All posts by csb10.top

Chanderpaul props up Derbyshire

ScorecardStuart Broad took four wickets in his first action of the season•Getty Images

Derbyshire’s decision to make Shivnarine Chanderpaul the marquee signing of their return to First Division cricket could not have been demonstrated more amply as he put himself forward with all his customary patience and obstinacy as the cornerstone of a recovery.Chanderpaul, the 38-year-old left-hander with the most recognisable stance in international cricket, last year became only the second West Indian batsman to pass 10,000 Test match runs. Here he passed another milestone when his first-class aggregate rolled over 22,000. He would have supplemented that with his 67th first-class century, you imagine, had he not run out of partners, which might be a recurrent theme of his latest spell in county cricket.Chanderpaul was left stranded on 87 not out but at one stage it looked likely that it would be a good deal fewer as Nottinghamshire, whose visit to the Racecourse has been eagerly awaited since the champagne corks popped on their winning of Division Two title last September, threatened to inflict more embarrassment on the newcomers, less than a week after they were dismissed for 60 by Middlesex at Lord’s.Able to call on Stuart Broad to bolster an attack that under-performed in an opening-round defeat, Notts overcame the loss of Andre Adams to injury early in the day to have their neighbours from along the A52 in serious trouble at 75 for 6, in grave danger of suffering another feeble surrender.Such a fate would have risked significant damage to morale among a set of largely inexperienced players. Broad, moreover, was not of a mind to take pity on them. His first spell was a little erratic, with a sprinkling of no-balls and leg-byes, but he found his rhythm more readily than is sometimes the case at this time of year and his four wickets were a suitable reward. Derbyshire’s younger batsmen were reminded of the potency of his bouncer just often enough to keep their focus sharp but on a green, seaming pitch he bowled a fuller length effectively, getting good swing and finding the edge of the bat with reassuring frequency.He dealt the first blow to Derbyshire in his third over as Wayne Madsen, the skipper, fell into a delivery that umpire Martin Bodenham thought about for a few moments before raising the finger. Billy Godleman, who was beginning to look set after surviving a chance to Ed Cowan at third slip on 10, was then caught in two minds about whether to play or not, thin-edging a catch to wicketkeeper Chris Read as he tried to withdraw the bat.Dan Redfern didn’t help himself with a loose drive taken at gully and Jonathan Clare poked at one outside off stump but the wickets were earned. “He usually takes wickets for us,” Mick Newell, Nottinghamshire’s director of cricket, said afterwards. “I thought he bowled a good length, a bit fuller than in the past. He is swinging the ball and inducing the edges and I think it is important for him that he is that kind of bowler, who pitches the ball up and who has the bouncer as the surprise.”Broad’s appearances for Nottinghamshire have been rare ever since he moved from Leicestershire, his elevation to international cricket coming sooner than Newell anticipated. This is only his 12th appearance in the Championship for Notts, yet his return in those is 58 wickets at 24.27 runs each, which reflects well not only on his ability but his eagerness to serve his county.It is good news from Nottinghamshire’s point of view that there will be another opportunity for him next week, when Durham visit Trent Bridge and Graeme Swann, who had a net at Derby, will make his competitive comeback. Newell knows already that Adams, who has a suspected torn calf muscle, will not play.”He is going for a scan but the physio is pretty sure there is a tear in there and he won’t bowl again in this match or play against Durham,” Newell said. “We haven’t got another Championship game until the middle of May but if there is a tear it will be at least two to three weeks to heal.”Adams missed the end of last season with a similar injury and at 37 his powers of recovery are not what they were. After relying heavily on his wickets in the last three seasons – 189 of them in total – Nottinghamshire’s title ambitions would undoubtedly suffer should he have a prolonged absence.Broad bowled in five spells, which was probably more than would have been the case had Adams remained on the field. It was a wicket, moreover – one that pitch inspector David Capel will take a second look at – that would have suited Adams ideally, which only reinforces the merits of Chanderpaul’s four-hour vigil. The conditions prompted Nottinghamshire to pick Harry Gurney, a left-armer who bowls a fuller length, ahead of Ajmal Shahzad, who might not have been so effective.As the ball softened, Chanderpaul found support eventually from Clare, who perished frustratingly on 49, and Tony Palladino, who made 39 before becoming a fourth victim for Gurney. Their partnerships with Chanderpaul added 96 and 68.

Mathews steps aside as Pune captain

Five matches since he last made an appearance in the IPL, Angelo Mathews has resigned as the Pune Warriors captain for the season.”I would like to confirm that I have decided to stand-aside as Pune Warriors franchise captain for the rest of the current season to ensure team leadership continuity,” Mathews said in a statement issued to the media prior to the start of Warriors’ home game against Royal Challengers Bangalore. “It is in our best interests that the captaincy is not switched frequently as we strive to achieve the best balanced team for each different opponent.”Mathews was appointed the captain for the season after Michael Clarke, the Warriors’ first-choice leader, couldn’t join the squad due to recurrence of his back injury. Mathews had to be dropped for the Warriors’ game against Chennai Super Kings on April 15 since the IPL’s restrictions on not allowing Sri Lankan players to participate in the games played in Chennai.Since then, Mathews has been unable to regain his place in the side. While Ross Taylor led the side in Chennai, he was dropped because, like Mathews, he was also going through a bad patch, despite the team’s victory in Chennai. Aaron Finch has led Warriors in the four successive losses since then.Mathews hinted that despite the team’s slide to the bottom of the points table, Finch is expected to lead the side for the remaining six games.”Given that Aaron (Finch) is likely to play in all our remaining games then it is logical that he continues to be our captain,” Mathews said. “I will naturally provide my fullest support at all times to Aaron and my team-mates. I will also continue to work as hard as possible as a player as we all strive to win our remaining matches.”

Hyderabad set to debut in new avatar

Match facts

Friday, April 5, 2013
Start time 2000 (1430 GMT)

Big Picture

After the top two teams of last year’s points table kicked-off the carnival on Wednesday, the bottom two will meet in Hyderabad on Friday. While the host city has a new team – Sunrisers Hyderabad – led by the same captain Kumar Sangakkara, Pune Warriors have a new captain – Angelo Mathews – after Michael Clarke was ruled out of the entire season.Sunrisers will feel the absence of an in-from Shikhar Dhawan, who was Deccan Chargers’ leading run-scorer last season. After retaining 20 players from the Chargers, Sunrisers revamped their leadership, bringing together Tom Moody and Sangakkara, who had worked together as coach and captain for Sri Lanka. They also have overseas pace options in Dale Steyn and Clint McKay, and allrounders Darren Sammy and Thisara Perera, but only Steyn picks himself.Warriors had an unsettled team last year and the addition Ajantha Mendis, Ross Taylor, Abhishek Nayar, and the return of Yuvraj Singh, will bolster their prospects. Steve Smith is more a batsman than allrounder these days and Warriors will be tempted to include Clarke’s replacement, Aaron Finch, who scored two fifties and a hundred against England Lions recently. With Marlon Samuels, Luke Wright, Wayne Parnell also in the squad, a right balance might not be easy to find.

Players to watch

Kumar Sangakkara scored 48, 63, 139, 55, 142, 105 and 58 in the recent ODIs and Tests against Bangladesh. He will now have to score in the shortest format against compatriots Ajantha Mendis and Mathews, among others. His captaincy will also be under the spotlight, because he led Chargers to only four wins last season.Yuvraj Singh scored consecutive fifties in the Deodhar Trophy and took 3 for 39 and 3 for 19 in the Vijay Hazare Trophy, so his recent form has been promising. With captaincy off his shoulders, and having missed all of 2012, he will want to score more than the two fifties he scored in 2011.

Stats and trivia

  • Warriors won only four out of their 16 matches last season
  • Warriors did not have a single bowler in the top-20 wicket-takers last season. Ashish Nehra, now with Delhi Daredevils, took 11 wickets for them and was in 26th place. Their leading run-scorer, Robin Uthappa, was 12th with 405 runs.

Quotes

“I am not looking far ahead. I am not looking at the semi-finals or anything like that. I just want to concentrate on every game, and on what we do in every game.”
“We have got replacements who are probably good enough to do the job and we are excited to give that opportunity to a younger guy.”

County ins and outs 2015

ESPNcricinfo keeps you up to date with all the player movements ahead of the 2015 seasonAaron Finch will return for a second season with Yorkshire in 2015•Getty Images

DerbyshireIN: Shiv Thakor (Leicestershire), Wayne White (Lancashire)
OUT: Tim Groenewald (Somerset), Stephen Moore, Richard Johnson (both retired), Gareth Cross, Peter Burgoyne, Paul Borrington, Mark Turner, Matt Higginbottom (all released)
OVERSEAS: Martin Guptill (T20), Tillakaratne Dilshan (T20), Nathan Rimmington (T20) , Hamish Rutherford (T20)DurhamIN:
OUT: Gareth Breese (released)
OVERSEAS: John HastingsEssexIN:
OUT: Ben Foakes (Surrey), Tymal Mills (Sussex), Saj Mahmood, Tom Craddock (both released), Tim Phillips (retired)
OVERSEAS: Jesse Ryder, Shaun Tait (T20)GlamorganIN: Colin Ingram (Kolpak), James Kettleborough (Northamptonshire), Craig Meschede (Somerset, loan), Andy Carter, (Nottinghamshire, loan)
OUT: Jim Allenby (Somerset), Murray Goodwin, Gareth Rees, Huw Waters, John Glover (all retired), Stewart Walters, Tom Lancefield, Mike Reed (all released)
OVERSEAS: Jacques Rudolph, Wayne Parnell (T20),GloucestershireIN: Geraint Jones (Kent), Kieran Noema-Barnett (NZ, British passport), Tom Hampton (Bucks)
OUT: Alex Gidman (Worcestershire), Will Gidman (Nottinghamshire), Graeme McCarter (released)
OVERSEAS: Peter Handscomb, Michael Klinger (June-September)HampshireIN: Andre Adams (Nottinghamshire), Gareth Berg (Middlesex), Fidel Edwards (Kolpak)
OUT: Matt Coles (Kent), David Balcombe (Surrey), Michael Bates, Ruel Brathwaite (all released)
OVERSEAS: Fidel Edwards, Yasir Arafat (limited-overs)KentIN: Joe Denly (Middlesex), Matt Coles (Hampshire)
OUT: Geraint Jones (Gloucestershire), Mark Davies (retired)
OVERSEAS: TBCLancashireIN: Alviro Petersen (Kolpak), Nathan Buck (Leicestershire), George Edwards (Surrey)
OUT: Kyle Hogg (retired), Kabir Ali, Andrea Agathangelou, Oliver Newby (all released)
OVERSEAS:LeicestershireIN: Mark Cosgrove
OUT: Josh Cobb (Northamptonshire), Nathan Buck (Lancashire), Shiv Thakor (Derbyshire), Greg Smith (Nottinghamshire), Anthony Ireland, Michael Thornely (both released)
OVERSEAS: Clint McKay, Umar Akmal (T20), Grant Elliott (T20)MiddlesexIN: Nick Compton (Somerset), James Franklin (Irish passport)
OUT: Joe Denly (Kent), Adam Rossington (Northamptonshire), Gareth Berg (Hampshire)
OVERSEAS: Adam Voges, Joe BurnsNorthamptonshireIN: Adam Rossington (Middlesex), Josh Cobb (Leicestershire)
OUT: James Kettleborough (Glamorgan), Andrew Hall, James Middlebrook, Matt Spriegel (all released), David Sales (retired)
OVERSEAS: Shahid Afridi (T20)NottinghamshireIN: Will Gidman (Gloucestershire), Greg Smith (Leicestershire)
OUT: Phil Jaques (retired), Andre Adams (Hampshire) Ajmal Shahzad (Sussex)
OVERSEAS: Vernon Philander (April-June), Ben Hilfenhaus, Darren Sammy (T20)SomersetIN: Jim Allenby (Glamorgan), Tom Cooper (Dutch passport)
OUT: James Burke (Surrey), Nick Compton (Middlesex), Steve Kirby, Chris Jones (both retired), Craig Meschede (Glamorgan, loan)
OVERSEAS: Abdur Rehman, Chris Gayle (T20), Sohail Tanvir (T20), Corey Anderson (T20)SurreyIN: Ben Foakes (Essex), David Balcombe (Hampshire), James Burke (Somerset)
OUT: Tom Jewell, Jack Winslade (all released), George Edwards (Lancashire)
OVERSEAS: Kumar Sangakkara, Moises HenriquesSussexIN: Tymal Mills (Essex), Ajmal Shahzad (Nottinghamshire)
OUT:
OVERSEAS: Steve Magoffin, Mahela Jayawardene, George BaileyWarwickshireIN:
OUT: Paul Best, Jim Troughton (both retired)
OVERSEAS: Jeetan Patel, Brendon McCullum (T20)WorcestershireIN: Alex Gidman (Gloucestershire)
OUT: Matt Pardoe, Graeme Cessford (both released)
OVERSEAS: Saeed Ajmal, Colin Munro (T20)YorkshireIN:
OUT: Azeem Rafiq (released)
OVERSEAS: Cheteshwar Pujara (April-May), Aaron Finch (June-August), Kane Williamson (September), Glenn Maxwell (T20)

