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Showing posts with label CRICKET. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CRICKET. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Pup, Punter share honours


Skipper Ricky Ponting and vice-captain Michael Clarke were named joint winners of the Allan Border Medal on Tuesday night.

Ponting and Clarke were locked on 41 votes, three ahead of Michael Hussey on 38, with paceman Mitchell Johnson and the born-again Simon Katich sharing fourth on 30 votes.

For the first time in the event's 10-year history, the medal was awarded with Australia's on-field superiority in question, adding significance to the victory of the team's two on-field leaders.

"As we all know it's been an up and down year for the team. Everybody right now is writing us off but I know deep down in my heart we're not far away at all," Ponting said.

"And the results would even prove that over the last couple of months. It's been an amazing time with some of our greats leaving the team and some very young and exciting players coming into the team."

"It's an amazing challenge for me and Michael to keep leading this team in the right direction, hopefully showing some direction and passing on some experience to the younger guys."

A winner in 2005 when relatively new to the international scene, Clarke's second Medal triumph comes at a time when he is shaping as the heir apparent to Ponting.

"I guess for me as soon as I walked into the Australian team I've tried to learn as much as possible from Ricky Ponting and nothing's really changed to be honest," he said.

"I guess being vice-captain has brought me a lot closer. I'm involved now, sometimes in selections, leadership meetings and things like that."

"So it's really given me a greater opportunity to continue to learn."

Friday, January 30, 2009

RSA IN TOP ODI TEAM NOW


Half centuries from Michael Hussey and Brad Haddin weren't enough to save Australia in the fifth Commonwealth Bank Series match against South Africa, the Proteas storming to a 39-run victory at the WACA on Friday night.

In the final one-day international clash with South Africa this summer, Australia struggled to build momentum from the start of its run chase after the tourists overcame a slow start of their own to post an imposing 6-288.

Hashim Amla starred with the bat for the Proteas while left-armed paceman Lonwabo Tsotsobe enjoyed a dream one-day international debut, taking 4-50 as Australia was bowled out for 249 in the second last over.

The elegant Amla compiled a chanceless 97 before falling short of his century, caught behind by a diving Haddin off James Hopes in the 42nd over, with A.B de Villiers and J.P. Duminy ably supporting him, both batsmen scoring 60.

In reply, Australia slumped to 4-53 as Tsotsobe claimed the vital wickets of Shaun Marsh and Ricky Ponting. But a 69-run partnership between Michael Hussey and his brother David (30), batting for Australia for the first time together in their native Perth, wrested the momentum back towards the home side.

But the hosts lost wickets at regular intervals, the Australians struggling to maintain a consistent run-rate as David Hussey (30) dolled up a catch to Johan Botha at short cover just as the brothers appeared set to lead a revival.

Mike Hussey and Haddin then combined for 72 runs, but 'Mr. Cricket' became Tsotsobe's third victim, bowled for 78 in the 40th over attempting one slog too many after belting the youngster for 12 runs from three balls during Australia's batting powerplay.

As the required run rate mounted Haddin (63) defiantly scored his half-century from 39 balls, but it was too late to prevent Australia falling to a 4-1 series defeat to South Africa.

The Proteas did the job without meaningful contributions from Herschelle Gibbs (seven) or Neil McKenzie (10), who both fell cheaply earlier in the day.

But Amla and de Villiers soon set about laying the foundation for a big total, patiently building the score as they compiled a 118-run third-wicket partnership.

De Villiers slashed recklessly at Hopes (3-44) and was out for 60 but his replacement Duminy produced a sterling shift, firing off an unbeaten 60 from 42 deliveries as the Proteas took full advantage of their batting powerplay, scoring 53 runs from the five overs.

Indeed, the tourists had a field day during the last 10 overs. Restricted early on by some tight bowling and excellent fielding, particularly by Michael Clarke and David Warner in the inner circle, the Proteas broke the shackles in the final 10 overs, plundering 92 runs.

Mitchell Johnson (1-68) was the main offender, the frontline bowler smashed for 20 off his final over during the batting powerplay as Duminy treated him with contempt. Nathan Bracken (0-70) also endured a torrid return to the Australian side, his last six overs conceding 53 runs, although Ben Hilfenhaus (2-43) and Clarke (0-30) kept things tight.

In reply, Australian opener Marsh could only manage five runs in his home debut for Australia before losing his wicket in the second over to a sharp catch by Amla at mid-wicket.

Australian skipper Ponting (12) attempted to pull a shorter Tsotsobe delivery, lofting the ball up for an easy catch by wicketkeeper de Villiers in the eighth over while Clarke followed him back to the shed seven balls later after chopping Morne Morkel onto his stumps for a duck.

A composed Warner (22) looked set to take on South Africa's attack but fell victim to a fluke run out by another Proteas' debutant Wayne Parnell, who got the tip of his finger to a straight drive by Mike Hussey that crashed into the stumps with Warner well out of his ground.

The two Hussey's and Haddin gave Australia some fleeting hope but the tourists did enough to hold the hosts at bay, completing a memorable summer for the touring team.


Thursday, January 15, 2009

India's tour of New Zealand has been extended

1st Twenty20 international- February 25, Christchurch

2nd Twenty20 international- February 27, Wellington

1st ODI- March 3, Napier

2nd ODI- March 6, Wellington

3rd ODI- March 8, Christchurch

4th ODI- March 11, Hamilton

5th ODI- March 14, Auckland

1st Test- March 18-22, Hamilton

2nd Test- March 26-30, Napier

3rd Test- April 3-7, Wellington



INDIA VS NZ 2009+

India's tour of New Zealand has been extended toinclude a third Test and a second Twenty20 international. The extra fixtures have been included at the expense of the tour match which means India will have no practice games during their visit that includes two Twenty20 matches, five ODIs and three Tests.

India will arrive in New Zealand on February 20, eight days earlier than originally scheduled, and will begin the tour with a Twenty20 match in Christchurch on February 25. Napier will host the additional Test, the second of the three-match series, from March 26 to 30. The reworked schedule resulted in the dates for the second Twenty20 game and the first three ODIs being brought forward. The three-day warm-up match against a New Zealand XI in Lincoln between the ODIs and Tests has also been scrapped.

