Rahul Dravid is the ICC's player of the year

Rahul Dravid was rewarded for a prolific year and his part in India’s good performances away from home© Getty Images

Rahul Dravid picked up both the Test Player of the Year and the Player of the Year at the inaugural ICC awards ceremony at Alexandra Palace in London on Tuesday night. “It was a great honour, totally unexpected,” said Dravid. “I was very surprised because a lot of people here have had a good year. I’m really happy, and honoured, to be selected.”Earlier, the first award of the night, Umpire of the Year, went to Simon Taufel, the young Australian official. He received the most votes from cricket’s Test captains and match referees.The next award, Emerging Player of the Year, went to Irfan Pathan, the 19-year-old Indian left-arm pace bowler. “I feel really good about this,” said Pathan. “I have the confidence to do well in international cricket, but this award will boost my confidence even more. It will motivate me a lot, but it’s a big motivation to play for India anyway. Every single match is a big challenge.”Malcolm Speed, the ICC’s chief executive, praised Pathan: “On behalf of the ICC and the cricket community, we congratulate Irfan Pathan on winning the Emerging Player of the Year award. He is a highly gifted player, and along with the other nominees in this category, [has] a very bright future in cricket.”The New Zealand team won the Spirit of Cricket Award, while Andrew Flintoff, rounding off an excellent summer, scooped the One-Day Player of the Year prize. Flintoff, 26, took 12 wickets at an average of 20.50, and scored 551 runs at an incredible 78.71 during the year-long voting period. Unsurprisingly, Flintoff was also part of the one-day team of the year.Flintoff was his usual self-effacing self, saying: “If somebody had said three years ago that I’d be up here with Ricky [Ponting], and Jacques [Kallis], I probably wouldn’t have believed them,” said Flintoff. “My career over the past 18 months has taken a massive turnaround. I’m in a bit of a purple patch at the moment – not only in my cricket, but in my life.”And Flintoff, who became a father earlier in the week, concluded: “My job’s been made easier by the class players in the [England] side. We’re really just 11 mates who go out and play, and enjoy each other’s company, and enjoy each other’s successes.”Ehsan Mani, the ICC’s president, explained: “Andrew Flintoff has certainly had a tremendous year in 2003-04, and we congratulate him on winning this award.”World one-day XI
1 Adam Gilchrist (wk), 2 Sachin Tendulkar, 3 Chris Gayle, 4 Ricky Ponting (capt), 5 Brian Lara, 6 Virender Sehwag, 7 Jacques Kallis, 8 Andrew Flintoff, 9 Shaun Pollock, 10 Chaminda Vaas, 11 Jason Gillespie.
World Test XI
1 Matthew Hayden, 2 Herschelle Gibbs, 3 Ricky Ponting (capt), 4 Rahul Dravid, 5 Brian Lara, 6 Jacques Kallis, 7 Adam Gilchrist (wk), 8 Chaminda Vaas, 9 Shane Warne, 10 Jason Gillespie, 11 Stephen Harmison.

Srinath to retire at last?

The formal announcement is pending, but indications are that Javagal Srinath might have played his last Test for India. Speaking to Wisden Cricinfo from England, Srinath refused to confirm an earlier news story announcing his retirement from first-class cricket, but said that he was “thinking about it.””Officially, I haven’t retired,” he said, “I’ll have to think over it and I’ll come back and do it from India.” He was playing his last match for the English county, Durham, at the Stockton ground.The possibility of Srinath’s retirement had gained currency from new reports a few days earlier that he had signed a playing and coaching contract with South African club Gauteng. Since the South African session ran from September to April, it would have ruled him out for the India’s Test series against New Zealand and Australia.Though the signing has already announced by Gauteng officials, Srinath said he was “still in the talking stages. Nothing much is firmed up there.”Retirement is a subject Srinath has wrestled with for a while now. Tired and disgruntled after India’s tour to West Indies in 2001-02, he announced his retirement from Test matches, saying that he would continue playing one-day international cricket. He was coaxed out of retirement by India’s captain, Sourav Ganguly, and played a vital role in mentoring India’s young fast bowlers, Zaheer Khan and Ashish Nehra.

Pietersen's blitz earns parity for Notts against Derbyshire

An innings of the very highest quality from Kevin Pietersen thrilled a small, but appreciative, Trent Bridge crowd and helped Notts recover from a precarious 122-5 to finish on 322 all out, a first innings lead over Derbyshire of just two.Pietersen’s 150 was his fourth Championship century of the summer, but his first on home ground, and combined destructive power with elegant strokeplay. Having seen him score an unbeaten double hundred last month at Derby the visitors were almost shell-shocked as the 21-year-old went on the offensive.From the fall of Stephen Randall’s wicket at 247-8 until Pietersen himself holed out no-one else scored any runs. That includes last man Nadeem Malik who shared a last wicket stand of 57 without getting off the mark!Six times Pietersen cleared the ropes during an innings which lasted just 164 balls.For Derbyshire Kevin Dean was the pick of the bowlers – taking 5-89. His first wicket came in unusual circumstances with the aid of a stumping from Karl Krikken who was standing 15 yards back. The striker Guy Welton was still rehearsing a shot – but was stood out of his ground and was found out by an opportune shy from the ‘keeper.Welton made 42 and Chris Read also got into the 40s but there was precious little else coming from the other end until Pietersen’s blitz.In the evening gloom Notts undid much of their work by bowling poorly and allowing the Derbyshire openers Steve Stubbings and Michael Di Venuto to race along at five an over.When the premature close came 15 overs early the visitors had reached 51 without loss, an overall lead of 53.

Luring £45m-rated Premier League flop could be transfer masterstroke from Emery and Arsenal

Arsenal fans have gathered in the Transfer Tavern and are excited to see who new boss Unai Emery may bring to the club this summer. 

It seems Arsenal are moving quickly to sign some new faces to the Arsenal squad. Emery has already secured two signatures and is still on the hunt to bring in a few more. In somewhat surprising news, the latest name to be linked with a move to the club is Marseille’s Florian Thauvin.

The Breakdown

The former Newcastle forward has been linked with a move to Arsenal according to Italian publication StadioSport. The report states that Emery is a fan of the 25-year-old French international and wants to make him a central figure in the team following the departures of Santi Cazorla and Jack Wilshere – both of whom left on free transfers.

During his six-month spell at St James’ Park, Thauvin only managed 16 appearances where he scored a single goal and registered two assists in all competitions for the Magpies. The 25-year-old, who’s valued at £45 million by Transfermarkt, has enjoyed a career rejuvenation since he returned to Ligue 1.  Since his return, Thauvin has scored 39 goals in Ligue 1 for Marseille and has helped the club return to prominence.

Although Thauvin has had a career rebirth since his return to the French league, at the price quoted it would seem unlikely that Unai Emery would want to add him to the squad. Moreover, it seems that Arsenal are primarily concentrating on finalising a deal for Uruguay’s Lucas Torreira.

Still, if they can lure Thauvin to North London at a reasonable price, he could prove to be quite a wonderful addition. A thrillingly incisive forward, he’d go some way into converting the Gunners’ mighty possession stats into shots at goal.

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So Arsenal fans – would you welcome Thauvin to the Emirates? 

De Kock and Amla power SA to record run-chase

South Africa 319 for 3 (de Kock 135, Amla 127) beat England 318 for 8 (Root 125, Hales 65, Stokes 53) by seven wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details2:05

‘Showed a lot of hunger on the field’ – De Villiers

A century of the highest class from Quinton de Kock helped South Africa complete the highest successful run chase in an ODI at Centurion and keep the series against England alive.With England having won the first two games in the five-match series, South Africa required a win to sustain their hopes of avoiding their first double defeat – in the Test and ODI sections of a tour – at home for 14 years.But when they conceded 318 it left them requiring a record run chase at this ground on a pitch that had appeared cracked and two-paced during the England innings.Yet they made light of their target, with an opening stand of 239 in 36.5 overs between de Kock and Hashim Amla racing them to victory with seven wickets and 22 deliveries remaining. They made it appear easy.It is a pretty special batting performance that eclipses a century from Amla, but so sweetly did de Kock time the ball, so wide was his range of stroke, so little margin for error did he allow the bowlers that a pitch on which few England batsmen looked comfortable was made to appear something approaching a batting paradise.The statistics of his de Kock’s career are worth dwelling upon for a moment. Despite only celebrating his 23rd birthday in December, this was his 10th ODI century in his 55th match. To put that in perspective, nobody has reached the milestone at a younger age (Virat Kohli was the previous holder of that record) and it is as many ODIs centuries as Graeme Smith managed in his entire 196-match ODI career.England will be relieved South Africa did not select de Kock earlier in the Test series. He has now scored three centuries against them (one in the Centurion Test and two in this ODI series) in his last four international games.Such is his ability, he forces bowlers to alter their natural length and then punishes the resultant full or short deliveries. Twice in the first over, he eased David Willey through the covers for four. Minutes later he was treating Reece Topley the same way and following it with a perfectly timed drive straight back past the bowler.Moeen Ali’s first delivery was delightfully late cut for four before he was slog-swept for six and when the seamers dropped short in search of a solution, they were pulled with dismissive power. One pick-up pull for six off a Chris Jordan delivery that was only fractionally short was probably the stroke of the day.With both sides set to name their World T20 squads on Wednesday, there was food for thought here for England. Despite all the progress they have made, with their batting in particular, their bowling attack remains both green and a little lacking in pace. In conditions where there is little swing available, they lack the weapons to dislodge well-set batsmen. Steven Finn might have made a difference, but there may also be a temptation to recall Stuart Broad, an unused member of this ODI squad.Amla was only marginally less impressive than de Kock. Using his crease to upset the line of the England bowlers, he stroked some balls off his off stump through midwicket and others through extra-cover. When the bowlers reacted by bowling wider of off stump, he unveiled that familiar, flowing drive that has featured in each of his 22 ODI centuries. Only AB de Villiers, with 23, has scored more for South Africa.Earlier the biggest of Joe Root’s seven ODI centuries took England to an apparently challenging total. By the time South Africa struck for the fourth time, they could have been quietly satisfied with their work. Jos Buttler, again promoted to No. 4 to build upon the strong start from England’s top order, had fallen first ball clipping to an intriguingly placed leg gully, while Eoin Morgan had laboured for 24 deliveries over his eight runs.But then Ben Stokes joined Root in a fifth-wicket stand of 82 in eight overs that took England’s total from the average to the strong. While Root was not entirely fluent in the early stages of innings, so wide is his range of stroke and so impressive his fitness levels that even when he was struggling to find the boundary, he was accumulating steadily. His 125 was the highest ODI score made by an England batsman against South Africa.Recognising that, once the shine had left the ball, the pitch became somewhat sluggish, Root started to skip down the pitch to hit the seamers off their length and over mid-on. With the bowlers struggling to hit upon a length that contained him, he punished the resulting short balls with one uppercut for six off Morne Morkel the stroke of the innings. Twice he thrashed full-tosses from Imran Tahir for six over mid-wicket.He gave one chance, on 44, when de Kock was unable to lay a hand on a tough chance offered off the bowling of David Wiese – a dab to third man that went a little finer than Root intended – but that moment apart, it was another masterful innings by Root.While de Kock went on to redeem himself, perhaps a key passage of play occurred far earlier. With seven overs and a delivery remaining of their innings, England had six wickets in hand, two batsmen well set and a target in excess of 330 in their sights.But then Root was run-out following a mix-up with Stokes – Root’s drive crashed into the stumps at the non-striker’s end and, in the confusion, the pair were caught mid-pitch – and Kyle Abbott, in particular, bowled with control and skill to stall the charge. He dismissed Stokes and Jordan with successive deliveries and, in five overs up to the end of the 48th over, England added just 24 runs.Such is the depth of England’s batting, that even their No.9 and No.10 – two men with 12 first-class centuries between them – are capable of attacking and Adil Rashid and Willey struck a six apiece in plundering 25 from the final two overs. But perhaps that lost momentum in the final seven overs cost them dear.Maybe Eoin Morgan will also reflect on his decision to bat first. de Villiers made no secret of his desire to bowl first, had he won the toss, and it did appear that conditions eased for batsmen as the lights came into play and the light dew allowed the ball to come on to the bat a little more readily.Or it may just be that, as with the best innings, the quality of the batting made it seem that way. The sense remains that, whatever England did with the ball and whenever they bowled, on this form de Kock was too good for them.

Bosman to miss ICC World Twenty20

Loots Bosman has been advised six weeks of rest because of a back injury © Getty Images

Injured South African opener Loots Bosman has been forced to withdraw from the ICC World Twenty20. Announcing the unfortunate news, Norman Arendse, the president of Cricket South Africa, said a replacement would be named only after it has been approved by the ICC’s technical committee.”The medical report left us with no alternative,” Arendse said. “Loots has had a stand-alone record in this form of the game in South African cricket and he was desperately keen to play.”But we have to look at the bigger picture, particularly as it affects his long-term career. Neurological injuries can take on career-threatening proportions and, had Loots got hurt again in the tournament, he could have been put out of action for far longer than the six weeks’ rest recommended by our team of medical specialists.”Bosman had hurt his lower back while attempting a catch during the ODI series against Zimbabwe last month. He has an impressive record in domestic Twenty20 competitions with a strike rate of nearly 150 and is one of only three South Africans to have scored a century in this format.

Dialogue between captains and officials a must – Ponting

Ponting feels there is nothing wrong with a captain approaching the umpires if he felt the situation warranted it © AFP

Ricky Ponting, the Australian captain, who was docked his entire match fee for arguing a wide-ball call with the umpire in the match against West Indies, has sought clarification over the on-field communication between umpires and captains.Ponting once again apologised for his behaviour but suggested that there was nothing wrong with a captain approaching the umpires if he felt the situation warrantedit. His view hadn’t found favour with Chris Broad, the ICC match referee, who fined him after the game finished on Tuesday night.Speaking to the media before the team left for an afternoon practicesession, Ponting said: “I know that’s happening even at the board level andICC level at the moment with the umpires having some input into a lot ofthat stuff. Chris did say to me the other night that he doesn’t see it asappropriate at all for a captain to be even approaching an umpire duringthe course of the game so there does need to be some clarification there.”Asad Rauf, the Pakistani umpire, was the target of Ponting’s ire duringthe opening game, and Ponting admitted that he had overstepped the line.”It was just one of those heat-of-the-moment sort of things that I tend toget a bit wrapped up in from time to time,” he said, before adding that hehad no qualms about owning up to his mistakes.”It’s always easy I think to do that, I’ve always been one when I made amistake to put my hand up and say that I’ve done it. It was important forme as a leader of my team. I wanted to get that point across to my teamthat it’s not acceptable. Everyone knows when they’ve made a mistake. Somepeople unfortunately don’t like owning up to them.”That said, Ponting still believed that there needed to be a dialoguebetween the captain and on-field officials to smooth over certainsituations. “I think it’s more the timing of it than not being allowed todo it,” he said. “The captain has got to be able to do that at differenttimes over the course of the game, so as long as the timing’s okay I thinkthat will continue.”

Waqar and Wasim for NCA?

The twin W’s have plenty of wisdom to pass on © AFP

The Pakistan Cricket Board is keen to utilise the experience and expertise of Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis at their National Cricket Academy as and when possible. The twin W’s, who comprised one of the most formidable fast-bowling pairings in the history of the game, had been contacted in this regard, a report in of Karachi suggested.The academy is aiming to be more result oriented, and the PCB felt that Wasim and Waqar would be able to help in identifying fresh talent and grooming promising youngsters. “Shaharyar (PCB chairman) has written to them that he realises that since they are busy people and have prior commitments as television commentators they can’t make themselves available on a full-time basis at the academy,” a board official is quoted as saying. “But he has invited them to come whenever possible and help train youngsters.”Akram has been sought out around the world, including most recently in India, to speak to young bowlers and pass on his wisdom. Not long ago Waqar was tipped to become fast-bowling coach of Pakistan but that fell through at the last moment as there was disagreement about the duration of his contract.

Jadeja eligible for selection, rules court

In a move that could let Ajay Jadeja play competitive cricket, the Delhi High Court has directed the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) to consider him for selection in Ranji Trophy matches, India’s premier domestic tournament. The BCCI had banned Jadeja for match fixing.The decision answered a petition filed by Jadeja after the board delayed implementing a court-appointed arbitrator’s decision, three months ago, to overturn the five-year ban imposed on him.On January 27, Justice JK Mehra, the arbitrator, had ruled that the inquiry commission to investigate whether Jadeja was involved in match fixing had not followed proper legal procedure. The arbitrator had been appointed after a few hearings in the High Court case that Jadeja filed challenging the ban on him.The next day after the arbitrator’s decision, Jadeja was stopped from playing for a Delhi Club and the match cancelled after the Indian board intervened. Jadeja filed another petition in the Delhi High CourtThe recent court award is to become final and binding on April 27. The court has asked the BCCI to respond to the ruling, and fixed the next hearing for May 19.

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