Gilchrist ready for form turnaround

Adam Gilchrist is happy with his wicketkeeping, but desperate for runs © Getty Images

Adam Gilchrist is confident of reversing a worrying batting slump as Australia eye-ball South Africa in the third and final Test at the SCG. While Gilchrist’s wicketkeeping has been so good Ian Healy recently rated it the best of his career, his run-scoring has been dramatically reduced and he has passed double figures only twice in his past five Tests.”You go through three or four low scores and you say, ‘Oh, nothing’s wrong. It’s no big deal’,” he said in . “But it’s continued on and it’s definitely been the longest run of low scores I’ve had to endure in my international career. I desperately want runs but I don’t feel pressure from anything external.”Gilchrist said his biggest frustration was finishing a game and knowing he had not contributed with the bat. “That’s new for me,” he said.Focusing on wicketkeeping has helped Gilchrist through the slump. “I’ve always said that is my No. 1 job, and I stand by that,” he said. “I have that belief [runs] will come eventually. Through my career if I have been batting well I have kept well. This is a nice scenario for me because the runs aren’t coming but I feel like I’m managing the other side of things pretty well.”

Hayden passed fit for New Zealand tour

Matthew Hayden: ready for the New Zealand challenge© Getty Images

Matthew Hayden has been declared fit to tour New Zealand for the five-match one-day series. Hayden had been struggling with a chest infection which forced him to miss last Friday’s ING Cup match between Queensland and Western Australia, but was cleared in Brisbane.Dr Trefor James, the Cricket Australia medical officer, said: “Matthew underwent fitness testing and was able to get through two heavy sessions without any difficulties or ill effects. He was reviewed by Queensland Cricket medical staff who were very happy with his progress.”Hayden will get another opportunity to wrest back the opener’s spot, which was taken by Michael Clarke during the VB Series finals. Hayden has had a horror run in both Tests and one-dayers in the last season, but Trevor Hohns, the chairman of selectors, indicated that Hayden would get another chance to regain his slot in New Zealand.Talking about the illness which had laid him low, Hayden said: “I felt very sick. My lung capacity was way below 50%. I felt not dissimilar to having pre-flu symptoms but as the week went on the pleurisy symptoms really started to hurt to the point where you just couldn’t breathe in air.”But I am on the road to recovery which is a good thing. I think I was relying on how I was hitting the ball today. If I was feeling terrible after hitting balls in the nets it was a sure sign I wasn’t fit. I definitely feel all right to go.”The Australia squad will leave for New Zealand on Wednesday, and will play a Twenty20 international on Thursday. The first ODI is at Wellington on Saturday and the tour will be followed by three Tests.

Clubs to bear the brunt of Zimbabwe boycott fallout

The financial ramifications of England’s refusal to play in Zimbabwe during the 2003 World Cup continue to be felt, but a report in the Daily Telegraph claims that the brunt of the cutbacks caused by the loss of income will fall on club cricket.Barrie Stuart-King, chief executive of the Club Cricket Conference (CCC) and a member of the ECB’s recreational advisory group, told the CCC’s annual dinner that central funding to clubs was set to be cut to a far greater extent than it was to the first-class counties.He also revealed that a deficit of between £2-4 million had been unearthed in the ECB’s pension fund for staff and umpires.”The reasons for the cut include the uncertainty over the fine yet to be imposed for the England-Zimbabwe fiasco, estimated at £1.3 million, and the recently discovered black hole in the ECB staff and umpires’ pension fund," Stuart-King explained. "Neither has anything to do with recreational cricket.”And he delivered a stinging attack on the way that the funding was effectively controlled by “18 private members’ clubs” – the professional counties. "The ECB’s idea of ‘one game’ is a joke,” he said, but he admitted that the lower levels of the game were powerless to do anything but accept their fate.

Midlands in dominant position after Matabeleland batting fails again

Matabeleland seem to have given away their Logan Cup match against Midlands as they were hit by another batting nightmare on the second day of play at Bulawayo Athletic Club. The home side lost five quick wickets to end on 80 for five at the close of play, still needing 81 runs to make the visitors take a second innings.This was after Midlands scored 353 all out in 99 overs in their first innings in reply to the 192 scored by the home side on the first day. Midlands resumed at their overnight score of 107 with Terrence Duffin and Sean Ervine resisting the pace in the early overs of the day. However the two did not last as the Matabeleland bowlers fought back.Ervine was the first to leave the field of play when he edged a Norman Mukondiwa delivery weakly to second slip where an alert Tawanda Mupariwa took a diving catch to send him back for 20 runs, meaning that the Zimbabwean international added only one run to his overnight score of 19. Duffin followed in the next over when he was dismissed by Gregory Strydom, caught at leg gully by Mike McKillop for 74, which included 13 fours.Midlands lost captain Dirk Viljoen for 55 when he was given out leg before wicket to spinner Mecury Kenny, and they went to lunch on 241 for five. After lunch the Matabeleland bowlers tightened the noose and that worked well for them as they manage to restrain most of the Midlands batsmen. Right-arm spinner Gavin Ewing grabbed the wicket of Kornford, bowling the middle-order batsman for 49. John Vaughan-Davies fell to McKillop a few overs after lunch, trapped leg before wicket for 10 runs.Ewing finished off the Midlands batting line-up when he grabbed two wickets.He removed Paul Reilly leg before wicket for a duck and went on to bowl Campbell McMillan for 59 to finish off the visitors. Ewing proved to be thetoast of the disappointing Matabeleland bowling attack, with the spinner taking five for 80 in his 28-over spell, with seven maidens. Pace bowler Strydom took two for 72 with one maiden in 19 overs, while Mukondiwa, Kenny and McKillop took a wicket apiece.In their second innings Matabeleland changed their batting line-up, with Wisdom Siziba, who scored 103 in the first innings, opening with Keith Dabengwa. That ploy however did not yield any results as Dabengwa could score only 13 runs before he was bowled by Viljoen. Kenny was trapped leg before wicket by McMillan for only two runs, with Siziba failing to regain his terrific form of the first innings, scoring only 28 runs before being bowled by Vaughn-Davies.Gregory Strydom had managed only five runs when he skied a ball from Kornford and saw McMillan take a brilliant catch at third man. Norman Mukondiwa, who was also brought up the order, could not stand the pressure piled on by the Midlands attack, and was trapped leg before wicket by McMillan for a duck. King and McKillop were left unbeaten with 19 and 0 respectively.Matabeleland manager Derrick Townshend admitted that his boys were having abad time but said the match was far from over. He was disappointed with thebowlers who he said should have restricted the visitors to a score of lessthan 300.

Anoop Pai helps Hyderabad take the vital lead

A strokefilled 94 by Anoop Pai helped Hyderabad take the vital firstinnings lead over Rajasthan in their Vijay Merchant Trophyquarterfinal match at the Deshbandhu Park in Calcutta on Saturday. Atstumps on the second day, Hyderabad were 290 for four in reply toRajasthan’s 254, compiled on Thursday.Resuming at two for no loss, the Hyderabad openers Prasanth Peter (89)and Imran Khan (47) put on 70 runs in 29.1 overs. Imran was the firstto be dismissed, caught by B Ranjan off S Godara. Hyderabad skipper ATRayudu (7) did not last long and in the 32nd over was caught by VivekYadav off Naresh Bhati.Anoop Pai then joined Prasanth Peter and the pair put their heads downto add 159 runs for the third wicket off 40 overs. Peter was thefourth batsman to be dismissed when he offered a catch to V Mathur offG Tanwar. During a 287-minute stay at the crease, Peter faced 213balls and hit nine fours and three sixes.Anoop then fell leg before to V Mathur with the score at 263, afterhelping Hyderabad cross the Rajasthan total. At stumps Abhinav Kumar(18) and Niranjan (14) were at the crease

Liverpool favourites to sign Gleison Bremer

Liverpool are reportedly the current front-runners to sign dominant Torino centre-back Gleison Bremer in the summer transfer window.

The Lowdown: Bremer’s monstrous season

The 24-year-old has been an impressive performer for Torino this season, making 25 starts in Serie A and helping his side sit 11th in the table.

Bremer has averaged 3.9 aerial duel wins per game, highlighting his prowess in that area of his game, and he has also enjoyed 3.5 clearances and interceptions apiece per match. To put that into perspective, all three of those numbers would rank in first place amongst the current Reds squad.

