McGlashan guides New Zealand to consolation victory

ScorecardErin Bermingham impressed in the field as she took four wickets•Getty Images

New Zealand secured a consolation six-wicket victory in the final one-day international at Lord’s as Sara McGlashan and Amy Satterthwaite guided a successful run chase after an impressive performance in the field restricted England to 176 for 9.The visitors had problems at the beginning of the chase with Katherine Brunt and Laura Marsh reducing them to 35 for 3 in 12th over. However, Satterthwaite and McGlashan played sensibly to keep the required rate well under control as England struggled to make further breakthroughs.Satterthwaite went to her fifty from 80 balls but couldn’t see out the pursuit when she fell to Holly Colvin and it was left to McGlashan, with 65 from 113 deliveries, and captain Aimee Watkins (11 not out) to guide New Zealand home with 20 balls to spare.England had struggled in their innings after choosing to bat first with Sarah Taylor caught behind in the fourth over. They limped to 68 for 5 in the 22nd over, but Lydia Greenway continued her good form with a fighting 65 to at least keep the innings afloat.New Zealand, though, kept chipping away with Erin Bermingham particularly impressive as she collected 4 for 35 while Sophie Devine and Nicola Browne each bagged two wickets.

Steve O'Keefe stars with bat and ball

Australia A 208 and 6 for 200 (Bailey 57*) lead Sri Lanka A 103 (O’Keefe 7-35) by 305 runs
Scorecard
Steve O’Keefe’s 7 for 35 kept Australia A on top at Allan Border Field•Getty Images

Steve O’Keefe’s impressive game for Australia A continued as he took seven wickets before his side gained a 305-run lead with two days to play against Sri Lanka A. O’Keefe, the New South Wales left-arm orthodox spinner, scored 61 at Allan Border Field on Friday and backed up with a memorable haul as the visitors were dismissed for 103 before lunch.That gave Australia a 105-run advantage and they increased the comfort of their position by reaching 6 for 200 at stumps. George Bailey, the captain, finished unbeaten on 57 and O’Keefe was 28 not out, while Michael Klinger (32), Usman Khawaja (30) and Andrew McDonald (21) got starts. Dammika Prasad was the leading bowler with 3 for 34 while the offspinner Sachithra Senanayake, who took the new ball, had Ed Cowan lbw for 9.O’Keefe, who has played six first-class games, was as difficult to conquer as Senanayake was on the opening day when he captured 8 for 70. O’Keefe delivered 18 overs while taking 7 for 35 in an outstanding performance mixing control and destruction.Replying to Australia A’s 208, the Sri Lankans were in a reasonable position at 4 for 72 before losing their last six wickets for 31. O’Keefe grabbed four of those to add to his dismissals of Lahiru Thirimanne, the top scorer with 20, and Dinesh Chandimal (15) at the start of the day.

Rain frustrates at Cardiff

ScorecardGlamorgan’s County Championship Division Two clash against Surrey at the Swalec Stadium ended in a draw after no play was possible on the final day because of rain.Umpires Michael Gough and David Millns waited until lunchtime to abandon proceedings after persistent morning rain. Glamorgan took 10 points from the match to Surrey’s nine, leaving leaders Glamorgan on 126 points at the halfway stage of the season.

Kieswetter and Pietersen seal title for England

England 148 for 3 (Kieswetter 63) beat Australia 147 for 6 (D Hussey 59) by seven wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out
HawkeyeKevin Pietersen was named Player of the Tournament after another irresistible display with the bat•Getty Images

Craig Kieswetter and Kevin Pietersen powered England to their first ICC global title with an irresistible 111-run stand for the second wicket, as Australia were outmuscled in a battle of the bowlers at Bridgetown. Despite a brave recovery led by David Hussey, who made 59 from 54 balls, Australia’s hopes of claiming the only world title to have eluded them were devastated from the moment they lost three wickets in 13 legitimate deliveries in a stunning start to the contest.Chasing a target of 148, Kieswetter and Pietersen broke the back of the chase in an 11-over alliance, but fittingly it was left to England’s captain, Paul Collingwood, to seal the victory with 18 balls to spare. At the moment of victory, he was mobbed by his jubilant team-mates as they poured out of the dug-out, with incredulity and triumph writ large on their features. Barely 12 months ago, Collingwood was leading England to defeat against the Netherlands in the opening contest of the 2009 event. Now he has joined football’s Bobby Moore and rugby’s Martin Johnson in captaining England to a world sporting title.The difference between the sides was underlined by the boundary count. Whereas Australia managed eight fours and three sixes in their 20 overs, and just two fours in the first 12 overs, England clattered 12 fours and five sixes in 17, as their confident and attacking batsmen targeted the weak links in the Australian bowling line-up – in particular Shane Watson – to motor past a mid-range target. England, by contrast, showed no weaknesses with the ball or in the field, as their multi-faceted five-prong attack tore onto the offensive with an aggressive but highly strategic display.The start of the contest was sensational, as Australia crashed to 8 for 3 with a wicket in each of the first three overs. Ryan Sidebottom, a controversial selection a week ago but an automatic choice now, settled England’s nerves and exacerbated those of the Australians by removing Shane Watson with the third delivery of the match. A lifter outside off was slashed through to Kieswetter, who fumbled the initial take only for an alert Graeme Swann at slip to dive forward and grasp the rebound in the heel of his hands.One over later, the dangerous David Warner was run out for 2, as his captain, Michael Clarke, called him through for a tight single at short cover, only for Michael Lumb to swoop and score a direct hit with his underarm shy. And before Australia had had time to regroup, they were undermined by misfortune as well, as Brad Haddin was adjudged caught behind off his hip – brilliantly caught, in fact, by a full-stretch Kieswetter – as Sidebottom snaffled his second.The effect of the early breakthroughs was to hand all of the initiative to England’s charged-up attack, who came at Australia with a Test-match intensity. While the pace in the pitch encouraged the seamers to bend their backs, they were sensibly sparing with the short balls, and instead concentrated on pinning the batsmen to the crease with arrow-straight but undriveable lengths. Had Lumb’s aim been slightly better, he might have added two further run-outs from short cover, as Clarke betrayed his anxiety with a succession of nip-and-tuck quick singles.It wasn’t until Clarke nudged Sidebottom through fine leg in the fifth over that Australia registered their first boundary, and though he added a second when he pulled a rare long-hop from Bresnan through mid-on, the score was 34 for 3 after seven overs when England turned to their spinners, Swann and Michael Yardy, with licence to apply the tourniquet. And when Collingwood leapt superbly at short midwicket to snaffle an attempted flick from Clarke, Australia had slumped to 45 for 4 in the tenth over.Not for the first time in this tournament, however, Cameron White had the power and the intent to lift Australia’s tempo. He chose the 13th over of the innings, Yardy’s third, to make his move, as he followed a David Hussey swipe for six with four, six, four in consecutive deliveries. With 21 runs in the over, Australia were suddenly back in business on 80 for 4, and with two further fours in consecutive overs, White had moved along to 29 from 17 balls when Collingwood opted to introduce Luke Wright for his first over of the tournament.The ploy paid quick dividends. Targeting the yorker with every delivery, Wright stifled the swinging blades before drawing White into a wild slash outside off. Broad, who moments earlier had made a mess of a swirling top-edge at deep cover off Hussey, called bravely and chased down a fine low chance as he ran back towards the rope at point. Michael Hussey joined his brother to nudge and swat 47 runs for the sixth wicket in 22 balls, but Australia’s final total of 147 for 6 was, as Clarke later conceded, at least 25 runs short of parity.For once, Lumb was unable to jump-start England’s reply, as he clipped airily to mid-on in Shaun Tait’s first over to fall for 2 from four balls, but Kieswetter – who was at his happiest with the ball pitched up in his half – cracked Dirk Nannes for consecutive fours, either side of a lengthy delay to fix the malfunctioning sightscreen. He added a third four when Tait overpitched in his subsequent over, and with Pietersen looking typically busy at the crease, England reached a healthy 41 for 1 in their Powerplay, a position that was comfortably ahead of Australia’s 24 for 3 at the same stage.With their platform secure, England never looked like faltering. The legspinner Steven Smith was nailed through the covers for Pietersen’s third boundary, before Kieswetter collected consecutive fours in Watson’s first over – the first a touch fortuitously as David Hussey fumbled at mid-off. Clarke had no choice but to recall Mitchell Johnson for his third over, and though he stemmed the flow a touch, Watson’s medium pace was meat and drink for the now pumped-up Kieswetter, who mowed a massive six over midwicket in an over that leaked 16 runs.Back came Tait with Australia desperate for a wicket, but Pietersen met him with an imperious lofted drive over mid-on for four, before opening his stance to drive a glorious six over extra cover, and take the required rate down below a run a ball. Two balls later, Kieswetter dabbed a wide ball through point to bring up a 40-ball fifty, and celebrated by slashing Nannes for four through third man before belting an astonishing one-handed six over backward square leg.With just 30 runs needed from the final seven overs, Pietersen gave Smith the charge and holed out to Warner at long-off for an excellent 47 from 31 balls, but at 118 for 2, Australia knew they still needed a miracle. That prospect became a touch more probable six balls later, when Kieswetter gave himself too much room to a Johnson yorker and was rather comically bowled for 63 from 49 balls, but to judge by the grim faces in the England dug-out, no-one was particularly keen on laughing just yet.Eoin Morgan, however, swept Smith powerfully for six over square leg to mop their collective brows, and when Collingwood pulled the luckless Watson off the front foot over midwicket for another six, the result was beyond doubt. A swat through fine leg brought the scores level, and one ball later, the title was secure, and England’s limited-overs hoodoo had finally been laid to rest.

Durham fight back after Carberry century

ScorecardMichael Carberry led Hampshire’s innings with a positive hundred•Getty Images

Hampshire were undermined by a spell of sustained hostility from Liam Plunkettafter Michael Carberry made a superb century in an opening stand of 183.As in Durham’s opening match against Essex, Plunkett began poorly but improvedin his third spell to take three of the wickets as the visitors subsided toclose the first day of the County Championship Division One match on 298 for 8.Plunkett did well to extract some life from another placid Riverside pitch, onwhich Carberry and fellow left-hander Jimmy Adams looked totally at ease afterNic Pothas chose to bat on a cold, bright day.With Steve Harmison and Graham Onions both still absent with back injuries, theDurham seamers struggled early on and left-arm spinner Ian Blackwell was on asearly as 22nd over. But Carberry swept him for four then advanced to driveanother glorious boundary through extra cover.Adams glanced and pulled Plunkett for two leg-side fours as his first five-overspell cost 29 runs and it needed a touch of beginner’s luck for Durham to makethe breakthrough.After remaining wicketless on his championship debut last week, England Under-19 all-rounder Ben Stokes struck with his first ball of the day.It was short and wide of off-stump, but Carberry cut it straight to backward point, where Plunkett held a sharp, low catch.It had all begun to look a little too easy for Carberry. After reaching 50 off87 balls, he needed only 53 more to complete his century with 15 fours and asix. But it was no surprise when he was out as he had begun to look a littlecarefree.Three overs later the more circumspect Adams shaped to drive Plunkett butseemed to check the stroke and got an inside edge to be well caught by PhilMustard for 68.South African Neil McKenzie looked totally at ease in reaching 30, but thenshaped to drive Blackwell and edged to slip. The left-arm spinner had a second wicket when Chris Benham aimed to turn him through midwicket and fell lbw, also for 30.In the final session Plunkett induced an inside edge into James Vince’sleg-stump and after dropping Sean Ervine at gully off Mitch Claydon he quicklymade amends by claiming the wicket himself.Ervine followed a ball leaving him on off-stump to be caught behind, and threewickets had gone down on 284 when Claydon had James Tomlinson lbw immediatelyafter Pothas suffered the same fate.

Unsettled New Zealand must stand up

Match Facts

Brent Arnel was the only local bowler to take more than one wicket in Wellington•Getty Images

March 27-31, Seddon Park, Hamilton
Start time 11am (2200 GMT)

The Big Picture

By winning the first match Australia have done enough to retain the Trans-Tasman Trophy, which they held coming in to the series, but they are keen to end their Test summer with seven wins instead of six. Their chances of taking the series 2-0 will be boosted by the inclusion of Shane Watson, who has declared himself fit after missing the first Test with a hip injury that he picked up during the one-day series. Watson batted for nearly an hour in the nets at Seddon Park on Friday and will take back his spot from Phillip Hughes on Saturday morning. “In the last four or five days it has come together really well,” Watson said. “I’ll be right to go at full speed.”The visitors will need another big effort from the attack after the fast men toiled over four consecutive days in Wellington. Watson was confident that he could bolster the bowling group despite his lay-off. “I’ve had a fairly big workload in the last six months with my bowling so a week off, not bowling, won’t make much difference to my workload,” he said. “I’ll be able to bowl the overs that Ricky wants me to bowl.”For New Zealand, there’s not much to lose at 1-0 down in a two-Test series. However, questions have been raised over whether they have the belief that they can beat Australia in the five-day format, a theory that the captain Daniel Vettori didn’t entirely dismiss on the eve of the match. “Maybe in the Test match form of the game that’s fair,” Vettori told Radio Sport. ” I think we’ve proved ourselves in the other forms of the game but Test matches has been the part of the game that we’ve struggled in. And coming up against one of the best teams in the world is a real test of that ability. Our ability to hang in there longer and persevere longer as we did on that fourth day [in Wellington] is the only way we’re going to compete against Australia.”The match is also Vettori’s 100th Test and at his home ground he will be desperate for a strong individual performance. New Zealand might need some Vettori brilliance to end their 17-year Test drought against Australia.

Form guide

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New Zealand LWDLW

Watch out for…

Most of the attention will surround Vettori but there is another Hamilton lad who could prove important for New Zealand. Brent Arnel bowled well on his Test debut with accuracy and subtle movement. Match figures of 2 for 120 don’t look impressive but bear in mind no other New Zealand bowler took more than one wicket for the game. Arnel was chosen based on his first-class success and much of his cricket over the past few years has been played at his home ground of Seddon Park, so New Zealand will look to him for valuable contributions.

Doug Bollinger struggled in the one-dayers but turned his form around dramatically in the first Test, grabbing 5 for 28 in the first innings and seven wickets for the match. He extracted more bounce from the Wellington pitch than any other bowler and his ability to swing and seam the ball will make him a handful if Hamilton produces a surface with a touch of grass. New Zealand need a stronger first-innings effort to really challenge Australia and Bollinger is the key to ensuring that doesn’t happen.

Team news

The Watson-Hughes swap is the only likely change for Australia. Marcus North eased doubts over his place with a century in the first Test and Ryan Harris’ six wickets on debut means he will stay ahead of Clint McKay in the pace pecking order.Australia (probable) 1 Shane Watson, 2 Simon Katich, 3 Ricky Ponting (capt), 4 Michael Hussey, 5 Michael Clarke, 6 Marcus North, 7 Brad Haddin (wk), 8 Mitchell Johnson, 9 Nathan Hauritz, 10 Ryan Harris, 11 Doug Bollinger.New Zealand’s line-up is not quite so settled. Vettori said Jeetan Patel would play, while the teenager Kane Williamson was unlikely to make his debut. That would mean only one question remaining – Mathew Sinclair or Peter Ingram at No. 3? Ingram’s lack of success during the series so far could mean a recall for Sinclair, who has the support of the batting coach Martin Crowe.New Zealand (possible) 1 Tim McIntosh, 2 BJ Watling, 3 Mathew Sinclair, 4 Ross Taylor, 5 Martin Guptill, 6 Daniel Vettori (capt), 7 Brendon McCullum (wk), 8 Jeetan Patel, 9 Tim Southee, 10 Brent Arnel, 11 Chris Martin.

Pitch and conditions

Two days out from the Test there was a lot of grass on the pitch and the outfield was moist but Vettori expected good playing conditions. “It’s still quite dry,” he said. “The greenness is probably misrepresenting the wicket. We’ve played here enough times to know that it will probably have a little bit in it early on, but it’s not going to be anything too terrible. It may be a tough first session but I think it will get lower and slower as the game goes on.” The forecast for the first day is fine and 24C.

Stats and trivia

  • Australia and New Zealand have met only once in a Test match at Hamilton, back in 1999-2000 when Australia won by six wickets. The only man from either squad who took part in that match was Mathew Sinclair
  • This match will be Daniel Vettori’s 100th Test, while Simon Katich and Michael Hussey are each playing their 50th
  • Two of Vettori’s five Test centuries have been scored at Seddon Park, where his Test batting average is 43.25

    Quotes

    “We can’t afford to be on the back foot at any stage against Australia in Hamilton.”
    Daniel Vettori

    “There’s no doubt our bowlers put their top order under a lot of pressure. Our opening bowlers will pose the same questions this week of those guys.”Simon Katich

Smith regains momentum for NSW

New South Wales 4 for 326 (Jaques 88, Smith 71, Forrest 62, Hughes 58) v Tasmania
ScorecardSteven Smith’s 71 took the Blues safely to stumps•Getty Images

Steven Smith and Peter Forrest steadied New South Wales on a two-paced first day as they finished at 4 for 326 in Hobart. The Blues sped through Phil Jaques and Phillip Hughes to register 140 in the first session before being held back in the second and easing away in the third.Smith and Forrest overcame some tight bowling from Tasmania during a stand of 119 for the fourth wicket that regained the momentum. However, Forrest gave Tim Paine his third catch late in the day to depart with 62, but Smith made it to stumps unbeaten on 71.Jaques and Hughes opened with 118 in 25.1 overs – about the rate expected in a one-day game – before Hughes (58) was caught behind off Adam Griffith, who had 2 for 72. Jaques moved confidently towards a century but fell for 88 trying to sweep Xavier Doherty.The loss of Usman Khawaja (22) three overs later left the visitors at 3 for 175, but Smith and Forrest steered the side away from danger. New South Wales are almost certainly out of contention for the final while Tasmania are currently third.

Quiney hundred sets Tasmania big chase


ScorecardRob Quiney was in good form for Victoria•Getty Images

Rob Quiney’s second first-class century gave Victoria hope of victory against Tasmania after James Pattinson helped the Bushrangers snare first-innings points early on the third day. At stumps, Victoria had reached 8 for 321 with Quiney unbeaten on 139 and Pattinson on 1 and their 356-run advantage meant a hefty final-day chase for the Tigers.The Victorians began the second innings with a 35-run lead but the match threatened to turn in Tasmania’s favour when Luke Butterworth ran through the top four batsmen. Victoria were 4 for 65 when Quiney and Aaron Finch came together in a 98-run stand that ensured the visitors regained control of the game.Finch, who was playing his first Sheffield Shield match, was caught behind off Brett Geeves for 50 but Quiney continued to increase Victoria’s lead, helped by Matthew Wade (47). Quiney was in his 26th first-class appearance and was under some pressure to lift his output and he did so, passing triple figures for his state for the first time since October 2008.The battle for first-innings points in the morning was a short one – Tasmania began the day needing 48 runs and the Bushrangers wanted three wickets. The breakthroughs came via Pattinson, who finished with 4 for 52, and the former Tasmania fast man Damien Wright, who collected 3 for 52.

Scotland edge Uganda in thriller

Scorecard
The second game of the Kenya Twenty20 Tri-Series between Uganda and Scotland ended in dramatic fashion, with the scores tied before Jan Stander sealed a win for Scotland in the Super Over. Arthur Kyobe carried his bat in Uganda’s run chase with an unbeaten 51, but Ryan Watson’s last gasp dismissal of Dennis Tabby ensured the match went to the one-over eliminator.Uganda recovered well from their mauling at the hands of Kenya in the first match of the series to restrict Scotland to 109 for 8. Tabby removed opener Fraser Watts and Kyle Coetzer in his opening spell, but Scotland still looked set for a decent total when they reached 66 for 3 in their first 10 overs.They stumbled against Uganda’s spin in the second half of their innings, however, with the 16-year-old Henry Ssenyondo picking up three wickets for just 20 runs. Frank Nsubuga showed his experience, stemming the flow of runs and picking up the important scalps of Gavin Hamilton and Watson, while Deusdedit Muhumuza’s medium pace also proved frugal.With his fellow opener Roger Mukasa falling in the first over, Kyobe played a lone hand for most of Uganda’s innings. Captain Akbar Baig joined him to provide a brief spell of stability, but Ross Lyons and Majid Haq worked steadily through the Ugandan middle order before Ssenyondo and Kyobe swung the match back Uganda’s way with the largest partnership of either innings. Their 44 took Uganda to 99 before Haq bowled Ssenyondo to spark panic in the Ugandan ranks.With only 11 runs needed in four overs, Watson and Richie Berrington’s nerveless death bowling got the better of Uganda’s tail, and with Tabby dismissed off the final ball of the innings the match was taken into a Super Over. Haq kept Uganda to just six runs in their over before Stander sealed the result by smashing Nsubuga for a boundary with two balls to spare.

Scotland seamers rout Kenya for 91

Close Scotland 121 for 3 (Sheikh 56*) lead Kenya 91 (Obuya 40) by 30 runs
ScorecardScotland’s four-man seam attack routed Kenya for 91 in just 49.1 overs, to secure a commanding position on the opening day of their Intercontinental Cup clash at the Gymkhana Club in Nairobi. Collins Obuya top-scored with 40, but the only other Kenya batsman to reach double-figures was the opener Maurice Ouma, as they shed their last seven wickets for 17 runs in 25.2 torturous overs.By the close, Scotland had built on their early success to carve out a 30-run lead with seven wickets still standing. Qasim Sheikh was the mainstay of their reply as he reached the close on 56 not out, having added 52 for the second wicket with Douglas Lockhart, who made 22. The two teams had come into the fixture with similar records for the 2009-10 season, after victories over Canada and draws against Ireland. But in the opening exchanges, Kenya were outclassed.Scotland won the toss and chose to field first, and claimed an early breakthrough when Seren Waters was caught-behind off Dewald Nel for 1 in the third over of the match. Ouma began aggressively but soon became Nel’s second wicket of the morning, caught by Ross Lyons for 22, whereupon Gordon Drummond and Richie Berrington set to work on the middle order.The struggling Steve Tikolo was Drummond’s first victim, caught by Berrington for 7, before Obuya, who had struck seven fours in a well-paced 73-ball stay, picked out Ewan Chalmers. That was the end of Kenya’s resistance. Four balls later, Rakep Patel was caught behind off Drummond for 3, before Nehemiah Odhiambo fell lbw to the same bowler for a duck. Gordon Goudie then returned to mop up the tail, as each of the four bowlers finished with at least two wickets.In reply, Scotland started confidently, reaching 22 in six overs before Kyle Coetzer was bowled by Odhiambo for 12. Lockhart and Sheikh then carried their team to within 17 runs of first-innings parity before Hiren Varaiya removed Lockhart for 22, and shortly before the close Odhiambo claimed his second as Chalmers fell for 14.