Showing posts with label South Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Africa. Show all posts

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Blow for Test match cricket

FEARS for the future of Test cricket have been heightened by new research in which only seven per cent of cricket followers in the sport's modern heartland, India, nominate Tests as their preferred form of the game.

The poll was commissioned by the Marylebone Cricket Club and covered fans in three countries where Test crowds have declined - India, South Africa and New Zealand. Armed with the findings, which have raised fresh concerns about whether Tests can remain relevant in the Twenty20 age, the MCC's World Cricket Committee implored administrators to give the longest form of the game the ''loving care and attention'' it deserves.

The Lord's-based group also renewed its push for Tests to be staged at night and to be given greater context in a global Test championship. Tony Lewis, the former England captain who chairs the committee, told The Age: ''It's not as if the game is falling apart, but it has been scooped by Twenty20 and I think we would be foolish if we didn't think it was universal.''

The key findings were presented to the International Cricket Council's cricket committee earlier this month in Dubai, where both groups reaffirmed their commitment to preserving all three forms. Interestingly, the survey shows the maligned 50-over game is alive and kicking; despite reports of public fatigue it remains the most popular format with 36 per cent of fans across the three countries.

But in India, Twenty20 internationals rule, with 58 per cent of the respondents declaring these as their favourite compared with 31 per cent for ODIs, 7 per cent for Tests and 4 per cent for the billion-dollar Indian Premier League. Overall, 13 per cent said they preferred Tests to the limited-overs contests.

In India, 58 per cent of respondents said the emergence of Twenty20 had reduced their interest in Test cricket, while 23 per cent of South Africans and 13 per cent of New Zealanders felt the same. But almost two-thirds of Indians and three-quarters of South Africans said Twenty20 might spark their interest in the longer formats.

The research, which is expected to be presented to chief executives of the Test-playing nations at their next meeting, should sound alarm bells with administrators who have already been accused of devaluing Test cricket by scheduling too many meaningless limited-overs matches. The crowded calendar, coupled with the emergence of new and lucrative opportunities in Twenty20 leagues, persuaded all-rounders Andrew Flintoff and Jacob Oram to retire from Test cricket, meaning that Test cricket can no longer be assured of showcasing the best players.

The study also challenges the assumption that slow over-rates and dull pitches are most instrumental in keeping people away from Tests. Instead, it suggests ticket prices and timeslots are key factors. The study also reaffirms the power of television - 89 per cent of people surveyed watch cricket live on TV. Sachin Tendulkar last October broke the world runscoring record in a Test against Australia in Mohali in front of only a few thousand people at the ground.

''We just can't sit back and let that happen,'' said Lewis. ''Test matches need loving care and attention, and they need to be played when people can watch. Can people afford to support all the brands of cricket? That's a really big question, I think. Australia and England don't feel the pinch so much in Test-match cricket but other countries do.''

He believes it is inevitable that Tests will be staged under lights and the MCC was moving closer to a trial with a pink ball. ''It's bound to happen,'' he said. ''We have a new agreement with Abu Dhabi - this is, MCC - to play cricket there, to do some preseason work when it's freezing cold [in England] and that is the sort of place where we can experiment with balls.''

The World Cricket Committee comprises figures such as Steve Waugh, Rahul Dravid, Geoff Boycott and Tony Dodemaide. The sample for the study was small - about 500 in each country - but market research company TNS Sport insisted this was big enough for meaningful conclusions.

Lewis expressed alarm about the prevalence of limited-overs cricket in India, which generates two-thirds of world cricket revenue. ''It did shock me because having played Test cricket in India you know how feverish the whole business is,'' he said.

The MCC is the custodian of the laws of cricket and Lewis said while it had moral authority it had no actual power. He vowed to keep lobbying the ICC until changes were made to preserve the most precious form of cricket.

http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2009/11/17/1258219839902.html?page=1

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Cool De Villiers keeps South Africa hopes alive

Cool De Villiers keeps South Africa hopes alive

Yahoonews, Reuters, 24 September 2009

Centurion: AB de Villiers scored an 70 to steer South Africa to a five-wicket win over New Zealand in ICC Champions Trophy Group B on Thursday.

The hosts, who lost their opening match to Sri Lanka, will now go into their final group game against England on Sunday knowing that victory would almost certainly book them a place in the semi-finals.

New Zealand were sent in to bat and compiled a mediocre 214 all out built around Ross Taylor's 72 off 105 deliveries.

South Africa lost wickets regularly in reply, but De Villiers ensured that they were always ahead of the required run-rate as he breezed to 70 not out off 76 balls, including nine boundaries.

The home side gave a much-improved bowling display on a pitch that had more of a green tinge than in the loss to Sri Lanka, with Dale Steyn (two for 32) and Jacques Kallis particularly economical.

Left-arm spinner Roelof van der Merwe showed that he can both contain and take wickets as he completed figures of two for 35 in 10 excellent overs.

New Zealand opening batsman Brendon McCullum scored 44, before Taylor and South African-born Grant Elliott (39) combined for a fourth-wicket stand of 71.

But the Black Caps suffered a late collapse in which they lost their last five wickets for 11 runs.

Wayne Parnell, expensive in his first two spells, returned to claim three more wickets and finish with career-best figures of five for 57.

Hashim Amla (38) and Kallis (36) put on 52 for the second wicket to keep South Africa on target after the early loss of captain Graeme Smith.

Kallis looked particularly impressive, being quick to get on the front foot as he stroked six fours off 39 deliveries, before edging a leg-cutter from Shane Bond to wicket-keeper McCullum.

The glovework of McCullum was the highlight in the field for New Zealand as he also took fine catches standing up to pace bowlers Daryl Tuffey and Kyle Mills to remove JP Duminy for 11 and Mark Boucher for 28.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

South Africa beat Australia to seal series

PORT ELIZABETH: Herschelle Gibbs made an emotional return to form as he hit a century which set up a series win for South Africa in the fourth One-Day International at St George's Park on Monday.

South Africa won by 61 runs to take a winning 3-1 lead in the five-match series. It was South Africa's third successive One-day series triumph against Australia and ensured they would retain their world number one ranking in One-day cricket.

Gibbs hit 110 as South Africa made 317 for six after being sent in to bat on a slow pitch.

Australia made a good start in reply, with Brad Haddin (78) and Michael Clarke (50) putting on 129 for the first wicket. But their innings lost momentum against the slow bowling of Roelof van der Merwe (three for 46) and Johan Botha (one for 48).

Fast bowler Dale Steyn took four for 44 to wreck the bottom half of the Australian innings as the tourists were bowled out for 256.

Gibbs and AB de Villiers (84) put on 136 off 123 balls for South Africa's third wicket in a partnership filled with sparkling strokes and audacious running between wickets.

When he reached his 21st One-Day International century Gibbs acknowledged the crowd then sank to his haunches and appeared to wipe tears from his eyes.

It was the first major innings played by Gibbs, 35, since drink driving charges against him were withdrawn last month in return for agreeing to do 100 hours of community service.

Earlier in the season he spent time in rehabilitation for alcohol-related problems after his arrest last year. He made his runs off 116 balls with two sixes and nine fours.

"It's been a long time coming but I knew there was one coming, it's been boiling for the last few games," said Gibbs.

"It was just time for me to get through the first ten overs and take it from there."

Ponting's decision to send South Africa in to bat in a must-win game for Australia was influenced by a good record for teams batting second on the small Port Elizabeth ground, including a successful chase by Australia, who were set to make 327 in 2001/02.

Australia had won four out of five previous matches against South Africa at the ground.

"Our batting is our strength so we backed our strength to chase runs," said Ponting. "We thought it (the pitch) would do a bit more than it probably did this morning but Herschelle played beautifully and AB played really well."