BCCI secretary N Srinivasan said he was delighted that both the boards were able to agree on an extended tour. "My thanks go to New Zealand Cricket for responding positively to our request for an extended Test series," he said. "There have been a number of issues for both boards to resolve to accommodate the new schedule and I am pleased we have been able to work together to achieve a high quality programme. To have such a strong mix of Tests, one-day internationals and Twenty20s will be good for both teams, and for cricket followers in India and New Zealand."

NZC chief executive Justin Vaughan said the opportunity for an extended tour by India was great for the game in New Zealand. "India are probably the most exciting side in the world at present - packed with superstar players, and the chance to see six more days of high quality international competition will be welcomed by all New Zealand cricket fans, and give our team a great chance to prove themselves against the world's best," he said.

"We have worked hard to keep as much of the schedule as possible intact - the result is a tour where more fans will be able to see more games in more places."

India last toured New Zealand in 2002-03 and were beaten 0-2 in the Tests and 2-5 in the ODIs.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

RSA still strong without skipper:Morkel



Injured captain Graeme Smith might be irreplaceable but his return to South Africa has not had an adverse effect on the Proteas' spirits as they prepare for the limited overs phase of their tour.

That's the view of paceman Morne Morkel, who believes the competition for places in a rebuilding South African one-day side will ensure the mood within the camp remains upbeat ahead of Sunday's KFC Twenty20 clash with Australia at the MCG.

The visitors will be led by all-rounder Johan Botha, who was not part of the Proteas' history-making Test wins in Australia, in Smith's absence for upcoming KFC Twenty20 and the Commonwealth Bank Series against Ricky Ponting's side.

"His presence in the changing room and out on the field you can't really replace that," Morkel said of Smith.

"He's an unbelievable guy to work with as you've seen with all our young guys."

"He knows how to push the right buttons. He's definitely going to be missed."

Like Australia, the Proteas' one-day side is undergoing a transitional period ahead of the 2011 World Cup.

Herschelle Gibbs continues his international career in the one-dayers but gone are senior pacemen Shaun Pollock and Charl Langeveldt, who have both been mainstays in the Proteas one-day set-up.

"They've been really big players for us, one with the new ball and also in the death overs. I think it's just a matter of finding the right mix as bowlers to replace them," Morkel said.

"We've definitely found guys who can do the job but it's a matter of playing it out on the field in those situations."

"It's a good opportunity to test ourselves against the best one-day side in the world to see where we are in terms of that."

Among the next generation of players are names such as Morkel, his brother Albie Morkel, paceman Lonwabo Tsotsobe, teenager Wayne Parnell and Vaughn van Jaarsveld.

Albie Morkel is on the comeback trail from a shoulder injury which has forced him to remould his throwing action, but at his best is a hard-hitting batsman and a handy medium-pacer.

He is looking forward to resuming bowling on Sunday in front of a crowd in excess of 70,000.

"I'm feeling much stronger and much better," he said.

"I haven't bowled in a game yet. I've done a lot of bowling back home and unfortunately the last two domestic games have been washed out."


Tsotsobe and Parnell are likely to get opportunities if Proteas selectors decide on a rotation policy with their bowlers in bid to have Dale Steyn, Makhaya Ntini and Morne Morkel fresh for the return Test series against Australia in South Africa starting next month.

"It's quite draining, especially after the last Test with back-to-back Test matches," said Morne Morkel.

"I think it's going to be more vital to get in all the recovery and getting ourselves ready to run in for the Twenty20."

"Our skills are more or less there, it's just adapting to our slower balls and working on the death bowling a bit.

Crisis in English cricket:strauss gets captain from kevin




Pietersen stands down as captain

Moores sacked, Strauss leads in WI

In the 18 months since Peter Moores took over as coach the results have not been good, but I think Strauss will be a very, very good captain. It may be that everything happens for a reason and things will turn out for the best for English cricket.

Strauss is getting the job at the right time, when he is playing at his best. He gathers his thoughts before he speaks. He man-manages people well. He is respected in our dressing-room and in dressing-rooms around the world. Such a decent man can bring back maturity and stability to the England team.

Strauss has been in charge before - when England played really well against Pakistan in 2006, and he was in charge when England lost a one-day series 5-0 against Sri Lanka earlier that summer. So he has some valuable experience, especially the time when England were losing, because it is when things are going badly that as a captain you learn most about your team and about yourself.

KP is very much his own person, which shows in his batting. He has never used a batting coach, he relies on his natural flair, he does it his own way like the maverick he is, that is the genius he is.

The captain coach relationship is crucial and when they speak to the team and the public they have to sing from the same team sheet. Myself and Nasser both had great working relationships with Duncan Fletcher despite the fact that we didn’t always agree but the team and the public never saw that.

Kevin has captained in three Tests and scored two hundreds so you can’t say the captaincy has affected his batting. But I always say you cannot judge a captain until he has been on tour. At home you can switch off with your family and friends or play with the kids, but when you are on tour you are always managing 16 players and you are the captain 24-7.

KP started brilliantly at home when beating South Africa in the Oval Test and the one-dayers. Then he had to start worrying about other people, more than he had ever done in his career. In the one-day series in India he must have been tearing his hair out as England went 5-0 down. He would have had a vision about where the one-day team should go and he would have got frustrated about the lack of progress.

After the Mumbai terrorist attacks he would have had a lot more to worry about. He would have had many meetings with Hugh Morris and the security officer Reg Dickason about things other than cricket.

What Kevin has to do now is go to the West Indies and score a hundred in the first Test, then all the controversy will be forgotten. England need Kevin to be challenging to be the No 1 batsman in the world. I held the title for about a month but he is the one England player who I have played with who has the ability to sustain the No 1 position in the world he is that good, that now has to be his goal. If he does that e will help England win many more games.

Strauss and KP get on well although they are very different people. There will be pressure on KP after all the controversy and I hope he is not going to be affected by it. He has the flair and ability to make world-class bowlers look ordinary, and I think he will average 50-odd and become the world No 1.

Finally I’d like to add that I’m not interested in coaching England or anyone else at the moment. I want to play and score hundreds for Yorkshire and England again.

