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Ramprakash backed for Test recall

Mark Ramprakash

Surrey batsman Mark Ramprakash is being backed for a remarkable England recall for the decisive fifth Ashes Test – seven years since he was last capped.

Australia crushed England to level the series going into the final match at The Oval, Ramprakash’s home ground.

He turns 40 in September and has not played for England since 2002 but has been in prolific form for his county.

"If I was an England selector picking my best side, he’d be in it," said Surrey cricket manager Chris Adams.

"He is playing the best cricket of his life," Adams, who briefly played for England, both at Test and one-day international cricket, told BBC Radio 5 live.

"He’s a fine player, whether it’s the right time to bring him back into a Test match is a different story"

Australia captain Ricky Ponting

"He has done so for three years. I believe strongly he has been the best batsman available for England for those three years.

"I know Kevin Pietersen would have something to say about that but from what I’ve seen from Mark this year he is an exceptional batsman, a batsman at the top of his game."

Adams echoed comments made by former England captain Alec Stewart, also a Surrey stalwart, who suggested a one-off return for Ramprakash might be the best option for a side enduring a middle-order crisis.

Only one England batsman, skipper Andrew Strauss, has scored a century in the series so far, compared to Australia’s return of seven.

Ravi Bopara, Paul Collingwood and Ian Bell, who replaced the injured Pietersen, have all disappointed.

606: DEBATE

"The Oval is Ramprakash’s home ground, as usual he is scoring countless runs, and let’s be honest, its not like he can do much worse than the current team"

The Ashes England

Between them, Bopara, Collingwood and Bell contributed a total of just 16 runs during the fourth Test at Headingley and England coach Andy Flower has suggested the batting line-up might be altered following his side’s innings and 80-run defeat.

Earlier in the summer Essex batsman Bopara cemented his place at number three with three consecutive centuries against West Indies but the 24-year-old has struggled against Australia, scoring 105 runs in seven innings at an average of 15.

England named Warwickshire batsman Jonathan Trott in their squad for the fourth Test and he is another being touted to replace Bopara for The Oval Test, which starts on 20 August.

Kent captain Rob Key’s name is also being bandied around, with former England batsman Geoffrey Boycott and BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew backing his inclusion.

Meanwhile England are again waiting on the fitness of all-rounder Andrew Flintoff.

He was seeing knee specialist Andy Williams on Monday with England captain Andrew Strauss keen for an early decision.

England waited until the morning of the fourth Test to rule Flintoff out.

The Lancastrian had said he was fit enough to play but was overruled by Strauss and Flower.

Strauss said: "Hopefully we’ll know two or three days out from the Test match whether he’s fit enough to play.

"He’s still desperate to play in that final Test but he realises he’s got to be fit enough."

TOM FORDYCE BLOG

"As everyone remembered that it’s actually 1-1 rather than 0-4, Andrew Strauss took on the role of Corporal Jones: "Don’t panic, Mr Mainwaring!""

But it is Ramprakash, who won the BBC’s Strictly Come Dancing show in 2006, whose name is causing the biggest stir.

The right-hander has played 52 Tests, scoring 2350 runs at an average of 27.32 with 12 half-centuries and two tons.

In 12 Tests against Australia he has notched 933 runs at an average of 42.40 with one century, coming at The Oval in 2001.

He was dropped after scores of nine and two against New Zealand in Auckland seven years ago but has since moved from Middlesex to Surrey and continued to dominate opposition bowling attacks at county level.

In 2008 he became only the 25th player to score 100 first-class centuries with a ton against Yorkshire at Headingley, and on Sunday he showed he was still going strong with 134 not out against Derbyshire.

It was the 108th first-class century of his career and moved him level with Pakistan’s Zaheer Abbas in 16th place on the all-time list.

"He’s a fine player, whether it’s the right time to bring him back into a Test match is a different story," said Australia captain Ricky Ponting.

"It’s amazing how quickly things change either the way the media sees the team or even the way the team looks upon itself."


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

Making a pitch

By Boria Majumdar

A cricket match in America

There are plans to launch a Twenty20 cricket league in the US similar to the successful Indian Premier League, a top US cricket official says.

The chief of the USA Cricket Association, Don Lockerbie, said that potential commercial partners are being sought for the tournament.

The matches next year are planned for three venues, including a new cricket stadium that has been built in Florida.

There are some 15 million cricket fans in the US, Mr Lockerbie said.

By organising America’s first professional cricket tournament, Mr Lockerbie said he was trying to make America "one of the top 15 cricket playing nations by 2015".

"[The planned tournament] is a very serious initiative and the chances [of it succeeding] are better than a 50-over tournament," he said.

Mr Lockerbie said proposals have already been sought from potential commercial partners and efforts were on to find out how much the tournament was worth.

Diaspora

With the USA being the second biggest market in the world for cricket television broadcast rights and Internet revenues, organisers expect many companies to set up teams and sponsor the tournament.

If everything goes according to plan, a number of private city or state based teams containing players from around the world will be playing in the tournament which will be recognised by the International Cricket Council.

Many of the matches will be held at a new cricket stadium in Florida, which can accommodate more than 15,000 fans.

"The tournament is a very serious initiative"

Don Lockerbie, chief of USA Cricket Association

Don Lockerbie

What is still unclear is how the ICC will find a window in the crowded cricket calendar to accommodate the American tournament.

Also, memories of the flop inter-island Twenty20 competition in West Indies sponsored by the controversial Texan billionaire Sir Allen Stanford are still fresh in the minds of cricket fans around the world.

