Showing posts with label ICC ratings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ICC ratings. Show all posts

Saturday, November 21, 2009

windies back in action

West Indies are back in action. They have fielded a full strength side..

Windies are touring Australia, it forms the 1st half of the Aussie summer who host Pakistan as the 2nd team later this year..



Date and Time in IST

Game
Venue

NOV 18-21



26 Nov – 30 Nov
05:30 AM

Tour match vs Queensland




1st Test – Australia v West Indies


Brisbane


Gabba, Brisbane
 4 Dec –  8 Dec
05:30 AM
2nd Test – Australia v West Indies

Adelaide Oval
16 Dec –20 Dec
08:00 AM


 Feb 4
04:30 IST

3rd Test – Australia v West  Indies




Prime Minister's XI v West Indians

WACA, Perth



Manuka Oval, Canberra 
Sun 7 Feb (D/N)
08:45 AM
1st ODI – Australia v West Indies
MCG
Tue 9 Feb (D/N)
08:45 AM
2nd ODI – Australia v West Indies
SCG
Fri 12 Feb (D/N)
08:15 AM
3rd ODI – Australia v West Indies
Adelaide Oval
Sun 14 Feb (D/N)
08:45 AM
4th ODI – Australia v West Indies
Gabba
Fri 19 Feb (D/N)
08:45 AM
5th ODI – Australia v West Indies
MCG
Sun 21 Feb
11:30 AM
1st T20I – Australia v West Indies
Bellerive Oval, Hobart
Tue 23 Feb (D/N)
14:05 PM
2nd T20I – Australia v West Indies
SCG
 




The West Indians ended a difficult tour game on a high when they fought to secure a draw with a committed batting display against Queensland..

Windies were bowled out cheaply for 271. Many were playing their first match in Australia and it can be tough.. The bowling was below par, missing the likes of Jerome Taylor and Darren Powell.. Conceded 617,.. 2nd innings was better though..

With Chris Gayle a major doubt due to his mother's illness in Jamaica, Sarwan and Chanderpaul are likely to have more responsibility and it was the experienced pair who guided the side for much of the day during a 131-run stand..

Sarwan and Chanderpaul scored well in both the innings.. The one who came good was the teen aged Adrian
Barath.. He impressed all with his exploits in the Champions League recently concluded in India where his team Trinidad n Tobago had a dream run.. In the absence of the captain,Gayle,  Travis Dowlin was Barath's partner against Queensland. It is an unfamiliar position for him. He went in No.3 in his two Tests against Bangladesh but his usual slot for Guyana is No.5.

In the 2nd innings, Narsingh Deonaraine was tried out at no.3.. Travis Dowlin played well for his 50..

The real test would be how well the bowlers cope up.. In the past, recent past, they had the likes of Walsh who was economical.. If these bowlers who have no experience at the international level keep leaking runs, then there would be no pressure on the world no.4..

Even though Australia are at no.4 in ICC test rankings, they are sure to dominate the proceedings throughout the series..

Windies will do well to at-least draw a match, that would be the biggest upset..

TEAM :
Australia: Watson, Katich, Ponting, Clarke, Hussey, North, Haddin, Johnson, Siddle, Bollinger, Hauritz, Hilfenhaus ..
Clarke is back and so is Haddin.. The toss would be in having a 4th seamer or a spinner.. Watson can be the 4th seamer so having Hauritz would be a good option.. Hilfenhaus may make way for Bollinger who had a great tour of India..

West Indies: Gayle, Dowlin, Barath, Sarwan, Chanderpaul, Deonaraine, Dwyane Bravo, Dinesh Ramdin, Brendon Nash, Sulieman Benn, Ravi Rampual, Kemar Roach, Jerome Taylor, Darren Sammy, Gavin Tonge..

Gayle has gone back home to be with his ill mother.. Sarwan and Chanderpaul are the only batting hopes.. Barath and Dowlin have to perform well and so should Nash.. Bravo will be useful with his bowling and experience, he has to be cautious in batting and not throw his wicket away.. He will be vulnerable in playing off the front foot..
Bowling is thin, Taylor is sore.. He is the lone bowler with considerable international experience.. Rampaul, Roach will probably form the back up.. Not expecting great performances from them.. Benn is a fast slow bowler, if that makes any sense.. I have never seen his turn the ball.. Sammy is too military medium to find a place in the side with bowling as criteria..
Leather hunt if windies bowl and quick wickets if they bat..

If they show the same fighting spirits as they did in the 2nd innings of the tour match, it would do the test matches a world of good.. Otherwise, test match's future and two tier system for tests will again crop up..

Biggest upset would be if a test is drawn, with no stoppage from weather..

Monday, August 24, 2009

Ashes lost

Australia's 2-1 Ashes defeat, confirmed with a heavy 197-run loss at The Oval on Sunday, has cost them their No. 1 spot in the ICC Test rankings. They have slipped to fourth, with South Africa now the No. 1 Test team in the world, followed by Sri Lanka and India.

It is the first time the Australians have lost their grip on the top spot since 2003, when the ICC introduced its current ranking system. The defeat has cost them eight points but despite the series result they remain ahead of their arch rivals England, who are in fifth place. England gained six points but are still 11 behind Australia.

Australia were in danger of losing their No. 1 ranking towards the end of last year, when they lost a home Test series to South Africa 2-1. A consolation win in the third Test in Sydney ensured they retained top spot and they also held on thanks to their follow-up series victory in South Africa.

ICC TEST CHAMPIONSHIP RANKINGS
Team Matches Points Rating
South Africa 30 3672 122
Sri Lanka 24 2852 119
India 28 3327 119
Australia 31 3600 116
England 39 4102 105
Pakistan 17 1424 84
New Zealand 22 1794 82
West Indies 25 1910 76
Bangladesh 19 255 13
  •  Ricky Ponting has admitted that they had got the playing 11 wrong in omitting Nathan Hauritz.. The Oval took turn from the first day itself.. Swann had picked up 5 wickets in the 1st innings and part time spinner Marcus North picked 4 wickets..
  • Ponting became the first Australian captain since Billy Murdoch to twice lead Australia to Ashes series defeats in England..

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..

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Latest ICC and player news

Johan Botha's 'doosra' delivery found to be illegal
     The ICC confirmed that an independent test has found the ‘doosra’ delivery of South Africa bowler Johan Botha to be illegal and the player has been warned against bowling that particular delivery in international cricket. A comprehensive analysis revealed that his action for the ‘doosra’ exceeded the 15-degree level of tolerance permitted under regulations. But the same assessment found that Botha’s off-break and arm-ball deliveries were bowled within the tolerance level and so the 27-year-old can continue to bowl those types of deliveries at international level.

Concept of day/night test matches
     ICC-cricket committee agreed the concept of day/night Test cricket should be explored with the possibility of a trial match in 2010 providing key factors were established beforehand. These factors included successful tests of an appropriate colour ball, research on what the spectators and broadcasters would want and successful trials at first-class level. The red ball currently used for Tests would not be of use at night and there remains an issue concerning the lasting qualities of the white ball.

Stricter punishment for slow over rates
   The committee also agreed to recommend stricter penalties for players and captains guilty of failing to maintain an acceptable over-rate. Host boards, umpires and match referees should also take responsibility for ensuring that everything within their control was done to ensure over-rates remained as high as possible. Doubling of fines for a failure to maintain the required over-rates. It also recommended that if a captain led a team that received three over-rate fines in the same format of the game in any 12-month period then he should automatically face a suspension.


UDRS has positives
   It has been agreed that the URDS Umpire Decision Review system has positives and the number of bad decisions have come down in the series where it was tried.. Suggestions for improval have been looked into and the umpires have been asked to train to use it effectively and develop consistency ..
( which was lacking, IND vs SL )




Six teams begin journey towards qualification for ICC CWC 2015
    Six ICC Members will take its first step on the road to qualification for the ICC Cricket World  cup 2015 when it takes part in the Pepsi ICC World Cricket League (WCL) Division 7 tournament gets underway in the Channel Island of Guernsey( home team ). The other competing teams taking part in this competition are Bahrain, Gibraltar, Japan, Nigeria and Suriname.

ICC Chief Executive Haroon Lorgat said “ICC Board has removed Pakistan as host location, not the PCB as joint host for the event”..

Flintoff may miss ICC World Twenty20
  The all-rounder injured his right knee while playing for his franchise, Chennai Super Kings, in the Indian Premier League. He subsequently underwent keyhole surgery on April 28. However, the all-rounder is yet to start running and regain complete fitness.. Well, another reason for the English to balme the IPL for their ever miserable performances in ICC events..

Australia hopeful of Watson recovery
  Watson returned home from the recent trip to the UAE with a groin strain and was forced to miss the opportunity to play in the IPL, but Cricket Australia officials believe that he is recovering well.

Chanderpaul loses his place at the top of batting rankings (finally!!!)
  West Indies’ Shivnarine Chanderpaul has lost his number-one position in the latest Reliance Mobile ICC Player Rankings for Test batsmen after his side’s 10-wicket defeat to England at Lord’s. The Guyanese left-hander made just four runs in the match and, as a result, has fallen back to second position, level with Kumar Sangakkara of Sri Lanka. 

Clarke and Afridi fly up the Reliance Mobile ICC
  After great performances in the recently concluded AUS vs PAK series in Dubai, Clarke and Afridi have jumped places in the ICC ODI rankings.. MSD still heads the list..