Wednesday, February 20, 2008

The IPL Story

Squads as of now:

Jaipur Shane Warne (US$ 450,000), Graeme Smith (US$ 475,000), Younis Khan (US$ 225,000), Kamran Akmal (US$ 150,000), Yusuf (US$ 475,000)

Chennai MS Dhoni (US$ 1.5 million), Muttiah Muralitharan (US$ 600,00), Matthew Hayden (US$ 375,000), Jacob Oram (US$ 675,000), Stephen Fleming (US$ 350,000), Parthiv Patel (US$ 325,000), Joginder Sharma (US$ 225,000), Albie Morkel (US$ 675,000)

Mumbai Sachin Tendulkar (icon), Sanath Jayasuriya (US$ 975,000), Harbhajan Singh (US$ 850,000), Shaun Pollock (US$ 550,000)

Bangalore Rahul Dravid (icon), Anil Kumble (US$ 500,000), Jacques Kallis (US$ 900,000), Zaheer Khan (US$ 450,000), Mark Boucher (US$ 450,000), Cameron White (US$ 500,000)

Hyderabad Adam Gilchrist (US$ 700,000), Andrew Symonds (US$ 1.35 million), Herschelle Gibbs (US$ 575,000), Shahid Afridi (US$ 675,000), Scott Styris (US$ 175,000)

Mohali Yuvraj Singh (icon), Mahela Jayawardene (US$ 475,000), Kumar Sangakkara (US$ 700,000), Brett Lee (US$ 900,000), Sreesanth (US$ 625,000), Irfan Pathan (US$ 925,000)

Kolkata Sourav Ganguly (icon), Shoaib Akhtar (US$ 425,000), Ricky Ponting (US$ 400,000), Brendon McCullum (US$ 700,000), Chris Gayle (US$ 800,000), Ajit Agarkar (US$ 330,000)

Delhi Virender Sehwag (icon), Daniel Vettori (US$ 625,000), Shoaib Malik (US$ 500,000), Mohammad Asif (US$ 650,000), AB de Villiers (US$ 300,000), Dinesh Karthik (US$ 525,000), Farveez Maharoof (US$ 225,000), Tillakaratne Dilshan (US$ 250,000)

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Cricket(Preview CB series 7th odi aus vs ind)

Australia play india tomorrow in adelaide oval.With sri lanka snatching a win against india the series is nicely poised.India have showed some good batting form recently.So there are lots of positives for them.

In the other hand aussie batting is disappointing.Captain Ricky Ponting is in poor form.Its a nightmare new year for the aussie captain.So it will be a good contest tomorrow in adelaide
oval.

Australia have a good record in this ground and it favours the team that bats first.In the last 8 games the team batted first have won 5 times.so toss will be crucial for the outcome of the game.
David Hussey is expected toplay in place of injured micheal clarke.It will be debut for him.
Brett lee is 50-50.

India: Plus................... The main boost for india is the good form of young prospect Rohit sharma .He is in excellent form.He has to do his job correctly to give any chance for india.

India:Minus................. The bowling department is a concern for india.except young ishant sharma there is no one to tell in specific.Sreesanth is very expensive.So the other opening bowlers have to help ishant sharma to give india a good chance.

Australia: Plus.............. Veteran gilchrist scored a good ton in his home ground two days back which will give aussies a boost.Mitchell johnson and Nathan bracken are performing well for the aussies.

Australia: Minus........... Their slip fielding is terrible.i haven't seen a worse fielding from the aussies in the past.They have to improve in that department and have to stop gifting lives for the opposing team.

AtoZ prediction............ A close contest.will be a good match.But aussies will clinch it

IPL kick off on April 18

IPL is expected to kick off on April 18 2008, with the first matches expected between Sharukh Khan’s Kolkata franchise and Vijay Mallya’s Bangalore team at the Chinnaswamy Stadium at Bangalore. IPL will feature eight franchises and will run for 44 days. Each franchise will play all others on a home and away basis with 7 matches at home. The top 4 franchises in the league will contest the semi finals and the victorious semi finalists will meet in the grand final all over one weekend, which will be played out in Mumbai.

The inaugural season of the IPL will showcase a grand total of 59 matches providing broadcasters and in-stadia spectators with 177 hours of live entertainment, which will also be viewed by a significant international audience. All matches will be during late afternoon and evening to coincide with prime time for television and providing a convenient time for the stadium audience.

