Showing posts with label CRICKET. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CRICKET. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 January 2012

Will not get pressured by allegations: Saeed Ajmal

DUBAI: Saeed Ajmal has responded to allegations about his bowling action and said that he would not be pressured by them. 

Following the spinner’s brilliant performance on the first day of the test match against England, former England captain Bob Willis called Ajmal’s action questionable. 

Ajmal said he would not be affected by the comments made against him in the British media and his bowling action had already been cleared by the ICC.

The off spinner claimed his career best figures of 7/55 on the first day of the test match underway in Dubai. 

GEO

Sunday, 15 January 2012

Dhoni suspended for fourth test


India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni has been suspended for the fourth and final test against Australia because of slow bowling, the International Cricket Council said on Sunday.
The one-match ban completed a miserable day for Dhoni, who was dismissed for two runs as India crumbled to an innings and 37-run defeat at the WACA to go 3-0 down in the four-match series.
"The India team has been fined for maintaining a slow over-rate during the third test against Australia in Perth ... and as this is the second offence within 12 months India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni has been suspended for the next test match in line with the ICC Code of Conduct," said an ICC news release.
India were two overs shy of the minimum rate required, the release said. The first offence was committed in the second test against the West Indies in Barbados in July.
Vice captain Virender Sehwag is likely to step up to replace Dhoni as skipper in Adelaide, where the fourth test takes place next week, with Wriddhiman Saha likely to stand in as wicketkeeper.
(Reuters) 

Australia crush India to seal series triumph


 A rampant Australia blitzed India's tail to crush the hapless tourists by an innings and 37 runs with more than two days to spare in the third test and take an unassailable 3-0 lead in the series on Sunday.
In a dramatic climax to the rout, Ben Hilfenhaus (4-54) took three wickets in five balls and Peter Siddle (3-43) performed the coup de grace by removing Virat Kohli for 75 in the next over to end India's innings at 171.
Australia reclaimed the Border-Gavaskar trophy they relinquished in 2009 and skipper Michael Clarke paid tribute to Man of the Match David Warner, whose innings of 180 included the fastest test century by an opening batsman in 69 balls.
"We should be very proud to have beaten the number two ranked test team in the world," Clarke told reporters.
"It's a very satisfying victory," he added. "A lot of credit not only to Davy, who batted brilliantly, but also to his opening partner Ed Cowan.
"Our bowlers also deserve a lot of credit for taking 20 wickets again against a very good batting side. I think we played really well and I couldn't be happier as a captain."
It was a seventh successive overseas test defeat for India after the 4-0 drubbing they received in England last summer to lose the number one test ranking, and questions will be asked about several of their experienced batsmen.
"Class is always there, they have the experience, it's just in back-to-back series that we have failed," Dhoni said in the post match presentation.
"We have not adapted well to the conditions quickly enough. Winning in Adelaide is the only motivation we have now, the bowlers have shown they can take wickets, we need to put more runs on the board."
India, bowled out for 161 in the first innings, had resumed on 88 for four still needing 120 runs to match Australia's first effort of 369 and make the hosts bat again.
On a blistering morning at the WACA, which had the fans crowding around the complimentary sunscreen dispensers as they streamed into the ground, the Australians were kept at bay for the first hour.
The Australian bowlers, outsanding in all three tests, continued to make full use of the bounce on offer from the wicket but were forced to wait for the breakthrough as Rahul Dravid (47) and Kohli put up stiff resistance.
UNDER PRESSURE
Kohli has been under pressure for his place in the side for much of the tour but once again proved to be one of his team's more impressive batsman, bringing up his fifty with a flicked four through long on after an hour's play.
He and Dravid had put on 84 for the fifth wicket when Ryan Harris finally separated them, fooling the senior partner with a ball that swung in, crashed through the gate and removed the leg stump.
It was the fifth time in six innings in the series that the 39-year-old Dravid, known as "the Wall" for his strong defence, had been bowled.
Captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni lasted just 20 minutes before edging a Siddle delivery to Ricky Ponting in the slips with the former Australia skipper taking a fine low catch.
The tourists scrambled to lunch at 165 for six but many in the 14,000 crowd were still getting back to their seats when the end came.
Hilfenhaus, who took 4-43 in the first innings, despatched debutant R. Vinay Kumar (six) and Zaheer Khan (0) in successive balls and Ishant Sharma lasted just two deliveries before he too departed for a duck. Clarke took all three catches in the slips.
It was left to Siddle to perform the last rites in the second ball of the next over, steaming in to end Kholi's stubborn resistance with an edge to wicketkeeper Brad Haddin.
Australia won the first test in Melbourne by 122 runs and the second in Sydney by an innings and 68 runs. The fourth test begins in Adelaide next week.
(Reuters) 

