Rampaul in line for first outing of series

Turkmenistan News.Net Sunday 22nd April, 2012

West Indies fast bowler Ravi Rampaul could be in line for his first match of the series against Australia when the third and final Test bowls off in Dominica on Monday.


The Trinidadian has been part of the squad since the opening Test in Barbados but is yet to play a match with Fidel Edwards and Kemar Roach preferred as the pace options.

However, captain Darren Sammy said with Edwards carrying a slight injury, Rampaul may be called up as a replacement.

'Fidel has complained about a little niggle, so we have to look at this and Ravi may have to come in for the final Test,' Sammy said. 'He bowled really well for us last year and we know that he is anxious to come out and play.'

Rampaul has been a steady member of the Windies over the last year but illness and injury saw him play just one first class match during the recent regional season.

And though he was selected, coach Ottis Gibson explained this week that the 27-year-old had been still short of match fitness.

'Ravi came back but we just felt he didn't have enough work in terms of bowling so he's been doing that,' Gibson told reporters.

'He's bowling in the middle, he's bowling in the nets everyday to try and top up his workload so when we get to Dominica we will look at what conditions are there.

'Both Fidel and Kemar have bowled a lot of overs in the last two Test matches. We'll look at them and see how they're travelling and see what combination of bowlers we're going to put out in that Dominica Test.'

West Indies trail 0-1 in the series after losing the opening game by three wickets in Barbados. The second Test here finished in a draw on Thursday.

--IANS/CMC

abr/vm

Comments


Comments

  • No comments yet for this story

  • Have your say

    • By submitting your comment you agree to our terms and conditions   

    More Turkmenistan News

    RSS
    • Xi may hold key to Moscow gas goals

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Sergie Blagov Russian Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich traveled to China on February 25 to attend a first meeting of the bilateral intergovernmental commission on energy cooperation. The commission was formed in December 2012 to replace the bilateral Russia-China energy dialogue. Dvorkovich held talks with his Chinese counterpart, Vice Premier Wang Qishan, to discuss ties in the ...

    • Kazakhstan-Korea trade changes shape

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Richard Weitz Kazakhstan has become South Korea's (also known as the Republic of Korea - ROK) main economic partner in Central Asia, and powerful complementarities exist between Astana's desire for foreign capital and technologies, especially in order to develop its infrastructure and new high-technology sectors, and Seoul's need for natural resources, particularly energy ...

    • Tajikistan regions still at war

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Shavkat Kasymov Fifteen years have passed since a peace agreement which ended a five-year long civil war in Tajikistan. Fought between regional groups and the national government of president Rahmon Nabiyev, the conflict killed between 50,000 and 100,000 and displaced more than a million. Presidential elections scheduled for the fall offer an opportunity to reflect on the disastrous ...

    • Kazakhstan seeks wider horizons

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Sergei Gretsky Kazakhstan is well known for the successful transformation of its economy following independence more than 20 years ago, and the leadership has consistently set ambitious goals to solidify the gains and diversify the economy to meet the challenges of the 21st century. The year 2012 ended on a high note - the 2012-2013 Global Competitiveness Report by the World Economic ...

    • Sino-Kazakh ties on a roll

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      China have started using the new railway crossing of Altynkol-Khorgos. It is expected cargo transportation will reach 10 million tonnes in 2015 and 15 million tonnes in 2020. Industry observers expect the Korgas Pass, which now connects China and Kazakhstan by a railway, a highway and an oil pipeline, to handle 20 million tonnes of cargo per year by 2020 and 35 million tonnes per year by ...

    • Russias cash flight to gather momentum

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Pavel K Baev Last week marked the anniversary of the shocking performance staged by the Pussy Riot punk rock group in the Christ the Savior Cathedral in Moscow. And this year saw a spectacular increase in the density of "patriotic" political noise silencing common sense in debates over such matters as separation of church and state, homosexual "propaganda" or the ...

    • Clashes challenge Azerbaijan strongman

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      increasingly vocal opposition, many believe Azerbaijan is in for a lot more political turmoil in the year to come. "The opposition political parties hope to expand their electoral base by using these protests and win the presidential election in October 2013," says Baxtiyar Haciyev, a member of the youth opposition movement Positive Change and a graduate of Harvard University. ...

    • Kyrgyzstan seeks to double its GDP

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      reforms and intends to spend US$13 billion to double gross domestic product (GDP) in five years, drawing on aid and investment to fund projects in agriculture, mining, transport, power and other sectors. Doubling the GDP will require an annual growth rate of at least 7%. Kyrgyzstan's GDP growth is projected at 8.5% in 2013, up to 7.5% in 2014, and up to 3.5% in 2015; inflation is ...

    • Nazarbayev brings in new blood

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Georgiy Voloshin Just two weeks into 2013, Kazakhstan's President Nursultan Nazarbayev announced the reorganization of the country's government. On January 16, he ordered the establishment of a new ministry in charge of regional development whose head, Bakhytzhan Sagintayev, had previously led the day-to-day activities of the ruling Nur Otan party in the capacity of its ...