Liverpool have been linked with a move for the Brazilian in the past and an exciting rumour has now emerged.

The Latest: Liverpool favourites to sign defender

According to Tuttosport [via Sport Witness], ‘in first place is Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool’ when it comes to the race to acquire Bremer’s signature.

Jurgen Klopp himself is believed to have ‘great interest’ in snapping up the Torino man, whose current contract expires in the summer of 2024.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/latest-liverpool-transfer-news-23/” title=”Latest Liverpool transfer news!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

The Verdict: Goodbye, Joe Gomez?

Should this rumour be true, you have to wonder if it could spell the end of Joe Gomez’s time at the club, with the Englishman linked with a move away from Anfield earlier this week.

He is already fourth in the centre-back pecking order behind Virgil van Dijk, Joel Matip and Ibrahima Konate, and Bremer surely wouldn’t be coming in as fifth choice.

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The defender would be an exciting addition to Klopp’s squad, given his age and his aforementioned statistics this season, but whether or not he is happy to play a squad role remains to be seen.

In other news, Liverpool would reportedly jump at the chance to sign one player. Find out who it is here.

Unpredictable wicket awaits both teams

Rahul Dravid will be aiming to get some more runs under the belt ahead of the Test series against Pakistan © Cricinfo Ltd

“You can’t take any team lightly these days. You don’t know which bush will throw up what snake.” These words, by Vijay Bharadwaj, the Karnataka coach, indicates how cautiously they are approaching the Ranji Trophy game against Himachal Pradesh. Karnataka will start as clear favourites, though: the team has Anil Kumble, who has just become the national captain, and Rahul Dravid, fresh from a double-hundred. Plus, they are playing at home.Both teams are carrying just one point from their previous games, as the batting let them down in the first innings. Karnataka collapsed against the spin of Ramesh Powar on a tricky first-day wicket against Mumbai while HP struggled against the Saurashtra spinners – Kamlesh Makvana and Rakesh Dhurv – and collapsed sensationally from 131 for 1 to 181.”It was one bad session of batting that cost us dearly,” Sandeep Sharma, HP’s captain, said. “But we are confident of a better show against Karnataka. Our bowling is in very good shape and I am sure the batsmen will come to the party.”Sharma has reason to believe that his team won’t be embarrassed. In Vikramjeet Singh Malik and Ashok Thakur, the left-arm seamer who took 11 wickets in the last game, they have a decent pace attack. And spin is their main strike weapon as they have the in-form left-arm spinner Vishal Bhatia and Sarandeep Singh, the former India offspinner who moved from Punjab to HP last season. Bhatia, who was the highest wicket-taker in the Plate league with 38 victims, and Sarandeep, who took 28 wickets last season, ensured that HP didn’t lose a single game en route to becoming the Plate champions.Their batting will be led by the captain himself and he will look to the young players like Paras Dogra, wicketkeeper Maninder Bisla, and Manish Gupta to get the runs on the board. Dogra was the top scorer last season with 528 runs at 48, while Sharma, too, enjoyed a good season.They have a fairly unchanged nucleus for the last three years. “We all know each other pretty well, there are quite a few talented youngsters, and it’s a very healthy attitude that prevails in our camp,” Sharma said. How these youngsters adapt to the challenge of playing against the experienced Karnataka players on an untested wicket will be the key.

A win while leading Karnataka would boost Anil Kumble’s confidence ahead of the his first stint as India’s Test captain © Getty Images

The pitch is of some concern as it was recently re-laid, and just a couple of games have been played on the new surface. The top layer has been changed, with soil brought in from Kakinada, a district in Andhra Pradesh. It’s anybody’s guess how the track will play; some players from both teams think it will assist spinners fairly early in the game as they reckoned the top surface is quite powdery. The curator, however, is confident it will hold up for the game.”We have left a sprinkling of grass on the track and it should hold up. It should be a sporting wicket,” Narayan Raju, the chief curator, told Cricinfo. “Of course it will take spin, perhaps from the end of the second day or by the third day.”Both teams have said that they will bat first if the coin falls in their favour. “Since it’s a newly laid track, we would look to bat first,” Bharadwaj said.Dravid practised for nearly a couple of hours in the morning on the practice wickets and he would be itching to have another big knock under his belt before the Tests against Pakistan. Kumble, who was in Mumbai for the selection meeting, is expected to fly back tonight and will pair up with Sunil Joshi as Karnataka’s spin weapons. The fast bowlers, Kumble will hope his fast bowlers – Vinay Kumar and NC Aiyappa, who was restricted to just one game due to an injury in the last season and bowled well only in patches in the last game – can put up a good show. Karnataka is likely to go with the same team that drew against Mumbai, while HP will finalise their playing XI tomorrow.

Warne routs England again

Australia 2 for 48 (Hayden 17*, Ponting 0*) trail England 159 (Strauss 50, Warne 5-39) by 111 runs
Live scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Shane Warne bowls Andrew Strauss to become the first man to reach 700 Test wickets © Getty Images

Shane Warne’s greatest strength, as befits the greatest bowler of the modern era, is not his prodigious ability to spin a cricket ball or the phenomenal accuracy with which he goes about his work. It is his ability to impose his iron will on any given occasion. And today, on the occasion of his final Test on his home ground at Melbourne, and with 699 Test wickets to his name, Warne rose above the conditions, the emotion, and most of all, his abject English opponents, to deliver the perfect belated Christmas present to an adoring crowd of 89,155.For all that he is Melbourne’s favourite son, Warne had absolutely no right to lord it to quite the extent that he did. On a miserably cold and damp day, the start of which was delayed by half-an-hour by morning drizzle, Warne took 5 for 39 in 17.2 overs of pure mischief-making. It was his 37th five-wicket haul in 144 Tests, his third in 11 at the MCG, and he didn’t even enter the attack until the 41st over of the day, by which stage two wickets had already been lost and several more were threatening to topple in conditions perfect for seam and swing.But that mattered not a jot to Warne, who sensed his stage and toyed with England as well as the crowd. Two overs before he was finally thrown the ball, he made as if to go to his mark and the crowd roared as Justin Langer took his cap off his head only to return it seconds later, and, when he did finally enter the attack, he needed only four overs to deliver the moment that his entire country had been awaiting. At 3.18pm, he bowled Andrew Strauss for an even 50 to reach 700 in Tests.The delivery that did for Strauss was a classic Warne dismissal, a flighted ball that dipped into the rough, bit and crashed into middle stump as the batsman played loosely for an imagined half-volley. The timing was especially shattering for England, who had lost Paul Collingwood two balls earlier to end a third-wicket stand of 57 – the highest of their innings. After that the rest of the innings passed like a Jubilee procession.Admittedly, it took Warne a while to get back in on the act again, but it hardly seemed to matter. Australia were unusually inept in the field – Matthew Hayden missed a straightforward chance in the gully and Adam Gilchrist muffed two chances behind the stumps, including a howler of a stumping against Kevin Pietersen – but they correctly surmised that another chance would be along before long.Sure enough, Warne bagged his second when Chris Read – picked in place of the out-of-form Geraint Jones – slapped a schoolboyish drive to short cover for 3 and returned to face the icy glare of his unamused coach, Duncan Fletcher. Steve Harmison heaved a wide ball to mid-on and trudged off for 7 before Pietersen, who seemed to be past caring by this stage, hoisted a steepler to Andrew Symonds in front of the screen screen. Warne wrapped up the innings when Monty Panesar, newly promoted to No. 10, scuffed another heave across the line and picked out Symonds again at mid-on.It had been, as Ricky Ponting admitted, a good toss to lose – and it was Flintoff who, understandly enough, chose to bat first. Glenn McGrath, like Warne, was making his final appearance in Melbourne, and he set the tone for the day in his very first over with a series of 125kph offbreaks. It was Brett Lee, however, who made the initial breakthrough when Alastair Cook – England’s centurion at the WACA – under-edged an attempted leave to Adam Gilchrist behind the stumps.

Matthew Hoggard should have had Matthew Hayden lbw on two occasions © Getty Images

Given the conditions, Australia’s star performers should have been the slower seamers – McGrath, Stuart Clark and Andrew Symonds, who managed just three wickets between them but should have had at least seven. Ian Bell, who almost ran himself out first ball, was trapped lbw for 7 by Clark, who also added the captain, Flintoff, for another uneasy innings of 13. McGrath, meanwhile, had to make do with the sole scalp of Sajid Mahmood. It was another unworthy swipe that earned the wicket, but it was at least McGrath’s 150th in Tests against England.When their turn came late in the day, England did bowl pluckily in the circumstances, but without luck as umpire Rudi Koertzen turned down numerous lbw shouts – with Hoggard staring incredulously into his eyes after one particularly marginal call against Matthew Hayden. Flintoff managed to pop up with two in two balls before the close, removing Justin Langer and the nightwatchman Lee, but Warne’s exploits had already sealed the day’s honours.

Short cuts

Play of the day
Shane Warne’s 700th wicket was the moment most of the MCG wanted to see and Warne obliged his home fans by bowling Andrew Strauss in his fourth over. Figures of 5 for 39 provided an ideal start to his two-game farewell.Smart decision of the day
The umpires choosing to stay on the field for most of the first session. Misty rain hit the ground at times but it wasn’t until a heavy shower forced an early lunch that they gave in.Not so smart decisions of the day
It wasn’t a great day for Rudi Koertzen. Matthew Hayden should not have survived two lbw decisions to Matthew Hoggard and Paul Collingwood benefited when hit on the pads by Stuart Clark before he had scored.Surprise of the day
Was it the cold weather or slippery hands? The Australians had a sloppy day in the field, with Adam Gilchrist missing a stumping and a catch and Matthew Hayden dropping Andrew Strauss in the gully. The unusual set of mistakes didn’t matter in the end.Near miss of the day
According to Cricket Australia Boxing Day has been sold out since June 1, but a few thousands seats weren’t taken up. A world record to beat the 90,800 here in 1960-61 was predicted, but the 89,155 was still a new Ashes mark.Quote of the day
“I was going to keep running but I got puffed.” Shane Warne on his celebration for his 700th wicket

'Ganguly was chosen as a specialist batsman' – Roy

‘Ganguly was considered a specialist batsman who could occasionally bowl’, according to Pranab Roy © AFP

Pranab Roy, the deposed senior national selector, said Sourav Ganguly was included in the Indian team for the just-concluded Chennai Test not as an “allrounder”, but as a specialist batsman.”Ganguly has all through been a specialist batsman,” he said. “When we discussed his name,we considered him as a specialist batsman, who can occasionally bowl.”When it was pointed out that Kiran More, the selection committee chairman, had announced to the media that Ganguly had been taken in the side as a batting allrounder, Roy said “I cannot comment on what More has said. I don’t know what he has said and in what sense.”After being sacked as captain and kept out of the squad in the back-to-back one-day series against Sri Lanka and South Africa, Ganguly made it to the team in the rain-hit Chennai Test against Sri Lanka.Roy, a member of the national selection panel from East Zone then, had been strongly arguing Ganguly’s case at selection meetings during the period when Ganguly was out of the side. “We never considered him as an allrounder,” he said, referring to the deliberations at the November 23 selection committee meeting where Ganguly was recalled to the side. However, Roy refused to give details, saying “It will be improper on my part to leak what happenned at the selection meeting”.Roy and two other selectors, Gopal Sharma and Yashpal Sharma, who had played a key role in ensuring Ganguly’s return to the Indian team, were sacked the very day the new Sharad Pawar-led regime took over the reins of the BCCI.

Back injury rules Langer out of Tasmania match

Justin Langer had to withdraw from a Pura Cup clash© Getty Images

Justin Langer has been affected by a back injury but is expected to return in time for the tour to New Zealand. He was due to play in Western Australia’s Pura Cup clash against Tasmania, but pulled out after the injury, which had threatened his appearance for the Boxing Day Test, recurred on Wednesday morning.Wayne Clark, Western Australia’s coach, played down the extent of the injury and said that Langer would consult with the Australian side’s medical staff. “He finds it difficult to bend over and we’ve decided to rest him from this game,” Clark said. “Given another day or two he probably would have been fine. He felt a recurrence of it on Wednesday morning and just didn’t have enough time to get it right.”Langer’s injury could have also affected his chances – remote ones, admittedly – of opening for Australia in the one-dayers. Usually not seen as a one-day player, Langer has been vocal about his exclusion from the ODIs. The poor run that Matthew Hayden, his opening partner in Tests, has suffered in recent times raised the possibility of Langer being tried out.

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