Iyer's swift century strengthens Mumbai

ScorecardFile photo: Shreyas Iyer finished the opening day 33 runs shy of his second double-hundred of this season•PTI

Shreyas Iyer’s rapid 167 not out off 176 deliveries lifted Mumbai to dominant 317 for 3 on the first day of their match against Baroda in Vadodara. Iyer’s knock was complemented by fifties from opener Akhil Herwadkar (67) and Suryakumar Yadav (66 not out), after Mumbai won the toss and opted to bat. Mumbai’s move to promote Dhawal Kulkarni as an opener failed but Herwadkar steadied things, taking the lead in a 42-run partnership with Shrideep Mangela. He then added a brisk 57 for the third wicket with Iyer before falling for 67 to Hardik Pandya. Iyer kept up the tempo of the innings with Suryakumar – the pair added an unbroken 196 runs at more than four runs an over – and struck 13 fours and 4 sixes during the day to finish 33 runs short of his second double-century of the season.
ScorecardAndhra pacers CV Stephen and D Siva Kumar took three wickets each as Uttar Pradesh crumbled to 170 all out on the first day of the Group B match in Ongole. In reply, Andhra’s opening pair of DB Prasanth and Srikar Bharat took the side to 77 for 0, with Bharat finishing the day on 56 not out off 79 deliveries. Only two UP batsmen – opener Tanmay Srivastava (42) and captain Praveen Kumar (47) – scored more than 40 and it was the 65-run partnership for the fifth wicket between the two batsmen that allowed the side to stretch their score to 170. Put in to bat, UP had been reduced to 52 for 4 by Siva Kumar and DP Vijaykumar and once Praveen was dismissed, the side suffered another collapse, losing the last six wickets for only 53 runs.
ScorecardMadhya Pradesh opener Aditya Shrivastava’s fourth century in only his seventh first-class innings helped his side recover from a middle-order collapse against Punjab in Patiala. Shrivastava and Jalaj Saxena added 152 for the first wicket after Madhya Pradesh opted to bat, but Saxena’s dismissal for 70 allowed Punjab to fight back through quick wickets. Madhya Pradesh lost five wickets for 51 runs – offspinner Pargat Singh and legspinner Sarabjit Ladda took two each – before Shrivastava and Rameez Khan saw them through to the end of the day. Shrivastava’s unbeaten 105 came off 267 deliveries and included six fours and a six.
ScorecardRailways’ bowlers struck with late wickets to limit Gujarat to 286 for 6 in Delhi, after a century from opener Priyank Kirit Panchal had given the visitors a chance to post a stronger total. Gujarat lost early wickets to the pace pair of Krishnakant Upadhyay and Ranjit Mali after being put in to bat, but the 120-run, third-wicket partnership between Parthiv Patel and Panchal led the side’s recovery. Y Venugopal Rao supported Panchal in a 73-run partnership after Parthiv was dismissed, but the Railways bowlers – each had a wicket to show at the end of the day – kept chipping away. Panchal was the last wicket to fall on the first day, caught by Ashish Singh off Arnab Nandi for 141.

Celtic: Devlin makes Carter-Vickers claim

The Athletic’s Celtic correspondent Kieran Devlin has claimed that the Hoops ‘definitely’ want to make Cameron Carter-Vickers’ loan move from Tottenham permanent in the summer.  

The Lowdown: Premier League clubs keen

The 24-year-old has been a regular under Ange Postecoglou this season and the Hoops have an option to make his loan move permanent at the end of the season in a deal worth an initial £6m.

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The USA international, who has been hailed as ‘incredible’ by his former Luton Town boss Graeme Jones, is on £22,000 per week but is now attracting interest from a number of English teams.

According to reports in the week, eight English clubs are showing an interest in the 24-year-old, five of which currently ply their trade in the Premier League.

