Netherlands stroll to seven-wicket win

Opener Eric Szwarczynski and captain Peter Borren guided Netherlands to a comfortable seven-wicket win over Nepal in the first play-off in Mount Maunganui on Sunday. Netherlands won the toss and elected to field, a decision which paid off as both Nepal openers were removed for single digits before quick strikes left Nepal at 39 for 4 in 15 overs.Captain Paras Khadka made 29 and Sharad Vesawkar grafted his way to Nepal’s high score on the day, 42 off 90 balls, to ensure their side was able to bat through all 50 overs to finish on 171 for 9. Ahsan Malik’s four overs accounted for Vesawkar, Binod Bhandari and Shakti Gauchan and the seamer finished with figures of 3 for 21.Despite the loss of Stephan Myburgh in the second over, Netherlands pursued the target with relative ease. Szwarczynski (56) struck his third successive fifty-plus score and took control of the chase adding 88 runs for the second-wicket with Wesley Barresi (31). Left-arm spinner Basant Regmi dismissed both men in the space of four overs to give Nepal brief hopes of a win, but the side failed to make another breakthrough. Borren teamed with Michael Swart for an unbeaten 50-run fourth-wicket stand to wrap up the chase in 31.5 overs.Canada kept Uganda winless at the tournament with a dominant 59-run D/L victory. After reaching 71 for 1 in 26 overs, Uganda collapsed to lose their last nine wickets for just 78 runs were eventually bundled out for 149. Left-arm spinner Parth Desai wrecked the Uganda middle order to finish with 4 for 29.Ruvindu Gunasekera (52*) and captain Jimmy Hansra (43*) put Canada on pace for victory with an unbeaten 86-run second-wicket partnership before rain halted play after 29 overs with the team healthily placed at 119 for 1. Play was unable to restart and with 20 overs completed, Canada were awarded victory, being well ahead of the Duckworth-Lewis par score of 60.Canada will next face Netherlands in the seventh place playoff on Tuesday, while Nepal and Uganda will both seek their first win of the tournament in the ninth place playoff.

McCullum praises Williamson's temperament

Brendon McCullum has said his 224 at Eden Park will be his best innings if New Zealand beat India in the first Test. He also credited Kane Williamson for his temperament during their double-century partnership on day one, and said that his younger colleague’s knowledge and approach had helped him bat for so long.”Definitely (it will be my best) if we win the game. Pleased to have contributed in a significant way, which was by building partnerships,” McCullum said after the second day’s play. “We managed to keep creating partnerships after a tough start so that is very satisfying, especially after we lost wickets. To get 500 after being put into bat, after wewere 30 for 3, is a great effort. Team has got a little bit of fight in them in tough situations.”McCullum and Williamson led that fight, adding 221 at over four an over. After Williamson was caught down the leg side for 113, McCullum carried on and added another 133 with Corey Anderson, before the allrounder got a rough decision on 77. McCullum marched on, and took the score past 500, a total he felt New Zealand had no hope of reaching given the dire situation he came into.”We thought we would get 200-odd,” McCullum said. “Was thinking about small targets, being competitive when you are 30 for 3, but when we started going obviously targets changed for us. Never did I think that after 30 for 3, and in those conditions that we would get 500 and that’s a fine achievement for this batting group. We have the bowlers to take 20 wickets provided we give them enough runs and I think we have given them enough runs.”Dwelling on Williamson’s role in the fightback, McCullum said his partner made him realise the magnitude of their task extended beyond making it to their respective hundreds. “He has got a really good mindset and he said 100 is just a number. Our job at that time was not to get too carried away, it was to keep batting and get good runs on the board. Was nice to tick off the milestone, nice to get a hundred at home, but still had ajob to do.”Credit to Kane for his temperament and also his batting knowledge that he passed on to me that I have got a job to do. Was hard to rein myself in at times but batting with Kane was outstanding. He has a great temperament, a great amount of maturity and is experienced as well. Disappointed that he got out, his approach was right and rubbedoff on me.”It was an important innings personally for McCullum as well. New Zealand had taken the one-dayers against India 4-0 but that was mostly due to the batting of Williamson and Ross Taylor. While McCullum did get some quick, late runs, he also had two successive ducks, and admitted it became difficult as captain when the runs were not coming.”Harder to lead when you are not scoring runs. That’s when your fighting qualities and as a leader come out, as you still have a job to do as captain,” he said. “If you aren’t scoring runs then that’s the important time to stand up as a leader, that’s what I have realised recently. And still enjoy other people’s success as well … just keep faith, keepheart and desire.”McCullum reached the double-century with a six and a four in the last over before lunch, and had also reached the hundred on day one with a six. He said he did not want to spend too much time in the nineties, having fallen there a few times before.The No 5 position was the ideal one for him, McCullum said. “Batting at number five is suitable for me with the ball not quite so new. Bat after Kane and Taylor and then with strokemakers later on, BJ (Watling) and Corey. Five is a good place to bat for me.”

