Pullar and Taylor ensure fiery Otago opening pair

Internationals Rachel Pullar and Clare Taylor will spearhead the State Otago Sparks’ bowling attack in this summer’s State League series.Pullar is a five-year veteran with the TelstraClear White Ferns while Taylor, awarded an MBE recently for her services to the game, has 15 years of international experience behind her for England. Taylor played for the Sparks in 2000/01 following the CricInfo Women’s World Cup in New Zealand.Coach Geoff Rodden will also be able to call on the services of long-serving provincial representatives Kirsten Spence and Megan Kane, while the team will be captained for the second successive year by Sarah Helmore, who has been drafted from Canterbury.Debut players this season are Claire Thompson and Adele Crawley.The Sparks’ season runs from mid-December through to mid-February.The State Otago Sparks this summer are: Sarah Helmore (captain), Natalie Bannerman, Adele Crawley, Jenna Innes, Alana Kane, Megan Kane, Katherine Lynch, Katey Martin, Rachel Pullar, Elizabeth Scurr, Kirsten Spence, Clare Taylor, Claire Thompson, Sarah Tsukigawa.

C&G Trophy Final Ticket Details

C&G TROPHY FINALAT LORD’S31 AUGUST 2002
(RESERVE DAY 1 SEPTEMBER 2002)
SOLD OUT!Somerset County Cricket Club announce that they have sold all of their allocation of 4,500 tickets for the above match.All enquiries for tickets should now be directed to the MCC on 0207 432 1066.

Vics crumble to verge of outright defeat

ADELAIDE, Oct 18 AAP – Victoria lost four wickets in the opening session today to crumble to the verge of outright defeat at 6-185 at lunch on the final day of its Pura Cup cricket match against South Australia at Adelaide Oval.The Bushrangers started the day at 2-94 in their second innings, needing an impossible target of 512 for victory, but more realistically aiming to survive until stumps.But that also quickly became an unlikely result, when Brad Hodge (22), Graeme Rummans (48), Nick Jewell (30) and Cameron White (0) all fell in the morning session.Darren Berry, on six, and Ian Harvey, on nine, were unbeaten at lunch and needed a long partnership to give Victoria any chance of holding out for a draw, with only tailenders to come.Former Victorian off-spinner John Davison, playing his first game for SA, had the figures of 4-80, including the wickets of Hodge and Jewell today, while Ryan Harris took the other two wickets to fall.

Average weekend for South Africans in England

Averages are often frowned upon when it comes to player ratings. One thing they do not do is lie about the form and consistency of cricket players. The South African players playing cricket in the County Championships on English soil have not sent any statistician scrambling for the record books.Division 1 of the Championship does not see a South African name in the top 30 of either the batting or bowling averages, with Nic Pothas filling the forth spot with 15 dismissals in the fielding list. An improvement in the Division 2 averages with Gauteng reject Sven Koenig filling the seventh batting spot with an average of 56.8 and 284 runs, nearly 400 runs behind top of the averages Michael Hussy from Australia. Greg Smith is third in the bowling averages at 15.85 and 20 wickets.The past weekend saw Warwickshire Shaun Pollock scoring 16 and 37 and returning bowling figures of 4/37 and 0/25 before leaving the field of play on hearing about the tragic death of his friend Hansie Cronje. In the same drawn match Neil Johnson scored 33 and returned figures of 0/34 and 1/17 for Hampshire. Nic Pothas managed one with the bat.Mark Davis in a loss for Sussex against Kent scored 24 not out and 18 while getting only 1/66 in the second innings.Derbyshire, top of the Division 2 table, won against Glamorgan where Andrew Gait scored 35 and four not out in their four wicket win.Sven Koenig, 29 and four, with Middlesex and second in the Division 2 table drawing with Durham.Nottinghamshire had a bye over the weekend.Allan Donald is to make his season debut for Worcestershire and then together with Pollock will return to South Africa to be at Cronje’s funeral service in Bloemfontein. Both players are expected back in England on Thursday morning.In the Lancaster league over the weekend Jacques Rudolph continued his improvement with a 62 and a 40 added to a 3/34 spell of bowling. Con de Lange also doing well with another fine batting performance of 68.For the rest Pierre Joubert got 36 and 1/20 and Paul Adams at last got into the double figures with 39 from the bat and 2/43 with the ball.Failures from Martin van Jaarsveld (2) and Kevin Pieterson on loan from Nottinghamshire (7) while Andre Seymore and Andrew Hall did not get a chance to bat. Andrew Hall is also on loan to Minor County Suffolk.

Auckland's O'Donnell gears up for next phase of coaching career

Auckland coach Mark O’Donnell could not be more aware of the differences between his home of 17 years in South Africa, and his new home in New Zealand.For a start there’s the rain. Auckland welcomed him with 12 days in a row, which was only a fraction of the true amount the Queen City endured.But that rain highlighted one adaptation O’Donnell, 40 and originally from Christchurch, is going to have to make.Most of his pre-season work with the Auckland side is going to have to be done indoors.The days of doing all the winter and pre-season training outdoors on grass pitches in South Africa are gone.O’Donnell meets with the Auckland squad for the first time this evening, although he has met with most of the individuals who made up the inaugural winners of the State Championship last season, on a one-on-one basis.His return to New Zealand completes a cycle which saw him move to Eastern Province where fellow New Zealander David Trist had taken on a coaching role. O’Donnell, who played cricket for Burnside West in the Christchurch competition, had gone to England the winter before and had met up with Trist in the Netherlands.Trist encouraged him to try his luck in South Africa, and having done that, O’Donnell married a South African and ended up staying, initially with Eastern Province but latterly for Gauteng.His experiences have been mixed.From the earliest years he was there, South Africa was still in isolation due to the apartheid policies of the National Government. Because of that he was able to witness and experience the incredible strength of club and first-class cricket.International players playing at those levels was a rarity in the rest of the cricket world, and since the re-entry into the normal realm of things in 1992, it has also become a rarity in South Africa.However, normalisation in sport has brought its own problems and it has been especially severe on the administration of the game.O’Donnell reflected on how easily a very strong structure in Gauteng had fallen apart as the results of inefficiencies in administration and pressures of advancement of black players had taken their toll.Gauteng had won the South African championship in 2000 in spite of the administrative collapse the side endured. Six of the side departed, only one of them – Ken Rutherford – to retirement, before the start of the next season.O’Donnell said there was a problem that was symptomatic with the next generation of South African players. Because so many of them now hold European Union passports they are transferring their playing allegiances to Europe, in the same way that rugby players have done.”They are getting out because they can earn more money and they are out of the political problems,” he said.Maintaining the strength of the side of the moment is going to be the real challenge for South Africa, he said.The transformation process would work eventually in South Africa, but it would take time, he said.Bowlers would come through the system quicker, and that has already been seen, but it would be tougher for batsmen to emerge and they would take longer.The situation was not helped by the system at the moment which has lowered the standard of first-class cricket by promoting players of colour ahead of players who are better skilled. It was difficult all round because the players knew themselves there were better players, while it was some of these players in the second-tier of the game who were seeking their opportunities elsewhere.”I am looking forward to working with Auckland. I can concentrate on actual cricket decisions. I wasn’t able to have a balanced side over the last five years,” he said.O’Donnell, who was last in Auckland in 1981, couldn’t help but notice the changes in the city, even at Eden Park where the only familiar sight was the terracing at the eastern end of the ground.”But it has been useful being here at this time because I attended a Level III coaching workshop in Christchurch and met quite of a few of the guys and was able to make some observations, and there has been a coaching programme in Auckland this week.”The competition involves about the same amount of cricket as South Africa, although the difference here is that it is squeezed into a much tighter time frame.”That puts demands on strength and skills of players in the squad and those just beneath them because you are only as good as your support players,” he said.”There are some very talented cricketers here and the talent is similar to South Africa although the average age of players is younger here. Clearly it is a lot harder to live on earnings as a first-class cricketer here,” he said.Each of the 11 first-class sides in South Africa has 17 contracted players.The latest phase of his coaching career will provide different challenges for O’Donnell. The lack of hard, fast tracks in the early part of the summer requires different thinking while there is that concentration of play which can be just as demanding organisation-wise as the playing out in the middle.

Cox will return even hungrier after defeat

Somerset skipper Jamie Cox will return to England next month in a hungry mood after his state side Tasmania failed to win the Pura Cup.Jamie, who has enjoyed a record breaking season down under during the winter, was dismissed for 19 as the Tasmanian team lost to Queensland in the Pura Cup final at Brisbane earlier this week.This morning Somerset Chief Executive Peter Anderson told me: “Before the game we sent Jamie a message of good luck, so we are naturally disappointed to hear that Tasmania were unsuccessful in their challenge for the cup.””Of course the rub off from that could be to our advantage, because when he returns to England next month he will be ever more determined for success.”At least Jamie can take some comfort from the fact that when he returns to Taunton he will have somewhere to live with his new wife Helen and their baby son Lachlan.As reported on the Somerset website and also in the local newspapers, a week ago Jamie was looking like being homeless on his return to the west country after his summer housing arrangements had fallen through at the last moment.However, glad to say somebody read about the Somerset skipper’s predicament and made contact with the club, as a result of which Jamie now has a house in the Taunton area to move into with his family upon his return.Somerset Executive Assistant Sally Donoghue told me: “We are delighted and relieved that we have at last found somewhere for Jamie and his family to live. We are very grateful to the person who has made the house available, and now all we need to do is to make sure that it is equipped with a cot and a high chair!”

