Maxwell carves his parallel universe

Glenn Maxwell seems to project an icy disdain when at the crease. Match situations rarely faze him and the bubble in which he plays excludes everyone else

Glenn Maxwell shaped to sweep but held his stroke and let the ball go past him instead, turning his back to it in exaggerated manner. It was the third time in two overs that R Ashwin had bowled a wide down the leg side to Maxwell, and each time it had seemed as though the batsman had provoked him into bowling that line.

Other batsmen try and upset a bowler's rhythm by moving conspicuously around the crease; Maxwell had done this with little feints of his hip and shoulder, like a winger toying with a fullback, suggesting he might play a certain stroke without really committing to it.

Ashwin had taken two wickets already. His side was defending a total of 205. But Maxwell had reverse-swept him twice already with clinical placement, and that had clearly rattled him.

"Why are you scared, Ashwin?" yelled a voice from the grass banks. "He's not Afridi!"

The heckler was right. Maxwell isn't really Afridi, even if his strike rate and his ability to clear the ropes puts him in that category of batsman. But he had brought back a vague memory of an entirely different Pakistan batsman in the brief time he had spent at the crease till that point. He had made you think of Javed Miandad.

There's no comparing their careers, of course, or their batting styles, but a common thread runs through their wholly different personalities at the crease. Miandad was cocky in a chatty sort of way; Maxwell seems to project a sort of icy disdain. Both approaches, though, are directed towards the same end, that of getting under the bowlers' skins.

This aspect of Maxwell's game surely played some role in two of his most notable international innings so far. Last year, in Bangalore, he had walked in at 74 for 4, with Australia going at under four-and-a-half runs an over while chasing 384 in the deciding match of the ODI series against India. Maxwell, impervious to the prevailing circumstances, came in and smashed 60 off 22 balls.

During the World T20 last month, Australia lost two wickets in their first over against Pakistan while chasing 192. Maxwell walked in and tonked 74 off 33 balls. In the time he was at the crease, Aaron Finch scored a wholly prosaic 37 off 32 at the other end. Finch carried on to make 65, but none of the other Australians got into double figures as Pakistan wrapped up a 16-run win.

Maxwell, that day, seemed to bat in a bubble that excluded everyone else, including his partner at the other end. It didn't even have room for the match situation. The bubble broke when he was dismissed, and normal service resumed.

Friday was similar. Punjab were chasing 206, and were 31 for 1 when Maxwell walked in. He saw two more wickets fall before David Miller joined him, at 52 for 3. Maxwell's response to all of this wasn't so much "no problem, I'll handle it" as "I don't really care".

You have to be extremely talented to play that way, of course, and there were a couple of occasions when he caressed the ball through the off side with so much grace that you had to rub your eyes and wonder what was going on. There was a bit of Ricky Ponting in the dip of his head at the highest point of Maxwell's backlift, and in the smooth downswing of his bat. Yes, him too.

In the end, Maxwell's 43-ball 95, which set Punjab up to win with a level of comfort that didn't seem possible when he had begun his innings, left you pondering a parallel universe. Here was a man who batted like a weird mix of Miandad and Ponting who, in between the flowing drives, the clever laps and reverse-sweeps, slogged rather crudely at a number of deliveries, timing some, missing some, never seeming to care either way. It made you wonder what sort of a batsman he would be if Twenty20 didn't exist.


Read More..

Some BCCI members want independent probe

A section of the BCCI's working committee is preparing to ask for an independent probe into the IPL corruption scandal during Sunday's emergent meeting, which was convened in the wake of the Supreme Court's observations against the BCCI and its sidelined president N Srinivasan on April 16.

A day after the formal notice of the meeting was circulated to the board, some members of the 24-person working committee started to hold informal discussions among themselves. According to IS Bindra, a former BCCI president and a critic of Srinivasan, the court's blunt statements had forced the board to sit up and take some action.

