Waugh declares Test win a complete Australian performance

Captain Stephen Waugh admitted he had never played in such a complete Australian performance after his team surged to a record-breaking win against South Africa in Johannesburg today.The Australians celebrated into the night after beating South Africa by an innings and 360 runs in the first Test at the Wanderers.It was the second biggest win in Test cricket history, littered with team and individual records including Adam Gilchrist’s fastest Test double century.Waugh’s team also posted Australia’s highest total against South Africa while Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath moved into second and eighth spots on Testcricket’s all-time wicket-taking list.Waugh has played 146 Tests through good and bad times in Australian cricket, including the world record of 16 consecutive Test wins.But the 36-year-old said he could not remember a better team performance.”It was a great performance,” Waugh said.”We put them under enormous pressure and that’s what Test match cricket is all about – whether you can handle the pressure.”In this game South Africa didn’t. They may handle it better next game. It is certainly going to be very difficult to come back from here.”Stand-in South African captain Mark Boucher insisted the Proteas could come back in this series despite losing four Test matches to Australia this summer by 246runs, nine wickets and 10 wickets before today’s collapse.The Proteas scored just 159 and 133 in reply to Australia’s 7-652 declared, and the Test finished after tea on the third day.Warne took six wickets for the match, including 4-44 in the second innings, while McGrath’s match haul of 8-49 included 5-21 in the second innings.Warne now has 436 Test wickets – second to West Indian great Courtney Walsh (519) – while McGrath (385) moved past former England all-rounder Ian Botham(383).Waugh said he wasn’t surprised at the margin of the win even though this series will officially determine the International Cricket Council’s best team.”Our record has been pretty good over the last couple of years,” Waugh said.”You don’t win 16 Test matches in a row if you are not a pretty good side. We played some superb cricket.”We have excellent cricketers in this team and we all came together for this Test match and basically clicked.”Everyone played pretty well. Once again we put enormous pressure on South Africa and they didn’t respond.”It gives me great satisfaction the way we played that Test match, the level at which we played and the intensity. We didn’t drop off for any period at all.”The Australians will enjoy two rest days before travelling to Port Elizabeth for a four-day tour match against South Africa A, starting Friday.They will then head to Cape Town, hoping to wrap up the series when the second Test begins on Friday week.

Canning magic steers Auckland to victory from hopeless situation

Coming on the back of two consecutive wins in the Shell Cup for the 2000/2001 season including a previous win over Auckland at Eden Park, the Otago Volts hopes were riding high when their fifth round match in the series against Auckland started at Molyneux Park today.Winning the toss and electing to bat the Otago team was- Lee Germon(Captain), Craig Cumming, Martyn Croy, Simon Forde, Chris Gaffaney, Andrew Hore, Brendon McCullum, Nathan McCullum, Warren McSkimming, Craig Pryor, Kerry Walmsley, Karl O’Dowda (12th man)Auckland – Blair Pocock(Captain), Llorne Howell, Lou Vincent, Mark Haslam, Dion Nash, Kyle Mills, Richard Morgan, Andre Adams, Aaron Barnes, Tama Canning, John Aiken, Chris Drum (12th man).State Otago Volts started in brisk fashion with Andrew Hore leading the way with a workmanlike 37. Craig Cumming however was the anchor and proceeded to work the ball around particularly in the early stages while others fell around him. He made 66.The exception was Chris Gaffaney who was unexpectedly out for 37 and Craig Pryor at the end of the innings who placed the ball well and smashed Tama Canning in his last over for two sixes and a four. Pryor was 55 not out and he saw Otago through to a respectable but not unbeatable 260. 18 leg byes featured in the Otago total.Bowling for Auckland Canning with 4/60 from his allotted 10 was the main destroyer while Mark Haslam had only 37 runs hit off his maximum spell.Auckland began their run chase for the 261 for victory with a four off the first ball of Kerry Walmsley and things looked a little ominous but the loss of Llorne Howell at four, Aaron Barnes at 29, Blair Pocock at 33 set the Northerners back on their heels. Enter John Aiken and Dion Nash who put on 67 for the fourth wicket before Nash was run out for 35. Aiken was bowled Walmsley for 60 and Nash run out for 35.And then came Tama Canning who makes a habit of winning matches for Auckland. He began cautiously but then some strong hitting took over and he and Richard Morgan put on 121 for the eighth wicket.Morgan was out for 44 but Canning continued on and got Auckland to the situation where they needed eight from the final over. A four, a two, a single, a dot ball, and so one run needed off two balls by them. A nick for two to fine leg and the game was theirs by 2 wickets with a ball to spare. No praise could be too high for Canning who finished 92 not out. Surely a New Zealand selection beckons in the future.For Otago Simon Forde with 1/18 from 7 overs was very economic while Warren McSkimming 3/37 from 10 overs was also good. Walmsley, Cumming and McCullum all went for over 50 but in good batting conditions it was probably to be expected.A good win to Auckland in a thrilling situation and perhaps the highlight of the game being Cannings batting and the Otago Volts ground fielding.

