India name both Ravindra Jadeja and R Ashwin in five-man bowling attack for WTC final

That also means India have only five specialist batters in the line-up, followed by wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant

Nagraj Gollapudi17-Jun-20213:13

‘WTC a step in the right direction for Test cricket’ – Virat Kohli

India will field two spinners at the WTC final, naming both Ravindra Jadeja and R Ashwin in their XI on the eve of the match that gets underway in Southampton on June 18. In all, Virat Kohli will have five bowlers to work with, with Ishant Sharma, Mohammed Shami and Jasprit Bumrah also in the XI. That also means India have only five specialist batters in the line-up, followed by wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant.

India’s XI for the WTC final

Virat Kohli (capt), Rohit Sharma, Shubman Gill, Cheteshwar Pujara, Ajinkya Rahane, Rishabh Pant (wk), Ravindra Jadeja, R Ashwin, Ishant Sharma, Mohammed Shami, Jasprit Bumrah

Watch cricket on ESPN+

The WTC final is available in the US on ESPN+. Subscribe to ESPN+ and tune in to the match.

The development marks the return of Jadeja and Shami to the playing XI – they had missed the home series against England after picking injuries on the Australia tour – and it will be the first time Ishant, Shami, Bumrah, Ashwin and Jadeja play a Test match together.From the 15 India named on June 15, pacers Mohammed Siraj and Umesh Yadav, wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha and batter Hanuma Vihari missed out.India announcing their XI on the eve of the game – as opposed to waiting till toss time – might come as a mild surprise to some, considering the very poor weather forecast for Friday and the consequent changes that might occur to conditions.Related

  • Virat Kohli: 'Win or lose this game, cricket does not stop for us'

  • Does Ashwin hold the key to the WTC final?

  • Five things India must keep in mind in the WTC final

  • Laxman's advice to Rohit: 'Focus on leaving balls outside off'

  • Rahane: 'Happy to take criticism. Because of criticism, I'm here'

India captain Virat Kohli said that the weather, however fickle it might be, had no bearing on the combinations the team had finalised. “No, it [the weather] does not change [things] from our point of view as a team,” he told the media on match eve. “For us, it is about covering all the bases and making sure that we take the strongest side we can be on the park, which gives us batting depth and gives us enough bowling options as well. We are quite clear in terms of what we want to do. The forecast is something we are not focused on.”We are not going to think too much about what might change. We are not bothered with what the weather holds. Do we need to change the outlook of the team altogether? No. Obviously how you approach the game and the decisions that you make day-to-day, they alter when the conditions are different. But not your whole team altogether.”

'Beneficial for sure' – Jaydev Unadkat, Abhimanyu Easwaran give nod to DRS in Ranji Trophy

Limited DRS, with a virtual pitch map and slow-motion cameras, will be used in the semi-finals and final

Varun Shetty26-Feb-2020The BCCI’s decision to introduce limited DRS in the semi-finals and final of the Ranji Trophy 2019-20 has been welcomed by the players, with Saurashtra captain Jaydev Unadkat agreeing that the technology would help in restricting the “howlers” in the crunch games.It is the first time that DRS is going be in use in India’s domestic circuit, but there will be no HawkEye, Snickometer or UltraEdge. The tools that will be used are a virtual pitch map (for lbw decisions) and slow-motion cameras, with each team getting four reviews per innings.”It will be beneficial for sure because there won’t be the umpiring howlers that sometimes happen,” Unadkat told ESPNcricinfo.However, the Saurashtra seamer wasn’t entirely certain how the limited version of the DRS would work and was waiting to hear more about it from the match officials before the semi-final against Gujarat later this week in Rajkot. “But it is not the DRS used in the international cricket. So I am slightly doubtful that even this [limited DRS] can go wrong. I am just afraid what if this doesn’t prove to be worthy enough for the decisions to be accurate. Having said that, it is still a beneficial first step.”Unadkat also pointed out that umpiring standards in domestic cricket have been improving. “The umpiring quality has sure-shot improved,” he said. “The BCCI has been ranking the umpires and the best umpires are standing in the top groups. This year I felt the best umpires were standing in the Elite Group matches.”Unadkat pointed out that the on-field decision-making was not below par even last season. According to him, the controversial decisions during the quarter-final between Karnataka and Saurashtra had “hyped” the issue and put umpires in a bad light. “It wasn’t that it was really, really poor last year. Just because of the couple of incidents, and because it happened against a team like Karnataka and it got hyped it so much, that is why the umpiring got highlighted.Abhimanyu Easwaran celebrates a century•Abhimanyu Easwaran

