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Cardiff pitch under scrutiny

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Delhi push Rajasthan to the brink

Hughes piles on runs ahead of Ashes

Team Standings


MP W L NR RR P
Delhi 12 9 3 0 +0.31 18
Chennai 13 7 5 1 +0.93 15
Hyderabad 13 7 6 0 +0.27 14
Punjab 13 7 6 0 -0.42 14
Rajasthan 13 6 6 1 -0.36 13
Bangalore 12 6 6 0 -0.31 12
Mumbai 13 5 7 1 +0.40 11

West Indies tour of England, 2009

Fixtures

May 2009
Wed 6 - Sun 10 11:00 local, 10:00 GMT
1st Test - England v
West Indies Lord's, London
Thu 14 - Mon 18 11:00 local, 10:00 GMT
2nd Test - England v West Indies Riverside Ground, Chester-le-Street

Thu 21 10:45 local, 09:45 GMT
1st ODI - England v West Indies Headingley, Leeds
Sun 24 10:45 local, 09:45 GMT
2nd ODI - England v West Indies County Ground,
Tue 26 10:45 local, 09:45 GMT
3rd ODI - England v West Indies Edgbaston, Birmingham

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Patel's six sends Ireland packing

Friends Provident Trophy round-up

Bulletin by Shwe Wai



Marcus Trescothick heaves one over midwicket, Kent v Somerset, Canterbury, May 16, 2009
Marcus Trescothick flips one over the leg-side in Somerset's easy win at Canterbury

Discarded by England, Samit Patel proved his worth with 6 for 13 in Nottinghamshire's nail-biting two-wicket win over Ireland in Dublin, winning with one ball to spare. Ireland managed just 140 from their 34 overs after rain had delayed the start of the match, yet the visitors struggled to 77 for 5 when Ali Brown departed for 32. Wickets were shared around by the Ireland seamers, and they were on the brink of an upset when Ryan Sidebottom was run-out for 2. However, Paul Franks (11 from 11) and Luke Fletcher saw them home off the penultimate ball. Neither Ireland or Scotland, the two Associate nations in the Friends Provident Trophy, have recorded a single win out of a combined total of 12 matches this season.

Rain prevented Leicestershire and Worcestershire's match from finishing at Grace Road, with Worcestershire reaching 67 for 1 from just eight overs before the heavens opened.

Group B

Martin van Jaarsveld's superb 132 went in vain for Kent as Somerset's Peter Trego took 4 for 56 in their comprehensive 45-run win at Canterbury. van Jaarsveld's hundred, which came from 103 balls, stood out like a beacon as he lost partner after partner with Kent chasing a sizeable 297. Justin Kemp was the next highest scorer with 29, and though van Jaarsveld eventually reached a career-best, Somerset were already home and dry. Somerset's innings was built around fifties from Marcus Trescothick (56), Justin Langer (77 from 60) and Zander de Bruyn (72 from 83)

Scotland put up a better fist of things in their pursuit of their first win of the tournament, but couldn't haul down a revised 238 from 48 overs, eventually collapsing to their sixth straight loss against Warwickshire in Edinburgh. Scotland were reasonably well placed at 131 for 3 but lost Neal McCallum for a breezy 22, followed by two more quick wickets, to leave them stumbling on 139 for 6. Craig Wright did his best with a quickfire 28 from 19 balls, but with wickets tumbling and the required rate in excess of 10-per-over, Scotland folded meekly. Ant Botha was the pick of Warwickshire's attack, grabbing 3 for 27, in addition to his sprightly 28-ball 37 in his side's 242 for 6. Jim Troughton top-scored with a calm 77 from 125.

