Cullinan and Thomas guilty of dissent

Daryll Cullinan, the Easterns captain, and Alfonso Thomas, the Northern Titans allrounder, have been found guilty of dissent during SuperSport Shield series match at SuperSport Park on Sunday.Cullinan was found guilty after questioning a number of umpires’ decisions on the first two days of the game. Thomas was similarly charged.The match has not been short of incident – it emerged that Pierre de Bruyn, the Eastern allrounder, had his bowling action reported by both umpires to the South African board as being suspect. de Bruyn has already been cleared twice by the board’s technical committee – most recently at the start of the 2003-04 season.

Loyalty or dollars? Symonds enters IPL debate

Andrew Symonds: “The bottom line is the money on offer in India is not going away and it may even get more and more tempting” © Getty Images
 

Andrew Symonds says the loyalty of Australia’s best players will be tested over the next couple of years as they weigh up representing their country with accepting huge payments to join Twenty20 competitions. Symonds said in his Sunday Mail column the baggy green was still the “jewel in Australian cricket’s crown”, but admitted the big money would be tempting.”The way things are heading loyalty is really going to become a major issue, particularly when you can make more money in six or eight weeks than what you can in a whole season,” Symonds said. “Loyalty versus money always makes for an interesting debate. Who wouldn’t be tempted to take a job offering more money for less work?”Symonds warned the game’s administrators to be careful about the “serious threat” caused by it being more financially rewarding to retire from Tests and ODIs and appear in the Indian Premier League or the Indian Cricket League. “They need to find a way to be able to work with the IPL so everyone’s available,” Symonds said. “Otherwise you’re going to have blokes retiring early or just saying: ‘Look, it’s not worth the heartache. I can earn more in a very short period of time.”Last Sunday Symonds was gagged by Cricket Australia over his column when the board felt the allrounder did not understand the complicated nature of the issues. Protecting sponsors is one of Cricket Australia’s main concerns, but other problems surround a rule where only two Australians can appear in overseas domestic teams.A decision is still to be made on whether Australia goes to Pakistan next month – the players are not keen to go and the trip isn’t mentioned in Symonds’ column – and if they are given permission to appear in the IPL the time is limited. The squad is due to depart on May 10 for the West Indies while the IPL runs until June.”Right now you’d have to be nervous if you’re a cricket administrator of any of the big cricket-playing countries,” Symonds said. “I’m talking the likes of Australia, South Africa and England.”The pressure’s on big time to really look after the players, especially at the peak and then coming down the back end of their careers. The bottom line is the money on offer in India is not going away and it may even get more and more tempting.”

Mithun Ali, Nadimuddin shine in tame draw

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Bangladesh Under-19 helped themselves to some batting practice as their three-day match against South Africa Under-19 meandered to a draw at Sedgars Park in Potchefstroom. After conceding a 140-run first-innings lead, the Bangladeshis reached 208 for 2, courtesy half-centuries from Mithun Ali and Nadimuddin, before the match was called off.Opener Rony Talukder hit a couple of boundaries before falling to medium-pacer Dwaine Pretorius. Nadimuddin then joined Ali and the two added 105 runs for the second wicket. Ali was the more aggressive one in the partnership, picking off eleven boundaries as he top scored with 80. After Ali’s dismissal, Nadimuddin and Nasir Hossain added an unbroken 73 runs as the South African bowlers were made to toil. Nadimuddin, who had fallen for nought in the first innings, redeemed himself with a sedate unbeaten 72.Earlier, the hosts resuming on 393 for 4, crumbled to 434 all out. Reeza Hendricks moved to 156 before being bowled by Dolar Mahmud, who was Bangladesh’s most successful bowler. Mahmud ended with five while Rubel Hossain took three as the last six South African wickets fell for 23.The three-day match is followed by a triangular one-day tournament, scheduled to start on Tuesday, that also features India U-19.

Tasmania recall Dawson after two-year absence

David Dawson finds himself back in favour with the selectors © Getty Images

Michael Dighton has been dumped from Tasmania’s Pura Cup side as the Tigers search for a way out of second-last spot. David Dawson, who has not played a state match since 2005-06, has been recalled to the top of the order.Tasmania, the defending champions, have only won one match this season and they have decided to shake up their regular opening partnership for the bottom-of-the-table clash against Queensland starting on Monday at the Gabba. Michael Di Venuto, who announced during the week that this would be his final summer with Tasmania, is set to partner Dawson.Dighton has averaged 20.50 from his six matches this campaign and has had the least productive season of all Tasmania’s specialist batsmen. Dawson was a standout in the Tasmania Second XI side this week, scoring 105 and 53 against the Western Australia Second XI in Hobart.Tasmania squad Michael Di Venuto, David Dawson, Travis Birt, George Bailey, Daniel Marsh (capt), Dane Anderson, Tim Paine (wk), Luke Butterworth, Jason Krejza, Brett Geeves, Chris Duval, Ben Hilfenhaus.

Parlane plays a lone hand for Wellington

Wellington 222 for 8 (Parlane 70*, Adams 4-37) v Auckland
ScorecardAn unbeaten 70 by Neal Parlane saved Wellington the blushes and carried them to a somewhat respectable 222 for 8 on the first day of the State Championship final at Eden Park in Auckland.Wellington won the toss and chose to bat, but were soon regretting that decision as Kerry Walmsley and Andre Adams, Auckland’s new-ball bowlers, reduced them to 15 for 3. One of those dismissed was Matthew Bell, Wellington’s captain, for just 10. Parlane steadied the innings, adding 65 for the fourth wicket with Jesse Ryder (30), and then putting together 54 with Chris Nevin, who contributed a quickfire 35. Wickets continued to fall at the other end, but Parlane kept going, consuming 158 balls for his knock, which included 11 fours.Adams was the most successful bowler for Auckland, taking 4 for 37, while Walmsley took 3 for 75.

I wouldn't play in Zimbabwe: Kirsten

POTCHEFSTROOM, South Africa, Feb 1 AAP – South African veteran Gary Kirsten has admitted he would refuse to play in Zimbabwe if his side was due to visit the strife-torn nation during the World Cup.Kirsten’s revelation comes on the back of reports of an Al-Qaeda cell planning to attack Westerners in Zimbabwe – and South Africa – if the US goes to war with Iraq.Kirsten, whose side is not drawn to play any matches in either Zimbabwe or another trouble spot, Kenya, told a charity function he believed there was a “security issue” around matches in Zimbabawe.The Australian Cricket Board and International Cricket Council (ICC) want Australia’s match on February 24 to go ahead at Bulawayo but they are constantly monitoring a potentially volatile situation.If players are thought to be at risk, Australia will withdraw.The safety of the team and officials is the only consideration. Political and moral questions over president Robert Mugabe’s rule will not come into it.New Zealand has already pulled out of its clash against Kenya after receiving information from independent security sources that terrorist activity was on the boil in Nairobi.”Politics should be left to the politicians,” said Kirsten.”But I would not play in Zimbabwe… there is a security issue.”A US Government report has detailed a plan by Tablik Ja’maat, an Al-Qaeda-linked group of militant extremists, to attack US targets in Zimbabwe if war was declared on Iraq.Other attacks would take place in Pakistan, Indonesia, Nigeria, Turkey, South Africa and Israel, according to the report.Meanwhile, ICC chief executive Malcolm Speed is trying to determine whether the New Zealand-Kenya game can be re-scheduled.If not, options for the Kiwis include taking the matter to an independent ICC committee of up to five members, appealing to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, or going to the ICC Cricket World Cup events technical committee.New Zealand is set to lose two valuable competition points from a game it would be almost certain to win but its reluctance to travel to a dangerous area is understandable after perilously close shaves with terrorist attacks in the past.A bomb killed 11 French engineers in a bus outside the New Zealand team’s hotel last year in Karachi, Pakistan. In 1987 in Sri Lanka, a bomb exploded in a nearby downtown Colombo bus depot. In 1992 in the same country, an assassination by car bombing, again near the team’s hotel, caused the immediate disintegration of the tour.Australia is scheduled to be in Bulawayo from February 21-25.

Australia need record to win

SYDNEY, Jan 5 AAP – Australia needs to break a record that has stood for more than a century if it is to beat England in the fifth Ashes Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground.By lunch on day four, England batsmen Michael Vaughan and Nasser Hussain had taken full advantage of Australia’s depleted bowling attack, leading their side to a 312-run lead with a record partnership of 189.At the break, the tourists were 3-313 with Vaughan unbeaten on 166.Australia took the new ball after 82 overs and finally struck four overs later when paceman Brett Lee had Hussain caught behind by Adam Gilchrist for 72 on the last delivery before the lunch break.The highest winning Ashes score at the SCG was Australia’s 4-276 to beat England by six wickets in 1898.Vaughan, who yesterday became only the seventh tourist to score three tons in an Australian summer after overcoming a duck in the first innings, resumed on 113 and hit 26 fours and a six on the way to his score.Hussain, who scored a handy 75 and shared England’s previous best third wicket stand against Australia at the SCG of 166 with Mark Butcher in the first innings, hit nine fours in his second knock.

Warne will be welcomed back as far as England is concerned

Shane Warne might be serving out a 12-month ban for using a banned diuretic, but his presence in the Australian team for the 2005 Ashes series is being keenly awaited in England. That’s the conclusion from a survey conducted by magazine.Seventy percent of respondents to the survey said Warne should be picked for Australia when he’s completed his 12-month ban. He might be the bane of English batsmen, but fans can’t wait to see the great leg-spinner back in action.John Stern, the editor of The Wisden Cricketer said, “People who love cricket want to see the big names and Warne is one of the greats. People will say [when] he’s served his ban, bring it on. Most English fans would love to see Warne play here again.”Not quite as many – 50 percent – believe England can win the series, with or without Warne, and slightly more than half would be happy if some on-field verbal conflicts were part of the entertainment.

Sri Lanka v England, 3rd Test, Colombo

Scorecard
Photo galleryDay 1
Bulletin – Honours even despite Flintoff’s fireworks
Verdict – Caught in two minds
Roving Reporter – Practising what he preaches
Day 2
Bulletin – Sri Lanka build towards domination
Verdict – A swing and a miss
News – Atapattu splits webbing of left hand
Quotes – ‘I assumed he was signalling to someone behind me’
Day 3
Bulletin – Samaraweera and Jayawardene increase England’s woes
Verdict – A red herring
Roving Reporter – Inflatable SantasDay 4
Bulletin – Murali and Fernando blow England away
Verdict – And the walls came tumbling down
Tillakaratne quotes – ‘We played positively’
Vaughan quotes – ‘Murali beat us fair and square’

Strauss and Trescothick hundreds put England ahead

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Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Hundreds for Andrew Strauss (top) and Marcus Trescothick as England got themselves in to a fighting position in the second Test© Getty Images

Marcus Trescothick and Andrew Strauss both strolled to centuries as England gained an 88-run lead in a remarkable turnaround on the third day at Durban. England had started the day staring defeat in the face, but a majestic first-wicket stand of 273 gave them a real chance of chasing victory. Trescothick eventually fell to Shaun Pollock in the final session for 132, but England bossed the day and they have nine wickets remaining, with the obdurate Strauss, unbeaten on 132, set to resume tomorrow.Strauss and Trescothick batted cleverly throughout the day: they respected the metronomic Pollock, but took on the other bowlers, exploiting some defensive field placings along the way. Strauss continued in impressive vein, and his imperious timing and measured temperament were much in evidence throughout. It was also an important innings for Trescothick, whose record on tour (an average of 34) falls way below his home form, where he averages over 53. But here at Durban he grew in confidence throughout, creaming some silky boundaries and taking the attack to the left-arm spinner Nicky Boje. And it was Trescothick who brought up his century first, with Strauss following hot on his heels.But what a difference a day makes. After two days where survival for all batsmen – except Jacques Kallis – was extremely hard, the pitch turned docile overnight and offered almost nothing for the bowlers all day. Boje found some turn, as did Graeme Smith, but they were both punished as Strauss and Trescothick made hay.All of the bowlers worked hard, and aggressively, but largely without reward as Strauss prospered with 13 fours in his fourth hundred in nine Tests, and his second of the series. There were few alarms early on, as Strauss immediately went on the offensive, while Trescothick took his time to cast off the shackles. Dale Steyn bustled in with fire in his belly but was wayward and continued to be expensive, as he was taken for more than five runs an over.Smith brought himself on in the middle session and his part-time offspin found Strauss’ edge immediately, but the ball flew past first slip and on to the boundary. Pollock came back into the attack, and found a menacing line, as Strauss played and missed four short of his century. Makhaya Ntini found Trescothick’s edge on 98 – as Pollock had done earlier – but the ball sailed through the vacant second-slip area. Both batsmen survived the nervous nineties and moved on to their centuries in fine style.Then, at last, came the breakthrough. Pollock seized the new ball after tea, Trescothick probed at a good-length delivery and edged through to AB de Villiers (273 for 1). Trescothick’s fall kick-started a catalogue of near-misses, and England were lucky to not lose another wicket by the time bad light brought play to an close 45 minutes early. Strauss escaped after edging Ntini to third slip where Martin van Jaarsveld dived forward and clutched at a low chance. And the very next ball Strauss’s false pull shot nearly found glove as the ball sailed through to the keeper. Then Mark Butcher was made to sweat on an lbw shout from Pollock, but he survived and England’s lead grew bigger.If the second day belonged to Kallis, then this one was certainly Trescothick and Strauss’s. Their partnership of 273 was England’s fifth highest opening stand. And theirs was the first opening stand of 200 for England since 1991, when Graham Gooch and Michael Atherton shared 203 runs against Australia. They also broke the record for a first-wicket partnership at Kingsmead.But amid the clattering of records was a real sense of purpose, as they chipped away at the deficit, and South Africa’s confidence. It has been a fascinating contest and could still go either way in the last two days. England’s lead is slender and if South Africa can take early wickets tomorrow then they will very much be in the ascendancy. On today’s evidence, it’s a big if.