Robin Jackman diagnosed with cancer

Robin Jackman, the former England bowler and cricket commentator, has been diagnosed with cancer and faces seven weeks of radiotherapy. Jackman has already had two operations to remove malignant tumours from his vocal cords, South African broadcaster Supersport reported.

"It's not the prettiest, but I got it early and I'm confident I'll be fine," Jackman, 67, is reported to as saying. "I won't be in Australia, but I sure will be rooting for the Proteas." He has been advised four weeks' rest after the treatment and hopes to return to commentary early next year.

Jackman played four Tests and 15 ODIs for England, and was involved with Surrey for 16 seasons starting from 1966. Over the course of his lengthy domestic career, Jackman took more than 1400 first-class wickets and scored 5681 runs. He was born in India, grew up in England, but maintained close ties with South Africa, coaching and representing Rhodesia and Western Province over 11 seasons.

Perhaps the most famous incident of his international career was the cancelling of the Guyana Test in 1980-81, after the Guyana government denied him a visa citing his involvement with the then apartheid South Africa, and the English management chose to not yield to political pressure.

After retirement, Jackman took up media work, and has been a regular television commentator for international matches. His diagnosis comes less than a month after another former England cricketer and commentator, Tony Greig, revealed he was being treated for cancer. Last month, former New Zealand captain Martin Crowe was also diagnosed with lymphoma, a type of cancer.


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Tendulkar receives Order of Australia honour

Sachin Tendulkar has said his first tour of Australia in 1991-92, when he was still a teenager, toughened him up as a cricketer, and helped prepare him to face world-class attacks. He was speaking at a ceremony in Mumbai where he became the first Indian sportsman to be honoured with membership of the Order of Australia.

"It (the 1991-92 tour of Australia) completely changed me as a cricketer. It was a critical moment of my career. Three and half months changed me completely," Tendulkar said. "I thought I was ready to play against any attack in the world and I can say that Australia has had some contribution in that to transform me into a tougher cricketer."

India lost the Test series 4-0, but Tendulkar was India's highest run-getter with 368 runs, including one of his most celebrated centuries, in Perth. "We all know Australians are fierce competitors but when you do well against them, they shower on you all the compliments. And that is what happened to me. I scored reasonably well and scored a couple of hundreds there (in the Test series)."

Tendulkar said he had dreamt of playing in Australia even before entering his teens. "The association with Australia started long time ago and not in 1991," he said. "To me it started way back in 1985 when I was 12 years old watching those fantastic day-night matches on television. I started dreaming that one day I want to go there and play cricket. It turned into a reality in 1991-92."

The other non-Australian cricketers to have received the Order of Australia honour are West Indian greats Garry Sobers, Clive Lloyd and Brian Lara. Tendulkar was recognised "for his service to Australia-India relations by promoting goodwill, friendship and sportsmanship through the sport of cricket."

Australia's arts minister Simon Crean conferred the award to the cricketer. "Mr Tendulkar, as a member and former Captain of the Indian Cricket Team, has made an outstanding contribution to international cricket for more than 20 years," a statement from the Australian consulate-general read.


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Saeed Ajmal to deliver for Adelaide Strikers

Pakistan's No. 1 spinner Saeed Ajmal has signed with the Adelaide Strikers for the Twenty20 Big Bash League. He will be available for the Strikers' first match, against the Perth Scorchers, and may then return for the latter stages of the tournament.

Ajmal's signature represents a significant addition to the Strikers and the BBL, his spinning variations having teased and confused batsmen the world over in recent times, not least those of Australia.

"I am really excited about playing for the Adelaide Strikers and really happy that I will get the chance to show my talent in the BBL," Ajmal said.

"I am very keen to meet up with the rest of the boys soon and play my best in the games that I am available, with the hope that Adelaide make the final stages and I can return to help win the competition."

The Strikers coach Darren Berry said he was delighted to have signed Ajmal, the latest example of his policy of using spin as an attacking weapon on dry surfaces at Adelaide Oval.

"We know what this guy is capable of, having seen him run through both the Australian and English batsmen a couple of months ago, so to have him on board is a great result for the Strikers," Berry said.

Adelaide have also signed the South Australia wicketkeeper Tim Ludeman and the Queensland legspinner Cameron Boyce.


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Stevens quits as coach of Warriors, Scorchers

Western Australia and the Perth Scorchers have lost both their captain and coach in little more than a week after Lachlan Stevens elected to follow Marcus North in quitting his role at the WACA.

Stevens' exit continues a period of significant instability in WA, following the widely publicised disciplinary problems that afflicted the Scorchers' Twenty20 Champions League campaign in South Africa and almost a decade without winning a domestic trophy.

Adam Voges is captaining WA in an interim capacity following North's exit and is expected to be appointed full-time, while the Australia assistant coach Justin Langer has been widely spoken of as a potential replacement for Stevens.

Having taken over the role last summer when his predecessor Mickey Arthur was chosen as Australia's head coach, Stevens took the Scorchers to the Big Bash League final and won a contract for the 2012-13 season.

However the Scorchers' African misadventures have been book-ended by a dire start to the Sheffield Shield by WA, and they registered a third consecutive outright defeat in the match against Victoria on Saturday.

After Stevens decided not to seek an extension to his contract beyond this season it was agreed that he would leave the WACA and return home to Queensland at the conclusion of Wednesday's domestic limited overs match against the Bushrangers.

"Whilst the start of this season has been extremely challenging for all involved with the Warriors and Scorchers, I believe the past couple of seasons have been very rewarding and feel confident that we have laid foundations for a bright future," Stevens said. "A fresh coaching structure and new programs will ensure a greater depth of State squad going forward.

"The timing of this announcement is not ideal during a season, but it was only fair for the WACA to begin the search for a permanent replacement since my future intentions have become clear."

Christina Matthews, the WACA cheif executive, said the search for a new coach would begin "as a matter of urgency".

"The WACA appreciates the manner in which Lachlan has conducted himself in regards to his intentions for beyond this season and we wish him all the best for the future," Matthews said. "We will begin the task of assessing options for the position of Head Coach with both the Warriors and Scorchers as a matter of urgency."

Arthur and Stevens joined the Warriors as a head coach/assistant duo in 2010, Stevens having previously worked as the Queensland assistant coach. Both he and Arthur were highly critical of the team they inherited.

"We've done our best over the three years (since) I've been here, with Mickey as well, to start to turn around what had become a very, very insipid group and insipid squad,'' Stevens told ABC Radio last month after the Scorchers returned from South Africa.

"Things that we inherited that were very, very difficult, and I think the results in some ways have been very effective around our list management and improvement. Whether the WACA decides to move forward with me, or whether I decide to move forward with the group ... it's literally not about the coach, it's about the internal group.''


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CAS to hear Asif and Butt appeal next February

The Court of Arbitration for Sports (CAS) will hear, next February, the appeals of banned Pakistan cricketers Salman Butt and Mohammad Asif against the ICC's bans for spot-fixing. Asif's case will be heard between February 5-7, and Butt's on the 8th, it was confirmed on Monday.

The CAS, headquartered in Lausanne, Switzerland, is recognised as the world's highest judicial body for sportsmen and cases involving sport.

Asif, along with Butt, was found guilty at Southwark Crown Court in November 2011, on charges of conspiracy to cheat and conspiracy to accept corrupt payments over deliberate no-balls bowled during the Lord's Test between Pakistan and England in August 2010. Mohammad Amir, the third player accused by the Crown Prosecution Service, had pleaded guilty to the charges. Butt served seven months of a 30-month jail sentence, Asif six months of a year-long term, while Amir spent three months in a young offenders' institute.

However, the three players had already been found guilty by an ICC tribunal on February 5, 2011, and were banned for various durations. Butt's ban was for 10 years and Asif's for seven. That punishment was announced a day after the CPS levied its charges against the players.

Butt had also wanted to lodge an appeal with the International Criminal Court, but decided against it due to the expense involved and the lengthy duration of the proceedings.


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Sehwag ton cannot avoid Delhi defeat

Uttar Pradesh 403 (Dagar 116, Kaif 91, Raina 55, Praveen 51*, Narwal 4-71) and 158 for 4 (Dagar 37, Raina 37) beat Delhi 235 (Bisht 52, Imtiaz 5-59) and 322 (Sehwag 107, Manhas 65, Bhuvneshwar 4-94, Imtiaz 4-112) by six wickets
Scorecard

Uttar Pradesh wrestled an outright win in a tight tussle with Delhi's ability to kill time, the fading light and a target that oscillated between reach and just out of grasp.

An aggressive but controlled century from Virender Sehwag, batting with an injured finger, gave Delhi a decent chance of grabbing some points from their Ranji Trophy season opener.

Sehwag's calculated belligerence this morning ended up being the only passage of play in which Delhi looked in charge in the four-day match. He added 85 with Pradeep Sangwan for the seventh wicket over the session at a crowd-pleasing clip, and took Delhi to 322 to set UP a target of 155.

It was a gettable total, but it would be a test of the composure of the UP batsmen, their response to the threat of the experienced Delhi bowlers, and the ability of the light to hold out till the target was reached. Again, UP came through as they had in every phase of the match.

The openers set up the start, scoring 54 in 15 overs, and Raina came in at No.3 (instead of at No. 5 as in the first innings) to take UP to 117.

Mohammed Kaif had been injured in the first innings, hit on the middle finger of his right hand, and had to sit out during Delhi's second innings. It was said later that Kaif would have come out to bat had the situation got dire. At one stage it did, with Parvinder Singh and Arish Alam getting tied down by Ashish Nehra and Ishant Sharma.

Delhi took their chances in the field to slow the game down. They had shin pads and helmets brought on, and the quick bowlers took slow trundles back from their extended followthroughs to the top of their run.

Parvinder struck clean boundaries off Ishant and Nehra, and the new man Ali Murtaza, who took over almost seamlessly, followed him. Ten runs off Ishant's last over of the match then melted UP's anxiety away and two overs later, when Murtaza creamed a sizzling square drive off Sumit Narwal, the scores were even. Alam hit a late cut off Vikas Mishra to clinch victory.

UP were feted and rewarded by the Ghaziabad organisers in a lengthy prize distribution ceremony, and Delhi's star players melted into the background. Delhi coach Vijay Dahiya said his team had been completely outplayed by UP in every department "and in patience and consistency." The sudden rush of heavyweight names did bring, he said, "to the back of your mind the thought that these guys will come and deliver. But it's not about them and what they are expected to do. Eventually, it's about the guy in the middle taking responsibility."

That guy in the middle today turned out to be Sehwag, who paced his innings as if his runs were in perfect sync with the clock. He may have hit 16 fours in the morning, but did not look like playing to either turn up in the highlights or offer the bowlers a chance. All but 31 of his runs came in boundaries; he was particularly severe on Imtiaz Ahmed.

If Sehwag had given Delhi a narrow opening to grab some points and wrest out a draw, his innings should also have given the Indian selectors and the core of the team management some breathing space going into the Ahmedabad Test against England. It was Sehwag's first Ranji century for Delhi in almost six years, out of a total of eight, the last coming against Haryana in January 2007. It was also his first three-figure score in any match since December 2011 after his double-hundred against West Indies in Indore.

It has been a while, and Sehwag knows it, but he was neither hurried nor hasty and for the better, like he has always been, a man in control of his destiny. When he reached his century with a brisk two to cover, the noisiest stands to the east, packed in on a Monday, made themselves heard to "Veeru."

Before he pointed his bat at the dressing room, Sehwag turned and acknowledged this audience. To crowded, chaotic Ghaziabad, Sehwag's innings was what they had been waiting for from the day the glamour boys came to town - a generous sprinkle of stardust.

It looked like a perfect Ranji game played in a small venue on a fair, result-oriented wicket. Six points to the home team and a century from Veeru. It was as if Diwali had turned up early.


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Worcestershire stalwart George Chesterton dies

George Chesterton, a right-arm seam bowler who played 47 times for Worcestershire between 1950 and 1957, has died at the age of 90.

Chesterton represented Oxford University in 1948 and 1949, winning his Blue in the second year, and then switched to Worcestershire where as an amateur he played when time permitted. His first-class career extended until 1966 with appearances for MCC.

His best bowling came in his final full season when he took 7 for 14 for MCC in Ireland, and in the Championship he best came at New Road that same year when he took 6 for 56 against Middlesex. In 72 first-class matches he captured 263 wickets at 22.78 and scored 598 runs at 8.79.

He remained closely involved with the county and was the president between 1990 and 1993. A keen backer of youth cricket, in 1991 he founded the Chesterton Cup which involved schools across the Midlands.

Chesterton worked at Malvern College, where he had also been a pupil, becoming deputy head and he also wrote a history of the school.


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Umar Akmal joins Sydney Sixers

Sydney Sixers, the reigning Champions League and Big Bash League trophy holders, have bolstered their squad for this summer by signing the Pakistani batsman Umar Akmal.

Like his national team-mate Shahid Afridi at Sydney Thunder, Akmal will be available for the Sixers' first three BBL matches, offering the kind of aggressive batting he has exhibited for Pakistan since his debut as a 19-year-old in 2009.

"I jumped at the opportunity to be a part of the Big Bash League when the Sixers approached me," Akmal said.

"I'm looking forward to spending December in Australia and will be aiming to assist them to go back to back and win the tournament again."

The Sixers have also signed the New South Wales rookie-contracted batsman Daniel Hughes, an opening batsman for the North Sydney grade club.

Hughes can be expected to slot into the Sixers' top order once David Warner departs for his expected national duty.


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Tanvir Ahmed's 12 wickets in vain as NBP clinch close game

A crucial half-century by No. 8 Qaiser Abbas took National Bank of Pakistan (NBP) to a two-wicket win against Port Qasim Authority (PQA) at the Gaddafi Stadium.

Chasing 211, NBP were in trouble at 122 for 6 when seamer Tanvir Ahmed, who took 12 wickets in the match, ran through the top order. But a defiant seventh wicket partnership of 84, led by Abbas, revived the chase and helped them secure victory.

Neither team dominated the low-scoring game but NBP were at a slight disadvantage after the first innings, when a seven-wicket haul by Ahmed bowled them out for 117, leaving them 33 behind. The last six wickets fell for 16 runs.

As PQA looked to consolidate on the lead and set their opponents a stiff target, fast bowler Umaid Asif took 5 for 55 to peg them back in their second innings. Umar Amin and No. 7 Daniyal Ahsan scored 42 and 45 respectively to help them reach 177 before being bowled out. Yet, a target of 211 meant NBP has to score the highest total in the match to win it.

After the early loss of opener Nasir Jamshed, NBP were given a platform by Sami Aslam and Umair Khan, and later Wahab Riaz. But three wickets for two runs changed the complexion of the game, with 129 runs still needed. Abbas sealed the chase with his 52 off 66 deliveries.

Despite the game being dominated by bowlers, fast bowler Riaz went wicketless in the game, and Mohammad Sami, who had taken seven wickets against Pakistan International Airlines a fortnight ago, took two wickets. Opener Jamshed managed only 11 runs across both innings.


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Cobras, Knights fashion contrasting wins

Cobras 225 for 8 (Puttick 48, van Zyl 24*) beat Dolphins 253 for 6 (Miller 68*, Smit 64, Hendricks 3-50) by 2 wickets by D/L method
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

An unbeaten 51-run stand for the eighth wicket helped defending champions Cobras sneak a two-wicket win against Dolphins in a rain-affected match in Pietermaritzburg. Dane Piedt and Charl Langeveldt came together in the middle with 47 runs required off 38 balls, but with only two wickets remaining, Dolphins were the clear favourites. Dolphins' bowlers, however, bowled two lose overs which turned the equation in cobras favour from 42 off 30 to 14 off 18. Langeveldt finished the match with two consecutive boundaries in the penultimate over giving Cobras their first points.

Cobras made a solid start in chase of 254 as they got to 76 for 2 after 18 overs. But the rains came to hold up play for 40 minutes at the stage and the target was readjusted as per D/L method to 222 off 40 overs. Batsmen Andrew Puttick and Stiaan van Zyl responded to the sudden jump in the required rate with aggressive shots but didn't last long enough and were both out to seamer Prenelan Subrayen. The incoming batsmen crumbled under pressure as four more wickets fell for 30 runs before the eight-wicket pair's late burst.

Dolphins chose to bat under blue skies but lost their openers within first six overs. Captain Daryn Smit and Vaughn van Jaarsveld then took a cautious approach to knit together a 121-run stand, both batsmen completing slow half-centuries in the process. Dolphins needed a late surge and the cameo came through David Miller's bat. Miller scored 68 off 45 balls and hit nine boundaries and a six to bring some urgency and take the total past 250.

Knights 325 for 9 (Elgar 76, Rossouw 56) beat Warriors 234 (Ingram 70, McLaren 5-38) by 91 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Knights joined Lions at the top of the table with a bonus point win over Warriors in their first domestic one-day cup match in Kimberley. Allrounder Ryan McLaren was the chief architect of the win with a five-wicket haul in addition to the 47 he scored while batting.

Put in to bat, Knights were setback in the first over when Ryan Bailey was caught behind off Andrew Birch without scoring. However, Reeza Hendricks and Rilee Rossouw set about building their 66-run partnership with a flurry of boundaries. Hendricks was out soon after getting to his half-century but Rossouw continued to build a strong platform in the company of captain Dean Elgar. Rossouw scored the second half-century of the innings but it was Elgar who increased the pace with his innings and brought up his half-century too.

After a 95-run stand between the two, wickets fell at regular intervals. However, the batsmen who followed didn't let the scoring rate to fall and 84 runs came off the last 10 overs.

Chasing a big total, a lot depended on the opening pair of brother JJ and Kelly Smuts but both were out within the first four overs putting early pressure on the middle order. Colin Ingram and Davy Jacobs responded with half-centuries but the two lacked support from the rest. As the required rate started shooting up, the batsmen started faltering and McLaren ran through the tail to complete a big win.


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