Restrictions lifted off Leicestershire

Leicestershire took a giant step towards safeguarding their future with the news that the local council had lifted the restrictive covenant on their Grace Road home.The covenant, which originally placed a value of £24,000 on the ground and restricted its use to sporting activities, was put in place in 1966 to protect the future of county cricket.But the city council have now agreed that such restrictions were endangering Leicestershire’s sustainability by preventing the club opening new revenue streams to help supplement their cricketing income. The ground’s current worth, anticipated to be somewhere around £3 million, can also be utilised by the club now should they require to borrow against its value.Leicestershire are now pressing ahead with a planning application to build 14 apartments on a parcel of land to the edge of the property and are hopeful of receiving a grant of up to £1 million from the ECB to develop other community projects.”When this covenant was drawn up, its purpose was to protect the future of county cricket in the city,” the City Mayor Sir Peter Soulsby said. “But, ironically, it’s now having the opposite effect.”Having looked at the cricket club’s situation, we can see that these restrictions are now preventing the club from attracting new investment and improving the facilities it offers to the local community.”By lifting the covenant, and giving the club the security it’s been lacking, we hope that the board will be able to access new funding – and be able to progress their ideas for a range of new development opportunities.”The club recently reported a loss of £66,000 for the last 12 months, while their hopes of building a new arena within the ground to house the city’s basketball team fell through.”We’ve been trying to remove this covenant for the last 25 years, so this is fantastic news,” Leicestershire’s chief executive Mike Siddall said. “This move has secured the future of county cricket in Leicester by giving us the freedom to seek new investment in our ground, in the club and in our cricket-led community projects.”It will unlock many new funding streams for the club – primarily from the England and Wales Cricket Board, which has already earmarked £1 million for Leicestershire.”This is a very important day for all of us at LCCC – and we’re delighted that the city council has recognised that the covenant is no longer fit for purpose and has decided to lift the restrictions that have been holding us back.”While Leicestershire finished bottom of the Championship without a win in 2013, there are three players (Stuart Broad, Luke Wright and Harry Gurney) in the current England squad in the Caribbean who developed, in part at least, through the club’s system.

