Easy wins for Lahore Lions and Lahore Eagles

Group A
Lahore Lions handed Hyderabad Hawks a hammering at the United Bank Limited Sports Complex in Karachi, winning by 222 runs. It was complete dominance by Lahore Lions as they scored 304 and then rolled over Hyderabad for 82. Their batting effort was led by opener Abid Ali and former Pakistan captain Mohammad Yousuf, who has been excluded from the national squad for the 2011 World Cup. Ali made 86 and Yousuf 81 off 76 as Lahore Lions reached 228 for 1. Even though they lost wickets towards the end of the innings, a quick, unbeaten 31 by Mohammad Saad took them past the 300-run mark. Hyderabad’s chase was doomed for the start as seamer Asif Ashfaq took three early wickets and they collapsed to 18 for 4. Legspinner Tanzeel Altaf ran through the rest of Hyderabad’s line-up, finishing with 4 for 21 as Hyderabad’s innings lasted only 25.3 overs.It was another one-sided game at the National Stadium in Karachi, as Karachi Zebras beat Quetta Bears by 198 runs. Karachi reached 344, with Khalid Latif scoring 127 off 108 balls and Akbar-ur-Rehman getting 77 off 48. Quetta lost their last seven wickets for 37 and were bowled out for 146 in 33.2 overs. Akbar-ur-Rehman followed up his half-century with four wickets with his seamer and spinner Atif Maqbool took 3 for 18.Group B
Lahore Eagles eased to their second win of the tournament, beating Pakistan Television by seven wickets at the Lahore City Cricket Association Ground. Legspinning allrounder Saad Nasim starred with a five-for, undermining half-centuries from wicketkeeper Fayyaz Ahmed and Yasim Murtaza, who had put together 70 runs for the seventh wicket and rescued their team from 96 for 6. Pakistan Television could only manage 201, which was easily overhauled. Useful contributions from opener Hamza Paracha and Kashif Nizami backed up an unbeaten 74 from Usman Salahuddin. He added an unbeaten 77 with captain Intikhab Alam to seal victory with 31 balls to spare.Peshawar Panthers opened their account in the competition with a 20-run win in a low-scoring encounter against Abbottabad Falcons at the Arbab Niaz Stadium in Peshawar. The hosts were put in and skittled out for 146, with only opener Haroon Ahmed offering any significant resistance. He played out 86 deliveries for his 57, and while Mahfooz Sabri made a quick 20. For Abbottabad, seamers Junaid Khan and Aziz-ur-Rehman shared seven wickets, but in vain. Barring opener Fawad Khan’s 56, and Junaid’s 29 way down the order, the rest of the Abbottabad batting crumbled as Riaz Afridi led Peshawar’s charge with four wickets. The bowlers ran through the line-up to shut the visitors out for 126.

Australia seek series win in flood-ravaged Brisbane

The floodwaters had receded but the devastation was still easy to see around Goodna, west of Brisbane, where the Australian cricketers did their bit to give the community something to smile about during time at a local school. They now hope to give Queenslanders some joy by securing the one-day series against England with victory at the Gabba on Sunday.This was the first time the squad had returned to Brisbane since the flooding – although Shane Watson went to his hometown, Ipswich, two weeks ago just as the recovery work began – and they visited schools and shopping malls around some of the worst-affected areas west of the city. The swollen, murky brown Brisbane River which snakes through the city is a reminder of how recently the disaster unfolded.Australia are now aiming to make this the city where they seal the series after giving England a lifeline at Adelaide and Watson believes the local support will make a huge difference. “It’s going to be a very emotional day and hopefully that can help pull us over the line and win the series,” he said.England have made their own donations to the flood appeal during this series and are aware of the motivating factors involved in this match for Australia. “Our hearts have gone out to the people. Seeing those things on TV is pretty shocking,” Chris Tremlett said. “The England team have been fully behind it. I imagine it will be a very emotional time for people on Sunday and we are glad to be part of it.”Watson has previously spoken about how his mind has often been on events in Queensland during the one-day series, yet he has been able to maintain his consistent form with a match-winning 161 at Melbourne and 64 at Adelaide. But while his success for Australia gives him great pleasure these past few weeks have given him a sense of perspective.”There’s no doubt that during the period when you didn’t know the extent of devastation, around Ipswich especially, it was something that took my mind off the cricket,” he said. “After the disappointment of the Ashes series it put my life into perspective for sure. It’s just great I was able to score runs during that period but life is bigger and greater than cricket, even though I love playing it.”Although the Suncorp Stadium, which is used for rugby and soccer, was flooded, the Gabba was largely unaffected and recently staged back-to-back Big Bash games. Kevin Mitchell Jr, the Gabba curator, has no concerns about the pitch for Sunday’s game despite the horrific weather of a few weeks ago.”It’s looking pretty good with nice even cover of grass so should play uniformly,” he told ESPNcricinfo. “With all the rain, we’re not too bad. The only way the Gabba gets flooded is if the stormwater and the tide from Norman Creek occur together. Since the redevelopment of the ground it’s happened four times. The wicket block is never affected.”Mitchell Johnson’s occasional state appearances now come for Western Australia, but he was born in Townsville and retains a strong connection to his home state. “Just driving through now and seeing where the levels were, Shane [Watson] showed me some photos of the water. It does blow you away and it’s hard to believe,” he said. “The Queensland spirit is nice and strong and we are sticking behind each other. The day after it all happened you saw the pictures of everyone lending a hand, digging that mud up, and doing everything they can.”Johnson, who struggled during the Ashes apart from his matchwinning performance in Perth, has been a frustrated watcher during the last three matches due to a throat infection. He hopes to return to the side in Brisbane and build form ahead of the World Cup in what he believes will be a memorable occasion.”I’m certainly looking forward to getting back and playing again,” he said. “It was hard sitting back on Australia Day and not being able to play, it’s one of the ones you want to take part in. Coming here on Sunday, back on home turf, hopefully I’ll get a game and be able to raise some more money.”

Duminy double-ton takes Cobras second

Rain didn’t only have a say in the Test match between South Africa and India at SuperSport Park in Centurion, but in the SuperSport series too. The first day of the matches between the Knights and the Warriors in East London, and the Cobras and the Dolphins in Paarl were washed out. The Lions and the Titans were the only teams that played on all four days. All three fixtures saw players on the fringes of the South Africa side record good performances.The Cobras slotted into second place with an innings-and-166-run victory over the Dolphins in Paarl. Play got underway on day two after a wet first day and the Dolphins chose to field, hoping to get some assistance from the overcast conditions. The going was tough for the Cobras openers. Alistair Gray took 199 balls to make his 57 runs but he and Andrew Puttick laid a solid platform for the middle order to launch from.Owais Shah made just 20 but Justin Ontong and JP Duminy cashed in. Ontong has been having a quietly successful season and scored 127. Duminy made his claim for national selection as loudly as he could. He became the second batsman to score an unbeaten double-century this weekend (Jacques Kallis being the other) in the country. Duminy’s 200 not out came off just 201 balls as the Cobras declared on 515 for 5. None of the Dolphins bowlers stood out. Imran Tahir, the highest wicket-taker this season, missed the match because of a back injury. Fellow legspinner Keshav Maharaj was the most successful bowler with 4 for 214.The Dolphins had a shocker in reply and were bowled out for 99. Vaughn van Jaarsveld was their highest scoring batsman and scored just 23. Cobras seamer Vernon Philander finished with figures of 4 for 33. With a 416-run deficit, the Dolphins were made to follow on and fared only a little better in their second outing. Van Jaarsveld scored 57 and Ravi Bopara made 74, but the Dolphins line-up left a lot to be desired. Philander’s three second-innings wickets left him with seven for the match.The Titans stamped their authority on the top of the table with a four-wicket win over the Lions in Potchefstroom. The Titans batted first and found themselves in trouble early on, at 57 for 3, but were rescued in magnificent fashion. Titans wicketkeeper Heino Kuhn scored 92 and Albie Morkel made an impressive return to form with 182 runs. Opener Pieter Malan, legspinner Shaun von Berg and seamer Gerhardus Viljoen also made half centuries and the Titans were bowled out for 513. The Lions spinners were the only ones who enjoyed success with Werner Coetsee and Dale Deeb sharing six wickets between them.Coetsee also starred with the bat in the Lions first innings. He put on 166 runs for the fifth wicket with Zander de Bruyn, who scored 109. The Lions were bowled out for 352, giving the Titans a 161-run lead, which allowed them to enforce the follow-on. The Lions were bowled out in their second innings for two more runs than they were in the first. Neil McKenzie’s 130 was the only century of their second innings with Jean Symes’ 43 the next highest score. Von Berg’s 4 for 130 and Viljoen’s 3 for 50 were the best figures for the Titans as they were set a target of 194 to win.Fast bowler Friedel de Wet was the biggest threat to the Titans getting there. He took the first three Titans wickets to reduce them to 72 for 3. Jacques Rudolph’s 60 had a calming effect on a line-up that was losing wickets quickly. Coetsee, Deeb and seamer Craig Alexander took a wicket apiece and even though the Titans were being pegged back, Morkel and von Berg took them to victory. The Lions have dropped from second to third in the table after the result.In East London, the Knights and the Warriors drew after two high-scoring first innings. Warriors fast bowler Wayne Parnell ripped through the Knights top three and reduced them to 65 for 3 in the ninth over. Centuries from Ryan Bailey and Morne van Wyk, who shared a 236-run fifth wicket partnership, took the Knights to a respectable 430 for 8 declared. van Wyk carried over his superb form from the MTN40 tournament and ended on 150 not out.The Warriors had few problems in their innings, with the top five all making healthy contributions. Wicketkeeper Arno Jacobs was one of two centurions after scoring 110. Kelly Smuts was unbeaten on 100 at the end of the match. The captains shook hands on a draw after he reached his century. The Warriors were on 499 for 5 and were ahead by 69 runs.Batsman of the week: For making the national selectors sit up and take notice of his desire to get back into the Test arena, JP Duminy’s 200 not out earns him the award.Bowler of the week: Vernon Philander’s match-haul of 7 for 73 against the Dolphins lifts him to third in the bowling charts with 23 wickets. He has the best average out of the top ten bowlers.

Sangakkara not surprised by West Indies' performance

Kumar Sangakkara, the Sri Lanka captain, has said he was not surprised by the way in which West Indies dominated the drawn first Test in Galle but added the difference in bowling between the teams was an “eye-opener”. West Indies, led by Chris Gayle’s 333, piled up 580 before their bowlers struck to help enforce a follow-on on the hosts. Sri Lanka managed to save the Test but West Indies were also held back by the weather on the last three days.”We were pretty wary about what they could do. The only thing was our attitude probably in the first two sessions which was a bit wanting,” Sangakkara said of his team’s bowling on the opening day. “The first six overs were probably okay although we didn’t make the batsmen play too much. But after that I thought the lines and the lengths we bowled on this track were not good enough for us to put any pressure on them either to get wickets or to cut down on the runs. Chris (Gayle) took a lot of advantage from that and he batted magnificently.””We’ve got understand that it is a good eye opener for us. It’s an example to us the way West Indies were disciplined in their bowling. I thought the attitude of the West Indian bowlers the way they went about their job was very impressive.”Sangakkara admitted Sri Lanka could have put in a better performance with the bat in the first innings where no batsman reached a century even though four managed to get past fifty. “If one batsman can get a hundred, usually a side ends up making 400. Those are the par scores for Test cricket on these tracks and unfortunately we fell about 100 runs short on our first innings at least,” he said.”With the bowling attack we had unfortunately we didn’t have the conditions in our favour apart from the first six overs where there was a little bit of swing. The first two days were the best days for batting and West Indies took maximum advantage of that.”The star for Sri Lanka on the final day was opener Tharanga Paranavitana, who made 95 in nearly three hours, and steered Sri Lanka to safety. “It was a fantastic effort from him,” Sangakkara said. “He quickly adjusted from the first innings and he showed us what a real old -style opener he is in Test cricket to grind away at the opposition and score runs.”The second Test gets underway on November 23 in Colombo.

Bhatt spins Baroda to innings victory

Group BRP Singh scythed through Orissa with a career-best 6 for 48•Getty Images

Bhargav Bhatt, the 20-year old slow left-arm bowler, spun Baroda to an innings-and-33-run win against Haryana on the third day at the Bansi Lal Cricket Stadium in Rohtak. Haryana, who needed to score 343 to make Baroda bat again, resisted for almost 100 overs before being dismissed for 310. Bhatt, playing only his third first-class game, took 7 for 127, his maiden five-wicket haul. Haryana’s opening pair of Nitin Saini and captain Rahul Dewan had started solidly, adding 68 runs before Bhatt struck, getting Dewan caught behind. Saini and Sunny Singh soon followed, and Haryana had slumped to 77 for 3. Wickets continued to fall regularly, and though Hemang Badani and Joginder Sharma resisted briefly, it was all but over for Haryana when Badani fell for 79. Bhatt’s accuracy was reflected in the manner of his dismissals, with six of his seven wickets either bowled, caught behind or leg before.

Form Guide – Tracking ESPNcricinfo’s players to watch this season

  • R Ashwin: Failed with the bat, but picked up both the Delhi wickets to fall in the second innings

  • Piyush Chawla: Had a day to forget, going wicketless in 22 overs against Orissa

  • Ravindra Jadeja: Took three wickets to help Saurashtra take the first-innings lead against Gujarat

  • Jaidev Unadkat: Also picked up three wickets for Saurashtra

  • Yuvraj Singh: Helped himself to an unbeaten half-century a day after being demoted in the BCCI contracts list

Yuvraj Singh made an unbeaten half-century a day after being demoted to Grade B in the BCCI’s list of central contracts. Punjab had already dropped first-innings points against Karnataka in Mohali, and Yuvraj’s 52 helped them to 173 for 2 in their second innings at stumps on the third day. Ravi Inder Singh also made a half-century after having been bowled off the second ball of the match in the first innings. Karnataka’s lower order had supported Amit Verma for more than 25 overs in the morning to prolong Punjab’s misery. Verma made a sedate 60 before becoming the last man to be dismissed. He fell to medium-pacer Manpreet Gony, who finished with three wickets. Punjab still trail Karnataka by ten runs.RP Singh tore through Orissa with a career-best haul of 6 for 48 to leave them reeling at 232 for 9 against Uttar Pradesh at the Dr Akhilesh Das Stadium in Lucknow. RP trapped former India opener and Orissa captain Shiv Sunder Das leg before for 1 in the sixth over of the day. Soon, Orissa were deep in trouble at 42 for 4. However, opener Natraj Behera found some support from the lower middle order, and went on to score his maiden first-class hundred which included 17 fours. Behera made more runs than the rest of his team-mates combined managed to, but fell to RP for 113. However, Orissa still trail by 171 runs and UP are almost assured of first-innings points going into the final day.Group AMumbai‘s bowlers gave their side a huge first-innings lead, bowling Bengal out for 296 at Eden Gardens. Resuming at 28 for 1 in reply to Mumbai’s mammoth 621, Bengal slipped to 84 for 5 as Manoj Tiwary, Shreevats Goswami and Wriddhiman Saha fell cheaply. Debutant Writam Porel and offspinner Saurasish Lahiri fought back with half-centuries. However, Mumbai’s frontline bowlers struck repeatedly and despite a 91-run stand eighth-wicket between Lahiri and Shibsagar Singh, Bengal had little chance of even reaching the follow-on mark. The Mumbai seam trio of Ajit Agarkar, Aavishkar Salvi and Dhawal Kulkarni picked up seven wickets between them. It is to be seen whether Wasim Jaffer will enforce the follow-on tomorrow, or whether he will be satisfied with first-innings points, like he was in Mumbai’s opening game against Saurashtra.Shikhar Dhawan’s unbeaten 76 kept Delhi in control•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Railways put behind the disappointment of conceding a narrow first-innings lead, and had Assam reeling on 160 for 9 at stumps on the third day at the Karnail Singh Stadium in Delhi. Murali Kartik picked up his 32nd first-class five-wicket haul, and was supported by the medium pace of veteran Sanjay Bangar. As many as eight Assam batsmen failed to reach double figures. Amol Muzumdar, the captain, waged a lone battle with an unbeaten 73. He got some support from wicketkeeper Kunal Saikia though, who made 25. Assam lead by 165 runs with one wicket remaining and would be glad that Muzumdar is still batting. In a low-scoring match where a total of 529 runs have been made in three days, the final day could see a close finish.S Badrinath’s 23rd first-class century was not enough as Tamil Nadu fell well short of Delhi‘s first-innings score at the MA Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai. Tamil Nadi had begun the day 196 runs behind with five wickets remaining. C Ganapathy stuck around for 133 deliveries, making only 22 but adding 89 in a sixth-wicket partnership with Badrinath. However, Ganapathy’s run-out by Pawan Suyal triggered a lower-order collapse as Tamil Nadu slipped from 171 for 5 to be bowled out for 208. Badrinath was the last man dismissed, bowled by Suyal after making 104. The next highest score in the innings was 28. Vikas Mishra, the 17-year old left-arm spinner, finished with 4 for 49 off 38 overs. Delhi stretched their lead to 232 by stumps, with opener Shikhar Dhawan easing to an unbeaten 76. Offspinner R Ashwin took both the Delhi wickets that fell.Jaidev Unadkat and Ravindra Jadeja picked up three wickets apiece for Saurashtra to skittle out Gujarat for 191 at the Lalabhai Contractor Stadium in Surat. Five of the six Saurashtra bowlers used were among the wickets as their side comfortably took first-innings honours. Gujarat fell short of Saurashtra’s total by 71 runs. Most of the Gujarat batsmen got starts but none went on to make even a half-century. Opener Priyank Panchal was the top scorer with 40 before he fell leg before to Jadeja. With three points in their kitty, Saurashtra crawled to 60 for 2 at stumps, offspinner Mohnish Parmar taking both wickets.

Malnad overcome Davangere in tense finish

Malnad Gladiators held their nerve in a tight finish against Shamanoor Davangere Diamonds in Bangalore, successfully defending a revised target of 116 from 16 overs as Davangere fell short by two runs. An opening stand of 89 in ten overs between Mayank Agarwal and CM Gautam had put Davangere in control. However, once they were dismissed with 16 needed from 23 balls, Davangere messed up the chase, losing three more wickets and ending on 113 for 5. Malnad medium-pacer Santhebennur Akshay took two of those wickets in the last over, dismissing Mohanram Nidesh and Sunil Joshi. Kunal Kapoor’s 43 from 34 deliveries and Ryan Ninan’s unbeaten 32 off 17 had earlier enabled Malnad to put up 149 for 8.Nitin Bille’s unbeaten 27 helped Mysore Maharaajas beat Mangalore United by seven wickets in Bangalore. In a match shortened to nine overs a side, Mangalore managed 68 for 5 after choosing to bat, with Chandra Shekar Ragavendra picking up 2 for 10 in two overs. Bille came in at the fall of Mysore’s first wicket, with 43 needed off 32 balls, smashed two fours and two sixes on his way to 27 from 15 and helped his team to victory in eight overs.

Minor injury worries ahead of first Test

The buzz around the series is slowly building up in Chandigarh. The Indian team, sans the Champions League and Board President’s XI players, have been training hard for two days at the PCA Stadium in Mohali, and the Australians have had a fruitful three days of cricket at the Sector 16 Stadium. The common theme has been niggles and minor discomforts that have made both the sides take precautionary measures.Gautam Gambhir, Sreesanth, Simon Katich and Marcus North have all experienced some sort of discomfort over the last three days. Sreesanth cramped up while bowling and took some time off before coming back to bowl. Gambhir was hit on the right hand by a rising delivery from Ben Hilfenhaus on the second day of the match. He played no part in the remainder of the game, sitting out while the BP XI team fielded on day three and choosing to not bat in the second innings. It has been learnt that this was just to ensure he did not aggravate the problem ahead of the series.North, who made a much-needed good start to his tour with a fluent century, experienced some back trouble too, and took the Gambhir route, staying out of action on day three. Katich had a bruised thumb, and he didn’t bat in the Australians’ second innings. He however came on the field after the Australians’ declaration, which is a good sign for the visitors.Meanwhile, over at the PCA Stadium in the outskirts of the city, key members of the Indian team got through a full practice session. Wearing the new team practice kit, Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag and VVS Laxman had a nice hit in the nets. Zaheer Khan, Ishant Sharma, Harbhajan Singh and Amit Mishra were the bowlers present. There had been reports that Sehwag was hit on the right knee by an Ishant delivery yesterday, but he seemed in no discomfort while batting in the nets.Apart from the team’s bowling coach Eric Simons, Harbhajan had his childhood coach, Devender Arora, work with him during the session.

ZC sets sights on Lara

Legendary West Indian batsman Brian Lara could be Zimbabwe Cricket’s next high-profile signing, according to reports in local newspaper the . Lara, who was guest of honour and keynote speaker at the recent ZC annual awards ceremony, could take up a player/coach role with one of Zimbabwe’s domestic franchises.”The season is long, discussions are taking place, let us wait and see. You might see me coming back here,” Lara is quoted as saying. Ozias Bvute, ZC’s managing director added: “We are talking but its early days to say whether he is coming back to play or coach here.”The report suggests that Lara could play in the domestic Twenty20 competition and may also be called upon to help coach the national side’s batsmen and claims that a source close to ZC has revealed that an offer has already been made.Former South Africa fast bowler Allan Donald and Australian Jason Gillespie have already taken up coaching contracts in Zimbabwe, while Sean Clingeleffer, Andrew Hall and a handful of English county players have also been linked to domestic franchises.

KP rides his luck in fight for form

Kevin Pietersen outscored the entire Pakistan team in his first-innings knock of 80 today, but it’ll take a few layers of dust on the scorebook before that stat manages to outshine its mitigating circumstances. Three clear-cut chances – one of them outrageously simple – and one controversial dead-ball “catch” competed with a host of snicks, gropes and optimistic lunges, as Pietersen fought to overcome his own troubling lack of form, and haul England into another commanding position.”It wasn’t my most fluent of knocks. But in terms of the situation of the game, it was one I’m pretty pleased with,” Pietersen said at the close of play. “I obviously rode my luck, but on that wicket, you’ve got to. It was two-paced, and occasionally the ball would nip – which made it really hard. It was one of those real grafting wickets, but we hope we’re in position now to do something really good on day three.”Humility has never come entirely naturally to Pietersen, but he’s had no choice but to feast on humble pie in recent times – from the loss of the captaincy, through the loss of his fitness, and ultimately the loss of his form – and it was strangely fitting that this particular performance required him to scrape the bottom of the pie-dish itself. It wasn’t especially edifying to watch, and as he paced the dressing-room corridor during a rain-break his tension was plain to see, but in terms of getting his game back to where he wants it, the scraps he chiselled out were doubtless every bit as nutritious.”Yeah, my confidence has taken a big whack,” he said. “Obviously I haven’t been scoring the big hundreds I did in the first fifty-odd Tests. But it’s not as if I haven’t been scoring runs. The dressing room is a fun place, the boys are on good form and you always feel pretty confident among them. I’ve taken a big hit in the last 18 months, but I’ll fight back.”You go from captaining the team to being one of the men again … being told what to do all day every day is something that was hard, in the way that everything happened 18 months ago,” he recalled. “Then I got injured and had a bad tour of South Africa – I was playing really badly there – so it’s not been ideal, the last 18 months. And then the last two wickets have been extremely tough. I haven’t played on two tougher ones in England in my career in Test match cricket.”Thanks to their hapless fielding, Pakistan effectively left themselves needing to take 16 wickets to break even, and therefore it was something of an achievement to restrict England to a less-than-formidable 251. They did so without the services of Umar Gul, who pulled a hamstring, but found in Saeed Ajmal a canny offspinner with a well-disguised doosra who backed up the strike bowlers, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir, with the sort of disciplined fare that Danish Kaneria had failed to provide at Trent Bridge.All of which conferred extra kudos on Pietersen’s grafting performance, but aside from one sumptuous leg-side flick to bring up his fifty, his flamboyant strokes of old remained under wraps, on a zippy surface that played into the hands of one of his most troublesome opponents. “Asif has made me look a clown on numerous occasions so far in my career ,” he said. “So to get down the wicket and take out lbw and bowled was probably the best option, and to play straight.”Aside from the struggle to reaffirm his status after a nightmarish year in 2009, Pietersen has also had to contend with a dispute on the home front, with his desire to move on from Hampshire leaving him out on a limb domestically, and without serious cricket coming into this series since the Australia ODIs in June. An opportunity to play a second XI fixture was turned down because of concerns about the quality of the cricket and the media circus that would have accompanied it, and instead his main preparation involved an intensive week of coaching with Graham Gooch at Lord’s.Pietersen conceded, however, that he had dropped his guard on the preparation front – a rare lapse from a man whose dedication to self-improvement has been one of the defining features of his career. A Man of the Series performance in England’s triumphant World Twenty20 campaign left him believing that his game was in better shape than he’d imagined, and it’s taken until now for him to make up the deficit.”The work I did with Goochie was brilliant work, and I didn’t feel in bad nick coming into the series, but I took some of my form from the Caribbean for granted coming into the summer, and I learned a few lessons. It’s the mental side of Test cricket you’ve got to get in tune with. You’ve got to really keep working hard, no matter how well you’re playing, and you’ve got to respect everything. But I’m fighting back now, and hopefully I’m back somewhere.”It was not an apology of an innings – far from it. But it did contain an apology nonetheless, as Pietersen extended his current penchant for mea culpas to the incident, on 41, when he slapped a dead-ball delivery straight to Salman Butt in the covers. “It was instinct, and I probably shouldn’t have hit it, so I apologise if I caused any issues. But the umpire called dead ball before the ball was bowled, so I think, and I haven’t read the rules book, but I think that’s a dead ball.”Salman Butt, Pakistan’s captain, also played down the issue as he fronted up for his team once again – as well he might on a day when his players had no-one to blame but themselves. To compound Butt’s misery, he was dismissed for a duck in the final hour of the day, to take his series tally to a sorry 16 runs.”It’s a one-ball game for us batsmen, and if you get a good one there’s not much we can do,” he said. “If we are lucky it might pass without edging, sometimes it doesn’t carry. But I think all the luck was with KP today.”

Bopara's second ton keeps Essex on top

ScorecardRavi Bopara’s second century of the match and an unbeaten 90 from Alastair Cook put Essex firmly in control of their battle against County Championship leaders Yorkshire at Chelmsford.After establishing a first-innings lead of 75, they will go into the final day 304 ahead after reaching the close on 229 for 3 second time around.Bopara made 102 in a third-wicket stand of 199 with Cook but both needed the benevolence of Anthony McGrath to prosper. McGrath put down each batsman at second slip. Bopara had made 38 when a straightforward catch was spilled before Cook was reprieved on 68, this time afar more difficult chance high to his left. Oliver Hannon-Dalby was the luckless bowler on the first occasion before Tim Bresnan was left cursing his misfortune on the second.As he had done in the first innings when making 142, Bopara excelled with some glorious drives either side of the wicket. Both batsmen completed 50 with the aid of seven fours but Bopara needed 32 fewer deliveries to do so – 72 to Cook’s 104.Bopara reached his century from a further 63 balls, by which time he had added a further three fours and three sixes, the last of which, a mighty blow over long on at the expense of Adil Rashid, carried him into three figures. The legspinner, however, was to extract his revenge soon afterwards when Bopara was bowled trying to cut.Although more circumspect, Cook was still quick to seize upon the opportunity to punish the loose delivery as he reached the close on the brink of his first century for Essex at first-class level since 2007. He had so far hit 13 boundaries in an innings spanning 172 deliveries.Earlier Yorkshire, resuming on 227 for 5, lost their remaining wickets while adding a further 97 before the innings was brought to a close shortly after lunch. Most of those runs were gathered by Rashid who was left stranded on 52 when last man Hannon-Dalby was run out. Between periods of watchful defence, Rashid laced his innings, which lasted 103 balls, with eight boundaries.Left-arm spinner Tim Phillips claimed two of the remaining wickets, including a return catch to get rid of Bresnan and end an eighth-wicket half-century partnership, to return figures of 4 for 94 from 44 overs. Andy Carter, the fast bowler on loan from Nottinghamshire, provided the main back-up support. His lively and aggressive approach brought him 3 for 77 from 24.1 overs.Essex were soon in trouble when they began their second innings. Jaik Mickleburgh fell to the first ball of the innings, bowled by Bresnan, and Tom Westley suffered a similar fate against Steve Patterson with the total on 15 – but then Bopara and Cook took over.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus