The probables: Rohan Banerjee, Harshad Khadiwala, Abhinav Mukund, T. Kohli, Manish Pandey, N. Einstein, Ankit Tiwari, Saurav Tiwari, Arpit Vasavada, Dhaval Kulkarni, Amanpreet Singh, Srikant Munde, Pradeep Sanghwan, P. Das, Mohd. Arif, Bharat Reddy, Tejasvi Yadav, Srivats Goswami, Rubin Dalwadi, Ravikant Saini, G.V.S. Prasad, K.P. Appanna, Iqbal Abdullah, Swapnil Singh and Mohd. Khalid. Stand-byes: Sunil Raju, Sarthak Mundva, Suffian Shaikh, Nitin Saini and Manish Sharma.
Friday, June 15, 2007
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Age is a number
Whats the fuss about Chandu Borde's age? Why is there no fuss about his designation? Whats the fuss about his designation? Why is there no fuss over what the designation entails?
Historically, managers of the Indian team have been tasked with the administrative aspect of touring a country and liaisoning with the Host Board and Media.
Chandu Borde is the manager.
Whats the fuss?
The crux of the Matter
Lara insists that the problems with West Indies cricket ran deep. "It's that we don't have a good infrastructure for young guys to develop. West Indies have a great Under-15 side. I know a 16-year-old guy in Trinidad who's awesome but I worry for him because of the facilities. A mediocre Australian cricketer at 17 or 18 will be slapping everyone all over the world five years later. If you don't have facilities and you don't have employment then you have a negative atmosphereAnd that in short, is the crux of the matter.
We often lament on the quality of our sides that take to the field. A lot of debate has been generated/is about to be generated over the squad selected. A lot of ink will be wasted on the identity of the coach.
At the end of three Tests, you might just find that India have carried a couple of passengers, but this is due as much to the fact that the cupboard in domestic cricket is a bit bare at the moment,is another common refrain.
Fair enough.
So what is being done about it?
Why is it that "A mediocre Australian cricketer at 17 or 18 will be slapping everyone all over the world five years later" ?
Why do our World Champions in the age group level falter on the bigger stage that is International cricket?
What are we going to do about it?
And isn't the answer to that question far more important than the identity of the coach and the team selection to whatever country we are playing against at the moment?
PS:-
What will Paras Mhambrey and Kiran More and Makarand Waingankar do?
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Homer for coach
With absolutely no reluctance at all, without concern for friends and family, Homer is gleefully putting his hat into the ring for position of Coach - Team BCCI.
Here are his qualifications -
1. Resident of the USA - Hello "We need a foreign coach" lobby
2. Indian passport holder - Hello " Only an Indian can do the job of coach"lobby
3. No International cricketing background - A bow in the direction of John Buchanan. In fact, unless you consider rubber ball under arm with "one bounce outs" and "six and out" and "full toss on the wall is out" as the real deal, he has no cricketing experience at all.
4. Willing to work with players - Not only willing to work with players, willing to do the players work. Homer is a guy who had famously offered to be the lift man at Sportsfield. He will be more than willing to carry the players kit bags (coffins), run their laps for them, keep tossing balls at them during nets all day and then runs their laps for them, substitute for them during catch practice and the run their laps for them, make tea and biscuit mandatory before and after every net and then run laps - you get the drift..
5. Manage players - Like every fan worth his two paisa, Homer will go above and beyond the call of duty and pander to player egos. Homer does fawning adulation better than most.
6. Blogger and so experience in handling media matters - Newspaper wallah's/ TV wallah's khush
7. Resident of Mumbai -Namaskaar Ravi dada Shastri, Diliprao Vengsarkar, Param Pujya Shri Sunilraoji Gavaskar, Mananiya Shri Sharadchandraji Raoji Pawarji.
8. Refers to self in the third person - Shades of Michael Vaughan.. And we know what Vaughan did to those vagabonds from Down Under because they lacked manners.
