Alex Blackwell ruled out of New Zealand series

Alex Blackwell will be out of action against New Zealand in October © Getty Images

Allrounder Alex Blackwell has been ruled out of Australia women’s forthcoming home series against New Zealand in October due to a knee injury.Blackwell ruptured the anterior cruciate ligament in her left knee during a training session with New South Wales at the Sydney Cricket Ground on July 15. She will undergo surgery next week, and will miss the entire tour, comprising a Twenty20 fixture at Brisbane on October 18, followed by a five-match one-day series.Speaking to reporters, Blackwell admitted that the injury was a huge setback, but added that it would only encourage her to try harder to make a strong comeback.”It’s very disappointing to be injured and know I’m going to be watching from the sidelines as I’ve been training hard over the past three months in readiness for the season,” she said. “My priority now is to go through the rehabilitation process, stay positive and make sure I come out the other side fitter and stronger and ready to play cricket as soon as I can.”Blackwell, a medical student, was recently named the 2005 Australian University Sport Outstanding Athlete of the Year.

'I am excited and honoured to coach Sri Lanka' – Moody

Tom Moody: ‘Our main focus is the 2007 World Cup’ © Getty Images

Tom Moody, Sri Lanka’s latest Australian coach, has been given a wider mandate than his predecessors to revamp the island’s coaching structure at the national and grassroots level, with the aim that Sri Lanka can win the 2007 World Cup and are able to be consistently rated as one of the top three Test nations in the world.Sri Lanka’s previous foreign coaches have had limited input into wider development issues and have often been left frustrated by a general lack of clout over even minor team issues. But Moody, the highest-paid coach in Sri Lanka’s history with a pay packet estimated to be US$150,000 plus expenses, has been assured a freer rein to build for the future.”Tom’s primary focus will be as head coach of the national team but he will also be looking at the structure of our coaching system in the island which we believe needs to be reviewed,” Tryphon Mirando, the interim board secretary, said at a media briefing. “We have already had a very healthy discussion about the long-term future and Tom will be working very closely with everyone so we can be champions again.”Moody produced an accomplished performance in front of the Sri Lanka media for the first time, sidestepping the predictable politically-slanted questions from some journalists relating to the recent cricket board crisis with ease. His theme was building for the future and putting in place the support structures necessary to properly harness the talents of the national team in particular and the island as a whole.”I am very excited and honoured to be Sri Lanka coach,” Moody announced. “I am ambitious and this [an international post] is something that I have been striving for. I am now looking forward to working with some of the world’s best players and taking the side forward. I will be the head team coach but I will also closely monitor the A team and the under-19 team and look into coaching at the grassroots.””Our main focus is the World Cup in 2007 and the journey we are started now is geared towards a successful campaign in the West Indies,” he added. “We will sit down with the senior core of the players when I return to review how the game is being played now and the likely conditions to formulate our strategies. Fortunately, we have plenty of time up our sleeve to come up with strategies that can help us win that tournament. In Tests, our goal is to look at a consistent place in the top three and to do that we need to maintain the side’s home form and improve performances overseas.Moody has also been given the freedom to build a new back-room support staff for the team. CJ Clarke is the current physiotherapist and is contracted until the 2007 World Cup, but there is no fitness trainer any longer after the failure of the previous administration to renew Shane Duff’s contract at the start of the year. A full-time assistant coach – possibly one of the leading local coaches like Rumesh Ratanayke or Roy Dias – is also on the cards.”I am in favour of having a quality support team to give the players the best chance possible of performing at their best,” commented Moody. “It may be worthwhile looking at an assistant coach and that is something we will look at in addition to the physiotherapist and fitness trainer. With regard to specialist batting and bowling coaches, as an experienced allrounder, I feel confident of being able to handle both of those areas. If I feel we need additional support, for example a dietician, we will address that when the need arises.”Moody promised innovation, but not technology for the sake of it: “I am familiar with all the new technologies that are being used now in the game and we will also be introducing new technologies into the coaching process, but it is also important to stick to the basics and we will not cloud the players in technology. If we can use technology to develop the players then fine.”Potentially Moody’s greatest frustration in the coming months could be selection, which has been a recurrent and consistent source of controversy over the years. Moody, who met Lalith Kaluperuma, the new chairman of selectors, on Wednesday afternoon, will not have an official vote but hopes that his opinion will be sought and valued: “It is important that the captain and coach have a close relationship with the selectors as it is important that we get the best XI out of the park.”Moody leaves for England on Thursday afternoon to re-join Worcestershire before returning on June 18 to start training and planning for the home series against West Indies, which starts on July 15.

