أشرف قاسم: إمام عاشور يُريد الأهلي لـ3 أسباب.. و"كوبري" ميتلاند شطارة إدارة

علق أشرف قاسم نجم الزمالك السابق، على احتمالية انتقال إمام عاشور لاعب ميتلاند الدنماركي الحالي، للنادي الأهلي، خلال فترة الانتقالات الصيفية.

وترددت أنباء بقوة عن اقتراب النادي الأهلي من حسم صفقة انتقال إمام عاشور، بعد عودته إلى مصر وعدم سفره إلى ميتلاند عقب انتهاء إجازته، رغبة منه في العودة للدوري المصري.

وقال أشرف قاسم في تصريحات عبر برنامج “كورة كل يوم”، على قناة “الحياة”: “من الجانب الاحترافي طبيعي يحدث في أي مكان أن يتفاوض ناد لضم أي لاعب من ناديه، ويتحدد الأمر بناءً على رغبة اللاعب نفسه”.

طالع أيضًا | سيد معوّض: الأهلي سيحاول الاحتفال بلقب الدوري ضد الزمالك.. وسعر إمام عاشور مُبالغ فيه

وتابع: “رغبة اللاعب لا بد أن تُحترم، إمام عندما كان لاعبًا في الزمالك كان مميزًا، وأنا مع سعي أي ناد لتدعيم صفوفه، وأعتقد أن رحيل حمدي فتحي سيقرب إمام عاشور من الأهلي”.

وأضاف: “الأهلي عنده مدخلات مادية من خلال كأس العالم للأندية ودوري الأبطال والرعاة، ويستطيع دفع قيمة إمام عاشور لنادي ميتلاند”.

وأردف: “من البداية كان خطأ من الزمالك بيع إمام عاشور، لأن الفريق كان يحتاجه، لكن موضوع الانتماء والوفاء انتهى منذ زمن، اللاعب يُفكر حاليًا في أن الأهلي يتوج بدوري الأبطال ويلعب في كأس العالم للأندية، بالإضافة إلى حصوله على راتبه بانتظام، عكس ذلك يحدث في القلعة البيضاء”.

واختتم: “إمام عاشور يُفكر في الانضمام للأهلي لكي يتواجد في منتخب مصر، واللاعب واضح وصريح أنه يريد الانضمام للمارد الأحمر، ولو انتقاله من الزمالك لـ ميتلاند (كان كوبري)، فهذه شطارة من إدارة الأهلي”.

BCCI unlikely to impose life ban during meeting

The BCCI working committee, which will meet in Chennai on Sunday, is unlikely to impose a life ban on the four cricketers allegedly involved in spot-fixing. The emergent working committee was called to discuss the implications of the involvement of Sreesanth, Ankeet Chavan, Ajit Chandila and Amit Singh in the spot-fixing controversy.While some may perceive it as inaction, the working committee’s decision is influenced by a constitutional clause. According to the board’s constitution, a life ban cannot be imposed on a cricketer, who breaches the players’ code, for 30 days after an internal inquiry committee is constituted. “Taking that into account, it would be unjust to ban the players for life before the formal and internal investigations are completed,” a BCCI functionary told ESPNcricinfo, preferring anonymity. “That doesn’t mean the BCCI is taking the matter lightly. Immediately after Delhi Police arrested these cricketers, the Board suspended all of them pending inquiry.”If the BCCI acts in haste and bans players against the provisions of their constitution, the decision can be challenged in court.Apart from briefing all the working committee members on the information passed on by Delhi Police, one of the key matters on the agenda will be to ratify the appointment of Ravi Sawani to lead the one-man inquiry commission. Sawani, head of BCCI’s newly formed anti-corruption and security unit (ACSU), had been appointed to investigate the matter, IPL chairman, Rajeev Shukla said on Friday. The BCCI constitution gives its president the right to appoint an inquiry committee, provided the working committee ratifies it within 48 hours.Sawani has been invited to attend the meeting along with the ICC’s ACSU chief, YP Singh. Since the BCCI’s ACSU is in its nascent stages, IPL’s anti-corruption activities have been outsourced to ICC’s ACSU for an annual fee of approximately US$1.2 million. The BCCI top brass is inclined to review ACSU’s mechanism. It is learned that the board officials will attempt to identify the loopholes in IPL’s security and discuss means to improve mechanisms that prevent players from being approached by bookies.With the BCCI facing criticism from all corners for ignoring the player-bookie nexus and allowing the fixing syndrome to grow rapidly, their decision to discuss the issue in detail with the ICC ACSU, and not question them, may be viewed as an exercise to pass the buck. But a BCCI source clarified that it was a “genuine attempt” to make the system as foolproof as possible to restore the credibility of the game.Hours after the Royals players were arrested in Mumbai in the wee hours of Thursday, a day after their match against Mumbai Indians, the BCCI suspended all three cricketers pending inquiry. The decision came even before the Delhi Police publicly revealed the evidence collected against the cricketers. On Friday, after realising that former Royals and Gujarat cricketer, Amit Singh was arrested as a bookie, the BCCI suspended him as well.

