Jones targets August comeback

Simon Jones suggested he could be back playing cricket in two months time as his recovery from a horrific knee injury continues to make good progress.He had a major operation to rebuild his knee in February after he tore the ligaments in the joint during that sickening tumble in Brisbane on the opening day of the 2002-03 Ashes series.Talking in Cardiff after a brief bowl in the nets with his leg heavily-strapped, Jones said: “Things are going well and I’m happy.”Reflecting on the injury, he said: “It was an absolute nightmare but it’s all in the past and I am looking to the future. I’ve had a chat with the physio and the medical staff around here and maybe I could play again at the end of August.”However, after such a serious operation, an August return might be pushing it a bit, and Jones did sensibly offer a note of caution: “If I’m not right I won’t play, but I’ll be looking to go to Australia for the winter.”

Our cricket is heading in the right direction: Aminul Islam

Aminul Islam is one of the stars of the Bangladesh cricket team. Theright-handed batsman, who captained Bangladesh in the 1999 World Cup, spoketo CricInfo during their recent tour of Sri Lanka.”It’s a nice place to be and a lovely place to play cricket. My previousvisit was in 1997 and it’s good to be here,” he enthused. “This side is oneof the best in the business and I am glad to be playing against them.”Even though Bangladesh were soundly beaten in the inaugural Test Matchbetween the two countries (as has happened in all the five Test Matches theyhave played in so far) Aminul, who’s popularly known as Bulbul, believestheir cricket is on the right path.”I feel we are heading in the right direction,” says the 33-year-old. “We’vegot a good structure, which is very important. The Board has done well tohire good Sri Lankan coaches over there. We might lose Test Matches bythumping margins, but that doesn’t matter as long as we learn things. Slowlywe’ll draw matches and in five or ten years time hopefully we can regularlywin.”He made his ODI debut in 1988 and from then on Bangladesh has played 40one-games and he’s missed just two of them due to injury. During the longcareer he’s also captained Bangladesh before they achieved Test status,”I have enjoyed my captaincy to the core,” says Aminul. “The two victoriesin the World Cup were so special and so were the wins in the warm up gamesagainst Essex and Middlesex.”And among those wins for this stylish batsman the victory against Pakistanin the 1999 World Cup was the greatest achievement, “The victory againstPakistan was like winning the World Cup for us.”Aminul feels that the win gave him greater self-belief, “Whenever I am downI go back to that moment and it gives me so much of confidence. After all,if we can beat Pakistan then we can beat anyone in the world.”When the country was granted Test status he lost his job to Naimur Rahmanwho had the honour of captaining Bangladesh in the Inaugural Test Match. Butno one could steal the limelight from Aminul as he made a classy 145 againstIndia on debut. That was the third highest score by a player on debut.”That 145 against India was a memorable innings and undoubtedly my bestknock,” he believes. “Firstly, it was a historical Test and secondly I wasout of form at the time. I was lucky to play in that Test and I am glad thatI made the most out of the opportunity.””I now want to play at least 25 Test Matches and then I’ll see how thingsare going for me and retire. When I retire I want to work as a coach in mycountry. This country has given me so much and it’s my duty to givesomething back.”

