ICC and Indian officials to meet WADA over dope tests

Top officials from the ICC and the Indian board are to meet later this month with David Howman, director-general of WADA, the world anti-doping agency, to discuss a “workable solution” to the impasse over cricket’s anti-doping policy. The meeting will come three months after the Indian board publicly rejected the contentious whereabouts clause in the ICC’s policy and stalled its implementation.Haroon Lorgat, the ICC chief executive, confirmed to Cricinfo that such a meeting was on the cards and described discussions on the issue as “work in progress”. Lorgat did not reveal any details but Cricinfo has learnt that a possible resolution will involve two options, both of which were first proposed by Cricket Australia (CA) soon after BCCI rejected the ICC’s whereabouts procedure in August.The first option has WADA, the ICC and BCCI exploring whether India’s concerns about out-of-competition testing — over the privacy, freedom and security of its players in the testing pool — can be addressed effectively within the existing policy. Basically, given the packed international schedules, India’s cricketers are expected to be on the road for most of the year, and the objective would be to convince the BCCI that any out-of competition testing will, for all practical purposes, take place only at official training sessions.Apparently, the feeling within the ICC and among some of its 10 full members is that the BCCI was initially unaware that the WADA guidelines could be interpreted in a practical manner. But a senior BCCI official said that though the Indian board would approach the proposed meeting in November with an open mind, it prefers the second option, which is based on the model adopted by FIFA, football’s governing body.This option involves further negotiations with WADA and requires the ICC to go back to the table, possibly constitute a working group, and return with a whereabouts procedure similar to FIFA’s. The football model, which has not been challenged by WADA, has three testing pools and only those in the first pool — high-risk players (read: doping suspects) , those penalized before for doping offences and those coming back from injury — need to comply with the daily individual whereabouts procedure that has been objected to by the BCCI. FIFA has two other testing pools where, instead of individual players providing whereabouts information, “elite teams” will provide the required information and, that too, only on team activity days — match venues, official training sessions, official functions and the like.If similar rules are applied to cricket, the onus is on the respective cricket boards to provide location and time details for all official activities such as matches, training sessions, functions and the like; players with long-term injuries or drug issues will, of course, have to file the information individually. This solution, in fact, mirrors the BCCI’s stand on the issue. Shashank Manohar, the BCCI president, had suggested to the ICC in August that instead of players revealing their whereabouts in advance, the governing body should consult the Indian board, which will ensure that the player will be available within 24 hours at the required location for testing.The current ICC anti-doping policy was approved by its executive board, including the BCCI, in January and led to the setting up of one testing pool, the International Registered Testing Pool (IRTP), which included 11 top-ranked cricketers each – nine male and two female – from the eight top cricket boards. All those in this IRTP were to comply, from August 1, with the individual whereabouts procedure that mandated these players to inform an ICC-nominated official through an online system before every three months, where they would be for one hour every day for the next 90 days.The 11 Indian players in the pool have expressed security concerns in this regard, especially because some of them such as Sachin Tendulkar and MS Dhoni face threats from terrorist organisations. The BCCI has also said that this clause, which prescribes severe penalties for defaulters including a ban for up to two years, violates privacy guarantees specified in the Indian constitution and that providing such details in advance was not practical given the hectic and fluctuating schedules of international cricketers.Other international cricketers in the testing pool from other countries had also expressed privacy and practicality concerns about the clause but agreed to abide by it within the ICC’s July 31 deadline.The ICC, however, needs WADA compliance to be part of the larger Olympic movement and to establish its credibility as an international sporting organisation. Asked what the ICC hoped to achieve during the meeting with WADA and BCCI this month, Lorgat told Cricinfo: “I would like to gain understanding: whether there is lack of understanding on the part of ICC, BCCI or WADA. All we need to do is understand exactly what the issues are – perhaps it is not such a big challenge as we see.”

Sajid Mahmood keen to cement spot on comeback

Sajid Mahmood, the Lancashire fast bowler, is keen to prove he is a more consistent performer after being included in England’s one-day and Twenty20 squads for the tour of South Africa.Mahmood, 27, who has taken 29 wickets in his 25 one-day internationals since his debut in 2004, is desperate to cement his place in the team. His last appearance for England was during the 2007 World Cup in the West Indies and he’s been unable to make it past Lions duty since then. Until now.”I’ve been waiting for over two years now and to get the call-up for the tour was fantastic,” Mahmood said. “I’ve been working really hard in them two years, trying to put things right and everything’s worked out pretty well for Lancashire. So I’m really looking forward to getting on with it.”I think the main reason I got sort of dropped from the international side was consistency – a lot of up and downs. I’ve now had over two years out of the [international] game, playing county cricket and away from the spotlight if you like.”I could reflect on what I did and where I needed to be. The massive thing was consistency, so I’ve gone back and worked on hitting certain areas with my bowling and trying to perform a lot more consistently and just doing stuff on a regular basis. That’s the main things I’ve worked on and it’s sort of shown over the last couple of years, that improvement. So hopefully I can carry on working on that and get better at it.”England begin their tour with a warm-up match against the Eagles on November 6 in Bloemfontein and have two more practice games ahead of the first Twenty20 international against South Africa in Johannesburg on November 13.

Wet pitches scupper Australia's practice

Australia’s preparations for the third ODI in Delhi, already blighted by several injuries, were further disrupted when they arrived at the Feroz Shah Kotla for a net session and found the practice pitches wet and “completely unusable”. The curator said he was not aware the team was training at 9.00 am and had watered the pitches, leaving Ricky Ponting infuriated and Australia restricted to a light net session and fielding drills.”When we turned up this morning, for some reason the practice wickets had been watered, so we haven’t had a chance to train really today,” Ponting said.Apparently the Delhi and District Cricket Association (DDCA) had no idea the Australian team would come to train at 9 am. The media, though, was informed of the team’s plans. Vijay Bahadur Mishra, the curator at the Kotla, said he was not expecting the team that early. “We were told both the teams would come at 2 pm and train together.” There are only four practice pitches at the ground, though, and it would have been difficult for two international teams to train simultaneously.”[I am] very disappointed. It seems everybody in the world other than the grounds man here today knew that we were training at 9 this morning,” Ponting said. “To turn up here and find the wickets completely unusable is disappointing. We only had one training day, and I am sure by the time the Indian team comes down here, the wickets will be fine. So it’s a bit of a disadvantage for us.”Australia could definitely have done without this fiasco: James Hopes and Brett Lee are not yet fit to play, and Graham Manou, the replacement keeper for Tim Paine, was due to arrive only on the afternoon of the eve of the match.

South Africa level series


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
South Africa women came back to level the series with a seven-wicket win over West Indies women in Cape Town.Sunette Loubser’s decision to field was vindicated by her bowling attack, which snapped a steady second-wicket stand at 62 and kept the pressure on West Indies thereafter. Wickets fell at 88, 89, 100, 104 (twice) and 128, after which Shanel Daley’s unbeaten 38 from 51 balls got the score to 182. Dane van Niekerk had figures of 3 for 25, Loubser picked up 2 for 25, and Marcia Letsoalo (1 for 23) and Charlize van der Westhuizen (1 for 20) were extremely parsimonious.South Africa paced their chase well, and from 44 for 2 were eased home by Cri-zelda Brits (31), Mignon du Preez (68 not out) and Alicia Smith (35 not out). du Preez and Smith added 58 to seal the win.

Chastened India seek quick turnaround

Match facts

Monday September 14
Start time 14.30 (9.00 GMT)Sanath Jayasuriya played himself back into form on Saturday•AFP

Big Picture

After seeing off New Zealand’s timorous challenge, Sri Lanka and India will contest bragging rights in the Compaq Cup final. Sri Lanka hold the edge in the clash between two sides who generally don’t do dull finals. The winners will go into the Champions Trophy in positive mood, leaving the loser to put salve on their injured pride.While Kumar Sangakkara said a decision on Muttiah Muraliatharan’s availability would be taken on Sunday evening, the bowler is fit and Sri Lanka should be fielding their strongest side – Thilan Samaraweera remains a doubt – and an Indian team missing the experience of three big-match players will have its work cut out to be competitive. Sri Lanka trounced India in the dress rehearsal on Saturday and again proved that once they have a score on the board at the Premadasa, they defend it resolutely.Sri Lanka have all the weapons they need in two brisk new-ball operators, a vicious slinger, and two spinners with an assortment of tricks. Each of those bowlers is capable, more so under lights, of denying batsmen the space and time to score. The support cast is no less impressive, with the ever-improving Angelo Mathews and India would do well to be wary of Sanath Jayasuriya, who sorted out a couple of New Zealand batsmen with his variations last week. On Monday, India could face the world’s most potent spin attack, with Murali and Ajantha Mendis possibly back in tandem. There will be a few flashes of the Asia Cup final last year.India’s concern is the batting, particularly at the top. Dinesh Karthik may have just played his way out of the XI, despite MS Dhoni having twice spoken of how wary he is to stick young Virat Kohli in as opener. Sachin Tendulkar has got starts on two occasions, but most worrying is the form of Yuvraj Singh, who has struggled to start against pace and spin. He scratched around dreadfully in both matches. India’s fielding was also rather shabby in the previous game.India’s only real hope is to put up a big total and then pressure Sri Lanka’s batsmen into committing errors. Chasing against the likes of Murali, Mendis and Lasith Malinga is a difficult task at the best of times, and as India found out yesterday, the anaconda grip gets you eventually.

Form guide (most recent first)

Sri Lanka WWLLW
India LWNRWL

Watch out for…

After his performance on Saturday, surely that’s got to be Sanath Jayasuriya. Harrying between the wickets like a man possessed and then finding the boundary freely while under pressure, Jayasuriya’s innings was an omen for India going into the final. In case they need reminding, in 12 finals against India, Jayasuriya has scored 692 runs at 57.66. The grand old man of international cricket rumbles on.India will also rely heavily on one veteran at the top. In nine finals against Sri Lanka, Sachin Tendulkar has scored 361 runs at 51.57. The last time he played Sri Lanka in a final was in the 2004 Asia Cup at the Premadasa where his 74 couldn’t produce a winning chase. Tendulkar will need to dip into the reservoir of 73 games against this opposition to correct a worrying trend for India.

Team news

Brendon Kuruppu, Sri Lanka’s manager, said that Murali could have played on Saturday but that the management wanted to give him the extra day to rest for the final. His return means that Sri Lanka will have to take a tough call between resting one of the three quicks or Mendis. Nuwan Kulasekara and Thilan Thushara have led the attack all year and Mendis hasn’t done much in two matches this week, so he may be the one to make way. Sri Lanka are also waiting on the fitness report of Samaraweera, who strained a hamstring after his century against New Zealand and missed the previous match.Sri Lanka: (probable) 1 Sanath Jayasuriya, 2 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (capt & wk), 4 Mahela Jayawardene, 5 Chamara Kapugedera/Thilan Samaraweera, 6 Thilina Kandamby, 7 Angelo Mathews, 8 Thilan Thushara, 9 Nuwan Kulasekara, 10 Muttiah Muralitharan, 11 Lasith Malinga.Karthik may continue to open the innings in Gambhir’s absence, given Dhoni’s reluctance to send Kohli in early. Kohli is not a specialist opener, though he filled the role in five ODIs in Sri Lanka last summer. He was impressive in handling Murali during this year’s IPL, so should present a credible case. There are a couple of other possibilities for India; after Mathews nipped out six with his canny seamers under lights, there’s an outside chance that the allrounder Abhishek Nayar gets a game. That would mean India have to drop Yusuf Pathan or one of the three fast bowlers (probably RP Singh, who had a poor last game). Praveen Kumar is another option.India: (probable) 1 Dinesh Karthik/Virat Kohli, 2 Sachin Tendulkar, 3 Rahul Dravid, 4 Yuvraj Singh, 5 MS Dhoni (capt & wk), 6 Suresh Raina, 7 Yusuf Pathan/Abhishek Nayar, 8 Harbhajan Singh, 9 RP Singh/Praveen Kumar, 10 Ishant Sharma, 11 Ashish Nehra.