“So the umpiring standards were not horrible last year. It was improving even then and has been the case even this season.”Bengal captain Abhimanyu Easwaran also backed the decision. “I think it’s a very good thing to have DRS in domestic cricket as well, especially in knockout games, and semi-finals and final, even though there’s not that much technology,” Easwaran said as his team got ready to face Karnataka in the other semi-final at Eden Gardens. “The umpires can make errors at times. A human can make an error, but to rectify it, you have the technology and that will probably change the game for a team and that can probably be a deciding thing at a crucial point of the game.”So I think it’s really good to have it, and hopefully, it can help players get crucial runs or crucial wickets and change the game for their teams.”Abhimanyu, like most of his team-mates and a lot of others in the domestic circuit, has never played in a match that has had DRS in operation. The Karnataka camp will have KL Rahul and Manish Pandey, at the very least, who will be familiar with the system through their time in international cricket. But Abhimanyu was confident that the lack of experience wouldn’t be too much of a barrier to overcome.”It’s a new thing, but I think guys have seen enough cricket on television, so we know a bit of how it works,” he said. “In the pre-match meeting with the umpires and the referee, there is going to be an explanation about how it works and what are the technologies available and things like that. So we’ll have a fair idea of it the day before the game.”And obviously, we’ll talk about it to our teams as well, so they have a fair idea of how it’s working. We’ve been also given papers to read how it works, and the guys have seen on TV, how to take a review, and things like that.”

Jos Buttler, Fawad Ahmed complete Thunder's win over cross-city rivals Sixers

The Big Bash League breaks for Christmas with Shane Watson’s Thunder at the top of the points table

The Report by Sreshth Shah24-Dec-2018England fast bowler Tom Curran took 3 for 24 and smacked his highest T20 score against cross-city rivals Sydney Thunder, but his Sydney Sixers team failed to cross the line, losing by 21 runs at the Spotless Stadium on Christmas eve.Curran’s 40-ball 62 gave Sixers some hope, after they were reduced to 6 for 56 following legspinner Fawad Ahmed’s three-wicket haul, but his dismissal in the 19th over ended any chance of a Sixers win.Thunder’s first-innings score was set up by Jos Buttler’s 37-ball 63 after they were asked to bat, and were destined for a score close to 200 at one stage, but a flurry of late wickets off Curran and left-arm spinner Steve O’Keefe kept their total down to an achievable 169.A solid bowling effort, however – barring the time when Curran and Sean Abbott added 88 for the seventh wicket – helped Thunder win the game comprehensively. Fawad was assisted by Daniel Sams, whose medium pace fetched him three late wickets as well.Buttler finds his groove earlyThunder lost captain Shane Watson for a sluggish 19, and with No. 3 Callum Ferguson taking his time to find the bat’s middle, it was down to Buttler to keep the scoreboard ticking in the Powerplay. He hoicked Sean Abbott, in particular, over midwicket a few times and hit young legspinner Lloyd Pope out of the attack. His blitz ensured Thunder were past fifty in the Powerplay and had crossed triple digits by the time he fell for 63 in the 12th over. At that stage, Thunder were on course for a score close to 200.Jos Buttler shuffles across the stumps and plays a scoop•Getty Images

