Masterful display from the Crusaders sees them leave Austria with 100% record

The Crusaders showed the Austrian Cricket Association little mercy as they punished the ACA attack with a glorious exhibition of strokeplay. Matthew Harrison and Tim Welsford shared an opening stand of 132, before Welsford departed for 72, and Harrison went on to reach his century in 104 minutes off 83 balls, eventually retiring on 113, sharing in a rapid partnership worth 87 for the fourth wicket with Ian Hewitt. Hewitt went on to eclipse him, plundering his 102* off 63 balls in a mere 70 minutes, as the Crusaders scored 332-4 in 37 overs. Earlier in the innings there had been a slight wobble as Wasif Mohammed picked up three wickets in five balls, removing Welsford, McDonald and David Hussey, the last of whom was stumped off a wide, thanks to some fast glovework by Amir Naeem.The batting performance was possibly surpassed by the bowling performance, with Hewitt bowling impressively and returning with 4-19 off 8 overs, the first blow being struck in the first over, with Tim Simpson departing for a duck. Erwin Grasinger batted patiently for 17 – occupying the crease for an hour in the process as wickets fell at the other end. Babar Nadeem, playing for the ACA side for the first time struck eight fours in a knock of 37, the highest score in the ACA innings, and after brief resistence from Thomas Grabetz and Paul Hudson, the ACA side were finally all out for 103.The Crusaders left Austria undefeated, with two wins to start their tour with, and moved onto Amsterdam, where their next opponents are due to be a VRA Invitation XI and SGS, both matches being played side by side on the same day (24th June) in Amstelveen, before games against the Netherlands and Netherlands Under 23 on the following days. The ACA would once again like to express their thanks to the Crusaders for the spirit in which they played the games and for their help in trying to encourage cricket in Austria.

Waqar seeks rapid improvement before crunch clash

Pakistan skipper Waqar Younis admitted that rapid improvements were necessary before their high-profile showdown with India at the weekend.Pakistan completed a comfortable 97 run victory over the Netherlands but a lacklustre performance by the middle order and an unacceptable 40 sundries took the gloss off their win.”We should have got 300 on that wicket,” Waqar said. “And then we didn’t bowl that well – giving away so many easy runs was a worry.”Perhaps we were a little lethargic playing against a weaker side but there are a few things we’ve got to improve on and talk about in the next few days.”The form of star batsman Inzamam-ul-Haq, who has scored just 10 runs in four innings, is a serious concern.”He is one our best players and has performed brilliantly for Pakistan in the past,” said Waqar.”Hopefully, he will get some more runs in the next game against India.”But Waqar paid tribute to Wasim Akram who became the first bowler to take 500 ODI wickets.”I just want to salute him. It is an outstanding achievement for him and for Pakistani cricket. I don’t see anybody else bettering his achievement,” said Waqar.

Milestones Preview: Australia vs Sri Lanka, India v Kenya

India v Kenya:Virender Sehwag (IND) 106 runs to complete 2000 ODI runs
Dinesh Mongia (IND) needs 96 runs to complete 1000 ODI runs
Javagal Srinath (IND) needs 118 runs to complete 1000 ODI runs
Anil Kumble (IND) needs 158 runs to complete 1000 ODI runs
Ravindu Shah (KEN) needs 3 runs to complete 1000 ODI runs
Thomas Odoyo (KEN) needs 51 runs to complete 1000 ODI runs
Hitesh Modi (KEN) needs 147 runs to complete 1000 ODI runs
Zaheer Khan (IND) needs 5 wickets to join the 100 ODI-wicket clubSteve Tikolo (KEN) needs 43 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Maurice Odumbe (KEN) needs 139 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Ravindu Shah (KEN) needs 176 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Kennedy Otieno (KEN) needs 187 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Maurice Odumbe (KEN) needs 7 wickets to join the 25 World Cup wicket-clubAustralia v Sri Lanka:Adam Gilchrist (AUS) needs 38 runs to complete 5000 ODI runs
Andy Symonds (AUS) needs 36 runs to complete 1000 ODI runs
Sanath Jayasuriya (SL) needs 86 runs to complete 9000 ODI runs
Michael Bevan (AUS) needs 20 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Adam Gilchrist (AUS) needs 131 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Darren Lehmann (AUS) needs 192 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Aravinda De Silva (SL) needs 64 runs to complete 1000 World Cup runs
Marvan Atapattu (SL) needs 112 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs
Hashan Tillakaratne (SL) needs 138 runs to complete 500 World Cup runs

