ICC forms committee on 'unauthorised cricket'

The Indian Cricket League might get the ICC’s authorisation to conduct exhibition games © ICL
 

The ICC has taken the first significant step towards resolving the contentious issue of unauthorised cricket – including the status of the Indian Cricket League (ICL) – by setting up a high-powered committee to study its legal aspects. It has also discussed the issue of global agreements to prevent cricketers from appearing in such games, Cricinfo has learnt.The committee, which was formalised during the ICC’s annual meeting in Dubai last week, includes Giles Clarke, the ECB chairman, Norman Arendse, the Cricket South Africa president, Shashank Manohar, the BCCI’s president-elect, Lalit Modi, a vice-president of the BCCI [and the IPL’s chairman and commissioner] and David Becker, the ICC’s senior counsel – business and commercial.The committee was set up after officials were made aware the ICL may explore the possibility of coming under the governing body’s umbrella as “a kind of authorised unofficial cricket” under a specific rule that deals with exhibition matches and other games of a similar nature. It is understood that preliminary discussions took place in Bangalore during a meeting of key ICC board members on April 18, before the inaugural IPL game.When asked about the committee and its objectives, an ICC spokesperson said, “The purpose of the group is to ensure that whatever conclusion is reached is in the best interests of the game.”The issue of the ICL and its status came into focus on the sidelines of the ICC annual meeting last week when officials from India, England, Australia and South Africa met for a discussion on the proposed Twenty20 Champions League.While India, Australia and South Africa are clear that players associated with the ICL cannot take part in the league, England will have to take a tough call on the issue as around 25 ICL players are currently playing for 15 English counties. Officially, the ECB does not support any involvement with unofficial cricket but, in this situation, has to operate within the stringent trade laws in England.The ICC, meanwhile, has also sent a letter to the ICL seeking details of its correspondence with the BCCI on the issue of their status in the game. An ICL official told Cricinfo the letter was received last week and added the league is yet to send its response. Himanshu Mody, the ICL’s business head, confirmed the development to Cricinfo but declined to comment on it. When asked about the letter, the ICC spokesperson said, “Dialogue and correspondence on the subject is ongoing.”According to ICL officials, they had first written to the BCCI in April 2007 informing them about their plans to hold a city-based Twenty20 league. “But they reacted harshly to the issue,” an official said.The BCCI is very clear it would not budge on the ICL. “We had received two or three letters from the ICL, but we made our position very clear early that they cannot be recognised,” a BCCI official said. The BCCI has barred all official contact with players associated with ICL and expects all other members of the ICC to align with them on the issue.The ICL has already organised three Twenty20 tournaments and a 50-over competition but its status was placed on the international cricket stage this April by Malcolm Speed, the former ICC CEO, who said the governing body had received a letter from the league seeking clarity on their existence. Speed, who was since told to go on “paid leave” by the ICC before his successor Haroon Lorgat took charge last week, had also said that the issue was being handled by the ICC’s lawyers.Later, Dave Richardson, who took over from Speed on an interim basis, said the ICC would go by the BCCI’s policy towards ICL. “The ICL is a domestic event that takes place in India so our rules prescribe that any decision as to whether an event be regarded as official or not must be made by the country that event is played in,” Richardson had said.

Soggy Sunday plays havoc with NUL fixtures


The weatherwins at Oakham
Photo CricInfo

Apart from the fixture between Glamorgan Dragons and Kent Spitfires who managed to get a truncated game played, the entire Norwich Union League programme fell foul of the weather. In the 23 over match that was played in Cardiff, the excitement made up for the lack of action elsewhere as it ended in a tie.Elsewhere, they made a start at Oakham School where Leicestershire Foxes reached 11 without loss in three overs before the contest with Worcestershire Royals was abandoned. They got 5.2 overs in at Lord’s where Sussex Sharks made 25 for one against Middlesex Crusaders before they had so much rain that the Sharks could probably have swum back to Hove.And that was it. All the other matches were washed out without the players even taking to the field on soggy Sunday.

Injured Kumble makes way for Harbhajan

The Indian team were spared the bother of dropping either Ashish Nehra or Ajit Agarkar to accomodate Harbhajan Singh when Anil Kumble was ruled out of the second Test with a calf strain. The leg-spinner, who was India’s best bowler in the first Test at Lord’s with 6 wickets, sustained the injury during the recently concluded NatWest Series. Kumble, India’s strike bowler for almost a decade now, was a doubtful starter on the eve of the Test and was eventually ruled out after a team meeting late on Wednesday.Kumble was scheduled to visit a specialist doctor for a scan along with team physiotherapist Andrew Leipus, but as none was readily available, it is likely that the leggie will undergo a scan on the morning of the second Test. Team manager Ranga Reddy broke the news over the telephone minutes after an hour-long team meeting at the Hilton, where the Indians are staying.Kumble, who so dramatically came on to bowl with his head bandaged after breaking his jaw in the Antigua Test against the West Indies, was keen to play. Although not at his best since a shoulder injury laid him low some time ago, his grit and determination have made him a tough cricketer.Kumble’s unavailability paves the way for Harbhajan Singh to play his first Test of the series. The exclusion of the offie from the team that played the first Test led to widespread condemnation in papers in England and India. It was believed that Agarkar, despite his surprise ton at Lord’s would lose his place in the side. Sourav Ganguly was spared the heartburn of carrying out this task, as the playing eleven virtually picked itself at the end of the team meeting.Unless there are more dramatic developments of this kind before the start of the Test match, there is only one change in the Indian playing eleven that took the field at Lord’s, with Harbhajan Singh coming in for Kumble. Ajay Ratra, carrying a niggle of his own, was finally cleared to play.

Gillespie shows stamina in South Africa for ironman tag

Jason Gillespie is wearing the unusual tag of Australia’s fast bowling ironman in South Africa as he tries to cement his place in one-day international cricket.Gillespie has humped the reputation of an injury-plagued bowler through his stop-start career, admitting he was once a “crazy trainer” who did not understand the best way to manage his body.But Gillespie is now a more streetwise player and the 26-year-old is the only bowler to have played in every match on the South African tour, which continues today with the sixth one-day clash in Port Elizabeth.Gillespie is the most successful bowler in the series with 12 wickets, helping him establish a spot in the Australian team after his luckless run of just 34 one-day matches in six seasons.”Nowadays I train a lot smarter. I used to come in and bowl in the nets for a couple of hours everyday and I used to go running every morning for half an hour and put added stress on my body that I didn’t need,” Gillespie said.”I don’t bowl as much in the nets now and I tend to look after myself a bit more. I don’t go running as much.”The hardest thing was changing my way of thinking because you always think you have to train harder and harder and sometimes it’s training smarter that gets you results.”Now I’m spending a bit more time in the pool and more time relaxing and that’s helped me.”But Gillespie won’t declare himself over the annoying run of injuries, preparing to stick to a “one-game-at-a-time” theory as the new-look Australians prepare for next February’s World Cup defence.He has become a central plank of the Australian attack in South Africa, giving up a passable 4.60 runs per over while showing good control with the new ball.If he maintains that progress, Gillespie and Glenn McGrath will be the pace spearheads when the World Cup begins next February in South Africa, where Gillespie boasts a quirky record.He has played more one-day internationals in South Africa than Australia – 13 compared to just eight in his homeland – typifying his annoying run with injuries.”I don’t want to get too far ahead of myself because, if you do that, things can go wrong,” Gillespie said.”But it just seems to be going really well at the moment.”I’ve always believed I was good enough but it was a matter of getting on the park and staying on the park.”I’ve never doubted that I could succeed. I’ve had to work pretty hard to get where I am and think about the game a lot more.”Despite his returns on tour, Gillespie could be rested in one of the final two matches after Australia wrapped up the series in Durban last Wednesday night.Selectors indicated they could rest key players once the series was won, enabling young talent like Tasmanian all-rounder Shane Watson to continue his introduction to international cricket.

'Stumpy' to the rescue on Sunday

Somerset’s new mascot `Stumpy’ was the hero of the day at the County Ground on Sunday when he stepped into repair a damaged water pipe.Ground safety officer Peter Robinson told me: "During the afternoon we discovered that we had a serious leak in one of the pipes in the Ondaatje Pavilion and it was in danger of causing major damage to the hospitality boxes. `Stumpy’ was circulating and meeting the crowd nearby at the time, and after hearing about the problem came to our rescue by repairing the leak."`Robbo’ continued: "Lucky for us ‘Stumpy’ had his dragon toolkit with him and after he had sorted out our problem he put his pads back on and went out to meet his fans again. It’s really quite amazing what a dragon can do. `Stumpy’ might not have brought good luck to the players on the field on Sunday, but it was certainly lucky for us that he was around when he was!"`Stumpy’ will be at the ground this coming Sunday, July 7th, when during the tea interval his many fans will have the chance to bowl at him!

Southern Electric Contracting Cup – First Round Draw

First Round part one – Tuesday May 22Alton v Liphook and Ripsley
Andover v Hook and Newnham Basics
Burridge v Hambledon
Havant v Waterlooville
Lymington v Old Tauntonians and Romsey
Paultons v Calmore Sports
South Wilts v Leckford
St.Cross Symondians v Easton and Martyr Worthy
First Round part two – Thursday May 24Bashley (Rydal) v B.A.T.Sports
Gosport Borough v Purbrook
Hungerford v Old Basing
Rowledge v Cove
Sparsholt v Flamingos
Trojans v New Milton
United Services v Portsmouth
Winchester K.S. v Hursley Park

David Mutendera – updated biography

FULL NAME: David Travolta Mutendera
BORN: 25 January 1979, at Highfield (Harare)
MAJOR TEAMS: Mashonaland A. Present club team: Universals
KNOWN AS: David Mutendera. Nicknames: Diva; Curtley (as in Ambrose, from hisheight); Courteney (from his admiration for Courteney Walsh)
BATTING STYLE: Right Hand Bat
BOWLING STYLE: Right Arm Fast Medium
OCCUPATION: Professional cricketerFIRST-CLASS DEBUT: Zimbabwe Cricket Academy v Australian Cricket Academy, atAlexandra Sports Club, Harare; 27 March 1999
TEST DEBUT: Zimbabwe v New Zealand, at Queens Sports Club, Bulawayo; 12-16September 2000
ODI DEBUT: Zimbabwe v Kenya, at Nairobi, 25 September 1999BIOGRAPHY (updated March 2002)For more than twenty years now the Zimbabwe Cricket Union has been promoting cricket in the black townships of Harare. Certain critics, ignorant of how long it takes to develop quality cricketers with no home or cultural background in the sport, have for a long time made cynical comments about the motives of those responsible for it.It took almost the full twenty years for the first development cricketer to break through to the Zimbabwe national side, paving the way for many more to follow in years to come. The man in question was pace bowler David Mutendera, who made his international debut in the one-day series in Kenya in 1999/2000.David was born in 1979, the year before independence, in the Harare high-density suburb of Highfield, although he grew up in neighbouring Glen Norah, one of the first high-density areas earmarked by the Zimbabwe Cricket Union for development. He went to Shiriyedenga Primary School and followed his elder brother into the game there in Grade 6, when his coach was Richard Munjoma. He began as a wicket-keeper, a natural follow-up for one who was a goal-keeper in soccer, but gradually switched over to bowling in his second year. All of his early cricket was played on the concrete pitches built to give an early start to the game in areas where cricket had never ventured before.David’s talent soon became evident. He did well in local matches against other schools also in the development scheme and was selected after only one year of cricket as a member of the Harare South team to play in the national primary schools cricket week; in his next year he captained the side. He was by now primarily a fast bowler, quick for his age, who could also bat usefully.It was his good fortune that his parents sacrificed a great deal to send him to Prince Edward High School, always a stronghold of cricket, again following his brother, who regrettably gave up the game after Form Four. By the time David reached the Sixth Form, though, the Zimbabwe Cricket Union had taken such an interest in him that they awarded him a scholarship for his last two years at high school. He lived 15 kilometres from the school and had to commute there each day.He won a place in the national Under-15 team and went on his first tour with that side, to the South African Under-15 cricket week in Bloemfontein. He missed the Under-18 side the following year, but was a member the following two seasons. For much of his time at Prince Edward he played as an all-rounder, batting in the middle order with a highest score of 92 not out against St John’s. He also scored 52 against Western Province at Grahamstown in his final Under-18 Week. Later, however, he decided to concentrate more on his bowling. In his final year he captained the side. His best bowling performance was a seven-wicket haul, including a hat-trick, against the strong St George’s College team.The next steps were the national Under-19 team to South Africa for their cricket week, and then to England in 1997. In England he played in two of the three unofficial Tests against the home country’s Under-19 side, which included such players as Andy Flintoff, Chris Read, Graeme Swann and Paul Franks. He has fond memories of Canterbury, where in the final match of the series he took for wickets for 51 in the first innings.The following home season he played in the Under-19 World Cup tournament held in South Africa, and took five cheap wickets against Papua-New Guinea in an overwhelming Zimbabwean victory. However, he rated much more highly his spell of 10 overs for 13 runs without taking a wicket against Sri Lanka, when he bowled as quickly and accurately as he had ever done.While still at Prince Edward he began playing club cricket, at first for the school’s Old Boys association, Old Hararians. Living so far from the school, though, he found transport difficult, and the following season he was happy to switch to Universals, as he had friends able to help him with transport to that club, which is much closer to Glen Norah. He has played for Universals ever since then.David names Richard Munjoma and `Bunny’ Brereton, his Under-15 coach at Prince Edward, as important influences in his early career, but believes that it was his time with Dennis Lillee at the MRF Pace Bowling Foundation in Madras that really transformed his career. His bowling action used to be very much a slinging one, but Lillee made him get his arm high and worked on his run-up and follow-through; even more important, though, was the encouragement he received to believe in himself and realize his own potential. He returned home a changed bowler, he states.He finished the 1997/98 season in the Zimbabwe Board team which played against the B sides of South African provinces. He then went on a scholarship to the Plascon Academy in South Africa, but unfortunately a season with a heavy workload had taken its toll of his back. The ligaments in his lower back became inflamed, and he had to return home from Plascon after three weeks. This injury cost him ten months’ cricket and put him out of most of the 1998/99 season just as people were beginning to look at him as a future international player.He came back gradually and was offered a place in the first intake of the new Zimbabwe Cricket Academy. He was still unable to bowl at full pace, but was selected for the Academy’s first match, against the visiting Australian Cricket Academy team. The local team was overwhelmed, but David was able to take three wickets in the match, his only first-class match before making his one-day international debut.In 1999 he had another and much more successful spell for four months at the Plascon Academy. He began slowly, aware of his recent injury, but then improved. He gained particular benefit from the physical fitness side that helped to strengthen his body. After finishing his year at the CFX Academy he completed his contract with two years in Kwekwe, playing for Midlands.After two impressive club games at the start of the 1999/2000 season, the Zimbabwean selectors pounced on their man, selecting him for the quadrangular tournament in Kenya. He admits he had not done much to be selected for the tour itself, but had doubtless been selected mainly for his past performances and potential, as well as the good report he had received at Plascon.David enjoyed the tour, where he was made to feel very much at home by his team-mates, who were still mostly white. He opened the bowling in the first match against Kenya, when he remembers the great support and encouragement he had from his opening partner Neil Johnson in particular and indeed the whole team. He soon learned, though, that in inter-national cricket there is a very small margin for error, which was brought home to him in the match against South Africa, where Lance Klusener devastated the Zimbabwean attack for a dynamic century on a flat batting pitch. He found Klusener was able to punish even his good balls, andconceded 26 runs in his four-over opening spell, as did Johnson, despite winning credit for using the new ball well.Neil Johnson sadly left Zimbabwe with a reputation as a selfish player who was a poor team man, but David has seen the better side of him. "He was the one who used to give me a lot of help with my bowling," he says. "He was a big encouragement in the team, and if we were playing in a match he used to be behind my back all the way, saying, `Come on, Dave, let’s do this or that.’ Even in my batting he was a big help."Despite his failure to take a wicket, David was pleased with his tour, and clearly others were too, as he was selected in the twelve for the Test match against the Australians. The expectation was, though, that should all players remain fit he would be twelfth man, which would nevertheless be an invaluable experience for one who can hope for a long and successful international career in the future.At the end of the 1999/2000 season, David was selected to tour Sri Lanka with the Zimbabwe A team. The pitches did not suit his bowling, but he earned valuable lessons. The next season began with the tour by New Zealand, and there were big holes in the Zimbabwe side with the departure of Murray Goodwin and all-rounder Neil Johnson. It was then that David made his unfortunately controversial Test debut, after being named in the twelve for the First Test in Bulawayo.At the team meeting on the eve of the Test, coach Kevin Curran announced the eleven to play in the Test the following day, with David as twelfth man. The senior players firmly believed that political interference then brought about the replacement of Craig Wishart with David, and vice-captain Guy Whittall was so incensed that he refused to play on a matter of principle. The Zimbabwe Cricket Union, for their part, insist that this was merely a misunderstanding and that the twelfth man had not actually been named. The first David knew of the change was the following morning at the hotel, when he received a call from Curran telling him that the selectors wanted him to play.Taken by surprise, David admits that he was not mentally prepared, but he says, "I just put that behind my back before the match and just concentrated on the game. I think I did all right; I didn’t get wickets but I bowled well, and I was economical." His figures were 14-4-29-0 in the first innings and he did not bowl in the second. "It’s a pity I didn’t get another chance, but if I get another chance I feel I can improve on these."David, it seemed, was not yet ready for Test cricket and has not yet been selected again, though he has played in more one-day internationals, making a current total of nine. He has taken nine wickets at 37, conceding just over five runs an over, although these are boosted by six wickets in three matches against the weak Bangladesh team.He continued to play regularly for the Zimbabwe Board XI in the UCBSA Bowl competition, and feels that it was his success here that led to his recall against Bangladesh. But he only played in one unsuccessful match against India in the triangular tournament, despite some impressive bowling in warm-up matches against both India and West Indies. Against India he dismissed Sachin Tendulkar twice, for 11 and 33; against the West Indians, playing for the ZCU President’s XI, he opened with a sensational spell in which he dismissed both openers, Garrick and the prolific Gayle, without scoring. His lack of consistency told against him, perhaps, as he would often bowl superbly in one spell, but then look quite innocuous when he returned later, as he did in that match. He spent much of that winter’s cricket doing twelfth-man duties for the national side.In 2001/02 he began with the tour to Kenya with Zimbabwe A, but without much success, and only played two matches in the Bowl competition. He remained positive, though, and felt that he was regaining his form. He accepts that he has to continue to work hard to renew his challenge for a place in the national side.David is six foot four inches tall and his main asset is the lift he can extract from a good length off the pitch, using his height well. His stock delivery is the off-cutter, although he can also bowl the ball that moves the other way. He knows he cannot bowl as quickly as many people expect, looking at his strong build, and needs to rely on other weapons."I need to be more consistent in my pace," he says. "I’ve got the advantage of height and can make the ball bounce off a good length, when I remember to bowl over the top. That’s one thing I need to work on, and I know the fault is that I tend to fall over in my action, and I need to practise that all the time."He realizes that it can be fatal to experiment in one-day cricket, and with 50-over club matches predominant in Zimbabwe he does not have much freedom to try out new developments in the middle. His one-day philosophy, quickly learned, is to let the batsman make the mistakes by bowling a tight line and length and maintaining the pressure; he names Adam Dale of Australia as a bowler who is an example worth copying in one-day cricket. His batting ability is still evident, and the likelihood is that he will, given time and experience, develop into a very useful all-round player.David emphasized again his commitment to hard work as a vital part of his career. "I want to be selected again to play Test cricket or play in the one-dayers," he says. "All I have to do is work hard and see what happens, if the selectors have faith in me. I’m ready to go. There’s nothing else for a cricketer but to play for his country in Tests or one-day internationals. Those are my goals and that’s why I’m here at the gym, working hard every day. I can’t afford to take a day off or relax because there’s always competition. If you’re going to play at the top level you’ve got to be prepared, you’ve got to be fit, you’ve got to be mentally fit as well. You’ve got to be raring to go, every day of your life, ready to fight, and I think any day if I’m called up to play for my national team I’ll be there to do it."

NZ under-19s in control after good first day effort

New Zealand developed a strong position on day one of the first Youth Test with South Africa and has already taken a 17-run lead with seven wickets in hand.South Africa chose to bat first in the four-day game at Molyneux Park, Alexandra in Central Otago.It proved a fatal choice as South Africa was dismissed for 150 and by stumps, New Zealand was 167/3 thanks largely to the efforts of Central Districts batsmen Greg Todd and Ross Taylor.The wicket looked good and as the South African batting progressed it appeared to contain no dangers whatsoever. However, apart from the South African eaptain Rivash Gobind who scored 68, no player really got on top of the bowling.The bowling was steady without being spectacular. Taraia Robin, another CD player did the early damage and finished the innings with 4-65. The other contributors were Ian Butler 2-32, Greg Todd 1-11 and Iain Robertson 1-1.Wicket-keeper Brendon McCullum, of Otago, captained New Zealand well and made several diving saves and took four catches for his side, two of them being real pearlers. The fielding was enthusiastic and it was easy to distinguish that the Kiwis were very focused.Setting out in pursuit of the South African 150, New Zealand were uncertain in the early stages of their innings and through the early stages battled through from 10/1, 35/2 and 51/3 before Todd and Taylor began the revival. They played some glorious shots off the South African attack.In the early stages of their innings they were very watchful, but towards the end of the day attacked with some class and the very hot day ended with New Zealand 167/3. Todd was 66 not out and Taylor 54 not out.Bowling for South Africa, Gerhard de Bruin had 2-11 and Warren Hauptfleisch 1-26.Bowling and fielding in the unique Central Otago heat, South Africa understandably tired and their effort flagged a little as the afternoon wore on but in the absence of two of their main bowlers, Johan Botha and Monde Zondeki, they worked hard.

The Ashes: England dominated the 19th Century

Australian teams had made nine trips to England in the 19th Century in1880,1882,1884,1886,1888,1890,1896 and1899. England overwhelmingly dominated this era by winning seven Test Series and Four Test Matches.The home team won the First Test Match in England played at the Oval from 6-8 September 1880 by 5 wickets. Dr WG Grace whose influence on the game is proverbial, scored the first century for England (152). Two summers later a seven-run victory by the Australians at the Oval in August 1882 helped originate the ‘Ashes’. England convincingly won the series in 1884, 1886, 1880, 1890, and 1893. The low scoring Test Series in 1896 was closely fought but England prevailed 2-1. JT Hearne (5/76) claimed the first ever hat-trick for England in the Ashes. Australia won the first 5-Test Series, the last of the 19th Century, by a 1-0 margin.The interesting highlight of the 3-Test rubber in 1888 was that the series produced only 1111 runs by both teams, Australia contributing only 507 in six completed innings. At Lords, during the series, 40 wickets fell for an all time low aggregate of 291 runs. 27 of these 40 wickets fell on a single day, 17th July, the 2nd day of the Test Match. Six weeks later the shortest complete ‘Ashes’ took place at Old Trafford involving only 6 hours and 34 minutes of batting time with Australia’s second innings of 70 lasting just 69 minutes.During this era England were led by Lord Harries, A Shaw, AN Hornby, AG Steel, WG Grace and AE Stoddart. WL Murdoch, HJH Scott, PS McDonnell, JM Blackham, G Giffen, GHS Trott and J Darling captained the visiting Australian teams.Notable performers on both sides during the Australian tours of England in 19th Century were:
For Australia: WL Murdoch, FR Spofforth, GHS Trott, JJ Lyons and H Trumble
For England: WG Grace, AG Steel, KS Ranjitsinghji, HGraham, T Richardson, GA Lohman, R Peel and J Briggs.

East to leave Essex

David East, Essex’s chief executive, is to leave the county for a new role in the UAE. East, who was Essex’s wicketkeeper during the 1980s and made more than 350 appearances for the county, has been appointed as chief executive of Abu Dhabi Cricket Club and Emirates Cricket Board.After ending his playing career, East returned to Essex as commercial manager before being made chief executive in 2000. He will remain with the club until the end of the year and help oversee the process of recruiting a successor.”David leaves the role after 12 years in the position and everyone associated with the club would like to wish him the best of luck in the United Arab Emirates,” Nigel Hilliard, Essex’s chairman, said.

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