The USA Cricket Association is also trying to get five Test cricket playing countries to send their teams to the US to play some ICC-recognised warm up matches in the run up the World Twenty20 cricket tournament in the West Indies.

"If these warm up games happen, it will be history in the making," Mr Lockberie says.

The USA Cricket Association believes there are an estimated 15 million cricket fans in the USA, mostly from the South Asian diaspora.

There are also an estimated 200,000 cricketers in America, according to Venu Palaparthi, co-founder of Dreamcricket.com, US’s largest cricket portal which also runs its own cricket academy.

‘Common heritage’

Mr Palaparthi says cricket was being played in more than 40 universities over the last decade.

The cricket stadium in Florida

Cricket is played at school level in nine states. New York’s public school cricket program has 23 participating schools.

The area along the East Coast extending from Boston to Washington DC appears to have the most number of cricketers. Outside this area, the largest concentrations of cricketers are in Florida, Texas, Illinois, Michigan and California.

With median incomes of expatriate Indians – who form the bulk of the South Asian diaspora – one of the highest in the country, cricket organisers feel that cricket has good commercial prospects.

International cricket can trace its earliest successes to the US.

The first recorded first class cricket match in the world was played between the US and Canada at Bloomingdale Park in New York in 1844 with over 10,000 spectators in attendance.

Cricket remained popular till the middle of the 1880s – an American team even defeated the West Indies in an international match in British Guyana in 1880.

One reason, according to scholars, why cricket did not take off in America was that the game had no "common heritage" to draw on.

A cricket match in America

"Unfortunately, in the United States cricket has no common heritage to draw on because the individual expatriate histories of the game do not provide common ground," writes P David Sentence in his book, Cricket in America, 1710-2000.

"When an American talks of baseball he knows what Babe Ruth did on a certain day in the year. Every Englishman, Indian, Pakistani, or West Indian carries his own version of cricket history in his head. When these histories are supplemented by American cricket achievements on the field of play then cricket will have arrived in the United States."

Boria Majumdar is a cricket historian from Oxford University and writer of a number of books on the game.


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

Bell will start third Ashes Test

England batsman Ian Bell

England batsman Ian Bell has been given a vote of confidence ahead of next week’s third Ashes Test, with selectors unlikely to add any batting cover.

National selector Geoff Miller said that the 13-man squad for Edgbaston, to be announced on Sunday, will include only extra bowling options.

That paves the way for Bell to return to the team on his home ground in place of the injured Kevin Pietersen.

The Warwickshire batsman was out for a duck against Hampshire on Friday.

Bell also made only seven runs in the first innings of the drawn match at the Rose Bowl, but has been in good form for most of the season.

Prior to his double failure against Hampshire, he had scored 640 runs in seven County Championship matches.

Bell was axed following England’s defeat by the West Indies in Jamaica last February, but was named in their 13-man squads for both matches so far in the Ashes series.

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"Bell out for 0 today – a grand total of 7 scored in his latest match and not ideal preparation for the next Test"

EarlsfieldOwl

The 27-year-old was identified as the next batsman in line by England coach Andy Flower in the aftermath of the second Test victory at Lord’s, before Pietersen was ruled out of the rest of the series after undergoing surgery on his Achilles tendon.

Asked about adding extra batting cover, Miller said: "There are no injury problems as such, so we probably won’t need to do that.

"We had question marks to cover in the last squad but I don’t foresee needing to do that here.

"If we needed to draft someone in for any reason, we know who we would be looking at and have provision to do that at short notice."

Bell will be hoping for a fresh start against Australia, having struggled in his 10 previous Ashes Tests.

He has managed just 502 runs off their attack, at a poor average of 25.10 – compared to an overall Test average of 40.59.


Probable England squad: AJ Strauss (capt), AN Cook, RS Bopara, IR Bell, PD Collingwood, MJ Prior (wkt), A Flintoff, SCJ Broad, GP Swann, JM Anderson, G Onions, SJ Harmison, MS Panesar. </p


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

Pietersen IPL injury claims rejected

• IPL coach claims Pietersen aggravated problem with beach run
• ECB denies instructing batsman on training regime

The England and Wales Cricket Board has denied that Kevin Pietersen aggravated the achilles injury that ruled him out of the rest of the Ashes series by flouting a prescribed training programme while playing in the Indian Premier League in South Africa in April.

Evan Speechly, Bangalore’s assistant coach and physiotherapist, claimed yesterday that Pietersen had gone on a training run in Durban. He told Cricinfo: “I think he was just feeling so good about it [his injury] that he got a bit carried away and tried to run on it too soon. He woke up one morning and decided to go for a run along the beachfront in Durban. It flared up again after that.”

But suggestions made by Speechly that Pietersen was under instructions not to run were seized on by the ECB. Neither the board nor Pietersen’s advisers denied that the player had gone on the run or even that his achilles may have been damaged during the exercise, but the ECB did deny that Pietersen had flouted instructions not to go running.

An ECB spokesman yesterday described as “blatantly untrue” suggestions Pietersen had been ordered to refrain from running during his stint with Bangalore. “Pietersen reported to Loughborough before he flew out to South Africa and was passed fit to join up with Bangalore,” the spokesman said. “ECB medical staff sent Bangalore a fitness programme and at no stage did Kevin Pietersen do anything to contradict that and at no stage was he told not to go running.

“Kevin Pietersen is the most diligent and responsible of trainers and prides himself on his physical fitness and preparation for playing cricket. The ECB medical staff hold him as one of the best examples of a player who does everything within his power to achieve maximum fitness to play cricket.”

