Late start for Masakadza

Hamilton Masakadza will miss Zimbabwe’s first two matches on Friday and Sunday on their whistlestop tour of South Africa.Masakadza did not travel with the team from Harare on Wednesday, and is said to bealready in South Africa, where he is studying. He is now expected to join the team on Monday in Pretoria.That brings to three the number of players in the side who have not joined the rest ofthe squad. Wicketeeper/ batsman Tino Mawoyo and pace bowler Admire Manyumwa were left behind in Harare after failing to get visas in time. Neither were named in the original squad and their applications for visas were left too late as a result. They wereexpected to arrive in Pretoria on Thursday afternoon.

ZCU provincial manager passes away

The Zimbabwe Cricket Union’s provincial development manager for Mashonaland, Dawson Mutsekwa, has died. He passed away yesterday in Cape Town, South Africa, where he had gone for specialist attention after lapsing into a coma in the Avenues Clinic in Harare following an operation. He was 62 years old.Mutsekwa joined the ZCU as facilities coordinator in June 2000, after a lengthy career with the Ministry of Education, Sports and Culture, which culminated in his appointment as headmaster of Churchill High School in Harare.He promoted the playing of cricket at the school, and Churchill became a centre of excellence, and one of the strongest cricketing schools in the country, where several promising cricketers were awarded ZCU scholarships. Among the players to have passed through the school are Tatenda Taibu, the current national captain, Douglas Hondo, Alester Maregwede, Hamilton Masakadza, Stuart Matsikenyeri, Vusumuzi Sibanda and Elton Chigumbura.Mutsekwa was also instrumental in the setting up of Takashinga Cricket Club, and their Winter Cricket League has a trophy in his honour. He is survived by a wife.

Emotional Smith collects large testimonial cheque


Robin receives cheque from Colin Ingleby-Mackenzie

Robin Smith collected a cheque for £239,000 from Hampshire Cricket President Colin Ingleby-Mackenzie at the counties annual general meeting.An emotional Smith, thanked everyone who helped and supported him in his testimonial in 2003, and stated how much he would miss being part of the playing squad.A tanned Smith, just returned from the West Indies will retain contact with the club in an ambassadorial roll.

Government grant for club cricket

The Eastern Province Cricket Board Amateur Department received a major boost when the central government through the United Cricket Board of SA made available an amount of R 11 904.76 for the previously disadvantaged premier league clubs.This money is geared towards uplifting the standard of cricket through coaching at those clubs.The clubs who will benefit from this funding are Gelvandale, Motherwell, Northville and United Cricket Clubs.On site to present the cheques to the clubs are Mr.Tono Mle, who said the government is to be commended for this effort. "This money will be of great help as some of these clubs will be undergoing winter coaching programmes. We also wish to appeal to our local companies to follow suit as government and government alone cannot make it happen. We need to establish a partnership so as to ensure that we achieve excellency in all various spheres."

Ben Smith wins cricketer of the month award

The Bland Bankart plc ‘Cricketer of the Month’ Award for July 2001 has beenawarded to Ben Smith.During the month of July, Ben scored 418 Championship runs in five innings. Thehighlights of his performance were 185 vs. Surrey, 117 vs. Glamorgan and 166vs. Kent.By the end of July Ben had scored 841 Championship runs at an average of44.26, accumulating four 100s and one 50.Congratulations are extended to Ben from all at Bland Bankart plc.,Leicestershire County Cricket Club, and the selection panel.The ‘Cricketer of the Month’ Award for July was presented to Ben Smith byPhilip Bland, Chairman of Bland Bankart plc.

Liverpool will forget Fekir forever if they could pull off ambitious raid on £63m-rated world star

Liverpool fans in the Transfer Tavern are delighted with how the transfer window has gone so far and can’t wait to see who will be arriving next.

Jurgen Klopp wasted no time in revamping his squad, signing Fabinho from Monaco for £40m just days after their defeat in the Champions League final. The Brazilian joined Naby Keita at the club on July 1 with both men set to feature against Chester in Liverpool’s first friendly. Our regulars are also delighted to see Mohamed Salah pen a new five-year-deal containing no release clause.

A title challenge is possible if Liverpool add a few more key signings. An attacking midfielder to replace Philippe Coutinho will be a priority in the summer. Following the collapse of Nabil Fekir’s move to Anfield, Klopp needs to find the right man to partner Keita in the engine room.

Our punters were gutted to see Fekir’s move fall through so Klopp should make an audacious attempt to sign James Rodriguez from Real Madrid instead. Valued at £63m by Transfermarkt, the Colombian is 12 months into a two-year loan with Bayern Munich. But following Zinedine Zidane’s dismissal, Madrid might surely be tempted to recall the 26-year-old.

Rodriguez has impressed for Colombia at the World Cup, notching two assists as his country topped their group to set up the round of 16 clash with England. His performances would likely spark a bidding war between some of the biggest clubs in Europe, though the Reds have recently shown a willingness to splash big cash in order to improve.

The former Monaco man is extremely suited to Klopp’s system, capable of playing out wide or centrally like Coutinho. His creativity and technical ability would compliment Keita in the centre of midfield and provide plenty of chances for Liverpool’s forwards.

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Reportedly (as per Don Balon) available for just £40m, this one is a no-brainer.

Liverpool fans, thoughts?

Guernsey and Vanuatu apply for Associate status

Three countries have applied for ICC Affiliate membership and two more to be upgraded from Affiliate to Associate membership.Bulgaria, Estonia and Turkey’s applications for Affiliate membership will be considered by the ICC and its annual conference in Dubai at the end of June.Guernsey and Vanuatu have applied for an upgrade to Associate membership which, if successful, will mean a substantial increase in the funding available to their national associations.Consideration of Vanuatu’s application is subject to it meeting the playing standard criterion in its matches against existing Associates in the World Cricket League Division 5. An ICC team is inspecting the facilities in Guernsey this week.

England seek ruthless finale

Daren Ganga: ‘We showed a lot of character and strength’ © Getty Images

It wasn’t until midway through this week’s third Test at Old Trafford that a lugubrious series finally sparked into life. England’s effortless dominance of the first two Tests was threatened, albeit briefly, by Darren Sammy’s inspirational spell on the third afternoon, and by Shivnarine Chanderpaul’s dogged insubmission thereafter, and it took the very best efforts of Monty Panesar and Steve Harmison to put the result beyond doubt.And so, for all that there is nothing tangible to play for as the teams decamp to Chester-le-Street, there is plenty pride at stake for both parties. England’s captain Michael Vaughan may have made it two wins out of two since his return to the helm (and 21 out of 35 all told), but he was rightly demanding more ruthlessness after his team’s hit-and-miss performances.Vaughan’s West Indian counterpart, Daren Ganga, on the other hand, would simply settle for more consistency. His side showed their best and worst traits at Old Trafford – the game was won and lost during a pitiful first-innings surrender in which their last six wickets fell for 13 runs, and yet such was the tenacity with which they batted second-time around, with the big-hitting Runako Morton epitomising a new over-my-dead-body attitude, that they fell just 60 runs short of squaring the series.”We showed a lot of character and strength,” said Ganga. “There are a lot of positives from this game that we are going to take to Durham.” Among these was the performance of their debutant allrounder, Darren Sammy, who showed strength, stamina and an eye for the big occasion in taking 7 for 66 in England’s second-innings collapse. However, Sammy was forced to go for a scan after injuring his groin while batting in the run-chase, and his fitness is not yet guaranteed.”It would be disappointing after he had such a good role in his first Test match,” said David Moore, West Indies’ coach. “It will leave a bit of a gap after what he has done for us – but I am very hopeful he will play. Sammy is just a complete example of hard work. If you wanted to hold up someone to say ‘this is what hard work can do’ [then] he’s your man.”Sammy himself told Cricinfo that his ambition is to be “the workhorse of the team”, and in that regard he could have no better role-model that his opposite number in the England set-up, a man who is himself returning to action after a groin injury. Matthew Hoggard played in 40 consecutive Tests for England until he missed the Sydney Test in January. Since then he has bowled just 10.5 overs in three Tests, but he proved his fitness on Wednesday, taking 1 for 55 in ten overs during Yorkshire’s one-run victory over Northamptonshire at Headingley.

Michael Vaughan in the Durham nets on the eve of the match: © Getty Images

“It was great to go out there and play in a game,” Hoggard told The Guardian afterwards. “You can’t replicate that in the nets. It was a good workout and I’m happy with the way it’s coming out. The only issue is going into the game without a lot of match practice, but It’s not as if I’ve come back feeling like a bag of spanners.”That’s more than can be said for the man headed in the opposite direction. Had he taken his opportunities over the past three matches, Liam Plunkett might have been anticipating a first Test in front of his Durham faithful. Instead he has been dispatched to the Rose Bowl to rediscover his form in the County Championship against Hampshire. England will, however, have two local representatives in Paul Collingwood and Harmison – and for Harmison in particular, it promises to be an eventful homecoming.England haven’t quite despaired of getting him back to his best, but it’s been a near-run thing this summer. At Lord’s he was dreadful; at Headingley he was distinctly average, save for a three-wicket burst to seal the match on a dank fourth morning. At Old Trafford, he started with a memorably desperate first over (that Ganga was unable to survive), but improved steadily as the game went by. By the time the match had been won after lunch, he was pounding in with an enthusiasm that few had witnessed for months.”He showed more character than any of us,” said Vaughan. “I’ve never been a bowler so I can only imagine how hard it must be when you know you are not at your best. He looked at himself, answered a few questions and came back in the second innings. He really worked hard. I don’t like to say he’s back to his best but he was certainly back to some real consistency in the second innings.”England 1 Andrew Strauss, 2 Alastair Cook, 3 Michael Vaughan (capt), 4 Kevin Pietersen, 5 Paul Collingwood, 6 Ian Bell, 7 Matt Prior (wk), 8 Matthew Hoggard, 9 Ryan Sidebottom, 10 Steve Harmison, 11 Monty Panesar.West Indies (probable) 1 Chris Gayle, 2 Daren Ganga (capt), 3 Devon Smith, 4 Runako Morton, 5 Shivnarine Chanderpaul, 6 Dwayne Bravo, 7 Denesh Ramdin (wk), 8 Darren Sammy, 9 Jerome Taylor, 10 Fidel Edwards, 11 Corey Collymore.

Jayasuriya in line for recall

Sanath Jayasuriya: back in contention © Getty Images

Sanath Jayasuriya has been named in Sri Lanka’s 12-man squad for the third Test at Trent Bridge, which gets underway on Friday morning, and has a “very good chance” of making the final 11, according to his captain, Mahela Jayawardene.Jayasuriya, 36, retired from Test cricket after Sri Lanka’s last home series against Pakistan earlier this year, but was persuaded to come out of retirement by the new chairman of selectors, Asantha de Mel. He was overlooked for the six-wicket defeat at Edgbaston, as Sri Lanka’s think-tank opted to invest in youth, but now – in a must-win match – he seems set for a recall.”If we have Sanath it gives us more depth and experience, as well as another bowling option,” Jayawardene explained to BBC Sport. And on a pitch that looks dry and is expected to turn, that final factor may well be the clincher, as his left-arm spin has been an underrated weapon in the course of his 102-Test career, accounting for 92 wickets at 33.18.Chamara Kapugedera, the 19-year-old middle-order batsman, could be the man to miss out. England will name their final 11 later, with Gloucestershire’s Jon Lewis once again expected to be overlooked.Sri Lanka (from) 1 Upul Tharanga, 2 Michael Vandort, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (wk), 4 Mahela Jayawardene (capt), 5 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 6 Chamara Kapugedera, 7 Farvez Maharoof, 8 Chaminda Vaas, 9 Muttiah Muralitharan, 10 Lasith Malinga, 11 Nuwan Zoysa, 12 Sanath Jayasuriya.

Taj television tight-lipped on West Indies tour to Sri Lanka

Taj Television, who own the broadcasting rights for international cricket matches played in Sri Lanka, have decided not to make any comments at this stage on the upcoming Test and one-day triangular series involving hosts Sri Lanka, West Indies and India.The series has become a somewhat low-key affair after the West Indies board left out such top-class cricketers as Brian Lara, Chris Gayle and Ramnaresh Sarwan because of the latest contract dispute and then named instead a second-string team under the captaincy of Shivnarine Chanderpaul. The team comprises eight players from the West Indies A team who are currently touring Sri Lanka.Taj’s director of sales and marketing, Jude de Vallier, said that this is not the appropriate time to make any comments with regard to the series, but added that they would review the situation and issue a statement if it is necessary. In January, Taj Television, the holding company of the Dubai-based sports broadcaster Ten Sports, signed a US$ 50 million broadcasting rights deal with Sri Lanka Cricket for three years.But now it seems that the television company is going to make a rather inauspicious start in trying to sell TV rights for the two-Test series and the seven-match one-day triangular tournament. The first Test begins on July 13.

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