Scotland slump in second innings

Scotland’s batsmen undid the good work of their bowlers as they slumped to 64 for 6 in the second innings against Afghanistan

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Dec-2010
ScorecardScotland’s batsmen undid the good work of their bowlers as they slumped to 64 for 6 in the second innings against Afghanistan having earlier fought back impressively on the second day of the Intercontinental Cup final in Dubai. At the close, Scotland’s lead was a precarious 105 after Samiullah Shenwari and Hamid Hassan shared five wickets to reassert Afghanistan’s control despite a struggle with the bat as they posted 171.Scotland’s position was harsh on their bowlers who did well to restrict the opposition by taking regular wickets during the first two sessions. Nawroz Mangal, the Afghanistan captain, top-scored with 56, while Matthew Parker and Majid Haq took three wickets apiece to earn Scotland a handy 41-run advantage despite the absence of captain Gordon Drummond with a rib injury.However, the good position was soon eroded as Preston Mommsen fell lbw for 9 and Fraser Watts departed for a steady 28. Scotland’s scoring they stagnated against some probing bowling with Kyle Coetzer and Gregor Maiden taking 12 overs over 14 runs. The pressure told as Coetzer was run out by Hassan and Maiden fell in the same over having faced 48 balls for 4.First-innings hero Neil McCallam couldn’t rescue his side this time as he collected a duck, caught behind off Hassan, and Hassan then claimed Parker who’d remained scoreless for 27 deliveries with the final ball of the day.”I think in the first few overs of the morning we started a bit full, but about 45 minutes in we started to hit our straps and put the ball in the right areas and after lunch it was really good for the bowlers, Matty Parker in particular put in a long shift and kept asking questions and taking opportunities,” said Scotland coach Peter Steindl.”I think we had a good start with the bat and at two down we started to let things get to us and we retreated into our shell. One bad over set us back but the thing for tomorrow is to get the lower -order to bat it out, get a good lead and then have our bowlers do what they did today.”The day had promised so much more for Scotland. Mirwais Ashraf was caught behind to provide their first wicket the Richie Berrington then nabbed a brace as Afghanistan wobbled on 89 for 4. Mangal and Asghar Stanikzai (26) added 43 for the fifth wicket before Haq broke through and the lower order didn’t offer much resistance.The last six wickets fell for 39 with Parker claiming two more and Ross Lyons removing Mangal followed by Hassan. That guaranteed Scotland the lead, but a few hours later the momentum was firmly back with Afghanistan as they chase the Intercontinental Cup title in their first year of participation.”It was a good day for us as the captain and coach put me in to bowl and get the match back for us which I think I helped to do,” said Shenwari. “I just think the spin worked for me today, I had to work a little but I managed to pitch it just right and the ball turned for the wicket. I hope that tomorrow I can take two more and make it five.”

CAB not to sell tickets for South Africa Test

The Cricket Association of Bengal (CAB) may not sell tickets for the India-South Africa Test at the Eden Gardens in February, a move similar to the one adopted during the fourth ODI between India and Sri Lanka last month

Cricinfo staff05-Jan-2010The Cricket Association of Bengal (CAB) may not sell tickets for the India-South Africa Test at the Eden Gardens in February, a move similar to the one adopted during the fourth ODI between India and Sri Lanka last month. The CAB had then offered the available seats to its members, various clubs, district sports units, affiliated universities and special quotas.The reasoning was that with renovation work in full swing to meet the 2011 World Cup deadline, the CAB would fail to ensure full capacity, informed Biswarup Dey, the association’s joint secretary and the BCCI’s tours and fixture committee member.”We are likely to follow the same ticketing arrangements that we had at last month’s one-dayer at Eden,” Dey told . “After all, the number of seats available isn’t going to go up when the Test match is round the corner.”Eden Gardens will be hosting four World Cup league matches and with the B, C, K and L blocks demolished and closed for renovation work, only 45,000 seats out of the total capacity of around one lakh were available for use during the Sri Lanka game.The CAB is expected to hold a working committee meeting in a few days to discuss the modalities of ticketing arrangements for the South Africa Test, tentatively scheduled from February 14-18. The final decision would be taken at the meeting.India will host South Africa for a full tour, comprising two Tests and three ODIs. Though the dates for the tour, scheduled for early this year, are yet to be finalised, India’s request to play two Tests in what was originally planned as an ODI series has been accepted. Nagpur has been confirmed as the other Test venue. Kanpur, Jaipur – which had missed out during the Australia series last year – and Ahmedabad have been decided as the three ODI venues.While the Sri Lanka ODI marked Kolkata’s first since February 2007, the second Test of the South Africa series will be the first in over two years, after India took on Pakistan back in November-December 2007.

