All posts by h716a5.icu

Further surgery for Zafar Ansari

Zafar Ansari, the Surrey allrounder who missed out on a maiden England tour due to a broken thumb sustained on the day he was called up, has undergone another minor operation on his thumb ahead of the new season

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Mar-2016Zafar Ansari, the Surrey allrounder who missed out on a maiden England tour due to a broken thumb sustained on the day he was called up, has undergone another minor operation on his thumb ahead of the new season.Ansari was included in England’s Test squad for the series against Pakistan in the UAE, but just a matter of hours after the news he badly damaged his thumb in the field against Lancashire. Given that Samit Patel, who was named as his replacement, played the final Test in Sharjah – and then toured South Africa – there is every likelihood that Ansari missed a Test debut.”This operation was designed to help with the healing process and is related to the bottom joint of his thumb – which had been damaged previously and exacerbated by the incident at Old Trafford – not the top one, which he suffered an open dislocation of,” Surrey said on their website.Meanwhile, they also announced that Jade Dernbach would miss the start of the season due a stress fracture of the back sustained while playing overseas. Dernbach had a spell playing T20 in New Zealand before returning for assessment on his back.”Jade has already started his rehabilitation programme and will undergo another scan in a fortnight’s time to further assess the healing process,” the club said. “Once it has been determined that the fracture has healed, Jade will begin a separate period of cricket rehabilitation with a view to being available later in the season.”Freddie van den Bergh, the left-arm spinner, is also on the injury list with a damaged thumb picked up playing club cricket in Australia and faces four to six weeks with the thumb splinted before further rehab ahead of a return to cricket.

Another link-man for Lionel Messi! USMNT star & two-time MLS Cup winner Julian Gressel joins Inter Miami on free transfer

Lionel Messi is getting another link-man at Inter Miami, with the Herons tying up a deal for USMNT star Julian Gressel.

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Wing-back available as a free agentEnded last season with the Columbus CrewReunited with Tata Martino at South BeachWHAT HAPPENED?

The 2023 Leagues Cup winners, who boast big ambition for the 2024 MLS campaign, have already added veteran former Liverpool and Barcelona striker Luis Suarez to their ranks during the off season. While the Uruguayan frontman brings extra goal threat, Tata Martino is also in the market for more creativity.

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That search has led David Beckham and the Inter Miami board in the direction of Gressel, who severed ties with the Columbus Crew at the end of the 2023 campaign. The German-born United States international – who has six senior caps to his name – has agreed a two-year contract in Florida, and it set to bolster their defensive and offensive ranks with his versatility on the pitch.

DID YOU KNOW?

Gressel began his career as a winger, but has turned into a natural wingback over the past few seasons. Wherever he is asked to perform for Inter Miami, he will bring welcome experience and trophy-winning pedigree to the Herons’ squad.

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Gressel is a two-time MLS Cup winner – having landed that prize with Atlanta United and Columbus Crew. He worked with Martino in Georgia and has also spent time with D.C. United and the Vancouver Whitecaps. The 30-year-old will link up with Inter Miami ahead of pre-season friendly dates against the likes of Vissel Kobe, Newell’s Old Boys and Cristiano Ronaldo’s Al-Nassr.

Should Liverpool be concerned? Egypt respond to fears over Mohamed Salah's safety after pitch invasion scare

Egypt's management team has finally addressed the issue of Mohamed Salah's safety after he was targeted by pitch invaders in Sierra Leone.

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Egypt responds to safety concernsSalah had to be escorted off the pitch by militaryEgypt beat Sierra Leone 2-0WHAT HAPPENED?

Liverpool star Salah was fortunate to escape unscathed after a group of intruders entered the pitch during Egypt's World Cup qualifying game against Sierra Leone on Sunday. The Pharaohs won the clash 2-0 courtesy of Trezeguet's brace. The security at the ground did not let the invaders come close to the superstar and Salah was later escorted off the field by the military.

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A day later, the Egyptian team management has finally responded and assured the superstar's fans and his club Liverpool that the incident was nothing serious, and said the invaders were just passionate Premier League followers. They further claimed that most of the people in Sierra Leone are Liverpool or Arsenal fans, so for them to witness Salah and Mohamed Elneny in action at their home was a rare experience.