Haddin raced to a half-century off 41 balls as he and Clarke gave Australia an ideal start.

Haddin appeared to target Johan Botha, the off-spinner who has bowled economically in two series against Australia, hitting two sixes in Botha's first over, which cost 14 runs.

Botha was taken off and was hit for another six by Haddin when he returned four overs later. But in trying to hit another ball out of the ground he lofted a catch to long-on.

Van der Merwe took the next three wickets with his left-arm spin as the required rate climbed rapidly.

Ponting hit four boundaries off Steyn in the first over of a batting power play in the 41st over but hit the last ball to midwicket to be out for 53, effectively ending his team's hopes.

"At 130 for nothing I was feeling a bit nervous," admitted South African captain Graeme Smith.

"But our spinners did it again. The two-spinner option has worked well for us and it's nice to finish off with a series win for the country. It means a lot to us."
Source: http://cricket.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/4th-ODI-South-Africa-beat-Australia-to-seal-series/articleshow/4396896.cms

Saturday, January 24, 2009

England on revenge mission in South Africa

England will launch a bid for Test revenge over South Africa next December at SuperSport Park in the Highveld town of Centurion.

The showdown heralds the start of a four-Test series that continues until mid-January and takes the visitors to Kingsmead in Durban, Newlands in Cape Town and the Wanderers in Johannesburg.

Graham Smith-inspired South Africa edged hosts England 2-1 in another four-Test series last year before coming unstuck in an ODI series they lost 4-0 with one fixture washed out.

The appeal of the next series will be heightened by a fierce rivalry between prolific run-getter Smith, who recently led his country to a 2-1 series triumph in Australia, and South Africa-born England batting star Kevin Pietersen.

While Smith was hailed as a hero after back-to-back victories in Perth and Melbourne, Pietersen lost the England captaincy following a power struggle with coach Peter Moores.

Pietersen wanted Moores removed and the outcome was both lost out although the Durban-reared batsman has pledged his loyalty to new captain Andrew Strauss and both are touring the West Indies.

"England have always been very difficult opponents to beat and we are expecting some very tight contests in all formats," South Africa coach Mickey Arthur told national news agency SAPA.

"We will be determined to retain the prestigious Basil d'Oliveira Trophy which we captured for the first time in England last year."

Cricket South Africa chief executive Gerald Majola said: "This is going to be another iconic tour which will delight local and international audiences and further boost the game here.

"The Proteas had their best season last year, including a historic Test series win in Australia, and will be looking to stamp their mark again on world cricket against England.

"It will be great to welcome England to our shores again and we look forward to excellent contests against the country that brought the game to South Africa."

England arrive in South Africa on November 7 and play a 20-over day-night match against South Africa A in the central city of Bloemfontein three days later.

Then come two Twenty20 internationals followed by a 50-over warm-up against South Africa A ahead of five ODIs that take the tourists to Johanensburg, Centurion, Cape Town, Port Elizabeth and Durban.

A couple of two-day games against South Africa selections in East London precede the Test series and England Cricket managing director Hugh Morris is happy with the itinerary.

"We are grateful to colleagues and friends in South Africa who have worked with us to provide what we believe is an exciting and well-balanced tour," he said in a statement.

Tour schedule

Nov 10 At Bloemfontein

South Africa A, 20-over match


Nov 13 At Johannesburg

First Twenty20 international


Nov 15 At Centurion

Second Twenty 20 international


Nov 17 At Potchefstroom

South Africa A, 50-over match


Nov 20 At Johannesburg

First ODI


Nov 22 At Centurion

Second ODI


Nov 27 At Cape Town

Third ODI


Nov 29 At Port Elizabeth

Fourth ODI


Dec 4 At Durban

Fifth ODI


Dec 9-10 At East London

South Africa XI, two-day match


Dec 11-12 At East London

South Africa XI, two-day match


Dec 16-20 At Centurion

First Test


Dec 26-30 At Durban

Second Test


Jan 3-7 At Cape Town

Third Test


Jan 14-18 At Johannesburg

Fourth Test


Source: http://www.cricbuzz.com/component/latest_cricket_news/Story/9851/england-on-revenge-mission-in-south-africa/

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Despite good showing only two Indians in ICC top 10

London Indian opening batsman Gautam Gambhir retains his 10th spot while team-mate off-spinner Harbhajan Singh moved up one place to seventh in the Reliance Mobile ICC Test rankings issued on Thursday.