Netherlands through after four-wicket win

Scorecard and ball by ball details3:14

‘Still a lot of work to do in India – Borren

A dream start in the field for Netherlands set up a tight chase as the Dutch booked a spot in the ICC World Twenty20 for the third time with a four-wicket win. Namibia held out hope for an unlikely victory after Bernard Scholtz spun through Netherlands middle order with 3 for 14 to leave the them at 103 for 5 in the 15th over, needing 136 to win. However, Max O’Dowd and Roelof van der Merwe put on a 30-run stand before Mudassar Bukhari hit the winning boundary through cover with four balls to spare.Netherlands now to move on to the semifinals against Ireland on Saturday while Namibia will have a second chance to qualify for the World T20 when they take on Oman in an elimination match on Thursday.Namibia’s nerves made for a nightmare in the first two overs, as both openers were gone with only five runs on the board. Gerrie Snyman hared hopelessly from the non-striker’s end on the second delivery of the match and a throw from Bukhari at square leg to the bowler Michael Swart dismissed Namibia’s most explosive player without facing a ball.Stephen Baard skied a short ball from Timm van der Gugten to van der Merwe at cover and the group stage’s leading scorer was out for just 4. Craig Williams and Raymond van Schoor remained positive, though, with Williams striking four boundaries in the Powerplay to take Namibia to 37 for 2 after six overs.The pair added 57 for the third wicket in eight overs before Williams holed out to midwicket for 43 off Peter Borren and at the halfway mark Namibia were 62 for 3. Van Schoor was lured out of his crease pushing forward to van der Merwe and stumped for 16 off 25 balls in the 12th. Borren, Bukhari and Pieter Seelaar continued to tie down the Namibia lineup through the 16th with Gerhard Erasmus caught in the deep off Bukhari for 5.Only 30 runs were added from overs 11 to 16, but captain Nicolaas Scholtz gave Namibia a fighting chance with his late 37 off 23 balls. He struck two sixes over long off against van der Merwe in the 17th and another 13 runs were taken in the 19th off Bukhari. His stand with Sarel Burger ended at 52 on the second-last ball of the innings when Nicolaas was caught behind swishing against van der Gugten.Though Malahide has been a low-scoring ground through the four days of matches so far, 133 never looked like it was going to be enough against a deep Netherlands batting unit. Snyman managed to snag Wesley Barresi on the first ball of the chase as the opener flicked a leading edge up to the keeper JP Kotze on a delivery that had been heading well down leg for a wide if left alone.Namibia needed to take all their chances in the field to keep pressure on Netherlands but the first of three was shelled in the third over off Snyman. Myburgh drove hard to Williams at mid-off on 9 but a lunging effort was spilled. He made Namibia pay in the fourth over by smacking JJ Smit for three consecutive boundaries. He hit his sixth four off Jason Davidson in the fifth, but the tall seamer came back with a slower ball to get Myburgh for 31, making it 45 for 2 after five.Bernard was brought on in the ninth over and his valiant Man-of-the-Match effort was nearly enough for Namibia. He extracted prodigious turn from outside off to beat Ben Cooper through the gate on his second ball to make it 70 for 3 and started the 13th by getting Borren to scoop one to Williams at long off. He should’ve had Swart stumped for 22 three balls later but a regulation chance was fumbled by Kotze. He managed to get Swart in the 15th, though, pushing a low return catch that withstood scrutiny from the third umpire, but with his spell done, Namibia’s attack was out of bullets.A six by van der Merwe to start the 17th over brought the required rate back under a run-a-ball and the Dutch looked certain to get across the line with just three needed off the final over. Van der Merwe tried to end it with a heave but was beaten in flight and bowled by Nicolaas. Bukhari coolly drove the winning runs off the following ball.

Northerns top the table

Northerns went to the top of the Logan Cup table with a convincing innings-and-83-run victory over Westerns at Harare Sports Club to follow their defeat of defending champions Easterns in the first round. Hundreds from Elton Chigumbura and Alois Tichana steered Northerns to 417 for 6 and then Westerns were bowled out twice in five sessions. Ray Price did much of the damage, taking 4 for 24 and 3 for 32, and only Thabo Mboyi with 67 in the first innings and Tafadzwa Ngulube with 51 in the second passed fifty for Westerns.Defending champions Easterns bounced back from their first-round loss to beat Southerns by an innings and seven runs in Mutare. Southerns were bowled out for 271 on the opening day, and Easterns took a first-innings lead of 116, thanks to a double hundred from Stuart Matsikenyeri, after seeming set to be bowled out cheaply. Matsikenyeri added 97 for the seventh wicket with Steven Nyamuzinga and exactly 100 for the tenth with Shingi Masakadza. Tafadzwa Kamungozi finished with career-best figures of 7 for 104 from 33 overs. In their second innings, Southerns limped to 109, with Prosper Utseya picking up 4 for 25.

Team Mat Won Lost Tied Draw Aban Pts
Northerns 2 2 0 0 0 0 37
Easterns 2 1 1 0 0 0 25
Centrals 1 1 0 0 0 0 17
Southerns 1 0 1 0 0 0 7
Westerns 2 0 2 0 0 0 7

Kolpak ruling is killing international cricket, says Majola

“If nothing is done, international cricket will just go downhill,” says Gerald Majola © Wisden Cricket Monthly

