Counter-attacking Lehmann tees off in hopeless situation for Redbacks

A badly inconvenienced Darren Lehmann produced an astonishing counter-attacking innings but Queensland continues to hold most of the aces over South Australiaafter day two of the Pura Cup clash between the sides at the ‘Gabba in Brisbane today.There was the spectacular clatter of wickets today that a green-tinged pitch had failed to produce after the Queenslanders were invited to bat first yesterday. But notbefore the Bulls had established a position of command on the back of a 145 run partnership for the fourth wicket between Stuart Law (87) and Andrew Symonds(85). Both players were at their authoritative best this morning as they took their team from the overnight mark of 3/229 to 3/322 shortly before lunch.It was probably a measure of Queensland’s dominance of the South Australian pace attack again this morning that it took the unlikely figure of Shane Deitz (2/17) to finallyinspire a Redback recovery in this match. Deitz is an emerging batsman, and part-time wicketkeeper. But he is not highly regarded, it is fair to say, as a leg spinbowler. So when the twenty-five year old snared the wickets of both Law and Symonds inside the space of eight deliveries to disrupt their association and thentrigger a collapse, it had an ironic touch about it.The last five wickets tumbled for twenty-nine runs as Brett Swain (4/96), Paul Wilson (1/46) and Mick Miller (1/62) finally crashed through a tame Queenslandlower order. Swain was, in fact, on a hat-trick at one stage after claiming Lee Carseldine (5) and Brendan Creevey (0) with successive deliveries.But, having reached a score of 378, the Bulls were already in a sound position. And it didn’t take long for them to thoroughly consolidate their advantage.By stumps, the visitors had collapsed to the grisly predicament of 8/110 – still 268 runs behind and holding little hope of avoiding the ignominy of following-ontomorrow. In spite of a debilitating hamstring injury that left him severely incapacitated, Lehmann (56*) smashed the attack late in the day to provide some glimmerof a recovery. But not before Adam Dale (3/33), Joe Dawes (2/34) and Creevey (3/42) had ripped through the Redbacks’ line-up in an astonishing display.The pace bowling trio reduced the visitors to a mark at 8/57 at one point in late afternoon, inviting thoughts that the South Australians might not even exceed themark of 66 that represented their previous all-time worst in first-class meetings with Queensland.Dale and Dawes snared the first half of the line-up in a shade more than twenty overs before Creevey produced a spell in which he fired out Miller (9),Graham Manou (1) and Swain (2) for the cost of only three runs. Other than for Lehmann and for number ten Wilson (6*), who played the most junior of partners ina swashbuckling fifty-three run stand at the end of the day, the Redback batting was a shambles.Openers David Fitzgerald (0) and Deitz (3) disappeared within eight balls of each other in the second session; Greg Blewett (18) and Ben Johnson (10) failedto build on remotely promising starts; and the in-form Jeff Vaughan (2) never got going.By the necessity of the injury he sustained yesterday, Lehmann demoted himself to as low as number six in the batting order, and spent a long period simply trying tosurvive. He barely even bothered to run singles such was the crippling extent of the problem. But, once the eighth wicket fell, he changed the focus of his inningscompletely. No bowler was spared his considerable wrath. Creevey endured particular punishment when he was belted for four pummelling boundaries in successionat one point. The sad part for South Australia is that not even their captain’s courageous effort seems likely to help them out of the messy overall situation in thematch into which they plunged so rapidly today.

Kenya postpones Elite League

To widespread frustration, Cricket Kenya has postponed the three-day part of its Elite League on the eve of the first round of matches.Originally, the three rounds of three-day matches were to have started earlier, but the whole event had to be delayed because of the domestic upheaval which followed December’s presidential elections. The one-dayers, which should have been played over two weekends, then had to be extended to a third because of a conflict with Nairobi’s 45-over competition.In a media release, CK said that onset of the Long Rains had led to the tournament being postponed until June. The first round will now take place between June 6 and 9 with the second and third rounds starting on the following Fridays.”The rains which have pounded the city heavily over the last one week have left most of the grounds waterlogged and the groundsmen have found it difficult to prepare for these matches,” Tom Tikolo, the board’s CEO explained.

Jayasuriya joins Lancashire

Sanath Jayasuriya has signed a short-term contract with Lancashire as cover forthe absence of Muttiah Muralitharan, who will be involved in a three-match Test series against Bangladesh.Jayasuriya will play in Lancashire Twenty20 Cup group matches and will be available to play until Muralitharan returns on July 20.”I’m extremely happy to have been called to participate in the forthcoming season,” Jayasuriya said from his Colombo home. “It’s a privilege after having played almost two decades of cricket all around the world and I look forward very much to be playing for Lancashire.””Sanath and Twenty20 cricket is an exciting prospect,” Mike Watkinson, the county’s cricket manager, said. “He has a tremendous record in one-day cricket and we are delighted he will be joining us.”

More than 100,000 tune in to Sky

Sky may have shown a huge commitment to covering the Tests, but you can’t argue with viewing figures. Their audience of just over 100,000 was just a sixth of what Channel 4 gleaned on the opening day of England’s summer last year.Channel Five, though, will be delighted with their viewership of 600,000, according to unofficial figures, which represented a 4% audience share. That’s nearly double their audience for the same slot of 7.15 – 8pm last week, where 400,000 viewers watched the wildlife documentary Rogue Raiders.In fact, Cricket on Five’s figures weren’t too far shy of those recorded by Channel 4 on the opening day of last year’s summer, against Bangladesh, with 700,000 viewers. But last year, of course, viewers had access to cricket on terrestrial throughout the day – and that was before the upsurge in interest generated by the Ashes.

Hughes interviewed as Border's replacement

Keeping watch: Merv Hughes understands the difficulties of selection © Getty Images

Merv Hughes has been interviewed for the Austalian selection panel’s fourth spot following the resignation of Allan Border last month. The Age reported Hughes did not apply to replace Border, but was asked by Cricket Australia to consider the job and was the first to meet with them.The paper said Ray Bright, the Victoria nomination, would be interviewed tomorrow. Other candidates for the position under Trevor Hohns, the chairman, are Tom Hogan, the former Western Australia international spinner and New South Wales’ Marshall Rosen. Darren Lehmann has been backed by South Australia despite intending to continue playing.While Hughes is portrayed as a larrikin, he understands the difficulties of selection after 53 Tests as a fringe, injured and crucial figure. Hughes, who has bowled with or against the panel members Hohns, Andrew Hilditch and David Boon, has also applied for a place on Victoria’s selection committee, which has lost the chairman Mick O’Sullivan.

Canterbury Youth draw for November 1

The Pub Charity Youth Cricket Draw – November 1(Please Note: Colts & U14A are 2-day matches)U18 (1-day):Stac v Midd G Midd G 1,Pk v St Bedes Parkland Reserve,Pap HS v Syd Syd 4a,CBHS Bye.Colts (2-day)25 Oct & 1 Nov2nd day of 2Section 22nd day of 2U16A (1-day):CC v St Bedes CC 2,Stac v CBHS Straven 3,SBHS v Syd Cash HS 1.U16B (1-day):Ricc HS v LPW Ricc HS 3,NB v CBHS South Brighton Dom,OC v Upr Ricc Dom,Horn CC Bye.U15A (1-day):CBHS v CC CC 6,SBHS v Stac White Stac 6a,Stac Blue v St Thom Stac 5,Syd v Burn HS Burn HS 3.U15B (1-day):Burn HS v Upr Ilam 6,St Bedes v Pap HS St Bedes 5a,Pk v CC CC 3,CBHS Black v CBHS Blue Straven 6,Stac Bye.U14A (2-day)25 Oct & 1 Nov2nd day of 2U14B (1-day):CC v St Bedes St Bedes 3,Burn HS v CBHS Blue Straven 8,SBHS v CBHS Black Straven 7,Stac v Syd Cash 2a,Rang HS v Ricc HS Ricc HS 4,Pap HS v Nb Pap HS 3a.U14C (1-day):CBHS Black v SBHS Straven 5,BWU v LPW Han 1a,CC Bye.

Central Districts side named for New Plymouth

The Central Districts side to play Auckland in the next round of State Shield cricket, at Pukekura Park, New Plymouth on Wednesday is:Glen Sulzberger (captain), John Nelson, Mathew Sinclair, Richard King, Ben Smith, Bevan Griggs, Campbell Furlong, Brent Hefford, Michael Mason, Andrew Schwass, Lance Hamilton, Jamie How.

Boland take command after day two

Boland assumed control of their four-day Supersport Series match againstNorth West in Paarl on Saturday, after taking an eight-run lead in the firstinnings.At stumps on day two, North West were on 92 for five and in trouble.But West Indian fast bowler Mark Lavine took a career best six for 53 forthe visitors to at least give his side a semblance of a chance in the match.If the North West top order could have responded in the same fashion Bolandmight be in for a contest, but as it is they are poised to take an importantvictory.James Henderson scored a patient 86 for the hosts, although he was droppedat fine leg when his score was on 22. It was a missed chance that could havecost North West the match.Boland resumed on 40 for three overnight and took the score to 76 before thefourth wicket fell. Justin Ontong edged a Garth Roe delivery down the legside where wicketkeeper Ezra Poole took an accomplished diving catch.The out of sorts Kenny Jackson made a miserable seven and virtually gave hiswicket away when he edged Lavine to Poole, with footwork that looked like hehad concrete boots on.Steve Palframan showed some nice touches on his way to 31. He and Hendersonwere involved in a 49-run partnership for the sixth wicket that came to anend with a low skidding delivery from Lavine to Palframan.He was so firmly in front of his stumps that the rare occurrence of abatsman walking before being given out, occurred.Brad Player then joined the patient Henderson and the two put on 66-runs forthe seventh wicket. Henderson unfortunately fell short of what would havebeen a deserved century just before tea.A ball from Alphonso Thomas clipped the edge of his blade and went throughto Poole, who snuffled the chance with little fuss. Henderson faced271 balls and hit ten boundaries in his innings.After tea Player fell to the Lavine-Poole combination for 31 and the restfollowed in short succession. They did however, manage to push the Bolandscore eight runs beyond the North West first innings total of 216.The North West top order were all back in the pavilion with the score on 21.Opener Andrew Lawson was run out for three, Glen Hewitt was caught at secondslip for a duck and Hendrik de Vos was caught at third slip for 12.Later Arno Jacobs edged one to Palframan off Player and with Martin Venterunable to bat because of a broken hand sustained on Friday, North West willdo well to post Boland in excess of 150 to win the match.

Petersen, Prince and the little sticks of rock

ScorecardAlviro Petersen shared a 321 stand with fellow South African Ashwell Prince•Getty Images

One rather doubts that the songs of George Formby feature prominently in Lancashire’s post-match victory celebrations; judging from what can be heard near the dressing room: a strident beat recognisable from rugby league matches and the repetition of the county’s name does the job perfectly well. Still, there were times on the first afternoon of this game when it seemed that Alviro Petersen and Ashwell Prince could play Glamorgan’s bowling with “little sticks of Colwyn rock”.By the close, Petersen and Prince’s unbroken third-wicket stand of 321 had steered Lancashire to 425 for 2, a score which already puts the Division Two leaders in a virtually impregnable position. They had inflicted suffering on the grand scale, destructive almost as soon as they began their partnership and they wreaked progressively more havoc as the afternoon drifted into the evening. In the final session 192 runs were scored off 32 overs.The Port Elizabethan pair’s demolition of Glamorgan’s seven-man attack was appreciated by all the 2200 spectators and it gave partisan pleasure to at least half the crowd. While this may be Glamorgan’s home game, the delightful Penrhyn Avenue ground is only an hour and a half’s drive from Formby’s birthplace in Wigan; it is far easier to get to for most local Lancashire supporters than it is for the Glamorgan followers living in the valleys, where some rather different singing goes on.The red rose was, therefore, as well represented as the daffodil in the throngs enjoying their burgers and pints on the popular side. There were plenty of Lancastrians, too, on the attractively-tiered green slope. Indeed, some might argue that this outground is the envy of millions of people in the Western economies at the moment: they have a bank which is conveniently situated and it makes them money.They may have applauded even more loudly had their team been steered to prosperity by two batsmen whose development had taken place in Lancashire but they are also aware that they lead Glamorgan by 47 points, albeit having played a game more. Should Lancashire win here, promotion will soon be a matter of quite simple arithmetic.The truth, however, is that neither side should lose this game, for it is being played on a wicket as flat as the most avaricious batsman could desire. Add to that, short boundaries and a fast outfield and you have the sort of conditions ripe for plunder and record-breaking.Neither Petersen nor Prince passed up the opportunity to boost their already healthy averages. One therefore had to be careful not to be sucked into a swamp of statistics by the sort of cricket that sends Opta men into numbers nirvana; much better, surely, to select the most significant records that were broken.Let it be noted, therefore that when Prince and Petersen returned to a standing ovation from the members in the pavilion at close of play, their stand was already a third-wicket record for matches between these sides. The pair had set a comparable record when they put on 258 against Derbyshire at Southport in May but their partnership is also now the second highest third-wicket stand in Lancashire’s history. Only Michael Atherton and Neil Fairbrother’s 364-run partnership against Surrey in 1990 lies ahead of them.The stroke-making of both players was close to faultless. They performed with the confidence of batsmen who had absolute trust in the surface on which they were playing. One lost count of the times Prince crunched the ball through midwicket or the occasions on which Petersen drove relatively blameless bowlers through the covers. Boundaries, rather than wickets, came in clumps but by the end of the day, the pair were not sated. There could have few more ominous sights for Glamorgan’s bowlers than seeing Petersen pat back Dean Cosker’s final over.Petersen will resume tomorrow on 205 which is only five short of his career-best first-class score; he has already hit 27 fours and a straight six off Cosker which landed in the gardens of one of Penrhyn Avenue’s russet-roofed houses. Three Lancashire players were sent to look for the ball for there was little prospect of them having anything else to do.By contrast, Paul Horton’s part in the day was long completed by the time Petersen and Prince came together. The Lancashire opener was trapped leg before in the seventh over by a ball from Michael Hogan which perhaps kept a little low. Horton took his leave with a reproachful glance at the pitch although he had probably changed his opinion by the end of the day.The rest of the morning was taken up with Karl Brown batting as felicitously as anyone to make his sixth fifty in seven Championship innings. Timing the new ball with seemingly little effort, Brown batted with grace and style but then frustrated his supporters when he was bowled when playing across a straight ball from David Lloyd. Some thought that a Brown century was going to be the main course at Colwyn Bay; instead it was merely the amuse bouche.As for Glamorgan’s bowlers, they did their best on a surface they must have come to loathe. In the 85th over Hogan was driven three times in succession to the extra-cover boundary by Preince; a few minutes later Petersen hit Lloyd for six fours in seven balls.”Come on Glammy, give us a wicket!” some yelled but it was a voice crying in the wilderness. By that stage Jacques Rudolph’s bowlers could have been forgiven for reckoning that they would have been better employed following George Formby’s example and cleaning a few windows instead of playing this wretched game.

Liverpool on verge of signing Chelsea reject Christie-Davies, fans react

Liverpool fans are never going to allow Chelsea to live down the fact that they sold Mohamed Salah in 2016.

The Egyptian international spent two years on the books at Chelsea, but struggled to find a way into the team, eventually spending loan spells at Fiorentina and Roma.

Just one year after being sold by the Blues to Roma, Salah found himself at Anfield, where he has shone.

With the Champions League final left to play, the 25-year-old has scored 44 goals in all competitions, and he has taken home a cabinet of awards, including the PFA Player of the Year, Football Writers’ Footballer of the Year, and the Premier League Golden Boot.

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Chelsea may feel that they made a mistake, and Liverpool fans are hopeful that the Blues will make another one in the sale of young midfielder Isaac Christie-Davies.

According to ESPN, the 20-year-old is expected to sign for Liverpool after he was not offered a new deal at at Stamford Bridge.

The publication claims that the Reds have been left impressed by the youngster, who was given a trial in March.

Fans have given their verdicts on Reddit.

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