Crash, bang, wallop

All Today’s Yesterdays – November 6 down the yearsNovember 5 | November 71999
The sort of all-action performance that makes you wonder how Michael Slater can ever fail to make the Test team gave Australia the whip hand over Pakistan in the first Test at Brisbane. Most batsmen would have started cautiously in reply to an imposing total of 367, but not Slater. He butchered 169 and put on 269 for the first wicket with Greg Blewett. And after Mark Waugh stroked an even hundred, Adam Gilchrist and Shane Warne rubbed it in. Gilchrist smacked an 88-ball 81 in his first Test innings, and Warne gleefully smeared four sixes in a then-Test-best 86, piling on 86 for the tenth wicket with his old mate Scott “Can’t bowl, can’t field” Muller (6 not out). Much-hyped before the series, Shoaib Akhtar nursed typically erratic figures of 32-2-153-4. In all Australia’s 575 took only 139.4 overs, the first display of the batting fireworks with which they would light up world cricket in the years to come. A defiant 119 from Saeed Anwar could not stop Australia completing an innings victory on the final day.1956
Birth of Western Australia’s Graeme Wood, a compact left-hand opener renowned for his stubborn determination and eccentric running – he became known as the “Kamikaze Kid” after a series of fiascos against England in 1978-79. Throughout his career Wood confounded expectations. Most notably, he followed hundreds in consecutive Tests (against England in 1980 and New Zealand the following winter) with three successive ducks. His Test career looked to be over after the 1985 England tour when he struggled, apart from a ten-hour 172 at Trent Bridge, but outstanding domestic form saw him return in 1988-89. He made a brave hundred against Ambrose, Marshall, Walsh and Patterson on a Perth flyer, but was dropped for the final time after the next match, as Australia tried out another left-handed opener … Mark Taylor.1956
Preparing a traditional Calcutta dustbowl backfired on India as they went down to a 94-run defeat to Australia in the third Test. In all 39 wickets fell in the match, and 35 of them went to spinners. Richie Benaud benefited more than anyone, taking 6 for 52 and 5 for 53, and though offspinner Ghulam Ahmed almost matched him with 7 for 49 and 3 for 81, a fourth-innings target of 231 proved beyond the Indians. It gave Australia a 2-0 series victory, neatly bringing down the curtain on the 45-Test career of their captain, Ian Johnson. He finished with exactly 1000 runs – and a slightly less symmetrical 109 wickets.1921
Birth of a true allrounder. New Zealander Geoff “Boney” Rabone was an aggressive batsman, an offspinner capable of turning to leggies or even medium-pace, an outstanding slip fielder and a popular captain. He captained New Zealand in five of his 12 Tests, and though they didn’t actually win any of them, it was hardly Rabone’s fault. At times he opened the batting and bowling, and he turned in some heroic performances, most notably in his first match as captain, against South Africa at Durban in 1953-54, when he made 107 (next-best: 32) and 68 (19) as the Kiwis went down to an innings defeat. He played his last Test against England at Auckland in 1954-55, when New Zealand were skittled for the alltime Test low of 26.1994
A rout at Harare, where Sri Lanka took their one-day series against Zimbabwe 2-1 with a thumping 191-run victory. It was their biggest win, in terms of runs, until they smashed India by 245 runs at Sharjah in 2000-01. The old firm of Aravinda de Silva and Arjuna Ranatunga set them up with a fourth-wicket partnership of 143 in 24 overs, with de Silva batting through for an unbeaten 107. Zimbabwe were always going to be up against it chasing 297, and it was effectively over when Chaminda Vaas and Ravindra Pushpakumara reduced them to 22 for 5. They were finally all out for 105 – there were only three fours in the whole innings – with Mark Dekker (23 off 109 balls) settling for some batting practice.Other birthdays
1876 Ernie Hayes (England)
1897 Jack O’Connor (England)
1919 Allen Lissette (New Zealand)
1927 Eric Atkinson (West Indies)

ZCO editorial, volume 3 issue 14

Our best wishes to all our readers for Christmas and New Year. With no cricket to report, ZCO will not appear next Friday, 28 December, but will be back on Friday 4 January.By that time Zimbabwe will have completed the First Test match against Sri Lanka and, for whatever reason, current form suggests we will be defeated heavily, that our national team does not have the confidence or spirit at present to make a close game of any of the three Test matches. The best we can hope for is to avoid three defeats in a series, which is a very real prospect for the first time in our history.This may sound defeatist, but it need not be so. We have the talent to do better, and the experienced members of the team have proved in the past that they can compete at Test level and in tough conditions. It’s all in the mind, and the players must work it through for themselves, as Andy Flower has done. Hopefully coach Geoff Marsh will begin to make an impact on them and help them to do so. Until then, it is futile to entertain any hopes of victory or even equality in Sri Lanka.Look at Dion Ebrahim and Craig Wishart, to provide two examples. In three one-day internationals in Bangladesh they were brilliant: 211 runs for twice out and 152 for once out respectively. Move them to Sri Lanka and what happens? Ebrahim 35 runs in four matches, Wishart 38. Much stronger opposition and harder conditions, but should it make all that much difference? Is there any reason why they couldn’t score half as many runs in Sri Lanka – unless the problem was in the head?Perhaps some sort of sports psychology course is required for our players. It is infuriating to see so many of them performing feebly, when we know they can do better, when their past history shows they have done better. We look to Geoff Marsh to instill some Australian confidence and spirit into our team.Part of the problem lies in what might be termed a national inferiority complex. Zimbabwe is a small country that has historically always been overshadowed by its much more powerful neighbour South Africa, and I suspect our sports teams have always been handicapped by that view. That perhaps was why Rhodesia, as it then was, never won the Currie Cup in which we participated until 1980.Under the captaincy of Mike Procter we were favourites for three or four years in the early seventies, blatantly robbed once by the South African Board who overturned the decision of the umpires to award a match to Rhodesia when Eastern Province refused to complete it with Rhodesia on the verge of victory, but never quite made it. When we looked like doing so, a disastrous batting collapse would snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. Perhaps the most talented cricket team in this nation’s history never quite put it together consistently when the pressure was on.There is also the matter of culture. Australians are brought up in a hard, brash, confident culture, while Zimbabweans are expected to be self-effacing. This was best illustrated to me when the Australian Academy team, which included fast bowler Brett Lee, visited this country three years ago. They played a match against a team from our local academy, then in its first year.The young local players had never faced anybody anywhere near the pace of Lee, and being Australians they swooped on them like sharks scenting blood. Several of our young players, instead of relishing the challenge, were clearly terrified of facing Lee. I spoke to the Academy coach Rod Marsh about this, asking how he would encourage such a young player. He looked bewildered and said straight away, "I don’t know; I’ve never come across that problem."So this is an additional problem facing our cricketers, and changing a culture is clearly impossible, when a confident child is squeezed into the mould of the society by peers and well-meaning adults alike. We do not want to breed a nation of brash, arrogant children, but there is a difficult middle course of building confidence without arrogance – Andy Flower being the ideal role model here. When that is not part of a culture, though, it remains a problem for our cricketers.New Zealand is a country similar to ourselves in that they have always been overshadowed by their larger neighbour. They actually took 26 years and 45 matches to record their first victory. They had the occasional world-class player and the occasional good tour, such as to South Africa in 1961/62 and England in 1973, but until the eighties victories were rare.The arrival of Sir Richard Hadlee as one of the all-time great bowlers, with a good supporting cast, made them for a period during the eighties perhaps second only to West Indies in world cricket, and in that decade they won three series and lost only one to Australia. They maintained their reputation as perhaps the most pleasant team on the international circuit, one that they sadly lost after the retirement of Hadlee and perhaps tried to make up for the comparative lack of talent by