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I have done my duty – Tamim

Tamim Iqbal has said he is not upset by the Bangladesh Cricket Board’s decision to sack him as vice-captain. Playing well for the team, he said, was more important than occupying the post, though he would have preferred it if the BCB had spoken to him about the decision beforehand.”I feel normal, to be very honest,” he told the after a training session in Mirpur. “I didn’t ask for the vice-captaincy and neither did I hand it back. It [sacking him] was totally the board’s decision. I am not worried about the reason [behind the decision].”I’m the happiest man in the world as long as I’m performing and playing for Bangladesh. If I play well and the board thinks I’m the right man, it [the leadership role] will come back again. At this moment, maybe I’m not the right man, so I’m fine with it. [But] If they discussed it with me at least once, it would’ve been better. Even so, I have no complaints.”Tamim took over as vice-captain from Mushfiqur Rahim ahead of the 2011 World Cup and, with captain Shakib Al Hasan, was stripped of his title on September 5, in the aftermath of a dismal tour of Zimbabwe. Indiscipline was cited as one of the reasons for the pair’s removal. Tamim, however, said he thought he had met the requirements of being vice-captain.”There isn’t much work for a vice-captain on the field but off it, I have done my duty and done well,” he said. Now though, he said he’s looking forward to moving ahead. “There are lots of other issues, but at this moment, we should leave all these alone. We better start thinking of the upcoming series. We are all concerned about Bangladesh winning games and playing well.”

Shelley Wickramasinghe dies at 85

Shelley Wickramasinghe, who was known as the Grand Old Man (GOM) of Bloomfield Cricket and Athletic Club, died at his home in Colombo on Wednesday at the age of 85.The 119-year old Bloomfield club is one of Sri Lanka’s oldest cricket clubs and Wickramasinghe had three stints as its club president – from 1972-73, then 1976-77 and the third a 21-year span from 1979 to 2000.Wickramasinghe also served as president of the Mercantile Cricket Association and chairman of the National Sports Council. He was also vice-president of Sri Lanka Cricket in the mid-eighties.Wickramasinghe was closely associated with former India and Bombay captain Ajit Wadekar, and several Bombay cricketers, including Vasu Paranjpe, played for his club in the local domestic tournament.Paranjpe, who was coach of Bombay and also at the National Cricket Academy in Bangalore, coached Bloomfield for three seasons during which they won the Division I club title three times.

No surprises in Zimbabwe one-day squad

Zimbabwe made some additions to the squad that played the one-off Test for the upcoming one-day series against Bangladesh, but there were few surprises in the 15-strong group.Zimbabwe will reshuffle into a more familiar line-up for the change of format, with captain Brendan Taylor and Hamilton Masakadza shunting up to the top of the order. Their move means that Regis Chakabva and Forster Mutizwa, who both missed out on selection for the one-off Test match, will be vying for a place in the middle order.Prosper Utseya, who was left out of the XI for the Test with Zimbabwe playing three seamers, should reignite his spin-bowling partnership with Ray Price, but Graeme Cremer is recovering from a knee injury and has therefore not been included. Allrounders Keegan Meth and Malcolm Waller could both get a look-in during the five-match series.The selectors have also asked that Tendai Chatara and Tino Mawoyo, not officially part of the squad, remain in camp and travel with the squad to BulawayoThere are six changes from Zimbabwe’s World Cup squad, with the experienced Charles Coventry among those dropped. Mutizwa and Waller are both making comebacks to the side, having not played an international match since 2009. Mutizwa got half-centuries in each of his last two games for Zimbabwe XI, while Waller scored a couple of half-centuries for Midwest Rhinos in the Metbank Pro40 Championship in March.Kyle Jarvis, Brian Vitori, and Hamilton Masakadza were also not in the subcontinent for the World Cup, but cemented their places during the Test against Bangladesh. The 23-year-old Meth has struggled to hold down a place in the Zimbabwe one-day side since making his debut in 2006, but gets another chance on the back of some impressive bowling performances in the Logan Cup.Zimbabwe squad: Brendan Taylor (capt), Regis Chakabva, Elton Chigumbura, Craig Ervine, Kyle Jarvis, Hamilton Masakadza, Keegan Meth, Christopher Mpofu, Forster Mutizwa, Ray Price, Vusi Sibanda, Tatenda Taibu, Prosper Utseya, Brian Vitori, Malcolm Waller

