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Showing posts with label Cricket. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cricket. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Pallekele set for World Cup debut.


The pressure on the Test teams in Group A, unlike those scrumming in Group B, is of a milder nature. The teams in Group B are securing quarter-final qualification first and looking after their positions in the process. Unless Zimbabwe scores an unlikely upset, however, all four Test teams in Group A are ensured of a place in the knockouts. They are merely jostling for places at present. Of the strongest, New Zealand are the weakest. Their opponents on Tuesday, Pakistan, are the only team to win everything so far.

New Zealand have beaten Kenya and Zimbabwe - by a ten-wicket margin no less - and another victory against Canada will see them through. It's that brittle performance against Australia, however, that is an indication of the difficulty they will face against formidable sides. On paper, like previous New Zealand teams, this one also has the facets of a fighting outfit.

They have explosive hitters, theoretically bat extremely deep, and have an abundance of bowling options, fast and slow. Their fielding, as ever, is among the best. Their problems are a combination of form, poor technique, and impatience that led to several batsmen chasing and edging wide deliveries against Australia. It's the batting that needs fixing first, for without runs on the subcontinent there is little hope, and they'll have to do it against one of the tournament's most in-form bowling attacks.

The odds on Pakistan being the only team with a 100% win record halfway into the league stage would have been rather high at the start of the World Cup. They weren't being talked up in the lead-up to the tournament - the spot-fixing scandal and the uncertainty over the one-day captaincy overshadowing their performances on the field. But they put Kenya and Canada away and in between those victories toppled tournament favourites Sri Lanka.

Their middle order has largely been solid, and the one time it failed - against Canada - their bowlers raised their game to meet the challenge. They've met and beaten New Zealand in a one-day series immediately preceeding the World cup. Play to potential and Pakistan will expect to dispatch them again tomorrow. Slip, and it could be the opening New Zealand need to rediscover their efficient game.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Hussey admits he needs time.

Australia batsman Mike Hussey has conceded he needs more work in the nets after his layoff from a ruptured hamstring after returning to the World Cup squad as a replacement for the injured paceman Doug Bollinger.


"I'm absolutely ecstatic I just can't wait to get over there," said the 35-year-old, who was named in the original 15-man squad but was controversially removed due to selectors' fears his injury would not recover in time.

"Initially when I was told I wasn't going to be going, I thought that was it," he told ABC radio.

"It was pretty demoralising but I was still very keen to get back and play as quickly as I could for WA (state side Western Australia)."

"I probably still need a little bit more work to get my skills right up to speed, to where they need to be, but it's just great to be out there playing and the hamstring feels great, to be honest."

Hussey, the older brother of David who is also part of Australia's World Cup squad, ruptured the hamstring in January and managed only 30 runs over two innings in Western Australia's seven-wicket victory over Queensland in their Sheffield Shield match that finished Sunday.

Hussey, nicknamed "Mr. Cricket" for his dedication and passion for the game, was nonetheless Australia's top batsman in the recent Ashes series and has scored 4,469 runs in 151 one-day internationals at an average of 51.96.

Hussey said he hoped to slot straight back into the side for Australia's next match against Kenya in Bangalore on Sunday.

"But the team's been going very well, I don't know what they want to do," said Hussey, a member of Ricky Ponting's victorious World Cup team in 2007.

"All I can do is just get over there as quickly as I can.

"I believe I'm flying out tomorrow around lunch time, so I'll join up with the team tomorrow night and then my preparation starts straight away.

"I'll be pretty much straight into the nets and preparing to play. Whether I do actually get to play straight away or not remains to be seen but I'll be preparing as though I'm going to be playing."

Pietersen to return home.

England batsman Kevin Pietersen has been ruled out of the Cricket World Cup with a hernia operation which needs immediate attention.



"Confirming the BREAKING NEWS mate: I fly home tonight. Out of the WC & IPL (Indian Premier League)...Absolutely devastated!!," he said on Twitter.

The International Cricket Council confirmed that the English cricket board had asked for a replacement but could not reveal who that was. The request was with the technical committee.

"...not a lot u can do about injuries mate!! onwards & upwards," Pietersen wrote.

"Sad to leave India... Love the people & the hospitality!! Alvida doston," he wrote, the last two words meaning "goodbye friends" in Hindi.

The England and Wales Cricket Board (had issued a statement on Saturday that Pietersen, 30, was suffering from a hernia but that it would be "managed" by medical staff for the duration of the World Cup which finishes in Mumbai on April 2.

The ECB spokesmen and team officials had their phones switched off.

The England party were flying from Chennai, where they clinched a thrilling six-run victory over South Africa in Group B on Sunday, to Bangladesh for their next match against the co-hosts in Chittagong on Friday.

Pietersen has been opening for England but has struggled so far to make a big impact in their four games, two wins, one defeat and a tie. On Sunday, he was out for two.

Yuvraj inspires India to nervy win.

Yuvraj Singh produced a stunning all-round show to become the first player to top up a five-wicket haul with a half century in the World Cup as India pulled off a nervy victory over Ireland in Bangalore.


Yuvraj's slow left-arm deliveries helped India to bowl out Ireland for a modest 207 and he followed that up with 50 not out off 75 balls to steer his team to a five-wicket victory in Group B, ensuring they stay unbeaten in the tournament.

The 29-year-old and his captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni (34 in 50 balls) played uncharacteristically sedate knocks and stitched together a 67-run partnership to set India well on their course to victory.

The duo came together with India precariously perched at 100-4 after Sachin Tendulkar (38) and Virat Kohli (34) fell in quick succession.

Following Dhoni's dismissal, Yusuf Pathan blazed a quickfire 30 off 24 balls with three towering sixes to finish off the match.