سكاي: ناديان سعوديان ينافسان برشلونة على ضم أوباميانج

دخل ناديان سعوديان في منافسة شرسة مع برشلونة من أجل محاولة ضم مهاجم الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي تشيلسي، بيير إيمريك أوباميانج، في الميركاتو الصيفي.

وتسعى أندية السعودية لتدعيم صفوف فرقها قبل انطلاق الموسم المقبل مع وجود كريستيانو رونالدو في النصر واقتراب تعاقد اتحاد جدة مع كريم بنزيما ورغبة الهلال في ضم ليونيل ميسي.

وبحسب شبكة سكاي سبورتس ومتخصص سوق الانتقالات، فابرزيو رومانو، أن ناديي أهلي جدة الذي يدربه مدرب الأهلي المصري السابق بيتسو موسيماني، والشباب، يرغبان في التعاقد مع أوباميانج بعروض مادية رائعة ولكن أولوية اللاعب هي ارتداء قميص برشلونة مرة أخرى.

اقرأ أيضًا.. رئيس أهلي جدة يفسر سبب عدم الاحتفال بدوري يلو ويثير الشكوك حول مستقبل موسيماني

أوباميانج هو أحد الأسماء التي تتواجد على طاولة الصفقات المحتملة في برشلونة، كما يرغب الجابوني الدولي في العودة مرة أخرى إلى “كامب نو” ولكن أزمة النادي الكتالوني الاقتصادية قد تحول دون ذلك.

كان أوباميانج يريد العودة في يناير الماضي بسبب فقدان مركزه مع تشيلسي منذ انتقاله في الميركاتو الصيفي الماضي، لكن إدارة البلوز رفضت الأمر.

بينما يبدو أن الشيء الوحيد والواضح في الوقت الحالي أن أوباميانج سيغادر تشيلسي لأنه ليس ضمن خطط النادي المستقبلية مع المدرب، ماوريسيو بوتشيتينو.

إلى جانب العروض السعودية، هناك رغبة من نادي إنتر ميلان أحد طرفي نهائي دوري أبطال أوروبا في التعاقد مع لاعب آرسنال السابق، بالإضافة إلى عرض أمريكي في مرتبة أقل.

Teams demand less gruelling Ranji schedule

The captains and coaches of all the domestic teams in India demanded more time between Ranji Trophy matches during the annual captains and coaches’ conclave that was held on Tuesday in Mumbai

Amol Karhadkar05-Mar-2013The captains and coaches of all the domestic teams in India were unanimous in demanding more time between Ranji Trophy matches during the annual captains and coaches’ conclave that was held on Tuesday in Mumbai. This was one of the many suggestions put forth at the conclave that was also attended by technical committee chairman Anil Kumble, BCCI president N Srinivasan, secretary Sanjay Jagdale and Ratnakar Shetty, general manager, cricket development.The 79th edition of the Ranji Trophy was played by 27 teams that were divided into three groups of nine teams each. The number of matches played was also more than previous seasons. In about two months, every team played eight games and, except for a week-long break at some stage, teams often played four-day games with a break of only three days in between. The scheduling not only affected the fitness of players but also resulted in some teams opting for a first-innings lead instead of trying to gain an outright victory.For the BCCI, scheduling remains a tricky aspect, given that a plethora of domestic tournaments are played in a limited time frame. However, Kumble assured teams that their concerns would be addressed.One of the options the technical committee and the fixtures committee may explore is to introduce a four-day gap between matches at least in the latter half of the league stage. “We could have some matches played after a gap of three days, while others could have a four-day break in between. We will have to see how it works,” Kumble told reporters after the two-hour meeting.Former India left-arm spinner Sunil Joshi, who has been coaching the Hyderabad team for the last two seasons, endorsed Kumble’s suggestion.”Ideally, every team would want at least a break of four days before every game but since it’s practically difficult to implement, it would help a lot if the teams got longer breaks in the latter half of the season,” Joshi said. “The fatigue starts creeping in as the tournament progresses. That is where the additional break can be helpful.”While Bengal coach WV Raman suggested that both captains and managers should be asked to submit their assessment of the wicket after every match, a section of coaches felt the teams needed extra motivation to go for an outright victory rather than settling for drab draws after attaining the firstinnings lead. “We have seen several instances of teams opting against enforcing a follow-on, despite gaining a big first-innings lead, and opting to bat on instead. If an additional point is rewarded for enforcing the follow-on, it could make such games more interesting,” Joshi said.Another suggestion, which was backed by almost everyone present at the meeting, was to stage the Ranji Trophy knock-out games at neutral venues.”There was a suggestion and the technical committee will discuss the issue during its meeting,” Kumble said.Mumbai coach Sulakshan Kulkarni suggested that the Vijay Hazare Trophy, the national limited-overs championship, also be staged in a format similar to the Ranji Trophy. While the Ranji Trophy is played in a three-tier league stage followed by knock-outs, the Vijay Hazare Trophy starts with a zonal league that covers five regions. The two top teams from each zone then progress to the national knock-outs.”It pits the same teams against each other in the preliminary stage, like the old Ranji Trophy format,” Kulkarni said.The suggestion, however, is unlikely to be implemented. “It will be a logistical nightmare,” Kumble said.Some of the teams raised concerns over umpiring standards. The major concerns centred around the decision-making abilities of umpires and uniformity in judging the quality of light during matches. “Everyone went by their own experiences and made their suggestions. The teams who were affected expressed their concerns. But the overall standards of umpiring have improved,” Kumble said.The suggestions will now be discussed in detail by the technical committee which could meet in the third week of March, according to Kumble.

Ben Stokes is 'moving forward', says Chris Silverwood, but unlikely to form part of England's Plan B

Bowling attack will rely on “supreme accuracy” in absence of Jofra Archer, Olly Stone firepower

Alan Gardner10-Oct-2021England will have to fall back on Plan B in Australia – and that is not ‘B for Ben Stokes’, with head coach, Chris Silverwood, stressing that no timeframe has been put on the talismanic allrounder making his comeback.In the two years since Silverwood took over from Trevor Bayliss with a brief to regain the Ashes, England had dedicated much of their planning to having a group of 90mph fast bowlers – Jofra Archer, Mark Wood and Olly Stone – ready to deploy in Australia. But with Archer and Stone ruled out by elbow and back problems respectively, as well as Wood’s well-documented fragility, Joe Root’s attack will prioritise “supreme accuracy” in their attempts to regularly take 20 Australian wickets.Silverwood believed England will be “very competitive” after picking what amounts to a full-strength squad, given the expected absences of Stokes, Archer, Stone and Moeen Ali, who retired from Test cricket last month. Only three of England’s top-order batters have played Tests in Australia before, and although Root is currently ranked No. 1 in the world by the ICC, the next-highest in the squad is Rory Burns at No. 24.Stokes’ return would strengthen England in all departments and it is not impossible that he could join the tour at a later date. For now, Silverwood stressed that the player’s mental well-being remained the priority, as he continues to work back to fitness after another operation on his finger earlier in the week.”Ben is moving forward, the communications I have had with him he is definitely more upbeat,” Silverwood said. “But what I will say is there will be no pressure from me for him to rush back. I’ve said, ‘When you’re ready, you call me and we’ll make a plan from there’. So there’s no pressure from me and no date on it.Related

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“I’m not going to tell him when he comes back. I’ll be led by him and my concern first and foremost is his well-being. And when he does come back we’ll make sure he’s in the right place.”Although the loss of Archer, who shook up the 2019 Ashes by taking 22 wickets at 20.27, was a particular blow to England, they have capable fast-bowling stocks to draw on. Ollie Robinson’s first summer in Test whites could scarcely have gone better – historical social media indiscretions aside – and he will look to provide key support to the veteran pair of James Anderson and Stuart Broad, who is set to return to bowling at Loughborough next week after a torn right calf ruled him out of three Tests against India.England can still call on Wood’s pace, even if his workload is likely to be managed. With Chris Woakes, England’s player of the summer in 2020, having previously made steps to improve his record with the Kookaburra ball, and Craig Overton, whose fighting spirit was one of the few highlights of the 2017-18 Ashes tour, impressing on his return to Test cricket in the win over India at Headingley, Silverwood remains upbeat.”I think we can [take 20 wickets],” he said. “Every plan has got to be adaptable. We have got one 90mph bowler in there in Woody. But I think the one thing that we have got in the bowling attack is supreme accuracy. You look at the bowlers that are there and the one thing they are very good at is hitting the stumps and bringing the stumps into play time and time again. We watched how India performed in Australia [last winter] and we tried to learn lessons from them.”I am very curious as a bloke so I am constantly watching, as are my bowling attack. What we will be doing is looking back over the plans India used and adapting any of those to our bowling attack. How do we get the best out of the bowling attack we have got rather than worrying about what we haven’t got? There is nothing we can do about that so it’s pointless. We will be using the skills we have in the best possible way and I do believe that we can make it work.”I think we’ll be very competitive, we look at the fact Australia have been very strong over the years and we have to respect them. But we have over the last 6-7 months played the top two teams in the world, learned a hell of a lot. We look at India, how do they go about their business? There is a strong belief we can [also] do something very special. They’ve shown a game plan that was successful over there and so we will be learning from them.”Ollie Robinson was England’s standout fast bowler during the summer•Associated Press

After making strides as a Test team between 2019 and early 2021, England will head for Australia having won just one of their last nine – beaten heavily in India and at home against New Zealand, then trailing 2-1 before India’s withdrawal from the Old Trafford Test last month. By contrast, Australia’s Test team has barely played, with just a home defeat to India on their record since January 2020. Despite a tough recent run, Silverwood was happy with his team’s preparation.”I think we are battle hardened, we’ve had some success along the way and we’ve proven we can compete with India. The important thing for me is our players have seen what the best in the world look like, they’ve played against it, they’ve felt what it is to have them push against us. We’ve also tasted success against them, look at the Headingley Test when we came back very strong, which showed that we have got the skills within the ranks to take 20 wickets and push the best. So I see that as a real positive, a real galvaniser to the group, to better handle pressure now that they see it more and more, which is great.”Silverwood also praised Root for the “class and empathy” he had displayed during lengthy and at times tense negotiations with Cricket Australia about the conditions England would tour under, before the ECB gave a tentative green light for the tour last week.”His players have got behind him and will follow him, so will I and my staff,” Silverwood said. “I think we’ve got to a good place before what should be a very competitive series in Australia.”It is an iconic series, every young cricketer growing up wants to play in it and as a coach, they want to coach in it. It is massively exciting that this series is going ahead, that we are at the point that everyone is committed and we are all going. I think the mindset now will shift towards performance. That’s how it has got to be. I will be speaking to the players and the staff and making sure when we turn up in Australia, whether that be the red-ball specialists and the Lions who arrive first or the multi-format [players] arriving from the World Cup here, we will make sure we are in the right mind space to come out there and compete.”

