Western Australia sign Mahmood for Big Bash

Sajid Mahmood, the former England fast bowler, has replaced Kemar Roach as one of Western Australia’s overseas players for the Twenty20 Big Bash. Roach had to pull out due to his West Indies commitments, forcing the Warriors to find another strike bowler for the tournament starting in late December.”I believe we have a very competent replacement,” the state coach Mickey Arthur said. “He is a genuine strike bowler who will shake up opposition batsmen, he is a capable batter himself who hits the ball a long way, and he is also great in the field, so he offers us the complete package.”Mahmood, 28, has played eight Tests, 26 ODIs and four Twenty20 internationals, but he last represented England in 2009. Western Australia are still waiting for final approval from the West Indies board to have Chris Gayle, the former captain, back for his second season.

Barsby's exit overshadows Queensland win


ScorecardThe captain James Hopes is the new caretaker coach•Getty Images

James Hopes’ shock promotion to Queensland’s caretaker coach began with a victory after he replaced Trevor Barsby on a sensational day for the Bulls. Barsby stepped down after a meeting on Wednesday morning due to an “unworkable” situation with his players and support staff.Before the season Barsby, who was in charge since 2008, had his contract extended to 2012, but he made the decision to walk away after five squad members were questioned by Queensland Cricket’s board on Tuesday night. “We’re not sacking Barsby,” Jim Holding, Queensland Cricket’s chairman, said at the Gabba.”Trevor made his own decision this morning to stand down. No players directly approached me and said there was a problem. When Trevor decided that his relationship with the playing group and support staff was unworkable, I can tell you some of the players we spoke to yesterday said it was becoming unworkable.”The Bulls are having a difficult season after the campaign began with Chris Simpson being replaced as captain by Hopes. The allrounder Hopes is currently out with a hand injury but was put in off-field charge for the win over Western Australia. He will also coach for the four-day game starting on Friday.Queensland’s young line-up posted 210 in their 45 overs, with Jason Floros leading the recovery from 4 for 44 in difficult conditions. Floros finished with 60 while Craig Philipson (35) and Nathan Rimmington (32 off 24 balls) also provided valuable contributions.Ryan Duffield collected 4 for 58 from 12 overs before the Warriors slipped to 132 in their chase. Chris Swan led the locals with 3 for 28 while Ben Cutting, Luke Feldman and Alister McDermott got two each, giving the new captain Ben Dunk a 78-run win.However, the result was overshadowed by Barsby’s sudden exit. Barsby, who took the side to two Sheffield Shield finals, went on immediate leave but plans to discuss his employment situation with the board. “We will look at the coaching options for the Bulls for the rest of the summer as a matter of urgency,” Holding said.

Dominant England bring Ashes triumph nearer


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Ricky Ponting’s disappointing run of form continued when he was caught at slip for 10•Getty Images

It was meant to be Boxing Day, not Boxing Australia Around the Ears Day. Within three sessions of complete England dominance at the MCG, they moved to within touching distance of retaining the Ashes by dismissing Australia for 98 and passing their total with no wickets down, leaving Ricky Ponting requiring a late Christmas miracle to avoid leading Australia to three Ashes series failures.Chris Tremlett and James Anderson collected four wickets each, backing up Andrew Strauss’s decision to send the hosts in, before Strauss and Alastair Cook showed that with discipline, batting wasn’t that hard on a pitch with a little juice in it. The day could not possibly have gone better for England, who finished at 0 for 157 with Strauss on 64, Cook on 80, a hefty first-innings advantage in prospect and a 2-1 series lead on the horizon.For Australia, it was up there with the opening day at Headingley against Pakistan this year, in terms of disastrous cricketing dates. Back then they chose to bat and managed only 88, but this time there was one slight difference – their dismal performance will probably cost them the Ashes. Not since 1936 had they scored a lower Ashes total at home, and that was in the days of uncovered pitches.It took Tremlett, Anderson and Tim Bresnan less than two sessions to run through the order as they hit consistent lines and kept the runs tight. They also exposed Australia’s team-wide inability to handle seam movement and swing, which is no great revelation but could not be ignored in front of 84,345 fans on the biggest day in the Australian cricket calendar.Every batsman fell to an edge caught behind the wicket, six to the wicketkeeper Matt Prior, two to slips and two to gully. Too many men played with hard hands away from their bodies, and they struggled to work out which deliveries to leave and which ones to play. The questions that the batting coach Justin Langer must consider surround not only technique, but also judgment.England picked up four wickets before the first break and in one particularly impressive patch they collected 3 for 0, as Michael Clarke, Brad Haddin and Mitchell Johnson all failed to make solid contact with the face of the bat. A rain delay had extended lunch by nearly an hour, but even that wasn’t enough to help the Australians survive until the scheduled tea break.But England’s bowlers certainly earned their wickets, especially the early strikes. Shane Watson was dropped twice on 0, as Paul Collingwood at slip and Kevin Pietersen at gully denied Anderson an early breakthrough. It was a sign of things to come, and Watson had only made 5 when he was surprised by sharp bounce from Tremlett and fended a loopy catch to Pietersen.