Monday, January 5, 2009

INDIA CRICKET IN 2008:review


source:cricinfo

December 31, 2008



India after clinching the return series against Australia

A year that began with defeat in one of the most controversial Tests of the modern age ended with a cathartic run-chase that transcended cricket. Two thousand eight wasn't without its embarrassments - being bowled out inside 20 overs in a Test match surely wasn't part of the script - but Test victories over Australia and England, and convincing one-day triumphs in Australia and Sri Lanka, meant that this was a 12-month period to savour. Two legends of the Indian game, Anil Kumble and Sourav Ganguly, bid adieu, but newcomers like Gautam Gambhir and Ishant Sharma established themselves, to ensure that the future looked as bright as it had ever been.

The early part of the year was dominated by events at the Sydney Cricket Ground - umpiring controversies, allegations of conduct that flouted the spirit of cricket, and a dramatic last-gasp finish - but in the months that followed, Indian cricket seemed to gain strength from its experience of that adversity. The tri-nation tournament in Australia was comfortably won after Sachin Tendulkar scripted two epic innings and Praveen Kumar proved an unexpected joker in the bowling pack.

After Sydney, India ceded no ground to Australia. In six subsequent Test matches, they won three and drew the rest. Kumble led them to a famous success in Perth, but by the time a series was clinched on home soil, the baton had been passed. Mahendra Singh Dhoni led with verve and his unique brand of cool to inspire victories at Mohali and Nagpur, and for once, Australia had no answers.

India's big blip of the year came in Dhoni's absence, in Sri Lanka. Though Virender Sehwag's strokemaking brilliance helped them to victory in Galle, Sri Lanka were streets ahead in the two Tests played in Colombo, with Ajantha Mendis and Muttiah Muralitharan humiliating the most feted batting line-up in the game.

Dhoni's decision to take a break had been prompted by a nightmarish schedule that saw two back-to-back one-day tournaments immediately after the inaugural season of the Indian Premier League. His Chennai Super Kings had been denied at the death in the IPL, and Dhoni was helpless to prevent the same fate in the Kitply Cup and the Asia Cup, with Pakistan and Sri Lanka proving too strong at the final hurdle. The Asia Cup nemesis would become a familiar foe a month later. Mendis' 6 for 13 was candidate for spell of the year, but with their victory on Lankan soil two months later, Dhoni's men proved that they could learn from their mistakes.

The IPL saw its share of thrills and dramatic falls from grace, starting with Brendon McCullum's 13-six assault in the tournament opener in Bangalore. The three most expensive franchises - Mumbai, Bangalore and Hyderabad - all failed to make the last four, and the Cinderella story was written by Shane Warne and his Rajasthan Royals, by some distance the least expensive team. Warne played a huge role in the success, and the mammoth crowds and record TV ratings suggested that Lalit Modi's experiment with the club system is certainly here to stay.

High point
No one-day or Twenty20 game could come close to matching a Test for pure excitement. England outplayed India for most of the game in Chennai, and most teams wouldn't even think of chasing 387 to win a Test, but then most teams don't have Sehwag opening the innings. The 50 came up in the sixth over, and though he was dismissed for 83, before stumps on the fourth evening, it left India needing to score just 256 on the final day. Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman couldn't stick around, but Tendulkar ensured that there would be no repeat of the 1999 heartbreak against Pakistan. This time he stayed right till the end, with Yuvraj's dashing 85 providing sterling support, clinching victory as only a champion could - with a deft stroke that also raised his 41st century. Three weeks on from the terror attacks in Mumbai, a nation smiled and saluted its favourite son.



Start as you mean to go on: Dhoni has won four of his first five Tests as captain © AFP

Low point
The two defeats in Sri Lanka were hopelessly one-sided. Tendulkar finished the series with 95 runs, Ganguly with 96. Even more painful, though, was the drubbing in Ahmedabad at South African hands. On a green-tinged pitch, India lasted the length of a Twenty20 innings against the pace and accuracy of Dale Steyn, Makhaya Ntini and Morne Morkel.

New kid on the block
Ishant Sharma's spells to Ricky Ponting in Perth and Mohali were little vignettes of Test cricket at its finest - a top-class batsman being given the runaround by a young tyro with something to prove. With his height, Ishant gets steepling bounce and he's as adept with the old ball as he is with the new one. The hair may have gone for a snip, but unlike Samson, he certainly hasn't lost his strength.

What 2009 holds
In 2008, India made a concerted push towards the top of the table in both forms of the game. Dhoni, the new leader, doesn't believe in rankings. "As long as we keep performing in the middle, they will take care of themselves," he says. That's an admirable attitude to have.

A real test of progress will come in New Zealand, where India haven't won for four decades. There's also the small matter of defending the World Twenty20 crown in England in the summer. With its blend of experience and mature youth, nothing is beyond this team, though.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Wisden backs up in Harry Potter



Bloomsbury, publishers of the J K Rowling books, has bought John Wisden, publishers of the cricketers' almanack that bears its name.

Wisden was bought by the late Sir Paul Getty in 1993 and, since the death of the billionaire philanthropist in 2003, has been owned by his son Mark.

Bloomsbury has been associated with the almanack for the last four years when it became Wisden's sales partner. Its publishing stable includes other distinguished almanacks, including Whitaker's and Who's Who produced by A&C Black, the Bloomsbury subsidiary.

Nigel Newton , Bloomsbury Publishing chief executive, described the purchase as a "landmark event" in the company's history. "It's an honour to be the new custodians of such an institution," said Mr Newton.

Founded by cricketer John Wisden, "the little wonder", in 1864, Wisden has a unique place in cricketing history and tradition. The annual publication with its mixture of statistics, trenchant opinion and carefully crafted features has become an indispensable part of the game.

Cricketing enthusiasts have spent thousands on rare editions. Wisden specialist Giles Lyon, of Sports Pages, has recorded £140,000 as the top price for a full set of the almancks.

The rarest, the 1875 edition, fetched £25,000 from a library in Philadelphia, which hosted England's first overseas 'test' match.

A fire at the Mortlake factory producing the almanack destroyed most of the 1875 print.

Two years ago the almanack had its biggest ever sale, topping the £50,000 mark. The 2009 edition is due out in April, edited by Scyld Berry, cricket correspondent of The Sunday Telegraph.

The Wisden sale marks the end of the Getty association with cricket publications. Mr Getty has already sold two others owned by his father.

Monday, December 1, 2008

WI COACH: WI VS NZ will be tough series

New Zealand lost their Test series across the Trans-Tasman peninsula, when Australia swept them 2-0 yesterday.

