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mary123 Offline



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17.04.2019 09:54
that we want to be competitive in Europe an Antworten

New Zealand 315 for 4 (Latham 105, Williamson 91) lead Zimbabwe 164 (Tiripano 49*, Wagner 6-41) by 151 runsScorecard and ball-by-ball detailsTom Lathams fourth Test century and 91 from Kane Williamson on his Test captaincy debut saw New Zealand dominate the second day against a hapless home side. Not only were Zimbabwe unable to make too many inroads into New Zealands line-up, but they also had to attempt to do that without their wicketkeeper Regis Chakabva and left-arm spinner Sean Williams, both of whom were ill and sorely missed.Brian Chari, not known for his glovework, missed three tough chances while Williams bowling could have been used on a surface that took substantial turn as the day went on. In his absence, captain Graeme Cremer had to bowl a marathon spell of 26 overs and with bounce, spin and drift, got more threatening with each one.Latham did not not have to contend with too much of the tougher conditions, with the exception of the chance he offered on 85. Chamu Chibhabha moved one in sharply, which took an inside edge but Chari moved too late to take the catch.Chibhabha was the only seam bowler to trouble New Zealands batsmen after frontliners Donald Tiripano and Michael Chinouya proved too predictable. Neither made an attempt to emulate Neil Wagners short-ball approach from the first day and both stuck to full deliveries outside the off stump, which helped them contain the batsmen, but only for a short while.Martin Guptill and Latham eased their way in, with 43 runs in the first hour of play, when Cremer kept close catchers in, and eventually spread the field. Zimbabwes only success of the morning came with the change bowlers. Chibhabha shaped them away from Guptill and cramped him for room, before drawing him into the drive for a thick edge which carried to Craig Ervine at gully.The second session was New Zealands most productive as Zimbabwe tried to use their part-timers in containing roles without success. Prince Masvaure and Sikandar Raza helped Latham and Williamson up their scoring rate. Midway through that session, New Zealand were in the lead with nine wickets in hand and Cremer then brought himself back on. In the 44th over, after Latham had crossed 50 and with Williamson on 29, Cremer began his third spell. He did not stop until six overs before the end of play, when he took the second new ball.At first, New Zealand, especially Latham, took Cremer on but they soon saw the threat he would pose. When Williamson was on 32, Cremer got one to rip across the face of the bat, the batsman had his back foot in the air but Chari could not complete the stumping. Williamson worked his way to a half-century but Cremer worried him again, with a ball turned out of the footmarks and snuck between the keeper and first slip.With Latham approaching his century, New Zealand became more cautious. They treated Hamilton Masakadza with as much respect as Cremer and took no chances. Latham spent 23 balls and the tea break in the nineties, leaving balls he could have hit, before bringing up three figures with a dap into the covers off a Cremer wrong un. His father, Rod, had scored his only Test century in the same city in November 1992.Cremer thought he had broken through when Williamson got an edge off a delivery that drifted in and Raza claimed the catch at slip but it was referred to the third umpire. A lengthy deliberation and several replays later, Williamson, on 72, was given not out.Seven balls later, Latham, who had spent a minute short of three-and-a-half hours in the middle, had a concentration lapse. He could have left a Masakadza delivery outside off but nicked off to end a 156-run stand with Williamson.Cremer got his own back when Williamson was legitimately caught at slip for 91, and with Zimbabwe applying sustained pressure for the first time refused the second new ball until the 95th over. What Cremer lacked was support at the other end. Raza continued to concede heavily and with the lead growing, Cremer brought his seamer back for a final burst. He was rewarded when Tiripano had Henry Nicholls caught behind but New Zealand remained well in front. Cheap NBA Jerseys . The Browns coaching search remains incomplete. Cheap Super Bowl Jerseys .com) - The red-hot Los Angeles Kings will try to extend their winning streak to a season-high seven games when they visit the Edmonton Oilers for Sundays clash at Rexall Place. http://www.cheapjerseyschinanfl.com/ . "I wrote 36 on my sheet at the beginning of the game," the Cincinnati coach said, referring the yard line the ball would need to be snapped from. Wholesale Jerseys Authentic . After the whistle, Thornton skated the length of the ice, pulled Orpik to the ice from behind and punched him in the face several times. China NFL Jerseys . Gerald Green and Miles Plumlee? Green had bounced around the NBA when he wasnt playing overseas. The Pacers gave up on Plumlee after just one season. Now Green and Plumlee are key cogs in the Suns surprising breakout season. Concerns surrounding the salary cap, a global calendar and the theft of Italian fast food will be forgotten momentarily on Friday when Gloucester run out at Kingsholm to