Bermuda's Cann refuses to travel to Uganda

Lionel Cann, one of the most experienced Bermuda players, has refused to travel to Uganda next month for the ICC World Cricket League Division Three tournament over security concerns following news of a foiled terrorist plot on September 13 in Kampala

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Sep-2014Lionel Cann, one of the most experienced Bermuda players, has refused to travel to Uganda next month for the ICC World Cricket League Division Three tournament over security concerns following news of a foiled terrorist plot on September 13 in Kampala.”I have already told the Bermuda Cricket Board that I will not be travelling if the tournament remains in Uganda,” Cann was quoted as saying in the . “It’s great to play for my country and I think it’s the biggest honour ever, and something I will never turn down. But, in these circumstances, there is no way that I can go to that country.”At least 11 USA players have already said they are likely to pull out of the tour to Uganda, even as the US Embassy in Kampala issued a 24-hour warning for all American citizens in the African country to stay at home or seek shelter in a safe place.A US Embassy spokesperson said the plot was organised by a terror cell from al-Shabaab, the Somalia-based group behind the Westgate Mall attack in Nairobi, Kenya last year. Nineteen people were arrested by Uganda police over the weekend in Kampala in connection with the terror plot, according to an Associated Press report. A police spokesperson stated that the suspects’ intentions “were very, very clear” in what was the planning of an “imminent” attack.”To see that terrorists have been arrested in the same city where we are going to be playing, obviously that is a major concern to me,” Cann said. “Being a family guy and having children, I will definitely not be travelling to that part of the world to play.”In a letter to all competing teams in the tournament, Tim Anderson, the ICC global development manager, said that the governing body was in touch with authorities in Uganda. “I wish to advise you that ICC’s security advisers are continuing to co-ordinate with various authorities on the ground in Kampala to understand the extent of this incident, and to ascertain the impact it may have on staging the event in Uganda.”

Mascherano, Arda & even Umtiti? The stars that could go in Barcelona clearance sale

After breaking their transfer record to sign the Brazil attacker, the Blaugrana are set to offload a number of players, either now or in the summer

Getty Images1Javier Mascherano

As reported by Goal, Javier Mascherano's proposed move to Hebei China Fortune is almost a done deal. All that remains now is for the deal to be finalised, meaning the Argentine's eight-year stay at Camp Nou is coming to a close.

The versatile defender will depart with his head held high and with the gratitude of Blaugrana fans the world over, having helped the Catalan club win 17 trophies, including two Champions Leagues, since arriving from Liverpool in August 2010.

AdvertisementAA2Arda Turan

Arda Turan is another player almost certain to leave Camp Nou before this month. The Turkish attacker has not made anything like the same impact as Mascherano, having failed dismally to justify the €34 million fee Barca paid Atletico Madrid for his services in 2015.

Of course, Arda was not eligible for selection until January of the following year due to the Catalans' transfer ban but even when he has played, the winger has severely underwhelmed.

As a result, Barca are now desperate to remove him from their wage bill and the 30-year-old is set to join Istanbul Basaksehir before the week is out.

Getty Images3Gerard Deulofeu

Gerard Deulofeu revitalised his career during a sensational six-month loan spell at AC Milan, prompting Barcelona to enact the buy-back clause they had inserted in the winger's contract when they sold him to Everton in 2015.

The 23-year-old had hoped that his second spell at Camp Nou would turn out differently to his first but, in spite of the considerable void left by Neymar's move to Paris Saint-German and an early-season injury to Ousmane Dembele, Deulofeu has been unable to convince Ernesto Valverde that he is worthy of a regular starting berth. 

A January return to Italy now sees inevitable, with Napoli and Inter leading the chase to sign a player who is desperate to represent Spain at this summer's World Cup in Russia. Barca, though, will not accept anything less than €10m for Deulofeu.

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Getty4Rafinha

After an injury-plagued year, Rafinha is now looking to revitalise his career and Barcelona believe that the versatile midfielder would be well served by a move away from Camp Nou, given the intense competition for places within the Liga leaders' starting 11.

The Catalans are open to offers for their youth academy product but, given suitors such as Serie A side Inter have understandable doubts over his fitness, a January loan deal with the option of a permanent switch at the end of the season seems the more likely outcome.

World Cup 2022 Group B: Fixtures, results, standings, squads & full details

Everything you need to know about the group that includes England and the USMNT!

The draw for the 2022 World Cup paired pre-tournament favourites England with USA, Wales and Iran in Group B.

Barring the goalless draw to the USA, England justified their status as favourites by dispatching off Iran and Wales with strong, dominant, and comfortable performances, therefore topping the group.

While there was much optimism about the USA in this World Cup, there was still doubt if they could make it past the group stages. However, the Americans surprised many with their solidity, conceding only one goal in 3 games (none from open play), and remaining unbeaten.

Iran would be disappointed they didn't secure qualification. They were one Christian Pulisic goal away from finishing as runners-up in the group.

Wales didn't show up for either of their games against Iran and England, being outrun easily by both nations. They will now focus on regrouping with the younger generation and qualifying for 2026.

Group B fixtures and results

Date

KO time (local time)

Fixture

Venue

November 21

16:00

England 6-2 Iran

Khalifa International Stadium

November 21

22:00

USA 1-1 Wales

Ahmad bin Ali Stadium

November 25

13:00

Wales 0-2 Iran

Ahmad bin Ali Stadium

November 25

22:00

England 0-0 USA

Al Bayt Stadium

November 29

22:00

Wales 0-3 England

Ahmad bin Ali Stadium

November 29

22:00

Iran 0-1 USA

Al Thumama Stadium

AdvertisementGroup B table

Position

Country

Played

W

D

L

GD

Points

1

England

3

1

1

0

+7

7

2

USA

3

1

2

0

+1

5

3

Iran

3

1

0

2

-3

3

4

Wales

3

0

1

1

-5

1

Group B squads

England squad

Position Name

GoalkeepersPickford, Pope, RamsdaleDefendersMaguire, Walker, Stones, Dier, Trippier, Shaw, Alexander-Arnold, Coady, WhiteMidfieldersHenderson, Rice, Mount, Bellingham, Phillips, Gallagher, MaddisonAttackersSterling, Kane, Grealish, Saka, Foden, Wilson, Rashford

Iran squad

Position Name

GoalkeepersBeiranvand, Niazmand, Abedzadeh, HosseiniDefendersMoharrami, Hajsafi, Khalilzadeh, Mohammadi, Pouraliganji, Hosseini, Jalali, Rezaeian, KanaaniMidfieldersEzatolahi, Amiri, Ghoddos, Nourollahi, Karimi, CheshmiAttackersJahanbaksh, Taremi, Ansarifard, Torabi, Gholizadeh, Azmoun

USA squad

Position Name

GoalkeepersTurner, Johnson, HorvathDefendersYedlin, Zimmerman, Long, Dest, Scally, Carter-Vickers, Robinson, Ream, MooreMidfieldersMusah, Roldan, Acosta, McKennie, Adams, De la Torre, AaronsonAttackersPulisic, Morris, Sargent, Ferreira, Reyna, Weah, Wright

Wales squad

Position Name

GoalkeepersHennessey, Ward, DaviesDefendersGunter, Williams, Cabango, Rodon, Roberts, Ampadu, Davies, Lockyer, MephamMidfieldersLevitt, Smith, Morrell, Williams, Thomas, Colwill, Allen, Ramsey, WilsonAttackersJohnson, Bale, Moore, Harris, JamesENJOYED THIS STORY?

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Kick-off times in UK and USA

Qatar time

UK

USA (ET)

13:00

11:00

06:00

16:00

14:00

09:00

18:00

16:00

11:00

19:00

17:00

12:00

22:00

20:00

15:00

Ex-Tottenham winger Marcus Edwards involved in horror car crash as his Range Rover flips on its side

Former Tottenham winger Marcus Edwards was reportedly involved in a horror car crash on Wednesday morning as his Ranger Rover flipped on its side.

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Edwards and driver unscathed in crash on outskirts of LisbonCar flipped onto its side in horror crashSporting CP take on Atalanta in Europa League on ThursdayWHAT HAPPENED?

The emergency services rushed to the scene of the accident in Atalaia, on the outskirts of Lisbon, where both Edwards and the driver of the other vehicle were found to be miraculously unharmed – as the reports. The Sporting CP winger is thought to have been on his way to join his team-mates, who are set to travel to Italy ahead of their Europa League clash against Atalanta. The former England U20 international is said to be shaky, but unhurt, and will be assessed by the club's medical staff.

AdvertisementTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Despite losing a number of star players in the summer, Sporting have made a strong start to the season and know that if they secure victory in Italy, they will qualify for the knockout stages of the Europa League. Edwards can be considered a key part of Sporting's success this season, having contributed seven goals and the same number of assists to the collective cause. The Lions will be hopeful that their number 10 will be able to make another contribution in their key game tomorrow evening.

GettyDID YOU KNOW?

Edwards came through the Spurs academy before moving to Portugal on a free transfer in 2019. Edwards impressed at Vitoria Guimaraes, scoring 20 goals, before earning a €7.7 million move to the capital – becoming the first English player to play for Sporting since Spurs defender Eric Dier.

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WHAT NEXT FOR EDWARDS AND SPORTING?

Edwards will return his focus back on helping Sporting qualify for the Europa League knockouts and fight for the league title against Benfica. The English winger has long been touted with a return to the Premier League and may well be joined by his Sporting team-mate Ousmane Diomande, who has been the centre of wild transfer speculation.

Guyana set to play Caribbean T20

Guyana is set to take part in the Caribbean T20 tournament despite an ongoing dispute with the government of Guyana over the administration of cricket in the country

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Jan-2012Guyana are set to take part in the Caribbean T20 tournament despite an ongoing dispute with the government over the administration of cricket in the country, which resulted in the offices of the Guyana Cricket Board (GCB) being locked. The WICB said the GCB had made progress in being able to field a team and that they had sought additional assistance from the West Indies board, which was provided to facilitate their participation.Guyana are scheduled to play Leeward Islands in Antigua on January 9, the opening day of the tournament.”The WICB is delighted that the GCB, against considerable odds, and despite the Government of Guyana’s refusal to unlock its offices, has been able to make significant steps towards being able to provide the Guyana team,” the West Indies board said. “The WICB felt compelled to offer its assistance to the GCB in the best interest of the Guyanese cricketers, the fans of cricket in Guyana and all stakeholders.”The WICB hopes there will be no further logistical and / or administrative hurdles placed before the GCB or the team to prevent the team’s participation. The WICB restates its commitment to the process for ensuring that the management and governance of cricket in Guyana is strengthened and improved while reiterating that the authorised governing body for cricket in Guyana is the GCB.”The GCB had its authority taken away by the Guyana government, which then appointed an interim management committee headed by former Guyana and West Indies captain Clive Lloyd. The standoff between the Guyanese government – represented by sports minister Dr Frank Anthony – and the GCB, and by extension the WICB, dates back to the disputed Guyana board elections in July 2011.

Kylian Mbappe's exit needs to end PSG's Champions League obsession – the time has come to start developing their own Galacticos

The forward's pending departure could lead to a rebirth for the Parisians, who have already hinted at a new team-building strategy

In a pre-season speech to the Paris Saint-Germain squad, club president Nasser Al-Khelaifi laid out his message for the new campaign. He spoke of the power of the manager, the pride of suiting up for the Parisians, and his desire for hard work in training. Notably, he also asserted: "The club is bigger than anyone here."

That was July 2023, and it seemed to be a shot at Kylian Mbappe – then in open warfare with the French champions regarding the status of his contract after infoming the club that he would not be picking up the extra year that had been placed into his deal a year earlier. Back then, it seemed unlikely that Mbappe, the last Parisian Galactico left, would be playing his football at Parc des Princes for the 2023-24 season.

But things changed. Mbappe came to an agreement with the club hierarchy, pledged his loyalty for the upcoming season, and re-joined the squad after a month in exile. Now, though, his departure is confirmed. He told the club last week that he wishes to leave Paris at the end of the season, while talk has accelerated about his desire to join Real Madrid – with a massive contract all-but agreed with Los Blancos.

Things, then, look bleak for PSG. Mbappe is a generational talent, one of the best in the world, and the face of French football. You'd struggle to spin this in an overwhelmingly positive light, and yet it does present an opportunity.

For years, the Qatar Sports Investment-run club have sought out the biggest stars in world football: Zlatan Ibrahimovic, David Beckham, Neymar, Lionel Messi and Mbappe himself. All of those intergalactic names were brought in not only as shirt-sellers, but also to form the foundation of a side that demanded Champions League success.

Now that they have gone, with Mbappe serving as the final departure, PSG can refocus. The Champions League can be worked towards, and approached organically. For the first time in recent memory, the Parisians finally have the chance to develop Galacticos of their own, rather than buying ready-made superstars in search of instant European glory.

GettySaga to end all sagas

Eighteen months ago, Mbappe leaving so soon seemed unlikely. At the very end of the 2021-22 campaign, he shocked the world by turning down Real Madrid's massive offer before he was paraded around Parc des Princes while holding aloft an 'Mbappe 2025' shirt to mark him becoming the best-paid footballer in the world.

Any hope of him joining Madrid over the course of the next three years was seemingly gone. Yes, Mbappe would have another chance to leave in 2025, but Madrid's ego had been bruised, and Mbappe's new salary presumably put him out of reach for any interested parties.

Things change quickly when it comes to Mbappe, though. He never stopped flirting with Madrid, keeping the possibility of a move open. and last summer, Mbappe went about sealing the deal. Refusing to pick up the extra option was the first step; announcing it to the world – or ensuring it was leaked – was the second; and declining a move to the Saudi Pro League was the third. It was all tied up – albeit six months later than he might have hoped – last week, when he officially communicated his decision to leave Paris.

Somehow, a season-and-a-half after signing the kind of deal that had the potential to keep Mbappe in Paris for life, he has now engineered an amicable exit.

AdvertisementGettyChampions League misery

Mbappe's pending departure brings the curtain down on a PSG era that promised so much, but instead saw them become an almost-annual punchline in the Champions League. Since Al-Khelaifi took charge in 2012, the club has acquired superstar after superstar, all in the hope that spending vast sums of money could bring the European Cup to Paris. It hasn't worked.

The Parisians' European failures have come in all shapes and sizes, from blowing massive leads to lifeless showings, penalty heartbreak, and an unfortunate final loss in 2020. From La Remontada to Marcus Rashford's VAR-assisted spot-kick, PSG just haven't been able to get it right on European nights.

The weight of expectation has certainly played a role. Big names are supposed to win big trophies – especially when they're coached by marketable man-managers or tactful tacticians. Parisian failures look worse because of the individuals in the line-up.

Getty ImagesSuperstars fall short

None of PSG's failures felt as catastrophic as those in 2022 and 2023. Messi has since revealed that he never really wanted to be a PSG player, but his reluctance does little to explain the fact that a team containing the Argentine maestro, Neymar and Mbappe never managed to make it past the last 16 of the competition.

There were admittedly failures around them, as first Mauricio Pochettino and then Christophe Galtier could do little to wrangle a turbulent squad into something coherent. While Messi, Neymar and Mbappe all had their moments in PSG shirts, focusing the bulk of club's finances on the forward line meant that the rest of the team wasn't up to the required standard, and thus the much-vaunted trio largely became little more than merchandise-moving commodities and sources of YouTube highlights.

A superstar-first approach seldom works; the presence of Neymar, Messi and Mbappe in Paris proved that.

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PSG.frChange of strategy

While the Mbappe saga grabbed most of the headlines around PSG last summer, the club hierarchy were simultaneously overseeing a much-needed change in strategy. Their transfer activity was lavish – the Parisians spent nearly €400 million (£340m/$430m) – but they focused on young players.

In came forwards Goncalo Ramos (22), Randal Kolo Muani (24) and Bradley Barcola (20), as well as midfielders Lee Kang-in (22) and Manuel Ugarte (22). Even their more experienced new arrivals, Ousmane Dembele (26) and Lucas Hernandez (27), were far from being over the hill, even if they both have patchy injury histories.

The managerial appointment sent a similar message. Luis Enrique is not the kind of manager a club hires in order to maintain dressing-room harmony and pander to stars. This was the coach who forced Xavi out and willingly dropped Neymar on a number of occasions at Barcelona, and he immediately told Marco Verratti that his services were no longer needed upon his arrival in France.

The potential in PSG's new-look squad couldn't be denied, but the plan seemed to be more aligned with the club's status as just below the true elite, and with one eye on the future.

Sammy not deterred by criticism

West Indies captain Darren Sammy has said he is not affected by the ongoing debate over his place in the side and believes his team can win the first Test

Sriram Veera at Sabina Park23-Jun-2011″Keep doing what you are doing Sammy … all will be all right,” a small section of the crowd at Sabina Park sang in the support of West Indies captain Darren Sammy. It almost felt out of place, as elsewhere in the stadium, he was getting the stick. To say that Sammy is not a popular man in the West Indies would be an understatement. Debate over his place in the Test side has filled radio waves; callers have been after his head. And on the second day in Kingston, to make matters worse, he dropped Rahul Dravid when he was on six. Dravid went on to make 112.”I didn’t sleep well last night,” Sammy said with a smile at the end the third day, after he picked up four wickets. The crowds were still gunning for him. “When I am out on the field I don’t hear the crowd; I block everything around me. I have a job to do as a captain, to make field placements and changes, and I try not to take on what’s said from outside. And obviously I try to put in a [good] performance. My job was to bowl lots of dot balls and restrict the scoring. And the attacking bowlers try to get the wickets. On some days fortunately I get wickets, some, I don’t.”Sammy said the debate over his place in the side motivated him to do better. “When you know your back is always against the wall out there in public, you either use it as motivation or you fall down and die,” he said. “I use it as a motivation. I don’t view the comments from the crowd as nasty. If it’s naughty I laugh. Those who encourage and those who discourage … I take it as a positive.”West Indies require another 195 runs for a win with 7 wickets remaining and Sammy believed his team could pull it off. But the pitch is up and down and taking turn, and West Indies are prone to collapses. It will be a tough ask; so much, it seems, depends on Shivnarine Chanderpaul. Brendan Nash managed just three nets sessions before this Test, Darren Bravo is yet to show he has the maturity and the nous to win Tests from such positions, and can the lower order be depended on to do this on their own? West Indies need a substantial contribution from Chanderpaul and Sammy was aware.”We all know what Shiv is capable of,” Sammy said. “He has been excellent throughout his career – he has been in this kind of position many times and has handled it very well. That’s why he has a Test average of just under 50. To get to this victory target we will need big partnerships. He knows what is required and will guide young Bravo out there. He is our most experienced player and I know he will come [out] with his best.”Rahul Dravid too knew it. “If we get a couple of quick wickets we can run through them,” Dravid said. “But we know that Shiv is a dangerous player who can stick in there; he has got the skills to bat in any conditions and they have a few very good young batsmen as well. We need to be patient tomorrow and create chances.”Sammy believed that self-belief was key. “We have to believe we can,” he said. “We just have to show the commitment and fight. The first hour will be important. The team that wins the first hour will be in a good position. At this stage it’s pretty even. We have two set batsmen at the crease and they are playing well.”West Indies’ approach in the second innings was refreshing. Barring Chanderpaul and Nash, West Indies don’t look a team, who can defend and grind their way out of trouble, especially on a pitch with some spice in it. Adrian Barath looked almost too eager to attack, and perhaps tripped on an overdose of adrenalin; but it was better than doing nothing. “Barath and [Lendl] Simmons have together a lot for Trinidad for a long time so they bat well together. Unfortunately Barath chased a wide one, but they gave us a good start. It was good to see them being positive and trying to get to the target.”Irrespective of whether Chanderpaul scores or not, Sammy could also be called upon to contribute with the bat. Coach Ottis Gibson said he was happy with Sammy’s bowling; the only thing he wanted from his captain was some runs. “The runs haven’t come with my bat,” Sammy said. “This could be the time when the captain gets some runs for the team. Hopefully the tables will turn.”If things turn dire tomorrow, West Indies and Sammy will look back at their first-innings batting debacle. “We should have batted much better in the first innings,” Sammy said. “That has been problem for number of years. Hopefully tomorrow we will get a good score. As long as we can get the batting side of things correct, and I stop dropping these catches, we should be all right.”

Warwickshire take control at Taunton

Inviting the opposition to bat first at Taunton was always likely to prove a risk, but in Marcus Trescothick’s worst dreams he can barely have imagined how badly the decision would backfire

George Dobell at Taunton15-Apr-2011Stumps
Scorecard
Inviting the opposition to bat first at Taunton was always likely to prove a risk, but in Marcus Trescothick’s worst dreams he can barely have imagined how badly the decision would backfire.By the time Warwickshire were bowled out, deep into the second afternoon, they had amassed an eye-watering 642 runs. That represents the sixth highest total in their first-class history and, by some distance, the highest score they’ve made having been inserted.It left Somerset’s pre-season tags as championship favourites looking highly questionable. While no-one disputes they have some quality batsmen, their bowlers will have to improve markedly on this performance if they’re really to claim that elusive first title.For this is not nearly such an easy batting surface as Warwickshire’s scoreline might suggest. While it’s clearly no mine-field, there is enough help to assist anyone pitching the ball in the right area, but the Somerset attack lacked the pace, consistency or skill to exploit it.If that was not apparent when Warwickshire batted, it certainly was when they bowled. The Taunton pitch suddenly appeared a seamer’s dream as ball beat bat more in an hour than it had in the previous day-and-a-half as Somerset lost six wickets in the final session. Though bad light spared them the final six overs of the day, they will resume on day three requiring another 346 just to avoid the follow-on.There are a couple of mitigating factors. Firstly, Warwickshire have played some very good cricket in this game and secondly, Somerset were obliged to bat in unusually gloomy conditions that would, only a few years ago, have prevented any play.But Somerset would be fooling themselves if they hid behind those excuses. The truth is they have, to date, been out-batted and out-bowled by a team who were tipped by the bookies to suffer relegation.There have been two key differences. Firstly, Warwickshire’s batsmen have appeared more willing to work for their runs. They’ve appeared more patient, more disciplined and more hungry, while their bowlers have appeared quicker and more able to exploit any help available in the surface.And then there’s Trescothick’s captaincy. If his original decision to insert Warwickshire was questionable – and, despite the score that remains debatable – his tactics during the Warwickshire innings were bewildering. The lack of a third man cost Somerset heavily, while his decision to employ Steve Kirby – who remained on the field throughout and whom the club insist is fit – for just two overs on the second day was mystifying. The bowlers must take some of the blame for conceding nearly four-and-a-half an over throughout, but they were not helped by some curious field placingsWith Peter Trego and Gemaal Hussain unable to stem the flow of runs, it left Ajantha Mendis and Charl Willoughby carrying a heavy burden. The Sri Lankan, who bowled immeasurably better than the previous day, finished with the most expensive figures of his career, as did Hussain, while the 36-year-old Willoughby appeared exhausted after his 34 overs.The chief architect of the Warwickshire innings was Varun Chopra. Having invested in a patient start to his innings, the 23-year-old reaped rich rewards by completing a maiden first-class double century. Very well he played, too.But, almost as impressive as Chopra, was the batting of Chris Woakes. The 22-year-old swing bowler recorded his fourth first-class century as Warwickshire turned the screw on the second day, punishing a tiring attack, and timing the ball with a sweetness that few young players can match. Truly, if Woakes couldn’t bowl, he’d still be a decent England prospect.His century here occupied just 106 balls and contained an array of strokes all around the wicket. It’s interesting to note that this was Woakes’ third championship century; as many as Eoin Morgan has managed to date.Though Mendis finally found one to nip back and end Woakes and Chopra’s 123-run stand for the seventh-wicket, Woakes then added 110 in 24 overs for the eighth wicket with the increasingly fluent Ant Botha. Every run seemed to grind away at Somerset’s spirit and heads had dropped long before Woakes drove to mid-off, Andrew Miller missed a straight one and Botha drove to long-off.Somerset’s reply actually started pretty well. Though Trescothick fell in the first over after tea, edging a loose drive to first slip, Arul Suppiah and Nick Compton took the score to 118 for 1 without undue alarm. Suppiah, neat off his legs and elegant through the covers, looked particularly fluent.All that good work was undone, however, when Suppiah cut a short ball straight to gully to precipitate a collapse that saw Somerset lose five wickets for 24 runs in 7.5 overs. Compton was left groping by Woakes’ swing, before James Hildreth’s timid poke only saw an inside edge on to his stumps. Jos Buttler edged a beauty from the sharp Rikki Clarke that bounced and left him before Criag Kieswetter’s oddly frenetic innings ended when he edged a drive to slip.Had Trego, on five, been caught, as he should have been, by Botha at gully, it could have been even worse for Somerset. But for a side with title aspirations, this has been a remarkably chastening experience to date.

Spinners' experience advantage for hosts – Dilshan

Sri Lanka’s captain Tillakaratne Dilshan believes the experience of his slow bowlers will provide a useful advantage over Australia’s rookie spinners in the first Test in Galle

Daniel Brettig in Galle30-Aug-2011Sri Lanka’s captain Tillakaratne Dilshan believes the experience of his slow bowlers will provide a useful advantage over Australia’s rookie spinners in the first Test in Galle, which begins on Wednesday.The hosts are leaning towards playing only two of the three spinners in their squad, as doubts remain over the allrounder Angelo Mathews’ ability to deliver significant spells following his recent knee problem. Rangana Herath and Suraj Randiv would appear to be the frontrunners for those two spots over Ajantha Mendis, who has played more ODI cricket than Tests of late.Herath, who made his Test debut against Australia on this ground in 1999, and Randiv both have vast experience of the Galle pitch and the sea breezes that influence the flight. By contrast, neither Michael Beer nor Nathan Lyon had ever set foot in Sri Lanka before they were picked for this tour.”Yes definitely [experience is an advantage], our spinners have bowled here in practice games and they’ve played club cricket here,” Dilshan said. “They know how to adjust to this wicket and the wind, I think that is a small advantage.”[Beer and Lyon] bowled well in the practice game, the left-arm spinner and the offspinner. The thing is, we have to bat really well. In the last [home] series against India we faced Harbhajan [Singh], one of the best spinners in Asia. [So] I think our guys can handle their spinners.”Experience was clearly a priority for Dilshan and the Sri Lanka selectors. They chose to omit the fresher-faced trio of Seekuge Prasanna, Shaminda Eranga and Dhammika Prasad who had featured in the limited-overs squads, even after Prasanna and Eranga had impressed in the one-dayers. The 13 that remain will be trimmed on the morning of the match.”It’s an important match starting tomorrow here and I want to try and play the experienced guys who’ve been playing well for us the past few months,” Dilshan said.Mathews captained the Sri Lanka Board XI against the Australians in their only warm-up match before the Tests, and though he batted solidly on the final day he did not bowl at all. Dilshan said Mathews would only be capable of ten to 15 overs in an innings, hardly the stuff of a new-ball bowler – a role he would have to fill, if Sri Lanka are to play all three spinners – in any conditions.”He’s fit enough to bowl maybe ten to 15 overs for one innings, not long spells. Three-over spells might be his sort of thing,” Dilshan said. “Angelo is a good batsman, he has batted at No. 7 in the last few years. I could manage [juggle] a little bit in the middle, he might be available to bowl tomorrow.”History suggests that Galle is all but guaranteed of producing a result, unless the weather intervenes, and Dilshan said he was confident his batsmen would be able to compile enough runs to put pressure on Australia.”We have had a very solid [Test] batting line-up in the last three or four years,” he said. “From No. 1 to No. 6 we’ve batted really well. Especially in the last series, we batted well with six batsmen in England. I have confidence in my line-up, with Thilan [Samaraweera] in the middle order and Prasanna Jayawardene.”

Wright follows England example

New Zealand will follow the England blue-print for defeating Australia in the two Test matches to be played in December, the coach John Wright has said

Daniel Brettig16-Nov-2011New Zealand will follow the England blue-print for defeating Australia in the two Test matches to be played in December, the coach John Wright has said.As he named the 13-man squad to play Tests in Brisbane and Hobart, Wright also said the visitors expected to be challenged by pace, and forsaw the 18-year-old fast bowler Pat Cummins playing a significant role in the Australian attack.While New Zealand have not won a Test match in Australia since 1985, Wright felt the combination of England’s example last summer, and the traumatic events of the Cape Town Test when Michael Clarke’s team was splintered for 47 to surrender a commanding position, gave the tourists a chance.New Zealand’s last Test resulted in a narrow win over lowly Zimbabwe, but the team will be bolstered by the return of the swing bowler Tim Southee and the aggressive batsman Jesse Ryder from knee and calf injuries, respectively.”We’ve got a fair idea [of how to beat Australia], England provided a really good example of how to bowl at them particularly last year, and the batting of Alastair Cook was exemplary at the top of the order, he was very patient, played very straight,” Wright said. “So England did provide in some ways a template of how to play best against Australia.”You look at that and then you look at your own side. To be honest, game-plans at this level aren’t that complicated, we know we have to bat four sessions, and we’ve got to find a way of taking 20 wickets. We’d like to keep as settled a line-up as we can. I think we’ve got the basis there, we have to be patient, but there’s some very talented young players who look like they might have an opportunity to succeed at the next level.”You can only go there in good form and with belief, it is a big step up from Zimbabwe. Australia have got a good record in Brisbane, but that’s what we’re hoping to create, that belief that if we apply ourselves and work really hard, and win our sessions, that we’ll be very competitive.”Cummins may yet debut for Australia against South Africa in Johannesburg, and Wright reckoned he would play a part in Brisbane or Hobart. New Zealand’s batsmen have been ratcheting up their bowling machines to maximum velocity in preparation.”I’ve heard he’s pretty quick, and that will be interesting because we have a feeling they might look to expose us to a lot of pace, and we’re going to have to stand up and be brave,” Wright said. “But having said that, those types of bowlers can provide you with scoring opportunities.”That [speed] is one adjustment we’ll have to make, because we don’t have too many bowlers in this country running around bowling 145kph plus. The boys are aware of that and have been doing some work on bowling machines etc. to simulate those conditions.”The new face in the New Zealand squad is the left-armer Trent Boult, who has turned heads in domestic cricket and will provide another swing bowling option to support Southee and Chris Martin at the Gabba if conditions are suitable.”[Trent is] the player who’s really stood out in the last two games, so his efforts in the first two games have earned him the opportunity,” Wright said. “I think a left-armer’s always handy, but he does swing the ball, and possibly that’s an area we’d like to exploit. The conditions in Brisbane sometimes suit swing bowling, but it does give you a different balance.”

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