Monday, 15 April 2013

Pune Warriors Taste Victory At Chepauk


Aaron Finch and Bhuvneshwar Kumar engineer 24-run win over Chennai Super Kings.
CHENNAI: The side with the poorest recent record in IPL pulled off what is generally considered to be the competition’s toughest assignment: a victory over Chennai Super Kings at Chepauk.
Pune Warriors, without Yuvraj Singh and captain Angelo Mathews, managed precisely that on Monday night by a margin of 24 runs. The visit side first posted 159 through bursts at the top and bottom of the order and then restricted Chennai to 135/8 in the pursue, as Bhuvneshwar Kumar came up with a stand out performance with the new ball.
The young Indian seamer return figures of 4-1-12-2, the scalps coming early in Chennai’s chase. Pune had earlier been served well by opener Aaron Finch’s 45-ball 67 and Steven Smith, who returned to the team and contributed a quickfire 39 and three smart catch in the deep.
Bad start
Chennai’s pursuit started most ominously. S. Anirudha – in the side for Mohit Sharma – was trapped in front by a now expected Bhuvneshwar in-swinger second ball. The home team would have plumbed deeper into distress were Vijay not drop by Tirumalasetti Suman off Ashok Dinda in the second over, a straight-forward chance at mid-on off a savage pull.
Vijay (24) went on to strike a couple of scary blow off pacer Mitchell Marsh, but just when he was looking to ease into a groove a top-edge against Abhishek Nayar’s military medium claimed him at extra cover.  That IPL behemonth Suresh Raina had, a little earlier, turn out to be Bhuvneshwar’s second victim - thanks to a mis-time to mid-on, located Chennai in somewhat of a soup at 40/3 inside of seven overs.
Regular wickets
Renowned escape artiste Ravindra Jadeja (27) and the reliable Subramaniam Badrinath (34) took things ahead.  The latter was crisp as he pulled and steered Nayar and flicked Dinda for four. But Badri’s first and only moment of uneasiness cost him his wicket: a slice high to Smith at long-off.
Having carted leggie Rahul Sharma for six, Jadeja frittered absent a solid platform by guiding Marsh into the hands of short fine-leg. Sixty-one were necessary off the last five overs when Ms Dhoni struck Dinda hard and low to Smith at long-off, signal the end of the chase.
Finch fires
Opener Aaron Finch’s 45-ball 67 stirred belongings up nicely to start with as the visitors, after choosing to bat at Chepauk, rode on a racy opening company. Finch claimed three boundaries in Dirk Nannes’ first over and seemed to deal exclusively in that mode of run-gathering, as his first 32 contained seven hits to the fence. Pune reached 48 without defeat in the Powerplay, with Robin Uthappa (26) playing the holding roll.
Finch smoked sixes off spinners R. Ashwin and Jadeja and brought up his half-century in 32 deliveries, before he was confused to the latter. Uthappa followed suit, holing out to South Africa all-rounder Chris Morris in an attempted correction of his dismal score rate.
Pune lost two more quickly. Morris got rid of Ross Taylor and Mitchell Marsh was taken in the deep off Bravo. Smith then came in for his first game of the season. The Aussiesmashed an unbeaten 39 in 16 balls, including strong sixes off the seamers Nannes, Bravo and Morris. Smith’s charge pressed Pune to 159, a total they defended admirably by chip away regularly at Chennai ‘s vaunted batting line-up.

Saturday, 13 April 2013

Gambhir-Kohli Involved in Ugly On-Field Spat, Virat-Gambhir Fight IPL 2013


This is going to be the biggest & saddest news for all the cricket fans of India. Their two stars batsman’s Gautam Gambhir and Virat Kohli has got involved in ugly on field spat on Thursday. That was the strong & unbelievable verbal duel between Kolkata skipper cum Indian Opening batsman Gautam Gambhir and Bangalore skipper Virat Kohli during their IPL 6 clash on Thursday. This Virat- Gambhir fight cum verbal duel took the fans by surprise on Thursday.

Talking about the match, Virat Kohli was on fire by smashing sixes & fours during Bangalore’s chase of 155. The situation became unbalanced when Lakshmipathy Balaji took the wicket of Virat Kohli by getting him caught by Eoin Morgan. Gambhir’s supposedly uttered a word to Virat Kohli on his dismissal that made Bangalore skipper angry. On Kohli’s reply, Gambhir was seen walking angrily towards Kohli before Rajat Bhatia intervened to avoid a possible collision.

Watch Gambhir- Kohli Fight in IPL 2013


Sreesanth’s Original Slapgate Video May Release Soon


Former IPL (Indian Premier League) chairman Lalit Modi made ​​a revelation on Friday in which he said that the idea of not releasing  the only Original video of ‘slap gate’ incident was of vice-president of the board Arun Jaitley, while adding he will now investigate it. The protagonist of the infamous Slapgate, 2008, S. Sreesanth Friday made ​​an explosive claim, says the whole Slapping incident was pre-planned and that his former teammate Harbhajan Singh was a ‘sneaky person’.
Indicating that he will consider the release of the video modes further wrote on his Twitter page, “Yes, I have the only copy of slapgate original video, will examine whether to release or not in the next few weeks.”
Sreesanth was the member of Kings XI punjab in that tournament, and he is currently playing for Rajasthan Royals, Sreesanth claimed that he was not all at fault in the incident and the real video of IPL Slapgate incident will show his version, which has never been released till now. He demanded that the videotape of the incident to be made public.

