NEWS ALERT

NEWS UPDATE : Asian Cricket Third Sri Lanka-Pakistan ODI abandoned due to rain COLOMBO: The third One-day International between Sri Lanka and Pakistan was abandoned due to rain here at the R Premadasa Stadium on Wednesday. The umpires made this decision after consulting ... Australia want to master all forms of game: Clarke SYDNEY: Australia's limited-overs tour of England and Ireland represents the start of a two-year campaign to make them the top nation in all three forms of the game, captain Michael Clarke said ... Bopara glad to be back for England SOUTHAMPTON, England: Ravi Bopara is eager to make up for lost times as he tries to revive his ... South Africa name unchanged squad for England series JOHANNESBURG: South Africa have kept faith with a winning formula by naming an unchanged squad for the three-Test series in England starting next month, Cricket South Africa (CSA) announced on ...


Monday, July 18, 2011

Spot-fixing: Pak cricketers to appear in London court

Pakistan, cricketers, involved in spot fixing case, will appear in a London court tomorrow.A British court has summoned the Pakistan cricketers Salman Butt, Muhammad Asif and Muhammad Aamir to appear on Tuesday.Former captain Salman Butt will not appear in the court as his England visa expired on July 11. He will be now be represented by his Indian lawyer Yaseen Patel.However, Salman Butt has applied for England visa to personally appear during next hearing of the case.Fast bowler Muhammad Aamir is already in England while Muhammad Asif’s lawyer will appear in the court on his behalf.

Fans select their Greatest Test Team of all time

Cricket lovers from across the world have cast more than a quarter of million votes this month to choose their Greatest Test team of all time. Fans voted on the ICC's official website, www.icc-cricket.com, using a short list provided by the game's governing body, to pick their leading eleven, as part of the activities to commemorate the 2000th Test Match, which will begin at Lord's between England and India on Thursday. Four Australians, four Indians, two West Indians and one Pakistani have been named in the ?people's' Dream XI. The final selection is as follows:

Virender Sehwag

Sunil Gavaskar

Donald Bradman

Sachin Tendulkar

Brian Lara

Kapil Dev

Adam Gilchrist (wk)

Shane Warne

Wasim Akram

Curtly Ambrose
Glenn McGrath
Haroon Lorgat, ICC Chief Executive, said: "The huge interest generated during the past month was amazing as media and supporters worldwide speculated and then selected the fan's Greatest Test team of all time. It supports our view of the everlasting popularity of Test match cricket."It would have been quite special to see this team take the field of play given the array of batting and bowling talent contained within the playing eleven. "Selecting from such greats is no easy job, and not surprisingly, the selection mainly reflects modern players seen by present day supporters. There are many greats from the past who would have easily merited selection in this team, but it is nevertheless interesting to see the fans view on their greatest eleven of all time.A series of activities are planned during this week in the build-up to and during the England-India Test match to celebrate the 2000th Test.

Wasim Surprised Over Gayle Omission

LAHORE - Pakistan’s former captain Wasim Akram has expressed surprise over the omission of Chris Gayle from the West Indies team against India. “Gayle not being part of the West Indies team, I feel is baffling to the cricketing world. Judging by his recent form, he is an automatic selection. In any version of the game, he is such a dangerous and useful player,” Akram was quoted as saying by ESPN.
IPL’s orange-cap winner Gayle accumulated 608 runs in 12 matches as an opener for runners-up Bangalore in this edition. The left-handed batsman hit 2 hundreds, 3 fifties and a record 44 sixes to demoralise the opposition bowlers. Akram believes Gayle was the show-stealer of the tournament. “We have seen him in the recently concluded Indian T20 League. I mean the guy is a class act. He is a destructive batsman, a pretty safe fielder and is very handy with the ball in the shorter version,” the Kolkata bowling consultant was quoted by tv interview Sport.Gayle has been at loggerheads with the WICB after the ICC Cricket World Cup. He was not selected for the series against Pakistan due to an abdominal injury. The batsman, however, claimed that he was dropped. According to Akram, there is more to it than just cricket. “There might be something very serious going on between the player and the West Indies board but that doesn’t warrant him an axe from the side. But I think it is West Indies’ loss,” opines Akram. Meanwhile, Akram is not too pleased with the media’s role in playing up the club versus country debate. Many senior Indian players have opted out of the Windies tour just after the cash-rich league and the issue has raised concerns about players’ ethics

Afridi is still Pakistan’s T20 captain!

KARACHI: Pakistan Cricket Board’s (PCB) new official website is a reflection of the poor state of the cricket body, which is evident from the fact that it shows retired allrounder Shahid Afridi as Pakistan’s Twenty20 captain.Recently, PCB chief Ijaz Butt declared that Afridi is not captaincy material and would never lead the national side at least not during his tenure. But the chairman’s word has not reached the concerned authorities responsible to look after the PCB’s web portal.Afridi and Butt were at loggerheads, which saw the talismanic allrounder criticizing the current setup of the PCB and ended up paying Rs 4.5 million for serious breaches of disipline. Butt later claimed Afridi was responsible for Pakistan team’s losses in last two One-dayers on the tour of West Indies.Several weeks have passed since this controversy but still Afridi’s name continues to be mentioned as T20 captain until the filing of this report.

PCB, ICC may decide PTT visit in London this week

KARACHI: Pakistan, the most successful team in the fastest format of the game, are confident of raising a squad strong enough to regain the ICC World Twenty20 title in Sri Lanka next year, writes Khalid Hussain.
The Pakistanis, who lost to India in the inaugural edition of the World Twenty20 Championship in South Africa in 2007, went on to capture the crown in England two years. But they failed to defend the title in the Caribbean last year when they fell to Australia in the semifinals from a seemingly winning position.They may lag far behind teams like old rivals India, South Africa and Australia in Tests and One-day Internationals but in Twenty20 cricket Pakistan have a better success ration than any other side. They have in their ranks some of the most successful players in Twenty20 format.However, in recent times their performance in the slam-bang version of the game has dipped a bit.The exit of Shahid Afridi, widely regarded as the most destructive allrounder in Twenty20 cricket, might further dent Pakistan’s title chances in Sri Lanka. Afridi, the former Pakistan captain, retired from international cricket after a bitter fall out with the country’s cricket authorities earlier this summer.But Pakistani cricket officials are upbeat about the country’s Twenty20 future. They believe that by blooding youngsters in the team, Pakistan can boost their World Twenty20 title hopes.“We are in the process of making our plans for next year’s Twenty20 World Cup in Sri Lanka and are confident of preparing team that is good enough to win the title there,” Intikhab Alam, the Pakistan team manager, told ‘The News’ in an interview.Intikhab’s optimism springs from the fact that Pakistan have a number of talented youngsters, who are currently making their bones at the domestic circuit. Youngsters like Ramiz Raja Jr  an explosive top order batsman — showcased their talents at a Twenty20 tournament in Faisalabad last month.“Twenty20 is mostly a young man’s game,” said Intikhab, a former Pakistan Test captain. “You have to have young guys who can hit the ball out of the park. You need guys who can really fight even while defending small totals. You need guys who are exceptionally good fielders. I’m sure that Pakistan currently has plenty of such guys.”Intikhab has been keenly following the opening phase of a fast-track coaching project that concluded last week at the National Cricket Academy (NCA) in Lahore. It featured fast bowlers and batsmen. The second phase, dedicated to spinners and wicketkeepers, will begin at the NCA from today (Monday).
“Several of the youngsters who featured in the first phase seem to be really good,” said Intikhab, who has also served as Pakistan’s national coach. “We can even blood some of them in our national Twenty20 squad,” he added.The coaching project is taking place under the supervision of former Test cricketers including chief selector Mohsin Khan, Sarfraz Nawaz, Ijaz Ahmed and Abdul Qadir. The programme is being run by Intikhab, who is also Pakistan Cricket Board’s Director of Game Development.The initial phase of the project featured a number of leading players including Test batters Taufeeq Umar, Umar Akmal, Asad Shafiq and Azhar Ali. The fast bowlers, who took part in the training camp, include Sohail Tanvir and Mohammad Talha.

Bresnan returns to England Test squad

The England selectors today named a 12-man squad for the first npower Test match against India at Lord's, commencing Thursday July 21 Test captain Andrew Strauss will lead an England squad that includes Yorkshire paceman Tim Bresnan, who returns to the England Test squad for the first time since the 5th Ashes Test in Sydney in January.The inclusion of Bresnan and the omission of Middlesex's Steven Finn is the only change to the England squad that won the recent npower Test series against Sri Lanka 1-0 England National Selector, Geoff Miller, said: "This is clearly a highly-anticipated series between two of the world's top Test playing nations and I know the England team is certainly looking forward to the challenge of taking on the number one ranked team in Test cricket."Following the successful Test and ODI series against Sri Lanka we're pleased to be able to include Tim Bresnan in the Test squad after his excellent return from a calf muscle injury. Tim adds further bite to our pace attack along with James Anderson, Chris Tremlett and Stuart Broad who has greatly benefitted from getting overs and wickets under his belt for Nottinghamshire during the week."Steven Finn has also benefitted from his time at county level in recent weeks and continues to press hard for Test selection. It's very pleasing to see the depth of quality around our bowling attack particularly with a challenging four-match Test series on the horizon."
England squad - 1st npower Test

Andrew Strauss (Middlesex) (Captain)

James Anderson (Lancashire)

Ian Bell (Warwickshire)

Tim Bresnan (Yorkshire)

Stuart Broad (Nottinghamshire)

Alastair Cook (Essex)

Eoin Morgan (Middlesex)

Kevin Pietersen (Surrey)

Matt Prior (Sussex)

Graeme Swann (Nottinghamshire)

Chris Tremlett (Surrey)

Jonathan Trott (Warwickshire)

England name squad for 1st Test against India

LONDON: England on Sunday named fast bowler Tim Bresnan in their squad to face India in the first Test, which begins at Lord's on Thursday, but there was no place for Steven Finn.Bresnan takes Finn's place in the only change to the squad that beat Sri Lanka 1-0 in the recent Test series.Yorkshire paceman Bresnan is returning to the England squad for the first time since the fifth Ashes Test in January."This is clearly a highly anticipated series between two of the world's top Test-playing nations and I know the England team is certainly looking forward to the challenge of taking on the number one ranked team in Test cricket," said England national selector Geoff Miller."Following the successful Test and ODI series against Sri Lanka we're pleased to be able to include Tim Bresnan in the Test squad after his excellent return from a calf muscle injury."Tim adds further bite to our pace attack along with James Anderson, Chris Tremlett and Stuart Broad, who has greatly benefitted from getting overs and wickets under his belt for Nottinghamshire during the week.England squad to face India in the first Test at Lord's Andrew Strauss (captain), James Anderson, Ian Bell, Tim Bresnan, Stuart Broad, Alastair Cook, Eoin Morgan, Kevin Pietersen, Matt Prior, Graeme Swann, Chris Tremlett, Jonathan Trott

India collapse to 138-8 against Somerset

TAUNTON: India suffered a miserable time against Somerset as South Africa's Charl Willoughby took five wickets to reduce the tourists to 138-8 in their first innings on Saturday.This is India's only warm-up game ahead of next week's first Test against England at Lord's, but there has been little to encourage coach Duncan Fletcher and his players so far as they struggle to adapt to English conditions.
After a rain delay of more than three hours, India were finally able to take the field on the second day, but the tourists must have finished up wishing it had kept on raining.India's bowlers spent most of the first day being hit to all parts of Taunton as Somerset opener Arul Suppiah scored a century, while England Test captain Andrew Strauss guesting for the west country outfit -- and Nick Compton recorded half-centuries.It was more of the same on Saturday as Suppiah took his total to 156 before he was caught by Rahul Dravid off the bowling of Sreesanth with the score on 356.Chris Jones, who scored an unbeaten 51, moved the total onto 425-3 before Somerset declared to the relief of an Indian bowling attack without rested stars Ishant Sharma and Harbhajan Singh.A strong Indian batting line-up including Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar and Gautam Gambhir should have been able to respond with big totals of their own on a flat pitch.But left-arm seamer Willoughby had other ideas as he finished the day with figures of 5-50, while no Indian batsman passed 30. Gambhir, returning to action after missing the recent West Indies tour with a shoulder injury, was first to go as he fell on 21 after edging Willoughby to wicketkeeper Jos Buttler.Willoughby struck again to dismiss opener Abhinav Mukund with the score on 51.That brought Tendulkar together with Dravid, but India's two star batsman failed to deliver.Dravid was caught by James Hildreth off Willougby for 17 and then Yurav Singh departed for a duck to Willoughby.Tendulkar couldn't stem the tide and he went for 26 as 19-year-old Craig Meschede claimed his opening first-class wicket.India were 90-6 afer Peter Trego dismissed wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha and only Suresh Raina, who made 30, offered any resistance as they finished in danger of defeat on the third and final day.

Sunday, July 17, 2011

No burden on India to prove anything: Zaheer


Pace spearhead Zaheer Khan is confident that India can continue their run as the world's best Test team in the four-match series. The left-arm pacer said there is no pressure on India to prove anything. He feels if India can play good cricket they can win the series. "There is no burden on our team to prove anything. If we play good cricket we will win matches and then everything else will take care of itself. I've got confidence from the previous tours I've had here as well as the county season I played, which makes me familiar with conditions," Zaheer was quoted as saying by The Mirror. Zaheer, who picked up 18 wickets in the 2007 series, said English conditions suit his bowling style. "I've always enjoyed playing here, the conditions are good for my kind of bowling. Whenever the weather is good it definitely provides that little bit extra for the seamers, which I really enjoy. This year I'm also looking to do the same thing as in 2007, I will use this practice game to get my body going and get into the zone, then carry on from there," he said. The jelly bean incident of 2007 is still fresh in Zaheer's mind. Ian Bell tossed a few jelly beans from short leg towards him when was batting in the Trent Bridge Test. "In the last series you could see how hurt they were when the whole jelly bean thing happened because they lost the series. It is up to them how far they want to push it and whether they want to cross the line or not. I am very clear, I want to play the game in the right spirit and I don't think by doing that they had shown the right spirit of the game.
"I want to fight hard on the field and that is the way I will be playing it in this series as well. As a bowler I'm very confident and the way things are panning out, it will be a big series and we're looking forward to the contest," he said. Zaheer wants Sachin Tendulkar to get the 100th century in the first Test at Lord's starting Thursday. The Lord's Test will be the 100th match between the two sides, the 2,000th Test match of all time.
Zaheer is also staring at a personal milestone as he is 10 wickets closer to his target of 300 Test scalps. "That would be great. It is going to be a massive game and a massive series," said Zaheer.

Bangladesh squad named for Zimbabwe series

DHAKA: Bangladesh have included uncapped batsmen Nasir Hossain and Shuvagoto Hom in their 15-man squad for next month's tour of Zimbabwe featuring a Test and five one-day internationals. The tour marks Zimbabwe's return to Test cricket after five years of voluntary exile because of political problems in the country. The Bangladesh squad announced on Friday had no room for batsman Roqibul Hassan and Alok Kapali or all-rounder Mohammad Sohrawadi, who played against Australia in Bangladesh's last ODI series in April.Shuvagoto was in the squad for the Australia series but did not play.Former skipper Mohammad Ashraful and batsman Junaed Siddique have returned to the side after missing out on the Australia series. Pace bowler Robiul Islam, who was part of the squad in Bangladesh's last Test series against England in 2010 but had never been considered for ODIs, is also in the squad.The Test will be held from Aug. 4-8 in Harare, with the ODIs running from August 12 to 21. Squad: Shakib Al Hasan (captain), Tamim Iqbal (vice-captain), Imrul Kayes, Zunaed Siddique, Mohammad Ashraful, Mushfiqur Rahim, Mahmudullah, Abdur Razzak, Shafiul Islam, Rubel Hossain, Nazmul Hossain, Shahriar Nafees, Robiul Islam, Shuvagoto Hom, Nasir Hossain.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Strauss inspired by Tendulkar's longevity

It is not just about Sachin Tendulkar's technical proficiency but also his mental strength that helps him in rewriting records even at the age of 38, feels England skipper Andrew Strauss."It's the overall package he brings. He is technically fantastic but it's also his mental strength; the way he withstands pressure, how humble and dignified he is," Strauss said on Thursday on the eve of India's warm-up game against Somerset."It is not just his runs but his desire and motivation to keep chasing down the records. He is an example that if you are still hungry, your power shouldn't decline as you get older," said Strauss."Among the examples out there, he is the best of them." Tendulkar will be chasing a record 100th international centuries when India and England kick off the first of the four-match Test series, at Lord's on July 21.Strauss acknowledged the Indian team's consistency but backed his team to beat the world number one in front of the home crowd."They are playing hell lot of good cricket. They are tough nuts to crack, generally such men bring the best out of our players."In the last two years, we have found ourselves in good position and go on and win the Test. The level of test is going to rise over the next five weeks. It excites us for once you overcome the best, you become the best. "It's a strong unit, ably led by Mahendra Singh Dhoni, but we back ourselves to beat anyone in home conditions and India is no exception to it," Strauss said.Should England win the series 2-0 or 3-1, they would replace the visitors from the top of Test rankings. "It's important we look to win the series -- it's always dangerous to look too far ahead. You do so by playing good cricket consistently. It might take six months or 12 years to reach the goal," he said.According to Strauss, the important thing is how his team is known in the world."More than ratings, how you are acknowledged around the world, that's a far longer goal. You could become number one, but how you sustain it is important."While sub-continental teams have struggled against short-pitched stuffs in the past, Strauss does not want to make the mistake of assuming that the Indians would be susceptible to the rising deliveries."All sub-continent teams have got better at it. They have been touring here quite often. I don't foresee any dramatic weakness there."We know Chris Tremlett did very well last time. He was younger and less developed. As we saw against both Australia and Sri Lanka, (the short-pitched bowling) if done consistently and accurately, will trouble most," he said.Strauss also clarified that he looked to play against the Indians not because he wanted to sort out his problems against Zaheer Khan."It would have been the first Test match for me to play without having played any match for three weeks. The other option was to play two games for Middlesex. I am happy that I'm getting an opportunity to score some runs against their bowlers."Zaheer, incidentally, has dismissed Strauss on five occasions.

Tests take fresh guard at 2,000 not out

LONDON: A five-day contest where often neither side wins, Test cricket may seem out of touch with 21st Century life yet next week's series opener between England and India at Lord's will mark its 2,000th match.And with a sell-out crowd expected at the 'home of cricket', where India great Sachin Tendulkar could become the first player to score a hundred international hundreds it seems there is life in the old dog yet.Certainly no-one designing a sporting format today would come up with anything like Test cricket.Yet its sheer length, and associated unrivalled capacity for changes of fortune -- this month marks the 30th anniversary of England's remarkable win, following on, against Australia at Headingley -- means it can create more truly memorable moments than one-day and Twenty20 formats.Starting with a match between Australia and England at Melbourne in 1877, it took a while for Test cricket to be regarded as more important than the old rivals' own first-class matches and, South Africa apart, its global appeal in those early years was strictly limited.Tests were also, for much of their history, comparatively rare events with 803 matches played in the first hundred years compared to 1,197 in the last 34 years.There has rarely been an age since its inception when Test cricket was not facing a crisis many thought threatened its existence, with last year's spot-fixing scandal involving Pakistan players in England the latest example.If that had diplomatic, as well as sporting, ramifications so too did the Bodyline series of 1929/30, when England quicks Harold Larwood and Bill Voce bowled to a packed legside field in a bid to curb the phenomenal run-scoring of Australia great Don Bradman.But by then, the key decision that would broaden Test cricket's horizons had already been taken with two Imperial Cricket Conferences at Lord's in 1926 agreeing to England's exchange of visits with the West Indies, New Zealand and India, opening up cricket to Afro-Caribbean and Asian influences.A series of increasingly sterile Anglo-Australian contests in the 1950s and 1960s left many fearing for Test cricket's future until a vibrant West Indies side during its 'Tied Test' tour of 1960/61 showed there was another way to play the game.Even so one-day cricket migrated to the international arena and soon proved itself a commercial success.Recently the advent of the brash Twenty20, again migrating from the county to the world stage, opened up new audiences.And, with the creation of the Twenty20 Indian Premier League, vast new riches were available to players without the need to have first established their status in the Test arena.Yet as International Cricket Council (ICC) chief executive Haroon Lorgat put it on Thursday: "Test cricket is the pinnacle form of the game."It is our link to the game's origins; it is what defines greatness and it is recognised by the players as being the benchmark by which they wish to be graded and remembered."History has proven that no other form of the game can create memorable and meaningful moments like Test cricket can."Which is not to say it doesn't face huge challenges. Crowds, outside of England and Australia, are often meagre and the sheer frequency of fixtures can leave even the most ardent fan feeling overwhelmed.Day/night Tests, often heralded as a way of bringing back spectators, remain on the drawing board and whether the ICC's proposed Test Championship, billed as a way of giving greater context to individual series, captures the public imagination, remains to be seen.But so long as a critical mass within the sport believe Test cricket to be living up to its name as the ultimate challenge -- and can convince enough people beyond the boundary to provide the necessary financial support -- it will be around for some time to come.

Batsmen working hard during training camp: Azhar Ali

LAHORE: Test cricketer Azhar Ali said Friday that due to fast pitches and bowlers, top order batsmen were getting the opportunity to improve and fix issues which they were facing, tv interview.Ali was speaking during the fast track coaching programme underway at the National cricket academy. He said that batsmen had worked really hard during the camp to improve their technique and the coaches were a great help. He added that fast pitches were prepared for training and due to the conditions in Lahore batsmen got the opportunity to face fast bowling.

SLPL - Sri Lankan Premier League

Sri Lankan Premier League’s Teams and their Captains

Sunday, May 15th, 2011 Seven teams for Sri Lanka’s domestic cricket competition Sri Lankan Premier League’s and their captains has been announced. and the board plans to add two more teams to the tournament within three years.
Team: Nagenahira Nagas
Captian: Shahid Afridi
 
Team:Kandurata Kites
Captian: Kumar Sangakkara
 
Team: Uthura Oryxes
Captian: Daniel Vettori
 
Team: Ruhunu Rhinos
Captian: Sanath Jayasuriya
 
Team: Uva Unicorns
Captian: Chaminda Vaas
 
Team: Basnahira Bears
Captian: Tillakaratne Dilshan
 
Team: Wyamba Wolves
Captian: Mahela Jayawardene

Archive for the ‘Sri Lanka Premier League’ Category
36 International Players Expected To Play SLPL - 2011
Wednesday, May 25th, 201136 International Players expected to play in Sri Lanka Premier League - 2011.
The list include:

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                Australian
    Callum Ferguson
    David Warner
    Daniel Christian
    Shaun Tait

11 Indian

    Manish Pandey
    Manoj Tiwary
    Paul Valthaty
    Ravindra Jadeja
    Saurabh Tiwary
    Umesh Yadav
    Vinay Kumar
    Yuvraj Singh
    Yusuf Pathan
    Munaf Patel
    Ravichandran Ashwin

4 Bangladeshi

    Tamim Iqbal
    Shakib Al Hasan
    Shafiul Islam
    Mohammad Ashraful

1 Irish

    Kevin O’Brien

1 Jamaican

    Chris Gayle

1 New Zealander

    Daniel Vettori

8 Pakistani

    Shoaib Akhtar
    Umar Akmal
    Shahid Afridi
    Abdul Razzaq
    Umar Gul
    Sohail Tanvir
    Wahab Riaz
    Misbah-ul-Haq

4 South African

    Albie Morkel
    Herschelle Gibbs
    Lonwabo Tsotsobe
    Makhaya Ntini

2 Trinidadian or Tobagan

    Darren Bravo
    Kieron Pollard
__________________________________________________________________________________

Sri Lankan Premier League - 2011 Schedule

Sunday, May 15th, 2011
Sri Lankan Premier League dates has been announced. All of the matches in the tournament will be played in R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo. from July 19, 2011 to August 4, 2011. The seven teams will play 24 matches over the 18 days and in this all the teams will play against each other once in a league stage, before two semi-finals and a final match. All the tournament will be telecast live globally.
1st Match
Tue Jul 19 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local | 20:00 IST
Basnahira Bears vs. Kandurata Kites
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
2nd Match
Wed Jul 20 | 10:30 GMT | 16:00 local | 16:00 IST
Nagenahira Nagas vs. Ruhuna Rhinos
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
3rd Match
Wed Jul 20 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local | 20:00 IST
Uthura Oryxes vs. Wayamba Wolves
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
4th Match
Thu Jul 21 | 10:30 GMT | 16:00 local | 16:00 IST
Uva Unicorns vs. Basnahira Bears
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
5th Match
Thu Jul 21 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local | 20:00 IST
Kandurata Kites vs. Nagenahira Nagas
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
6th Match
Sat Jul 23 | 10:30 GMT | 16:00 local | 16:00 IST
Ruhuna Rhinos vs. Uthura Oryxes
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
7th Match
Sat Jul 23 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local | 20:00 IST
Wayamba Wolves vs. Uva Unicorns
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
8th Match
Sun Jul 24 | 10:30 GMT | 16:00 local | 16:00 IST
Basnahira Bears vs. Nagenahira Nagas
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
9th Match
Sun Jul 24 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local | 20:00 IST
Kandurata Kites vs. Ruhuna Rhinos
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
10th Match
Mon Jul 25 | 10:30 GMT | 16:00 local | 16:00 IST
Uthura Oryxes vs. Uva Unicorns
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
11th Match
Mon Jul 25 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local | 20:00 IST
Wayamba Wolves vs. Basnahira Bears
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
12th Match
Tue Jul 26 | 10:30 GMT | 16:00 local | 16:00 IST
Kandurata Kites vs. Uthura Oryxes
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
13th Match
Tue Jul 26 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local | 20:00 IST
Nagenahira Nagas vs. Wayamba Wolves
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
14th Match
Thu Jul 28 | 10:30 GMT | 16:00 local | 16:00 IST
Ruhuna Rhinos vs. Uva Unicorns
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
15th Match
Thu Jul 28 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local | 20:00 IST
Uthura Oryxes vs. Basnahira Bears
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
16th Match
Fri Jul 29 | 10:30 GMT | 16:00 local | 16:00 IST
Wayamba Wolves vs. Kandurata Kites
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
17th Match
Fri Jul 29 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local
20:00 IST - Uva Unicorns vs. Nagenahira Nagas
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
18th Match
Sat Jul 30 | 10:30 GMT | 16:00 local | 16:00 IST
Basnahira Bears vs. Ruhuna Rhinos
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
19th Match
Sat Jul 30 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local | 20:00 IST
Kandurata Kites vs. Uva Unicorns
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
20th Match
Sun Jul 31 | 10:30 GMT | 16:00 local | 16:00 IST
Nagenahira Nagas vs. Uthura Oryxes
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
21st Match
Sun Jul 31 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local | 20:00 IST
Ruhuna Rhinos vs. Wayamba Wolves
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
1st Semi-Final Match
Tue Aug 2 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local | 20:00 IST
TBC vs. TBC
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
2nd Semi-Final
Wed Aug 3 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local | 20:00 IST
TBC vs. TBC
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
Final Match
Thu Aug 4 | 14:30 GMT | 20:00 local | 20:00 IST
TBC vs. TBC
Venue: R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo

11th Asia Cup Cricket 2012 Bangladesh

Asia cup cricket is the most enjoyable Tournament for Asian people. Normally We seen cricket worldwide series or some traveling but this is the another enjoy to find out who is the best in Asia. It will be held between four Asian test playing teams Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka and Pakistan. This is the time 2006,India ,2008,Pakistan ,2010,Srilanka, 2012,This Time Bangladesh host the tourment

Friday, July 15, 2011

India's number-one ranking goes on the line

England will go to number one in the Reliance ICC Test Championship if it beats India by at least two Tests in the upcoming four-match series. Although currently in third position on the table, Andrew Strauss's team will leap above South Africa and India to take pole position if it finishes the series 3-1 or 2-0 to the good or better.This will add extra masala to a series that is already highly anticipated. The first Test, which starts at Lord's on 21 July, will be the 2,000th in the history of the game and the 100th between England and India. With a full house and a huge global television viewership expected, the enduring qualities of the pinnacle format of cricket will be highlighted, more than 134 years since the first Test was staged.According to the latest table, following the annual update*, England will lead the table by three ratings points if it wins the series by two clear matches. In that scenario, India would hold on to second position with South Africa slipping to third. If the home team was to sweep the series 4-0, India would drop to third place. A 1-0 or 2-1 series win for England will put its rating level with India's but India will still be top by a fraction of a point. A drawn series (0-0, 1-1 or 2-2) will ensure India stays six points clear at the top but with England edging ahead of South Africa into second position.An India series win will see it stretch its lead at the top of the table, leaving England lying in third place.The update, whereby older results are dropped or have their weightings reduced, has led to no changes in the rankings but India's lead over South Africa is trimmed from nine points to seven points. SA is not scheduled to play Test cricket until November when it hosts Australia.The most dramatic change coming from the update is Australia's loss of seven ratings points (from 107 to 100). Although Michael Clarke's men remain fifth, they are now eight points adrift of Sri Lanka in fourth place. The reason for this significant drop is the exclusion of a number of fine results Australia enjoyed in the season 2007-08, when it won all three of its series (against Sri Lanka, India and the West Indies). ICC Chief Executive Haroon Lorgat said: "As we all prepare to celebrate the staging of the 2,000th Test match, one cannot imagine it to be any better than between two of the top teams in a series that carries with it the battle for top spot on in the rankings. That is great context and we will enhance that with the ICC World Test Championship in future."Test cricket is the pinnacle form of the game and we will continue to protect and promote it above all. It is our link to the game's origins, it is what defines greatness and it is recognised by the players as being the benchmark by which they wish to be graded and remembered. History has proven that no other form of the game can create memorable and meaningful moments like Test cricket can."

"We want to be the number one Test side," says Alastair Cook

England's ODI captain, Alastair Cook, on this week's ICC Cricket World radio show talks exclusively about the win against Sri Lanka and looks ahead to England's upcoming series against India, where he wants to see his side assume the number one position in the Reliance ICC Test Championship.Former India captain Sourav Ganguly predicts a tough Indian summer for England at home, while England women's captain Charlotte Edwards looks back on the recently concluded women's quadrangular series wins at home and New Zealand's Aimee Watkins talks about her retirement from the game."It has been a good couple of months and to win the series is very pleasing. We have certainly got a lot to prove. We know as an English side, we know that we have to win. We have made a step in the right direction," says Cook.The England Test vice-captain is now looking forward to the India challenge in the upcoming four-match Test series."It is going to be a great summer, we need to go back to Test mode. We want to world number one in the Reliance ICC Test Championship. There is nothing better than playing against the current world number one, to show that we can reach there. They have got some players who will go down as all-time greats. But I am very confident that if we play well, we will be a hard side to beat,'' says Cook.The show can be used in whole or part by radio stations that want free cricket content for editorial use, while the public can also download it straight from or from iTunes.Meanwhile Sourav Ganguly looks ahead to the upcoming series between England and India."It is going to be a good series. We won there the last time in 2007 and I remember playing an important role myself. The English team has improved since then. But the England team will remember that in 2002, we managed to square the series. It is going to be a tough Indian team coming this season,'' says Ganguly.England women's captain Charlotte Edwards, who is thrilled with her team's winning performance in the recently completed women's quadrangular ODI and T20 series at home, speaks in a special focus on women's cricket."It was a great series. We were delighted to win the tournament. I think everyone contributed to the win. Lydia Greenway was exceptional with the bat, Holly Colvin and Katherine Brunt led our attack with the ball very well,'' says Edwards.New Zealand's retiring women's captain Aimee Watkins was disappointed with her team finishing last in both the formats in the quadrangular series, but Watkins was sure that it was the right time for her to step away. "It was a decision that I came to nearly six months ago, it's better to finish now and move on. I can now pay attention to my family and move to the next stage of my life. Without a doubt I will miss my teammates and the people I have met on the way," says Watkins.Apart from these exclusive interviews, there is the usual round-up of cricketing news and an update of the Reliance ICC Player Rankings.This show is 15-minute audio show and has been put together by the ICC's global broadcast partner, ESPN STAR Sports.

India focus on handling short-pitch bowling

Anticipating that they will be tested with short-pitched stuff in the upcoming Test series against England, the Indian batsmen on Thursday devoted time in the practice session to finding ways to handle the James Anderson-led pace battery. The tour opens with a three-day game against Somerset from Friday.With the county resting most of its top players, the wicket as featherbed as it comes and forecast of rain-laden next three days, the specter of Anderson is making Indians almost bypass the game against Somerset.Anderson has 24 wickets from six Tests against India - 20 of them of top order batsmen. He picked up a five-wicket haul at Lord's on India's previous visit in 2007. He has claimed Sachin Tendulkar 5 times from 6 Tests.Thus it was little wonder that Gautam Gambhir spent as much time as he could in the nets adjacent to the centre pitch. Coach Duncan Fletcher watched him from the front, then slipped behind the nets and had a few chosen words of advice for the opener.Gambhir appeared to practice against deliveries which bounced and left him. Time and again, he hopped on to his backfoot and angled down the bat in the gully area a realization that the quartet of Anderson, Steve Finn, John Tremlett and Stuart Broad are the tallest set of pacemen operating for one team in international cricket.Sachin Tendulkar, the centre of all hype and anticipation on his 100th international hundred, looked surprisingly relaxed as he preferred the throwdowns from fielding coach Trevor Penny. Later on, he warmed up and faced up to India's top medium-pacers and then kept at it for a long time.The competition between the medium-pacers was palpable though Zaheer Khan, without any such worry, preferred to gingerly run up to the crease. He might sit out on Thursday to deny England captain Andrew Strauss the practice he so desperately needs.Somerset would do their own bit to deprive Indians of any worthwhile practice. Captain Marcus Trescothick is away, England's one-day opener-wicketkeeper Craig Kieswetter is unlikely to be around and the only fast bowler of any promise, Steve Kirby, could be missing.The consolation, besides Strauss, could be young batsman of promise James Hildreth and Malaysia-born Arul Suppiah, who made headlines this season when he returned world-record figures in Twenty20 cricket - a haul of 6 wickets for 5 runs.Returning to the Indians, Sreesanth didn't hold himself back at all and looked around for nods of approval after he once claimed VVS Laxman. The slip cordon was also given practice with tennis balls which swerve and could pop out if the hands are not kept soft.

Pakistan reject ICC recommendations

KARACHI: Pakistan’s cricket authorities on Wednesday rejected a series of recommendations proposed by a special task force appointed by the International Cricket Council (ICC) to help put the sport back on track in this country.Terming a comprehensive report prepared by ICC’s Pakistan Task Force as a ‘scholarly exercise’, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) urged for a more ‘Pakistan specific’ blueprint from the force that includes a number of leading cricketing personalities.In a lengthy statement issued on Wednesday, PCB questioned the credibility of the report saying that the PTT members did not even care to visit the country before finalising it“The entire report has been prepared without PTT ever visiting Pakistan (except for a brief chat of a few hours that David Richardson had with a few ex-players during his visit to Karachi in January 2011 or perhaps some input to PTT from Ramiz),” said the statement referring to Ramiz Raja, the former Pakistan Test opener who is a PTT member.“This raises serious questions on the observations given in the report,” said the statement.According to a PCB official, a detailed response to the 38-page PTT has been sent to the ICC.The PCB has raised serious objection on the PTT’s move to question political interference in the Board, claiming that unique circumstances in Pakistan justifies it.The PTT report had expressed reservations on the authority of the President of Pakistan in appointment of the Chairman PCB and members of Governing Board.PCB’s response states, “The circumstances in Pakistan are unique and cricket administration requires and deserves government support without which international cricket may not be able to return to Pakistan. Keeping in view the extraordinary security situation in the country, having the President as Patron of PCB adds tremendous value and comfort.PCB also believes that the PTT should do more about reviving the iconic Pakistan-India series instead of just talking about the importance of the event.Whereas the Indian government issued favorable statements regarding resumption of cricketing ties between the two countries, but it seems that BCCI is still awaiting formal signal from its government in this regard. We feel that perhaps PTT/ICC should have taken a lead role in ensuring that all bilateral tour commitments are honoured by India vis-‡-vis Pakistan. We do not have anything to suggest on record that PTT/ICC made any efforts to engage with BCCI or the Government of India in this regard,” said PCB.On PTT’s observation regarding role of Mike Brearley and Greg Chappel, PCB states, “while we appreciate that Mike Brearley and Greg Chappell were made Ambassadors to support Pakistan cricket, we are yet to observe any endeavors from their side. Although with their standing in international cricket, they could have gone a long way in supporting cricket in Pakistan. We still welcome them to come to Pakistan and expect that they will now play a proactive role in supporting return of international cricket in Pakistan.”The PCB has also rejected PTT’s criticism over selection matters. In its report, PTT suggested that the national selection committee should be independent.“Regrettably, PTT did not meet the Chairman of Selection Committee to get his views. The process of selection is such that the selectors finalise a team which is sent to Chairman PCB for his formal approval.In case there are any queries with regard to any player, the same is sent back to the Selection Committee for their comments and it is entirely up to the Selection Committee to finalise the squad. They in fact sign the final squad before submitting the same to Chairman PCB for his formal approval.“We therefore feel that the recommendations of PTT that Chairman PCB has the right of veto are not based on facts. The process of selection is a time tested one and has worked for Pakistan. It ensures that there are proper checks and balances in selection matters. The view that there is interference in the selection matters is therefore factually incorrect devoid of reality and henceforth rejected.”PCB has also disagreed with PTT’s proposal that the national selection committee should have more say in the appointment of team captain.“We respectfully disagree with this recommendation. In Pakistan the system of selecting a captain is different. No reason has been given by PTT in support of its recommendation that Selection Committee is the best judge of who the captain of Pakistan should be? If this recommendation is based on what other countries follow it may not work for Pakistan. Again the authority to nominate the captain has been delegated by the Governing Board to the Chairman.”The Board also shrugged off PTT’s suggestion that Pakistan should appoint a regular manager, stressing that such a move won’t work in Pakistan.“These recommendations are probably given by PTT as ‘best business practice’ rather than Pakistan specific. To our knowledge, there are other countries that nominate managers on tour-by-tour basis and the system works well for them. Same in the case with other support staff who is appointed by the Boards. In the absence of any plausible argument in favor of change, such recommendations cannot be accepted nor implemented.”Commenting on the PCB response, Board chief Ijaz Butt said: “I am grateful to the PTT for their work. While the intent cannot be questioned, few discrepancies can be identified in the report, which PCB consider duty-bound to rectify. I wish to reiterate the assurance of ICC to us that recommendations in the report are not directives to PCB and that it is entirely up to PCB to accept and implement these. Having consulted members of our Board of Governors, we decided to send a detailed response to ICC. I hope that it will be taken in a positive spirit.

Batsmen need to work harder after new laws: Taufeeq Umar

LAHORE: Test cricketer Taufeeq Umar said Thursday that batsmen would need to work harder to take advantage of the new law which would allow the use of two new balls from each end during One-day internationals,Speaking during the fast track coaching programme taking place at the National Cricket Academy, Umar said he tried to improve his technique with the help of Mohsin Khan. He added that the participants of the programme were getting the opportunity to improve their fitness due to the hot weather. The ongoing fast track coaching programme is providing training to the country’s top batsmen and bowlers. The programme is being supervised by former cricketers Sarfaraz Nawaz, Mohsin Khan and Ijaz Ahmed.

Malinga too hot for Scotland

LONDON: Sri Lanka fast bowler Lasith Malinga ensured the islanders tour of Britain ended on a winning note as he took five wickets in a 183-run one-day international rout of Scotland here on Wednesday.Beaten in both Test and one-day series by England, the World Cup finalists proved too strong for a Scotland side who'd only the day before piled up 323 in a shock win over fellow non-Test team Ireland.Sri Lanka made 284 for seven, featuring fifties from openers Mahela Jayawardene (64) and Dimuth Karunaratne (60).They then saw Malinga, one of the most difficult bowlers in world cricket to face on account of his round-arm, 'slingshot', style take five for 30 as Scotland were shot out for 101 with Majid Haq's 34 double the next best score of any other home batsman. Malinga, 27, who has retired from Test cricket, earlier made a rapid unbeaten 32 off 15 balls with two sixes but it was his bowling that did the damage.

Ton of tons no concern to Tendulkar

LONDON: Sachin Tendulkar is on the brink of yet another record-breaking achievement as he heads into next week's first Test against England at Lord's just one century away from 100 international hundreds.But the 'Little Master' insists he is not thinking of personal milestones and reckons any records he set "might be broken by someone else"The 38-year-old Tendulkar has already scored 51 Test hundreds and 48 in one-day internationals.It would appear everything is set up for him to achieve a 'fairytale' century at Lord's, the 'home of cricket' in next week's first Test of four.However, Tendulkar told the London Daily Telegraph: "I'm not thinking of records. I'm just thinking of enjoying this tour. "The secret to any performance is not in chasing records. I think about, 'What is the best way to enjoy the game, and how can I enhance that enjoyment factor?'," added Tendulkar, whose four previous Tests at Lord's have yielded a meagre top score of 37."If I enhance the enjoyment then, naturally, the standard of play becomes higher. To me, that is more important. If I'm playing well, things can happen." Someone who is hoping to delay Tendulkar from yet another landmark achievement is England Test captain Andrew Strauss."The longer it goes on, that he is on 99, the better," Strauss said. We know what a quality player Sachin is."You only have to look at his record to see that," added Strauss, who could find himself playing against Tendulkar later this week when he 'guests' for Somerset against India at Taunton -- the tourists' only warm-up fixture before the first Test.Tendulkar achieved a goal even more cherished than a century of centuries when he helped India win the World Cup by beating Sri Lanka in a final played in front of his adoring home crowd in Mumbai in April. "It was something I had always dreamt about," he said. "You start playing cricket, and one day you walk away as part of a world champion team. "I took up playing serious cricket because in 1983, we won the World Cup, and that was a big turning point in terms of considering cricket a full-time profession," Tendulkar explained."That moment was a decisive one. I felt, 'I want to play for India one day'. It was a huge boost. From then I started working hard."Tendulkar's international career started at the age of 16 and for the past 22 years he has been subjected to a level of scrutiny and adoration few sportsmen ever experience at all, and then but briefly in their careers.However, he insisted: "I'm used to it. It began around the age of 16. But I don't feel suffocated. I feel extremely comfortable back home in whatever I do. That's how my life has been, so I believe it's normal."Perhaps the only batsman in history who has carried the hopes of a nation in the same way as Tendulkar was Australia icon Sir Donald Bradman, whose Test average of 99.94 remains unsurpassed.Tendulkar met Bradman, who died 10 years ago, when he visited his home in Adelaide following India's Test match in the city in 1992.Bradman paid Tendulkar the compliment of saying he thought the Indian maestro's batting was reminiscent of his own."To have the statement from Sir Don that my batting resembled his, that my style was exactly like his, it meant a lot," Tendulkar said.Although his batting has proved to be a statistician's delight, Tendulkar wants his career to be about more than raw figures."For me, it's not about breaking records or creating new ones. It's about adding value to my team. "Records will be set by me, they might be broken by someone else. They're not going to stay permanently. "But the impression that I leave on people will last forever, I feel. "The impression that I leave behind -- to me that is important. "If I can motivate the next (generation of) young cricketers, that will be a big contribution.

Afridi returns home leaving county cricket halfway

MUMBAI: The Indian cricket team has departed for England and on this tour the national side will include Sachin Tendulkar and other experienced players. During the England tour, the Indian team will play one Twenty20 International, five One-day Internationals and four Tests. The team will include Sachin Tendulkar, Gautam Gambhir, Yuvraj Singh, Zaheer Khan, and S Sreesanth. These players did not participate in the series against the West Indies. The first Test between Indian and England will be played on July 21 at Lords and it will be the 2000th Test in the history of cricket.

Afridi leaving English county half-way returns home

KARACHI: All rounder Shahid Afridi leaving English county championship half-way has returned home for looking after his ailing father, tv inter view.Shahid Afridi has appealed to the nation for praying his father’s early recovery.Afridi was representing Hampshire County in England, but he had to rush back home because of his father being in critical condition. Afridi’s father Shahibzada Fazlur Rahman ill for a long time was admitted into a local hospital, where he is under treatment in ICU.Talking to Tv Interview, Shahid Afridi has appealed to the nation praying for his father’s health.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

I m always available for Pakistan

The quaint St Lawrence Ground in Canterbury is a pretty picture despite the construction girders hugging the half-finished stands. The sight and smell of sand and cement haven't deterred loyal patrons from compiling their scoresheets while absorbing every ball. Others lie in deck chairs on the grass embankments, soaking in the joys of the sunny yet windy April afternoon. It's a scene far removed from the urban jungle of Islamabad, but Azhar Mahmood, Kent's Pakistan professional, is at home.It's the penultimate day of Kent's County Championship match against Gloucestershire - Mahmood's first four-day game of the season. He has just returned from stints as a studio analyst for Sky Sports and ITV for the World Cup and the IPL respectively.His run-up and pace are down by a few yards, but he is still effective, taking 4 for 56. He also looks far less menacing than in his days as a street-fighting allrounder in a sun hat, sporting a moustache.Mahmood sips his tea while keeping an eye on Kent's chase of 291 as he recounts his stop-start career with Pakistan and his life as a county pro. Would it be factually incorrect to label him a "former Pakistan player"? Is Azhar Mahmood a spent force in international cricket?"I'm always available for Pakistan. I haven't retired yet," he says with a chuckle. "On March 17 I qualified for England as well. But there's nothing like playing for your home country.A lot of people have been asking me if I want to play for England. It's like a bubble in the air, if the opportunity comes up I will take it.Turn the clock back four years to the day, probably the gloomiest in Pakistan's cricket history, when they were ejected out of the World Cup by Ireland. Mahmood had the misfortune of bowling the delivery that sealed Pakistan's fate. Their coach, Bob Woolmer, died tragically that night. Mahmood didn't know it then but his Pakistan career was to take a nose dive. It was his last international to date.Now, married to a British-Pakistani, Mahmood's options have increased. He joined Surrey in 2002, thanks to his Pakistan team-mate Saqlain Mushtaq, who was their overseas player at the time. Six seasons later Mahmood signed for Kent. It was quite a transition, going from a power-packed Surrey unit to struggling Kent, now relegated in the County Championship.In Surrey there was competition for places, as we had Saqlain, Graham Thorpe, Alec Stewart," he says. "Adam Hollioake [the Surrey captain] and Wasim bhai [Akram] are the best captains I've played under. Surrey is like a big company, but Adam made sure we gelled well. Kent is a much smaller club, and has more of a family atmosphere.The talk shifts to Pakistan. Did success come too soon for Mahmood? His CV boasts a century on Test debut: one hundred of three in his first five Tests against South Africa - no mean feat considering they had Allan Donald and Shaun Pollock in the side. Mahmood's 132 in Durban in 1997-98 was ranked at No. 8 in Wisden's Top 10 Batting Performances of all time list (compiled in 2001). Wisden wrote: "Even more impressive, for a batsman two days short of his 23rd birthday, was the way he protected the tail.That was the last time he passed 50 in a Test, though. He stayed on for a bit as a vital member of the one-day team, forming a deadly all-round partnership with Abdul Razzaq, which helped Pakistan reach the final of the 1999 World Cup. For reasons known only to his supposed betters, he was dropped from the Test side after the summer of 2001, and his one-day appearances became sporadic.
Mahmood says Pakistan's frequent captaincy changes led to poor man-management. "After Imran bhai [Khan], no other allrounder has performed like Razzaq and myself," he says. "Each captain has his own way of thinking. Some captains had more trust in Razzaq, some trusted me more. When you keep changing captains, you can't settle."He looks back at one conversation with regret. "In 2000, Gen Tauqir Zia [the PCB chairman then] took me aside and said, 'You're the next Pakistan captain.' I said, 'No, make Waqar [Younis] the captain'."Why did he hold back? "I was too young then," he says. "That was the biggest mistake I made in my life."The captaincy wasn't offered for a long term. I saw no point having it for one tour alone. It's in the culture in India and Pakistan where seniors wonder why the captaincy is given to the youngsters and not them. I thought it would disturb my cricket. That's why I said no."When Waqar became captain, I got injured. They couldn't drop Shoaib Akhtar. Wasim was too good to be dropped, Razzaq was playing well. They had to play four seamers and one spinner. Who could they have dropped?

Hameed sets sights on comeback

Yasir Hameed, the Pakistan batsman, has set his sights on a return to the national team after serving his ban from domestic cricket last season. Hameed, 33, was banned by the PCB earlier this year for for his interview with an undercover reporter from News of the World in the immediate aftermath of the spot-fixing controversy last year.Last month, Hameed won a partial victory in his battle with the tabloid, which published its final issue on Sunday, getting it to remove the video and story of him discussing the Lord's spot-fixing scandal as well as an approach by a bookie in 2004."The board's disciplinary committee had fined me Rs 300,000 and banned me for the second half of the last domestic season," the Pakistan Tribune quoted him as saying. "I have paid the fine and also served my ban."Hameed has played 25 Tests and 56 one-dayers but hasn't represented Pakistan since that Lord's Test. "I now just want to focus on my cricket again and I have started training hard," he said. "I am 33 and I feel I can still give a lot to the team."There are now several players in the national team who are over 30 and they are performing well which has encouraged me to not give up hope of playing for Pakistan again." Nearly half the Pakistan line-up in their most recent Test, against West Indies in May, was over 30 years old.Hameed's immediate target was hitting form in the upcoming domestic season. "I will try to win back the confidence of selectors and board with my performances because that is what matters."

Afridi's father admitted to hospital in critical condition


KARACHI: Shahibzada Fazalur Rehman, father of former Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi has been admitted to hospital in critical condition,Afridi's father was experiencing health problems and when his situation worsened he was immediately admitted to the hospital. Shahid Afridi who is currently playing country cricket for Hampshire in England will skip the remaining matches of his team and arrive in Karachi via Dubai to be by his father's side.

EU tour would have helped groom juniors: Samiullah

KARACHI: Pakistan Hockey team’s former captain Samiullah has said that had the juniors would have been given chance in place of the seniors for European tours then Pakistan could have benefited out of it in the Champions Trophy and Olympic games.Talking to tv interview, Samiullah said that Olympic was still one and a half year away and it was difficult to say whether all the seniors would be able to keep themselves mentally and physically fit.Former superb forward known as the ‘Flying Horse’ said that Pakistan would have to work hard for preparing to play against the European teams, who seem fully ready for big fights.

Wednesday, July 06, 2011

Michael Holding attacks India's cricket 'power'

London: Michael Holding has hit out at India for wielding "too much power" in world cricket India are the sport's financial powerhouse on account of cricket's massive following in the world's second most populous nation.They also currently boast the 50-over world champions and the game's top-ranked Test side.But there have long been concerns about the way the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) uses its influence in the sport's corridors of power.For example, last week the International Cricket Council announced the controversial Decision Review System would be made mandatory in all Tests and one-dayers.However, it added that ball-tracking deviceswhich India objects to -- would only be used to assist in lbw decisions with the agreement of both teams."I have no sympathy with India," said former West Indies fast bowler Holding."They have too much power."I do not believe any country should be able to dictate to the rest of the world," Holding, now a television commentator, added."In the Caribbean we have been fans of Brazilian football for many years. Brazil has dominated many World Cups."But they could never go to FIFA and say 'this is what we want'. They could never dictate the path of the sport," Holding insisted."Only the organisation that runs the sport should dictate its path."Individual boards are dictating certain things and that's something I can't agree with."Holding was speaking at the MCC Spirit of Cricket Cowdrey Lecture delivered by Sri Lanka's Kumar Sangakkara at Lord's on Monday.

Players to blame for team's problems: manager

KARACHI: A small cabal of Pakistan's cricketers had interfered in the team's management, leaked confidential information and contributed to a divisive culture, the team's long-term manager has said.The team has been riven by controversy in the past three years with significant player turnover and a revolving door in the captaincy while three players were also embroiled in a spot-fixing scandal and received lengthy bans.There were times when 15 minutes after a team meeting television channels were running tickers about things that happened or were discussed in the meeting," Intikhab Alam tv Interview."There are many things that are not for public and media consumption and when they are leaked to the media it creates problems within the team."This is a big problem in the team. There is a need for these players to sit down and discuss everything including reservations with the management."These things have damaged Pakistan cricket and are not good for our image.Alam, however, said the Pakistan Cricket Board had taken a strong line against the players, forced some out and tried to change the culture in the past 12 months."We are trying to set things right now and developing a more positive culture," the former leg-spinner added."We have also tried reforming and reasoning with the players and they are now responding well which is good for Pakistan cricket."The 69-year-old Alam, who played 47 tests and was coach from Oct. 2008 to March 2010 before being appointed as manager, admitted he had been critical of the team's culture in his reviews."Whatever I have written in my reports is facts and what I honestly believe is true and is my own personal assessment of the players," he added."If I try to hide these things I am not helping Pakistan cricket or these players. (The) truth must come out." (Reuters)

Tuesday, July 05, 2011

ICC ruling to end presidential appointment of PCB chairman

KARACHI: Pakistan cricket will not challenge the International Cricket Council’s (ICC) directive to member boards to free themselves from government interference within two years.The ICC annual conference upheld a constitutional amendment last week to provide for the principle of free elections and the independence of member boards.In Pakistan, the president is the chief patron of the board (PCB) and directly appoints the chairman.“We have no intention of challenging the ICC ruling as it was approved by the general council in Hong Kong last week,” PCB Chief Operating Officer Subhan Ahmad told Reuters.The PCB would soon meet with government officials to inform them about the ICC ruling.“Once our chairman, Ijaz Butt, returns home later this month he will brief the chief patron on the changed scenario,” Ahmad added.The ICC has given members a maximum of two years to reorganise their boards or face sanctions.Ahmad said that after consulting legal advisors and meeting government official the PCB would start working on making the necessary amendments in its constitution to bring it in line with ICC requirements.“It will take a few months but we also want to ensure this  process is completed without a hitch,” he added.Last month, PCB Chairman Ijaz Butt called for an end to political interference in the board’s row with former captain Shahid Afridi, saying it was damaging the sport.

Court summons PCB on Kaneria case

KARACHI: Sindh High Court (SHC) on Monday summoned cricket authorities to explain why they have not cleared leg-spinner Danish Kaneria to play after he was released without charge in a spot-fixing case.Kaneria and fellow Essex bowler Mervyn Westfield were arrested last year on charges of spot-fixing during a Pro40 match against Durham in 2009. Kaneria was later released without being charged but Westfield faces criminal proceedings.Kaneria featured in Pakistan's Test series against England last year but has not been
selected since for international matches because he has not been formally cleared by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB).His lawyer Farogh Naseem told that the PCB has been summoned to appear in court on July 26, after the 30-year-old went to court last week in a bid to revive his international career."I have given every document to the PCB but they are not clearing me. I have committed no crime and that's why Essex police and my county have cleared me in that spot-fixing case," Kaneria had told."My priority is to play for Pakistan but I don't know for what crime I am being punished by the PCB. Every time they announce a squad and every time they give contracts to players, they say Kaneria is not cleared."The wily leg-spinner has taken 261 wickets in 61 Tests, besides taking 15 in 18 one-day internationals.The PCB was forced to form an integrity committee by the International Cricket Council after a separate spot-fixing case in England last year ended in lengthy bans for Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Aamer.

Cook’s ton helps England reach 246-7 against SL

LONDON: England captain Alastair Cook's career-best century kept Sri Lanka at bay in the third one-day international (ODI) at Lord's here on Sunday.But with no other England batsman making more than Kevin Pietersen's 41, the hosts were still held to 246 for seven.England's total would have been considerably worse had not Cook been reprieved on 15 when Mahela Jayawardene dropped a regulation slip catch As it was Cook, also dropped by Thilina Kandamby at third man on 103, went on to make 119. He shared stands of 72, with Ian Bell (30), and 75, with Tim Bresnan (26) for the fifth and sixth wickets respectively after England had collapsed to 85 for four.Cook was on course to become only the second batsman, after fellow England left-handed opener Nick Knight, to bat through a full 50-over ODI innings when he was run out attempting a bye by Sri Lanka wicketkeeper Kumar Sangakkara.In all he faced 143 balls with 13 fours -- not the most rapid run-rate but hugely valuable in the context of the match.This was only Cook's second century in 29 ODI innings and his highest, surpassing the 102 made against India at Southampton in 2007.The 26-year-old who in Sri Lanka's 69-run series levelling win at Headingley on Friday won the toss and fielded because England would "quite fancy chasing" only to see the tourists pile up 309, opted to bat first at Lord's.Cook, belying his reputation as a slow scorer, forced Angelo Mathews off the backfoot for four in the first over.It was the only over Mathews, struggling with a knee injury, bowled.Cook should have been out when he edged Nuwan Kulasekara only for the normally reliable Jayawardene to drop the two-handed chance. Pietersen, looking in excellent touch, dominated a third wicket stand of 49, of which Cook's share was just seven, before leg-spinner Jeevan Mendis checked England's recovery with two wickets. First he induced Pietersen, who faced just 43 balls, to sky a sweep to deep square leg where Suraj Randiv held a well-judged catch and Mendis then had left-hander Eoin Morgan lbw for four.

3rd ODI: England win toss, bat against Sri Lanka

LONDON: England captain Alastair Cook won the toss and elected to bat against Sri Lanka in the third one-day international at Lord's here on Sunday. Both sides were unchanged from the second one-day international at Headingley on Friday which Sri Lanka won by 69 runs to level the five-match series at 1-1 after Cook won the toss and fielded. Teams England: Craig Kieswetter (wk), Alastair Cook (captain), Jonathan Trott, Kevin Pietersen, Eoin Morgan, Ian Bell, Tim Bresnan, Graeme Swann, Stuart Broad, James Anderson, Jade DernbachSri Lanka: Tillakaratne Dilshan (captain), Mahela Jayawardene, Kumar Sangakkara (wk), Thilina Kandamby, Dinesh Chandimal, Angelo Mathews, Jeevan Mendis, Nuwan Kulasekera, Suranga Lakmal, Suraj Randiv, Lasith MalingaUmpires: Billy Bowden (NZ) and Nigel Llong (ENG), Third umpire: Richard Illingworth (ENG)
Match referee: Alan Hurst (AUS)

Bravo overshadows Sharma to earn West Indies draw

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados: Another incisive spell from Ishant Sharma was upstaged by resilient West Indies batting led by Darren Bravo as India had to settle for a draw in the second Test on Saturday.Man-of-the-match Sharma captured four for 53, finishing with match figures of 10 for 98, as the West Indies, chasing 281 for victory, ended on 202 for seven in their second innings when bad light stopped play.India's hopes of a historic series-clinching victory were almost derailed as Darren Bravo, whose 73 was the top score, and Carlton Baugh Jr, not out on 46, added 69 for the seventh wicket.But rain, which had dogged the Test over the first four days, returned to ruin an exciting finish just when it appeared that India were on the back foot.The result meant that India held on to a 1-0 lead in the three-match series, after they won the first Test by 63 runs at Sabina Park in Jamaica.The rain came at the right moment for India and interrupted the West Indies' flow, stopping play for half an hour with the hosts needing 102 from the final 18.3 overs, after Baugh and Bravo started to blossom.Sharma had Bravo caught behind, his 174-ball innings containing eight boundaries, and then added to Sammy's batting woes when he trapped him lbw for a duck in his final over.After Sharma's next delivery to Ravi Rampaul, umpires Asad Rauf of Pakistan and Ian Gould of England ushered the players off the field.India will now look to clinch the series when the final Test opens on Wednesday at Windsor Park in Dominica.Their bid for victory had hit a snag before tea, when Bravo and fellow left-hander Shivnarine Chanderpaul navigated West Indies to 108 for three.India had the hosts wobbling on 55 for three, but Bravo and Chanderpaul put on 54 for the fourth wicket either side of the break to stem the fall of wickets.Off-spinner Harbhajan Singh moved to within two scalps of 400 Test wickets when he dubiously trapped Chanderpaul lbw for 12 shortly after tea.Ball-tracking TV replays suggested that the batsman might have been very unfortunate.India continued to hunt for victory, but Baugh came to the crease and batted sensibly, seeming to turn the tide in the West Indies' favour before the rain stopped him and Bravo in their tracks.Before lunch, Sharma and Praveen Kumar left West Indies shaky on 51 for two.Sharma made the breakthrough when he had opener Lendl Simmons caught at first slip for 14, edging a loose drive, and Kumar had Ramnaresh Sarwan caught at second slip for eight, top-edging a cut, leaving West Indies 27 for two.After lunch, Sharma removed opener Adrian Barath in the first 10 minutes, caught at third slip for 27, but West Indies showed some fight with the bat for the first time.Earlier, V.V.S. Laxman had been dismissed for 87  following on from his 85 in the first innings as India moved to 269 for six in their second innings before declaring just over an hour into the morning.

Sunday, July 03, 2011

Laxman, Dravid put India in charge of second Test

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados: Half-centuries from V.V.S. Laxman and Rahul Dravid put India in a formidable position in the rain-hit second Test against West Indies on Friday.Laxman was unbeaten on 72 - his second half-century in the match - and Dravid was dismissed for 55, as the Indians reached 229 for three in their second innings for an overall lead of 240 on the rain-affected fourth day.Laxman and Dravid, the visitors' most decorated batsman, featured in three half-century stands that fortified the World No.1 Test team's position.Dravid added 63 for the second wicket with opener Abhinav Mukund, and put on 65 for the third wicket with Laxman, who then shared an unbroken stand of 75 with Virat Kohli before the close.

Dravid, a century-maker in the first Test, reached his 50 from 157 balls, driving Fidel Edwards through mid-off for a deuce in the first over after tea.

But he fell in the fifth over after the break, when he top-edged a cut at a short, rising ball outside the off-stump from Edwards, and was caught behind. He struck just three boundaries from 171 deliveries in close to four hours.

When he departed, Laxman took control, reaching his 50 from 120 balls, sweeping leg-spinner Devendra Bishoo behind square leg for two.

He was fortunate on 69 however, when West Indies captain Darren Sammy dropped a return catch in the last hour.

Laxman however, preserved, and his near four-hour long innings contained six fours from 171 balls.

He and Kohli, not out on 26, batted through the final two hours of the day to ensure that India enhanced their chances of wrapping up their second straight Test series victory in the Caribbean.

Dravid and Laxman had started to beef up the Indians' lead, carrying them to 143 for two at tea.

The two batsmen drew upon their vast experience to consolidate their side's position, after Mukund, playing in his second Test, fell in the first hour after lunch for 48, gloving a snorter from Edwards.

India had reached 62 for one at lunch, after play started 50 minutes later than regularly scheduled.

The Indians resumed on their overnight total of 23 without loss, but opener Murali Vijay departed in the second full over of the day, when he was caught behind for three off Ravi Rampaul, edging an unplayable delivery that moved away sharply.

Mukund and Dravid started to blossom, following a circumspect start against a West Indies attack that continued to exploit the lively Kensington Oval pitch.

Mukund drove West Indies captain Darren Sammy through mid-off for his second boundary to get into stride, and Dravid steered a delivery from Edwards between third slip and the gully for his first four.

Dravid however, had an anxious wait on nine, when he turned a delivery from Sammy to mid-wicket, and fielder Adrian Barath claimed a low catch, diving forward.

But a consultation between on-field umpire Asad Rauf and TV umpire Gregory
Brathwaite gave Dravid a reprieve.

Kaneria files petition against PCB

KARACHI: Pakistan Test-leg spinner Danish Kaneria Saturday finally filed a petition to go for a legal battle against the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), which would be taken up for hearing on Monday.The etitioner’s lawyer Dr. Mohammad Farough Naseem accompanied by Danish Kaneria himself filed the constitutional petition in SHC this morning.The petitioner has made a plea that he had been acquitted of the charges of spot fixing in spite of that PCB was persistently ignoring him. He also stated that he was quite fit and he wanted to use his potential for the national cricket team, but he was not given the chance.SHC would take up this petition for hearing on Monday.

Rawalpindi Rams win Super Eight T20 Cup

FAISALABAD: Rawalpindi Rams won the Super Eight Twenty20 Tournament defeating Karachi Dolphins by nine runs in super over after the final tied in an exciting day-night contest here at the Iqbal Stadium on Friday.The interesting match began lately due to rain and Rawalpindi Rams winning the toss put Karachi Dolphins into bat on a we ticket.Karachi Dolphins made 16 runs for five wickets in the allotted 20 overs with the help of an aggressive 64 by Ramiz Raja unior.Rawalpindi batted very well and were looking in sight of victory but lost all their wickets for an even score in 20 overs.After the match was tied, it was decided on super over.Batting first, Rawalpindi made 16 off the over but Karachi could score only seven runs and lost the match and the title.