WHAT EGYPT'S MANAGEMENT SAID

Speaking to , the team manager for the Egypt national team, Mohamed Ghoraba said: "The story of it being an assault is not there at all. Here, the people are very kind and they support Liverpool or Arsenal.

"For them, Mohamed Salah and Mohamed Elneny are icons, so their presence in the country is something they wish to happen again. For them, that's the only opportunity to have Salah playing in their ground, so it's normal like any fan entering the pitch."

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The Reds star is enjoying a rich vein of form in the ongoing season having scored 10 goals and provided four assists in 12 Premier League appearances. He is currently just three strikes behind Manchester City goal machine Erling Haaland in the Golden Boot race. The 31-year-old will be next seen in action against the Cityzens in the league on Saturday.

BCCI seeks fresh advice on CSK's demerger

The BCCI working committee has decided to seek fresh legal advice on Chennai Super Kings’ low valuation in an attempt to demerge the franchise from India Cements Ltd

Amol Karhadkar26-Apr-20155:46

‘CSK valuation didn’t add up’ – Sports law expert Sekhri

The BCCI working committee has decided to seek fresh legal advice on Chennai Super Kings’ low valuation in an attempt to demerge the franchise from India Cements Limited. The committee also authorised board president Jagmohan Dalmiya and secretary Anurag Thakur to decide the fate of Champions League Twenty20.”The committee decided to seek a fresh legal opinion on the demerger and transfer of shares of CSK for further action,” Thakur stated in a brief media release after the first working committee meeting of the new structure, which lasted almost four hours.It is understood that former BCCI president Shashank Manohar and Tamil Nadu Cricket Association vice-president PS Raman were involved in a heated exchange over Super Kings’ valuation. Manohar apparently pointed out that it was absurd of the Super Kings management to put base value of the proposed trust to administer the franchise as Rs 5 lakh (approx. $8000).The Baroda twist

Baroda Cricket Association’s Samarjit Gaekwad was barred from attending the working committee meeting, while vice-president Rakesh Parikh was allowed to be the official BCA representative. The decision was in contrast to the AGM, where Gaekwad was chosen to be the legitimate BCA representative.
The BCA has seen lots of infighting over the last year. Since Gaekwad was an N Srinivasan loyalist, AGM chairman Shivlal Yadav had ruled in favour of Gaekwad over Parikh and it made a huge impact on the outcome of the elections.
On Sunday, however, the working committee voted in favour of Parikh who presented a BCA managing committee resolution to back his claim.

Manohar is also understood to have pointed out that by approving the proposal on February 27, the previous governing council headed by Ranjib Biswal did not primarily act in the board’s interest. Since any change in control of a franchise results in a payment of 5% of the additional value, the BCCI accepted an application of Rs 25,000 as transfer fee for a franchise that spends at least Rs 120 crore (approximately $18.75 million) every season.Raman retorted by saying they had adhered to all the norms set by the BCCI and if the board backtracks on its approval, the Super Kings management may seek legal recourse.Considering the legal complexity of the issue, the house then absolved all the previous governing council members of any wrongdoing or ulterior motive to dupe the board and decided to seek legal recourse. The matter will now be forwarded to the BCCI’s legal consultants, Amarchand & Mangaldas, who will revert to Dalmiya and Thakur with their suggestions.The CLT20 discussion revolved largely around whether the tournament has become redundant for most of the stakeholders, especially the BCCI. When it was informed to the floor of the house that the broadcaster, Star India, is not to keen to continue its association, Dalmiya and Thakur were then authorised to have a last round of discussion with the broadcaster and take the final call over the future of the tournament.The working committee also accepted Thakur’s proposal to set up a cricket advisory committee that will have a major say in all cricket affairs. “The Working Committee of the BCCI authorised the President Mr Jagmohan Dalmiya to constitute a cricket advisory committee comprising of prominent cricketers who will share their recommendations on the overall conduct and development of the game,” the BCCI media release said.One of the first tasks of the new committee will be to initiate the procedure to appoint India’s support staff ahead of its next international assignment in June in consultation with Dalmiya and Thakur.The working committee also ratified Neeraj Kumar and Madhusudan Sharma’s appointment as consultants to the BCCI Anti-Corruption & Security Unit, and recommended Rohit Sharma for the Arjuna Award, one of the most prestigious honours for sportspersons instituted by the Government of India.

Jayawardene pushes case to open

Mahela Jayawardene has urged Sri Lanka’s national selectors to let him open the innings in one-day cricket for the final phase of his international career

Gaurav Kalra12-Nov-2014Sangakkara unhappy going home

Kumar Sangakkara has expressed dismay at being rested for the final two matches of the ongoing ODI series against India. Sangakkara is one of four players being withdrawn from the squad after Sri Lanka had lost the first three matches comfortably.
“Nobody likes to leave a series in the middle, especially when losing,” Sangakkara told . “We always like to stay together and earn a win when the team is losing. Leaving while winning is no problem.”
Sangakkara had arrived in India with a back complaint, but he said the injury had healed during the course of the series. “I think the selectors thought about the back injury and thought about safety. But it’s totally okay now, and because of me leaving there will be a chance for some other player – that’s important.”

Mahela Jayawardene has urged Sri Lanka’s national selectors to let him open the innings in one-day cricket for the final phase of his international career. Speaking exclusively to ESPNcricinfo in Kolkata ahead of the fourth one-day international against India on Thursday, Jayawardene said he had been “pushing for the move since the 2011 World Cup.””The only thing I haven’t done is gone down on my knees to the selectors and asked for me to be allowed to open,” Jayawardene joked. “I have felt that’s the position I should bat leading up to this World Cup. The selectors obviously have a different theory. Because the middle order isn’t experienced, they wanted me to be there. But every time I have opened the batting, I have played my best cricket, been consistent and controlled the game. So we’ll see. We still have three to four months before the World Cup.”Over his 16-year international career, Jayawardene has opened in just 32 of his 426 ODIs despite posting some impressive numbers in that position. He averages 44.76 as an ODI opener with four centuries and seven fifties at a strike rate of 91.48.”Every time an opener gets sick or has an injury, I am the first one to put my hand up and that’s how I got my opportunities,” he said. “In T20 cricket I’ve opened and that frees me up quite a bit and gives me that opportunity to start well and control the innings.”Jayawardene’s plea for a promotion up the order is unlikely to be accepted immediately, especially after he made an attractive 118 in 124 balls in the third ODI at Hyderabad batting at No.4. Jayawardene came into bat with Sri Lanka placed precariously at 7 for 2, and guided the innings with a typically cultured knock that included 12 fours and a six.”To bat in the middle makes a big difference, especially against a good quality attack. Personally, it’s good to get back into that competitive mode and get my game plan sorted.”Despite Jayawardene’s heroics, Sri Lanka lost the match by six wickets to give India an unassailable 3-0 lead in the series. Having suffered big defeats in the first two games as well, Jayawardene conceded that the series had been a “disappointing” outing.”We’ve been very consistent home and away this year but unfortunately we didn’t hit the stride as soon as we came here,” he said. “But you always try to look at things in a positive way. We were able to try a few options before the World Cup and give a few guys opportunities and see if they are up for the big occasion. I think all in all even though it’s a disappointing tour, we’ve learnt quite a bit.”Jayawardene is convinced that the setback in India will have no impact on the team’s preparations for the World Cup. Sri Lanka has been consistent at world tournaments over the last decade or so having reached the last two World Cup finals and three World T20 finals, winning the last one in Bangladesh. He believes this success is down to the ability of Sri Lanka’s players to “handle pressure really well.”Jayawardene is now looking ahead to his last World Cup campaign, in Australia and New Zealand next year, and is pleased with how Sri Lanka’s schedule has been drawn up going into the tournament.”We will be based in New Zealand and our preparation is going to be good. We have two Test matches and seven one-dayers against New Zealand before the World Cup,” he said. “Adapting to surfaces in Australia and New Zealand is going to be quite different. One hurdle at a time, get through that and then from the quarterfinals, it’s on the day, how you keep your head, keep calm and execute.”Having already retired from Test cricket earlier this year, Jaywaredne will end his international career after the World Cup. As he leaves the stage, Jayawardene is convinced the future of Sri Lankan cricket is secure with Angelo Mathews at the helm of affairs as captain.”He (Mathews) handles pressure really well as a batsman, and once you do that captaining the side becomes fairly natural as long as you are calm and collected,” Jayawardene said. “He had a fantastic year with the bat last year and as a captain as well, winning in England for the first time. He’s come a long way, we are happy that he’s settled now and by the time we leave, the team is in good hands.”

