Taylor forces underdogs into contention


Scorecard and ball-by-ball commentary

Ross Taylor hoists another six during his Test-best 154 © Getty Images
 

A majestic 154 by Ross Taylor drove New Zealand into a dominant position on the second day against England at Old Trafford. With the visitors squeezing out four late wickets, it is the hosts who are limping, weighed down by that favourites-tag millstone around their necks.After Taylor’s superb hundred provided the backbone to a solid first innings of 381, Iain O’Brien – who replaced Tim Southee for this Test – broke through with an 82mph legbreak to Alastair Cook. Replays suggested the batsman had every right to grumble, but luck and the match momentum were with New Zealand for most of the day. Andrew Strauss and Michael Vaughan then put on a calming 78 in 34.2 long overs before Strauss, who had passed 50 from 125 balls, edged O’Brien to Brendon McCullum, who grasped the most athletic, initiative-seizing of catches low to his left – reminiscent of Alec Stewart’s brilliant snaffle to dismiss Brian Lara at Lord’s in 1995. Daniel Vettori, who turned it square, then had Michael Vaughan trapped in front before Ryan Sidebottom, the nightwatchman, fell three overs before the close.New Zealand owe their dominant position to Taylor, however. No one ever doubted his class and prodigious talents, but pedigrees are habitually unpredictable – as those two reckless innings at Lord’s (19 and 20) proved. The contrast between the rusty Taylor of last week and today’s supercharged (or IPL-charged?) model could not have been more defined. No other New Zealander looked as settled at the crease, and few have the audacity to move to 150 with an expansive six over midwicket. His method is a curious mix of the poise of Martin Crowe (whose record at Old Trafford he beat) and Nathan Astle’s frenzied brutality – but crucially, his hundred today provides much-needed evidence that, under his lid, there lurks a brain. It’s quite a package.Some of England’s tactics were confusing at best, and their fielding lurched from average to embarrassing. Monty Panesar – who turned it square yesterday – was delayed from entering the attack, as was James Anderson who Jacob Oram struggled against yesterday afternoon. In fact Anderson didn’t bowl until 30 minutes before lunch, and it wasn’t due to outstanding bowling from Sidebottom or Stuart Broad. With a strong wind blowing across the ground, Taylor was immediately into his stride with a short-arm bunt through extra cover followed by an audacious cover drive right out of the textbook.

Kyle Mills provided valuable support to Ross Taylor with a Test-best 57 © Getty Images
 

Oram continued to struggle, however, never resembling a batsman fresh from a Lord’s hundred last week. Broad persisted in peppering him with bouncers from around the wicket and Oram responded by swaying, ducking and weaving out of the way, but never was he comfortable. Once Panesar was belatedly introduced, Oram took him on with a skip down the pitch but Panesar beat him in the flight, the ball circling above Anderson at mid-on. He flunked a relatively easy chance, labouring after the ball and failing to even get a hand on it.Oram gifted his wicket four runs later when, on 38, he too laboured as Taylor called him through for a single to point. Cook – whose fielding has improved beyond sight since the Bambi-like figure who debuted two years ago – swooped, threw down the stumps and Oram was a foot short. Worse was to come, however. Two balls later, Vettori ambled through for a single – as though on a Sunday jog – but failed to ground his bat, and Panesar’s throw was sufficiently straight for Tim Ambrose to whip off the bails in time. Vettori’s foot was airborne, and so were England’s ecstatic fielders. New Zealand had slipped to 250 for 6 in the blink of an eye.Taylor needed a partner, and Kyle Mills responded. A streaky edge off Sidebottom was followed by a heave off Panesar. Another carved four off Sidebottom took him past his previous Test-best of 31 before he matched Taylor’s own elegance with two classical off-drives. Taylor’s hundred – his second in Tests – came from 130 balls, while his and Mills’ fifty partnership came up from just 72. The momentum was entirely with New Zealand.Taylor expanded and flourished after lunch, moving from 100 to 150 in 42 breathless balls, smacking four fours and four sixes, the last of which sailed into the top tier of the stand at midwicket. Vaughan was left flummoxed, as depicted by an awful shy at the stumps which missed by several feet, handing five overthrows. Broad matched that effort with a similarly hapless attempt in the next over off Sidebottom, and the same fielder – now stationed at deep midwicket – failed to cling onto a Taylor mow, parrying it over the rope. Sidebottom’s apoplectic rage could be heard ringing around Manchester as New Zealand ran England ragged.The contrast in run-rates between New Zealand, who skipped merrily along at nearly four-per-over, and England (a yawningly dull 2.57) neatly demonstrates whose confidence levels are spiralling, and whose have plummeted. Kevin Pietersen remains not out, and the pitch is a belter, but England have their work cut out.

