Patron's Trophy wrap-up after Round-3

The end of Round 3 saw the Points Table take shape according to the relative strengths of the teams. The strong PIA team is in the driving seat and KRL and NBP are competing for 2nd place.HBL v PIA
PIA easily overcame HBL by 7 wickets. PIA won the toss electing to bowl first and amazingly, wrapped up the HBL 1st innings for 27 runs. Fazl-e-Akbar was the main destroyer. He took 7 wickets in which he had a hat-trick, taking the last 4 wickets in successive balls. On their turn, PIA scored 269 and took a huge lead of 242. Shahid Nazir and Kabir Khan took 3 wickets each. HBL replied strongly, reaching 313 runs with the help of Younis Khan?s century and an entertaining half-century by Shahid Afridi, setting PIA an easy target of 72. PIA?s Fazl-e-Akbar grabbed another 5 wickets in the 2nd innings. Expectedly, PIA reached the target but lost 3 wickets.ABL v WAPDA
The match between ABL and WAPDA ended in a draw after ABL won the toss and scored 451 in their 1st innings. Ijaz Ahmed Jnr and Rashid Latif had a major hand in that innings. Ijaz Ahmed made 103 and Rashid hit 81 runs. Aqeel Ahmed of WAPDA took 6 wickets. In response, WAPDA scored 306 runs and Adil Nisar was the highest scorer with 85 runs. ABL made 179 runs in their 2nd innings and set a target of 325. Ijaz Ahmed Jnr again batted well and made 75. At the close of play, WAPDA had scored 88 for 4 with the match ending in a draw.ADBP v SGCP
ADBP defeated SGCP by 50 runs after SGCP won the toss and elected to bowl first. SGCP bowled ADBP out at a score of 118 runs in which Inam-ul-Haq scored 61.Abdur Rauf was the main striker for SGCP to grab 8 wickets. SGCP scored 136 runs in reply and took an 18 run 1st innings lead. ADBP scored 192 in their 2nd innings and gave SGCP a target of 175 runs to win. Abdur Rauf was again the top wicket taker, picking up another 6 wickets. However, SGCP could not manage and were bowled out at the score of 124.CUSTOMS v NBP
NBP beat Customs by 6 wickets after winning the toss and deciding to bowl. Pakistan Customs was bowled out for 241 runs. Shadab Kabir was the main scorer with 51 runs. Mushtaq Ahmed took 6 Customs wickets with his leg-spin. NBP scored 404 runs in their 1st innings with Sajid Ali hitting 113 and took a 163 run lead over Pakistan Customs. Customs scored 309 in their 2nd innings while Azhar Shafiq was top scorer with 106 runs and set a 147 run target, easily achieved by NBP at the loss of 4 wickets.KRL v PWD
The high scoring match played between KRL and PWD at the Jinnah Stadium, Sialkot ended in a draw. PWD won the toss and put in KRL who scored 457 in their 1st innings. Jaffar Nazir was top scorer with 80. PWD then surprised the experts through an excellent batting display and scored 592 runs in reply with centuries by Saad Wasim and Iqbal Imam. They ended up with a 135 run 1st innings lead over KRL. Yasir Arafat was KRL?s main bowler taking 6 wickets. In their 2nd innings KRL scored 315 for 1 with both openers making centuries. The match was ended in a draw.

Absorbing finish cut short after captains set game up

ScorecardChris Dent gave Gloucestershire a handy start to their chase•Getty Images

Declarations by both sides set up a potentially exciting finish, but bad light forced an early close with Gloucestershire, chasing 302 to win, still 90 runs short with five wickets and just under nine overs of their match against Leicestershire at Grace Road remaining.Resuming on the final day with their first innings on 249 for 8, Gloucestershire captain Will Tavare called his batsmen in as soon as the follow-on had been saved, with the visitors still 146 runs adrift of Leicestershire’s first innings score.With the Leicestershire batsmen looking to score quickly, Tavare’s bowlers then took four wickets before lunch. Liam Norwell had Ned Eckersley caught off a top edge, a fine effort from David Payne running back from midwicket, and Angus Robson caught behind with a delivery that bounced and left him.Mark Cosgrove hit a swift 21 before trying to hit Benny Howell over midwicket and being given leg before, and Aadil Ali, looking to drive, gave Kieran Noema-Barnett a straightforward return catch.Wickets continued to tumble after lunch, with Niall O’Brien, Wayne White, Ben Raine and Clint McKay all falling cheaply, but Dan Redfern hit his highest score of an injury-hit season, allowing Cosgrove to declare in turn.Tavare and Chris Dent gave Gloucestershire the ideal start, compiling an opening partnership of 108 at over four an over, but left-arm seamer Rob Taylor picked up Dent caught and bowled off a leading edge.Tavare gloved an attempted hook at Ben Raine behind the wicket to Niall O’Brien behind the stumps, but Peter Handscomb and Neema-Barnett had added 40 for the sixth wicket to reignite the chase when the light became unplayable.

International enemies become IPL friends

The problems between Australia and India appear to have been forgotten © Getty Images
 

Former foes, including Ricky Ponting and Sourav Ganguly, have become Indian Premier League team-mates and publicly patched up their differences. Ponting and Ganguly played small parts in Kolkata’s 140-run thrashing of Bangalore and set out to work together on the field.”We’ve always got on really well right throughout our careers,” Ponting said in the Daily Telegraph. “Ganguly mentioned that he wanted to work pretty closely with me to make sure we get everything right on tactics on the field.”Ganguly said any tension between the players was in the past and he was excited about joining forces with Ponting. “Things happen when you compete in series,” he said, “and that’s over and done and we need to look forward.”Matthew Hayden, one of the key figures in the hearings after the SCG Test, now believes the events surrounding Harbhajan Singh’s race charge were “blown out of all proportion”. “Bhaji is a true fighter and we enjoy the on-field rivalry,” Hayden said. The pair is likely to face off again when Hayden’s Chennai take on Harbhajan’s Mumbai on Wednesday.”Whatever happened in Australia was blown out of proportion and has been talked to death,” Hayden said. “In fact, playing Bhaji helped me understand how to get into the mind of a spinner.”Shane Warne and Graeme Smith, who had a prickly on-field relationship before the legspinner’s international retirement, are in the same team at the Rajasthan Royals, but Warne doesn’t expect any problems. “We have had a fair go at each other as opponents but I believe we will jell quickly,” he said in the Herald Sun. “He is a competitor and is always up for a scrap, which I like, and I’m sure playing in the same side will be fun.” Smith’s entry has been delayed while he completes domestic duties in South Africa.

Sarwan ruled out of tour

Ramnaresh Sarwan will fly home as he recovers from his shoulder injury © Getty Images

Ramnaresh Sarwan, the West Indies captain, has been ruled out of the rest of the England tour with the shoulder injury sustained last week, a spokesman has confirmed. West Indies were expecting the news, but nevertheless it’s a further blow following their drubbing by England in the second Test at Headingley, when Sarwan picked up the problem.”Unfortunately Sarwan’s injury will take approximately six weeks to heal and as a result he will not be able to take any further part in this tour,” the manager Mike Findlay said on Tuesday afternoon from the team hotel in Leeds.It’s not yet been decided who the replacement captain will be, although Daren Ganga will be strongly placed for the nod, after deputising admirably in Leeds. Findlay said: “As soon as a decision is reached we will make an announcement on who the player is.”Sarwan spoke of his understandable frustration. “I am very disappointed that I would not be able to continue on tour,” he said, “but I have spoken with the players and wished them well for the remainder of the Test series and the Twenty20 games and the One Day Internationals.”West Indies, who are trailing 1-0 in the Tests, have two further matches in a bid to turn their series around. The next Test begins at Old Trafford on June 7. Two Twenty20s at the end of June, and three ODIs in July, follow.”I have confidence that the boys will be able to rebound after the defeat at Headingley and give a better account of themselves and the team as a whole,” he added. Sarwan will leave London for the Caribbean on Wednesday May 30.

Roddy Smith stays with Scotland

Scotland’s search for a new chief executive had no sooner begun than it was over, with the vacancy filled by Roddy Smith, the man whose resignation started the process.Smith, who quit last month to take up a new job with the ICC, decided, for personal and family reasons, to turn down the offer of employment as the Development Programs Manager which would have involved relocation to the Middle East.”It was very flattering to be offered the chance to work for the world governing body,” Smith said. “On reflection in the last couple of weeks my family and I have, however, decided to remain in Scotland, where I feel there is considerable unfinished business which I would like to influence.”We are at an amazingly exciting period for the game in Scotland and I want the chance to continue the progress we are making at all levels. The World Cup is less than nine months away, our club and junior games are developing and our off field activities are growing. Above all, we need to focus on what happens over the next four years, in performance, development and financial terms.”The Board of Cricket Scotland has been supportive of my decision and I am committed to ensuring the continued development of our game and governing body.”Keith Oliver, the chairman of Cricket Scotland, commented: “It was a real blow to think we were losing Roddy and we fully understood his attraction to the post with the ICC. To welcome him back as our senior professional staff member is a real bonus for us at an important time in our development.”

White snares Blewett to have SA 4-96 at lunch

ADELAIDE, Oct 15 AAP – Victorian leg-spinner Craig White claimed the prize wicket of South Australian captain Greg Blewett to leave the Redbacks in trouble on 4-96 at lunch on day one of their Pura Cup match at Adelaide Oval.Blewett, who provided the main resistance to the Victorian bowlers after he won the toss and chose to bat, was out lbw for 36 in the second-last over before lunch on the first ball of White’s second over, after the leg-spinner was hit for nine runs in his first over.Blewett was hit on the front pad coming forward and could have considered himself slightly unlucky to be given out.The wicket broke a partnership of 42 between Blewett and SA’s NSW recruit Mark Higgs (15 not out), which had helped SA partly recover from early trouble.Mathew Inness, Will Carr and Ian Harvey each claimed a wicket to have SA 3-54 earlier in the session.

Richardson puts Kiwis in command

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Mark Richardson: paced his innings to perfection, until he was unluckily dismissed for 93 shortly before the close© Getty Images

Mark Richardson, with the help of Nathan Astle and Jacob Oram, boosted New Zealand to 284 for 5 on an intriguing opening day of the first Test at Lord’s. After Stephen Fleming won the toss, Richardson batted sensibly and solidly for most of the day to give his side a slight edge against England.This series promised to be a close affair, and today proved to be just that as the momentum swayed between the two teams until Oram’s dynamic innings towards the close. Before that, England’s bowlers twice pegged back New Zealand’s progress, firstly after their good start in the morning, and later when Astle went on the rampage in the afternoon session. Simon Jones and Andrew Flintoff were by far the pick of the attack, bowling England back into the game, but neither could prevent Richardson and Oram’s vital stand of 106.Richardson provided the backbone of the innings. He wasn’t all thrills and spills by any means, more graft and grind. He took some time to settle down at the start, but he calmed the nerves with a square-drive and an elegant cut off Matthew Hoggard. He was happy to play second fiddle to all his partners while he played in his limited but effective manner, keeping out the straight ones, and hitting the bad balls. He guided Jones for two consecutive cover-drives on the way to his half-century, which he signalled with a punchy on-drive.Richardson carried on jabbing balls through the offside, where the majority of his 16 boundaries came, but just when a fourth Test century was in sight, he was given out lbw to Stephen Harmison with three overs remaining for 93. To make the blow even worse for Richardson, replays showed the ball hit the bat before his pad. He did have two earlier let-offs, however. Shortly after he had reached his half-century, he was lucky not to be run out at the non-striker’s end after a mix-up with Astle, and on 56, Ashley Giles put down a hard chance in the gully.On the whole, it was a mixed bag from England’s attack. Hoggard and Harmison were initially far from their best, even with the help of the cloud cover hovering over London. They bowled too short and on a leg-side line, and though Marcus Trescothick, England’s stand-in captain, kept faith with the Hoggard and Harmison combination, there were no repeats of their Caribbean carnage.Fleming signalled his intent with four quick boundaries against the offline bowling. Things weren’t quite going to plan for Trescothick, but the aggressive Jones and the economic Flintoff managed to get England back on track. They slowly stemmed the runs by keeping a consistent line, and it was Jones who got the reward with the big wicket of Fleming. Jones bowled a wide, full delivery outside off, and Fleming skewed the ball to Andrew Strauss, the debutant, who took a good head-high catch at point (58 for 1).

Matthew Hoggard traps Craig McMillan lbw for 6© Getty Images

England went to lunch in better spirits, but Astle then deflated them again with a cameo innings in the afternoon. He started off with a few streaky edges, but soon clicked into gear. He brought up the team’s hundred with a spanking square-drive off Hoggard, and then played a sumptuous straight-drive two balls later. Hoggard and Harmison came in for more treatment, being whipped and walloped to all parts of the ground on the way to his half-century, including eight fours.Astle continued his procession of boundaries, cutting and driving Jones to put two more in the four column as New Zealand slowly pulled away from England. He had an enormous slice of luck when, on 60, he nicked Flintoff between Graham Thorpe and Mark Butcher at second and third slip, who let the ball sail harmlessly between them. However, Flintoff got his deserved reward in the following over when the dangerous Astle nibbled at a straight one through to Geraint Jones, who was even more delighted to take his first Test catch (161 for 2).And Jones was soon celebrating his second when Scott Styris nicked his third ball, off the other Jones (162 for 3). It was just the tonic England needed, and Hoggard then temporarily put England on top when he trapped Craig McMillan palpably in front of middle for 6 with one that nipped back a touch (174 for 4).However, Oram, all 6ft 6ins of him, was immediately positive and took the initiative back New Zealand’s way. He twice drove Harmison down the ground, and pulled Jones with dismissive ease. Giles was eventually given a whirl in the evening session, and he played out a little tussle with Oram – and the batsman came out well on top.Oram smacked Giles down the ground, over midwicket, and twice over long-on on the way to his half-century from 53 balls. His unbeaten 64, including 10 boundaries, gave England a glimpse of what he will capable of during the series, and also set New Zealand up to a competitive score from which to accelerate tomorrow.

Vettori and Atapattu escape serious injury after collision

Daniel Vettori and Marvan Atapattu have escaped serious injury after agruesome fielding collision on the third afternoon of the second Testbetween Sri Lanka and New Zealand at Kandy.However, the participation of both players in the last two days of the Testmatch is in doubt. The teams will wait until the morning before decidingwhether they are fit enough to continue.Both players were carried from the field and rushed to hospital in anambulance following a collision after Atapattu ran out Vettori to end theNew Zealand first innings.Fortunately, x-rays have revealed no serious damage to Vettori’s ankle or toAtapattu’s neck, which was fitted with a precautionary neck brace, althoughAtapattu, the Sri Lanka vice-captain, was mildly concussed.The players were discharged from hospital and sent back to their hotel,where they were advised to rest by doctors.Jeff Crowe, the New Zealand team manager, said: "The good news is that Dan[Vettori] does not have a fracture. His left ankle is heavily swollen and isin a splint.""We can make an assessment of it only after 24 hours," Crowe added. "Wewould err on the side of caution rather than rush him back into action."Ajit Jayasekera, the Sri Lanka team manager, said: "Marvan had two injuries,a spiked ankle and mild concussion after being hit behind the ear byVettori’s helmet. He should be okay in a day or two."