Broad fined for umpire criticism

England captain Stuart Broad has been fined 15% of his match fee for comments following his team’s rain-affected defeat against New Zealand.England lost on the Duckworth-Lewis method and Broad questioned the timing of the umpires’ decision to take the teams off the field. He pleaded guilty to a Level One charge of publicly criticising match officials.Lightning was seen above the ground in Chittagong before five overs of the New Zealand innings had been completed – the amount required to constitute a match – but Aleem Dar and Paul Reiffel elected to keep the players on until the arrival of rain, which came after 5.2 overs, a decision that Broad described as “decidedly average”.It has also emerged that the ECB has urged the ICC to revise its regulations and ensure that players are taken off at the first sign of lightning in future. Decisions on when to suspend play due to adverse weather are currently in the hands of the umpires but Giles Clarke, the ECB chairman, has asked ICC chief executive, David Richards, to institute a rethink.”We have been having discussions of a very serious nature,” Clarke told the . “These were extraordinary circumstances, and the umpires were in a tricky position. But if that had been a golf tournament, everyone would have been off.”I completely see Stuart Broad’s point. The safety of both the players and the crowd should be paramount if there’s an electrical storm. If it happens again, they’re almost certainly going to have to go straight off.”Broad’s comments were, according to match referee Javagal Srinath, in breach of section 2.1.7 of the code of conduct for players. “Umpires are the final judges of the fitness of the ground, weather or light for play,” Srinath said. “Weather decisions are the most difficult to make, but the umpires make the best decision possible, taking all factors into account.”Such public criticism is not good for the spirit of the game. Mutual respect between players, match officials and administrators is paramount to the game of cricket.”Broad was visibly displeased after the game, although he did his best to remain “polite”, saying that he thought the delay had put the safety of players and the crowd at risk. He received the backing of his team-mate Michael Lumb, who has experienced the frightening effects of lightning while growing up in Johannesburg.”I think Stuart covered it in detail but, from a personal point of view, you don’t mess around with lightning,” Lumb said. “There are lives at stake. It was literally right above us and it was pretty scary.”It would have been a different story if we were waking up this morning talking about guys who were struck by lightning. If we were on a golf course, we’d probably have been taken off. It’s a serious thing and it’s not to be messed with. I’d have been quite happy to go off the field earlier.”It’s something we need to look at and address. You do play in certain parts of the world where there will be lightning. It’s a big factor and something has to be done.”

Raza, Vitori's bests help Eagles prey on Rocks

An unbeaten double-century by Sikandar Raza was the driving force of Mashonaland Eagles‘ innings and 94-run win against Southern Rocks in Harare that helped the team maintain its second position in the Logan Cup table. It was the second time within a week that Rocks’ bowling had bore the brunt of Raza’s aggression: a day before the start of this match, Raza’s 130 had downed Rocks in the Pro50 Championship game.Within 24 hours of that loss, the Rocks were batting again and despite a solid 64-run stand for the first wicket, their fortune didn’t show any signs of change. Brian Vitori, who had not played the List A game, dismissed both the openers, then added three more wickets to complete his fifth first-class five-wicket haul. Other bowlers chipped in and the Rocks were bowled out for 164.By the time Raza came in to bat on the second morning, the Eagles had all but wiped off the lead with a 161-run stand for the second wicket between Nick Welch and Mark Vermeulen. Both batsmen fell in the 80s, but Raza and Regis Chakabva, who scored 102, pummelled the bowling with a 235-run stand. The Eagles declared their innings with a lead of 343 runs as soon as Raza reached the 200-run mark.Batting might have seemed easier during Eagles’ innings, but it changed when Rocks came back. Faced with a mountain to climb, the Rocks lost their openers early, and despite brief periods of resistance, succumbed to the pace of Vitori who bagged a second five-for to finish with career-best figures of 12 for 106.A five-wicket haul from the legspinner Natsai M’shangwe helped Mountaineers clinch a comprehensive 162-run win against Matebeleland Tuskers in Mutare. Tuskers were set 289 for victory, but barring a 66 from Sean Williams, none of the other batsmen could muster more than 23 as the team folded 126 in 47 overs. M’Shangwe finished with 5 for 39 – his third five-for in first-class cricket – as only three batsmen managed to reach double digits.Mountaineers, put in to bat, fared poorly in their first essay, as a five-wicket haul from Williams restricted the team to 157. Tuskers, however, were unable to make that advantage count, as they were bundled out for 147, handing Mountaineers a 10-run lead. Williams once again stood out with a fighting 98, but received little by way of support at the other end, as Donald Tiripano snared four wickets to prevent the batting team from gathering any momentum.Mountaineers struggled to build a foundation until a 74-run association for the fourth wicket between Kudzai Sauramba (56) and Timycen Maruma (50). Sauramba added a further 66 runs for the seventh wicket with M’Shangwe, as Mountaineers ended on 278.