    • Russia migrants kept to the shadows

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Tom Balmforth MOSCOW - Bek Takhirov knows all too well the problems that migrant workers face. The 38-year-old ethnic Uzbek came to Russia in 2004 and worked illegally, stacking cargo in a warehouse for alcoholic beverages. Two years ago, he completed a lengthy application for Russian citizenship in order to step out of the shadows. He now works legally in St Petersburg as a ...

    • Uzbekistan bids to save culture from popping

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      ensure students do not fall prey to supposedly subversive ideas. She's not thrilled about the task. "Students spend so much time playing games featuring violence, such as a [first-person shoot-'em-up] game called Counter-Strike, and chatting with complete strangers online. Parents don't seem to care, and the burden falls on us, poor teachers," Mahfuza told ...

    • ... as Central Asia bracesfor militant returnees

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Jacob Zenn On December 4, 2012, the deputy chairman of Kazakhstan's National Security Committee, Kabdulkarim Abdikazymov, said that Jund al-Khilafa was a "real threat" to Kazakhstan's national security. Similarly, on November 26, 2012, the chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Defense and Security of Kyrgyzstan, Tokon Mamytov, warned that "there might be ...

    • EU hopefuls face starkchoice on Customs Union

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Robert Coalson Moscow seems to be growing frustrated with Ukraine's efforts to pursue closer ties with the European Union while simultaneously seeking benefits reserved for members of the Russia-led Eurasian Customs Union (ECU). "You cannot be a little bit pregnant," Russian Foreign Ministry official Aleksandr Gorban said on January 1, referring to the choice facing ...

    • Afghanistan tries to lure investments

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Farangis Najibullah and Zarif Nazar Foreign forces are preparing to leave the country, capital is fleeing, and it's the Afghan government's job to stop it. To meet its objective, the Afghan Finance Ministry has drafted a package of incentives to assure companies and individual that their investments in Afghanistan will be safe after the expected withdrawal of Western troops ...

    • Russias gas grip worries US senator

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Margarita Assenova United States Senator Richard Lugar has urged the Obama administration to break Russia's energy monopoly in Europe and called on congress to lift limitations on deliveries of liquefied natural gas (LNG) deliveries to North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) allies in Europe. His critical report, "Energy and Security from the Caspian to Europe", and ...

    • Rate of US-Russian nuke disarmament slows

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Carey L Biron WASHINGTON - Although the United States and Russia have massively reduced their collective number of nuclear weapons since the heyday of the Cold War, the rate of that reduction is slowing, the Federation of American Scientists (FAS) warned on Monday. Further, these two countries alone continue to account for more than 90% of the worlds total nuclear arsenal, 15 times ...

    • Cold winds from Janaozen

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Alexandra Kazakova Last year's violence in the town of Janaozen has created a significantly more oppressive environment in Kazakhstan, according to human rights defenders and analysts interviewed by IWPR. The activists were attending a conference in Almaty on December 13, three days before the first anniversary of the bloodshed. On December 16, 2011, police shot dead at 16 ...

    • Gazprom moves on helium demand

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By John Helmer MOSCOW - Blimps long ago lost their value as a means of cargo transportation, military reconnaissance, or anti-aircraft defense; whilst the helium that fills them - more safely than the combustible hydrogen gas which brought down the Hindenburg in 1937 - is sharply increasing its value in other applications. But the United States, which is currently producing most of the ...

    • Russia plays alongwith Sakhalin pipeline project

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Sergei Blagov Russia's gas monopoly, Gazprom, has apparently ruled out the possibility of building a subsea Sakhalin-Japan natural gas pipeline. However, the continuation of talks on this ambitious project is thought to remain a valuable bargaining instrument in Russia's difficult negotiations with China on gas prices. On November 8, the head of Gazprom's ...

    • South Stream start riddle

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Ron Synovitz and Rikard JozwiakRussia's Gazprom said construction would begin last week on the underwater section of its South Stream pipeline, which will carry natural gas beneath the Black Sea and into the European Union. But is this really the case? Gazprom CEO Aleksei Miller announced last month that the final investment decision for the project had been reached. Miller ...

    • Russia closes gates to Siberian gas city

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Claire Bigg Ever wanted to visit the northern Siberian city of Novy Urengoi, Russia's "gas capital"? You may have missed your chance. Novy Urengoi has slapped harsh new access restrictions on both Russians and foreigners, a dramatic move that has sparked mixed reactions. Officials say they want to protect the affluent city from unbridled immigration, a surge in crime ...

    • ONGC Videsh eyes stake in Kashagan

      Asia Times - Saturday 25th May, 2013

      By Georgiy Voloshin On November 26, Kazakh media reported that the US oil company ConocoPhillips was planning to sell its 8.4% stake in Kazakhstan's Kashagan oil field on the Caspian Sea. In the context of continuously falling revenues (in the third quarter of 2012, ConocoPhillips lost about 14% of its profits, earning slightly over US$15 billion), its top managers decided to ...

    More Turkmenistan News

    News from around our Network