"I am definitely very happy with my bowling. First five-wicket haul and I am happy that I could finish off the game," man-of-the-match Yuvraj said with a wide grin.

"Ireland played well and put us under pressure. They fielded exceptionally."

Yuvraj's captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni agreed: "Frankly speaking, the scoreboard said 208-odd runs but it was close to 240 because the Ireland side fielded really well and their bowlers were very well backed up by the fielders."

Ireland used as many as eight bowlers to try and dislodge the pair but they dealt with the varied bowling attack and managed to score at a modest pace despite a sterling fielding effort by the Irish.

The most impressive Irish bowlers were their young spinners.

The 20-year-old Paul Stirling finished with none for 45 and the 18-year-old off-spinner George Dockrell finished with two for 49 -- their figures spoilt by Pathan's blitz at the very end.

Earlier, known more for his explosive batting, Yuvraj showed that his left-arm off spin was just as lethal as he bowled his quota of 10 overs on the trot, taking wickets at regular intervals to ensure that the Ireland run rate never took off.

Yuvraj came on in the 26th over and bowled with excellent flight and guile to finish with a career-best five for 31, including the key wickets of William Porterfield (75) and Kevin O'Brien (9), scorer of the World Cup's fastest ever century on Wednesday.

Yuvraj took over after Zaheer Khan gave India the perfect start by bowling Stirling in the first over of the day and removing Ed Joyce in his next over. He finished with three for 30.

Ireland went into a shell and crawled to 27-2 after 10 overs as Zaheer got the ball to move around dangerously and Dhoni brought on his spinners from the fourth over of the day.

Ireland skipper Porterfield top-scored for his team with a fighting 75 in 104 balls and Niall O'Brien (46) steadied the innings with some determined batting mixed with pugnacious strokeplay in a stubborn 113-run partnership.

They took their team to a relatively comfortable position of 122-2 when a smart piece of fielding by Virat Kohli saw O'Brien run out short of a well deserved 50.

Kevin O'Brien, fresh from his amazing match-winning 113 off 63 balls against England, found his team in a similar situation against India, but he failed to repeat his heroics as he fell to a smart catch by Yuvraj off his own bowling.

From then, it was precession of wickets at regular intervals as they lost their last eight wickets for 85 runs and some more resistance by the lower order helped Ireland inch over the 200-run mark.

England pull off stunning comeback.

England roared back from having been skittled out for just 171 to beat South Africa by six runs in thrilling fashion in their crucial World Cup Group B clash in Chennai.






It had looked to be all doom and gloom for Andrew Strauss's side as they were bowled out inside 46 overs for what looked to be a paltry total.

But England staged a dramatic and improbable comeback to clinch victory in the 48th over of the reply as the Proteas lost all 10 of their wickets for the cost of just 165 runs.

It is the latest in a string of pulsating matches for England in their rollercoaster World Cup campaign, and the victory keeps Strauss's side on course for progression to the quarter-finals.

Stuart Broad took the last two wickets to finish with four for 15 and barring Hashim Amla, who compiled 44, none of the South African batsmen could make an impact against the English bowlers who came up with a lion-hearted effort.

This was after South Africa's left-arm spinner Robin Peterson ended with three for 22 as he wrecked the England top order, claiming two wickets in his first over, while his in-form spin colleague Imran Tahir took four for 38 to scythe through the lower order.

"We didn't think 170 was as competitive as it should be but it's proved to be just that so we're delighted," said England spinner Graeme Swann.

"We knew there was a lot in the pitch for us. We knew it would turn, we knew it would keep low for the seamers and we knew how difficult it was to score from when we batted, especially at the end.

"As it turned out, their innings mirrored ours. We knew that pressure would build on the later batsmen and it was very hard to score runs at the end.

"It just goes to show that if you believe you can win any game... as we proved today."

The South African batting line-up, which shone in victories against West Indies and the Netherlands, showed similar vulnerability to slump to 127 for seven from a relatively comfortable 82 for two.

With South Africa losing five quick wickets, fresh life was injected into an otherwise dull match.

Things further spiced up when Faf du Plessis ran himself out for a brisk 17 and Michael Yardy removed Peterson to pave the way eventually for a memorable victory, made possible by Broad's late double strike.

In the morning, England captain Andrew Strauss won the toss and decided to bat first but a nightmare unfolded before his eyes at the M A Chidambaram Stadium.

His South African counterpart Graeme Smith opened with Peterson, whose magical first four-over spell - three wickets for four runs from four overs - wrecked England's top order.

Peterson removed the scoreless Strauss with his third delivery and Kevin Pietersen with his sixth and was not done yet.

Having sent down a maiden over, he returned to catch Ian Bell off his own bowling to reduce England to 15 for three inside five overs.

The 99-run fourth wicket stand between Jonathan Trott, who scored a patient 52 and Ravi Bopara, who racked up a breezy 60, somewhat arrested the slide but England never got going and lost the last five wickets for just 23 runs.

However, their partnership proved to be vital as England won their second match of the tournament.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Amir opts to complete education during ban.

KARACHI: Pakistan’s banned pace bowler Mohammad Amir has decided to finish his degree during his forced isolation from cricket.


The 18-year-old abandoned his studies when he started globetrotting as his career with Pakistan took off but his promising future was abruptly halted after he was found guilty of corruption by an International Cricket Council tribunal last month.

Handed a five-year ban from the sport, Amir said he wanted to use the time productively.

“I had to leave my college studies because of my full-time career in cricket once I was selected for Pakistan. But now I am trying privately to get a college degree,” the teenager said on a news channel.

“I am passing through the toughest period of my life and I have realised just how important it is to get a good education.”

Amir, former test captain Salman Butt and Mohammad Asif, were banned for a minimum of five years after being found guilty of bowling pre-arranged no balls during a test against England last year. They are appealing their bans with the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).

