Dhoni glad to have Bravo back

After Chennai Super Kings were knocked out of the IPL earlier this year, MS Dhoni had highlighted the injury to West Indies allrounder Dwayne Bravo as one of the main reasons for the campaign ending early.

Bravo had been the leading wicket-taker in the 2013 IPL but could play only one game in the 2014 season before being sidelined by a shoulder problem. One of the five players retained by Super Kings ahead of this year's player auction, Bravo is back with squad for the Champions League.

"We missed Dwayne Bravo during the IPL. He got injured," MS Dhoni said. "That really affected the strength, combination and stability of the side. It is good to have him (Bravo) back."

Two days ahead of the start of Super Kings' CLT20 campaign in Hyderabad, Dhoni talked about how little time there was for the squad to prepare for this tournament. "We don't get 10 days before the start of the tournament. It is usually pretty fast. Especially the fact, most of the Indian cricketers, they are part of the ODI squad and they are coming from England, which means [they] will be arriving here late.

"In my case, I just came here (Hyderabad) today. So, you don't get the same amount of time with the team. As I said, it has its own challenge. Still it is good. We get enough time to get together. The two months of IPL, the time, we spend that really helps us. It becomes like a refresher course, where you get together and start getting your acts together."

While the IPL has been a blockbuster hit over the years, attendances and the following of the CLT20 have lagged well behind, but Dhoni defended the tournament. "The idea of Champions League T20 is brilliant. But also, it becomes difficult to indulge the Indian crowds at the same level if you compare to IPL. Because, if two teams from abroad are playing, you won't get the same kind of crowd, may be when two Indian teams are playing, the interest of crowd grows. This is a challenge."


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Parvez Rasool tells of flood horror

Parvez Rasool, the India offspinner, has spoken of the hardship he and his family have endured during the on-going floods in his home state of Jammu & Kashmir. He said his home in the Anantnag district had been flooded and they had been without proper communication for about ten days.

The northern Indian state of Jammu & Kashmir has suffered extensive damage to life and property since the beginning of September because several rivers were in spate due to torrential rainfall. "For the last 11 days, I was literally cut off from society as none of the telephones or cell-phones were working," Rasool told PTI. "It was a helpless situation for me and my family. We were staying on the first floor as the ground floor was filled with floodwater.

"The situation was terrible but it's better in Anantnag right now. I am planning to come to Srinagar within next two days. I haven't been able to contact my Jammu & Kashmir Ranji team-mates.

"In fact, a local NGO over here did tremendous work as they reached out to people with food, essential medicine and clothes. We also received help from the NGO as we were stuck inside our house.

"After watching them work for three to four days, I also joined the relief workers and did my bit in helping them. I am only 25, but people, who are of my grandfather's age said they have not seen anything like this [flood] in their lifetime. There were times when we were taking water from the overhead tanks and boiling everything as there is a chance of infection.

"I only hope that by next week things change for the better as the people from the economically backward sections are the ones who have been suffering a lot. You feel pained watching their plight.

Rasool said he hoped to resume cricket practice as soon as possible. "It's never happened that I have missed training for two weeks. I have to get back to training."

The Indian domestic season begins with the Vijay Hazare one-day competition on November 7.


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Trent Bridge brings out Nash's best

Sussex 358 for 9 (Nash 178, Fletcher 3-49) v Nottinghamshire
Scorecard

Chris Nash continued his special relationship with Trent Bridge by scoring his third County Championship century on the ground to help Sussex to 358 for 9 on the first day of their match against Nottinghamshire. Nash scored 178, the first time he had reached three figures this summer, his runs coming from 235 balls with 32 fours. It was the 31-year old's 17th first-class hundred, with four of them coming against Notts.

After a scratchy start against the new ball he prospered to reach 70 not out by lunch and was on 160 at tea. His only alarms came after passing his hundred when twice he somehow managed to escape having edged the unlucky Samit Patel. The first instance, when on 116, saw him find a gap between wicketkeeper Chris Read and first slip Alex Hales. Nine runs later, a genuine edge seemed to go through Hales' attempt to grab it before racing down to the third man fence.

Veteran spinner Gary Keedy, who had pocketed a total of nine wickets during recent defeats to Durham and Yorkshire, ended Nash's resistance in another impressive showing. After almost five hours at the crease the opener attempted a sweep and became the second batsman to be given out lbw in that manner by umpire Richard Kettleborough.

Earlier Keedy, who ended with 3 for 96, had altered the complexion of the day by dismissing both Craig Cachopa and Luke Wright in the same over, late in the afternoon session. Cachopa narrowly missed out on his sixth 50 in seven innings, edging Keedy to slip, after sharing in a punishing stand of 133 with Nash and then Wright was trapped in front five balls later.

Notts included two debutants in their side, 21-year old batsman Jake Libby and England Under-19 left-arm medium-pace bowler Luke Wood, who picked up his maiden wicket with the first delivery after tea when he enticed Michael Yardy to steer into the hands of Michael Lumb in the gully.

At that stage Sussex had lost three wickets in as many overs but regained the initiative with Ben Brown making 46 and Chris Jordan adding 25 before both fell to the new ball. Luke Fletcher, the only right-arm bowler in the five-man attack, claimed them both to end with figures of 3 for 49, having earlier had Ed Joyce smartly taken at slip by Riki Wessels. Late in the day Wood struck again, having Steve Magoffin caught at the wicket, to secure a third bowling point for his side, with Sussex having already obtained four points for their efforts with the bat.

"We are playing on pitches that are not normal Trent Bridge pitches because, with the inclusion of Gary Keedy, we want them to spin, so I think we've come out of that reasonably well but day two will tell us how well," Mick Newell, Nottinghamshire's director of cricket, said. "I thought Luke Wood was terrific. He was running in at half-past five with the same skill and aggression that he showed when he was running in half-past 10. It was good that the captain put him on to bowl straight after tea and I'm very pleased he got that first wicket and pleased he chipped in again right at the end.''

Sussex head coach Mark Robinson said he was delighted for Nash, adding: "I'd have taken that score at the beginning of the day but probably not at 250 for two - we got careless. Chris Nash is a good player and I'm delighted for him. He's not had the year he wanted. He had a ruptured appendix that really put him back but he's just had a 19-day break and has come back really well. He was outstanding at Hove last week and has carried that on here.''


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Kieswetter puts career fears behind him

Somerset 266 for 5 (Hildreth 70, Kieswetter 69, Abell 50) v Middlesex
Scorecard

It might be pushing the truth a little to claim that Craig Kieswetter was blind but now can see, but the Somerset keeper has admitted he feared his career might be over after sustaining a serious eye injury a little over two months ago.

Kieswetter sustained a broken nose and fractured orbital socket after he was struck by a short ball from David Willey on July 12. For three weeks it was unclear whether he would regain the level of sight required to pursue a career in cricket. But now, with the double-vision having cleared, Kieswetter regards the whole experience as positive and claims it gave him not only a fuller appreciation of his position as a professional sportsman, but also of the affection in which players are held at a friendly, well-supported club like Somerset.

"Once the extent of the injury became clear, I was panicking," Kieswetter said. "There was a week before the surgery and two weeks after that I was worried that I might not play again.

"For the first 90 minutes I was full of adrenalin. But then, as I was passed from surgeon to surgeon and it became clear there was an issue with my optical floor, I was panicking. But my surgeon did a fantastic job and I have been overwhelmed and humbled by the support I have received.

"I had double vision in one eye for a couple of weeks after surgery and, even now, it is not 100% when I look directly up. It takes time to get over the injury and the trauma.

"Sometimes as players, we can be a bit aloof towards supporters. But the care I had showed what a special club this is to be around. It is a special thing for a player to feel that sense of belonging.

"I might be walking down the street or out for dinner and people I didn't know would come up and ask how I was. Even the reception when I walked out to bat today gave me goose-bumps. It's important I return the favour. I was delighted to give something back today."

Kieswetter "gave something back" by providing the most fluent batting of a day which ended with Somerset having edged Middlesex a little closer to relegation. Contributing 70 at little less than a run-a-ball, he made light of an unusually green wicket and, when greeted with the inevitable short ball near the start of his innings by Toby Roland-Jones, responded by pulling it for six. No matter that there was something of the top-edge in the stroke, he played it with conviction and was soon timing the ball sweetly through the covers.

With Tom Abell and James Hildreth also contributing patient half-centuries, Middlesex, were restricted to one bowling bonus point despite inserting Somerset in overcast conditions.

Middlesex have another 14 overs on the second day in order to claim more bonus points - they require a maximum of 13 more points from their final two games to ensure Division One survival - but are now in an uncomfortable position ahead of their final game against the other relegation candidates, Lancashire, next week. After winning four of their first six matches, Middlesex have failed to win any of their last eight, with the last victory coming on May 21.

They were a little unfortunate here, though. Ball beat bat regularly in the first session and, with 17 of the first 34 overs maidens, batting became a pretty desperate fight for survival.

"We didn't get out rewards today," Richard Johnson, the Middlesex bowling coach, said. "We reckon they must have played and missed 50 or 60 times, but it was just one of those days."

But Middlesex also squandered at least two chances. Abell was reprieved on 4, when Eoin Morgan put down a sharp chance at third slip, and 28 - Dawid Malan, at second slip, the guilty man on this occasion. A couple of other chances dropped just short of the cordon on a surface which, despite the grass covering, remains slow and dry.

There were moments when it appeared Middlesex might capitalise. Certainly after Marcus Trescothick guided one to gully and Nick Compton was bowled by one that nipped back, and then when Abell was run-out backing-up off Neil Dexter's boot, it seemed Somerset might subside. But each time they found a player to dig them out of trouble, first Abell, with a 123-ball half-century, and then Hildreth, with a 130-ball half-century.

Only Kieswetter looked comfortable, though. After returning to the nets a couple of weeks ago with batting coach, David Houghton, Kiesweeter regained his confidence against tennis balls and has gradually built up the pace and intensity of net sessions. He still retains hopes of winning a late call to the England World Cup squad, but aims to play in the Big Bash if that proves beyond him.

"I wouldn't be playing if I didn't think I could still play at that level," he said. "And my personality is such that I always like I should be playing for England. But having had this time to reflect on everything - the injury, being dropped by England and everything else - I realise I am one of those lucky people who earns a living doing something they truly love. It's the game I fell in love with as a kid.

"A lot of players forget that perspective check. I'm not saying I'm perfect, but I have seen the bigger picture. Hopefully the whole experience has made me mature. I hope I've improved as a person and as a cricketer."

Another man coming to terms with trauma and disappointment - albeit of a very different characteristic - is Ashley Giles. Giles admits he lost his appetite for coaching for a while after missing out to Peter Moores in the race to be appointed England coach, but is now recovering his enthusiasm for the job.

He is expected to visit Taunton at some stage this week with a view to talking to the club about the role of director of cricket. It is worth noting, though, that it took Giles five years to transform Warwickshire from rabble to Championship winners. Whether Somerset, a club impatient for success after years of near-misses, will provide such time remains to be seen.


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Roach leaves Bangladesh in tatters

Bangladesh 104 for 7 (Tamim 48, Roach 5-33) trail West Indies 380 (Chanderpaul 84*, Johnson 66, Al-Amin 3-80) by 276 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Kemar Roach thrilled on his way to a five-wicket haul, leaving the Bangladesh batsmen dazed and confused. His 12-over spell after the tea interval gave West Indies full command at the end of the second day, with the visitors left lurching at 104 for seven.

They are now 276 runs behind West Indies' 380 all out from earlier in the day. The three-man pace attack was what Denesh Ramdin used for all but two overs till stumps.

Roach removed Shamsur Rahman in the sixth over and after tea, and accounted for Anamul Haque, Tamim Iqbal, Nasir Hossain and Taijul Islam to complete his sixth five-for and his first of the year. His deliveries would invariably be on a good length or further up, tempting the batsmen to either play the ball or leave with some confusion.

Roach was lucky to get the wicket of Shamsur, who tickled a legside delivery, neatly caught by Ramdin diving to his left. Anamul couldn't make up his mind whether to leave or play the ball. He suffered that torment for just over an hour until his attempted leave took the bat's face and ended up in Darren Bravo's hands at first slip. Tamim, having made 48 off 75 balls, was constantly being dragged away from the stumps even when he was leaving the ball. After several close shaves, Tamim went sideways, edging the ball far from his body.

Nasir Hossain's prod was more out of speculation but he hardly wasted time in the middle. Taijul was set up with relentless short balls, two hitting him in the gloves, and then he timed one right into third-man's lap. Roach's five-for was complete

Apart from Roach's five, Jerome Taylor took two wickets while Shannon Gabriel went wicketless, but the plan to attack Bangladesh was a three-man strategy.

Gabriel was the quickest of the lot, regularly hitting 90mph and he attacked the stumps mostly but he also beat the bat a number of times. He had stung Tamim on the front boot with a yorker just before tea and the batsman only survived the review because Hawkeye suggested the ball had pitched inches outside the leg stump.

Taylor bowled more at the body, reintroducing the Bangladesh batsmen to their old fear: the short ball. His delivery to Mominul Haque was virtually unplayable with the batsman completely unaware where the ball that hit him in the gloves had gone.

It was smartly caught by Jermaine Blackwood at short leg, and the spit that was created by the seam hitting the pitch just short of a good length made it the most dangerous delivery of the day.

Thirty-nine minutes later, Taylor moved the ball back into Bangladesh's best batsman on the tour, Mushfiqur Rahim, and dislodged the off stump.

Earlier, the West Indies innings ended an hour into the second session, after Shivnarine Chanderpaul had held it together with an unbeaten 84. He had made an unbeaten 85 in the first innings of the first Test, but here in St. Lucia the situation was more complicated.

When he joined Darren Bravo late on the first day, the fourth-wicket pair had to negotiate an invigorated Bangladesh bowling attack. They guided West Indies to safety but Bravo didn't last too long in today's morning session, losing his patience after Robiul Islam and Al-Amin Hossain had strung together seven parsimonious overs. In the first six overs of the day, West Indies scored only two runs, both being no-balls.

Bravo was drawn into following a Robiul outswinger, edging to the wicketkeeper for 46. It triggered a collapse and three more wickets - those of Jermaine Blackwood, Ramdin and Roach - fell in the next 21 balls. Al-Amin was on a hat-trick at one stage after he had made the ball straighten after pitching to find the edges of Blackwood, caught at first slip, and Ramdin, caught behind.

West Indies were 269 for 7, and Chanderpaul only had the tail for company. Help came from No 9 Jerome Taylor, who hammered 40 off 31 balls with five fours and two sixes. The 41 minutes of mayhem threw Bangladesh off-kilter, evidenced by Mominul Haque dropping Taylor at cover, when he was on 18. And even after Taijul Islam broke the 54-run eighth wicket stand, Bangladesh's wait wasn't over.

Sulieman Benn made 25 and added 52 with Chanderpaul for the ninth wicket, before he was caught at fine leg off Al-Amin. The innings ended soon after, when Robiul bowled Shannon Gabriel in the 124th over. Al-Amin finished with three wickets while Shafiul, Robiul and the expensive Taijul picked up two each.

The bowlers may have thought they did a good enough job by taking 7 for 134 in the first three hours but they will have to put in a gargantuan effort with the bat as well, to drag the Bangladesh innings past the follow-on mark, if they are to have another bowl at the home side.


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Saqlain Sajib wrecks Zimbabwe A

Bangladesh A 30 for 0 trail Zimbabwe A 206 (Chakabva 64, Sajib 9-82) by 176 runs
Scorecard

Bangladesh A left-arm spinner Saqlain Sajib blew Zimbabwe A away on the first day of the unofficial four-day match in Cox's Bazar, as he collected 9 for 82 - the best bowling figures in first-class cricket by a Bangladesh player, beating Abdur Razzak's 9 for 84 in 2012.

The visitors were bowled out for 206 in their first innings, after which Litton Das and Shadman Islam guided Bangladesh A to 30 for no loss at stumps.

Sajib started by removing Tino Mawoyo in the 15th over, but Zimbabwe A captain Vusimuzi Sibanda and Brian Chari led a recovery by adding 61 for the second wicket. Chari fell to Sajib after lunch, having made 30 off 56 balls, and he was soon followed back to the pavilion by Mark Vermeulen.

That third wicket prompted a mid-innings collapse as Zimbabwe A lost their next four wickets for just nine runs. Sibanda was dismissed for 62 off 99 balls with five fours, and was quickly followed by Tinotenda Mutombodzi, Luke Jongwe and Tawanda Mupariwa, as Zimbabwe A fell to 122 for 7 by the 39th over. Jongwe was bowled by Farhad Hossain, before Sajib removed Mupariwa to claim his fifth victim.

The wicketkeeper-batsman Regis Chakabva added 65 for the eighth wicket with Wellington Masakadza, the younger brother of Hamilton and Shingi. Chakabva was the last man out, for 64 off 110 balls with three fours, as Sajib walked off with his first nine-wicket haul. He is now only the second Bangladesh bowler after Razzak to achieve this feat. Sajib's previous best was 7 for 29 during the 2009-10 National Cricket League.


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Tahir parachuted in for Hants push

Imran Tahir, the Pakistan-born South Africa legspinner, has rejoined Hampshire for the final two weeks of the season as the club look to close out promotion back to Divison One of the County Championship.

Tahir, 35, last played for Hampshire in 2011 and was part of the side that won the county's first T20 title in 2010; he also helped them to Finals Day a year later.

In 2009 he was Hampshire's leading Championship wicket-taker with 52 scalps at 32.90 and two years later took 28 first-class wickets at 24.46 in eight Championship matches - but that season saw Hampshire relegated and now Tahir hopes to put that right.

Hampshire need 27 points in two matches to make certain their promotion and have matches at home to Kent and away to Glamorgan remaining.

"It was definitely in my mind when I agreed to come here and I'm looking forward to the challenge," Tahir said. "I'm only here for the last two matches but If I can contribute to Hampshire getting promoted then I will be very satisfied.

"It's always nice to be in England - I love it here. Hampshire were the club who gave me my first chance so I owe them a lot. I've played for a few sides in England but I do really enjoying playing my cricket here and I have a lot of respect for Hampshire and the people.

"Hampshire have played really good cricket all season and I'm just here to give all I've got for the next two games. I really enjoy playing my cricket at Hampshire and hopefully we'll do well and get over the line."

Tahir has previously been parachuted in at the end of the season. In 2008, he appeared for Hampshire's final game of the year despite having been called back by his South African club Titans two weeks previously. He took eight wickets in the match but it wasn't enough to lift Hampshire over eventual champions Durham.


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Bangladesh running away from batting issues

The St Vincent and St Lucia Tests have shown that Bangladesh's batting habits continue to be ineffective in any conditions slightly different from those they encounter at home.

The 35th over of the Bangladesh innings produced ten runs and a wicket, which was an unimportant contribution to their score and only gave West Indies the wicket of a tail-ender. An unsafe 79 for 6 became a more perilous 89 for 7.

What stuck out during this over was the constant chatter that came from the other end. Barring the first ball, Kemar Roach was bowling only short-pitched deliveries at Taijul Islam but Mahmudullah kept telling the man on strike that the next one would be a full ball. He said it after Taijul was stung on the gloves off the second ball, after he had fended the next one off his elbow guard for four leg byes, and after the next two balls, to which the No.8 again backed away.

Initially it seemed as if the senior batsman was preempting what Roach was going to bowl, and hoping that the next one would indeed be a full ball. But Mahmudullah's motive sounded like an indirect attempt at bringing Taijul to the pitch of the ball.

It is what club coaches sometimes do in Bangladesh when the young batsman has only just started to play with the cricket ball. The coaxing would obviously be backed up by an actual full ball and sometimes slipping in the short one, but it has often worked.

The simple reverse-psychology would work on someone only starting out on the game but Taijul was having none of that. He was not going to stand still to Roach for any one of those deliveries. Finally, he backed away and ramped the sixth ball into third-man's hand.

Taijul has a 64 in his 20 first-class matches so far, but he is a tail-ender. These days everyone in the playing XI is expected to have some gumption to hold his own, with a precondition that they would have batted at a competitive level in their formative years.

Roach's hounding of Taijul, and the batsman's sliding away from the line of the short ball each time, showed how unprepared most Bangladeshi cricketers are when they enter international cricket. The manner of his batting made it easy to realise that he was fearing getting hit, and that invariably happens when a batsman is not used to facing this sort of attack. But this cannot be an excuse for Taijul or for Bangladesh cricket.

To go a little deeper, it is indicative of how little attention is paid in pitch development even in first-class venues. The acceptance that Bangladeshi cricketers will always play on flat pitches that only offer slow pace and little bounce doesn't just trouble Taijul but the more established players like Tamim Iqbal, Nasir Hossain and Mushfiqur Rahim.

Bangladesh's cricket calendar is shaped as such that international cricket clashes with domestic cricket, and since the Dhaka clubs are opposed to playing the Premier League one-day tournament without the national players, first-class cricket doesn't see any of the senior players hone their skills regularly.

It is true for most Test countries that their international cricketers are hardly available for region, club, county or franchise but in the case of the tenth Test playing nation, such absence hurts the international cricketers as much as it constricts the domestic game.

So when the senior cricketers are repeating the same mistake in Test cricket, are being sucked into a false comfort zone or cannot easily find their way out of poor form, a lot of things are blamed, except their appearance in domestic matches.

The economy of Bangladesh cricket is kept sound by ensuring these players get to play Dhaka Premier League and the Bangladesh Premier League at every given opportunity. But when Test status was sought 14 years ago or fiercely protected earlier this year, was it done just for the "status"?

Let alone the domestic game, the idea of playing more first-class cricket against Associate Nations has never been given due attention. The BCB have made it clear in the recent past that they would avoid risking a loss to one of these lesser ranked nations. Former president AHM Mustafa Kamal dawdled for a long time before approving a T20 series against Ireland two years ago. When Bangladesh won a game there, he hastily arranged an extra game, only to lose that one.

Shane Jurgensen and before him Stuart Law requested time and again to arrange some four-day cricket against the likes of Ireland, UAE or Afghanistan but the BCB kept quiet. Nepal and Afghanistan have come out and said how little the BCB have supported them.

The connection between these decisions and how Taijul batted is long-winded but a simple route. When the BCB doesn't pay attention to the cricketing needs of the Bangladesh team, and that means skill development and the quest for constant improvement in their all-round game, the writing is on the wall for the cricketers, established in international cricket or not, to struggle in alien conditions.

Bangladesh's last tryst with a green-top was in Zimbabwe last year and they were crushed in both innings of the first Test match. In 2012 they did not face a pitch that offered pace and bounce while in 2011 it was only the West Indies and Pakistan attacks in Mirpur and Chittagong that made them uncomfortable; the year before they faced swing and seam in England for two Tests and struggled.

The other side of the argument is that Bangladesh need not change pitches at home just to prepare for conditions that they face only once or twice every year. But as has been the latest evidence in slow St Vincent and rapid St Lucia, the batting habits that have been set for years are ineffective in any conditions that are slightly different than at home.

So when Roach comes to hit Taijul, he will not listen to Mahmudullah from the other end but will continue to run away. Saving his bowling fingers, saving himself. How that reflects on a Test-playing nation is for all to see.


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Illegal bowling actions: FAQs

The whats, whys and hows of illegal bowling actions, and the related corrective measures and penalties.

What is an illegal bowling action?
An illegal bowling action is one in which the bowler's 'elbow extension' exceeds 15 degrees while he is in his delivery stride. The ICC set the 15-degree limit for all bowlers in November 2004.

What constitutes elbow extension?
Elbow extension includes flexion (in this case, the closing of the elbow joint) and extension (the straightening of the elbow joint).

Does a bent arm automatically signify an illegal action?
If the arm is bent at the onset of the delivery stride but remains rigid or does not flex or extend beyond the permissible 15 degrees during the duration of the stride, the action is not illegal. An action is only illegal if the arm flexes or extends beyond the permissible limit while in the delivery stride.

What happens after a bowler's action is reported by the match officials?
Once the match officials' report is received by the bowler's team management or home board, he must undergo testing on his action at an ICC-accredited facility within 21 days. At present, there are ICC-approved centres in Brisbane and Cardiff, and another one in Chennai is expected to be functional soon. The player is free to bowl until the results of the test are out.

What does the test involve?
The bowler is expected to replicate the action he uses during an international match and bowl at the same speed too, for the various deliveries being tested. His action is captured by multiple cameras and his movement is monitored using sensors placed on his body. The test, which is conducted by biomechanists and human movement experts, measures the degree of flexion and extension for every delivery and determines whether the action violates the prescribed 15-degree limit.

If the action is found to be illegal, what then?
The player will be suspended from bowling in international cricket immediately and a report of the test will be sent to the player's home board. On receipt of the report, the board has the option of appealing the results to an ICC-appointed bowling review group (BRG) within 14 days. However, should the appeal fail, the BRG could impose a ban on the player for a period of time.

What is the process if the player's board decides not to appeal?
The player will have to undergo remedial work on his action. He can apply for retesting at any point of time, and if his remedied action passes the ICC's 15-degree rule, he will be allowed to resume bowling in international cricket.

What happens if the bowler's action is found to be illegal a second time?
If the player is suspended a second time for an illegal action within two years of the first instance, the second suspension - from bowling in international cricket - shall last for a minimum of one year. He will be allowed to apply for reassessment only at the completion of the one year.

What if only one of a bowler's deliveries is deemed to be illegal?
If testing shows that the bowler's action is illegal only for a particular delivery, say the doosra, he will be banned from bowling just the doosra in international cricket until he corrects his action for this particular ball and has it passed as legal. If he is found to have bowled the doosra in an international game without having it reassessed first, he will be reported and suspended from bowling in internationals altogether, and the suspension shall be considered a second suspension in keeping with the terms mentioned in the previous question.


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Dahiya back as Delhi Ranji coach

Former India wicketkeeper-batsman Vijay Dahiya has been reinstated as the chief coach of the Delhi Ranji Trophy side while former Test batsman Yashpal Sharma will head the selection panel, according to a list released by the Delhi and Districts Cricket Association (DDCA).

Dahiya had coached Delhi in the 2012-13 season before DDCA decided against renewing his contract as assistant coach Sanjeev Sharma was elevated to top post. However, Delhi failed to clear the group stage last season under Sanjeev.

Sanjeev is in line to become one of the domestic match referees.

Gursharan Singh will be the chairman of selectors for the Under-23 side, which will be coached by Ajay Verma while another former Delhi skipper, Bantoo Singh, will head the U-19 selection panel and Raju Sharma has been appointed chief coach.

Anil Jain and Kamal Talwar will be the chairman of the U-16 and U-14 teams. Shikhar Dhawan's childhood coach Madan Sharma will be in charge of U-16 side while U-14 team will be under S M Khan's tutelege.


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