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Posts Tagged ‘Peter Siddle’

Hastings in Australia’s World Cup squad, Siddle dropped

Peter SiddleFast bowler Peter Siddle was excluded while inexperienced all-rounder John Hastings found a berth in Australia’s 15-man World Cup squad that was annunced here Tuesday. Skipper Ricky Ponting and veteran Michael Hussey were named in the squad despite injuries. Ponting is recovering from a finger fracture while Hussey suffered a serious hamstring injury Sunday. Hussey [...]

Pietersen branded ‘smarta***’ by Johnson

kevin pietersenEngland batsman Kevin Pietersen, who irritated pacer Mitchell Johnson by sarcastically asking for his phone number on Thursday and again yesterday, was branded a ‘smarta***’ by the Australian speedster, as sledging took centrestage at the Ashes. “I think he was being a bit of a smarta***. I don’t think he was being friendly,” The Sun [...]

Strauss, Pietersen on top of Bollinger’s Ashes wicket-taking hit list

Australian fast bowler Doug Bollinger has put England captain Andrew Strauss and middle order batsman Kevin Pietersen on the top of his Ashes wicket-taking hit list. The left-arm pacer was named in the initial 17-man squad for next week’s first Test in Brisbane after making a comeback in Sydney grade last weekend. Bollinger is expected [...]

Green SCG wicket could hinder Ashes hopes of Khawaja, Hughes: Watson

Australian opener Shane Watson has said that the SCG wicket, which is considered a bowlers paradise, could cast trouble for Ashes fringe players Usman Khawaja, Phillip Hughes and even Steve Smith during New South Wales’ Sheffield Shield match against Victoria. Watson said the forecast of stormy conditions would make it tough to score runs in [...]

Sending George to make debut in India is like ‘not giving him a chance’: McGill

Expressing his displeasure at the way the Australian team is picked, former leg-spinner Stuart MacGill has said that sending young paceman Peter George to India to make his Test debut is like “not giving him a chance”. George received his baggy green cap in Bangalore on Saturday after Doug Bollinger’s withdrawal because of a muscle [...]

Oz players wise to opt out of IPL-3: Roebuck

Sydney, Jan.27 (ANI): The Australian cricketers decision to give a miss to the third edition of the Indian Premier League (IPL) is both wise and promising, feels noted columnist Peter Roebuck.
In an article for the Sydney Morning Herald, Roebuck opines that the Australians are fully aware of the workload that is before them, especially in [...]

Spinner Hauritz to be part of Oz squad against Windies

Australian captain Ricky Ponting has confirmed that off-spinner Nathan Hauritz will be a part of the first Test squad taking on the West Indies at the Gabba in Brisbane on Thursday.
Pacer Doug Bollinger will be the 12th man, while the other quicks featuring in the team would be Mitchell Johnson, Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus, [...]

Hilditch says Hussey has secured his Test career, but holds out less hope for Brett Lee

The chairman of selectors for the Australian cricket team, Andrew Hilditch, has said that middle order batsman Mike Hussey has secured his Test career with his outstanding one-day form. He also says that Brett Lee has an uphill battle to regain his Test place and that Shane Watson will continue to open the batting in [...]

Watson departs after prolific show

With the help of Shane Watson cracking half-century(93), Australia were 146 for one at the end of 26th over after skipper Ricky Ponting won the toss and elected to bat on a batting paradise wicket against India in the crucial fifth cricket one-dayer at Rajiv Gandhi stadium in Hyderabad on Thursday.
India have made [...]

Another injury blow for Australia, Siddle heads back home

Injury woes continue to hound the Australian cricket team in the ongoing ODI series against India with pacer Peter Siddle becoming the latest to head back home due to a side strain he picked up during the fourth one-dayer in Mohali.
“Cricket Australia today confirmed Australian fast bowler Peter Siddle will return from Australia’s Tour [...]

Mohali ODI: Marsh departs after slow start

Put into bat first, Australia were 63 for one at the end of 13th over against India in the fourth one-dayer against Australia in Mohali on Monday.
With opener Gautam Gambhir nursing a neck injury, India have brought in Virat Kohli in the side. Other opener Virender Sehwag, who suffered a foot injury in the last [...]

India need 230 runs to win against Australia

Australia were 166 for the loss of three wickets at the end of 40th over after captain Ricky Ponting won the toss and elected to bat against hosts India in the third one-dayer at Feroze Shah cricket stadium in New Delhi on Saturday.
India are unchanged for the match but injury-hit Australia have been forced [...]

Australia win toss, elect to bat

Australia were 20 for no loss at the end of 6th over after captain Ricky Ponting won the toss and elected to bat against hosts India in the third one-dayer at Feroze Shah cricket stadium in New Delhi on Saturday.
India are unchanged for the match but injury-hit Australia have been forced to bring in [...]

Ponting wins toss, India to bat first

Australian skipper Ricky Ponting won the toss and elected to field against India in the second one-day international of the seven match series at VCA Stadium in Nagpur on Wednesday.
India have made one change to their side, bringing in Yuvraj Singh in place of Virat Kohli.
Injury hit Australians have replaced Brett Lee and James Hopes [...]

Australia beat NZ to lift Champions Trophy

Australia crowned the 2009 ICC Champions Trophy winner after Shane Watson’s unbeaten century guided the defending champions to a six-wicket victory over a depleted New Zealand in the low-scoring final match in Centurion last night.
Watson hit an unbeaten 129-ball 105 (10X4, 4X6) and starred in a 128-run stand with Cameron White (62) under tremendous [...]

ICC recognition of Oz pacers shows team is on right track: Ponting

Australian cricket captain Ricky Ponting is convinced that his side can regain its mantle as the undisputed best team in the world after the recognition being given to the country’s new breed of pace bowlers.
Fast bowlers Mitchell Johnson, Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus have all gained acknowledgement of their strong past 12 months with nominations [...]

Australia on top as England slump

Fourth Ashes Test, Headingley: England v Australia
Dates: Friday, 7 August to Tuesday, 11 August Start time: 1100 BST
Coverage: Live Test Match Special commentary (from 1025 BST on day one, 1045 BST on remaining days) on BBC Radio 4 LW, 5 Live sports extra, the Red Button and BBC Sport website. Live text commentary on BBC Sport website and mobile phones. Also live on Sky Sports.


Brett Lee bowling in the nets at Edgbaston

Australia fast bowler Brett Lee is confident he will be fit to play in the fourth Ashes Test starting at Headingley on Friday.

Lee has not played in the Ashes after injuring his side in Australia’s warm-up match against England Lions.

"I had a really good bowl on Saturday and got to 80-85% – and there was no pain there," Lee told BBC Radio 5 Live.

"By Monday I want to be bowling at 100% and make myself available for the fourth Test."

Lee has been bowling the nets at Edgbaston, building up gradually after initially coming in off two-to-three steps.

"It is going well," added Lee. "I’m not worried about the way the ball is coming out or my general fitness.

606: DEBATE
How important is Lee to Australia

"I am just worried about the side strain and there is no problem there. So full steam ahead."

Australia are currently 1-0 down in the five Test series, with fast bowler Mitchell Johnson struggling for form.

Ricky Ponting’s team have also played Peter Siddle, Ben Hilfenhaus and off-spinner Nathan Hauritz in all of the Tests.

Going into the fourth day of the Edgbaston Test, Hilfenhaus had claimed 10 wickets in the series and Hauritz nine while Johnson and Siddle had both taken eight.

With no tour matches between the Tests at Edgbaston and Headingley there will be no meaningful opportunities for Lee to prove his fitness.

"It comes down to maintenance and looking after the body," added Lee.

"The way it has gone over the last three-to-four weeks, it has been a long, slow process and to sit on the sidelines during an Ashes Test has killed me.

"I’ll make sure I’m ready for the fourth Test."

England fast bowler Steve Harmison is also hoping to play some part in the series.

"I love playing for England and I do have unfinished business with Australia"

Steve Harmison

The Durham player, who has been in good form this season, was a key member of the team that won the 2005 series – but he was also part of the side that lost the subsequent series 5-0 in Australia.

Harmison bowled the opening delivery of that series, a wide that was taken by Andrew Flintoff at second slip.

And Harmison, who was in the England squad but not selected for the Tests at Lord’s and Edgbaston, said he has "unfinished business" against Australia.

"The truth is that, much as I love playing for Durham, I’m desperate to play against Australia. You can’t overestimate how desperate," he told the Mail on Sunday.

"I’d have given everything to have played at Lord’s, to be playing now in Birmingham and to play in Leeds.

"I’m champing at the bit again and the way I’m bowling at the minute, I’d be a handful against any opposition.

"I love playing for England and I do have unfinished business with Australia.

"I’ll never forget winning in 2005 but I don’t want my last Ashes memory to be of 2006-07, neither for that first ball, nor the whole experience of losing 5-0."


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Anderson haul puts England on top

Third Ashes Test, Edgbaston (day two):
England 116-2 v Australia 263
Match scorecard

James Anderson celebrates a wicket with Graeme Swann

By Oliver Brett
BBC Sport at Edgbaston

Brilliant swing bowling from James Anderson and Graham Onions put England in a fine position after two days of the third Ashes Test.

Australia capitulated shockingly from an overnight 126-1, losing two wickets off the first two balls of the morning, to collapse to 203-8 at lunch and eventually 263 all out.

When bad light brought a premature end to proceedings at 1745 BST, with 19 overs left in the day, Andrew Strauss (64 not out) had guided England to 116-2, trailing by 147.

Onions triggered the Aussies’ demise, taking the first three wickets in the day to fall, and then the last, to finish with 4-58.

Anderson recovered from a poor showing on Thursday, and some wayward stuff early in his spell on day two, to take 5-13 in 38 balls either side of lunch for overall figures of 5-80.

But another key figure in proceedings was umpire Rudi Koertzen, who awarded Anderson two very debatable lbws and then denied Mitchell Johnson one against Ian Bell when the ball would have probably hit middle stump.

Bell, who hit the first six of the Ashes series by an England batsman, lived to fight another day, and will resume with Strauss on 26.

Graham Onions celebrates taking a wicket

With the memories of a disjointed bowling display on Thursday evening still in the back of the mind, Onions gave his team – and the home fans – a massive boost with the first two balls of.

Shane Watson, who had cruised to 62, just 16 runs shy of his best score in Tests in his first experience as an opener at this level, completely misjudged his shot at a ball homing in on his stumps.

Failing to get his bat down in time, he gave Aleem Dar an easy lbw decision to make.

Michael Hussey, who was bowled playing no shot to Andrew Flintoff at Lord’s, again left a delivery that only came back a fraction to brush his off-stump.

Though some of the 21,000 fans had not yet taken their seats, they rushed into position to see the hat-trick ball – and after the obligatory roar Onions sent a short ball just whistling past Michael Clarke’s gloves.

The game settled down for a while as Clarke and Ricky Ponting used their collective nous to withstand Onions’ variations on a theme of swing.

The captain picked up the runs needed to pass Allan Border and become the leading Australian run-scorer in Tests – leaving only pack leader Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara in front of him.

And when he on-drove Flintoff for four, taking the score to 159-3, Australia appeared to be entering calmer waters. But only four runs were added before Ponting, on 38, tried to pull a well-directed bouncer from Onions and edged to wicketkeeper Matt Prior.

All the action was happening in Onions’ tremendous nine-over spell from the City End – and he could have had Clarke out twice.

The right-hander was reprieved by umpire Dar, turning down a very good lbw shout on 18, and by Flintoff on 20. England’s usually flawless second slip somehow spilt an outside edge.

But it was Anderson who picked up the wicket-taking baton in devastating fashion from the Pavilion End as Australia lurched from 193-4 to 229-9 – with Koertzen providing two prominent assists.

The South African official ended Clarke’s innings on 29 (ball probably missing leg-stump) and then Johnson back for a golden duck (slightly too high, according to Hawkeye).

In between those two wickets, Marcus North chased a wide one and was well caught by a diving Prior. Anderson’s fourth wicket, and the eighth of the innings, came when Graham Manou was bowled by a pearler.

Australia took lunch in dreadful shape, but their tail-enders did pretty well after the interval – although the ball was still swinging – to add 60 runs for the final two wickets. Onions finally wrapped it up, taking a richly-deserved fourth wicket when Ben Hilfenhaus speared the Durham man to gully.