Smart Stats

  • Australia 98 is their second lowest total at the MCG. They went past their 83 against India in 1981, which was previously their lowest at the MCG. This was however the lowest score in England-Australia Tests at the ground.

  • This is Australia’s fourth score below 120 since 1990 in home Tests.

  • All ten batsmen were dismissed caught in Australia’s innings. This was the 48th occasion that all batsmen have been dismissed by this mode.

  • Matt Prior took six catches in the innings, one behind the record of seven which is shared by four keepers.

  • James Anderson’s remarkable improvement in Australia continued with another four wicket haul. He now has 16 wickets in the series so far at an average of just over 26. In contrast, in the previous series in Australia, he picked up just five wickets at an average of 82.6.

  • Andrew Strauss became the 52nd batsman to reach the 6000 run mark in Tests.

  • Strauss and Alastair Cook put on their 10th century stand for the opening wicket in Tests, which puts them joint fourth in the list of opening pairs with most century stands.

Soon afterwards, Phillip Hughes (16) tried to cover-drive and edged to gully to hand Bresnan his first Ashes wicket, and without further addition to the score the Australians also lost Ricky Ponting. Again it was the rising ball from Tremlett that did the job, and this one nipped away significantly off the pitch, so much so that Ponting, on 10, did well to even get bat on ball as his edge flew to second slip.Australia’s recent saviour, Michael Hussey, joined the procession in the last over before lunch, when Anderson produced a pearler that moved away from Hussey and found a thin edge through to Prior. Then came the rain, an early and prolonged lunch, and after the break the dismissals got a bit softer, as Australia’s middle order failed to exercise due caution.The hosts want Steven Smith in the side for his energy and all-round talent, but as a Test No. 6 his technique needs a lot of work, and all it took was a probing delivery outside off stump from Anderson to draw an edge behind when Smith had 6. The top scorer Michael Clarke, who made 20, also wafted outside off at a ball he could have left, and edged behind off Anderson.And 5 for 77 soon became 8 for 77 when Haddin drove at Bresnan and gave Strauss a catch at first slip, before Johnson tickled a catch to Prior off Anderson. A few late runs came via Ryan Harris and Peter Siddle before Tremlett finished off the tail to finish with 4 for 26, a much deserved return after he was the best of the bowlers early, extracting bounce from a pitch expected to be as stodgy as leftover Christmas pudding.By the time Australia bowled, it looked like any spice in the pudding had lost its kick. In reality, they just didn’t bowl well enough, while Cook and Strauss defended solidly and left the right balls, also ticking the score along by chasing the bad deliveries, like an uppish cut to the vacant third-man area from Cook when he was given width.That Strauss and Cook both registered half-centuries before stumps was the perfect finale for the visitors, and Cook was already within sight of his third hundred of the series. Australia’s four-man pace attack had little impact – Michael Beer was made 12th man again – and by the close, Smith had tossed up a few overs of unthreatening legbreaks, including one that was slog-swept almost for six by Cook.Smith wasn’t born last time England won the Ashes in Australia, in 1986-87. He’s about to see it happen first-hand.

