Showing posts with label India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India. Show all posts

Friday, 3 September 2010

Imran Khan should run Pakistan cricket: Kapil Dev

Imran Khan should run Pakistan cricket: Kapil Dev

  
“He (Imran Khan) can really put the nation out of this controversy and others,” Dev said. —AFP/File Photo

KOLKATA: Former Indian captain Kapil Dev said on Thursday that Imran Khan is the ideal man to run Pakistan cricket after so many scandals have damaged it over the years. 

Describing the 1992 World Cup-winning Pakistan captain as the “cleanest and the strongest” person in the neighbouring nation to fix the downward trend of cricket in Pakistan, Kapil said: “In this time of crisis, I can only think of Imran Khan as the cleanest cricketer to look after Pakistan cricket. 

“He can really put the nation out of this controversy and other ones because he also has a strong personality and a sharp mind.” 

Monday, 30 August 2010

Cricket and the lure of money – a sad tale with a long history



Cricket and the lure of money – a sad tale with a long history

The allegations of spot-fixing made against Pakistan are the latest in a long line of incidents where the pernicious influence of money has damaged the game


Hansie Cronje
The late Hansie Cronje, the former South African captain, was found guilty in 2000 of fixing matches. Photograph: Martyn Hayhow/AFP/Getty Images

Cricket was never a wholly clean game. Whatever we like to imagine, it has seldom been entirely free from the dangerous lure of money, whether it was gentlemen wagering on the outcome of matches during the gambling boom of the 18th century, WG Grace and his brother Edward fiddling the takings at Gloucestershire in the Victorian era, or Graham Gooch and Mike Gatting accepting wads of particularly filthy cash to lead tours to South Africa during the time of apartheid. But the alleged incidents of spot-fixing revealed by today's story in the News of the World will damage the sport's integrity as surely as if someone had detonated massive charges of high explosive under its foundations.
You would like to smack the idiots who allegedly accepted money to influence events in the fourth Test at Lord's, thus dealing a blow to the dreams of young boys and girls who grow up admiring the heroes of the game and aspiring to emulate their achievements. The fact that one of the current crop of apparent miscreants is a teenage bowler of great virtuosity in one of cricket's most arcane and appealing skills – that of swing bowling – makes it all the sadder, since he is just the sort of figure to inspire even younger people, in his homeland and elsewhere, to take up a game constantly under threat of obsolescence.
The case of the late Hansie Cronje, the former South African captain found guilty in 2000 of fixing matches, was one thing. Cronje may have been taken for a role model in his country, but he was a mature man and cricketer entering the final years of his career. He was deserving of no sympathy or regret, merely contempt for his venality and hypocrisy. At 18, Mohammad Amir is at the other end of his career and has it in him to become one of the greatest players in his country's history, as he showed with that mesmerising passage of play in which he captured four English wickets for no runs on Friday morning. If this case is proved, however, and it is hard to see how it can be defended in the light of the evidence presented today, his reputation will never be the same.
There will be regrets, too, about the role of Salman Butt, his 25-year-old captain, who made such a marvellous showing on his first Test appearance against England in Multan five years ago, contributing knocks of 74 and 122 to a thrilling victory by 22 runs, under the leadership of Inzamam‑ul‑Haq. But it is difficult to see how the preordained bowling of no-balls can take place without the connivance of a captain willing to adjust his bowlers' schedule to fit the plan.
And this scandal is, of course, the last thing Pakistan needed, whatever perspective is taken, from the narrow interests of a mere game to the plight of the millions left homeless by a natural disaster. Unable to play Test matches at home due to security issues, and with their gifted players prevented by the same considerations from joining the scramble for the millions available from the Indian Premier League and forced to watch others reap the rewards now available at the pinnacle of the game, they are perhaps uniquely vulnerable to such temptations.
This is a world, moreover, which is approaching that of 18th‑century England in its obsession with gambling, which assumes its most pernicious form when money is staked on failure. At one end of the scale lies George Soros's notorious $1bn winning bet on the collapse of sterling in 1992, while at the other lies Mohammad Amir's foot landing a few inches beyond the batting crease, just far enough to persuade the umpire to declare a no-ball and perhaps to net the culprit a few thousands pounds. In between lie the worlds of junk bonds, short-selling and spread betting, with bookmakers' logos on the front of the shirts of Premier League footballers and the pernicious Skybet slogan broadcast daily into British homes: "It matters more when there's money on it."
What we must do, as things stand, is congratulate the News of the World – owned, of course, by the mastermind of Sky – on this particular piece of journalism. The newspaper's successful efforts to expose the personal peccadilloes of such as Max Mosley and John Terry are hard to applaud, given their tenuous connection with any conceivable public interest, but when the same team brings its well-resourced ingenuity to bear on a subject such as fixing sporting events for gain, the result is of legitimate benefit to society. And, of course, to sport, which continues to develop its insatiable appetite for money from all sources to the point of helpless addiction while coming under ever increasing pressure to ensure that the public can believe what it sees.