Pakistan complete whitewash with ten-wicket win at Bulawayo

Pakistan raced to an easy ten-wicket victory over Zimbabwe at Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo soon after lunch on the fourth day of the match. Left 57 to win, they took only 8.3 overs to get there without losing a wicket.Zimbabwe got off to the worst possible start to the fourth day, losing Andy Flower to the fourth ball of the morning without addition to their overnight score of 171 for five. A ball from Waqar Younis jagged back viciously from the pitch to trap him plumb lbw inside the crease. Flower was out for 13 to complete what for him was a disappointing series, with only one fifty to his credit. All hopes of setting Pakistan any sort of belated challenge or achieving a draw, with no rain at all likely, were crushed.Andy Blignaut began confidently, but had an escape when on 7 as slip Inzamam was slow to react to an edge that flew to his left. He continued to live dangerously, but the impression was that his approach was more `let’s have a bash’ rather than `let’s make a fight of it’. Waqar tried to trap him with a few bouncers, and Blignaut pulled him for two fine sixes, and was then dropped near the boundary attempting a third. Waqar may still bowl with tremendous skill, but his once feared pace has gone, especially on this slow pitch.Tatenda Taibu did his part well, and the fifty partnership came up off only 59 balls – of which Blignaut scored 37. Shortly afterwards Zimbabwe saved the innings defeat and went into credit with four wickets remaining. Blignaut immediately threw his wicket away, leaping extravagantly down the pitch, head in the air, to Saqlain and was easily stumped. His 41 came off 32 balls and included two sixes and four fours.Mluleki Nkala continued the fight with Taibu, but was surprised to be given out by umpire Venkat, caught at the wicket for 14, trying to hit Saqlain out of the ground, possibly the first really dubious dismissal of the match. Raymond Price, usually dour in Tests, experimented with the long handle and reached double figures for the first time in Tests before being bowled for 12 by a superb leg-cutter from Mohammad Sami.Henry Olonga held out with Taibu until lunch, after which Pakistan took the second new ball. The last pair did not survive long, as Taibu chipped an easy catch to mid-on for 57, leaving Olonga unbeaten with 3 and Pakistan with 57 to win.A wide and two fours by Taufeeq Umar off the first over, bowled by Olonga, suggested a canter. Price opened from the other end and was hit for four and six by Saleem Elahi, following which Olonga dropped a return catch from Taufeeq. The batsmen dealt mainly in boundaries; the batsmen did not need to run until they scored the 39th run of the innings.When Saleem turned Olonga to leg for the winning run, he had 30 (four fours, two sixes) and Taufeeq 21 (five fours). Pakistan thus deservedly completed a two-nil victory in the series.

Srinath not among probables for ICC Knockout

Fast bowler Javagal Srinath was not included in a list, announced on Friday, of 20 probables for the ICC Knockout Championship scheduled for September in Sri Lanka.After a meeting of the selectors at Mumbai, the complete list was announced to the press. Although there are no other notable exceptions, left-arm spinner Murali Kartik and seamer L Balaji have, with consistent performances for the India ‘A’ side, forced their way into the list.The final squad of 14 is to be announced on August 12.Probables: Sourav Ganguly, Ajit Agarkar, Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar, VVS Laxman, Mohammad Kaif, Yuvraj Singh, Harbhajan Singh, Ashish Nehra, Zaheer Khan, Anil Kumble, Tinu Yohannan, Sanjay Bangar, Parthiv Patel, Ajay Ratra, L Balaji, Murali Kartik, JP Yadav, Dinesh Mongia, Virender Sehwag

