Mohammad Ghouse steals the thunder

Guru Nanak College Ground, Chennai was the venue for the South Zone Ranji TrophyOne Day Tournament match between Kerala and Hyderabad. Kerala who had scoredback to back wins against Goa and Andhra Pradesh were hopeful of an upsetvictory against Hyderabad. Mohammad Ghouse dashed all Kerala hopes with awhirlwind knock of 20 in just 8 balls including three consecutive sixes and thenbowling an economical spell of 10-2-29-1.On a crisp Friday morning, Hyderabad won the toss and elected to bat. The grassyoutfield had more to it than what met the eye. Grass was uneven and the outfieldbumpy and to add to the misery the Kerala fielders found it painful divingaround. Hyderabad amassed 272/7 in their 50 overs. Thanks to the useful knocksby Daniel Manohar (60), Vanka Pratap (55) and D Vinay Kumar an unbeaten 53. ForKerala Ananthapadmanabhan picked up 3/45. The 48th over of the innings bowled bySreekumar Nair produced 28 runs as Mohammad Ghouse swung three sixes in a rowover the midwicket fence. Tinu Yohannan who bowled the 49th over, sent Ghouse’soff stump cartwheeling of a no ball, which summed up Kerala’s day.Clear blue skies, brilliant sunshine and a stiff breeze that swayed the treesthat stood all around the ground, was just picture perfect for a cricket match.Kerala batsmen strolled into the middle with absolutely no idea of making amatch of it. The pitch also made things worse with an uneven bounce. At onepoint, Kerala were batting as if to save a four day match, defending the ballswith dour determination. Opener MP Sorab who has had a reasonable run with thebat in this tournament again got a start and made 44 in 85 balls. KChandrashekhara tried his best with an innings of 55 in 62 balls. The reliablecaptain Sunil Oasis disappointed as he tried to steer an arm ball from Indiareject Venkatpathy Raju and was bowled for 24 (33 balls). Sreekumar Nair hithard to make 16 in 10 balls, but all was over for Kerala in the 48th over whenthe innings folded for 208. Raju had an afternoon out with no effort at all tofinish with 3/32. Hyderabad took two points while Kerala took none.

Wood praises 'Tweedledee and Tweedledum'

Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid have been backed to give England the spin resources they need to challenge Pakistan, with the bowling partnership set to have a new nickname.Moeen claimed 3 for 41 from 22 overs during a hot day’s work in Sharjah as England completed their first two-day match against Pakistan A. Rashid, who is closing in on a Test debut, was wicketless but conceded under three runs an over during 20 overs as the spinners were given a lengthy outing by Alastair Cook.Mark Wood, who claimed one of the two wickets to fall to the pace bowlers, believes the pairing can flourish in tandem – a role they had during the one-day series against Australia last month – and a recent film night for the squad has inspired a moniker for them.”‘Tweedledee and Tweedledum’ are going to be perfect together in these conditions,” Wood said. “We watched [the film] last night, and there was a midfield partnership of ‘Tweedledee and Tweedledum’ – so I think they’re going to get that nickname now.”The spinners showed today they’re going to be vital. Moeen Ali, I thought, assessed the conditions really well and bowled a great pace. Then Adil Rashid, if chances had been taken off him, I think he’s proved he’s a wicket-taking bowler.”I thought they were excellent. I think, if we need to break a partnership, those two are going to be vital.”The 90 overs in the field reinforced what England will face when the Test starts next week in Abu Dhabi. The catching was far from faultless, with two chances doing down and another missed in the slips, and Wood is well aware that every opportunity will have to be grabbed when it really matters.”If we’d taken our half-chances, I think it would have been a brilliant day – but it’s still been a good one,” he said. “That’s how we we’re going to win the series, by taking those half-chances.”Wood also conceded that England are going to have to adapt their gameplan from the often gung-ho approach which paid dividends during home series against New Zealand and Australia. Large totals will have to be ground out then wickets chiselled away in Tests that are likely to move at a very different pace.”We found out it’s pretty hot here and you have to dig in and that patient cricket is going to do the business here,” he said. “I tried a few different things, tried to be aggressive at times but I have to be patient at times as well. We got used, during the summer, to playing this attacking brand of cricket – where we’ve been trying to blast teams out. That aggressive style is what we want to play at home [but this] is totally different.”One key element to England’s attack will be trying to get the ball to reverse swing once the small window of opportunity with the new ball has passed and Wood was pleased to see a hint of movement as the day wore on in Sharjah.”The ball reversed a little bit which is key for us. It’s going to be vital during the series that we get the ball moving off the straight – and we managed to do that today.”