Wednesday, 25 August 2010

Sehwag, seamers lead India into final



India v New Zealand, tri-series, 6th ODI, Dambulla

Sehwag, seamers lead India into final

August 25, 2010
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India 223 (Sehwag 110, Southee 4-49, McCullum 3-35) beat New Zealand 118 (Mills 52, Praveen 3-34, Praveen 3-21) by 105 runs
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Virender Sehwag gets ready to hit straight down the ground, India v New Zealand, tri-series, 6th ODI, Dambulla, August 25, 2010
It appeared as though Virender Sehwag was batting on a different pitch © AFP
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A combination of belligerent hitting by Virender Sehwag and potent seam bowling helped India storm into the final of the tri-series with a comprehensive thrashing of New Zealand in the last league game. On a day when a majority of specialist batsmen on both sides batted with two left feet in bowler-friendly conditions, Sehwag found a way to carve out an aggressive century, scoring more than what 11 New Zealanders managed. The target of 224 was out of New Zealand's reach after their top order crumbled against a four-pronged seam attack, a bowling combination you wouldn't associate with Indian sides, especially in the subcontinent.
By the end of the night, you could imagine batsmen queuing up outside Sehwag's door for the inside story on how he managed to dominate everything thrown at him. It was as though he was batting on another surface. Sehwag was unfazed by the early movement and nip off the wicket, which made the seamers potent. He played in a style known only to him and, with the final in three days' time, his innings today will undoubtedly be analysed in detail.
MS Dhoni took the gamble of batting on a fresh pitch, despite India having collapsed for 103 after batting first in their previous match against Sri Lanka. New Zealand's seamers nipped out four wickets by the end of the 13th over with a combination of swing, cut and bounce and those strikes took the sheen off an entertaining start from Sehwag.
Not known for exaggerated foot movements, Sehwag used the crease to loft the seamers over the off side. He barely moved across the stumps but such was his confidence that he stretched to scoop and slash powerfully over backward point. He backed away and slapped the slower bowlers past the infield as well. A more conventional punch through cover brought up his 1000th ODI four, one that was part of a sequence of three consecutive fours off Tim Southee.
India were lucky to have MS Dhoni at the other end for he rotated strike and built a solid partnership with Sehwag. Their stand produced 107, but India needed more from their last capable pair, having only Ravindra Jadeja, who is still trying to find his feet in ODIs, and a long tail to follow. Sehwag, however, didn't alter his approach. He continued to charge the spinners, lifting Kane Williamson inside out over extra cover for boundaries, and also cleverly picked the gaps at fine leg off the seamers. He played an upper cut over the vacant slip cordon shortly after getting to his century, but the fun ended for India when Sehwag found deep midwicket when on 110. His dismissal was against the run of play.
Dhoni, who had batted carefully, had to try and reclaim the advantage for India but New Zealand took control. Having grafted to 38 off 75 balls, Dhoni edged a Nathan McCullum delivery while trying to drive. The dismissals of Sehwag and Dhoni in quick succession meant a premature end to the innings was inevitable. Soon after New Zealand picked up the final wicket, though, their control over the game came to a grinding halt.
They had no-one with Sehwag's calibre and temperament to take the initiative, irrespective of the damage being done at the other end. They were exposed against the moving ball and even seasoned performers struggled. Praveen Kumar started the slide in conditions tailored to his variety of bowling, trapping Martin Guptill leg before in first over.
There was no respite from the other end as Ashish Nehra, with his extra pace when compared to Praveen, got the ball to nip in sharply to the right-handers, slicing them in half. A lot depended on the experienced Ross Taylor, but he was just as circumspect as the rest. He expected the ball to move in, but it went the other way and took a thick outside edge, giving Praveen his second wicket.
New Zealand's chase was irreparably damaged when their senior-most batsman, Scott Styris, chopped one on to his stumps without moving his feet. Grant Elliott knew that the best way to counter the swing was to cover the line and smother the movement. He regularly shuffled across the stumps, committing to the movement even before delivery, but his method didn't yield runs as almost every defensive push found fielders. Williamson, who finally scored an international run in his third innings, was dismissed by an Ishant Sharma delivery which cut in and took the edge onto the stumps. Munaf, who was miserly to begin with, bagged two lbws with with his probing line.
Kyle Mills' blitz only succeeded in saving New Zealand the embarrassment of being bowled out for less than 100.
Kanishkaa Balachandran is a sub-editor at Cricinfo
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