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Horton carries heavy burden

ScorecardAshwell Prince made an unbeaten 87 in Lancashire’s first innings but fell for 1 second time around•PA Photos

Lancashire managed to interpret the absence of outstanding individuals in their ranks as a virtue while they were winning the County Championship last season but in circumstances such as these it looks uncomfortably like a shortcoming.Winning cricket matches, as Lancashire proved, depends on individuals combining effectively as a team, especially the bowlers, but with 238 runs still needed to avoid an innings defeat against Warwickshire today, the statistics of Lancashire’s batting form are not encouraging.In 2011, for example, even winning the title, they managed only eight first-class hundreds, compared with 16 for both Warwickshire and Somerset, and 22 for Durham. Yet if there is one thing they need to have any hope of saving this match it is a proven accumulator of runs.What’s more, their best hope of any player stepping up to fulfill that role seems already to have gone. Ashwell Prince, whose unbeaten 87 in Lancashire’s first innings denied Warwickshire the opportunity to wrap things up inside three days, perished after facing only four deliveries in the follow-on.The South African was caught at slip going after a ball from Jeetan Patel with a stroke that contrasted so starkly with the patience of his near four-hour vigil earlier in the day it seemed almost as if it were another batsman. Coming moments after Karl Brown had gone for 45, ending a stand of 87 for the second wicket that appeared to have set up Lancashire nicely for a last-day rearguard, it was a bitter blow for Glen Chapple’s side and an enormous fillip for Warwickshire.Paul Horton, with whom Brown shared that second-wicket partnership, played soundly for two and a half hours to be unbeaten on 56, but will now need to do so for a good deal longer and hope for more of the gloomy conditions that came to their aid in bringing the third day to a premature close.As it was, Lancashire limped to 122 for 3 and Warwickshire remain well on course for the innings victory that will put them 15 points clear at the top of Division One with a game in hand on both Nottinghamshire and Somerset.Eight wickets in the day rewarded more impressive work from the Warwickshire bowlers on what has essentially been a good batting surface. Given that Lancashire had been 54 for 5 on Thursday, 197 all out in their first innings represented something of a recovery. Yet the total of 408 they needed merely to avoid the follow-on was never remotely likely.They lost only two more wickets in the morning session, their resistance almost entirely due to the efforts of Prince, who has four half-centuries in 10 Championship innings since he rejoined Lancashire. Only he, with the benefit of considerable experience, of course, produced the necessary resolve that was required to make Warwickshire work for their wickets.There was some, naturally, from Glen Chapple, batting despite the discomfort of the side strain that prevented his bowling for much of the Warwickshire innings. He survived 44 balls but even he was guilty of an injudicious choice of shot, caught behind trying to hook Chris Wright, falling for 14.Gareth Cross, shaping to pull Chris Woakes but failing to commit fully to the stroke, and Ajmal Shahzad, taking the aerial route against Jeetan Patel’s offspin, had both been wasteful earlier, although Jim Troughton, running backwards, did his best to let Shahzad off the hook, juggling the ball twice before grabbing it at the third attempt at long-on.Woakes, making an impressive comeback from the ankle injury that caused him to miss the early part of the season, finished with 3 for 20 and both he and Wright continued to produce moments of menace. Patel could not conjure much in the way of turn but he finished on a hat-trick when he dismissed Simon Kerrigan and Gary Keedy with successive balls, denying Lancashire even the consolation of a batting point.Woakes took his fourth wicket of the match when Stephen Moore edged a fine away-swinger to first slip in only the fifth over of the follow-on and for a moment Warwickshire had visions of a rapid conclusion.Horton and Brown had other ideas but just as some of the more pessimistic Warwickshire supporters were beginning to wonder if the declaration had been delayed too long on Thursday, two wickets in quick succession tipped the balance heavily back in their favour.First Brown, always looking to play shots, edged Wright into the gloves of wicketkeeper Tim Ambrose and then came Prince’s aberration. Horton, who has not made a Championship century since April 2010, has much weight on his shoulders.

