ICC not to intervene in Windies dispute

Ehsan Mani: ‘We hope that common sense prevails and that the matter is soon amicably settled’© Getty Images

The International Cricket Council has announced that it does not foresee its involvement in the sponsorship dispute West Indies cricket is embroiled in. The crisis, which deepened when the board omitted top players like Brian Lara, Ramnaresh Sarwan and Chris Gayle from the squad for the first Test against South Africa, and appointed Shivnarine Chanderpaul as the captain, has sent shockwaves throughout the Caribbean.Speaking to the , Ehsan Mani, the ICC chairman, said, “Of course it is a concern to everyone in world cricket when a dispute such as this arises and it’s something we [the ICC] can’t ignore. It’s our hope that common sense prevails and that the matter is soon amicably settled.”The ICC had intervened in a similar incident last year in Zimbabwe, when 15 players including Heath Streak boycotted the team in dispute with the Zimbabwe Cricket Union (ZCU) over selection. Mani remarked that the incident questioned the integrity of Test cricket and considerably weakened the Zimbabwe side. This resulted into ZCU canceling the Tests against Australia after which the ICC withheld the Test status of Zimbabwe until the end of the year.The West Indies board, which failed to reach a solution that was satisfactory to all parties, named a second string squad to play against South Africa in the first Test on March 31. “It’s obvious that the absence of Lara, Gayle and Sarwan means that the West Indies have lost three top players but their cricket has a much stronger base than Zimbabwe’s did last year,” continued Mani. “Many of our members have faced similar issues and are very strongly of the view that the only way to find a solution is at the local level.”Mani, who was present in the ICC meeting in Delhi last week along with Teddy Griffith, the president of the WICB, said that they spoke only briefly on the impasse between the board and the players. Mani also explained that the ICC had no mandate from its members to “unilaterally impose itself on these types of disputes”. It took action only when it posed a threat to Test cricket.

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).

England steal a famous win in the gloaming

By the time England toured this country in 1984-85, the one-day scenariowas very different from that existing during their previous trip threeyears before.


The last hour saw the later order batsmen displaying lynx eyed batting and carrying England nearer the target. After Marks was out for 44, Richard Ellison joined Downton and the two continued in fading light to inch England closer to their objective in the face of a comparatively inexperienced attack ­ RS Ghai, Amarnath, Prabhakar, Shastri, Ashok Patel and Roger Binny.


India were World champions and it was the turn of the visitors to startas underdogs. But a nicely balanced England team defeated an overconfident Indian side in the first of the scheduled five one-dayinternationals at Pune by four wickets with ten deliveries to spare.There were indications however that the contestants were more evenlybalanced and they produced a humdinger of a match in the second game ofthe series at Cuttack.India got off to a cracking start with openers Krish Srikkanth and RaviShastri putting on 188 runs ­ then the country’s highest partnership forany wicket. Srikkanth was unlucky to be dismissed a run short of hiscentury but Shastri got to the coveted mark before he was out for 102.On an easy paced pitch, the remaining batsmen failed to build adequatelyon this dream start. Srikkanth was out in the 37th over but in theremaining 12.2 overs, India could only add 64 runs. Too much time waswasted first by Shastri as he proceeded to his hundred. And none of theother batsmen ­ Dilip Vengsarkar, Mohinder Amarnath, Yashpal Sharma andRoger Binny ­ could force the pace leading to India being ultimatelyrestricted to 252 for five in 49 overs.England lost Tim Robinson early, bowled by Manoj Prabhakar for one. Butthe in form Mike Gatting kept them in the hunt with a stroke filled 59.Skipper David Gower chipped in with a valuable 21 while Allan Lamb got28. England’s hopes however faded when Lamb was run out in the 33rd overat 145. However Vic Marks and Paul Downton turned out to be unexpectedheroes. Not only did they add 58 runs in nine overs but they also madethem in light which could theoretically be called unplayable.The last hour saw the later order batsmen displaying lynx eyed battingand carrying England nearer the target. After Marks was out for 44,Richard Ellison joined Downton and the two continued in fading light toinch England closer to their objective in the face of a comparativelyinexperienced attack ­ RS Ghai, Amarnath, Prabhakar, Shastri, AshokPatel and Roger Binny. Play was finally called off in the gloaming after46 overs with the score 241 for six. But Downton (44) and Ellison (14),with their unbroken seventh wicket stand of 38 runs in four overs, hadseen their side edge ahead by 0.08 of a run and England were declaredwinners on a faster scoring rate. Theirs was a really gallant effortthat proved successful and they went two up in a series that they won byfour matches to one.