Rasool a 'brilliant all-round cricketer' – Bedi

Offspinner Parvez Rasool, with figures of 7 for 45 in Chennai, was doing more than merely welcoming the Australians on their edge-of-seat tour of India. Offspin and Australians do not go well together in any case, but as they stumbled to 241 all out in a rash of shot-making, Rasool was also marking a milestone for cricket in his home state, the politically-troubled Jammu & Kashmir, and raising a toast to his Ranji Trophy coach Bishan Singh Bedi.Bedi’s most memorable advice to him over the past two seasons, Rasool said, came when he was working hard on developing his doosra. Rasool laughs when he talks of it: “Bedi sir said to me, ‘If you bowl the (first one) well, why do you need the doosra?” The word “doosra,” when translated from Urdu, merely means the second one.On a pitch that offered slow turn at the Guru Nanak College ground, Rasool showed control of flight and generated bounce, having Steve Smith caught at short leg and the acting captain Matthew Wade caught in the deep. Smith’s dismissal triggered the slide and the last five Australian wickets fell to Rasool.Australian opener Ed Cowan said Rasool had “held the attack up nicely.” India offspinner R Ashwin sent out his compliments on Twitter: “Well done to parvez rasol. Such a nice lad. So happy for him.”Bedi called Rasool a complete package. “He has a clean action, uses his shoulder well and has a deceptive faster one,” he said. “He is an orthodox offspinner, and is a brilliant all-round cricketer and a very good athlete.”His advice to Rasool this season, he said, had been simple. “I told him to be himself. When batting, hit the bloody thing, when bowling turn the bloody thing.” Rasool finished the Ranji season top of both batting and bowling charts for J&K, with 594 runs, including two centuries, and 33 wickets.Rasool became the first cricketer from his state to be selected in an Indian team to play an international side, when he was picked for India A against England in a warm-up match before the one-day series. Rasool said today that his strength was being able to control his flight. “I was able to bowl to my strengths today and remembered what Bedi sir said to me. Flight is what will make you deceive the batsman first up, don’t worry if you’re hit for six or four, toss the ball up.”Rasool belongs to Bij Behara, a town in the Anantnag district in the south of Kashmir valley. He came through the junior ranks, representing his state from the Under-14s onwards. His father batted for Anantnag district and an elder brother Asif played two T20 matches for J&K in 2009.Rasool took to cricket watching Abdul Qayuum, one of Kashmir’s best known players, rise through the ranks to play for North Zone. “I started my cricket based on what he had done … it is a very big thing for me to bowl against an international team today. Inshallah, if I get another chance, I will do better. I want to tell all the youngsters in my state today that if they work hard, you will get a chance.”

India finish seventh after Raj ton

ScorecardMithali Raj’s fourth ODI century, which came one match too late, helped India maintain their unbeaten record against Pakistan and end their World Cup campaign with a consolation victory. The six-wicket win helped India end the tournament at seventh place.No team had chased more than 105 at the Barabati Stadium during the tournament. However, once the Pakistan batting eventually clicked, the sizeable crowd – expectedly the biggest turnout so far – knew that India had to bat very well in order to chase down a respectable target of 193.India lost Poonam Raut cheaply for the second time in as many games, falling over while attempting an on drive, trapped in front of the wicket. Mithali walked in at No.3 and looked in sound touch and though she had started off on a similar note against Sri Lanka, she made sure she stayed till the end.When Raj and the left-handed opener Thirush Kamini were looking set for a big partnership, the opener perished, holing out to Sana Mir at mid-off off Bismah Maroof with the score on 51. Raj and Harmanpreet Kaur were untroubled by the Pakistan bowlers. Raj did the bulk of the scoring, charging down the wicket and lofting the offspinner Mir straight and following it up with a square cut through point off the next ball.Four balls after the halfway mark, Kaur perished, thanks to a run out. Shortly after, the offspinner Nida Dar sneaked through Sulakshana Naik’s defence to leave India at 108 for 4. Raj found an able partner in Reema Malhotra. While Malhotra focused on rotating the strike, Raj went after the Pakistan bowlers at will.Once India crossed the 150 mark, Raj cut loose and eventually reached her century to robust cheers from the crowd after pulling Dar for a one-bounce boundary through midwicket. India thus overhauled the target with four overs to spare.Pakistan’s decision to bat first appeared surprising, considering they came into this game on the back of totals of 84, 104 and 81. However, fifties by Nain Abidi and Nida Dar, and the duo’s 80-run stand for the fifth wicket helped Pakistan post a better total.The pair not only resurrected Pakistan’s innings but also helped them register their highest ever total in World Cup matches, also their fifth-highest total overall. Despite losing Abidi while attempting to push the scoring, Dar remained unbeaten, raising the third-highest individual score for a Pakistani in international women’s cricket.

Auckland keep finals chances alive

ScorecardA blinding seven-ball assault by Donovan Grobbelaar helped Auckland steal a win from Canterbury in Rangiora and keep their chances to qualify for the finals alive. 25 runs were required off the last 11 balls when Colin de Grandhomme, who scored 36 off 23, was out. But Grobbelaar smashed two sixes and three fours to complete the chase with three balls to spare.Auckland now need to beat Central Districts in their last league match to move up to No. 3 on the table and set up a clash with Wellington in the qualifier for the final.Canterbury, who needed to win the match too, chose to bat and a frenetic 78-run stand for the third wicket between George Worker and Andrew Ellis set the platform for a tall total. Worker stayed unbeaten on 89 as Canterbury racked up 182. In response, Auckland stayed up with the rate but had lost four wickets by the 11th over. But Craig Cachopa and de Grandhomme brought Auckland close to finish line with a half-century stand, before Grobelaar applied the finishing touch.
ScorecardAfter slim pickings in the last two matches, Jesse Ryder hit another half-century – his fifth in this year’s HRV Cup – in Wellington’s nine run win against Northern Districts at the Basin Reserve. It was one of Ryder’s slower innings as he took 65 balls for his unbeaten 85, but along with captain Michael Papps (65* off 42 balls), it frustrated the Northern Districts bowlers as the two put up 142 runs together in an unbeaten stand.Northern Districts, who needed to win to move to safety in the table, were on track to chase down the total quick contributions from James Foster and James Marshall. Sixteen runs were required off the last over, but Theo Doropoulos, who picked up three wickets, gave away only six to take Wellington to the second spot on the table.Northern Districts, who have 20 points, now need to hope that Auckland lose their last match against Central Districts for them to move to the knockout stage.
ScorecardAn all-round performance by Central Districts captain Kieran Noema-Barnett failed to stop table-toppers Otago from sneaking in yet another win in this year’s tournament. It was Otago’s eighth win out of nine matches, but it didn’t come easy.Otago were seven down on 130 chasing 164 and with 23 balls remaining, Central Districts appeared to have an upper hand. But Ian Butler smashed three sixes in his 17-ball 32 to help Otago stretch their lead at the top of the table.Despite Noema-Barnett’s two crucial wickets in three balls and his sixes-laden 47, Central Districts crashed to their seventh loss in the tournament.

