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Onions…

September 3rd, 2006

.. is the name of the latest fast bowler recruited by the English cricket team. It epitomises England’s bowling troubles that they have to select a player whose List A and first class bowling averages are 35 and 37.10 respectively at the moment. The English fans are crying but others like me can’t wait to see Onions in action.

Update: Matt informs me that Durham’s wicketkeeper is Philip Mustard. So they always get batsmen out “caught Mustard bowled Onions“. Hilarity ensues.

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The Water bomb..

August 31st, 2006

.. becomes the number 1 most astounding reason why cricket matches have been interrupted. Sand storms and earth-quakes have been responsible for interruptions before of course but what are they compared to the Blackpool waterbombs!

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Cricket suffers

August 20th, 2006

The Pakistan cricket team is accused of ball tampering by the umpire and hence cheating. They refuse to come out to play for the post tea session.

Darrel Hair takes off the bails from the stumps and according to the rules, as Pakistan didn’t come out to play, the umpires could technically forfeit the game and award it to England. A bit later, the Pakistan team came out to play but the umpires refused to officiate.

More than thirty minutes passed in the above stated ludicrious events. If a player or team is accused of cheating, he doesn’t become a cheat necessarily. Appeals can be lodged and strong statements by boycotting if not heard properly can be made later on. By refusing to play and cuasing commotion when there wasn’t need for it, the Pakistani cricket team did not see the larger picture of the responsibility of letting the show go on. The personal issue was given more importance than the good of the game at large.

That Darrel Hair was the umpire did not help matters. He prefers donning the hat of a police man in the middle, showing his importance. The good umpires, an old adage goes, are the ones who are noticed the least. Darrel Hair doesn’t believe in this adage and likes to be in the centre of every thing. He ignored the larger picture, not for the first time - the good of the game is vital above every thing else.

The fans who came to watch the cricket at The Oval on a Sunday chosing cricket over football or the ones who decided to watch on TV were left with the mockery for more than an hour. That is 2/3rds of the time it takes to finish a football match. That the crowd behaved calmly is complementary. The watching public, sponsors and the television companies are within their rights to get back their money for the day as the cricket, for which they paid, didn’t actually occur for 15-20% of the day for circumstances which could have been controlled.

Damage control needs to be done and the test match should continue tomorrow. If the egos of the men involved is so big that they cannot talk it out and the match is called off, it would disgraceful for the game. The persons involved in effecting the disgrace should be penalised but you would be a fool to bet that the ICC will do that.

Update: The test match has been forfeited and awarded to England.

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Tendulkar versus school boys

July 7th, 2006

Photograph courtesy Richard Hingston.

Result? Tendulkar scores a century - his fourth for Lashings.

Friend Richard Hingston is an excellent photographer. Here are photographs of Ajit Agarkar, Tatenda Taibu and Chris Harris.

You can see more of Richard’s photography and request for photographs you want to buy from here. Really good stuff.

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Which Year will England win the Cricket World Cup?

May 5th, 2006

I was just wondering. :D

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Not Cricket

April 9th, 2006

Violence erupted after the crowd waited several hours for the 5th India-England one dayer to start. Excessive rain meant the match was delayed and later called off. Did the Guwahati crowd have to behave in such a manner? Could the BCCI have improved the facilities for draining the water at the ground before scheduling an international match here? Was the security lacking?

Simon Mann writes in his column for BBC:

The Nehru Stadium resembles a ramshackle English football ground from the 1970s, but the BCCI’s attitude appears to be that if spectators continue to turn up in vast numbers, everything must be fine. That is a short-sighted and misguided approach.The authorities could start by providing cover for spectators, the vast majority of whom are forced to sit for hours exposed to the sun.

Money will be returned to the spectators. It is less certain if and when Guwahati will have another international cricket match.

All I know is that this is not cricket.

Update: Cricinfo’s The Surfer does a nice round up of what the British Media has to say on the incident.

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Blackwell makes India struggle

March 31st, 2006

One headline I thought I would never see on Cricinfo! Ian Blackwell’s performance so far: 6-0-16-2. He was great in the first game too with a bowling performance of 10-0-24-1. Srikkanth said at the lunch interval in game 1:

Ian Blackwell is an ordinary bowler but India made him look like a great bowler as if he is Bishan Singh Bedi.

India is struggling chasing England’s 226 and are at 125/5. Making a legend of Shaun Udal first. And now adding Blackwell to the list. India sure know how to improve the profile of pie bowlers! I have seen absolute ordinary players achieve extra ordinary feats versus India. Case in point: Chris Lewis making a century. But ordinary spinners made to look like they are unplayable is some thing else.

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On England Not Letting the Opportunity Slip, A Few Champions and A Few Losers

March 22nd, 2006

A few days ago I asked the question, “Has England let the opportunity slip in the battle for No. 2 and chasing Australia?

A win in Mumbai is now needed for England to remain in the race. Very difficult but it is the only way England can stop the opportunity from slipping. No one said the battle was ever going to be easy!

England did win in Mumbai and showed strength in the face of adversity. The persistance was evidant in the way England batted in the post tea session on Day 4 - with planning to go for the shots only once England felt safe. The persistance was also evident on Day 5. The pitch had not deteriorated. It was playing much better than most 5 day pitches play. England kept the ball in a line which made Indians play. Ball after ball this line was maintained. There was hardly any straying. The discipline and superb bowling effort was a pleasure to watch.

Defensive mindset

India has been defensive in mind set in this series. In the first test they went for the shots very late. That was when the score line read 0-0. Here the score line was 1-0. So it was unlikely that they would go for runs and risk drawing the series. The plan would be to play out the first session and a half or two sessions and if wickets are in hand after that, see if going for the target during a small phase is a good option.

This is where I think India erred. Defensive play is never a good option regardless of the situation. Dravid almost got into a shell and Tendulkar survived a few close LBW shouts which would have been plumb had they been a bit closer to the wicket. Safeguarding your wicket is needed in such situations. But in the process playing the natural game as far as possible should not be forgotten. If you let the bowlers dominate, they will gain in confidence and get on you sooner rather than later.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Munaf Patel Opening for India

March 21st, 2006

With Sehwag missing most of the time in the field in England’s second inning due to injury, he can bat only lower down the order.

Debate between Jawagal Srinath and Dean Jones occurs on who should open with Jaffer. Jones reckons it should be Munaf Patel.

No he wasn’t joking as he backed it up:

I would say Munaf Patel. If he gets quick 15 runs, India could be off to a flyer. Certainly he is wasted at number XI and should bat up higher.

Hmm.

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Has England Let the Opportunity Slip in the Battle for No. 2 and Chasing Australia?

March 16th, 2006

The English Team was at cross roads in Pakistan. I had written on the same nearly 3 months ago which can be read here. I titled it facing adveristy. In the period which has followed since then, England has enountered a lot of adversity. A menacing Shoaib Akhtar in Pakistan and a series of unfortunate events leading 4 of their first XI to withdraw from the tour of India being unquestionably the biggest external adversities. The internal weaknesses they have shown shouldn’t be forgotten.

With the collapse in Pakistan and throwing away a match England should have probably drawn in India in the second test of the series in Mohali, it has probably let slip the opportunity to challenge Australia for now. From being the unquestionable number 2 side, it has gone down a step in the close battle of the number 2.

In fact, it also finds itself at a position inferior to Pakistan. Pakistan appear to have lost Shoaib Akhtar for the immediate future. However there is some time to go for Pakistan’s tour of England. If Pakistan can manage even a draw in that series, it would mean that Pakistan has set itself above the current English side.

And what about South Africa? South Africa played superbly in Australia. It is now involved in the home series versus Australia. If South Africa can manage a victory or even a draw, it can be accepted as a strong team despite Glenn McGrath not playing in the current series and despite what Chris Fogarty has to say regarding only the Ashes mattering, test cricket is about more than just The Ashes. John Stern analyses the current situation and the mouth watering prospect which lies ahead of us much more judiciously.

India may be finding bowlers (Munaf Patel, Piyush Chawla) who might show some potency in times to come. However, with it playing just 2 test series in the run up to World Cup 2007 and having lost the series to Pakistan (despite it being like a 1 test series), India finds itself behind the pack in this chase. Did New Zealand not go behind a huge distance in one session in their home series versus Pakistan where Shoaib Akhtar wrecked them? It did India no favours that for them that the home series versus England was always going to be The Nothing Series. India in fact loosened their noose in the tussle they failed to win their last series in the West Indies. That they lost the home series versus Australia did them no favours. They have been chasing as a back runner since then and will have to keep persisting. They do not find themselves in the picture before the pyajama cricket - World Cup 2007 is done and dusted with.

Climbing up the ladder is difficult. It requires consistent brilliant performances. New Zealand is finding it out the hard way. It is doomed in mid table for the time being. Has England let it’s opportnity slip by two collapses, one in Pakistan and one in India? The importance is not in that England lost. England would be respectable losers after drawing their first test match in India. The importance was in the manner in which a match which should have been drawn was lost. A win in Mumbai is now needed for England to remain in the race. Very difficult but it is the only way England can stop the opportunity from slipping. No one said the battle was ever going to be easy!

Pakistan does have a small lead ahead of the rest of the pack - England, South Africa and India. South Africa has the best chance to contend with Pakistan. While all this is going on, Australia cannot work out who the right players are for their international side. A side which boasted of depth finds itself bringing back older warriors who were discarded after the Ashes war was lost. The batsmen are not showing consistency. There is no sign of a future Glenn McGrath or Shane Warne. Most importantly, Australia has set such high standards for themselves that they will themselves find it difficult to maintain these levels. Even if McGrath and Warne do manage to play for a few more years, it will be very difficult for Australia to not slip from it’s high intensity performances is now characterized with. Some would argue that the slipping has already started.

Very interesting times to be a test cricket fan.

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