Warner admits 'regret' over Ashes talk

Last week, Warner called the Ashes “war” and said he wanted to find “hatred” in England but now suggests that may have been too much

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Oct-20172:53

‘Hope Stokes, Hales incident doesn’t make England reclusive’

David Warner has conceded he may have got carried away when he compared the Ashes to “war” last week and talked of needing to find “hatred” of England when the series begins.While on one hand saying he would take a subtler approach to sledging in light of the ICC crackdown on on-field behaviour, he notched up the pre-series talk by insisting he would be looking to verbally take on the England players.Now Warner has acknowledged a degree of “regret” about his choice of words although not the reason behind them.”I probably regret some of the words I used during the week, but at the end of the day, you’ve got to try and have some inward anger,” Warner said on Channel Nine’s . “You’ve got to create a bit of that buzz out there.”Speaking to last week, Warner said: “As soon as you step on that line it’s war. You try and get into a battle as quick as you can. I try and look in the opposition’s eye and try and work out ‘how can I dislike this player, how can I get on top of him?’ You’ve really got to find that spark in yourself to really take it to the opposition.”You have to delve and dig deep into yourself to actually get some hatred about them to actually get up when you’re out there. History is a big part in this and that is what carries us onto the ground.”His comments were called “pathetic” by former England batsman Marcus Trescothick while former captain Michael Vaughan said they were a symptom of the hyped build-up to an Ashes.”I heard David Warner mention the word ‘war’, I’ve never seen any tanks arrive on a cricket field but these kinds of words come out of people’s mouths as they go into an Ashes series,” Vaughan told ESPNcricinfo.When asked this week if he thought the Ashes would be a hostile series, Warner added: “I’d like to think so.”

Aponso, Jayasuriya help Sri Lanka A clinch low-scorer

Sri Lanka A’s lower order, led by Shehan Jayasuriya, rallied from 83 for 5 to chase down 177, despite fast bowler Sheldon Cottrell’s career-best 4 for 44

ESPNcricinfo staff02-Nov-2017Sri Lanka A 181 for 8 (Asalanka 33, Cottrell 4-44, Cornwall 2-31) beat West Indies A 176 (Hodge 54, Kumara 3-26, Aponso 3-34) by two wickets
ScorecardAFP

Sri Lanka A’s lower order, led by Shehan Jayasuriya, rallied from 83 for 5 to secure a low-scorer, despite fast bowler Sheldon Cottrell’s career-best 4 for 44. Jayasuriya stayed unbeaten on 31 off 36 balls along with Amila Aponso, who contributed 16 off 13, to help the visitors chase down 177 with two wickets and two overs to spare.Aponso had earlier made a bigger impact with the ball, his 3 for 34 limiting West Indies A to 176. He was complemented by the 20-year old quick Lahiru Kumara, who claimed three wickets of his own.West Indies A began well with Montcin Hodge and John Campbell putting on 67 for the first wicket. Hodge went onto make 54 off 69 balls, including four fours and a six, but wickets kept falling at the other end. From 67 for 0, the hosts slumped to 133 for 7, before Rahkeem Cornwall’s 43-ball 37 hauled the score to 176.In response, Sri Lanka A stumbled to 83 for 5 by the 23rd over with Cottrell leading the way with the new ball. Charith Asalanka, who captained Sri Lanka in the Under-19 World Cup last year, and Chamika Karunaratne then added 35 for the sixth wicket to give the side hope. Both batsmen fell in quick succession to Cottrell, and Kyle Mayers got rid of Malinda Pushpakumara for 11, but Jayasuriya and Aponso held their nerve to put Sri Lanka A 1-0 up in the three-match series.

India experience will help identify the right characters – Pothas

Sri Lanka’s interim coach slams team’s aggressive approach on the fourth morning, says some of the players are repeating the same mistakes

Karthik Krishnaswamy in Nagpur27-Nov-20171:54

Chopra: Vijay’s century stood out

The margin of Sri Lanka’s defeat to India in Nagpur – an innings and 239 runs – was the worst in their Test-match history. The defeat was also the most recent in a sequence of chastening results against India.In July-August, Sri Lanka suffered a 3-0 home defeat to India, and lost each of the Tests by a big margin: 304 runs, an innings and 53 runs, an innings and 171 runs.For a team as inexperienced and low on confidence as Sri Lanka are currently, it might seem like a punishment to play the world’s No. 1 Test side in back-to-back series, but their interim coach Nic Pothas feels the experience will help identify players “with the right characters”, who can take the team forward in the long term.In his post-match press conference on Monday, Pothas said, without naming names, that there were a few players in the dressing room who had been making the same mistakes repeatedly and were in danger of losing their places.”I still firmly believe, if we play a team like India in such a short space of time, twice, in six Test matches, the guys with the right characters – which I keep talking about and I keep asking for – will get better into the future,” he said.”As long as the curve is on a general upward trend, then you’re always going to be, when you look down the line, that person’s going to get better. Like in any environment, when things get tough and the pressure goes up, some people fall off the bus, some people get better. That’s natural everywhere.”I think the key is to make sure that we’re picking people, or more people, that are likely to stay on the bus when the pressure goes up. That again is the nature of professional sport. It’s tough, and, as we sit here, it’s very, very tough. The answer you’ll probably get in the next 18 months or two years whether this was a good idea or not to play India twice. Personally, as a coach, I find it hugely exciting.”I’ve learned a hell of a lot in the last series and in the short period of time we’ve been here, and I’ll continue to learn more. What I would say is that, when you play a team like India, cricket is a game like chess. If one team makes a move, or an individual makes a move, you’d better have a counter-move, because if you don’t, you will fall off that bus. At the moment in our changeroom, we probably have a few who keep making the same move and they keep losing pieces off the chessboard.”A big contributing factor to Sri Lanka’s present state, Pothas felt, was the fact that players come to Test cricket having played mostly three-day first-class cricket. He said the SLC, which has included the former Test captains Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara in a five-member committee to rehabilitate Sri Lankan cricket, was in the process of addressing the issue.”If we don’t have a format whereby – I think this is being addressed, at the moment – if you don’t have a format that gives you the opportunity to bat for four to six hours, I think it’s unfair on our part to ask batters to now come and try and replicate that in a Test match against high-quality bowling,” Pothas said. “That, once again, is just a fact. But that is being addressed.”I think Kumar and Mahela have spoken about that at length, and I think their advice is being heeded at the moment. Once we get into a four-day format of high-quality cricket, it will actually make it easier to select people based on results rather than on any other factor.”Pothas did not mince words while summing up Sri Lanka’s Nagpur performance, calling it embarrassing. “Hugely disappointing,” he said. “Disappointing because of the amount of work that goes in, behind the scenes, and to put in a performance like that, I think it’s embarrassing. The players should be embarrassed in their own performances. Putting in work and hitting the ball nicely in the nets means nothing if you’re not going to go out and put runs on the board.”He was scathing of their approach on the fourth day, when, faced with a massive first-innings deficit, a number of players got out playing aggressive shots rather than try to bat time. “Was there a message [before the day’s play]? Of course there was a message. Were they asked to make sure that our score was made up 61% out of boundaries? No. When the percentage of your score is so high in boundaries, against a quality attack, you’re going to run into a lot of trouble.”India, for example – 610 [in their first innings], boundary percentage 37. That’s why they get 610. We’re talking about the top batters in the world. If 37% is good enough for them, then it sure should be good enough for us. If you’re striking at 61% in boundaries, that’s what’s going to happen.”One of the major concerns for Sri Lanka on the batting front is the form of their ex-captain Angelo Mathews. He hasn’t scored a Test hundred since August 2015, and since then has averaged 27.80 across 36 innings. Pothas sympathised with Mathews’ struggles with injury of late, and backed him to rediscover his form, but said there was no running away from his recent numbers.”Having injuries is always tough when you’re not playing continuously, to try and strike a rhythm when you do come back,” Pothas said. “If you’re consistently playing, and facing bowling above 140kph, you get used to it.”We’ve got Thilan Samaraweera now as our batting coach, who is a phenomenal batting coach with a good track record. I’m sure Thilan will sit with Angelo and work things out. Angelo is a quality international cricketer. His numbers over a period of time tell you that.”But you can’t run from the numbers in the short term. Angelo is hurting at the moment, he has an immense amount of pride. And I have no doubt that, with his ability, he’ll come out with some answers. It’s our job as coaches to create an environment and to provide him with as much support as possible, in order for him to have the best chance of success.”

Sabbir Rahman loses BCB central contract, fined and suspended

The Bangladesh batsman will also be fined about $25,000 and barred from playing domestic cricket for the next six months as punishment for assaulting a fan during a first-class match

Mohammad Isam01-Jan-2018Bangladesh batsman Sabbir Rahman has been stripped of his BCB central contract as punishment for assaulting a fan during a first-class match. Sabbir has also been fined Tk 20 lakh ($25,000 approx) and barred from playing domestic cricket for the next six months.Sabbir was the first cricketer in Bangladesh to be punished in such a way. He was in Grade B in the BCB’s list of contracted cricketers, earning $30,000 in 2017. By being fined $25,000, he breaks his own record, having been fined Tk 12 lakh ($16,000 approx) for a serious disciplinary breach during the 2016 BPL.

Proposal to penalise Tamim for outfield comments

There is a proposal to fine Tamim Iqbal Tk 5 lakh ($6,250 approx) for his outburst against the outfield at the Shere Bangla National Stadium during the BPL. BCB chief Nazmul Hassan said that Tamim could also be warned to exercise caution while speaking to the media in future. A decision on the matter is likely later in the month.

After Comilla Victorians and Rangpur Riders struggled to get past 100 in their game on December 2, Tamim had criticised the pitch and also made a mention of the outfield, which the ICC had given a “poor” rating in September.

BCB president Nazmul Hassan spelled out these punishments after the disciplinary committee’s hearing on Monday. Hassan said the committee’s recommendations to punish Sabbir were “final” – meaning that he approved of them – although the board directors will have to endorse them in a meeting later.The incident took place on December 21, the second day of Rajshahi Division’s National Cricket League game against Dhaka Metropolis. Apart from assaulting the fan, Sabbir also allegedly misbehaved with the match referee after being summoned for investigation.According to the committee’s vice-chairman Sheikh Sohel, Sabbir apologised for his actions during Monday’s hearing. Sohel said Sabbir’s history of disciplinary breaches were kept in mind while deciding the punishment.”We felt that he didn’t learn anything from his past two punishments,” Sohel said. “We have meted out a heavy punishment. He is out of the national contract, which is a huge blow. He is also fined Tk 20 lakh. But this is his last chance. If he has another brush with indiscipline, he will be permanently suspended.”

Duckett set to miss start of season due to finger surgery

Ben Duckett will have the operation on the ring finger of his left hand next Monday with the recovery time estimated to be 12 weeks, which also rules him out of the North-South series

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Feb-2018Ben Duckett will miss the start of the English domestic season after it was decided he would undergo surgery on a finger injury sustained at the end of the 2017 summer.Duckett will have the operation on the ring finger of his left hand next Monday, with the recovery time estimated to be 12 weeks, after he carried the injury over the last few months.The surgery means that Duckett has also been ruled out of the North v South one-day series in Barbados in late March.It has been a difficult few months for Duckett, who played four Tests for England in late 2016 against Bangladesh and India, after he was caught up in controversy in Australia for throwing a drink over James Anderson in a Perth nightclub when the England Lions squad was alongside the main Ashes party.Duckett was not sent home at the time of the incident – which came just a few weeks after the Jonny Bairstow headbutt affair at the same club – but was suspended and given a written warning at the time then omitted from the Lions squad which is currently touring West Indies.Duckett’s absence will stretch the Northamptonshire squad at the start of their County Championship campaign. A 12-week timescale takes Duckett’s likely absence into May but his return could coincide with the start of the Royal London Cup.He will be replaced in the North’s squad by Adam Hose, the Warwickshire batsman, who impressed during Birmingham Bears’ run to the NatWest T20 Blast final.A change has also been required for the South after England allrounder Liam Dawson signed for the Pakistan Super League as a replacement for Shakib Al Hasan, with Ollie Pope, the Surrey batsman, taking his place.Dawson, who is currently with England’s T20 squad for the tri-series in Australia and New Zealand, had also been set to play in the one-day leg of the Lions series against West Indies A. The selectors have yet to decide whether to replace him for that portion of the tour.

Shakib ruled out of Nidahas Trophy

Mahmudullah will continue to lead the T20 side in the absence of Shakib, who is yet to recover from the finger injury he sustained during the ODI tri-series in January

Mohammad Isam03-Mar-2018Shakib Al Hasan has been ruled out of Bangladesh’s Nidahas Trophy campaign, as he still hasn’t recovered from his finger injury. Mahmudullah will continue to lead the Bangladesh T20 team in his absence while Liton Das has replaced him in the squad.Shakib injured the little finger on his left hand during the ODI tri-series final on January 27 and missed the Test and T20 series against Sri Lanka last month. He also didn’t play in the Pakistan Super League.Last week the BCB picked a 16-man squad with Mehidy Hasan Miraz as Shakib’s cover as the diagnosis till that point wasn’t encouraging. Shakib also consulted two orthopedists in Bangkok, and it now seems that his recovery will take longer than expected.Liton, meanwhile, has been in good form in the domestic List-A competition. He has scored 386 runs in five innings, including two centuries. In the BPL last year, Liton scored 261 runs in 12 innings at a strike-rate of 124.88. Liton is the third wicketkeeper in the squad, apart from Mushfiqur Rahim and Nurul Hasan.Bangladesh squad: Mahmudullah (capt), Tamim Iqbal, Soumya Sarkar, Imrul Kayes, Mushfiqur Rahim (wk), Sabbir Rahman, Mustafizur Rahman, Rubel Hossain, Taskin Ahmed, Abu Hider, Abu Jayed, Ariful Haque, Nazmul Islam, Nurul Hasan, Mehidy Hasan, Liton Das

New Lankan Premier League set to clash with CPL and T20 Blast

The six-team tournament is scheduled from August 18 and September 10, while the CPL is set to be played from August 8 to September 16 and the English domestic season ongoing throughout

Andrew Fidel Fernando16-Feb-2018Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) has finalised dates for its Lankan Premier League (LPL) T20 tournament, but its ability to attract foreign talent may be limited due to scheduling clashes with the Caribbean Premier League and England’s T20 Blast.The LPL is scheduled to run between August 18 and September 10, while the CPL is set to be played from August 8 to September 16, and the English domestic season ongoing throughout. The LPL will feature six teams in its inaugural edition.Although the clash seems an oversight, perhaps there was no way around it. With the IPL taking up almost two months, and the southern-hemisphere T20 leagues being played roughly from December to January, the Sri Lankan board is hamstrung by a busy schedule, not to mention the island’s monsoon season. An August-September window may be the best of a poor set of options.There is, at least, a slight lull in the international cricket schedule in those months. SLC may target players from New Zealand, Bangladesh and Australia, with those teams likely to be free during this period. Pakistan players could also be an option, particularly if their tour to Zimbabwe is called off. As the T20 blast and the CPL – in particular – are bigger-ticket tournaments, the LPL may struggle to attract the marquee players that other T20 tournaments boast.Nevertheless, news of a high-profile Sri Lankan T20 tournament will be welcomed by local players, who have not had a regular domestic T20 tournament over the past few years. SLC had hosted an IPL-style T20 event in 2012, called the SLPL. That tournament collapsed after its first edition, largely due to lack of interest.

ACA calls for reduction of 'disproportionate' sanctions for ball-tampering

The players’ body also asked CA to take the contrition shown by the players on their return to Australia into account, and allow them back into domestic cricket sooner

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Apr-2018The Australian Cricketers’ Association (ACA) has asked Cricket Australia to consider reducing the “disproportionate” sanctions on Steven Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft, the three players involved in the plan to tamper with the ball during the Cape Town Test.

‘I’d pick them for sure’ – Mark Waugh

Australia selector Mark Waugh has backed Steven Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft to make returns to the national side after they complete their bans for ball-tampering in Cape Town.
“I would (pick them), for sure,” Waugh told Sky Sports Radio. “My personal contact with these three guys is they’re all good people. Everyone makes mistakes. This is a major one.
“We all hope they bounce back to their best form when the penalties are finished. We should all look at the facts and you’ve got to let them back into the fold again. You’ve got to forgive them.”
Waugh also defended the Australian team against criticism of its culture.
“I don’t see this team as any different as any other team from previous eras,” he said. “Of course there’s the odd individual player who’ll push the boundaries. But to then say because of that there’s a whole toxic culture of Australian cricket, I’m just not seeing that. Most of this team, they’re so quiet on the field.”

Smith and Warner were banned from international and domestic cricket for 12 months, while Bancroft was banned for nine. Warner was also banned from holding leadership positions in Australian cricket for life, while Smith and Bancroft were banned from leadership positions for another 12 months after the end of their bans.”The proposed penalties are disproportionate relative to precedent,” ACA president Greg Dyer said in Sydney on Tuesday. “We ask that consideration be given to recalibrating the proposed sanctions, to consider options such as suspending or reducing part of the sanction. To consider allowing the players to return to domestic cricket earlier, for example, as part of their rehabilitation.”We believe [the bans] are disproportionate. We’ve pointed out the fact that incidents of this similar type have occurred previously, the sanctions are vastly less than what’s been suggested here. There’s a need to reconcile between the two, there’s a need to understand that disproportionality and to move forward. We’re in ongoing conversations with Cricket Australia through this process.”The players have until Thursday to decide whether to appeal the penalties imposed by CA or not.”The ACA is working strongly with the players,” Dyer said. “Their decisions are imminent but I’m not able to share them with you this morning. [It is] a deeply personal decision for the players. We’re supporting them through that process but ultimately [whether to appeal is] for the three players to decide.”Dyer was of the opinion that the administration needed to support the banned players during this time, and allowing them to stay involved with cricket would be beneficial. “The players need to be brought back into the confines of the game to be supported by the game – to be assisted by the game, in the rehabilitation,” Dyer said. “If the sanctions were to prevent that then I think that would be a bad outcome.”The loss of leadership is significant as a sanction … these are very substantial things that have occurred to these men. That needs to be brought into mind. Those [consequences] are over and above the length of the sentence.”Smith, Bancroft and Warner held press conferences after returning to Australia, where they expressed remorse for ball-tampering on the third day of the Newlands Test. All of them were extremely emotional during their press conferences and Dyer said their “extraordinary contrition” should be taken into account by CA.”The contrition shown by these men is extraordinary. We ask for this extraordinary contrition to be taken into account by Cricket Australia just as it would be in any fair or proper process. Their distressed faces have sent a message across the globe as effective as any sanctions could be. Australia cried with Steve Smith last Thursday. I certainly did. We expect this contrition to be taken into account.”

Luus, Niekerk fifties hand South Africa unassailable lead

The 32-run win in Bloemfontein put the hosts one victory shy of another clean-sweep, having claimed the ODI series 5-0.

ESPNcricinfo staff19-May-2018Sune Luus struck a brisk 35 before being run-out•ICC

Half-centuries from allrounders Sune Luus and Dane van Niekerk helped South Africa take an unassailable 2-0 lead over Bangladesh in the three-match T20I series. The 32-run win in Bloemfontein put the hosts one victory shy of another clean-sweep, having claimed the ODI series 5-0.Bangladesh had started positively in this game with the wicket of the in-form opener Lizelle Lee off the second ball of the match. Left-arm spinner Nahida Akter removed Lee for 4 – her lowest and only sub-30 score since the start of the ODI series – before medium-pacer Panna Ghosh dismissed Lee’s opening partner, debutant Tamzin Brits, for 10.Bangladesh’s early strikes, which reduced South Africa to 35 for 2 inside the Powerplay, were negated by a 96-run stand between Luus and Van Niekerk for the third wicket. The duo struck 20 fours and a six and helped propel South Africa to 169 for 4. Van Niekerk finished on 66 off 42 balls while Luus fell off the penultimate ball of the innings for a 57-ball 71 – her highest T20I score.Bangladesh were teetering on 21 for 2 after 3.5 overs of the chase. Marizanne Kapp struck with her fourth ball to dismiss opener Sanjida Islam for a duck; Shabnim Ismail, meanwhile, accounted for Rumana Ahmed. But halfway through the chase, Bangladesh were 74 for 2 and had reduced the equation to 96 needed from 60 balls.A 77-run stand between Shamima Sultana and Fargana Hoque for the third wicket anchored the innings, before Ismail dismissed Hoque. Sultana motored on to notch up Bangladesh’s maiden individual T20I fifty off only 39 balls, but she faced three more deliveries without scoring a run before being bowled. Of the 57 runs required off the last 18 balls, the visitors managed only 24. Bangladesh finished on 137 for 5 – their highest total in T20Is.

Injured Saha out of Afghanistan Test

Dinesh Karthik has been picked as replacement, ahead of Parthiv Patel

ESPNcricinfo staff02-Jun-20180:44

Quickinfo – Dinesh Karthik returns

A thumb injury sustained in the IPL has ruled India wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha out of playing their Test match against Afghanistan in Bengaluru on June 14. Dinesh Karthik has been picked as replacement, ahead of Parthiv Patel.Having been struck on his right thumb by a Shivam Mavi bouncer on May 25, Saha faces an estimated recovery period of five to six weeks. He also missed six games for Sunrisers Hyderabad in the IPL because of a shoulder niggle. The first Test in England starts on August 1 at Edgbaston.During India’s previous Test assignment in South Africa, both Parthiv and Karthik were added to the squad after Saha was sidelined with a hamstring niggle. It was Parthiv who was brought into the XI for the second and third Tests, but he managed only 56 runs in four innings. He had a particularly poor game in Centurion: dropped two catches and failed to attempt a third regulation chance.Karthik is set to play his first Test since 2010 and 24th overall since his debut in 2004. More recently, he captained Kolkata Knight Riders to the IPL playoffs and was the top-scorer for the side with 498 runs in 16 innings at an average of nearly 50 and strike rate of nearly 150.Updated India squad: Ajinkya Rahane (capt), Shikhar Dhawan, M Vijay, KL Rahul, Cheteshwar Pujara, Karun Nair, Dinesh Karthik (wk), R Ashwin, Ravindra Jadeja, Kuldeep Yadav, Umesh Yadav, Mohammed Shami, Hardik Pandya, Ishant Sharma, Shardul Thakur

Game
Register
Service
Bonus