Naved Latif lifted National Bank of Pakistan’s (NBP) spirits and helped them reach a creditable 256 for 6 by close on the opening day of their first-round replay against Sialkot at the Multan Cricket Stadium on Monday.Put in to bat, NBP lost opener Nasir Jamshed (13) early but a 63-run second-wicket partnership briefly lifted them before a flurry of wickets – three for 26 – pegged them back again. Fawad Alam then played a rescue act with Latif as they carried NBP towards the 200-mark before Alam was cleaned up by Nayyer Abbas for a 46-ball 33. At this juncture, Latif and Mansoor Amjad, NBP’s captain, joined hands in an unbroken 75 run-partnership for the seventh wicket that took NBP to close.Most batsmen contributed well as Rashid Riaz’s 48 came off 124 balls with six fours, Naumanullah, already the highest scorer in the tournament, took his tally to 945 with his 34 off 58 balls. Latif’s unbeaten 62 at close had come off 112 balls as Mohammad Ali, who finished with three wickets for 69 runs, took his tournament tally to 40 wickets.The first-round tie between these teams in October was abandoned after unplayable conditions at Jinnah Stadium.The 11th and final round of the Championship begins with three Group A matches from Wednesday in addition to five Group B matches. Habib Bank Limited (HBL) are on top of the Group A table with 66 points and a win against Karachi Whites in their final round encounter will take them into the final.NBP need to win both their last two matches and gain the full 18 points. At the same time, they would be hoping that HBL are beaten by Karachi Whites. Group B leaders Sui Northern Gas Pipeline Limited (SNGPL) have already qualified for the final, which will be played from January 1, 2008.
Rahul Dravid and Brian Lara wore distinctly different expressions at the end of India’s 3-1 series win at Baroda. Lara, usually eloquent and warm, seemed hurried and just about ready to leave as soon as he arrived. Dravid, normally cagey and defensive, was relaxed and cracking jokes. But both sang from the same hymn sheet when asked about Sachin Tendulkar’s innings.”We were not unduly worried about Sachin. Maybe everyone else can stop worrying now so we can have a bit of peace around. But what will we discuss then?” said Dravid, eliciting laughter from the press corps. “It was a great innings. Sachin showed why he is a great player, why he can play in different conditions, why he can adapt. Not many people in the world can do this. If you have players who can do this sort of thing, you’re going to win a lot of games, no doubt about it. Sachin’s innings was truly special and one of the best I’ve seen from him.” Lara was no different. “Another very good innings. We all know what he’s capable of. I am not surprised, maybe you are,” he said. “He’s capable of producing innings like that every now and then.”But from there on, there was little similarity in what the two captains had to say. Lara acknowledged that his team had been comprehensively outplayed on the day. “It was complete domination but I wouldn’t say it was a lack of fight from West Indies,” he said. “I thought the Indians just played much better. They deserve the win. Their performance was outstanding with the bat and in the field as well.”Lara also stood by his decision to put India in, explaining it by saying, “There was nothing wrong with the decision to field. It was the same decision as the one in Madras [Chennai]. There was nothing very different about this pitch. We gave away too many runs and when it was our turn lost too many wickets. India batted pretty well and things didn’t work out for us in the first half. After they had a good foundation the likes of Dhoni and Tendulkar could accelerate in the end. We started poorly and didn’t put the ball in the right areas. Uthappa got India off to a flier, scoring at 6-7 an over and this meant that there was no pressure on the guys who came after.”Dravid was just happy with the way the series had ended. “It’s a really good way to win the series. It was a must-win game for us, to win the series,” he said. “We were under a bit of pressure. That’s good. We’re going to play some pressure games that are must-win in the future. To come out and put in a performance like this was a tribute to the whole squad.”
