'How much more can we take?'

Even the most ardent pessimists are daring to dream that the Ashes will be regained by England. “In racing terms, we have our noses in front,” said a cautious Geoffrey Boycott in . For some ardent optimists, though, victory is already in the bag. “The Ashes are coming home” roared a premature headline in .England, of course, were kept in the hunt by that victory at Trent Bridge, and just how important keeping the Ashes alive is to the future of English cricket was underlined by s Richard Williams. “English cricket was briefly threatened with the most damaging defeat in its history,” he wrote, “given the hopes invested in this series. Had Australia forced the win […] many of the game’s gains of the past five weeks would have been forfeited.”Whether or not England regain the urn remains to be seen. But whatever happens, journalists are talking excitedly about their belief that this series is second-to-none for intense drama. “For spectacle and sheer unrelenting excitement, if not for the quality of the cricket,” began Christopher Martin-Jenkins in , “this really must be accounted the greatest of all Test series.””Never in the 129-year history of Test cricket can three consecutive matches have ended in such dramatic circumstances,” agreed s Angus Fraser, while Simon Barnes wondered how much more the nation could take. “Just when Wimbledon was safely over,” he wrote in “the England cricket team have set to outdo Tim Henman as a cause of national neurosis.”One unbearable climax has followed another as England have repeatedly outplayed Australia and have repeatedly found it hard, if not impossible, to make the killing stroke. The finger freezes on the trigger. England simply cannot believe in their own superiority over the old enemy.””For once a tense endgame didn’t look likely,” wrote Derek Pringle in . “Vaughan’s men looked like they might give the Aussies a good towelling. Yet with Ricky Ponting’s side unable to say die, at least not yet, the drama began to wind its way to another tortuous resolution. England’s batsmen made it hard for themselves. What began as positive intent quickly began to look like blind panic.”The papers re-enacted the tense moments of England’s chase to the line, with ‘s Glenn Moore adding: “Turmoil invaded the minds of the England team as their run-chase coughed and spluttered like a Ferrari running on diesel.” At the helm in the final push were Ashley Giles and Matthew Hoggard, and Giles admitted in his column that his nerves were on the edge of fraying.”I would rather just watch,” he recalled saying prior to his innings, but in the aftermath he was naturally delighted. “To go out there and get the winning runs was awesome.” Hoggard, he reported, was in a much calmer, determined frame of mind. “”Come on, let’s you and me get it done,” he said, with a bit of a smile.”That they did is to the whole team’s credit, as Simon Barnes acknowledged. “Giles and Hoggard stuck it out in a cheer-every-run nerve-stretcher,” he wrote, “and that, perhaps was most appropriate of all. This has been a team performance in a summer of team performances […] when one English player fails, another stands up for his time of glory.”Credit is due in no small part to Michael Vaughan and Duncan Fletcher, as Derek Pringle observed. “Old England might have folded,” he wrote. “But Vaughan and Duncan Fletcher have built a team not only hungry for success but who back themselves fully.”And Vaughan’s superior captaincy when compared to that of Ricky Ponting is a key factor in England’s series lead, suggests Richard Williams. “At every turn Ricky Ponting has found himself outmanoeuvred by Vaughan, even in the psychological contest whose rules his own predecessors invented.”Mike Selvey, in agreed, but suggested that there was a brief passage of play where Ponting had got it right – and this nearly cost England victory. “For two hours Ricky Ponting, such an unimaginative captain for much of the game, cast off his cloak and abetted by Warne’s influence became inspirational,” said Selvey.Attention hovered over the two Joneses, with Geoffrey Boycott acclaiming Simon for producing “the biggest improvement out of all the bowlers in this series.” But he gave short shrift to Geraint, whose keeping, he said, “means the bowlers have to strive much harder. Instead of having to take 10 wickets in an innings, they have to take 14 or 15. Everyone makes mistakes but Jones makes too many. The problem is, I don’t know who you would stick in his place. But if he doesn’t improve soon, his errors will cost a Test match.”David Hopps is not convinced, either. “To believe that Jones’ wicketkeeping will rise to the challenge at the last requires an evangelical zeal. He is the perkiest of batsmen […], but the wicketkeeping, oh the wicketkeeping. How much more pressure can we take?”We are set to find out when this series heads for its dramatic climax at the Oval at the start of September. ‘s Paul Hayward knows just how big a match this will be for English cricket: “There will be a five-day hole in the English economy, a flooding back to the sport that dominated our childhood summers before football rolled its tanks on to the village green and the local rec.”Thumb through the catalogue of great sporting events on English soil since the honeyed summer of ’66,” he added, “and few reach the magnitude of the Oval Test.” If you think the matches to date have been big, the final act will be huge. Don’t go away.

Kent stun Worcestershire as Middlesex beat Surrey

Frizzell County Championship Division One

Scorecard
Day 1 – Lancashire crash Sussex party Hugh Chevallier’s exclusive match report
Day 2 – Law rules, but Sussex stay in touch Hugh Chevallier’s exclusive match reportDay 3 – Seamers take centre stage to sink Sussex Hugh Chevallier’s exclusive match report
Scorecard
Day 1 – New season, new role for Newman The Guardian
Day 2 – Hollioake’s swansong gets off to a flier The Guardian
Day 3 – Azhar sustains the balance The Guardian
Day 4 – Shah the perfect stand-in The Observer
Scorecard
Day 1 – Peters prospers as Kent falter The Guardian
Day 2 – Sharp-eyed Fulton is not for shifting The Daily Telegraph
Day 3 – Worcestershire take command The Times
Day 4 – Walker and Carberry stun Worcestershire Wisden Cricinfo

Frizzell County Championship Division Two

Scorecard
Day 1 – Shreck halts Durham recovery The Times
Day 2 – Plunkett’s plunder The Daily Telegraph
Day 3 – Warren dampens Hamilton’s big day The Times
Day 4 – A debacle at Durham The Sunday Sun (Newcastle)
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Day 1 – Glamorgan make the best of advantage The Daily Telegraph
Day 2 – Maynard puts Leicestershire to the sword The Times
Day 3 – Kasprowicz’s killer blows The Daily Telegraph
Day 4 – Hodge hits heights The Sunday Telegraph
Scorecard
Day 1 – No play due to rain
Day 2 – Bowler increases the torment for Derbyshire The Times
Day 3 – Adnan hits heights for Derbyshire The Telegraph
Day 4 – Somerset seeking self-belief The Sunday Telegraph
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Day 1 – Jefferson halts Yorkshire attack The Independent
Day 2 – White relishes his latest purple patch The Guardian
Day 3 – Harvey gives 95 reasons for cheer The Guardian
Day 4 – Yorkshire nearly pay for gall The Sunday Telegraph

Other matches

Scorecard
Day 1 – Wagh puts case for England The Times
Day 2 – Tahir shows promise on debut The Times
Day 3 – Troughton grasps rare opportunity The Times
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Scorecard
Day 2 – Students grateful to Bishop for strong recovery The Times
Day 3 – Swann enlivens stale draw The Times

Bradman cap sets record: auctioneer

Sir Donald Bradman’s 1947 baggy green cap apparently set a new record inMelbourne yesterday, but auctioneer Michael Ludgrove is not revealingthe price.The cap, from the 1947-48 Test series against India, is the first of TheDon’s baggy greens to be offered at public auction.However, it did not go under the hammer: it was sold before the auctionfor an undisclosed price, Mr Ludgrove said.”It sold for a record figure which has to remain undisclosed at thisstage,” Mr Ludgrove said.”It exceeded a Bradman sculpture which previously sold for $180,000,while baggy greens usually fetch between $30,000 to $40,000.”A suitable offer was made before the auction which was acceptable tothe vendor and acting on his instructions we withdrew it.”I can say that it is a record figure for any item of cricketmemorabilia or any baggy green,” he said.The bid was made by a successful Sydney businessman aged under 40, hesaid.The cap was given to India’s team manager Pankaj Gupta by Sir Donald in1948 after Australia played India at the Adelaide Oval.It has been handed down to different owners since.The vendor, who wished to remain anonymous, lives in London.A life-size bronze sculpture of Bradman’s cover drive, expected to reachbetween $100,000 and $200,000 was passed in at $95,000, as was the batwielded by Sir Garfield Sobers when he smashed six sixes in a six-ballover in 1968.The bat was expected to fetch between $200,000 to $300,000 but biddingceased at $150,000.Other lots included the baggy green cap of Neil Harvey from the 1956Ashes series ($15,000), a signed photograph of bushranger Ned Kelly in aboxing pose ($30,000) and ornithologist John Gould’s eight volume Birdsof Australia, which sold for $260,000.An auction of the images and historical press photograph collections ofMiller, Sam Loxton, Bill Johnston and Lindsay Hassett scheduled fortomorrow (Monday) has been cancelled following their pre-sale for$75,000, Mr Ludgrove said.They are now owned by a Melbourne collector.

Police file chargesheet against GCA chief, eight others

The Goa police on Thursday filed a chargesheet against the Goa CricketAssociation (GCA) president, Dayanand Narvekar and eight others in thecourt in connection with the `fake’ ticket scam under various sectionsof the Indian Penal Code (IPC), including criminal conspiracy, policesources said.The names of GCA secretary Vinod Phadke, former treasurer RamaShankardas, ticket contractor Chinmay Fallari and his brother DevduttFallari, also figure in the chargesheet filed in the court of JudicialMagistrate First Class, Margao, they said.Eknath Naik, brother-in-law of GCA president, Gangaram Bishe,Venkatesh Desai and Joaquim Pires were the other four charged underdifferent sections of the IPC, including printing and sale of faketickets, criminal conspiracy and cheating the public, police sourcessaid, adding, the different IPC sections slapped against them were461, 465, 468, 471, 201 and 120 (b).About 200 persons, including those chargesheeted in the case had beeninterrogated since the police launched investigations about threemonths back into allegations of printing and sale of fake tickets forthe India-Australia One Day International on April 6 last in Goa. TheBCCI executive secretary Sharad Diwadkar had also appeared before theinvestigating team, police added.This was the second chargesheet into the developments related to theODI after the one filed by the police yesterday under section 336 ofthe IPC. The chargesheet filed yesterday also in the court of JMFC,Margao, charged Narvekar, a former deputy chief minister, Phadke,Shankardas and a GCA member, Vivek Pednekar, with lapses on their partto `undertake measures for the safety of public, endangering humanlives and with failure to verify between genuine and fake ticketholders.’

Andhra run out easy victors

Andhra ran out easy victors by an innings and 20 runs on the final day of their South Zone Ranji Trophy match against Goa at Margao on Sunday. The win, worth eight points, takes them to joint second place in the zonal table at 11 points from two games. Goa are languishing at the bottom without a point.The hosts resumed at 249/5, needing to post a total of 351 if they wanted to make Andhra bat again. But a double strike in the fourth over of the day dealt a fatal blow to Goa’s hopes. Skipper Pravin Amre was run out for 11 and three balls later, seamer N Madhukar scalped the other overnight batsman Ananth Bhagwat for 41.From 277/8, Avinash Avare and Nitin Kalekar extended the proceedings with a 51 run ninth wicket partnership but Andhra finally cut short the resistance of the tail one minute before lunch. Goa finished at 331 with off spinner YS Ranganath bagging 4/59. Andhra next play Karnataka at Bangalore while Goa take on Kerala at Ernakulam, both from November 15-18.

Consistent Bengal brace for hungry Madhya Pradesh

Injured Tare to miss quarter-final

Mumbai captain Aditya Tare will miss his team’s quarter-final against Jharkhand in Mysore after failing to recover from a finger fracture sustained during the Syed Mushtaq Ali T20 competition. Allrounder Abhishek Nayar will stand in as captain, and Mumbai have included wicketkeeper batsman Eknath Kerkar as Tare’s replacement in their 15-man squad.

Bengal’s consistency this season can’t be overstated. They won two games in the league stage and lost none, and their only blip came in the first game against Karnataka when they dropped first-innings points. Bengal never conceded the lead thereafter, and eventually went on to finish second in Group A. A graph of their performance would reveal a smooth upward stroke gaining height with every game. Minus the backstory it would be easy to believe such an impressive performance was borne out of a harmonious set-up that nurtured the winning habit. But there was very little that was harmonious about Bengal’s build up to the season.Their pre-season tour to Sri Lanka was tarred by reports of alleged infighting, culminating in Laxmi Ratan Shukla stepping down as captain and Manoj Tiwary replacing him. Then there was the spat between Tiwary and Gautam Gambhir in Delhi and the controversy over an ‘underprepared’ Kalyani pitch after the two-day finish against Odisha. Bengal also had a revamped bowling attack that had no place for veteran offspinner Saurashish Lahiri, and had Pragyan Ojha making his first appearance for the team. The batting unit also had a fair bit of green about it. So what went right for the team?”I would say Sairaj Bahutule has played a very important role along with [Cricket Association of Bengal president] Sourav Ganguly because he also chips in with his valuable inputs [on] how to go about as far as all these things are concerned,” Tiwary told reporters after Bengal’s practice session ahead of their quarter-final against Madhya Pradesh at the Brabourne Stadium. “Other support staff like [bowling coach] Ranadeb Bose and [fielding coach] Joydeep Mukherjee have made sure our team doesn’t get distracted with all this things.”Tiwary said controversies were inevitable in Bengal, and so the players had to work around them. “Each and every season in Bengal, you know, there are a lot of unnecessary controversies which are not required,” he said. “This time around we made sure each and every one is focused in their job.”It’s a kind of a challenge you can say. Along with batting and bowling in the middle this is also a challenge for us to just to handle things better off the field. It’s important for a captain or any individual to be as calm as possible and think of the things which are related to cricket only rather than wasting energy on other things.”Tiwary said the senior players pulled their weight and that in turn rubbed on to the younger players. Ojha and Dinda have topped the bowling charts with 33 and 31 wickets respectively, but Tiwary was particularly pleased that the selection punts on youngsters like offspinner Aamir Gani, preferred to Lahiri, and seamer Mukesh Kumar had come good.”It’s important we [seniors] take extra responsibility to perform consistently and this season our performance in the Ranji Trophy we have been very consistent,” he said. “Bowlers, especially Dinda and Ojha, have contributed a lot. Mukesh is a find for Bengal for the season. Our team looks very confident and balanced.”According to Tiwary, Sudip Chatterjee – the team’s highest scorer with 712 runs – and opener Abhimanyu Easwaran had the potential to play Test matches for India. “[Sudip] is a determined youngster. He has that hunger to do well. It’s that desperation [that has contributed to his success],” Tiwary said. “Along with him, Abhimanyu Easwaran is one of them. They have the potential [to play for India]. It’s just that they have to be on the right track and work the way they are working.”Tiwary is carrying a niggle in his right calf but he felt playing through pain was a small price for the joy that a Ranji Trophy title offered. “It’s a very important match for Bengal cricket, so you will have to [play through pain] at times,” he said. “I don’t think every cricketer is always 100% fit. It’s important to get through the pain. I have been jogging a lot, touch wood nothing will happen.”[A Ranji title] is due as well. This is the best period of Bengal cricket. The chances of getting the trophy are much higher. But we have to take it as another match and not put too much pressure.”Madhya Pradesh, on the other hand, have had an intriguing run to the knockouts. Having started off in reasonably solid manner, they went through a phase where they won successive games against Baroda and Railways before losing the next two. Then, in a must-win game against Andhra, they grabbed seven points and scraped through to the quarter-finals by virtue of a better net run rate than Gujarat. This was welcome respite for a side that had missed out a knockout berth by a whisker last season.”Qualifying for the knockouts was our first aim when we started off,” Madhya Pradesh captain Devendra Bundela said. “Our first two games didn’t go well but we made a good comeback. Of course there was the disappointment of last year so we put in more effort and concentrated harder this time. We have also had the same group of players over the last three-four years, so there is good bonding. We will play with three medium pacers and two spinners tomorrow.”Both captains were united in their assessment that the Brabourne pitch had decent grass cover and would offer assistance to the seamers early on before going on to become a good batting surface.

State minister allows ICL use of Eden Gardens

The Indian Cricket League (ICL) has received support from an unexpected quarter with West Bengal sports minister Subhash Chakraborty saying the ICL would be allowed to use the Eden Gardens and other grounds in the state.”Whatever facilities we have, we will make available to the boys who have been punished, particularly by the Cricket Association of Bengal (CAB),” Chakraborty told , an Indian television channel. “I have no objection. All the fields will be available for them as all the fields are available for CAB. The owner of the fields is the state government not any other body. The Eden Gardens was looked after by CAB. Now the lease period is over and it is state government’s property. If Kapil and others like to play in Eden Gardens, I would allow it. What is the harm in it?”The minister’s public support for the Subhash Chandra-owned Essel Group’s venture has come as a surprise as the current CAB president Prasun Mukherjee has the backing of the Sharad Pawar-led BCCI regime.The BCCI decided not to recognise the league and barred the defecting players from playing for India or at the domestic level, besides withdrawing all financial benefits.The ICL has managed to lure as many as 44 Indian first-class cricketers and seven overseas players, including Brian Lara and former Pakistan captain Inzamam-ul Haq, in the initial list for its proposed Twenty20 tournament expected to be held in October.

Rain the winner at Trent Bridge

ScorecardThe final day of Nottinghamshire’s match against West Indies A was abandoned without a ball bowled. Heavy thunderstorms have been sweeping through the country and the umpires called the game off before the scheduled start. This was the last first-class match of the tour for West Indies, who now finish their trip with a one-day match against Hampshire, at The Rose Bowl, on Sunday.

McGrath and Warne miss tour game

McGrath, Lee and Gilchrist have been rewarded with a break after Lord’s, but Jason Gillespie will play against Worcestershire © Getty Images

Australia have rested five of their big guns for the second-Test warm-up against Worcestershire, but rain threatens to curtail the traditional Ashes tour fixture. Bad weather has forced the cancellation of the side’s final training session at the New Road ground and it is predicted to continue through the three-day match.Glenn McGrath, Brett Lee and Shane Warne have been rested after their success in the first Test at Lord’s, while Adam Gilchrist and Damien Martyn also have free time this weekend. The five will be replaced by the non-Test members, with Brad Hodge and Shaun Tait getting their first matches of the tour. Brad Haddin, whose only game was against Somerset, will stand-in behind the stumps and Michael Kasprowicz and Stuart MacGill will step into an attack led by the struggling Jason Gillespie.Worcestershire, who were the traditional opponents for the opening contest of an Ashes tour, have the international bowlers Shoaib Akhtar, Gareth Batty, Kabir Ali and Ray Price in their squad, but Shoaib has already been ruled out with injury. The game is due to start tomorrow.The Australian XI Matthew Hayden, Justin Langer, Ricky Ponting (capt), Simon Katich, Brad Hodge, Michael Clarke, Brad Haddin (wk), Jason Gillespie, Michael Kasprowicz, Shaun Tait and Stuart MacGill.Worcestershire Vikram Solanki (capt), Stephen Moore, Stephen Peters, Graeme Hick, Ben Smith, Zander de Bruyn, Gareth Batty, Kabir Ali, James Pipe, Matt Mason, Nadeem Malik, Ray Price (12th man to be named).

Jayawardene steadies Sri Lankan reply

Lunch Sri Lanka 3 for 162 (Jayawardene 43*, Dilshan 14*) trail Australia 220 by 58 runs
Scorecard

Michael Kasprowicz: got an early breakthrough on the second morning © Getty Images

After their dream start to the series, Sri Lanka tried to consolidate on thesecond morning. The pace of the game slowed with Australia’s bowlersproducing a far more disciplined display. They nipped out a couple wicketstoo, but Sri Lanka still had their nose ahead as they went into the lunch break on 3 for 162, just 58 runs in the arrears.Ricky Ponting handed the ball to Michael Kasprowicz and Shane Warne in themorning. The pair bowled tightly and Sri Lanka, clearly trying toconsolidate upon the advantage won yesterday, crawled along during the firsthour, scoring just 37 runs.Kasprowicz, who bowled five overs for 13, snatched an importantwicket, clinging on to a sharp one-handed return catch off a firm push-drivefrom Kumar Sangakkara. Sangakkara, who had started his innings the previousevening with a majestic six over midwicket off Stuart MacGill, had scored 22 (2 for 92).Atapattu, meanwhile, dug in on the slow pitch. He forced away one eleganthigh-elbowed back-foot drive behind square off Kasprowicz to the boundary,but was otherwise content to accumulate his runs with pushes and neat clips.But the entry of Jason Gillespie created more problems.Atapattu came within a whisker of being bowled as he shouldered arms to adelivery that jagged back from outside off stump. Next over, straight aftera sweetly timed legside flick, Gillespie found the inside edge as Atapattuchopped onto his stumps for 47 (3 for 123).Mahela Jayawardene (43 not out) showed more adventurous intent at the otherend, slapping Warne through extra cover on one occasion and also sweepingone for four. But Warne was also settling into his groove, probing away fromover and round the wicket, and keeping Jayawardene on his toes.Tillakaratne Dilshan’s arrival at the crease was followed byanother bowling change. Gillespie, who bowled a superb spell of 1 for 12 from six overs, was replaced by Kasprowicz. Dilshan had a couple of narrow escapes, surviving a close lbw shout off Kasprowicz and then getting into a tangle with a well-directed yorker. However, David Shepard, pale-faced under the scorching mid-day sun, kept his fingerfirmly down.MacGill, ignored until 15 minutes before lunch, finally entered thefray as Warne collected his cap after a long 13-over morning spell. MacGill made an inauspicious start, serving up a full-toss first up which was heaved to the leg-side fence.Jayawardene finished off the session on a positive note, steering away adelicate late-cut and then, next ball, slog-sweeping Andrew Symonds oversquare leg. The late boundaries sealed Sri Lanka’s morning but Australiaweren’t out of the game yet.

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