Returning from South Africa after corrective surgery to his elbow, Shoaib Mailk, the Pakistan allrounder, hopes to make it to the team’s tour to England beginning July 1.Malik underwent surgery in Cape Town to improve his bowling action, which had been first declared suspect in October 2004 during the Paktel Cup one-day tournament at home. His doctors in South Africa termed the surgery a success after extracting a `piece of floating bone from his elbow. They were confident that physiotherapy and exercise would help Malik, who complained of pain in his elbow while batting and bowling, recover within four to six weeks.Malik had been in a car accident in 2003 causing the tendons in his arms to loosen. The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) claimed that it was because of this accident that his elbow straightens when he bowls.Meanwhile, Shoaib Akhtar, recovering from a stress fracture to his heel began bowling at the nets in Lahore. His doctor, Tauseef Razzaq, said that Shoaib will begin full training in a month’s time. The PCB expects both bowlers to be fit for the tour to England in July.
Dennis Lillee, the former Australian fast bowler who was present at the recently concluded fast bowlers’ training camp in Bangalore, has said that the top Indian medium-pacers are in fine fettle ahead of the new season.This will come as welcome news to the Indian team after a season when many of their frontline bowlers- Zaheer Khan, Lakshmipathy Balaji, Irfan Pathan and Ashish Nehra – were rendered ineffective through fatigue and varied injuries.Lillee, who interacted with Greg Chappell and the players, said that both he and TA Sekhar, the chief coach of the MRF Pace Foundation, had analysed video footage of all the 15 bowlers. Chappell had also been told of the adjustments that each bowler had to make. “Remember they have come out of the off season,” said Lillee. “So they are just trying to bowl a line and length. It is good that I had the chance to see them just before they start a new season.”Lillee felt that the players were doing the right things and said he had made corrections wherever necessary. “After all, all of them had been with me earlier at different times. I only needed to make slight adjustments,” he said after analysing the video footage that was sent to him by Chappell. Sekhar also added that there would be frequent sessions analysing the bowlers’ progress and that the players were happy with the opportunity to be monitored under Lillee at the start of a new season.Lillee felt that today’s budding fast bowlers understood the rigours of the trade and were genuinely interested in developing their fast-bowling skills. Lillee said that in 1987, he had trouble finding fast bowlers in the 14-17 age group and attributed this to a lack of fast-bowling role models in India. Lillee was optimistic about the current batch of young fast bowlers and added that “some ‘Sikh boys’ and a few others are really good and look to be long-term future prospects”.He agreed with Javagal Srinath’s view that fast bowlers could win matches for India and cited instances in the past when fast-bowling combinations had proved to be matchwinning in most conditions. “History also proves that Australian and West Indian fast bowlers have won matches for their teams during their visits to India.” Lillee also added that a pitch that assisted quick bowling would provide for more entertainment as a spinning track might hinder fluent strokeplay. “Wickets in Australia and the West Indies do help fast bowlers and the batsmen,” he said. “A fast wicket will be interesting for the paying public as solid stroke makers could keep fast bowlers at bay.”
Brian Lara scored his 24th Test century, and in the process became the fastest batsman ever to reach 9000 runs, as West Indies continued to fight back strongly on the third day at Cape Town. But Andre Nel’s best Test figures of 5 for 87 restricted the Windies to 427 all out, a deficit of 105.Lara began his innings with uncharacteristic circumspection, taking 23 balls to get off the mark, but reached his hundred with a hooked six off Jacques Kallis, after being stuck on 99 for five overs. He was helped to his landmark by the belligerent debutant Dave Mohammad, who clattered to a run-a-ball 36 with seven fours and a six, which earned him several cautionary words from his captain along the way.After the turbo-charged start to their innings, West Indies had throttled back and fallen apart in the first session of the day, as South Africa conceded just 59 runs in grabbing three wickets. Chris Gayle, who had enthralled the crowd with a devastating 79-ball century on Saturday evening, demonstrated that valour was the better part of discretion. He lasted just four more overs before offering no stroke to Shaun Pollock, and was adjudged lbw to a ball that might just have nipped off stump (183 for 2).Ramnaresh Sarwan also fell inside the first half-hour of the day, as he slashed loosely at Nel and picked out Neil McKenzie at backward point for 44 (187 for 3), and when a nervous Wavell Hinds grazed a catch off Jacques Kallis to take his series tally to 34, West Indies were 224 for 4 and in danger of collapsing.Dwayne Smith, making his debut in place of Shivnarine Chanderpaul, walloped Adams for a pair of boundaries through midwicket, and pulled Pollock’s sixth ball after lunch behind square for another four. But he became Andre Nel’s third wicket of the innings, when he went fishing outside off stump and offered a regulation slip catch to Kallis (252 for 5),With the new ball looming, Lara decided a gear change was necessary, and flailed Kallis for three fours in an over to bring up his half-century from 134 balls. Ntini was then crashed both sides of the wicket by Lara, but Ntini exacted his revenge on Ridley Jacobs instead, with a brute of a delivery that hit a crack and reared off a thick outside edge to Pollock at first slip (306 for 6).Lara saved the follow-on shortly after tea, and in the same over cracked Nel through the gully to register his 9000th run in his 177th innings – two fewer than Sachin Tendulkar had required when he passed the same mark on Friday. Drakes then clobbered Ntini for six over midwicket, before slashing Nel to Mark Boucher, diving in front of first slip (361 for 7).After Adam Sanford had been run out by a direct hit from Kallis, Lara was the last man out, bowled by Nel as he heaved across the line. But his 115 had ensured that West Indies remained in the hunt with two days to go, even though Graeme Smith and Herschelle Gibbs had rattled South Africa along to 38 for 0 at the close.
Mark Waugh accepted the blame for his axing from the Australian one-day cricket team today but said only time would tell whether selectors had prematurely ended his record-breaking career.Waugh acknowledged he did not make enough runs at home during the summer, giving selectors the chance to sack Australia’s most successful one-day batsmanahead of matches in South Africa and Zimbabwe later this month.Just three weeks after twin and captain Stephen was dumped, Mark learned his one-day international career was finished as selectors gave the first insight into the players they expect to feature in Australia’s World Cup defence in 12 months.Andrew Symonds also was dropped while fellow all-rounder Shane Watson and versatile Queensland off-spinner Nathan Hauritz were named in their first Australian one-day squads.Queensland mates Matthew Hayden and Jimmy Maher were returned to the national squad as selectors went for 15 players for the 10 African matches, starting inJohannesburg on March 22.It will be the first time Australia has played without a Waugh in the squad since January 1986 although Mark insisted he was still, at 36, good enough to play for his country.”It was disappointing but life goes on. I’ve played a lot of games so it’s not like I haven’t had a good run,” he said here today.”I would like to keep playing because I think I’m probably batting well enough now to do the job in one-day cricket.”But I thought this might happen, reading between the lines.”I should have made more runs last summer … and we lost games so I guess there were always going to be a few changes.”Jimmy Maher and Matthew Hayden will come in and, who knows, if they don’t score a lot of runs then maybe I was dropped too early.”If they score a lot of runs then selectors were probably right.”I can’t look into the future and tell you that but I feel like I’m playing pretty well at the moment.”Twilight is now upon the Waugh twins, who remain part of the Australian Test squad which has barrelled its way through South Africa, heading to the second Test in Cape Town on Friday.While both insist they can return for the World Cup next season, albeit unlikely according to Mark, national selector Trevor Hohns admitted the odds were againstthe Waughs ever wearing Australia’s one-day strip again.”You never close the door on anybody these days, however in the near future it’s going to be difficult to go back on that decision,” Hohns said.”It’s never easy. Both of them are probably legends of the game in Australian cricket and it’s never easy to adjudicate on their futures.”Mark was woken this morning by phone calls of support from home, while South African fans struggled to believe that Australian selectors could drop the brothers.Steve and Mark have made more runs than any other Australian batsmen and both have scored centuries in tour matches since arriving in South Africa.It was a mixed announcement for the Australian players already on tour, with Watson and Hayden receiving their chance to press for a World Cup berth.Hayden will be given an extended run at the opening role alongside Adam Gilchrist after he was dropped in January during Australia’s ill-fated home triangular series against the Proteas and New Zealand.The 20-year-old Watson was selected even before he smashed an unbeaten century in his international debut yesterday, while taking match figures of 3-60 againstSouth Africa A.Maher’s inclusion, after playing two one-day internationals four years ago, comes as just reward for his performances for Queensland while the 20-year-old Hauritz has been marked as a finger spinner capable of developing all-round talents.”Right from the first time he played for Queensland he looked like a young fellow who knew how to bowl,” Hohns said.”He was relaxed, he was comfortable with what he was doing, he just seemed to know what he was doing, so he is another outstanding prospect for us.”
Western Province beat Border by 77-runs in their Supersport Series match at Buffalo Park in East London on Monday. The win moves Western Province to the top of the log in pool B with the 17 points they earned for victory.After batting first in the match, the visitors were able to declare on Sunday and left the hosts needing 321 to win the match off 106 overs. It was a game declaration by HD Ackerman, but Border were unable to seriously give chase as they lost wickets at regular intervals.Starting the day on three for one, Border progressed slowly to 31 in the first hour of play. Nightwatchman Geoff Love was the first scalp of the morning when he was caught by Herschelle Gibbs at cover point for 24, off the tiring left-arm seamer Charl Willoughby, who had given great effort in hot conditions in the morning.The wicket appeared to lift his spirits and in his next over he had opener Craig Sugden caught by Alan Dawson for 11 tooth-achingly dull runs. It reduced the home side to 36 for three.Steven Pope and Wayne Wiblin negotiated the next stage comfortably, but when Dawson returned to the attack with his aggressive right-arm seam he achieved a timely breakthrough. Pope mistimed a drive and was caught by Ashwell Prince in the covers for 22.Wiblin was then clean bowled for 22 by South African international wrist-spinner Paul Adams, and Border were once again in the quagmire.They survived without further loss until tea, but when Ian Mitchell and Vasbert Drakes resumed after the interval Western Province made the decisive move with the wickets of Drakes and Tyron Henderson in short succession.Border, however, still had some fight left in them. Mitchell and number 11 Liam Graham embarrassed the top order with their application as they frustrated the visitors bowling with a 53-run stand.With eight overs left in the day a draw that had seemed impossible after lunch looked like a possibility. Dawson had the final say however, when Graham eventually edged a ball to Ackerman at slip for a well played 19 that took over an hour.Mitchell was not out on 46 to add to his first innings score of 61 while Willoughby was the pick of the bowlers with three for 57 in 20 overs.
Despite Rodrigo de Paul having been linked with a move to Leeds United for the best part of a year – with Marcelo Bielsa’s outfit reportedly seeing a €35m (£30m) bid rejected for the Argentina international in the summer of 2020 and Phil Hay claiming in February 2021 that the 27-year-old remained interested in a switch to Elland Road – the central midfielder ultimately sealed a move to Spain, with Atletico Madrid landing De Paul in a €35m (£30m) deal.
And, since his switch to the Spanish giants, the £42m-rated dynamo has gone from strength to strength, highly impressing over his 26 LaLiga appearances for Diego Simeone’s side this season, scoring one goal, registering two assists and creating six big chances for his teammates, as well as making an average of 1.2 key passes, 0.7 interceptions, 1.4 tackles and winning 4.5 duels per game.
These returns have seen the player who Julio Velazquez claimed “lacks absolutely nothing” and “could play in any club in the world” average an extremely impressive SofaScore match rating of 7.00, ranking him as Atleti’s seventh-best performer in the top flight of Spanish football.
However, it has not only been in domestic competitions that the £28k-per-week has shone for his new club, as, over his six appearances in the Champions League, De Paul has been in similarly spectacular form, scoring one goal and creating three big chances, in addition to making an average of 1.2 key passes, 0.8 interceptions, 2.3 tackles and winning 5.2 duels per fixture.
These metrics have seen the Argentine average a quite extraordinary SofaScore match rating of 7.15, ranking him as Simeone’s joint third-best player in the tournament.
Furthermore, in recognition of his astonishing level of performance for Atleti, the 27-year-old was recently named as the 46th-best footballer in the world by The Guardian, ahead of the likes of Chelsea’s Kai Havertz, Real Madrid’s David Alaba and West Ham United’s Declan Rice.
Meanwhile, since missing out on the signing of De Paul last summer, things have gone in quite the opposite direction for Leeds, with Kalvin Phillips having been ruled out of action since December with a hamstring injury and the club’s status as a Premier League side looking increasingly uncertain – with the Whites now being just two points above the relegation zone.
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As such, it very much feels as if Victor Orta’s decision not to up his bid for the player who Smarterscout’s Dan Altman claimed no midfielders “can match” was something of a sliding doors moment for the Whites, with De Paul’s form since his move to Spain only further highlighting the club’s nightmare on missing out on his signature.
AND in other news: Marsch can seal instant Leeds masterclass by unleashing £16.5k-p/w “wrecking ball”
Sri Lanka have asked Pakistan to schedule their bilateral one-day series, which was proposed to fill the gap caused by Australia’s pull-out, so that the dates do not clash with those of the Indian Premier League (IPL).Arjuna Ranatunga, the Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) chairman, had agreed in principle to a one-day series in Pakistan after Australia postponed their tour due to security concerns but the reported dates were between April 23 and May 5, which coincide with the IPL, which runs between April 18 and June 1.”We have told Pakistan that we are keen to help Pakistan only if it [the series] did not clash with the IPL,” Duleep Mendis, the chief executive of the SLC, told AFP. He said that the SLC had already released players for the IPL.Cricinfo had reported that the IPL could affect the series because several Sri Lankan and Pakistan players had been bought by the franchises during the first auction on the basis of their availability, and a newly scheduled series would be an inconvenience. The PCB said that it was willing to offer SLC $800,000 for the five ODIs but only if they sent their full team.Player sources denied any pressure was placed on SLC by the cricketers to delay the tour: “Media speculation over the weekend that some of Sri Lanka’s players might have been considering an early retirement or a series boycott to play in the IPL rather than tour Pakistan is totally unfounded. Playing for Sri Lanka is the No 1 priority.”Meanwhile, Niranjan Shah, the secretary of the BCCI, which is running the IPL, told Cricinfo he had contacted officials of the PCB and the SLC regarding the proposed series. “But it was just at the proposal stage. So we didn’t go any further into it,” Shah said.
After Inzamam-ul-Haq, Pakistan’s captain, Mushtaq Ahmed, the caretaker coachand Talat Ali, the manager, were questioned by police on Saturday over Bob Woolmer’s murder, it’s now the turn of Brian Lara, the West Indies captain. Lara was staying in the room opposite to Woolmer’s in the Pegasus Hotel and the questioning, which may be followed by DNA testing, is believed to be part of the routine process of eliminating suspects.After the questioning of Inzamam and the other two, the Pakistan team flew out of Jamaica to home as scheduled.Pervez Mir, the team’s spokesperson, told Cricinfo that the three Pakistan players werequestioned for about half an hour. “They were questioned over a coupleof things that were previously overlooked.” But he was keen to stressthere was “nothing out of the ordinary” about the questioning andreiterated that “no one from the team is involved – this is all justmedia hype.”The team is planning to leave as per our original plan and there isno change in that,” added Mir. The team is due to fly from Jamaica toHeathrow and onwards from there to Karachi.Later, addressing a press conference, Mark Shields, deputy commissioner of Jamaican police, said: “This really continued the process of cooperation that we have had with the Pakistani team throughout. We need to be absolutely thorough and clear and ensure if there is any ambiguity in anyone’s statements we should clear up that ambiguity as soon as we can.”The Pakistan team are free to go and are on their way to the airport. There is no reason at all why they shouldn’t leave the island.”All of this, Shields said, was “standard police procedure when you consider any serious crime investigation.” The important thing, he added, “is that we keep an open mind. What we need to do is look at all of the options, all of the suspicions people have.”Sources close to the team told Cricinfo that Mushtaq was questionedabout his nose injury (which is likely to be the one he picked up inpractice before Woolmer’s murder) and Inzamam and Ali about roomchanges.Inzamam told AFP that the questioning was routine and that they hadbeen told by police that they were free to leave for home as plannedlater Saturday. “It was nothing, just one question, nothing special,”Inzamam said. “There have been so many rumours but we are going hometonight and everything is clear. The police said we are free to gohome.””The police are doing their work and they ask lots of guys differentquestions,” Mushtaq told Sky News. “It is not a big issue, just amatter of timing. It was little things they wanted to know. We have to follow police policies and everything is calm and OK. Weare supporting the police. We are leaving and they wanted to cleareverything up.” reported that investigators were yet to hand over Woolmer’s room on the 12th floor to hotel authorities and that the police were examining the electronic key to Woolmer’s room to find out the number of times the room was opened in the few hours leading to his death.Sayed Hafiz, first secretary at the Pakistani embassy in Washington,attended the media briefing at the Pegasus Hotel. He said: “The team was never under detention. They are understandably traumatised. But this is a serious crime, and we wanted to cooperate. We’re very satisfied with the professionalism shown by theJamaican police.”He added that Murray Stevenson, the trainer, and Asad Mustafa, the chiefoperations officer, would be staying back in Jamaica – Stevenson to escortWoolmer’s body back to South Africa, and Mustafa to “tie up any looseends.”Neither he nor the diplomats would say for sure whether the players wouldbe asked back to Jamaica if required – “We’ll cross that bridge when wecome to it,” said Shields – and it’s still unclear when the coroner willallow for Woolmer’s body to leave the country.Shields said that DNA swabs and fingerprints had been taken from severalpeople, apart from the Pakistan players, and added that CCTV footage wasbeing analysed by his officers. He was also in touch with a representativeof the ICC’s Anti-Corruption Unit, saying: “We will look at all theoptions.””Everybody in some ways is a suspect,” said Shields, when asked if he andhis investigating team had made any headway in identifying the culprit.”There are no clear suspects at the moment.”
Imran Khan, the former Pakistan captain, has blamed the team management’s “atrocious” strategies for the side’s recent slump in one-dayers. He also criticised the decision to appoint Jonty Rhodes as fielding coach and their decision not to play Mohammad Sami in the recently concluded tour of Sri Lanka.Although Pakistan enjoyed a successful ODI season last year – which included away victories in West Indies (3-0) and India (4-2) – they have appeared a little inconsistent since then. Though they beat England at home, they were thumped by India in February 2006. Including the series against England, Pakistan’s success rate has dropped considerably, and they have lost as many matches as they won (seven out of 15 with one winning as one no-result. “In one-day cricket, other teams put their best batsmen at No. 2, 3, 4 and 5. But Pakistan keeps its best batsman at No.6 and 7,” Imran told the Press Trust of India. “Inzamam-ul-Haq ran out of partners in Abu Dhabi because he was batting lower down the order. I don’t know who is behind these atrocious decisions.”While criticising the Pakistan board’s decision to keep Mohammad Sami out of the Sri Lanka tour, Imran said that, Pakistan will need fast bowlers like Sami, Mohammad Asif and Shoaib Akhtar to be fit, to maintain their winning streak against England. Pakistan has not lost a series in England since 1982, when Imran side was beaten 2-1 by David Gower’s men.When asked about the team’s need for a fielding coach, Imran said, “The Pakistan cricket team has a bowling coach. Now they have a fielding coach and the skipper himself is a batsman. I don’t understand what will Bob Woolmer do.” Rhodes is set to spend two weeks with the Pakistan cricket team and work on their fielding skills before their departure for the tour of England in July.”Fielding cannot be improved by appointing coaches”, he continued. “The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has to understand that Australia and South Africa are good fielding sides because their players play [domestic cricket] on good grounds and in near perfect structure.”
John Wright has asked Indian officials in charge of preparing wickets to be more thoughtfulwhen they set their job. In the drawn Test at Ahmedabad, Anil Kumble and HarbhajanSingh could not force the issue despite giving their best. “It is the responsibility of peoplepreparing the wickets to keep these things in mind. Sometimes you probably need to raisethese points with the people responsible,” said Wright at a press conference in Mohali,where the second Test starts on Thursday.”It’s unusual in India that the team batting first scores 500 runs in the first innings andthere is no assistance to the bowlers in the later stages of the match,” said Wright. “Wehave to play on wickets that are given to us. Sometimes you hope for a little bit of homeadvantage. It is the case in all the countries. In Australia, they make sure that theirwickets never turn.”Sourav Ganguly has publicly defended his bowlers for their effort in Ahmedabad, and Wrightechoed these thoughts. “There were three world-class spinners — [Anil] Kumble, Harbhajan[Singh] and [Daniel] Vettori – playing in the match. They all struggled on the track. But thelong spells will help them in the subsequent match.” However, he did not cite this as anexcuse. “You have to play on whatever wicket that is given to you. You have to approachthe game and adapt accordingly. We played good cricket but we could not finish the matchin the way we desired”Wright believed that four bowlers could do the job adequately, unless specialcircumstances demanded the inclusion of an extra bowler. He also had a comforting wordfor Akash Chopra. “It is important to give some space to the newcomers. You have to havefaith in them and show it. You have to allow these players to settle down.”Wright also downplayed calls for preparing fast tracks in India. “Trying to change the basicnature of Indian pitches will not be good for the game. India should keep its tradition. Ifwe start making pitches like the ones in Australia, it will not be good for the game. Thediversity of the game is also important.”