Match called off due to rain

Match abandoned due to rain
ScorecardRain stopped barking and finally took a bite out of the series, with the fourth one-dayer in Dunedin being called off, and a replay scheduled for the next day. The replayed game will be a day game that begins at 12pm local time (11pm GMT).Play looked likely for a while when Graeme Smith won the toss yet again and put New Zealand in to bat. But rain washed the ground minutes before play was to begin. South Africa had their fourth success with the coin, but the rain ensured that there would be another toss tomorrow.South Africa’s inability to use the conditions – and the form of a rejuvenated New Zealand side – has resulted in two losses on the go. New Zealand’s victory in the third ODI came after the bowlers pegged back South Africa during the middle overs, and even inspired batting by Shaun Pollock could only take his team to the precipice of victory. An injury sustained during the game kept him out of today’s team, and Lance Klusener was his replacement.For New Zealand, the third match was an eye-opener. Michael Papps showed everyone what the fuss was about when he scored his first fifty and played a vital role in giving his team its first significant start of the series. And then their bowlers caged the batsmen. South Africa’s bowlers, barring Pollock, were made ineffectual and they failed to live up to the reputation that preceded them to New Zealand. It was a U-turn from previous expectations.

Williams returns to Warriors Pura Cup team

The Western Australian Cricket Association selectors today announced the Western Warriors team to play Tasmania in a Pura Cup match in Hobart on February 5-8.The team is:Justin Langer (Captain), Mike Hussey (vice-captain), Jo Angel, Ryan Campbell, Beau Casson, Michael Clark, Murray Goodwin, Shaun Marsh, Marcus North, Chris Rogers, Callum Thorp and Brad Williams.The Warriors are in Adelaide this weekend for a crucial ING Cup limited-overs match against the Southern Redbacks on Saturday, February 1.This entire match will be televised live on Channel Nine, from 7am (Perth time) on Saturday.The team travels to Hobart on Sunday morning, February 2, to prepare for the four-day Pura Cup encounter with the Tigers.

Shrugging off drug charges, Indian team aims to retain focus for final

While the Indian cricket team trying to shrug off allegations of druguse by some of its members and retaining focus on the Coca Cola Cuptri-series final against West Indies on Saturday, physio Andrew Leipushas come up strongly in defence of his side.Leipus termed the allegations “laughable” and said he felt extremelylet down by the story.A news magazine last week quoted former Indian cricketer and coachAnshuman Gaekwad alleging certain players took performance-enhancingdrugs. Gaekwad had subsequently denied the comments attributed to him.”Personally it puts me in a bad light. All the hard work that I havedone to get the players fitter and better has been washed away withthis allegation,” Leipus said. He categorically stated he had “neverinjected a player except when it is for acupuncture” and denied evergiving a steroid to any Indian player.On the charge that he had imported some “stuff” from Australia for theplayers, the physio retorted, “It is myoplex, a nutritional powder,and it is secured from South Africa and not Australia. Also, it is nota steroid.”Steroids help people in the gym enormously. If you are in to heavyweight training, steroids will help you. But our guys, when in thegym, do not train so hard. Their training is not really intensive.Whoever has done the story has little or no knowledge of thedifference between diet supplements and steroids”, he said.”Fingers have been pointed at us,” said a senior cricketer oncondition of anonymity. “But nobody cared to remember that quite a fewIndian cricketers, like Javagal Srinath, Rahul Dravid, Anil Kumble,Sourav Ganguly and Sachin Tendulkar, have played county cricket inrecent past where drug regulations are in place and they have alsobeen repeatedly tested.”The England and Wales Cricket Board and the Australian Cricket Boardare the only two national cricket bodies where drug regulations areenforced and random tests are carried out on cricketers. However,these laws are applied at the first class level and not in theinternational arena.Sunil Gavaskar, who heads the cricket committee of the InternationalCricket Council, says the issue does not fall under the jurisdictionof his unit.”We handle only the technical matters of the game internationally,though I did broach this subject with the chief executive (MalcolmGray) at the executive meeting of the body in Nairobi last October andwork on it is underway,” he said.ICC’s Anti-corruption unit chief Sir Paul Condon also mentioned theallegations of baggage and equipment on tours being used to facilitatemovement of illicit drugs.Zimbabwe batsman Andy Flower said it was time the respective cricketboards had a sound drug policy in place. “If everyone feels the gameis clean, why not put in place a sound drug policy to avoid anyrumours gaining ground”.Craig Smith, the long-serving physiotherapist of the South Africanteam, termed the allegations in the magazine as outlandish and farfetched.”A cricketer is not like a sprinter, whose success depends largely onpower. There are so many variables in a game of cricket and a batsmanrelies on technique and timing and a bowler on technique and rhythm.Those are not things you can find in a bottle. A lot of the topplayers take nutritional supplements, such as carbohydrates andproteins, or Creatine, which is legal and advisable, but to say thereis widespread use of steroids, beta-blockers or amphetamines is justan attempt at sensationalising the issue.”It is not the first time though that suggestions have been made on theusage of drugs by Indian cricketers. During the Commonwealth Games inKuala Lumpur in 1998, some leading Indian bowlers were not included inthe team because they were taking cortisone injections to ease bodypains. Cortisone is a taboo as per the International OlympicCommittee’s medical commission.ICC spokesman Mark Harrison said cricket bodies around the world willsoon be forced to submit players to stern drug testing, most certainlyby the 2003 World Cup. The ICC would have, by then, recognised whichdrugs are illegal and which are only energisers, he said.