Play it again, SamsThunder, however, lost their way after Buttler’s dismissal. A mix-up sent Ferguson back for a 24-ball 23, and Joe Root was clean bowled by an O’Keefe wrong’un that slipped through his defense. Jason Sangha and Chris Green fell to Curran in a bid to accelerate, and from 4 for 147, Thunder had lost three more wickets for no run.But in the midst of Thunder’s batting crisis, Sams – who smashed a 21-ball 34 in their previous game too – struck three fours and two sixes in a cameo of 28 in just 11 balls to hold up one end. He used the pace of Sixers’ bowlers to particularly good effect, but fell trying to deflect another late glance off pacer Ben Dwarshuis. His innings, however, ensured Thunder set their rivals a target of 170.Fawad owns the post-Powerplay boutSixers were in a spot of bother early in their chase, after Sam Rainbird’s late-moving delivery clipped the top of Joe Denly’s off stump. Jack Edwards then followed Denly after legspinner Jono Cook’s googly trapped him lbw. With Moises Henriques failing to clear Sams’ half-volley over mid-on in the sixth over, Thunder were at 3 for 32 after the Powerplay.But the real knockout blow came from Fawad. He took two middle-order wickets in his first over – and the innings’ seventh – twice rattling Jordan Silk and Daniel Hughes’ stumps off carbon-copy googly deliveries and followed it up by trapping Phillipe lbw in the ninth over. That sent Sixers into the final ten overs with more than 100 runs behind and with only four wickets in hand.Curran displays heart and muscleWith Abbott at the other end, Curran followed up his three-for with his second T20 fifty. They added 88 for the seventh wicket after the early batting wobble. Regular boundaries (in all, Curran struck nine) gave Sixers a glimmer of hope as they crossed hundred, and with three overs to go, his blitz had brought the equation down to only 50 runs.Seventeen runs came off the 18th over, helped by two fours and a six by Curran, but his dismissal and the subsequent of Abbott and O’Keefe consigned the team in pink to their first defeat of the season. Thunder, however, would be disappointed despite the win. At one stage, they looked to be winning with a much larger run margin.

India wobble against seam before rain washes out second day

Dasun Shanaka took two wickets as India were reduced to 74 for 5 in bowling-friendly conditions before a period of persistent rain forced officials to call off play more than two hours before the scheduled close

The Report by Nikhil Kalro17-Nov-2017Stumps
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details3:31

Irfan Pathan: Pujara knows his game and sticks to it

Persistent rain dominated another day in Kolkata, allowing just 21 overs on the second morning. In all, just 32.5 overs have been bowled over two days. Sri Lanka’s seamers had earlier capitalised on a dry, bowling-friendly morning at Eden Gardens, as Dasun Shanaka picked up two wickets with his gentle medium pace under gloomy skies offering sufficient lateral movement. Cheteshwar Pujara displayed impeccable defensive technique again, picking only the errant deliveries to score during his unbeaten 47, carrying India to 74 for 5 before a drizzle that became gradually heavier at 11.00 am forced an early lunch.The rain had relented for a short period around noon, but returned heavier and forced the officials to call off the second day at 2.30pm local, more than two hours before the scheduled close of play.The little play on the second day wasn’t short of action. Dinesh Chandimal, anticipating a long haul for his seamers, operated with a specialist fast bowler from one end and Shanaka from the other for the majority of the morning. Seam, like spin, is more effective at a quicker pace, disallowing batsmen time to be decisive with their feet and shot selection. Therefore, India’s batsmen would have preferred Shanaka to two specialist fast bowlers.However, these are atypical conditions for a Test match in India. With so much rain over the last few days, it seemed like a pitch on which the grass grew itself under the covers. That gave Shanaka, despite his 125 kmph range, a fair chance under overcast skies.Pujara, attuned to such conditions through his recent stint with Nottinghamshire, came forward to drive away from his body only when Shanaka erred too full, hitting him for four boundaries through mid-off. However, Ajinkya Rahane, and then R Ashwin, misread Shanaka’s perfect full deliveries for run-scoring opportunities, driving loosely with their hands too far away.A scrambled-seam delivery, which neither swung nor seamed, found Rahane’s outside edge, as he played for the inward angle. Ashwin had played 28 balls for four runs, his only scoring shot a sweetly-timed cover drive off a full toss from Shanaka, when he sliced a drive to backward point.In between, Suranga Lakmal and Lahiru Gamage generated appreciable swing and bounce – arguably too much on this surface – to beat the bat regularly. Ashwin was even rapped on the right hand by an inducking dart that kept climbing steeply to beat an awkward jab.Pujara was rewarded for his diligence as Chandimal was forced to turn to Dimuth Karunaratne’s even-gentler medium pace, hitting him for 12 runs off six wayward deliveries.

Cloudy outlook for Yorkshire as Berg tips contest

Gareth Berg took his first five-wicket haul in five years as Hampshire’s attack made the best of favourable conditions to reduce the champions to 275 for 9

Freddie Wilde at the Ageas Bowl31-Aug-2016
ScorecardJake Lehmann anchored Yorkshire’s first innings (file photo)•Getty Images

“Don’t look down, look up” goes the old Yorkshire adage about whether to bat or bowl first at Headingley. A few hundred miles south at the Ageas Bowl the proverb is ever-more appropriate, as overhead conditions appear to be shaping the game at Hampshire’s ground with increasing regularity.Upon winning the toss in this crucial match, with repercussions for the top and bottom of the Championship table, Yorkshire captain Andrew Gale looked up, saw a cloudless blue sky and opted to bat. With the two most recent first-innings scores at this ground being 637 for 7 and 548 for 6 Hampshire would have been forgiven for preparing themselves for another long stint in the field, having last week been run ragged for 137.4 overs in their most recent Championship match at Taunton.In a season in which fortune has frequently frowned on Hampshire, with injuries and illness robbing them of some of their best players, they could probably hardly believe their luck when after just 20 minutes of play, in which Yorkshire’s openers had looked relatively untroubled, the sky was suddenly choked by dense and leaden clouds. Five minutes later the floodlights were on, a couple of balls jagged sharply past the outside edge and the whole feeling of the occasion had been transformed.

‘Family comes first’ – Gillespie

Jason Gillespie has reiterated that his decision to leave his position as Yorkshire head coach was due to a desire to spend more time with his family.
“This decision hasn’t come around as quickly as it may have seemed. It’s been in the pipeline for a little while,” Gillespie said. “I didn’t want to make any snap decisions but considering all things I’m sure it is the right time. Family is the most important thing and the brutal reality is that seven or eight months away from the family just doesn’t work. And that’s just the honest truth. It was a difficult decision to stand down because I love it.
“I feel that we have made some great strides and there is more for this group of players to achieve but it’s time for someone else to take the team further forward.
“My main job is as a husband and a father. Cricket’s my hobby and my second job so to speak. I have to be true to that, and that’s why I’ve made this decision.”

