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Zimbabweans poised for win

ScorecardAn easy win is on the cards for the Zimbabweans, with the Bangladesh Cricket Board Academy having been reduced to 107 for 8 in pursuit of 304. The bowlers dominated the second day as well – 16 wickets fell to add to the 22 on day one – but the tourists managed a respectable 273 in their second innings, a much better performance after they had been dismissed for 89 in the first.The worrying sign for the Zimbabweans was the failure of their middle order, with Nos 5-8 in the line-up failing to pass 10. Hamilton Masakadza, the captain for this game, and Tatenda Taibu resumed the innings at 113 for 2. The two added 52 before Masakadza was caught behind off Nazmul Hossain for 66. Taibu top scored with 70 off 90 balls and was the eighth man out. An unbeaten 27 from Ray Price boosted to total to 273. For the hosts, fast bowler Nazmul Hossain took a four-for, while Saqlain Sajib chipped in with three wickets.The BCB Academy had been shot out for 59 on Tuesday, and there was not much fight in their second innings barring Kamrul Islam and captain Naeem Islam. The duo put on 67 in 27.1 overs after the openers were out cheaply, but both failed to build on their starts. Price and Tawanda Mupariwa took seven wickets between them – three of Price’s four came in the penultimate over of the day.

No penalty for opting-out – Miller

Geoff Miller has told England’s players that it’s ok to stay at home, and Andrew Flintoff is likely to choose to do so © Getty Images
 

England’s national selector, Geoff Miller, has paved the way for a weakened squad to return to India ahead of the forthcoming Test series, by insisting that no player will be penalised if they choose the safety-first option and decide to stay at home with their families.Emphasising that safety was his priority, Miller told The Guardian that an opt-out would “not count against” anyone, and added: “Players need to be on their full mettle. There is no point in anyone going out there if their mind is on physical self-preservation. We need them performing with bat and ball. But depending on the character involved, it might not be right for some.”With that in mind, Miller added that England’s captain, Kevin Pietersen, had been canvassing opinion from his team-mates, although as many as three senior players are already believed to have opted out. Steve Harmison and Andrew Flintoff, who picked up an ankle injury in last week’s fifth ODI, are highly unlikely to travel back with the team, while James Anderson, whose wife is pregnant, is also a doubt.Harmison, unsurprisingly, has been the most vocal dissenter in the England camp. “I’m sorry, but whatever is being asked of us in the next few days, at the moment, the idea of being asked to go back out there is the last thing on my mind,” he told the Mail on Sunday. “This is beyond cricket. This is beyond anything. It’s all very well for people back home to say we should carry on with the tour, but none of what has happened has anything to do with cricket.”The England squad is expected to fly back to India on Thursday or Friday, only a week after the terrorist attacks in Mumbai that killed more than 200 people. Mumbai had been scheduled to stage the second Test between December 19 and 23, but that venue has now been shifted to the southern city of Chennai. Talks are also underway about a change of venue for the first Test on December 11, with Ahmedabad expected to make way for Mohali.The entire trip, however, still hinges on the content of the security report that is currently being compiled by Reg Dickason, the team’s security advisor, with inputs from various sources such as the British government and the Indian board. Dickason, a regular member of the tour party in recent years, is said to be trusted “100%” by the players, although his assurances alone may not be enough to ensure a full-strength party for the Tests.Nevertheless, for some fringe players of the England team, expediency alone may be enough to sway their opinions. The spinner, Graeme Swann, who stands to make his Test debut – nine years after his first England selection – told BBC Five Live that he was “not that keen” to return to India, but said he would be happy to abide by the contents of the report.”I have every faith in Dickason, and if he comes back saying: ‘Look guys, it’s safe, we can go back there, we can do some good and get playing cricket’ then I would go,” said Swann. “Obviously it’s tricky for people like myself who are trying to forge a regular place in the team. It comes down to thinking, ‘If I don’t go will I miss out on future selection’ and stuff like that, which sort of clouds the issue a little bit. It’s certainly not an easy decision to make and not one that anyone will be enjoying.”Speaking to BBC Radio Four’s Today programme, the former England captain, Graham Gooch, said he believed the series remained in serious doubt. “The players have returned home, they’ll have spoken to their families and young children and it’s a tremendous pull on the heart-strings.”Cricket teams around the world have [previously] been caught up in terrorist situations but have never been a target,” said Gooch. “But it’s been stated in this case that British and American passport holders were a target, so you’d have to think, sadly, that an England team and their supporters would be targets. If one individual decides they cannot go then others will probably follow.”