Deccan's chance to catch up

Match facts

Friday, May 4, Chennai
Start time 2000 (1430 GMT)Cameron White’s return to form has helped Deccan Chargers to two victories•AFP

Big Picture

Dale Steyn, the world’s best fast bowler, has been Deccan Chargers’ outstanding performer this season, but their only wins in 2012 have come when Steyn’s had no impact, or worse: they left him out in their first success against Pune Warriors, and in the other victory, he had his poorest figures of the year – 4-0-46-0.The other common factor in Chargers’ wins have been the big-hitting of Cameron White, who shrugged off a year-long drought with a couple of powerful half-centuries. Chargers have now lifted themselves to five points, and one more triumph will see them cut the once yawning gap between them and at least two other teams at the bottom to a mere one point.While Chargers have picked up four points from their previous three matches, their opponents on Friday, Chennai Super Kings, have just one point from their previous three. Their last victory came two weeks ago and had given them a share of the top spot, but they have since slid seven points behind the leaders. What has been particularly disappointing for Super Kings fans is that a team filled with match-winning batsmen has only managed to post a score in excess of 170 twice this season. Super Kings, though, have perfected the art of peaking at the right time in the season, winning two titles despite not having been the best team in the league phase. Their fans will hope that repeats this year as well.

Form guide

(most recent first)
Chennai Super Kings: LLNrWW
Deccan Chargers: WLWNrL

Players to watch

Kumar Sangakkara’s decision to drop himself for a match on Sunday prompted plenty of debate. He was back in charge of the side for the game against Warriors, and his spirited fist pump after reaching his half-century shows how much performing in this series matters to him.For a side which has regularly found it difficult to put up big scores this season, Super Kings have utterly under-used Albie Morkel – he has only got 41 deliveries to face though he has played eight matches in 2012. Super Kings need to re-jig the order to give Morkel a little more time in the middle as they try to recapture the form of 2011.

Stats and trivia

  • MS Dhoni had a strike-rate of 158.70 in the IPL last season but this year, he’s going at only 116.08. For more stats on Super Kings’ batting, click here.
  • Amit Mishra had a solid IPL last year, but is struggling to match those performances this year. In 2011, he finished with 19 wickets at an economy-rate of 6.71; the corresponding figures this year are five at 7.91.

Quotes

“Always said I’d rather go for 40 and win than bowl great and lose!”

“We need to look at the personnel as well as this is the first time we’ve been challenged for form.”

Settled Super Kings eye more success

Big picture

Runners-up, semi-finalists, champions, champions. Thus reads Chennai Super Kings’ record across the first four seasons of the IPL. They have been the most consistent and successful team in the league by far, and are the most settled side as well, after retaining most of their squad in last year’s shuffle.That they have a settled line-up was reflected in the 2012 auction, when they were willing to spend their entire purse on a single acquisition: Ravindra Jadeja. They were involved in a fierce bidding war for Jadeja with Deccan Chargers, and eventually beat them in the tie-breaker. Even so, Super Kings cannot afford any complacency and coach Stephen Fleming knows it. “There is a fine line between finishing first or indeed missing out on the finals,” he said in an interview on the franchise’s website. They have tread that line on several occasions – in 2008 and 2010 Super Kings faced a must-win situation in their last league game to make the semis, while last year they almost complicated things for themselves by delaying their launch till the very last moment in a stiff chase in the play-off against Royal Challengers Bangalore.In 2011 the batting was typically solid, with MS Dhoni, Suresh Raina, Michael Hussey, S Badrinath and M Vijay all aggregating in the vicinity of 400 runs. R Ashwin, expectedly, led the team’s bowling charts with 20 wickets at 19.40 apiece. If Super Kings have a weakness, though, it is on the fast-bowling front. Their opponents have often got off to fliers against the quicks, before Dhoni has applied the squeeze and invariably turned the match with the spinners. On that count, they will be happy to have the services of Australia’s Ben Hilfenhaus this time around. When he arrives from the West Indies, he should form a solid partnership with Doug Bollinger, Super Kings’ pace spearhead over the last two seasons.Off the field, Super Kings have been at the centre of several controversial issues – including a possible conflict of interest with BCCI president N Srinivasan also managing India Cements, the owners of Super Kings – but their on-field performance has been strong enough to steal the headlines and deflect negative publicity.