When asked if any players would be rested in the forthcoming matches against Sri Lanka, Dravid said, “Now we’re coming to a stage where we have to pick our squad and play our best fifteen with an eye to the World Cup. Who plays in specific games depends on the conditions.”Before the start of this match there was plenty of interest in how Irfan Pathan would fare in his comeback. Seven overs for 43 runs was not exactly ideal, but Dravid was comfortable with the start that had been made. “I thought Pathan bowled quite well. He bowled in some good areas,” said Dravid. “When he pitched it right he created a few problems for the batsmen. He has to get some more international bowling under his belt before we can make any judgments but the start was a good one.”Dravid was also happy with the way Yuvraj Singh was finding his feet on return from injury, and the manner in which he fielded. “He was exceptional, wasn’t he? That’s exactly what we wanted to see,” said Dravid. “One of the goals in playing Yuvraj – who feels fit and fine – was to see this. What he needed was the confidence in a match to do the things he knows he can do and has done in the past. Under pressure of a game when a catch is there your instincts take over. He was brilliant.”
Rahul Dravid has hinted that he will open the batting, despite terming it a short-term option, and emphasised the importance of starting well in the second Test at Faisalabad. He added that the bowlers needed to wake up to the challenge of bowling on placid tracks, lowering the bar and trying different strategies.”We already have two specialist openers available,” he said when asked if India were considering using Sourav Ganguly as an opener. “My individual success and the good partnership with Sehwag has given us some short-term options. Instead of looking at it as a difficult situation, I would like to take it as a positive. It has given us the opportunity to try a few things out. We will review it on an ongoing basis, when we go on other tours, when the pitches and the conditions are different. But we are not looking at Sourav opening as an option at this moment.”Approaching the series as a two-Test rubber, Dravid reiterated that every session from now on would be critical, and hoped for some moments of brilliance from his side. “Every hour, every session is very important now,” he continued. “With less sessions and less Tests left, you can’t afford to make many mistakes. Looking at it the other way, it also gives us the opportunity of having a couple of good sessions. A couple of sessions of brilliance from the team can put you in good positions.”Gauging the surface, Dravid termed it as being “slightly different” to Lahore. “It looks a good wicket, good for batting,” he confirmed, “and as the game progresses, maybe it will play a little up and down, helping the bowlers. Crucially, we have to play good cricket on it for five days. Let’s give it a chance, let’s see how it pans out. We are focussing on playing good cricket, and I am sure the curator has done his best in the time he has got.”When confronted with a flat track, he felt the bowlers needed to approach it as a challenge rather than curse their luck. “You throw out a challenge to them,” he noted. “In difficult conditions, it will be unrealistic to expect them to run through the opposition. But you tell them to look to keep the runs down. It’s as challenging for the bowlers to bowl on flat tracks as it is for batsmen to play in a green top or a seaming pitch. Just like a 40 on a green top can be criticial, a couple of wickets at a crucial time can be decisive. In such conditions, you have to lower the bar. Most of the bowlers are experienced, they enjoy the challenges, and they can gain and learn from the experience that will help them in better conditions.”Barring Sachin Tendulkar, none of the current squad has played at Faisalabad before but Dravid revealed that knowledge of the previous Tests provided them with indications of what to expect. “We look at a lot of numbers as part of the build-up,” he added, “and that can give you an indication of how games have gone here. But you can’t form definitive judgements based on those numbers alone, because the kind of wickets and conditions can vary dramatically. You don’t have the same wickets this month as you had the previous month, so you can’t really read too much into what happened five years back.”
"The great, green, greasy Limpopo river …" Celebrated in Rudyard Kipling’s Just So stories as the place where the elephant got its trunk*, and situated on the Zimbabwean border in the northernmost reaches of South Africa, it is not the most likely of places to spawn a Test cricketer – let alone two in a single match. But all that is set to change tomorrow morning, when AB de Villiers and Dale Steyn are expected to make their Test debuts.There has been no standing on ceremony where these two players are concerned: neither of them has yet completed a full season of first-class cricket, but already their selection belies Kevin Pietersen’s assertion that there is no future for young white talent in the South African set-up. Steyn has just seven matches under his belt, including a nine-wicket haul against the Warriors at Buffalo Park in East London, while de Villiers has but one century to his name which, happily enough, was scored in the very week he was selected for the national squad. As wild cards go, they seem precisely the type of hungry young carnivores who should thrive under Ray Jennings’s raw-meat-eating regime.Are they green? Most certainly. Greased? Well, in Steyn’s case, his brief dalliances with the speed-gun have recorded a none-too-sluggish delivery of 147.7kph, while de Villiers’s penchant for belting the leather off a cricket ball has resulted in some lightning-quick performances in the Standard Bank Cup. And as for "great", only time will tell, but at the ages of 21 and 20 respectively, they clearly have plenty of that on their side – de Villiers especially, who has a useful little sideline as a wicketkeeper.As befits an opening batsman, albeit a strokemaking one, de Villiers is the more cautious of the pair. He watches all questions carefully onto the bat, and meets the more testing ones with a confident assertion that he will "play his own game", whatever that game may be. But he can certainly play his strokes with dismissive disdain as well. Steve Harmison, surely a daunting prospect for any debutant, is driven straight back down the ground as "just another bowler", while Test cricket itself seems no big deal either – "bigger crowds, a bit more professional, that’s it really."
Steyn, by contrast, has a more up-and-at-`em attitude, and plays his cricket in a style not dissimilar to a young Allan Donald, with speed through the air and late movement his trademarks. Though he has been given licence to crank up his pace at Port Elizabeth, he seems mildly disappointed that the St George’s Park pitch is unlikely to favour an out-and-out attack. "You need to bowl a fuller length down there," he concedes, "so if they want me to ping a few guys on the head I might struggle. But I’ll be up for it I promise you."Steyn has an interesting admission that belies his surname, and is sure to make readers of Die Beeld wince – he speaks no Afrikaans. "I do try …" he insists, but explains that his parents were British Rhodesians and so there was never any cause to take up the language. Already, however, his ignorance has stood him in good stead at the crease. Faced with a gutful of vitriol from Nantie Hayward, his fiery forebear in the South African team, Steyn could do nothing but shrug: "I couldn’t understand what he was on about!"They may hail from the same province, and play for the same franchise, the Gauteng-based Titans, but there was little overlap between the pair as they worked their way towards national recognition. de Villiers’s home of Belabela is a good 500km from Steyn’s stomping ground in Phalaborwa, and by the age of six he had already moved to Pretoria, where his sports-mad family gave him little option but to pursue a career in cricket.de Villiers continued his sporting education in Ireland last summer, where he played club cricket for Carrick and laid waste to records left, right and centre. Steyn, by contrast, took a much less focussed route to recognition, and it was only once he’d left school that he realised he wanted a career in the game. "They play a bit up there [in Limpopo], but no-one takes the clubs too seriously. It’s up to you want you want to do. It’s your life."Though he was mentioned in dispatches for the tour to India, Steyn was wisely left at home for that trip, for the subcontinent is no place for a young fast bowler. But he won’t exactly be on familiar territory at Port Elizabeth either – he’s never yet played at the ground. Not that he’s fazed, of course. "I’m ready to play on any track," he says. "Just to be there at all is a bonus."(* courtesy of a tenacious crocodile)
Hampshire sunk to a two day defeat against bottom club Derbyshire in the Frizzell County Championship at The Rose Bowl. Dominic Cork’s side outplayed Hampshire at both batting and bowling in what was a disapointing display by the home side.Derbyshire’s last four wickets added a further 155 runs to their first innings overnight tally, as Nathan Dumelow led the charge with a run a ball career best 75. Dumelow hit 13 fours and a six and was aided by some loose bowling and poor fielding including two apparently straightforward catches being dropped.Dimitri Mascarenhas was the pick of the Hampshire bowlers as he toiled in the heat in an attempt to stem the tide. Chaminda Vaas in his first Championship match took 4 wickets. James Bruce proved expensive, but he was the unlucky bowler to see chances go astray as butterfingers seem to rule.With a lead of 198, Derbyshire soon got amongst the Hampshire batting, four wickets fell for 24 runs, with Cork again being the main protaganist. John Crawley came in with a runner and held up the visitors progress for a while, but only Simon Katich held his end in resolute fashion.Chris Tremlett hit three fours and a six in a bright 30 to take Hampshire past 150, but the inevitable happened shortly after tea.
Former Leicestershire player Jonathan Dakin has become the latest player to join Essex as part of the Club’s rebuilding programme in their quest to regain their mantle as one of the country’s leading counties.Born in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, the 28-year-old all-rounder made his debut for his former county in 1993 and was a regular member of both their championship and one-day squads.Standing 6’6″ tall, he is a powerful left-handed batsman and right-arm medium-fast bowler with a highest score of 190 against Northamptonshire in the championship. Last season, he topped the Leicestershire first-class bowling averages with 16 wickets at 26 runs apiece in his seven matches.Chief Executive David East said: “Jonathan is currently playing in Tasmania and is delighted at the prospect of joining us. We all believe that he can play a full part in taking the county into Division 1 of both league competitions, as he is a proven performer at that level. We expect him to prove a shrewd capture.”
Could Alastair Cook pull out the reverse sweep during the Test series against Pakistan? For one of England’s most orthodox batsmen, and an increasingly rare link back to the traditional form of Test batting, it would appear an unlikely prospect. But the importance of England not becoming bogged down by Pakistan’s spinners has been pinpointed by Paul Farbrace, the assistant coach, as a key route to success this winterCook is one of three left-handers likely to be part of England’s top seven at the start of the series. His opening partner is set to be Moeen Ali, while Ben Stokes will bat at No. 6. They are going to be facing two spinners, legspinner Yasir Shah and left-armer Zulfiqar Babar, turning the ball into them with fields that are likely to stifle their leg-side scoring options.England had an early taste of such a tactic during their opening warm-up match when, on occasions, the Pakistan A spinners – the two who bowled the most, Zafar Gohar and Mohammad Ashgar, were left-armers – had a seven-two leg-side field.England have previously been criticised for their obsession with the conventional sweep in Test cricket, instead of hitting straight down the ground, and Farbrace said that playing straight should be the preferred option in the first innings. However, he believes that all variations of the sweep could have a key part to play, especially deeper into the Test matches.”Second innings, the sweep is going to be a huge part of the game,” Farbrace said. “Even [in the first warm-up], we saw to the left-handers with a seven-two leg-side field bowling into the stumps, it might be that the left-handers have to learn to reverse to get the ball into the offside, just to manoeuvre the field.”People talk about ‘you’ve got to play straight’ but all you’re looking to do with the reverse sweep is play it once or twice to manoeuvre the field. What the best batsmen do against spin is manoeuvre the field to where they want the fielders to be to create gaps to knock the ball into. That’s something you have to do. On slow pitches, you have constantly to be rotating the strike and getting the ball into gaps.”The biggest danger, Farbrace says, is when a batsman becomes stuck at the single end, giving a spinner the time to work him over. After the warm-up match Mark Wood conceded how England will have to play a different game compared to their expansive Ashes cricket, but it must not go from bash to block.The 2007 vintage of Alastair Cook attempts a rare reverse sweep•Getty Images
“The bowler builds pressure, fielders around the bat, and eventually you bat-pad one and you get out,” Farbrace said. “The key for our batters is, one, to adapt to the conditions very quickly and have the options to play the sweep, reverse sweep, whatever it might be. Even hitting over the top, down the ground, all of our batsmen have got to have that option within their game as well.”England’s 3-0 whitewash against Pakistan in 2012 will be a regular reference point, but since then they have drawn in Sri Lanka and won in India so their record in subcontinental conditions – which the UAE can be bracketed as – is not as bad as some would make out.In two of the victories – Colombo and Mumbai – the now absent Kevin Pietersen was to the fore making 158 and 186 with astonishing strokeplay, including the switch hit, and quick footwork that did not allow the spinners to dominate.However, Cook was also immense, making 94 against Sri Lanka and three centuries in India. He played to his strengths, working off his pads, playing square into the off side and picking off anything that was dropped short. So the odds of Cook moving away from his method are slim. The first innings of the recent Ashes series was also instructive when he tried to attack Nathan Lyon early on and edged a cut. His is the long game. For anything more extravagant from the lefties, you probably need to look to Stokes.But not over-hitting has been a key message from short-term consultant Mahela Jayawardene who is working with England until the end of the first Test. The outfield in Sharjah for the first warm-up match was slow, reducing value for shots, but England’s batsmen are being told not to get frustrated.”Rather than trying to hit the ball harder because the ball is not getting to you as easily as it might do at home, the key is to let the ball come a bit more, hitting more under your nose, actually looking to bunt the ball into gaps,” Farbrace said. “If you see a long hop, the natural reaction is to pull it as hard as you can…[Jayawardene] is talking about letting the ball come, hitting it as late as you can, guide it into gaps. You’re only going to get one [run] anyway.”We saw people whacking the ball hard still only getting ones. Rather than whacking it and nicking behind, just guide the ball. They are the very simple things that he’s talked about. And it is simple. There’s nothing rocket science about what he’s talked about. He’s just offered some of his thoughts.”How many of those thoughts England’s batsmen implement, only time will tell.
An Aaron Ramsey goal in injury time gave Arsenal an excellent 1-0 win over Marseille in the Champions League on Wednesday night, but Arsene Wenger is keeping his feet on the ground.
The Gunners turned in a solid performance at the Stade Velodrome against a highly fancied French team, with the Welsh midfielder snatching three points in the dying minutes for the English side.
The victory moves under-fire Arsenal to the top of Group F, and Wenger knows it was an important win.
“We left it very late because we had a difficult start, we lost many balls in the first half,” he told Sky Sports after the contest.
“I don’t think Marseille were dangerous in the second half. In fairness they defended well, but we were rewarded because we kept going.
“We have made a little step forward, but we have to be humble because we are a team that has to continue to grow. The next game at home against Marseille will be very important,” he concluded.
The triumph means the Emirates outfit have won five out of their last six games in all competitions, and seem to be shaking off the slow start to the campaign that drew so much media criticism.
Wenger’s men take on Stoke in the league on Sunday, and will look to put a good run of form together as four of their next five games are at the Emirates Stadium.
FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast. FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast.
By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept Valnet’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.
Tottenham boss Harry Redknapp is hoping to have Gareth Bale fit for Wednesday’s Champions League match against AC Milan.Welshman Bale, who can play anywhere along the left flank, missed Tottenham’s 1-0 win in the first leg of their round-of-16 tie at the San Siro with a back problem.He returned to action during Spurs’ 3-3 draw away to Wolverhampton Wanderers in the English Premier League on Sunday. The 21-year-old came off the bench in the second half at Molineux.Despite a slight groin niggle, Redknapp is confident Bale will be available for the European match at White Hart Lane on Wednesday. “When Gareth came on and started to run with the ball, it was exciting. We’ve missed that for the last five or six weeks,” Redknapp said.”Hopefully he’ll be okay for the Milan game and he seems all right after the game. He just felt the pitch was a bit heavy and his groin was a bit tight.”Creative midfielder Rafael van der Vaart is in doubt with a calf problem, while holding player Tom Huddlestone remains sidelined by a long-term ankle injury.Spurs also have problems at the back, with full-back Vedran Corluka and centre-backs Younes Kaboul, Jonathan Woodgate and Ledley King all expected to miss out. Milan prepared for the trip to north London with a 1-0 win away over Juventus on Saturday. They lead Serie A by five points, but will also be forced to contend with a number of key absentees.Combative midfielder Gennaro Gattuso scored the winner against Juve, but he is suspended for Wednesday’s match after head-butting Spurs assistant Joe Jordan during an ugly confrontation in the first leg.Gattuso will be joined on the sidelines by first-choice midfielders Andrea Pirlo and Massimo Ambrosini. Former Spurs man Kevin Prince-Boateng is the latest midfielder to fall under an injury cloud after he limped off in the Juventus game with an ankle knock.Striker Alexandre Pato and fullback Massimo Oddo were flu victims at the weekend, while centreback Thiago Silva was fighting a stomach bug.But the extent of Milan’s injury worries means the trio are likely to be pressed into service on Wednesday.
For some performing at the World Cup proved to be too big of an ask. Here are the top five players who failed to impress in South Africa:
5. Claudio Marchisio
Italy manager Marcello Lippi said before the tournament that the Juventus midfielder would be Italy’s playmaker. A lot was expected of him given Andrea Pirlo’s injury that kept sidelined for the Azzurri’s first two games, it was believed that he could be a key player for his side and really make a name for himself in the tournament. However this didn’t prove to be the case, he started Italy’s opening games against Paraguay and New Zealand, firstly playing behind the strikers in the first game and then out on the left hand side in the second, however he just could not get a foothold in either game and was substitued in the second half of both matches. As a result of his two awful performances he didn’t start Italy’s final World Cup match against Slovakia and with the form that he was showing wouldn’t have made the slightest difference.
4. Kaka
The Brazilian midfielder is regarded as one of the best players in the world yet found it hard to breathe any life into the Brazil side. Robinho and Elano turned out to be the Selecao’s most creative outlets, and although Kaka did show some glimpses of his quality it just wasn’t enough from a player of his standards. He didn’t have a great season for Real Madrid and found himself in and out of the side, although hit may seem unconceivable from such a player her may have lost some confidence due to his poor first season. But that still isn’t an excuse for him not to play to his best for his country; and a player who should be lighting up a tournament with his skill and great goals is going to be best remembered in the tournament for getting harshly sent off against the Ivory Coast.
3. Fernando Torres
Liverpool’s number 9 has found the World Cup very tough, he hasn’t a scored a single goal in the tournament and has looked like he couldn’t hit a cow’s backside with a banjo in front of goal. Had it not been for David Villa shouldering the team’s attacking responsibilities then Spain could well have crashed out by now. Apart from Spain’s opening group game Torres has started every single one of their games, and you would have thought that a great striker like him would have hit the back of the net at least once by now. Torres was injured at the end of Liverpool’s season last year so it could be that he was rushed back too quickly to play for Spain, whatever his condition though El Nino has definitely disappointed at this World Cup.
2. Cristiano Ronaldo
The most expensive player in the world failed to live up to his reputation in the World Cup and was very lacklustre, scoring only one goal in the tournament in Portugal’s 7-0 mauling of North Korea. Ronaldo had a great debut season for Real Madrid scoring 33 goals in 35 games for the club and for the past few season has been a fantastic player both at Madrid and for Manchester United. However he wasn’t able to take that form to South Africa, and with his ability really should have been one of the players of the tournament. What makes his underperformance worse is that manager Carlos Queiroz entrusted him with the captain’s armband, yet a no point during the tournament did he ever look like a leader out on the pitch. Love him or hate him, everybody surely wanted to see him have a good World Cup as he is fantastic to watch and Ronaldo really disappointed with his performances.
1. Wayne Rooney
The man who was to shoulder England’s World Cup responsibilities was the biggest flop at the World Cup by far. Sir Alex Ferguson has claimed that the pressure got to Rooney, but he should know as well as anybody that a great player like him should thrive under the pressure and not become overwhelmed by it. Also it’s not as though he was unlucky in the tournament or simply didn’t play well but he looked like he couldn’t be bothered and wasn’t trying. Whether or not that’s a case of burnout from playing too many games in the season is unknown, but you would think that he would give that bit extra for his country and at least try.
Who do you think flopped at the World Cup?
Message me on Twitter with your thoughts
Get the latest World Cup 2010 news on Twitter
FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast. FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast.
By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept Valnet’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.
**
Click on image below to see the Argentinean babes at the World Cup