No issues working with 'good friend' Hardik Pandya for Suryakumar Yadav

With Hardik Pandya losing the India vice-captaincy, and set to lead T20I captain Suryakumar Kumar at the IPL, could it make for a strained relationship? Not at all, says Suryakumar

Sreshth Shah21-Jan-20251:16

Manjrekar: India’s transition in T20Is has ‘happened quite easily’

Axar Patel has been promoted to being India’s vice-captain, and Hardik Pandya is no longer this team’s deputy. Could that affect T20I captain Suryakumar Yadav’s dynamics with Hardik, who, come the IPL, will be captaining Suryakumar? Not at all, Suryakumar said on the eve of the first T20I in Kolkata. He might not have the tag of vice-captain, but his “good friend” Hardik remains a key member of India’s T20I leadership group, Suryakumar said.”The relationship with him has been really great. We’ve been playing [together] for a really long time. I still remember that from 2018, when I went back to Mumbai Indians [we first played together] and [it’s the same] till today,” Suryakumar told the media in Kolkata. “It’s just that the added responsibility that I’ve got [here]. When we go back to franchise cricket, I can get to be quiet and relax for a little bit.”But we’ve been good friends on the field and we know what we want going forward with the India team. Axar has been given that added responsibility. We saw what he did in the 2024 T20 World Cup, he’s been with the team for a very long time. At the same time, Hardik is also part of the leading group. When we sit, we decide what we want to do with the team going forward and even on the field, he is always around. We have a lot of captains on the ground.”Related

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Suryakumar – who also took his first steps towards being one of the great T20I batters of his generation under Gautam Gambhir’s captaincy at Kolkata Knight Riders – feels the working relationship he has with Gambhir is rock-solid. Since Gambhir took over as coach in mid-2024, India have T20I series wins in Sri Lanka, at home against Bangladesh, and in South Africa, losing just one game across those three series. While their Test form might be under scrutiny, in T20Is, Suryakumar believes they are moving in the “right direction” with Gambhir.”I’ve played under Gambhir for four years, so I know how he works,” Suryakumar said. “Even without speaking to him, we know what we need to do. He wasn’t there on the tour of South Africa since he was preparing with the Test team, but we are moving in the right direction with him. He gives freedom, he allows players to express. He keeps things simple, he knows what is going inside a player’s head. He keeps things light and maintains a good atmosphere.”Sanju Samson is currently India’s first-choice keeper in T20Is, Suryakumar Yadav confirmed•AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A.

India’s T20 team is building towards a home World Cup – hosting rights for the tournament in February-March 2026 are split with Sri Lanka – where they will be defending champions. But Suryakumar doesn’t want to think that far ahead for now and instead “enjoy the journey”.”For me it is important that the T20 World Cup is one year away but I don’t want to think about that,” he said. “We want to enjoy the journey to that event instead. We want to make a team, understand which batters work well in which position, which bowlers can win you games single-handedly.”It’s important for a group to play lots of games in the lead up. That’s what Gauti and I will think about. We want to play with this group until the Asia Cup and the T20 World Cup.”

No Pant in India’s T20I plans?Neither Rishabh Pant nor KL Rahul is part of this T20I squad, with Sanju Samson – who scored three T20I centuries and maintained a strike rate of 180.16 in 2024 – the incumbent gloveman and Dhruv Jurel his understudy. Suryakumar said that’s a position which is sealed for now.”Currently, there’s no question mark on the wicketkeepers,” he said. “Sanju has done really well in the last 7-10 games and has shown what he’s capable of. It’s what we want from all our players, not just the wicketkeepers but from everyone – to keep the team first. He’s got that opportunity, he’s made full use of it. And I’m happy for him.”Generally, the atmosphere is great. We had a team dinner yesterday. This group has been together for 2-3 series now. The boys know what their team-mates like and don’t like. This camaraderie will reflect on the field as well.”