Rakhi Mehra shapes North win

North Zone managed to pull off a five-wicket win against East Zone inthe CricInfo Rani Jhansi Trophy Women’s cricket tournament at the IITChemplast ground in Chennai on Tuesday.At the start of the match, both North and East were looking for theirelusive first win in the tournament. After dismissing East for 142,North started disastrously by losing both openers Jaya Sharma (0),Gulshan (2). But the East bowlers could not maintain the pressure andwhen Rakhi Mehra (67) and Rajni Bhalla (17) came together, one saw asmany as three bowling changes in five overs. They both put on a 57-runpartnership in 13.4 overs for the third wicket before Rajni Bhalla wascaught at short cover by Saswathi off Seema Singh when she tried toclear the fielder.Incidentally, East’s bowling was in sharp contrast to that of NorthZone. There were far too many extras conceded in the early overs evenas they were able to pick up the two early wickes. This, coupled withsome wayward bowling later on saw Rakhi Mehra pick some easy runs andlay the platform for a North Zone win.In the company of Gurdeep Kaur (27), Rakhi took the match well andtruly out of East Zone’s hands with a 68-run fourth wicket stand in 24overs. But Kavitha came back in the 37th over to pick up Gurdeep andVandna off successive deliveries. But that was too precious and toolittle for the occasion and North completed the formalities thanks toRakhi Mehra and Reema Malhotra.Rakhi had a shaky start and was helped on the way by some shoddyfielding during her stay at the crease. Though her first scoringstroke was a boundary, she was not able to find the timing and theconviction. Even as she played some good shots and hit someboundaries, she had as many as three lives.Earlier, put in to bat East made a patchy start with openers NeetuSingh (26 runs off 40 balls) and Saswathi Mukerjee (5 runs off 20balls) putting on 20 runs in 5.4 overs. Saswathi fell to an innocuousshot when she mistimed a drive to give a simple catch to Jaya Sharmaat the covers. Then Chandrabarti Paul (37 runs in 75 balls) joinedNeetu and took the score to 61 with a fruitful 41 run stand in 9.2overs before Neetu was adjudged leg before to Anjuman Bassi. LaterAsha, who bowled ten overs on the trot, managed to find the edge ofGeetha Samantrai’s bat after scoring five runs in 21 balls.The middle overs saw the North Zone bowlers restricting the Eastscoring rate and picking up wickets at regular intervals. Kavita andChandrabarti put together a 27-run fourth wicket stand in 11.5overs. But the run out of Kavitha (10) triggered a little collapse asEast lost both Chandrabarti and Pratima cheaply for the addition ofonly seven runs to the total.In the end Anjuman Bassi picked up the wickets of Jhulan and Babushain the space of eight balls. The East innings folded up in the thirdball of the 46th over with the total at 142. Off-spinner AnjumanBassi was the pick of the North bowlers with figures of 3 for 27 inher quota of ten overs.

