Wednesday 28 November 2012

What Sachin Tendulkar needs to do to shut up his trenchant critics


Posted By Anoop Dubey
November 28,2012

The Mumbai Test showed that when a team is highly motivated, determined and focused on the job at hand, crisis can be turned into opportunity. It’s characteristics of a team that is hungry for victory. And England has shown that they are hungrier than Team India.



Man proposes, God disposes

The plans of depriving the England batsmen practice against spinners in the run-up to the Test series has failed. The question to be asked at this point: Did the Indian batsmen play games against spinners on turning wickets? From what I know, most of the Indian players played in Ranji Trophy games before the first Test on good batting tracks.  That, for me, is either poor preparation or complacent attitude. Everybody knew that xaptain Mahendra Singh Dhoni would demand turning tracks for the Test matches – in fact, pressure the curators to provide pitches that turn from Day One. When planning, one should also anticipate counter strategies that opponent would employ to negate the plans made for their downfall. However, the Indian batsmen were caught in their own trap at the Wankhede pitch – a track that had something for everyone.

The Indian spinners had not played adequate matches in the longer version and had not bowled long spells in competitive games coming into the Test series. And that could be one of the reasons for running out of ideas to break the match-changing partnership between Alastair Cook and Kevin Pietersen. They seem mentally fatigued bowling long spells in Test matches. As a consequence, they erred in line and length. They went on the defensive instead of attacking with accuracy – hangover of the overs-limit format.  The Indian spinners have the requisite talent and skills, but they need to show adaptability and mental discipline – two keys to help bounce back in the series.

Dhoni won a vital toss and took first strike of the Wankhede strip. The script went wrong for India when a Sikh left-arm spinner – Monty Panesar – had the home team struggling. Panesar’s pace and accuracy of his delivery, as also the turn and bounce he got from the wicket had most Indian batsmen in copious trouble.

Chesteshwar Pujara yet again shouldered the responsibility alone as the more experience batsmen in the team succumbed to spin. Pujara’s partnership first with Dhoni and then with Ravichandran Ashwin – fast maturing as dependable all-rounder – took India to a respectable score of 327.

Cook yet again gave eloquent testimony that the Indian spinners can be tamed. And then Pietersen took the Indian attack by the scruff of the neck to batter them into submission. The variations he brought to the sweep shot were jaw-dropping. He swept square, reverse, and out of the ground. He pounded the spinners through covers, off either foot to come 14 short of a double hundred. Though the last four wickets contributed only 31 runs to take the England score to 413 on the afternoon of Day Three, the game was evenly poised with the possibility of all three results.

But Panesar played havoc and in the bargain showed that Indian batsmen are also vulnerable against quality spinners by running through the line-up. He pierced their defense convincingly as the Indian innings folded quickly on the fourth morning. England openers quickly scored the required 56 runs without loss to register a comprehensive outclass India in all department of the game.

Tuesday 3 July 2012


Sehwag, Zaheer set to return for Sri Lanka tour

Posted By Anoop Dubey
July 03/2012

The fit-again duo of opening batsman Virender Sehwag and pacer Zaheer Khan is all set to return to the Indian squad after missing the Asia Cup when the selectors meet in Mumbai on Wednesday to choose the side for the upcoming cricket tour of Sri Lanka.
The duo, along with Zaheer's pace understudy Umesh Yadav, sat out of the Asia Cup in Bangladesh in March on fitness grounds.
They were also not part of the squad for the one-off Twenty 20 International in South Africa on March 30 which was India's last international engagement.

Saturday 9 June 2012


IPL spot-fixing probe: BCCI panel to study inquiry report

Preview By Anoop Dubey

June 09,2012

New Delhi:

Ravi Sawani, who heads the Board of Control for Cricket in India's newly-formed anti-corruption wing, submitted a report to N Srinivasan after he completed his inquiry into corruption allegations levelled against five uncapped Indian players during the fifth edition of the Indian Premier League.


Shalabh Srivastava, Mohnish Mishra, TP Sudhindra, Amit Yadav and Abhinav Bali featured in a sting operation by a television channel during IPL 5. Sudhindra was caught on camera allegedly negotiating a deal worth Rs 40,000 to bowl a no-ball in a Madhya Pradesh Premier League T20 match, while Mishra was caught discussing an out-of-turn IPL contract worth more than his fixed slab.

N Srinivasan, the BCCI president, and Arun Jaitley and Niranjan Shah, both senior functionaries of the BCCI, are expected to study the report, which was prepared after Sawani held hearings with all the five players in question.

The sting operation also exposed the possibility of spot-fixing in domestic cricket, where women were allegedly used to entice cricketers.

In the wake of the incident, several former cricketers and sports ministry officials have called for strong action to help curb corruption and other such practices in the IPL. 

Friday 8 June 2012


Selectors to decide captaincy: Gautam Gambhir

Posted By Anoop Dubey
June 08,2012

After having thrown his hat in the ring, opening batsman Gautam Gambhir on Friday refused to be drawn into the debate over India's Test captaincy saying that the decision remained solely with the selectors.
Under Gambhir's captaincy Kolkata Knight Riders won their first Indian Premier League (IPL) title defeating twice champions Chennai Super Kings in the finals.
"That's for the selectors to decide," Gambhir said when asked about Test captaincy after his office team ONGC beat Rajnigandha Club at the Modern School grounds (Barakhamba Road) in the Lala Raghubir Singh Hot Weather cricket tournament..
The BCCI's decision to remove Gambhir from his post of vice-captaincy and appoint young Virat Kohli in the Asia Cup ODIs came as a surprise to many.
Talking about revival of cricketing ties between Pakistan and India, the elegant left-hander said that too much should not be made of the situation and felt that playing against the arch-rivals was the same as playing against any other country.
"For me, Pakistan is no different from Bangladesh, Australia or New Zealand. The main thing is that you are playing for your country and that in itself is a big motivation," said Gambhir.
Gambhir said retirement of senior cricketers like Rahul Dravid would not dent India's performance in the Tests and felt that everyone in the team were equal.
"There are no seniors or juniors in the Indian team. Everyone is equal in a team. If you are playing for India, you have to take the responsibility. Obviously, when you have experience, you are a bit more matured."
On the national team's debacle in the Test arena in England and Australia, the southpaw said the minor break the team has away from the game would augur well in their pursuit of winning back the No.1 ranking.
India have a busy schedule ahead of them and will play New Zealand, England and Australia in Tests at home.
"This break from cricket will act as a positive for us. We will be able to come back fresh with better fitness. We have the talent and we have to get back to No.1 ranking in Tests," the senior opener said.

Tuesday 5 June 2012


Chris Gayle returns to West Indies team for ODI series

Posted By Anoop Dubey
June 05,2012

Chris Gayle returns to international cricket for the first time in 14 months after being recalled by West Indies for the one-day series against England......
          The 32-year-old former captain has been out of the team after a dispute with the West Indies Cricket Board.
Dwayne Bravo returns as vice-captain, while all-rounder Kieron Pollard and spinner Sunil Narine are also included.
The three-match one-day international series begins at Hampshire on 16 June.
Gayle, the fourth highest-scoring West Indian batsman in ODI cricket with 8,087 runs from 228 matches, has not played for them since their World Cup quarter-final defeat by Pakistan in March 2011.


The cavalier left-hander, who was involved in contract disputes with the WICB in 2009, when much of the team decided to take strike action, was left out of the team for a series with Pakistan soon after that 2011 World Cup defeat and was highly critical of the WICB and coach Ottis Gibson in a radio interview.
As his absence from the West Indies side continued he played in Twenty20 tournaments across the world, and was the leading scorer in this year's Indian Premier League with 733 runs, including a 128 from 62 balls.

Thursday 31 May 2012


Pakistan news

Decision on Indo-Pak ties likely in June - Ashraf

Posted By Anoop Dubey
May 30,2012


The ICC's annual conference in Kuala Lumpur in June is where India and Pakistan could take significant steps towards the resumption of cricketing ties, with even the possibility of the announcement of a series, according to PCB chief Zaka Ashraf.
Ashraf is in Delhi for a few days after attending the IPL final (to which he was invited by the BCCI) in Chennai, and he told ESPNcricinfo, "Probably the final decision will be [taken] in Kuala Lumpur, where the ICC board of directors meeting will be held. There Mr Srinivasan and I will hold discussions, and maybe we will be able to formulate and announce something about the resumption of ties."
He denied that the two parties had already discussed or suggested a tentative schedule for a bilateral series during a gap in England's winter tour of India, when the England team will return home for a Christmas break. "The BCCI haven't conveyed that to us. What we see on the calendar is that the English team will continue to play matches. But that is now up to the BCCI, the ball is in their court. They have to think which slab is available, where there is a vacuum during which both of us can play. What we can play, what format … they have to take steps and let us know."
During his stay in Delhi on what was his first visit to India, Ashraf said he had met with the Pakistani high commissioner to India, Salman Bashir, and political leaders of several parties, ruling and opposition, whose names he did not wish to reveal.
India and Pakistan have not played each other in a bilateral series since December 2007. It is India's turn to tour Pakistan, but the country has not hosted an international series between two Full Members at home following the Lahore terrorist attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team bus in March 2009. Bilateral ties between India and Pakistan have been frozen since the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks. Pakistan, however, travelled to India to play in the semi-final of the 2011 World Cup.

Sunday 27 May 2012


Kolkata v Chennai, IPL 2012, final, Chennai

Kolkata take title after Bisla blitz

Posted By Anoop Dubey
May 29,2012

Kolkata Knight Riders 192 for 5 (Bisla 89, Kallis 69) beat Chennai Super Kings 190 for 3 (Raina 73, Hussey 54, Vijay 42) by five wickets

 There was a galaxy of former Indian cricketers in attendance, the brightest lights from Bollywood were in the stands, both teams had some of the biggest stars in the world game but the headlining performance came from little-known Manvinder Bisla as Kolkata Knight Riders prised the IPL trophy out of Chennai Super Kings' hands. Bisla, who was without a Ranji Trophy side last season, made a mockery of his previous career Twenty20 strike-rate of 106 to play a jack-in-the-box innings that helped overhaul what had seemed a mountainous Super Kings total.
The title seemed headed Super Kings' way for the third year in a row, when for the third match in a row a seemingly out of form Super Kings batsman played a blinder - this time it was Suresh Raina - and the rock of Knight Riders' batting Gautam Gambhir was bowled in the first over.
All that changed when Bisla intervened. Virtually every ball he faced, he either jumped beyond leg to make room or danced down the track to get close to the pitch of the ball as he unleashed a series of lofted extra cover drives to dent Super Kings. The first signs of trouble for the defending champions was when Bisla crashed Albie Morkel for four off-side fours in the fourth over to kickstart Knight Riders's innings.
The experienced Jacques Kallis stroked the singles to allow Bisla most of the strike, and Bisla, getting a game ahead of the regular wicketkeeper-batsman Brendon McCullum, showed no signs of the pressure of a big occasion getting to him. A slower one from Dwayne Bravo was dispatched for six in the next over, and R Ashwin, who has played a leading role in Super Kings successes over the past three seasons, was hit over his head for a couple of classy sixes. After half an hour of Bisla's pyrotechnics, Knight Riders were the team in charge and even the usually unfazed MS Dhoni was giving a heated lecture to his team during the time-out.
A century seemed for the taking for Bisla, but he was undone by Morkel's slower one, holing out to point for 86. Kallis then switched from watchful to wallop. The decision to promote Laxmi Shukla to No. 4 failed, but Kallis played one of the shots of the match, a perfectly placed lofted drive that bisected extra cover and long-off for four. That was followed by a heart-in-the-mouth moment as Kallis swung the ball towards deep midwicket where Michael Hussey held on to a tough catch but couldn't prevent himself from going over the rope.
Yusuf Pathan's horrendous 2012 season came to a fitting end as he top-edged a sweep to be dismissed for 1. Ben Hilfenhaus, who took out Gambhir early and bowled a probing spell with the new ball, returned for his final over in the 19th and he injected more excitement into the game by getting a cramping Kallis to slice a catch to sweeper cover. Hilfenhaus undid that by bowling a full toss that was no-balled for height and following up with another full toss that was nervelessly scooped for four by Shakib Al Hasan.
The tournament entered its final over with Knight Riders needing nine. There were just two singles off the first two balls, including some panicky running, but Manoj Tiwary settled the five-season wait for a trophy with two boundaries behind square leg to spark scenes of wild celebrations.