Thursday, July 30, 2009

Champions League T20 fixtures

Champions League T20 is a T20 league played among  the finalists of IPL and the T20 events in the countries of Australia, South Africa, England, winners of T20 event in Sri Lanka, West Indies and New Zealand.. Since Pakistan are not involved the 3rd best team in IPL2009 also take part as the 12th team.. An initiative of three founding members - the BCCI, Cricket Australia and Cricket South Africa (CSA) - the tournament will have prize money of US$6 million.

The teams are divided into 4 groups with the top 2 teams from each group qualifying for the next round of 2 groups of 4 each.. The event will be played across 3 venues in India ; M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore; Feroz Shah Kotla, New Delhi and Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium;Hyderabad from October 8 to October 23rd..

Victoria and New South Wales from Australia, Cape Cobras and Eagles from South Africa, Otago Volts from New Zealand, Trinidad and Tobago from West Indies and Wayamba from Sri Lanka take part in the event.. The English teams will be determined after their Twenty20 Cup ends in August.

GROUP A -- Deccan Chargers, Trinidad and Tobago and TBC
GROUP B -- New South Wales, Eagles and TBC
GROUP C -- Royal Challengers Bangalore, Otago and Cape Cobras
GROUP D -- Delhi Dare Devils, Wayamba and Victoria

FIXTURES

Date and Time(IST) Match

Thu Oct 8
20:00 Hrs
Group C - Royal Challengers Bangalore v Cape Cobras
M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore

Fri Oct 9
16:00 Hrs
Group B - Eagles v New South Wales
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi

Fri Oct 9
20:00 Hrs
Group D - Delhi Daredevils v Victoria
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi

Sat Oct 10
16:00 Hrs
Group C - Cape Cobras v Otago
Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Uppal, Hyderabad

Sat Oct 10
20:00 Hrs
Group A - Deccan Chargers v TBC
Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Uppal, Hyderabad

Sun Oct 11
16:00 Hrs
Group B - New South Wales v TBC
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi

Sun Oct 11
20:00 Hrs
Group D - Delhi Daredevils v Wayamba
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi

Mon Oct 12
16:00 Hrs
Group A - TBC v Trinidad & Tobago
M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore

Mon Oct 12
20:00 Hrs
Group C - Royal Challengers Bangalore v Otago
M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore

Tue Oct 13
16:00 Hrs
Group D - Victoria v Wayamba
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi

Tue Oct 13
20:00 Hrs
Group B - Eagles v TBC
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi

Wed Oct 14
20:00 Hrs
Group A - Deccan Chargers v Trinidad & Tobago
Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Uppal, Hyderabad

Thu Oct 15
20:00 Hrs
League B - TBC v TBC (C1 v D2)
M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore

Fri Oct 16
16:00 Hrs
League A - TBC v TBC (A2 v B2)
Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Uppal, Hyderabad

Fri Oct 16
20:00 Hrs
League A - TBC v TBC (A1 v B1)
Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Uppal, Hyderabad

Sat Oct 17
16:00 Hrs
League B - TBC v TBC (C2 v D2)
M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore

Sat Oct 17
20:00 Hrs
League B - TBC v TBC (C1 v D1)
M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore

Sun Oct 18
16:00 Hrs
League A - TBC v TBC (A2 v B1)
Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Uppal, Hyderabad

Sun Oct 18
20:00 Hrs
League A - TBC v TBC (A1 v B2)
Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Uppal, Hyderabad

Mon Oct 19
20:00 Hrs
League B - TBC v TBC (C2 v D1)
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi

Wed Oct 21
20:00 Hrs
1st semi-final - TBC v TBC (Winner B v Runner up A)
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi

Thu Oct 22
20:00 Hrs
2nd semi-final - TBC v TBC (Winner A v Runner up B)
Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Uppal, Hyderabad

Fri Oct 23
20:00 Hrs
Final - TBC v TBC
Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Uppal, Hyderabad


23 Matches overal , 9 to Hyderabad , 8 to Delhi and 6 to Bangalore..
ESPNSTAR will broadcast the event and Airtel are the sponsors..

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Champions Trophy - 1998

ICC Champions trophy was earlier the ICC Knock out tournament in 1998 and 2000, played amongst the test playing nations..

1998 edition was played in Bangladesh.. 9 test playing nations were there, so it had to be reduced to 8 with a decider played between one test nation and Zimbabwe.. New Zealand won that match and was the 8th team to participate in that event..

This edition was organized at the 11th hour as floods threatened to pull the tournament out of Bangladesh..

