Ambati Rayudu to play for Baroda

Ambati Rayudu, the Hyderabad batsman, has decided to play for Baroda in the 2010-11 Ranji Trophy

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Sep-2010Ambati Rayudu, the Hyderabad batsman, has decided to play for Baroda in the 2010-11 Ranji Trophy. DS Chalapati, secretary of the Hyderabad Cricket Association (HCA), confirmed that Rayadu had asked for an NOC from the association to allow him to play for Baroda.Hyderabad were relegated to the Plate League after a poor performance in the Super League during the Ranji season last year. Venkatapathy Raju, the Hyderabad coach, was unhappy with Rayudu’s decision to play for Baroda, who are part of the Super League.”It was done in bad taste,” Raju told . “As a senior member of the team, he should have taken the responsibility to guide Hyderabad this season. He should have been loyal to Hyderabad. This move reflects his commitment to the Hyderabad team.”Rayudu, who played for Mumbai Indians in the IPL, made his first-class debut for Hyderabad in 2001-02 but, after a disappointing 2004-05 season, transferred to Andhra for the following season. He returned to play for Hyderabad in 2006 and then played for the Indian Cricket League in 2007. After serving a two-year ban Rayudu made a comeback to the Hyderabad Ranji team last season.

Chris Benham released by Hampshire

Hampshire have released Chris Benham, the middle-order batsman, who has been involved with the club since he was 10

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Oct-2010Hampshire have released Chris Benham, the middle-order batsman, who has been involved with the club since he was 10.Benham, 27, was regarded as having a bright future in the game after he struck 158 in the 2006 Pro40 play-off but struggled to cement a permanent place in the first team. During the 2010 season he played six Championship matches and scored 268 runs at 24.36.Despite the setback to his career, Benham is keen to find a new county. “Personally, I still have a huge desire to play cricket at the highest level,” he said. “I see playing in a new environment with different ideas as a very exciting prospect.”The Hampshire manager Giles White added: “As the squad has strengthened opportunities for Chris have become limited. However, he has a good feel for the game and has never given anything but 100% for the Hampshire cause, and I would like to thank him for his input.”

Ed Joyce and Hamish Marshall named in Ireland touring party

Former internationals Hamish Marshall and Ed Joyce have been named in Ireland’s 17-man squad for their upcoming tour to India

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Oct-2010Former internationals Hamish Marshall and Ed Joyce have been named in Ireland’s 17-man squad for their upcoming tour to India. Marshall, the former New Zealand batsman, is included for the first time, while Ed Joyce is back in an Ireland squad after trying his hand with England. Joyce last played for Ireland in the ICC Trophy final against Scotland in July 2005.Both players don’t become eligible to play for Ireland in official ODIs until April next year, but Ireland have asked the ICC for a special dispensation to allow both to take part in the World Cup which starts next February – a decision on their participation is expected from the ICC soon.Alex Cusack returns after his recent operation, which ruled him out of Ireland’s tour to Zimbabwe. The remainder of the squad contains few surprises, with Boyd Rankin and Regan West still out recuperating from their injuries.The squad will be based at the Pune Sports Club from November 1 to 22, and will play four matches against invitational sides made up of first-class cricketers. The tour is a key part of Ireland’s preparation for the World Cup, which will be held in India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh next year.Ireland coach Phil Simmons feels the tour will not only give his team a chance to bond but also crucial experience of the conditions they will confront at the World Cup. “It’s a fantastic opportunity for the squad to acclimatise and bond together during the three weeks in India. I’ve put together a demanding programme covering physical, technical and tactical elements. We’ll also be playing four games against quality opposition, so the players will get a chance to impress in subcontinental conditions.”Although Joyce and Marshall aren’t officially available yet, Simmons said the tour was a great opportunity for them to get to know the other players and vice-versa, as well as providing depth to the squad. He also emphasised the need to do well in the World Cup, as the 2015 event has been reduced to 10 teams.”It’s vital we stay high in the world rankings, and continue to compete and indeed defeat full member countries. We’ve reached the quarter final stage of two of the last three major tournaments, and that could well have been three in a row bar the rain intervening in our game with England in Guyana.”Ireland squad: William Porterfield (capt), Andre Botha, Alex Cusack, George Dockrell, Allan Eastwood, Trent Johnston, Nigel Jones, Ed Joyce, Hamish Marshall, John Mooney, Kevin O’Brien, Niall O’Brien (wk), Andrew Poynter, Paul Stirling, Albert van der Merwe, Andrew White, Gary Wilson.

Prasanna Jayawardene rues not avoiding follow-on

Prasanna Jayawardene has rued not being able to avoid the follow-on but said his team could finish on a positive note after the encouraging start provided by openers in the second innings

Sa'adi Thawfeeq in Galle18-Nov-2010Prasanna Jayawardene, the Sri Lanka wicketkeeper, has rued not being able to avoid the follow-on against West Indies in Galle but said his team could finish on a positive note after the encouraging start provided by openers Tillakaratne Dilshan and Tharanga Paranavitana in the second innings. Prasanna, who was the last batsman to fall in the first innings, battled his way to 58 but holed out, top-edging a sweep, to Kemar Roach off the bowling of offspinner Shane Shillingford with the hosts just three runs short of avoiding the follow-on target of 381. But Sri Lanka finished the day on 89 without loss in the second innings, still 113 behind.”We wanted to save the follow-on but unfortunately it didn’t happen. Our openers have done well. If we can bat like this tomorrow in the first session we have a great chance to end up well,” Prasanna said. “Against the offspinner we were trying to sweep because I thought if I defended, there was a chance of a bat-pad catch. So I kept on sweeping. I wanted to sweep and get a four. If there was a single I wasn’t going to run. I was in too minds and as I swept the bat turned a bit and I got an edge.”I know that (Thilan) Thushara (the No.11 batsman) can bat, but the issue was that the offspinner bowled the best. You have to handle the pressure and I thought against the spinner I had to take strike.”Prasanna admitted the batsmen initially found it difficult to deal with Shillingford, who picked up four wickets. “When others bowl the offbreak they flight, but Shane darts the ball sending it down. There is a change in the way he bowls,” Prasanna said. “He was troubling us at the beginning, but as he got tired he failed to bowl a good line. Our openers had to issues tackling him in the second innings.”Sri Lanka had been struggling at 295 for 7 when Prasanna was joined by fast bowler Dammika Prasad, who supported him in a stand of 72 with a quickfire 47. “Dammika batted really well. There’s no point in blocking thinking of the follow-on. You have to be attacking. I thought both of us could avoid the follow-on but once Dammika got out we got into trouble.”The key to winning the series, Prasanna said, was to dismiss Chris Gayle, who smashed 333 in the first innings, early. “The lower order is not batting well and if we get Gayle I think we have a very good chance in the rest of the series.”Prasanna also acknowledged he was under pressure to perform, though he has represented Sri Lanka in 34 Tests so far in a staggered 10-year Test career. He scored a century during the tour of India last year in Ahmedabad, made 29 in the first Test against India in Galle this year and failed in the final Test of that drawn series at the P Sara Oval. “I didn’t get a chance to bat at SSC and in the third Test, I failed in both innings. Overall if you take my performances I have failed in those two innings only, but there’s always pressure for me to perform ahead of a Test,” he said.”It doesn’t affect me. I take it match by match and I try to give my best. My average is around 30 and if you can’t handle pressure you can’t play cricket. I started playing for the country in 2000 and I have always performed. It doesn’t bother me. I am used to pressure and I try to do well at every opportunity I get.”

'We don't want to give them a sniff' – Trott

Tests against Australia have traditionally been the acid test for England batsmen, but Jonathan Trott has so far bucked that trend, with two second-innings centuries in his only two matches

Andrew Miller in Adelaide01-Dec-2010Tests against Australia have traditionally been the acid test for England batsmen, but Jonathan Trott’s brief flirtation with Ashes cricket has so far bucked that trend, with two second-innings centuries in his only two appearances, at The Oval in 2009 and most recently at the Gabba last week.But if any cricketer in the England team knows what it takes to begin again from scratch in Adelaide this week, it is Trott, whose unflappable desire to pile up runs irrespective of circumstance has made him indispensable at first drop in England’s order. His plan for dealing with Australia’s bowlers for the rest of the series is simple: “We don’t want to give them a sniff”.Coming into the first Test, Trott was the only member of England’s batting unit not to have made a half-century in any of the three warm-up fixtures in Perth, Adelaide and Hobart, but having shown promising signs of form during his first-innings 29, he made it count second-time around to bat England to safety with a massive unbeaten 329-run stand with Alastair Cook.”Leading up to the Test match I felt in good nick but I hadn’t been able to kick on and get a big score, so I was very pleased to contribute to an excellent fightback that was set up by Staussy and Cooky,” Trott said. “I’ve been pretty fortunate to do pretty well [against Australia], but individually and as a team things can change pretty quickly.”Trott’s unbeaten 135 has given him a share in two triple-century stands in consecutive Test matches, following his record eighth-wicket 332-run with Stuart Broad against Pakistan at Lord’s back in August. By his own admission the conditions in Brisbane were benign by the final day, having assisted the bowlers on both sides early in the match, but the powers of concentration he displayed during his six-hour stay with Cook were not to be under-estimated.”The wicket flattened out and that’s what Test cricket is about, it’s about hard yards,” said Trott. “Sometimes you get on wickets as a batter that are tricky to bat on, so it evens itself out. At the Gabba it probably wasn’t what you want as an ideal Test wicket, but you get on with what you’re given, and we did that pretty well. To be 200 behind wasn’t ideal in the first Test of the Ashes, but we showed great character in the way we were able to get back in the game.”With unseasonal rain interrupting preparations ahead of the second Test, there is a slim chance that the Adelaide wicket will prove to be more sporting than the one at the Gabba. However, the ground’s new curator, Damian Hough, has promised a “traditional” pitch for his first match in charge, which implies it will be slow and full of runs, with some assistance for spin bowlers late in the game. Much as was the case on England’s last visit four years ago, in fact, when Shane Warne spun them to a standstill on a shocking final day, despite the teams each registering 500-plus totals in the first innings.Trott is the only member of England’s top six who missed that fixture, but he admitted that the memories, although ancient history as far as the current squad is concerned, still serve as a cautionary tale – not least on the final day of the Brisbane Test, when the satisfaction at rescuing the team from a sticky first-innings situation was tempered by the knowledge that their lead going into the fifth day – 88, with nine wickets intact – was actually worse than had been the case in that fateful Adelaide match.”The way we approached batting on the last day [in Brisbane], obviously we were only 90 ahead, and I was speaking to Alastair, and he said they were only half of that ahead in this game [Adelaide],” he said. “So we were making sure that our mindset was to bat for each hour, then reassess. It was normal Test match batting. We don’t get ahead of ourselves, we just do what we do well as a pair, and as a unit. But I don’t think the guys will be worried about four years ago. It was in the past and we’re looking to come to Adelaide and win.”England’s overall approach to the series has been as measured as Trott’s own approach to batting. The desire appears to be to take the series one ball at a time, let alone one Test at a time, and extraneous issues such as the form of Mitchell Johnson or the likely make-up of Australia’s attack, with Doug Bollinger and Ryan Harris both competing hard for inclusion, are not being allowed to impact on the team’s overall planning.”When you’re batting as a pair you don’t worry about outside things that are going on,” said Trott. “The fact we could bat for a long length of time is very pleasing, and that’s our job, to get their bowlers into their third and fourth spells, and get ourselves big scores. We don’t want to give them a sniff.”Johnson most certainly wasn’t given a sniff in the first Test. He went wicketless for the first time in his career, with England frustrating him with their disciplined refusal to flirt outside off stump. “I think that’s generally the idea in Test cricket,” said Trott. “You don’t want to be playing where you don’t need to be. There’s no huge urgency on run-rate, and although it’s good to have a positive mindset, you want to be playing in your areas of strength, where you know you can score and are confident.”Trott may have played his part in finishing the first Test on a high, but having being bowled out for 260 on the first day of the match, he’s under no illusions that improvements are required from England’s batting if they are to make good on any psychological ascendancy that may exist. “The one thing we look at in Brisbane is our first innings,” he said. We didn’t get as many as we’d have liked, because if we’d got a big score we’d have put pressure on them. As a batting unit, first-innings runs in Australia are very important. Hopefully it’s in this game.”

Lou Vincent powers Auckland to final

Auckland have qualified for the HRV Cup final after they comfortably beat Northern Districts by eight wickets at the Bay Oval in Mount Maunganui

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Dec-2010Auckland have qualified for the HRV Cup final after they comfortably beat Northern Districts by eight wickets at the Bay Oval in Mount Maunganui. Auckland’s win was set up by an all-round bowling performance which helped them restrict ND to a below-par 135 for 8 in their allotted overs.ND won the toss and elected to bat but got off to a terrible start when they lost Brad Wilson in the first over. Daniel Flynn blasted three sixes and a four off Michael Bates but once he was dismissed in the eighth over with the score on 47, ND lost momentum. The middle-order struggled to score freely as Auckland’s bowlers kept pegging away, backed up by some sharp fielding. Daryl Tuffey and Andre Adams were the most successful bowlers for Auckland; both picked up a couple of wickets, while conceding less than six runs an over.A target of 136 was never going to be enough to test the Auckland batsman. Though they lost Colin de Grandhomme in the second over, Lou Vincent and Jimmy Adams added 110 runs for the second wicket to set the platform for Auckland’s victory. Vincent top scored with 77 as Auckland won with nine deliveries remaining. This win takes them to the top of the points table and they will now host the final where they will face either Central Districts or ND.Wellington’s hopes of qualifying for the finals were dashed after they lost to Central Districts at the Basin Reserve in Wellington.CD lost Peter Ingram early after they were sent in to bat but a second-wicket partnership of 109 between How and George Worker set the stage for a big total. How blasted six sixes and nine fours in his 96 off just 42 balls, before he was dismissed by Jeetan Patel. Three more wickets for Patel, and a couple of run-outs kept CD’s middle order in check, but How’s impetus at the start was enough to carry them to 192 for 8 in 20 overs.Wellington started the chase in positive fashion, racing to 38 in four overs before Luke Wright was dismissed. Ian Blackwell then pegged the Wellington middle order back with three key strikes as the Wellington batsmen failed to build on their starts. They could only reach 163 for 6 in 20 overs to hand CD an easy 29-run win. CD are at second place in the points table, two points ahead of ND with one round of matches remaining.The game between last placed Otago and fourth placed Canterbury at Molyneux Park in Alexandra was abandoned without a ball being bowled due to rain.

'We played dumb cricket' – Oram

Jacob Oram, the New Zealand allrounder, has termed his side’s performance in the fifth ODI against Pakistan at Hamilton as “dumb cricket”, and said captain Daniel Vettori gave the team an appropriately harsh talk after the match

ESPNcricinfo staff04-Feb-2011Jacob Oram, the New Zealand allrounder, has termed his side’s performance in the fifth ODI against Pakistan in Hamilton as “dumb cricket”, and said captain Daniel Vettori gave the team an appropriately harsh talk after the match.Vettori missed the match with a hamstring injury but called a team meeting under the Seddon Park grandstand straight after the match. “Basically Dan kicked the management and support staff out, or maybe they just chose not to come and look us in the eye,” Oram said. “For an hour-and-a-half it was just the players in the dressing room and we didn’t get back to the hotel till 12.30am.”New Zealand’s loss in Hamilton was their 14th in their last 15 completed ODIs, and they have just one more match to play, against Pakistan in Auckland on Saturday, before the World Cup. Ross Taylor had said, after the fifth ODI, that the team was not far away from a win but individuals had to take more responsibility, and Oram said similar themes were discussed in the post-match meeting.”We’re just trying to get to the bottom of what is going on. We’re not far away but it’s happened too often for it to be just a coincidence. As we said, talent isn’t the issue. We all know how good the individuals in this team are. We’re not gelling and we’re not taking responsibility for winning the match for New Zealand.”Coach John Wright and his assistants Allan Donald and Trent Woodhill were absent from the meeting. Wright took over the coach’s job from Mark Greatbatch in December last year, and Donald, the former South Africa fast bowler, joined the team as bowling coach just before the start of the ODI series against Pakistan.Vettori announced after the Test series he would step down from captaincy after the World Cup, but Oram said he was still very much in charge of the current team. “Dan ran the show. He’s captain and he’s hurting more than anyone else because this team is his baby. Everyone had their say and there were a lot of home truths spoken.”There were conversations and it led to debates and arguments but we needed to get a lot of things out in the open. There was some serious honesty. But it will mean nothing if we don’t win tomorrow [Saturday] or do well at the World Cup. It will just be another chat. We’ve got to make sure this big chat means something.”Oram also expressed his disappointment with the apparent lack of composure his team showed in failing to reach Pakistan’s 268 in Hamilton – a gettable total on a flat track. New Zealand had two needless run-outs of Jesse Ryder and Scott Styris, and were eventually bowled out for just 227.Prior to the on-going six-match series, Oram had not played international cricket since August last year, when he had to return home from New Zealand’s tri-series in Sri Lanka because of the recurrence of a tendon injury in his knee. He had later said he would consider retirement if he wasn’t named in the World Cup squad. He was included for the World Cup and has played in four of the five games in the current series, impressing with his end-over bowling in the fifth match.

Cameron Mirza sets USA U-19 record

Cameron Mirza entered the record books by becoming the first USA Under-19 batsman to score a century

Peter Della Penna10-Feb-2011Cameron Mirza, a 17-year-old born and raised in the suburbs of northern New Jersey, created history on Monday by getting the highest score by a USA Under-19 player. Mirza carried his bat in USA’s 285-run win against Argentina on the first day of the ICC Americas U-19 Division One in Florida. He went on to score 118, only the second ton by a USA U-19 player, after Amer Afzaluddin’s ton against Argentina U-19 in 2001. The third highest score by a USA U-19 player is Andy Mohammed’s 90 against Afghanistan in the 2009 Youth World Cup qualifier, in Toronto.”It felt great, it was a relief,” Mirza said. “I was really excited when the coach told me I was going to open and I just couldn’t wait.” Mirza scored his century in 125 balls with 10 boundaries before finishing with 12 fours in his knock. It was his first game playing for USA at the U-19 level after previously playing in the U-15 squad at an ICC regional event in Bermuda in 2008.”I think he [Mirza] fits the bill,” Robin Singh, USA’s U-19 coach, said. “He’s somebody who takes his time and in 50 overs you have a lot of time to play and he fits that role pretty well.”Mirza’s mother, who travelled to Florida for the game, is Irish-American while his father immigrated to America from Pakistan. Mirza only started playing cricket four years ago after he saw his father watching a game on TV. Two years later, he became one of the first junior players in America to secure a bat sponsorship deal. He is one of only six American-born players in the current USA U-19 squad.Mirza is highly rated by current Bangladesh bowling coach Ian Pont. In the last few years, he has travelled to Potchefstroom in South Africa and Mumbai to take part in camps run by Pont.”[The camps in] India really helped with batting for long periods of time,” Mirza said. “[The camps in] South Africa helped me a lot with playing quick bowlers and India was great for spin. They all just chipped in little parts that came together.” Mirza has also spent extensive time training in New Jersey at DreamCricket Academy and Indoor Cricket USA, two places that have a fast growing reputation for producing USA U-19 representative players over the last three years.Mirza had set a personal goal before the start of the tournament to be the highest run-scorer at the end of the week. After the first day, he’s in the driver’s seat on the leaderboard and could very well achieve that goal. “I’d like to do that every game and I feel like because I did that in the first game, there’s expectations now for me to do it again,” Mirza said. “I’m confident but I realize its cricket. Anything can happen.”

Self-belief key to recovery, says Davison

John Davision, the Canada batsman, has said the team is “pretty down” after its two losses but greater self-belief was key to a better performance

Osman Samiuddin in Colombo02-Mar-2011If every player was as honest as Canada’s John Davison, sportsmen might not be ‘professional’ anymore. So couched are most reactions to wins, individual performances, highs and lows, in cliché-built nothings of professionalism, they can be scripted without actually speaking to a player. And if they were as self-deprecating as Davison, then press conferences might become a popular pastime.Davison is soon to be at an age when men start worrying about life ahead of them and buy a flash car to smooth those brows. Perhaps that’s unkind on a 40-year-old but doubts, as he so candidly admits, are creeping in. He has a grand total of zero runs from two innings and nine balls faced as an opener in this World Cup. He first thinks it might be “a little bit of a lack of technique” in his case, though admittedly the ball Thisara Perera did him with at Hambantota wasn’t half-bad.”Personally for me, it’s probably more a mental game,” he said. “I’m 40 years old and probably have those self-doubts that do I have the ability to perform at this level? I’ve been hitting the ball pretty well in the nets and I just need to give myself a little time to get in. I got a good ball against Sri Lanka, I’ll give hats off to the bowler there. But against Zimbabwe I had a game-plan and I wanted to hit [Ray] Price over mid-off early but probably could’ve given myself a few more balls to get in. I don’t think it’s too far away.”He was asked about tomorrow’s likely team and if he had known it he would’ve given it. There is talk, he said, of him moving away from the new ball, as if he was a reporter reporting on his own troubles. “I’m not a 100% sure what the team is tomorrow but there is talk of me shuffling down the order…I haven’t got a leg to stand on so I’ll bat wherever they tell me to right now.”The problem for him, John Davison says, is the mind•AFP

Canada might need Davison version 2003 to bat through positions 1-10 given the kind of form their other batsmen have been in. Their top score is Rizwan Cheema’s 37 in the opening game of the group against Sri Lanka and collectively have crumbled for 122 and 123. There is genuine talent in the squad – in the young slip of a boy Nitish Kumar – and other, rougher delights in Cheema and Hiral Patel, but such is the Associate’s plight. Pakistan’s attack, whatever shape it takes, will not make life any easier.”If you look at the scoreboard you’d probably say yes [the top order has been a problem],” Davison said. “I don’t think necessarily the bowling has been getting us out, possibly in my own case probably a little bit of a lack of technique and a couple of younger guys lacking a bit of self-belief. If you come to watch them in the nets you’ll see they’ve got talent. If they can clear their heads in a certain way to perform in the middle, it’ll give them the best chance to being successful.”This campaign is Davison’s third and “not so great compared to the others.” Canada have on occasion been competitive in the past, at the very least their batting; in 2007 they made 228 and 249 against England and New Zealand respectively, performances they want to repeat. But the side is “pretty down” at the moment.The one, admittedly small, consolation is that they are up against a side tomorrow that Associates must allow themselves to dream against. Pakistan is the ultimate Associate lottery, a game against them the day one man writes his own legend. It has happened twice at the World Cup.”We have to have our best day and they have to have their worst day,” Davison said when asked to rate the chances of an upset. “You always go into the game with some hope of winning it otherwise you don’t turn up. We’ll go into the ground hoping to deliver a good performance and hopefully Pakistan have a poor day which they have done in the past on many occasions.”We haven’t played them before. They’re a great team and a very varied attack. For example we have our challenges in reading their spinners. One of the biggest challenges in the subcontinent is to play reverse-swing in later overs.”The bad news is they haven’t got much help from their two Pakistan-origin players, Cheema and Khurram Chohan. “It’s quite interesting that the two Pakistani guys are quite shy,” Davison said. “It takes a lot of prodding to get a lot of information out of them. Maybe if we sit them down tonight and we prod them they might be able to give us some more information.”

Gayle, Chanderpaul and Sarwan dropped

West Indies have left out Chris Gayle, Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Ramnaresh Sarwan, their three senior-most players, from the squad for the first two ODIs of the five-match series against Pakistan that begins on April 21

ESPNcricinfo staff14-Apr-2011West Indies have left out Chris Gayle, Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Ramnaresh Sarwan, their three senior-most players, from the squad for the first two ODIs of the five-match series against Pakistan that begins on April 21. Dwayne Bravo, whose World Cup was cut short by a knee injury, returns to the squad and will serve as captain Darren Sammy’s deputy, while Antigua-born legspinner Anthony Martin remains the only uncapped player in the list of 13.Kieron Pollard will miss the five-match series to play for Mumbai Indians in the IPL, while Bravo, who, like Pollard, had opted out of a retainer contract with the West Indies Cricket Board, will skip the two-match Test series that follows the ODIs to join Chennai Super Kings.The exclusion of Gayle, Chanderpaul and Sarwan following West Indies’ quarter-final exit from the World Cup marks a significant step and underlines the selectors’ intention to move on and start afresh with an emphasis on youth. “Consistent with the policy to expose young players, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Chris Gayle and Ramnaresh Sarwan were not selected,” a West Indies Cricket Board release stated.West Indies also left out left-arm spinners Sulieman Benn and Nikita Miller; Legspinners Devendra Bishoo – who picked up three wickets on his international debut against England in Chennai in the World Cup – and Martin, along with Marlon Samuels, will comprise the spin attack. In the previous edition of the WICB Regional 50-over tournament, Martin picked up eight wickets for Leeward Islands from five games and had the best economy rate of 2.82 an over. He finished with 16 wickets in six games in the Caribbean’s domestic first-class competition.Samuels, who is also part of the squad for the one-off Twenty20 international against Pakistan, won a recall after serving a two-year ban for alleged involvement with illegal bookmakers. Lendl Simmons, the Trinidad and Tobago batsman – and nephew of Phil Simmons – was also picked while batsman Kirk Edwards and allrounder Andre Russell, who were part of the World Cup squad, kept their places.”We have looked at a mix of players who will take us through the next five to ten years, and with this squad we have put together a youthful but exciting combination of exceptionally talented cricketers who we believe can win matches,” WICB chairman of selectors Clyde Butts said.”There are some familiar faces who have not been included on this occasion, but we have already identified the core of players who we will build the team around. The time has come for us to introduce a fresh crop of players who we believe have a deep desire to excel and who can be tested at the international level.”In another decision, the WICB agreed to consider Bravo and Pollard for selection across all formats even if their IPL commitments meant they would miss national duty. The board had adopted a policy of tying national selection to participation in regional tournaments in the corresponding format – the reason behind Pollard and Bravo not being picked for the Twenty20 game against Pakistan.”It was mutually determined that Pollard would be best served by being allowed to hone his T20 skills in the Indian Premier League, which will bring future benefit to West Indies cricket,” the release stated. “He will not play in the series against Pakistan, but remains committed to West Indies cricket and will be available for future selection to the West Indies team in all formats.”About Bravo, the release said: “Dwayne Bravo, who is also contracted to an IPL franchise, will play in the one-day series against Pakistan but will miss the two Tests in order to participate in the IPL. Like Pollard, Bravo also remains committed to West Indies cricket and will be available for future selection to the West Indies team in all formats.”Squad for first two ODIs: Darren Sammy (capt), Dwayne Bravo (vice-captain), Devendra Bishoo, Darren Bravo, Kirk Edwards, Anthony Martin, Ravi Rampaul, Kemar Roach , Andre Russell, Marlon Samuels, Lendl Simmons, Devon Smith, Devon Thomas (wk).

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