Napier blast sends Essex into final

Scorecard

Graham Napier launches one of his six sixes that swung the semi-final Essex’s way © Getty Images
 

There won’t be a Lord’s final send-off for Darren Gough. His former club Essex dumped Yorkshire out of the Friends Provident Trophy with an 87-run victory in the second semi-final at Chelmsford. The match was heading for a tight conclusion while Andrew Gale and Anthony McGrath were adding 94, but once Essex broke through the end was swift. The final nine wickets fell in a clatter for 49 and Gough was the last-man out, left to ponder what might have been.The key was superb bowling from Danish Kaneria and Ryan ten Doeschate, who took three wickets apiece, with the latter having an innings to remember as he demolished the middle order. Essex like to defend totals on their home ground – they did so successfully four times during the Twenty20 qualifiers – backing their lively fielding and the wiles of Kaneria to make up for a lack of quick bowlers. It was a game plan that worked to perfection once Graham Napier lived up to his Twenty20 heroics with a 34-ball 61 and lifted them to 285 for 8.The pressure Essex were able to apply in the field was due to the extra runs Napier’s late assault provided. At one stage some sharp Yorkshire fielding, with two direct hits from Tim Bresnan, and wily bowling from Rana Naved left the home struggling to reach 250 despite Alastair Cook’s controlled 95. But Napier is the talk of Chelmsford these days.A couple of weeks ago he re-wrote the record books with 152 off 58 balls in the Twenty20 against Sussex and here was equally belligerent. The boundary ropes were in – especially on the pavilion side – but most of Napier’s six sixes sailed comfortably into the stands. He fell in the final over, picking out deep midwicket trying for another maximum, but he’d done his job and 101 runs came off the final 10 overs. The momentum was back with Essex.Yorkshire were out of the blocks at a nippy rate as Gale and Adam Lyth added 56. David Masters broke through when Lyth missed an ugly heave across the line, although umpire Peter Hartley erred as the ball had pitched outside leg. McGrath survived a huge shout for caught behind before he scored, but soon settled into a productive stand with Gale.Against the first four Essex bowlers run came comfortably and James Middlebrook, the first spin introduced straight after the Powerplays, was deposited into the stands. Gale’s half-century came off 54 balls, then Essex began to strangle the life out of the innings. Boundaries dried up against Kaneria’s biting legspin, while ten Doeschate was equally hard to get away as he maintained a wicket-to-wicket attack.Still, though, moments before the 30-over mark Yorkshire were 140 for 1 and the common equation is to double the score from that point. The visitors still had hope, but it changed in a flash. Gale suffered a moment of madness when he defended into the leg side and tried to take a single to the bowler. It wasn’t a contest, but ten Doeschate still showed calmness to maintain the presence of mind to run at the stumps, rather than hurl the ball.Yorkshire had taken a gamble in their approach, because Gale and McGrath never got ahead of the run rate which meant a tough job if wickets began to fall. It was a telling factor. McGrath carved high to extra cover, where ten Doeschate needed four attempts before holding the catch to the relief of the vocal home support.It was ten Doeschate with ball in hand who claimed the next three; Gerard Brophy lbw pressing forward, Adil Rashid somehow edging a low full toss (a fine catch by James Foster) and Jacques Rudolph missing a swing across the line. It was the last of that trio that showed how Yorkshire knew the game was getting away from them. The remaining wickets fell to similarly hopeless swipes.Cook’s innings was the most prosaic of the day, but then not many of his efforts linger too long in the memory. He ticked along at his natural rate, picking off loose balls when they came along, particularly from Rashid. His fifty took 85 deliveries and he appeared set for just his second one-day century for Essex (his other was for England), but fell to Bresnan’s second direct hit of the innings. Richard Pyrah had parried a fierce cut down to third man and Cook was coming back for a second when he was caught well short by a bullet throw.When one set batsman departs it’s important for the other to take over, but Ravi Bopara, who never found his timing, was given out caught behind in the next over. Essex were in danger of squandering the advantage, but in hindsight it was perfect timing as it allowed Napier a chance to stretch his arms. The Essex supporters gave him a standing ovation and they’ll all be hoping he has a repeat performance in store at Lord’s next month.

