Buchanan deserves praise for outstanding record

Ricky Ponting says the Australians have produced some amazing results under John Buchanan © Getty Images

Ricky Ponting has praised the work of the coach John Buchanan for much of Australia’s recent success and believes his successor has an enormous role to fill. While the retirements of Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath and Justin Langer dominate Australia’s view of the fifth Test at Sydney from Tuesday, it is also Buchanan’s final Test in charge.Buchanan, 53, will stand down after the World Cup in West Indies in April and a search is underway for his replacement. Ponting’s comments come after Kevin Pietersen claimed the Australian coach was not respected by his own players.Ponting said Buchanan and his support staff had been overlooked for a long time and deserved to share in the side’s achievements. “They have to accept some of the accolades that come the team’s way,” Ponting said at the SCG. “You look at the standard of cricket that we’ve been able to play over a long period of time.”Just before John took over and certainly right through his stint as coach we’ve played some amazing cricket. Even this current run, we’ve won 11 matches on the trot. That doesn’t happen every day either. The coach has got to take a lot of the credit for that.”Langer, who announced his Test retirement today, described Buchanan as “the great visionary”. “I’ve learned so much from John Buchanan,” Langer said. “He’s an outstanding person and an outstanding coach. His vision was monumental in the success we’ve had over the last few years.”Buchanan has the exceptional record of 68 wins in 89 Tests in charge, and having started with 15 consecutive victories in 1999-2001, he could finish with 12 straight successes. “He’s been coaching a very skilled and very talented team,” Ponting said. “What you’ve seen some of those players do has been a lot of the time pretty extraordinary, so he’s got to take a lot of the credit for that.”Tom Moody, the former Test and one-day allrounder who is currently with Sri Lanka, and Tim Nielsen, a previous Australia assistant coach, are the front-runners to replace Buchanan.

Sunil Joshi spins Karnataka to the top

ScorecardSunil Joshi turned in a stunning performance to spin out Delhi, comfortably placed overnight at 213 for 2, for 258, gaining a vital first-innings lead before Sujith Somasunder and Thilak Naidu propelled Karnataka to 196 for 5, 221 runs ahead by the end of day three at Bangalore. Joshi was assisted by Anil Kumble who picked two wickets but it was the left-arm spinner who donned the wrecker-in-chief role today. Joshi, the former India player, removed Virender Sehwag and Aakash Chopra, the two well-set overnight batsmen, cheaply to engineer a collapse. Sehwag, the captain, was castled by Joshi but came back with the ball, picking up two wickets including that of the half-centurion Somasunder. It’s a crucial tie for Delhi as they have only 6 points in five games and need at least 2 points from this tie to avoid relegation.
ScorecardHemang Badani’s 157 charged Tamil Nadu, overnight on 164 for 3, to a commanding 423 declared before Rajamani Jesuraj grabbed three wickets to leave Bengal, chasing 497, struggling at 109 for 3 by the end of the third day at the Eden Gardens. Badani, who stepped down from captaincy ahead of this tie citing the need to concentrate on his batting, played a fabulous hand in TN’s revival. He lost Sridharan Sriram, his overnight partner, and the next man in Sathish early in the day but put on a 126-run stand for the sixth wicket with K Vasudevadas, the 20 year old left-hand bat, that allowed Tamil Nadu to declare. Dinesh Kartik, ignored for the Pakistan tour, did himself no favours, getting out for a duck but MR Srinivas, the No. 9 batsman, hit a breezy 41 to increase the target.Jesuraj, who rocked Bengal with a five-for in the first innings, hit the top order hard again in the second essay leaving them tottering at 51 for 3 before Sourav Ganguly and Ashok Jhunjhunwala took Bengal past the 100 run-mark at stumps. Bengal, with nine points from five games, will be looking to Ganguly, batting on 25, to engineer a minor miracle and hope to eke out some points to secure a semi-final spot while Tamil Nadu will do its best to go for an outright victory or at the least grab two points to avoid being relegated to Plate.
ScorecardUttar Pradesh require another 26 runs to claim their first win of the season after Piyush Chawla’s third five-wicket haul in as many games saw Hyderabad bowled out for 277 on the third day at Lucknow and left UP just 29 to win. Arjun Yadav, Hyderabad’s captain, top-scored with 49 but Chawla and the rest of the UP bowlers proved too much for the middle order. Should UP go on to win by 10 wickets, they will gain 5 points and replace Haryana to take the fifth spot in the Group B table.
ScorecardRajesh Sharma’s first five-wicket haul and three wickets from Dinesh Mongia, Punjab’s captain, skittled out Andhra for just 237 to give Punjab the upper hand on the third day’s play at Visakhapatnam. Sharma, a 21-year-old offspinner, shared the spoils with Mongia after MSK Prasad and Venugopal Rao, the overnight batsmen, forged a 146-run stand for the third wicket. A shocking eight Andhra wickets fell for just 41 runs as Sharma made a mockery of the middle order after the senior duo of Prasad and Venugopal had done so well in the morning session. At 98 for 3, Punjab have a commanding 177-run lead going into the final day.
ScorecardRailways, with only 4 points in five games and facing relegation, were rocked by Munaf Patel who grabbed a six-wicket haul to bowl them out for a paltry 140, gaining a vital 97-run first innings lead for Maharashtra. Munaf, the right-arm medium pacer, ripped Railways apart in their own backyard before Maharashtra reached 76 for 3, 173 runs ahead by the end of the third day at the Karnail Singh Stadium in Delhi.
ScorecardPinal Shah, Baroda’s wicketkeeper, made his maiden first-class hundred a fine unbeaten double as Jacob Martin declared his side’s first innings on 449 for 4 and then restricted Services to 194 for 3 at stumps on day three at Palam. Shah’s 512-minuted effort consumed 355 deliveries and was laced with 25 boundaries, and ensured Baroda cannot lose this match. Martin, with 53, and Yusuf Pathan, with a breezy 25 not-out, added to Services’ woes. Madhusudhan Reddy then scored a dogged fifty as Services began their reply, but he was the second wicket to fall as Services ended the day 262 runs behind Baroda. Jasvir Singh was not-out on 63, and much of Services’ hopes rest on him as the final day begins.
ScorecardRamesh Powar’s five-wicket haul reduced Gujarat to 181 for 6 after the Mumbai tail had earlier eked out a few runs to earn a nominal first-innings lead. Powar ran through the middle and lower order after Aavishkar Salvi had removed the openers but Niraj Patel shored up the Gujarat innings with a fighting 72. Mumbai, having resumed the day with two wickets in hand and still 6 runs behind, were steered by Nilesh Kulkarni (14 off 82 balls) to a seven-run lead.

