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Sreesanth's comeback inspires Irfan

Posted by: Venk / Category:


Out-of-favour seamer Irfan Pathan finds inspiration in S Sreesanth's spectacular return to international cricket.

And, Irfan believes he too can claw his way back to the Indian team with some solid performance in domestic cricket.

Back in action for the ongoing Ranji Trophy, Irfan said he would leave no stone unturned in his efforts to impress the selectors and stage a comeback like Sreesanth did.

"Sreesanth has made an excellent comeback. He was doing well in domestic matches earlier and after returning to the India team, he put up an performance which is quite inspirational. I want to make a comeback like him," Irfan told PTI from Vadodara.

"I met him before Ranji match, I am impressed with his body language also. This kind of comeback strengthens the believe that you can also do it in same manner by improving your performance," said the left-arm seamer.

Back from a 19-month hiatus, Sreesanth was instrumental in India's 144-run victory in the second Test, where his five-wicket haul in the first innings forced the Lankans to follow-on in Kanpur.

Irfan said every domestic match has become of immense importance for him and it would take a string of good performance to make a comeback.

"Every cricketer has to improve to cement his place in the national team. I am trying to give my best in every domestic match and hope it will get the attention of selectors," said Irfan, who was recently demoted from Grade B to Grade C in BCCI's central contract.

Irfan played his last Test match against South Africa in Ahmedabad last year, while his last one-day appearance came against Sri Lanka when India toured the island nation earlier this year.

Irfan said he was free of niggles and was in good nick with the bat.

"I am totally fit now and bowling long spells. I have also cracked a half-century recently. It would be better had I been in India team in this series. But it's nice to see India claiming its 100th Test victory," he said.

Irfan, who has 100 wickets from 29 Tests, also feels that their next Ranji Trophy Super League match against Group B leader Karnataka is going to be a tough encounter.

"It is going to be a very important match for us. They are the group leader and playing well, but we are also ready to take them on at our home ground," Irfan said.

On the incident in which four Baroda bowlers, including Salim Veragi, Rajesh Pawar and Sankalp Vohra were called up for suspect actions, Irfan said, "This is a new system introduced by the BCCI and the umpires are only following the rules. They cannot do much about it."


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Mumbai win will give India top spot

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India will reach the top spot in the ICC Test Championship table if it beats Sri Lanka in the third and final Test match in Mumbai.

The Mumbai Test starts from Wednesday.

India lead the series 1-0 and are currently placed third in the Test rankings with 119 points.

If India can beat Sri Lanka in the Mumbai Test and wrap up the series 2-0, they will 124 points pushing South Africa (122) and Sri Lanka behind.

But, in case the Mumbai Test ends in a draw, India will find themselves tied on points with South Africa.

In case Sri Lanka wins the Test, both teams will retain their present standings.

The Test Championship table is updated only after the end of a Test series.


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ICC to discuss anti-doping code

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The contentious anti-doping code will top the agenda when the ICC's Chief Executives' Committee sits down for its last meeting of the year.

The Committee will also discuss preparations for the 2011 World Cup and the post-2012 FTP

The Decision Review System will also be discussed during the meeting.

The two-day meet, to be chaired by ICC Chief Executive Officer Haroon Lorgat, will also consider the host country of the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy.

"Among the matters up for discussion are the ICC events for the period 2012-2020 and beyond as well update on decision review system (DRS), online piracy and the Future Tours Programme post-2012," an ICC statement said.

"The CEC will receive an update report on preparations for the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011. It will also receive update reports on global response to broadcast piracy and online infringements, match officials' performances, the anti-racism and anti-doping codes and international cricket results," it added.

The CEC will also begin discussions on the location and scheduling of ICC events for the period after 2015.

ICC President David Morgan and the Chairman of the ICC Cricket Committee Clive Llyod, will also attend the meeting, which will be the fourth such gathering this year.

The CEC comprises the chief executives of the 10 Test-playing Members and three representatives from the ICC Associate and Affiliate Members.


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Efficient India complete 100th Test win

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India achieved their biggest victory against Sri Lanka and in the process clinched their 100th Test win on the fourth day of the second Test in Kanpur. India's previous best against their neighbors was a victory by an innings and 119 runs in 1994 and they bettered that with ease today. Thilan Samaraweera resisted the inevitable with an assured fifty but it was always just a matter of time before India wrapped up the game.


The only question at the start of the day was how long Sri Lanka would delay defeat. They batted positively, adding 149 runs in the first session, but India kept taking wickets at regular intervals. Samaraweera was involved in two fighting partnerships with Prasanna Jayawardene and Ajantha Mendis, which not only proved that the pitch wasn't bad for batting but also showed the top order in poor light.


India's only concern was Zaheer Khan's no-ball problems (12 in this game and 21 in the series) but he started the day by dismissing Angelo Mathews in his first over. Mathews had hit three consecutive fours, which included a pull, and Zaheer placed a man at deep square-leg and tested Mathews with more bouncers. The first was fended off in an ungainly manner and the next was top-edged to backward point where Rahul Dravid took a lunging catch.


Samaraweera proceeded to stitch together a 61-run partnership with Prasanna who, much like in the first innings, flattered to deceive. He was looking good with his cuts and sweeps but was cleaned up by an off break from round the stumps from Harbhajan Singh. It drifted away and broke back in but Prasanna left a big bat-pad gap and was bowled. Muttiah Muralitharan indulged himself with a typical hit-and-giggle knock filled with slog sweeps but fell, going for yet another big hit.


Samaraweera, who then added 73 runs with a determined Ajantha Mendis to frustrate India, was rarely troubled during his stay, the highlight of which was a whippy on-drive to a delivery on off and middle stump from Sreesanth. He rarely looked hurried, tackled the spinners and seamers and unfurled several pleasing on drives. The series now moves to Mumbai for the third Test that starts on December 2.


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Sreesanth gives India total control

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Indian cricket's prodigal son Sreesanth returned to international cricket in style with a five-for, and six wickets overall, to leave Sri Lanka staring at defeat in the second Test in Kanpur. Sri Lanka, forced to follow on after tea, were tottering in the second innings still 356 runs adrift with six wickets standing.

Though India's spinners and Sri Lanka's batsmen - the senior-most duo contrived a run-out while following on - contributed to the collapse, most of the work was done by Sreesanth, playing his first international game in 19 months. For nine successive overs in the first session, and for seven on the trot in the second, he ran in hard, hit the deck and found life in a slow pitch. He led the way in the second innings too, removing Tillakaratne Dilshan with a leg cutter, before Sri Lanka started to disintegrate against spin.

Mahela Jayawardene and Prasanna Jayawardene offered some resistance with a 60-run partnership in the first innings but Sri Lanka threatened to implode without much fight in the second. Tharanga Paranavitana was trapped by an arm-ball from Virender Sehwag and Kumar Sangakkara chopped a topspinner from Harbhajan on to the stumps.

However, the decisive moment of the collapse, and something that exposed the visitors' mindset, was the run-out of Mahela, the first-innings top scorer. Sangakkara pushed the ball to the right of a straightish midwicket and called for a suicidal run but Mahela had no chance to beat the throw from Yuvraj Singh. Perhaps the fact that they had lost nine wickets in just over two sessions and yielded their biggest-ever lead to India had knocked the fight out of them.

Or perhaps it was just Sreesanth. Green Park was where he played his last Test 19 months ago before disappearing from the sports pages and becoming an occasional feature on Page 3. Today, he stormed back, lifting India with spells that read 9-2-28-3 in the first session and 7-2-18-2 in the second.

His bowling was sublime through the day but the high point of his redemptive journey was the delivery that gave him his fifth wicket, a peach that cut away from the middle stump line to take out the off stump of the clueless Rangana Herath. The celebration was muted: a folding of palms in prayer and gratitude, the right hand raised to accept the high-fives from his team-mates and the face slowly creasing into a smile. It wasn't dramatic, it wasn't the usual Sreesanth theatrics that make him perhaps the most complex cricketer in this side. Today, those signature self-exhortations at the top of the run-up were rarely seen, as was any special celebration after a wicket.

It was all about the bowling. If he troubled the batsmen with seam movement in the morning, he found some reverse swing post-lunch with the old ball and continued to harass the batsmen. He got the big breakthrough of the second session when he terminated the fighting partnership between the two Jayawardenes. Prasanna had taken an aggressive route, slog sweeping and driving the spinners and, though he faced Zaheer Khan, he didn't have to play Sreesanth till he reached 35. Sreesanth probed Prasanna with 11 testing deliveries that included leg cutters, inswingers and a lovely inswinging yorker but Prasanna stood firm. However, Prasanna chased the 12th, a short and wide one, and got a thin nick through to the keeper.

That was a recurring theme. Sreesanth would severely test the batsmen with a cluster of good deliveries and would invariably pick up a wicket with one slightly wide from the stumps. His pace wasn't frightening (135 kmph was the average), there were no fiery bouncers and he didn't swing it around corners, but what he did was land each ball on a probing line and length, and cut it either way just enough to test the batsmen. He had his share of luck too - two batsmen played on off the inside edge - and Sri Lanka's batsmen didn't tailor their techniques to the demands of the pitch.

Instead of playing as close to the body as possible on a pitch with variable bounce, the batsmen erred by playing away. Tharanga Paranavitana was set up by a bouncer that crashed into his shoulder before he pushed at one cutting away from him. Sangakkara, who faced 24 deliveries from Zaheer Khan today, fell in the first over he faced off Sreesanth. Sangakkara played out three straight deliveries but was lured into a cover drive by a full and wide one, and ended up dragging it on to his stumps. Thilan Samaraweera was the next to go, pushing hard and early at a length delivery cutting away from him.

Not everything went Sreesanth's way though. He produced an edge from his best delivery but it didn't get him a wicket. Jayawardene, on zero, pushed at one that cut away late and got an edge but neither MS Dhoni nor Sachin Tendulkar at first slip went for the catch. It was the wicketkeeper's catch. Jayawardene got another reprieve on 25 when he edged a late cut off Harbhajan to first slip where Rahul Dravid couldn't hold on to a sharp chance. The same thing happened in the second innings too but it didn't matter on either occasion as Mahela couldn't carry on for long.

It was not a completely solo show by Sreesanth, though, as the debutant Pragyan Ojha kept things tight, allowing Dhoni the luxury to attack from the other end. Ojha also got the big wicket of the first innings when he beat the top scorer Mahela in the flight and produced a mishit to mid-on. Ojha also hastened the end of the Sri Lankan innings post-tea by trapping Muttiah Muralitharan in front but Sreesanth was undoubtedly the star today.


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"The Wall" Makes History..

Posted by: Venk / Category: ,


"The Great Wall Of India" Rahul Dravid makes history, he sur passes Allan borders
Record 11,174 and becomes the 4th highest run taker in the history of the game.

Rahul Dravid compiled a serene, yet commanding, 144 to lead India to a position of immense strength by lunch on the second day of the second Test in Kanpur. During his innings, Dravid overtook Allan Border's record of 11,174 Test runs to become the fourth-highest run-scorer in Tests.


The stand-out factor in Dravid's batting during this series has been his intent. He's been decisive, in defense and attack, and has been looking to score. Today he charged down the track, played gorgeous inside-out cover drives by stretching forward on that front foot, punched skillfully off the back foot but what stood out was a delectable late cut against Ajantha Mendis.


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Guess Who..?? A Rare Pic..

Posted by: Venk / Category:


Can you guess who is the lady on the pic? It is hard to find when you see it the
First time, take a closer look and see. Still unable to find out.?? Ok i'll tell you
Its none other than the great master blaster sachin tendulkar himself, in a fancy dress competion, this is a very rare pic, i think his fans will be astonished when they watch this.


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Sehwag and Gambhir dominate

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Lunch India 131 for 0 (Sehwag 70*, Gambhir 59*) v Sri Lanka

Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir started sedately before shifting gears to launch India into a great position by lunch on the opening day of the second Test in Kanpur. Sri Lanka managed to keep things tight with the new ball but everything went pear shaped for them with the introduction of the spinners as the openers looted 73 runs from nine overs of spin.

It seemed Sehwag was waging a battle with himself in the initial period. Off the third ball he faced, he chased a wide delivery and edged it but was given a reprieve as Prasanna Jayawardene dived across and distracted Mahela Jayawardene who spilled the catch at first slip. He then tried to go hard at Angelo Mathews couple of times and was beaten. You felt that this was the make or break moment as either Sehwag was going to combust due to impatience or he will change tack and be more watchful. He chose the latter route and started to play defensively with the full face of the bat and as close to the body as possible. It has to be said, though, that the seamers did their best to tempt Sehwag into indiscretion. They kept the ball full and outside off, inviting the drives, but Sehwag resisted after the initial nervy period. That his first boundary came only in the 27th delivery he faced said much about his state of mind. Occasionally, Welegedera got the ball to nip back in and once, even had a plausible shout for lbw turned down, but couldn't break through.

Gambhir was the more assured of the two against the new ball. He was out in the last Test, playing away from the body against Welegedera, and took care to play as close to the body as possible. He did pick up quite a few runs in the third-man region but the slow pitch was always going to throw up that kind of a wagon wheel.

The presence of three spinners and just one frontline seamer was always going to pose problems and it did. It was the nervous duo of Rangana Herath and Ajantha Mendis who wilted under the assault of the openers. It was a fascinating phase as both batsmen had decided to go after the spinners from the word go and the two bowlers couldn't handle the heat. Gambhir lashed out at Herath in his first over, creaming him for three boundaries: He whipped through covers, cut to point and stepped out to loft to the straight boundary.

If Gambhir took Herath out of the attack with his aggression, Sehwag nearly did the same to Mendis. He tried to lash out against Mendis but mistimed the first few balls. There was a sense of edginess in the air but Mendis couldn't keep up his nerve. He floated a full toss, offered a long-hop and slid one down the legs and Sehwag disposed each one of them to the boundary. The attacking spirit was best seen in the last over before the lunch when Sehwag launched himself against Mendis and heaved an off break high over long-on.


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MS Dhoni declared fit for Kanpur Test

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Indian captain MS Dhoni has been declared fit to play the second Test against Sri Lanka in Kanpur starting tomorrow. Dhoni hurt his finger during the Ahmedabad Test which ended in a dull draw last Friday and the team management rushed wicketkeeper Dinesh Karthik to the city as a last minute back-up. Karthik will now return to Dharamshala to join his Tamil Nadu team-mates for the Ranji Trophy match against Himachal Pradesh, also starting tomorrow.

Dhoni had arrived at Green Park on Sunday without any taped fingers nor did he seem in any sort of pain. He batted his full quota during training, hit powerful, flat-bat strokes, and enthusiastically bowled seam-up immediately after removing his batting pads.

With Karthik returning, the left-arm spinner Pragyan Ojha too could be released for Hyderabad's Ranji Trophy match. India are likely to persist with Harbhajan Singh and Amit Mishra for Kanpur.

Dhoni had played an important role in the first Test, scoring a century and adding 224 runs with Rahul Dravid, a partnership that helped India reach 426 in the first innings after a top-order collapse. He then held a spectacular diving catch to his left to dismiss the Sri Lankan opener Tharanga Paranavitana.


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The Master Does It Again. Proud To Be His Fan.

Posted by: Venk / Category:


"The Master" touches another milestone in his long lasting carrier, none other
Batsman can do this in the world. He has reached "30000" runs including Both
ODI & Test cricket. I bet you no one in this world can do this even if they last
For 20 years or 30 years. thats why he is called "The Master Blaster", Wow what
A great cricketer he is. He has now got 88 centuries in international cricket
I would keep on telling about him so i'll finish now see you with nother post.

Sachin Tendulkar, Gautam Gambhir, and a dead Ahmedabad pitch (21 wickets and seven centuries in five days) put paid to Sri Lanka's dream of a first Test win in India. Gambhir played out 110 deliveries for 40 runs, and Tendulkar 211 for 100 runs; both of them looked entirely at home in the role of saving a Test, not letting dot balls affect their minds.

By the time the final session of the match arrived, the only question left unanswered was whether Tendulkar would get to his 88th international century. Kumar Sangakkara didn't seem pleased with being kept on the field in the mandatory overs while Tendulkar moved towards the ton. The bowlers started bowling way outside off stump, and Tendulkar retorted in his own inimitable manner. He walked across to a delivery so wide it would have been called in an ODI, and flicked it to the square-leg boundary to get into the 90s. He had to work similarly hard for the rest of the runs too. As soon as he got there, the captains agreed to call off the match with six overs still to go.

Sri Lanka started the day 144 ahead, and needed eight Indian wickets to force a result, but met a docile pitch and determined batting. The only break in concentration came in the second session when Gambhir stepped out to launch Rangana Herath out of the ground, and ended up losing his wicket. That was not before he had reached his seventh century: four of them, including his last three, have come in the second innings, two of them in match-saving scenarios. He now averages 59.55 in the second innings, against 54.22 overall.

Sri Lanka were not helped by the hamstring injury to Dammika Prasad, who didn't bowl in the first session, and Muttiah Muralitharan's ineffectiveness: he didn't take a wicket in 38 second-innings overs. Previously Murali had gone wicketless in the second innings of a match only six times; the most he had bowled in such scenarios was 17 overs. Their problems on the unhelpful pitch were summed up by how Amit Mishra, nightwatchman from yesterday, got to his personal best score and frustrated them for 26 deliveries on the fifth morning.

Gambhir, at the other end, was in his Napier-like mode from earlier this year, when he batted 643 minutes for 137 runs to save the Test. Even today, he was not interested in scoring, or in other words he didn't let being stuck at one end bother him much. Angelo Mathews bowled well in Prasad's absence, hitting good lengths consistently, getting some of them to stay low and getting the odd one to seam away off the rare crack on the pitch. But Gambhir took most of the strike to him, playing 30 consecutive balls from Mathews for no run in the first hour, certain in his judgement outside off, and coming forward to straighter deliveries to negate the odd shooter.

Against spinners, Gambhir preferred to stay back, or jump out of the track and get close enough to the delivery. He did pull out the big hits in the 90s, as he is used to doing because he prefers to get the 90s done with quickly. He took 61 deliveries to move from overnight 74 to 90, but then hit three boundaries in six balls to reach his century quickly. And then scored two runs in 25 deliveries. The approach in the 90s was similar to that in Napier, when he stepped out and lofted Daniel Vettori and Jeetan Patel for fours in consecutive overs.

Post lunch, when Gambhir played his only rash shot, he left the saunter towards safety in Tendulkar's hands. Tendulkar had started off fluently, driving Murali against the spin for two boundaries, and punching Mathews for one, and once he got comfortable in the middle he too opted to play for time. Between them Gambhir and Tendulkar played out 24 overs. The latter had reached 32 off 75 deliveries, and slowed down even more after that.

Sri Lanka tried one of the last rolls of the dice, taking the new ball and getting Prasad to bowl despite the injury. But neither Prasad nor Chanaka Welegedara could find enough from the pitch to disturb Tendulkar or VVS Laxman. For a while Tendulkar shut shop completely, scoring three runs in 26 deliveries. By that time he had reached 30,000 international runs, and it seemed torturous to make the fast bowlers keep bowling on this pitch.

The spinners came back on, the match started moving towards a slow draw again. By tea Tendulkar had crossed 50, India had erased the deficit, and Tendulkar and Laxman had played out another 24 overs. Post the interval, both Tendulkar and Laxman batted with more intent, in the knowledge that the game had been saved. Sri Lankan bowlers tried various angles of attack, but there was little left to play for, and both the batsmen duly reached personal milestones.


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Ghambir's Flawless Knock.

Posted by: Venk / Category:


It was Gautham Ghambhir who played a gem of an innings(114) before he got out with a
Poor shot similar to shewag to the same Herath. He along with shewag layed a good
Foundation for the indians where Shewag did a blistring knock with a half century,
This time "The Wall" dint stay too long he made 38 to his name and was given leg-
before which was a wrong decision. Then amith mishra was sent as a night watchman
The day ended when Ghambir was on 77 and mishra at 12. Mishra got out early this morning and "The Master" joined Gauti, Soon after Ghambir reached his ton which
helped india to save the test match.


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Indian Gave Batting Practice To The Lankans.

Posted by: Venk / Category:


The indian bolwers gave batting practice to the srilankans, They failed to stop the
Batsmen scoring quick runs, Each and every lankan batsmen scored good runs, Especially Dilshan, Mahela Jayawardane and Prasana Jayawardane were flawless. The
Most experinced bolwers Zhaeer and Bhajji too were unable to pick their wickets,
It is shamefull for us that we gave these many runs in our home soil. It is not fair
That we cannot produce a genuine fast bowler in a highly populated country were the
Rest of cricket playing nations have only one third of ours. P.Jayawardane is not a
Regular batsman who scores tons regularly, he has'n performed well with other countries, M.Jayawardane is a classy batsman and one of the best batsman in the world. Another main thing is when we saw the fielding placement of the srilankans
Were attacking and aggressive but we had a definsive field rather. We must keep attacking field setup atleast to frustrate the batsman. Both murali and herath bowled in line and length they were variating their line and length the ball coming on to the stumps so that the batsman were forced to defend than attacking, atleast from now on dhoni must realise the situation and act as per it. lets hope atleast we do better in the upcoming test matches.


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Jayawardene Breaks Indian Hearts.

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Jayawardene double flattens India

Mahela Jayawardene ground the Indian bowlers into the Ahmedabad dust, almost ruling out a defeat for Sri Lanka in the first Test. This was only the second time that Sri Lanka took a first-innings lead in India, and only the first time they crossed 450 in the country. Jayawardene's sixth double-century, and twelfth 150, was one of his easier ones because for more than half his innings India didn't try to take his wicket, and only towards the end was he made to work hard for singles. The bowlers were not helped by the slowness of the pitch and the indiscipline of the spinners, who managed just one wicket in 102 overs, that too a dodgy decision against Angelo Mathews.

Jayawardene was supported by Thilan Samaraweera in the first session, Prasanna Jayawardene in the second and third, and by muddled thinking from India in both. Their fast bowlers couldn't generate any swing, conventional or reverse, but still looked the only ones capable of making things happen. The only blip for Sri Lanka came when Samaraweera was set up by Zaheer Khan and dismissed by Ishant Sharma, but Jayawardene had started assuredly, and never gave India a serious look-in. Despite that Mathews wicket to what turned out to be the last ball before lunch, the Jayawardenes thwarted any hopes of a quick Indian comeback.

Sri Lanka started the day 151 runs behind, knowing they needed a lead of at least 70 runs to compensate for having to bat last on a pitch that was turning. But the problem with that turn was its slowness, and both Jayawardene and Samaraweera negotiated it comfortably in the morning. India were made to bowl spinners for the first 10 overs before the new ball was due. And in a move that spoke a lot about their attitude, they came out in the containment mode, with a deep point for Harbhajan Singh. Not a single shot went there, and the fielder watched late-cuts from Jayawardene go to the third-man boundary.

The only blotch on Jayawardene's morning came when Amit Mishra drew an edge from him, but the ball died on Rahul Dravid at slip. Twenty-nine runs and two maidens came in those first 10 overs, the last of which had Mishra beating Samaraweera with a googly and missing out on an lbw call. Both batsmen reached fifties during that spell, and brought up their ninth 100-run stand. That last over was about the best Mishra had bowled, but MS Dhoni went for pace from the 81st over.


The sixth over with the new ball, bowled by Zaheer, was the best of the day from India's perspective. He beat Samaraweera with an away-going delivery, got him into an uncertain position with a bouncer, and then hit him in the midriff with another. Ishant continued from there in the next over, beating him with one that held its line. And then came a pull shot Samaraweera would otherwise have kept along the ground, but was hurried into this time.


Jayawardene made sure India wouldn't feel too excited when, two overs later, he drove Zaheer for three boundaries in four balls: through mid-on, wide of midwicket, and through covers. The last one of those shots took Jayawardene to 74, Sri Lanka to within 78 of India's total, and Zaheer out of the attack. The spinners came on soon, and failed to make an impact as Sri Lanka started to steadily push the accelerator.


Prasanna looked to sweep Harbhajan, while runs kept coming effortlessly for Jayawardene. Dhoni spread the field, but Mishra and Harbhajan struggled to keep the same batsman on strike for a considerable period. Despite the defensive mindset, India could manage only four maidens in the first two sessions. India's bowling was most insipid in the second session and the Jayawardenes capitalised fully. Without much fuss, Prasanna reached 42 by tea, and Jayawardene 142, another of his tons that seemed inevitable once he got in. By tea, the two had added 108 off 27.4 overs, 84 of which were run.


Post tea, both sides called ceasefire. Dhoni got spinners to bowl from round the stumps with 6-3 leg-side fields, while the Jayawardenes didn't seem interested in taking too many risks, and were happy scoring in ones and twos and occasional boundaries. In the 144th over of the innings, Sri Lanka ran their 200th single. In the 158th over, Zaheer bowled the 17th no-ball; and India had got only 21 runs from four of their top-six batsmen. While India managed to stem the run-flow in the final session - a total of 108 runs came in 36 overs - it didn't help much because there were still two days left in the match, and Sri Lanka got closer and closer to not having to bat again.


The senior Jayawardene didn't let fatigue get the better of him and reached the double with two overs to go, while Prasanna took the opportunity to move towards what would be a risk-free second century.

Smart StatsMahela Jayawardene reached his sixth score of 200 or above in Tests, joining Kumar Sangakkara, Marvan Atapattu and Javed Miandad. Ahead of him on that list are Don Bradman, Brian Lara and Wally Hammond.
Jayawardene now has 12 scores of 150 or above; five players have exceeded that mark.

Jayawardene's 216-run stand with Prasanna Jayawardene is the highest for the sixth wicket for Sri Lanka.

It was Jayawardene's seventh stand of 200 or more in Tests.
By scoring 591,

Sri Lanka have equalled their fourth-highest score in away Tests. They are within striking distance of reaching their second-highest - 644.

They've gone way past their previous best score in India, though, of 420.
India's spinners were taken for 372 runs in this innings;

it's third in the list of most runs conceded by an Indian spin attack since 2000 at home, and the record is likely to be overtaken tomorrow.

Harbhajan Singh conceded 150 runs or more in an innings for the sixth time in Tests, and the second time against Sri Lanka.


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India Survives From Disaster Start..

Posted by: Venk / Category:


The first test match between India and Srilanka began yesterday. MS.Dhoni won the
Toss and elected to bat first, the batting condition was great the ball was coming
down to the bat, but Welegedara gave us shock by taking 3 quick wickets in his first
spell. We lost Ghambhir, Shewag, Tendulkar and Laxman before we reached 50, India
were 40 for 4, The wall was still staying on the crease, Each and everyone might have
Thought that India might be all out for less than 150, then came Yuvi to the crease
he joined Dravid and kept the score board ticking, yuvi reached his half century
both had 100 partnership but soon yuvi felt making a responsible 68, at that stage
then came the Indian skipper he joined Dravid and kept the indian hopes alive. The
Wall was looking steady and confident he reached his 27th century soon after dhoni
came in, the srilanks were missing Ajantha Mendis indeed, they could not break the
partnership between these two, even muralidharan could'n give them a break through
soon after the skipper to reached his 2nd century and first on indian soil, soon after the 200 partnership came, at the end of the day Dhoni got out after scoring
valuable 110, Dravid was standing tall and harbajan was on the crease. India ended
the day with 385 for 6. Dravid was 177 not out. The wall reached another milestone
By scoring 11,000 runs in test, he is now the 5th highest run getter in the test
history following the Master blaster, Brain lara, Ricky Pointing, Allen border.
India finished their innings today morning 426 all out. The wall got out without
making a single run today.


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Cricketers Who Have Played More Than 15 Years Of International Cricket..

Posted by: Venk / Category: ,

Player From To Span Mat
Javed Miandad (Pak) 11 Jun 1975 9 Mar 1996 20y 272d 233
SR Tendulkar (India) 18 Dec 1989 8 Nov 2009 19y 325d 436
ST Jayasuriya (Asia/SL) 26 Dec 1989 27 Sep 2009 19y 275d 441
PA de Silva (SL) 31 Mar 1984 18 Mar 2003 18y 352d 308
GA Gooch (Eng) 26 Aug 1976 10 Jan 1995 18y 137d 125
Wasim Akram (Pak) 23 Nov 1984 4 Mar 2003 18y 101d 356
Imran Khan (Pak) 31 Aug 1974 25 Mar 1992 17y 207d 175
Saleem Malik (Pak) 12 Jan 1982 8 Jun 1999 17y 147d 283
A Ranatunga (SL) 14 Feb 1982 30 May 1999 17y 105d 269
RJ Hadlee (NZ) 11 Feb 1973 25 May 1990 17y 103d 115
A Kumble (Asia/India) 25 Apr 1990 19 Mar 2007 16y 328d 271
BC Lara (ICC/WI) 9 Nov 1990 21 Apr 2007 16y 163d 299
HP Tillakaratne (SL) 27 Nov 1986 7 Apr 2003 16y 131d 200
MS Atapattu (SL) 1 Dec 1990 17 Feb 2007 16y 78d 268
M Muralitharan (Asia/ICC/SL) 12 Aug 1993 25 Sep 2009 16y 44d 334
SR Waugh (Aus) 9 Jan 1986 3 Feb 2002 16y 25d 325
N Kapil Dev (India) 1 Oct 1978 17 Oct 1994 16y 16d 225
DL Haynes (WI) 22 Feb 1978 5 Mar 1994 16y 11d 238
IT Botham (Eng) 26 Aug 1976 24 Aug 1992 15y 364d 116
IVA Richards (WI) 7 Jun 1975 27 May 1991 15y 354d 187
CL Hooper (WI) 18 Mar 1987 4 Mar 2003 15y 351d 227
CG Greenidge (WI) 11 Jun 1975 25 May 1991 15y 348d 128
SC Ganguly (Asia/India) 11 Jan 1992 15 Nov 2007 15y 308d 311
DB Vengsarkar (India) 21 Feb 1976 14 Nov 1991 15y 266d 129
M Azharuddin (India) 20 Jan 1985 3 Jun 2000 15y 135d 334
AC Cummins (Can/WI) 20 Nov 1991 22 Mar 2007 15y 122d 76
Inzamam-ul-Haq (Asia/Pak) 22 Nov 1991 21 Mar 2007 15y 119d 378
MW Gatting (Eng) 23 Dec 1977 20 Mar 1993 15y 87d 92
AR Border (Aus) 13 Jan 1979 8 Apr 1994 15y 85d 273
CA Walsh (WI) 10 Jan 1985 11 Jan 2000 15y 1d 205
CL Cairns (ICC/NZ) 13 Feb 1991 8 Jan 2006 14y 329d 215
ML Hayden (Aus/ICC) 19 May 1993 4 Mar 2008 14y 290d 161
RT Ponting (Aus/ICC) 15 Feb 1995 8 Nov 2009 14y 266d 330
S Chanderpaul (WI) 17 Oct 1994 5 Jul 2009 14y 261d 252
Mushtaq Ahmed (Pak) 23 Mar 1989 3 Oct 2003 14y 194d 144
WPUJC Vaas (Asia/SL) 15 Feb 1994 27 Aug 2008 14y 194d 322
CB Lambert (USA/WI) 15 Mar 1990 10 Sep 2004 14y 179d 12
Akram Khan (Bang) 29 Oct 1988 17 Apr 2003 14y 170d 44
JG Wright (NZ) 15 Jul 1978 12 Dec 1992 14y 150d 149
M Amarnath (India) 7 Jun 1975 30 Oct 1989 14y 145d 85
DL Houghton (Zim) 9 Jun 1983 5 Oct 1997 14y 118d 63
Saeed Anwar (Pak) 1 Jan 1989 4 Mar 2003 14y 62d 247
CZ Harris (NZ) 29 Nov 1990 8 Dec 2004 14y 9d 250
Moin Khan (Pak) 13 Nov 1990 16 Oct 2004 13y 338d 219
Ijaz Ahmed (Pak) 14 Nov 1986 11 Oct 2000 13y 332d 250
DR Martyn (Aus) 8 Dec 1992 5 Nov 2006 13y 332d 208
JH Kallis (Afr/ICC/SA) 9 Jan 1996 10 Nov 2009 13y 305d 295
LRD Mendis (SL) 7 Jun 1975 24 Mar 1989 13y 290d 79
MD Crowe (NZ) 13 Feb 1982 26 Nov 1995 13y 286d 143
TM Odoyo (Afr/Kenya) 18 Feb 1996 18 Oct 2009 13y 242d 120
SO Tikolo (Afr/Kenya) 18 Feb 1996 17 Oct 2009 13y 241d 126
LN Onyango (Kenya) 6 Mar 1996 18 Oct 2009 13y 226d 27
B Zuiderent (Neth) 17 Feb 1996 1 Sep 2009 13y 196d 41
R Dravid (Asia/ICC/India) 3 Apr 1996 30 Sep 2009 13y 180d 339
KO Otieno (Kenya) 18 Feb 1996 11 Jul 2009 13y 143d 90
Waqar Younis (Pak) 14 Oct 1989 4 Mar 2003 13y 141d 262
GD McGrath (Aus/ICC) 9 Dec 1993 28 Apr 2007 13y 140d 250
AJ Stewart (Eng) 15 Oct 1989 2 Mar 2003 13y 138d 170
N Hussain (Eng) 30 Oct 1989 2 Mar 2003 13y 123d 88
SM Gavaskar (India) 13 Jul 1974 5 Nov 1987 13y 115d 108
UDU Chandana (SL) 14 Apr 1994 25 Jul 2007 13y 102d 147
Aminul Islam (Bang) 27 Oct 1988 25 Jan 2002 13y 90d 39
RS Mahanama (SL) 2 Mar 1986 30 May 1999 13y 89d 213
AH Omarshah (Zim) 9 Jun 1983 1 Sep 1996 13y 84d 28
RS Kaluwitharana (SL) 8 Dec 1990 22 Feb 2004 13y 76d 189
JE Emburey (Eng) 14 Jan 1980 20 Mar 1993 13y 65d 61
Minhajul Abedin (Bang) 31 Mar 1986 31 May 1999 13y 61d 27
ME Waugh (Aus) 11 Dec 1988 3 Feb 2002 13y 54d 244
RW Marsh (Aus) 5 Jan 1971 12 Feb 1984 13y 38d 92
Shahid Afridi (Asia/ICC/Pak) 2 Oct 1996 9 Nov 2009 13y 38d 288
SP Fleming (ICC/NZ) 25 Mar 1994 24 Apr 2007 13y 30d 280
Arshad Khan (Pak) 1 Feb 1993 11 Feb 2006 13y 10d 58
Abdul Razzaq (Asia/Pak) 1 Nov 1996 9 Nov 2009 13y 8d 237


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'One of my most fluent efforts' - Rahul Dravid

Posted by: Venk / Category:


On the opening day of the Ashes in 2002-03, after Nasser Hussain had sent Australia in to bat, Matthew Hayden set the agenda for an utterly one-sided contest, powering his way to an unbeaten 186 out of 364 for 2. On the first day at Motera, Rahul Dravid finished with 177 of the 371 runs that India scored after he arrived at the crease. Hayden faced 255 balls at the Gabba that day. Dravid faced four fewer. Hayden scored 104 of his runs in boundaries (23 fours and two sixes), while Dravid took 110 from strokes to or over the fence (26 fours and a six).

As batsmen, they couldn't be more different. Hayden was the colossus who stood outside his crease, walked down the pitch and generally bullied bowlers into submission. Every ball was a confrontation, one more opportunity to assert his dominance over the opposition. Dravid, one of the cornerstones of India's batting strength over the past decade, has made his runs far more sedately, with greater subtlety. Where Hayden went for the first-round knockout, sheer persistence was the Dravid way. On occasions, even mighty Australian sides were worn down to the point of exhaustion.

This was a very different Dravid. From the moment he placed one from Dammika Prasad through the covers, the positive intent was evident. But unlike many of his modern-day contemporaries, who use bats as thick as arks and prefer to stand-and-deliver, there was nothing frenetic or brutal about his methods. Dravid bats the old-fashioned way, bending his knee and transferring the body weight at just the right time. Each of the 13 fours he drove in the arc between point and long off was crowned with the perfect follow-through.

Even late in the day, with the second new-ball taken, he chose his battles carefully. He invariably got into line for each delivery, and was perfectly content to leave off-stump bait well alone. "I knew we needed a partnership," he said later, having spent some time in the ice-bath to recover from the day's exertions. "I had that South African game [April 2008] at the back of my mind, where we were bowled out in 20 overs and the wicket became good later on.

"I knew that if we could get through to lunch, batting would get a lot easier. Yuvi [Yuvraj Singh] came and batted really well. He was very positive and played some good shots. We were able to put on a 100-run partnership and that set the platform for me and Mahi [MS Dhoni]. We showed character today to be able to fight back."

More than his powers of concentration, always a hallmark of his game, what was most impressive was his ability to find the gaps. At one point, Kumar Sangakkara had a short cover and a sweeper in place, in addition to the mid-off fielder. He still threaded the ball through. Late on, with square leg and fine leg in position, he pulled Chanaka Welegedara so precisely that neither man moved more than a five yards before the ball crossed the rope.

He made four half-centuries in New Zealand earlier this year, including match-saving efforts of 83 and 62 in Napier, but this was an innings played at an altogether different tempo. Not since The Oval in 2007, when he eased to a half-century before being castled by James Anderson, had he played with such freedom.

He admitted as much. "It's nice to get this feeling of batting the way I have. I've been through some tough times for a couple of seasons. I thought the flow's sort of come back this year, in various forms of the game. It was probably one of my most fluent efforts over the last few seasons."

With the pitch conducive to run-scoring, Dravid reckoned that India would need around 500 to put some pressure on the Sri Lankans. And he was in no hurry to critique this particular innings. "It'll be a good question to answer at the end of a game," he said. "I always rate an innings in the context of the game. From 32 for 4, at the end of the day I'm really happy with what we've achieved. If we go on to win this Test match, you'd say it's somewhere up there.

"That's why the innings I've played in Kolkata [v Australia, 2001], in Adelaide [v Australia, 2003] or in Rawalpindi [v Pakistan, 2004] ... when you go on to win, that's when you realise the value. In terms of shot-making, this was a good one. It was a pretty flat wicket. I've played on much tougher ones. If it ends up being a draw, it's a great knock, but not as meaningful as some of the other ones."

After scoring 11,000 runs and 27 centuries, he really has nothing left to prove to anyone. But on a day when he frequently put two far more aggressive strokemakers in the shade, there was plenty for selectors and supporters to ponder. Instead of a Wall-like immoveable object, this was a free-flowing stream of an innings. "I'm not even thinking of selection," he said when asked a question that alluded to his exclusion from the one-day scheme of things. "I'm just trying to play every single game."

There could well be a few more if this latest uptempo back-to-the-wall effort produces a result.


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A Man And A Childwood Superstar...

Posted by: Venk / Category: ,

Tendulkar the cricketer seemingly emerged fully formed when he first picked up a bat. So too perhaps did Tendulkar the luminary

Sachin Tendulkar comes to the ground in headphones. He might make a racket in the privacy of the bus, who knows, but when he steps out he is behind headphones. Waiting to bat he is behind his helmet. The arena is swinging already to the chant, "Sachin, Sachin", the first long and pleading, the second urgent and demanding, but Tendulkar is oblivious, behind his helmet.

At the fall of the second wicket, that familiar traitorous roar goes round the stadium, at which point Tendulkar walks his slow walk out, golden in the sun, bat tucked under the elbow. The gloves he will only begin to wear when he approaches the infield, to busy himself against distraction from the opposition. Before Tendulkar has even taken guard, you know that his quest is equilibrium.

As he bats his effort is compared in real time with earlier ones. Tendulkar provides his own context. The conditions, the bowling attack, his tempo, his very vibe, is assessed against an innings played before. Today he reminds me of the time when … Why isn't he …. What's wrong with him!

If the strokes are flowing, spectators feel something beyond pleasure. They feel something like gratitude. The silence that greets his dismissal is about the loudest sound in sport. With Tendulkar the discussion is not how he got out, but why. Susceptible to left-arm spin? To the inswinger? To the big occasion? The issue is not about whether it was good or not, but where does it rank? A Tendulkar innings is never over when it is over. It is simply a basis for negotiation. He might be behind headphones or helmet, but outside people are talking, shouting, fighting, conceding, bargaining, waiting. He is a national habit.

But Tendulkar goes on. This is his achievement, to live the life of Tendulkar. To occupy the space where fame and accomplishment intersect, akin to the concentrated spot under a magnifying glass trained in the sun, and remain unburnt.

"Sachin is God" is the popular analogy. Yet god may smile as disease, fire, flood and Sreesanth visit the earth, and expect no fall in stock. For Tendulkar the margin for error is rather less. The late Naren Tamhane was merely setting out the expectation for a career when he remarked as selector, "Gentlemen, Tendulkar never fails." The question was whether to pick the boy to face Imran, Wasim, Waqar and Qadir in Pakistan. Tendulkar was then 16.

Sixteen and so ready that precocity is too mild a word. He made refinements, of course, but the marvel of Tendulkar is that he was a finished thing almost as soon as began playing.

The maidans of Bombay are dotted with tots six or seven years old turning out for their coaching classes. But till the age of 11, Tendulkar had not played with a cricket ball. It had been tennis- or rubber-ball games at Sahitya Sahwas, the writers' co-operative housing society where he grew up, the youngest of four cricket-mad siblings by a distance. The circumstances were helpful. In his colony friends he had playmates, and from his siblings, Ajit in particular, one above Sachin but older by 11 years, he had mentorship.

It was Ajit who took him to Ramakant Achrekar, and the venerable coach inquired if the boy was accustomed to playing with a "season ball" as it is known in India. The answer did not matter. Once he had a look at him, Achrekar slotted him at No. 4, a position he would occupy almost unbroken through his first-class career. In his first two matches under Achrekar Sir, he made zero and zero.

Memory obscures telling details in the dizzying rise thereafter. Everybody remembers the 326 not out in the 664-run gig with Kambli. Few remember the 346 not out in the following game, the trophy final. Everyone knows the centuries on debut in the Ranji Trophy and Irani Trophy at 15 and 16. Few know that he got them in the face of a collapse in the first instance and virtually out of partners in the second. Everyone knows his nose was bloodied by Waqar Younis in that first Test series, upon which he waved away assistance. Few remember that he struck the next ball for four.

This was Tendulkar five years after he'd first handled a cricket ball.

Genius, they say, is infinite patience. But it is first of all an intuitive grasp of something beyond the scope of will - or, for that matter, skill. In sportspersons it is a freakishness of the motor senses, even a kind of ESP.

Tendulkar's genius can be glimpsed without him actually holding a bat. Not Garry Sobers' equal with the ball, he is nevertheless possessed of a similar versatility. He swings it both ways, a talent that eludes several specialists. He not only rips big legbreaks but also lands his googlies right, a task beyond some wrist spinners. Naturally he also bowls offspin, usually to left-handers and sometimes during a spell of wrist spin. In the field he mans the slips as capably as he does deep third man, and does both in a single one-dayer. Playing table tennis he is ambidextrous. By all accounts he is a brilliant, if hair-raising, driver. He is a champion Snake player on the cellphone, according to Harbhajan Singh, whom he also taught a spin variation.

His batting is of a sophistication that defies generalisation. He can be destroyer or preserver. Observers have tried to graph these phases into a career progression. But it is ultimately a futile quest for Tendulkar's calibrations are too minute and too many to obey compartmentalisation. Given conditions, given his fitness, his state of mind, he might put away a certain shot altogether, and one thinks it is a part of his game that has died, till he pulls it out again when the time is right, sometimes years afterwards. Let alone a career, in the space of a single session he can, according to the state of the rough or the wind or the rhythm of a particular bowler, go from predatorial to dead bat or vice versa.

Nothing frustrates Indians as much as quiet periods from Tendulkar, and indeed often they are self-defeating. But outsiders have no access to his thoughts. However eccentric, they are based on a heightened cricket logic rather than mood. Moods are irrelevant to Tendulkar. Brian Lara or Mohammad Azharuddin might be stirred into artistic rage. Tendulkar is a servant of the game. He does not play out of indignation nor for indulgence. His aim is not domination but runs. It is the nature of his genius.

The genius still doesn't explain the cricket world's enchantment with Tendulkar. Ricky Ponting and Jacques Kallis are arguably not lesser cricketers than he, but have nothing like his following or presence. Among contemporaries only Shane Warne could draw an entire stadium's energy towards himself, but then Warne worked elaborately towards this end. Tendulkar on the pitch is as uncalculated as Warne was deliberate. Warne worked the moments before each delivery like an emcee at a title fight. Tendulkar goes through a series of ungainly nods and crotch adjustments. Batting, his movements are neither flamboyant nor languid; they are contained, efficient. Utility is his concern. Having hit the crispest shot between the fielders he can still be found scurrying down the wicket, just in case.

Likewise, outside the pitch nothing he does calls up attention. In this he is not unusual for the times. It has been, proved by exceptions of course, the era of the undemonstrative champion. Ali, Connors, McEnroe, Maradona have given way to Sampras, Woods, Zidane, Federer, who must contend with the madness of modern media and sanitisation of corporate obligation.

Maybe Tendulkar the superstar, like Tendulkar the cricketer, was formed at inception. Then, as now, he is darling. He wears the big McEnroe-inspired curls of his youth in a short crop, but still possesses the cherub's smile and twinkle. Perhaps uniquely, he is granted not the sportstar's indulgence of perma-adolescence but that of perma-childhood. A man-child on the field: maybe it is the dichotomy that is winning. The wonder is that in the years between he has done nothing to sully his innocence, nothing to deaden the impish joy, nothing to disrupt the infinite patience or damage the immaculate equilibrium through the riot of his life and career.

The wonder is that in the years between he has done nothing to sully his innocence, nothing to deaden the impish joy, nothing to disrupt the infinite patience or damage the immaculate equilibrium through the riot of his life and career


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The Run Getting Machine...

Posted by: Venk / Category: ,


From the beginning, the relationship was about something bigger than admiration and affection. When Sachin Tendulkar set foot in Australia he brought with him rain.

Lismore, a place of board shorts and stubby coolers, on the far north hippie trail of New South Wales, was the strange location for Tendulkar's maiden first-class innings in Australia. Lismore hadn't seen rain - the kind of rain that wet your shirt - in months. The Indians arrived on a Friday, November 1991, and all that morning it poured, drowning out the net session they'd scheduled. They moved indoors and it poured some more.

Local politician Reg Baxter used a homemade super-sopper to get play started. Conditions were grey overhead and green underfoot, which made predicting the ball's flight path tricky. The bowling was top-shelf - Whitney, Lawson, Holdsworth, Matthews, Waugh, Waugh - and the batting a little gormless, all except for the one who was 18. Under the Oakes Oval pines he took careful guard, his head still, his footsteps like tiny, precise pinpricks, going backwards mostly, unless the bowler overpitched. Fifteen hundred people saw this, the great Alan Davidson among them. Davo was dumbfounded: "It's just not possible… such maturity."

Tendulkar hit 82 that afternoon, when no one else passed 24, then 59 out of 147 in the second innings. When Australians hear Indians grouch about their hero going missing in an emergency and having no appetite for a scrap, it always comes as a shock.

The Tendulkar Australians got to know, the one with the baby footsteps, had played cricket in six countries already. Still he looked like his team-mates' little brother. He ran faster than them all, a gammy-legged bunch, and as he ran, his eyes would be wide and round, and darting, as if alert to the danger that his team-mates' barely muzzled huffiness might distract him from important things. And what was important to Tendulkar - and here Australians saw in him something rare and precious, a single-mindedness they fancied they recognised in themselves - was run-getting.

Every bolt and screw in the Tendulkar technique seemed put there to aid the getting of runs. Tendulkar was a run-getting machine, except no machine could also be so graceful - or instinctive, for that's what it was, instinct, which told him that the way to bat was to attack. He didn't learn this. He knew it, inside himself. Runs were what counted. So nothing outlandish would be tried for the sake of outlandishness. Those footsteps were only as big as they had to be, for footwork was simply the thing that moved your body from its starting position to its ideal hitting position. Once you got there, you kept out the good ones and hit the loose ones hard. And when you hit hard, you did so along the ground - because you cannot get caught and get runs.

This is the way of Bradman, the way of Hill, Trumper, Harvey, the Chappells and the rest. Give him a pair of bushy mutton chops and paint a weathered furrow or two on his brow, and Tendulkar could pose for the cover of How to Play Cricket Australian Style.

Tacky facial add-ons, or some bleach-blond spikes, say, have never been Tendulkar's go, and Australians like that about him too. Australia takes its cricket seriously. Your after hours are for sombre reflection and practising your forward-defensive, not for phone-chasey with sheilas or motel-room hijinks in your Playboy undies. You occasionally hear it said wistfully that Tendulkar is the Australian Shane Warne could have been. It is a neat line but it undersells what they have in common. For if any two modern cricketers might be soul mates, it is Warne and Tendulkar, grandmasters of their arts. Bowling legspin comes as naturally to Warne as batting does to Tendulkar, which is to say, as naturally as the rest of us find breathing.

Two sublime Tendulkar hundreds lit up his first trip: one, in Sydney, as serene as a stroll through rhododendrons; the other, in Perth, more pugnacious, less repeatable. He didn't tour Australia again for eight years. But he visited. He went, with Warne, the two of them in beige suits, to see Sir Donald on his 90th birthday. Tendulkar got as excited as any Australian boy - "I consider myself one of the luckiest guys on earth" - and he asked Bradman the questions any Australian boy would ask, stuff about his stance and his grip and his bats.

When next he came to play cricket he was captain of India, and perhaps that did distract him from the really important things. But it lost him no admirers. Asked his views on sledging, he replied: "One should expect that at this level. You are playing Test cricket, not club cricket."

Always when he went to the wicket, Tendulkar's was the scalp on which the afternoon's destiny hung. Fieldsmen dived further, getting hands to quarter-chances that would normally have eluded fingertips. Umpires concentrated harder - too hard probably, if you tally up the bat-pad rulings that never got a feather, the creative licence applied to some leg-before-wicket interpretations. One never-to-be-forgotten day in Adelaide, Tendulkar was adjudged shoulder-before-wicket. "You almost want him to get a few runs," Mark Waugh once remarked, "just to see him." Odd how a cricketer so Australian as Tendulkar could provoke such un-Australian sentimentality.

He has toured Australia on four occasions, as many times as Bradman toured England. Like Bradman, he has never gone home without a Test hundred to his name.

One particular hundred - Sydney, 2003-04 - might outlive the others. When someone bats for 613 minutes, strung across three sweltering January days, the mind can wander, and as Tendulkar trudged on, making do without the cover drive, for it had caused his downfall too many times already, this mind wandered to Leichhardt and Giles and the famous explorers, who made do without company, without water, surviving on single-mindedness and instinct. He could do things to your imagination, this boy who knew how to make it rain.

Tendulkar was a run-getting machine, except no machine could also be so graceful - or instinctive, for that's what it was, instinct, which told him that the way to bat was to attack


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Smashing Shewag Tells 10 Things About His Idol..

Posted by: Venk / Category: ,


The first time Virender Sehwag met Sachin Tendulkar was in March 2001, at a practice session ahead of the first ODI of the home series against Australia. For Sehwag, Tendulkar was the man who had inspired him to skip exams in school and allowed him to dream of cricket as a career. Sehwag was shy then, and didn't speak to his hero. He got 58 off 51 balls and picked up three wickets. Tendulkar later walked up to him and said, "You've got talent. Continue playing the same way and I'm sure you will make your name." That ability to motivate youngsters is one of the traits, Sehwag says, that makes Tendulkar special. Here he tells Cricinfo about 10 things that make Tendulkar stand out.

Sehwag credits Tendulkar with teaching him how to compile big hundreds © AFP

Discipline
He never comes late to any practice session, never comes late to the team bus, never comes late to any meeting - he is always five minutes ahead of time. If you are disciplined, it shows you are organised. And then he is ready for anything on the cricket field.

Mental strength
I've learned a lot of things from him as far as mental strength goes - on how to tacke a situation, how to tackle a ball or bowler. If you are not tough mentally, you can't score the number of runs and centuries he has in the last two decades. He is a very good self-motivator.

He always said to me: whatever the situation or whichever the bowler you face, always believe in yourself. There was this occasion in South Africa, early in my career, when I was not scoring runs fluently, so he suggested I try a few mental techniques that had worked for him. One of the things he said was: Always tell yourself you are better than others. You have some talent and that is why you are playing for India, so believe in yourself.

Picking the ball early
He can pick the ball earlier than other batsmen and that is a mark of a great batsman. He is virtually ready for the ball before it is bowled. Only great players can have two shots for one ball, like Tendulkar does, and a big reason is that he picks the ball very early.

Soft hands
I've never seen him play strokes with hard hands. He always tries to play with soft hands, always tries to meet the ball with the centre of the bat. That is timing. I have never been able to play consistently with soft hands.

Planning
One reason he can convert his fifties into hundreds is planning: which bowler he should go after, which bowler he should respect, in which situation he should play aggressively, in which situation he should defend. It is because he has spent hours thinking about all of it, planning what to do. He knows what a bowler will do in different situations and he is ready for it.

In my debut Test he scored 155 and he knew exactly what to do every ball. We had already lost four wickets (68 for 4) when I walked in, and he warned me about the short ball. He told me that the South African fast bowlers would bowl short-of-length balls regularly, but he knew how to counter that. If they bowled short of a length, he cut them over slips; when they bowled outside off stump, he cut them; and when they tried to bowl short into his body, he pulled with ease. Luckily his advice had its effect on me, and I made my maiden hundred!

Adaptability
This is one area where he is really fast. And that is because he is such a good reader of the game. After playing just one or two overs he can tell you how the pitch will behave, what kind of bounce it has, which length is a good one for the batsman, what shots to play and what not to.

A good example was in the Centurion ODI of the 2006-07 series. India were batting first. Shaun Pollock bowled the first over and fired in a few short-of-length balls, against which I tried to play the back-foot punch. Tendulkar cautioned me immediately and said that shot was not a good option. A couple of overs later I went for it again and was caught behind, against Pollock.

Making bowlers bowl to his strengths
He will leave a lot of balls and give the bowler a false sense of security, but the moment it is pitched up to the stumps or closer to them, Tendulkar will easily score runs.

If the bowler is bowling outside off stump Tendulkar can disturb his line by going across outside off stump and playing to midwicket. He puts doubts in the bowler's mind, so that he begins to wonder if he has bowled the wrong line and tries to bowl a little outside off stump - which Tendulkar can comfortably play through covers.

In Sydney in 2004, in the first innings he didn't play a single cover drive, and remained undefeated on 241. He decided to play the straight drive and flicks, so he made the bowlers pitch to his strengths. It is not easy. In the Test before that, in Melbourne, he had got out trying to flick. After that when we had a chat he said he was getting out playing the cover drive and the next game he would avoid the cover drive. I thought he was joking because nobody cannot not play the cover drive - doesn't matter if you are connecting or not. I realised he was serious in Sydney when he was on about 180-odd and he had missed plenty of opportunities to play a cover drive. I was stunned.

Ability to bat in different gears
This is one aspect of batting I have always discussed with Tendulkar: how he controls his game; the way he can change gears after scoring a half-century. Suddenly he scores 10-12 runs an over, or maybe a quick 30 runs in five overs, and then again slows down and paces his innings.

He has maintained that it all depends on the team's position. If you are in a good position you tend to play faster. He also pointed out that the batsman must always think about what can happen if he gets out and the consequences for the team. The best example is the knock of 175. I was confident he would pull it off for India and he almost did.

Building on an innings
I learned from Tendulkar how to get big hundreds. He told me early on that once you get a hundred you are satisfied for yourself. But it is also the best time to convert that into a bigger score for the team because then the team will be in a good position.

If you look at my centuries they have always been big. A good instance of this was in Multan in 2004, when he told me I had given away a good position in Melbourne (195) the previous year and the team lost, and I needed to keep that in mind against Pakistan. In Multan, in the first hundred of the triple century I had hit a few sixes. He walked up to me after I reached the century and said he would slap me if I hit any further sixes. I said why. He said that if I tried hitting a six and got out the team would lose the control over the game, and I needed to bat through the day. So I didn't hit a single six till I reached 295. By then India were 500-plus and I told him I was going to hit a six!

Dedication
This is the most important aspect of his success. In his life cricket comes first. When he is on tour he is thinking about nothing but cricket, and when he is not on tour he dedicates quality time to his family. That shows his dedication to the game and to his family. He has found the right balance.


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World Sexiest Man Praises The Master Blaster...

Posted by: Venk / Category: ,


Amid whizzing deliveries on a green Karachi wicket, the seeds of greatness were sown. Often an unforgiving cricketing frontier, Pakistan witnessed
the debut of Sachin Tendulkar, him of the curly hair, rosy cheek, steely glint in the eye and the hunger to demolish. Soon, the seasoned pros were nodding their heads, acknowledging that this was a legend in the making

When I first bowled to Sachin Tendulkar, I almost felt sorry for this small-built 16-year-old , who looked 14. It was an India-Pakistan encounter and we were playing hard, yet it almost seemed unfair when we saw young Sachin and I for one was tempted to go easy on him.

The wickets were tailormade for us, and they remained green for two full days. Batting against quality pace bowling was really hard in that series. But it’s hard to say how I would have bowled to him at my peak, because when he made his debut against us 20 years ago, I was at the end of my career. However, both Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis - who too made his debut in the same Test as Sachin - were bowling at a fiery pace.

My memories of that 1989 series are that we virtually played four-day Tests because of the light, which is why a very strong Pakistan side had to be content with a draw against a relatively weaker, inexperienced Indian side.

As far as Sachin was concerned, there was one shot he played right through that series that has stayed in my mind. It was off the backfoot between point and cover. The pitches were green, the ball was moving and it struck me that it was remarkable how he was timing this drive and getting it right so often.

More evidence that he was special came during a practice game in Peshawar. Abdul Qadir was at the peak of his bowling then. Sachin hit him for one six, after which I teased Qadir that a schoolboy was launching into him. The wily leg-spinner gave me a wink to suggest it was a trap. Sachin went on to hit another one over the boundary and I gave Qadir the look. After the fourth six, the smile was gone from Qadir’s face, and later that evening he told me that this boy was an extraordinary talent.

However, it was only over the years that I began to realise that Sachin was a special talent. This has nothing to do with the fact that his entry into international cricket was relatively quiet. It’s because I need to be convinced of a player’s temperament and technique before I rate him. I have seen many talented cricketers not achieve what they could because they lacked the other key ingredients that transforms talent into success.

Fortunately for India, Sachin’s passion was what set him apart from the rest. When one is passionate about one’s game, hard work becomes fun, and those long hours at the nets seem interesting and challenging rather than routine and monotonous. This passion helped Sachin tighten his technique and gave him the temperament to manage his innings well. Sachin’s concentration, his discipline and his unquestioned ability, all make him one of the best players of his generation. He does have that gift of timing when he plays the quicker bowlers, but he is also exceptional against spin, proof of which lies in his famous battles with Shane Warne.

Over the years, Sachin has remained remarkably consistent and has more records than anybody I can remember. His talent and versatility are unquestioned, which is why the only question that rankles is why he did not win enough games for his team. Very often, he has taken his team to the brink of a famous win before getting out.

I have two explanations for this. The first one is that Sachin often took the whole burden of team responsibility and expectation squarely on his shoulders. This often reflected itself as worry on his face, and his body language betrayed a sense of anxiety. A good bowler is a predator and once he senses this pressure in the batsman, he goes in for the kill. Perhaps if Sachin had developed the tunnel vision, which made him focus on one ball at a time, he might have been able to convert more games into wins for his side.

The other major problem was that for the better part of his career, India did not have a bowling attack that could take 20 wickets, especially outside India. If he had match-winning bowlers to back up his own excellence, many of his knocks would have become match-winning ones.

Sachin has had the misfortune of seeing some of his best efforts come in a losing cause, the 175 against Australia last week being the most recent example. Perhaps that is the one aspect of his career that he might look back at with some regret. Maybe he would feel that for a player of his ability and stature, he should have been able to pull off a few more victories in his long, illustrious career.

If there is one area in which Sachin is ahead of his contemporaries, it is focus. Inzamam-ul Haq was possibly even more gifted, but Sachin was more successful due to his commitment and focus. Inzamam had an exceptional ability to play off both feet and on both sides of the wicket - something Ricky Ponting also does so well.

However, despite the long and distinguished career that he had, I still feel Inzamam could have done even more. Besides, Sachin never backed away from responsibilities, while Inzamam was always reluctant to bat up the order in One-day internationals.

Sachin did fill in a space that had been vacated by Gavaskar’s retirement. It’s hard to compare the two because both were the products of their respective generations, and their circumstances were different. Gavaskar came in at a time when cricketers from the subcontinent were not rated very highly.

Gavaskar changed all that thanks to his unwavering temperament, an area where I would rate him higher not only than Sachin but also many of his own great contemporaries. He had an incredible ability to soak pressure, and the only other player who comes close to him in this regard is Ian Chappell. Therefore, while Sachin is certainly the more versatile, free-flowing and talented batsman, I would still choose Gavaskar as the man I would want in a crisis situation.

Not only does Sachin have the role of being a key batsman of his side today, he is also a mentor for the younger members of the team. All this means that he needs to use his limited time in international cricket effectively. I would imagine that he will be around for the World Cup in 2011, and the Indians would hope that they see one last flourish from him. It is hard to say how long Sachin will play, but he is too proud a cricketer to hang around if he is not meeting the high standards he has set himself over these last two decades.


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Sunny, Vishy feted by Big B,Master Blaster

Posted by: Venk / Category:


It was a sight for the Gods. Four legends - Amitabh Bachchan, Sunil Gavaskar, Gundappa Vishwanath and Sachin Tendulkar - came together on
one stage to celebrate 60 years of life of two of India's greatest cricketers in Gavaskar and Vishwanath.

While Tendulkar was the chief guest of the function, Amitabh did the honours by presenting Sunny and Vishy with golden bats. And indeed, as these greats stood together to a standing ovation from the distinguished audience at the Rangasharda auditorium, they made for a picture to be preserved for posterity.

The clock was pushed back to the era when Gavaskar and Vishwanath were the signatures of Indian cricket. There were glimpses of their heroics on the screen while their friends and colleagues came up with interesting anecdotes to bring forth not just their passion for the game but also their colourful persona.

The mood was set for the wonderful evening once Amitabh held fort and his rich baritone struck an instant rapport with the audience. And catching the mood of the occasion, Vishwanath took a trip down memory lane to recall several humorous and even horror-filled incidents of his illustrious career. Yet, when it came to praising Gavaskar, he underlined the qualities that made his brother in-law one of the greatest batsman of all times.

"He was an amazing player who faced fast bowling all over the world with courage, pride and determination. I admired his tremendous powers of concentration and his ability to pick the length of the ball," said Vishwanath.

On his part, Gavaskar recalled that he never wore a helmet because he wasn't comfortable wearing it and found it a bit heavy. In a lighter vein, Gavaskar said that if born again, he would like to be a fast bowler and not an opening bat. His reasoning: "In my days, they used to have a fast bowlers' union where by no fast bowler would bowl a bouncer at any of his opponent. But now things are different. I can retaliate."

The unique occasion gave Big B butterflies in his stomach. "Even as I sit between these distinguished people, I have butterflies in my stomach. I don't know what to say. But, it's good to have butterflies for any performer to perform under pressure," he explained. His views were endorsed by Tendulkar who said, "It's important to be nervous because when I am nervous I know I want to do well."

While greeting Vishwanath and Tendulkar for their wealth of accomplishments, Amitabh said he was privileged to have spent more time with Sunil. "He would call me on every birthday and I called him on his birthday. And it was Sunil who started it," the Bollywood icon said.


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India's Melody Queen Wants Cricket God To Continue Atleast A Decade..

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She calls him the god of cricket and as Sachin Tendulkar completes 20 years of a glorious international career on Sunday, melody queen
Lata Mangeshkar hopes the batting maestro plays for another 10 years before even considering retirement.

A self-confessed Tendulkar fan, Mangeshkar said she wants the veteran right-hander to win the 2011 World Cup for India.

"I want Sachin to win the 2011 World Cup. Not only that, I wish he continues as long as he is playing well, hopefully at least for the next 10 years. He has a lot of cricket left in him," Mangeshkar said.

Mangeshkar said she gets upset every time there is speculation about Tendulkar's retirement.

"I don't know why people start talking about his retirement despite the fact that he is playing so well. I don't like any criticism directed at Sachin.

Asked if she considered Tendulkar as the world's greatest batsman, Mangeshkar said, "Sir Donald Bradman has acknowledged Sachin's greatness, can I say more? Bradman saw glimpses of himself in Sachin, I don't think there is any better compliment for him than this."

"He was and remains a very good player. Bowlers are still scared of him. Nothing has changed," she said.

The veteran singer, who follows every series that Team India plays, said winning and losing are part of the game and we should not get too critical in case of a defeat.

"We like winning but we should be prepared for losses as well. Australia beat us recently, I didn't like it but this happens.

Tendulkar fondly calls Mangeshkar 'mother' and the legendary singer recalled the story behind the bond.

"Both Sachin and my father have their birthday on April 24. I once met Sachin a day before his birthday and journalists asked him what he would like to say about me.

"He replied 'how can I say anything about my mother'. Since then, he addresses me as mother," she said.

Also a fan of Sunil Gavaskar, Mangeshkar said she got very upset when he retired from cricket in 1987 and even asked him why he took the decision.

"Critics had made life miserable for him at that time and I felt perhaps he retired because of that. I asked him a year after why he retired, he said 'My time is over but Sachin is there for you'."


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20 Years of Sachin: Little Master's Big Words

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It was in 1989 when Sachin Tendulkar made his international appearance and since then there has been no looking back for the batting genius. His demeanour, his dedication have complimented his talent and made his success story a legendary one.

As he completes 20 years, CricketNDTV.com presents a compilation of his golden words that are true reflections of his worth-emulating personality.


"I care about playing for India" - Sachin during the presentation ceremony after India lost the 5th ODI despite his 175 against Australia in Hyderabad.


"Nobody is bigger than the game. Cricket teaches you every day. If you start feeling that you are bigger than cricket, sooner comes the fall"


"When I started learning cricket from my coach Ramakant Achrekar, I was told clearly by him that not only I should respect the game, I should worship cricket also and than only cricket will take care of me. I still believe in that."


"Twenty20 is like desserts. It tastes good but you can't fill up your stomach with it. You have to have a main course and that's Test cricket. I couldn't survive without main course."


"What I need to do is to contribute to whatever my team's requirements are. I'm not here to answer what x,y, and z is writing about me or saying about me. People will say lot of things, not necessarily they are always correct. I don't take their opinions seriously."


"People sometimes throw stones and you convert them into milestones" - Taking a dig at his critics, Sachin said.


"I don't think much about records. I want to enjoy my game. If players focus on their performance, records automatically fall into place. I focus on playing the game well"


"I wanted to be as solid as Sunil Gavaskar and as destructive as Vivian Richards, because that combination was always going to be lethal. I felt truly inspired by these two individuals on the field," Tendulkar told a news channel.


"Close to 10 years ago, when (former Zimbabwe batsman) Andy Flower started playing reverse sweep I said that in the next five years this would become a common shot. Now many batsmen play it and in time more innovations will come from batsmen and bowlers."


"I don't personally feel that IPL is dumbing down the game. It's just another version of cricket. Test cricket is there and then they started one-day cricket many years ago and one-day cricket has been a tremendous success and if the game is gonna get globalised in the form of IPL, then why not? It's better for cricket," ," Tendulkar said in defence of the T20 tournament that has been criticised for being too glamorous and money-centric.


"I would continue not to play Twenty20 (international). The team is settled and I don't want to disturb it"


"I used to receive letters written in blood...but not any more. It feels strange when a fan comes and touches your feet and says you are God. I don't feel comfortable with it, but it is the way they feel about you."


"I wouldn't want to think about all those things. I'm a bit superstitious. Let others count the hundreds and let me go and bat," Tendulkar said after hitting 42nd Test hundred.


"I have been through various challenges and ups and downs. It's all circles of life and I want to complete the circle. As long as I'm enjoying and giving my best, I'll continue to play. The day I start feeling otherwise, that will be the time to stop," Sachin on his retirement plans.


"My father was my first Guru and he gave direction to my life. In his most important advice to me, he told me everything in life is temporary. The only lasting thing is the impression you leave on people's mind. He said 'people should remember you as a good human being even after you are through with cricket'"


"I feel like 16. I think it's the good wishes and blessings that count," he said after turning 36 this year.


"There were times when I felt that, yeah, I should bunk practice and spend time with my friends and go out for a movie. But my coach would turn up and make me sit on his bike and take me all the way to practice."


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Younis quits, says he's lost command...

Posted by: Venk / Category: ,


Younis Khan has given up the captaincy of Pakistan once again, and taken a temporary break from the game altogether, after failing to overcome a long-running rift with a group of players.

Effectively, after Younis informed the Pakistan board chairman Ijaz Butt of his decision, it signaled a victory for player power over an unpopular captain.

"I met the chairman today and told him I needed to rest," Younis told Cricinfo.

"I told him I feel as If I have no command over this team.

And if a leadership has no command over its players, what is the point of continuing to lead? I also told him that the last 3-4 months have been very trying times for me, not just with the cricket but all that has happened outside it.

I need time to get myself together now." At least eight or nine players in the current squad have been unhappy with Younis as captain for a while and had made their concerns clear to Butt immediately after the Champions Trophy.

The loss to New Zealand in the three-match ODI series, in which Younis failed with the bat, cranked up the pressure, with a number of voices in Pakistan calling for his ouster.

Today Younis decided that he had lost "command" over the team and carrying on was not an option.

The PCB immediately named Mohammad Yousuf, senior batsman and one-time stand-in captain, as the man to lead the side in a three-Test series in New Zealand beginning later this month.

Kamran Akmal, the wicketkeeper, will be his deputy.

The PCB's no-frills press release stated simply that Younis had asked for a rest and Butt is reported to have said that they did not object to the decision.

"We did appoint Younis captain until the 2011 World Cup, subject to his performance and fitness, but we have no objection to him asking for a rest, and I don't think it's turmoil in Pakistan cricket," he said.

In 1992-93, Miandad was again sidelined by his own players during the ODI series in Australia, which led to Wasim Akram taking over.

And not long after, Akram was pulled down by a group of players led by his own vice-captain and fellow fast bowler Waqar Younis.

--> Younis' tenure, which began earlier this year, has been crippled by a lack of support from his players.

Ostensibly his resignation last month, after the Champions Trophy, was over the match-fixing allegations leveled against his side, but as the affair progressed it became increasingly clear that Younis was trying to outmanoeuvre a group of players who were not with him.

It worked briefly, as the board made him captain till the 2011 World Cup, with enhanced powers over selection, but the players' support has clearly not been forthcoming.

Younis refused to go into further detail over which players had revolted but it is believed the group is led by Shoaib Malik and includes other seniors such as Shahid Afridi and Kamran Akmal.

Sources close to Younis say that he was particularly disappointed in the manner in which some players were dismissed in the last ODI against New Zealand.

Though Pakistan ultimately lost by seven runs, their batting had collapsed to 101 for 9 - effectively losing those nine wickets for 54 runs - until a miraculous last-wicket stand took them nearly all the way.

But the way established batsmen were dismissed - in a rash of pull shots - on a placid pitch has led Younis to conclude that it was done to undermine him.

"He was really unhappy with the shots some of the batsmen played and he feels as if they did it deliberately to undermine him," one source told Cricinfo.

"He just feels as if he is knocking his head against a brick wall, telling batsmen, senior guys, how to play and them just not listening.

He is tired of the constant fighting within the team, especially when it is not clear what they are all fighting or upset about.

Nobody has gone to him directly to say anything and that has upset him the most.

It isn't so much the pressure of his own failures that has brought him down as this." Younis's immediate future is unclear.

It is believed that he wants to continue playing international cricket and will return to Pakistan and play some domestic cricket to set himself up for the Australia tour, beginning at the end of December.

A return to captaincy seems highly improbable; neither is the PCB likely to offer it to him, having been burnt so many times, nor is he likely to take it up, given his experience this time round.

As a result, Yousuf's elevation marks a remarkable comeback for the batsman, who only recently was in exile from the national team for his involvement with the ICL.

He has led Pakistan in the past, twice in Tests in Australia - both lost - and once at home against South Africa in 2003-04, which Pakistan won.

Incidentally, he was also a replacement captain for Younis once before, for all of a day, when Younis walked away from the post ahead of the 2006 Champions Trophy, only to be convinced to come back.

The buzz in Pakistan suggests that former captain Inzamam-ul-Haq has also played a hand; in recent days, Inzamam has been publicly vocal about the need to dispose of Younis, openly pushing the candidacy of Shahid Afridi as ODI captain.

According to some reports, Yousuf contacted Inzamam - the pair are very close - before accepting the job.

Some are even touting Inzamam as the next coach for Pakistan.


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