Third women's one-dayer washed out

Rain has forced the third match of the delicately poised women’s one-day series between Australia and England to be abandoned. The game, which was scheduled for Drummoyne Oval in Sydney, was cancelled following the wet weather in the city over the past week, which made it impossible to prepare the ground.England won the first fixture at the MCG before Australia levelled the five-match series in Melbourne on Monday. The final games will be played at the SCG on Sunday and Monday, with the one-off Test to be held in Bowral from February 15.

Rain denies Sri Lanka's victory charge

Scorecard
How they were out

Muttiah Muralitharan leaps for joy after having Paul Collingwood stumped off his second ball in an over which produced three wickets © Getty Images

Sri Lanka were denied victory in Galle when a second torrential downpour ended the final Test with England tottering on 251 for 6 although Alastair Cook’s 118, his seventh Test century, helped keep Sri Lanka at bay. However, when he was removed after the first interruption England’s tail was left with a task that would surely have been beyond them, especially against Muttiah Muralitharan who had triggered an earlier dramatic collapse of three wickets in four balls before lunch.It was hard on Sri Lanka, who deserved a 2-0 scoreline but have the consolation of a rise to third in the world rankings. England travel in the opposite direction, down to fifth from second, a position they have held for three years, although how much those standings really mean to the players is unclear. Despite the draw England can’t take much pride from their performance, although Cook’s hundred at least means they registered three figures once in the series.The highlight of the final day of the series was Muralitharan’s pre-lunch spell which sent England crashing from 200 for 2 to 200 for 5 in four balls. He hasn’t quite been at his incisive best since capturing the world record three weeks ago in Kandy, but sparked into life with the prospect of a few week’s rest. Sri Lanka’s next commitments are not until the CB Series in February.He had already made the first incision of the morning, removing Ian Bell with a delivery which kept wickedly low to hit off stump. Cook, who was dropped early in the day on 54, and Kevin Pietersen responded by adding 72, but Muralitharan was settling into a probing spell. Switching to around the wicket he put Pietersen in a tangle, unsure whether to use bat or pad. He eventually gained his reward when Pietersen carelessly clipped a half volley to Mahela Jayawardene at midwicket.Pietersen did have time to pass 3000 runs in his 33rd Test, equalling the mark set by Herbert Sutcliffe, and he also reached 1000 for the year, but it was the first time he ended a series without at least a half century. England suffered in all three Tests from losing batsmen when they are well set and Pietersen’s departure gave an opening to Sri Lanka. Two balls later Paul Collingwood was bamboozled and left stranded by a doosra as he tried to find the gap at midwicket and Prasanna Jayawardene produced a neat stumping.

Alastair Cook gave England some pre-Christmas cheer with a fighting 118 © Getty Images

Ravi Bopara completed a depressing pair, and a chastening first Test series, when his urgency to find a run ended his stay first ball. He edged Muralitharan to Jayawardene’s right at slip and the Sri Lanka captain dived, collected the ball and in one motion returned to the wicketkeeper. Bopara had already taken a couple of strides down the pitch and couldn’t turn in time. It was another example of the athleticism Sri Lanka have shown throughout the series, but Bopara’s desperation came from a mind that has been scrambled by recent events.In contrast, Cook’s mind remained commendably focussed after watching from the non-striker’s end and he maintained his composure to reach a century off 228 balls. He now has seven Test hundreds which puts him one behind Don Bradman and Sachin Tendulkar who had eight by the time they turned 23, and level with Javed Miandad. Cook’s birthday is on Christmas Day. It was also England’s first overseas Test hundred since Cook scored his second-innings century at Perth a little over a year ago.Prasanna Jayawardene dropped a leg-glance off Lasith Malinga in the day’s second over, a rare error for a wicketkeeper who has impressed during the series. Cook played Muralitharan with relative ease and combined with Matt Prior – who had ground to make up after three dropped catches – in a stand spanning 30 overs either side of the rain breaks.The weather caught everyone by surprise by clearing as rapidly as it arrived meaning Sri Lanka had one more chance to push for victory. Muralitharan thought he had Prior twice, firstly with an lbw which Asad Rauf correctly ruled would have slipped past leg stump, then with an edge that dropped fractionally short of slip. Jayawardene claimed the catch and tensions were running high with him not impressed by England’s time wasting.Cook was dropped a second time from a flashing cut the wicketkeeper dives across Kumar Sangakkara, who could only get fingers to the ball at first slip; the reprieve was brief as he fell next ball when Chanaka Welegedara made once bounce outside off stump. Sri Lanka were sensing the kill, but rain began to fall again and this time there was no coming back as the ground was soaked within minutes.However, after beginning the series on the back of a hammering by Australia and rumblings of discontent in the camp, Sri Lanka have shown that in their own conditions they are one of the most formidable opposition in the world.

Australia win despite Sangakkara's 192

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Kumar Sangakkara revived Sri Lanka with a brilliant 192 but he was denied the opportunity to try to get them over the line © Getty Images

Kumar Sangakkara’s 192 was the big difference between the scripts in Brisbane and Hobart but Sri Lanka were denied a fairytale ending as Brett Lee grabbed four wickets and Australia secured a 2-0 series victory with their 14th consecutive Test win. Despite a collapse early in the morning when Sri Lanka lost 5 for 25, Sangakkara gave Australia a few nervous moments with an audacious assault that only ended with an unfortunate umpiring call shortly before lunch.It is hard to predict how close Sri Lanka would have come to the record 507 they needed to win had Sangakkara stayed at the crease, but the way he was playing he just might have got them home. He could have given up once Lee and Mitchell Johnson sparked the early crashes but instead Sangakkara simply altered his game plan and formed a 74-run stand with Lasith Malinga.Sadly for the visitors Sangakkara was denied his third double-century for 2007 when he tried to hook Stuart Clark and the ball flew off his shoulder to Ricky Ponting at slip. Rudi Koertzen agreed with the Australians that there was some bat involved but Sangakkara, and the replays, knew that was not the case. It was a disappointing finish to a superb display from Sangakkara, who blasted 27 fours and one six in his remarkable innings.Once he found himself with the tail, Sangakkara refused singles off the first few balls of overs and then when the field came in, he reverted to one-day mode with some clean strikes over the off side. There were a few streaky shots too – thick edges flew to vacant spaces and not everything came off the middle – but it was a courageous fightback from a Sri Lanka outfit that desperately needed some spark.In the end his assault did not affect the outcome but it let him register the highest score by a Sri Lankan in Test in Australia, beating Aravanda de Silva’s 167 in 1989-90, and the highest score in a Test at Bellerive, passing Michael Slater’s 168 in 1993-94. It also gave Sangakkara 677 runs for the 2007 calendar year at a phenomenal average of 225.66.A few late fireworks from Malinga (42 not out) and Muttiah Muralitharan followed – Malinga clubbed three sixes, all off Clark – but Lee finished the job by rattling Muralitharan’s stumps and confirming the 96-run victory. Lee’s 4 for 87 gave him eight wickets for the match, 16 for the series, the Man-of-the-Match title, the Player-of-the-Series award, and the respect of anyone who believed he could not step into the spearhead’s role in the absence of Glenn McGrath.Fittingly it had been Lee who started the procession earlier in the day – not for the first time this series – by breaking Sangakkara’s 107-run partnership with Sanath Jayasuriya. Australia were just at the point where Ricky Ponting might once have looked imploringly to McGrath or Shane Warne, when Lee switched to over the wicket and troubled Jayasuriya, who tried to cut too close to his body and was caught behind for 45.Sparked by Lee, Australia’s attack suddenly became deadly. Johnson found Chamara Silva’s edge to slip and had Prasanna Jayawardene lbw leaving a good inswinger first ball. Like Lee on the fourth day, Johnson missed the hat-trick – he slipped it down leg side against Farveez Maharoof – but the script had nearly been finalised.After Maharoof was run out due to his runner’s incompetence in the first innings he had nobody to blame but himself for his dismissal for 4 in the second. Stuart MacGill, who had struggled on the fourth day, dropped one short and Maharoof miscued his pull over mid on, where Lee ran back and took a well judged catch.Dilhara Fernando followed with a poor piece of running from his first ball. He clipped Clark through midwicket and scored an easy two but Sangakkara wanted the strike and Rhett Lockyear, the Tasmania player who was substituting for Andrew Symonds, provided an excellent throw from the deep to have Fernando caught short attempting the third.From there it looked like it would be downhill for Sri Lanka. Sangakkara disagreed and gave Australia’s new attack a thorough examination in their second Test as a unit. Again they passed the test, maintaining Australia’s dominance and their hope of breaking the record of 16 straight Test wins.

Denmark and Namibia book spot in World Cup qualifiers

Adnan Ilyas on his way to an eye-catching 113 during Oman’s win over UAE © ICC

Denmark booked a spot in the World Cup Qualifier with a three-wicket win over Argentina at the Wanderers ground. Freddie Klokker (54) continued his strong form as Denmark survived an early wobble at 24 for 3 to chase down 169 with 23 balls to spare. David Borchersen, Bobby Chawla and Bashir Shah took two wickets each as Argentina, despite Matias Paterlini’s 51, couldn’t bat out their 50 overs.In a low-scoring match at the Centre for Cricket Development, Gerrie Snyman took 5 for 36 to bowl Namibia to a 27-run victory over Uganda to book their place in the qualifier. Namibia suffered a rare batting collapse to be bowled out for 145 in 45.4 overs with new-ball partners Danniel Ruyange and Kenneth Kamyuka sharing five wickets between them. Snyman, who is tournament’s leading run-scorer with 517, compensated for his batting failure by taking a five-wicket haul as Uganda was dismissed for 118 and now has nine wickets in the tournament.In the dress rehearsal for Saturday’s final, Oman overpowered UAE by 25 runs at the United ground after Adnan Ilyas’ eye-catching 113 propelled Oman to an imposing 298 for 8. Ilyas faced 112 balls and hit six fours and five sixes. In turn, UAE were dismissed for 273 despite Amjad Javed’s 71 and Arshad Ali’s 64.Argentina and Uganda are now relegated but will have a second chance to book a place in the 2009 World Cup Qualifier when they play in the next Division Three tournament – the top two there will also make the qualifier.

Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
Oman 5 5 0 0 0 10 +0.767 1268/225.3 1214/250.0
U.A.E. 5 4 1 0 0 8 +1.660 1463/229.1 1181/250.0
Namibia 5 3 2 0 0 6 +1.543 1199/211.5 997/242.1
Denmark 5 2 3 0 0 4 -1.113 871/246.1 855/183.5
Uganda 5 1 4 0 0 2 +0.140 927/220.1 979/240.3
Argentina 5 0 5 0 0 0 -2.845 843/250.0 1345/216.2

Youngsters toil in the sun against Glamorgan


Richard Hindley debutant

Hampshire Cricket’s day started badly with the announcement that their Pakistan all-rounder had pulled out of his one season contract due to ill health, and the rumour mill was winding about the future of Ed Giddins, and Shaun Udal pulled out before the start of the Frizzell Championship match against Glamorgan with an ongoing shoulder injury.In Udal’s absence Hampshire gave a debut to 28 year old Richard Hindley, an allrounder who recently scored a century for the 2nd XI, and with Robin Smith and Alan Mullally still injured, John Crawley took a young side out to face the Welsh county.On a hot sunny day, losing the toss did not make the day any better, and despite Glamorgan losing opener Jonathan Hughes early on it was a day of toil in the heat for the youngsters. The term “sticking to their task” would be a good statement as that is what they did.All the bowlers performed admirably, although a couple of fielding blips proved costly. Adrian Dale secured his first century of the season with a patient innings, which included 19 fours. Matthew Maynard’s class showed out as well scoring a superb 129 in which his stroke play was the event of the day. Hitting 18 fours and two hugh sixes, he batted for two and a half hours before Chris Tremlett snared him with the second new ball.Tremlett in fact took three late wickets that allowed Hampshire maximunm bowling points, and at 436 for 9 the home side should feel reasonably satisfied. It could have been worse.Debutant Hindley started well, but Maynard took a liking to his bowling, but much of the spin duties was performed by Simon Katich, he like Tremlett took 3 wickets, with the persevering Mascarenhas stepping in with two.

Zimbabwean captain left frustrated after poor umpiring in Colombo

As a full moon holiday in Colombo brought the first Test to a temporary halt on Sunday, Zimbabwean captain Stuart Carlisle was left ruing a string of poor umpiring decisions on the first three days that leaves his side facing a massive innings defeat.Zimbabwe were forced to follow on 402 runs in arrears after being bowled out for 184. They then lost both openers, Hamilton Maskadza and Trevor Gripper, before the close of day three.Carlisle admitted that his side had bowled poorly on the first two days and some batsmen had been guilty of throwing away their wickets in the first innings, but he also believed his side to have been extremely unlucky.Zimbabwe were the victims of seven dubious decisions, starting with early let-offs for Marvan Atapattu (caught short leg) and Sanath Jayasuriya (caught behind). Russel Arnold was then reprieved on the first evening because of poor quality television replays.In their first innings, Muttiah Muralitharan won two doubtful decisions – Gavin Rennie (lbw) and Grant Flower (caught bat-pad) – before Pakistani umpire Riazruddin gave Travis Friend a palpable wrong decision. Then, to stir up Zimbabwe’s frustration even more, Trevor looked unlucky to have been given out caught behind in the second innings just before the close.Sri Lanka, too, suffered, with Andy Flower getting two lives and Kumar Sangakkara unlucky to be given out caught at slip by the third umpire after inconclusive replays, but Zimbabwe bore the brunt of the bad decision-making.Carlisle said: "We took a gamble with the toss and we were very unfortunate. We had certain opportunities and it could have been a completely different story. We could have had two wickets down relatively early and that would have changed the match a bit."As a fielding and batting side we have been very unlucky on certain things and it really hasn’t gone our way. Something needs to be done and I am sure that it will be eventually, but these important factors change games."He tried his best to be phlegmatic: "You just have to say its one of those things in cricket. Individuals make mistakes – although when they are made it can be very hard to lift the guys."But also acknowledged that his side had been outplayed: "We are lacking a spinner and we backed our seamers but the Sri Lankan batsmen made full use of a good batting pitch. Then there were some pretty ordinary shots from out batters and once again a couple of 30s and 40s that needed to be turned into big scores."We are now at the back end of it, but we sure are going to try our hardest to save this game. It is a pretty good batting pitch, but 30s and 40s are not going to do it. It’s up to the eight batters left to get really stuck in and put together some big partnerships."On a slow, low wicket offering little assistance to the faster bowlers, Zimbabwe’s faint hopes securing a draw, hang on how they counter the wiles of Muralitharan. Carlisle was not displeased with their efforts against him thus far, even though he has already taken six wickets."Murali is clearly a word class bowler and he is always going to be hard in Sri Lanka. We had a game plan – although it’s up to individual batsmen to say, "This is what I am going to do," and stick to it – and, on the whole, I was happy with how the guys played Murali. He got four wickets in the first innings and too of those were fortunate."

We tried to save cricket in Zimbabwe: Carlisle

Stuart Carlisle has hit out against the Zimbabwean Cricket Union, saying that the move by some of the players to go on strike was prompted by what he claimed were racist and politically motivated policies by the board.Carlisle, who was among 15 cricketers banned by the board, is now part of a 14-man squad called The Red Lions which will tour England for a series of friendly games. Speaking at a fund-raising dinner to launch the tour, Carlisle said: “Our group went through this extremely stressful period not to destroy cricket in Zimbabwe but to try and save it. It did not all start three months ago (with the strike), but in 2001 when the Zimbabwe Cricket Union launched its Task Force.”The Task Force was meant to provide more opportunities for blacks to take to the game, but Carlisle stated that it only ended up alienating the players. “The result [of the Task Force’s actions] was we lost 35 players, both black and white during the last three years,” Carlisle said, according to an AFP report. “At that time the players formed their own association and we were internationally recognised, but not by the ZCU. Had they done so, we would not be in disarray today.”Because of this, players had to try and fix off-field problems individually. And so they were targeted. And when some players actually refused the captaincy or vice-captaincy, it shows how serious the situation became. Past form, performance, statistics, experience and merit are words that have not been in the selectors’ vocabulary for a long time.”And so, when an employer refuses to meet employees about all this, problems inevitably occur. In putting our international careers on the line it was a sure sign we had had enough. It turned out we were all sacked three times in a month. Can that have happened anywhere before?”Carlisle, who played 35 Tests and 108 ODIs for Zimbabwe, will now play for The Red Lions in a week-long tour of England, which starts on July 14 and includes matches against a Lashings XI and a Zimbabwe World XI.

Bevan on verge of another one-day milestone

Michael Bevan should eclipse another one-day milestone tomorrow when his New South Wales Blues take a winning Gabba record into the ING Cup clash with Queensland.Bevan needs just seven runs to reach the 2000-run mark in domestic one-day matches, enhancing his reputation as one of the most effective batsmen in theshortened form of the game.Five batsmen have already passed 2000 runs, but none has matched Bevan’s performances in the international arena.The left-hander averages 57.28 in his 164 matches for Australia – the best mark of any international batsman to have played more than five matches – and he willprove a genuine test for Queensland’s bowlers tomorrow.The Bulls tamed Bevan during their comfortable win in the four-day Pura Cup match earlier this week in a rare double failure for the 31-year-old.”You can’t score runs every game but we rely pretty heavily on Bevo and he’s been the man for us in a lot of situations,” Blues captain Shane Lee said.”That’s the way it is but our one-day form has been very good and I can’t remember the last game we lost here.”The Blues haven’t lost at the Gabba since October 1996, bucking the trend at a ground which has become a killing field for Queensland.Lee kept the winning run intact two years ago when he smashed an excellent century to beat a Queensland team which had been cruising at 0-189.Sports bookmakers expect tomorrow’s match to be a preview of February’s final, particularly after the Bulls almost rolled a full-strength NSW in Sydney two weeks ago.”We probably should have won it – we lost it rather than they won it – so it should be a good one-day contest,” Bulls captain Stuart Law said.The Blues sit atop the table on 13 points, four ahead of Queensland, South Australia and Western Australia.Tomorrow’s clash coincides with the beginning of the third Test between Australia and New Zealand in Perth but eight of the ACB’s 25 contracted players will be at the Gabba.Discarded Test opener Michael Slater will also shoulder some hopes for the Blues along with explosive batsmen Brad Haddin and Mark Higgs.The Bulls are expected to bracket Martin Love with Jimmy Maher at the top of the batting order in the absence of Test opener Matthew Hayden.Maher is also nearing a milestone, needing 21 runs to overtake Hayden as Queensland’s most profilic one-day runscorer.That would push Maher into second place on the Australian all-time list behind Darren Lehmann.QUEENSLAND: Stuart Law (capt), Jimmy Maher, Martin Love, Clinton Perren, Andrew Symonds, Brendan Nash, James Hopes, Wade Seccombe, Ashley Noffke, Nathan Hauritz, Michael Kasprowicz, Joe Dawes.NEW SOUTH WALES: Shane Lee (capt), Brad Haddin, Michael Slater, Michael Bevan, Michael Clarke, Mark Higgs, Graeme Rummans, Shawn Bradstreet,Stuart MacGill, Don Nash, Nathan Bracken, Stuart Clark.

New Zealand cricket emerged stronger from tumult, says Snedden

“Tumultuous times” was how Martin Snedden, the chief executive of New Zealand Cricket, described the last 12 months at today’s annual general meeting of New Zealand Cricket (NZC). From the players’ strike of last October through to the decision not to visit Kenya during the World Cup, NZC has had a few crises to handle during that period of time.But out of those difficult days, especially from the strike, new relationships have developed, and Snedden said he had been heartened by the recovery in the relationship between administrators. The home performance against India last summer had helped with the healing process, he said.”I deal with the Cricket Players’ Association nearly every day, as do many of the staff, while the major associations are also working more closely with them. The end result of it all has been a good player contract system,” said Snedden.The Kenyan issue highlighted how much safety and security issues had become part of modern administration. It was the case that there would be times when New Zealand’s view of security matters would be totally different to other countries, and this would create tensions. That was just a fact of modern life, he told the meeting.Snedden said while the Test performances of the New Zealand team merited their third place in the rankings, there was inconsistency in the one-day arena that needed to be focussed on. There were players of talent and ability, and New Zealand needed consistency of results to move away from the middle of the rankings and launch an attack on the positions occupied by Australia and South Africa.The White Ferns still had a large gap between themselves and Australia at the top of the poll in women’s cricket. Snedden likened the situation to that in netball where, five or six years ago, the two countries were in similar positions. The challenge for New Zealand was to close the gap in the way the netballers did this year, in taking the world title off Australia. It would take time, and the supporters would have to be patient as the gap was narrowed, said Snedden.Snedden said he felt the quality of domestic cricket was improving and the players’ contract system would help this by allowing a larger number of players to commit with confidence to a semi-professional career. There did need to be a stronger focus on playing conditions because if the work was not put in there, then it would be a waste of the good efforts happening in other areas of the game.Coaching had also had a significant boost, and the policy of sending major association coaches away with the national side would be continued, especially in the improved programme for the New Zealand A team.Snedden left no doubt about the commitment of NZC to the development of grassroots cricket through the cricket coordinators’ programme. “This is a long-term project and we can’t expect instant success with it. But I am pleased there has been an almost total buy-in to this programme by the Major and District Associations.”Out of everything we are doing, this is the one in the end that is the most important,” he said. “It is the one that resources must go into. We must get it right because we will get the rewards from this.”Snedden vowed to continue the policy of openness in dealing with the media that marked his tactical approach during the players’ strike. He said that by putting information on issues in front of the public, and letting them see the thinking behind decisions, it was nice to get a boost of confidence from the public understanding and acceptance of decision-making.He also hinted at the direction of the strategic plan, called “Pushing the boundaries”, being enacted within the next month. It was a fact of New Zealand’s geography and small population that it didn’t enjoy the resources of nearly all of its international rivals. In order to compete with those countries, it was vital that New Zealand made every possible use of its own resources.The geography and population barriers should not be an excuse, said Snedden. “We have got to drive ourselves past that. We have to extract the absolute maximum that we can and get ourselves into the mental state where we push ourselves beyond what people reasonably expect and achieve more than what people expect.”We have to push ourselves harder and harder, higher and higher, in all aspects of the game, not only at elite level but through all aspects of the game,” Snedden added. “These are really exciting times for New Zealand Cricket and we are just about there with our release of the plan. We have found through working on these matters at NZC that we are already thinking that way in our decision-making. We can’t settle for the ordinary, we have to push ourselves beyond that.”

Ramprakash rides the lightning

ScorecardAs Surrey found out during their catastrophic defeat against Northamptonshire on Sunday, not even a Mark Ramprakash century is any guarantee of success in these uncertain times. But it remains one of their few elements of consistency. By the close of an extraordinary day, in which London was engulfed by electric storms and monsoonal downpours and yet The Oval remained bone-dry throughout, Ramprakash had moved serenely to 96 not out, four short of his fourth century of the season.Throughout his Test career, Ramprakash never quite perfected that elusive art of batting in a bubble, in which he could stick to his natural game and remain utterly oblivious to the chaos reigning all around him. But his experiences as an England player in the 1990s appear to have prepared him well for life as a Surrey player in the 2000s. As the autumn of his career approaches, and as Surrey’s situation becomes more desperate by the day, he no longer feels the need to rage against the dying of the light – these days he’ll take it if offered, but otherwise he’ll be quite happy to bat on regardless.Ramprakash’s effort was the cornerstone of a decent first-day total of 299 for 4, to which Scott Newman and the debutant Richard Clinton both made important contributions. But on a hugely lop-sided pitch, where even a miscued six is liable to dent a few bonnets on the Harleyford Road, Worcestershire did well to keep the run rate down to a manageable four runs an over. Two seasons ago, Alistair Brown plundered a similarly short boundary to score a double-century against Glamorgan in the C&G Trophy, and when he resumes on 17 not out in the morning, Worcestershire should be wary of offering up any long-hops from the Vauxhall End.One coming and three goings were the talking point of the morning session, as Surrey won the toss and chose to bat first. On the bowling front, Alex Tudor was fit and ready to resume his first-class career after a lengthy injury layoff, but that was tempered by the news that Brett Lee had been called up by Australia, and would not be available to help rescue Surrey’s season. Meanwhile, the batting was weakened by two notable absentees. Mark Butcher’s dodgy thigh ruled him out of contention, and possibly out of the reckoning for the third Test as well, while Adam Hollioake, of all people, found himself dropped as punishment for his thoughtless dismissal in that Northants debacle.Butcher’s misfortune opened the door for Clinton, the son of Grahame, whose circuitous route to The Oval has taken him via Essex and Loughborough University, as well as 2nd XI cricket for no fewer than six different counties. But it was Newman who made the early running, cracking three consecutive fours off Kabir Ali before edging Nadeem Malik low to Andrew Hall at first slip for 46, as Surrey rattled along to an opening stand of 90 – their highest since mid-May, which is in itself an indictment of their season.The Oval is currently midway through its much-needed facelift, and the builders at midwicket were grateful for their hard hats when Clinton clipped Malik for six early in his spell. He then followed up with a gorgeous straight-driven four, but for a while thereafter, miner’s helmets might have been more appropriate, as Clinton became entrenched on 48 for 31 consecutive deliveries.He eventually reached his fifty with an ugly miscue for four off Gareth Batty, but it was a cathartic moment, and suitably relieved, he cracked five more fours in quick succession. Batty, who has been mentioned in dispatches ahead of the spin-friendly Old Trafford Test, suffered an inauspicious start to his spell, as Ramprakash dumped his fourth ball into the building site for six, but he kept his discipline and was rewarded with a hand in the next wicket to fall, as Ramprakash sold Clinton a dummy, and Vikram Solanki’s accurate return from backward point beat a despairing dive by two feet.By now Ramprakash was flicking wristily through any available gap and dismissing the short ball with sledgehammer cuts, but once again, Surrey’s middle order fell short of solidity. Rikki Clarke’s bright and breezy 36 had included seven fours when when he lost concentration and whipped Andrew Hall to midwicket, where Batty swooped to his right to cling on to a firm two-handed chance, and the game’s other Batty, Jon, didn’t last long either. He had made only 8 when he drove loosely off the back foot at Kabir, and Graeme Hick plucked a sharp edge at second slip.The spectacular forks of lightning that lit up the sky over Vauxhall and Westminster drove the players from the field for 30 minutes in mid-afternoon, and later returned to force an early finish. But none of it could faze Ramprakash, who currently seems to be the one man who can save Surrey’s season.