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Edwards in charge of England quest

Charlotte Edwards will lead England’s quest to regain the Women’s Ashes which begins with the sole Test match on Sunday.

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Aug-2013Charlotte Edwards will lead England’s quest to regain the Women’s Ashes which begins with the sole Test match on Sunday. The revamped Women’s Ashes series encompasses all formats of the game with a Test, three ODIs and three T20s.Edwards, 33, will play in her 11th Ashes Test and will hope to give her side the perfect start to regaining the Ashes they lost in Australia in January 2011. Edwards scored an unbeaten century in the one-off Ashes Test in Sydney and is one of seven players in the England squad for this Test that played in the defeat two years ago.Seam bowler Katherine Brunt and allrounder Laura Marsh are two of those; both return to the squad having missed the series against Pakistan last month. During that series, Yorkshire’s Lauren Winfield and Surrey’s Natalie Sciver made their debuts and both are included in the Test match squad for Wormsley.Winfield, 22-years-old from York, is a right-handed batsman who made little impression in the two ODIs and two T20s against Pakistan. Sciver, just 20, plays for Surrey and took 3 for 28 in the second ODI.England have also named a further two squads for the ODI and T20 series. 10 players are included in all three squads. Sussex’s Holly Colvin will come in to both limited-overs parties with Georgia Elwiss named in the 14 for the ODIs and 17-year old Kent left-arm seamer Natasha Farrant joining the squad for the T20s.The Women’s Ashes will be the first major series for the new ECB Women’s and Girls’ high performance manager Paul Shaw who replaced Mark Lane, who oversaw the England Women’s team for five years until he resigned in May.

Women’s Ashes

  • Test match: August 11-14, Wormsley (Six points for a win, two for a draw)

  • One-day internationals: August 20, Lord’s; August 23, Hove; August 25, Hove (Two for a win, one for a draw)

  • Twenty20s: August 27, Chelmsford; August 29, Ageas Bowl; August 31, Durham (Two, one)

“The inaugural multi-format Women’s Ashes is unprecedented in terms of establishing a winning team across all three formats,” head of England Women’s cricket Clare Connor said. “Our selectors have picked well-balanced squads to maximise the strengths of our players in each of the formats of the game. England are focussed on regaining the Ashes and we know Australia will be looking to continue their dominance of the past couple of years, so we anticipate an exciting and hard-fought month.”England Women squads to face Australia
Test Match
Charlotte Edwards (Kent, capt), Tammy Beaumont (Kent), Arran Brindle (Sussex), Katherine Brunt (Yorkshire), Lydia Greenway (Kent), Jenny Gunn (Nottinghamshire), Danielle Hazell (Yorkshire), Heather Knight (Berkshire), Laura Marsh (Kent), Natalie Sciver (Surrey), Anya Shrubsole (Somerset), Sarah Taylor (Sussex, wkt), Lauren Winfield (Yorkshire), Danielle Wyatt (Nottinghamshire)ODIs
Charlotte Edwards (Kent, capt), Tammy Beaumont (Kent), Arran Brindle (Sussex), Katherine Brunt (Yorkshire), Holly Colvin (Sussex), Georgia Elwiss (Sussex), Lydia Greenway (Kent), Jenny Gunn (Nottinghamshire), Danielle Hazell (Yorkshire), Heather Knight (Berkshire), Laura Marsh (Kent), Anya Shrubsole (Somerset), Sarah Taylor (Sussex, wkt), Lauren Winfield (Yorkshire)T20s
Charlotte Edwards (Kent, capt), Tammy Beaumont (Kent), Arran Brindle (Sussex), Katherine Brunt (Yorkshire), Holly Colvin (Sussex), Natasha Farrant (Kent), Lydia Greenway (Kent), Jenny Gunn (Nottinghamshire), Danielle Hazell (Yorkshire), Laura Marsh (Kent), Natalie Sciver (Surrey), Anya Shrubsole (Somerset), Sarah Taylor (Sussex, capt), Danielle Wyatt (Nottinghamshire)

Kieran Powell named West Indies A limited-overs captain

Kieran Powell takes over from Kirk Edwards as captain of the West Indies A one-day team, for the tour of India in September

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Aug-2013Kieran Powell takes over from Kirk Edwards as captain of the West Indies A one-day team, for the tour of India in September. Edwards will continue to lead the team in the first-class format on the tour.Powell, the opening batsman who has played 15 Tests and 19 ODIs, is making his way back from injury. He had to sit out the Champions Trophy and the home series against Pakistan, before making a return to international cricket in the recently-concluded Caribbean Premier League.Powell said he was up for the challenges the tour would provide: “I played in India before and it’s a great place for cricket with the crowds, the atmosphere and the level of competition. We anticipate a good, competitive series. I’m eager and confident as we prepare for the tour and I know all the other players are as well.”West Indies A’s previous series was at home, against Sri Lanka A in June, when they drew the unofficial Tests and won in both limited-overs formats. Edwards had led the team in the four-day and 50-over matches in that series. Edwards said he was confident the side could do as well in the India series: “As one of the most experienced members of the squad, I know I will have a very important leadership role to perform on and off the field. We played well against Sri Lanka A earlier this year and we expect to do very well against India A as well.”India and West Indies A teams had previously met last summer, when India toured the Caribbean. Then, the hosts won the unofficial Tests and the limited-overs series finished all square. Now, West Indies will play one T20 and three ODIs, followed by the first-class games, in India.First-class squad: Kirk Edwards (capt), Kieran Powell (vice-capt), Kraigg Brathwaite, Jonathan Carter, Sheldon Cottrell, Miguel Cummins, Narsingh Deonarine, Assad Fudadin, Jahmar Hamilton, Delorn Johnson, Leon Johnson, Nikita Miller, Veerasammy Permaul, Shane Shillingford, Chadwick WaltonLimited-overs squad: Kieran Powell (capt), Veerasammy Permaul (vice-capt), Ronsford Beaton, Nkrumah Bonner, Jonathan Carter, Sheldon Cottrell, Miguel Cummins, Narsingh Deonarine, Kirk Edwards, Andre Fletcher, Leon Johnson, Nikita Miller, Ashley Nurse, Andre Russell, Devon Thomas

Openers, Prasanna deliver series-leveling win

Sri Lanka A openers Dimuth Karunaratne and Kusal Perera provided the substance and impetus of Sri Lanka A’s 291 for 9, before Seekkuge Prasanna’s 5 for 38 ensured New Zealand A could not draw close to the target in a rain-reduced chase

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Oct-2013
ScorecardFile photo – Karunaratne followed up his ton in the first match with an 81•Manoj Ridimahaliyadda

Openers Kusal Perera and Dimuth Karunaratne provided substance and impetus to Sri Lanka A’s innings once again, this time to happier effect, as the hosts leveled the one-day series with New Zealand A, in Pallekele. Legbreak bowler Seekkuge Prasanna’s 5 for 38 then ensured the visitors would not threaten the target.Kusal struck his second aggressive half-century in as many matches, while Karunaratne followed up a ton from the first ODI with 81 from 105 balls on Tuesday. Their 108-run stand became the platform for Sri Lanka’s 291 for 6, before that target was revised for the visitors, who lost ten overs from the chase due to rain. They eventually fell short of the new total of 241 by 44 runs.Tearaway Adam Milne took his first five-wicket haul in List A cricket, but before he bore down on Sri Lanka’s middle order, Kusal’s 61-ball 65 had set the hosts off apace. The scoring rate slowed somewhat after his demise as Angelo Perera contributed a relatively unhurried 36 alongside Karunaratne, but Chaturanga de Silva ensured his side achieved the challenging total they had promised early in the innings, when he struck 36 from 25.Rain after 6.5 overs of New Zealand’s innings stole an over from the reply, but bad light after 40 overs cut a further nine overs. New Zealand had begun with a 43-run opening stand, but four wickets between the eighth and 16th overs forced a deceleration that would prove definitive.Grant Elliott made 63 from 75, but his team-mates continued to surrender ground to Sri Lanka’s phalanx of slow bowlers, led by Prasanna, who took 5 for 38. Sri Lanka required only seven overs of pace bowling in the 40-over innings.New Zealand managed 196, and the teams will now play the decider in Dambulla on Thursday.

Norwell's second burst sees Gloucestershire take charge

Liam Norwell made a telling impact in the second innings against Essex to leave Gloucestershire on top at Chelmsford.

Press Association04-May-2015
ScorecardLiam Norwell struck three times in 11 balls in the second innings•Getty Images

Liam Norwell made a telling impact in the second innings against Essex to leave Gloucestershire on top at Chelmsford. The hosts started their second innings trailing by 86 runs after the visitors were bowled out for 245, and Norwell struck three times in 11 balls before Essex closed on 91 for 4.Norwell’s burst followed his first-day rampage of four wickets in 16 balls. He was at it again on Monday. First, the right-arm paceman ended a promising stand when he had Nick Browne neatly snapped up at second slip by Chris Dent with the score on 42. He then forced Jaik Mickleburgh to play on for 31 before 17-year-old Dan Lawrence was done for pace and trapped lbw with the total on 52.Just before the arrears were cleared, Jesse Ryder drove against Matt Taylor to mid-off leaving James Foster and Kishen Velani to concentrate on defence before bad light curtailed play seven overs early.The day’s early honours went to Essex after Gloucestershire had resumed at a healthy 77 without loss. But Will Tavare was bowled by Jamie Porter for 32 without addition to the total and in his next over, the pace bowler had Gareth Roderick well caught by wicket-keeper Foster diving to his left.In the end, the visitors were indebted to Dent and Peter Handscomb for their useful lead. Opener Dent made 57, containing eight boundaries before he was caught in the slips off the medium-paced Ryder, while Handscomb put together a well-contained 66. He reached his half-century by pulling Ryder over square leg for six, a landmark reached in 77 balls and also containing seven fours. His innings was eventually cut short by the impressive Porter who ended with 4 for 59 from 20 overs.Much is likely to rest on Foster if Essex are to make a real fight of it and he has underlined his determination to do so. Normally a batsman with aggressive instincts, the home skipper has so far defended resolutely in scoring just 13 from 72 deliveries. Velani has proved just as stubborn while gathering three singles from 30 balls, the pair having added only six in eight overs.Essex will have to display a more positive intent on Tuesday but it will not be easy to score freely on a pitch which is still giving seamers assistance with its occasional awkward bounce.”It’s gone pretty well for me in this match,” Norwell said. “As a unit, our bowlers put a bigger focus on hitting our fuller lengths and its a bit green on top which gives some assistance. Luckily enough, I managed to pick up some wickets but it was a real good team effort, we bowled good areas and I think we deserve to be in the position that we are.”Essex paceman Jamie Porter who returned figures of 4 for 59 added: “I felt that I have bowled well without too much reward in the last couple of games but I felt that there were a few wickets around the corner so it was nice to cash in today.”When we started the day today, I just thought that if I could get two or three wickets in one spell, it would open the game right up and that’s what happened. We are in front now although only just but one big partnership and a useful stand elsewhere could get us a 200 lead and I reckon that might win it for us.”

Champions League likely to be scrapped

A day after informally discussing the fate of the Champions League Twenty20 with Cricket Australia and Cricket South Africa, the other stakeholders of the tournament, BCCI secretary Anurag Thakur dropped another hint that it may be scrapped

Amol Karhadkar25-May-20152:15

The end of CLT20?

A day after informally discussing the fate of the Champions League Twenty20 with Cricket Australia (CA) and Cricket South Africa (CSA), the other stakeholders of the tournament, BCCI secretary Anurag Thakur dropped another hint that it may be scrapped. ESPNcricinfo understands that a meeting of the CLT20 governing council is likely to be convened soon to make the final call.”We still have CLT20. We will have meetings on how to make it a better tournament, or something in place of that. We just finished the season eight of the IPL which has been very successful. We will now start thinking on those lines [fate of CLT20],” Thakur told a group of select journalists in Kolkata on Monday.”If CLT20 cannot attract crowds in India or abroad, you need to sit down and think about other options. It’s in the interest of cricket. In the interest of cricket, you make changes. Like from Test cricket we switched to ODIs, then T20s and now we’ve the IPL. With time, you bring in changes so that the game does not die. There should be enough takers for the game. Tournament should be successful.”

Fitness test for Bangladesh-bound cricketers on June 6

The BCCI will conduct fitness tests for the India players selected for the Bangladesh tour on June 6 – the day before they fly out – in Kolkata
Over the last year or so, BCCI had not conducted fitness tests on the national team since they were playing non-stop cricket ahead of the World Cup. With another gruelling season of international cricket ahead though, beginning in Bangladesh and culminating with next year’s World Twenty20, BCCI have had a change of mind.
A meeting between BCCI president Jagmohan Dalmiya and secretary Anurag Thakur failed to break the deadlock over India’s support staff for the tour of Bangladesh. “You will get to know about coach and support staff before 6th of June,” Thakur told reporters after the meeting.

For more than a month, the fate of CLT20 has been hanging in the balance. BCCI, the majority stakeholder of the tournament, and the broadcaster aren’t keen on hosting it, but they will need a formal consent from CSA and CA before cancellation. The South African board seems to have accepted that CLT20 is a history, having already announced Africa T20 Cup to be held in September, when the CLT20 usually takes place.IPL chairman Rajiv Shukla had also said that the BCCI was planning to do away with CLT20, adding that they were exploring possible alternatives.Sections in the media had reported of a tournament involving the top four IPL teams from this season. Although Thakur denied those claims, he admitted that the Champions League has been struggling to attract any takers.”Would you like your product to go down?” he said “No. You will only get sponsors if you’ve a successful tournament. There will be no takers otherwise. Eventually, you will have to look for cricket first. For me, that one-month window has to be used properly in the interest of cricket and cricket board.”

Root century galvanises England

Joe Root made 134 from only 166 balls to help lift England from a tricky position at 43 for 3 on a grouchy Cardiff morning

The Report by David Hopps08-Jul-2015
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsJoe Root has come a long way since he was part of a demoralised England squad that left Australia with a 5-0 whitewash and apparitions of Mitchell Johnson, vaudevillian moustache to the fore, lurking around every corner. Australia will now recognise that improvement only too well after Root’s rapid, sure-footed century galvanised England at the start of the Investec Ashes series.On a slow Cardiff surface, as if designed to nullify Johnson, a recourse that England might turn to all summer, Root blossomed from the outset as he struck 134 from only 166 balls, an innings of attacking intent that made light of England’s initial loss of three wickets for 43 on a grouchy Cardiff morning.With England imperilled, Root needed good fortune to get through his first few deliveries from Mitchell Starc, an inside edge saving him from an lbw decision first ball and Haddin then dropping a very takeable one-handed catch to his right from the next delivery as he dug at a full, wide one. Australia barely reacted, as if they imagined it might be a bump ball. But it was a duck they could have done with: instead, he has broken the chains. There was a reminder of Root’s first Ashes hundred at Lord’s when he edged temptingly between Haddin and first slip early in his innings and went on to make 180.Since that Australia whitewash, Root has averaged 85.41 in 13 Tests. It has been an emphatic response, ranking him alongside Australia’s Steven Smith as one of the most exciting young batting talents in the game. Root was once derided as a plodder, Smith as technically adrift. Yet they will refresh this age-old contest, as the best young players indubitably do.Joe Root leaves the pitch after making 134 from 166 balls•Getty Images

If Jos Buttler and Ben Stokes are the embodiment of England’s one-day enterprise, Root bears their hopes on his slim shoulders in this Ashes series. His departure, at 280 for 5, with nearly 18 overs remaining left England facing an awkward phase with the second new ball soon due and the further loss of Stokes, after a rumbustious half-century, and Buttler reasserted Australia’s threat.Producing deliberately slow pitches, if that proves to be England’s aim, could reduce the appeal of the series to damaging effect, although suspicion of English subterfuge should be tempered by the recognition – as Graeme Swann shrewdly put it on Test Match Special – that you can’t take pace out of a Cardiff pitch when there is not any in it in the first place.No matter, the danger of killing England’s renewed appetite for cricket before the salivating had begun was not evident on the first day as Root’s enterprise was entertaining enough. His third-wicket stand of 153 in 39 overs with his Yorkshire team mate – and one-time room mate – Gary Ballance was the bedrock of England’s innings.He fell in a manner that would have irked him, driving at a wide one from Starc, whereupon Shane Watson held the catch at slip. Later than it might have been, Starc must have thought. Starc then bowled Stokes with a beauty, holding his index finger to his mouth in a gentle admonishment of Stokes’ pre-series fight-fire-with-fire hype. Buttler then chipped Josh Hazlewood tamely to mid-on.Starc was as blustery as the south Wales weather, the low pressure rushing in whenever he had to align himself against left handers. Hazlewood bowled a probing line and could grow into the series as a more-then-useful replacement for the injured Ryan Harris, if not with quite the same bullish intent. Both finished with three wickets. Nathan Lyon, too, cleverly introduced early in the day by Michael Clarke, quickly claimed the wicket of Alastair Cook and would be reasonably content to go at three an over when England intend to counter his offspin aggressively.As for Johnson, reaper of 37 wickets in the last Ashes series, he finished wicketless and expensive. Outside Australia and South Africa, where slower pitches reduce his physical threat, his record puts him back in the realm of mere mortals. A streaky first boundary for Cook was a rare success. There was barely a bouncer to be seen all day and when it came, it was hooked over the sightscreen for six by Ben Stokes. The wrong sightscreen, to be fair, a top edge which flew high above the wicketkeeper Haddin.After the pre-series hoopla of the past few weeks – largely repetitive and tiresome this time around, a consequence of three Ashes contests in two years – the first Test could not begin too soon. There were squally morning showers to contend with, national anthems – Wales being forever in confusion about the extent of its sporting allegiance – and Cook, who chose to bat in expectation of settled afternoon weather, found the morning a demanding one.Three England wickets with only 43 on the board – Cook himself, Adam Lyth and Ian Bell dismissed – represented a potent opening to the series for Australia on a sluggish pitch. In the first over, from Starc, two balls reached Haddin on the second bounce, the second of them almost getting a third one in. It looked ominous, but the keeper and slips came up a few yards – a reluctant walk, particularly for an Australian – and nobody much minded after that.It was Hazlewood, who probably owed his involvement to the injury-enforced retirement of Harris, who made the first incision with his sixth delivery in Ashes Tests. Lyth had clipped Hazlewood confidently to square leg to record England’s first boundary but when he tried a repeat the ball flew low to David Warner at gully.For Cook to fall to offspin in the 14th over of the morning, Lyon already three overs into his spell, was not in the script. But Lyon found gentle turn, Cook attempted his favourite cut shot and Haddin held the edge. Lyon was immediately withdrawn.There was a failure for Bell, too, Starc’s inswinger quickly trapping him lbw. It was a marginal decision but one which England were correct not to review. Starc had been wayward against the left-handers but his inswing carried more threat against right-handers, as Bell had discovered. He now has six scores of 0 or 1 in his last nine Test innings.That left the bulk of the day with Root and Ballance. Root’s off-driven and cut boundaries against Starc signalled the start of England’s fight back and Ballance, the more subdued, awoke to take two boundaries off Johnson in the last over of the morning. He occasionally looked unsettled when Johnson fired the ball into his body from around the wicket, and safely edged a few that might have carried on a quicker surface, his stout, broad defensive bat coming with a slight sense of vulnerability.By tea the dominant memory was the crispness and authority of Root, especially driving on the front foot. There were a few frisky moments, too, and he survived an Australian review on 62 when Nathan Lyon sought an lbw decision, on the sweep, replays showing that the ball had struck Root outside the line of leg stump.He reached tea only seven short of his hundred, but this time there would be no faltering with a century in his range, as there had been twice against New Zealand at Lord’s in May. Instead, it was Ballance who succumbed for 61 in the second over after tea, playing all round a straight one.Root brought up his hundred with the shot that had been a hallmark of his innings, cover driving Hazlewood, before, feeling his back a little, he soft-pedalled beneath the aggression of Stokes. The battle has begun; runs had rushed ahead at nearly four an over just as England had suggested they would, but Australia could claim that the spoils were evenly shared.

Selectors to mull spin attack for SL tour

India’s national selection panel is likely to ponder over the composition of the team’s spin attack when they sit down on Thursday in Delhi to finalise the squad for the three-Test series in Sri Lanka

Amol Karhadkar22-Jul-20151:56

Kalra: Naman Ojha could be picked as reserve-keeper

India’s national selection panel is likely to ponder over the composition of the team’s spin attack when they sit down on Thursday in Delhi to finalise the squad for the three-Test series in Sri Lanka.Harbhajan Singh has seemingly justified his recall with decent outings in the Bangladesh and Zimbabwe ODIs, and is set to be given a full series, while R Ashwin, too, is ready to roll in what would be his maiden Test series in Sri Lanka. With two spots locked in the XI, the selectors will have to decide on the back-up spinners.Karn Sharma, who was the third spinner in the Test squad in Bangladesh, got injured ahead of the Zimbabwe tour. It is understood, however, that he has recovered from his finger injury and is available for selection. Still, Karn is not assured of a spot, with three other players competing for the third spinner’s position, even though Ravindra Jadeja has fallen out of the radar in recent months.Axar Patel, considered to be a like-for-like replacement for Jadeja, has put in consistent performances in limited overs. Also, the fact that Amit Mishra and Pragyan Ojha have been rewarded with India A call-ups indicates that Sandeep Patil’s panel has not written the pair off completely. Interestingly, it was Mishra and Pragyan who shouldered the responsibility in India’s last Test series in Sri Lanka, in 2010, when Harbhajan returned home after the first Test.With opening batsman KL Rahul also returning to top-flight cricket after recovering from a bout of dengue fever, 14 of the 15 members, barring Karn, who were originally selected for the lone Test in June are likely to be persisted with.The other point of discussion would be whether to add a reserve keeper in the squad. MS Dhoni’s Test retirement will give Wriddhiman Saha, who was Dhoni’s understudy in Sri Lanka in 2010, his first full series behind the wickets. Considering that it is a three-Test series, if the selectors decide to include a reserve keeper and expand the squad to 16 members, Naman Ojha will be the frontrunner for the position. Naman, who was in the Test squad for the final match against England last year, was also with the squad in Australia till the first Test as Dhoni had missed out with injury.While the seven batsmen select themselves, the selectors are likely to persist with captain Kohli’s demand for an aggressive pace attack.

Familiar foes meet on Finals Day

Three of the four teams who contested Finals Day in 2014 will meet again later this month to determine the winner of the NatWest T20 Blast

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Aug-2015Three of the four teams who contested Finals Day in 2014 will meet again later this month to determine the winner of the NatWest T20 Blast. Birmingham, the defending champions, will be joined by Lancashire, last year’s losing finalists, and two-time winners Hampshire.The fourth county are 2013 winners Northamptonshire. They have been drawn against Birmingham in the first semi-final, which will start at 11am on August 29. As in 2014, Lancashire will face Hampshire in the second semi-final at 2.30pm.”Hopefully it will be the same result in the semi, and we can go one better this year and win the final,” Steven Croft, Lancashire’s captain, said after his team squeezed past Kent on Saturday, by virtue of losing fewer wickets in their tie.Birmingham are favourites to become the first team to retain the trophy and they will be playing on their home ground, with Edgbaston hosting Finals Day for the third year running. They topped the North Group, ahead of Northamptonshire and Lancashire – third and fourth respectively – while Hampshire finished third in the South Group.Hampshire will be making a sixth consecutive Finals Day appearance, extending their own record, and looking to win for the first time since 2012. Lancashire have won more T20 games than any other county since the format’s introduction but are still searching for a first title.The only other time the same three teams have reached consecutive Finals Days was in 2005, when Leicestershire, Lancashire and Surrey all made it back, only for Somerset to lift what was then the Twenty20 Cup.

Bangladesh name unchanged squad for first Australia Test

Bangladesh have opted to retain the squad that played the Test series against South Africa for the upcoming first Test against Australia

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Sep-20151:06

Full strength Bangladesh for raw Australia

Bangladesh have opted to retain the squad that played the Test series against South Africa for the upcoming first Test against Australia. The squad also includes left-arm spinner Taijul Islam, who has recovered from a bout of jaundice which he suffered last month.

Rubel doubtful for first Test

A calf muscle strain has put Rubel Hossain in doubt for the first Test against Australia, after suffering the injury on the first day of the three-day game for Bangladesh A against India A in Bangalore on Sunday.
Rubel couldn’t bowl throughout the second day’s play, and there was further bad news for pace bowler, Shafiul Islam, who sustained a hamstring injury. According to the BCB, both Rubel and Shafiul are to be assessed upon returning to Dhaka on September 30.
Rubel, who was named in the 14-man squad to face Australia in the first Test, played his last Test against Pakistan in Khulna, before being rested for the solitary Test against India and benched for the two Tests against South Africa.

The Bangladesh Cricket Board has announced the squad despite the uncertainty surrounding the series. Last week, Cricket Australia chose to delay the team’s scheduled departure on September 28 due to increased security concerns. CA’s chief executive, James Sutherland, cited “recent advice from a range of Australian government sources” that identified potential security risks to Australian interests in Bangladesh.CA’s decision to proceed with the Test series will depend on the outcome of meetings between its security chief Sean Carroll and government and police officials in Bangladesh. It is learnt that security officials who met with Carroll assured fool-proof security for the team and the BCB is also quietly confident of sharing more detailed information that can help ease CA’s concerns.According to the current schedule, the first Test is scheduled between October 9 and 13 in Chittagong, while the second Test will be played in Mirpur from October 17. Australia are also scheduled to play a three-day tour match against the BCB XI in Fatullah before the start of the Test series.Bangladesh squad for the first Test: Mushfiqur Rahim (capt), Tamim Iqbal (vice-capt), Imrul Kayes, Jubair Hossain, Liton Das, Mahmudullah, Mohammad Shahid, Mominul Haque, Mustafizur Rahman, Nasir Hossain, Rubel Hossain, Shakib Al Hasan, Soumya Sarkar, Taijul Islam

SL, Pakistan share series after another stalemate

Sri Lanka Under-19 and Pakistan Under-19 had to settle for a draw for the second game in a row, meaning that the two-match series ended 0-0

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Oct-2015
ScorecardSri Lanka Under-19 and Pakistan Under-19 had to settle for a draw for the second game in a row, meaning that the two-match series ended 0-0.Sri Lanka, having been inserted, made the early running in the game, as a century from their captain Charith Asalanka powered the hosts to 305. Asalanka, who had scored a double-century in the first Test, struck 15 fours during his 124. Sixteen-year-old medium-pacer Sameen Gul was the pick of the bowlers, picking up 3 for 56, while 15-year-old Hayatullah collected 3 for 81.Pakistan, in reply, lost early wickets to fall to 71 for 5, but half-centuries from Hamza Khan (81) and Hasan Mohsin (60) steadied the innings. However, no other batsman contributed with a meaningful knock, as a four-wicket haul from fast bowler Geethal Malinga bundled the team out for 252.It meant the hosts had a lead of 53 in hand, but with just over 30 overs of play remaining in the game, their chances of forcing an outright win remained unlikely. The team managed their way to 119 for 5 before stumps were called, with Shammu Ashan top-scoring with 46.

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