Monday, September 8, 2008
Ganguly out of Rest of India squad
Saurav Ganuli mentioned that Pakistan outplayed India. But on the contrary it is India that has some unnecessary overheads that is players just out of form. Induction of Dhoni made India win the last ODI. If you look at the scorecard you will see there are players in the Indian squad who are just out of form.
In ODI every batsman and every run counts. In that scenario Saurav Ganguli is now a burden for the team. May be he should be rested for a dew ODIs and new comers like Dhoni given some chance.
India’s miserable 213 all out could have been worse. Saurav Ganguli did a great job for the team and the Cricket Control Board must take into some hard look and bring in new comers to make sure future of Indian cricket is harvested.
According to Reuters, Pakistan bowler Rana Naved grabbed a career-best six-wicket haul and opener Salman Butt struck a century as Pakistan crushed India by 106 runs in the third one-day international on Saturday.
Butt slammed 10 fours in his 116-ball 101, sharing in a 145-run stand for the second wicket with Shoaib Malik (75) for the visitors, who now trail 2-1 in the six-match series.
Pakistan piled up 319 for nine after electing to bat on a flat wicket and then bowled India out for 213 in 41.4 overs, Naved ending with six for 27.
Naved struck a vital blow in the second over, having in-form opener Virender Sehwag caught for two as he cut straight to Afridi at point.
Mohammad Sami then dismissed Tendulkar for six, edging to second slip, before Naved ran through the Indian line-up, sending back Saurav Ganguly (4), Mahendra Dhoni (28 off 24 balls) and Yuvraj Singh (1) in quick succession to make it 66 for five.
Former India skipper Sourav Ganguly became the first casualty from the ‘Fab Four’ when the selectors ignored him for the Rest of India squad to play Ranji Trophy champions Delhi in the five-day Irani Trophy match at Baroda from September 24 to 28.
With Ganguly's omission, there is a huge question mark over his future in Test cricket. The selectors sprung a couple of surprises in the 14-member team, which has been termed as a virtual Test squad ahead of the forthcoming home series against Australia. Even as selectors ignored the likes of Yuvraj Singh and Rohit Sharma, they included rookie fast bowler Ashok Dinda and also gave opening batsman Wasim Jaffer a chance to make a comeback after not being considered for the Sri Lanka tour.
The selectors also raised a few eye brows by naming two wicketkeepers – Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Parthiv Patel – with the latter likely to open the batting with Mumbai opener Jaffer. Parthiv, who was not considered for Test selection after his disastrous performance in the Sydney Test in 2003-2004 until the recently concluded Sri Lanka series, failed to impress in the third and final Test in Colombo, which the Indians lost after pulling level at Dambula.
Dinda’s selection seems to be a fair one even though the Bengal lad’s chances of playing in the XI is low as Zaheer Khan, Munaf Patel and Rudra Pratap Singh have also been named in the 14. Dinda’s fine showing in the Indian Premier League (IPL) must have influenced his selection.
Saturday, August 2, 2008
Virender Sehwag New Records
Overall, Sehwag is the third player to post a double century at Galle. Two Sri Lankans -- Mahela Jayawardene (two) -- 237 vs South Africa in 2004 and 203 not out against England in 2007-08 and Marvan Atapattu -- 201 not out vs England in 2000-01 had achieved the distinction previously.
After Rahul Dravid , Sehwag became the second Indian batsman to register five double hundreds in Test cricket.
Sehwag is now the 10th Indian player to make 5,000 runs or more, joining nine other Indians Sachin Tendulkar (11826), Rahul Dravid (10124), Sunil Gavaskar (10122), Dilip Vengsarkar (6868), Sourav Ganguly (6819), Mohammad Azharuddin (6215), Gundappa Viswanath (6080), V V S Laxman (5901) and Kapil Dev (5248).
Sehwag extended his world record for hitting his last eleven hundreds as 150-plus innings. This is how he has scored in his last eleven centuries in Test cricket:
Runs Balls SR Opponents Venue Series Result
195 233 83.69 Australia Melbourne 2003-04 Lost
309 375 82.40 Pakistan Multan 2003-04 Won
155 221 70.14 Australia Chennai 2004-05 Drawn
164 228 71.93 South Africa Kanpur 2004-05 Drawn
173 244 70.90 Pakistan Mohali 2004-05 Drawn
201 262 76.72 Pakistan Bangalore 2004-05 Lost
254 247 102.83 Pakistan Lahore 2005-06 Drawn
180 190 94.74 West Indies Gros Islet 2006 Drawn
151 236 63.98 Australia Adelaide 2007-08 Drawn
319 304 104.93 South Africa Chennai 2007-08 Drawn
201* 231 87.01 Sri Lanka Galle 2008 Awaited
Sehwag became the second Indian batsman to carry his bat through a completed innings. Sunil Gavaskar was the first to achieve the distinction-127 not out against Pakistan at Faisalabad in 1982-83.
Sehwag is one of the five batsmen to have recorded a double hundred while carrying his bat Australia's Bill Brown, England's Len Hutton, New Zealand's Glenn Turner and Sri Lanka's Marvan Atapattu had accomplished the feat previously.
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Twenty20 Cricket Records
Friday, June 20, 2008
Friday, May 30, 2008
Indian Cricket League vs Indian Premier League
First of all, what the hell are these two? IPL - Indian Premier League, official Twenty20 league of the BCCI. ICL - Indian Cricket League, backed by the Essel group and not recognized by the BCCI or the ICC.
It is now reported that Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath and Stephen Fleming have all signed up to the IPL for significantly less amounts as compared to what the ICL was offering.
The IPL is based on the US NBA franchise model where each team pays the BCCI a fee to participate in the league. The BCCI in turn gives access to shared revenues and the right to exploit exclusive revenue streams.
The winner of the league will then play in the Champions League which comprises of teams from Australia, England, India and South Africa. The inaugural tournament for the Champions League has been slated for October 2008. This is also the first time that domestic teams from different countries will officially participate against one another. The top two teams from each country will play against one another.
As per information obtained from Cricinfo.com the overall prize money for the Twenty20 Champions League will be $5 million, the winners taking home $2 million. There will be $3 million up for grabs in the IPL. By contrast, the winners of the ICC World Cup in the Caribbean took home $1 million; the team that wins the current ICC World Twenty20 will take home half of that. That is a lot of money we are talking about.
I am no die hard backer of ICL. I mean I don’t really care whether its IPL or ICL, as long as I get my 3-4 month season of quality cricket without patriotic pretensions and at my preferred times - late evening every other day and weekend afternoons. I also want to experience the stadium atmosphere once in a while with family, the noise and crowd thrills.
So, will IPL provide us all that? I am still not sure. Here are my apprehensions:
The meaningless internationals are not going away. whats the point in playing these 5 or 7 match one day internationals when you can get to watch quality players from multiple nations every other evening via a rich domestic league?
I don’t see any steps yet to cut other domestic tournaments to a) make space for IPL, and b) make IPL/ICL little exclusive as far as watching players in action is concerned.
I don’t see anything on the ground yet to tell me that I will get my quality stadium experience, you know, without the dirty chairs, stinking urinals and ticketing nightmares.
Last and most important, BCCI’s monopoly and opacity on cricket has denied us, the paying (we pay by time, sitting next to TV) public, quality cricket-entertainment for decades. I don’t see anything that tells me that either the monopoly or non-transparency is going to go away.
That last point there is the most important one. Is BCCI a money making body, or a public body? It must do certain things to earn the good faith we put in it to run the cricket affairs in our country, and one of those is transparency in its operations and accounts. Otherwise, who is to say that a bunch of businessmen and politicians wont use IPL etc to make their personal fortunes?
Let us keep watching. IPL or ICL, I just cant wait for the day when I will have better choices than Saas-Bahu skirmishes, cheap stings or millionth re-run of 1983 and 1985 Cup Finals on prime time TV :)
Thursday, May 29, 2008
My Favorite cricket Star
A man and his bat carry the hopes of a nation
Cricket is India's national passion; Sehwag its latest object of hope and adoration. As a batsman, the 29-year-old is aggressive, graceful and, when he's on his game, outright dazzling. In a one-day match against New Zealand in 2001, he hit 100 runs off 69 balls—the second-fastest century by an Indian in history. The most striking feature of his batting is the ease with which he dispatches balls all around the wicket—the sign of a natural shotmaker. That talent is obvious to all Indians, including teammate and legend, Sachin Tendulkar, whom Sehwag idolizes and imitates.
To India's impoverished youth, Sehwag is the man of clay astride the mountain of the gods. Most of India's cricket heroes have come from affluent or middle-class backgrounds, gone to private schools and learned English and other gentlemanly ways. Sehwag was lucky his parents could afford the $3 a month for cricket training. His family didn't have high hopes: his grandmother used to call him bholi, an endearment for a good-natured simpleton. That simpleton is now a jet-setter. Invited into the cockpit of a jumbo jet on a recent flight from New Delhi to Bombay, Sehwag gazed at the gleaming dials and the skyline of Bombay coming into view and whispered: "If I wasn't a cricketer, I would never have been able to see this."
Between matches, Sehwag makes thousands of dollars a day shooting advertisements for multinational brands, including Coca-Cola, Samsung and Johnson & Johnson. The first sports jacket he ever donned was the blue blazer of the national cricket team. Today, Sehwag is a pitchman for Mayur Suitings, a giant textile manufacturer, and he owns a closet full of tailored suits. During a recent photo shoot in New Delhi for Mayur's catalogue Sehwag poses in two dozen outfits, and the photographer goes through a bagful of film, but the cricketer is ever cool, raising his eyes to the camera as if he's staring down a bowler on the pitch. "He's so sweet," coos the makeup artist.
Sehwag plans to trade in his Honda City for a red Mercedes convertible and buy his family a $500,000 home in New Delhi's posh Defence Colony. But he doesn't hide the apron strings endearingly attached to his cricketer's blazer. Sehwag calls his mother after every match, a habit memorialized in a cell-phone advertisement run on Indian television during the recent International Cricket Council's 2003 World Cup. He wears a gold Shiva medallion bought by her "for safety," he says, and his favorite dessert is still her homemade custard. Does his mother worry that her famous son will get caught up in the vacuous swirl of India's élite? "No," she says, sipping tea in her living room, a wall of Sehwag's trophies looming behind her. Sehwag is married to Aarti and now the couple is the proud parents of a baby boy.
On a recent afternoon in Najafgarh, school has let out, and on both sides of a dusty, pot-holed road, boys in gray slacks and frayed navy-blue sweaters are running past piles of discarded tires and skipping over spiny-haired pigs. They're playing cricket, of course, and for these prepubescents hoping to find a way out of hardscrabble lives, there is only one role model. "Sehwag played on this spot," says scrawny 12-year-old Deepak, tapping his bat on the uneven dirt wicket. "If Virender Sehwag can make it from here," he says, "so can I."