South Africa end Pakistan's winning streak

South Africa U-19 halted Pakistan U-19’s three-match winning streak with a 42-run victory in Cape Town

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Jan-2012
ScorecardSouth Africa U-19 halted Pakistan U-19’s three-match winning streak with a 42-run victory in Cape Town.Batting first, South Africa overcame an indifferent start through a 98-run fourth wicket stand between Shaylin Pillay and Theunis de Bruyn. The latter was the mainstay of the innings, contributing 73 off 76 balls. No. 7 batsman Prenelan Subrayen chipped in with 25 at nearly run-a-ball as South Africa surged to 240 for 7. Zia-ul-Haq and Usman Qadir impressed with two wickets each for Pakistan.Opening bowler Corné Fry dismantled the chase early, removing both Pakistan openers before they could settle in. The support cast backed up Fry and left Pakistan in trouble at 107 for 6 in the 28th over. No. 8 Qadir resisted with a fifty, but it was only a matter of time before Pakistan subsided. They were 42 runs short when they were bowled out in the 44th over.

England face test of character – Cook

Alastair Cook has warned his England colleagues that they face a
thorough examination of their character if they are to avoid the
humiliation of a 3-0 series whitewash against Pakistan

George Dobell in Dubai04-Feb-2012Alastair Cook has warned his England colleagues that they face a
thorough examination of their character if they are to avoid the
humiliation of a 3-0 series whitewash against Pakistan.The teams will resume on day three of the third Test with Pakistan
having already built a lead of 180 with eight second-innings wickets
in hand. Younis Khan (115 not out) and Azhar Ali (75 not out) have so
far added 194 runs for Pakistan’s third wicket and, in a low-scoring
series in which England’s batsmen have posted a total over 200 just
once, the tourists will have to produce a much-improved performance to
avoid another defeat. Pakistan have already earned an unassailable 2-0
lead in the series.Cook, perhaps worn down by experience, did not sound full of
confidence about the struggle to come, but insisted that England’s
pride and professionalism would ensure they fought hard to deny
Pakistan victory and retain England’s position as the top-ranked Test
side. If England lose this series 3-0 and South Africa subsequently
beat New Zealand by the same margin, then South Africa will leapfrog
England for the No. 1 position.”We all know we’re a very long way behind in this game,” Cook said.
“But if we sit here and say ‘well, we’ve lost this
game already’ then we might as well give Pakistan victory right now.
If we’re thinking that in our dressing-room, we might as well just not
bother turning up.”It will take some serious guts to drag ourselves out of this. But
there are some bloody good players in that dressing-room, and I hope
we can stand up. Anything is possible, but it’s going to take a lot of
mental toughness to deliver it.”Cook accepted that England’s batsmen had endured a grim tour to date –
none of the side are averaging as much as 30, while the middle order
of Ian Bell, Eoin Morgan and Kevin Pietersen are all averaging under
11 – but admitted that their repeated failures were starting to
frustrate the entire squad.Younis Khan expects a better response from England on an improved track for batting•Getty Images

“We have had our struggles on this tour and it is going to take some
serious character from the top six to turn it around. I
know we’ve got the players in there. But there’s only so many times
you can keep saying that – we’re going to have to get out there and do
it.”It has been very frustrating, and we haven’t played to the standards
we know we can. But we never once thought, just because of what
happened over the last two years, we’d turn up and wipe the floor with
everyone.”Twenty-two wickets fell in the first four sessions of the match but, since
then, Younis and Azhar have batted for 72 overs without giving a
chance. While Cook accepted that the Pakistan batsmen had played very
well, he also felt that the pitch had eased.”The pitch characteristics have changed. There were less
wicket-taking balls around than there were yesterday. It was quite
easy to see that.”But they didn’t give us a chance in those last two sessions, and
played very well. When they came in, they were still 20 runs behind us
– and we had a really good opportunity to take a couple more wickets.
If we had got them 50 for 4, we would have been right in the game.
But now they have given us a real mountain to climb. We tried a lot of
things. But Younis took the attack to us. He was never reckless, but
he never let the bowlers settle into any type of rhythm.”Younis agreed that conditions had eased for batsmen, but also said
that his anger at his first-innings dismissal had inspired him in the
second innings. He also said he expected a tough fight from England
over the closing sessions of the series.”The pitch is much better for batting,” he said. “The first day was
difficult with the ball seaming around. It seems like a totally
different pitch now.”I was very angry about how I got myself out in the first innings.
Seriously angry. So I decided to play more positively and I had a very
good partner, who has a fantastic technique and plays according to the
situation.”England tried their best, but we have the edge on them. England
have fantastic players and they are No. 1 in the world, so it
won’t be easy for us. There could be a fightback, but they will need
some luck.”

Roach fined for deliberately barging Lee

Kemar Roach has been fined 50% of his match fee for making deliberate physical contact with Brett Lee twice in the same over

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Mar-2012West Indies fast bowler Kemar Roach has been fined 50% of his match fee for making deliberate physical contact with Brett Lee twice in the same over, during the fifth one-dayer against Australia in St Lucia.The incident took place during the 39th over of Australia’s innings. Lee took a single off Roach and was approaching the other end when Roach first made contact with him. The two stared at each other before Roach nudged Lee again while walking back to his mark.Roach pleaded guilty to the Level 2 offence of the ICC Code of Conduct, which relates to “inappropriate and deliberate physical contact between players in the course of play”. There was no need for a formal hearing.”There is no doubt that Kemar deliberately made physical contact with Brett, not once but twice,” Andy Pycroft, the ICC match referee, said. “This is completely unacceptable as there is no place for physical contact in cricket.”It is not the sort of example that players should be setting at any time, least of all in a series as high-profile as this one. Kemar accepted his mistake and admitted that his behaviour was over aggressive and inappropriate. I am sure he has learnt his lesson and will be more careful in future.”Edited by Kanishkaa Balachandran

Defending champions in tournament opener

ESPNcricinfo previews the opening match of IPL 2012 between Chennai Super Kings and Mumbai Indians in Chennai

The Preview by Kanishkaa Balachandran03-Apr-2012

Match facts

Wednesday, April 4, Chennai
Start time 2000 (1430 GMT)Harbhajan Singh, the Mumbai Indians captain, could use the IPL as an opportunity to make a comeback•Mumbai Indians

Big picture

A year ago, the hangover of the World Cup had barely ended before another exhausting tournament started. Fans dehydrated by the emotions of India’s World Cup victory were now expected to show up in those numbers for the IPL. The fans and players had one thing in common – both were knackered. The scenario this year is not entirely different. India’s horrific season must have drained them mentally. Their followers are tired of defeat. The next two months will reveal the fans’ true faith in their own players.Indian cricket has come a full circle in a year, and the man at the epicentre is MS Dhoni, who’s back to leading Chennai Super Kings tomorrow in the IPL opener against Mumbai Indians. Public memory is short, and all it could take is a few victories for his fans to restore their faith. The reshuffling of squads last year didn’t affect the defending champions Super Kings. They thrived on a power-packed batting line-up, backed by a competent spin attack. They spent their auction purse in getting hold of a spinning-allrounder in Ravindra Jadeja. Dhoni, unfortunately, found himself shouldering too much burden as India captain, which affected his performances. If Super Kings are to succeed again, this squad, with varying degrees of experience, need to rally around him.His Mumbai counterpart, Harbhajan Singh, was largely disconnected from India’s plunge because he was dealing with a slump of his own. Poor form and injury kept him on the sidelines, but he regained pride by leading Mumbai to the Champions League title last year. He finds himself in the same role this year, after Sachin Tendulkar decided to step down as captain. Mumbai may be missing Andrew Symonds, but the squad’s intimidating enough without him. It’s fitting that the defending champions are taking on the team to beat in the opener.Mumbai are lucky to have their entire international contingent available for the season. Super Kings have a couple of injury concerns, but the core of their squad – barring Michael Hussey who is to join at the end of the month – is available.

Players to watch

Since his 95 in the IPL final last year (and 434 for the tournament), M Vijay has had a quiet 11 months. He underperformed in the West Indies and found himself out of contention. He had his moments of success during the domestic season, but this IPL will again be crucial towards making a return to the national side, at least when it comes to auditioning for the World Twenty20. Another chance beckons for the opening batsman.Harbhajan Singh is another player who could use this tournament as an opportunity to make a comeback. The criticism was that he had become a defensive bowler, bowling flatter lengths which weren’t fetching him enough wickets. His domestic season wasn’t good enough to force a return either. R Ashwin’s mixed returns in Australia should improve Harbhajan’s chances. But Harbhajan will know that he will be up against the likes of Pragyan Ojha and Rahul Sharma, at least in the limited-overs formats. He needs wickets, and plenty of them.

2011 head-to-head

Mumbai and Super Kings played each other just once last year. Rohit Sharma’s 87 off 48 balls took Mumbai to 164. Super Kings were well-placed at 98 for 2 in the 12th over, but Harbhajan inflicted a collapse, taking five wickets to give Mumbai an eight-run win. S Badrinath was the last-man standing with 71.

Stats and trivia

  • Super Kings’ overall win-loss ratio across four seasons (1.54) is comfortably ahead of second-placed Mumbai, who have a corresponding value of 1.26.
  • Chepauk, traditionally a high-scoring venue, experienced a drop in the run-rate in 2011 to 7.86. The rate was above 8 in the first and third IPL seasons.
  • Mumbai and Super Kings have played eight games against each other and the head-to-head record is locked at 4-4.

    Quotes

    “If you notice we have done exceedingly well when the pitch has been responsive with good bounce. So for us one of the first things to check will be the bounce of the pitch.”
    “My body is shaping up well; I am very much in the rhythm. I have been playing a lot of domestic T20 games, so yes I am very positive about it.”

  • Mohammad Amir features in ACSU's educational video

    Mohammad Amir has appeared in an educational video on behalf of the ICC’s Anti-Corruption and Security Unit

    Umar Farooq05-Apr-2012Mohammad Amir, the Pakistan fast-bowler banned from competitive cricket for five years for his part in the spot-fixing scandal of the 2010 Lord’s Test, has appeared in an educational video on behalf of the ICC’s Anti-Corruption and Security Unit (ACSU).In the five-minute video, Amir speaks about his life after being trapped by the illegal betting mafia, his embarrassment at lying to the ICC during its Qatar hearings and his three months in a British prison. Amir recounts his career, coming into the Pakistan team, and the Lord’s Test, of which he says, “I took six wickets but I did something very bad… after a couple of hours, my life is changed, my life is ruined because of two no balls.” It is understood the Amir video has also been shown to players from the various IPL teams in the lead-up to the event, which began on Wednesday.Amir said he had wanted to confess to the ICC anti-corruption tribunal during their hearings in Qatar last January, but had been unable to do so. In the video, he says, “I always knew this was cheating cricket but I was under pressure. But I accept my mistake. When I was in the ICC hearing, I knew I was totally embarrassed because I knew I am lying. I wanted to tell the truth but I didn’t have courage.”He said had bowled the no-balls at Lord’s because, “some senior players put me under pressure. I didn’t want to. One day I was on the top and the next day everyone was calling me cheater and fixer. You don’t have words to explain that.” The spot-fixing episode, he said, had been an act of entrapment but accepted his mistake of becoming a part of it. He said he was tricked into spot-fixing and he was not aware of the the player-agent Mazhar Majeed’s intentions.When he found himself facing a criminal trial, Amir said he had decided to tell the truth. The spot-fixing exercise was exposed by a sting operation arranged by the now defunct UK Sunday tabloid, the . Amir who will turn 20 on April 13, pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy to accept corrupt payments and conspiracy to cheat at gambling and did not stand trial in London. He was sentenced to six months in jail and in the video says, “When the police put me in handcuffs I was literally crying and I was thinking I am not going to play cricket ever again.”His parting message in the video is, “Prison is a bad place for everyone. Don’t make the mistakes which I did. I was stupid I didn’t tell anybody because I didn’t have coverage…If someone comes to you and asks you to do those kind of things, go straight to ICC team and team management they can help you.”Since his release after serving half of his six-month custodial sentence in England, Amir has been in contact with the ICC and PCB for an educational and rehabilitation program, which “remains confidential”.Speaking to ESPNcricinfo last month, the ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat had suggested the idea of Amir featuring in videos to point out the perils of corruption as part of educating young cricketers. “If Mohammad Amir stands up and delivers a message of caution about this murky world, people are going to sit up and listen. That is one example of rehabilitation,’ Lorgat said.In a televised interview with former England captain Michael Atherton last month, Aamer said his friendship with former Pakistan skipper Salman Butt was betrayed as it was Butt who had lured him into spot-fixing. Amir is currently living in Lahore, and serving his five-year ban which will run till 2015. There is no suggestion that Amir’s appearance in the ACSU video will lead to a reduction of his ban.There has been a lot of sympathy for Amir largely due to his age. Former captain Ramiz Raja met the bowler last week said, “the lad is obviously shaken badly by the gravity of events.” The PCB at the moment is keen to take care of the bowler but is yet to launch any rehabilitation program officially; it is understood the ICC is supporting the PCB in the process. An ICC spokesman told ESPNcricinfo: “The ICC has been in contact with Amir and the PCB about appropriate education and rehabilitation at an appropriate time, the details of which remain confidential.”

    Deccan look to build on maiden win

    ESPNcricinfo previews the IPL match between Mumbai Indians and Deccan Chargers in Mumbai

    The Preview by Devashish Fuloria28-Apr-2012

    Match facts

    Sunday, April 29, Mumbai
    Start time 2000 (1430 GMT)Deccan Chargers could cause a few more upsets in the tournament•AFP

    Big Picture

    After a demoralising sequence of five straight losses, Deccan Chargers finally got their first win of the season with a strong performance against Pune Warriors. They will take the momentum to Mumbai where they face a battered Mumbai Indians side. They had lost to Mumbai Indians in Visakhapatnam – a game that should have been closed out by Chargers.Chargers have faced a number of problems. Their batting line-up has been inconsistent, making three 150-plus totals and three sub-140 scores. One reason for that has been the failure of their captain Kumar Sangakkara and Daniel Christian, big name players who should be their pillars. Sangakkara has 83 runs from five games at less than run a ball and Christian has lost his place to Cameron White. That Chargers have posted high totals is largely due to the Shikhar Dhawan’s 224 runs in the tournament. While their batting has misfired, their bowling has been unable to defend good totals. Apart from Dale Steyn and Amit Mishra, the others have been taken for easy runs. But in the previous game, Juan Theron replaced Steyn in a surprising move and grabbed two wickets. Another addition to the team was 21-year old Ashish Reddy, who made his debut. Reddy bowled his four overs for 32 and picked up two wickets. He consistently bowled a foot outside the off stump, which helped Sangakkara set his fields.Mumbai Indians are back at Wankhede and will look to regroup quickly. They have now lost three of their last four games. They tried a new opening batsman in Delhi – their sixth different opening combination in eight matches, but that move didn’t work as Aiden Blizzard was out for a duck. They also came to know on Saturday that Australia fast bowler Mitchell Johnson will not be available this season due to a toe injury. The team needs some good news, and a match against the bottom-placed team at home presents them the opportunity.

    Form guide

    (most recent first)
    Mumbai Indians: LWLLW
    Deccan Chargers : WNrLLL (Nr – no result)

    Players to watch

    If Ambati Rayudu’s last two innings are any indication, he will be hard to stop. Rayudu scored a 17-ball 32 against in Mohali and bettered it with a 39-ball 62 against Delhi Daredevils. The Delhi innings kept Mumbai on track for three-quarters of their chase, even after they lost several heavyweights at the top of the order.Kumar Sangakkara needs to step up after a disappointing run so far. If the burden of defeat was affecting his batting, it would have lifted a bit after the win against Warriors. Against Mumbai Indians, Sangakkara will have to take the lead in tackling Malinga, like Mahela Jayawardene did.

    Stats and trivia

    • Dhawan was the leading scorer for Deccan Chargers in IPL 2011 with 400 runs. He is leading the charts again this year.
    • Mishra is the leading spinner in IPL, with 66 wickets.

    Quotes

    “He’s been getting off to starts and playing reasonably well in the last couple of knocks, but he backed himself fully today and showed what he can really do.”

    “I have got to lift my performance for myself and the team. I haven’t been bowling well, the last two-three matches, I have gone for runs.”

    Bell and Bopara star in simple chase

    Ian Bell maintained his fine ODI form as he led the England’s run chase in the second ODI against Australia at The Oval

    The Report by George Dobell01-Jul-2012
    Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsIan Bell made passed 50 for the third time in his last four ODI innings•Getty Images

    It is one of the ironies of England’s recent resurgence in all formats of the game that, for all their meticulous planning, two of the crucial ingredients of their success have come through luck. Just as it was only the sacking of Kevin Pietersen and Peter Moores as captain that brought Andy Flower and Andrew Strauss together as captain and coach, so it has only been the “retirement” of Pietersen from limited-overs international cricket that presented another chance to Ian Bell as an ODI batsman.It is not just luck, of course. It is how England have adjusted to circumstance and overcome the obstacles that have arisen. But it remains true that, had Pietersen not departed the England limited-overs set-up recently, it is most unlikely that Bell would have returned to the top of the England order.Bell has certainly embraced his opportunity. Since returning to the ODI side, he has contributed scores of 126, 53, 41 and now 75 and played a significant role in England not only taking a 2-0 lead in this five-match series, but extending their unbeaten record to eight successive victories in completed ODIs this year. It equals England’s best run of ODI results and sustains their chance of leapfrogging Australia to become the No. 1 ODI side; a position they will assume if they win this series 5-0. That will also make them the first team to hold No. 1 rankings in all three forms of the game. This was the first ODI in which they had beaten Australia at the Oval since 1997.Here Bell showed not just his class – a straight six off the bowling of Shane Watson quite majestic – but also his composure and maturity. Against an attack containing two men bowling in excess of 90 mph, he had time, confidence and the range of stokes required. He slog-swept David Hussey, cut Watson, swept Xavier Doherty and drove Mitchell Johnson with power. He looked a high-class player, quite at home on the ODI stage.Ravi Bopara also enjoyed an excellent match. Having contributed a miserly five overs and taken the key wicket of Michael Clarke, pushing indeterminately at one outside off stump, he produced an admirably calm and increasingly assured innings of 82 to take England to the brink of a comfortable victory.Clarke briefly created some uncertainly in the England ranks. He ended Bell’s innings with his first delivery – the batsmen attempting to cut a delivery that was too full for the shot – and then saw Eoin Morgan adjudged leg before just two balls later. Hot Spot, which showed (on the third umpire’s television, anyway) the faintest of touches on Morgan’s inside edge, reprieved the batsman. England were never seriously troubled again and cruised to victory with six wickets and 4.2 overs in hand.But Clarke’s senior seamers let him down. Mitchell Johnson, perhaps rusty having bowled just six List A overs since sustaining a foot injury in November, came into the side due to Pat Cummins’ withdrawal with a side strain, but donated three no-balls in his first two overs, with Alastair Cook and Bell taking advantage to thrash two of the resulting free-hits through mid-off for four. Brett Lee also donated five wides down the leg side in his second over. Only Clint McKay, who beat Cook with a good one that swing back in to trap the England captain leg before, and Watson, who might have had Bell caught for 70 had David Warner, at point, been able to hold on to a diving chance, threatened to stem the tide.Nor did Australia score enough runs. Winning first use of a good batting pitch, they were indebted to half-centuries from Shane Watson and George Bailey but would reflect that they fell perhaps 25 runs short of par in such conditions.Watson lived dangerously for much of his innings and, apart from edging the ball just past his own stumps (on 2 and 30), was dropped by Jonathan Trott, at gully, on 8. He also survived a run-out chance on 47 – had Ian Bell, at mid-on, hit with his throw Watson would have been out – and two decisions that were referred to the third umpire for review.But if Watson was somewhat fortunate, Australia were grateful for his sense of urgency. His top-order colleagues struggled for fluency and, after David Warner had top-edged a pull to square leg, Peter Forrest, having scored only two from his first 17 deliveries, was brilliantly caught down the leg side. The departure of Clarke and the introduction of Graeme Swann and Bopara, saw Australia make only 24 in 10 overs and 53 in 18 in mid-innings as Bailey, in particular, became bogged down.The pressure told on Watson, whose final 10 runs occupied 25 balls, and who, in attempting to loft Graeme Swann over the top, succeeded only in gifting a catch to deep mid-wicket.Bailey – who scored only 26 from his first 61 balls – eventually found some momentum and, in partnership with the more dynamic Hussey added 78 in 13 overs before Finn, in his follow through, ran out the latter with a superb throw with just one stump to aim at.That wicket stalled Australia’s hopes of some late-innings acceleration. Bailey’s lavish drive was beaten by some inswing, before Matthew Wade’s attempt to scoop one over the keeper’s head resulted only in a simple catch to short fine leg.But England were far from their best with the ball or in the field. England’s bowlers, missing James Anderson who was absent with a groin strain, donated eight wides, two no-balls and numerous deliveries that drifted on to the pads. Apart from dropping Watson, Bailey was also missed on 52, a tough chance offered to Tim Bresnan off Graeme Swann at deep midwicket, and could have been run out on 55 had Bopara hit from short distance. Lee was also dropped on 2 and 17, from the final ball of the innings, after Morgan, at long on, failed to cling on to tough chances.In an odd way, however, England might find it encouraging that they could play so far below their best and still ease to victory against the No. 1 ranked ODI side.

    Dernbach ruled out of series

    Jade Dernbach, the England pace bowler, has been ruled out of the remainder of the NatWest Series against Australia with a side strain

    ESPNcricinfo staff02-Jul-2012Jade Dernbach, the England pace bowler, has been ruled out of the remainder of the NatWest Series against Australia with a side strain.Dernbach had already been withdrawn from the squad for the third match at Edgbaston on Wednesday – along with Surrey team-mate Stuart Meaker – on compassionate grounds as he will be attending Tom Maynard’s funeral.He had been recalled to the one-day side to replace the injured James Anderson, on his homeground at The Oval, and sent down 10 wicketless overs for 59 although had two catches dropped in the deep off him by Eoin Morgan during the final overFollowing England’s win which gave them a 2-0 lead, Alastair Cook praised Dernbach’s effort. “Jade came in and did really well,” he said. “It was obviously disappointing for Jimmy not to play – but that’s the reason why we have squads, and our strength in depth in seam bowling is really encouraging. For Jade to come in and perform as well as he did, bowling a lot of Powerplay overs, is really good.”Chris Woakes had already been added to the squad for the third one-dayer although the ECB have said a decision on further replacements will be made after the Edgbaston match. Meaker was brought in after Anderson’s groin strain and there will be a chance he will be included for the final two matches if England want further cover.

    In-form Rushworth skittles Worcestershire

    On an apparently blameless pitch ball dominated bat at Chester-le-Street on the first day of a match which is for one team important and for the other crucial

    Les Smith at Chester-le-Street21-Aug-2012
    ScorecardChris Rushworth took his third five-wicket haul of the season•Getty Images

    On an apparently blameless pitch ball dominated bat at Chester-le-Street on the first day of a match which is for one team important and for the other crucial. Three consecutive victories in Division One had lifted Durham to a position in which victory here would virtually guarantee safety, while Worcestershire’s recent slide placed them precariously at the bottom of the table, albeit with a game in hand on their closest rivals to avoid the drop, Lancashire and Surrey.Shortly before the toss cloud began to roll in and when Daryl Mitchell made the wrong call Paul Collingwood took the initiative and sent Worcestershire in to bat. Graham Onions and Chris Rushworth took the new ball and, bowling unchanged for the first hour, reduced Worcestershire to 26 for 5. Rushworth, who went on to record career best figures of 5 for 44, and Onions removed the openers Mitchell and Phillip Hughes for nine runs between them. In his fifth over Rushworth hit the stumps of Vikram Solanki and Neil Pinner, both for no score, and the Worcestershire innings was tottering.Amid the mayhem, almost unnoticed at first, Matthew Pardoe had come to the wicket, and the 22- year-old from Stourbridge set about settling the ship. He started cautiously but became more fluent as time passed, striking the ball particularly effectively square on the offside and through the covers. When he was caught in the slips off Onions he had scored 36 invaluable runs.Onions and Rushworth were back in harness after lunch to polish off the innings, but not before Ben Scott had put bat urgently to ball. Scott’s onslaught was cut short, though, when he tried one ambitious slog too many and skied a catch to square leg to give Rushworth his third five-wicket haul of the season.Rushworth later said about how success in limited-overs cricket has spilled over into his first class game. “It’s nice to get the chance and have a bit of confidence put in you by the captain and the coach. I feel I’m at the top of my game or as close as I ever have been. It’s coming out well”.With Worcestershire all out for 120, Durham appeared to be set fair for a large first innings lead. However, they started even more shakily than Worcestershire with Alan Richardson and Chris Russell combining to remove openers Mark Stoneman and Will Smith before double figures had been reached.Young South African Keaton Jennings, the son of Ray, and Ben Stokes came together to add 72 for the third wicket, and after Jennings became the second of Gareth Andrew’s five victims Stokes became more expansive in his stroke play on both sides of the wicket. He reached fifty off 64 balls with a fierce pull to midwicket off Russell, and appeared to be on his way to put all the earlier nonsense into perspective when he played across a ball from Andrew and was bowled off his pads for 78.Dale Benkenstein and Collingwood, the mainstays of the Durham middle order, both contributed runs which, in the context of a low scoring day, were valuable, but Benkenstein edged Andrew to keeper Scott, and shortly afterwards Phil Mustard and Collingwood were out to successive deliveries, the last ball of an Andrew over and the first of one by Richardson.When Durham’s ninth wicket fell they were 73 useful runs ahead of Worcestershire, but Scott Borthwick and Rushworth came together to add a further 22 undefeated runs for the last wicket and Durham will go into the second day needing just six more to establish a lead of over 100, which on this evidence would be a tidy result.Rushworth, reflecting on his achievements with the ball, acknowledged that pitches at Chester-le-Street are very “bowler-friendly”. A cursory glance at the scorecard would support that view.

    Pietersen apologises to the ECB

    Kevin Pietersen has apologised to the ECB over the derogatory text messages that he sent about members of the England dressing room to South Africa players

    David Hopps and George Dobell14-Aug-2012Kevin Pietersen has apologised to the ECB over the derogatory text messages that he sent about members of the England dressing room to South Africa players in a last-ditch attempt to gain forgiveness and be selected for World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka.Pietersen and his representatives were waiting on Tuesday evening for the ECB to respond to his gesture with Saturday’s deadline for naming England’s World Twenty20 party looming ever closer.The apology presumably constituted an admission of guilt and as such leaves him at risk of a heavy fine, a suspension or both. If England’s managing director, Hugh Morris, continues to pursue a hard line it could automatically rule him out of a tournament in which he desperately wants to take part.The ECB would make no official comment on Tuesday night, perhaps recognising that leaks in the past have been unhelpful in the reconciliation process.ESPNcricinfo understands a decision, nevertheless, is expected on Wednesday, at which point extensive statements from both sides can be anticipated. There was a growing sense at Lord’s of the need to settle the issue before the final Test against South Africa at Lord’s which begins on Thursday. England, 1-0 down in the series, need to win the Test to retain their status as the No 1 Test side in the world.The ECB have failed to make Pietersen available for Surrey in their vital relegation championship match against Middlesex, at the Oval, beginning on Wednesday, as both parties recognised that it would be inappropriate as confidential negotiations were reaching a delicate stage.The decision for the ECB was when to replace punishment with rehabilitation.In another development in the Pietersen soap opera, Stuart Broad issued a statement denying any part in the creation of a parody Twitter account that so infuriated Pietersen and led him to suspect that his England team-mates were secretly deriding him.Broad, the England Twenty20 International captain, and Alex Hales, who took Pietersen’s place at the top of the order in England’s T20 side, were both alleged to have been involved in the account by Pietersen’s friend, the chatshow host Piers Morgan.The real creator of the parody account, Richard Bailey, came forward on Monday and not only apologised for the trouble he had caused, but clarified that he had worked alone. While Bailey is a friend of Broad and Hales, all parties insist that no professional players were in any way involved either in setting up the account or supplying information.”Following last night’s statement by Mr Richard Bailey that he was responsible for creating a parody Twitter account in Kevin Pietersen’s name, I would like to confirm that I had no involvement in this whatsoever,” Broad said”I met with the Managing Director, England Cricket, Hugh Morris this morning and assured him that I did not play any role in the creation of this account or provide Mr Bailey with any information regarding Kevin Pietersen or the England team.”As has been widely reported Mr Bailey is a friend of mine, but we had no conversations regarding this issue at all and I am pleased that he has now decided to close the parody account down.”Broad’s words echo the results of an ESPNcricinfo investigations last week that identified the creator of the parody account, but found no evidence that any England player had been actively involved in it at any stage. That information was communicated to senior officials of the ECB.Morris added: “Having discussed this matter with Stuart, I am fully satisfied that he acted in a professional manner at all times and did not breach any confidences regarding fellow England players.”ECB also accepts the apology Mr Bailey offered last night to the England team via his Twitter account and his re-assurances that no professional cricketers were involved in the creation of this site.”

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