Sports

England humbled by novice pair in final Ashes warm-up draw

November 18, 2017
Australia XI's Jason Sangha avoids a bouncer from England's pace bowler Chris Woakes on the fourth and final day of a four-day Ashes tour match in Townsville on Satrday. — AFP
Australia XI's Jason Sangha avoids a bouncer from England's pace bowler Chris Woakes on the fourth and final day of a four-day Ashes tour match in Townsville on Satrday. — AFP

TOWNSVILLE, Australia — Novices Jason Sangha and Matt Short scored their maiden first-class centuries for a Cricket Australia XI to frustrate England on the last day of their final Ashes warm-up game on Saturday.

Eighteen-year old Sangha and team skipper Short — with only seven first-class matches between them — shared in a 263-run fourth-wicket stand to draw the four-day game ahead of next week's first Brisbane Test.

Sangha hit 133 off 226 balls with 13 fours and a six, while Short remained unbeaten on 134 off 264 balls when the game was called off late on the final day in Townsville.

Sangha is the second-youngest player to score a century against England behind India great Sachin Tendulkar. He was finally caught off leg-spinner Mason Crane, allowing the tourists to avoid the indignity of going wicketless on the final day.

"It's not really damaging to us," England coach Trevor Bayliss said. "Obviously we'd like to take 10 wickets for 90 runs in every game, but this is what can happen in cricket.

"A number of guys spent time in the middle with the bat and the bowlers got a lot of overs under their belts. Hopefully everyone now has got their rhythms right and they can come out next week and go from ball one."

The inexperienced CA XI finished on 364 for four off 110 overs to lead by 99 runs when the rival captains agreed a draw. Sangha was dropped by Mark Stoneman on 43 but England's bowlers created few other chances.

England comfortably defeated a similar CA XI in Adelaide last week and for two days in north Queensland they had looked set to do so again. The CA XI ended the third day on 121 for three, trailing England by 144 and short of a batsman because of an injury to Nick Larkin.

But Sangha and Short made the most of the benign conditions to ensure England spent the fourth day toiling in the tropical heat. Pace bowler Craig Overton was treated with disdain, going wicketless for 65 off 15 overs.

Off-spinner Moeen Ali, in his first game of the tour after a side injury, bowled a total of 48 overs in the match. But fellow spinner Crane was loose, finishing the second innings with two for 97 from 30 overs.

By the end, England were using part-time spinners Joe Root and Dawid Malan to protect the frontliners and hasten the finish.

"It was good to spend some time in the field. I'm sure there will be times during the Test series where we're out in the field all day," Bayliss said.

"There were two young guys out there that batted very, very well. All credit to them. They looked good. It's good for Australian cricket."

Bangladesh tackles illegal cricket betting with raids

Bangladesh has launched a series of police raids to crack down on illegal betting in cricket stadiums that has gripped the country's main Twenty20 competition, tournament officials said Saturday.

Some 77 people have been thrown out of two cricket grounds in the cities of Dhaka and Sylhet in the past few days after being suspected of betting during the Bangladesh Premier League (BPL), a lucrative competition modeled on the Indian Premier League, officials said.

Betting is illegal in Bangladesh, but the alleged offenders — 10 of whom were Indian nationals — used their mobile phones to place live bets before scores were broadcast on television and online, BPL secretary Ismail Haider Mallick told reporters.

"Matches go on air four to five seconds or in some cases nine seconds after the original actions take place (on the ground). Gamblers were using the time gap to do betting," he said.

The bettors were monitored at the venues, before being caught and evicted with assistance from special branch police, Bangladesh cricket Board spokesman Jalal Yunus told AFP.

Tea stalls, restaurants and auto-rickshaw garages have all become venues for fans to place their bets during the matches, the newspaper said.

Last year the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission blocked 12 betting websites in an attempt to curb gambling during cricket matches.

Nearly 50 foreign cricketers, including Sri Lanka's Lasith Malinga, the West Indies' Chris Gayle, New Zealand's Brendon McCullum and England's Jos Buttler are taking part in the seven-team BPL tournament this year. — AFP


November 18, 2017
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