Gambhir, who scored 1134 runs in 2008 including three centuries in his last four Tests, is still the highest-ranked Indian batsman.

His opening partner Virender Sehwag, who scored 1462 runs in 2008, is at 13th spot while Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman, both of whom also scored more than 1000 runs in 2008, jumped two places each to share joint 16th spot.

Harbhajan Singh remained the only Indian at the top 10 in the Test bowlers' list at the seventh place with 686 rating points.

Pacer Zaheer Khan is at 12th with 630 points in the list headed by Sri Lankan Muttiah Muralitharan. The Test batsmen's chart is still headed by West Indian Shivnarine Chanderpaul, who is currently the only batsman in the world with 900 ratings points or more.

Australia captain Ricky Ponting has climbed back up the rankings to sixth after impressive knocks of 101 and 99 in Melbourne against South Africa. Ponting has leap-frogged his opposite number in the South Africa side, Graeme Smith, who has risen one spot to seventh.

Ponting's team-mate and vice-captain Michael Clarke climbed three places to reach career-best ninth following his 88 not out in Melbourne while Michael Hussey dropped out of top 10 for first time since 2006 after a run of low scores in the two Tests played so far against South Africa.

Outside top 20, South Africa's Jean-Paul Duminy has shot up the rankings by 62 places to 47th after his outstanding knock of 166 in Melbourne which set up a nine-wicket victory for the Proteas.

In the Test bowlers' chart, South Africa's Dale Steyn has narrowed the gap at the top of the table between himself and Sri Lanka's Muttiah Muralitharan.

Currently 39 points separate the two bowlers and with both men having two more Tests to play in their respective series, there is every opportunity for the gap to widen or decrease further.

Australia's injured fast bowler Brett Lee has dropped two places to ninth after ending the Melbourne Test with match figures of 0-117.

South Africa's Jacques Kallis still heads ICC Player Rankings for Test all-rounders followed by New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori.


Source: http://www.indiavilas.com/redir.asp?l=http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?j1752539753

Monday, June 9, 2008

Gibbs contemplating retirement?

Miffed at being ignored for the Test series against England, South African opener Herschelle Gibbs has hinted that he may retire from international cricket.

The 34-year-old was left out of the Test side and he says he does not harbour hopes of making the cut for the ODI team either, leaving him with little choice but to think about quitting the game.
"I've got some decisions to make in the next few weeks whether to carry on at international level. I'm not in the squad and I'm not sure if I'll get back into the One-Day team either," Gibbs told the BBC.

Gibbs' last Test appearance was in January against West Indies and he was subsequently omitted for the Test series against Bangladesh and India.

Being ignored for England is the latest blow to his career and Gibbs says he is making last ditch efforts to save it by playing county cricket to prove his worth.

"I've spoken to the coach and he said I'm first reserve for South Africa in case anyone gets injured. So we'll have to wait and see. But I've been dying for a proper go at an English cricket county for the last few years so maybe me coming to Glamorgan has happened at a good time," he said.

"Maybe my appearance for Glamorgan in the Twenty20 Cup could be a sign of things to come," he added.

South Africa will kick off their tour of England with a match against county side Somerset on June 29. Their four-Test series against England starts July 10 to be followed by a five-match ODI series.
Source: http://www.cricketnext.com/news/gibbs-contemplating-retirement/32055-13.html