Wednesday, 10 April 2013

IPL 6: Bullish Mumbai Indians Hand Delhi Third Straight Loss


Mumbai: Rare is the day that a team recover from 1 for 2 to post a 200-plus total. Tuesday evening at the Wankhede Stadium saw hosts Mumbai Indians do just that, thanks to blazing fifties from Dinesh Karthik and Rohit Sharma that deliver the highest total of IPL 6.
Delhi Daredevil lost a wicket first ball of their run after thanks to one of the best catches of the modern era from 40-year-old Ricky Ponting, and the visitors wilted under the force of a daunting target to end up 44 runs short. The result took Mumbai to top of the table and level on four point with Rajasthan Royals, Royal Challengers Bangalore and Sunrisers Hyderabad. Delhi's third successive defeat was their heaviest.
Mumbai's inning got off to a awful start as both openers departed in nine deliveries with a solitary run on the board, but a startling counter-attack from Karthik put Delhi on the back foot quickly. Ponting was the first to fall for a duck, chipping Irfan Pathan to Mahela Jayawardene at mid-off. In the second over, Jayawardene completed his presence felt with a direct hit as of the same position to run out Sachin Tendulkar for 1.
But Karthik was not about to back away, and hit three fours in his first 11 balls faced. He then waded into Ashish Nehra in the sixth over with two fours and a six, after which Rohit top-edged a free hit for six over third man. The horse had bolted. Shahbaz Nadeem, the left-arm spinner, was welcome into the attack with a deft dab from Karthik for four as Mumbai's run rate crossed seven. Three fours off Umesh Yadav in the ninth over carried the score to 75 for 2, which Karthik bringing up his second fifty of the season in just 29 balls. At this stage, Rohit was a silent spectator with 12 as the partnership reached 74.
Stunningly, Karthik just continued to back himself to beat the fielders. The IPL debutant Jeevan Mendis was not on time cut for four and Nadeem slog-swept for six and slashed past extra cover to raise Mumbai's 100. Taking a cue, Rohit drove Mendis for six over extra cover to shift into the 20s. Consecutive fours to Karthik off Irfan took Mumbai to 124 for 2 going into the second strategic time-out. This was not slogging, but spotless hitting from Karthik.
The first two balls of the 15th over were edged and paddled to the boundary by Rohit, after which Morne Morkel got Karthik to drive a catch to extra cover off the fourth. He had fall four short of his Twenty20 best. Kieron Pollard smacked 13 off six balls before driving his seventh to mid-off, but Ambati Rayudu smashed 24 off eight balls of which 20 came in four successive deliveries from Irfan. Rohit - who had collected a welcome fifty off 42 balls in between Pollard's carefree hitting - finished the innings by means of three sixes off Nehra, who bled 20 in the last over.
Chasing 210 is a daunting task andDelhi were rocked first ball by a terrific catch from Ponting at small cover, leaping horizontally to his right as Unmukt Chand got a leading edge off Harbhajan Singh. It could have been two wickets in three balls for Harbhajan but Lasith Malinga dropped a catch at short fine leg when Jayawardene top-edged a brush. Delhi were 1 for 1 in one over.
The drop cost little, because Mitchell Johnson struck in his first over with the big wicket of Jayawardene, edging a drive to Karthik. David Warner was left to guide the chase and did so well until, having collected 11 runs off three Johnson deliveries, he chipped the fourth straight to deep cover for a 61 off 37 balls. Warner's innings mixed smart running and four huge sixes - the pick of the lot was a swiveled pull off Johnson - but his exit hurt Delhi. That was followed by Mendis' first-ball dismissal, pop a return catch to Pollard, as the visitors lost two wickets in four balls.
With the asking rate crossing 13, young Manprit Juneja was left to wage a lone battle. Irfan (10) swung Pragyan Ojha to a boundary rider, Kedar Jhadav (1) popped a return catch to Malinga, Nadeem (2) and spooned Ojha to point. A direct hit from Rishi Dhawan cut off Juneja on 49 and some free swinging from Morkel (23 not out off nine balls) ensured Delhi were not bowled out.

Royal Challengers Bangalore vs Sunrisers Hyderabad – IPL 6 – Toss Report


Sunrisers Hyderabad’s skipper, Kumar Sangakkara, won the toss against Royal Challengers Bangalore and his side will bat primary in the 9th match of the ongoing Indian Premier League Season, at present being played at the Bangalore, April 9, 2013.
The undefeated franchise complete one change to the line-up, leaving out left-arm spinner Ankit Sharma, and bring in batsman Biplab Samantray, in a bid to bolster their batting resources. Sangakkara expects the playing field to assist the batters.
His counter, Bangalore’s skipper Virat Kohli, was not too disappointed with the outcome of the throw, claiming that the track will turn into better as the match progresses. The home surface made two changes to their playing XI, bringing in South Africa’s ODI skipper, AB de Villiers in place of the out of form Tillakaratne Dilshan. The Sri Lankan all-rounder had be in poor knick of late, scoring just 5 runs in the opening two sports competition, including a duck. As for de Villiers, he recently arrived after performing his duty for his domestic franchise, the Titans.
The other change come in the bowling department for the Challengers, where they have included left-arm pacer RP Singh. He take the place of batsman Karun Nair.
The home side will be looking to avenge the defeat they suffered at the hands of their current opponent at Hyderabad just two nights ago. After being tied at the end of the 40 overs, the Sunrisers won the tie, via the Super Over eliminator, with Cameron White life form the star of the show.
Hyderabad will be aiming to win their third consecutive game following wins against the Challengers and Pune Warriors. The home side made a good start to the season by defeating Mumbai Indians and will be hoping to return back to winning ways.
Royal Challengers Bangalore: 1 Chris Gayle, 2 Mayank Agarwal, 3 Virat Kohli (capt), 4 AB de Villiers, 5 Moises Henriques, 6 Vinay Kumar, 7 Arun Karthik (wk), 8 Murali Kartik, 9 Jaidev Unadkat, 10 RP Singh, 11 Muttiah Muralitharan
Sunrisers Hyderabad: 1 Akshath Reddy, 2 Parthiv Patel (wk), 3 Kumar Sangakkara (capt), 4 Cameron White, 5 Thisara Perera, 6 Hanuma Vihari, 7 Biplab Samantray, 8 Ashish Reddy, 9 Amit Mishra, 10 Dale Steyn, 11 Ishant Sharma
Tagged in: Royal Challengers Bangalore, Indian Premier League, Sunrisers Hyderabad
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Tuesday, 19 March 2013

Sehwag, Gambhir Come Good In Different Hue


While the Indians were scything from side to side the Aussie batting line-up at Mohali for a win inside four days, made likely by their new opening pair, the just-discarded duo of Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir was taking fresh guard together some 300 km away in Gurgaon.
Just a handful of people at the secluded 'green' TERI Gram - built on power-saving techniques - witnessed the duo's spine-tingling start to a 161-run chase in the Syed Mushtaq Ali national T20 opener against Punjab.
Clad in Delhi's yellow and blue, away from fans and media with Sehwag even dumping his spectacles, they, as MS Dhoni insists in media session, 'expressed themselves'.
Bright start
Sehwag found the meat early next to paceman Sandeep Sharma, glancing one to fine leg and then clearing mid on; an edge to third man fence finished the over.
Gambhir, deciding not to play the sheet fasten he is known for, survived jitters. Siddharth Kaul got some bounce that left Gambhir missing a couple of swats and after that mistiming one.
Through the early part, while Viru blaze away to a 26-ball 36, the Gauti rushed into his shots. He was dropped twice, survive a run-out chance once.
But he soon found his groove at what time a full delivery was creamed through cover. From thereon, Gambhir waited, saw and shattered.
After Sehwag was caught small of his crease in a rather clumsy manner, not grounding his bat even after reaching the crease, and Unmukt Chand holing one to bottomless point for a duck, Gambhir took charge and guided the pursue as Puneet Bisht went berserk.
The Viru-Gauti unite realized 76 in just 8.3 overs.
When Sehwag last played in nationwide T20s - just last season - he was eye return to India team from injury.
Since then, he has been axed from the T20 squad, then as of the ODI squad and finally from Tests. This time though, he seem to be eyeing a return - as a pair with Gambhir.
Punjab 160/7 (Gurkeerat 57, M Sidhana 35, V Sood 2/24, P Negi 2/36, P Awana 1/37) 
lost to Delhi 162/4 in 19.1 overs (G Gambhir 68*, V Sehwag 36, P Bisht 32)
J&K 108/7 (S Khajuria 61, I Khan 2/16, A Sakuja 2/23) 
lost to Services 109/5 in 19.2 overs (N Verma 39*, R Paliwal 22) 
by five wickets.
Published by HT Syndication with permission from Hindustan Times.

Praveen Kumar Ready To Turn A New Leaf


Few would disagree that Praveen Kumar was the one who brought back the venomous effect of swing bowling back in the Indian bowling sphere. His stint with the Indian team has, however, been interspersed with injuries.
That hasn’t affected his morale, stresses Praveen. “I won’t say that I contain been unlucky with injuries. Only the elbow injury had worried me for a while. Although I have missed a lot of big tournaments like the World Cup because of injuries, I don’t have any regrets,” Praveen told Mail Today on Monday.
Althoughthe 26- year- old paceman has recently been in the news for all the wrong reasons, he’s ready to move on and give his best in the upcoming Indian Premier League. He also said that the Syed Mushtaq Ali Twenty20 Trophy is a perfect open pad for the IPL. “For the moment, I am looking forward to the IPL and am working hard to make sure Kings XI Punjab do well in the tournament. I am presently playing in the Mushtaq Ali Trophy and am bowling in the right areas. It is absolutely a good preparation ahead of the IPL,” he said.
On Kings XI Punjab’s prospects, Praveen said so as to he was looking forward to work under new coach Darren Lehmann, who was the coach of the erstwhile Deccan Chargers. He also said that although momentum is key in a rivalry like IPL, they have to take one match at a time.
“I have heard a lot of positive things about Darren Lehmann from the Hyderabad players and am excited to play under him. We did well last year and only just missed a playoff berth. In the IPL, we have to take one match at a time,” he said.
The Deodhar Trophy in Guwahati saw a overabundance of former India players like Gautam Gambhir, Munaf Patel and Dinesh Karthik taking fraction in the limited overs tournament. And Praveen did his reputation no harm by bagging the wicket of Gambhir and bowling a stingy spell, which included two wickets at the cost of 28 runs in seven overs.
Praveen is, however, not overtly concerned at his lengthy absence from the international scene, “My job is to perform and I know I will be rewarded if I keep drama well at the domestic level. Personally, I have always enjoyed live at every level, be it domestic, international or Twenty 20,” he said.

Monday, 18 March 2013

India Squeeze Out Another Win By Australia In 3rd Test Match 2013




MOHALI: Australia resists like a girl with an attitude, but gave in eventually to a relentless suitor as India won the third Test by six wickets to go 3-0 up in the series. The fourth plus last match will be played in New Delhi from March 22 when India wills effort to win four Tests in a series for the first time in their history.
Set a target of 133 in a minimum of 27 overs, India hit the Promised Land for the loss of Murali Vijay (26), Cheteshwar Pujara (28) and Virat Kohli (34) and Sachin Tendulkar (21). For a brief while it appeared that Australia may confine India to a draw. Thirty were desirable in fifty-six balls when Kohli flicked Peter Siddle to short mid-wicket.
Tendulkar and MS Dhoni (18*) played through a stage of quiet as the requirement escalated, and the maestro’s sharp run-out by David Warner gave Australia one more look-in to enforce a draw. But Ravindra Jadeja walked in to cream limits against Siddle, setting an example for his skipper to follow: Dhoni decided things with three fours off Mitchell Starc and after that uprooted a stump as a souvenir.
The win at Mohali was mainly set up by Shikhar Dhawan’sblazing 187 on debut that was scored across two sessions on Saturday and made up for the time lost on account of the first-day washout. Dhawan was named Man of the Match, but did not come out to bat on Monday as he has injured his hand while fielding. India were also served well by Jadeja's left-arm spin, that claim six wickets - three in each innings - in the match. Jadeja has dismissed Michael Clarke five times in this series.

Cricketers Reaction over Longest Six by Shahid Afridi


Few Interesting Comments from Players n Personalities All Over the world about shahidAfridi After the Match ( Read Below ) !!
Lala constructed a World Record by hitting all time huge six of 158 meters, in the history of Cricket.
Scott Styris tweeted: That was a ludicrously big six from Afridi!
Most Sixes In Odi Record
AFRIDI (308)
JAYASURIYA (270)
TENDULKAR (195)
GAYLE (193)
GANGULY (190)
PONTING (162)
CAIRNS (153)
DHONI (152)


Longest Six By Shahid Afridi Video

“De Villiers is like a drummer. He is brutal. Amla is like a violen. He is subtle. Shahid Afridi is like a base drummer.” Pat Symcox
“There are not many players with over 200 SIXES, but there is just one with over 300 and that’s Shahid Afridi.” Pat Symcox
“Thank godness I was not part of the South African XI today. When Shahid Afridi was batting, they had their faces red.” Pat Symcox
When Shahid Afridi is hitting, you can only pray and do nothing else.”

Cricket for me is basically fun – Samuels


Marlon Samuels was pleased to return to internationalcricket with a four-wicket haul that helped restrict Zimbabwe to 211 in the Barbados Test, saying he might be called "comeback kid" after the number of comebacks he has made in his vocation. For him, he said, cricket was all about enjoyment, and that showed through in his eagerness to contribute in all departments.
"Cricket for me is basically fun, with bat, fielding, bowling. Whenever I get a chance to bowl I enjoy it. They call me 'lucky arm' now, I've been picking up some wickets recently. I'm just having fun and enjoying being back in global cricket," Samuels said at the end of the first day's play in Bridgetown.
Zimbabwe chose to bat, and seem to building a solid platform at 100 for 2, before the introduction of offspinner Shane Shillingford turned the innings. They lost eight wickets for 111 runs, with Shillingford and Samuels claim seven between them.
Samuels struck with his primary ball, bowling Craig Ervine for 29. "He just pushed the wrong line and missed it. He had wanted me to bowl to him in a do game, I told him I didn't want to bowl," Samuels said with a laugh. "So I finally got to bowl to him and got him out first ball, it was great."
The Zimbabwe batsmen, he said, might have been a bit complacent after seeing off the pacy trio of quicks - Tino Best, Kemar Roach plus Shannon Gabriel. "After Zimbabwe faced our fast bowlers, maybe they became a bit relaxed next to our slower bowlers. Everyone was looking [for us] to blast out the Zimbabwe batsman, but that didn't occur today.
"There was some wonderful bowling by Shillingford. He show that the slower you bowled on the wicket you could also get some rebound as well and he did a great job."
But the day was not all rosy for West Indies, as they lost two wickets inexpensively in reply (including nightwatchman Roach), going to stumps on 18 for 2. The pitch demands that their batsmen work hard on day two, Samuels said: "A couple of balls be very quick and a couple held up, so it's a pitch where you have to apply yourself plus runs will come. If you work hard as a batsman you'll get some runs.
"Runs on the board are already on the plank. So we need to get past it [Zimbabwe's total] first and then we'll see where it goes from there."
Samuels is back for West Indies following two months out due to a facial injury; he was struck on the face by a Lasith Malinga delivery at the Big Bash League in Australia in early January. The time away helped him reassess his game, he said. "It was time for me to sit rear and relax with the family, and reflect on what I've been doing around the world. I used the time to reflect on my work and put myself back in a position to achieve the goal I set out to get in international cricket."

Sunday, 17 March 2013

MOHALI: Thank Michael Clarke if you’re Indian. Fall at his feet if you’re Shikhar Dhawan. On Saturday, the Aussie captain allowed the Delhi opener to have a belligerent, record-breaking maiden Test by choosing not to appeal when Mitchell Starc had inadvertently ‘Mankaded’ him on the first ball of the innings.
Dhawan went on to smash an unbeaten 185 in just 168balls, the fastest hundred ever on debut and the highest score by an Indian debutant, and was 15 away at close from scoring the country's first double-hundred in a maiden Test. The blitz kept alive India's hopes of enforcing a result in the rain-curtailed third Test. 


Shikhar Dhawan Scintillates On Debut


The opener collars the Aussie attack for a record score at Mohali.
MOHALI: Thank Michael Clarke if you’re Indian. Fall at his feet if you’re Shikhar Dhawan. On Saturday, the Aussie captain allowed the Delhi opener to have a belligerent, record-breaking maiden Test by choosing not to appeal when Mitchell Starc had inadvertently ‘Mankaded’ him on the first ball of the innings.
Dhawan went on to smash an unbeaten 185 in just 168 balls, the fastest hundred ever on debut and the highest score by an Indian debutant, and was 15 away at close from scoring the country's first double-hundred in a maiden Test. The blitz kept alive India's hopes of enforcing a result in the rain-curtailed third Test.
The hosts, having endured an irritatingly prolonged wag of the Australian tail in the first session, took themselves to within 125 runs runs of their rivals by stumps. Not since Virender Sehwag (the man Dhawan displaced) in his pomp had India gathered Test runs at such a pace: 283 for no loss in 58 overs, in reply to Australia's 408. This was also India's third-highest opening partnership in Tests.
Power play
The impetus came mostly from Dhawan’s bat and he pierced a packed offside with spectacular stroke-play. Almost 80 percent of his runs came in boundaries (a scarcely believable 33 fours garnished with two sixes) mostly placed to perfection through a well-populated off-side field, but some also cheekily attained via the premeditated paddle against the spinners.
Dhawan reached fifty in as many balls, and just 35 more deliveries were needed to nudge aside Suresh Raina as India’s latest centurion on debut. His 150 came off 131 deliveries. The frenetic, unconquered opening partnership of 283 is the highest, by a long way, by an Indian opening pair against Australia. Murali Vijay (83*), who ensured a steady distribution of strike while his partner was going ballistic, deserves no little credit for that.
Two of Australia's own had earlier come tantalizingly close to three figures. Steve Smith stretched his overnight half-century to 92 before Pragyan Ojha got him with a beauty, ending a 97-run partnership that tormented India for one whole session.  The other relinquished maiden hundred was even harder on the heart.
Mitchell Starc batted like a man possessed for 99, presenting the full face of the bat, alternating conscientious blocking with intensive hitting that gained him 14 boundaries. He hit Ishant Sharma back over his head and cut and flicked R. Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja. Starc survived a streaky phase during which he edged a few and eventually the nerve of getting to a maiden hundred got to him one run away from the landmark.
Suddenly, Starc was all pins and needles against Ishant Sharma, who teased him outside off before snaring him with an outside edge for his highest first class score. This made Starc the fourth Aussie bat to miss out on a ton in this innings. The tail, however, had done enough by then to extend the score from an overnight 273/7 to 408 all out. With the entire first day lost to rain, it appeared that the visitors had done enough to ward off defeat in the third Test. Dhawan took two sessions to rubbish that notion.

Wednesday, 13 March 2013

Lele Wants 'Match-Winner' Sehwag Back In Team


Mumbai, Mar 12: Former BCCI secretary Jaywant Lele wants discarded Indian opener Virender Sehwag to be recall and made an integral part of the Indian team in all three format of the game for his match-winning abilities. "He is a batsman who has scored two triple hundreds and one near triple hundred in Test cricket. He's a match-winner and according to me Sehwag be supposed to be in the Indian team in all three forms of the game as long as he is fit and available," said Lele, at the CCI yesterday, while delivering the keynote address of the "Legends Club" on the 98th birth anniversary of former captain Vijay Hazare. The outspoken former official claimed how he had play a role in Sehwag getting a firm foothold in the Indian team through the ODIs early on in the Delhi dasher's career. "Selector Madan Lal used to bring up Sehwag's name consistently in selection group meetings chaired by Chandu Borde as the player used to score 40-50 regularly batting at 7 or 8 in domestic match and after a lot of persuasion was included in the squad of 15 in the ODI series against Zimbabwe," Lele recalled. "When captain Sourav Ganguly was banned from the Rajkot game for India owing to over-rate penalty, Madan asked me to try and convince Borde to give Sehwag a chance. I persuaded Borde to include him in the XI and the latter decided only on the condition that I take up the entire responsibility by saying he could not be contacted and I agreed. And Sehwag is still playing," said Lele. Lele also recalled legendary Sir Garfield Sobers' lofty praise of Sehwag's abilities during a talk show in Mumbai a few existence ago when he said he was the Indian player he liked most for his attacking play. "When I met Sandeep Patil before the Test series, I told him concerning Sehwag'smatch-winning qualities and he agreed," Lele added.

Howard Doesn't Know The Real Me – Watson


Shane Watson challenge Australia's team performance manager Pat Howard to research his standing as a team man among cricketers around the country and denied he had any major problems with the captain Michael Clarke on his near the start return home from the India tour.
Having left Chandigarh to spend time with his pregnant wife following his dumping from the side for the third Test alongside James Pattinson, Mitchell Johnson and Usman Khawaja, Watson declared Howard did not know him or the game well sufficient to make the contention that he only "sometimes" does the most excellent thing for the team. 
"All I can really say is go approximately and ask every person I've ever played cricket with and that will give you the best indication of whether I'm a team man or not," Watson thought at Sydney airport. "Pat Howard doesn't particularly know me extremely well. He's come from a rugby background and hasn't been in and around cricket very long. I think the best people to ask are the people I've played cricket with and they'll be able to give their truthful opinion."
As for Clarke, of whom Howard said he and Watson had to "sort their issues out", the vice-captain insist their relationship was strong. Watson also revealed he had spoken to Clarke immediately after landing in Australia following the ventilation of Howard's comments.
"The way relationships work, there's always ups and downs like there is in marriages, friendships and all," Watson said of Clarke. "I've been playing cricket with and against Michael Clarke since I was 12. We've got a lot of history as people. We're clearly quite different people in certain ways but very very similar in a lot of ways as well.
"In the end, like you do in every association, it goes up and down and things are going really well at the moment with me and Michael. With Pat Howard, he's only come on slat the last year and a half. Myself and Michael go a little bit further back than a year and a half."
Maintaining his view so as to the sanctions for four players having failed to send in feedback ahead of the third Test was extremely harsh, Watson noted how many bouts of injury and rehab he had battled through to keep playing for Australia.
"I, with a few other guys, took it as most important into the Test match and I got that extremely wrong, which meant that it's cost me a Test match," he said. "They obviously thought that was the right decision for the team at this point in time. I accept that I did the wrong thing with what I did, but I will always find it very hard to believe being suspended from a Test match for my country. "I've miss Test matches and games through injury throughout my career. I feel like I've worked my absolute bum off to have an opportunity to represent my nation. When that's taken away from you, you think the actions must be very severe. That's where we differ on our opinions. I think it's very harsh. I expressed my extreme disappointment with the punishment. But everything happens for a cause in your life."
Watson's father has spoken of how a future without international competition may be contentedly filled by Twenty20 duty in the IPL and for other clubs, and the sometime allrounder said he would be carefully weighing up his love of the game and the harm this suspension has caused him.
"It'll give me a chance to reflect on what's really happened over the past couple of days and be able to absorb what's happened and have a think about where belongings are at," he said. "I absolutely love playing cricket. I love nothing more than being able to have the opportunity and privilege to represent my country. That's amazing that, when it was taken away from me with this suspension - well, the guys reverse in India know how much it hurts me."

For Cricket Sachin Tendulkar Is Maradona And Pele Put Together: Allan Donald


New Delhi: South African pace fable Allan Donald feels cricket would be a poorer sport once Sachin Tendulkar retires from the scene as the Indian veteran is "Maradona and Pele put jointly" for the game.
"Sachin Tendulkar's charm goes beyond the field. For cricket he is Maradona and Pele put jointly, it is as simple as that. Cricket will be a poorer sport when he quits the game. He has been unbelievably special," the 46-year-old South African has on paper in the upcoming book Sachin -- Cricketer of the Century, authored by Vimal Kumar and set to hit the stands later this month.
Donald said when he is asked about the greatest in the game, the first name that comes to his mind is Tendulkar. "Tendulkar's is the first name that comes to mind the instant you ask who is the greatest," he said.
Allan Donald said whenever he is ask about the greatest in the game, the first name that comes to his brain is Sachin Tendulkar.
"My granddad introduced Sachin to me through the Wisden Cricketer magazine. When he play for Yorkshire in county cricket, I saw him for the first time. He is the No. 1 player. I keep saying that and I don't think I will ever change my mind," he additional.
Known for his hostile speed and 'White lightening', Donald has a word of advice for international bowlers on how to get ready for the senior batsman. "You don't analyse Sachin two days previous to a Test. We always planned months in advance. We knew how extremely Indian teams depended on him.
"History will show you that right-arm express pace bowlers have been successful next to him. I spoke to Curtly Ambrose before my 1996 trip to India and he told me to by no means let Sachin leave the first 15 balls," he explained.

Thursday, 28 February 2013

Injury-prone Pattinson Could Be Rested For Hyderabad Test


Sydney, Feb 27: Australia's leading pace gentleman James Pattinson, who performed brilliantly in the first Test against India in Chennai, could be rested for the next Test in Hyderabad by means of team pecking order desperate not to risk the fast bowler breaking down again.
There is only a three-day rotate until the second Test begins on Saturday, and Australia will consider what effect the rigours of the Chennai defeat had on the 22-year-old Victorian, who was creation his international return from a lower rib injury suffered next to South Africa in November, the Sydney Morning Herald reports.
India completed an eight-wicket come first here on Tuesday morning, successfully managing a 50-run chase after Australian debutant Moises Henriques was left stranded on 81 not out. The house side leads the four-Test Border-Gavaskar Trophy series 1-0.
Pattinson, along with NSW all-rounder Henriques, was a leading light for Australia, claiming 5-96 in the first innings including five of India's top seven batsmen, and adding another in their brief second dig.
Pattinson is coming off what the team's high-performance staff regard as a low base, entering the first Test by means of only a Sheffield Shield appearance in January and a two-day tour game in Chennai, as well as a cameo in club cricket last month, the paper said.
After being used carefully by captain Michael Clarke earlier in the match Pattinson bowled only six overs in two full session on Saturday, but devastated the India top arrange in the process, the paper added.
The concern with Pattinson's workload is due to his previous breakdown, as after starring next to South Africa in Brisbane, he went down during the second Test in Adelaide, wiping him out for the relax of the international summer, the paper reported.
Selectors receive advice from the high-performance team on players' workloads and fitness before each match, and then make a decision, and therefore there is a probability the rapid could be rested in the next Test. 

Sachin's Super Sixes


And other sidelights from the Chepauk Test.

Only once had Sachin Tendulkar begun a Test innings with a six: when he crunched Muttiah Muralitharan rear over his head and out of the stadium first ball at Nagpur in 1997. On Tuesday, the genius went one better, wading into Nathan Lyon’s off-spin for two huge strikes over long-on on the first two deliveries. Another hit for utmost would have won the match in style, but that wasn’t to be and it was absent to Cheteshwar Pujara to stroke the charming run. Tendulkar though made what is possibly his last Test appearance at Chepauk a memorable single for those who turned up.
Numbers game
Match-by-match statistical upheaval are now commonplace. The last day of the Chepauk Test too contributed to a budge in numbers. MS Dhoni equaled Sourav Ganguly as India’s most successful captain on 21 Test wins. Dhoni has now won all the five Tests so as to he has captained against Australia at home, but lost all three to them away. When Ravindra Jadeja removed Nathan Lyon to finish Australia's second innigs, it was the 20th wicket taken by an Indian spinner. This is the third example of Indian spinners picking up all 20 wickets in the match. The previous occasion were against Australia in 1972/73 and New Zealand in 1975/76.
In a match with several positives, there was still a rotten concern for India. The state of their openers. Virender Sehwag and Murali Vijay did very little to redeem their places in the side. Sehwag’s spectacles didn't appear to have helped his bat as he failed in either inning. Both openers were out to James Pattinson in the first essay. Their dismissals as India chased a modest 50 to win were embarrassing. Vijay spoon a catch to mid-off trying to drive; Sehwag was out defending to a spinner. There is bound to be fair discussion for Shikhar Dhawan to be draft in for the second Test, after which a back-in-form Gautam Gambhir would be eager to get back in the thick of it.
Winning spin
Another issue that is likely to eggs debate is the number of spinners in the eleven. Dhoni used his pace bowlers for just three of the 93 in the second innings. All twenty wickets falling to spin hinted that the inclusion of another tweaker wouldn’t have impair India’s chances, rather it would have lent another facet to the assault. Harbhajan Singh bowled better in the second innings than he did in the first; still his failure to hit the right line an outright helpful track made for no special performance. Ravindra Jadeja did his bit with the ball; his batting a scornful shadow of his domestic domination. Another expected turned at Hyderabad – the venue of the second test – just may allow Pragyan Ojha a pastime at the expense of a pacer.
After struggling against England, Ashwin return to form with 12 wickets on a minefield of a pitch and against an inexperienced batting line up. For a while in the first innings, when he have scooped out the top six, Ashwin raised hopes of another 10-wicket haul – a-la Anil Kumble next to Pakistan in 1999. But Ravindra Jadeja destroyed that dream by shattering Mitchell Starc’s stumps. The Chennai off-spinner however did turn out to be the first Indian bowler to take 10 in a match alongside Australia, since Kumble at the same venue in 2004. Ashwin also become the fastest to 500 runs and 75 wickets in Tests. He got there in his 13th match, displacing Ian Botham (14 Tests) to second place.
It was a match of contrast for Australia. In Moises Henriques they found a valiant debutant who ground out two fighting half-centuries in nerve-wracking conditions. And in Nathan Lyon they exposed, to their misfortune, an off-spinner totally out of his league. While Henriques contributed 149 runs on debut, Lyon was taken for 215 in his 47 laborious first innings overs. India’s captain MS Dhoni was chiefly severe on Lyon, taking 104 from 85 balls, including five sneering sixes. His only high point was bowling Sachin Tendulkar before a century-expectant crowd, but really Xavier Doherty, Glenn Maxwell and Steve Smith couldn't have perhaps done a worse job.

Monday, 25 February 2013

India v Australia: The Five Highest Impact Indian Test Batting Performances


The 5 highest impact batting performances by an Indian against Australia since 1947-48. For the first time - in a match/ series context.
Most batting performances are seen in an innings context, which is highly inadequate as that is such an incomplete picture. Since the DNA of Test cricket is Test matches made up of two innings, and those matches are in turn part of a series, the big picture is the series – that is the war, as it were. Test matches are battles, an innings merely a phase in a battle.
To provide this context to cricket performances, we bring you the five best Test batting performances in a match/series context, in the history of India-Australia Test cricket. Most of these will perhaps not be a surprise but their order may be.
All of them are Series-Defining performances, which gives them values higher than what their Match IMPACT numbers say.
1. VVS Laxman – 59 & 281 v Australia, Kolkata 2001
Match Batting IMPACT: 11.92
Brief Scores: Aus 445 & 212, Ind 171 & 657/7 – India won by 171 runs
It is hard to imagine any batting performance having a higher impact in Test cricket history. The facts around this performance are as legendary as the performance itself. 16 consecutive world-record wins for Australia who are 1-0 up in the 3-Test series, Australia make 445, India 171. VVS Laxman coming in at 88 for 4 in the first innings, which soon becomes 129 for 9, playing the only substantial innings – a fluent 59 off 83 balls, with an unbelievable twelve boundaries (in the context of the game, where run-scoring seems so difficult). India follow on, Laxman promoted up the order comes in at 52 for 1. 556 more runs would be scored, bowlers like McGrath, Gillespie, Warne and Kasprowicz would be thwarted like never before, or since, more than ten hours of play would transpire - before Laxman finally would get out for 281 off 452 balls – 44 boundaries in them. We’re keeping the romance out of this (enough has been written on this in that vein) – the facts are spine-tingling enough – from being 222 behind when Laxman walked in, to being 384 ahead when he got out -  no one has traversed a journey this long, and this deep, in Indian cricket history. It’s a rags-to-riches cricket story – as his team went on to win the next Test and the series. And changed the course of Indian cricket history.

2. R Dravid – 25 & 180 v Australia, Kolkata 2001
Match Batting IMPACT – 7.87
Brief Scores: Aus 445 & 212, Ind 171 & 657/7 – India won by 171 runs
For too long, Dravid’s performance in the same match has been seen as a supporting role. If Dravid had got 20 runs more, the romance around his performance would increase considerably and maybe history would remember this differently. But the facts are – coming in to bat at 232 for 4 (as the last recognized batsman) a demotion for the first time in his career from no. 3 to no. 6 (after a laboured 25 in the first innings) – an international cricket life on the line. 42 runs from making Australia bat again, on a good pitch that shows no sign of breaking up. With just one ball separating two highly disparate destinies – through this fragile reality Dravid resumes his innings on 14th March 2001, on his overnight score of 7, hoping his partner, though well-set on 109, is not satiated yet (a quintessential Indian shortcoming). About 7 hours and 335 runs later, the duo is still not separated – India 315 runs ahead, and visions of victory entering incredulous Indian consciousness. India would go on to win (thanks to Harbhajan Singh) in the last day – which, of course, gave the match its legendary status and these two batting performances their high impact. How could it have been otherwise – can life, even in all its indifference, deny any moment such a high degree of poetry?

3. R Dravid – 233 & 72 not out  v Australia, Adelaide 2003
Match Batting IMPACT – 7.67
Brief Scores: Aus 556 & 196, Ind 523 & 233/6 – India won by 4 wickets
A rare momentum-changing performance that changed the way the series would be fought .
The most interesting thing about this performance is that Dravid’s 233 actually had a slightly lower impact than his fourth innings unbeaten knock of 72. It seems staggering at first, when you look at the circumstances of the first innings – handling a mini-collapse when it had become 85 for 4 at one point (thus handling considerable pressure). Adding 303 runs with Laxman, then 135 more runs with the rest. Making the highest individual score overseas by an India – yes, he did all that, but the context of the match tells the full story. The first half of the match yielded 1079 runs (of which he scored 233; Ponting made 242; Laxman 148; Katich 75; even Gillespie made 48), the second half yielded 429 (of which he scored 72; no-one crossed 50) – just 6% more proportionately in the first innings. This was overtaken by the value of making the 72 in a substantial fourth innings chase (the rare occurrence that often defines legacies), even though no pressure came through the falling of quick wickets (though they kept falling on-and-off) - Dravid himself played a big part with his calm presence – there was no panic; he kept the innings together. He would later say his fierce motivation was the desperation to avoid the so-near-yet-so-far heartbreak he and his team had experienced a few times in the recent past. Fact is – that unbeaten 72 would have had a classic status in Indian cricket history, even if he’d scored a duck in the first innings. The reverse may not have been true because India probably wouldn’t have won the Test otherwise. A good example of how circumstances and context have a big say in the calculation of impact.
4. Nawab of Pataudi jnr 86 & 53 v Australia, Bombay 1964
Match Batting IMPACT – 5.80
Brief Scores: Aus 320 & 274, Ind 341 & 256/8 – India won by 4 wickets
A classic from the 1960s – when a 23-year-old prince (and India’s youngest-ever captain till date) led India, in every sense of the word, to a memorable win after being 0-1 down in the series. India was lucky that, shortly after the start of the match, Australian batsman Norman O’Neil withdrew with stomach problems and took no further part in the match. But even then, Australia put up 320 and had India at 149 for 4 when the one-eyed prince walked out. There wasn’t much batting to follow but high class Test batting for over three and a half hours took the score to 293 until Pataudi Jr was out for a heroic 86. A rejuvenated India added almost 40 more but Australia came back strongly in the second innings and set India 254 to win – a very high ask in that era. Thanks to night-watchman Surti, the Nawab came out even later than the first innings (many experts feel he should have batted at no. 4 all his life), at 113 for 5, which shortly became 122 for 6. For the second time in the match, Pataudi took charge (this time with Vijay Manjrekar, who also came out late) and brought stability that seemed occidental in its assuredness – which would eventually be Pataudi Jr’s greatest contribution to Indian cricket. He was out 30 runs from the target though; Chandu Borde’s unbeaten 30 ensured none of this was in vain. 42,000 people watched the match, which ended half-an-hour before close – and gave India its most memorable Test win of that era. It was 

India vs Australia Test Series 2013 Schedule


India vs Australia Test Series 2013 will begin on Friday, February 22, 2013 in India as per cricket schedule announced. India vs Australia 2013 is an international bilateral series to be organized by India. India vs Australia Test Series 2013 will consist of 4 Test matches to be hosted by India in Feb-Mar 2013. The India vs Australia 2013 bilateral series will comes to end on Mar 26, 2013.

The India vs Australia Test Series 2013 bilateral series is a part of Future Cricket Tour Programs (FTP) prepared by International Cricket Council (ICC). India will host the India vs Australia Test Series 2013 bilateral series, beginning on February 22, 2013. In India vs Australia TestSeries 2013 bilateral series, first Test match would be between India - Australia on Feb 22, 2013 at 09:30 local time to be played at MA Chidambaram Stadium - Chepauk, Chennai.

India vs Australia Test Series 2013 Schedule is available with full fixtures and time table for India vs Australia 2013. India vs Australia Test Series 2013 is available in PDF Format for download. India vs Australia 2013 is also available in Excel (CSV) format. You must open this file in excel only.
Date and Time                      
Fri Feb 22 - Tue Feb 26     1st Test - India vs Australia
09:30 local | 04:00 GMT     MA Chidambaram Stadium - Chepauk, Chennai
Sat Mar 2 - Wed Mar 6      2nd Test - India vs Australia
09:30 local | 04:00 GMT    Rajiv Gandhi Int. Stadium, Hyderabad
Thu Mar 14 - Mon Mar 18 3rd Test - India vs Australia
09:30 local | 04:00 GMT    Punjab C.A. Stadium, Mohali
Fri Mar 22 - Tue Mar 26   4th Test - India vs Australia
09:30 local | 04:00 GMT   Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi

Monday, 18 February 2013

Australia women claim sixth World Cup 2013


Australia team after winning the ICC Women's World Cup 2013 at the Brabourne Stadium in Mumbai on February 17.

MUMBAI: Ellyse Perry took three wickets and Jess Cameron scored a half-century to help Australia clinch the women's World Cup for the sixth time with a 114-run win over the West Indies in the final on Sunday.
Cameron smashed two sixes and eight fours in her 76-ball 75 as Australia posted 259-7, the highest total in the final, before dismissing the West Indies for 145 in the day-night match in Mumbai.
Merissa Aguilleira (23), Deandra Dottin (22) and Kyshona Knight (21 not out) were the main scorers in a below-par batting performance by the West Indies, making their maiden appearance in the final.
Seamer Perry, who also represented her country in the women's World Cup football, got three wickets in her opening three overs, including that of prolific run-getter Stafanie Taylor, to reduce the West Indies to 41-3.
The 22-year-old Perry, returning to the side after missing the Super Sixes round due to an injury, finished with 3-19 off 10 overs.
Off-spinners Lisa Sthalekar and Erin Osborne, and seamer Megan Schutt took two wickets each for Australia, who had lost to the West Indies in the Super Sixes round.
Cameron and Rachael Haynes (52) scored half-centuries before Australia slipped from 181-3 to 209-7, but skipper Jodie Fields (36 not out) and Perry (25 not out) added a brisk 50 to help their team cross the 250-mark.
WestIndies leg-spinner Shaquana Quintyne, 17, was the most impressive bowler with 3-27 off 10 overs.
Cameron cracked the first six of the innings when she pulled seamer Tremayne Smartt and then completed her half-century with a second six in the same over.
Australia made a solid start after electing to bat as Haynes and Meg Lanning (31) put on 52 for the opening wicket. Haynes also added 64 for the second wicket with Cameron.

Sunday, 17 February 2013

Australia Vs West Indies, 2013 Women's World Cup Final


The ICCWomen's World Cup has reach its final stage where the West Indies women will take on the Australia Women in the former's first-ever World Cup finale. The Windies had a topsy-turvy tournament, losing the first few games, but bounced back in impressive fashion to win the remaining ones. Australia, on the other hand, came into this year's World Cup as the strongest contenders for the title. They were unbeaten throughout the contest, with their only loss coming against the West Indies in their last Super Six pastime. Both teams look extremely strong on paper and its leaving to be a gruelling battle of heavyweights to determine which team determination emerge as world champion. We're in for a cracker of a contest for sure!
The Women's World Cup is up for grab as West Indies take on Australia in the final of the contest at the Brabourne Stadium. What a tournament it has been so far, nobody would have predicted that West Indies would come in to the final. It's their first time while Australia contain been there before and won it five times.
West Indies are the only side that have beaten the Southern Stars in this tournament. No other team could achieve to do so. The nerves will be up there for them and there is a lot of hope from the Caribbean along with the support.
Pitch - It's a belting outside and is pretty dry. There are a few superficial cracks on the good length areas and the ball good hold up if the fuller length are opted for. Hitting through the line shouldn't be a problem.
Toss- Australia have win the toss in addition to chose to bat. They will look to post a total that would be further than the reach of the dangerous batters in the West Indian line up. Perry and Coyte come in today for Chappell and Ferling. Knight, the opener comes in for West Indies.
West Indies (Playing XI( - Kycia Knight, Natasha McLean, Stafanie Taylor, Kyshona Knight, Deandra Dottin, Merissa Aguilleira(c/wk), Shanel Daley, Shemaine Campbelle, Shaquana Quintyne, Anisa Mohammed, Tremayne Smartt
Australia (Playing XI) - Rachael Haynes, Meg Lanning, Jess Cameron, Alex Blackwell, Lisa Sthalekar, Jodie Fields(c/wk), Sarah Coyte, Erin Osborne, Ellyse Perry, Julie Hunter, Megan Schutt
The national anthem of both the sides are being play and the passion is absolutely flushing on the face of the players. What a instant this will be for most of them, representing their own nations in a World Cup final.