West Ham fans impressed with Joao Mario on his Premier league debut

Despite only managing to steal a point from their home game against Crystal Palace on Tuesday evening, West Ham fans can be encouraged by their teams’ determination, which had been missing in droves during the first part of their campaign.

In a rather uneventful 90 minutes, a Mark Noble penalty helped West Ham back into the game after Christian Benteke had given Palace the lead mid way through the first half. The score remained level throughout the rest of the match but West Ham looked the better of the two sides and had opportunities to take all three points.

One man who particularly impressed for the Hammers was new signing Joao Mario. The Portuguese midfielder, who is valued at £23.4million on Transfermarkt, looked mightily impressive on his Premier League debut, distributing the ball well and contributing defensively too.

After the game, West Ham fans took to Twitter with excitement regarding the performance of their new signing.,.

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West Indies and Pakistan set up final replay

West Indies had few problems in securing their place in the CLICO International U-15 Championship final with a rousing eight-wicket win over Malaysia, the surprise semi-finalists who entered the tournament at the last minute following Zimbabwe’s withdrawal .Malaysia won the toss and batted, making a solid if rather ponderous start as Zubair Asyraf (39) and Keithan Goonasagaran (33) guided them to 82 for 1. But the innings unraveled against two left-arm spinners, Man-of-the-Match Kaverm Hodge (10-3-23-2) and Derone Davis (9.5-2-33-4), and they were bowled out for 160 with one ball remaining.West Indies’ batting has been one of the features of the competition and they raced to victory in 24.5 overs. Ramon Senior led the charge with an unbeaten 69 while the prolific Kraigg Brathwaite chipped in with 52, his fifth score over fifty in seven outings.In the other match, a repeat of the knockout semi-final, Pakistan, who were made to struggle on that occasion, cruised to a six-wicket victory over Bangladesh. Winning the toss, Bangladesh lost three early wickets to Syed Kumail Abbas, slipping to 13 for 3, and despite a gutsy 66 from Didar Hossain the innings never got going and they were bowled out for 126.Pakistan’s openers, Mohammad Babar (64) and Mohammad Naeem (36) put on 82 and, although they suffered a slight wobble, they eased home with more than 19 overs in hand.West Indies and Pakistan met last week in the Knockout tournament final. On that occasion Pakistan won a tense match by two runs.

Bangladesh announce women's squad

Bangladesh have announced their 14-player squad for the Asian Cricket Council women’s tournament in Malaysia next month.Tazkia Akter leads the side for the tournament which comprises eight teams, divided into two groups. A semi-final stage and final follow. Bangladesh, the favourites, have been grouped with UAE, Singapore and China.Their first match is against UAE on July 11.Squad Tazkia Akter, (capt), Salma Kahatun, Reshma Akter Aduri, Panna Ghosh, Irin Sultana (wk), Shuktara, Ayesha Akhter, Shathira Jaker Jessy, Chamely Khatun, Shamima Akhter Pinkey, Tithi Rani Sarker, Papiya Haque Babu, Champa Chakma, Mina Khatun (reserve wk)Reserves Monjila Khatun, Khadija Akhtar China, Fatima Akhtar, Saria Tanjin Sumona

South Africa face hectic schedule

The cricket season promises to be as packed as ever for South Africa © Getty Images

South Africa face a hectic international season ahead of next year’s World Cup in West Indies, with the announcement of the 2006-07 international fixtures programme by Cricket South Africa. The team will play a maximum of eight Tests and 20 ODIs, starting with the tour of Sri Lanka in July.The Sri Lanka tour includes two Tests and a tri-series also involving India, with each team playing each other twice before the finals. South Africa then head to India for the ICC Champions Trophy where they will play a maximum of five matches, should they make the finals.Their home season kicks off with a five-match ODI series against India during the first half of the summer. The focus then shifts to the Tests, with six back-to-back matches, three each against India and Pakistan. Pakistan will play their Tests at Centurion, Port Elizabeth and Cape Town, followed by five ODIs, with the last ending on February 14. Almost immediately after, South Africa head to West Indies for the World Cup, and will be based in St Kitts for the group stages.Gerald Majola, CEO of Cricket South Africa, said that the schedule was aimed at improving the team’s international ranking and bench strength. South Africa are well placed in the ODI team rankings, second only to Australia. However, they will want to improve on a Test ranking which places them behind Pakistan.”We have put a high performance programme supported by Standard Bank in place to fine tune the Proteas [South Africa] as well as to ensure that our widening pool of emerging players are ready to meet the challenges of international cricket,” Majola said in a media release. “The Proteas will be looking to consolidate their ODI position in the top 2 with Australia, and to climb further up the Test ladder.”All eyes are on the World Cup in March, and as world record holders the Proteas will be going into the tournament with much confidence. We will leave no stone unturned to ensure that the Proteas get the best preparation possible.”Pakistan in South Africa Jan 6-8 Tour Match – Kimberley
Jan 11-15 1st Test – Centurion
Jan 19 -23 2nd Test – Port Elizabeth
Jan 26 -303rd Test – Cape Town
Feb 2 1st ODI – Johannesburg (d/n)
Feb 4 2nd ODI – Centurion
Feb 9 3rd ODI – Port Elizabeth (d/n)
Feb 11 4th ODI – Cape Town
Feb 14 5th ODI – Durban (d/n)

'Selection should be a professional position' – Wright

John Wright finally came out and spoke about things he would have liked done differently © AFP

John Wright, the former Indian coach, has said that the time for honorary selectors may be up, and has urged the Indian board administration to bring in professionals. “I have no problems with the selectors because they’re all trying to do a tough job,” said Wright in a frank interview with . “What I have a problem with is the system, whereby they’re voted in every year and they’re voted in by a geographical region. I don’t think that situation is healthy.”Wright said he had witnessed several passionate selection meetings, and noted that since selectors performed in an honorary capacity, they would be changed often, regardless of whether they were competent or otherwise. This process, he said, had to change because a large part of a team’s showing depended on the actions of the selectors.”Every year, generally, you have a new convenor and a different make-up on your panel, so the continuity is difficult. Sanjay Jagdale has been an outstanding selector and because his time is up he is no longer in that position. That to me just doesn’t make sense.”I feel that the system of picking your national selection panel may have done its course,” he continued, “and I would urge the BCCI to study the situation. I have a personal opinion that it should be a professional position, the way it is in a number of countries. You can have the best coaching system and your best coaches, but if you don’t get your selections right, you’re making it very difficult for yourselves.”Wright added that a selector who toured with the team could help matters, because he would be in a position to interact with the captain and coach on requirements and decisions, and could convey them to the rest of the selection panel. As for feedback on players at first-class level, utilising the services of coaches could be helpful. “I think there are some good coaches out there in the first-class system, and they should be used. I hope they establish a pathway for coaching in domestic cricket. There’s a new group coming through, guys like Paras Mhambrey, Venkatesh Prasad, Robin Singh. If you can get a system going where they feel there’s a career there, then that could be helpful.”Wright added that you could not rule entirely out a situation where coaches becamse surplus to requirement and the team was “taking responsibility for those decisions.”Which leads us to the Ian Chappell situation, where if a captain doesn’t really want anyone else around, then fine.”

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