Predicted Spurs XI, team news v Burnley

Tottenham Hotspur can move to within four points of the top four in the Premier League if they manage to beat Burnley at Turf Moor this evening.Antonio Conte’s outfit have three games in hand, starting with this encounter in Lancashire tonight, a little down the road from where they were triumphant only a few days ago.Spurs defeated the defending champions and current league leaders Manchester City with a clinical 95th-minute strike from Harry Kane on Saturday evening as the north Londoners stunned Pep Guardiola’s men at the Etihad Stadium.Now they face a tough midweek test in the form of Sean Dyche’s Clarets, who too won at the weekend.It will be interesting to see if Conte rotates his starting XI, having hinted at changes during his pre-game press conference, so what sort of lineup could we see from the Italian?Here’s what we are predicting…There could be as many as three changes from the side that defeated the Citizens.Between the sticks, skipper Hugo Lloris is surely going to remain and the back three in front of him are also likely to be unchanged, so Eric Dier stands in the middle of Ben Davies on the left and Cristian Romero on the right.Conte revealed that he expected Sergio Reguilon to miss the game, so Ryan Sessegnon could keep his place at left wing-back, whilst Emerson Royal had to be withdrawn with a knock, so he may not be risked with Matt Doherty primed to take his place.

In midfield, there could be further rotation as Harry Winks earns a rare start. He replaces Rodrigo Bentancur, who started only his second game for the club on Saturday after arriving on deadline day from Juventus.

The £45m-rated powerhouse could do with a rest before the weekend, so is axed for the Englishman, who partners Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg.

And finally, there is a big call to be made in the final third over whether or not to stick with Dejan Kulusevski after a considerable impact on his first Spurs start.

Conte may want to keep him fresh, so in comes Lucas Moura, who made way for the Juventus loanee up in Manchester last time out. He’ll feature alongside the usual frontline of Heung-min Son and Harry Kane.

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AND in other news, Fabrizio Romano drops big behind the scenes Conte claim at Hotspur Way…

Sidebottom modest to the end

‘I didn’t think the umpire would put the finger up, but when he did I just ran away like a bit of a headless chicken’ © Getty Images

Ryan Sidebottom admitted he had no idea how to react after becoming the 11th Englishman to take a Test hat-trick during an extraordinary fourth day’s play of the first Test in Hamilton. Sidebottom struck three times in three balls en route to career-best figures of 5 for 37, as New Zealand lost six wickets for 20 runs to finish the day on a precarious 147 for 8. Nevertheless, with a handy lead of 122 on first innings, Sidebottom was aware his hard work isn’t over just yet.”I suppose I’ll remember it for as long as I’m alive,” said Sidebottom, who achieved the feat in front of his father, the former England paceman, Arnie. “I’ve never had a hat-trick before and getting one in a Test match is even more special. It hasn’t really sunk in yet, but it’s not just about me. We want to win Test matches and it’s a big day for us tomorrow.”We said in the dressing-room if we got two or three early wickets we might be right back in it because they’d come out to play a few shots,” said Sidebottom. “Daniel Vettori will be a key wicket, he’s in good nick, but if we can open up an end and get Chris Martin in, the onus is on us to play well. In the first hour we’ve got to be right on the money.”Sidebottom may ply his trade for Nottinghamshire these days, but he began his career at Yorkshire, where he shared a dressing-room with each of the last two Englishmen to record Test hat-tricks. Darren Gough achieved his at Sydney during the 1998-99 Ashes, while Matthew Hoggard emulated the feat five years later in Barbados, during England’s 3-0 victory in the Caribbean.”Goughy always likes a bit of a chirp in the dressing-room, and he used to talk about his hat-tricks,” said Sidebottom. “You always dream of doing it and I don’t know what to say to be honest. I’ve not taken a hat-trick at any level before – I’ve been on one two or three times in my career, but I’ve never got one before.”Sidebottom was in fact on a hat-trick at the start of New Zealand’s innings, after dismissing Jeetan Patel and Chris Martin with consecutive deliveries in the first innings, but he had not been aware of the opportunity. “I was just concentrating on hitting the right areas,” he explained. “The Kookaburra [ball] doesn’t swing for very long.”It was, however, reverse swing that did the trick for Sidebottom, as he tailed a perfect off-stump delivery into Jacob Oram’s front pad to trap him plumb lbw. Once the appeal had been upheld by umpire Daryl Harper, he hurtled off in the direction of midwicket where he was smothered by his jubilant team-mates.”Swanny [Graeme Swann, a substitute fielder at mid-off] said he’d do a few things to me if I got the hat-trick,” said Sidebottom. “I didn’t think the umpire would put the finger up, but when he did I just ran away like a bit of a headless chicken.”Sidebottom’s first two wickets were both to excellent catches in the gully from Alastair Cook, but ever the team man, he was more concerned with passing the praise to England’s batsmen, Paul Collingwood and Tim Ambrose, whose 90-run stand for the seventh wicket had set the game up for his grandstand performance.”They fought so hard,” said Sidebottom. “Timmy was fantastic on his debut, it wasn’t easy and he showed a lot of patience. It’s going to be difficult [to chase in the fourth innings], their guys are in good form and bowling really well. But we’ve still got to get two wickets and then see what the score is.”One man who wasn’t surprised by Sidebottom’s success was his county captain, Stephen Fleming, who also happened to be the first of the hat-trick victims. “He is deserving of that and he’s a great guy,” said Fleming. “He has worked incredibly hard and I have known for some time the qualities he possesses and he has shown that consistently for some time so our dressing-room is not surprised.”In a way it’s spectacular to see a hat-trick as well,” he added. “It has breathed some life into the game that was meandering along. We were the only team to be positive enough to do it to create this opportunity, so from that point of view England must be pretty pleased they have given themselves a chance. We knew that would have to be the case if we were to win this match.”

Irish joy at a tie as Zimbabwe choke

Zimbabwe 221 (Matsikenyeri 73*, Sibanda 67) tied with Ireland 221 for 9 (Bray 115*)
Scorecard

Jeremy Bray reaches his outstanding hundred … it earned him the Man-of-the-Match award © Getty Images

Zimbabwe tied with Ireland in one of the greatest World Cup matches ever, the game at Sabina Park producing some of the most pulsating, enthralling cricket you could ever ask to see. Zimbabwe will wonder how they threw away an almost certain victory, and while the points are shared, the day belonged to the Irish, and in particular their batting hero Jeremy Bray. It was they who were celebrating at the end while the expressions on the faces of the Zimbabwe side were of utter bewilderment.Zimbabwe had seemed to be cruising when on 92 for 1 chasing 222; within 45 minutes they were teetering on 133 for 5. But Stuart Matsikenyeri and Brendan Taylor, with plenty of time available to them, steadied the ship and guided Zimbabwe falteringly towards the finishing line. As Ireland started to look sloppy in the field, there appeared to be only one winner.Then the wheels really came off. Taylor was run-out in desperately unlucky circumstances at the non-striker’s end after a fortuitous deflection off the bowler’s wrist. That did not seem crucial at the time, but it was the turning point. When Gary Brent fell leg-before with ten needed, the jitters really set in among a very inexperienced side.Matsikenyeri was the difference between the teams but he was not on strike – he faced only 15 of the last 30 balls – as the penultimate over started with nine still required. Kevin O’Brien, in only his second over of the innings, had Prosper Utseya caught off a full toss with his first ball, and then Christopher Mpofu was stranded at the wrong end off the last.Matsikenyeri took five off the first three balls of the last over, bowled by Andrew White. Rainsford chipped a single off the fourth, leaving Zimbabwe needing three from two. Matsikenyeri then top edged and an airbourne Trent Johnston at short third man couldn’t quite cling on to the ball, and then his shy at the bowler’s end was thwarted by some unsubtle but effective blocking by Rainsford who threw himself in the path of the throw.With the scores tied, Matsikenyeri had to get something on the ball but he played and missed, and while the attempt to stump him failed – he never left his ground – Rainsford, who had charged towards his colleague, was left stranded. Zimbabwe had lost four wickets for nine in 15 balls in one of the most sensational World Cup chokes.Zimbabwe had been in trouble twice earlier. They struggled early on when a battling 67 from Vusi Sibanda bailed them out. Terry Duffin and Chamu Chibhabha both came and went without ever looking remotely in touch – Duffin dropped behind the wicket twice in four balls before finally being caught off the fifth.Sibanda kept the scoreboard ticking along with some well-struck drives, but he lacked any support. Sean Williams came and went after a most bizarre cameo, batting like a man who wanted to be showered and back in his hotel within the hour. He threw the bat at everything and almost inevitably and immediately holed out. Two balls later Zimbabwe could have been in deeper trouble when Matsikenyeri was left stranded when sent back by Sibanda, but Kyle McCallan failed to gather Kevin O’Brien’s throw with Matsikenyeri flailing in no-man’s land. It was a crucial miss.Sibanda’s excellent innings ended in unfortunate circumstances when he stepped back on his stumps as he looked to punch the ball into the covers, sparking delirious celebrations among the small but hugely vocal Irish contingent – which included two of the unlikeliest Leprechauns you will ever see. For five overs it could have gone either way, but Matsikenyeri and Taylor dug deep and appeared to have weathered the storm.

