::: CRICKET ZONE :::

kudos_utopia

Member
Mar 31, 2008
26,085
368
0
Mathews demolishes feeble India

Sep 13, 2009


India's stay at No. 1 in the ICC rankings lasted all of 24 hours. Sri Lanka reasserted their superiority at home, scoring 307, and then strangled wickets at regular intervals to completely rout India in the dress rehearsal for Monday's final. Sanath Jayasuriya and Thilina Kandamby scored brilliant nineties after which the Premadasa reaffirmed its status as one of Sri Lanka's safe houses.

Leading a canny display of seam bowling was Angelo Mathews, who picked out six wickets like plastic ducks in a shooting gallery.

Blinded by the lights, India were steamrolled and suffered their biggest loss, in terms of runs, on Sri Lankan soil.


After Kumar Sangakkara had won the toss and chosen to bat, there was a welcome return to form for a key player. Jayasuriya, without a fifty-plus score since January, could have gone on 13 when he edged Ishant Sharma wide of slip, but was chanceless thereafter. He used the width on offer to judder boundaries and as Sri Lanka reached 34 in four overs, India had reason to fear the worst.

The loss of Tillakaratne Dilshan didn't cramp Jayasuriya's style and he continued to punish even the smallest indiscretion in line and length. With Jayasuriya pulling and driving RP Singh for three fours in an over, India's best option was to train their efforts at the other end. MS Dhoni gave them the breakthrough by stumping Mahela Jayawardene down the leg side. Sangakkara departed soon after, out lbw to a straight delivery from the impressive Harbhajan Singh, whose first six overs cost 13 as he struck a teasing line.

Jayasuriya had been slowed down due to a loss of strike. Incredibly, he spent 13 deliveries spread over 9. 1 overs in the forties. As the pop anthem of the year, the Black Eyed Peas' "I Gotta Feeling", blared across the thumping stadium Jayasuriya raised his half-century. The crowd cheered loudly. Those cheers turned to thunderous applause when Jayasuriya hammered Yuvraj Singh's short-pitched offerings over midwicket for consecutive fours. Jayasuriya's running between the wickets was superb and belied his age. Seven doubles - three of which came in one over - and three triples were just as punishing for India as the 13 boundaries Jayasuriya picked.

With the crowd rooting for his every run, Jayasuriya played to the gallery: Ashish Nehra was cleverly swatted wide of short fine leg, Yusuf Pathan was swept and paddled with power and precision. There was to be no century, however, as Nehra removed Jayasuriya for 98.

But there was something more deadly to come. Kandamby and Chamara Kapugedera put together an 83-run partnership that would all but seal the fate of the game. As is required when a pair must build on the excellent work of a player before them, they kept the scoring rate healthy. They weren't as belligerent as Jayasuriya but ran well, called loudly, and found the gaps.

Kandamby made sure to cut out any ambitious swings through the off side, opting to run hard for must of his initial runs and only backed himself to play aggressive shots when the run rate needed a boost. Anything that was too full or too loose disappeared and plenty in between was pushed away for ones and twos. The boundary patrollers were kept on attention as he swatted and deflected regularly.

A fabulous display of clean, crisp hitting - not slogging - helped Sri Lanka poach 53 off the batting Powerplay. A flurry of chips and biffs sailed over the square-leg region and extra cover, in between two awesome laps around the corner and one violent heave over midwicket. Aided by a drop at mid-on when he was 73, Kandamby added 18 more to his total and ensured Sri Lanka a winning score.

On tracks like this, against skilful bowlers who know more about choking than the average serial killer, successful pursuit of 308 needed something special. It wasn't to be. India again lost Dinesh Karthik early in the piece, gloving a short ball from Thilan Thushara down the leg side, and when Sachin Tendulkar turned a slower ball from Nuwan Kulasekara to mid-on, the warning sign was flashing.

With Tendulkar back in the hutch India shifted to the lowest gear. Yuvraj Singh survived a clear nick when on 9 but repeated the loose prod and nibbled one behind. Suresh Raina, one of the heroes of yesterday's run chase, nicked his first ball. Rahul Dravid was twice reprieved by Sri Lanka's fielders who missed the stumps, but his luck ran out on 47 when Mathews snuck one past the bat. The rest came and went without much impact against Mathews, who bowled nippy, stump-to-stump seam-up bowling. It literally was a procession: pitch it straight, get a bit of cut and nip, and thanks for coming.

Missing their lead spinner and hardly relying on Ajantha Mendis, Sri Lanka's latest masters of asphyxiation did it comfortably in the end.

