Daffodils, Dragons and Leeks

The new Twenty20 Cup competition will see the Glamorgan players take to thefield as the ‘Leeks’ in 2003.A new green and white playing kit, in keeping with the ‘Leek’ nickname, willbe worn for the Twenty20 Cup and replica shirts will be available from theClub Shop by the end of May.A Glamorgan Spokesperson confirmed that the County wanted to move away fromthe more aggressive nicknames of old and hoped that the ‘Glamorgan Leeks’would convey a softer side to the game, which would prove attractive to awider audience, particularly women.Breaking from tradition, the Club also plan to introduce a female mascot.’Lynwen Leek’ will debut at the County’s first home Twenty20 match againstNorthants on Monday, 16th June.Chief Executive Mike Fatkin said:
“It took us a long time to come up with a name for the team for the Twenty20Cup and we just thought that the ‘Glamorgan Leeks’ sat well with our othertwo recognisable welsh emblems of Daffodils and Dragons.”Club Captain Steve James added:
“I can’t say that the players were over keen with the name, after all, itdoesn’t exactly strike the fear of God into the opposition when you run onas Leeks. But we accept that in the current climate, organic food has animportant role to play in day-to-day life”.With three home Twenty20 fixtures being played within the space of 8 days inmid-June, the county hope to continue the theme by offering leek based foodproducts only in each of their catering outlets.Catering Manager Anthony Quilter said:
“We’re looking to offer a complete Twenty20 experience – which will differfrom what we offer on other matchdays. Health foods will take the place ofpies and chips and we’re also looking at the possibility of a low-fat, leekice-cream”.Mark Hodgson of the England and Wales Cricket Board said:
“We applaud Glamorgan’s initiative in the Twenty20 Cup and are looking atthe possibility of each of the counties linking in with a vegetable of somedescription. I certainly feel that this approach could attract a whole newgeneration of health conscious cricket spectators”.

News and Views

Is the ACU really taking a weird turn?
If one believes recent media reports, it’s unfortunate the ICC’s Anti Corruption Unit (ACU) having done a good job, is now taking a weird turn that may lead them into a jungle from which they will never find a way out. The reports allege, in an attempt to enlarge the scope of match fixing investigations, the ACU has now set themselves on the path of `suspecting’ the shots on which players get out.With so much cricket being played round the year and players getting out in different styles, such an investigation is like jumping into the sea to catch a rare fish. Since the method seems to lack the vital ingredient of proving the intention of a player except through hypothesis, the players could not possibly be charged for `throwing away the wicket leading to match fixing’.According to a press report the trio of Inzamam-ul Haq, Wasim Akram and Brian Lara are in the first list for such a special investigation. As per the news item, keeping Inzamam under suspicion for some time, the ACU has focussed on his performance against Australia in the one-day match at Cardiff on June 9, in which Inzamam was out second ball, stumped by Adam Gilchrist off Shane Warne for a duck.While sensible observers of the game termed Inzamam’s sallying down the pitch to be a reaction to the stationing of a `silly point’, the ACU is looking into whether it could have been the part of a "betting operation". While Brian Lara is under investigation by Elliott Mottley of the West Indies Cricket Board, Wasim Akram’s name appears again, despite having been already tried and punished with a fine and invaluable loss of captaincy.In its vigorous pursuit of the subject the ICC must realise that while players like Mark Waugh, Alec Stewart and Martin Crowe (for allegedly selling information) and Arjuna Ranatunga and Arvinda de Silva (for alleged match fixing) have been cleared out of the net, the efforts of the media continue to trap mostly Pakistani players time and again.The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has been upright and prompt in taking action against its players even on the slightest suspicion. One can only wonder if this is just reward of such honesty that Pakistan players continue to be the targets of the sordid match-fixing episode? One hopes that all player performances, like the way of getting out, are being closely monitored the world over. It’s obvious that dark clouds of suspicion cast on the players will adversely affect their performance, jeopardizing the spirit of competition that the game generates.Inspection of facilities
It has become a common practice for the visiting teams to send a representative to inspect facilities in the host country prior to launching a tour. The New Zealand team is scheduled to arrive Pakistan on September 14 for a series of 3 one-day matches followed by 3 tests. The Manager designate, Jeff Crowe, visited Pakistan recently to inspect the playing as well as the boarding and lodging facilities that exist in the country.It is not the first time that the New Zealanders are visiting Pakistan. Having played a test series here as recently as 1996-97, they would have known about the grounds, stadiums and hotels well, plus the standards of hospitality. Having organised the World Cup twice, there could not be a doubt about the playing facilities that exist in Pakistan.It is possible that an official of a touring team visiting match centres in the host country to inspect facilities may be regarded as insulting by the hosts. With frequent exchange of visits between teams, the host countries even know the food habits of their guests.The hosts always offer their best to the visitors. I remember, as ex-Secretary of the PCB, I had to direct all match centres to arrange a special bed for Joel Garner when the West Indies team was on a visit of Pakistan. Such are normal courtesies, which the host countries are pleased to provide their guests.It would be a matter of great pleasure if an official of the visiting team visits the host country in advance to discuss matters of mutual interest with the Board, but no inspection of facilities please. To eliminate the feeling of the hosts being subservient to the guests, such a practice should better be discontinued. I feel we ought to meet each other and treat each other on absolutely equal basis.

Titans keep play-off hopes alive

ScorecardFile photo: Heino Kuhn and Henry Davids added 149 for the first wicket to set up Titans’ win•BCCI

Titans kept their faint hopes of reaching the play-offs alive, beating Knights by three wickets according to the Duckworth-Lewis method in Bloemfontein. Titans cruised to a revised target of 271 from 48 overs with six overs to spare but failed to get the bonus point that would have bettered their chances of qualification.Titans now have 19 points from nine games, four points short of third-placed Dolphins and five points behind Warriors, who are placed second.The Titans chase was set up by a 149-run opening stand between the captain Henry Davids and Heino Kuhn.Kuhn blasted a 80-ball 92 with 13 fours, while Davids played a more patient 73 off 78 deliveries. After Davids fell, Kuhn put together a 48-run stand with Cobus Pienaar, marching towards the total. However, once Knights got Kuhn out, the Titans’ middle order, in an attempt to snatch a bonus point, began to recklessly attack the bowlers and lost three wickets in successive overs, going from 220 for 2 to 231 for 5.Pacers Quinton Friend and Malusi Siboto picked up three wickets apiece, as Knights tried to claw their way back into the game, but the start provided by the openers gave Titans enough impetus to achieve the target in 42 overs.Earlier, Knights chose to bat and were buoyed by starts from their top-order batsmen, who added steady stands for the first and second wickets. An 85-run, third-wicket stand between Dean Elgar and Rilee Rossouw set the platform for a challenging total. Rossouw smashed 87 off 76 deliveries with 11 fours and a six, before late contributions from Pite van Biljon and Diego Rosier propelled them to 279 for 7 from their 50 overs.Titans must now beat Warriors on Friday, and hope that Cape Cobras beat Dolphins, to stand any chance of qualifying.
ScorecardCape Cobras maintained their position on top of the points table with a tight one-run win over Warriors in Paarl. Warriors, chasing 239, needed 14 runs off the final over, but lost Christiaan Jonker, who had brought the side to the brink of victory, off the fourth ball. No. 9 batsman Andrew Birch came in and smacked a four but, with three needed off the final ball, hit Lizaad Williams’ well-disguised slower ball straight to cover, and was run-out attempting a second run.Warriors lost wickets at regular intervals during the run-chase and were precariously placed at 153 for 6, before Christiaan Jonker and Simon Harmer counterattacked with a 80-run seventh-wicket stand. Jonker’s run-a-ball 66 included three fours and two sixes, while Harmer remained unbeaten on 32 off 26 balls.Earlier, Andrew Puttick scored his 10th List A hundred to help the shaky Cobras line-up reach 239 for 8. Puttick hit 10 fours during his 108 off 138 balls, and added 71 for the fifth wicket with Justin Ontong, to keep the side’s innings going in spite of regular wickets on a dry pitch that produced reverse swing. Puttick fell in the 49th over to pacer Rusty Theron, who finished with 3 for 44.