A spokesman for the player said last night: “Kevin had a medical before he went on the trip [to the IPL in South Africa]. He would not have been allowed to get on the plane if there was anything wrong. He reported to Loughborough before he flew out to South Africa. They gave him a programme and told him to stick to it but he was never told not to go running.”

The ECB is clearly sensitive that its two best players, Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff, both centrally contracted, played in the IPL immediately before one of the busiest and most important international summers in memory. Now Pietersen has been ruled out of the remaining three Tests of the Ashes series and is extremely doubtful for the heavy one-day programme that follows it.

Flintoff, meanwhile, was the star turn in England’s victory over Australia at Lord’s, which gave them a 1-0 lead in the series. But doubts also hang over his continued involvement. The all-rounder hurt his knee playing for Chennai Super Kings and was unable to play in the Tests and one-day matches against West Indies. He also missed the World Twenty20 after having an operation on his knee following his return from South Africa. Pietersen went under the knife this week, after playing a subdued part in the victory at Lord’s.

The plight of the two players has made many question the worth of lucrative central contracts. Hugh Morris, the managing director of the England team, was criticised for allowing Pietersen and Flintoff to go. In reality, though, he had little choice. The ECB had agreed on a “window” of opportunity in South Africa before the new central contracts were signed. The farce has led to Sean Morris, of the Professional Cricketers’ Association, saying that big-name cricketers could quit their fat contracts and turn freelance instead.

Pietersen and Flintoff plan to play more IPL cricket next spring, in addition to a hectic international schedule. Flintoff is also due to play for Queensland in Australia’s own Twenty20 tournament this winter. Sean Morris said: “I can see issues with the ECB wanting to restrict players’ appearances in non-international Twenty20 cricket.”

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


Powell: Britain’s sprinters are ‘lazy’

• British rivals are living in comfort zone, says Jamaican
• Sprinter convinced he can beat Usain Bolt once again

Asafa Powell, the former 100m world record holder unseated by Usain Bolt, delivered a damning criticism of his British rivals on the eve of facing them at Crystal Palace tomorrow night, saying the reason they are not challenging for honours is because they are lazy.

Powell is due to contest the 100m at the London grand prix and says athletes in his native Jamaica have a greater motivation to succeed. “I’ve said over the years that British sprinters are very lazy and don’t really want to practise,” he said. “Maybe it’s comfort. In Jamaica, you have to work harder for what you want.”

The 26-year-old friend and rival of fellow Jamaican Bolt, who also runs in tomorrow night’s 100m, says life is harder on the West Indies island and that makes for tougher competitors than the British sprinters. “We have a different mindset,” he said. “You have to make a living out of it because you don’t get a living from anywhere else. You have to go out there and make something of yourself.”

Powell took a swipe at Britain’s leading 100m hope, the 23-year-old Simeon Williamson, who outpaced Dwain Chambers in the UK trials in 10.05sec. “Simeon came to Jamaica and from what I observed, he is a bit lazy,” said Powell. “He did well, though, and he made a lot of improvements. If he puts in the effort and the hard work, there is a lot more to come.”

Tomorrow night, Powell is confident he can repeat the performance that saw him beat the Olympic champion in Stockholm last July, Bolt’s last defeat. “I think I can really go out there and do something spectacular,” said Powell. “I just need to run my own race because if I do I will beat him and beat the field. I really want to be the king of sprints because I think I am.”

It is only 14 months since Powell was the 100m world-record holder with 9.74sec, but after Bolt’s performances – twice breaking the 100m world record in Beijing last year – Powell had been written off in some quarters.

He has been called a “choker”, plagued by psychological demons, and he admitted to “giving up” halfway through the last World Championships final in 2007 as he watched Tyson Gay pass him and finish in third place. Powell contests that accusation – “I don’t think I have a psychological problem,” he said, although he conceded that he will need to prove his mettle this summer with a big championship performance.

“I really have a point to prove but it can become a mental problem if you think about it too much, because every year I keep getting injured. I’m always injured and you have to block that out because it affects you when it comes to the major champs.”

This year the 26-year-old has been tormented by injuries – describing his season’s best time of 9.88sec in Rome two weeks ago as “running on one leg” – and he lists a catalogue of complaints. “My knees affected me a lot and I had a problem with my hamstring. I still suffer from this shoulder injury that I had surgery on last year. I’ve a lot of things I’m working on. I’m trying to get back. It’s mainly both knees and my left ankle.”

Despite the setbacks Powell has run under 10 seconds three times already this season. “That’s what keeps me going because I have all these injuries and I can go out there and run below 10 seconds. I know that when I’m healthy I’ll be a force to go up against.”

Powell says he will use tomorrow night’s to show just how fast he can run before the World Championships in Berlin next month. “It’s important to make a statement because you don’t want to go into Berlin not knowing what shape you’re in.

“If you’re going knowing you have run 9.6, 9.7 two, three weeks before, then you know you’re in 9.7 shape so it’s possible for you to go out there and win. But if you’re running 10 flat all the time you know that you’re chances are not that high.”

For Powell to beat Bolt tomorrow night, or in Berlin, he will need to get a good start. Bolt and Gay, leading the 100m rankings so far this year, are notoriously bad getting out of the blocks. But get off to a bad start, warns Powell, and that knowledge could prove a major distraction.

“Usain is not a good starter‚ so if you get out of the blocks and Usain is right beside you, you know that can be trouble for you. If you get out beside him, in your head it will register that you didn’t start well and that can throw off your race a bit. You just have to try and get out there and let him try and catch you.”

