Donkers and Ellis make final Canterbury 14

Two newcomers, Brendon Donkers and Andrew Ellis have been named in the 14 from whom the Canterbury squad will be named for the first two State Championship matches.Donkers is a medium-pace bowler, who has represented New Zealand at indoor cricket as recently as this year’s World Cup in Wellington while Ellis is a fast-medium bowler.Missing from the team from last year is promising batsman Shanan Stewart.Canterbury’s opening match is against Otago at Carisbrook on November 29-December 2 and the second match is against Northern Districts from December 5-8 at Rangiora.Rain may have obliterated any chance Canterbury’s selectors, Craig Thiele (convener), Graeme Kench and Michael Sharpe had of assessing their top players, but they are confident they have selected the strongest squad available.The final twelve will be named on Tuesday at 5pm.The Canterbury Wizards Squad is:Gary Stead (captain), Nathan Astle, Shane Bond, Chris Cairns, Wade Cornelius, Brendon Donkers, Andrew Ellis, Chris Harris, Gareth Hopkins, Chris Martin, Craig McMillan, Michael Papps, Paul Wiseman, Warren Wisneski.

Boxing Day given another test with domestic Twenty20

Victoria have won the first three versions of Twenty20 in Australia © Getty Images
 

Boxing Day has always been an occasion to indulge in cricket, but this year there will be even more on offer with a domestic Twenty20 game expected to be added to the public holiday. Cricket Australia is planning a major review of the tournament in Australia as it tries to develop its own version of the Indian Premier League, but it has resisted the urge to tinker immediately and there are only minor changes to the 2008-09 scheduling, which includes the addition of a preliminary final to the fixture list.A revised draft of the season plan shows the KFC Twenty20 Big Bash will begin with a night match between Queensland and New South Wales at the Gabba on Boxing Day and another three games will be held in the same week as the MCG Test. Last season the tournament, which is preparing for its fourth summer in Australia, began on New Year’s Eve and the top two teams after the preliminary rounds went through to the decider. Victoria won the competition for the third year in a row.The period from Boxing Day to the final on January 24 will be blocked off for domestic Twenty20 fixtures, although appearances from Australia’s major players will be prevented by the staging of the Test and limited-overs matches involving South Africa. Twelve of the 17 inter-state contests will be televised on Fox Sports, with each team involved in five rounds before the two finals.Twenty-two of the 50-over FR Cup fixtures will be broadcast, starting with the season opener between Western Australia and New South Wales on October 15. The Pura Cup is due to begin on October 10 with matches between Queensland and Tasmania and the Warriors and the Blues.

'We thank you all for your support' says Anderson as website figures reach a new record

Somerset County Cricket Club have just been given the staggering news that their official website www.somerset.cricinfo.com received well over a million visits during the month of July.Over the months since it was first established in May 2001, the official Somerset website has enjoyed increasing popularity even through the winter, with its up-to-the-minute news, views and information from the county club, but this figure far exceeds what was expected when it was launched.Chief executive Peter Anderson told me: "We have been totally amazed but grateful for the interest shown in our website. We thank you all for your support, especially those who live outside the UK in mainland Europe, the USA and even further afield, and welcome to you all."The August 31st final will be a very special day for the club, the players and all of our supporters. We hope to report on a success and will have a detailed report for our loyal supporters outside the United Kingdom, but if we should lose then I promise that it won’t be a black-edged page!"Tom Faulkner, Head of UK Business Development for CricInfo, who host the site said: "These page impressions are absolutely fantastic. Well done to everybody."

Somerset looking for visually impaired players to form a county team

The England Blind cricket team will be spending two days at the County Ground next weekend preparing for their forthcoming overseas tour to India, and all visually impaired people in the region are invited to go along on Sunday September 15th to get a taste of the game for themselves.Earlier this season England player Tim Gutteridge came down to the ground and so impressed Andrew Moulding that the Somerset Cricket Development Officer is now keen to try to get a county side together.He told me: "This invitation is open to all visually impaired people in the B1 B2 and B3 categories and we are hoping for a good response. The game is played with a size three football which is filled with ball bearings. The bowling is underarm and the ball has to pitch twice before reaching the batsman."Mr Moulding continued: "This is a huge opportunity for us to expand our disabled cricket activity, and we hope we get enough interest from next Sunday to get a side together for Somerset."The cricket development officer is also hoping to arrange a cricket match next season between the England Blind team and Somerset CCC, with the game being played to blind cricket rules and the Somerset players having to wear special glasses to impair them visually.Anyone who would like to find out more about the visually impaired cricket day next weekend should contact Mr Moulding at the Centre of Excellence on 01823 352266.

Ian Blackwell rescues Cidermen with a magnificent unbeaten century

All rounder Ian Blackwell played Somerset back into the championship match against Yorkshire at Taunton today, when he hit a magnificent century.Coming into bat with the score on 26 for 4 in reply to the visitor’s total of 213, after an apprehensive start `Blackie’ set about the Yorkshire attack. He hit England paceman Matthew Hoggard for consecutive sixes over the Coal Orchard boundary, before bringing up his own century with an enormous six off the penultimate ball of the day over the Stragglers Bar.Ian Blackwell’s century came off exactly one hundred balls and contained 6×4’s and 11×4’s, and was greeted by a standing ovation from the large crowd.When play closed for the day Somerset had reached 186 for 6, just 27 runs behind Yorkshire with four wickets remaining.All of this was witnessed by England team boss Duncan Fletcher who can’t help but have been impressed by the all rounder’s batting performance.Earlier in the day Somerset had bowled out the County Champions for 213 with Andy Caddick taking 5 for 72, Matthew Bulbeck after a good opening spell ending with 2 for 90 and Simon Francis taking 2 for 37.After the close of play Somerset chief executive Peter Anderson told me: "It has been a very interesting days cricket, in which Somerset have bowled and fielded very well."The chief continued: "We had an extraordinary batting display by Ian Blackwell, all in front of Duncan Fletcher and the ECB coaches who were on the ground to discuss the merits of the Academy programme. Ian Blackwell has done himself a lot of good with his batting performance today."During the tea interval Steffan Jones was out on the field bowling to Kevin Shine. After the game the Welshman told me: "I have been out bowling on three different occasions today and it all went very well. I will certainly be playing on Sunday."

