Tasmania sweep past Queensland

Tasmania jumped to a 10-point lead on the one-day table with a convincing five-wicket win over Queensland in Hobart

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Nov-2010Tasmania 5 for 168 (Paine 71, Bailey 51) beat Queensland 9 for 167 by 5 wickets

ScorecardTim Paine, who spent the off-season with the national team, steered Tasmania with 71•Getty Images

Tasmania jumped to a 10-point lead on the one-day table with a convincing five-wicket win over Queensland in Hobart. The Bulls were dismissed for 75 and 96 in the Sheffield Shield last week and continued to have trouble with the bat, struggling to 9 for 167 in 45 overs.Only having the best Nos 10 and 11 in the game helped the Bulls get to the end of the innings, with Chris Hartley (27) and Ryan Harris (13) putting on an unbeaten 40 for the final wicket. The visitors had packed their batting line-up but were undone by Brendan Drew (4 for 38) and Gerard Denton (3 for 47).Tim Paine, who did so well for Australia in the off-season, set up Tasmania’s chase with a brisk 71 and George Bailey added 51. James Hopes and Luke Feldman picked up two wickets each but the hosts reached the target in the 32nd over. The Tigers moved to 21 points after five games, 10 ahead of Victoria and New South Wales.

ICC unveils Twenty20 Qualifier details

The ICC has announced the schedule for the eight-team ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier 2010

Cricinfo staff17-Dec-2009The ICC has announced the schedule for the eight-team ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier 2010, which will take place in the United Arab Emirates between February 9 and 13.The winner of the tournament will join South Africa and India in Group C at the ICC World Twenty 20 in the Caribbean in May while the losing finalist will join Group D which includes the West Indies and England.The Qualifier involves two groups of four teams with Ireland, Scotland, Afghanistan and the USA making up Group A while Kenya, the Netherlands, Canada and the UAE will fight it out for supremacy of Group B.Ireland, Kenya, Canada, the Netherlands, Afghanistan and Scotland have directly qualified for the qualifier on the basis of their ODI status while the UAE and the USA have been controversiually invited to participate by the ICC.A total of 17 matches will be played over five days with Abu Dhabi’s Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium hosting six group stage matches and Dubai International Cricket Stadium at Dubai Sports City staging 11 matches, including six group stage matches, four Super Four matches and the final.

Hain, Latham do the needful as Warwickshire see out the draw

Half-centuries for senior pair ensure Somerset cannot capitalise on morning declaration

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay 25-Jun-2025Warwickshire and Somerset harvested the predictable Rothesay County Championship draw as a forgettable match finally petered out on the final day at Edgbaston.Set a notional victory target of 377 in 69 overs, Warwickshire plodded to 161 for four as Tom Latham (52 from 103 balls) and Sam Hain (68 not out, 157) escorted their team to safety and the match to stalemate.Somerset had extended their second innings in the morning to 229 for eight (James Rew 61, 81) but not as quickly as they hoped due to interference from Australian off-spinner Corey Rocchiccioli who took five for 67 on debut.It had always appeared that a bland pitch would blunt the victory aspirations of either side and so it proved. Both shored up their positions in the middle of Division One with a solid points haul from a match which offered less than vivid entertainment. The deployment of two short mid-wickets and two short extras for Latham off Migael Pretorius was about as exciting as it got for the slumbering Edgbaston faithful.Somerset resumed on the final morning on 116 for three, 283 ahead overall, and started purposefully. Rew completed a 66-ball half-century but two wickets for Rocchoccioli slowed the momentum and changed the plan. The spinner unfurled a lovely turning delivery which Rew edged to wicketkeeper Kai Smith. Tom Banton missed a sweep and was lbw.Bowling coach Steve Kirby had suggested after day three that Somerset would need 80 overs to try to bowl Warwickshire out, but that point arrived with the lead only 317. That would have been a very attractive target on a pitch still good for batting.Tom Abell (42, 63) and Archie Vaughan (38 not out, 59) batted watchfully to prevent a collapse then expanded to add 65 in 14 overs before Abell charged and missed at Rocchoccioli. Pretorious had his off-stump rendered askew by Ethan Bamber and Rocchoccioli’s five-for was complete when Craig Overton missed a reverse sweep and was lbw, triggering lunch and the declaration.To challenge the target – 377 in two sessions – Warwickshire needed a strong platform but they lost soon both openers. Alex Davies fell to the fourth ball, lbw, trapped in the crease by Matt Henry. Rob Yates left a gap between bat and pad and Jack Leach, who opened the bowling, turned the ball through it.That scuppered any chance of a Warwickshire win. Somerset’s hopes were ground away over the next two hours by Latham and Hain. There are few batters better-equipped than those to steer a side to safety and they duly quietened the excited fielding side with resolute, solid and watchful work.They declined to pursue a target of 276 from 34 overs after tea. Latham drove a return catch to Overton and Jacob Bethell top-edged a pull at Pretorius but the implacable Hain reached 50 for the 58th time in first-class cricket to see the job through in a soporific, slumbering, sparsely-populated stadium as far-removed as can be from the passionate cauldron it will be when England meet India there next week.

Shubman Gill and Deepti Sharma win big at BCCI awards

Ravi Shastri, meanwhile, has been conferred the lifetime achievement award

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Jan-2024Shubman Gill and Deepti Sharma have won the BCCI awards for best men’s and women’s international cricketers of 2022-23. Gill won the men’s award, named after the former India captain Polly Umrigar, for the first time in his career, while Deepti won the women’s award for the second time – she also won it for the 2019-20 season.The BCCI had not announced their awards since naming Jasprit Bumrah and Poonam Yadav the international cricketers of 2018-19. They have now cleared their backlog, announcing winners for the past four seasons in one go. Mohammed Shami and Deepti have taken the honours for 2019-20, R Ashwin and Smriti Mandhana for 2020-21, and Bumrah and Mandhana for 2021-22.Gill made the step up from exciting prospect to international superstar in 2022-23 (the award timeframe runs from October 1 to September 30), enjoying incredible returns with the bat particularly in ODIs, in which he scored a world-leading tally of 1418 runs at an average of 64.45, with five hundreds including a double-century against New Zealand in Hyderabad. In the same period, Gill also scored 387 runs at 35.18 in seven Tests, and 304 runs at a strike rate of 146.85 in 11 T20Is.Related

  • Jasprit Bumrah, Poonam Yadav claim top BCCI awards

Deepti, meanwhile, was a key member of an India side that won the Women’s Asia Cup and the Asian Games gold medal in a year packed with T20I action. The offspinner picked up 38 wickets – the fifth-most in the world in the award period, and the most by a bowler from a Full Member nation – in T20Is at an average of 14.81 and an economy rate of 5.71, while also contributing 313 runs with the bat, including two half-centuries, at an average of 28.45. Deepti only played three ODIs and no Tests in the award period, but carried her form into a triumphant 2023-24 home season, taking 11 wickets at 10.81 and scoring 165 runs at 55.00 as India beat England and Australia in one-off Tests in Mumbai.Ravi Shastri excelled in various roles up and down the batting order•PA Photos

Shastri wins lifetime achievement award

Former India allrounder Ravi Shastri, meanwhile, has been bestowed the BCCI’s lifetime achievement award. A versatile batter who played multiple roles through his career – he had a particularly impressive record as opener outside Asia – and an accurate left-arm fingerspinner, he finished with 3830 Test runs at an average of 35.79 and 151 wickets at 40.96.After knee injuries ended his playing career when he was still only in his early 30s, Shastri moved effortlessly into TV commentary, where he established himself as an incisive voice with a distinctively punchy manner of calling big moments. While he only got to captain India in one of his 80 Tests, he got a wider canvas to express his skills as a tactician and man-manager as coach: his stints at the helm of India’s men’s team from 2014 to 2016 and 2017 to 2021 coincided with their rise as an all-formats, all-conditions force. Under him India became a near-invincible Test team at home and achieved unprecedented levels of competitiveness away from home, most memorably winning two successive series in Australia in 2018-19 and 2020-21.

Adam Zampa: World Cup opener will get Australia's 'juices flowing'

The legspinner is confident the team’s recent defeats won’t mean much when they face New Zealand

Andrew McGlashan19-Oct-20223:19

Du Plessis, Kumble, Fleming, Moody head star line-up of experts

Adam Zampa has brushed off concerns about Australia’s form leading into their defence of the T20 World Cup title, believing that the extra edge provided by tournament play will bring the best of them.Australia were beaten 2-0 by England in the three-match series, and it would likely have been 3-0 without rain in Canberra, then also lost a close warm-up game against India at the Gabba when they lost four wickets in four balls during a late collapse.However, there has been a sense within the team that they have perhaps had a little too much cricket leading into the tournament – there was also a three-match series in India last month with Aaron Finch recently saying a bit of fatigue was a factor – and that it has been about biding their time ahead of facing New Zealand at the SCG on Saturday.Related

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  • Finch blames fatigue for Australia's form slump as rain spares whitewash

  • Weather watch: High chances of rain affecting Aus vs NZ, Ind vs Pak

“I think the intensity of the cricket we’ve played recently has probably dropped slightly due to the fact we are keeping in mind how close the World Cup is,” Zampa said. “And nothing gets the juices flowing like having a trophy there for the taking. We always want to perform our best when playing for Australia but think you’ll see a few pumped boys for the World Cup.”Think the comments about being tired were probably taken in the wrong way almost…the guys have been waiting around for this game for a while now.”Despite their recent losses Australia are considered one of the favourites for the tournament with added expectation of being on home soil where they were successful at the 2015 ODI World Cup. However, Zampa said that the nature of the T20 format means a rather philosophical approach is needed.Adam Zampa is preparing to bowl with a wet ball•Cricket Australia/Getty Images

“Internally we all know T20 is a pretty fickle game,” he said. “The worst that can happen is we don’t win this thing, the best that can happen is that we defend our title at home at the MCG. Don’t know if we are totally expected to win…but we do understand we should give it a red-hot crack. We have to earn the right to win it again. Last year we did that, we played some crucial cricket at crucial times [and] played our best cricket at the right time towards the end.”There has been a considerable amount of tinkering with Australia’s T20 line-up in recent matches, but much of that was due to Marcus Stoinis and Mitchell Marsh being restricted in their bowling and with an eye on the main event. On Tuesday, national selector George Bailey indicated that, as expected, Steven Smith would not be in the starting XI, being replaced by Tim David in the one initial change from last year’s winning team.The weather could play a part over the coming days with a high chance of showers for the game at the SCG. As he has in the past when expecting dew to be a factor, Zampa has been training with a wet ball that he dumps in a bucket but also added that any dampness in the wickets could also provide assistance for the spinners.”Feels like every time we are at the SCG or in Sydney we are looking for rain to come,” he said. “The way that I train I always have it at the back of mind, usually have a bucket to drop the ball into to prepare for that.”We play so much cricket under lights and a lot of the places we travel around the world, as soon as you bat first and bowl second to defend a total that dew really kicks in. Saw it last year in the World Cup. [Almost] every time you bowl second you are bowling with a wet ball so it’s really important to prepare for that.”

Hannah Jones' Thunder steal two-wicket win despite Eve Jones 100* for Sparks

Spinner takes three-for as visitors get over the line despite collapse

ECB Reporters' Network12-Jun-2021Thunder 205 for 8 (Lamb 39, Davis 3-42) beat Central Sparks 203 (E Jones 100*, H Jones 3-33)Central Sparks suffered their first defeat in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy despite an unbeaten century from captain Eve Jones as North West Thunder edged home by two wickets at New Road.The Sparks totalled 203 all out on a used pitch after recovering from 17 for 3 thanks to a superb effort from Eve Jones who withstood an excellent three-wicket spell from spinner Hannah Jones.Thunder looked to be coasting to victory after openers Emma Lamb and Georgie Boyce put on 73.Sarah Glenn, allowed to play after her release from the England squad, and fellow spinner Georgia Davis turned the game back in the Sparks favour with combined figures of 5 for 74 from their 20 overs. But the Thunder lower order did enough to see their side over the finishing line with two overs to spare – their second win of the campaign.The Sparks were put in and opener Milly Home, on 1, failed to make her ground after Eve Jones played Piepa Cleary to mid-on and set off for a single.Poppy Davies was lbw to Laura Jackson for a first-ball duck, and Gwen Davies played the same bowler into the covers, set of for a single but hesitated and was run out by Cleary’s throw to Jackson for nought.Eve Jones and Steph Butler added 62 until the latter on 25 went down the wicket to Hannah Jones and was stumped. Clare Boycott helped put on a further 37 before being caught and bowled on 17 by Hannah Jones, who dismissed Glenn for a duck when she pulled a delivery to midwicket.The spin of Hannah Jones (10-1-33-3) and Alex Hartley (10-2-26-0) kept a tight grip on proceedings through the middle part of the innings.Eve Jones completed a 106-ball half century and Issy Wong, with 18, was a valuable ally in a half-century stand until she sliced Jackson to short third man.Eve Jones accelerated despite Ria Fackrell and Georgia Davis falling cheaply but the last batter in Liz Russell was at the crease when she reached three figures. Her second 50 runs came off only 42 balls and she hit one six and 14 fours and carried her bat after Russell was run out.Thunder openers Boyce and Lamb laid a solid platform but the wickets started to tumble against Glenn and Davis. Boyce pushed forward and was bowled by Glenn and Lamb went for a reverse-sweep against Davis and suffered the same fate.Cleary lofted Glenn straight to mid-off and Davis had Natalie Brown lbw and Rebecca Duckworth stumped in successive overs. Glenn and Davis finished with figures of 10-2-32-2 and 10-1-43-3 respectively.When they came out of the attack the game was evenly poised at 131 for 5 and a sixth wicket quickly fell when Fackrell had Ellie Threlkeld lbw. Laura Marshall and Jackson added 39 before the latter on 30 went lbw to Russell at 178 for 7 and Marshall, with 32, was bowled by Wong with three needed.

Akbar Ali, Shoriful Islam lead Bangladesh to Under-19 World Cup glory

Yashasvi Jaiswal’s 88 in vain as a collapse of 7 for 21 costs India

The Report by Deivarayan Muthu09-Feb-2020
Yashasvi Jaiswal once again showed why he’s one to watch out for in the future, cracking 88 off 121 balls. But, his dismissal set in motion an Indian collapse of seven wickets for the addition of just 21 runs in 7.4 overs for India to stop well short of where they would have wanted to be. In pursuit of 178, Bangladesh suffered a similar collapse, losing six wickets for 52, as both the sides seemed to be passing the trophy to each other. Till Akbar Ali, the Bangladesh captain, produced a rearguard to remember, taking Bangladesh across the line in a nervy finish, made more dramatic because of the weather.Dropped catches, fumbles, overthrows, over-the-top appeals, and some verbal jousting added to the drama of the 2020 Under-19 World Cup final. Heck, rain made an appearance as well, leaving the sides scrambling for DLS calculations. After the weather cleared, the target was adjusted to 170, and Bangladesh needed seven off 30 balls with three wickets in hand.Ali and No.9 Rakibul Hasan rose above all the chaos upon resumption and coolly led Bangladesh to their first-ever ICC title at any level. It was Hasan who struck the winning runs, when he stepped out and launched the Under-19 Asia Cup hero Atharva Ankolekar over midwicket. The celebrations that followed were as crazy as the game itself.Such a finish did not seem as likely when Bangladesh were well in front at 50 for 0 in the ninth over. Legspinner Ravi Bishnoi then let rip one wrong’un after another to send Bangladesh into a tailspin.Parvez Hossain Emon, who had retired hurt on 25 in the 13th over, made a heroic return, much like how an injured Tamim Iqbal had done during the Asia Cup in 2018, and made a vital 47 off 79 balls to bring the target within Bangladesh’s reach.Emon, who struggled to run between the wickets, popped in pills and laced left-arm seamer Akash Singh for a brace of cover-driven fours to ease the nerves in the Bangladesh camp.Captain Priyam Garg then punted on Jaiswal’s part-time legspin, and he delivered by having Emon scooping a catch to short cover. This meant Bangladesh needed 35 off 108 balls (the equation was revised after the rain).Ali, though, didn’t budge. He went 16 balls without scoring when he was on 32. But, he absorbed all the pressure, ran hard between the wickets and finished it off sensibly.Shoriful Islam had also played a starring role in Bangladesh’s historic win. He bowled rip-roaring spells with both the new ball and the old one. He was electric in the field – and off his own bowling, too. Tanzim Hasan Sakib and Avishek Das, too, bowled intense spells as India’s batting line-up wilted in the face of relentless bowling.The tigers were roaring at Potchefstroom•ICC via Getty

After Bangladesh had beefed up their pace attack and opted to bowl, Islam set the scene, threatening both the inside and outside edges of Jaiswal. He backed that up by throwing death stares at the in-form Indian opener. Divyaansh Saxena, the other opener, was also skittish against the moving ball and tigerish fielding from Bangladesh gave India no respite. It was Das who made the first incision when he had Saxena carving a catch to backward point for a painstaking 2 off 17.After seeing Saxena toss his wicket away, Jaiswal watched No. 3 Tilak Varma cop a fierce throw on the unprotected part of the knee and collapse onto the ground. Varma, though, shook the blow off and shored up India’s innings with a 94-run stand for the second wicket.Bangladesh’s seamers continued to zip the ball around and Islam even had Jaiswal ducking and weaving, but the 18-year-old Indian opener showed great composure and overcame that tetchy start. By the end of the tenth over, India were 23 for 1, with Jaiswal on 14 off 35 balls.The introduction of the slower bowlers afforded Jaiswal more breathing space. In all, Jaiswal scored 33 off 35 balls from Hasan and Shamim Hossain, reaching his fifth fifty-plus score in six games this tournament. Jaiswal raised the tempo after reaching the landmark, but Varma fell 12 shy of the mark when he scythed Sakib to Islam at deep backward point.Suddenly, India’s largely untested middle order was up against a fired-up attack that was made to look even more potent by their fielders.Islam, who already has the experience of eight first-class games and 12 T20s, showed off his range in the 40th over. He nailed an off-stump yorker, which was kept out by Jaiswal. Islam then unfurled a legcutter, but floated it down the leg side, with Jaiswal swatting it away to the fine-leg boundary. Islam then ramped up his pace to 130kph, hit a hard length and had Jaiswal flapping a catch to short midwicket.After Jaiswal’s dismissal, India panicked so much that at one point Dhruv Jurel and Atharva Ankolekar were running towards the non-striker’s end. Eventually, it was Jurel, who was run out for 22 off 38 balls.Having got rid of Jaiswal and Siddhesh Veer off successive balls, Islam was on a hat-trick, but it was averted. Islam, though, wasn’t done yet. He swooped in from his followthrough and ran out Bishnoi with a nifty under-arm throw and then fittingly closed out India’s innings when he completed a sprawling catch at deep third man.Hours later, he would he celebrating wildly with his team-mates under firework-filled Potchefstroom skies.

West Indies' last chance to salvage Bangladesh tour

Having lost the Test and then the ODI series, the visitors will look to spring a surprise on Bangladesh in the T20I series decider

The Preview by Mohammad Isam21-Dec-2018

Big Picture

Having wrapped up the Test and ODI series, Bangladesh will aim to secure the T20I series as well when they face West Indies in the third T20I. After West Indies won the first T20I, Bangladesh hit back in the second to force this series into a decider. The third T20I will be West Indies’ last chance to salvage something from this tour.Bangladesh had a near-perfect batting performance in the second T20I, with Tamim Iqbal and Liton Das getting off to quick starts before Soumya Sarkar took on the bowling. After a short burst of wickets, Mahmudullah and Shakib Al Hasan kept Bangladesh afloat in the last seven overs, putting on an unbroken 91-run stand for the fifth wicket.Bangladesh’s bowlers also had a decent outing, particularly Shakib, who said that he was surprised with his five-wicket haul in dewy conditions. Mustafizur Rahman and Abu Hider, who had leaked runs, will have to find ways to keep West Indies quiet in the decider. Mehidy Hasan’s offspin will also be central to Bangladesh’s bowling in the middle overs.Shai Hope has been West Indies’ most consistent limited-overs batsman on this tour, but he hasn’t got enough support from Darren Bravo and Evin Lewis. After impressing in the Test series, Shimron Hetmyer hasn’t made a substantial score in the limited-overs series. Rovman Powell, though, returned to form with a fifty in Dhaka and will be key for West Indies in the death overs.Oshane Thomas and Sheldon Cottrell will have to find ways to keep Bangladesh’s scoring rate down, while Fabian Allen, West Indies’ most economical bowler in the second game, will be looking to exploit the conditions if the visitors bowl first.

Form guide

Bangladesh WLWWL (last five completed matches, most recent first)West Indies LWLLL

In the spotlight

Mahmudullah’s counter-attacking 43 not out, after Bangladesh had lost three quick wickets in the second game, tilted the balance in the hosts’ favour. He is the side’s designated finisher, and he needs more support from the other middle-order batsmen.In the second game, Rovman Powell struck his first fifty on West Indies’ tour of the subcontinent this winter. He was particularly severe on Abu Hider en route to his 50 off 34 balls on Thursday. The tourists will want an encore from Powell in the decider.

Team news

Bangladesh are unlikely to tinker with their combination although there are questions over Hider’s place.Bangladesh (probable): 1 Tamim Iqbal, 2 Liton Das, 3 Soumya Sarkar, 4 Shakib Al Hasan (capt), 5 Mushfiqur Rahim (wk), 6 Mahmudullah, 7 Ariful Haque, 8 Mohammad Saifuddin 9 Mehidy Hasan Miraz, 10 Abu Hider, 11 Mustafizur RahmanSherfane Rutherford’s big-hitting gives West Indies an interesting option, but they could stick to the same XI on Saturday.West Indies (probable): 1 Evin Lewis, 2 Shai Hope (wk), 3 Nicholas Pooran, 4 Darren Bravo, 5 Shimron Hetmyer, 6 Rovman Powell, 7 Carlos Brathwaite (capt), 8 Keemo Paul, 9 Fabian Allen, 10 Oshane Thomas, 11 Sheldon Cottrell

Pitch and conditions

Dew could be a big factor again, so the side winning the toss will look to bowl first. Bangladesh had managed to get over the line in the previous game, but it wasn’t easy. The weather remains cool in Dhaka.

Stats and trivia

  • The 24 runs Mustafizur Rahman leaked in his first over in the second T20I is the most he has conceded in a single over in international cricket.
  • Shai Hope has hit 596 runs in 11 innings across formats on this tour, while Hetmyer has scored 318 runs in ten.

Milne's five-for lifts Kent back into contention

Adam Milne claimed 5 for 11 as Kent beat Somerset by six wickets at Taunton to keep alive their chances of qualifying for the quarter-finals of the NatWest T20 Blast

ECB Reporters Network12-Aug-2017Adam Milne claimed 5 for 11 as Kent beat Somerset by six wickets at Taunton to keep alive their chances of qualifying for the quarter-finals of the NatWest T20 Blast.Returning his best figures for Kent, the New Zealand paceman registered 15 dot balls in 3.5 overs as the home side were dismissed for 149 in 18.5 overs. Striking the ball cleanly, Sam Billings then posted an unbeaten 56 from 36 balls as the visitors reached their target with nine deliveries to spare, in the process inflicting Somerset’s first home defeat in the competition.Adam Milne picked up sensational figures of 5 for 11•Getty Images

Put into bat, Somerset made a blistering start in front of a sellout crowd, Steven Davies and Lewis Gregory trading almost exclusively in boundaries and matching one another blow for blow in an opening stand of 35. But the momentum shifted dramatically as Somerset then lost three wickets in a Powerplay that ebbed and flowed.Davies was brilliantly caught by an airborne James Neesham at midwicket off the bowling of Milne and Gregory top-edged a quicker delivery from Mitchell Claydon and was snaffled by wicketkeeper Billings on the run. When Jim Allenby edged Claydon behind in the fifth over, the home side were 40 for 3 and firmly on the back foot.Required to rebuild the innings, Johann Myburgh and James Hildreth had little option but to proceed with a degree of caution. More of an accumulator than a dasher, Hildreth adopted a supporting role, while the naturally pugnacious Myburgh opted to hit out, a high-risk strategy that resulted in him chipping a delivery from Imran Qayyum to cover point for 25.Hildreth has proved himself a saviour on more than one occasion for Somerset in the short format this summer, helping his team chase down victory targets in games against Middlesex and Surrey. Charged with the task of stabilising the innings, he successfully rotated the strike with Dean Elgar in a revitalising partnership that was characterised by deft placement and feverish running.Having raised 36 from 30 balls and dominated a stand of 43 for the fifth wicket, Hildreth was looking to accelerate when, in the act of attempting to sweep Milne, he proved fallible and was adjudged lbw with the score on 117 in the 15th over. With a tendency to be hit or miss on these occasions, one-day specialist Roeluf van der Merve was then bowled by a straight ball from Callum Haggett as Somerset’s prospects of posting a challenging total receded.Called upon to play expansively, Elgar perished in pursuit of a six, held by Alex Blake on the long-on boundary off the bowling of Neesham as Kent, supremely athletic in the field, turned the screw further. Tim Groenewald hoisted the final ball of the 18th over to deep midwicket and Craig Overton was bowled by Milne for 12, at which point the home side were 147 for 9 and resigned to falling short.His confidence running high, the impressive Milne then made a mess of Paul van Meekeren’s stumps as the innings was terminated with seven balls unused.Managing to deliver what Somerset could not, Joe Denly and Daniel Bell-Drummond both cleared the boundary rope in an opening stand of 40 that served to stamp Kent’s authority.Any anxiety induced by the dismissals of Bell-Drummond and Sam Northeast, who succumbed in quick succession to Gregory and van Meekeren respectively, was dispelled by the arrival of England international Billings, who scored at better than a run a ball from the outset. But Somerset stuck to their task and the introduction of Groenewald saw Denly hole out to deep midwicket for 33, leaving the visitors needing a further 77 from 60 balls with seven wickets in hand.Veteran Darren Stevens offered a return catch to van der Merve to give Somerset renewed hope, but Billings batted with supreme assurance throughout a measured innings that yielded three fours and three sixes and helped keep the required rate in check. Billings brought up his fifty in grand manner, clearing the rope at Groenewald’s expense as Kent cruised to victory.

Mustafizur's Sussex debut delayed due to visa issues

Pacer Mustafizur Rahman’s arrival in the UK for the NatWest t20 Blast has been delayed due to visa issues

Mohammad Isam13-Jul-2016Pacer Mustafizur Rahman’s arrival in the UK for the NatWest t20 Blast has been delayed due to visa issues. The delay was caused by the unusually long Eid vacation, which meant he had to wait till after the holidays to apply for the UK visa.Mustafizur couldn’t leave on July 13 as planned. That means he will miss his scheduled debut for Sussex on July 15 against Hampshire.The visa procedure is set to be completed “any day”, according to a BCB spokesman, upon which Mustafizur will immediately fly out. He will now have to target Sussex’s July 21 T20 fixture, in Essex.That leaves him with only seven possible appearances in the 2016 English season. He had already missed most of Sussex’s T20 and one-day campaign through multiple injuries on his right leg following IPL 2016 where he turned out for Sunrisers Hyderabad.