A chance to upset the champions

Match facts

December 10, 2012
Start time 1800 local (1200 GMT)

Big Picture

Kieron Pollard came good only in the final ODI•AFP

Had West Indies beaten Bangladesh as they were expected to in the ODIs, the one-off Twenty20 international would have been more of an exhibition. Now, because Bangladesh won the one-dayers 3-2, the fixture will have added significance for the visitors. Their captain Darren Sammy said the T20 was West Indies’ chance to finish this tour on a high.Bangladesh will also want to end the year on a positive note. The ODI series triumph will have given them confidence, but they face a difficult task because they have struggled in the shortest format. And West Indies are the world champions in T20 cricket. Bangladesh had prepared extensively ahead of the World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka, playing tournaments in several countries between June and September just to get a hang of the gameWest Indies will be favourites once again, but they were favourites to win the ODIs too. They won’t take Bangladesh lightly.

Form guide

Bangladesh: LLLWL (Most recent first)West Indies: WWWLW

Watch out for

Kieron Pollard, after his 74-ball knock of 85 in the final ODI. The innings included eight sixes, and some of them were mishits that landed well beyond the rope.Ziaur Rahman, who is regarded as the only specialist big-hitter in the Bangladesh team. He is likely to be picked at the expense of one of the regular batsmen, or a spinner, and will be asked to do half the job of a Pollard.

Team News

There are doubts over Mashrafe Mortaza’s fitness, but he could be picked despite his thigh strain. He may last a 20-over game, but Mushfiqur has spoken about the risks involved.Bangladesh (possible): 1 Tamim Iqbal, 2 Anamul Haque, 3 Jahurul Islam/Ziaur Rahman, 4 Nasir Hossain, 5 Mahmudullah, 6 Mushfiqur Rahim (capt & wk), 7 Mominul Haque, 8 Sohag Gazi, 9 Shafiul Islam/Mashrafe Mortaza, 10 Abdur Razzak, 11 Elias Sunny.West Indies could include all four allrounders but they would have to leave out one of the spinners, and that could be Veerasammy Permaul.West Indies (possible): 1 Chris Gayle, 2 Kieran Powell/Lendl Simmons, 3 Darren Bravo, 4 Marlon Samuels, 5 Kieron Pollard, 6 Darren Sammy (capt), 7 Devon Thomas (wk), 8 Andre Russell, 9 Veerasammy Permaul, 10 Sunil Narine, 11 Kemar Roach.

Quotes

“We are T20 champions and we have to play like that on Monday.”
“The expectations are now higher but through success in the ODIs, I want this team to do well in formats like Twenty20s and Tests.”