Marshall ton forges Gloucestershire fightback

Hamish Marshall saved Gloucestershire from first-day capitulation against Kent by scoring the 28th first-class hundred of his career in steamy Canterbury.

ECB Reporters Network08-May-2016
ScorecardHamish Marshall was facing a scoreline of 14 for 4 shortly after he arrived at the crease•Getty ImagesHamish Marshall saved Gloucestershire from first-day capitulation against Kent by scoring the 28th first-class hundred of his career in steamy Canterbury.Marshall rescued the visitors from the perils of 14 for 4 and led them to relative respectability at stumps on 296 for 9 after they had won the toss and chosen to bat.Extracting decent carry and a little nip off a first-day surface at The Spitfire Ground, St Lawrence, Kent’s veteran new-ball pairing Mitch Claydon and Darren Stevens shared six wickets, including two apiece inside the opening 18 overs of the match.The sixth-placed visitors lost Chris Dent 16 balls into the game. Pushing late and down the wrong line to a full-length ball from Claydon, he went lbw for a single.Four overs later, visiting No.3 Ian Cockbain, in attempting to pull against Claydon, edged through to keeper Adam Rouse to depart for a 12-ball duck.After an hour at the crease opener Cameron Bancroft pushed at a good length lifting leg-cutter from Stevens to be caught behind then, in his next over, Stevens produced a near identical delivery to account for Gareth Roderick and give Rouse a third catch of the session against his former county.Marshall’s back-foot cut through backward off the bowling of Calum Haggett opened his side’s boundary account once Stevens rested following an obdurate 10-over spell of 2 for 10 from the Pavilion End that included five maidens.Yet it was Matt Hunn, on his season’s debut, and Haggett claimed Kent’s only mid-session successes. Haggett bowled George Hankins to end a fifth-wicket stand that added 87 in 20.5 overs, then Hunn nipped one down the Canterbury slope to clip the top of middle stump as left-hander Kieran Noema-Barnett played back and across the line.Marshall might have gone with his score on 35, but Claydon was unable to cling on to a low caught and bowled chance in his follow-through allowing him to reach a 179-ball century with 11 fours.Kent were left a bowler light at 4.25pm when, after bowling the 69th over, offspinner Adam Riley went off the field with a suspected side strain.Marshall took full advantage to add 112 in 27.2 overs in tandem with Jack Taylor who looked assured in scoring a 74-ball 50 with seven fours. But Taylor blotted his copybook in the penultimate over before the second new ball by driving a return catch to Stevens for a gift third wicket of the day.Five deliveries later, Claydon’s first delivery of a new spell from the Nackington Road End, lifted, struck Marshall on the gloves and ballooned to Tom Latham at second slip to end his 202-ball stay. Marshall had batted almost four-and-a-half hours for his 112.Claydon and Stevens shared the second new ball but without success as ninth-wicket partners David Payne and Craig Miles added 39, before Miles edged a loose back-foot force against Haggett to Stevens at slip.Fresh from his three wickets, Stevens admitted that losing Riley with a side strain was a blow – and neither was he pleased about the tactics against Marshall.”We spoke about our lengths this morning and we were right on the money in the morning session, but when Hamish came in we pulled our lengths back that little bit too much,” said the Kent beneficiary.”Hamish is international quality. He left the ball really well today. It was like he’s been playing here for years, the way he played the slope and left well. We know he loves the short ball and he probably scored 50 or more, square, behind the wicket or down to third man. He hardly scored a run down the ground, so we need to learn from that second time around.”Kent had made three team changes to the side that beat Glamorgan by 10 wickets to move third in the Division Two table on Wednesday.Opening bowler Matt Coles, suspended for two games under the ECB’s disciplinary procedures, was replaced by Haggett. Top-order bat Sean Dickson needed eight stitches in his left hand after cutting himself when trying to repair a fan at his home.The South African could be out for a fortnight and was replaced by Alex Blake, while Hunn was preferred to rookie seamer Hugh Bernard, who made his first-class debut in the win over Glamorgan.