Zaheer centre of attention on attritional day

For a moment, it seemed from afar as déjà vu for Zaheer Khan. In July 2011, when India took on England at Lord’s, he made an early impact with the ball but walked off the field due to what was later revealed as a hamstring injury. He subsequently underwent an ankle surgery and did not play competitive cricket for more than four months. Now, a day before India’s squad for the first Test against England is to be picked, he ran in to bowl the fifth ball of his 21st over, got the ball on target but, terminated his follow-through abruptly, clutched his groin, walked back to the umpire to pick up his cap, had a brief chat with a couple of players and returned to the dressing room.However, Ajit Agarkar, the Mumbai captain, said later that Zaheer had been cramping but was expected to take the field on Monday. “He was just cramping badly. It suddenly got a little humid, the last couple of days, probably dehydrated a little bit,” he told reporters at the end of the day’s play. “He should be okay, he should be on the field tomorrow morning.”On a day that he bowled almost 12 overs, looked in rhythm and also probed the batsmen, questions over Zaheer’s fitness took centre stage during the final session, and for a while overshadowed a fight put up by Railways in response to an intimidating score. They finished on 380 for 8, with three batsmen hitting half-centuries; the lower order also made Mumbai work hard for their wickets, and got to within striking distance of avoiding the follow-on.Agarkar said Zaheer was in good shape and that 20 overs bowled across a day and a half were good preparation for someone about to play a major Test series. “There is a Test match at the back of his mind, you want to get yourself ready, bowl as many overs,” he said. “Sure he would have liked a few more wickets but I think 20 overs is a fair workout under your belt as a bowler. You need overs going into big games. Not that he was just turning his arm over. He was obviously trying to get his lines, lengths and rhythm right for the coming Test series. Over the course of the Tests, conditions weather-wise are going to get better so this is probably the toughest workout he’ll have.”The trigger for the uncertainty over his fitness was his absence for five overs after the tea break. But he made his way onto the ground and fielded inside the circle, mostly at extra cover against the two left-hand batsmen in the middle and waited six more overs before being called on to bowl. When given the ball, he asked a few questions, even rapping the batsman on the gloves off a delivery he held back. But at the point of bowling the fifth ball, he prompted further curiosity with his immediate decision to retire to the dressing room.Zaheer, who had bowled nine overs on the second day and had a catch dropped off his bowling, kicked things off on the third. After bowling a few in the channel outside off, he moved to round the wicket, banged the ball in hard, occasionally got it to nip away but Sanjay Bangar and Nitin Bhille, both of whom hit fifties, played him patiently. Zaheer’s first spell of five overs cost just nine runs, and included a boundary driven through mid-off by Bhille.Zaheer returned for his second spell of the day immediately after Abhishek Nayar had broken through to remove Bangar, who was involved in a century stand with Bhille for the third wicket but fell playing a loose drive to extra cover. The pair had again targeted Ramesh Powar, who for the bulk of his bowling spells over two days went for more than six runs per over. Zaheer was called on to bowl the 51st over, for a short spell of 12 deliveries. He got Bhille to edge one towards Rohit Sharma at slip, only for the ball to drop short, but was also driven, again, through mid-off. Mumbai, with Bangar dismissed, opted for spin from both ends during the hour before lunch.Zaheer didn’t have to run too much on the field on the third day, fielding at fine leg, at times at long-off and even inside the circle. As Mumbai shuffled their bowlers, using Powar, Iqbal Abdulla, Nayar, and Agarkar, who had Bhille caught at slip, it wasn’t until the 81st over, when the second new ball was taken, that Zaheer was brought back on.Though he was negotiated well by the Railways batsmen, he got his way past Mahesh Rawat in the third over of his third spell. With the new ball deviating slightly, Rawat tried to drive through extra cover but was caught behind for 68.Against the new man Murali Kartik, who came in at 263 for 6, Zaheer had four slips and a gully, but was counter-attacked. Kartik pulled and then punched him through extra cover for boundaries. But Zaheer bowled through to tea, completed a four-over spell that cost 13 and produced a wicket.Kartik and Ashish Yadav combined for a half-century stand of their own. They, too, scored off Powar and by the time Zaheer was asked to bowl the 99th over, the offspinner had gone for 126 runs in 24 overs. A small Sunday crowd at the Wankhede had much reason to celebrate when Sachin Tendulkar took two catches, one a well-judged skier at mid-off, to dismiss Kartik and Yadav. This, before Agarkar emerged from the dressing room following the close to answer questions that pertained more to the condition of a fellow fast bowler than his own – Agarkar himself had been off the field for a while due to a calf strain.

Pietersen out of World Twenty20 squad

Kevin Pietersen has been omitted from England’s 30-man squad for the ICC World Twenty20, apparently ending chances of a limited-over return

George Dobell18-Jul-2012Kevin Pietersen has been omitted from England’s provisional 30-man squad for the ICC World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka later this year, despite his insistence that he was available for the event. The announcement suggests Pietersen is unlikely to end his premature retirement from limited-overs internationals in the near future.Pietersen, who was player of the tournament when England won the WorldT20 in the Caribbean in 2010 – the only global trophy they have ever won – has always maintained his desire to play in England’s defence. Last week he said he would also be open to an ODI return if his schedule could be lessened. “I would love to play for another three or four years in all forms of cricket,” he said.Under the terms of England central contracts, a player cannot be considered for one format of the limited-overs game unless they are available for both. While Pietersen’s comments suggest he is prepared to play all formats, the England management still consider him ‘retired’ as he remains reluctant to commit to the team’s full schedule.Andy Flower, the England team director, responded to the news that Pietersen’s representatives were in talks with the ECB by saying that the situation had not changed and that a return was unlikely. He appears to have got his way, with Alex Hales, who scored 99 on his return to the T20I side against West Indies in June, likely to continue as opener.The final squad will be cut to 15 by August 18, ahead of the start of the tournament in mid-September. England’s first game will be against Afghanistan on September 21, with India also in Group A. While there is scope for players outside the 30 to be named in the final 15, it can only happen in exceptional circumstances. That usually means injury.While there is no place for Pietersen, there are recalls for England’s ODI captain, Alastair Cook, Ian Bell, who has recently made a successful return to the ODI side, Michael Lumb, who opened for England in the Caribbean in 2010, and Gareth Batty, who enjoyed a good domestic T20 season with Surrey. Joe Root, the young Yorkshire batsman, is also included for the first time, as is Lancashire’s Steven Croft, alongside other young players such as Ben Stokes, James Taylor and Jos Buttler.Matt Prior, England’s Test wicketkeeper who has continued to impress in limited-overs cricket at domestic level, is also an intriguing selection and offers a potential alternative to Craig Kieswetter.Provisional squad Stuart Broad (capt), James Anderson, Jonathan Bairstow, Gareth Batty, Ian Bell, Ravi Bopara, Scott Borthwick, Tim Bresnan, Danny Briggs, Jos Buttler, Alastair Cook, Steven Croft, Steven Davies, Jade Dernbach, Steven Finn, Alex Hales, Craig Kieswetter, Michael Lumb, Stuart Meaker, Eoin Morgan, Graham Onions, Samit Patel, Matt Prior, Joe Root, Ben Stokes, Graeme Swann, James Taylor, James Tredwell, Chris Woakes, Luke Wright

Derbyshire's Needham calls time on playing career

Jake Needham has retired from professional cricket after asking to be released from the final year of his contract with Derbyshire

ESPNcricinfo staff28-May-2012Jake Needham has retired from professional cricket after asking to be released from the final year of his contract with Derbyshire. The county have accepted his request, ending Needham’s six-year stay.With first-team chances very limited – his final appearance was in the first half of 2011 – he has decided to explore opportunities in the financial services sector, while working in a part-time role with Derbyshire’s media and marketing department. He has also been appointed captain of Ockbrook and Borrowash, who play in the Derbyshire Premier League.In 2006, he was the first player from the Derbyshire academy to be offered a professional contract after making his first-team debut in 2005 against Essex at Derby. His found more opportunities in the one-day arena, playing 56 limited-overs matches and taking 34 wickets with his offspin.”I felt it was the right time for me to look at a career outside county cricket,” Needham said. “It is, therefore, with great optimism and enthusiasm that I take a position working behind the scenes with the club. Karl Krikken and the rest of the club have been fantastically supportive throughout this period and I would like to thank them all sincerely.”I’ve been involved with Derbyshire since playing junior cricket at the age of 11 and it’s no secret that I have a great affection and affinity for the place and the people. I am, therefore, relishing the chance to help the club in any capacity possible.”Needham played twice for England Under-19s in 2006, before making the bulk of his Derbyshire appearances in 2007 and 2008. He spent last season captaining the second XI.

Shaun Marsh struck down by gastro

Australia are confident Shaun Marsh will be fit to play the third Test against India despite being struck down with gastro

Brydon Coverdale09-Jan-2012

Shaun Marsh has had a lean series with the bat•Getty Images

Australia are confident Shaun Marsh will be fit to play the third Test against India despite being struck down with gastro. Marsh flew home to Perth on Sunday following Australia’s victory in Sydney and he was scheduled to speak at a media conference on Monday, but was unable to do so due to his illness.The Australian squad was due to convene in Perth on Monday afternoon ahead of the Test, which begins on Friday at the WACA, where Australia will be aiming to take a 3-0 lead. Michael Hussey, a fellow Western Australian, said Marsh would be keen to play his first Test at his home ground.”I’m sure he’s fine,” Hussey told reporters in Perth. “He’ll be at training tomorrow I’m sure with the boys and preparing as well as he can. He’ll be really looking forward to playing on his home ground. His first home Test. The WACA crowd always give the local guys a huge welcome and a louder roar than any other player, so he’s got plenty of motivation to play exceptionally well in this Test.”Marsh has had a lean time in the first two Tests, with scores of 0, 3 and 0 in the victories in Melbourne and Sydney. It was quite a change from the first three Tests of his career: he made a century on debut in Sri Lanka in September, followed by 81 in his second Test and a fighting 44 in Cape Town, where he provided the only serious support for the captain Michael Clarke during his century.However, a serious back complaint that he picked up in Cape Town sidelined Marsh for the next six weeks, and he returned to the Test side after just one Twenty20 match for the Perth Scorchers. But Hussey believes Marsh can regain his best form on his home ground at the WACA, where he has averaged 45.02 in first-class cricket.”I wouldn’t be surprised if he performs very well in this Test match,” Hussey said. “He prepares very well with his training leading up to games. It’s always tough when you have been out of the game for over a month to be able to come straight back into Test match cricket and perform straight away.”It does take a bit of time, but he has been working very hard and he’s been hitting the ball very well in the nets. So it’s just a case of him being able to get through that first half an hour of his innings and then if he gets a start, I’m sure he’ll want to turn it into a big hundred.”Marsh has been trusted with the No.3 position after Ricky Ponting’s move down to second drop, although the New South Wales batsman Usman Khawaja is hovering on the fringes should Marsh continue to struggle at home. Australia’s coach, Mickey Arthur, said Marsh had been tentative in Melbourne and Sydney but that he was worth persevering with at the top of the order.

USA prevail in thrilling one-run win

A round-up of the action from the fourth match-day of the ICC Women’s World Cup Qualifier in Bangladesh

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Nov-2011

Khadiza Tul Kubra took 6 for 32 in Bangladesh’s win over Ireland•ICC/ Mainoor Islam Manik

USA Women beat Zimbabwe Women in a thrilling encounter in Mirpur, prevailing by just one run. A contribution of 72 off 89 balls from wicketkeeper Shebani Bhaskar was the backbone of USA’s score of 188. Bhaskar was the seventh wicket to fall with the score on 144, but Anahita Arora and Sara Farooq added a further 44 to lend some respectability to the total.USA didn’t do themselves any favours by bowling too many extras in the chase but made up for that by picking up wickets. The highest score in the Zimbabwe response was an unbeaten 28 from Christabel Chatonzwa; six batsmen in all reached double-figures. There were 33 extras in all, but the wickets fell in quick succession at the same time. At 172 for 7 in the 46th over, it was still Zimbabwe’s game but seamer Triholder Marshall and a couple of run-outs at the death clinched the game for USA. Marshall picked up three wickets, was involved in a run-out in the 48th over of the game while Bhaskar sealed the win with a run-out, catching Sharyce Saili short with two needed for victory. Zimbabwe will rue the fact that they lost the game with seven balls to spare with a set batsman at one end.Ireland Women slipped to their third defeat of the competition, losing to Bangladesh Women by 95 runs in Savar. They managed to restrict Bangladesh to 209 for 7 in an innings that included five run-outs. Opener Suktara Rahaman made 47 while captain Salma Khatun led the way with 73. As it turned out, the score proved more than sufficient. Ireland were in a good position at 68 for 1 in the 17th over but the innings soon fell apart. Offspinner Khadiza tul Kubra dismissed top-scorer Cecilia Joyce for 44 and finished with six wickets as the rest of the Ireland line-up failed to offer any significant resistance. They were bowled out for 114.West Indies Women preserved their position at the top of Group B by thrashing Japan Women by 10 wickets in Fatullah. Stafanie Taylor starred with the ball this time, taking 5 for 13 as Japan were bowled out for 71. In response, the win was sealed in 16.3 overs, the openers Kycia Knight (24*) and Britney Cooper (36*) seeing West Indies through. Japan bowled 15 wides.South Africa Women’s new-ball pair of Shabnim Ismail and Moseline Daniels demolished Netherlands Women for 36 to help their side to a whopping 233-run win in Savar.South Africa chose to bat and all their top and middle order got into double figures to set-up a competitive total of 269 for 5. Mignon du Preez and Cri-Zelda Brits top scored with 65 and 63 respectively. Offspinner Esther de Lange was the pick of the Netherlands’ bowlers, with figures of 10-1-45-3. Netherlands got nowhere close in their reply. Ismail struck in the first over, and went on to claim a career-best 6 for 10. Daniels also put on a career-best performance, picking up the other four wickets for 25 runs. Just one of the Netherlands batsmen managed to get into double figures: No. 5 Esther Lanser remained unbeaten on 11 as her team crumbled around her.

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