Stats and Trivia

  • Sri Lanka haven’t lost to India in the last seven finals between the two teams – they’ve won five while two were rained out. The last time India won a final against them was 11 years ago, in the Singer-Akai Nidahas Trophy.
  • Murali has an excellent economy rate of 3.94 in finals against India. In eight innings, he has taken ten wickets at 28.00.<!– COMMENTED OUT
  • Between them, Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, Yuvraj and Dhoni have managed one century and eight half-centuries in 48 innings in tournament finals. –>

Quotes

“If you win it, you have 60% chance of winning the match. Moreover, if you score 230-240, then you have a good chance as the bowlers will find it easier to bowl second.”
“He is fit and ready to go. We will see how he is, his body is. This evening we will make a decision as to whether he is available for tomorrow’s game. Because we have a very important Champions Trophy coming up, we don’t want to rush him into anything too soon. But to give him ample time to recover and get fully fit.”

Ponting's done well to keep the team afloat – Chappell

Ian Chappell, the former Australia captain, has backed captain Ricky Ponting to stay on as the leader despite being the only second Australian captain to lose two Ashes. Chappell said that he was impressed with his leadership of a team that is still rebuilding after the retirement of several seniors in quick succession.Ponting has already conceded two Ashes series to England this decade, the latest defeat coming after a 5-0 drubbing of England at home in 2006-07. But Chappell cautioned that Ponting’s performance as captain will be scrutinised when the team returns home.”Obviously with Australia losing the series and Ponting losing the Ashes in England for the second time, there will be some queries about his captaincy, there will be some sniping about his captaincy,” Chappell said while reviewing the series for Cricinfo. “Overall I thought he did a pretty fair job as a captain. And when you consider the turnover of very good players that he has had under his captaincy – no other Australian captain has had to cope with that. And I think he has done remarkably well to keep Australia afloat in a situation where they are still a team in transition.”Chappell agreed with Cricket Australia’s chief executive James Sutherland that Australia would not benefit from a kneejerk captaincy change. Chappell felt that sacking Ponting at this stage could have a negative impact on the team.”Now is not the right time to sack Ponting as captain,” Chappell said. “For starters if you sack him you will probably lose your best batsman because I don’t think he would want to continue if he was sacked as captain.But the most important thing is I don’t believe that he deserves to be sacked as captain, he’s still the best man for the job.”Chappell however added that some of Ponting’s captaincy moves in the series will come up for sharp criticism. He pointed to England’s jailbreak in the first Test in Cardiff, when the Australian spinners failed to dislodge the last-wicket pair of James Anderson and Monty Panesar in the fourth innings. Ponting was slammed for bowling spinners for the sake of rushing through the overs.”Australia failing to finish off England at Cardiff when they had them on the mat turned out to be a really big turning point in this series,” Chappell said. “There I guess you could perhaps query Ricky Ponting’s choice of bowlers at the end. I think he went for quantity of overs rather than quality of overs and that was a mistake.”Speaking at the presentation ceremony at The Oval at the defeat, Ponting said he was prepared to face the music back home, adding that it was all a part and parcel of leading a major Test team.

Emerging Indians brush aside hosts

ScorecardIndia Emerging Players kicked off their Australian tour with a facile win over the Australian Institute of Sports with nine balls to spare in the opening match of the two-week tournament. The tourists made regular inroads and were lead by their new-ball pair of Sudeep Tyagi and Pradeep Sangwan, who picked up two wickets each as Australia were restricted to 101.Tom Cooper, the No. 3, held Australia together with an unbeaten 63 from 57 balls but there was absolutely no support. The home side was rocked first ball when Tyagi took out Rob Quiney, and then slipped to 4 for 24 with each of India’s first five bowlers finding success. Cooper’s innings contained six fours and a pair of sixes and stood poles apart from the next highest contribution, 8.India themselves were in a spot of bother at 3 for 19, Peter George taking 2 for 9 in four overs, but Ajinkya Rahane and Abhishek Nayar steered the chase thereafter. Rahane finished unbeaten on 43 from 55 balls while Nayar (30 from 19) assisted capably.
ScorecardSouth Africa Emerging Players began their tournament on a high with a last-ball six-wicket win over New Zealand Emerging Players. Chasing 130, South Africa sealed a tight victory thanks to some clinical hitting from the captain Vaughn van Jaarsveld, who made 53 from 47 balls, and a steady unbeaten 58 from the opener Henry Davids.After opting to bat first, New Zealand posted 9 for 129 thanks to Colin de Grandhomme’s 49 from 34 balls. BJ Watling contributed 29 off 37 balls in an opening stand of 72 in 9.2 overs before being run out. Reece Young celebrated his call-up to the senior side by smashing an unbeaten 24 from 14 balls as slow left-armer Dean Elgar snared three victims to ruin the lower order.New Zealand’s attack, led by Tim Southee’s successive strikes in the third over, hurt South Africa’s top order but crucially failed to dislodge Davids, who shored up the chase. van Jaarsveld, batting at No. 4, played an excellent hand to ease the chase and though he fell with 22 needed, Davids finished matters off.

Yusuf questions Irfan's exclusion

Yusuf Pathan, the India allrounder, has said his brother Irfan has been left out of the 30-man Champions Trophy pool for non-cricketing reasons.”Irfan’s performance was always up to the mark. He has not been left out because of his performance,” he said on Tuesday. “Everybody has seen what is happening. What will I comment. It is for you (the media) to react and comment on what is happening.”Irfan’s last one-day appearances for India were in the series in Sri Lanka, where he took four wickets but leaked 7.06 runs an over in two matches. What has also hurt his chances of making the national side is that his batting has fallen away in ODIs – he hasn’t scored a half-century in nearly three years.He was also part of three games during India’s dismal World Twenty20 campaign, but picked up only one wicket and didn’t contribute much with the bat either. He hasn’t been a part of the Test side since the home series against South Africa in April 2008.Both the BCCI and chief selector Kris Srikkanth declined to comment on Yusuf’s statements.

Stop embarrassing Pakistan – Younis

Pakistan’s captain, Younis Khan, has expressed his exasperation at the allegations of ball-tampering that marred his team’s crushing victory over New Zealand at Lord’s on Saturday, and has called upon his critics to produce TV evidence of any alleged misdemeanours, rather than resort to innuendo.Speaking in the aftermath of the 39-run victory over Ireland at The Oval that sealed Pakistan’s progression to the semi-finals, Younis defended his star bowler, Umar Gul, who followed up his figures of 5 for 6 at Lord’s with another superb spell of 2 for 19, and hit back at the comments made by New Zealand’s captain, Daniel Vettori, who claimed after the Lord’s defeat that he had never seen any bowler achieve reverse-swing as early as the 12th over of an international fixture.”Everyone has his own opinion, especially when you get out cheaply and lose a game like that because New Zealand have a big reputation in world cricket,” said Younis. “But for reverse swing you need pace and a good action, and Gul has a good action. It is an art, it is not cheating, and Umar knows the art, especially in Twenty20s. In every single game he performs like that.”Vettori confirmed that he had “raised a couple of concerns” with the on-field umpires and the match referee, Ranjan Madugalle, after Gul had claimed the first five-wicket haul in Twenty20 internationals to dismiss New Zealand for 99, but he later added that he had put the matter behind him after the officials had “no issues at all with the state of the ball”.”The amount of reverse swing that we saw was new to us and therefore we raised a couple of concerns,” Vettori said. “They relayed back to us that they had no issues at all with the state of the ball. We accepted that and now we move on to our important game against Sri Lanka.” Vettori also said he had no discussions with Younis after the game regarding the matter.Younis, however, maintained that the roughed-up condition of the ball had been due to the hard hitting in Twenty20 cricket, and was not impressed that the matter had been allowed to escalate, especially given how damaging Pakistan’s last ball-tampering row, again at The Oval back in August 2006, had turned out to be. On that occasion, the team, captained by Inzamam-ul-Haq, had refused to retake the field after being docked five runs by umpire Darrell Hair, and went on to complete the first forfeiture in the history of Test cricket.”We are not cheating, but today was very embarrassing,” said Younis. “All the time the umpires were checking the ball, and there are plenty of cameras, so how could we cheat? It’s not good. And every time it is happening in England. Why? We have good actions and we have pace. So don’t disrupt a boy like Umar Gul, he has a good reputation.”And don’t embarrass a team like Pakistan, we already have a lot of controversies in the whole world, and we are suffering a lot of things. Forget these things and focus on the game. Let the cameras catch it if anything is happening with the ball. In this game a lot of sixes are hit, and the ball goes in the crowd, and hits the concrete.”The Pakistan board and team management also expressed their disappointment that questions were being asked about Gul’s reverse swing. Coach Intikhab Alam said it was down to Gul’s talent. “It is disappointing to hear these things,” Intikhab told AFP. “Umar is a fantastic bowler. Not everyone can bowl a reverse ball. You’ve got to have a special ability to do that. He’s quick and his action makes a lot of difference.”Younis agreed with that assessment. “He does his hard work, and like Imran Khan, Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis, it’s all about hard work in the nets. He chats with Wasim, he chats with Waqar, and he chats with Shoaib Akhtar as well. He improves day by day, and he knows the tricks, all the yorkers and slower balls. He knows the art.”There was also strong criticism from Ijaz Butt, the PCB chairman, over Vettori’s comments. “I didn’t expect it from a cricketer like Vettori,” he told Cricinfo. “I have a lot of respect for him, but he made a statement which is uncalled for. [Gul] would never do a thing like this.”Geoff Lawson, the former Pakistan coach, was commentating on Saturday’s match at The Oval and noted that several New Zealand pacemen achieved subtle reverse swing towards the end of their innings.”My first reaction after reading [Vettori’s] comments was of being pretty disappointed,” Lawson told Cricinfo. “It sounded as if an issue was being made just because the New Zealand batsmen couldn’t play him. There was no great mystery to what he was doing. He was bowling it nice and full and getting it to go just enough, not metres.”I was commentating the game, and we were noting on air that some of the New Zealand bowlers were getting it to go a little bit reverse when they were bowling full towards the end of their innings. Gul was the best bowler at the last World Twenty20 and it’s pretty disappointing for New Zealand to have made an unofficial approach. It seems Pakistan carry the cross for these kinds of things.”

Ponting and Johnson see off New Zealand

Scorecard and ball-by-ball commentaryRicky Ponting swings over midwicket during his fifty•Getty Images

Australia executed a perfectly-paced chase to brush aside New Zealand by seven wickets in their warm-up match at The Oval. Ponting led the way with a brisk half-century and received support from his deputy Michael Clarke who remained unbeaten to ensure victory was secured in the final over.There was good news on the bowling front too with Mitchell Johnson taking 4 for 20 while Brett Lee bowled with hostility and took 1 for 9 off 3.5 overs. Their new-ball partnership left New Zealand’s top-order in shreds at 21 for 5 and it needed a feisty recovery from Scott Styris and Peter McGlashan, who was playing Australia for the first time, to set a respectable target.Australia made a near-perfect start, with Lee and Johnson snaring the New Zealand openers in consecutive overs. There were an astonishing number of dot balls as both bowlers passed the bat with regularity. The New Zealand batsmen’s efforts to break free failed – Martin Guptill holed out after striking one boundary, as did Ross Taylor after hitting three fours in a row. Jacob Oram’s dismissal – run out without facing a ball – hurt New Zealand further but they recovered to 147 thanks to the depth of their batting line-up.Australia also bat deep – Lee is slotted at No. 10 – but their lower order wasn’t tested on the day. They too suffered a minor hiccup at the start, losing both Shane Watson and David Warner within the space of five balls to James Franklin, but Ponting and Clarke prevented any further damage. They planned the chase masterfully, picking up singles and twos with regularity, chipping away at the asking-rate and then reducing it dramatically with the odd boundary.Tim Nielsen, the Australia coach, was pleased with his team’s effort and said that they were improving with every game.”Brett and Mitchell almost put the game to sleep in the first six overs. Then we chased the score down sensibly,” he said. “It is nice to turn the competitive juices on in a game situation.”You can never replicate that in training no matter how hard you do it, so to play against another country gets the adrenaline going and some good stuff happened because of the competitive environment.”He reserved special praise for Johnson, whose four economical wickets cut through New Zealand. “He is just starting to get some condition about him,” Nielsen said. “He has just come off a month in Perth, where he has been doing some work in the gym. He was beaming last night because of the fact he thought his rhythm was there and the ball was coming out fast without him trying hard.”That’s always a good indication. It is always about three or four runs in that he bowls at his best and he is only two runs in at the moment.”