Will Lionel Messi play again this season? Inter Miami boss Tata Martino delivers injury update as MLS play-off dreams fade

Lionel Messi has sat out four successive games for Inter Miami, but the Argentine superstar may figure in MLS again before the 2023 season is over.

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All-time great nursing a knockHas sat out four games in a rowNo risks taken on his fitnessWHAT HAPPENED?

The seven-time Ballon d’Or winner has been ruled out for the Florida-based franchise at the worst possible time, with a dip in results seeing their play-off dreams fade. A 4-1 defeat at the Chicago Fire last time out may have put the final nail in that coffin.

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Messi is nursing an injury picked up while on 2026 World Cup qualifying duty with Argentina in September, with no risks being taken on his fitness, but Tata Martino has said when asked if the all-time great will figure in any of Inter Miami’s final three games of the current campaign in America: “I think he’s getting closer to playing again. As we said, we’ll evaluate him tomorrow and Friday to see if he’s in condition [to play]. The most important thing is he’s leaving his injury behind and slowly discovering his best form… we’ll see what’s most convenient ahead of the next game. I suppose just like Barcelona in their moment, PSG [Paris Saint-Germain] in their moment, the Argentine national team in their moment, why wouldn’t we miss having the best player in the world? Even when we win, we miss him.”

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Messi inspired Inter Miami to a historic Leagues Cup triumph within weeks of his arrival in the United States, while also helping them to the U.S. Open Cup final, but Martino says acquiring the South American superstar was always part of a long-term plan. He added: “I always thought that these six months were to shape the club, and have an excellent 2024.”

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Inter Miami may have to turn their attention towards next season, when Messi will be fully rested and recovered, as they have just three more games to take in this term and a five-point gap to try and bridge to the Eastern Conference play-off places.

‘It’s a different level’ – Wrexham boss Phil Parkinson says international call-ups for James McClean and Jacob Mendy demonstrate club’s 'profile'

Phil Parkinson has claimed that the international call-ups for James McClean and Jacob Mendy demonstrate Wrexham's "profile" is "different level".

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McClean called up IrelandMendy made it to the Gambia bench against BurundiParkinson thrilled with international call-upsWHAT HAPPENED?

Wrexham will miss the services of Mendy and McClean against Accrington Stanley in League Two as the players have been called up by Gambia and the Republic of Ireland, respectively. While McClean was set to retire from international football against New Zealand on November 21, injuries to Will Smallbone and Festy Ebosele forced manager Stephen Kenny to call him up for the weekend's Euro 2024 qualifier against the Netherlands as well.

The international call-ups have been well welcomed by Parkinson as, despite losing key players, he believes they reinstate the quality his side have despite plying their trade in League Two.

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Speaking to he said: "It just shows that playing for Wrexham you're getting recognition, irrespective of being in League Two. The profile of the club, it's kind of a different level for a normal League Two club because of the reasons that everybody knows."

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Mendy was an unused substitute during Gambia's 3-2 loss to Burundi, but Parkinson hopes that he will get some minutes in the next match against Ivory Coast on Sunday to prove his mettle on the international stage.

"The Gambian manager has been monitoring him, closely," Parkinson said. "There's other players in his position and he's got competition as you'd expect. But he's done well to get in there. Obviously, he wants to have some minutes to show what he can do. I'd like to see him get some game time and not have a trip where he goes there and is just a squad player. Obviously we've got a lot of belief in Jacob and we think he's a really good player."

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WHAT NEXT FOR WREXHAM?

Parkinson will have to trust his squad depth against Accrington on Saturday as McClean and Mendy are away with their respective national teams. On the other hand, McClean will be itching to get a run against the Dutch on Saturday. It could end up being his final competitive match for Ireland before calling curtains on his international career against the Kiwis next Tuesday.