"Teams come back from a series against Australia, when they're playing well and feel "thank goodness that's over", West Indies head coach John Dyson said.

"From our point of view, it's been great to watch them play against Australia. We'll get some useful tips from it.

"But, Any New Zealand side in New Zealand is a difficult proposition, so I expect they'll come home saying "let's get on with this series".

"They're playing in front of their home crowds on their home soil. They're very patriotic. They dig deep."

Intriguing series

Dyson noted New Zealand have slipped below the West Indies to eighth in the ICC Test Champion-ship, following their defeat to Australia and he believes it sets things up for an intriguing series.

"This is a contest between two teams, who are pretty closely placed on the ICC table," he said.

"Both teams talk about wanting to move up. To me, this is going to be a good indication, this series, of just where they both are."

West Indies start a three-day tour match against Auckland at Eden Park on Friday and Dyson expects it to be a proper first-class game - not one where teams use 12 or 13 players to have a practice workout.

But Dyson is concerned with the lack of international experience of some of his players and acknowledged that a single three-day warm-up game ahead of the Tests was not ideal.

"We haven't played a Test for a number of months (since June against Australia), but these days you've got to get used to playing just one tour match then a Test,Ó he said.

"We had a good practice in Christchurch that was good from the point of getting over jetlag. We'll get them out in the middle for a three-day game, then another week's practice for the Test.

"We're looking for some consistency and some good performances to justify the faith that has been placed in them."

The first Test begins in Dunedin on December 11 and the second Test follows the week after in Napier.

The tour continues with two Twenty20 Internationals against the Black Caps and concludes with five One-Day Internationals.

BCCI to decide on Champions League on 7 December


NEW DELHI: The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) will be holding a meeting with the board members of Cricket Australia (CA) and Cricket South Africa (CSA) on 7 December to decide the fate of Champions League Twenty20.

BCCI VP Lalit Modi confirmed to Indiantelevision.com that the three boards are meeting on Sunday to decide on a suitable date.

The inaugural edition of Champions League Twenty20, which was scheduled to be played in Mumbai, Bangalore and Chennai from 3 to 10 December, was postponed last week due to the terror attacks in Mumbai.

The new schedule has to be in sync with Future Tour Programmes (FTP) which is drafted with the approval of the International Cricket Council (ICC).

According to the present FTP, India was supposed to play against Pakistan in January, 2009. However looking at the prevailing conditions related to the Mumbai terror attack, India's tour of Pakistan might not turn into a reality.

In addition, the South Africa tour to Australia is scheduled to begin in the second week of December with a series of three Test matches, followed by two T20 matches and five one day matches.


If the three boards (BCCI, CA, CSA), along with ICC, are able to tighten the South Africa versus Australia series, then Champions League T20 could be played in January.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Middlesex will not be travelling to Mumbai:shane udal



Cricket concerns are secondary in the wake of the terrorist attacks on Mumbai. Discussions surrounding the immediate future of the ongoing England Cricket Tour of India and upcoming Champions League Twenty 20 are concerns for later. Now the organisation is focusing on more important matters than cricket.

Cricket concerns are secondary in the wake of the terrorist attacks on Mumbai. Discussions surrounding the immediate future of the ongoing England Cricket Tour of India and upcoming Champions League Twenty 20 are concerns for later. Now the organisation is focusing on more important matters than cricket.

Middlesex skipper Shaun Udal has confirmed Middlesex will not be travelling to Mumbai for the Champions League Twenty20, after terrorists launched a series of deadly attacks in the Indian city.

Udal and his team were due to fly out to Mumbai tomorrow morning to take part in the inaugural Twenty20 Champions League.

Their first match of the lucrative competition was due to take place in Mumbai a week today against Australian side Victoria Bushrangers, but Udal confirmed they will not fly out as planned in the wake of the attacks.

"All we know is that our flights have been cancelled in the morning," Udal told Sky Sports News.

"We were due to fly out from Heathrow at 10 o'clock and we had a call tonight to say that those plans were now cancelled."

Udal added that the three group matches due to take place in Mumbai will be moved to Bangalore.

England had also planned to use the hotel, where international cricket teams usually stay while on tour, during the second Test against India next month.

Cricket Australia have suspended all travel to India while it takes security advice, a decision which leaves the Victoria Bushrangers and Western Australia Warriors - the two Australian teams due to compete in the elite Twenty20 tournament - as well as several Australian cricketers who are due to play for Indian teams, such as Shane Warne, Matthew Hayden and Mike Hussey, in limbo.Warne stopped his flight to India in Singapore where he is now on an extended stopover.

An official from the Board of Control for Cricket in India is quoted as saying: "This has been a terrible day for India but at the moment it's far too early to talk about cancelling England's tour or the Champions League."

The England cricket team have said they will not make a decision about whether to remain on tour until they have been fully briefed by the Foreign Office, but it is understood that the issue will be discussed at a team meeting later on Thursday.

Worries are also reflected by Cricket Australia in its instructions to players not to travel to India for the time being. A Cricket Australia spokesman said: "In circumstances like these it always takes at least 12 hours for details to emerge, and we will review all information available." In the meantime, CA has put a hold on all cricket-related travel to India - hence Warne's extended stay in Singapore.

The Cricket Australia chief executive Paul Marsh added: "We are shocked, and we have contacted all relevant experts in a bid to learn more about the situation. The teams are due to leave on Saturday, so we have to make a decision pretty quickly."

An ­organisation calling itself the Deccan Mujahideen has claimed to be behind the attacks.

for the Champions League Twenty20, after terrorists launched a series of deadly attacks in the Indian city.

Udal and his team were due to fly out to Mumbai tomorrow morning to take part in the inaugural Twenty20 Champions League.

Their first match of the lucrative competition was due to take place in Mumbai a week today against Australian side Victoria Bushrangers, but Udal confirmed they will not fly out as planned in the wake of the attacks.

"All we know is that our flights have been cancelled in the morning," Udal told Sky Sports News.

"We were due to fly out from Heathrow at 10 o'clock and we had a call tonight to say that those plans were now cancelled."

Udal added that the three group matches due to take place in Mumbai will be moved to Bangalore.

England had also planned to use the hotel, where international cricket teams usually stay while on tour, during the second Test against India next month.