Jaques has done enough to get Test nod

Phil Jaques, who hopes to become the next generation’s opener, educates a player of the future © Getty Images

Phil Jaques is a modern opener who is ready to join Matthew Hayden at the Gabba next month, according to Mark Taylor. Taylor, who held a place at the top of the order for 104 Tests, said Jaques would be a fine choice to fill the gap left by Justin Langer.”I’d probably say yes he has done enough, he’s probably done more than enough,” Taylor said in the . “I have no doubt that if Phil is selected he’ll do a damn good job because he’s a very professional cricketer, he’s never whinged about continually making runs and being sent back to state cricket.”Two events since the start of the season have boosted Jaques’ claims to play Sri Lanka at the Gabba from November 8. His 167 in the second innings of the Pura Cup match against Western Australia gave him the edge over his rival Chris Rogers, who was then scratched with appendicitis. Jaques, who has played two Tests, has another chance to secure his position this week during games against Queensland at the SCG.”Being on the fringes is probably the hardest spot to be in on any cricket team,” Jaques, who was speaking at the launch of CricKids Playing in Harmony, told the paper. “Hopefully the pressure of being on that edge and trying to perform at a top level for so long will count in my favour.”Taylor has been impressed by Jaques’ play and the way he backs himself to score runs. “One thing about Phil is that he typifies the modern game … much more prepared to go for the bowling early on,” Taylor said. “He’s one of those guys who can be 80 not out at lunch. Back in my day I dreamed about being 80 not out at lunch. If I could be 80 at about tea I thought ‘this is good’.”

Tushar Saha's five-for puts Tripura in command

ScorecardTushar Saha’s magnificent spell of left-arm spin, the best figures by a Tripura bowler, put his side in a commanding position at the end of the second day’s play at Agartala. Saha, who ended with a superb 5 for 8 in 10.5 overs, and Vineet Jain (4 for 40) made full use of a lively pitch to reduce J&K from 91 for 4 to 128 all out. Tripura ended the day on a confident 129, with R Bainak, Rasudeb Dutta and SD Chowdhury making handy contributions.
Scorecard
Jai Prakash Yadav rocked the top order while Sanjay Bangar ran through the tail as Railways shot out Madhya Pradesh for 158, gaining a 145-run lead. Yadav prised out three quick wickets to leave MP limping at 44 for 4. Syed Abbas Ali put up a fight, stitching together a 69-run stand for the fifth wicket with Amay Khurasia (21) but Yadav trapped him to re-open the floodgates. One run later, Bangar removed Khurasia and proceeded to rip apart the tail as MP folded up meekly.
ScorecardJ Arunkumar’s 78 helped Assam strengthen their position at the end of the second day at Guwahati, finishing on 288 for 6 with a lead of 154. Stitching together useful partnerships – of which the 73-run stand between PK Das and Arunkumar was the most prominent – Assam took control. Six of the seven top-order batsmen crossed 20 and though they chose to crawl along at less than three an over, Assam had gained a firm footing in the contest.
ScorecardPowered by Faiz Fazal’s 70, Vidarbha finished 100 runs in arrears, with five wickets standing, by the end of the second day at Palakkad. Vidarbha were comfortablyplaced at 132 for 1 when the run out of Alind Naidu sparked of a mini-collapse, losing 3 for 4. However, O Afzal lifted Vidarbha out of trouble with an unbeaten 35. Earlier, Cheruvillil Deepak, overnight on 5, made 41 and steered Kerala to a healthy total.
ScorecardSourabha Sehgal prised out three quick wickets, including centurion Yashpal Singh, as Orissa fought their way back at Cuttack. Services were sitting pretty at 310 for 4 when Sehgal got into the act, removing Sarabjit Singh before inducing Yashpal to edge behind. A cosy 317 for 6 turned to 319 for 8 when Sehgal and Sanjay Satpathy dealt two further blows. Niranjan Behera made an unbeaten 39 to steer Orissa to 71 for 2 at the end of the day.
ScorecardAshok Thakur, the Himachal Pradesh left-arm seamer, impressed with a five-wicket haul to bundle out Jharkand for 146, giving his side an imposing first-innings lead of 140 on the second day at Dharamsala. Jharkand, after wrapping up the opposition early, lost wickets at regular intervals, with opener Manish Vardhan the only batsman to offer some resistance, scoring 43. Thakur gave his side the upper hand, getting rid of the top order. Himachal got off to a shaky start in their second innings, losing three wickets for 46, but Paras Dogra and Maninder Bisla added an unbeaten 49 till stumps to strengthen their position in the match.