Gerald Majola, chief executive of Cricket South Africa, said the European Union’s (EU) Kolpak ruling is killing international cricket and urged affected governments and the ICC to address the issue.Under the Kolpak ruling a player from any nation sharing an associate trading relationship with the EU is free to play as a professional within the EU. Since the ECB allows only two overseas players for each county, this ruling enables the counties to circumvent the limitation and hire professionals from outside England, especially from South Africa.Speaking after 22-year-old Highveld Lions batsman Vaughn van Jaarsveld became the latest player to sign a Kolpak contract, Majola told the , “We are particularly worried about the young players taking up Kolpak contracts. We have invested a lot of money in them, through the national cricket academy and in other ways.””Vaughn is a case in point. We have been watching him since he was at school. We could see he had something special, now he has indicated that he wants to try to qualify to play for England, and our investment in him is lost.”Majola said that England was as badly affected by the ruling as South Africa. “Because of the strength of the pound, they can get a better and cheaper Kolpak player than an English player. This means that English players are having difficulty coming through the system.””The whole Kolpak thing is affecting international cricket, with more and more players opting to play county cricket. If nothing is done, you’ll find the world’s best players on the county circuit, with second string players representing their countries, and international cricket will just go downhill.”

Gilchrist looks to play beyond World Cup

‘After a three-month break, I am dead keen for the [Australian] summer to start and the Champions Trophy, the Ashes and the World Cup to begin’ – Gilchrist © Getty Images

Adam Gilchrist, the Australian wicketkeeper, says he is looking at remaining in cricket beyond next year’s World Cup in the Caribbean. Gilchrist, 34, who requires 41 more dismissals to usurp compatriot Ian Healy at the top of the Test wicketkeeping list, had previously indicated that he might quit the game after the tournament to spend more time with his young family.Exhausted after a year of near non-stop cricket, Gilchrist headed home from Bangladesh last April and wondered how much longer he could maintain his packed playing schedule. “If you had sat me down after Bangladesh and asked me how much time I had left in the game, you probably would have gotten a different answer to now,” Gilchrist told . “I’m not keen on making any big statements, but right now I am looking to keep playing.”I have voiced the opinion that I think there is too much cricket being played at the moment but, after a three-month break, I am dead keen for the [Australian] summer to start and the Champions Trophy, the Ashes and the World Cup to begin. Beyond that, you never know if your physical game or the skills are still going to be there but, if they are, I can’t see why I would stop. The schedule is pretty clear for a while after the World Cup.”Since making his debut in 1999, Gilchrist has not missed a Test. He has scored 5124 Test runs at 48.80 with 16 centuries in 85 Tests and is tied for third with Rod Marsh on 355 dismissals. Fitness permitting, Gilchrist may become the first wicketkeeper in Test history to claim 400 dismissals.”I will go to my grave saying that my job is to keep wickets,” Gilchrist said. “The keeping has been really pleasing lately. There is still plenty of motivation for me to keep playing. I can’t see any value in playing just one form of the game, either.”Gilchrist’s batting has been under fire since England’s regaining of the Ashes last year. Since Andrew Flintoff unveiled his highly effective around-the-wicket, at-the-body line throughout last year’s Ashes series, Gilchrist has averaged 26.88.”I might have fallen short of my own standards with the bat, but I still am doing quite well compared to the other keepers over the course of history,” he said. “That’s not to say that I won’t be working hard to get the batting right. My century [144 against Bangladesh in Fatullah] recently was one of my better ones, and has given me a lot of confidence.”I’m thinking about facing [Flintoff] again the same way I thought of it in the ICC Super Series. I am just really looking forward to getting back out there against the likes of Flintoff and [Stephen] Harmison and enjoying the challenge in the Ashes series later this year.”

Meuleman makes quick recovery from dislocated shoulder

Batsman Scott Meuleman has made an amazing recovery from a dislocated shoulder and will play for Western Australia in the ING Cup match against New South Wales at North Sydney Oval on Sunday.The return of Meuleman, who injured his left shoulder in the first over of Western Australia’s opening match on October 15, is a big boost for the side that has missed his tenacious defence and sweet timing at the top of the order. The only change to the team that took on Tasmania was Beau Casson, the left-arm wrist spinner, replacing Aaron Heal, the left-arm orthodox spinner.New South Wales have named an unchanged team to the one that lost to Tasmania on Sunday. The Blues were beaten by three wickets despite an impressive debut from the spinner Jason Krejza, who took 3 for 45. Krejza has been selected alongside the experienced legspinner Stuart MacGill.Western Australia Michael Hussey (c), Murray Goodwin, Beau Casson, Michael Clark, Kade Harvey, Brad Hogg, Steve Magoffin, Scott Meuleman, Marcus North, Luke Ronchi, Adam Voges, Darren Wates.New South Wales Brad Haddin (c), Nathan Bracken, Shawn Bradstreet, Stuart Clark, Phil Jaques, Jason Krejza, Greg Mail, Stuart MacGill, Matthew Nicholson, Aaron O’Brien, Matthew Phelps, Dominic Thornely.