Saturday, 14 January 2012

Australia back in charge after India top order folds


Australia, fired by David Warner's 180, were closing on victory after reducing India to 88 for four in their second innings after two days of the third test on Saturday.
India, who already trail 2-0 in the four-match series and are heading for a seventh consecutive overseas test defeat, are still 120 runs shy of forcing the hosts to bat again.
India's bowlers, led by Umesh Yadav's 5-93, got their team back into the contest after the day one demolition, skittling the last six Australian wickets for 79 runs to leave the hosts all out for 369 at tea with a first inning's lead of 208.
The bounce of the WACA wicket once again proved too much for their batsmen, however, and Australia's pace quartet removed Gautam Gambhir (14), Virender Sehwag (10), Sachin Tendulkar (eight) and VVS Laxman (0) cheaply in the final session.
India will resume on Sunday with Rahul Dravid, who had made 32 not out, and Virat Kohli, unbeaten on 21, at the crease with three days of the contest remaining.
Australia would have been hoping for a bigger lead after dominating the opening day to bowl India out for 161 and resuming on 149 without loss on another hot day at the WACA.
Yadav, however, struck with three wickets in the hour before lunch, Ishant Sharma accounted for Warner, Zaheer Khan pitched in with two wickets and debutant R Vinay Kumar got his maiden test victim.
It could have been even better for the tourists had Kohli not dropped a simple catch when Warner, who hit the quickest century by an opening batsman in 69 balls on Friday, was on 126.
As it was, Warner, showing only flashes of the swashbuckling brilliance he displayed on Friday, was allowed to reach his first 150 in his fifth test before holing out 20 runs shy of a double century.
The 25-year-old lefthander, who had resumed on 104, hit a spectacular six through extra cover, his fifth of the innings, and two balls later grabbed his 20th four with the crispest of cuts.
Another two balls on, however, and a Sharma delivery was launched into the sky towards long on and Yadav got himself under it to take the catch, bringing an end to the innings after 261 minutes and just 159 balls.
Yadav had already separated the two Australian openers when he bowled Ed Cowan for 74 with 214 runs on the board in the hour before lunch.
Shaun Marsh managed just 11 runs on his home ground to continue his miserable form before Ricky Ponting had made seven when Yadav removed his middle stump for a third wicket.
Warner was next to go after the break and after his departure the wickets fell rapidly, the final six tumbling for just 79 runs.
Both captain Michael Clarke, who hit an unbeaten 329 in the last test, and Brad Haddin were caught behind off Zaheer in quick succession for 18 and a duck respectively.
Western Australian Mike Hussey was Vinay Kumar's first test wicket for 14 and Peter Siddle grabbed a handy 30 before Yadav took out his off stump.
Ryan Harris (nine) and Ben Hilfenhaus (six) could do little to extend the tail, the former giving Yadav his fifth wicket and the latter falling to Sehwag's occasional spin.
(Reuters) - 

Thursday, 12 January 2012

Aamer set to be released on Feb 9

LONDON: Convicted fast bowler Muhammad Aamer is set to be released from the young offenders institute in Weymouth next month, on completion of half of the jail term he was awarded by a court.

Arsalan Abbasi, Aamer’s friend and a legal guarantor in the UK, said the bowler would be released from Her Majesty's Prison Portland, Dorset, England, on February 9, at the half leg of his six months jail term and added that he would complete part of his remaining sentence on licence at a London address.

“Aamer will be allowed to stay in London for about three weeks and then he will leave for Pakistan,” Abbasi told The News, emphasising: “He (Aamer) will not be deported to Pakistan.”

Aamer’s lawyers and the UK Border Agency have reached an agreement that he would leave the UK on his own and that there would be no immigration restrictions on him if he ever wanted to return to the country, Abbasi added.

A probation officer from the Prison Services visited the particular address--belonging to a close friend of Aamer--two weeks ago and cleared it for the cricketer to stay on condition of keeping in touch with the services.

During the sentence hearing at the Southwark Crown Court of the spot-fixing trial, no recommendation for deportation of Aamer was made but this scribe has learnt that if a sentence is less than 12 months, the judge usually leaves it to the UK Border Agency (UKBA) to recommend deportation or otherwise.

In the case of Aamer, he will be leaving the country on his own accord at the completion of his agreed time period. A legal expert told The News that after the UK sentencing of Aamer is over, he still has a few years of ban from the International Cricket Council (ICC) but once that’s over he should have no restrictions on his trade and he can play in the UK again if he is selected by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB).

“I can't see him being refused a visa to the UK or anywhere else,” said the legal expert. After being sentenced to six months’ detention on November 3 last year with fellow players Salman Butt and Muhammad Asif, the young bowling genius was first sent to Feltham Young Offenders Institution and then, within three days, to the Prison Portland.

A source told The News that Aamer spent his time at the youth hostel, playing different sports, attended education classes, exercised regularly at the gym. He was allowed free access to internet and library and also worked for a charity. He was even allowed to go to the local town centre on his own regularly with a strict return curfew.
 

SOURCE : GEO

Poor team spirit blamed for Sri Lanka loss

COLOMBO: A Sri Lankan minister slammed the country's cricket team on Thursday, blaming poor team spirit for its humiliating 258-run thrashing by South Africa, the island's worst one-day international defeat.

Government spokesman and Media Minister Keheliya Rambukwella said he was
"horrified" when Sri Lanka were dismissed for 43 runs at Boland Park in Paarl on Wednesday, their lowest one-day score.

"You can understand a defeat, but not something like this," Rambukwella told reporters in Colombo. "We are appalled. Something has to be done immediately. It looks like there is no team spirit among players."

Rambukwella said the loss was humiliating to cricket-crazy Sri Lankans who won the 1996 World Cup and emerged runners up at the 2011 World Cup.

Sports Minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage had blasted the national team even before Wednesday's defeat, saying the side was in "crisis" due to divisive politics among the players.

Sri Lanka has already lost the Test series to South Africa 2-1. After a five-match ODI series with South Africa, Sri Lanka heads for a tri-series tournament in Australia which also includes India.

Since the retirement of bowling star Muttiah Muralitharan in July 2010, Sri Lanka has won only one Test match.

Sri Lanka skipper Tillakaratne Dilshan has blamed his side's inconsistent results on the island's weak domestic scene.

"It is very difficult to find good cricketers. We have to correct our domestic structure. Coming from our club cricket to international cricket is a huge difference," he said after losing the Test series.

Some players have complained about months of unpaid wages as the Sri Lanka Cricket board struggles with debts of $69 million after building two new venues and revamping a third ground for the World Cup. (AFP)
 

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

Amir could still have international career: PCB

KARACHI: Teenage Pakistan fast bowler Mohammad Amir, serving six-months in jail for spot-fixing elements of a test match, could still have a future in international cricket, Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Zaka Ashraf said.

Amir, 19, was detained for six months in a young offenders institution after he admitted bowling two intentional no-balls in the Lord's test against England in August 2010.

Amir, along with team mates Mohammad Asif and Salman Butt, was banned for a minimum of five years by the International Cricket Council in February last year.

"Whenever he is cleared by the International Cricket Council and serves his punishment, we think he needs intense counseling and then the selectors can decide about him," Ashraf told a news conference on Tuesday.

"As far as his playing again is concerned that is for the selectors to decide because there is no doubt about his immense talent and he is still very young."

Amir has taken 51 wickets in 14 tests.

Former captain Butt and Asif were jailed for 30 months and one year respectively by a London court in November for their part in the gambling-inspired plot. (Reuters)
 

Misbah wants spot-fixing scandal forgotten

DUBAI: Pakistan cricket captain Misbah-ul Haq on Tuesday stressed the need for forgetting the 2010 spot-fixing scandal when his team take on England in the first of three Tests here next week.

The Pakistan captain got the first taste of how the series -- the first between the two countries since the scandal -- will be seen during his press conference after arriving here on Monday.

The scandal, related to the bowling of deliberate no-balls during the Lord's Test against England, ended in jail terms for then captain Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Aamer.

When asked about the scandal, a visibly upset Misbah said: "That's the past, we don't get into that. I am only focusing on what we can do on the ground. I think everybody knows in both teams that we just have to forget the past."

Since the scandal, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has implemented a strict code of conduct for the players and introduced anti-corruption courses for both international and domestic cricketers.

Misbah said corruption in Pakistan cricket was no more a concern.

"It's not an area of concern for me. Our area of concern is to play good cricket, fair cricket, and that's what we can do," said Misbah, under whom Pakistan have not lost a Test series since the spot-fixing scandal.

And since he replaced Shahid Afridi as one-day captain, Misbah has led Pakistan to wins over Ireland, Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

Misbah said the credit goes to the players.

"I think the credit goes to the team and all the players after that difficult time," he said. "They just wanted to collect their thoughts and prove to the world that we are good players, a good team, and I think they just proved it.

"They are really focusing on their cricket and making my job easier. The players are ready to give their hundred percent and we are concerned with the present and future, not about the past."

Misbah said the series against England will be played in good spirit.

"Our target is just to play cricket in the true spirit ... good relations, and play really good and hard cricket," he said.

Misbah also praised his off-spinner, Saeed Ajmal, who took 50 Test wickets last year.

"Ajmal is a fine bowler and has a lot of variations but we are not depending on him only," said Misbah of Ajmal, who has promised to use a surprise delivery against England.

"England will have to explore themselves. Let's see how England's batsmen tackle it. That's a secret."

England, who earned a hard-fought three-wicket win against an ICC Combined IX here on Monday, take on a PCB XI in another three-day game here from Wednesday.

The first Test starts on January 17. Both teams will also play four one-day and three Twenty20 internationals. (AFP)
 

Monday, 2 January 2012

PCB sought clearance before picking Wahab


ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Cricket Board said Saturday it sought clearance from the International Cricket Council’s anti-corruption unit before selecting fast bowler Wahab Riaz for next month’s test series against England.
Riaz was not picked for Pakistan’s last two series against Sri Lanka and Bangladesh for unknown reasons.
Spokesman Nadeem Sarwar said in a statement the PCB approached the anti-corruption unit ”as a precautionary measure” to seek any relevant information about Riaz.
”In the absence of any observation, the PCB proceeded with selecting Wahab (Riaz) for the England series,” Sarwar said.
Three Pakistani cricketers are in prison in England after they were found guilty of spot-fixing during a test match against England in 2010.
Former captain Salman Butt was sentenced for 2 years, fast bowler Mohammad Asif for 1 years and young paceman Mohammad Amir for six months.
Wahab, 26, was a key component in Pakistan’s bowling lineup in the absence of Asif and Amir in 2011.
Although Pakistan lost the World Cup semifinal against archrival India in March, Wahab took 5-46.
He went on to claim another seven wickets in the one-day series against West Indies shortly after the World Cup before he was rested for the series against Zimbabwe.
Wahab traveled with the Pakistan team in October to the United Arab Emirates for the series against Sri Lanka but was never picked in the playing XI for test matches before being dropped for the limited-overs series.
”We would like ICC’s anti corruption unit to share any information on our players with PCB in order to jointly proceed in such matters,” Sarwar said.
”We hope we are able to establish that protocol in the future.”
ICC’s chief executive Haroon Lorgat said in a statement that ”it remains the absolute right of a member board to decide which player it wishes to include in a squad or select in its team for any match.”
Lorgat also said that the ICC’s permission is only required for selection if a player has been charged, provisionally suspended by the ICC or banned by an independent tribunal.
SOURCE: DAWN

India aren’t finished, Dhoni warns Australia


SYDNEY: India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni has warned Australia not to get too carried away with their victory in the first test and backed his team to battle back in the second in Sydney this week.
If the nature of last week’s 122-run defeat in Melbourne had rattled the tourists, the ice cool Dhoni certainly showed no signs of it when he addressed the media at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Monday.
Asked whether India’s 4-0 series drubbing in England earlier this year, and the match in Melbourne, had proved his team was “not much good when there was something there for the bowlers”, Dhoni calmly rebuffed the question.
“That’s what you think,” he replied during a news conference. “If you see the kind of players that we have got, that would be very a premature statement to make.
“Because what we have seen is that we have always bounced back. Australia will have to keep the pressure on the batting line-up and the bowlers as well.
“It’s just that we haven’t performed in the first test and we look to improve in the second.”
Wicketkeeper Dhoni’s own form with the bat overseas has been of much a concern to Indian cricket fans and scores of six and 23 in Melbourne left him averaging just 17 in Australia.
The 30-year-old was not about to push the panic button, though, and said his ability to adapt to different conditions was one of his strengths.
“I won’t look to make too many adjustments because what I’ve learned over the last 15 years since my school days is it’s very difficult to changes in just one series,” he said.
“What’s important is to adapt well, look for where you are weak and try avoid the deliveries that can get you out.”
One player who has never had any trouble scoring runs, particularly at the SCG, where he has an average of 221 in six tests, is Sachin Tendulkar.
The batting master’s 10-month quest to notch up his 100th international hundred may have been frustrating for cricket-mad India but Dhoni said it has little impact on the player or his team mates.
“It’s not the first time Sachin’s approached a milestone,” he said.
“We all know it will happen. It may happen in this test match, it may happen in the next test match or in this series. You can’t really stop it from happening.
“I don’t think he thinks about it a lot … it never really feels like he’s under any sort of pressure when it comes to scoring the 100th hundred.
“As a team, we would like him to score it as quickly as possible for no other reason than that it’s a big milestone and we would love to enjoy and celebrate it with him.
“It’s also a big distraction for the media, which is good for us.”
Dhoni will not name his side until just before the start of the match on Tuesday and would therefore not comment on whether Rohit Sharma would make his debut in place of the out-of-form number six batsman Virat Kohli.
Having lost the number one test ranking after the injury-ravaged side lost in England and now on a run of five successive defeats outside India, Dhoni admitted their confidence had been dented slightly.
“It does effect it a bit,” said Dhoni. “But we all know the reasons for what exactly has happened and you learn from your mistakes.
“In the last five tests we have lost, there were also plenty of positives. We are looking at the positives.”


SOURCE : DAWN

Saturday, 31 December 2011

Australia’s New Year resolution?


MELBOURNE: Australia close out the year on a high after their rousing 122-run victory over India in the first test in Melbourne, but might hope their batsmen have underlined “I shall not throw my wicket away cheaply” at the top of their New Year resolutions.
A brilliant performance from Australia’s raw pace attack with bat and ball gave Michael Clarke’s team a shot of confidence heading into the second test in Sydney, but also glossed over their batsmen’s continuing woes.
Barring half-centuries from debutant Ed Cowan, Ricky Ponting and Mike Hussey, the specialists lost their wickets quickly and in bunches, reprising a disturbing trend of collapses in recent tests against New Zealand and South Africa.
To add insult to injury, those further down the order not paid to score runs put them in the shade at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
Pacemen James Pattinson and Peter Siddle scored 100 runs in the test, more than opener David Warner, number three Shaun Marsh and skipper Clarke combined (76).
Warner, who scored a century in the previous test against New Zealand in Hobart, fell back to earth when he appeared to confuse the India match for a Twenty20 fixture, losing his wicket with ill-chosen swipes in both innings.
Marsh made a first-innings duck in baffling circumstances, flicking a ball off his pads straight to a player in the gully, then emulated Warner’s second innings downfall by chopping a ball onto his stumps for three.
Australia’s batsmen have been under fire since getting skittled for a second innings 47 in their recent test in Cape Town against South Africa, but Clarke has shielded them with a sturdy defence many would rather see used on his own wicket.
He was at it again after the MCG test, charitably describing their failures as “unlucky”, while pointing to their opponents’ similar struggles on the MCG wicket.
His Indian counterpart MS Dhoni was not so accommodating to his own batters, however, laying the blame for the loss squarely at their feet.
“When you get conditions like we’ve faced for the last few test matches, when the ball swings and seams you’re going to nick balls, you’re going to play and miss balls,” said Clarke, who did just that to be bowled twice against India.
With opening batsman and all rounder Shane Watson sidelined with injury, Australia’s flailing top order will head to the Sydney Cricket Ground intact but under pressure to deliver against an Indian side renowned for their slow starts.
They would do well to emulate pacemen Peter Siddle, Ben Hilfenhaus and James Pattinson, who withstood India’s pace onslaught to produce runs when called upon, while raffling 20 wickets between themselves with a mixture of speed, line and controlled aggression.
The trio, led by a Man of the Match performance from 21-year-old Pattinson in his third test, have given Michael Clarke a happy selection dilemma, with front-line paceman Ryan Harris now having to fight his way back into the side.
Harris has been picked in a 12-man squad for the second test, but is no certainty for selection after struggling with a hip injury and given the Sydney Cricket Ground wicket usually rewards spinners as it wears.
“(Harris’s) obviously an outstanding bowler. The times he’s played he’s had great success,” Siddle told reporters on Friday.
“The way we’ve played and to have someone like that to come into the squad, obviously it’s a bonus.”
Equally encouraging for Australian media, who were declaring the team “in crisis” following their second test loss to New Zealand in Hobart, was the emergence of a ruthless streak against India not seen since the team’s calamitous Ashes series loss on home soil.
Prominent cricket writer Malcolm Conn wrote of “Michael Clarke the cut-throat captain” in a News Ltd column after the 30-year-old skipper instructed his pacemen to soften up India’s tail-enders with short-pitched bowling.
“James Pattinson could not have channelled Dennis Lillee more convincingly without growing whiskers and wearing his shirt unbuttoned to the waist,” enthused The Age newspaper, referring to the fiery Australian quick of the 1970s and early 80s.
Having knocked over India’s star-studded batting lineup twice, Australia’s rejuvenated pace attack now has an almost tougher assignment to hose down great expectations ahead of Sydney, where Dhoni has promised a better showing from his team.
“Is this the most destructive attack in world cricket emerging?” was the first question at a media conference directed at a bemused Siddle on Friday.
“I’d like to think so!” he replied with a smile.
“No, I don’t know, but I think we’re just doing everything right at the moment.
“Obviously the bowling is going well, the batting’s getting there and we’re working well as a unit and that’s the best thing.”

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...