Read earlier post on the team squads and the fixtures..

 


1st QF: England v South Africa
South Africa won by 6 wickets (with 20 balls remaining)
England 281/7 (50 ov); South Africa 283/4 (46.4 ov)
  • Hollioke coming at no.7 scored 83* after Symcox opened the bowling..
  • Cullinan, Cronje and Rhodes' half centuries sealed the match.. 
  • Cullinan was Man of the match..
  • Benkenstein and Alan Dawson made their debuts for their respective sides..

2nd QF: New Zealand v Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka won by 5 wickets (with 51 balls remaining)
New Zealand 188 (49.5 ov); Sri Lanka 191/5 (41.3 ov)
  • 3 run outs and 5 wickets to the spinners ended the NZ innings.. 
  • Sri Lanka were in a spot of bother losing 3 wickets for 5 runs to be rescued by Kaluwitharana and Ranatunga.. 
  • Ranatunga was Man of the match for a knock of 90*..

3rd QF: Australia v India
India won by 44 runs
India 307/8 (50 ov); Australia 263 (48.1 ov)
 
  •  Ganguly and Azharuddin went early.. Dravid scored 48, Jadeja ended the innings with a brilliant 71 off 65 runs..
  • Not to forget the innings of Sachin, 141 off 128. He got run out in the 46th over.. Truly amazing innings.. 
  • Aussie had good contribution from Mark Waugh but Tendulkar's 4 wickets meant that India had to win..
  • And no prizes for guessing that Sachin was Man of the match..

4th QF: Pakistan v West Indies
West Indies won by 30 runs
West Indies 289/9 (50 ov); Pakistan 259/9 (50 ov)
  • Phillo Wallace scored more than a run a ball 79..
  • Wasim's bowling at the death restricted Windies to 289..
  • Ijaz Ahmed and Saleem Elahi were the lone performers and Keith Athurton's 4-for ended Pak's tournament..
  • Keith Athurton had earlier in the day scored 33 runs earning him the Man of the match award..

1st SF: South Africa v Sri Lanka
South Africa won by 92 runs (D/L method)
South Africa 240/7 (39/39 ov); Sri Lanka 132 (23.4/34 ov)
  • Rain curtailed match- 39 overs.. 
  • South Africa rode to 240 for 7 on the back of a brilliant century from Kallis
  • Sri Lanka were given a revised target of 224 in 34 overs but they were all out for 132 with Symcox and Elworthy taking 3 each..
  • Kallis was MoM..

2nd SF: India v West Indies
West Indies won by 6 wickets (with 18 balls remaining)
India 242/6 (50 ov); West Indies 245/4 (47 ov)
  • Much expected match as India looked to win to reach the finals..
  • Tendulkar got out early that jolted India.. 
  • Ganguly scored 83 and Robin Singh 73* but a slow inings from Dravid and a strike rate of 77 from Ganguly meant that India reached only 242..
  • Windies reached the target with 3 overs to spare on the back of 60 from Lara and 74 from Shiv Chanderpaul..
  • India knocked out and Dillon was adjudged MoM for his 3 for..

Final: South Africa v West Indies
South Africa won by 4 wickets (with 18 balls remaining)
West Indies 245 (49.3 ov); South Africa 248/6 (47 ov)
  • Big stage- Windies into a final after a long time.. and South Africa had to prove a point winning at a big stage after their come back into international arena..
  • 100 from Wallace, 49 from Hooper and 5-for from Kallis ended Windies'innings at 245..
  • Gritty knock from Cronje after a great start made SA win the trophy with 3 overs to spare..
  • Player of the match and series was Kallis..
Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
25 October
  England  281/7
30 October
  South Africa  283/4
  South Africa  240/7
26 October
  Sri Lanka  132/10
  New Zealand  188/10
1 November
  Sri Lanka  191/5
  South Africa  248/6
28 October
  West Indies  245/10
  India  307/8
31 October
  Australia  263/10
  India  242/6
29 October
  West Indies  245/4
  West Indies  289/9
  Pakistan  259/9
Highest team total - 
India 307 vs AUS..
WI 289 vs PAK 
Highest run getter- 
Philo Wallace -221 
Jaques Kallis -164 
Winner
South Africa
Player of the Series
Jaques Kallis

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Champions trophy classics - 1998

ICC Champions trophy began as a knock out tournament in the year 1998.. It is conducted once in two years and is touted as the mini world cup..



ICC Knock out trophy 1998 was called WILLS International Cup..

The ICC decided to award the tournament to Bangladesh to promote the game in that nation. One the worst ever floods of the region  threatened to ruin the tournament. However, the tournament eventually went ahead in Bangladesh and the Bangladesh Cricket Board promised to donate 10% of the gate money to the Prime Minister's Fund for flood reflief.

The tournament was intended to be held in a direct knock-out format for all the test playing countries of the time. There were 9 countries eligible which meant that 2 countries would play a qualifier knockout to determine the final 8 teams. Initially, it was announced that the 9 teams would be ranked according to the 1996 Cricket World Cup seeding. However, the draw eventually released appeared to have been tweaked in favor of some of the team with bigger fan following.



According to the final fixtures, New Zealand had to play Zimbabwe to qualify for the main draw.

Match Schedule

Date -1998               Match

24 October          1. New Zealand v Zimbabwe  :: Qualifiers

Quarter Finals
25 October          2. England v South Africa
26 October          3. Sri Lanka v New Zealand
28 October          4. Australia v India
29 October          5. Pakistan v West Indies

Semi Finals
30 October          6. winner of QF 1 vs QF 2
31 October          7. winner of QF 3 vs QF 4

Final
1 November          8. winner of SF 1 vs SF 2
2 November          Reserve Day




  • All matches at Bangabandhu National Stadium



  • Australian Squad

    • Steve Waugh (captain),
    • Mark Waugh (vice-captain),  
    • Michael Bevan, 
    • Damien Fleming, 
    • Adam Gilchrist, 
    • Brendon Julian, 
    • Michael Kasprowicz, 
    • Darren Lehmann,
    • Damien Martyn, 
    • Glenn McGrath, 
    • Ricky Ponting, 
    • Gavin Robertson, 
    • Andrew Symonds, 
    • Brad Young.

    England Squad

    • *AJ Hollioake
    • ID Austin
    • AD Brown
    • DR Brown
    • MA Ealham
    • NH Fairbrother
    • MV Fleming
    • AF Giles
    • GA Hick
    • NV Knight
    • GD Lloyd
    • PJ Martin
    • RC Russell
    • CEW Silverwood 

    New Zealand Squad

    • *SP Fleming
    • GI Allott
    • NJ Astle
    • MD Bailey
    • MD Bell
    • SB Doull
    • CZ Harris
    • MJ Horne
    • CD McMillan
    • SB O'Connor
    • AC Parore
    • AR Tait
    • DL Vettori
    • PJ Wiseman 

    Pakistan Squad

    •  *Aamer Sohail
    • Akhtar Safraz
    • Ijaz Ahmed
    • Saleem Malik
    • Yousuf Youhana
    • Moin Khan
    • Shahid Afridi
    • Wasim Akram
    • Shoaib Akhtar
    • Saqlain Mushtaq
    • Arshad Khan
    • Aaqib Javed
    • Saleem Elahi
    • Azhar Mahmood 

    South African Squad

    • *WJ Cronje
    • DM Benkenstein
    • N Boje
    • MV Boucher
    • DN Crookes
    • DJ Cullinan
    • AC Dawson
    • S Elworthy
    • JH Kallis
    • G Kirsten
    • M Ntini
    • SM Pollock
    • JN Rhodes
    • PL Symcox 

    Sri Lankan Squad

    • Arjuna Ranatunga, Capt
    • Aravinda De Silva, VC
    • Roshan Mahanama
    • Hashan Tillakeratne
    • Sanath Jayasuriya
    • +Romesh Kaluwitharana
    • Mavan Atapattu
    • Mutiah Muralitharan
    • Chaminda Vaas
    • Avishka Gunawardene
    • Upul Chandana
    • Nuwan Zoysa
    • Pramodya Wikramasinghe
    • Kumara Dharmasena 

    West Indies Squad

    • *BC Lara
    • KLT Arthurton
    • S Chanderpaul
    • M Dillon
    • CL Hooper
    • RD Jacobs
    • CB Lambert
    • RN Lewis
    • NAM McLean
    • NC McGarrell
    • PV Simmons
    • PA Wallace
    • SC Williams
    • RD King 

    Zimbabwe Squad



  • *ADR Campbell



  • +A Flower



  • GJ Rennie



  • GW Flower



  • CB Wishart



  • MW Goodwin



  • CN Evans



  • PA Strang



  • HH Streak



  • NC Johnson



  • M Mbangwa



  • AR Whittall



  • HK Olonga



  • AG Huckle


  • Indian Squad

    • *M Azharuddin
    • A Jadeja
    • SR Tendulkar
    • SC Ganguly
    • RR Singh
    • +NR Mongia
    • A Kumble
    • SB Joshi
    • BKV Prasad
    • AB Agarkar
    • J Srinath
    • R Dravid
    • VVS Laxman
    • N Chopra


    The matches and results in the next post..

    Wednesday, July 22, 2009

    Ashes series - Lords

    In his final act at the home of cricket, Andrew Flintoff broke England's 75-year Lord's curse with his first five-wicket haul since the Ashes-clinching Oval Test of 2005. It was, unquestionably, a performance that will enhance his already mythical status within English cricket, but more pertinently for now, delivered England to a 1-0 series lead heading into Edgbaston. England have waited 75 years to win at Lords , and they have taken a 1-0 lead in an Ashes series for the first time since 1997.


     
      
      
    It was Flintoff all the way.... England having posted a great opening wicket stand slumped a bit to reach as similar a situation as was at Cardiff.. With Strauss being bowled in the 1st over the next day, the onus was on the lower order to put up some vital runs.. And they did it considerably well.. 425 was a par score.. 
    Australia were below par in their 1st innings losing 2 early wickets only for Katich and the tired out of form Hussey to bail them out.. Once they were out, the team crumbled to 152 for 8 with Siddle and Hauritz saving the blushes for australia as they played brilliantly to get the team across 200.. 
    A lead of 210 was a little too much and Australia had to bowl well to restrict England to a decent score to post a successful chase.. They failed to do so.. Bopara and KP were uncharacteristically slow , Prior played well to post a quick fire half century.. 
    The declaration was not all that well timed.. The only reason could have been to use the early morning conditions to get a few wickets but I personally would have loved to have another 60-70 runs more or whatever is got in the 1st hour of play.. It was good that Australia lost Katich early or a good performance from him and/or Hussey could have got Aussies closer.. But it was the big man Freddie all the way.. Took 5 wickets in his final outing at the Lords as a test match player and was instrumental in the win.. Swann played an equally important role.. 
    Now, the big question that arises is - How many times have the Aussies failed to play the swinging ball ? Genuine swing or reverse swing Aussies always lose out.. Mitchell Johnson who was hyped as a trump card hasn't bowled well at all going at well over 4 or at sometimes 5 RPO.. Thats ridiculous from a test match point of view.. He may lose out his spot to an accurate Clark if the Aussies want to win and square the series.. 
    Andy Flower, coach England has jumped the gun and said England can win without KP and Flintoff ; even if not for performances their mere presence in the team will boost the side's morale and they need to play a crucial role if England are to regain the Ashes.. 
    Next match at Birmingham on the 30th of july.. 

    Tuesday, July 21, 2009

    The new wall :Gautam Gambhir

    Who was India's top scorer in the World Twenty20 final 2007, playing an innings that set up their win? Who topped the batting charts in the CB Series, which India won convincingly in Australia earlier this year? A hint: he was second on the list of run-getters in the Indian Premier League opening edition.

    If you don't remember, that's not much of a surprise: Gautam Gambhir has never been much of a household name. People are more likely to recall the pulsating final over bowled by Joginder Sharma in the World Twenty final in Durban than Gambhir's 75. They're more likely to remember Sachin Tendulkar's two gems in the CB Series finals than Gambhir's two centuries which played a pivotal role in taking India that far. Or Virender Sehwag's blitzkrieg 41-ball 94 in the IPL over Gambhir's 534 runs at an average of 41, which were instrumental in getting Delhi to the knockouts.

    Gambhir has struck gold in just about every tournament he has played over the last year. In between wearing the orange cap as the leading run-scorer for a better part of the IPL, and helping India notch up crucial victories on the world stage, Gambhir led his state, Delhi, to their first Ranji Trophy title in over a dozen years. Over the last year he has the best average among Indian ODI players, ahead of Sachin Tendulkar, MS Dhoni and Yuvraj Singh.

    Gambhir is assured enough that he now belongs at the highest level. "I have more responsibility now," he says, "which is good because every player wants that - where the team expects you to win games for them. That responsibility has changed me as a player and also as a human being."

    Where earlier he was known for his fragile temperament, these days Gambhir is more relaxed. He is still seen as being generally aloof and not easily approachable, and known for being uncommunicative - which is at times misread as arrogance - but that's not something that bothers him much. "I'm emotional and very patriotic," he says. "I'm proud to be an Indian and when I wear the cap and the jersey I have a lot of responsibility. Sometimes I'm very temperamental. But I'm very instinctive as well. Once I take a decision, I back myself till the end even it backfires at times.


    Gambhir's first stumbling block came when his career had barely got going. He was ignored by the selectors for the 1999 junior World Cup, though he happened to be one of the leading run-scorers in Indian Under-19 cricket at the time. Mohammad Kaif led India to victory in the tournament. "I never understood what happened," Gambhir says, his tone indicating that it is something he has never been able to get over.

    Vivek Chaddha, a neighbour and friend of 20 years remembers how disappointed Gambhir was. "When he did not get picked in the Under-19 side, that was the first time he realised one requires something more than making just runs," Chaddha says.

    Gambhir was furious, and his rage found expression in his batting. He announced himself with a double-century in a day against the visiting Zimbabweans. At the end of his fourth domestic season he finished eighth among the leading run-scorers for the year; the following year he climbed to No. 3.

    Gambhir was a regular in India A teams before he played his first ODI in 2003, followed by his Test debut a year later, against Australia in the eventful three-day Mumbai match of 2004. He then had a brief run in the side, during which he made his first Test hundred, against Bangladesh, and turned in half-decent performances in the three Tests against Pakistan. He then sat out 12 ODIs before coming back into the side, starting brightly with a Test 98 against Zimbabwe and an ODI hundred against Sri Lanka before a lean spell took hold.
    The lowest ebb was not being picked for the 2007 World Cup. The day before the third one-dayer against West Indies in Chennai, the selectors told Gambhir he would need to prove himself if he had to make the World Cup squad. He was up against Robin Uthappa for a spot in the team. Uthappa opened with Gambhir, scored 70 to his partner's duck, and made the cut.

    "That was the lowest point in my career," Gambhir says. For over a month he went into hibernation, not touching his bat and staying away from people, including friends.

    Making the adjustment
    Hitting rock bottom allowed Gambhir to raise a stronger platform, though. Sanjay Bharadwaj, who has been his coach since 1991, had seen him walk out of the woods under similar circumstances following the Test series against Sri Lanka in 2005, where he made just 54 runs in the three matches. "He never blames anyone for not getting picked. That's why he has come back each time," Bharadwaj said.

    VB Chandrasekhar, a former national selector and opening batsman said, "We always knew he was a very good player who had made tons of runs on the domestic circuit, but he was getting out frequently getting his front foot across, and international fast bowlers found it easy to expose that fault." Last year Chandrasekhar, who also does commentary during the domestic season, found Gambhir had made a noticeable change. "He has made a very conscious effort to get his front foot out of the way."

    How did it come about? Bharadwaj had got Gambhir to bat wearing a golf ball suspended from a necktie around his neck. "His centre of gravity was falling to the other side, so we decided he had to play straighter. One way of doing so was to keep the golf ball close to his chest while he played forward." To make Gambhir play the ball in line, three lines linking both sets of stumps were drawn so he could visualise the line of the delivery better. As a result he began to be more confident about leaving many deliveries outside off alone. Before the 2007 series in the UK, Gambhir had been caught behind seven times in 21 ODIs. In the next 27 games he got out that way only three times.


    Even back when he played cricket with the neighbourhood lads in the Western Delhi suburb of Rajendranagar where he lived, one thing was clear: losing was never on his agenda. "Even now, when we play PlayStation, he will go to the extent of cheating but hate to admit defeat," Chaddha laughs.


    Dislike of losing apart, Gambhir has been a rhythm player, one who needs a lot of self-belief. Last summer on the UK tour he won the Man-of-the-Match award for his 85 not out against Scotland, then blew cold with three runs in the first ODI against England. Rahul Dravid, India's captain at the time, spoke of how talented batsmen like Gambhir needed to become more responsible. Gambhir was given a role, to anchor the innings, and in the fifth and sixth games of the series he made 51 and 47.

    Early in 2008, in Australia, after Gambhir had made a fluent 39 in India's first game against the world champions in the CB Series, Sachin Tendulkar spoke to him about how he needed to convert his starts and how important it was for him to try and play 40 overs. Gambhir made two centuries in that series - testament to the motivation those words provided. In the second game he walked in in the 15th over and remained undefeated on 102. Then, towards the end of the league phase of the tournament he scored a scintillating 113, taking the charge to Australia after having virtually opened the innings (Tendulkar was out in the first over) before falling in the 40th over. India lost that game but Gambhir described his innings as "a dream".
    In his one-day career so far Gambhir has been not out six times, all of those coming in the last year, starting with the tour of the UK.

    Gambhir credits his current captain, Mahendra Singh Dhoni, with having been instrumental in helping him get to where he has. "The kind of support MS has shown in me and the kind of confidence he has given has helped me grow as a player.

    "It was more about security of my place in the side," Gambhir says. "When I went to the Twenty20 World Cup last year, I was confident I was going to play the entire tournament, even if there were bound to be a couple failures. I told myself I'm going to be there and I'm going to be playing. That is one thing that has really helped me, and it has really changed my cricket and my confidence."

    That in turn has helped him become more stable emotionally as well. "When I go to the field, I have my role which I try to do to the best of my ability, so I control my emotions and try not to get carried away. That is where I have matured as a cricketer. The team comes first and if the team demands something out of me, I do my best to control my emotions."

    Though he was not picked for the Australia Test series - the selectors weren't sure about whether he had recovered fully from a shoulder injury he had sustained during the ODIs against Australia in October - Gambhir didn't let that get to him. He moved his focus to Delhi's Ranji Trophy campaign. Though he hadn't played many games in the season till then, he took over the leadership role left vacant by Virender Sehwag, who had had to leave on national duty.

    Gambhir went on to make four hundreds in five games, including one each in the semi-final and final. Vijay Dahiya, Delhi's coach, spoke glowingly of his "willingness, his eagerness, his determination to do well". Dahiya also pointed out the apparent pride with which Gambhir led Delhi - unusual in an international player. "When he led Delhi, it was all about the state and not about the country. Every move of his was directed towards being there in the moment. His focus was all here and now."

    In the final, in Mumbai, Delhi quelled the challenge of Uttar Pradesh. Gambhir made a duck in the first innings. Delhi fell behind on first innings and in the second he needed to decide whether to risk his broken thumb. He did, and made a courageous hundred, leading his side to their first Ranji Trophy win in 16 years. "We'd seen lots of lows and a few years ago we were on the verge of relegation and so we wanted to win to prove we had the talent," he says.
    "I've started believing a lot in myself. I started believing in my game that I've got the game to be a successful player at the international level," he says. "I'm much more relaxed off the field compared to the feeling of insecurity earlier. The last thing helps a lot."

    Gautam Gambhir now has climbed up to no.1 in ICC test batting rankings after failure of Mohammad Yousuf. Yousuf who was at top is now in no. 5 due to failure in second test against Sri Lanka. With this, Gambhir has become the first Indian in about 4 years to top the ICC test batting rankings. In ODI batting rankings too, there is another Indian i.e MS Dhoni in top. So, both ODI and test batting rankings are headed by India.

    Talking about the test batting ranking, Younis Khan is in second place followed by Sangakkara and Chanderpaul. Gambhir is the only Indian to be in top 10 in test batting ranking. In ODI ranking, MS Dhoni is followed by his team-mate Yuvraj Singh at no.2. V Sehwag is at no.7. Dale Steyn leads the test bowling ranking while its still Kulasekara at the top of ICC ODI bowling ranking. Bhajji and Zaheer are in top 10 in test bowling ranking from India while no bowlers are ranked top 10 from India in ODI.

    Gambhir has certainly become the new wall of Indian batting.. Though a little off form these days, he is sure to come back and perform well.. Gambhir owes most of his success to his batting partner Virender Sehwag, truly the way the pair runs between the wickets for quick singles is a treat to watch..

    Champions trophy 2009 schedule

    Group A: Australia, India, Pakistan, West Indies
     

    Group B: South Africa, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, England

    Timing
    Teams
    Venue
    Tue 22 Sep (D/N)
    18:00
    Group B – Sri Lanka v South Africa
    SuperSport Park, Centurion
    Wed 23 Sep (D/N)
    18:00
    Group A – Pakistan v West Indies
    New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg
    Thu 24 Sep
    13:00
    Group B – South Africa v New Zealand
    SuperSport Park, Centurion
    Fri 25 Sep (D/N)
    18:00
    Group B – England v Sri Lanka
    New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg
    Sat 26 Sep
    13:00
    Group A – Australia v West Indies
    New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg
    Sat 26 Sep (D/N)
    18:00
    Group A – India v Pakistan
    SuperSport Park, Centurion
    Sun 27 Sep
    13:00
    Group B – New Zealand v Sri Lanka
    New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg
    Sun 27 Sep (S/N)
    18:00
    Group B – England v South Africa
    SuperSport Park, Centurion
    Mon 28 Sep (D/N)
    18:00
    Group A – India v Australia
    SuperSport Park, Centurion
    Tue 29 Sep (D/N)
    18:00
    Group B – England v New Zealand
    New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg
    Wed 30 Sep
    13:00
    Group A – Pakistan v Australia
    SuperSport Park, Centurion
    Wed 30 Sep (D/N)
    18:00
    Group A – India v West Indies
    New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg
    Fri 2 Oct (D/N)
    18:00
    1st Semi Final – A1 v B2
    SuperSport Park, Centurion
    Sat Oct 3 (D/N)
    18:00
    2nd Semi Final – A2 v B1
    New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg
    Mon 5 Oct (D/N)
    18:00
    Final
    SuperSport Park, Centurion


    Only 2 venues Johannesburg and Centurion to host the games.. The short duration of the tournament will be the key to success.. Champions Trophy is viewed as a mini world cup and is not that popular, the success of this tournament will hold the key to the future of 50 over game.. 

    Tuesday, July 14, 2009

    Crisis deepens - West Indies contracts row

    Floyd Reifer led a weakened West Indies team to defeat in the first Test against Bangladesh, but he chose to see the brighter side of a dispiriting loss, lauding his players for fighting hard under adverse circumstances.
    "For a team that was brought here right before the Test match, I thought we really fought well," he said. "We represent West Indies and we'll go to Grenada [the venue for the next Test] and fight hard."
    "It was a rush, But we've been training and practicing hard, and it's good to be back here again playing Test cricket."

    But the players' problems do not look like being addressed and the WI board is adamant that the current team would continue if the players do not return to the fold..  The West Indies board has announced that the squad for the Champions Trophy will be picked from among those currently playing Bangladesh and others who have made themselves available for selection. It also decided to interview prospective captains for future series. These decisions indicate there may be no speedy solution to the stalemate between the board and the West Indies Players' Association (WIPA) regarding player contracts. The move in effect is a warning to those players who did not make themselves eligible for selection for the Bangladesh Test that they will not be considered for future tournaments, and is widely seen as an attempt to put pressure on those who boycotted the game to reconsider their position.

    The first major contract issue is that the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) has signed an US$20 million deal with Digicel, a major Caribbean-based telecommunications company. However, a number of players already have personal endorsement deals with a rival company, Cable & Wireless. The board wants the players to sign contracts which will prevent them from promoting any company in competition with Digicel - that might compromise their existing individual contracts with Cable & Wireless.The main income for West Indies players comes from bonuses and third-party endorsements rather than salaries paid by the cash-strapped board. So by looking to restrict the additional income available, the players argue that their income will be seriously reduced. The WICB contract would also mean that the players forfeited a considerable portion of their image rights..-- Nov 2005.. 
    The contract issue was unresolved and the tour of Australia for a tri-nation VB series went ahead.. In April 2005, WI named a replacement squad for the tour of  SRL with Shivnaraine Chanderpaul as captain.. The show then continued with agreements from both the sides to field a full strength team with clause 5 that covered players' individual sponsorship deal still left for talks/compromise/arbitration...
    2007 WC was sponsored by Cable and Wireless and not Digicel.. After the WC, WICB had planned a tour of England for which the players' demanded extra pay as it was according to them not a part of the FTP.. Their point was proved and the WICB had to face defeat yet again.. Truce was called and Ramnaraine became a director in the WICB only to break away from it in a year or so after serious problems in the domestic arena where the players went on strike..
    Among the more critical and outstanding issues were retainer contracts and first-class fees, scheduling of regional and international tournaments, injury payments, the long overdue updated anti-doping policy and the provident fund for cricketers. The national side threatened to boycott the final ODI against England in St Lucia but in the end in went ahead as scheduled. The board agreed to look into pay hikes for first-class players.
    In July09 two days before the start of the first Test against Bangladesh, the WIPA announced the squad would boycott the match since the players had gone five series without contracts. WIPA claimed the board had not responded to its submission of retainer contracts and had instead penalised players for not signing those within the deadline. The board vice-president Dave Cameron said the contracts had not been signed because of WIPA's "unreasonable behaviour". WICB named a second-string squad which included nine uncapped players. 
    Who is to blame?
    Both sides have been less than straightforward in their dealings with each other and traded charges with the other leading to several years of disinformation and mistrust. WIPA has alleged the WICB of reportedly failing to honour a number of assurances given, acting slowly, and allegedly trying to create divisions among the team. The players have been far too prone to withdraw their labour and go on strike, and also to make Digicel, as chief sponsor, the enemy and not the board.

    What about the board's announcement at the weekend that it was prepared to pick squads from the youngsters who were available for the Bangladesh Test?

    "If the board wants to go ahead with picking who it wants, then that's fine with me. I feel inevitably if you select these 19-year-olds, then sooner or later they're going to be exposed to proper sports management outside the Caribbean, and at some point when they're in a position to understand what's happening, then we're going to come back here again. So, in five or seven years' time you're going back down the same road and you'll have the same issues. We just want to get these issues done once and for all so we can move on.  -- JIMMY ADAMS
     and somewhere along the line we need to stop the game for a while and get this structure sorted out.
    This is the call from most former players that WI should pull out of International tours and get the things sorted out before going ahead with cricket.. Playing a 2nd stream  of players will only weaken the side and it ridicules the position that WI find themselves in.. A strong team of the past, a team that was respected and still we speak of the greats that have graced the game of cricket and now it finds itself languishing at the bottom of the ranking charts for quite a while now ;  so sending a 2nd stream or an "A" side as your full side will still dampen their causes in cricketing arena..

    Pity that the once mighty WI are in such a situation.. :-(

    Bangladesh rein supreme

    When was the last time Bangladesh won a test match ?

    We have to date back to Jan 2005 to a 2 test home series against Zimbabwe.. Zimbabwe were lead by Taibu and Bangladesh by Bashar.. At 12.53 p.m. on January 10, the moment all Bangladesh had been waiting for arrived. When Enamul Haque junior had Christopher Mpofu held at silly point, they recorded their maiden victory in their 35th Test. They had been dreaming of this day since gaining Test status in 2000, but first had to endure 31 defeats, three draws..

    Four years and six months after their first Test win, Bangladesh sealed a historic second victory when they beat West Indies by 95 runs in St Vincent.. Bangladesh's spin twins Shakib Al Hasan and Mahmudullah weaved a tantalizing web to consign a weakened West Indies to defeat.
    The champagne moment arrived at 4.40 pm local time when Shakib, the stand-in captain, nailed last man Tino Best in front with a dipping full toss with only ten overs left in the day.. Bangladeshi fielders converged in a huddle of joy, soon joined by a limping Mashrafe Mortaza..

      
      
      
      

    Monday, July 13, 2009

    nPower Ashes test- Cardiff

     
     nPower Ashes 2009

     
    Happier time

     
    Poor bowling gives Anderson headaches and leaves Broad red faced

     
    Philip Hughes got Aus to a great start followed by stupendous batting from Ponting and Katich

     
     Aussie dressing room celebrates centuries from North and Haddin

     
    Marcus North scored a brilliant century cementing his disputed spot in the side

     
    Haddin has been in great form of late and he continued his form with a quick fire 100

     
    KP bowled by Hilfenhaus and Aussies got on top of England soon after..

     
    Gutsy batting by Panesar and Anderson to save the test match wwas marred by some cheap tactics of getting the 12th man and the physio on the field to evade time

     
    NO!! Thats not the scenes of winning but actually narrowly managing to escape from the jaws of defeat..
    Australia were on top right throughout the game until the last hour.. Last hour they some how could not manage to get Panesar and Anderson out.. Earlier in the day Collingwood played brilliantly to eat away time which was undone by a momentary lapse in concentration that made him top edge a upper cut or rather a miscued upper cut to Hussey.. England looked down and out before their nightwatchman Anderson and the no.11 Panesar batted out nearly 11 overs to save the match.. Every defense of Panesar was cheered to the max.. The huge roar when England went past Aussie score to post a lead was akin winning back the ashes..
    Nothing much to celebrate though, as England would rue missing the inform Onions in this match.. Swann was very poor so was Panesar.. Broad looked down and out.. Need to strengthen the bowling if the have any hopes of winning a test match leave alone winning the ashes back.. 
    Aussie looked far better.. The question they would like to answer if they like to bring Clark back in for Siddle, the latter had gone for quite a few runs in the match at a high RPO.. Clark would keep things tighter.. Hauritz has been more than handy and has bowled pretty well amidst all the criticisms that he cannot be rated as a spinner.. Batting looks all the more potent with North showing quite a lot of promise making up for the loss in form of Hussey.. 
    All eyes now on the coming Thursday as the action shifts to Lords.. Will there be any team changes from the both the sides? Or atleast England would like to bring Onions back in place of Panesar/Swann ..