Pawar and Ganguly have an amiable meeting

Sourav Ganguly’s innings of 40 and 39 in the second Test against Sri Lanka were not enough for him to retain his place in the Indian team © Getty Images

Sharad Pawar, the Indian board president, has told Sourav Ganguly that he respected him as a “champion cricketer” who has done a lot for Indian cricket, when the two met in New Delhi on Tuesday.Rajiv Shukla, the BCCI spokesperson, said that Pawar and Ganguly discussed the state of Indian cricket and how best the team can prepare for the tour of Pakistan in January 2006.Pawar said, in a report in htcricket.com, that he was helpless in selection matters but told Ganguly that no further injustice, perceived or otherwise, would be done to him.Sourav Ganguly’s innings of 40 and 39 in the second Test against Sri Lanka at Delhi were not enough for him to retain his place in the Indian team for the third Test. The selectors, with one eye on the future and the other on addressing concerns over an opening slot, had picked Wasim Jaffer in the squad for the third Test against Sri Lanka.After the defeat of the Jagmohan Dalmiya camp – believed to have solidly stood behind Ganguly on all occasions – in the recent board elections the latest selectorial decision was widely seen as vindictive on the part of the new incumbents.However, Pawar, who categorically claimed that he was not party to the decision, had said, “As a cricket lover, I am hurt and shocked over the exclusion of Ganguly. In the Delhi Test his performance was satisfactory. Also, he was a victorious captain and we feel proud of him”.

Another Hussey troubles West Indies

Scorecard and ball-by-ball commentary

Cameron White shows his all-round talent with a vital half-century© Getty Images

David Hussey welcomed the West Indians with a century in the first match and his older brother Michael caused them more trouble with a crucial 70 in the second. But it was a horror collapse – the last seven wickets fell for 34 runs – that allowed Australia to level the two-match warm-up series.West Indies were easing towards their target after an aggressive opening from Chris Gayle and a half-century to Wavel Hinds, but the match turned when Cameron White accepted Ramnaresh Sarwan’s sharp chance off Nathan Hauritz and they freefell from 3 for 158. Hauritz and Brett Lee, who is likely to face the same opposition in the VB Series opener at the MCG on Friday, both picked up two wickets as all six of the attack were successful.Michael Hussey top-scored for Australia A as he and White saved the side from another top-order topple to reach 9 for 243. White, scoring his second half-century of the weekend, combined for 88 with Hussey at 5 for 84 in the 19th over after Brad Hodge had fallen to a spectacular catch from Xavier Marshall at backward point and Brad Haddin was caught behind by Courtney Browne. Browne’s third catch came from Hussey and further contributions from Brett Lee and Nathan Hauritz pushed Australia A to a competitive total.Shivnarine Chanderpaul, the stand-in captain for Brian Lara who joined the tsunami charity game today, won the toss and had economical returns from his spinners Gayle and Samuels while Reon King took three expensive wickets.

Itchy feet and Xmas presents – Bracewell can't wait

It has only taken a couple of weeks in the job, but John Bracewell, the new Black Caps coach, has admitted to having itchy feet to get into his job when the New Zealanders return from their tour of India and Pakistan next month.So far he has been watching and selecting with an almost detached view, far removed from the emotion of the action. But after six years as chief selector at Gloucestershire, he knows there is an emotional attachment coming.”I see things slightly differently at the moment, but that will change when I am more involved,” he said.Bracewell, who left for England, just after New Zealand Cricket had adopted the Hood Report, said the scene had changed enormously in that time. “I heard the rumours around England that New Zealand had really got their act together. When I first went over there, they had the administration structure, including the administrators, and the coaching underway to the point it was leading edge. But now there is a trail of English coaches coming out here to the High Performance Centre to take in what is being done.”It is an evolutionary thing. New Zealand Cricket has been very lucky to have the right people in the right place at the right time. Initially, it was John Howell coming into the coaching role when there was no structure at all. But he made people feel wanted in coaching. He was a tremendous host, you would come to Christchurch for a meeting and you always went home with a buzz that what you were doing was appreciated.”Christopher Doig injected energy into the administration and brought John Graham in to sort out administrative matters with the team. The time has been tremendous, hopefully to this point,” he said, acknowledging that in many ways the flame of innovation and performance has been passed to him.”He has been increasingly informed with where NZC is at in its development. As soon as he applied for the job, information was made available to him, something he felt was probably aimed at ensuring he was in a reasonable position to answer questions when interviewed.Asked as a former spinner what he might be able to do about the dearth of spinners in New Zealand, his answer was typically Bracewellian – “The biggest issue is the captaincy situation.From what observations he has taken from 10 days of the annual pre-season matches at the Academy he said all captaincy had been done by remote control and spin bowlers couldn’t develop in that situation. “They lack self confidence because they lack self belief. Spinners must operate with the support of their captains,” he said.Bracewell had been impressed with the potential of spinners he has seen, but not with their treatment. “I have been impressed with the bowling talent, the athleticism of the players and the wicketkeeping talent.” The batsmen had been guilty of not adjusting to the conditions as quickly as they should have and they were approaching batting on the first day as if they were on the second, third or fourth day pitches.Bracewell cast his mind back to his own introduction to first-class cricket when his spin bowling was immature, something that had developed because he couldn’t bowl fast. He dabbled in spin-bowling at school when like most 1st XI’s his side lacked bowling depth and he used to pick up Brendon’s, his fast-bowler brother, scraps.”I spun it a lot without controlling it. Getting the ball to spin as much as I could was my total enjoyment in bowling,” he said.The change came when Bracewell went south to Dunedin to play rugby, and to try and get a place at Teacher’s College. “All I ever wanted to be was a teacher, I never had any other career in mind.”But in the meantime, he came to the attention of the Otago cricket selectors and it was the combined influence of Warren Lees, the wicketkeeping captain, and Stephen Boock, the left-arm spinner, that Bracewell’s own spin-bowling career took off. There was some fine tuning to be done, in fact, if it had been a television set the fine tuning knob would have taken more than a few twists to get it right.Bracewell credited Lees with being the finest manipulator of a game that he knew. And it all came down to the use of time left in a game, not the time to score runs, but the time required to bowl the number of overs to get the opposition out. And the best way to do that was to utilise the number of overs spin bowlers could send down in a given time. In the three-day cricket of that time that ability was vital, whereas nowadays with four days in which to play, captains were running out of time because they didn’t understand what they were trying to achieve. It had been an era in which there were a number of good spinners on the New Zealand first-class scene.And, consistently, the hardest of them all to keep out was Boock, now serving on the board of NZC. “Stephen Boock was a mean son of a bitch. His attitude to the batsman was, ‘You are not going to score a run off me.’ He was very hard on me. He would come up to me and say, ‘Our job is to keep this guy on 0 as long as possible. That’s how we will get him out.’ I wanted to rip the ball past him first ball but it was a discipline to have. Lees had Boock and Lance Cairns to keep it tight. I would give away a couple of fours an over, but because Boocky was not giving any runs away, the opposition were only scoring four an over.”The only captains he thought had this quality of understanding in England were Adam Hollioake, the Surrey captain, in the four-day game and Mark Alleyne in the one-day game for Gloucestershire.Reflecting on the possible Bracewell coaching style and how it would be seen by the New Zealand public, he said the team was entitled to due respect for its performances in Test cricket. The two-Test introduction the home series against Pakistan would be a useful opener for him to observe the chemistry of the team he has inherited.That would be the entrée to the main course as perceived by most with an interest in the New Zealand game, adressing the inconsistencies of the one-day side, during a five-match series with Pakistan and a six-match series at the start of the South African tour. He had no fears about making the changes required for greater ODI consistency. An overhaul was required in the team approach.He has watched New Zealand’s one-day performances in India from a distanceas he has seen the same frustrations as everyone else. But there was not only the inconsistency of performances, but the inconsistencies within performances.The answer would not be a quick fix. There would be a period of observation before the changes were felt. Obviously, he said, the New Zealanders were athletes, even their biggest players were athletic, which was in marked contrast to the Andrew Caddicks’ and Ashley Giles’ of the England team.”The New Zealanders are athletic. We are lucky that they have chosen cricket. Normally, we get second choice athletes, that’s what we were in the 1980s. Basically, we were players who weren’t good enough at our favourite sport, so we opted for cricket. We all came from the 1st XV-1st XI upbringing. It was probably Chris Cairns who first had to make the choice between the two. Cairns and Jeff Wilson both had to choose, and they went in different directions.”He has four years, the same time as yesterday’s strategic plan for the game in New Zealand. The timing is not without coincidence. Improving the one-day game has to be addressed now if the side is to perform to capacity in the West Indies in 2007.Bracewell has asked questions of himself about whether he is ready for the role? Whether his time away from New Zealand has prepared him sufficiently and whether he is good enough to do the job? And the answer?It’s probably best outlined in his description of having “the Christmas feeling”. The presents are all under the tree, but it is not December 25, and he can’t open them yet.