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Pressure increases on England team after Pietersen’s injury

The England team’s middle order has become a bit vulnerable and pressure has increased on other players to perform after star batsman Kevin Pietersen was ruled out of the Ashes series due to injury.
Pietersen, who had been troubled by the injury for the past six months, had surgery on Wednesday after seeing a specialist from [...]

Pietersen ruled out of Ashes series

• ‘I’m absolutely devastated to be missing the rest of this series’
• Injury forces Pietersen out of all action for around six weeks

England’s Ashes hopes have been hit by the news that Kevin Pietersen will miss the rest of the series following an Achilles tendon operation. Pietersen’s surgery rules him out of all cricket for six weeks.

“As an England cricketer the Ashes are the pinnacle of the game so I’m absolutely devastated,” said Pietersen. “Up until now the injury has been manageable but it recently reached the point where we needed to look at other options in terms of treatment. I hate missing matches for England and especially during an Ashes summer but… I’m confident I can return to the England team injury-free following a course of rehabilitation.”

Pietersen first incurred the discomfort earlier this summer and sat out the one-day series against the West Indies to recuperate. But the combination of rest and painkilling injections could not get him through the Ashes.

“Following a consultation, involving scans and testing, with the world’s leading Achilles specialist, Kevin Pietersen today underwent surgery on his right Achilles tendon,” confirmed England and Wales Cricket Board chief medical officer Nick Peirce. “The operation involved a small incision and trimming of the blood vessels and nerves around the inflamed tendon and appears, at this early stage, to have been routine.

“Kevin will look to undertake a comprehensive rehabilitation programme to ensure there is no risk of recurrence. This is expected to be approximately six weeks but will be taken at an appropriate pace following constant review.”

Although Pietersen played in the 115-run victory over Australia at Lord’s, he spent lengthy spells off the field and was clearly in pain when running.

“I was pleased with the previous course of treatment as it allowed me to take part in this Ashes series but unfortunately the injury has recently deteriorated,” said Pietersen.

“To leave a winning dressing room at this time is heartbreaking but it wouldn’t be fair to the team or myself to continue given the severity of the injury. I’ll be supporting the team closely and wish them the best of luck as they look to build on the brilliant win at Lord’s and reclaim the Ashes.”

Pietersen’s withdrawal means Ian Bell is set to come in for next week’s third Test at Edgbaston. England coach Andy Flower had indicated the Warwickshire batsman, who has been in impressive form for his county, was next in line, having been included in the squad for the first two Tests.

Bell scored a century against Lancashire last week and has amassed 640 runs at an average of 80 in 11 county championship innings this season – though was out for just seven today at Hampshire.

Speaking on Tuesday before learning of Pietersen’s surgery, Bell said: “It’s great to know I’m next in line. Obviously I’m desperate to be back in an England shirt and I’m ready and waiting to go.”

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Strauss breaks into top 20 Reliance Mobile ICC player rankings

England cricket captain Andrew Strauss has broken back into top 20 batsman while Flintoff has also moved up the bowling rankings. Australia’’s Michael Clarke has also been rewarded, but “Mr. Fixit” Michael Hussey slips out of top 20.
Having passed the 5,000-run mark during the match and scoring his 18th Test century, the 32-year-old Strauss has [...]

Rain fails to slow Bangladesh spinners down

Bangladesh’s spinners continued to torment the West Indies’ batsman in an afternoon session truncated by the weather and left the home team scrambling on 192 for eight at tea in the second and final Test on Sunday.
At the break, Dave Bernard Jr was unbeaten on 61 and Tino Best was not out on four, after [...]

Clarke and Haddin star as Australia stay alive in Ashes

Australia, chasing a world record 522 to win, were 313 for five at the close of the fourth day of the second Ashes Test at Lords in London, still needing a further 446 runs for an unlikely victory.
Australia produced a stunning counter-attack to derail England’s bid for victory in the second Ashes Test.
Australia vice-captain [...]

Strauss defies Australian fightback

England 364–6
Australia

A position of strength, a chance to nail Australia with the game still in its infancy, was squandered wantonly by the fragile England middle order. An opening partnership of 196 between Andrew Strauss and Alastair Cook, the highest England have made against Australia at Lord’s, had the shirt-sleeved crowd bubbling. England were romping, Australia a rabble.

But this is England and it had to be too good to last. Cook, five short of a third century at Lord’s, became an unexpected victim for Mitchell Johnson, whose bowling had been so inept, such utter garbage, that doubts were being cast on whether his South African heroics were a myth, concocted in the same studio in which conspiracy theorists insist the moon landings were fabricated.

The wicket set in motion a change in fortune in which Australia, held together by the excellent swing bowling of Ben Hilfenhaus, regained their composure as a drunk might sober up. By the time Andrew Flintoff – fit to play and greeted rapturously as he bounded helmetless down the pavilion steps – edged him to second slip, six wickets had tumbled in the afternoon for 137 runs, bringing Australia back into the game without the benefit of the new ball.

Ponting took it with four overs of the day left, to no further avail, and England must attempt to capitalise tomorrow morning. Much will depend on Strauss, who, leading magnificently, batted all day in reaching an unbeaten 161, 16 short of his Test best and his fourth and highest Test hundred on this ground. Shortly before stumps he reached 5,000 Test runs.

On Tuesday evening, at a dinner in the Long Room for his benefit, footage of Strauss’s career had been played. It had reminded the viewer that the 2005 Ashes success was not all about Flintoff and Kevin Pietersen and that at Old Trafford and The Oval, Strauss had made centuries. There was no reference, though, to the tribulations that followed in Australia in 2006-07, when brilliant planning and execution deprived him of his square cut and pulls. It took him a year to recover.

Yesterday, as if in an act of benevolence, he was fed once more, a mere handful of his runs coming in areas other than the segment between midwicket and extra cover. One on drive apart, late on in the piece, his 22 boundaries were carved away square of the wicket, clipped, angled to third man or, twice, slog-swept to midwicket.

While Cook was there, swatting boundaries across an outfield as fast as Turnberry’s greens, the sky had seemed the limit, although the Essex opener will play better for less reward. He was spoon-fed mediocre longhops by Johnson. The pitch was good – not fast as had been seen earlier in the summer against West Indies but not sluggish like Cardiff last week either – but had Australians other than Hilfenhaus had the capacity to exploit it there was movement in the air and a little off the seam down the slope. Top bowling all round would have had its reward.

Instead, galácticos from the great Australian sides sat in their commentary positions and hospitality boxes and saw, Hilfenhaus excepted, a display of shambolic incompetence. Perhaps the Lord’s experience proved overwhelming for those on their first trip. Bowling was off target, fielding ponderous and wicketkeeping comedic (although the ball dipping and swinging after it had passed the batsman did not help).

A blow was suffered shortly after lunch, when Nathan Hauritz dislocated the middle finger of his bowling hand in attempting to catch a straight drive from Strauss, then on 52. It was the only real chance he was to offer in more than six hours, although four runs previously Brad Haddin had dropped him from a Hilfenhaus no ball.

Cook’s dismissal brought in Ravi Bopara, who played with panache for 20 minutes or so, as if trying to prove a point. If he is to survive at No3 he has to learn, fast, about substance over style. A three-card trick from Hilfenhaus, the oldest of ploys on this ground, saw Bopara middle a couple of away-swingers, only to play outside the sucker ball that shaded down the slope.

A frenetic effort followed from Pietersen, either side of tea. It was the sort of innings that would be played by someone overdosing on SunnyD and it ended when he feathered an away-swinger from Peter Siddle, who had begun to find his feet after a shaky start. Paul Collingwood’s insipid chip to mid on and Matt Prior’s extravagant drive, beaten and bowled by Johnson’s in-swing – rare as hens’ teeth this summer – brought the only headshaking emotion from Strauss.

Much tomorrow will depend on the fortunes of the lower order against the new ball, and the weather. Heavy rain is due to pass through in the night but England, having included Graham Onions in their side at the expense of Monty Panesar, and sent Steve Harmison to Trent Bridge to rejoin Durham, will want to see the ball swing as it did for Hilfenhaus. If they can harness that, and Jimmy Anderson and Onions can flourish, then they can put Australia under real pressure. If not, there could be some long hours in the field once more.

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Strauss century defies Australia

Second Ashes Test, Lord’s: England v Australia
Date: 16-20 July
Coverage: Test Match Special commentary on BBC Radio 5 Live sports extra, BBC Radio 4 Long Wave, Red Button and BBC Sport website, plus live text commentary on BBC Sport website and mobiles. Live on Sky Sports


England captain Andrew Strauss believes Andrew Flintoff will play in the second Test at Lord’s starting on Thursday.

Flintoff, who is to retire from Tests after the Ashes, has knee trouble after last week’s drawn Test at Cardiff.

Asked whether Flintoff would be fit Strauss said: "The indications are that he will be. We’re hopeful."

Kevin Pietersen has overcome Achilles problems, while Australia are again without the injured Brett Lee and will delay naming their side until the toss.

Pietersen had an injection in his back before the Cardiff Test and has had another jab in his troublesome Achilles.

England called in Ian Bell as cover but are convinced Pietersen will be fit so have released the Warwickshire batsman.

Australia captain Ricky Ponting admitted Lee had not been in contention for Lord’s. "Brett didn’t train with us and that means he won’t be available for selection," he said.

Lee will step up his rehabilitation from a sore left side in the next few days and could return to the side for the third Test at Edgbaston on 30 July.

Paceman Steve Harmison will deputise for England if Flintoff misses out but may play anyway depending on the state of the pitch.

There were calls for 30-year-old Harmison to be recalled to the side after he impressed with six wickets against the Australians for the England Lions earlier this month, dismissing opener Phillip Hughes in both innings.

However, his Durham colleague Graham Onions, who took seven wickets on his debut against the West Indies at Lord’s in May, is also in the squad.

The 26-year-old would be sure to come into serious consideration if England decide as expected to dispense with either Graham Swann or Monty Panesar.

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How important is Flintoff to England’s chances

Flintoff insists he will not be swayed by sentiment for his inclusion in the second Test and said: "Andrew Strauss is very supportive but I will make my decision on whether I will be fit enough to play and not because I want to play one last Test for England at Lord’s."

Strauss believes Flintoff can still play a key role for England this summer and said: "He is very much part of our strongest XI as long as he is fit.

"We’ve got every confidence he can put in some big performances with bat and ball."

Looking ahead to the Lord’s Test, the England skipper feels the team can benefit from the hard-fought draw in the tension-filled Cardiff Test.

"A lot of our individuals probably didn’t play as well as they should have done but we hope the momentum and impetus we got from getting out of jail in Cardiff will put us in good shape for Thursday."

Meanwhile, former captain Michael Vaughan expects the England bowling attack to change regardless of whether Flintoff is fit to play.

"Steve Harmison has been picked as a like-for-like replacement for Flintoff if he is not fit and Graham Onions will play for one of the spinners," Vaughan told BBC Sport.