Atapattu stars as Sri Lanka strike back at Benoni

Opener Marvan Atapattu scored his seventh one-day century as Sri Lanka kepttheir hopes alive in this five-match series with a seven-wicket victoryagainst South Africa at Benoni on Sunday.Chasing the 253 for seven scored by South Africa earlier in the day, SriLanka’s batsmen finally hit form, eventually coasting past the target with8.2 overs to spare.Atapattu, the vice-captain, finished the game with a straight driven sixhaving scored a brilliant 123 from just 121 balls including 15 fours and onesix.He added 140 runs with De Silva, who also threw off the shackles off poorform with an industrious 71 from 77 balls with 10 boundaries.After humiliating defeats at Wanderers and Centurion, where they were bowledout for 128 and 140, the visitors still trail 2-1, needing to win the lasttwo games to take the series.Crucially, unlike those two games, the tourists survived the initial newball burst from Shaun Pollock and Makhaya Ntini without substantial damage,losing just two wickets: Sanath Jayasuriya (22) brilliantly caught in thegully by the irrepressible Jonty Rhodes and Kumar Sangakkara (10) caught atslip.Atapattu and De Silva then consolidated on a good batting pitch offeringSouth Africa’s fast bowlers no lateral movement whatsoever once the ball had lost its initial hardness.De Silva looked rusty at the start and Atapattu was cautious, but onceestablished the pair rattled along at nearly a run a ball.When De Silva was eventually clean bowled trying to pull a good lengthdelivery from Pollock, Sri Lanka were home and dry needing just 41 runs with13.1 overs remaining.Earlier, Sri Lankan captain Sanath Jayasuriya won his first toss of theseries, raising eyebrows as he bravely elected to bowl first on a flatlooking pitch. But the gamble was justified as Sri Lanka’s bowlers wobbledthe new ball and took early wickets.Chaminda Vaas, playing in his 200th ODI, struck first, winning a diabolicallbw decision from umpire Russell Tiffen against Herschelle Gibbs (0).Medium pacer Chamila Gamage, playing his first game of the series after a kneeinjury to Pulasthi Gunaratne, then knocked back Boeta Dippenaar’s (5)off-stump.Vaas cleaned bowled inform opener Graeme Smith (16) with a delivery that cutback through the left-hander’s bat and pad.Next over, Gamage produced a perfect leg-cutter to have Jonty Rhodes (0) caught at the wicket to leave South Africa tottering on 35 for four.But Sri Lanka were unable to press home their advantage as Kallis, whoexudes aura of invincibility whenever he walks to the crease these days,fought back with a burst of rollicking cover drives.Kallis added 36 with Mark Boucher (14) before the wicket-keeper batsmandragged a short delivery onto his stumps and then 81 from 103 balls withPollock, who scored 39 from 48 deliveries, hitting four boundaries.Sri Lanka paid the penalty for bowling too short after their early successas Kallis and Pollock wrestled away the initiative from the visitors after aperiod of consolidation.When Pollock dragged a short delivery from Jayasuriya straight into thehands of short cover, Lance Klusener helped maintain the momentum, adding afurther 57 off 81 balls with Kallis.Kallis missed out on ninth one-day century when Jayawardene held on to astinging catch at mid-off but that only set the stage for Klusener to statehis credentials for a place in the World Cup.Dropped for the first two games, Klusener had endured a lean spell with thebat and was under severe pressure for his place. But the left-hander seizedhis opportunity with an unbeaten 60 from 57 balls, hitting seven fours and asix, his first fifty in 11 matches.Vaas was the pick of the Sri Lankan bowlers, finishing with two for 39 from10 overs, but Jayasuriya was also economical, conceding just 37 runs in 10overs, the first time he has completed his full quota since dislocating hisshoulder during the Morocco Cup in August.

Security tight as New Zealand arrive in Lahore

High security as the New Zealand squad arrives in Lahore
© AFP

After weeks or will-they, won’t-they, a weakened New Zealand team finally arrived in Lahore for the start of their short tour of Pakistan.The trip, scheduled as compensation following the abandonment of New Zealand’s 2001 tour after a bomb blast in Karachi, gets underway with back-to-back day-night matches at Lahore on Sunday and Monday, with five games in all. Faisalabad hosts the third match on December 3 before the series ends at Rawaplindi on December 5 and 7.There were several high-profile absences in the squad, with four players – Ian Butler, Craig McMillan, Scot Styris and Lou Vincent – withdrawing after receiving anonymous email threats a fortnight ago. Stephen Fleming pulled out after failing to recover from an abdominal injury.The arrival was low-key with the tour party quickly ushered through the airport and onto their hotel, all the time accompanied by a large number of police and army commandos.”We will provide the New Zealand team with full-fledged security,” insisted Adnan Bokhari, the sub-inspector of the Lahore police. “They are our distinguished guests and the security is just like that we usually give to any head of state.” Bokhari added that 2000 police and 150 commandos had been allocated to provide security for the New Zealanders.

Waugh says coin toss result over-rated

Rival captains Steve Waugh and Waqar Younis have contrasting opinions onthe first act of the second cricket Test starting in Sharjah.Waugh, who will playing his 150th game, repeated his mantra as captainthat the toss is “over-rated” and said it would play no part in theoutcome.Waqar, who has captained Pakistan to two crushing wins over the WestIndies at this ground after winning the toss and batting first, said thetoss will be vital.”It will be an important toss because it will be hard to bat later onthe game,” Waqar said.”The wicket gets slower and slower as the days go on.”And this pitch looks a little slower than a normal Sharjah pitch – thislooks more scuffy and might spin a bit more and reverse swing a bitbetter.”With that in mind, Pakistan will take in an extra spinner, DanishKaneria, ahead of medium pacer Mohammad Sami and will expect another bigcontribution from Shoaib Akhtar with his reverse swing speciality.”The guy’s bowling really well .. I’m hoping for him to produce the sameperformance in this game, maybe better,” Waqar said of Shoaib.Australia hasn’t yet decided on its line-up, with the bowling being thehardest puzzle to solve.Off-spinner Nathan Hauritz and pace man Andy Bichel appear to be in ahead-to-head contest to replace the injured Jason Gillespie but Waughhinted Australia would go with a traditional line-up of three pacebowlers plus Shane Warne.”We pretty much know our game plan and we’ve played with a similarattack for a long time – it doesn’t matter too much what the pitch islike we’ll still play our style of cricket – I don’t think we’ll changetoo much,” Waugh said.”I think the pitch going to hold together pretty well … that sort ofpitch suits us, a hard, flat one where you have to work hard and show abit of patience – we play good cricket on that type of wicket.”Australia won the first Test by 41 runs in Colombo to lead the series1-0.

Jammu and Kashmir pile on the runs against Bihar

Centurions Ashwani Gupta and debutant Shammy Salaria forged a 210-run stand, as Jammu and Kashmir reached 502-8 at the end of the second day of their plate group encounter against Bihar. Gupta made 188 not out while Salaria stroked his way to 115 off 172 balls with 14 fours and three sixes to put the visitors in an almost impreganble position in the four-dayer, being played at the Keenan Stadium, Jamshedpur.A fine bowling performance from Venkatesh Prasad, meanwhile, secured visitors Karnataka a handy 56-run lead in their match against Maharashtra, being played at the Nehru Stadium, Pune.In the morning, Karnataka, who resumed at 220-9 extended their total to 252. Dodda Ganesh, who resumed on 35 not out, ended with an unbeaten 59. When the hosts replied, as many as three batsmen – captain Hrishikesh Kanitkar, Abhijit Kale and wicket-keeper Satyajit Satbhai – made 33 each. But the fact that none of them could push on to make bigger scores proved to be Maharashtra’s undoing.In the only other Plate group encounter, Madhya Pradesh remained in the hunt for the first innings lead, replying with 206-5 after Haryana were dismissed for 333. Opener Mudassar Pasha, who made an unbeaten 84 off 206 balls, anchored the visitors reply at Rohtak.Earlier, Amit Mishra missed his maiden Ranji ton by 16 runs. Joginder Singh, the other overnight not out batsman, for his part, made 81.

