Injured Moores launches six-hitting blitz

Tom Moores, batting with a runner, struck 27 off one over from Simon Harmer as his do-or-die innings turned the match in Nottinghamshire’s favour

ECB Reporters Network22-Jun-2018
ScorecardA hobbling Tom Moores, batting with a runner, launched a blitz of sixes in a whirlwind 87 that enabled Nottinghamshire to set a beleaguered Essex a near-impossible target of 441 in 131 overs. Notts had four Essex batsmen back in the pavilion by the close.Moores, the 21-year-old son of head coach Peter, took a particular shine to Essex spinner Simon Harmer, who he deposited all around Chelmsford in an over that went for 27. In all, Moores hit seven fours and seven sixes in an 80-ball knock, and was the only contributor to a last-wicket stand of 58 from 52 balls with Harry Gurney, who was not out nought from 13 balls.With a series of pulls, straight drives, many lofted, and unorthodox shots out of the one-day repertoire, Moores followed up his maiden century in the last Specsavers County Championship match, at Taunton. He recorded his second highest first-class score despite turning his right ankle during wicketkeeping drills before the start of the third day.Notts assistant head coach Paul Franks said: “We’re not sure at the moment how serious it is. But we could see that he was in a bit of discomfort and would not be able to run between the wickets. He is in a bit of pain but these things can settle down overnight. He’s had a fantastic season and really made his mark on the team. He’s had to follow in some big footsteps.”He has a good range of shots, and sometimes it looks like he doesn’t always use them. But his ball-striking was outstanding and he managed the situation really well. Sometimes when you have a runner, batting with tail-enders chaos can ensue. But he handled it well.”Essex had agreed at lunchtime that Moores could bat with a runner, and Jake Libby duly walked out alongside him at the fall of the seventh wicket on 143. His efforts almost doubled Notts’ score and put the game far beyond Essex’s reach. Moores did not appear behind the stumps later with Riki Wessels taking the gloves briefly before young 2nd XI player Tom Keast arrived from Trent Bridge.Essex’s chase got off to the worse possible start as their top-order folded again. Alastair Cook went lbw in the second over without scoring, playing back to a ball from Matt Milnes that kept low, and Varun Chopra’s middle stump was knocked out of the ground in Milnes’s next over. To compound that, stand-in captain Tom Westley was beaten by one from Luke Fletcher that nipped back and struck off-stump.It was Cook’s second duck in nine innings for the county this summer, Westley’s fifth single-figure score in 11, while Chopra has totalled just 92 from eight Championship outings.Dan Lawrence and Ravi Bopara set about trying to save the game in the early evening, and their patient partnership reached 55 in 20 overs when Lawrence was caught and bowled by Samit Patel.But the day belonged to Moores. At the start of his innings, he was struck firmly on the boot by Neil Wagner. It did not discomfort Moores in the least as he was soon pulling Harmer for four and sweep-swiping his first six from the following ball. He went down on one knee to cart Jamie Porter over midwicket for his second six.But it was the return of Harmer, who went for 78 from his 15 overs, that sparked the fireworks. The first ball was thumped over long-off for six to reach a 63-ball fifty. The next was driven for a one-bounce boundary, followed by a swept four. There were further sixes, one on to the press-box roof and another to long-leg, before the over was completed with a single into the deep.Moores’s sixth six brought up the fifty partnership for the last wicket, and he added a second in the only over of the match bowled by Ravi Bopara. Moores finally departed, edging Porter behind.The day had not started so promising for Notts when they lost nightwatchman Milnes without addition. Patel pushed forward to Coles and sent Adam Wheater tumbling to his right to take the catch low down. Ross Taylor, centurion in the first innings, lasted just seven balls second time around, bowled trying to cut.Libby perished on 51 as Wagner found some exaggerated movement off the pitch. Switching around the wicket, the New Zealand pace bowler slanted one in to remove leg-stump.Wagner added his second straight after lunch when he got one to climb and take the edge of Wessels’s bat. Billy Root had just reverse-swept Harmer for four to reach 29 when he popped the next ball into Cook’s hands at third slip. But the Tom Moores show was about to begin.

SCG curator Tom Parker steps down

The long-serving SCG curator Tom Parker will step down later this year, just a few months before Australia’s home Ashes series

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Jun-2017The long-serving SCG curator Tom Parker will step down later this year, just a few months before Australia’s home Ashes series.Parker has spent 20 years in charge of the SCG pitch and turf, and will be joined in his exit by Allianz Stadium curator Michael Finch, with the SCG Trust planning to bring both the cricket and soccer venues together under one team of groundstaff.”It’s been a privilege to work at this magnificent ground,” Parker said. “There are certainly some special moments that I’ll look back on in coming years but the opportunity to call the SCG home for the past two decades is what I’m most proud of.”SCG Trust chairman Tony Shepherd said: “Tom has been a key figure in the ground’s history and has played a huge part in its success over the years. On behalf of my fellow Trustees I would like to thank him, both professionally and personally, for the commitment he has shown to the SCG.”Despite Parker’s achievements over the past two decades, he did face criticism in 2015, when a Sheffield Shield match at the SCG was abandoned due to what was deemed an unsafe outfield. After several players slipped over, the match officials decided to abandon the match, a decision that neither Parker nor the SCG Trust believed was necessary.

Mumbai call in Jerome Taylor for injured Malinga

Mumbai Indians have signed Jerome Taylor as a replacement for the injured Lasith Malinga for the remainder of IPL 2016

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Apr-20162:18

Jerome Taylor joins Mumbai Indians’ set-up

Mumbai Indians have signed West Indies pacer Jerome Taylor as a replacement for the injured Lasith Malinga for the remainder of IPL 2016. Taylor trained with Mumbai on Wednesday, and will be available for selection for their game against Kolkata Knight Riders on Thursday.A knee injury has kept Malinga out of action since February this year; he last played competitive cricket in the Asia Cup and missed out on the subsequent World T20. His participation in the IPL was always doubtful, but Mumbai had decided to wait until their first five matches were completed to give him time to recover before looking for a replacement. The highest wicket-taker across IPL seasons, Malinga was eventually ruled out of the 2016 tournament on April 17.Taylor has been involved in the IPL in the past, as part of Kings XI Punjab and the now defunct Pune Warriors. While he didn’t get to play a match during his time with Kings XI, Taylor represented Pune Warriors in five matches in the 2011 tournament, taking six wickets at an economy rate of 8.05. Overall, in 61 T20s, Taylor has 74 wickets at an average of 23.18, having conceded 7.81 runs to the over. He was part of West Indies’ squad for the 2016 World T20, but played only one game where he went wicketless.

All-round Canada thump Netherlands

A century from opener Ruvindu Gunasekera, complemented by a fine bowling performance by medium-pacer Jeremy Gordon, helped Canada stroll to an eight-wicket win over Netherlands in just over two days in King City.

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Aug-2013
ScorecardJimmy Hansra (right) and Ruvindu Gunasekera shared a sixth-wicket stand of 87 runs•Eddie Norfolk