What followed was an engrossingly competitive day that ebbed and flowed as readily as the clouds rolled in and out, in which ball dominated bat for large swathes of it and ended with Hampshire in a decidedly better position than perhaps even they would have envisaged at 11am.If Hampshire are indeed relegated this season, which remains likely, the locals are unlikely to see cricket bearing the intensity and meaning of that which they witnessed in the morning session for some time. The air was heavy with import as Ryan McLaren, Brad Wheal and Gareth Berg stared the top order of county cricket’s northern powerhouse straight in the eyes and matched them blow for blow, beating the edge by getting the ball to spit, bounce, seam and swing.As well as Hampshire bowled in that opening session it was the catching of Will Smith that could be largely credited with the wickets of Yorkshire’s left-handed openers. Both Alex Lees, against McLaren, and Adam Lyth, against Wheal, tried to force balls through the off side delivered from round the wicket that were arguably not wide enough to do so too, and on both occasions Smith, diving to his right at a wide gully, first with two hands and then spectacularly with one, was there to intercept the ball inches above the turf.The brilliance of Smith did not rub off on to James Vince, whose catching struggles continued as he dropped England team-mate and possible rival for a winter tour spot, Gary Ballance, twice in less than 15 minutes at third slip. It was third time unlucky for Ballance however when wicketkeeper Lewis McManus did not make the same mistake as his captain when a hint of swing extracted a fine edge to leave Yorkshire teetering at 57 for 3.It was then that the pendulum began to swing back towards Yorkshire as Gale and Jake Lehmann combined in a 62-run partnership either side of lunch that arrested their slide. Lehmann’s counter-attacking innings of 58 from 73 balls made for enjoyable viewing. He is a punchy player, unafraid to play his shots and his quickness to pick up length is an enticing trait.After Gale was squared up by McLaren and Lehmann brilliantly caught by Jimmy Adams playing one cut shot too many, the game swung towards Hampshire again only for Tim Bresnan to wrest it back with a typically tough fifty from No. 6.It was after tea with the floodlights on and dark skies above that Hampshire built on the foundations of their strong first two sessions. A superb spell by Berg, in which he took 3 for 13 from five overs and got the ball to move wickedly off the pitch, gutted Yorkshire’s lower order, instigating a dramatic collapse from 212 for 5 to 234 for 9. The three wickets sealed Berg his first five wicket-haul since September 2011. He, like Hampshire more generally, were assisted by the conditions but it took skill to utilise them.Just how important Yorkshire’s unbeaten tenth wicket partnership of 41 between Jack Brooks and Ryan Sidebottom was will become apparent after Hampshire have batted. This felt like a good day for Hampshire, especially after being put into the field, but batting was not easy and Yorkshire have the bowlers to cause real damage if helpful conditions persist.

Essex sneak through; Northants, Lancashire in quarters after rain

The last series of group matches in the NatWest T20 Blast saw a number of teams deeply interested in what their rivals were doing or, more to the point, given the wide band of rain that moved in from the West, whether they were playing at all

Paul Edwards24-Jul-2015This was not a normal Friday evening. The last series of group matches in the NatWest T20 Blast saw a number of teams deeply interested in what their rivals were doing or, more to the point, given the wide band of rain that moved in from the West, whether they were playing at all.And, in the end, the final quarter-final berth was confirmed in the dying moments of a sodden evening when Gloucestershire beat Glamorgan in a Five5 which meant Essex clung on for fourth place in the South Group.After heroic efforts by the Glamorgan groundstaff, and with just minutes to spare, the thrash began moments before 9pm. Essex fans suddenly swelled Gloucestershire’s support base. They glued themselves to radio and social media to track every ball. It was out of their hands, but Glamorgan could only post 45 in their five overs. Gloucestershire cruised it.Paul Grayson, the Essex coach, was relieved. “We would have preferred to have played and beaten Kent to book our quarter-final place but I am still happy that we have made it through,” he said. “After our poor start in the competition when we lost four of our opening five matches, to have reached the quarter-finals is something that we have to be happy with no matter how it was achieved.”

NatWest T20 Blast quarter-finals

August 12: Sussex v Northamptonshire, Hove
August 13: Birmingham v Essex, Edgbaston
August 14: Worcestershire v Hampshire, New Road
August 15: Kent v Lancashire, Canterbury