Chandimal, Gunaratne carry Ruhuna to win

Ruhuna kicked-off the Sri Lanka Cricket Inter-Provincial Twenty20 Tournament with a convincing 40-run win against Kandurata at the R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo. Being asked to bat, Ruhuna put on a competitive 154 for 7, driven by a knock of 63 off 53 balls by Dinesh Chandimal. The chase was off to a terrible start, as offpinner Janaka Gunaratne – who opened the bowling for Ruhuna – and some poor running combined to reduce Kandurata to 4 for 3 in the fourth over. Kandurata didn’t recover, slipping to 27 for 5 and 30 for 6, before a rapid, unbeaten 55 from No. 8 Farveez Maharoof carried them to a respectable 114 for 7 in 20.In the other game of the day at the same venue, Wayamba gained a point against Basnahira by winning a bowl-out, after the match was abandoned due to rain without a ball being bowled.

Hales and Wessels set up Nottinghamshire win

ScorecardOpeners Alex Hales and Riki Wessels both hit half-centuries as Nottinghamshire Outlaws took another step towards the quarter-finals of the Friends Life t20 by thrashing Lancashire Lightning by 53 runs.The pair put on 85 for the first wicket before Hales was bowled for 60 – his fourth 50 of the competition – off 38 balls with seven fours and two sixes, but Wessels went on to make 76 from 49 balls with five fours and four sixes in a total of 184 for 4.That proved enough for the hosts to extend their lead at the top of the North Group as Lancashire were bowled out for 131 in 18 overs, Andre Adams taking two for 19 in his first appearance in the competition this season. Steven Croft’s 55 off 28 balls was the only Lancashire highlight, but after he fell to former Lancashire all-rounder Steven Mullaney, the visitors slipped quickly to their fifth defeat in 10 matches.Hales was the faster of the two Notts batsmen out of the blocks as he hit two fours off the first over of the match from Simon Kerrigan, before taking three consecutive boundaries off Junaid Khan’s second over. He also pulled Sajid Mahmood for six and hit Stephen Parry for a straight maximum before the left-arm spinner got his revenge, bowling Hales in the 11th over.Wessels had just been dropped by Stephen Moore having scored 21 and went on to make the visitors pay for their miss. Adam Voges drove Parry to long-off for 17 and although Khan yorked Wessels in the 18th over, the damage had already been done.Lancashire’s hopes took an immediate dent when Moore was brilliantly caught by wicketkeeper Chris Read, flying to his right for a catch off Darren Pattinson. Croft kept Lancashire up with the required rate but could not find a partner to stay with him as Tom Smith and Farveez Maharoof were both caught off miscued shots.And when Croft himself failed to clear extra cover, the rest of the Lancashire batting collapsed, Mullaney claiming 2 for 23 and Graeme White 2 for 26.

Broad, Swann ensure Notts fightback

Scorecard
Stuart Broad picked up two wickets at Hove, including that of Luke Wright•Getty Images

