The India A Squad for Zimbabwe and Kenya
Mohammad Kaif, Parthiv Patel, Robin Uthappa, Cheteshwar Pujara, S Badrinath, Rohit Sharma, Rajesh Pawar, Mahesh Rawat (wicketkeeper), Piyush Chawla, Arjun Yadav, Pragyan Ojha, Irfan Pathan, V R V Singh, Yo Mahesh, Pankaj Singh, Niraj Patel
Saturday, July 07, 2007
Thursday, July 05, 2007
I beg to differ
Here is the comment I posted on the Indian Express website in response to Harsha Bhogle's column - None to witness a sunset in Indian cricket history
To the best of my knowledge, a vast majority of the Mumbai players are in England playing Club/League cricket.
That is, if they are not donning the national colors.
You will be privy to more information in this regard that I.
I personally think its a cheap shot, calling out the Mumbai cricketers and accusing them of a lack of respect.
If respect is what you seek, it will be instructive to peruse through the list of Mumbai cricketers who donned India colors on the Mumbai Cricket website. And list down the names that are not there .
If you are looking for respect, look no further than the MCA. Who have yet to publicly facilitate thier players for engineering what is possibly the greatest turn around in the history of Indian domestic cricket.
And if it is respect you seek, please peruse through all the obits on Dilip Sardesai and list down those that eugolize his contribution in Mumbai winning an unprecedented 15 Ranji titles on the trot.
When, at an institutional level ( and I am not even thinking of the BCCI and their shenanigans with stopping Player pensions) there is no respect for the game or its players, why expect kids who have just broken into the game to show a sense of history?
When learned hacks think nothing of bypassing Dilip Sardesai's contributions to Mumbai's cricketing legacy, instead couching their obits around the West Indies tour of 71, why expect kids to know any different?
Why fob off our responsibilities on a generation whose ignorance we have lauded ( Virender Sehwag not knowing Pankaj Roy and Vinoo Mankad's record) when we have all along encouraged this behavior?
Cheers
Wednesday, July 04, 2007
The Coaching special
The District Sports Association (DSA) Silchar has kickstarted the first-ever summer coaching camp for various age group probables by any sports association in the state under the tutelage of the Assam Cricket Academy.
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The new Indian coaching manual, for players and coaches, is almost ready and will be circulated - as a book and in a CD — in the next three months. It is a culmination of eight months of hard work and research, from careful examination of reports and analyses of feedback from four men — Lalchand Rajput, Bharat Arun, Arshad Ayub, Dinesh Nanavati and Rajesh Kamat.
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This is the only platform where gender bias in cricket—stuffed on power and technique —comes to nought. And appearing for the National Cricket Academy (NCA) Level II coaches workshop-cum-examination, Ragini Malhotra and Priyanka Sisodia agree to that. Both cleared the Level I course a year and-a-half ago — the only two in the entire North Zone — and if they clear this exam too, they will be among the most qualified women cricket coaches.
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“There are certain subtle, but crucial changes in technique, like stance, grip, positioning, etc, that the batsman in Twenty20 cricket has to go through. To be able to score at run-a-ball, and not allow bowlers to bowl dot balls, technique is foremost. Power is necessary to hit the ball hard to the boundary,” Ghosh said.
Engerland..
“Our Belfast experience will help because you won’t get conditions worse than that. It was absolutely freezing and the conditions were tough. I’ve never encountereed anything like this in my entire career. This is something we are not used to, and experiencing that just before the series against England is wonderful,” remarked Sachin Tendulkar who completed his 15,000 one-day runs in the Future Cup series.
--Well, India haven’t won a Test at Lord’s since 1986. I hope this time around they break the jinx, for they have the potential to beat this England side. Yes, I will be there in the Lord’s balcony cheering Rahul and boys.
The Colonel speaks
--“Playing in England is special,” he said. “I firmly believe we can win the series this time around.”
Very Very Special speaks
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Rohit Mahajan
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Andy Bull
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Fiesty cricket or not, bring on the Poms!
Today...
The year, 1971, was the year Indian cricket learnt to walk, became adult, made its bones, call it what you like, and Sardesai did more than anyone to make that possible. And he did it without a helmet.Mukul Kesavan on Dilip Sardesai.
