Jadeja to replace Gambhir in ODI squad

New Delhi: All rounder Ravindra Jadeja has been named as a replacement for an injured Gautam Gambhir for the upcoming ODI series against England.
Gambhir, who is suffering from concussion, is returning back to India. He had banged his head on the ground while falling back in attempting to catch Kevin Pietersen on the third day of the final Test at The Oval during England's first innings.
Gambhir had immediately left the field, and dropped down the batting order in both innings. He was struggling from the injury and failed to make an impact, scoring 10 and 3 runs as India lost by an innings and eight runs. Gambhir's recovery took a further hit when Stuart Broad's bouncer on the final day hit him flush on back of the helmet.
Gautam has been advised to take rest and is expected to recover spontaneously without any further medical intervention. He will be returning to India shortly.
Though Gambhir travelled with the team for the three warm-up matches, he did not play any as he complained of blurred vision.


Hussey stands firm in Galle

Left-hander's 95 sees Australia up to 273 on day one


Galle: Sri Lanka bowlers Rangana Herath and Suranga Lakmal took three wickets apiece to dismiss Australia for a modest 273 on the opening day of the first cricket Test on Wednesday.
Mike Hussey fought a lone battle for Australia with 95, unable to find partners for lengthy stands. He faced 177 balls and hit three sixes and seven boundaries at Galle International Stadium. On the brink of a 14th test hundred, Hussey was last man out, lbw to Tillakratne Dilshan on the off stump, and confirmed by video review.

The Sri Lanka batsmen walked out to the middle to face the 20 deliveries remaining for the day but the umpires called off play due to bad light.
Left-arm spinner Herath picked up the top-order wickets of Shane Watson (22), Ricky Ponting (44) and captain Michael Clarke (23) to finish with 3-54. Lakmal had 3-55.
Clarke won the toss and elected to bat first in a match delayed by one hour because of morning rain.
Watson started with his usual aggression and looked to seize early control by hitting left-arm seamer Chanaka Welegedara for four boundaries in a single over. But the introduction of Herath with a newer ball produced immediate results. Herath ousted Watson with his first ball, having him caught by wicketkeeper Prasanna Jayawardene for 22.

Lakmal then surprised Phil Hughes with a rising ball that went for an easy catch to Tharanga Paranavitana at first slip. Hughes made 12.
Clarke combined with his predecessor, Ponting, in taking Australia to lunch on 76-2.
In the middle session, Clarke was first to be dismissed when he misread a straight delivery from Herath and was trapped lbw, ending a 55-run partnership with Ponting.

Ponting batted with confidence and looked set for a bigger score but his aggression led him to mistime a shot against Herath for a catch to Angelo Mathews on 112-4. He hit six boundaries in his 44 runs.
Hussey and Usman Khawaja shared a 45-run partnership but seamer Welegedara bowled Khawaja (21) to end the stand on the stroke of tea.
Brad Haddin's dismissal by Randiv after tea for 24 on 205-6 exposed a tail which couldn't support Hussey long enough, and lasted only 19 more overs.

Youngsters key as India challenge Eng in T20

Manchester: The battle between limited-overs champions India and England gets underway with the one-off Twenty20 here on Wednesday. While England’s new T20 captain Stuart Broad will hope to lead from the front after his heroics in the Test series, MS Dhoni will hope the youngsters carry their match-winning form of practice games into the international arena.
After a goal-fest over the weekend in the English football's heartland, focus shifts to cricket and a run-fest is expected when the reigning Twenty 20 Champions run into the current ODI Champions.
Praveen Kumar has recovered from his injury and will spearhead the attack in Zaheer's absence. It will be interesting to see who Dhoni chooses to partner Praveen: the untested pace of Varun Aaron or the rusty swing of RP Singh.
Munaf Patel is certain to earn his first cap on tour after a baffling four-Test 'cooling-off' period and Dhoni's reluctance to field four pacers may leave Vinay Kumar on the bench, with Amit Mishra most likely to take the fourth bowler's role ahead Ravichandran Ashwin.
On the other hand, England's batting looks formidable even in the absence of Ian Bell and ODI skipper Alastair Cook, who are not part of the T20 squad. But there is enough firepower in the form of Lord's double-centurion Kevin Pietersen and limited-over specialists Craig Kieswetter and Eoin Morgan.
On the bowling front, skipper Stuart Broad and Tim Bresnan - who tore India apart in the Test series - will try to prolong India's misery with the bat. They will have able assistance in the form of Steve Finn and Jade Dernbach, with Graeme Swann's off-spin completing a formidable lineup.
India and England have so far played two Twenty20 internationals against each other with a scoreline of 1-1.

Squads:
England: Stuart Broad (c), Ravi Bopara, Tim Bresnan, Jose Buttler, Jade Dernbach, Steven Finn, Alex Hales, Craig Kieswetter (wk), Eoin Morgan, Samit Patel, Kevin Pietersen, Ben Stokes, Graeme Swann.
India: MS Dhoni (c/wk), Gautam Gambhir, Virat Kohli, Suresh Raina, Rohit Sharma, Vinay Kumar, Varun Aaron, Ravichandran Ashwin, Praveen Kumar, Amit Mishra, Munaf Patel, Parthiv Patel (wk), Ajinkya Rahane, RP Singh, Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid.

Tour game: India register third win on the trot

Leicester: India registered their third win in as many tour matches as they beat Leicestershire by 15 runs in the Twenty20 match on Monday.
Putting in to bat first, India first posted 161/5 in their twenty overs and then restricted the opposition side for 146/7.
R Vinay Kumar and Amit Mishra took two wickets each, while Praveen Kumar and R Ashwin got one wicket a piece.
Abdul Razzaq gave the Indians a good run for their money as the 31-year-old Pakistani all-rounder hit a breezy 37 off 24 balls, but it could not help the home team cross the finishing line.
Andrew McDonald also contributed with 44 runs off 34 deliveries.
Suresh Raina had been given the reins of the Indian team in the absence of regular skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who opted out of the game along with Sachin Tendulkar.
Parthiv and Ajinkya Rahane gave India a rollicking start before the latter departed after scoring 19 from 18 balls.
Parthiv, who was joined by experienced Dravid, kept hitting boundaries with ease. But his wicket brought Virat Kohli to the crease, but the 22-year-old could not repeat his performances of the first two tour games and got out after scoring 13 runs.
Rohit, another batsman who has been in descent nick lately, got going from the outset without being troubled much.
The home team brought the Indian run scoring under control by taking wickets at regular intervals.
Joshua Cobb, the 21-year-old leg-spinner, took two Indian wickets while Andrew McDonald, Razzaq and Jigar Naik chipped in with one wicket each.


Khawaja strikes ton against SL Board XI

Colombo: Usman Khawaja hit an impressive century ahead of a three-Test series against Sri Lanka as Australia gained the upper hand in a warm-up match on Friday.
The Pakistan-born batsman made 101 before retiring as the tourists reached 311-5 in their first innings in reply to a Sri Lanka Board XI's 258 at stumps on the penultimate day of the three-day game.
Opener Phillip Hughes (76) and skipper Michael Clarke (61 not out) also gained valuable batting practice ahead of the series, starting in Galle next Wednesday. The remaining two matches will be played in Pallekele (September 8-12) and Colombo (Sept 16-20).
Australia, resuming at 26 for no loss, denied the hosts success for more than a session as Khawaja and Hughes put on 153 runs for the opening wicket.
Hughes fell in the second session when he was bowled by part-time spinner Tharanga Paranavitana after hitting 10 fours.
Khawaja, who has played just one Test, then added 53 for the second wicket with Michael Hussey (28). He cracked two sixes and eight fours before retiring in the last session.
Off-spinner Dilruwan Perera bagged two wickets for the hosts.
Brief scores:
Sri Lanka Board XI: First innings 258 (D Chandimal 59, T Paranavitana 49, T Perera 36, L Thirimanne 32, B Rajapaksa 21; T Copeland 5-47, R Harris 2-39, M Beer 2-42, N Lyon 1-71)
Australia: First innings 311-5 (Usman Khawaja 101 retd., P Hughes 76, M Clarke 61 not out, M Hussey 28; D Perera 2-115)