Struggling Morgan given a break by Middlesex

Eoin Morgan, England’s limited-overs captain, has been given a break by Middlesex amid a form slump that has not seen him pass fifty since the one-day series against New Zealand.He will miss three Royal London Cup matches and the Championship match against Sussex in a bid to recharge his batteries before the limited-overs matches against Australia which begin with the one-off T20 at Cardiff on August 31.In 15 innings since he made 113 in the fourth ODI at Trent Bridge – marshalling an England record run-chase alongside Joe Root – he has a top score of 48 and has made five ducks. His only substantial innings was a century for Middlesex 2nd XI.”Eoin has been on the go since October 2014 and is in need of a rest,” Angus Fraser, Middlesex’s managing director, said. “He has been working his socks off away from matches trying to find the form he wants and it has so far not brought the results he is looking for.”We believe a week or two away from cricket will allow him to recharge and to play the cricket he wants for the remainder of the season.”Morgan had been named England captain for the World Cup just weeks before the team left for Australia following the sacking of Alastair Cook after the one-day series in Sri Lanka last December.He endured a poor campaign during England’s early exit from the tournament – making 90 runs in five innings – and there was a suggestion he would be removed as captain, but he was given a vote of confidence by the new director of England cricket, Andrew Strauss, as soon as Strauss took the role in May.He responded with an outstanding series against New Zealand where he scored 322 runs at 64.40 with a strike-rate of 124.80 as England bounced back to win 3-2.In Morgan’s absence, James Franklin will take on the captaincy of the Middlesex one-day side.

Top order struggles haunt Sri Lankans

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Andy Bichel pushed Queensland from trouble to safety with 125 © Getty Images

The Sri Lankans’ Test preparations suffered another severe wobble when their top order collapsed for the second time in the tour match against Queensland. After folding to 5 for 45 in the first innings, the visitors were in more trouble at 4 for 55 as they tried to overhaul the 85-run deficit created by Andy Bichel’s muscular century.Ashley Noffke continued his fine match when he raced through the openers Sanath Jayasuriya and Marvan Atapattu before Michael Vandort and Thilan Samaraweera added to the tourists’ pain. They finished the day at 4 for 62, still 23 runs behind, and will rely on Mahela Jayawardene (22) and Chamara Silva (2) to ease the headaches of a side already missing Kumar Sangakkara with injury.Jayasuriya began the tour with a century on a flat surface in Adelaide, but he has struggled with the pitch’s pop at Allan Border Field and managed only three runs for the game. Noffke, who captured five victims on Friday, forced him to fend a lifting ball to Clinton Perren and he departed to similar dismissals on both occasions.The exit of Atapattu, who was lbw to Noffke for 7, was less of a concern as he has performed strongly in both games, but Michael Vandort missed an opportunity for a meaningful contribution when he went for 26 to an excellent legside take from Chris Hartley. At least the Sri Lankans have an idea of what they will face at the Gabba from Thursday after dueling with a high-quality attack.Shaun Tait’s elbow injury means Mitchell Johnson is a virtual certainty for the first Test even though he has struggled for wickets in this match. He took one on Friday and was again out-bowled by Noffke, who had 2 for 8 off six overs in his opening spell. Bichel chipped in late to dispose of Samaraweera and complete a satisfying day of personal achievement.Bichel smashed seven sixes, the most in a first-class innings for Queensland, and 11 fours as he led the Bulls from the early-morning trouble of 4 for 60 to relative comfort. Entering at No. 6 in a bowler-heavy line-up, Bichel started the day cautiously but expanded his repertoire as he got comfortable and reached three figures shortly before tea.”I was a bit lucky today, I got away with a few things, but it worked for me,” Bichel said. “I’m feeling quite comfortable with the bat in my hand and I hope that continues.”The rescue mission of 125 from 168 deliveries ended when he top edged a sweep off Malinga Bandara, who suffered the most bruises from Bichel. Taking advantage of a dropped chance at mid-off on 18 and a run-out escape, Bichel hit freely and rushed to 99 with two sixes in a Bandara over before flicking a single to midwicket for his century.A couple of mistakes in the field did not help the bowlers, who were unable to shut down a pesky lower order despite regular movement off the pitch. Farveez Maharoof was the most successful with 3 for 72 while Bandara picked up 2 for 89 and Jayasuriya claimed the final two wickets as Queensland were dismissed for 285. Maharoof was unlucky, forcing numerous plays and misses, and eventually gained a reward when he had Hartley caught behind for 8 after Noffke had fallen for 34.Bichel and Noffke, who lost a ball with a six over mid-on, combined for an 80-run stand before Johnson and Bichel added 94 in quick time to pass the Sri Lankans’ first-innings total of 210. Johnson may have struggled for impact with the ball over the opening two days but he contributed a lively half-century to complement the work of Bichel.Maharoof, who was pleased with his return, said there was a lot of work to do on the final day. “Whoever gets in just has to bat on,” he said. “You can’t do that much on this wicket, the only thing you can concentrate on is playing down the line and occupying the crease. The first day the pitch was a bit spongy, but it’s dried out a bit and it’s taking off from a length.”

IPL cuts into New Zealand Test preparation

The issue of the IPL clashing with the international calendar has arisen once again with the news that several key members of the New Zealand side are likely to arrive in England just two days before the start of the first Test between the countries in May.New Zealand’s captain, Brendon McCullum, is one of nine internationals signed up to participate in the IPL, which runs from April 8 until May 24. The first Test at Lord’s will begin on May 21 and NZC has set a deadline of May 19 for those Test-squad members with IPL contracts to report for duty.The clash means that New Zealand may well struggle to field a team in their two warm-up matches. As well as McCullum, Test regulars such as No.3 batsman Kane Williamson, allrounders Corey Anderson and James Neesham, and new-ball pair Tim Southee and Trent Boult have IPL contracts.Lindsay Crocker, NZC’s head of cricket, told the that the ECB had refused requests to change the tour itinerary, including moving the Tests back and playing the limited-overs matches first.”Clearly it is not ideal preparation for us,” Crocker said. “But the bottom line is some of our players have the chance to participate in the IPL and in order to be picked up we had to allow them a playing window. If we had truncated that it would have reduced their marketability.”They can earn money in the IPL that we can’t contemplate paying them. But it was important to us, and important to them, that they don’t miss any internationals so we came up with an arrangement that they were all back in time to play in the first Test.”New Zealand have yet to name their squads for the tour of England. Matt Henry, Mitchell McClenaghan and Adam Milne, all of whom could expect to he involved in the five ODIs and sole T20, are the other New Zealand players at the IPL. NZC is reportedly hopeful that some could be released early by franchises if their services are not required.The ECB rejected requests to alter the schedule due to the proximity of an Ashes series in the second part of the summer – in particular, it was keen for England not to play seven Tests in a row. New Zealand begin their tour with four-day matches against Somerset and Worcestershire before the Tests and the latter has been downgraded from first-class status to allow greater flexibility with the playing XI.”The make-up of our team for the warm-up matches will be a combination of Test squad players, IPL players out early and players in England with other responsibilities, be that county cricket or league cricket,” Crocker said.Under McCullum, New Zealand have only lost two Test series out of nine – away to South Africa and England in 2013 – and five Test wins in 2014 marked their most successful year in the longest format.