Reiffel decides to give umpiring a go

MELBOURNE – Having lived the boyhood dream in 35 Tests and 92 one-day internationals for Australia, Paul Reiffel may have found a way to extend his international cricketing career for decades to come.Reiffel and Rod Tucker, a veteran of 103 first-class games for New South Wales and Tasmania, will umpire matches next season as part of an initiative to attract former players.They have been fast-tracked into the system by the Australian Cricket Board (ACB) and will spend 2002-03 mostly officiating in first-grade district matches.”The main thing was getting my head around being an umpire which is not something that you grow up really wanting to be, you want to play,” Reiffel said today.”… but once my playing days were finished I always thought that I wanted to stay involved with cricket and the umpiring avenue is good timing for me.”The 36-year-old Reiffel retired midway through last season as Victoria’s all-time leading wicket-taker.He then dipped his toe in the umpiring pool by officiating in a fourth grade match and found he enjoyed it.”I wasn’t going to start now if I didn’t see myself doing it in 25 years, I didn’t see it as a short term thing,” said Reiffel.”There’s a little carrot dangling there to get back to international cricket and to get out there in front of the crowds again and be involved in the atmosphere that I loved as player.”(But) the main thing is I’ve got to become a good umpire or I won’t go anywhere.”Daryl Harper is the only Australian on the International Cricket Council’s elite umpiring list.Below him the ACB has 26 contracted umpires, from the six men on the national panel down to Reiffel and Tucker on the project panel.The only other with first-class playing experience is Queenslander Bruce Oxenford, a wrist-spinner who played eight games for Queensland in the early ’90s.England is widely believed to produce the best cricket umpires and it is also the country which attracts the most former players such as Peter Willey and David Shepherd.India’s Srinivas Venkataraghavan is another former Test player who has successfully made the transition.”I think having first-class experience will help that relationship, I’ll certainly know what the players are going through,” said Reiffel.”Hopefully once I get experienced in umpiring I might be just one step ahead of the players because I know what’s about to happen.”Reiffel said his time as Victorian captain taught him when to step aside from his teammates and when to be one of the boys.And when it comes time to report a player for misconduct, Reiffel will have experience in that area as well.He was fined $200 after disputing the umpire’s decision to give Queensland captain Stuart Law the benefit of the doubt when it appeared he had been caught in the slips in the pivotal moment of the 2000-01 Pura Cup final.”It was a pressure-packed game and things happen,” Reiffel said today, before adding diplomatically, “the umpires are always right.”

