Anderson seeks consistency in England comeback

James Anderson: finding his rhythm, but still prone to the odd bad over © Getty Images
 

James Anderson has known some dramatic peaks and troughs during his five-year England career, and his recent tour of New Zealand provided a perfect microcosm. He was recalled for the second Test in Wellington and starred with five first-innings wickets en route to a series-turning victory, but one match later in Napier his form had fallen away, and he was dispatched for more than six an over by Stephen Fleming in the first innings and Matthew Bell in the second.”It was very frustrating, and I can’t really put my finger on why it happened,” said Anderson during the launch of adidas’s new England kit at Lord’s. “It’s just the way it goes I guess. The pitch was flatter in Napier, but in both innings I started off reasonably well and it was coming out quite nicely. Then I had one bad over, and I tried to chase it from there.”Bad overs are a bit of a feature of Anderson’s game. In Kandy before Christmas, he was clubbed for six fours in consecutive balls by Sanath Jayasuriya, and in Napier, he suffered arguably a greater ignominy, as Bell – a batsman who had failed to pass 30 all series – hurtled towards a half-century with four blows in a row of increasing authority.The impression is that Anderson’s head drops as soon as a batsman gets after him, but the man himself disagreed with that suggestion. “It’s not getting down on myself, but when you’ve gone for 30 off five, you have got to pull it back from there,” he said. “My thought process is to bowl maidens, and I want to be pretty economical, keeping the run-rate below three. I was probably chasing it a bit too hard rather than being patient and letting the rhythm do it like I did in Wellington.””I call myself a strike bowler, and the way I see myself is getting wickets,” he said. “But when you play against a team like New Zealand, who want to hit boundaries, you want to stop them doing that. Sometimes that might be about bowling maidens to get that pressure.”Anderson suffered an injury setback during the Wellington Test, when he twisted his ankle in a warm-down game of football, but by and large, he said he felt as comfortable in his run-up and action as he has been for several years. There was a period around 2004-05 when Anderson’s action, which involves an awkward dipping of the head at point of delivery, was completely deconstructed by the England coaching staff. But all that, he believes, is now behind him.”I think I have gone full circle now,” he said. “I have played for five years now, and I think technically and physically my action is as good as it is going to get. I am comfortable now it feels really natural, and I don’t think there is an awful lot more I can do with it. When I first started, my leading arm was somewhere behind the back of my head. Now it is somewhere where it feels comfortable.”Anderson returns to competitive action for Lancashire next week, but the countdown is already on for the first Test of the rematch against New Zealand at Lord’s on May 15. It is a venue at which Anderson enjoys bowling, and against India last summer, he picked up his second five-wicket haul in three visits.”It’s a nice place to bowl – there is a nice slope, and it generally swings here,” said Anderson. “My mentality might change if the ball is swinging. Like in Wellington, I might bowl more attacking lines and I might be happier going for more runs than I would do if it wasn’t swinging. I just think you do better at some grounds than others. I don’t up my game when I play here, it just happens.”There is no guarantee that Anderson will feature in the first Test, however. His poor showing in Napier has given hope of a recall to Matthew Hoggard and Steve Harmison, the men who made way for his Wellington comeback, and also looming on the horizon is Anderson’s Lancashire team-mate, Andrew Flintoff, who has completed 28 overs in his comeback match at Surrey – his heaviest workload since the Brisbane Test in November 2006.”It’s going to be a real battle for places. No-one’s place is set in stone,” said Anderson. “We have all got to perform in the first couple of games of the season. Hoggy and Harmy are going to be fighting like mad to try and get their places back, then you have got the other guys like Chris Tremlett, Liam Plunkett and Saj [Mahmood] at Lancashire too. There are a lot of people in the hat.”As for Flintoff, Anderson was cautiously optimistic that – after four ankle operations – he might this time get back to his best form. “Every time he has an operation he has come back strong,” said Anderson. “So it is just whether this time it is for good. He has always been pretty fit, and his bowling always seems to look after itself. He gets it down at good speeds when he needs to.”From his own point of view, Anderson knows what he needs to do to cement his place in the England team. “Fitness wise I am fine, so the only issue is mental,” he said. “I know I can bowl that well, it is just about figuring out what went wrong in that game [at Napier]. A lot of it is about rhythm and just being relaxed, and not trying to fight myself and bowl quicker when it is not going so well.”

