Alan Pardew slams pitch surface

Alan Pardew has criticised the quality of Maritimo’s pitch after both teams fired blanks in a lethargic goalless draw.

The uneven surface was a definite factor in the Toon Army’s slow start in Portugal, but despite this Pardew still believes his side did enough to win.

The ex-West Ham boss stated to The Journal, “I thought the pitch was of a very poor standard. Both teams suffered from it.

“But I’m probably the happier of the two managers as we didn’t suffer any more injuries. The performance of the team was outstanding.

“The first ten minutes of the game I thought they were in control and I am disappointed we didn’t get the win with the chances we had at the end.”

Pleased to pick up an away point the 51 year old now has the relief of knowing his next two European ties are at home, with Bordeaux and Club Brugge next up in the Europa League.

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Pardew added, “Now it will be easier for us as we have to home games successively. It will be like a normal week for us.”

West Ham fans discuss Murphy’s comments

Former England midfielder Danny Murphy has claimed that West Ham United need to overhaul their squad this summer if they manage to say in the Premier League.

Indeed, in his column for the London Evening Standard, Murphy wrote that Marko Arnautovic, Mark Noble, Declan Rice, Josh Cullen and Manuel Lanzini are the only five players that should be sure of their future at the club next season.

It is quite a statement from the former Liverpool midfielder, and unless West Ham are preparing to downsize to a five-a-side team then they might have some problems next term.

The West Ham fans, who have also recently reacted to reports of a possible takeover, have been discussing Murphy’s comments, and have indeed been offering their own opinions when it comes to which players should stay at the club this summer.

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There is expected to be a turnaround in terms of personnel, but whether David Moyes has the chance to change the squad remains to be seen.

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Some of the Twitter reaction from the West Ham fans to Murphy’s column can be seen below:

Durham make up for lost time against Hampshire.

Both Durham and Hampshire made inroads into the interrupted Championship match at Riverside on Friday. By lunch the home side had scored 141 runs, with Hampshire taking three wickets.With the crowd anticipating the approaching seasons 1,000 from Australian Simon Katich, he cut at a ball from Dimitri Mascarenhas as was caught high up at first-slip by Shane Warne, just four runs short of the magical target.Katich had batted for nearly three hours, sharing a 125 run partnership with makeshift captain Jon Lewis.Paul Collingwood was well held low down at second slip to give Hampshire their first bonus point of the match.Lewis who had batted patiently for four hours, finally fell when he played on to Shane Warne, but by the lunch interval on the second day Daley and Speight had added a further 74 in 15 overs.Rain and thunderstorms predictably arrived during the lunch break. By three pm, the deluge of hailstones, very heavy rain and thunder and lightniing gave umpires Benson and Steele little option but to abandon play for the day.

England make slow progress against young Patrons XI

A young Pakistan Cricket Board Patron’s X1, which included just one batsman of Test status – the captain, Mohammad Wasim – reached 188 for 5 by close of play on the first day of their four-day match against England.It provided a good work-out for England bowlers, eight of whom were used.Matthew Hoggard proved most successful, claiming a wicket in each of the three sessions of play, conceding 33 runs from 19 overs. Ashley Giles and Marcus Trescothick took a wicket each.Having decided to make first use of a grassy wicket at the Rawalpindi Stadium, the PCB Patron’s X1 lost two wickets in each of the first two sessions of play, reaching 76 at lunch and 150 at tea.The scoring rate was almost identical in those two sessions but 19-year-old Qaiser Abbas provided entertaining batting during his three-and-a-quarter hours at the crease.The left-hander played fluent strokes which brought him nine boundaries by stumps in his unbeaten score of 71 from 139 balls. None of the bowlers troubled him during his chanceless knock. His timing was excellent and he cut and drove showing much confidence for a young man.In the last over before tea Abbas drove Ian Salisbury straight for four to bring up the 150 of the innings for the loss of four wickets. He was 43 not out from 69 balls and ten balls later, shortly after the break, reached his half century with a pull to mid-wicket off Salisbury.England’s fine fielding restricted the scoring and just one catch went down when Graeme Hick at slip dropped Salman Shah off Hoggard. But it was not an expensive miss, as the batsman fell to the same bowler four runs later in the last session of play.