The cause and effect of Mugabe's obduracy has manifested itself in the killing, maiming and torture that is now tragically Zimbabwe's trademark and its President's stock in trade.
Mike Rook on Zimbabwe.
Watching a player struggle to take that last, final step from aspirant to champion, being so desperately close yet not quite there, unsure sometimes what precisely it is that is holding them back from greatness, is compelling.
Rohit Brijnath.
On whether Anil Kumble's retirement from ODIs made his comeback easier
No... Whether he’d retired or not, I could only have come back after good performances in domestic cricket and at other levels... That’s what happened.
However, former India spinner and current national selector Venkatpathy Raju justified calling back Chawla from Scotland. “Unfortunately, we don’t have too many side games nowadays.There are leagues happening in Southern India and it would help Chawla more if he plays in them rather than just sitting around the dressing room. Also we have India ‘A’ tours coming up,” Raju reasoned.
Avinash Iyer
Monday, July 02, 2007
Today..
For everything else that is wrong with Shoaib Akhtar, the guy has his heart in the right place when it comes to batsmen
I don’t... When I come charging in, the one thought is to **** them... I like being aggressive and don’t like batsmen who keep improving their average by batting against mediocre attacks on flat wickets... It’s a pity that there are so few genuinely quick bowlers... Batting has definitely become easy and ridiculous rules such as a free hit (in ODIs) after a foot-fault no ball are absurd... For God’s sake, don’t discourage fast bowlers.Suresh Raina is on the mend
“I know it will be a tough fight, but it is good for me. I will be motivated to perform, and if I able to do so I know I will make my way back to the Indian team,” he says. As an afterthought he adds, “I know Kaif bhai and Veeru bhai are also are eager to make a comeback, the competition is getting tougher.”So too is Manoj Tiwary
“Till this point, all that he has been doing is going through regular, light rounds of shadow practice, without kits and bat,” Tiwary’s coach said, adding: “But by next week, I hope he will have recovered properly enough to get back into full swing at the nets. The final call of course depends on Dr Wallace, with whom Manoj is constantly in touch.”As is Irfan Pathan
It did cross my mind and I did make an extra effort to maintain a level head, to tell myself that this is reality and this is not, to know that this all looks good but will not last. Still, I did make mistakes… you take things for granted. You go along with the flow, think you're doing right but it might not be.And here is Yuvraj Singh
The first three wickets had fallen quite early and it was important to hold the innings together… The ball had been seaming… Rahul and I had a good partnership and, then, (Mahendra Singh) Dhoni came to the wicket… His presence makes me comfortable as he can strike the ball hard and runs fast…It is hard not to get enthused by the maturity shown by these kids. And for that reason alone, I feel good about India's cricketing future ( inspite of the BCCI).
RIP Dilip Narayan Sardesai
Dilip Sardesai, who passed away yesterday did not know what it was like to surrender the Ranji Trophy in his playing days. City cricket is left poorer.
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Former Test cricketer Dilip Sardesai, who was considered India’s best batsman against spin bowling, died of multiple-organ failure here on Monday.
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It could be a club game, Ranji Trophy or Test; Dilip never ever gave his wicket easily.
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and thanks for the memories.
Sunday, July 01, 2007
Losing the plot
4.1 Zaheer to de Villiers, no run, good length delivery angling away from
the right hander, de Villiers goes on the backfoot and looks to flick it away,
closes the face of the bat very early, gets a leading edge and Sachin Tendulkar
takes a stunning catch at 1st slip, they are celebrating but Aleem dar says not
out!!! This has to be the poorest decision by an umpire I have ever seen... That
was a regulation nick!!!
4.2 Zaheer to de Villiers, no run, short of length delivery on the stumps,
de Villiers goes on the backfoot and pulls it away, in the air and straight to
the fielder at short mid wicket, he is DROPPED Gambhir has put him down
At this stage, the batsman is unsure of what to expect next. The reprieve may have given him a new lease of life , but I am not sure he is convinced of either his technique or batsmanship. So what does India do next?
4.3 Zaheer to de Villiers, FOUR!!, short of length delivery on the off, de
Villiers goes on the backfoot and pulls it away to deep mid wicket, that is
insult to injury!!!
When you have the batsman where you want him, unsure of himself, why is it that time and time again, we give him a get out of jail card with compliments?