Gillespie ruled out of second Test

A shoulder injury that Mark Gillespie sustained during the ODIs against Bangladesh has kept him out of the second Test © Getty Images
 

Mark Gillespie, the New Zealand fast bowler, has been ruled out of the second Test against Bangladesh after he aggravated the shoulder injury which forced him to miss the first Test while playing for Wellington against Auckland.Gillespie took 3 for 36 off 4.2 overs during his comeback for Wellington but the injury, which he sustained in the second ODI against Bangladesh in Napier, resurfaced and forced him to leave the field.”He [Gillespie] is definitely out of the Test line-up,” Durning told stuff.co.nz. “He bowled a complete spell the other day but yesterday he was three or four overs into a spell and all of sudden something happened again. We’ll wait and see the results of the Tests before making another other decisions.”Wellington coach Anthony Stuart also couldn’t explain what the problem with Gillespie’s shoulder was. “He [Gillespie] was confident of getting through ten overs and he got three wickets for us early and then just pulled up lame so it doesn’t look good,” Stuart said. “I’ve got no idea and to be fair I don’t think many people have got any idea about it. But there’s obviously a problem in there, whether it’s a rotator cuff or a nerve.”It only hits him at certain times and I don’t know if there’s an apparent reason for it or not, whether there’s something in his action, I don’t know, we can’t pinpoint it.”Gillespie did not take part in New Zealand’s practice session at the Basin Reserve in Wellington on Thursday. Fast bowlers Iain O’Brien and Michael Mason were the contenders to replace Gillespie though offspinner Jeetan Patel also had a chance depending on the nature of the pitch.

Bloomfield fall to first defeat in thriller

Premier Limited Over Tournament

High-riding Bloomfield, without their prolific scorer Tillakaratne Dilshan who was leading a Sri Lanka President’s XI against England, suffered their first defeat of the season when Colombo CC won by one wicket during an exciting encounter at the Bloomfield ground. Allrounder Laknath Perera was Bloomfield’s adversary taking four wickets with his gentle medium-pace and then showing a cool head to score an undefeated 25 off 29 balls to enable CCC to pass the target of 198 in the 48th over. Despite the defeat Bloomfield continue to head the points table hotly pursued by Colombo Colts.Colombo Colts kept pace with NCC by defeating Ragama CC by nine wickets at the Colombo Cricket Club. Angelo Mathews, the former Sri Lanka Under-19 captain, knocked out the top and bottom of the order with four wickets. Colts made short work of the modest target, cruising home in the 23rd over mainly through an opening stand of 100 by Shantha Kalavitigoda and Dilruwan Perera, who made his ODI debut against England last month.Player of the week – Riki Wessels
Although there were a number of closely fought matches, the overall standard of batting has been disappointing with many young players failing to play straight. But one player who has stood out is Riki Wessels, the 22-year-old son of former Australian and South Africa cricketer Kepler Wessels.An Australian by birth Wessels, who plays for English county Northamptonshire and has set his sights of representing England in the future, signed up for one season with Nondescripts CC. According to the club’s vice president Ranjith Fernando he has making a good impression. “Riki’s fitted into the system very well. The way he is batting he’s certainly shown that he is enjoying himself.”Having started the season with an impressive knock of 83 against Tamil Union, Wessels has shown consistency as an opener averaging 53 from five matches. Last weekend he hit back-to-back half-centuries – 61 and 53 against Bloomfield and Chilaw Marians. However, despite Wessels’ contributions NCC are struggling to keep pace with the rest of the clubs. They are lying sixth and need to lift their game in the remaining four matches to have any chance of qualifying for the knock-out stage.

Tier A
Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts
Bloomfield 5 4 1 0 0 20
Colts 5 4 1 0 0 18
Col CC 5 3 2 0 0 14
Ragama 5 3 2 0 0 14
Moors 5 3 2 0 0 13
Nondescripts 5 2 3 0 0 9
Sinhalese 5 2 3 0 0 9
Chilaw 5 2 3 0 0 8
Tamil Union 5 1 4 0 0 5
Badureliya 5 1 4 0 0 4
Tier B
Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts
Lankan CC 5 5 0 0 0 23
Burgher 5 4 0 1 0 22
SL Army 5 4 1 0 0 19
Panadura 5 3 1 1 0 15
Moratuwa 5 2 3 0 0 10
Saracens 5 2 3 0 0 9
Police SC 5 2 3 0 0 8
Sebast CAC 5 1 4 0 0 5
SL Air SC 5 1 4 0 0 5
Singha SC 5 0 5 0 0 0

Not just another Ranji season

Can Bengal reach yet another Ranji final, this time without Deep Dasgupta? © AFP

Almost everyone, either openly or secretly, had a good laugh when Kapil Dev called those who joined the Indian Cricket League (ICL) “the cream of the country”. That was because the players picked by the ICL did not promise a competitive league. But now, at the start of the first-class season, looking at the situation in terms of the loss to the Ranji Trophy rather than the ICL’s gain, the impact of the exodus seems huge; and it is only natural that it dominates pre-season thoughts.Moving from one Indian domestic season to another has long been a seamless transition, with not many changes, or changes that place too slowly to be noticed. It is usually difficult to identify the start of one season from another, but the huge exodus to ICL – about 15% of the total workforce – means this time will be different. When in two days’ time Bengal play Hyderabad at the Eden Gardens, more than 10 regular players from both sides will be missing. Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Baroda, Maharashtra, almost every team has been affected by the migration. The teams hit by ICL have never been too far from the semi-finals, which makes this one of the most unpredictable seasons in recent memory.It will be interesting to see how they cope with the predicament they find themselves in. “Cricket doesn’t stop with a few players”, has been the general, outwardly brave attitude of the teams severely hit. But only on the first morning will we know if Railways can do without JP Yadav, if Bengal without Deep Dasgupta, Baroda without Rakesh Patel, Punjab without Dinesh Mongia and UP without Shalabh Srivastava. This season will test the resilience of Indian domestic cricket and the supply of talent from junior cricket.Not a pointless exercise
From this season, holding on to a draw will get teams a point. What used to happen earlier was once a side had conceded the lead, it would play devil-may-care cricket in the second innings and get bowled out, in turn handing four easy points to the leading team. That usually hurt other teams in the group competing to make it to the semi-finals.Another aspect the BCCI might want to look into is that the team is awarded no points for gaining a first-innings lead if it eventually loses the match. This keeps the teams from going for outright wins, once a lead is attained.Getting the order right
The decision to schedule the Ranji Trophy before the Duleep Trophy this season, has meant that Ranji will have an early start on November 3. It also means the best performers can be picked for the Duleep Trophy for playing in an inter-zone tournament should be an apt incentive for performing well in the inter-state tournament.

Umpires will be appraised this season on the basis of video-feedback © Cricinfo Ltd

Ump, you are being watched
Lack of feedback and proper appraisal has long been the umpires’ grudge in domestic cricket. Starting this season, every decision made by them will be logged and there will be an appraisal for umpires based on reports from the umpiring officer, the match referee and the captains. The umpiring officer will be assisted by the video-feedback system.But that is not where the umpiring officers’ work ends. Off the field they will have to guide the umpires on the match management; communication and team work; professionalism; preparation; and fitness, diet and appearance.Welcome to the big league
Orissa and Himachal Pradesh (HP) are the teams promoted to the Super League this season. HP, the Plate League champions, and Orissa, the runners-up, have made it on the back of dominating performances last year. While HP conceded a first-innings lead once last season – trailed Orissa by 51 runs – Orissa’s record was unblemished. But they will know this is a different league and to stay here for more than one season they will have to considerably up their performance.**First-round matches
Himachal Pradesh v Saurashtra in DharamsalaMumbai v Karnataka in MumbaiTamil Nadu v Maharashtra in ChennaiOrissa v Uttar Pradesh in CuttackPunjab v Andhra in AmritsarBengal v Hyderababad in Kolkata*Delhi v Rajasthan in Delhi**The two matches will start on November 4.

Kookaburra diplomacy, and a big blackout

Four, four, four, gone: Adam Gilchrist’s five-ball cameo ended in a middle-stump mess © AFP

Kookaburra diplomacyBefore the game began, as the Australians walked out to the boundary ropes for a stretch the boisterous crowd began its sickening chant of “Aussies Suck”. It’s a Mumbai speciality, and though you hardly expect respect from the crowds for some of the best performers in the game, you don’t want to see this kind of thing either. Mike Young, Australia’s fielding coach, did his bit to win the crowd over, walking around the outfield and tossing a ball into each of the stands for a lucky spectator to catch. Handy souvenir from someone you’re booing.BlackoutAfter its initial reluctance to warm to the idea the Board of Control for Cricket in India has now embraced Twenty20 as fully as possible. But the organisation, or at least some parts of it, were a shambles when play began. For nearly ten overs there was no electricity in two stands and the tower housing the broadcasters and the media. The BCCI are quite good at keeping the media in the dark when they want, but this surely was the first time they did so literally.

End of the road? Brad Hodge walks back after his final innings of a miserable tour © AFP

Twelve and outBrett Lee used to be part of a band that called itself . On the day it was 12 and out for Adam Gilchrist. Off the very first over, in a supercharged atmosphere, Gilchrist carted the second, third and fourth deliveries from RP Singh for boundaries. A streaky edge between slip and keeper, a slash over point, a whip to fine-leg and middle stump uprooted next ball by a superb yorker. In all his innings consumed just three minutes. Not even enough time to cook instant noodles.Bounce ‘imWith the DJ pumping music that was geeing the crowd up – as if they needed any help – it was perhaps not surprising that Sreesanth, never one to keep his calm at the best of times, chose to bounce Matthew Hayden. The ball was pacy and climbed sharply on Hayden, but he was up to it, pulling off the front foot, with such monstrous power that the ball didn’t merely go high, it went far as well, clearing first the ropes and then the stands on the leg side, sailing out of the ground. Hitting sixes is one thing, but clearing the stands? That takes some doing.End of the road?Brad Hodge, for all the long rope he has been given, has failed to come up with one meaningful score in this Indian sojourn. His latest knock, perhaps his last in green and gold, lasted all of six balls and produced two runs, before Irfan Pathan got a straight one to slide through. Hodge, attempting to biff the ball over midwicket, was nowhere near the ball and the middle stump landed in Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s gloves.First sighting of HilfyBen Hilfenhaus has travelled to Bangalore, Kochi, Hyderabad, Chandigarh, Vadodara, Nagpur and Mumbai without bowling a single ball. When the swing bowler from Tasmania got his first go, it should have produced a wicket. Gautam Gambhir sliced one high and wide towards mid-off, and it was safely pouched by Stuart Clark. Just as the Australians began to celebrate Suresh Shastri, the umpire, signalled the no-ball with a smile on his face. The free-hit cost nothing but one wasn’t too sure if Hilfenhaus saw the funny side of it.

Buchanan brushes aside comparison to Ashes

John Buchanan dismissed suggestions thattoday’s one-dayer would reflect the Ashes© AFP

Australia’s coach, John Buchanan, has scotched suggestions that today’s match between Australia and England would give an insight into the teams’ prospects for next summer’s Ashes series. There has been a familiar sense of optimism surging through England’s ranks, thanks to their recent successes in Tests and one-dayers, but Buchanan is not getting caught up in the hype, saying that this match was only a fleeting moment.”I’m not convinced about that,” Buchanan told AAP, when asked if the match was an indication of the future. “It’s a snapshot in time. It makes a statement about this particular match. Nothing else. There’s a lot of time before the Ashes series, a lot of change will happen to both teams between now and then. I don’t think this game will have any bearing.”But Duncan Fletcher looked at it differently. He believed English cricket was changing, and that the team had a pretty good chance of putting one over Australia. “This is probably the best opportunity we’ve had in a long time to topple the Aussies,” Fletcher said to the . “Winning the World Cup and the Ashes would be the ultimate dream. Any decent coach would tell you the same thing.”But something special is happening in English cricket. We really do want to become the best side in the world.”It was a thought mirrored by Darren Gough, who added that neither victory nor defeat could hide the fact tht England had improved. “I don’t think we have to beat them to know that England have progressed in both forms of the game. We have a good one-day side and the Test side is playing some excellent cricket, but we’ll only get a true test of how close the sides are when they play against each other in a five-Test series.”Even when I’m not playing I want England to beat them. It’s always going to be that way,” said Gough. “There will come a time when England beat Australia all the time and the Aussies will be thinking the same.”

Cairns, McMillan blast hundreds in Brisbane warmup

Chris Cairns and Craig McMillan blasted hundreds as New Zealand cruised to an easy 127-run win over a Queensland XI in the first of two one-day practice matches at Allan Border Field, Brisbane, today.The matches have been arranged as preparation for the New Zealanders before they embark on a triangular one-day series against Pakistan and South Africa in Singapore starting next Sunday. Queensland have already played host to the Australian team for two matches over the past three days.While New Zealand had a comfortable win in today’s match, they suffered a blow with wicketkeeper Chris Nevin being unable to take his place behind the stumps after injuring a tendon. Nevin is being flown back to New Zealand and is out of the Singapore series. Adam Parore is replacing Nevin and will fly into Brisbane to join the New Zealand squad tomorrow morning.NZ captain Stephen Fleming won the toss and elected to bat first. Daniel Vettori opened the batting with Chris Nevin. Usual opening batsman Nathan Astle is playing for Accrington in the Lancashire League and will join the NZ camp in Singapore later this week.By the end of the third over both openers were back in the pavilion. Nevin made seven, while the Vettori experiment ended with his score on four, becoming Scott Muller’s first victim of the day.Muller claimed his second wicket and Queensland’s third with the score on 49, Stephen Fleming (15) hitting a catch to the waiting hands of Jimmy Maher. This brought Cairns to the crease, and in Muller’s next over Cairns moved into full cry with a four, a six and a six off successive deliveries. Twenty-two runs off the over saw Muller (2/56 from seven overs) removed from the attack, the second day in a row that he had taken a mauling.The scoring was in excess of a run a ball when Roger Twose (24) was the next wicket to fall, caught behind off the bowling of Matthew Pascoe. McMillan joined Cairns and after a brief settling in period the onslaught resumed.Cairns brought up his half-century in the 23rd over with a boundary off Lee Carseldine, having faced just 36 balls. He was severe on off-spinner Scott O’Leary, lofting him for sixes in consecutive overs.Cairns’ 100 came up on his 87th ball faced in the innings, but he failed to add to that score when he lofted O’Leary to a waiting Scott Muller. He hit seven fours and five sixes in his even hundred.McMillan brought up his half-century off 84 deliveries in the 43rd over of the innings, but with Chris Harris as his new partner, the scoring rate simply accelerated. The final eight overs of the New Zealand innings yielded 108 runs, McMillan bringing up his hundred on the second last ball of the fiftieth over from 108 deliveries. That’s 24 balls for his second fifty.McMillan was out off the final ball of the innings for 103 (nine fours, three sixes), while Harris (38* from 23 balls, three fours, two sixes) played one of the innings that has made his reputation as one of the finest late-overs batsmen in the world.New Zealand finished their fifty overs with a total of 7/321. Muller was the only bowler to take two wickets. Scott O’Leary (1/76 from ten overs) has yet to play for Queensland in a Pura Cup or Mercantile Mutual Cup match, and is unlikely to experience the same baptism of fire when the day of his competition debut does arrive.From the moment that Jimmy Maher (14) was given out lbw to Geoff Allott in the seventh over, Queensland were never in the hunt. Jerry Cassell made a fine 58, and Scott Prestwidge (31, including two sixes off Vettori) played a lively innings, but at the thirty-over mark the required run rate per over was already more than 10.Eight New Zealanders were giving bowling practice, and at least the Queenslanders can say that they lasted the full fifty overs, their score at the end of the innings being 9/194. Shayne O’Connor (3/24 from seven overs), Chris Harris (3/23 from eight) and Geoff Allott (2/26 from seven) were the best of the NZ bowlers.With Nevin unable to keep wicket, Roger Twose donned the gloves until Queensland Second XI keeper Gavin Fitness had been summoned to take over. Fitness, in his role as New Zealand substitute keeper, found himself in the unusual situation of stumping fellow Queenslander Brendan Creevey off the bowling of Vettori.New Zealand have one more practice match against Queensland tomorrow Tuesday. Parore is expected to keep wicket for the visitors, almost immediately after hopping off the plane.

Lara's return to form inspires West Indies

West Indies 208 for 2 (Lara 86*, Gayle 69) v England
Scorecard

Andrew Flintoff jumps for joy at trapping Daren Ganga lbw© Getty Images

After three Tests where, by and large, everything came fairly easily to England’s bowlers, they found the going far harder on a pitch devoid of pace and bounce. By the close of a rain-interrupted first day in Antigua, West Indies were cruising on 208 for 2, and Brian Lara was looking broodingly dangerous, unbeaten on 86. He has plenty of scores to settle.The loss of the entire afternoon session after a downpour during and shortly after the lunch break robbed proceedings of any real momentum, and overall the day had something of an end-of-term feel to it. The crowd was slow in arriving – there were still plenty of empty seats midway even by lunch – and the atmosphere inside the Rec was decidedly flat. This most compact of grounds only came alive during the rain delay, with the sound systems in the Double Decker stand loud even by their standards and the dancing frenetic. Only the resumption of the match stifled the fun.England’s pace quartet realised early on that this wicket had been custom-made for batting. Lara briefly flirted with putting England in – heavy rain had left the surface damp – but his decision to bat was vindicated as England’s hitherto lethal attack huffed and puffed with little reward. Geraint Jones spent most of his first day in Test cricket taking balls dying on him.The morning belonged to Chris Gayle. He took half an hour to dust off the cobwebs, but when he did he unleashed some trademark drives and cuts through the covers, although there were still enough wild slashes to keep the bowlers interested. He lost Daren Ganga – who had once again failed to look as if should be opening the innings – on the hour when Andrew Flintoff produced the classic fast bowler’s one-two. First he dug in a bouncer, and then the next ball was pitched up, Ganga was caught back in the crease, and was comprehensively leg-before for 10 (33 for 1).

Back on song: Brian Lara on his way to 86*© Getty Images

Enter Lara, under pressure, out of sorts, but on a ground which holds happy memories for him. Before he had scored, he survived a hugely confident shout for caught behind from Stephen Harmison. There was a noise – but no visible deflection – and the celebrating Harmison was well past the batsman before he looked round to see Darrell Hair shaking his head. Harmison – with 22 wickets coming into this game – was due an off day, and this was it. He was warned in his second over for running down the pitch, and rarely rekindled the menace he has shown so far.With Gayle’s confidence increasing, Lara was initially content to play second fiddle. As Gayle’s run-rate rose, England quite deliberately slowed the pace, with blatant time-wasting to try and rattle him. But what did unsettle him was the introduction of Gareth Batty – a late replacement for the unwell Ashley Giles – in the final over of the morning. Conscious that he had to be sensible with the break looming, Gayle, on 69, was caught in several minds, and he tamely chipped Batty’s fifth ball back to him. It was a limp ending to an entertaining innings (98 for 2).After a four-hour delay, play resumed and it was almost uninterrupted one-way traffic as West Indies chugged along at over four an over. Lara grew more assured, although Ramnaresh Sarwan was suffering in a crisis of confidence of his own at the other end. Lara’s timing, indifferent at first, returned and he brought up his fifty with a sweet pull off Simon Jones, and then smacked him through the covers for good measure. It might have come two or three Tests too late, but he was three-quarters of the way to being back to his best.Meanwhile, Sarwan’s problems were compounded when he was struck amidships by Batty; he collapsed as if shot by a sniper, and took about as long to recover as if he had. He then edged Jones, who was struggling with his run-up, to second slip, but that fielder had been removed to stem the flow of runs, and the ball bobbled for four. In the final overs his inside-edge off Harmison somehow missed his off stump and earned him another boundary. He ended the day on 41, and for once the luck was with West Indies.The pitch at St John’s usually lasts the duration, and it will take some good bowling or bad batting for either side to force a result, especially given that the forecast for the next four days is for more heavy showers. It would be very much a case of after the Lord Mayor’s Show, were it not for Lara.Martin Williamson is managing editor of Wisden Cricinfo.

Bangladesh down, but not out

Trevor Chappell, the Australian-born coach, was not reading the riot act to his batsmen after the Bangladeshis scored a disappointingly slow 120 from 61 overs in the first innings of their four-day match against Auckland on the Eden Park Outer Oval today.Chappell said his batsmen were under orders to bat with patience, especially after being put in to bat on a greenish pitch which may have been slightly suspect after so much recent wet weather.”Actually our opening batsmen did a good job for the ball was swinging about. Unfortunately, as sometimes happens with these players, they lose patience. Some of them were out to very good balls, others out to bad shots.”Chappell said there was nothing wrong with his players’ spirits.”They have taken some beatings in recent times and feel a bit down after a loss. But they are a fairly happy lot, quite upbeat about their cricket.”However, Chappell said the loss through rain of two of the three days of the New Zealand District Association XI match at Wanganui over the weekend, was a major setback in preparation for the first test at Hamilton next week.”We badly needed some batting against the District XI bowlers, and have only this Auckland game to adapt to the new conditions.”

Boycott winning his battle against cancer

Geoffrey Boycott has announced that he is on the road to recovery from his throat cancer ordeal. Boycott attended a charity match near Leeds to honour cancer fund-raiser Jane Tomlinson, and he revealed that his recuperation is making good progress.Since he was diagnosed last September, Boycott has undergone radiotherapy and chemotherapy and has lost almost 12 kilograms, but with that now behind him, he is looking forward to a healthy future.Talking to the , he said: “So far so good. It looks as though it [the treatment] has worked. I have check-ups every month to see if it has."He added, "The treatment is finished. I’m not saying anything more because I don’t want to tempt providence. It comes as a big shock to everybody. Most of us know very little about it until we actually get it and then we start reading up.”He plans to resume his career as a cricket broadcaster, but is still awaiting clearance from his doctor.

Sami skittles Northants as other matches end in stalemate

In the latest round of County Championship matches, Kent beat Northants by 145 runs after Mohammad Sami ripped through the batsmen with 6 for 99. Sami finished with match figures of 10 for 138. Robert Key further reminded the England selectors of his ability with his third century of the week. Elsewhere, Surrey drew with Middlesex after Jamie Dalrymple’s 244, and Sussex drew with Warwickshire at Horsham. Ian Bell, the first-innings double-centurion finished on 64 not out at the close. At Chelmsford, James Foster smashed an aggressive 212 in Essex’s draw with Leicestershire. Derbyshire drew with Somerset at Derby, despite Andy Caddick’s 6 for 92. Yesterday, there were big wins for Worcestershire, Glamorgan and Nottinghamshire. Matthew Mason took five wickets as Gloucestershire went down at New Road, David Hussey helped set up Notts’ win with 125, and Alex Wharf grabbed five to sink Durham at the Riverside.

Frizzell County Championship Division One

Scorecard
Day 1 Report – Wisden Cricinfo
Day 2 Report – Wisden Cricinfo
Day 3 Report – Wisden Cricinfo
Day 4 Report – Wisden Cricinfo
Scorecard
Day 1 Report – Middlesex see red as Murtagh rides his luck The Guardian
Day 2 Report – Dalrymple cashes in on Strauss call-up The Daily Telegraph
Day 3 Report – Nash altercation sours Batty’s mood The Guardian
Day 4 Report – Brown guides Surrey home The Sunday Times
Scorecard
Day 1 Report – Bell rings with old joy of young freedom The Guardian
Day 2 Report – Bell and Frost shine in day of records The Daily Telegraph
Day 3 Report – Ward in carefree mood The Daily Telegraph
Day 4 Report – Bell still learning the fame game The Sunday Times
Scorecard
Day 1 Report – Wilting county watch the Hick master-class Gloucestershire Echo
Day 2 Report – Hick wallows in batting heaven The Daily Telegraph
Day 3 Report – Gidman digs in to delay inevitable The Daily Telegraph
Day 4 Report – Mason’s zip seals victoryThe Daily Telegraph

Frizzell County Championship Division Two

Scorecard
Day 1 Report – Caddick hits a reach seam The Daily Telegraph
Day 2 Report – Belligerent Blackwell hits back The Daily Telegraph
Day 3 Report – Derbyshire look to end drought The Daily Telegraph
Day 4 Report – Derbyshire dilemma The Sunday Telegraph
Scorecard
Day 1 Report – Hodge tears into Essex The Daily Telegraph
Day 2 Report – Promising Cook grabs maiden 100 The Daily Telegraph
Day 3 Report – Foster hits out as Essex boys shine The Daily Telegraph
Day 4 Report – Essex miss Napier power The Sunday Telegraph
Scorecard
Day 1 Report – Pietersen tucks into depleted Yorkshire The Independent
Day 2 Report – Hussey closes on century to deflate Yorkshire attack The Independent
Day 3 Report – Hussey piles on Yorkshire woe The Guardian
Scorecard
Day 1 Report – Quickfire Powell turns on power in glory bid IC Wales
Day 2 Report – Harrison’s best swings it towards Glamorgan IC Wales
Day 3 Report – Wharf leads the way IC Wales

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