Moody awarded testimonial

Tom Moody has been awarded a testimonial year in 2004 by Worcestershire. He retired from first-class cricket in 2001, after which he took up the role of director of cricket.He has been with Worcestershire since 1991, and as a player he was a key member of the side who won both the Benson & Hedges Cup in 1991, and the NatWest Trophy in 1994.He said: “I am honoured the club has awarded me a testimonial year. It has been a privilege to have been involved with the county since 1991 as a player and now the director of cricket.”Worcestershire are currently riding high on top of Division Two and are unbeaten in the Championship so far this season.

www.somerset.cricinfo.com

The 2001 season saw the launch of the new Somerset Website, which from its tentative beginnings has gone from strength to strength as the season progressed.The site, which is joint venture between Somerset County Cricket Club and CricInfo was launched on May 21st, and during the first month of its existence it received nearly 14000 visits. During the second month the site attracted 21000 hits, which had grown to more than 29000 hits during last month.The web site (www.somerset.cricinfo.com) is so successful that out of all the county sites that are hosted by CricInfo the Somerset site is second only to Hampshire.From the start the aim of the Somerset web site has been to keep the supporters of the Club as well informed as possible, and to this end information and news items have been added on a daily basis. Where at all possible reports have been supported by quotes from the relevant parties, and the cooperation received from Kevin Shine, Jamie Cox and all of the players in this has been much appreciated.The Club has also used the site to make official press releases, and Chief Executive Peter Anderson has made public several documents that he has presented to official meetings through the site.The site has not only concentrated on the first team, but has reported on second team matches on a daily basis where possible, and on the Somerset Board matches. Somerset Youth Cricket has been reported on the site, and mid way through the season a Jurnor Sabres Page was introduced.Both of the competitions were very well supported, and more competitions are planned for the future, so keep on visiting the site on a regular basis!In addition during the long winter months we will carry regular personal updates from England’s overseas tours courtesy of Andy Caddick and Marcus Trescothick, as well as up-to-the-minute news, views and developments on the Somerset County Cricket scene as they take place.Don’t forget to put www.somerset.cricinfo.com number one on your list of favourites, and remember that all of the items covered on the site can still be accessed through the archive pages, which also include one or two reports that never made it to the headlines on the site.

'Kumar the most professional cricketer I have seen' – Farbrace

Paul Farbrace, the former Sri Lanka assistant coach, has said that Kumar Sangakkara is the “most professional” cricketer he has seen at training, and had helped him become a better coach. Farbrace, now England’s assistant coach, had two stints with the Sri Lanka team. He was assistant coach under Trevor Bayliss from 2007 to 2009, and was briefly head coach, from January to April 2014.”Kumar is, without doubt, the most professional I have ever seen in practice,” Farbrace said. “I’ve never seen anyone practise like him. Some get close, but his desire to be the best he can be is unbelievable. The day before a match he is – in the nicest sense – a complete pain. His practice has to be top quality.”He watches videos of bowlers to work out when he should be making his movements. It takes a lot of thought. It takes a lot of understanding. He is a cricketing genius.”Farbrace had been with Sri Lanka when Sangakkara led them to the World T20 final in 2009, and had also overseen the 2014 World T20 victory. Sangakkara’s highest Test-match aggregate – 424 against Bangladesh – also came under Farbrace’s watch.”Kumar taught me a very valuable coaching lesson,” Farbrace said. “He is very specific about his left foot. It moves from middle and leg to middle and off. Never back and across, never forward – it never opens. I was watching him in the nets and concentrating more on the bowlers than him. But after about 10 balls he asked how his foot was looking. I told him it looked great, as he had been hitting the ball nicely.”After the net, he took me to one side and said, ‘Next time I ask you a question like that, be honest with me. Three times my foot went back and across towards leg stump, not the other way, and I don’t want any false information.’ That was a huge lesson for me. I should have said I hadn’t been watching. I should have been honest. I learned so much from him. And I know the players around him learned from that level of professionalism.”Farbrace also lauded both Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene as “world-class people as well as world-class players”.”I recall we had a Test in Kandy once when I was unwell. First he took me to a doctor for treatment to help me get over an ear infection, and then we stopped at a local ground where he had a bat on a concrete net in front of his dad.”His dad has clearly been a constant throughout his career. He pushed and encouraged him when he was young and he continued to provide advice and reassurance. Anyway, Kumar never forgot how he had become successful. Even when he was at his peak, he would go back to see his dad and make sure no faults had crept into his game.”Sangakkara averages 54.07 away from home, and Farbrace said it is his versatility that makes him a great cricketer. “I’ve seen him score 192 against Brett Lee at his quickest in Hobart and I’ve seen him score 150 on a turning pitch against the best spin bowlers. He had to adapt and adjust. That takes so much planning and ability.Farbrace has been a force behind the drive to get Jayawardene into a temporary consultancy role with England. He said Sangakkara was also quick to share his experience with other cricketers.”Kumar is very good at deflecting credit towards other people. He always talks about how good Mahela is and how much he has inspired their nation. He talks about him being their greatest captain. But he has given so much to his country and so much to the game. I have got him to talk to England players in the past. He will share his knowledge with anyone who has the passion that he has.”I don’t think the Sri Lankan team will realise quite how big a contribution he has made until he is no longer there.”

Stokes: England must unleash 'the dog' in bid to salvage Ashes

Ben Stokes has urged his England team to unleash “the dog” in them to keep the Ashes alive ahead of a decisive third Test in Adelaide.Trailing 2-0 to Australia after two different but equally harrowing eight-wicket defeats, the England captain has lit a fire under his charges, urging them to show more fight ahead of what will be the biggest match of his tenure.Since taking over in the summer of 2022, Stokes has tended towards a more holistic approach, encouraging players to express themselves in ways they see fit. Now, in the City of Churches, he has called for something akin to Old Testament fury – to challenge Australia head-on in what will be a defining week for his tenure, and that of head coach Brendon McCullum.Asked how he would define that need for more “fight” after two meek Tests, Stokes insisted the word would show itself differently in each player. But the sentiment, he believed, was to look squarely back at Australia and not relent.”What it [fight] means to me could be completely different to someone else,” Stokes said. “It’s just trying to fight in every situation that you find yourself in and understanding the situation and what you feel is required for your team. Just look at your opposition every single time and show a bit of dog. That’s fight to me.”It comes a lot easier to me, it might be a lot harder for other people because of their personalities or whatever that may be. I’m not going to expect or ask a completely different character to me to carry on like me. That’s like asking me to carry on like someone like Jamie Smith, who’s a lot more laid back. It just wouldn’t work. However, you find the best way to find that mode that I’m talking about, that’s probably the best way to explain it.”It was a sentiment Stokes first put across with his own actions, after resuming his seventh-wicket stand with Will Jacks on the morning of the final day of the second Test. The pair’s 96 from 221 deliveries was a welcome show of resistance, even if it only delayed Australia’s win.”I could have gone out there on that morning session in Brisbane and nicked off first ball, but going out there with that mentality and that mindset is what fight is to me.”As long as you go out there and everyone is in that mindset around the situation and what is needed, you’re giving yourself the best possible chance if you’ve got a bit of dog in you.”Ahead of the final passage of the second Test at The Gabba, Stokes urged one last scrap. With Australia needing just 65 for victory, he knew the match was gone. But rather than lean on tropes – “I didn’t go out there and say the cliché thing of ‘you never know’ – he encouraged Jofra Archer to ramp it up to give the home batters something to think about as they left Brisbane.Related

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Archer subsequently bowled one of his fastest spells in an England shirt. And though he was subject to what Stokes describes as “unfair criticism” for summoning those speeds in a lost cause, Archer did exactly what his skipper asked of him.”That was one of those moments when I asked him to really turn it on because I needed that to be a marker for us to carry into Adelaide,” Stokes said. “I thought that that was a really, really important moment for us in the series.”Stokes doubled down on that message later that same day, stating in his post-match press conference that his dressing-room “isn’t a place for weak men”. It was a sentiment that percolated around the squad during their four-day break in Noosa, which Stokes facilitated with individual and group conversations. On Sunday, he reiterated that message to the whole squad in the Adelaide Oval away dressing-room, midway through England’s first training session ahead of the third Test.One of the key examples that Stokes brought up was the recent Test against India at Lord’s. After Zak Crawley’s time-wasting at the dregs of day three drew understandable ire from the visitors, led by their captain Shubman Gill, England decided to bite back. In doing so, they were able to push the game along to such an extent that they triumphed in an emotionally charged finale late on day five. Of course, England did not go on and win the series, as India responded emphatically with a valiant draw at Emirates Old Trafford and then a blockbuster win at the Kia Oval. The series was drawn 2-2, meaning that Stokes is still searching for his first victory as captain in a five-match series. Nevertheless, he pointed to Lord’s as an example of the dog that resides in this group that must be accessed.”That (Lord’s) is exactly what I’m on about. That was a moment where we all did that, we all noticed and we all identified that moment. And you’ve seen the way that team came out on that day.”We were probably in a situation where we would have to be absolutely perfect to win that game, and we were. And on the back of attitude, mentality towards that specific situation is what gave us the best chance of winning that game. That was spoken about, that India game, for the rest of this series.”I’ve done all the talking over the last two days that I needed to have done. All that stuff’s done now, so it’s about what gets seen out on the field in Adelaide this week.”Everyone’s very switched on for what needs to be done this week. Yeah, a few more expectations, I think, around the group, but everyone responded incredibly well to it. Because what other option do we have?”With Josh Tongue coming in for Gus Atkinson as the sole change to the previous XI, the opportunity is there for players to make up for their mistakes so far – particularly in the batting group, of which Stokes is a part. Beyond that half-century in his second innings at Brisbane, he has been found wanting as one of five of the top seven to average under 30 from four knocks so far.Stokes made his Test debut at Adelaide in 2013, where he showcased the mongrel that lies within in a clash with wicketkeeper Brad Haddin, having over-stepped for what would have been his maiden Test wicket.Stokes has readily accessed that side to his personality throughout his career – at times, to a fault. But he admits his team of varying personalities have been too tentative in fully combating what Australia has thrown at them, on and off the field.After Mark Wood returned home on Saturday following a recurrence of an injury to his left knee, there are now just four players on the tour with previous experience of Ashes tours. While the squad was told what to expect when they arrived here, the reality has been far more confronting, both with the local media and the crowds.”Honestly I think so,” Stokes said, when asked if the players had been taken aback by the the scale of the noise during their month in the country so far. Now, he hopes they can use it to fuel a desperately needed comeback.”There’s been a lot of guys in the squad who have come out here to Australia for the first time, and I remember my first tour here; you try to imagine what it’s going to be like and you hear people talk. And when it does come around it’s like ‘wow’.”But now I feel everyone has experienced that, and probably at its highest level, so we all know what it’s going to be like. So for the next three games there isn’t going to be any of that ‘I didn’t expect this’ … ‘it’s the first time I’ve had this’.”Even the likes of Jamie Smith, the day he dropped that catch (in Brisbane), then the whole crowd was wailing at him every time he caught the ball. He now knows it.”Sometimes experiencing stuff like that for the first time, you’re not worrying about it. I think sometimes saying it with a little bit more emphasis and passion and attitude from myself can take lads to another level in terms of that side of things that they thought they could get to.”

Crazy running and airplane celebration

Off he goes; Shoaib Akhtar celebrates airplane-style © AFP

Suicidal jump of the day
Batsmen are instructed to get in the way of the ball while running between thewickets; Misbah-ul-Haq made all the right moves before blowing a fuse at the lastmoment. Patting to point, he took off for a quick single and just needed to groundhis bat at the non-striker’s end when he chose to jump and evade the throw instead.Dinesh Karthik’s effort from point found its way onto the stumps and Misbah was out when inmid-air.Suicidal second run of the day
Meanwhile batsmen are also better off not running after slipping at the crease.Sachin Tendulkar completed a single and took off for the second, despite losing hisfooting at the crease. In fact he seemed more intent on the run after slipping thanbefore it. The throw was on target and Tendulkar, sent back by Rahul Dravid, foundhimself a few inches short.One an airplane, another a stoic
Shoaib Akhtar should have had Wasim Jaffer in the first over of the innings, leg-before toa speedy one that angled in, but had to wait till the 22nd over before he could geta positive response. Off he went in an airplane impersonation, ecstatic that hisfine spell had finally got a reward. His opening partner, Sohail Tanvir, though,doesn’t do expressions. After dismissing two batsmen with far greater records, withdeliveries that arced in at a menacing angle, he dead-panned his way to histeam-mates and looked the most serious of the lot.Tactic of the day
Mahendra Singh Dhoni thought it best to come down the track to counter Tanvir’sswing. It had worked in the one-dayers and Dhoni felt it best to do the same here.It tempted Tanvir to try a few short ones but Dhoni was behind the line to those,blocking with purpose. He somewhat miscalculated a charge against Danish Kaneria,though, missing a legbreak that had him nick one to the wicketkeeper.Warning of the day
The authorities at the Feroz Shah Kotla are obviously wary about poor crowdbehaviour. “Spectators are reminded that racially abusive comments and action willresult in ejection,” said a couple of boards in the Wing A side of the ground.

Byas decides to leave Yorkshire

End of the road for Byas after 20 years at the club © Getty Images

David Byas has left his post as Yorkshire’s director of cricket by mutual consent after weeks of discussions with the board, ending a 20-year association with the club.It is the second administrative hiccup for Yorkshire this winter following the muddle with Chris Adams. The Sussex captain, who this year led his side to the Championship and the C&G Trophy, agreed to move north to skipper Yorkshire and become their director of Pro-cricket. It pushed Byas out of a job but, when Adams performed a rapid u-turn two weeks later and announced he was staying with Sussex, Byas was left pondering his options.”The club would like to thank David for his service to Yorkshire,” Stewart Regan, the Yorkshire chief executive said in a statement. “Under his leadership the club were promoted to the first division of the County Championship in 2005. He has also overseen the development of a number of the county’s emerging prospects.”Yorkshire have no one in line to replace Byas, with the current coaching staff covering until a replacement is found.”The club is going through a major change process both on and off the field,” the statement continued, “and both David and the club agree that it is time for a new structure.”

NSW ring changes for clashes with Western Australia

Ed Cowan gets a recall as the Test players move to Brisbane © Getty Images

The departure of their impressive international contingent has forced New South Wales to make a string of changes to the Pura and ING Cup squads for matches against Western Australia in Perth. Aaron Bird, Ed Cowan, Grant Lambert and Matthew Phelps have been added to both outfits while Matthew Nicholson, Aaron O’Brien and Doug Bollinger were included in the Pura Cup unit.Greg Mail, the batsman, was dropped following the comfortable four-day win over South Australia at the SCG last week while Simon Katich, Brett Lee, Glenn McGrath, Nathan Bracken and Stuart MacGill will be in Brisbane for the first Test. The Blues play a day-night match at the WACA on Friday before the Pura Cup game begins on Sunday.New South Wales squad Phil Jaques, Matthew Phelps, Corey Richards, Dominic Thornely, Ed Cowan, Brad Haddin (capt, wk), Aaron O’Brien, Grant Lambert, Stuart Clark, Matthew Nicholson, Aaron Bird, Doug Bollinger.

New Zealand Women record big win

Scorecard
New Zealand women, also called the White Ferns, kicked off their tour of Ireland and England with a comfortable 200-run win over Ireland at Trinity College in Dublin. The New Zealanders are scheduled to play three warm-up matches against Ireland before taking on England.The New Zealand openers, Rebecca Rolls and Maria Fahey, justified their captain’s decision to bat first by adding 96 and helped themselves to half-centuries. Rolls fell for 50, bowled by the offspinner Mirian Grearley, while Fahey completed her fourth half-century in ten innings before being dismissed for 66. Fahey added 69 for the second wicket with Haidee Tiffen.Maia Lewis, the captain, and Sarah McGlashan finished with a flourish as they added 112, just four short of the New Zealand record. Lewis, who had prepared for the tour by getting some batting instruction from Roger Twose, scored 63 off 56 balls, which included a six. McGlashan finished on a breezy 31, and New Zealand ended with a mammoth 278.Ireland were never in with a chance and folded for just 78 in 36.1 overs. Louise Milliken, the medium-pacer, took 3 for 14 and achieved her best figures in one-dayers. Rebecca Steele, the left-arm spinner, finished with 2 for 6.

Flintoff likely to miss second Test

England’s hopes of having Andrew Flintoff back in the team for the second Test, against Zimbabwe at Durham, have been dealt a blow with news that he could be out of action for a further two weeks.Duncan Fletcher, the England coach, would have faced a tough decision whether to play a fit Flintoff instead of Anthony McGrath – one of the heroes from Lord’s – but it’s a call he would have welcomed: “If he comes through any time earlier than that then it’s a great advantage to us.”However, Flintoff – who continues treatment for his injured shoulder at Lancashire – was in a positive mood: “If the injury keeps improving like it has done then hopefully I won’t be out for too long.” He added, “I have not ruled myself out of anything yet and I will keep with the treatment and see how it progresses.”And he insisted he could be back earlier than diagnosed: “It is really hard to put a time-span on when I am going to return but it has improved tremendously. I have got a lot more movement in my shoulder than I did have so that is very positive.”McGrath will undergo a scan on Tuesday (May 27) on his strained side but is expected to be fit ahead of the naming of England’s one-day squad.Meanwhile, the England selectors will be keeping their eye on the progress of Darren Gough – another player feeling his was back from injury. Gough, who said he hoped to play in the second Test on June 5, played in Yorkshire’s National League game against Glamorgan at the weekend. He bowled six overs at 32 runs, and didn’t take any wickets, as Yorkshire went down by four wickets.

Bajan spinner Austin called

Barbadian off-spinner Ryan Austin is in the side for the third andfinal four-day Under-19 Test against Young England, starting today, atthe Riverside Ground, Chester-le-Street, Durham.West Indies coach Gus Logie confirmed that Austin would be draftedinto the squad, as West Indies were now struggling to hold on withjust 12 of the 15-member party fit to play.The other Bajan in the touring party, Patrick Browne, has notrecovered from a leg injury sustained in the first Test, and fastbowlers Andrew Richardson, of Jamaica, and Guyanese Rayon Thomas havealso been ruled out with stress fractures of the back and foot,respectively.Austin has been bowling well without much success, but he was verygood in the One-Day matches. He will be looking forward to playing inthe final `Test’, and that will give him a very good opportunity,Logie said.The injuries to Thomas and Richardson left the West Indies with justtwo fit pacers: Jermaine Lawson of Jamaica and Vincentian left-armerKenroy Peters.These were both rested for the three-day match against EnglandUnder-18 at Durham University, where prolific opener Devon Smith hithis second century of the tour in the drawn match. He hit 54 in thefirst innings.We don’t have many choices. We will have to play two spinners, comewhat may, and this will put us under pressure, because we’re not awareof the surface we’ll encounter, Logie said.Durham is known to be a seamer-friendly pitch, and the West Indiesbatsmen will have to do most of the work, if they are to protect their1-0 lead in the three-match series.It will be up to the batsmen to perform well again, but the guys haveresponded well. They are very eager, and focused on the job at hand,the former West Indies vice-captain added.Meanwhile England have strengthened their side with the inclusion ofbatsman Nicky Peng, and keeper Matt Prior, who were both named in anelite group of 15 of the country best Under-23 players.The pair played in the first Test but missed the second one due tocounty duties.England team: Kadeer Ali, Ian Bell, James Anderson, JustinBishop, Kyle Hogg, Monty Panesar, Nicky Peng, Gary Pratt, Matt Prior,Joe Sayers, Bilal Shafayat, James Tredwell, Tim Boon (coach), NeilFoster (assistant coach).

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