Brutal Doropoulos helps break Western Australia drought


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Theo Doropoulos produced a powerful 75 to set up Western Australia’s victory © Getty Images
 

Western Australia ended a six-game losing streak as they benefited from Queensland’s kamikaze batting in a failed bid to remain in contention for the FR Cup final. The Bulls needed to reach 243 in 25 overs to gain a double bonus point and stay in the race, but they were unable to mix heavy run-scoring with wicket protection and lost by 131 runs.Jimmy Maher left to the third ball of the innings, Chris Simpson was run-out for 13 and when Nathan Reardon and Craig Philipson fell quickly the home side was 4 for 55. Shane Watson had the most success, thrashing 46 off 27 balls, but he was bowled by Steve Magoffin when walking across his stumps after taking 14 from the over.Queensland refused to call off the chase and Magoffin, Ben Edmondson and Paul Davis were rewarded with three wickets each. The match was concluded 17.5 overs into the second innings and it was Western Australia who gained the pair of bonus points. However, both teams ended their limited-overs campaigns for the season.Theo Doropoulos showed no nerves as he rescued the Warriors from 4 for 33 and produced a brutal 75 off 63 balls, which included four sixes. He particularly liked the offspin of Chris Simpson, who was hit into the stand twice at mid-on, while Michael Kasprowicz’s final day was most memorable for him being hit into the top tier after Doropoulos charged him.It was Doropoulos’ second fifty in consecutive games and was essential to Western Australia’s total. His 124-run partnership with Matt Johnston re-floated the innings after Ashley Noffke took three wickets in a brilliant opening.Noffke thrust out his right hand for a sharp caught and bowled to get rid of Shaun Marsh, his second wicket after finding Luke Ronchi’s edge in the second over. He also removed Chris Rogers as the Bulls’ hopes of a massive win improved.The Doropoulos-Johnston stand made that virtually impossible and the Western Australia lower order annoyed the home side again, just like it did when escaping with a draw in the Pura Cup game on Thursday. Noffke was the pick with 3 for 27 while Chris Swan also provided some problems in taking two wickets.Kasprowicz did not get a breakthrough and was struck for 50 runs in his last game as a Queensland player, but it did not dampen the reception he received for his decades of service. He was also in the middle when the match ended with Scott Brant edging to Rogers at slip.

Hayden set for World Cup opener

Matthew Hayden should be ready for Australia’s first World Cup match © Getty Images

Matthew Hayden remains on target to play in Australia’s World Cup opener against Scotland on Wednesday. Ricky Ponting said Hayden’s broken big toe was healing well and extensive net sessions had him in good shape for the Scotland clash.”He batted for an hour-and-a-half today,” Ponting told after Australia’s warm-up victory over England on Friday. “He’s done a lot of running as well. The impact is the thing that everybody has been worried about. He seems to be coming along pretty well. I think right at the moment he would certainly be on track to play [on Wednesday].”Ponting said it was therefore likely Shane Watson would drop down to No. 7 despite his excellent results when given the chance to open. “I’ve said for a long time now I think his [Watson’s] game is best suited to the top of the order,” Ponting said. “Every game we’ve seen him lately when he has opened, he has looked the part there.”He’s got very good new-ball shots. He’s got a good solid technique if the ball is swinging around and he drives the ball down the ground and cuts it and pulls it as good as anybody going around. There’s no doubt he’s got a game well suited up there.”At the same time he’s a pretty strong powerful sort of guy too. So if we can get him in at the right situation with wickets in hand towards the end of our innings, he’s a guy who’s going to be able to clear the rope for us.”The imminent return of Hayden will mean Australia have a near full-strength squad. Only Andrew Symonds will remain on the sidelines but Australia hope he will be fit for their second or third group match.

Six-a-side, five-overs extravaganza to hit Sydney

Jason Gillespie, before his Test recall, was set to represent the NSW Aboriginal All-Stars © Getty Images

Come tomorrow another new form of hit and giggle game is all set to be unveiled in Australia, the has reported. Cricket Masala – a six-a-side, five-overs format, will involve local players, mostly Sydney first-graders, who will play for teams representing their own cultural heritage such as India, Pakistan or South Africa.Cricket Masala is the creation of Patrick Skene, who has seen the success of similar festivals in cricketing outposts such as Vancouver, Hong Kong, Chiang Mai and Shanghai. “If you want excitement, non-stop entertainment, it’s the way to go. This is going to be the most colourful celebration of cricket and of community that Sydney has ever seen.”Kersi Meher-Homji, a cricket writer, believes the atmosphere at Bankstown Oval will be “like that of a Roman amphitheatre and sub continental bazaar rolled into one”. That hype is not unwarranted as worldwide television deals have been struck, through PanGlobal TV, and have attracted several big-name sponsors, including Commonwealth Bank, Milo, Dilmah Tea and SBS.Lisa Sthalekar, the Australian vice-captain, will lead a Rest of the World team while Subroto Banerjee, the former India Test player, and Aminul Islam, the former Bangladesh Test cricketer, are some of the players involved. Jason Gillespie, before his Test recall, was set to represent the NSW Aboriginal All-Stars and his place has gone to Andrew Gordon, a recipient of the NSW Cricket Indigenous Volunteer of the Year award.”I’ve just started rugby training and one of the guys said to me on one hand we’ve got Jason Gillespie, who has played more than 50 Tests for Australia and taken more than 200 wickets, ” Gordon told the website. “On the other hand we have Andrew Gordon, who would be lucky to have taken 100 wickets for Ballina Bears.”

Bravo enlivens drab final day

South Africa 588 for 6 dec (Kallis 147, Prince 131, Smith 126, de Villiers 114) and 127 for 1 (Smith 50*, Dippenaar 56*) drew with West Indies 747 (Gayle 317, Sarwan 127, Chanderpaul 127, Bravo 107)
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Dwayne Bravo: maiden Test century © AFP

Dwayne Bravo’s maiden Test century was the highlight of the final day of the long-dead-and-buried Antigua Test, but he will hope that his next hundred comes in rather more memorable circumstances. His was the eighth three-figure score of the match – a new world record – as West Indies were finally extracted for a jumbo total of 747, leaving them just four runs shy of the ground record, as set by West Indies themselves against England last year.In the 31 overs that were available before an early finish, South Africa reached 127 for 1, with both Graeme Smith and Boeta Dippenaar making unbeaten half-centuries. A match that had been played for the most part with a shrug of the shoulders ended on an unwarranted sour note, however, when Wavell Hinds and Graeme Smith had a very public disagreement as the last rites of the game were played out. The scene was untypical of a largely good-humoured series.Given the circumstances of the match, South Africa’s innings contained several moments of improbable excitement. AB de Villiers, with one century in the bag already, seemed intent on raising a second before the close, when he clobbered Tino Best for three fours from the first three balls he faced. But he then skewed his fourth – a optimistic bouncer – straight to Dwight Washington at mid-on. Four overs later, Smith came within a hair’s breadth of a similar cock-up – but after a brief consultation, Narsingh Deonarine admitted that he wasn’t sure if his catch at midwicket had carried.

At least Shivnarine Chanderpaul seems fond of the pitch © AFP

The closing stages of the West Indian innings had been equally farcical, as all 11 South Africans were called upon to bowl – as had been the case when the Indians visited in 2001-02. Even the wicketkeeper Mark Boucher, with just 18 first-class deliveries to his name, turned his arm over, and, lo and behold, it was he who ended the innings, when Bravo slapped a rank long-hop to Ashwell Prince at cover. It was an undignified end to an important innings for the 21-year-old Bravo, whose marshalling of the tail was proof of a maturity beyond his years.For the fourth day out of five, there were two batsmen celebrating centuries (yesterday, by way of contrast, it was one batsman – Gayle – celebrating twice). South Africa took to the field in the morning session like condemned men, and little wonder. Chanderpaul was 82 not out overnight, and as he continued to bat with a singular lack of urgency, it was left to Makhaya Ntini to keep his team-mates’ spirits up, as he celebrated bringing up his “century” by borrowing a bail and holding it aloft to milk his applause.

Graeme Smith: two wickets with his part-time offspin © AFP

Pollock, who might now wish that his ankle had not been passed fit for this game, later followed suit, and of the frontline bowlers, only Jacques Kallis (0 for 96) and Nicky Boje (0 for 76) managed to avoid the same ignominy. Boje, in fact, never took the field at all. He was examined by a cardiologist after suffering from irregular breathing during the tea interval on the fourth afternoon, and took no further part in the match. Haroon Lorgat, the convenor of selectors, later confirmed that they would be exercising caution and Boje was duly withdrawn from the one-day squad.South Africa’s first breakthrough of the day was a bolt from the blue, but an entirely appropriate one at that. An amble down to deep mid-on, a casual pick-up and a speculative throw, and Pollock pulled off a direct hit run-out to end Chanderpaul’s 287-ball vigil and inject some fresh colour into the match. And, as so often happens, one wicket heralded two, when Smith struck the new batsman, Courtney Browne, flush on the toe and sent him on his way for a sixth-ball duck.That wicket ensured a pleasing symmetry remained on the West Indian scorecard (century, single-figure, century, single-figure … well, you’ve got to keep yourself amused somehow …) and Bravo duly obliged with his maiden hundred to maintain the pattern and level the individual centuries tally at 4-4. Simple pleasures for the statistically minded, but little consolation for those who prefer their cricket to be a contest between bat and ball.

How they were out

West IndiesShivnarine Chanderpaul run out (Pollock) 127 (665 for 6)
Speculative throw, direct hit from deep mid-onCourtney Browne lbw Smith 0 (665 for 7)
Full toss, hit on toe in front of off stumpDaren Powell b de Villiers 12 (700 for 8)
Inswinging yorker – remarkably good deliveryTino Best c Gibbs b de Villiers 5 (712 for 9)
Slogged high to midwicketDwayne Bravo c Prince b Boucher 107 (747)
Slapped rank long-hop to coverSouth AfricaAB de Villiers c Washington b Best 12 (14 for 1)
Three fours in three balls, then toe-ended slog to mid-on

Speed without haste, risk without recklessness


The cream rises to the top – Bradman’s 254 is voted best ever

Sir Donald Bradman’s career involves many totemic numbers. In a cricket publication it is almost superfluous to mention the contexts in which 99.94, 6996, 334 or 974 arise. But no number resonates quite like 254, because no innings held for its maker quite the same significance.The first of Bradman’s great Ashes innings, at Lord’s in June 1930, was like his very own Operation Shock and Awe, with English cricket’s dismay as its objective. It commenced at 3.30pm on the second day of the second Test with what remained Bradman’s fastest Test fifty, in 45 minutes. What Neville Cardus called “the most murderous onslaught I have ever known in a Test match” finished at 2.50pm on the third day, after 341 minutes, 376 deliveries and a century in boundaries.The particular significance of the 254 derives, however, from Bradman’s own estimation of it. While controversy attaches to other choices posthumously ascribed to him, Bradman left no room for doubt about where he ranked this feat, volunteering in Farewell To Cricket that it was technically the best innings of his career. “Practically without exception every ball went where it was intended,” he opined – and “practically” is, with Bradman, not an inconsiderable word.This is not merely a premium endorsement either, but an insight into Bradman himself. In his restless quest for perfection, this exploit was the pinnacle of efficiency to which he himself always aspired: speed without noticeable haste, risk without obvious recklessness. If Bradman’s feats now seem scarcely human, the self-scrutiny that singled this innings out implies they cannot have been altogether unconscious. By the same token, it is interesting that Bradman made his distinctions on a technical basis. In echoing him since, critics have been inclined to let the inning’s specifications and dynamics efface its circumstances.At the time Percy Chapman’s Englishmen had Bill Woodfull’s Australians very much under the cosh. The hosts held the Ashes, led 1-0 in the series and had compiled 425 in their first innings on the game’s most venerable ground. The trail to a Test double century, moreover, had been blazed by only three Australians in more than fifty years of international competition.The stage was set by Woodfull and his opening partner Bill Ponsford, whose 162 for the first wicket survived every challenge save a teatime visit from King George V. Indeed it was Woodfull whom Bradman credited with his approach: he was “playing so finely … that I could afford to go for the bowling”.Despite being “naturally anxious to do well” in view of the occasion and audience, Bradman surged for-ward to meet his first ball from England’s Jack `Farmer’ White, punched it to mid-off and sauntered a single. The stroke was as clean and clear as a proclamation. “It was,” wrote England’s former captain Pelham Warner, “as if he had already made a century.”White, a famously parsimonious left-arm spinner, could not curb him. Nor could Maurice Tate, still probably the world’s best medium-paced bowler. The young Gubby Allen and Walter Robins were harshly manhandled.Yet what was striking about Bradman’s batting was less its power than its poise. He already held the record for the biggest first-class innings: his 452 not out for NSW against Queensland. But this was more than humdrum accumulation of runs. It was calm, carefree, precocious; as if nobody had explained to Bradman why the occasion should daunt him and whose were the reputations he was trampling. “Young Bradman,” said Cardus, in one of his crispest phrases, “knocked solemnity to smithereens.”That Cardus was present as cricket correspondent of the Manchester Guardian is history’s good fortune; in cricket terms, it’s as if AJP Taylor had been around to report the signing of Magna Carta. “The bat sent out cracking noises; they were noises quite contemptuous,” wrote the dean of English sports journalism. “When he batted eleven men were not enough. Lord’s was too big to cover; holes were to be seen in the English field everywhere. Chapman tried his best to fill them up, but in vain.”After tea, everyone appeared to become a spectator. To cut off Bradman’s scoring seemed like trying to cap a Yellowstone geyser or a Spindletop gusher. He barely paused for the applause that greeted his 105-minute century – his third hundred in consecutive Tests – and ploughed on to the more remarkable landmark of a century in a session.Despite Woodfull’s 78-run and 170-minute head start, Bradman had caught up with his captain by the time their 160-minute partnership of 231 was ended. England’s impressive total was in sight by stumps, and now being judged according to an entirely different scale: suddenly no score, no statistic, no history was safe.Given the curious queasiness that has emerged in recent years about Bradman’s records, it’s worth noting that the man himself knew no such taboo. Resuming on Monday at 155, he cast intrepid and covetous eyes on the benchmark Test score of 287 by England’s RE `Tip’ Foster. He even thought there might be something appropriate about his consigning it to oblivion: he would seize for Sydney the record set at its cricket ground 27 years earlier.With this in mind Bradman introduced a note of care to his play before lunch, allowing Tate to bowl him a maiden. Still he overhauled a double century in 245 minutes – becoming, at 21 years and 307 days, the youngest to achieve the feat. His lunchtime 231 was already the highest score by an Australian, the highest against England and the highest at Lord’s – and still it wasn’t over.Foster’s citadel, in the end, did not fall. The elastic Chapman stuck his right hand aloft at extra cover to arrest a screaming drive – “a magnificent piece of work,” wrote Bradman admiringly – with the batsman 34 shy of his goal. His 254 had been made from 423 added while he’d been at the crease, and his third-wicket partnership of 192 with Alan Kippax was another Lord’s record.Perhaps the only aspect of Bradman’s innings as remarkable as the number of records is their brief durations. The cause, of course, was Bradman himself. His 254 was the Australian Test best for precisely one match; his 334 at Headingley two weeks later put everyone in the shade, including himself. Bradman’s 974 runs in the five-Test series, including another 232 at The Oval in August, remains a record seemingly beyond challenge.It was the beginning of a sporting monopoly so unsparing it should almost have been dissolved by anti-trust regulators. To break a record is one thing; to break one’s own is quite another. To make big scores is one thing; to compile them so memorably that they become associated with you forever is a mark of genuine greatness.

Zimbabwe Domestic: National League Scores

CLUB CRICKET: NATIONAL FIRST LEAGUE, ROUND 6MATCHES PLAYED ON SUNDAY 5 JANUARYALEXANDRA SPORTS CLUB v TAKASHINGAAt Alexandra Sports Club. Takashinga won by 137 runs.TAKASHINGAA Maregwede b Blignaut 18H K Olonga c de Beer b Blignaut 3E Chauluka c Stannard b Barry 12*S Matsikenyeri c I de Grandhomme b Stannard 83+T Taibu c I de G’homme b D Marillier 65H Masakadza run out (?) 23E Chigumbura b Rennie 25T Mufambisi b Rennie 7P Utseya not out 2A Maungwa not out 1R N ManyandeExtras (b 6 lb 4 w 13) 23(8 wkts; 50 overs) 262Blignaut 8 0 41 2 (8w)Barry 8 0 40 1 (2w)D A Marillier 7.5 0 46 1Rennie 10 0 54 2Stannard 10 0 42 1 (1w)C de Grandhomme 5 0 22 0S J Marillier 1.1 0 7 0ALEXANDRAD de Beer c Masakadza b Olonga 2+G C Goosen c Taibu b Olonga 2*G J Rennie run out (?) 31D A Marillier c Maregwede b Chigumbura 4A M Blignaut c Taibu b Maungwa 9J Cameron c Masakadza b Maungwa 11S J Marillier b Matsikenyeri 23C de Grandhomme c Taibu b Maungwa 0I de Grandhomme st Taibu b Manyande 20S Barry not out 2D D Stannard lbw b Utseya 0Extras (b 1 lb 4 w 11 nb 5) 21(32.4 overs) 125Olonga 10 1 39 2 (4w 4nb)Chigumbura 5 0 22 1 (1w)Maungwa 5 0 17 3 (1w 1nb)Utseya 6.4 1 16 2 (2w)Manyande 3 0 10 0 (1w)Matsikenyeri 3 0 16 1 (2w)OLD HARARIANS SPORTS CLUB v HARARE SPORTS CLUBAt Old Hararians Sports Club. Harare Sports Club won by nine wickets.OLD HARARIANST Benade b Mwayenga 6R Kaschula b Mwayenga 5C H Brewer c Mwayenga b Gripper 46C Ervine c Penney b Kuhn 61H P Rinke c and b Bala 5G Ziegler lbw b Mwayenga 5A Smith c Mhandu b Johnstone-Robertson 0N Chari c Carlisle b Johnstn-Robertson 6+S Khan c Gripper b Kuhn 0R Ervine c Mwayenga b Johnstn-Robertson 4H Smith not out 0Extras (b 1 w 23 nb 2) 26(47.1 overs) 164Penney 7 0 28 0 (3w 2nb)Mwayenga 8 0 34 3 (14w)Kuhn 6.1 0 29 2 (2w)Bala 10 2 34 1Gripper 10 3 20 1 (1w)Johnstone-Robertson 6 1 18 3 (3w)HARARE SPORTS CLUBM A Vermeulen not out 87*T R Gripper c H Smith b Chari 2S V Carlisle not out 65R VermeulenB KuhnA MhanduA PenneyM LewisA MwayengaS BalaG Johnstone-RobertsonExtras (lb 2 w 9 nb 1) 12(1 wkt; 30.1 overs) 166Chari 5 0 21 1 (1w)Rinke 10 2 51 0 (7w 1nb)H Smith 3 0 10 0C Ervine 5 0 29 0Brewer 2 0 21 0 (1w)Benade 5.1 0 32 0KWEKWE SPORTS CLUB v BULAWAYO ATHLETIC CLUBAt Kwekwe Sports Club. Kwekwe Sports Club won by 229 runs.KWEKWE SPORTS CLUBT Duffin lbw b Nicolle 0V Sibanda c Williams b Nicolle 28T J Friend lbw b Ewing 109S M Ervine lbw b Ewing 58*D P Viljoen c Williams b Coventry 39J M Cornford b Coventry 38+D J R Campbell not out 16C MacmillanR W PriceE C RainsfordR IslandExtras (lb 3 w 39 nb 4) 46(6 wkts; 50 overs) 334J S Nicolle 10 1 69 2 (3w 2nb)M Nicolle 5 0 54 0 (21w 2nb)Hoffman 7 0 42 0 (7w)Coventry 7 0 49 2Dabengwa 6 1 40 0 (3w)Ewing 10 0 45 2 (1w)Williams 5 0 32 0 (3w)BULAWAYO ATHLETIC CLUBK M Dabengwa b S M Ervine 1A P Hoffman c S M Ervine b Friend 3C Mahachi b Friend 0C K Coventry c Campbell b S M Ervine 6+M G McKillop c Macmillan b Friend 4*G M Ewing c Macmillan b S M Ervine 33S Williams not out 10M Nicolle c Cornford b Friend 3R Kasawaya c Campbell b Friend 2J S Nicolle c Island b Macmillan 0B Mukondiwa c Viljoen b Price 18Extras (w 23 nb 2) 25(27.4 overs) 105Friend 10 2 33 5 (15w 1nb)S M Ervine 10 1 43 3 (4w 1nb)Macmillan 4 0 20 1 (4w)Price 3.4 1 9 1UNIVERSALS SPORTS CLUB v OLD GEORGIANS SPORTS CLUBAt Universals Sports Club. Old Georgians won by three wickets.UNIVERSALS SPORTS CLUBD D Ebrahim lbw b Mackay 2B A Murphy c Wishart b Mwayenga 13B G Rogers c Jones b Mackay 11G M Croxford b Flower 38N B Mahwire c Wishart b Mackay 1H Adam c Mackay b Bennett 8*I Meman c Flower b Bennett 3D T Hondo c Wishart b Flower 21S Adam lbw b Flower 0B Sanyika not out 4A Adam b Flower 0Extras (lb 1 w 10 nb 9) 20(37.5 overs) 121Mackay 8 1 22 3Mwayenga 7 1 19 1Evans 4 0 17 0Bennett 7 0 33 2Flower 7.5 0 14 4Coulson 4 0 15 0OLD GEORGIANSC B Wishart c Croxford b Murphy 61A J C Neethling b Hondo 0G W Flower c Ebrahim b Murphy 5C N Evans b Murphy 0*A J Mackay c Mahwire b S Adam 28S Jones c Hondo b Murphy 0W Kalas not out 4M de Souza lbw b Hondo 3W Mwayenga not out 7R J BennettI M CoulsonExtras (lb 1 w 12 nb 3) 16(7 wkts; 30.2 overs) 124Hondo 10 3 27 2Mahwire 5.2 0 54 0Croxford 2 0 8 0Murphy 10 2 26 4S Adam 3 0 8 1

MUTARE SPORTS CLUB v QUEENS SPORTS CLUBThis match will be played at a neutral venue, Harare Sports Club, on Saturday 11 January.

Indian news round-up

My job is to get more out of the team: WrightIndian coach John Wright expressed concern over the crucial number six spot in the Indian side and said he was desperately looking for an all rounder. In an interview to PTI in Mutare, Wright said “We are in desperate need for someone who is an all-rounder… or someone who can be a genuine number six…. We do need a balance”. He added “I think the captain (Sourav Ganguly) is in a better position to fill in this spot. He probably has to bowl a bit more. Of course he is a very capable bowler. We need more people like him. Even Sachin (Tendulkar).They can change the course of any match on their day. If they can expand their roles, they can help us to become a better cricket team.”The former New Zealand captain said “Zaheer Khan and Harbhajan can both develop on their batting skills. They have already shown signs that they can bat to a certain extent. Even Ajit Agarkar is capable of a lot more with the bat. And that’s my objective – to get more out of them.” Apart from allrounders, Wright expects the seamers to perform saying “There is some promise, but we need performance. We need to be on the look out for fast bowlers. Javagal Srinath at the moment is looking sharp. And then there is quite a bit of battle for the other two medium pacers’ slot.”On the gruelling schedule ahead for the Indians, the coach said “The coming six months will be good for us because we will be away from home and this will help the team to form into a close-knit unit. We have to keep it tight together in victory or defeat.”Condon report does not say anything new: DalmiyaFormer International Cricket Council President, Jagmohan Dalmiya on Wednesday said Sir Paul Condon’s report on match fixing was “merely cosmetic” and had no real substance. “The report does not really throw much light on the match fixing issue. It does not say anything new. Just making references to some events does not help in solving the issue,” Dalmiya told a press conference in Kolkata.Dalmiya said that the report had not gone into the match fixing issue in depth though Condon had studied the reports of various other agencies and commissions probing the matter. He said that Condon had also questioned the credibility of the final of the ICC KnockOut tournament in Kenya between India and New Zealand but had not mentioned any specific wrong-doing. “He has made a passing mention to that match. The New Zealand Board have been quick to defend their players. I don’t know whether the BCCI has defended their players since I was out of the country”, Dalmiya said.On Condon’s view that the present structure of the ICC was inadequate to run international cricket and manage large sums of money, Dalmiya said the ICC’s executive board would meet at Lord’s on June 18 and Condon’s recommendations will be discussed in detail.”Ministry could consider introducing provision for misconduct: JaitleyThe Union Law Minister Arun Jaitley said on Wednesday that ‘misconduct’ by cricketers found guilty by the CBI of match-fixing did not come under any of the existing penal provisions adding it was for the Sports Ministry to suggest changes in the law to prosecute such offenders. “Those found guilty of match-fixing did show misconduct. But the ingredients of misconduct strictly did not fit into any of the penal provisions of criminal code of conduct wherein they could be prosecuted,” Jaitley told reporters in London.Jaitley, who is also President of Delhi and District Cricket Association, said. “As of today, with the kind of evidence they have, all accusations showed misconduct by concerned cricketers and therefore, the Indian Cricket Board was empowered to take action which they did.”On the case referred to him by the Sports Ministry to find out whether any penal action could be taken based on the CBI report, Jaitley said there was no proposal before the Law Ministry to incorporate penal provisions for such misconduct and added, “It is for the Department of Sports to consider.” He added “If such acts are repeatedly still taking place in spite of the exposures, then you have to come out with tougher provisions of law.”Kumble turns down lucrative offer to turn TV commentatorAnil Kumble, India’s main strike bowler in the last decade, has turned down a highly lucrative offer to become a television commentator in the forthcoming India-Zimbabwe Test series and the Triangular series between the two countries and the West Indies. According to information available from Star-ESPN sources, Kumble had been given the offer a few days back to join Sunil Gavaskar and Ravi Shastri as a member of the commentary team. However, he declined the offer as hehad some prior commitments. One of them was to take part in some shooting for advertisements and also appear in a regional film.Meanwhile, the leg-spinner is not expected to be fit before India’s tour to South Africa. As a result, he will miss the India-Sri Lanka series, the Asian Test Championship and a few other one day tournaments.Yadav to hold discussions with DalmiyaThe President of the Bihar Cricket Association, Laloo Prasad Yadav, is expected to visit Kolkata next week to hold discussions with his counterpart in Bengal, Jagmohan Dalmiya. Yadav, who took over the post recently, is determined to improve the state of the game in Bihar. Other than that, he is also interested in hosting international matches in various parts of Bihar and also to improve the playing conditions.Reports from Patna indicated that Yadav would hold discussions with Dalmiya and seek his co-operation in improving the facilities for the game in Bihar. He would also ask for suggestions to improve the infra-structural facilities including a face-lift for the stadium at Patna. Sources however, made it clear that at the moment Yadav’s aim was to put Bihar on the cricketing map of the world.Sekhar coaching bowlers in BangladeshA five-day long workshop for young and emerging bowlers began at the Dhanmondi Club ground in Dhaka on Thursday under the supervision of former Indian fast bowler TA Sekhar, currently the chief coach of the MRF Pace Foundation in Chennai.The workshop, which brought together 28 youngsters in the morning, was reduced to 16 by the afternoon. “By the time I finish, hopefully I’ll be able to recommend eight to ten bowlers to the Board for further long-term training,” said Sekhar. He added that Bangladesh had a couple of very promising bowlers and if they could be given proper attention, then they would be an asset in the future.Later, Sekhar intends to select at least four boys for a month’s training at the MRF Pace Foundation, starting on June 17.

Celtic: Daniel Kelly set to pen three-year Parkhead deal

Celtic now look set to fend off interest from Liverpool for Daniel Kelly, with the young playmaker set to pen a professional deal at Parkhead.

The Lowdown: Multiple clubs keen

The Hoops have lost a number of young talents in recent years, with Ben Doak set to become the latest with a transfer to Liverpool edging closer.

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The Reds were also circling over a swoop for Kelly, along with Arsenal and Benfica. Kelly, a creative central midfielder, is just 16 years of age and is actually the godson of former Celtic striker Scott McDonald, with the Hoops connection set to continue.

The Latest: Three-year deal

The Daily Record’s Scott Burns shared a story late on Tuesday evening, revealing Kelly is set to pen a three-year professional deal at Celtic Park despite the interest from Anfield.

Burns added that a contract is set to be finalised before the end of the week, with left-back Mitchel Frame in line for a similar deal.

The Verdict: Good news

It appeared at one point that the Hoops were unable to hold onto any of their future stars, with the likes of Liam Morrison, Barry Hepburn, Josh Adam and Liam Hughes just some who have departed for some of Europe’s biggest clubs in recent years.

Doak looks set to join that list with a move to Anfield, however, Celtic chiefs now look set for a long-awaited boost with two players closing in on permanent deals.

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Hopefully, both Kelly and Frame go on to become first-team regulars in years to come and the Hoops stay in constant communication in regards to a pathway to Ange Postecoglou’s plans.

In other news: ‘Unfortunately…’ – Journalist gutted ‘for Celtic’ as more exit news emerges from Parkhead. 

'The batsmen forgot their roles' – Dhoni

Irfan Pathan was the only batsman to get into double digits as India slumped to a nine-wicket defeat © Getty Images
 

Mahendra Singh Dhoni says India’s batsmen need to rethink their roles inthe team after the side was bundled out for 74 in a nine-wicket Twenty20loss to Australia. Irfan Pathan was the only man who reacheddouble-figures and Dhoni said early wickets meant too many players wereforced into unfamiliar tactics.”We ended up [in a situation where] players who should have played their strokes were [forced to] play some other game, and guys who should have stayed there and given the strokeplayers a base played their shots and got out,” Dhoni said. The typically aggressive Dhoni had to attempt a rescue mission after India wobbled to 5 for 32, but could only manage a watchful 9 from 27 balls. Before Dhoni departed, Gautam Gambhirand Robin Uthappa were both caught when they aimed over the infield andRohit Sharma was bowled trying to pull a delivery that was much too full.”Somewhere in the middle, they forgot their roles and responsibilities inthe team,” Dhoni said. “We lost too many early wickets, and in the middle overs it was really hard to determine whether to go after the bowlers or just rotate the strikebecause on a wicket like this you cannot really defend 120 runs.”Dhoni was confident the loss would not affect his team’s mindset ahead ofthe CB Series, though his counterpart Michael Clarke said Australia nowhad the momentum. Clarke said as much as India’s mistakes, it wasAustralia’s precision that earned them their first Twenty20 win againstthe world champions.”The way we prepared, studied the Indian batsmen over the last fewTwenty20s that they’ve played, I think our preparation was spot on and ourexecution was exactly how we wanted it,” Clarke said. Australia and Indianow travel to Brisbane for the opening tri-series game on Sunday.

Brown targets Dutch battle

Scotland have enjoyed some tough battles with the Netherlands © AFP

While the smaller nations at the World Cup dream of upsetting one of the major sides their main target is to make the most of the experience at the top level. The matches between Associate nations become their own mini-finals and Dougie Brown, the Scotland allrounder, is targeting his team’s meeting with Netherlands.The two sides meet in St Kitts on March 22 having recently completed a close tussle at the World Cricket League in Kenya, where Scotland came out on top by two runs. Both teams will already have played Australia and South Africa in the group stage, but their latest head-to-head will give a true reflection on where they stand.”Holland is our cup final and they are the team we are playing on a level playing field,” Brown told the . “They’ve got some quality players, we’ve got some quality players and it should be a fascinating game.”We’ve managed to win the last three or four games against the Dutch but they’ve generally been tight matches. The improvement in our squad during the past three months has been dramatic and this needs to continue in the West Indies.”But Brown added that making those strides in international cricket will always be tough while the game is played at an amateur level by most of the squad. “Without being able to dedicate time to cricket, nine to five, our development will consistently be hindered,” he said. “If we play professionally then we will be able to take on any side in the world on a level playing field.”Scotland lost both their warm-up matches against Sri Lanka and Bangladesh although Brown believes the team can only gain positives over the coming weeks and enhance their reputation on the world stage.”We can’t really lose in the next few weeks because we’re expected to lose,” he added. “And that makes us a dangerous side – we’ve got good players playing good cricket with proven match-winners in our ranks.”It’s up to us to raise the profile of the game further in Scotland and hopefully secure the extra funding that we need.”

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