Smith's gamble reaps dividends

South Africa 70 for 3 trail England 139 (Pollock 4-32) by 69 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball

Shaun Pollock claims one of four victims: this time, Andrew Flintoff, who fell for a duck as England folded © Getty Images

After being bruised by defeat in the first Test, a battling South Africa came out fighting on Boxing Day at Durban. After winning the toss and fielding, they never let up, blowing England away for 139 and reducing the deficit to 69 for the loss of three wickets by the close.England’s lowest in Tests this year – their previous worst was 226 against West Indies – vindicated Graeme Smith’s bold decision to put them in. His fast bowlers performed well, banging in short balls to exploit the pace of the pitch: Ashley Giles, in particular, was a handy punchbag for a battery of body blows before he became a third victim of injudicious hooking.But none of England’s batsmen played with much conviction and the killer blow came ten minutes before lunch when Nicky Boje dismissed Andrew Strauss – England’s hero at Port Elizabeth – for 25 with his fourth delivery (53 for 3). And after the break, South Africa carried on where they had left off – picking up the three quick wickets of Graham Thorpe, Andrew Flintoff and Michael Vaughan as they kept England on the ropes.Simon Jones and Matthew Hoggard put up some late resistance – their ninth-wicket partnership of 26 was England’s highest – but the bowlers applied blow after brutal, bloody blow until they finished England off.And while Smith, Herschelle Gibbs and Jacques Rudolph had all been sent back to the pavilion before the close, South Africa will be more than happy with an honest day’s work which was kick-started by Makhaya Ntini’s dismissal of Marcus Trescothick for 18. Ntini had initially struggled to find a probing line and it was only when he switched over the wicket to the left-hander Trescothick that he struck, finding the inside edge and AB de Villiers, in his first session as a Test keeper after replacing Thami Tsolekile, changed direction to hold a diving, one-handed catch to his right.

Steve Harmison celebrates as he overtakes Ian Botham’s 25-year-old record to become the leading English wicket-taker in a calendar year, with 64© Getty Images

The unconvincing Mark Butcher, nearly run out early on, then aimed to smack Dale Steyn through the covers off the back foot but only succeeded in dragging the ball into the ground and on to his off stump for 5. But if that gave South Africa the slight advantage, Strauss’s dismissal really put them in the driving seat. Strauss had been subdued yet patient, but, just after stroking two good fours, he failed to get over a straight ball from the left-arm spinner Boje, and Ntini took a good low catch at widish mid-off. That really started the rot.Shaun Pollock then struck twice in his first two overs after the break: an inswinger trapped Thorpe in front for 1, then Flintoff departed without scoring, as he mis-hooked a straight bouncer which lobbed to Hashim Amla at short leg (64 for 5). Ntini then waded in with the sucker punch – a straight, well-pitched one which trapped Vaughan leg-before for 18. At 80 for 6, England were reeling.Geraint Jones showed signs of fighting spirit, opening his account with a hooked six off Pollock, and he added several streaky edged boundaries before he perished attempting a hook too many off Ntini. A defiant Simon Jones thumped Pollock for two fours and a glorious straight six in five balls before he fell, dragging one on to his stumps. Pollock then bowled his fourth victim, Steve Harmison, to complete England’s batting misery.But England’s bowlers gained the immediate breakthrough they desperately required: Smith fell for 9 as South Africa stumbled to 17 for 1. Harmison and Matthew Hoggard responded to the working-over England had received with some fiery pace of their own. Harmison clattered Smith on the upper arm before he offered an outside edge to Flintoff at second slip.Harmison then set about tucking up Rudolph, while at the other end Hoggard was busy keeping the usually aggressive Gibbs quiet – he managed one four, a crashing cover-drive, but was mainly in defensive mode. Hoggard eventually got his man. On 15, Gibbs misjudged one which nipped back to hit off stump (48 for 2).Harmison made history with the last ball of the day: in removing Rudolph he brought up his 64th Test wicket of this calendar year, a record for an English bowler – Ian Botham had held the honour for 25 years. Rudolph fell steering a bouncer to Thorpe at short leg after a breezy 32, but there was no doubt as to which team had the upper hand on the first day. England will need to muster all their bowling acumen and strength on the second day against South Africa’s reinforced batting line-up.Jenny Thompson is assistant editor of Cricinfo.

Vaughan moves up to second spot in PwC ratings

Both Michael Vaughan and Herschelle Gibbs moved up one place in the latest PriceWaterhouseCoopers Test ratings after scoring hundreds at Edgbaston, but the biggest gainer was Graeme Smith. His 277 and 85 in the Test ensured that he moved up a whopping 25 places, to No. 19. Vaughan and Gibbs swapped places with Sachin Tendulkar – who dropped to third spot – and Rahul Dravid, who is now ranked 10th.Darren Lehmann’s century against Bangladesh in the Test at Cairns moved him up 11 places to No. 47, while Steve Waugh climbed two spots to No 13. Habibul Bashar improved his rating to 575 points (No. 36) – the highest ever by a Bangladesh batsman.

Rank Batsman Points
1 Brian Lara (WI) 887
2 Michael Vaughan (Eng) 858
3 Sachin Tendulkar (Ind) 843
4 Matthew Hayden (Aus) 821
5 Ricky Ponting (Aus) 816
6 Jacques Kallis (SA) 812
7 Adam Gilchrist (Aus) 799
8 Inzamam-ul-Haq (Pak) 793
9 Herschelle Gibbs (SA) 792
10 Rahul Dravid (Ind) 789

Among the bowlers, Stuart MacGill climbed an impressive nine places to No. 7 after his haul of ten wickets against Bangladesh. However, Glenn McGrath’s lacklustre performance – he finished with 1 for 79 – ensured that he dropped a place to third spot. It also allowed meant Shaun Pollock stayed top of the rankings, despite taking only two wickets at Edgbaston. Meanwhile, Darren Gough, who played his first Test in nearly two years, made a reappearance in the top 20, at No. 19.

Rank Bowler Points
1 Shaun Pollock (SA) 872
2 Muttiah Muralitharan (SL) 861
3 Glenn McGrath (Aus) 848
4 Harbhajan Singh (Ind) 746
5 Jason Gillespie (Aus) 740
6 Andrew Caddick (Eng) 698
7= Stuart MacGill (Aus) 691
Shoaib Akhtar (Pak) 691
9 Anil Kumble (Ind) 688
10 Makhaya Ntini (SA) 682

Click here for full PwC ratings

Captain's Log – the Gloucestershire skipper's weekly column

There were many bright moments in the 2001 season despite some disappointing outcomes. This week I am going to choose four players that made significant progress. My definition of progress is not based purely on statistics but, just as importantly, the contribution to the team ethic.Chris Taylor is the youngest of the four and started the season with a lot expected of him. After a slow start, Chris had a chance created by the absence of Ian Harvey on international duty and he grabbed it with both hands. John Bracewell and I were very worried about Chris and had decided to give him an extended run at number four with no one-day responsibilities.We were so elated with Chris’s response that it was impossible to leave him out of the one-day side but this did not affect him as he plundered a couple of big hundreds and entertained with some real sparkling performances. The key for 2002 is to keep challenging Chris as there is immense talent in there and we intend to get full value.James Averis’s opportunities came in abundance in 2001 but so did his workload. The much publicised absence of Mike Smith and Jon Lewis propelled James to our first choice new ball bowler. James was a regular in the successful one-day unit but was keen to have a more rounded game, performing consistently in both forms of cricket.James managed to retain some of the excellent form in the one-day game while he developed as a first-class bowler. These efforts made him the choice as player of the year and with quality support in 2002, I expect James to make even bigger strides.The next two players, unlike Chris and James who were both capped in 2001, have rather more experience but are still hell-bent on improving and taking their games forward. Both did so with such effect that I was not the only one impressed. Jeremy Snape and Martyn Ball both received England call ups and as I write they both have made impressive starts with Jeremy getting man of the match on debut. Martyn has been limited to one first-class game in India but came out of it with a lot of kudos.For us, Jeremy’s bowling was limited but his batting was destructive. Jeremy became one of the main reasons we were in the top three sides in the country for batting bonus points. Achieving his maiden hundred at Derby, he went from strength to strength and added a couple more. Doing all this at number six had a numbing effect on the opposition and very often we could take advantage of a demoralised outfit.Although Martyn’s contribution with the bat was up there with his best, I thought his bowling had the consistency of a quality performer. History suggests spin has not been our most potent force but Martyn emerged as one of the best performing spinners in the country. His allround efforts are magnificent and we expect the international experience has further enhanced his game which would leave him with a major role in 2002.Once again, there are reasons to look forward optimistically to next season.

Victoria Sporting go top with nine-wicket win

Prime Doleshwar came crashing down after four big wins, when Victoria Sporting Club handed them a nine-wicket defeat in the Dhaka Premier League.After deciding to bat first at the BKSP-3 ground, Doleshwar were bowled out for just 85 runs in 26 overs. Victoria’s Sri Lankan pace bowler Shalika Karunanayake and seamer Soumya Sarkar took three wickets each, while Sajedul Islam and captain Nasir Hossain picked up one each.Doleshwar were always going to be in trouble when Tillakaratne Sampath, Mominul Haque and Roshen Silva all failed in this game.Anamul Haque and Karunanayake then added 81 runs for the second wicket to take Victoria to an easy win, completed in 14.3 overs. Victoria join Doleshwar in the top of the table with four wins from six matches.Abahani however remain in tenth position, after suffering their fifth defeat. This time, Prime Bank Cricket Club crushed them by 120 runs at the Fatullah Cricket Stadium.Prime Bank batted first after winning the toss, and despite losing an early wicket, they began brightly. Saikat Ali (59) and Bhanuka Rajapaksa (69) added 82 for the second wicket, before Lahiru Thirimanne struck a breezy half-century.Abahani lost wickets regularly in their chase, never quite finding a rhythm. They missed the in-form Mosaddek Hossain in the middle-order. He has left for West Indies with the Bangladesh Under-19s squad, having been the joint highest-scorer in the league with 320 runs.Prime Bank captain Enamul Haque jnr picked up four wickets while offspinner Fariduddin Masud took three.There was a heavy defeat for Mohammedan Sporting Club too, who went down by 103 runs to Gazi Tank Cricketers. It was their third loss in a row, after having won the first three games.They inserted Gazi Tank at the Shaheed Chandu Stadium in Bogra, and had the early momentum. But Mahmudullah and Raqibul Hasan struck fifties to lift Gazi Tank from 95 for four. The pair added 94 runs for the fifth wicket, with Mahmudullah warming up nicely for the upcoming Test series with 68 off 78 balls. Raqibul was the top-scorer, making 75 off 65 balls with six fours and a couple of sixes.Ejaz Ahmed and Upul Tharanga kept Mohammedan in the hunt for a while. Opener Ejaz smashed three sixes in his 43-ball 42, but Tharanga saw wickets tumble at the other end. He made 56 off 72 balls, but by the time he was dismissed, Gazi Tank had the ascendancy.Ashar Zaidi, the 32-year-old left-arm spinner, took three wickets in seven overs while Mahmudullah picked up two.

Newcastle transfer news on Botman

Newcastle United are reportedly now leading the race to sign Sven Botman this summer.

The Lowdown: January failure

It was reported that the St. James’ Park faithful had made a bid for Botman in the January transfer window, before they signed Dan Burn from Brighton and Hove Albion instead.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/newcastle-news-4/” title=”Newcastle news!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

He did not end up leaving Lille despite interest also from Milan, and other clubs have now joined the race for his signature in the summer.

The Latest: Newcastle in pole

As per Football Insider, the North East club are now in ‘pole position’ to sign Botman for around £30m.

He has already agreed personal terms with them, and is ‘keen’ to play for them in the Premier League.

Despite also agreeing personal terms with Milan, the Tyneside outfit are now ‘confident’ that he will accept their contract offer.

The Verdict: No-brainer

If the Magpies have a chance of signing Botman this summer, then it is surely a no-brainer.

They have already seen the gems that they can unearth by dipping into the French market, having already signed Bruno Guimaraes from Lyon, and Botman is another player that is thought of very highly in Ligue 1, as per his agent Francesco Miniero, who has labelled him as a ‘golden boy’.

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Miniero also points out that Botman is ‘one of the strongest central defenders in the world’, emphasised by the 2.8 aerial duels won per game in the UEFA Champions League this season, among the best in that category for centre-backs.

It is crazy to think that the Netherlands international is still only 22 years of age, and so Botman could be a mainstay in Eddie Howe’s team for years to come.

In other news, find out which three positions NUFC will now ‘target’ this summer here!

Jadeja's double-century propels Saurashtra

Ravindra Jadeja’s double-century underpinned Saurashtra’s dominant batting performance against Jammu & Kashmir in Rajkot. Jadeja, who was unbeaten on 150 overnight, struck another 51 runs, while Snell Patel, who resumed on 31, ended up with 94 as Saurashtra racked up 624 for 7 before declaring their innings. Jammu & Kashmir openers Ahmed Bandy and Shubham Khajuria could not build on starts, while Pranav Gupta and Ian Dev Singh were sent back cheaply. The side finished on 103 for 4, with Parvez Rasool, their captain, unbeaten on 23. The left-arm-spinning Jadejas – Ravindra and Dharmendrasinh – combined to take all four wickets, the latter accounting for three of them.Chirag Gandhi’s unbeaten 91 gave Gujarat the first-innings lead against Kerala in Nadiad. Gujarat began the day on 60 for 2 in response to Kerala’s first-innings 208. With Gujarat at 164 for 6, either team could have taken the lead, but Gandhi ensured the hosts would be that team, striking 12 fours and a six in his 142-ball knock. He found support from Rujul Bhatt with whom he added 90 runs for the seventh wicket. Gandhi is in the middle of an unbroken last-wicket stand of 28 with Siddharth Desai, who is yet to contribute a run. MD Nidheesh and Jalaj Saxena took three wickets each for Kerala.Tajinder Singh’s maiden first-class century shored up Rajasthan to 423 in their first innings against Jharkhand at the Sawai Mansingh Stadium in Jaipur. Tajinder resumed on 66 in the company of the overnight centurion Amitkumar Gautam, who scored just four more before being dismissed. Tajinder finished with 134 with the help of 18 fours and a six before becoming the ninth man dismissed. Rajasthan were also aided by contributions of 35 from their captain Pankaj Singh at No. 10 and an unbeaten 18 from their No. 11 Khaleel Ahmed. Jharkhand lost their openers early to be reduced to 15 for 2 before Saurabh Tiwary (56*) and Virat Singh (28*) rescued them with an unbroken 82-run stand.

The Kumble way sets in

Munaf Patel, for the first time in more than a year, showed he could be quick and disciplined at the same time © AFP

In the third last over of the day, Munaf Patel dug in a short one to Misbah-ul-Haq, saw him pull fiercely towards short midwicket, watched Harbhajan Singh stretch his arms out wide, saw him grass the chance, and kicked the ground in anguish. Watching from mid-on, Anil Kumble turned heavenwards. On most days it might have been Kumble doing the kicking.Cricket teams take a bit of time adjusting to their new leader, finding their way before settling into a rhythm. India, especially with the Test and one-day leadership now split, might take a bit longer than the rest. But going by their start to the Test series, a day that they bossed for large parts, it would appear the Kumble work ethic has caught on well and early. India’s first day of the series was played out under Kumble’s giant shadow.On a flat pitch that didn’t offer much seam movement, India persevered. With typical Kumble-esque persistence the four-man attack made the most of their resources, stuck to the basics, utilised the early swing and induced errors. A part-timer, Sourav Ganguly, exceeded expectations and a possible weak link, Munaf, charged in with fire. There weren’t any magic balls, no banana-swingers that swung from leg to off, but just good old line and length. Cricketers love to harp on about the “right areas”. This was the day when they really found them.There were some symbolic passages too. Just like Kumble has experienced through his career, India’s bowlers struggled to extract lbw decisions from umpires. Appeal after appeal was met with a negative response with a few close shouts going Pakistan’s way. And just as Kumble has struggled to get rid of the opposition’s tail of late, the rest of the bowlers had a tough time dislodging them too.Munaf, for the first time in more than a year, showed he could be quick and disciplined at the same time. He burst on to the scene as an erratic fast bowler, tried to convert himself into an accurate medium-pacer and ended up as a confused bundle of nerves. Gettingthrough a day even seemed a bridge too far. This was a Munaf transformed: managing to consistently clock 135kph and generating movement off an unresponsive pitch (one that Ganguly later termed “only down, not up and down”). He bowled the most – 20.4 overs – and his only wicket, that of Shoaib Malik, was through the ball of the day.Zaheer Khan backed him up efficiently but it was Ganguly, maintaining a robotic length, that had most surprised. Rarely has he bowled 12 overs on the first day of a Test and probably never done so in such a metronomic fashion. He entered the Test with his spot under a bit of scrutiny, what with Yuvraj Singh making waves in the one-dayers, but blossomed in a department where, as he candidly confessed, “there is no pressure”.”There was a swing,” he said when asked if it was his best spell, “but I was happy I could hit the right areas. The conditions helped early on.” Was he, India’s most successful captain, impressed with Kumble’s first day at the office? “Fantastic,” he beamed, “he even gave me 12 overs.”Kumble, like he often has, ran the risk of being unnoticed – despite being the most successful bowler, he sent Ganguly for the post-match press conference. All his three wickets were with quick, straighter deliveries and he profited from a pitch where the ball died on the batsmen. When he castled Kamran Akmal his wicket-tally at the Feroz Shah Kotla went up to 50. The number may just get a marginal mention but India refused to forget the Kumble-way through the day.

'We never gave up' – Smith

Listen to Graeme Smith and Shaun Pollock at the press conference

Justifiably elated: ‘As a captain, to have guys in your team who want to takeresponsibility is a huge asset’ © Getty Images

Weighed down by his own batting woes and shocked by the manner of the123-run defeat, Graeme Smith had cut quite a disconsolate figure after thefirst Test at the Wanderers. Less than three weeks later though, the moodwas very different, after a five-wicket win that he called one of thehighlights of his career. Victory in Durban in the Boxing Day Test gaveSouth Africa a route back into the series, and at Newlands, on a surfacemore suited to the Indians, Smith’s side came back magnificently to scripta famous final-day triumph.”I think it’s a massive win in all of our careers, to come back from 1-0down in a three-Test series,” he said after the game. “I remember afterthe Wanderers [defeat] being asked how difficult it would be.Realistically we knew how difficult it would be. I think we just playedsuperb cricket. We’ve never given up, and shown character at key moments.To win in Durban like we did was obviously fantastic. But this win here atNewlands, considering the conditions and considering that they were 254for 3 at the end of day one, was incredible.”They had to do it the hard way, with unseasonal rain keeping the playersoff the pitch for more than three hours after Smith and Shaun Pollock hadgiven the team a rollicking start in the morning. “Obviously a little bitof panic starts to set in,” said Smith, when asked about the mood in thedressing room as the rain poured down. “You don’t know when it’s going tostop. The Black southeaster is always rare, and you don’t know if it’sgoing to stop or not. Polly and I had huge momentum going into that raindelay. We were definitely on top of the Indian team at that stage. Theywere panicking. Virender Sehwag was coming on. It was disappointing tocome off. But having got back on and finished off the game, we’re prettyrelaxed now [laughs].”The decision to move Pollock up to No.4 proved an inspired one, thoughSmith accepted that it had been laced with risk on a pitch where AnilKumble was expected to wreak havoc. “I phoned Polly last night and toldhim that I was thinking about moving him up to bat with me in themorning,” said Smith. “Between the new ball, which was difficult, and thereverse-swinging stage, there was a time where you could score prettyfreely. I think both teams did. This morning, it was important for us totake the initiative up front. Shaun’s the guy with all the experience andthe ability, and he’s a good thinker on the game. It was the right choiceand luckily it paid off. It was one of those decisions you live or dieby.”After Smith and Pollock departed, it was left to Jacques Kallis andAshwell Prince to seal the win, though Kallis exited just two runs beforethe stands erupted in joy. “There were one or two discussions that tookplace after I got out,” said Smith, when asked if he had been tempted topromote an attacking player like Mark Boucher or Herschelle Gibbs. “Ithink Ashwell’s becoming a serious pressure player. He’s a man stepping upon a lot of big occasions for us.”He proved it last year against Australia, and he’s proving it again now.His game’s really compact, and at that stage another partnership wouldhave got us home. You’ve got to rely on your guys to do the job. We’dtaken the one risk, and the guys did a superb job of taking us home.”The win was all the more satisfying considering that it came on a pitchthat Wasim Jaffer described as an “Indian” one after his opening-daycentury. “Those that say we can’t produce spinners’ wickets to developslow bowlers should have seen this one,” said Smith with a grin. “It wasdisappointing, but it was fantastic to win on it. It means we’ve learntfrom our trips to the subcontinent. Our ability to play spin, whicheveryone questions all the time, has definitely improved.”There were two factors in this game. One was the reverse swing, with thedry surface and some very skilful bowlers. And obviously, the spinnersplayed a huge part. Our ability to put India under pressure in theirsecond innings was the key. They didn’t score runs and we picked up fourwickets after lunch. That gave us the initiative. Still, chasing 211 on apitch like that is a huge achievement.”Smith wasn’t overly critical of India’s tactics on the final day, thoughhe did admit that one particular decision perplexed him. “We were sayingat the end of the game: what if Tendulkar had bowled 20 overs [he bowled3.1]? He was getting a huge amount of turn and has a great googly thatguys struggle to pick.”Kumble never posed the threat that he was expected to, and Smith said thathis batsmen deserved a lot of credit for that. “I think the key for me wasto get off strike as much as I could, and to keep mixing up whether I wentforward or back,” he said, talking of his approach on the final morning.”Any bowler that feels a bit of pressure doesn’t settle into a line andlength. And I also had to get rid of silly point [laughs].”

All round performance: ‘I don’t know how many more compliments we can givethe guy [Pollock] but he’s certainly a superb asset for us’ © Getty Images

In the final analysis though, the win was set up by some superb bowling onthe fourth day, with India’s batsmen retreating into a defensive shellfrom which they never emerged. “We knew that we really had to squeezeIndia after lunch,” said Smith. “I heard comments that we were a bitnegative with [Paul] Harris bowling into the rough. At that stage, we justwanted to make sure that India went nowhere. We knew that if we could getthe ball to reverse, we had the guys to make the ball work for us. Pauldid a superb job in partnership with Jacques [Kallis] initially and thenShaun [Pollock].”Shaun bowled best with the reverse-swinging ball in the first innings andhe did it again. You don’t get to 400 Test wickets if you don’t know whatyou’re doing. He’s the guy that’s stepped up the game for us beautifullythroughout the series. I don’t know how many more compliments we can givethe guy but he’s certainly a superb asset for us [smiles].Pollock was the man of the series, for his 187 runs and 13 wickets at aScrooge-like average of 16. After a couple of seasons of relativeunderachievement, he had an outstanding series against India, and was fullof praise for the manner in which the team had bounced back. “All the guyshave shown a lot of character, from the guys who walked in for theirdebuts, Morne Morkel and Harris, to the guys who were perceived to be outof form [Smith] that bounced back and got big runs,” he said. “We’ve shownwhat a fighting team we can be.”We’re not proud of where we’re rated in the world rankings at the moment.We’re working on trying to get up, and that was a motivating factor forus.”The last word has to go to Smith, who led his team magnificently when thechips were dwindling and there were calls from a few quarters for his headon a plate. “Senior players are always the ones who are watched,” he saidwith no trace of rancour in his voice. “Even when we lost Jacques [Kallis,to a back injury] in Durban, a number of guys stepped up at the time. Andin this game, our senior guys all contributed superbly.”And it’s not only what you see on the field. It’s what happens in thedressing room, what they say to the young guys, the experience they bring.That’s invaluable. At one point, Makhaya [Ntini] was asking me if he couldgo and bat next [laughs]. He backed himself as a senior player to go andfinish the game. As a captain, to have guys in your team who want to takeresponsibility is a huge asset.”How Rahul Dravid must long for the same.

Sehwag stays seventh despite Lahore innings

Virender Sehwag: another century against Pakistan, but still at No. 7 in the rankings © Getty Images

Virender Sehwag’s remarkable double-century against Pakistan at Lahore this week was not sufficient to lift him up from seventh position in the latest LG ICC Player Rankings. Ordinarily, an innings of 254 from 247 balls would have sent Sehwag surging up the list, but such was the torpid nature of the Gadaffi Stadium pitch that his efforts barely registered.In five days just eight wickets fell while 1089 runs were scored, even with men of the stature of Shoaib Akhtar and Danish Kaneria in the Pakistan attack. Five other batsmen scored centuries, including Sehwag’s opening partner and captain, Rahul Dravid, who climbed two places to joint-fourth with Australia’s Matthew Hayden.Inzamam-ul-Haq was a rare failure, making just 1, and has slipped down to sixth. But his middle-order colleagues Younis Khan and Mohammad Yousuf have both made gains after their scores of 199 and 173 respectively. Yousuf is ninth and Younis tenth, with career-best ratings for each of them.Further down the list, Shahid Afridi’s blitzkrieg batting on the second day has moved him up five places to joint 39th, while Kamran Akmal, whose 81-ball century was the fastest by a wicketkeeper in Test history, is up to 52nd spot. Both players have career-best hauls of rating points.There were five bowlers from among the world’s top 20 on show in Lahore and unsurprisingly, all of them lost rating points. Irfan Pathan has dropped out of the top ten, slipping two places to 12th position, but India are still represented in that top ten by Anil Kumble, down one spot to ninth place. Pakistan’s representatives are Shoaib Akhtar, unchanged in fourth, and Danish Kaneria, down one position to 14th.For the complete rankings click here

'Pathan is getting better with every game'

Sourav Ganguly, on the road to recovery from the fever that kept him off the field for the whole of the third day of the first Test, spoke to the media after India’s emphatic win at Dhaka.

Sourav Ganguly leads the Indian team off the field after a comfortable win at Dhaka© Getty Images

On how Bangladesh played
They played well in patches. I thought they bowled well in the first session of the second day. They picked up three wickets, and there were a few dropped chances. It’s early days in international cricket for them, so you have to give them time.On this Bangladesh team in comparison to the one he played against in their inaugural Test in 2000-01
This is a pretty young side. When I played them four years ago, they had a few experienced guys. Most of these boys need to be persisted with because there is talent and they will get better with the experience. Experience does matter in Test cricket.On how easy or difficult it was to motivate the team against weak opposition
We were pretty motivated. As I said, it is Test cricket after all, and we were in a tough situation at 60 for 3. I don’t think motivation is a factor. Every Test series is important. We’ve done very well in Test cricket in the past couple of years and we need to keep on winning. It’s no different here.On whether the reserves would get a chance in the next Test
We have a thought in mind about that. We have some young guys in this team and we will probably look to give them an opportunity in the next Test and also in the one-day series to come. We’ve not spoken about it because the Test just got over. But that’s definitely an option. Because you need to give everybody a go to find out how good they are.On missing out on a hundred
It’s pretty disappointing. It’s happened right throughout the year. I’ve got runs but I’ve not converted them into hundreds. It’s pretty disappointing when you are playing well [and not getting a century].On Irfan Pathan
He’s getting better with every game. He’s young, he’s just 20 and he’s got loads of cricket ahead of him. He has to shoulder the responsibility of Indian fast bowling for quite some time.On Zaheer Khan’s batting
I thought he batted pretty well. We were to declare at lunch but he wanted to get a Test hundred. I thought he played pretty well for a No. 11.

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