Vusi Sibanda lofts one over midwicket on his way to 67 © Getty Images

After the heart-stopping drama of the final overs, it was easy to forget that Bray’s unbeaten 115, which earned him the Man-of-the-Match, had bailed Ireland out after their top order had also come apart at the seams. Bray, who batted right through the innings, was the only batsman who came to terms with Zimbabwe’s wibbly-wobbly seam attack which at one stage threatened to bowl out Ireland for under a hundred.Bray, who sounds more Wagga Wagga than Wicklow, was a virtual bystander as Ireland’s top order came and went, perishing to inauspicious shots against bowlers who lacked pace but not nagging accuracy. All Ireland’s top five are left handers, and they were unable to cope with balls angled across them.They were a wicket down inside the first over when William Porterfield nicked Chris Mpofu, and although the loquacious Taylor spilt the chance, Sibanda dived across from second slip to snatch the rebound. Eoin Morgan, highly touted as being one who might follow Ed Joyce onto bigger things, survived a few alarms before edging to first slip. Mpofu bowled a super first spell and a lamentable second one at the death.The innocuous-looking Elton Chigumbura then ripped through a paper-thin middle order. Bray, who smacked some sumptuous cover drives and two off-side sixes, needed someone to stay with him. O’Brien began to look like he would do that until he fell to a limp jab to give Taylor a second catch. At 89 for 5 an early finish was in store.But Bray, who smacked some sumptuous cover drives and two off-side sixes, finally found support from White and Johnston, and as the scoreboard ticked over, Zimbabwe’s fielding lost its shape. Chigumbura’s Chaplinesque drop at deep square leg will take some beating in this competition, but he was not alone – Rainsford, the victim on that occasion, spilled a chance the next over.Bray’s hundred, which was delayed by a brief rain break, came up with a slashing cover drive and he and the swishing Dave Langford-Smith made Zimbabwe pay in the last few overs. It provided the platform to send the Leprechauns into seventh heaven, but Zimbabwe, who have had so little to cheer in recent years, will be left wondering quite how they blew it.

Pollock returns for curtain-raiser

Shaun Pollock: back in the South Africa squad © Getty Images

Shaun Pollock has been recalled to the South African team for their Twenty20 international against Australia at the Wanderers on Friday, replacing the big-hitter Justin Kemp. Kemp has been rested due to an ongoing shoulder problem that will require surgery, probably at the end of the five-match one-day international series starting on Sunday.After a poor display in the VB Series in Australia, where Sri Lanka pipped them to the finals, South Africa are taking the Twenty20 match seriously. Graeme Smith, the captain, left no cause for doubt when he said: “We’ll be looking to implement a few of the strategies we’ve been working on ahead of the World Cup in 2007, because we’ve only got 20 to 25 one-day internationals before then.”It’s more of a mindset thing. Ten or 15 years ago teams were happy to be going at four runs an over, but after playing Twenty20 cricket we now know that you can score at 10 an over. You’ve just got to break the mental barriers.”We have to be innovative because teams are going to need to play differently at the next World Cup, much like Sri Lanka did in 1996. Hopefully we can take the world by storm.”However, Smith said one of the ICC’s innovations, the Supersub, left him cold. “If we’re not going to be using [him] in the World Cup,” he asked, “why must we keep playing him in the next five or six games?”His Australian counterpart, Ricky Ponting, said he would also like the experiment, set to continue until March, to end as soon as possible. “Why wait as long as March?” Ponting asked. “It doesn’t make sense. The sooner we get back to playing how we will be playing in the future, the better.”Ponting added his team would be going to greater lengths to crack the Twenty20 code as successfully as they have in the 50-over game. “We haven’t yet got fully to grips with Twenty20 cricket and a few of the guys do still go into it quite lightheartedly,” he said. “But it’s a hard game to take too seriously because you basically have to come out and swing from the word go, and sometimes you’ll come off and other times you won’t.”But South Africa have chosen a specialist Twenty20 team and if the ICC are going to have a Twenty20 world championship, then maybe we do need to look at it more seriously. We’re still learning and hopefully we’ll learn a bit more tomorrow.”One of the Australians’ other goals tomorrow will be to neutralise a South African crowd which is expected to bombard them with plenty of caustic comments after the racial abuse their team endured Down Under. “We’ll be trying to block the crowd out,” he said, “but one of the things we’ve learnt on tours is that if the crowd keeps quiet it generally means we’re playing pretty good cricket.”While the Australians have generally expressed delight at the hospitality they have been shown in South Africa, some of the players were terribly disappointed with their practice nets on Thursday. Batsmen had a torrid time as the ball leapt around in deranged fashion, and Ponting pointed a finger of blame at the South African camp.”The practice facilities were great on Wednesday,” said Ponting, “but they were not very good this morning. I spoke to the groundsman and apparently the South African team kept training yesterday in heavy rain and the staff didn’t get a lot of the pitches covered in time. They were still very wet this morning, but at least we got a good session in yesterday.”South Africa were beaten by 95 runs by Australia in the Twenty20 international at the Gabba in January, but the Aussies have been weakened for the return clash by the absence of key batsmen Michael Hussey and Andrew Symonds. Hussey’s wife gave birth to a baby boy on Thursday and he is flying over to South Africa on Friday, while Symonds will be resting a thigh strain.South Africa Graeme Smith (capt), Loots Bosman, AB de Villiers (wk), Herschelle Gibbs, Neil McKenzie, Shaun Pollock, Andrew Hall, Robin Peterson, Roger Telemachus, Thandi Tshabalala, Johan van der Wath, Makhaya Ntini.Australia Adam Gilchrist (wk), Simon Katich, Ricky Ponting (capt), Damien Martyn, Michael Clarke, Shane Watson, Brett Lee, Brad Hogg, Nathan Bracken, Stuart Clark, Mitchell Johnson, Mick Lewis.

Buchanan points to tired batsmen

John Buchanan believes lighter training workouts will help Australia’s weary batsmen© Getty Images

Australia’s jaded batsmen have been responsible for the side’s recent one-day run stutters, according to the coach John Buchanan. Buchanan expects to downscale training sessions in a bid to give the players’ back their spark as they begin the five-match limited-overs series against New Zealand at Wellington tomorrow.”There’s a sense of all players being a bit jaded and obviously that can affect their mental application and that possibly is a contributing factor with the decision-making of their batting,” Buchanan said. “As a batting group we’ve been making poor decisions at certain times through the course of one-day cricket. Individuals will know that and collectively as a team we can discuss that, but at a more appropriate time."Australia comfortably won the VB Series despite only Michael Clarke and Damien Martyn averaging more than 30 as the bowlers stood tall. Mike Hussey and James Hopes are the two fresh faces in the squad, which has contested the Champions Trophy and series against India, New Zealand, Pakistan and West Indies since August. Buchanan said the key to the one-day series was "to play well from the outset".

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
Scorecard

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.

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