 

kudos_utopia

Member
Mar 31, 2008
26,085
368
0
Lee propels Australia to 4-0


Sep 12, 2009


108148.2.jpg



Brett Lee has wanted to prove a point in this series after missing the Ashes and did so in emphatic style as he claimed 5 for 49 to set up Australia's crushing seven-wicket victory, which gave them an unassailable 4-0 lead.
After England folded to the pace of Lee for 220, Tim Paine made his first international half-century to set up the chase, then Michael Clarke helped himself to an unbeaten 62 as Australia cruised home with 38 balls to spare.
England were still handily placed on 146 for 3 when Lee, who removed Joe Denly in the fifth over, returned for a one-over spell before the mandatory ball change at 34 overs. His first delivery was a pinpoint yorker that was too much for Matt Prior, he finished with a wicket-maiden, and from there the innings nose-dived. However, it was Lee's last spell that was the most destructive as England's last five wickets fell for 20.

Lee was just too quick for four batsmen as he demolished the stumps with searing yorkers to complete the ninth five-wicket haul of his career. Nathan Hauritz also deserves huge credit for claiming two key wickets, including Strauss, and conceding just 23 runs from his 10 overs. In a pattern that has become eerily predictable, Andrew Strauss shone at the top with a neat 63, but once again his colleagues couldn't follow suit.

It was thrilling to watch Lee in full flow, an absent phenomenon during the Ashes series, as he uprooted the stumps of Luke Wright, Stuart Broad and Adil Rashid in the space of 15 balls. England's frustrations nearly boiled over when Owais Shah swung a full toss from Shane Watson to midwicket and stood his ground, believing the ball had been above waist height. Replays showed it was marginal, but England are far from a happy bunch.

There was barely a need for Australia to break sweat during their chase, although Watson's habit of falling lbw continued when he played across a delivery from Tim Bresnan. Paine cashed in on a couple of long hops from Rashid, who was introduced inside the Powerplays and struggled with his length to begin with, while Ricky Ponting eased back into his day job with two boundaries off Bresnan during a second-wicket stand of 57 in nine overs.

At times England's bowling was as ordinary as the batting, but to Rashid's credit he recovered somewhat from his loose start and removed Paine via a top-edged sweep. Ponting enjoyed what was little more than an extended net following his three-week lay-off - an ideal way to get himself back into the groove ahead of the Champions Trophy - until he drove Bresnan to cover, but Clarke eased to his half-century from 66 balls in the glorious late-summer sunshine.

Australia didn't bother to knock the runs off especially quickly on their last appearance at Lord's for the summer and the batting Powerplay was unused. The ground has brought mixed memories this year, but they will be back again in 2010 when they face Pakistan in a Test.

The pattern of England's efforts in this series has been uncanny - and not in a good way. Strauss dominated the scoring at The Rose Bowl, before he fell for 63 off 72 balls, and it was an almost identical situation here as he reached a 48-ball half century having won his fourth toss of the series. However, with Hauritz doing an impressive job in stifling the scoring rate - he had already removed Ravi Bopara - Strauss felt the need to try and increase the tempo, but only managed a thick outside-edge to short third man when England needed him to stay and score a hundred.

As he has done throughout the summer, Strauss looked in complete control. He took three fours in four balls off a wayward Nathan Bracken and had just the one awkward moment against Lee, when he got into a tangle against a short ball and gloved the delivery just wide of a diving Paine.

Bopara, demoted to No. 3 with Denly's recall, was also playing comfortably in a second-wicket stand of 67. However, Hauritz's introduction slowed England's progress and he made the breakthrough in his third over when Bopara was struck in line with off stump while sweeping to complete another unfulfilling innings.

England couldn't get Hauritz away - he conceded just a single boundary in his 10 overs - but again there was a lack of intent and the pressure told on Strauss as the run-rate dropped from over five to nearer four. In a smart piece of captaincy from Ponting, Hauritz was removed from the attack after nine overs to allow Lee a dart before the ball was changed at 34 overs with the result being Prior's demise.

Paine pulled off a swift leg-side stumping to remove Eoin Morgan and though ideally two batsmen need to set when the batting Powerplay is taken, England had little option to call theirs soon after Wright arrived as his role in the side is to hit boundaries. It started brightly as the first two overs brought 21, but Lee soon found his range and England were blown away. In every sense.


