Kallis and Smith take South Africa closer

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Jacques Kallis picked up five wickets as Bangladesh were bowled out for 182 © AFP
 

In the four years since he last took five wickets in a Test innings,Jacques Kallis has cemented his position as one of the batting greats ofthe modern age, but it was an inspired eight-over spell on the thirdmorning at the National Stadium in Mirpur that went a long way towardsdestroying Bangladeshi hopes of an epochal victory.Kallis’ 5 for 30 triggered a collapse to 182 all out, and solid knocksfrom Graeme Smith and Hashim Amla got them to within 27 of the 205 neededbefore the victory push was halted by bad light. Shahadat Hossain, whostarred with 6 for 27 in the first innings, and Mohammad Rafique induced alate-afternoon wobble, but dour batting from Ashwell Prince and AB deVilliers shut the door in the final overs of the day.As ever, Kallis bowled a heavy ball and got just enough movement to worrybatsmen on a pitch that showed further signs of wear and tear. In thespace of four balls midway through the morning session, the complexion ofthe match turned utterly. Dale Steyn had probed away while Makhaya Ntinihad again been disappointing, and as the fifth-wicket partnership betweenJunaid Siddique and Aftab Ahmad swelled to 63, Smith was running out ofoptions.Instead of Mornè Morkel, he threw the ball to Kallis, and the breakthroughcame with the fifth ball he bowled. The line was perfect, and there wasjust enough deviation away to take the outside edge as Siddique sparreduncertainly. He had batted 184 balls to equal his previous highest of 74,and his exit was a serious blow to hopes of setting a big target.Three balls later, the innings was in disarray. Aftab had previouslysurvived a vociferous shout after padding up to Ntini, but when he did thesame to a Steyn delivery that darted back, the umpire wasn’t in charitablemood. Aftab had eschewed his attacking instincts during a sober innings,but like Mohammad Ashraful, his captain, he couldn’t quite carry on.Kallis struck in his second over as well, though Mushfiqur Rahim wasn’texactly thrilled when Steve Bucknor ruled him out after he appeared tomiss a glance down the leg side. Boucher took the catch and went up inappeal, and the raised finger gave him a record 417th dismissal, one ahead of therecently-retired Adam Gilchrist.Rafique came in and played the only way he knew. Two carves through theoff side off Kallis briefly enlivened the crowd, but a lazy waft then sawhis off stump knocked out. And on the stroke of lunch, Kallis wrappedthings up, having Mashrafe Mortaza graze one to slip and Shakib Al Hasanedge through to Boucher. The demolition job was complete, and it was leftto the batsmen to complete the task of getting the favourites out of jail.Neil McKenzie might have gone in Mortaza’s opening over, but an outsideedge didn’t carry to the slip cordon, and when he survived a massive shoutfor leg before soon after, you sensed it would be South Africa’s day. Heplayed a couple of gorgeous cover drives as the bowlers erred in line andlength, and Ashraful was soon calling for some left-arm spin from Rafique.

