Thursday 18 September 2014

KKR beat CSK in opener

Kolkata Knight Riders defeated Chennai Super Kings by three-wicket in the opening match of the sixth edition of the Champions League Twenty20. Earlier, Mahendra Singh Dhoni (35 not out off 20 balls) and Dwayne Bravo (28 not out off 28balls ) took their team to 157 for 4 from the allotted 20 overs. Chasing 158, the Kolkata-based team couldn’t get going in front of Ashish Nehra, who reduce them to 21 for 4 at one stage. The reigning IPL champions were tottering at 51/5 when Ryan ten Doeschate (51 not out) and Andre Russell (58) played out a responsible partnership which took KKR to win. Nehra was the star bowler picking up 4/21 from his four overs for the Super Kings while Mohit Sharma and Ravindra Jadeja picked up a wicket each.
Brief scores
Chennai Super Kings 157/4 in 20 overs (Mahendra Singh Dhoni 35 not out, Dwayne Bravo 28 not out, Suresh Raina 28; Piyush Chawla 2/26, Sunil Narine 1/9, Yusuf Pathan 1/16) lost to Kolkata Knight Riders 159/7 in 19 overs (Andre Russel 58, Ryan ten Doeschate 51 not out, Suryakumar Yadav 19; Ashish Nehra 4/21, Ravindra Jadeja 1/25, Mohit Sharma 1/31).
Other Cricket news:-
Captain is confident
Captain Misbah-ul-Haq has said Pakistan can “once again rule the world” by winning the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand next year. The return of the tournament Down Under was a good omen for Pakistan, as that was where it won its only World Cup in 1992, when Imran Khan’s side beat England in the final. “As the event is returning to Australia and New Zealand, the level of expectation from us will be quite high,” Misbah said as he posed with the trophy in front of Badshahi Mosque and independence monument in Lahore. “The team’s victory in 1992 is still the most special sporting achievement in the minds of our cricketers and all cricket fans in Pakistan.The whole team is focused to face the most difficult challenge in world cricket, and with the determination of the players and the backing of the millions of Pakistani fans, we hope to once again rule the world.” The 40-year-old Misbah acknowledged the tournament starting in February could also be his international swansong. Pakistan’s opening match on Feb. 15 in Adelaide will be against archrival India, which it has never beaten in five previous World Cup matches. With so much history between them, Misbah said, “People will be looking at it as more than a final.”
Johnson given more time
Cricket Australia has withdrawn Mitchell Johnson from the start of the Champions League Twenty20 to allow the aggressive fast bowler to recover from a rib injury. Johnson plays for India’s Kings XI Punjab, and might be released to play in the latter stages of the tournament which starts this week and culminates in a final at Bangalore on Oct. 4. In a statement, Australia physio Alex Kountouris said Johnson had some rib pain during the recent one-day international tri-series in Zimbabwe. Kountouris said Johnson “has had a break from bowling since returning to Australia and having regular treatment to resolve the problem. He has not fully recovered as yet and will be reviewed over the next week.”
Source-www.crictoday.com

Wednesday 17 September 2014

Clarke to miss series

Australia captain Michael Clarke will miss the limited-overs cricket series against Pakistan next month due to a hamstring injury that forced him home early from a recent series in Zimbabwe. Cricket Australia physiotherapist Alex Kountouris said tests had confirmed “a significant hamstring injury” for the 33-year-old Clarke. “Importantly, the scans have demonstrated tendon damage which complicates the recovery from this injury,” Kountouris said. He remained hopeful that Clarke will be available for the two test matches against Pakistan starting Oct. 22. Left-hander Phil Hughes was drafted into the ODI squad on Wednesday to replace Clarke for the three limited-overs internationals in the United Arab Emirates starting Oct. 7. Hughes was initially left out of the squad for the one-dayers, despite scoring two half-centuries in four matches in the recent Zimbabwe tri-series, but was already scheduled to travel to the UAE earlier than the remainder of the test squad to work on his batting technique against spin bowling with coaching consultant Muthiah Muralitharan.
The 25-year-old Hughes has been in and out of the Australian set up since making his test debut in 2009, but has only played 24 ODIs since his debut in that format in 2013 and averages 37.31. He forced his way back into the ODI squad for the Zimbabwe after scoring two double-centuries in two weeks for Australia A against South Africa in July and August. Clarke, who has struggled in the past with a back problem, hurt his left hamstring last month and missed Australia’s first two games in the tri-series involving South Africa and Zimbabwe. He returned to play against Zimbabwe but retired hurt during his innings and, although he returned to bat and field, it was his only game of the tour. Clarke has been at the forefront of Australian team’s resurgence in the last 12 months and is likely to play an important role in the team’s preparations for the World Cup, which starts February in Australia and New Zealand. He averages 45 with the bat in 237 ODIs, including eight centuries and 56 half centuries, and was part of Australia’s World Cup winning team in 2007. He has had more success in the test arena, averaging 51.5 in 105 matches including 27 centuries and 27 half centuries.
other Cricket news:-
Afridi is T20 captain
Shahid Afridi will captain Pakistan in Twenty20s until 2016 while Misbah-ul-Haq will remain the skipper for the World Cup next year, the Pakistan Cricket Board announced. Afridi replaced Mohammad Hafeez, who stepped down after Pakistan’s unimpressive performance at the World Twenty20 in Bangladesh this year. Afridi has led Pakistan in 19 T20s from 2009-11, losing 11 and winning eight. He was captain when the team reached the semifinals of the World Twenty20 in the West Indies in 2010. He was removed as captain in 2010 after differences with the then-PCB chairman Ijaz Butt. “Afridi’s bowling is very good in Twenty20s and we should back him,” former captain Mohammad Yousuf told Geo Television. “He just needs to take the rest of his team-mates with him.” Afridi is the world’s third highest wicket-taker in T20s, with 77 wickets from 74 matches, eight behind top wicket-taker Saeed Ajmal, who was has been suspended for a suspect action, and six behind fast bowler Umar Gul. Misbah, 40, has captained Pakistan in 74 ODIs, with a win-lost record of 40-31. Pakistan is scheduled to play eight one-dayers and three T20s in the United Arab Emirates before the World Cup in February in Australia and New Zealand. It will take on Australia in a one-off T20 and three ODIs, next month, then two T20s and five ODIs against New Zealand in December.
Source- http://www.crictoday.com/news/196-slidenews/12670-clarke-to-miss-series.html
http://www.crictoday.com/news/194-slider/12669-afridi-is-t20-captain.html

Windies beat Bang in second test

Veteran Shivnarine Chanderpaul completed his 30th Test century and left-arm spinner Sulieman Benn followed with 5-72 as the West Indies defeated Bangladesh by 296 runs late on day four of the second test. The West Indies, playing its landmark 500th test, swept the two-test series 2-0. Chanderpaul’s unbeaten 101 allowed the West Indies to declare its second innings at 269-4 early in the day. Bangladesh, set 489 for an unlikely victory, was bowled out for 192 in the final over of the day. Benn’s second five-wicket haul of the series was supported well by fast bowler Jerome Taylor, who claimed his 100th Test wicket on his way to figures of 3-39. For the visitors, Tamim Iqbal top-scored with 64 and left-hander Mominul Haque contributed 56, the pair adding 110 for the third wicket to give the visitors hope. But once Benn removed Tamim, the innings went into terminal decline, the last eight wickets tumbling for 34 runs in an hour and a half. Earlier, the West Indies added 61 runs in 10 overs after resuming in a position of strength at 208-4. Chanderpaul and Jermaine Blackwood extended their unbroken fifth wicket stand to 169. Blackwood, resuming on 43, soon brought up his second test half century and Chanderpaul, who celebrated his 40th birthday a month ago, wasted no time in moving from 63 to another triple figure score. In doing so, the veteran became the 11th batsman to reach 30 test tons. The left-hander also became only the second West Indian to score a century after the age of 40, joining Clive Lloyd, who was watching on from the stands in his role as chairman of selectors.
Bangladesh got off to a bright start through Tamim and Shamsur Rahman. Shamsur (39) took on a short bowling barrage from Taylor, smacking him for four and two sixes, off successive balls. But he eventually fell to the stroke, top-edging straight to deep backward square leg at 47-1. One run later, Benn claimed Anamul Haque (0) edging to wicket-keeper Denesh Ramdin for a duck to further strengthen the hosts’ grip. But Tamim and Mominul forged a sterling partnership either side of tea to stall the West Indies. Mominul survived a chance to Darren Bravo at first slip when 29 but the pair were largely untroubled as they batted into the final session. The 33-year-old Benn made the crucial breakthrough an hour after tea when Tamim swung across the line and skied to Shannon Gabriel at midwicket and soon added the scalp of Mominul, who hit a full toss straight to the same fielder. In between, Gabriel claimed Mahmudullah lbw for a duck. The lower order offered little resistance as Benn took his series tally to 14 wickets and Taylor brought up his 100th in his career. Benn had Nasir Hossain lbw and pouched a return chance off Taijul Islam while Taylor bowled Mushfiqur Rahim and had Robiul Islam lbw. Kemar Roach, who had taken a five-wicket haul in the first innings, ended the match by rattling the stumps of Shafiul Islam.
Source-http://www.crictoday.com/news/12672-windies-beat-bang-in-second-test.html

Monday 8 September 2014

India Need More than Stop Gap Measures

Desperate times call for desperate measures. In the absence of acceptable contingency measures, the BCCI risked getting caught with its hand in the cookie jar without looking like it was serious about preserving the last vestige of the sport – Test cricket. Unwilling to take a swipe at the skipper midway through the difficult overseas tour of England, the BCCI did the next best thing it could do under the circumstances – virtually fire the foreign support staff barring the head coach. With mission scapegoat on their mind, the changes coming from BCCI’s quarters did not themselves cause surprise as much as to what they implied. The reality, however, is that more changes should be in the offing if the score line is intended to improve somewhere down the line on future overseas tours.
In a sport where the captain has more bearing than the coach and by that extension, the support staff, the BCCI made the backroom payroll pay for the on field disappointments of team India, although it was not entirely unwarranted. The BCCI stopped short of putting their foot down and in doing so, left the door open for more criticism. Stopping short of firing the current Indian coach, Duncan Fletcher, the BCCI sent his support staff consisting of fielding coach, Trevor Penny, and bowling coach, Joe Dawes, on a brief hiatus while bringing in a slew of stop gap measures for the remainder of India’s tour of England. If this was BCCI’s way of wanting to oust the coach without getting its own hands dirty, it was certainly pointing the way.
Although some would say that this was a classic case of locking the door after the horse has bolted, the BCCI appointed former Indian cricket and commentator, Ravi Shastri, as India’s director of cricket for the forthcoming one day international series against England. With the BCCI spelling out clearly that Shastri would be overseeing the interests of Indian cricket, it is not hard to surmise who the boss is in this picture. While Fletcher would remain coach, Shastri, a well known BCCI loyalist, has been entrusted with the task of not only infusing fresh energy into the weary squad but also, reporting back to the BCCI on the merits of keeping Fletcher on as coach for the remainder of the latter’s contract which runs up to the ICC Cricket World Cup in 2015.
Additionally the BCCI brought in an entirely Indian support staff to replace the duo with former Indian cricketer, Sanjay Bangar, and Bharat Arun as assistant coaches while employing R. Sridhar, associated with the National Cricket Academy, as the fielding coach. Bangar was the Kings XI Punjab coach in the IPL of 2014 after retiring from first class cricket in 2013 and had impressed both, the Indian and foreign cricketers, in the team with his level of involvement, commitment and clearly spelled out ambitions for the team. Arun has been involved with the coaching of India’s under-19 teams and the appointments are being seen as a way to reconnect with the young Indian squad and get a better understanding and perspective on the situation.
While the move to inject Indian support cast to bolster the team may have been seen as expeditious in an attempt to bridge the communication breakdown suspected to have taken place between the foreign coach and the Indian players in the course of the Test series, it would seem rather outrageous that on the face of it, the BCCI officials would go as far as to say that both, Joe Dawes and Trevor Penny, were free to either go back home or go on a holiday at a time when it would have seemed more prudent for them to hang around to exchange notes and assess the team and the players vis-à-vis their Indian counterparts. If that is not a clear signal that the BCCI is no longer interested in their services, one would not know what is.
While these are certainly interesting moves from the BCCI at a time when it is colluding with other powerful boards to enhance its commercial interests, tinkering with the support staff alone would not get the team over the line on the next overseas tour in a format that has become something of an endangered species. While the BCCI is believed to be reticent about rocking the boat by firing both, the coach and captain, in making these changes, it is not unlike pulling the rug from under the feet of the coach who brought in the support staff in the first place. The changes would suggest that pressure is directly on Duncan Fletcher, who as India’s foreign coach, has struggled to change perception in the public eye that he is little more but an aging figure in the Indian dressing room and whose experience and knowledge as a master tactician has not, by a process of osmosis, converted into results since taking over from Gary Kirsten midway through 2011.
Although Fletcher came highly rated by his predecessor, Kirsten, who enjoyed a great run with the Indian team culminating in the ICC Cricket World Cup in 2011, and has been the strength behind the likes of Jacques Kallis and Nasser Hussain and even helping out Rahul Dravid who rates him rather high, Fletcher’s help behind the scenes has been largely invisible and with India’s track record abroad not looking like changing anytime soon, Fletcher would be counting down his days to the next edition of the World Cup, if he manages to survive the duration of his extended contract which seems highly unlikely at this point.
As things stand, this may be an unceremonious booting of a foreign coach who never quite understood the ethos of the Indian cricket culture and furthermore, would find, in hindsight, his inability to connect with the passionate Indian masses may have led them to not being able to weigh and asses his value in the dressing room and fully appreciate his appointment. Against a dominant board and a powerful captain backed up by influence in the board, Fletcher’s uphill battle began almost immediately after an inconsequential tour of Zimbabwe straight into the now infamous tour of England in 2011. It would then seem to come full circle for the former England coach with an unrepentant India facing the consequences for lessons unlearnt, sitting on their laurels after the second Test and underestimating their opponents with Fletcher once more facing the brunt of the brickbats for being the silent, ghost-like shadow in the Indian dressing room.
The sixty-five year old Zimbabwean may feel even more handicapped in the absence of his own staff. However, there were growing concerns in several regards. For one, bowler management seemed a serious issue. Bhuvneshwar Kumar looked ragged as the series drew to a close while Pankaj Singh remained underutilized. Dhoni had little faith in Stuart Binny who was anyway a shocking selection to begin with. Ravindra Jadeja was preferred over India’s lead spinner, Ravichandran Ashwin, and it is a choice selection that needs to be worked out between the selection panel, the captain and the bowling coach who may have had input which may or may not have been passed on or even appreciated, which would be a cause for concern in any case.
India’s slippery fingers in the slips was a persistently agonizing issue and one could attribute the turning point of the series to the dropped chances that allowed the England captain, Alastair Cook, to crawl back into contention and retain his captaincy on the morning of the first day of the third Test in Southampton. While Fletcher was seen taking on players for fielding practice individually, concerns remained whether the players were being subjected to mock drills to enhance their perception about slip fielding which includes understanding the degree of proximity to their fellow slip fielders in a crucial scenario such as a Test match where taking twenty wickets is as imperative on the bowlers as it is on the quality of slip fielding. One could only wonder if some of the football drills could not have been substituted for the players honing their skills harder and longer in the practice sessions.
Fletcher himself has been instrumental in the shaping and reviving of many an international batsman’s career. While some of the players have spoken about Fletcher being able to help them on an individual basis, that the results have not percolated onto the field can only point to either of the scenarios where the batsmen have failed to imbibe the lessons quickly enough, or whether the players were even seeking the advice of the coach, and whether there was a communication gap between the coach and the team between taking a hiding on the field and extracting the lessons from it. It is hard to assess the reactions and the contributions of a coach who is deliberately reticent with the media, his deadpan countenance giving nothing away either to his contentment with the team or displeasure at indiscipline.
While Fletcher’s past credentials are not in question, ultimately when a team is not able to utilize the services of a great tactician either due to their own stubbornness or of the coach’s inability to translate that information in a different cultural environment that represents the Indian dressing room, it would be a waste of both, time and resources, when perhaps India, given the number of young incumbents in the team, would be better served to have one of their own icons taking control of matters in the dressing room.
For the present generation of Indian cricketers that has grown up watching India’s iconic players and former captains such as Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid, having them in the dressing room in the role of a coach, mentor or consultant could prove to be just the shot in the arm that the team needs to propel itself from converting potential and passion into commendable results. Not only would these players command attention and respect and be a source of inspiration but also, because they have been at the helm of affairs for the better part of a decade and a half at the least, that would make them ideally connected to the demands of the modern game and therefore, better able to understand, empathize and help resolve issues that come with the trade. Although Dravid did serve as a batting consultant for the initial part of the tour, one can only imagine how dramatically different the results could have been if the experiment had been persisted with.
But the coaching job is not the only one on shaky ground. Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s tactical acumen seem to fail him when it comes to the longest version of the sport. The tour is not the first instance and depending how long he lasts in the role as India’s Test captain, it will not be the last time that Dhoni’s captaincy will be scrutinized with the same ruler. If leeway was accorded to Dhoni on India’s previous tour of England as India went down 4-0, Indian cricket fans, heavily invested emotionally in the sport, would be far less forgiving over two abysmal tours to England, this tour particularly so after India seemed to have their grip after the win at Lord’s and Alastair Cook seemed all but certain to lose his as England’s skipper. Even for the most ardent of Dhoni fans, it has been apparent for some time now that Dhoni does not seem to have quite the same fluency of thought when it comes to Test cricket. When faced with a brick wall, Dhoni’s defensive tactics only expose that further.
At times one got the impression that the length of Dhoni’s wisdom laced sound bytes at the post match presentation lasted longer than India’s batting at the crease. But the pertinent question was whether Dhoni was managing to convey the same message effectively in the dressing room. Dhoni showed great enterprise in curbing his natural instincts, batting with refrain and scoring knocks that saved India further ignominy. But at times, his comments following the match gave baffling insight about the skipper’s own mindset. Dhoni’s “Don’t be jealous of the IPL” sounded like someone with the air of entitlement while the skipper’s bizarre take at the post match presentation that the team looked forward to two additional days of rest after India surrendered tamely to England inside three days in the fourth Test at Old Trafford did not sound like a team looking for redemption, suggesting either that the skipper was not entirely serious about the format or of the gravity of the situation as he would have liked us to believe.
Dhoni, as a batsman, may have survived the litmus test for the moment but his wicket keeping was competing with his captaincy, with the latter dominating the headlines as the series progressed for all the wrong reasons. As India’s game unraveled, so did some of Dhoni’s on field decisions, hitting a sore point or two. And yet his stubbornness to stick to plans that lost significance a long time ago smacked of a skipper in denial or of someone who had run out of ideas. This is not the first time that Dhoni’s captaincy in the Test format has come under the scanner. And yet some would suggest Dhoni’s continuing to hold onto a post that could have been taken away from him after the 2011’s 8-0 drubbing came down to his favourable standing in the corridors of the BCCI. And the story may yet continue in the same vein.
Succession planning for the Test skipper’s role may have gone awry in light of the batsmen’s poor performances. Undoubtedly before the start of the tour of England, Virat Kohli was considered the frontrunner for the job of India’s Test captain. Kohli’s pathetic batting record in England exposed the vulnerability that even the young dynamic batsman has had to come face to face with. It may have emboldened Dhoni while flummoxing those with selection powers over the merits and repercussions of replacing Dhoni. However, given Dhoni’s record of thirteen Test losses and only one win in seventeen Tests, a younger captain’s mistakes could not be worse and even forgiven in light of them being attributed to a learning curve.
If South Africa could bring in Graeme Smith into the captaincy role after only eight Tests, Kohli or even Cheteshwar Pujara, as someone perhaps in the mould of Hashim Amla (although it is too early for comparisons) as a silent, strong entity, could be inducted into the role if only as a temporary trial run before the selectors are more confident in their choice. Ganguly himself was not popular choice, was never really considered captaincy material and yet brought about a new era of mental robustness into a young Indian team and chased away his detractors with some degree of success.
It may be harsh to blame a captain when the team’s misgivings ranging from abysmal fielding, poor batting application to a lack of consistency of line and length in bowling. However, when a captain has shown inadequacies in critical areas – be it making the final playing eleven selection, optimal use of players be it in field placement or rolling in imperative bowling changes when the opposition is ripe for the taking, one would think that the degree of discrepancy would suggest a fresh, tactical mind was almost as imperative as a rap on the knuckles for the players to pull up their socks.
A couple of player selections have been baffling to say the least. In that context, it becomes equally relevant that the Indian selection panel and the BCCI identify the stock of players ideally suited to the longest format of the game. Stop gap measures rarely do the job as India have found out on this tour. The need to identify and develop players for key roles becomes particularly imperative given that between the tours of 2011 and 2014, India have been flanked by the same problems ranging from finding openers who can drop anchor and lay the foundation to finding the right fifth bowling option to ensure a watertight bowling attack. It must concern a team when a talent like Rohit Sharma is unable to convert that potential and cement his place in the team because he has shown captaincy skills as well if only briefly.
If there is an issue of commitment to the Test format as has been implied by former Indian captain and commentator, Sunil Gavaskar, then there is a need for the BCCI to have a sit down with these players, make clear their intentions and then work accordingly towards restructuring the crux of the team. Competency and talent alone do not ensure success. Given that the BCCI is solely responsible for putting the Indian Premier League (IPL) on a pedestal, the onus would fall on them then to get the heart of the matter, weed out of the issues in the minds of the players and get the five day game back on track. Whether this would mean identifying players for the longer format, building up a healthy bench strength, compensating them for their specialist job, sending them on special A tours, exposing them to domestic cricket abroad and conducting master class that they could benefit from would go a long way towards reviving India’s Test cricket ambitions.
As things stand presently, India are in danger of being dubbed bullies only in the boardroom – the lambs abroad tag has been bandied around in good measure. Whether India could have benefitted from an Argus report like Australia did even back in 2011 is a matter of speculation. One of the reasons Australia bounced back quickly was because they were smarting from the defeats, a feeling that does not seem to emanate in quite the same measure from either the Indian team or management even on the last tour debacles which is a serious cause for worry. What is apparent, however, is that lessons unlearnt from that tour have come back to haunt India, perhaps more glaringly than at any other time in Dhoni’s career as India’s Test captain and the BCCI is still not willing to walk the extra mile. If India walk away from this England tour, hoping a home series against the rather obliging West Indies or worse still, the one day series against England, will obliterate their blundering ways in the Test series, they would do so at their own peril of greater humiliation, which one thought could not have gotten any worse than what India had to face on their last tour of England.
Source-http://www.crictoday.com

Saturday 6 September 2014

Jacques Kallis: End of the Era of the Powerhouse Legend

Eighteen years in the relentless grind of international sport is a long journey by anyone’s standards. Yet few cricketers truly epitomize the powerhouse tag better than Jacques Kallis, arguably one of the world’s greatest all rounders of all time and certainly the greatest amongst his contemporaries spanning across the last couple of decades. It only naturally follows that an undeniable twinge of sadness hangs heavy in the air, not to mention the slightest hint of apprehension, with Kallis’ retirement truly marking the end of an era.
Those feelings find resonance amongst aficionados for whom contemplating cricket and life itself without their favourite iconic players is next to impossible. If fans have found familiarity in a player who has remained at the top of his game for the better part of two decades, it has to be attributed to the degree of his commitment and passion to the sport and to the level of fitness demanded at the highest level. Jacques Kallis is one of those rare giants of the game that will leave a huge void as South Africa rebuild their cricket without the familiar sturdy colossus casting his protective shadow over their interests.
Pomp and pageantry are not for him. That would explain why while many a player of his time hung around longer than able if only for a swansong, Kallis has, in his unassuming style, chosen to bow out without fanfare. There was a sense of shock and at the same time, inevitability when Jacques Kallis announced that he was hanging up his boots in all formats of the game – he had retired from international Test cricket over six months ago. The shock was palpable given that South Africa were slated to lose one giant per World Cup with the 2015 edition in Australia-New Zealand expected to mark Jacques Kallis’ farewell from international cricket. Yet Kallis’ decision to retire came six months too soon after a rather sedate single digit showing in the three one day internationals on South Africa’s otherwise successful tour of Sri Lanka.
Some would have attributed Kallis’ ambition for one final World Cup showdown to downright greed that is sometimes the bane of legends past their prime. However, to Kallis, the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 represented one final lung burst of an opportunity to make amends for the national’s passionate sporting interests that have been hurt sorely by South Africa’s chequered history at the Cricket World Cup. After all, Kallis was the Man of the Match for his five-for with the ball in the only ICC tournament that South Africa have won – the Wills International Cup in 1998 that later went by the name of the ICC Champions Trophy. With South Africa having been stuck rather too conveniently and often harshly and unfairly with the ‘chokers’ tag, given Kallis’ ambitions for the team, it seemed only natural that he would have wanted to bring all the wealth of his experience and skill sets towards South Africa setting the record straight once and for all.
However, even legends have to sometimes come to grips with the inevitability of reality that the gap between desire and execution may be a chasm too wide to bridge. That is precisely what Kallis seemed to have come face to face with in the mirror upon returning from the tour of Sri Lanka where South Africa won the one day internationals series in the Emerald Isles for the first time since the post apartheid era in 1991. And the team did it without a characteristic worthy and weighty performance from the humble all rounder. In Kallis’ case, true to his selfless nature, he did not need the shove of the selectors to tell him it was perhaps his time to go. To be fair, left to themselves, the South African selectors may not have had the courage to make such a huge game changing decision on Kallis’ time knowing the World Cup was round the corner. However, Kallis wanted to win his place in the team for the World Cup on merit, and not solely on the reputation he painfully, and sometimes at the expense of his own personal turmoil, built over two decades.
Only a player true to his game and bold enough in his decision making could have made the tough call that Kallis did, so close to the World Cup. Some would have thought to ride the rough waves in the hope of a fitting farewell for diligent service rendered. But Kallis knew better than to bide time and hold South Africa back. Arguably the toughest decision that even the greatest of players must make before it is forced down their throat like bitter medicine, Kallis was magnanimous enough to realize that it was time to make room for fresher legs and more importantly, a fresher, hungrier mind. On calling it a day, Kallis expressed rather candidly, “I realized in Sri Lanka that my dream of playing in a World Cup was a bridge too far. Ï just knew on that tour that I was done. The squad that was in Sri Lanka is an amazing one and I believe they have a good chance of bringing the trophy home in March.”
Kallis’ thoughts are not entirely misplaced. He was at first hand to experience that South Africa does have the potential talent to go the distance – that really never was South Africa’s problem to be honest. While Kallis remained the only South African batsman to score a century in Sri Lanka in sixteen matches since 2004, on this tour alone, four centuries were scored between wicketkeeper-cum-opener, Quinton de Kock, South Africa’s ODI captain, AB de Villiers, and South Africa’s Test captain, Hashim Amla, who scored two centuries in a format that many had rather erroneously ascribed as being beyond the classically styled batsman. Besides, South Africa have a world class bowler in Dale Steyn and well backed up by the likes of Morne Morkel, Ryan McLaren and Vernon Philander although it has to be said in the same breath that South Africa have not quite unearthed an all rounder of the same caliber or mould as Kallis which is not unexpected given Kallis’ majestic yet rare stature in world cricket.
If numbers alone could separate the genius from the mediocre, Kallis would not find rush hour traffic-like competition. That he remains one of the most underrated cricketers of his time was evident in the fact that while Kallis was caught in a three horse race that involved India’s Sachin Tendulkar and Australia’s Ricky Ponting for the top billing as Test cricket’s highest run getter, he was often the forgotten third act. That Kallis finished third, falling short by only eighty-nine runs to Ponting’s 13,378 runs, boasting an average superior to both his contemporaries at 55.37 and having four centuries more than Ponting’s forty-one hundreds puts Kallis on a pedestal only a few can even aspire for.
When Kallis ended his Test career following the home series against India, it greatly impacted a fellow statesman and his captain, Graeme Smith. It was not long thereafter that the South African skipper called time on his own Test career at the end of the home Test series against Australia. And in one of those candid moments, Smith spoke about how Kallis’ retirement has had a telling impact on him towards factoring his own retirement decision. If fast bowlers hunt in pairs, perhaps there is something to be said of the fact that for Smith, Kallis may have seemed to have hung around since time immemorial, having begun his international career as a twenty-year old in 1995 while Smith’s own career got underway following the ICC Cricket World Cup in 2003 at twenty-three years of age.
That Kallis’ retirement from the one day internationals is a huge loss despite his lack of runs was evident in the effusive tribute that the current South African Test captain, Hashim Amla, paid to the genuine all rounder. Amla spoke about Kallis’ presence that had greatly influenced men of his generation and that he would leave a void in the dressing room, “Jacques was a one in 50 years cricketer who had a huge influence on so many Proteas players over a twenty year period. I was privileged to have been one of those. You appreciate the magnitude of the cricketer not only when you look at his record but also when you play alongside him.” Numbers only further emphasize Amla’s point. Kallis retires from the game after having played 328 matches with 11,579 one day international runs that include seventeen centuries and a phenomenal average of 44.36, only a shade shy of Tendulkar’s one day internationals average of 44.83. Kallis ends his career as the seventh highest run getter in the fifty overs format and only the third non-Asian cricketer in the top ten, sandwiched between Ponting in second spot and West Indies’ Brian Lara on the tenth rung.
But what differentiates Kallis from the likes of Tendulkar and Ponting is that while both men turned their arm over, one more than the other, Kallis was considered amongst the truly genuine all rounders the game has ever seen. Robust numbers back that perception including the fact that he is third on the list for winning the most number of Man of the Match awards at thirty-two. With 200 catches in Test matches and 131 catches in one day internationals, Kallis established himself as a permanent member of the safest slip cordon. His forty-five Test centuries make his the highest for South Africa, Smith coming in a distant second with twenty-seven with Amla catching up with twenty-two centuries to his name. His 292 Test wickets and 283 one day internationals wickets only further evidence the fact that Kallis was one of South Africa’s frontline blustery bowlers on whom the South African skipper relied consistently on to form the crux of the team’s bowling arsenal. He is one of four all rounders and the only non-Asian besides Sanath Jayasuriya, Abdul Razzaq and Shahid Afridi to have to his credit over 5000 runs and 200 wickets which says something not only about the dearth of great all rounders but also, of the rare gem of an asset that Kallis has been to South Africa’s cause.
But Kallis did more than just make up the numbers. One of the truly enigmatic personalities of the sport, Kallis carried a Zen-like aura about him that defied the colossus of a team mate that he was in the dressing room, an opponent who commanded respect and a true icon of the game in every sense of the word. His character as a grounded, safe, stable, gentle giant of the game was in sharp contrast to the competitive streak with which he approached his game. Although never one with a visible aggressive streak, an ability he learnt well to camouflage under an unfazed exterior rather early in his career more as a necessity in a team context when South Africa needed an anchor rather than a swashbuckling hero, Kallis was a stealth weapon who sneaked up on the opposition with a game changing, match-winning performance to evince awe and respect.
One of the truly reticent gentlemen on and off the game, Jacques Kallis came to represent a certain sense of solidity about a team that carried a touch of vulnerability and fragility about them despite having one of the most mentally formidable captains in Kepler Wessels leading them upon their return to international cricket over three decades ago. Kallis reminded many of Brian McMillan in the same likeness of both, being a broad shouldered gentleman with a safe pair of hands in the slip and an all rounder. And yet like much of South Africa from the initial days, Kallis was a vastly improved, improvised and impervious version of the all rounder who represented South Africa in the limited opportunities that was accorded to South African cricketers late in their careers at the time.
Kallis often gave off the impression that he couldn’t care less what the bowler had in mind, often seeming to appear millions of miles away while at the crease. His meditative nonchalant stance was perhaps amongst the most deceptive as Kallis soon developed a reputation for being one of the most difficult men to dislodge while at the crease. His batting may not have been as flamboyant or extravagant as some of his counterparts or even some of the other hailed all rounders of yore, but that by no means meant that Kallis’ style of batting was unattractive. If anything, Kallis’ classic cover drives spelt magnificence, his picture perfect follow through arrested in flawless perfection and yet his return to his nonchalant poise at the crease seemed not to allude to the majestic shot that preceded it.
It was hard to fault Kallis for much while he was at the crease, except perhaps for sometimes giving off the impression that he was more content occupying the crease than letting the scoreboard rattle. Yet numbers reveal nothing could be further from the truth. Kallis was one of those few players in international cricket who perfected the sublime art of pacing an innings, keeping his poise, playing into his role with deceptive sedateness before powering through to another applause winning knock that put South Africa on top and in command. Never one to show emotion, even when life handed him some toughs family wise, the only time Kallis’ emotions became more evident in the public eye when fellow South African cricketer and personal friend, Mark Boucher, suffered loss of vision in one eye while keeping eye on the foreign tour of England in 2012 when Kallis tussled between his on field duties and off field hospital visits. He even dedicated his century in the Test at the Oval to his friend of many years.
With the ball, Kallis was equally deceptive and blustery in pace. Injuries may have got the better of his bowling career towards the end of his career but not of his prowess. His ability can be verified in numbers, providing South Africa another frontline bowler who gave the skipper the option to add depth to the line up. And yet in a team that prided itself on more than one all rounder, there was never any doubt that Kallis epitomized the perfect example of the traditional cricket all rounder, one of the few genuine ones that cricket would look upon with both, pride and envy.
Kallis’ retirement renders the air with nostalgia because he played the finest brand of cricket, classic and yet blended beautifully to meet the demands of the modern game. In Kallis, South Africa fashioned a great many ambitions. While others may have walked away with accolades on the day for a job well done, Kallis was the silent strength behind the team, the wind beneath the wings, the sturdy foundation below the magnificent architecture. The pillars may not always be bold or ostentatious; they need not be. They reflect the rarest brilliance because they hold up the structure without drawing attention to themselves. Kallis was content being the grit behind the glory, the gumption of the story than the glamour of the show. Never the gambler, always the giver, Kallis showed that the sublime could deliver just as effectively as the flamboyant, perhaps more deceptively so. Kallis has been worth his weight in gold.
Source-https://www.crictoday.com/

Friday 5 September 2014

The broken nose saga continues

duck and be hit on the helmet or perhaps he has misjudged the length and the speed of the ball and is struck. In the pre-helmet days batsmen had to be extra careful in negotiating the faster deliveries for obviously he could not afford to be hit on the head. These days it is not an uncommon sight to see a batsmen being hit on the helmet for he is aware that even if he makes a misjudgment he is protected. But as we have seen this is not guaranteed. The recent mishap to Stuart Broad in the Old Trafford Test against India is a case in point. The tall left handed England all rounder hooked Varun Aaron for successive sixes – a grand way to open his account. Heady with success he went for another maximum off the very next ball. But having just come in perhaps he had not got his eye fully in for this delivery – another short one – was a shade quicker timed at 141 kmph and rose probably more than Broad expected. He was late on the stroke and the ball struck him flush on the grille of the helmet where it lodged itself. Some of the newer helmets have an extra grille on the visor but it appeared that Broad’s helmet didn’t. The ball went in between the grille and the peak of the helmet and it was quickly obvious that it was a nasty blow with the bridge of the nose taking the maximum impact. He was bleeding and the physio rushed out to render first aid. Broad was led off holding a cloth to the bloody nose. Not unexpectedly he did not take any further part in the match even as England made light of his absence as a bowler and won in three days by an innings and 54 runs.
Taken to hospital Broad required stitches for a fractured nose but he made a fast recovery and included in the team for the final Test at the Oval he played with a nose splint to disguise the temporary damage. Broad’s case is not the first such incident. There have been a few players over the years who have suffered grievous injuries in a similar manner with the helmet unable to save them. The most famous – or infamous depending on one’s point of view – is the one involving Mike Gatting and Malcolm Marshall. It happened on the 1985-86 England tour of the West Indies. Gatting the vice captain had been one of the few batsmen to be among the runs during the early phase of the tour but in the first ODI at Kingston he suffered a blow which had long term consequences both in playing terms and psychologically. England batted first and Gatting came in when the score was ten for two with both Tim Robinson and skipper David Gower falling for ducks to Patrick Patterson. The fearsome West Indian speed quartet was at full strength for besides Patterson, there were Marshall, Courtney Walsh and Joel Garner. Gatting had scored ten when he missed an attempted hook off Marshall and was struck flush on the nose. To add insult to injury the ball cannoned off his face to the stumps. Gatting was predictably donning protective gear but some of the early helmets did not have the visors that came in later. Gatting flew home to get his nose fixed and after convalescing for some time rejoined the team four weeks later. As misfortune would have it he broke his thumb within 20 hours of his return in the game against Barbados. In the first innings he batted bravely showing no after effects of his facial injury but after making 36 in 85 minutes he had no counter to a fast medium delivery from Vibert Greene which as bad luck would again have it lifted steeply to his bottom hand whence it looped to second slip where Carlisle Best completed the catch. Gatting did not bat in the second innings and took no further part in the tour. How much impact Gatting’s initial injury had on the team as a whole could be debated but the fact remains that England suffered a 5-0 “blackwash’’ in the Test series besides losing the ODI series 3-1.
One recalls Manoj Prabhakar meeting with the same fate at the hands of Walsh on the 1994-95 West Indian tour of India. As an opening batsman Prabhakar was courageous personified and this quality saw him face up to the fastest of bowlers despite limitations in his technique. In the third and final Test at Mohali he had scored a brave 120 in the first innings – incidentally the only Test century in his 39-match career – batting for 405 minutes and handling the pace of Walsh, Kenny Benjamin, Cameron Cuffy and Andy Cummins admirably. In the second innings when India were set a victory target of 357 Prabhakar again opened but before he could open his account he had his nose broken by Walsh in the very first over. He tried to pull the ball but it went through his helmet grille causing considerable damage. Prabhakar was led off bleeding and not unexpectedly could not come back to bat even as India went down to defeat by 243 runs. While on the subject I also recall Kris Srikkanth being hit on the face by a ball from Wasim Akram despite wearing a helmet in an ODI between India and Pakistan at Hyderabad in 1987. He had scored just two and the injury kept him out of the three remaining matches in the series. Without their most explosive batsman
Source-http://www.crictoday.com/

Thursday 4 September 2014

Career Ending Injury

Fifty two years have passed but it remains arguably the most tragic incident associated with Indian cricket. The history of Indian cricket is littered with sorrowful stories but surely, there is no greater tragic figure in Indian cricket than Nari Contractor. It is not just that a promising career – both as captain and batsman – was cut short at 28. It was the sudden, shocking and savage manner in which his international career was brought to an end – in a split second – that is difficult to accept more than half a century after that horrifying incident occurred. When the incident occurred Contractor was at the peak of his power and popularity. Having led India to their first series victory over England he was the undisputed captain, was among the leading batsmen and his ability and technical skill in facing up to the fastest of bowlers was unquestioned. As the Indian team left for West Indies in February 1962, he did seem set for a long reign at the helm. He had already led India in ten Tests and by the end of the West Indies series, he would have equaled Lala Amarnath’s record of having led India in most Tests, 15. He was about a month short of his 28th birthday and it did look like he could, with some luck, even lead the country throughout the sixties. Such were the optimistic feelings expressed as the team landed in the West Indies. But the dream came to a shattering end, suddenly, swiftly and violently. India lost the first two Tests and Contractor’s form too was not in keeping with his reputation. Scores of 10, 6, 1 and 9 were of help neither to him nor his team. There were still three Tests to be played. But between the second and third Tests was the colony game against Barbados at Bridgetown. The hosts batted first and finished with a total in the region of 400. The Indians had just commenced their reply and immediately after lunch on the second day, came the blow that finished Contractor’s international career.

Charlie Griffith had already been a controversial bowler. His action was considered suspect by some batsman who had faced him and the Indians had been forewarned. He opened the attack with Wesley Hall. Contractor’s record against fast bowling was admirable. In the past few years, he had faced Ray Lindwall, Hall, Roy Gilchrist, Fred Trueman, Brian Statham, Alan Davidson and Ian Meckiff with the utmost composure. The runs that he had scored had been compiled courageously, handsomely and consistently. His technique against fast bowling was exemplary and he invariably got well in line to play the fastest of deliveries. For the “delivery that all but brought about a meeting between Contractor and St Paul,’’ as eye witness Dicky Rutnagur wrote at the time, again Contractor got right behind the line to play the lifting ball. But according to Wisden, “he could not judge the height to which it would fly and bent back from the waist in a desperate split second attempt to avoid it and was hit just above the right ear.’’ At first the injury was not thought to be very serious. But Contractor’s condition suddenly took a turn for the worse around dinner time


. Haemorrhage set in and his left side began to get paralyzed. The nearest neurosurgeon was in Trinidad but waiting for him would have meant certain death so a general surgeon from Barbados set to work on removing a blood clot on the brain. The specialist from Trinidad arrived the next morning and immediately detected that another clot was in the process of formation. “Within eight hours of the first ordeal the screaming, half paralyzed cricketer was wheeled back into the operation theatre for a second operation,’’ wrote Rutnagur. Budhi Kunderan, who was not playing in the match, was in the dressing room. He gives a firsthand account of what happened: “We could hear the sound in the dressing room. Nari just stood up and initially thought nothing of it. We thought he was all right. But after a while he felt very uneasy as blood started to flow and he came in. In the dressing room, while he was resting, suddenly he started screaming. He was taken to hospital for an x-ray. At the end of the day, we heard that he would have to be operated upon. We all went to the hospital. Ghulam Ahmed (the manager) was very nervous. The whole team was at the hospital that night. The tension of waiting got to everyone.’’ For several days Contractor’s life hung in the balance. Polly Umrigar was a constant companion at his bedside. Besides, he, Chandu Borde and Frank Worrell donated blood. The rest of the team was in an agony of suspense. Miraculously, Contractor survived the ordeal and the team members, the entire nation and the whole cricketing world heaved a sigh of relief. After all, the image of cricket was a noble one, a gentleman’s game and the thought of a player dying on the field of play after being hit by a cricket ball could never occur to anyone.

A steel plate inserted in his skull, as a grim reminder of what had happened, Contractor came back to India, the captaincy passing on to the Injury nawab patoudi. It was quickly taken for granted that Contractor was lost to Test cricket – and perhaps even the first class game. But courage had always been Contractor’s trademark. In 1963-64, he was again opening the batting for Gujarat in the Ranji Trophy – and scoring hundreds. Then he opened for West Zone in the Duleep Trophy, getting another hundred. In the meantime he lost his Test place. While everyone agreed that he would never play Test cricket again, Contractor had never given up hopes of making a comeback. As late as 1967-68, he was scoring centuries in first class cricket and the selectors must have given a thought to picking him for the tour of Australia and New Zealand that winter before dropping the idea. And while he continued playing first class cricket till the 1970-71 season, he last played for India at Kingston in March 1962. Even without getting too emotional, it can be said that Contractor would have improved upon his Test record, which was suddenly terminated after 31 Tests, in which he scored 1611 runs at an average of 31.58.
Source-https://www.crictoday.com/

Wednesday 3 September 2014

India embarrass England

India embarrassed England in winning the fourth one-day international by nine wickets at Edgbaston to go into the last match with a chance to whitewash the series. After dismissing the hosts for a pitiful 206, India openers Ajinkya Rahane and Shikhar Dhawan mercilessly hit England’s bowlers around the ground to race to the target in the 31st over. Rahane made 106 from 100 balls, his first ODI century, and was out 24 runs from victory. Dhawan smashed 97 off 81 deliveries, as India scored 212-1. Dhawan’s 97 included the match-winning six, blasting fast bowler Harry Gurney back over his head to secure the series win at 3-0. Rahane reached three figures when he glanced a delivery from Chris Woakes for two down to fine leg, and held his arms up and looked skyward as the crowd cheered an authoritative innings. He was removed by Gurney, caught by Alastair Cook in the covers. “It feels really special but I am really happy for the team,” Rahane, who was named man of the match, said. “The bowlers initially worked really well so credit goes to the whole team.” Captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni also singled out his fast bowlers. England’s batsmen struggled against spin in the previous ODIs, but Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Mohammed Shami removed England captain Cook for 9, Alex Hales for 6, and Gary Ballance for 7 between them to leave England on 23-3 after eight overs.
“They bowled in the right areas and they were quite patient,” Dhoni said. “They made the job slightly easier for the spinners. It was crucial, it was important to get wickets early because that really puts pressure on the opposition. The fast bowlers worked really well.” England never recovered from those early dismissals. Joe Root and Eoin Morgan took the hosts past 100 with a fourth-wicket stand of 80, but their disciplined partnership carved out of 122 balls was spoiled when Morgan fell to Ravindra Jadeja for 32. Root then top edged Suresh Raina to debutant Dhawal Kulkarni for 44, as England stumbled to 114-5. Jos Buttler and Moeen Ali looked to forge another lasting partnership, but the normally aggressive Buttler failed to get going, and was trapped lbw by Shami on 11 from 37 deliveries. Ali offered some resistance with an impressive 67 off 50 balls, including three sixes, and was the only player Cook felt played well on a forgettable day for England. “The most frustrating thing is when you don’t play anywhere near your potential,” Cook said. “We have to back our beliefs and work incredibly hard. Moeen is probably the only guy that has had a really good day today. When people don’t score big runs or bowl in the right places, you get punished, and that is what is happening.” When Ravichandran Ashwin bowled out Ali, England’s tail was exposed, and India duly wrapped up the innings with a sense of routine. Raina ran out Woakes on 10 with a direct hit, Jadeja struck for the second time by clean-bowling Steven Finn for 3, and Shami finished the innings when he bowled out Gurney on 3. With the last match in the series at Headingley, India will be targeting a 4-0 whitewash.
Source https://www.crictoday.com/

Saturday 30 August 2014

Previous Entry South Africa beat Zimbabwe

South Africa’s bowlers delivered a 61-run win over Zimbabwe as Dale Steyn and Ryan McLaren took three wickets each to bowl the hosts out for 170 in the triangular one-day series. South Africa was kept to a mediocre total of 231 at Harare Sports Club but was saved by its bowlers as Zimbabwe’s batsmen succumbed under the pressure. Sean Williams made 46 for Zimbabwe in the middle order but was the only Zimbabwean to threaten South Africa’s attack. He was furious with himself for his error when he was caught by Hashim Amla off McLaren with the score on 138-5. Zimbabwe collapsed after that. McLaren finished with 3-24 and Steyn 3-36 to take South Africa to two wins from two in the tournament after beating top-ranked Australia on Wednesday. Zimbabwe had a good chance of a first win in the series after spinner Prosper Utseya took a hat trick in his 5-36 to restrict the Proteas at Harare Sports Club. But Steyn, McLaren and two valuable wickets from left-arm spinner Aaron Phangiso meant Zimbabwe didn’t come close to the target and took South Africa to the top of the three-team standings. Australia plays Zimbabwe in the next game on Sunday.
Utseya’s career-best return in ODIs had given the home team a good chance of a first victory over South Africa in 14 years. South African openers Hashim Amla (66) and Quinton de Kock (76) both made half-centuries in a 142-run opening stand before Utseya intervened, taking the first five wickets including De Kock, Rilee Rossouw and David Miller in consecutive deliveries. It was the second hat trick by a Zimbabwean in ODIs after Eddo Brandes against England in 1997 at the same Harare ground and Utseya celebrated by falling onto his back and kicking his feet up in the air as teammates mobbed him. Utseya is also on report over a suspected illegal action but is allowed to bowl pending tests. Utseya was backed up by fellow off-spinner John Nyumbu, who took 3-42. Zimbabwe was never settled in its chase, though, after Tino Mawoyo was run out with the score on one. Phangiso took the crucial wickets of Hamilton Masakadza (25) and Brendan Taylor for a duck as he beat both of Zimbabwe’s most experienced batsmen to rattle their stumps. Steyn and McLaren did the rest, with McLaren taking two wickets in two balls near the end and threatening to claim the second hat trick of the game.
Source-https://www.crictoday.com

Thursday 28 August 2014

Raina leads India to win

Suresh Raina struck a rapid 100 and off-spinner Ravindra Jadeja took 4-28 as India thrashed England by 133 runs in the second one-day international to take a 1-0 lead in the five-match series. After capitulating to a 3-1 loss in the recent test series, the Indians quickly found their groove in their favored 50-over format to start the long build-up to next year’s World Cup impressively. Raina’s fourth ODI century, reached off 74 balls, helped India recover from a poor start and post a challenging total of 304-6 in chilly, overcast conditions at Sophia Gardens. England’s target was revised to 295 off 47 overs because of rain, but the hosts didn’t get close and were always behind the run rate as they were bowled out for 161 in 38.1 overs. Opener Alex Hales top-scored on his ODI debut with 40 before becoming one of Jadeja’s wickets. The first ODI in Bristol was abandoned without a ball being bowled because of rain. The third match is at Nottingham on Saturday.
Raina shared a 144-run stand with Dhoni (52 off 51 balls) for the fifth wicket to accelerate India’s innings, which stumbled to 19-2 after the cheap departures of Shikhar Dhawan (11) and Virat Kohli (0) and then 132-4 following opener Rohit Sharma’s demise for 52 in the 30th over. Raina, who didn’t play in the test series, showed the benefits of practicing with a taped tennis ball to get used to the kind of ball movement seen on English wickets, with the aggressive left-hander hitting three sixes and 12 fours in his first hundred in 95 ODI innings. Paceman Chris Woakes removed both Raina and Dhoni to finish with figures of 4-52, but a total of more than 300 was a brilliant score considering the very English conditions the hosts were bowling in and the fact that India lost the toss. England quickly fell behind the run-rate and lost three wickets in 20 balls, with Alastair Cook trapped lbw for 19 after playing across the line and both Ian Bell (1) and Joe Root (4) misjudging straight deliveries to be bowled by Mohammad Shami and Bhuvneshwar Kumar, respectively. When the big-hitting Hales top-edged a sweep off Jadeja and was caught by Ravichandran Ashwin, England was tottering on 81-4 and only Eoin Morgan (28) put up any worthwhile resistance in the middle and lower order.
Dhoni hails knock
Indian skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni heaped praises on Suresh Raina for his match-winning hundred in the second one-dayer against England that helped the visitors take a 1-0 lead in the five-match series. “It was a fantastic knock,” said Dhoni, about Raina’s 75-ball 100. “It’s a very different format,” said India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni, welcoming the world champions’ return to playing ODIs, “and it gives them freedom to express themselves in the field.” On the other hand, English captain was not happy with his team’s performance. “We didn’t play very well at all,” Cook said. “Credit to MS (Dhoni) and Raina, they took the game away from us.”
Source-http://crictoday.com/

Wednesday 27 August 2014

Anderson and Broad: The new lead pair in modern fast bowling

Anderson and Broad: That sounds like the name of a chartered accountant firm or an attorney firm. They do not evoke the same menace of other fast bowling combos: such as a Lillee and Thomson or a Wasim and Waqar. Still, they take truckloads of wickets. Not just against India. Whoever comes to England, suffer their wrath. In English conditions, no batsman has mastered them. Not even Sachin Tendulkar.
If there is moisture in the air and there is bounce on the pitch, James Anderson and Stuart Broad are virtually unplayable. Or you ask Virat Kohli – or Cheteshwar Pujara. Anderson and Broad have convinced these young Indian batsmen that they have miles to go before they become the next Tendulkar and Dravid.
Setting a record
It is a well-worn cliché: that fast bowlers hunt in pairs. But if you look closely at the fast-bowling history, you will find far too many lonely hunters than celebrated pairs. Kapil Dev, Imran Khan, and Richard Hadlee, all were magnificent soloists.
In any case, Anderson and Broad were not considered as a deadly pair; but they have quietly notched up a remarkable record. In the series against India, they plucked out their 500th wicket. As far as opening bowlers go, only the Pakistani pair of Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis and the West Indian pair of Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh have taken more wickets.
Unlike the other prolific fast-bowling pairs, they do not appear larger than life. Somehow, they miss the swagger and terrifying air of great fast-bowling pairs of yore. What sets them apart is their unassuming way. The fun and frolic through their Twitter accounts make them look like harmless young brats than dangerous fast-bowling giants.
What they have to show off for their worth is wickets. Together, they have already taken 523 wickets from 69 matches. Anderson and Broad entered the 500-club in their 67th match. To put this into perspective, Walsh and Ambrose have taken 762 wickets from 95 matches. Akram and Younis have taken 559 wickets from just 61 matches. Akram and Younis are in a class of their own. They have the best strike rate among fast-bowling pairs. Anderson and Broad have almost the same strike rate as that of Walsh and Ambrose.
Technically, there are two other bowling pairs who have taken more wickets than Anderson and Broad. The South African pairs of Shaun Pollock and Jacques Kallis and Makhaya Ntini and Jacques Kallis have taken 547 and 538 wickets, respectively, from 93 matches. However, they were not exactly bowling ‘pairs’. Kallis was more of a silent partner in these partnerships. Pollock and Ntini took the bulk of their wickets.
It is a matter of time, really, that Broad and Anderson will overtake Akram and Younis in this list. They need just 37 more wickets to go past the Pakistani greats. India are not touring England for a five match series in the near future. Still, they get enough opportunity in the next couple of series.During the 69 matches they played together, England took a total 1155 wickets. And they accounted for 523 of those wickets – almost half of the total wickets. At that rate, they will need just another 12-15 matches to edge past Akram and Younis. Barring an injury or a sudden dip of form, they are likely to achieve that feat. But Walsh and Ambrose are a long way ahead.
Broad is only 28; but Anderson is 32. The latter is unlikely to go on playing for a maximum of about four more years. They will have to race against time to catch up with the Caribbean giants.
Among the currently active players, Dale Steyn and Morne Morkel have scalped 463 wickets together from 54 matches. Among the current crop, only they have any realistic chance of breaking into this elite club of fast bowling pairs.
What make Anderson and Broad click?
The easiest thing to find is their different sorts of bowling styles. Anderson swings the ball by making it to kiss the surface. Broad bounces the ball by banging it hard of surface. Anderson swings the ball both ways, but his stock delivery is the one that goes away. Broad bowls inswingers all day and he uses outswinger as surprise delivery. Their different bowling styles complement each other.
Another factor that works for them is their relentless accuracy. Broad has a McGrath-like accuracy – he bowls almost every ball in the channel just outside the off stump. While he does not have a prodigious swing, he moves the ball enough to beat the bat or find the edge. Anderson relies on super-natural swing. His deliveries appear coming to the leg stump, but end up well outside off-stump. The ball goes like teasing asteroids that pass the earth every now and then.
Both of them are disciplined with their line and length. They rarely offer boundary balls. They often get wickets by creating pressure and sustaining it for a long time. And they are ruthless against new batsmen. When a new batter comes to the crease, they do not allow him to settle by offering easy boundary balls. The batsman will have to play at every ball, but at the same time he will have to be judicious in his stroke-making. No one now knows more about their tricks and vile than the Indian batsmen.
Let us now see how Anderson and Broad started their individual journeys and how those journeys fused into a collective march towards the top of the cricket world.
James Anderson
Born in 1982, Anderson made his test debut against Zimbabwe in 2003. After the retirement of Darren Gough and Andrew Caddick, he assumed the leadership of English pace bowling attack. He has taken so far 380 wickets in 99 matches.
In his early days, he was a mercurial bowler. In swinging conditions, he was a magician capable of making the ball obey his orders. He would produce some memorable spells. But he had lacked consistency. When there was no swing on offer, he was like a rabbit under headlights. He bowled like amateurs in such situations. By about 2007, when he became the leader of the pace attack, he had realized the need to improve his consistency. It was then that he dropped the idea to bowl a magic delivery in every ball. He learnt to bowl line and length and began to use his big-swinging deliveries as a surprise weapon or when he is in the zone. The new approach offered him handsome dividends. He became a consistent bowler, troubling the top batsmen of the era. He would still have occasional off-days. But by and large, rival openers began to hate the sight of Anderson.
Stuart Broad
Born in 1986 as son of former English opener Chris Broad, Stuart Broad was destined to become a cricketer. He made his debut in 2007 against Sri Lanka when Anderson was assuming the leadership role of English pace attack. Unlike Anderson who is a perennial number 11, Broad is a capable lower order hitter. In the early days, he was more known for his intense attitude than actual results. In fact, he became the laughing stoke of whole of India when Yuvraj Singh hit him for six sixes in an over in the inaugural World T-20 championship.
He came back strongly from that setback. If anything, he only became a better, and fearless, bowler after that. In the shadow of Anderson, he found his mojo. He bowls at roughly the same pace as that of Anderson – in the 140-145 kmph range. But he does appear quicker. Perhaps that is because of the bounce he generates from the pitch. He attacks the top of the off-stump more regularly than any of today’s bowlers. Batsmen cannot keep leaving the deliveries. They have to play at the deliveries and he will test their skills. Unless the batsman is at the top of his game, Broad will get on top of him.A Place in Hall of Fame
Anderson and Broad are destined to earn their place in the hall of fame of opening bowlers by the sheer weight of wickets they take. Of late, both the players have acquired a reputation as nasty sledgers. It is often seen as spurts of anger than consistent menace. If they continue like this for a couple of more years, they will come close to Walsh and Ambrose, if not move past them in the wicket tally. If they do become the highest wicket taking fast-bowling pair, nobody will confuse them for chartered accountants and attorneys. They will be the AB of opening bowling.
Source-http://www.crictoday.com/

Tuesday 26 August 2014

Dhoni, the Test captain, has to go

Another overseas tour, another series defeat. Or let us just rephrase that a bit. Another overseas tour and another humiliating, embarrassing and crushing Test series annihilation. That is the Indian Test team story. A story, which Indian fans have been quite used to witnessing for quite some time now. In spite of that, the 3-1 series loss to England has come as a rude shock to Indian cricket. After India had surprisingly won the second Test match at Lord’s, many had expected them to show some more fire and go on to win the series. However, the tame manner in which the entire team capitulated was shocking to say the least.
While a lot of introspection and analysis is now being done on the Indian team’s performance, the one thing which is standing out in the mess is captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s future. It is true that since the time that Dhoni took up the reigns of the Indian team, he has brought the country several laurels. However, his record as a Test captain leaves a lot to be desired and his performance in England has further put a massive question mark on his leadership abilities in the longer format of the game.
There was a time, not too long ago, when Dhoni was known as ‘Captain Cool’. However, over the last few years, especially as was witnessed in this series, chinks have started to appear in his cool demeanor. Dhoni has increasingly started to become sarcastic and angry in his post-match interviews. What has become alarming is that instead of accepting his faults and trying to find a solution, Dhoni resorts to snide comments and laughs off pertinent questions. Clearly, this is not the ideal way the captain of national team should be behaving. Especially one who is continuously losing Test matches in disgraceful ways.
It is perhaps time now, for Dhoni, the Test captain, to move away. Let us now look the reasons to support this argument.
Looks quite jaded and uninspiring
Dhoni clearly is not made out for the longer haul of cricket; especially when it is in overseas tours. If it is a four or five match series, then Dhoni tends to become quite tired and exhausted as a captain. True that he is one of the fittest people in cricket, but leading a side in Test cricket is an entirely different ball game altogether. When the Test series against England began, Dhoni was his usual smiling and composed self. However, as it progressed and reached the third Test, Dhoni began to slowly lose the plot. His eyes seemed droopy and he looked battle-worn. By the time India was playing the last Test, it seemed as if Dhoni just did not care and wanted the misery to end. His jaded looks did nothing to inspire the team to push themselves. And that, unfortunately, has been the story for far too long with Dhoni.
Team selections are baffling
The hallmark of a good captain is his astute team selection. With Dhoni, things seem to be the quite the opposite. His team selections in Test matches border on the bizarre, confusing and baffling. Persisting with part-timer Ravindra Jadeja in Test matches and ignoring frontline spinner Ravichandran Ashwin, playing Stuart Binny instead of a pure batsman or bowler and including rookie Pankaj Singh ahead of Varun Aaron (who went on to impress later) are some of his glaring selection errors that could be seen in this Test series. Dhoni has been known to make such strange decisions on previous tours as well which have resulted in India’s chances of doing well eventually.
Confusing field settings and bowling changes
If there is one thing that Dhoni really lacks behind as a Test captain it is his field settings. To continuously keeping his favourite leg-slip position, which never really comes of use, to not keeping a third-man when boundaries keep getting hit there, to placing a short fine-leg when the situation never demands it, Dhoni does it all. To top that, Dhoni’s field settings in overseas Test matches, are hardly ever attacking; even if his team has the upper hand. He will keep the mandatory two slips for most of the time and even if the situation asks for it, he never goes for a third or fourth slip. His placement of fielders too in pertinent positions is not very smart. The most glaring example of his baffling field settings can perhaps be best summarized in the way he stood up behind the wickets to spinner Ravindra Jadeja in the last day of the second Test match at Lord’s against England. It left most experts and even ex-players scratching their heads and none had the answer to this weird position.
Another point worth noting is Dhoni’s bowling changes which are often times absurd, ridiculous and simply preposterous. When a bowler is doing well, Dhoni suddenly takes him off when he can be persisted with for a bit more. In the current series against England, the Indian captain often started new sessions with Ravindra Jadeja and even Stuart Binny when he had the better option of Bhuvaneshwar Kumar or Varun Aaron. His persistent usage of Pankaj Singh before Varun Aaron too was quite baffling in the fourth Test match against England. It seemed that either Dhoni had run out of ideas or was simply doing things to prove people wrong. As many had questioned the selection of Jadeja, Binny and Pankaj; Dhoni perhaps was determined to use these players more so that they could prove him right and the ones who had questioned him would then be proved wrong.Lets game drift
As was seen in this series and has been seen in several previous occasions, Dhoni has the nagging tendency of letting games drift when things aren’t going his way. Instead of taking the game by the scruff of the neck and enforcing some changes, Dhoni has the habit of getting laidback and hoping that the batsmen would commit some errors. This particular habit of his has been oft-repeated and has cost India dear on more occasions that one.
When you have captains like Michael Clarke who make smart bowling changes, making early declarations to enforce a result and regularly coming up to the bowlers to pump them up, Dhoni is the exact opposite of all these traits in Test matches. Clearly, he does not observe the better captains in world cricket and try and learn the tricks of the trade from them.
Tactics more suited for ODIs
There is no question of Dhoni’s credibility as a captain in the shorter format of the game. It is the format which is tailor made for him and it is where he feels very relaxed and sharp. However, it seems Dhoni doesn’t seem to revel or enjoy himself in the Test matches as a captain. To captain the side in tiring circumstances session after session, day after day is an arduous task. And even though he may not like to hear this, Dhoni’s tactics and modus operandi looks more befitting for Test matches.Dhoni as an overseas captain in numbers
Dhoni has been the captain of the national Test team for close to six years now and his records aren’t too pleasing to the eye. He now holds the dubious record of most Test losses as an Indian captain in overseas matches; which currently stands at 11. With India set to tour Australia later in the year for a four Test match series, the numbers look set to be increasing. Dhoni’s win percentage, after captaining India to a record 58 Test matches, currently stands at 46.55; with most of the victories having come on Indian soil. He is the captain who had overseen his team to appalling losses of 0-4 each in England and Australia back in 2011. He then also embarrassingly lost a Test series 2-1 to England in his own country in 2012. And to add to his tally, the current humiliation has been piled up. Clearly, some rampant changes are required to resurrect the Indian Test team and we have to start at the top.
Looking ahead
Mahendra Singh Dhoni has to be relived of captaining the Test side with immediate effect. This move can make a big difference in the future, if taken without any further ado, to both Team India and Dhoni himself. There is no denying that Dhoni has been a great servant of Indian cricket and in these dire times, India needs him more than ever. Perhaps when the burden of captaincy is removed from his shoulders, he can concentrate more on his wicket-keeping- which has been found wanting of late – and also improve his batting. Dhoni will be an asset to any side he plays for and perhaps reliving him off his captaincy duties would regenerate him and let him perform at his best.
Now this bring is to the most important question. If not Dhoni, then who? The answer to that would be the players who are regulars in the Test team and have been performing decently well for some time. The obvious people who would fit these criteria would be Virat Kohli and Cheteshwar Pujara. Although, their performance in the current series against England was quite disappointing; that cannot be taken into account for their future. They are very good batsmen and are sure to come back strongly very soon. Both have been in the Test side for some time now and have had enough grooming. Either of the two hence can and should be given the mantle to lead India in Tests and see how they take that from there. The West Indies would be coming to India for a three-Test series in October this year. It would do good to make either Kohli or Pujara have a go at Test captaincy in that tour. We can see how they perform and then things can be taken forward from there. The Indian Test team currently needs a young and vibrant approach to lift up its sagging fortunes. Some changes are imminent and the change in captaincy seems to be the most prudent one. It may not bring us immediate results as our team is one in transition. However, with proper guidance and positive approach, Team India can be revived. Hence, whether some people like it or not, for the future of Indian Test cricket, Mahendra Singh Dhoni, the captain, has to go. Source-http://www.crictoday.com

Friday 22 August 2014

SA takes series 3-0

A scintillating 84 from 75 balls by opener Quinton de Kock led South Africa to a seven-wicket win over Zimbabwe and a 3-0 whitewash in the one-day international series. Spurred on by De Kock, South Africa needed just 27.2 overs to reach 171-3 and easily chase down Zimbabwe’s 165 all out at Queens Sports Club. De Kock plundered seven fours and two sixes and appeared to be racing to a sixth century of his young career when he smashed a catch straight to Sean Williams near the mid-wicket boundary with South Africa only 22 short of the target. JP Duminy finished the game with a six to end 28 not out as the Proteas cruised to a fourth success in Zimbabwe after also winning the one-off test. Stand-in captain Faf du Plessis made 40.

“I’m enjoying every moment of it,” De Kock said of his rich vein of form. He was named man of the series. South Africa rested a string of top players through the series in Bulawayo and was still a class above the Zimbabweans. Front-line fast bowlers Dale Steyn, Vernon Philander and Morne Morkel sat out the entire ODI series ahead of a triangular tournament also involving Australia. Regular ODI skipper AB de Villiers and Hashim Amla were rested for the final game. Without them, South Africa still retained its record of winning every ODI series it has contested against Zimbabwe. The second-string pace attack of Marchant de Lange, Kyle Abbott and Wayne Parnell was easily good enough. Abbott removed Zimbabwe opener Hamilton Masakadza in the first over, De Lange (3-31) took a wicket off the first ball of the second over, and the Zimbabweans never recovered from being 4-2. At 119-9 the home team was destined for a much lower total until some late hitting by captain Elton Chigumbura in a last-wicket partnership of 46 with Tinashe Panyangara. Chigumbura made 90 with 10 fours and two sixes and launched some big shots before he had his off stump knocked back by De Lange trying another heave to the leg side.


Facing the modest total, De Kock looked likely to take South Africa charging to victory. He advanced down the track to stroke fast bowler Panyangara over mid-off for six in his best shot. But he hit the next delivery low and hard to Williams to get out. It made no difference, with Duminy and David Miller (13 not out) seeing South Africa to a comfortable win. “Very happy,” stand-in skipper Faf du Plessis said. “We started this series wanting to beat Zimbabwe convincingly. To do it 3-0 and in the fashion we finished the game off today, I’m very happy.” South Africa, Zimbabwe and Australia will now contest a triangular series in Harare starting next week. “I think our batting has to improve,” Zimbabwe captain Chigumbura said

Related News:

Australia arrives for tour The Australia cricket team arrived for its first tour of Zimbabwe in a decade, promising to play hard and shrugging off questions over the trip. Australia avoided playing in the troubled southern African country for 10 years from 2004 because of the rule of longtime president Robert Mugabe and his ZANU-PF party, which has been criticized by human rights organizations. Australia all-rounder Mitchell Marsh, whose father Geoff once coached Zimbabwe, was asked at Harare International Airport if it was right to come to Zimbabwe now. Marsh replied: “I’m not the right person to ask.” Australia’s government directed its cricket team in the mid-2000s not to tour Zimbabwe because of Mugabe, describing him as a dictator. But although it hasn’t played an international game in Zimbabwe for 10 years, Australia has sent a second-string “A” team here recently. “A couple of guys have been here over the last two years (with Australia A) and we obviously love being back here,” Marsh said. “So we are ready to have a good few weeks.” Australia will play in a triangular ODI series against Zimbabwe and South Africa, the first of a string of limited-overs contests for the Aussies as they count down to co-hosting the World Cup with New Zealand early next year. “We come here with an attitude that it doesn’t matter who we are playing. We bring a good attitude. We play hard cricket. We play to win every game,” Marsh said. Top-ranked Australia is without top-order batsmen David Warner, Shane Watson and Shaun Marsh.

The tournament begins at Harare Sports Club with Australia vs. Zimbabwe.

Source-https://www.crictoday.com

Chopra joins Sachin Tendulkar-owned team

Former Newcastle striker Michael Chopra’s Indian origin made him a top pick as he was bought quickly by Kerala Blasters in the international player draft of the Indian Super League. Chopra, the only English player among 49 players in the draft, was picked by the south Indian franchise which is part-owned by retired cricket great Sachin Tendulkar. “When the drafts came up, the first name that caught our attention was that of Chopra,” said former England goalkeeper David James, a player and manager with the Kerala Blasters. “We immediately decided to pick him and are happy to have him in this team.” Chopra will get $58,185 per season, according to organizers. Other prominent picks included French defender Bernard Mendy ($80,000) and former Manchester United midfielder Bojan Djordjic of Sweden ($58,185) by the Chennai franchise, while Spanish midfielder Jofre Mateu ($58,185) went to Atletico de Kolkata. The players were classified in pay brackets of $39,000 to $80,000 as the league, to be played from Oct. 12-Dec. 20, brought in a mix of some big names by Indian standards as well as upcoming players in a bid to boost the game’s following. The order of draft picks was decided by draw of lots, with the teams choosing from players in pre-decided sets according to their positions of play.
Unlike the biddings at cricket’s Indian Premier League, from which the ISL is inspired, there was no glamour quotient as the cricketers and film stars associated with the tournament did not turn up for the draft. Giant screens showed the team selection process inside the hall for the draft at a prominent five-star hotel facing the Arabian sea. All the teams have the option of selecting three players from outside the draft process, including a marquee player. Luis Garcia (Kolkata), Joan Capdevila (North East United FC) and David Trezeguet (Pune) are some of the marquee players announced so far, while other teams are still scouting for big names, which are being paid more than those in the draft. Teams will have squads of 22 with a similar process for Indian players completed last month. Most of the Indian players also figure in the national I-League tournament run by the All India Football Federation, which is likely to play second fiddle to the heavily-promoted ISL in the coming seasons. The I-League also features several foreign players but no big names since fees are generally much lower. “Frankly speaking, the I-League has not delivered,” All India Football Federation secretary-general Kushal Das said. “Indian football needed some adrenalin and we are hoping the ISL will help attract people to the game.”
The eight-team ISL is being organized by IMG-Reliance in collaboration with Rupert Murdoch’s Star India group. The presence of former cricketers and Indian film stars as co-owners in the league is expected to arouse interest in the cricket-crazy country of 1.2 billion where a number of franchise leagues in other sports have mushroomed over the past few years. Former India cricket captain Sourav Ganguly has a stake in Atletico de Kolkata, while Bollywood actors Salman Khan, Ranbir Kapoor and John Abraham are among the other co-owners of teams in Pune, Mumbai and Shillong, respectively. Meanwhile, organizers announced that Bangalore owner Sun Group has dropped out and will be replaced with one from Chennai that will be run in collaboration with Italian club Inter Milan. The name of the team will be announced later.
Source-https://www.crictoday.com

Wednesday 20 August 2014

Captaincy not up to standard

Former England captain Mike Brearley has stated that MS Dhoni’s captaincy and wicketkeeping is not up to Test standard. Brearley, writing in his column for The Times, said India have been a disappointment in the Test series even though their bowling has throughout been energetic and often skillful. “In three of the past four Tests, including the one at Lord’s won by India, the pitches have been designed to suit England, and to test India’s batsmen, but much of the rest of their play, including slip fielding, has been, for the last three matches, poor,” the former England skipper said. “Mahendra Singh Dhoni has batted with skill and courage, standing out above the rest. He seems able in his batting and in his captaincy to put much of the past behind him, and to avoid touchy or petulant reactions,” Brearley said. “But his wicketkeeping is not up to Test standard. Nor, I think is his captaincy,” he said.
Windies beat Bangladesh
All-rounder Kieron Pollard hit 89 and Denesh Ramdin chipped in with 74 as the West Indies overcame a disastrous start to beat Bangladesh by three wickets in their opening one-day international at the National Stadium. With five fours and six sixes off 70 balls, Pollard added a critical 145 off 132 deliveries with fellow Trinidadian Ramdin after the hosts had slumped to 34-5. The West Indies eventually got home at 219-7 off 39.4 overs after Bangladesh reached 217-9 from its 50 overs. Al-Amin Hossain took 4-51 from 8.4 overs for Bangladesh, whose 21-year-old opener Anamul Haque hammered 109 off 138 balls after being sent in by the hosts. In only his 20th match, Anamul hit 11 fours and one six in his third century at this level. He shared an opening stand of 41 with Tamim Iqbal, who contributed 26, and a sixth wicket partnership of 53 with Nasir Hossain, who also supported with 26. However, the Bangladesh innings never got the momentum needed and the final total was well short of par. Captain Dwayne Bravo took 4-32 with his medium pace for the West Indies. The hosts’ reply stuttered badly early on as Al-Amin, with support from fellow seamer Mashrafe Mortaza and off-spinner Mahmudullah, reduced them to 34-5 after 13.1 overs. Chris Gayle (3) sliced to third man off Mortaza while Al-Amin picked up Darren Bravo (7) and Lendl Simmons (0) from outside edges to the wicketkeeper. In between, Kirk Edwards was bowled by Mahmudullah as he missed a sweep.
When Dwayne Bravo clipped to deep square leg for Al-Amin’s third scalp, Bangladesh looked to have taken control of the match — only for Ramdin and Pollard to share a record sixth wicket stand. Ramdin was busy throughout while Pollard used his straight hitting to good effect. Their association of was the best sixth wicket partnership for the West Indies against Bangladesh and the best for the wicket at this venue. Bangladesh sensed a way back when Pollard and Ramdin were dismissed shortly after a rain delay of half an hour. Ramdin bottom-edged Shag Gazi onto his stumps while Pollard holed out off Al-Amin with Mahmudullah holding a fantastic running catch. But Jason Holder hit 22 not out off 15 balls to see his side home.
Source-http://www.crictoday.com

South Africa takes series

South Africa claimed the one-day international series against Zimbabwe after a 61-run victory in the second game gave the tourists an unassailable 2-0 lead. South Africa made 257 after being put in at Queens Sports Club and Zimbabwe’s batting lineup crumbled in pursuit of only an average score on a tame pitch to be bowled out for 196 in the last over. Zimbabwe was 88-6 at one point before a minor flurry of runs down the order. Sean Williams provided the only prolonged resistance with his 55. Seamers Ryan McLaren took 3-21 and Wayne Parnell 3-38 for South Africa, which clinched the series with a game to spare and without front-line fast bowlers Dale Steyn, Vernon Philander and Morne Morkel. They are being rested for the three matches. Zimbabwe limited the visitors to 211-7 after winning the toss and applying pressure through its three-man spin attack. A late partnership of 41 between tailenders Wayne Parnell and Kyle Abbott took South Africa past 250, a below-par score on the batting-friendly surface but more than enough runs in the end. Faf du Plessis made 55 for his second straight half-century of the series, while Quinton de Kock (38), JP Duminy (36) and David Miller (45) all contributed. De Kock became the joint-fastest batsman to reach 1,000 ODI runs, equaling the 21 innings it took the West Indies’ Viv Richards and England’s Kevin Pietersen and Jonathan Trott to reach the mark. Zimbabwe spinners Williams, Prosper Utseya and John Nyumbu all took two wickets each.
Zimbabwe’s chase was effectively over inside 30 overs, however, as the top order collapsed. When Luke Jongwe edged to Hashim Amla at slip to be one of McLaren’s three wickets and leave Zimbabwe 88-6, it left just Williams and the tail. The left-handed Williams hit three fours and two sixes and No. 11 Brian Vitori launched two big sixes over mid-wicket at the very end, but it was in a lost cause for the home team. South Africa maintained its record of winning every one of its ODI series against its African neighbors ahead of the last game. Steyn, Philander and Morkel will return for South Africa in an upcoming triangular series that also involves Australia.
Gibson out as coach
The West Indies Cricket Board has terminated its contract with coach Ottis Gibson and said team manager Richie Richardson will take charge of the West Indies on an interim basis. The board said in a statement that it and Gibson, a former pace bowler for Barbados who played two tests for the West Indies, had “mutually agreed to terminate their association with immediate effect.” Gibson, a former England bowling coach, began as coach of the West Indies in February 2010. Since, the West Indies have won just nine of 29 tests and 36 of 90 one-day internationals. Richardson, a former West Indies captain who played 86 tests, will lead the team for a three-match limited-overs international series against Bangladesh beginning in St. George’s, Grenada.
Source-https://www.crictoday.com