Showing posts with label cricket. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cricket. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Dhoni changed the indian team

Mahendra Singh Dhoni's leadership has changed the face of Indian cricket, according to Pakistan's pace legend Wasim Akram who believes it is a matter of time before India upstages Australia as the number one team in the world.

Akram said Dhoni has completely transformed the team ever since he took over the mantle of captaincy and that Indian cricket was on the right track with a number of talented players in their ranks.

"Dhoni has changed the face of Indian cricket, there is no doubt about that. He leads from the front, he has charisma and players like him. You can't ask for anything more," Akram said in a telephonic interview.

"He has given the team the confidence. The players now believe that they can go and beat any team and it is this confidence that has helped India to bring about the desired results," the former Pakistan captain said.

Akram, regarded as one of the finest left-arm speedsters with 414 Test and 502 ODI wickets to his credit in a career spanning nearly 17 years, said Dhoni had also brought about a refreshing change in his attitude and approach to matches.

"It does not matter whether Sachin Tendulkar is resting or some other players are injured, the Indians are so confident that they go out and do the job. It was not the case about six or seven years ago, India did not have that confidence," he observed.

"If the captain leads from the front, half the job is done. That is what I like about Dhoni. He is cool, comes out with few quotes and gets the best out of his players," Akram said.

"Leading the Chennai team in the upcoming Champions League will be a good challenge for him since there will be a lot of international teams," he said.

Asked whether India would be able to topple Australia as the number one team in the near future, Akram said "India is the new Australia. I think they are on the right track to achieve that".

Akram also lavished praise on India's new pace sensation Ishant Sharma saying the Delhi youngster had improved by leaps and bounds in the last few months.

"Ishant has been a revelation. He has really improved in the last few months and I think he is a real asset to India," Akram said about the paceman who emerged as the man-of-the-series in the recent Test series against Australia.

"After the Australian tour late last year, his length was slightly short. But he has now rectified that and was simply brilliant in the recent series against Australia. The way he bowled, it seemed he had been around in Test cricket for five years or so," he said.

The cricketer-turned-commentator said Ishant will only get better with time but also cautioned that the youngster needed to be handled well to prolong his career.

"He (Ishant) will get quicker and better with time, there is no doubt about it. He just has to keep himself fit as fast bowling is hard work," Akram pointed out.

He said the Indian bowling line-up looked quite balanced at the moment and the presence of an in-form Zaheer Khan has provided a lot more sting.

"Zaheer has been fantastic. He has bowled the reverse swing well, got the ball to swing in and out... he has become a complete bowler now. He really provides that cutting edge to the attack," he said.

"India always had good spinners but I am happy to see these pacemen developing. They are winning matches for India", Akram said.

The ex-pacer said Harbhajan Singh was capable enough to shoulder the responsibility in the spin department following the retirement of champion leg spinner Anil Kumble.

"Harbhajan is a good spinner. It is now upto him to take upon the responsibility in the spin department. I think he is capable of doing it and also has the experience".

Akram also credited India's rise as a cricketing nation to the planning done by the BCCI over the last few years.

"Credit must also go the BCCI for India's rise in recent times. They have planned and implemented everything well. The results have started coming now," he added.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

India us england fourth ODI series

Bad weather conditions have turned out to be better at Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bangalore and it seems India and England will soon resume fourth ODI match.

Around an hour back, rain interrupted the fourth ODI between India and England. India were at 81/2 when umpires DJ Harper and AM Saheba asked the sides to halt the play.

Unstoppable Delhi boy Virender Sehwag completed 6000-run mark before the match was intervened by rain.

Sehwag (45*) along with Gambhir(23*) will resume batting for India after the weather conditions turn better.

Earlier in the match, England pacer Stuart Broad got an early breakthrough for his side by clinching the invaluable wicket of Sachin Tendulkar for 11 runs.

England, on the other hand, retained the same side that played in Kanpur.

Master Blaster Sachin Tendulkar came back in the team when Team India decided to rest Rohit Sharma. The veteran player opened with Virender Sehwag after England captain Kevin Pietersen asked India to bat first.

India are just one win away from wrapping up the seven-match series, and Mahendra Singh Dhoni and his bravehearts are eager to maintain their winning sequence in the floodlit encounter in Bangalore.

The visitors, on the contrary, have been left with the daunting task of winning four matches in a row to clinch the series and it seems to be a hard nut to crack to stop the Indian juggernaut.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

India Won third ODI us england


Poor light saw D/L method playing the decisive role as India won the third ODI at Kanpur by 16 runs. Chasing 240, India were 16 runs ahead of the revised target and finished with at 198/5.

England's all-rounder Andrew Flintoff broke the 52-run partnership between MS Dhoni and Yuvraj Singh after he dismissed the latter for 38 runs in the third ODI at Kanpur.

After flaying England bowlers, Yuvraj mistimed a pull shot off a short delivery and found Stuart Broad at the deep square leg. In his knock of 38 runs, Yuvraj slammed two fours and one six. He fell as Flintoff's third wicket. Previously, Freddie dismissed Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir.

Sehwag sliced one from Freddie in the gully region and Paul Collingwood took an unbelievable catch to see the dangerous Indian opener back in the hut. Sehwag raised 31st ODI half-century, his fifth against England. He had added 73 runs with Rohit Sharma for the third wicket before England spinner Graeme Swann dismissed the latter for 28 runs as the third Indian wicket. Sharma tried to cut a delivery but his late movement saw the ball taking a thick edge of his bat before wicketkeeper Matt Prior gloved it.

Sehwag lost his opening partner Gautam Gambhir early in the innings. Flintoff picked his wicket when Gambhir chipped a short ball and Stuart Broad caught him at third man for 14 runs. Broad carried the momentum and hurriedly dismissed Raina for 1 run. A good-length delivery swung back in and took an inside edge of Raina's wicket before crashing into the leg-stump.

Earlier, on what was predicted to be a batting track, England fell well short by at least 30-40 runs as India bundled them for 240 runs in 48.4 overs. India's off-spinner Harbhajan Singh picked three wickets and also completed his 200 ODI wickets. He became the sixth Indian bowler to cross the 200-mark after Anil Kumble, Javagal Srinath, Ajit Agarkar, Kapil Dev and Zaheer Khan. He achieved this feat when he dismissed Owais Shah for 40 runs. Shah holed one from Harbhajan to Zaheer at long-off.

Kevin Pietersen and Paul Collingwood were his first two victims whom he foxed with his 'doosra' and removed in quick succession. He first deceived Pietersen (13) as the English skipper went for the lofted drive and found Zaheer at long-off. Bhajji's next victim, Collingwood was beaten by the flight. He lunged forward to drive the ball but lost the balance and wicketkeeper MS Dhoni stumped him for just 1 run.

After a steady start from openers Ravi Bopara and Ian Bell, England lost the plot and kept losing wickets at regular intervals. Bopara, who was promoted as the opener in place of Matt Prior, gave a good start to his side along with Ian Bell. They added 79 runs for the first wicket when Indian pacer Munaf Patel gave India the first breakthrough. He dismissed Bell for 46 runs. A good-length delivery from Munaf took a faint edge of Bell's bat before landing in the gloves of Dhoni. Munaf also dismissed James Anderson as the last wicket of the innings with a straight delivery knocking off the middle stump.

While his partner missed out on a fifty, Bopara got one up in the order. He slammed fourth ODI fifty, his second against India, with the help of eight fours. He was removed by Yuvraj Singh for 60 runs. Yuvraj's short of length delivery drew Bopara out of the crease. The ball beat him and Dhoni made no mistake behind the wickets to knock off the bails.

Andrew Flintoff was done by Yusuf Pathan for 26 runs. The ball pitched in the line of off and middle. Flinotff tried to play across the line and the ball hit him on the knee-roll.

Ishant Sharma, who replaced RP Singh, struggled with his bowling but finished with two wickets of Samit Patel and Matt Prior. While Patel (26) was caught by Suresh Raina at long-off, Prior missed the next delivery that kissed the leg-stump and sent him packing for 5 runs. Zaheer picked Stuart Broad's wicket as he surprised him with a short ball and Dhoni took a simple catch behind the stumps.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

championship league : chennai super kings team schedule


Captain: Mahendra Singh Dhoni. Best Twenty20 cricket captain in the world.

Top order: Mathew Hayden, Arun Karthik Suresh Raina and Parthiv Patel. They dropped Vidyut who played reasonably well in the IPL. Hayden and Karthik will open the innings.