adopting the verbal war game. Zimbabweans have not enjoyed their attitude on the field ever since Martin Crowe’s team was the second Test-playing side to visit us in late 1992.Due to lack of size and resources, New Zealand and Zimbabwe will never be as consistently strong as Australia and South Africa. But we will have brief periods of glory and can certainly give most teams a hard game most of the time. New Zealand have reached that state, although sadly they have lost their once-fine reputation for outstanding sportsmanship. One day too Zimbabwe should also reach that state, although it will not be until we get a genuine black majority in our side. Let us hope that we can go one better than New Zealand and enjoy a reputation for both good play and good attitude.A final thought is that we could well do with some more experienced players in Sri Lanka. Alistair Campbell, Guy Whittall and Paul Strang may not be in the best of form, but in such difficult conditions their experience of several tours there would be invaluable. It is clear that several of our young players re currently on learning curves that are too steep for them. One or two more old hands could make the difference between competitiveness and humiliation. We do not want any more double-figure totals in the Test series. If Andy Flower fails, that could very well happen.VAUGHAN HANDLED THE BALLThere has been another clash of cultures on the cricket field this past week, this time in India, where England batsman Michael Vaughan was given out `handled the ball’ when he thoughtlessly picked it up with his hand on the popping crease while batting.This was quite in accordance with the laws of the game, but since Vaughan’s action was not in any way depriving the opposition of a wicket, the question is whether it is within the spirit of the game. The Indians obviously believe it is; the English do not. The incident was reminiscent of the notorious Murray Goodwin incident at Harare Sports Club two years ago, when the Sri Lankans ran out Goodwin when he moved down the pitch in the belief the ball was dead. The English, like some of the Zimbabweans then, predictably but wrongly retaliated by making the atmosphere as vicious as possible when the opposition batted. This sort of thing brings the game into disrepute.My rhetorical question to such incidents is: "Is it really worth it, to take a wicket in circumstances that so greatly offend the opposition?" Unfortunately, in today’s world of professional cricket where there seems to be no idea of professional etiquette, the answer is often yes.When two sides differ so strongly on incidents like these, there should be some method of resolution. It is difficult to legislate for the spirit of the game. My thought is therefore that the captains of the various Test-playing countries, who hold an annual meeting every year, should get together and decide among themselves exactly how they want to play the game between themselves, bearing in mind the image of the game.Do they really want bouncer warfare, such as that practised by Brett Lee on South Africa’s hapless tailenders? Do they really want sledging or excessive appealing? Are they happy to condone players slagging each other off on the field or pressuring umpires to decide in their favour when they know the batsman is not really out?Occasional incidents, like those involving Goodwin and Vaughan, also need discussing. If teams do not have a common understanding on such matters, there will be much unnecessary antagonism, bitterness and vengeance both on and off the field. If they decide that such dismissals as those inflicted on Vaughan and Goodwin are acceptable, then fair enough. At least we will all know where we stand. But when two teams accept different interpretations of the spirit of the game, there will be trouble and the game itself will be brought into disrepute.Various teams, most notably India, are not happy about the role played at times by match referees. Perhaps they need reminding that the system only came into operation because of the excesses of players who should have been controlled by their captains. Right now would be a good time for international captains to take some of the responsibility back into their own hands by agreeing on a code of conduct for their teams, a code that portrays the right sort of image of the game. If this is done and adhered to, there will be small need for match referees.Nobody wants to see Test cricket lose its hardness. But it can still be played in a spirit of good humour and chivalry, without bitterness or malice. Let’s see the Test captains take the lead, especially Steve Waugh. He commands tremendous international respect and he has noticeably reined in the excesses of the Australian team in recent months. He is reported to have a great respect for the history and traditions of the game. It would be good to see him leave as part of his legacy something concrete to ensure that the best traditions of the game are still upheld after he has left it.

