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Bangladesh v. England - 2nd. Test

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Donny Aries

Formerly known as MAGFAN8.


Joined: 04 Aug 2002
Location: Toonumbar NSW Australia

PostPosted: Wed Oct 29, 2003 12:32 am
Post subject: Bangladesh v. England - 2nd. TestReply with quote

A change of scenery

by Andrew Miller in Chittagong

Chittagong is a breath of fresh air - in the most literal sense. As Bangladesh's second city, it exudes the same chaotic charm as Dhaka, but with a fraction of the smog and barely a quarter of the population. In this town, nowhere is further than a bicycle-rickshaw ride away, and what few traffic jams are encountered (generally to be found in the winding lanes of the central bazaar) are a relative pleasure - all tinkling bells and jostling colour, and only the merest hint of exhaust fumes.

After three intense weeks of commuting from the centre of Dhaka, a change will be as good as a rest for England. That is just as well, because Bangladesh's purposeful showing in the first Test has put paid to the prospect of any genuine relaxation in the coming days. Instead, England had just Monday evening in which to unpack their belongings and settle into the luxurious Hotel Agrabad, and then it is straight back into the thick of things, with a 9am roll-call for an important net session today, before the match starts tomorrow.

Chittagong's cricket ground - the MA Aziz Stadium - is a two-kilometre bus ride and a hop across the railway line. It is situated halfway up the first hill that England will have encountered in their time in the country, although there were plenty of unforeseen mountains at the Bangabandhu Stadium last week. Not everything in Bangladesh is as flat and unchallenging as the guide-books and form-books would have you believe.

In appearance, the stadium is a far cry from the community centre of the Bangabandhu - it is more of a concrete mock-up of England's own Old Trafford, with a pavilion situated to the side of the wicket, looking towards a solitary double-decker protruding from a low ring of stands. Behind the bowler's arms are a pair of petite press-boxes, while four imposing floodlights complete the scene. The Manchester weather even dropped in for a brief visit as well, as Chittagong was drenched by more of those rains with which England are now so familiar. But the sun returned to boil away the worst of the downpour, and a prompt start is expected tomorrow.

With a day of preparation remaining, the pitch (either of two being put together by the groundsman) has something for everyone - an even, sunbaked surface for the batsmen, a generous covering of grass for the seamers, and one or two inviting canyons on a spinner's length as well. It seems designed to increase England's anxieties about their bowling line-up, which was the butt of all criticisms of Saturday's hard-fought victory.

Talking of hard-fought victories, it was another edgy England triumph - that of the all-conquering rugby team - that dominated the weekend sports coverage. Their unforeseen difficulties against Samoa, however, were manna from Melbourne for England's coach Duncan Fletcher, whose inexperienced side are in nothing approaching the class of Clive Woodward's ensemble. "That match proves you can't take anyone lightly," said Fletcher. "Unlike most people, we never underestimated the Bangladeshis. If we'd just flown in and treated these matches as a warm-up [for Sri Lanka], we'd have been in for a fright."

Nevertheless, England are sure to have half an eye on the Sri Lankan leg of the tour when they ponder their options for this match. Bangladesh's unease against raw pace and probing outswing was all too apparent as Steve Harmison and Matthew Hoggard shared 16 wickets and several stiff limbs at Dhaka. Harmison has emerged as an injury worry after aggravating an old problem in his lower back during the delayed 45-minute flight from Dhaka. But the batsmen's relative certainty against England's spinners carried them to the brink of an unlikely upset. And for that reason the least impressive of the two - Ashley Giles - may be sacrificed in favour of Richard Johnson or Martin Saggers.

In an ideal world, England would prefer to give Giles and Gareth Batty another chance to cement their partnership ahead of their crucial roles in Sri Lanka next month. But, happily for the reputation of Test cricket, Bangladesh (who have named an unchanged side) just aren't going to let it happen that way.

Bangladesh (from): 1 Hannan Sarkar, 2 Javed Omar, 3 Habibul Bashar, 4 Rajin Saleh, 5 Alok Kapali, 6 Mushfiqur Rahman, 7 Khaled Mashud (wk), 8 Khaled Mahmud (capt), 9 Mohammad Rafique, 10 Mashrafe Mortaza, 11 Enamul Haque jnr, 12 Mohammad Moniruzzaman.

England (from): 1 Marcus Trescothick, 2 Michael Vaughan (capt), 3 Mark Butcher, 4 Nasser Hussain, 5 Graham Thorpe, 6 Rikki Clarke, 7 Chris Read (wk), 8 Gareth Batty, 9 Richard Johnson, 10 Matthew Hoggard, 11 Stephen Harmison, 12 Ashley Giles.

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Donny Aries

Formerly known as MAGFAN8.


Joined: 04 Aug 2002
Location: Toonumbar NSW Australia

PostPosted: Wed Oct 29, 2003 10:50 am
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Harmison ruled out of second Test

Nathan Ross

Stephen Harmison will not be fit to take his place in the England team for the second Test match against Bangladesh which starts tomorrow at Chittagong. Harmison, who collected match figures of 9 for 79 in England's seven-wicket win in the first Test at Dhaka, has suffered a recurrence of a lower-back injury that prevented him from training with the squad on Monday.

England were subjected to a four-hour flight delay on their journey from Dhaka to Chittagong, and this is thought to have aggravated Harmison's back problem. Harmison had a fitness test today, but was forced to withdraw. Either Richard Johnson and Martin Saggers will take his place - and both will play if England decides to go in with just the one spinner.

Harmison told Sky Sports: "It is really disappointing for me after the way I bowled in the first Test, but playing in that match made me realise how hard it is to bowl with only two seamers, and I knew it wouldn't be fair to either Michael Vaughan or the team that I played when I was only half-fit."

He went on: "I'm not worried about Sri Lanka at this stage. I am sure after a couple of weeks' rest I will be all right - I am used to the heat now and I have acclimatised so it shouldn't take me long to get back into it again."

Vaughan, meanwhile, will be searching for his fourth Test win as England's captain. However, he knows it will be difficult taking 20 wickets on what will most certainly be a flat pitch. "We know they're a decent team," he said, "and they're a good team on their home soil, so we'll have to play well."

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Donny Aries

Formerly known as MAGFAN8.


Joined: 04 Aug 2002
Location: Toonumbar NSW Australia

PostPosted: Wed Oct 29, 2003 3:07 pm
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Bangladesh won the toss and sent England in.

After 8 overs, they are 0/18.

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Donny Aries

Formerly known as MAGFAN8.


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PostPosted: Wed Oct 29, 2003 4:44 pm
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Vaughan goes to 50 n.o. and England are on 0/88 after 30 overs.
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Donny Aries

Formerly known as MAGFAN8.


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Location: Toonumbar NSW Australia

PostPosted: Wed Oct 29, 2003 4:44 pm
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Vaughan goes to 50 n.o. and England are on 0/88 after 30 overs.
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Donny Aries

Formerly known as MAGFAN8.


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PostPosted: Wed Oct 29, 2003 6:12 pm
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Amazing. England were 0/126 when Trescothick went for 60.

Then Butcher (6) went on 133.

Next Vaughan (54) was dismissed on 134.

Two balls later, Thorpe (0) was on his bike.

Bangladesh took 4/8 and 3/1 from 8 balls !!

The score is now 4/137. What a turnaround.

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Donny Aries

Formerly known as MAGFAN8.


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PostPosted: Wed Oct 29, 2003 6:58 pm
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Hussain (17 n.o.) and Clarke (29 n.o.) have stopped the rot with a 45 run partnership. 4/179.
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Donny Aries

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PostPosted: Wed Oct 29, 2003 8:13 pm
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Clarke and Hussain take their partnership to 66 as England go to 4/200.
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Donny Aries

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PostPosted: Wed Oct 29, 2003 10:19 pm
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At stumps, England have recovered from the '4/8 in 5 overs' shock to be 4/237 with Clarke on 53 n.o. and Hussain, 47 n.o.
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Donny Aries

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PostPosted: Thu Oct 30, 2003 9:54 am
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A defeatist approach

The Wisden Verdict by Andrew Miller

The history of Test cricket is littered with famous examples of captains who have won the toss, chosen to bowl … and quickly been made to regret it. Mohammad Azharuddin at Lord's in 1990 (Gooch's match), and Nasser Hussain at Brisbane last year are just two of the most striking. If today's choice by Khaled Mahmud is not in the same league, it is for the simple reason that a 25th defeat in 26 matches could hardly be blamed on the toss. But it remains, nonetheless, a curious decision.


In fairness to Mahmud, he was only carrying on from Bangladesh's approach at Dhaka, and putting self-preservation above all else. The pitch is a fright - all green and tufty, like a Martian's chest hair - and with England's attack loaded with seam and swing bowling, Bangladesh might have been out of the match before it had even begun. But "might" is a mighty loose term. There is a fine line between caution and defeatism, and on this occasion Mahmud veered across it.

With a record that reads like theirs, it is rich to suggest that Bangladesh can approach any match with anything else but defeatism. But as other nations become aware of their steady improvement, those miserable statistics can and should be worked to Bangladesh's advantage. They are both a launchpad for success and a fallback for failure. With every game that goes by, the onus is on the opposition to avoid an unwanted place in history.


And until they were asked to bat first, England were as ripe for the picking as any side on offer. Injury had deprived them of Stephen Harmison, their man of the match at Dhaka. Matthew Hoggard, no less of a stalwart in that Test, will be eternally grateful for an extra day's recovery time. Richard Johnson is short of match practice, and as for the debutant Martin Saggers, he would have been as susceptible to first-day nerves as any other man. But above all, there's the spin bowling.


For the first time in their history, Bangladesh have found a facet of their game that is markedly superior to their opponents. Ashley Giles is low on confidence, and has been selected on humanitarian grounds alone, while Enamul Haque jnr and Mohammad Rafique are flushed with early success. In the circumstances, it defies logic that Bangladesh should forfeit the opportunity to bowl last, on a pitch that seems certain to crumble in Chittagong's baking heat.


England started and finished the day with a flourish, but their nerves were once again betrayed in an unseemly post-lunch collapse, during which Bangladesh stormed into their most commanding position of the series. Not once in the day did they appear overawed, not even when Marcus Trescothick and Michael Vaughan were doling out some hefty punishment in the first session, and throughout the day Mahmud led by example, thrifty with the ball and intelligent with his bowling changes. More's the pity that Bangladesh didn't play to their strengths.

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Donny Aries

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PostPosted: Thu Oct 30, 2003 3:09 pm
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In the 4th. over of the morning, Mortaza (3/56) dismissed Clarke for 55. Hussain is now 63 n.o.
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PostPosted: Thu Oct 30, 2003 3:13 pm
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That was a long time ago.
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Donny Aries

Formerly known as MAGFAN8.


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PostPosted: Thu Oct 30, 2003 3:57 pm
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Hussain is 68 n.o. and Read, 20 n.o. They have added 37 and England are 5/287.
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Donny Aries

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PostPosted: Thu Oct 30, 2003 8:37 pm
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From 5/313 to all out for 326. A pretty good effort from the Bangers.

Read (37) went and, in the next over, Hussaun (76) was gone as well.

Mortaza took 4/60, Rahman, 2/50 and Rafique, 2/63.

After 20 overs, Bangladesh are on 2/61 with Sarkar on 28 n.o.

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Donny Aries

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PostPosted: Thu Oct 30, 2003 9:33 pm
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Clarke has 2/7 from 7 overs. Banglash in trouble at 4/83.
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