Committee of Administrators blasts BCCI treasurer's conduct

BCCI chief executive Rahul Johri, too, files affidavit against Anirudh Chaudhry with the Supreme Court

Nagraj Gollapudi29-Jan-2018The power struggle in the BCCI has intensified with the committee of administrators (CoA) joining forces with the chief executive officer Rahul Johri and chief financial officer Santosh Rangnekar in challenging the conduct of treasurer Anirudh Chaudhry.In November, Rangnekar told the Supreme Court that Chaudhry had issued veiled threats against him on three separate occasions. Chaudhry responded with shock and surprise at the allegation and promptly denied any wrongdoing. He also submitted an affidavit to that effect, having been being asked by the court to do so, on December 13.The court was scheduled to hear the matter on Monday, but deferred the case to February 23. Meanwhile, the CoA submitted its sixth status report to the court on January 25. Johri had filed an affidavit of his own on the same day and the contents of both these documents could lead to Chaudhry facing some tough questions at the next hearing.In a damning appraisal of his work, the CoA wrote that Chaudhry’s conduct had become “seriously objectionable” and they have “no reason to disbelieve the allegations levelled” against him by Rangnekar. The report further stated that Chaudhry “appears determined to use his position to undermine” the authority and functioning of the CoA, which took charge on January 30 last year. The committee felt they were “constrained” to report on Chaudhry to the court once he began “inundating” Johri and Rangnekar with e-mails intended to put pressure on them.Johri told the court that Chaudhry had accused him of taking “erroneous” decisions during the first three weeks of January last year, the period when he acted as head of the BCCI before the CoA took charge. On January 2, the court had sacked the board president Anurag Thakur and secretary Ajay Shirke and disqualified all existing office bearers pending their approval of the Lodha Committee reforms.Johri cited an example of Chaudhry’s pressure tactics in his affidavit. Last November Chaudhry sent him an e-mail saying he had violated the BCCI’s rules, and his own contract, by trimming the national selection panels (senior and junior) from five to three members. Johri explained that he took the decision based on “directions” from the Lodha Committee but Chaudhry argued that a court order on January 2 and 3 last year had limited the committee’s powers and as such their instructions were not “binding”.Johri insisted he made the call after consulting both the BCCI’s senior management and their lawyer. He further added that the Lodha committee told him that the court impasse should not hinder “cricketing activity”. But Chaudhry would not accept that the CEO had acted in “good faith”.Chaudhry highlighted another “wrongdoing” on the part of both Johri and Rangnekar when they accessed funds from a BCCI bank account at a Union Bank of India in Mumbai in January 2017. But both men argued they were within their right to do so. The court had sacked the board’s office bearers and there was a danger of cricket coming to a standstill if various vendors, suppliers, hotels, and state associations were not paid. Under such an emergency, as per a resolution of the BCCI’s financial committee in 2016, the Union Bank account could be operated by two out of three officials – the CEO (Johri), CFO (Rangnekar) and the board’s manager of game development and administration (Ratnakar Shetty).It was at this juncture the CoA decided to step in. According to Johri, they told Chaudhry that his conduct “is designed to intimidate the professional management of the BCCI and created obstacles in its functioning.” Furthermore, the CoA, in the status report, told the court that Johri had only acted in the “best interests” of the BCCI and should have been “commended rather than vilified”.The BCCI’s three existing office bearers have been asking the court to take another look at the Lodha reforms, one of which pertains to the demarcation of duties between administrators and management. Supported by many of the state associations, the office bearers prefer control of the board stays in own hands.The CoA, though, is clearly against that. In an email to Chaudhry on November 22, they said that “vested interests” within the BCCI were trying to create a “parallel” administration, one that wants to stick with the “flawed” existing constitution while opposing the reform process undertaken by the committee. “It is obvious which administration within the BCCI you form part of and support.”The thrust of your grievances stems from your preference” for the existing BCCI constitution, which was “flawed” and was being replaced by the reforms recommended by the Lodha Committee, approved by the court and being exercised by the professional management under the panel’s supervision.”It is for this reason that you have been inundating the CEO and CFO with long and verbose emails designed to intimidate them rather than pride any constructive suggestions. Some of the issues raised by you do not even pertain to your duties as Treasurer of the BCCI and it appears that you are insistent on involving yourself with mattes that are outside the scope your duties.”

Anshul Kamboj becomes third bowler to take all ten wickets in an innings in Ranji Trophy

Haryana fast bowler bagged 10 for 49 against Kerala, and became the sixth Indian to achieve the feat in first-class cricket

Shashank Kishore15-Nov-2024Haryana fast bowler Anshul Kamboj became only the third cricketer to take all ten wickets in an innings in the Ranji Trophy. He achieved this feat when he dismissed Kerala’s Shoun Roger at the Chaudhary Bansi Lal Stadium in Lahli, to finish with figures of 30.1-9-49-10 in the first innings.Two other bowlers had taken all ten wickets in an innings in the Ranji Trophy previously: Bengal’s Premangsu Chatterjee in 1956-57 and Rajasthan’s Pradeep Sunderam in 1985-86. Overall, Kamboj is the sixth Indian to achieve this feat in first-class cricket after legspinners Subhash Gupte and Anil Kumble, and Odisha seamer Debasis Mohanty. While there have been 90 instances of bowlers taking all ten wickets in an innings in first-class cricket, Kumble along with England’s Jim Laker and New Zealand’s Ajaz Patel are the only ones to do it in a Test match.

Kamboj, 23, comes from Karnal in Haryana, a boxing heartland, and began playing cricket on open fields. It wasn’t until the age of 14 that he began to take cricket seriously. In less than a decade, Kamboj has progressed to play for his state team and has also broken into the IPL.The milestone of ten wickets in an innings is yet another achievement for Kamboj over the last 12 months. He took 17 wickets in ten games with an economy of 3.58 in Harayana’s run to the Vijay Hazare Trophy title, including a best of 4 for 30 in the semi-final against Tamil Nadu.While playing for India C against India B during the Duleep Trophy in September, Kamboj picked up 8 for 69, his best first-class figures until the ten-wicket haul. That performance included the wickets of seasoned domestic batters like Sarfaraz Khan, Rinku Singh and N Jagadeesan. Last month, he was part of the India Emerging squad at the T20 Asia Cup, where he turned in a match-winning performance of 3 for 33 against Pakistan Shaheens.Kamboj also got his maiden IPL contract this year with Mumbai Indians and played three games at the back end of a season where they finished in last place. He was a candidate to be an uncapped retention ahead of the IPL 2025 auction, and although that didn’t happen his performances this year will make him one of the uncapped Indian players to watch at the auction on November 24 and 25.

Rohit on BCCI making domestic cricket mandatory: 'You hardly have any time'

Rohit heard telling chief selector Agarkar that his team-mates had expressed concerns over some of the guidelines, including the travel restrictions on families

S Sudarshanan18-Jan-20252:42

Rohit: Hardly any time for India regulars to play domestic cricket

India captain Rohit Sharma has said that it is important for players to have enough rest and stay fresh for international engagements, even as he agreed that the BCCI was right in making it mandatory for members of the national team to play domestic cricket. The guideline on domestic cricket participation was one of ten to emerge from the BCCI this week, after a review meeting – that Rohit was part of – to go over India’s recent poor run in Test cricket. Rohit was also heard to say during a press interaction in Mumbai that his team-mates had expressed some concerns over some of the guidelines, including the restrictions on families travelling with the players.Rohit was speaking at a press conference where India’s Champions Trophy squad was announced. But his comments about his team-mates’ concerns, as well as wanting to discuss them with the BCCI secretary Devjit Saikia, were directed to Ajit Agarkar, the chair of the men’s selection committee, ahead of the formal start of the press conference. Later, when asked by reporters about the need to issue such guidelines, Agarkar said they were not a “diktat” or “punishment”.Rohit, who is the first current player to talk about the guidelines, told the press conference that while he understood the BCCI’s call, there had not been much opportunity for India players to play domestic cricket of late, and none of them were taking their spots in the team for granted. “[In the] last six-seven years, if you go back and see our calendar, there hasn’t been a time where we were sitting at home for 45 days and there is cricket going on,” Rohit said. “You do get that time when you finish the IPL and if there’s nothing happening right after that. But if you see our domestic season, it starts in October – maybe September – and it gets over by February-March. And that is the time India plays a lot of [international] cricket as well. So, guys who are not playing certain formats and have time, and then there is domestic cricket happening, then they will play.Related

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“But the last six-seven years – I can at least tell about what has happened with me since I’ve started playing Test cricket regularly, which is from 2019 – you hardly have any time. When you play so much international cricket through the year, you need some time off as well as a cricketer just to refresh, get your mind right, just to be ready for the upcoming season. But we have addressed it now and nobody takes it for granted or anything like that.”Rohit, who last played a domestic first-class game in September 2016, will be playing Mumbai’s next Ranji Trophy match, against Jammu & Kashmir, next week. Among India’s Test regulars, Shubman Gill, Ravindra Jadeja and Rishabh Pant are also set to play in the next round of games.Agarkar conceded that it is difficult for players who play all formats to take part in domestic cricket but insisted that such guidelines are place to strengthen the Indian domestic system. “We’ll probably talk about it endlessly if we keep going on but I think everyone should [play domestic cricket] when available,” he said. “Sometimes, to be fair to a lot of the players, it’s difficult if you’re playing all three formats, you don’t get as much time… You’ll probably find most of the guys playing this round of Ranji Trophy. There’s been a little bit of [down] time.”And those who are available and fit, obviously, you expect people to play. I don’t think it is a diktat. It’s one of the things that BCCI has obviously put forward. As selectors, we expect people, when they’re available, to play because that can only strengthen our domestic structure. Not just for their form or their fitness and playing cricket, but it can only strengthen our domestic structure.”In its guidelines, the BCCI reiterated that not being available for domestic cricket could cost players their place in international cricket as well as impact their central contracts. The sanctions, it laid out, could also include barring them from participating in the IPL.Agarkar said while this was not “school”, certain rules still needed to be followed. “When the time permits, we expect everyone to play,” he said. “Various things you see over the last few months where you can improve as a team, where you can get a bit closer as a team. It’s not a school. It’s not a punishment.”You have some rules in place and when you’re playing for the national team you just follow those rules. Again, these are mature individuals. They are superstars in their own right in international sport. But at the end of the day, you’re eventually representing your country. There are certain things that you just inherently follow as every team does.”A lot of them have been in place. Maybe we’ve spoken about it now and it’s been put out, but a lot of them have been in place in any case. You keep on refining it as you go along. Eventually what suits the team, you want to try and do.”Although Rohit spoke about the mandatory participation in domestic cricket guideline, when asked about his take on the “new policy” for players, he replied: “Who told you about this? Has it come officially?”

Pandey keeps his name in India's middle-order conversation

Though recent attention has been on Kedar Jadhav, KL Rahul and Ajinkya Rahane, a half-century in Manish Pandey’s first ODI since October 2016 highlighted the middle-order depth India has on offer

Andrew Fidel Fernando31-Aug-2017Competition for spots in India’s top five is tough, with Kedar Jadhav, KL Rahul, and Ajinkya Rahane all angling for positions. However, Manish Pandey has made a strong case that he ought to be invested In – or at least trialled – for a little longer after a half-century in his first ODI since October during the visitors’ 168-run win over Sri Lanka on Thursday.Pandey had begun his international career brightly, against Zimbabwe and Australia, before losing a little rhythm against New Zealand last October. It is the emphatic manner in which he has regained his form, however, that not only caught the selectors’ eye, but also put him in good stead to perform in this match. In five one-day innings for India A in South Africa during July and early August, Pandey struck 307 runs and was dismissed only once to finish as the leading scorer in the tri-series with South Africa A and Afghanistan A. Pandey says the performances there helped him to arrive in Sri Lanka feeling good about his game.Manish Pandey struck a half-century in his first ODI since October 2016•AFP

“It definitely does really help a lot when you know that you have some runs in the bank,” he said, referring to his returns in South Africa. “You know you will eventually get a chance in the ODI side and you have to wait patiently for the chance. When you get it, you just bat the way you have been batting.”Through the India A series, I batted very similar to the way I batted today. So it was not too different for me to come back. I have been batting well in the nets and I just had to watch the ball and play.”Coming in at No. 6, Pandey batted perhaps one spot lower than he expected to after Hardik Pandya was sent in at No. 4 in the 30th over as India attempted to capitalise even further on a 219-run second-wicket stand between Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma. Nevertheless, Pandey said he had planned to begin batting at around the 35th over, which is exactly when he entered after Hardik and Rohit were dismissed by Angelo Mathews off consecutive deliveries. Pandey spent 19 balls getting to double figures, and had scored only in singles until the 42nd over. All this, also, went roughly as he had hoped.”I had a chat with Ravi [Shastri] yesterday and even today before the start of the game, about how I take some time before I start playing my natural game,” Pandey said. “I need to take at least six to 10 balls to know what the wicket is like. It was spinning a bit, when the middle order got out. There were wickets falling on the other side but I had to keep my calm and rotate the strike. Eventually it came off for me.”India did, in fact, suffer a mild middle-order stutter, losing three wickets inside three overs for 12 runs, as Rahul fell in the 37th. So good had the stand between Kohli and Rohit been that they were always going to get a commanding score. But that they eventually reached the mammoth 375 for 5, however, was thanks to the unbeaten 101-run sixth-wicket stand between Pandey and MS Dhoni, which came off 74 deliveries. Pandey’s share in it was 45 off 32 balls – Dhoni hitting 49 not out off 42 in his 300th ODI.”I have played a few games with [Dhoni] already now, and I know how he plays,” Pandey said. “I know how he likes to rotate strike. I like to bat with somebody who loves to do that. Occasionally we get some boundaries and that’s how we keep the scoreboard ticking. With Mahi bhai, you are always on your toes and he keeps giving you advice.”

Australia expecting significant spin threat in Super Eight

India, Afghanistan and most likely Bangladesh will be their opponents in the next stage

AAP and ESPNcricinfo staff15-Jun-20242:48

Wade: ‘I would’ve been sacked if we didn’t win the 2021 T20 World Cup’

A trial by spin awaits Australia in the T20 World Cup 2024, with them looming as the odd team out in an otherwise all-Asian Super Eight group.Having won their first three games, Mitchell Marsh’s side will progress to the next stage of the tournament whatever happens in Sunday’s clash with Scotland in St Lucia.The main talking point of that match will be the impact it has on England – with an Australia loss enough to knock out the defending champions. But that aside, Australia’s path to a second T20 World Cup and the capture of all three current men’s ICC global titles is becoming much clearer.Related

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Based on pre-tournament seedings, Australia will meet India and Afghanistan in their Super Eight group. Bangladesh are in the box seat to join them, after Nepal fell one run short of shocking South Africa on Saturday.That trio will make for a significant challenge against an Australia team who have traditionally had difficulties on spinning wickets.”A lot of us have prepared for plenty of spin depending on what venue you get to,” Australia’s vice-captain Matthew Wade said. “Guys have been preparing for that through the world, through IPL into the start of this World Cup.”We expect nothing different, and on their day they’re all going to be very very hard teams to beat. We’re expecting them to hit us with a fair bit of spin over the next little bit.”India have so far relied more on their quicks for their matches in the USA, but have Ravindra Jadeja, Axar Patel, Yuzvendra Chahal and Kuldeep Yadav at their disposal for the slower Caribbean pitches.Afghanistan can call on Rashid Khan, Noor Ahmed and Mohammad Nabi, although have lost Mujeeb Ur Rahman to injury, while Bangladesh will also fancy their spinners as the wickets grow tired. Legspinner Rishad Hossain, who Australia have not faced before, has impressed with seven wickets in three matches.There was significant help for the spinners in the South Africa-Nepal match in St Vincent where Australia will meet Afghanistan.Meanwhile, Wade added he hoped this tournament would not signal his farewell for Australia. He was expected to retire after the 2021 and 2022 T20 World Cups, but at 36 has continued to be a threat for Australia batting at No. 7.”I’m at my best when it’s the last opportunity,” Wade said. “Hopefully I can pull some good stuff out in the next little bit, but it will be the same conversation at the end of this one. There are going to be players go out of this team. I’m more than comfortable if I’m one of them to get the next cycle of players coming in to play for Australia.”

'I've been fit since January' – Hardik confirms he will bowl in IPL 2024

MI captain says he hasn’t met with his predecessor Rohit Sharma yet but foresees no issues

Yash Jha18-Mar-2024Hardik Pandya has declared himself fit to bowl as he returns to captain Mumbai Indians in IPL 2024. The allrounder said he has been fit since the start of this year, after suffering an ankle injury during the 2023 ODI World Cup that ruled him out of all cricket since October.”Yes, I will be bowling,” Hardik said at a pre-season press conference in Mumbai on Monday. “My injury in [the] World Cup was a freak injury. It had nothing to do with my past injuries, it had nothing to do with my fitness. When I got fit, the Afghanistan [T20I] series had just started [in January]. I’ve been fit since then, but there were no games to play.”Hardik had injured his ankle in his follow-through while bowling during India’s World Cup league match against Bangladesh in Pune. He said that his attempts to recover in time for the knockout stages had aggravated the injury.”My injury, from day one, showed that I’m going to be out of the World Cup, but playing for India has always been special, especially in a World Cup. [So] we pushed [for] ten days – we knew that it’s an uphill task to be fit for the World Cup semi-finals or finals,” he said. “When we pushed, I kind of triggered my injury [further], and the injury became a little longer.”Related

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Hardik: ‘I know that Rohit will always have a hand on my shoulder’

Hardik’s return to Mumbai as captain, replacing Rohit Sharma who had led the team since 2013, is one of the biggest talking points of this IPL season.”I don’t think it will be awkward, or anything different, it will be a nice feeling because we’ve been playing [together] for ten years,” Hardik said of his relationship with Rohit and the new team dynamic. “I’ve played my whole career under him, and I know he’s going to have a hand on my shoulder always.”He’s been traveling, he’s been playing. It’s been a couple of months since we’ve seen each other. Once he comes [and joins the MI camp], we’ll definitely have a chat.”The Mumbai coach Mark Boucher said that Rohit freed from the responsibility of captaincy could be key for the team. “I think Rohit’s in fantastic form. I’ve been watching the games against England and the way that he’s hitting the ball, his movements into the ball are fantastic,” Boucher said. “So I’m really looking forward to Rohit going out and really expressing himself, without the captaincy on his shoulders.”Rohit has had a tough time with the bat in recent IPL seasons, averaging 24.89 and going at a strike rate of 127.54 in 70 innings across the last five years. “If he has a great season for us, we’re going to be in the dying stages of the tournament,” Boucher said.IPL 2023 was Boucher’s first season as head coach after replacing Mahela Jayawardene, and Mumbai finished fourth in the league stage before crashing out in Qualifier 2 – to Hardik’s Gujarat Titans.

Will MI start with four overseas players?

Mumbai went all out for overseas quicks to partner the returning Jasprit Bumrah this season, spending INR 14.40 crore (out of a remaining purse of INR 17.75 crore) on South Africa’s Gerald Coetzee and Sri Lanka’s Dilshan Madushanka and Nuwan Thushara. They also bought Afghanistan allrounder Mohammad Nabi in addition to the pre-auction trade of West Indian Romario Shepherd.”If you have a look at all the [overseas] players we have selected, we’ve got plenty of options,” Boucher said. “I think this season we can choose conditions-related, we’ll have a look and see which players best suit different conditions.”Boucher did hint at Mumbai possibly starting with three overseas players – something they did in three games last season – given the wealth of Indian batting options available for the first XI.”There might even be situations where we only go in with three overseas players, without giving too much away, and maybe have one or two options as impact players on the bench, and have a look at the conditions and see what’s best going to suit us.”

Somerset drop Abell as young captain seeks form

Tom Abell, Somerset’s talented but beleaguered young captain, has been dropped for Somerset’s Championship match against Yorkshire at Scarborough

David Hopps03-Jul-2017Tom Abell, Somerset’s talented but beleaguered young captain, has been dropped for Somerset’s Championship match against Yorkshire at Scarborough.But Somerset remain adamant that the decision to have appointed him captain at 22 remains the right one with director of cricket Matt Maynard praising him as “a genuine leader of men.”Abell’s season hit a new low point when he made a pair during Somerset’s draw at Ageas Bowl last week – a match in which their top-order frailties were again exposed by two wholesale collapses.Abell, now 23, is not the only batsman out of form, far from it – only the South African Dean Elgar averages more than 30 – but his decline is marked nevertheless, with 171 runs at 14.25. Even his season’s-best 71 came during a stalemate against Middlesex on a docile Lord’s pitch.Somerset go into the Yorkshire match 29 points adrift of safety with half the season gone and Elgar now on South Africa Test duty. They will draw some hope from the fact that Yorkshire lack three senior batsmen in Joe Root, Gary Ballance and Jonny Bairstow, all on England duty..Somerset’s other alternative would have been to have rested Abell from the captaincy, and encouraged him to regain his form in the 1st XI, playing only as a specialist batsman, because not to do so has left their top six looking strikingly raw.But that would have conveyed the message that their captaincy decision was a flawed one at this stage of his career, and they remain insistent that this is not the case. Their faith in him both short-term and long remains unstinting.Abell, well respected but a less bullish individual than many who have made a success of captaincy at a young age, will now search for form in the 2nd XI without the added pressure of leading a struggling side. Tim Rouse, a 2nd XI batsman, replaces him with Lewis Gregory standing in as captain.Happier times as Abell is named as captain•Getty Images

Abell said on the Somerset website: “It’s been a tough start to the season for me and the team has to come first. The support that I’ve received has been incredible and hugely appreciated, as has the backing from the team and coaches.”Maynard added: “Every single person connected with the club, from the members and supporters up to the committee, are desperate for Tom to return to form and I have no doubt that he will do just that.”He is an outstanding player, a genuine leader of men and as the old adage says: form is temporary but class is permanent.”We’ll be working hard with him in the nets and he’ll be playing some Second XI cricket – I’m confident that he will be back in contention for First XI selection again sooner rather than later”.Abell had been full of optimism as April dawned, observing a Somerset season in 2016 in which they were pipped for the title on the final day and saying: “I am convinced we have the squad and the coaching staff to win the title.”

Netherlands fail to walk the walk after talking a good game – Cook

But coach backs his team to learn lessons and bounce back from heavy defeat

Andrew Fidel Fernando25-Oct-20232:13

Ryan Cook: ‘The guys will be hurting in the changeroom’

Netherlands have stressed they are not just at this World Cup to make up the numbers. A surprise win over South Africa early in their tournament only galvanised them, and their belief they could make a meaningful run at the semi-final.In that context, a defeat of the magnitude that Australia meted out to them on Wednesday has seriously hurt, said Ryan Cook, their coach. Having conceded 399 for 8, Netherlands were all out for 90 in 21 overs.”The guys will be hurting in the changing room, for sure,” Cook said. “We talked a good game before the game, and we didn’t play a good game of cricket today. We didn’t execute our plans quite like we wanted to and then the fight that we have shown in lots of the matches – we saw only glimpses of that. We need to play better cricket for a lot longer if we’re going to compete with teams like Australia.”Resilience is something as I say we pride ourselves on as a team. We’ll be able to get back up for the next game and learn our lessons from that.”Related

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So where did it go so wrong? Cook spoke about Netherlands being “a bit up and down” in the field. While there were several excellent diving stops in the infield, particularly in the early overs, Netherlands were also guilty of one very expensive drop – a difficult, high, swirling chance off Glenn Maxwell (who was 26 off 15 at the time), which Teja Nidamanuru could not hold on to, running back from mid off, off the bowling of Paul van Meekeren.Australia had already passed 300 in the 44th over when that happened, but could conceivably have been held to less than 350 had Maxwell been dismissed at that stage, as they were already six down.”When these types of players give you chances, even if they’re half chances, you do have to take them to be able to give yourself a good chance of victory,” said Cook.Allrounder Logan van Beek said the greater disappointment was Netherlands’ batting. After an early string of boundaries to Vikramjit Singh, who top-scored with a run-a-ball 25, the remainder of the batting line up folded rapidly. The next-highest score was Nidamanuru’s 14.”With the bat is the disappointing one. We shouldn’t be getting bowled for 90. We should be putting up at least a fight. That’s the part that hurts the most.”

Trott sees 'promising signs' in Ibrahim's 114 and Afghanistan's third-day domination

Trott hopes to have the full complement of players to choose from when Afghanistan play Test cricket, which isn’t always the case

Andrew Fidel Fernando05-Feb-2024If Afghanistan got to play more Test cricket, you’d see them rise as quickly in that format as they have in the others. This was the line of thinking their coach Jonathan Trott presented after their first Test against Sri Lanka, which Afghanistan lost by ten wickets but dominated portions of.In any case, Afghanistan have won three of their first eight Tests, which, going by how other sides have performed in their first few years of Test cricket, is an outstanding start to their journey. In the Test at the SSC, Afghanistan had dominated day three almost entirely, with Ibrahim Zadran hitting a maiden Test century while forging big partnerships with Noor Ali Zadran and Rahmat Shah.They fell away rapidly on day four, but had had nine wickets in hand overnight, and were only 43 runs from establishing a lead.Related

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“This is our eighth Test as a nation, and this year Sri Lanka play ten Tests,” Trott said after the match. “At the moment, you see in the T20 and ODI formats, the more we get to play the better, and the bigger pool of talent we can select from. But for us to come here and go neck and neck with Sri Lanka, and yesterday dominate the day, shows promising signs for the future.”But, as Trott pointed out, Afghanistan didn’t have their full complement of players to choose from for Tests, with the likes of Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Fazalhaq Farooqi and Rahmanullah Gurbaz currently playing the ILT20 in the UAE. They were also without Rashid Khan, their star spinner, as he recovers from a back surgery.”There are a lot of other players we can call upon to play Test cricket, but they’re all still playing the leagues,” Trott said. “I think Sri Lanka faces the same issues. So do all cricketing the nations. It’s about when those Tests are played and the availability of players, and if the players feel like the balance between leagues and playing for the national side is.”It’s a double-edged sword, but I would like to have a full batch of players to be able to select from. Hopefully for Ireland [whom Afghanistan play in a one-off Test beginning February 28], we can get that right.”Cricketers have a short window in their careers, and they’re trying to set themselves up and trying to find the right balance in terms of nation and league. The more money there is in Test cricket the more attractive it’s going to be for younger players. That’s my one fear, that younger players aren’t going to see it as a route to playing. Test cricket is so unique. It’s such a shame if that isn’t protected and nurtured as much as possible.”On the Test itself, Trott poured substantial praise on Ibrahim, whose 114 was the centrepiece of an Afghanistan second innings that prevented them from being completely blown away in this match. This was the fourth Test hundred from an Afghanistan batter, and the first from one of their younger batters – Ibrahim is 22.”Yesterday, he spent the whole day in the field,” Trott said of Ibrahim. “He fielded in the morning on the third day of a Test with humidity and the temperature close to 40 degrees. But then also the mental strength it takes as well – getting nought in the first innings, and then being able to field for 100-plus overs, and then being able to spend the amount of time he did at the crease is credit to him as a youngster.”It’s a good example for the rest of the players of Afghanistan – the standards of Test cricket, and the fitness you need to call upon. The way that he trains is second to none, and he’s a great ambassador for the game, and the country.”

All-round Stevens helps Jersey sail past Germany

Ghana pipped Vanuatu in a Group B thriller, while David Hooper and Josh Butler kept Guernsey’s hopes of a semi-final slot alive in Group A

ESPNcricinfo staff04-Sep-2017

Semi-final scenarios

All teams have an off day on Tuesday before the final day of round-robin play on Wednesday. Guernsey play Qatar in what is effectively a quarter-final match in Group B with the winner joining Italy as the second semi-finalist from their half of the draw while Italy play Cayman Islands for a chance to claim the top spot in the group.
In Group A, Jersey play Ghana for a chance to go to 3-0 and seal a semi-final spot while Germany play Vanuatu in the other match. Should Jersey beat Ghana and Vanuatu beat Germany, it would create a three-way tie for second place in the group with the second semi-finalist determined by net run rate. Germany currently have the best net run rate of the three.
Germany can clinch a semi-final spot with a win and a Ghana loss while Ghana can likewise take the spot with a win plus a Germany loss to Vanuatu. The possibility also exists of a three-way tie for first place should Jersey lose to Ghana and Germany beat Vanuatu but Jersey currently have a +0.939 net-run-rate advantage over Germany. Jersey will automatically clinch a semi-final slot in spite of a loss if Vanuatu beat Germany.

Group B

Ghana played their second nailbiter in a row on Monday but this time came out victorious with a two-wicket win over Vanuatu. New-ball strikes were key once again for Ghana as Vincent Ateak removed day-one top-scorer Jonathan Dunn for 12 while Obed Agbomadzie took three wickets for the second day in a row including the key scalps of Patrick Matautaava and Nalin Nipiko to set Vanuatu back at 41 for 4 in the 14th over. Captain Andrew Mansale top-scored with a battling 26 before his side was bowled out for 124 in 47.2 overs.The 16 unused deliveries proved vital as Ghana’s attempts to drive home a net-run-rate advantage nearly backfired spectacularly with victory in sight. Ghana were 116 for 3 when captain Peter Ananya was dismissed for 50 by Matautaava at the start of the 31st over. Subsequent attempts by the middle order to score quick runs to kill off the match were foiled by a pair of run-outs before Nipiko claimed wickets off back-to-back balls in the 34th over to put himself on a hat-trick with Ghana eight down with two runs still needed for victory. But 18-year-old Godfred Bakiweyem pinched a two off the hat-trick ball after entering at No. 10 to clinch a tense win.Jersey moved a shade closer to a semi-final berth with a five-wicket win over Germany in Benoni. Medium pacers Charles Perchard and Ben Kynman and left-arm-spinning allrounder Ben Stevens took two wickets each in a collective bowling effort to restrict Germany to 248. Germany captain Rishi Pillai top-scored for his side with 46 before they were bowled out in the final over.Stevens followed up his five-for from day one with his first fifty of the tournament, striking 53 off 65 balls while teaming with Peter Gough and Jonty Jenner for a pair of half-century partnerships. Sussex batsman Jenner then saw Jersey across the line, finishing with an unbeaten 68 off 65 balls including eight fours and a six as victory was sealed with 32 balls remaining.

Group A

Italy moved to 2-0 and clinched a spot in the semi-finals with a six-wicket win over Qatar. Captain Gayashan Munasinghe took 3 for 52 opening the bowling before Hasnat Ahmed ripped through the tail to claim 4 for 37 as Qatar were dismissed for 209 in 46.3 overs.Openers Gian Meade (51 off 84 balls) and Rakibul Hasan (62 off 67 balls) got the chase off to an emphatic start with a 123-run stand. Damian Crowley fell four short of his second fifty in a row but by the time he was dismissed Italy needed just 23 to win. Peter Petricola took Italy over the line with an unbeaten 21 to secure victory with 49 balls to spare.Guernsey bounced back from their opening-day loss to Italy with a six-wicket win over Cayman Islands. Opener Sacha de Alwis had taken Cayman to a strong position near the halfway point of the innings by top-scoring with 60 after they chose to bat first but things turned south when he was second out to fall with the score at 115. Medium pacer David Hooper put the brakes on the middle order by taking 5 for 36 as Cayman managed just 99 runs off the final 28 overs to finish on 214 for 9.Josh Butler (93 off 87 balls) dominated a 97-run opening stand with Matthew Stokes in reply while Oliver Newey produced a half-century for the second day in a row, making a brisk 54 off 38 balls. Guernsey eventually reached the target with 13.3 overs to spare, putting themselves back in the hunt for the other semi-final spot from Group B while Cayman Islands have been eliminated from semi-final contention.

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