Trescothick blitz sees Somerset cruise home

Somerset 184 for 2 (Trescothick 87, Trego 75*) beat Unicorns 183 for 8 (Elstone 75*, Meschede 2-15) by 8 wickets
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Marcus Trescothick blasted eight sixes in a whirlwind 87 to lead Somerset to an emphatic eight-wicket win over Unicorns in a one-sided game at Taunton.

The hosts needed only 15.3 overs to chase down a target of 184, with Trescothick making his runs off just 49 balls and opening partner Peter Trego smashing 75 not out off 38 deliveries, with 10 fours and four sixes.

Scott Elstone's 75 not out was the backbone of a Unicorns total of 183 for 8 after losing the toss. Tom Lancefield hit 38, while Craig Meschede was the pick of the Somerset bowlers with two for 15 from his eight overs.

The result was never in doubt once Trescothick and Trego cut loose with a brutal attack on the Unicorns bowlers. Trescothick hit four sixes off consecutive balls from Josh Poysden and three in succession off Garry Park. He was finally caught at long-off and the successful bowler Paul Hindmarch had Jos Buttler taken at backward square-leg off his next ball.

But by then the outcome had been settled. Trescothick ended with seven fours to go with his abundance of sixes, at times appearing to flick to ball over the ropes with nonchalant ease.

Despite the best efforts of Lancefield and Elstone, Unicorns were never able to gain the necessary momentum to their innings in excellent batting conditions.

Former Surrey batsman Lancefield impressed at the top of the order, finding the boundary four times in his 42-ball innings. But Trego struck twice in the first seven overs, sending back Lewis Hill and Michael O'Shea with only 32 on the board.

Lancefield departed with the score on 65, caught behind to give Meschede the first of his two wickets. The second was former Somerset favourite Keith Parsons, also taken by wicketkeeper Buttler, for a third-ball duck, having received a rousing ovation from home fans.

In between Meschede's wickets, leg-spinner Max Waller had Park caught at deep square off a slog sweep for 22 and it was left to Elstone to boost a modest total with some quality shots, including a six over long-on off Lewis Gregory.


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Taylor ton hands Notts opening win

Nottinghamshire 287 for 4 (Taylor 108) beat Northamptonshire 204 for 8 (Patel 3-30) by 83 runs
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James Taylor hit a fine century as Nottinghamshire opened their Yorkshire Bank 40 campaign in some style with an 83-run win over Northamptonshire at Wantage Road. The difference in quality was marked as the visitors, fielding six internationals, batted with real purpose, Taylor scoring 108 off 102 balls, before an efficient job with the ball.

Taylor's century, plus 95 from Samit Patel, saw Nottinghamshire post 287 for 4 from their 40 overs with Northants failing to get going as they fell short of a first win. Andrew Hall hit an unbeaten 58 but it was too late as Patel combined his performance with the bat with the ball taking 3 for 30.

Chris Read called correctly electing to bat, and, after Michael Lumb fell to Trent Copeland in the second over, the visitors made hay on a decent surface.

Alex Hales assumed the dominant role in the initial stages with the initial eight powerplay overs finishing with the score at 48 for 1. Hales reached his 50 off as many balls, two runs after being badly dropped at short fine-leg off Hall, but his innings ended when he aimed a crude swipe at Steven Crook. That brought in Patel and, in collaboration with Taylor, the pair added 149 in under 18 overs.

Taylor's first 50 was relatively sedate, taking 69 balls, but he accelerated markedly to his century with three figures coming up in a further 29 deliveries before he picked out long-on shortly after to give Crook a second wicket.

Patel, dropped twice before reaching 40, was in full flow by this stage but fell five short of his own century, off just 66 balls, when he skied a return catch to Copeland in the final over.

The hosts' reply started promisingly as Stephen Peters, with 21, and Kyle Coetzer, 30, put on 50 in the Powerplay without any undue fuss but their good work quickly unravelled.

Peters, advancing down the pitch to Patel, had his stumps rattled and the same fate befell Coetzer who had his leg stump removed by Jake Ball in the next over. Two then became three as Alex Wakely missed a rashly attempted reverse sweep off Patel and at 63 for 3 a tricky task suddenly looked very difficult indeed.

David Sales then steered a short, wide offering from Ball to backward point as what was 59 without loss before Peters fell, became 64 for 4.

Ben Duckett didn't hang around too long as he gloved a pre-meditated switch hit to Read and Crook was stumped in Graeme Swann's first over. Hall and James Middlebrook provided some belated resistance with 58 and 43 respectively in a partnership of 97 but it was all in vain.


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Essex bounce back but Bopara fails again

Essex 212 for 6 (Westley 71, Quiney 50) beat Durham 209 for 5 (Stokes 51) by four wickets
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Essex recovered from their mauling at home to Yorkshire Bank 40 holders Hampshire on Friday with a four-wicket victory over Durham at Chester-le-Street. Chasing Durham's 209 for 5, Essex turned a stroll into a scramble before getting home with an over to spare.

Openers Tom Westley and Rob Quiney had 103 on the board before Quiney fell for 51 in the 17th over. Man of the match Westley made a flawless 71 off 73 balls, but Essex stuttered to 199 for 6 in the 38th over.

They would have lost Greg Smith with eight needed had Callum Thorp not misjudged a top-edged sweep in the sun. That was off the first ball of the 39th over and Smith drove a lofted four to secure victory.

On a slow pitch Durham laboured after being asked to bat, with David Masters bowling straight through his eight overs to take 1 for 18. His scalp was that of Paul Collingwood, who drove to mid-on.

Durham recovered from 39 for 3 in the 11th over through Ben Stokes making a 62-ball half-century before the third umpire decided he had been run out. It was the result of a throw from Sajid Mahmood, coming in from long-on, which was deadly accurate, unlike his bowling. He sent down five wides but had the consolation of bowling home skipper Dale Benkenstein with a slower ball.

The loss of Stokes for 51 with 10 overs left was a big blow for Durham but Gordon Muchall, with 49 not out, and Gareth Breese, an unbeaten 41, took 40 off the last five overs in an unbroken stand of 69.

Essex looked like coasting to victory as Quiney quickly warmed to his task with an effortless straight drive off Chris Rushworth. Westley matched him stroke for stroke before Quiney was caught at deep midwicket off Scott Borthwick.

That brought in Ravi Bopara with something to prove following his selection in England's Champions Trophy squad. But he made only 10 before pushing forward and falling lbw to the first ball of a second spell from Mark Wood, whose pace possibly surprised Bopara.

Thorp then had Westley lbw when aiming for midwicket and after putting on 42 Mark Pettini and James Foster both drove off-side catches to Wood and Chris Rushworth respectively. The in-form Graham Napier looked like winning it, only to pull a catch to square leg, leaving Tim Phillips to complete the task with Smith.


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Career-best added bonus for Williams

Sean Williams said his personal career-best score was the last thing on his mind after his match-winning unbeaten 78 that finished the six-wicket win for Zimbabwe and levelled the three-match ODI series in Bulawayo.

He guided the chase from the moment he walked into the crease. It was 94 for 3 in the 18th over and Zimbabwe had just lost Vusimuzi Sibanda and Sikandar Raza in the space of five balls, after they had added 65 for the second wicket.

Williams immediately got to work, adding 73 for the third wicket with his captain, before finishing the job with another 86 runs in an unbroken fourth wicket partnership with Malcolm Waller.

"It obviously feels great reaching my highest score," Williams said. "But it wasn't on my mind. Obviously batting through the whole innings was on my mind, and winning the game.

"It was tough to lose a few wickets but I kept my composure till the end. It was a fantastic batting deck. It was tough to bowl on this wicket."

Williams paced his innings perfectly, mixing a cautious approach with ones and twos. There enough boundaries in his innings too; most of them came just when the Bangladesh bowlers had got a hold over their scoring.

He is one player whose record says much about Zimbabwe's selection policy. He has played fleetingly, but apart from a few low scores, he has generally been a regular performer. Williams plays spin well, a strong attribute in this batting line-up.

Zimbabwe captain Brendan Taylor was pleased to see Williams get to his 12th half-century, especially after he had been sidelined during the Test series after impressing in the West Indies. "It is really good to see guys like Sean, who have been out of the fold for long, to do well," Taylor said. "We contributed as a group. I am very pleased to see guys putting their hands up and getting us over the line."

Taylor brushed aside any suggestion that the toss has become important, especially due to the 9am start. He said the pitch was a good for batting but the batsmen had to be careful in the first ten overs.

"From my position behind the wicket, I could not see much seam movement," he said. "There was a bit of swing early on and I guess you just had to see off the first ten overs. Otherwise the pitch was the same throughout the day. There was very little spin on offer. It was just a good batting track."


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Cobb and O'Brien embarrass Gloucestershire

Leicestershire 289 (Cobb 107, O'Brien 104, Payne 3-45) beat Gloucestershire 174 (Cobb 3-34, Williams 3-34) by 115 runs
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Niall O'Brien and Josh Cobb both hit centuries as Leicestershire launched their Yorkshire Bank 40 campaign in style with a resounding victory against Gloucestershire at Grace Road.

Cobb smashed 107 and O'Brien hit 104 in an opening partnership of 193 that was the cornerstone of the Leicestershire's total of 289. It proved too much for Gloucestershire, who never recovered from a nightmare start to their innings and were dismissed for 174 to lose by 115 runs, with Cobb following up his heroics with the bat by taking 3 for 34

Cobb, the Leicestershire one-day captain, and O'Brien, on his one-day debut for the county, gave an electrifying display after Gloucestershire won the toss and decided to field first. They raced to a 50 partnership off 35 balls with O'Brien hitting five boundaries and Cobb four. By the end of the power play it was 63 without loss, and the runs continued to flow.

Cobb was first to his half century off 47 balls having hit a huge six off David Payne. O'Brien soon followed, reaching his 50 off 44 balls, and both batsmen then put their foot on the accelerator. They pierced the field at will with O'Brien offering the only chance when he was dropped in the deep off Benny Howell on 86.

He reached his century off 79 balls with a six and 12 fours before holing out to long off in the 27th over. Cobb went to his century off 89 balls with eight fours and three sixes. But he too perished going for another big hit.

After that wickets fell at regular intervals with only Matt Boyce (28) offering much resistance as Leicestershire lost their last eight wickets for 74 runs in 10 overs with Payne taking 3 for 45.

Gloucestershire made a disastrous start to the runs chase slumping to 44 for 5 in 10 overs with both Michael Klinger and Chris Dent run out by some sharp fielding from the Foxes. Then Cobb came on to bowl his offspin and capped a Man of the Match performance by taking the wickets of Ian Cockbain, Gareth Roderick and Will Gidman to finish with competition best figures. Robbie Williams also took 3 for 34 and the game ended with 35 balls remaining.


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Record-breaking Middlesex move ahead

Middlesex 166 and 283 for 2 (Rogers 131*, Robson 129) lead Surrey 338 by 111 runs
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Chris Rogers and Sam Robson set a new record for the highest ever first-wicket stand for Middlesex against Surrey on a day that saw the home side wrestle back the initiative from their south of the river rivals. It was in the 69th over that the record set by Pelham Warner and Johnny Douglas in 1907 at The Oval was passed, and owed as much to the openers' pro-active start as it did to a pitch that became much easier to bat on.

In an elongated afternoon session, Rogers and Robson compiled 161 runs in 48 overs, in a determined yet comfortable manner. They continued on their merry way in the evening with such nonchalance that the passing of Surrey's total was met with nothing more than a cursory glance at the scorecard from the spectators. While their hundreds were reached at the same pace - both took 185 balls - the nature of their innings bore the imprint of their respective personalities.

Robson displayed his aptitude for driving before bringing out his dabs behind square on both sides of the wicket. If you'll allow the typecasting, he is the evolving opener; growing into his innings through a well-rounded attacking game rather than bitty accumulation. Obviously that comes with its own pitfalls - his conversion rate of fifties to hundreds may never get above the one-third it stands at now - but he is an exciting prospect who should be encouraged to play his game. His decision to try and hook Zander de Bruyn cost him his wicket, but he had played a fine hand.

"Been there - done that - did it again" would be the pithy 1990s subtext to Rogers' first century for Middlesex against Surrey. The majority of his runs against the seamers came through third-man with a deliberateness that Jade Dernbach couldn't quite believe; anything on his legs was greatly received. Even when he was driving crisply yet straight to the fielders at the end of the day, he would wryly walk away from his crease, before returning to push the next ball around the corner for a couple. It was his career in a nutshell; trial and error - hold the error.

The day started with Surrey taking the one remaining wicket before Tim Murtagh and Corey Collymore could add the 28 runs needed to avoid the follow-on. Unsurprisingly, with his bowlers well rested and rain predicted for Sunday, Graeme Smith put Middlesex back in. There was rain in the air; a light drizzle greeted spectators upon their arrival before the start of play and a bigger, longer downpour came with Middlesex 29 without loss.

A 40-minute delay and an early lunch later, in muggier conditions, Dernbach drew the first false shot with Rogers edging a difficult chance to Wilson at second slip, which had the Irishman diving to his right and slightly forward, but failing to hold on.

At the other end, Chris Tremlett looked strong and quick, bringing his length forward and hitting the bat hard. Watching him the previous day from square of the wicket, the 6ft 7 inch bowler had a notable stop after delivery; an unusual hop, seemingly dissipating any kind of forward momentum. Today he bustled through the crease with greater fluency - the hop making way for a couple of ferocious strides. However, Rogers used this extra pace to slap a couple of fours behind point as he and Robson took Middlesex past fifty with minimal fuss.

The springiness of the surface on the opening was a faint memory as the pitch played with more conventional bounce which Robson in particular thrived on. He didn't have to force the issue, instead timing the ball well on the front foot and, as he moved into the 30s, working the ball through cover-point and in front of square leg off Tim Linley and Dernbach.

He moved past fifty for the fourth time this season with his ninth boundary and Rogers soon joined him in the fifties, though not before a little scare when he edged again to second slip, this time well short, off the bowling of Linley. Save that moment, Linley was ineffectual and at times looked like he was returning a favour to Robson.

As both players motored on in the evening session, Smith got creative in the field. When Robson was startled by a short-ball from Dernbach, Smith encouraged his bowler to persist and supported him with five men on the leg-side; a wide mid-on, midwicket, deep square leg and two behind square - one of whom was a leg-slip.

Considering the circumstances and the protagonists - an Australian batsman in the process of qualifying for England and a South African-born English bowler obeying the orders of his pugnacious yet affable skipper - it was very much Bodyline-lite, and when Dernbach was slightly wide with his short-ball, Robson gleefully moved to 96, and past 3,000 first-class runs.

Rogers was not keen to play the short ball, choosing to duck and dive, which only infuriated Dernbach further; he thought he might have had Robson caught off an inside edge but it wasn't given. The 200 partnership came up with both batsmen on 98 and the only question was who would get there first. In the end it was Rogers with a punch through cover, before Robson followed with a scampered single to midwicket.

With an overnight lead of 111, Middlesex's middle order have the chance to make amends for their earlier misdemeanours and give their bowlers enough runs and - importantly - time to push for a win. The corresponding fixture, albeit on a less accommodating pitch, produced a thrilling finish in Middlesex's favour, and history suggests it may not just dribble to a draw.

If the Sunday of a long weekend has you at a loose end, look no further than Lord's - where adult tickets £5 and it's free for over-65s and under-16s - for the finale of what has been a compelling encounter.


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Nepal pip USA to WC Qualifiers

Nepal have leapfrogged USA to earn a place in the World Cup Qualifiers after a dramatic day at the World Cricket League Division 3 tournament in Bermuda.

It was a plausible, but unlikely, scenario at the start of the day with Nepal needing to thrash Italy then hope that Bermuda overcame USA. In the end, that is exactly what happened.

Nepal raced to victory with a massive 211 deliveries to spare which gave their net run-rate the surge required to keep their hopes alive. Tight bowling had restricted Italy to 127 for 9 and then Nepal's openers - Subash Khakurel and Pradeep Airee - added 87 in 12 overs to speed them on their way before captain Paras Khadka provided the finishing touches with 22 off eight deliveries.

Still, however, Nepal needed a favour from Bermuda who, by now, had no chance of progressing. Ultimately, Bermuda cruised home with more than five overs to spare, but it will have been an agonising few hours for Nepal. They impressively knocked off 221 led by their captain, Chris Douglas, who made 89 off 75 balls. He may now find himself being offered the freedom of Kathmandu.

Nepal will now join Uganda, who had already qualified top of the group, at next year's World Cup Qualifiers to compete for a chance to play at the main event in Australia and New Zealand during early 2015.


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Dwayne Bravo replaces Sammy as ODI captain

Dwayne Bravo has replaced Darren Sammy as the West Indies ODI captain for the Champions Trophy. Sammy will continue to lead them in Tests and Twenty20 internationals. Under Sammy, West Indies won the World Twenty20, but have won only three ODI series over the last three years, two of them against Bangladesh and Zimbabwe.

"Our results in Tests and T20s have been showing consistent improvement, and Sammy deserves every kudos for the work he has done in leading and moulding the team in these formats," chairman of the selection panel, Clyde Butts, said. "We remain confident in his leadership in these formats, and will recommend that he continues as the captain for Test and T20 cricket.

"However, our ODI results have not been as strong, and we believe that it is best that we freshen the leadership of the team in this format."

West Indies have won 19 and lost 30 ODIs under Sammy, who first captained them in April 2010. Sammy averages 21 with the bat and 42 with the ball in the format. He has often been criticised for batting too low - usually No. 8 - to justify his place as primarily a bowler of limited penetration. However, that criticism hasn't been limited to just one format.

Bravo, who averages 24 with the bat and 30 with the ball, was thrilled at the news. "I must say congratulations to Sammy in his leadership of the team, and I am very happy to be taking over from him," he said. "I am even happier that he remains in the team, and I am looking forward to working with him along with the team management and all the players, especially vice captain Denesh Ramdin, Chris Gayle, Ramnaresh Sarwan, Kieron Pollard and Marlon Samuels."

Sammy pledged support to the new captain. "I congratulate Dwayne Bravo," he said, "and give him my full support as he leads the ODI team. He can be assured of my unwavering commitment to the team and our plans to be champions of one-day cricket."

Bravo did captain West Indies when Sammy rested during the home ODIs against Zimbabwe. Andre Russell, Narsingh Deonarine, Veerasammy Permaul and Kieran Powell were left out of that 13-man squad. Sammy, Ravi Rampaul, Samuels, Gayle, Devon Smith and youngster Jason Holder made comebacks.

"We have shown confidence in the players who have served well in both the batting and bowling departments, and have identified some young players such as Jason Holder and Johnson Charles who add quality to the squad," Butts said.

Among those left out, only Powell was injured. Darren Bravo, who has undergone a minor eye surgery, was picked although he is yet to resume playing for Trinidad & Tobago.

West Indies squad for the Champions Trophy: Dwayne Bravo (capt.), Denesh Ramdin (wk & vc), Tino Best, Darren Bravo, Johnson Charles, Chris Gayle, Jason Holder, Sunil Narine, Kieron Pollard, Ravi Rampaul, Kemar Roach, Darren Sammy, Marlon Samuels, Ramnaresh Sarwan, Devon Smith


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Substance over style works for Dernbach

Middlesex 161 for 9 (Dernbach 3-59, Batty 2-23) trail Surrey 338 (Murtagh 3-54, Collymore 3-72) by 177
Scorecard

On a day where the sun shone bright and the sky remained spotless, Middlesex produced an inept batting display to leave themselves with one first innings wicket remaining and a deficit of 177 runs.

Collectively, the Surrey bowling unit operated with a determined nature that would have buoyed Graeme Smith. It must be said Smith rotated them well - Chris Tremlett in particular responding positively to the four over shifts he was given - but Middlesex will know their own batting sold them short. Many have championed their bowling attack but there was undoubtedly going to be games where the batsmen would be needed to make something happen. This is one of them.

Zander de Bruyn started the morning with the bat and showed good intent to push Surrey on, as Tim Murtagh swung a delivery past Steven Davies' inside edge and rapped him on the pads, in front of middle and off, to send him on his way. Murtagh was reliable as ever, but Steven Finn was off-colour, seemingly concentrating solely on pace; the giveaway being a handful of leg side wides. His third and final wide, before he was taken out of the attack, was particularly unbecoming of a Test bowler.

Pennies for the thoughts of Andy Flower and David Saker; both present at Lord's today, surely running the rule over the four international quicks present, past and future. Toby Roland-Jones represents the latter and he was more convincing today, claiming his first wicket of the match with a devilish back of a length ball that made a play for de Bruyn's shoulder, but made do with the thumb of his glove.

Surrey will know they left runs in the track as Corey Collymore, an international of the past, and Paul Stirling shared the last four wickets. Head coach Chris Adams preaches "hard cricket" and he will not be happy that the last six wickets only added 71 runs, but what he can't fault is the response with the ball.

Middlesex's innings started at a greater pace to Surrey's dreary first go, but where the visiting side left well - particularly day one centurion Rory Burns - the hosts found themselves falling for temptation. Chris Rogers took a brace of fours off Jade Dernbach before he chased a wide, full length delivery from de Bruyn and only succeeded in diverting it rather violently onto his middle stump. His replacement Joe Denly also seemed nonplussed by Dernbach until he made one just duck in, which the batsman - head falling to the offside - could only meet with pad.

One of England's preliminary 30 for the ICC Champions Trophy, Dernbach failed to make the whittled down 15 as Ashley Giles went for substance above style. There's no doubting his talents; his armoury of slower balls, cutters and back-of-the-handers seems both a gift and a curse. His slower-ball did make an appearance and had Dawid Malan baffled briefly before the ball dipped just wide of his toes and onto his bat.

But Dernbach has shown this season that he has a clear appreciation of the sub-plots of long-form bowling. After Robson was squared up neatly by de Bruyn and Malan unluckily adjudged lbw to Gareth Batty's first ball when it seemed there was bat involved, Dernbach produced a mini-spell of pressure which pressed home Surrey's advantage.

Neil Dexter edged him to Vikram Solanki in the slips before Dernbach produced an in-swinging yorker to greet Paul Stirling on his County Championship debut. Regardless of how many more times Stirling dons the whites in county cricket, he'll struggle to face a better ball - especially first-up.

Roland-Jones swatted two fours before giving Tremlett a return catch for his first wicket, while Simpson's chip to mid-on should rightly earn him some blank stares and coarse words from anyone with Middlesex's best interest at heart.


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Pakistan regroup for Champions Trophy camp

Pakistan's six-day conditioning camp ahead of the Champions Trophy began on Friday in Abbottabad. On the opening day at the Abbottabad Cricket Stadium, the team had a two-hour session, spending most of it in physical and fielding drills.

The stadium is at an altitude of 1260 metres above sea level, surrounded by hills, and the players wanted to ensure they acclimatised themselves with the conditions first. The forecast suggests that temperature will stay pleasant through the day, but could drop to single figures at night.

"The mood is pretty good here," Dav Whatmore, the Pakistan head coach, told reporters. "We are very keen to extract as much as we can in the six days by training in the conditions, which are similar to where we are going to play much of our cricket in the next two months.

"We decided to come to Abbottabad, with its obviously cooler conditions, as it's very warm in Lahore at the moment. We have also prepared pitches with grass on them to try and simulate conditions like those in England. While one cannot recreate it exactly, this is the best we have."

The day started with fielding drills as Misbah-ul-Haq, Mohammad Hafeez and Asad Shafiq had a rigorous slip-catching session while rest of the players went through regular fielding practice. There wasn't much bowling as the groundstaff worked on preparing the centre pitches for batting practice on Saturday.

Except Junaid Khan, all players picked for the Champions Trophy arrived for the camp, while five emerging fast bowlers were also called in to train with the national squad. Junaid, who lives in Swabi, about two hours away from Abbottabad, is expected to join the squad on Saturday.

Thirty minutes into the camp, Javed Miandad made an appearance. He said he was there to motivate players and had come on the request of the PCB chairman.

One of the sidelights of the day was the race between Nasir Jamshed and Saeed Ajmal. The usual sprinting drill was amusingly converted to a competition between the two, with the 35-year-old Ajmal beating the 23-year-old Jamshed by a big distance, leaving the latter out of breath.


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