Kelly's allround show propels T and T

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Richard Kelly steers the ball to point during his knock of 93 © T&T Express

A see-saw battle on the fourth day of the Carib Beer Challenge Final between Trinidad and Tobago and Barbados ended with the hosts in firm control by the close of play at Guaracara Park. Barbados, having been set a victory target of 337 after dismissing T&T for 266 before tea, tottered to 110 for 4 by the close.As Rayad Emrit had done two days ago, allrounder Richard Kelly gave a sterling performance with both bat and ball, shepherding the T&T tail to good effect to take their lead over the 300-run mark with a tenacious 93. He then returned to rock Barbados’ second innings, dismissing both openers.The last-wicket partnership between Amit Jaggernauth and Kelly had frustrated their opponents in putting on 26 before Kelly was caught by Dwayne Smith off Pedro Collins, seven runs short of his maiden regional first class century. And when the pair teamed up again – this time at opposite bowling ends – they were very productive as well.Barbados got off to a flying start in pursuit of a daunting target, with their openers Dale Richards and Wayne Blackman taking 33 runs off Mervyn Dillon and Emrit. Richards was particularly severe on Dillon, scoring heavily off him square of the wicket, in the most productive session of the final. Richards got to his half century driving Jaggernauth to the long-off boundary.Jaggernauth had Blackman in all sorts of trouble with his `doosra’, but the first breakthrough came from Kelly, who trapped Richards leg-before with the score on 86. Blackman (25) followed soon after with the addition of just three runs, playing down the wrong line to a Kelly delivery and having his leg stump disturbed.Things got even more glum when Floyd Reifer, renowned for being adept at playing spin bowling, tried to knock down a straighter one from Jaggernauth first ball after the drinks break, only to be snapped up by a vigilant Lendl Simmons at silly point, to leave Barbados reeling at 97 for 3. Dwayne Smith’s brief stay at the crease ended with the score on 99, hitting straight to Brian Lara at mid-off.Resuming their overnight score of 137 for 5, Emrit kept Kelly company for almost an hour, before Collins had him caught behind by Patrick Browne for 28. Dwayne Bravo, pushed down the order due to a groin strain, departed without scoring, caught by Hinds off Smith.Kelly kept up the battle and reached his 50 with steady support from Dave Mohammed at the other end. When the runs dried up, the two kept their patience, to take T&T to 199 for 7 at lunch. With the score on 214, Mohammed (14) flashed at Bradshaw and was caught behind by Browne. The T&T innings came to an end when Kelly, on 93, looking to drive Collins for four, was snatched up with a brilliant diving effort by Smith, leaving Jaggernauth unbeaten on 13. Kelly struck 11 boudaries in his knock.Barbados will now need a very special batting display to overhaul T&T’s total today, fifth and final day of the contest. Ironically, the record at this venue for a successful fourth innings chase is 301 for the home team against their current opponents.

Patel's super six demolishes Warwickshire

Min Patel took six wickets as Kent destroyed Warwickshire – and replaced them at the top of the table. The destructive Patel imparted plenty of flight and turn with his off-spin to demolish Warwickshire’s middle order and consign them to a crushing defeat by an innings and 64 runs. It was their third defeat of the season.Nick Knight fell first, without adding to his overnight total of 26 and Warwickshire, who had resumed some 272 runs behind, were immediately in trouble. It was the early breakthrough that Kent were hoping for and from there Patel promptly ran through their middle order with little mercy to pick up 6 for 53.Russell Warren was his first victim, edging through to Niall O’Brien. Jonathan Trott was next, Patel trapping him lbw for 12. Jim Troughton (11) was next in line. Amjad Khan picked up Dougie Brown (12) from the other end and, at 124 for 7, Warwickshire were in the mire.When Patel bowled Alex Loudon just four runs later, the writing was on the wall: Loudon was Warwickshire’s topscorer with 37, but he too succumbed to Patel’s guile after holding firm for 83 balls. And Patel wasn’t finished there – he added Heath Streak, also bowled, for 4.The final pair – Tony Frost and Neil Carter – put on 18 for the last wicket, but it was little more than a token gesture and Khan wrapped up proceedings by bowling Carter for 15 as Warwickshire collapsed to 153 all out. It was a far-from-impressive display of batting from the home side, who played too many shots on the backfoot. But Kent – who learned earlier in the match that they were to be docked eight points for a poor pitch against Gloucestershire – have taken a big stride forward.