A century from opener Ruvindu Gunasekera, complemented by a fine bowling performance from medium-pacer Jeremy Gordon, helped Canada stroll to an eight-wicket win over Netherlands in King City.Netherlands, put in to bat, had a slow start, losing both openers Michael Swart and Michael Rippon to the seamers Gordon and Cecil Pervez within 14 overs. Eric Szwarczynski, batting at No. 3, revived the innings with a brisk 57 off 72 deliveries. He smashed 10 fours and added 82 for the third wicket with Tim Gruijters, as Netherlands stabilised.Pervez, brought back into the attack, got the breakthrough for Canada, trapping Szwarczynski lbw in the 35th over. His wicket triggered a collapse, as the visitors, unable to deal with Canada’s pacers, lost the last eight wickets for 32 runs. Raza-ur-Rehman, took four of those wickets, conceding eight runs off 8.3 overs. Gordon also took four wickets, including three in successive overs, as the pair bowled out Netherlands for 164.Gunasekera led Canada’s first innings, hitting 21 fours and two sixes during his 173-ball 150 to take Canada to 436. He put up crucial stands of 73, 112 and 87 for the fourth, fifth and sixth wickets with Ashish Bagai, Salman Nazar and Jimmy Hansra respectively as Canada established a lead of 272. Netherlands medium-pacer Vivian Kingma struck three early blows but the visitors found things difficult once Canada’s batsmen had settled down.Facing a vast deficit, Netherlands had another shaky start as Gordon and Harvir Baidwan dismissed Swart and Rippon in the first three overs. Gordon, who finished the match with figures of 8 for 149, then dismissed Gruijters to leave Netherlands at a precarious 45 for 3.Szwarczynski, however, counter-attacked with 85, and was involved in a 99-run partnership for the fourth wicket with Daan Van Bunge, who made 54. Szwarczynski eventually edged a delivery from Gordon back to the wicketkeeper Bagai, but the visitors showed more mettle and resistance in the second innings, as Wesley Barresi, Tom Heggelman and Pieter Seelaar all made useful contributions.Seelar led the lower-order resistance with an unbeaten 75 as Netherlands managed to wipe out the deficit but failed to open up a big enough lead, before being dismissed for 336. Pacer Harvir Baidwan complemented Gordon’s effort, finishing with a four-wicket haul in the second innings.Canada took 43 balls to reach the 65-run target, led by a 24-ball 44 from Gunasekera. The win took Canada up to fifth in the Intercontinental Cup table, one point ahead of Kenya, while Netherlands finished last.

Two impressive records collide

Preview of the second one-day international between England and South Africa at West End

The Preview by Alan Gardner27-Aug-2012

Match Facts

August 28, West End
Start time 1pm (1200GMT)Alastair Cook has enjoyed a vastly successful 2012 as England’s ODI captain•Getty Images

The Big Picture

Persistent rainfall in Cardiff limited the action to just 33 legitimate deliveries in the first ODI, as England retained their No. 1 ranking by virtue of a no-result. In that short window, however, Ian Bell managed to hit Morne Morkel for sixes over midwicket and long-off, racing to one of the most classy (if pointless) 26 not outs you’re likely to see. He only faced 18 deliveries in the mid-afternoon murk but it was enough to re-emphasise why England are happy with their post-Kevin Pietersen one-day set-up.The proposition remains the same for the second match of the series, with a win for South Africa enough to depose England at the top of the rankings. Conceivably, the No. 1 tag could be handed back and forth in Chuckle Brothers style (“To me, to you”) over the course of the next week and a bit, though England may hope that a return to the sort of damp, overcast conditions that provided the backdrop to their 4-0 win over Australia will aid their pursuit of a fourth consecutive ODI series victory in 2012.Under AB de Villiers, South Africa have won six from eight ODIs, beating Sri Lanka 3-2 at home (losing only the two dead games) and then claiming a 3-0 whitewash in New Zealand. Few of the current squad have played at Hampshire’s West End ground before, though they did manage a visit to nearby St Mary’s for Southampton’s Premier League match against Wigan at the weekend and may take inspiration from the visitors’ 2-0 victory. At the very least, their warm-up games of football should show some improvement.

Form guide

(Most recent first, completed matches)
England WWWWW
South Africa WWWLL

Watch out for…

Steven Finn has taken 23 ODI wickets at 15.91 in 2012, at a better strike-rate than any other bowler in the world with ten or more dismissals to their name. His fiery spell on day four of the third Test evoked the consistent hostility of Finn’s recent one-day bowling, which appears to have improved his discipline and economy. A comparison with Lonwabo Tsotsobe, the only fast bowler currently ranked above him, should be interesting.There are few bigger holes to fill in world cricket than that left by the rested Jacques Kallis. Dean Elgar made his South Africa debut in the first ODI, though it was limited to trudging around a wet outfield, and the 25-year-old should have a more extended chance to impress while filling in for Kallis at No. 3 this time around. Elgar won the domestic one-day cricketer of the year award in 2011-12 and his slow left-arm spin could come in useful if the pitch offers turn.

Team news

Despite Jonny Bairstow’s T20 pyrotechnics, England seem unlikely to ditch Ravi Bopara, who returned to the side at Cardiff after time off for personal issues. Bopara’s form is a question mark, however, and he was released to get some batting practice for Essex in the CB40 today. Samit Patel may return at the expense of Chris Woakes if England want a second spin option.England (possible) 1 Alastair Cook (capt), 2 Ian Bell, 3 Jonathan Trott, 4 Ravi Bopara, 5 Eoin Morgan, 6 Craig Kieswetter (wk), 7 Samit Patel/Chris Woakes, 8 Tim Bresnan, 9 Graeme Swann, 10 James Anderson, 11 Steven FinnAlbie Morkel and Dale Steyn missed out on the brief skirmish at Cardiff due to minor injuries and neither is expected to play on Tuesday, though both should be fit for World Twenty20. South Africa could call on Imran Tahir after more than a year out of the one-day side.South Africa (possible) 1 Graeme Smith, 2 Hashim Amla, 3 Dean Elgar, 4 AB de Villiers (capt & wk), 5 JP Duminy, 6 Faf du Plessis, 7 Ryan McLaren, 9 Wayne Parnell, 8 Robin Petersen, 10 Morne Morkel, 11 Lonwabo Tsotsobe

Pitch and conditions

On Twenty20 Finals Day in Cardiff, where the first ODI was rained off 24 hours earlier, Hampshire were presented with a familiar slow, low surface on which they duly prevailed. A similar track is perhaps to be expected at West End, though England made 288 against West Indies at the ground earlier this summer and with a bright, clear forecast, batsmen shouldn’t fare too badly. De Villiers has consulted Hampshire’s former South Africa international Neil McKenzie and he advised the touring party to expect the pitch to spin.

Stats and trivia

  • South Africa have played only once at the Rose Bowl, as it was then called, in 2003 against Zimbabwe – a match they won by seven wickets, with Graeme Smith scoring 69.
  • Ian Bell has made his two ODI hundreds – both scores of 126 – at the ground.
  • AB de Villiers currently averages 158.33 as captain/wicketkeeper of South Africa’s ODI side.
  • As on Friday, if South Africa win this match they will become the first team to hold the No. 1 position in all three formats.

Quotes

“The guys who have come in and replaced him have done particularly well. Whoever has stepped up has done really, really well.”
“David has a bright future ahead of him and I look forward to playing with him one day, but we have just got quite a lot [of destructive batsman].”

Tour match headaches for tourists

Australia have more players in need of match practice than they can fit into the team for the tour match against a Sri Lankan Board XI, and the only certainty is that Phil Hughes will open

Daniel Brettig in Colombo24-Aug-2011Australia’s captain Michael Clarke is certain that Phil Hughes will open the batting in the three-day tour match against a Sri Lankan Board XI at Colombo’s P Sara Stadium from Thursday. Beyond that things get rather tricky.Because the match has been bestowed first-class status, the tourists may only pick 11 players, when they have more, particularly in the bowling department, in need of match practice. Apart from Mitchell Johnson and James Pattinson who were in the ODI team, each of Ryan Harris, Peter Siddle, Trent Copeland, Nathan Lyon and Michael Beer are yet to play on tour.Compounding the headache is that Clarke and the tour selectors Greg Chappell and Tim Nielsen are far from certain about the composition of their best XI for Galle, where the conditions are likely to assist spinners. However they are uncertain whether it would be assistance enough to have Australia play multiple specialist spinners for the first time since Shane Warne and Stuart MacGill – plus Dan Cullen in one Test – on the 2006 tour of Bangladesh.Shaun Marsh is expected to be given first look at the No. 6 batting spot, but his rival Usman Khawaja may find himself at the top of the order if it is decided to rest Shane Watson after his limited overs exertions.”I can say Hughesy will open the batting for us and then it would be between Usman [Khawaja] and Marshy to bat No. 6 I would say,” Clarke said. “Then we’ve got to work out do we pick two spinners, do we pick three quicks. Conditions in Galle will determine that one and it’s a hard one for selection for tomorrow as well, are we sure which three quicks, do we go for the three who we think are going to play, is it our best attack? There’s a lot of questions we need to answer.”Rain sent the Australians scurrying indoors for practice on match eve, and it was in this environment that Clarke got his first genuine sight of the offspinner Lyon’s bowling. It is thought that Lyon may be better prepared to adapt to Sri Lankan climes than his nominally senior spin partner Michael Beer, given how elastically Lyon has adapted to the different tactical demands of Twenty20, one-dayers and first-class cricket.”They’ve obviously played a bit of cricket in Zimbabwe which I think helped, they got some overs under their belts in pretty slow, turning conditions as well,” Clarke said of the pair. “They’ve been training hard since they got here and Tim’s been at every training session, Greg’s been at every training session, so if we pick two spinners tomorrow they get that opportunity, and if we only pick one it comes down to their preparation leading in, what they did in Zimbabwe.”Clarke denied that the choice of a single spinner for Colombo would dictate who played in Galle, as the amount of turn available would be the final arbiter on the number of spinners required.”We still have net preparation that is important, but I still think you need to go on conditions once you get to Galle,” he said. “It’s hard because you can only fit 11 in [for the tour match], so do we think we’re going to play three quicks or two spinners. If I look at the one-dayers, Steve Smith, Xavier Doherty and Dave Hussey played a big part in our success, but I think our fast bowlers statistically got the most wickets, so we need to work out what is the right combination as a bowling unit in the conditions.”Australia’s preparations have been punctuated by the release of the Argus review, and Clarke reiterated his happiness with how the team had taken on his message that the size of the distraction was dictated by the players themselves.”The one point I’ve tried to push is that in this business everybody has a job to do, and our job as players is to prepare well and perform well on the field,” Clarke said. “The other stuff, the administration, the selectors, all the other stuff that goes with our game which is very important, all of that will be taken care of and is out of our control really, so the size of the distraction is determined by us. If we make it a big distraction then it could affect the team.”But so far on tour, nobody has [made it a big distraction]. We know what we’re here to do, we know how important this tour is, and I was stoked the way we won that fourth one-day game of the series, I think it showed a lot of character. What I see in the review is we’re trying to make people accountable, we’re trying to have measures of performance and trying to make people accountable.”For us right now the players are accountable to our performances throughout this tour, the one-day tour we knew it was going to be tough cricket and we performed pretty well in quite different and tough conditions. The Test tour’s the same, we’re ranked 5th in Test cricket, so we need to improve. From the first camp we had up in Brisbane at the Centre of Excellence I think our preparation is outstanding. It’s easy to say ‘we’re going to wake up every day and try to get better’, but I know we have.”

India fined for slow over-rate

India have been fined for maintaining a slow over-rate during their defeat to Sri Lanka in the tri-series final in Dambulla on Saturday

Cricinfo staff29-Aug-2010India have been fined for maintaining a slow over-rate during their defeat to Sri Lanka in the tri-series final in Dambulla on Saturday. The match referee, Alan Hurst, found the team to be two overs short of its target at the end of the Sri Lankan innings after taking the time allowances into consideration.The captain MS Dhoni was fined 40% of his match fee while the remaining players were docked 20% each. Batting first, Sri Lanka compiled 299, with big contributions from Tillakaratne Dilshan and Kumar Sangakkara. India, in reply, managed 225.Last December, Dhoni was slapped with a more severe penalty for a slow over-rate, when he was banned for two ODIs during Sri Lanka’s tour of India. He was found guilty during the Nagpur ODI and Virender Sehwag led the side in his absence. Back then, India were three overs short, which came under the “serious over-rate offence” category. Falling short by up to two overs in an ODI, and five in a Test day, is considered a “minor offence”, and merits a ban only if the offence is repeated twice in 12 months.

Mulani and Shaw put Mumbai in position of strength on tricky track

Mumbai finished the fourth day 274 runs in front with four second-innings wickets in hand

ESPNcricinfo staff04-Oct-2024Stumps The fourth day of the Irani Cup started with Rest of India well placed to challenge Mumbai’s first-innings score of 537, and overnight batters Abhimanyu Easwaran and Dhruv Jurel did well to begin with. Shams Mulani, however, sent them back in back-to-back overs to finish off the fight, and from 393 for 4, Rest of India collapsed to 416 all out. That gave Mumbai a handy lead of 121, which Prithvi Shaw has added to since, putting the team in a strong position to finish on top.Abhimanyu and Jurel were on 151 and 30 overnight, and Jurel was the quicker of the two on the fourth morning, scoring at 76.85 to get to 93 before Mulani sent him back gloving an attempted sweep through to wicketkeeper Hardik Tamore. That ended the fifth-wicket stand of 165, and one wicket led to another when Abhimanyu also fell to the sweep, sending the ball pitched in the rough outside leg stump to Tanush Kotian at short fine-leg. He fell for 191.No one from Rest of India reached double figures after that as Mulani and Kotian finished with three apiece.The Mumbai second innings was all about Shaw. As wickets fell at the other end, all courtesy spin – Saransh Jain the offspinner and Manav Suthar the leg-arm spinner – Shaw went about his job merrily, scoring 76 in 105 balls with eight fours and a six. Shaw, who had missed out in the first innings, scoring only 4, became the fifth Mumbai wicket to fall late in the day, to Jain, who has 4 for 67 to Suthar’s 2 for 40.Rest of India will hope to finish off the Mumbai innings quickly on the fifth morning and give themselves a chance of pulling off the chase, however steep and unlikely – seeing that spinners are very much in the game at this stage – but Mumbai will start the day feeling the better of the two camps.

Oli Carter, Bradley Currie the heroes as Sussex upset Hampshire

Liam Dawson half-century fails to overcome troubled start by visitors at Hove

ECB Reporters Network16-Jun-2023Sussex 183 for 6 (Carter 64) beat Hampshire 177 for 9 (Dawson 59, Currie 3-27) by six runsOli Carter and Bradley Currie were the unlikely heroes as Sussex Sharks upset Hampshire Hawks at Hove to claim only their third win in this season’s Vitality Blast.In quick-scoring conditions at the 1st Central County Ground the reigning champions dragged things back well after Carter (64) and skipper Ravi Bopara (30) took Sussex to 127 for 2 in the 12th over with a stand of 98 in nine overs. They departed in successive overs and although Sussex got to 183 for 6 it didn’t look enough.But by the second ball of the third over Hampshire had slumped to 15 for 3 and were soon 24 for 4. Although Liam Dawson made 59 off 34 balls and their lower-order batters kept swinging Sussex won by six runs.Debutant Currie started his first over with two wides but then had James Vince caught at deep mid-wicket before Toby Albert played on to the next ball. The hat-trick delivery was also a wide but Sussex were celebrating again when Ben McDermott was pinned in front of middle stump by Ari Karvelas at the start of the next over.The 24-year-old left-armer, who will be playing for Dorset in the National Counties Trophy against Wales on Sunday, took his third wicket in his second over when Ross Whiteley dragged on, leaving Hampshire 24 for 4.Joe Weatherley (33) and Dawson rebuilt in a stand of 51 and even after Weatherley fatally swung across the line to a straight ball from Bopara, Dawson didn’t give up.He reached his sixth fifty in the format and had just hit George Garton into the flats overlooking the ground for his fifth six when the left-armer hit the top of off stump with his next ball.But this was a night for Currie. He added to his three wickets with a sensational catch when he made ten yards to his left and dived full length on the mid-wicket boundary to take a two-handed grab and remove Howell. Even then, with 22 needed off the final over, Nathan Ellis scored 12 off the first three balls but was leg before to the fifth from Karvelas as Hampshire finished on 177 for 9.The unexpected star of the Sussex innings was 19-year-old Carter, who smashed 64 off just 33 balls in only his sixth game in the format. His previous highest score was 27 against Essex earlier this month but he made the most of his chance at No.3 to hit six fours and four sixes, including successive maximums off James Fuller to become only the third Sussex batter to lodge a fifty in this season’s Blast.Skipper Bopara has made two of them and when he and Carter were putting on 98 from 54 balls for the third wicket the holders looked a little rattled.But, as experienced sides tend to do, the Hawks held their nerve and Sussex struggled to regain the initiative after Bopara, who had just heaved the returning Howell over mid-wicket, played on trying to repeat the shot to the next ball.Carter played shots all around the wicket and demonstrated eye-catching improvisation, but he departed four balls later giving himself room to heave over cow corner only to pick out Ellis, who took a good catch, instead. That was in the 12th over and Sussex didn’t score another boundary until the 17th as Howell and Dawson, whose four overs cost just 21, kept things tight.

Allan Donald says Bangladesh's seamers have the skills to exploit Gqeberha conditions

Bangladesh’s fast-bowling coach is the highest wicket taker at St George’s Park

Mohammad Isam06-Apr-2022Bangladesh’s spectacular batting collapse in the fourth innings in Durban, where they were bowled out for 53, largely overshadowed a wonderful bowling performance from their fast bowlers. It was only the fourth time Bangladesh took 20 wickets overseas, and the second time in the last three Tests when the fast bowlers have taken more than 10 wickets in the match.Khaled Ahmed led the fightback in the first innings after South Africa got off to a good start. Ebadot Hossain bowled decently in both innings, while Taskin Ahmed fought off a shoulder injury that would eventually send him home, to take two crucial wickets in the second innings.Related

  • First Test stats – A rare triumph for spin in SA

  • Bangladesh to lodge formal complaint against Durban umpiring

  • Mominul: 'Crime to give wickets to spinners on foreign soil'

The fast bowlers’ improvement has been one of the eye-catching aspects of the Bangladesh team over the last couple of years. Allan Donald, their newest fast-bowling coach who is overseeing the South Africa tour as his first assignment, said that the Durban performance from the quicks was a formula for success for the second Test in Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth) too, which begins on April 8.”I think the Bangladesh seamers can be very proud of the way they conducted themselves in the first Test,” Donald said. “I think we were feeling our way into it a little bit. Once we settled down, it was very good. We spoke about bowling in partnerships. It was a fantastic performance from all the seamers. The way Khaled got into the team, the way Ebadot bowled.”It was even better in the second innings. I felt we bowled like a Test unit. The run-rate went down from 3.7 to 2.5. The way we took wickets at crucial times in that second innings to restrict South Africa to 273. I am very proud of the seamers. They kept coming all day long to keep the pressure up. If you are looking for a recipe for success, it doesn’t change here in St George’s Park.”Donald especially praised Taskin for braving the pain of his shoulder injury during the fourth day’s play in Durban. Taskin removed Dean Elgar who was looking dangerous on 64, before adding Keshav Maharaj as he bowled 11 overs.”We can’t speak highly enough of Taskin. I was so happy for him in the one-dayers at the way he led the bowling attack. He started getting a bit of niggle in his shoulder in the firs Test. It gradually got worse. He strapped it up in the second innings. He was willing to go even further and do the job for Bangladesh. We wish him well. We have Sri Lanka around the corner.”It is an absolute pleasure working with the young guy. He is a great listener. He wants to learn. He has a proper engine in him. He keeps going through all that pain. The three of them were outstanding, especially Taskin who was in a lot of pain. Tells you a lot about his character and also about how much he cares for this team where the stakes were at its highest. The pain was at its highest,” said Donald.As the highest wicket-taker at St George’s Park, Donald obviously knows enough about the venue to tell his bowlers what will – and what won’t – work here. “It is a ground where you have to be very creative as a bowler. As the innings goes on, the track will get flatter. From a fast bowling perspective, you must have something up your sleeve. You have to put your hand up and be brave. Try different things.”Dale Steyn showed here few years ago against Australia on a flat pitch, that when the ball starts reversing, you can take wickets here. It is going to be tough work for the bowlers,” he said.Donald also said that the afternoon wind can be disconcerting for the bowlers and fielders, and it is something that they are talking about and working on ahead of the second Test.”You have to contend with the severe winds in Port Elizabeth. It comes around 12:30 to two o’clock over the scoreboard. Late in the afternoon it gets up to about 40-45kph. It is like a wind tunnel from the scoreboard, and it keeps swirling. As a bowler you feel you are with it, and all of a sudden you are against it. Someone has to do the dirty work (to bowl) into the wind. It is not going to be tough work.”We have been talking about our fielding, high catching and getting into correct positions quickly. We have to do a lot of spiral catching. Long catching. High catching is a real skill here,” he said.

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