Showing posts with label sports news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sports news. Show all posts

Thursday, 25 August 2011

A victory for India, at last- Virat kohli, Rohit sharma finds form; RP snares four


Hove: India may have been outplayed in whites this summer, but dress them in blue and give them a slow, dead pitch to bat on and they can still play like princes. Virat Kohli, Parthiv Patel and Rohit Sharma, none of whom played in the Test series, each made a bullying half-century to give India their first win on this tour with 25 balls remaining.
To the delight of a capacity crowd, five of the World Cup-winning team were playing, including Sachin Tendulkar and Mahendra Singh Dhoni, but injuries deprived India of five other players who beat Sri Lanka in the final in April.
Gautam Gambhir continues to complain about his vision after hitting his head on the outfield at the Kia Oval last week. Two MRI scans in London did not reveal anything of concern, but the batsman was rested Thursday and is not expected to play in the floodlit match against Kent Friday to be fit for the limited-overs sequence with England that starts on September 3.
Tendulkar came and went as India made a rapid start to their pursuit of 237. The veteran breezed to 21 off 17 balls before unusually scoop a ball from Chris Liddle straight into the hands of mid-off.
Patel, who toured England as long ago as 2002 when he was 17, has recently regained his place as Dhoni’s understudy after six years out of the team and batted competently enough in five one-day matches in the West Indies before this tour. He reached 55 before he misjudged the primary ball he faced from Chris Nash and was bowled.
Kohli, who may find some happy memories Friday of when he hit 123 at Canterbury for India Under-19 in 2006, joint a third-wicket stand of 104 in less than 18 overs with Sharma to ease any worries of defeat. Kohli was caught at mid-on for 71, half pull out of a drive, but Sharma saw India home with 61 off 65 balls. Having made 257 runs for twice out in the five-match one-day series in the Caribbean, he may be India’s danger man.
The match began half an hour late in light drizzle and the players went off twice in the first seven overs when it started to rain heavily, but when the clouds moved away, India began to take be in command of.
R.P. Singh led the attack with rather more verve than he had at the Oval, taking four wickets and getting decent movement off the seam, but Sussex were given quite a few runs by fairly half-hearted fielding. Perhaps if training sessions were not optional, India might look more lively.
Too many boundaries were given up when a more sprightly fielder would have kept the batsmen to two and there were a couple of dropped catches, the most damaging by the normally consistent Suresh Raina, who put down Matt Machan at mid-wicket when he was on 11. The middle-order batsman made a career-best 56 before being caught and bowled by Raina.
With Joe Gatting hitting 46 before chopping a ball from Ravichandran Ashwin on to his stumps and Ben Brown making 48, Sussex looked to have a defendable total but with Wayne Parnell, Monty Panesar and Michael Yardy left out of the side, they lack the bowlers to hold the Indians.

Injury agonize continues for Gautam Gambhir


HOVE: The mystery over Gautam Gambhir's illness isn't getting over in a hurry for the latest indications emerging from the Indian dressing room is that all is not well with the left-handed opener.
Gambhir supposedly still is suffering from blurred vision and is almost certain to miss out the day-night fixture against Kent on Friday.

If things get better dramatically over the next couple of days, Gambhir ought to be target the one-day sport against Leicestershire on August 29 after which the Twenty20 and five one-day internationals against England would be take part in.

However, things are looking far from rosy as the Delhi opener is having trouble on fixing his sight on no substance which - be it looking at the mobile or watching the television.

Gambhir took to indoor nets at Hove region cricket ground for 45 minutes on Thursday. Bowling coach Eric Simmons was at hand to look at his progress. To onlookers though it was apparent he had trouble in picking up the line and length of throw downs which Simmons hurled at him.

During the innings break in the match between Sussex and the Indians on Thursday, Gambhir came out and tested himself out with a run in the earth with a support staff of the Indian team trying to review his state of fitness.

Apparently Gambhir suffers from a nausea whenever he tries expert himself either bodily or when he fixes his eye on anything.

The left-hander is distress from blurred vision after the concussion he suffered while fielding in the final Test at Oval last week.

The one-off Twenty20 match is programmed to be held on August 31 while the first one-day international will be theatrical in Durham on September 3.

Monday, 1 August 2011

What, actually, is the role of the cricket specialist

Michael VaughanLondon: What, precisely, is the role of the cricket pundit? Must he simply observe, report and analyse? Or must there be a critical edge to his voice which distinguishes him from others? More importantly, just how contentious or controversial should he be, and at what point is a line transgressed that makes those views unfairly and dangerously biased?

None of these concerns will be addressed within the English media as they reflect on a significant and heavy Test victory over India which puts the national side on course to take over the number one mantle for the first time. England are also just one draw away from registering their first Test series win over India since 1996.
And yet, if there is something that ever so slightly sours the sweet taste of success for Andrew Strauss’ sides, then it comes in the heavy-handedness of some of the comments from the home side’s best-known media figures.

Former English skippers Michael Vaughan (L) and Nasser Hussain enjoy stoking the fires of controversy as they did during the second Test at Trent Bridge. Clive Rose/Getty Images
Take Michael Vaughan, Ashes-winning captain in 2005 and now a fully paid-up member of the ex-players-in-the-press-box club.
When totally unsubstantiated rumours began circulating on Saturday that VVS Laxman might have survived an appeal for a caught behind by applying Vaseline to the edges of his bat – thus deceiving HotSpot — Vaughan mischievously sensed an opportunity.
He asked his 160,000 Twitter followers: “Has Vaseline on the outside edge saved the day for Laxman?”
By simply posing the question, Vaughan had unwittingly waded into treacherous waters. Laxman is a hero to many Indians, the scorer of an almost mythically brilliant 281 to douse Australia’s fire at Eden Gardens in 2001 and set up a remarkable win.
Ten years later, he is still revered, the elegant shot-making continues and above all else, his disciplinary evidence is spotless. Vaughan had not directly accused Laxman of cheating, but he had suggested the possibility, and that was the problem.
When Vaughan woke up on Sunday morning, he found a barrage of criticism directed at his Twitter account from ordinary Indians, much of it foul in the extreme, whether in Hindi or English.
Some of it might have been prompted by this separate tweet: “If I was them (India’s bowlers) I would get the jelly beans out and get the ball swinging.” It was a cheeky reference to an unpalatable moment in the 2007 series between the two sides.
Vaughan, who is making a decent living out of working for the BBC, the Daily Telegraph, Betfair and Channel Five, rather enjoys stoking the fires of controversy, you suspect. He is not afraid to make bold predictions on air, and above all else does not want to get lumped with the bland, unopinionated second division group of commentators who have to be sufficient on a diet of county cricket and the occasional One-day International in Durham.
In that particular regard, he is similar to Nasser Hussain, the man he succeeded as England captain.
Hussain, a regular figure on the UK’s live televised cricket coverage on Sky Sports, is also doing stints for ESPN during this series, thus bringing himself into contact with Indian viewers.
It so happened that he was in ESPN’s studio when Harbhajan Singh became the second victim of Stuart Broad’s hat-trick, lbw despite a big inside edge which was hard to detect in real time, but patently obvious on the close-up slow-motion.
Because of the half-baked use of the decision review system (DRS), no batsman can ask for a reprieve from an lbw verdict in this series, and Hussain was quick to put the boot in. He reminded his audience that it was the Indian board which had objected to that element of the DRS process in the first place, so the players could hardly complain of bad luck.
Another ESPN pundit, Ravi Shastri, was less than happy about the position taken by Hussain, saying there was “jealousy” about India’s progress to becoming the best side in the world, and that the choice taken by the Indian board on DRS was its business alone.
The argument continued to simmer, with Hussain telling readers of his Daily Mail column on Monday: “If I am being paid to give my opinions by ESPN, that is exactly what I will do. I played 96 Tests and I have every right to say what I feel about India’s refusal to use the DRS, whatever spectators I was addressing.”
As someone who works in the British media, I understand Hussain’s position. It was always going to be difficult to sympathise with an Indian batsman let down by a bad decision when the DRS was not being fully implemented at the instance of India itself.
With Vaughan, on the other hand, it’s probably a case of a lesson learned. He would find it easy to dish out and receive “banter” from Australian fans in the same situation, but he perhaps should have respected that the English sense of humour does not always translate easily across borders.
Graeme Swann, for example, chose to belittle the big Sunday talking-point — the run-out and subsequent reprieve of Ian Bell – by making one of his Twitter jokes that endears him to his home supporters, but runs the risk of alienating him from Indian cricket fans.
“The big issue about ‘the run out that wasn’t’ hasn’t been mentioned yet. I had already started a cheese sandwich so it was definitely tea,” tweeted Swann.
Apart from producing a few lusty blows with the bat on day one, Swann had a match to forget, picking up a hand injury, failing to take a single wicket and kicking the stumps in frustration at one point on day two.
Many of his teammates at Trent Bridge were outstanding, however. If Vaughan and Hussain have ruffled a few feathers – as they clearly have – at least England’s cricketers have been doing their nation proud.


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Tuesday, 26 July 2011

Dhoni blames infirmity for Tendulkar's Lord's lows


LONDON: India captain Mahendra Singh Dhonisaid illness played a key role in Sachin Tendulkar's poor proceed during the first Test against England at Lord's.

Tendulkar was kept to come for an unprecedented 100th international hundred after being dismissed for 34 and 12 as England won what was the 2,000th Test of all-time by 196 runs on Monday to go 1-0 up in the four-match series.

'The Little Master', whose 51 Test centuries and 48 in one-day internationals are both world records, was rested from India's recent tour of the West Indies.

Tendulkar, who owns a assets near Lord's, had spent much of the past month practising at the 'home of cricket'.

But during the course of the first Test he was struck down by a viral infection which required him to spend most of Sunday's fourth day off the field and that meant he had to bat out of position in India's second innings.

"He was much better (Monday) but I wouldn't say he was like 100 percent fit," Dhoni said. "But in both innings he really felt it, personally after the first innings when he felt quite weak.

"That was one of the main reason he didn't turn up on the field in the first half of the second innings. He's much enhanced right now but of course not 100 percent."

Tendulkar struck several impressive boundaries during his first innings before edging a good duration ball from Stuart Broad to second slip Graeme Swann.

But the 38-year-old's second innings was a far more muted affair, featuring just one four in 85 minutes at the crease.

Tendulkar spent 38 balls on 11 and was then dropped by England captain Andrew Strauss at first trip off James Anderson on 12.

But, two balls later, Anderson nipped one back to have Tendulkar lbw.

"You never want to drop Sachin, put it that way," said Strauss.

"Thankfully Jimmy Anderson spared my blushes."

Meanwhile Strauss defended Tendulkar's batting on Monday by saying: "I am never going to question the way he approaches his innings. He was obviously trying to salvage a draw out of the game for India.

"He tried his hardest to do that and thankfully Jimmy was good enough to get him out lbw."

Tendulkar's exit, in what could be his last Test at Lord's, left him with a modest record at the ground of 195 runs in nine innings, spanning five Tests, at an average of 21.66 with a best of 37 made four years ago.

Both Australia's Ricky Ponting and now retired West Indies star Brian Lara, the other two great batsmen of the last 20 years, have also failed to make a Test century at Lord's.

Tendulkar's next chance to become the first batsman to score 100 international centuries is set to come in the second Test at Trent Bridge in Nottingham, central England, starting on Friday.

Saturday, 23 July 2011

Is the Lord's Test over for Zaheer Khan?

London: Zaheer Khan, who strained his hamstring on day One of the opening Test against England on Thursday, didn't stick around and sulk in the hallowed dressing room of the Lord's Cricket Ground all day. But chances of him taking further part in the Lord's Test look rather bleak.
He was at the gymnasium of the Marylebone Cricket Club indoor school on Friday afternoon with trainer Ramji Srinivasan. It is learnt that he worked out on an exercise bicycle. "I feel better," Zaheer told MiMiD DAY. Asked whether there was any hope of bowling in the second innings, he said, "let's see how it goes."

The India spearhead did not limp while on his way out of the indoor school, but his body language could not be called great. MiD DAY learnt that the left-arm quick will not bowl in the second innings.
"You cannot take any risk whatsoever with a hamstring injury, so bowling in the second innings is out of the question," said a source.
The second Test in Trent Bridge (July 29 to August 2) is too close on the heels of the Lord's Test, so there is a big question mark over his chances for that battle too.
It would be a travesty if Zaheer doesn't make it for the Trent Bridge Test because the wicket there will suit him probably more than Lord's where he had taken two wickets before retiring to the dressing room. It can be recalled that he almost single-handedly bowled India to victory in the 2007 Test there after which India won the series, with the next and final Test at the Oval ending up drawn.
Zaheer's absence is a big blow for sure, but India can find solace that they have a hungry S Sreesanth itching for an opportunity. Plus, there is Munaf Patel, who has been a much-improved bowler. Praveen Kumar's fifer in his maiden Lord's Test has added some cheer in an otherwise dull Indian camp.

Tuesday, 19 July 2011

Sachin is the best batsman in the world: Lara

Sachin Tendulkar at Adelaide OvalImage via WikipediaThe Sachin Tendulkar fan club keeps getting bigger with West Indies batting legend Brian Lara describing him as the best batsman in the world right now and former England captain Alec Stewart calling him “the modern day Don Bradman”.

Participating in a panel discussion at Indian captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni's 'East Meets West' Gala Dinner at the Hilton Park Lane Monday night, Lara said, “Sachin started playing (Test cricket) at the age of 16. And at 38 now, we have not seen a better player. Sachin is the best batsman in the world.

“I am going to the Lord's to see Sachin make his 100th century,” he said.

Stewart, who also participated in the discussion, described Tendulkar as “the modern day Bradman”.

India's veteran batsman Rahul Dravid added to the praise, saying, “In India we have many Gods and he is one of them.”

Monday, 18 July 2011

உலககோப்பை வென்ற தோனியின் பேட் இன்று ஏலம்

லண்டன் : உலக கோப்பை வெற்றிக்கு பங்களித்த டோனியின் ராசியான பேட் ஏலத்தில் விடப்படுகிறது. இந்திய கிரிக்கெட் அணி கேப்டன் மகேந்திர சிங் டோனி, அவரது மனைவி சாக்ஷி தலைமையில் அறக்கட்டளை ஒன்றை நடத்தி வருகிறார். இந்த அறக்கட்டளையின் மூலம், வறுமையில் வாடும் குழந்தைகளுக்கு கல்வி வழங்குவதற்காக ஒரு பள்ளியை கட்ட முடிவு செய்துள்ளார். இதற்கு நிதி திரட்டுவதற்காக, டோனி தனது பேட்டை ஏலம் விட உள்ளார்.

லண்டனில் இன்று இரவு நடக்கும் பிரமாண்ட விருந்தில், 2011 உலகக் கோப்பை இறுதிப் போட்டியில் சிக்சர் அடித்து இந்திய அணி சாம்பியன் ஆக காரணமான டோனியின் பேட் ஏலத்தில் விடப்படுகிறது. மேலும், இறுதிப் போட்டியில் பயன்படுத்தப்பட்ட பந்தும், சச்சினின் உருவப்படம் வரையப்பட்ட ஓவியமும் ஏலத்தில் வருகிறது. இந்த விருந்தில், இந்தியா, இங்கிலாந்து அணி வீரர்களும், தொழிலதிபர்களும், பாலிவுட் நட்சத்திரங்களும், முன்னாள் கேப்டன்கள் கங்குலி, கும்ளே உட்பட பலரும் பங்கேற்கிறார்கள்.

இந்த விருந்தில் பங்கேற்க விரும்புபவர்களுக்காக ரூ.1.9 லட்சம் மற்றும் ரூ.1.25 லட்சம் மதிப்பில் இருவகையான 850 டிக்கெட்டுகள் விற்கப்பட்டது. டிக்கெட்டுகள் அனைத்துமே விற்று தீர்ந்துவிட்டது குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது.

Friday, 15 July 2011

All eyes on Zaheer vs Strauss as India take on Somerset

London: England and India begin their Test series next week at Lord's, but there will be an early taste of what's on offer when the tourists play their three-day match against Somerset. And that's not just because it will be a chance to see MS Dhoni's team, but because it is set to be round one of Andrew Strauss versus Zaheer Khan. (Also Read: Injury could put Sehwag out of entire series)

It's not a contest that will decide the series - England are good enough to win without Strauss's runs and India have other bowlers besides Zaheer - but it's an intriguing head-to-head. Strauss has issues with left-arm quicks and Zaheer is the best in the business. For both players Taunton is important; Strauss ideally needs a decent score before the Test series and Zaheer needs miles in his legs having not played since the IPL. (Also see: Sachin and others face short pitch bowling to practice)

The two sides are, of course, seeing the opportunity very differently. Strauss is playing down the significance of the outing, suggesting he would need it even if he had scored plenty of runs against Sri Lanka rather than the 27 he managed in four innings, but there was a hint from Duncan Fletcher that India see it as a chance to make an early mark.

"If he gets out early there's a chance we'll have something over him, but I believe our bowlers are pretty confident at the moment even if he does get runs," Fletcher said. "You are allowed to get runs at some stage. From our point of view we have to be careful that there are other batsmen in that side we need to look at. The problem really lies with Straussy, if he feels he has a problem it's more a concern for him than us."

MS Dhoni, meanwhile, had a wry grin when asked about his leading bowler against the England captain. "One thing for sure I won't be thinking much about Zaheer versus Strauss," he said. "Strauss will be batting and Zaheer bowling. It's good practice for both of them and we'll try to get the most we can out of this game because Zaheer hasn't been bowling for a while. Records don't play a big role."

Strauss, who spent part of the afternoon facing a bowling machine on the outfield, insists that what happens over the next three days won't have a major bearing on the series. Since the end of the Sri Lanka Tests he has played one innings for Middlesex where he made 2 against Gloucestershire and has since been restricted to net sessions.

"It's not a gamble," he said. "I've played no cricket for three weeks so it was crucial for me to be able to play some cricket this week. I don't think I've ever taken part in a Test match having not played cricket for three weeks beforehand.

"Thankfully this opportunity came up otherwise I would be probably be playing a second team game for Middlesex somewhere. What I do this week is not going to have a dramatic effect on the Test series but it will be nice to get some runs to feel confident, see a lot of their bowling and move to Lord's in a good frame of mind."

Strauss's form - and his performance against Zaheer - is just one of many potential themes that will emerge over the next five weeks, which is what makes for such an enticing prospect. It was confirmed on Thursday that if England win the series by two clear Tests they will overtake India and secure the No. 1 spot for the first time.

It has been the stated ambition of the Strauss-Flower regime to propel England to the top but now that it's within touching distance the captain doesn't want minds to wander away from the smaller goal of each Test match.

"It's possible to jump up rankings and fall back over a couple of games," Strauss said. "I think what we're looking at is to become No.1, but a little more sustained than that. It would be great if we can achieve this goal this summer. But I wouldn't say the hard work would be done then. It's one thing being No.1 in the world but quite another to be acknowledged all round as No.1 in the world."
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Chitika

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