Smith and Gibbs make it South Africa's day

South Africa 231 for 2 (Smith 88, Gibbs 80) v New Zealand
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Graeme Smith on the attack en route to his 88© AFP

Graeme Smith (88) and Herschelle Gibbs (80) threatened to take the game away with a punishing 177-run first-wicket partnership, but two wickets on either side of tea and some disciplined bowling in the final session enabled New Zealand to stay in touch in the second Test at Auckland.Yet, the bowlers were guilty of throwing away a great chance in the morning. New Zealand included Chris Martin, the medium-pacer, for Paul Wiseman and sent South Africa in on a pitch that assisted seam movement. Martin, though, sprayed it all around and hardly made the batsmen play. Daryl Tuffey, normally a handful on a bowler-friendly wicket, lacked the spring in his stride and didn’t cause the batsmen too many alarms. In fact, out of the 85 balls bowled in the first hour, 31 were left alone by the batsmen and New Zealand’s frustration mounted.That caused them to err in length as well, and a barrage of short balls followed. Smith, however, took them on with readiness. His pulls were executed with complete control, most of them all along the ground, but he did summon the strength to unleash one over square leg.After the first drinks break Gibbs, who was circumspect to begin with, displayed his range. He carted Cairns for a huge six over midwicket in the 20th over. Three more fours followed and the run-rate, which was the only thing in New Zealand’s control, took on healthy proportions.After lunch, they switched to cruise mode. Smith gobbled up some generous offerings on leg stump as he tucked into them neatly. The errant line bowled to Smith was illustrated by the fact that he scored 70 out of 89 on the on side. With the inconsistent line that was bowled, singles were always on offer, and both rotated the strike admirably.In between these singles, there were some gorgeous shots that lit up Eden Park. Gibbs drove, punched, and pulled with complete economy of footwork. Smith, who stroked eight fours and a six, showed his brute force with his pull shots and smacked the half-volleys with equal force.

Herschelle Gibbs did his bit in another massive partnership with Graeme Smith© AFP

New Zealand had two great chances just before tea. A run-out opportunity to dismiss Smith – a direct hit would have had him short of the crease – and an uppish flash from Gibbs that went perilously close to Jacob Oram at point. Both were squandered. But Cairns gave them the breakthrough they desperately needed. A good-length ball seamed away after pitching, and beat the outside of Gibbs’s bat to clip the top of off stump (177 for 1). Gibbs smashed 13 fours and a six in his innings.Martin then trapped Smith lbw off the first ball after the tea break – though the ball appeared to have pitched just outside leg – and New Zealand were sneaking back into it (177 for 2).The rest of the day was about some disciplined bowling, which they could have dearly done with in the morning. Jacques Kallis began in imperious fashion, pulling and driving with élan, but the runs were gradually reduced to a trickle. Cairns and Styris plugged their ends and a number of edgy moments ensued. Only 54 were scored in the last session and Jacques Rudolph took an age to even get off the mark. He managed a painstaking 14 off 87 balls at the end.Oram nearly had Kallis (39 not out) in the 78th over with a snorter that fizzed off a good length and took the glove, but the ball fell in no-man’s land. The new ball also posed a few problems, but both Jacques managed to survive a few nervy moments.Yet, for all the pressure that New Zealand applied, South Africa still had a great day. The Smith-and-Gibbs show provided the thrills and Kallis, who will chase Bradman’s record of six hundreds in as many Tests tomorrow, was still unbeaten. A few wickets in the morning will tilt the scales. For that, New Zealand’s bowlers will need some discipline.

