesn’t make you a Test spinner where you have to show yards and yards of patience,” Jenner said. “That ten overs doesn’t equate to bowling for a day-and-a-half at the MCG.”However, Hogg, 36, feels he has a chance to add to his four Tests, the last of which came against Zimbabwe in 2003-04. “The [selectors] just said I have an opportunity to play Test cricket this year so that lifted my spirits a fair bit and gave me a fair goal,” Hogg, who is performing strongly in the series in India, said in the . “That is one of the things I really want to do. This is the first time they have given me an inkling that I am a huge chance of playing.”

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