 

kudos_utopia

Member
Mar 31, 2008
26,085
368
0
Paine aims to cement No. 2 spot in Aus Wicketkeeping

Sep 11, 2009


108028.2.jpg




Tim Paine concedes it has been nerve-racking to be thrust into Australia's one-day team in England but he knows he must make the most of his chances.


Paine is the fourth wicketkeeper used by Australia in internationals this year and he is assured of his place until the end of the Champions Trophy as Brad Haddin continues to recover from finger surgery.



But Paine, who has been opening in England, knows a decent score would help ensure he remains Haddin's backup. He has made 0, 26 and 29 against England, as well as an unbeaten 29 against Scotland, and a bigger innings would keep him ahead of Graham Manou and the other state glovemen in the one-day pecking order.

"I'm enjoying my time here, I don't want it to end but obviously it's going to," Paine told AAP. "I suppose all I can do is do as well as I can and try and cement myself as No. 2 in one-day cricket while Brad isn't here."

Paine, 24, is not a muscly strokeplayer like Haddin, but his batting skills are excellent and he has a first-class double-century to his name for Tasmania. On Saturday, he will line up alongside Ricky Ponting for the first time in Australian colours and it was some advice from his Tasmanian colleague Ponting several years ago that helped Paine develop his game.

"When I was young I got caught up with blokes who'd hit the ball a lot harder and stuff like that and then I'd try and go and do that," Paine said. "He [Ponting] has always said to me about playing your own way and everyone plays differently and just to back the way you play."

Paine has taken over from Luke Ronchi as Australia's backup gloveman in one-day internationals but he will be challenged in the future by Manou, who played the Edgbaston Test, as well as Victoria's Matthew Wade and Queensland's Chris Hartley. Paine said he had enjoyed his opening taste of international cricket, despite the pressure.

"It's been great, I've had a ball, the side's been playing very well as well, which has made it a lot easier," Paine said. "I've been very nervous I suppose before games, but each game I've played so far it's been easier to prepare for, I'm a bit more relaxed. I'm looking forward to the next few games and cashing in on the starts I've had and continuing to keep well."​
 

kudos_utopia

Member
Mar 31, 2008
26,085
368
0
Is Indian Cricket Team Under Safe Hands?



r221420_871544.jpg



Aggressive and high self-confidence might not be the right words to use while defining personality. However when it comes to Cricket and MS Dhoni, one might not have better words in mind. Be it the victory of T20 World Cup 2007 or the IPL finale, Dhoni has always led his team with pure zeal of winning. Cricket, especially the Indian Cricket has seen a new dimension altogether after their ‘Super King’ played the first ever match.

It is hardly known that MS Dhoni was inclined more towards Tennis and professionally played the game too. However his tendency of hitting the ball hard became profitable in cricket. But you can still see him swinging the tennis balls on his off days.

Who would believe that a newcomer who scored a duck in his first four matches of ODI played against Bangladesh, would win ‘Man of the Match’ in the 5th ODI and since then, continue on doing so in every match. “Mahi” as he is lovingly known, is a right hand batsman, a bowler, a wicket keeper and a captain. An all rounder like him definitely makes India proud. India, under MS Dhoni, will be no less than energetic, proactive and decisive.

India’s invisible man, yet the most noticeable, MS Dhoni made a marvel at the latest ODI with 100 runs at 63.66. Indian Cricket has its future solely on the hands of Dhoni. There is no doubt that this Man, who loves Milk, will never allow a fall in the rising fame of his motherland. Well, he actually drinks three litres of milk everyday!

Whatever one calls him, ‘The Real Hero’ or ‘The Power Keeper’; MS Dhoni is a boon to India and a rich asset on whom the dependence of the other ten poles lie. The final test match against Australian is a living proof of his skills. This win has added a feather in Dhoni’s cap, which will stay with him forever. In short, MS Dhoni: A revolution in true sense!​
 

kudos_utopia

Member
Mar 31, 2008
26,085
368
0
Fans will miss Saurav Ganguly

ganguly_saurav_d.jpg



The last test series saw two senior players going out of the international [FONT=&quot]cricket[/FONT] arena forever. But one was celebrated and felicitated by [FONT=&quot]fans[/FONT] all over the world, and the other went out quietly. No special farewell, no special felicitations from his fans whomsoever were offered. It looks as if this man never contributed to the [FONT=&quot]Indian[/FONT] team. Why were the cases so different in the two [FONT=&quot]retirement[/FONT] announcements?

