Hodge targeted by New South Wales

Brad Hodge: possible move to New South Wales © Getty Images

Brad Hodge has been the target of a bold approach by New South Wales, the Pura Cup champions, in an attempt to get the Victoria batsman to move to Sydney. Hodge, who is due to arrive in England for his county stint with Lancashire early next week, had a meeting with a NSW delegation in Melbourne.Brad Haddin, the NSW captain, David Gilbert, the chief executive and Matthew Mott, the assistant coach, met with Hodge at the end of the last week to discuss options. It is understood that extra leadership responsibilities would be part of the package, after Hodge was overlooked for the Victoria captaincy in favour of Cameron White.Although Hodge has yet to make a decision he told that he has to consider his options. “As a professional sportsman, I have to look at all my options, take in those options, then work out where is the best place for me to get a game in the Test or one-day side. There are also considerations for life further on in my career.”Hodge has won a place in the Ashes squad after another prolific domestic season in the Pura Cup, scoring 891 runs at 63. He was also part of the Australian squads that toured India and New Zealand.He has become the latest Victoria batsman to look at a move to a rival state in recent weeks. Matthew Elliott is currently appealing against Victoria’s attempts to try and block his proposed move to South Australia, while there are also question marks over the future of Jon Moss, Matthew Inness and Ian Harvey in Melbourne.

Middlesex hold their nerve for win

Division One

Middlesex completed a thrilling two-wicket win over Northants off the last ball. Ed Joyce made 74 from 78 balls to put Middlesex on course, along with Jamie Dalrymple who hit 76 from 76. However, Joyce’s wicket prompted a tense finish as Johann Louw and Damien Wright squeeze the tail-end batsmen. But Melvyn Betts held his nerve to scamper the winnings runs. The result was harsh on Martin Love and Usman Afzaal, who both hit unbeaten centuries, adding 227, as Northants amassed 283 for 1.Nottinghamshire won their first National League match of the season as they beat Lancashire by 61 runs. Lancashire’s top-order failed to fire as they slumped to 94 for 6 in the face of some accurate bowling for the Notts seamers. Mark Ealham was the best of them, bowling his nine overs for 33 and dismissing Brad Hodge. He earlier played a major role with the bat, hitting 35 from 32 balls and added 86 with Chris Read as they managed to score 95 runs in the final 10 overs. Notts struggled in the initial part of the innings and from 77 for five, so their victory represented a fine turnaround.

Division Two

Kent’s powerful batting performance, led by another century for Martin van Jaarsveld, condemned Somerset to a heavy 75-run defeat at Bath. van Jaarsveld made his runs from 106 balls and was well supported by Robert Key (67) and Matthew Walker (56 from 39 balls). Darren Stevens rounded the innings off in style with 28 in 10 balls. While Ian Blackwell was hitting 57 from 42 deliveries Somerset had an outside chance, but Justin Kemp cleaned up the tail with 4 for 52.Leicestershire earned a comfortable seven-wicket win against Yorkshire after a tight bowling and fielding display. Despite reaching 102 for 2 Yorkshire could never really find proper momentum against an impressive attack. Dinesh Mongia removed Craig White first ball while Darren Maddy and David Masters were economical and took two wickets each. Mongia then guided Leicestershire home with 46 in 38 balls to complete another excellent, personal, National League match. Tom New anchored the the chase with a solid 47 at the top of the order.

The not-so-golden jubilee

Pakistan marked 50 years of Test cricket today with a bitter attack on arch-rivals India for severing ties with them. It was against their neighbours India that Pakistan played their first Test, at New Delhi on October 16, 1952 – but the two countries have not faced each other since May 2000, after the Indian government refused to sanction a meeting in protest at Pakistan’s alleged support to militants in Kashmir.”India are afraid of losing to us on the cricket field,” said Pakistan’s new team manager Khawaja Mohammad Nasir during a break in the Test series against Australia. “There can be no other reason. India lost to Pakistan in Sharjah, Australia and Bangladesh and suddenly decided to stop playing us. The Indian nation is emotional about losing to Pakistan at cricket. They are willing to face us in other sports like hockey, but do not want to play cricket.”India’s constant refusal is playing havoc with the game in Asia,” said Nasir, a retired brigadier in the Pakistani army. “It’s only a game, and should not be a matter of life and death as India makes it out to be.”India are scheduled to play a Test series in Pakistan next April, but the tour is likely to fall through given the border tensions between the two.Waqar Younis, Pakistan’s captain, said it was unfortunate that his country’s golden-jubilee series had to be played at neutral venues in Sri Lanka and Sharjah after Australia declined to tour Pakistan for security reasons. “It would have been a grand affair had the series been played at home as scheduled,” he said. “It’s not a healthy sign. We must play at home. I agree there were some problems for teams touring Pakistan, but it will be great if we can play Test matches at home again.”Australia refused to play in Pakistan after a car-bomb killed several foreigners outside New Zealand’s team hotel in Karachi in May.Pakistan cricket, the high point of which was the World Cup triumph under Imran Khan in 1992, has been dogged over the years by allegations of ball-tampering, match-fixing and bitter internal battles in the national team.But Waqar insisted that Pakistan should not be singled out. “There were allegations of ball-tampering against former England captain Mike Atherton, and the match-fixing scandal hit South Africa, Australia, India and Sri Lanka as well,” he said. “Cricket just seems to attract a lot of controversy. We have had it, so have the others.”Pakistan’s celebrations were almost marred by the dramatic departure of Lt-Gen. Tauqir Zia, the Pakistan Cricket Board chief. He offered his resignation earlier this week after Pakistan slumped to record lows of 59 and 53 – the two lowest totals in their history – to lose the second Test to Australia in Sharjah inside two days.Zia was, however, reinstated by Pakistan’s president Pervez Musharraf on Tuesday, a move that brought immense relief to the cricketers here. “It’s a great relief that General Zia is back,” said manager Nasir. “He is a man of great honour and accepted responsibility for the defeat, deflecting criticism from the young team onto himself.”It is now time for the boys to prove their worth on the field. We are going to fight in the final Test, which starts on Saturday. It [the heavy defeat in the second Test] has happened once, it will not happen again.”

Canterbury Junior Association draw for October 18

The Christchurch Junior Cricket Association Draw for Saturday 18 October 2003CJCA 18 October 2003All matches to start at 9amPlease note: (1)Syd Park numbering is as per the CJCA Red Book(2) BurwN (Burwood Park North)Senior Traditional Two-day:(One-day match only) Section 1:Es1 v Oc1 Cla2,Med1 v Hals1 Med1,Stac1 v Bwu1 Stac2,Es2 v Nb1 Avdl1.Section 2:Cagr1 v Syd2 Syd2,Oc2 v Hals2 Halsd2,Stac2 v Es3 Stal1,Syd1 v Horn1 Dent1,Hare1 v Hh1 Red1.Senior Traditional One-daySection 1:Es4 v Hsob1 Hgsc,Hals3 v Oc3 Malv1,Med2 v Bwu3 Burn10,Syd5 v Es5 Stal2,Sum1 v Oc4 Malv2,Bwu2 v Es6 Burn9.Section 2:Bwu4 v Pk4 Burn5,Med3 v Horn2 Dent2,Nb2 v Cagr2 Raw2,Lpw2 v Stac3 Stac3,Syd6 v Stc1 Syd4.Section 3:Bwu6 v Syd7 Beck2,Med4 v Oc8 Por1,Stc2 v Oc5 Ilam2,Bwu7 v Mp1 Emc1,Oc6 v Upr1 RiccHS5,Syd8 v Lpw4 Cash1,Med5 v Bwu5 Burn7,Oc7 v Med6 Ilam1.Junior Traditional One-daySection 1:Hals4 v Syd14 Cash2a,Oc10 v Oc11 Stal3,Es10 v Med7 Med2,Pk5 v Es11 Por2,Sum3 v Sum2 Bar1.Section 2:Cagr3 v Oc12 Cg1,Syd17 v Horn3 Dent3,Nb3 v Hals5 Southbd,Lpw5 v Syd15 Ens2,Sum4 v Oc13 Barn2,Bwu9 v Es12 Burw3.Section3:Lpw6 v Stac4 Ens3,Bwu8 v Oc15 Burn8,Upr3 v Upr2 Rd1,Syd18 v Oc14 Ilam3,Heath1 v Pk6 Hd1,Hare2 v Hals6 Red2,Oc16 Bye.Junior ModifiedZone 1:Bwu11 v Oc24 Burnp,Hals8 v Oc21 Polo1a,Med8 v Hsob3 Kirk1a,Oc22 v Hals7 Oak1a,Oc23 v Oc20 Fns1a,Bwu10 Bye.Zone 2:Es15 v Nb2 Chis2a,Es18 v Mp2 Polo2a,Mp3 v Es16 Polo4a,Syd21 v Es14 Sis1a,Syd20 v Syd22 Thor1a.Junior AverageZone 1:Lpw8 v Syd34 Brgn1,Heath2 v Syd32 Brgn2,Hals10 v Syd30 Brgn3,Hals12 v Hals11 Brgn4,Hals9 v Syd31 Brgn5,Syd33 v Lpw9 Brgn6,Syd35 v Sum7 Brgn7,Sum6 v Hh2 Brgn8.Zone 2:Nb6 v Oc34 Walt5,Cagr4 v Syd36 Walt6,Pk7 v Es25 BurwN2,Es24 v Es23 BurwN1,Cagr5 v Hare3 Walt7,Syd37 v Stac6 Walt8,Oc35 v Nb5 Walt9,Stac5 v Oc36 Walt4.Zone 3:Hsob4 v Oc32 Jel2,Ricc1 v Oc30 Jel4,Mp5 v Mp4 Jel6,Oc31 v Horn4 Jel3,Med10 v Oc33 Jel5,Med9 v Oc37 Jel7.KiwiZone 1:Syd41 v Hh3 Brad1,Syd43 v Hals13 Brad2,Sum9 v Sum8 Brad3,Hals14 v Syd42 Brad4,Syd40 v Heath3 Brad5,Lpw10 Bye Brad6.Zone 2:Cagr7 v Nb7 Walt3,Nb8 v Cagr6 Walt1,Med11 v Stac7 Walt2.Zone3:Horn5 v Oc45 Elm5,Oc40 v Mp6 Elm6,Ricc2 v Oc42 Elm7,Oc41 v Hsob5 Jel1,Upr4 v Mp7 Walt10,Oc46 v Horn6 Jel8,Oc44 v Pk9 Elm8,Pk8 Bye.

Dykes retained as New Zealand manager

Ross Dykes has been retained as acting manager of the New Zealand cricket team, ahead of their tour of Bangladesh next month.Dykes took over on a temporary basis during the ICC Champions Trophy in England, when Lindsay Crocker, the team’s general manager, was forced to fly home early for health reasons.Crocker is still recuperating, and his fitness and availability for the tour to Australia in November will be determined next month.New Zealand play two Tests and three one-day internationals on their trip to Bangladesh.

And so it begins

Simon Jones: his previous Ashes Test lasted less than a day © Getty Images

To say the talking is over would be a lie, because for the next eight weeks the banter on and off the pitch is likely to exceed fever-pitch, but at last, the end of the beginning has been reached. The most interminable build-up to the biggest series of modern times is behind us, and tomorrow, at 10.30am BST, England and Australia will get on with the main event of the summer.From the moment England left the field at Centurion way back in January, with a 2-1 series win against South Africa under their belts, July 21 has been the sole focus for the entire squad. That much became apparent when Andrew Flintoff, on whom so many of England’s hopes rest, hopped on an early flight from Johannesburg to London to undergo immediate surgery on his troublesome ankle. With apologies to Bangladesh and a smattering of one-day aficionados, everything that took place between then and now has mattered not a jot in the grander scheme of things.The questions have been asked so often and so loudly that they have taken on the guise of mantras. Is Glenn McGrath over the hill? Is Kevin Pietersen a one-shot slogger? Is Flintoff really a Test-class No. 6? Is Jason Gillespie finished? Are England’s openers up to the task? Can Shane Warne leave his personal life off the pitch? Have England really dispensed with two decades of mental baggage? The trouble with pre-ambles of such length and intensity is that they tend to overshadow the main event, but for the first time in a generation, Australia suspect that the hype might, at a pinch, be justified.”Both sets of players are sick and tired of talking about the Ashes,” admitted Michael Vaughan at a press conference at Lord’s. “We’ve got a young group of players who are excited by the challenge, and it’s a challenge we are all looking forward to.”Vaughan has become an advocate of such plain speaking in recent weeks, and his toughnut approach has taken on shades of Allan Border in the definitive Ashes summer of 1989. He has understandably refused to play along with Australia’s worthy, but hypocritical, suggestion that the fielder’s word should be gospel where disputed catches are concerned, and if nothing else, Australia know that England will not be cowed into submission before a ball has been bowled.That has not always been the case in the past, and Vaughan winced at the memory of the 2002-03 series, when Nasser Hussain won the toss and chose to bowl first on a baking hot first day at Brisbane. “Whether we were overawed I don’t know,” he added, “but Australia started well and we lost Simon Jones, which was soul-destroying for the team.” Jones, whose tumbling slide on the sandy Brisbane outfield resulted in a grievous knee injury and 16 months on the sidelines, was, as expected, named in England’s XI this morning, with Chris Tremlett missing out of the 12-man squad.There will be no such pulling of punches tomorrow, when the toss is won or lost. Lord’s, as Hussain himself admitted during a recent Championship match, is a ground where you look up, not down, upon winning the toss, and with clear blue skies predicted for the first three days of the match, both captains will be desperate to get first use of another belter of a pitch. Vaughan, who earned a reputation as a luckless tosser in his early captaincy days, has since won four in a row in Tests – although he would have gladly traded in some of his luck against Bangladesh for a correct call tomorrow.Australia have taken longer than usual to find their swagger this summer, but after their humiliations in the early weeks of the tour, all the pieces of the jigsaw are starting to fall into place now. Ricky Ponting and Adam Gilchrist found form in the final one-day matches, Damien Martyn and Justin Langer went large against Leicestershire, and even Gillespie had located some elusive rhythm by the end of that drawn game at Grace Road. McGrath, never shy of a prediction or two, announced that Australia would win 5-0, while Ponting pointed at the inexperience of England’s middle-order, where Ian Bell and Pietersen (total caps – 3) have taken over from Graham Thorpe (caps – 100).Thorpe’s omission has not attracted copious column inches as yet, which is indicative of the quandary that Pietersen’s irresistible one-day form has presented. Had Thorpe played more than just a solitary Test in three series against Australia, then Pietersen might have been forced to wait his turn, but as things stand, only one of the two players has genuine form against the Aussies – and it isn’t the man who has already signalled his retirement at the end of the series.The hope is that Pietersen will make up in bravado what he lacks in a watertight technique, although Australia, who have done their utmost to talk him into the team, can’t wait to get stuck into him. John Buchanan, their coach, has described him as “a very poor starter”, while McGrath has admitted that he and the fellow members of Australia’s self-styled “fast-bowling cartel” have one or two plans up their sleeves.But, all such speculation is, at last, superfluous. Tomorrow, the words become deeds, and not before time.England 1 Marcus Trescothick, 2 Andrew Strauss, 3 Michael Vaughan (capt), 4 Ian Bell, 5 Kevin Pietersen, 6 Andrew Flintoff, 7 Geraint Jones (wk), 8 Ashley Giles, 9 Matthew Hoggard, 10 Simon Jones, 11 Stephen Harmison.Australia (probable) 1 Justin Langer, 2 Matthew Hayden, 3 Ricky Ponting (capt), 4 Damien Martyn, 5 Simon Katich, 6 Michael Clarke, 7 Adam Gilchrist (wk), 8 Shane Warne, 9 Brett Lee, 10 Jason Gillespie, 11 Glenn McGrath.

Simpson wants new outlook from selectors

Bob Simpson coached Australia to the series victory over West Indies in 1995 © Getty Images

Bob Simpson, the coach who took Australia to the top of the world, believes the selectors’ attitude must change to ensure a successful future. He said a couple of players’ “careers might be in the balance” as they discovered the “down slope can be as quick as the up”.”They have been very loyal to this team over a long time and it has been the right way to go,” Simpson said in the . “Now they have to be very objective about what they need.” Matthew Hayden and Jason Gillespie have been the chief concerns during the Ashes series, while Michael Kasprowicz, Damien Martyn and Adam Gilchrist have also struggled.Simpson, who was in charge when Australia beat West Indies in 1995, said the side has had a swing bowling problem for the past three years and the fielding has also slipped. “It’s not just reverse-swing, but swing in general,” he told the paper. “I think it’s a problem of world batsmen at the moment. There are not many of them at all out there who are good at playing it. That problem has been there for a while and it’s really been shown up in Australia by England.”With the fifth Test starting on Thursday, Simpson said Australia’s batsmen had to start finding some consistency. “A lot of them, and I suppose Matthew Hayden is one of the main culprits here, have been getting starts and not going on with it,” he said. “Australia need to get enough runs to give their bowlers something to defend.”

Snyman powers Namibia to victory

Scorecard

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.

Guyana seal semi-final berth

Scorecard

Shivnarine Chanderpaul’s blistering 65 set up Guyana’s win © Getty Images

Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Ramnaresh Sarwan pulled their weight with the bat as Guyana sealed a semi-final spot in the KFC Cup, beating Windward Islands by a handy 55-run margin at the Carlton Club Ground in Black Rock. Chanderpaul made 65 while Sarwan scored 62, helping Guyana amass 252 for 7 in 43 overs. In reply, Windwards could only manage 197, with Darren Sammy (50) making the only significant contribution.Chanderpaul smashed two fours and four sixes in his knock, which came off just 58 balls. He was involved in a couple of handy partnerships, adding 59 for the second wicket with Krishna Arjune (47), and then putting together 84 for the fourth with Sarwan. Rawl Lewis, the Windwards spinner, was the most successful bowler, taking 3 for 57 from eight overs.Windwards’ run-chase got off to a poor start when Junior Murray got out for a duck, and wickets fell at regular intervals thereafter as thet slumped to 88 for 5. A 63-run stand between Sammy and Lewis (29) gave them some hope, but Guyana continued to chip away at the wickets and ended up with with a comfortable win.

The last of the independents shuts down

Less than 24 hours after this article was posted the USCricket.com forum reappeared. It can be read at https://www.uscricket.com/idealbbUSCricket.com, considered the premier independent cricket website in the USA for nearly a decade, abruptly went off line on October 15, 2005. It reappeared a few days later, but its bulletin boards – long considered the only place on the internet where US cricket issues were openly discussed – were no longer operational, and its home page remained frozen with the same news it has carried for the past few months.No explanation was offered on its home page for the site’s sudden demise. Calls and e-mails to the principals went unanswered.This leaves US cricket with no national website for independent reporting and open discussion. The sites of the factions in the USA Cricket Association have been in suspended animation for the past six months because of their legal disputes; Major League Cricket (MLC)’s website focuses on its own programs and operations. In any case, none of these sites have open forums where views and arguments can be freely expressed and exchanged.USCricket.com’s open forums owed their reputation to a mistake on the part of the USACA four years ago. The USACA had inherited a flourishing open forum from the US Cricket Federation (USCF), which had dissolved itself under an agreement brokered by Sir Julian Hunt on behalf of the ICC which gave its member clubs official recognition in an expanded USACA. However, the USACA’s management shut down the bulletin board because many of the posts were criticisms of its executives and board.USCricket.com’s forums, which had functioned in relative obscurity, were deluged with posts from persons who no longer had a voice in the USACA, and it responded by giving anybody and everybody who had something to say about US cricket unrestricted access to all its forums. In a few weeks, twice as many posts were appearing on USCricket.com’s forums than had ever appeared on the old USACA forum, and USCricket.com’s reputation as the premier marketplace of ideas in US cricket had been firmly established.This reputation was acquired at considerable cost, and a great deal of controversy. USACA supporters were unhappy at continuing criticism and so they resorted to a variety of tactics, which grew over time in sophistication and complexity. Under cover of the anonymity provided by USCricket.com’s rules, they proceeded to fill the forums with frivolous and irrelevant posts, character assassinations, unsupported accusations, and opinions that could be charitably described as illogical. Forum aficionados countered the lies and illogicalities with vim and vigour, but all this used up valuable space and turned off many serious US cricketers from the rubbish.Whether this is what led to the demise of the website is an open question. Some pointed to the moribund state of reporting on the site, which had posted no news stories since the Under-19 team’s triumphs in Canada. Others pointed to the absence of any sponsorship, which could put any independent website in a financial bind. It was suggested that the site had been in de facto bankruptcy for some time, and had continued the forums until it could no longer afford to do so. The truth lies with the site’s owners — and, so far, they are not talking.The loss of the USCricket.com must be considered a grave loss to US cricket. Will some other web site emerge from the shadows, as USCricket.com once did, to take on where it left off? No known candidates exist at this time. One can only watch and wait.Less than 24 hours after this article was posted the USCricket.com forum reappeared. It can be read at https://www.uscricket.com/idealbb

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