Dhoni and Gambhir show the way

Gautam Gambhir finished as the leading run-getter in the series © AFP
 

Mahendra Singh Dhoni – 9
Mahendra Singh Dhoni led India in both their victories in this series. Heinfused energy into India’s approach with creative field placements inMohali and displayed ruthlessness in Nagpur by choking Australia’srun-flow with a restrictive eight-one offside field. He was criticisedseverely for his unattractive tactics but didn’t care a jot. Heading intoa tense final day, Dhoni stayed calm even when Hayden briefly threatenedto destroy India’s best-laid plans. Dhoni also made invaluablecontributions with the bat. In Mohali, he batted aggressively and his twohalf-centuries helped India gain time. In Nagpur his 56 in the firstinnings was part of a 119-run stand with Ganguly and his 55 in the secondrescued India from 166 for 6 and helped take the target out of Australia’sreach.Gautam Gambhir – 9
Australia possessed a fast-bowling attack that was inexperienced in Indianconditions and Gautam Gambhir took advantage of it. His form wasconsistently excellent and he shared two half-century partnerships and onecentury stand with Virender Sehwag. He had a vital role in India winningthe Mohali Test, scoring 67 in the first innings and 104 in the second.His attacking approach was best captured by the shot with which he broughtup his first century in India: a jump down the track against Shane Watson,followed by a savage pull into the stands at wide long-on. He followedthat performance with a maiden double-century in Delhi, an innings whichhelped India eliminate the possibility of Australia winning the Test. Ablot, however, was Gambhir’s altercation with Watson which resulted in aone-Test ban. But despite playing only three Tests, Gambhir was still thetop-scorer of the series with 463 runs at average of 77.Ishant Sharma – 8.5
Ishant Sharma was the first Indian fast bowler to win a Player-of-the-Series award at home since Kapil Dev in 1983. He took 15 wickets at an average of 27 and struck significant blows in every innings apart from the first in Delhi. Ishant is India’s most-improved bowler over the last year and he displayed the ability to adapt on unresponsivepitches. He surprised Australia’s batsmen with a surprise slower delivery onthe sluggish surface at the Chinnaswamy Stadium, and bowled cross seam inorder to get the ball to reverse early in Mohali. He broke Australia’ssecond innings in that match by dismissing Ricky Ponting and Shane Watsonduring a terrific spell of reverse-swing bowling.Sachin Tendulkar – 8.5
Sachin Tendulkar began the series on the verge of becoming the highestrun-scorer in Test cricket and, during the course of achieving thelandmark, he made important contributions when his team was vulnerable.His gritty 49 in the final innings in Bangalore helped India bat out thefinal day to save the Test; his 88 in Mohali came after three wickets hadfallen for 17 runs; his 68 in Delhi helped India recover from 27 for 2;and his 109 in Nagpur consolidated the innings after a top-order wobble.He was as reliable as ever in the middle-order and was the second highestrun-scorer of the series with 396 runs at an average of 57.Virender Sehwag – 8
Virender Sehwag usually scores one big hundred in a series but he missedout this time, scoring three half-centuries in his tally of 351 runs.Sehwag’s performance after the first three Tests was average: he hadeither got out early or failed to convert a start, with the exception of asecond-innings 90 in Mohali. His biggest challenge was in Nagpur whenIndia were without Gambhir. Sehwag responded superbly, scoring 66 and 92at rapid pace, contributing to his overall strike-rate of 82 in theseries. He was also India’s fifth bowler, bowling 82 overs in the series,and took his first five-wicket haul in Delhi.Sourav Ganguly – 7.5
Ganguly ended his career on a high. He had announced that this serieswould be his last before the first Test in Bangalore and went on to score324 runs at 54, far higher than his pre-series average of 32against Australia. He scored at a steady clip and helped India buildformidable first-innings totals in both their victories, scoring 102 outof India’s 469 in Mohali, and 85 out of 441 in Nagpur.

Ishant Sharma was the first Indian fast bowler to be win a Man-of-the-Series award at home since Kapil Dev in 1983 © AFP
 

Harbhajan Singh – 7.5
Harbhajan Singh was the joint highest wicket-taker with 15 at 29 apiecebut his most valuable contributions came with the bat when Australia werepoised to take grip of two Test matches. In Bangalore, India were trailingby 198 runs in the first innings with three wickets in hand when Harbhajanscored a half-century to help whittle Australia’s lead to below a hundred.In Nagpur, India had lost six wickets for 50 runs and were in danger ofsetting Australia a below-par target; Harbhajan scored anotherhalf-century – his fourth against Australia – in a 108-run stand withDhoni which helped secure the Border-Gavaskar trophy. He followed that up with 4 for 64 in the final innings.VVS Laxman – 7.5
VVS Laxman begin the series with a duck in Bangalore but his 42 off 142deliveries in the second helped India save the Test. He didn’t play amajor role in India’s victory in Mohali but scored an unbeaten 200 in thefirst innings at the Feroz Shah Kotla and followed it up with 59 in thesecond. Laxman played his 100th Test in Nagpur and scored a half-centuryto help India recover after losing three wickets quickly in the firstinnings. He averaged 95.25 at the end of the series.Zaheer Khan – 7
Zaheer Khan’s stats aren’t impressive – 11 wickets costing 43 apiece – but he ensured that Australia lost an early wicket by dismissing Hayden cheaply in the first three innings of the series. He completed his first five-wicket haul in India by mopping up Australia’s tail in the first innings in Bangalore and was Harbhajan’s partner during that vital rearguard partnership, contributing 57 runs to India’s bid to save the first Test. In Mohali, Zaheer executed Australia’s tail on the final day in a breathtaking spell of swing bowling but his form dipped in Delhi where he took no wickets. He was wayward at the start of the decisive Nagpur Test too but recovered on the third morning and bowled long spellswith precision to back up the eight-one strategy.Amit Mishra – 7
Amit Mishra would not have played in this series were it not for Anil Kumble’sshoulder injury. Mishra grabbed his opportunity and took a five-for in the first innings and seven overall on debut in Mohali. His performance prompted a raging debate over whether he should make way for Kumble in Delhi. As it turned out Harbhajan missed the third Test but Mishra had a poor game, taking 2 for 146. Dhoni didn’t seem to have much confidence in the legspinner in Nagpur and brought him into the attack late in the first innings. Mishra, though, made a significant contribution in the second: his direct hit dismissed Ponting and he broke an intimidating partnership between Michael Hussey and Hayden in his first over.M Vijay – 7
Vijay was celebrating his double-century in a Ranji Trophy match when hereceived an eleventh-hour call-up to the Test squad as a replacement forGambhir. Less than 48 hours later, he was facing Brett Lee on debut. Aperformance in one Test isn’t much to go by but Vijay batted with poiseand calmness in Nagpur. He didn’t try to do anything flash – he rarelywent after deliveries outside off stump – and played with a predominantlystraight bat. He made contributions of 33 and 41 but the time he spent atthe crease allowed Sehwag to bat aggressively and resulted in openingpartnerships of 98 and 116. Vijay was outstanding in the field too and ranout Matthew Hayden and Michael Hussey in the first innings.

Rahul Dravid’s lean patch continued © AFP
 

Anil Kumble – 4
Kumble was India’s appointed captain of the series but a shoulder injuryruled him out of the Mohali Test before a gash to his finger prompted himto retire after the third Test. He struggled to have an impact with theball in the series. The fizz, skid and bounce – factors that are crucialto his success – were missing and he bowled 51 overs in Bangalore withouttaking a wicket. He wasn’t the force he used to be at the Kotla either forhe picked up only 3 for 112 in 43.3 overs. Kumble, however, couldn’t befaulted for effort. He bowled despite his shoulder injury in Bangalore andtoiled in Delhi after needing 11 stitches to sew up a cut on his left hand. His last wicket in Test cricket was a caught and bowled.Rahul Dravid – 2
Rahul Dravid had a miserable series. The pitches at all four venues wererelatively placid, yet Dravid’s slump continued and he was the weak link in the batting line-up. He had a promising start, scoring 51 in the first innings in Bangalore,but finished with 120 runs at an average of 17. He ended the series with 0and 3 in Nagpur. Dravid appeared to time the ball well in several inningsbut he either got a good ball, or he lost concentration and played a looseshot. Dravid’s fragility at No. 3 meant that the middle order often had toconsolidate after a substantial opening partnership was followed by acouple of quick wickets.

Determined Australia make India toil


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Ricky Ponting battled his way to 87 as Australia fought hard on the third day © AFP
 

Ricky Ponting and Matthew Hayden led a solid collective effort from Australia on the third day in Delhi, although by the close there was no guarantee they would avoid the follow-on. Virender Sehwag went from fifth bowling option to major striker with three wickets, including two key breakthroughs in the final session that left Australia needing 76 more runs to ensure India would bat again.It was a difficult day for Australia and the stumps scorecard did not fully reflect the gripping nature of the contest. There were no mammoth individual efforts like those from Gautam Gambhir and VVS Laxman; the most impressive aspect of Australia’s batting was simply their group fight.Replying to 613 is a psychologically difficult task and India’s bowlers did not make it any easier. Even without Anil Kumble for one and a half sessions – he went to hospital for treatment on a cut finger after getting his hands to a fierce Hayden stroke at short midwicket – the attack was constantly threatening.Sehwag, India’s prime offspinner in the absence of Harbhajan Singh, was as dangerous as any of the specialists as he spun some deliveries sharply while others sailed straight on towards the stumps. He gave India momentum at key intervals and his removal of Michael Hussey and Ponting after tea sparked something in his team-mates.Hussey had worked incredibly hard for his 53, only to see his dead-straight bat beaten by a superb offbreak that clipped the off-stump. Ponting had already departed to a ball that pitched in the rough and turned back to rattle his stumps and the two blows came at just the right time for India.They were frustrated that Ponting survived a super spell of reverse-swing bowling from Ishant Sharma and Zaheer Khan, who tested his focus more rigorously than a pair of optometrists. As expected, Ishant troubled him with deliveries that bounced and jagged back in sharply. Zaheer’s swing was also a challenge. Despite a couple of indecisive and almost fatal leave-play-leave moments, Ponting somehow survived.

Smart Stats
  • The 123-run stand between Matthew Hayden and Simon Katich was their first century partnership in the nine innings they have batted together.
  • Virender Sehwag bowled 22 overs today, which is only the third time he’s bowled more than 20 overs in an innings. His highest is 30 overs, in an innings against West Indies in 2006 but with Australia just four wickets down and the Kotla pitch taking plenty of turn, Sehwag may well overhaul that figure tomorrow.
  • Of the 27 wickets Sehwag has captured in his Test career, 20 have been of batsmen in the top seven.
  • This is the first time the top four Australian batsmen have all scored 50 or more in an innings against India. Against all teams, Australia have done it 13 times.
  • Ricky Ponting didn’t get out to Ishant Sharma today, but he was more cautious against him than any other bowler. Ponting managed just 9 runs in 26 balls off Ishant at a strike rate of 34.61. Ponting played Amit Mishra quite well, scoring 35 off 60 balls including six fours, and scored 17 from 32 balls off Sehwag, who eventually dismissed him.
  • Matthew Hayden handled Zaheer Khan, his nemesis in this series, with restraint as well, scoring just 17 runs off 40 balls from Zaheer, and made 10 from 33 off Anil Kumble, but was more fluent against the other bowlers, particularly Amit Mishra, whom he hit for 22 off 27.
  • For a batsman who favours the sweep shot, Hayden surprisingly kept that stroke in the closet, employing it four times – and getting just four runs – during his knock of 83.

There were some genuinely good strokes from Ponting, who was desperate not to stagnate. He drove Amit Mishra beautifully straight back down the ground for four and pounced on occasional full tosses and long-hops. But for a man who usually makes batting look so simple, this innings was as fluent as his Hindi.In many ways, that made it even more impressive that he reached 87. His 82-run partnership with Hussey continued to grind Australia towards avoiding the follow-on after the early work of Hayden and Simon Katich. Importantly for Australia, the stings throughout the day were well-spaced, although a swarm of bees that descended on the stadium just after lunch briefly provided a different sort of threat.When the players and umpires avoided the buzzers by lying flat in their positions – some perpendicular to the pitch, some parallel – the aerial view looked like a human version of the board game Battleship. Sachin Tendulkar was the small and aptly-named destroyer, Hayden the hulking aircraft carrier. And it wasn’t long before Sehwag sank the biggest ship with a perfectly targeted missile.Hayden had survived a few close calls, including an edge off Sehwag that landed centimetres short of Rahul Dravid at first slip, before his fortune ran out. Playing back to a Sehwag delivery that held its line, Hayden was lbw for 83 and Australia were 202 for 2. It was a respectable scoreline but after two of the opposition made double-centuries Australia wanted at least a single hundred from one of their top men.Still, Hayden’s innings was a step in the right direction following his struggles in the first two Tests. He was more composed, he watched the ball closely and waited for opportunities, and rarely did he try to bully the bowlers. He went over the top only when it was safe to do so – he pulled a Mishra long-hop viciously for six and cut Zaheer without risk over the cordon to the vacant third man region.Generally his bat was straight and it was noticeable that he ignored the sweep that undid him in Mohali. A classic cover-driven boundary off Ishant gave Hayden his first half-century of the tour and he was part of two important partnerships: a 123-run opening stand with Simon Katich and a 79-run compilation with Ponting.In what was by far Australia’s most positive start of the tour, Katich scored more freely than the watchful Hayden and used his feet impressively to the two legspinners. But on 64 he tried to close the face and clip Mishra through leg – a tactic that had worked before – but could only watch on as the ball spat out of the rough and collected his middle stump.He was not the only batsman who would have that feeling. The task will only get tougher in the final two days of the Test. For now, Australia cannot look that far ahead. Their primary goal must be to knock off the 76 runs they require to avoid the follow-on.

'If Kumble is fit, he will replace Mishra' – Kirsten

Gary Kirsten, India’s coach, has ruled out playing three spinners at the Feroz Shah Kotla © AFP
 

While the stadium itself has retained none of the charm of the old world, the surroundings suggest you have entered a town of forts. Once you have entered the Feroz Shah Kotla – and it’s mighty tough given the security – just look up and you’ll find a policeman at most of the high points, overlooking the movements outside the stadium, almost like the guards in a fortress. They may as well be protecting India’s lead in the series, welcome to the Fortress Feroz Shah.Leading 1-0, India couldn’t have come to a better venue – Kotla itself means a citadel – to try and kill the series: they have won the last seven Tests played here. India’s build-up going intothe third Test is in stark contrast to the one going into Mohali, where they won comprehensively. In Mohali, India were not sure of the final XI till about half an hour before the start; here they arealmost sure – two days before the match – that Anil Kumble will replace Amit Mishra, who took a five-for on debut.If Kotla is the fortress, Kumble has been its king. He has taken 55 wickets in six Tests here, at an average of 15.41. After having missed the Mohali Test, he seems to have recovered from the shoulder injury, and has been bowling in the nets. “He is looking good,” Gary Kirsten, India’s coach, said. “We are very happy with the way he is progressing. And if he is fit, he is the captain of the team, and he will take Mishra’s place.”Harbhajan Singh’s fitness comes into question because of a toe injury he had picked towards the end of the Mohali Test. Yesterday he bowled less than an over in the nets. Today he did the fielding drills, bowled about three overs, and also batted. “We will just wait and see. We have got two days to go, but hopefully it’s not too serious,” Kirsten said of the injury.If Harbhajan and Kumble are both fit, Mishra will have to go back to what he has done for the last eight years: wait his turn. It may sound harsh, but that’s what mostly happens to the replacement when the captain is back to full fitness. Kirsten was very clear about that, and also ruled out playing three spinners. “That’s one good option you have [dropping a batsman to accommodate all the spinners],” Kirsten said, “But I certainly want to be going into a Test match with sixbatsmen.”And dropping one of the fast bowlers is not a question at all, given the form Zaheer Khan and Ishant Sharma have been in.Apart from that aspect of team composition, Kirsten spoke of the confidence India’s win in Mohali gave them. “It was a great Test-match win, certainly a benchmark Test, in terms of dominating play,” Kirsten said. “It’s a new day, a new game, but we will certainly use that Test as a benchmark for what we want to achieve.”While the player behaviour has come under the scanner once again in an India-Australia series, Kirsten said it was natural when two such competitive sides played. “[These are] two very competitive, emotional and aggressive teams. I think there will always be occasions inpressure situation when either team might overstep the mark a little bit.”Zaheer, in the match referee meeting [when he was fined 80% of his match fee for having given Matthew Hayden a send-off], admitted that he had crossed the line, but these things happen. These are two teams playing a high level of cricket, that creates great excitementfor Test cricket in the world. We must encourage that competitiveness; we understand that individuals mustn’t overstep the mark.”

Paul Adams announces retirement

Start the blender: Paul Adams stunned world cricket when he first came onto the scene © Getty Images
 

Paul Adams, who burst onto the international scene after only five first-class matches for Western Province in 1995-96, has announced his retirement from professional cricket.A chinaman bowler with a unique action, famously described as resembling “a frog in a blender”, he took eight wickets on his Western Province debut against Northerns, earning him a call-up for South Africa A against England where he took 9 for 181 in the match. Six weeks later he became the youngest person to play for South Africa when picked for the Boxing Day Test at Port Elizabeth. He took eight wickets in the last two Tests of the series as South Africa won 1-0.Adams bamboozled batsmen in his early appearances, but his effectiveness diminished with familiarity. In his first three series he took 31 wickets at 25.06 but he was rarely as effective again.He was further hampered by injuries, while always prone to the occasional bad ball and as these became more frequent he was seen by the selectors as too much of a gamble. Even at provincial level, captains appeared reluctant to pick him and he drifted into the second tier of domestic cricket.The last of his 45 Tests was at Hamilton in March 2004 where he took 2 for 118. He finished with 134 wickets at 32.87, and in all first-class cricket he took 412 at 32.66. His best return in Tests was 7 for 128 against Pakistan at Lahore in 2003-04.

Krejza toasts national selection after drink ban

Jason Krejza’s move to Tasmania has been successful © Getty Images
 

Jason Krejza, the new Australia offspinner, says it was not until the past summer that he felt committed enough to play at the highest levels. Krejza’s Tasmania team-mates banned him from alcohol for 2007-08 and excluded him from pre-season training after he was arrested for drink-driving and speeding last year.”That was the pivotal moment in my career,” Krejza told the Sydney Morning Herald. “I had to prove to myself that I was committed enough. When someone asks you to go for a beer, it’s a bit hard to say no sometimes. It was me being able to be committed enough to something to stick at it.”When it is all up against you, you find out things about yourself. That experience really did show me what I wanted to do.”On Sunday Krejza will leave with the Australia squad for India as the back-up spinner behind Bryce McGain and Michael Clarke. His selection is a gamble, but Australia’s preference for a finger spinner forced the selectors to look past Dan Cullen and Nathan Hauritz, who have played Tests on the subcontinent.Krejza turned out in seven first-class games last season and collected 18 wickets at 47.11, a slightly more economical return than Cullen managed in one more match. He also won a spot ahead of Beau Casson, who appeared in a Test in the West Indies. It was Casson’s arrival in New South Wales from Western Australia that convinced Krejza to move to Tasmania in 2006-07.”I was playing a lot of grade cricket and doing quite well but I had Stuey MacGill in front of me and there was Stuart Clark, Nathan Bracken, Doug Bollinger and Brett Lee, so there wasn’t a lot of opportunity to bowl long spells,” Krejza said. “Then they brought in Beau and Nathan Hauritz so I knew I had to look for an opportunity elsewhere.”

Bermuda to host Namibia in September

Bermuda are to host Namibia for their next Intercontinental Cup fixture on September 3 at their National Sports Centre (NSC).It will be the second occasion this year that the NSC hosts a game, following several years when it was deemed unfit owing to the poor soil. Such concerns are now a distant memory and Reginald Pearman, the president of the Bermuda Cricket Board, is excited at the prospect of the touring Namibians.”Once again I am pleased to be able to confirm that Bermuda have the opportunity to play at home for the second time this year. The ICC approval for Bermuda to host the Namibia game, confirms that the National Sports Centre, with the hard work of its groundsmen, have prepared and maintained the wicket to the international standards required,” he said.”Bermuda faces a tough team and I encourage all of Bermuda to come out to support your country.”Namibia share the top spot of the Intercontinental Cup table with Scotland, on 82 points, but have two games in hand.

Last chance for Netherlands

Eoin Morgan is unavailable for Ireland due to his commitment to Middlesex © Getty Images
 

Netherlands have one last chance of reaching the final of the Intercontinental Cup – a must-win game against Ireland which gets underway in Rotterdam on Wednesday.While a win could lift them into second spot above Kenya, defeat would leave them 18 points adrift and having played two games more. For all the importance of tomorrow’s match, Netherlands have been severely hampered by the absence of key players. Their gifted young batsman Alexei Kervezee has damaged a hamstring while Eric Szwarczynski continues to recover from a broken toe. Most importantly, however, they will miss the services of Ryan ten Doeschate who has chosen county over country.Rifaiz Bakas replaces Kervezee while another batsman, Lesley Stokkers, is also drafted into the squad.The scenario for Ireland, the defending champions, is slightly different. They have two games in hand against Netherlands – and have played one less than Kenya, who they trail by only 17 points. With Scotland, in fifth place but with two games coming up against the bottom two sides Bermuda and Canada, the table should become a lot clearer by the end of August.Like Netherlands, Ireland are also missing a number of key players. Eoin Morgan (Middlesex), Niall O’Brien (Northamptonshire) and captain William Porterfield (Gloucestershire) are all absent on county duty, while another first-choice player, former captain Trent Johnston, is ruled out through work commitments. Andrew White misses the match for personal reasons.Ireland does have the consolation of welcoming back the increasingly influential all-rounder Kevin O’Brien, Niall’s brother, after injury. James Hall comes in for White and Greg Thompson also slots into the squad while Kyle McCallan takes over as captain.SquadsNetherlands (from): Jeroen Smits (capt, wk), Peter Borren, Mudassar Bukhari, Daan van Bunge, Tom de Grooth, Maurits Jonkman, Alexei Kervezee, Geert-Maarten Mol, Edgar Schiferli, Pieter Seelaar, Nick Statham, Bas Zuiderent.Ireland (from): Kyle McCallan (capt), Andre Botha, Peter Connell, Alex Cusack, Thinus Fourie, James Hall, Gary Kidd, Kevin O’ Brien, Andrew Poynter, Paul Stirling, Roger Strydom, Greg Thompson, Gary Wilson (wk).

Brilliant Napier outclasses Northants

Scorecard

Runs and now wickets for Graham Napier © Getty Images
 

Not even Graham Gooch or Nasser Hussain, two of Essex’s most loyal luminaries, could have predicted the impact Graham Napier would have on the Twenty20 Cup this season. Batting with the same freedom and remarkable power of the past three weeks, he continued his supreme form with another bruising knock, but it was with the ball that he most impressed today. His 4 for 10 eased Essex past Northamptonshire at Chelmsford and, in doing so, into Finals Day.It was with some relief that the fortress of fans at Chelmsford were able to watch a match. 6000 Durham and Yorkshire supporters were denied in the first quarter-final of the day at Chester-le-Street, owing to an administrative bungle of embarrassing proportions. Happily, Napier and Essex were on top form to sound a note of caution to other Finals Day hopefuls. This was a dominant and all-round performance from the outset.They had the rub of the green, winning the toss and batting, but immediately put Northamptonshire’s bowlers under pressure. Ravi Bopara was out of the traps with a fortunate splice over the slips, yet thereafter played with an elegance not often seen in Twenty20 cricket. Two orthodox cover-drives were struck with immense timing, as were a fierce drive down the ground and a pull over midwicket. Curiously, Grant Flower came in at No.3 followed by James Foster, and at 134 for 3 it was a surprise Essex delayed Napier’s arrival.If it was a tactic, the decision paid off handsomely as Napier took command in 20 balls of power-hitting. The first of three sixes broke a tile on the roofs at midwicket, while Andrew Hall was repeatedly mowed through the leg side, but there is class amid the carnage, as demonstrated by a hit-through-the-line maximum off Johann Louw. The same bowler was dispatched for another six when Napier scythed him over long-on – very nearly over the floodlight. It, like all three, landed in the street.Essex’s good fortune continued when a brief shower spiced up the pitch, aiding David Masters and Napier’s impressive new-ball spell in defending 175 from 18 overs. Masters had Rob White caught behind with a keen incutter before Napier, bowling with genuine pace, lured Hall into nicking an outswinger. Three balls later David Sales was clean-bowled by a searing inswinger proving, were it needed, that behind Napier’s obvious brawn lies plenty of brain. Riki Wessels also fell under his spell, and at 11 for 4, Northamptonshire had little hope.Nicky Boje carved eight fours in an entertaining fifty, which almost went unnoticed by one of county cricket’s most partisan and honest crowds, but Northamptonshire never had a hope after their top-order capitulation. For good measure, Napier added Lance Klusener to pick up 4 for 10 – the most economical Essex figures in the Twenty20 Cup – as Essex wrapped up the most emphatic of wins.So far, Napier – surprisingly modest for someone with the build of a prop forward – has dismissed his chances of a future England call-up as the stuff of dreams. Today, he responded with “we’ll see,” perhaps showing the selectors that he himself now believes the hype. Either way, the Indian Premier League dollars now surely beckon.