Museum to be built for Worrell

Sir Frank Worrell’s childhood home will become a museum now © The Cricketer International

The boyhood home of the late Sir Frank Worrell was torn down to make way for a museum for the West Indies cricket great.Bostonville, as the house was named, was demolished at the weekend after being in a state of disrepair for several years. It was built just outside the gate of the historic Empire Club in the suburb of Bank Hall, on the outskirts of Bridgetown.The government decided to tear down the house after it became a home for vagrants and drug dealers. The Ministry of Works was leading a project to rebuild the home into a tribute to Worrell, who died in 1967.”The centre will be restored as it was before to become a faithful reproduction of Bostonville,” ministry spokesman Lionel Weekes said yesterday. “It was necessary to demolish the old house which had become a litter-infested drug den after being abandoned since the early 1990s. We felt that the house could not be salvaged at all because it was structurally unsound.”Work on the new building will start soon, Weekes added, and will be a fitting tribute to the life and efforts of Worrell. It is expected that the new house will have a museum displaying some of Worrell’s memorabilia.Worrell, the first black captain of West Indies, played 51 Test matches from 1948 to 1963, averaging nearly 50. He was knighted in 1964. He was a senator in Jamaica when he died at age 42 of leukemia, and was buried at the Cave Hill campus of the University of the West Indies, outside Bridgetown.

Punjab sense big win

Punjab sensed a huge win after enforcing the follow-on on Sindh, later grabbing three more wickets in their second innings on the third day at the National Stadium in Karachi on Friday.Sindh, after making 340 in their first innings – which saw them being enforced the follow on — were looking to avoid an innings defeat after Punjab made a massive 576, were reeling on 118 for the loss of three wickets in their second innings. Punjab continued their dominance and showed good discipline in their bowling department, grabbing ten wickets in the day’s play.Resuming the third day’s play on 155 for 3, Sindh lost wickets at regular intervals after Khurram Manzoor, who added just seven to his overnight score of 75, got out to Sohail Tanvir’s bowling. Captain Faisal Iqbal (54), wicketkeeper Sarfraz Ahmed (66) and Fawad Alam (34) chipped in with good contributions but were unable to save their team from the follow-on. Left-arm spinner Babar Naeem, who took 4 for 64, was the pick of the bowlers while Sohail Tanvir, after his magnificent batting performance, took 3 for 72.Sindh were in trouble after they lost their topscorer from the first innings, Khurram Manzoor, with the score on 18. Faisal Athar, who didn’t get going in the first innings, started to blossom but was lbw by Bilal Khilji three short of his fifty. Sohail Tanvir got on the act once again as he took another important wicket, this time of Naumanullah, who scored just 6.**********Imran Farhat made a scintillating 157 for Habib Bank Limited (HBL) as they posted 393 in their first innings in reply to Khan Research Laboratories‘ (KRL) score of 374 on the third day of their four-day at the National Bank of Pakistan (NBP) Sports Complex Stadium in Karachi. By stumps, KRL reached 55 for 1.Resuming their overnight score of 204 for the loss of three wickets, the HBL batsmen dominated the proceedings early in the day. Farhat made his presence felt after being dropped out of the Pakistan World Cup squad and added 48 more to his overnight score of 109.He fell to Saeed Ajmal’s bowling who captured four wickets in the innings. His other victims were Taufeeq Umar (33), Hasan Raza (28) and Khaqan Arsal (26).Ashar Zaidi was the pick of the bowlers who also took four wickets giving away just 62 runs. Aftab Alam made a fifty (57) before falling to Abdur Rauf. Jafar Nazir took one wicket too when he showed Asim Kamal (43) way to pavilion.

Ticket sales double of previous World Cup – Dehring

Chris Dehring (left) expects that fans will attend the semi-finals of the World Cup being anxious to be part of a piece of history regardless of what side they support © AFP

Chris Dehring, the managing director of the World Cup, said that despite the perceived low turnout the revenue from ticket sales is already double of the total ticket sales worth US$ 10.5 million from the last World Cup in South Africa.”That’s already a creditable showing when you compare South Africa’s size, both in population and economy, with that of the West Indies,” Dehring told the Sunday Observer, a Jamaican newspaper.The average attendance, according to Dehring, of the three Super Eights games – England v Sri Lanka, Bangladesh v South Africa and Australia v England – just before the Ireland-New Zealand match was just under 10,000. “If we continue on this upward trend as expected, our average attendance will be comparable with the previous CWC in South Africa, which had an average attendance of around 10,000 persons per game”.An optimistic Dehring also said that the tournament would rebound from early exit of India and Pakistan. “As certain teams continue to excel we anticipate seeing more nationals from those countries.”Dehring added that 80 to 90 per cent of tickets for the semi-finals had been sold and that in his opinion they hadn’t been bought with particular teams in mind. “You’re always going to have fans who have tickets with the hope of supporting their team, but will always… be anxious to be there and be a part of history,” he said. He also explained that a review of the World Cup could not be carried until the tournament had finished as factors varied in each game.With sponsors putting a number of tickets back into the system, there are now more tickets available to the general public for the first semi-final on April 24 in Jamaica, said Pauline Nelson, the communication manager at the Jamaica Local Organising Committee. Approximately one thousand Category One tickets are available, as are a smaller number of Category Two and Three tickets.

Ken Gordon to meet with US's warring factions

Ken Gordon, the chief executive of the West Indies Cricket Board, has agreed to meet with the two sides battling for control of US cricket in a bid to find an end to the row which has seen the USA suspended from the ICC.The two factions – the USA Cricket Association, led by Gladstone Dainty, and the regional league presidents – have been asked to come together in Washington on the weekend of June 9-10.In a letter to all those concerned, Paul de Silva, the USACA secretary, wrote:”Mr. Gordon is of the view that an important first step would be to have a general airing of views from USACA membership so that there can be a clear understanding of whether problems exist.”Gordon and the WICB were asked to intervene by the ICC in March when the USA were suspended for the second time in as many years.The timing of the meeting is important as should a resolution be worked out then it will enable the WICB to report this to the ICC executive when it meets in London at the end of June. If all goes well, it is possible that the ICC executive might recommend that the suspension be revoked.

Chawla keen to find place in Test side

Chawla: ‘Bowling well is in my hands which I tried but wickets are something not up to you’ © Getty Images

Piyush Chawla, the 18-year old legspinner, says he sees a bigger role for himself in the one-day internationals following Anil Kumble’s exit from the 50-overs game but he is keen to cement his place in the Test team too.”I think [with Kumble’s retirement] I will get to play a lot of that [ODIs], but I am aiming for a permanent position in both the teams,” Chawla said.Chawla said he was not overawed by bowling to the likes of Jacques Kallis and Herschelle Gibbs. “They are great players but not bigger than Tendulkar,” said Chawla.Chawla says he has become a more confident bowler after dismissing Sachin Tendulkar in domestic cricket. “In domestic cricket, I have got Sachin Tendulkar out. If I can get his wicket, I can dismiss any batsman in the world.” Chawla had bowled Tendulkar with a googly in the Challenger Trophy event at the start of the last season.Looking back at the tour of Ireland, Chawla wished he had taken more wickets. “I am happy but not satisfied. I wanted to take more wickets,” Chawla told the . “I bowled well and created chances, I am happy with my bowling but didn’t get wickets. Bowling well is in my hands which I tried but wickets are something not up to you. It has been a good tour and a great experience as I got a chance to be on the field with the seniors of the team

'New dawn for West Indies cricket'

Outgoing West Indies Cricket Board president Ken Gordon last night gave his final address to the Board of Directors meeting at Hilton Trinidad, Port of Spain. In his speech, Gordon sought to outline the challenges he faced and the achievements that were made, and which could now serve as a road map for his successors.

Ken Gordon: “The WICB can look forward to being clear of all major debt for the first time in more than a decade and operating in a healthy financial environment” © Getty Images

One of the major commitments I made at the time that I assumed the Presidency of the West Indies Board was that there would be full transparency in the manner in which the Board conducted its affairs…We are pleased to take that promise of transparency to a new level with a resumption of the West Indian Cricket Board’s Annual Report. This will hereafter be done on an annual basis. The consolidated accounts for the years 2004/2005 and 2005/2006 are both contained in this Report. They tell a dismal story. But they represent the recent history of the organisation, not its current financial realities.The significant turn around of the WICB commenced during the second half of the 2005/2006 financial year and will be fully captured when the accounts for the current financial year, September 2006-August 2007, are published. Our focus in this report will therefore be on the major activities, including management accounts, of the current financial year and the foundation which has been put in place for the future.The process of transforming the WICB into a result-driven organisation has begun. At the beginning of my term I asked to be judged on the basis of results and now as I depart, this statement will report on what has been achieved and the structures, which have been in place for the development of West Indies cricket.1. Cricket: The performance of our team on the field has been for the most part disappointing. We have changed captains, altered selectors, lost one of the best batsmen the world has seen, had our coach depart prematurely, appointed a cricket committee and made innumerable adjustments to our team, but the results continue to be up and down and far more often down. With some exceptions, we remain a tragedy of unfulfilled potential. There were moments before the World Cup when we dared to dream of winning it. More recently there was the outstanding performance of the team in winning the ODI series in England. Hopefully, that may represent a new beginning, but the evidence suggests that with the best of intentions we have been tinkering for too long with a problem that requires a fundamental change of culture and commitment. A change that will impose discipline as a matter of course and make people accountable for their behaviour.Our team lacks the toughness, mental and physical, of professional sustainability. At a time when our players are amongst the best paid in the game, we hear complaints that a “curfew is too restrictive”, “training standards are too vigorous”, “the fellas need a break”. All this while we remain at the lower end of the international scale and the leading teams conform to the demands of today’s professional cricket as a matter of course.

Our team lacks the toughness, mental and physical, of professional sustainability. At a time when our players are amongst the best paid in the game, we hear complaints that a “curfew is too restrictive”, “training standards are too vigorous”, “the fellas need a break”.

Our performance in the World Cup was our moment of truth. Now we must acknowledge the failure of not only our cricketers, but even more pointedly the failure of those of us who have had the responsibility to do the things we have not done.The other fundamental objective to which I committed myself at the beginning of my term was to pull together a foundation from which West Indies cricket could be rebuilt. Too many things flowed in different directions. Cricket was and still is all over the place and because of the intense emotion it generates in our six million-plus people whatever goes wrong is fed into a media circus. Those with agendas feed this and there is little breathing space to take considered coordinated action when addressing one or other of the myriad problems which occur daily.But the truth is that it is impossible to do so when you are also insolvent and kept alive only by the good will of your debtors. You live in a state of firefighting rather than managing effectively. Clearly then the underlying problem in the belly of it all was the finances of the WICB. And that had to be the first order of transformation, for without it nothing else was possible.2. Finance: The parlous state of WICB’s finances was accelerated on its downward slide with the introduction of the Future Tours Programme.The past ten years have been a building financial disaster. When our administration took office in August 2005, the WICB was bankrupt. That is a simple statement of fact. We were unable to pay our bills, lines of credit had dried up, we had suffered a loss of US$6.5 million the previous year and there was in addition a consolidated loss built up over the preceding years of US$15 million. After two frequently unpleasant years the situation has been fundamentally altered: Our credit is good, we made a profit of US$1.5 million at the end of 12 months (Sept 05-Sept 06), an improvement over the previous year of US$8 million, and we are on target for the current financial year with a small profit. This during a year when there were no “at home” games and therefore a notoriously difficult financial period. Also, assisted by the returns from the World Cup we have discharged our liabilities and subject to final audit we expect our consolidated loss of US$15 million to be virtually discharged.It is important to emphasise that the World Cup assisted. It was not responsible for the turn around which had commenced one year earlier with an improvement of US$8 million in our performance between 2005-2006 and the previous year. The WICB can therefore look forward to being clear of all major debt for the first time in more than a decade and operating in a healthy financial environment.3. The World Cup: Before I comment on the structure and changes that must prepare the foundation we need for our cricket, let us look at the World Cup as the major project of the WICB calendar. This event has been heavily criticised for its rigidity, high prices, being too up market, not delivering opportunity to the small man, and requiring too heavy an investment. Some of the criticisms are not without merit. We must acknowledge that there were weaknesses which might have been addressed differently and from which we must learn for future planning of mega events. I will not explain the circumstances which led to these problems, for this is not a World Cup Report. But it is necessary to put these criticisms into perspective. Let us therefore quickly look at some of the achievements of the World Cup:- On time delivery of 12 world-class stadiums and 22 practice grounds and facilities.- The skills development benefit from producing one of the largest events in the world, which has never before been attempted across nine sovereign states and which many thought was impossible.- The recruitment, training and outstanding performance of 4,300 volunteers- Training and certification of over 3,000 security personnel across the region delivering an incident-free match day operation- Global execution of the largest ticketed event in Caribbean history with almost flawless distribution of 672,000 tickets.- The movement of 16 teams and officials with “plane side pick up” throughout the region over 57 days with a 90 per cent on time record for all flights.- Moving 7,000 pieces of baggage across the region without losing one.- The management of over 9,000 men and women across the region- Delivery to cricket Boards a sum expected to be in excess of US$6 million for cricket development.- Delivering to LOCs a benefit of some US$32 million in ticket sales.Earning an estimated profit of US$59 million from the project as compared to South Africa’s US$27.2 million in 2005 and England’s US$22.3 million in 1999. Further, the benefits of destination exposure simply cannot be quantified, neither can the benefit to sport, if we manage our stadiums right.Much can be added, but what has been said makes the point. Our World Cup was much more than a learning experience. The WICB fought to get it. We won it, managed it and we delivered the approximate results we said we would. This was corporate achievement at its best and of which we can all be proud. I thank our CWC Board, CEO Chris Dehring and his able staff for their outstanding performance.

The Academy will not only train and develop, it will give cricket a home. The debates on issues need no longer be conducted as a knee jerk reaction in the public gaze. When former West Indies Test players can be programmed to meet systematically with current younger players, this lifts the level of communication, assists understanding and tends to shift us all closer to the same page.

4. The Academy: Now I turn to the foundation we must put in place. Over the past two decades all the major cricketing nations of the world, other than the West Indies, have established cricket academies. That is where they work on developing the whole cricketer: the player, his mind and the man the type of development we have been talking about for 22 years, according to Clive Lloyd. It is long overdue that we broaden the horizons of our players and lift them above learning on the job.Now finally it is going to happen. The Academy will operate on the basis of a hub, with five spokes. The hub will be in Barbados and it is proposed that the spokes be in Jamaica, Leewards, Windwards, Trinidad and Tobago and Guyana.The University of the West Indies and the WICB have already signed a MOU which makes the facilities at the 3Ws ground in Barbados available to the WICB. Similar assurances have been given by the governments of Antigua and Barbuda for the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium and with the Trinidad and Tobago government for the Brian Lara Stadium. We are pleased to advise that a Caribbean company has now agreed in principle to the sponsorship of the Barbados hub for the first five years and this is likely to be confirmed in a matter of days. We also hope to be in a position to shortly announce the sponsors of the spokes in the other five countries.The Academy will not only train and develop, it will give cricket a home. The debates on issues need no longer be conducted as a knee jerk reaction in the public gaze. When former West Indies Test players can be programmed to meet systematically with current younger players, this lifts the level of communication, assists understanding and tends to shift us all closer to the same page. Less tangible, perhaps, but in the longer term an unquantifiable benefit.A project which has been talked about for more than a decade will now ensure the ongoing viability of the Academy. The Governments of Caricom have collectively made a commitment to assist in its financing. They have agreed to make a percentage of the funds from a Caribbean Superball Lottery available for this purpose. The Trinidad and Tobago government, which will not be participating in the lottery for policy reasons, has made a commitment to provide an annual sum via a Trust Fund or otherwise, equivalent to what would have been earned had they participated. Finally therefore, Caribbean people will have the long awaited opportunity to demonstrate their support for Cricket by participating in the lottery. We expect their response to be loud and tangible.Professor Beckles of UWI, who has done an excellent job in developing the 3Ws Centre of Excellence in Barbados, has been appointed Chairman of the Committee responsible for implementation and will shortly be meeting the media to outline the details of the Academy Structure. The sum expected from the lottery is US$6 million per annum and the start-up date to which Caricom Governments have committed is October 1, 2007.5. Restructuring: We undertook a major restructuring of the WICB management team which took longer than anticipated. Nonetheless, this exercise contributed significantly to the success of our cost reduction efforts and is now near completion with the recent appointment of an experienced CEO heading our team. Mr Bruce Aanensen has come in to face a strong headwind with many internal distractions. Even so he has made a good start and I have every confidence in his ability to get the job done.6. WICB/WIPA: Our relationship with WIPA continues to be a matter for concern. The arbitration process has assisted in that strikes have been avoided. But communication between the two organisations remains adversarial. There are reasons for this which I will not address in this report. But I recommend to the new administration that this remains at the top of the list of priorities.

We admire the Stanford initiative and we are happy to hear that Mr Stanford is having fun, but however attractive the short-term benefits, these must fit in the overall plan for rebuilding West Indies cricket, not the other way round.

7. Stanford 20/20: We continue to hope that we may find common ground with Mr Stanford. We have done everything possible to do so and accommodate his requests but our overriding concern must be the growth and development of West Indies Cricket and this is not limited to a four- or five-year cycle. Neither can it be restricted to 20/20 cricket. It is unfortunate that the position of the WICB has from time to time been misrepresented in the media, so it may be helpful to restate our position.We have from day one sought whatever approvals were requested of us on behalf of the Stanford organisation from our international allies on the ICC Board. Where these were not forthcoming it was not from lack of effort on our part.Of course there is an inescapable reality in all this which is that Mr Stanford is a businessman. Whatever his desire to assist West Indies cricket this cannot be expected to occur without concern for a return on his investment. He has frankly acknowledged this. But marketing strategies, important as they are, can never be more important than the right development plan and scheduling for our teams and this has to be our primary consideration.We support 20/20. We admire the Stanford initiative and we are happy to hear that Mr Stanford is having fun, but however attractive the short-term benefits, these must fit in the overall plan for rebuilding West Indies cricket, not the other way round. Once this is understood and remains the common objective of us both, there is no reason whatever why a satisfactory formula should not be found.8. Digicel Contract: This contract has been a source of concern and has not operated in our favour. It has now been renegotiated with more favourable results for WICB. We expect to earn approximately US$2.6 million more per annum as a consequence. Even more significantly we have been able to negotiate out of the contract the offending clauses which had been inherited and we have included a termination clause which had not previously existed. Perhaps it is necessary to add a further word particularly since its passage was only secured by the use of my casting vote as president, the only occasion on which I have done so in my two-year term.Our administration met this contract mired in controversy. There was ongoing conflict over various interpretations resulting in unfavorable consequences to the WICB which led to earning even less than was expected from the contract. This led to high level intervention and eventually a complete transformation of Digicel’s approach which resulted in the renegotiation to which I have referred. Now a completely new environment exists between Digicel and ourselves and they have committed to additional projects which have already commenced. We now have a contract which is vastly superior and one we can with appropriate notice end when it is in our interest to do so.

We have been able to negotiate out of the [Digicel] contract the offending clauses which had been inherited and we have included a termination clause which had not previously existed. Perhaps it is necessary to add a further word particularly since its passage was only secured by the use of my casting vote as president, the only occasion on which I have done so in my two-year term.

9. Business Plan: The ingredients for our business plan are now all in place. This will be one of the early tasks of our CEO and his team and should prove an invaluable guideline to plot the way forward.10: Governance: And finally I address the issue of the governance of West Indies cricket. We commenced a review of the governance of the WICB a little more than one year ago. It was intended initially to reduce the size of the board by having one representative, instead of the two who now sit from each regional Board. It was proposed to fill the six vacancies that would have been created with a mix of outstanding achievers from throughout the caribbean. Immediately before the meeting it became clear that this proposal would not have obtained the necessary support. Our options were therefore to continue as we were going or add brandy to the water. We chose the latter and increased the existing number of directors by three. These gentlemen have served us most ably and I publicly thank Sir Alister McIntyre, Dr Grenville Phillips and Mr Clive Lloyd for their important contributions.Now we have moved to the second phase of the Governance review: A small high-powered committee led by former Prime Minister of Jamaica, the Honourable PJ Patterson, has been appointed to undertake this exercise and to make appropriate recommendations. The other members are Sir Alister McIntyre and Dr Ian McDonald. This is probably the most important committee the WICB has ever appointed for its remit is to chart a course that will move the structure of WI cricket from its largely untouched colonial antecedence into the challenging new world of highly-competitive professional cricket.The preliminary report which was submitted to the WICB on Saturday July 14 speaks volumes for the manner in which they have approached their task. Their Report was warmly received by the board.The opening statement of their report is “West Indies cricket does not belong to the WICB; it belongs to the people of the West Indies”. A message that goes to the heart of the wider involvement in the decision-making process which is now required.The Patterson committee has promised its final report by September 15. Meanwhile, the interim report will be discussed at the levels of the regional boards and their comments will have the opportunity of shaping the final recommendations of the committee. I have requested Mr Patterson to make one or other members of his committee available to the regional boards when the matter is being discussed and he is agreeable to doing so.It is also important to add that as popular as it has become to be critical of the West Indies Cricket Board, the decision to appoint this committee was one which was freely taken by the board of the WICB and the board must be commended for this.Gentlemen, let me end by saying that it has been an honour to have served West Indies Cricket. We have not achieved the ultimate objective of turning around the performance of our team, which has been sliding for more than a decade, but then it was always more a hope than an expectation that this could be done in two years. We have neither the foundation, the facilities for preparation and certainly not the professional end product which is so much more evident in the other major cricketing nations. Even more fundamentally we have not had the money to do these things and have barely been able to survive. But now we have changed that. There is a new dawn, with new opportunity to rebuild West Indies cricket and we must move forward aggressively to build on what is now in place.We can take satisfaction in the knowledge that we have lifted our environment from bankruptcy to financial viability; that the challenge of the World Cup has been successfully met and we have delivered where so many expected us to fail; that our 22-year discussed Academy will now become a fact of life on September 14; that the governments of the caribbean continuing the unprecedented collaboration inspired by the World Cup are committed to a start-up date of October 1, 2007 for the Caribbean Lotto; that the controversial Digicel contract has been favourably revised: that the path for the future can be guided by a realistic business plan and that the long overdue examination of the structure of West Indies Cricket, which is perhaps the most fundamental initiative of them all, is fully under way.These are conditions precedent to any serious expectations that West Indies Cricket can be restored to its former glory. Unfortunately, without foundation and structure, many have behaved like crabs in a barrel, who fight because they do not know how to get out of the barrel. Now, hopefully, that will begin to change for we have a road map.So it has not been smooth sailing and there have been very difficult moments. I have no apologies for this, for our structure has outlived its usefulness with its limitations and qualitative shortcomings. It is a sad truth that it is virtually impossible to discuss any serious matter at board level without having this leaked to the media. On one occasion a sensitive decision was leaked and reproduced in the media while the meeting which took the decision was still in progress. At another level, one of our independent members was sufficiently moved recently to write to another director who was the source of some 14 emails sent over eight days to remind him that our role is to serve West Indies cricket rather than feed individual egos and that behaviour is all part of a deliberately disruptive pattern. Fortunately, it comes from a very small pocket of the board.So the governance/constitutional exercise now taking place is of critical importance and cannot be over emphasised for I am convinced that without changes to the structure in place everything else would have been in vain. The ultimate challenge then is one to which you the people who love cricket in the West Indies must respond.The WICB has opened the door for fundamental change, the Patterson Committee is in place to facilitate a new direction now, you must ensure that the process of consultation be widespread, constructive and successful.I say farewell. I thank PM Keith Mitchell of Grenada who, as chairman of the caricom prime ministerial sub-committee on cricket, has been of tremendous assistance in mobilising the support of Caribbean prime ministers. I thank so many of you on the board for your support. I thank the CEO and his team which I am confident will serve you well and wish the new President and his administration every success.”

Spinners put England in control

Scorecard

Tom Westley enjoys one of his four wickets as Pakistan collapse © Getty Images

England Under-19 took a huge stride towards claiming the first Test against Pakistan after making them follow-on at Scarborough. The spin duo of Tom Westley and Liam Dawson claimed Pakistan’s last eight wickets for 80 with only Umar Amin’s century offering major resistance.The England batsmen continued their strong start from the opening day with Adam Lyth and Ben Wright joining Alex Wakely with centuries and the pair added 228 for the third wicket. Lyth’s ton came off 109 balls, while Wright was more sedate taking 176.From 429 for 2, England’s innings fell away with their last eight wickets adding 103 as Pakistan’s bowlers finally made an impression on a flat pitch. Mohammad Aamer closed the innings in a hurry with three quick wickets.But any thoughts Pakistan had of making use of friendly batting conditions took an early blow when James Harris removed Ahmed Shahzad second ball. Amin settled in to play the anchor role and formed the best stand of the innings – 91 – alongside Taimur Ali (41) before Westley made the breakthrough with his offspin as Ali offered a return catch.Further resistance was virtually non-existent while Dawson and Westley wheeled away to impressive effect. The England players had expected their seamers to do more damage than Pakistan’s, but spin was the trump card. Amin was the last-man out, trapped in front by Westley, and although Pakistan survived seven overs in the follow-on a long battle lies ahead.

Barbados and Jamaica enter Under-19 finals

Barbados and Jamaica are into the finals of the West Indies Under-19 tournament but not without controversy. Confusion initially reigned over who would contest the final of the limited-overs series after both semi-finals were wrecked by torrential rain and strong winds in St Kitts.Guyana’s team management said that on the basis of the tournament’s playing conditions, they had qualified for the final because of their No. 1 seeding from the preceding three-day tournament.Barbados, meanwhile, assumed they too had missed out on a spot in the final, based on the playing conditions laid down for the tournament. However, Derek Nicholas, the West Indies Cricket Board’s operations officer, revealed that Barbados and Jamaica would contest the final, based on standings after the three-round preliminary campaign.Barbados finished top of the standings with ten points while Jamaica and Leeward Islands were joint second on eight. Guyana were fourth with six points.Jamaica, sent in by the Leewards in overcast conditions at Cayon, had reached 70 for 3 after 21 overs when rain and wind, associated with the passage of Hurricane Dean, swept across the ground bringing a swift end to the contest. With the pitch waterlogged along with most of the outfield, umpires Cornelius Sam and Rudolph Wattley had no choice but to call off play.Before the abandonment, Shacoya Thomas, unbeaten on 24, and Andre Creary, on 5, were leading a revival after Jamaica had slipped to 53 for 3.In the second semi-final at Conaree there was even less play in the game between Guyana and Barbados. Sent in by Barbados, Guyana reached 22 for 2 before adverse weather lashed the ground rendering conditions unfit for play. Umpires Steadroy Techeira and Troy Mills made an inspection at 1.15 pm before making their final decision.Earlier, play began 66 minutes late due to late preparation of the playing area occasioned by extremely windy conditions. Barbados started positively when fast bowler Diego Stuart bowled Chris Pattadin for 4 with the third ball of the match to leave Guyana on 6 for 1. When the rain finally came the pitch was left uncovered as the ground staff, like the players and spectators, rushed to safety indoors as the wind speed increased rapidly.

ICL recruits kept out from Bengal squad

The six Bengal players, who joined the Indian Cricket League recently, were today excluded from the 16-member state squad for the Moin-ud-Dowlah Gold Cup in Hyderabad next month.The players, who did not make the cut because of their association with the ICL, are former captain Deep Dasgupta, Abhishek Jhunjhunwala, Syed Akhlakh Ahmed, Shibsagar Singh, Subhojit Paul and Subhomoy Das.Laxmi Ratan Shukla, who opted out of the ICL four days after joining the league, and Sourasish Lahiri, were not included as they were injured.Manoj Tiwary, who has recovered from a shoulder injury, will lead the squad in the tourneySquad: Manoj Tiwary (capt), Ranadeb Bose (vc), Arindam Das, Rohan Gavaskar, Kamal Hossain Mondal, Sohom Ghosh, Priyankar Mukherjee, Arindam Ghosh, Anushtup Mazumdar, Shib Sankar Paul, Kirti Sarkar, Irish Sengupta, Ashok Dinda, Sourav Sarkar, Wriddhiman Saha and PS Bhattacharjee.

Sami fined for late arrival

Pakistan A fast bowler Mohammad Sami has been fined Rs105,000 for reporting late on Thursday and Friday during the ongoing Test match against Australia A at the Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore.Aaqib Javed, Pakistan A coach, said that Sami was handed a Rs5,000 fine on Thursday for joining the team 35 minutes late. However, on Friday, Sami reported almost an hour after the scheduled start time and was consequently fined Rs100,000 in keeping with the clause of the players’ central contract.

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