Matt Henry's broken thumb adds to New Zealand's woes

The seamer is available to bowl on the second day but his role with the bat will be determined by the state of the game

Andrew McGlashan in Sydney03-Jan-2020New Zealand’s injury- and illness-ravaged tour of Australia gained another casualty at the SCG with X-rays confirming Matt Henry had suffered a broken left thumb on the opening day of the final Test.Henry was struck by a drive from Joe Burns in the first session of the Test and left the field for treatment before returning to bowl and finishing the day with 21 wicketless overs. The thumb has been splinted and strapped and Henry will continue to be available to bowl on the second day but his role with the bat will be determined by the state of the game.Henry was preferred in the New Zealand side ahead of Tim Southee with coach Gary Stead explaining that his extra pace was one of the factors.”I guess the decision making around that, we just felt that we wanted a little more pace out there, what Matt Henry sort of offers over Tim,” Stead said. “And being the workload that Tim has had not just in the last two Tests but if you put the last four together, it’s somewhere around 200 overs in a short period of time, just felt that what Matt offered would have given us a point of difference.”Henry is the third New Zealand pace bowler to be injured on the tour after Lockie Ferguson suffered a calf strain on the opening day of the series in Perth then Trent Boult broke his hand against Mitchell Starc in Melbourne.New Zealand had to scramble to get an XI together for the final Test as flu went through the camp ruling out Kane Williamson, Henry Nicholls and Mitchell Santner. The uncapped Glenn Phillips was hastily flown across the Tasman and made his debut. He was surfing north of Auckland when summoned into the squad and almost missed the call from selector Gavin Larsen.”I was way up north trying to find a couple of friends and I thought it was them calling. When I saw it was Gav… he said ‘we’ve got a bit of a situation and we need you on a plane in a couple of hours’,” Phillips said. “I pushed it really fine, traffic played ball and my brother-in-law left five minutes after me and only arrived half an hour later. Thank goodness, I got on where I did.”Phillips hasn’t had much time to soak up the occasion but is determined to make the most of it. “You have to take the opportunities when they’re there,” he said. “You may never get a chance again so I’ll grab it with both hands and enjoy the moment for what it is. Gary [Stead] came over and said ‘hey mate you’re going to be batting five’. I was like ‘whoa this is happening’.”

Aaron Finch likely to stay at top for Sydney Test

Coach Justin Langer said that Aaron Finch would be better for the experience of learning how to juggle three formats as he goes through a testing series as opener

Daniel Brettig31-Dec-20182:28

Langer backs Finch to come good as an opener

Struggling opener Aaron Finch appears likely to stay at the top of the Australian batting order for the final Test of the series against India at the SCG through a lack of other options in the squad. Coach Justin Langer insisted the white-ball captain would “be better” for learning how to juggle three formats after the fashion of Steven Smith and David Warner.In adding yet another middle-order batsman to the Sydney squad in Marnus Labuschagne, the Australian selectors left themselves short of top-order options. Among the eight batsman now available, Marcus Harris, Usman Khawaja, Shaun Marsh, and Finch have experience as openers. Should Khawaja be moved up to open with Harris in place of Finch, this would create another issue as all of Shaun Marsh, Travis Head, Peter Handscomb, Mitchell Marsh and Labuschagne prefer to bat at Nos. 4, 5 or 6.With this in mind, Langer was left to state that Finch needed to take on the lessons of the series so far, where his technical wherewithal to deal with the likes of Ishant Sharma and Jasprit Bumrah has been tested to its very limits and beyond. An ill-advised attempt to cut at Bumrah second ball he faced in Australia’s second innings summed up the accumulated mental toll of the series on minds that are unseasoned as to the wages of extended Test match jousting.”Something we’re talking about obviously,” Langer said of Finch’s position. “He’s having a bit of a lean run of it although he’s got a couple of 50s. Got a 100 run partnership one Test match ago and that set up the whole Test match for us. Finch is a really good player, we know that, he’s great in the team, he’s working harder probably than he’s ever worked and as I’ve said to him for some time he’s in this uncharted territory where he’s the only guy playing all three forms of the game.”We saw Warner do it for a while and Smith do it for a while and he’s a great example of how to prepare now. He’s got to somehow recharge his batteries over and over and over again. It’s a great challenge for him at the moment. He’ll be better for this period I think. Test cricket is about toughness and character and he’ll be better for this period,” Langer said.

