Azhar and Sohail make 81 each on attritional first day

Azhar Ali and Haris Sohail summoned the spirits of what had made this Pakistan side so hard to beat on UAE soil

The Report by Danyal Rasool24-Nov-2018Stumps Haris Sohail drives•Getty Images

Azhar Ali and Haris Sohail summoned the spirits of what had made this Pakistan side so hard to beat on UAE soil, channelling it right through the middle session to take the wind out of New Zealand sails. After an opening session where the bowlers had bullied Pakistan for two hours, the pair’s obstinacy began to pay dividends as the pitch flattened out and the ball wore down. Spanning almost 61 overs and spread across all three sessions, the pair gritted out a 126-run partnership. It helped Pakistan end an attritional day at 207 for 4, the scoring rate of 2.30 suggestive of the toil archetypal to Tests in the UAE.The pair came together in the tenth over after New Zealand made short work of Pakistan’s openers with the new ball. Azhar was the more forceful of the two during the partnership, doing well to have unclouded his mind after the heartbreak of Abu Dhabi. But if one player in this Pakistan team can be counted upon to show mental fortitude, it is him. Making the most of an early reprieve, once he settled down he was close to impregnable. He used his feet well against the spinners; Ajaz Patel in particular was not allowed to settle. A glorious six over long-off off the man who had sealed New Zealand’s victory in the first innings would have felt like sweet revenge, if only a few days later than he really needed it.Haris’ effort at the other end was more attritional, though no less commendable. He found it harder to keep the runs ticking, but seems to have that invaluable trait of setting some store by his wicket. As such, he never appeared to be in danger of throwing it away as the pressure mounted, confident in seeing it through to the phase where the situation would be more fertile to quick runs. That time came, somewhat, in the final session but what was more important was he saw his side right through to stumps, looking almost comfortable against the second new ball even as Babar Azam at the other end was wobbling. 81 of 240 balls may not be on many highlight reels, but if you watch Test cricket in the UAE, chances are you’d look past the highlights, where you would find Haris towering over today’s proceedings.If it didn’t strike as characteristic of Pakistan to have gutsed out a partnership with discipline, rigour, and resoluteness in the post-Misbah era, the mode in which that Azhar-Haris partnership ended was despairingly, delightfully Pakistani. For 361 balls, New Zealand had toiled without reward, and Pakistan had dug deep showing scant concern for the run rate. But this marathon effort would end with a run-out, confusion between the hapless Azhar and Haris ending the former’s remarkable resistance just 19 runs from his first century since Misbah and Younis retired.Asad Shafiq’s dismissal was soft, typical, arguably, of the temperament that has held him back all through his career. A pointless slog against Patel to a ball he got nowhere near the pitch of caught his edge and found Neil Wagner at short third man, and until Babar’s adroit resistance, a surfeit of wickets was looking on the cards.In the morning session, Trent Boult had built the pressure while Colin de Grandhomme reaped the rewards. At the toss, which New Zealand lost, Williamson had made clear his desire to pad up first, but a miserly bowling effort from his side meant runs were tightly controlled as Pakistan battled merely to keep the visitors’ feet off their throats. Only 56 runs were scored in the whole of the first session as Pakistan lost both openers early on. Azhar and Haris had been able to fend off New Zealand from further denting Pakistan while the pitch still retained some moisture and the ball some shine.De Grandhomme was assisted capably by Boult, who gave nothing away from the other end while regularly hissing past both outside edge and the stumps. Mohammad Hafeez looked jittery and out-of-form as it was, but against Boult and de Grandhomme, he was effectively a walking wicket. The ever-unplugged bat and pad gap nearly brought about his downfall, and pokes outside off evinced edges. It was only a matter of time before one from de Grandhomme carried through – just – to Tom Latham, putting the 38-year-old out of his misery. With 66 runs from six innings since a hundred against Australia, Hafeez is once more reminiscent of the player Pakistan sought to move on from a few months ago.Imam-ul-Haq evoked memories – not in a nice, nostalgic way, mind you – of Imran Farhat in the Pakistan whites, nudging and flashing outside off just when the opening bowling pair were swinging it away from him. He was reprieved once as early as the fourth over, when he drove de Grandhomme on the up with no foot movement. It was just as well he had flashed hard; the ball flew to Latham, who had no time to react.It proved only a momentary stay of execution. Imam fell in exactly the same manner to the same bowler, who hung another one outside off stump. It was too much temptation for Imam to resist as he hung his bat out at it, leaving the rest to a very busy Latham at the slips.That Azhar and Haris had managed to hold New Zealand off before lunch seemed pivotal at the time, and with both of them continuing the resistance right the way through to the final session, it could be one of the lessons they gleaned from the agony of Abu Dhabi. The coach Mickey Arthur had lamented Pakistan’s failure to press home the advantage with the bat. So far, it looks as if Azhar and Haris had been listening intently.

