Moin Khan omitted from Pakistan squad

Moin Khan: in one day, out the next © Getty Images

Moin Khan has been omitted from the 17-man Pakistan squad for the tour of the West Indies. Moin had been picked by the selectors in the provisional squad announced on Saturday (April 30), but the squad was then sent for ratification to the Pakistan board, which decided to exclude him. The rest of the line-up remains the same.The PCB has opted instead for Bazid Khan, a 24-year-old opener who has played two one-dayers so far. Bazid, the son of the former Pakistan captain Majid Khan, was in excellent form for Pakistan A during their recent tour of Sri Lanka, scoring 336 runs in three innings, including two centuries and a half-century in the two Tests.Pakistan will play three one-day internationals and two Tests on the tour, with the first match to be held in St Vincent on May 18.Pakistan squad
Salman Butt, Shahid Afridi, Bazid Khan, Yasir Hameed, Younis Khan, Inzamam-ul-Haq (capt), Yousuf Youhana, Asim Kamal, Shoaib Malik, Kamran Akmal (wk), Abdul Razzaq, Rana Naved-ul-Hasan, Shabbir Ahmed, Shahid Nazir, Rao Iftikhar Anjum, Arshad Khan, Danish Kaneria.

Bond returns for Zimbabwe tour

Shane Bond: back to the international fold after more than two years © Getty Images

Shane Bond has been included in both the Test and one-day squads for New Zealand’s tour of Zimbabwe in August. Jeetan Patel, the Wellington offspinner, was the only new face in the one-day side while the 15-man Test squad was picked on expected lines. Daryl Tuffey and Chris Harris have both been left out of the tour, with each given more time recover from their injuries and get back to fitness.Bond, 30, has been out of international cricket for more than two years owing to a back injury and his return as the spearhead of the attack will bolster a struggling New Zealand side who have won just four of their last 21 Tests.”It is exciting to see Shane Bond back after a successful return to first class cricket,” John Bracewell, the coach, was quoted as saying in the . “We will monitor his progress in Australia with the Emerging Players team and expect that should he continue to progress well, we will see him return to international cricket at some stage during the Zimbabwe tour.”Though there were indications a few players would not tour Zimbabwe on moral grounds, none declared their unavailability. Bracewell added that Tuffey would join Daniel Vettori, Chris Martin and Kyle Mills as extra players with the Emerging Players team going to Australia next week.Patel, 25, has picked up 86 wickets in 46 first-class games and Bracewell cited the reasons for his inclusion. “Patel has been selected for the one-day series as part of our buildup to the World Cup,” Bracewell said. “He bowled well at domestic level last season and has the ability to bowl under the bat and late in the innings. Spin bowlers of this type have been very successful in the West Indies.”Test squad
Stephen Fleming (capt), Daniel Vettori (vice-capt), Nathan Astle, Craig Cumming, Lou Vincent, Hamish Marshall, Scott Styris, James Marshall, Brendon McCullum (wk), Jacob Oram, Kyle Mills, James Franklin, Shane Bond, Chris Martin, Paul Wiseman.One-day squad
Stephen Fleming (capt), Daniel Vettori (vice-capt), Scott Styris, Nathan Astle, Chris Cairns, Lou Vincent, Hamish Marshall, Brendon McCullum (wk), Craig McMillan, Jacob Oram, Andre Adams, Kyle Mills, Jeetan Patel, Shane Bond.

Ponting admits Somerset game is important

Ponting: “By the time Saturday and Sunday come around, there won’t be any excuses” © Getty Images

Ricky Ponting has admitted that Australia’s embarrassing collapse against England in the Twenty20 international has raised the stakes involved in Wednesday’s one-day game with Somerset.Australia looked decidedly rusty as they were skittled for 79 by England’s bowlers at The Rose Bowl on Monday in the first hostilities between the two countries ahead of the Ashes Test series. And Ponting admitted it was now important that the likes of Michael Hussey and Michael Clarke get some time at the wicket at Taunton before the triangular series with England and Bangladesh gets underway at the weekend.”Half of the reason Hussey and Clarke batted where they did on Monday was to have some time in the middle. But Clarke got out first ball and Hussey only faced half a dozen,” Ponting said. “We’ve got to look at that. The good thing is that Hussey has been playing a lot of cricket over here with Durham so he shouldn’t be out of touch. I’ve also kept a pretty close eye on him in training and he looks pretty good.”Clarke did a lot of work at home pre-season but there is nothing as good as some time in the middle as we all know. Hopefully both Hussey and Clarke, and even myself and Damien Martyn, will have time in the middle in the Taunton game. It is probably a pretty important game for us now against Somerset and we’ve certainly got to try and get whatever we can out of that.”We had a good game down at Leicester the other day. We got a lot out of that game as far as batsmen getting time in the middle and the bowlers having a good work-out. Hopefully we can do the same at Taunton.”And Ponting admitted there were areas work on: “We can all improve a little bit. It takes a little time to get back into the pace of the game at international level. We’d had two months off leading into this tour. I’m sure there is still a bit of rustiness there although I’ve been happy with what we have done. By the time Saturday and Sunday come around, there won’t be any excuses as far as preparation goes from us.”Australia face Bangladesh at Cardiff on Saturday and will get their chance for revenge when they again lock horns with England at Bristol on Sunday.Ponting also revealed that he would not be in favour of the Twenty20 format being used for a mini World Cup. He said: “I think we will play a few more of these games around the world. It has been great for the game over here in England. When I played one for Somerset last season we had a full house and it’s done a lot for the game over here.”It’s a good game for the fans. I don’t see it becoming a Twenty20 World Cup. I think it is better being played as a fun, more light-hearted sort of game. That’s my opinion. I don’t think it should be taken that seriously.”

NZ government may ban Zimbabwe

Phil Goff: ‘The Zimbabwe cricket team should not anticipate that it will be granted entry into New Zealand’

New Zealand may ban a planned tour by the Zimbabwe cricket team scheduled for December because of “appalling abuses of human rights” perpetrated by Robert Mugabe’s government, Phil Goff, the country’s foreign minister, has stated.”The Zimbabwe cricket team should not anticipate that it will be granted entry into New Zealand,” Goff said in a statement. “The imposition of a ban on the team would send a strong message to the Mugabe regime that New Zealanders and their government abhor the actions it is taking against its people.”Mugabe’s government has been pulling down thousands of homes and businesses, leaving hundreds of thousands homeless in winter, according to the United Nations. The destruction targeting mostly poor areas has been condemned worlwide and follows March elections described as a sham by foreign governments. Goff said he had been advised Thursday of the planned tour by Zimbabwe and he had not yet had a chance to discuss it with the cabinet or get legal advice.”However, given the current appalling abuses of human rights and relentless trend of the Zimbabwe government towards a dictatorship, the New Zealand government would not welcome a visit from a side representing Zimbabwe at this time.” New Zealand Cricket officials were not available for comment. Martin Snedden, the NZC chief executive, and Sir John Anderson, the chairman, were on their way to London for the ICC annual meeting.Earlier, Goff said the government had no legal way of stopping the scheduled tour by the New Zealand cricket team to Zimbabwe in August. Full strength Test and one-day squads for the tour were announced by NZC on Wednesday.”Only a dictatorial, autocratic regime can stop New Zealanders from leaving their own country,” Goff explained. “That’s exactly what we’re protesting about in terms of what Mugabe is doing.”Nevertheless, the government would prefer the tour not take place but NZC said that its players had unanimously agreed to embark on the five-week tour after an independent security report gave the all clear. Snedden told reporters that the team would be liable for a fine of more than $2 mllion under ICC rules if it pulled out.

ICC gives NZ a release clause on Zimbabwe tour

Ehsan Mani has recognised that the NZ board may have to fall in line with government directives © Getty Images

The International Cricket Council ruled out cancelling New Zealand’s tour to Zimbabwe next month but said it accepted the New Zealand government could stop it going ahead. The New Zealand government has opposed the tour because of alleged human rights abuses in Zimbabwe. But it has ruled out legislating a ban on the tour or directing New Zealand cricket to cancel it.Ehsan Mani, the International Cricket Council (ICC) chairman, has said in a letter that the ICC had rejected the New Zealand government’s request to alter its tour schedule. However the letter conceded that the ICC recognised the reality that governments could apply sporting sanctions. “Our members accept and respect that where this clear directive is given by a national government, the obligations of the future tours programme will not apply.”A spokesman for New Zealand Foreign Minister Phil Goff said clarification was being sought from the ICC on what would constitute a clear directive. “We want to clarify whether a parliamentary motion saying New Zealand Cricket should not tour would be sufficient to give New Zealand Cricket a release,” the spokesman said.Unless New Zealand cricket can win a release from its tour obligations, it faces a fine of at least US$2million and claims from Zimbabwe for lost revenue. Opposition to the tour has grown in New Zealand as Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe’s government presses ahead with a campaign to demolish shacks and other illegal homes and businesses, leaving hundreds of thousands homeless.Zimbabwe’s first black Test cricketer Henry Olonga arrived in New Zealand Tuesday to support the campaign to cancel the tour, saying the situation in his former country could be likened to apartheid in South Africa.

Pitch not likely to be a spinners' paradise

Spinner’s turn: Shane Warne faces the media as Australia prepare of Thursday’s Test © Getty Images

Rumours that the Old Trafford pitch might be a spinners’ paradise were scotched by Jim Cumbes, Lancashire’s chief executive, when he told reporters that it was likely to favour quick rather than slow bowlers.”At the moment the pitch is like concrete,” he said. “There is plenty of pace and bounce and at this stage I would expect it to favour the seamers rather than the spinners. Traditionally it has favoured spin but it has been prepared slightly differently this time because of the weather. There should be some turn from the fourth day on, but I don’t think it will be turning sideways early in the match.”That view was backed by Old Trafford groundsman Peter Marron. “Everyone keeps telling me it will turn square. I don’t think it will. It’s rolled out flat, it’s got a polished surface and the weather forecast is good.” But he added that it would offer something for the slow men. We spent years trying to get pitches to turn for English bowlers,” he smiled. “It happens to do it naturally now. But I don’t think it will turn as quickly as everyone thinks it will”On the evidence of matches this season, there seems little to support claims that the ball could turn sideways early on. The most successful bowler at Manchester in 2005 is Durham’s Steve Harmison.Stuart MacGill, who was expected to partner Shane Warne, might now sit out the game, but he said that a faster surface would still suit him. “It may well actually work in our favour, because a bit of extra pace in the deck wouldn’t hurt me much.”But while the Australians appear unfazed, Tony Ware, the head curator of the MCG, told Sydney’s SEN radio that any attempts to prepare a quick track to negate Warne and MacGill could end in disaster. “It’s a tricky exercise,” he explained. “I think their only option, if they want to not have a spinning wicket, they have to have almost a damp wicket on day one or day two, which only means that the Test match becomes determined by the toss of the coin, which nobody wants to see. If the curator is under a bit of direction to put water on the wicket so close to a game under English conditions, I think they need to be a little careful with that.”

England v Australia, 3rd Test, Old Trafford

Australia 302 and 366 for 9 (Ponting 156, Flintoff 4-71) drew with England 444 and 280 for 6 dec
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details5th day
Bulletin – England come agonisingly close
Verdict – The draw that roared
Australian View – Captaincy when it counted
Quotes – “I thought I had let it slip”
On the Ball – Ponting finds his feet
Cosmic Corner – It’s written in the stars
Roving Reporter – Thousands join the jittery stampede
Gallery – Pictures from the fifth day
4th day
Bulletin – Strauss to leaves Australia facing huge target
Verdict – England’s jigsaw begins to take shape
Aus view – Australia face their day of destiny
On the ball – England’s dark horse delivers
Quotes – Strauss and McGrath reflect on the day
Gallery – Pictures from the fourth day
News – Australia rocked by Warne and Ponting bust-up
3rd day
Bulletin – Warne saves the follow-on
Verdict – Warne is the leader Australia lack
Aus view – Taking an unfamiliar route
Quotes – Fletcher plays down Jones errors
Paper Round – The tables are turned
Spot of the Day – Warne saves Australia again
Roving Reporter – And the rains came down
News – Clarke’s back troubles likely to persist
Gallery – Pictures from the third day2nd day
Bulletin – Giles and Jones leave Australia struggling
Verdict – Lost in transition
Aus view – Taking an unfamiliar route
Quotes – ‘I’ve done what Ashley Giles can do’
On the Ball – Giles turns it on
Gallery – Pictures from the second day
1st day
Bulletin – Vaughan leads England’s charge
Gallery – Pictures from the first day
Verdict – Australia fear the unthinkable
Australian View – A leader in need of direction
Quotes – Vaughan and Warne play to type
News – Clarke suffers back injury
On the ball – Putting it all together
Shane Warne’s 600
News – Warne reaches 600 wickets
Stats – The road to 600
Comment – The ride of the decade
Ian Healy – Bowled Shane
Tribute – Wisden Cricketer of the Century
My Favourite Cricketer – Magic in his wrists
Preview package
Preview – Warne to the fore as Ashes come ablaze
Stats – Warne’s playground

McGrath fit to play at The Oval

Glenn McGrath is raring to have a crack at England © Getty Images

Glenn McGrath, the Australian fast bowler, has declared himself ready for the final Ashes Test at The Oval beginning on September 8 after missing the fourth Test at Trent Bridge because of an injured elbow. He had also sustained an ankle injury that made him miss the second Test at Edgbaston.”It’s back to business as usual for the fifth Test. I’ve made a full recovery and will definitely play at The Oval,” McGrath said in . “It’s been frustrating sitting out two of the first four Tests, but now I can get at England in the decider.”Conceding that his prediction of a 5-0 Australian win was incorrect, McGrath was confident that Australia would regroup to win at The Oval. “I concede I got my figures wrong in predicting that England would collapse to a 5-0 whitewash. My statement has proved to be way off beam, but I’ve lost none of my confidence in backing Australia’s ability to retain the Ashes. Come the end of The Oval Test, I believe the precious urn will remain where it belongs – in our hands. Our focus is only on winning the fifth Test. Nothing less than a total triumph will do.”Australia have lost both the Tests that McGrath missed, giving England an unbeatable 2-1 lead. A drawn series will mean that Australia retain the Ashes. McGrath underwent training on Friday without his elbow causing any problems but sat out of the tour match against Essex as a precaution.

The Strauss and Warne show

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Shane Warne breathed passion on the opening day at The Oval and kept Australia in the hunt © Getty Images

Andrew Strauss and Shane Warne were the star performers on the opening day of the deciding Ashes Test at The Oval. It was only right that the start of such an important match produced another see-saw day, which left the destination of the Ashes as delicately poised as when play began. Strauss’s seventh Test century was the mainstay of England’s stop-start innings and Warne’s 5 for 118 meant Australia were always in contention as he again manfully carried the attack.Everyone at The Oval, and the millions watching the action around the world, hoped for a day that would stand the test of this amazing series and begin a fitting finale – they were not disappointed. There was something for all; from the watchful accumulation of Strauss, the stunning strokeplay of Andrew Flintoff, the mastery of Shane Warne and the sheer determination of Australia not to let go of their little urn.Each of the sessions was its own mini-drama. Following a rollicking start by Strauss and Marcus Trescothick, Warne began yet another master class of legspin. Then Strauss and Flintoff built their brilliant fourth-wicket stand of 143 as England took control in the afternoon. But, Australia weren’t finished and with three late wickets they claimed the final-session honours.Following the opening stand of 82 the major contribution to England’s innings was the partnership between Strauss and Flintoff, which produced two contrasting knocks from two contrasting players. Strauss has not always been at his most fluent during this series but had his game in top working order from the start of play.His judgment of what to play and what to leave was excellent, as was his shot selection. He played carefully against Warne and was content to pick his runs off the quicker bowlers as England consolidated following their mini-collapse against Warne where they lost 4 for 49. Flintoff played well within himself – aware of the importance of his wicket to both teams – but still timed the ball with effortless ease.

Andrew Strauss celebrates his seventh Test century and second against Australia © Getty Images

Ricky Ponting was faced with a familiar problem of who to bowl in place of McGrath and Warne. Brett Lee was not at the top of his game – firing too many balls down the leg side – and for every impressive delivery Shaun Tait produced there was another four-ball just around the corner. Strauss and Flintoff waited for these looser deliveries and generally found the boundary despite the now-obligatory defensive fields. Even when England were four wickets down, following their midday wobble, Ponting often resorted to one slip and only had the confidence to attack the batsmen while Warne was bowling.Confidence is something that exudes from Flintoff and he opened his shoulders after playing himself in, taking three consecutive fours off Warne to reach his fifty before launching him into the stands for a majestic straight six. Strauss moved along in more measured fashion and reached his second Ashes century off 150 balls.But then another shift in momentum took place. McGrath removed Flintoff, with Warne again in the thick of the action – but this time with his catching. Flintoff prodded at a ball outside off stump and Warne took a sharp, low catch stood at the solitary slip. Paul Collingwood, England’s only replacement player throughout this Ashes series, did not last too long as he attracted one of the few balls from Tait that would have threatened the stumps. Collingwood was beaten for pace by a yorker, although replays showed the ball struck him just outside off stump. The Australians won’t care about that – they will think they are owed a couple of decisions in their favour.Warne claimed his fifth wicket when he removed Strauss half an hour before the close thanks to a brilliant piece of anticipation from Simon Katich at silly point, holding on to the pad-bat chance inches from the ground. It was fitting that Warne claimed the final wicket of the day as he was the man who ignited Australia during the morning session.Although it had all been plain sailing in the opening hour for Trescothick and Strauss, Warne said, before this match, how determined he is to make a mark in his final Test in this country and again he let his actions to the talking.

Strauss’s 129 is ended by a brilliant catch from Simon Katich © Getty Images

With the seamers being taken at over four-an-over Ponting was again forced to throw the ball to Warne inside the first hour. The outcome – certainly on the form of this series – was predictable. There has hardly been a moment when Warne hasn’t been having an influence on the situation. On almost every occasion when Australia have needed a wicket Warne has put his hand up. He came to the fore again as he removed Trescothick – courtesy of a stunning catch by Matthew Hayden at slip.He struck again to remove Michael Vaughan, who clipped a catch to Michael Clarke at midwicket before capping a great morning fightback when Ian Bell was trapped lbw for a duck by the slider. Warne was producing all his variations, including the rarely seen googly and Australia had suddenly grabbed the advantage out of nowhere. Their position was further enhanced when Kevin Pietersen fell shortly after lunch to a poorly judged and executed whip across the line. It was not the consolidation that England required.But any thoughts that England may start to think about playing for draw were rapidly banished by Strauss and Flintoff, and any thoughts that Australia were going to lose their grip on the Ashes without the toughest of struggles was dispelled by their subsequent surge of wickets. The series deserves a fittingly thrilling and gripping finish and on the evidence of today that is what it will get.

EnglandMarcus Trescothick c Hayden b Warne 43 (82 for 1)
Michael Vaughan c Clarke b Warne 11 (102 for 2)
Ian Bell lbw Warne 0 (104 for 3)
Kevin Pietersen b Warne 14 (131 for 4)
Andrew Flintoff c Warne b McGrath 72 (274 for 5)
Paul Collingwood lbw b Tait 7 (289 for 6)
Andrew Strauss c Katich b Warne 129 (297 for 7)

Inzamam puts faith in spinners

Inzamam-ul-Haq will hope for scenes like this as Pakistan prepare spin-friendly tracks for England © Getty Images

Inzamam-ul-Haq, the Pakistan captain, has made it clear that spin-friendly conditions would play a decisive role in combating England’s aggressive batting.”The home team has only one advantage, the wickets you play on,” Inzamam was quoted as saying by . “Danish Kaneria has been our main bowler for the past year and we intend on giving him wickets which will offer assistance.”Under Inzamam and Bob Woolmer, the coach, Pakistan has often chosen Shahid Afridi as the back-up spinner. Afridi’s under-rated legspin has been seen as a suitable foil to Kaneria, but with veteran Mushtaq Ahmed’s name doing the rounds two conventional legspinners may take the field. “Mushtaq has plenty of experience,” Inzamam said. “I am not in favour of blooding anyone in a series of such pressure.”Pakistan has not played international cricket since June, a fact Inzamam rues. “A lay-off for four to five months is unthinkable nowadays. I think England start as favourites. We must play positively to dent their confidence.” He also stressed the importance of good teamwork. “All eleven have to contribute; one or two players will not be able to swing it for us.”The relationship between Inzamam and Shoaib Akhtar, the fast bowler, has been publicly debated ever since Inzamam suggested that Akhtar had feigned a wrist injury to avoid bowling against India 18 months ago. Inzamam was keen to challenge any rumours of a rift between the two. “Let me clarify that I don’t have a problem with Shoaib. If he’s fit, it’s in my interest to have him in the side.” Both players were part of the World XI tour to Australia this month, though Shoaib was not selected for the Super Test in Sydney. “He has to return home and play the practice first-class matches,” Inzamam added.

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