By then, Peter Siddle had edged Anderson behind, giving him his first five-wicket Ashes haul, and it should all have ended on 241 when Nathan Hauritz top-edged a pull over Ravi Bopara’s head.

England’s backward-point had to turn to take the catch over his shoulder, but it was not a difficult chance and thus a disappointing drop.

Hauritz and Hilfenhaus each made 20, a suggestion to England’s openers that batting was not necessarily as nightmarish as many of the Australians had made it look.

And when Hilfenhaus and Siddle then opened the bowling for the Aussies there was only the merest hint of swing – nothing like the lavish movement enjoyed by Onions and Anderson.

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"If Bopara, Broad and Cook continue to play and fail, we will struggle to maintain our lead in this series!"

ingeniousAsh

All the same, the Aussies had an ideal start when Alastair Cook lazily drove at a ball outside off-stump he could have easily left in the second over, Manou making an instant impression with a solid wicketkeeper’s catch.

But with Strauss looking in good touch from the off, and Ravi Bopara overcoming a slightly nervy start to hit some scorching drives through the off-side, England recovered to reach tea on 56-1.

Intriguingly, Johnson was relegated behind Hauritz to fourth bowler on the Australian roster, and after tea was replaced by Hilfenhaus at the Pavilion End.

Ponting judged that particular bowling change well, Hilfenhaus putting Bopara in two minds with a teaser outside off-stumps, and the Essex man’s tentative poke deflected the ball into his stumps.

With the scoreboard reading 60-2, there was a bit of a pressure on the recalled Bell to make an impression – and he did not disappoint on his home ground.

Siddle helped him out with a couple of full tosses that were easily put away, and Bell’s confidence looked in good order as he drove Hauritz over mid-on for the landmark maximum.

Strauss reached his fifty with a back-foot punch off the tiring Hilfenhaus for four and followed up with a lovely straight drive off the same bowler.

Bell was given a major lifeline on 18 when umpire Koertzen, who had already infuriated Australian fans at Lord’s with some of his decision-making, denied Johnson’s concerted lbw appeal.

A few balls later, Bell hit a rasping cover-drive to the boundary to exasperate a much-improved Johnson further. Australia might be glad that Koertzen is not officiating at Headingley or The Oval. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Brett Lee may miss third Ashes Test

• Attacking spearhead to miss match against Northamptonshire
• He has not played since picking up rib injury at Worcester

Brett Lee is looking increasingly doubtful for the third Ashes Test after Mike Hussey, who captains the Australians tomorrow against Northamptonshire, said today that the fast bowler was “not right”.

Lee will not take part in the match against Northamptonshire starting tomorrow, meaning he would not have played since injuring a rib in the warm-up match against Worcestershire earlier this month.

“Brett Lee is still not right,” Hussey said of the 32-year-old Lee and with the Edgbaston Test starting a week tomorrow the bowler looks unlikely to be fit in time.

Hussey said the Australian 12 to play against Northants is yet to be finalised but Peter Siddle, Ben Hilfenhaus and Mitchell Johnson, the three quick bowlers who started the opening two Tests of the five-match Test series, are all included. In addition, Stuart Clark, who has yet to feature in the Test series, is expected to appear.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Brett Lee may miss third Ashes Test

• Attacking spearhead to miss match against Northamptonshire
• He has not played since picking up rib injury at Worcester

Brett Lee is looking increasingly doubtful for the third Ashes Test after Mike Hussey, who captains the Australians tomorrow against Northamptonshire, said today that the fast bowler was “not right”.

Lee will not take part in the match against Northamptonshire starting tomorrow, meaning he would not have played since injuring a rib in the warm-up match against Worcestershire earlier this month.

“Brett Lee is still not right,” Hussey said of the 32-year-old Lee and with the Edgbaston Test starting a week tomorrow the bowler looks unlikely to be fit in time.

Hussey said the Australian 12 to play against Northants is yet to be finalised but Peter Siddle, Ben Hilfenhaus and Mitchell Johnson, the three quick bowlers who started the opening two Tests of the five-match Test series, are all included. In addition, Stuart Clark, who has yet to feature in the Test series, is expected to appear.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds