Showing posts with label Michael. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael. Show all posts

Monday, 28 October 2013

England seamer Stuart Broad stands his ground on walking saga to Michael Vaughan

England seamer Stuart Broad remains unrepentant about his controversial decision not to walk after he edged Australia spinner Ashton Agar to slip during last summer’s first Ashes Test at Trent Bridge.

Broad was given not out by umpire Aleem Dar and went on to share a decisive partnership with Ian Bell which helped to give England a lead in the series which they went on to win 3-0.

In an interview with former England captain Michael Vaughan which will be broadcast on Radio5 Live this evening Broad insists that he did nothing different to most other professional cricketers. “My first comment on that whole incident is I could name you 18 or 19 players who played in an Ashes series who nicked it and didn’t walk,” Broad said. “We could be here all day if I named players from the past. I am trying to think of someone in the modern game who is consistently a walker.

“It’s a really interesting debate and something that got blown so out of proportion maybe because the Australians were frustrated they had wasted two referrals.

“It was an important moment in the game because, let’s be honest, if Belly and I hadn’t put on those runs, we wouldn’t have won the Test match so we would only have won 3-1 or something.”

Asked by Vaughan whether he would stand his ground again if the same situation were to happen in the first Test of this winter’s Ashes series, Broad said: “Yes. I won’t nick, I’ll hit it for four.”

Broad’s refusal to walk at Trent Bridge was criticised by Australia coach Darren Lehmann, who accused him of “blatant cheating” and urged Australia fans to make Broad cry this winter.

Broad revealed that Australia players had criticised Lehmann for his comments and that the coach had apologised to him for his comments.

“Ryan Harris came over to me and apologised. First of all he said from the players we have given him [Lehmann] a hard time and his comments were unacceptable,” Broad said. “Then he [Lehmann] came across and said: I meant it in jest. I said that in black and white it doesn’t look like jest to me. He said something along the lines of, listen to the interview, and I said, I have far better things to do with my time, and that was about it. We shared a nice beer and I said, 'See you in November’.”

Lehmann has since described England’s cricket as dour and questioned the technique of batsman Jonathan Trott but Broad said England would not be distracted by Australia’s attempts to play mind games.

“It’s like a big boxing match coming up a bit of trash talk. We are the side that don’t need to get involved in that, we are very happy where we are as a team, we have got some very skilful players,” Broad said.

“We don’t need to comment on Australia we don’t need to comment on them as a team. We are more than happy for them to comment on us.”

You can hear more in Stuart Broad Uncovered on BBC Radio 5 Live tonight at 9pm


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Friday, 6 September 2013

Eoin Morgan backs Michael Carberry to put horror England ODI debut behind him

Carberry became a figure of fun for the crowd as he dropped two catches in England's six-wicket defeat of Ireland in Dublin on Tuesday.

His luck did not change as he conceded 12 runs in bowling a single unimpressive over and then failed in his principle job, opening the batting, managing just 10.

But after the 32-year-old was selected on the back of some superb form for Hampshire, Morgan expects him to come good.

Morgan said: "With debuts you are on a hiding to nothing most of the time. More often than not they do not go right for you.

"Carbs is a very experienced cricketer. He will pick himself up, re-evaluate where he is at and we will encourage him to play with the freedom he does at Hampshire.

"We have very strong belief in him as an opening batsman."

Carberry - who played one Test match in 2010 - is one of a number of players to be given an opportunity this autumn as England rest several of their star names following their Ashes exertions.

Regular captain Alastair Cook, James Anderson, Ian Bell, Stuart Broad and Graeme Swann are all sitting out the late-season one-day internationals, which primarily consist of the five-match series against Australia starting on Friday.

Carberry, Boyd Rankin and Gary Ballance all made their debuts in the format against the Irish while other inexperienced players in James Taylor and Ben Stokes came back into the side.

Changes could be made as Kevin Pietersen, Jonathan Trott and Joe Root come back into contention for the first of the Australia matches at Headingley.

Morgan said: "We picked a team specifically for Tuesday and the conditions. We will see what we are going to do."

Edited by Michael Beattie


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Friday, 30 August 2013

Michael Richardson's century helps put Durham into impregnable position against Yorkshire

For the second time in his fledgling first-class career, Michael Richardson demonstrated a liking for the Yorkshire bowling attack, in the process steering Durham into an apparently impregnable position in this collision of the County Championship’s top two sides.

The South African-born wicketkeeper-batsman made his championship debut against the White Rose at Headingley two years ago, scoring 140 runs in the match, including an unbeaten 73 that, until Thursday, represented his highest first-class score.

Since then Richardson has been something of a bit player, his 17 first-class appearances yielding 568 runs at an average of 22.72. But once again the whiff of battle against the Yorkies brought out the best in him.

He started the day with just three to his name and probably expecting to play second fiddle to his captain Paul Collingwood who, 74 not out overnight, looked well placed to become the third Durham batsman to reach three figures. Instead, Collingwood fell early, judged leg before as he shaped to turn a short delivery from Ryan Sidebottom to leg after adding only seven.

That nevertheless left Durham on a healthy 414 for seven and any hopes of Yorkshire wrapping up the innings in short order were dashed by Richardson, aided and abetted on an easy-paced surface by Mark Wood and Jamie Harrison.

After surviving a confident lbw shout against Adil Rashid on 29, Richardson reached his fifty from 80 balls with seven fours, on the way losing Wood, caught at cover after an eighth-wicket stand of 49 in 31 overs.

There was to be no let-up for Yorkshire, however. Once again, Sidebottom apart, their bowlers struggled for consistency and Richardson and Harrison were in no mood to let them go unpunished. They had added 84 in 22 overs when, with Yorkshire looking increasingly impotent, Harrison was run out at the bowler’s end for a career-best 35 by a direct hit from wicketkeeper Jonny Bairstow.

Richardson was 77 at that stage but soon moved into the nineties with a six over long on off Kane Williamson and repeated the stroke to reach his century from 141 balls with 11 fours and two sixes. He fell three balls later, well caught by Gary Ballance at deep mid-on as he went for a third big hit.

A Durham total of 573 was, however, not what the majority of another 5,500-plus crowd would have had in mind at the start of the match and their mood was not improved by the early loss of Adam Lyth, superbly caught at third slip by Ben Stokes as he aimed an extravagant drive at Chris Rushworth.

Yorkshire were still 555 in arrears at that stage but Phil Jaques and Willamson began the long haul to safety confidently enough, adding 54 in 13 overs before Scott Borthwick’s leg-spin deceived Jaques by some extra bounce and he was caught at short leg off bat-pad.

When Andrew Gale was trapped leg before by Harrison nine overs later, Yorkshire were 107 for three and on the back foot. Steady nerves were required and they were provided by Williamson and Bairstow.

New Zealand all-rounder Williamson, a late overseas recruit as cover for the possible absence of Bairstow and Ballance on international duty, had been dismissed for a golden duck in his only previous championship innings. However, once that ignominy had been avoided, he slipped into the groove, reaching a chanceless half-century from 81 balls with nine fours and by the close he and Bairstow had added 75 in 45 overs. Yorkshire are still the little matter of 242 away from avoiding the follow-on.

“The call from Colly was to push the follow-on target as high as possible,” said Richardson. “It’s going to be hard work to bowl pressure because the pitch is flat and the outfield fast. But things would change very quickly if we could get rid of Williamson and Bairstow early.”


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Michael Russell O'Brien in concert in Braidwood

Michael Russell O'Brien will be in concert at Immaculate Conception Church in Braidwood at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 12 at 110 S. School St., Braidwood.

Tickets are $10 for adults. Children 5 to 10 is $5. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. This concert is part of his 25 anniversary tour as he shares his talent with many parishes throughout the United States and Canada. Michael was a Rock N Roll recording artist with Oceana Records in the 1990's. He headlined with Disney World as well before he dedicated his career to singing for Our Lord and Our Lady. Michael will share his conversion story at Medjugorje in Bosnia. There will be a social after the concert. Autographs and CD's will be available.

For tickets call 815-458-2125 8 a.m.-4 p.m., after 4 p.m. call Anita at 815-739-9767.


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Thursday, 29 August 2013

Stuart Broad: Michael Vaughan 'disrespectful' to suggest refunds after England ODI squad named without stars

Vaughan said on Twitter that England fans should be offered a partial refund after it was announced one-day captain Alastair Cook, batsman Ian Bell, off-spinner Graeme Swann and seamers James Anderson and Broad himself would be absent from the five-match NatWest Series, starting on Sept 6.

However, captain Broad has defended the decision, believing certain players in the squad need a rest and that their replacements will be more than a match for Australia.

"I think they're (Vaughan's comments) disrespectful to the side that's going to go out on the field," Broad said.

"There's guys who have performed throughout the county season to get a chance at the international level.

"As an ODI team, we're building towards that 2015 World Cup (where) you need to have a big group of players going into that World Cup with experience of international caps.

"They wouldn't be in the squad if they're not good enough play and that ODI squad will be very focused on beating Australia.

"I know if I was paying to go and watch, I'd want to go and watch England beat Australia, that's it."

Vaughan thought it unfair of England to sell tickets to fans that would have been under the impression they would get to see most of the Ashes winners in action.

Kevin Pietersen, Joe Root, Jonathan Trott and Steven Finn were the only players selected in the ODI squad that played some part in the Ashes.

Vaughan tweeted on Tuesday: "I would have only rested Captain Cook.. Plenty of time to rest from Sept 16th - Nov 21st!!!? Can't sell tickets then rest 5 star names!!!!

"No problems resting players but I think Supporters who have paid good money to watch the best should get a small refund..."


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England fans should get refund after ODI team to face Australia has Ashes heroes missing, says Michael Vaughan

One-day captain Alastair Cook, batsman Ian Bell, off-spinner Graeme Swann and seamers James Anderson and Stuart Broad will sit out the five-match series between Sept 6 and 16.

England’s decision to give a break to crucial players before they attempt to complete a fourth successive Ashes series win had been widely expected but it prompted former captain Vaughan, a Telegraph Sport columnist, to say on Twitter that spectators should be offered a partial refund.

“I would only have rested Captain Cook. Plenty of time to rest from Sept 16th-Nov 21st!!! Can’t sell tickets then rest 5 star names,” Vaughan said after England named a squad including players such as Jamie Overton, who is uncapped at any level.

“No problems resting players but I think supporters who have paid good money to watch the best should get a small refund.”

However, the series is still heading for a sell-out and the counties hosting the internationals – Yorkshire, Lancashire, Warwickshire, Glamorgan and Hampshire – will not offer refunds as team selection is not one of the conditions of purchase. Warwickshire confirmed last night that they had received no requests for refunds.

“Despite the rested players the England squad will be strong and have some exciting young players in it so I do not think it will undermine late sales or leave people feeling short-changed,” Warwickshire chief executive Colin Povey said.

Hampshire believe that the ­presence of local favourite Michael Carberry will help to ensure that the final one-dayer at the Ageas Bowl is a sell-out.

“We’re delighted, especially as Michael Carberry has been called up. Not only is it a great opportunity for Michael, and well deserved too, we expect it to have a positive effect on ticket sales as Hampshire fans get behind one of their own,” a Hamp­shire spokesman said.

The opening ODI at Headingley on Friday week is a sell-out and only a limited number of tickets are available for the matches at Old Trafford on Sept 8, Edgbaston on Sept 11 and Cardiff on Sept 14.

Sky Sports, who will televise the one-day series, declined to comment on England’s squad selection.

England ODI squad v Ireland: E Morgan (Middlesex, capt), G Ballance (Yorkshire), R Bopara (Essex), D Briggs (Hampshire), J Buttler (Somerset), M Carberry (Hampshire), S Finn (Middlesex), C Jordan (Sussex), J Overton (Somerset), B Rankin (Warwickshire), B Stokes (Durham), J Taylor (Nottinghamshire), J Tredwell (Kent), L Wright (Sussex).

England ODI squad v Australia: E Morgan (Middlesex, capt), R Bopara (Essex), J Buttler (Somerset), M Carberry (Hampshire), S Finn (Middlesex), C Jordan (Sussex), J Overton (Somerset), K Pietersen (Surrey), B Rankin (Warwickshire), J Root (Yorkshire), B Stokes (Durham), J Tredwell (Kent), J Trott (Warwickshire), L Wright (Sussex).


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Michael Carberry set to be called up by England for one-day series against Australia

Carberry has not played for England since his solitary Test against Bangladesh in 2010. Since then ill health has set back his career but this season he has been in good form for Hampshire and the England Lions.

Carberry, who has suffered a blood clot on his lung since his one England appearance, has been enjoying a prolific season in limited-overs cricket. He made 146 for the Lions against Bangladesh A last week and topped 500 runs in the Friends Life Twenty20 competition at a strike rate of 142.

The pinnacle of his T20 season came with a hundred in the quarter-final against Lancashire helping to earn him a place in the England Twenty20 squad, which was announced earlier this month.

England play two Twenty20s against Australia starting at the Rose Bowl on Thursday and Durham on Saturday.

It is likely that Alastair Cook, who does not play in the T20 side, will be rested from the 50-over side, leaving Eoin Morgan to captain the 50-over team. Stuart Broad will lead the Twenty20 side but is likely to miss some, if not all, of the 50-over series.

Kevin Pietersen, James Anderson and Graeme Swann are also set to be rested although they could be added to the squad at a later stage. The five-match one-day series begins on Sept 6, three days after a one-off game against Ireland in Dublin.

Morgan has struck form just at the right time, hitting a season’s-best 90 to inspire his Middlesex side to a four-wicket Yorkshire Bank 40 win over Leicestershire at Lord’s on Monday.

National selector Geoff Miller was there to see Morgan hit eight fours and four sixes in a match-defining innings as Middlesex reached their target with 10 balls to spare.

Morgan reached a 43-ball fifty – his first in all forms of cricket in a hugely disappointing domestic season – by chipping six into the Tavern Stand against Josh Cobb. He was just 10 short of his century when a mistimed slog sweep against Shiv Thakor flew to Greg Smith at long on.


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Monday, 26 August 2013

Ashes 2013: bad light sours finale as Australia captain Michael Clarke fronts up to umpire Aleem Dar at the Oval

Clarke revealed he told Dar not to touch him after the official appeared to push him away as he was consulting his light meter.

Clarke was urging the umpires to take the teams off the field after seeing the reading on the light meter, which he said proved the light was darker than when the umpires suspended play in the third Test at Old Trafford as Australia pressed for victory.

“I remember him [Dar] touching me and I asked him politely not to touch me as if I touched him I would be banned for three games,” said Clarke. “There was no comparison with the light. I remember seeing the reading when we were told we had to go off in Manchester.

"There was a big difference. It was certainly darker out there then than in Manchester. We have to go on the umpires’ call. If they say it is safe to keep playing we keep playing.”

Boos rang around the ground when Dar and Kumar Dharmasena took the players off and suspended play. Giles Clarke, the chairman of the England and Wales Cricket Board and an influential presence at the ICC, will call for the governing body to change regulations regarding bad light.

At the moment umpires have to take the players off the field if the light reading drops from a pre-agreed reading before the game. “It is totally unsatisfactory the way the game ended – the rules are unacceptable and I expect Dave Richardson to change it at the next ICC chief executives meeting,” said Clarke.

The Australian captain had a long conversation with the umpires when it became clear his fielders were struggling to pick up the red ball under the floodlights, which had been switched on for some time before the players went off.

“I just asked why we haven’t got the meter out here,” said Clarke. “It took a few overs to get it out. All the players could see it was dark. You could see your own shadows and around the time that happens is generally close to when the umpires take us off.”

Alastair Cook described lifting the Ashes urn as the “proudest” moment of his life and even though his side missed out on becoming the first England team to win an Ashes series 4-0 he defended the umpires and Clarke from criticism.

“I can understand the crowd and it would have been nice to finish,” said Cook. “It is tough but rules and regulations are there for a reason and it was pretty dark. The umpires had a decision to make and even though it would have been nice to finish it cricket does not work like that. Fair play to Australia for pushing the game and making it a spectacle.”

Ricky Ponting was booed at the Oval four years ago but Australia will be upset Clarke was targeted after attempting to manufacture a finish.

“It doesn’t surprise me [to be booed],” said Clarke. “But that is the way I would like to see cricket played. I like to lead the Australian team in that type of manner.

"We had nothing to lose at 3-0 down but to me even if we were not 3-0 down we would still do everything to win a Test. The risk of losing was there but it was what we had to try and do.”


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Thursday, 25 July 2013

Ashes 2013: will Michael 'Pup' Clarke follow Henry 'Tup' Scott in guiding Australia to seven consecutive defeats?

Yet there are still some illuminating parallels between the Australian side that lost seven consecutive Tests against England and the current one under Michael Clarke that has so far lost four.

Michael Clarke’s nickname is ‘Pup’, while the Australian captain for three of those seven defeats was known as ‘Tup’. When Henry Scott was supposed to be leading Australia on their 1886 tour of England, he spent so much time riding round London in the horse-drawn omnibuses on a two-penny ticket that he was nicknamed ‘Tuppence’, then ‘Tup’.

Both Pup and Tup have had their captaincy questioned. Clarke is wise in his changing of bowlers and setting of fields, but what about his off-field man-management? To lose one senior batsman in Ricky Ponting was inevitable, but to lose Mike Hussey – who could still have shown the youngsters how to bat all day – was more than careless.

Tup stayed on in London after his 1886 tour to qualify as a doctor, before returning to Australia. In the outback he rode for long hours, by horse not bus, to visit his patients, and there is still a hospital named after him, the Scott Memorial Hospital, on the road north from Newcastle to Tamworth.

Tup lost all three Tests of his 1886 tour, but he could bat, although you might not think so from a surviving photograph of him posing in his crease. He stands vertically and holds his bat vertically: of the gap between Scott’s bat and pad James Anderson might make something.

Nevertheless, in the game against Yorkshire at Bramall Lane, Scott pulled the offspinner Saul Wade for six, four, six and six: a record that still stands as the most runs (22) off a four-ball over in first-class cricket. And those were the days not only of four-ball overs but of the ball having to be hit out of the ground, not simply over the boundary, to count six.

But Tup’s man-management was hopeless. Wisden condemned the 1886 tour as “emphatically a failure”, and noted “a lack of enthusiasm and cohesion in the team”. Fred Lillywhite, in his Scores and Biographies, was less diplomatic and more explicit about Tup: “For quarrels among the players were many, and he had not sufficient strength of character to cope with the situation.”

Then as now, Australia’s batting was their major on-field weakness. In reviewing their 1886 tour, Wisden cited “the limited amount of high-class batting”. But they also lost one of their main bowlers to injury, Fred Spofforth, just as Clarke’s men have lost James Pattinson.

England’s batting was based on prototypes of Joe Root, tough northern professionals who hit the ball almost as hard as they hit the bottle and who batted for long periods, while the Australians were still essentially amateurs. And when fisticuffs broke out between the two sides, as they did on at least two recorded occasions in the 1880s, a century before David Warner was born, those northern pros did not back down.

Another cause of the low standard of Australian batting was specific to the period: Adelaide and Brisbane were small towns not cities, Perth did not exist and Tasmania was a backwater. Most cricketers came from Melbourne and Sydney – and because the military kept the flat spaces around Sydney harbour for their barracks and parades, the city had no centre for practice until the Sydney Cricket Ground was developed during the 1880s.

And whenever Melbourne cricketers are involved, so is the Melbourne Cricket Club and its insistence on acting like the counterpart of the MCC at Lord’s. The first four tours of England (or five, as we should count the Aborigines of 1868) were private enterprises: the players put in a stake to cover initial expenses and shared the profits, which were usually handsome. So they were bound to pull together.

But in 1886 Australia’s MCC organised the tour instead, and they refused to pay the players, not even broken-time payments, so a couple of seasoned batsmen refused to tour. All-rounders were left to bat several places too high in the order. The only player who had a first-class batting average of 25 on Scott’s tour was George Giffen, an all-rounder with a big ego: it is conceivable there may be another parallel here with the current tour.

Australia had already lost the last Test of the 1884-5 series, so Tup extended their losing sequence to four Tests with his 3-0 whitewash. Then, while he studied in London, another doctor took over the Australian captaincy in Percy McDonnell, who lost the next three Tests in a row – and he could not heal himself either as he died aged 37.

McDonnell was the first captain to send a Test side in to bat, when England were dismissed for their lowest ever Test total of 45, but with their tough northern pros they still bounced back to win – not by 14 runs, as at Trent Bridge this summer, but 13. A couple more losses followed, featuring bog-standard Australian batting including their lowest ever total in Australia of 42, to make it a seven-match losing sequence.

If Tup’s precedent is anything to go by, Pup’s tour will demand a similar memorial if it ends in a 5-0 whitewash - somewhere that can deal with accidents and emergencies.

Seven Australian Test defeats in a row:

5th Test of 1884-5 at Melbourne: England won by an innings and 98 runs1st Test of 1886 at Old Trafford: England won by four wickets2nd Test of 1886 at Lord’s: England won by an innings and 106 runs3rd Test of 1886 at the Oval: England won by an innings and 217 runs1st Test of 1886-7 at Sydney: England won by 13 runs2nd Test of 1886-7 at Sydney: England won by 71 runsOnly Test of 1887-8 at Sydney: England won by 126 runs

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