The trio also face criminal charges of accepting bribes and trying to defraud in a case brought by Britain’s Crown Prosecution Service and must appear in a magistrate’s court on March 17 in London.

They all deny any wrongdoing.

Many Pakistan players such as Amir hail from rural backgrounds and are unable to get a good education.

The left arm paceman had been tipped to become one of the best bowlers in the sport after picking up 99 wickets – across tests, ODIs and Twenty20 matches – since making his international debut in July 2009.

But with his career now on hold, he said his family suggested he should focus on his studies to remain busy. He did not specify the nature of his degree.

“I have filed an appeal with the CAS through my lawyer and I am hopeful of a good result and I am also going to London next week to attend the magistrates hearing in the Scotland Yard case against us,” he added.

“I regret not being able to play in the World Cup but I watch the matches. One thing this episode has taught me is to differentiate between true friends and foes.”

Friday, March 4, 2011

West Indies humiliate Bangladesh.

Ruthless West Indies humiliated Bangladesh with the bat and ball in front of their own fans, skittling the World Cup co-hosts for their lowest ever ODI score of 58 before chasing down the target in 12.2 overs.


Left-arm spinner Sulieman Benn claimed four wickets while Kemar Roach and Darren Sammy bagged three scalps each as Bangladesh were flattened in 18.5 overs.

The crowd reacted angrily, throwing placards, caps, logos and even team jerseys on to the outfield.

The boos around the Shere Bangla National Stadium could still be heard when the West Indian openers Chris Gayle and Darren Bravo came out to bat but Shakib Al Hasan's men were powerless to stop the visitors winning by nine wickets.

Bangladesh's score of 58 was the lowest total in this year's World Cup.

Gayle tried to explain the Bangladesh collapse.

"The wicket seemed to be doing a bit, I mean for the spinners, but Kemar Roach did a brilliant job.

"In fact, all our players stepped up to restrict Bangladesh to 60 runs.

"I think this win will take us to the quarter-final but we still can't relax as we have couple of crucial games coming up against Ireland, India and England."

NZ thrash Zimbabwe by 10 wickets.

The New Zealand opening batsmen complemented the efforts of their bowlers and thrashed Zimbabwe by 10 wickets to notch up their second World Cup win.


Paceman Tim Southee led a disciplined New Zealand bowling show to skittle Zimbabwe for 162 runs after the Africans chose to bat first in the Group A match at the Sardar Patel Stadium.

Southee bowled full and fast to pick up three wickets for 29 while captain Daniel Vettori and Kyle Mills, who returned from a back injury in place of batsman Jamie How, picked up two wickets apiece.

Openers Martin Guptill (86 not out) and Brendon McCullum (76 not out) then came back and swatted away whatever Zimbabwe threw at them and reached the target in under 34 overs.

New Zealand captain Vettori appeared a satisfied man after their second 10-wicket triumph in the tournament.

"I think this was the performance we were looking for. Right from the start... the way we bowled, the discipline we showed... the performance with the bat from Guptill and McCulllum... this was what we have been looking for from a long time," he said.

The lopsided win, however, denied the New Zealand middle-order batsmen to get a workout before their crunch match against Pakistan on Tuesday in Pallekele.

But the captain was not worried.

"This is what we were after, where two guys take responsibility and that's what we need to do in the big games coming up against Sri Lanka and Pakistan," Vettori said after the match.

Both the right-handers were equally comfortable against medium pace and spin and used their feet well to deny their opponents any breakthroughs.

Zimbabwe got off to a poor start in the morning after captain Elton Chigumbura opted to bat first on a placid pitch.

The run out of opener Charles Coventry in the second over of the morning put Zimbabwe on the back-foot early and the New Zealand bowlers ensured their opponents never recovered from there.

The maximum damage was done within the first 15 overs of the innings when Zimbabwe lost half their side with just 46 runs on the board.

Opener Brendan Taylor (44) put up some resistance and along with Greg Lamb added 40 runs for the sixth wicket, which helped Zimbabwe get past three figures.

Prosper Utseya, with a gritty knock of 36 managed to take the African nation past the 150-run mark.

The scramble starts in earnest.


It's not yet a knockout contest, but the loser of this one will require a standing count. After a week of ever-escalating entertainment in Group B, the tournament is just about to get deadly serious for two opponents who will have watched the past few days' events in Bangalore with a host of contrasting emotions. Bangladesh and West Indies know a place in the quarter-finals is there for the taking, especially in light of England's struggles to impose themselves on the tournament. But with Ireland on the march after their epic triumph on Wednesday night, there's suddenly a sixth competitor waiting to pounce on the next team to blink.

Bangladesh enter this contest on a tide of popular acclaim. The manner in which they overcame the Irish in Mirpur last week has reinforced the belief that in their favoured home conditions, with a quartet of canny spinners to take advantage of their slow, low surfaces, they are quite capable of holding their own against teams with superior credentials - let alone a team such as West Indies who are below them in the world rankings. That Ireland were able to saunter past 327 against England in Bangalore, yet flounder in pursuit of 206 in Bangladesh, will serve as a warning to West Indies' power-hitters. Unless someone does a Sehwag - and no prizes for guessing the likeliest candidates - this one could be another war of attrition.

That's not to say that West Indies do not have the skill or patience to overcome the conditions. Chris Gayle's diligent 110-ball 80 against the Netherlands was an atypical performance from such an explosive player, but it mirrored almost perfectly Tamim Iqbal's 86-ball 70 in Bangladesh's opening defeat against India. It's almost as though the two men had primed themselves for a controlled explosion at a later date, and just as Tamim's 44 made the difference against Ireland, the winner of their head-to-head tussle could well propel the destiny of the match.

Realistically, this one is too close to call. Both teams have begun with a win and a loss apiece, but if West Indies' dispatching of the Netherlands was eye-catchingly comprehensive, with Kemar Roach's hat-trick setting the seal on an excellent day's work, Bangladesh's self-belief in their out-muscling of Ireland was no less impressive. Strength in adversity has rarely been Bangladesh's strong-point, but right from the moment Mohammad Ashraful reduced the Irish to 75 for 3 in the 19th over, their body language was that of a team that knew it would win. In a tussle between two teams ranked eighth and ninth in the world, such displays of belief will be critical.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Afridi saves Pakistan from embarrassment.


Pakistan, one of the tournament favourites, slumped to a well below-par 184 off 43 overs against the unfancied minnows who were 104-3 in their reply.

But Afridi ripped through the middle order with 5-23, becoming the first man to take at least four wickets in three consecutive World Cup matches, as Pakistan maintained their 100% record.

Winning the toss and taking first use of the pitch, Pakistan could not get their batting rhythm going and lost wickets at regular intervals.

They slumped to 67-4 before Misbah-ul-Haq (37) and top scorer Umar Akmal (48) posted the best partnership of the innings with 73 for the fifth wicket.

Once the stand was broken at 140, the rest of the Pakistan batting collapsed with the last five wickets tumbling for 19 runs unable to cope with the medium-pace and spin combination of Canada who had heavily lost their first two matches to Sri Lanka and Zimbawe.

Canada lost their opening bowler Khurram Chohan who failed to complete his fourth over but he was not missed as the rest of the bowlers bowled a tight line and length.

Medium-pacer Harvir Baidwan was the pick of the attack with three for 35 while Rizwan Cheema, Balaji Rao and Jimmy Hansra shared six wickets among them.

Canada, whose only World Cup victory was over Bangladesh in 2003, started well in their pursuit of a relatively modest target against a Pakistan attack missing the resting Shoaib Akhtar with Zubin Surkari (27) and Jimmy Hansra (43) putting on 60 for the fourth wicket.

But Surkari's dismissal to Saeed Ajmal in the 34th over prompted the Afridi-inspired collapse with Canada eventually all out for 138 in 42.5 overs.

All-round South Africa wallop Netherlands.


A day after Ireland's heroics in Bangalore gave the Associates a major fillip, normal service resumed in Mohali where AB de Villiers and Hashim Amla reeled off contrasting hundreds to set up a hammering of Netherlands. Peter Borren elected to field under overcast skies, but things unraveled at an alarming rate after a disciplined show in the first quarter of the match. Amla overcame a sluggish start and focused on accumulation, while de Villiers shredded the attack in a blaze of big hits that was reminiscent of Herschelle Gibbs' assault in the last World Cup encounter between these two teams. South Africa's bowlers then backed up the batting with a near-perfect display to set up the fourth-biggest win in World Cup history.

Chasing 352, Netherlands' best chance of getting anywhere depended on the top order's ability to see off Dale Steyn and Morne Morkel. The openers played out six overs from South Africa's fastest bowlers, but Jacques Kallis ruined their efforts by snaring two quick wickets after coming in first-change. With the run-rate under control, Graeme Smith deployed his spinners on the lower order, and Netherlands sank without a trace, losing their last seven wickets for 39 runs against Imran Tahir and Robin Peterson.

The margin of victory completely eclipsed Netherlands' spirited efforts with the new ball. Their steady army of seamers stuck to tight lengths, and their accuracy left Smith prodding uncertainly from the outset, unsure of his footwork and indecisive in his outlook. After 31 balls of struggle, Smith had seen enough, and lost his leg stump while trying to shovel Bernard Loots across the line. Ryan ten Doeschate then won the first round in the battle of the prolific allrounders, strangling Kallis into glancing one down the leg side through to the wicketkeeper Wesley Barresi. At 58 for 2 in the 16th over, South Africa were in some strife. Thankfully for them, their two best batsmen in recent times were on hand to revive the innings. Even their most optimistic fans, though, would not have envisaged the emphatic manner in which the tide was turned.

Restless to put the failure against West Indies behind him, Amla tried to kick off his World Cup career by disregarding the lengths, and punching on the up. He nearly paid the price in Berend Westdijk's third over, when his drive fell just short of the man at short cover. In Mudassar Bukhari's next, he mishit another forcing shot through the off side, getting an inside edge that was pouched by Barresi on the bounce. Amla tightened his approach following the two reprieves, resorting to deflections behind square, and compact drives down the ground. His first eight balls yielded three fours, but he got only one more - a fortuitous inside edge to fine leg off ten Doeschate - on his way to a vital half-century.

As he had done against West Indies, de Villiers checked in with a surge of immaculate boundaries, flicking and cutting ten Doeschate for fours in the 18th over. They were shots of intent that changed the complexion of the game, ending a period of nearly ten overs in which South Africa's only boundary was Amla's edge to fine leg. de Villiers then went on to expose Netherlands' limitations, leaving the accumulation to Amla and throwing punches in all directions. He looted boundaries in all but two of the overs between 27 and 35, pinging boundaries in a comprehensive arc from third man to midwicket, with shots ranging from the revers- sweep to the slapped flick. While his improvisation was top class, the hallmark of his innings remained the trademark crunched cover-drives whenever the bowlers over-pitched.

Netherlands enjoyed a boundary-drought between overs 36 and 41, but it was clearly a case of the batsmen calibrating their guns for a final assault. Amla strolled to one of his quieter hundreds in the 40th over, and South Africa took the batting Powerplay soon after. de Villiers began the carnage by lapping Pieter Seelar for the first six of the innings, before reaching his century off 88 balls. His next ten deliveries brought him 34 runs, as he smashed Loots for three successive sixes and then ten Doeschate for a hat-trick of fours. Netherlands managed to dismiss both batsmen in quick succession, but it was scarce solace as the Powerplay went for 69.
The fields fell back for the last four overs, but that did not seem to affect Duminy, who kept getting under
length deliveries to swing four gleeful sixes. Netherlands must have known they were out of the game once South Africa finished with 351. Unfortunately, they did not have Kevin O'Brien in their ranks.

Struggling Canada hope to compete.


A game between two countries continents apart will be infused with a strong South Asian flavour on Thursday. Canada's been the adopted home of more than a million immigrants from the subcontinent, including the bulk of the national team, and the Toronto suburbs of Brampton, Missisauga and Scarborough, each with a significant South Asian population, will have some watching the potential mismatch with more than a reasonable interest.

There's much at stake for Canada. Their performances, including a meek surrender against Zimbabwe, have, in the eyes of many, justified the ICC's decision to shrink the next World Cup. Some of their more experienced players weren't picked in the World Cup squad; instead, five players from the Under-19 level, fresh to international cricket, were given a go, raising concerns over whether the best-available XV were selected. Their senior cricketers, Ashish Bagai and John Davison, have failed to step up. The only consolation is that their group members, Kenya, have had a worse time this tournament. For those at home with competing loyalties, a determined display against Pakistan would prove a satisfactory result.

Pakistan, eyeing a third straight win, would want a performance as dominating as the one against Kenya, but it remains to be seen whether they choose to tweak their combinations in a game with little room for surprise.

Mohammad Hafeez: He has proven to be a reliable opener for Pakistan since the start of 2010, but has often been dismissed after getting a good look-in at the crease. Hafeez has made three half-centuries and a ton, apart from a spate of 30s, in the last year. He's gifted with timing, is solid in defence and has the ability to bat out an innings. The Canadian bowling offers him a a good chance to dig in.

John Davison: The oldest player in the competition and Canada's big-name player has had a horrible two games with ducks in each. There was little hope against Sri Lanka in a mammoth chase but his team needed a strong start from Davison against Zimbabwe, an opposition Canada had hoped to beat at the start of the tournament. Without any impetus at the start of the innings, the rest of the Canadian batting appears to switch focus to survival rather than pushing on. With so much responsibility on his shoulders, Davison needs to set an example.

Team news

The fitness status of Henry Osinde remains unclear, but it would be worth it to promote their frontline batsman, Zubin Surkari, and allrounder Rizwan Cheema up the order. They batted at No.7 and No.6 respectively against Zimbabwe, coming in well after the game had been decided. There is also talk of Davison moving down the order.

Canada (possible): 1 John Davison, 2 Nitish Kumar, 3 Ruvindu Gunasekera, 4 Ashish Bagai, 5 Rizwan Cheema, 6 Zubin Surkari, 7 Jimmy Hansra, 8 Tyson Gordon, 9 Khurram Chohan, 10 Harvir Baidwan, 11 Balaji Rao.

Left-arm spinner Abdur Rehman has been ruled out of Thursday's game with an injury to his adductor muscle; offspinner Saeed Ajmal could well make his World Cup debut. Misbah-ul-Haq has a hamstring niggle but is expected to be fit while there is uncertainty over whether Pakistan will rest Shoaib Akhtar. If they do, left-arm seamer Wahab Riaz could be picked.

Pakistan (possible): 1 Ahmed Shehzad, 2 Mohammad Hafeez, 3 Kamran Akmal (wk), 4 Younis Khan, 5 Misbah-ul-Haq, 6 Umar Akmal, 7 Shahid Afridi (capt), 8 Abdul Razzaq, 9 Umar Gul, 10 Saeed Ajmal, 11 Shoaib Akhtar/Wahab Riaz.

Amla half-century drives sluggish South Africa.


Hashim Amla overcame a sluggish start, after Netherlands' discipline earned them two big wickets under the overcast morning skies in Mohali. Amla buckled down after a couple of lucky escapes, bringing up a careful half-century, while AB de Villiers settled down in more fluent fashion to drive South Africa to a reasonable position at the 25-overs mark.

Presented with more helpful conditions than they had encountered in Nagpur and New Delhi, Netherlands' steady army of seamers partly vindicated their captain's choice to field. Barring two short balls in the opening overs - both of which Amla dispatched for boundaries on either side of the wicket - Mudassar Bukhari and Berend Westdijk kept wobbling them off the seam without offering anything to drive.

Graeme Smith scratched around for 32 balls, unsure of his footwork and indecisive in his outlook. Once Bernard Loots and Ryan ten Doeschate came on, Wesley Barresi moved up to the stumps, cramping Smith further by binding him to the crease. By the 13th over, Smith had seen enough, and lost his leg stump while trying to shovel Loots across the line.

ten Doeschate then won the first round in the battle of the prolific allrounders, strangling Jacques Kallis into glancing one down the leg side through to Barresi. With the first two Powerplays gone, South Africa seemed in some strife at 58 for 2. Thankfully for them, their two best batsmen in recent times were on hand to revive the innings.

Amla, restless to put the failure against West Indies behind him, tried to kick off his World Cup career by disregarding the lengths, and punching on the up. He nearly paid the price in Westdijk's third over, when his drive fell just short of the man at short cover. In Bukhari's next, he mishit another forcing shot through the off side, getting an inside edge that was pouched by the wicketkeeper on the bounce. Amla tightened his approach following the two reprieves, resorting to deflections behind square, and compact drives down the ground. His first eight balls yielded three fours, but he got only one more - a fortuitous inside edge to fine leg off Ryan ten Doeschate - en route to a vital half-century.

