Jayasuriya officially stands down as skipper

Sri Lanka captain Sanath Jayasuriya officially tendered his resignation on Friday morning, handing over a letter to cricket board chief executive Anura Tennekoon.Jayasuriya had resigned immediately after the World Cup but was persuaded to stay on for the Sharjah Cup so the selectors could identify a successor."He handed over a letter to me this morning and I have informed the chairman of selectors," said Tennekoon.With two selectors currently out of the country, the five-man panel are expected to discuss the captaincy after the Sinhalese New Year next week.The committee, headed by former Sri Lanka leg-spinner Lalith Kaluperuma, will have to decide first whether to accept Jayasuriya’s resignation and then who should take over."The selectors will have to make the decision as to whether to accept his resignation," confirmed Tennekoon.However, Jayasuriya made it abundantly clear during the recent Sharjah Cup that he now wants to continue only as a player.”I was asked to continue for Sharjah but after this they will have to find someone else to do the job," he said. "I have made my decision and I will continue as a player.”Explaining his decision, he said: “After the World Cup I thought the time had come to groom someone for the 2007 World Cup.”The 33-year-old all-rounder believes Marvan Atapattu, the current vice-captain, is his natural successor: “My personal thinking is that Marvan should take over – he has a lot of experience and has been vice-captain for some time now.”

Penney sees Warwickshire into semi-finals

Warwickshire gained their revenge on Yorkshire by beating them by four wickets with 35 balls to spare at Headingley to go through to the semi-finals of the Cheltenham and Gloucester Trophy.It was a shock result after Warwickshire had been bowled out for only 59 on the same ground two days earlier when Yorkshire had won the day-night match by 175 runs.The man who turned-the-tables for them was Trevor Penney who came in with Warwickshire on a shaky 63 for four as they chased a victory target of 189.Penney was still there at the close with 58 and his brave performance earned him the man-of-the-match award.He made his runs off only 80 balls and struck six fours and a six, adding an unbroken 59 in 12 overs with Ashley Giles (19 not out) to put the issue beyond doubt.Although Yorkshire left out Chris Silverwood because of a slight back strain they included their England pair of Darren Gough and Craig White but neither was able worry Warwickshire unduly. Gough was economical but failed to take a wicket in ten overs which cost him 28 runs while White picked up just one wicket for 36 runs.Put in to bat, Yorkshire seemed to have taken command after a hesitant start and there was an outstanding knock of 82 from Anthony McGrath who hit eight crisp boundaries off the 136 balls he received.But when he was run out by Nick Knight’s direct hit from cover it triggered a collapse which saw Yorkshire’s last five wickets crash for 15 runs in 25 deliveries, both skipper David Byas and Ryan Sidebottom also failing to make their crease.Yorkshire’s latest fast bowling discovery Steven Kirby had his first disappointing day since joining the county a few weeks ago and he was far too erratic, going for 53 off his ten overs.Ryan Sidebottom was easily the best of the bowlers with three for 32 but Knight (29) and Dougie Brown (30) both batted sensibly in helping lay the foundation which Penney was able to build upon.

‘The Boy Has Got Skills’ – Arsenal’s Alfred Mugabo

Alfred Mugabo has certainly been doing something right down at the Arsenal training ground in recent weeks.

The Rwandan U17 International has been on the end of some big praise from fans favourite and fellow teammate Jack Wilshere.

The England international, who himself has been tipped for a big career, revealed his support for Mugabo on his twitter feed just a couple of weeks ago.

@JackWilshere tweeted: Watch out for this young lad at #Arsenal #Decent #Baller

When somebody of Wilshere’s calibre goes out of his way to praise a youngster it’s bound to get people noticing.

Mugabo compares himself to the likes of fellow Arsenal star Abou Diaby and revealed that Barcelona midfielder Xavi is hero and favourite player of all time.

The big, strong and versatile Rwandan is happiest when sitting just in front of the back, but can easily make the transition into centre-back, centre-midfield, or even as a wing back.

Mugabo was aware of his talent from a very young age, even in primary school he was progressing at a faster rate than many, playing for the year 6 football team when he was still learning in class 3.

Just a few years later Arsenal wrapped up a deal for the Rwandan when he was aged just 16-years old.

The deal came after Mugabo earned his first International call-up during the U17 World cup at the age of just 15.

Despite the midfielder’s side dropping out in the group stages there was no doubting the valuable experience it gave Mugabo.

And it now looks as though the Rwandan has taken the experience and progression into the training ground as he continues his development and starts to get noticed.

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Mugabo will now be hoping that his good form continues to get him noticed as he looks to gain a chance to reach the Arsenal first team in years to come.

There’s no doubting that the strong Rwandan is going the right way about is thus far.

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Beating Delhi was 'sweet revenge' – Warne

Shane Warne: Our plan was to bowl slow to Virender Sehwag © AFP (file photo)
 

Shane Warne has called the return match between the Rajasthan Royals and the Delhi Daredevils a “sweet revenge”. Last time the two sides met, Delhi had walloped Rajasthan by nine wickets. That match was the first for both teams in the tournament.”I am happy with the team’s victory, sitting on top of the table,” Warne said.Warne also praised the all-round efforts of compatriot Shane Watson, who took two wickets and scored 74 off 40 balls in Rajasthan’s three-wicket win against Delhi in Jaipur.Watson’s innings, according to Warne, was the turning point of the match. “His innings was perhaps the best in the tournament,” Warne said. “It was most valuable and brilliant innings.” Rajasthan were 15 for 2 in five overs when Watson came out to bat. He added 71 with Graeme Smith and fell when Rajasthan needed only seven more to get their seventh IPL win and maintain their 100% record at home.Warne also apologised for his final over which went for 27 runs. Delhi were at 122 for 6 when Warne came on to bowl the 19th over. Farveez Maharoof and Tillakaratne Dilshan had taken Siddharth Trivedi for 13 runs in the previous over and they continued the onslaught against Warne. Maharoof hit him for four sixes to take Delhi to a competitive total. “Things went according to our plan till 19th over,” Warne said. “I apologise for that over. I was hit for 27 runs. We gave 20-25 runs extra to them.”But he was happy with the way his side executed the game-plan earlier in the innings. “We bowled well. Field placing was good and we were able to contain them. We had plans for [Virender] Sehwag. We bowled slow to him. Dimitri [Mascarenhas], Watson Siddharth [Trivedi] and Munaf [Patel] intentionally kept the ball slow.”Rajasthan now have a five-day break before they play the Bangalore Royal Challengers in Jaipur on Saturday.

Chopra can't deny Sri Lanka A

ScorecardSri Lanka A completed a comprehensive 10-wicket victory against MCC at Arundel, although Aakash Chopra’s century at least made them bat again for the win.When MCC fell to 158 for 7 an innings defeat was on the cards, but Chopra added 77 with Christopher Prowting, whose 48 nudged MCC into the lead. Chopra, who played 10 Tests for India between 2003 and 2004, hit 13 boundaries in his century before being bowled by Dilruwan Perera, one of three wickets for his offspin.Perera and Mahela Udawatte then took less than an over to knock off the seven runs required to open the tour in confident style. Their next match is a one-day outing against Worcestershire on Saturday at, conditions permitting, New Road which is still trying to recover from the recent floods.

US Virgin Islands and Cayman Islands post wins

ScorecardSt Maarten’s participation in the Stanford 20/20 tournament in Antigua was short-lived as they were comprehensively beaten by 47 runs by the United States Virgin Islands in the first match of the tournament.Set to make 147 for victory, the St Maarten innings never gained the momentum that they needed, with wicketkeeper-batsman Steven Evans the only one to score at more than a run-a-ball. His 39 from 32 was never going to be enough to fight the lone battle. Sherville Huggins, John Florent and Dane Weston each took two wickets to bowl St Maarten out in 18 overs.Earlier, the Virgin Islands had scored 145 for 7 in their 20 overs thanks to Huggins, who scored the first half-century of the tournament. He was well assisted by Clifford Walvin and together, the two put on 47 in the middle overs.Had it not been for some poor fielding from the St Maarten outfielders, this could have been a closer affair than what it turned out to be.
ScorecardA five-wicket haul by fast bowler Kenneth Tulloch helped Cayman Islands post a comprehensive 57-run win against Bahamas under lights on the opening day of the Stanford 20/20 tournament at St Johns. Sent in to bat, Cayman Islands made an impressive 175 for 4, powered by half-centuries by Saheed Mohammed and Pearson Best, who top-scored with 74. Tulloch ran through the Bahamas top order, taking the first four wickets and effecting the run-out of opener Narendra Ekanayeke. Bahamas never recovered from their score of 22 for 5, and ended up with 118 for 9 in their 20 overs, with Llewellyn Johnson remaining unbeaten on 40. Tulloch bagged his fifth wicket with the last ball of his spell, dismissing Jonathan Barry.

Jayasuriya spins a fatal web

Under lights at the Gaddafi in Lahore, Sri Lanka held aloft the Paktel Cup. They had won when it mattered most, and had weathered every crisis of the day. The dew factor, that scourge of bowlers under lights at this ground, was made irrelevant as they kept the pressure on Pakistan’s stroke-makers, who stumbled, crumbled and hit the dust.It was a redemption of sorts for Sanath Jayasuriya (5 for 17), for he made the ball dance, and the Pakistanis who took him lightly fell flat. He had failed earlier that day, as his teammates set about building a total of 287, but now he and Upul Chandana struck repeatedly, thrusting, bouncing, turning, and the batsmen committed one folly after another on their way to a 119-run defeat.Pakistan had started hopefully with bat and ball, first removing Sri Lanka’s openers for little and then nullifying the opening attack with youthful vigour. In both cases, Sri Lanka first got a toe-hold in the door, before blasting it wide open. The morning recovery was steady. The one later was more dramatic. Salman Butt and Yasir Hameed raced away because the bowlers were unsteady in line and length, offering width and the boundaries that went with them. Soon 40 runs had been scored.Dilhara Fernando then took the ball in his hands, and after making the sign of the cross, dismissed a bewildered Hameed with his very first ball: a straight ball clipped his bat and slammed into leg stump. Then Chandana floated a delivery that Butt drove at, and he missed, but it turned in and hit the wicket. He had played comfortably, with arrogance even, but it was a misjudgement that later made clear how difficult the conditions and the bowlers were.Inzamam-ul-Haq swung at Chandana on his second ball, and dismissed it with power to midwicket. Chaminda Vaas was brought in, and Sri Lanka’s most experienced bowler immediately sold Inzamam a dummy. He inserted a slip, but swung the ball in to have him leg-before (91 for 3). Then Yousuf Youhanna wandered out of his crease and was stumped off Jayasuriya, who removed Abdul Razzaq and a disdainful Shahid Afridi as well. Moin Khan (14) swept powerfully but valiantly; he needed men to fight alongside. Chandana had him too (150 for 8).The morning had not started well for Sri Lanka. They were nervous. And why not? Their away record was skewed. They had lost to Pakistan twice in recent days. And the Gaddafi was supposed to be hell for bowlers under lights. Eager to get off the mark, Saman Jayantha ran down the wicket in the first over but Jayasuriya, who fell soon after for a scratchy 21 (35 for 2), turned him away too late.Marvan Atapattu and Kumar Sangakkara joined hands and carefully settled in. They drove with caution, and ran runs with great risk; Pakistan’s fielders hurled themselves around, and threw the ball with frightening power. While Atapattu eschewed risk at other times, Sangakkara cut, swept and drove the ball with the smile of a man who had crossed a thousand runs for the season. Shoaib Malik had Atapattu (66) stumped off a wide, but by then the batsmen had put on 106 runs.The ground resonated with the sound of their languid strokes, and a few spectators cheered them on. Sangakkara (68) fell soon after, knocking a ball onto his stumps, but Mahela Jayawardene (49) and Tillakaratne Dilshan (39) hurried, and used the pace of the ball to score boundaries; the region between point and third man was active towards the end of the innings. To the bowlers’ credit, they did not lose the plot. To a man, they stuck to their task, and perhaps it was this rigidity that did them in.

'I was made a scapegoat' – Malik

Saleem Malik lashed out at the ICC and accused them of bias© Getty Images

Saleem Malik, the former Pakistan captain, believes that he was made a scapegoat in the match-fixing scandal, which ruined his career.Malik, currently in Mumbai for fund-raising purposes, went on to name a few cricketers who had been cleared in the match-fixing affair. An ANI report quoted him as saying, “Ata-ur Rehman’s ban is off. Herschelle Gibbs and Shane Warne are still playing, but I am stuck. Other Pakistani players whose names appeared in the investigations were fined and let off. Only I was punished. I guess they wanted a scapegoat, and who better than me? In India, the board thought Azharuddin would be the ideal person to ban because he was nearing the end of his career, and here in Pakistan I was coming towards the end of my career. So, Azhar and I were made the scapegoats.”Malik felt that players from the subcontinent were at the receiving end of the ICC’s anti-corruption unit. “England lost to Zimbabwe in the early 90s. West Indies were bowled out for 54 against England recently. But no one ever says those matches were fixed. The ICC continues to scrutinise only games where teams from the subcontinent are involved.”Accusing the ICC of bias, he said, “It’s because of the colour of our skin. If we were white, there wouldn’t be so much scrutiny. Shane Warne is still playing, as is Herschelle Gibbs.”When asked about his appeal to the Supreme Court to lift the life-ban imposed by the Justice Malik Qayyum committee, Malik said, “What can I say? The court is not willing to give any date for a hearing. To be honest I have given up all hope that I would ever be cleared of this allegation.”He spoke about his plight and fading hopes of detaching the stigma from his name. “As it is, what damage had to be done has been done to me and my family. I have suffered a lot … The matchfixing allegations completely destroyed me and I could not perform in the middle after that at all. In the middle of the 1999 World Cup I had to attend court hearings. It was humiliation of the worst kind. I was harassed, shot, slapped, slaughtered in public by my board, the ICC and also the media.”Malik also denied rumours about him wanting to migrate to some other country after being banned for life. “Where will I go from here? This is my country and this is the only place where they are people who still believe I am innocent and support me.”

Pakistan has never been in such a tight corner

In the entire World Cup history to date never has Pakistan been in such a tight corner as they are in the current tournament. Even when they had not qualified for the semi-finals (inaugural World Cup in 1975 and 21 years later in 1996), their reputation as one of the leading teams in the world had not been impaired to the extent as it has now.The lack of commitment, poor form/fitness and the mediocre performance so far exhibited by the team in World Cup 2003 has reduced their rating just above the `B’ Class teams participating in the mega event.Alas! A team whose rich potential and capability is never in any doubt is suffering heavily for poor leadership, mismanagement and absence of strategic planning.At last and finally the crunch moment has arrived.Pakistan must enter Centurion Park on 1st March with a `do-or-die’ spirit. Obviously the morale of Indian team is soaring having already earned 16 points and on recording a thumping 82 runs victory over England.Not withstanding this situation and for the fact that Pakistan has lost all the three previous World Cup matches played against India the overall statistics hang heavily in Pakistan’s favour with 52 victories against India’s 29 in 85 encounters.On analysis, Pakistan’s major weakness in the recent matches had been their inept batting, too many wides and noballs, scratchy fielding and on top of all that, a lack of application and concentration.However, supporters of the team believe that Pakistan will make amends and stage a comeback and one can hope they will keep their nerves in this crucial match.Yet any forecast on the result of the match may prove erroneous except it suffices to say, the key of success for the two teams in this match is largely held by Sachin Tendulkar for India and Wasim Akram for Pakistan.Here under is a brief review of the previous World Cup matches played between Pakistan and India:1. 1992-Sydney:
Man of the Match Sachin Tendulkar scored 54 the highest in the Indian innings of 216-7 in 49 overs. KapilDev and Vinod Kambli contributed 35 and 24 respectively. Legspineer Mushtaq Ahmad claimed 3 for 59. Pakistan team, well known as poor chasers, collapsed and fell 43 runs short of the target despite Aamer Sohail’s knocks of 62 and Javed Miandad’s 40. Kapil Dev, Manhoj Parbhakar and Javagal Srinath all took two wickets each.2. 1996-Bangalore:
Prior this match Pakistan had done reasonably well to win four of the five league matches but in their crunch match against India – the quarterfinals in Bangalore – they failed. Psychological pressure, indifferent batting and crowd behaviour accounted for the downfall of the potentially stronger team. Responding to a total of 287, Pakistan openers gave a flying start of 84 and they were chasing well at 231 for 5 when 4 wickets tumbled in quick succession, which sealed the fate of the match. Pakistani was without the services of skipper Wasim Akram, because of injury. The legend Javed Miandad bowed out of International cricket after this match.3. 1999-Old Trafford
Pakistan bowling attack, in particular skipper Wasim Akram (2/27) and Azhar Mahmood (2/34), succeeded in containing India. Still Rahul Dravid (61), Mohammad Azharuddin (59) and Sachin Tendulkar (45) enabled them to reach 227-6. Pakistan batting once again flopped against their traditional opponents and were bowled out for (180) in 45.3 overs. Saeed Anwar on (36), Inzmam-ul-Haq (41) and Moin Khan (34) only some offered resistance to the magnificent bowling of Man of the Match Venkatesh Parsad – 5 for 27 in 9.3 overs. Javagal Srinath 3 for 37 and Anil Kumble 2 for 43 ably assisted the Indian hero. Pakistan lost the match by 47 runs.

Matara SC threatens legal action over relegation threat

Matara Sports Club have threatened to take the Tournament Committee of theBoard of Control for Cricket in Sri Lanka (BCCSL) to courts over itsdecision to force the club into playing in the promotion and relegationtournament.Matara SC ended fourth in the Plate Championship of the Premier LeagueTournament, but the Tournament Committee cancelled their points, relegatingthe side to the bottom of the table after Kurunagala Youth Cricket Club.Kurunagala protested that five players playing for Matara SC had alreadyplayed for Moors Sports Club in the one-day tournament during same season.The players were R. Priyadarshana, C. Bandaratillake, U. Fernando, M.P.Salgado and A. Jayasinghe.Kurunagala ended up in the seventh place of the Plate Championship and wereto play in the promotion and relegation matches. When their protest provedsuccessful they moved up into the safety of sixth position and were thusguaranteed a place in the Premier League next season.Matara, however, responded to the board’s decision by refusing to play asingle promotion or relegation game.They complain that BCCSL tournament rules and regulations require thatofficial protests should be handed over to the secretary of the tournamentcommittee within 48 hours of a match. Kurunegala’s protest came aftertwo-months and Matara officials smell foul play.Sports Secretary of Matara SC, P.M.C Waidyarathne, claims that the fiveplayers were legitimately transferred, having moved from one province toanother because of changes to their employment.Chairman of the Tournament Committee, Shriyan Samararathne, maintains thatthe committee is not satisfied with the documents provided by thetransferred players.

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