"Things are brewing and have started moving now. The board members are realising after the Supreme Court's observations that something has to be done," Bindra, the president of the Punjab Cricket Association, said. "The members should press for an independent panel to probe the matter."

Vidarbha Cricket Association president Prakash Dixit said he expected an independent probe to be the only solution to save face: "After what happened in the last year, a completely independent probe needs to be pressed for."

Some BCCI officials made an effort to reach out to Bindra, former VCA and BCCI president Shashank Manohar, and former BCCI and ICC president Sharad Pawar, who now heads the Mumbai Cricket Association, to attend the meeting and create a pressure group against the ruling south zone lobby. However, none of them will attend Sunday's meeting. The PCA will be represented by the secretary MP Pandove, Dixit and joint secretary Dr PV Shetty will represent the VCA and MCA, respectively.

Despite several state associations writing to acting BCCI president Shivlal Yadav requesting an emergent working committee meeting before the next court hearing, Yadav said the decision to call the meeting had been his own.

"My feelings were echoed by a few BCCI members. Even if the members hadn't written to me, I would have definitely convened a working committee meeting for discussing the future course of action," Yadav said. "The sole agenda for the meeting is to take a stock of the developments in the Supreme Court and decide on the necessary measures to be taken in future."

Meanwhile, Aditya Verma, the secretary of Cricket Association of Bihar, demanded Manohar to be appointed the chief of the probe panel. "Only Mr Manohar can clean the image of BCCI and IPL," Verma said in a statement, saying CAB will oppose any other probe panel that is not headed by Manohar.

"Till the probe is concluded, CAB demands a good governance review committee for the BCCI," Verma said. "Several former office-bearers of BCCI, like Mr Jagmohan Dalmiya, Mr AC Muthaiah, Mr IS Bindra, Chirayu Amin, Ajay Shirke, Sanjay Jagdale and Niranjan Shah are very much capable of improving the administrative function of BCCI."


Read More..

Jaggernauth quits competitive cricket

Amit Jaggernauth, the Trinidad & Tobago offspinner, has retired from top-flight cricket. He represented West Indies in one Test against Australia in 2008 and his tally of 265 wickets in first-class cricket puts him as the joint leading wicket-taker in T&T history.

"I have been contemplating my retirement since the last first-class season," Jaggernauth said. "I played the last game in Guyana and I am not enjoying playing first-class cricket again. The chances of me getting back to the West Indies team right now are very slim."

Jaggernauth began playing first-class cricket in 2002 and averaged 24.55, with 15 five-fors to his credit. Consistency over a decade of domestic cricket earned him recognition off the field. In 2008, he was named T&T Cricket Board's National Senior Cricketer beating current ODI captain Dwayne Bravo among others. His List A career spanned four matches.

Another major highlight of his career was being part of a side that became regional first-class champions in 2006. "We had a very slim chance of winning and we needed to beat Barbados outright, in Barbados and to be part of that was special."

He was the most successful bowler in the Carib Beer Series in 2006-07 with 40 wickets, and second highest wicket-taker next season, earning him a call-up to the Test side in the home series against Sri Lanka, but he did not make it to the starting line-up.

"I am pleased with my regional career. I am still disappointed I did not get more opportunities at the international level and the one opportunity I got against Australia was not really much of an opportunity."


Read More..

Moores set to return as England coach

The ECB will announce a new England head coach on Saturday with Peter Moores, who was sacked from the role five years ago, set for a second chance at the job with Paul Farbrace, the recently appointed Sri Lanka coach, tipped to come on board as Moores' assistant.

Interviews of the shortlisted candidates for the top job - Giles, Peter Moores, Mark Robinson, Mick Newell and Trevor Bayliss - have taken place in the last few days at Lord's or, in Bayliss' case, via Skype from the Middle East. Farbrace was also interviewed although it is understood he did not want to be considered for the head coach's position.

Since England returned from the World T20, where they were dumped out before the semi-finals and finished with a defeat against Netherlands, the mood had shifted from Giles being the man expected to slot into Andy Flower's shoes - a step up from his position as limited-overs coach - to Moores, who previously coached England from 2007 to early 2009, being the frontrunner to shape England's new era.

In the wake of the 5-0 Ashes whitewash, Giles presided over a 4-1 loss in the following one-day series and 3-0 in the T20s. Although there was some silverware in the Caribbean, with the one-day series, the subsequent failings in the World T20 appear to have swung Giles' fate.

Moores' previous spell came from 2007, when he replaced Duncan Fletcher following a previous Ashes whitewash and poor World Cup campaign, to early 2009 when he lost his job alongside the sacking of Kevin Pietersen as captain after it emerged the pair could not work together. Other senior England players also had concerns about Moores, but in the intervening five years he has had the chance to evolve his coaching methods.

Flower, who now has a new role with the ECB based at Loughborough, is also an admirer of Moores who he worked under as assistant coach before promotion following Moores' sacking.

Although the manner in which Moores' stint ended is what it is largely remembered for, he did put in place a lot of personnel who went onto play significant roles in England's subsequent successes from 2009 to 2013. He oversaw James Anderson's return to the Test team, recalled Graeme Swann, gave Matt Prior his Test debut and helped mould the early days of Stuart Broad's career and his fruitful partnership with Anderson.

Shortly after losing his England role, Moores became the head coach with Lancashire. He guided the county to their first Championship title in 77 years in 2011 and although they were relegated the following season they were promoted straight back in 2013.

Farbrace, meanwhile, the former Yorkshire 2nd XI coach, has made a late run for the line to work alongside Moores. He was only appointed to Sri Lanka in December and led them to the World T20 title earlier this month when they beat India in the final. Farbrace is currently in the UK for the Easter weekend.

Farbrace had signed a two-year contract with SLC beginning on January 1 this year, and a move to England would constitute a significant crisis for Sri Lanka, less than a month before their tour of England is set to begin.

Financial limitations had severely hindered SLC's hunt for a new national coach, after Graham Ford left the position and began work with Surrey, in January. On Friday, SLC did not appear to have been informed of Farbrace's potential move, with CEO Ashley de Silva dismissing reports of his forthcoming appointment in England as "pure speculation and rumour". Farbrace had not been part of Sri Lanka's Colombo celebrations after their World T20 triumph, having left the country shortly after the team landed.

The speed of the final decision may raise eyebrows - the announcement had not been expected until later next week - but there is not a huge amount of time for the ECB to play with. England's first international of the season is on May 9 against Scotland, in Aberdeen, before the visit of Sri Lanka later in May.

Lancashire will be in need of a new coach and while talk has already started that it may become a home for Giles the club could also look to recruit from within with Gary Yates, the current assistant coach, and club captain Glen Chapple among the options.

With inputs from Andrew Fidel Fernando in Colombo


Read More..

Stokes wants to lock away anger

Ben Stokes has admitted he needs to mature if he is to fulfill his potential after missing the World T20 in Bangladesh when he broke his wrist punching his locker in frustration following his dismissal in the third T20I against West Indies.

While Stokes was a rare glimmer of gold amid the rubble of England's Ashes tour - he hit a century in his second Test in Perth and claimed a six-wicket haul in the first innings in Sydney - he has conceded that the occasional "moment of stupidity" has done him few favours.

Stokes was also sent home from an England Lions tour of Australia in early 2013 due to two "breaches of discipline" and has admitted that he also broke a bone in his hand in similar fashion a few years ago. On that occasion, when he was 15, Stokes lashed out at a fire door.

Stokes' frustration in Barbados was understandable. His first-ball duck meant he had scored just 18 runs in his previous seven international innings and England had already slid to a series defeat against West Indies.

"I was disappointed that things had not gone well personally and it got the better of me," Stokes told ESPNcricinfo. "I'm very passionate about cricket, but unfortunately it came out in a way I regret in Barbados. Looking back, it is a lesson learned. I need to show that passion on the pitch, but I need to keep it there and not bring it off the field.

"It's a matter of handling it a bit more maturely. Punching lockers isn't the way forward for anyone. There's only going to be one winner there.

"I did it when I was a lot younger and I thought I'd moved on from it. I broke a bone then as well. It wasn't a locker; it was a fire door and it was when I playing club cricket."

The England team management did not censure Stokes. Instead they appear to have viewed his self-inflicted absence from the World T20 and a certain amount of public embarrassment as punishment enough. No doubt his relative youth - he is only 22, after all - was taken into account.

"Ashley Giles didn't say much to me on the matter," Stokes said. "He didn't need to.

"He knew that the worst punishment was missing the World Cup. I was really looking forward to it. Nothing he could do could be as bad as anything he could have said. It would have been my first global event.

"The management were obviously disappointed and I let them know that I was disappointed with myself. I spoke to the team before I left and said I was sorry for letting them down."

But Stokes hopes that the ECB will not hold the incident against him. "I hope the ECB look at it as a moment of stupidity and know that I know I made a big mistake," he said. "I hope I don't give them an opportunity not to play me because of my attitude. That is something I make sure I'm on top of. It is a big thing, attitude. That was part of how I was brought up by my old man."

That 'old man' is Ged Stokes, the former New Zealand rugby league player and now a coach, who was as underwhelmed as anyone by his son's flash of temper.

"He wasn't best pleased," Stokes said. "He just called me a wally."

While no firm date has been set for his return, Stokes hopes it should be in mid-May, meaning he should be fit and firing ahead of the Test series against Sri Lanka which starts in mid-June.

He also hopes to feature in Durham's T20 season, which starts on May 16. The competition - the NatWest T20 Blast - has been re-launched this year, with matches to be held, predominantly, on Friday evenings across 12 weeks of the season, allowing spectators to plan their trips to matches.

"I'm really looking forward to being part of it," he said. "Hopefully the regular slot on Friday nights will help us see some big crowds and generate a great atmosphere. It should become more of an event.

"I'm probably a more consistent red ball cricketer than I am white ball at the minute. I haven't got a consistent role with one-day cricket at the moment, particularly with England, so I can't wait to get back on the pitch and be a part of it. I'd love the opportunity to show what I can do and bat higher up the order for Durham and England."

Ben Stokes was speaking ahead of the start of the NatWest T20 Blast season. Blast Off is Friday 16th May, tickets can be purchased from www.ecb.co.uk/natwestt20blast


Read More..

Bangladesh board keen on BPL third season

Despite a surfeit of controversies marring the first two seasons of the Bangladesh Premier League, the BCB is looking for a window in the coming season to host the league again. The second edition was held in January-February 2013, after which problems over player payment and a prolonged match-fixing investigation stalled the domestic T20 tournament.

At this stage, the November 2014 to January 2015 slot is being looked at by the BCB. Bangladesh are scheduled to take on Zimbabwe in a Test series in early November, while according to the Future Tours Programme (FTP), Pakistan are supposed to tour Bangladesh in January 2015.

"BCB is willing to stage the BPL," Ismail Haider Mallick, BPL governing council's member secretary, said. "We have selected an approximate date to hold the tournament. We are looking to arrange the tournament between November 2014 and January 2015. However, we of course have to see the international and local cricket's schedule first."

Mallick also said that the tournament's event management company, Game On Sports, have paid Tk 10 crore ($1.3 million) of the 19 crore (approx $2.45 million) it owed to the BPL, albeit in three parts. "Game On Sports has given a cheque worth Tk 10 crore. We already received Tk 2.5 crore (approx $323,000) and we will get another 2.5 crore by April 20 while we will be receiving the remaining Tk 5 crore (approx $645,000) very soon," he said.

Whether this payment would be used to pay the players was left unsaid, but it is one of two major problems in the BPL. Even now, several players have remained unpaid. The last reported claim was on February 28 when Netherlands' Ryan ten Doeschate, West Indies' Kevon Cooper, Zimbabwe's Brendan Taylor and England players Ravi Bopara and Jason Roy said that they were still to get money from the Chittagong Kings.

The other major problem is the BPL corruption investigation and while the tribunal has given its short verdict, the BCB is planning to appeal against their judgment after only one individual among nine accused was found guilty of "being party to an effort to fix" a match in the 2013 BPL. The long verdict is still due, although it was to be announced shortly after the World T20 held in Bangladesh.

Last year, BCB president Nazmul Hassan had said that it would be difficult to hold the BPL without clearing it of the controversies.


Read More..

Bangalore's arsenal blazes to victory

Bangalore 146 for 2 (Yuvraj 52*, Kohli 49*) beat Delhi 145 for 4 (Duminy 67*, Taylor 43*) by eight wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Hattangadi - Delhi lost it in the first six overs

The Yuvraj Singh-Virat Kohli partnership didn't have a happy ending in the World T20 final, but less than two weeks after that night in Mirpur, their association in Sharjah followed a different script. Swapping India's blue for Bangalore's red, the pair made easy work of Delhi's 145, helping Bangalore stroll to a eight-wicket win. Yuvraj was circumspect to begin with but later on brought out his power game to not only outscore Kohli but help Bangalore march to the target with plenty to spare.

The bedrock of the chase was Kohli, who benefited from two let-offs in his 20s to remain unbeaten on 49. The pair added 84 in just 7.5 overs, nullifying the unbeaten 110-run association between Delhi's JP Duminy and Ross Taylor that helped Delhi recover from a wobbly 35 for 4.

Bangalore were never under serious pressure during the chase, especially after opener Parthiv Patel gave the innings a push with a positive 35, in the absence of Chris Gayle to injury. He charged down the track to the seamers, forcing the ball down the ground and pulling a six, off the left-arm spinner Shahbaz Nadeem, out of the ground. After he was bowled in the ninth over, Bangalore were at a comfortable 62 for 2, giving Yuvraj the platform to play himself into form, with the security of Kohli at the other end.

Yuvraj didn't look secure initially, taking his eyes off a short ball and hooking a boundary to fine leg. He found his groove with a flat six over long-on off the legspinner Rahul Sharma and some wayward bowling by Nadeem gave Yuvraj the chance to pepper the leg-side boundaries with his favourite slogs.

Delhi needed wickets but when the chances came their way, they fluffed them. Jimmy Neesham fluffed the simplest of catches at short fine leg when Kohli was on 23, and when the batsman had added one more, he was put down by Mayank Agarwal at deep cover. Against arguably the best chaser in the world, regulation drops will come back to hurt. It was clearly Bangalore's night as Yuvraj and Kohli closed out the chase with more blows over the boundary. Yuvraj managed his first Indian T20 fifty in 20 innings and the smile was back on his face.

Delhi found it tough on a two-paced Sharjah pitch, struggling to get the run rate above five in the first ten overs. The loss of early wickets slowed them down. Agarwal fell top-edging a pull to square leg as the frustration to score began to build, and Delhi were pegged back further when Dinesh Karthik and Manoj Tiwary fell for 0 and 1 respectively.

The strategic timeout didn't change Delhi's fortunes as M Vijay, who had made a start with 18, was bamboozled by the legspinner Yuzvendra Chahal. Vijay was playing for the turn but the ball straightened and shaved the off stump. At 35 for 4 in the eighth over, Delhi desperately needed a big partnership at a good clip to compensate for the sluggish scoring in the first half.

It was a scratchy innings from Taylor as he cursed himself when he played and missed, in an effort to push the scoring. Chahal got it to turn and grip and the googlies were a handful for Taylor. The boundaries had dried up for seven overs before Taylor broke the shackles with a flick to fine leg off Ashok Dinda.

The momentum in the latter half was provided by Duminy, who unlike Taylor found the middle of the bat regularly. He lofted Yuvraj for a six to the sightscreen before scooping Dinda to the same area. Dinda was ineffective at the death yet again as he leaked 51 off his four overs. Delhi took 30 off the last two overs and 63 off the last five but in the end, 145 wasn't enough.


Read More..

Trott stands down after relapse

Jonathan Trott is to take an extended break from cricket having suffered a recurrence of the problems that forced him to leave the Ashes tour after the first Test in Brisbane.

Trott left Australia in November with what was described at the time as a "stress related illness" by the ECB. While he hoped that a period of rest ahead of the English domestic season would prove the cure for what he believed to be "burnout," he experienced a recurrence of the symptoms of anxiety and mental exhaustion that plagued him in Australia while representing Warwickshire in recent days. The ECB, who remain Trott's employers as he still holds a central contract, are expected to make a statement on Friday.

No time-frame has been placed upon his return. Indeed, it is quite possible there will be no return, even at county level.

Certainly this decision is highly likely to signal the end of Trott's international career. Not only may Trott be reluctant to put himself back into an environment that causes him such difficulties, but it seems unlikely that the ECB would want to burden him with such pressure or risk the possibility of a recurrence on the eve of a big game.

It may also raise questions about the ECB's handling of the affair. While Trott was full of praise for the compassion shown by Andy Flower, his team-mates and Hugh Morris at the time of his breakdown in Australia, the ECB's support has been less obvious since Trott returned to England.

It is understood that there has been little communication with the ECB and, in particular, the England team management and instead of the support that was promised, Trott has at times cut an isolated and forgotten figure.

Trott has also been stung by criticism in some sections of the media. While dealing with media scrutiny comes with the territory for professional sportsmen, for a man recovering from a stress related illness to have his motives doubted and explanations questioned has not helped the process.

Whether the strong criticism of former England captain, Michael Vaughan, proved particularly damaging to Trott's fragile recovery and was a contributory factor in this decision is hard to say, but the level of scrutiny - inevitable and natural though it is - has proved unbearable. Photographers have been found lurking in his garden and outside his daughter's school since his return from Australia.

The combination of a perceived lack of support and some harsh criticism resulted in Trott feeling on trial every time he has taken the field. He has now concluded he no longer wants to put himself, or his family, through the pain. The relaxed and happy Trott, freed of the concerns of cricket, bears little resemblance to the careworn Trott seen in Australia or around Edgbaston in recent days.

He informed his Warwickshire team-mates of his decision at the end of the Championship game against Sussex on Wednesday. It is understood he thanked them for their support but explained that he did not feel he could serve them if he was unable to concentrate or focus as he had been in the past.

While Trott batted particularly well in the first innings of the match - he top-scored with 37 as Warwickshire were bowled out for 87 - he was less impressive as the game wore on. He was struck twice by short balls from Chris Jordan in the second innings and then fell to a pull stroke off the same bowler. It was an innings that did nothing to refute those who suggest his problems have been born largely out of a struggle to play the short ball.

However, the key moment came when he dropped a catch. Standing at slip to the offspin of Jeetan Patel, Trott put down Ed Joyce on 91. Joyce went on to score an unbeaten 151 and win the game for his team. Trott appears to have blamed himself and his inability to concentrate as he once could. Three other players dropped catches in the same innings, but Trott has always been harder on himself than most. At one time, that self-demanding character drove him to levels of achievement of which most cricketers can only dream. For now, it appears to have become burdensome and destructive.

Aged 32, there is still time for a comeback. But if this is the final chapter, Trott will leave the game with a record of which to take pride. He scored a century in the first of his 49 Tests, against an attack that included Mitchell Johnson, was a part of three Ashes-winning sides and the Test and ODI teams that reached No.1 in the world rankings.

He is the only England player (to have played more than 20 innings) with an ODI average in the 50s - indeed his ODI average is 20% higher than any regular England player in history - and at domestic level he helped Warwickshire win two County Championship titles. He also has the highest T20 average of any England qualified player and, in 2011, he won the ICC Player of the Year award; arguably the highest accolade in cricket.

Stress and anxiety do not discriminate, however, and Trott appears to have decided that the man bent of out shape by cricket is not the man he wants to be. With a young family to consider, he seems to have come to the conclusion that on-field success in no longer worth the sacrifices required.


Read More..

Tuskers mauled by Sibanda double ton

Vusi Sibanda's fluid 217, his highest first-class score, set he base for Mid West Rhinos thrashing Matabeleland Tuskers by an innings and 299 runs. Bradley Wadlan's left-arm spin scythed through Tuskers in the second innings picking up 7 for 30 to seal the game in two days.

Rhinos lost the toss but their bowlers ensured no ground was yielded by dismissing the Tuskers openers quickly and then sparking a middle-order collapse. Six wickets fell for 46 runs and Tuskers were polished off for 128. Sean Williams top-scored with 48, while six of his team-mates were dismissed for single-figures.

Sibanda and his captain Brendan Taylor took Rhinos into the lead during a partnership of 204 runs for the second wicket. Sibanda belted 27 fours and five sixes during his 256-ball innings. Taylor's count was 11 fours and three sixes when he fell for 106. The respite gained when in the 47th over when their stand was broken proved temporary as Steven Trenchard struck 120 off 145 balls to push the total beyond 500.

Tuskers provided another sorry display in the second innings. Wadlan ensured a steady bleed of wickets and his double-strike in the 10th over began the downward spiral that lead to Tuskers being all out for 79.


Read More..

Carberry ton nudges selectors

Hampshire 422 (Vince 144, Wheater 82) and 215 for 2 (Carberry 100*, Vince 58*) beat Gloucestershire 304 (Tavare 139, Tomlinson 4-68, Abbot 5-67) and 332 (Marshall 94, Gidman 72) by eight wickets
Scorecard

Michael Carberry offered a timely reminder to the England selectors with an unbeaten century to lift Hampshire to their first win of the new Championship Division Two season at Gloucestershire. The 33-year-old opener completed the eight-wicket win by lifting part-timer Chris Dent for back-to-back sixes and reach an even hundred from 131 balls.

Carberry is currently the man in possession of England's opening role alongside captain Alastair Cook, although he faces competition from the likes of Joe Root and Middlesex's Sam Robson ahead of the first Test of the summer. Robson stated his case this week with a 163 in Middlesex's Division One success over Nottinghamshire at Lord's - where England will begin their new Test era against Sri Lanka on June 12.

After Carberry had managed just 33 runs in three innings to start the season, his match-winning hundred therefore came at just the right time, as Hampshire chased down a victory target of 215 on the final day at Bristol.

The left-hander was England's second top scorer during the winter's Ashes whitewash - behind the already discarded Kevin Pietersen - but the emergence of Robson, as well as Carberry's frank assessment of how he was treated by the England hierarchy Down Under in a pre-season interview, could threaten his position on the pecking order.

That will be a decision for England's new coach to consult over after this week's interview process is completed. Until then Carberry will have done his hopes no harm as he and James Vince completed the run chase in quick time. Together they put on a 101-run stand in 10.2 overs after Hampshire's captain, Jimmy Adams, and Liam Dawson both made starts.

Carberry's failure to build on a platform in Australia was regarded as one of his failings - he also made just one century in county ranks last term - but was able to match that mark in his second game of the new campaign with the aid of 16 fours and three sixes.

Earlier, Hamish Marshall fell six runs short of a century as Gloucestershire were bowled out for 332. Marshall and last man Matt Taylor added 24 runs to the overnight score before the veteran was bowled by South Africa seamer Kyle Abbott, who finished with seven wickets in the match.


Read More..