Northants continue impressive start

ScorecardSteven Crook took seven wickets in the match to go with his first-innings half-century•Getty Images

Northamptonshire strengthened their position at the top of Division Two with a seven-wicket victory over Gloucestershire at Bristol.The hosts began the final day on 280 for 9 in their second innings, leading by only 68, and added 19 runs in 25 minutes before being bowled out for 299, Jack Taylor last man out for 48. That left Northamptonshire requiring 88 to win and, despite some spirited Gloucestershire bowling, which accounted for Kyle Coetzer, Stephen Peters and Alex Wakely, they passed their target of 88 just before lunch.Northants took a maximum 24 points from the game, while Gloucestershire had to be content with three. To compound their disappointment, neither Benny Howell nor Liam Norwell fielded in the Northants’ second innings because of injuries.Taylor produced some defiant blows, including a six over wide long-on off Trent Copeland, in adding 12 to his overnight score. His resistance ended when he got a bottom edge on to his stumps to give Steven Crook his fourth wicket of the innings, seventh of the match and 18th of the season.A bitterly cold day stayed dry for Northants, who contrived to lose openers Coetzer and Peters with only 18 on the board. Coetzer was first to go, well taken low down by Taylor at midwicket off David Payne for 5, then Peters miscued a leg-side shot to substitute fielder Graeme McCarter off Will Gidman and departed for 7.Wakely counterattacked with a brisk 20, hitting Taylor’s offspin for a straight six and a four through wide long-on. But in the same over he mishit another attacking shot to Chris Dent at midwicket to leave the visitors 51 for 3.The reassuring presence of David Sales was at the wicket by then. He and Rob Newton saw Northants safely to their modest target, Sales ending unbeaten on 29.

Kohli, Unadkat help RCB keep pace

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Virat Kohli became only the second man to be dismissed on 99 in T20s•BCCI

After 16 overs of their innings, Royal Challengers Bangalore were 106 for 3, and Virat Kohli was 47 off 43. When Kohli was run out while attempting the second off the last ball of the innings, he had reached 99 off 58, and Royal Challengers had finished on 183. Not many teams recover from such an onslaught. Delhi Daredevils tried hard to recover, but lost out to a limping Jaydev Unadkat’s five-for and crashed to their 10th loss out of 13 matches. Royal Challengers moved to 16 points from 13 matches, staying in touch with the other three contenders for three open spots in the playoffs.Those four overs, when Kohli and AB de Villiers hit six sixes and seven fours to loot 77 runs, took the game away from the hosts, but until then they had bowled pretty well on a slow surface. The same couldn’t be said of their fielding and field placements. The fashionable wide slip, a simple drop by Virender Sehwag and a no-ball by inches all cost them wickets after they had got the better of Chris Gayle.Finally given the first over the innings, Morne Morkel grew a leg and bowled fast, accurate and extracted movement. He had Kohli edging through even before he had scored, but had overstepped by an inch. Sehwag soon dropped Kohli when he was 14. However, despite those blemishes they kept the lid on until Kohli and de Villiers unleashed towards the end.De Villers began the onslaught, attacking his South Africa team-mate and the best Daredevils bower, Morkel. With 18 runs off the 17th over, including a ramp over fine leg, de Villiers might just have freed Kohli up a bit too. He had been anchoring the innings until then, but he now got stuck into his India team-mate, Umesh Yadav. Twenty-four came off that over, and it only got worse for Daredevils.Kohli didn’t go crazy with the hitting, but with the strike staying with him, he trusted his trademark shots to punish Yadav some more in the final over of the innings. One of them was a four through wide long-on, and the other a drive through extra cover. He was now 86 with three balls to go. Then came two straight sixes. The run-out of the final ball kept the damage down to 23, but enough had been done.Ravi Rampaul sconed Sehwag twice early in the second innings, and with Sehwag struggling Mahela Jayawardene fell in search of quick runs. Unadkat then took out the softened Sehwag with a slower ball, and Daredvils were 49 for 1 in the sixth over. Around those events, though, Unmukt Chand survived despite a loud edge through to the keeper, and Unadkat injured himself fielding in the deep.With nothing to lose, Daredevils kept going after the total, and stayed in the hunt, but Unadkat once again split the game open when brought back in the 17th over. Daredevils were 129 for 4 then. Soon to be 133 for 6 by the end of that over.It did become a bit interesting with slightly poor bowling over the next two overs, and even poorer umpiring. In the 19th over, Rampaul was no-balled with half his foot behind the line, and the third umpire didn’t intervene. He got his own back with a dot-ball yorker, but conceded a six off the last ball, leaving Unadkat 18 to defend in the last over.Both Morkel and Irfan Pathan hit him for a four each before Unadkat came back with a yorker to send back Morkel and seal the win.

Bangladesh women to tour India

Bangladesh women will face India for the first time, when they tour the country for three Twenty20s and as many ODIs, starting in Vadodara on Tuesday.India have omitted senior batsman Mithali Raj and experienced fast bowler Jhulan Goswami, among others, from the 15-member squad for the series. Batsman Harmanpreet Kaur will take over as captain from Raj, who led India during their first-round exit in the recently-concluded Women’s World Cup.Bangladesh weren’t a part of that tournament. Having started playing international cricket in 2011, they last played the Twenty20 Asia Cup in Guangzhou, reaching the semi-finals of the tournament. Salma Khatun will lead the 15-member side on the ten-day tour, which will end with the final ODI in Ahmedabad on April 12.Squads:
India: Harmanpreet Kaur (capt), Poonam Raut (vice-capt), Thirush Kamini, Smriti Mandhana, Anagha Deshpande, Sneha Deepthi, Mona Meshram, Nagarajan Niranjana, Archana Das, Poonam Yadav, Ritu Dhrub, Swagatika Rath, Shubhlakshmi Sharma, Sushma Verma, Ekta BishtBangladesh: Salma Khatun (capt), Farzana Haque (vice-capt), Shohaly Akther, Ayesha Akhter, Fahima Khatun, Jahanara Alam, Lata Mondal, Nuzhat Tasnia, Panna Ghosh, Ritu Moni, Rumana Ahmed, Shahanaz Parvin, Shukhtara Rahman, Tazia Akhter, Yasmin Boishakhi

Raipur, Ranchi to host IPL matches

Raipur and Ranchi match schedule

April 28, Daredevils v Warriors, Raipur
May 1, Daredevils v Knight Riders, Raipur
May 12, Knight Riders v Royal Challengers, Ranchi
May 14, Knight Riders v Warriors, Ranchi

Raipur and Ranchi will make debuts as IPL host cities in the 2013 edition, according to the tournament schedule that was released on Saturday. Raipur will act as a second home venue for Delhi Daredevils, while Ranchi will host two of Kolkata Knight Riders’ matches.The schedule also confirmed that the Sawai Mansingh Stadium in Jaipur will host all of Rajasthan Royals’ home games. Earlier, the BCCI had relocated Royals’ games to Ahmedabad and Rajkot, following a prolonged standoff between the Rajasthan Cricket Association and the Rajasthan state sports council – which owns the stadium – over the use of the ground.However, doubts remain about where Pune Warriors’ home matches will be played. As of now, the schedule suggests that they will be played at the Maharashtra Cricket Association (MCA) Stadium – previously the Subrata Roy Sahara Stadium – in Pune as has been the norm, but the dispute between the MCA and the Sahara Group, the franchise owners, remains unresolved.The standoff centres around the title rights of the stadium: the MCA had covered the name of the stadium that read ‘Subrata Roy Sahara Stadium’ in January for alleged default over payment of the contract, and Sahara Group officials subsequently moved the Bombay High Court over “termination of agreements”. The court case doesn’t have any direct relation with the hosting of the Sahara-owned franchise’s games in Pune, but the business conglomerate expressed its desire to play their home games at other venues.The IPL 2013 tournament opener, on April 3, will be between defending champions Knight Riders and Daredevils at Eden Gardens. The group matches will end on May 19, following which the play-off matches will be split between the MA Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai and Eden Gardens. The final will be in Kolkata on May 26.

BCCI hit with massive tax bill

The BCCI has been hit with a Rs 2300 crore (approx $433m) notice from the income tax department and has asked its treasurer Ajay Shirke to suggest how to deal with the issue.The BCCI working committee met in Chennai on Monday and discussed the matter in detail. President N Srinivasan explained to the working committee that the tax-related issues have compounded since the BCCI changed its objectives in 2006, has reported.Since the BCCI is registered as a charitable trust, it used to get various tax exemptions on the grounds of promoting cricket as a ‘charitable activity’. But after the BCCI amended its objectives in June 2006, the government has started considering the BCCI to be earning income through ‘commercial’ means, it was explained to the working committee.The bone of contention has been the income generated through sale of IPL franchises and through sale of broadcast rights for the Twenty20 league. While the BCCI claims it distributes a “major portion” of the income generated to its affiliated units (ie the state and regional associations), the tax authorities have been reportedly seeking taxes both from the parent body as well as affiliated units.It was learnt that Shirke has been asked to chalk out the path ahead “within a fortnight” so that the BCCI can “sort out” all the impeding issues with the tax authorities.

Agarkar shines as Mumbai squeeze Baroda

ScorecardFile photo: Ajit Agarkar scored a quick fifty and followed it up with the wicket of Yusuf Pathan•Sportz Solutions

Mumbai buried Baroda under a mountain of runs on a flat track, and then watched irresponsible Baroda batsmen crumble under the weight. In reply to the hosts’ 645 for 9 declared, Baroda got off to a good start, but their batsmen played irresponsible shots to be reduced to 157 for 5, a predicament from which there seems no way back. Not against Mumbai, renowned masters of the game of not letting the opposition back down once.It has been thus right from the time Wasim Jaffer and Sachin Tendulkar came together to bat on the first morning. Abhishek Nayar carried their good work forward on day two, and while he could add only 10 to his overnight 122 on day three, their bowlers did the job, both with the bat and the ball. Nayar fell at 563 for 8, but Ajit Agarkar and Javed Khan attacked the tired Baroda bowlers with a 73-run stand in 13.1 overs.Agarkar, the better batsman of the two, relied more on finding gaps and picking twos while Javed hit four sixes, one of which resulted in a lost ball. Javed holed out just before reaching fifty, but Agarkar brought up his 16th in first-class cricket. Not many expected Mumbai to declare – what with the possibility of a sixth day in the match – but they asked Baroda to bat for 25 minutes before lunch.Those 25 minutes didn’t bring much nerves as openers Saurabh Wakaskar and Aditya Waghmode continued with what has been a fruitful season. The same continued in the post-lunch session, although the openers remained content in defence, reaching 93 for 0 by tea. After tea, though, Mumbai’s move of playing two left-arm spinners began to work. Debutant Vishal Dabholkar broke through soon after Wakaskar reached his fifty, and Baroda their hundred. He pushed at a length ball that didn’t turn enough, and moving to his right at slip, Wasim Jaffer took a catch more difficult than the kind Yusuf Pathan kept dropping at slip.Waghmode survived an easy stumping soon after, but his partner Abhimanyu Chauhan, who had shackled himself, didn’t enjoy such luck. Dhawal Kulkarni had pushed him back with short balls, Chauhan was stuck at 0 off 20 balls, but the 21st was pitched up, and snuck through the gap created by his staying on the crease. Not that Waghmode made much of his luck: he went to punch a ball rising higher than the waist and angling away, and managed a nick to provide relief to wicketkeeper Aditya Tare, who gleefully accepted the chance.Even before Yusuf Pathan could confound with his innings, Kedar Devdhar fell lbw to Dabholkar. Agarkar came back to account for the reckless Yusuf, who toe-ended a pull shot to mid-on. Ambati Rayudu, who had been off the field with illness, came to bat at No. 7, but he is left with too much to do.

No pressure on us – Mushfiqur

Despite being on the verge of a series victory, against a West Indies team seemingly made for one-day cricket, and in front of passionate home support, the Bangladesh captain Mushfiqur Rahim has insisted his team are not feeling the pressure ahead of the third ODI in Mirpur but retained respect for the matchwinning potential in the visitors’ team.”All the pressure is on them, not us,” Mushfiqur said. “The manner of defeats would make them think because we didn’t win by one wicket or 10 runs, we won by handsome margins that proves we are playing better cricket than them. If we can continue in this vein, we can get a favourable result.”Having said that, West Indies are a capable side and they can come back and surprise us. They are a dangerous side. Things are clicking in our favour, whether that is forming a batting partnership or taking a wicket at the right time. But I am confident that even if they play well, our consistency will pull us through.”If Bangladesh can convert this opportunity into a series victory it will not only help the team’s confidence but will also provide a vital lift to their standing on the world stage. They have slowly come into grips with the nuances of ODI cricket, a format they are more consistent at than Tests or Twenty20.”We have been playing good, consistent cricket in ODIs for the past year and a half, especially at home,” Mushfiqur said. “It is definitely a huge opportunity in front of us to win the series. Everyone is aware of this so I hope we continue doing what we have done in the last two games and perform in all three areas.”Mushfiqur also hit back at West Indies coach Ottis Gibson’s suggestions that Bangladesh have “had it easy” after Gibson said that it was his batsmen who have given away the wickets.”We have forced them to gift the wickets,” Mushfiqur said. “Our bowling partnership was very good so they didn’t have any options apart from giving us the wickets. As simple as that.”Bangladesh’s two victories have come without key allrounder Shakib Al Hasan, who has been ruled out of the series, and while Mushfiqur conceded it was a big hole to fill it has open up opportunities for some younger players which, he said, bodes well for the future.”It would have been a lot better performance with Shakib. We are fortunate that a cricketer like him is in our team. I hope he comes back to cricket quickly. Due to his absence, the younger players have a chance to play in this series.”It is a big opportunity for them, if they can play against such strong opponents and do well they will have a lot of confidence. We have guys now who perform so we have more than just Tamim and Shakib to rely upon. It is a good sign, and is a new addition to our strength.”Mushfiqur, who confirmed Rubel Hossain will replace the injured Abul Hasan, expressed concerns over the amount of dew that everyone has seen on the Mirpur outfield as they trained under the lights.”Rubel has recovered sufficiently after bowling a lot in the Tests, and he will replace Abul Hasan,” he said. “The wicket will be slow but probably the ball will skid in the evening. I am surprised to see so much dew in the evening. We lost to India even after scoring 290 because of the dew. It is a concern, so we will try to balance the team keeping this in mind.”

South Australia eye rare MCG victory


Scorecard
Phillip Hughes was eventually dismissed for 158•Getty Images

Gary Putland and Chadd Sayers bowled South Australia into a strong position to push for victory on the final day at the MCG, where Victoria went to stumps on the third evening at 6 for 86. The Bushrangers still trailed by 11 runs they were relying on Peter Handscomb, who was on 32, and John Hastings, who had 10, and the pair had formed a 45-run stand after the top order was demolished.Sayers got rid of Chris Rogers, Ryan Carters and Aaron Finch before Putland took his wicket tally to ten for the match when he removed Glenn Maxwell, David Hussey and Cameron White. Those strikes left the Bushrangers at 6 for 41, and although Handscomb and Hastings were able to stage a recovery of sorts, the damage was done.The Redbacks can now dream of their first Sheffield Shield win at the MCG since 1998, after earlier cruising to first-innings points. Phillip Hughes made 158, Callum Ferguson scored 73 and Travis Head made 66 as South Australia made 443, with Hastings (5 for 66) and Maxwell (4 for 42) the most threatening of Victoria’s bowlers.

Cowan and Harris share honours in even battle

ScorecardJames Harris made regular inroads although was expensive•Getty Images

Two cricketers dominated the evenly-balanced opening day of the second unofficial Test match between England Lions and Australia A at Edgbaston. One of them, Glamorgan’s James Harris, has been badly hampered by injury over the last year and is not mentioned too often when the full England side’s seam bowling requirements are discussed; yet he proved the timeless value of accuracy to take six wickets, two of them lbw and two bowled, as the Lions attack enjoyed success, but also conceded runs too freely, on a pitch which had been trimmed since it offered the seamers plenty of help in Monday’s CB40 game.The other player to catch the eye was Australia A captain Ed Cowan, who made 73 when the Birmingham wicket was at its liveliest and the England bowlers fresh. Cowan did not seem to be the obvious candidate to open his country’s batting early last November until hundreds in four successive matches won him a place in the team for the Boxing Day Test. So if the players have a moment to relax with a beer after this game, maybe Harris can compare notes on the virtues of persistence with a man who is nearly eight years his senior and who has paid his dues to make it.For the moment, they are on opposite sides in a short series which has been well contested throughout. And no one has fought harder than Cowan, whose 186-ball monument to patience on the opening day of the second match followed his 99 in last week’s encounter at Old Trafford. The Australia A captain has worked hard to fashion a successful technique in which every stroke seems carefully calibrated; even favoured shots, like the cover drive, are removed from his repertoire if they carry unacceptable levels of risk.It was in this manner that Cowan proceeded carefully to his 116-ball fifty, hitting four boundaries and, somewhat incongruously, lifting a bouncer from Harris over fine-leg for six. He seemed set for a century too, until James Tredwell won an lbw decision from Neil Mallender when Cowan attempted a sweep. The batsman had almost to drag himself from the crease and appeared less than enamoured with the decision. He may have had a point.By the time Cowan was fourth out, the total was 186 and Harris had started his good day’s work. That had begun with his twelfth ball of the morning when Liam Davis shouldered arms and was lbw for a 15-ball 24. Four overs later, Michael Klinger was also lbw although on this occasion the batsman was on the front foot, not that it saved him from Tim Robinson’s finger.Cowan and Phillip Hughes saw Australia A through to lunch on 106 for 2, although they did so in contrasting styles: Hughes was adventurous, cover-driving Matt Coles for two fours and clipping Ben Stokes’ final ball before the break though midwicket for another boundary; Cowan stuck to the method he knew and it served him well.Ten overs after the break, Hughes gave Harris his third wicket when he drove all too loosely and was caught by Joe Root at short cover for a 51 which had been filled with fine strokes, yet had exhibited an all too fallible method. The afternoon might have gone even better for the Lions had not Joe Burns been dropped by Samit Patel off Chris Woakes, who was in the middle of a fine nine-over spell which cost just 12 runs.Either side of Cowan’s dismissal, Burns steadied the ship for the tourists, reaching tea on 27 in one of those innings where one looks up at the scoreboard and wonders quite how the batsman has acquired his runs.The final session of play at Edgbaston was the most attractive of the day. Australia scored 110 runs for the loss of five wickets, three of them to Harris, who bowled Burns for 29 immediately after the resumption when the batsman played across the line. At the other end, the Kent offspinner James Tredwell epitomised the parsimonious spinner and he too got his reward, first when Tom Cooper edged his arm-ball to Kieswetter, and then ten overs later when Mitchell Johnson also snicked a ball to the keeper, though this delivery did turn.By the end of the day Tredwell’s figures were 19-7-35-3 and he has been the Lions best bowler in the series, albeit that he seems fated to be the supporting actor rather than the leading man.Dominating the stage in the last hour were Tim Paine and, inevitably perhaps, Harris. The Australian wicketkeeper-batsman restored the game to some sort of balance with a well-judged innings of 59 and a sensible eighth-wicket partnership of 51 with Nathan Coulter-Nile, who made 24. Both batsmen fell to Harris, though, Coulter-Nile hitting across the line and Paine caught down the leg side.These dismissals proved once and for all that it was to be the Welsh seamer’s day and he was honest enough to admit in the aftermath of success that other bowlers had deserved success too. Probably he was thinking of Woakes, who had Nathan Lyon dropped by Tredwell at slip in the last significant action of the evening session.

Westley, Shah rack up runs for Essex

ScorecardOwais Shah, seen here for his old county Middlesex, made his highest score since joining Essex•PA Photos

Tom Westley and Owais Shah both hit centuries as Essex declared on 520 for 9 in reply to Glamorgan’s 438 all out on the third day at Colchester. Faced with six overs before the close and a deficit of 82 runs, the visitors steered clear of trouble to reach 16 without loss.Westley made 185 and Shah 138 after Essex, who resumed on 165 without loss, warmed to their task against a toiling and innocuous attack. Jaik Mickleburgh added only two runs to his overnight score before he was caught behind by Mark Wallace off Huw Waters. His dismissal on 74 ended an opening stand of 178 and came immediately after Westley completed his century with three boundaries. It arrived from 149 balls and contained 20 fours.The arrival of Shah hardly brought an increase in tempo. He needed 31 deliveries to open his account but then found his touch to complete a half-century from 98 balls. On a pitch that gave the bowlers no help, the third wicket pair were to put together a partnership of 191 in 56 overs. The longer it went on, the more subdued Westley became and he scored only 35 runs in 29 overs after lunch before his marathon effort, during which he surpassed his previous best of 132, finally ended on the stroke of tea when he fell lbw trying to sweep offspinner Robert Croft. His innings lasted 402 minutes and 334 balls, and in it, he gathered 28 fours.By then Shah had completed his first century of the season, moving into three figures by advancing down the pitch and despatching a huge six over mid-wicket against Croft. It had arrived from 158 balls and contained 13 fours in addition to two maximums.At tea, Essex still required 24 runs from three overs to move to 400 and pick up maximum bonus batting points. It was a mission they accomplished with just one ball to spare thanks to a flourish from Shah that included an on-side six against Jim Allenby but not before Mark Pettini was caught on the long-on boundary attacking Croft.Shah’s fine innings came to an end shortly afterwards when he drove Graham Wagg into the hands of Allenby at mid-off. He laced his 198 ball innings with four sixes and 17 fours.The remaining batsmen came and went in rapid succession with Croft the main beneficiary as he took 5 for 135 in 30.5 overs although the home side were able to record their highest total of the summer.