A few surprises in an unpredictable tour

8Jacques Kallis

Jacques Kallis: ‘An admirable cricketer, but an utterly unlovable one’© Getty Images

Breathtaking statistics from a, well, statistical point of view. But the lingering suspicion that Kallis plays solely for himself was writ large across his final-day performance when, having created the most solid platform imaginable, he simply refused to carry the attack to England’s bowlers in the manner that we all know he can. At Durban and Cape Town, he had played in the knowledge that his wicket was of paramount importance, for there was little of substance to come but, by the Centurion Test, South Africa’s selectors had wised up, and with men of the calibre of Graeme Smith and Mark Boucher lurking in the middle order Kallis’s reticence was mystifying. An admirable cricketer, but an utterly unlovable one.8 – Charl Langeveldt
Played just the one Test, but Langeveldt gets an extra mark both for his demolition of England in their warm-up at Potchefstroom, and for bowling South Africa to victory at Cape Town despite the pain of a broken hand. After theirpumped-up, fight-fire-with-fire attitude in the opening rounds of the series, it took a thirtysomething debutant to remind South Africa of the virtues of line and length, and most of all, patience. As Hoggard later demonstrated, Langeveldt’s absence at Johannesburg proved to be critical.8 – Makhaya Ntini
All the best opening partnerships have involved a measure of contrast, and the Pollock-Ntini alliance is no exception. Where Pollock is all guile, Ntini is pure rampage – an indefatigable gallop to the wicket and a limb-flailing launch, which more often than not gets its rewards. Until Andre Nel appeared for the final Test, Ntini and Pollock shouldered an incredible burden, and did so unstintingly as well. They deserved better.8 – Shaun Pollock
A constant menace, as an incredible economy rate of 2.26 would imply. Andrew Strauss likened him to a bowling machine, but that would be doing his guile a disservice. Bowled more overs than anyone else on either side (although Ntini finished just four balls behind him) and was as much of a handful in those desperate final moments at Centurion as he had been at any other stage of the series. His batting was less visibly effective, although seeing that he was often as low as No. 9, that is unsurprising. He showed his true colours at Durban, however – a first-innings 43 to set up what must have seemed like a victory, and a second-innings 35 to stave off the prospect of a devastating defeat.8 – AB de Villiers

AB de Villiers: incredible self-belief for one so young© Getty Images

Incredible self-belief for one so young, especially one who was mucked around by the selectors so dramatically all series. Began and ended as an opener, but in between he took over the wicketkeeping duties and also propped up the middle order. Impetuosity got the better of him in the early stages of the series – and again in the first innings at Centurion, when he was dismissed sweeping for 92 – although he made impressive amends second time around. But, for all the brilliance of that Man-of-the-Match performance, nothing could compare to his backs-to-the-wall half-century at Durban. He has all the talent in the world, and is here to stay.7 – Herschelle Gibbs
Took a while to settle back into the side after a very public chastisement from his new coach, Ray Jennings, and he nearly blew it all over again when he was fined his entire match fee for a late-night indiscretion at Cape Town. But Gibbs works best when he is left to his own devices, and his breathtaking batting at Johannesburg demonstrated just that, as he came agonisingly close to a century in both innings. Class is permanent, as the man himself would say.7 – Andre Nel
Misses out on the extra mark simply because he was unable to square the series, but Nel’s in-your-face attitude masked a skilful performance that deserved better rewards. By his own admission, he has grown as a person and a cricketer since his back injury last year, although he still remains the man the crowds love to hate. His good-natured aggression is, however, good for the game.6 – Mark Boucher
His omission was such a talking point at the start of the series that he seems to have been present throughout, rather than just for the final two matches. His first innings back was a gritty 64, a two-fingered salute of a performance, but he had no answer to Hoggard’s perfect delivery that deceived him in the second innings at Jo’burg. South Africa is stronger for his presence.6 – Jacques Rudolph

Jacques Rudolph: became more and more anonymous as the series progressed© Getty Images

Unable to build on his 93 in the first Test, Rudolph became more and more anonymous as the series progressed. He remains the most secure of the several middle-order batsmen whom Graeme Smith regularly berated for their lack of application, but an eventual average of 30.40 is proof that he was every bit as culpable as his colleagues who didn’t last the course.6 – Nicky Boje
Very much in the modern mould of left-arm spinners, Boje’s contributions as a batsman were every bit as vital – if not more so – than his tight but unpenetrative bowling. His late appearance in the team, after an operation to remove his thyroid gland, instantly transformed the balance of the batting, and his quickfire 76 at Cape Town was arguably the decisive performance of the only one-sided match of the series. Constantly derided by Geoff Boycott for his bowling, but his leadership qualities were a further string to his bow.6 – Graeme Smith
Troubled by Matthew Hoggard throughout, and distracted by the ever-changing dynamics of his squad, Smith was a shadow of the formidable figure who swept all before him in the 2003 series. That’s not to say he wasn’t still a mighty presence, however, and England were never able to rest easy until he had been removed from the crease – particularly in the second innings of their two victories, at Port Elizabeth and especially at Jo’burg, when his defiant 67 looked for a time as though it might salvage a draw. Deserved better luck with his bowling, especially against Graham Thorpe.5 – Boeta Dippenaar
In hindsight, Dippenaar’s first-Test century was one of the worst things that could have happened to South Africa. He is indisputably one of the game’s good guys, and the moment was one that he will cherish, but he has long been considered a soft touch by opponents. His guaranteed presence in the middle order ensured that the selectors were still searching for their best combination as the series reached its climax.5 – Dale Steyn
Raw and rapid, Steyn was an exciting prospect with which to launch the series, but he was soon discovered to be out of his depth, for the moment at least. He did, however, serve notice of his potential with arguably the finest delivery of the tour, a wicked 90mph legcutter that demolished Michael Vaughan’s off stump at Port Elizabeth. Needs some more meat on his bones before he can start to live up to any comparisons with a young Allan Donald.4 – Hashim Amla
Looked a million dollars in net practice, but seemed out of his depth in the middle. Accidents singled him out and he has time on his side, but South Africa were a stronger side by the time they bit the bullet and cast him aside.Also playedAndrew Hall
An unfortunate scapegoat after Port Elizabeth, he returned to the side too late to alter the result.Martin van Jaarsveld
A late replacement at Durban. One impressive innings, but not enough to keep Dippenaar from resuming his duties.Thami Tsolekile
The unwitting centre of the Boucher storm. Performed admirably and acrobatically in his primary role as a wicketkeeper, but not up to the task with the bat.Zander de Bruyn
Trumpeted as the next big allrounder, but at Port Elizabeth he looked neither one thing nor the other.

Naveed Nawaz to lead Sri Lanka A in India

Naveed Nawaz, vice-captain during the A team’s recent tour to South Africa and Kenya, will captain Sri Lanka A during a five-week tour of India later this month.Lanka de Silva, a wicket-keeper batsman, who had been included in the national one-day squad, has been named as his deputy after Romesh Kaluwitharana’s recovery from a hamstring injury.De Silva was put on standby for Kaluwitharana when the one-day squad was picked early this week. However, he is set to play as a specialist batsman in India as Prasanna Jayawardene has been named as the regular wicket-keeper.The Sri Lanka ‘A’ team comprises five other players who went on the tour to Africa – Ian Daniel, Jehan Mubarak, Prasanna Jayawardene, Kaushalya Weeraratne, Rangana Herath and Omesh Wijesiriwardene.It also includes youngsters Tharanga Paranavithana, Thilina Kandamby, Tharanga Lakshitha and Lasith Malinga, who played for Sri Lanka in the Asian Emerging trophy one-day triangular against Pakistan and India.SLC sources said that there maybe changes made to the team during the England series at home which runs concurrently.The team is scheduled to leave for India on November 15, starting with a three-day match against an Indian Under 19 XI at Rajkot and followed by three unofficial Tests at Ahmedabad, Pune and Mumbai.The team will stay back to participate in the ACF A team one-day triangular against India and Pakistan at Bangalore from December 13-21.SRI LANKA A SQUAD:Naveed Nawaz (captain), Lanka de Silva (vice-captain), Ian Daniel, Tharanga Paranavithana, Nuwan Shiroman, Jehan Mubarak, Prasanna Jayawardene (w/k), Anushka Polonowita, Kaushalya Weeraratne, Thilina Kandamby, Rangana Herath, Chamara Mudalige, Tharanga Lakshitha, Lasith Malinga, Omesh Wijesiriwardene.Hemantha Devapriya (coach), C.J. Clark (physio)

Zimbabwe Under-19 squad chosen

The Zimbabwe Under-19 squad to tour South Africa was chosen during the half-term school break. The team to compete in the International Cricket Council U19 World Cup in New Zealand in February next year will also be chosen from the squad.The squad includes three players recently involved in the full international side – Tatenda Taibu, understudy to Andy Flower, Hamilton Masakadza, who has already lit up the international stage by becoming the youngest player to score a Test century on debut, and Sean Ervine, who is currently with the national side in Bangladesh.The squad of eighteen also includes: Thomas Benade, Conan Brewer, Michael Brundle, Elton Chigumbura, Charles Coventry, Andrew Durham, Brendon Hammond, Richard Mackie, Stanley Marisa, Stuart Matsikenyire,Alfred Mbwembwe, Waddington Mwayenga, Jordane Nicolle, Simon Seager and Sharezad Omarshah.Four staff will travel with the squad: Wyndam Justin-Smith as team manager, Steve Rhodes as coach, Maziva Stephen Mangongo as assistant coach and Bradley Robinson as physiotherapist for the squad.The team will play two three-day matches; the first will be against Easterns from 30 November to 2 December in Benoni, and the second against Kwazulu-Natal in Bulawayo between 7 and 9 December. They then have an eight-day break before they play in the South African Coca-Cola Week in Vereeniging between 17 and 22 December.Before heading off to New Zealand they will have a four-day camp in Johannesburg in January to prepare for the event. The Under-19 World Cup is held once every four years – the last one was held in South Africa in 1998.

Bancroft fails again as WA face big chase


ScorecardFawad Ahmed took five wickets in the first innings and added another early in the second (file photo)•Getty Images

Test aspirant Cameron Bancroft fell cheaply for the second time in Western Australia’s Sheffield Shield match against Victoria at the MCG, where the Warriors were set a chase of 390 for victory. At stumps on the third day they still needed a further 365 with opener Will Bosisto at the crease on 15 alongside nightwatchman David Moody on 0, with the total at 1 for 25.They had already lost Bancroft, who was lbw to Fawad Ahmed for 6 to add to his 4 from the first innings, hardly the kind of audition he was hoping for after Usman Khawaja’s hamstring injury opened up a place in the Test side. His team-mates and fellow Test contenders, Shaun Marsh and Michael Klinger, had scored fifties in the first innings and will likely bat on day four.The day had started with the Warriors on 7 for 217 in their first innings, and they added 55 for the loss of their final three wickets. Ashton Agar scored 54 and Fawad finished with 5 for 105 after claiming two of the last three wickets in the innings.Victoria extended their healthy lead through opener Rob Quiney, who top scored in the second innings with 79. Peter Handscomb (36), Glenn Maxwell (38) and debutant wicketkeeper Aaron Ayre (36) all made contributions before the declaration came at 7 for 238.

Leeds United eye Montreal’s Djordje Mihailovic

Leeds United boss Jesse Marsch is already making movements behind-the-scenes, with the club already lining up a potential transfer target for the summer…

What’s the story?

According to journalist Manuel Veth, the new Whites manager is considering making Montreal forward Djordje Mihailovic his first signing at Elland Road.

Imagine him and Raphinha

A versatile attacker who predominantly plays off the left flank, the 23-year-old Mihailovic is the kind of exciting winger that would make for a very dynamic wing tandem with Raphinha.

Mihailovic has also come in for some rave reviews from some of the greats of the game, with his former teammate at Chicago Fire, Bastian Schweinsteiger, saying: “You can see he is a football player, he is technical, clear, he was not always passing the ball to the first option, but also the second option.

“He was moving more fluid and not so mechanical. He was also actually confident about himself, that he was better than one or the other. It’s a thing that was good to see, because he knows his strengths. But you also need to have patience as a young player and be willing to learn every day… The most important thing for me is that he’s always ready to learn.”

His performances in the MLS last year were a testament to just how much he has grown as a player, averaging an impressive 2.3 key passes per game, creating 18 official big chances, and chipping in with a whopping 14 assists too – it’s no surprise then that journalist Chris Smith hailed him as a “gorgeous passer” of the ball.

When you compare some of his key stats to Raphinha, it’s arguably even more exciting than Raphinha.

The USA U23 international averages a better successful dribble rate (60% compared to Raphinha’s 44%), wins a better proportion of his total duels, wins back possession more, provides more key passes and crosses, and boasts a far better passing accuracy too.

Mihailovic seems to be the perfect Leeds winger in that not only is he a real dynamic threat going forward with his ability to take players on and deliver an end product, but also has the defensive mind and work ethic to work hard and press from the front.

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It’s clear that Marsch is already beginning to make some exciting transfer moves at Elland Road.

Meanwhile, this Leeds star could explode under Jesse Marsch…

Bollinger fizz kills off flat Tigers

New South Wales 7 for 512 dec beat Tasmania 214 and 263 (Butterworth 116, Birt 77, Bollinger 6-63, Bracken 4-53) by an innings and 35 runs
Scorecard

Doug Bollinger took 12 wickets to knock over Tasmania and complete a thumping win © Getty Images

Doug Bollinger picked up his second six-wicket haul to complete an emphatic victory for New South Wales by an innings and 35 runs. He had reached a career-best 6 for 68 in the first innings, but improved on that again in the second, with 6 for 63.Nathan Bracken also added four, all taken on the final day, to press his Test claims as Tasmania subsided in the morning and were wrapped up before lunch. They began the day 157 behind with six wickets remaining, but were pushing for parity as Luke Butterworth converted his overnight 62 to a century.He finally fell on 116, bowled by Bracken, who had earlier picked up Brett Geeves. Bracken then went on to clean up Brendan Drew and had Ben Hilfenhaus caught at second slip to close out the match.But the main excitement came early on with Bollinger’s double strike earning him the first 12-wicket haul by a New South Wales player at the SCG since Richie Benaud in 1959-60. Travis Birt was Bollinger’s first wicket of the day, leaving one that clattered into his stumps on 77. Sean Clingeleffer followed soon after, edging to second slip, and the writing was soon on the wall for Tasmania.Bollinger’s haul comes amid a rich vein of form that started in Pakistan in August on Australia’s A tour. This season he has taken 26 first-class wickets at 12.50, just behind the leading wicket-taker Ashley Noffke, who has played one extra match with five. Bollinger, however, has the most wickets in the Pura Cup so far.New South Wales once tried calling him Bubbles because of his surname. That may not have stuck, but it’s a fair bet there will plenty of champagne tonight.

'They have their noses slightly ahead' – Smith

Graeme Smith made a battling 94 but not all South Africans could build on the starts they had © Getty Images

Graeme Smith had to seek refuge in humour when asked about a pitch thathas put his team in an unenviable position heading into the final two daysat Newlands. Smith showed the way with a superb 94, but no other batsmanbuilt on a start to construct a substantial innings, leaving South Africa41 adrift at the end of the first innings. With the pitch affording sharp turn, albeit ofthe slow kind, South Africa will need to bowl out of their skins on dayfour to keep alive slim hopes of victory.”Never ever,” said Smith when asked if he had ever seen a pitch such asthis in South Africa. “Never ever, and hopefully never again,” he addedwith a rueful laugh.But having set such a good example with the bat, Smith was in no mood toconcede victory to the Indians. “It’s not hard to win,” he said. “We justhave to play well. I think the wicket deteriorated a lot more than what weexpected. It took a lot of turn from both ends. There was more turn to theright-handers.”I think the other key to their success was the reverse-swinging ball.They got it to reverse early and that’s going to be the key to our successtoo. There has not been a lot of natural swing around with the dryconditions. We have to come up with a plan and get that. Obviously, howour spinner and part-timers bowl will also be key. But with a 40-odd lead,they have their noses slightly ahead.”India waited till the 116th over before Sreesanth was given the second newball, but Smith admitted that the decision to keep going with the old ballhadn’t surprised him. “We were going well and the ball was reverseswinging a lot,” he said. “The ball was quite soft and it was difficult toscore freely. They were creating pressure with the swinging and turningball.”Though the association between Smith and Hashim Amla realised only 29 moreruns in the morning, vital partnerships between Jacques Kallis and AshwellPrince, and Shaun Pollock and Mark Boucher, got South Africa within rangeof India’s total. And though he regretted not pushing on past 414, Smithpraised his batsmen for the manner in which they had adjusted to achallenging surface.”Talking to the guys who were batting, they were saying that the ball wasquite soft and to create any pace on it was difficult,” he said. “Therewere some soft dismissals today but we shifted into a subcontinental frameof mind. It was also important to keep them under pressure.”Despite his reluctance to make any sort of excuse, there was no hidingSmith’s irritation at his team’s predicament on a pitch that Wasim Jafferadmitted was like a New Year gift to the Indians. “It’s like playing inIndia,” said Smith candidly. “Batting fourth is always going to be thetoughest part of the game and I think this wicket will break up a little.”A lot of the guys got starts, got to 50, but unfortunately no one took iton today. Those were the positives for us going forward. If we can takethe initiative and put India under pressure [with the ball], it will giveus an opportunity. The turning ball is going to be an issue.”Anil Kumble wasn’t at his best on day three, but still finished withfigures of 4 for 117. It would surprise no one if Smith has the oddnightmare contemplating what he might do on a fifth-day pitch.

Weekes backs Lara as skipper

Everton Weekes: ‘If I were the selectors, I would offer Lara the job’ © Getty Images

Everton Weekes, the legendary West Indian batsman, believes Brian Lara should be reinstated as Windies skipper despite his two lean spells in charge.”I would think that Brian Lara would be the one to captain the side at this stage with his experience and so on,” Weekes told the Trinidad Express. “Frank Worrell was captain of the side when he was 36, 37 or even older and he is still accepted in the view of many as the best West Indies captain we’ve ever had.”And Brian Lara can do that chore I believe. He’s an intelligent player, he’s an intelligent person, and if I were the selectors, I would offer him the job. You’ve got be a thinking player to perform like he does.”Lara, 36, was West Indies captain twice before but was replaced as skipper earlier this year by Shivnarine Chanderpaul who has so far won one Test match and lost seven in 11 games. Lara has also fallen foul of the West Indies authorities in 2005 after sitting out last July’s tour to Sri Lanka as well as the first Test in South Africa in March after a row over sponsorship.Lara, who is the top run-maker in Test history with an aggregate of 11,187 runs at an average of 54.04, has hinted that he wants to play in the 2007 World Cup before he calls it a day.