Redbacks want to send Chappell out on rare high

ADELAIDE, March 5 AAP – South Australia’s cricketers will aim to end coach Greg Chappell’s five seasons at the helm on a rare high note in the Pura Cup match against Tasmania starting here tomorrow.Chappell had a magnificent playing career as an Australian batsman and captain through the 1970s and 1980s, scoring 7,110 runs at an average of 53.86 in his 87 Test matches.But his stint in charge of the Redbacks, which he will retire from after the four-day match against the Tigers, has been far less productive.SA has finished in the bottom half of the Pura Cup table in each season in which Chappell has been in charge, and has not made a final of the one-day competition.This season, the Redbacks finished last in the ING Cup and were incapable of finishing higher than fourth in the Pura Cup heading into tomorrow’s match.But skipper Greg Blewett said today Chappell did not deserve to bear the brunt of the blame for the results, and players were keen to send him off with a victory against the Tigers.”We haven’t won anything over those five years and I don’t think that’s any reflection on (Chappell),” Blewett told reporters.”His enthusiasm has been excellent throughout the five years even though we have gone through some tough times.”We certainly owe it to (Chappell) and to ourselves, I suppose.”If we do finish off on a good note that would be fantastic, mainly for the guys, but also for (Chappell), it would be nice to send him off with a win.”Chappell said he had mixed emotions heading into his final match as coach.”There’s a little bit of sadness but a lot of excitement as well, it’s the end of one chapter and the start of another one,” he said.”It would be nice to finish on a high note if the boys can have a win here for our final game of the season.”He said he was not the best person to judge how successful he had been as a coach, but believed his impact on individual players was a more important measure than results.”It would have been nice to have won a title, and we went close to playing some one-day finals over that time, and I think we probably should have won a one-day title over that period, but that’s not the ultimate,” Chappell said.”It’s the ultimate in certain areas and certain ways, statistically that’s nice to do, but I think the overall development of the guys as players and as people is probably more important.”SA has made only one change to the side that was thrashed outright by the Tigers in Hobart last week, with all-rounder Mick Miller out with a foot injury, replaced by untried paceman Trent Kelly.Damien Wright and Adam Griffith return from injury into Tasmania’s 13-man squad.Squads:SA: Greg Blewett (captain), Ben Johnson, Mark Cleary, Graham Manou, Mark Cosgrove, Shane Deitz, Paul Rofe, David Fitzgerald, Shaun Tait, Mark Higgs, Brad Young, Trent Kelly. (12th man to be named).Tasmania: Jamie Cox (captain), Sean Clingeleffer, Michael Dighton, Michael Divenuto, Xavier Doherty, Andrew Downton, Adam Griffith, Adam Polkinghorne, Daniel Marsh, Scott Mason, Chris Bassano, Gerard Denton, Damien Wright. (12th and 13th men to be named)

Sri Lankan fast bowlers gain initiative in unofficial Test match

The second unofficial Test Match between Sri Lanka A and Pakistan A playedat NCC Grounds in Colombo today, like the first game in Dambulla, proved tobe a keenly contested affair and at the close of play the game remainedevenly balanced, with Sri Lanka claiming a marginal advantage.Pakistan, who looked well set on 102 for two at one stage, lost steadywickets throughout the afternoon, as the Sri Lankan fast bowlers started tofind their groove. The left-handed Toufiq Umer held the innings togetherwith a three-and-a-half hour 69. They were eventually bowled out for 229.Sri Lanka then survived a potentially dangerous eight over spell as theshadows started to stretch across this tree-lined ground. The Pakistaniopeners bowled with great fire and enthusiasm and managed to winkle outDammika Sudarshana, who was caught at third slip. Avishka Gunawardene,however, responded with typical disdain, smashing four boundaries before theclose.Sri Lanka, though delighted to have bowled out a talented Pakistan battingline-up through a combination of probing fast bowling and poor Pakistanirunning, will have been disappointed to have failed to fully exploit moistconditions during the morning session after winning the toss.They selected three fast bowlers – including Suresh Perera and IsharaAmarasinghe who did not play in Dambulla – so the decision to bowl first wasa fair one, even if Pakistan were unperturbed – they apparently wanted tobat.Unfortunately for Thilan Samaraweera, the captain, the openers, AkalankaGanegama and Ishara Amarasinghe, failed to find their radar and allowedPakistan to recover from the loss of an early wicket: Faisal Naweed in thefifth over, who was trapped leg-before wicket with a delivery from Ganegamathat looked gun barrel straight.Imran Farhat, a stocky left-hander, then played stylishly with Toufiq Umer,another left-hander, and the pair added 58 for the second wicket beforeIshara Amarasinghe, a strong-shouldered young prospect with genuine pace,trapped Farhat leg-before wicket for 27 in his first spell after theluncheon interval.Hasan Raza, who has been an up and coming player for an age, failed tofollow his hundred in the first match when he was caught behind off SureshPerera, who grew in confidence throughout the day. The Pakistan innings wasback in the balance at 102 for three.Qaiser Abbas and Toufiq Umer, who had by now completed a fine fifty, added afurther 35 runs, before Michael Vandort, a palm tree of a man, stretchedsmoothly down at second slip to catch Abbas for 23.The turning point of the innings came in the 56th over of the innings.Pakistan were 160 for 4 and looking strong with Touqir Umer on 69. He wasbatting with Misbah-ul-Haq, similar in style to his namesake Inzamann, butalso in his destructive running between the wickets. Within the space ofeight balls Umer and the wicket-keeper batsmen Humayan Farhat were back inthe pavilion having been run out.Pakistan’s tail had been opened and the Sri Lankan fast bowlers sensed someeasier pickings. Misbah-ul-Haq did his best to make up for the run outsthough with an entertaining 34, full of placid defensive strokes, delicatelate cuts, and lumbering clumps through mid on. Inzamann would have beenproud to share his name.After Yasir Arafat and ul-Haq had added 15 for the eight wicket Pakistanlost three wickets for 25, before Irfan Fazil (26) warmed up for his bowlingwith some entertaining blows at the death and added 17 for the final wicket.Perera, who bore the brunt of Fazil’s aggression, ended the innings whenTillakaratne Dilshan took his third catch of the innings behind the stumps.

Journalist provides fresh Fekir update, Liverpool fans go crazy

The story of Nabil Fekir and Liverpool has turned into somewhat of a transfer saga, with variations of the situation being reported all the time.

The latest has come from David Maddock of The Mirror, who has reported that the attacking midfielder has pleaded with Lyon to let him move to Anfield.

The publication states that club owner Jean Michel Aulas has agreed to open talks, but as it stands, Liverpool are not willing to stick to the initial deal of £53m.

[brid autoplay=”true” video=”262625″ player=”12034″ title=”England (2018) vs. England (Experienced) Football Manager Simulation”]

The Reds walked away from negotiations due to concerns over a previous knee injury, but Maddock suggests that the club could be persuaded to come to an agreement if the terms changed.

Liverpool fans have made it clear on social media numerous times that they want Fekir to join the club this summer.

Is this the best World Cup ever? Give us your thoughts here and win any World Cup shirt of your choice.

The Merseyside outfit are yet to replace Philippe Coutinho, who left to join Barcelona in January, and some supporters think that Fekir is the perfect fit.

On Twitter, plenty of fans reacted with joy when Maddock posted the update.

Pakistan U-19s outplay Sri Lanka U-19s in opener

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Mohammad Rameez took three wickets as Pakistan coasted to victory © Getty Images
 

After a solid performance by their batsmen, Pakistan Under-19s turned in a superb bowling display to beat Sri Lanka Under-19s by 83 runs in the first match of the pre-World Cup tri-series in Colombo.After Sri Lanka elected to field, there were some initial jitters for Pakistan as Ahmed Shehzad and Umair Mir fell in quick succession to leave their team at 31 for 2. Umar Amin, who anchored the innings with a sedate 68, was then involved in a run-a-ball 70-run stand with Umar Akmal, who did the bulk of the scoring in the partnership. Akmal carted eight boundaries in his 40-ball 41 before being bowled by medium-pacer Ishara Jayaratne.A patient 42 from Ali Asad was followed by aggressive contributions from Usman Salahuddin (41 off 40) and captain Imad Wasim (21 off 16) as Pakistan finished on a competitive 256 for 5. Left-arm medium-pacer Chathura Peiris was the pick of the Sri Lankan bowlers taking 3 for 43 in his ten overs.The hosts’ chase received an early jolt when Dilshan Munaweera was bowled by Adil Raza in the first over. Pakistan struck at regular intervals and a 20-run stand for the fourth wicket was the highest Sri Lanka managed for their first eight wickets. By the 22nd over, they were reduced to a hopeless 79 for 8. Peiris, coming in at No. 10, then slammed a 52-ball 62 but it was to no avail as Sri Lanka were bundled out for 173 in the 40th over. Mohammad Rameez was the most effective Pakistan bowler and had excellent returns of 10-1-31-3.The tournament, also featuring England, sees each side take on the others twice before the final on February 1. Pakistan face England in the next match on Thursday.

Wright bowls Tasmania to historic victory


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Damien Wright backed up his handy batting with 5 for 13 to skittle the Blues © Getty Images

Damien Wright and Ben Hilfenhaus bowled Tasmania to their first Pura Cup title after 25 years in the competition, obliterating New South Wales by 421 runs. Wright claimed 5 for 13 and Hilfenhaus 4 for 22 as Tasmania dismissed the Blues for 149 on a historic day at Hobart.After a slow fourth day when the Tigers ground New South Wales out of the match with determined batting, the speed of the visitors’ collapse was surprising. They crashed to 7 for 108 at lunch and added a quick 41 after the break while Wright wrapped up the tail.There was a mad rush to collect memorabilia as the Tigers enjoyed their moment, and a jubilant Michael Di Venuto, who had previously lost three finals with Tasmania, snared two stumps and the ball. Wright had ended the game with two lbw decisions within three balls, removing Matthew Nicholson and Doug Bollinger.Ben Rohrer’s resistance finished on 30 when he edged behind off Wright shortly after the break and any outside hopes of a fighting draw vanished. Fittingly it was Hilfenhaus, the competition’s leading wicket-taker this season, who set up the win with four of the seven dismissals in the dramatic morning session.Simon Katich looked in the best touch for the Blues, confidently striking a run-a-ball 34 before he pulled Hilfenhaus straight to Tim Paine at square leg. Hilfenhaus also removed Grant Lambert, who was promoted to open and played a couple of outstanding cover-drives on his way to 18.Ed Cowan and Dominic Thornely both failed to use their feet properly, playing on when they misjudged Hilfenhaus’ swing. Wright’s excellent match – his fifth of the season – continued when he bowled Daniel Smith with an offcutter and caught the edge when Nathan Hauritz tried a wild drive. The day began badly for the visitors when Phil Jaques was adjudged lbw to Adam Griffith for 5 from the third ball.The win was set up by Sean Clingeleffer and Luke Butterworth, whose day-four centuries put the Tigers in an unbeatable position. Butterworth earned the Man-of-the-Match honours for his innings of 66 and 106 and his 4 for 33.Dan Marsh, the captain, said the lower order’s determination under pressure was outstanding. “Seven, eight and nine – Clingeleffer, Butterworth and Wright – have had three of the best games you’d ever want to play,” Marsh said.Tasmania only received full admission to the then Sheffield Shield competition in 1982-83, after five seasons of part-time membership. Until this season they had played in three finals away from home but lost them all. Marsh said there was no reason why the win could not be the first of many.”We’ve got a great young group of cricketers and hopefully this is the start of things to come,” he said. “I think we’re building towards something really big and hopefully we can win a few more of these titles and also get a few players playing for Australia.”Katich said his Blues outfit had been outplayed but showed a lot of promise throughout the season. “We didn’t take our opportunities in this game,” he said. “We’ve got a lot of young guys in the team and hopefully they learned a lot. It’s obviously disappointing but it’s better to be here than not to be here.”

Scans clear Langer of serious injury

Justin Langer leaves the field after being hit by Makhaya Ntini © Getty Images

Justin Langer has undergone scans in hospital after being struck on the head by Makhaya Ntini and suffering concussion during his 100th Test, but has been cleared of serious injury. He was hit with the first ball of Australia’s innings on the second day, at Johannesburg, and was helped from the field appearing unsteady.Langer received two stitches to a cut behind his right ear when he returned to the dressing and was then taken to hospital. With a history of blows to the head it was no surprise that the cautious route was taken but the scans showed no major damage.Philip Pope, Cricket Australia’s media manager, said Langer’s participation in the rest of the Test will be decided overnight and there is no decision as to whether he will bat again on the second day if required.He was hit on his Test debut, against West Indies at Adelaide, and also at The Oval in 2001, shortly after reaching a century in one of his comeback games. Langer’s season has been blighted by injuries and he missed three Tests during the Australian summer. A cracked rib kept him out of the first two matches against West Indies before a hamstring strain ruled him out of the Boxing Day Test.

Moles: 'We can give Bangladesh or Zimbabwe a good run'

Andy Moles: ‘I have seen enough potential to believe that we would give Bangladesh or Zimbabwe a good run for their money’© Cricinfo

Around the environs of Scotland’s National Cricket Academy in Edinburgh, there is a genuine frisson of excitement and anticipation about the imminent challenge of the most important season in the country’s history, for those addicted to cork-and-willow matters.Until recent times, the sport in these parts used to function with a similar degree of professionalism and urgency to Dibley Parish Council, but a dramatic transformation has been implemented in the governing body. It’s there in the steely gaze of Craig Wright, the Saltires captain and marketing manager of Cricket Scotland, who has endured sufficient disappointments in his career to be immune to easy excuses from his compatriots, but perhaps most noticeably in the words, actions and body language of Andy Moles, the former Warwickshire player who recently became Scotland’s national coach.In a nutshell, the Englishman’s job is to steer the Scots to the 2007 World Cup in the West Indies. Failure is not an option, given that the leading five teams at this summer’s ICC Trophy qualifying competition will book their passage to the Caribbean, as well as the likelihood of being granted full ODI status, with all the benefits that would entail.Hence the titanium-hard message spelt out to Wright’s personnel during a bonding session in the Highlands at the start of April: namely that the batsmen have to improve their performance – “by 40%,” according to Moles – while the team as a whole must cease to specialise in inconsistency and toughen up their act ahead of their final National League campaign, as the prelude to tackling Oman, Canada, Papua New Guinea, Namibia and Holland in July. This might hardly sound the most daunting of assignments, but Moles, a staunch member of the Edgbaston collective which dominated the county circuit in the early 1990s, has no interest in finishing second or third. He wants outright victory, as another reminder to the ICC that they should really be sending Bangladesh to Scotland this summer, rather than despatching them into the lion’s den of a string of what may well turn out to be dispiriting drubbings at the hands of England and Australia.”Nobody owes us anything, but we will be offered opportunities by the ICC if we show the right commitment and application and produce results where they count,” says Moles. “The lads know that. They are an intelligent bunch and they appreciate that, too often, they have underachieved with the bat, got out in the twenties instead of progressing to a major score, while we have to be more streetwise in the matches where situations get tight.”Yet, even in the short time I have been in Scotland, I have seen enough potential to believe that we would give Bangladesh or Zimbabwe a good run for their money at the moment, and hopefully, if we continue to crank up the momentum, the ICC will invite us to be part of a triangular tournament with the Aussies and England in the future. But we can’t be starry-eyed about what< might happen. Instead, we have to be 100% focused and hard-nosed in our approach and recognise that a frontline batsman who is averaging 20 isn’t carrying his weight. Nor is a fielder who drops catches regularly, or a bowler who takes three or four overs to find his direction. We have sat down and discussed these issues and the boys are an honest bunch. So now we have to bring it all together.”This week, belatedly, Moles and his squad will escape from indoor nets in Edinburgh and Glasgow into the start of an intensive fixture schedule over the next six weeks. Today they lock horns with Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge, tomorrow they practise at Edgbaston, and then they have two tussles with Warwickshire, by which stage we should have an inkling of Moles’s impact on his charges, the majority of whom have participated in the Saltires’ jousts since their formation in 2003.One suspects the coach will be particularly interested in the form of Fraser Watts, Dougie Lockhart and Steve Knox, all of whom have been adept at providing cameos rather than matchwinning displays, but he will also have to check on a bowling line-up which looks worryingly long in the tooth, with Asim Butt, Paul Hoffmann and James Brinkley being 37, 35 and 31 respectively. On paper, at least, these individuals, operating in tandem with such mercurial characters as Ryan Watson, Colin Smith and Wright himself, should move quickly into their stride, prior to commencing hostilities with Durham at The Grange on May 1. If they don’t, Moles will not show the same loyalty as his predecessor, Tony Judd. Bluntly, he hasn’t the luxury of time at his disposal, en route to Ireland.”Don’t get me wrong, the Scots have definitely sharpened up their act in the last decade. When I used to play against them, these were matches you expected to dominate from beginning to end, and one of the failings of Scotland and the Minor Counties at that stage was that they were enjoying the experience, not seriously believing they could record a victory,” says Moles. “Since then, the lads have matured and there is a noticeably different attitude among the county sides nowadays. They recognise that they can’t just stroll into Edinburgh and casually assume they will notch up a hundred or take five wickets, and that is a measure of how the Scots have developed, whether in skittling Kenya and Canada on the road to winning the Intercontinental Cup last winter, or in beating the likes of Durham, Lancashire, Sussex and Somerset in the past two years.”But, in plain terms, the Saltires were still bottom of the table in 2003 and 2004, so I want us to improve on that position in 2005. We have the talent to be competitive against anyone in the National League, but we have to get all the parts working in unison. I’m confident we possess the ability to do just that. But let’s get out onto the grass …”These next few days will proffer tentative steps into a fresh era. Yet ultimately, Moles doesn’t strike this observer as being imbued with limitless patience. He is rightly demanding a new philosophy from his men and those disinclined to eat, breathe and sleep cricket for the next six months should start organising their summer barbecues now.