Karnataka strong after conceding lead

ScorecardFortunes oscillated on the second day at the Chinnaswamy Stadium, but Karnataka made amends after a poor opening day with a strong opening partnership between Robin Uthappa and KL Rahul. The duo not only erased the first-innings deficit of 66 but extended the lead to 70, undefeated. Karnataka held the upper hand by taking quick wickets in the morning session, but that initiative slipped when Parvinder Awana, fresh from a five-wicket haul the previous day, made an attacking fifty to give Delhi the lead. Karnataka then came back strongly by their openers.The talking point, though, was Awana’s elevation to India’s Test and T20 squads. News of his selection broke after lunch, when Delhi had taken the lead. By then, Awana had gained enough confidence to take the bowling apart, with all the specialist batsmen dismissed. His character was tested after he walked in with Delhi struggling at 144 for 7, still 48 adrift of Karnataka’s score. Delhi had just lost two wickets in two balls. Puneet Bisht went forward to drive a full delivery from HS Sharath and edged to the keeper, before Rajat Bhatia provided KL Rahul with a simple catch at second slip. The initial target of 192 seemed a long way off.Awana and Sumit Narwal kept the bowlers at bay with a steady partnership. Karnataka went on the defensive, pushing mid-off and mid-on back to the spinner KP Appanna. As Awana looked to play aggressively, the Karnataka captain Vinay Kumar had as many as four men in the deep while he was bowling. Delhi inched towards the lead and ended the opening session trailing by 15.After lunch, Awana batted in a different gear, biffing boundaries towards midwicket and slashing over point to take Delhi closer to the lead, which they achieved with a boundary over extra cover by Narwal. Appanna then nipped out two wickets in an over, leaving Awana with the No.11 for company. Karnataka struggled to remove the last-wicket pair. Fielders were placed in the deep but Awana still found the gaps, pulling and slashing when given width. He brought up his fifty off as many balls with a hoick towards midwicket, and was dismissed on 74 when he gloved Vinay to the keeper.It was an effective comeback by Delhi after their earlier struggle. They took the approach of batting positively, but like Karnataka, the top order was guilty of giving it away before getting settled.Shikhar Dhawan was foxed by extra bounce from Vinay, and he gloved to the keeper; Mithun Manhas looked dangerous with some crisp cover drives before he chased a full, away-swinging delivery off his namesake Abhimanyu Mithun and got an outside edge to the keeper. Vaibhav Rawal, playing his third first-class game, looked in good touch but was lucky to be dropped on 12 when Manish Pandey was slow to react at second slip. The let-off was a bit expensive as Rawal added 50 in quick time with Bhatia and went on to score 48. Rawal was strong off the front foot, punching past cover and driving down the ground when the seamers overpitched. Sharath, the most penetrative bowler of the morning, got rid of him when he slanted one across the left-hander and induced an edge. Rawal failed to carry on after making a start, but Awana gave Delhi control.Karnataka, in reply, had lost a wicket in the first over but the pair of Uthappa and Rahul ensured they went into the team break without having lost another wicket. Uthappa got the innings off to a positive start by angling the first ball of the innings wide of slip. The batsmen appeared to get a good measure of the second-day pitch, and waited patiently for the bad balls. Delhi maintained attacking fields but the tactic didn’t work as the pair found the gaps with ease. Uthappa was strong driving down the ground while Rahul too settled into a good rhythm, getting to his fifty with a controlled glide over the slips.Delhi had their chances of dismissing both of them, but fluffed it. Awana was the bowler on both occasions. Rahul was dropped on 44 by the keeper Bisht while Uthappa was let off on 64 by Rawal at third slip. Uthappa offered other chances too. Having endured a tough evening, Delhi will need to make the morning count on Monday, given that the first session has proven to be the most productive for the bowlers.

Last-wicket pair deny Australia A

ScorecardDerbyshire’s last-wicket pair, Christopher Durham and Mark Footitt, survived 35 balls to deny Australia A victory in the opening match of their tour after Test duo Mitchell Johnson and Nathan Lyon had combined to take seven wickets.Australia A had declared an hour into final morning, following a stand of 73 between Ed Cowan and Mitchell Starc, to leave Derbyshire a target of 315 and the top order laid a solid foundation as Usman Khawaja hit 66. Daniel Redfern also compiled a confident half-century but the middle and lower order fell away against Johnson and Lyon.However, Durham, the 20-year-old wicketkeeper making his first-class debut, and No. 11 Footitt resisted for the final 20 minutes of the day to ensure honours were even after a keenly fought three days.Johnson’s figures of 3 for 47 were a marked improvement on the first innings where he went wicketless and the first of his three scalps came early when he removed Wayne Madsen. Khawaja, against his fellow countrymen, and Matt Lineker then added 92 for the second wicket to give Derbyshire hope of making a significant attempt at the target.Lyon broke through when Lineker offered a return catch and Khawaja was soon removed by Johnson to leave Derbyshire at 127 for 3. Redfern helped steady the innings but Australia A continued to chip away either side of the tea interval. Jackson Bird had Ross Whiteley lbw before Redfern was caught behind off Starc.Derbyshire, to their credit, did not go into their shells with Wes Durston putting pat to ball for 40 off 31 deliveries but the target was always a little out of sight. David Wainwright was stumped off Lyon and Tony Palladino, the first-innings century-maker, edged to Tim Paine off Johnson as Australia A closed in on victory but they could not quite cross the line.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus