Brian Lara calls this pacer the ‘greatest ever to play’

West Indies legend Brian Lara heaped high praise on retiring England veteran James Anderson, calling him the greatest pacer ever to grace the field.

41-year-old Anderson will play his last Test match against West Indies, starting on July 10, at the iconic Lord’s, the same venue where he made his debut 21 years ago against Zimbabwe.

Lara, while talking about Anderson’s career, lauded the veteran pacer and acknowledged his legacy as the greatest among all the pace bowlers.

“He is the greatest fast bowler that has ever played the game. His numbers are incredible, and he has served England well. I know he did not have that in mind (retiring from cricket), but I think he has accepted it. If that is the choice of his captain, coach, and selectors, then so be it,” Lara said.

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“He has had a tremendous career for England. There are not many England cricketers who come close to Anderson (when asked about Anderson’s legacy). He has taken the most Test wickets as a fast bowler and had a career that lasted for over 23 years.”

Brian Lara name-dropped his fellow countryman Courtney Walsh as the only fast bowler, who is nearly as great as James Anderson.

“I think only Courtney Walsh comes close to him in terms of the number of years he has played, but his legacy is going to be tremendous, and I think as an English cricketer, he has the respect of the world.”

For the unversed, Anderson is the only pacer in history to take more than 700 Test wickets. He achieved the milestone during England’s fifth away Test against India, in March this year.

He is also the third in the list of players with the most Test wickets, only behind spinners Muttiah Muralitharan (800 wickets) of Sri Lanka and the late Shane Warne (708 wickets) of Australia.

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Key players dropped as England announce squad for West Indies Tests

England dropped experienced wicketkeepers Ben Foakes and Jonny Bairstow as well as bowlers Jack Leach and Mark Wood from their 14-member squad for the first two Test matches of the three-match Test series against West Indies.

Nottinghamshire seamer Dillon Pennington and Surrey wicketkeeper batter Jamie Smith have earned their maiden call-ups in Test cricket. Both have been standout performers in the County Championship Division One this season.

Surrey seamer Gus Atkinson is the only other uncapped player. He was part of the squad for the Test tour of India earlier this year.

Pennington, 25, who joined Nottinghamshire this year from Worcestershire, has been showing his promise with the ball, taking 29 Championship wickets at an average of 23.03 in the top flight.

Meanwhile, the attacking right-hand batter Smith, who has been in spectacular form this campaign, helping Surrey consolidate their top spot in Division One, has scored 507 runs at an average of 50.70.

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He is set to be rewarded with his Test debut next week at Lord’s and add to his England ODI credentials when he debuted last summer against Ireland.

Seamer Chris Woakes also returned to the Test squad for the first time since July 2023, when he was awarded the Player of the Series during the Ashes series against Australia.

“The first Test of the summer is always a special moment, but it will be extra poignant with it being Jimmy’s (Anderson) last Test before he retires,” ECB Managing Director for England Men’s Cricket, Rob Key.

“He has given everything to the sport since his Test debut in 2003. We all would like to wish him well as he walks out at Lord’s for the last time for England.

“We are looking forward to getting the season underway against a strong West Indies side in what will be an excellent Test series.”

England Test Squad for West Indies series

Ben Stokes (Durham) Captain

James Anderson (Lancashire) (First Test only)

Gus Atkinson (Surrey)

Shoaib Bashir (Somerset)

Harry Brook (Yorkshire)

Zak Crawley (Kent)

Ben Duckett (Nottinghamshire)

Dan Lawrence (Surrey)

Dillon Pennington (Nottinghamshire)

Ollie Pope (Surrey)

Matthew Potts (Durham)

Joe Root (Yorkshire)

Jamie Smith (Surrey)

Chris Woakes (Warwickshire)

Series Schedule

1st Test: England v West Indies, 10-14 July 2024, Lord’s Cricket Ground, London

2nd Test: England v West Indies, 18-22 July 2024, Trent Bridge, Nottingham

3rd Test: England v West Indies, 26-30 July 2024, Edgbaston, Birmingham

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David Miller reprimanded for showing dissent at umpire’s decision

South African batter David Miller was reprimanded by the International Cricket Council (ICC) for showing dissent at an umpire’s decision during his side’s ICC Men’s Super Eight match of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024 against England.

The left-handed batter was handed an official reprimand over the Level 1 breach of the ICC Code of Conduct during the final stages of the South African innings.

Furthermore, one demerit point has been added to Miller’s disciplinary record, for whom it was the first offence in a 24-month period.

The incident occurred in the 19th over when the South African batter faced a full toss delivery from Sam Curran and signalled for a review, expecting it to be called a no-ball.

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However, a review is not possible in such decisions, so umpires disregarded his appeal, leading him to show dissent and breach Article 2.8 of the ICC Code of Conduct.

The charges were levelled by the on-field umpires Chris Brown and Sharfuddoula Ibne Shahid, third umpire Joel Wilson, and fourth umpire Chris Gaffaney.

For the unversed, if a player reaches four or more demerit points within a 24-month period, they are converted into suspension points and a player is banned.

Notably, David Miller was a notable contributor to South Africa’s narrow-victory over England with a 28-ball 43 which featured four fours and two sixes.

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Phil Salt powers England to dominant victory over West Indies

SAINT LUCIA: Phil Salt played a scintillating unbeaten knock of 87 runs to power England to a thumping eight-wicket victory over West Indies in the second Super Eights match of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024 here on Wednesday.

Chasing a mammoth 181, Salt and Jonny Bairstow helped England achieve the target with 15 balls to spare.

The defending champions got a fiery start to the chase courtesy of a 67-run opening stand between Salt and skipper Jos Buttler.

Salt, being the chief contributor struck 40 off 24, while Buttler scored 25 off 22 before falling prey to Roston Chase in the eighth over.

Moeen Ali came out to bat but could only score 13 off 10 with two boundaries.

Bairstow then joined Salt and together they ripped apart West Indies’ bowling lineup with an unbeaten 97-run partnership from 44 balls.

England needed 40 off the last five overs, however, Salt completely tilted the game in his team’s favour as he struck 30 runs off Romario Shepherd in the 16th over with three sixes and three fours.

Salt finished his innings with an unbeaten 87 off 47, knitted with seven boundaries and five sixes, meanwhile, Bairstow, who scored the winning runs, amassed 48 runs from 26 balls with five boundaries and two sixes.

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After being invited to bat, West Indies opening batter Brandon King gave his side a decent start with a 23-run cameo off 13 balls with the help of three boundaries and one six.

However, King retired hurt in 4.2 overs with 40 runs on board, bringing last match’s hero Nicholas Pooran to the crease.

Pooran joined hands with a settled Johnson Charles, who was playing at 13, and together they added 54 runs for the second wicket partnership.

England bowlers bowled tight lines to keep both batters under check and kept the scoring rate low, which incited Charles to attack Moeen Ali only to get caught by Harry Brook.

Charles top-scored with a 34-ball 38, laced with four boundaries and one six.

West Indies skipper Rovman Powell then smashed five sixes during his entertaining 17-ball knock of 36 runs, including three sixes to Liam Livingstone before getting out while attempting a fourth one.

Pooran fell prey to Jofra Archer in the next over after scoring 36 off 32, featuring four boundaries and one six.

Sherfane Rutherford then scored a quick 28 off 15 with one boundary and two sixes to push his team’s total to 180-4 in their allocated 20 overs.

For England, Archer, Livingstone, Ali and Adil Rashid bagged one wicket each.

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T20 World Cup 2024: England win toss, elect to field against West Indies

SAINT LUCIA: England have won the toss and chose to field first against West Indies in the second Super Eights match of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024 here at Daren Sammy National Cricket Stadium on Monday.

PLAYING XIs

West Indies: Brandon King, Johnson Charles, Nicholas Pooran (wk), Roston Chase, Rovman Powell (c), Sherfane Rutherford, Andre Russell, Romario Shepherd, Akeal Hosein, Alzarri Joseph, Gudakesh Motie

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England: Phil Salt, Jos Buttler (c)(wk), Jonny Bairstow, Harry Brook, Moeen Ali, Liam Livingstone, Sam Curran, Jofra Archer, Mark Wood, Adil Rashid, Reece Topley

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Jude Bellingham gives England victory over Serbia at Euro 2024

GELSENKIRCHEN: Jude Bellingham showed why he has been hailed as the key to England’s Euro 2024 challenge with a masterful display capped by the winning goal in their 1-0 victory against Serbia at the Arena AufSchalke on Sunday.

Bellingham arrived at the European Championship heralded as one of the world’s best young players after enjoying the season of his life at Real Madrid.

The 20-year-old lived up to the hype as his influential performance ensured England started their bid for a first major trophy in 58 years in winning fashion.

“It’s really special to score any time for England, especially a match-winning goal and one that can hopefully help us do well in the tournament,” he said.

From the moment he burst onto the scene at Birmingham at the age of 16, Bellingham has been on a remarkable rise that shows no signs of abating.

Bellingham helped Madrid beat his former club Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League final earlier in June and was named La Liga’s Player of the Year after starring in the club’s latest domestic triumph.

Bellingham’s 19 league goals for Real this term showcased his transformation into a genuine penalty area threat, a valuable weapon along with his smooth passing and indefatigable work rate.

He took just 13 minutes to underline the point in their Group C opener against Serbia.

Bellingham started the move in midfield with a measured pass to Kyle Walker before sprinting into the penalty area to meet Bukayo Saka’s cross with a superb diving header that arrowed into the net from six yards.

After being mobbed by his teammates, Bellingham showed his comfort in the spotlight, soaking up the adulation of the England supporters with his arms outstretched before running to the centre circle to whip up the fans at the other end.

“It’s a great start for me personally. They give me a lot of appreciation and love. It’s good to give that back,” he said.

Scoring England’s first goal of a major tournament is nothing new to Bellingham, who headed their opener against Iran at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

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Jude Bellingham is the first European player to feature in three major tournaments before he turns 21 after previously playing at Euro 2020 and the last World Cup.

Having become the youngest Englishman to play at a major tournament four years ago, Bellingham is also the second man after Michael Owen to score at both the World Cup and European Championship before the age of 21.

Despite his tender age, Bellingham is already so influential for England that he was named part of boss Gareth Southgate’s four-man ‘leadership group’ ahead of the tournament.

Serbia were completely unable to contain Bellingham and veteran Nemanja Gudelj earned a booking after resorting to a crude foul on the midfielder.

“I took a few kicks but it’s something I have got used to. I feel like in every game I can make an impact, I can decide a game,” he said.

With 56 touches in the first half — compared to just two for England captain Harry Kane — the relentless Bellingham was the Three Lions’ driving force.

“I felt really good coming into the game. You could see I was enjoying it. I wanted to get on the ball and build some energy,” Bellingham said.

England’s Euro campaign was starting in what was once known as the ‘city of a thousand fires’.

And Bellingham lit up the drab surrounds of Gelsenkirchen’s industrial heartland in such vibrant fashion that it is hard to imagine England’s stay in Germany being a slow burn.

He remained a blur of intelligent movement in the second half to keep Serbia at bay as England held on despite a nervy finish.

“This team is still so new, gelling together with every game,” Bellingham said.

Fittingly, he departed to a standing ovation when he was substituted in the closing stages.

Jude Bellingham already has a mural in his hometown of Stourbridge — a tribute that might well be upgraded to a statue if England get their hands on the trophy in Berlin on July 14.

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England crush Namibia in rain-hit clash to boost Super 8s hopes

ANTIGUA: A combined batting and bowling effort led England to a comfortable 41-run victory over Namibia in a must-win ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024 clash here at Sir Vivian Richards Stadium on Thursday.

Set to chase 126 as per the Duckworth-Lewis-Stern (DLS) method, Namibia could manage 84/3 in the allotted 10 overs.

Namibia got off to a shaky start to the daunting total as their openers Nikolaas Davin Michael van Lingen found it hard to score freely against a dominant England bowling attack.

The pair added 44 runs in six overs before Davin decided to retire out after scoring 18 off 16.

David Wiese was promoted to No.3 to accelerate the flow of runs.

The all-rounder took on the attack to the England bowlers with clean hitting. He was supported by Lingen as the pair brought up 36 runs in just three overs before the latter perished.

Michael van Lingen top-scored for Namibia with a cautious 33 off 29 deliveries, hitting one boundary and three sixes.

But, Wiese, who perished on the fourth delivery of the final over was the pick of the batters for Namibia for his blistering 27 off 12 deliveries.

For England, Chris Jordan and Jofra Archer claimed one wicket apiece.

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Put into bat first in a crucial match that was eventually reduced to 10-over a side, England registered a massive total on the board, courtesy of a third-wicket partnership between Jonny Bairstow and Brook.

The defending champions, however, had a contrasting start to their innings as they lost both their openers Jos Buttler (0) and Phil Salt (11) inside 2.1 overs with just 13 runs on the board.

Following the early hiccup, Bairstow launched an astounding counterattack by taking Namibia bowlers to the cleaners in a one-sided 56-run partnership with Brook.

Bernard Scholtz provided a much-needed breakthrough to Namibia on the first delivery of the eighth over when he got rid of Bairstow, who scored a quickfire 31 off 18 deliveries with the help of three fours and two sixes.

Harry Brook then switched gears after Bairstow’s dismissal and further bolstered England’s total at the backend. He was supported by Moeen Ali (16) and Liam Livingstone (13), who added quick runs with handy cameos.

Brook top-scored for England with an unbeaten 47 off just 20 deliveries, laced up with six boundaries including two sixes.

For Namibia, Ruben Trumpelmann bagged two wickets while David Wiese and Scholtz could pick up one wicket each.

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Mark Wood believes Australia “will play hard and fair” against Scotland

England’s right-arm speedster Mark Wood expressed his hope that arch-rivals Australia would play “hard and fair” in their last ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024 group-stage fixture against Scotland.

Australia will face Scotland in their last group-stage fixture on Sunday which could decide England’s fate in the T20 World Cup 2024 even if they manage to beat Namibia in their remaining group match.

Scotland are currently second in Group B standings with five points in three matches while England climbed to the third with three points in as many matches.

The defending champions bolstered their net run rate by decimating Oman by eight wickets and 101 balls to spare.

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Earlier, Australian pacer Josh Hazlewood hinted at the possibility of exploiting England’s difficulty in the tournament in the post-match press conference.

“In this tournament, you potentially come up against England at some stage again and they’re probably one of the top few teams on their day,” stated Hazlewood.

“We’ve had some real struggles against them in T20 cricket, so if we can get them out of the tournament, that’s in our best interest as well as probably everyone else’s I think.

“It will be interesting to see, never really been in this position before as a team I don’t think.

“Whether we have discussions or not, or we just try and play again the way we played tonight, that will be up to people, not me.”

Reacting to Hazlewood’s comments, Mark Wood insisted that Australia would not deliberately lose to Scotland.

“I’m absolutely confident Australia will play the game the hardest, that’s the Australian way, that they’ll play hard but fair and try and get the win,” said Wood.

“I think that’s part of being England and Australia, isn’t it?” said Wood.

“I think actually I saw it more as a respect thing if I’m honest that he was saying that England have done well against Australia in the recent past and thinks we’re a big threat and a big team so I have no problem with it.”

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Pat Cummins denies Australia manipulating England’s World Cup exit

Pat Cummins ruled out the prospect of Australia underperforming against Scotland in a bid to oust rivals England from the ongoing ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024, saying it would be against the “spirit of cricket.”

Bowling spearhead Josh Hazlewood caused controversy this week when he said it would be in Australia’s interests for reigning champions England to be out of the competition.

Australia have already secured their place in the next round, the Super 8s and he suggested they could ease up in their closing Group B game against Scotland this weekend to engineer their bitter rivals’ exit.

That scenario now appears less likely after England crushed Oman by eight wickets on Thursday to move above Scotland on net run rate with a final game to come against Namibia.

In this case, if England beat Namibia then Scotland will have to overcome Australia to qualify for the Super Eight.

England coach Matthew Mott — an Australian — said he hoped Hazlewood was joking and Australia’s Test and one-day skipper Cummins assured him that the bowler was.

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“When you go out and play you’re trying your best every time. And if you’re not, it’s probably against the spirit of cricket,” Pat Cummins told reporters in St Lucia.

“I don’t think you can (go into a game not trying to win) -– ever. You’re playing an international game in the middle of a World Cup.

“You still want to try and have a good game and carry that on into the Super Eights. I’ve never stepped onto the field without the mindset of being aggressive like the guys have so far.”

Cummins said he had spoken to Hazlewood and the comments were tongue-in-cheek and “got taken a bit out of context.”

“We’ll go out there and try to play Scotland, who have had a really good tournament so far, so it’s going to be tough,” he said.

“It’s something you discuss as one of the quirks of the set-up, but it does it change the way we play? Absolutely not.

“I’ve never stepped into the field without the mindset of trying to take the game on and be aggressive like the guys have so far.”

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England blow away Oman to push for Super 8s qualification

ANTIGUA: A ruthless bowling performance, followed by equally dominant batting led England to ease past Oman in the must-win ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024 fixture here at Sir Vivian Richards Stadium on Thursday.

Set to chase a modest 48, England chased down the total in just 3.1 overs, courtesy of Jos Buttler’s blitz.

Earlier, opening batter Phil Salt gave the defending champions a flying start by smashing back-to-back sixes on the first two deliveries of the innings.

Salt, however, perished on the next delivery as Bilal Khan hit back.

England then lost another wicket in the run chase as Will Jacks only managed five off seven before falling victim to Kaleemullah in the second over.

Meanwhile, Jos Buttler decimated Bilal in the third over of the innings and put England just two away from the victory.

Jonny Bairstow then smashed Fayyaz Butt for a boundary on the first delivery of the fourth over to complete England’s resounding victory. He scored eight off two deliveries.

Buttler top-scored for England with an unbeaten 24 in just eight balls, peppered with four fours and a six.

For Oman, Bilal Khan and Kaleemullah could pick up a wicket.

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Sent into bat first, Oman’s inexperienced batting unit was unfolded on a meagre total in 13.2 overs.

Oman, after a disastrous start, kept losing wickets at an alarming rate and were subsequently bundled out at a paltry total.

Shoaib Khan was the only Oman batter to amass the double figures as he top-scored for the associate nation with 11.

Whereas, Kashyap Prajapati (9) and skipper Aqib Ilyas (8) were the other notable run-getters.

Adil Rashid spearheaded England’s dominant bowling attack with a four-fer, followed by Mark Wood and Jofra Archer, who picked up three wickets each.

A dominant eight-wicket victory lifted defending champions England to third in Group B standings of the T20 World Cup 2024 with three points in as many matches while Oman ended their campaign with four defeats.

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