The Latest: Devlin’s comments on Carter-Vickers

Here at The Transfer Tavern, we asked Devlin on Sunday morning for an update on Carter-Vickers following the links with numerous teams south.

This is what he had to say in reply in his Q&A on The Athletic, claiming that the Hoops ‘definitely’ want to sign the defender:

“Nothing new, really. Celtic have first say with their option-to-buy and they definitely want him, but ultimately it’ll be down to the player I believe.

“Newcastle was his preference in August but their interest wasn’t serious enough, so when Spurs called Celtic and offered them him on deadline day they readily accepted – they’d enquired about a loan with option-to-buy earlier that month but Spurs initially rejected it wanting only a permanent move, but by deadline day they just wanted him out the squad.

“Not sure how that’s changed and wouldn’t want to speculate – whether he now feels at home at Celtic or whether his performances attracting EPL attention will swivel his head.”

The Verdict: Fingers crossed

Postecoglou has trusted Carter-Vickers throughout the season and has reaped the rewards, with the defender impressing in Glasgow.

No Celtic player has won more aerial duels per game than the American, who also leads the way in terms of clearances per game at Parkhead and is dribbled past the least. [WhoScored]

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A £6m permanent deal would make him the club’s ninth-most expensive signing of all time, but following his performances this season, it could prove to be a shrewd move in the long run, especially with plenty of Premier League sides now keen on him.

In other news: Journalist drops ‘insane’ Celtic transfer claim regarding Ange moving for Real Madrid winger

Cheatle, Stalenberg in line for Australia debuts

Lauren Cheatle and Naomi Stalenberg, who have both impressed with the Sydney Thunder in the Women’s Big Bash League, are in line to debut for Australia after being named in the squad to take on India in six matches over the next month.Australia’s selectors have named a squad of 15 for the matches, beginning with three T20s in Adelaide, Melbourne and Sydney, followed by three ODIs in Canberra and Hobart. The three T20s will be broadcast by the Nine Network and have been scheduled as double-headers to correspond with the T20s being played by the Australia and India men.Cheatle, 17, a left-arm fast bowler, and Stalenberg, 21, a middle-order batsman, have been named in the T20 squad only, after their strong WBBL performances. Cheatle is equal second on the WBBL wicket tally with 17 victims at 15.76 and an economy rate of 6.38, while Stalenberg has proven herself one of the tournament’s quickest scorers, with 160 runs at a strike-rate of 150.94.”The T20 squad has been selected with an eye to the upcoming ICC Women’s T20 World Cup in March and includes two new faces,” Shawn Flegler, the Women’s National Selection Panel chairman, said. “We have chosen the Sydney Thunder’s Lauren Cheatle and Naomi Stalenberg, after some very impressive recent performances in the WBBL and WNCL.”Cheatle is a 17-year-old left-arm quick who can swing the ball into right-handers and has shown great composure in her second and third spells during the WNCL. Naomi Stalenberg has been a real standout with her aggressive middle-order batting, displaying great power and a healthy strike rate.”Stalenberg and Cheatle will be replaced for the ODI portion of the series by legspinner Kristen Beams and top-order batsman Nicole Bolton. Beams is recovering from a dislocated thumb and her fitness will be monitored closer to the start of the one-day internationals.Australia squad Meg Lanning (capt), Alex Blackwell (vice-capt), Kristen Beams (ODI only), Nicole Bolton (ODI only), Lauren Cheatle (T20 only), Sarah Coyte, Rene Farrell, Holly Ferling, Grace Harris, Alyssa Healy, Jess Jonassen, Beth Mooney, Ellyse Perry, Megan Schutt, Naomi Stalenberg (T20 only).

South Africa crush Netherlands

South Africa 232 and 86 for 1 dec (Benade 51) beat Netherlands108 (Loubser 5 for 37) and 50 (Loubser 3 for 22) by 159 runs
ScorecardSouth Africa crushed Netherlands on the final day of the one-off Test at Rotterdam, to win by 159 runs with Sunette Loubser returning match figures of 8 for 59 from 54.3 overs. Netherlands crumbled twice on Tuesday – they lost their final six wickets for 19 runs in the first innings, and then were all out for 50 in the second, after South Africa set them 211 to win.The visitors rushed to 86 for 1 from 22.3 overs before declaring to leave Netherlands an ask which was way beyond them. Susan Benade led South Africa’s run-glut, with 51. South Africa weren’t always on top in the match, though, after a first day wobble to 159 for 5.However, this score was soon put into context when they showed their true class on the last two days (with the third day washed out).The result is bound to put into question the value of Netherlands playing another Test. This form of the game is already played infrequently, and while the side’s first outing in this game was promising to begin with, it quickly unravelled.

Full-strength South Africa to come hard at Zimbabwe

Micky Arthur is hoping his players are stretched by Zimbabwe © Getty Images

Micky Arthur, South Africa’s coach, has said his team were not taking the three limited-overs matches against Zimbabwe lightly and that match practice was crucial ahead of the Champions Trophy. “I expect Zimbabwe to be very competitive but we are going to focus on our own performance,” Arthur said. “One could use these fixtures as practice matches but we would rather ensure that our combinations and match-plans are in place for India.”The South African team will also play against two domestic teams, the Lions and the Titans, according a report on the SuperSport website. “We are going to play these two matches according to international one-day rules,” Arthur said. “They are part of the training camp in Pretoria before we leave for India.”South Africa pulled out of the tri-series in Sri Lanka, and had scheduled matches against Zimbabwe in order to give them some time on the field ahead of the Champions Trophy. “One can practise in the nets as much as you want to but it’s not the same as out in the middle. I want the lads to train with consequences,” said Arthur. “If you play the ball down someone’s throat in the nets, you continue batting. If you do so in a match situation, you have to go take a shower. I want the players to train under pressure.”Zimbabwe, meanwhile, are fresh from a 3-2 series win over Bangladesh. Even so they are extremely unlikely to stretch a top-notch team like South Africa.

McGrath confident of Oval return

Window pain: Glenn McGrath was ruled out of Trent Bridge with an elbow problem © Getty Images

Glenn McGrath is confident that he will be fit for next week’s Ashes decider at The Oval.McGrath will continue undergoing treatment for swelling and pain in the joint of his right elbow before the two-day game against Essex at Chelmsford on Saturday. “I’ve improved out of sight,” McGrath said. “Errol Alcott again is weaving his magic. If I don’t quite make the Essex match then I’ll definitely be right for The Oval.”That bullishness was offset by a more cautious offering from Ricky Ponting. “We’ve got to look at how Glenn’s going to come up,” he said. “We’re not really sure how he is right now, if he’s going to be fit.”However, Ponting vowed Australia would be ready for the series climax on September 8 and claimed the crunch situation would lift some of the pressure off his side, which must win to retain the Ashes. “We’ve probably never been in this situation before, where we’re going into the last match of a series having to win to draw the series,” he said. “But that might not be a bad thing for us right now. It’s almost like a little bit of the pressure is off. We can just go out there and play and if all the individuals lift a little bit and play the way I know they can, then I am sure the result will be different.”England, chasing 129 for victory after making Australia follow-on for the first time in 17 years, almost failed to get home with Shane Warne taking 4 for 31. “As I have seen over the last two days of this game, a lot of that fight is there but just not for long enough,” Ponting said. “If we want to win Test matches, it has to be over the four days, we have to be at our best for four days.”Ponting indicated that Australia were reluctant to make any changes to their batting line-up, despite the opener Matthew Hayden’s form struggle and poor returns from Damien Martyn. “I can’t see that happening, to be honest,” he said.

Final decision on Odumbe expected in mid-August

Maurice Odumbe: a tense few weeks ahead© AFP

The International Cricket Council has confirmed that the final ruling on Maurice Odumbe will be made in in mid-August. Odumbe, the former Kenyan captain, was alleged to have received money from an Indian bookmaker.The defence was given time till August 6 to provide final written submissions to Justice Ahmed Ebrahim, the judge, and the prosecution will be given three days to respond to these submissions.Ebrahim will then consider the evidence and a judgement is likely to be delivered around the third week of August.The charge centred on allegations that Odumbe had “received money, benefit or other reward which could bring him or the game into disrepute”. In his final submissions, Ishan Kapila, Odumbe’s lawyer, argued that prosecution evidence was based on hearsay.Odumbe was included in the Kenyan squad for the series against Pakistan A. The opening three-day game will be played at the Nairobi’s Simba Union club on Saturday. “He will definitely play for us this weekend,” Andy Moles, the Kenyan coach, told AFP. Despite the case, Odumbe played a crucial role in Kenya’s victory over Uganda in the ICC Intercontinental Cup last Sunday.

Caddick out for the rest of the summer

Andy Caddick will miss the rest of the summer after a scan revealed he is suffering from a prolapsed disc in his back.”Andrew has been given stronger medication to relieve the back problem,” said Dr Peter Gregory, the England & Wales Cricket Board’s chief medical officer. “If this does not control the pain, the specialist will give him an epidural injection in the near future.”His condition will be reviewed by the specialist six weeks from now,” he added, “and if he has not improved, then surgery will be considered as an option. He will not play cricket during this time and has been advised by the specialist that he should rest for the remainder of the season.”Caddick was recently diagnosed with a stress fracture of the right foot which is expected to have healed within the next two weeks. He has taken 234 wickets in 62 Tests, but at 34 time is not on his side if he wants to add to that tally.

South Africa in Zimbabwe: further thoughts and comments

Another wholesale slaughter for Zimbabwe’s bowlers in the first one-day international in Bulawayo last weekend, as South Africa ran up the highest total ever recorded against Zimbabwe in a one-day international. 363 for three is quite an advance on the 313 for seven scored by Sri Lanka in the World Cup of 1991/92, the previous highest our team has ever conceded.Our bowlers have taken a lot of hammering in recent months, and they will not forget South Africa’s 600 for three in the Harare Test in a hurry. West Indies also scored 559 for six in the Bulawayo Test in July, and last November India scored 609 for six against us.The three highest Test match totals in nine years of Test cricket have all been recorded within the last year. Even when we first began and had a paper-thin attack before the coming of Heath Streak as a major force and with Eddo Brandes sometimes injured, our bowlers never suffered like this. Why?WHY THE DECLINE?There are three fairly obvious reasons. Firstly, there is the serious injury problem we regularly undergo, but which has been worse against South Africa, with Andy Blignaut, Brighton Watambwa and Bryan Strang all out of action. Secondly, we have the decline of Streak as a bowler, both factors that I have mentioned before.Thirdly, the groundsmen prepared pitches, no doubt to blunt the powerful South African pace attack, that have very little in them for bowlers and favour the bat. I think this is the right policy for our players, except that a little more pace in some pitches would be better. We have had some Tests and one-day internationals in the past few years played on very bowler-friendly surfaces, mainly at Harare Sports Club, and they have been disastrous. Especially when Zimbabwe lost the toss and were put in to bat, as invariably happened.But there is more to it than that. The quality of the bowling has been so poor, with even Streak at times unable to bowl a consistent line and length. The selectors’ policy recently has been to select bowlers with genuine pace or spin, and the ability to bowl wicket-taking deliveries. The trouble is that at Test level there have been few signs of wicket-taking deliveries actually doing their job.THE VIRTUE OF ACCURACYThey seem to have forgotten the value of accuracy. Bryan Strang was omitted from the team from the Bangladesh tour up to the triangular tournament, when Streak’s temporary resignation over selection and other issues immediately resulted in his reinstatement. He is obviously and rightly a players’ choice. And immediately his value was obvious, as his accuracy put a brake on the scoring and his overall average was up there with the best.But, when he was ruled out of the South African tour through injury, the selectors did not seek to replace him with another bowler of proven accuracy. Pommie Mbangwa has not played international cricket for a year now and he was not even included in the squad. Gary Brent, not quite as good or experienced as a bowler perhaps, but handier with the bat, was also not selected. Instead we had bowlers who were simply too inaccurate to keep the batsmen quiet, let alone trouble them. So much of Test cricket is about applying pressure, and our current bowlers have on performances so far been quite incapable of doing that.Young bowlers like Travis Friend have great potential, there is no doubt about that, but he has not shown the consistency needed yet. Given a stronger bowling side, he could be eased into international cricket, but he has so little back-up from the rest of the attack that his inaccuracy has been critical. Doug Hondo is another who should have a fine future, but he was clearly unready for Test cricket when he was plunged into it in Harare – as first-class career figures of 11 wickets in eight matches at an average of 43 might have suggested. At least he was not a complete failure, as he held up his end usefully with the bat and held a fine catch, besides capturing one wicket.With so many experienced players in the team now – the Flowers, Alistair Campbell, Streak and Guy Whittall have all played over 40 Tests – one would expect performances to improve. But, apart from the great Andy Flower, none of these players are turning in significantly better performances than they did five years ago.BURNOUT?I suspect they are just playing too much these days, touring the globe for most of the year and rarely having much time to relax and to hone their techniques, both vital for successful players. The big occasion does not quite inspire them as it used to, because it has become all too common, and the adrenaline is diluted. They will struggle again this year, because after playing England they visit Sharjah, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and India in quick succession before returning to play Australia. Their only significant break is between India and Australia, when they will be expected to play in the Logan Cup. From May they finally have a four-month break to rest their weary bodies and minds.For young players on these tours the physical and mental pressures are so much greater. It is likely there will be more injuries, and our back-ups, especially in the pace department, are not as good as we thought they were. Asian tours are often the hardest anyway, and we may have to suffer more humiliation before the season is finally over.Admittedly the administrators are caught in a cleft stick, because all these tours bring in valuable foreign currency for the game, which would suffer in this country without it. Perhaps we just have to recognize that we have to cut our losses in the playing area and take the risk of player burnout, physical and mental, so as to broaden the base of our domestic cricket which will be of benefit in the future.The fact that our players can get it all together at times helps to bear out my feeling that many of the problems are in the mind. We had a fine Test victory over India, where Streak, Friend and Blignaut bore the brunt of the attack after Watambwa limped off injured, and did so superbly. But there is so little consistency, otherwise we would be winning like that more often.Just one final word on selectors: Craig Wishart once again experienced the quirks of the selectors, who are unpredictable when they pick him and much more predictable when they drop him after one poor performance. He scored a superb 93 against West Indies, but failed in the First Test against South Africa, to be promptly dropped again. We will never see the best of this immensely talented but vulnerable player until he is given the confidence he needs by the authorities. He has never been sure of a decent run in the side, and his latest sacking from the Bulawayo Test confirms his insecurity.MAN OF THE SERIESFor the Test series, it went to Jacques Kallis, who scored 388 runs without being dismissed over 1028 minutes, a world record. But was his performance as meritorious as that of Andy Flower, who with much less support and against much better bowling scored 422 runs in 1043 minutes, a slightly better rate? Runs per over works out to Kallis 3.02 and Flower 3.07.With scores of 67 and 14 not out, Andy did not dominate the Second Test as much as the first, whereas Kallis scored a century in each. But in Bulawayo, Kallis’ 189 not out was scored at less than three an over, and this slow rate of scoring meant that South Africa were unable to put themselves into a position to force victory. Kallis is a fine batsman, a fine all-rounder, the best batting all-rounder in the world, but if he had been playing for Australia I think his captain would have expected a more dominating innings from him in Bulawayo. Andy as usual played the best possible role for his side in both innings.THIS WEEKENDThis weekend sees the final two matches of the one-day series against South Africa at Harare Sports Club. On current form, we can expect two more massive hidings for Zimbabwe.But Zimbabwe don’t play to current form for long. Every now and then they lift themselves to play out of their skins, such as in that crucial Test victory over India, and in the final match of the triangular tournament in Australia last season, when they lost to the hosts by just one run. I think that in at least one of the matches this coming weekend they will pull themselves together and give the South Africans a run for their money, although perhaps a victory is too much to hope for realistically. But it will indeed be a poor show if they do not at some time during those two days give us reason to be proud of them.

SA's pace trio likely to delay Rabada's Test debut

Pace, precision and a penchant for plucking wickets would ordinarily lead to a Test debut, but 20-year old Kagiso Rabada may have to wait just a little while longer to wear the whites. Rabada is part of South Africa’s squad in all three formats for the upcoming tour of India, but remains a reserve in the Test ranks for now.”We’re winning Test matches at the moment, so it’s going to be hard for Kagiso to get into the side and India is going to be even harder because we might even play two spinners,” Charl Langeveldt, South Africa’s bowling coach, said at a training camp for the Johannesburg-based bowlers. “We’ve got three seam bowlers that have done well for South Africa for a number of years now but if an injury comes along then you never know.”That means Dale Steyn, Vernon Philander and Morne Morkel remain South Africa’s first choice, but this will be the first time they bowl as a trio in India. The trio first came together in November 2011 and have since toured other parts of the sub-continent such as Sri Lanka where Steyn, in particular, was impressive. Langeveldt expects nothing less even in India.”Our fast bowling attack is still key. Steyn bowls well with the ball reversing and with the new ball; although it’s an SG ball, he does bowl well and he gets the ball to reverse,” Langeveldt said.Where Langeveldt expects things to be different is with Philander, who could move from a frontline attacking bowler to the last line of defence.”When Vernon bowled in Bangladesh, he was was one of our best bowlers. He made guys play a lot more than others,” Langeveldt explained. “If he can strike with the new ball in India, that’s key for us. He brings that consistency to our attack and he can keep the run rate down. He went for about one-and-a-half runs an over in Bangladesh recently.”He didn’t get the results but if you talk about keeping the run-rate down and creating pressure from one end while the spinner is attacking from the other end, he can do that.”A strategy where Philander is used as a container could also mean a return for Imran Tahir as the specialist spinner ahead of Simon Harmer and Dane Piedt, both offspinners. That move could further confine Rabada to the bench, where Langeveldt said he will learn what’s expected of him when he makes the step up.”I will make sure he is prepared so if the opportunity does come he is ready to play. I can’t say when he’s going to play, it’s out of my control, it’s out of his control, all he can control is that he will be ready.”Part of the preparation will involve the study of reverse swing, something Langeveldt believes Rabada can master. “KG has got a good wrist position so the ball will reverse for him as well,” he said.”It’s all about looking after the ball. That’s the key to teach him now: to prepare the ball, to look to shine, even throwing from the boundary, those are the things we will discuss. Everyone knows how to prepare the ball for when it does reverse, or when it is reversing or how to get it to reverse.”The more Rabada learns, the more the rest will have to look over their shoulder, which is exactly what Langeveldt wants. Already, Rabada is holding down a fairly regular place in South Africa’s limited-overs sides and with time, he is expected to challenge for a Test spot.”You want a battery of bowlers who are competing. When you’ve got guys competing for the same spot, everyone will lift their game – a senior player will lift his game,” Langeveldt said, while warning his bowlers that no one is safe. “I just don’t want to say he is going to play and that’s it. You have to earn your rights to play for South Africa, and I am a big fan of competition.”

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