AB de Villiers had checked in with three immaculate shots through the off side against West Indies, and he repeated the early surge today, flicking and cutting ten Doeschate for a couple of flowing boundaries. With the sun coming out, and the field spreading, de Villiers seamlessly shifted into accumulation mode. His unbeaten 50-run partnership with Amla came in good time despite featuring just those two fours, and holds the key for South Africa going into the second half of their innings.

Brutal O'Brien shocks England.


Kevin O’Brien played one of the greatest innings the World Cup has seen as Ireland completed a remarkable run-chase to beat England in Bangalore.

His savage 113 off 63 balls was almost solely responsible for rescuing the Associate nation from a position of little apparent hope and enabling them to pull off an upset to rival all upsets.

Although he was run out in the penultimate over of a scarcely believable pursuit, O’Brien had done enough to allow John Mooney and Trent Johnston to see Ireland to a target of 328 with three wickets and five balls to spare.

It was yet another breathless finish for England, who seem incapable of taking part in a routine game in this tournament, but any inadequacies in their performance will rightly be overshadowed by the brilliance of O’Brien.

In powering his way to three figures off just 50 balls, he recorded the sixth fastest century in ODI cricket. It comfortably surpassed anything we have seen in this competition, and spanned 16 fewer deliveries than Matthew Hayden’s hundred four years ago, the previous fastest in World Cup history.

On a day when records tumbled like autumn leaves, Ireland were left celebrating the highest successful chase achieved in a World Cup.

That Jonathan Trott, en route to 92, joined Viv Richards and Kevin Pietersen as the quickest player to 1,000 ODI runs - in 21 innings - had long since been forgotten by the time Mooney swung James Anderson through midwicket to seal a victory that will live long in the memory of the Irish and English alike.

Trott’s third-wicket stand of 167 with Ian Bell, who made a fluent 81, was central to England’s imposing 327 for eight, and appeared to the game’s defining partnership until O’Brien and Alex Cusack combined to flay 162 in barely 17 overs. Cusack’s contribution was a mere 47.


That their alliance began with Ireland tottering on 111 for five makes it all the more astonishing, although England will once again reflect on a below-par fielding display marred by five dropped catches.

Andrew Strauss spilled a tough chance over his shoulder at mid-off, but O'Brien had 91 to his name by that time - and was deep into an innings that ultimately contained 13 fours and six sixes.

The figures are worth dwelling upon, for they reflect the brutality of O’Brien’s strokeplay on a pitch every bit as true as that on which 676 runs were scored by India and England at this venue on Sunday.

The prospects of an Ireland victory appeared distant after Will Porterfield dragged the first ball of their reply, an Anderson loosener, on to leg stump.

Paul Stirling’s departure for a breezy 32 hardly helped matters, and you would have got long odds on anything other than a convincing England win after Graeme Swann struck three times in the space of 10 deliveries.

Niall O’Brien, sweeping rather ambitiously, was bowled off stump; Ed Joyce’s patience evaporated when he advanced fatally to provide Matt Prior with one of his easier stumpings; and Gary Wilson was lbw as he too tried to sweep.

If England assumed the contest was over, they did not reckon upon the younger of the O’Brien brothers.

Swann was twice hoisted into the stand at deep midwicket - he nonetheless returned admirable figures of 3-45 - to spark an unrelenting assault in which Cusack was consigned to the role of roadie, never mind playing second fiddle.

He had the best view in the house as O’Brien, swinging powerfully over the leg side and driving forcefully down the ground, mounted a staggering assault that peaked when he smeared Bresnan over point for six.

They plundered 62 off five overs of the batting powerplay and, although Cusack was run out in the 42nd over and O’Brien perished with 11 needed off 11 balls as he tried to get back on strike, Mooney and Johnston held their nerve while all in the crowd were losing theirs.


Mooney’s unbeaten 33 off 30 balls will be remembered more fondly than his 4-63 haul, but the role he played in limiting England’s late charge with the bat was not dissimilar to that performed by Bresnan against India four days ago.

But for a collapse that saw six wickets fall in the final eight overs, England’s innings was superbly paced, and served as more than ample justification for Strauss’ decision to bat first on a pacy surface.

Stirling, who took 1-45, also deserves credit for applying some sort of control with his occasional off-spin after Strauss and Kevin Pietersen’s opening stand of 91 inside 14 overs.

Strauss, fresh on the back of an ODI-best 158 three days ago, made 34 on his 34th birthday, only to be bowled behind his pads as he stepped across to manufacture a sweep against left-arm spinner George Dockrell.

Pietersen, who had shown his usual disdain for anything in the vicinity of his pads, responded to losing his skipper by pulling Mooney off the front foot for a flat six over midwicket, but his attempt at improvisation ended in failure when he gloved a reserve-sweep off Stirling to Niall O’Brien. He had struck 59 off 50 balls.

While Trott and Bell initially erred on the side of the caution, they rarely missed the opportunity to score.

Trott, typically, favoured the leg side, while Bell drove with his usual poise - both over and through the infield - in the arc between extra-cover and wide mid-on. There was no better example than when he advanced to ease Dockrell over long-off for six.


Both managed to combine control and aggression until Bell clipped the last ball of the batting powerplay to short midwicket, where Stirling took a splendid catch diving to his left.

Mooney gained further reward when Trott, aiming an expansive drive, had his off stump pegged back by one that nipped back, and Prior was bowled making room to Johnston moments later.

Paul Collingwood holed out at long-on attempting a second six of the over off Mooney, who had Bresnan taken at deep midwicket off the last delivery of the innings after Johnston’s slower ball had done for Yardy.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Broad boost as England bat.


England welcomed back Stuart Broad for the World Cup Group B clash against Ireland in Bangalore.

The pace bowler was passed fit after missing Sunday’s thrilling tie with India due to a stomach bug.

Ajmal Shahzad made way in the only change to the England side, who will bat first after captain Andrew Strauss - on his 34th birthday - won the toss under clear blue skies.

Ireland, meanwhile, dropped Andrew White and Andre Botha to make way for Alex Cusack and Gary Wilson as they attempt to bounce back from defeat to Bangladesh in their opening match.

England: Strauss (captain), Pietersen, Trott, Bell, Collingwood, Prior (wicketkeeper), Yardy, Bresnan, Swann, Broad, Anderson.

Ireland: Porterfield (captain), Stirling, Joyce, Niall O’Brien (wicketkeeper), Cusack, Kevin O’Brien, Botha, Mooney, Johnston, Dockrell, Rankin.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Malinga's yorkers decimate Kenya.

Sri Lanka stormed to a landslide nine-wicket win over Kenya in World Cup Group A in Colombo, inspired by Lasith Malinga's hat-trick.


The Kenyans batted longer than they had managed in either of their previous two innings in the tournament, but still buckled for a paltry 142 all out, with Malinga finishing with figures of six for 38.

The wicket balls verged on unplayable, full and straight deliveries with a hint of inswing to which the Kenyans had no answer.

Malinga took the second hat-trick in two days of World Cup action following Kemar Roach's effort against the Netherlands 24 hours prior - and became the only bowler in history to take two World Cup hat-tricks, having managed the feat in 2007 with four wickets in four balls against South Africa.

Sri Lanka set about the target with purpose and power, scoring at just shy of eight runs an over until they knocked off the total with 188 balls remaining.

Kenya had folded to totals of 69 and 112 in their previous two innings at the World Cup, and the decision of captain Jimmy Kamande to bat after winning the toss was either bravery or foolhardiness.

It took just 13 balls before both openers were gone. Nuwan Kulasekara trapped Maurice Ouma plumb in front of the stumps and Seren Waters was undone by a full ball from Malinga which hit the toe of his back foot.

The Obuya brothers, Collins and David, then came together at the crease and frustrated the Sri Lankans for the best part of 30 overs.

They rode their luck as Sri Lanka tested them with pace and then spin, with Collins surviving a leg-before appeal from Muttiah Muralitharan reviewed and then dismissed on height grounds, and David earning a reprieve from the referral system after challenging a leg-before decision against him from Ajantha Mendis.

But they fought hard and accumulated slowly as Kamande had requested before the toss, adding 94 runs together until Collins was clean-bowled by Malinga.

That precipitated a collapse, as the rest of the Kenyan line-up fell for a series of single-figure scores.

Steve Tikolo drilled a cut off Mathews to the man at point, while David Obuya's resistance fell with a heave to midwicket.

Kamande ran himself out needlessly, before Malinga took his fabulous hat-trick.

He ended Tanmay Mishra's misery with a yorker which pegged him leg-before from the final ball of the 42nd over, before clean bowling Peter Ongondo and Shem Ngoche with the first two balls of the 44th.

His accuracy let him down as he attempted to take a fourth consecutive wicket, but two balls later he rediscovered the line with a yorker to clean out Elijah Otieno and end the innings.

Upul Tharanga and Tillakaratne Dilshan got the Sri Lankan reply off to a roaring start, with the latter crashing boundaries with ease as Kamande rotated through his bowling options forlornly.

Sri Lanka were halfway to the total in just 8 overs when Otieno, his fifth bowler, removed Dilshan for an explosive innings of 44.

That brought the captain Sangakkara to the crease, however, and the pair continued apace to reach the total.

The duo took the batting powerplay early to leave spaces in the field, and Tharanga struck Ngoche's slow left-arm spin for 19 runs as the game drew to a close.

Sri Lanka rebounded from a disappointing defeat to Pakistan with an emphatic victory, though stiffer tests await, starting with Australia on Saturday.

Jayawardene takes legal advice over fix claims.

Sri Lanka batsman Mahela Jayawardene has taken legal advice over doubts raised on a state-run TV channel about the way he and another batsman performed in the World Cup defeat by Pakistan.


Sri Lanka, who are one of the favourites to win the tournament, lost Saturday's Pakistan game by 11 runs as Jayawardene and Thilan Samaraweera were out for just two runs and one run respectively when the team was trying to accelerate the run rate against the powerful Pakistan bowling.

State-owned Independent Television Network in an analytical documentary aired on Sunday criticised several Sri Lankan players including Jayawardene and Samaraweera for their poor performance.

Jayawardene when asked about the allegations before the Kenya match said he had consulted his lawyers over the matter.

"The lawyers will decide what proper course of action should be taken," he said.

ITN also accused a businessman of betting 2 million rupees (£11,075) on Pakistan's victory without giving any further details.

"We are treating the matter seriously," said Nishantha Ranatunga, the secretary of Sri Lanka Cricket.

In a statement issued later, Sri Lanka Cricket condemned the programme for "carrying a story that is baseless and thereby demoralising our players during the ongoing World Cup".

"Sri Lanka Cricket will be taking this matter up with the relevant authorities of this channel, based on the fact that this channel has brought great distress to two of our national cricketers who have served Sri Lanka Cricket with honour and dignity throughout their illustrious careers so far."

The ITN in its 'Vimasuma' (inquiry) programme accused both Jayawardene and Samaraweera of changing the game, which otherwise Sri Lanka would have won.

"We are now in second thoughts whether Mahela and Thilan actually 'changed the game'," the narrator of the programme said, adding that if both had scored 30 runs together, Sri Lanka would have won.

Compared to other Asian neighbours, the 1996 World Cup champions have been relatively free from corruption and match-fixing scandals.

"People who make such allegations should be careful of what they say unless they have sufficient proof," Sri Lanka's team Anura Tennekoon said.