Both Saurav and Kumble played more than 15 years of international cricket. Both got the chance to lead the Indian teams to victory too. But when it came to Saurav, his retirement was a public affair. From the local clubs in India to the special functions organized by the fans to the BCCI and ICC to the parliament, everywhere it was Saurav only. How much farewell respect did Kumble get in return for his 18 [FONT=&quot]years of service[/FONT].

Of course, there was a press conference, where he (Kumble) announced that there was no external pressure on him. He just had enough and wanted to retire. He said that it is the choice of an individual as to choose his time of retirement. In the conference itself, he told that he will now pursue photography and later build an academy for cricket.

The fact that Saurav has a huge following to support him: locally as well as internationally, is the topmost reason why his retirement was publicized this much. TVs and other media focus on their TRPs and hence they designed their programs around Ganguly as he has a greater charisma: a charisma that was gained not only by playing cricket but by indulging in controversies too. There are a number of controversies in which, the cricketer is involved. Hence sometime or the other he remained in news even if it was not the season.

On the other hand, Kumble preferred to spend more time with people close to him when he was not playing. Interviews and photo-shoots were not his cup of tea. He was not pretty much interested in endorsements as well. As compared to the other team players, his glamour was limited to playing cricket only, while others got ample chance to procure more glamour by way of press releases and endorsements, and public appearances. The result: a silent walk alone towards the sunset!​
 

kudos_utopia

Member
Mar 31, 2008
26,085
368
0
Sehwag says no to captaincy



Virender Sehwag has clearly said that he does not harbour any hopes of leading the Indian side, but only wants to score many runs for the team. He added that he would prefer if the vice-captaincy was taken away from him and assigned to someone else in order to groom his for his future as the captain after M.S.Dhoni’s run as the captain.

Talking to a news channel, he said that he had already informed the selectors that he did not want the role of the deputy captain, as it should belong to someone who would be the selectors’ choice for a long term captain after Dhoni ended his current reign at the top of the side. He said, “I want that I should continue to score runs and keep winning matches for the team.”

Sehwag has been the vice-captain of the side on an on and off basis. He was first chosen as the deputy after Rahul Dravid replaced Sourav Ganguly as the captain. He also had his chances as the captain when the main captain was not a part of the side, as he has led the team in two test matches, five ODIs and their first ever T20I against South Africa. However, his batting average in both, the test matches and the ODIs that he has led in is a meagre 19.

During the period of 2006-07, which had seen Sehwag lose form and his place in the side, the mantle of the vice-captaincy was passed over to VVS Laxman for some time. Then, with the chances that Rahul Dravid may also resign from the captaincy, Sachin Tendulkar was made the vice-captain, before Dhoni pipped everyone to the post by taking over the reigns of the game in all the three formats, the tests, the ODIs and the T20Is.

Once Dhoni was anointed the captain, Sehwag also regained his vice-captaincy, ahead of Yuvraj Singh, who people thought was the front-runner as, even the captain of the national side. However, with Yuvraj’s place in the test match side not fixed, making him the vice-captain in a couple of formats, and not having him as one in the other format would not have made sense and hence he was relieved of his responsibilities.

Sehwag also said that he thought that Sourav Ganguly was the best ever skipper that India had. According to him, Ganguly had a big hand in moulding a new team into a world beating one, and he did a wonderful job at that.​
 

kudos_utopia

Member
Mar 31, 2008
26,085
368
0
Compaq Cup

Chastened India seek quick turnaround



Match facts
Monday September 14
Start time 14.30 (9.00 GMT)




Big Picture


After seeing off New Zealand's timorous challenge, Sri Lanka and India will contest bragging rights in the Compaq Cup final. Sri Lanka hold the edge in the clash between two sides who generally don't do dull finals. The winners will go into the Champions Trophy in positive mood, leaving the loser to put salve on their injured pride.
While Kumar Sangakkara said a decision on Muttiah Muraliatharan's availability would be taken on Sunday evening, the bowler is fit and Sri Lanka should be fielding their strongest side - Thilan Samaraweera remains a doubt - and an Indian team missing the experience of three big-match players will have its work cut out to be competitive. Sri Lanka trounced India in the dress rehearsal on Saturday and again proved that once they have a score on the board at the Premadasa, they defend it resolutely.
Sri Lanka have all the weapons they need in two brisk new-ball operators, a vicious slinger, and two spinners with an assortment of tricks. Each of those bowlers is capable, more so under lights, of denying batsmen the space and time to score. The support cast is no less impressive, with the ever-improving Angelo Mathews and India would do well to be wary of Sanath Jayasuriya, who sorted out a couple of New Zealand batsmen with his variations last week. On Monday, India could face the world's most potent spin attack, with Murali and Ajantha Mendis possibly back in tandem. There will be a few flashes of the Asia Cup final last year.
India's concern is the batting, particularly at the top. Dinesh Karthik may have just played his way out of the XI, despite MS Dhoni having twice spoken of how wary he is to stick young Virat Kohli in as opener. Sachin Tendulkar has got starts on two occasions, but most worrying is the form of Yuvraj Singh, who has struggled to start against pace and spin. He scratched around dreadfully in both matches. India's fielding was also rather shabby in the previous game.
India's only real hope is to put up a big total and then pressure Sri Lanka's batsmen into committing errors. Chasing against the likes of Murali, Mendis and Lasith Malinga is a difficult task at the best of times, and as India found out yesterday, the anaconda grip gets you eventually.


Form guide (most recent first)

Sri Lanka WWLLW
India LWNRWL




Watch out for...
After his performance on Saturday, surely that's got to be Sanath Jayasuriya. Harrying between the wickets like a man possessed and then finding the boundary freely while under pressure, Jayasuriya's innings was an omen for India going into the final. In case they need reminding, in 12 finals against India, Jayasuriya has scored 692 runs at 57.66. The grand old man of international cricket rumbles on.

India will also rely heavily on one veteran at the top. In nine finals against Sri Lanka, Sachin Tendulkar has scored 361 runs at 51.57. The last time he played Sri Lanka in a final was in the 2004 Asia Cup at the Premadasa where his 74 couldn't produce a winning chase. Tendulkar will need to dip into the reservoir of 73 games against this opposition to correct a worrying trend for India.

Team news

Brendon Kuruppu, Sri Lanka's manager, said that Murali could have played on Saturday but that the management wanted to give him the extra day to rest for the final. His return means that Sri Lanka will have to take a tough call between resting one of the three quicks or Mendis. Nuwan Kulasekara and Thilan Thushara have led the attack all year and Mendis hasn't done much in two matches this week, so he may be the one to make way. Sri Lanka are also waiting on the fitness report of Samaraweera, who strained a hamstring after his century against New Zealand and missed the previous match.
Sri Lanka: (probable) 1 Sanath Jayasuriya, 2 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (capt & wk), 4 Mahela Jayawardene, 5 Chamara Kapugedera/Thilan Samaraweera, 6 Thilina Kandamby, 7 Angelo Mathews, 8 Thilan Thushara, 9 Nuwan Kulasekara, 10 Muttiah Muralitharan, 11 Lasith Malinga.
Karthik may continue to open the innings in Gambhir's absence, given Dhoni's reluctance to send Kohli in early. Kohli is not a specialist opener, though he filled the role in five ODIs in Sri Lanka last summer. He was impressive in handling Murali during this year's IPL, so should present a credible case. There are a couple of other possibilities for India; after Mathews nipped out six with his canny seamers under lights, there's an outside chance that the allrounder Abhishek Nayar gets a game. That would mean India have to drop Yusuf Pathan or one of the three fast bowlers (probably RP Singh, who had a poor last game). Praveen Kumar is another option.
India: (probable) 1 Dinesh Karthik/Virat Kohli, 2 Sachin Tendulkar, 3 Rahul Dravid, 4 Yuvraj Singh, 5 MS Dhoni (capt & wk), 6 Suresh Raina, 7 Yusuf Pathan/Abhishek Nayar, 8 Harbhajan Singh, 9 RP Singh/Praveen Kumar, 10 Ishant Sharma, 11 Ashish Nehra.

Stats and Trivia
  • Sri Lanka haven't lost to India in the last seven finals between the two teams - they've won five while two were rained out. The last time India won a final against them was 11 years ago, in the Singer-Akai Nidahas Trophy.
  • Murali has an excellent economy rate of 3.94 in finals against India. In eight innings, he has taken ten wickets at 28.00.
 

kudos_utopia

Member
Mar 31, 2008
26,085
368
0
Flintoff to help coach UAE

Flintoff to help coach UAE

September 18, 2009



Andrew Flintoff will help coach the UAE national team while he recovers from his latest operation in Dubai.

His agent, Andrew "Chubby" Chandler, told The Times the work was part of a deal struck with Dubai Sports City where Flintoff will undertake treatment in the coming months. The arrangement will be informal and he will not have an official role.

"A partnership has been agreed to use their gym and facilities as a base for his rehabilitation," Chandler said. "I believe he will be one of the first people to use them. In return he will be carrying out some coaching for the UAE national team over the next six months. There's been good growth in UAE cricket in the last few years and Andrew felt that he wanted to give something back."

Chandler also revealed Flintoff's children had already started at a local school and the family were on the hunt for permanent accommodation.



Flintoff's decision will come as a boost to the UAE, which is among the leading Associate sides and which will host the ICC World Twenty20 Qualifiers later this year.



andrewflintoff.jpg



article-0-05F21E02000005DC-905_306x411.jpg

 

kudos_utopia

Member
Mar 31, 2008
26,085
368
0
Andrew Flintoff vows to become king of one-day world after toasting England's glory w

Andrew Flintoff vows to become king of one-day world after toasting England's glory with his dad

24th August 2009


Andrew Flintoff is determined to become the best one-day player in the world after walking away from Test cricket in a blaze of glory - and a pint with his dad.
The inspirational England star helped land the Ashes in his final match in the five-day format and he will now have surgery on his dodgy knee tonight.
But he has vowed to come back stronger and rise to rule the one-day and Twenty20 game.

Realistically I think before Christmas I'm going to struggle. Obviously I've retired from Test cricket but there's a tour to Bangladesh next year which I desperately want to be involved in. So realistically I think that could be my first cricket after this Test.'
Flintoff enjoyed a quiet beer with his dad after helping England regain the Ashes.
All-rounder Flintoff played a crucial role in his final Test, running out AustraliaRicky Ponting, as England earned a 197-run victory. captain
The 31-year-old admitted he 'celebrated hard' after England's last Ashes win but last night's post-series party was'pretty low key by my standards'.
'We had a room in the hotel for friends and family and celebrated a memorable day - it wasn't too crazy," he told a press conference today.
'I remember 2005 - contrary to popular belief - 2005 was fantastic, it almost snuck up on us.
'I lived for the moment then and celebrated hard. But this time it was something which I savoured. It was quite nice - all the families came over.

'I sat with my wife and my kids, my dad who has done so much for me throughout my career. I was able to have a beer with my dad. It was very different but in a lot of ways far more enjoyable.'


Flintoff has also backed England to push on without him to become the No 1 team in the world.
'There's no reason why we can't be the best in the world,' he added. 'We're a very talented team - but we can't get carried away.
'I loved playing Test cricket - it feels strange talking about it in the past tense. Having the opportunity to play Tests at my home ground (Old Trafford) and walk out at The Oval should never be taken lightly.

'It's one of those things you don't want to end - but like all things it comes to an end at some point and I couldn't ask for a better way for it to finish.

'To win the Ashes twice is everything. I'm proud to be English and represent my country and I feel very fortunate to do it on and off for the last 10, 11 years or so.'

'There's no reason why we can't be the best in the world,' he added. 'We're a very talented team - but we can't get carried away.

'What I think we need to do is, if there's any lesson to learn from 2005 now, it's to go for domination, to try to get No 1 in the world.

'We've got the talent, we've got the side to do it. It's just a case of believing it and putting it into practice.'

Flintoff made no effort to hide the fact that he will dearly miss Test cricket.

'I loved playing Tests - it feels strange talking about it in the past tense,' he added. Having the opportunity to play Tests at my home ground (Old Trafford) and walk out at The Oval should never be taken lightly.


'It's one of those things you don't want to end - but like all things it comes to an end at some point and I couldn't ask for a better way for it to finish.

'To win the Ashes twice is everything. I'm proud to be English and represent my country and I feel very fortunate to do it on and off for the last 10, 11 years or so.'


James Anderson has revealed that emotions were running high in the dressing room after England secured the Ashes on Flintoff's Test farewell.

The victorious squad celebrated well into the night after their epic triumph at The Oval on Sunday.
Anderson admitted that Flintoff, who retired from Test cricket with a brilliant throw to run out Ricky Ponting, was overcome with his send-off.


'He was pretty emotional once the game was over and we were all thanking him for every­thing he has done,' wrote Anderson in the London Evening Standard.
'That run-out of Ricky Ponting was pretty special, wasn’t it? But while people can see what he gives to the team with his batting, bowling and fielding, they’re probably not aware of how he contributes in other ways.
'At certain points during the game, when the Australians put together some big partnerships, a few guys were getting a little bit edgy, but Fred was the one who calmed everyone down.'
Despite losing their talisman, Anderson insists England can rise to the top of the world game without Flintoff.

Yes, we are going to miss Fred but have strength in depth and we believe we can keep getting better,' he added. 'To become the No 1 Test team in the world is a definitely a goal.'

Meanwhile, national selector Geoff Miller hopes England have not seen the last of Flintoff after his final Test.
'We will miss him but he's made a decision,' said Miller. 'He knows what his body's like so we'll run with that.
'He's not packed up on one-day cricket so when everything's sorted out with his operation, or whatever happens to him on Tuesday, we'll take it from there.
'It might be a long break but we know what he's capable of doing. We know what he wants, he's passionate to play for England and you saw it yesterday.'

http://www.dailymail.co.uk







 

kudos_utopia

Member
Mar 31, 2008
26,085
368
0
Champions Trophy - Wasim Akram

It’s time for some serious fun again


Friday 18th September 2009

By Wasim Akram



India already have a title under their belt ahead of it. Australia are already bracing up for the championship in great style and the rest of the world is eagerly looking forward to it. Yes, I am talking about the Champions Trophy in South Africa from September 22.

It’s time for serious fun. I know the world is debating on the future of 50-over cricket, but let’s just treat this as a temporary time-pass topic over a hot cuppa. Period. Didn’t critics doubt the future of Test cricket in recent times? I would like to take them on especially after we have had such a fascinating Ashes series.

It’s good to experiment with formats. If entertainment is the name of the game, tinkering with playing conditions is sometimes welcome. But experiments cannot be at the expense of skill, application and temperament. Cricket should be a holistic mix of formats and I think the current set-up is just fine from both the public and commercial point of view.

I hear Andrew Flintoff is looking for life as a freelance T20 cricketer. He has shunned an incremental one-year contract from the English Board in the hope of making more money playing for various teams in T20 cricket. I hope his body holds up to seek such an ambitious career. But all said and done, the world will remember Freddie, my good friend, for his exploits in Test and ODI cricket, not T20 playing for Chennai!

That brings me back to Champions Trophy and those who are questioning its existence. I know there is a lot of clamour for T20 cricket. But in my book, it’s like having a quick snack and moving on. T20 is great fun for sure, but it does not judge a cricketer’s competence level. Any sport that does not measure proficiency and consistent excellence, is just no good.

I am excited that ‘long’ cricket will be back in focus. In South African conditions, players and teams with proven ability and calibre will do well. Unlike T20 cricket, an average team will not survive in Champions Trophy. Similarly, a mediocre player will have no place.

I was happy to see the seriousness in Dhoni’s face after he won the triseries final against Sri Lanka on Monday night. He wasn’t basking in glory for sure. Certainly not when his younger players dropped sitters and gifted a few runs to the opposition. Dhoni knows he can’t afford these mistakes in Champions Trophy.

Fifty-over cricket requires mental preparation. Fifty-over cricket demands endurance and strategy. Fifty-over cricket commands application. You can’t compare with a slam-bang game of T20. I agree the game tends to become a bit boring during the 15-35 over stage, but that does not mean, give ODIs a boot. It will be suicidal and there are wise men sitting at the ICC. Change, but change for the better.

 

kudos_utopia

Member
Mar 31, 2008
26,085
368
0
ODIs offering pointless matches

ODIs offering pointless matches

Tuesday 15th September 2009

By Suresh Menon




Australia are 4-0 up in the one-day series against England, with three pointless matches to go. One out of four matches in the Compaq Cup in Sri Lanka was pointless since the teams had entered the final already. And we wonder why the 50-over format is struggling to survive. These are just two of the latest examples.

The cynic has suggested that in Sri Lanka at least, there is little point in actually playing the matches since the results are biased in favour of the team winning the toss in a day-night game. The captain losing the toss might as well concede the match graciously, and the pre-match television inanities ("Our aim is to win" ) can segue into the post-match inanities ("Our bowlers bowled in the right areas") with a short break in-between (at least in the subcontinent) for local officials, marketing geniuses and political wannabes to line up for the presentation.

The two most important suggestions in recent years to reduce the importance of the toss has been the split game (revived recently by Sachin Tendulkar), where teams play 25 overs apiece alternately, and giving the captain losing the toss the option of changing his eleven after the toss has been made. He thus gets to pick an extra batsman or a different type of bowler knowing that his team will be chasing. When the toss becomes so vital, it makes sense to hand over an equalizer to the captain who calls wrongly.

What is affecting the 50-over game is not so much the format itself as the number of pointless games over a series. To reduce the number of overs to 40, a suggestion many ex-players have endorsed, would be to alter the essence of the game. To reduce the number of matches played by eliminating those that have no bearing on the final result is, theoretically at least, the better solution.

In practice, there would be two hurdles. Television commitments and the commitment to a venue. But that could be tweaked too. A series is sold as a package now, and to divide the rights for the four-match Compaq Cup or the seven-match Anglo-Australian series depending on matches actually played might take some selling to television honchos.

In fact, we might be addressing the problem from the wrong perspective. It is not the format that needs fixing but how television covers the sport. For example, if television refuses to cover pointless matches, the cricket authorities would soon find ways and means of getting rid of them.

Sure, over a longer tournament like the World Cup or the Champions Trophy, there will be matches that have no impact on the final outcome, and the practical approach would be to reduce them since eliminating them altogether might be both impossible and cruel.

But surely in a bilateral series, a 4-0 lead is comprehensive enough to decide the better team? After such a start, there are the questions of motivation and fitness to contend with. And at the end of a long tour, why should the winning team be penalised by forcing them to extend their stay abroad?

In the 1990s when the match-fixing scandal hit the headlines, one of the reasons for its spread was said to be the many pointless matches in pointless tournaments. Since human nature is the same, the temptation to win alternate matches to keep a series alive might be just as strong. But the ICC has sensible rules in place now, and if the format inspires such corruption, then it might be a good idea to do away with it altogether anyway.


 

kudos_utopia

Member
Mar 31, 2008
26,085
368
0
“Something wrong with the Proteas”

“Something wrong with the Proteas”

ICC Champions Trophy



The fourth episode of Cricket Up Close on STAR Cricket analyses what goes wrong with the South African team in crunch moments.
Presented by ESPN STAR Sports cricket commentator and analyst Harsha Bhogle, Cricket Up Close takes a peek into the teams participating in the ICC Champions Trophy.

Though Nikhil Chopra, Sanjay Manjrekar and Ayaz Menon agreed that the Graeme Smith led team has some great talent, it is the crucial matches that let them down.

Manjrekar, a former Indian batsman and now an ESPN STAR Sports commentator, said there is something wrong in the South African team.

"You cannot put it down to choking or bad luck," Manjrekar said.

"They lost the crunch game in the semi-final (against Pakistan) after looking unbeatable throughout the ICC World Twenty20."

Menon, Editor-at-Large, however, said that Smith has turned things around for South Africa ever since the disastrous World Cup campaign in 2003.




283640_33_preview.jpg

 

kudos_utopia

Member
Mar 31, 2008
26,085
368
0
Anderson looking for a new England

Anderson looking for a new England


James Anderson wants England to start afresh against Australia at Durham on Sunday.
Anderson also wants his side to banish thoughts of becoming the first side in history to lose a one-day international series 7-0.

After the elation of Ashes success, England's limited-overs squad has been blown away by Australia in six successive NatWest Series outings.

Thursday saw their most humbling defeat yet, a 111-run thrashing as the hosts capitulated for 185 on what appeared to be a decent batting track.



CT in sight

But Lancashire seamer Anderson, who marked his return to the line-up with four wickets at Trent Bridge following a two-match rest, has called for the side to treat the game as a one-off warm-up for next week's Champions Trophy rather than focus on recent results.

"Obviously we don't want to lose 7-0. There'll be a lot of pride to play for on Sunday. We're very disappointed with the way we've played in this series, we've never really clicked as a team," he said.

"But we've got the Champions Trophy to look forward to now as a fresh start. We need to use this as a warm-up game for that.

"We have to try and forget as much as possible that we're 6-0 down and make sure we put in the performances we're capable of."

Despite England looking second best with both bat and ball, as well as in the field, Anderson believes the margins between the teams remain relatively small.

"The vast majority of us in the dressing-room still believe we can beat Australia, and we think that 6-0 probably flatters them a bit," he said.

"We know that we've not yet played anywhere near the standard that we're capable of."

Anderson also addressed the increasingly concerning problem of running between the wickets in the England camp.

Running woes

Owais Shah has been subject to plenty of criticism for some indecisive calling during the series, while both Ravi Bopara and Matt Prior were run out by Ricky Ponting in Nottingham.

Anderson admits it is an unacceptable problem for a major international team to have.

"You'd think that after playing cricket for most of our lives, we'd be able to do that, it's not the most difficult of skills," he conceded.

"Throughout the series, it seems as though we've tried to make it look as complicated as possible. I don't know why. It's not really something you can practice, it's just something you ought to be able to do when you've played a lot of cricket.

"I suppose when the confidence is low as a batting team, it affects everything, not just your shot selection.

"To be a good one-day side, you've got to be good at running between the wickets, and we need to improve."