England go 1-0 up with emphatic win

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsThere are many ways to lose a Test and Australia have lost this one in a manner that will cause them much disquiet. They would have had to make history to chase down 412 in Cardiff. Instead they made an unholy mess of things, surrendering five top-order wickets in 12 overs from the stroke of lunch to make a thumping England victory in the first Investec Test inevitable.That victory came in the 17th over of the final session: the margin 169 runs, the forecast of rain until mid-afternoon on the final day an irrelevance. The pace bowlers were having a rest in anticipation of a second new ball that was not needed and Joe Root, Man of the Match for his decisive first-innings hundred, even nipped in with a couple of wickets and the final catch.A defiant, clean-hitting half-century by Mitchell Johnson, with the ball soft, the pitch napping and the pressure lifted by the prospect of certain defeat, provided some window dressing, but by the time he fell at slip for 77 from 94 balls, he had provided apt commentary on Australia’s middle-order failings as England went 1-0 up in the series. The favourites beaten at the first attempt: we have a series on our hands.Australia initially put up determined resistance in challenging batting conditions. No side had ever successfully achieved such a fourth-innings target in an Ashes contest, but Australia made a solid start before the departure of David Warner, the second wicket to fall, in the final over before lunch, rallied England’s spirits. Things were never the same again.There were doubts before the series that England’s attack had the capacity to dismiss Australia twice. But in Cardiff they have made much more disciplined and resourceful use of a slow, dry and occasionally inconsistent surface. Stuart Broad and James Anderson have been rejuvenated by another Ashes skirmish, Mark Wood has bowled straight and purposefully, Ben Stokes has raised his reliability levels and Moeen Ali, although not finding the turn uncovered by his Australian opposite number, Nathan Lyon, has nevertheless had the guile to spirit five good wickets in the match.The loss of Warner, for 52, abruptly changed the outlook at the end of a morning session when Australia, at 97 for 1, had done their utmost to insist that in an Ashes Test there was no such thing as a done deal. Moeen ran a ball into Warner’s pads, he was bemused as he edged back when he might have gone forward, missed the ball by a notable distance and the umpire’s decision fell to England.Joe Root claimed two lower-order wickets and the winning catch•Getty Images

That wicket must have been a particular relief for Moeen, who had been given an early outing by Cook, but whose two overs cost 22, including a six over midwicket by Warner, as he failed to settle. Lyon had taken four wickets on the previous day on a responsive surface and Moeen was bearing heavy expectations. It was a good call by the captain to take another look as the morning session ticked away.Chris Rogers had been the first wicket to fall, his sequence of Test fifties ending at seven, and a share of the record. Broad capped a probing new-ball spell by dismissing him for 10 as he angled one into him from around the wicket and a defensive push flew low to Ian Bell at second slip. Rogers stood his ground, to England’s discomfort, before TV replays confirmed the catch was clean.Warner had begun to settle in ominously before his dismissal and England had already jettisoned one review against him when a ball from Broad had actually flicked the top of Warner’s pad. Broad also sensed another lbw when Warner was 15, his brain not entirely computing the presence of a big inside nick. There could be no more liberties with only one review remaining and Broad curbed his ambitions, holding his hands to a reddening face like a teenager suddenly realising on the last bus home that they had left their mobile phone in the lavatory.England could be satisfied with the standards they achieved, and could point at numerous examples in the morning session when fortune did not quite fall their way. Broad and Anderson combined in an insistent opening salvo, passing the bat regularly.There was not the same swing available as there had been earlier in the match but England wisely pulled back their lengths slightly, in the expectation that a dry and variable surface would come to their aid.Five Australia wickets for 25 in 12 overs was an emphatic turnaround. Seven balls into the session, Smith was gone, steering a wide ball to Bell at second slip, the second time in the match he had been out for 33. It was a reward for the plan England have followed all Test against Smith, bowling at fifth or sixth stump, calculating that a batsman who walks so far across his crease to cover his stumps by the time the batsman delivers will not be best placed to put a bit more mileage in.Clarke will be equally disappointed by his departure. He was searching for a delivery from Broad that he could only drive to backward point. Broad has now dismissed him 10 times in Tests: once it reaches double figures, one can assume that a pattern is probably developing. Broad, stirred by England’s rush of wickets, three of them his, beckoned for the crowd to get involved. The old football staple of “You’re not singing any more” wafted towards the banks of Australia supporters, the ultimate criticism, of course, when delivered in the Land of Song.Voges, in common with Rogers, has a traditional English approach about him. He was not about to try to knock England’s bowlers off their lengths, certainly not in only his third Test at the age of 35. He made only a single before edging Wood off the back foot, a reward for the bowler’s excellent line.From 106 for 5, Haddin’s glowering aggression was not about to stem the tide. His failure to catch Root, on 0, on the first day would be a turning point in the Test that he would just have to learn to live with. Wood bounced him twice; Haddin got off the mark with a streaky pull which barely cleared the stumps and then grimaced as he was struck in the groin.It was the seemingly futile resistance of an old soldier and it was ended not by Wood but by Moeen, who tossed up his first delivery for Haddin’s ugly heave to be excellently caught, second attempt, by Cook at short midwicket, a productive position on this slow surface, where Smith had also come to grief against Moeen in the first innings.England had only to add a favourite toy to the pram to make their afternoon complete. Wood sprang into his gymnastics run, a straight, full ball exposed Shane Watson’s front-foot plant and, as Watson reviewed the decision without avail, it gave everybody time to update that damning statistic: that is 29 lbw dismissals in 109 Test innings (14 in 35 against England) and while he remains in the side it is a fair assumption that the figure will keep on rising.The final session saw Johnson hit straight and often as England suddenly looked as weary as the pitch. But Root popped in for an encore. Lyth alertly held Starc at slip after Cook’s parry from gully, Lyth again held the catch as Johnson fell more conventionally and then, as if he could do no wrong, Root wandered off into the deep to hold the winning catch.

Rahane century holds Indians together

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details2:27

SL conditions will challenge batsmen – Rahane

A smooth Ajinkya Rahane century headed up a sturdy first outing for the Indians, who withstood occasionally testing fast bowling on a green surface to post 314 for 6 on the first day in Colombo. Shikhar Dhawan made a half-century, in a 108-run opening stand with KL Rahul, who fell in sight of his own fifty.Only M Vijay did not bat, from among India’s top seven. He is currently resting a strained hamstring, but is on track to play the first Test starting August 12. All 15 members of the squad are in play for the match.Rahane eased into his innings with a drive down the ground to collect two from his first ball, before taking 12 from a Nisala Tharaka over soon after.  He quickly settled into a rhythm of risk-free runs into a lush outfield, largely untroubled by the seam movement that claimed the wickets of men around him. Occasionally, he broke the long, steady spells with bursts of aggression. Shortly after tea he hit seven fours inside 22 balls, during the course of which he reached his fifty.”I wanted to play my positive cricket,” Rahane said of his innings. “My intent has been positive throughout the last one to two years, wherever I have played. I wanted to continue with that same intent. In our batting unit, everyone’s intent is to look for runs.”When he returned to a more measured approach, Rahane was always adept at finding the off-side gaps, which allowed his strike rate to remain above 60. He was scoring off most balls by the end of the day, and will sit overnight on 109 from 127 deliveries.Dhawan and Rahul had been circumspect to begin with, going scoreless in the first 23 balls of the day, as the Sri Lanka Board President’s XI seamers induced movement from a full length. Rahul was particularly tentative, taking 67 balls to hit his first 20 runs.The first session was survived without major incident, but the hosts made a brief charge in the afternoon. Rahul hit consecutive fours in Tharaka’s tenth over, but fell attempting a third. He aimed a pull in front of square off a chest-high ball outside the off stump, but could only offer a thick top edge which settled in the hands of Danushka Gunathilaka in the slips.Lahiru Gamage – the Board President’s XI’s most accomplished bowler – did not bowl before lunch, and he made his presence felt soon after he came to the bowling crease. An inducker found Virat Kohli’s middle stump when the batsman was on 3, but that delivery was deemed a no ball for overstepping. While Gamage applied pressure from one end, wickets fell to Kasun Rajitha at the other. Rohit Sharma had been bowled for 7, and Kohli himself was gone for 8, sending an edge to second slip with an attempted cover drive. Dhawan was caught behind for 62 to give Rajitha three scalps in as many overs.Rahane and Pujara quelled the opposition’s surge, putting on 134 for the fifth wicket to raise the Indians from 133 for 4. Pujara was the more restrained of the two, soaking up plenty of dot balls in his 42 from 89. “Pujara batted pretty well,” Rahane said. “He took his time and it is important to get one or two big partnerships in Test series because in one or two sessions, the game can change.”They each milked the developing legspin of Jeffrey Vandersay either side of tea, but Pujara was dismissed by the same bowler when he miscued a catch to short cover. Vandersay also had Wriddhiman Saha caught at slip for 3, late in the day.R Ashwin remained unbeaten on 10 alongside Rahane when stumps were drawn.

Australia cruise to 3-2 series win


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details1:14

Australia end tour on a high

It wasn’t a dead rubber, but neither was it a particularly competitive finish to the series. Led by a strong performance from their fast bowlers, who rolled England for 138, Australia cruised to an eight-wicket victory in the final ODI Old Trafford and ended their three-month tour of England, which featured the disappointment of another failed Ashes campaign, with a 3-2 win in the one-day series.Mitchell Marsh and John Hastings might hardly be the most intimidating pair of fast bowlers but it was they who caused England’s collapse, between them collecting seven of the nine wickets that fell. Aaron Finch and George Bailey then steered Australia past their target with ease. In the end, the fans barely saw half the amount of overs they expected – 57.2 in total, made up of 33 in England’s innings and 24.2 in the chase.It was not only the result that was of concern for England, though. James Taylor captained England in the field after Eoin Morgan was struck on the helmet by a short delivery from Mitchell Starc and was forced to retire hurt during England’s innings. Morgan was accompanied off the field by England’s medical staff and took no further part in the game.But there was little Taylor could do with such small total on the board. Two wickets fell before the delayed lunch break – Joe Burns slashed at a wide one and edged David Willey behind for a duck, and Steven Smith edged behind off Mark Wood for 12 – but after the resumption it was a procession towards the target. Finch and Bailey ensured there were no further wobbles.Finch struck 11 fours and one six on his way to an unbeaten 70 from 64 balls, and Bailey ended up not out on 41 from 45 deliveries. The winning runs came with a thick edge to the third-man boundary from Bailey, and Australia had something to celebrate at last. It was their bowlers who had set the victory up in the early stages of the day.In an eventful first over Jason Roy was twice given out lbw off Starc by umpire Joel Wilson. The first Roy reviewed and was found to have inside-edged onto his pad; the second he chose not to review and should have – replays suggested Starc’s delivery would have swung well down leg. Roy had scored 4 and Alex Hales managed only 4 as well, before he slashed Hastings to point and was caught by a juggling Glenn Maxwell. Taylor made it 22 for 3 when he edged behind off Hastings.The sixth ball that Morgan faced was quick and short from Starc and Morgan turned his head and ducked, and was struck flush on the side of the helmet. He appeared in some discomfort and after several minutes of assessment by England’s medical staff on the field, he retired hurt and did not return. England were effectively 22 for 4, and as it turned out, Australia’s best bowlers of the game had not even entered the attack.Marsh picked up three lbws through the middle overs, using his tight delivery line from close to the stumps to ensure his deliveries often pitched in line. Jonny Bairstow was given not out but found to be out on review for 10, and both Willey and Ben Stokes were lbw to balls that pitched on leg, straightened, and would have struck either leg or middle stump.Stokes was frustrated to depart for 42; he had been the only England batsman who looked like he might push the score up to something more competitive. Stokes struck six fours and one six, down the ground off Marsh, but his departure left England at 85 for 7 and gave Marsh his fourth wicket – Moeen Ali had earlier edged behind driving loosely for 5.Hastings returned to claim a third wicket when Wood holed out to deep extra cover, and at 106 for 8 England were asking a lot of Adil Rashid and Reece Topley, a man who in 104 previous first-class, one-day and T20 matches combined had managed only 103 runs. It was credit to Rashid and Topley that they put on 32, the second best partnership of the innings.Rashid struck five boundaries and finished unbeaten on 35; Topley remarkably got off the mark with a five, a badly-judged single that was joined by four overthrows when Maxwell’s ping at the stumps from point missed. Topley was the last man out, lbw to Ashton Agar for 6, and Morgan did not return to the crease at the fall of the ninth wicket.Hastings finished with 3 for 21 from his ten overs and Marsh picked up 4 for 27, outshining the much quicker Starc and Pat Cummins, while Agar was fortunate to even get a bowl at the end of the innings, and sent down two overs.The strong bowling effort ensured that Australia got their hands on some sort of trophy on this tour – just not the one they most wanted.

Victory sends off Clarke and Rogers on a high

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsA flirtatious Ashes series which has often been seductive without delivering much in the way of long-term commitment, so much so that the urn might have been sponsored by Ashley Madison, lent its loyalties for the final time to Australia as they claimed the fifth Investec Test by an innings and 46 runs.There has been much to enjoy over the five Tests in a series watched by capacity crowds – and lovers of Test cricket will delight in that – but history is likely to judge this hit-and-miss series one of the more insubstantial affairs between two teams possessing striking inconsistencies – loved for their skill, unlikely to be hailed for their resilience.Alastair Cook, England’s captain, will make light of that, content that after a 5-0 whitewash in Australia the Ashes have been regained. “I honestly believe this is a highly-talented group of players,” he said. “Being underdogs helped us and allowed us to play with a bit of freedom. It has been a very different Ashes series: two-and-a-half day Test matches with one side getting on top and the other unable to respond, but I am very proud of the lads.”As if to reveal this trait, all five matches have been one-sided. There has been entertainment a plenty but little tension. As well as this victory margin – an innings and 46 runs, Australia found further consolation in London when they won by 405 runs at Lord’s. England dominated by 169 runs in Cardiff, eight wickets at Edgbaston and an innings and 78 at Trent Bridge. The ability to fight back in adversity has been strangely lacking. It has not been a series to be holding tickets for the final day.Rain delayed Australia for nearly three hours on the fourth day – not many batsmen on either side can claim to have done that to bowlers during this series – before Peter Siddle, appearing in the final Test like a battle-hardened guest star from a more sober age, took the last two wickets to finish with 4 for 35 and 6 for 67 in the match.England’s winning margin was clipped to 3-2 and properly so. Stuart Broad, the leading wicket-taker in the series, is followed by four Australians. Joe Root is the only England batsman in the top four run-makers.But England won some decisive passages of play, not just Stuart Broad with eight wickets on a heady first morning at Trent Bridge, but also the man who pipped him for the Man of the Series award, Joe Root, who struck centuries at Cardiff and Trent Bridge. The citation from Australia’s coach, Darren Lehmann, praised: “Outstanding knocks in bowler-friendly conditions at key moments.”Chris Rogers, one player whose resilence could be taken for granted, was Australia’s Man of the Series. It has been hard work: the wickets have been tough and England have bowled pretty well,” he said. “I am a very proud Australian but it’s quite fitting for me that I get to finish up in England,. England has been pretty good to me.”Pitches at Edgbaston and Trent Bridge shamelessly played to England strengths. England, although they are far from being a strong Test side, can be an exciting one and they can be grateful to have regained popularity and come away with the spoils. Considering the disenchantment that surrounded English cricket after a feeble World Cup challenge, the director of England cricket, Andrew Strauss will more than settle for that.Michael Clarke, although saddled with an Ashes record of five defeats in seven, at least retired knowing that for his farewell appearance the dressing room had responded to his leadership. “But this was not about me,” he said. “It was about the need to show determination. We are very proud of the result, although Alastair and England deserve a lot of credit.”England still trailed by 129 when they resumed their second innings at 203 for 6. Mark Wood’s appearance as a nightwatchman on Saturday evening had appeared dubious even for those who are not automatically critical of the tactic. Any policy that pushes Moeen Ali down to No. 9, where his involvement can be curtailed in the space of two balls, surely does not have logic on its side, especially considering the prospect that he will be used as an opening batsman against Pakistan in the UAE in October.Since it was pointed out that the umpires have excelled in this series, with 31 of the first 32 reviews falling in their favour (the umpire’s call margin of error helps in this of course), the figures have been slightly tarnished by several reversed decisions for Kumar Dharmasena, the latest being when Australia successfully overturned his refusal of Siddle’s lbw appeal against Wood, DRS showing the ball going on to hit leg stump.The recent introduction of the system where the third umpire’s instructions can be heard on TV and radio has added to the understanding of, and trust in, the system. India’s continued resistance is perverse.Jos Buttler’s disappointing Ashes campaign then came to rest when three overs later he drove Mitchell Marsh weakly to mid-off. Had Moeen’s edge of Siddle carried to slip before he had scored, Australia might well have beaten the rain.Instead, much fidgeting ensured before Siddle bowled Broad with the second ball of the resumption, defeating an intended blow down the ground, and then found the edge as Moeen attempted a back-foot force.

Lehmann rebukes Saker over bowlers

Australia coach Darren Lehmann has delivered David Saker a blunt lesson in states’ rights, rebuking the new Victoria coach for his suggestion that the Australian selectors would be “mad” to choose James Pattinson for the Test team before Christmas.

‘You’ve still got to get results’

A young Australia will not have any excuses for failure at home this summer, nor does the coach, Darren Lehmann, want them to. Asked whether expectations for the team needed to be dialled down after a raft of retirements following this year’s Ashes defeat, Lehmann stated his men were still very much in the results business, even as they rebuilt.
“I think our expectations are always high,” he said. “So whoever comes in we expect them to play well for Australia and perform when they need to and succeed. There’s a transition with the retirements obviously, but for us it’s more a case of playing the way we need to play and a couple of senior guys now like [David] Warner and [Steven] Smith will need to stand up and do the extras. Make more runs but help the young guys to develop their games.
“It is exciting times for Australian cricket, and the big thing for us is you’ve still got to get results. We’ve got to get a side that’s going to be good enough to compete around the world for five or six years and beyond.”
Lehmann said the postponement of the Bangladesh tour had disappointed him in delaying sight of a group of youngsters, but at the same time meant a smoother preparation to face New Zealand.
“A setback because we didn’t get to see the young blokes play, but in terms of prep for New Zealand it’s probably better to be at home so you don’t have to go from subcontinent wickets to Australian wickets,” he said. “In terms of prep it’s probably better, but still a shame we didn’t get the chance to play there.”

Formerly the England bowling coach, Saker replaced the long-time Bushrangers mentor Greg Shipperd earlier this year, and the state’s decision not to play Peter Siddle in the Matador Cup has disappointed Lehmann and other members of the team hierarchy. Saker’s subsequent directives about Pattinson were not taken to kindly, either, even if state and national set-ups have similar views about the need for him to groove his new bowling action before returning.”I think David Saker should concentrate on coaching Victoria, and leave us to pick the side for Australia,” Lehmann said pointedly. “And if James Pattinson is in and ready to go we think highly of him. We won’t rush him back if he’s not right, he’s got to be ready to play.”Haven’t seen him [Siddle] bowl. It would be good for him to be playing but we can’t control what Victoria do, it would be nice to see him play because we’ve got a Test match coming up, so we’ll just have to wait and see. That [one Sheffield Shield game] is probably all he’s going to get, isn’t it?”The debate with Saker is of the sort once commonplace in Australian cricket, when the states habitually bickered with Cricket Australia over the handling of their players. However it has grown increasingly rare as the national governing body pursues a policy of unification and ‘One Team’ working together for the betterment of the national game.All states save for South Australia were represented at Hurstville Oval on Tuesday as the team began a two-day training camp to keep one eye on the looming Test series against New Zealand in the midst of the domestic limited overs competition. Lehmann spoke frankly about two lessons to be learned from the winter’s Ashes defeat – there will be no repeat of the four bowlers, six batsmen experiment at Trent Bridge, while the bowling attack will be better balanced to ensure the scoreboard is not allowed to leak damaging runs.”No, we’ll play with five bowlers. We made that mistake in England and we won’t do that again,” Lehmann said when asked about choosing six batsmen. “The biggest learning curve for us was the type of pitches they chopped and changed so you might have to chop and change your attack depending on the conditions. Ryan Harris [retirement] certainly hurt, no doubt about that, and we’d certainly like control.”England was the first time our bowlers have leaked a lot of runs or gone at four an over. We certainly had the control at Lord’s and the Oval, but the other three we went around the park and that’s not been what we’ve been about over the last 18 months, we’ve kept it under three an over and in control of the game.”That’s been the interesting change for us with the group to make sure those blokes that are playing if they are attacking bowlers they’ve still got to be able to defend as well. At the end of the day we’ve got to pick the side to take 20 wickets. One thing about Australian cricket the last couple of years we’ve been able to take 20 wickets, but we need to get control back and go for less runs.”To that end, Lehmann and his fellow selectors Rod Marsh, Trevor Hohns and Mark Waugh will be monitoring the progress of Mitchell Johnson, who is set to resume bowling in the latter stages of the Matador Cup. Johnson and Josh Hazlewood were both kept out of the theoretical tour squad for Bangladesh in order to let them refresh and regain strength, and Lehmann said he wanted to see Johnson bowling fast.”He looks fit and strong, that’s what we did it for, and he’s got all his niggles out of the way,” Lehmann said. “I was looking forward to seeing him bowl right now, but he looks like he’s fresh and ready to go. I think that’s when he bowls his best – he’s running in, he’s strong, he’s fit.”Towards the back end [of the Ashes] he got a bit tired, he played a lot of cricket, the same with Josh and Mitchell Starc, they got tired. This break’s been good for them, some one day cricket’s not bad because it’s 10 overs and you can have a look at how they’re going. Mitchell Johnson will play this week for WA I would think. He’s getting back to where we need him to be, and we should have a fully fit squad to pick from.”

SCG match abandoned due to 'unsafe outfield'

Match abandoned
ScorecardThe state of the outfield was the source of much discussion on day three at the SCG•Getty Images

Match officials have been criticised by the SCG Trust for their decision to abandon the Sheffield Shield match between New South Wales and Victoria on day three due to an unsafe outfield.Several Victorian players had slipped over on the second day of the rain-affected match as the Blues reached 1 for 88 after choosing to bat first, and the match referee Steve Bernard said that after making an inspection on the third afternoon the umpires decided that conditions had not improved.”Umpires Simon Fry and Mike Graham-Smith inspected the ground at 12pm on day three,” Bernard said, “and judged that a number of areas of the ground were unsafe and had not improved since the players were taken from the field on day two.”The umpires concluded that these areas would not improve significantly over the remainder of the match and would continue to pose a risk to the fielding team. Player safety is paramount and it is with this in mind that they have made the difficult decision to abandon the remainder of this match.”On the second evening, the Victoria coach David Saker had described conditions as dangerous. “In first-class cricket you expect conditions to be suitable for cricket,” he said. “The wicket’s fantastic but the outfield and surrounds are quite poor and dangerous.”However the SCG Trust attacked the decision to call off the fixture, with the head curator Tom Parker declaring the outfield on day three was “in the best condition that it had been all match”. “Given that there was no rain overnight,” Parker said, “it was absolutely ready to host a match today.””The Sydney Cricket and Sports Ground Trust is disappointed that match officials chose to abandon the Sheffield Shield fixture between NSW and Victoria today,” a Trust spokesman said. “Players and officials from both sides had described the pitch condition as fantastic.”The infield and outfield condition was heavy after the ground received a month’s rain in the past week. There was no rain recorded overnight on Saturday. The surface had been deemed fit for play on Friday and Saturday by match officials. The Trust supported the NSW Blues’ decision to conduct a centre-wicket practice session after the abandonment of the match.”The Trust had also brought in another observer to judge the surface, past president of the International Turf Society Peter McMaugh. “There is no reason in my professional opinion why they shouldn’t have been playing today,” he said.The match is the second first-class fixture in Sydney to be abandoned in as many weeks. New Zealand’s final warm-up match ahead of the Gabba Test was abandoned after the tourists complained about the safety of a rapidly deteriorating pitch at Blacktown Sports Park, where the ground staff had been unable to grow grass on the wicket.