Steven Finn and Jonathan Trott help England draw first Test with New Zealand

Finn and Trott help save first Test as England bat their way to a draw in Dunedin

By
Paul Newman

PUBLISHED:

03:51 GMT, 10 March 2013

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UPDATED:

03:51 GMT, 10 March 2013

Steven Finn took a big stride down this lifeless Dunedin wicket ball after ball to repel New Zealand and rescue England from first Test embarrassment today in one of the great displays of nightwatchman defiance.

Not since Alex Tudor made an unbeaten 99 in England’s victory charge against New Zealand in 1999 at Edgbaston has a bowler doing a batsman’s job for England made such an impact as a nightwatchman.

It seemed an excessively cautious act by England to send Finn in ahead of Jonathan Trott when Alastair Cook was out with just over two overs left on the fourth day but far from just seeing his team through to the close the big fast bowler went on and on and on today.

Unlikely hero: Nightwatchman Steven Finn hit 50 as England drew the first Test

Unlikely hero: Nightwatchman Steven Finn hit 50 as England drew the first Test

Finn outlasted Nick Compton, Trott and Kevin Pietersen to score his first half-century in first-class cricket and go a long way towards earning England a draw that will feel like a great escape after they were humiliated for an abject 167 in their first innings.

For whatever inexplicable reason England have again been slow starters in an overseas series but have got away with their first innings negligence here and will feel that they cannot bat as badly again at either Wellington or Auckland.

They owe much of that to Finn. If the man preferred to Jimmy Anderson as nightwatchman got out early on the fifth day it is probable that England would have been on the end of one of the biggest upsets in recent Test history.

As it was they were made to battle all the way by a New Zealand side who pushed hard for what would have been one of their greatest modern wins, having England421 for six, a lead of 128, when both Brendon McCullum decided that enough was enough at the start of the last hour.

Such had been the quality of the start of England’s second innings, Compton and Cook putting on 231 for the first wicket, that England knew they just had to bat sensibly on what was effect a fourth day pitch to survive.

But Compton, who played what may turn out to be a career defining innings to record his maiden Test century on Saturday, could add only 15 to his overnight 102 before he was trapped lbw by the impressive and ever persevering Neil Wagner to give New Zealand hope.

That brought in Trott who had the rare experience of outscoring his partner as he moved smoothly along towards a fluent half-century, the only surprise coming when he was athletically caught by Wagner off his own bowling.

Kevin Pietersen, still looking rusty after his extended break from first-class cricket, arrived on a king pair but eased his first ball through midwicket for two. It could have been the cue to calm Pietersen down but he never looked comfortable before inside edging his new nemesis Wagner through to BJ Watling and departed for 12. England can only hope he is more fluent is the second Test which begins on Thursday.

When England had moved on to 382 for four at tea, a lead of 89, that seemed all but safe but the trouble was that they had scored too slowly to be out of New Zealand’s reach, only 53 runs coming in the middle session.

Certainly when Finn’s long vigil was over when he was trapped attempting to sweep the left-arm spinner Bruce Martin, after facing 203 balls for his 56, there was the hint of a twitch for England. When Joe Root was then run out without scoring the wobble was very much on.

But the bottom line was that this was a lifeless University Oval pitch, which made England’s first innings capitulation all the more inexplicable, and Ian Bell and Matt Prior were able to negotiate the remaining overs for England without alarm.

New Zealand will be able to hold their heads up high after this match. They went into the series seemingly in turmoil internally and with very few players of genuine Test-class. Yet in Neil Wagner they seem to have found a left-arm seamer with considerable enthusiasm and no little pace and in Hamish Rutherford they have found an opener who has started off in the best manner possible.

It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that England, under-prepared after just one first-class warm-up match, were complacent here, even if it was sub-consciously, but they now know they are in a proper series.

The second Test follows in Wellington on Thursday and , after this experience, they will be backing themselves to do what they did in India and come back from a rotten first Test to win the series.

