Flintoff backs Pietersen to perform in India

Fomer England captain Andrew Flintoff has said Kevin Pietersen will be intent to perform in India, after a difficult exile from the team

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Oct-2012Former England captain Andrew Flintoff has predicted a successful reintegration into the team for Kevin Pietersen, saying the batsman will draw strength from recent adversity when England tour India in November. Flintoff said Pietersen had a track record of responding to strife with good performances, and expected him to turn the misgivings from his exile from the team into runs for England.”When people get on Kevin’s case he comes out swinging and scores runs,” Flintoff told . “I think Alastair Cook might benefit from this. He might get KP at his best.”Pietersen was added to the squad to India, having missed the final Test and limited-overs leg of South Africa’s tour of England, as well as the World Twenty20, because of text messages he had sent to South Africa players criticising Andrew Strauss, who was captain at the time. Pietersen has since been accepted back into the team, after he, the ECB and England’s team leadership discussed their concerns behind closed doors.Pietersen first showed a tendency to be steeled rather than weakened by adversity in an ODI series in South Africa in 2005, when he made three hundreds and a 75 despite crowds in his former nation treating him with hostility. In August this year, he made 149 against South Africa at Headingley, just as his deteriorating relationship with the England team began to play out in the media.”When Kevin’s got a point to prove, he usually proves it with the bat,” Flintoff said. “We saw that when he came into the international game in South Africa and he just kept scoring hundreds. In his last innings, he got a hundred at Headingley and saved England.”Flintoff also said Pietersen was invaluable to England’s cause, and that efforts needed to be made to smooth over differences given his considerable ability. In April this year, Pietersen made 151 in Colombo to help end a five-Test away losing streak for England.”I think his qualities as a player outweigh everything. Like everyone else he needs a bit of encouragement,” Flintoff said. “When you are as good as he is, you need an arm round the shoulder and you need the backing of the team. He is different, but if you want Kevin the player, you have Kevin [the person as well]. If he starts scoring runs and England win, it will quickly be forgotten.”Flintoff expected Pietersen’s reintegration into the team to be more difficult for some of his team-mates. Graeme Swann and James Anderson were thought to have had issues with Pietersen, with Swann having criticised Pietersen’s captaincy in a book released last year. Swann, Anderson and Stuart Broad all denied being party to a parody Twitter account making fun of Pietersen.”I think Kev will be fine,” Flintoff said. “It might be a bit more uncomfortable for some of the others who have not been too kind in books, in paper reports and in interviews. Everyone’s got an ego. Maybe there are a few clashing in that dressing-room at the minute and they just need to put them to one side and carry on.”

Binny, Uthappa bring Karnataka back

A round-up of the second day of the Group B matches in the first round of Ranji Trophy

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Nov-2012
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File photo: Stuart Binny removed both the Baroda centurions to bring Karnataka back into the contest•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Riding on a Stuart Binny five-for, Karnataka made a roaring comeback against Baroda in Vadodara, bowling them out for 406 and then making a steady 148 for 2 in response. Baroda started the day with two overnight centurions at the crease, but Aditya Waghmode and Irfan Pathan could add only eight and 16 on the second day.Both the batsmen fell to Binny’s medium pace. This was Binny’s third five-wicket haul. The remaining batsmen couldn’t add meaningful partnerships, and the last six wickets fell for just 79 runs. Robin Uthappa and KB Pawan were cautious in response but added 112 for the first wicket. Utahppa played against his nature to stay unbeaten on just 67 in close to three hours.
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After being bowled out for 55, Haryana had a slightly better day where they made Vidarbha fight for their runs and wickets, but they still needed 47 runs to avoid an innings defeat and had seven wickets in hand. On a testing Lahli pitch, none of the Vidarbha batsmen reached a half-century, but they managed to put together enough partnerships to rack up a 150-run first-innings lead. Their last three wickets added 87.Wicketkeeper Nitin Saini and Rahul Dewan then provided Haryana with a 80-run opening stand, but Vidarbha struck back just before the first fifty of the match could be posted. Opening batsman and part-time bowler Faiz Fazal provided the breakthrough with Saini’s wicket, and Umesh Yadav then took two more before stumps to take his match tally to seven.
ScorecardDelhi were left searching for directions in Ghaziabad, one of its much-derided eastern outskirts. The match, packed to bursting with big Delhi names, is in danger of being snatched away by the journeymen of Uttar Pradesh. If medium-pacer Imtiaz Ahmed took out half the Delhi batting on day one of the Ranji Trophy, on day two, Mukul Dagar handled their bowling with the precise and heavy tread of a batsman determined to make his mark.It was a 196-run partnership for the second wicket between Dagar and Mohammad Kaif that ensured that if Delhi want points from this game, they will have to amp up the quality of their cricket so that it matches their reputations. For the better part of two days, the game has belonged to UP and its bling-less cricketers. Click here to read the full report.
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No play was possible on the second day in Cuttack. Overnight and morning rains meant play was called off even before noon.

Ranji spectators turned away in Bangalore

The first day of the Karnataka-Delhi Ranji Trophy match in Bangalore had spectators turned away, as security has been tightened around the Chinnaswamy Stadium in the lead-up to the India-Pakistan Twenty20

Kanishkaa Balachandran at the Chinnaswamy Stadium08-Dec-2012While domestic matches in India are not known to fill seats in stadiums in the bigger cities, the first day of the Karnataka-Delhi Ranji Trophy match in Bangalore actually had the few spectators who showed up turned away; security has been tightened around the Chinnaswamy Stadium in the lead-up to the Twenty20 between India and Pakistan on December 25.A top Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) told ESPNcricinfo that the stadium has been handed over to the police, who have the final say on letting spectators in. He added that it is possible for a spectator to watch the Ranji Trophy game in select stands, but will have to furnish personal information to convince the security team. It will also help if the spectator is a member of the adjoining KSCA club or can get authorised by a member.The issue came to light when a fan, posting on ESPNcricinfo’s Ranji Trophy blog, said he was not allowed entry. The ongoing match, against Delhi, will be the only Karnataka game affected by these security arrangements, as they play their next two home games in Mysore and Hubli.Such security arrangements are likely to be employed in Delhi too, and so their next home Ranji game, from December 15, will probably not be played at the Feroz Shah Kotla which is the venue for the final India-Pakistan ODI on January 6.

Batsmen need to take control – Mahela

Before the tour, Sri Lanka’s bowling appeared to be the weakness. But their batting collapses have left the bowlers with little to defend

Andrew Fernando02-Jan-2013Chief among Sri Lanka’s woes after the deflating loss in Melbourne has been the form of its top order, whose torrid two-month stretch in Tests culminated in a gutless 156 and 103 at the MCG. As the final Test approaches, the batting appears just as brittle as the severely depleted pace attack. Their opponents have seemingly sensed easy prey, and opted for four seamers on a track that has traditionally been the most suited to spin in Australia.Sri Lanka’s susceptibility to high-quality pace bowling was apparent even before they arrived down under, as they played out a drawn two-match series at home against New Zealand. Twice in their four innings there, Sri Lanka succumbed five wickets for less than 70 and were 102 for 4 in another. The only innings in which Sri Lanka crossed 50 unscathed was in their fourth innings chase of 92 in Galle, during which New Zealand’s best bowler did not take the field because of a niggling injury. In Australia, they have lost four wickets for less than 100 thrice.Before the tour, it was the inexperience of the visitor’s pace attack that had invited bleak assessments, but Sri Lanka’s batting failures have only compounded their torment, as they have been forced to defend meagre totals on pitches that have largely suited batting. The prospect of a spin-friendly SCG surface always presented the best chance for Sri Lanka to win their first Test in Australia, but the visiting batsmen must extend the game to the last two days for Rangana Herath’s left-arm spin to be effective, and they cannot afford the first-innings deficits that have seen them effectively relinquish any hopes of victory early in the match.There was a time where Sri Lanka’s modus operandi in home Tests was to bat first, bat big and then unleash the spinners on the opposition on a wearing pitch, and despite his batsmen’s recent form, that is the blueprint Mahela Jayawardene still hopes to follow in Sydney.”The best way that we can win a Test match is to create a situation for Rangana on a slow turner,” he said. “We have to make sure that until the fourth or fifth day, we execute a good game plan and we stay in the game.”The last two or three Tests have been a bit of a blip, but our strong point is our batting. That’s where our experience lies and that’s where we’ve controlled a lot of Test matches. We need to get that control back, whether it’s with the mental side of it or the technical side, it’s something that we need to address.”Shortcomings in both technique and temperament led to the collapses in Melbourne, with several batsmen out playing injudicious strokes in the first innings, while others struggled to handle the bounce and pace in Melbourne. Sri Lanka opted to train only twice in the five days between the matches, not wanting to risk further injury, but Jayawardene said his side had taken the time off to assess their weaknesses and regroup mentally.”To try and get over that Test match [MCG Test] was the initial thing. It is pretty hard to shake off a loss like that, but I think it’s also about individuals taking responsibility and knowing what they have to do. If you really sit down and look at what we’ve achieved through this series, it’s not that hard to say, ‘No we haven’t done enough,’ and that we need to really stand up and be counted. It has to come from within themselves as well.”Teams do go through things like that and it happened to us at the Centurion. When we were in South Africa we lost in two and a half days and we bounced back to win the next Test. What we saw in Melbourne was that Australia had different gameplans against different players. The guys have to realise what they need to do in those situations. We’ve spoken about that.”Among the top order batsmen yet to make a significant score in the series is opener Dimuth Karunaratne, who will retain his place for the third Test. Karunaratne, 24, impressed the selectors with an unbeaten run-a-ball 60 in his first Test, but his highest score in four innings since has been 30. In Melbourne, his eagerness to take a tight second run began the collapse that saw them last less than 25 overs, but Jayawardene urged patience with the batsman, whom he hoped would justify his selection.”When you have a run out sometimes you feel bad. The circumstance is that it was Dimuth in his second or third Test match and he probably had a bit more energy flowing in his veins because he’s that kind of guy. When you make those kinds of mistakes, the guys will learn quickly. I personally feel that’s a good investment for us for the future.”We made a conscious call that Dimuth was going to be the second opener in this series, and the selectors backed it and said he’d get a good run whatever happens. That’s the way to go about it in Test cricket. You need to give younger guys enough opportunities. You need to make them feel comfortable. If you can remember, Marvan [Atapattu] went through five or six ducks in his career and he came back and delivered for Sri Lanka.”

Time running out for India openers

The third ODI between India and Pakistan is critical for India’s struggling openers Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir to revive selectors’ faith in them

Amol Karhadkar05-Jan-2013The result of India’s match against Pakistan at the Kotla maybe inconsequential in the context of the series, but the match is critical for India’s struggling openers Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir to revive selectors’ faith in them ahead of the upcoming series against England.The national selection panel is set to be convened at the end of the match for selecting the squad for the five-match ODI series against England, which begins in Rajkot on January 11. And with both Sehwag and Gambhir repeatedly failing to make sizeable contributions in the shorter format, don’t be surprised if one of them – if not both – faces the axe at least for the initial phase of the England ODIs.Since his epic 219 against West Indies in December 2011, Sehwag has had a forgettable run with the bat in the 50-over format. He has been able to score just 248 runs in 11 innings since the record knock in Indore. His solitary fifty during this period came during the series in Sri Lanka last July-August. As a result, time is running out for the veteran player.”The only way he can save himself is by coming up with a big knock tomorrow. Otherwise, it will be difficult for him to be a part of the squad thereafter,” a source close to the selection panel said.It is also uncertain if the selectors will announce the squad for all five ODIs or a part of the series. With the team in dire straits, it won’t be surprising if Sunday will see the squad for the first two or three ODIs being named.What is almost certain though is the entry of Cheteshwar Pujara into the one-day fold. The Saurashtra batsman has more than established himself as a Test No. 3. But with his ability to find gaps at will, Pujara is set to be included in the one-day squad for the first time. It remains to be seen if he replaces either of the established openers or Mumbai batsman Rohit Sharma, who yet again failed to translate his form in domestic cricket on to the international stage.

Watson open to middle-order role

Shane Watson is confident he has the technique to handle a middle-order position on spinning Indian pitches if he is not restored to his preferred opening position on the upcoming Test tour

Brydon Coverdale09-Feb-2013Shane Watson is confident he has the technique to handle a middle-order position on spinning Indian pitches if he is not restored to his preferred opening position on the upcoming Test tour. Watson’s new role as a non-bowling specialist batsman will provide the Australian brains trust with its biggest conundrum in the lead-up to the first Test in Chennai as they decide not only where to bat Watson, but also how to balance the team’s make-up without him as a fifth bowling option.Since his decision to temporarily give up bowling in an attempt to avoid injury, Watson has spoken of his desire to return to the top of the Test order instead of filling the No.4 role he occupied against Sri Lanka. One of the reasons Watson was moved down the order last year was to allow him to juggle his batting and bowling responsibilities more easily; now that is not a consideration, although looking ahead to the Ashes tour when he wants to bowl again, it will be relevant once more.However, Watson’s impressive form against the new ball in the past two one-day internationals against West Indies has been a timely reminder of what he can do against fast men and a hard ball, even if it is in the 50-over game. Over the next week, Michael Clarke and his fellow selectors must decide whether to reinstall Watson at the top of the order in India, which would mean splitting up one of the most successful Test opening partnerships of the past couple of years.Since Ed Cowan and David Warner came together in the Boxing Day Test against India in 2011, they have scored more runs as an opening pair than any other combination in the world, and their partnership average of 44.59 is the best of any pairing who have opened in at least 10 innings together. By comparison, in the same time Graeme Smith and Alviro Petersen have averaged partnerships of 38.28 and Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir’s figure is 32.82.”It certainly is different batting at No.4, 5 or 6 compared to opening,” Watson said. “You do know that batting through the middle order you’re going to be coming in against spin the majority of the time and also reverse swing, which provides big challenges. I know that’s part of what it would be to bat in the middle order but I also know that I’ve got the game to be able to negate that.”If that’s what the selectors and the captain and coach see as the best opportunity for me to score runs then I’m certainly willing to take that on. I’ve played a lot of cricket in India now in all forms of the game so I suppose I am one of the more experienced guys to be able to take on the conditions and take on the Indian bowlers. I’ve played a lot of cricket against the majority of their bowlers so I know them very well and I know the conditions.”Watson is one of only four members of Australia’s squad who has played Test cricket in India, along with Clarke, Peter Siddle and Mitchell Johnson. In his first Test series there in 2008, Watson was a No.6 whose bowling, and especially his ability to reverse-swing the ball, was important. He averaged 24.48 with the bat on that trip. When he returned for a two-Test tour in 2010 he opened, averaged 67.75 and scored his second – and still most recent – Test century.”That is where I feel most comfortable, there’s no doubt about that,” Watson said of opening. “Even opening the batting over the last couple of nights … I love taking on the quick bowlers with the brand new ball and challenging myself against the best bowlers in the world. That’s what really gets me up and going. That certainly is the exciting thing about opening the batting.”I’m not here to put extra pressure on Ed at all, because I know he wants to be doing as good a job as he possibly can. All I’ve said is the reasons why I got moved down the order was mainly to do with my bowling, to be able to get the balance exactly right. But moving forward I really don’t want my bowling to get in the way of my batting.”Cowan scored his first Test century during the home summer against South Africa but despite reaching fifty two more times, he wasn’t able to post another big score. But he has consistently shown that he can take the shine off the new ball and occupy time at the crease, an important role for a Test opener, and the Cowan-Warner partnership was solid during the summer.Cowan was part of the advance group that has already arrived in India and will take part in a two-day tour match in Chennai, before the rest of the squad lands in time for a second warm-up game, a three-day contest. Watson said it was disappointing that the squad was unable to travel as one group due to the crossover with the one-day series against West Indies, but he said a jam-packed schedule meant it could be no other way.”To think that there are different stages of the group going over, it’s not a whole team going across to make our mark straight up, makes it very disappointing,” Watson said. “But that’s just the way the schedules have worked. You’ve just got to make the most of the situation. It’s not ideal but it is part and parcel now of trying to fit all the amount of cricket in that there is at the moment.”For me, I just want to play. There’s no doubt you want to represent your country and I’ve missed quite a bit of the summer. The most exciting thing about representing your country is playing in front of your home fans, so for me I certainly would prefer to be playing here because that’s what really excites me … I’m going to be lucky enough to have a three-day tour match [in India] and I think that will be a perfect lead-in.”

Surrey bring in Ponting as Smith cover

Surrey have pulled off a second major signing by securing the services of Ricky Ponting for June and July this season.

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Feb-2013Surrey have pulled off a second major signing by securing the services of Ricky Ponting for June and July this season.Ponting, who retired from international cricket after the third Test against South Africa in Perth in December, will fill in as the county’s overseas player while Graeme Smith, who signed a three-year deal as Surrey’s new captain, is playing in the Champions Trophy for South Africa.The signing of one of the best batsman to have ever played the game is testament to the pulling power of Surrey, who signed another world great, Smith, to lead their revival. Ponting turned down the chance to play for Somerset last season, despite a gap in the international calendar.Ponting, 38, could play in four County Championship matches – against Warwickshire, Sussex, Yorkshire and Nottinghamshire – and two Yorkshire Bank 40 League matches – against Essex and Lancashire – providing a highlight for the 75th anniversary of the Guildford festival.He will also play in the group stages of the Friends Life t20 where a mouth-watering line up of Ponting, Smith and Kevin Pietersen will feature in probably the most talented batting order ever assembled in the competition. Surrey will be hoping those three names are a guarantee not only of large attendances at The Oval but a reversal of their terrible performance in the competition last season where they finished bottom of the South group.Ponting, 38, continues to show his appetite for the game and has returned to play for his state side Tasmania. He scored an unbeaten 200 in his last first-class match against New South Wales.His career record is among the best of any batsman to have played the game: 13,378 Test runs at 51.85, 13,704 ODI runs at 42.03, 23,313 first-class runs at 55.50 – remarkable figures. Surrey will be hoping he replicates his impact of his previous stint in county cricket with Somerset in 2004. He averaged 99 from both three Championship matches and four one-day games, with three centuries.Ponting said he was “really excited” about the chance to play for Surrey. “I’d like to think I can contribute a significant amount to the club – on and off the field – and am looking forward to getting stuck in as soon as I arrive. They are a forward thinking and historic club and play at one of the greatest grounds in the world. It hasn’t been the friendliest place for me but now it will be my home for two months this summer.”Ponting has never made a century at The Oval and has a high score of 66 in his four Tests there. His best innings was 92 in his final ODI on the ground in 2010.Smith said Ponting was a great person to have involved with the club. “I was proud that they were looking at him. I have a lot of respect for Ricky. Hopefully both of us will be able to create some new philosophies at the club and hopefully we will have success there.”Surrey Team Director Chris Adams added: “We knew we would lose Graeme to the Champions Trophy in June. That given, we focused on recruiting the best possible replacement and, in Ricky Ponting, we have signed one of the greatest batsmen of the modern era.”This year, our young batsmen will enjoy a unique opportunity to learn from not just one but two of the greatest International players of the modern age.”Ponting becomes the latest very experienced cricketer to be brought in by Surrey. Jon Lewis, 37, was signed last season and for 2013, along with Smith, Vikram Solanki, the 36-year-old former Worcestershire batsman, and left-arm spinner Gary Keedy, 38, have both been signed to boost an otherwise young, inexperienced squad.

WI taught Zimbabwe a lesson – Taylor

Brendan Taylor, the Zimbabwe captain, has admitted his team were “taught a proper lesson” during their 2-0 Test series defeat against West Indies

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Mar-2013Brendan Taylor, the Zimbabwe captain, has admitted his team were “taught a proper lesson” during their 2-0 Test series defeat against West Indies. Both matches ended inside three days as the Zimbabwe batsmen, in particular, struggled to cope against a vastly more experienced West Indies side.Zimbabwe lost seven out of seven international fixtures on the tour – three ODIs, two T20s and two Tests – their first since a similarly disappointing trip to New Zealand last year. The defeat in Roseau was Alan Butcher’s last match as coach of Zimbabwe, with his contract up at the end of the month, and his replacement will have much work to do ahead of the visit of Bangladesh in April.”It’s been massively disappointing. We have been taught a proper lesson,” Taylor was quoted as saying by . “It hurts to be in this position but the West Indies were a far better side than us.”The seamers can hold their heads high and hopefully carry some momentum into the Bangladesh series but a lot of us need to go home and have a good think and then try to execute better in quiet a few areas. We can only learn from this, we are a side that will definitely try to rectify a few things.”The tour was a difficult one for Taylor personally, as he made just 123 runs from nine innings, with a top score of 39. Before Zimbabwe’s squad left for the Caribbean, Taylor had been critical of the decision to leave behind batting coach Grant Flower, bowling coach Heath Streak and fitness trainer Lorraine Chivandire and there is plenty for the support staff to work on ahead of the Tests against Bangladesh, the first of which begins on April 17.Zimbabwe only returned to the Test arena in 2011, after a six-year exile, beating Bangladesh in a one-off Test in Harare. The successor to Butcher, who guided Zimbabwe for the last three years, is expected to be one of Flower, assistant coach Stephen Mangongo or Andy Waller, a former international, and should be in place by the start of next month for Bangladesh’s return.

I'm still standing, says centurion Davies

Steven Davies provided a welcome reminder of his class with a first Championship century in almost a year.

George Dobell at The Oval19-Apr-2013
ScorecardSteven Davies passed 50 for the first time since the death of Tom Maynard•PA Photos

It had been, as Elton John might have said, a long, long time. But, after a grim year and a spell spent reflecting on his career options, Steven Davies provided a welcome reminder of his class with a first Championship century in almost a year.There would have been something rather pleasing in a 147 from a Steve Davies at any time – the snooker parallels are obvious – but in the context of this game, this was a return to form that will be celebrated far beyond Surrey.Like many of his team-mates, Davies was hit hard by the death of Tom Maynard. So horribly did he lose form after the incident that he was omitted from the side by the end of the season. After June 18, the day of the incident, he averaged just 15.40 in the Championship and he had not passed 50 since making a century, also against Somerset and also at The Oval, in May of last year. A player who had once appeared joyous and natural, often appeared careworn and crushed.He responded by taking some time away from the game during the off-season. Unlikely though it sounds, he accompanied Elton John on tour in Asia – they became friends when the singer sent champagne to The Oval following news that Davies had ‘come out’ as gay in early 2011 – and, slowly, recovered his love of the game.Here Davies provided a persuasive reminder of his extravagant gifts with a chanceless century. On a pitch that remains slow and against an attack that, on the whole, maintained its discipline, he timed the ball sweetly, but also showed abilities for which he is less well known: patience, shot selection and resilience. Playing noticeably straighter than he has previously, he helped wear down an honest Somerset attack before producing some of those familiar, dreamy caresses through the off side.”Elton is a good friend,” Davies told ESPNcricinfo “and going on tour with him was the break I needed. It took me away from the game, cleared my head and allowed me to return refreshed.”It felt good today. I’ve worked hard to be where I want to be with my game and we just concentrated on spending time at the crease on a flat wicket.”Yes,” he continued with a smile, “I suppose you could say that I’m still standing.”Less than a year ago, Davies was the man the England selectors called when Matt Prior was an injury doubt ahead of the third Test against West Indies at Edgbaston. Whether he remains England’s reserve Test wicketkeeper is debatable – Jonny Bairstow and Craig Kieswetter are among those who may have usurped him – but this was an innings that will have provided some assurance that he is back in the frame of mind to be considered.But while Davies will gain the headlines, the chanceless century by Rory Burns was just as important. Indeed, it was Burns who saw off the attack at its freshest and the new ball at its hardest and Burns who laid the platform for much of what followed.Burns is not a particularly eye-catching cricketer. He does not have Davies’ innate timing – not many do – or his range of stroke. But his judgement at which balls to play at and which to leave outside off stump is exceptional, while his ability to concentrate for long periods is most unusual in a 22-year-old in the modern game.His first 50 occupied 151 deliveries – 128 of them scoreless – but his second took only 77 more as Somerset’s attack began to flag just a little. Scoring primarily between mid on and square leg, he also cut well when appropriate and looked to have a sound defence. He will face tougher attacks on tougher pitches, but he looks to have the temperament and technique to go a long way in the game.Together the pair steered Surrey from the perilous position of 87 for 4 late on day two with a stand of 159 before Burns’ innings was ended by a catch down the leg side.It is testament to Somerset’s bowling, however, that Surrey had to be content with only two batting bonus points. They had scored just 290 when the 110th over of the innings was bowled with Steve Kirby, who delivered 33 overs and remains as enthusiastic as ever at the age of 35, and Alfonso Thomas, who gained more movement off the pitch than any of his Somerset colleagues and conceded under two an over, the pick of the bowlers. Only George Dockrell, who struggled with his length, was a disappointment though in mitigation, this pitch offered him little and aged just 20, such days are bound to occur.In general though, Somerset remained patient and tight on a desperately slow wicket. They won belated reward when Gary Wilson was drawn into nibbling at one he could have left, Gareth Batty’s enterprising innings ended when he missed an attempted flick across the line and Stuart Meaker prodded outside off stump. When Davies, slogging in search of quick runs, finally fell Surrey declared to leave Somerset a potentially awkward couple of overs.There are few demons in this pitch, though, and it will take some remarkable cricket to conjure victory for either side on the final day.

Bangladesh sneak home in last-ball finish

Bangladesh Under-19 fought off an extraordinary final over by Ramesh Mendis to win the third one-dayer by one wicket against Sri Lanka Under-19 in Mirpur

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Apr-2013
Scorecard Bangladesh Under-19 fought off an extraordinary final over by Ramesh Mendis to win the third one-dayer by one wicket against Sri Lanka Under-19 in Mirpur. The offspinner Mendis took three wickets, but Mustafizur Rahman hit the final ball for four to give the hosts a 2-1 lead in the five-match series.After conceding one run off the first ball, Mendis removed Nehaduzzaman, Rifat Pradhan and Jubair Hossain in the space of four deliveries to give his side a great chance to win. But it was still not enough for the visitors.The chase for Bangladesh was going properly when Joyraz Sheik and captain Mosaddek Hossain put together a stand of 126 for the fourth wicket. Joyraz made 74 off 95 balls while Mosaddek missed a hundred by two runs.Earlier, Sri Lanka posted 277 for 8 through half-centuries by Sadeera Samarawickrama who made 83 off 101 balls and Sandun Weerakkody who scored 65 off 61 balls, while for the hosts, legspinner Jubair took 3 for 60.