Bairstow stirs England interest

ScorecardJonny Bairstow began to reassemble his game against the champions Durham•Getty Images

If the achilles tendon injury afflicting Matt Prior does not heal pretty soon, and assuming Jos Buttler’s glovework does not reveal appreciable benefits from his brief encounter with Peter Moores at Old Trafford, then the debate over whether Jonny Bairstow begins the summer Tests as England wicketkeeper might be fairly short.The Yorkshireman is the man in possession in any event, having replaced an out-of-form Prior for the last two Tests in Australia. Some might say it is for others to prove they are worthy, rather than for him to feel he must defend his position, yet Bairstow himself clearly feels he must bolster his own case, rather than leave anything to chance.Back in the Yorkshire side for the first time in this Championship season, having been ruled out thus far because of the broken finger he suffered in a pre-season friendly, he contributed handsomely to Yorkshire’s continuing dominance here, turning his overnight 22 into what would have been his side’s third century had umpire Jeremy Lloyds been in a more generous frame of mind.Instead, Lloyds gave Bairstow out leg before to Chris Rushworth for 95, a decision that prompted discussion in the television studio, where the Sky team mulled over replays that suggested the ball might have cleared the stumps had it not thudded into Bairstow’s back leg. The batsman himself did not look convinced, certainly, and rubbed his upper thigh pointedly as he began the walk off.Afterwards, following the usual script, he spoke about doing as well as he can for Yorkshire and letting the rest take care of itself, but then made reference specifically to his two brilliant innings against South Africa at Lord’s in 2012 as setting the standard to which he not only wishes to aspire but believes he can, with a little less inhibition.”I just need to play for England a bit more like today if I’m honest,” he said. “That’s something I haven’t necessarily done. I’ve not necessarily gone out and played the way Jonny Bairstow has done in county cricket. That’s something I want to do a bit more of.”The way I played at Lord’s against South Africa in the first and second innings was how I want to go about my cricket and always have done.”It might take more than a fresh surge of confidence to convince those with doubts over his batting technique — doubts he did little to quell in his four innings at the end of the Ashes series — but perhaps the new faces in England’s coaching staff will help him to address those without compromising too much the way he wishes to play. Having Yorkshire’s former assistant coach Paul Farbrace on board will doubtless help in that respect.Clearly, the Bairstow who replaced the disgraced Kevin Pietersen at Lord’s in 2012, answering the call with two superb attacking innings of 54 and 95, is the one Peter Moores and company would like to see again.He did not dominate in the way he can here — his boundary count was relatively modest — but he still looked in reassuringly good order. He and Andrew Gale, his captain, put on 198 for the fourth wicket, putting Yorkshire in full control. Gale, having taken the brave decision to leave himself out of Yorkshire’s previous match, found the fluency that he had lacked on the opening day, attacking short and wide deliveries with much more conviction and while he may have enjoyed some of his previous 15 first-class hundreds more, there was a wide smile on his face when he completed this one, as if a burden had been lifted.A half-century from Adil Rashid added further to the angle of Durham’s bending morale. Graham Onions, strangely out of sorts, finished with two wickets in two balls, but when Gale declared at 589 for 8 Yorkshire had amassed the third highest score made on this ground.The only flaw in the day from Yorkshire’s point of view was their failure to take more than one wicket in 19 overs with the new ball, at the end of which Mark Stoneman, Durham’s reliable opener, was on 48, with the air of a man intent that it is only the start.

Durham close in after Wood fires

ScorecardSam Robson could be key to Middlesex’s survival hopes on the fourth day•Getty Images

Middlesex opener Sam Robson stood firm as Durham piled on the pressure in search of their first Championship victory of the season. Robson finished day three at Chester-le-Street on 42 not out with the visitors 90 for two in their second innings and still trailing by 148 after being asked to follow on.Chris Rushworth had earlier trapped Chris Rogers leg-before for one with the score on five before Keaton Jennings took a fine diving catch off the bowling of Mark Wood to remove Dawid Malan and leave the champions in the driving seat heading into the final day.Having resumed their first innings in deep trouble at 69 for 4 in reply to Durham’s mammoth 568 for nine declared, Middlesex initially made solid progress. However, with Joe Denly and John Simpson having put together a partnership of 114, Simpson’s stumps were demolished by a full-toss from Ben Stokes, prompting a sheepish apology from the bowler.The visitors’ fortunes were to take a further turn for the worse two balls before the scheduled lunch break when John Hastings found the shoulder of Denly’s bat and Michael Richardson snapped up his third catch of the innings in the gully.They might have been even worse off had Stokes managed to cling on to a sharp chance at gully off Rushworth after lunch which let Paul Stirling off the hook on 17, and the batsman took full advantage to reach 50 off 96 balls. He and Toby Roland-Jones put on 89 for the seventh wicket before the Irishman chipped Scott Borthwick to Jennings at short leg having added just five more to his score.Roland-Jones, whose 5 for 103 was the only significant bowling contribution in Durham’s first innings, completed his 50 off 80 balls and had progressed to a career-best 63 by the time he dragged on a ball from Mark Wood to leave the visitors at 320 for 8 at tea. They managed just four more runs as Steven Finn was bowled by Wood for 2 – he ended with 4 for 75 from 14 overs – before Borthwick had Tim Murtagh stumped for 42 to end the innings on 330, 89 short of the follow-on figure.

Bhuvneshwar counters Ballance century

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsAnother batting failure for Alastair Cook, an increasingly beleaguered England captain, followed by a long, hard grind against a persistent India attack on London’s hottest day of the year: this Lord’s Test match Friday was never going to grant its favours easily. But Gary Ballance does not look like a batsman who needs an easy life. His second hundred in a fledgling England career strengthened the impression that he is a rock on which England can build.Andy Flower, England’s previous coach, praised Jonathan Trott as his rock when Trott’s departure from last winter’s Ashes tour proved to a harbinger of their decline. It might just be that Peter Moores, and his revamped selection panel, have unearthed a rock of their own at No 3. Not a gurning rock given to idiosyncratic pitch markings, but a red faced, red necked rock winning seeping admiration among England observers.There is no instant appeal in Ballance, no flamboyance, no fripperies, no manly tattoo or golden curls. He reddens up so quickly that in a series without DRS he is his own walking Hot Spot. On an easing pitch, his innings did not quite have the brilliance of Ajinkya Rahane’s on the first day. But there is resourcefulness by the bucketload.What he again displayed in his second Test hundred at Lord’s this summer – Sri Lanka, like India, have also learned of his merit – was a strong technique, based on a preference for the back foot, a fondness for shots square on the off side vaguely reminiscent of Andrew Strauss and, as he established himself, some full-bodied drives from strong forearms. He batted further forward than he normally does to combat the seam. He has dealt with the Lord’s slope with aplomb – in his other match here he made a hundred for Yorkshire. He looks to be a combative, thinking cricketer.He will curse his misfortune as he fell to the third over with the second new ball, a leg side strangle won by a little bit of wayward outswing from Bhuvneshwar Kumar, leaving him with four wickets for an impressive day. Matt Prior joined the nightwatchman, Liam Plunkett, who had been sent out more than seven overs from the close to protect him. Closing without further damage at 219 for 6, England trailed by 76 runs.This has been an excellent contest and India performed with determination on an easing pitch, the bowlers maintaining good lines throughout the day and their ground fielding reliable. Bhuvneshwar was a reliable, unshowy leader of the attack, undertaking probing long spells as if they were just part of a normal day’s work. The spinners are also in this game on a dry, grassy surface – not that either side is fielding one of any renown.Ballance should have fallen on 32 when he edged Stuart Binny between MS Dhoni and Shikhar Dhawan at first slip, both of them equally culpable for not responding. Binny, bowling his medium-paced wobblers on the ground where his father, Roger, performed so well in the 1983 World Cup final, should have marked his second over in his second Test with a first Test wicket.Instead, Binny became a catalyst for his century: five boundaries struck off him in eight balls. He drove him through the off side off back and front foot then clipped Binny for two more teeth-gritting boundaries in his next over to pass 100. Determined not to give it away, he produced a barn-door defence to the next ball only for his timing to be so perfect by then that it whistled for four down the ground.It was a strong-willed, grounded response by Ballance, considering that he arrived at Lord’s for the start of the match to discover that he had achieved Minor Celebrity status, in the form of newspaper photographs of a boozy night in in Nottingham after the Trent Bridge Test and the gentlest of reminders from England about his public image. His hundred achieved, he opted to keep his shirt on.Gary Ballance could be England’s new rock•Getty Images

England are under considerable pressure. They suffered all day for their failure to take advantage of excellent bowling conditions on the day one. India’s first-innings 295 was inflated; England’s batsmen were deflated. India’s bowlers stuck impressively to basic principles in conditions where high humidity encouraged the swing bowlers and there was still some nibble in the pitch, although neither were as evident as on the opening day when Rahane played with such a flourish in making 103.Cook’s day started well when he held a juggling catch at first slip – Ben Stokes finding Mohammed Shami’s edge in the second over of the day – to ensure that India’s last pair added only five to their overnight total: this time at least there would be no last-wicket heroics.But his demoralising run of scores will again introduce the conversation England’s hierarchy simply does not want to hear: his right to the England captaincy. He is beset by criticism both of his tactical nous and dried-up batting returns. It is 26 innings since he Cook scored the last of his England record 25 hundreds, a run during which his average has dropped into the 20s.His footwork was static as Bhuvneshwar caught him on the crease with an outswinger that continued down the slope from a good length. Dhoni collected an easy catch from a languid push, leaving Cook to reflect on a summer of mounting misery as he returned to the pavilion.Bhuvneshwar deserved recognition for his part in Cook’s wicket. He bowled him an over of inswingers the previous over before producing one which left Cook, ensuring that his otherwise confident and well-managed start fell prey to what has now become a recognisable bat dangle.Criticism sounded immediately. Geoffrey Boycott, commentating on BBC Radio’s Test Match Special, called for Cook to return to county cricket to return his form. But even if England took such a desperate move, the fixture list would afford him no release with the counties about to commit to a month of predominantly limited-overs cricket.Releasing Cook from the strains of captaincy is equally difficult. England, who have not won for nine Tests, their worst run in 20 years, have pinned their entire strategy on allowing Cook to develop a side in his own image and there are no obvious contenders to replace him. His failures, though, cannot continue forever, especially if England go behind in the series.Sam Robson, who was dropped off Shami the over before Cook was dismissed – a regulation chance for Rahane at second slip – did not make good his let off. He became Bhuvneshwar’s second victim when he drove at one that faded down the slope, giving Dhoni another simple catch.Ian Bell and Joe Root perished in the afternoon. Bell’s form has also lapsed and he gave Kumar a third wicket when he attempted to leave a ball that bounced and chased him from just short of a length and gloved to Ravindra Jadeja at third slip, a shaken response to a challenging but by no means unplayable ball.Root’s wicket belonged to Jadeja. He was beaten in the flight by a ball which skidded into his pads, but it was a bad decision by umpire Bruce Oxenford who missed an inside nick. Ballance and Moeen Ali then assembled a fifth-wicket stand of 98 after tea before Moeen’s careful resistance ended with a weak lbw playing across a full ball when M Vijay was granted a brief perambulation.

Amla focussed on ODIs before Test captaincy

Hashim Amla, who will lead South Africa for the first time in the two Tests in Sri Lanka, has said his initial focus is on performing as a batsman in the three ODIs that precede the Tests. Highlighting the challenges that await in Sri Lanka, a place where South Africa have not done well in the past, Amla hoped the team would draw from their collective subcontinent experience in dealing with the conditions.”Although I have had a few weeks to give the captaincy a little bit more thought, but nothing much has changed,” Amla said. “I think a lot will change once the series starts, but up until then, my focus mentally is on the one-day series. Fortunately, I was in the UK playing county cricket in preparation for this tour, but in my mind I have been thinking about the ODIs and hopefully we can make amends. The captaincy will come at a later stage.”Two matches, I am quite happy about it. Sri Lanka is a tough place to tour. From a rankings perspective, we have dropped to No. 2, but that is not at the forefront of our objectives. We would love to be there [No. 1] as soon as possible but with the kind of new make-up team that we have, it’s important to find a winning formula first and things will fall into place later.”In three bilateral ODI series in Sri Lanka since 2000, South Africa have managed just one win in 13 matches. The team’s record in Tests has not been good either during this period – one win in seven matches. However, they did win the T20s in their limited-overs tour to Sri Lanka last year and Russell Domingo, the South Africa coach, hoped to draw on that confidence.”I know it’s a different format but the way we finished the last two of the T20s. We beat them 2-1,” Domingo said. “It was our first white-ball series win in Sri Lanka, so we can take the confidence from it that we have won a series in the shorter version in Sri Lanka.”I know we lost 4-1 (in the ODIs) last year, but I can remember it as a strange tour. Hashim played one game, then he got sick, then he started playing the next game and broke a finger. So there were lot of disruptions, lot of injuries, and lot of inexperience. There was no Dale Steyn, no Jacques Kallis. Hashim missed a few games. And having that sort of quality will be a massive benefit. Last year was a learning experience for the young players and now we are fortunate to have some of the senior players back. Hopefully that will make a big impact.”South Africa were fortunate to get a match in Hambantota, a venue, Domingo said, that “suits” South Africa because of the extra pace and bounce in the pitch. He was, however, quick to emphasise the wider challenge of the conditions.”The heat is stifling in Sri Lanka and your pace attack can only bowl short spells. It’s anything but easy to bat in Sri Lanka. Very testing conditions, not just the heat, but the nature of the wickets – they are abrasive and it spins,” Domingo said. “We have seen at night times sometimes, it does offer a little bit of movement. So losing early wickets is a possibility that exposes your middle order to their spin strength, which then puts your team under pressure. So it’s not easy to bat in Sri Lanka.”Those batting challenges will extend into the Test series. Among the batsmen, only Amla and AB de Villiers have played a Test, the last of which was eight years ago, in Sri Lanka. While de Villiers scored 217 runs in four innings during the 2006 tour, it was a below average outing for Amla, who managed just 69 runs. Both batsmen have gained in stature since then but Amla said the Sri Lankan bowling, especially Rangana Herath, will be testing.”We have always viewed Herath as a very good bowler, especially in Sri Lankan conditions,” Amla said. “Malinga is not playing Tests anymore, so they have relied on Herath as their main wicket-taker. Let’s not be forgetting or disrespecting to the other bowlers who have done really well for them, but Herath is a factor. If the wickets do turn, we will deal with it. We are fortunate that most of our batters have played in the subcontinent – we have beaten India – and Dubai and in Sri Lanka. Fortunately we have lot of experience and we will draw on that.”

Tridents whip Tallawahs to clinch spot in CPL final

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Spearheaded by captain Kieron Pollard’s 63 off 36 balls, the Barbados Tridents produced a stunning performance to knock off the Jamaica Tallawahs by 88 runs on Sunday night at Warner Park in St Kitts. On a dramatic final day of the CPL 2014 regular season, the Tridents catapulted from fourth place into first to earn a bye through to the tournament final based on having the best net run rate after finishing deadlocked at 6-3 with the Tallawahs, Trinidad & Tobago Red Steel and Guyana Amazon Warriors.A loss for the Tridents would have left them in fourth place at 5-4, leaving them needing two wins to reach the final. That fate has now been transferred to the Tallawahs, who could have clinched first place outright with a win. Instead, the nosedive they took on net run rate in a losing effort means they will have to beat the Red Steel in the first CPL play-off match on Wednesday followed by another win 24 hours later against the Amazon Warriors in order to reach Saturday’s final.Pollard’s decision to bat first after winning the toss was met with a good amount of criticism from the game’s television commentators, particularly because teams batting first had managed to win just seven of 26 games on the season heading into the match. The choice was vindicated in emphatic fashion as the Tridents recorded the CPL’s largest margin of victory by runs with the captain leading the charge.Dwayne Smith got the Tridents off to a solid start, bashing 32 of the game’s first 35 runs before falling in the sixth over to Daniel Vettori thanks to a tremendous catch from Andre Russell, who covered 30 yards running across from long-off to take a skied chance at long-on. Shoaib Malik and Raymon Reifer fell cheaply a few overs later and when William Perkins was caught behind off Rusty Theron in the 14th over for 36, the match was evenly balanced at 98 for 4.Pollard and Jeevan Mendis then produced a 57-run stand for the fifth wicket, with 38 of the runs coming off Pollard’s bat as the captain put his stamp on the game. The Tallawahs seemed to have the Tridents held in check at the 16-over mark with the score 124 for 4, but Pollard erupted for a four and two sixes off Russell in the 17th as part of a 20-run over and brought up his half-century off 28 balls in the process.Mendis was run out for 17 to end the 18th over before Rusty Theron nailed the stumps to remove Pollard and Kyle Mayers off consecutive deliveries to end the 19th to make it 161 for 7. Jason Holder cracked two sixes in the final over before falling to Russell for 12 as the Tridents ended on 175 for 8. Theron ended up with figures of 4 for 35.Considering that the Guyana Amazon Warriors chased 189 earlier in the day with relative ease on the same pitch in the small confines of Warner Park, doubts still lingered as to the wisdom of Pollard’s decision at the toss. The Tridents bowling unit turned in a sterling performance to ensure Pollard’s efforts with the bat did not go to waste.Ravi Rampaul struck a major blow in the second over of the chase, striking Chris Gayle low on the pads with a full inswinger to remove the Tallawahs captain leg before for 1. His opening partner Chadwick Walton joined him in the dugout one over later for 5 when the keeper Perkins pulled off an extraordinary one-handed diving catch down the leg side.The Tridents focused effort in the field continued with the run-out of Adam Voges for 10 in the eighth over before Owais Shah missed a sweep to the legspin of Mendis and was struck in front of the stumps for the second lbw dismissal of the innings to make it 54 for 4. Russell was the only player left with the kind of muscle needed to get the Tallawahs back into the game but a brilliant diving catch by Mayers running in from long-on removed Russell for 4 and sparked euphoric cries in the field.Nkrumah Bonner scored 47 at number three, but he and Voges were the only two to reach double figures for the Tallawahs as the tail was wiped out in quick time. Theron was caught on the boundary off Ashley Nurse for 3 to end the game as the Tallawahs were bowled out for 87 in 15.3 overs, the lowest total by any team in this year’s CPL. The Tridents now have five days to bask in the glow of Sunday’s win while the Tallawahs have 72 hours to dust themselves off and regroup for Wednesday’s play-off encounter with the Red Steel.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus