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Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Muttiah Muralitharan

Opening batsman Gautam Gambhir has reveled that legendary Sri Lankan spinner Muttiah Muralitharan is the toughest bowler he has ever faced.

''Muralitharan is a great bowler, he has taken more than 700 wickets, and apart from that he is a great thinker of the game,'' Gambhir told 'espnstar.com'. ''I feel Murali is the toughest bowler I have ever faced.'' The Mahender Singh Dhoni-led Indian team today left for Colombo to play a tri-series against New Zealand and the host nation.

Gambhir said it would be tough to beat Sri Lanka in their own backyard.

''Sri Lanka know our strengths and weaknesses and we know theirs. It's going to be a good challenge.

''It's a challenge when we play someone so often and in their own backyard. When asked will there be extra pressure on him in the absence of Virender Sehwag to lead the Indian batting order, the opener said, ''Any team would miss Viru, especially after seeing him in the kind of form he was in the New Zealand.'' ''There's no extra pressure as it is all about going out there and showing your talent, enjoying the game and giving hundred per cent on the field,'' he added.


Mahendra Singh Dhoni

Indian One-Day cricket captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni's performance on the pitch and his good looks have earned him a huge female fan following, among them a bevy of Bollywood actresses. Here's what they say:

Bipasha Basu: Dhoni is great at his job and he is a good ambassador of our country. He is well groomed and I find him soft-spoken and charming. And I don't think he uses his popularity for the wrong reasons.

Esha Deol: Yup, I'd say Dhoni is terrific and he conducts himself with plenty of dignity. Right now I think he's at his best - physically fit and raring to go. I'd say he is the best sportsman in our country today.

Nandana Sen: Dhoni has great focus, speaks his mind freely. Although he is super-talented, he talks like a very regular guy. I find normalcy in superstars very attractive.

Raima Sen: Cricketers have always been more popular than stars. I feel Dhoni's main charm lies in the fact that he has become the captain of the Indian cricket team at such a young age. And then he brought the (Twenty20) Cup home. That did the trick. Success is the greatest aphrodisiac. It sure has added sex appeal to Dhoni's personality. And let's not forget his hip hairstyle. Wow!

Kangana Ranaut: I think Dhoni is hot enough to give any of our studs from Bollywod a run for their money. And since Dhoni can run faster than any of them, he has an extra edge. Of course, I find him hot. Which normal hot-blooded girl wouldn't?

Minissha Lamba: In any industry, whether it is cinema or cricket, we need to focus on people's achievements rather than wonder how far their sex appeal goes. Success is sexy. And everyone has the right to look his best. But physical beauty shouldn't be allowed to eclipse the value of his real personality or the fact that he has put the country on the international sports map.

Mona Singh: I find Dhoni super hot. He not only looks good but plays well too. And he is a superb captain.

Divya Dutta: Oh, I find Dhoni very hot, specially his passion for living on the edge, not playing safe or getting tense while taking crucial decisions. He is so full of energy. And he is a fabulous cricketer. Of course, the bare chest is the icing on the cake.

Gul Panag: Dhoni? Ha! He's a heady mix of good looks, success and power.

Amrita Arora: Yes, he's hot, but only as a player, please. His good personality teamed with being an excellent player makes him a force to reckon with.

Perizaad Zorabian: The fact that Dhoni comes from a small town and has beaten all odds to make it big makes him very sexy. He comes across as determined, calm, confident and no-nonsense. He takes pride in who he is. These qualities make him stand apart in a world of self-promoting wannabes.

Harbhajan Singh

NEW DELHI: A coy Virender Sehwag does not want to lead the Indian cricket team but his feisty team-mate Harbhajan Singh does, saying it's a
Harbhajan Singh
challenge worth a try.

Sehwag has already informed the selectors about his reluctance and requested them to groom someone for future.

Harbhajan, on his part, said incumbent Mahendra Singh Dhoni is doing an excellent job at the helm but he made no bones about his own ambition, saying he would not shy away if Team India captaincy ever comes his way.

"Whoever plays for India wants to lead the side at some stage and it's no different with me. At the end of the day, it's a huge honour for a player," Harbhajan said in an interview hours before his departure for the tri-series in Sri Lanka.

The star off-spinner, however, gave a thumbs-up to Dhoni's captaincy and said, "At the moment, Dhoni is doing a fantastic job and there is no doubt that he is a brilliant skipper."

Harbhajan was seen in the captain's role in the recent BCCI Corporate Trophy where the off-spinner led Air India Blue to the final and the spinner said he thoroughly enjoyed the experience.

"Leading Air India Blue in Corporate Trophy was obviously a good experience. Of course you learn more and more with time but I certainly enjoyed it. It was a challenge for me which I accepted and enjoyed to the hilt," said the 29-year-old Punjab spinner.

Incidentally, Dhoni played under Harbhajan in the tournament and also rolled his arms for three unsuccessful overs in the final.

Talking about captaincy, one thing that baffles Harbhajan is the myth that bowlers make inferior captains and more often than not, the job goes to a batsman.

"I don't know why batsmen are traditionally preferred for the captain's job. I mean if you have good leadership skills, it should not matter whether you are a batsman or a bowler. Your ability to lead should be the lone criterion," he said.

"Imran Khan was primarily a bowler when he took over captaincy and did a great job with Pakistan. And look at (New Zealand captain Daniel) Vettori today. He has been doing so well for quite a while. So how come people perceive captaincy a job beyond the bowlers?" Harbhajan asked.

A veteran of 189 ODIs and 77 Tests, Harbhajan acknowledged captaincy is a full-time responsibility when he would have to plan for others as well but said he can handle the pressure that comes with the job.



Hayden




Hayden has aggregated 298 in six innings at an average of 59.60, including three fifties.

The following are the statistical highlights of the Twenty20 match between Chennai Super Kings and Bangalore Royal Challengers:

Chennai Super Kings (179 for five) registered the highest total in the second edition of the IPL so far, surpassing the 165 for 7 by Mumbai Indians against Chennai Super Kings at Cape Town Saturday.

The score is Chennai’s highest against Bangalore, eclipsing the 178 for five at Bangalore last year.

Chennai Super Kings with their comprehensive win over Bangalore Royal Challengers, have now won ten games out of 18 in the IPL. Rajasthan Royals have won the most matches (13) and Kings XI Punjab 10.

Chennai Super Kings’ 92-run victory is their highest by runs margin in the IPL, surpassing their 33-run win over Kings XI Punjab at Mohali, April 19, 2008. The victory is Chennai’s second in three games over Bangalore.

Muttiah Muralitharan (3/11) has for the first time claimed three wickets in an IPL innings, eclipsing the 2 for 39 against Rajasthan at Mumbai on June 1,2008.

Muralitharan received his first MOM award in the IPL.

Parthiv Patel and Hayden recorded the first century stand for the opening wicket for their side.

Bangalore Royal Challengers (87) posted their second lowest score in the IPL, their lowest is 82 against Kolkata Knight Riders at Bangalore last year.

Chennai Super Kings’ 92-run victory is the third biggest in terms of runs in the IPL - the top two being by 140 runs by Kolkata over Bangalore at Bangalore and by 105 runs by Rajasthan over Delhi Daredevils in the first edition of the IPL.

Sydney, Oct 6 (IANS) Harbahajan Singh’s declaration that he is not out to make friends against Australia has fired up his foe opener Matthew Hayden, who said such comments would only inspire him to perform better against the hosts.The 36-year-old said he doesn’t harbour any grudge against the off-spinner who drew the ire of the Aussies during the series between the two teams early this year.

“There is a lot less of the personal tension with Harbhajan than what is made out. In a lot of ways, I feel if that is affecting him, it’s a good thing for me because I don’t feel I am harbouring any massive resentment,” Hayden was quoted as saying in the Sydney Morning Herald.

“I think he is a very good bowler and it is challenging to play well. Over the years those kind of tensions have always made me play better, and I will certainly be using that to my advantage.

“It (the series) is going to have Test match tension and I don’t feel threatened. The only thing that threatens me is what balls he can deliver to get me out. To me, that has been a great source of motivation, not just (against) Harbhajan. They’ve got a very solid bowling attack right around,” he said,

The Australian opener has had running battles with Harbhajan during the series earlier in the year and famously called him “an obnoxious little weed” - a remark that drew a reprimand from Cricket Australia.

Kapil Dev


New Delhi, Sept.24 (ANI): Former Indian cricket captain and all-rounder Kapil Dev, was on Wednesday commissioned into the Territorial Army (TA) as an honorary lieutenant colonel.

Indian Army chief General Deepak Kapoor piped the badges of the rank on the shoulders of Dev, at a ceremony at the Army Headquarters here this afternoon. He was later felicitated at the Territorial Army headquarters mess in the evening in the presence of host of dignitaries who been members of the Territorial Army for years and achieved major milestones in other careers. They included Major (retired) Subir Saha, the former Chairman and Managing Director of the ONGC, and Brigadier K. P. Singh Deo, a former Cabinet Minister, besides others.

“This is my second innings. Earlier I fought for the country in my white uniform. Now, I will do the same in my olive green army uniform,” Kapil said proudly.

Kapil, 50, was commissioned into the 150 TA (Infantry) battalion of the Punjab Regiment.

“I am proud I have been given this rank. It took six months for the things to materialise, with the file moving from the home ministry to the defence ministry,” said Kapil, as his wife and daughter looked on.

Kapil will also be the brand ambassador of the Territorial Army and help train golfers of the army.

Territorial Army sources said that his induction would help in attracting talent as the army is facing a major officer crunch. (ANI)

Rahul Dravid



Bangalore, Oct 6 (IANS) Rahul Dravid’s 10,000 Test runs were celebrated here at Chinnaswamy stadium with Sachin Tendulkar unveiling a wall of 10,000 bricks.It was a wall of commitment, consistency and class written all over it to describe the former India skipper.

Built by Bangalore-based realtor Skyline group, the Wall projects Dravid in metal statue playing his trademark cover-drive and features the legendary batsman’s finest cricketing moments in both forms of cricket.

Dravid is popularly considered to be “the wall” of Indian batting for his impenetrable technique and diligence.

Unveiling the Wall, Tendulkar said Dravid truly deserved such recognition and would remain a testimony for all his achievements.

“It is a great credit to his family. More than a great cricketer and a great batsman, Rahul is a perfect gentleman on and off the field. The Wall will inspire every budding cricketer to emulate Rahul and his batting skills,” Tendulkar said.

A live electronic unit in the top corner on the right displays Dravid’s current score — 10,246 runs in Test cricket. The unit will keep ticking as Dravid scores runs in Tests played in India or overseas, Skyline group managing director Avinash Prabhu told reporters at a simple ceremony, graced by former and present cricketers.

Dravid is the brand ambassador for the Skyline group. His parents - Sharad and Pushpa - were present on the occasion.

Located strategically outside the pavilion-end, the Wall is visible from the famous M.G. Road in downtown and a few yards away from Kumble circle, christened after Indian Test skipper’s 10-wicket haul in second Test against Pakistan in February 1999 in Delhi.

“The Wall is a tribute to Dravid’s legendary contribution to Indian cricket and his outstanding achievements on and off the field. The tall structure will be a new landmark in India’s IT hub and serve as an immortal reminder of Dravid’s great feats,” Prabhu, a classmate of Dravid, said in his brief address on the occasion.

In his remarks, Dravid said though he was humbled by the honour, he felt embarrassed to be present in the midst of legendary cricketers like Sachin, former off-spinner E.A.S. Prasanna, yesteryear spin bowler B.S. Chandrasekhar, former wicketkeeper Syed Kirmani and others.

“For me the greatest thing is to play for the country and be in the company of a legendary cricketer who also scored over 10,000 plus runs. I am sure this Wall will inspire budding cricketers. I am also touched that the Wall is erected where I began my cricketing career,” Dravid said amidst applause.

Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) secretary and former Indian batsman Brijesh Patel said it was a momentous day for the Chinnaswamy stadium.

“Dravid is ranked along with former legendary cricket Gundappa Vishwanath and former Indian badminton champion Prakash Padukone who also hail from Karnataka. By scoring 10,000 plus runs in both forms of cricket, Dravid is counted among the world’s top six legendary batsman, including Sachin Tendulkar, Sunil Gavaskar, Steve Waugh, Brian Lara and Allan Border,” Patel said.

Having watched Dravid from his younger days, Patel said the Bangalore-born lad was level-headed, intensely focused and good student of the game.

“Dravid has an outstanding batting average in Test cricket. It is not for nothing he is considered the ‘Wall’ for his commitment, consistency and class,” Patel said

Monday, September 7, 2009

Chris Gayle

  1. Chris Gayle and other leading West Indies players will remain sidelined for the immediate future © Getty Images The Champions Trophy will be devalued by West Indies sending a substandard team, according to Tim May. Full Article at Cricinfo.com

  2. AP Photo logo AP Photo 2 months ago
    The West Indies' cricket captain Chris Gayle, center, stands among India's players after his team lost the one-day international series at Beausejour Cricket Ground, in Gros-Islet, St. Lucia, Sunday, July 5, 2009.

    The West Indies' cricket captain Chris Gayle, center, stands among India's players after his team lost the one-day international series at Beausejour Cricket Ground, in Gros-Islet, St. Lucia, Sunday, July 5, 2009. View Photo »

  3. I am looking forward to a wonderful charity. I understand that Brian Lara will be taking part and it will be a tremendous feeling for me to take part in a match against him

Shae warne



Shane Warne waves farewell at Lord’s after leading the IPL franchise Rajasthan Royals to victory in the inaugural British Asian Cup against Middlesex.

shane warne bye to lords

Shane Warne celebrated his last competitive match at Lord’s with a hint of the brilliance that so beguiled opponents for years as he lead the Rajasthan Royals to a 46-run victory in the inaugural British Asian Cup. The former Australian leg-spinner drew a large cheer from the 20,000 crowd each time he entered the attack, but the largest roar was reserved for a classic Warne dismissal – a stumping after the Middlesex favourite Dawid Malan failed to pick Warne’s googly.

In typical larrikin Warne style, he declined to rule out a future return to Lord’s. “That will my last game at Lord’s unless the Royals play here again in the next 12 months or in the future,” he said. “It will be my last competitive game in England, that’s for sure. I’ll play the odd benefit game.

“I love being out there and thought I did quite well considering I’d just jumped off a plane and haven’t bowled for a couple of weeks.”

sharnwarn

Brett lee



Test debut Australia v India at Melbourne, Dec 26-30, 1999 scorecard
Last Test Australia v South Africa at Melbourne, Dec 26-30, 2008 scorecard
Test statistics
ODI debut Australia v Pakistan at Brisbane, Jan 9, 2000 scorecard
Last ODI England v Australia at Lord's, Sep 6, 2009 scorecard
ODI statistics
T20I debut New Zealand v Australia at Auckland, Feb 17, 2005 scorecard
Last T20I England v Australia at Manchester, Aug 30, 2009 scorecard
T20I statistics
First-class debut 1994/95
Last First-class England Lions v Australians at Worcester, Jul 1-4, 2009 scorecard
List A debut 1997/98
Last List A England v Australia at Lord's, Sep 6, 2009 scorecard
Twenty20 debut New Zealand v Australia at Auckland, Feb 17, 2005 scorecard
Last Twenty20 England v Australia at Manchester, Aug 30, 2009 scorecard
Profile

Brett Lee is determined that age and injury shall not weary him. Always positive and flashing a smile from a toothpaste advertisement, he insists his body "still feels really young", but after years as Australia's youthful pin-up he has entered fatherhood and his early 30s. At first there was the pace, but then came the injury and long layoff. It is a recurring theme in Lee's career as he has aimed for numbers that would result in licence suspensions on any Australian road. His speed thrills, but after overcoming another serious ankle problem in 2009, there is no guarantee he will be able to continue slamming his foot down. Despite planning a post-cricket career in Bollywood - he already has a hit song with You're The One For Me and is learning Hindi - Lee is confident of delaying the all-singing, all-dancing routine for a few more seasons.

However, this time the scene has changed since Lee hobbled out of the 2008 Boxing Day Test for foot and ankle surgery. The rise of Mitchell Johnson and Peter Siddle has put rare pressure on Lee, who scraped into the Ashes squad, and he was so determined to join the set-up after five months out he flew to South Africa to be near them. His troubles started last year when he missed the Bangladesh one-day series for family reasons and then struggled with illness and form during his first Test campaign in India. Despite keeping his public spirits high, he didn't spark at home either - of his 21 wickets in eight games in 2008-09, nine came in one match against New Zealand - and it was sad to watch him grimace through the final day in Melbourne.

One major difference in his 2007 recovery was Australia needed his return to health. Previously Glenn McGrath and Jason Gillespie provided the cover, but the changes in the attack left Lee as the main man. And he excelled. Against Sri Lanka he was Man of the Series for his 16 wickets, another 24 came against India and by the time the West Indies campaign was over he had 58 Test victims at 21.55 in the post-McGrath era. The Allan Border Medal was another reward, along with the Test Player of the Year prize and the Pura Cup, which he helped seal with 97, his highest first-class score.

Over the past few years Lee's outlook has matured - essential variety has been added to the bouncer-yorker method - and he has become consistent to the point where the team analysts struggled to log a bad ball in some 2006-07 Ashes innings. Twenty England wickets helped him move on from the 2005 defeat, but the summer ended in disappointment when his ankle turned painfully at training in New Zealand.

As Lee completed rehab after an operation to reattach the ligaments, his team-mates reacquainted themselves with the World Cup. Lee was disappointed to miss out, but remained upbeat. "Having a bit of a layoff is good for the body," he said. "Although I'm 30 I still feel like I'm 27 as far as bowling age." When he was really young he was the freshest and fastest at a flicker above or below 100mph, and always seemed on the verge of striking a body or a wicket. When Lee released the throttle and began that smooth acceleration, the spectator stayed his drinking hand. The leaping, classical delivery might have produced a devastating yorker, a devilish slower ball or a young-Donald outswinger. Add a dash of peroxide, a fruity vocabulary, a trademark jump for joy, a stylish bat, a streak of sadism when bowling at tailenders, a pop group (Six And Out), and an endearing link to a job at a gentleman's outfitters, and you had the 21st century's first designer cricketer - not to mention a priceless pin-up boy.

While Steve Waugh unleashed him in a dramatic opening of 42 wickets in seven Tests before an elbow operation, Ricky Ponting gave Lee a blueprint for lasting success. "The way that Ricky has captained my personal bowling over the last couple of years has just been brilliant," he said early in 2006. "Going back two or three years, I wasn't really sure what they wanted me to do."

Lee's career hasn't always been easy. He struggled against accusations of throwing, bean balls, stress fractures and other injuries, and had a strangely barren first Ashes series in 2001. Three years later he U-turned from ankle surgery, but was stuck in the pits of the dressing room as he ran drinks and sponges in nine consecutive Tests. He came back for the 2005 Ashes series and earned plaudits for his brave performances with bat and ball. He nearly pulled off a win for Australia with a battling 43 at Edgbaston, but his partner-in-crime Michael Kasprowicz fell at the contentious final hurdle. Andrew Flintoff's consoling of Lee seconds after the catch was 2005's defining image.

Less than a year later the duet with Kasprowicz reformed and a nail-biting win over South Africa eased the pain of the previous near-miss. It had been an important summer as he assumed the role of attack leader when McGrath first struggled for impact and then pulled out of tours to South Africa and Bangladesh. Lee moved into the position he had craved since crashing on to the Test scene with 5 for 47 against India, and celebrated 89 international wickets for the season with lawnmower, hunting and leaping celebrations. Now Lee has to reprove he deserves the full-time paternal responsibilities following his difficulties in 2008-09
Cricinfo staff May 2009


Jhonty rhodes

South Africa's fielding coach Jonty Rhodes doesn't want to sound too harsh, but in simple terms the tragic death of the team's former mentor Bob Woolmer has to be put aside in order to get on with business at the World Cup.

Pakistan coach Woolmer, 58, died on Sunday after being found in his hotel room in what Jamaican police have described as "suspicious" circumstances.

South Africa have a crucial Group A clash with Australia on Saturday and not even the loss of his personal friend and former national coach Woolmer will sway the resolve of Rhodes.

"It's really hard. Bob and I really got on well," Rhodes said on Wednesday.

"Obviously some of the guys are still emotional. Not to sound too tough or anything, but we have an important match coming up and we have a job to do, and that is to play good cricket.

"The two most important people in my cricketing career were Hansie (Cronje) and Bob and they're both gone.

"I just hope they're not in heaven picking a team because I don't want to be next!"

Rhodes said Woolmer was the target of banter every week by the players.

"But Bob used to give as good as he got. I had an amazing relationship with him," Rhodes said.

"He had a way of giving of himself and it was something I could relate to. That made him more than a coach to me.

"My cover drive was beyond help, and Bob adjusted it. Technically, he was a good coach but he had passion and for me it was more the passion and his attitude towards coaching."

Rhodes said Woolmer made cricket fun.

He employed a similar philosophy at Pakistan, who were encouraged to play soccer as a warm-up game at training, which helped break down the barriers between senior players and less experienced lads.

"It was not about you have to do it this way. He actually gave us options," Rhodes said.

Rhodes said Woolmer was an all-rounder.

"Like Jacques Kallis, if you replace him with a batsman, the bowling side is weak, and if you replace him with a bowler, the batting side is weak," Rhodes said.

"Bob had that all-round ability as a coach, and that comes with the way I coach as well."


Sunil gavaskar


Sunil Gavaskar was one of the greatest opening batsmen of all time, and certainly the most successful. His game was built around a near perfect technique and enormous powers of concentration. It is hard to visualise a more beautiful defence: virtually unbreachable, it made his wicket among the hardest to earn. He played with equal felicity off both front and back foot, had an excellent judgement of length and line and was beautifully balanced. He had virtually every stroke in the book but traded flair for the solidity his side needed more. His record for the highest number of Test hundreds was recently overtaken by Sachin Tendulkar, but statistics alone don't reveal Gavaskar's true value to India. He earned respect for Indian cricket and he taught his team-mates the virtue of professionalism. The self-actualisation of Indian cricket began under him. Since retiring, Gavaskar has served as a television commentator, analyst and columnist, as well as various responsibilites with the BCCI and chairman of the ICC cricket committee. He recently stepped down - after some controversial comments - from the latter in orer to continue as a media columnist and commentator

Full name Sunil Manohar Gavaskar

Born July 10, 1949, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra

Current age 60 years 59 days

Major teams India, Mumbai, Somerset

Also known as Sunny

Adam gilchrist

Adelaide: One of India`s leading cricket writers has claimed that Adam Gilchrist is unquestionably the greatest one-day cricketer of all time.

Sharda Ugra, who is deputy editor of India Today magazine, was voicing his opinion as part of the big debate ahead of the ICC Champions Trophy on who is the leading 50-over player in the history of the game.

"My choice as the greatest ODI cricketer of all-time is Adam Gilchirst, because he shuts the door on the argument," wrote Sharda, who also collaborated with former India coach John Wright on his book John Wright`s Indian Summers.

"Because he is arguably the first player every captain, past or present, would pick in an all-time XI to play anyone, anywhere.”

"Because he is a revolutionary who re-defined his game and the game, putting his own signature to what Sanath Jayasuriya started. “

"Because along with 9619 runs in the game scored at the top of the order, at a strike rate of 96.95, he has 417 catches and 55 stumpings, bringing two top-quality skills to his team. “

"Because his impact was lethal, definitive, averaging 41 in matches Australia won where he scored all his 16 100s and 43 of 55 fifties.”

"Because he was a pivotal figure in Australia`s domination of the modern one-day game and its three back-to-back World Cup victories, his lowest score in three finals being 54. And, always, he entertained."

Karnataka premiyar leage

KPL - Karnataka Premier League

Critics of IPL! In your faces!!

Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) launched the Karnataka Premier League (KPL), a T20 'inter-district' tournament, set to kick off on September 12, on the lines of IPL!

At Chinnaswamy Stadium on Friday, KSCA made the announcement on KPL, and the following few basic rules took shape then!

No of teams:

There would be bidding on the 10 district zones of Karnataka, the highest 8 of which will participate in the tournament!

This means any 8 of the following zones could be a part of KPL: Mysore, Mangalore, Dharwad, Raichur, Tumkur, Shimoga, Bellary, Gulbarga, Belgaum and Bangalore!

No of matches:

It has been proposed to have a total of 31 matches in the KPL, 28 at the league level, 2 semis, one final!

Each team will play each other, once, and then proceed to the semis! All matches are to be played at the Chinnaswamy Stadium!

Players:

KSCA has decided to make available a pool of 40 top players from across the state to be divided into eight teams through an auction, five per team. KSCA allows another 7 players to be picked by the franchisee from a list provided by them. Each team, in addition to all this, must have 2 players who are domiciled in their franchise zone and/or catchment area.

The players will be up for auction on August 8!

'Foriegn' Players:

Each franchisee is permitted to include 3 players from any other region or part of India, other than the state of Karnataka, with no geographical relevance.

Thus, each franchisee will have a minimum of 14 and a maximum of 20 players in their squad.

It was announced that the minimum bid amount per franchise will be Rs 20 lakh, with the player fee capped at Rs 6 lakh for the 14 Karnataka-based players in the team. For the first five players (out of the list of 40), a cap of Rs. 4 lakh has been decided, with the other Rs. 2 lakh to be spent on the remaining 9 players. A window has been left open for the big bucks, with the 3 non-Karnataka players, to whom no budget constraints shall apply.

(Of course, for non-Indians, understanding a lakh may get hard. Concentrating on all my knowledge of numbers, I have been able to recollect that 10 lakh = 1 million! I hope that is what it is!)

Yeah, this should be fun and exciting to watch unfold! Yeah, this should help IPL in some manner! Yeah, at least BRC and Dr. Mallya!

Sunday, September 6, 2009

sanith jayasuriya


The limited-overs part of the tough tour has started on a definite high for New Zealand © Associated Press

How quickly the momentum has shifted. After bossing New Zealand around in the Tests, Sri Lanka have been slightly deflated with a loss in momentum, after defeats in both Twenty20 contests over the past three days. New Zealand followed up their three-run victory on Wednesday with 22-run win last night to start the limited-overs part of their tough tour on a definite high.

This was most visible right after the second match, when the entire New Zealand team and support staff stood in unison near the dais, waiting for the presentation to start. Kumar Sangakkara came out shortly but had to stop, look around, and then beckon his players to join him in a show of solidarity like the tourists. A visibly flustered Sangakkara called out to a couple players looking on from the dressing room, signaling that the rest all hurry down immediately. Slowly, the Sri Lankans descended the steps and formed a queue around their captain.

Later, in a closed-room press conference, Sangakkara said his team will have to fight hard to regain lost momentum. "It was a great pitch, but we lost too many wickets and were not able to build the kind of partnerships you need. We tried everything and we still came up short. A loss is always a concern. Once you're outplayed, you have to accept it. You learn from it and move on."

For his opposite number, Daniel Vettori, this was an indication of things to come. "The guys will take a lot of confidence from that. I think everyone out there put up a performance at some stage and they'll be happy with that," Vettori said. "They can take that into the one-dayers. For us to make the final will be a great stepping stone for the Champions Trophy."

Both Twenty20 internationals highlighted Sri Lanka's reliance on Tillakaratne Dilshan to provide a good start. On Wednesday, Dilshan blazed away as wickets fell around him and by the time he departed for 57, the damage had been done with Sri Lanka 75 for 4. Yesterday, Dilshan's dismissal in the first over was followed by a slump to 11 for 3. "When a batsman's in form, he always seems to be the guy scoring the runs at the top. Unfortunately the other guys haven't been supporting him as they can," said Sangakkara. "They have the ability to do so but unfortunately we haven't had that. It's a learning process, form comes and goes but I think the players we do have are well capable of getting us the runs and the starts we need to win."

Vettori pinpointed that dismissal as a result of planning - Martin Guptill was put out on the boundary for this shot, and Shane Bond dropped the ball short of a length - and hard work. "Shane stood up and said he wanted to do that job. We had some goods plans and they worked today. It's always great when that happens because you work pretty hard and sometimes it doesn't work out. To see it work today and the lift it gave the team was great.",

The other concern for Sri Lanka is the lack of runs from Sanath Jayasuriya, whose last eight innings have produced 125 runs at 15.63. His one-day form is equally dismal, with just 132 at 18.66 in his last seven trips to the middle. "It's always a concern when a batsman's out of form," said Sangakkara, "But we all know what he can do and what he has done. We have to give him every chance to get back in there and score runs.''

Bond's return to the international circuit has been watched closely by many, including the two captains. The jury is not yet on Bond going into what will be his first real test, the one-day part of this tour. "You can't really tell much in four overs but you've in these conditions fast bowling is always a challenge," said Sangakkara. "Batsmen always back themselves to face pace on these tracks. With the sun coming out of day-nighters, bowling in the sun…that will be the real test for him.''

Vettori said it was a great start for Bond, as he attempted to launch himself at the highest level. "You couldn't really ask for too much more. It's great for him to start the way he has and I think he'll get better and better. The role's he's performed - taking the new ball and then coming back at the death ...I've been really impressed with the way he bowled then.

"He looks confident and when Shane's confident he's a really good bowler. I think we'll see more of that as the one-day series goes on. This series will take the nerves away from him and he'll be able to concentrate on playing cricket now."


Sanath jayasuriya

Rickey ponting

Karachi, Aug 26 (IANS) Pakistan coach Intikhab Alam has warned that speculations about match-fixing are adversely affecting the morale of the national players.
Intikhab said he is confident all the Pakistani players were completely clean and are giving their best each time they take the field in an international game.

“It is very important for us to stop suspecting our players each time we lose because it is affecting them a lot. It is time that the ghosts of match-fixing are buried for ever,” the former Pakistan captain was quoted as saying in ‘The News’ Wednesday.

“More than match-fixing, its false reports of bookies meeting our players and things like that which sort of ruins everything.”

“Even in Sri Lanka, it was speculated that our players were contacted by alleged bookies to throw matches. I must make it clear here that nothing can be far from truth than such baseless reports,” he said.

Reports surfaced during Pakistan’s disastrous tour of Sri Lanka that some Indian bookies tried to contact national team players in their team hotel in Colombo during the three-match Test series. The fact that Pakistan lost two of those Tests from seemingly winning positions only added fuel to fire.

“Everything was blown out of proportion,” he said. “In Colombo, we were staying at one of the Taj hotels and it was full of Indian nationals, some were businessmen while others were tourists.”

“Some of them wanted to be photographed with our players. A few of them even invited Younis for a cup of tea. That’s quite normal but our players still informed us about it. That’s a good thing but suddenly we were flooded with reports of match-fixing attempts and all that.”

“Look at the Ashes,” he said. “Australia had their moments but couldn’t capitalize on them. Even on the last day (of the final Ashes Test) their best batsmen including captain Ricky Ponting was run out and they followed one after the other. Now some people might become suspicious but I believe it only proves that cricket is a game of uncertainties,” he said.


Ricky ponting

Brian lara

Brian Lara gave a one on one interview to a journalist from the UK's Independent newspaper.

Trinidad and Tobago had its own "The Independent" several years ago. It was a break away from The Guardian after a fallout with the Board. It was later bought out by The Express and subsequently shut down. Below is the interview.

Brian Lara: 'I am hoping that the World Cup is a watershed moment'

Brian Viner Interviews: The West Indies captain is almost as eloquent with the word as the willow and, as he prepares for cricket's global celebration, he talks of his past, present and future with candour and class.

A big crowd of journalists is milling around excitedly on the ground floor of a private members' club in Covent Garden, a spectacle that troubles me, for I am here to interview Brian Lara and was assured that I would be one of only a handful of newspapermen to be given time with the great man.

Happily, after a slight misunderstanding with the receptionist who keeps saying "the who?" when I explain that I am here to see the West Indian cricket captain Brian Lara, it turns out that the media throng is here for a press conference to announce a European tour by The Who. For the Lara interview I need the fourth floor, and as I make my way upstairs to meet, with apologies to Roger Daltrey, the cork ball wizard, I wonder whether Daltrey, a keen cricket fan, knows that Lara is in the building. He might just want to come upstairs and pay homage.

Trinidad's most famous son is in London for a day to publicise the computer game Brian Lara International Cricket 2007, which I'm sure is absolutely terrific, although he understands that it's not high on my list of conversational priorities. There is an imminent World Cup in the West Indies to discuss.

"People back home are very excited," he says. "We'll never get an Olympics or a soccer World Cup but to have a global event like the cricket World Cup is fantastic, and everyone hopes it will leave a legacy. Most of the islands in the Caribbean rely economically on tourism, and we want visitors to take home the message that we're accommodating and hospitable. Obviously, people in Europe and America know about the Caribbean already, but the World Cup will help us get the message to places like India and Australia too."

OK, that's the tourist board shtick over: now, what chance do he and his team-mates have of actually winning the thing? "A very good chance," he says. "We've played in two ICC tournaments between the 2003 World Cup and now, and we've won one and got to the final of the other, so we know we have the players capable of doing very well. And the Caribbean has unique conditions for cricket, which we're accustomed to. The host nation has never done well in the cricket World Cup, but we can turn the tables on that."

I ask him whether his team has a secret weapon, and he gives one of his 100-kilowatt smiles. "I've told the younger players that there's no way we're going to win the World Cup on the back of four or five experienced players such as myself and [Shivnarine] Chanderpaul. We need everyone to contribute and I think Dwayne Bravo will be a force to be reckoned with. Also, Jerome Taylor is a good young fast bowler. But the player no one has really heard of outside the Caribbean is Kieron Pollard. He's never played a one-day international but he's been hitting the headlines back home. He's only 19 but he's really special, an all-rounder and a big hitter, batting at number five."

Lara expects the West Indies, Australia, South Africa and one other to make the last four. "I'd like to say England, who are certainly improving in the one-day arena, as we saw in Australia. But every time I look at the newspapers there is someone else injured. Michael Vaughan, for example, is very important to the team. If they're fit, they're all good players. Kevin Pietersen is a force, Flintoff is a match-winner, Monty Panesar has come into his own in the shorter version of the game. I hope they have a good World Cup."

He was surprised, he adds, that England capitulated in the Ashes, and watched the series unfold with great interest; the West Indies, of course, tour here this summer. It was said during the Ashes, I remind him, that Ricky Ponting had become the world's best batsman. With a record 11,953 Test match runs under his belt, perhaps he might feel inclined to disagree?

He chuckles. "No, I have no argument with that, although I don't think people should compare players. I prefer to appreciate each and every single player for what he brings to the game, including the guys who are not fashionable, or exciting, the likes of Rahul Dravid. If I wanted someone to bat for my life, it would be Dravid, not Ponting, playing those hook shots off his front foot. But I appreciate all players, from Australians down to Bangladeshis, for all the ingredients they bring."

It occurs to me that when he does finally retire his bat - and he assures me that in his 38th year he has no immediate plans to do so, indeed negotiations are reportedly under way for him to come back to county cricket - Lara might have a future as a United Nations diplomat. In the mean time, what does he think of my theory that it is more than coincidence that the very greatest batsmen, such as himself, Ponting and Sachin Tendulkar, are all relatively short men? "Well, I'm a bit taller than Tendulkar," he says, cheerfully. "But yes, [Sunil] Gavaskar, Don Bradman, Sir Garry [Sobers] ... I don't know whether it's something to do with a lower centre of gravity, being more compact, more flexible. Maybe it's because the one thing we can concentrate on is batting. It's not as though we can be fast bowlers."

He was the 10th of 11 children, he adds, citing his place in the family as another significant factor in his development as a cricketer. "It was tough just to get a game on the street with my bigger brothers and their friends, so if I did get a hit, as an eight-year-old playing with 16-year-olds, I had to be good. I was very competitive right from when I was very small, and there came a time when I was 10 years old and they couldn't get me out all afternoon."

The Englishmen standing haplessly in the field when Lara scored 400 not out in Antigua in 2004, and those who watched him hit 501 not out for Warwickshire against Durham 10 years earlier, will know the feeling.

But it wasn't just cricket at which he excelled in his youth. When he was 11 he played football for Trinidad against Tobago, in a match to determine the Trinidad & Tobago Under-12 team for a forthcoming tournament. "After that game, there were two names pencilled down first. One was Dwight Yorke, who was only eight years old and already something special. The other was Russell Latapy, who's now the player-coach at Falkirk, and Dwight will tell you that as a kid Russell had more talent than anyone. The three of us have remained great friends." Another broad grin. "We're the three musketeers."

While the other two musketeers pursued their football careers, Lara smashed all records as a schoolboy cricketer, and in 1989, aged 19, got into the West Indies Test squad just days before his beloved father died. "But I didn't make the team, and he died during the first Test in Trinidad. At least he knew that I'd made the squad, but I'd give up anything to have my father watching me at a Test match, sitting alongside Sir Vivian Richards. He did a wonderful job with the entire family, brought us up in the right way, and we have a charity named after my parents, the Pearl and Bunty Lara foundation, so their legacy lives on."

Their 10th child's own legacy, if only as a cricketer, is already assured. I ask Lara if he knows exactly how many Test runs he has scored? "I know I'm 40 or 50 short of 12,000 but it's not something I focus on. It's nice to pass milestones, and to go past a player such as Allan Border was momentous for me, but at the end of the day I would give everything up to be part of a successful team over the last 10 years. I don't ever say that I wish I'd played in the 1970s and 1980s when the West Indies were invincible, because I've enjoyed a good camaraderie with the present players [although not the selectors, who have relieved him more than once of the captaincy]. It's been a privilege, but I regret that I've played through the decline of West Indies cricket."

The World Cup, he hopes, will arrest that decline. But to what does he ascribe it? Is it the growing popularity of basketball? Is it, heaven forfend, sedentary games such as Brian Lara International Cricket 2007?

"Well, when I was a kid the first thing we were given was a coconut branch carved out in the shape of a bat. Now, kids don't leave the house sometimes, with computers to play with, cable TV. But that is not where the problem lies. We have only had 400 or so Test cricketers over 75 or 80 years, so why would we blame the dilution of interest in cricket? The problem is that we have never put anything in place to ensure that those who want to play can play. There is nothing to harness their talent to turn them into international cricketers. I can handle the fact that we have lost thousands of kids to other sports, but not that we let down those who want to play cricket. So I am hoping that the World Cup is a watershed moment, that we go on to build academies, build a grass-roots infrastructure, because we have fallen so far behind England, Australia, even India."

As long as there are kids aiming to become the next Brian Lara, there is hope. But the laid-back culture does not encourage idolatry, and that's the way he likes it. "We're not celebrity-crazy in the Caribbean. You can be Halle Berry or Tom Cruise and yes, you will be acknowledged, but people will leave you alone. I love the fact I can take a run round the Queen's Park Savannah [in Trinidad] and not be bothered. The fanaticism in India [towards Tendulkar in particular] I can't believe."

To return to the World Cup, despite 19 centuries in one-day internationals, and an average of more than 40, Lara's recent form has been unremarkable. He makes no bones of his preference for Test cricket - "for myself there is no comparison, Test matches are the true test of a cricketer's ability"- and yet he insists he is raring to go, both as a batsman and as captain. Moreover, he knows full well the old adage about form being temporary and class permanent, and that applies not only to him but to the side he considers favourite to win.

"You can have Australia four down for 100, and in walks Andrew Symonds. There are six or seven guys in their batting line-up who can destroy you, but if they bat first and get a low total, you can't take that lightly. You have to beat them at the five-over stage, the 10-over stage, the 15-over stage, at every stage all through the match."

Of all the encounters he is looking forward to, beginning with the tournament's curtain-raiser against Pakistan next Tuesday, there is one prospect that fills him with particular pleasure. "Playing against [Glenn] McGrath for the last time will be special, and I hope we face each other in the final. The last time I played Test cricket against him, at Adelaide in 2005, the two big boys, McGrath and [Shane] Warne, both got me out. But I also scored a double-century [226, which took him past 11,000 runs] against them. That was something for the archives." One more big smile. "It will be lovely to face him again."
brain lara

Saturday, September 5, 2009

sachin Tendulkar: Two decades ago, when India’s World Cup winning captain Kapil Dev placed a friendly bet, challenging Sachin Tendulkar to play 10 years for India, little did Sachin realise that he would not only win the bet, but actually double those years. Having won that bet hands down, the Master Blaster now wants to continue playing for India.

“It’s a great feeling, completing 20 years of international cricket. It’s a dream to play for India. The more, the better,” Tendulkar said on Friday. “Cricket has been an integral part of life for me. It’s hard to imagine life without cricket. It’s hard to express the feeling.

However, Sachin denied saying that he wanted to score 15,000 Test runs.

“A lot of things are attributed to me that I’ve never said. I never said I wanted to score 15,000 runs (in Tests) before I retire,” Sachin said.

“When I made my debut, Kapil (Dev) challenged me and invited me to bet on me playing for India for the next 10 years. Now I am close to doubling that number,” the 36-year-old maestro said at a function to announce his new sponsorship deal with sports gear manufacturers Adidas.

The deal will see Tendulkar playing with custom-made Adidas bats from the tri-series in Sri Lanka. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has signed a contract with Nike for apparel sponsorship of the Indian team till next year, but a BCCI source said Tendulkar’s association with Adidas would not constitute ambush marketing since “the bat space (for marketing) is the players’s prerogative.”

“I don’t think we have co-created a brand with the idea of ambush marketing in mind. Our only aim is to extend our association with Tendulkar. We have now co-branded a bat which carries his DNA, which is a dream come true for us,” Andreas Gellner, Managing Director of Adidas India, said.

On the topic of bats, Tendulkar said he always had a rapport with his bat. “The bat speaks to me,” the veteran 159 Tests with 12,733 runs said.

Tendulkar did not believe that the balance of the game has been affected with the constant improvement of bats whereas the ball has remained the same over the years.

“I think the quality of the ball had also changed over the years. I don’t think the quality was the same in 1960 or 1975,” he said.


sachin

Ganguly

As Ganguly's career winds down, it feels good to see him go with a bang rather than a whimper. For all the complaints I have of him, I was also one of his biggest fans during his peak days and it pained me to write ill of him time and again.

Fair weather friend, some might say, but as a blogger, I tried to stay true to my promise of looking at the bigger picture as I saw it, and not look at the Gangulys and Tendulkars. No fair weather friends (or enemies), no friends, just say it as I see it.

I hailed him when he became the captain and I defended him when he was down. Like a billion others, I was the un-official selector of the Indian cricket team, and for a large part of that tenure as selector, Ganguly scored high on my list. This changed in the last quarter of his career but that was not about Ganguly, the person but Ganguly, the cricketer. Simply put, I thought he should get out because he was no longer good enough either as a player or as a Captain.

Greg Chappell happened, and he did go out! Ironically, but not surprisingly considering Indian cricket's eccentricities, some time later Chappell went out and Ganguly came back in, and to my mind, if the Ganguly who came back after the Chappell saga had been available before the Chappell saga, I doubt if the Chappell saga would have happened.

Since his comeback, Ganguly has played well, no questions about that but as is perhaps natural to expect, he was a far cry from the Ganguly of yore. Sadly for him, he also came back at a time when Indian cricket was looking to turn a corner and the selectors, that ever-accursed gang of five, were implementing a vision in their own bumbling and blundering manner but implementing it none the less. More and gang started it, Vengsarkar and party took it forward, and Srikkant and chums seem to be looking in the same direction. I don't believe in fairy tales and I am sure Ganguly's selection for the Australian series does indeed have a story behind it. I don't know what it is and I don't care either; the fact that Ganguly finally goes indicates that the selection process is indeed moving in the right direction.

A world cup win in Twenty 20, a dynamic captain in MS Dhoni, a young team showing the way forward for Indian cricket; unfortunately, Ganguly doesn't fit into that picture, regardless of the chestnuts about age and experience. Nor do some others fit the picture but their day will come too, and the decision of whether they go out on a high, a la Ganguly, is now in their own hands.

Ganguly brought many good things to Indian cricket! People call him a great captain but while I never saw him as a great or even modest on-field captain, I do see him as an outstanding spotter of talent. He brought an edge to the team by his own style of "I don't give a damn who you are" attitude, and the personnel he chose had the same kind of edge. I also differ from those who say he brought aggression to the team; I prefer saying that he brought in the personnel who lent aggression to the team. Personnel who probably became more loyal to him than they did to Indian cricket!

Ganguly changed many things about Indian cricket, and he will be remembered for that. He was an outstanding ODI batsman in his prime, probably the best in the world at that time, and he will be remembered for that. He built a team, and not many captains can claim that, that went on to be highly successful in ODI cricket and did better than their predecessors ever did in test cricket, and he will be remembered for that too.

There were some negative points he might be remembered for; but regular readers of my blog would not need a reminder of my complaints against Sourav Ganguly, and I really prefer this post to celebrate Ganguly because I truly believe he did some good things for Indian cricket.

There were many ways in which Ganguly could have made his exit; he could have gone after being dumped by the selectors without getting his second chances; he could have gotten his second chances and gone after a series of failures; or he could have gotten his second chances and gone out in style as he seems to be doing now; a style as regal as the way he batted in his prime.

A proud man that Ganguly obviously is, I am happy that he leaves with his head high. He has earned his boasting rights over the years, and whatever the true reason be for his decision to retire, I believe for Indian cricket this was the best possible decision. If he boasts tomorrow that he was good enough to score a hundred against the world champions in his farewell series, it would be a boast no Indian cricket fan would begrudge him.

The way Ganguly's exit is panning out, the man who loved to hate Ganguly, a certain Mr. Steve Waugh, must be saying to himself "deja vu"!


gangully