Langer flags ODI rest for bowlers

Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc are set to be rested from the limited overs matches against India that sit between this Test series and the subsequent meetings with Sri Lanka in late January and early February, with the coach Justin Langer stating that careful management of fast bowling resources was critical to plans for 2019.
“It’s the great condurum for us, how we manage our bowlers – for example we might not play them in the next three one-dayers so they’re ready for the next two [Tests], to keep them fresh,” Langer said. “[Cummins] has been brilliant, he’s been outstanding. But then – as soon as we do that they want to play, and also then everyone else would be on our back saying ‘why aren’t they playing every single game. But we’ve also got a World cup and Ashes next year. We want him fresh for those things.
“So getting that management right and staying true to the management, we can have him fit and firing – we’ve got to be strong with that because there’s got to be a lot of people with different opinions as to whether they should play every game. But we know it’s really hard to play all year round because they need to keep their bodies as fresh and strong, and be bowling at the level we want them to be at. it’s a real balancing act.”

Among the defining characteristics of a Test series is the sustained nature of contests between opponents, as the same batsmen and bowlers fight each other in different cities and varying conditions. As the former Test opener Ed Cowan wrote in an ESPNcricinfo column about his first series, also against India in 2011-12, “A lengthy timescale in such psychological battles also allows for the pronouncement of “bunnies”. I now understand how the disintegration of Daryl Cullinan by Shane Warne took place. There was simply nowhere to hide.” Langer said it had been challenging to mentor a team where the majority of the batsmen were experiencing this all at once.”I remember at the end of our careers when we had the most experienced [team], I think we got called Dad’s Army in our last Test series and we’d played a bit of cricket and I remember how tiring it was for us, every Test match,” Langer said. “There’s some physical tiredness but just the mental drain of Test cricket, honestly it’s relentless. And then with these guys one of the hardest things about Test cricket is one of the distractions, so they’re learning on the run actually.”Got a lot of guys learning on the run at the same time actually so not easy for them but that’s OK, we’ll collectively be better for it, like Finchy, we’ll collectively be better for it over time. Just got to make sure we stay in this contest and be great at the end of it – India have come here determined to win this series, we know that, we see that in everything they’ve done since day one. It would be nice for us to send them home drawing the series not winning it.”Asked about the system underpinning Australia’s batting production line, Langer acknowledged there was a wider sense that opportunities were being afforded to players, at club, state and international level, who had not earned them in the time-honoured way of churning out consistent runs over time. But he also pointed out that teams still needed to be chosen for matches regardless of performance, adding complexity to the job of the selectors.”Most of our batters who are knocking on the door are averaging in the 30s and that’s probably not… whether it’s the system I’m not sure,” Langer said. “Whether it’s something we’ve got to change in our psyche, I’m not sure. Specifically about the system you’re asking but it would suggest we’ve got – the art of batting, we’ve got some work to do on it.”We’ve got to be careful not to reward poor performances. But again, trust me, try being a selector at the moment. I’m not – that’s part of our job. It’s not as if the guys are absolutely banging the door down. Whether it’s from second grade cricket to A grade cricket, progression is everything that we want. If you’re talking to some A grade or 2nd grade coaches, [they’d say] we’re playing kids who probably don’t deserve to play A grade or second grade. But it’s where we’re at at the moment. It’s something everyone is looking at. We want to work on getting better.”As for the complaints raised by the captain Tim Paine about some of the surfaces offered up to visiting teams in Australia, not least an MCG surface that was slow and to the advantage of India’s methodical, skillful approach, Langer stopped short of similar criticism but agreed he would prefer more bounce and pace than what had been seen in Melbourne. “I love playing at the WACA and I love playing at the Adelaide oval, a bit of pace and bounce,” he said. “I guess all I’d say is all the years we’ve gone to India we haven’t had too many bouncy wickets, it usually spins square. But its also our way in Australia to just produce the best wickets we can.”We’re interested to see what we’re going to get in Sydney next week, we’re not sure, been a bit inconsistent. India played a practice game there and it was very flat and Shield game there a few weeks ago it’s very flat. We certainly hope it’s not. Saw in the press, most important thing in Test cricket aside from absorbing pressure from our batters is the wickets we play on.”Because you want to see a great contest and in Melbourne the last couple of days were more of a contest but that was because the wicket deteriorated and you want to see a good contest. Want to see a contest from bat and ball. From Australian perspective you’ve got three of the best fast bowlers in the world and a gun spinner you’d like to see a bit more bounce.”Apart from setting an example of Finch to follow in terms of the format juggle, Smith and Warner have been in plenty of headlines over the past week, not least due to the interviews Smith and Cameron Bancroft conducted for the host broadcaster Fox Cricket. Langer, midway through his first summer as head coach, responded wearily to the ongoing saga. “It’s all just part of the soap opera we’re in every day,” he said. “I feel like a director of a soap opera at the moment, I honestly do.”That’s part of coaching – it’s man management, looking after people and caring for people. That was just another distraction last week. There’s different ways you can look at those interviews. so it’s just another part of our day to day job. We’re in touch with the boys all the time, there’s a really good process we’re going to go through to get the boys back into the team. It was great to see Cameron playing last night. It’s part of the soap opera.”