Middle order: Michael Hussey, Kapugedara.

All-rounder: Albie Morkel. He needs to play crucial role in the absence of Jacob Oram.

Bowling: Gony, Makhaya Ntini, Balaji, Tyagi, Muralidharan and Ashwin. Chennai has strong bowling lineup in both fast and spin departments. But Muralidharan and Ntini failed to meet expectations in the IPL 2008 but Gony surprised cricket experts with his superb performance.

Chennai Super Kings will play with Victoria on December 4th in its first match in the Champions League Cricket tournament.

Breaking news: First test between England and India will be held as per schedule. No change in dates.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

It will not be a walkover for India: Ponting

India completed a crushing victory over Australia by a record margin of 320 runs in the second Test to seize a 1-0 lead in the four-match series.

But Ricky Ponting, who has been speaking exclusively to NDTV through this series, has come up with a warning to India, said the Border-Gavaskar series won't be a walk-over for the host.

"Too early to talk about decline won't go down without fight. nothing is putting more pressure on us than the way we are playing," Ponting said.

Australia have lost experienced stars Justin Langer, Adam Gilchrist, Glenn McGrath, and Shane Warne to international retirement.

"A series win is well within our reach, it won't be a walkover for India, we can't fill in shoes of Justin Langer, Adam Gilchrist, Glenn McGrath, Shane Warne," Australian skipper said.

"Mike Hussey has been our most consistent batsman in the tour so far, we need our experienced players to play as well as they can. So, the younger players have something to look up to. This is team capable of winning this Test series. we don't care what others are saying," he said.

Ponting also played down a spat with pace spearhead Brett Lee on the fourth morning after the bowler, who has struggled in the series, had been denied a bowl throughout the session.

The Australian skipper said he had told Lee he would not bowl first up, to take the pace off and deny easy runs to Indian as they looked to declare their second innings.

"It doesn't bother me, too much was made of it, Brett understood why he hadn't bowled in the opening session, nothing is putting pressure on us other than the way we're playing our cricket, skipper said.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

India us austalia third test

Double centuries from aggressive Gautam Gambhir and charismatic VVS Laxman took India to a mammoth total of 613(dec) at the loss of 7 wickets at the end of Day 2 of the third Test against Australia at Ferozshah Kotla in New Delhi. This is India's fourth highest first innings score against the visitors from Down Under.

The word - 'Bombardment' seems to be apt for the kind of run-flow India brought in their first innings total. In reply to which, Matthew Hayden (16*) and Simon Katich (29*) scored 50/0 by the end of second day's play.

Skipper Anil Kumble waited for 'Very Very Special' Laxman to complete his second double ton against Aussies and declared the innings as soon as he embraced the feat. Amidst the ongoing retirement debates, Laxman let his bat do the talking and hopefully answered in a better way to some of his critics.

His first double ton (281) also came against the world champions in the historic Eden Gardens Test in 2001. Laxman played a crucial role in the 278-run partnership with Gautam Gambhir for the fourth wicket before Shane Watson dismissed the latter for 206 runs.

When Kotla crowd looked charmed by the VVS-Gambhir's show, Australian all-rounder Shane Watson broke the duo's rhythm and gave his side a few moments to rejoice by picking two quick wickets of local boy Gambhir and vice-captain MS Dhoni.

Retiring veteran Sourav Ganguly soon walked back after adding just five runs to his team's score. His outing was cut short by part-time bowler Simon Katich as he holed one to Ponting at short cover.

Gambhir, who scored his first double hundred, slaughtered Australian bowling to register his second ton of the Border-Gavaskar series. Watson, who had a verbal war with the Indian opener on the first day, had the last laugh when Gambhir nicked his delivery that crashed into the stumps.

Dhoni's cameo of 27 runs was put to end by Watson. He edged a delivery that was going outside the off-stump and wicket-keeper Haddin took a diving catch.

Then came in Anil Kumble who played a fine supporting role to VVS Laxman. But, Oz pacer Mitchell Johnson interrupted the Kumble-Kotla love affair by dismissing the skipper on 45. India was then at the verge of crossing 600-run mark.

Zaheer Khan (28*) added some glitter to the Laxman's innings by flicking few balls out of the boundary rope.

India's run-riot definitely depicted the positivity in the batting department. Laxman and Gambhir were the show-stealers as they leave Australia beleaguered.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

India won the match

Trucks in the Punjab are famous for the one-line messages they carry. One of the typically earthy ones is, “Vekhi ja, par chedi na [Keep watching my truck, but don't fiddle around].” For four days and a bit in Mohali, India were the runaway truck that Australia could only watch and do nothing about.

It is a rare happening: When was the last time a team toyed around with Australia? When was the last time Australia were so dominated? One has to go back more than 10 years, to the same opposition and country, to Eden Gardens 1997-98. So long ago that only four players, on both sides, from that Test played in this match. Between Eden Gardens and Mohali, Australia played 117 matches, losing 15, without being so completely outplayed even once.

What would be more satisfactory for India, though, is that this win didn’t come on a crumbling dustbowl; home advantage counted for nought this time. It was a good batting track, looking like any Australian pitch, with a little less bounce, on the first day. Contrast this with Eden Gardens 1998, when India played with three spinners, and Sourav Ganguly opened the bowling. Over the last five days, though, and on the same pitch, the ball would lose all potency the moment it was handled by Australian bowlers.

To be fair to the Australians, this isn’t the same team that dominated the world over the last decade. Some of the best players in that side - Shane Warne, Adam Gilchrist, Glenn McGrath and Justin Langer - have gone. Also, they embarked on this tour - possibly their toughest assignment of recent times - without Andrew Symonds; discipline problem or not, it’s a mistake they may yet come to regret. Even so, it would take a special effort to put the boot in, simply because of their winning habit and the belief that they can pull themselves out of any kind of strife.












It’s perhaps fitting that this defeat has been inflicted by India, who have stood up to Australia, competed against them more consistently than any other team in the past decade. And India are the only team who constantly threaten to outskill them: once it was their mysterious spin bowling and imperious batting, here the biggest difference between the teams was the quality of the pace bowling.

While Australia struggled for any disconcerting movement, the Indian bowlers got prodigious swing, both conventional and reverse. A TV split-screen visual of the six-over-old ball being used by both the teams told a story. While the one Australia used was scuffed up all over, the one India used had two markedly different sides, shiny and rough. That meant the ball started reversing as early as in the ninth over at times, a sensational phenomenon. And since it’s still hard and new that early, as MS Dhoni suggested, it was all the more difficult to face. “The ball [from Ishant Sharma] that got me would get me 95 times out of 100,” Ricky Ponting confessed.

The batsmen and the spinners did their job too. Gautam Gambhir and Virender Sehwag gave India two fiery starts, putting Australia on the back foot right away. The middle order revived them after a brief blip. Amit Mishra’s debut was phenomenal, a throwback to the old days of classical legspin bowling. And Harbhajan Singh fast-tracked Australia to their demise in the second innings.

Right from the toss, India did little wrong. The one potentially distracting period was when Tendulkar moved towards his record but India regrouped well. They were aggressive throughout, and there wasn’t a single player in the side they needed to hide. You could say they had nine potential Man-of-the-Match winners, something we rarely see with the Indian team. Perth, earlier this year, was a team performance, but not nearly as destructive.

Two moments summed up the match for India and Australia. One of them came early on the second day. India had contrived to keep Australia in the game on day one, even though the latter chased leather throughout the day. At 326 for 6, India were still capable of being bundled out for a below-par total. In walked Dhoni, and he got a bouncer first-up. He hooked that for four, then hit another for a six, and “the most defensive side in a long time” was being taken to the cleaners.

Then, on the fourth morning, India played Australia at their own game, applying ruthlessness and urgency - and clarity of thought - in their approach to setting the target, and giving themselves close to 130 overs to bowl out a side low on confidence. And when Matthew Hayden tried to intimidate the bowlers, they didn’t take a step back. The inevitable soon happened and, as it usually happens in India, it happened too fast once it started.

Naturally Dhoni was pleased with his team’s effort. “I’ve never seen anything like that,” he said. “Especially at one time in the first innings, they were 22 from 13 overs. I said to Rahul [Dravid], ‘Look at the board, we won’t see that again.’”

The way this Indian team is playing, don’t bet on it.

Source : CNN IBN

Friday, October 17, 2008

sachin makes history


The stifling suspense and the prolonged wait finally came to an end as Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar on Friday (October 17) emerged as the highest run-accumulator in Test cricket’s history, staking a legitimate claim as the best batsman cricket has known since Don Bradman, both aesthetically and statistically.

After his mission incomplete in Bangalore, Tendulkar redeemed himself in Mohali in his 152nd Test and West Indian legend Brian Lara was toppled from the highest Test run-accumulator’s pedestal. Test debutant Peter Siddle sent down the first ball of the post-tea session. Tendulkar glided it to third man for three runs to surpass Lara’s record of 11,953 runs and raise the bar even higher for posterity.

Relieved to have achieved the milestone that eluded him in Bangalore, an overwhelmed Tendulkar took the helmet off and looked upwards in a silent prayer and suddenly all the hostility surrounding the Indo-Australian Test series evaporated as Ricky Ponting and his men came to shake hands with him.

Sourav Ganguly walked down from the non-striker’s end, patting him on the achievement and firecrackers went off around the Punjab Cricket Association Stadium in a pre-Diwali celebration to mark the golden moment in the history of Indian cricket.

Tendulkar arrived here with 11,939 runs against his name from 151 Tests, averaging 54.02 hitting 39 centuries in the process. His ODI record put together– he tops the run-accumulator’s chart there too with 16,361 runs — Tendulkar has scored more than 25,000 international runs with the help of a mind boggling (42+39) 81 centuries and 138 half-centuries.

And all those runs flowed from the blade of someone who, rather reluctantly, swapped leather-flinging with willow-wielding after a blunt Dennis Lillee told the 12-year-old aspiring fast bowler in a Chennai camp that he had no hopes as a pacer. Or probably the blame actually lies with Waqar Younis.

Tendulkar was hit on the mouth by Waqar in his debut Test series in Pakistan with dripping blood drenching the shirt of the cuddly teen with curly hair. Nineteen long years since the incident and bowlers around the world continue to bleed even to this day for a folly of one of their predecessors. Worse, the torment is far from over.

Almost as a matter of revenge, Tendulkar lorded over the bowlers since that 1989 series, eclipsing virtually every batting record and piling on mountain of runs and setting new benchmarks for batsmanship in the process.

Impeccable technique, perfect temperament and unflinching commitment to his craft have made Tendulkar a paragon of all batting virtues and his single-minded determination and an incredible ability to insulate himself from anything unwarranted have only added to his aura.

With no real chink in his batting armour, bowling to him is often a trauma for the bowlers, although Shane Warne preferred to call it nightmare. Equipped with every shot in the book and endowed with the flair to blend routine with recherché, Tendulkar grew in stature with ever game before eventually attaining cult status. Don Bradman anointed him as his heir and euphoric Indians fans deified him.

He did burn his fingers with captaincy before renouncing it but the aura and idolatry remained intact. Unlike others, his name is not debated in selection meetings. They just enquire about his fitness. Loudmouth opponents like Australia refrain from sledging him, not as a favour but out of fear as it often brings out the best in Tendulkar. Bowlers fancy his scalp and whenever hit for a boundary, considers it comeuppance.

For his legion of fans, Tendulkar has been nothing sort of a messiah. Every time he walked out in the middle and took guard, he was expected to excel, regardless of opposition, condition and everything else. And on most occasions, Tendulkar did just that and his cult grew.

His impeccable demeanour on and off the field and a childish love for the game have endeared Tendulkar to all, making him a genuine ambassador of the game. With this new feather added to his already well-decorated cap, Tendulkar is now in a league of his own.

List of world’s top Test cricket batsmen after Sachin Tendulkar broke Brian Lara’s record to become the leading run scorer today (Name, country, Tests, runs, centuries):

Sachin Tendulkar (IND) 152* 11,955 39
Brian Lara (WIS) 131 11,953 34
Allan Border (AUS) 156 11,174 27
Steve Waugh (AUS) 168 10,927 32
Rahul Dravid (IND) 127* 10,341 25
Ricky Ponting (AUS) 121* 10,239 36
Sunil Gavaskar (IND) 125 10,122 34.

Besides Tendulkar, only Rahul Dravid and Ricky Ponting are the active cricketers in the list while Brian Lara, Allan Border, Steve Waugh and Sunil Gavaskar have already retired.

 

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