Cricket Australia have suspended all travel to India while it takes security advice, a decision which leaves the Victoria Bushrangers and Western Australia Warriors - the two Australian teams due to compete in the elite Twenty20 tournament - as well as several Australian cricketers who are due to play for Indian teams, such as Shane Warne, Matthew Hayden and Mike Hussey, in limbo.Warne stopped his flight to India in Singapore where he is now on an extended stopover.

An official from the Board of Control for Cricket in India is quoted as saying: "This has been a terrible day for India but at the moment it's far too early to talk about cancelling England's tour or the Champions League."

The England cricket team have said they will not make a decision about whether to remain on tour until they have been fully briefed by the Foreign Office, but it is understood that the issue will be discussed at a team meeting later on Thursday.

Worries are also reflected by Cricket Australia in its instructions to players not to travel to India for the time being. A Cricket Australia spokesman said: "In circumstances like these it always takes at least 12 hours for details to emerge, and we will review all information available." In the meantime, CA has put a hold on all cricket-related travel to India - hence Warne's extended stay in Singapore.

The Cricket Australia chief executive Paul Marsh added: "We are shocked, and we have contacted all relevant experts in a bid to learn more about the situation. The teams are due to leave on Saturday, so we have to make a decision pretty quickly."

An ­organisation calling itself the Deccan Mujahideen has claimed to be behind the attacks.

Monday, November 24, 2008

symonds did not in anyway provoke this situation."



The Normanby Hotel has denied that Australian all-rounder Andrew Symonds was at fault in any way during an alleged incident he was involved in with a member of the public at the establishment on the weekend.

According to a representative from the hotel, Symonds was no more than a victim of the antics of an overzealous fan.

The patron in question apparently tried to hug and take a photo of Symonds with both attempts being declined by the 33-year-old Queenslander.

Following Symonds' refusal, the patron reportedly continued to harass the recently recalled Test all-rounder before being asked to leave by security for what it deemed to be inappropriate behaviour.

Symonds verified this version of events in a statement on Monday evening.

A member of the public acted unreasonably towards me while I was with friends at which time I took steps to remove myself from the situation," said Symonds.

"The member of the public was subsequently removed from the premises as a result of his actions."

"I was sharing some drinks with other players and close friends and did not in anyway provoke this situation. Cricket Australia confirmed that it was still investigating the incident.

"At the moment we're gathering more information, we want to better understand the situation," a CA spokesman said.

"As we understand it, the member of the public approached Andrew and there was an altercation after which the member was ejected by hotel security."

"Andrew was back at the team hotel by 9.30 or 10.00. Some other Australian cricketers were at the bar and we need to speak to those players to gather more information.

Friday, November 21, 2008

The deadline is extended:Champions League T20


friday 21st

Media deadline extended for Champions League

The deadline for media accreditation for the inaugural edition of the Champions League Twenty20 has been extended until 6pm on Monday 24 November.

All members of the media who intend to cover the event must apply online for accreditation and can complete the forms by clicking here.

Applicants will need to provide a scanned passport size photograph of themselves and a letter from his/her editor, without which the application process would be termed incomplete and the form cancelled.

As the accreditation process is venue based, all applicants are asked to take time to identify accurately the games they would like to attend, and bear in mind that they will only be able to pick up their accreditation at the venue of the first game they are covering.

For example, on 3 December matches are being played at Mumbai and then Bangalore and anyone intending to cover both would need to pick up their accreditation from Mumbai.

All applications are subject to the Terms & Conditions for Media Accreditation available with the accreditation form.

The form will not be available online after the deadline and media cannot apply once the form has been removed.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

AUSTRALIA STRUGGLE: 214 all out ,clark 98 out


Played at Brisbane Cricket Ground


Australia 1st innings R M B 4s 6s SR

ML Hayden c Taylor b Southee 8 18 16 2 0 50.00

SM Katich c wicketkeeperMcCullum b Southee 10 27 17 1 0 58.82
captain RT Ponting c How b Southee 4 14 8 1 0 50.00

MEK Hussey lbw b Martin 35
78 4 0 44.87

MJ Clarke not out 63
168 8 0 37.50

A Symonds c wicketkeeperMcCullum b O'Brien 26
33 3 0 78.78

SR Watson c wicketkeeperMcCullum b O'Brien 1
8 0 0 12.50
wicketkeeper BJ Haddin c How b Ryder 6 22 19 1 0 31.57

B Lee c wicketkeeperMcCullum b Southee 4 18 12 1 0 33.33

Extras (lb 1, w 1, nb 1) 3











Total (8 wickets; 59.4 overs) 160 (2.68 runs per over)

To bat SR Clark, MG Johnson



New Zealand fast bowler Tim Southee has rocked Australia's top order to see the home side reduced to 3-60 at lunch on day one of the opening 3 Mobile Test of the summer at the Gabba.

Black Caps skipper Daniel Vettori quickly had his decision to send the Australians in on a lively green pitch vindicated when Southee extracted good bounce and movement to see Australia crash to a dire 3-23 early in the first session.

BREET LEE (1not out) and Michael Clarke (60 not out) are the unbeaten men at the crease for the home side at the meal break and have been able to do a sufficient job of rebuilding the damage caused by Southee.

The 20-year-old, playing his first Test match against Australia and his third overall, took little time to stamp his impact on the game, putting the new ball to good use to see Australia's top three batsmen back in the stands after just over half an hour of play.

Opener Matthew Hayden (eight) was the first to go in the fourth over when he tentatively drove at a delivery that held its line and squared Hayden up, with a thick edge flying to Ross Taylor at first slip.

Southee grabbed the wicket of Simon Katich (10) in his next over when he produced good seam movement that Katich failed to deal with, finely edging the ball to keeper Brendon McCullum.

Southee showed bounce was another weapon in his arsenal when he caught Ricky Ponting (four) off guard with a rising shorter delivery that the Australian captain hesitantly popped up to Jamie How at second slip.

Southee was an unexpected starter in the Black Caps XI when he regulated the more experienced Kyle Mills, one of only five players in the New Zealand squad to have played a Test match against Australia, to drinks duty.

He quickly proved selectors right though as he finished the first session of the Test with figures of 3-34, causing headaches for Clarke and Hussey as they attempted to negotiate the new ball.

Clarke's fortunes would have been particularly frustrating for Southee, who found the edge of the Australian vice-captain's bat twice, but saw the knicks fly short, and then wide of the slips cordon for boundaries.After a delay of half and hour, Vettori won the toss and had no hesitations in electing to bowl to take advantage of humid conditions and a Gabba green-top that is greener than usual due to turbulent storms that have hampered the preparation of the pitch.

Australia elected to go into the match without a frontline spinner after omitting off-spinner Jason Krejza at the expense of Andrew Symonds, who returned to the national side after a three month absence.

National selectors will be hoping that all-rounders Shane Watson, who edged out Krejza for the last spot in the XI, and Symonds will be able to chalk up the runs that the top order missed out on.



Monday, November 17, 2008

Srikkanth tips: Yuvraj for Ganguly slot

November 18, 2008





Kris Srikkanth, the chairman of India's national selectors, has backed Yuvraj Singh to take the Test middle-order spot vacated by Sourav Ganguly, the former captain who has retired.

Yuvraj made two consecutive match-winning hundreds (138* and 118) against England in the first two ODIs of the seven-match series over the last five days, and also picked up a four-wicket haul in Indore yesterday. Srikkanth told the Kolkata-based Telegraph that he now sees Yuvraj as the front-runner to take Ganguly's slot.

"I see Yuvi as a potential match-winner in Tests too. Over the years, he has already shown he's a match-winner in ODIs," Srikkanth said. "There are others in the running as well (for Ganguly's slot), but Yuvi is definitely a front-runner."

Yuvraj has had an inconsistent run in Test cricket, having played just 23 matches for 1050 runs since his debut five years ago. However, the 26-year-old has been a mainstay for India in one-day cricket having piled up 6397 runs in 219 matches.

While Dilip Vengsarkar, the former India captain and previous chief selector, had recently blamed Yuvraj's inconsistency at the highest level on a lack of focus, Srikkanth said it had more to do with confidence.

"I've never felt Yuvi has a problem focusing on what he's required to do. I've always seen him as a confidence-player and such players need a couple of good knocks under their belt," Srikkanth said.

Asked about Yuvraj's latest run of form, Srikkanth said, "He has been brilliant. Rajkot had a batting track, but the Indore wicket was on the slower side and Yuvi had to first hold the innings together. He proved that he can be a match-winner from any situation."

The Indian selectors will meet on Thursday in Kanpur, after the third ODI between India and England, to select the team for the rest of the series.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Symonds will play:former aussie captain

Former Test captain Steve Waugh expects all-rounder Andrew Symonds to feature in Australia's line-up for the first Test against the Black Caps in the first Test of the 3 Mobile Test Series in Brisbane on Thursday.
Steve Waugh

"I think they need his spirit back in the side and the way he carries himself and his enthusiasm," Waugh said on Friday.

"Whether he's form-wise ready to get back into it and mentally, I guess the jury's still out on that because he hasn't done well for Queensland yet."

"There's got to be still some question marks there, it's not easy at international level just to turn the tap on and say 'ok I'm going to get back into my best form now'."

"So I think it might take him a little bit of time to get back into it so we don't want to expect miracles straight away if he plays in Brisbane and I think it'll take him a couple of Test matches to get back into it."

Symonds' return from exile after he was stood down by the player leadership group ahead of the sides one-day series against Bangladesh in August, creates a potential dilemma for selectors following fellow all-rounder Shane Watson's solid performances in India.

But Waugh says' he'd be 'comfortable' with the inclusion of both men in the final XI. "I don't think they've brought Andrew Symonds back in the 13 (man squad) to be 12th man or 13th, he'll play I'm pretty sure," Waugh predicted.

"And I think Shane Watson deserves his place in the team so I'm glad I'm not a selector."

"Maybe one of the quicks might make way and Shane Watson can be the third quick."

Meanwhile, Waugh conceded the current Test team is in the middle of a 'tough phase' but called for patience as Ricky Ponting's new-look side adjusts to the demands of international cricket.

"It's a little bit tougher for the younger players coming into the environment where the Australian cricket team's been so dominant and all of a sudden they feel a bit vulnerable, a bit fragile (having just) lost a series," he said.

"We've just got to give these guys a bit of time I mean Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath weren't star overnight, it takes a bit of time to get used to this top level.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

The youngest fast bowler make a debut in australia club


Josh Hazlewood will this week become the youngest fast bowler ever to play for New South Wales, having been chosen for his first-class debut against the touring New Zealanders. Hazlewood, 17, has been picked for the four-day match that starts in Sydney on Thursday and he is part of one of the most youthful squads New South Wales have ever chosen.

A 200-centimetre right-arm bowler, Hazlewood is so highly rated by New South Wales that he already holds a full contract with the state. However, the Blues had decided against picking him until his year 12 demands were complete and they kept to their policy - just. Soon after finishing his final exam in geography on Friday, Hazlewood was told he would be bowling for his state within a week.

"I was surprised and didn't even know New South Wales were playing New Zealand," Hazlewood told the Daily Telegraph. "I thought they were tied up with the domestic scene. I think it will be a good game to get started in. There won't be as much pressure given it's a tour game."

He has been likened to his childhood hero Glenn McGrath who, like Hazlewood, was raised in rural New South Wales. Hazlewood is from the small town of Bendemeer, a 40-minute drive from Tamworth. His selection gives the Blues a remarkably young line-up for the tour game - Steven Smith and Phillip Hughes are both 19 and another four players are aged 22 or under.

David Gilbert, the chief executive of Cricket New South Wales, said the 12-man squad highlighted the state's promising stocks. "New South Wales has a proud history of producing quality young players," Gilbert said.

"We are delighted that the game against New Zealand offers our youngsters the chance to compete against international opposition. We have been greatly impressed with the development of Josh Hazlewood and it will be exciting to see him make his first-class debut at the Sydney Cricket Ground this week."

New South Wales squad Phillip Hughes, Usman Khawaja, Peter Forrest, Steven Smith, Dominic Thornely (capt), Moises Henriques, Daniel Smith (wk), Grant Lambert, Beau Casson, Nathan Hauritz, Burt Cockley, Josh Hazlewood.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Fears over deepening Congo crisis

Papers
source: BBCNEWS

The paper describes rebel leader Laurent Nkunda as "The 'butcher' bringing fear and panic" to thousands of people in the city of Goma.

The Guardian says "violent instability will continue to plague the region" unless long-term issues are addressed.

"Deeper problems including citizenship, management of natural resources, government legitimacy and return of refugees," are all of vital importance.

Risky business

The Andrew Sachs phone call row rumbles on, with the Daily Mirror labelling Jonathan Ross a "prize pumpkin" for throwing a lavish Halloween party amidst the furore.

The Sun takes a different stance altogether, referring to Children in Need and the £20m it raised last year.

It says: "Amid the justifiable outrage at the BBC, it is worth remembering that it still does some decent things."

The Daily Telegraph points out that good television "needs to risk causing offence", just like Fawlty Towers did.

'Sad prospect'

The papers also react to Barclays' plan to obtain billions of pounds from Middle Eastern investors.

The Daily Express calls the deal "a sad, sickening prospect" that is "bad for Britain's national interest".

The Financial Times says Barclays will struggle to persuade "sceptical shareholders" that the move - which dilutes their investments - was the right one.

Meanwhile, the Independent says Gordon Brown is also going "cap in hand to the Gulf" to ask for help with the economic downturn and the price of petrol.

'Not cricket'

"March of the dustbin Stasi," writes the Daily Mail. The paper is angry at the use of "anti-terror laws" to catch people who put their rubbish out on the wrong day.

"Their tactics are chilling", it says of councils. "Our civil liberties are too precious to be threatened by these meddling jobsworths."

The Times, meanwhile, is upset at Allen Stanford's million dollar cricket match involving England later today.

It is "meaningless and undignified", it writes, and just "not cricket".

Thursday, October 30, 2008

The spectacular Mr Lara


http://image.com.com/gamespot/images/bigboxshots/7/934457_77963_front.jpg

You cannot discuss West Indies batting in the modern era without bringing up the names of Sir Vivian Richards and Brian Lara. I grew up watching Richards murder bowling attacks, chewing his ever-present gum with a swagger and arrogance all his own.

West Indian cricket has been a journey of thrills, fun, amazing peaks and disappointing troughs. For a team shackled with the burden of a heroic past, impeded in its development by wrangling within its cricket board, Brian Charles Lara has stood out and stood tall as one of the greatest batsmen the world has seen.

To an observer who is not West Indian, the Caribbean attitude is a strange one. Where most of us show immense emotion when confronted with challenges, many West Indian players hardly seem to change expression - whether they have won or lost, scored a duck or a hundred. This relaxed, laidback attitude, which has unfairly drawn huge criticism for being unsuitable to the pursuit of relentless success as styled by the Australians, has, however, succeeded in producing some of the most versatile and complete cricketers to have ever played the game. And that is exactly what Brian is: versatile and complete.

Like all great batsmen he has scored runs in every corner of the cricketing world against all the best attacks. What sets Brian apart from the other greats is the manner and attitude in which he wields the willow. There is panache; there is flamboyance, unpredictability, periods of consistent brilliance, and inexplicable runs of bad form. Never one to have been praised as a true team man, he single-handedly shouldered the burden of carrying West Indies' batting through a decade.

I have been unfortunate enough as a Sri Lanka cricketer to have witnessed him at his best at close quarters. The West Indian tour to Sri Lanka in November 2001 was The Brian Lara Show. In just six innings he scored 688 runs at 114.66, with three hundreds and a fifty. He did so at a time when Muttiah Muralitharan and Chaminda Vaas were at their lethal best on Sri Lankan pitches that had bite, bounce, turn and reverse swing. Yet West Indies still lost 0-3.

Brian's technique and style are not orthodox. Though he starts with a beautifully balanced stance, he progresses into a flamboyant and outrageously high back-lift that would be a coaching book no-no. His initial movement seems to be a spilt step-jump that flings his body into the position required to play his shots. Although unorthodox, these two movements, coupled with a fantastic eye and even better hands, allow him to generate incredible bat speed and power at the moment of impact. His sometimes extravagant follow-through is the result of this bat speed. Many are the times when, though his feet are nowhere near the required position they should be in to play a shot, the correctness of his balance and head position frees his hands and allows them to catch up with the ball at the exact right moment.

He is also the most destructive player of spin I have seen. To my mind he is the only batsman to have effectively tamed the threat of Murali and dominated him and Shane Warne. Brian has all the cliché attributes of a great player of spin: a good eye, quick feet, the ability to read from the hand, and an attacking attitude, combined with the most solid of forward defences. But to my mind what truly sets him apart and makes him such a fine player of spin, better than the rest, is that he is not content to react to the bowler. He keeps challenging himself in the middle of an innings to exploit the one area of the field the bowler wants him to exploit. I have seen Murali turn the ball square across him, with no midwicket, enticing him to play against the turn, and I have seen Brian keep driving, flicking and sweeping into that one vacant spot. Doing it once or twice is comprehensible, but to watch him do it for an entire session, it made you raise your eyebrows in amazement and wonder.

His nemesis in international cricket for a long time was Glenn McGrath, whose success against Brian was based on his ability to exploit the angle of bowling around the wicket. When Glenn came around the wicket to Brian it was almost a given that he would edge to slip. This was a matter of hot debate in our dressing room: many are the times we have tried to replicate the strategy, many are the times I have watched other teams attempt to do so, both with no great continued success.

So the question remains: was it really the one technical chink in Brian's armour or was it McGrath's special ability? Murali, wanting an answer, in his own direct and engagingly blunt fashion asked Brian himself when we were having dinner together at Mahaweli Reach in Kandy once. "Brian," Murali said, "why are you getting out all the time to McGrath?" Brian's answer was: "Murali, I have to get out somehow, and if I get out to McGrath, so what, it does not bother me." He simply did not believe there was a problem.

This was a personality trait that helped make Brian so successful. The situation of a match did not seem to bother him - the pressure, the expectations, his form; it just didn¹t seem to prey on his mind. Brian played as if for the moment. Each ball a fresh start, each stroke unhindered by the immediate past. He always believed that his ability would triumph. It is a degree of self-awareness and self-confidence that is extremely hard to achieve.










Maybe it was this, too, that undermined his effectiveness as a leader and allowed the perception to develop that he was not always a total team man. I cannot be sure this was the case, not having shared a dressing room with him. I question whether being so much better than the rest made it hard for him to relate properly to the lesser players in the team. Although he was certainly an astute and intelligent captain, he struggled to get full team cooperation and respect. It is hard to drag a team along that does not fully believe in you.