'T20 is the right format to globalise the game' – Tendulkar

Sachin Tendulkar has said that the T20 format is most suited for cricket to expand into new markets.”To globalise the game, I feel T20 is the right format,” Tendulkar told ESPNcricinfo in New York City, where he is gearing up for the start of the Cricket All-Stars Series starting on Saturday at Citi Field.”The format is fast, it’s gripping, it’s got lot of energy and invariably the finishes are real close. Very rarely you get to see a one-sided game, which is what people like to see. Towards the end of most T20 games, every ball matters.”Tendulkar and Shane Warne are set to lead a team of retired stars in a series of three T20 matches across three cities over the next week. Following the launch at Citi Field, the series will shift to Houston for the second match on November 11 before the final T20 is played in Los Angeles on November 14.Tendulkar said he hoped the games – to be held in baseball stadiums in each city – would draw large crowds, not only from the expatriate community but also from among those who have never watched a cricket match.”This is an introduction to cricket,” he said. “If there are guys who want to understand more about the different formats then they are going to follow Test cricket and ODIs. Even if you get ten percent of the guys to follow Test cricket and like Test cricket, it’s a win-win situation.”Tendulkar wishes that his band of retired superstars can kindle the curiosity of many American kids and inspire them to try and get a taste of playing the game.”Somewhere down the line maybe a kid in the US will hold a baseball bat in one hand and cricket bat in another,” he said.”You need role models, you need heroes. Youngsters need heroes to get inspired – to believe that yes, I want to become like Wasim Akram, I want to become like Brian Lara, I want to become like Jacques Kallis. That is how that journey starts.”

Fergie to up ante with £13m bid & Hazard a problem United could do without? – Best of MUFC

You get the feeling that this summer will be one of upheaval at Manchester United. In the wake of sacrificing their Premier League crown to noisy neighbours City the rumours have cultivated that Sir Alex Ferguson is planning a major overhaul in an effort to wrestle the title away from their rivals next season. Some of the names being linked with transfer to Old Trafford are enough to make any football fan salivate and if theres anyone that can persuaded them to leave their respective clubs to join the club then it’s Ferguson. As the Eden Hazard saga begins to pick up speed the 70-year-old has turned his attentions to other targets as the highly-rated Belgian mulls over which English side he’ll eventually pitch up at. In the meantime the United chief has set his signs on midfielders Shinji Kagawa and  Kevin Strootman along with Leighton Baines. Both positions let the Red Devils down last season and Ferguson knows strengthening them will give his side a fighting chance of knocking City off their perch next season.

This week on FFC is United’s resident Bulgarian set to quit the club and is the pursuit of Hazard even worth the time and effort for Sir Alex?

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Best of FFC

One last hurrah For Michael Owen?

Has Eden Become a Hazard Warning for Premier League clubs?

Can Neville Stay Neutral for the cause?

Who cares about whether the players get along

Fast becoming a ‘must have transfer’ within the Premier League

Caption Competition: England quartet get a surprise visitor

City Domination or United Transition?

Manchester United to make improved £13m bid

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Best of WEB

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Is Eden Hazard Worth The Wait? – Red Flag Flying High

VIDEO: Interview With Director Of Youth Football Jimmy Ryan – The Busby Way

Footballing Heartbreak? Pass The Footballing Chocolate… – 7Cantonas

Jaap Stam interview – Beyond the Pitch

Berba’s long goodbye – United Rant

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United Need To Move Quickly For Shinji Kagawa – Red Flag Flying High

Lessons To Be Learned From The Heartache – The Busby Way

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Quote of the Week

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“We talked 10 times, he told me there would be a place for me but I stayed on the bench. My time at Manchester United is running out. I no longer feel like a valuable part of this team.”I think I did well in the few opportunities that I received. I am a little frustrated by the way this happened, I do not think I deserved it. But I have dignity and I stopped going to such meetings, it is clear that I’m leaving United. It’s obvious that I have to leave.”I’m looking for a new place now. I know I can still play at the highest level.” Dimitar Berbatov admits he is looking to leave Manchester United in the summer 

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Manchester United compilation 2011/12

Mithun and Nadimuddin tons set up Bangladesh U-19s win

Scorecard
Wicketkeeper Mithun Ali and left-hand batsman Nadimuddin slammed centuries for Bangladesh Under-19s to set up a convincing 111-run win over Nepal Under-19s in the first one-dayer at the Khulna Divisional Stadium.After being sent in, Bangladesh were in a spot of bother, losing two wickets to medium-pacer Paras Khadka. However, from that stage onwards Bangladesh were in control of the match with Mithun and Nadimuddin putting on a massive 261 runs for the third wicket. Mithun struck 14 fours and three sixes in his 137-ball 142 while Nadimuddin carted 13 boundaries in his 134-ball 118. Their superb partnership saw Bangladesh set a daunting target of 303 for Nepal, who did themselves no favours by bowling 18 wides. Of the seven bowlers Nepal employed, only their opening bowlers, Khadka and Amrit Bhattarai, managed to keep their economy-rates below six.Nepal’s chase got off to a poor start as Mahesh Chhetri was run out with only four runs on the board. A 65-run stand followed between Anil Mandal and Gyanendra Malla but their sedate pace of scoring stymied Nepal’s chances of overhauling the target. Mandal and Khadka then stitched together another slow and steady partnership of 59 runs from 97 balls. A flurry of wickets saw the visitors stumble to 139 for 5 and despite being gifted 33 extras, Nepal fell well short of their target, mustering only 191. Barring wicketkeeper Mithun, all of Bangladesh’s players bowled during Nepal’s innings.The next match of the three-game series is at the same venue on Saturday.

Quiney in line for Pura Cup debut

Tim Paine’s form has dropped away © Getty Images

Tasmania and Victoria have both made forced changes ahead of their Pura Cup match starting at Hobart on Monday. The Tigers have recalled Brett Geeves after Adam Griffith failed a fitness test and the Bushrangers promoted Rob Quiney in the absence of Brad Hodge, who is with the Australia ODI squad.Quiney has struggled for form in his seven one-day games this year but he scored 215 in Melbourne’s grade cricket last weekend, which could put him on track to make his first-class debut. Griffith was considered only an outside chance to make his comeback after re-injuring his hamstring at a training session.The game should also see the return of Sean Clingeleffer, who was dumped from the Tasmania Pura Cup team before Christmas. Tasmania were forced to rethink their decision to hand the wicketkeeping gloves to Tim Paine after his batting fell away dramatically with the extra responsibility.Paine, 22, made a terrific start to the season and after four matches averaged 58.42, with a highest score of 215 against Western Australia at Perth. But since he was tasked with wicketkeeping as well as opening the batting, Paine has reached double figures only once from six innings and has averaged 4.66.Tasmania squad Michael Di Venuto, Tim Paine, Michael Dighton, Travis Birt, George Bailey, Daniel Marsh (capt), Sean Clingeleffer (wk), Damien Wright, Luke Butterworth, Brett Geeves, Brendan Drew, Ben Hilfenhaus.Victoria squad Nick Jewell, Lloyd Mash, Michael Klinger, David Hussey (capt), Jon Moss, Rob Quiney, Andrew McDonald, Adam Crosthwaite (wk), Shane Harwood, Bryce McGain, Michael Lewis, Darren Pattinson.

Scratchy England U-19s sneak through to Super League

Points table
Group A

BulletinGroup B

Scorecard
BulletinGroup C

Scorecard
India showed no mercy in their clash against Scotland, crushing them by eight wickets. India, who won the toss and chose to bowl, blew Scotland away for just 112 with Abu Nechim Ahmed producing a testing display of seam and swing bowling, picking up 4 for 25. Despite the favourable bowling conditions, the Scots threw away many of their wickets and, at one stage, were struggling on 49 for 6. That they managed to reach 112 represented a significant recovery – largely thanks to Scott MacLennan (25) and Aamir Mehmood (32*) – but a total of 112 was never likely to cause the Indians any trouble. Indeed, they romped along at over six runs per over, with Cheteshwar Pujara (47*) and the captain, Ravikant Shukla (45) powering the Indians home with 31 overs to spare.Group D

Scorecard
England sneaked into the Super League with a nail biting four-run win over Ireland. Their win places them into the quarter-finals, along with Zimbabwe, and their meeting on Friday will decide which of them tops Group D. It was, however, another disappointing effort from England whose batsmen failed to click , although this was largely due to some insicive fast bowling from Ireland’s Niall McDarby who picked up the Man-of-the-Match award. The opening bowler, with 6 for 50, helped reduce England to 48 for 4 before Rory Hamilton-Brown (55) and Ben Wright (50) combined in a partnership of 112 which lifted their team’s final total to 214. In reply, Ireland’s Gary Wilson struck 69 from 98 balls and, at 180 for 5, seemed likely to see the Irish to a famous win. But the pressure of chasing a target – in what was a must-win game – proved too much for their lower order, and they fell by four runs.

  • England batsman reprimanded

  • Kiwis storming despite six McGrath blows

    Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
    How they were out

    Nathan Astle glances on his way to a 74 that continued New Zealand’s hold over Australia© Getty Images

    Glenn McGrath pulled Australia out of their self-induced bowling misery with a mesmerising six-wicket spell, but they were still experiencing extreme pressure from New Zealand. Australia’s Top End has been battered by Cyclone Ingrid, a system which generated winds up to 240kph over the past couple of days, but while the storm’s status has been downgraded it is still a serious threat. The country’s cricketers understand the situation.New Zealand have blown through their opponents over two days, although the breeze eased when McGrath reversed his bowling attack’s fortunes with late-innings swing to wrap up New Zealand for 433 when 500 was realistic. The damage caused by Hamish Marshall’s 146, Nathan Astle’s 74 and three wickets meant a deficit of 292 runs, but the world champions were thankful because it could have been worse.Justin Langer and Matthew Hayden, who became Iain O’Brien’s first dismissal after escaping a superb one-handed Craig Cumming grab ruled not out by the video umpire, both fell as New Zealand stayed in control, and they roared to stumps when Daniel Vettori won an lbw from David Shepherd against Damien Martyn in the second-last over. Ricky Ponting stepped safely to stumps unbeaten on 41 with his team puffing at 141 for 3.Shaking Australia out of their slumber either side of lunch, McGrath dredged six wickets for 40 after boasting the unflattering figures of 0 for 75 in 32 overs. Cleverly manipulating the old ball at will, he dug deep into his repertoire for a host of variations and his next ten overs sparkled. It was a major turnaround after New Zealand had scored a run-a-minute for the first hour and Australia’s sluggishness from day one remained.Marshall, who hurried in adding 43 to his debut Test century, was again impressive alongside Astle until his 24-boundary display ended with a magical ball from Shane Warne. From that point the batting became more vulnerable.McGrath woke with a stomach problem, but ran in deciding against muscling his opponents and out-thinking them instead. An outswinger curved into Craig McMillan’s edge and Astle and Brendon McCullum, who he twice hit on the forearm with short balls, were lined up after lunch. McCullum’s discomfort was visible and he fell to a mistimed drive after Astle departed and New Zealand were 403 for 7.Curbing his aggression to play a valuable innings, Astle started in a support role and grew into a senior one. The switch towards application guided his side towards relative safety before he misjudged a full McGrath delivery that seared into his shin on the full. The darting movement was too much for the tail and Franklin, O’Brien and Martin were added to conclude the fightback.New Zealand dominated the first session and scored freely until Warne produced a ball to place on his top shelf when he bowled Marshall through his legs with a fierce-spinning, drifting delivery. The wicket was crucial to raising Australia’s shoulders and bringing in a spreading field.Warne aimed an in-drifting legspinner into the rough and the late movement deceived Marshall, who spread his legs to maintain balance, and the huge turn pushed the ball past his left knee to knock back middle stump. Marshall’s delicious innings lasted 256 balls and he now owns the equal-highest score for a New Zealander on debut against Australia with Mark Greatbatch. The reaction from Warne was considered, but he was re-energised. It had the same effect on McGrath.A distraction in the first session was the unofficial investigation of Sky’s elbow ruler to highlight the ICC’s bowling change to 15-degrees of flexibility. The loose camera research concluded Michael Kasprowicz had a one-degree bend and McGrath’s arm flexed seven degrees through delivery. The six blows from today’s bowling were official and outstanding, but New Zealand are running with the wind.How they were out
    New Zealand
    Marshall b Warne 146 (330 for 4)
    Pushing to midwicket, he missed a big-spinning, big-drifting legspinner and the ball hit middle after threading his legs.McMillan c Gilchrist b McGrath 13 (355 for 5)
    Toying with reverse swing, McGrath chose an outswinger and caught the edge with McMillan playing away from his body.Astle lbw b McGrath 74 (388 for 6)
    Hit on the shin in line with off after missing a late, full inswinger.McCullum c Langer b McGrath 29 (403 for 7)
    Curled a drive to cover where Langer took a comfortable catch.Franklin lbw McGrath 0 (403 for 8)
    Played for a straight ball and got a late inswinger.O’Brien c Gilchrist b McGrath 5 (415 for 9)
    Hooking awkwardly, ball appeared to tip glove and clipped helmet on the way through.Martin c Gilchrist b McGrath 1 (433)
    Drove loosely and thick-edged to Gilchrist.Australia
    Langer b Franklin 23 (48 for 1)
    Waved outside off with no feet movement and under-edged on to his stumps.Hayden c Astle b O’Brien 35 (75 for 2)
    Astle snapped up a fine diving catch to his right from a hard driving edge at second slip.Martyn lbw Vettori 32 (140 for 3)
    Pushed back by Vettori, he inside-edged a quicker, straighter ball and was given out by Shepherd.

    South Africa up against it


    Mushtaq Ahmed: under pressure after a poor performance at Lahore © AFP

    South Africa may be relieved with Richie Benaud’s ruling which has kept Shoaib Akhtar out of the second Test at Faisalabad, but Graeme Smith and his not-so-merry men will still be hard-pressed to level the series after the first-Test debacle. Akhtar was instrumental in starting the slide in the second innings at Lahore, but more worrying for Eric Simons, the South African coach, was his batsmen’s inability to come to terms with Pakistan’s spinners.Between them, Danish Kaneria, Shoaib Malik and Mushtaq Ahmed took 12 wickets in the Lahore Test. Mushtaq was the least of the threats, though, which persuaded the selectors to call up Mansoor Amjad, a 17-year-old wrist-spinner who has yet to play a first-class match, although he has appeared for Pakistan’s age-group teams. He is unlikely to make his debut at Faisalabad, but South Africa can expect another severe examination by spin at the Iqbal Stadium.The lack of experience in playing quality spin bowling showed quite clearly at Lahore, as none of the batsmen attempted to use their feet and smother the spin. There were also far too many batsmen who got starts, and then failed to cash in: Smith, Herschelle Gibbs, Jacques Kallis and Boeta Dippenaar all made scores of between 24 and 33 in the first innings at Lahore.To make matters worse, the South Africans have no-one to exploit the conditions, which are again likely to favour the slow bowlers. Paul Adams picked up seven wickets in Pakistan’s first innings in the first Test, but also served up plenty of hit-me balls – and he was taken apart in the second innings, when he disappeared for 57 in 11 overs. The only other spinner in the squad, Robin Peterson, is hardly a wicket-taking option.Pakistan might be one strike bowler short, but their batting will be bolstered by the return of Inzamam-ul-Haq, their captain, who missed the first Test with a hamstring injury. He will step in for Yousuf Youhana, who has a hamstring strain of his own. Pakistan’s line-up in Lahore lacked experience, but Asim Kamal, the 27-year-old left-hander who filled in for Inzamam there, made an encouraging 99 on his debut. It was an excellent example of how to construct a Test-match innings. It lacked the flourish of extravagant shotmaking, but in a batting order already bursting with exciting strokeplayers, Kamal’s solidity is a huge asset.Smith’s short stint as South Africa’s captain has been notable for his hard-nosed approach, and his earnest attempt to ensure that his side shrugs off the choker’s tag that it has been stuck with. The South Africans demonstrated this newfound steel as recently as the one-day series in Pakistan, turning a 0-2 deficit into a 3-2 series win. It is time to display that resolve again.Pakistan (probable): 1 Taufeeq Umar, 2 Imran Farhat, 3 Yasir Hameed, 4 Inzamam-ul-Haq (capt), 5 Asim Kamal, 6 Abdul Razzaq, 7 Moin Khan (wk), 8 Shoaib Malik, 9 Mushtaq Ahmed, 10 Mohammad Sami, 11 Danish Kaneria.South Africa (probable): 1 Graeme Smith (capt), 2 Herschelle Gibbs, 3 Gary Kirsten, 4 Jacques Kallis, 5 Boeta Dippenaar, 6 Neil McKenzie, 7 Mark Boucher (wk), 8 Shaun Pollock, 9 Paul Adams, 10 Makhaya Ntini, 11 Andre Nel.