Last month, three Pakistan players were banned for a minimum of five years over allegations that they deliberately bowled no-balls (spot-fixing) against England last August.

That case has now been taken to sport's highest court of appeal, the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

The game's governing body, the International Cricket Council, told Reuters on Tuesday that each of the 49 matches at the World Cup were "to some extent" scrutinised by an anti-corruption unit.

A spokesman explained that unless the unit, which keeps its deliberations secret, planned action against a team or individual then the ICC itself would not be informed.

Cricket-Kenya win toss and elect to bat first v Sri Lanka.


Kenya won the toss in their World Cup Group A match against Sri Lanka and elected to bat first.

Co-hosts Sri Lanka will want to bounce back after losing their last match to Pakistan by 11 runs on Saturday. Kenya heavily lost their first two games against New Zealand (10 wickets) and Pakistan (205 runs).

Lasith Malinga, the Sri Lanka bowling spearhead, returned to the side after missing the first two games.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Roach hat-trick lights up Delhi.

Paceman Kemar Roach took a stunning hat-trick as West Indies thrashed the Netherlands by 215 runs in their World Cup Group B clash in Delhi.


Roach became only the sixth bowler to take a World Cup hat-trick as he finished with outstanding figures of six for 27 and gave his side an emphatic victory at the Feroz Shah Kotla stadium.

Netherlands skipper Peter Borren won the toss and elected to field, leaving Chris Gayle to score 80 and Kieron Pollard a belligerent 27-ball 60 as West Indies post 330 from their 50 overs.

Borren's side never looked remotely likely to challenge as the Associate nation were swiftly reduced to five for 36 inside 10 overs, and they never recovered with their resistance extinguished after just 31.3 overs courtesy of Roach's brilliance.

It was a strange opening to the match as the normally rampant and free-flowing Gayle played in circumspect fashion and was overshadowed by early fireworks from his opening partner Devon Smith in a startling role-reversal.

Smith departed in the 17th over having compiled a brisk 53 off 51 balls and provided his side a solid platform, before Darren Bravo added a swift 30.

Gayle's innings gradually accelerated as he plundered seven fours and two sixes, while Ryan ten Doeschate was given a fearful hammering as he finished with figures of one for 77.

Pieter Seelaar was the pick of the Netherlands bowlers with his three for 45, and the spinner also accounted for captain Darren Sammy as the West Indies innings tailed off towards the end.

Ramnaresh Sarwan was given two galling reprieves as the Dutch fielding left a lot to be desired, but his luck finally ran out with 49 runs to his name.

But it was the scintillating half-century from Pollard which had the crowd in raptures: the number five and IPL star located the top tier of the grandstand on four occasions in a quite staggeringly uncompromising knock.

The Netherlands reply needed to be assured, but it lacked any conviction as opener Wesley Barresi was sent back to the hutch with just two runs on the board for a four-ball duck as Roach seized his first scalp.

Only Tommy Cooper provided any semblance of a resistance with a gutsy and at times enterprising 55 not out, but his class and character was in stark contrast to the insufficient contributions made around him.

Star man Ten Doeschate failed as he was trapped lbw by the languid and unflappable Sulieman Benn, while middle-order incumbents Bas Zuiderent and Tom de Grooth were each sent packing with just a solitary run a piece.

Number eight Mudassar Bukhari produced an obdurate, dogged knock to accompany Cooper for a fleeting stint at the crease, but Roach demolished his woodwork for 24.

Seelaar and Bernard Loots departed for one and a golden duck respectively, and suddenly Roach had ignited the Delhi crowd with two wickets in successive deliveries.

Roach roared in and scattered the stumps once more as Berend Westdijk was comprehensively clean bowled, and the paceman had clinched victory for his side in the most emphatic fashion possible.

Both teams needed a victory to get their campaigns back on track following opening loses in Group B, and it was West Indies who prevailed by a convincing 215-run margin.

Pakistan to keep momentum going – Saurav Ganguly.

I have always stated that I am not a firm believer of the tag ‘favourite’ and I was proved right once again by Pakistan’s win over Sri Lanka.


Most people had termed Sri Lanka to be the favourite to win this match but as I always believe, it is the team in form on that particular day which took away the honours.

Pakistan needs to be congratulated for the win, but at the same time Sri Lanka will have to be careful in preparing wickets.

They have to prepare the twenty-yards in such a way that the team batting first after winning the toss doesn’t carry away most of the advantage. The wicket at Premadasa slowed down as the game went on and run-chase was extremely difficult.

I have liked the Pakistan team as much I have seen them till now.

Younis Khan and Misbah-ul-Haq at four and five will have crucial role to play in the tournament and will be the anchor for the team’s batting. The Pakistan think-tank have set the batting line-up in such a manner that it portrays perfect balance with Afridi and Razzaq at seven and eight.

The Pakistan bowling also looks to be in good health with Afridi and Shoaib Akhtar leading the pack. Afridi seems to have developed hugely as a bowler and is leading with his heart.

They could have won the game with ease had they not let off Sangakkara and Chamara Silva early on.

It will be interesting to watch Pakistan in the next few games, waiting to find out as to how they keep the momentum going.

Sri Lanka, I have always believed, is a top heavy batting team. They rely heavily on Sanga and Mahela and if these two fail to shoulder the team Samaraweera, Kapugedera, Chamara Silva, Angelo Mathews seem to lack the wherewithal to carry the burden.

Sri Lanka is definitely missing Lasith Malinga in their scheme of things. His ability, experience with the new ball and at the death is being surely missed by his team.

The big matches are now on in this World Cup and it’s time for the cricket fans to sit up and take note. One needs to keep a close eye on how the big guns are shaping up for the final onslaught from the quarter-final stage.