Tour Game: India beat Kent by five runs

Canterbury: A superb half century by Virat Kohli and some brilliant bowling at the death by RP Singh and Munaf Patel enabled India to win their tour match against Kent by five runs on Friday.
Set a victory target of 165 off 20 overs in a rain affected game, it turned out to be a case of so near yet so far for the hosts who finished at 159/5 as opener Joe Denly scored a magnificent 100 from just 68 balls.
Martin van Jaarsveld and Darren Stevens tried hard to give Denly support from the other end with but once the centurion departed Kent's chase fell apart.
RP shone with the ball for India picking up two wickets for 36 runs while Munaf (1/22) and Ravichandran Ashwin (1/30) scalped a wicket each.
Kohli struck three sixes and seven fours in his innings of 77 as India ended up scoring 164/6. Rohit Sharma gave Kohli good support from the other end with a run-a-ball 30.
Earlier, the match was reduced to a twenty overs per side clash after persistent rain and a wet outfield delayed the start of the game which was initially supposed to be a 50 over affair.
After four pitch inspections it was finally decided that the contest would get underway at 7:30 pm (local time).
Following a win in their first one-day practice match against Sussex, a heavy downpour prevented the start of India's second warm-up tie.


Eng rest Pietersen for ODIs against India

London: England left Kevin Pietersen out of their squad for five one-day internationals against India, giving the batsman a chance to rest after a grueling Test schedule.
Pietersen was included in a 13-man squad announced on Friday for Wednesday's Twenty20 at Old Trafford but was effectively replaced in the 14-man one-day squad by Ben Stokes, who made his debut this week against Ireland.
The Twenty20 squad features two new players in Jos Buttler and Alex Hales.
"We've selected an exciting blend of experienced international performers along with some exciting young players with a great deal of talent," national selector Geoff Miller said.
"The decision to omit Kevin Pietersen from the one-day squad is in line with our policy of sensibly managing player workloads and will give the opportunity to another batsmen to test himself batting at No. 4."
England beat India 4-0 in the four-Test series that ended this week and forced a memorable tie when the teams met in this year's World Cup, which India won as host.
Twenty20 Squad: Stuart Broad (captain), Ravi Bopara, Tim Bresnan, Jos Buttler, Jade Dernbach, Steven Finn, Alex Hales, Craig Kieswetter, Eoin Morgan, Samit Patel, Kevin Pietersen, Ben Stokes, Graeme Swann.
ODI Squad: Alastair Cook (captain), James Anderson, Ian Bell, Ravi Bopara, Tim Bresnan, Stuart Broad, Jade Dernbach, Steven Finn, Craig Kieswetter, Eoin Morgan, Samit Patel, Ben Stokes, Graeme Swann, Jonathan Trott.


England win one-off ODI vs Ireland by 11 runs

Dublin: Jonathan Trott returned from injury to hit 69 in England's 11-run win over Ireland in a rain-affected one-day international on Thursday.
After missing England's last two test victories over India, Trott opened the batting at Clontarf Cricket Club Ground alongside Craig Kieswetter and top scored in 201-8 from 42 overs.
Jade Dernbach then took 3-30 and conceded just seven from a tight final over as England restricted Ireland to 117-8 from 23 overs, narrowly avoiding a repeat of its embarrassing three-wicket defeat at this year's World Cup.
Eoin Morgan captained England against his home country and was the only other visiting batsman to score heavily, hitting 59 from 65 balls.




Ponting urged Dravid not to retire

Melbourne: Former Australia skipper Ricky Ponting claims that he persuaded Rahul Dravid against retiring when he was written off after a string of low scores last year and the in-form Indian batsman has reciprocated the support by inspiring him during his lean patch.
Dravid, the lone Indian batsman to perform well in with three centuries and 461 runs in the team's recent 0-4 Test whitewash at the hands of England, was woefully out of form last year and Ponting said he encouraged the veteran right-hander carry on despite the criticism.

"I remember after our last series in India there was a lot of talk and speculation about Dravid being finished," Ponting told a website.
"I actually went and found him at the end of the series and said 'don't you even think about retiring' because I just saw some stuff in a few of his innings that suggested he was still a very, very good player.
"I just said 'don't let them wear you down, don't let them get you down'. I received a similar text message before and after the Ashes from him as well," he added.
The 36-year-old Ponting has not scored a Test century since January last year but he is confident of regaining his touch and he is looking upto Dravid for inspiration.
"There are a few (who provide an inspiration for batsmen of advancing years). Sachin (Tendulkar) and (Jacques) Kallis both had a great last year; Dravid is doing well now.
"It's not only good for guys of my age to see guys doing that, it's good for the younger blokes to see it as well; to know that if you keep doing the right things and working hard, and if you've got talent, then age is not a barrier in our game," he said.
Speaking about the state of the game in general, Ponting said he is worried about the impact of Twenty20 on youngsters.
"The big worry I've had about Twenty20 cricket and even other shorter forms of the game being played at really developmental times in kids' careers is that it won't teach them the art of concentration.
"Cricket for me when I was growing up meant batting until someone got me out, and if that took them a week then that's how long it took them," he said.
"Now, even Under-17s and Under-19s are playing T20 games in national championships, and at the detriment of two-day games. Good state players these days are averaging 35; if you were averaging 35 when I was playing your dad would go and buy you a basketball or a footy and tell you to play that. So there are areas of concern there; I don't know how you change them," he explained.
Asked about India's slide from the top of ICC rankings after the debacle in England, Ponting said it would be interesting to see how Mahendra Singh Dhoni's men do once the veterans retire.
"India still haven't reached that point that I thought they'd get to yet. They've still got that crux, those great batters in that side. Time will tell with India now. Dravid was probably one who was in the gun before the rest of them and he's found a way to come through," he said.
"They (Tendulkar, Dravid and VVS Laxman) are all about the same age and they won't go on forever. They will be tested more than anything with their bowlers.
"I think we found even in the last few years that a lot of their spin bowling probably isn't as strong as it used to be, and if you take Zaheer (Khan) out of their fast bowling stocks there's not much left there either; so they've got an interesting couple of years ahead," he added.
On whether India was focusing too much on Twenty20 and ignoring Tests, Ponting said, "They're probably prioritising Twenty20 cricket as much as anyone aren't they, with the IPL being based there and the commitment some players have to certain franchises and tournaments going on around that."
"I reckon a good example of where their cricket is now is the fact they played RP Singh in that last Test match, when he hadn't played a first-class game since January," he explained.

Tour Game: India beat Sussex by six wickets

Hove, Sussex: Half centuries by Virat Kohli (71), Rohit Sharma (61*) and Parthiv Patel (55) took India to a comfortable six wicket win over Sussex in their one day international (ODI) practice game at Hove on Thursday.
Chasing a winning target of 237 in 45 overs, India finished at 238/4 in 40.5 overs as victory was achieved with 25 balls to spare.
The Indians looked in control even though Sachin Tendulkar (21) did not last long as Patel, Kohli and Sharma played around with an average home attack.
Kohli's knock came from 83 balls and included six fours and a six. Sharma's unbeaten 61 came from 65 balls and studded with eight fours and a six.

Tendullkar played some gorgeous strokes before he spooned up a catch at mid-off against left-arm paceman Chris Liddle.
As many as four fours were hit by Tendulkar in his brief 17-ball knock.
Patel was similarly aggressive, relying a great deal on chipped shots behind square before he played back to off-spinner Chris Nash and missed the line completely. He made his 55 runs from 65 balls and slammed nine fours.
But Kohli and Sharma then took over and literally toyed with the home side attack, running their singles crisply and hitting big shots at will.

Earlier, Sussex lost their last five wickets for 18 runs to be dismissed for 236 off the last ball of their allotted 45 overs.
RP Singh took 4/45 for the Indians while Matt Machan struck 56 off 71 balls for the hosts in a clash which was interrupted on three occasions because of rain.
Praveen Kumar provided India with an early breakthrough when he sent back Luke Wells after MS Dhoni won the toss and elected to bowl first in a delayed start to the match because of damp conditions.

RP then struck by getting the wickets of Lou Vincent (14) and CD Nash (24) as India kept a check on the Sussex innings.
Sussex lost their fourth wicket when Joe Gatting (46) was dismissed by Ravichandran Ashwin.
Joe Gatting and Machan then put on 47 runs for the fourth wicket before the former was bowled by Ravichandran Ashwin for 46.
A 65 run partnership between Machan and Ben Brown then took the Sussex total to 170 before Suresh Raina caught Mahan off his own bowling to leave the home team five down.
RP then returned to take two of the last five wickets to fall as the Sussex innings came to a tame end.

Gambhir's MRI scan okay, likely to play ODIs

Hove: The uncertainity over Gautam Gambhir's participation in the upcoming ODI series against England is all but over with the Indian opener likely to be fit for the five-match rubber, team manager Shivlal Yadav said here on Wednesday.
Yadav said Gambhir should be fine for next month's ODI series after his MRI scan did not show anything untoward.
Gambhir is critical to India's plans in the ODIs now that his fellow opener Virender Sehwag has been completely ruled out for the five one-dayers and one-off Twenty20 match.
Gambhir suffered the concussion after he backpedalled at mid-on in a bid to catch a miscued pull off Kevin Pietersen during the Oval Test. The chance was fluffed when he fell back and hit his head on the ground with a thud.
Even though speculation over his availability has died down after the MRI scan, the left-hander did not come out to practice with his colleagues.
The present series has been one of misfortune for Gambhir. He was painfully hit on his right elbow while fielding at forward short leg during the first Test at Lord's last month.
He subsequently had to miss the second Test at Trent Bridge. He did play the third Test at Edgbaston and scored 38 and 14 in the two innings.

India look to hit ODI groove against Sussex

Hove, Sussex: In hopes of bringing an end to their miserable campaign in England so far, Team India will don the blue in the practice game against Sussex here on Thursday and try to do justice to their World Champions' tag after losing the No. 1 rank in Test cricket to England.
India were whitewashed 0-4 by England and the team will expect the induction of youth in the shorter version to provide the spark that has went missing so far in the English summer. However, the management needs to make sure that the injured players prove their fitness before being entrusted with the job of guarding India's reputation in ODI cricket.
Praveen missed the final Test at the Oval due to an ankle injury while Gambhir suffered a concussion making him a mere shadow of his formidable self in the two innings of the match.
Team India would find it difficult to live it down if a recently injured cricketer breaks down in the one-day series like Zaheer Khan and Virender Sehwag did in the Test matches.
As a result, India would like to throw as many youngsters as possible into the fray to assess their early form and confidence.
In all likelihood, Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar would pull out to give a few younger batsmen the opportunity to familiarise themselves with the seaming and swinging conditions.
It would ensure that all four young batsmen of the side - Ajinkya Rahane, Virat Kohli, Suresh Raina and Rohit Sharma - lose little time in coming to grips with the testing conditions.
If skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni also sits out - and the Indian captain does need a break - than Parthiv Patel would have a critical opportunity.
If this season has been the one to have marred reputations, it can also be one to make reputations. There ought to be scramble for ODI places among young batters as well as bowlers.
Munaf Patel, so far kept in cotton wool, would have an opportunity to show his utility after being discarded in favour of RP Singh in the final Test at Oval last week.
In all likelihood, India would like to test their bowling combination for the one-dayers and hence Munaf Patel, Praveen Kumar, R Ashwin and one between Vinay Kumar and young Varun Aaron should play.
They could have a good simulating situation to ODIs since Sussex boasts of some big names and the wicket at Hove is said to assist seam and swing.
Indian cricket fans would be familiar with the names of Murray Goodwin, Matt Prior, Monty Panesar and South African quick Wayne Parnell.
Michael Yardy, Ed Joyce and Luke Wright have all been England players. The two Pakistanis Naved-ul Hasan and Umar Gul need no introduction. In all likelihood, Sussex ought to field a good side.
With a whole lot of new faces - unaffected by the 4-0 whitewash of Tests - clamouring for places, Indians ought to start their campaign with a fresh mind.


India can be No. 2 with win in England ODIs

Dubai: Going by the present form, it looks highly unlikely but if India can manage to beat England by a 4-1 margin or better in the upcoming one-day series, they can climb to second spot from third in the ICC ranking chart.
World champions India (117) are placed third behind Sri Lanka (119) in the list, headed by Australia (130)
Australia's 3-2 series win has restricted Sri Lanka to earn only one rating point which, in turn, has given India a chance to reclaim the second position.
To achieve the number-two position, India will have to beat England by 4-1 or whitewash the hosts in the five-match series, starting at Chester-le-Street on September 3.
Meanwhile, in the rankings for ODI batsmen, Virat Kohli has entered into the top five with a gain of one position and sachin Tendulkar re-entered into the top 10 with a similar gain.
India skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni lost a place to find himself at number nine.
Off-spinner Harbhajan Singh is the only Indian bowler in the top-10 as he lost one position to be at 10.
Australia's fast bowlers Mitchell Johnson, who along with Sri Lanka's Lasith Malinga was the leading wicket-taker in the recent series with 11, has jumped four places to claim third position while Malinga, who recorded the third hat-trick of his career in Monday's ODI, has jumped 19 places to claim 11th position.
Dough Bollinger's nine wickets in the series has helped him return to the top-10 in seventh position after vaulting 15 places while Brett Lee has been rewarded with a jump of four places after his eight wickets in four matches which has put him just behind Malinga in 14th position.
Graeme Swann of England is on top of the bowling chart but leads New Zealand's Daniel Vettori by just six points.
In the list of batsmen, former Sri Lanka captain Mahela Jayawardena has returned to the top 20 in 17th position after rising five places following his series contribution of 180 runs which made him the fourth most successful batsman in the series behind Michael Clarke (242), Ricky Ponting (196) and Shane Watson (185).
While Watson and Ponting have retained their third and 15th positions, respectively, Clarke has moved up two places to seventh position.
The batting table is headed by South Africa's Hashim Amla while his captain, AB de Villiers, is in second position.
There is no change in the top three of the rankings for all-rounders which are still led by Watson.


Dravid enters top 10, Sachin, Laxman slip

Dubai: Almost all the top Indian batsmen apart from Rahul Dravid slipped in the latestICC Test Rankings for batsman released on Tuesday.
The shoddy performance of their batsmen in the just concluded Test series affected their individual rankings with Sachin Tendulkar dropping a spot to fifth place.
The Bangalorean is now 10th in the list of Test batsmen which has Jacques Kallis firmly entrenched at the top of the ranking table.
Ian Bell and Kevin Pietersen's star acts during the series helped them to gain four and five places respectively.
While Bell is now third in the list after Kallis and Kumar Sangakkara, KP has also broken into the Top-10 and is now in seventh place.
India's VVS Laxman who has had a horrible series lost five places to be at 17th while Virender Sehwag also dropped a couple notches to be at 19th. Gautam Gambhir who was 30th in the earlier table is now 31st.
In the bowling department Zaheer Khan remained seventh despite bowling only 13.3 overs in the series. Off-spinner Graeme Swann is now in the top three with a leap of two places while Dale Steyn and James Anderson remained No 1 and 2 respectively.
While Stuart Broad maintained his fifth position, Tim Bresnan with his brilliant show is now 11th having gained five places. India's Harbhajan Singh and Ishant Sharma dropped a place each to be 12th and 13th in the list respectively.