    Trumphant day for Fleming and Vincent

    Australia was given a taste of life without Glenn McGrath as New Zealand briefly took control of the third and deciding cricket Test at the WACA here today.With opener Lou Vincent joining an elite band of players by scoring a century on debut and captain Stephen Fleming ending years of self-doubt by scoring his first century in 42 months – Australia was on the ropes for much of the day.New Zealand finished at 7-293 with the match evenly poised.It’s no coincidence that New Zealand’s ascendancy corresponded with McGrath’s absence.The tall fast bowler, who has played 41 consecutive Tests, was out of the attack for a total of four hours today when he suffered back spasms after bowling fiveovers.When he left the field to go to hospital for precautionary scans, New Zealand was 2-19 and hovering on the brink of another batting slump.When he returned to the attack late in the day, the Black Caps were 3-226 after Vincent (104) and Fleming (105) added 199 for the third wicket.With Steve Waugh having to manage his bowling assets, the Kiwis had the luxury of 10 overs from Damien Martyn, Mark Waugh and Ricky Ponting while ShaneWarne bowled much more than he would have anticipated on the first day of a WACA Test.Just enough pressure was taken off for the New Zealanders to flourish.The tourists were also helped by cool, overcast and windy conditions and a pitch which lost some of its bite as the sun went off it.”It was a pretty flat wicket – an ideal wicket to play cricket on,” Vincent said.As soon as McGrath took the ball again, things went downhill for the Kiwis.While he didn’t take any of the four wickets to fall late in the day, his presence alone appeared to lift the Australians who had drifted through the middle session.New Zealand slumped from 3-264 to 7-281 as Brett Lee (2-89) and Jason Gillespie (3-79) did the damage with the second new ball.Vincent admitted “things looked good for a while” when McGrath was away.”It’s mixed emotions towards the end there I was hoping we’d finish a maximum five down – seven down’s a bit of a kick in the guts,” Vincent said.New Zealand skipper Fleming preferred not to talk about his own century saying “it’s Lou’s day”.And it was Vincent’s day – from the moment he was beaten all ends up by the first ball he faced from McGrath.”I played and missed but I didn’t nick it – so I thought it could be my day,” he said.He praised Fleming for getting him through the day to become the sixth New Zealander to make a century on debut.”He’s an inspiring leader, he kept me cool and composed at times in the game when the timing, the head and the feet were all over the place.”The 23-year-old Vincent had never opened the batting in a first-class game before today but the Kiwis gambled on his raw potential and positive attitude as they sought to become the first side in nine years to win a series in Australia.That is still a possibility but Fleming said the way Australia roared back in to the contest was a warning for his team.”It was a very impressive the way they came back but at seven for 293 we’re still in the game and we’ll be looking to make 350-plus tomorrow.”Gillespie removed Craig McMillan (4) and nightwatchman Daniel Vettori (2) before Lee sent dangerman Chris Cairns (8) back to the pavilion.At stumps, Nathan Astle was on 28 and Adam Parore on five.While Fleming played down his effort, even the Australians stopped to applaud his century.It’s been three and half years and 48 innings since Fleming made his last century – against Sri Lanka in May 1998.In his 63rd Test it was just his third century – although he passes 50 every second match he plays – and his first against Australia.

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