With 5 centuries in an innings Pakistan maul Bangladesh

It was Pakistan’s day right through. Batting the whole day and piling up a gigantic total of 546 for the loss of only 3 wickets was a fantastic performance. Four out of the five centuries were scored during the day and gave it a historical dimension. The Bangladesh bowlers and fielders toiled hard in the heat without any gains. Then Bangladesh lost 3 wickets for 55 and do not look to have a chance to survive the 3rd day.Pakistan batsmen gave such a superb display of batting that it was really difficult to single out one from the other. All the centurions, Saeed Anwar (101), Taufeeq Umar (104), Inzamam ul Haq (105*), Abdur Razzaq (110*) and Yousuf Youhana (102*) batted with such flourish that the Bangladesh bowlers and fielders looked totally ineffective. The batsmen made no mistakes, and took no chances and literally punished the bowlers around the ground.Out of all the century makers, it was an auspicious occasion for young Taufeeq Umar who achieved the distinction of becoming Pakistan’s 8th batsman to score a century on test debut. The only casualty of the day, Taufeeq, returned to the pavilion with glory and off course no regrets. Inzamam retired hurt (dehydration) but with a grand century in his bag in his home town.The Bangladesh bowling whether pace or spin made no impact on the batsmen. The bowlers were punished right, left and centre with a flurry of shots to the boundary as well as over the fence. A stage came when Yousuf Youhana and Abdur Razzaq achieved such mastery over the bowling that they were engaged in a race as to who would score his century first.At tea Pakistan was 492 for 3 with lots of speculation whether the skipper would declare or provide a chance to the two players to complete their centuries. Waqar chose the latter course to encourage the players and the race continued and both Youhana and Razzaq completed their centuries, bringing the team’s achievement into the record books.Certainly good experience for the Bangladesh bowling but they were unable to break the partnership. Pakistan declared at 543 for 3, enjoying a 1st innings lead of 412, a deficit considered impossible for the visitors to meet.Bangladesh started their 2nd innings to face 19 remaining overs but could muster no tangible strength to face the Pakistan bowlers. They lost 3 wickets for only 55 runs on the board. Even Pakistan’s young bowlers like Danish Kaneria and Shoaib Malik proving too good for them. The visitors do not appear to have a chance to survive beyond the 3rd day and an innings defeat is staring at them.

Broad and Root bury feeble Australia

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsAlastair Cook had called for England to “etch their names in history” as they sought a victory in the fourth Investec Test that would regain the Ashes and ease the memory of their whitewash in Australia 20 months earlier. But even Cook, an England captain brimming with expectation, would not have anticipated the rout that came to pass as Stuart Broad carved through Australia’s batting at will in one of the most startling opening sessions in Ashes history.Australia, utterly bereft, were dismissed for 60 in only 18.3 overs, with cricket statisticians wading through damning numbers either achieved or narrowly avoided. Broad, carrying an onerous responsibility in the absence of James Anderson, returned his best Test figures of 8 for 15 in 9.3 new-ball overs amid scenes of general delirium. Only Jim Laker, twice in the same match, has bettered that for an England bowler in the Ashes.Then order was mightily restored. England came out, so did the sun, and the lead at their lead at the close was 214 with six wickets remaining: the Ashes surely as good as won after a single day. After Broad’s feeding frenzy came Joe Root’s serene imposition of reality – an unbeaten 124, sagacious where Australia had been so disorientated, his mind crisply attired for the task as he sparkled with a succession of drives and late cuts and a beaming sun taunted Australia for their inability to bat long enough to benefit from easing conditions.Broad loves Trent Bridge, his home ground, and he must have sensed it making eyes at him on an overcast morning carrying great significance. The occasion stirred him, his competitive zeal allied to faultless execution. Long before the first drinks session of the day, he was brandishing the ball, a rudely red one only 6.1 overs old, to the crowd to mark a five-wicket haul.Five wickets in record time: the curdled cream of Australian batting secured by the first delivery of his fourth over. Australia’s batsmen were awash with paranoia. He bowled a perfect, inviting length on a good old-fashioned English seamer, finding just enough movement and leaving a systematic close-catching cordon to do the rest.Stuart Broad saluted a turbo-charged five-wicket haul before the drinks break on the first morning•Getty Images

“Lack of batting technique leading to collapses,” was the considered opinion of Geoffrey Boycott, prominently placed on ESPNcricinfo as the Test began. Australia can’t say they weren’t warned. Within 35 minutes, they were 29 for 6 and the batsman walking off was Michael Clarke, who had tried to stare down his lack of form with jaw-jutting defiance and who had just had an almighty swipe at a wide one.Australia did not play and miss all that much, but they went hard at the ball, nicked often and when they did, England’s catching was exemplary, nine of the 10 wickets falling in the cordon.Broad’s first wicket, that of Chris Rogers, made him the fifth England bowler to reach 300 in Tests. When Clarke departed, Broad’s run of five wickets in 19 balls became the most prolific start to an innings in Test history.Australia’s inability to adapt to English conditions had never been more striking. An era where so much Test cricket is attritional on sedate pitches, and where T20 holds sway, has eaten into defensive techniques. From the first ball, as Broad scratched the crease, the brown earth revealed some residual dampness. But the movement was not excessive, not as extravagant as Edgbaston where England had won within three days.England, for all that, won a good toss to have first bowl on an overcast Nottingham morning, aware that the Trent Bridge groundsman, pilloried for a stultifying surface officially marked as “poor” 12 months earlier against India, would feel obliged to provide something a little spicier. The Test pitch had been dug up and its replacement thought it was housing a county match in April.Rogers has been one of the staunchest members of this Australia batting line-up but, as the series has progressed, Broad has found his measure, hounding the left-hander from around the wicket. When he found a little movement to expose a furtive push at the third ball of the morning, the tone was set.By the time the first over was completed, one of cricket’s prettiest scoreboards was looking uglier: 10 for 2. Steven Smith square drove Broad to the boundary boards – one of only seven boundaries in the innings – but then he edged to third slip. Broad had squared up left and right-hander in turn.England preferred Mark Wood to Steven Finn with the new ball, aware of his excellent Trent Bridge record, and his insistent line was enough to draw an inside edge from David Warner to a ball that came back. Clarke, demoted to No. 5 in an attempt at protection, must have been scurrying around the dressing room for bat and thigh pad, feeling no protection at all.Shaun Marsh, preferred to his brother Mitchell to give Australia six specialist batsmen, became the third duck in the top four, Root the latest sharp knife in the England slip box, standing at third. Adam Voges knows Trent Bridge from county cricket, but Broad knows Voges and knows he is a theory that has not come off. Resistance was beyond him as Ben Stokes flung himself rapidly to his right to hold a spectacular one-handed catch that will join Ashes folklore.Broad ran down the pitch holding his hands to his face like a blushing deb who had just received an entirely unexpected present. England’s wicketkeeper and four of the slips had all held catches in the first 4.1 overs.Clarke’s mind must have been swirling. A wideish delivery from Broad was tempting to a desperate man. Clarke was a desperate man. The ball flew to his rival captain, Cook, holding the catch above his head. It was a rash attempt to remedy matters with a single statement and it brought him only further misery. He might have fallen earlier, too, a statuesque flip-pull against Wood that fell short of Finn at deep square.And so it went on, a collapse that was impossible to arrest. Finn joined the fun, bringing one back to strike Peter Nevill’s off stump. Then three more to Broad. Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson – his 25-ball 13 the height of Australia’s resistance – giving two more slip catches to Root and the final one to Stokes as Nathan Lyon became the ninth batsman to fall in the close-catching cordon.Broad had begun the morning hoping for 300 Test wickets. He finished level with Fred Trueman’s 307. And as Fred would have said, pipe a puffing, it was hard to know what was going on out there.Consolidation for England did not come automatically. By tea, Starc had taken three wickets in return: Adam Lyth undone by late swing; Ian Bell falling into a big inswinger; and Cook, who apart from one flirtation with the slips had looked intent on batting long, so exposing Australia’s four-strong attack, unaccountably falling lbw to a floaty, full one. But Australia had opted for only four specialist bowlers to stiffen their batting (so much for that theory) and two of them, Starc and Johnson, are not exactly designed for long spells.Only a dicky back, not for the first time in this series, disturbed Root in an assertive fourth-wicket stand of 173 in 34 overs with Jonny Bairstow, his Yorkshire confrere, whose 74 was less precise but a punchy innings designed nevertheless to establish him in England’s middle order before he chipped Josh Hazlewood to square leg. Root saw out the day, but as adroitly as he batted, it was a day that belonged to Broad, a day when he looked a pugnacious and quarrelsome Ashes record in the eye and pronounced himself a winner.

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