Tudor leads Surrey's survival bid

Scorecard

Alex Tudor: three quick wickets in comeback game© Getty Images

If Surrey are relegated, will the public mourn the decline of a side that played exhilarating cricket and finished in the top five every season for the past six years, or rejoice at the fall of English cricket’s dominant force? If Surrey’s footballing equivalent, Manchester United, were to be dumped from the Premiership at the end of the forthcoming campaign, it would send many happy fans to bed with smiles on their faces. But the country’s attitude to Surrey is less clear, and they may yet escape finding out if they push home the advantage their bowlers gained on the second day at The Brit Oval.Worcestershire closed on 281 for 8, 94 runs adrift of Surrey’s first-innings 375. It’s a winning position for Surrey, and a position they must take advantage of. They have four more games to save themselves, and their coach, Steve Rixon, said before this contest that they needed to win three of their remaining fixtures, all of which are against quality sides also somehow caught up in the fight against relegation – two against Lancashire, and one apiece against Kent and Sussex. Rixon’s statement puts pressure on Surrey, who have been strangely incapable of coping with the slightest whiff of a problem. They have gone from a team which, like the Australians, seemed to take a perverse pleasure from seeing opponents squirm, to a team who don’t want to upset anyone. From Margaret Thatcher to Thora Hird.This time, however, they are responding well. Alex Tudor, in his first start of the season, has probably been unaffected by Surrey’s dire form, because he has been so wrapped up in his long road back from injury. If he had something to prove, he didn’t let himself down. It was his devastating spell in the afternoon that accounted for three Worcestershire batsmen, and began to make Surrey believe that Division Two is no place for them.At 159 for 1, with Stephen Moore back in the dressing-room retired hurt and Stephen Peters the only loss after a swaggering 75-ball 74, Surrey were on the ropes, and several of their players might have spent the tea break swapping CVs with the builders in charge of modernising the Vauxhall end of the ground. But Tudor ripped out Graeme Hick, Vikram Solanki and Andrew Hall for the addition of only eight runs. Jimmy Ormond also accounted for Ben Smith in the middle of Tudor’s 15 minutes of catharsis.Later, Tudor snaffled the vital wicket of Moore, who had been forced to leave the field in the rather rosy position of 144 for 1, and then required to return in the weedy predicament of 189 for 6. He had added an important 50 for the eighth wicket with Steven Rhodes before falling for a watchful 76 with only six overs remaining.At 299 for 4 overnight, Surrey had been wonderfully well placed to put the game out of Worcestershire’s reach. But the morning session summed up their season. In the previous six years they would have punished sides, battering them into submission and picking on their fragile confidence and spirit; but now they are too cautious, unsure of how to push home the advantage. Only one Championship win this season tells its own story, and that story must have been replaying itself over and over again in the minds of the incoming batsmen. They lost their remaining wickets with the addition of only 76 runs in just under 30 overs. No signs of asserting any kind of dominance, then. Worse still, their last four wickets melted away for just a single run.Only Mark Ramprakash’s fifth century of the season allowed Surrey to set a competitive target against a side who have the rather fortunate habit of making big scores. They have reached 400 on six occasions this season, once going on to make 500 and another time they passed 600. With scores like these, Worcestershire are hard to beat, and a draw just isn’t good enough for Surrey. They had better hope Tudor’s efforts aren’t wasted by the rest of the attack.

Rain hits SPCL programme again

The ECB Southern Electric Premier Cricket League has been sent reeling by a third successive weekend of wet weather.All 17 of Saturday’s scheduled matches were either postponed or abandoned – play did begin on five grounds – leaving clubs counting the cost."I suppose the players did have the consolation of watching Saints in the FA Cup final on television," remarked Premier League chairman Alan Bundy."But, generally speaking, its been a pretty horrendous start, particularly after the superb pre-season weather we enjoyed in March and April, when the pitches would have been hard."Bundy revealed that Saturday’s complete washout meant that 26 out of 47 scheduled Premier League matches so far this season had fallen foul of the elements."And in the 21 matches that actually finished, 12 have been affected by the weather, with games determined by faster overall scoring rates."Worst hit have been 2001 Premier champions BAT Sports, who have so far managed to play just 11 overs and 40 minutes league cricket this season."Our first game at Bournemouth was called off, then the Portsmouth game was abandoned after less than an hour."We mutually agreed that yesterday’s game at Andover could be put back 24 hours so the lads could watch the cup final, but, not surprisingly, London Road was waterlogged after the rain of the previous two days," moaned BAT skipper Richard Dibden.Bournemouth have fared little better, playing – and significantly – beating South Wilts in only one of three scheduled starts.Their visit to Portsmouth on Saturday was postponed, as was Bashley-Rydal’s home game with Liphook & Ripsley.It was Bashley’s first postponement – the Foresters having beaten Calmore, but lost to Havant in a 29-over match.Both of Lymington’s home matches at the Sports Ground have been called off.They were due to have entertained Old Tauntonians & Romsey.New Milton have managed to start both of their Premier Division 3 games, but Saturday’s visit to Havant was abandoned with Milton 118-4 (Richard Wilson 36) after 36 overs.Flamingo’s decision to delay their home match with Waterlooville paid dividends – the Corhampton club winning a low scoring affair by four wickets at The Holt.Dave Wright (5-18) and Stuart Brittan (3-30) combined to dismiss Ville for 70 – a total Flamingo hardly looked capable of bettering when Andy Love (4-18) ran through the top order.But cousins Kevin Brewster (24) and Ian Hitchings (19) lifted Flamingo from a desperate 25-5 to within touching distance of a crucial win.Mr Bundy pointed out that the bad weather hits cricket clubs hard, particularly in the pocket. "Most of the Premier League clubs only open their bars at weekends when there is cricket on."Places like Bashley, Havant, Lymington and Romsey are real social focal points after matches, with players from three or four teams all congregating after games."On a nice summer’s day, the places are buzzing, with vital income going across the bar. No cricket means no money – and that’s worrying," he said.On Saturday, Calmore Sports got started at Lower Bemerton and were 64-2 when their visit to South Wilts was called off after 21 overs.Newly promoted Gosport Borough had reached 44-1 at Sparsholt when the rains came down, while Ventnor were well placed at 107-2 when play against South Wilts II was abandoned.Play also began at Hungerford and New Milton, before the weather took a winning hand.