Henry Nicholls faces ball-tampering charges

TV footage appeared to show Nicholls brushing the ball against a helmet during a Plunket Shield game between his team Canterbury and Auckland

AAP10-Nov-2023Henry Nicholls has been accused of breaking New Zealand Cricket’s code of conduct after being reported by umpires for ball-tampering in a domestic first-class match.TV footage of the Plunket Shield match between Nicholls’ Canterbury and Auckland this week appeared to show Nicholls brushing the ball against a helmet during a change of ends.”Nicholls has been reported for allegedly breaching Rule 3.1, article 1.15 of the Code during Day 3 of the Plunket Shield match between Canterbury and Auckland at Hagley Oval,” New Zealand Cricket said in a statement Friday.The rule “involves changing the condition of the ball in breach of Law 41.3 of the Laws of Cricket”.New Zealand Cricket said the allegation had been referred to a commissioner for first-class cricket. No date has yet been set for the hearing. Nicholls is due to tour Bangladesh with the New Zealand Test squad later this month.Nicholls has not commented on the charge.In the game between Canterbury and Auckland, Nicholls played a leading role in taking his side to an eight-wicket win. After Auckland were bowled out for 217 in their first innings, Canterbury declared their first innings on 413 for 9, with Nicholls top-scoring with 120. He added another unbeaten 30 when Canterbury, set a victory target of 61, got there for the loss of two wickets.It was Canterbury’s first win of the Plunket Shield season. They are currently in fourth place on the six-team table.New Zealand’s leading limited-overs players are in India competing at the ODI World Cup, where a win over Sri Lanka on Thursday moved the 2019 runners-up closer to qualifying for the semi-finals.

Paul Stirling leads Brave cruise after George Garton extinguishes Fire

Garton takes three wickets in first seven balls to leave hosts shellshocked

ECB Reporters Network22-Aug-2022Paul Stirling proved he has lost none of his firepower as he guided Southern Brave to another nine-wicket victory over Welsh Fire at Sophia Gardens.The Ireland opener won the match award in the inaugural final last year and picked up where he left off, joining Quinton de Kock in a first-wicket run-fest in his first appearance of the season after international duty. He is a replacement for Marcus Stoinis, who has left to play in Australia’s ODI series against Zimbabwe.He notched a record individual score for Brave with an unbeaten knock of 74 off 42 balls and joined de Kock in a season-high partnership of 121 for the first wicket – just three short of the best for any wicket in the Hundred of 124 by D’Arcy Short and Dawid Malan for Trent Rockets against Brave last season.After George Garton had blasted out three top-order Fire batters in his opening seven balls to leave the home side shell-shocked at 1 for 3, the reigning champions restricted their hosts to 129 for 8 from their 100 balls.Related

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Despite a 20-minute break for rain when they batted, Brave didn’t hang around in their chase as they condemned Fire to a fifth successive defeat to leave them pointless. Stirling started at breakneck speed with two boundaries off David Payne and Brave were 18 off 10 balls when the teams went off for the rain break.He then punished George Scrimshaw, hitting him for four successive fours when the game resumed. The visitors had 40 on the board from the powerplay and brought up their 50 off 63 balls. Stirling then hit Payne for successive sixes to reach his half-century.The only blot on Brave’s copybook was the loss of de Kock for 37 with nine runs left to win. They were added within four more balls to see Brave home with 18 balls to spare.The home side were seeking their first win of the campaign after four straight defeats and also had revenge in mind having been beaten by nine wickets by the reigning champions in their opening game.James Vince won the toss and had no hesitation in inserting Fire on a greasy wicket and with a heavy cloud covering overhead. Garton opened the bowling and produced one of the finest 10-ball spells in the history of the competition, sending back three batters for only one run.George Garton struck three times in the first seven balls•Getty Images

First to go was Jacob Bethell, caught at the wicket off the second ball for a golden duck. Next up was skipper Josh Cobb, who also went for a duck, and then Ben Duckett fell to a diving catch behind the wicket by de Kock.That reduced the Fire to 1 for 3 and they limped to a record-equaling lowest powerplay total of 17 off 25 balls.Joe Clarke and David Miller dug in and Miller had the honour of striking the first boundary off the 19th ball. Miller was the fourth man out when he was clean bowled by James Fuller for 15 and Clarke followed after a calamitous run-out with Leus du Plooy for 17.Du Plooy hit three boundaries in his 37 and his compatriot Dwaine Pretorius chipped in with 15 off seven balls. He struck a six to take his side past the lowest total in the tournament, 87, and then hit a four to take his side past their own previous lowest total, 91.Matt Critchley made hay off the last set of five from Michael Hogan, launching the last two balls for sixes to take his total to 32 and carry the Fire to 129 for 8. It was nowhere near enough.

States in discussions on Earl Eddings future as Cricket Australia chairman

New South Wales oppose a second term for Eddings but he may have the support to continue

Daniel Brettig08-Apr-2021South Australia’s chairman Andrew Sinclair has responded to his New South Wales counterpart John Knox’s opposition to a second term for the Cricket Australia chair Earl Eddings, writing to ask for greater clarity as to why the largest state association is eager for change at the top of the game’s governance.Last month, Knox sent a letter to all the state associations in which he outlined the NSW board’s opposition to Eddings getting a second term, and also attached a 2019 letter to the CA chair in which he made it clear that a succession plan was required.ESPNcricinfo has learned that Sinclair replied with his own correspondence that defended the incumbent’s record but also asked for Knox to outline his reasons for wanting change. It is believed that subsequent discussion was had between Knox and Sinclair, rounded off by follow-up correspondence from the NSW chair to the rest of the state associations welcoming further talks.David Maddocks, the Cricket Victoria chairman and a longtime associate of Eddings through their common connection to the North Melbourne Cricket Club, is also understood to have written to Knox. He outlined the case for leadership continuity to ESPNcricinfo last year.”You often hear it said that board members by the time their period is about to expire, they’re really at their best, they’ve been around, they understand the issues, they understand the interrelationships and all those sorts of things,” Maddocks said. “I think at the moment in terms of CV and CA, there is a strong case for stability in a period of great instability. My personal view is I think Earl is doing a very good job and I think if there was potential for him to stay on, I think it’s something that ought to be considered.”CA is currently awaiting a conclusion to another succession saga around their chief executive, a role held in interim form by Nick Hockley since Kevin Roberts’ resignation mid-last year. Hockley wants the job full-time, but CA have engaged an outside recruitment firm to conduct a search for candidates to be weighed up against him.Related

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Hockley and Eddings were able to successfully helm the staging of the international and domestic home seasons despite the pressures of Covid-19 and a dispute with the free-to-air broadcaster Channel Seven. Major overseas commitments to play Bangladesh and South Africa have been postponed, while scheduled home assignments against Afghanistan and Zimbabwe are also in limbo. There are also simmering discontents around the way the board handled CA’s initial response to the pandemic last year, including mass stand downs for staff.Twelve months on, strategic discussions around the future of the game have begun at CA management and board levels, a curious development given the lack of clarity about the tenure and identities of both the chair and the chief executive.Eddings, who has been a CA director since 2008, is also involved in strategy and governance discussions at the global level with the ICC, which is in a similar state of flux with a new chairman Greg Barclay and an interim chief executive, Geoff Allardice.CA’s board nominations committee is chaired this year by John Harnden, the director nominated by Sinclair and the SACA, while Queensland (chaired by Chris Simpson), Western Australia (chaired by Terry Waldron) and the CA director Michelle Tredenick are the other committee members.While approved by CA’s nominations committee as new directors last year, former New South Wales premier Mike Baird and ABC board director Vanessa Guthrie did not sit on their first CA board meeting until the last week of March this year, by which time the Cricket NSW board, chaired by Knox, had stated its opposition to Eddings being retained as an independent director when his current term expires in October.There has been a precedent, tried by Eddings’ predecessor David Peever, to have the CA board “unanimously” endorse him as chair for a second three-year term prior to the two governance processes that follow in any given year: those of the nominations committee for directors, and the CA AGM itself where directors are retired or re-elected by rotation via the votes of their state association owners.Nick Hockley is favourite to be the long-term CEO although other names are being canvassed•Getty Images

Peever, in the end, was successful in being voted back in as chair for another three years in October 2018, in spite of the chaos at that point enveloping CA in the wake of the Newlands scandal and the cultural review that followed it. However, after the review was belatedly shown to the state associations in the hour after the AGM itself, Peever lasted only a few more days when Knox called him to state, flatly, that he had lost the support of the largest state association.Two and a half years on, and Eddings has given no indication that he wishes to conclude his time as chair, in spite of Knox and NSW again raising their opposition. This time around, Eddings appears to want to stay on provided he has the support of the board and a working majority of the states: four out of six need to be opposed to Eddings in order to force him out.”I’m there at the behest of the board and the members, so it’s up to them to make that call,” he told ESPNcricinfo late last year. “Succession is really critical and we’re always talking about succession. My comment around longevity is you don’t want to stay around too long, however with the dynamic of the ICC, it takes a long time to build relationships and if we didn’t spend time building a relationship with India this summer could have been in jeopardy.”CA has been governed by an independent board of nine directors since major constitutional reform in 2012 that ended a representative model in which the six states shared 14 directors who also sat on state boards. Numerous states are known to want consideration of a hybrid model, whereby six directors are direct representatives of the six states, with three independent directors.

Tshwane Spartans stuck in third after washout against Jozi Stars

This is the third time the Centurion-based side were unable to play at home, but the first where not a ball was bowled

Firdose Moonda05-Dec-2019Match abandoned Tshwane Spartans had to settle for two points against Jozi Stars, which keeps them in third place on the MSL table, after their match was abandoned at SuperSport Park. This is the third time the Centurion-based side were unable to play at home, but the first where not a ball was bowled.The Spartans faced 7.1 overs against Nelson Mandela Bay Giants on November 13, before the rain came down, and there were 17.1 overs played in their fixture against Durban Heat, which was eventually reduced to five overs on November 21, before play was no longer possible.Those results affected the early part of the Spartans campaign, which left them with one win from their first three matches. They went on to two more victories against the Stars and Paarl Rocks before losing to the Giants and Cape Town Blitz to keep them off the top of the table. The Spartans are now two points behind the Giants and the Rocks and have one more match to play.On the other end of the table, the defending champions Stars will welcome their first points after losing all seven matches so far. While they are out of contention for the playoff and will still end up with the wooden spoon, they have moved to two points instead of none and have two matches left to play.Heavy rain on the South African Highveld is expected to last until Friday, bringing much needed relief from a heatwave and a severe drought. It should clear before the Stars play their final pool match against the Heat at the Wanderers on Saturday and the Spartans host the Blitz on Sunday afternoon, in what could be a decider to determine who makes the playoff.

Tabraiz Shamsi, Faf du Plessis keep Durban Heat at the bottom of the table

After the left-arm wristspinner’s twin strikes limited Heat to 154 for 6, the Paarl Rocks captain led the chase with an unbeaten 76

The Report by Deivarayan Muthu02-Dec-2018
Left-arm wristspinner Tabraiz Shamsi’s twin strikes and his captain Faf du Plessis’ well-modulated 76 not out off 48 balls fashioned a crucial win for Paarl Rocks and kept Durban Heat at the bottom of the points table. The game boiled down to the final over, but du Plessis’ clever manipulation of the field – his innings included eight hard-run twos – ensured Paarl were always in control of their chase of 155 on a two-paced pitch.The nine-wicket win meant Rocks remained in contention for the playoffs, while Heat were pushed to the brink after their fifth loss in six matches.Such a heavy defeat for Heat did not seem likely when they zoomed to 56 for 0 in the Powerplay. While the dropped Hashim Amla was carrying drinks after managing just 55 runs in five innings, his replacement Sarel Erwee teed off with four successive boundaries off left-arm spinner Bjorn Fortuin in the fifth over. Morne van Wyk too kept the scorecard ticking before seamer Grant Thomson had Erwee chopping an inducker onto his stumps for 32 off 22 balls.Shamsi then struck in the 10th over to pin van Wyk lbw with his stock ball that broke back in. The next five overs yielded only 23 runs for the loss of two further wickets. Shamsi was central to the squeeze, exploiting the early-morning moisture with his variations. He ended with 2 for 20 in his four overs on a day when no other bowler took more than one wicket.Khaya Zondo and Vernon Philander then added 49 in 4.3 overs to haul Heat from 105 for 5 to 154 for 6.Rocks had an early scare in their chase when opener Henry Davids retired hurt on 2 because of an adductor muscle strain, sustained while running a single. Ironically, the running between the wickets turned out to be the hallmark of the chase. There were as many as 17 doubles, including four on the trot in the 18th over.In the Powerplay, du Plessis and Aiden Markram matched each other shot for shot to take full toll of anything loose. Zimbabwe legspinner Brandon Mavuta then cut short the opening stand at 76 when he drew Markram out of the crease and had him stumped for 48 off 39 balls. Du Plessis, though, displayed greater confidence against Mavuta, taking 16 runs off 10 balls from him. He raised his fifty off 36 balls and coaxed Vaughn van Jaarsveld to run hard between the wickets too.They sealed victory with three consecutive fours, van Jaarsveld hitting the winning runs with a violent hoick over mid-on.Durban Heat, who are still mathematically in contention for the playoffs, will hope that Rashid Khan’s arrival – he missed the start of the tournament because of his stint in the T10 league – gives their campaign a leg-up.

Bangladesh tighten grip with late wickets

The hosts made 260 after choosing to bat in Mirpur, and then rattled Australia just before stumps on the first day

The Report by Brydon Coverdale27-Aug-2017
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
6:56

Isam: Tamim, Shakib dug Bangladesh out of a hole

There was nothing to match a Jason Gillespie double-century, but the first day of Test cricket between Bangladesh and Australia in 11 years provided a gripping contest all the same. Three Bangladesh wickets tumbled in the first four overs of the day; three Australian wickets crashed in the final four overs of the day. In between, Shakib Al Hasan and Tamim Iqbal celebrated their respective 50th Tests with a century stand that led Bangladesh’s recovery.

Stats – Lyon surpasses Benaud

1 – Number of Australia spinners to have taken more Test wickets than Nathan Lyon. The offspinner surpassed Richie Benaud’s tally of 248 and moved to 250 wickets. Shane Warne leads the list with 708 wickets. Lyon also became the eighth bowler from Australia to claim 250 wickets in Tests.
155 – Runs added by Shakib Al Hasan and Tamim Iqbal – the second highest for the fourth wicket for Bangladesh.
3 – Wickets lost by Bangladesh for 10 runs in four overs. This is only the second time they have lost their first three wickets for 10 runs or fewer. They had lost three wickets for five runs against New Zealand in 2004.
8 – Century partnerships for the fourth wicket after a team had lost its first three wickets for 10 runs or fewer. The 155 runs added by Shakib and Tamim in this match is the second highest after Larry Gomes and Clive Lloyd added 237 runs against India in 1983.
12 Dismissals for David Warner against offspinners in Asia. He averages 28.75 against them. On Sunday, he was pinned lbw by Mehidy Hasan for 8

By stumps, Australia were 18 for 3 in reply to Bangladesh’s 260, and much work remained for Steven Smith, who was on 3, and Matt Renshaw who had 6. Australia’s innings was only nine overs old, but already their struggles against quality spin had come back to haunt them. David Warner was given out lbw twice in successive balls off Mehidy Hasan; the first time he was saved by an inside edge on review, the second time he walked.Usman Khawaja, restored to the side despite a disappointing record in Asia, appeared nervous and found himself run out for 1 when he took off for a single of high risk after pushing Shakib into the off side. Renshaw sent him back, and Khawaja was short. Shakib then accounted for the nightwatchman Nathan Lyon, who was trapped lbw for a five-ball duck, ensuring no repeat of Gillespie’s heroics from 2006.It was a frantic end to an eventful day in which the only batsmen to really shine were Shakib and Tamim, who compiled a 155-run stand. Curiously, given the length of their service, this was just the fifth time that Shakib and Tamim had batted together in a Test innings. Both men would have been disappointed to fall to Australian spinners with centuries seemingly there for the offering, Tamim for 71 and Shakib for 84.The morning had started disastrously for Bangladesh, who had chosen to bat. Pat Cummins, who was 12 years old last time these teams played a Test, demolished much of the Bangladesh top order within his first two overs with the new ball. He found pace and bounce in a pitch the Australians likely expected to offer little but spin, having Soumya Sarkar caught at gully, then Imrul Kayes and Sabbir Rahman caught behind off consecutive balls.Cummins missed out on a hat-trick, but he had reduced Bangladesh to 10 for 3 in four overs. But if Australia thought Bangladesh would be pushovers, they reckoned without Shakib and Tamim, who put together the second-highest fourth-wicket partnership in Bangladesh’s Test history to lead the recovery.Tamim Iqbal propped up Bangladesh with 71 off 144 balls•Getty Images

Shakib scored more consistently, having little trouble handling the pace of Cummins and Josh Hazlewood, and showing a willingness to attack the spinners. He brought up his half-century off his 65th ball by steering Ashton Agar behind point for two. Tamim was patient but threatened to get bogged down in a string of dot balls, though when he did attack he did so effectively and struck three sixes, all off Lyon. His fifty took 119 deliveries.The Australian spinners, most notably Lyon, had found turn and bounce, but it was Glenn Maxwell who broke the big partnership with his only wicket of the innings when Tamim rocked back and shaped to cut, but succeeded only in lifting a catch to backward point. Eight overs later, Shakib was gone as well, caught at slip when he played back and followed an offbreak from Lyon.That wicket took Lyon’s tally to 248 in Test cricket and brought him level with Richie Benaud, who himself had taken eight wickets in Australia’s first Test match in Dhaka, against Pakistan in 1959. By the end of the innings, Lyon had moved on to 250 wickets and was outright second on the all-time list of spinners on Australia’s Test wicket tally, behind Shane Warne.From there, Bangladesh’s batting offered only glimmers of resistance. Ashton Agar, playing his first Test since that memorable debut series in England in 2013, had Mushfiqur Rahim lbw with a flattish delivery for 18, and later added Nasir Hossain in similar fashion for 23. Lyon was lucky to snare Mehidy, who was given out caught at short-leg despite missing the ball – but by then, Bangladesh were out of reviews.Lyon had Taijul Islam lbw and Agar finished the innings by having Shafiul Islam caught skying one to mid-on. Australia might have been pleased to knock Bangladesh down from 165 for 3 to 260 all out. They were about to find out that 260 still was perhaps not so bad after all.

Wessels' 80 off 35 leads Notts charge

A brutal innings from Riki Wessels helped Nottinghamshire to their second NatWest T20 Blast victory of the weekend with a one-sided nine-wicket victory over Worcestershire at Trent Bridge.

ECB Reporters Network 09-Jul-2016
ScorecardRiki Wessels ensured Nottinghamshire raced to victory•Getty Images

A brutal innings from Riki Wessels helped Nottinghamshire to their second NatWest T20 Blast victory of the weekend with a one-sided nine-wicket victory over Worcestershire at Trent Bridge.Having toppled Northants on Friday evening, the Outlaws were equally ruthless in dismantling the Rapids to move into second place in the North Group table.Set to score 125 to win, Notts reached their target in only 12.2 overs with Wessels blazing an unbeaten 80, scoring his runs from only 35 balls, He hit six fours and seven sixes in one of the most brutal assaults witnessed on the ground for some time.Worcestershire limped their way to a score of 124 for 8, after morning rain had delayed the start by 15 minutes.
Ben Cox made an unbeaten 37 and Tom Kohler-Cadmore scored 22 from 28 balls but far too many of their team-mates were guilty of gifting their wickets away.Put in, after Dan Christian had won his eighth toss out of 10 for the Outlaws this season, the Rapids lost their way as early as the third over when Joe Leach fell for 18.Leach had shown signs of intent by hoisting Harry Gurney for the only six of the innings but then perished to a catch at long-on from Jake Ball’s bowling.Christian took pace off the ball as soon as the Powerplay overs had been completed and was rewarded as Imran Tahir, Steven Mullaney, who took two for 26, and Samit Patel dried up the runs and picked up crucial wickets in the middle overs.Tahir was the only bowler not to take a wicket but was nevertheless instrumental in throwing down the stumps to run out Brett D’Oliveira off his own bowling and then gathered a Ball return to dismiss Daryl Mitchell in the same way.The chase soon became a formality, even though Michael Lumb fell to Matt Henry in the fourth over.By then Wessels had already hit his straps, hitting Leach for 4646 at the end of the second over. The 30-year old continued in the same aggressive manner and brought up his fifty with his sixth maximum, from just 17 balls, the quickest in the competition this year.Greg Smith provided additional firepower from the other end, hitting Matt Henry over the ropes on his way to an unbeaten 32 from 27 balls.