One question mark I have in my mind about Brian is: why the bad periods? He was brilliant, but he could also be inconsistent. On song, unstoppable; but there were times when he struggled badly. Technically he didn't change all that much through his career. It could just be that he couldn't synchronise his back-lift and exaggerated trigger movement. He needed rhythm as a batsman.

If you assess his achievements, he undisputedly ranks at the very top - 501 in first-class cricket for Warwickshire, 375 not out and then 400 not out in Test cricket; the highest run-scorer in world cricket for years until Tendulkar pipped him recently. That he achieved most of these feats when the opposition was swarming all over his team is remarkable.

However, perhaps the true value of Brian was his entertainment power. Whatever he did on the field he did with style and grace. He was not just a cricketer, he was a performer. There have been many great players, but few with the same ability to thrill a crowd. With Brian batting, the record books were constantly threatened. Every game had the potential to produce something amazing. When he was batting well, there was no greater sight in world cricket.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Gambhir ton : india on fire day one


India v Australia, 3rd Test, Delhi, 1st day


India 296 for 3 (Gambhir 149*, Tendulkar 68, Laxman 54*) v Australia

Billy Bowden defuses the situation between Gautam Gambhir and Simon Katich, India v Australia, 3rd Test, Delhi, 1st day, October 29, 2008

Billy Bowden defuses the situation between Gautam Gambhir and Simon Katich, India v Australia, 3rd Test, Delhi, 1st day, October 29, 2008





It took Gautam Gambhir nearly four years to make his second Test century having posted his first against Bangladesh in Chittagong; within nine days he has added a third. And if scoring two hundreds against the world's No. 1 Test team within a fortnight was not enough of a thrill, Gambhir can celebrate striking his highest Test score at his home ground and giving India an excellent start to a match that could deliver them the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.

When Gambhir, who had been impressively patient throughout the day, brought up the milestone with an unexpected six slammed nonchalantly over long-on off Shane Watson, the roars around the Feroz Shah Kotla were loud and long-lasting. The fans had been denied a century from Sachin Tendulkar, who was in magnificent touch until he fell for 68, but the Gambhir hundred was ample compensation.

The only ones not cheering were the Australians, who were witnessing an opening day that bore worrying similarities to the first three sessions in Mohali. Ricky Ponting insisted at the toss that his men had identified the problems that lost them the second Test and had worked tirelessly to fix the issues.

But apart from pinching two early wickets, Australia again had few causes for optimism. Their concerns included a lack of pace in the pitch, the absence of a frontline spinner, the inability of their fast men to consistently swing the ball, and the concentration of India's batsmen. It was a very familiar list of troubles.

The day went firmly in India's favour as soon as Gambhir and Tendulkar bedded down for a patient and important 130-run partnership. For most of their time together it was Tendulkar who looked by far the more dangerous. Unburdened by questions over when he would break the Test run-scoring record, he was in superb form.

A couple of brilliantly executed back-foot drives that raced past point for boundaries off Mitchell Johnson were a hint that something special might have been coming. An exquisitely-timed cover-drive to an overpitched Brett Lee delivery was just as attractive and Tendulkar passed 50 for the 20th time in Tests against Australia with a delicate and seemingly effortless late cut for four off Stuart Clark.

A 40th Test century was looming when Tendulkar edged behind off Johnson in the final over before tea. But Australia's momentary spark was quickly extinguished after the break when Gambhir lifted his pace.

When the Australians were running through a pre-series analysis of India's batting line-up they must have assumed the major threats would be the usual suspects: Tendulkar, VVS Laxman, Virender Sehwag, Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid. But the back-to-back centuries have come from Gambhir, the least experienced man in the top order.






Particularly impressive was the patience displayed by Gambhir after the early losses of Sehwag and Dravid. He comfortably saw India through a slightly nervous period, realising that there was not severe swing, seam movement or steepling bounce, and a sensible approach should work.

He did pounce at times - a pull off Watson comfortably cleared midwicket and sped away for four - but mostly Gambhir displayed his class with terrific timing and placement. A cover-driven boundary off Johnson rivalled anything Tendulkar had provided and he was quickly on to any seamers who strayed towards his pads.

When the platform was safely constructed, Gambhir changed gears more smoothly than Lewis Hamilton. Watson's around-the-wicket angle, which had tied down the left-hander, suddenly became a liability as Gambhir clipped balls repeatedly through the leg side. He began to cut and drive through the off-side more readily and capped off an attacking period by clubbing the six to move from 99 to 105.

The runs did not stop there. Laxman was almost unnoticed, inasmuch as that can be said of his glorious flicks through leg, in building a valuable half-century that helped stop any momentum Australia might have collected when Tendulkar departed. Laxman and Gambhir's unbeaten 139-run partnership became a major frustration for Ponting, whose troops performed admirably at times but failed to maintain the pressure.

The first hour had brought two mood-improving strikes for a team that had suffered a crushing loss in Mohali. In the third over Sehwag was beaten by Lee's speed and was struck dead in line, then as soon as Johnson came on he drew Dravid into an ill-advised drive that caught the edge and was terrifically snared by Matthew Hayden at first slip.

But the momentum eased, despite impressively tight bowling from Stuart Clark, who returned to the side having missed the second Test with an elbow injury. Australia's decision not to play the offspinner Jason Krejza meant Cameron White was again the leading slow bowler and his initial signs were not good.

Tendulkar contemptuously slog-swept a barely-turning White delivery over midwicket for four and drove him through cover, while Gambhir also attacked with delight. It took India 16 overs to take 27 runs from Clark; it took them four overs to strike the same amount off White, who was duly shelved and not seen again for the rest of the day.

Michael Clarke had a trundle and Simon Katich was given his first bowl of the series, although his major contribution was to antagonise Gambhir after comprehensively getting in the way of an attempted single. Words were exchanged and Billy Bowden inserted himself between Katich and Gambhir but the incident had no bearing on the final wash-up.

At a venue where India have won the past seven Tests a stumps total of 296 for 3 was precisely what Australia didn't want. They would hate to hear it, but it was an even worse outcome than the first day in Mohali, when India closed with 15 more runs but two fewer wickets in hand. Ponting has four more days to inspire his men.