kick off the new Aviva Premiership season against Leicester Tigers.It is just over three months since Alex Goodes try put the seal on Saracens second successive championship win, but an influx of talent has ensured the new campaign is keenly anticipated.Leicester could line up in the west country with Rugby World Cup winner, JP Pietersen, on their right wing and are awaiting the arrival of Australia playmaker Matt Toomua.Others preparing to make their Premiership bows this term include Kurtley Beale, Taulupe Faletau, Louis Picamoles and Ben Teo, as clubs this side of the English channel attempt to keep pace with those in the Top 14.But on the domestic front, it is the champions -- bolstered by the headline acquisition of Schalk Burger -- who remain the team to beat.Its hard to look beyond Sarries, Wasps director of rugby Dai Young admitted. What theyve built over the last couple of seasons is phenomenal. Were on a journey and theyre a good blueprint for us to follow.Wasps have taken advantage of the continued softening of rules governing how much a club can spend on their squad to bolster their back line. Beale, Danny Cipriani, Kyle Eastmond and Willie Le Roux -- when he arrives from Japan -- will add spice to a side not exactly lacking try-scoring expertise already.If the Coventry club have reached for the cheque book in a bid to slug it out with Saracens, then it has been another summer of studied recruitment from their opponents this Sunday, Exeter. Last seasons beaten Premiership finalists have added quality rather than quantity, with four acquisitions compared to Wasps 13.Chiefs boss Rob Baxter is not the type to waste money, and this summers arrivals -- Dave Dennis, Ollie Devoto, Greg Holmes and Lachie Turner -- will be expected to buy into the clubs ethos and ensure a side that has improved steadily since winning promotion in 2010, does so again.The important thing for us is not to over focus on the loss to Saracens, Baxter said. If you look at what theyve done over the last few seasons, theyve gotten to some finals or knockout games and lost but theyve built on it and gotten stronger.He added: Weve recruited well, theyre a great group of players but we need to keep the core group of players last year too and drive them through another good year. Hopefully we can achieve the same level of consistency we did last season.Finding the right characters for us is the same challenge it was six or seven years ago. We spend a lot of time on it, personally I think its the most important part of my job. Theres no magic answer to it but we spend a lot of time analysing players on the rugby fielld because you can pick up their characteristics doing that.ddddddddddddExeters transformation from provincial pretender to continental contender was rubber-stamped last season as they made the Champions Cup quarterfinals as well as the Premiership final. Wasps ended the Chiefs European run in the last eight, but as Baxter plots his clubs path this campaign, he is keen to prove that success can be achieved in a sustainable manner.Rugby shouldnt be a business that is boom or bust. I would say we dont want to create a situation where clubs are going bankrupt left, right and centre because that would be bad for the game and would portray the game in a bad light, he said.However we decide to do these things, if its raising or lowering the salary cap year on year or abolishing it all together, the one fundamental thing that should remain is that we want to be competitive in Europe and that we want all Premiership clubs to be sustainable, competitive and quality businesses.It is not just on the pitch where incoming names and faces are set to excite, with Bath and Harlequins preparing for the new season under the guidance of new directors of rugby.Both clubs are keen to improve on disappointing seasons last time out, and while Quins took the decision to promote John Kingston from within, Bath looked slightly further afield, to New Zealand and Todd Blackadder.And when the former Crusaders coach says it feels like Ive been here six months rather than a few weeks, it is because he has been made to feel at home, not due to the size of the task at hand.What really hooked me to Bath was the vision of the club, he said. Theyve got a great history and legacy, really good training pitches but they really want to build on their culture. I think thats really important because the rugby is a by-product of that. The timing feels really right.Blackadder admits he is looking forward to mixing it with some of Baths more heated rivals and in that sense, he could not have timed his arrival any better.Bristol are back in the big time following seven years in the wilderness, and will be led by Andy Robinson, a former Bath boss himself, who last coached in the Premiership 16 years ago.Both Robinson and his men are now ready to make their mark in the top flight -- starting with a date against Quins at Twickenham on Saturday afternoon.Weve been desperate to get back into the Premiership and now its about putting a stamp there, the former England and Scotland coach said.The key to us is the belief that we can be successful. You have to love what you do, theres pressure in the games but you have to thrive on it or you might as well be back in the Championship. ' ' '

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