Graeme Smith’s 62 helped South Africa inch closer to a hard-fought win © AFP
 

It was Hossain who provided the opening though. Despite having gone for 13in his previous over, Smith lacing two lovely fours in the V, Ashrafulkept the faith in his bowler and was rewarded when a McKenzie miscued a pull to Habibul Bashar at square leg. Smith, who had been struck a painful blowin the abdomen at the start of his innings, survived a strong shout for acatch behind soon after, but the sort of collapse that ruined the firstinnings never materialised.Hashim Amla got going with a tidy glance off Rafique and an on-driveoff Hossain and when Smith moved towards his half-century with a sweetshot down the ground off Mortaza, the crowd’s spirits sank further. Havingbeen in the ascendancy a day earlier, Bangladesh were once again staringat defeat inside three days.Amla played some fabulous strokes down the ground and through midwicket,while Smith was clinical in putting away anything overpitched or wide. Thepartnership was worth 73 when Smith tried to tuck Rafique through the legside only to miss it completely. The appeal was upheld and Kallis, thebowling hero, arrived at the crease.Amla’s elegant effort ended soon after, when an attempted cut off Rafiqueflew off the outside edge to Siddique at first slip. Though the speed atwhich it was travelling pushed him back, he managed to hold on. It wasconsolation too for Rafique, after Bucknor had ruled Kallis not out when athin edge ricocheted off Rahim to the man at slip.He didn’t stay long enough to capitalise on the good fortune though.Hossain tempted him with a short ball, and the pull arrowed into the handsof Mortaza at backward square leg. At 144 for 4, the dressing room wouldhave been jittery, but Prince and de Villiers opted for discretion ratherthan an early finish, sensing that the Bangladeshis had lifted their game.de Villiers was uncharacteristically subdued, and it was Prince thatwhittled away at the target, with a powerful cut off Mortaza and two meatypulls off Rafique. Barring a dramatic reversal of fortune on Monday, SouthAfrica will win this game, and leave Bangladesh to ponder just how theylet it get away.

England penalised for slow over-rate

England’s players have been fined for their slow over-rate during the seven-wicket defeat to Australia in Antigua on Sunday. Mike Procter, the ICC match referee, found the team to be two overs short at the scheduled finish after taking into account all the delays and stoppages.According to the ICC Code of Conduct, the players are fined 5% for every over they fail to bowl in the allotted time while the captain is slapped with twice the amount. Michael Vaughan was docked 20% of his match fee while the rest of the side was handed a 10% penalty.Australia lost only three wickets as they chased down the target of 248 in 47.2 overs. England’s next game is a must-win affair against Bangladesh on Wednesday.

Harbhajan spins India to victory

India 203 (Harbhajan 37, Kabir Ali 4-45) beat England 164 (Pietersen 46, Harbhajan 5-31) by 39 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Kevin Pietersen top-scored for England, but his dismissal triggered a dramatic collapse © Getty Images

Harbhajan Singh bounced back from his disappointing Test series with an allround performance to savour, as England were sent tumbling to a 39-run defeat in the first one-day international at Delhi.Having managed just eight wickets in 148.4 overs in the Tests, Harbhajan at last showed a glimpse of his true colours with the second five-wicket haul of his one-day career, as India successfully defended a meagre total of 203. And that was not all – had it not been for his hard-hitting 37 in the latter stages of a disappointing batting performance, that total would have been considerably less defendable.After being asked to bat first on an improbably grassy pitch, India’s innings started aggressively, stuttered timidly as Kabir Ali and James Anderson got the better of the top order, and had slumped to a nadir of 147 for 7 before Harbhajan got stuck in with his unique brand of willow-wielding.His 46-ball effort included three fours and a vast six off Liam Plunkett, and lifted his side past the psychologically significant 200-barrier. For all that England had performed creditably – Ali in particular who bowled a fast, full length that invited a reckless response – their failure to chase similar totals in Pakistan before Christmas was a warning of problems to come.Sure enough, England’s reply got off to the worst possible start, as Irfan Pathan burst out of the blocks in the manner that had reaped him a first-over hat-trick against Pakistan in the recent Karachi Test. Andrew Strauss and Owais Shah were his victims this time, bamboozled by fast, full, swinging deliveries that in one instance grazed the edge of the bat, and in the other, arced into the knee-roll for the most plumb lbw imaginable.When Matt Prior, who has not yet convinced as an opening batsmen, swept loosely to backward square-leg to give Harbhajan the first of his five victims, England had slipped to 57 for 3, and it was clear that they had a serious battle on their hands. Even so, with Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff in harness, and a meagre target in their sights, India were soon forced onto the back foot by a range of exquisite attacking strokes.For eight overs, it seemed there could be only one winner. Pietersen set the tone with a series of six boundaries in three overs, including five trademark whips through midwicket and a thumping cut-drive for four. Flintoff, after a circumspect start, followed his team-mate’s lead with two massive sixes and a lofted drive for four off Sreesanth, but no sooner had he moved past 40 for the seventh international innings out of seven, the performance started to unravel.Unsurprisingly, it was India’s spinners who scrambled England’s brains and turned a walk in the park into a tiptoe through a minefield. Yuvraj Singh made the key breakthrough as Pietersen hoisted a full-toss to deep midwicket, but when Flintoff followed without addition as missed an attempted sweep off Harbhajan, there was no looking back. One over later Geraint Jones’s poor tour with the bat had been compounded by a now pumped-up Harbhajan, who deceived him with a beautifully flighted yorker.England had lost three wickets for three runs, and at 120 for 6, their performance was in freefall. Ian Blackwell was expertly caught on the boundary as he too fell victim to the dreaded sweep, while Paul Collingwood was brilliantly snaffled by Mohammad Kaif at short leg, as Harbhajan tweaked another one out of the rough. Anderson and Liam Plunkett added 22 composed runs for the tenth wicket to give England a glimmer of hope, but Pathan returned to finish what he had started, ending with the superb figures of 3 for 21.Earlier in the day it had been India’s batsmen who were hell-bent on self-destruction, with Ali and Anderson combining with the new ball to reduce them to 68 for 4. Virender Sehwag was once again undone by the bouncer, Gautam Gambhir spoiled a feisty innings with a limp prod to the keeper, and when the middle-order of Kaif and Yuvraj mustered five runs between them, all eyes fell on India’s captain, Rahul Dravid, who had been dropped on 0 by Shah at first slip.He had ground his way to 34 when Plunkett burst through his defences with a high-kicking length ball, and though Suresh Raina and Irfan Pathan repaired some of the damage with a painstaking partnership of 58, it wasn’t until Harbhajan came to the middle to produce the highest score of the innings that India truly believed they had a total they could fight for. With Harbhajan himself at the forefront of the defence, it proved in fact to be more than adequate.

How they were out

India
Virender Sehwag c Plunkett b Anderson 7 (17 for 1)
Defeated by yet another short ball, top-edged pull to midwicketGautam Gambhir c Jones b Ali 25 (56 for 2)
Good-length delivery, faint edge to defensive pushYuvraj Singh b Ali 1 (58 for 3)
Forcing off back foot, inside-edge onto stumpsMohammad Kaif run out 4 (68 for 4)
Quick single, bat airborne at moment of impactRahul Dravid b Plunkett 34 (80 for 5)
Perfect length, inside-edge onto back leg then stumpsSuresh Raina c Collingwood b Plunkett 24 (138 for 6)
Hitting over the top, skewed drive to mid-onIrfan Pathan c Plunkett b Anderson 28 (147 for 7)
Swipe across the line, fine low catch off leading edge at mid-offMahendra Singh Dhoni c Collingwood b Plunkett 20 (201 for 8)
Short and wide, slapped to pointHarbhajan Singh c Flintoff b Ali 37 (203 for 9)
Driven low to coverSreesanth c Pietersen b Ali 0 (203 for 10)
Slower ball driven high into the coversEngland
Andrew Strauss c Dhoni b Pathan 0 (0 for 1)
Grazed edge to keeperOwais Shah lbw b Pathan 4 (4 for 2)
Booming inswinger, struck on knee-rollMatt Prior c Gambhir b Harbhajan 22 (57 for 3)
Top-edged sweep to backward square legKevin Pietersen c Gambhir b Yuvraj 46 (117 for 4)
Hoisted full-toss to deep midwicketAndrew Flintoff lbw b Harbhajan 41 (117 for 5)
Sweeping, struck in lineGeraint Jones b Harbhajan (120 for 6)
Yorked by flighted deliveryIan Blackwell c Gambhir b Harbhajan 10 (137 for 7)
Swept high to deep midwicket, superbly judged catch inside ropePaul Collingwood c Kaif b Harbhajan 8 (141 for 8)
Flicked to leg, brilliant take under the helmetKabir Ali lbw b Yuvraj 0 (142 for 9)
Topspinner fizzed into padsLiam Plunkett c Dhoni b Pathan (164 for 10)
Thin steer to keeper

Kenya build healthy lead

Scorecard
Uganda launched a spirited fightback on the second day of their Intercontinental Cup fixture in Kampala, but Kenya still finished with a healthy advantage of 236 runs before bad light ended play early.Steve Tikolo followed-up his first-innings century with 54, as Kenya pressed for quick runs, but was out to the last ball of the day, caught by Lawrence Sematimba, the keeper, off Emmauel Isaneez. The Ugandan attack did an impressive job in restricting the Kenyan run rate as they looked to build on their first-innings lead of 151.Thomas Odoyo was the star bowler, taking 5-34 with his brisk medium-pace. He helped reduce Uganda to 84 for 6 before a fightback from the seventh wicket pair of Sematimba and Frank Nsubuga. They added 59, with Sematimba making a determined half-century, before Odoyo returned to wrap up the tail.

Zimbabwe v Bangladesh, 2nd Test, Bulawayo

Zimbabwe 210 for 2 (Carlisle 103*) drew with Bangladesh 168
ScorecardDay 1
Bulletin – Bulawayo washout
Day 2
Bulletin – Another soggy day in Africa
Verdict – Right place, wrong time
Day 3
Bulletin – Rain stops Zimbabwe in their tracks
Verdict – Three clear segmentsDay 4
Bulletin – The deluge returns at Bulawayo
Verdict – Another day, another washoutDay 5
Bulletin – Carlisle hundred the only saving grace
Verdict – Zimbabwe take the bird-in-a-hand option

A virtuoso performance from Lara

Inspired by an innings of 116 by Brian Lara that immediately re-established his place among the greats of the modern game, the West Indies revival, so unmistakably initiated in his absence in India three months ago, was confirmed here yesterday before the watching cricket world.His virtuoso performance in the opening contest of the World Cup, against stunned hosts and second favourites South Africa, was in his first encounter of any meaning since September 15 when he was stricken by the debilitating illness that kept him out of the game for four months.It earned him the Man Of The Match award in a remarkable West Indies victory by three runs. But it was only one of the many highlights of a classic encounter.As an advertisement for the remainder of a tournament previously enmeshed in commercial and political controversy, it was so perfect it could have been scripted by Dr Ali Bacher and his organising committee.For the 25 000 South Africans packing the Newlands Stadium, waving their flags, cheering their heroes and overwhelming the small group of supporters from the Caribbean and Bermuda, the defeat, however narrow, was a disappointment. But no one could have asked for better entertainment.To watch a master craftsman at work, such as Lara was over three hours and 134 balls, is always worth any money. But there was much, much more.The day produced 553 runs and the outcome was not decided until the penultimate ball when Ramnaresh Sarwan held the catch on the extra-cover boundary off Makhaya Ntini that left South Africa with the impossibility of scoring eight from Vasbert Drakes’ last ball.Left-hander Nicky Boje swung it for four but joyful West Indians on and off the field were already celebrating. After completing the job, those on it ran across to the flag-waving group of West Indians opposite the pavilion to express their appreciation.Lara’s measured batting led the West Indies through the darkness of seven for two after seven overs and 67 for two after half their 50 overs were through into the light that finally dazzled in a closing partnership of exhilarating, clean hitting worth 63 off 28 balls between the two young tryos, Ricardo Powell and Sarwan.The West Indies then kept claiming regular wickets and their triumph seemed all but settled at 204 for seven in the 41st of the 49 overs to which South Africa were reduced by their slow over-rate.Suddenly, Lance Klusener, whose awesome hitting earned him the Man Of The Tournament title in the previous World Cup in England in 1996, kept smiting leg-side sixes, five in all, electrifying the previously muted crowd once more as the target rapidly dwindled.The equation was reduced to 14 off two overs and nine off the last. Klusener swung a full toss from Vasbert Drakes, third ball of the last over, into the hands of captain Carl Hooper at deep midwicket, deliberately positioned there the previous delivery by the bowler.When Ntini swatted the fifth into Sarwan’s grasp, it was effectively over. Not even a six by the left-handed Boje could have changed it. His four was meaningless.

Stewart concedes defeat after another pitch invasion

A pitch invasion in which a ground steward was injured marred the end ofEngland’s NatWest Series match against Pakistan at Headingley. Englandcaptain Alec Stewart conceded the match to Pakistan, who were just four runsshort of victory when the invasion took place, with six wickets and tenovers to spare.Younis Khan and Azhar Mahmood had seen Pakistan to the threshold of the winwhen the disgraceful invasion took place. It appeared to begin in thefootball stand, when a supporter wearing a Pakistan shirt ran on to thepitch followed by a large section of the crowd. The injured steward wasstretchered off the ground after being caught up in the stampede. There wereechoes of a similar incident in the floodlit game at Edgbaston earlier inthe series, which was delayed by nearly half an hour after crowds burst onto the ground in the mistaken belief that Pakistan had secured victory overEngland.The steward injured in the invasion at Leeds is understood to have been kicked in the head and the stomach. He was taken to hospital and was found to have suffered broken ribs and a damaged spleen.Earlier, a destructive spell of fast bowling by Waqar Younis at the outsethad set up Pakistan’s win, which owed much to a partnership of 107 betweenAbdur Razzaq and Yousuf Youhana. It was England’s tenth consecutive one-daydefeat. The Pakistan captain’s figures of 7-36 were the finest of hisdistinguished limited-overs career.When Pakistan began their reply, Darren Gough gave England fleeting hopes ofan improbable victory with a new-ball spell which accounted for bothopeners. Shahid Afridi was caught behind by Stewart for two as he edgedan extravagant off-drive, and the same combination then accounted for SaeedAnwar. After playing some thumping strokes on the off side, the left-handerfenced at a ball from Gough to give the England captain another regulationcatch.The innings was steadied by Razzaq and Youhana, who began slowly but thenaccelerated as the target drew closer. Razzaq hoisted Alan Mullally for ahuge six over the long-on boundary into the Football Stand crowd, and whenGough was recalled as England strove for a breakthrough, Razzaq responded bycutting him for another boundary. Youhana also played some forceful strokes,although he was content to play second fiddle to Razzaq as Pakistan movedinexorably towards England’s meagre total.Youhana was eventually caught at the wicket off Dominic Cork for a watchful24, and Abdur Razzaq became Stewart’s fourth victim for 75 (102 balls, 7fours, 1 six), when he attempted to hit a slower ball from Cork out of theground.When England batted it had taken a dashing half century from Ben Hollioaketo restore some of England’s battered pride after Waqar’s sensationalnew-ball spell had reduced the home side to 58 for 7. England, alreadycondemned to third place in this tournament, were put in to bat by Waqar,who immediately spreadeagled Marcus Trescothick’s stumps with the first ballof the innings.The chilly, overcast conditions early on suited Waqar and Fazl-e-Akbar, whobowled at a lively pace from the Football Stand end. Waqar next accountedfor Nick Knight, who was caught by Afridi at backward point off a leadingedge. Michael Vaughan then drove uppishly into the covers where Youhanaspilled a simple chance. Vaughan failed to capitalise, edging a ball toYounis at third slip in Waqar’s next over.Owais Shah became Waqar’s fourth wicket when he edged a lifting deliveryfrom Waqar to first slip, where Inzamam held on to the catch, despitewicket-keeper Rashid Latif diving across his line of sight. Paul Collingwoodfollowed in similar fashion without scoring before Stewart, who hadhung on grimly at the other end, then top-edged an attempted pull to a ballfrom Waqar which was caught by Razzaq at mid-off. Stewart (18) was soonfollowed by Dominic Cork, who was caught behind by Rashid Latif for a duckas he aimed to hit Waqar through mid-wicket.Hollioake then gave the crowd some relief with an array of delightfuldrives, including three fours in a row off Mahmood. Hollioake added 67 forthe eighth wicket with Gough, before the Surrey all-rounder was out for 53(66 balls, 9 fours) as he drove over a straight ball from Shahid Afridi.Andrew Caddick then fell to a brilliant, one-handed diving catch by Latifoff Mahmood, and when Alan Mullally was run out without scoring England wereall out for 156, with the ebullient Gough left unbeaten on 40.A review of ground security is likely before Pakistan next meet Australiaunder floodlights at Trent Bridge on Tuesday, in a rehearsal for Saturday’sFinal at Lord’s.

Leeds should bid for Tom Ince once Huddersfield complete Adama Traore deal

According to reports in The Sun, Huddersfield Town and Wolverhampton Wanderers are leading the race to sign Middlesbrough winger Adama Traore in an £18m deal, and Championship side Leeds United should be watching developments closely.

What’s the word, then?

Well, The Sun says that Boro boss Tony Pulis is considering selling the highly-rated attacker to boost his transfer fund ahead of a promotion push in the upcoming season, and that the former Barcelona starlet has a release clause set at £18m that allows clubs to discuss personal terms with him.

Traore struggled to make much of an impression in the Premier League with Aston Villa, but he has been much improved with the Teesside outfit and he ended the campaign with five goals and a further 12 assists in 34 league games, which hasn’t gone unnoticed by Terriers manager David Wagner.

The German obviously feels that he needs attacking reinforcements with his side only narrowly avoiding relegation last term, and feels that the speedy Traore could add something for Town in the final third.

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Why should Leeds be monitoring the situation?

Well, new Whites manager Marcelo Bielsa, whom fans are desperate to sign these three players the most this summer, will surely be looking to add to his squad before the start of the new Championship season, and adding some quality in wide areas may well be a priority with Ezgjan Alioski being one of their only natural widemen during the 2017/18 campaign.

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Ince would arrive at Elland Road with proven pedigree at this level with 68 goals and a further 44 assists in 211 second-tier appearances, and he would certainly add a real creative and goal threat for them in the final third given he was also something of a regular in the top flight last term.

That said, first-team opportunities were more few and far between towards the end of the season and the arrival of Traore in an £18m deal would surely push him further down the pecking order, and perhaps looking to leave in search of regular minutes on the pitch again.

A gentleman who relishes a game which truly reflects character

A sort of a cricket person © Getty Images
 

Inches of snow have fallen on the garden beyond, but tucked away here indoors the voice is that of golden-rayed summers long gone by. EW Swanton CBE – `Jim` to his global family of friends – will be 90 next month, but his thirst for fun is as undiluted as the gin and so-called tonic he proceeds to pour.He has been told he was a five-month-old baby in his pram on thepavilion balcony when W G Grace made 140 for London County atForest Hill in 1907, as a lad of nine he watched the glow in thesky over north London announcing the shooting down of a firstworld war German Zeppelin near Cuffley, Herts, and as a highlyexcited 12-year-old he visited the Oval in 1919 to see hisbeloved Surrey play Yorkshire and to fall hopelessly in love withcricket.Eight decades, 23 books, an estimated eight million words (mostof them as cricket correspondent of The Daily Telegraph) andcountless hours at the microphone later, his ardour for the gameglows with the same schoolboy intensity. When E W Swanton admits you into the office – part library, part museum, part den – of his idyllic 18th-century town house at Sandwich, nearthe Kent coast, you settle back in a leather chair, savour thatmelody of ice rattling on crystal glass and luxuriate in thesound of his master`s voice. And, oh, what a voice it is. As David Rayvern Allen describes it in E W`s latest book, Last Over: A Life In Cricket: “That beautifully produced brown, treacly voice with ecclesiastical overtones was – and is – compelling. A friend of mine, hearing the Swanton vowels for the first time, remarked that it reminded him `of a great uncle with a partiality for brown Windsor soup and gentleman`s relish`.”The imminent arrival of his 90th birthday – an improbable anniversary for so sharp a mind and so active a body – will be marked by all manner of tributes, most notably a three-part BBCradio series recalling the many highlights of his career and acelebration dinner in the Long Room at Lord`s blessed by the attendance of a veritable Who`s Who of cricket. He is, after all,”one of the great cricket writers of this century” in the opinionof John Major. “Not just his Telegraph articles . . . but hisbooks, as well, some of which I think are classics.”But for a summary of his life (so far), including tales ofBradman`s final innings, of heroes like Compton and Sobers, ofadventurous sea voyages and flying boats, of the grim years as aPOW, of how he came to miss the Bodyline Series, of his abomination of coloured clothing, of Basil d`Oliveira and his hatred ofapartheid, of his ill-concealed distaste for Kerry Packer and IanBotham, of the celebrated rows with Raymond Illingworth and EnochPowell, I have great pleasure in handing you over to E W Swanton.”I`m a sort of curiosity, that`s what I am. I can picture thescene in our garden when I picked up a cricket bat for the firsttime. I must have been four or five I suppose because I canremember the buses were still drawn by horses. My father sufferedfrom very bad eyesight – in fact he couldn`t get into the firstwar so he became a special constable – but he was treasurer ofForest Hill Cricket Club in south London. My mother helped lookafter the teas, as ladies did in those days – and still do, thankGod – so I grew up on the boundary ropes. At 14 my father mademe a junior member of Surrey and I saw the Test match betweenEngland and Australia at The Oval in 1921 from the pavilion,which was a marvellous thrill. As it happens, I`ve just completedmy 76th year as a member of Surrey.”A life vice-president of the MCC, founder of The Arabs touringteam and arguably the most famous and influential non-Test playing cricket personality in the world, E W Swanton was born of anera when journalists at Lord`s were equipped with an assistant todictate their copy (and another to fetch the ice for their cocktails) and when writers on overseas tours would take dinner inevening dress. “We had a few firebrands in the old days, butsports writing is completely different now. Very much sharper andless kind. Directly after the war, everyone was lookingfor heroes. That`s why Denis Compton was a hero like none other. He was what every mother wanted her son to be. The writingthen was more benevolent, but a great part of cricket`s mystique when I started was that the public liked to admire cricketers for what they were. Len Hutton, Jack Hobbs, FrankWoolley were all nature`s gents. That feeling has rather gone nowand I feel the press has become far too intrusive.”Not that E W Swanton hesitates to meet controversy head-on whenthe occasion demands. He was bitter in his condemnation of SouthAfrica over the d`Oliveira affair, launched a withering attack onEnoch Powell in the letters page of The Spectator after thepolitician`s notorious `Rivers of Blood` speech, engaged in aprolonged feud with the then England captain Ray Illingworth -who had accused the scribe of “being such a snob, he doesn`t eventravel in the same car as his chauffeur” – and dismissed KerryPacker as “the anti-Christ”.Officially, he retired in 1975 but remains nothing if notopinionated. In Last Over, Allen notes: ” . . . at various timeshe [Swanton] has been called `overbearing` and `pompous`. Duringone commentary, when white smoke was seen billowing from a distant chimney . . . John Arlott turned to his colleagues and said,`Ah, I see Jim has been elected Pope`.” Arlott was speaking withaffection, however, for E W Swanton truly is the voice of cricket. “Ours is a slow-moving game and as such holds up a clearermirror to character than most,” he wrote in From Grace To Botham:A Century Of Cricket Fame. “We want to admire the stars forwhat they are as well as for what they do – which is why theexhibi- tionist antics of a few in recent times, giving theworst of examples to the young watchers on television, are soparticularly abhorrent.”He has been present at every great moment in cricket history,such as Bradman`s last innings when he was bowled by Eric Holliesand thereby denied the four he needed for a Test average of 100 -“I thought that [Jack] Fingleton and [Bill] O`Reilly were goingto have strokes in the press box, they were horribly unkind tothe Don” – except the notorious Bodyline tour of 1932-33, whichhe missed after being cricket-writing career.”I`d been covering a match between Yorkshire and Essex at Leytonin which Yorkshire, in the persons of Holmes and Sutcliffe, puton 555 for the first wicket. A world record. The Evening News,the Standard, an agency and The Star had to share the one publictelephone and old Swanton was the last. I missed the edition andthe editor at the time said, `Well, if the young fool can`t getus a story from Leyton, what`s he going to do from Melbourne andSydney?` So he deselected me and selected a chap called BruceHarris – the lawn tennis correspondent. Utter ignominy. When themonumental row started because we cheated, Bruce Harris latchedon to Douglas Jardine and Jardine was sensible enough to see he`dgot a spokesman for his views. I think if I had gone, I can`t believe I wouldn`t have condemned it. None of us wanted to believethey were doing what they were doing and since Bruce Harris gotsyndicated absolutely everywhere, everyone in England got the impression the Australians were squealers. It was an appallingthing.”Yet this has been a life of precious few disappointments, rathera life spent describing great deeds in great words. Harkunto Swanton on Sobers, his “favourite modern player . . one ofa large family from a little wooden house such as they have inBarbados and I saw him aged 17 playing his first Test in Jamaica.He aver- aged 57, I think it was, in Tests but if he`d been arun-grabber, if he`d put himself in at No 4 all the time instead of down the order, he`d have averaged 70, I expect. But thebest thing about him was that he never put a foot wrong. Heplayed the game hard and tough – as it should be – but scrupulously fairly.”Here, among his memories of Sobers and his collection of Wisdensstretching back to 1879 (including the battered 1939 version hekept with him in a Japanese POW camp), we must take our reluctantleave of E W Swanton for there is much work to be done before hecan flee the winter to enjoy his annual holiday in Barbados. Aswe crunch down the snowy path, from the drawing-room can be heardthe piano of his wife Ann, 85, an accomplished pianist who hasperformed with Sir Noel Coward and Sir Donald Bradman, while fromthe office E W Swanton is dictating his latest thoughts; and,yes, sounding remarkably like “a great uncle with a partialityfor brown Windsor soup and gentleman`s relish”.

Clark joins Hampshire for two months

Stuart Clark will be heading to England after World Cup duty © Getty Images

Australia’s World Cup fast bowler Stuart Clark has signed a two-month deal with Hampshire, meaning he will team up with Shane Warne at The Rose Bowl.Hampshire’s move for Clark, which was spearheaded by Warne as the club captain, had been on the cards since the Ashes, but his late call-up to the World Cup squad has resulted in him starting a couple of weeks later than originally planned.”I am extremely grateful that such a great club as Hampshire would consider offering me the opportunity to join their club and allow me the chance of making a contribution towards the team’s success for this season,” said Clark. “This is a once in a lifetime chance for me and with the added benefit to also play cricket with such a cricketing legend and personal friend as Shane Warne making my time at Hampshire very exciting.”Clark, who came into the World Cup outfit for Brett Lee, will certainly enjoy the surfaces at The Rose Bowl which, although they have flattened out in recent seasons, still offer quality seam bowlers plenty of encouragement. This is Clark’s second stint in the counties after he played for Middlesex in 2005.

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