Frosty wins Groundsman of the Year Award again

Somerset Head Groundsman Phil Frost has won the coveted Groundsman of the Year Award for a record breaking fifth time in the space of seven years.”Frosty” who was born and brought up at nearby Wellington has been in charge at The County Ground since 1988.The award is based upon the marks awarded for the wickets at both Taunton and Bath by the first class umpires from each of the matches played during the season.Phil Frost told me that the award this season had come “as a total surprise,” and went on “I really didn’t expect to win it this year. We had such an awful start to the season because of the bad weather.”

USACA blames ICC for non-payment of players

Three weeks after returning home from the World Twenty20 Qualifier in Ireland, each player from USA’s 15-man squad is yet to receive nearly $2000 in stipend payments that were promised to them ahead of the tour. The news was initially reported by ESPNcricinfo on Monday after learning of the situation from multiple players in the squad.However, the USA Cricket Association is laying blame on the ICC for what it says was a broken promise to take care of the players while the board is under ICC suspension. USACA officials were due to meet with ICC chief executive David Richardson and ICC general counsel Iain Higgins in New York on Tuesday to discuss a variety of issues related to the suspension, including finances, and the ICC claims it never agreed to pay the players. USACA vice-president Owen Grey has pointed the finger squarely back at the ICC.”Ask the ICC why they refuse to pay the players,” Grey told ESPNcricinfo on Monday. “You suspend a nation and you said the players must not suffer. You’re supposed to pay the players and you decided that yes you’re going to pay the players and then you renege. So go ask Ben Kavenagh, David Richardson and Tim Anderson. You hear that a nation is suspended and the ICC wants it both ways.”The ICC told the manager John Wilson up in Dublin that they sent the money to USACA to pay the players which is a bloody lie. The ICC got the request about the stipend for the players through [USACA liaison] Vincent [Adams] to Tim Anderson, Ben Kavanagh, Faisal Hasnain and David Richardson. They were supposed to pay the players. They didn’t do it. They said they sent the money to USACA which is a lie.”ESPNcricinfo reached out to ICC officials late Monday to get their version of events relating to the stipend payment. An ICC spokesperson responded on Tuesday, stating that though USACA did make a request, no agreement was ever made by the ICC to provide a supplemental stipend beyond the $60 a day that all players from each of the 14 teams received from the ICC as meal money during the tournament.”The ICC didn’t agree, and is not in a position to pay the USA players,” the ICC spokesperson said. “USACA was advised of this several weeks ago. In saying this, despite USACA’s current suspension, the ICC remains committed to providing the best players in the USA with opportunities to compete internationally. It is for this reason that the USA was allowed to compete in the recent ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier and the ICC Americas U19 Championship, while USA players have also been selected for the upcoming ICC Americas Combine.”On Sunday, USACA announced a national $100,000 tournament in Florida to be played by the best clubs of USACA member leagues. However, Grey was adamant that the tour stipend payments for the 15 USA players should come from the ICC and not from any other funding sources.”The players are out $27,000 as we speak, which should have been paid before they left Dublin last month,” Grey said. “The pay scale was $60 per day for dinner and a $100 stipend. In 2013, when we weren’t suspended, USACA paid the players $120 a day plus they got $50 dinner money from the ICC for the same tournament in Dubai. The meal money was increased $10 a day this year so we said fair is fair, pay them $100. So the players are out $100 per day which is $1800 per player.”

Members Spring Newsletter mail out is on its way

The Somerset Spring Newsletter, which is always a sure sign that the new season is just around the corner, will be sent out to all members early next week, and will be read no doubt from cover to cover by everyone.The actual logistics of packing and sending out the newsletter and the other enclosures to all of the membership is a well oiled machine which has been set up and running very successfully for several years.Chris Bass, who operates the scoreboards for the club during the summer has sent across the following information about the mail out which I am sure everyone will find enlightening.”A group of volunteers, normally around seventeen of us, gather in the Colin Atkinson Pavilion every September, November and March. The office staff produce the computer-generated envelopes which must be literally “stuffed” with the various articles members are to receive, often as many as fifteen separate items. Some need to be folded, but all must be bundled together into individual envelopes – yes – over 7000 of them!The envelopes are then counted religiously into Royal Mail boxes. There is no production line, no machine, just honest human endeavour and concentration from the volunteers involved.Many of those involved have been carrying out this task for years, uncomplainingly. No doubt fuelled by the players’ success and the spirit prevailing within the club at presentour team is growing.The forthcoming mail out is on Monday march 11th and the norm is to draw stumps around mid afternoon. Any fellow members wishing to join us are most welcome. Please give your contact details to Chris Bass who can be contacted before the season by leaving a message at the ground.The Club provide an excellent lunch, drinks, coffee and tea. The banter enjoyed by all is superb, so why not offer your services to help with this very worthwhile activity.”Thanks Chris for putting us in the picture. Perhaps now when all of the members open their envelopes next week they will know better what effort has gone into to getting them posted out.

Grayson takes Suffolk to title success


ScorecardPaul Grayson’s 87 proved the difference in the Minor Counties knock-out final, lifting Suffolk to an insurmountable 219 – and the trophy. Some tight bowling then had Cheshire stumbling to 26 for 3 and then squeezed them for the rest of their innings: Suffolk-ated as the tabloids may have had it.Cheshire will now have to content themselves with a tilt at the Championship honours, having already claimed the Western Division, with their final against Eastern winners Northumberland.This final, though, belonged to a determined Suffolk who pulled themselves back from 73 for 4, with the experienced Grayson played with an elegance and timing reminiscent of his first-class days. His stand of 85 with Chris Swallow (38) was the key partnership as they rebuilt and then marched on to a solid score.Having chosen to bat, Suffolk were in early trouble against the tight lines of Chris Finegan and Adam Syddall. Finegan starred with the ball, taking three wickets, and had a hand in a run-out and two catches. He bowled with a hint of swing, and trapped Ben France (24) playing across the line. Soon after he ran out Tobias Hembray, going for a needless second.Enter Grayson and Swallow, who both played unflappably, Grayson bringing up his fifty with a cover-drive punched off the back foot as he drove his way to a decent total. Nathan Dumelow, formerly of Derbyshire, eventually broke the partnership, Swallow rushing down the track and Matthew Dawson’s neat hands doing the rest. Danny Woods struck soon after, inducing a thin edge off Phil Caley (1), and then Finegan dismissed Nick Warn for 7, flashing outside off.But again Grayson stood firm, seeing Suffolk past 200, until he finally swiped to long-on. The innings tailed off quickly, Jason Whittaker trapping Paul King lbw (0) and claiming Martin Smith holing out to long-on to bring the innings to a close.This may be a clash of the minor counties, but there was some major talent on display, not least Grayson. Paul King and Martin Smith were hostile from the start, and Cheshire’s top order had no answers to their control.Ben Spendlove briefly threatened with 49, but his dismissal – Justin Bishop tempting him to feather his awayswinger through – prompted a minor collapse of some major wickets: James Duffy popping a simple return to Grayson, then Bishop struck again with a similar removal of Chris Bassano. A consolation fifty came for Matthew Dawson, but his efforts were more damage limitation than anything and Ben France cleaned up with four wickets.King and Bishop bowled intelligently in a game of one-sided chess – not to mention Smith, Grayson and later on France – and soon it was checkmate for Cheshire.

Nazir aiming for return to national side

Are we to see Imran Nazir doing this for Pakistan soon? © China Cricket International Limited

Pakistan’s continuing problems with openers has meant that for Imran Nazir, the door for a return, remains wide open. Poor form and injury has kept Nazir out of the Pakistan Test side for four years, while his last ODI appearance was over two years ago.A typically rampaging hundred against Uttar Pradesh in the ongoing Mohammad Nisar Trophy for Sialkot comes conveniently timed and on a suitably big stage. And though upstaged by the likes of Mohammed Hafeez, Imran Farhat and Salman Butt, Nazir is still hopeful of a comeback.”I want to return to the Pakistan team for both ODIs and Tests. I am doing well at the moment and it all depends on the selectors,” Nazir told PTI in Dharamshala. “I was out of action for a year with a fracture in the right shoulder. I did a lot of training and physiotherapy to recuperate from that injury. Now I am perfectly fine and playing well.”Nazir could get his chance in the Champions Trophy in India, after Wasim Bari, the Pakistan chairman of selectors, stated that he was being considered as a replacement for Inzamam-ul-Haq. Inzamam has been banned for four ODIs for bringing the Oval Test against England into disrepute due to ball-tampering allegations.”Imran has a chance of being selected because he is a brilliant fielder and very energetic as a batsman,” Bari said. “But it is also a fact that he is an opener while Inzamam is a middle-order batsman.” However, Nazir was not a part of the 30-man probables squad for the tournament and Bari added that his selection would require permission from the ICC. Younis Khan, the Pakistan captain, would be consulted regarding the replacements.Nazir is leading Sialkot in the four-day Nissar Trophy match and has played just eight Tests and 61 ODIs since his debut for Pakistan in 1999. But he has been undone on occasion as much by his own rashness, though he is hardly alone among Pakistan openers recently in that trait.”People say that (I am prone to playing rash shots) about me. But, I am confident about myself. What I need to do is keep performing consistently because that’s what is in my hands.”Nazir added he was enjoying the experience of being in Dharamshala. “I am enjoying very much playing at such a unique place like this. The mountains and the ground are beautiful. I went around the place last night, it was a good feeling.” A better feeling no doubt would be a recall to the Pakistan side.

Snyman powers Namibia to victory

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Gerrie Snyman: a matchwinning 112 not out © Getty Images

Mashonaland went down to their third successive defeat in the Faithwearone-day series, losing this time by a convincing 101 runs againstNamibia. Gerrie Snyman, Namibia’s allrounder, was the difference between the sides, scoring a dynamic unbeaten 112.Namibia, put in to bat, were struggling at 90 for 4 in the 25th over.They owed much to their captain Deon Kotze, who played a sound innings of 56 and paved the way for the Snyman onslaught. Snyman faced only 79 balls and hit 10 fours and two sixes against an attack that lacked the injured Douglas Hondo. However there was a surprise return for the former national player Bryan Strang, who steadied an inexperienced bowling attack. The final total was 279 for 5.A slow start meant that Mashonaland would always be struggling, but they did reach 96 for 1 at one stage, with Brendan Taylor scoring 52. Then the middle order collapsed, and last season’s champions slipped to 178 all out, with Rudi van Vuuren, who started the slide, taking 3 for 38.

ICC admit error over Bari's remarks

David Shepherd: in the eye of the storm© Getty Images

The International Cricket Council has admitted it made an error, after a private letter of chastisement to Wasim Bari from Malcolm Speed, their chief executive, was allowed to enter the public domain.Bari, Pakistan’s chief selector, had been scathing in his criticism of David Shepherd’s umpiring, following two poor decisions in the final of the tri-series against Australia at Amstelveen in August. "Shepherd’s decisions were like target killing and cost Pakistan the final,” Bari was reported as saying, after the controversial dismissals of Inzamam-ul-Haq and Yousuf Youhana had contributed to a 17-run defeat. “His decisions were not only doubtful but disgraceful," he added, saying that it was time for Shepherd to retire.As a consequence, Bari was severely reprimanded by the ICC, with Speed branding his remarks as “inflammatory” and “out of order”.”Wasim, please rest assured that any future public criticism of ICC officials by you while you are chairman of selectors for the PCB will be dealt with very firmly under the ICC code of conduct,” Speed wrote in his letter. “You have been in and around the game long enough to know that you were well and truly out of order in making these comments.”Unfortunately, Speed’s response found its way to the press owing to a lack of clear instructions about its publication. “I should have been more explicit in my instructions within my department so that this unfortunate situation would have been avoided,” said Brendan McClements, the ICC’s corporate-affairs general manager. “I understand that this has now placed [Wasim Bari] in a difficult position, a situation that all of us would prefer not to have occurred.”The current ICC regulations do permit selectors to make such comments, although players and team officials are forbidden from doing so. Since Bari made his remarks, however, Speed has taken steps to tighten this loophole.

Afghanistan awarded Associate Membership by ACC

The Afghanistan Cricket Federation (ACF), which is already an affiliate member of the International Cricket Council (ICC), has been awarded Associate Membership of the Asian Cricket Council during the ACC’s June 14 meeting in London.In a message Venu Ramadass of the ACC said: “Firstly, we would like to congratulate Afghanistan Cricket Board [Federation] for being granted Associate membership of the Asian Cricket Council. We hope both parties will work together for the betterment of cricket in Afghanistan."The ACF is active in building up cricket in Afghanistan after the recent war, and has already sent teams to play in two of Pakistan’s domestic competitions. They had applied for the ACC membership and also requested permission to send a team to the 2003 Youth Asia Cup, which starts on July 15 in Karachi, Pakistan.The ACC has regretted ACF’s participation in the U19 tournament due to time constraints saying, “We are sorry to say that approval is not being given due to a number of reasons. Approval could only be given after the ACC AGM in London and the time frame is too short for the team’s preparation. The allocation, tournament arrangements and the match schedules are being done to accommodate 10 teams and by having an additional team at this time nearer to the tournament, will not be feasible.”All is not lost for the keen Afghan cricketers as there is a U17 tournament coming up later this year and the ACC has allowed the Afghan team to play, “Asian Cricket Council has welcomed Afghanistan’s participation in the U17 Junior Asia Cup 2003 in India, which will be held at the end of the year.”This tournament will add to ACF’s plans for more international cricket as they are already scheduling a visit to India to play 10 matches in August with a tour to UAE in October to play during the UAE national cricket season.The Afghan team has also been invited to tour Pakistan again for the Quaid-e-Azam Grade-II domestic tournament. They have already played in Pakistan’s Grade-II tournaments in 2001 and 2002.Some more help for the ACF is on the way with ACC’s development officer, Pakistan ex-Test cricketer Iqbal Sikander promising to visit Afghanistan soon to help set up a proper cricket infrastructure.On Monday, while announcing that the Australian Cricket Board (ACB) will help ACC set up regional cricket academies in Dubai, Malaysia and Nepal he had some encouraging words for Afghan cricket.”Since Afghanistan has now been given membership by the ACC, the idea is to move quickly and provide them timely assistance in the development of the game.”Cricket was first taken up by Afghani refugee youth who had fled to Pakistan after the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the early 1980’s and carried on playing till they could return home 10 years later – more than sufficient time to inculcate cricket culture. The ACF was founded in 1995 and in 2001 they were made an Affiliate Member by the ICC.

WP switch sponsors

WP have switched sponsors from MTN to Nashua.This has been confirmed by WP CEO Arthur Turner. WP join Northerns Titans and Kwa-zulu Natal in the Nashua cricket stable. Tuner said MTN, with their commitment to the national side and considerable spending in development felt that they were over-committed. “Nashua have taken over the terms and conditions of the MTN sponsorship” Turner is quoted in today’s Sunday Argus. “The deal runs till 2005” Turner added.

Priest 60 seals series win for NZ Women

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‘We want to have a clean sweep’ – Priest

Rachel Priest’s maiden half-century in T20Is powered New Zealand Women to a six-wicket win against India Women in Bangalore, victory also sealing the series for the visitors.Set 137 for the win, New Zealand lost their captain Suzie Bates off the second ball of the innings, and slumped to further trouble when Sophie Devine, who broke the record for fastest T20 fifty on Saturday, was caught by Jhulan Goswami off her own bowling. However, Priest led a recovery, marshaling a 71-run stand for the third wicket to Leigh Kasperek to put the team back on track. Priest drilled 10 fours and two sixes during her 34-ball 60, but both she and Kasperek fell within quick succession of each other by the 11th over to open the door slightly for India. However, Amy Satterthwaite and Katie Perkins remained unfazed, chipping in with handy twenties to take the team home inside 18 overs.Earlier, India, after being inserted, were pegged back by early strikes from Devine and Hannah Rowe. Vellaswami Vanitha top-scored with 41 and strung together crucial partnerships with Harmanpreet Kaur (30) and Veda Krishnamurthy (29), but were unable to really accelerate and push on to a big total.