India enmeshed in Kensington jinx

India found themselves immediately enmeshed in Kensington Oval’s age-old jinx on the opening day of the third Test against the West Indies yesterday.On the ground where they have been beaten in six of their seven Tests and never won a match of any kind, they lost a wicket off the first ball of the match after they were sent in, had the trauma of Sachin Tendulkar’s dismissal for his second successive 0 of the series and were all out for 102 in 33.4 overs, broken into three parts by rain interruptions.By the close, called 19.3 overs before schedule as the day’s fourth shower swept in from the east, the West Indies had replied with 33 for the loss of Stuart Williams, whose edged drive off left-armer Zaheer Khan was neatly taken at third slip.With the use of the pitch over the next two days when it is usually at its most favourable for batting, they have a golden opportunity to press for the victory that would even the series, following their loss by 37 runs in the hard-fought second Test last week.Captain Saurav Ganguly was the only exception to India’s pathetic performance against four fast bowlers on a pitch faster and bouncier than those for the drawn first Test in Georgetown and for the second in Port-of-Spain that they won by 37 runs but far from intimidating.The collective malfunction was induced not so much by the conditions or by the bowling, as spirited as it was, but by history.Since their first tour of the Caribbean 49 years ago, Kensington has been to India what Waterloo was to Napoleon. Their key batsmen yesterday – Tendulkar, Ganguly, Rahul Dravid and V.V.S. Laxman – brought unhappy memories of their last Test at the prestigious venue when a seemingly simple winning target of 120 proved beyond them as they folded for 81.As captain, Ganguly spent just over two untroubled hours between the showers setting an example his partners had neither the inclination nor the technique to follow against four fast bowlers who could keep fresh between the weather breaks.He compiled 48 before he was last out to Merv Dillon’s sensational, tumbling catch in front of the disbelieving Three Ws Stand on the boundary’s edge at third man off a raised cut off the energetic Adam Sanford.Yet even he had a hand in the breakdown for he was culpable in the run out of Dravid for 17, just n From Page 47.when the two were easing the shock of Tendulkar’s rare failure.India made only one change to their winning 11 from Port-of-Spain, the slim right-hander Wasim Jaffer brought in for his third Test as the third opening partner for Shiv Sunder Das in the series.But the diminutive Das was the immediate victim, like Tendulkar later, for his second successive duck in the series. Tardy in defence, he was bowled middle-stump by Dillon’s on-target first delivery.It was a start that would have set off alarm bells in an Indian dressing room already suspicious of Kensington’s bogey. The position never got much better.In the seventh over, Jaffer, feet static, edged Dillon for reinstated wicket-keeper Ridley Jacobs, back where he belongs, to snare a sharp catch to his right.Three balls later, the 8 000 or so in the stands reacted as if Owen Arthur had just abolished all taxes as Tendulkar sparred at left-armer Pedro Collins’ second ball, angled across him, and Jacobs jubilantly claimed the deflection.Out fourth ball in his previous innings in the second Test, it was the first time India’s cricketing god had recorded successive 0s in his 94 Tests.Dravid began scratchily with an edge off Dillon that flew through vacant fourth on its way to the third man boundary.But he is India’s most solid batsman, Tendulkar not necessarily excluded, and he and the impressive Ganguly were steadying things when Ganguly pushed Cameron Cuffy to Shivnarine Chanderpaul’s left at cover.He initially summoned his partner for the run but then changed his call. Dravid skidded to a halt, spun around as quickly and nimbly as the quickest ZR but Chanderpaul’s return and Cuffy’s neat, low take before breaking the stumps were too swift.Umpire Billy Doctrove’s verdict on the television replay took ages but was inevitable.Ganguly found himself left with a tailend that begins with the little wicket-keeper Ajay Ratra at No.7 and the four bowlers when Cuffy, operating from the north after his opening burst from the south, produced a sharp breakback in the next over to breach Laxman’s loose drive and hit the off-stump.He was then 19 and was responsible for 29 of the 51 runs added before it was all over.Ratra gained a stay of execution through Hooper’s miss of a low chance at second slip off Cuffy and an hour-long rain stoppage. Ten minutes into the resumption, he predictably edged again and Jacobs gobbled the catch off Dillon.Sanford then restored some of the public’s vanishing faith in West Indian bowlers to bounce out batsmen – even if they were inadequate tailenders.Harbahajan Singh hooked into fine-leg’s lap in a replay of Port-of-Spain and Zaheer Khan stabbed a catch to short-leg as if shaking off a centipede.By this time, Ganguly realised he didn’t have long to do what he had to do and improvised two astonishing shots off successive balls from Dillon.Charging down the pitch, he slapped a four that whizzed to the extra-cover wall in front of the Kensington Stand and then hoisted the fast bowler on top of the Pickwick Pavilion’s roof.They were to be the last flickers of life in the dying innings.Dillon disposed of Srinath, lbw right after the late tea interval, and then hung on to his breathtaking catch off Ganguly to round off quite a day for himself – and for the team.Now it’s up to the batsmen to make the most of the effort.

South Africa take control of fifth Test in Jamaica

The South Africans had made it clear before this Test match, if anyone waswilling to hear. They want to win the fifth Test and take the series 3-0;there would be no foot taken off the pedal. On Thursday they proved true totheir word, and seized the final Test against the West Indies by the scruffof the neck. At close of play the West Indies were 214-9, well short of par.


Theregoes another one
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There was very little that did not go captain Shaun Pollock’s way apartfrom the toss, although Brian Lara (81) again wielded his magnificent batand helped lift the home side from total disaster to something approachingrespectability. Carl Hooper’s decision to bat first on a wicket that hasplayed well looked to be the correct one, but the West Indies batsmen failedto capitalise.Allan Donald (4-47), returning after the hamstring injury which kept himout of the fourth Test, looked back to his fiery best, while Pollock (4-24)was also outstanding.Things could not have got off to a worse start for the West Indies,their first wicket going down off the first ball of the match bowled byDonald. It was faced by debutant opening batsman Leon Garrick, called intothe side at the eleventh hour after his 174 not out against the SouthAfricans in a largely meaningless two-day warm-up game in Montego Bay at theweekend. The ball was just short of a length and rising on the diminutiveGarrick, the batsmen cutting it straight to Shaun Pollock in the gulley.Garrick’s preparations for the Test were hardly ideal, but he now knowsthe difference between a two-day knockabout and Test cricket. It was aninjudicious shot from a nervous batsman, who stood for several seconds atthe crease in horror and disbelief at the way he had thrown his wicket away.He joins a man who previously ran a club all of his own, for Testbatsmen dismissed for a duck on debut off the first ball of a Test match.The other is South Africa’s Jimmy Cook, dismissed by Kapil Dev of Indian inDurban in 1992-1993.By lunch, Shivnarine Chanderpaul (7) and Chris Gayle (25) had followed,and Marlon Samuels became Donald’s third victim when he edged to MarkBoucher in the first over after the interval. His departure brought captainCarl Hooper to the crease and for the next hour or so, he and Lara wrestedthe initiative slowly back towards the West Indies.The way it was handed back was a cameo of the series, and the culprit onthis occasion was the captain. Pollock set the trap with two men on theboundary behind square on the leg side, bowled the bouncer, Hooper (25)hooked and Gary Kirsten took the catch.Ridley Jacobs followed soon afterwards for a six-ball duck, but Dillonkept Lara company as the left-hander began to strike out. In eleven Testsagainst South Africa he has never reached 100 and again he fellfrustratingly short, spooning a catch to Jacques Kallis as he baled out of apull shot off Pollock. His 81 came in 228 minutes, off 156 balls andincluded 12 fours.Dillon (24) offered three chances, but after Boucher spurned two of themwith batsman on nought and two, he made it third time lucky with a goodcatch off a rising delivery from Donald which took the edge and flew high tohis right.

Sangakkara blasts 230 as Sri Lanka tighten grip

Sri Lanka, powered by a maiden double century from Kumar Sangakkara, mauled the highly over-rated four-man Pakistan pace attack to take an iron grip in the Asian Test Championship final at Gaddafi Stadium Thursday.Sangakkara, starting the day at 39 in the visitors 94 for one, struck a scintillating 230 – highest individual score by a Sri Lankan against Pakistan – as the tourists replied to home team’s modest 234 with 447 for five when curtains were drawn for the second day with four overs still to be bowled.Pakistan must be thanking the floodlights that came into operation 18 overs before the scheduled close. With the red new cherry in hand, Pakistan picked up Russel Arnold and Sangakkara in a space of four balls to restrict Sri Lankans from posting a much bigger lead.But the late double strike failed to take the honours away from Sangakkara inspired Sri Lanka who added an impressive 353 in 86 overs Thursday with 212 coming off boundaries.The left-handed Sangakkara, who reached his fourth career century in style by belting three boundaries in five balls off Shahid Afridi in the final over before lunch, reached his double century by flicking Mohammad Sami off his toes for his 27th boundary.His high quality and strokeful innings contained 32 boundaries and three sixes from 327 balls. He was dropped on 119 and 182 and then making a narrow escape at 215 when the edge flew between Younis Khan and Rashid Latif, was not the only one to toy with Pakistan’s mediocre attack.Skipper Sanath Jayasuriya, who began at 47, scored 88 in a stand of 203 while an elegant Mahela Jayawardena scored 68 in a third wicket partnership of 173 in as many minutes. Arnold joined in the fun and chipped in with a 52-ball 44 after being dropped by Younis Khan when 22. He hit six boundaries and added 71 runs in 72 minutes for the fourth wicket with Sangakkara.Jayasuriya’s innings spiced 14 boundaries from 159 balls while Jayawardena canned eight boundaries and a six in his 174-minute vigil at the crease. If Sangakkara, sixth wicket-keeper to score a double century, was in imperious form and in punishing mood, his cause was helped by poor, purposeless, and wayward bowling by the Pakistanis in overcast conditions.Pakistan pacers, relying on speed rather than accuracy and trademark swing bowling, bowled short and everywhere except stumps to be ruthlessly hooked, pulled and cut by Sri Lankan batsmen. Ironically, when the bowlers put the ball at the right length, they succeeded.Jayasuriya was caught at the wicket off Abdul Razzaq, Jayawardena was picked by Inzamam-ul-Haq at the first slip off Mohammad Sami, Sangakkara was smartly held by Younis Khan at first slip off Razzaq and Arnold’s furniture was disturbed by Shoaib Akhtar.

Muralitharan back in action as Sri Lanka are bowled out cheaply

The joy that swept through the Sri Lankan camp when it was announced Muttiah Muralitharan was fit to play was quickly dissipated as the England bowlers worked steadily through the batting order.When the morning rain eventually relented and Nasser Hussain had won his fourth toss in 23 attempts, the bowlers made up for lost time by hustling out the Sri Lankans for 162. The pitch, with its steep bounce, was tailor-made for Andrew Caddick, and the tall Somerset pace man did not spurn the opportunity it offered him. Despite Murali’s appearance in the attack before the close, the England openers survived until stumps.Play could not get under way until 1.40pm, and within nine overs of the start, Sri Lanka had lost two wickets. Matthew Hoggard had struggled to match the consistency of Caddick, tending to over-pitch – the preferable of the two possible errors. However, he found a beauty that Marvan Atapattu had to play, touching it to Alec Stewart behind the wicket.A scoreboard that read 23 for one read 23 for two just four balls later. Caddick had earlier rapped Sanath Jayasuriya a painful blow on the hand. Now he found the edge and Stewart poached the catch from in front of first slip.There was a crying need for the Sri Lankans to stiffen their resistance, and Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara duly did so. With Caddick resting and the other bowlers unable to maintain quite the same sustained hostility, the batsmen settled in to offer evidence of their attractive strokeplay.Jayawardene, in particular, looked in elegant form and scored the bulk of the runs in a productive third-wicket partnership with Sangakkara. They had added 53 runs and were promising more riches when Sangakkara played the most appalling shot at a wide ball from Andrew Flintoff. He did well to reach it (or not!) without any apparent foot movement to present Stewart with his 200th victim as a Test wicket-keeper.Before the hundred had been posted, Aravinda de Silva forced Hoggard off the back foot straight into the gully, to be followed to the pavilion 14 balls later by Jayawardene, who offered Flintoff a regulation catch at second slip off the deserving Caddick. The same pair combined on the stroke of tea to bring about the downfall of Russel Arnold so that the tourists took an uncomfortable break on 108 for six.Chaminda Vaas joined Hashan Tillakaratne after tea to play with a good deal of commonsense before two wickets fell in the space of four balls to set Sri Lanka back on their heels once again.There was a suspicion of an inside edge as Tillakaratne was given out lbw to Alex Tudor before Nuwan Zoysa hooked high to deep fine-leg where Hoggard waited patiently for the ball to descend into his hands.Vaas proved admirably adhesive and found an equally determined partner in Charitha Buddika. They were not able to increase the scoring rate significantly, but did slow the rate at which the bowlers were taking wickets. Their stubborn partnership came to an end when Vaas played on to another wide ball from Flintoff.Muralitharan faced one ball to which he played an extraordinary one-handed drive. But next over, as Buddika tried to protect him from the bowling, the final wicket was sacrificed. They tried to steal a single that was never there off the last ball as Buddika tried to keep the strike and Caddick and Tudor effected the inevitable run out that ended the innings.The England openers had seven overs to face, the fifth of which was bowled by Muralitharan. From the fifth ball, he found the outside edge of Michael Vaughan’s bat only to see Jayawardene fail to grasp the chance at slip. Vaughan went on to score his one thousandth Test run, as the England batsmen safely negotiated the brief period of play that concluded in brilliant sunshine.

Season of change for Titans and Cobras

South Africa’s first-class competition may not have the same aura as its English counterpart, but it is still regarded as one of the best breeding grounds for Test cricketers. Since the franchise system started in 2004-05, the quality of the contests has become stronger and the cricketers produced have shown a readiness for a bigger stage.Last summer, the tournament went down to the final weekend, and this time the level of competition is expected to be just as strong.

Titans

Captain Henry Davids
Coach Matthew MaynardWhat’s changed
Most noticeably, the captaincy. Martin van Jaarsveld, who had a torrid time on his return to the South African domestic scene, has been replaced by Henry Davids. Less obvious could be the change in mood. A double tragedy struck in the off season and its effects could linger over the camp. The Titans will have to move on without long-serving chief executive Elise Lombard, who died of a heart attack in August, and coach Matthew Maynard lost his son, Tom, in an accident in the UK. Usually one of the most festive franchises, the Titans may be tinged with sadness this season.How they fared last season
The Titans won the competition with five victories from ten fixtures. Their season did not begin as planned, though, with a loss in their opening match to the Knights at home. They recovered to win in Durban against the Dolphins the following week. The pattern continued with a big win over the Lions and an innings defeat to the Cobras. By mid-season, the Titans were barely in contention. They gained consistency after that and three more wins secured the title.Faf du Plessis earned his Test call-up due to his 599 runs from four matches while new captain Davids was their most consistent player, with 637 runs from nine matches at an average of 37.47. Rowan Richards was their highest wicket-taker – 26 at 20.07, including two five-wicket hauls.Who to watch
Mangaliso Mosehle is on wicketkeeper watch as South Africa continue their search for a permanent replacement for Mark Boucher. Spinner Paul Harris still has a point to prove after he was dropped from the national team. Farhaan Behardien is trying to secure a spot in it.

Cobras

Captain Justin Ontong
Coach Paul AdamsWhat’s changed
Everything. With Richard Pybus resigning the post under a cloud – he said he was being undermined by the chief executive Andre Odendaal – the Cobras have new management. Paul Adams will hope to bring his knowledge of the international game into his first venture as a franchise coach. Justin Kemp has handed the armband to Justin Ontong, who will head up a unit that is used to winning but only had one trophy to show for it last season.How they fared last season
Participation in the CLT20 meant that the Cobras’ domestic season started later than normal but they made an impact immediately with an eight-wicket win over the Warriors. Innings victories over the Titans and Lions set them up well before their first defeat came – a shock result at the hands of the Warriors. They rallied to beat the Knights comprehensively but three draws and a narrow loss to the Titans at home ended up proving decisive. They remained on top of the table until the final weekend when they had to beat the Lions but were held to a draw.Justin Ontong scored 658 runs at an average of 59.81 to finish as their leading run-scorer while Dane Vilas caught the national selectors’ attention, averaging 48 with his with 528. Johann Louw and Rory Kleinveldt were the chief destroyers with 33 and 32 wickets respectively.Who to watch
Monde Zondeki makes his return to professional cricket after injuries forced him to lose his contract for a significant period. Dane Piedt and Siya Simetu are two spinners who have registered on the radar.

Knights

Captain Morne van Wyk
Coach Sarel CilliersWhat’s changed
The Knights have been consistent in the engine room and the playing field for many seasons and will continue in that vein this summer. Morne van Wyk continues to lead a familiar squad of few superstars.How they fared last season
Promise faded into mid-table mediocrity as the Knights surged to three wins from their first four fixtures but then compiled a succession of draws to finish third. Victories over the Titans, Dolphins and Warriors were followed by two draws. Remarkably, they only lost once but it was a heavy defeat. An innings-and-54 run humiliation at the hands of the Cobras preceded two more draws but they ended the season on a high, with a win over the Warriors.van Wyk continued his evergreen form with 754 runs at an average of 44.35. He was closely followed by Reeza Hendricks, who featured in the South Africa A side after scoring 748 runs. Experience topped the bowling charts with Quinton Friend claiming 40 wickets and Johan van der Wath, 34.Knights’ Reeza Hendricks is pushing for national selection•Getty Images

Who to watch
Hendricks and Rilee Rossouw are both pushing for national selection. With runs aplenty between them in seasons past, they must feel they don’t need many more before the national selectors come calling.

Lions

Captain Alviro Petersen
Coach Geoffrey ToyanaWhat’s changed
The bowling attack. The Lions have headhunted two strike bowlers in paceman Hardus Viljoen and legspinner Imran Tahir to bolster their ranks. Dave Nosworthy’s resignation paved the way for Geoffrey Toyana to take over as coach. As a former first-class cricketer, Toyana knows the structures at the union well and is also South Africa’s first black African franchise coach.How they fared last season
Two draws and a loss in their first three matches summed up what would become the Lions’ biggest problem over the season: an inability to bowl teams out. They were able to take 20 wickets against the Warriors, who they beat to earn their first win of the season. A crushing innings-and-83-run loss to the Cobras was followed by two victories, over the Titans and Warriors but their season petered out with three draws.Run-scoring came in droves for the Lions. Alviro Petersen wrested back his international spot with 816 runs from seven matches at an average of 62.76 and was the competition’s top run-scorer. Neil McKenzie was second highest with 790 runs, and Steven Cook contributed 690 to give the Lions a healthy top order. Pumi Matshikwe’s 30 wickets got him picked for the South Africa A side and Eddie Leie’s 24 scalps saw him emerge as an exciting legspin prospect.Who to watch
Quinton de Kock is being talked up as the next big wicketkeeper-batsman and will be closely monitored. Chris Morris was part of the South African squad who competed in an unofficial T20 tri-series in Zimbabwe and Matshikwe has shown promising signs in the fast-bowling department.

Warriors

Captain Colin Ingram
Coach Piet BothaWhat’s changed
The loss of Lonwabo Tsotsobe is the biggest concern for the Warriors who have a talented but underperforming squad. Since Russell Domingo was poached for the national assistant coach job, they have struggled to reach the highs of the 2009-10 season when they won two trophies. Not much has changed in their personnel, but they will need a change in attitude if they hope for success this season.How they fared last season
With seven losses from ten matches, it’s a wonder the Warriors did not finish last on the table. They managed over 350 runs just once in the competition and conceded over 350 six times. With three defeats from their first three matches, reaching parity was always going to be tricky for them but they almost stood up to the challenge. Wins over the Dolphins and Cobras kept them above water. But three defeats, a weather-affected abandoned match and a fourth loss ended their season dismally.It was not all woe though – Simon Harmer’s 44 wickets made him the tournament’s highest wicket-taker. Jon-Jon Smuts was their leading run-scorer with 742 runs at an average of 43.64.Who to watch
The Smuts brothers, Kelly and Jon-Jon, are entertaining and resourceful cricketers who could attract the attention of people in important places. Makhaya Ntini is still playing, despite international retirement, and Ashwell Prince is the senior statesman who has not given up on playing for South Africa just yet.

Dolphins

Captain Daryn Smit
Coach Lance KlusenerWhat’s changed
Another franchise who have had a complete change at the top, the Dolphins are another new-look team. After Graham Ford’s departure to Sri Lanka mid-season, Klusener was appointed interim coach and the players enjoyed playing under him so much that he was given the job full time. Smit is a new, enthusiastic leader, and they have acquired Tsotsobe and Jonathan Vandiar, but lost Tahir to the Lions.How they fared last season
A forgettable season for the Dolphins, who won one match in 2012, beating the Warriors by 227 runs.Divan van Wyk scored 669 runs at just under 40 and Imraan Khan contributed 652 runs. Kyle Abbott and Robbie Frylinck both took 33 wickets to lead the bowler’s rankings.Who to watch
Khaya Zondo and Mthokozisi Shezi have made waves in the batting and bowling departments respectively, while Vaughn van Jaarsveld is always on the national selectors’ minds.

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