West Indies Cricket Board sack CEO

After months of speculation, the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) has terminated the services of its chief executive officer, Gregory Shillingford. In a media release, the WICB said that Shillingford’s termination “followed consideration of a report on his performance conducted by its Review and Assessment Committee…and comments from each board member.”Shillingford’s position has never been secure since he became embroiled in a controversy surrounding the firing of West Indies team manager Ricky Skerritt via email last year. Skerritt was subsequently rehired following a review of the method of his dismissal.As early as June last year, Shillingford expressed uncertainty about his future involvement with the WICB since he was part of the Select Committee that had fired Skerritt. Reports published earlier this year also hinted that a WICB director had ‘advised’ two members of staff at the WICB secretariat in Antigua that the CEO’s days were numbered. When news of this broke, it was quickly dismissed. As recent as two weeks ago, there was talk of a ‘separation agreement’ being in place, but this too was dismissed by the regional body.The WICB said that the decision to fire Shillingford was unanimous. Roger Brathwaite, the newly appointed chief marketing executive, will act as CEO until a replacement is appointed.

Rain saves Bangladesh the blushes

For the West Indies, the first one-day international at Chittagong was a curious dichotomy of both shabby and scintillating cricket, the division occurring not so much because of the failures of a few as because two players staggeringly outperformed the rest.That certainly wasn’t expected when the tourists were put in to bat; with the top order in a fine vein of form, it looked like a bad decision from Khaled Mashud, even if he did look to the hard pitch and the gloomy conditions as defence. When Wavell Hinds began systematically taking the attack apart four overs into the innings, old-timers may have recalled WG Grace’s remark about batting first: “If you win the toss, choose to bat. If you’re doubtful, think about putting the other side in and then choose to bat.”But Mashud’s gamble paid off – at least initially. Hinds was caught at long-off trying to smash a Manjural Islam slower ball over the border into India. Twenty-six runs later, a frustrated Marlon Samuels lashed out at a flighted Mohammad Rafique delivery only to find sweeper cover. By now, spin was operating at both ends, and the West Indians started to struggle.Ramnaresh Sarwan and Chris Gayle, both immensely successful in India, sweated to work the leg-spin of Mohammad Ashraful, the left-arm spin of Rafique and the off-spin of Naimur Rahman off the square. The singles dried up, the pressure built palpably, and when Gayle (38, 70b, 5×4) was finally run-out looking for a non-existent single, it was hardly a surprise.Flown in as a replacement for the injured Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Daren Ganga was, unlike his teammates, clearly new to the subcontinental conditions. Stroke after stroke found only the fielders, and considering that he found Ashraful in particular difficult to pick, it was perhaps an aberration that Sarwan (39, 66b, 1×4) fell to the leggie instead, uppishly driving to extra cover.The arrival of Ricardo Powell to the crease signalled the turn. Rotating the strike with deceptive ease, Powell upped the run-rate almost immediately, even inspiring enough confidence in Ganga to smite two big sixes. An intended third found long-on, but Ganga (44, 56b, 2×6) had done his share of reconstruction.Powell then came alive. Boundaries flowed regularly as the big-hitting batsman muscled the ball as many as six times over the ropes, and seven more times just short of it. Two sixes came off one Rafique over, and when he fell off the penultimate ball of the innings – trying, perhaps, to do a Youhana and get to three figures off the last ball – he had powered his way to 88 off just 50 balls. More importantly, he saw the West Indies to a total that – at 145 off 37 overs – looked near-impossible.The deep quality chasm continued into the West Indian bowling. At one end, Vasbert Drakes did everything but make the ball talk, using the pitch and the new ball to get bounce and sharp movement either way. At the other end, however, short balls, over-pitched deliveries and other run-scoring opportunities were generously sent down by Jermaine Lawson and Corey Collymore.Of the openers, Hannan Sarkar was the first to fall, caught behind as the extra bounce took the edge. Al Sahariar followed 19 runs later, a peach of a delivery nipping off the pitch between bat and pad to clip middle stump.Meanwhile, Mohammad Ashraful, Test cricket’s youngest centurion, was occupying himself at the other end by throwing the bat at virtually everything. Starting with a mighty pull to midwicket off his very first ball, he added a top-edged six to fine leg and three more pulled fours later on.He lost Habibul Bashar in the ninth over – when the batsman tried to cut too hard and presented Jacobs his second catch of the innings – but was was soon back in the pavilion himself. Drakes pitched the ball just outside off and moved it away a shade, drawing the batsman forward. The ball took the shoulder of the bat and flew rapidly to the right of Gayle at slip, who took a fine, gangly-looking, diving catch. That gave Drakes all four of the Bangladeshi wickets to fall.As Drakes was taken off – and bowlers such as Mahendra Nagamootoo and Gayle started to operate – the innings steadied. Sanwar Hossain and Alok Kapali made identical scores of 18 off 21 balls and added 38 runs for the fifth wicket when rain interrupted proceedings with Bangladesh on 90 for four. It never let up, and after the umpires waited in vain for it to clear up, they were forced to abandon the game, leaving it to the remaining two day-nighters in Dhaka to decide the series.

Tendulkar and Ganguly make light of Headingley gloom

Just under an hour’s play was lost at the start of the second morning of the third npower Test at Headingley, but the Indian batsmen more than made up for lost time with a spectacular display of batting skills while the England bowlers laboured in conditions that should have helped them. Rahul Dravid went on as surely as ever and, when he was eventually out, Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly raised individual hundreds in a fourth wicket partnership worth 249.When play did get under way beneath slate-grey skies, there were the expected examples of the bat being passed but without taking the edge, and increasingly Dravid and Tendulkar imposed themselves. As ever in these conditions, there was encouragement for the bowlers, but there were numerous instances of frustration that were seized upon rather than the consistent inspiration that was required.Matthew Hoggard even induced Tendulkar to drive uppishly through the covers for four, and when the next ball was whipped off his legs for another boundary, Nasser Hussain switched Andrew Caddick to bowl down hill, without any more success. That was just one of a number of changes made to the bowling, but all with the same result. Just before lunch, Hussain even resorted to trying the occasional medium pace of Mark Butcher who was undoubtedly short of bowling since his knee operation. He also gave one over to Michael Vaughan.The batsmen, meanwhile, were quickly giving momentum to the innings. The first ten overs of the morning produced 41 runs, with seven fours. Dravid went to his highest score against England while Tendulkar passed fifty with an exciting pull off Tudor.The batsmen continued to make healthy progress after lunch with Tendulkar in particular showing a range of shots that should have been closed to mere mortals in these conditions. The bowlers did get a boost, however, when the third wicket partnership had put on 150.Ashley Giles drew Dravid down the pitch, beat him in the air and Alec Stewart did the rest. Dravid’s innings had lasted just over seven hours, he had faced 307 balls and hit 23 boundaries. He had been bruised and battered about the hands but had never flinched and the value of his innings in the circumstances cannot be overstated.Ganguly settled quickly to his task after what is now the traditional greeting from Andrew Flintoff in particular who delivered a considerable number of balls in his own half. Meanwhile Tendulkar was in imperious form. He went to his century with an exquisite on-drive off the bowling of Giles for his thirteenth boundary after facing 171 balls. It was his sixth hundred off the England attack in 15 matches and his 30th Test century in all. Only his great hero, Sunil Gavaskar, has scored more.It became evident during the extended afternoon session that England stood little chance of bowling India out and it became a question of when Ganguly was likely to make the declaration. He was in no hurry to do so while there were rich pickings to be had and England could be batted out of the match.While Tendulkar went on remorselessly, Ganguly brought up his fifty with a six off Giles. A spectator tried to do what England’s fielders had been unable to do, namely catch Ganguly. Unfortunately for the man in the stands, his moment of glory became somewhat tarnished when the ball crashed into his head and he was led away for treatment from the medics. Robert Key did not receive the same attention when he dropped Ganguly off a straightforward chance at slip when the Indian captain had 62. Certainly the bowler, Caddick, did not appear to be inquiring after Key’s health.Perhaps the fielder was inconvenienced by the light, or lack of it, for it was shortly afterwards that the umpires offered it to the batsmen who declined to go off. Memories went back to Trent Bridge when, with fewer than the four lights showing on the board here, England’s batsmen had scurried to the pavilion in similar circumstances.Tendulkar and Ganguly took no notice of the gloom (there were now five lights shining brightly) as they clattered the bowling to all parts. They added 47 from three overs before Tendulkar reached 150 and Ganguly went to his hundred from 156 balls with 12 fours and a six. He then smashed Giles for a six over mid-wicket, changed his bat, and proved the new one was just as good by hitting another six next ball and then a one-bounce four in an over that cost 23.The 11 overs with the second new ball cost 96 runs, including five sixes and nine fours, when Ganguly swung and missed at a straight ball from Alex Tudor and was bowled for 128. It was a thrilling innings that could be allowed to be run its course because a declaration would have inevitably brought a close because of the light.VVS Laxman made his way to the middle and then returned to the pavilion as the gloom was overwhelming. Grinning broadly, he followed Tendulkar in with 185 not out to his name. It seems a very short time ago that questions were being asked about his continuing mastery. This was the perfect answer.

Pakistan all set for the African Safari

The Pakistan team is on the way for their campaign in Africa, the final opportunity to get their act together before the World Cup. The timing of these tours of Zimbabwe and South Africa could not have been more opportune and is an ideal chance to get acclimatized to the conditions. One can hope this will give them a head start over other teams in the competition. The downside is the fact Pakistani cricket is currently in total disarray with the selectors and management struggling to find the ideal balance between youth and experience.The two teams named for the Test series and One-Day Internationals look to be brilliant on paper, but unfortunately the game of cricket can only be won on the field. That is the problem that has been plaguing the side, while having no shortage of talent, they just can’t seem to deliver the goods consistently. Inzamam and Youhana will definitely add some stability to the very fragile batting order, but Saeed Anwar’s exclusion is mind-boggling. He is still the best opener Pakistan has, and deserves to be given the opportunity to play in the World Cup, most likely his last as age catches up with this great player. Saleem Elahi has made yet one more appearance right out of the cold, and one really wonders what thought process went in behind that decision? Kamran Akmal in preference over Moin Khan as a reserve wicket keeper is also very strange, as these tours are too crucial to be testing new players.To preserve Wasim Akram for the One-Dayers exclusively was a very sensible one, as the last thing we need is to have him unfit during the World Cup. It will most certainly be his last World Cup campaign, and one hopes that this great servant of Pakistan cricket will bow out in style. The inclusion of speedster Mohammed Zahid is most heartening and must actually be ‘allowed’ to play rather than again sit on the bench as one of the reserves. There is little doubt the bowling attack looks in great shape and has been the only solace for Pakistani fans for quite some time.That leaves us with only one problem and that is, very obviously, the batting line up. The batting order has not been established with any degree of certainty; with many players unsure of what role to perform. Shahid Afridi, if played in the ODI’s must be assigned a specific role which must be to play his natural game and take the opposition apart early. He is likely to fail on more occasions than one, but asking him to curb his aggressive instinct and play cautiously is a waste of his abilities. In Test matches, Taufeeq Umar and Saleem Elahi are a better proposition at the top of the order. The one-down slot has been experimented with too long with Abdul Razzaq too often being asked to be the sacrificial lamb. Razzaq is a far better player against the old ball, and this position ought to be reserved for Yousuf Youhana. Inzamam, Younis Khan and Faisal Iqbal must be the other sureties in the middle order. Hasan Raza too showed quite a lot of character in his last two knocks and deserves to be given a fair chance to prove his mettle against Zimbabwe.The team management needs to give all the young batsman a full go in Zimbabwe, and then pick the most proficient ones for the highly important tour of South Africa.With little time at hand and a lot of hard work to be done, one can only hope the Pakistanis can turn around their form in the twin series to enter the World Cup on a high note. It will be an uphill task after the extremely poor showing against the Aussies. The Board and team management must go all out to help this young team show guts and grit if they are to get things back on track.

Somerset in a strong position at the end of the first day at Taunton

Somerset ended the first day of their county championship match against Leicestershire at Taunton in a strong position.Havingwon the toss and batted all day the Cidermen closed on 376 for 3 and look well set to continue to build an even larger score tomorrow.Jamie Cox (176) was the star performer with the bat today, and shared in an opening partnership of 184 with Matthew Wood, and then put on 114 with Mike Burns (52).The Somerset skipper was eventually dismissed by Darren Maddy shortly before the close of play, leaving Peter Bowler unbeaten on 45 and Keith Parsons on 7.After the close of play Somerset coach Kevin Shine told me: "This was an excellent professional batting performance today. Jamie Cox is a class act and batted as well as I have ever seen him, and Peter Bowler is looking good."Earlier in the day the Somerset skipper had shared an opening partnership of 184 with Matthew Wood, who was playing in his first championship match this season. Referring to the young opener the coach said: "Woody batted well, he scored at a good tempo and looked to be in good nick"What were the plans for tomorrow I asked the coach. He told me: "We will bat as long as we can tomorrow, we can’t let go of a position like this."

Promising all-round career tragically shortened

</tableBen Hollioake's death at the age of 24 robs Surrey and England of an all-rounder who was showing signs of doing fuller justice to his enormous potential.Hollioake was marked out as a potential superstar at the age of just 19, when he scored a rapid 63 for England against Australia in the third ODI in 1997. He followed this with 98 in his next match at Lord's, the B&H final, which won him the Man of the Match award. It came as no surprise when he was voted Young Cricketer of the Year by the Cricket Writers' Club.Such was the impression made upon the England selectors that Ben, along with brother Adam, was included in the England team for the fifth Test against Australia at Nottingham in 1997. It was the only time two brothers made their Test debuts together in the 20th century. At 19, Ben was the youngest England debutant since Brian Close in 1949.Such exciting potential took time to develop, and by the start of the 2001 season Hollioake had still only played in two Tests and seven ODIs. He was recalled for the NatWest Triangular Tournament against Pakistan and Australia, and although he ended the series wicketless, he impressed with the bat on two occasions. He made an unbeaten 37 against Australia at Bristol, contributing to a rapid end-of-innings stand of 70 with Owais Shah, and a mature 53 in an otherwise forgettable England batting performance against Pakistan at Headingley. He went on the short tour of Zimbabwe last October, and played in the one-day series in India in the New Year. After that, a knee injury kept him out of the New Zealand series.Hollioake's exploits for Surrey will leave saddening, but heart-warming memories for many supporters. On hearing of his death, one remembered three sixes in an afternoon at The Oval, one of which broke tiles on the roof of the Apollo pub over the road. Hollioake opening the bowling with Alex Tudor, pitching full of length and swinging the ball both ways. Hollioake in partnership with Ali Brown, the two outdoing each other with drives. Hollioake diving at point, just failing to take a catch scarcely five yards from the batsman after covering twice the distance to attempt it. And last summer, practicing with his brother during a rain break, and thinking, yes, he's putting in the work that will make him the best all-rounder in England since Botham.Fleeting glimpses of a tragically shortened career.

Watson injury scare ahead of Tests

Australia’s vice-captain Shane Watson was whisked away from New South Wales’ Sheffield Shield match against Queensland to hospital for scans on his troublesome left calf and must now be considered in doubt for the first Test against South Africa.In his first appearance at the bowling crease in a first-class match since the tour of the West Indies in April, Watson delivered only one over before speaking with his state and national captain Michael Clarke and leaving the field.It soon emerged that he was bothered by a sore left calf, the same muscle he strained during this year’s ODI tour of England. A calf ailment had also contributed to Watson missing all of the 2011-12 home Test matches. Medical staff later sent Watson away from the ground to have scans on the injury.Watson’s exit from Allan Border Field continued a fraught round of domestic matches for Australia’s Test batsmen, as only Michael Hussey has made any substantial runs while Ricky Ponting was withdrawn from Tasmania’s match against South Australia with hamstring tightness.The close proximity of the Champions League to the first Test of the summer had opened up the possibility of injury disrupting either Australian or South African participants in the Twenty20 event. The visiting batsman Hashim Amla said the adjustment up from the shortest format to the longest was among the more vexing challenges in the post-modern game.”That element is always a challenge, to go from one format to another,” Amla said. “Some guys struggle to do it, some don’t struggle to do it, and in managing their body every player has to find what works for him and what doesn’t.”We have medical professionals in our team that guide us along the way. We always take their advice and I’m sure every sportsman takes the advice and tries to stick with it. Everything doesn’t go to plan all the time, but you’ve just got to try to find what works for you and hopefully stick with it.”James Sutherland, the Cricket Australia chief executive, was adamant that the team performance hierarchy, fitness and medical staff had done all they could to prepare players as best as possible for the forthcoming Tests, admitting that the circumstances created by the CLT20 were not ideal.”I think people are perfectly entitled to ask questions, but at the same time they should have confidence the people involved are doing everything they can,” Sutherland told .”What we have done in recent times is really co-ordinated the effort between state associations and CA management and medical staff and conditioning staff to ensure that the preparation of players for international cricket is as good as it can be in the circumstances. I think Pat Howard and his team have made some giant strides in that regard.”Data collected by Cricket Australia’s team performance wing has demonstrated that players are at considerable risk of injury when they are adjusting back up to first-class and Test cricket from the game’s shortest format.Aware of this, and Watson’s injury history, the team performance manager Pat Howard had arranged for him to return home early from the Sydney Sixers’ squad in South Africa, the better to give him time to rest and prepare in training for the upward surge in his workload.There had also been discussions about Watson playing in Sydney grade cricket or for the NSW Futures League team in a match against the ACT in Canberra. It was ultimately decided that he would not take part in either.But the precautions have been unable to prevent the recurrence of calf trouble, and Wtson’s place in the XI for the Gabba Test is now open to question.

Don't rule me out of England side yet, says Hick

Graeme Hick is setting his sights on yet another comeback into the England Test side.The Worcestershire captain was not awarded a central contract by the ECB after a disappointing winter with England.But at the age of 34 he is not ready to throw in the towel yet and, having been recalled ten times by England already, a return would hardly be unprecedented.Hick, currently leading Worcestershire against Middlesex at Lord’s, told PA Sport: “I’ve not had a good winter.”England played well as a side and it was fantastic to win both Test seriesbut it was certainly not my best winter personally.”If you don’t get many runs and you don’t perform, then I don’t expect toomuch.”But I’m still ambitious to play for England. I’m only 34, I’m still prettyfit and I see a lot of cricket ahead of me. It’s up to me to make sure my nameis in the hat (with England).”I still want to be playing Test cricket. First of all I’ve got a job to dohere now with Worcestershire but I’ve still got other goals beyond that I wantto achieve.”There are still things I would like to do which hopefully will keep memotivated. If I get a truckload of runs at the start of the season, we will haveto see what happens.”

Frantic schedule has its dangers, says Hussain

Looking ahead to this summer’s seven Test matches in England, captain Nasser Hussain has voiced his concern about the effect of the hectic international schedule on the players.England play three Tests against Sri Lanka and four against India this summer,with a one-day tournament involving the trio in between.The one-day team will then compete in the ICC Champions trophy in Colombo, go on to Australia for a five-match Ashes series and more one-day games, before rounding off a whirlwind 10 months at the World Cup in South Africa.”There is a feeling around the game that we do want a little bit less cricket to make it more important,” said Hussain.”There is so much cricket, a one-dayer here, a one-dayer there on the otherside of the world, Test matches, triangular series, we don’t know who is playingwho now. You could be playing the ninth game of a 12-match series.””For young bowlers like Hoggard and Flintoff, particularly with captains like me, the extra cricket could have an effect. I bowled them into the ground last winter because you want to win every game.”When you are out there you are not thinking about four years’ time, you justwant to win the game. With captains like me around it will wear them down and careers will shorten.”I don’t know if it is good or bad for the game, better people than me willhave to work that out.”Although 11 players have already been contracted to England for the summer, Hussain insists others will be considered for selection for the opening Test, at Lord’s on May 16.”People just look at the contracts and see that as being the team, thinkingthat others cannot get in,” said Hussain.”But the contracts and the team that we will select next week are different. We will look at the conditions at Lord’s, who has played well there before and how we have won games there before and will pick a side to beat Sri Lanka. The boys with the contracts, of course, will be high on our lists.”Hussain again stood by the Essex wicket-keeper James Foster, following speculation the Alec Stewart could be in the frame for a recall after an impressive start to the season.Speaking at the ECB’s new initiative to entice youngsters to play the game, the launch of the Lion’s Den at The AMP Oval, Hussain said: “We have got to give him a go. He’s the future. Obviously Alec’s name will come up from time to time, he’s a world-class cricketer.”But there’s no point in us going round in circles. Mistakes are made by every young player that comes into international cricket, Graham Thorpe and Marcus Trescothick are the only two that have come in and been major successesstraightaway.”In my time I hope to give every young cricketer that comes in, whoever theymay be, a chance. It’s easy for the selectors to pick our best side to try and win this Test series. But Duncan has a saying about looking after the next week or looking after the future. Which is most important?”It’s selfish to look after the next week — we have a responsibility beyondthat. English cricket demands success, however, so we have to try and balance itand beat Sri Lanka and India.”


BenHollioake – on Test debut in 1997
Photo Paul McGregor