Cairns sensational as Black Caps power to thrilling victory

A brilliant unbeaten century from Chris Cairns has guided New Zealand to a four wicket victory over South Africa in the countries’ VB Series match here at the ‘Gabba ground in Brisbane tonight. With his team chasing a target of 242 for victory, Cairns (102*) thrashed the first ball of the 50th over to the extra cover boundary to simultaneously win the match and raise a richly deserved hundred.The powerful all-rounder had arrived at the crease with New Zealand at 4/73 in the 19th over as it struggled to stay within touch of the total of 241registered by the South Africans earlier in the day. When Craig McMillan (6) lost his wicket five overs later to leave the total at 5/98, it seemed thatthe prospect of four points was all but slipping away from the Black Caps’ grasp.However, with Cairns in increasingly confident touch, the New Zealanders’ hopes never faded completely. His strokemaking became increasinglybelligerent and, with excellent support arriving from Chris Harris (24) and Adam Parore (21*), the Kiwis were duly able to claim an outstandingvictory with five balls to spare.”It’s nice to achieve something that I have always wanted to do and that’s score a hundred in Australia,” said an elated Cairns after the match.”We just wanted to get the win tonight. Sometimes you realise that, when you get into that situation, you have more time than what you might think.”(Our achievement) hasn’t sunk in yet.”The New Zealanders’ chase had begun disastrously as Mark Richardson (0) perished from just the second ball of the innings. And, when BrendonMcCullum (37), Stephen Fleming (23), Lou Vincent (9) and McMillan variously joined the list of victims in the pavilion through the middle stages ofthe pursuit, there looked few ways out for the Black Caps.Cairns, though, was not to be denied and his partnerships of 62 and 84 runs with Harris and Parore respectively defined the difference between theteams.He had also played a major role earlier in the day in a lower order South African collapse that laid a vital platform for New Zealand’s firstlimited-overs victory over South Africa since February 1999.Together with paceman Shane Bond (4/37), undisputed man of the match Cairns (2/44) triggered a remarkable slide that saw the South Africanssurrender an imposing position at 5/231 to be dismissed – with only a further ten runs added to the score – just four overs later. Bond’s involvementin the fightback was particularly impressive after he had conceded 16 runs in one over to the aggressive Jacques Kallis (65) in the midst of anexpensive first spell.”The way we fought back and denied them a 270 to 280 score was fantastic,” enthused New Zealand captain Fleming after the match.”What (Bond) is showing is good mental toughness (to come back well),” he said.With opener Gary Kirsten (43), Kallis added 115 runs in an excellent partnership for the second wicket and then another profitable associationbetween Mark Boucher (51) and Jonty Rhodes (44) offered further momentum. But the innings finished on the same note of wicket-taking as it hadstarted – opener Herschelle Gibbs (0) having perished from the very first delivery of the match – and none of the Proteas was ultimately able to rivalCairns’ ability to translate a start into a genuinely big innings.South African captain Shaun Pollock admitted he was disappointed by a defeat that now hands leadership of the competition to the NewZealanders. He expected that there would be some changes to the side that will take on the so far winless Australia in another important game heretomorrow.

Hyderabad cruise to an easy victory

In the Ranji Trophy South Zone League match between Hyderabad and Goa atNFC Ground, Hyderabad, the last day’s play on Saturday saw Hyderabad beatGoa by 153 runs.Starting the day at 99/3 Goa had an uphill task to even stretch themselvesfor a victory. Hyderabad bowling was far too superior to let Goa chase fora victory. Goa’s innings was jostled when it lost the experienced PraveenAmre for 15 early in the day to Venkatapathy Raju, reducing themselves to114/4. Dinesh Rao went on to complete his half century but was dismissed on54 at the team score reading 162/5. Narendra Pal Singh (29.2-5-81-4) andMohammed Ghouse (17-6-43-3) ran through the second half as Goa were bundledout for 226 in 101.2 overs. Hyderabad cruised to a comfortable win andeight outright points. Goa went home with none.

Full coverage of Michael Clarke's retirement

2015August 24
Mark Nicholas – Clarke pulls his final few tricks
August 23
Ian Chappell – Clarke second only to Taylor as captain
News – Clarke’s parting plea for better Test pitches
Press conference – ‘I didn’t let the emotions get to me’ – Clarke
August 22
Daniel Brettig – Lyon is Clarke’s greatest legacy
August 19
News – ‘I can’t wait,’ says Clarke on retirement
Daniel Brettig – Clarke’s career ever so near to greatness
Simon Barnes – Where’s the love for Clarke?
Russell Jackson – A fan’s notes
Brydon Coverdale – Gutsy in Cape Town, resilient in Adelaide
Video – Clarke’s chance for glorious finale
Press conference – Clarke looking to finish on a high
Clickbait – The Michael Clarke highlights
August 18
News – Clarke leaves behind a ‘legacy of aggressive, entertaining cricket’ – Mark Taylor
Illustrated report – ‘A bloody good bloke to boot’
Gallery – Clarke’s career in photos
Video – Chappell: Tactically, Clarke was second only to Taylor
Video – Boycott: Australia won’t miss Clarke because of his recent form
August 14
Numbers Game – The highs and lows
August 11
News – ‘Baggy green culture eroded under Clarke’ – John Buchanan
August 10
Video – Chappell: Not surprised Clarke’s career has been a short one
August 9
Press conference – ‘Clarke will be remembered for courage’ – Sutherland
August 8
Jarrod Kimber – A battle for greatness and love
Press conference – ‘Been lucky enough to captain Australia’ – Clarke
Video – Ponting: Clarke put his heart and soul into the game
News – Clarke removes captain’s mask
News – Clarke announces retirement after Ashes
Video – Brettig: Clarke left with little choice
By the numbers – A statistical look at Clarke’s recent poor form
August 7
Video – Australia fans call for Clarke’s retirementAugust 5
News – Clarke is not retiring
August 4
News – Stubborn Clarke digs his heels in

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