Badrinath keeps Tamil Nadu in the hunt

Scorecard
S Badrinath came in the eighth over of Tamil Nadu’s innings and batted solidly to leave the game fascinatingly poised•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Tamil Nadu’s wall S Badrinath stood between Rajasthan and their dream of entering the Ranji final at end of a fascinating third day in Jaipur. The equation is simple if no team takes the first-innings lead: Tamil Nadu, if they don’t get bowled out, will have to score 272 runs in 90 overs on the final day to go through based on net run-rate. Badrinath came in the eighth over of Tamil Nadu’s innings, after Hrishikesh Kanitkar and Ashok Menaria hit hundreds to push Rajasthan to a strong 552, and faced 184 balls for his unbeaten 78.There were several dramatic moments in the day: When Badrinath was on 57, there was a huge shout for a catch off Sumit Mathur. There was some noise as Badrinath prodded at it but there was no visible deflection. Badrinath was also earlier involved in an incident with the umpire Tim Robinson. Rajasthan’s players complained that Badrinath was not getting ready to face and was repeatedly pulling out when their bowlers were running in to bowl. “You have to be ready when the bowler is ready to bowl,” Robinson told Badrinath who said he won’t get ready until the fielders behind the wicket stopped chattering. Badrinath edged the next delivery to his pad and scrambled across for a quick single and was involved in a discussion with the umpire.It was that kind of a day. There was lot of chirping from the fielders – Aakash Chopra was the acting captain in the absence of the indisposed Kanitkar – and the seamers, Pankaj Singh and Deepak Chahar, bowled their heart out on a docile track. While the rest of the top order wilted around him, Badrinath stood firm.His foot movement was precise- he was fully committed on the front and back foot- and drove and cut at every opportunity. He cut and drove the spinners well and was equally fluent against the seamers. There was a lovely cover drive against Pankaj but his best shot was a gorgeous extra cover drive off Chahar late in the day. It perfectly captured his assured knock: He leaned well forward, the front elbow was high and he caressed through the line of the delivery.Rajasthan attacked the rest of the batsmen with purpose. Chahar followed couple of bouncers with a full outswinger and the opener Arun Karthik dragged his attempted cover drive to the leg stump. Abhinav Mukund, the other in-form batsman, strived to get forward at every opportunity but Pankaj went round the stumps to nail him with a delivery that seamed in to trap him lbw. Dinesh Karthik, who has a solitary fifty this season, tried to look positive, cutting the legspinner Vivek Yadav for three successive boundaries. However, Yadav got one to slide on straight and Karthik was caught in front, pushing well outside the line. K Vasudevadas lent support to Badrinath and the pair added 50 runs in 20 overs to leave the game fascinatingly poised.Tamil Nadu have R Sathish, who hit a match-saving hundred against Haryana in the quarter-final, to follow and Rajasthan will have the opportunity to take the new ball in 11 overs. That new cherry could well decide the fate of the game.

Injury problems send Graeme Swann home

Graeme Swann has been forced out of the one-day series against Australia by injury as England’s casualty list continues to grow. He picked up a knee problem during the first Twenty20 and has now suffered a back strain and will be returning to the UK to recover for next month’s World Cup.Swann played the second T20 and first one-day international in Melbourne but has missed the last two matches. It had been hoped he would be able to take part towards the end of the series, but a back spasm a couple of days ago added to his problems, leaving England another key bowler short as they aim to bounce back from 3-0 down.”It’s frustrating to return home from the tour early but the priority for me now is the World Cup and getting my body right so that I am able to play an important role for England throughout the tournament,” Swann said. “I will be following the rest of the series and hope to see England put in some positive performances over the next fortnight. I’ve had the time of my life over here and bringing back the Ashes is something that will always stay with me.”Andy Flower, the England team director, said Swann would be taking the earliest flight home. “He’s unfortunately got a strain in his lower back and that allied with his knee problem means it’s best for him to go home and get ready for the World Cup now,” Flower said.It leaves England with Michael Yardy and James Tredwell to fill the spin roles for the remainder of the series but neither offer the attacking option of Swann and his absence has been felt during the middle overs.”It’s a big blow, he’s an important part of our side,” Flower said. “He’s a world-class performer and full of confidence after the Ashes. But these things happen, we are coming towards the end of a long, hard tour and certainly the physical challenges are starting to take their toll.”Swann is the second player to fly home from the one-day series after Tim Bresnan picked up a calf strain in Hobart. England have not been able to field their first-choice attack at any stage in the limited-overs games due to Stuart Broad’s absence and James Anderson being rested. Anderson, though, is available for the Adelaide match on Wednesday and will provide valuable experience as England aim to stay in the series.Flower, meanwhile, has looked upon the loss of his main bowlers as a valuable chance to give experience to some younger and less experienced one-day players. One of the topics Flower has often mentioned is the need to have more than just a first eleven that is good enough because of the demanding international schedules.”One of the areas I’ve been really happy with on this tour is the fact that some of our fringe players have come in and done very well,” he said. “People like Bresnan in the Tests who did superbly, Tremlett the same. These guys stepped into the breach and I think we’ve seen Shahzad grow in the first three limited-overs games.”I think they are great opportunities for some of our fringe players now. With the schedules we are given we are going to need a squad in which we can certainly rotate fast bowlers, because they are the ones at greatest risk of injury.”England’s major issue has been a lack of consistency from the batsmen although Kevin Pietersen is fit again which will provide some extra power to the middle order. His replacement in Sydney, Paul Collingwood, continued to struggle with 1 and Flower admitted he was concerned but hinted at retaining him.”Yes, of course we are. And he is,” Flower said. “But we need him to be in form for the World Cup and again there’s a good opportunity tomorrow for him to get that form.”

Tiripano, Chatara destroy Rhinos

ScorecardMountaineers cemented their place at the top of the Castle Logan Cup table with a crushing innings-and-96-run victory over second-placed Mid West Rhinos at the Kwekwe Sports Club. Their new-ball bowlers Tendai Chatara and Donald Tiripano ran through Rhinos’ batting line-up twice on the third day, bowling them out for 61 in the first innings and then 88 in the second. It meant the match was over in two days, since the first one had been almost completely washed out.Most of Mountaineers’ batsmen struggled on the second day, but there were two standout innings: a gutsy 52 by opener Tino Mawoyo and a 108-ball 105 by 19-year-old Gary Chirimuta. Those two scores helped Mountaineers get to 245 in their first innings. Rhinos seamer Justin Lewis picked up six wickets, but it was the Mountaineers’ quicks who did the telling damage. Tiripano struck on the second day itself, leaving Rhinos 14 for 1 at stumps, but it was just a precursor for the carnage the seamers were to unfold on Monday. Tiripano took five in the first innings, while Chatara took three. They then exchanged roles for the second innings, with Chatara taking the five-for and Tiripano chipping in with two scalps. Rhinos batsmen were hapless, with only two getting to double figures in the first innings and three in the second.

Murali and Sangakkara ease Sri Lanka top

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsMuttiah Muralitharan helped Sri Lanka ease past New Zealand at the Wankhede Stadium•Getty Images

Sri Lanka’s old guard combined to ease to a 112-run victory over New Zealand at the Wankhede Stadium. Kumar Sangakkara made his first ODI century since June 2008, supported by a controversial 66 from Mahela Jayawardene, to haul Sri Lanka up to 265 before Muttiah Muralitharan spun New Zealand to defeat with 4 for 25.Coming into the tournament as one of the favourites, Sri Lanka have not quite convinced so far and but for their three most experienced players might have struggled again. Instead the finish was the kind of one-sided result that has epitomised Group A.New Zealand, though, will rue their misfortune when Jayawardene was reprieved at a critical moment. Sri Lanka had lost both openers and were struggling to get on top of the New Zealand slow bowlers when, in the 24th over, Jayawardene chipped a return catch to Nathan McCullum.It went low to McCullum’s right and the bowler dived full-length to scoop the ball centimetres off the turf. The batsman stood his ground and the decision was sent upstairs. Side-on replays seemed to clearly show McCullum’s fingers under the ball but a front-on shot, as it so often does, created doubt that the third umpire, Amiesh Saheba, ruled on. Before then Jayawardene had scrambled for 50 deliveries to make 26 but silkily added a further 40 at a run a ball and Sri Lanka never looked back.Sangakkara helped himself to a century that he’s been waiting 64 matches for. Looking typically unhurried, he was content to work the ball around early on before unfurling some of the stylish strokes that are his hallmark as the innings went on. One six, eased down the ground off Scott Styris, told of a batsman in total

Smart stats

  • The 145-run partnership between Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene is the second-highest for Sri Lanka against New Zealand in a World Cup match.

  • Sangakkara and Jayawardene have put together 4724 partnership runs in ODIs, which is the highest by a non-opening pair. This was also their tenth century partnership in ODIs, which puts them in second place, next only to the Sachin Tendulkar-Rahul Dravid pair, who have 11.

  • In World Cups, this was their third century partnership in ten innings, but the first against a Test-playing team. Only three other non-opening pairs have got three hundred stands in World Cups.

  • The 112-run margin of victory is Sri Lanka’s third-highest against New Zealand.

  • Muttiah Muralitharan’s bowling returns of 4 for 25 is his second-best in World Cups, next only to his 4 for 19 against Ireland in 2007.

  • New Zealand’s total of 153 is their fourth-lowest in a World Cup match, and their poorest against Sri Lanka.

control. The verbal exchanges that Jayawardene got involved with after his escape only served to fire him up and he was soon exhibiting the fluent form that had deserted him since his century against Canada in Sri Lanka’s opening game.The pair added 145 and the importance of the stand was demonstrated by what followed. Sangakkara rushed to his century with four boundaries in six deliveries but was out soon after for 111. Following his dismissal Sri Lanka lost five wickets for 55 in the final 8.2 overs. That they even got so many was almost entirely down to Angelo Mathews, who swatted 41 from 35 balls to thwart New Zealand’s fightback.In the end, the collapse was irrelevant but in the knockout stages, opposition teams will know beneath Sri Lanka’s top order is a soft underbelly waiting to be exposed. New Zealand would have backed themselves to make a better fist of chasing but – despite dew, on a ground that will host the World Cup final, hampering the Sri Lanka spinners – Muralitharan and Mendis choked them into submission.The early work was done by the quicks when Brendon McCullum was given out by the TV umpire after Jayawardene, of all people, claimed a low catch off Mathews. There was some uncertainty as the take was almost spilled at the last moment. TV replays were not entirely certain but, unlike the first time, the right decision was made and McCullum was sent on his was for 14. After Guptill fell for 13, Jesse Ryder and Ross Taylor threatened to make a match of it but the spinners took over.Mendis’ mystery may have faded with exposure but his variations proved too much for Ryder who nibbed a carrom-ball behind for a 23-ball 19. Muralitharan’s introduction had been delayed after he picked up an injury while batting. Despite hobbling around, he was still devastating when he finally got into the attack in the 18th over.A doosra took care of Kane Williamson for 5 before he landed the killer blow by spinning one back into Taylor’s pads. Despite a big stride and a review, Taylor was rightly given out for 33 and his team never looked like competing. Scott Styris chipped a return catch to Muralitharan, who belied his injury to spring up and snaffle the chance, and Nathan McCullum and James Franklin soon followed. Between them Mendis and Muralitharan took six wickets for 49 in 14 overs.Unlike the frenzied excitement in Group B, the qualifiers in Group A are already settled. Sri Lanka are guaranteed to finish second whatever happens between Australia and Pakistan, which might well leave them in line for a contest against the World Cup mysterybox, England, in the quarter finals.

Match Timeline

Akram Khan named Bangladesh chief selector

Former Bangladesh captain Akram Khan has been named the chief selector by the board. He will lead a three-man committee that includes Habibul Bashar and Minhajul Abedin, who are also former national captains. The new panel will take charge from June.Akram led Bangladesh to victory in the historical win in the ICC Trophy in 1997, while Bashar led Bangladesh in the 2007 World Cup, where they pulled off surprise wins against South Africa and India. Abedin, who was a part of the playing XI in Bangladesh’s first official ODI in the ’80s, retired after the 1999 World Cup where he averaged 70.00 with two half-centuries – including one against Australia – in four innings.Akram was a member of the outgoing selection committee, whose tenure was not renewed after it ended on April 30. The decision was taken as part of a revamp of the Bangladesh cricket setup, after a disappointing 2011 World Cup performance.Coach Jamie Siddons departed earlier this month, after Bangladesh lost 3-0 to Australia at home, while a host of support staff are either leaving or under review. While bowling coach Ian Pont has already parted ways with Bangladesh cricket, strength and conditioning coach Grant Trafford Luden will stay on for another year. The future prospects of fielding coach Julien Fountain and physio Michael Henry are not yet clear.

Gavaskar, Kapil criticise Fletcher's appointment

Former India captains Sunil Gavaskar and Kapil Dev have criticised the appointment of Duncan Fletcher as the coach of the national team, saying the BCCI should have instead picked a former India player.”Someone like [Mohinder] Amarnath would have been a better choice for the simple reason that the core of the Indian team today is from the Hindi-speaking belt,” Gavaskar told the news channel. “He would have got on brilliantly with this group as well as the seniors. It would have been a lot easier for Amarnath to understand and interact with the players.”Apart from that he has got a fabulous record of making comebacks, he knows what it is to be down and then come back up. There is a perception and a wrong one that an Indian [coach] can be influenced and that he will get involved in politics. You are presuming that he cannot be a strong person.”Kapil said Robin Singh and Venkatesh Prasad, who were fielding and bowling coaches of the side for more than two years until October 2009, should have got the nod again. “Who is Duncan Fletcher?,” Kapil, who played against Fletcher in the 1983 World Cup, asked the newspaper. “That happened almost 30 years ago. I don’t remember much of him as a player. I would like to see Prasad and Robin as coaches of the Indian team. Not because they are Indians but because they did a great job at the T20 World Cup in 2007.”The BCCI have not appointed an Indian coach since the era of John Wright, under whose watch India began to win consistently abroad and made the final of the 2003 World Cup. Greg Chappell, who took over from Wright, endured mixed results, including an ignominious first-round exit at the 2007 World Cup. Gary Kirsten, who was recommended by a panel that incidentally included Gavaskar, oversaw another turnaround, taking India to the top of the Test ranking table before ending his stint with a win in the 2011 World Cup.

Badrinath was expecting the India call-up

S Badrinath has said that he was expecting his selection for the ODI series against West Indies after three years in the wilderness. Badrinath was disappointed after losing his central contract last season but that inspired him to regroup and reset his targets.”I was expecting it [the selection call] to be honest. I have been really playing well in recent times and there was news floating around that I would be selected,” Badrinath said. “Since I was out for three years in ODIs, it really feels good to be back.”Though he lost his place in ODIs, he last played for India in February 2010 in the Test series against South Africa. He was soon dropped from the side and lost his central contract later.”I was disappointed losing the contract as it meant I wasn’t part of the whole system. I was out of sight. It was a tough phase. I sat down after that and charted out where I wanted to go. I set my goals and wanted to come back. They say you learn more from your failures than your success and it’s true for me.”Badrinath had a stellar domestic season and that form continued into this year’s IPL. He said he never had any doubt that he would be unable to make a comeback to the national team. “There wasn’t one day I thought I will never get back. I just had that fire in me. I have been always striving to be a better player and concentrated on the process. IPL was a huge help; you learn from big cricketers who constantly strive to keep improving. Once you do that, you are going to get just better.”His critics have cited his age – 30 years – as a deterring factor but Badrinath said it made him work that much harder on his fitness. “Why do they say one is old – it’s just about fitness. I have really worked very hard to be fit. I always pride on my fitness.”