Broad and Anderson dominate New Zealand

New Zealand 96 for 6 (Anderson 6-42) trail England 364 (Pietersen 115, Ambrose 67, Broad 64) by 268 runs
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How they were out

James Anderson: a career-best six-wicket haul© Getty Images
 

James Anderson produced his best Test figures with both bat and ball, and Stuart Broad recorded his maiden Test half-century, as England seized control of the third Test against New Zealand at Trent Bridge with a day of unstinting dominance. By the time bad light had brought a premature end to the day, the Kiwis were floundering on 96 for 6 in reply to England’s 364, and their deficit of 268 seemed insurmountable in the face of Anderson’s hostile and high quality swing-bowling assault.Throughout his international career, Anderson has been like the girl with the curl from the children’s nursery rhyme – at times in this series, his performances have been horrid, but today, he was back to being very, very good indeed. He located a full, fast and outswinging length from the very first over of his spell, and in claiming all six of the New Zealand wickets to fall, he finished the day with half an eye on history. Only two players – Jim Laker and Anil Kumble – have managed ten in an innings, but if Anderson can replicate the same form he showed today, his opponents – and team-mates – may not have much say in the matter.Ultimately, Anderson is a mood bowler, and there’s nothing quite like an early wicket to set his juices pumping. With his third ball of the day, he turned Aaron Redmond inside out with a wickedly jagging outswinger that detonated his off stump, and New Zealand’s foreboding was tangible. Out strode their kingpin, Brendon McCullum – relieved of the gloves and promoted to No. 3 – but his talents were wasted in such hostile conditions. He had made only 9 when Anderson flattened his stumps with a carbon copy of the Redmond delivery, and at 14 for 2, the innings was in freefall.Ross Taylor counterattacked with the sort of confident recklessness that befits a man with two 150s to his name on this tour, and together with the low-key Jamie How, he guided New Zealand to tea at 57 for 2. But after the break, and armed with a changed and fractionally shinier ball, Anderson picked up where he had left off. Taylor squirted a fat edge to gully and departed for 21, and three balls later the hapless Daniel Flynn – whom Anderson maimed with that tooth-shattering bouncer at Old Trafford – was pinned on the crease and sent on his way for a duck.At 62 for 4, How was New Zealand’s last obdurate presence, but he was the next to go, and in a disappointing fashion. He hung a limp bat outside off stump, and Anderson’s natural outswing curved perfectly off the edge and carried through low to Tim Ambrose behind the stumps. Then, only five balls before the umpires offered the light, Jacob Oram followed in similar fashion for 7. At 96 for 6, with only Daniel Vettori of the recognised batsmen remaining, the hopes of New Zealand snatching a share of the series had receded over the horizon.It was quite a contrast to the Kiwis’ mood on the first day, when England slumped to 86 for 5 after lunch, but since then they have been subjugated by a succession of impressive performances. And though Anderson stole the limelight with his bowling, his first role of the day came with the bat, as he and Broad compiled an improbable and important eighth-wicket stand of 76. When New Zealand took the field under slate-grey skies, with England evenly poised on their overnight 273 for 7, they doubtless envisaged a swift denouement. Instead they were made to toil lucklessly and with mounting frustration.For Broad, it was yet another demonstration of his rich promise as an allrounder. Since his batting breakthrough in partnership with Kevin Pietersen at Napier in March, he has reached at least 25 in each of his last five innings, and his shot selection and patience has borne all the hallmarks of a pedigree cricketer. It was especially appropriate that his best innings to date should come at his new county home of Trent Bridge, where his father Chris made his name as a batsman in the mid-1980s.His poise and balance at the crease was exemplary, and any international cricketer would be proud of his back-foot driving, which earned him three more boundaries in the morning session. He did require one massive, and tone-setting, moment of good fortune in the third over of the day when, on 21, he edged Chris Martin firmly to second slip, only for McCullum – unaccustomed to the angles at second slip – to fumble the opportunity.After that, Broad’s performance was plain-sailing, until he reached the threshold of his half-century. On 49, he was made to sweat as Vettori and Oram pinned him down for 25 balls either side of lunch. But crucially, Broad refused to succumb to a rash slog, and sure enough the loose delivery eventually arrived. Vettori strayed onto his pads, and Broad flicked him away through midwicket for a hugely cathartic boundary.Anderson’s own career-best was scarcely less impressive, and his disappointment was clear when he finally feathered a nick to the keeper off Oram to give New Zealand their only breakthrough of the morning session. Up until that point he had produced some shots that belied his lowly reputation, including a crunching cover-drive and a confident slog sweep in consecutive overs from Iain O’Brien and Vettori. But his true role was still to come, and by the time his day’s work was done, New Zealand’s stout resistance in this series had been all but broken.

Shamsur ton puts Bangladesh in control

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Shamsur Rahman’s 125 ensured that Bangladesh Academy finished the first day of their match against the Sri Lanka Academy XI in a strong position in Dambulla. He shared a 179-run stand for the fourth wicket with Marshall Ayub, who scored a patient half-century, to lead Bangladesh Academy to 340 for 5 at stumps.Bangladesh’s openers, Imrul Kayes and Mahbubul Alam, handled the Sri Lankan fast bowlers with ease and scored 46 runs by the first drinks interval even though they were sent in on a pitch with a hint of grass. However, Alam fell for 24 when his attempt to hit offspinner Suraj Mohamed for a second six resulted in a catch at deep-midwicket. Kayes was joined by Shamsur and the pair added 38 before Kayes fell just before lunch, bowled by legspinner Seekuge Prasanna for 45.Naeem Islam, the Bangladesh captain, looked in good nick during his 21 but his innings was cut short when he was stumped off Mohamed. Shamsur and Ayub strengthened Bangladesh’s position by batting together for close to 49 overs. Chaminda Vidanapathirana finally broke the stand when he bowled Shamsur and, in the very next over, Ayub was trapped leg-before by Seekkuge Prasanna. Farhad Hossain and Suhrawadi Shuvo were both unbeaten on 15 at the close of play.

ECB announce 30-man squad for ICC Cricket World Cup

The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) today announced a provisional squad of 30 players for the ICC Cricket World Cup, which begins on Sunday 9 February in Cape Town, South Africa.A final England squad of 15 players will be announced by Tuesday 31 December.England 30-man squad:1. Nasser Hussain (Essex)2. Marcus Trescothick (Somerset)3. Nick Knight (Warwickshire)4. Michael Vaughan (Yorkshire)5. Owais Shah (Middlesex)6. Alec Stewart (Surrey)7. Ronnie Irani (Essex)8. Paul Collingwood (Durham)9. Andrew Flintoff (Lancashire)10. Craig White (Yorkshire)11. Ian Blackwell (Somerset)12. Jeremy Snape (Leicestershire)13. Ashley Giles (Warwickshire)14. Andrew Caddick (Somerset)15. Matthew Hoggard (Yorkshire)16. James Kirtley (Sussex)17. Robert Key (Kent)18. Darren Stevens (Leicestershire)19. Vikram Solanki (Worcestershire)20. Anthony McGrath (Yorkshire)21. Matthew Maynard (Glamorgan)22. Adam Hollioake (Surrey)23. Chris Read (Nottinghamshire)24. Richard Dawson (Yorkshire)25. Martin Saggers (Kent)26. Kyle Hogg (Lancashire)27. Kabir Ali (Worcestershire)28. Stephen Harmison (Durham)29. Ryan Sidebottom (Yorkshire)30. James Anderson (Lancashire)

Flower guides Essex to trophy triumph

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Grant Flower lofts the winning boundary high over midwicket as Essex win by five wickets © Getty Images
 

For two sides possessing such hulking heavyweights as Graham Napier and Justin Kemp, the final of the Friends Provident Trophy appeared destined to offer big runs and lavish hundreds. And yet for all the power contained Essex’s lineup, it was left to Grant Flower to guide them home with a pitch-perfect 70, beating Kent by five wickets.It was the second occasion this season that Kent have reached a final yet finished as losers. Middlesex beat them in the Twenty20 Cup, a result which deflated the usually indefatigable Robert Key, and again today they were outplayed from the outset at a packed Lord’s.Six years ago, the domestic 50-over final was the peak of a county cricketers’ season. And although Twenty20’s attitude has seeped into batsmen’s mindset in 50-over cricket on occasion, the 2008 final was as much a throwback to the dusty old days of low-scoring one-dayers. And no bad thing that was, either.With Essex chasing what appeared to be a straightforward 215, Kent had fought back impressively to leave them on 161 for 5, still needing 54. The catalyst for this comeback was Robbie Joseph, the young Antiguan-born fast bowler in whom Kent have invested so much time, who produced the sort of blistering spell his supporters know he is capable of. Reintroduced into the attack after a wayward first over conceded seven, he trapped Ravi Bopara leg-before with a quick off-cutter and then caused Alastair Cook embarrassing indecision trying to pull, and then cut. The result was a bottom edge to short extra cover, and Essex had lost two of their big guns.At last, however, Flower found a similarly determined team-mate in James Foster to keep things under control, and the pair put on a patient 68 for the fifth wicket. With Azhar Mahmood and Yasir Arafat out of the attack, Key turned to Darren Stevens and Ryan McLaren who both bowled tidily enough, but their lack of venom allowed Foster and, in particular Flower, to keep the scoreboard ticking. Nurdles through midwicket, cheeky paddles down to fine-leg and a sweetly timed four off Stevens’ gentle drifters kept Essex and they never needed more than a vaguely-testing five-an-over.Foster, to his own outrage, fell to a loose flap outside his off stump – Joseph’s third wicket – but Flower soon stepped up another gear, reaching 50 from 73 balls and lofting Joseph over extra cover. Ryan ten Doeschate played a vital and infuriating role at the other end, running Kent ragged with daring singles out to cover, and he was typically elegant to anything minutely straight, turning them through midwicket with ease. Yet it was Flower who appropriately sealed Essex’s win with a clout over midwicket, and Kent’s 30-year wait to win a Lord’s final continued.”That was the epitome of a team performance,” Mark Pettini, the Essex captain, said. “Grant Flower stood out in the run chase, but the rest of the day was all down to the fight from the team. It turned out to be a nice toss to lose. My team were absolutely fantastic. We knew Kent would come hard at us, and the guys rose to the challenge really well.”If Flower sealed the win, then it was Essex’s bowlers who set up the victory-charge. Renowned as a frighteningly powerful striker this season, Napier has been more consistent with the ball than in years gone by, and bowled a fine opening spell alongside David Masters to upset Joe Denly and Key’s natural free-flowing partnership.On 7, Key tried to force Masters off the back foot but could only edge him behind to Foster, standing up to the stumps, who took an effortless snaffle – as is now expected of him. Martin van Jaarsveld, evergreen at 34 and the tournament’s highest run-scorer, nearly fell for nought lbw, but the same bowler found one to cut back sharply on Denly and bowl him through the gate.Essex were in business and had restricted Kent to a distinctly tepid 31 for 2 after 10 tight overs. Nevertheless, van Jaarsveld had his fellow South African for company, Kemp, and the pair set about calming Kent’s evident nerves with a patient, nurdling partnership of 39. It couldn’t last, however, and an equally frantic cut off Masters, whose unerring line outside off was a testament to the underrated control he has offered Essex this season, sent an inside edge cannoning into his stumps. Kent had slipped to 58 for 3.Panic set in, aptly demonstrated by Stevens’ fraught swipe off Chris Wright. Geraint Jones, meanwhile, threatened briefly with two crunching cuts before he was trapped by Danish Kaneria. Essex were on top through a disciplined bowling performance, but the shot selection from Kent was much less restrained.van Jaarsveld brought up yet another fifty from 68 balls – his third this season, in addition to four hundreds – but fell shortly afterwards to an outstanding catch by Cook, sprinting back from midwicket. And it was left to McLaren to salvage something for Kent, working balls through midwicket; back-cutting to the wider deliveries offered by ten Doeschate and nudging through the gaps with a coolness of temperament that his top-order team-mates lacked. His 63 was too little, much too late.As a hefty contingent of Essex fans roared their side on with victory in sight, Flower lofted the winning runs to seal their first Lord’s final since the B&H Cup in 1998. The 50-over lark may lack Modi’s millions, but Essex’s triumph was no less sweet.

National Cricket League starts on Oct 10

The 10th Bangladesh National Cricket League is scheduled to start from October 10. Khulna are the defending champions while Rajshahi finished runners-up the previous season.The following are the divisional squads for the 2008-09 season:Khulna Division: Imrul Kayes, Nazmus Sadat, Monirul Islam, Ashraful Aziz, Tushar Imran, Shakib Al Hasan, Taibur Rahman Parvez, Nahidul Haque, Mustafizur Rahman, Raihan Anas, Sahagir Hossain, Mohammad Salim, Masrafe Bin Mortaza, Ziaur Rahman, Syed Rasel, Dollar Mahmud, Mahmuduzzaman, Robiul Islam, Murad Khan, Abdur RazzakRajshahi Division: Zunaed Siddique, Jahirul Islam, Shakil Haider, Farhad Hossain, Anisur Rahman, Ashraful Hossain, Mahbub Alam, Naeem Islam, Rofiqul Islam, Khaled Mashud, Hamidul Islam Himel, Mushfiqur Rahman, Saiful Islam, Mohammad Shahzada, Deloyar Hossain, Alamgir Kabir, Shafaq Al Jabir, Saqlain Sajib, Sohrawordi Shuvo, Shabbir Ahmed RummanDhaka Division: Javed Omar, Rashedul haque, Amit Mojumdar, Mohammad ashraful, Mehrab Hossain Jr., Mahmud Ullah Riyad, Shamsur Rahman, Mominul Haque, Nadif Chowdhury, Ashiqul Islam, Anwar Hossain, Nazmul Hossain Milon, Emon Ahmed, Mahbubul Alam, Shahadat Hossain, Mohammad Azim, Eliyas Sunny, Humayun Kabir, Arafat Sunny, Rezaul Islam RajonChittagong Division: Tamim Iqbal, Gazi Salauddin, Nafees Iqbal, Tareq Ahmed Ruben, Faisal Hossain, Mahmudul Hassan, Masum-ud Dowla, Marshall Ayub, Nadimuddin Mintu, Arman Hossain, Raihan Uddin Arafat, Rubel Hossain, Moniruzzaman, Kamrul Islam, Golam Kibria, Tarek Aziz Khan, Moktar Ali, Yasin Arafat, Mohammad Younus, Mohammad SokranBarisal Division: Hannan Sarker, Uttam Sarker, Rony Talukdar, Mehrab Hossain, Roqibul Hassan, Nasiruddin Faruque, Imran Ahmed, Raisul Islam, Arafat Salauddin, Nasir Hossain, Abul Bashar, Shaheen Hossain, Robiul Karim, Sajedul Islam, Kamrul Islam Rabbi, Monowar Hossain, Talha Jubair, Ariful Hoque, Saju Datta, Tariqul IslamSylhet Division: Mohammad Mithun, Golam Rahman, Imtiaz Hossain, Sharifullah, Nizamuddin Ripon, Sonjoy Chakraborti, Rajin Salah, Tarequzzaman, Ezaz Ahmed, Kamrul Islam Emon, Golam Mowla, Mushfiqur Rahim, Lablur Rahman, Saikat Ali, Abul Hassan Raju, Nazmul Hossain, Sumon Saha, Shuvashish Roy, Rashedur Rahman, Nabil Samad

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