Balcombe continues Glamorgan's woes

David Balcombe has made an eye-catching start to the season and that continued when he took five Glamorgan wickets to put Hampshire in control on the first day

19-Apr-2012
ScorecardDavid Balcombe has made an eye-catching start to the season and that continued when he took five Glamorgan wickets to put Hampshire in control on the first day of their rain-interrupted Division Two clash.Balcombe recorded figures of 5 for 33 to go with his match figures of 11 for 119 against Gloucestershire last week.He was denied a sixth wicket as Glamorgan imaginatively declared their first innings on 103 for 9 during the last of three breaks for rain in an attempt to recover lost ground by making inroads into the Hampshire batting in the final hour. The tactic paid limited dividends as Huw Waters had Jimmy Adams caught behind. Hampshire closed on 29 for 1, 74 behind.Glamorgan’s batting woes continued after their consecutive defeats to Leicestershire and Derbyshire. Despite winning the toss and electing to bat, they were 68 for 5 at lunch. Stewart Walters attempted an expansive drive and was caught at second slip by Liam Dawson off Balcombe; Gareth Rees fell leg before to Chris Wood; and then Nick James, brought into the side to bolster the middle order inhis first game of the season, was neatly caught by wicketkeeper Michael Bates.Before lunch, Glamorgan lost two more wickets. Danny Briggs, their left-arm spinner, struck in his fourth over to have Ben Wright caught at short leg by James Vince and just two overs before the interval, Jim Allenby went lbw to Balcombe playing across the line.Rain during the lunch interval forced a delay of an hour. Will Bragg seemed to enjoy the break, taking two fours off Balcombe’s first over of the afternoon session to move to 42. Another break for rain, however, proved calamitous for Glamorgan as four wickets fell in the space of only three overs.They still have not made a Championship fifty. Bragg threatened to become the first, but on 45 he was brilliantly caught one-handed, low down at second slip, by Liam Dawson off Wood. Balcombe then had Moises Henriques lbw, removed Graham Wagg at mid-off, attempting to pull, and completed his haul with another lbw decision to dismiss Dean Cosker.

Nasir Aziz reported for suspected illegal action

United Arab Emirates offspinner Nasir Aziz has been reported for a suspected illegal bowling action during the final of the World Cricket League Division Two tournament

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Apr-2011United Arab Emirates offspinner Nasir Aziz has been reported for a suspected illegal bowling action during the final of the World Cricket League Division Two tournament against Namibia, which was played on Friday.Aziz, 24, was reported after the end of the game by on-field umpires Sarika Prasad and Buddhi Pradhan, along with third umpire Gary Baxter. ICC Tournament Referee Graeme La Brooy handed over the copy of the report to UAE team manager Mazhar Khan on Saturday morning.Where a bowler is reported by the umpires due to a suspected illegal action in a WCL match, the policy requires the relevant member board – in this case the Emirates Cricket Board (ECB) – to instigate an assessment. In the meantime, the player is still free to take part in international cricket.The ICC has asked the ECB to make arrangements for the assessment of Aziz’s bowling action within 21 days from today, April 17. As soon as the assessment has been completed, the ECB must formally report back to the ICC as to what the results of the tests were and what action has been taken.

James Franklin hundred sets up Gloucestershire win

James Franklin’s first one-day century inspired Gloucestershire Gladiators to a
51-run win over Derbyshire Falcons in the opening Clydesdale Bank 40 fixture at
Bristol

25-Apr-2010
ScorecardJames Franklin’s first one-day century inspired Gloucestershire Gladiators to a
51-run win over Derbyshire Falcons in the opening Clydesdale Bank 40 fixture at
Bristol.The New Zealand all-rounder responded to his new position as opener by hitting
133 off 121 balls, with 10 fours and three sixes, as his side ran up 230 for
5 after losing the toss. Alex Gidman (35) and Chris Taylor (32) offered good support.Steve Kirby (3 for 44) then took two early wickets to reduce Derbyshire to
31 for 2 and, despite 37 from Chris Rogers and 41 from John Sadler, the
visitors were restricted to 179 all out. It was an important win for Gloucestershire, beaten at home in their first two County Championship games of the season. Batting frailty in those matches led to the experiment of promoting Franklin up the order and he responded with a superbly-paced innings.Overcoming the early loss of Jonathan Batty and Hamish Marshall, the elegant
left-hander added 89 in 17 overs with Gidman and 70 in 10 overs with Taylor. Franklin owed his hundred to Taylor’s quick thinking. On 95 he would have been run out had his partner not sacrificed himself by crossing before bowler Tom Lungley’s throw hit the stumps.Soon afterwards the Kiwi reached three figures off 104 balls. Surprisingly for
an international player of his pedigree, it was the first time he had done so in
any one-day competition at home or in England. Franklin’s three sixes were all hit straight down the ground.Tim Groenewald was the pick of the Derbyshire attack conceding 37 runs from his
eight overs. After Kirby’s double strike, Rogers and Greg Smith put on 47 in 11 overs for
the Falcons third wicket before Smith (28) was caught at the second attempt by
wicketkeeper Batty off Gidman.There was still hope for Derbyshire at 103 for 3. But then Garry Park, on
13, carelessly swung off-spinner Taylor’s first ball of the game down the throat
of Steve Snell at deep mid-wicket. The key wicket of Rogers followed when he had a swing at Franklin and skied a steepling catch to Batty. At 107 for 5, the Falcons were suddenly staring down the barrel.Sadler ensured their total would reach respectability by being last man out,
having hit his 41 off 34 balls, but it was always in a losing cause. He became Kirby’s third victim, while Anthony Ireland and Taylor claimed two each.

Derbyshire rue missed opportunities as Marcus Harris digs in

Dropped catches outnumber wickets taken as Leicestershire prosper between showers

ECB Reporters Network19-Apr-2024Leicestershire 168 for 2 (Harris 77*) vs DerbyshireAustralian opener Marcus Harris underpinned Leicestershire on a day when Derbyshire fluffed their lines in the Vitality County Championship match at Derby.Harris kept his concentration through lengthy rain delays to score an unbeaten 77 from 147 balls but was dropped twice after Derbyshire elected to bowl first on a chilly opening day at the County Ground. Derbyshire also put down Rishi Patel who made 36 before he was bowled by New Zealand fast bowler Blair Tickner, who was the pick of the attack.Although 50 overs were lost, Leicestershire made good progress and closed on 168 for 2 with skipper Lewis Hill not out 34.Derbyshire’s previous home game against Gloucestershire had been a complete washout with no play possible on any of the four days and there was more frustration despite the match starting in bright sunshine.That proved to be deceptive as steely grey clouds rolled in with only 18 overs bowled in the morning session after Derbyshire put Leicestershire in on a green-tinged pitch.Derbyshire brought in fast bowler Pat Brown for only the ninth Championship game of his career with Ben Green making his Leicestershire debut following his loan move from Somerset.Sam Conners and Tickner shared the new ball and should have had both openers in the first half-hour of the day. Harris had made only 1 when he edged Tickner to second slip in the fourth over but Wayne Madsen put down a shoulder high chance.It was the sort of catch Madsen usually takes and there was more frustration for the home side when Patel was given a life on nine two overs later. Conners found the right-hander’s outside edge only to see Aneurin Donald spill the ball diving to his right at third slip.After electing to bowl, those chances had to be taken and Patel and Harris took advantage to guide Leicestershire past 50 before rain halted play shortly after midday.When play resumed at 2.05pm, there was more there for the bowlers but Derbyshire put down a third chance three overs into the afternoon session. Harris, who early on did not look entirely convincing, was on 26 when he edged Anuj Dal low to Madsen, who again failed to cling on.But the stand was broken in the next over when Tickner, who had posed questions for the batters with his disciplined line, found enough away movement to beat Patel’s forward defensive push and knock out off stump.Harris was six short of his fifty when the rain returned and kept the players off the field until 5.30pm. When the game restarted, Derbyshire quickly claimed a second wicket. Louis Kimber played at a good length ball from Conners without any foot movement and edged to third slip where Donald this time made no mistake.But the rest of a truncated day belonged to Harris and Hill who scored freely in the closing overs to take Leicestershire in two down.

'Leadership came natural to me and it's a role I would like to grow into' – Sune Luus

She describes captaining South Africa in a home World Cup as a “massive, massive honour”

Valkerie Baynes09-Feb-2023Sune Luus doesn’t mind admitting that captaincy is a role she has grown, and continues to grow, into.On the eve of the Women’s T20 World Cup, where she will lead hosts South Africa in the opening game against Sri Lanka at Newlands, Luus felt firmly ensconced in a job she has held on and off since 2017 and ready to take on the world.”It’s always difficult being a stand-in captain, you’re always one foot in and one foot out,” Luus said. “But as I grew up I was always a leader at some stage in whatever team I played, so those leadership qualities came natural to me and it’s a role I would really like to grow into.”Every game you play, you get more accustomed to your team-mates next to you and what they want and what they need. Every game you play you grow into that role.”Luus cut a different figure on Thursday to the one standing in when Dane van Niekerk missed South Africa’s tour of England last year with a broken ankle. During that time, her team was facing the controversial retirement of Lizelle Lee, lost star player Marizanne Kapp for a portion of the trip and won just one match in the multi-format series after drawing the Test.Related

  • Pressure of expectations bogs South Africa down; freedom gives Sri Lanka wings to fly

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  • Dane van Niekerk left out of T20 WC squad, Luus to captain

  • Lee retired over fears of being dropped

Now, with a global event on her doorstep, Luus seemed understandably more upbeat and was positively inspiring, despite her side again being without van Niekerk, who failed the 2km run segment of her fitness test to qualify for selection. But Luus was willing to embrace the noise around her team leading up to this tournament as part of the job.”It’s just a reality, but at the moment I’m an official captain so it makes my job easier to take control and kind of stamp my authority on things and how I would like to go about things,” Luus said. “It comes with a new dimension. It brings new challenges and difficulties but it’s a challenge I’m willing to take on and accept and grow in that role. The focus is on cricket and that’s where we’d like it to be.”Luus has captained South Africa in 28 T20Is, winning half of them, while van Niekerk has a similar record with 15 wins from 30 matches as captain. South Africa have also won 19 of Luus’ 34 ODIs as captain, compared to 29 of 50 under van Niekerk.In a sign of the calmness she prides herself on as a captain, Luus was able to laugh off a minor hiccup to her latest preparations for leading her country after her proud parents’ arrival from Johannesburg to watch her was delayed.12:25

Why this feels like a special edition of the Women’s T20 World Cup

“My parents just missed their flight,” Luus said. “Hopefully they make it for the first game to be here and supporting me. The moment I phoned my dad and I told him this is how it’s going to be, he started crying and he was just so proud. It’s a massive, massive honour to lead a country, not just in any series but at a home World Cup, I think that makes it even more special.”I would like to think I’m very calm and collected on the field. Some people might say I’m too calm and too chilled but in difficult times that’s what a team needs, you don’t want someone that’s also going a bit frantic.”South Africa split their official warm-up matches with a win and a loss. They comfortably defeated Pakistan by six wickets, a win built largely on a century opening stand between Laura Wolvaardt and Tazmin Brits, and posted 229 chasing 247 against England when middle-order batters Chloe Tryon and Nadine de Klerk both scored fifties.Prior to that, they had defeated India in the final of their tri-series, also involving West Indies, with an unbeaten half-century from Tryon and some solid bowling by left-arm spinner Nonkululeko Mlaba, who has surged ahead of Deepti Sharma to sit second on the ICC’s T20 bowlers’ rankings behind Sophie Ecclestone. With slow wickets expected at this tournament, it could play into Mlaba’s hands.”She’s been fantastic in our team,” Luus said. “She started at a very young age and she’s grown in leaps and bounds over the last couple of years in terms of her bowling and every game she’s playing she’s just getting more confidence. She’s going to be vital for us being our main spinner and controlling the game.”First game aside, Luus also has her eyes on the big picture in terms of what the tournament could mean for women’s cricket in South Africa as a whole.”It’s quite massive,” Luus said. “I don’t think we quite realise what we’ve really achieved without playing a game. It’s going to be awesome tomorrow seeing everyone coming out and apart from the cricketing things and apart from being successful and winning games, it’s the responsibility of inspiring a nation as well and inspiring young girls to get out of their comfort zones and to imagine a career that they can do anything in.”That’s one of our biggest roles as a team that we would like to play, not just winning games but also inspiring a nation to give them that opportunity to know that they can be anything they want.”There’s always going to be pressure and you’re always going to feel it whether you play at home or not but we’ve spoken a lot about it and how we want to go about this World Cup. We just need to embrace the moment and embrace the pressure and take it on and run with it.”

Dhoni, Kohli, Rohit, Bumrah retained by IPL franchises for 2022

Narine, Russell, Williamson and Maxwell are also among the big names who won’t be going into the auction

Nagraj Gollapudi29-Nov-20214:58

CSK retentions: Why Moeen may pip du Plessis

MS Dhoni, Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, Jasprit Bumrah, Sunil Narine, Andre Russell and Glenn Maxwell are among some of the big names that the existing franchises have decided to retain for IPL 2022.Following is a list of names that ESPNcricinfo has confirmed as of Monday evening. The order they appear in is not as per IPL retention list.Chennai Super Kings: Ravindra Jadeja, MS Dhoni, Ruturaj Gaikwad, Moeen Ali.
Kolkata Knight Riders: Sunil Narine, Andre Russell, Varun Chakravarthy, Venkatesh Iyer
Sunrisers Hyderabad: Kane Williamson
Mumbai Indians: Rohit Sharma, Jasprit Bumrah
Royal Challengers Bangalore: Virat Kohli, Glenn Maxwell
Delhi Capitals: Rishabh Pant, Prithvi Shaw, Axar Patel, Anrich Nortje
Rajasthan Royals: Sanju Samson
Several franchises are still finalising their retention list with the IPL deadline closing at 12pm IST on Tuesday. Recently the IPL, which will be a 10-team league from the 2022 season, had enhanced the auction purse to INR 90 crore while setting various retention slabs. The existing franchises can retain a total of four players (max. two overseas) while the two new unnamed franchise – to be based in Lucknow and Ahmedabad – can buy upto three players each from the pool after the original eight teams have made their retentions.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

In case a franchise retains four players, INR 42 crore would be deducted from the total purse. For three retentions the purse would shrink by INR 33 crore, while for two retentions it would reduce by INR 24 crore and in case of one retention INR 14 crore would be deducted from the purse.Earlier this month, Dhoni had expressed the hope of playing his last T20I in Chennai. The Super Kings have brought him one step closer to that by retaining him ahead of the mega auction in 2022. Having won the title last year, the franchise has kept hold of another of its best performers in Ruturaj Gaikwad. The 24-year old opener was the highest run-getter in 2021 with a tally of 635 and his partnership with Faf du Plessis provided the basis of their newfound hit-from-ball-one batting plan. And while the South African might also have been considered as an option to retain, the management preferred the all-round talents of Moeen Ali.Much as he had said while giving up the captaincy, Virat Kohli will remain with Royal Challengers Bangalore. He has represented them since the start of the IPL in 2008 and was one of only two players the franchise chose to hold of, along with Maxwell.Rookie sensation Venkatesh Iyer will stay at Kolkata Knight Riders after a stellar season that also fast tracked him into the Indian T20I side. As a hard-hitting batter and bowler capable of withstanding even the pressure of the death overs, he was expected to fetch a huge price in the auction but it turns out he didn’t even need the auction for that.

'Match-fixing law will be a game-changer in India'

ICC anti-corruption officer Steve Richardson wants the Indian government to criminalise corruption in sport

Nagraj Gollapudi24-Jun-2020Making match-fixing a criminal offence will be a “game-changer” and the “single-most-effective thing” for sport in India. That is the strong belief of Steve Richardson, the coordinator of investigations at the ICC’s anti-corruption unit (ACU). Ajit Singh, the head of the BCCI’s ACU, concurs with that viewpoint, adding that India also needs a “very strong law” against betting, which is believes is the source of corruption in cricket in India.With India scheduled to host two global marquee men’s events in the next three years – the 2021 T20 World Cup followed by the ODI World Cup in 2023 – Richardson urged the Indian government to consider creating a match-fixing law for sport like its neighbour Sri Lanka.In 2019 Sri Lanka became the first major cricket-playing country in South Asia to criminalise match-fixing with punishments including a 10-year prison sentence. The ICC ACU had helped the then Sri Lanka government to draft the legislation in the wake of extensive investigations that found several Lankan cricketers including former captain Sanath Jayasuriya guilty of breaching the corruption code.”India has got two ICC global events coming up: the T20 World Cup [in 2021] and the World Cup in 2023,” Richardson said. “At the moment with no legislation in place, we’ll have good relations with Indian police, but they are operating with one hand tied behind their back. We will do everything we can to disrupt the corruptors. And we do, we make life very, very difficult for them as far and as much as we can to stop them from operating freely.”But the legislation would be a game-changer in India. We have currently just under 50 investigations. The majority of those have links back to corruptors in India. So it would be the single-most-effective thing to happen in terms of protecting sport if India introduces match-fixing legislation.”Both Richardson and Singh were participating in a panel discussion on the subject of ‘Does India need a match-fixing legislation?’ as part of the Sports Law & Policy Symposium held on June 20. The rest of the panel comprised Supreme Court lawyer Rebecca John, who represented Sreesanth in the IPL spot-fixing case, senior journalist Pradeep Magazine, and Suhrith Parthasarthy, a lawyer in the Madras High Court.More than the players, Richardson stressed the law would deter the corruptors, who he said were right now freely moving around. “I could actually deliver to the Indian police or the Indian government now at least eight names of people who are what I would term serial offenders, constantly approaching players to try and get them to fix matches,” Richardson said. “At the moment with the lack of legislative framework in India it is very limited what the police can do, and to that extent they have my great sympathy because they try as professionally and hard as they can to make the existing legislation work, but the reality is it wasn’t framed with sports corruption in mind.”So the reason that there is an imperative for legislation specific to match-fixing – yes, it is about the players, but more importantly it is about those outside the sport who actually corrupt the players and are organising and pulling the strings of these networks. Those are the people I would like to see dealt with under match-fixing law.”Mohammad Amir, Salman Butt and Mohammad Asif were prosecuted under the 1906 Prevention of Corruption Act•Getty Images

To support his stance, Richardson provided the example of the Bribery Act in the UK, which was used to prosecute former Pakistan batsman Nasir Jamshed, who pleaded guilty to charges of bribery in the PSL. Jamshed was handed a 17-month sentence in February by a Manchester court. In 2010, the Pakistan trio of Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir were prosecuted under the 1906 Prevention of Corruption Act which was repealed by the Bribery Act.”I see this from a slightly different perspective inasmuch as I do not see the players as the main problem when it comes to match-fixing,” Richardon said. “The players are the final link in the chain who actually would go out on to the pitch and perform any act if they had agreed to do so. The problem that I see is further upstream and it’s in the people who are organising the corruption, people who are paying the players the money, and most of those sit outside of the sport.”‘No adequate law to cover match-fixing’As far Singh was concerned, he said the BCCI’s ACU could do “little” as far as the “non-participants” were concerned. But Singh, a former Indian Police Service officer, who served as DGP Rajasthan before taking charge at the BCCI in 2018, agreed that there had been “no adequate law to cover match-fixing”, which both the federal government as well as the courts have recognised previously.In 2013, the then Indian government even presented a draft bill for the prevention of sporting fraud, but it has not been acted on subsequently. The draft bill covers the definition of sporting fraud, the perpetrators, and the punishment – which can extend to five years of imprisonment, a fine of INR 10 lakh or five times the benefit derived from the sporting fraud.In 2016, the RM Lodha Committee, which drew up the framework that paved way for the structural reform of the BCCI, told the Supreme Court that the Law Commission of India (LCI) should look into criminalising match-fixing in sport. Two years later, the LCI agreed that match-fixing of any kind in sport, including cricket, should be a criminal offence carrying significant punishment. Calling gambling and betting two sides of the same coin, the LCI also recommended to the Indian government that it consider regulating betting and gambling activities as against imposing complete prohibition.”So definitely there is a requirement for a law which criminalises match-fixing,” Singh said. According to Singh, the roots of match-fixing lie in betting, which he described as a “malaise” in India.”Just to make windfall gains illegally in an illegal way through betting they [corruptors] approach the participants – it could be a player, it could be a curator, it could be a match official, whoever. And the amounts of the money involved are unimaginable.”Betting law – ‘totally archaic and the punishments are laughable’Singh said unverified accounts indicate annual turnover from betting in India is in the range of INR 30-40,000 crores. Singh pointed out that the corrupters were not just operating in international sport, but were also busy influencing players and matches in domestic cricket with some even posing as “godfathers” to young playersSingh said the BCCI’s ACU had used data agencies like Sportradar to examine the extent of betting in some T20 matches in Indian domestic cricket. “It’s not the IPL, but it’s the state leagues. It (betting) comes to the tune of maybe [up to 20 million] euros or pounds. So the amount of betting even in small matches is so much that the temptation to fall prey to the demands or requests of these people is very high. And it is more so with people who don’t see much of a future for themselves.”Cricket is played in rural areas and mofussil towns and there are certain godfathers have come to finance them. They see a promising player, finance the player, become his patron, and ultimately what happens is when he is at a level where his games are televised, where he has made it to a certain league, then they extract the pound of flesh. So it needs to be curbed heavily, both at the match-fixing and betting level.”As it happens betting is illegal in India, but Singh pointed out it was governed by a law that was “laughable” in its current form. The law is the 1867 Public Gambling Act. Those breaching it barely blink an eye, Singh said, with only a cursory monetary penalty to pay. “We need to make a very strong law against betting. Right now the law that exists is totally archaic and the punishments in it are laughable. You impose a fine of INR 200 or 500 and that’s the end of it.”Both John and Richardson agreed that the Gambling Act ought to be replaced as soon as possible. “Its quite an anomaly that you can bet INR 500 on the outcome of a match for a side to win/lose in India and that would be illegal,” Richardson said. “However, if you offer USD 30,000 to a player to underperform in that match then there is nothing illegal in that.”Richardson pointed out that betting and corruption should been seen as separate only because betting was legal in many countries. “We have to be very, very clear here that betting itself is not corruption. So what is corruption is people who are trying to get to players to corrupt them in order to make money from betting.”Singh said part of the proposed law against sports corruption should comprise a “specialised” investigating agency, “which keeps a proper database, which can join the dots, which when it sees an alert raised on its screen so it could investigate. Also the law is to facilitate better investigation and better appreciation of what evidence can be collected and what evidence is available.”

Another mankading incident averted as Krunal Pandya lets Mayank Agarwal off

The Mumbai Indians bowler could have run the Kings XI Punjab batsman out, but decided to let the opportunity pass

ESPNcricinfo staff30-Mar-20193:02

Agarwal took the game away from us – Shane Bond

A second incident in the first week of the IPL involving a bowler running out a batsman before delivering the ball was averted.Mumbai Indians’ Krunal Pandya decided not to break the stumps with Kings XI Punjab’s Mayank Agarwal, the non-striker, out of the crease before the ball was released.The incident took place in the tenth over of the Kings XI innings. Agarwal was on 19 at the point and would go on to make an explosive 43 off 21 balls to inject momentum into Kings XI’s eventually successful chase. Kings XI were 80 for 1 at that point, and by the time Agarwal departed, the target had come down to 60 runs from 39 balls.ALSO READ: The spirit of cricket is not a substitute for the lawsKrunal Pandya sends Chris Gayle off•BCCI

As per the IPL playing conditions as well as Law 41.16, Krunal had the right to run Agarwal out. Although there is no rule to warn the batsman, it’s regarded as a convention, Krunal opted to just let Agarwal hop back into the crease.Moments later the broadcasters zoomed the camera towards Kings XI captain R Ashwin. On Monday, playing in Jaipur against Rajasthan Royals, Ashwin had run Jos Buttler out backing up at the non-striker’s end. His action had generated a massive debate on social media and elsewhere, with several players, past and present, criticising Ashwin for forgetting about the Spirit of Cricket. The MCC, the custodians of the Laws of the game, initially cleared Ashwin of any wrongdoing, but a day later reviewed that call, saying the offspinner had “paused” too long before releasing the ball, something not “within” the spirit of cricket.When Mumbai bowling coach Shane Bond was asked by commentator Brendon McCullum on air if Krunal’s action was “gamesmanship”, the former said, “Just a subtle dig, mate, at the mankad.”

We asked for pace and bounce, not grass – Gibson

South Africa coach Ottis Gibson insisted that while they asked for surfaces that would assist their pace attack, the exaggerated bounce and lateral movement was unexpected

Firdose Moonda in Johannesburg26-Jan-2018South Africa insisted that the uneven and excessive bounce and seam movement at the Wanderers in the third Test was not part of their request for helpful pitches. Though South Africa admitted to asking for surfaces that would assist their attack, they maintained that all they wanted was pace and bounce, and not the lateral movement or exaggerated bounce that this surface provided.”Everybody is making a big issue of grass but we’ve never asked for grass, we asked for pace and bounce. If you’re a groundsman and we ask you to make a wicket with pace and bounce, and you feel that the best way to do that is leave grass on the wicket, that’s it. Then we get on and play with it,” Ottis Gibson, South Africa’s coach said. “The Test in Cape Town only went three days, but we thought it was a good wicket. We asked for a similar wicket in Centurion, and it was more like Mumbai than anywhere else, and it was a great Test match as well. With this one, the wicket has unfortunately got worse as the match has gone on.”Asked whether the pitch may have been a result of extra pressure placed on the groundsman by the knowledge that South Africa would not settle for anything less than bowler-friendly conditions, Gibson did not think that was the case. “I can’t speak for groundsman. We asked for a certain type of pitch and then the groundsmen have a month to try and get it right,” he said.But there is some expectation within the home camp that the scrutiny on the surface will not let up, even after play resumes on day four. “There is no doubt that questions are going to be asked about the preparations of the pitch, Mohammed Moosajee, South Africa’s team manager said. “When we got here on day one, it looked like a sporty wicket, and from a South Africa perspective, all we wanted was a wicket with pace and bounce. Obviously, the ICC will rate it and there will be some form of repercussion.”South Africa stopped short of criticising the Wanderers surface and reiterated their willingness to play on. But between the two sides, they placed more emphasis on safety after Dean Elgar was struck on the grille of the helmet in the ninth over of South Africa’s chase. The incident caused play to called off 19 minutes before the scheduled close.Initially, it appeared that the ball had veered up off a crack, but television replays showed that it had pitched at a back of a length, and Elgar had gone forward fairly far, which may have made it look worse than it actually was.”Dean went forward and the ball took off from a length. Whether it was 8m or not, even on a third-day pitch, you are not expecting the ball that pitches at 8m to take off and hit the batsman on the head without the batsman even having the time to take evasive action” Gibson said. “At the end of the day, the umpires will make a decision, which they did. Before you go on about India batting twice on the same pitch, yes they did. And there were balls that were taking off from a length, and our captain was saying that, ‘I’m not sure that this is fair either.’ So it’s not like we are sour grapes or anything. We felt this morning that when balls were taking off off a length, it was obviously a little bit tricky and a decision would have to be made.”Elgar was the only batsmen to be hit above the throat in the match, but players on both sides copped body blows. Hashim Amla was hit on the ribs, Ajinkya Rahane on the elbow, M Vijay on the hip, and several others on the gloves. South Africa’s concerns appeared to have begun then, especially because they felt batsmen did not have time to defend themselves.”When I spoke to Faf at lunch, he said that if a ball is going to hit you on the finger and the bowlers are bowling at 140 and you haven’t got time to react or respond or take evasive action, then the umpires have to think that they have to look after player safety,” Gibson said. “If you think it’s getting a bit dangerous – and the umpires in the middle were saying that before lunch – Faf said, ‘A couple on the fingers, we can get away with, but when the ball rears up and hits you on the face then it’s a different situation.”And after all that, Gibson said the team are “absolutely not” making excuses for the position they find themselves in now on an increasingly difficult pitch.”Throughout the whole game on both sides, we saw batsmen wearing a few on the body, and we are not complaining. I hope you are not sitting here thinking we are complaining. But obviously Dean got hit in the face when he wasn’t able to take evasive action, and there was one before that that he went forward to that he was going to leave that bounced up and hit him on the hand. But again he wasn’t able to take evasive action. Once they (the match officials) tell us what the decision is, we’ll get on with it.”And on the fourth morning, they will have to.

Injured Hardik Pandya, KL Rahul released from India squad

KL Rahul, who had aggravated an injury to his left forearm in the nets in Mohali, has been released from the India squad but is expected to be fit in time for the fourth Test against England in Mumbai on December 8

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Nov-2016KL Rahul, who had aggravated an injury to his left forearm in the nets in Mohali, has been released from the India squad but is expected to be fit in time for the fourth Test against England in Mumbai on December 8. Allrounder Hardik Pandya has had to leave the team as well, having hurt his right shoulder while training at the PCA Stadium. The BCCI’s medical staff have advised him to “consult a specialist to decide the future course of action”. No replacements were named by the board in its media release.Rahul had picked up his problem while batting in the Visakhapatnam Test – which was his comeback from a hamstring injury picked up in September. His career has been a bit stop-start. Soon after making a century in his first Test series, in Sydney, he contracted dengue and missed a one-off match in Bangladesh. He was brought back into the XI when M Vijay was injured in Sri Lanka, but didn’t play the home Tests against South Africa. Rahul reclaimed his place and became India’s first-choice opener on the tour of the Caribbean, when he made a century and a fifty. His unavailability in Mohali led to Parthiv Patel – on a comeback of his own – opening the batting for India.Pandya was with the Test squad for the first time, his pace and one-day form impressing the selectors. He was the only uncapped player in the squad by the time he picked up the injury, with Jayant Yadav making his debut in Visakhapatnam and Karun Nair in Mohali.