Key players

The Dhoni-Raina combine: For Super Kings, when it comes to key performers, it’s hard to look beyond MS Dhoni and Suresh Raina. The pair has formed the backbone of the team since the inaugural IPL, with Raina not missing a single match across seasons and captain Dhoni missing just three of Super Kings’ 62 games. Dhoni, with an average touching 40, has scored 1425 runs, while Raina is the leading run-getter in the IPL’s short history with 1813 at 36.26. Add to that Raina’s tidy offspin and electric fielding, and Dhoni’s tactical nous on tweaker-friendly tracks, and you know why Chennai paid big bucks to retain them last season.Dwayne Bravo: Super Kings have a preference for allrounders. The squad is always packed with them, one being Bravo, who Super Kings signed last year. Coming off a long break due to an ankle injury, Bravo was picked in the West Indies squad for the limited-overs games against Australia earlier this month, and took up new-ball duty in the ODIs. If he could do the same, effectively, for Super Kings, it would add better balance to the side. That, plus a few timely cameos down the order, and he could push Albie Morkel for the No. 1 allrounder’s spot in the XI.

Big names in

Ravindra Jadeja: The only new signing in a well-established squad, Jadeja, as an allrounder, fits Super Kings’ preferred mould. Unlike the overseas allrounders, though, he gives Super Kings a spinning option. Presumably, he has always enjoyed the backing of his captain, Dhoni, but he might still feel the pressure to perform after being the biggest buy at the 2012 auction.Ben Hilfenhaus: A potential answer to Super Kings’ fast-bowling worries. Hilfenhaus was meant to play the 2011 IPL for Chennai, but missed out due to injury. Prior to that, he had had a poor showing in the 2010-11 Ashes, meaning he was out of the Australia team. When he returned, after almost a year, he hit top form – he led the wicket-takers’ charts in the Australia-India Test series, and returned to international limited-overs cricket with a five-for in the tri-series that followed.

Big names out

Tim Southee: The New Zealand quick replaced the injured Hilfenhaus in the squad last season, and began impressively: his inch-perfect final-over yorkers won Super Kings’ the tournament opener against the Kolkata Knight Riders by two runs. Thereafter though, he tapered off a bit, finishing with four wickets from five games at 41.50 apiece. He went unsold at the 2012 auction.

Below the radar

Anirudha Srikkanth: A hard-hitting opening batsman, Anirudha was the Man of the Match in last year’s opener against Knight Riders. Once Michael Hussey arrived though, he, expectedly, was sidelined. This year, fitness and availability issues could mean that Anirudha has a chance to open the innings with M Vijay early in the tournament once again. He showed decent touch in the recently-concluded domestic one-day competition, the Vijay Hazare Trophy, scoring three half-centuries in five matches for Tamil Nadu. Super Kings will want more of the same.

Availability

Opening batsman Abhinav Mukund twisted his left ankle during the pre-tournament training camp on Sunday, and will be out of action for ten days. Among the overseas signings, Doug Bollinger, Albie Morkel, Faf du Plessis, Dwayne Bravo and George Bailey are all available from the start of the tournament. Offspinner Suraj Randiv is expected to arrive on April 8, following the conclusion of the Sri Lanka-England Tests, and Hilfenhaus and Hussey on April 30, after the West Indies Tests. Sri Lanka seamer Nuwan Kulasekara, who is recovering from a hamstring strain, is scheduled to join the squad on April 10.

2011 in a tweet

They came, they saw, they scrapped, they conquered … again.

Lahore Lions crash to embarassing defeat

Group ALahore Lions were routed for 81, owing to a combined bowling performanc, led by the right-arm seamer Asad Ali at the Lahore City Cricket Association Ground. Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited (SNGPL) finished the chase in just 11.1 overs to register their maiden win in the tournament. Early strikes by Asad and Imran Ali left the Lions tottering at 5 for 5. Farhan Asghar and Saad Nasim were the only players to pass 20. Asad finished with the best figures of 4 for 14, while the other three bowlers took two wickets apiece. The SNGPL openers Ali Waqas and Imran Ali (the opener) ensured they attained the target without any loss of wickets.A half-century by Musadiq Ahmed and a five-wicket haul by Mohammad Fayyaz set up Peshawar Panthers‘ 28-run win over Khan Research Laboratories (KRL) in Peshawar. Musadiq hit 66 off 96 balls with five fours to take the Panthers to 227. Mohammad Irfan took 3 for 35. KRL began their chase steadily, taking the score to 100 for 2. But the Panthers hit back, taking four wickets for 29 runs. Bazid Khan was the top scorer with 60 but was dismissed by Fayyaz, who ran through the middle and lower order to finish with 5 for 26 off six overs, his maiden five-for in domestic one-dayers.Group BA century by Bismilliah Khan set up Quetta Bears’ 140-run victory against Multan Tigers in Karachi. Bismilliah scored 142 off 141 balls and was supported by Abid Ali, who made 73, in an opening stand of 177. Quetta finished on 326 for 5 in 50 overs, the only wicket-taker for Multan being Haziq Habibullah, who claimed 4 for 64. Multan floundered in their chase, and collapsed from 109 for 2 to 186 all out in 39.5 overs. Mohibullah took 3 for 19 and Arun Lal 3 for 36 for Quetta. Moinuddin and Maqbool Ahmed top scored with 40 each for Multan, woefully inadequate contributions when chasing such a tall target.Lahore Eagles restricted Karachi Zebras to a below-par 199 for 9 and completed a five-wicket victory at the National Stadium. Lahore struck early and repeatedly after winning the toss, reducing Karachi to 69 for 5, before the lower-order batsmen rallied and prolonged the innings until the 50th over. The opener Behram Khan top scored with 71, the next best being Sohail Khan’s 39 at No. 9. Lahore stumbled from 50 for 0 to 63 for 3 in their chase but Rana Adnan cored 58 and Usman Salahuddin 42 to take their team towards victory. The target was achieved with nine overs to spare.

Who was sold to whom

Bought

Brendon McCullum – $900,000 to Kolkata Knight Riders (base price $400,000)
Ravindra Jadeja – Maximum purse of $2 million bid by Chennai Super Kings and Deccan Chargers. It goes to a tiebreaker. Bought by Chennai Super Kings for an undisclosed amount (base price $100,000).
Muttiah Muralitharan – $220,000 to Royal Challengers Bangalore (base price $200,000)
Mahela Jayawardene$1.4 million to Delhi Daredevils (base price $300,000)
Herschelle Gibbs – $50,000 to Mumbai Indians (base price $50,000)
Brad Hodge – $475,000 to Rajasthan Royals (base price $200,000)
Parthiv Patel – $650,000 to Deccan Chargers (base price $200,000)
Dinesh Chandimal – $50,000 to Rajasthan Royals (base price $50,000)
Andre Russell – $450,000 to Delhi Daredevils (base price $50,000)
Mitchell Johnson – $300,000 to Mumbai Indians (base price $300,000)
RP Singh – $600,000 to Mumbai Indians (base price $200,000)
Vinay Kumar$1 million to Royal Challengers Bangalore (base price $100,000)
Sreesanth – $400,000 to Rajasthan Royals (base price $400,000)
Ramesh Powar – $160,000 to Kings XI Punjab (base price $100,000)
Brad Hogg – $180,000 to Rajasthan Royals (base price $100,000)
Sunil Narine – $700,000 to Kolkata Knight Riders (base price $50,000)
Robin Peterson – $100,000 to Mumbai Indians (base price $100,000)
Daniel Harris – $70,000 to Deccan Chargers (base price 50,000)
Kevon Cooper – $50,000 to Rajasthan Royals (base price 50,000)
James Faulkner – $190,000 to Kings XI Punjab (base price $100,000)
Azhar Mahmood – $200,000 to Kings XI Punjab (base price $100,000)
Thisara Perera – $650,000 to Mumbai Indians (base price $50,000)
Marchant de Lange – $50,000 to Kolkata Knight Riders (base price $50,000)
Darren Bravo – $100,000 to Deccan Chargers (base price $100,000)
Doug Bracewell – $50,000 to Delhi Daredevils (base price $50,000)

Retained

(Players who were signed last year as a replacement for injured players and then retained by the franchise for this year)
Chris Gayle – Royal Challengers Bangalore, $550,000
Sourav Ganguly – Pune Warriors, $400,000
David Miller – Kings XI Punjab, $100,000

Transferred

(Main players signed during the IPL’s trading window between December 15 and January 20)
Kevin Pietersen – Deccan Chargers to Delhi Daredevils
Andrew McDonald – Delhi Daredevils to Royal Challengers Bangalore
Dinesh Karthik – Kings XI Punjab to Mumbai Indians
Pragyan Ojha – Deccan Chargers to Mumbai Indians
R Sathish – Mumbai Indians to Kings XI Punjab
Harmeet Singh – Deccan Chargers to Kings XI Punjab

Unsold

James Anderson – base price $300,000
Tamim Iqbal – base price $50,000
Adrian Barath – base price $50,000
Ramnaresh Sarwan – base price $100,000
Ian Bell – base price $200,000
Owais Shah – base price $200,000
Upul Tharanga – base price $50,000
VVS Laxman – base price $400,000
Matt Prior – base price $200,000
Brendan Taylor – base price $100,000
Mark Boucher – base price $100,000
Justin Kemp – base price $100,000
Marlon Samuels – base price $100,000
Steven Smith – base price $200,000
Ravi Bopara – base price $100,000
Luke Wright – base price $200,000
Kevin O’Brien – base price $50,000
Dwayne Smith – base price $100,000
Lonwabo Tsotsobe – base price $50,000
VRV Singh – base price $100,000
Vernon Philander – base price $200,000
Fidel Edwards – base price $100,000
Ravi Rampaul – base price $100,000
Peter Siddle – base price $200,000
Tim Southee – base price $100,000
Graeme Swann – base price $400,000
Rangana Herath – base price $50,000
Ajantha Mendis – base price $50,000
Steve O’Keefe – base price $100,000
Xavier Doherty – base price $100,000
Michael Klinger – base price $50,000
Richard Levi base price $50,000
Alviro Petersen base price $100,000
Lendl Simmons base price $50,000
Farveez Maharoof – base price $50,000
Jacob Oram – base price $100,000
Moises Henriques – base price $50,000
Ben Laughlin – base price $50,000
Ryan McLaren – base price $100,000
Nicky Boje – base price $200,000
Jacques Rudolph – base price $20,000
Andy McKay – base price $50,000
Alister McDermott – base price $20,000
Michael Neser – base price $50,000

For the full list of players who had registered for the auction, click here.

IPL 2012 to start, end in Chennai

The fifth season of the Indian Premier League (IPL), comprising nine teams and 76 matches, will begin and end in Chennai, with the opening match on April 4 and the final on May 27. The teams will play each other at home and away during a league phase consisting of 72 games at 12, possibly 13, venues, beginning with the defending champions Chennai Super Kings playing Champions League T20 winners Mumbai Indians.There won’t, however, be any matches in Sri Lanka, the BCCI apparently turning down a suggestion by Sri Lanka Cricket to stage a few games there.The Pune Warriors franchise will host eight games at the new stadium in Pune, subject to its completion. In 2011, Pune had to stage their ‘home’ games at the DY Patil Stadium in Mumbai. Dharamsala and Visakhapatman will also host two games each, and Cuttack is listed as an alternate venue to Hyderabad for two matches.The first Qualifier, which will be contested by the top two teams in the league, and the Eliminator, contested by Nos. 3 and 4, will be held in Bangalore. Chennai will host the second Qualifier, which will be played between the winner of the Eliminator and the loser of the first Qualifier, and the tournament final.The tournament is scheduled to begin 12 days after the Asia Cup final and a week after the end of South Africa’s tour of New Zealand. At present there are three international series that will clash with the 2012 IPL and could affect player availability for both the franchises and the countries. Sri Lanka are hosting England in April, while West Indies host Australia and then travel to England in May.The next player auction for the IPL is scheduled for February 4.

Chilaw Marians, NCC, SSC and Colts reach semi-finals

The Premier Limited Over Tournament Tier A semi-final line-up has been decided with Nondescripts Cricket Club and Sinhalese Sports Club qualifying from Group A and Chilaw Marians Cricket Club and Colts Cricket Club coming through from Group B. The same sides made the semi-finals of the previous season as well.The previous final was washed out with SSC and Colts being declared joint champions. The two teams could meet again in the final this year as Colts take on NCC and SSC clash with Chilaw Marians in the semi-finals. However, the weather could be a factor as the final weekend of matches produced two no-results and four out of the remaining six games were decided on the Duckworth-Lewis rule.The group matches produced some exciting finishes, none more than the Colts v Bloomfield game where Colts scraped through by one wicket, scoring the winning runs off the last ball. Bloomfield, dismissed for 183, fought back to reduce Colts to 148 for 8. When the ninth wicket fell at 175, the match could have gone either way. But last man Sajeewa Weerakoon used all his 16-year experience as a first-class cricketer to stick around with match-winner Chathuranga Kumara (39 not out) to steer Colts home.Two days earlier, Bloomfield had managed to win another thriller by one wicket against Ragama. Chasing 222 for victory, they were cruising at 199 for 5 in the 36th over, but former Sri Lanka legspinner Malinga Bandara snapped up three wickets in nine balls to reduce Bloomfield to 211 for 9. It was left to the last pair of Suraj Randiv and Tyron Gamage to knock off the required 11 runs, for which they took 31 balls amid high tension.The opening match of the tournament had two brothers battling it out as Badureliya took on Tamil Union at the P Sara Oval. Tillakaratne Sampath, younger brother of Sri Lanka captain Tillakaratne Dilshan scored a fighting century to help Badureliya recover from 89 for 6 to 193. But Dilshan, opening the batting, struck a run-a-ball 61 as Tamil Union won by five wickets with more than 15 overs to spare.In Tier B, Sri Lanka Army take on Sri Lanka Ports Authority (formerly Seeduwa/Raddoluwa) while Sri Lanka Navy meet Saracens in the semi-finals. Army made the semi-finals previous season as well.Sri Lanka Air Force, who recruited the services of former Sri Lanka captain Sanath Jayasuriya for their final group match, finished second from the bottom in Group B with a solitary victory. Jayasuriya scored 23 off 22 balls in his debut for Air Force against Ports Authority in a match ruined by rain.The 42-year-old Jayasuriya, a Member of Parliament with the ruling party United People’s Freedom Alliance, was given permission by Sri Lanka Cricket’s tournament committee to change clubs midway through the tournament and he joined Air Force from Bloomfield. He will now represent Air Force for the rest of this season.A board official said that a player could represent a team after only seven days of registration especially if he had been out of the country by producing a copy of his passport confirming the date of arrival in Sri Lanka. Jayasuriya was in the UAE recently as part of the Ten Sports commentary team for the series between Sri Lanka and Pakistan.

Spinners bowl Jamaica to Super50 title

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsFile Photo: Nikita Miller finished with 10 wickets in the tournament•Getty Images

Jamaica have won West Indies’ domestic one-day competition for the first time since 2007-08, beating Trinidad & Tobago comfortably in the final. It was another low-scoring game at Providence, and Jamaica’s captain Chris Gayle used his spinners to dismiss T&T for 118. The batsmen stuttered early in the chase but Tamar Lambert and Shawn Findlay made sure Jamaica got home in the 36th over.Before the spinners choked T&T, Jamaica were given a bright start through two early wickets from Andre Russell, the West Indies allrounder. Russell had Justin Guillen edging a wide delivery to the wicketkeeper in the fourth over and then got William Perkins to mistime an attempted lofted drive to mid-off.Left-arm spinner Nikita Miller was introduced as early as the ninth over and struck in his second over, knocking back Dwayne Bravo’s off stump. Miller had Daren Ganga lbw in the 15th over and T&T were in deep trouble at 30 for 4. Jason Mohammed showed some intent with a couple of fours off Gayle’s offspin and put together 44 runs for the fifth wicket with Sherwin Ganga. Once Ganga was dismissed by Gayle, the rest of the wickets tumbled quickly. Miller picked up another wicket to finish with figures of 12-2-19-3, and legspinner Odean Brown took two wickets as well.The target was a small one but Jamaica were given an early jolt when Kennar Lewis was trapped in front by Sunil Narine off the second ball of the chase. Xavier Marshall was next to be dismissed, lbw to Sherwin Ganga and when Samuel Badree dismissed Gayle, also lbw, Jamaica were tottering at 31 for 3. Danza Hyatt took his time, facing 78 balls for his 29 runs, and got Jamaica back on track. Tamar Lambert was also watchful, scoring 30 not out of 54 balls, and Shawn Findlay finished things with a flourish, scoring the winning runs with a boundary of Sherwin Ganga.

We counted on MacGill to play on – Nielsen

Stuart MacGill threw Australian cricket’s plan for life after Shane Warne into a state of confusion when he retired almost two years earlier than expected, the former national coach Tim Nielsen has said.Nielsen revealed in an interview with ESPNcricinfo that the team expected MacGill to play on until the end of 2009, rather than ending his career in the middle of the 2008 West Indies tour.Such a path would have had MacGill face India, New Zealand, South Africa and then England on the 2009 Ashes tour. Instead, his retirement started a cycle of scatter-shot spin bowling selections that continued unabated for three years, and may only be settling now after Nathan Lyon’s success on his first Test tour in Sri Lanka.Nielsen admitted he was unsure whether in all that time the team and the selectors knew exactly what they were looking for in a spinner.”I just wonder whether we ever clearly understood what role we wanted the spinner to actually play,” Nielsen said. “We came off the Warne era and the MacGill era, MacGill retired in the West Indies in ’08 which was why Beau [Casson] came in to debut.”What really was the issue was we counted on MacGill to play through until the end of 2009 really, and when that changed, it put us under a bit of pressure from a spin bowling stocks point of view, we had young blokes who weren’t quite ready and maybe thrown in the deep end a bit early. At different times there were decisions made that it might actually hurt them more to keep going rather than just yank them out and let them play a bit more Shield cricket.”Having spent most of his career in the shadow of Warne, MacGill became Australia’s No. 1 spinner at the end of 2007 but immediately ran into a range of physical problems, from chronic knee trouble to the damaging emergence of carpal-tunnel syndrome, which robbed him of feeling in his spinning fingers.”MacGill isn’t talked about much but he took 200 Test wickets. By then he was probably older than he needed to be to play every Test match for a couple of years,” Nielsen said. “He’d played a lot of Test cricket by the time he got the opportunity to be the only spinner, he must’ve played 50 Test matches, and he had chronic knees, he’d been around the system for a long time.”What we did do after that was speculate a couple of times, that didn’t quite work out, [Nathan] Hauritz has been pretty good I reckon. Because we’ve had a few spinners in a row it continues to be talked about, and in the background under all that you say is SK Warne. Someone we relied on and loved to have for so long, was no longer there.”It was a hard place to be as a spinner because there was this public expectation of the next Warne and our Test match victories a lot of the time happened with the quicks doing damage in the first part of the game and then Warney cleaning up in the second half. When we didn’t have that sort of option there was pressure put on publicly and I’m sure they felt it themselves, so it wasn’t that easy.”Among the most curious cases in Australia’s spin saga was that of Jason Krejza, dropped only one Test after taking 12 wickets on his debut in India as an aggressive bowler. Nielsen said that looking back, Krejza might easily have been persisted with, though he also highlighted the problem of bowlers learning their trade at Test level because they were not given enough room by their states in first-class cricket.”In hindsight it is easy to say exactly that, we should have stuck with him,” Nielsen said. “The hard part was he was very inexperienced, a bit like us having to pick Hauritz out of the NSW second XI. Everybody yells and screams about the selectors having to pick spinners, well I’d like the states to start picking some spinners as well and sticking with them.”While the selectors can be panned for that, it is bloody hard to go up and learn your caper at the highest level. We need to get these kids in there and give them a run and a chance to get their heads around first-class cricket, and learn. Ideally by the time they get to Test match cricket they’ve been up and down and through the mill a couple of times, and understand how to cope when its not spinning a lot in Perth or its not going that well in Brisbane. They’ve learned by playing there.”

A little longer would have been nicer

Just as a gastronome would moan if Heston Blumenthal served up only one course at The Fat Duck, so too will cricket fans lament the decision to make Australia’s tour of South Africa so brief. Three years ago, these teams delivered the ultimate degustation experience. Over three months and across two continents, they dished up helping after helping of the highest quality cricket, and the final 3-3 score line left viewers simultaneously satisfied and hungry for more.There was the near-record chase of 414 in Perth, completed by AB de Villiers and the debutant JP Duminy. There was Graeme Smith’s courageous return to the crease at the SCG, where he tried in vain to save the Test, batting with a broken left hand and painful right elbow. There was Phillip Hughes’ twin centuries in Durban, in his second Test. Every moment was worth watching.By contrast, a tour consisting of two Tests, three one-day internationals and two Twenty20s will not satiate fans, but it will at least provide a tantalising taste of what the teams can offer. The squeeze has been necessitated by the tight calendar – Australia need to get home by late November for their home Tests – and their next tour of South Africa will include four Tests to compensate.There are still plenty of fascinating elements on the menu. Both teams have new captains since their last meeting, Australia in all three formats, South Africa in ODIs and T20s. Both sides have new coaches, South Africa a former champion player, Gary Kirsten, and Australia a stand-in mentor, Troy Cooley. Australia have slipped to fourth on the ICC Test rankings, a far cry from the battle for the Test mace that occurred last time, while South Africa remain at No.2.Despite the rankings, the teams are close to being evenly matched. Dale Steyn, Morne Morkel and Lonwabo Tsotsobe will provide a fierce challenge to Australia’s top order, but equally the conditions should suit Australia’s attack. They will note with interest that South Africa haven’t won a Test series at home since beating Bangladesh three years ago.Perhaps the most fascinating sub-plot surrounds Mitchell Johnson, who was one of the key antagonists in the drama of 2008-09. In those six Tests he took 33 wickets, second only to Dale Steyn. Johnson broke Smith’s hand with a nasty delivery in Sydney, was unplayable during a fearsome late-afternoon spell at the WACA, swung the ball expertly at the Wanderers and drew blood from Jacques Kallis’ chin in Durban. For good measure, he also scored a couple of half-centuries and his maiden Test hundred.Johnson has failed to hit those heights since. He has slipped back into his old ways, angling the ball across right-handers and hoping they make a mistake. Australia hope a return to South African conditions will turn his form around. They need him firing in an attack likely to feature the bustling but injury-prone Ryan Harris, and the steady but far from frightening Trent Copeland.At least Johnson is – for now – still part of the Test team. The same cannot be said of Marcus North, who impressed with a century on debut in Johannesburg but thereafter proved to be unacceptably inconsistent, Simon Katich, who has been usurped by Hughes, and Ben Hilfenhaus, another new man in that 2009 series who now cannot find a place in the side. Not to mention that Australia have been through five Test spinners since then.South Africa’s personnel list has had fewer changes, the key departures being Makhaya Ntini to retirement and Duminy to poor form in the longer format. It is hard to believe that Duminy never matched the highs of his first two Tests, in Perth and Melbourne, so classy did he appear at the time. The veteran wicketkeeper Mark Boucher remains in the side for now, but could be under pressure as the summer wears on.Not that it is entirely clear who is part of South Africa’s Test outfit at the moment, so long has it been since their last match. They haven’t played a Test since the first week of January, when they drew with India in Cape Town to level the series. And while a break between contests is desirable, nine months without a Test is far from ideal. They have only two matches in which to readjust to the longest format; last time South Africa enjoyed such a lengthy hiatus was after the 2009 Tests against Australia, and in their next series, at home against England, it took them until the fourth match of the series to register a win.Australia are in precisely the opposite situation after their series win in Sri Lanka last month. Some members of the squad, such as Shane Watson and Michael Hussey, have hardly had a chance to sit down between the Sri Lankan Tests, Champions League Twenty20 in India and the limited-overs games in South Africa.The last time an Australian team made back-to-back Test tours without a significant break or a home summer in between was in 1969-70, when Bill Lawry’s side won in India and was then demolished by South Africa. The abbreviated length of trips these days should prevent any similar burnout this time.That will be helped by the schedule, which eases the players in with two Twenty20s and three ODIs. South Africa begin without the injured de Villiers, who is not only the world’s No.2-ranked ODI batsman but is also the newly-appointed captain in the shorter formats. Whether he is fit for the Tests remains to be seen.In the meantime, Hashim Amla has been given the leadership of the Twenty20 and one-day teams. They haven’t played a T20 since January or an ODI since exiting the World Cup in March. Their rust needs to be shed quickly.Australia begin with Cameron White in charge for the T20s, before Michael Clarke takes over for the one-dayers and the Tests. Since taking over from Ricky Ponting after the World Cup, Clarke has proven himself a thoughtful and innovative captain. His men will be more than a match for South Africa.The only shame is the length of the offering, for another months-long degustation would be welcome. Still, a taste of Heston’s snail porridge is better than nothing.

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