Saturday, 6 July 2013

NFL Blows Chance To Do Public Good

Mitch McConnell

I'm like most sports fans who like to keep sports and politics as far apart as possible.

Not always possible.

It's like Dave Zirin wrote in his book Game Over: How Politics Has Turned the Sports World Upside Down: "Whether we choose to acknowledge it or not, a politically charged atmosphere pervades all of professional sports."

So, you'll forgive me for mixing a little politics with football.

Plus, it's July.

This little story deals with how the NFL could have helped out informing the public about the Affordable Care Act, but went all scaredy-cat on us when it got a nasty letter from a couple of Senators.

Feel free to offer your cogent and incisive thoughts.

- Getty Images


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Hogan & Wallace secure Glamorgan win

Glamorgan 132-2 (17.4 overs) beat Warwickshire 126-8 (20 overs) by eight wickets

Mark Wallace hit an unbeaten 69 to guide Glamorgan to victory over Warwickshire and maintain their unbeaten start in the FLt20.

Warwickshire were restricted to 126-8 at Rugby, with Varun Chopra (30) top-scoring as Michael Hogan returned figures of 3-11 for the visitors.

Glamorgan looked comfortable with the bat despite losing Jim Allenby (24) and Chris Cooke (19) in their run chase.

Murray Goodwin (17no) hit the winning runs with a six off Laurie Evans.

Glamorgan, with three wins from three, move to the top of the Midlands, Wales & West Group while Warwickshire have now lost their opening three games.

Edward Bevan of BBC Radio Wales: "This was a wonderful performance by the Glamorgan bowlers. Michael Hogan was quite incredible, his figures of 3-11 from four overs reflect the excellence of his bowling.

"A quick opening stand of 33 between Allenby and Wallace set the tone for the chase, and Wallace's innings of 69 was a match-winner as they won by eight wickets with 14 balls to spare."

Match scorecard


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Lumb knock sets up Notts victory

Nottinghamshire 156-2 (15.3 overs) beat Durham 154-4 (20 overs) by eight wickets

Michael Lumb scored 96 off 52 balls to help Nottinghamshire to a comfortable eight-wicket FLt20 win at Durham.

The 33-year-old shared an opening partnership of 91 with Alex Hales (34) before Hales fell to Gareth Breese's first ball in the ninth over.

Lumb, who hit 14 fours and three sixes, was stumped off the bowling of Scott Borthwick, leaving James Taylor and David Hussey to see Notts home.

Earlier, Mark Stoneman (51) and Borthwick (44) guided Durham to 154-4.

Jake Ball (2-21) and Hussey (2-23) impressed with the ball for Notts, who registered their fourth victory to maintain their 100% start in the North Group.

Australian Hussey hit the winning runs, blasting a six off Ben Stokes, to wrap up victory with 27 balls remaining.

Match scorecard


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Thursday, 4 July 2013

The making of an England batting great

By Sam Sheringham BBC Sport When Alastair Cook's prowess as a choirboy won him a music scholarship to Bedford School, his brief was to sing rather than to bat.

But all that changed one summer's day in 1998 when Marylebone Cricket Club turned up for a match against the Bedford first XI one player short.

Fourteen-year-old Cook, already a promising club cricketer, was drafted in as an emergency replacement and proceeded to score a century.

The innings was the harbinger of a prodigious talent that saw him go on to shatter Bedford's batting records, establish himself in the Essex first team at the age of 18 and as an England opener at 21.

Alastair Cook 60 & 104 not out - scores on his Test debut v India in March 2006, aged 21 294 - highest Test score, against India at Edgbaston in August 2011 766 - cumulative runs in the 2010-11 Ashes series 61.96 - Test batting average in 32 matches since the start of the 2010-11 Ashes series, with 12 centuries 1,311 - number of runs in 11 Tests as captain, with seven centuries at an average of 69 Joint 16th in the all-time list of Test centurions with 25. India's Sachin Tendulkar leads the way with 51 Now, as he prepares to captain England in the Ashes against Australia, which start on Wednesday, it is fascinating to go back to Cook's school years - before the 7,524 Test runs, the 25 centuries and the countless accolades - to examine the evolution of a modern-day batting great.

During those prolific years at Bedford, the best seat in the house was reserved for Will Notley, Cook's partner at the top of the batting order.

Notley picks up the story from the aftermath of the MCC match, when the Cook was immediately promoted to the first XI, which meant competing against boys four years his senior.

"He was a lot smaller back then and a lot slighter," explains Notley. "He wasn't 6ft 2in like he is now and he got a lot of grief because he struggled to hit the ball off the square.

"But what he lacked in strength he made up for in temperament. He was quite unflappable and as a 14-year-old playing against 18-year-olds you have to have some pretty good concentration.

"He's always been good off the back foot, so he is at home cutting and pulling. All the 18-year-olds would try to bounce him out and he would just hook them for four."

One of Cook's greatest attributes is his ability to score heavily in sweltering conditions. Reputed to sweat less than any other member of the England team, five of his six highest Test scores have come in Brisbane, Kolkata, Sydney, Ahmedabad and Chittagong.

As Notley explains, Cook's ability to thrive in the heat was in evidence when they played together at a tournament in Barbados at the age of 15.

"Cooky batted well through the whole competition, scored a couple of hundreds and kept his concentration amazingly well in quite intense heat," says Notley.

Alastair Cook Cook unfurls his trademark sweep shot for Bedford School in a match at Stowe in 2002

"He puffed and panted like the rest of us, but he had a determination not to get out, just like he does now."

By the time Cook reached the sixth form, he was a member of the Essex Academy and being groomed for life in professional cricket.

Every morning, Bedford coach and former England batsman Derek Randall would get on the first train from Nottingham to run fitness sessions and bowling machines with his protege before breakfast.

Meanwhile, out in the middle, Cook - with Notley in his slipstream - was starting to go through the gears.

In the lower sixth, he scored more than 1,100 runs, including five consecutive hundreds, and was picked out in Wisden as "one to watch". The following summer, his tally of 1,287 included two double hundreds and broke a school record that had stood since the early 1980s.

Over the two years, Cook and Notley's average opening partnership was 126. Their finest hour came in the upper sixth against Gordonstoun - another independent school renowned for sporting achievement - when they batted for the full 50 overs to put on 333, a record opening stand in schoolboy cricket at the time.

Alastair Cook & Will Notley Cook (left) and Notley pose proudly in front of the scoreboard depicting their record opening stand

During the partnership, which saw Cook finish on 206 and Notley 111, Cook revealed a trait that has characterised many a great batsman - greed.

"Cook scored almost double the runs I got against Gordonstoun, but part of the reason was that he farmed the strike so well," recalls Notley.

"There was a period in the middle of the innings where he had five consecutive overs. I faced nothing in that period and eventually stopped talking to him between overs as a kind of friendly protest.

"We started talking between overs again once we went through 300 though, which also brought up my century."

Inevitably, there were times when Notley failed to stay the course and simply had to marvel at the blend of mental strength and technical skill that have served Cook so well in an England shirt.

"We could be three down for not many, chasing 280, and he would steer it through, scoring 150 to win us the game," he adds.

"He did it so often that we always knew he was going to go on, but to reach the level he has now, we couldn't predict that."

Away from the cricket field, Notley describes Cook as "one of the boys" who would enjoy a beer and "dossed around in economics lessons like the rest of us".

Alastair Cook and James Kettleborough Cook congratulates James Kettleborough on breaking his Bedford runs record

After leaving school with three A-levels, Cook was drafted straight into the Essex first team, while Notley went to university to read architecture.

The pair have remained close friends, occasionally meeting up after Cook's matches in London or at old boys' functions at the school.

In 2010, Cook even made a special trip to Bedford between Test matches to congratulate James Kettleborough as he eclipsed Cook's own school record. "Even though he had 4,500 Test runs at the time, I think he was secretly quite annoyed that it had been broken," says Notley.

As for Cook's former accomplice, he recently qualified as an architect and plays for Hornsey Cricket Club in north London at weekends.

Having long given up hope of following his friend into professional cricket, he still dines out on his schoolboy exploits with the England skipper.

"I think I outscored him 10 times and I certainly get a lot of pleasure from telling the lads that," he says. "Mind you, the way I've been batting this season, I think they are beginning to wonder if I made it all up."

Live radio commentary from Test Match Special (TMS) on the Ashes will be available on BBC Radio 4 LW and BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, the BBC Sport website and via the BBC Sport app and iPlayer radio app.


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Azharullah relishes English chance

Northants bowler Muhammad Azharullah says he is making up for lost time now that he is in the club's first team.

The 29-year-old has taken eight wickets in three YB40 matches, seven wickets in two County Championship games and 3-23 in the Steelbacks' Twenty20 opener.

He told BBC Radio Northampton: "I started playing cricket in Pakistan in 2006 and [had to take] three years off.

"I got married in Yorkshire and you have to wait [that long] to play first-class cricket here."

Azharullah added: "Northants is a wonderful club with wonderful people."

His form with the ball has helped to lessen the blow of losing Australian bowler Trent Copeland.

"Copeland was exceptional," said Azharullah, who was recommended to Northants by Ralph Middlebrook, father of spinner James Middlebrook.

"But I've been through it before, playing with test cricketers, so I just do what I do best. I forget who I'm coming for and who was playing before me."

Azharullah played for Multan Region, Multan Tigers, Quetta Bears and the Water and Power Development Authority in Pakistan prior to his move to England and appearances for the Northants Second XI.

"The Water and Power Development Authority is very good first-class team. We had the likes of Rana Naved and Junaid Khan," he said.

"It was where I made most of my progress. To stay in the fast bowling attack, I had to work hard.

"It's quite flat surfaces there, so if you don't have these skills, you don't do very well.

"When I came here, I played in Yorkshire for [Ralph Middlebrook's club] Pudsey Congs and I came and trialled with Northants in the winter.

"I had to push myself to get into the team but I'm really happy with the way the team is performing and the spirit in the team."


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Banned bowler in corruption pledge

4 July 2013 Last updated at 13:37 GMT Mervyn Westfield Mervyn Westfield served eight weeks in jail for taking a corrupt spot-bet payment Banned cricketer Mervyn Westfield, jailed for spot-fixing, has pledged to help fight corruption in the game.

The 25-year-old served eight weeks for taking a corrupt payment for a match in 2009, between Essex and Durham.

The Old Bailey last year heard the Essex bowler was paid £6,000 after agreeing to bowl an over to let Durham score a set number of runs.

Westfield said he now wants to educate young cricketers not to repeat his mistakes.

Westfield said: "I'm sorry for what I've done.

" I just want to put it right now and help identify the clear dangers that exist.

'Powerful tools'

"Cricket has been my life since I was six and it's all that I know, what I love and what I live for. I have missed playing so much.

''I hope people can forgive my actions and maybe even find it in themselves to understand how difficult I've found it to cope with every step of this affair.

"I will now do all I can to help the Professional Cricketers' Association (PCA) and others to educate cricketers, especially young ones, to ensure nobody else has to go through what I have."

He says he will be working with the PCA in creating tutorials, attending pre-season meetings and the annual mandatory Rookie Camp.

Westfield is banned from first-class cricket until 2017.

Jason Ratcliffe, PCA assistant chief executive, said, "[Westfield's] personal insight will now complement our existing anti-corruption tutorials and be one of the most powerful tools we have in the fight against corruption within cricket."


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Clarke stars as Australia dominate

Tour match, Worcester (day three of four):

Australia 396-4 dec & 344-5 v Worcestershire 284 & 64-1

Captain Michael Clarke smashed 124 from 98 balls as Australia dominated the penultimate day of their final Ashes warm-up game against Worcestershire.

The hosts added 38 to their overnight score before being bowled out for 284.

Leading by 112, the Aussies lost Chris Rogers (26) and Ed Cowan (34) before Clarke added 132 with Phillip Hughes (86) and 115 with Steven Smith (43).

Clarke declared on 344-5 to set Worcestershire an unlikely 457 to win, and they had reached 64-1 by the close.

England opener Nick Compton, loaned to Worcestershire for this game, was stumped for 26 off left-arm spinner Ashton Agar six overs before stumps were drawn.

July

10-14 1st Test, Trent Bridge (11:00 BST)

18-22 2nd Test, Lord's (11:00 BST)

August

1-5 3rd Test, Old Trafford (11:00 BST)

9-13 4th Test, Chester-le-Street (11:00 BST)

21-25 5th Test, The Oval (11:00 BST)

The Somerset right-hander was dropped for England's warm-up game at Essex, indicating that he will be left out of their squad for next week's first Ashes Test at Trent Bridge when it is named on Saturday.

He claimed on Wednesday, after scoring 79 in the first innings of this game, that he had not been given "a fair crack of the whip" by England after scoring two Test centuries in New Zealand in March, before he struggled in the return series against the Kiwis.

With Compton gone, his opening partner Matthew Pardoe was unbeaten on 34 at the close, with Moeen Ali on two.

Earlier, Clarke and Australia had taken advantage of a flat pitch and a gentle bowling attack to enjoy their final batting practice before the Test series begins, scoring at quicker than a run a ball.

Shane Watson will open at Trent Bridge but his first-innings century prompted the Aussies to offer their other batsmen some time in the middle and after openers Rogers and Cowan were both trapped lbw, Clarke and Hughes took control.

Clarke was dropped by Alexei Kervezee on 32 but the third-wicket pair blazed away, adding 132 in 113 balls as Hughes - who knows New Road well from spells as Worcestershire's overseas player - hit his former team-mates for seven fours and a six in an 11-ball spell, including four boundaries from one Gareth Andrew over.

Even with seven men on the boundary, the runs continued to flow until Smith was bowled by Chris Russell trying to paddle the ball over his shoulder.

Clarke eventually perished when he was caught at third man, and Smith holed out just before the declaration.


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