Monday 30 January 2012

Indian batting greats are a flag at half-mast: Oz media

The Australian media slammed the Indian cricket team for its "disgraceful lack of fight" in the 4-0 Test series whitewash and made mocking comparison of the gait of the visiting batting greats returning to the dressing room to "flag at half-mast". 

"India's lack of fight has been disgraceful but Australia's bowling has been as remarkable as the batting of Michael Clarke and the revival of Ricky Ponting," a write-up in Daily Telegraphsaid. 

"Who in their wildest dreams could have imagined this inconsistent team in such a state of transition would completely demolish one of the most credentialed batting line-ups ever assembled?" it asked. 

"It was an utterly dominant performance from the home team, with the result never really in doubt. While Australia continued its steady march back up the world rankings, India took another serious hit and strengthened its reputation as a flaky easybeat on foreign soil," it said. 

A write-up in The Australian caricatured the Indian batsmen returning to the pavillion after being dismissed to being similar to a flag at half mast. 

"The visitors' four mighty batsmen, weighty with honours and worth 45,000 Test runs, slouched towards the exits of their careers, the victims of good bowling, if not perhaps in each case of particularly good balls. They moved off pensively - in Virender Sehwag's case at a meditative limp, holding the 

bat at its toe, analogous to a flag at half-mast," the write-up said. 

The write-up even pulled out a term used by Rahul Dravid himself during the Bradman Oration he delivered last month and said that it turned out to be the "self-mocking description" of the Indian batting greats. 

"Rahul Dravid was widely and justly praised for his Bradman Oration last month. He has also proven prophetic. 

"Creaking terminators": his droll, self-mocking description of India's top order has turned out to be almost unimproveable. At Adelaide Oval, they ground finally to a halt, and a remorseless Australian attack rolled right over the top of them," the newspaper said. 

Under the headline 'Whitewash: insipid India play Australia back into form', Sydney Morning Herald said that the difference between the two teams was the confidence level of the players. 

"There can be no doubt India's insipid performance has made Australia look better than they are. Nonetheless, the most priceless quality in sport is confidence. Australia have it in abundance," the newspaper said. 

"In cricket, everything is cause and effect. In their different ways, Australia and India arrived at the same explanation for this counter-intuitive whitewash: India did not score enough. Only once did they make more than 300, and that was on the way to an innings defeat in Sydney." 

The newspaper said only Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman should not be blamed for India's debacle and Virender Sehwag should also take the responsibility. 

"The legends were not exclusively to blame. Sehwag, a kind of legend-elect, had another poor series. In press briefing, he wore an Indian cap, but with a conspicuously expensive pair of sunglasses covering the crest (mind you, Clarke wore a garish sponsor's cap). India's cricketers are millionaires and sometimes play that way," it said. 

"No one tells millionaires what to do. In this series, Sehwag stubbornly refused to adapt his gunslinger's game to ever more pinched circumstances. Yet Sehwag would not contemplate changes, nor countenance an Argus-style review -- indeed no retrospective other than what he said was each player's duty to review his own game and, otherwise, to forget that this series was ever played." 
Source: http://www.cricbuzz.com/cricket-news/49000/indian-batting-greats-are-a-flag-at-half-mast-oz-media

Thursday 14 April 2011

Aus cannot waste talent like India: Chappell


Melbourne: Former India cricket coach and Australia's national selector Greg Chappell has said that his country does not have the liberty to waste talents like India, which has a rich reserve pool.
Fresh from his return to Boston Red Sox and the University of Texas football program to tap into their expertise in identifying talented players, Chappell said, "We're not like India, we can't waste talent."
"They can have a few fall over and there will be someone there backing them up, but we don't have the talent pool they have, so we have to be a lot more efficient," he added.
Chappell also pointed out that Ricky Ponting, Michael Hussey and Simon Katich are well aware of their role in the Australian team, which is going through a transformation phase.
"I don't think we have to send any message to them. They are mature cricketers, they know what the landscape is and they can't play forever.
"As long as they can bring something to the table, not only the runs or wickets, but the input they can have with the group, they are viable, but at some stage they won't be, that is just a fact of life," Chappell told the Age.
Emphasising upon the importance of regeneration, Chappell said the concept is important but it can come about in different ways.
He, however, added that there was no need to make wholesale changes.
"We've got a new captain. Change isn't just about personnel, it's about attitude and intent and about tactics, and I'm sure Michael (Clarke) will bring different thought processes to the captaincy, and I think that is a positive thing," Chappell said.
Pointing out at Shane Watson's recent run with the bat, Chappell said, "We need players who are going to help us win games, and Shane Watson opening the batting can help us win games."
"(His bowling) also gives the flexibility to play an extra spinner in Sri Lanka or an extra pace bowler in South Africa," he added.
Meanwhile, senior batsman Micheal Hussey has expressed his desire to be a part of the transition.
"I want to be part of the new (era). I want to help the new guys coming in," the left-hander said after the team's series win against Bangladesh yesterday.
"We've got a nice blend at the moment, I think, of some experienced players and then we've got some really young guys.
I definitely see a bit of a role to play there to help those guys adapt to international cricket," Hussey added.
Source: http://cricketnext.in.com/news/aus-cannot-waste-talent-like-india-chappell/56539-13.html


Pune solve the middle-order missing link


New Delhi: Debutants in IPL-4, Pune Warriors India might just have taken advantage of the complacency of the other franchise owners.
While the emphasis was on splashing the cash on the rising stars of Indian cricket with the Saurabh Tiwary's and the Manoj Tiwary's of this world going for dizzying amounts of cash, Pune cashed in on the lack of attention given to the Indian players and Indian team discards.
Yuvraj Singh was in all kinds of mess after the end of IPL-3 and did not get any respite at the international level as well. Struggling to string together any kind of momentum in his innings and the sound of the ball hitting the sweet spot of the bat a distant memory, the stylish southpaw found no buyers and little willinglness for any franchise to see him as a part of their setup.
But for seasoned campaigners like Yuvraj, form is temporary and class is permanent and Pune franchise supremo did not hesitate to swoop for the Chandigarh lad.
Fast-forward to World Cup 2011, and after playing some crucial and match-winning knocks for the World Cup-winning Indian team, World Cup Man of the Tournament and skipper of the Pune Warriors is now the hottest property in world cricket, and how Preity Zinta and Kings XI Punjab must be cursing themselves for letting go off the all-rounder.
The quadrennial cricketing extravaganza also saw the rise of Yuvraj Singh the bowler, with the perennial Indian problem of the fifth bowler being solved and how.
And with the confidence back, and along with that the swagger, the attitude seems to have rubbed off on his peers as Pune have quickly established themselves as the team to beat in this IPL. After clinical displays with bat and ball, the confidence of the captain in himself is clearly showing in the attitude of the team as well.
And then there is Robin Uthappa. Why the Royal Challengers Bangalore let go of him after the Indian T20 World Cup winner smashed 26 sixes in the IPL-3 still remains a mystery. But what is the Challengers' loss is the Warriors' gain.
An expert with coping up to the demands of the shortest version of the game, he has proved himself to be a through and through specialist, now also keeping for the Warriors to prove his versatility as a cricketer.
Unorthodox shots have always been one of his strong points, as he very well exhibited when he fearlessly ventured into the middle against the Kochi Tuskers and nonchalantly reverse swept the wizard Muttiah Muaralitharan for four.
But like every Indian batsman, his two-step dance down the pitch to dispatch the spinner and fast bowlers alike to the furthest parts of the ground is a sight to see.
He has clearly showed his game-changing abilities by knocking the wind out of the sails of the opposition with some lusty hits.
With encouraging signs on both batting and bowling fronts, the debutants are definitely presenting a strong case for themselves, and when in trouble, they know the Robbie-Yuvi duo can come and save the day.
Source: http://cricketnext.in.com/news/pune-solve-the-middleorder-missing-link/56540-5.html


Sehwag risking WI, Eng tour to play IPL


New Delhi: A World Cup win can bring satisfaction of a lifetime and champion players rummage around for a recliner to relax while the medal sits on the chest perpetually. But winds of change have refashioned perceptions, where the IPL money rules the roost and other issues move to the back-burner.
Virender Sehwag's niggling shoulder injury, which forced him out of the ODIs on the South African tour to be fit for the World Cup, is one such example where a player risks jeopardising his career for franchisee reputation and some extra zeroes.
Sehwag and BCCI's decision to delay the shoulder surgery until after the World Cup was in national interest, but postponing it for franchisee cricket defies logic.
In contrast, neighbouring giants Sri Lanka have issued marching orders to their IPL-serving players midway through the tournament to prepare for national duty for the tour of England.
This opens Sehwag's disregard towards his fitness to even severe scrutiny as India too have energy-sapping tour of the West Indies commencing just six days after the IPL final on May 28, followed by the tour to England.
What more, the delay has already cost India Sehwag's more than useful off-spin. Though it thankfully didn't hurt the team in the World Cup, the signs indicate his decision to delay can make it only worse.
So if the 'Devil' is planning to 'Dare' the scalpel after the IPL, it's almost certain that the most feared opener in world cricket has resigned to the fact that he won't tour the Caribbean.
Does it mean that Sehwag and BCCI have wilted under the pressure of big-spending franchises, treating national interest secondarily? Is India's tour of the West Indies trivial in comparison to domestic entertainment like the IPL?
These and many similar incisive questions are waiting to dissect Sehwag and the Indian board's decision to put off an imminent treatment. Hope it doesn't cost India a disaster in the West Indies after a fairytale in the subcontinent.
Source: http://cricketnext.in.com/news/sehwag-risking-wi-eng-tour-to-play-ipl/56541-13.html


Sehwag risking WI, Eng tour to play IPL


New Delhi: A World Cup win can bring satisfaction of a lifetime and champion players rummage around for a recliner to relax while the medal sits on the chest perpetually. But winds of change have refashioned perceptions, where the IPL money rules the roost and other issues move to the back-burner.
Virender Sehwag's niggling shoulder injury, which forced him out of the ODIs on the South African tour to be fit for the World Cup, is one such example where a player risks jeopardising his career for franchisee reputation and some extra zeroes.
Sehwag and BCCI's decision to delay the shoulder surgery until after the World Cup was in national interest, but postponing it for franchisee cricket defies logic.
In contrast, neighbouring giants Sri Lanka have issued marching orders to their IPL-serving players midway through the tournament to prepare for national duty for the tour of England.
This opens Sehwag's disregard towards his fitness to even severe scrutiny as India too have energy-sapping tour of the West Indies commencing just six days after the IPL final on May 28, followed by the tour to England.
What more, the delay has already cost India Sehwag's more than useful off-spin. Though it thankfully didn't hurt the team in the World Cup, the signs indicate his decision to delay can make it only worse.
So if the 'Devil' is planning to 'Dare' the scalpel after the IPL, it's almost certain that the most feared opener in world cricket has resigned to the fact that he won't tour the Caribbean.
Does it mean that Sehwag and BCCI have wilted under the pressure of big-spending franchises, treating national interest secondarily? Is India's tour of the West Indies trivial in comparison to domestic entertainment like the IPL?
These and many similar incisive questions are waiting to dissect Sehwag and the Indian board's decision to put off an imminent treatment. Hope it doesn't cost India a disaster in the West Indies after a fairytale in the subcontinent.
Source: http://cricketnext.in.com/news/sehwag-risking-wi-eng-tour-to-play-ipl/56541-13.html


Sunday 3 April 2011

Dreams are made of these...

"Let me tell you something my friend. Hope is a dangerous thing. Hope can drive a man insane." - Red to Andy Dufresne in the classic 'The Shawshank Redemption', 1994. 

India started the day with hope. Zaheer Khan was un-hittable by the Lankans, and the fielding made one suspect that coach Kirsten had injected some South African genes into the Indian team. What had been injected though was much simpler and much more visible: desire. The Indians were leaping, diving, running as if they had to train with Usain Bolt and the Sri Lankans found the going tough in the initial few overs. Visions were raised of a bowling choke, leading to a sedate chase. Then Dilshan and Sangakkara built a stand, after which Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene got the scoreboard ticking over much more regularly. Sangakkara went, and Mahela - who had started the World Cup with a 100 off 80 balls against Canada, before losing his form, decided the final would be the perfect place to recapture it on the way to a 100 off 84 balls. Sri Lanka scored 63 runs off the final five overs of the innings, turning a average-competitive total into a very tough one. Hope, that had been steadily growing in Indian fans' hearts, must have done a quick about-turn and headed straight into insanity territory. 

The scene had to be seen to be believed. It was midnight, there wasn't any store open and yet there was a teeming, swaying, gathering mass of humanity. Men and women, old and young, inebriated and sober, on vehicles and on foot - all bound by one fact and one only: They had discovered the Indian in them. 

Roads that had never seen this kind of movement at this hour were jam-packed. Vehicles were stuck, moving 10 metres in half an hour, but that was alright - no one was trying to get anywhere, everyone simply wanted to be a part of the festivities. At one point, I thought I should ask the group of people I was with to get back inside the car because I had spied a police car coming from the distance. Then I paused - there was a hand that was coming out of the police car as it neared a throng. That hand was raised in an unmistakable gesture of high-fiving the revelers. There wasn't going to be a crime committed today - not for the next two hours. Not when the country was in the throes of a collective happiness the like of which it had never seen. Tonight, the police were part of the delicious madness. I didn't get back in my car - I waited till I could bump hands with the man behind the wheel of the police vehicle.
 

Sri Lanka had ended up with a very good total, it was true. No batsman hitting a century in a World Cup final had ended up on the losing side - this was also true. No side playing the final at home had won the World Cup, yes. And no side had chased as many as 275 runs to win in a World Cup final. Yet hope had not completely disappeared. After all, no chasing side had a set of openers like Virender Sehwag and Sachin Tendulkar did they? 

As it turned out, after just 6.1 overs India didn't have them either. Sehwag had gone off the second ball of the innings, trapped plumb in front by Lasith Malinga. He took with him a sizeable chunk of hope and one needlessly wasted review. However, Tendulkar was still there, and it is an axiom of an Indian fan's life that as long as he is there at the crease, hope is never fully banished from the heart. For 13 glorious balls he made us believe. It was written - he would get to his 100th century while anchoring India's chase and bringing home the trophy that he most wanted and yet had never got, in front of an adoring home-crowd. God had rested on the 7th day, in twice the number of balls, the God of Indian cricket chased a ball from Malinga that was going away and had to leave to stunned silence. 

31/2 in 6.1 overs with the two principal match-winners back in the pavilion. Bye-bye hope, welcome Insanity. 

There was a man in a corner waving a giant India flag. He didn't look like he had come with anyone else, and yet he was bear-hugging every body within arm-reach. He was draping the flag over someone else, and high-fiving every passer-by on vehicle. There was a man on a motor-cycle. He didn't have anyone riding with him. And yet, from a moving vehicle he found the energy and the insouciance to holler a 'Bharat Mata Ki Jai' and exchange fist-bumps with whoever seemed to be passing him. There is a pedestrian, but he's not on the footpath. He's in the middle of the road. And he spontaneously starts a chant of 'Sachin...Sachin'. what feels like 50,000 voices immediately join in. They might have come alone, but there was nobody who was alone on this night. 

Gautam Gambhir and Virat Kohli. Two Delhi boys. Two future India captains maybe. Also most importantly, two men with limitless stomachs for toughing it out and who had the cojones to probably think to themselves, "So what if Tendulkar and Sehwag have gone? We are still there." 

They dusted off the early dismissals and focussed on the task at hand: how to get India to 275 in little steps. Gambhir looked fluent from the start, Kohli first settled down and then started opening up. Visions of this match cropped up. Irrestible parallels were drawn - India chased a much higher total in that match and the combined score of Tendulkar and Sehwag was 18 then too, as it was today. Would Kohli and Gambhir repeat their heroics? Kohli, it turned out, would not. 114/3 in the 22nd over, and India was once more on the back-foot. Out walked MS Dhoni, ahead of the in-form Yuvraj Singh. He had - he said later - a point to prove: to himself. And he backed himself to prove it. It was a courageous decision on the part of a man who hadn't been scoring too many runs so far, knowing that if it back-fired, he would have had to face a barrage of questions. 

It didn't backfire. Dhoni didn't allow it to. Gambhir and Kohli had taken India from despair to uncertainty. Dhoni and Gambhir took them from uncertainty to looking increasingly likely winners. Gambhir had already got to a superb fifty, and during the course of the stand Dhoni joined him. "We see your Mahela," the Indian fans seemed to be saying, "and we raise you a Gautam." The stand had crossed the century mark, and Gambhir was nearing his own. He would have got it too, except for a rush of blood that saw a fairly straight 'you miss, I hit' ball from Perera duly miss Gambhir's flailing bat and head for his stumps. Nevertheless, with 97 off 122, while chasing in a World Cup final, Gambhir had entered the pantheon of the select few who have played great World Cup final knocks. 

Out walked India's World Cup talisman - Yuvraj Singh. The game was in the balance, with India having a slight advantage. Recognizing the moment and realising that he needed to seize it, MS Dhoni turned it on. He had been scoring at almost a run-a-ball until Gambhir's dismissal. After Yuvraj's entry, he unleashed a brutal square-cut for six. When Malinga came back for his final spell, there was one quiet over, after which he was taken for 11 runs, with 9 of them coming off Dhoni's blade. With that, India's required rate was 5 runs to win off 12 balls. 

Grown men are not supposed to dance like this. Since when did the streets of a city become a post-midnight celebratory meeting place? And India will not be allowed to forget this party. 1983 exists as televison recording. 2011 will half be remembered by the street videos. For every man who is dancing, there is one taking a video - on a cellphone, on a camera, on possibly other sophisticated devices whose names I don't know. Yes, India will not be allowed to forget this party - there are just too many recordings of it! 

However, perhaps I should pull my friends - respectable, intelligent, mature men in ordinary lives - away from the throng where they are dancing without a care in the world, without a music beat to be heard and with only the accompaniment of a thousand screaming voices? I would, but I find that I'm part of the throng. My voice is contributing to the collective roar. My two left feet are dancing in wild abandon.
 

5 off 12, becomes 4 off 11 with a single and MS Dhoni is back on strike. He finishes it in the way only he can. Ice-cold eyes, even cooler head and a mighty swing over the sight-screens. He's had a previous highest of 34 in this World Cup, and he ends it by scoring 91 not out off 79 balls. For the first time after 28 years, a nation erupts with joy. 

O Captain, my Captain! Our fearful trip is done, The ship has weathered every rack, the prize we sought is won. [Link] 

The events of the night play back in memory. The first of many re-runs. The men who have won the Cup will be over the moon. And I'd wager that the men who might not have been a part of the winning squad, but who had just as much of a hand in bringing India to this summit on this day, will be just as happy. I raise a silent toast to Anil Kumble and Rahul Dravid. To Sourav Ganguly and VVS Laxman. To John Wright and Javagal Srinath. And of course to the entire Indian team of today. And to Sachin Tendulkar. You beautiful champion - who cares if you did not score runs. You had a date with destiny and you kept it. 

The images continue to flash: There was emotion on the field from MS Dhoni. There were tears from many Indian players and millions of fans. I had walked out in the streets after the win. I was greeted, hugged, and fist-bumped by people I did not know. The last time I had greeted and hugged so many strangers was at my wedding. 

Eleven men have won a trophy in a sport that only 10 countries in the world play at any sort of competitive level. But don't tell me that it's 'just a game'.
 

"Remember, Red, hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies." - Andy Dufresne, in reply to Red. From, 'The Shawshank Redemption', 1994. 

Source: http://www.cricbuzz.com/cricket-news/39475/dreams-are-made-of-these

No fairytale finish for record-breaker Murali

Record-breaking Sri Lanka off-spinner Muttiah Muralitharan bowed out of international cricket on the losing side as India won the World Cup final by six wickets on Saturday. 

Murali, who will 39 later this month, had said before the tournament he would retire after this World Cup. 

He went into the final with 800 wickets in 133 Tests and 534 in one-day internationals, both world records. 

But in his 350th one-day international a half-fit Murali was rendered wicketless, his eight overs costing an economical 39 runs but without quite the same sharp turn that made him so difficult to face for so long. 

Muralitharan's longevity as a top-flight player could be seen from the fact he was the sole survivor in the current side from the Sri Lanka team that beat Australia to win the 1996 World Cup final in Lahore. 

His career, although littered with individual records, was highly controversial on account of his unorthodox action. 

Born with a bent elbow, he was called three-times for 'throwing' by Australian umpires in the mid 1990s. 

He was also once called a 'chucker' by John Howard -- a comment which would later help scupper the former Australian Prime Minister's bid to become president of the International Cricket Council. 

Repeated bio-mechanical tests indicated his action was legal. 

But when the ICC amended their rules on bowling actions to allow for 15 degrees of flexibility in 2005 many critics felt it was a decision designed solely for Murali's benefit and a move to appease cricket's powerful 'Asian bloc'. 

Source: http://www.cricbuzz.com/cricket-news/39462/no-fairytale-finish-for-record-breaker-murali

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