Ravichandran Ashwin frustrates England as they close in on victory

Day four analysis: Ashwin makes England wait as Cook and co close on emphatic win

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UPDATED:

12:23 GMT, 8 December 2012

Ravichandran Ashwin's one-man show of defiance with the bat may have frustratingly held up England's victory charge but sometime tomorrow morning Alastair Cook's side will establish a 2-1 lead in this series.

That prospect would have appeared beyond the realms of fantasy when Andrew Strauss sat in a stark back room at Galle in late March following England's fourth consecutive Test defeat.

The press conference in question was the first time Strauss' position as England captain had been publicly questioned. It came after yet another loss in Asian conditions following the 3-0 whitewash against Pakistan in the UAE and it was a spinner, Sri Lanka's Rangana Herath, who again had been England's chief tormentor.

Dominate display: Ravichandran Ashwin was a key man with the bat for India

Dominate display: Ravichandran Ashwin was a key man with the bat for India

The team's ability to play spin, or lack of it, has been the theme of the year away from home. Although the subsequent victory in Colombo saw England draw that series in Sri Lanka 1-1, their demons against spin bowling reappeared with a vengeance when they lost the first Test of this series by nine wickets in Ahmedabad.

/12/08/article-2244987-15EEBEB5000005DC-218_306x423.jpg” width=”306″ height=”423″ alt=”In control: Alastair Cook's team look set to take a 2-1 lead” class=”blkBorder” />

In control: Alastair Cook's team look set to take a 2-1 lead

If the questions about spin had been like a broken record to all connected with English cricket then what has occurred in these last two, glorious Tests must be akin to discovering a lost orchestral masterpiece.

The victory in Mumbai, only England's second in India in 27 years, was good. This, though, at Eden Gardens promises to be even better.

At lunch yesterday, with Virender Sehwag poised on 49 and India just 121 runs behind with ten second-innings wickets in hand, the momentum of a match which England had dominated for three days was threatening to swing back in the home side's favour.

Just 79 devastating minutes after the interval and the door which England had allowed India to push ajar had been ruthlessly slam shut.

Six wickets fell in that period, kickstarted by Graeme Swann bowling Sehwag with the first ball after lunch. They looked like completing the job after tea, knocking over Virat Kohli, Zaheer Khan and Ishant Sharma, before an inspired Ashwin took matters into his own hands.

Spin king: Graeme Swann had a good session after lunch

Spin king: Graeme Swann had a good session after lunch

No wonder the spinner is fighting hard. India have not lost at this ground since 1999 but his defiance will surely be in vain as England look to move ever closer to their first series victory in India since 1984/85.

Hopefully by lunch tomorrow, all that stands between's Cook's men and a place in history will be avoiding defeat in the final Test in Nagpur. They have proved they are undoubtedly the better side over these last two Tests.

Now they have to finish the job in the morning.

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Roy Hodgson plans England future

Roy has big plans for Smalling as Hodgson plots England's future

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UPDATED:

22:30 GMT, 15 November 2012

Roy Hodgson bid farewell to his England players and will spend the next three months toying with names, combinations and tactical ploys while praying everyone stays fit and in form.

It is the lot of the international manager, all the more so when your pool of elite talent is a little on the shallow side and you’ve already dropped four points in qualification.

Hodgson cannot dare to think he might fail to qualify for the World Cup finals in Brazil in two years’ time and a qualifier against Group H leaders Montenegro in March already looms large.

Ton up: Roy Hodgson with new England centurion Steven Gerrard

Ton up: Roy Hodgson with new England centurion Steven Gerrard

Last year, when England visited the tiny Balkan republic for a Euro 2012 qualifier they managed just a draw after Wayne Rooney was sent off.

A similar outcome will be a serious blow to the current campaign but, after six months in charge, Hodgson reacted with defiance to a 4-2 defeat in Sweden.

‘I’m in a much better position when it comes to assessing players and knowing what I can get out of an England team than I was when I came into the job and straight off to the Euros,’ he said.

‘That was quite a conservative group we took there. If anything, we have become a lot less conservative and I think the players have responded very positively.’

Hodgson has called up 48 different players since taking control in May and has capped all but four.

One to watch: Chris Smalling is highly rated by England boss Hodgson

One to watch: Chris Smalling is highly rated by England boss Hodgson

Of six debutants in Stockholm, he singled out Leon Osman for praise and name-checked Chris Smalling, one of the players he has not been able to select because of injury but who returned for Manchester United last week.

‘There’s a lot of top-class talent coming back,’ said Hodgson. ‘There’s a boy at Manchester United called Smalling, who I’ve always thought is going to be a top-class centre half.’

The mere mention of Smalling, who Hodgson signed from non-League when he was Fulham boss and sold to Manchester United two years later, hints at concerns about central defence.

Smalling is only 22 and has played fewer than 50 games in the Barclays Premier League but the England manager has faith in youngsters, such as 17-year-old Raheem Sterling, who has been described by Steven Gerrard as a ‘phenomenal talent’.

Starlet: Raheem Sterling impressed on his England debut against Swansea

Starlet: Raheem Sterling impressed on his England debut against Swansea

Hodgson added: ‘In the past we seem to have been reliant on a group of players who had to play at all times and there’s not been a lot of support. Now there’s more competition and more help for the Gerrards and Rooneys.’

Rooney missed the Sweden game with an injury but Zlatan Ibrahimovic’s heroics prompted questions of how to coax more from England’s talisman.

‘We know the ability he has,’ said Hodgson. ‘But if he doesn’t have a good game a lot of questions are asked of him. That’s the responsibility he bears. Steven Gerrard has the same responsibility.’

Hodgson will select his next squad for a friendly against Brazil at Wembley in February before qualifiers against San Marino and Montenegro, both away.

He has ruled out the idea of playing Sterling and Wilfried Zaha against San Marino in order to pin their futures to England.

Sterling was born in Jamaica and Crystal Palace’s Zaha, 20, was born in the Ivory Coast. Both made their England debut on Wednesday but can still change their minds about their allegiance because the game was a non-competitive friendly.

Frankie Dettori ends association with Godolphin

Dettori: It's over, Dubai! Jockey quits Godolphin after calculated act of defiance on Coolmore horse

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UPDATED:

21:37 GMT, 21 October 2012

Frankie Dettori appears destined for a
freelance career after ending his 18-year association with
Dubai-based Godolphin.

The position of Britain's best known Flat jockey
had looked in serious doubt since he accepted the Prix De L'Arc de
Triomphe ride on Aidan O'Brien's Camelot earlier this month.

Riding a
colt owned by the Coolmore Stud – fierce commercial rivals to Godolphin
and its founder Sheik Mohammed – appeared a calculated act of defiance
which placed the 41-year-old on an inevitable path to Sunday's
conclusion.

Royal Blue: Frankie Dettori will end his association with Godolpin after 18 years

Royal Blue: Frankie Dettori will end his association with Godolpin after 18 years

Dettori had lost his No 1 role at Godolphin and, at times,
looked a humiliated figure as opportunities were handed increasingly to
rising 21-year-old French rider Mickael Barzalona, who rode Godolphin's
2012 Dubai World Cup winner Monterosso and St Leger hero Encke.

There
were rumours Dettori was about to quit before the Derby in June,
and on Sunday he said: 'Godolphin has been a major part of everything I
have achieved in racing and I have loved every minute of it.

'I feel the
time has come for a change. My position in the stable has changed a
little bit and I need a new challenge.'

Godolphin racing manager Simon
Crisford said he hoped Dettori would still ride for the stable, but an
era has ended.

On his way: Dettori feels put out by the favouring of his French-born Godolphin team-mate

On his way: Dettori feels put out by the favouring of his French-born Godolphin team-mate

FRANKIE'S FILE

Rides: 3,422
Wins: 943
Group One victories: 110 (262 victories at Listed level or higher)
Strike rate: 28 per cent
Ridden for Godolphin at 65 courses in 14 different countries, winning at 55 of them.

Rode Godolphin’s first Classic winner in 1994 Oaks on Balanchine.

Landed the Dubai World Cup Three times: Dubai Millennium (2000), Moon Ballad (2003) & Electrocutionist (206)

Won nine British Classics

Other best Horses ridden: Daylami (1998 Eclipse, 1999 Breeders’ Cup Turf & King George), Marienbard (2002 Arc), Singspiel (1997 Coronation Cup & International Stakes), Sakhee (2001 Arc & International Stakes), Swain (1996 Coronation Cup, 1998 King George)

Dettori's last mounts in the Godolphin blue may prove to
be Artigiano at the Breeders' Cup and Cavalryman in the Melbourne Cup
next month.

Suggestions a big job may be in the offing from racing's
growing number of Qatari owners were countered by a strong suggestion
Jamie Spencer is poised to land a major role with Shiek Fahad Al Thani
and his family.

Godolphin’s racing manager, Crisford, added: 'We have had a tremendous association with Frankie over many years.

'However, Frankie is looking for a fresh challenge and we felt that the retainer was not really working so this is the best way forward.

'We have had many great days together and we look forward to working with Frankie in the future and hopefully enjoying more success together.'

Speculation that breaking point had been reached was fired when Dettori accepted the ride on Camelot, the colt owned by Coolmore Stud, in the Prix de L’ Arc de Triomphe on October 7.

The Irish stud and Sheik Mohammed, who pays Dettori a sizeable retainer, are the two giants of the European racing industry and fierce commercial rivals.

Switch: Dettori rode Camelot for Aidan O'Brien in the Arc

Switch: Dettori rode Camelot for Aidan O'Brien in the Arc

Dettori had not ridden for Coolmore
since winning the 2005 St Leger on the O’ Brien-trained Scorpion,
after which he was forced to issue a public apology for his lack of
loyalty to Godolphin.

Barzalona,
on board Encke when the colt provided Godolphin with their one British
Classic winner this season in the St Leger, also rode Godolphin’s most
prestigious winner of the year when partnering Monterosso in the Dubai
World Cup in March.

That
loss of Dettori’s No 1 status, in particular Godolphin’s newest trainer
Mahmood Al Zarooni seeming to favour using Barzalona, was in effect a
public humiliation for Dettori and the Camelot taking ride appeared a
calculated act of defiance.

Both Dettori and Godolphin are expected to say that they will still work together but those situations look likely to be infrequent at best.

The 41-year-old Italian has enjoying massive success with Godolphin.

He was on board their first Classic winner when Balanchine won the 1994 Oaks at Epsom.

In all he has ridden in 3,442 races for them in 14 different countries, won 943 races with 110 at Group One level.

Although he never won the Derby for the Sheik Mohammed, the ruler of Dubai he affectionately calls The Boss, Dettori landed nine British Classics for the stable.

Favoured: Mickael Barzalona will enjoy the pick of Godolphin's runners

Favoured: Mickael Barzalona will enjoy the pick of Godolphin's runners

The best horse he rode for Godolphin
was the ill-fated Dubai Millennium, who became the first of his three
Dubai World Cup winners for the team in 2000.

Other
top Godolphin horses he rode included Arc winners Sakhee (2000) and
Marienbard (2001), King George winners Swain (1998) and Daylami (1999)
plus Breeder’s Cup Turf hero Fantastic Light (1991).

Dettori finished last on Godolphin’s Colour Vision in the Qipco British Champions Long Distance Cup at Ascot on Saturday.

That horse provided what might be his last group one winner for Godolphin when landing the Ascot Gold Cup in June.

A
freelance career now looks to be the future for Dettori, who finished
second on Godolphin's Retrieved in the Gran Premio del Jocky Club
Italiano on Sunday.

There
will also be speculation whether Barzalona, who will be first choice,
yet has the experience for such a hot seat in a worldwide racing
operation.

He is not yet
the finished article but Sheik Mohammed has never been afraid of giving
youth its head, just as he did with Dettori.

Ricky Burns beats Kevin Mitchell in Glasgow

Feel the Burns: Rampant Ricky blasts through Mitchell to win 'Battle of Britain' and retain world belt

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UPDATED:

23:23 GMT, 22 September 2012

Burns stunned Kevin Mitchell in front
of a raucous crowd in Glasgow to retain his world lightweight title in
breathtaking fashion.

The Scot, defending his WBO belt for
the second time, took the fight to his opponent from the first bell and
never relented in a staggering display.

Mitchell was floored twice in the
fourth round before yet another unanswered flurry of punches forced the
referee to call a halt to the bout.

Impressive: Ricky Burns aims a punch at Kevin Mitchell during his convincing victory

Impressive: Ricky Burns aims a punch at Kevin Mitchell during his convincing victory

Billed as a 'Battle of Britain', Burns turned the fight into a procession, beating the Englishman to the punch time and time again before pinning him to the ropes and unloading.

Controlling the fight with his jab and always looking to land the right to head and body, Burns edged the opening exchanges of the first round.

Mitchell looked to respond where he could but the bout burst into life when the pair went toe-to-toe with neither giving an inch.

Down and out: Ricky Burns knocks Kevin Mitchell down

Down and out: Ricky Burns knocks Kevin Mitchell down

The home favourite continued to dominate in the second stanza as the pace of the bout refused to relent.

Mitchell served the champion with some timely reminders of his punching power but it was he who was taking some hefty punishment.

Mitchell showed he was not fazed by the Scot's flying start in the third round when, pinned to the ropes, he beat his own chest in a mocking show of defiance.

Punishing: Ricky Burns goes on the attack

Punishing: Ricky Burns goes on the attack

But if that was an indication that he was forcing his way into the contest, the sizeable English contingent in the crowd were silenced minutes later.

Burns' pressure fighting paid off as he floored Mitchell twice in quick succession and although he rose on both occassions, Burns' victory was inevitable and 10,000 fans rose as one to salute their hero.

Burns is set to defend his title again in December with countryman Scott Harrison a possible opponent.

Lance Armstrong rides at Power of Four mountain race despite ban

Banned 'drugs cheat' Armstrong back on the bike one day after being stripped of titles

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UPDATED:

17:02 GMT, 25 August 2012

Banned Lance Armstrong put in a show of defiance as he climbed back on his bike just one day after his reputation was destroyed by a damning doping verdict.

The American, who was sensationally stripped of his record seven Tour de France titles on Friday and banned for life by the US Anti-Doping Agency, took part in the Power of Four mountain race in Snowmass Village in Colorado on Saturday.

The 40-year-old opted not to challenge the US Anti-Doping
Agency's charges against him, claiming to be 'finished with all this
nonsense' after a long-running battle against allegations of cheating.

Back in the saddle: Lance Armstrong prepares to take part in the Power of Four mountain race at the starting line in Snowmass Village, Colorado

Back in the saddle: Lance Armstrong prepares to take part in the Power of Four mountain race at the starting line in Snowmass Village, Colorado

The race was the first public appearance for Armstrong since the US Anti-Doping Association stripped him of his seven Tour de France championships and banned him for life

Armstrong was earlier backed by his ong-time friend Jim Ochowicz. who insisted he had earned every victory he has achieved over the course of his career despite his decision not to contest doping charges.

The USADA have stripped him of all his titles and imposed a lifetime ban, although that still has to be ratified by the sport's governing body, who could take the decision to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

Until then, though, questions remain over Armstrong's previously illustrious legacy, but Ochowicz, who has mentored Armstrong throughout his career and is the current manager of BMW Racing, is not buying in to that.

Taking part: Armstrong is banned but made an appearance in the mountain race

Defiance: The race was the first public appearance for Armstrong since the US Anti-Doping Association stripped him of his seven Tour de France championships and banned him for life

Good to talk: Armstrong prepares to take part in the race

All smiles: Despite the controversy, Arsmtrong appeared relaxed

All smiles: Despite the controversy, Arsmtrong appeared relaxed

'I think Lance did a lot for the sport. We're all grateful to him for what he's done. I think he's earned every victory he's had,” he said in a statement.

'It's a tough day for cycling but we're going to carry on from here. I'm a friend of Lance's. I support his decision to call it. He's done so much for our sport over the years.

'I'm sad about what's transpired but at the same time, I wish him luck with his family. I love them, I love him.'

Armstrong, who was charged along with
five associates in June, sought a temporary restraining order against
the agency's legal action but that was dismissed in a federal court in
Austin, Texas on Monday.

USADA
claim once that action failed Armstrong had until midnight on Thursday
to contest the evidence against him in an arbitrary hearing, and was
fully aware of the consequences of not doing so.

The statement revealed that over a
dozen witnesses, up to 10 of whom are believed to be former team-mates,
had agreed to testify against Armstrong.

It
also claimed the USADA received evidence Armstrong was doping in 1996,
prior to his battle with testicular cancer, which set his Tour triumphs
in the most heroic of contexts, and in 2009, after making his return to
the sport following his initial retirement.

Centre of attention: Armstrong is surrounded by fellow riders ahead of the race

Centre of attention: Armstrong is surrounded by fellow riders ahead of the race

Marlon Samuels: West Indies exclusive interview

EXCLUSIVE – Samuels: I have been plagued by evil people but knew my time would come

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UPDATED:

21:30 GMT, 4 June 2012

Marlon Samuels does things his way. It is a way that has seen him enveloped in controversies that could have ended his career but one that now finds him on a path he hopes will end with him becoming the best batsman in the world.

The man who has provided hope for West Indies with the world-class quality of his batting in two Tests that have again ended in defeat is a singular character who can be as eccentric as he is classy.

Samuels has spent almost as much time talking to the England fielders as he has batting at Lord’s and Trent Bridge but has come out on top in his running battle with Jimmy Anderson that, sadly, will not be continued in Thursday’s final Test at Edgbaston.

Time to shine: West Indies batsman Marlon Samuels has proved his class in the series with England

Time to shine: West Indies batsman Marlon Samuels has proved his class in the series with England

Above all, Samuels has shown that, with a display of defiance at Lord’s and then a century and another high-class contribution at Trent Bridge, he is now the key figure in West Indies' batting line-up, possibly more so even than the veteran Shiv Chanderpaul.

It has not always been thus. Far from aspiring to be the best in the world, Samuels could once have laid claim to another far less flattering soubriquet – that of the biggest wastrel in world cricket.

There was not just the two-year ban for passing on information to bookmakers and the doubts over the legitimacy of his bowling action, but the suspicion that he did not care enough, a record of just two Test centuries in 37 matches stretching back to 2000 belying a rich natural talent.

Yet impressions can be wide of the mark. Michael Holding, a man Samuels talks of as a father figure, had told me that Marlon was one of the good guys, that he had been innocent of charges he collaborated with bookies and that he cared very much both about his own batting and West Indies’ fortunes. Turns out, not for the first time, Holding was right.

We meet in Leicester where West Indies were attempting to prepare for their last chance on this tour to show they have made enough progress not just to compete but to win a Test here.

Samuels, 31, is a very receptive
interviewee, talking not only about his career and hopes for the future
but also about his penchant for on-field chat, his devotion to his
family and his five dogs in Jamaica and about his cricketing hero,
Nasser Hussain.

Aiming high: Samuels wants to be the best batsman in the world game

Aiming high: Samuels wants to be the best batsman in the world game

'Over the years I’ve been plagued with all sorts of issues and problems with people I regard as evil but I always knew that my time to shine would come,' said Samuels.

'I have always had a lot of fire burning inside but I’m managing that fire well at the moment. I’m going out there and transferring that fire on to the field and I’m very happy to be showing what I can do.

'I use every disappointment to build me as a person and not let anybody get me down. I use all of them to motivate me and I know that if I can overcome all the obstacles put in front of me I can get to where I want to go.

'I see myself going up a hill. It will take time to reach the top but I am willing to put in the time to get there.'

Samuels has been as entertaining to those with access to the stump microphones in this series as he has to those in the stands who have seen him apply himself so impressively with the bat. He has told England’s fielders to 'shut up until I've got back-to-back hundreds' while enjoying a running commentary with Anderson that twice saw umpire Aleem Dar step in to cool things down at Trent Bridge.

Not that Samuels felt the need for any cooling down. 'I went out against Australia at 19 and the Aussies talked to me a lot and told me a lot of different things,' he said. 'So I started enjoying it and talking to me in the middle is a waste of time now because it motivates me. When I am batting I am begging the opposition to say something because it means my concentration level is improving.

Preparation: Samuels at Leicestershire's Grace Road ground ahead of next week's third Test

Preparation: Samuels at Leicestershire's Grace Road ground ahead of next week's third Test

'I enjoy a challenge and Jimmy is a fantastic bowler. I remember hitting him over his head a few years ago but he has learnt so much and is the best bowler in England now. Even when he said a few things to me I said, “Jimmy, you're still my favourite bowler”. It’s a bit of fun. He wants to get me out and I’m enjoying the challenge.

'The English players are lovely people. They are competitive but anything they say stays on the field and off the field they are very nice. None of the talking means anything.'

Samuels has always had respect for one Englishman in particular. 'Nasser has always been my favourite batsman,' he said. 'I have a few. Shiv, Steve Waugh and Sachin Tendulkar, but Nasser has always been my No 1. It’s great to see him in the commentary box and I knew I had to come up as the trump card for him because he knows my story and knows I’ve been through a lot.'

That story reached its nadir with his two-year ban and he remains one of the few high-profile players punished by the International Cricket Council for involvement with bookies.

'I was innocent. I got into a situation where it was unfair,' he insists. 'I will tell you honestly, if I had done the crime or done anything to be ashamed of I would not have come back to my sport.

'But I didn’t do anything wrong and that gave me more strength to come back and show people that this ban didn’t kill me, it built me. It made me a stronger man and I’m raising the bar higher now. I am training hard and my work ethic has gone up.

Jimmy's nemesis: Samuels has enjoyed a running battle with England fast bowler Anderson (left)

Jimmy's nemesis: Samuels has enjoyed a running battle with England fast bowler Anderson (left)

'The two years that were taken away from me worked wonders for me because it enabled me to look at myself. I never thought of quitting.'

The time out was spent with his family and now he dedicates his achievements to his two children Dimitri and Djourna and his dogs in Kingston – Sheba, Samson, Simba, Demon and Devil.

'I love dogs. I'm going to get some more. I am batting for them at the moment,' he smiled.

And he is doing that batting, thankfully, for West Indies having left the Indian Premier League halfway through his contract with Pune to join this tour.

'If I’d been available for the whole IPL season I’m sure I would have gone for double the money but I wanted to come here and play against the No 1 team because I have more than just a point to prove. Sometimes it’s not about cash,' he said.

'I’m not just batting for my family. I’m batting for the missing time and I want to be the No 1 batsman in the world. I’ve been stopped in my tracks many times but I’ve never lost sight of my aims and my goals.

'I like Twenty20. It’s fun. And I like the one-dayers. But Test cricket is the best cricket. And Test cricket shows the real quality of the batsman. When you look at the archives and look at the great players it is Test cricket they are remembered for.'

Samuels will be remembered for the right reasons now.

Fabrice Muamba: "I"m fearless"

After brush with death at Tottenham, Muamba says: 'I'm fearless!'

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UPDATED:

08:23 GMT, 5 May 2012

Fabrice Muamba says his brush with death has left him fearless.

The 24-year-old needed 78 minutes of resuscitation after suffering a cardiac arrest on the pitch while playing for Bolton against Tottenham at White Hart Lane in March.

'I died, literally. I am alive,' he told The Times. 'There is nothing now to be in fear of.'

Good to be back: Muamba has made a stunning recovery

Good to be back: Muamba has made a stunning recovery

The former England Under 21 international is continuing to make a remarkable recovery in defiance of predictions he was likely to suffer significant brain damage.

He continues to suffer from the after-effects of his ordeal, however.

'I've still got a long way to go with my memory and it frustrates me,' he said.

'Obviously my brain is not as it used to be because there are things missing.

'My memory is literally all over the place. I will talk to (fiancee) Shauna, ask her about someone. Five minutes later I'll ask the same question.'

Muamba has been saddened by the deaths of two sportsmen since his own incident – Livorno player Piermario Morosini, who collapsed on the pitch, and Norwegian swimmer Alexander Dale Oen.

Muamba said: 'Three times in sports in the last few months Unbelievable. There has to be a way of stopping this.

Horror: The Bolton midfielder came close to losing his life

Horror: The Bolton midfielder came close to losing his life

'Morosini in Italy, that shocked me big time. I watched it on YouTube. It was mind-blowing.

'I said to myself, “This was me not so long ago”.'

Muamba's fiancee Shauna revealed the intervention of Jonathan Tobin, Bolton's club doctor, twice stopped the medics from giving up during the period of resuscitation.

She said: 'It was only the personal relationship between Dr Tobin and Fabrice that kept them going. Dr Tobin told me that.'

She added: 'They thought about stopping twice. Dr Tobin said, “No, let's try again”.

'And they kept on trying until they saved his life.'

Liverpool crisis: Loyal boss needs foot soldiers, not fools

Loyal boss needs foot soldiers, not fools, as Liverpool crisis deepens

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UPDATED:

22:00 GMT, 1 April 2012

Kenny Dalglish was bringing his latest post-match post mortem to a close when he was asked whether it would be difficult to lift Liverpool’s browbeaten squad.

'I don’t think so,' he said with a hint of defiance. 'They believe in what they are doing. It is not as if they don’t work hard or have the determination and effort.

'It is up to us to channel our frustrations in the right way. But if they start to enjoy losing games, then we will have a problem.'

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Needless: Pepe Reina was sent off for a foolish lunge of the head

Getting caught up in the moment not only demolished any hope Liverpool had of staging an unlikely comeback, it also immediately jeopardised their hopes of beating a resurgent Everton at Wembley on Saturday week in the FA Cup semi-final.

His place between the posts will now be filled by Alexander Doni. Capped 10 times by Brazil, Doni’s only action since joining from Roma last summer was 57 minutes in a friendly against Glasgow Rangers at Ibrox last October – and even that game ended early after he dislocated his finger.

To watch Doni in pre-match warm-ups, it is clear he is a fine shot stopper but how will he cope with the intensity and pressure of a Merseyside derby Dalglish needed all his big players to tackle their neighbours, so for Reina to get himself banned was rank stupidity. He owes Dalglish an apology.

King: Kenny Dalglish's crown is slipping from his head

King: Kenny Dalglish's crown is slipping from his head

As does Carroll. The barroom sages on Merseyside have long since said that April 14 was going to be a problematic day for Dalglish regarding his 35million striker, with his dilemma being does he play him in the semi-final… or run him in the Grand National

It is the latest in a line of cheap shots that have been aimed at Carroll since he became the eighth most expensive footballer in history on January 31, 2011. Yet while his form has dipped and dived, and the goals have failed to come, Dalglish’s stance has remained unwavering and supportive.

Repaying his manager by aiming a flurry of invective at him at the end of 90 calamitous minutes was poor. When pressed on the matter, Dalglish tried to defuse the situation but the look on his face said everything. These are worrying times for Anfield’s King. The problem is they could get even worse.