Earlier, at lunchtime, the position in the North Group was that Birmingham Bears and Worcestershire Rapids had secured home quarter-finals; the remaining places would be taken by two of Northamptonshire Steelbacks, Lancashire Lightning and Nottinghamshire Outlaws with the Trent Bridge side needing to get more points than one of the other pair in order to make the last eight. If no game could be played, Notts were out.The situation in the South Group was never so simple. While Kent Spitfires had booked their home quarter-final spot for Saturday August 15, the remaining three places were to be fought over by six counties: Hampshire, Sussex, Essex, Glamorgan, Gloucestershire and Surrey. It was, in its way, as near as county cricket gets to an election night.The first no-result came in from Kennington North, where Surrey’s home match against Sussex Sharks at The Oval was abandoned early on. This eliminated Surrey. It also moved Sussex up to second in the group but, quaintly, did not even guarantee their qualification for the last eight.And that was it for an hour or more. Somerset’s home game with Middlesex had bit the Taunton mud but neither of those teams could qualify anyway.Across the rest of the country, savvy captains took the view that play might still be possible in their own game for just as long as they knew other matches had not been called off. At Worcester the great ground could only be viewed through a thin film of rain. Everyone waited for conditions to improve in the full knowledge that they probably would not. Peter Roebuck once described English cricket as a dry game in a wet land.At 6.45 umpires Steve Garratt and Jeremy Lloyds declared that no play would be possible at Worcester and at more or less the same time, the game between Leicestershire and Notts was also abandoned. Those decisions sorted out the North Group and made it clear that Lancashire Lightning would visit Kent Spitfires.”There a few nervous moments checking on my weather thing,” Ashley Giles, Lancashire’s cricket director, said. “It suddenly brightened up a little bit at Leicester but it appears it has gone dark.”It is unfortunate for Notts but of course good news for us. It’s not the way you want to go through to a quarter-final but one of our targets was to get to the quarters for a start, then move on from there.”Mick Newell, Notts’ director of cricket, had an honest assessment. “It wasn’t about tonight, it was about the results earlier in the
competition,” he said. “We’ve beaten all the teams which have finished in the top four at least once, so we only have ourselves to blame.”Now all that was needed was for similarly executive decisions to be made by the returning officers at Chelmsford and Cardiff. But at Chelmsford, the rain stopped and the umpires decided to have a glance at 7.45. However, it was futile and the match was abandoned shortly before 8.30pm, leaving all eyes on events in Cardiff. Despite all the rain, there was drama to the very end.

Railways collapse after solid start

A wrap of the first day of the ninth round of Ranji Trophy matches in Group A

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Dec-2012
ScorecardSourav Sarkar took three wickets to halt Railways’ progress•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Railways began the round with an outside chance of qualifying for the next round, made a good start, but collapsed after that. Asked to bat first by hosts Bengal, openers Amit Paunikar and Shivakant Shukla added 85 for the first wicket, at a fair clip, but once Sourav Sarkar dismissed Paunikar for 50, Railways couldn’t arrest the slide.Railways lost six wickets for 40 runs, the last one of those to Shib Paul, the injury-prone fast bowler who was playing his first first-class match in four-and-a-half years. Murali Kartik and Karan Sharma then added 68 for the seventh wicket, but Railways lost three more in one go. Kartik, who scored 48, was the last man to fall to what turned out to be the last ball of the day.
ScorecardIn the contest to avoid relegation, Rajasthan, the defending champions, made decent progress after being put in by Hyderabad. Rajasthan may have lost five wickets, but the smallest partnership they had was 40. The end of that partnership reduced Rajasthan to 82 for 2, but the reliable Vineet Saxena scored 84 to set them on their way.Ashok Menaria capitalised on the start with a quick 63, and while Saxena fell short of a century, captain Hrishikesh Kanitkar, playing his 100th Ranji Trophy match, added 42 before being bowled to the last ball of the day. The team that emerges the better side from this match will avoid relegation.
ScorecardZaheer Khan had a fruitful first day as captain of a first-class side, as Mumbai bowled out Gujarat for 244 in what is a virtual pre-quarter-final. Had hosts Mumbai not lost opener Kaustubh Pawar in the last over of the day, the smile on Zaheer’s face at stumps would have been even wider.Click here for the full report.
ScorecardGoing by day one, the Rajkot pitch confounded both sides, who were expecting it to turn early, and turn big. In the end, the innate slow nature of the pitch didn’t allow that. The lack of watering and rolling of the pitch over the last two days, in the presence of a BCCI curator, somehow added variable, largely low, bounce to the mix. Slow and mostly low made batting difficult for Saurashtra, who conceded whatever advantage winning the toss had given them by losing nine wickets.Click here for the full report.

Kallis and Amla to miss rest of ODI series

South Africa have made three changes to the squad for the remainder of the ODI series against Sri Lanka

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Jan-2012Hashim Amla will
miss the remainder of the ODI series against Sri Lanka to be with his wife, who is expecting their first child. Jacques Kallis has been rested while Rory Kleinveldt has been ruled out due to injury.Alviro Petersen and Colin Ingram replace the two senior batsmen and Vernon Philander, who’s been impressive in Tests, has been picked in the ODI squad in place of Kleinveldt.Amla’s been in excellent form in the series; he scored a century in the first ODI in Paarl and followed up with a half-century to help South Africa take a 2-0 lead in East London.The decision to rest Kallis is part of Cricket South Africa’s rotational policy, though it is yet unclear about when Kleinveldt is likely to return after a “relatively long-term injury”.”Hashim Amla has been forced to stand down because of family responsibilities while Rory Kleinveldt has a relatively long-term injury,” Andrew Hudson, the CSA selection convenor, said in a release.Petersen has been in good form, with runs behind his back for the Lions in the Franchise 1-day Cup, the domestic List A tournament, where he was the top scorer, and a century against Sri Lanka in the third Test in Cape Town, where he was picked at the expense of Ashwell Prince.Ingram, too, has had a good run, with consecutive hundreds for Warriors in the SuperSport series and 521 runs at 57.88 in the Franchise 1-day Cup. Both are making a comeback to the ODI side after extended breaks. Ingram last played in the World Cup and Petersen hasn’t played an ODI for South Africa since May 2010.Philander finished the Sri Lanka Test series with 16 wickets in two matches and grabbed 14 in the series prior against Australia. He last played an ODI for South Africa in August 2008.”Both Petersen and Philander showed excellent form in the recent Test series against Sri Lanka and they have also represented the Proteas in the ODI format before so I don’t anticipate their having any problems adapting to 50 overs cricket,” Hudson said. “Ingram has also been in top form in domestic cricket and was a member of the squad that went to the World Cup last year after making a century on debut against Zimbabwe.”Although we are sad to lose players such as Amla and Kallis I see this as an opportunity to try out our options. There are still places up for grabs in our ODI squad and I must say I am excited to see the talent coming through our development pipeline.”South Africa squad: AB de Villiers (capt & wk), Johan Botha, JP Duminy, Faf du Plessis, Colin Ingram, Albie Morkel, Morne Morkel, Wayne Parnell, Alviro Petersen, Robin Peterson, Vernon Philander, Graeme Smith, Dale Steyn, Lonwabo Tsotsobe.

Davy Jacobs eager to open with Tendulkar

Davy Jacobs is looking forward to opening the batting for Mumbai Indians with Sachin Tendulkar, while Johan Botha admits being surprised at his high price