Lawrence leads fightback after Abbott's six

ECB Reporters Network20-Sep-2017Kyle Abbott ripped through Essex to bowl the Specsavers County Champions out for 76, before Dan Lawrence and Ravi Bopara helped them back into the game, having been made to follow on, with patient half-centuries as the visitors led Hampshire by 30 runs at the end of day two.South African fast bowler Abbott ended with figures of 6 for 20 as Essex collapsed to their lowest score of the season. Essex began the day on 33 for 5 after Abbott and new-ball partner Fidel Edwards had sparked a collapse.Abbott needed just four morning deliveries to add to his two wickets on the previous evening, when he sent Lawrence’s off stump cartwheeling. Essex captain Ryan ten Doeschate had reached 26, the highest score in the innings, but became Abbott’s next victim as he was struck on the pads.The former Test quick then celebrated his fourth five-wicket haul since re-joining Hampshire at the beginning of the season as he hit Simon Harmer on his back pad plumb in front of the stumps. The very next ball Neil Wagner was adjudged lbw to a ball pinging back at him, but Jamie Porter unconvincingly blocked the hat-trick ball.Ian Holland wrapped up the innings when James Foster was lbw – Essex scoring below 100 for the first time in three seasons and completing their lowest score since they were bowled out for 20 in 2013.That left them 178 runs behind Hampshire – who were seeking victory to confirm their place in Division One for the 2018 season.After being asked to bat again, Varun Chopra gloved Gareth Berg behind to spark worries of a repeat of the first innings for Essex. But Nick Browne and Tom Westley put on 43 for the second wicket in a watchful manner to begin a turn in fortunes.Browne fell lbw to a sharp Liam Dawson turner, while Westley was attempting to press his case for Ashes selection with a well-judged innings before smashing a caught-and-bowled back to Dawson on 36.At 81 for 3, Essex were still 97 runs behind Hampshire, but Lawrence and Bopara partnered up to bat their side towards safety. Lawrence had got off the mark with a six over midwicket, but attacking shots were at a premium as he scored his half century in 115 balls.After moving into the lead, and a century stand, Bopara collected his 48th first-class fifty from 106 balls. With stumps called early due to bad light, the fourth-wicket stand was unbroken on 127 and Essex had the chance to at least set Hampshire something in the fourth innings.

Notts make quarter-finals after Smith seals chase

Notts Outlaws secured their place in the NatWest T20 Blast quarter-finals with a six-wicket win over Birmingham Bears at Edgbaston

ECB Reporters Network22-Jul-2016
ScorecardIan Bell top-scored for Birmingham with 80 not out from 55 balls•Getty Images

Notts Outlaws secured their place in the NatWest T20 Blast quarter-finals with a six-wicket win over Birmingham Bears at Edgbaston.The Outlaws are through with a game to spare and assured a home quarter-final after a solid all-round display but Birmingham have work still to do to reach the last eight.After their fourth defeat in five North Group games, the Bears must now win their last match, away to Lancashire Lightning next Friday, to be sure of going through.Put in, Birmingham accelerated after a slow start to amass 172 for 2, built around a stand of 116 in 79 balls from Ian Bell (80 from 55 balls) and Will Porterfield (61 not out from 44).Notts’ chase was given a sound platform by Michael Lumb (34 from 25) and Riki Wessels (37 from 28). Dan Christian (37 from 23) kept up the momentum and Greg Smith (52 not out from 31), improvised brilliantly to see them home with five balls to spare.Birmingham made a sedate start with the first three overs yielding 11 singles and five dot balls. Bell upped the ante with two sixes in four balls from Harry Gurney and Jake Ball but the latter struck back by trapping Sam Hain lbw.Birmingham reached halfway on only 66 for 1, Samit Patel having bowled three overs for 20 and, as Bell and Porterfield sought to accelerate, the spinner returned to deliver the 15th over for just three off the bat.Bell reached his half-century from 42 balls with four sixes and, curiously, no fours and Porterfield followed to his from 37 balls (four fours, two sixes). Their stand equalled the Bears’ T20 second-wicket record, (116, set by Jim Troughton and Darren Maddy against Northants Steelbacks at Edgbaston in 2010) before Bell chipped Harry Gurney to mid-on.Porterfield ended with an unbeaten 61 but, with quite a short boundary on one side, it was a target that Notts fancied.
Wessels, dropped on 7 by Bell at mid-off off Rikki Clarke, and Lumb added 74 in 52 balls before both perished in three balls from Keith Barker, Lumb blazing to extra-cover and Wessels hoisting to mid-off.Tight overs from Clarke and Jeetan Patel kept Birmingham in the game and Notts started the last six overs needing 61. However, Christian made a big dent in the required rate with two sixes and a four off Ateeq Javid and Smith timed the pursuit to perfection to take his side over the line with a 30-ball half-century.

Last chance for Associates to seal WT20 berth

ESPNcricinfo previews the two World Twenty20 Qualifier playoff matches on Thursday

Peter Della Penna in Malahide22-Jul-2015

Afghanistan v Papua New Guinea

The hunters have become the hunted at this year’s World Twenty20 Qualifier, and nowhere is that more evident than in the case of Afghanistan. A group-stage loss to Oman in Scotland has now been followed by their first ever loss to Hong Kong in T20 cricket.Afghanistan must now win against Papua New Guinea on Thursday, or be left home for next year’s World T20 in India. The pair of losses for Afghanistan coincided with strike bowler Hamid Hassan being out of the line-up after taking six wickets in the first three games. His possible return may galvanise the team in the field, but if he can not go again, PNG will be very much in the contest.On the batting side, Samiullah Shenwari has been relatively quiet since scoring 44 and 30 not out in the team’s first two wins over Netherlands and UAE to start the qualifiers. He is one of only three batsmen in the side, along with opener Mohammad Shahzad and captain Asghar Stanikzai, to pass 100 runs for the team. Najibullah Zadran has the capacity to devastate in the middle alongside Shenwari, but his aggression has backfired in the two losses to Oman and Hong Kong, scoring just 2 and 5. Shenwari and Najibullah must back up the good starts laid at the top.PNG flew out of the gate with three straight wins, including a stunner over Group A favourites Ireland in Belfast. However, having three games scheduled back-to-back in Dublin clearly took its toll on the team. After a straightforward win over Nepal to kick off that stretch, they were beaten by Namibia. A tired bowling and fielding effort against USA followed, and it cost them a chance at the top spot and an automatic berth to India.The one positive to finishing fourth on net run-rate behind Hong Kong and Namibia despite being equal on points, is that they got three days to rest instead of one. A fully charged PNG unit will be a handful for Afghanistan to deal with, and will help close the talent gap between the two sides.On the whole, though, PNG’s batting unit has struggled. The team’s highest individual score has been 34, made by both Assad Vala and Tony Ura. Only once have PNG had a fifty-plus stand in the whole tournament, between Vala and Ura against Namibia, tied for the fewest in the tournament. If it were not for the No.10 batsman Norman Vanua’s four sixes against Ireland, they may not even be in this game. The batting needs to pick up the slack to have any chance against Afghanistan’s bowlers.

Namibia v Oman

An Oman win against Namibia will make them the lowest ranked team to qualify for a World Cup•ICC/Donald MacLeod

After blowing two chances to qualify for the World T20 in 2012, Namibia tripped up again on Tuesday against Netherlands. The tournament’s most explosive batsman, Gerrie Snyman, was run out before facing a ball while fellow opener Stephen Baard, the tournament’s leading scorer, fell for single digits and from there, Namibia had little chance against a clinical Netherlands outfit.Of Namibia’s five highest partnerships during the tournament, four have involved Baard. He is arguably more crucial to Namibia’s hopes of putting up a defendable total than Snyman just for his consistency.Bernard Scholtz almost single-handedly kept Namibia in the match against Netherlands with his slow left-arm spell of 3 for 13. He now has 13 wickets in the tournament, but lack of support from the seamers continues to be a problem hindering Namibia’s performance on the field. To make matters worse, JJ Smit left the field during the Netherlands chase with what appeared to be a rib injury. If he can not go on Thursday, more responsibility will fall on Jason Davidson and Sarel Burger to pick up the slack with the ball.Oman currently sit in World Cricket League Division Five and have a global ranking of 29th, which pits them seventh among Asian Associates behind even Singapore and Malaysia, who sit in Division Three. If Oman were to continue their remarkable journey through this tournament with a win over Namibia, they would become the lowest ranked team to qualify for a World Cup.Foremost among their heroes in Scotland is allrounder Zeeshan Maqsood. In their first win of the tournament over Canada, Maqsood raced to an unbeaten 86 off 41 balls, a knock which Oman technical consultant Derek Pringle told ESPNcricinfo was Chris Gayle-esque. He also took 4 for 23 in the 40-run win over Afghanistan.But Maqsood has not done it alone. Slingy fast bowler Munis Ansari’s 4 for 15 against Netherlands reduced them from 134 for 5 to 135 all out. No.3 batsman Jatinder Singh then struck an unbeaten 65 not out to round out their first shock win before sucker-punching Afghanistan. If Oman can outlast Namibia on Thursday, it would make a fantastic fourth win and a spot in India will be theirs.

Mishra gives Haryana first win over Delhi

A round-up of the fifth round of Ranji Trophy’s Group B matches on December 4, 2012

ESPNcricinfo staff04-Dec-2012
ScorecardLahli, near Rohtak, produced a thriller again as Haryana beat neighbours Delhi for the first time in the Ranji Trophy in the closing moments of the final day. It was also Haryana’s first win of the season after three successive losses on the same ground. Their captain Amit Mishra made a crucial fifty and took four wickets in the second innings but it was offspinner Jayant Yadav who ended the Delhi innings just as Haryana were about to run out of time. Haryana resumed on 167 for 6 and Mishra’s 74 helped extend the innings to 209, and set Delhi a target of 293.Delhi began at a reasonable pace of scoring but lost too many batsmen to get close. Mohit Sharma started it all, bowling Unmukt Chand second ball. Shikhar Dhawan and the other Mohit Sharma got starts but could not carry on. Mithun Manhas and Rajat Bhatia tried to steady the innings in a 68-run stand but Mishra removed Bhatia and Puneet Bisht in three deliveries. It was now a question of how long the tail would last. Mishra dealt the decisive blow when he had Manhas caught for 73, and four overs later, Yadav trapped last man Vikas Mishra in front to end the innings on 209.
ScorecardTamil Nadu declared their first innings and ended up conceding the lead for the second time this season. It had happened against Karnataka, and it happened against Vidarbha in Nagpur today. Resuming on 214 for 2 in pursuit of Tamil Nadu’s 443 for 8, Vidarbha were jolted by a double-strike from L Balaji, who bowled Hemang Badani for a duck and Faiz Fazal for 143. Vidarbha were 282 for 5 at that stage, but their captain Ranjit Paradkar and Shrikant Wagh hit fifties to earn three points. Vidarbha did not declare once the lead had been gained, and batted for 181 overs to make 566 for 8 before the game ended.
ScorecardMaharashtra put in a solid batting performance in the second innings to take a point in Sambalpur against hosts Odisha. Harshad Khadiwale, Sangram Atitkar, Ankit Bawne and Chirag Khurana hit half-centuries while Lagnajit Samal picked up all four wickets to fall today. Odisha had already assured themselves of three points with their 126-run first-innings lead and the match was called off shortly after tea. Odisha are now just one point behind group leaders Uttar Pradesh.

IPL 2012 to clash with West Indies schedule

The 2012 IPL will be the longest edition of the tournament yet and will clash with a number of international tours, most notably Australia’s tour of West Indies in April and West Indies tour of England in May

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Oct-2011The 2012 IPL will be the longest edition of the tournament yet and will clash with a number of international tours, most notably Australia’s tour of West Indies in April and West Indies tour of England in May. Pakistan are also scheduled to play international cricket during the event, which will be played from April 4 to May 27, but their players have not been part of the IPL since the inaugural tournament in 2008.The BCCI approved the dates of the tournament on Friday and West Indies, with their traditional home season falling in March and April, will once again have to find a way of coping without players who want to play in the lucrative Twenty20 league. According to the ICC’s Future Tours Programme, West Indies host Australia for three Tests and five ODIs in March and April, before heading to England to play three Tests, three ODIs and a T20I in May and June.Former West Indies captain Chris Gayle, who starred for Royal Challengers Bangalore in the 2011 IPL, and allrounders Kieron Pollard and Dwayne Bravo were given No Objection Certificates by the West Indies Cricket Board to play in the tournament this year. Pollard missed the ODI series against Pakistan while Bravo missed the Tests to turn out for their IPL franchises Mumbai Indians and Chennai Super Kings. The Gayle situation is further exacerbated because he is involved in a standoff with the board over his decisions to play domestic T20 events around the globe, and has not played for West Indies since the World Cup.The Australia players who have IPL deals will be free to join the league mid-way, as they did this year after their ODI series against Bangladesh. However, England’s players will once again find themselves at odds with the IPL, since the West Indies series starts on May 1. That could discourage franchises from bidding for players from England, should they be part of a player auction next year.Pakistan are scheduled to welcome Bangladesh in April and May for two Tests and three ODIs, after which they are due to tour Sri Lanka for three Tests, five one-dayers and two T20Is. Pakistan’s visit would require Sri Lanka’s international players to leave the IPL early, something that became a contentious issue in 2011 for Sri Lanka’s tour of England.

Taylor ton leads West Indies win

A round-up of the action from the ICC Women’s Cricket Challenge where West Indies, South Africa and Pakistan all recorded victories

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Oct-2010

ScorecardStafanie Taylor’s century set up a crushing win•International Cricket Council

Former captain Stafanie Taylor blasted West Indies to a 148-run win over Netherlands on the opening day of the the ICC Women’s Cricket Challenge in Potchefstroom.Opening the innings after Netherlands captain Helmien Rambaldo won the toss and put West Indies in, Taylor thrashed 147 from 141 balls to launch West Indies to an imposing 283. In contrast the Netherlands chase never got going as they were restricted to 135 for 8 from 50 overs.Taylor received able support from Stacy-Ann King who made 22 in an 80-run stand for the fourth wicket but it was the following 113-run stand with Deandra Dottin that carried West Indies out of sight.Dottin shot to prominence when she became the first woman in history to score a Twenty20 international hundred – which she made off 38 balls – against South Africa in the World Twenty20 earlier this year and she was in typically aggressive form in this game, reaching 59 from 58 balls. The standout innings, however, came from Taylor who smashed 15 fours and a six before falling in the penultimate over.The total was always going to be beyond Netherlands but their approach seemed more concerned with survival than at giving themselves a chance of victory. Esther Lanser top-scored with 39 at the top of the order, but her innings, which came off 92 balls set the tone.Rambaldo’s 27 was the only other score of note as the rest of the line up struggled to get to grips with the West Indies attack. Dottin made her good day even better by picking up 2 for 15 from her seven overs of medium pace as Netherlands crept to 135 for 8 to finish well short.

ScorecardSouth Africa thrashed their Sri Lankan counterparts by 153 runs – rolling them out for 75 after battling to 228 on the North-West University No2 Ground.The spin pair of Dane van Niekerk and Sunette Loubser were the chief destroyers, taking four wickets each to help inspire a collapse from 50 for 2 to 75 all out in 10.5 overs. Just three players reached double-figures, Chamari Polgampola top-scoring with 25 at the top of the order. The 4 for 13 that 17-year-old legspinner van Niekerk finished with was her best figures and she now has 15 wickets from seven ODIs.What was barely a contest in Sri Lanka’s chase was more of a tussle in the South Africa innings. Captain Cri-zelda Brits anchored the innings with 78 from 108 balls. At 131 for 3 it looked as though a big total would be built but Polgampola struck back with three wickets to help reduce South Africa to 189 for 7 by the time Brits fell.Yet Loubser and Shabnim Ismail rallied to take the score to 228. It meant that Brits’ knock, which featured six fours, was not wasted and allowed enough for the bowlers to surge to victory.

ScorecardPakistan gave their country’s cricket fans some much-needed cheer by thrashing Ireland in their opening match of the ICC Women’s Cricket Challenge in Potchefstroom.Opting to field they made light work of the Ireland line-up, bundling them out for 116 in 31.5 overs. Only three players made reached double- figures as Asmavia Iqbal took an impressive 3 for 17 from nine overs. She was ably backed up by Kanwal Naz who took 3 for 18 with her left-arm spin.Jill Whelan top-scored for Ireland, striking three boundaries in her 18 before being run-out. All around her the Ireland line-up came and went in a procession leaving a simple chase for Pakistan.Whelan followed up her relative success with the bat by taking the first wicket in the second over of Pakistan’s chase but that only brought Nain Abidi to the crease. She laid a sound platform alongside Javeria Khan in a 50-run second-wicket stand and despite two more wickets falling, Abidi held firm to reach an unbeaten fifty and seal the victory.

Mascarenhas replaces Malinga at Tasmania

The England allrounder Dimitri Mascarenhas will replace Sri Lanka’s Lasith Malinga for Tasmania’s Twenty20 campaign this season

Cricinfo staff16-Nov-2009The England allrounder Dimitri Mascarenhas will replace Sri Lanka’s Lasith Malinga for Tasmania’s Twenty20 campaign this season. The Tigers announced in July that they had signed Malinga but Sri Lanka’s international commitments in January have forced the state to change their plans.”When Malinga was first signed we knew this was a possibility,” David Boon, Cricket Tasmania’s cricket operations general manager, said. “Although it is disappointing, we have a suitable back-up player in Dimitri Mascarenhas who will arrive in Hobart during December.”Mascarenhas, 32, was raised in Australia and has played club cricket in Melbourne and Perth, but this will be his first taste of state cricket in Australia. A regular member of England’s Twenty20 international side, Mascarenhas will offer Tasmania powerful striking and medium-pace bowling.Malinga is not the first Sri Lankan star to sign for the Big Bash only to later become unavailable – South Australia have already gained and then lost Ajantha Mendis, who was replaced by Pakistan’s Shahid Afridi. Victoria are yet to make an announcement on Muttiah Muralitharan, who had agreed to play for the Bushrangers.Each state is allowed to sign two international players for the Big Bash, which runs from late December to January. Chris Gayle has signed with Western Australia, Dwayne Bravo with Victoria, while Kieron Pollard and Afridi will play for South Australia.

Healy cleared to resume keeping but tight schedule could be a challenge

In-form Georgia Voll is likely to be kept out of the XI while England wait on the fitness of Kate Cross

Valkerie Baynes11-Jan-20252:25

Charlie Dean: We don’t have as many Ashes scars in this team

Alyssa Healy will resume wicketkeeping duties for Australia in the Ashes series opener, Sunday’s first ODI against England in Sydney.But Healy, Australia’s captain who has been nursing a knee injury since mid-November, admitted that a tight schedule of seven matches – including a four-day Test – in the space of 22 days might mean some rotation of personnel through the series, which starts with three ODIs followed by three T20s.”Yeah, good to go,” a beaming Healy told reporters of her ability to keep after a practice session at North Sydney Oval, less than 24 hours before the series start at the same venue.Related

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“Probably I’d be lying if I said there wasn’t any doubt, in particular off the back of a rough couple of months, but everything’s progressed probably just as well as we would have hoped. I’m feeling really good.”More importantly, I’m feeling really confident on it to be able to get out there and do that job. I wouldn’t be doing it if I felt like I was going to let the team down. I’m really excited to get back out there tomorrow.”Healy has endured a tough run with injury since October, when she ruptured the plantar fascia in her in her right foot while running between the wickets during Australia’s group game against Pakistan at the T20 World Cup.She then suffered a knee problem while playing for the Sydney Sixers in the WBBL, ruling her out of Australia’s home one-dayers against India and she played as a batter only on the subsequent ODI tour of New Zealand with Beth Mooney standing in behind the stumps for both series.On Saturday, Healy trained with the gloves alongside Mooney at slip with Georgia Voll, the 21-year-old opening batter who impressed on international debut against India in her place, feeding balls off the bat.Voll has 173 runs at 86.50 and a strike rate of 108.80 from her three ODIs, including a century in just her second game against India. But Healy’s recovery leaves Australia with just one selection choice to make between quick Darcie Brown and Georgia Wareham as an extra spinner.Having proved herself such a valuable option at the top of the order, including fifty opening alongside Healy in the washed-out Ashes warm-up between England and a Governor General’s XI, Voll could slot in at any time Healy needs to rest though.Alyssa Healy will be back behind the stumps at the start of the Ashes•Cricket Australia/Getty Images

“It’s a valid question, and I don’t know the answer to that just yet,” Healy said when asked if she had recovered enough to play all Ashes fixtures. “I think it’s just going to depend on how I pull up after each and every opportunity.”But obviously we know we’ve got a pretty handy back-up that’s ready to do the job, and I know that I can run around in the field quite confidently as well, so we’ll just play it by ear. From my perspective, I’d love to be out there keeping every game, but we’ll just have to see how the body goes.”England have one key decision to make over their bowling line-up depending on how dependable seamer Kate Cross pulls up from their match-eve training session after battling a back injury. Cross broke down with back spasms during last month’s tour of South Africa and scans subsequently revealed a slightly bulging disc that required an epidural over the Christmas period.”Obviously Crossy’s struggling a little bit with a back issue, she’s going to have a little bowl today and we’ll make a final decision once we’ve had a look at the wicket and seen where everyone’s at post-training,” Heather Knight, England’s captain, said on Saturday.England have a number of seam options including Lauren Bell who returned from South Africa with 12 wickets, eight of those in the Test, and Lauren Filer, whom Knight backed to provide an added dimension with her speed despite struggling with her footing on a soggy North Sydney pitch during the warm-up game, which Knight put down purely to the conditions.”The bounce that she gets and the speed that she bowls at is really tricky,” Knight said of Filer, who surprised the Australians with her speed on her international debut in the 2023 Ashes Test, where she took two wickets in each innings. “Facing her in the nets is not a particularly pleasant experience, I’ll tell you that, and I think since that 2023 series she’s really grown.”She’s improved her consistency, she’s added a few skills to her game as well. She was really raw in that series and really made an impact so she’s one of a number of bowlers that are going to contribute throughout this series.”She’s certainly someone that bowls wicket-taking balls and that’s what we want her to do. Accepting sometimes she’s going to go for runs, that’s completely fine, that’s not her job. Her job is to come in and take poles and try and ruffle a few feathers so I’m excited to watch her bowl for sure.”England XI (possible): Tammy Beaumont, Maia Bouchier, Heather Knight (capt), Nat Sciver-Brunt, Danni Wyatt-Hodge, Amy Jones (wk), Alice Capsey/Sophia Dunkley, Charlie Dean, Sophie Ecclestone, Lauren Bell, Lauren Filer/Kate CrossAustralia XI (possible): Alyssa Healy (capt, wk), Phoebe Litchfield, Ellyse Perry, Beth Mooney, Annabel Sutherland, Ashleigh Gardner, Tahlia McGrath, Alana King, Kim Garth, Megan Schutt, Darcie Brown/Georgia Wareham

Former Otago allrounder Sam Wells appointed New Zealand's selection manager

He replaces Gavin Larsen, who had stepped down in March after almost eight years in the role

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Sep-2023Former Otago allrounder Sam Wells has been appointed New Zealand’s selection manager, taking over from Gavin Larsen ahead of the start of the upcoming domestic season. Wells, who has also been a selector for Otago, will work alongside head coach Gary Stead, who is also New Zealand’s chief selector.Wells, 39, played 61 first-class and 43 List-A games for Otago as well as two first-class matches for New Zealand A, in a career that started in 2007-08 and ended in 2016-17. He was even called up to the Test squad in January 2012, though he didn’t get the chance to make his international debut. After his playing career ended, Wells was a selector for Otago A, before taking over as convenor of selectors for Otago during the 2022-23 domestic season – all this while continuing to practice law in Dunedin.”Sam’s playing and selecting experience, combined with his communication and legal skills presented a compelling case,” NZC GM High Performance Bryan Stronach said. “He’s well-versed in running robust processes, where a variety of information and opinions are brought to the table to be considered – and that’s ultimately the role of the national selection manager.”While Gary will ultimately make the final decisions as the chief selector, we want Sam preparing him with as much intel as possible, and then challenging his thinking and decisions.”Larsen, who Wells succeeds as selection manager, had stepped down from the post this March, after almost eight years in charge.Wells’ role with the senior New Zealand side will be full-time in the summer but with reduced hours in the winter, with him starting officially on October 16.”I’m hugely passionate about cricket in this country, and to be given the opportunity to contribute at the highest level is an honour and a privilege” Wells said. “As a player, I always appreciated direct and honest communication from selectors, and that’s what I will endeavour to bring to this role.”

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