England pair Stuart Broad and Graeme Swann shared four wickets on their return to county duty as Nottinghamshire fought back to dismiss Sussex for 304 on the first day of the County Championship match at Hove. Sussex looked like making the most of winning the toss when openers Ed Joyce and Chris Nash posted their third century stand of the season. But Sussex were never the same after Joyce and Luke Wells fell just before lunch.A dry pitch is already turning, albeit slowly, and five of the wickets fell to spin. Swann removed Joyce with his 10th delivery while Samit Patel finished with 3 for 37 including skipper Mike Yardy and Nash, who passed 50 for the fifth time this season without converting it into a hundred.Nash and Joyce scored at five-an-over for most of the morning session with Nash, who raced to 50 off 35 balls, taking full advantage of some wayward bowling, particularly from Andre Adams. But Swann struck in his second over when Joyce was leg before to a ball which turned and struck him high on the pad and just before lunch Wells, who has scored two centuries already this summer, was bowled for a 21-ball duck by Patel.Murray Goodwin struck Adams for two fours in an over but the New Zealander broke through when wicketkeeper Chris Read ran backwards to take an excellent diving catch off a mis-timed pull to leave Sussex on 119 for 3.Matt Prior, who was also making his Championship return, added 70 in 17 overs with Nash to regain the initiative but Swann returned to the attack and struck straightaway when Prior sliced Swann’s first ball back to cover. Nash had looked untroubled, hitting 13 fours in 205 minutes in moving to his highest score of the season. But seven short of his hundred he missed a straight one from Patel and was did not look surprised when the leg before appeal was upheld.Yardy, also making his first Championship appearance of the season as he recovers from depression, helped England team-mate Luke Wright put on 39 for the sixth wicket either side of tea. But Patel struck again when he turned one as Yardy tried to drive and Adam Voges snapped up the edge at slip.Wright took the attack to Swann, twice striking him off the front foot to the boundary in an over, and was going well on 33 when Broad returned to the attack and to have him caught down the leg side. Broad was in business again later in the over when his nip-backer trapped James Anyon and Sussex were still 18 short of securing a third batting point whenAmjad Khan played across his pads to give the persevering Luke Fletcher a wicket.But Rana Naved-ul-Hasan, mixing careful defence with the occasional attacking flourish, made an unbeaten 43 off 52 balls with six fours and helped last man Monty Panesar take the score to 304 before Panesar played on to give Adams his 500th first-class wicket.Panesar is likely to have plenty of work as the contest unfolds and he and his team-mates finished the day on a positive note when Rana struck in his second over with the new ball, bowling left-hander Neil Edwards via an inside edge as Notts closed on 5 for 1.

Hosts haunted by Cup memories – Siddons

Bangladesh coach Jamie Siddons has said that Bangladesh’s timid attempt to chase Australia’s 270 in the first limited-overs match in Mirpur, could possibly have been due to the batsmen being haunted by memories of being shot out for 58 and 78 during the World Cup.Tamim Iqbal (62 off 89 balls), one of Wisden’s cricketers of the year, and the captain Shakib Al Hasan (51 off 90 balls), batted with a great deal of circumspection as they attempted to set a platform for the chase, but once when they were dismissed, the innings faded away to 210 for 5.”Shakib didn’t really have a lot of answers for me when he came off as to why they went so slow, other than the wicket was very difficult. I didn’t like the running between wickets, didn’t like them walking between wickets,” Siddons said of the innings. “I was disappointed we didn’t go a bit harder after we got to about 160, I thought we took the Powerplay probably six or eight overs too late; I wanted it taken while Tamim and Shakib were in and Tamim got out.”It’s difficult; 58 and 78 [against West Indies and South Africa in the World Cup] were really playing on the batsmen’s minds, particularly once we lost No. 2, 3 and 4; the memory banks kick in pretty quickly for our guys.”They’re young, inexperienced as far as age goes – they’re 23-year-olds. We don’t have [Michael] Clarke, [Ricky] Ponting, [Kumar] Sangakkara or any of them there, and we need to develop two or three of them.”Siddons, whose contract ends at the end of the ongoing series, could be informed of his future with Bangladesh as early as Monday following a board meeting. He said he had tried on Saturday to do as he had done throughout his tenure – advise his players but also allow them room to learn for themselves.”My plan in the brief before we went out was to be 200 at the 40-over mark and see if we can get the last 70 [in 10 overs]. We lost three wickets really quickly so 200 was way out of our reach, and then I pretty much left it up to the captain and vice-captain.”I tend to try to let them grow and learn as captain and vice-captain, and didn’t want to send messages out there; as soon as I sent a message out, Shakib got caught at long on the next ball. So that’s my fear: as soon as I say hit the odd boundary, get the ones but hit the odd boundary, that [a dismissal] happens, so I tend to stay away from it.”

Kochi's chance to capitalise on Deccan's weaknesses

Match facts

Wednesday, April 27, Kochi
Start time 2000 (1430 GMT)Ravindra Jadeja: striking at a fair clip•AFP

Big picture

With a bowling attack that seems to be currently operating with just two men and a batting line-up that has collectively made two half-centuries in six games, it’s no surprise that Deccan Chargers find themselves in last position in the table. Apart from Amit Mishra and Dale Steyn, the rest of the bowlers have struggled to attack as well as contain. Ishant Sharma and Pragyan Ojha have together conceded 254 runs for four wickets, and big signing Daniel Christian has been taken for more than nine an over.Their leading run-getter Kumar Sangakkara has had several starts but a top score of 49, Christian has been almost as disappointing with the bat as he has been with the ball, and JP Duminy hasn’t got going. The fact that Deccan lack a top-class Indian batsman was always going to test them; their domestic batsmen Shikhar Dhawan, Bharat Chipli and Sunny Sohal haven’t inspired the same confidence as a member of the national side would have.Deccan’s opponents on Wednesday, Kochi Tuskers Kerala, return to their base for the first of two home games after having their three-match winning streak halted by Shane Warne on a tricky Jaipur pitch with unpredictable bounce. They should find the Nehru Stadium surface more to their liking and would want to capitalise against a misfiring Deccan outfit.

Form guide (most recent first)

Kochi: LWWWL (seventh in points table)
Deccan: LWLWL (tenth/last in points table)

Team talk

Kochi have some decisions to make since Brendon McCullum is expected to recover from his shoulder injury in time for the Deccan game. Both Thisara Perera and Muttiah Muralitharan played against Rajasthan Royals as McCullum missed out. Now there will be place for only one of the duo. Raiphi Gomez has done little with the bat, and his seven overs have leaked 78 runs. With Kedar Jadhav being wasted down the order, Kochi could look at giving Sreesanth or Ramesh Powar a game in place of Gomez.Harmeet Singh didn’t do too badly in his only game of this IPL, against Delhi Daredevils, and Deccan could consider bringing him in for Ojha. Duminy or Michael Lumb should replace the woefully out-of-form Cameron White. Deccan also continue to bench Rusty Theron, persisting with Christian.Predict the playing XIs for this match. Play ESPNcricinfo Team selector.

In the spotlight

They are close friends on the field and off it. One handed the national captaincy to the other and became his deputy. When the other resigned after the World Cup, the now-deputy followed suit. Sri Lankan cricket in the new millennium has been synonymous with Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara, two of the best batsmen and sharpest brains in the game. Contrasting personalities – one flamboyant and articulate, one polished and perceptive – they are proud competitors, and their face-off as opposing captains could be an interesting battle of wits. They might even sit down together and dissect the game over a drink after it’s done.

Prime numbers

  • Amit Mishra and RP Singh are the only bowlers from the two sides to have conceded less than seven an over this season (min. two games). Mishra is also Deccan’s highest wicket-taker, with eight from six matches
  • Ravindra Jadeja has the best strike-rate this season among the two teams: 151.40, which is also the sixth-best in the tournament (min. 100 runs)

The chatter

“I guess he is our enemy tomorrow.”

Niall O'Brien seeks T20 contract for brother Kevin

Niall O’Brien is doing his best to get younger brother Kevin a Twenty20 contract in England, and has been in touch with all 18 first-class counties. O’Brien believes other domestic teams around the world could be interested in his brother, and expects him to be part of the player auction prior to next year’s edition of the IPL.”I’m looking after Kevin’s best interests now,” Niall, who already has a county contract with Northamptonshire, told . “At the moment I’m speaking to all the counties in the UK. If any want to get in touch, Kevin’s looking for a Twenty20 position for this summer. I have been in touch with all the counties but at the moment there’s nothing signed and sealed.”We’re trying to get him a deal in the UK first and foremost, but also speaking to teams around the world – in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa – and when the IPL comes up for auction next year his name will definitely be in the hat.”Kevin O’Brien had a brief spell with Nottinghamshire in 2009 but currently plays for Irish club side Railway Union. He shot to fame when he slammed a 50-ball hundred against England in Bangalore – the fastest in World Cup history – to set up a three-wicket win.”It was definitely Ireland’s innings of the tournament,” Niall said. “It was the best innings by an Irish player of all time, without a shadow of a doubt. It’s a record I can’t see being broken for a very, very long time.”From my point of view I was very proud to see my younger brother play such a fantastic knock. I’ve seen him play innings like that before against lesser opposition, but to do it against a team like England fresh off an Ashes victory was second to none and my parents were in the crowd as well, so very proud for the whole O’Brien family.”Niall playfully suggested that he wouldn’t relish the prospect of playing his brother and raised the possibility he might be able to secure a contract with Northants, but financial pressures at the club, which registered a pre-tax loss of £27,439 for the financial year ending September 30 2010, mean that’s unlikely.”If he’s playing in England, I’d rather have him on my team than play against him,” added O’Brien. “There’s nothing worse than coming up against him, if he’s playing for another county in our group, and beating us all round the park. Hopefully someone at Northants could come up with a few quid and sponsor four months’ cricket for us.””Kevin’s a super prospect,” head coach David Capel confirmed to . “The way he hit the ball in that innings there, most people would be interested in getting him involved in Twenty20. When you set your plans out, there’s a limited amount of resources we have financially. So while you never say never, at this stage we haven’t got any plans to say we can do that.”

Misbah rides on higher confidence

It is difficult to believe both that, at 36, Misbah-ul-Haq hasn’t played a World Cup before and that he is playing this one at all. Such was the force of his last axing, from all three formats no less, that until circumstances thrust him into the Test captaincy last October, his career was all but over.Yet as the premier domestic batsman in Pakistan in the 2000s, many felt he had been treated unfairly in not being given at least one opportunity between 2003 and 2007; with Inzamam-ul-Haq, Mohammad Yousuf and Younis Khan in the middle order during that period, however, it was difficult to see how he would get in.But, like the best actors and boxers, he does comebacks exceedingly well. In 2007, after a four-year exile, he nearly won Pakistan a world title. In this latest return he has been even more remarkable; 65 against Kenya in Hambantota was his ninth international fifty in 12 innings across Tests and ODIs.The player, he said during Pakistan’s practice at the Premadasa in Colombo, does not change. “I’ve always said it is important for any player to get some self-belief and confidence back. You start scoring runs, the team starts believing in you and people’s expectations of you increase andthat gives you self-belief. And as your confidence builds your performance gets better. The player actually remains the same before and after, but with confidence higher, you perform better.”Had poker been an official pursuit in Pakistan, his face would’ve won him titles, so expecting him to express regret, or anger, or even blink twice, at being asked about missing past World Cups is futile. He is happy, he says, just to be playing at all. “I think whatever cricket you play you should think about that. I am enjoying it at the moment, I have always enjoyed playing it, domestically or internationally and I only want to do what I can for the side.”Misbah’s return has fitted in seamlessly with a gradual upswing in Pakistan’s batting results over the last year or so, an under-scrutinised aspect of their performances. In 20 ODIs in Sri Lanka, England, the UAE and New Zealand, Pakistan have made 250 or more 13 times. Each member of the top six has made contributions at various stages, so that the problem has been one of plenty, of pacing an innings, of arranging the order so that momentum is not squandered and stabilityalways present.Misbah has come, as he did on Wednesday, mostly at five and has batted often in tandem with Younis Khan. Though the poor start then highlighted the calm the pair brings, against a better attack more oomph might be needed through the middle, an Umar Akmal breaking up the pair. Some in Pakistan, Imran Khan no less, want Misbah even higher in the order.”The situation as it is, with the way the batting order is, all our batsmen have scored runs,” Misbah said. “Kamran [Akmal] comes in at three and he has opened, Younis at four who has mostly played at three, the openers did well scoring hundreds in New Zealand, so we’re not really feeling that our batting is missing something. We’ve got guys scoring runs and performing. Our batting order is fine and it is a good combination at the moment. Whatever the team needs, will happen. None of the players have any issues with where they are batting and what number.”Few attacks can match Sri Lanka’s for potency or variety so Saturday, in what is likely to be an electric atmosphere, will be a comprehensive test of Pakistan. “Sri Lanka always, but especially in the last 2-3 years they have been very consistent, playing good cricket and in home conditions they are a very tough side,” Misbah said.”To get a good first win in this kind of tournament, with most of your batsmen scoring runs and then convincingly get them out, the morale gets high and players get into touch. It is a very vital match for both sides.”

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