Rain forces tame draw in Sylhet

Sri Lanka Under-19 185 (Mendis 54, Jubair 4-35) and 59 for 0 drew with Bangladesh Under-19 271 for 7 dec (Shanto 69, Mehedy 59, Mosaddek 74, Mendis 4-76)
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Rain robbed much of the action in the drawn second four-day game in Sylhet. There were four half-centuries and two four-wicket hauls from either side, and only two completed innings.

Only 5.2 overs were possible on the first day after Sri Lanka captain Kusal Mendis decided to bat. The visitors resumed on the second day, but only to be bowled out for 185. Legspinner Jubair Hossain took four wickets while Mendis top-scored with 54 off 83 balls with nine fours.

After the third day which was completely washed out, Bangladesh responded well on the final day, with Nazmul Hossain Shanto, Mehedy Hasan and Mosaddek Hossain scoring fifties.

For the visitors, offspinner Ramesh Mendis took four wickets before the hosts declared at 271 for 7. Sri Lanka batted out 26 overs in the final session, without losing a wicket, as the match ended in a tame draw.


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Samaraweera holds up Glam

Worcestershire 123 and 186 for 5 (Samaraweera 71*, Moeen 55) lead Glamorgan 295 by 14 runs
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Glamorgan go into the final day at the SWALEC Stadium as favourites to win but half-centuries from Thilan Samaraweera and Moeen Ali ensured Worcestershire would not lose by an innings and by the close they had reached a lead of 14.

Glamorgan's most effective bowler was Will Bragg. His part-time medium pace accounted for Moeen and Alexei Kervezee in the space of four balls either side of tea as he recorded figures of 2 for 7.

Glamorgan resumed the third day on 235 for 7, a first-innings lead of 112 with Jim Allenby (71) and Dean Cosker (8). The duo moved the score onto 244 before a light shower forced the players off the field. When they returned Allenby's 212 minute vigil ended when he edged Gareth Andrew to Daryl Mitchell at second slip. Allenby made 78 from 162 balls.

Michael Hogan was dismissed three balls later when a ball from Chris Russell trickled onto his stumps. The last wicket of Cosker and Mike Reed produced some entertainment as they put on 36 before Russell brought the innings to a close when he yorked Reed for 15 with Cosker unbeaten on 44 from 88 balls with five fours. Gareth Andrew was Worcestershire's best bowler ending with figures of 4 for 79.

Glamorgan struck in the first over of the Worcestershire second innings when Graham Wagg bowled Matt Pardoe for 0 shouldering arms before the visitors reached 5 for 1 at lunch, still 167 runs adrift of making Glamorgan bat again.

Worcestershire had reached 50 for 1 before Jim Allenby made the breakthrough to remove skipper Daryl Mitchell with Bragg making a fine diving catch at midwicket. Moeen went on to make 55 with nine fours in a stay in the middle of two hours 39 minutes before perishing in the final over before tea. Moeen's defiance ended when he chopped a ball from Bragg on to his stumps.

From 97 for 3 at tea, Worcestershire lost another wicket three balls after the break when Kervezee went for a duck - the second victim of Bragg's medium pace after he was caught at slip by Allenby. But Samaraweera and Michael Johnson ensured a lead as well as no more scares for Worcestershire, putting on 48 for the sixth wicket by the close.


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Smiling Ambrose dashes Durham chances

Durham 284 and 11 for 1 require another 402 runs to beat Warwickshire 345 and 351 for 8 dec (Ambrose 105, Clarke 92)
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Tim Ambrose said he was "enjoying cricket and enjoying life" after making a first century since opening up about his battle with depression. His dashing 105 gave Warwickshire a big lead and a chance to push for victory on the final day.

Last September was the first time that Ambrose had revealed the troubles that saw him miss almost half the 2010 season. But now almost entirely free from the "soaking wet duvet" that had covered him, he is in a good place and part of a lower-order that makes Warwickshire extremely hard to kill off.