Jordan's excellence sets up Joyce

The national selector, James Whitaker, might have ventured to Edgbaston to see the batting of Jonathan Trott and Ian Bell, but it was Ed Joyce who stood out amid the wreckage of a day on which 20 wickets fell

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Apr-2014
ScorecardChris Jordan was in the wickets against as Sussex routed Warwickshire•Getty ImagesThe national selector, James Whitaker, might have ventured to Edgbaston to see the batting of Jonathan Trott and Ian Bell, but it was Ed Joyce who stood out amid the wreckage of a day on which 20 wickets fell.At a time when Associate nations have been given a pathway, albeit a pathway strewn with obstacles, along the route to Test cricket, Joyce provided a compelling reminder of the class of batsmen outside the current elite. In seam-friendly conditions in which everyone else struggled, he oozed quality, compiling a century from 116 balls. Only two other men passed 30 and no-one else on either side managed to reach 40.Joyce’s enterprise left Sussex with a potentially decisive first-innings lead of 142 as they immediately threatened to add to an innings victory in their opening Championship match of the season against Middlesex at Hove.This was Joyce’s second first-class century of the season – following an innings of 103 against Loughborough MCCU – and his 14th since joining Sussex at the start of 2009. It was chanceless until he reached 100 – Trott then put down a relatively straightforward chance on the midwicket boundary – and was studded with fluent drives through the covers and graceful flicks off the pads. There are few higher-quality, more elegant batsmen in the county game.While Joyce may take the headlines, Sussex’s dominant position was established by their seamers. Utilising helpful conditions expertly, a quartet of bowlers that have all been deemed surplus to requirements by Surrey at one stage or another dismissed Warwickshire for their lowest first-class total this century.Indeed, it was only the third time this century they have been dismissed for under 100 and is their lowest total since their 86 against Essex in 1999. It was also their lowest total against Sussex since they were dismissed for 43 here in 1982.Chris Jordan, in particular, can only have impressed Whitaker. Bowling at a sharp pace, finding movement both ways and maintaining an excellent line and length, he cut through the top-order with a series of deliveries that were close to unplayable. Certainly Laurie Evans could have done little with the ball that bounced and left him, while Varun Chopra and Bell were also victims of fast, well-directed deliveries that drew strokes and moved late to take the edge.Odd though it sounds for a team that lost all 10 of its wickets before lunch, Warwickshire were victims more of excellent bowling and slip catching – six wickets fell to catches in the cordon – than they were guilty of poor batting.It was a scenario that caused Bell to rue his decision to bat first upon winning the toss. He later admitted he had “got that one wrong,” but, after lunch, as conditions eased, it was easy to see why he had batted first. In truth, it was an excellent toss to lose and Joyce admitted that he, while he would have chosen to bowl, he was in two minds about what to do.The ECB’s pitch liaison officer, Jack Birkenshaw, left after tea having declared himself satisfied with the pitch. There was some seam movement, as you would expect on April 13, but much of the damage was done by swing. That has nothing to do with the pitch.Jordan received excellent support from Steve Magoffin, who created indecision in the batsmen’s minds by moving the ball both ways, and Jon Lewis, who would rarely have seen conditions as much to his liking as this in his spell at The Oval. Jimmy Anyon, back at one of his previous clubs, also claimed the 300th first-class wicket of his career when Chris Woakes attempted to turn a straight one into the leg side.”Jordan would bring something new to the England team,” Joyce said afterwards. “He bowls with pace, he swings the ball, he is a good first slip and he bats well. He was exceptional today.”The one man who looked comfortable was Trott. Given a rousing reception by the 1,500 spectators enjoying the Spring sunshine, Trott played the moving ball expertly and looked every inch a Test-class batsman. It was some surprise when, left with the tail for company, he attempted to force the pace and, in trying to run one to third man, chopped a ball on to his stumps.”They bowled outstandingly well,” Bell agreed later. “There actually weren’t that many bad shots. You saw some genuine dismissals and Jordan, especially, was brilliant. He bowled exactly where we didn’t want it. We’re a long way behind in this game and we have to come out scrapping tomorrow.”Perhaps the day could have been even better for Sussex. By the time they began their reply, conditions had eased considerably and they had an opportunity to bat Warwickshire out of the game. Starting brightly against some loose bowling from Chris Wright and Keith Barker, they were brought to heel by the excellent Woakes and canny Jeetan Patel and may yet come to regret some profligate batting. Joyce apart, they batted poorly.A first innings lead of 142 is substantial, certainly, but with several batsmen falling to loose strokes – Joyce pulled directly to the midwicket fence where Trott made amends for his earlier error; Rory Hamilton-Brown heaved across the line; Luke Wells turned one to mid-wicket and Ben Brown edged a waft – they may yet reflect that they have missed a chance to kill off a dangerous adversary.Sussex have a poor record at Edgbaston. They have only won once in the Championship here since 1961 and that was back in 1982.”We’re a little frustrated,” Joyce continued. “We would have liked to be five or six down. But Woakes came back at us really well and Warwickshire probably have the strongest seam unit in the country. We expect an attritional day tomorrow.”The other shadow on Sussex’s day was the continuing struggles of Matt Prior with an Achilles injury. Prior has struggled with Achilles problems for a couple of years and, having not been fit to keep wicket in Sussex’s first game against Middlesex, was obliged to pull out of this game entirely.Sussex hope that an injection and a two-week period of rest will resolve the issue but, with England looking to rebuild with a team that can see them through the next few years, there have to be doubts over Prior’s long-term fitness. At present, Sussex hope to have him back for their game against Somerset, though it may be he is able only to bat and not keep wicket.

CSA turns down Jennings application

Ray Jennings, the coach who took South Africa Under-19s to victory in the World Cup, will be out of a job from next week

Firdose Moonda23-Apr-2014Ray Jennings, the coach who took South Africa’s Under-19 squad to victory in the World Cup in the UAE last month, will be out of a job from next week. Jennings applied for a position within CSA’s development structures but was overlooked in favour of Lawrence Mahatlane, the former assistant coach of the Lions franchise. Shukri Conrad, who was in charge of both the Cobras and Lions, has been appointed national academy head coach.”I am bitterly disappointed,” Jennings told ESPNcricinfo. “But if the system doesn’t want you, then it doesn’t want you. It’s upsetting that it was left so late to let me know.” Interviews were conducted over the last three weeks but Jennings was only informed of the decision today.With just a week left until he will be out of contract Jennings admitted he is concerned about his future. “I’ll have to sit down and think properly about it,” he said while also mooting the possibility that he need to look beyond South Africa’s borders for employment. “But all these things take time.”Jennings had a hint that his services would no longer be required when he returned triuphant from the U-19 World Cup in March. Then, it was announced the role of U-19 coach would cease to exist its current form when Jennings’ contract expired at the end of April and would be split into two positions.CSA have since announced the position of U-19 head coach still exists, which was the job Jennings applied for. Mahatlane has been assigned to the role. Mahatlane obtained a Level Four coaching certificate in 2008 and was at the helm when the Gauteng Strikers, the provincial side who play at the tier below franchise level, won the three-day competition in the 2006-07 season and the one-day competition in 2007-08. He stopped coaching in 2011 but has worked as a cricket and rugby radio commentator for the public broadcaster, the SABC.The second post focuses on the national academy which will also involve running the academy from May to September standardising all the provincial academies. Conrad has been given this job. Conrad won the one-day competition with the Gauteng team in the 2003-04 season before the franchise system was introduced. He was then in charge of the Cobras for five years in which time he won the all three trophies on offer in separate seasons: the one-day cup (2006-07), the 20-over tournament (2008-09) and the first-class competition (2009-10). In 2011 he worked with the Ugandan national side and has since appeared on television commentary.The pair will look to fill the continuity gap left by Jennings, who has been in charge of South Africa’s U-19 side since 2006. Jennings has taken the side to five World Cups and he remembered that in that time, the various teams he has led have only lost four matches. He has also coached at provincial level, having been in charge of domestic teams Easterns and Gauteng and at international level with the South African A side and South Africa’s national side between 2004 and 2006.This is the second job Jennings has lost this year. In January, he was axed from the Royal Challengers Bangalore when they unveiled Daniel Vettori was their new head coach.

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