"Monty Panesar has the best record but Graeme Swann has been great and I expect the selectors to stick with him but I wouldn’t rule out Monty at Lord’s."


England squad: AJ Strauss (capt), AN Cook (Essex), RS Bopara (Essex), KP Pietersen (Hampshire), PD Collingwood (Durham), MJ Prior (Sussex, wkt), A Flintoff (Lancashire), SCJ Broad (Nottinghamshire), GP Swann (Nottinghamshire), JM Anderson (Lancashire), MS Panesar (Northamptonshire), IR Bell (Warwickshire), G Onions (Durham), SJ Harmison (Durham)</p


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

England fear for Flintoff future

• All-rounder a major doubt for Lord’s Test
• Flintoff awaiting results of scan on his right knee

England were last night fearful over Andrew Flintoff’s participation in the rest of the Ashes series as they awaited the results of a scan on his right knee that is likely to rule him out of this week’s Lord’s Test and possibly beyond.

Flintoff, who has been bowling only since 11 June after injuring the same knee playing in the Indian Premier League in April, twisted the joint in the field during the draw with Australia in Cardiff and now faces renewed speculation about his future as a Test force.

As England’s relief at saving the first Test last night gave way to a familiar sense of foreboding, team officials insisted the scan was merely precautionary but the addition of Steve Harmison to an enlarged 14-man squad did little to dampen fears that the latest in a long line of niggles could rule Flintoff out for the summer.

At 31 he boasts a list of career injuries that have already forced him to miss 62 of the 138 Tests England have played since he made his debut 11 years ago. Although an England spokesman said Flintoff would be given every chance to recover in time for Lord’s, sources close to the Lancashire all-rounder were pessimistic about his chances.

Geoff Miller, the national selector, said: “Andrew is experiencing soreness and swelling in the knee which he twisted while in the field and he will be reassessed by the medical staff over the next 48 hours. It’s not the pain he had before when he had his real problems with the knee – it’s new pain. But if you have pain of any kind you find out the best remedy. We won’t rush it: we regard Andrew too highly to do that. We know how much passion he has to play for England and in the Ashes so we would not rush that situation. An Ashes series is not a sprint, it’s a marathon.”

Exactly how Flintoff picked up his new affliction is not clear, although he twice slid heavily chasing balls to the boundary during Australia’s mammoth total of 674 for six at Sophia Gardens – at one stage berating his captain, Andrew Strauss, for failing to lend support to one of his boundary-saving tumbles. What does seem beyond doubt, though, is that Flintoff’s 35-over stint – his longest run-out in any cricket since he bowled 40 overs in the first innings against South Africa at Headingley a year ago – would have done nothing to ease the discomfort.

The likely absence of Flintoff for Lord’s would leave room in the line-up for another tall, bang-it-in bowler, and Miller duly described Harmison, who took five for 60 over the weekend for Durham in their county championship match against Yorkshire, as a “like-for-like replacement”.

Miller agreed that Harmison, who twice bounced out Australia’s opener Phil Hughes for single-figure scores while playing for England Lions in Worcester two weeks ago, loomed large in the Australian psyche – despite his disastrous wide to second slip to kickstart the 2006-7 Ashes in Brisbane. “Cricket is a game of mental toughness and psychology, as well as capability and technique, and they remember what he can do,” said Miller, who was at Headingley yesterday to follow Harmison’s progress. “It’s a case of him showing what he could do, he can still do now. If he can, then it’s game on.”

Miller said Harmison’s recall was a reward for his efforts since being dropped during the series in the West Indies earlier this year. “He knows what it’s all about, he’s a strong character, he knows what he has to do internationally, he knows the opposition, so I would have no worry if he did play at Lord’s.

“He didn’t sulk. He was given the reason why he wasn’t selected, and he’s gone away knowing what he had to do: show enthusiasm for Durham, get the results for Durham. When he got those results he was then selected for the Lions. He got the results for the Lions, and he’s come back in the next game here and done really well, so he’s justified his place in the squad.”

“I wouldn’t like to say we can cope without Andrew Flintoff, because that’s the wrong phrase, but we’ve got international quality players, and if he’s not fit we’ll pick 11 who are.” Miller added that Harmison and Flintoff could even play in the same side if conditions suited, but last night it was a scenario that felt far-fetched.

Mike Selvey, page 2

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England fear for Flintoff future

• All-rounder a major doubt for Lord’s Test
• Flintoff awaiting results of scan on his right knee

England were last night fearful over Andrew Flintoff’s participation in the rest of the Ashes series as they awaited the results of a scan on his right knee that is likely to rule him out of this week’s Lord’s Test and possibly beyond.

Flintoff, who has been bowling only since 11 June after injuring the same knee playing in the Indian Premier League in April, twisted the joint in the field during the draw with Australia in Cardiff and now faces renewed speculation about his future as a Test force.

As England’s relief at saving the first Test last night gave way to a familiar sense of foreboding, team officials insisted the scan was merely precautionary but the addition of Steve Harmison to an enlarged 14-man squad did little to dampen fears that the latest in a long line of niggles could rule Flintoff out for the summer.

At 31 he boasts a list of career injuries that have already forced him to miss 62 of the 138 Tests England have played since he made his debut 11 years ago. Although an England spokesman said Flintoff would be given every chance to recover in time for Lord’s, sources close to the Lancashire all-rounder were pessimistic about his chances.

Geoff Miller, the national selector, said: “Andrew is experiencing soreness and swelling in the knee which he twisted while in the field and he will be reassessed by the medical staff over the next 48 hours. It’s not the pain he had before when he had his real problems with the knee – it’s new pain. But if you have pain of any kind you find out the best remedy. We won’t rush it: we regard Andrew too highly to do that. We know how much passion he has to play for England and in the Ashes so we would not rush that situation. An Ashes series is not a sprint, it’s a marathon.”

Exactly how Flintoff picked up his new affliction is not clear, although he twice slid heavily chasing balls to the boundary during Australia’s mammoth total of 674 for six at Sophia Gardens – at one stage berating his captain, Andrew Strauss, for failing to lend support to one of his boundary-saving tumbles. What does seem beyond doubt, though, is that Flintoff’s 35-over stint – his longest run-out in any cricket since he bowled 40 overs in the first innings against South Africa at Headingley a year ago – would have done nothing to ease the discomfort.

The likely absence of Flintoff for Lord’s would leave room in the line-up for another tall, bang-it-in bowler, and Miller duly described Harmison, who took five for 60 over the weekend for Durham in their county championship match against Yorkshire, as a “like-for-like replacement”.

Miller agreed that Harmison, who twice bounced out Australia’s opener Phil Hughes for single-figure scores while playing for England Lions in Worcester two weeks ago, loomed large in the Australian psyche – despite his disastrous wide to second slip to kickstart the 2006-7 Ashes in Brisbane. “Cricket is a game of mental toughness and psychology, as well as capability and technique, and they remember what he can do,” said Miller, who was at Headingley yesterday to follow Harmison’s progress. “It’s a case of him showing what he could do, he can still do now. If he can, then it’s game on.”

Miller said Harmison’s recall was a reward for his efforts since being dropped during the series in the West Indies earlier this year. “He knows what it’s all about, he’s a strong character, he knows what he has to do internationally, he knows the opposition, so I would have no worry if he did play at Lord’s.

“He didn’t sulk. He was given the reason why he wasn’t selected, and he’s gone away knowing what he had to do: show enthusiasm for Durham, get the results for Durham. When he got those results he was then selected for the Lions. He got the results for the Lions, and he’s come back in the next game here and done really well, so he’s justified his place in the squad.”

“I wouldn’t like to say we can cope without Andrew Flintoff, because that’s the wrong phrase, but we’ve got international quality players, and if he’s not fit we’ll pick 11 who are.” Miller added that Harmison and Flintoff could even play in the same side if conditions suited, but last night it was a scenario that felt far-fetched.

Mike Selvey, page 2

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England fear for Flintoff future

• All-rounder a major doubt for Lord’s Test
• Flintoff awaiting results of scan on his right knee

England were last night fearful over Andrew Flintoff’s participation in the rest of the Ashes series as they awaited the results of a scan on his right knee that is likely to rule him out of this week’s Lord’s Test and possibly beyond.

Flintoff, who has been bowling only since 11 June after injuring the same knee playing in the Indian Premier League in April, twisted the joint in the field during the draw with Australia in Cardiff and now faces renewed speculation about his future as a Test force.

As England’s relief at saving the first Test last night gave way to a familiar sense of foreboding, team officials insisted the scan was merely precautionary but the addition of Steve Harmison to an enlarged 14-man squad did little to dampen fears that the latest in a long line of niggles could rule Flintoff out for the summer.

At 31 he boasts a list of career injuries that have already forced him to miss 62 of the 138 Tests England have played since he made his debut 11 years ago. Although an England spokesman said Flintoff would be given every chance to recover in time for Lord’s, sources close to the Lancashire all-rounder were pessimistic about his chances.

Geoff Miller, the national selector, said: “Andrew is experiencing soreness and swelling in the knee which he twisted while in the field and he will be reassessed by the medical staff over the next 48 hours. It’s not the pain he had before when he had his real problems with the knee – it’s new pain. But if you have pain of any kind you find out the best remedy. We won’t rush it: we regard Andrew too highly to do that. We know how much passion he has to play for England and in the Ashes so we would not rush that situation. An Ashes series is not a sprint, it’s a marathon.”

Exactly how Flintoff picked up his new affliction is not clear, although he twice slid heavily chasing balls to the boundary during Australia’s mammoth total of 674 for six at Sophia Gardens – at one stage berating his captain, Andrew Strauss, for failing to lend support to one of his boundary-saving tumbles. What does seem beyond doubt, though, is that Flintoff’s 35-over stint – his longest run-out in any cricket since he bowled 40 overs in the first innings against South Africa at Headingley a year ago – would have done nothing to ease the discomfort.

The likely absence of Flintoff for Lord’s would leave room in the line-up for another tall, bang-it-in bowler, and Miller duly described Harmison, who took five for 60 over the weekend for Durham in their county championship match against Yorkshire, as a “like-for-like replacement”.

Miller agreed that Harmison, who twice bounced out Australia’s opener Phil Hughes for single-figure scores while playing for England Lions in Worcester two weeks ago, loomed large in the Australian psyche – despite his disastrous wide to second slip to kickstart the 2006-7 Ashes in Brisbane. “Cricket is a game of mental toughness and psychology, as well as capability and technique, and they remember what he can do,” said Miller, who was at Headingley yesterday to follow Harmison’s progress. “It’s a case of him showing what he could do, he can still do now. If he can, then it’s game on.”

Miller said Harmison’s recall was a reward for his efforts since being dropped during the series in the West Indies earlier this year. “He knows what it’s all about, he’s a strong character, he knows what he has to do internationally, he knows the opposition, so I would have no worry if he did play at Lord’s.

“He didn’t sulk. He was given the reason why he wasn’t selected, and he’s gone away knowing what he had to do: show enthusiasm for Durham, get the results for Durham. When he got those results he was then selected for the Lions. He got the results for the Lions, and he’s come back in the next game here and done really well, so he’s justified his place in the squad.”

“I wouldn’t like to say we can cope without Andrew Flintoff, because that’s the wrong phrase, but we’ve got international quality players, and if he’s not fit we’ll pick 11 who are.” Miller added that Harmison and Flintoff could even play in the same side if conditions suited, but last night it was a scenario that felt far-fetched.

Mike Selvey, page 2

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Bangladesh seal rare Test victory

First Test, St Vincent (day five, stumps):
Bangladesh 238 & 345 beat West Indies 307, 181 by 95 runs

Match scorecard


Mahmudullah celebrates dismissing West Indies skipper Floyd Reifer

A superb bowling spell from Mahmudullah saw Bangladesh record only their second ever Test victory with a 95-run win against a weakened West Indies side.

Set 277 to win, the home side crumbled to 181 all out as the debutant off-spinner ripped through the batting order with 5-51 in St Vincent.

David Bernard (52 not out) was the only batsman to provide any resistance.

Earlier, Bangladesh lost their last five wickets for 23 runs to finish on 345 with Darren Sammy claiming 5-70.

The victory is Bangladesh’s first overseas – their previous win came against Zimbabwe over four years ago in Chittagong – in 60 matches since their introduction to Test cricket nine years ago.

The victory was made the more remarkable considering captain and strike bowler Mashrafe Mortaza missed the West Indian innings with a knee injury, with vice-captain Shakib Al Hasan deputising in his absence.

"It was probably a blessing in disguise when we got bowled out (on Monday morning) which gave us more time," said Mortaza, skippering his first Test match since succeeding Mohammad Ashraful last month.

"I thought we let ourselves down in the first innings"

Captain Floyd Reifer

"We were looking to bat until lunch and get a lead of about 300 or more, but we lost our last five wickets quickly."

However, Bangladesh’s achievement came against a second-string West Indies side missing 13 of its best players because of an ongoing contract dispute with the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB).

The board has insisted it will field the same squad – seven of whom made their debuts at Arnos Vale – if no settlement can be reached ahead of the second Test, which starts in Grenada on Friday.

The final day began promisingly for the home side as Sammy claimed three dismissals for his second Test five-wicket haul.

But with 80 overs to chase down 277 on a wearing wicket encouraging turn, the inexperienced West Indies batting line-up succumbed to Bangladesh’s triple spin attack.

Openers Dale Richards and Omar Phillips each fell for 14 before captain Floyd Reifer became the first of Mahmudullah’s five victims for 19.

Reduced to 85-5, Bernard found support in Sammy, but the vice-captain was dismissed by Shakib Al Hasan to leave the home side precariously placed at 119-6.

606: DEBATE
Your thoughts on Bangladesh’s victory

Despite reaching his second half century of the match, Bernard could not find adequate support as Bangladesh wrapped up their historic victory 40 minutes from the scheduled close.

"It is disappointing to lose but I think the guys, brought here the night before a Test, fought well," said 36-year-old stand-in skipper Reifer, who made his first international appearance in more than 10 years.

"I thought we let ourselves down in the first innings, when the batsmen did not capitalise on the starts that they got.

"Many of us got a start, but never really carried on. Young Omar Phillips scored 94, but I thought that a lot of other guys, including myself, got starts, and we never carried on to a big score."</p


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England’s struggle interrupted by rain

England 435 and 20-2, Australia 674-6dec

The gloom that had descended over Sophia Gardens by tea-time can only have been matched by that in the England dressing room. Faced with a monumental total, the like of which the Australians have never before come close to matching as an entrée into an Ashes series, they required 239 runs to avoid an innings defeat.

The early exit of Alastair Cook, palpably leg before wicket to Mitchell Johnson in the fifth over of the innings as he played around his front pad, was not the start they were looking for. Next to go, eight balls later in the following over, was Ravi Bopara, also lbw, to Ben Hilfenhaus as he tried to work a straight ball crookedly to midwicket. If it was an inept shot – a touch too flashy for comfort: had he not watched Ricky Ponting for hour after hour? – then it was an even more inept decision by Billy Doctrove, the ball destined to pass a distance over the top of the stumps. At 20 for two, it looks as if even rain, which arrived on cue, cannot save England.

The Australian innings was relentless. No wicket had fallen during the morning session, nor seemed likely to, and during the afternoon Marcus North and Brad Haddin were able to continue their dissection of the England bowling, the stately progress of earlier replaced by a late romp as Ponting sensed the impending bad weather and the chance to make a statement before it arrived.

Haddin in particular came out of his self-imposed shell, using just 48 deliveries to go from his half century to his second Test hundred. By the time he was well caught by Bopara, in the furthestmost corner of the ground as he hoiked Paul Collingwood away, he had made 121, with 11 fours and three sixes. Ponting promptly called off the humiliation, leaving North unbeaten on 125. The sixth wicket had produced exactly 200, Australia’s 674 for five the highest total made by them against England in the last 75 years, and their fourth highest ever against them.

Once, in 1955, five Australian batsmen made hundreds in a single innings against West Indies, but never had there been four by them until Haddin clipped the single that took him to three figures. No one previously had made four in an innings against England. They really do know how to hit so that it hurts.

Click here for a full Test scorecard from the Swalec Stadium, here for Mike Selvey’s morning report and here for his day three audio report. For other news, features, comment, video, audio, Hawk-Eye and more, visit our dedicated Ashes site

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