Ambrose was needed to claw his side back from 64 for 4 as Warwickshire's top-order again showed its fragile nature. They lost a fifth wicket with the lead at 225 but Ambrose and Rikki Clarke shared a century stand in 138 balls that whipped away the opportunity Durham sensed after their morning's work.

For Ambrose, it was a century dedicated to his grandfather Nick who underwent a recent heart operation. The news was positive and Ambrose will Skype him with his own good news.

"I'm enjoying cricket and enjoying life and that's the important thing for everyone," Ambrose said. "I felt good all pre-season. As soon as I picked a bat up in late February I've felt in great nick. I said to the guys on the first morning of this game, is it wrong that I want someone to get out so I can have a bat? I haven't had a hit, in Abu Dhabi the guys piled on the runs and against Derby the rain got in the way so now that I've had the chance, it's nice to convert it."

Ambrose was usurped by Matt Prior at both Sussex and in the England Test side and it was his exclusion from the England team in 2009 that triggered his lowest ebb. He played 11 Tests and made a century against New Zealand, averaging just under 30. His last match came when Prior flew home from the West Indies when his wife was pregnant, cementing Ambrose's place as Prior's perennial understudy.

International cricket is now as much of an issue to deal with as his depression and he can focus on delivering another title for his county. His runs last year, 623 at 44.50, were part of a lower order that was essential to their success.

"We've talked among ourselves about the engine room," Ambrose said. "With myself, Rikki, Chris Woakes and Keith Barker, there are a lot of runs there and it's something we're very proud of. When we get into trouble we've got the guys to get out of it."

Ambrose and Troughton ensured disaster was averted but Ben Stokes produced a quick, reverse-swinging spell from the Pavilion End that reignited Durham's hopes. Stokes found an edge from Ambrose that narrowly evaded first slip and trapped Troughton lbw. But Clarke survived the burst and struck two fours in three balls to see Stokes off and end Durham's best hope of a target within range.

It was disappointment for the Durham head coach, Geoff Cook, who chose to praise Warwickshire's lower order rather than his bowlers who had put the match on an even keel at 64 for 4. Ian Westwood and Will Porterfield fell to good deliveries that swung just enough before Varun Chopra was strangled down the leg side from Stokes' first delivery. And when Laurie Evans pulled to mid-off the engine room was being revved up for duty.

They delivered. Warwickshire reached a safe position through Ambrose and Clarke but, given the way runs have been accumulated with ease and at pace on all three afternoons of the match when the ball has softened, Troughton was very cautious in his declaration and ensured that Durham would have to score at over four-an-over to chase 413.

They pulled out with five overs remaining in the day and with the seventh ball of the innings, Chris Wright found a little movement back into Keaton Jennings to trap him for a golden duck.


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Obuya leads Kenya to convincing win

Kenya 176 for 5 (Obuya 75*, Obanda 47) beat Netherlands 172 for 5 (Swart 89, Aga 3-24) by five wickets
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An unbeaten 75 from Collins Obuya guided Kenya to a five-wicket win over Netherlands in a T20I match in Windhoek. The two sides will engage again on April 20 in a T20 Quadrangular series match, with Namibia and South Africa Emerging Players the other two teams in the competition.

Set a target of 173 to win, Kenya were on the backfoot at 18 for 2 after the loss of two quick wickets. However, a 54-run stand between opener Alex Obanda and Obuya brought their chase back on track. Once Obanda fell for 47, Obuya paired with Rakep Patel and the duo put on 83 runs off 44 balls to take Kenya to the brink of victory. Obuya then guided the side home with one over to spare.

Earlier, the Netherlands openers got off to a blistering start after choosing to bat first. Stephan Myburgh and Michael Swart shared a 97-run opening stand that was broken by Ragheb Aba, who bowled Myburgh for 41. Swart then added 51 runs with Tom Cooper to take Netherlands to 148 for 1 in the 15th over, creating a solid platform for a big score. However, once Swart and Cooper fell, the other Netherlands batsmen struggled, managing only seven runs in the last two overs. Swart's innings of 89 came off 55 balls and included six fours and five sixes. Aga was the pick of the Kenyan bowlers, finishing with figures of 3 for 24 off his four overs.


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Jones, Coles put Kent on top

Kent 406 (Jones 67, Coles 59, Naik 4-97) v Leicestershire
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Leicestershire's decision to bowl first backfired as Kent racked up 406 on the first day at Grace Road with half-centuries from Brendan Nash, Geraint Jones and Matt Coles.

More than half the Kent total came in boundaries as a young Leicestershire attack struggled to keep control in the windy conditions. Jones and Coles shared a seventh-wicket stand of 104 in 19 overs, with Coles letting loose in a 63-ball stay. In all Kent scored 216 runs in boundaries, hitting 51 fours and two sixes.

It was the second successive game in which Leicestershire have conceded more than 400 runs after putting the opposition into bat, having suffered the same fate last week against Hampshire. Leicestershire's cause was not helped when Matthew Hoggard, their most experienced bowler, trudged off the field after a five-over spell before lunch and did not reappear for the rest of the day.

Nathan Buck, Alex Wyatt and Anthony Ireland had already been ruled out because of injury, leaving the home side's seam attack seriously weakened. Kent cashed in, scoring at well over four runs an over throughout the day as the boundaries flowed following the early run out of Sam Northeast. Rob Key, also fell before lunch for 41, top edging a bouncer from Robbie Williams to Shiv Thakor at fine leg.

With Nash, Mike Powell, Darren Stevens and James Tredwell back in the pavilion by mid-afternoon, leaving Kent 207 for 6, Leicestershire looked to have a chance of keeping the total to a respectable level. But the partnership between Jones and Coles put Kent well on top and by tea they had reached a healthy 283 without further loss.

Jones reached his 50 off 70 balls with five fours and Coles hit a six and eight fours in a 51-ball half-century. He was stumped attempting one big hit too many off Jigar Naik. Jones was then trapped lbw for 67 by the same bowler but still Leicestershire were unable to bring the innings to a close.

Callum Haggett hit 40 and Mark Davies 41 as the last two wickets added 89 runs to give Kent maximum batting points, before Haggett was caught at midwicket off Naik, who finished with 4 for 97 off 21.5 overs.


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Reed and Hogan dismantle Worcestershire

Glamorgan 0 for 0 trail Worcestershire 123 (Reed 5-27, Hogan 4-33) by 123 runs
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Pace bowler Mike Reed registered his maiden County Championship five-wicket haul as Glamorgan had much the better of the first day of their Division Two clash against Worcestershire in Cardiff.

Reed, 24, claimed 5 for 27 in 15.5 overs with Worcestershire bowled out for only 123 in their first innings. Skipper Daryl Mitchell and Moeen Ali top-scored with 20 apiece. Reed's fellow seamer Michael Hogan also recorded figures of four for 33.

In reply Glamorgan's openers - Ben Wright and Will Bragg - only faced 13 balls between them for no score before bad light stopped play with only 65.2 overs possible on the opening day.

Hogan and Reed went through the top order to reduce Worcestershire to 59 for 5 by lunch - losing four wickets for only five runs.

It vindicated captain Mark Wallace's decision to put the opposition in after he won the toss and was a turnaround from the opening match of the season where Northamptonshire dominated until wet weather forced a draw.

Australian Hogan claimed the first wicket of the day in the seventh over when opener Matthew Pardoe was caught at leg slip by Wright. Worcestershire looked like they had weathered the early storm reaching 55 for one before losing four wickets in the space of 3.5 overs before lunch.

Mitchell went edging a ball from Reed to Stewart Walters at second slip before Sri Lanka's Thilan Samaraweera went for a duck trapped leg before by Hogan. With their backs up Glamorgan took two more wickets in successive overs with Wright claiming a second catch at leg slip to dismiss Ali to give the impressive Hogan his third victim.

Three balls later Reed had Alexei Kervezee leg before for 2 as Worcestershire lost four wickets in four overs with only five runs added. Glamorgan's bowlers did not stop there. Reed claimed his third wicket after lunch bowling wicket-keeper Michael Johnson, while the medium pace of. Jim Allenby bowled Neil Pinner as Worcestershire were reduced to 85 for 7.

Hogan bowled Gareth Andrew for 9 before Dean Cosker caught David Lucas in the gully to give Reed his fourth victim as Worcestershire struggled to 102 for 9. Reed rounded off a fine five-wicket haul after bowling Chris Russell.

Glamorgan began their innings but the players went off for bad light at 4.30pm and they did not return


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Westfield set for ECB meeting

Mervyn Westfield, the former Essex bowler, is to hold a meeting with the ECB on Thursday afternoon as attempts continue to persuade him to give evidence at Danish Kaneria's appeal hearing.

Westfield, whose evidence was crucial in the original hearing that found Kaneria guilty of corruption, has had no contact with the ECB for many months and has so far resisted all attempts to persuade him to appear at the appeal. While the ECB were successful in gaining a summons from the High Court compelling Westfield to attend the appeal hearing on April 22, doubts remain as to whether the court has any jurisdiction in this case.

Westfield remains angry with the ECB and the PCA. He feels that the harshness of his penalty - he spent two months in prison and was banned from the first-class game for five years and the recreational game for three - does not reflect that he cooperated with the investigating authorities, pleaded guilty and gave evidence against Kaneria.

The fact that he has agreed to meet the ECB suggests a deal could be imminent, however. Westfield is understood to desire a return to club cricket - he remains connected with Wanstead Cricket Club in the Essex League - and he could be offered a chance to partially revive his career if he cooperates. Westfield would be expected to earn several hundred pounds a week as a club professional.

Kaneria, the Pakistan legspinner, was banned from the game for life and charged £100,000 in costs by an ECB panel in June 2012 for his part in the spot-fixing case involving Westfield.

Kaneria had been found guilty of inducing his former Essex team-mate to underperform in a limited-overs game in 2009 and of bringing the game into disrepute. Westfield, who was jailed for his role in the case, gave evidence against Kaneria at the hearing.

As all boards under the governance of the ICC have an agreement to mirror bans imposed in such circumstances, Kaneria's ban has been effective worldwide.

Kaneria's appeal hearing was originally scheduled for December but, after the ECB was unable to gain Westfield's cooperation, it was postponed until April. Without Westfield's evidence, the ECB's case against Kaneria is severely compromised. Kaneria's lawyers are looking not just for his ban to be overturned - at 32, he harbours hopes of a reviving his international career - but they are also claiming "very substantial damages" from the ECB.

Kaneria returned to the UK on Wednesday. His lawyers remain adamant that, without Westfield's evidence, the ECB "has no case".


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Crook demonstrates Northants' potential

Northamptonshire 156 for 5 (Peters 60, Napier 3-30) trail Essex 183 (Napier 73*, Crook 4-39) by 27 runs
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Northamptonshire weren't touted as potential Division Two promotion contenders but few counties have started 2013 better. Only rain denied them victory after bowling Glamorgan out for 134 last week and here the vaunted Essex batting line-up were dismissed for 183.

The shoddy shot selection of Essex's top order was partially to blame for their fate but significant credit must go to Northants' seamers. Steven Crook was outstanding, claiming Mark Pettini caught at second slip to a ball that reared up and then James Foster clean bowled to a delivery that moved late in the same over on the stroke of lunch. Ravi Bopara was utterly becalmed by Crook's unrelenting line in his 31-ball 6 and edged behind just three balls after being dropped at second slip to another tentative forward prod. Since returning to Northants, Crook has now taken nine Championship wickets at under ten apiece.

Crook's career path may have been unconventional - he briefly retired from cricket a few years ago - but his bowling success, based on a strong, repeatable action and a consistent line just outside off stump, is certainly not.

Northants have quietly assembled a formidable seam attack at Wantage Road. Australian Trent Copeland bowls a consistently threatening off stump line, which accounted for the stylish Tom Westley; David Willey showed the priceless left-armer's virtue of swinging the ball back from around the wicket; and Andrew Hall's relentless wicket-to-wicket bowling trapped Essex's overseas player Rob Quiney lbw. Together, they easily vindicated Stephen Peters' decision to bowl after winning the toss.

Peters would have been particularly thrilled that three bowling changers yielded wickets within two balls. As Crook later said, "We've bowled well as a unit and we've got some variation in our attack - we're not all doing the same thing."

That Essex even mustered 183 was the result of Graham Napier's belligerent unbeaten 73. With Essex in disarray at 138 for 9, Napier responded as is his wont, thrashing five sixes in ten balls. A couple were harrumphed over long-on, and there were a trio of upper cuts for six as Napier sagaciously targeted the short third man boundary. It's not often that a bowler can feel frustrated with figures of 4 for 39, but that was Crook's fate after Napier plundered him for 22 in an over.

Napier, who said he had never played in windier conditions, was almost as impressive with the ball, bustling in with considerable pace to take 3 for 30. Indeed, had substitute Tom Craddock taken Rob Newton - who has batted pleasingly for his unbeaten 35 - just before the close, Essex might even be dreaming of a first innings advantage.

But Napier and Reece Topley might have benefited from a little more support. While Topley was impressive, fellow left-armer Tymal Mills bowled too many short deliveries on leg stump. Maurice Chambers was also inconsistent, going for 27 in five overs, and was a little fortunate to dismiss Alex Wakely, caught at square leg of a lackadaisical flick. But he was also unlucky not to get another wicket: he got a ball to rear up to Rob Newton's glove, and it bounced onto off stump without dislodging the bail. As wags immediately remarked, it was a case of Newton defying gravity.

Fifteen dismissals in the day might suggest this was a pitch with excessive zest but, although good bowlers can find seam movement and bounce, it is an excellent cricket wicket. Indeed, if there is a problem with the conditions it is with the wind. Napier avoided blaming the wicket for Essex's first innings total, saying only "it's a strange pitch - when it's done something it's done a lot".

That the wicket rewards good batsmanship was highlighted by Stephen Peters, who played the late-cut deliciously in his 60. It is often remarked that Peters hasn't enjoyed the career expected after scoring a match-winning hundred in the Under-19 World Cup Final in 1998 but he remains one of the most aesthetically pleasing batsmen on the county circuit.


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Mushfiqur quietly confident, Taylor banks on home conditions

Height was not the only difference between Brendan Taylor and Mushfiqur Rahim when they posed with the Test series trophy. In the few minutes that the captains stood posing for the cameras, their faces said it all: while Taylor is weighed down with worry, Mushfiqur is buoyed by possibility.

The Zimbabwean camp are doing their best to disguise their difficulties. Although they have been through a period of poor results and financial disputes, if an alien landed in the country, it would not see many differences between Zimbabwean training and practice in most other places in the world.

"We've got a happy camp. We've got a rejuvenated camp. All the other stuff is water under the bridge," Taylor insisted. While watching them go about their preparations in a carefree, unfussed manner, that is easy to believe. When considering that as recently as last week, Craig Ervine walked out on his country to take up a club cricket deal, it is not.

But Zimbabwe are used to these kinds of disruptions. They have been able to play with sideshows going on in the past. They have not been able to win often, but that is not the fault of diversions alone and so they have got used to that too particularly away from home - where they have been playing for more than a year.

Although they regard their poor showings in New Zealand, at the World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka and in West Indies with seriousness, they are careful to separate those from what they hope to achieve on their own turf. The comfort of Harare Sports Club is what Taylor hopes will justify his fighting talk.

"I'm sure it will be a testing wicket here with good pace and bounce. I'm sure they'd (Bangladesh) rather be on a lower flatter wicket," he said. "We know they have got to the talent to score big against any team but we hope our bowlers can cause some problems." When Zimbabwe last hosted Bangladesh at this venue, their opening bowlers, Kyle Jarvis and Brian Vitori, both on debut, impressed. Their emergence hinted that Zimbabwe were bucking the trend of relying on spinners and starting to develop quality seamers. Heath Streak oversaw the process and although his contract as bowling coach has not been renewed by Zimbabwe Cricket, the fruits of his labour will be on display.

Four quicks are a possibility with Tendai Chatara, who earned his first Test cap in the West Indies, expected to play alongside a resurgent Elton Chigumbura and a focused Keegan Meth. Jarvis, who has been Zimbabwe's best player since their Test comeback, will lead the attack but Vitori may not appear at all. Injuries have caused him to regress although he looks to be readying for a comeback.

Zimbabwe's batting is the concern especially after it was dismantled by spin in the West Indies. At home, Taylor believes the top four can produce and knows he is a crucial part of that. He managed just 123 runs in his last eight innings but is ready to rectify that. "I've hit thousands of balls since then. I feel my preparation has been excellent," he said.

Mushfiqur has no such pressure. He recently became Bangladesh's first double centurion on the tour of Sri Lanka where they showed real progress. "It's big satisfaction for any captain if you see your team doing well," he said. "Players are taking more responsibility and they prepare well. What we want now is more consistent cricket."

Bangladesh talk in an eerily similar way to the way South Africa do although they are at the opposite end of the Test rankings. Mushfiqur used the word "processes," in the same context Gary Kirsten does when he explains South Africa's approach. "We are thinking of the processes and the basics and we want to improve each series."

He hinted that the team was learning to deal with the expectations of their public because they are a "bit more professional," and promised would use this tour as an "opportunity to change the statistics."

He also brushed off suggestion that Bangladesh will be disadvantaged by the conditions, saying their experience in Pallekele prepared them for less spin-friendly surfaces. "If there is something in the pitch, our quicks will have the same advantage as them so we are looking forward to bowling and batting on it," he said.

Up to that point, the two captains were on an even keel as their sides often are when they take the field. But Taylor conceded the advantage when he admitted Bangladesh had taken further strides than Zimbabwe over the last 20 months because of their depth.

"Being part of the BPL and seeing the development and the number of young players coming through and the talent they have, I know Bangladesh have got a good, balanced side," he said. "We'll have to be on top of our game if we are going to beat Bangladesh." Maybe that realisation caused him to frown and his opposite number to grin.


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Netherlands move to second place with 31-run win

Netherlands 268 for 9 (Barresi 60, Klazinga 3-48) beat Namibia 237 (Williams 116, Van der Gugten 3-37) by 31 runs
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Netherlands moved to second place in the ICC World Cricket League with a 31-run win over Namibia in Windhoek on Tuesday.

Put in to bat first, Netherlands brushed aside a shaky start to score a solid 268 for 9, with Wesley Barresi's half-century guiding the innings. Barresi and Tom Cooper added 97 runs for the third wicket to lift Netherlands from 17 for 2 to 114 for 2 in the 22nd over. Tom de Grooth and Daan vun Bunge then took charge of the innings, adding 58 before van Bunge was dismissed for 28. De Grooth took Netherlands past the 200-run mark before a quickfire 47-run partnership between Mudassar Bukhari and Timm van der Gugten took the score to 268. Namibia fast bowler Louis Klazinga was the best bowler, picking three wickets for 48 runs.

Netherlands struck early to put Namibia's chase on the backfoot, leaving them at 20 for 3 in the eighth over. Craig Williams, however, lifted their hopes, stitching together a 96-run partnership with Stephan Baard. Namibia lost quick wickets in the middle but Williams carried on, adding another 58 runs with Nicolaas Scholtz and scoring his fifth hundred. Once he fell for 116, the lower order collapsed and Namibia were all out for 237 in the 49th over. Timm van der Gugten picked up three wickets for 37 runs and was supported by Bukhari (2-39) and Jamil (2-60).


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