Friday, September 14, 2007

Breaking News

Rahul Dravid has stepped down as Indian captian saying he wants to concentrate on his batting. This could be because he intends to join the ICL.

Sunday, September 2, 2007

Shane Warne 50 best cricketers!!

Shane Warne names the 50 best cricketers he has played with or against(he turned out to name53).



50 Jamie Siddons

49 Darren Berry

48 Brian McMillan

47 Chris Cairns

46 Dilip Vengsarkar

45 Waqar Younis

44 Alec Stewart

43 Michael Atherton

42 Ravi Shastri

41 Justin Langer

40 Kapil Dev

39 Stuart MacGill

38 Sanath Jayasuriya

37 Stephen Harmison

36 Andy Flower

35 Michael Vaughan

34 Bruce Reid

33 Allan Donald

32 Robin Smith

31 Tim May

30 Kevin Pietersen

29 Shoaib Akhtar / Craig McDermott

28 Saeed Anwar / Mohammad Yousuf

27 Jacques Kallis / Shaun Pollock

26 Steve Waugh

25 Darren Lehmann

24 Brett Lee

23 Stephen Fleming

22 Martin Crowe

21 David Boon

20 Adam Gilchrist

19 Aravinda de Silva

18 Merv Hughes

17 Matthew Hayden

16 Andrew Flintoff

15 Graham Gooch

14 Rahul Dravid

13 Anil Kumble

12 Mark Waugh

11 Courtney Walsh

10 Ian Healy

9 Mark Taylor

8 Ricky Ponting

7 Muttiah Muralitharan

6 Wasim Akram

5 Glenn McGrath

4 Allan Border

3 Curtly Ambrose

2 Brian Lara

1 Sachin Tendulkar



Shane Warne list of 53 players contain 20 Aussies, 8 Englishmen, 6 Indians, 5 Pakistanis, 4 South Africans, 3 New Zealanders, 3 Sri Lankans, 3 West Indies and a Zimbabwean. It is heavily favoring Aussies as well as slightly favoring Englishmen. Kapil Dev placing at only 40 seems a bit strange but can be explained as Warne has not played with Kapil much. Harmison's placing ahead of Waqar is also very strange. One would expect Waugh to placed higher as well. And who is this Tim May and Mer Hughes. Inzy and Miandad are missing from the list as well as Laxman and Bajhii who Aussies should have a high regard for. Dada is also strangely missing. Alec Stewart is in the list but Sangakkara and Dhoni are not. As I said already, there are 20 Aussies but he does not find a place for Michael Bevan. South African crowd of Ntini, Rhodes and Gibbs did not make it either. Although any list will not be perfect there is no reason some can't be totally wrong. I think Shane Warne's list of 50 greats has been totally farcical.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Ganguly: Born to play till the day he calls it himself

After a poor performance in 2005 coinciding with a semi-public spat with former coach, Greg Chappel, Ganguly was really struggling for form. After that it was really a see-saw till the start of 2006. A gritty 30 in early 2006 against Pakistan in a low-scoring test was not enough for him to retain his place in the Indian team. It seemed like the beginning of the end of a great player. Most of India were asking and anticipating for his retirement. A poor run with Nottingham seemed like the end of him. But he waited and waited until the knock on the door came. A poor performance by the Indian team in the ODIs against South Africa forced the selectors to give him an another chance. He came back like a hungry phoenix and pounced on his prey of the South African attack and eventually ended up as the highest run-scorer in that series. He then capped his fairy-tale comeback with some menacing performance in the ODI's leading to the World Cup. Suddenly his selection to the World Cup was a certainty. His performance in the World Cup was nothing to write home about. He scored fifties in his first two innings but in the crunch game against Sri Lanka he failed like many others. Now Dada, the Bengal tiger is still going strong and he will keep playing until he calls it a day by himself.

Friday, August 24, 2007

Twenty20 World Cup Squads

Australia: Ricky Ponting (captain), Nathan Bracken, Stuart Clark, Michael Clarke, Adam Gilchrist, Brad Haddin, Matthew Hayden, Brad Hodge, Bradley Hogg, Michael Hussey, Mitchell Johnson, Brett Lee, Andrew Symonds, Shaun Tait, Shane Watson.

Bangladesh: Mohammad Ashraful (captain), Aftab Ahmed, Nadif Chowdhury, Shakib Hasan, Tamim Iqbal, Alok Kopali, Mashrafe Mortaza, Mushfiqur Rahim, Ziaur Rahman, Syed Rasel, Abdur Razzak, Farhad Reza, Zunaed Siddique, Nazim Uddin, Mahmud Ullah.

England: Paul Collingwood (captain), Ravi Bopara, Stuart Broad, Andrew Flintoff, James Kirtley, Darren Maddy, Kevin Pietersen, Matt Prior, Chris Schofield, Owais Shah, Ryan Sidebottom, Jeremy Snape, Vikram Solanki, Chris Tremlett, Luke Wright.

India: Mahendra Singh Dhoni (captain), Ajit Agarkar, Piyush Chawla, Gautam Gambhir, Dinesh Karthik, Irfan Pathan, Yusuf Pathan, Virender Sehwag, Joginder Sharma, Harbhajan Singh, Rohit Sharma, RP Singh, Yuvraj Singh, Shanthakumaran Sreesanth, Robin Uthappa.

Kenya: Steve Tikolo (captain), Rajesh Bhudiya, Jimmy Kamande, Tanmay Mishra, Lameck Ngoche, Nehemiah Ngoche, Alex Obanda, Collins Obuya, David Obuya, Thomas Odoyo, Peter Ongondo, Elijah Otieno, Morris Ouma, Ondik Suji, Hiren Varaiya.

New Zealand: Daniel Vettori (captain), Shane Bond, Peter Fulton, Mark Gillespie, Gareth Hopkins, Chris Martin, Craig McMillan, Brendon McCullum, Nathan McCullum, Jacob Oram, Jeetan Patel, Bradley Scott, Scott Styris, Ross Taylor, Lou Vincent.

Pakistan: Shoaib Malik (captain), Shahid Afridi, Shoaib Akhtar, Kamran Akmal, Fawad Alam, Yasir Arafat, Mohammad Asif, Salman Butt, Umar Gul, Mohammad Hafeez, Misbah-ul-Haq, Rao Iftikhar, Younis Khan, Imran Nazir, Abdul Rehman.

Scotland: Ryan Watson (captain), Fraser Watts, Dougie Brown, John Blain, Gavin Hamilton, Navdeep Poonia, Gregor Maiden, Neil McCallum, Qasim Sheikh, Colin Smith, Craig Wright, Dewald Nel, Gordon Drummond, Ross Lyons, Majid Haq.

South Africa: Graeme Smith (captain), Gulam Bodi, Loots Bosman, Mark Boucher, AB de Villiers, JP Duminy, Herschelle Gibbs, Justin Kemp, Albie Morkel, Morne Morkel, Makhaya Ntini, Vernon Philander, Shaun Pollock, Thandi Tshabalala, Johan van der Wath.

Sri Lanka: Mahela Jayawardena (captain), Dilhara Fernando, Hasantha Fernando, Kaushal Lokuarachchi, Sanath Jayasuriya, Farveez Maharoof, Lasith Malinga, Jehan Mubarak, Muttiah Muralidaran, Kumara Sangakkara, Chamara Silva, Upul Tharanga, Dilshan Tilakarathne, Chaminda Vaas, Gayan Wijekoon.

West Indies: Ramnaresh Sarwan (captain), Dwayne Bravo, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Pedro Collins, Narsingh Deonarine, Fidel Edwards, Chris Gayle, Runako Morton, Daren Powell, Denesh Ramdin, Ravi Rampaul, Darren Sammy, Marlon Samuels, Devon Smith, Dwayne Smith.

Zimbabwe: Prosper Utseya (captain), Gary Brent, Chamunorwa Chibhabha, Elton Chigumbura, Keith Dabengwa, Tymsen Maruma, Hamilton Masakadza, Stuart Matsikinyeri, Johnson Marumisa, Christopher Mpofu, Tawanda Mupariwa, Vusimusi Sibanda, Tatenda Taibu, Brendon Taylor, Shaun Williams.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Twenty20 World Cup "India"

India
The Indian team will be without the big three, Tendulkar, Ganguly and Dravid as well as start bowler Zaheer Khan and as a result most people are writing them of for the World Cup. I think this is a big mistake. As you all know twenty20 cricket is a very fast, trill-a-minute game suited for the younger generation and the big three could be as big a liability as an asset. There are a lot of young and fairly new faces like Yusaf Pathan, Rohit Sharma and Joginder Sharma; it will be anybodies guess how these three perform. India's opening pair, I think should be Rohit Sharma and Robin Uttappa with Uttappa to face. One down should be the pinch hitter Yusaf Pathan and two down should be Sehwag. The middle order should be made up of Dhoni, Karthik and Yuvraj. The tail should be Agarkar, Chawla, Sreesanth and RP Singh. Karthik should definitely keep wickets allowing Dhoni to captain freely. Yusaf was chosen to pinch so he should and he should also bowl his quota of four overs. The pitches have been made shorter for the world cup and scores of 150+ should be very achievable. The only problem I see is the inexperience in the team. Why was not a coach chosen before such an important event. The senior players must step up and take responsibility and help the first-time captain Dhoni. Dhoni will be consulting form a lot of players like Sehwag and Yuvraj and even Agarkar. I think in the batting department the presence of Kartik will be very important like the presence of Sreesanth being important in the bowling department. Kartik is a very talented player and a fierce competitor. He is also a gusty performer and captain material. He is a very consistent player and will be the team anchor in case they get into trouble. Sreesanth on the other hand is a very talented aggressive bowler who needs to be groomed but on his day he is as good as it gets. He will be Dhoni's talisman and should lead the bowling attack. He will be fine as long as he does not go over-board. If all this goes well then the Indian team will get a very different reception home to the World cup in West Indies last April.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

WHAT NOW????

India a have been knocked out of the world cup but it is still not the end of it. Chappel has retired. Jumped before he was pushed. The nation is calling for the retirements of Sachin and Saurav. However, what right do we have to decide these men's fate. The most important thing for now India is go to Bangladesh and convincingly beat them. Restore lost pride. There will be no Sachin or Saurav but instead Manoj Tiwary and Rajesh Pawar. If India win that then look one step forward. The tour of England which consists of 7 ODI. Sachin and Saurav will probably be an automatic selection for that irrespective of how Manoj or Rajesh play. If India win there then there will only be a few matches left to our final goal, the twenty20 world cup. We have to blood young players in games like these for example against South Africa in Ireland. Win these and the Natwest series and we will sure be flying to South Africa on a high. The team picked for The twenty20 world cup should be on the bases of these matches. Fielding is just as important an batting and bowling We need the right mix. If all this goes our way we might be the first twenty20 world champions.

The problem with Indian cricket

This is a very important period in Indian cricket. If we don't evolve to the newer faster version of cricket we will get left behind like we did in hockey in the 80s. If we watch a game between Australia and South Africa we see a whole different ball game. Fielders diving at slip cordon, batsman trying to covert ones to twos, fielders trying to make two one. For Ganguly and Sachin when there is a two they get one and if Dravid tried to get two runs of a two run ball he will get himself or his partner run out. The next thing is passion which most Indian cricketers lack. If you watch Bangladesh or Ireland play you will see their passion. How happy the are when the get a wicket or win a game. Indians act like celebrities and winning and losing are all part of the game for them. Sreesanth is an Indian with a lot of passion. He will not make a good captain but he inspires the team. Dravid and Chappell made a huge mistake by not picking him for the world cup team. Another problem is this automatic selection policy. Sachin, Saurav and Dhoni have automatic selection to squad irrespective of form. I and the rest of India are surprised that Sachin and Saurav have been rested for Bangladesh tour. Munaf Patel is a good player but he looks like he is 124 not 24. That to me is a lack of passion. Fielding is as much of a part of cricket as batting and fielding.