There "was" a Masterful Batsman by the name Yuvraj

Gary Kirsten thinks it's about belief, Mahendra Singh Dhoni attributes it to pressure, Kapil Dev has called for more time, Michael Clarke feels a comeback is imminent, and some experts have said a break is the best option. A Bollywood actress' name keeps cropping up. With every match, every new failure, the Yuvraj Singh conundrum is dissected further.

Yuvraj's slide has been one of the themes of the Australian summer, one where he has found new ways to get himself out. At the MCG last Sunday, with the game on a knife edge, he swung hard at a slow offcutter from Stuart Clark. The ball popped straight to Michael Hussey at short cover, who had been stationed in the position expressly for the purpose. A fielder was brought in and Yuvraj played straight into his hands.

It was déjà vu all over again. Yuvraj arrived in Australia a proud prince, fresh off a scintillating century against Pakistan in the Bangalore Test. The swagger remains but the bat is no more the flashing blade that cut bowlers to pieces. Adding to the frustration is the fact that the bowlers have often been peripheral to Yuvraj's downfall.

Kirsten, a left-hand batsman who based his game more on graft rather than dazzling shots, talks of "high expectations and a fear of failure". Few would be more qualified to talk about ploughing one's way out of a rough patch, so diligently did Kirsten approach every single innings. "It usually requires a scratchy but determined innings to get the confidence and belief back," he told Cricinfo. "And it also requires a bit of luck. I believe this comes from a really good attitude in training and in one's preparation. Work as hard as one can in one's physical and mental preparation and more times than not, things will turn."

There's no doubt that Yuvraj himself has been dissecting his technique to bits, trying to figure out where the flaw lies. There has been talk of his vulnerability against the moving ball, his tentativeness against spin, his lack of footwork against both, and his faulty head position. Surely Yuvraj, on the cusp of his 200th ODI, has had enough time to find out what works best for him?
http://pictopia.com/perl/get_image?provider_id=278&size=550x550_mb&ptp_photo_id=2297792
The slump has called on Mahendra Singh Dhoni to field a barrage of questions at the end of every match. At Canberra, where Yuvraj came in as late as the penultimate over, he scowled when asked about Yuvraj's form. Dhoni is doing his bit to curb his own flamboyance, in keeping with the need to achieve his vision for a brave, adaptable team. He has knuckled down, brought out a more guarded front, and thrived on the responsibility. The ability to do likewise has often eluded Yuvraj.

"Yuvraj is key and whether he is scoring or not doesn't matter. At times when you are desperate to perform, the pressure mounts," Dhoni said. "Personally, I feel Yuvi should come after the 20th over because the field opens up and that's the main time when you build up your innings. The main emphasis for a team has always been on how you start the innings and how you finish in the final overs, but for me it is how you set up and how you perform in the middle overs - 20-39 overs is more important and that's the key moment for your best batsman to be out there.

"Last year he was our main middle-order batsman, who handled pressure and gave good stability to the side. He also contributes with the ball when we play an extra batsman, so he is an asset to the side."

Yuvraj, too, has cited his phenomenal run last year, where he came into his own as a one-day batsman and was unstoppable in the World Twenty20. After India's World Cup debacle, he rattled up 1025 runs in 29 games up until the start of the CB Series. In 2007 he was the most successful Indian batsman in run-chases, ended with the best average, and was India's second most prolific run-scorer after Sachin Tendulkar.

Before the CB Series, Yuvraj spoke of his disastrous run in the Tests in Australia - he totalled 23 runs in five innings - and argued that it was only a minor blip that was being blown out of proportion. "It's just two games, not like some ten-odd games."

Yet, ever since his debut in 2000, there has been a question mark over his consistency. Those who have played the game at his level point to his frequent inability to lean into a stroke completely - which various bowlers have exploited by placing an extra fielder at short cover or silly mid-off.

The demons of self-doubt may have surfaced after his latest injury as well. It took a while for Yuvraj to rebound from the knee injury he sustained in 2006, and he was lucky to get away with a minor twinge this time around. Whispers that his frail knee has been playing on his mind are yet to be confirmed, but these are hard to ignore when he is seen at mid-on or languishing in the outfield instead of at his favourite position, point.

It's not so much the lack of runs that is worrying. Yuvraj has displayed little vitality in the field, and a distinct lack of leadership of the sort that one expects from the vice-captain. Harbhajan Singh, a long-time friend, reckons Yuvraj is one of the "top ten" batsmen at the moment. Yuvraj knows he has the resources to justify the claim. With other players one might have asked, "Will he, won't he?" but this man, supposedly India's next great batsman, has no option. He simply must.

Friday, February 15, 2008

Football (Uefa cup round up)

Bolton and Tottenham both secured first leg victories as they eye a place in the last 16 of the Uefa Cup, while Aberdeen were hugely impressive in their 2-2 draw with Bayern Munich.

Hamburg had too much for FC Zurich and Fiorentina also tasted success on their travels as they beat Rosenborg.

Gary Megson's Bolton will take a first leg lead to the Spanish capital after the Reebok faithful were treated to a 1-0 win over Atletico Madrid.

An evenly fought and often volatile encounter was decided by El-Hadji Diouf's close range winner, just moments after Atletico substitute Sergio Aguero was sent-off for spitting in the 72nd minute.

Aberdeen performed heroically at Pittodrie to hold Bayern Munich to a 2-2 draw that saw them twice lead against the Bundesliga giants.

Josh Walker fired the SPL side into a shock 24th minute lead with a precision strike from the edge of the box, but their joy proved short-lived as Bayern hit back through Miroslav Klose's smashed finish from Luca Toni's flick on.

Aberdeen restored their lead when Omatsone Aluko showed a great touch and composure before firing a low drive under a helpless Michael Rensing just before the half-time break.

Bayern responded strongly in the second period and will host Aberdeen on a level footing in the return leg, thanks to Hamit Altintop's close range effort, after he had seen his penalty saved by Dons goalkeeper Jamie Langfield.

Tottenham claimed an away day success at Slavia Prague, as they secured a 2-1 victory that should have seen them win by more, despite a late rally from the home side.

Spurs were always in cruise control on their trip to the Czech capital as they needed just four minutes to take the lead.

Jermaine Jenas' mazy dribble concluded with the ball breaking to Dimitar Berbatov, who proceeded to slam in his 16th goal of the season.

So as not to be overshadowed by his strike partner, Robbie Keane got in on the act when on the half-hour mark he converted Jenas' clever pass with the finish it deserved.

Juande Ramos looked content on the bench but after David Strihavka capitalised on Radek Cerny's dropping of a routine cross with 20 minutes remaining, Spurs looked distinctly shaky.

Prague went close to grabbing a surprise leveller on a number of occasions, with Erich Brabec crashing the bar with a header.

Hamburg were far too strong on their travels to Zurich as they came away with a comfortable 3-1 victory, which saw all the goals scored in the second half.

David Jarolim broke the home side's resolve four minutes after the break when he converted substitute Jose Guerrero's knock-down with a smart finish.

And it was Guerrero again that proved to be the architect of Hamburg's second, as his cross was converted by Croatian striker Ivica Olic.

The win was secured when Piotr Trochowski scored a low free-kick that should make the return leg in Germany very much a formality.

Zurich's consolation was scored two minutes from time when Eric Hassli scored a free-kick of his own.

Former Chelsea striker Adrian Mutu ensured it is Fiorentina that are favourites to progress to the competition's latter stages as his goal saw off Rosenborg in Norway.

The Romanian's 16th minute effort saw him pounce from close range to finish Riccardo Montolivo's pass.

Ariza Makukula's goal two minutes before the break secured Benfica a first leg advantage over Nurnberg.

Cricket(CB series 6th odi AUS vs SL) at Perth

Australia 236 (Gilchrist 118, Clarke 43, Malinga 4-47) beat Sri Lanka 173 (Sangakarra 80) by 63 runs

Adam Gilchrist celebrated a century on his farewell appearance at the WACA as Australia beat Sri Lanka to go top of the Commonwealth Bank Series table.

Adam Gilchrist acknowledges the applause at the end of his innings, Australia v Sri Lanka, 6th Match, CB Series, Perth, February 15, 2008
The big-hitting wicketkeeper cracked 118 on his home ground as the Australians made 236 in 49.4 overs and then bowled out Sri Lanka for just 173 as the tourists were made to pay for a host of dropped catches and misfields towards the end of the Australian innings.

Gilchrist, who is set to retire from international cricket after the series, smacked nine fours and three sixes from his 132-ball knock, but the hosts' total had looked achievable on a decent pitch with a quick outfield.

Kumar Sangakkara took the fight to Australia, but the wicketkeeper was offered precious little support from his team-mates to finish on 80 as the game drifted away from Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka started their run chase in a hurry and Brett Lee went for 16 from the first over, openers Tillakaratne Dilshan and Sanath Jayasuriya both hitting boundaries.

But Jayasuriya was soon sent packing by Nathan Bracken for a rapid 12, James Hopes taking the catch at third man, and Mitchell Johnson, brought into the attack in place of Lee, removed Dishan's middle stump in his first over for 11.

The next partnership of Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene looked ominous for Australia as the pair sprayed the ball to all corners of the ground with a steady flow of fours to keep the run rate well above a run a ball.

Johnson though struck again with a late-swinging delivery held by Ponting in the slips to dismiss Jayawardene for 21.

Andrew Symonds, diving low to his left, then took a stunning one-handed catch with the ball barely off the ground to get rid of Chamara Silva for a duck off the bowling of Bracken.

Sangakkara's scoring slowed dramatically after those two wickets and his partnership with Chamara Kapugedara produced just two fours, both from the new batsman.

It was not until the 32nd over that the wicketkeeper brought up his 50 from 80 balls to move the tourists on to 129 for four.

Kapugedara was caught next ball by Michael Hussey off James Hopes for 26.

Brad Hogg did for Farveez Maharoof (7) and Chaminda Vaas for a golden duck in the space of two balls before Nuwan Kulasekara (0) lobbed a Bracken delivery into Symonds' hands and Johnson shattered Malinga's stumps with the Sri Lankan on five.

Lee rounded off the win by bowling Sangakkara.

Earlier, Lasith Malinga had been the pick of the Sri Lankan bowlers with figures of four for 47.

The paceman struck first to dismiss Matthew Hayden for just four, Maharoof taking the catch, while number three Ponting was next to fall for a quickfire 25, caught by Jayawardene off the bowling of Vaas.

Opener Gilchrist proved more difficult to remove and raced into the 90s before his next partner Michael Clarke went for a pedestrian 43, Muttiah Muralitharan fooling him with a doosra and Sangakkara whipping off the bails.

The left-hander was stuck in the 90s for some time and his pursuit for 100 seemed to slow the Aussies down as first Clarke and then Symonds looked to give him the strike and the chance of glory rather than hit big.

Gilchrist edged slowly closer to three figures with a succession of singles and finally reached the landmark after Symonds had edged a Maharoof delivery to wicketkeeper Sangakkara for four to move Australia on to 180 for four.

He was dropped by Kapugedara off Muralitharan on 116, but the fielder made amends the following over as he held on when the batsman got a leading edge trying to hit a Malinga delivery down the ground.

Hussey, having come in for Symonds, survived a stumping appeal and a woeful drop from substitute fielder Upal Tharanga before he went for 25, caught by Jayawardene off Kulasekara.

Kulasekara had struck earlier to dismiss Hopes for two, while Brad Hogg was clean bowled by Malinga for five shortly after.

In the closing stages, Johnson was run out for a duck after a fine direct hit on the stumps from Dilshan and Lee was the last man out for two, the victim of a Malinga yorker.

A Century on his last appearance at Home Ground


Adam Gilchrist celebrated a century on his farewell appearance at the WACA as Australia beat Sri Lanka to go top of the Commonwealth Bank Series table.


Adam Gilchrist, arms outstretched, celebrates his 16th ODI hundred, Australia v Sri Lanka, 6th Match, CB Series, Perth, February 15, 2008

The big-hitting wicketkeeper cracked 118 on his home ground as the Australians made 236 in 49.4 overs and then bowled out Sri Lanka for just 173 as the tourists were made to pay for a host of dropped catches and misfields towards the end of the Australian innings.

Gilchrist, who is set to retire from international cricket after the series, smacked nine fours and three sixes from his 132-ball knock, but the hosts' total had looked achievable on a decent pitch with a quick outfield.

Kumar Sangakkara took the fight to Australia, but the wicketkeeper was offered precious little support from his team-mates to finish on 80 as the game drifted away from Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka started their run chase in a hurry and Brett Lee went for 16 from the first over, openers Tillakaratne Dilshan and Sanath Jayasuriya both hitting boundaries.

But Jayasuriya was soon sent packing by Nathan Bracken for a rapid 12, James Hopes taking the catch at third man, and Mitchell Johnson, brought into the attack in place of Lee, removed Dishan's middle stump in his first over for 11.

The next partnership of Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene looked ominous for Australia as the pair sprayed the ball to all corners of the ground with a steady flow of fours to keep the run rate well above a run a ball.

Johnson though struck again with a late-swinging delivery held by Ponting in the slips to dismiss Jayawardene for 21.

Andrew Symonds, diving low to his left, then took a stunning one-handed catch with the ball barely off the ground to get rid of Chamara Silva for a duck off the bowling of Bracken.

Sangakkara's scoring slowed dramatically after those two wickets and his partnership with Chamara Kapugedara produced just two fours, both from the new batsman.

It was not until the 32nd over that the wicketkeeper brought up his 50 from 80 balls to move the tourists on to 129 for four.

Kapugedara was caught next ball by Michael Hussey off James Hopes for 26.

Brad Hogg did for Farveez Maharoof (7) and Chaminda Vaas for a golden duck in the space of two balls before Nuwan Kulasekara (0) lobbed a Bracken delivery into Symonds' hands and Johnson shattered Malinga's stumps with the Sri Lankan on five.

Lee rounded off the win by bowling Sangakkara.

Earlier, Lasith Malinga had been the pick of the Sri Lankan bowlers with figures of four for 47.

The paceman struck first to dismiss Matthew Hayden for just four, Maharoof taking the catch, while number three Ponting was next to fall for a quickfire 25, caught by Jayawardene off the bowling of Vaas.

Opener Gilchrist proved more difficult to remove and raced into the 90s before his next partner Michael Clarke went for a pedestrian 43, Muttiah Muralitharan fooling him with a doosra and Sangakkara whipping off the bails.

The left-hander was stuck in the 90s for some time and his pursuit for 100 seemed to slow the Aussies down as first Clarke and then Symonds looked to give him the strike and the chance of glory rather than hit big.

Gilchrist edged slowly closer to three figures with a succession of singles and finally reached the landmark after Symonds had edged a Maharoof delivery to wicketkeeper Sangakkara for four to move Australia on to 180 for four.

He was dropped by Kapugedara off Muralitharan on 116, but the fielder made amends the following over as he held on when the batsman got a leading edge trying to hit a Malinga delivery down the ground.

Hussey, having come in for Symonds, survived a stumping appeal and a woeful drop from substitute fielder Upal Tharanga before he went for 25, caught by Jayawardene off Kulasekara.

Kulasekara had struck earlier to dismiss Hopes for two, while Brad Hogg was clean bowled by Malinga for five shortly after.

In the closing stages, Johnson was run out for a duck after a fine direct hit on the stumps from Dilshan and Lee was the last man out for two, the victim of a Malinga yorker.

Bucknor to return as Test Match Umpire

Umpire Steve Bucknor will return to cricket for two test matches between Bangladesh and South Africa this month.


Steve Bucknor - ICC Portrait 2003, ICC Panel Umpire


Jamaican Bucknor was dropped by the International Cricket Council (ICC) from a test series in Australia last month following pressure from India, who had criticised his performance in their 122-run defeat against the hosts in Sydney.

Bucknor will stand in with Pakistan's Alim Dar in the first and second tests between Bangladesh and South Africa, starting on February 22 and 29 respectively.

India had also accused Bucknor of playing a major role in the row over their spinner Harbhajan Singh, who was charged with racially abusing Australia's Andrew Symonds, a charge which was later dismissed by an independent judge.

The decision to drop Bucknor was one of the factors which allowed the Australia tour to continue after India's cricket board had threatened to take their team home.

Widely respected and instantly recognisable, Bucknor has umpired a record 120 test matches, as well as 167 one-day games.

Only David Shepherd of England and Rudi Koertzen of South Africa have umpired more one-day internationals.

The 61-year-old Bucknor has also stood in five successive World Cup finals.

Cricket ( NZ vs ENG 3rd ODI at Auckland ) on 15th FEB 2008

Collingwood Steers England to a Six Wicket Victory

A determined-looking Paul Collingwood acknowledges the applause after cracking an unbeaten 70 in England's six-wicket win, New Zealand v England, 3rd ODI, Auckland, February 15, 2008

CAPTAIN Paul Collingwood hit a quickfire half-century to guide England to a rousing six-wicket victory over New Zealand and keep the outcome of the five-match series alive.

Humiliated in the opening two matches in the series, Collingwood typified England’s determination not to lose the series in successive matches and delivered a defiant performance at Eden Park.

Chasing a revised target of 229 in 47 overs after New Zealand posted a competitive 234 for nine, Ian Bell and Kevin Pietersen helped the tourists recover from losing both openers with a 120-run stand.

But after Bell scored a determined 73 off 89 balls, his first one-day half-century in 12 innings, both he and Pietersen fell to New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori in successive overs to once again put the outcome in doubt.Ian Bell pushes off the back foot, New Zealand v England, 3rd ODI, Auckland, February 15, 2008

Collingwood arrived at the crease, however, and raced to an unbeaten 70 off 50 balls, which included six fours and three sixes, to help England claim their first win of the series with three overs remaining.

Phil Mustard had run himself out in the third over of England’s reply – the seventh run out of the series for the tourists – and Alastair Cook pulled Jacob Oram straight to mid-on shortly after the restart after the rain.

England could have suffered a further run out with Bell (on 22 and 52) twice being given reprieves after throws missed the stumps with him well short of his ground.

He weathered those nervous moments, however, and looked set for his first one-day international century in 15 matches, only to be adjudged lbw to left-arm spinner Vettori despite television replays suggesting he got an inside edge onto his pad.Ian Bell vents his frustration after being given out lbw to Daniel Vettori. Replays indicated Bell got an inside edge, New Zealand v England, 3rd ODI, Auckland, February 15, 2008

Pietersen followed in Vettori’s next over, but this time there was no cause for complaint over the decision, leaving England once again jittery until Collingwood settled their nerves during an unbroken partnership with Owais Shah.

The tourists had earlier allowed New Zealand to recover from 95 for six to post a competitive 234 for nine after important innings from all-rounder Jacob Oram and Vettori.

The pair shared a crucial 74-run stand off 72 balls and helped add a crucial 81 runs off the final 10 overs after their top order had been decimated by England’s new ball attack.

England had made two changes to their line-up in a desperate attempt to change their fortunes with Ravi Bopara and spinner Graeme Swann both being dropped and replaced by all-rounders Luke Wright and Dimitri Mascarenhas.

The changes were successful initially with Lancashire seamer Jimmy Anderson striking with the 10th legitimate ball of the innings to remove dangerous wicketkeeper Brendon McCullum and shared the first four wickets to fall with the impressive Stuart Broad.

With Paul Collingwood also claiming two wickets to remove Peter Fulton and Ross Taylor, England seemed in the dominant position and also had luck on their side with umpire Asad Rauf ruling an Oram drive for four as a dead ball because he was not in position at the bowler’s end.

Three balls later Taylor fell to an lbw appeal and New Zealand could have lost their composure at the injustice of the situation, but instead relied on the wise heads of Oram and Vettori to steer them towards a competitive score.

Their stand was all the more galling for England, who had missed Vettori before he had scored with Anderson missing a one-handed catch at mid-on off Collingwood.

Vettori went on to hit four fours and a six off in his 42 off 35 balls before being superbly caught by Owais Shah on the mid-wicket boundary attempting to hit Collingwood for successive fours with eight overs remaining.

Jacob Oram reaches his half-century, New Zealand v England, 3rd ODI, Auckland, February 15, 2008

Oram was in sight of only his second one-day international century and moved closer to it by hitting Broad for successive sixes in his final over.

But, attempting to clear the cover boundary off a full toss from Ryan Sidebottom, Oram mis-timed his shot and was superbly caught by a diving Ian Bell having hit four fours and four sixes in his brilliant 88 off 91 balls.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Cricket - Stephen Fleming to retire after England Series


Former New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming announced today he will retire from international cricket after the third Test against England next month.

The third Test will be played in Napier from March 22-26, after which Fleming said he would concentrate on business opportunities and also play in India's Twenty20 Premier League.

"I always indicated that I was likely to retire from international cricket at some point in the near future, and the time is right for me and my family to do that now," Fleming told a press conference in Auckland today.

Fleming departs with a sackful of New Zealand Test records. No New Zealander has played as many Tests (108), scored as many runs (6875), taken as many catches (166), captained as many games (80), or led as many wins (28) as Fleming.

Appointed at 23, he was the country's youngest Test skipper and only Allan Border, who led Australia through 93 Tests, guided his team in more games. When Fleming retired from one-day international cricket last September he left with a similar bunch of records. At the same time as Fleming quit ODIs New Zealand handed the Test captaincy to Daniel Vettori, which disappointed Fleming, who wanted to see if separate captains could help New Zealand's consistency.

When he made his Test debut in 1993-94 it was immediately apparent the selectors had found an important player for the future success of the side. In a team led by Ken Rutherford against India in Hamilton, Fleming made 92 in his opening Test, and he followed it just days later with 90 in his ODI debut in Napier.

He led New Zealand to their first triumph in a major tournament - the Champions Trophy in Nairobi in 2000.

The one-day arena was also where Fleming experienced some of his biggest disappointments, and failing to get his team into a World Cup final was a regret. Following last year's semi-final knockout at the hands of Sri Lanka, Fleming quit the ODI captaincy, which precipitated a chain of events that gradually led to his removal from the Test leadership. Fittingly, though, he has been afforded the right to end his playing career on his own terms.

The Glam Slam Final -Australian Open Women's Singles Final

Is the FedEx going to derail?

This seems to be the million dollar question among all the tennis fans world over.Federer has set himself very high standards so that even a semi final exit is considered a disaster which in any other tennis player's career would go down as a good showing.But I feel Federer still has it in him to win half a dozen more grand slam titles,but it would take him a lot more effort than it took him for his first twelve grand slam titles as he has to fight his way among the young brigade of rising tennis stars-Djokovic,Nadal,Tsonga,Tipsarevic and lots more.

Last to beat Federer in Grand Slams

Australian Open: Novak Djokovic (SF 2008)

French Open : Rafael Nadal (F 2007)

Wimbledon : Mario Ancic (R1 2002)

U.S.Open : David Nalbandian (R4 2003)

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Cricket (Aussies Unlikely to tour Pakistan)

Australia's tour to Pakistan, scheduled for March-April, is looking increasingly doubtful following last week's meeting between the chairmen of both boards in Dubai.

Following the get together, Creagh O'Connor, Cricket Australia's (CA) chairman, sent a letter to the Pakistan board expressing reservations about the security situation inside Pakistan.

"We received a letter yesterday from CA following our meeting and though they reiterated their commitment to supporting Pakistan cricket, they said that security briefings they have received in Australia are advising them against touring," Nasim Ashraf, the PCB chairman, told Cricinfo.

A CA security delegation is due to visit the country in the aftermath of the general elections due to be on February 18. But a report in the Urdu daily Jang said CA were unsure whether sending a delegation would serve any purpose now, indicating perhaps that a decision to not tour had already been made.

"They have asked us whether we still want a security delegation sent here and if so when," Ashraf said. "In response to this, we have told CA that we still firmly believe that the environment for cricket and cricketers is still safe here. We have also said that the security team should visit Pakistan from February 25, exactly one week after the elections."

Australian players have expressed concerns about touring Pakistan for what would be their first visit in a decade, following a year of increasing violence and instability through the country. Despite this South Africa and Zimbabwe have both completed tours in recent months without any glitches.

But privately, board officials now concede that the trip is becoming an unlikely prospect and the PCB has already insured the series against cancellation. "Certainly public utterances coming from Australia seem quite indicative of them not wanting to tour Pakistan so it wouldn't be a surprise if they pulled out," one official told Cricinfo.

Pakistan will, however, continue to press for the visit to go ahead. Shafqat Naghmi, the PCB's chief operating officer, is scheduled to meet James Sutherland, CA's chief executive, in Kuala Lumpur and further discuss security arrangements. "We stress that incidents could happen anywhere in the world," Ashraf said. "They happen in Sri Lanka, they happened in Glasgow last year when we were there for an ODI and bombs went off in England in 2005 when Australia were there. We have to make decisions not just on perceptions, but ground realities.

Football (Drogba wants barca move)


Yaya Toure has again revealed Chelsea striker Didier Drogba wants a move to Barcelona.

"Of course, we talked about Barcelona," Ivory Coast midfielder Toure told Ona FM. "Didier Drogba is a very important player in my country, but he costs a lot of money.




"He would really like to play for Barca because we have a great team and have great players.

"Drogba told me that he would like to come and play with me, but he knows that it is complicated as Eto'o, Henry and Messi are already there

Cricket (NZL vs ENG 2nd ODI) on 12th Feb 2008

England endured another one-day beating at the hands of New Zealand, losing the second match of the series by 10 wickets at Seddon Park.

After being woeful in Wellington last Saturday the tourists were humiliated in Hamilton, turning in a dreadful display with both bat and ball to leave them in a deep hole with three games to play.



They did manage to surpass their score in the first match, though only just, being bowled out for 158 after being 89-2 before a lengthy stoppage for rain shortened the match to 36 overs-per-side.




Alastair Cook top-scored with 53 before becoming one of three run-outs as England failed to learn the lessons from Saturday's poor show at the Westpac Stadium.



The Kiwis had no problem chasing a Duckworth-Lewis revised target of 165, opening duo Brendon McCullum and Jesse Ryder belting the ball to all parts as they got home inside 19 overs.

England did themselves no favours by dropping both batsmen before they had got started, wicketkeeper Phil Mustard and slip Owais Shah the culprits.

What ensued afterwards was complete carnage, every bowler coming in for punishment as New Zealand rushed to their first ever 10-wicket success over their opponents.

McCullum, dropped by Mustard without a run to his name, was particularly savage on anything short as he smashed eight fours and five sixes in a whirlwind 80 that came off just 47 balls.

Partner Ryder was hardly struggling at the other end, treating the capacity crowd to the biggest six of the day when he whacked a Paul Collingwood slower ball over square leg and out of the ground.

The burly left-hander finished unbeaten on 79 after being dropped twice, both times off Sidebottom with the bowler himself making a hash of a simple caught-and-bowled chance late on that summed up England's day.

It had all looked so good for them before the heavens opened - after they had been put into bat by home skipper Daniel Vettori.

Cook certainly shone ahead of the rain, while opening partner Mustard briefly showed his capabilities with the bat by hooking Chris Martin for six before drilling the very next ball he faced to Vettori at mid-off.

If the New Zealand captain's low catch was impressive then McCullum's effort straight after was spectacular, the wicketkeeper leaping high to his right to hang on one-handed to an edge off Ian Bell.

It would not be the last time England lost two wickets in as many balls, though the first occasion did not stall their progress too much.

Kevin Pietersen - looking far more at home on a pitch with good pace and carry - quickly got into his stride, hitting Martin for 14 in the space of three deliveries.

However, a break of more than two hours for rain not only delighted the local farmers - who are having to deal with the worst drought in Hamilton for a decade - but also the home side, as they picked up the last eight England wickets for just 68 runs.

Some awful running between the wickets helped the Kiwis' cause, skipper Collingwood setting a bad example when he foolishly took on Jacob Oram's arm trying for two just one ball after Pietersen had been trapped lbw by Michael Mason for 29.

Cook was also caught short of his ground by a sharp throw from Ross Taylor, though he at least could blame Essex team-mate Ravi Bopara for calling him through for a suicidal single.

Sidebottom became the third run-out victim before the innings ended when Stuart Broad was caught off the first ball of the last over for 23.

For the second successive time they failed to bat through to the end, and the equally poor bowling display means a radical rethink is likely for the third game in Auckland on Friday

Cricket (CB series 5th ODI India vs Sri Lanka) on 12th Feb 2008

Sri lanka beat India in the 5th odi in manuka oval in canberra.

Tillakaratne Dilshan hit 62 to lead Sri Lanka to an eight-wicket victory over India in a rain-affected fifth match of the Commonwealth Bank Series on Tuesday.

The Sri Lankans reached their revised target of 154 for the loss of just two wickets with two overs to spare of their allocated 21, after reducing the Indians to 195 for five from 29 overs.

Rohit Sharma again impressed for India, smashing his second ODI half-century as his team posted a competitive total after being asked to bat.




In a match initially reduced to 29 overs per side following heavy rain in the morning at the Manuka Oval, Rohit held the Indian innings together with an unbeaten 70 off 64 deliveries which included six fours and a six off Muttiah Muralitharan.

Sachin Tendulkar and Virender Sehwag gave India a good start, putting on 45 runs in little more than seven overs before both opening batsmen lost their wickets in the space of five deliveries.

Sehwag was the first to go, taken at third man by Muralitharan for 14 off a Nuwan Kulasekara delivery, and Tendulkar followed in the next over for 32 when he struck a ball from Farveez Maharoof straight to Kulasekara at deep third man.




A third-wicket stand of 64 between Rohit and Gautam Ghambir took the Indian total to 113 before Gambhir was run out for 35 at the non-striker's end following a mix-up between the pair.

The Indians put on 85 runs in the final nine overs as skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni shared a 68-run partnership with Rohit before he was also run out for 31.

Yuvraj Singh made six runs off three deliveries before lofting Lasith Malinga to Muralitharan at wide mid-off for a simple catch in the final over.

Further rain saw Sri Lanka's target reduced to 154 from 21 overs, and they knocked off the runs with minimum fuss.

Sanath Jayasuriya fell in the fourth over when he got a leading edge to an Ishant Sharma delivery and was caught behind by Dhoni for 27, while Kumar Sangakkara's run-a-ball innings of 10 was brought to an end in the eighth when he was caught at mid-on by Ishant off Harbhajan Singh.



But Dilshan and Mahela Jayawardene saw the Sri Lankans home with two overs to spare, the opener completing his half-century off 47 balls alongside his captain who finished unbeaten on 36.

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