Gloucestershire buoyed by the return of Harvey

Gloucestershire start their Benson and Hedges quarter-final against Durham as clear favourites and buoyed by the return of all-rounder Ian Harvey to their side.The undisputed masters of domestic one-day cricket are seeking to retain the cup that they won as part of a one-day treble last season, but with several key players such as ‘Jack’ Russell and Mike Smith missing early-season games, and Harvey withdrawn from the Norwich Union League game against Yorkshire at the weekend, some members were worried that their side would go into the quarter-final with some inexperienced faces, but Bracewell was taking no chances.”It was just a precautionary thing that Ian didn’t play. He’s just had a bit of a strain behind the knee,” Bracewell explained. “But we will see how the pitch looks on the day before we pick the side, because it will depend on whether we want to bat or bowl.Bracewell is taking nothing for granted despite his team’s great performances in the last two-years.”We played Durham earlier in the season,” he said. “We had a good look at them and they had a good look at us. They are not going to be pushovers by any means and it is going to need a workmanlike performance.”Paul Collingwood would appear to be the key for the visitors. He has been in the runs consistently this season, and has often held the Durham batting together.The other three games are on Wednesday: Somerset v Yorkshire; Sussex v Surrey and Nottinghamshire v Warwickshire.

Styris returns to Sussex for t20

Sussex have re-signed Scott Styris as an overseas player for the 2013 Friends Life t20 season.Styris, the 37-year-old former New Zealand international, who has previously had spells in county cricket with Middlesex, Durham and Essex, enjoyed an impressive season with Sussex in 2012. Most eye-catching was the 37-ball century against Gloucestershire in the quarter-final which included five fours and nine sixes and equalled the third fastest century in global Twenty20 cricket. The innings not only won Styris the Walter Lawrence Trophy for the fastest century in an English season, but helped Sussex reach T20 finals day.Styris retired from international cricket soon after the 2011 World Cup, ending a New Zealand career that spanned 188 ODIs and 31 Twenty20 internationals. He also played 29 Tests, the last of them in 2007. Since then he has become one of the first T20 specialists, though he has continued to play the occasional List A game. He has represented sides in the IPL, the Bangladesh Premier League, the Sri Lanka Premier League and in English and New Zealand domestic T20 competitions.”I’m delighted to sign this contract with Sussex,” Styris said. “I thoroughly enjoyed my time with the team this year and feel we have unfinished business in this competition. I want to contribute next season so we can go all the way to securing the silverware.””We are all delighted at the prospect of having Scott back,” Mark Robinson, the Sussex cricket manager, said. “His performances on and off the pitch obviously made him not only a crowd favourite but one within the whole club.”

Pollock gives series a ginger tint

Man of the match, man of the series, winning captain – about the only accolade Shaun Pollock was missing at the conclusion of the third Castle Lager/MTN Test match was man of the century, and it’s a fair bet that if a vote was taken now for the honour he’d be up there among the contenders.Not that he doesn’t deserve the plaudits: South Africa’s innings and seven runs victory over Sri Lanka at SuperSport on Monday completed a magnificent season for the home team. South Africa won four out of six home Test matches this summer, with the two missing matches both suffering from interference from the weather, and 10 out of 11 one-day internationals.This is an impressive record, whichever way you look at it, and the quality of the cricket played by the South Africans, particularly in the last two Test matches as Sri Lanka were crushed by an innings, has done much to help the country consign Hansie Cronje to his unfortunate place in history.For Pollock, the Sri Lankan series was an almost uninterrupted triumph. He took his 200th Test wicket in the first Test in Durban, claimed six for 30 to blast Sri Lanka out for 95 in the first innings at Newlands and then hammered out a maiden Test century at better than a run a ball – after South Africa had been 204 for seven – at SuperSport Park.He has now established himself as one of the world’s leading all-rounders, an adventurous captain and a leader able to inspire both the youngsters and veterans in his side. It has been a remarkable learning curve for the 27-year-old.The outcome at SuperSport Park on Monday amounted to little more than a formality. The only real ambition remaining for the Sri Lankans, 184 for three overnight, was to reach 259 and make South Africa bat again.They failed by seven runs, but perhaps more disappointing for all concerned, came when Kumar Sangakkara was denied a century and a rare opportunity to carry his bat through an innings.He was last man out for 98 after batting for 10 minutes less than six hours and it is doubtful that even the South Africans would have begrudged him his hundred. To make matters worse for the young man, his LBW decision, claimed by Makhaya Ntini and given by Peter Willey, looked a bit iffy.But Sangakkara (and Russel Arnold on Sunday) was about all Sri Lanka had to take from the match. They were handicapped by the absence of Muttiah Muralitharan and Chaminda Vaas, but in truth it was their batting rather than their bowling that let them down, in this match and throughout their tour.At the start of the tour Sanath Jayasuriya had expressed concern about the lack of preparation his batsmen would have on South African pitches and he made the point again at the end of if.He did single out Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene as batsmen who had moved forward on the tour, and said that Muralitharan had bowled magnificently. But he had to concede that the batsmen had let the side down.There are quite clear lessons for the Sri Lankan management and administration from this tour. If they are not absorbed, the next side to tour here will suffer a similar fate.But it has been South Africa’s, and Pollock’s, match and series. Pollock singled out the performances of others as the high points of the summer – Neil McKenzie’s maiden Test century in Port Elizabeth and Ntini’s bowling in Bloemfontein – but everyone else will remember him scything through the Sri Lankan batting in Cape Town and thrashing the bowling all over Centurion. This particular series has been coloured with a ginger rinse.

Indian news round-up

BCCI technical committee member not in favour of graded systemA member of the technical committee and Punjab Cricket Association secretary MP Pandove on Sunday said in Mohali said that the graded system of payment linked with seniority of players is not feasible and has ‘certain complications’. PTI quotes Pandove as saying that “this system which is likely to be implemented after thorough deliberations at the next meeting of the board would force players to declare themselves professionals.” He added “No player would like to declare himself professional due to the obvious reason of taxation,” he said.Pandove also felt that this system would lower the morale of the young players and this would ultimately would affect team spirit. “I personally think that this system cannot be effective in this part of the world.” Five Indian players last week pressed the BCCI to have a contract system for greater security and graded system of payment linked to seniority and performance.PCA launches coaching scheme for upcoming playersThe Punjab Cricket Association (PCA) on Sunday launched a coaching scheme for upcoming youngsters across the state. Briefing newsmen after the executive meeting of the PCA in Mohali, PCA secretary MP Pandove said under the scheme six regional coaching centres of the PCA would be created in Ludhiana, Chandigarh, Patiala, Amritsar, Mohali and Jalandhar for providing training.Pandove added that the PCA would provide 12 dozen cricket balls each, aid for installing an irrigation system and 50 per cent reimbursement of coaching fee at these centres. The PCA had approved a budget of Rs 25 lakh to create these coaching centres, he said adding that from such centres a total of 20 players below the age of 19 would be selected. The chosen players would be brought to the PCA for advanced training under psychologists, doctors and super speciality video-tape guidance, he said. He said that the executive has decided to rewardsuitably one cricketer each under the age group of 14, 16, 19 and a senior cricketer each year.The PCA had also decided to honour Test cricketers Harbhajan Singh and Navjot Singh, besides four players who represented the victorious Indian Under-19 team in Sri Lanka, Yuvraj Singh, Reetinder Sodhi, Ravneet Ricky and Munish Sharma. Pandove said the PCA would host the first Test match between England and India during the 2001-2002 season.Assam Assn. to start academyThe Assam Cricket Association will soon open an academy at the Nehru Stadium in Guwahati. The venue will be shifted to the proposed new stadium at Hengrabari when the stadium gets ready. The decision was taken at the governing body meeting of the ACA last week. The academy will start functioning from June 1 with a trial camp for the U-14 cricketers of the State for 21 days, according to ACA secretary Nandan Bezbaruah. Thereafter, a trial camp of the same duration will be held for U-16 and U-19 players. At least three camps would be held in a year and the State U-14, U-16 and U-19 teams would be selected as aresult.For the inaugural camp at the Academy, 25 players from all over the state would be selected. In this regard, the ACA has instructed all the affiliated districts to send two players from their district to the Nehru Stadium. After four days of training by Manoj Bhagawati and Mukut Das, 25 players will be selected for the training camp. To run this academy, a committee has been set up comprising the president, secretary and treasurer. Apart from this, one representative from six zones of the State will be included in the committee. Four coaches have been selected for conducting the camp at the academy. The chief coach is Kamal Das.Another important decision taken at the meeting was to have an advanced training session for coaches. In this regard, two coaches from each district will be asked to attend the session.Laloo Prasad elected BCA president unopposedThe former Bihar Chief Minister Laloo Prasad Yadav on Sunday was elected unopposed as the president of the Bihar Cricket Association in Jamshedpur. The formal announcement was made yesterday as he was the lone candidate for the post.Ajay Narain Sharma was elected the secretary while Ravi Shankar Prasad, Satish Singh and Ram Kumar were elected as members of the executive committee.

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