NZ batsman Phillips to join Tallawahs

The New Zealand batsman was the top-scorer in the domestic Super Smash T20 competition, and made his international debut in a T20I against South Africa earlier this year

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Aug-2017New Zealand batsman Glenn Phillips, who made his international debut in a T20I against South Africa earlier this year, is set to join Jamaica Tallawahs for CPL 2017.Auckland Cricket confirmed that 20-year-old Phillips will join Tallawahs as the franchise’s fifth overseas player, alongside Shakib Al Hasan, Kumar Sangakkara, Mohammad Sami and Imad Wasim.Phillips was the highest run-getter in New Zealand’s domestic T20 competition, the Super Smash, in the 2016-17 season with 369 runs in ten innings, at a strike rate of 143. He struck three fifties and a century in the tournament, becoming the first New Zealand player to hit centuries across first-class, List A and T20 formats in the same season.The performance earned him a call-up for the sole T20I on South Africa’s tour of New Zealand in February and he made his debut in Auckland.Tallawahs, the defending champions, have played two matches so far, with one win and a loss. Their assistance coach, Mark O’Donnell, who also coaches the Auckland Aces in New Zealand’s domestic set-up, said Phillips added value as a back-up wicketkeeper, too.”Glenn is valuable to any team he joins as he can turn a game on its head with his batting. He is also handy behind the stumps so to have him as a keeping option is also helpful for the Tallawahs.”

Vitori's bowling action declared legal

Zimbabwe left-arm fast bowler Brian Vitori’s bowling action has been found to be legal, following remedial work and a re-test performed at University of Pretoria on June 10

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Jun-2016Zimbabwe left-arm fast bowler Brian Vitori’s bowling action has been found to be legal, the ICC confirmed, following remedial work and a re-test performed at the University of Pretoria on June 10.The re-test revealed that the bend at Vitori’s elbow was within the permissible 15-degree limit for all his deliveries. He is now free to resume bowling in international cricket and at domestic tournaments worldwide.Vitori’s action had been reported after the third T20I against Bangladesh in Khulna on January 20, and he was subsequently suspended in February.Vitori, 26, has played four Tests, 19 ODIs and 11 T20Is for Zimbabwe after making his international debut in August 2011.

Another trial by spin to decide series

South Africa’s 52-run win in the first T20 has put Bangladesh in an unfamiliar situation of late – to level a series after a loss in the first game

The Preview by Mohammad Isam06-Jul-2015

Match facts

Tuesday, July 7
Start time 1.00pm local (0700 GMT)1:39

Isam: Bangladesh will look to improve their batting

Big picture

South Africa’s 52-run win in the first T20 could have left Bangladesh dispirited but there has been a good vibe among the home team in recent months because they have learned how to bounce back. What will irk them, though, is that this is the first time since November that they have lost the first game of a series.It was South Africa’s T20 captain Faf du Plessis who ensured victory after the visitors had a sluggish start. Rilee Rossouw also contributed at an important stage, adding an unbeaten 58 for the fifth wicket with du Plessis, who did not throw his wicket away despite occasionally struggling to time the ball.Bangladesh were hasty in their chase and Tamim Iqbal, Soumya Sarkar, Mushfiqur Rahim and Shakib Al Hasan need to execute proper shots in the next game. They were first hustled by South Africa’s pace attack and later strangled by Aaron Phangiso and JP Duminy. The visitors will want more of the same in the second T20, in particular the verve shown by youngster Kagiso Rabada.Bangladesh will also hope their bowling attack can once again contain South Africa, and that their batsmen can find the right blend of discipline and aggression.