Harare prepares for David and Goliath battle

Tomorrow sees the start of a biblical encounter at Harare Sports Club as Zimbabwe take on South Africa, with David having suffered serious reverses in the artillery department that enabled him to win his original battle three thousand years ago.Zimbabwe are severely handicapped by the loss of Heath Streak’s three leading pace-bowling assistants during the winter series: Brighton Watambwa, Andy Blignaut and Bryan Strang. True, South Africa have lost Allan Donald, but they were preparing for life without him anyway. The treadmill of modern cricket is wearing down players, especially pace bowlers. Zimbabwe players have had only the months of May and August free from international cricket in the past year – even then they were in training for the next series – and it is a source of relief that Heath Streak’s suspect knee has not yet seriously rebelled against the pressure.The selectors could have brought together, instead, the trio of pacemen that brought Zimbabwe successive Test victories against India and Pakistan three years ago. Streak and Henry Olonga opened the bowling with fire, while Pommie Mbangwa tied up the batsmen superbly while they rested. Had any one of these three been missing on those two occasions, Zimbabwe would almost certainly not have won.Olonga was in the squad and reported fit, but he has not played much cricket for several months and was not at his best. Mbangwa was not in the squad; selectorial policy during the last year, though, has been to prefer pace and the potential to bowl wicket-taking deliveries to accuracy, and Mbangwa appears to have fallen badly out of favour without doing much wrong. Gary Brent is another medium-pacer who served the country well in the past but has seemingly been forgotten. Preference was given to the greater pace of Travis Friend, while Doug Hondo is set to make his Test debut. Last season Hondo took eight wickets at 40 each in five first-class matches, and will be under pressure to prove that he merits a place.The batsmen are all fit – at the time of writing – with Andy Flower’s hand having made good progress without being completely right; he is such a valuable player, though, that he was always certain to play barring accidents. Tatenda Taibu was in the squad, however, were it to be decided that Flower could not keep wicket.For once the selectors had a problem in which of their batsmen to leave out. Of the first six in the order, Alistair Campbell, the two Flowers and Guy Whittall are long-established players and permanent fixtures when fit. Hamilton Masakadza could hardly be dropped after his debut century against West Indies. That left room for two out of Dion Ebrahim, who has been opening with Campbell in recent Tests, Stuart Carlisle, returned from injury, and Craig Wishart, who showed the best form of the three during the winter. Carlisle, a fixture throughout last year and the man whose fighting innings won that crucial Second Test against India, was the man genuinely unfortunate to be left out. Had he not broken his finger in the field against West Indies, Masakadza would not have been given a chance.If the pitch is prepared to suit the home side, it will probably be pretty flat with any intentional help to be given to the spinners rather than the pacemen. Memories are still fresh of that disaster two years ago when the pitch was watered too much overnight, giving an inordinate advantage to the team that won the toss. In such situations, as Napoleon observed, God is on the side of the big battalions, and the South African pacemen enjoyed an early Christmas. Zimbabwe have only one specialist spin bowler in their squad, though, with Raymond Price selected instead of leg-spinners Brian Murphy, still not fully fit from his ankle injury, and Paul Strang.Little need be said of the South African team, except that their ability to steamroll weaker sides has never been in doubt. But we need no computer analyst to find a pattern in each of Zimbabwe’s last five Test series (two matches each), since April last year, excluding that against newcomers Bangladesh. In the first match of all five series, Zimbabwe have lost, mainly due to poor batting, with seven wickets being the smallest margin of defeat. Then, in the Second Test, they have fought back strongly, defeating India, drawing three times, and only New Zealand have been able to force home a second victory.The players will have to guard against a repetition of that pattern against South Africa. It will not be easy to do better, as they are a stronger team than any of the others Zimbabwe have played in the last 18 months. They would appear to have no hope of victory – but that was what everybody said before that famous World Cup match of 1999 at Chelmsford.Both teams are perhaps less well-prepared than they would have liked, although Zimbabwe have been in training for the past three weeks. With Carl Rackemann in Australia, former national coach Dave Houghton has been in charge of the cricketing side. Captain Heath Streak said that they had a good practice match last week and had been working hard in the nets.Zimbabwe are very respectful of South Africa, he said, adding: “But I believe that if we can put together a team effort we certainly have a chance to give them a scare and win a game.” It will always be unlikely, and Zimbabwe’s best chance is if the South Africans become subconsciously overconfident. But if the Zimbabweans all play to their potential they have the ability to give any team in the world a tough game.South Africa has traditionally been the team Zimbabweans have supported over the years, apart from their own. This stems from the years, prior to independence in 1980, when Rhodesian cricket, as it was then, was part of the South African Currie Cup – as it was then! Players from this country, like Colin Bland, John Traicos and Jack du Preez – now the only former Rhodesian and South African player still living in Zimbabwe – played Test cricket for South Africa.That is no longer the case, for a variety of reasons. Despite the proximity of the two countries, there is a widespread feeling that South Africa have not supported Zimbabwean cricket as well as they should have. Tomorrow’s match will be only the fourth Test between the two countries – of the senior Test-playing countries, only Australia have played Zimbabwe less frequently. In one-day cricket, South Africa stand at the bottom of the list among Zimbabwe’s more senior Test-playing opponents, with a mere 12 meetings between the sides.While the Zimbabwe Board XI participates in the UCBSA Bowl competition, promotion to the SuperSport series has been denied again, although at least they have been accepted for the one-day provincial series next season. And although South Africa are very keen for touring teams to play against their development sides, they did not want to play any warm-up matches against young Zimbabwean players.Another factor is the perceived arrogance of many of the South African players. Several Zimbabweans have commented on how difficult it is to get to know them off the field of play, in contrast to the Australians, who are always friendly off the field, however much they may try to kill them on it. Andy Flower feels he made a little progress towards improving relationships between the teams during his recent term as captain, but there is clearly much work to be done.So Zimbabwe will be especially keen to come out from under the shadow of their powerful southern neighbour and at least earn more respect for their deeds on the field. The matches should be well supported by the public, and perhaps the South Africans may yet win back some of the affection they have lost in Zimbabwe in recent years.There has been talk in certain quarters of cancelling tours to Zimbabwe in view of the political state of the country, but this would only hurt the cricketing community without affecting those causing the crisis. There has also been concern about the safety of the players, but this is needless, as they will not be visiting any parts of the country where they could be endangered. Despite the background, there is every reason to expect that this tour will take place as peacefully as every other tour to the country and that the South Africans will enjoy their stay – but Zimbabweans hope not too much on the field of play.Zimbabwe team for the First Test: Alistair Campbell, Dion Ebrahim, Hamilton Masakadza, Craig Wishart, +Andy Flower, Grant Flower, Guy Whittall, *Heath Streak, Travis Friend, Raymond Price, Douglas Hondo.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus