Vinay Kumar strikes century

Hitting an unbeaten hundred, D Vinay Kumar took Hyderabad to a strongposition at the end of Day Two of their Ranji Trophy league matchagainst Tamil Nadu at Chennai.Unbeaten overnight on 56, Vinay Kumar proceeded to compile runs slowly,batting primarily with Venkatapathy Raju (35). He completed his centuryand was not out on 103, made off 317 balls. He hit 11 fours and a six.For Tamil Nadu, Lakshmipathy Balaji and MR Shrinivas took three and fourwickets respectively.The home side opener, Sadagopan Ramesh, fell having made 16, but SSriram and C Hemanth Kumar batted well before the former fell for 33.Hemanth Kumar was unbeaten on 42 off 84 balls at stumps, and he wasaccompanied by Hemang Badani, who was not out on 7.

Ireland defeat Netherlands in low scoring game

Ireland successfully defended a small total of 149 when they defeatedNetherlands by 19 runs in the Plate Championship of the under-19 WorldCup at the Radella grounds on Wednesday.Electing to bat, Ireland found runs hard to come by against the trioof Tewarie (3 for 23), Nijman (2 for 31) and Hout (2 for 23) and wererestricted to 149 for eight in 40 overs. Opener D Joyce top scoredwith a fighting 58. He faced 101 balls and hit five of them to thefence. With wicketkeeper R Haire (23) he took part in the only standof note – 62 runs for the fourth wicket off 11.5 overs.Netherlands also struggled for runs and at 66 for seven, they faced abig defeat. But A Raja (43) and A Buurman (15) put up a semblance of afight by adding 34 runs for the eighth wicket off seven overs. Rajawho was last out, faced 46 balls and hit two fours and two sixes. CArmstrong was the most successful bowler with three for 13 off sixovers. Netherlands were all out for 130 in 38.3 overs.

Leeds: Pete O’Rourke makes Brenden Aaronson claim

Journalist Pete O’Rourke has claimed Leeds United want to sign two midfielders this summer, with Brenden Aaronson a ‘top target’, GiveMeSport report.

The Lowdown: January bids

The Whites failed to add to their senior ranks in the January window, with teenage striker Mateo Joseph Fernandez the only player through the door at Thorp Arch.

Leeds did try and bring Aaronson to Yorkshire, though, and made two bids to RB Leipzig for the American’s signature. As we know, they were unsuccessful, but the club are confident their pitch for the 21-year-old will work in the summer.

The Latest: O’Rourke’s comments

O’Rourke was talking to GiveMeSport regarding transfers in a story shared on Tuesday evening. He said two are wanted at the end of the campaign, with Aaronson their key target.

“I don’t think that stance has changed from the Leeds recruitment team. They still want to bring in two midfielders, and Aaronson remains a top target in the summer.”

The Verdict: Survival required first

It’s good to see that the club want two midfielders in the summer, however, failing to make any senior signings in the winter window has been a huge gamble.

Marcelo Bielsa has had to deal with multiple injury issues this season in what is already a small squad, with Liam Cooper, Kalvin Phillips and Patrick Bamford missing large parts of the season. As a result, Leeds are now flirting with the bottom three as we enter the crunch period of the campaign.

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Hopefully, the Whites will remain in the top flight and bolster their midfield ranks over the summer but they’ll first need to guarantee their place in the division to do just that.

In other news: ‘Exciting’ Leeds attacker now set for March return after months out as reporter relays news. 

Carey century keeps Australia afloat as Ashes refuses to find slower gear

Australia 326 for 8 (Carey 106, Khawaja 82, Archer 3-29) vs EnglandAstonishingly, this Ashes series is just seven days old, but it remains in no mood to slow down and take stock of its surroundings. This opening day at Adelaide Oval was, in its own way, every bit as chaotic as the six that had gone before it. By its close, a cricket-record crowd of 56,298 was none the wiser as to whether England were in the process of clawing themselves back from the brink in this series, or whether Alex Carey’s brilliant maiden Ashes hundred had already pitched them most of the way through the exit.Arguably, the day’s only moment of stillness came in the minutes before the first ball was bowled, when the teams and crowd united in a pitch-perfect tribute to the victims of the Bondi terror atrocity. Either side of that serene moment, it was turmoil – starting with Steven Smith’s shock withdrawal, 45 minutes before the toss, due to vertigo, a moment which, in turn, granted Usman Khawaja a reprieve, not only for this contest, but arguably his Test career.Related

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  • Smith ruled out on the morning of Adelaide with vertigo, Khawaja recalled

The madness continued through an opening gambit in which England’s bowlers threatened to lose the plot on a sweltering morning in the field – only for Australia to hand it straight back to them with a run of five culpable dismissals in a row, and six out of eight all told. The most damning of these were the two wickets in three balls, immediately after the lunch break, with which Jofra Archer ignited England’s revival as part of a very personal response to the criticism he had attracted in the wake of the Brisbane loss.As if that was not sufficient, there was also space in the narrative for Khawaja’s career prospects to turn on a dime, thanks to a drop at slip from Harry Brook on 5 that persuaded him to shed the reticence and feast on numerous freebies from a toiling but deeply flawed attack. And in the final session, another DRS drama also reared its head, with Carey’s reprieve for a caught-behind on 72 subsequently declared by Simon Taufel, the former ICC umpire, to be another failure of “technology calibration”. Carey himself conceded at the close that he thought he’d heard a nick, and soon after the close the operators accepted they had been at fault.The upshot was another Ashes day conducted at warp speed. That Australia’s run-rate ended up shy of 4 an over was due entirely to the hard-lined discipline, and intermittent raw speed, of Archer, whose 3 for 29 in 16 overs made him as much of a lone wolf in England’s attack as Mitchell Starc had been for Australia in each of his first innings at Perth and Brisbane.And in the same way that Starc’s superiority had drawn nervy errors from England’s batters in those games, so Australia were the team that frittered away a chance for a choke-hold on this contest, and potentially the series.Only once this century had the hosts scored less than 439 after winning the toss and batting first at Adelaide – and that innings of 245 had come in England’s epochal victory on their triumphant tour in 2010-11. With that nemesis Starc still in situ at the close on 29 not out, it’s not out of the question that he’ll be able to marshal the tail on the second morning, as he did so effectively at the Gabba. But against a three-over-old ball, and against an England team who are in the process of showing their “dog”, flawed and feral though it may be, it ought to be over to England’s batters soon enough, to show if they’ve heeded any lessons from their frivolity to date.Jofra Archer was England’s stand-out bowler on the opening day•Getty Images

Despite all the apparent hard talk since Brisbane, the opening exchanges gave the impression that certain members of England’s attack were still living it up in their beach bar in Noosa. Brydon Carse, promoted to the new ball in the absence of Gus Atkinson, started with real purpose … for all of five balls, before sacrificing his threatening seam and swing for a diet of half-trackers that Jake Weatherald in particular was delighted to cash in on.It took a barely acknowledged moment of brilliance to blast England their opening. Archer – conspicuously missing his trademark gold chain after the ad hominem attacks he had received for wearing it – ground his way through his gears to draw Weatherald onto the front foot before scorching a 147kph bouncer into his splice. Jamie Smith gathered the top edge with barely a flicker – conscious perhaps of his culpable drop of Travis Head at a similar moment in the second Test. At 33 for 1, England were in the mix.Moments later, they were surging at 33 for 2, courtesy of a stunning one-hander from Zak Crawley, as Head slammed a hard-handed drive low to his left at short cover, to give Carse’s tempestuous day a kick-start.Out came Khawaja, still blinking at the absurdity of his circumstances. However, as he ground out five runs from his first 27 balls, it initially seemed that obsolescence would have been the kinder fate for a player who is due to turn 39 midway through this contest. But then, he lashed into a drive as Josh Tongue fired in a full length, and Brook at second slip made a meal of a tough but takeable chance, away to his left.It was the pardon that freed Khawaja of his reticence. His very next ball was pinged off the pads through square leg for four – the first of five boundaries in that region, and eight behind square all told – and as he romped along to an 81-ball fifty, England’s basic lack of discipline was being laid all too bare.But then, so too was Australia’s. Honours were broadly even when the teams went to lunch on 94 for 2, but what followed would have beggared belief, had it not been for England’s own batting opting for similar self-immolation all series long. Archer’s first ball after the break was little more than a loosener, but Marnus Labuschagne met it with a floppy, half-formed pull that Carse at midwicket could not have dropped if he’d tried – and seeing as he’d missed a similar sitter off Josh Inglis at Brisbane, he did have previous in that regard.As if that wasn’t enough of a gift, out came Australia’s golden child, Cameron Green, fresh from his whopping Aus$4 million deal with Kolkata Knight Riders. The only mercy for Green was that the IPL auction had taken place the previous evening. His second ball produced a nondescript push off the pads to midwicket, where Carse clung on again, rather more fortuitously this time, as the ball clanged off his right palm and into his left as he dived across to his right.Carey, at least, remained in the zone that he has graced throughout a superb series. Right from the outset of his innings, it was clear that his timing was exquisite, even on the shots that thumped into England’s ring of cover fielders. As he and Khawaja built into a fifth-wicket stand of 91, normal service for a first innings at Adelaide was being restored – not least when England’s spinner Will Jacks entered the attack for some of the leakiest, most optimistic offspin ever to be described as a frontline option.Usman Khawaja fell to Will Jacks as England struck before tea•Getty Images

Though he found some purchase, which Nathan Lyon will doubtless have observed with interest, Jacks was scarcely able to land two balls in a row on the same length as his initial overs were milked at more than an run a ball. And yet, no sooner had he served up his best ball of the day, a dipping ripper that turned sharply past Khawaja’s edge, than he had delivered the afternoon’s key breakthrough. Khawaja climbed into a slog-sweep to re-establish his dominance, and picked out Tongue at deep midwicket who held on well to a fast, flat chance.Inglis kept the runs coming, with judicious use of the reverse sweep, as he and Carey built into the evening session. But Tongue burst through his defences for 32 for arguably the day’s first dismissal that was not predominantly batter-error, before Carse claimed his second, courtesy of a lifter into Pat Cummins’ ribs that Ollie Pope collected at short leg.That decision was upheld by DRS, unlike Carey’s earlier in the afternoon – an under-edged pull off Tongue on 72, that Ahsan Raza decreed had missed the bat, and which Snicko could not confirm despite England’s adamance, and Carey’s own apparent guilt. It was a continuation of one of the subplots of the series, though the life did enable one of the most poignant moments of the day – Carey’s century and subsequent tribute to his father Gordon, who died of leukaemia in September. The tears in his own eyes were nothing compared to those of his wife in the crowd.Much like his team-mates, however, Carey couldn’t make the good going last for as long as he might have done. After a fine 143-ball innings, he found an unworthy way for it to end – an ugly slog-sweep off Jacks that spiralled high into the leg-side for Smith to complete his second simple take of the day.Though Starc and Lyon endured to the close, the sense of Australia’s dominance of the contest could not. And yet, forewarned is forearmed where this series, and this England team is concerned. For the third Test running, they’ve closed the first day in a position of apparent competitiveness. It’s only when their fickle batters get going on this far from fickle surface, that we’ll know the true size of the dog in this fight. And the pulse in their campaign.

Feeble Canada struggle in follow-on

ScorecardCanada lost 6 for 53 in a dramatic collapse on the third day to put Namibia in control of their Intercontinental Cup match at Windhoek.Resuming on 233 for 4, Canada lost two quick wickets to Ian van Zyl before Gerrie Snyman mopped up the tail. Snyman, the 26-year-old medium-fast bowler, ended with the impressive figures of 4 for 63. Mohammad Iqbal’s lone effort, a brilliant 140, wasn’t enough for Canada to save the follow-on.They didn’t fare much better in their second innings either, losing Abdul Jabbar and Qaiser Ali cheaply. But Iqbal found support in Trevor Bastiampillai, with whom he put on 125 for the third wicket before Bastiampillai was caught behind for a composed 63. One wicket brings two – or in Canada’s case, three or four in quick succession – and Iqbal was left stranded while his middle and lower orders collapsed around him.At stumps, Canada led by just 40 runs.

Yousuf continues his run-fest

Pakistan 257 for 7 (Yousuf 102) v West Indies
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Pakistan how they were out

Mohammad Yousuf became only the third batsman to run up a streak of five hundreds insuccessive Tests.© AFP

A year that has already been a spectacular one for Mohammad Yousuf goteven better as he stroked his way to yet another classy hundred – a recordeighth in 2006, and his fifth in successive matches – on the opening dayat Karachi. Requiring 148 at the start of the day to equal Viv Richards’srecord of most runs in a calendar year, Yousuf reduced the deficit to just46, but his dismissal for 102 gave West Indies the edge, as they foughtspiritedly in the field to restrict Pakistan to 257 for 7.Imran Farhat contributed a useful 47, while most of the others got starts,but as has been the norm this year, Yousuf was the only batsman who kickedon. On a dry pitch lacking in pace and bounce – hardly anything rose aboveknee length, while Denesh Ramdin regularly collected deliveries around hisankles – Yousuf found his rhythm and timing with amazing ease, driving onthe up with the languid grace that has been such an attractive feature ofhis batting. While others struggled to get the ball off the square, Yousufcreamed boundaries almost at will before missing a pull shot off CoreyCollymore late in the day.But for Yousuf’s effort, West Indies would have been in complete commandof the match. Despite losing the toss and having to bowl on a completelygrassless surface, the bowlers kept their spirits up quite superblythroughout the day. They went in a bowler short – Dave Mohammed wasdropped for Ramnaresh Sarwan – but the lack of bowling resource didn’taffect them, as the fast bowlers all toiled hard. Collymore bowled withoutstanding control all day, Jerome Taylor managed pace and some swing,while Daren Powell, even though he finished wicketless, bowled awhole-hearted spell late in the day, getting appreciable reverse-swing.Dwayne Bravo chipped in with two crucial wickets, and the fielding wassharp, with several direct hits – the only blemish was Denesh Ramdin’sreprieve of Yousuf, when he was on 63.Apart from that one lapse, though, it was a near-flawless knock fromYousuf, who became only the third batsman to run up a streak of five hundreds insuccessive Tests. (Don Bradman, with six, and Jacques Kallis are theother two.) Right from the outset Yousuf timed the ball crisply – a clearindication of the dream form he is in – even as the rest battled toovercome the lack of pace in the track. He leant into his drives andpeppered the cover and extra-cover boundaries whenever the bowlers pitchedit up outside off, and picked off anything on his legs with immaculateclips off the legs. A gloriously executed back-foot punch through covertook him past the 500-run mark for the series, as West Indies struggled tokeep him in check.The rest of the batting, though, remained a disappointment. MohammadHafeez was comprehensively beaten by a superb indipper from Collymore,Farhat promised a lot but fell to yet another poor stroke, Younis Khan wasa victim of atrocious running between the wickets, while Inzamam-ul-Haq’sbattle for survival was a telling commentary of how ephemeral form can be.Widely recognised – till recently at least – as the best batsman in theside, Inzamam’s struggles were in stark contrast to Yousuf’s fluidelegance. The pair put together 66, of which Inzamam contributed alaboured 18 off 64.Finding the lack of pace a huge hindrance, Inzamam pottered around, unableto time his drives or place the ball in the gaps. That he finally fell tothe innocuous offspin of Daren Ganga, driving straight to mid-off, tellsjust how badly out of touch he was.The West Indians, for their part, did most of the things right in thefield. In a match they must win to level the series, it would have been easy tolose heart after seeing the way the ball behaved in the first couple ofovers – there was no swing on offer, and very little bounce – but theyfought on. Brian Lara often employed unorthodox fields: recognizing thefact that the edges to the slips might not carry, he reduced the slipcordon early on, instead using the short midwicket and short cover to tryand snaffle the miscues. They were especially dominant in the lastsession, taking four wickets for only 73, and despite Yousuf’s century,Lara would be happy with their day’s work.

Maynard backs under-performing batsmen

Michael Vaughan’s second batting failure of the game was matched by several of his colleagues © Getty Images

Matthew Maynard, England’s assistant coach, refused to get carried away after England’s second top-order collapse of the match, and instead put England’s struggles down to a touch of early-tour rustiness.”The guys have had five or six weeks off, and only they could tell you how switched on or off they are at the moment,” Maynard told reporters after England had slumped to 39 for 6 in their second innings. “Losing the wickets was a disappointment, but I wouldn’t read too much into it. I can’t fault the commitment from the lads. They’ve worked hard in training and in the nets.”Improbably, given all the pre-tour hype about the trial by spin that awaits England, the damage in both innings has been done by seamers. But Maynard pointed out that the same had been true on England’s last tour in 2000-01. “Apparently the same happened five years ago,” he said. “The practice wickets have been totally different to the centre wickets, which will be totally different to the Test wicket in two weeks’ time. Today it was a bit like English county conditions, and we haven’t adapted that well.”Anyone back home examining England’s scorecard might accuse the team of a touch of complacency, but Maynard insisted this was not the case. “I wouldn’t have thought so at all,” he said. “The team has been talked to by the captain, and they all know that to win in the subcontinent is the next big challenge. They are definitely all up for it.”Amid the chaos, some early indicators for the Test have been popping up, not least Paul Collingwood’s apparent headstart over Ian Bell. “It’s still early stages,” said Maynard. “The management team and selectors have got their ideas, but if Belly scores a hundred tomorrow his name is sure to be in the frame. That’s the beauty of this squad, everyone is competing for a place.””The bowlers impressed,” Maynard added of England’s one bright spot of the day. “They were rusty at the start, but once they had got overs in their legs they began to hit good areas. There was some great reward for Liam Plunkett in his first match, a nice comeback for Jimmy Anderson, and Shaun Udal got some turn.”

Balaji to miss Australia series

Lakshmipathy Balaji: time for some rest© Getty Images

Lakshmipathy Balaji will miss the upcoming Test series against Australia due to his groin injury. Andrew Leipus, the team physiotherapist, confirmed that Balaji was surely ruled out of action for the next two months and added that the recovery process might take much longer., a Kolkata-based daily, reported Leipus as saying: “Well, he’s off cricket for at least two months and complete recovery from the groin problem may take four-five … He’s still in pain, but nothing much can be done.”Balaji was suffering from a bone inflammation on both sides of the pelvis and Leipus said that the recovery process would take time. “Painkillers aren’t the solution, in fact they may retard the recovery process.”Leipus had also consulted Chris Bradshaw, a doctor based in London, and added, “Dr Bradshaw’s opinion is that nature must be allowed to take its course. More than anything else, Balaji has to focus on the rehab programme. As for the pain, Dr Bradshaw believes it’s going to go away one morning. That Balaji will wake up without discomfort.”Balaji is scheduled to return home and will leave Birmingham for London on Friday morning. Balaji admitted that it was a setback and added, “But it’s not the end of my career. I reckon things are going to be better once the pain goes. I’ll be back, that’s for sure.”

Netten ends long association with CD selection

One of the longest serving selectors in New Zealand’s domestic cricket, Basil Netten has ended his selection role with the Central Districts (CD) side. First named as a selector in 1989, he served for all but three seasons, and they were when he was chairman of CD.The association has decided to follow New Zealand’s lead and combine the team coach and the convener of selectors role. Former international batsman Mark Greatbatch has been elected there and his selectors will be former long-serving CD batsman Scott Briasco and the newcomer to the panel David Hadfield.Hadfield, from the Horowhenua Kapiti region, has been a CD Under-19 selector in the past and more recently has worked with the CD Stags in his sports psychology role. He has also been part of Briasco’s CD coaching of coaches programme.

Sri Lankan squad for 1st Test versus West Indies

The Selection Committee of the BCCSL has chosen the following squad for the first Test versus the West Indies in Galle from the 13th to the 17th of November. The squad was approved by the Ministry of Urban Development, Public Utilities, Housing & Sports.1. Sanath Jayasuriya (Captain)
2. Marvan Atapattu
3. Mahela Jayawardena
4. Hashan Tillekeratne
5. Russel Arnold
6. Kumar Sangakkara
7. Tilan Samaraweera
8. Muttiah Muralitharan
9. Chaminda Vaas
10. Nuwan Soyza
11. Ruchira Perera
12. Suresh Perera
13. Michael Vandort
14. Niroshan Bandaratilleke
15. Charitha Buddhika

Manager Air Commodore Ajit Jayasekare
Coach Dav Whatmore
Physiotherapist Sean Slattery
Media Manager Interim Committee Interim Committeebccsl.mu.2001.35

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