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Maynard blasts student attack

Although Glamorgan`s match against Cardiff UCCE petered out into a draw, the friendlygave the county professionals some invaluable practice in readiness for theirChampionship fixture against Derbyshire starting on Good Friday.After gaining a first innings lead of 212, Steve James wisely opted againstenforcing the follow-on during the afternoon session, and instead the Glamorgancaptain gave his batsmen further time in the middle against the university bowlers.The county`s batsmen responded in positive fashion, amassing 306-5 in just 44.2 overs,with the highlight after tea being some vintage strokeplay from Matthew Maynard,who struck an imperious century from just 49 balls, with 13 fours and 5 sixes. His secondfifty came from just 17 balls, and this was the second century of the season for the 37 year old,following his fine hundred against Somerset at Taunton. Maynard appears to be inrich form at the moment, scoring 344 runs in the pre-season games and havingonly been dismissed once.David Hemp and Mike Powell also took full advantage of further time at the wicket, andboth hit fluent half-centuries before being dismissed by James Tomlinson, the left-armseamer who is on Hampshire`s staff.Earlier, the students had began the day on 136-4, but they lost wickets at regularintervals during the morning session, although there was some stubborn resistance fromwicket-keeper Ryan Bradshaw, and all-rounder Tom Lambert.Bradshaw, who had previously been on the M.C.C. groundstaff, made an aggressive 22,whilst Lambert compiled a pugnacious 44 before he was the last man out to giveDavid Harrison his fourth wicket. Darren Thomas also picked up three wickets,with Andrew Davies claiming two and Robert Croft one, whilst Alex Wharf bowled acouple of hostile spells and was unlucky not to pick up at least one wicket.There was also the welcome sight before play of Mike Kasprowicz fresh from hisovernight flight from Australia, where he was the leading seam bowler in Shieldcricket last winter.

Hat-trick for Anderson as Essex stumble at Old Trafford

James Anderson has become the youngest player ever to take a hat-trick for Lancashire, as Essex slumped to 97 for 7 at lunch on the first day of the Frizzell County Championship Division One match at Old Trafford.


James Anderson celebrates dismissing Nasser Hussain for 0 on his way to a hat-trick for Lancashire
©Getty Images

Anderson was already a shoo-in for his Test debut against Zimbabwe at Lord’s next week, but he emphasised his readiness by trapping Nasser Hussain lbw first-ball for 0 with a beautiful inswinging yorker, the second of his three wickets.Darren Robinson had already fallen for 11, caught in the gully by Alec Swann, and Anderson completed the hat-trick with the first ball of his next over, when Will Jefferson was caught behind by Warren Hegg for 19.It was the first hat-trick at Old Trafford since Dominic Cork famously skittled the West Indies in 1995, and the last Lancashire bowler to complete the feat was Mike Watkinson, their current coach, against Warwickshire at Edgbaston in 1992. Anderson’s achievement overshadowed the Lancashire debut of Carl Hooper, the former West Indies captain, who has gained special dispensation to replace the injured Indian spinner Harbhajan Singh.It was a mixed day for England captains. Essex’s captain Ronnie Irani, who led England’s one-day side in a tour match at Bowral last winter, also fell for a first-ball duck, but Michael Vaughan scored 103 for Yorkshire against Northamptonshire, his first century of the season.

Difficult start for Fleming in English season

Getting off the plane and stepping straight into English cricket’s Twenty20 Cup did not provide the perfect start for New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming’s season with Yorkshire.Playing against Derbyshire in his first game he was out for a first ball duck, and two days later he scored four off his first ball and was then dismissed off the second.While his New Zealand team-mate Chris Cairns ponders the broken finger keeping him out of action at the moment, he can reflect on 252 runs scored at 42.00 in his four County Championship games to date and 179 runs at 59.66 in his four one-day matches.Ian Butler ended his four-game stint with Gloucestershire with 17 wickets at a cost of 28.11 but his three one-day matches produced only one wicket from 22 overs at a cost of 128 runs.Former New Zealand player Craig Spearman has made a sound start for Gloucestershire with 349 County Championship runs at 38.77, including a century and two half-centuries.In one-dayers he has totalled 504 runs at 56.00, with a highest score of 153, off 123 balls, against Warwickshire.Another New Zealander, Chris Harris made 50 for Lashings in their first game of the season, against Cambridge University. Cambridge scored 209 in 40 overs with Harris contributing 50. Cambridge were unable to do better than 160 for five in their innings.Harris also played for a World XI, along with Andre Adams, in a match against the Netherlands to celebrate HCC’s 125th jubilee. Harris scored 49 not out for the World XI which totalled 225 for nine and then took five for 41 as the home team were all out for 172.Former Canterbury player Darron Reekers was a member of the Netherlands side.Among the New Zealanders playing league cricket in England, Matthew Bell scored 108 for Esher in their winning draw against Regiate Priory in the Surrey Championship premier division.Rob Nicol scored 88 not out and took three for 52 in Rishton’s seven-wicket loss to Haslingden.James Marshall’s 49 wasn’t enough to help Formby who suffered a three-wicket loss to Liverpool in the first division of the Liverpool and District competition, while in the premier division Warren McSkimming scored 27 in Lytham’s one-wicket win over Bootle.Aaron Barnes scored 53 in Colwyn Bay’s six-wicket loss to Southport and Birkdale while Brendon Donkers scored 23 not out in Leigh’s draw with Northern.Reekers’ Quick Haag team suffered a 101-run loss to VCC in the Netherlands league, with Reekers only able to contribute six runs while taking one for 32 from his 10 overs.

Time is right for Bracewell move home

John Bracewell, the newly appointed New Zealand coach, feels that it is the right time to accept a job at the international level because of the potential for the side to continue its rise in the world rankings.Bracewell, who left his Auckland coaching base in 1999 to take up a position with Gloucestershire with a view to gaining the experience that would make him a viable international coach, will take up his place on November 1. That means the New Zealand team will tour India under Ashley Ross, New Zealand Cricket’s player development manager, who has been an assistant coach on several previous New Zealand tours.Bracewell told Wisden CricInfo today that one of the most common questions he had been asked by the New Zealand media was about his potential compatibility with Stephen Fleming, New Zealand’s captain, who, in recent years, has taken on much more of an all-round leadership role with the side.”Stephen is the world’s leading captain undoubtedly and I am pleased he has decided to take on that sort of role,” said Bracewell. “I am also pleased that he has finally decided he wants to be a top batsman. In order to do both he might want help and that will be my role.”Bracewell, a former offspinner who is one of only three New Zealanders to have taken 100 Test wickets and scored 1000 Test runs, said that he was “pretty excited” about getting the coaching job although he had been a little nervous until he talked to his Gloucestershire players. He did that yesterday and was feeling happier about his decision as a result.”I’m really comfortable with my decision. It is time to move forward for me and time for Gloucestershire to move on. It looks to me, like they say, a good time to come on board with New Zealand. They have a management structure that is really getting things together.”Bracewell said that he wasn’t sure if they were any specific issues in the New Zealand side that he would be looking at from the outset but he said that with rankings systems now in place for both Test and one-day cricket it was important for the side to be continually improving.In Gloucestershire he had been used to dealing with fewer resources than enjoyed by some of the other counties, but the side’s success had come from utilising what resources there were to the maximum.Since he joined the county, it has won the NatWest Trophy in 1999 and 2000, won the Benson & Hedges Super Cup in 1999, the Benson & Hedges Cup in 2000, won the Norwich Union League first division in 2000 and the NUL second division in 1999. The side has achieved a success rate in limited overs matches of 65.7%, with an 84% win ratio in the NatWest Trophy and 75% in the B & H Cup. The county championship record in which Gloucestershire is in the second division had only a 23% win ratio by comparison.While there has been a suggestion that Bracewell will also be the chairman of selectors, thus supplanting Sir Richard Hadlee from the position, Bracewell said that he had never asked for that to happen but if NZC felt they wanted the coach to bear the responsibility of the selection consequences then he had no fear of it. NZC will be announcing their selectors in another few weeks.He admitted that he liked to control his own destiny and he said that it was understandable that the coach should be looked at when people were looking for excuses for why a team wasn’t performing.”New Zealand is a world force in the game,” he said. “It is respected. I always got the feeling when I toured England as a player that we weren’t respected. But I feel now that New Zealand is respected and you can see that when so many players are wanted by county sides. And I also know they wanted others who turned them down.”Bracewell said he was aware that some players were struggling with their games at the moment and he was prepared to work with players in finding out what they wanted. “Some players listen and hear people giving them different messages. I might ring some bells for some of them. But I would be a fool not to pull on any resources that might scratch the itch of a player.”The important thing was for players to want to perform. There would be no place in his sides for players who were half-baked (although in typical Bracewellese his description was a little more graphic) in their thinking and commitment. “It’s such a short time they have to take advantage of their skills and they don’t want to waste that time,” he said. “It’s not me who walks onto the paddock and the players have to get their thoughts together.”By taking on the position, which now involves ending what he described as “one hell of an adventure”, with his family having put down roots in England, he would be reuniting with the man who sent him out into the wider world of coaching. His former boss at Auckland Cricket, Lindsay Crocker, was named general manager of the New Zealand team today.”It was Lindsay who inspired me to go out and take the chance to expand my career and I’m looking forward to working with him again,” said Bracewell. “I intend to finish the season with Gloucestershire and will move to Christchurch then.”

Long way to go yet, urges BAT skipper Dibden

"There’s plenty of hard work for us to do yet". That’s the stern dressing room reminder skipper Richard Dibden will give his BAT Sports team before tomorrow’s key ECB Southern Electric Premier League clash with Havant.A maximum of 38 points from the last three matches will be enough to bring the crown back to Southern Gardens.But, on the eve of the club’s biggest weekend in years, captain Dibden plans a few home truths in his players ears."Everyone seems to think the championship is a foregone conclusion, but that’s not the case at all," he warned."If we lose to Havant it’s back in the melting pot, though we do back ourselves to get the points we need."BAT, who have sold over 1,000 tickets for Sunday’s clash with Lashings, will be at full strength.Havant say their farewells to all-rounder Bev Moynan, whose career as a physical trainer is taking him to Cambridgeshire.Neal Parlane may have 884 runs to his name – and be within 131 runs of breaking Robin Smith’s long-standing Southern League record – but the Kiwi has yet to make his mark against Havant."We got him for 16 in the drawn all-day game at our place and had him caught for four in the SEC Cup semi-final," smiled Havant skipper Paul Gover. "I think we’ve got the Indian Sign over him !"For once, defending champions Havant aren’t BAT’s biggest challengers.Bournemouth, who look to have a home banker against Calmore Sports at Chapel Gate, lie second – and lead the Limited Overs Pennant table.One-time skipper Stuart Rintoul, who scored 121 for Dorset against Devon in the Minor Counties Championship last weekend, is set for a rare Bournemouth appearance.Teenager Nick Park drops out to aid Bournemouth 2nd XI’s Hampshire League promotion cause at Lymington.Calmore Sports are effectively 23 points adrift at the basement but, with Portsmouth still to play, can still retrieve a seemingly lost cause.They need the Hampshire Academy to beat Portsmouth at St Helen’s tomorrow – and for the Young Hawks to produce a far better performance than against Bournemouth last week.Having just won the Time Pennant, they produced a rank bad show in their first 50-over game back and lost by nine wickets.Portsmouth, with a major injury doubt over Matt Keech, have to do without left-hand opener Ben Thane, who has been suspended for 14 days for verbal abuse at an umpire.Thane sat out Portsmouth’s defeat at Bashley last week and completes his ban tomorrow.Third-placed Bashley (Rydal), who visit Andover, may call up Ross Grierson as 35-wicket skipper Matt King and Kevin Nash (30) continue to vye for the Premier 1 bowling prize.South Wilts visit Liphook & Ripsley.

End of the Rhodes

Jonty Rhodes has confirmed that he will be retiring from first-class cricket at the end of the English season.Rhodes, who is currently enjoying a fruitful one-off season at Gloucestershire, quit international one-day cricket after the recent World Cup, explaining that he wanted to spend more time with his family.”I’m done, I’ve been playing for 14 years and I’ve enjoyed every day at the office, and have no regrets whatsoever,” he told the BBC. “Cricket has been such a major part of my life so it will be nice to have a break and see where the future takes me.”Rhodes, who has studied for a business degree between matches, has already received five job offers for non-cricketing work. He played 52 Tests and 245 one-day internationals for South Africa, after making his debut at the 1992 World Cup in Australia and New Zealand.As a batsman, Rhodes was a reliable Test cricketer, and capable of explosive hitting in the one-day game, but he will forever be best known for his brilliant fielding. He quit Test cricket in 2000 to concentrate on the 2003 World Cup, which took place in South Africa, but his campaign was cruelly cut short by a broken hand.”It’s sad for cricket that Jonty will not be continuing,” John Bracewell, Gloucestershire’s outgoing director of cricket, told the Press Association. “Having said that, we knew that the odds on him coming back for another year were probably against us. He’s lived up to every expectation we had, both on the field as well as in and around the dressing-room. He’s been a marvellous ambassador for cricket and his standing with the coaches and team puts him with the best of our overseas players.”

Munaf makes his mark

Leonardo di Caprio’s histrionics in the movie, Titanic would have won far greater acclaim from critics had it not been for the spiel that a well-oiled public relations machine dished out in the weeks and days preceding the release of the movie. Munaf Patel’s situation is not a far cry from the same. For some time now, he has been touted, alternately, as the pace sensation that will rock Australia and as the greenhorn, raw paceman attracting too much credit. Some even likened him to a spoiled child, getting attention when all that was called for was a rap on the knuckles. On his first-class debut, against the New Zealanders at Rajkot, he proved that the truth lay somewhere in-between.Patel, a big young man of 20, lumbers rather than sprints in to the crease. As he quickens his step, he opens his shoulders, reaches for the popping crease with a pronounced final step and sends the ball down with considerable effort. You’re left almost listening for a Jimmy Connors-esque grunt. The arm is high, but not nearly high enough, as there is a bit of space between bowling arm and right ear. The ball zips out of the hand, and has enough weight behind it to climb considerably when banged in short.It was such a short ball that Mark Richardson received first up, quite literally, on the shoulder, ducking into one that did not quite get up as much as he expected. Perhaps he had been reading about Patel in the local papers as well. From there on, though, Patel settled into an easy rhythm, displaying adequate pace to keep the New Zealand batsmen from committing onto the front foot.His first spell, while economical, did not produce a wicket. When the players walked off the field for lunch Patel’s 7.4 overs (he stepped in to bowl four balls to complete an over after RP Singh twisted his ankle) had cost 21 runs.At lunch, there must have been some talk about the appropriate length to bowl, for Patel began to pitch it up consistently in the second session. While the wicket had something in it for the seamers, both in terms of lateral movement and bounce, there was nothing to fear for the New Zealand batsmen who are more than familiar with conditions that help pace bowling. The effect of switching to a fuller line did not bear immediate fruit as Patel was pummelled for three strident boundaries by Stephen Fleming in the first over he bowled after lunch.Then came a 15-ball spell of three wickets for five runs that vindicated the faith people have in Patel. Fleming looked to leave one outside off at the last moment and nicked the ball back onto his stumps. Scott Styris then tickled one fine and Deep Dasgupta held a diving catch low and to his left. Both these wickets came with a little help from his friends, but Patel could confidently claim his next scalp – the prize one of Nathan Astle – as his very own. A sharp delivery ducking in just a trace trapped Astle in front of the stumps, very first ball.When he returned with the second new ball the inexperience showed, expectedly. After all, this is just his first big game. That would have been the leeway afforded to any other fast-bowling debutant. Patel cannot ask for that, for it is partly the hype that fast-tracked him to this level in the first place. And at the end of the day, as an exercise, it was well worth it.Mark Richardson, who made a dogged unbeaten 128 in over six hours, certainly thought so. “The young Indian lads might have got a bit carried away with the bouncy and carry and bowled a bit short. Perhaps they might have had a bit more success if they had pitched the ball up. The bowlers have promise and certainly have enough pace and bowl a heavy ball.”

Taylor goes back to Hampshire

Billy Taylor has completed his expected move to Hampshire from Sussex, signing a three-year deal with the club where he began his career.Taylor played for Hampshire’s 2nd XI but was never an offered a contract and so went to Sussex to further his career. He took 21 wickets last season and even though Sussex made it clear they wanted him to stay next season, he insisted on leaving, and has now gone back to where it all started.Tim Tremlett, Hampshire’s Director of Cricket, said: “He is former Hampshire Schools and Hampshire 2nd XI player, a wholehearted cricketer who has improved a lot during his time with Sussex.” He added, “He is a bowler who is always willing to learn and he is looking for a new challenge in the hope of playing regular first-team cricket. It is nice to get him back.””This is a wonderful opportunity for myself”, Taylor told the press at The Rose Bowl today. “I always wanted to play for Hampshire, and it feels like coming home. I was disappointed at not being offered a contract all those years ago, but hopefully I have proved my worth at Sussex. I am much fitter and able to bowl long spells with more pace. I hit the seam much more so I like to take the new ball.” He added, “Coming to the Rose Bowl is fantastic, what a magnificent stadium."

Flintoff rushes England past the winning post

England 146 for 3 (Collingwood 36*, Flintoff 55*) beat Bangladesh 143 (Hannan Sarkar 30, Flintoff 4-14, Giles 3-29) by 7 wickets
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A stroll in the park: Ashely Giles leads the England celebrations
© Getty Images

A fine allround performance from Andrew Flintoff, the Man of the Match, swept England to a comfortable seven-wicket victory at Chittagong in the first of three one-day internationals against Bangladesh.First Flintoff grabbed 4 for 14 as Bangladesh crumbled after a useful start, then he ambled in after three quick wickets had gone down and biffed a rapid half-century, from only 45 balls, to speed England home. Flintoff was aided with the bat by Paul Collingwood, in his first ODI since injuring his shoulder at the start of the last English season. They put on 91 for the fourth wicket, and Collingwood rounded things off by clouting Alok Kapali for three successive fours to complete the formalities with 24.3 overs to spare.England had wobbled slightly after a busy start in which they had reached 39 by the end of the seventh over. Suddenly, though, Mushfiqur Rahman took two wickets in successive balls to stem the tide. First Vikram Solanki (10) waltzed down the wicket, but only skyed his heave straight to Jamaluddin Ahmed at mid-on. The batsmen crossed, and next ball Marcus Trescothick (28) played his trademark dab towards third man, only to guide the ball straight to Hannan Sarkar in the gully (39 for 2).Collingwood avoided the hat-trick, but shortly afterwards Michael Vaughan was gone for 9. He dragged his back foot forward trying to sweep, and Khaled Mashud whipped off the bails. The TV replays showed that Vaughan had not quite slid his foot back in time, and the red light signalled a wicket for the left-arm spin of Manjural Islam Rana, from only his third ball in international cricket.

Andrew Flintoff: followed up his 4 for 14 with a rapid half-century
© Getty Images

That made it 55 for 3, but it was the end of Bangladesh’s brief hopes. While Collingwood consolidated, Flintoff hit out. He flailed a six over midwicket off Jamaluddin, another debutant, without remotely timing it – then clouted another over long-on, off Manjural, just to show how it should be done. There were also eight fours, one of which nearly decapitated the umpire at the bowler’s end, as he sprinted to 55 not out.Earlier Bangladesh had fallen to pieces after a decent start. They reached 50 for the loss of only one wicket, but lost four more with the score on 65 and another one run later. Some lower-order resistance pushed the total to a more respectable 143, but it was never going to be enough. Apart from Flintoff’s four wickets, there were signs of a return to form for Ashley Giles, who took 3 for 29 – although he was slightly flattered by those figures.Giles conceded eight runs from his first over and Flintoff 12, but after that the procession started as Bangladesh’s batsmen capitulated. Habibul Bashar began with a neat boundary, but Flintoff removed him with a poor ball, a leg-side bouncer which Habibul tried to pull but only succeeded in gloving to Chris Read (50 for 2). Then, at 65, Rajin Saleh top-edged an attempted sweep off Giles into the covers and the wheels really came off.Hannan Sarkar, the only batsmen to settle, survived a good shout for a catch behind – but that only angered Flintoff, who banged the next ball in and Sarkar did glove it through to Read. Sarkar’s 30 was more than Nos 2 to 7 managed between them.Two balls later Khaled Mahmud – who was given the bird by a noisy and enthusiastic crowd – edged an attempted drive to give Read his third catch, and Giles claimed his second wicket when Kapali played back to a ball crying out for positive footwork, and was as lbw as it is possible to be. That basic error was typical of an innings undermined by inappropriate shots and poor technique.Bangladesh limped to three figures thanks to an eighth-wicket stand of 34 between Mashud and Manjural, but by then the game was effectively over as a meaningful contest. The last-wicket pair of Jamaluddin and Tapash Baisya chipped in with 36 as well.It all left England looking near-certainties to complete a clean sweep in this short series – and left battle-scarred Bangladesh still looking for their first ODI win against another Test-playing country since they upset Pakistan in the 1999 World Cup.Steven Lynch is editor of Wisden Cricinfo.

Carseldine returns for India match

Lee Carseldine, the Queensland allrounder, is set to make his return from injury for the Queensland Academy of Sport side to take on India at the Allan Border Field this weekend.Carseldine has missed the past two weeks with a back injury, but will play as a batsman only against the Indians, who play their final match before the first Test next week. Carseldine has had an impressive run against international touring teams, scoring a double century against New Zealand two years ago, and 92 against Bangladesh earlier this year.He will be joined in the Academy team by his Queensland team-mates, Daniel Payne, Chris Simpson, Steve Farrell, Shane Jurgensen, Scott Brant and Joe Dawes. Aaron Nye, the Wests batsman who led the second XI to victory over Western Australia last week at Albion, will captain the side. The three-day game, which starts on Saturday, will not be a first-class match. Admission is free for the game, with play starting at 10.00am. Queensland Academy of Sport XI 1 Daniel Payne, 2 Chris Simpson, 3 Lee Carseldine, 4 Aaron Nye (capt), 5 Craig Philipson, 6 Steven Farrell, 7 Chris Hartley, 8 Ryan Leloux, 9 Shane Jurgensen, 10 Scott Brant, 11 Joe Dawes, Steven Magoffin (12th man).

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