Dwayne Bravo to lead West Indies A

Dwayne Bravo will captain West Indies A against Bangladesh A in the first four-day game between the two sides from November 5 at North Sound. The 13-man squad for the game includes three players who are on development contracts from the WICB, and Andre Russell, who is on a Grade C contract.Bravo’s inclusion in the A squad means he will not be part of the Test squad for West Indies’ tour of India, which starts with the first Test in Delhi from November 6. He has not played for West Indies since asking for a break after the first two ODIs against India in June to work on his game. Since then he has played for Chennai Super Kings in the Champions League T20 and for Trinidad & Tobago in the ongoing Regional Super50 tournament.Fast bowlers Shannon Gabriel and Nelon Pascal, who played two Tests last year, and wicketkeeper Devon Thomas, who has played nine ODIs for West Indies, are the three players on development contracts who have been included in the West Indies A squad for the first game against Bangladesh A. Batsman Danza Hyatt, who has been a regular member of West Indies’ limited-over squads in recent times, and legspinner Nkruma Bonner and allrounder Carlos Brathwaite, who were recently handed international debuts, are also in the A squad.Russell has become an integral part of West Indies’ limited-overs side but has played just the solitary Test so far, against Sri Lanka in Galle last year.Sunil Narine, the T&T offspinner, has also been added to the squad after topping the wicket-charts in the Regional Super50. Narine also impressed during the recent Champions League T20, where he took 10 wickets at an average of 10.50.West Indies A will play two four-day games against Bangladesh A, two Twenty20 matches and three one-day games.Squad: Dwayne Bravo (capt), Nkrumah Bonner, Carlos Brathwaite, Jonathan Carter, Rajindra Chandrika, Kyle Corbin, Shannon Gabriel, Nelon Pascal, Veerasammy Permaul, Danza Hyatt, Andre Russell, Devon Thomas (wk), Sunil Narine

Dhawan, Rahane put Rest of India in charge

ScorecardAjinkya Rahane was one of two centurions for Rest of India on the first day•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Two centuries – an aggressive, substantial one from Shikhar Dhawan and a solid, unbeaten one from Ajinkya Rahane – almost ensured that Rest of India couldn’t lose the Irani Cup outright. They scored quickly on the opening day against Ranji Trophy champions Rajasthan, lost only three wickets, and amassed 400 by stumps in Jaipur.Dhawan scored 177 off 165 balls, an innings that contained 32 fours and one six. Having been dropped from India’s one-day squad after the tour of West Indies, Dhawan did not waste this opportunity to stake his claim again. He added 190 runs for the second wicket with Rahane, who adapted smoothly to the change in format. Having impressed during the limited-overs games in England, Rahane switched into five-day mode and batted with patience to end the day on 117 off 212 balls. He will have to revert to one-day mode against England after the Irani Cup tie is settled.Rajasthan’s bowlers struggled, with last season’s hero Deepak Chahar going wicketless for 120 runs in 21 overs. His new-ball partner Aniket Choudhary also conceded more than four an over in 17 overs.Dhawan began to attack as early as the day’s fifth over, when he hit four consecutive boundaries off Chahar. The first two were driven through mid-off, the next two pulled and cut as the bowler dropped short. The other opener, Abhinav Mukund, wasn’t as quick, his first fours coming in the 12th over when he drove and glided Choudhary down the ground and through gully. Dhawan reached his 50 off the first ball after drinks, off 51 balls.Rajasthan’s first bit of relief came in the 19th over, when Mukund edged medium-pacer Sumit Mathur on to his stumps. Rest of India were 77 for 1. Choudhary should have dismissed Dhawan, on 80, in the final over before lunch but Chahar misjudged the top-edge at long-leg. The Dhawan-Rahane stand took Rest of India to lunch on 122 for 1.There was little joy for Rajasthan in the second session. Dhawan got to his century off 119 deliveries, sweeping offspinner Madhur Khatri for two, and celebrated with a six over midwicket next ball. He and Rahane added 145 runs to their partnership and only shortly before tea were they separated. Dhawan had clouted Chahar down the ground for three successive boundaries but in the next over, from Khatri, he missed a slog sweep and was bowled. Rest of India went into tea on 280 for 2.Choudhary began the final session positively for Rajasthan, trapping Manish Pandey lbw for 16. The dismissal cut short a bright start, for Pandey had struck four boundaries during his brief stay. Rahane then led a period of consolidation for Rest of India, moving steadily towards his century, which he reached with a straight drive to the boundary off Chahar. He had a solid partner in Parthiv Patel, who was unbeaten on 55, and they added 113 runs for the fourth wicket before stumps.

Bell building towards ODI future

Now that they have achieved one of their stated goals – that of becoming the No. 1 team in Test cricket – England’s next challenge is to emulate that achievement in the one-day arena. But if one batsman epitomises the problem of translating such success across formats, it is Ian Bell, whose silken batting in Tests has been one of the major reasons for England’s recent rise, but whose role in the shortened versions of the game remains up in the air.Bell has played in just seven of England’s 38 Twenty20s (and did not feature in last week’s one-off at Old Trafford), while his one-day career includes two World Cup campaigns but just one century in 103 appearances. That solitary score came on India’s last tour of England in 2007 – at the Rose Bowl, no less – when he and Alastair Cook added 178 for the second wicket in a comprehensive victory. However, an overall average of 34.48, and a strike-rate of 72.69, provide damning evidence of his shortcomings to date.The current India series, in Bell’s opinion, is a chance to start making amends. Kevin Pietersen’s absence has created a vacancy at No. 4 which, he believes, will suit his accumulative style much better than was the case earlier in the season, when he was inked in at No. 6 against Sri Lanka, with a licence to play his shots, but made 81 runs from 117 balls all told.”I was desperate to give it a good go, but I didn’t feel I had done it as well as I possibly could have done,” he admitted. “The majority of the time I [was going] in with 15 overs to go and had to work on scoring boundaries from ball one. I’m not the kind of guy who is going to hit the ball into a few rows back, and I have to go over extra cover, or whatever, and use the skills that I have and find boundaries that way.”Part of the problem for England at present is that they have too many players who need to build up a head of steam – such as Alastair Cook and Jonathan Trott, who are bankers in the top three – and too few who are capable of raising the run-rate from a standing start. In the right conditions Craig Kieswetter can do just that, although he has struggled with the moving ball, while Ben Stokes hasn’t yet had a chance to strut his stuff.Only Eoin Morgan has the proven versatility to cope with all situations than arise in 50-over cricket, but given the fluency of his Test run-making, Bell ought to be capable of making the necessary adjustments. “I try to learn off Morgs in how he plays the spinners and scores boundaries off the front and back foot,” he said. “I want to be a cricketer improving all the time in one-dayers and Test cricket so you have to learn and be open to new things. The game is going forward all the time and you have to stay with it.”His stated preference, however, is to be allowed the time to “go through the gears”, as he puts it. “I can still hit sixes. I can do it against spinners in Test matches so I can do it in a ODI, but if you are coming in late, you actually [have to be] able to clear your leg, which is not something I grew up doing,” he said. “I grew up trying to get a nice cover-drive and play Test cricket, whereas young lads now grow up looking at Twenty20 and hitting the ball, and that becomes a lot easier to them to do that, rather than someone who grew up looking to play Test cricket.”That is where the likes of Stokes, Alex Hales and Jos Buttler – all of whom have turned professional since the advent of Twenty20 cricket – have the change to steal a march on their elder colleagues. “You can see the skills they come in with now,” said Bell. “They have more skills than batters ten years ago would have. The little sweeps with fine-leg up, to clearing your leg is, I guess, just what modern cricketers grow up with. We are working on it and I’m desperate to improve in my one-day cricket because that’s what you are going to have to do – that’s the way it’s going.”That need to get down and dirty is something that Bell has been actively practising since the end of the Test campaign, but ultimately, he wants to be able to stick to what he knows best. As Mahela Jayawardene has demonstrated throughout a brilliant one-day career, there is a place for graceful shot-making in the shorter form of the game. All that matters is the speed at which the scoreboard ticks over, not the speed at which the ball sails to the boundary.”Speaking to Goochy, there are different ways to score runs,” he said. “You can pick the ball over midwicket or you can lift it over extra cover. There are a lot of shots. There is no point me trying to become something I’m not. I have to play to my strengths. I have to pick the gap like I do in Test cricket.”We’re all trying to score at a run a ball. Andy Flower pushes us hard to score at a run a ball. With the spinners on, we want to score off every ball bowled and push down the number of dot balls in the innings. That would be a perfect day, but you’re not going to have every day like that. A goal of ours in the middle overs is to score off as many balls as possible. If we can achieve that, we’ll score more runs and be a better one-day side.”Despite 10 series wins in their last 12 bilateral campaigns, England’s ODI team is still very much a work in progress. However, Bell is excited about their prospects in the coming months and years, and believes that Jade Dernbach’s emergence has added an extra dimension to their bowling.”We’re trying everything we can to improve,” he said. “Watching the Twenty20 the other day, it looks like we’ve got some players who can really bowl well at the back end, and when we go to India, the reverse-swinging ball and slower balls become so important. It looks like we’ve got an attack which can do that, which is a massive improvement already.”We’re targeting to become one of the better fielding teams in the world,” he added. “We’re desperate to do it. As with Tests, the group is hungry for improvement and success. If we keep that, I’m hoping it will be exactly the same as in Tests.”

Davies and de Bruyn set winning platform

Scorecard
Surrey remained on course to win their County Championship Division Twomatch at Northamptonshire going into the final day after centuries from StevenDavies and Zander de Bruyn.Davies reached 156, his best score for Surrey, and also passed 1,000first-class runs for the season in a 216-run stand for the fourth wicket with DeBruyn, who finished unbeaten on 108. The visitors set Northamptonshire a daunting 486 to win after declaring on 410 for 6, and the hosts ended day three on 103 for 4.Surrey resumed this morning on 115 for three, with a healthy lead of 190, andlooking to carry forward the momentum seized on day two. A flurry of boundaries in the early overs saw the visitors strengthen their grip on the match, with opener Davies reaching his ton with a single off the bowling of Northamptonshire captain Andrew Hall just before lunch.At the other end, De Bruyn also found quick runs easy to come by and the pairadded 124 runs to their overnight total during the morning session. They continued well into the afternoon session, punishing the hosts, before their partnership was broken with the team score on 321.Davies was finally out off the bowling of Chaminda Vaas, top-edging anattempted pull shot that went straight up and was gloved by wicketkeeper NiallO’Brien behind the stumps. Tom Maynard made 34 before he was run out following a direct throw at the stumps by Rob Newton from deep mid-wicket, before De Bruyn completed his hundredjust before tea.In the last over before tea, Jason Roy was caught behind on nine by O’Brien offthe bowling of Hall, which prompted a Surrey declaration. With Stephen Peters still nursing a back injury, Newton and Kyle Coetzer opened the batting.Although they started positively, Northamptonshire lost Newton in the fifthover for 14, guiding the ball to Mark Ramprakash at gully off the bowling of TimLinley. The home side’s realistic hopes of saving the game received further blowsbefore the close as they lost Alex Wakely for 22, bowled by Pragyan Ojha, andDavid Sales for five, caught by Roy at short leg off the same bowler.Coetzer’s resistance ended in the penultimate over of the day, playing a poorcut shot to be caught by wicketkeeper Davies for 54 off the bowling of StuartMeaker. Nightwatchman Lee Daggett (4no) and captain Hall (2no) will resume in themorning, facing an uphill battle to save the match.

Tremlett available but Trott still injured

Jonathan Trott will not make it back in time for the fourth Test against India, so Ravi Bopara will have another opportunity in the England side at The Oval. England have named the same 13-man squad as they did for the Edgbaston Test, and Chris Tremlett is available for selection, leaving England with the dilemma of whether to replace the impressive Tim Bresnan.”Jonathan Trott is making steady progress in his rehabilitation from his ongoing shoulder injury but he requires further treatment and won’t be fit for the fourth and final Test match,” Geoff Miller, the England national selector, said. “As such Ravi Bopara retains his place in the squad.”Chris Tremlett is available for selection following continued treatment for his back injury and he and Steven Finn are included in a broader 13-man squad for the last Test match of the summer.”Trott sustained a shoulder injury while fielding on the second day of the Trent Bridge Test, and, though he batted at No. 7 in England’s second innings there, missed the third Test. Bopara was hopeful of securing the No. 6 spot for England this summer after choosing county cricket over the IPL, but the selectors favoured Eoin Morgan for the series against Sri Lanka and India. Bopara was handed a chance through Trott’s injury but did not make the most of it at Edgbaston, where Morgan scored a century.There is little at stake for England in the final Test as they have already sewn up both the series and the No. 1 ranking.England squad Andrew Strauss (capt), James Anderson, Ian Bell, Ravi Bopara, Tim Bresnan, Stuart Broad, Alastair Cook, Steven Finn, Eoin Morgan, Kevin Pietersen, Matt Prior, Graeme Swann, Chris Tremlett

Somerset qualify after tied match

ScorecardRyan McLaren’s late hitting helped Middlesex tie with Somerset•Getty Images

Somerset have secured a place in the quarter-finals of the Friends Life t20even after Middlesex, bottom of the South Division, snatched a tie in a dramaticfinish at Southgate.Middlesex appeared to be heading for their 12th defeat in 14 games when theybegan the final over needing 18 off the bowling of Kieron Pollard to overhaul atarget of 144 to win.But Ryan McLaren, who had earlier taken three for 37, struck sixes offsuccessive balls to take them within four of victory. He holed out on the midwicket boundary next ball, but Tom Smith scrambled a two and a single off the last two deliveries to bring the scores level.Somerset had Craig Kieswetter back from international duty to open the battingalongside Marcus Trescothick, but neither of them got very far on a sluggishpitch.Trescothick only made eight before he pulled McLaren to deep mid-wicket and wascaught by a leaping Smith, while Kieswetter reached 17 off 18 balls when he wascaught at wide mid-on off Tim Murtagh.It was left to Pete Trego and James Hildreth to give Somerset some momentumwith a third-wicket stand of 47 in nine overs, but neither of them could reallycut loose against some tight bowling from Smith and Neil Dexter. Smith got his reward when Trego top-edged to backward point after making 36 off 33 balls and two overs later McLaren yorked Hildreth, who had struggled to 31.There were some late fireworks from Pollard who struck 33 off 18 balls,including two huge sixes, but there were only nine fours and three sixes in theentire innings. A total of 143 for 6 still looked too good for Middlesex, who lost wickets atregular intervals.Louis Gregory was the main protagonist for Somerset, taking three for 26including joint top-scorer Dexter, who matched Scott Newman’s contribution of33. But then came McLaren’s spectacular finale, the South African allrounder making25 off 17 deliveries.

Agreement on DRS after Hot Spot is made mandatory

The ICC chief executives’ committee (CEC) has unanimously agreed to make a modified version of the Decision Review System (DRS) mandatory in all Tests and one-day internationals. The mandatory terms and conditions for the DRS that have been recommended to the executive board for approval consist of infra-red cameras and audio-tracking devices. The ball-tracking technology has been removed from the ICC’s original compulsory list of DRS technologies.This means India will, for the first time since 2008, be agreeable to using the DRS in a bilateral series when it tours England in July.However, the DRS used in the England-India series will be without ball-tracking technology. For example, if the ball pitches outside leg stump and the batsman is given lbw, he can appeal against the verdict but the third umpire will not have the benefit of ball-tracking technology to ascertain where the ball pitched. On the other hand, if a batsman is given lbw and he thinks he hit the ball, the Hot Spot will resolve whether there was an edge or not.The pitch mat was brought up during the discussion as the one element of the ball-tracking technology that could be used in the DRS so that the lbw could be covered using two technologies. It was, however, rejected by the BCCI, which did not want any element of the ball-tracking technology to be part of the modified mandatory requirements for the DRS.While Hot Spot is the only infrared, thermal-imaging camera available in cricket, audio tracking referred to the high quality “clean and real time” replays from the stump microphones, and not the Snicko, an ICC official confirmed.The CEC, which also approved the cricket committee’s recommendation to reduce the number of unsuccessful reviews in ODIs from two to one, decided that the continued use of the ball-tracking technology as a decision-making aid will depend on the bilateral arrangement between the participating teams. Further independent and expert research will be carried out into the accuracy and reliability of ball-tracking technology.A decision on how the cost of the DRS would be divided will be taken later. Last week, BCCI vice-president Niranjan Shah had said that the cost of using the DRS was as high as $60,000 per match. According to the ICC, however, that figure is closer to $5000 per day, with a maximum of $25,000 being spent on DRS per Test.

Spin hard and believe, says Warne

Belief, technique, and above all else, spin. Shane Warne encapsulated the desired legacy of Terry Jenner by saying that all Australia slow bowlers had to be implored to ‘rev’ the ball as hard as they could, and to a build a career from that most basic of tenets.Jenner’s final farewell was attended by more than 600 guests in an emotive memorial service at Adelaide Oval, where the speakers included his daughter Trudianne, Warne, fellow pupil Cullen Bailey and Jenner’s long-time partner Ann. Aged 66, Jenner died on May 25 in his suburban Adelaide home a little more than a year after suffering a massive heart attack while coaching in London.Other guests such as Ian and Greg Chappell, Rod Marsh, Ashley Mallett, Doug Walters, Martin Kent, Ray Bright, Bryce McGain, Darren Lehmann, Jason Gillespie and the Australian coach Tim Nielsen reminisced about Jenner’s impact on many inside and outside cricket over the course of a life that saw hard times as well as good.Warne, a pudgy youth with one expensive Test wicket to his name in 1992 when Jenner urged him to start making more sacrifices in the name of his art, said most of his advice to young spin bowlers was rooted in Jenner’s teaching.”Most of the stuff I pass on to spinners is mainly from TJ,” Warne said before the service. “With 21 or 22 years of being involved with first-class cricket myself I’ve obviously learned a bit, but the major messages are exactly the same as what TJ was telling me 20-odd years ago. I’m passing on the same sort of stuff and have done for a long time.”It’s not so much a technical thing. As a spin bowler you’ve got to spin the ball, that’s the most important message that TJ taught me, if I want to look at a fast bowler I’ll watch him bowl fast, if I want to watch a swing bowler I’ll watch him swing the ball, but if I want to watch a spin bowler I’ll see him spin the ball. So that’s the No.1 message to any spinner that I’ve always passed on.”There’s just little things, a little bit technically but it’s more about the way you think, your attitude to it, and your captain being one of your best friends who you might share a beer with at the end, that might give you an extra over here or there too. [Also] field settings, what to look for in batsmen, how to approach different situations, Twenty20’s impact.”Jenner’s death has left a vast gap in Australian cricket’s knowledge about slow bowling, something emphasised by the fact that a spin summit was taking place in Brisbane on the same day as his funeral. Warne said he would keep pushing to educate those that had followed him about the best way to bowl spin, and had already spoken with the new captain Michael Clarke about the strengths and weaknesses of various members of the modest Australian spin stable.”I think we’ve got a lot of good spinners at the moment, it’s just about getting them some confidence, making them believe, getting the captains to back them, giving them exposure at first-class level, and supporting them,” Warne said. “Getting a process in place from CA, all the way down to grassroots cricket, and the same messages going out there all the time – that’s the most important thing.”The spin bowling summits in Brisbane I’ve helped out the last few years, I’ve only just got back from India and I’ve got my kids for a couple of weeks. I haven’t been able to get up there this time but I’m always available, I’ve spoken to Michael Clarke a few times about some of the spinners and things to work on and I’ll keep giving back to Australian cricket like I have done for a while, and helping in any way I can.”In Brisbane, Jason Krejza emphasised the difficulties facing those who had followed Warne by discussing how confused he had been after being jettisoned from the Test team only one match after taking 12 wickets on debut against India in Nagpur in 2008.”I was a bit of a mental case [after being dropped] and thought about things way too far ahead and too deep,” Krejza said. “I just had to concentrate on how I was playing the next day, that’s the simplest way to do it – it doesn’t do your head in. I had to get back to being the attacking spinner that I always was and stay consistent. I won’t stop being an attacking spinner now – I can’t go the other way, I have to stay in that mindset.”Warne summed up Jenner’s advice as often being of the kind that seemed obvious only after it had been suggested.”I was very lucky to come under his guidance and tutelage to teach me so many wonderful things,” he said. “Just some simple things you never really thought of but when he said it you’d be ‘yeah, ok, that makes sense’, and then we’d go away and work on them.”We had ongoing discussions about different things. One of the things was about the line you should bowl for a legspinner, it took probably 21 years for him to agree I could actually bowl leg stump – let’s call it a discussion rather than a debate – but we’ll all miss him.”I wouldn’t have been able to do what I did for Australian cricket if it wasn’t with his help.”

Sri Lanka in running to host Pakistan-England series

Sri Lanka is in the running to host the England-Pakistan Test and one-day series scheduled for early 2012, with continuing security concerns preventing England from travelling to Pakistan. Sri Lanka Cricket’s secretary Nishantha Ranatunga said he was “very positive” about Sri Lanka being handed the hosting rights, though the PCB said it has yet to make a decision.”We’re working on several options for [hosting] that series, and UAE and Sri Lanka are a couple of them,” Subhan Ahmed, the PCB’s chief operating officer, told ESPNcricinfo. “Nothing is confirmed just yet.”Ranatunga said Sri Lanka was an ideal venue as it was a favoured destination of both English and Pakistan fans. “I have spoken to the cricket boards of both England and Pakistan and they have been very positive about playing the series in Sri Lanka,” he said. “Pakistan chose Sri Lanka to play all their group matches of the 2011 World Cup and they had a lot of crowd support.”England are also keen to play in Sri Lanka as their supporters, including the Barmy Army, have enjoyed previous tours here with the England teams.”The financial aspect will also come into play in any final decision. SLC is reportedly in debt after the World Cup and any potential series will help alleviate that situation. “The series would also generate income for the Cricket Board and also improve our tourist industry,”Ranatunga said.For Pakistan, Sri Lanka may provide a cheaper option for logistical costs than the UAE, where they have been holding most of their “home” internationals. Last October they hosted South Africa for a full tour and it is believed they are keen to look at other options given the higher costs the UAE incurs.It would also make more sense for England to play the three-Test, five-ODI series in Sri Lanka instead of the UAE, as they are due to tour Sri Lanka soon after, from early March to April 2012.Sri Lanka are also scheduled to play a Test and ODI series against Pakistan this October, and that series is almost certain to be held in Sri Lanka, Ranatunga said. “We have put forward our proposal to the PCB and are awaiting a response from them. I am quite certain they would want to play the series in Sri Lanka.”Sri Lanka were the last international team to play in Pakistan, in early 2009, with the second Test being called off midway after the Sri Lankan team bus was shot at in Lahore. The incident led to the ICC dropping Pakistan as one of the four countries co-hosting the 2011 World Cup, and Pakistan have been using Abu Dhabi and Dubai as neutral venues for their matches since.Sri Lanka previously hosted a neutral Test between Pakistan and Australia in Colombo in October 2002, after Australia cited security concerns over travelling to Pakistan in the aftermath of the 9/11 terror attacks and the ensuing war in neighbouring Afghanistan.

Pietersen set for Surrey return

Kevin Pietersen is set for a return to competitive cricket at Fenner’s next week, and is well on course to feature in the first Test against Sri Lanka on May 26, after stepping up his rehabilitation following hernia surgery with extensive nets sessions at The Oval.According to Surrey’s cricket manager, Chris Adams, Pietersen is approaching full fitness after nearly two months on the sidelines, and should be available for selection for Surrey’s three-day game against Cambridge MCCU, followed by their County Championship clash with Essex at Whitgift School, starting May 18.Assuming he comes through those matches unscathed, with the possibility of a CB40 fixture against Scotland in Edinburgh in between whiles, he is expected to slot straight back into the squad for the first Test against Sri Lanka in Cardiff in three weeks’ time, despite leaving the England squad under something of a cloud during the recent World Cup.Pietersen withdrew from the squad on March 6, immediately after England’s thrilling six-run victory over South Africa in Chennai, complaining that the pain of a hernia that he had sustained during the one-day series in Australia had become unbearable.While the nature of the injury was not in doubt, the timing of his departure raised many eyebrows, not least those of England’s head coach Andy Flower, who suggested that Pietersen could have “bitten the bullet” and managed the injury through to the end of the tournament. It reawakened doubts about Pietersen’s hunger for international cricket, however, Adams insisted that he was eager for a return to the fray.”He’s back to playing and within himself, he’s ready to play,” said Adams. “He’s had a good break and he’s keen to get going, because it’s time to focus on the next couple of weeks in the run-up to first Test. He’ll be with us all this week, doing two nets a day, and all the twisting and turning and bits of fielding before a game, and if he comes through that alright he’ll play next week at Cambridge.”The final say on Pietersen’s availability will be determined by the ECB – “we feel he’s England’s player, not ours,” said Adams – but with the club physio, Dean Conway, working closely with the England management team, Pietersen came through a fitness test at Lord’s last week, and was given a good going-over by a trio of Surrey youngsters in the Oval nets on Wednesday morning. “He looked very good, very simple, and reported no problems whatsoever,” said Adams.With Surrey struggling at the foot of the Division Two table, Adams insisted that the prospect of Pietersen’s availability was nothing but a boost for the squad. “Do we think of it as a disruption, or can we find the space for him in the side? Absolutely yes, he’s a world-class player. Any one of our players, if they were in Kev’s position, they’d like to think they could come back and get a game if they needed it.”He’s taken advice from the England management in terms of staying away from cricket since the World Cup, but he’s popped in on a few occasions,” said Adams. “When he’s been around he’s been good as gold. When he came here last year he had a good motive to be good around the squad, and he was very helpful and led by example. I’ve not seen anything different yet this year, and he’s seems very at home.”

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