Lloyd's extend sponsorship with Scotland

Cricket Scotland has secured another two year’s sponsorship with Lloyd’s TSB, extending their association until 2009.”The profile of cricket in Scotland has increased significantly since we first became main sponsor,” Lisa Stephenson, director of marketing at Lloyds TSB Scotland said. “It is one of the largest participative and inclusive sports we have and is a perfect fit with our brand and our business. We are extremely proud to have been associated with this growth in popularity.”Roddy Smith, Cricket Scotland’s chief executive, was delighted with the deal and is excited by the future benefits the continued sponsorship will bring. “Lloyds TSB Scotland is a much valued partner, and the support we have received to date has played a significant part in the development of the game in Scotland,” he said. “Against a backdrop where other national teams are losing or changing sponsors, it is a major coup for cricket to secure continued support at this level.”

Richardson lavishes praise on Lara

Richie Richardson feels Brian Lara went out to silence the critics © Getty Images

Richie Richardson, former West Indies captain, u-turned on his earlier criticism of Brian Lara’s captaincy, attributing West Indies’s success in the ODI series against India to his imaginative leadership. West Indies won nine out of their eleven home ODIs this season, which included a 5-0 drubbing of Zimbabwe and a 4-1 victory against India.Richardson had earlier criticised Lara’s appointment as captain for the third time in his career, saying that he lacked support from his players. Instead, he supported elevating vice-captain Ramnaresh Sarwan to the post, but was convinced the West Indies board reverted to Lara for the sake of getting instant results, with no long-term objective.”A lot of people thought they should have annihilated Zimbabwe”, Richardson told . “It didn’t happen. Maybe there was a concerted effort to try and do something different [against India], and have a different approach.”I really don’t know what transpired, but I believe Brian Lara had a part to play in that. Just the way he went about his job, especially in the field. He was there with a purpose.”Richardson also believed that Lara would have been spurred by negative comments, after Sir Vivian Richards also stated that his appointment was based on commercial considerations ahead of next year’s World Cup. “Maybe something like that inspired Brian Lara. He is the sort of guy that if you criticise him, he’s going to want to prove you wrong.”

Tikolo unhappy with selectors

Steve Tikolo, the former Kenya captain and unofficial spokesman for the 13 striking players, has slammed the Kenya board (KCA) after none of them were included in the squad for next month’s Intercontinental Cup semi-final in Sharjah.Sharad Ghai, the KCA’s chairman, said that none of the players who boycotted the recent match against Namibia had been picked as they had not reapplied for selection. “We only read about the whole thing in the press,” fumed Tikolo. “Is this the way to get in touch with players?”No KCA official has ever contacted us asking us to apply,” he continued. “We have only been reading about it in a section of the press recently and before taking note, the team was named. Now we are the ones being blamed for not applying.”The announcement by Ghai that the players had to ask to formally reapply for selection caught them on the hop, and when he made the statement earlier in the week it raised suspicions that they were about to be omitted.Against Namibia, the players drafted in to replace the strikers were subjected to considerable heckling, but Tikolo offered those chosen his full support. “We have no problem with the team which has been selected and we wish them all the best since they are our brothers,” he said. “I hope they will continue with their form.”

Pakistan to relax visa regulations

The Pakistan government has told the foreign office to relax visa regulations for Indians travelling to watch the upcoming Pakistan-India series.A report from India Abroad News Service quoted an official of the foreign ministry as saying, “We have received instructions from the prime minister’s secretariat to make special arrangements for issuing visas for the cricket series.”The Indians arrive in Lahore on March 10, and will play five one-day internationals and three Tests, in addition to a one-day warm-up game. The one-day series will start in Karachi on March 13.According to the official, the Pakistan high commission in New Delhi had been given instructions to the effect that all Indians carrying “valid documents, bookings in Pakistani hotels, and tickets for the matches will be given visas”.The visas will be issued on a “first-come, first-served” basis, and the number issued would depend on the capacity of the stadiums where matches are to be played. For a one-day match, three-day visas would be issued, while for Tests, they would be for seven days.Meanwhile, officials of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) have said that Indians too can purchase tickets online. “Different organizations have already started the online sale of tickets for next month’s series,” said the official.Only 20 per cent of the tickets have been allotted for sale on the Internet, with the remaining to be sold at the gates.There has been tremendous interest from Indian and Pakistani expatriates living in Britain, the USA and the Middle East.

Australia closes in on England

SYDNEY, Jan 4 AAP – Steve Waugh failed to add to his stunning century of yesterday but Adam Gilchrist took up the challenge as Australia closed in on England’s first innings total in the fifth Ashes Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground today.At lunch on day three, Australia was 8-336 in reply to the tourists’ 362.Waugh, who resumed on 102 after hitting a four off the last ball yesterday to equal Sir Donald Bradman’s record of 29 Test centuries, was out on the fifth ball he faced today.He was caught at second slip by Mark Butcher off the bowling of Matthew Hoggard in the second over of the day.Hoggard struck again when he had Andy Bichel caught by John Crawley for four and, with his next ball, had Brett Lee caught behind by Alec Stewart.Jason Gillespie survived the next delivery to deny Hoggard the hat trick.Gilchrist reached his century off just 94 deliveries to be not out 127 from just 116 balls at the break.He was well supported by Gillespie, who remained unbeaten with 11 with the pair putting on a partnership of 69.

PPC Cement Pitches Programme is well on track

It is encouraging to see South Africa’s youth showing a keen interest in thegame of cricket. PPC Cement and Barloworld, are proud to be associated withcricket development as sport lies in the heart of a winning nation.The PPC Cement Pitches Programme was launched in 1997. It is a jointinitiative between PPC Cement, its holding company – Barloworld – and theUnited Cricket Board of South Africa (UCBSA). The objective of thisProgramme is to develop winning, local, regional and national teams of thefuture.The PPC Cement Pitches Programme is well on track to reach the goal ofcompleting 1000 concrete pitches and 23 ovals by the 2003 Cricket World Cup,which should ultimately boost cricket development throughout the country.To date, the PPC Cement Pitches Programme has been responsible for theconstruction of 722 concrete pitches and practice nets, eleven ovals and twoclubhouses throughout South Africa’s provincial cricket regions.As part of PPC’s commitment to uplift the communities in which it operates,all these facilities were built by contractors drawn from the localcommminities. In addition, these contractors were trained in basic concretetechnology and provided with technical assistance, in an effort to enhancetheir future prospects through the skills that they have acquired.

Spurs: Gold drops Skipp update

Alasdair Gold has revealed a teasing update on the current condition of Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Oliver Skipp.

What’s the latest?

In a recent report for football.london, Gold relayed the comments of Antonio Conte regarding the injury of the central midfielder, in which the Italian appeared to suggest that the 21-year-old could finally be in line for a return to first-team football after the upcoming international break.

Speaking about the England U21 international, the 52-year-old said: “About Skippy, I hope to have him after the international break. His pain is getting better and better.”

An update supporters will love

While it is true that the January signing of Rodrigo Bentancur has somewhat eased the loss of Skipp in the middle of the park, the news that the midfielder could be available for selection for the Newcastle United fixture on April 3 is sure to be an update the Tottenham Hotspur faithful will love.

Indeed, the youngster has proven to be something of a revelation for Spurs over his 18 Premier League outings this season, with the £18m-rated dynamo having become a first-team regular under the management of Conte, something that is not surprising considering the 21-year-old has made an average of 0.7 interceptions, 1.8 tackles, 42.3 passes and won 3.6 duels – at a success rate of 54% – per appearance.

These metrics have seen the £24k-per-week academy product average a highly impressive SofaScore match rating of 6.81, ranking him as Tottenham’s joint 15th-best performer in the top flight of English football in the current campaign.

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As such, while it would appear as if Skipp remains unavailable for the West Ham United clash on Sunday, the news that the player who Jose Mourinho dubbed a “future captain” looks as if he will be back in time for Tottenham’s Premier League run-in is undoubtedly fantastic for Conte and his side – as the return of the tenacious midfielder will almost certainly increase the club’s chances of going on to secure a top-four finish in the league come the end of the season.

AND in other news: Paratici eyeing bid for £84m “thoroughbred bomber”, “he’s the future” of Conte’s Spurs

New South Wales v Victoria, Pura Cup final, Sydney

New South Wales 281 (Katich 86, Siddle 5-66) & 8 for 563 dec (Hughes 116, Lee 97, Siddle 4-101) beat Victoria 216 (Hodge 84, Lee 4-71) & 372 (Jewell 99, Casson 4-128) by 256 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
5th day
Bulletin – Blues’ all-round power delivers Pura Cup
Quotes – Cup caps off perfect year for Katich
Gallery
4th day
Bulletin – Lee’s 97 puts Blues on the brink
News – Siddle faces another shoulder reconstruction
Gallery
3rd day
Bulletin – Hughes and Katich put Blues on top
Quotes – Katich unfazed by Pura Cup record
Gallery
2nd day
Bulletin – Lee stirs as team of champions starts to surge
Quotes – Hodge confident Victoria can fight back
Gallery
1st day
Bulletin – New South Wales suffer from Siddle shocks
News – Siddle’s pain is Victoria’s gain
GalleryLead-up coverage
Preview – Blues hold aces in high-stakes match
News – Beau wraps up successful summer
News – Siddle eager to step up against stars

A Cup-ful of lessons

West Indies’ exit from the Super Eights coupled with India and Pakistan’s elimination at the group stage resulted in sparse crowds © Getty Images

So how will the first World Cup staged in the West Indies be remembered?Will it be how Simon Barnes put it in the , as “the worst sporting event in history”, or as Owen Arthur called it: “a tremendous success”?The detached sports writer and the involved prime minister clearly saw it from two entirely different perspectives, which is bound to be the case for most observers. Certainly, the cherished dream of Chris Dehring, the chief organiser, that it would be the best World Cup ever proved to be an illusion. It was always an unrealistic aim; and even though there were extenuating circumstances, it turned into a nightmare.The vision of Dehring, as all West Indians, was for Brian Lara, showered in champagne and against the backdrop of dazzling fireworks, to be holding the trophy aloft at the remade Kensington Oval as his became the first team to win the cup on home turf.That script further called for a gripping tournament, filled with brilliant performances and close contests, played in front of large, enthusiastic, cosmopolitan crowds stirred by the spirit of the Caribbean. It was a far-fetched scenario but the eventual reality was even more improbable.By the time the cup was presented, for the third successive time to Australia, there was general relief that the tournament was over. It was too long, contained too many lop-sided matches and was blighted with bad luck from the shocking murder of Bob Woolmer that threatened its very continuation within the first week to the shambles that was the showpiece final.It seemed somehow appropriate that it should end as it did, with the disappointment of the first of the nine finals to be shortened by the weather compounded by the ignorance of four highly-paid, supposedly experienced officials that erroneously extended it into the darkness of overtime.By then, the West Indies, ill-prepared for such an important assignment, had been dishonourably discharged and Lara was a week into retirement. There was no doubt who the irritated public held responsible for the mess.At the presentation ceremony after the final Malcolm Speed, International Cricket Council (ICC) chief executive, Ken Gordon, West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) president, and Dehring, the chief executive of World Cup, were each roundly booed. Whether such derision was justified is a moot point.But instead of the tournament being the best ever, it was condemned in the international media as, variously, a shambles, a disaster, and a debacle, to go along with Barnes’ hyperbolic assessment. Yet, at the same time and for justifiable reasons, Arthur was in buoyant mood. Avid cricket fan that he is, the cricket in itself was not his main concern. He was fully satisfied with how his nation coped with what he saw as “definitely the most complex thing that Barbadian society, not the Government, has had to do”.When the tournament was awarded to the Caribbean, and the Super Eights round and the final to Barbados, Arthur said it was “an expression of confidence of who we are and what we can do as a people”. It was significant, he felt, that the governments of such small states “should pursue the belief that this region should host something as important as a World Cup”.The people, not least those who staffed the local organising committees (LOCs) in the three years preparing for the event and the thousands of helpful volunteers who were a feature at every venue, proved conclusively that they can cope with a global event of this magnitude.All the pre-tournament doubts over internal travel and accommodation, based on practical experience, proved largely unfounded. Not every bag arrived in every island at the same time as its owner but there were none of the predicted foul-ups, and the use of cruise liners between Barbados, Grenada and St Lucia in the closing stages could be the template for a new method of regional travel. While there were valid complaints from visitors about the cricket and matters related to the cricket, the overall Caribbean experience made an unmistakable impression.The 6000 or so Australians who descended on St Lucia and Barbados for the last two matches, and the few hundred Irish who celebrated as only they can their team’s unlikely passage through the first round in Jamaica, are unlikely ever to forget it. Judging by comments in the press from a cross-section of other nationalities, this is generally true.But more telling considerations will follow for Arthur and other prime ministers. They have to convince their constituents that their massive financial investment was worth it and that benefits will follow through the much-hyped legacy.

‘The World Cup was blighted with bad luck from the murder of Bob Woolmer that threatened its very continuation within the first week to the shambles that was the showpiece final’ © Getty Images

It is imperative that proposals for maximising the use of the fantastic new and renovated stadia be put quickly in place. Otherwise, they will become a drag on the several economies and on the electoral status of governing parties. For those concerned solely with the cricket side of the cup, “tremendous success” was hardly a fitting description, although unforeseen circumstances conspired against it.Only two things remained constant throughout – the awesome invincibility of Australia and the adversity that stalked the event at every turn.Sandwiched between Woolmer’s murder and the fiasco of the final, two of the most attractive teams, India and Pakistan, and consequently their fans, were eliminated in the first round; the keen interest of West Indians was diminished by their team’s four losses in five Super Eights encounters, and match after match meandered towards its predictable conclusion.Of the 51 matches over the six weeks (not counting the unofficial warm-ups), six were won by more than 200 runs, including one semi-final, seven by 100 or more and seven by eight wickets or more. Only four went into the last over.Bangladesh and Ireland were the fairy-tale qualifiers over India and Pakistan. Their success was spirited, deserved and a tremendous boon to the game in their countries; but it diminished the quality of the cup. In any sporting tournament, upsets are likely and not every contest will be tense and exciting. But such shocks and mismatches were heavy body blows.If such developments on the field were beyond the control of the ICC, World Cup and the LOCs, matters off the field were not.Anxious to demonstrate the so-called globalisation of the sport and against repeated, if unofficial, advice, the ICC increased the number of teams to 16 and kept the length over six weeks. The tedium typified in South Africa four years earlier was now amplified by the proliferation of dud matches.There surely must be a review for the next World Cup, in 2011, to ensure that there is more urgency to the contests in the later stages and that the Super Eights are not compromised by matches that end before lunch (or dinner) and feature top teams that omit their leading players with a semi-final in mind.From the start, the tight restrictions imposed at and around the stadiums, also a complaint in South Africa, and the exorbitant ticket prices rankled fans who saw them as the high-handedness of planners concerned only with gratifying sponsors, lacking a feel for the game and for the uniqueness of the Caribbean, and with little consideration for the pockets of the average West Indian.These, more than anything else, led to the heckling of Speed, Gordon and Dehring, even though several of the more draconian measures were relaxed towards the end. There were hundreds of lessons to be learned by the ICC, the WICB and regional governments from World Cup 2007. They would be foolish not to heed them.

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