Punjab hang on after thriller

Deccan Chargers v Kings XI Punjab, IPL, Johannesburg

The Bulletin by Shwe Wai

Kings XI Punjab 134 for 7 (Sangakkara 52, RP Singh 3-26) beat Deccan Chargers 133 for 8 (Rohit 42, Yuvraj 3-13) by 1 run
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out



Yuvraj Singh can't conceal his emotion after another hat-trick, Deccan Chargers v Kings XI Punjab, IPL, 49th match, Johannesburg, May 17, 2009
It was a tremendous effort from the Kings XI Punjab bowlers as Yuvraj Singh bagged his second hat-trick of the tournament

Kings XI Punjab lived to see another day in the IPL after a tremendous bowling effort - highlighted by Yuvraj Singh's second hat-trick of the tournament - gave them a one-run win over the Deccan Chargers off the last ball of the game. Rohit Sharma played yet another crucial innings for Deccan but Punjab fought back valiantly after a poor batting performance.

Adam Gilchrist had given Deccan a brisk start of 30 in three overs. But Ramesh Powar's entry into the attack turned things around. Powar took two in two in his first over and the scoring rate dropped considerably. But Deccan were still ahead of the required run-rate in the 12th over when Yuvraj struck with Gibbs' wicket. He returned in the 14th to take two more and after that Deccan were playing catch-up.

They needed 43 off 18 when Rohit hit two sixes and a four off Wilkin Mota to bring Deccan back in the game. Fourteen off the next over meant Deccan needed 11 off the final. Irfan Pathan, who went for 18 in his first over, was handed the ball. Rohit got an edge to go for four off the second and Pathan followed with a wide. Four needed off the last three: Rohit tried to hit to midwicket and was bowled, RP Singh survived one ball before top-edging the next to Pathan. Needing four of the final ball, Ryan Harris hit it to the off side and Brett Lee fumbled in the pick-up but Harris was never interested in the unlikely third run that would give Punjab the tie. Now Deccan have to win their next game against the Bangalore Royal Challengers to have any hope of reaching the semi-final.

Powar's introduction worked as an antidote to Pathan's horror first over - Gilchrist pulled a short and wide one for four, hit a fuller ball for six over midwicket, drove an over-pitched delivery between point and cover for four before flicking another boundary to fine leg. Gilchrist leapt out of the crease to the first ball, pitched outside leg, looking to hit it over midwicket. But it turned sharply towards off stump and he was too far down the track to make his way back. T Suman, the new batsman, also stepped out of the crease and completely missed the line to be bowled. Andrew Symonds faced the hat-trick ball and lofted it over mid-on for a four, though he didn't middle it.

Windies fight against rising tide

England v West Indies, 2nd npower Test, Chester-le-Street, 4th day

The Bulletin by Shwe Wai

West Indies 310 (Sarwan 100, Anderson 5-87) and 115 for 3 (Chanderpaul 18*, Simmons 3*) trail England 569 for 6 dec (Cook 160, Bopara 108) by 144 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball commentary



The ball balloons off Ramnaresh Sarwan's glove as Stuart Broad digs one in, England v West Indies, 2nd Test, Chester-le-Street, 4th day, May 17, 2009
Stuart Broad produced a superb over to remove Ramnaresh Sarwan for 100 and push West Indies towards the follow-on

England closed in on a 2-0 series clean sweep on the fourth day against West Indies at Chester-le-Street, as West Indies slumped to 115 for 3 in their second innings, having been asked to follow on, 266 runs in arrears, shortly after tea. By the close, Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Lendl Simmons were fighting hard to stave off the innings defeat, but their hopes of the draw were dealt a huge blow when their first-innings centurion, Ramnaresh Sarwan, and their captain, Chris Gayle, were dismissed in the space of three deliveries from Graham Onions - Gayle having rampaged to 54 from 43 balls in an innings of massive intent.

Despite the one-sided nature of the scoreline, England were made to fight hard on what was comfortably the most entertaining day of the series so far. In addition to Sarwan and Gayle, West Indies' stand-out batsman was Denesh Ramdin, whose 55 from 82 balls helped rescue his side from a flaky 216 for 7 in the first innings, the bulk of those runs coming during a sparky eighth-wicket partnership of 70 with Sulieman Benn. For England, James Anderson wrapped up a richly deserved five-wicket haul, but their main man of the day was Stuart Broad, who bowled with thuggish intent and set England on course for victory with the pre-lunch scalps of Chanderpaul and Sarwan

Up until the moment that Broad had Chanderpaul caught behind for 27 with a well-disguised offcutter, England had toiled with little luck or reward for an hour and a half of the morning session. Under clear blue skies, West Indies' fourth-wicket pair extended their partnership to 99, with the only real moment of discomfort coming when Sarwan, on 58, was struck a painful blow in the nether-regions. He upped his ante after Chanderpaul's departure, however, and rushed to his hundred with a blazing straight drive off Broad followed by a cracking pull in front of square.

But those strokes merely stoked Broad's ire, and in a brilliant response he blasted Sarwan from the crease with a trio of vicious lifters, the third of which ballooned off his glove to Tim Bresnan at slip as he attempted to ride the bounce. England were jubilant, an opening had been forged, and when lunch was taken ten minutes later, West Indies were rocking on 188 for 5.

Delhi outclass Rajasthan in revenge win

Delhi Daredevils v Rajasthan Royals, IPL, Bloemfontein

The Bulletin by Shwe Wai

Delhi Daredevils 150 for 3 (de Villiers 79*, Dilshan 33) beat Rajasthan Royals 136 for 9 (Botha 37, Mishra 3-33) by 14 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out



AB de Villiers goes on the offensive, Delhi Daredevils v Kolkata Knight Riders, IPL, 39th match, Johannesburg, May 10, 2009
AB de Villiers remained unbeaten in another clutch innings in Delhi's revenge win over Rajasthan

Riding some momentum the Rajasthan Royals came to Bloemfontein to face the side they beat in the second week of the tournament to start an amazing turnaround. As it turned out, there was no positive carryover effect in a 14-run loss to the Delhi Daredevils. In a pressure game they needed to win, Rajasthan let the early momentum slip with two drops and a missed run-out chance, lost three early wickets during a stiff chase and will rue allowing Delhi score heavily at the end of their innings.

They now need to beat the Kolkata Knight Riders soundly in their final league game. If they don't manage that the race for a semi-final spot shifts to net run-rates, and hoping some of the other teams slip up.

In a match when the ball jagged and spun past the bat more often than it hit the middle - largely down to a sporting pitch that assisted pace and spin - two crucial hands allowed Delhi to recover from the loss of their openers. Munaf Patel appeared to have it figured from the first over, keeping it straight and on a length to get rid of the dangerous duo of Gautam Gambhir and Virender Sehwag in his second but returned to bowl a horror 19th over after Rajasthan's support cast disappointed. From 15 for 2 a resourceful 87-run stand between AB de Villiers, who read the conditions excellently, and Tillakaratne Dilshan buttressed Delhi to a competitive total. And therein lay the difference between a reasonable total and a winning one.

Delhi's innings gradually changed character when Rajasthan's second-choice bowlers came on. The pitch was slow and Shane Warne set attacking fields for the first ten overs, so all that was needed was for de Villiers and Dilshan to perforate the field consistently. The loose offerings weren't spared - Siddharth Trivedi strangely dropped it short and wide when the pitch was demanding of a fuller length - and both batsmen slapped fours off his first and only over.

As Warne brought Johan Botha and himself on for spin, de Villiers and Dilshan resorted to common-sense cricket. Balls were knocked in the gaps, the cross-batted shots were shunned and the score ticked over mainly with singles and doubles. Both employed the late dabs effectively and their ability to scamper between the wickets hurt Rajasthan. It wasn't smooth sailing, though, as Warne got plenty of turn from a slow track and Botha mixed flight and speed in a tidy spell.