9. Willing to work with coaching staff - Will play catch with Robin Singh ( since there will be no one else to who will be willing to).. Will work long with Venky Prasad to learn the nuances of bowling juicy half volleys and juicier full tosses at the nets.
10. Work with the BCCI - $20,000 a month is $20,000 too many for a role any lay person on the streets of India is willing to do.Especially when lodging and boarding come free with the job. He will not complain of crowded itineraries- who does not like to fly business class for free and bump up their frequent flier miles? And who in their right minds will say no to staying in luxurious hotels with stocked liquor cabinets?
11. Brilliant with Power Point - who does not like jazzy presentations with lots of buzz words thrown in?
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Homer will do a stellar job of coaching the team. In fact, he will let the team coach him. And I have already started stocking up on the sledges we will use against the Poms.
Doni, Rahul, VVS, repeat after me - "Kev Pieterson has no taste - in women".
PS:- Sportsfield is a building in Mumbai that houses the whoz who of Mumbai cricket.
Monday, June 11, 2007
Darren Ganga
The West Indies had been heavily criticised for lacking pride and discipline earlier in this match, but that has not been the case over the past two days. Starting with Darren Sammy's seven wickets on Saturday, they have confounded most people's expectations by knuckling down to the point where they have an outside chance of levelling the series.Derek Pringle 11/06/2007
West Indies are mercurial as a side can be, bouncing merrily this past month between total incompetence and steadfast obduracy.We saw the best of it at Lord's in the drawn first Test and we have seen it in the second innings here, led brilliantly by the diligent, vigilant, unflappable Shivnarine Chanderpaul, who after four and a quarter hours will resume on 81, his third successive half-century of the series, and abetted by Devon Smith (42), Runako Morton (54) and Dwayne Bravo (49). On this occasion the tourists' batsmen have shunned the flash flippancy that has characterised too much of their cricket and taken responsibility instead.
Mike Selvey at Old Trafford
Monday June 11, 2007
Yesterday's cricket contained two collectors' items, firstly involving Steve Harmison bowling straight, and secondly a series of West Indians at least declining to use their bats as though they were auditioning for the conductor's job at the Last Night Of The Proms.
How West Indies missed him during that flaccid surrender at Headingley. He had batted for four-and-a-half hours to set up the draw at Lord's, and he made another sheet-anchor half-century in the first innings here - an innings that only ended because of the wickets tumbling all around him. The spark for West Indies' fightback may have been provided by Darren Sammy's seven-for on Saturday, but Chanderpaul is the slow-burning wick that has kept that flame alight ever since.
It wasn't a solo effort by any means, although who else could have inspired Runako Morton's monument of self-denial in the afternoon session. Morton's natural game was best demonstrated by the furious swish he took after being given out lbw for 54 - it was the shot he had been gagging to play all innings, but had somehow found the willpower to resist. Instead he had been leaving the ball expertly against the quicks and spinners alike - and replays of his dismissal suggest his judgment didn't entirely desert him.
Andrew Miller at Old Trafford June 10, 2007
The underlying theme of all the reportage of the fourth day's play of the Third Test between England and the West Indies has been the levels of discipline shown by the Windies in the Test in general and the fourth day in particular.
Ganga's leadership has been about instilling discipline and nurturing a good work ethic. Sarwan considers himself a gambler who is willing to take risks.Maybe the fourth day was a one off, maybe it is too early in his captaincy for Ganga to leave his imprint on the team and for us to sit in judgement, maybe I am clutching at straws - but I think that Darren Ganga could be the best thing to happen to West Indies cricket in a very long time......
Ganga, at 28, brings a decidedly more mature approach than Sarwan, who will turn 27 in June. Not that age is the decider, but their temperaments and experiences have been starkly different. Ganga has been bumped in and out of the West Indies team, sometimes inexplicably, but he has been stoic and resilient and has always tried to work out his problems, though it has affected his confidence.