Victoria challenged by Bichel and Perren

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Ashley Noffke helped himself to 53 lower-order runs © Getty Images

Clinton Perren’s 99 and Andy Bichel’s 7 for 54 kept Queensland in the game as Victoria were set 224 to win on a dramatic day at Brisbane. The Bushrangers, who need a victory to reach the Pura Cup final, were 0 for 2 at stumps having let the Bulls off the hook to reach 269.Perren compiled important partnerships with Chris Hartley and Ashley Noffke after a bad start left the team 4 for 28. Perren missed his second century of the season by one run but Noffke continued to trouble Victoria, passing fifty for the second time against them in 2006-07.Noffke was the last man out, for 53, and his timing gave Victoria one tricky over to face before stumps. They took no chances, opening with a night-watchman, their first-innings No. 11 Dirk Nannes, who survived all six balls from Bichel.Bichel had starred in a hectic morning session, destroying Victoria for 165 and earning his best figures for Queensland. The visitors lost 5 for 25 in 14 overs before the Bulls also struggled and were four-down at lunch.Clinton McKay, who claimed only one victim from his first two matches, was on a hat-trick in the sixth over when he had Jimmy Maher and Greg Moller caught in the slips. McKay did not get three in a row but next over added Ryan Broad, snared at bat-pad, and finished with 4 for 42.

NSW steal ING Cup despite Tait brilliance

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Even Shaun Tait’s six-wicket burst could not keep New South Wales from the ING Cup © Getty Images

Stuart MacGill hit the trophy-winning run for the second time in two seasons as New South Wales clung on for a one-wicket victory over South Australia at Adelaide. The Blues almost didn’t make it as Shaun Tait produced a stunning performance of 6 for 41 – he took the first five wickets as the Redbacks tried valiantly to defend only 154 – but MacGill’s leg glance off Darren Lehmann earned them the final ING Cup prize in a similar manner to last season’s Pura Cup success.Corey Richards and Phil Jaques made a comfortable start after Tait had knocked over Craig Simmons for 1, but Tait returned with a brutal over that included the wickets of Richards (35), Jaques (21) and Matthew Phelps (0). Brad Haddin and Dominic Thornely combined for a 44-run partnership to steer the side away from the trouble of 4 for 67 before Tait struck again.Thornely edged him off the back foot to Mark Cosgrove at first slip, Haddin was run out by Callum Ferguson and when Tait struck his sixth wicket, a fierce short ball for the caught-behind of Jason Krejza, New South Wales were 20 runs short with three batsmen remaining. Moises Henriques, who captained Australia to the semi-finals of the Under-19 World Cup this month, walked out to meet Aaron O’Brien and remained composed with an unbeaten 5 off 21 balls as O’Brien departed seven runs short of the total and Aaron Bird left with six still needed.However, MacGill again showed his batting capabilities under extreme pressure and heaved his team to victory, just as he did against Queensland at the Gabba in 2004-05. “We just keep coming up with the goods in the finals,” Haddin said before collecting the trophy, which his state has won in four of the past six seasons. Tait was an easy choice as Man of the Match and Lehmann hoped the result would help his young team in the future. “To my players: so close yet so far, a great experience,” he said.The Blues were set for a strolling chase once they dismissed South Australia for 154 in only 43.5 overs. Bird created problems with 3 for 30 after the home side had cruised to 1 for 66. However, they quickly lost 5 for 24, including Mark Cosgrove for 49, and relied on Graham Manou (28) and Mark Cleary (26) to drag them towards 150. Doug Bollinger was also effective and Stuart MacGill and O’Brien matched his two wickets.New Wales collected Au$75,000 for the win that ended ING’s 14-year involvement with the competition. David Hussey, the Victoria batsman, won the Fastest Fifty award for his 36-ball effort against the Warriors while the Best New Talent was Western Australia’s Brett Dorey, who was rewarded earlier in the season with an Australia one-day cap.

Balaji's control and Inzy's cool

Balaji’s control
Lakshmipathy Balaji returned to international cricket with a bang, dismissing five Pakistani batsmen by sticking to the basics. He has often spoken of his reliance on accuracy and on the first day he had the numbers to prove it. His discipline against the right-handers was impeccable. He pitched 97% of his balls were on or outside the off stump, tying down the batsmen and making them play at deliveries that cut and swung marginally. While Zaheer Khan and Irfan Pathan were fiery and swung it more, Balaji’s dedication to the rudiments fetched him 5 for 76.

Inzamam’s cool
From the first few balls of his innings, it was clear that Inzamam-ul-Haq was in great touch. Where his openers struggled to lay bat on ball, he played swinging deliveries with time to spare. The result was that he and Taufeeq Umar steadied the team after their rocky beginning, and even after Umar’s dismissal, he carried on with such comfort that nearly 70% of all the deliveries he faced hit the middle of his bat. Even more remarkably, he was beaten only 2% of the time during his stay on a pitch that afforded the bowlers huge swing.

As the pitch dried up and the ball swung less, Pakistan’s in-control percentage against the bowlers rose in the afternoon and then fell. This had much to do with some loose batting by the lower-middle order and the tail as well as accurate bowling.

Pathan v ZaheerBoth Pathan and Zaheer swung the ball in their first spells, but Zaheer seemed the more hostile, the more likely to make a breakthrough. He induced numerous edges off the bat and conceded three times as many runs as Pathan in the morning, but as the day went by, Pathan began pitching the balls in the right areas and made the batsmen play.

Zaheer continued to bowl with hostility throughout the day but could not discomfort the batsmen as he had in the morning. As a result, the in-control percentage of the batsmen against him rose: they were not in control of 17.1% of the time against Zaheer, while the figure bloated to 29.3% against Pathan.

'I don't care about ratings' – Ponting


Ricky Ponting: got value for his strokes
© Getty Images

Ricky Ponting pronounced himself "pretty happy" with the way in which he played on the opening day at the Adelaide Oval, though he admitted that Sehwag’s dropped catch at gully – when he had made just 17 – was "a big let-off". "It was a good wicket, and a good outfield," he said, "and you got real value for your strokes."He admitted that the Australians were in command, but cautioned against making too many plans ahead of tomorrow. "We want to get as many as we can, but we also know that it’s going to be hard work for the bowlers," he said, when asked about the possibility of enforcing the follow-on.Ponting’s century was his 19th, and the fifth this calendar year, taking his 2003 tally to a remarkable 1149 at 95.75. But he wasn’t too harsh on the Indian bowlers when asked what he thought of their display. "They missed Zaheer," he said bluntly. "He’s been their best bowler the past couple of years, and he bowled well up in Brisbane. They didn’t bowl as well as they’d have liked today, but you can’t judge them based on that."Of Irfan Pathan, he said, "I thought he might have swung it a bit more, having seen him play in India. But he ran in well and will certainly improve, no doubt about that."Ponting said that he enjoyed batting with Steve Waugh – "the crowd enjoyed it, the reception he got was sensational" – and said that lapses in concentration from Justin Langer, Damien Martyn and Waugh had cost only the individuals, and not the team. There was also praise for Simon Katich – "the way he played after he passed 20 was excellent."When asked where he rated alongside the modern-day batting greats, Ponting said he wasn’t particularly bothered. "Sachin’s been the standout player for a number of years, but I really don’t care too much about ratings and opinions."He said a more aggressive and positive approach had helped him to be more successful against the turning ball. "In India a couple of years ago, I didn’t back my technique enough, and that cost me," he said. Today, he certainly backed himself, and India paid the price.

Pakistan survive scare to maintain winning streak

SHARJAH – Pakistan recovered from a disastrous start of three for 15, to overhaul a modest West Indies target of 191 with four wickets and almost four overs to spare to maintain their winning streak here in the first of the three one-dayers. It indeed was the depth in their batting which saved the day for the Pakistanis, as Afridi, Youhana, Latif and Razzaq all played little cameos to guide Pakistan towards victory.As three wickets went down quickly, it seemed that Pakistan would once again make a mess of the run chase. The West Indies must have sniffed a chance, but everyone lower down the order made a contribution to dash their hopes, and Razzaq’s (unconquered 46, 41 balls, 5 fours, 1 six) lusty hitting at the fag end sealed the issue, making it look comfortable in the bargain.For his splendid all-round effort, Razzaq was named Man of the Match.Though Pakistan survived the scare to win the match, lots of credit must be given the West Indies; they at least made a fist of it – something the Windies seemed singularly incapable of in recent encounters.After being shot out for 190, the Caribbeans were off to a dream start as Naved Latif slashed at Merv Dillon in the opening over, Ridley Jacobs pouching the snick. Next over, Younis Khan played one to mid-off and scampered for a quick single and we saw Corey Collymore’s beating him in photo finish. Inzamam ul Haq, out of sorts and out of form, pottered around for 20 deliveries for his one run before Cameron Cuffy had him caught by Darren Ganga at mid-wicket.Afridi, who had lofted Cuffy over extra cover in the second over, with emphasis now on staying at the wicket, curbed his aggressive instincts to steady the ship in association with Yousuf Youhana. Right when it seemed that Pakistan was out of the woods and the stand between the two had flourished to 47, Afridi, who was by now shedding his inhibitions, lofted Darrel Brown down to Collymore for a fine running catch at the square leg fence.Youhana by now had played himself in and with Rashid Latif started playing some exquisite strokes, especially off his legs and the most attractive stand of the innings ensued. The two kept stroking their way, not in the main through boundaries but singles, twos and threes. The 100 was posted in the 30th over and the runs were now coming in a steady stream. Again when the Pakistan camp was breathing easy, Hooper snapped up Youhana, caught and bowled. Another stand of 40-plus had failed to progress further.Latif and Razzaq kept the momentum going, and though Rashid fell, caught at the square leg fence, after a very well made 47 (58 balls, 4 fours), Razzaq stood there, solid as a rock, sending Dillon’s first delivery of the 47th over crashing into the mid-wicket fence for victory. He was also judged the man of the match for his 2 wickets and an unbeaten 46.Earlier, on a superb batting wicket, winning the toss and electing to bat first, after a rather bright start, the West Indies lost the plot completely, to end up with a wholly insufficient 190 with nine deliveries of the regulation 50 overs remaining unutilised.With Chris Gayle taking the attack to the Pakistan bowlers in a stroke-filled innings of 50, they seemed destined to greater things. But that was not to be, and Pakistan managed to extend their winning streak to 10 successive games in overs-limited cricket.Making a comeback, Akram started off with a wide, and was despatched to the point boundary next ball by Darren Ganga. A couple of overs later, Waqar was treated similarly by Ganga, and the West Indies innings seemed off to a confident and brisk start. It was at this point that Ganga, playing from way inside the crease trod onto his stumps to give Waqar and Pakistan the first wicket. Wavell Hinds replaced him, and straightaway flicked Akram to the fine leg boundary for four. Hinds was dropped by Inzamam off Akram, an easy one in the slips, and though he hit the next ball for four to the square leg fence, he was not to benefit from this lapse. With the 50 of the innings already on the board, Shoaib Akhtar was brought on first change, and he immediately obliged his skipper with a wicket, Hinds caught at point by Younis Khan. Rated as the best all-round fielder of the team by coach Mudassar Nazar, Younis held onto the ball that was streaking to the boundary in a second attempt after it had bounced out.By now Gayle was in his element, and with skipper Hooper watching him from the other end, he unleashed a dazzling array of strokes, predominantly in front of the wicket and mostly on the off side. He was especially severe on a tiring Akram, hitting him for three boundaries in his seventh over – one gloriously on-driven for four, next audaciously put away in extra cover region, nearly taking Afridi’s head along with it, and yet another delivery off-driven to the boundary. Razzaq was given a taste of the same medicine, driven for fours to long-on and extra cover in his first over, and off-driven for four in the next.But Razzaq had his man in his third over, though not before Gayle reached his 50 (52 balls, 10 fours). It was a casual, perhaps over-confident shot, and to Gayle’s utter dismay it rattled the stumps – perishing right when he seemed to be most threatening. One soft dismissal followed another, as Chanderpaul holed out first ball to Afridi at mid-wicket.This double blow literally took the wind out of the Caribbeans’ sails, and to make an already bad situation worse, Ryan Hinds ran himself out, not grounding his bat after he was sent back by Hooper from midway down the pitch as Akram and Rashid Latif combined to ensure his demise.Happily-placed at 95 for 2 in 18 overs, the Windies were reduced to 117 for five in 25. What followed was drab, lacklustre cricket, with Hooper and Jacobs intent on not losing another wicket, and the Pakistan attack choking them for scoring opportunities. Such was the sway of Pakistan bowling in this part of the innings that there were absolutely no boundaries; while 16 fours were struck in the first 17 overs, there were none between 22 and 45.A well-set Hooper (45, 81 balls, 3 fours) was trapped leg before by Shahid Afridi in his first over of the second spell. His departure, in the 40th over, well and truly put paid to West Indies’ hopes of putting up a competitive total. Jacobs’ (25, 57 balls) following him three overs later, bowled behind his legs while he clumsily essayed a sweep, didn’t help matters at all. There was no flurry from the tail, though Brown clouted Saqlain for a six over mid-wicket, but he was gone two balls later – reverse sweeping into the hands of a highly dependable Younis Khan at point. A leaping Inzamam pulled off a stunner at mid-wicket off Akram to send back Dillon, and Cuffy was run-out by Yousuf Youhana to bring the curtain down on a rather unsatisfactory display by the Caribbeans.

Uttar Pradesh draw with Vidarbha

Vidarbha drew with Uttar Pradesh on Thursday atthe Vidarbha Cricket Association Ground, Nagpur,in the Vijay Merchant (under-16) Central Zoneleague match. UP middle order batsman A Alam witha fine knock of 109 and Vidarbha bowler SohilBhengade with 5/35 shared the honours.Electing to bat, Vidarbha got off to a bad startlosing their first wicket in the first over of thematch, with captain Ali Akbar out for a duck. Thatwas followed by a retrieving stand of 108 for thesecond wicket between Faiz Fazal (52) and PushkarMenghal (50). From a relatively strong position of109/1, the Vidarbha innings collapsed and came toan end on 149 in 70.2 overs. Devendra Singh (Jnr)was the pick of bowlers with figures of9.2-3-36-3.UP were struggling at 24/2 when T Abbas and A Alamgot together. They put on a partnership of 122 forthe third wicket. Abbas was dismissed for 68 madein 96 balls and included 11 fours. Captain R Elahijoined Alam and kept the momentum going with apartnership of 91 for the fourth wicket as Alamwas dismissed reducing UP to 237/4. Alam’s inningslasted 232 minutes and he got his runs off 180balls. Alam was severe on the bowlers, smashing 15boundaries. The UP innings folded up with thedismissal of Alam though captain Elahi made 62.Sohil Bhengade did most of the damage capturingfive of the last six batsmen to fall. UP finishedat 286 all out in 90.1 overs.Vidarbha in their second innings made a splendidstart with openers Ali Akbar and Faiz Fazalputting on 115 runs. Ali Akbar made 71 of thoseruns, striking 10 fours. Faiz Fazal went on toscore a patient 84 (8 fours) in 229 balls.Devendra Singh ripped apart the batting, pickingup 4/49 as Vidarbha’s second innings came to anend at 238 in 101 overs. The UP chase was never onas there was little time left in the match. By theclose, UP were 70/0 in 12 overs. UP took home fivepoints and Vidarbha had to remain content withthree.

AVFC: O’Rourke makes Douglas Luiz claim

Journalist Pete O’Rourke has claimed that Aston Villa are in talks with Douglas Luiz over a new contract, as per GiveMeSport.

The Lowdown: January interest in Luiz

Labelled a ‘fantastic player’ by Gregg Evans, the Brazil international has been a regular under both Dean Smith and Steven Gerrard this season. The 23-year-old has started 24 Premier League games and recently netted his first goal of the campaign against Southampton.

The Brazilian was a wanted man late in the January transfer window, with Villa rejecting three bids in the final week of thew winter market. Villa have been hoping to extend the player’s contract since then, and O’Rourke has now made a claim on the midfielder.

The Latest: O’Rourke’s comments on Luiz

Talking to GiveMeSport, the journalist had this to say about Luiz, with Villa’s sporting director Johan Lange and co still working on a new agreement:

“There are still talks ongoing over a new contract at Villa Park.

“It looks like he’s won favour with Steven Gerrard as well, despite doubts that he might be sold in January.”

The Verdict: Key few months

Luiz will be into the final 12 months of his current deal in the summer, so hopefully an agreement can be reached prior to then.

The South American may well be seeking a pay rise after becoming a key player under Gerrard, with his current salary worth £52,000 per week.

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Fellow midfielder Morgan Sanson has made just two league starts all season and is on more money than Luiz, so you couldn’t hold it against Luiz if he is looking to become one of the club’s biggest earners, as his performances have merited such a status.

In other news: ‘Brilliant…’ – Ashley Preece buzzing as Aston Villa announce another ‘long-term deal’

Tendulkar's SCG success and Gilchrist bags No. 400

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Sachin Tendulkar delighted the Sydney crowd with his third hundred at the SCG © Getty Images
 
  • Following his unbeaten 154, Sachin Tendulkar now averages an amazing 326 at the Sydney Cricket Ground. He has scored 652 runs at the SCG and his last 455 runs have come without being dismissed. Tendulkar’s average at the SCG is his best at any ground. He has now scored a century on each of his four tours of Australia – five in all – out of which three have been scored at the SCG.
  • During his innings, Tendulkar also passed 2000 Test runs against the Australians. At the end of his innings, his aggregate stood at 2090 runs in 42 innings at an average of 56.48, with eight hundreds and as many half-centuries. Sunil Gavaskar is the only other Indian batsman to score more than 2000 runs against a particular country – against West Indies, England and Pakistan.
  • The 129-run partnership for the eighth wicket between Tendulkar and Harbhajan Singh was the highest for India against Australia beating Syed Kirmani and Karsan Ghavri’s 127 in Mumbai in 1979. It was also the fourth-highest overall eighth-wicket stand for India in Tests.
  • Adam Gilchrist’s catch to dismiss Mahendra Singh Dhoni was his 400th dismissal in Tests. He is the second wicketkeeper to reach the landmark after South Africa’s Mark Boucher. Gilchrist also beat Jeff Dujon’s record of 60 dismissals against India. He now has 62 against India and 402 overall.
  • This was also only the second time that the eighth wicket had produced century partnerships for both teams – Andrew Symonds and Brett Lee had added 114 for Australia after which, Tendulkar and Harbhajan added 129. The first time this happened was in the Lahore Test between Australia and Pakistan in 1980, Allan Border and Ray Bright added 109 before Majid Khan and Imran Khan added 111.
  • India’s 69-run lead was the first time a team has taken a first innings lead against Australia since the Adelaide Test during the 2006-07 Ashes, when England gained a 38-run lead. The Adelaide Test was also the last time a team scored over 500 in an innings against Australia.
  • Harbhajan passed 1000 runs in Tests during his 63, which was his third half-century in Tests. He reached the landmark when he was on 7, making him the 16th player – the third Indian after Kapil Dev and Anil Kumble – to complete 1000 runs and 250 wickets in Tests.
  • Ishant Sharma’s 23 was his highest first-class score and it more than doubled his aggregate which had stood at 15 runs after 13 innings before this match.
  • Stuart Clark’s figures of 1 for 80 tipped his bowling average over 20 for the second time in his 13-Test career . His average rose to 20.24 during the second Test against Sri Lanka in Hobart, fell to 19.33 after the Melbourne Test against India and now stands at 20.35.
  • Mashud left out of Bangladesh squad

    Mushfiqur Rahim’s promising efforts in Zimbabwe have won him a World Cup place © AFP

    Bangladesh have named their 15-man squad for the World Cup and, as widely predicted, they have left out their experienced wicketkeeper Khaled Mashud and chosen Mushfiqur Rahim, who performed well on the recent tour of Zimbabwe.Habibul Bashar, the captain, said that he was looking forward to the tournament. “I was a member of the World Cup team four years back and then we had hardly any ambition rather than playing good cricket,” he said. “The scenario is totally changed now after we have already won a number of matches in the recent past.””We are going to the World Cup with lot of confidence this time, especially after the away series victory and definitely our target is to make a second round berth. We know it will not be an easy task to beat at least one team like India and Sri Lanka to make our dream come true. But I think there is hardly any meaning to our trip if we have no target. I will not be surprised if my team beat any big fish in the competition.”Bangladesh squad Habibul Bashar (capt), Shariar Nafees, Tamim Iqbal, Aftab Ahmed, Saqibul Hasan, Mohammad Ashraful, Mushfiqur Rahim (wk), Mohammad Rafique, Abdur Razzak, Mashrafe Mortaza, Shahadat Hossain, Tapash Baisya, Syed Rasel, Rajin Saleh, Javed Omar.

    Another distraction for West Indies

    West Indies arrived in New Zealand on Friday on their latest mission overseas, yet again weighed down by a burden of their own making. The consequences are likely to be the same as those that overwhelmed them twice in Australia and once in Sri Lanka last year.In each case, the spectre of the row between the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) and the West Indies Players Association (WIPA) hovered destructively over the cricket. The upshot was inevitable. An unsettled team managed only one victory in six matches in the VB Series in Australia and was knocked out after the first round. By the time Sri Lanka came around six months later, the wound had been allowed to fester to such an extent that a makeshift team, under a changed captain, was sent while the majority of dissatisfied leading players remained at home. The replacements lost both Tests and three of four ODIs-and even that was better than expected.While the standoff between the WICB and the WIPA was finally ended, shamefully by the intervention of foreign mediators, and the team that ventured to Australia in October for the series of three Tests was the strongest available, the time was too short to expect players on opposite sides of the divide only weeks earlier to be suddenly united again. The discord was evident to everyone close to the tour and to those watching the 3-0 drubbing through their television sets on the other side of the globe. It was subsequently borne out by captain Shivnarine Chanderpaul’s scarcely veiled hints (“There is not much I can do, really. There are a lot of things coming from inside”) that he and coach Bennett King, the two supposed leaders, didn’t see eye to eye. These were issues that, in the past, would have been aired, and cleared, at a debriefing involving captain, coach and manager before a properly constituted cricket committee of the WICB.The problem was that, over the years, the WICB’s directors paid little heed to such a committee and it duly disappeared. So Chanderpaul, King and manager Tony Howard went their separate ways after the tour while public criticism, and cynicism, mounted.Into the vacuum stepped Chetram Singh, president of the Guyana Cricket Board (GCB), with a proposal to establish a committee to review the work of King and his all-Australian crew and establish whether they were worth their annual US$1 million salary. Singh is the WICB’s longest-serving director. As such, he would have been party to the hiring of the coaching staff 15 months earlier, the size of the salary and the conditions of employment, all of which he would have reported back to the GCB. He may not be the only one now questioning the collective decision but, in any competent organisation, such a performance review of staff is a routine, internal matter.Not so the WICB. With much fanfare, it acceded to Singh’s submission with the appointment of a special panel of renowned former players and mandated it to report back by February 15. It was seemingly unaware of the irony that the date coincides with the start of the New Zealand tour and of the impact such a pointed, widely publicised investigation could have on the coach’s authority and, by extension, on the captain and the team.So no sooner than the damaging divergence of the row over sponsorship and disputed clauses in tour contracts fades into the background than this new, wearisome issue takes its place. As it is, Chanderpaul, King and the players already have enough to occupy their attention in New Zealand.If their opponents are palpably not as powerful as their neighbours across the Tasman Sea, they have a strong record at home, not least against West Indies teams that have ventured there over the past 55 years. The West Indies’ previous visit, six years ago, was one of their most disastrous, even in the decade of decline. Defeat in both Tests and all five one-day internationals so depressed Brian Lara that he resigned the captaincy and took time off from the game to consider his future. The challenge is just as daunting this time.The West Indies are firmly lodged at the bottom of the eight genuine international teams in both forms of the game, with a win-loss record of 1-8 in Tests and 2-15 in ODIs in the past year. The incomparable Lara, the linchpin of the batting, has declared himself unavailable for the ODIs as he seeks to extend his Test career at the age 36 and the most effective bowlers of the recent past are all missing-Corey Collymore and Pedro Collins through injury, Jermaine Lawson through the enforced change of action that has significantly cut his pace.The only bowler available with a Test average of less than 40 is Dwayne Bravo, an ebullient young all-rounder of immense potential but, as yet, only nine Tests. Fidel Edwards (53 Test wickets at 45 runs each), Daren Powell (39 at 42) and Jerome Taylor (three at 72) are the faster men expected to provide the cutting edge. Ian Bradshaw and Rawl Lewis, both 31, are two seasoned campaigners in regional cricket who are likely to shoulder considerable responsibility. But Bradshaw is yet to play a Test and Lewis last briefly presented his leg-breaks and googlies in Test cricket seven years ago.Until Lara joins for the Tests, the batting must revolve around Chanderpaul (91 Tests), vice-captain Ramnaresh Sarwan (58) and Chris Gayle (54). The others lack either experience or statistical credentials or both. It is a chance for Daren Ganga (probably the last), Runako Morton (realistically the first) and Devon Smith to show that they are Test batsmen worthy of the title and for Bravo and Denesh Ramdin to build on the reputations they have quickly forged in their brief careers.With the World Cup 13 months away, the one-day series, against tough opponents, is the first genuine chance since the VB Series in Australia a year ago to sort out combinations and assess individuals. Another 15 such matches-at home against Zimbabwe and India at home, away against Pakistan-are available to determine a settled team, imperative in advance of the tournament. In this regard, Dwayne Smith will be keenly assessed. He has been given every opportunity but he is yet to fulfil his obvious potential to become the West Indies’ Shahid Afridi, a potential match-winner with his fierce hitting, electric fielding and steady bowling. The selectors’ patience may be running out.They won’t have to contend, as they did a few months back, with Australia’s power-packed batting or the pace of Brett Lee, the Chinese-torture of Glenn McGrath and wizardry of Shane Warne, but Stephen Fleming leads a handy team all the same.It was always going to be a tricky assignment. By tossing in its latest distraction, the WICB has made it even more so.

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