Walmsley back for England game

Otago’s most successful bowler this season former international Kerry Walmsley has regained his fitness and will play against England in the three-day match starting at the Queenstown Events Centre on Saturday.Walmsley has missed the last two State Championship games because of a side strain and he replaces the man who took his place Neil Rushton.Brendon McCullum also returns to the team in place of Andrew Hore who is not available.And Duncan Drew has been named as wicket-keeper for the match with Martyn Croy, fresh from a record equalling seven catches against Auckland, being rested due to a niggling ankle injury.There are no other changes to the side.The Otago team for the match against England is: Craig Cumming (captain), Simon Beare, Duncan Drew, Chris Gaffaney, Robbie Lawson, Brendon McCullum, James McMillan, Nathan Morland, Craig Pryor, David Sewell, Rob Smith, Kerry Walsmley.

Kenyan selectors opt for experience in World Cup squad

The Kenyan selectors can hardly be accused of throwing untried youngsters into the World Cup fray. When they announced their squad for next month’s tournament, two names stood out. Asif Karim, the former captain and Davis Cup tennis player, and Alpesh Vadher have both been brought out of retirement for the occasion.In fact, the party looks remarkably similar to the one that travelled to England for the last World Cup, with one notable omission. Jimmy Kamande, whose bowling action came in for unfavourable scrutiny at the start of the 1999 tournament, is left out. He is a reserve, along with Lameck Onyango and promising batsmen Alfred Luseno and Maurice Ouma.Left-arm spinner Karim retired from international cricket after the 1999 World Cup, while Vadher has also been recalled to add some experience to the team that was found wanting on their recent tour to Zimbabwe.Further experience is provided by the outstanding batsman in Kenyan cricket, Steve Tikolo, who will captain the side and will bowl his off-breaks. Former captain Maurice Odumbe will also be expected to overcome his weakness against pace bowling to score the runs of which he is capable, and to bowl off-breaks.Full squad:Steve Tikolo (captain), Maurice Odumbe, Asif Karim, Alpesh Vadher, Ravindu Shah, Hitesh Modi, Brijal Patel, Martin Suji, Tony Suji, Thomas Odoyo, Kennedy Obuya, Joseph Angara, Peter Ongondo, David Obuya and Collins Obuya.

Zimbabwe: National League scorecards (Round 7)

NATIONAL LEAGUE, ROUND 7Matches played Sunday 12 JanuarySunday 11 January – Mutare Sports Club v Queens Sports Club, at Harare Sports Club, was not played due to the cancellation of the air flight from Bulawayo.

ALEXANDRA SPORTS CLUB v QUEENS SPORTS CLUBAt Alexandra Sports Club. Match drawn (rain).QUEENS+W T Siziba c de Grandhomme b Blignaut 0R J King c Goosen b de Grandhomme 12M L Nkala c Goosen b Barry 8G M Strydom c D A Marillier b Barry 0H H Streak c Rennie b Stannard 75N R van Rensburg run out (Goosen/de G’homme) 1P N Engelbrecht c ? b D A Marillier 6M W Townshend c and b Rennie 0*M Mbangwa b D A Marillier 11R Lombard not out 7J Nyumbu c D Marillier b S Marillier 0Extras (lb 1 w 12) 13(49.4 overs) 133Blignaut 10 1 26 1 (6w)Barry 6 1 14 2de Grandhomme 6 1 15 1 (1w)Rennie 10 4 13 1D A Marillier 10 1 33 2 (3w)Stannard 5 0 22 1S J Marillier 2.4 0 9 1ALEXANDRAD de Beer c Siziba b Mbangwa 9C de Grandhomme not out 36*G J Rennie c and b Lombard 6D A Marillier not out 10A M Blignaut+G C GoosenJ CameronS J MarillierS BarryC M AnticevichD D StannardExtras (b 4 lb 2 w 8) 14(2 wkts; 20.4 overs) 75Nkala 4 0 23 0Streak 7 4 10 0Mbangwa 7.4 2 15 1Lombard 2 0 21 1HARARE SPORTS CLUB v MUTARE SPORTS CLUBAt Harare Sports Club. Mutare Sports Club won by 59 runs (Duckworth-Lewis).HARARE SPORTS CLUBM A Vermeulen c Sims b L J Soma 17*T R Gripper lbw b Whittall 56S V Carlisle not out 129+B R M Taylor b A Flower 15M R D Brundle lbw b A Flower 11R Croxford st Ferreira b Sims 12A Penney not out 4S BalaA MwayengaG Johnstone-RobertsonA MhanduExtras (lb 4 w 6 penalty 5) 15(5 wkts; 50 overs) 259Brent 6 0 27 0L J Soma 6 0 32 1Whittall 10 2 36 1Lewis 10 2 57 0 (1w)Sims 7 0 55 1A Flower 10 0 37 2 (5w)A D Soma 1 0 6 0MUTARE SPORTS CLUB*A D R Campbell not out 100+N R Ferreira c Mwayenga b Bala 46G J Whittall not out 16A FlowerR W SimsK P R WentG B BrentA D SomaL J SomaK J TaylorJ M LewisExtras (lb 2 w 16 nb 1) 19(1 wkt; 31 overs) 181Mwayenga 4 0 32 0Mhandu 4 0 29 0Penney 4 0 18 0Carlisle 3 0 20 0Bala 8 0 41 1Gripper 8 0 39 0OLD GEORGIANS SPORTS CLUB v OLD HARARIANS SPORTS CLUBAt Old Georgians Sports Club. Old Hararians won by two wickets.C B Wishart run out (Butterworth) 4A J Mackay c Brewer b Rinke 17*G W Flower c Ziegler b Chari 12C N Evans c Rinke b Chari 0L S Malloch-Brown c R Ervine b Strang 7M de Souza b Rinke 13G F Barrett c Benade b Rinke 13S Jones lbw b Strang 0W Mwayenga c Kaschula b Strang 5R J Bennett run out (Benade/Butterworth) 15I M Coulson not out 9Extras (lb 2 w 13 nb 2) 17(30.2 overs) 112Rinke 10 1 43 3Chari 9 1 33 2Butterworth 1 0 13 0Strang 8.2 4 13 3Benade 2 0 8 0OLD HARARIANST Benade c Barrett b Mackay 36R Kaschula c Evans b Mackay 1C H Brewer lbw b Mackay 7R E Butterworth c Jones b Mwayenga 4*P A Strang b Bennett 12C Ervine c Jones b Mwayenga 0G Ziegler b Coulson 19H P Rinke c Jones b Evans 4N Chari not out 15R Ervine not out 0+S KhanExtras (w 8 nb 7) 15(8 wkts; 32.1 overs) 113Mackay 9 0 44 3 (1w 7nb)Mwayenga 10 2 25 2 (3w)Bennett 7 2 26 1Flower 4.1 1 6 0Evans 1 0 12 1Coulson 1 1 0 1TAKASHINGA v KWEKWE SPORTS CLUBAt Eaglesvale School. Takashinga won by 99 runs. The Kwekwe innings does not add up.TAKASHINGAA Maregwede b Ervine 14E Chauluka b Price 30*S Matsikenyeri c Friend b Price 10T Taibu c and b Viljoen 9H Masakadza c Friend b Viljoen 67E Chigumbura b Rainsford 36P Utseya c Cornford b Sibanda 15R N Manyande c Macmillan b Ervine 4H K Olonga b Ervine 4A Maungwa not out 1A Mbwembwe b Ervine 0Extras (b 2 lb 6 w 13 nb 13) 34(48 overs) 224Ervine 9 0 47 4 (1w 8nb)Macmillan 2 0 22 0 (4w 2nb)Rainsford 10 0 45 1 (4w 2nb)Price 10 1 34 2 (1w)Viljoen 9 0 27 2Sibanda 8 0 41 1KWEKWET Duffin c Chigumbura b Olonga 0V Sibanda c Olonga b Masakadza 34T J Friend lbw b Olonga 6S M Ervine c Maregwede b Masakadza 47C Macmillan c Maregwede b Masakadza 3D P Viljoen c Chauluka b Masakadza 3J M Cornford b Utseya 3R W Price c Olonga b Masakadza 5+D J R Campbell run out (Matsikenyeri) 11B Hundermark not out 1E C Rainsford st Taibu b Masakadza 2Extras (w 6 nb 4) 10(33.4 overs) 126Olonga 7 2 22 2 (1w 4nb)Chigumbura 5 0 23 0 (1w)Maungwa 2 0 14 0Utseya 10 3 24 1 (2w)Masakadza 9.4 0 43 6

Australia to face old nemesis

CENTURION, South Africa, Feb 13 AAP – Maybe Steve Waugh is wrong.Maybe Sourav Ganguly isn’t such a bad bloke.Ricky Ponting seems to think so after chatting with the Indian captain for half an hour on the eve of the World Cup.Australia’s clashes with India in 2001, the last time they met, were memorable for three things: an epic Test series, a hard-fought one-day tournament and Waugh’s intense dislike of Ganguly.Ganguly infuriated Australia’s Test skipper by refusing to take the field during a tour match, spending most of the day on his mobile phone in the dressing room.Then for five straight games he kept Waugh waiting at the toss, the Australian standing there fuming with his hands on his hips until Ganguly finally strolled over like it was no big deal.Waugh would be resplendent in his team blazer and baggy green cap and Ganguly would be wearing a sloppy joe like he was off to the movies. Waugh was livid. Where was the respect?The mere mention of Ganguly’s name made Waugh’s blood boil. It was assumed Ganguly thought likewise.But in the lead-up to Australia’s World Cup match against India at SuperSport Park on Saturday, Ganguly said he held Waugh in the highest esteem.”I am a great fan of Steve Waugh,” he said.”The bottom line is that he is a great, great cricketer and I have the deepest regard for him, honestly, probably the most regard I have for a cricketer. Things happen on the field but I thought it was blown out of proportion.”Small things happened coincidentally and they were blown up as if they were done purposely. As a cricketer he is a champion … a great man.”Ganguly’s run-ins with Waugh led to the perception in Australia that he was a right-royal pain in the neck.England captain Nasser Hussain has since formed a similarly uncomplimentary view of the man known as “Raj” because of his privileged upbringing.Ponting isn’t so sure.”I don’t really know where that started with him (Ganguly) and Stephen,” he said.”I think they had a few heated conversations out on the ground.”I actually had a very good chat with him on the day of our official World Cup photo. I probably spent 30 or 40 minutes with him just talking about cricket and about batting and I’d never really done that with him before.”He sort of stayed away from us a lot. It was nice to have that sort of chat and get to know him a little bit better.”It’s funny – when you play against a lot of people you gather different opinions of them until you get to know them really well.”Ponting said he expected Ganguly to walk with him to the toss on Saturday.”I think we get fined if we don’t these days,” he said.”We have to walk out together, but I don’t know if we’ll be holding hands.”

Milestone Preview: Australia v New Zealand

Australia v New Zealand:Damien Martyn (AUS) needs 187 runs to complete 3000 ODI runs
Ricky Ponting (AUS) needs 171 runs to complete 6000 ODI runs
Andy Symonds (AUS) needs 36 runs to complete 1000 ODI runs
Chris Cairns (NZ) needs 150 runs to complete 4000 ODI runs
Scott Styris (NZ) needs 38 runs to complete 1000 ODI runs
Mathew Sinclair (NZ) needs 194 runs to complete 1000 ODI runs
Nathan Astle (NZ) needs 5 wickets to join the 100 ODI-wicket club
Chris Harris (NZ) needs 5 wickets to join the 200 ODI-wicket club
Ricky Ponting (AUS) needs 168 runs to complete 1000 World Cup runs
Michael Bevan (AUS) needs 19 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Adam Gilchrist (AUS) needs 32 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Darren Lehmann (AUS) needs 182 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Chris Harris (NZ) needs 101 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Nathan Astle (NZ) needs 97 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Chris Cairns (NZ) needs 7 wickets to join the 25 World Cup wicket-club

Face the music

He’s young, blond, good-looking, intelligent, polite and musical. Oh, and he’s the fastest bowler in the world. The only drawback? Sorry to spoil the celebrations after that win over West Indies, but Brett Lee is Australian, and he’ll be coming to England next year as one of the most exciting members of the best Test and one-day teams in the world.At a depressing time for cricket, when many of us have become cynical about leading players, it has been a relief and a delight to find a highly talented bowler who is as generous and polite as some of his seniors are selfish and egotistical. Lee is fast and fun to watch, and his emergence reminds us that cricket can continually renew itself.Lee, who’s 24 on November 8, made his Test debut in December last year. He immediately took five wickets blitzing the hapless Indians with an impressive combination of skill, raw pace and unadulterated enthusiasm. A few months later, during a one-day game in front of a noisy and passionate sellout crowd at the Wanderers in Johannesburg, Lee equalled the fastest delivery ever recorded by electronic means, with a 156kph (97mph) thunderbolt.Soon afterwards, in July, an investigation was announced into his bowling action. Three long weeks later the International Cricket Council’s panel of experts cleared his name. Lee had already survived career-threatening stress fractures of the lower back six years ago, after which he worked hard at remodelling his action, under Dennis Lillee’s tutelage. All this helped him take the throwing allegations in his stride.Many cricketers, if they’re suddenly thrust from relative obscurity to a sort of a pop-star fame, happily believe the most breathless publicity about themselves. They lose their way, their perspective, and become cut off from the real world. A lot of those players live and learn and, often with help from selectors who drop them for a while, come out the other end as reasonably decent human beings.But Brett Lee seems to be the sort of character whose head will not be swayed by fame and fortune. Certainly success hasn’t changed him so far. An easygoing country boy with a politeness that comes to him as naturally as his charming smile, Lee is different. He happily admits to loving classical music and to resorting to the soothing melodies of Mozart when he relaxes away from the game.”It’s a bit different for a fast bowler, isn’t it?” Lee admits. “For me, music is the same as the other guys playing golf. They play golf to get away from cricket, to relax. I play music, strum a few chords on my guitar.”Dad played a lot of classical records around the house and Mum played piano, so I’ve grown up with music. When I’m on tour I’ll take a very mixed lot of CDs. I’d have some Mozart, some Jimmy Barnes, Backstreet Boys – the whole lot. I’m a huge Elvis fan. I appreciate most types of music.”Lee is not just another cricketer who strums a chord or two on the guitar and fantasises that he is a rock star (just as most rock stars wish they were international cricketers). He can actually play.These days a team singalong in the hotel bar after an important win features Lee on the house piano, mingling passages from Chopin nocturnes with the `60s and `70s rock he also loves. Older brother Shane – an Australian one-day player himself and New South Wales’s captain – plays guitar, and younger brother Grant is now a qualified music teacher. Brett and Shane are in a pub band called , made up of NSW players, who play regular gigs around Sydney in winter and will soon release their first CD.Although he no longer needs to work outside cricket, Lee is in his third year on the sales staff of a Sydney men’s outfitters – Barclay’s. He works there three or four days a week – when cricket allows – and is featured in newspaper ads for the company, which he does free of charge.Lee has a real job for two reasons: to keep his feet on the ground, and to repay Richard Bowman, his boss, for the support he offered in the early days of his career.”I’ve been here for three years,” Lee told me as we chatted in a café in the mid-city arcade that houses Barclay’s suit shop. “I was working here when I was just playing first-grade cricket. He took a punt on me and now it’s paid off. I do those ads because I owe him a lot and it’s good to be able to pay him back.”He’s never knocked me back when I’ve asked for time off for cricket. We agreed from the start that cricket was Number One. If I’ve come up to him and asked for four months off he’s said `take five’. So I work here, then when cricket comes up I go and do that and then come back. He’s been right behind me and now I want to look after him.Lee also sees advantages in avoiding fulltime professional cricket. “I don’t really have to work, but it’s good for me. So much has happened in the past year that this keeps my feet on the ground. It’s a place where I can come and not worry about bowling or batting, and I’m not sitting at home watching TV. I can do something that’s teaching me skills – how to meet people and what-have-you.”It’s funny sometimes. People come into the shop to meet me or ask me to sign something. Twelve months ago I was working here and no-one had any idea who I was. Which was good. Still I suppose now it makes a sale a helluva lot easier when you talk cricket, take their minds off the price and nail’em at the end!Although this may all sound far too sensible for a young cricket star, an express bowler no less, it is not contrived. Brett Lee might receive astute advice – from older brother Shane, from the other members of his close-knit family, from manager Neil Maxwell (a former NSW player), and from mentor Dennis Lillee – but he is also smart enough to take that advice.After discussions with Shane and Maxwell, Brett recently ignored a lucrative sponsorship offer from a liquor company. It was not the sort of product he wanted to be associated with. Instead he and Shane advertise Weet-Bix, a well-loved Aussie breakfast cereal, and also promote a charity whose aim is to reduce Australia’s alarming teenage suicide rate.So much for Lee the young man. But can he bowl? The evidence is unequivocal. Lee is consistently faster and more accurate than Shoaib Akhtar, seems able to bowl an outswinger with the new ball at full pace, has an excellent yorker and a promising amount of bowling nous.Lee would have made his Test debut two games earlier if the selectors had acceded to the wishes of captain Steve Waugh and then vice-captain Shane Warne and included him in the XI for the Third Test against Pakistan at Perth last winter. Michael Kasprowicz was given a deserved chance instead, but a few weeks later the word went out: Lee just had to come into the Test side.In a Sheffield Shield game at Perth, Lee had launched an astonishing onslaught, the fastest bowling seen in Australia since the days of Jeff Thomson back in the `70s. He broke Jo Angel’s arm, and frightened his own fielders, let alone the West Australian batsmen.”Well, I’ve been told by the NSW boys, Mark and Steve Waugh, that’s the quickest they’ve ever seen me bowl,” Lee says. “It felt heaps quicker than when I was clocked at 156kph in South Africa. Perth was the quickest I’ve bowled. I just wish they’d had a speed camera there. But the most important thing to me is taking wickets. People ask me if I think about reaching 160 [about 100mph]. That doesn’t worry me as long as I’m taking wickets.”Lee is as excited as other Australians about the prospect of sharing the ball with Glenn McGrath and Jason Gillespie for the first time this summer. Gillespie is back from a one-year lay-off caused by the broken leg he suffered in that horrific collision with Steve Waugh in Sri Lanka last year, and McGrath is simply the best in the business. The trio might just develop into the best fast-bowling combination Australia has had since Lillee and Thomson ruled the world.”It’s very exciting. I’m very good mates with Dizzy [Gillespie], and it’s just great to see him back. I’m looking forward to playing at the WACA, taking the West Indies on there in the Second Test. It’ll be huge.”Add a spinner called Warne (“Yeah, he’s not too bad, is he?” Lee laughs) and a quality back-up swing bowler like Damien Fleming, and Australia will bring a powerful attack to England next year. However, after six consecutive one-sided Ashes series, there is always the chance that a new generation of Australian cricketer might think the gloss has faded from cricket’s oldest rivalry. Brett Lee was only 10 when Australia last lost a series to England. Where do the Ashes rate now?”Number One”, he says. “Doing an Ashes tour is the cream of the crop for any cricketer growing up in Australia. The biggest thing for me so far was getting my baggy green cap and playing my first Test. I think if I get a chance to go and play in England it would be a dream come true.”We’ve got such a love-hate relationship with the English people, it’d be great to knock them off. We actually enjoy playing against England. We love it. They’re very competitive and that’s what Test cricket is all about: Australia playing England.”Lee might bring the best of feelings and intension to England next year; but he won’t be able to pack local experience along with the Mozart and Elvis CDs. Strangely, he has never played in England, although when I point out that the ball travels through the air just as fast in England as anywhere else, he flashes that smile.”Exactly.”——————————————————————————–Brett Lee
Born Nov 8, 1976, Wollongong New South Wales
First-class debut 1994-95 for Australian cricket Academy, NSW debut 1997-98
Test debut 1999-2000 v India at Melbourne; took 5-47 in 1st inns. After 5 Tests, has 31 wkts at 16.06
ODI debut 1999-2000 v Pakistan, Brisbane, After 19 matches, has 32 wkts at 22.43. BB 5-27 v. India, Adelaide, has taken 3 wkts in inns 6 more times
Family ties Brother Shane (born Aug 8 1973) has played 43 ODIs for Australia since 1995-96
Back and forth Has had a reputation as a lightning-fast bowler since his teens, but suffered back problems in 1994-95, and again, to lesser extent, in 1998. Worked on strengthening his back and remodelling his action with Dennis Lillee. During the Australian Academy tour of South Africa in 1998 coach Rod Marsh said Lee was the fastest thing he’d seen since Thomson, and was a must for the Test team

99.7 mph Jeff Thomson 160.45 kph, Australia v West Indies, Test, 1975-76
97.0 mph Brett Lee 156 kph, Australia v South Africa, ODI, Johannesburg 1999-2000
97.0 mph Shoaib Akhtar 156 kph, Pakistan v South Africa, ODI, Sharjah 1999-2000
94.3 mph Nantie Hayward 151 kph, South Africa v England, Test, Port Elizabeth, 1999-2000
93.7 mph Darren Gough 149.8 kph, England v West Indies, Test, Edgbaston 2000
Thomson’s delivery was measured using different equipment to the current Speedster radar-gun. But he also claims he wasn’t trying very hard at the time

Whatmore tipped for Indian job

Sri Lanka coach Dav Whatmore has been approached by the Board of Control forCricket in India (BCCI) with regard to coaching India’s junior players,according to the Hindu newspaper.Whatmore’s contract with the Board of Control for Cricket in Sri Lanka(BCCSL) expires in May and the Sri Lankan bornAustralian is yet to confirm his plans for the future. The currentquadrangular in Sharjah will be his last assignment with the national side.According to the Hindu, Brijesh Patel, India’s chairman of selectorsapproached Whatmore after it became clear that his contract would not berenewed by the BCCSL. He is tipped as the possible head of a NationalCricket Academy.Whatmore had had two stints in charge of the Sri Lanka national team,guiding them to the World Cup in 1996 during the first tenure and thenoverseeing their progression to the World Cup semi-finals in 1999 during asecond four-year spell.

Yorkshire accounts "in chaos" tribunal told

Yorkshire’s dirty linen continues to be washed in public, and a report in today’s Yorkshire Post reveals that Anthony Panaro, their former commercial director, was told to lie to the police by Chris Hassell, Yorkshire’s former chief executive.Panaro, who was sacked by the county last year, told a Leeds tribunal that Hassell demanded that he change his story regarding an alleged cash payment to David Gower if he "wanted to keep his job". Panaro is suing Yorkshire for unfair dismissal.Gower was paid £1000 for speaking at a cricket dinner to celebrate Yorkshire’s Championship win in 2001, but, according to Panaro, was also given £2000 in cash from the raffle held on the night. The matter came to light when Hassell was questioned by the Yorkshire committee about a shortfall in the proceeds from the raffleBut David Ryder, the county’s chief accountant since 1975, maintained that Panaro was responsible for a string of loss-making deals as well as for the submission of bonus claims he was not entitled to. Ryder did, however, admit that Gower was paid more than the £1000 fee shown in the official accounts.What will cause concern within the membership are Panaro’s revelations of the lax financial controls at the county. He told the tribunal that “cheques and cash were often left on desks and in drawers” and “accounting practices were in complete chaos”. He added that he believed he had been made a scapegoat for Yorkshire’s dire financial problems.Panaro said that he had raised the issues with the chairman of finance but nothing had been done because "it was his department I was directly criticising”.The hearing continues, but the information coming to light will cause grave concern among Yorkshire’s long-suffering membership.

Inzamam recalled for Bangladesh series

Inzamam-ul-Haq has been recalled to Pakistan’s Test squad for their series against Bangladesh, following a five-month period of exile after his desperate performance in the World Cup.Inzamam, 33, has made 6,214 runs in 85 Tests, including a career-best 329 in his most recent Test innings on home soil, against New Zealand at Lahore two years ago. But he managed just 19 runs in six innings in the World Cup in South Africa. He has since battled hard to earn a recall, and is eager to make his part on the three-Test series. “I am motivated for the game,” he said, “and I want to make a comeback with a bang.””We never had any doubts in our minds about the credentials, experience and talent of Inzamam,” explained Aamir Sohail, Pakistan’s chief selector. “We believed he deserved a rest because he had been playing non-stop cricket for 18 straight months. He was tired.”The rest of the squad has a distinctly youthful cant to it, with seven new caps being named among the 15-man party. Batsmen Saeed Bin Nasir and Farhan Adil, together with fast bowler Mohammad Khalil, never never played at the highest level at all, while Yasir Hameed, Mohammad Hafeez, Shabbir Ahmed and Umar Gul have all played one-day international cricket.”The squad is a combination of youth and experience and we are basically looking at forming the right combination for the South Africa series [in October],” said Sohail. “The series against Bangladesh is an ideal opportunity for the younger players to establish themselves at Test level.”Pakistan Test squad Rashid Latif (capt & wk), Mohammad Hafeez, Taufiq Umar, Yasir Hameed, Inzamam-ul-Haq, Yousuf Youhana, Misbah-ul-Haq, Shoaib Malik, Umer Gul, Shabbir Ahmed, Danish Kaneria, Shoaib Akhtar, Saeed Bin Nasir, Mohammad Khalil and Farhan Adil.

Dale named in squad for Worcester despite eye injury

Despite sustaining an eye injury that required 10 stitches in last night`s floodlit National League at Worcester, Adrian Dale has been named in the following 13 man squad to play Worcestershire in the Frizzell County Championship match starting tomorrow (31st July) at New Road. Dale will undergo a fitness test tomorrow morning to ascertain whether or not he will be able to play in the Championship match.

J Hughes (22)JP Maher (6)A Dale (11)MJ Powell (14)MP Maynard (25)MA Wallace (18) +RDB Croft (10) *MS Kasprowicz (3)SD Thomas (7)AG Wharf (16)DS Harrison (20)IJ Thomas (27)DA Cosker (21)

Game
Register
Service
Bonus