Backing for ECB over Zimbabwe decision

The Chairman of the England and Wales Cricket Board, David Morgan, and England’s senior player, Alec Stewart, today confirmed that England’s players will back the ECB’s decision to play their World Cup match in Zimbabwe.Morgan himself has been in constant touch with the England camp over the controversy, and has sought the views of both the captain Nasser Hussain and coach Duncan Fletcher.”The decision yesterday was one that I had – along with Tim Lamb and Mike Soper – recommended to the management board and they were unanimous in their support and reaction,” said Morgan.”We should continue to attempt to fulfil commitments to the World Cup by playing in Harare. The players have made it very clear, as have the management, that they are prepared to follow ECB instructions in this case.”Providing there is no further deterioration in the safety and security issue then we can fully expect to be playing in Zimbabwe.”The ECB’s decision to resist Government pressure to boycott the match has also received the backing of the Professional Cricketers’ Association.Members of England’s World Cup squad have been gathering information about the situation in Zimbabwe, and today their views were voiced by wicket-keeper Alec Stewart.”We should discuss it,” Stewart said. “Because we are cricketers it doesn’t mean we don’t know what goes on in the outside world. It’s like the India situation last year over security when the players discussed whether they would go or not.”But we still take guidance from the ECB management board. We have bosses above us that have dealt with the Government and they are the ones who know what is going on. If the Government steps in and puts sanctions on Zimbabwe then I am sure that will change.”Stewart added that he believed the ECB’s chief executive, Tim Lamb, had been put into a difficult position by the Government.”I’d say he’s handled himself and the ECB situation very well,” added Stewart. “He’s obviously had high-powered meetings with the Government, and they have been, using his words I think, ‘less than supportive’ and backed him into a corner.”The ECB came under belated pressure from ministers to boycott the game over Christmas, after the International Development Secretary Clare Short voiced initial opposition to the match.The Government also ruled out compensation in return for the game’s abandonment, and Morgan added that there were other issues to consider.”It is not just money the ECB stands to lose but the unity of world cricket is at stake,” he told the BBC. “Yesterday’s decision goes a long way to preserving the unity of world cricket.”It isn’t cricket’s job to make moral judgements. We have a commitment to play a World Cup match in Zimbabwe and providing it is safe for cricketers and administrators to travel, and it is, we have to fulfil that commitment.”We have great sympathy for the plight of people in Zimbabwe but also sympathy for cricket worldwide and cricket in Zimbabwe. The Zimbabwe Cricket Union would feel terribly let down if we fail to fulfil the commitment of playing a World Cup match there.”Meanwhile the BBC cricket reporter, Pat Murphy, has taken a personal decision not to travel to next month’s match.Murphy, who is covering England’s one-day games in Australia, said: “This is not an issue of safety for me, it is a matter of personal morality. I think it reflects well on the maturity of the BBC that they allow me to reflect such freedom of conscience.”This is something that has bothered me for some time and it is a personal and private decision. I don’t make any criticism of my colleagues who choose to travel. I wish them well.”

Tendulkar to leave for South Africa on August 25

Batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar has postponed his departure to SouthAfrica for treatment to his injured right toe by three days, thesecretary of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) JaywantLele said in Baroda on Wednesday.Lele told PTI that the batting star was to leave for South Africatomorrow, to be treated by noted orthopeadic surgeon Dr Mark Fergussonbut has postponed his departure due to personal reasons.Tendulkar skipped the on-going Test series in Sri Lanka due to theinjury sustained during the Triangular one-day series in Zimbabwe inthe last league match against the West Indies on July 4.Tendulkar’s stay in South Africa will depend on the advice ofFergusson. However, he will be available for the Indian cricket team’stour of South Africa beginning from October 1.

Nevin and Sulzberger get Pakistan call-up

Central Districts’ all-rounder Glen Sulzberger impressed at the right time during New Zealand A’s tour of India and has won a trip to Pakistan as a result.Off-spinner Sulzberger and Wellington wicket-keeper Chris Nevin were today named as the final two players to be included in the New Zealand team for the three-match One-Day International series with Pakistan starting on October 19.They replace Grant Bradburn and Adam Parore from the side which played in Sri Lanka last month.New Zealand selection chairman Sir Richard Hadlee said today: “Chris Nevin offers more versatility to the batting lineup.”He is capable of opening with Nathan Astle and he may also be trialled lower down the order where we would expect him to maintain a high strike rate and add impetus to the run-scoring.”Nevin has played 13 ODIs and has scored 291 runs at an average of 24.25 with his best score 74 against Australia two summers ago.Last summer he set a record for wicket-keeping dismissals in New Zealand domestic cricket with 47.Hadlee had earlier hinted at Parore’s exclusion from the one-day programme on the Pakistan tour saying New Zealand wanted to ensure Parore was not over-used in the latter part of his career.”While Adam Parore’s recent Test form has been good, his ‘keeping in the one-dayers has not been as sharp as it should be and he has been too inconsistent with the bat,” Hadlee said.Hadlee has not ruled out the longer term development of one of the side’s best close-to-the-wicket fieldsmen, Lou Vincent, as a wicket-keeper in ODIs.Vincent kept for the State Auckland Aces last summer and in one match when Nevin was injured in India he kept wickets for New Zealand A and took four catches.Sulzberger has impressed selector Ross Dykes in India where Dykes has been managing the New Zealand A team.Suzlberger made his New Zealand debut last summer in Zimbabwe when called into the side as a replacement player. He came back into consideration in India where he took a five-wicket bag in one of New Zealand A’s Buchi Babu tournament victories and on the tour over he had shown enough form to be given another opportunity at international level, Hadlee said.The full CLEAR Black Caps squad is: Stephen Fleming (captain), Nathan Astle, James Franklin, Chris Harris, Craig McMillan, Kyle Mills, Chris Nevin, Dion Nash, Jacob Oram, Mathew Sinclair, Glen Sulzberger, Daryl Tuffey, Daniel Vettori, Lou Vincent.The squad for the Test leg of the tour will be named in Christchurch next week.

Sri Lanka grind on remoselessly in Galle

In what appeared to be an attempt to break the spirit of the foot-sore WestIndians, Sri Lanka’s batsmen ground on remorselessly on the fourth day of theGalle Test, to set-up an opportunity for their spinners to press for victoryon the final day.Sri Lankan captain Sanath Jayasuriya finally called the innings to close on590-9 after Hashan Tillakaratne had completed his eighth Test century andthe West Indian players had been forced to endure just over 14 hours in thefield.The old fashioned “wear them out then knock them out” strategy then producedits first casualty when a weary Chris Gayle was caught at mid-off whilsttrying to drive an innocuous looking delivery from Chaminda Vaas.Daren Ganga and Ramnaresh Sarwan held their together their concentration till the umpires finally called off play, with the West Indies 9-1, still 133 runs in arrears.West Indies coach Roger Harper was upbeat at the close, pointing out thatthe team had scored over 400 in the first innings and were confidant ofbatting out the final day on a pitch that has not deterioratedsignificantly.Sri Lankan coach Dav Whatmore described it as “a tremendous effort by thebatsmen to overhaul the West Indies total” but the tourists could have beenput under greater pressure if the batsmen been more industrious earlier inthe day.Starting the day on 343-3, they struggled to score freely in the first twosessions, as the West Indies employed deep-set fields and bowled tighterthan they had done on Thursday and Wednesday. Sri Lanka scored 69 in themorning and 94 in afternoon before raising the tempo slightly in evening,but still only cobbled together 247 runs in 92.4 overs.Sanath Jayasuriya admitted that they had got “a little bit stuck” butinsisted that the intention had always been to gather a lead of around 150.”We wanted to try and make sure that we didn’t have to bat again,” heexplained. “Unfortunately we lost Russel (Arnold) and Kumar (Sangakkara), asthey are the players who can score freely. At the end of the day I am happy.We managed to get a 140 run lead got one wicket before the close.”It will be difficult tomorrow, as batsmen can still score runs on thiswicket,” he warned. “Getting out Carl Hooper and Brian Lara will be the keyto victory.”Sri Lanka were indeed handicapped by the early loss of Russel Arnold, whowas trapped leg-before by Dinanath Ramnarine for 33 in the fourth over ofthe day. He had the ability to push the run-rate and without him therun-scoring mantle was passed onto the team’s grafters.Kumar Sangakkara’s 140, which last for eight hours and 48 minutes, was anepic display of concentration and patience, but he struggled on the fourthmorning and should have been caught off his very first scoring shot by ChrisGayle at first slip. In the end, he managed only 14 runs in 107 minutesbefore he was run out after a mix-up with Tillakaratne.Tillakaratne and Thilan Samaraweera, playing his second Test innings aftermaking a century on his debut, then chipped away at the lead.After lunch the innings came to a virtual standstill as 22 runs were scoredin 12 overs during a grim passage of play. At one stage the pair went 36overs without hitting a boundary.When Tillakaratne lofted Neil McGarrell straight down the ground to bring uphis fifty, and finally overhaul the West Indies first innings total, the pairstarted to show greater urgency.The partnership was only broken after tea, when Samaraweera top edged anattempted pull and was caught by Ridley Jacobs for 77, by which time it hadyielded 154 runs.Chaminda Vaas (7), Niroshan Bandaratillake (4) and Muttiah Muralitharan (14)then attacked the bowling as Tillakaratne completed his patient century. WhenMuralitharan was trapped leg-before and Jayasuriya declared, he had scored105 from 247 balls.Sri Lankan hopes, as they have done so often before, now appear to rest inthe hands of off-spinner Muralitharan. However, on this flat pitch, the WestIndies really should be able to salvage a draw.

Wells century defies leaders Yorkshire

Leaders Yorkshire were denied victory in three days by a battling unbroken eighth-wicket partnership of 113 between Leicestershire captain Vince Wells and all-rounder Phil DeFreitas in their CricInfo Championship clash at Grace Road.Now they will be looking anxiously at the weather with heavy rain forecast for the final day. If that proves correct then Leicestershire could yet salvage a draw, having been 53 for five in 13 overs after being set an unlikely victory target of 539.But with Wells leading by example to score his second Championship century of the season, Leicester finished the day at 245 for seven after Yorkshire had claimed the extra half-an-hour in a bid to clinch the win that would take them a step nearer their first title in 33 years.Wells finished on 123 not out and DeFreitas on 47. They came together with the score at 132 for seven and their partnership was spread across 32 overs and nearly two hours.Wells faced 167 balls and hit 18 fours and a six to spearhead the rescue act just when it seemed that his side were on the way to a heavy defeat.Fast bowlers Steve Kirby and Paul Hutchison wrecked the top order with a hostile opening spell, Kirby taking three for 37 and Hutchison two for 21. Kirby was also involved in a verbal exchange with Wells and told to calm it by his captain David Byas after umpire Bob White stepped in to help defuse the situation.Darren Maddy and Wells then laid the foundations for the recovery with a stand of 69 for the sixth wicket before DeFreitas joined his captain in a resilient partnership which frustrated the Championship leaders.If rain does intervene to save Leicestershire then Byas might be regretting delaying his declaration until 15 minutes after lunch. By then Yorkshire had made 429 for eight and led by 538. Darren Lehmann hit 193 and Byas 100.

Weakened champions may slip at strong B.A.T.Sports in week 7

Title holders Havant fear their unbeaten Southern Electric ECB Premier League record could go when they send a weakened team to face third-placed BAT Sports at Southern Gardens tomorrow, 11.30am.The defending champions, who won all five 50-over games before being held to a draw by Calmore Sports last week, travel to Totton minus four key players.In-form Andy Perry, who hit an unbeaten 160 in the Calmore statemate, is ruled out with back trouble, while leading wicket-taker Phil Loat is out of the country playing golf.Also missing are Luke Sears and medium-pace bowler Mark Copping. “It’s a worry,” confesses skipper Paul Gover, who plans to move himself up the batting order.”These are four main players and to have them all missing at once is a recipe for trouble.”Nonetheless, Havant call up four more than adequate replacements in Army all-rounder Steve Hole, Matthew Ward, Graham Benton and Gover’s younger brother Matt, whose fielding is sure to have an effect on the champions’ out-cricket.BAT, meanwhile, are quietly confident they can be the first team to lower Havant’s sails.They field an unchanged side, with Australian all-rounder Dave Carson showing glimpses of a return to form after back-to-back half-centuries in his past two knocks.South Wilts skipper Russell Rowe, who has already scored over 500 runs this season, aims to notch yet another century as the Salisbury club entertain Bournemouth at Lower Bemerton.Rowe completed a glorious hat-trick of hundreds with an undefeated 170 at Liphook & Ripsley.Newly-wed Jamie Glasson, his long-term opening partner, makes his first appearance of the season tomorrow, but Dorset’s Tim Lamb is out.Ironically, mid-table Bournemouth are experiencing a few run-scoring problems, but Tom Webley’s return should remedy things at the top of the batting order.Provided he comes through Hampshire’s current Second XI Championship match with Kent unscathed, Andy Sexton will return for Bashley (Rydal) against struggling Hungerford at Bashley Common Lane.Sexton missed last week’s seven-wicket over Andover with a damaged finger.Andover, who have sunk to the Premier League basement after a sequence of poor performances, are likely to be unchanged against Calmore Sports at Loperwood Park.Calmore, certain to be without Mark Boston, could have Allan Hurst back after a shoulder injury, but skipper Tommy Pegler is unlikely to finalise his side until this evening.Burridge, who entertain in-form Liphook & Ripsley at Botley Road, expect Hampshire’s James Hamblin to return, while John Francis is set to make his first SPL appearance of the season after a successful term at Loughborough University in which he hit 126 against Leicestershire and 88 off the Nottinghamshire attack.Dave Tiller, who broke his collar bone at Sparsholt last week, will mss Portsmouth’s next six Premier Division 2 matches, but fit-again Ben Nolan returns for the Cove match at St Helen’s, Southsea.Second placed Lymington are unchanged at Easton & Martyr Worthy, where Andy Birch is well again. A bout of `flu meant the influential Easton all-rounder missing his first game in over ten years last weekend.Rob Savage could be a key absentee as Sparsholt visit Old Tauntonians & Romsey, while a breakdown in Trojans’ internal communication system could mean West Indian all-rounder Tim Subnaik missing the game with basement boys Old Basing.Division 3 pace-makers Winchester KS should win easily at lowly Lymington II, but Havant II – depleted by first team calls – have their hands full against New Milton. Alton go to run-shy Leckford.One key tussle in the lower echelons is Flamingos home match with Bashley (Rydal) – neither club being in particularly good batting form.

Onus on England to live up to their billing

Mark Butcher: his remarkable run of 42 consecutive matches will come to an end© Getty Images

Four months ago, while England were rampaging to victory in the Caribbean, it was tempting to be a little bit blasé about the prospects for the return series – the so-called highlight of the English summer – that begins at Lord’s tomorrow morning. West Indies were a disorganised rabble, so the general consensus went, while England were soaring higher and higher, as their emphatic victories against New Zealand amply demonstrated. A rout was the only foreseeable outcome.There’ll be no such complacency now. The juggernaut that was England’s Test form has been shunted aside by a one-day campaign of Reliant Robin standards, and it is West Indies who have sped to a psychological advantage, particularly at Lord’s where, in the most compelling match of the recent NatWest Series, Chris Gayle’s rumbustuous century dumped England out of their own one-day party. When set against a backdrop of English defeat, Brian Lara’s majestic world record in Antigua reads less as a footnote, more as a premonition.There is an uncomfortable irony about the timing of yesterday’s announcement, that England had been catapulted into second place on the ICC World Test Championship table. Injury and uncertainty – two unwelcome ingredients that were noticeably lacking during England’s run of six wins in seven Tests – have taken hold since the New Zealand series, and whatever their achievements in the past year, tomorrow’s match promises to be more finely balanced than even the most pessimistic of England supporters could have envisaged.What is more, it could be a much-changed side that takes the field on Thursday. Personnel-wise, it should look and feel pretty similar to the side that wrapped up the series in Barbados, but as England have found to their cost in one-day cricket, the question of balance is critical to the team’s success. In that respect, Andrew Flintoff’s ongoing ankle trouble is a grievous blow.Flintoff, who was first rested entirely and then recalled as a specialist batsman for the NatWest Series, has had to receive a cortisone injection after experiencing pain while bowling during Lancashire’s Twenty20 Cup match against Yorkshire last week. Never mind the long-term ramifications and the prospect of surgery; in the short term, his removal from the attack places an extra burden on Steve Harmison, who is not only England’s best source of wickets, but the only other bowler who can be relied on to stem the run-flow.If he continues to reap the wickets as he has been doing this year, Harmison will almost certainly finish this match as the leading bowler in the world, according to the PwC ratings. But the last thing England need is to over-burden their one remaining world-class performer. Though the talent is undeniable, Harmison has yet to demonstrate that his new-found fitness and stamina is anything but a (hugely impressive) flash in the pan, and England would do well to heed the lesson they learnt with Flintoff in 2002. On that occasion, they were so overjoyed to have unearthed a genuine allrounder, that they bowled the poor guy all the way into the operating theatre.But it is not just the bowling that will give England’s selectors one or two causes for concern. In the Caribbean, England owed everything to their troika of middle-order veterans; Mark Butcher, Nasser Hussain and Graham Thorpe. But Hussain has since retired, to be replaced at No. 4 by the off-colour Michael Vaughan, while Butcher’s remarkable run of 42 consecutive matches will come to an end after he suffered whiplash during a car-crash in South London and was later ruled out of the starting XI. Ironically, he was on his way to the physio for treatment on the thigh strain that forced him out of last week’s MCC fixture, and he will make way for Robert Key, whose stunning early-season form in the Championship will be a distant memory after a disappointing one-day series.That leaves Thorpe, England’s Man of the Match at Trent Bridge, who did at least play in that MCC fixture at Arundel. But since his retirement from the one-day game, he has not exactly been overburdened with match practice, and England will be desperately hoping that he has not gone off the boil in the interim. It is one of the perils of the modern-day English summer, with its midseason emphasis on limited-overs cricket, that the touring sides are invariably better prepared than the home players.

Robert Key chats to David Graveney as he prepares for his ninth Test© Getty Images

For West Indies, that preparation was capped nicely against Sri Lanka A last week, when runs and wickets were to the fore in a concerted team performance. The most pleasing aspect of that match was the return to form of Shivnarine Chanderpaul, West Indies’ second-most experienced batsman behind Lara, whose poor returns in the Caribbean were a significant factor in the ease with which England’s bowlers bossed the series.He may possess the crabbiest technique in world cricket, but Chanderpaul is also one of the most consistently under-rated batsmen in the game, equally adept at attrition or explosive strokeplay. With Lara and Ramnaresh Sarwan, he completes a middle-order that, given a nice sun-baked batting track and an over-stretched attack, could yet cash in as this series progresses. It is one of the mysteries of the modern age how a batting order of such potency could be rolled over in double figures in four of their last eight Tests against England. Don’t expect the habit to continue.And then there is the West Indian bowling attack – perhaps the most diminutive ever to reach these shores, but not to be underestimated at any cost. Tino Best found that the constraints of the NatWest Series did not suit his flamboyant approach, but he still found enough pace and penetration to remind Marcus Trescothick of his struggles against the new ball in the Caribbean. It will be particularly instructive, both for this summer and the series to come, to see how Andrew Strauss fares against the 90mph delivery.With Fidel Edwards slinging his way into town for the Tests, and Jermaine Lawson back in favour after remedial work on his bowling action, West Indies have the sort of cutting edge that New Zealand, through the injury to Shane Bond, were palpably lacking earlier in the summer. Add to that mix Pedro Collins and his unsettling left-arm line, and it is clear that England’s supremacy is not to taken for granted.It must be a good 50 years since England last began a series against West Indies as the overwhelming favourites. It is a position of unfamiliar responsibility, and the onus is on them to live up to their billing.England (probable): 1 Marcus Trescothick, 2 Andrew Strauss, 3 Robert Key, 4 Michael Vaughan (capt), 5 Graham Thorpe, 6 Andrew Flintoff, 7 Geraint Jones (wk), 8 Ashley Giles, 9 Simon Jones, 10 Matthew Hoggard, 11 Steve Harmison.West Indies (probable) 1 Chris Gayle, 2 Devon Smith, 3 Ramnaresh Sarwan, 4 Brian Lara (capt), 5 Shivnarine Chanderpaul, 6 Dwayne Smith, 7 Ridley Jacobs (wk), 8 Tino Best, 9 Jermaine Lawson, 10 Pedro Collins, 11 Fidel Edwards.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus