Minor Counties Championship – Day 1 Scores

March:
Buckinghamshire 263 (D Bauer 62) v Cambridgeshire 5-0Exmouth:
Devon 368 (R Foan 130, A Pew 76; G Treagus 5-72) v DorsetBishop’s Stortford:
Hertfordshire 74 & 18-2 v Suffolk 263 (PC Caley 67no)Manor Park:
Staffordshire 451-4d (GF Archer 201*, PF Shaw 120, KJ Barnett 79) v NorfolkJesmond:
Northumberland 233 (M Drake 70*) v Cumberland 83-1Abergavenny:
Cheshire 357 (A Hall 175, PSJ Renshaw 65) v Wales Minor C 2-0Westbury:
Berkshire 325-5d (BHD Mordt 68, SP Naylor 66, PJ Pritchard 52) v Wiltshire 32-0

Dalmiya and Zia to meet in Dubai

Jagmohan Dalmiya, chief of the Indian cricket board, and Tauqir Zia, his Pakistani counterpart, will meet in Dubai early next month in an attempt to resolve the impasse arising out of the Indian government’s refusal to sanction bilateral ties. Both will be in Dubai to attend the Asian Cricket Foundation session on May 3.In keeping with their policy of not allowing bilateral series, the Indian government had declined permission for the team to tour Pakistan for a Test series. Pakistan responded by pulling out of the six-nation Asia Cup, to be held in Sri Lanka from August 10 to 28.Zia admitted to , a Kolkata-based newspaper, that India’s refusal to play in Pakistan was a primary reason in Pakistan pulling out of the Asia Cup. “Look, that’s been the top, but not the sole, consideration. There have been a series of events.”Zia was clearly irked by India’s decision to play a three-nation tournament in Bangladesh, when they should have been touring Pakistan.”Even though India should have visited us after the World Cup, the Board of Control for Cricket in India made the Bangladesh commitment well over a year ago. How do you expect us to react? What do I tell people in Pakistan?”It was on the understanding that India would play Pakistan in a Test series, even if that be on neutral territory, that we agreed to forego our chance of hosting the Asia Cup. But, when even that is not materialising, why should Pakistan play at all? After all, it’s known that India’s no to a bilateral series is hurting the Pakistan Cricket Board.”The ACC [Asian Cricket Council] has no future. It can’t unless India and Pakistan join hands.”A source from the Indian board indicated that a compromise could still be worked out, but with the Indian government maintaining its tough stand, it’s difficult to see how.

Media invitation to launch of West Indies World Cup campaign

The West Indies will herald its hosting of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2007 with a Caribbean-style event on March 9 in Johannesburg.South African and international journalists and cricket officials, tour operators and other influential persons will be invited to get a taste of what the Caribbean has to offer the world in 2007.The event which is being hosted at a private venue by the Windies World Cup 2007 delegation now in South Africa is made possible through the support of a number of companies as well as cultural and tourism entities in the region. Video extracts of the event will be shown internationally to build awareness of the West Indies’ hosting of the next World Cup.During the party top Caribbean band, Square One will take the invitees on a musical journey throughout the region performing popular music from the various countries. Invitees will also get an introduction by video to the beauty of the Caribbean and the special experience of watching cricket “The Windies Way”.Elegant Hotels, Barbados will also be sending one of its chefs, Athlone Mc Collin to prepare an authentic Caribbean meal for guests to enjoy.WWC 2007 CEO and Head of the delegation, Chris Dehring addressing the purpose of the event party noted : “This event is our first invitation to the ICC Cricket World Cup 2007 and presents an exciting opportunity for international media and others to get a preview of what the Caribbean has to offer.”WHERE: SAINTS ENTERTAINMENT COMPLEX, CLOISTERS SHOPPING CENTRE, CNR 9th AVENUE & RIVONIA, JOHANNESBURG.WHEN: SUNDAY, 9 MARCH, 7.00-10.00 PMRSVP TO : Poppy Rangwaga on 011 888 7988 email: [email protected] ARE LIMITED AND RSVPS ARE REQUIRED TO GUARANTEE PLACES.

Fairbrother signs new contract for Lancashire

Lancashire have announced that 39 year-old left-handed batsman Neil Fairbrother has signed a new contract that will keep him playing for the club for at least one more season.Fairbrother made his debut for Lancashire in 1982. He was capped in 1985 and, two years later, made the first of his ten Tests for England. However, it was as a one-day player that he made his international mark with 75 appearances, the last of which came in the 1999 World Cup against India at Edgbaston. He averaged a shade under 40 in one-day internationals.Last season he scored his 20,000th first-class run, and can boast an average of over 40 at this level. In 1990 he scored 366 against Surrey at the Oval – the third highest score ever in championship cricket. He was appointed captain of Lancashire for the 1992 season, but resigned from the post in 1993.Mike Watkinson, the cricket manager at Old Trafford said: "I enjoyed being a team-mate of Neil’s for many years and I am looking forward to him making many more significant contributions to the side next summer."Fairbrother, who was named after his mother’s favourite cricketer Neil Harvey, commented: "I am enjoying my cricket as much as ever and am looking forward tremendously to working with the new cricket management team under Mike Watkinson."

Problems for Bangladesh are not all on the field

With all the attention of politicians currently centred on Zimbabwe and the ICC poised to examine security aspects of staging World Cup matches there and in Kenya, another serious instance of politics interfering with cricket has come to light. The headlines might have been focused on the unacceptable aspects of the Mugabe regime in Zimbabwe, but the situation in Bangladesh is, it seems, little better.President Robert Mugabe was at least invited to become patron of the Zimbabwe Cricket Union. Reports from Bangladesh suggest that the ruling coalition has overthrown the elected directors of the Bangladesh Cricket Board and installed their own cronies to run cricket in the country.The parallel changes in government and cricket administration are nothing new, especially in parts of Asia, but the system appears to have been taken to excess in Bangladesh. Ali Asghar is a member of parliament belonging to the Bangladesh Nationalist Party. He was nominated to the post of president of the BCB after the general elections in late 2001.Although he is the president, the Board itself is dominated by Arafat Rahman, who is the younger of the two sons of Prime Minister Begum Khaleda Zia. It is alleged that Koko, as Arafat Rahman is known, and his friends are instrumental in decision-making and running the Board. Ali Asghar apparently acts as a front man and seldom goes against the wishes of Koko, as he owes his political entity to the Prime Minister. It is also thought that he is involved in some significant business deals conducted on behalf of the Prime Minister’s two sons.Out of a board of 25 elected directors, it appears that only four are allowed to operate effectively. Apart from Arafat Rahman, there is a further member of parliament, the son of another and the brother of yet another. The other elected members are all forced to assume a passive role in the knowledge that those who have spoken out against this government intervention have either been threatened with repercussions or have actually become the victims of violence.Even so, three have gone to the courts in an attempt to restore democratic principles to Bangladeshi cricket, and have been punished for doing so. Further threats hang over them should they not withdraw their petition from the courts.Such threats should not be taken lightly in Bangladesh. There are reports of government-controlled terror tactics being unleashed on the opposition parties and free thinkers almost every day. Thousands have been arrested, among them university professors, journalists and intellectuals. A Reuters journalist and two other foreign journalists – a Briton and an Italian on assignment from Channel 4 – were jailed for allegedly "plotting against Bangladesh"Some 45 people have died at the hands of the army in the last three months, with the widely-held belief that they were victims of torture and other unexplained treatment. The government states that they all died of heart attacks.Among those currently being detained is the former president of the Bangladesh Cricket Board and a government minister himself in the previous administration, Saber Hossain Chowdhury. He has been detained twice in three months and is currently facing charges of treason for "lowering the image of Bangladesh in the world."Saber Chowdhury was largely instrumental in the campaign that resulted in the elevation of Bangladesh to Test status. He was a national hero at the time among the cricket-loving Bangladeshis, but his political activities have been used by the present government to erode that support.His "crime" was to research and publish allegations that extremist and fundamentalist Islamic militant groups are operating in Bangladesh and that they have close links with the present government. He was also accused of masterminding a series of terrorist outrages himself as a result of a telephone call with the arrested Reuters man.Quite obviously there are forces at large in Bangladesh that might not be acceptable to many observers, but whatever internal politics are involved is not the concern of the cricket community. The interference with the Bangladesh Cricket Board is.When similar tactics were applied to the Bangladesh Football Federation, FIFA stepped in and stripped Bangladesh of its membership with an ultimatum that the elected federation be reinstated or face a ban from international as well as club football. The government was humiliated and forced to return the administration of the BFF to the elected body.The same is not happening with cricket. The ICC has not yet taken similar steps and is unlikely to unless there is a formal complaint from those who feel there has been injustice. The policy is to accept any notified changes to a country’s board until such time as any alleged wrongdoing is brought to their attention, at which time there could be an ICC investigation.That allegation will come from a member of the Bangladesh Board, Mubasshar Hussain. Currently in England recovering from heart surgery, he says that he does not want to initiate any process now in case such action distracts the players in the national team. However, this former freedom fighter during the liberation war that resulted in independence from Pakistan will lodge that formal complaint once the World Cup campaign comes to an end.The situation for Saber Chowdhury is not as simple. Amnesty International has expressed anxiety at the way political prisoners like him are being held in Bangladesh. A spokesman for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London said, "We are concerned about reports from Bangladesh and we have made the point to the authorities there through our High Commission in Dhaka that we expect all detainees to be held according to international norms."There are plenty of examples in the world of injustice and the suspension of human and democratic rights. That does not make them acceptable to civilised society but they have to be accepted, however reluctantly. Nevertheless, cricket in Bangladesh has enough problems in coming to terms with its status as a Test nation. It would stand a better chance of succeeding on the field if problems off it were resolved.

Edge taken off Centurion match, says Pollock

South Africa captain Shaun Pollock acknowledged that what took place at SuperSport Park in Centurion on Friday was not Test cricket. And neither does he believe that it should be upgraded to full Test status at some future date."I don’t think that would be right," said Pollock "You need to know (that it is a Test match) before the start of the game."The fact that the match would not be recognised as a Test by the ICC "took the edge off", said Pollock. "You know that it’s not a fully-fledged Test. We were probably a little more relaxed than we would be before a real Test."On a measure of one to 10, Pollock said that the current contest was "just under where a Test should be". It was. Nevertheless, "good practice. We’ve got a tough tour of Australia coming up and I would think it would be good practice for India before they play England".He said that the Indian side clearly felt more strongly about the events of the past few days than the South Africans, but said that "from the South African public’s point of view, it’s good to have a game".

Christian leads Blues' recovery in national Under-19 Final

A late order recovery has helped New South Wales escape trouble on an engrossing opening day of the national Under-19 Championship Series Final against Queensland in Newcastle today. By stumps, the Blues had scrambled their way to a score of 8/210 after courting danger at several times during the day.All-rounder Daniel Christian (56*) was the key figure in the revival, joining with Brad Roworth (37), Gary Geise (22) and James Allsopp (12*) respectively in vital late stands that extricated the home team from a potentially grisly predicament.Four wickets had tumbled in the opening session, and another three fell between lunch and tea, to leave the Queenslanders well placed in their bid for three consecutive national titles.But Christian’s industry, at number eight in the order, stalled the charge.It wasn’t necessarily pretty cricket, and the final session in particular – which yielded a mere 45 runs in total – was dominated by maiden overs.Yet it was just what the doctor ordered for the locals after the Queenslanders had made a series of important early inroads.There had been nothing in the play at the start of the day to suggest New South Wales’ imminent decline as the Blues won the toss, batted first, and steadily made their way to a score of 29 without loss before a small but supportive local crowd.But, following the two-day game’s opening drinks break, the complexion of proceedings altered dramatically.It was fast bowler Nathan Rimmington (2/46), a key player in Queensland’s win in the corresponding game 12 months ago, who decisively wrested the initiative his team’s way.After a patient innings from Jarrad Burke (1), the New South Wales captain was defeated by a fine delivery which cut away marginally off the seam, edging a catch to Julian Nielsen at first slip. And then another major blow was landed from the very next ball as Mark Faraday (0) played around the line of a straight delivery to be bowled. Rimmington’s hat-trick attempt was averted but matters became no easier for the home team in the short term.Opener Jason Krezja (29) and middle order batsman Steve Karam (29) adopted a vigilant approach, shoring up the defences and trying to work singles wherever possible.The bowling remained highly disciplined, though, and it wasn’t long before right arm paceman Chris McCabe (1/19) was able to compound the Blues’ woes. After a long period of general inactivity on the scoreboard, the right armer extracted an outside edge from Krezja’s bat on the stroke of lunch to present a grateful Nielsen with another catch at slip.The loss of the in-form Krezja’s wicket drove a stake deeply through the heart of the Blues’ cause, given that it came just a day after he had showcased his talents with a brilliant double century against South Australia.Fast bowler John Loader (3/36) maintained the young Bulls’ momentum after the break by enticing Brett Eriksson (2) to brush a low leg side catch off the line of his hip to wicketkeeper Murray Bragg and then forcing Karam to outside edge a delivery of excellent length. The Blues, by this stage, were in a near-desperate predicament at 6/82.It was from there that the recovery took effect.Before falling to a catch at extra cover from off spinner Aaron Maynard (1/25), Roworth unfurled a suitably belligerent innings that featured one glorious six over square leg in the midst of a series of fine attacking strokes.Though Geise eventually became another Loader victim as he defended down the wrong line, he was another to resist the Queensland bowlers for a long period.And, all the while, Christian was adding to the visitors’ frustration too with a dogged mixture of jaw-jutting defiance and the occasionally aggressive shot.Queensland captain Craig Philipson tried a range of options in a bid to shift his increasingly stubborn opponents but found few ways through their defences. His task was also made more difficult by the fact that his pace bowlers had bowled close to their allotted quotas of 20 overs for the day by early in the final session.Elsewhere in Newcastle, all-rounder Cameron Viney (6/20) snared tournament-best bowling figures to help Tasmania skittle Western Australia for 123 in the battle for third place. Tasmania was 1/24 in its reply by stumps.Victoria, meanwhile, was at 4/93 in response to South Australia’s 175 in the contest for fourth place.And, after it was forced to make a late start as the result of a damp outfield, the Australian Capital Territory had reached a score of 9/233 by the close of play in its match against the Northern Territory.

Arnold to lead Sri Lanka 'A' against Pakistan

Russel Arnold will skipper a Sri Lanka A side against Pakistan in a one-daywarm-up at the P. Sara Oval on May 7.For Arnold, dropped from the national squad after a low scoring World Cup,the game will provide an opportunity to convince the selectors that he isready to return to international cricket.Dilhara Fernando, who is still recovering from a back injury, is alsoincluded in the 14-man squad, which includes several one-day specialistsvying for a place in the triangular series that starts on May 10.Sri Lanka ‘A’ squad:Avishka Gunawardana, Michael Vandort, Jehan Mubarak, Russel Arnold(captain), Tillakaratne Dilshan, Chamara Silva, Upul Chandana, KaushalyaWeeraratne, Dinusha Fernando, Dilhara Fernando, Anushka Polonowita, SahanWijeratne, Ranga Dias, Thilina Thushara.

Goa has good chance at victory

Overcoming their first-innings debacle, Goa surged back into the gamein their Ranji Trophy league match against Kerala at Panaji onWednesday.Having Kerala overnight at 6/2, Goa did not let up on the pressure.Barring C Prashanth Menon, who made 55 off 148 balls, and Ajay Kudva(44 off 120), none of the Kerala batsmen was allowed to convert astart into a significant score.Kerala were bowled out for 210, with Narayan Kambli taking 4-49 andAvinash Aware taking 5-67. At stumps on the third day, Goa were 33/0,chasing a fourth-innings total of 213 for victory.

Indian team request Agarkar as back-up

The Indian team management have requested that the Indian cricket board send fast bowler Ajit Agarkar to Sri Lanka as a back up option for the final Test in Colombo starting on Wednesday.When strike fast bowler Javagal Srinath pulled out of the tour after sustaining hand injury in the first Test in Galle the Indian selectors decided not to send a replacement even though India only had three full time fast bowlers in their 15-man squad.A lacklustre performance by right arm pace bowler Harvinder Singh in Kandy, though, appears to have forced a rethink as India try to win a Test series they looked destined to lose after the first two days of the second Test, which they eventually won by seven wickets.The 23-year-old Agarkar has already played in 10 Tests without notable success, taking just 24 wickets. Considered to be an allrounder, he has also failed with the bat, averaging just 8.26 and having been dismissed for a duck in eight out of his 16 Test innings thus far.Agarkar, a member of the one-day squad in the Sri Lanka during the Coca-Cola Cup earlier this month, is expected to arrive in Colombo on Sunday or Monday morning.

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