Form guide

Bangladesh LWLLL

South Africa WWLLL

Players to watch

Left-arm spinner Arafat Sunny took the wickets of AB de Villiers and JP Duminy but did not finish his full quota of four overs. He had figures of 3-0-19-2 and will be expected to be accurate once again.Despite the hot and humid weather, South Africa fast bowler Kagiso Rabada bowled with a lot of energy and generated more bounce than anyone else on this pitch.

Teams news

Legspinner Jubair Hossain, who was one of two players to go to training on Monday, could replace Sohag Gazi who went wicketless in his two overs.Bangladesh (possible): 1 Tamim Iqbal, 2 Soumya Sarkar, 3 Shakib Al Hasan, 4 Mushfiqur Rahim (wk), 5 Sabbir Rahman, 6 Nasir Hossain, 7 Litton Das, 8 Sohag Gazi/Jubair Hossain, 9 Mashrafe Mortaza (capt), 10 Arafat Sunny, 11 Mustafizur RahmanThe visitors had left out Beuran Hendricks, Chris Morris and Eddie Leie for the first T20 and it is likely they will remain benched, unless South Africa have plans to hand the young legspinner Leie a T20 debut.South Africa (possible): 1 Quinton de Kock (wk), 2 AB de Villiers, 3 Faf du Plessis (capt), 4 JP Duminy, 5 David Miller, 6 Rilee Rossouw, 7 David Wiese, 8 Wayne Parnell, 9 Kyle Abbott, 10 Kagiso Rabada, 11 Aaron Phangiso

Pitch and conditions

The pitch for the first game was slow and had inconsistent bounce. The surface for the second T20 may have higher bounce and aid batting a little more.

Stats and trivia

  • Shakib Al Hasan is now Bangladesh’s leading wicket-taker in T20 internationals, after he overtook Abdur Razzak’s 44 wickets.
  • Having been bowled out for 78 in their 2011 World Cup game, Bangladesh have been dismissed for less than 100 by South Africa in two consecutive matches.
  • AB de Villiers opened in the first match, only the second time he has done so for South Africa in T20s

    Quotes

    “We couldn’t take opportunities that we created in the first game, so I hope it changes in the next game.”

India seek to build on T20 boost

ESPNcricinfo previews the second T20I between India and England in Mumbai

The Preview by Siddhartha Talya21-Dec-2012

Match facts

December 22, 2012
Start time 1900 (1330 GMT)Alex Hales batted impressively in Pune•BCCI

Big Picture

One-off or two-match Twenty20 series are usually lacking in context, and that’s even more the case on this England tour which is taking place a couple of months after the premier, global T20 tournament has ended. But, for a side beaten in a home Test series for the first time in eight years, the positives have been few, and the limited-overs games offer an opportunity to push for more. There were encouraging signs for India in Pune; they fielded with intensity and Yuvraj Singh returned to his match-winning ways.Described as a side in transition in Tests, India looked much more at home in the shorter format as opposed to England, under a stand-in captain and a new-look team. Alex Hales stood out for England with his display of clean striking at the top of the order – he’s one of three Nottinghamshire players from the first T20, each of whom have been told by their county that they will not be allowed to the play in the IPL next season.

Form guide

(Most recent first)
India: WWWLW
England LLWLL

In the spotlight

Ajinkya Rahane has been made to wait for a Test debut but has been impressive in the shorter formats. He pulled off a couple of cleanly-struck straight sixes in the first game and looked good for more before he mistimed one to mid-on. Often talked up as a future member of the Indian Test top order, Rahane’s opportunities in the international arena have been very limited, just four so far this year.Samit Patel has had more chances but hasn’t had the best of years. He lost his place in the Test XI this series, though chipped in with a quick 24 in the first T20 international in Pune. He’s got another T20 game to finish 2012 on a brighter note.

Team news

Jonny Bairstow has left the squad and flown back to England for “family reasons”. Jade Dernbach was expensive in his three-over spell in Pune and England could consider giving Middlesex seamer James Harris a go in his place.England (possible): 1 Michael Lumb, 2 Alex Hales, 3 Luke Wright, 4 Eoin Morgan (capt), 5 Samit Patel, 6 Jos Buttler (wk), 7 Tim Bresnan, 8 James Tredwell, 9 Stuart Meaker, 10 Danny Briggs, 11 James Harris.Should India wish to make a change, they have Bhuvneshwar Kumar, the Uttar Pradesh seamer, or Abhimanyu Mithun, on the bench.India (possible): 1 Gautam Gambhir, 2 Ajinkya Rahane 3, Virat Kohli, 4 Yuvraj Singh, 5 Suresh Raina, 6 MS Dhoni (capt and wk), 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 R Ashwin, 9 Bhuvneshwar Kumar/Parvinder Awana/Abhimanyu Mithun, 10 Piyush Chawla, 11 Ashok Dinda.

Stats and trivia

  • India’s win over England in Pune was their second-best against a non-‘minnow’ team in terms of balls to spare; they had won with 15 balls to spare against Pakistan in the World Twenty20.
  • Yuvraj Singh’s effort was the 16th instance of a player scoring 30 or more and picking up three or more wickets in the same game. He’s done it twice.

Quotes

“I felt each and every bowler, apart from Yuvraj, bowled at least one bad over in the game. But I’m overall very happy with the performance.”

“We got off to a great start. Alex Hales played tremendously well along with Luke Wright but in that middle period we failed to kick on and score. That positivity wasn’t there in our batting and we lacked about 15 or 20.”

All-round Van der Westhuizen stars for Namibia

Namibia completed a 6-2 thrashing of Kenya with a convincing seven-wicket win in the final match of the Twenty20 series

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Nov-2011
Scorecard
Namibia completed a 6-2 thrashing of Kenya with a convincing seven-wicket win in the final match of the Twenty20 series at the Wanderers Cricket Ground in Windhoek.Kenya chose to bat and folded for 93 in 18.1 overs, as only three of their batsmen got into double figures. Wicketkeeper Peter Kituku was their top scorer with 31. The Namibia bowlers shared the wickets around, but Louis van der Westhuizen had the best figures after he ran through the tail to finish with 3 for 19 in 3.1 overs.Van der Westhuizen then powered the small chase, slamming 32 off 15 balls with four fours and two sixes, to take his side home with over five overs to spare. Captain Sarel Burger, who opened the innings, anchored the chase with an unbeaten 30, while Craig Williams also contributed with a rapid cameo.

Germany and Kuwait secure promotion

A round-up of the semi-finals and play-offs of the World Cricket League Division 8 tournament in Kuwait

Liam Brickhill11-Nov-2010Kuwait and Germany have secured promotion to World Cricket League Division Seven and will meet in the final of the Division Eight tournament after winning their semi-final encounters against Zambia and Vanuatu, respectively. There is little doubt that they have been the two best teams at the competition, Kuwait powered by the strength of their fast-bowling attack and Germany’s batsmen setting up a series of winning totals, and although Kuwait have the home advantage and start as slight favourites, a fascinating encounter awaits.Vanuatu and Zambia will play each other on Friday to decide which of them will remain in Division Eight and which will be relegated back to the regional tournaments alongside the already relegated Bhutan, Suriname, Gibraltar and Bahamas.Kuwait have not come close to losing a match in this tournament, but were given their biggest scare yet at Kuwait City as a spirited Zambian side fought back after they had been rolled over for 64. Every Zambian bowler picked up at least one wicket, with Gladson and Godfrey Kandela picking up two each, as Kuwait slipped to 54 for 7 in their chase. Gladson Kandela, in his first senior tour since graduating from the Under-19 captaincy, has emerged as a reliable opening bowler and started Kuwait’s wobble by removing Irfan Bhatti in his first over.After captain Hisham Mirza was removed by Sharif Yousuf, Kandela clean-bowled Abid Chaudry to reduce the home team to 17 for 3. Wickets continued to tumble, and when Godfrey Kandela and left-arm spinner Mohmed Mitha picked up a wicket apiece in consecutive overs to have Kuwait tottering at 54 for 7, a Zambian win that had seemed unthinkable suddenly seemed a distinct possibility. But Saad Khalid and Mohammad Murad, who are more used to wreaking havoc as Kuwait’s new-ball pair, kept their heads and saw the side home.Khalid and Murad’s efforts have had a great influence on Kuwait’s progress through this tournament, and this match was no different. Murad, who picked up four wickets against both Bhutan and Suriname, went one better today as his 5 for 15 helped demolish Zambia’s batsmen. He started the rot by removing both openers in his first spell, before returning to rip through the lower order as the Zambians were bowled out in the 29th over. Both he and Khalid will be a daunting prospect for Germany’s batsmen in the competition final on Friday.”We’ve worked really hard as a side for this tournament and to know we’re now heading to Division 7 is a great feeling for all the team,” said captain Mirza after the match. “I hope tomorrow we can do the people of Kuwait proud by beating Germany and claiming the tournament trophy. Zambia tested us today and we need to make sure we learn from the mistakes we made batting today and must come back stronger tomorrow for the finals.”In the other promotion play-off Germany prevailed over Vanuatu at the Sulabiya Ground, easing to a 92-run victory. Kashif Haider, whose remarkable eight-wicket spell set up the win over Bahamas, ensured Farooq Ahmed’s strong effort with the bat didn’t go to waste as he derailed Vanuatu’s pursuit of 186 with four cheap wickets.Aby John went wicketless as Germany beat Vanuatu to secure promotion to Division Seven•International Cricket Council

Opening bowlers Rana-Javed Iqbal and Ehsan Latif made the initial incision before legspinner Kashif and offspinner Shakeel Hassan scythed through the middle and lower order as Vanuatu were bowled out for 93 in the 35th over. Germany’s usually-reliable batsmen had also been given a torrid time by Vanuatu’s bowlers, allrounder Patrick Matautaava leading the pack with 3 for 27. Germany had Ahmed to thank for their respectable total as the left-hander, who came to the crease with the score at 78 for 4, struck an 89-ball 79 to set up a promotion-earning win.”It feels fantastic to know we’ll be travelling to Botswana next year for Division 7,” said German captain Asif Khan. “To have won every game so far in this tournament is brilliant and I hope tomorrow we can round off a great week with a win over Kuwait to make it a clean sweep.”Vanuatu tested us today and credit must got to Farooq Ahmed who stood up to the strong bowling attack to make 79. While I must also mention another fine performance by Kashif Haider who made sure we dismissed Vanuatu for 93 and claimed victory.”Kieron Ferrary edged to the top of the tournament’s run-scoring tables with a second half-century – to go with his hundred against Zambia – as Gibraltar beat Bhutan by 56 runs at the Hubara Ground. Ferrary lashed eight fours and a six in his 56, and his effort was built upon by Mark Bacarese and Ross Harkins, who also passed fifty to take Gibraltar to an imposing 279 for 7.Bhutan have had a series of thrashings inflicted upon them in this tournament, but to their credit they fought hard with the bat in this match to challenge Gibraltar’s bowlers. After man-of-the-match Bacarese added to his half-century with three top-order wickets, Jigme Singye’s half-century helped hold the middle order together as he shared in a 90-run stand with captain Tshering Dorji. Once they were removed, Lobzang Yonten kept up the fight with a 35-ball 38 but wickets continued to fall regularly at the other end and Bhutan were bowled out in the final over.In the final game of the day, Suriname secured a win over Bahamas at the Unity Ground after Troy Dudnath smashed his way to 61-ball 111 not out, the 20-year-old allrounder helping his side to 269 for 7. Bahamas captain Greg Taylor once again led his side from the front, scoring 78, but despite efforts from Shanaka Perera and Jermaine Adderley the side fell short of victory by 36 runs.

WIPA approves 15-point plan to boost cricket in region

The West Indies Players’ Association (WIPA) approved a 15-point plan for the development of cricket in the region, and appointed Larry Romany as their chief operations officer

Cricinfo staff10-Dec-2009Larry Romany, the current President of the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee, has been appointed chief operations officer of the West Indies Players’ Association (WIPA). The decision was taken at a board meeting on Wednesday, where a 15-point plan for boosting the development of West Indies cricket was also approved.The WIPA approved a team of professionally qualified experts to look at the developmental aspect of the game in the region, and authorized it to audit the structures and programmes currently in place and make recommendations for improvement if need be. The first-class season, it suggested, should consist of two rounds of matches with a minimum of 12 four-day games each season played alongside international series.It recommended the yearly schedule be agreed well in advance for players to be aware of their commitments, and singled out as its immediate priority the appointment of a Director of Cricket to handle all cricketing matters. The WIPA also termed the establishment of a Cricket Academy and its satellite centres as a matter of “extreme urgency”, and proposed the allotment of a fitness manager and a physiotherapist, in addition to a coach and manager, for teams at all levels of the game – from schoolboy to Test cricket.WIPA also called for an improvement in facilities at the first-class level, suggesting that matches at practice sessions be held at international venues or those of an equivalent standard. In an attempt to make the first-class game mirror international cricket, it also proposed adequate preparation for regional as well as national teams ahead of their matches, and the use of the same cricket balls at both levels.The WIPA and the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) were involved in a bitter dispute surrounding player contracts in July, when senior players, including Chris Gayle and Ramnaresh Sarwan, boycotted the Test series against Bangladesh, leading to a second-string team – which lost the series – being picked. However, the two sides reached a truce in October, enabling the selection of a full-strength squad for the ongoing tour of Australia.

Phillips hundred highlights final-day scramble for bonus points

Middlesex promotion push takes a hit as Gloucestershire No. 3 notches maiden century

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay01-Aug-2025Gloucestershire 404 for 9 dec (Phillips 136, Hammond 71, Bancroft 58) drew with Middlesex 445 (Williamson 153, Hollman 60, De Caires 58, Du Plooy 57)Gloucestershire’s Joe Phillips hit his maiden first class century as the rain-ruined Rothesay County Championship Division Two match with Middlesex ended in an inevitable draw.After the third day washout, a still wet outfield prevented any play until 1.25pm, with a minimum of 68 overs left in the game. Resuming their first innings on 54 for 1, a deficit of 391, Gloucestershire extended it to 400 for 9 by stumps, 21-year-old Cornishman Phillips making 136 from 182 balls, with 19 fours.Miles Hammond contributed an attractive 71 and Cameron Bancroft 58. But there had been too little time on a placid pitch for the teams to conjure a decisive outcome and both had to settle for 15 points.Following an early lunch at 12.45pm, Phillips and skipper Bancroft played confidently on a pitch still proving surprisingly straightforward to bat on considering it was shaved at both ends.Unbeaten on 11 at the start, Phillips had a scare on 34 when advancing down the pitch to offspinner Josh De Caires and edging between wicketkeeper and first slip for four. It was a rare moment of anxiety for Gloucestershire as Bancroft was first to his half-century, off 104 balls, with nine fours.The experienced Aussie was looking in prime form and it was a surprise when, with the total advanced to 126, he was bowled off a bottom edge aiming to pull a boundary off left-arm seamer Noah Cornwell.By then Phillips was treating the sparse crowd to a range of sweetly-timed strokes off front and back foot, a single to deep cover off Luke Hollman’s legspin taking him to fifty off 92 deliveries, with five fours. Two more boundaries followed from fierce pull shots in the same Cornwell over.Ollie Price was soon looking equally at home on the two-tone coloured surface. A glorious square drive for four off Ryan Higgins took Truro-born Phillips past his previous best first-class score of 80, made on the same ground against Worcestershire in 2023.By tea, he had moved to 96 and, with Price unbeaten on 33, Gloucestershire were 209 for 2, still trailing by 236. A looping full toss from Sam Robson gave Phillips the chance to strike the boundary that brought up his century off 145 balls. It was his 15th four and he raised a clenched fist in the air to celebrate.Price departed soon afterwards for 34, caught behind top-edging a sweep off Robson’s leg-breaks. The dismissal meant a first bowling point for Middlesex on a day their promotion hopes suffered a damaging blow with Glamorgan’s victory over Lancashire.Phillips and Hammond took Gloucestershire to 250 and a batting point. With more bonus points up for grabs, neither team wanted to shake hands on the draw.Using his feet well to attack the spinners, Phillips continued on his merry way, while Hammond also went on the attack at every opportunity. Their entertaining stand of 66 in 12.1 overs ended when Phillips holed out to long-on off Higgins.Cheltenham-born Hammond, who often flourishes at the Festival, advanced to smack a straight six off De Caires as Gloucestershire progressed to a second batting point, losing James Bracey cheaply, caught at mid-on off De Caires with the total on 299.Hollman earned Middlesex a second bowling point when having Graeme van Buuren caught at slip. But Hammond moved to a fluent half-century off 63 balls before Zaman Akhter was seventh man out, caught at backward square leg sweeping a ball from Hollman with eight overs remaining.A Hammond six off Hollman took Gloucestershire to a third batting point before he fell aiming to clear long-on off Higgins. With three overs remaining, Middlesex took the second new ball and Cornwell had Matt Taylor caught behind to give his side maximum bowling points.There was still time for a Josh Shaw six off Higgins as he and Todd Murphy helped the hosts reach 400 in the very last over. Both teams could feel happy at the end of a thoroughly entertaining final hour.

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