Firdose Moonda08-Jan-2011Just over three-quarters of a million dollars wound up separating Warriors team-mates Johan Botha and Davy Jacobs after the first day of the 2011 IPL player auction. Botha was snapped up for the massive amount of US$950,000 by the Rajasthan Royals, while Jacobs was a bargain for the Mumbai Indians at $190,000.The difference in money doesn’t bother Jacobs at all. “My base price was $20, 000 so I took a massive leap. To be honest, I would have gone for free,” he told ESPNCricinfo. Jacobs made a name for himself in the Champions League Twenty20 last year, where he scored 286 runs in six matches at an average of 47.66, and led the Warriors to the final. “I got the opportunity to play in the IPL because of my performance in the Champions League, I wouldn’t have got anywhere without it.”Jacobs hoped his CLT20 performances would help him earn a national call up, but he has so far been ignored. Now, he thinks if he performs well in the IPL, it might earn him a chance to wear the green and gold. “I want to play for South Africa, but I know I couldn’t have played better than I did in the CLT20. I am going to put the Warriors and the Mumbai Indians first and hope I can get there. There’s no point planning it anymore.”As an opening batsman, there is the real possibility that Jacobs will get to partner Sachin Tendulkar. “I’ve had people tweeting me saying I may be opening the batting with Sachin Tendulkar. I’ve never met him but it will be awesome. The whole world looks at this guy. When I was a boy, he was playing Test cricket and he is still going.” Jacobs did not keep in the CLT20 because Mark Boucher was in the side, but he is an able wicketkeeper and would do the job if called on.”I’ll bat anywhere or do anything. I just want to make the most of my chance.”He is known for his lively personality on the South African domestic circuit, and said he will try to bring some of that to Mumbai. “I just want to add what I can add. I will bring the same passion and desire that I have at the Warriors.”Botha received his news in a more measured fashion. He admitted to being surprised about his high price tag. “It’s a massive surprise and these types of things are life-changing but with that comes responsibility.” He has had a season in the IPL before, also at the Royals and he is pleased to be back at the same franchise. “I enjoyed my time with them before. I got along well with Warnie [Shane Warne] and the coaching staff. It’s a nice to go back to a team where you were before.”The South African T20 captain is concentrating on the current one-day international series against India and the World Cup before turning his attention to the IPL. “There is a lot of cricket before IPL4. I’m sure once we get there we will give 100% for our teams.”

Hodge's 139 sets up 20-run win for Victoria

Brad Hodge’s highest one-day score in 17 seasons for Victoria set up a 20-run win that pushed the Bushrangers into second place on the FR Cup table

Cricinfo staff27-Jan-2010
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsBrad Hodge was in sparkling form•Getty Images

Brad Hodge’s highest one-day score in 17 seasons for Victoria set up a 20-run win that pushed the Bushrangers into second place on the FR Cup table. Tasmania were set an enormous 327 for victory and thanks to a powerful 97 from Travis Birt they almost got there, but the loss of Birt in the 48th over snuffed out their chances.James Pattinson picked up the key wicket of Birt, whose 77-ball stay ended when a flat aerial drive was taken at long-off. Birt struck three sixes and was the key man for Tasmania, who also had contributions from Michael Dighton with 63 and George Bailey, who made 58.The Tigers had some misfortune including the dismissal of Jason Krejza, who helped Birt in a late 32-run stand. Krejza was controversially adjudged run out when the third umpire felt his bat was in the air within the crease when the stumps were broken, having bounced when he touched it down, although it was hard to conclusively call one way or the other.Another moment of luck for Victoria came when Rhett Lockyear (26) became one of three wickets for John Hastings. Lockyear drove down the ground and the ball was spilled by David Hussey, running back at mid-off, only to bounce off his cap and then off his forehead and land safely in his hands.Hussey, the stand-in captain for Victoria, had helped drive them to 7 for 326 in a 183-run stand with Hodge. Hussey had made 93 from 85 balls when he played on a knuckle-ball slower deliver from the part-time medium pace of Dighton.But the star of the day was unquestionably Hodge, who has retired from first-class cricket but continues to prove a force at state level. Hodge’s 139 from 136 deliveries was his best score ever in the FR Cup or its predecessors – his highest List A innings of 164 came in a match for Australia A.Hodge struck 11 fours and three sixes, including one slap over midwicket off Brett Geeves that landed on the roof of the corporate boxes. The win meant Victoria jumped Tasmania and moved into second behind Queensland with two games each remaining for the Bushrangers and the Tigers.