Killeen announces retirement

Durham seamer Neil Killeen has announced his retirement from domestic cricket, and Durham’s Clydesdale Bank 40 clash against Kent at Chester-le-Street will mark his final appearance for the county

Cricinfo staff04-Sep-2010Durham seamer Neil Killeen has announced his retirement from domestic cricket, and Durham’s Clydesdale Bank 40 clash against Kent at Chester-le-Street will mark his final appearance for the county. Already a qualified coach, he will continue to be involved with the club as part of the coaching staff.”It was a tough decision to call time on my career but I’m incredibly excited about the opportunities ahead of me especially those that will see me continue to work alongside some of the quality talent we have here at Durham,” said Killeen. “I’d like to say a huge thank you to all the players, staff and members for their support over the years.”Killeen made his Durham debut in 1995, aged just 20, and has since made over one hundred first-class appearances for the county, as well as playing in 226 one-day games – taking over 300 wickets in the fomat – and 45 Twenty20s.He came close to an England call-up in 2000 before suffering an ankle ligament injury and was part of the team that secured Durham’s historic first piece of silverware, the Friends Provident Trophy, in 2007 when they beat Hampshire in the competition’s final at Lord’s.”I’ve had a wonderful career at Durham and enjoyed every minute of it. My absolute highlight has to be winning the Friends Provident Trophy at Lord’s, it was great seeing the hard work of so many people coming into fruition – it was a massive achievement for the team and that weekend is something I will always remember.””I’ve enjoyed watching Neil play cricket throughout his career and for him to retire as the leading wicket taker for Durham in one day cricket is certainly an accolade that is much deserved,” said Geoff Cook, Durham’s head coach. “He has worked extremely hard to give his best to the team and the club over the last 16 years and I’d like to wish him all the best with his future projects.””Neil’s contribution to Durham CCC has been one of real dedication, on and off the field,” added David Harker, the county’s chief executive. “We have been lucky to have him in our set up and while it’s sad to see him retiring we’re pleased that he will maintain his links with the club.”

Abhishek, Varun lead India's demolition of England

After the spinners limited England to 132, India’s batters aced the chase to go 1-0 up

Vithushan Ehantharajah22-Jan-20251:34

Manjrekar: India’s spinners made it impossible for England to recover

India brutally cast aside England in the first T20I at Eden Gardens, as Abhishek Sharma’s 79 from just 34 deliveries munched a meagre target of 133 with 43 balls to spare.Abhishek’s third 50-plus score in the format capped an accomplished all-round performance from India. A combination of Arshdeep Singh’s 2 for 17 up top and Varun Chakravarthy’s 3 for 23 through the middle accounted for England for 132, scuppering their attempts to mark Brendon McCullum’s first match in charge in the format with the attacking verve he craves.But for Jos Buttler’s 68 – his 26th T20I fifty – things could have been worse. Buttler’s evening had begun by losing a crucial toss to Suryakumar Yadav. With the 7pm start in Kolkata, moisture was in the air throughout, and dew a factor in the first innings itself. Both captains wanted to bowl, and only one got the chance.Related

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Arshdeep made the best of the conditions, removing openers Phil Salt and Ben Duckett in his first 11 deliveries. Those dismissals took the left-arm seamer to 97 wickets in T20Is, leapfrogging Yuzvendra Chahal as India’s top wicket-taker in the format.By the time Buttler departed in the 17th over, he had provided 68 out of the 109 on the board, with Harry Brook the only batter to reach double-figures before Jofra Archer pitched in with 12 from No. 9.Brook’s 17 was part of a stand of 48 with Buttler, the vice-captain and captain setting about a rebuild that was ended by Varun’s googlies. Varun bowled Brook and Liam Livingstone in the space of three deliveries to turn England back to rubble. His third was Buttler, holing out to deep square-leg.Whatever little jeopardy there was in the chase, was restricted to just the fifth over, when Archer removed both Sanju Samson – who had done the early running – and Suryakumar for a duck in four deliveries. Archer, who bowled his four overs on the bounce having opened the innings, was comfortably the pick of England’s bowlers with 2 for 21. By contrast, Gus Atkinson was taken apart for 38 runs across his two overs, with his first blitzed for 22 by Samson.The onus was then on Abhishek, who was put down by Adil Rashid on 29 off 16. He would bring up his half-century just four balls later.Though Rashid eventually got his man, India had all but established a 1-0 lead in this five-match series by then. A top-edged four from Tilak Varma off Mark Wood’s bouncer off the penultimate ball of the 13th over confirmed it.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Arshdeep Singh sets the tone

Before England were choked through the middle by a three-pronged spin attack, they were clipped up top by the lone Indian full-time quick. Since debuting in 2022, Arshdeep has been a new-ball banker for India’s shortest format. Consistently devastating and devastatingly consistent.It was fitting that on the night he became India’s leading T20I wicket-taker, he reinforced his credentials as one of the format’s leading seamers in an opening three-over spell of 2 for 10. Movement away and up off a good length did for Salt, who could only sky a leading edge, and it was followed by nip the other way that left the left-handed Duckett for a similar demise.Of those initial 18 deliveries, a remarkable 12 were dots, which saw him get the better of Buttler and Brook without reward. On another day, their feelers outside off stump may have resulted in edges, bringing more joy Arshdeep’s way. But rather than bemoan missing out on those extra notches in the wicket column, he seemed happy enough with his work, having opened the door for his spinners.Jos Buttler top-scored for England with 68 off 44 balls•Getty Images

Familiar failings

There is no shame in falling to India’s spinners in any format, least of all when they are operating at home. But there was a haunting familiarity about England’s failure at Eden Gardens – and it has nothing to do with what happened here in that final in 2016.Eight years on from that heartbreak, England were roughed up in 2024’s semi-final in Guyana, as Axar Patel, Kuldeep Yadav and Ravindra Jadeja combined to take 6 for 58 from 11 overs. Only Axar remained this time around, but the results were about the same – 12 overs of web-spinning prising out five for the concession of just 67.It is easy to say the likes of Brook, Livingstone and Jacob Bethell should have taken cues from Buttler, particularly his ability to pick length. But Buttler’s vast IPL experience and superior ability makes that hard to replicate. Credit belongs to the bowlers, particularly Varun.Despite the grass on the surface, the spinner was unperturbed. His IPL nous came to the fore at a ground where he has taken 24 wickets at 22.20 from 16 appearances.A holding pattern of deliveries just short of a length kept the ball out of hitting arcs, and he was not pre-occupied with spinning the ball past the edge – even though he beat the insides of Brook’s and Livingstone’s bats. “Bowling sidespin, I cannot beat batsmen with sidespin. The only way I can beat batsmen with bounce,” Varun, as he nursed a deserved Player-of-the-Match award, said. Perhaps most galling for England is he rated his display a humble “seven out of ten”.Nitish Kumar Reddy took a running, tumbling catch to send back Jos Buttler•AFP/Getty Images

India’s cleaner hands

Bethell’s drop of Abhishek, charging in from deep midwicket, tracking the ball all the way only to see it spill through his hands as he dived forward, did not matter.A ball later, Abhishek was caught at longoff. An over later, India had confirmed their win. But the sight of one of England’s best fielders fall short in that moment highlighted the gap between the two fielding efforts on Wednesday evening.It would have been one hell of a take, but still not the best of the night. That honour belonged to Nitish Kumar Reddy, who pulled off a tougher version of Bethell’s effort, sprinting in at a greater rate of knots and intercepting the ball so close to the ground that the umpires asked for a second look. Buttler, whose charge was halted by that brilliance, had already made it back to the dugout when the television umpire finally gave it the all-clear.Despite playing no part with bat or ball, Reddy got plenty of airtime, taking a simpler catch to remove Jamie Overton and scurrying about the deep on a one-man mission to restrict England’s boundary count. That endeavour was matched by those in the ring, with Rinku Singh setting the tone when he claimed a leading edge off Duckett that required him to sprint back from cover with one eye over his shoulder.Of course, Bethell’s drop was not even the worst off Abhishek. Rashid’s was a far simpler caught-and-bowled chance. The legspinner was duly punished when the left-hand batter blitzed three boundaries – the last two sixes over midwicket, then straight down the ground – off the remainder of his over. England’s heads dropped – a nod to the nourishing effect of taking your catches.

McSweeney and McAndrew add to NSW blues as Shield pain continues

McSweeney made a stunning 100 and McAndrew took four wickets to put South Australia on the brink of victory over NSW in Adelaide

AAP and ESPNCricinfo17-Oct-2023New South Wales are reeling towards a 14th straight Sheffield Shield game without a win after a stunning spell former Blues junior Nathan McAndrew and a brilliant 100 from Nathan McSweeney put South Australia well on top in Adelaide.The Blues went to stumps on day three at Adelaide Oval on 99 for 6, still needing 224 more runs to chase down their fourth-innings target of 323.After taking 5 for 42 in the first innings, McAndrew was again the main destroyer on Tuesday as he took four wickets for the Redbacks to leave the Blues in trouble.Former Blue Harry Conway and Wes Agar also chimed in with one wicket each. NSW wicketkeeper Matthew Gilkes was left fuming when given out lbw to Agar to a ball that appeared to hit him outside off stump late in the day, swinging his bat in anger as he walked up the players’ race.McAndrew’s wickets included Daniel Hughes in the shadows of stumps, caught behind on 58 after being close to the last resistance for the Blues.McAndrew also trapped Kurtis Patterson lbw for 10, and had Ryan Hackney and Moises Henriques caught behind cheaply in similar fashion.At one stage McAndrew had figures of 3 for 6 after eight overs, before Hughes hit him for back-to-back boundaries through the offside. The seamer finished the day with 4 for 19.Born in Wollongong and a Sydney Thunder player in the BBL, McAndrew was never given the chance to represent NSW in the Sheffield Shield. But after making his debut for the Redbacks two seasons ago, he has proven a nemesis for the Blues. He took 6 for 97 against NSW at the end of last summer, before his nine wickets in this match.NSW’s situation comes despite debutant Jack Nisbet taking 5 for 53 in South Australia’s second innings on Tuesday.But it was McSweeney who stole the show for the hosts, scoring his third first-class century before being bowled by Nisbet for an even 100.McSweeney was the last man out for the Redbacks when he dragged a ball back onto his own stumps, after going from 72 to 100 with No.11 Conway down the other end.The Redbacks had lost their first-round match to Tasmania, but have been much improved with the ball in this match.NSW have not won a match in the Shield since way back in February 2022, after going without a victory last season and drawing with Queensland in the opening round of this summer.

Danni Wyatt set for return to middle-order despite World Cup semi-final century

England veteran happy to contribute as finisher after success at top of order in Christchurch

Andrew Miller10-Jul-2022Danni Wyatt expects to slip back into England’s middle order for the first ODI against South Africa at Wantage Road on Monday, despite her starring role as an opener in the teams’ last meeting, in the World Cup semi-final at Christchurch in March.Wyatt, 31, made the highest score of her international career – an explosive 129 from 125 balls – as England atoned for their tense three-wicket loss at Mount Maunganui in the group stages to end South Africa’s dreams of a maiden World Cup final appearance with a 137-run victory.However, Wyatt was unable to follow up that display in the final, making 4 from five balls as Australia sealed their indomitable campaign with an emphatic 71-run win. And now, with England embarking on a new three-year white-ball cycle, the likelihood is that Emma Lamb will be given the chance to resume the opening partnership with Tammy Beaumont that was launched in the recent Test at Taunton.”I’m happy to bat wherever,” Wyatt said. “I’ve been up and down the order, but that’s fine. I’m just happy to be in the starting eleven. A lot of coaches have said in the past that I am flexible in the order in ODI cricket, and I can perform whatever role they say, which is a credit to myself.”It’s just about being really clear in my role, chatting to the captain or coach about what my role is going to be leading into the series and just prepare really well – whether it be with a new ball or an old ball – about my plan and how I’m going to go about it.”Despite her starring role in the semi-final, Wyatt herself acknowledges that her best moments for England have come when her available overs have been reduced – either as an opener in T20 cricket, in which role she has scored two of England’s three fastest hundreds, from 52 balls against India in 2018 and 56 against Australia the previous year, or as an ODI finisher – she averages 40.14 at No.7, compared to 24.00 in 30 innings as an opener.”My ideal situation is to go in with 15 or 10 overs to go,” she added. “Just go out there and do what I do in the T20 format: just be brave, show intent, run well, which is what happens when I’m playing my best cricket. Just back myself and try to get the team to the highest score possible.”Either way, Wyatt says she is excited by the current dynamic within the England squad, with a raft of new players including Issy Wong, Lauren Bell and Alice Davidson-Richards impressing when given their chances in the Test match and challenging the old guard to keep their standards high.”We’ve got a good mix between young and old faces in the squad, which is really nice,” Wyatt said. “It keeps us all young – but it’s a bit weird saying I’m old, I don’t feel it. But all the youngsters are fitting in nicely around the group. We all hang out, there’s a real good togetherness going on at the minute, so hopefully, we can take that onto the pitch as well.”That togetherness included an outing to Old Trafford for the opening match of the Women’s Euros last week, and with England’s cricket itinerary culminating in their Commonwealth Games campaign at the end of the month, Wyatt acknowledged this was a huge summer for women’s sport in the country.”It’s a massive month for women’s sport,” she said. “You’ve got the Euros and you’ve us playing as well, and I was actually lucky enough to go to Old Trafford with a few of the girls the other night, which was an unreal atmosphere.”I was in shock with how good the atmosphere was. And yeah, hopefully the girls can go all the way and win the Euros, that would be class. We’re all getting really behind the girls as well. I’m a big fan of the Lionesses. And most of our girls are as well. It’s great to watch.”Sune Luus, South Africa’s captain, admitted that her team’s failure to seize their chance in the World Cup semi-final still hurt, and that they would be fully focussed on exacting a measure of revenge in the coming matches.”We just had a team meeting about it, saying how much we want to get that win on the board,” Luus said. “Obviously in the semi-final, we had a lot of opportunities and just didn’t take it. I feel like that game could have gone a whole other way, and our World Cup journey could have been a bit different.”The mindset that we’re going with tomorrow is just about taking every opportunity we have, make sure we get on top, and don’t give them that satisfaction again.”

Ollie Davies soaking up every chance to learn from the best

The 20-year-old batsman is part of the NSW squad for the Marsh Cup after a BBL campaign which showed glimpses of his talent

Alex Malcolm14-Feb-2021When Oliver Davies’ father Kevin was doing his carpentry apprenticeship, he didn’t have the fortune of being mentored by the world’s best craftsmen.But Davies’ professional cricket apprenticeship, which is barely six months old, has already featured some valuable lessons from a host of the world’s best limited-overs players. And there are more to come, as he has been included in New South Wales Marsh Cup squad alongside Steven Smith and new NSW captain Pat Cummins.”I’m hoping to get a game. That would be absolutely amazing,” Davies told ESPNcricinfo. “But I guess I’m going to be running drinks for Steve Smith and Pat Cummins so either way I’m going to be learning a lot.”Davies, 20, announced himself as a future star with two stunning innings in his first two BBL games for Sydney Thunder. He made 36 off 22 balls against Perth Scorchers on debut, striking three huge sixes off Jason Behrendorff and Fawad Ahmed.Related

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He trumped that with a Player of the Match performance in his second outing against the Melbourne Renegades scoring 48 off 23 including striking five consecutive sixes. Davies was delighted to even get a game let alone perform as he did.”I initially didn’t have any expectations of playing any games,” Davies said. “It was only because Alex Ross got injured after the second game against the Heat that I actually got a chance to play.”I wasn’t really going in with any high expectations. I just wanted to sort of spend a full season around the group and take it in. But I ended up playing eight games. It definitely wasn’t what I was expecting at the start but it was amazing. Picking the brains of Callum Ferguson, Usman Khawaja, Alex Hales, some top-quality cricketers, it was a really good experience.”The performance against the Renegades was extra special for Davies, as he got to spend some time post-match with his childhood hero Shaun Marsh.”Shaun Marsh was my favourite cricket growing up,” Davies said. “I didn’t really look at anyone else.”It was when he made his Test debut in Sri Lanka in 2011 and made 141. That was one of the first games that I watched and I loved him after that. I was like, I’m going to back this guy and obviously got the chance to meet him when I was a little bit younger and then play against him.”He came up to me before the game and had a little chat to me and after the game he said well done and said I’ll meet you back in 10 minutes and we’ll have a chat. We went back out and had a chat for 10-15 minutes which was quite good and got a little photo, which was nice.”Davies was grateful for Ferguson’s guidance in particular in a rollercoaster debut season.

“For me, Ferg was really good chatting before my debut and then after each of my games, I’d catch up for coffees with him and check in with how I was going,” he said.”He spoke to me a lot about giving myself a chance when I was going out and playing. More often than not I would go out there and try and hit the first or second ball to the boundary if I thought it was there but he spoke about giving yourself five, six, seven balls just to have a look and pick up the pace of the wicket, which was probably the big takeaway for me and that’s something I wish I knew a little bit earlier in the tournament. It would have been good to get that under my belt.”Englishman Sam Billings also provided sage counsel as Davies faced the cold reality of life in the professional ranks. Following the success of his first two games, he scored just six runs in his next five innings and lost his place in the Thunder side in the latter stages of the tournament.”I was a little bit down and he just spoke to me and said why don’t you watch some of your highlights of when you were absolutely whacking them,” Davies said. “He got me to think in a more positive mindset, like how I was playing at the start of the tournament and before then when I would go back to grade cricket and perform quite well.”He was just dumbing it down for me and said what were you doing well when you’re batting well, and how can you get back to that now.”0:54

WATCH – Aus U-19 cricketer Davies hits six sixes in an over

Davies responds well when things are simplified for him. His father kept things simple when throwing balls to him for hours in the backyard at home. Kevin Davies is still playing in his 50s for Warringah in the Shires in Sydney, having peeled off four half-centuries this season.Davies junior’s closest cricket mentor, Cricket NSW Transition and Under-19 coach Anthony Clark, has also taken the same approach in coaching Davies.The pair met when Davies was 15 and he continues to turn to Clark for advice.”He’s probably been my biggest mentor throughout my short career so far,” Davies said. “He had a lot to do with me since NSW Under-15s. He’s really my person I go to when I’m talking about batting.”Some coaches can get really technical. He just dumbs it right down and says play the ball late or watch it right onto the bat which for me personally that’s a lot more beneficially and take a lot more out of that than getting bombarded with technical stuff.”He’s my main man who I go to if I need to ask anything or if I’m not doing well, I’ll always go to him.”Opportunities are coming at Davies thick and fast. But ultimately, he knows he will need to be patient if he is to progress to where he wants to go.”In my ideal world, I’d love to be opening the batting in every game that I play in in white-ball cricket,” Davies said. “But obviously I understand that opportunity probably isn’t going to come anytime soon for me. If I get an opportunity to play in the NSW one-day side I’ve just got to take wherever they put me at.”I got told if I play I would be batting at six. I think that’s something I will have to adjust to. That’s the position I’m probably going to start in.”

Aamir Kaleem's four skittles Nigeria for 71

Jatinder Singh’s rapid 48 helped Oman canter to a big win

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Oct-2019
Thirty seven-year-old Aamir Kaleem took 4 for 14 in his four overs to shoot out Nigeria for 71 and set up Oman’s third win in the T20 World Cup qualifier in the UAE.Bilal Khan(3 for 7) was also among the wickets as Oman dismissed Nigeria in 19.5 overs. Opener Jatinder Singh then hit 48 off 22 balls, helping his side knock off the target in seven overs.After batting first, Nigeria had a quiet start in the Powerplay, reaching 22 for 1. They moved to 34 for 1 in the eighth over before losing 9 for 37. Opener Daniel Ajekun was the only Nigeria batsman to pass 15; No. 3 Sulaimon Runsewe’s 14 was the second-highest score in the first inningsIn response, Jatinder cracked nine fours and six before he was dismissed in the last over of the Powerplay. At that point, Oman needed just six runs from 85 balls. Fittingly, it was Kaleem who was at the end, Oman winning by seven wickets and 78 balls to spare.

Ricky Ponting injured; Australia coaching role under a cloud

The former captain picked up a serious Achilles injury while shooting a commercial

Daniel Brettig07-Sep-2018Ricky Ponting will miss the Twenty20 leg of Australia’s UAE tour against Pakistan and his medium-term future in the head coach Justin Langer’s plans has been placed under a cloud after he suffered a serious Achilles injury while shooting a commercial.Considered one of Langer’s closest confidantes, Ponting and his management team have had a long-term dialogue with Cricket Australia about how he is to best serve the national team while also juggling a host of other corporate and broadcasting commitments post retirement.While he had previously worked with Australia’s T20 team with some success and was also involved with the team on their ODI tour to the UK earlier this year, discussions about whether Ponting would be going to the UAE were still taking place when he suffered an Achilles tear kicking a football during a shoot for one of his sponsors.Having undergone surgery to repair the tear last week, Ponting’s mobility will be restricted for three to six months, making it difficult for him to fulfil the sort of assistant coaching roles Langer had envisaged for him whenever available. Nevertheless, CA and Ponting will continue to discuss ways of involving him in the Australian team set-up.The injury is not expected to interfere with Ponting’s new role as Channel Seven’s biggest commentary signing for their free-to-air coverage of Australian cricket this summer, which commences with the first Test against India in Adelaide in early December.The unavailability of Ponting is a blow to the developing coaching tenure of Langer, though, given the pair’s closeness. Langer spoke recently of how the magnitude of the job – rehabilitating Australian cricket after the Newlands ball-tampering scandal and amid two concurrent reviews into the culture of the team and CA – was keeping him awake at night, and that he needed to know who he trusted.”It’s the first time in my adult life I’ve woken up in the middle of the night,” he told . “I did it a few times in England. I’ve done it a few times since I’ve been home. It’s bizarre but hopefully as I start getting my feet under the table and I start knowing who I trust around my new team of people at Cricket Australia, hopefully I start sleeping better.”Certainly I’m gaining greater clarity in the foundations of what we are trying to achieve in the team for the next few years. I’m getting clarity about leadership. My huge focus is organic leadership and it can’t just be about the title C or VC, it’s got to be about developing these young blokes.”If I leave this role and there’s probably six or seven guys who you could make captain tomorrow then I reckon I’ve done a pretty good job because if we do that … then not only will we be playing good cricket and I reckon the Australian public will be proud of us again, we’ll have earned respect and there will be plenty of heroes out there for Australian kids, and that’s the way it’s always been in Australian cricket.”The support staff Langer takes with him to the UAE will be largely unchanged from the group that his predecessor Darren Lehmann took on the fateful trip to South Africa, with David Saker as assistant and bowling coach, Graeme Hick as batting coach and Brad Haddin as fielding coach. All are under contract until the end of the 2019 Ashes in England.Cricket Australia declined to comment.

Trouble for Bears as Hampshire go top

Hampshire beat the rain by skittling Warwickshire out for 167 to go top of the Specsavers County Championship Division One table

ECB Reporters Network05-Jun-2017
ScorecardHampshire beat the rain by skittling Warwickshire out for 167 to go top of the Specsavers County Championship Division One table.Kyle Abbott and spin twins Mason Crane and Sean Ervine whipped through the struggling visitors to pull off an innings and 94 runs victory – with dark clouds circling at the Ageas Bowl.Ian Bell reached his 99th first class fifty, as he looked the only player at home on a tricky wicket, before he was bowled by Abbott.Jonathan Trott, who had batted all but 13 balls on day three, departed soon after as Mason Crane found turn and bounce to find his outside edge – a simple catch for Sean Ervine at first slip.Abbott’s golden arm then saw him pin Sam Hain lbw, the umpire noticing the ball had just struck pad before bat, before the South African had Rikki Clarke leg before to a ball which failed to get up.Gareth Berg replaced Abbott at the Pavilion End and had his own success in his second over when he had Tim Ambrose lbw – leaving Warwickshire in dire straits at 131 for 7.The only blip on an otherwise perfect morning for Hampshire was Jimmy Adams’ drop at second slip – which saw Keith Barker earn an extra life.After the interval, Crane pulled off a sensational googly, which kept very low, to baffle Grant Thornton and rap him on the pads.Kyle Abbott took the key wicket of Ian Bell•PA Photos

Then the rain arrived and frustrated the hosts by forcing the players off for 20 minutes, but when Hampshire came back onto the pitch they took little time in rolling through the tail.Boyd Rankin was bowled leaving a Sean Ervine straight ball, before the Zimbabwean finished things off by pinning Sunny Singh lbw.
Hampshire move 14 points clear of Essex at the top of the table, having played a game more.The win was their third of the season, with Warwickshire taking three bonus points from the match to stay second from bottom.

CSA to meet with sports ministry over transformation targets

Cricket South Africa has admitted to being “caught by some surprise” by the South African sports minister’s decision to ban it, along with three other national federations, from bidding for major global tournaments as punishment for the slow pace of trans

Firdose Moonda19-May-2016Cricket South Africa has admitted to being “caught by some surprise” by the South African sports minister’s decision to ban it, along with three other national federations, from bidding for major global tournaments as punishment for the slow pace of transformation. The sanction was announced last month and this weekend CSA will meet with the ministry to discuss what more the cricket board can do to meet transformation targets, to which it remains committed.”We believe firmly in the need for transformation strategies. We were caught by some surprise by what the minister announced a few weeks ago. It’s something which we will understand better when we meet on Saturday,” Haroon Lorgat, CSA’s CEO, told at the announcement for a new sponsor on Wednesday. “Across the board we are held up as the market leaders in so far as good governance, transformation and world-class administration. We’ll engage [with the government] and try to understand better why we were short on some of our dimensions.”CSA only fell 5% short of the ministry’s target of 60% players of colour in men’s national teams but was lagging behind in black-African representation. Only 9% of South Africa’s national men’s team is black African, which translates to one player in every starting XI. The ministry has not made public what they want this number increased to but may discuss that with CSA over the weekend.While CSA remains adamant that there is no quota for national teams, its most recent squad – the ODI group to tour West Indies for a triangular series in June – comprises eight players of colour [out of 15], including two black Africans, and indicates a shift in composition. All three players dropped from the previous ODI squad are white while all the new inclusions are of players of colour. Domestically, CSA has not announced any change to the targets that all franchise and provincial teams must field at least six players of colour [which does not meet the 60% requirement], including at least three black Africans.The ministry’s ban does not affect CSA too much because it is not due to host any ICC senior events until at least 2023, with only an Under-19 World Cup in 2020 on the calendar. Lorgat said CSA hoped to use that time to meet the ministry’s requirement and have the punishment lifted.”We haven’t set our sights on specific events just yet,” he said. “There are some conversations happening but it’s very early days at the ICC with future events. I have no doubt South Africa will be a sought-after venue and I’m sure by that time we will have completed our engagements with the minister, finding out where we were short and committed to making things right. The fundamental point is that none of us differ that we need to transform. We know where we want to get to. We’ve been aggressive in our own way to get ourselves transformed. There’s no doubt we’ll be able to align ourselves with the minister.”

De Kock's eventful day ends in defeat

Quinton de Kock was pleased to score runs on the subcontinent, but disappointed in finishing on the losing end of the Super Over against Otago Volts

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Sep-2013Lions batsman Quinton de Kock’s unbeaten 109 was not enough to prevent a heart-breaking Super Over loss to Otago Volts, and their subsequent ouster from the Champions League. De Kock was chiefly responsible for putting Lions in a strong position, and smashed a four and six in the Super Over when 14 was required for victory. However, off the final ball, he failed to take an apparent second run which would have taken them to victory, and keep their tournament hopes alive.”Yeah, it is difficult,” de Kock said after the loss. “I mean I came here and I tried to do my best for the team. I feel bad for the team. Yeah it is sad to lose especially after getting some runs.”De Kock’s century was an innings of two parts. His first 50 runs were a rather scratchy affair, with some ill-timed shots around the wicket. However, once he passed fifty, he started to open up and take advantage of some poor bowling from Otago Volts, who bowled a number of short deliveries which de Kock accepted gleefully.This innings was a landmark for de Kock, who has not enjoyed the best of times in the subcontinent of late. He was bought by Sunrisers Hyderabad in this year’s auction for his base price of $20,000, and did not do too much after, with a duck on debut, scoring only 6 runs in 3 innings. He was duly dropped from the side and did not feature for the rest of the campaign, despite Sunrisers reaching the final four. Following that, he endured a torrid ODI tour of Sri Lanka, scoring only 55 runs in three innings.”Yeah I finally scored some runs in the subcontinent. I have been working hard on my game, especially here on these kind of wickets. Yeah, let’s hope that my hard work has paid off now.”His captain, Alviro Petersen, had praise for his young ward. “Yeah he is a good player,” Petersen said. “We know he is a special talent, we have played together and every time he seems to score some runs and put us in a good position.”When queried about the loss, Petersen was most critical of the bowler’s performance. “I am more disappointed in the way we bowled. It is the worst I have seen the Lions bowl so it is something we need to work on, and it’s something we have to go back to the drawing board and come back stronger.”Petersen was also upfront about the lack of experience his players had in these conditions. “Most of our team hasn’t played in the subcontinent. We don’t have a lot of international players. We are a team that relies on every single player to perform well, you know, and we just came together here so we are disappointed but we need to keep our heads high.”

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