Likes and dislikes ruining cricket team's performance

With talent in abundance, Pakistan cricket team which is perhaps the best on paper in the world looks demoralised because of the total mess in the management.The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), is being run simply on personal whims of the establishment totally ignoring the potential of the players and selection or appointment of team officials who are simply either incompetent or have no say whatsoever in its functioning or policy making decisions. Whatever may be the reason, in nutshell the team’s performance is proof enough of all-round deterioration.The team’s performance at Tangiers (Morocco) and Nairobi in the just concluded tri-nation competition exposed the intentions and calibre of all those who are associated with the team and those who are at the helm of affairs. The responsibility cannot be put only on the team management or the establishment. If one cares to do postmortem of the recent events, which is a must and if someone cares to improve the things, it is evident that there is unnecessary interference from some quarters which is adversely affecting the team’s performance.The role in the overall performance of the team shows that personal likes and dislikes is governing the policy of the PCB. If national interest is dear to anyone, this factor should never be allowed to creep in. The problem is that it has become the governing factor. Those who talk of merit are living in a fool’s paradise at least in the present PCB setup.Every move of the establishment is manoeuvred which has plagued the board. Nobody in the PCB seems to be sincere or loyal to the game. If there would have been sincere people, they would not have allowed sports vultures to hang around. What is the contribution of individuals like Zakir Hussain Syed to cricket. He was offered a lucrative job of secretary, Asian Cricket Council and unconfirmed reports suggest that a situation is being created to adjust him somewhere in the PCB hierarchy.Presence of a few shady characters in Morocco has given new dimensions to rumours that Pakistan lost some of the matches in Tangiers under suspicious circumstances. May be someone sensing rift in the team and being present on the scene made full use of the situation.The Kenya episode, which resulted in Yousuf Youhana being sent home was the overflow of happening in Morocco which was covered up under the guise of fitness problem of the batsman. Can the PCB explain how come Youhana went for an MRI test without the consent of the team doctor. It was all doctored and nothing else.The present PCB setup has a set plan to have only ‘yes’ men or paid employees who dare not raise their finger on any issue. It adopted the policy of having paid selectors and perhaps the PCB chief himself was the worst sufferer when his yes men dare not pinpoint the fault of Junaid Zia’s bowling action. The result was that Junaid was called for chucking on four occasions. Team coach Haroon Rasheed failed to show any wisdom by not pointing out the problem with Junaid’s action after the first call. But, Haroon was more interested in his bread and butter than anything else.The present chairman of the selection committee, Wasim Bari, a gentleman cricketer, just cannot afford to put his foot down and at times he is not even aware of team selection. The PCB is in dire need of men of the stature of Haseeb Ahsan who despite having best relations with the then BCCP chief, Air Marshal (Retd) Nur Khan refused to select, player of the calibre of former Pakistan captain, Imran Khan, purely on medical grounds and stepped down, totally ignoring his relationship with Nur Khan.When Haseeb toured England with the Pakistan team as manager, the British press which is always out to run down visiting teams was perhaps most respectful. Then we have a man in Naushad Ali, who is a clean man and has managed the Pakistan team, is a former Chairman of the Selection Committee and a former ICC match referee with good reputation.But such people cannot be inducted in the board as they are men of principle and would work with full freedom without any interference. Nobody can doubt their credibility and credentials. There are some other people but they do not suit the present management who want to meddle in everything and are responsible for the present mess up.The latest action of the PCB in retaining Shoaib Malik and sending back Azhar Mahmood is simply disgusting. Shoaib Malik is being rated as a better off-spinner than Saqlain Mushtaq and a better batsman than Saeed Anwar. So much so that the PCB toyed with the idea of promoting him as an opener. Shoaib Malik scored two hundreds in one-dayer which gave boost to the manipulators to promote him in the batting order.The whole effort fired back as whenever he went to open the innings he played dot balls, resulting in increased pressure on the team. He only wanted to secure his place in the team caring hoots for the team interest. He failed as a bowler when in three matches he just bowled one over for 15 runs. In the last match against Australia he scored 37 from 94 balls which totally belied the PCB hierarchy’s doctrine.If anyone from Nairobi had to be sent home, it should have been Shoaib Malik, the worst performer on the present form and not Azhar Mahmood who has been declared unfit, a reasoning which is hard to challenge as neither the player nor the team doctor will support for obvious reasons.Those who follow the game must be surprised with the way the present management is handling Shahid Afridi, who holds the world record of scoring fastest century in one-day. The team management is toying with his batting position. He has batted at No. 3, 5, 6, 8, 9 and last time he was sent to open the innings. Can anybody in his senses ever make such decision unless there is some motive behind it.Misbah-ul-Haq, who has been unlucky in the past at last got a chance when the team management was left with no option and he slapped in the face of the establishment by scoring 50, 39 and 50. What was the team of so many experts travelling with the squad doing all along. All the team officials should be kicked out and fresh team of management should be inducted. But nothing will change as long there is interference from the top. Unless everyone who is given a particular assignment has a free hand which at the moment seems impossible. What has been the benefit of specialist, trainers imported from Australia for batting, bowling and fielding.Pakistan sports in general and cricket in particular is on decline and one cannot expect any improvement unless we do away with the politics of regionalism, nepotism and ‘sifarish’ and work with the sole aim of promoting national interest, keeping personal interest at a distance. No doubt it is easy to preach than practice but nothing is impossible if there is sincerity and loyalty to the nation which should not be compromised.

Steffan Jones pays tribute to 'Banger'

The morning after appearing for Wales in their historic victory over England at Cardiff, Somerset fast bowler Steffan Jones was in buoyant mood when I spoke to him.He told me: "It was a really great day for Wales and for me, and I’m very pleased with my performance. It gave me a chance to show Duncan Fletcher how well I can bowl in one day cricket."The Welshman continued: " This is the start of my season now, after struggling for several weeks with an injury. I bowled quickly at the start , and then bowled again at the death, I was pleased with my figures of 1 for 27 off 9 overs. This was a big occasion for me and a shop window to show the England management just what I can do."I asked about the catch that dismissed his Somerset team mate Marcus Trescothick. He told me: "I caught him out at third man off Andrew Davies. One of the Welsh boys said that `Banger’ looked round after he hit the ball, saw it was me and gave a smile."Steffan paid tribute to the way that the acting England skipper had reacted at the end of the game. He said: "Banger was very gracious in defeat, and came across to us all and said well done. When the winning run was hit I wasn’t on the field, but Banger grabbed one of the stumps and gave it to Steve James to give to me. I really appreciated that."He concluded: "Now I’m back to full fitness I am looking forward to making a real contribution for Somerset."