Third day washed out in Sydney


Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsIt was a frustrating day for fans and players•Getty Images

A draw in the third Test between Australia and West Indies at the SCG appears almost inevitable after the third day’s play was abandoned without a ball being bowled. Persistent rain made it impossible for the players to take the field at all, making it just the third time in the past 20 years that a full day’s play had been lost in a Test in Australia.Only 68 balls had been bowled on the second day due to the wet weather, and rain also affected the first day’s play. The forecast for the fourth day is for a shower or two, but there is unlikely to be enough rain to significantly affect the chances of play. West Indies will resume in their first innings at 7 for 248, having not yet faced a full day’s allotment of overs.

A lot of long talk

Ramnaresh Sarwan and interim coach David Moore during the England tour © Getty Images

Apart from the realisation that he didn’t like Bennett King very much, and that he perceived political, rather than cricket grounds for his omission in the second Test in Pakistan last November, Ramnaresh Sarwan’s comments from Toronto last week confirmed two reasons for the present state of West Indies cricket.The first is that the practice of airing every perceived grievance in public has now become an entrenched and destructive part of the culture. The second is that the general mental weakness of the players, correctly identified by a host of observers, from Brian Lara to Ken Gordon, as a prime cause of the decline, extends beyond the field of play.The purpose of the new captain’s denigration of head coach King as “one of the worst coaches I have had” was as pointless as its timing. The Australian has already quit and is long since back in his native Brisbane where they are likely to hold to Lara’s more considerate view of their man than to Sarwan’s.It is the time for the new captain to look forward in hope, not backwards in bitterness. He has a great opportunity to build a team that can regain the competitiveness and respect it has increasingly lost, whoever the coach, whoever the captain. For that, he needs to create a close rapport with King’s successor and adopt an attitude of compromise and co-operation that is the hallmark of captaincy.When Sarwan meets with Julian Hunte sometime soon, the new president of the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) might just point out to him the damage already created by similar verbal conflicts between those in leadership positions.Dinanath Ramnarine has criticised just about everyone who has ever opposed him within the WICB, and in turn, has been sledged by WICB officials. Lara publicly turned on the selectors and the ground staff during the series against India last year. Chris Gayle has had his say about WICB bungling and been “severely reprimanded” in turn by the WICB president. The new chief executive has dissed as “incompetent”, players who have hit back at his management style.Through it all, results on the field remain an embarrassment to the good name of West Indies cricket.While Ramnarine and the WICB argued about how many arbitrations they had won and lost, they seemed not to care about how many Test matches were won and lost. Hunte has already moved to make peace with Ramnarine by including him on the board. He could be somewhat more direct with Sarwan by telling him, as politely as he can, to leave out the bad-mouthing and get on with it.

Few teams reach the top without committing to tough training and full fitness

Hunte might need some psychological help to erase the persecution complex the players have developed that is the basis of the mental weakness they carry onto the field.One of Sarwan’s beefs about King was that “he was also very aggressive and vocally abusive to certain players to the point where he even threatened them”. Threatened them with what, he did not say, but we can take it that he meant with dismissal from the team.WIPA complained to the WICB a few years back that Viv Richards, then chairman, and other selectors had “verbally belittled and threatened” players. According to WIPA, some players received death threats during the altercation over contracts prior to the 2005 South Africa tour of the West Indies. Tony Howard, then team manager, was said to have pressured team members during the split later that year, in Sri Lanka.Players have complained about training regimes that are too tough, prompting the premature resignation of the most recent fitness trainer, and have objected to over-strict curfews.There are few successful coaches or captains in any sport who do not badger charges [when] they believe [they]are not fulfilling their potential, as is palpably the case with West Indies. Few teams reach the top without committing to tough training and full fitness. Those who take personal offence at such an approach invariably flounder.

Bangladesh hit by injuries

Mashrafe Mortaza is back on the injury table, but hopefully not for long © Bangladesh Cricket Board

Bangladesh are facing fitness concerns over two of their leading fast bowlers before the start of next month’s Champions Trophy in India. Both Mashrafe Mortaza and Syed Rasel have suffered freak injuries.Mashrafe sprained his ankle recently after slipping down the stairs at home but according to Faruque Ahmed, the chief selector, he is likely to recover in time. “We are monitoring his condition closely. At this moment it looks like he will be okay within the time, but to be sure we have to wait a few more days,” Ahmed told Reuters.Bangladesh will be banking desperately on Ahmed’s optimism for Mashrafe has been in good form lately and will be key to their chances of qualifying for the main rounds. He took 12 wickets in three games in Kenya last month, including a Bangladesh record six for 26. He will miss training for up to ten days.But Faruque showed greater concern about the condition of Mashrafe’s bowling partner Rasel, who damaged his foot in a motorbike accident last week. “Rasel did not improve on the scale we expected of him,” Faruque said. It means that Shahadat Hossain is now the only fit pace bowler in Bangladesh’s 14-man Champions Trophy squad.Meanwhile, Bangladesh’s opening pair is also posing considerably problems before the tournament gets underway. Uncapped Mehrab Hossain junior is expected to open the innings with Shahriar Nafees. If so it will be the 23rd opening pair to be tried since Dav Whatmore took over as coach in June 2003, according to the Dhaka-based daily .In 62 ODIs since then, Habibul Bashar, Khaled Mashud, Alok Kapali, Aftab Ahmed, Manjarul Islam Rana and Moniruzzman have all been tried. Javed Omar and Nafees have had the longest run, opening together in 15 matches followed by Nafees and Rajin Saleh. In this time, there has been only one partnership of over hundred and four over 50.

Is Mehrab Hossein the answer to Bangladesh’s opening problems? © Cricinfo Ltd

But Whatmore told the paper, the statistics were misleading. “That means one (opening pair) every three games. I didn’t realise that many. You know sometimes we got one or two boys opening just for the sake of the game or prefer for one or two matches.”I don’t think you can honestly say that we tried twenty two opening pairs in sixty matches but there might be the odd game or two where we put somebody in there to open the batting for a specific reason but not for long-term. So I am not sure whether the twenty-two is an accurate figure in that sense.”Whatmore added that the batting line-up as a whole was a concern. “If you look through the whole batting line-up we need to be strong in all departments, not just in the opening position. Yes, the opening is very important as much as number three and number four, five. They are all important.”But I have to say that we have won games without the openers doing well. It would be nice to see them do well. I am not sure you can just pick out one area and say you have done well in a certain area. We have done well in other areas. We have to improve more and opening is one of them. The situation is that we are not still able to have a regular opening partnership but we have to do the best we can.”Faruque admitted though that the number of pairs tried was too high. “Definitely the figure is abnormal. I am ready to accept that we were also inconsistent about the opening pair. Yes, we tried too many opening partnerships but what I want to say is that we were also helpless in one sense.”We even tried Ashraful in this position but I must say we didn’t give him enough time. Actually we are still confused whether it would be fruitful to use him as an opener because we have to think about the middle order too.”Bangladesh will play in the qualifying phase against Sri Lanka, West Indies and Zimbabwe from October 7-14. The main tournament starts on October 15.

BCCI disputes validity of Zee writ petition

A lengthy debate on whether the Board of Control for Cricket in India was an authority of the state dominated proceedings on the opening day of the Supreme Court hearing which sought to find a solution to the telecast-rights impasse that has overshadowed the build-up to the Test series against Australia.KK Venugopal, the BCCI counsel, pleaded that the writ petition filed by Zee Telefilms was invalid since the board was not an authority of the state – as defined in Article 12 of the Indian constitution. As per definition, “the State” implies not just the government, but also “all local or other authorities”, and according to a report in , Harish Salve, Zee’s counsel, argued that the BCCI should be considered as an “other authority”.He asserted that the BCCI was the sole representative of India as a nation at all levels of the game, with the team it selects playing under the national flag. The BCCI, however, contended that since it had no links with the government, and received no financial assistance from it, it could not be subjected to a writ petition.According to Venugopal, all that the government did was recognise the BCCI as the game’s apex body in India. The hearing, presided over by Justice Santosh Hegde, will resume on Wednesday.

Ganguly suggests two-tier system for Tests

Sourav Ganguly has suggested that the ICC implement a two-tier system to preserve the sanctity of Test cricket. Reacting to the news that the ICC was planning to offer full membership to six more countries before the 2007 World Cup, Ganguly said: "If the standard of the game has to be preserved, it would be better to have a two-tier system." Such a system would ensure that the top teams only play each other, leaving the bottom-rung teams to battle among themselves.The clamour over maintaining the standards of Test cricket comes in the wake of some hopelessly one-sided series over the last few years. Bangladesh have struggled since being granted Test status, losing 26 out of 28 matches, while the Zimbabweans – missing almost all their top players – have looked completely out of depth: they have been thrashed by the Sri Lankans in the current series, but an even more fearful mauling is in prospect in the upcoming series against Australia.Ganguly also admitted that the while the Australians were still the best team in the world, the Indians were gradually closing in. “We have to match Australia in consistency. Australia have played good cricket over a period of time to become the number one team. We have played well and done well against them in Tests but in one-day cricket they have had the better of us. [But] doing well in the coming series will definitely close the gap.”On the issue of retaining John Wright as the coach, Ganguly said: “It depends on lot of issues. John has been a very good coach. But whether to retain him or otherwise depends on a lot of issues. He also has to decide. He has a family and he has been travelling widely for the last few years.”

Australia travel, practice and media sessions

Wednesday 12 MarchThe Australian squad will travel from Port Elizabeth to Durban, ahead of its third and final Super Six match against Kenya on Saturday 15 March. The squad departs Port Elizabeth on South African Airways flight SA 676 at 0815, arriving into Durban at approximately 1000. Vision only is available of the side upon arrival in Durban. There is no practice scheduled following the squad’s arrival. Media access will be co-ordinated upon request.Thursday 13 MarchThe squad will train at Kingsmead, Durban from 1200. A media opportunity will follow practice at approximately 1500.Friday 14 MarchThe squad will undertake an optional practice session at Kingsmead from 0900.A pre-match media conference will take place following the session.Saturday 15 MarchAustralia takes on Kenya at Kingsmead, Durban in its third and final Super Six match of the tournament. The match is a day / night fixture, commencing at 1430.For further information please contact (in South Africa): Jonathan Rose, ACB Media Manager, on +27 (0) 833 107 662.

CEO on hold

Lack of funding has forced the Barbados Cricket Association (BCA) toput on hold the appointment of its first chief executive officer(CEO).BCA president Stephen Alleyne said, however, the board of managementwas still committed to filling the position, which was to play a vitalrole in the reorganisation of the association’s administrativeoperations.Last August, the board finalised the terms, conditions and mandate forthe appointment of a CEO and the post was advertised in the media thefollowing month.At the time, we had anticipated a particular source of funding. In theend, that did not eventuate and the board felt, looking at itsfinances, it was not something that we could support, Alleyne said inresponse to a question from the SUNDAY SUN over the delay.We have chosen to defer that until such time as we can put theappropriate finances in place.His comments came against the background of BCA losses of $657 344during the financial year which ended March 31.Before the job was advertised, the BCA, as an interim measure,retained the services of former civil servant Selwyn Smith as aconsultant with responsibility for day-to-day management of the officeon a short-term basis. Smith is still performing duties as aconsultant.The search for a chief executive was undertaken with the assistance ofa leading accounting firm. Earlier this year, there were reports thatSmith, former West Indies Cricket Board executive secretary, AndrewSealy, and former Barbados Consul-General to New York, Ricky Craig,were front-runners for the job.When appointed, the CEO will be responsible to the BCA board for theimplementation of its policies and for all aspects of its dailyoperations, including strategic planning, financial management,personnel management, public relations, member services and customerservices.