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400 just a number, says Tendulkar

October 10, 2007 crickinfo Leave a comment

0050.jpgHe has done that for 18 long years and when Sachin Tendulkar walks down to take his guard against Australia on Thursday, he will become only the second player in the world to feature in 400 One-Day Internationals.

It will be yet another milestone achieved by the master craftsman who chose the momentous occasion to drive down memory lane and relive every moment of that fascinating journey from a cherubic school kid to a legend.

Team India ready to rumble

Tendulkar, who will follow Sri Lankan great Sanath Jayasuriya into the one-day record books, said that Thursday will be no different. He would aim to do what he has done in these 18 years — score runs and help India win the game.

“I am hoping I will perform well and get runs to help India win the game,” said the 34-year-old batsman in Vadodara ahead of the fifth ODI against Australia.

“My approach would be the same. I would treat it as just another game. 400 is just a number and my approach to it would be as normal as ever,” the soft-spoken Tendulkar said.

“I am taking each match at a time. The 400th one-dayer happens to be against Australia. It could have been against any other team. My preparations are not going to be any different,” he added.

He said that the series against Australia is going to be a very competitive one.

“Our preparations have been good so far and I am hoping is that we can implement our plans tomorrow,” he said.

The only time Tendulkar got flustered during the chat with the media at the team’s practice area was when a scribe asked him why his performance had been more downhill than uphill during the current year.

“Please check your records,” he retorted.

Asked to single out a few memorable ties, Tendulkar listed some of the most memorable moments that fans would recount with great relish.

The 1993 Hero Cup semi-final against South Africa at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata, his desert storm-interrupted attacking knock at Sharjah against Australia in 1998 and the subsequent final against them. The superb innings of 98 with 12 boundaries and a six against the fiery Shoaib Akhtar [Images] and company of Pakistan in the 2003 World Cup tie at Centurion Park in South Africa were Tendulkar’s best and he fondly recollected those moments.

“The Hero Cup semi-final in Kolkata when I bowled the last over. I have a very strong memory of that. Then the matches in Sharjah in 1998 [when he smashed 143 and 134 in successive matches against Australia including the final which India won] and the World Cup match at Centurion against Pakistan.

“These have been some very important matches. These are some wonderful memories,” said the holder of the record for the most number of Test and ODI centuries.

The Hero Cup was the tournament where his magical bowling arm won India the semi-final against South Africa.

The last over of that match was surprisingly bowled by Tendulkar who, watched by a capacity crowd of over a lakh, persuaded his captain Mohammad Azharuddin to give him the ball.

The Proteas needed six runs to win and the batsmen at the crease, Brian McMillan and Allan Donald could get only three against the little champion.

Categories: Cricket News

Lee to record album in India

October 10, 2007 crickinfo Leave a comment

Australia fast bowler Brett Lee plans to record and release his first studio album in India during breaks in his playing schedule over the next 12 months and is also looking forward to charity work and movie offers in the country in future.

Lee has returned to India with the Australian one-day side for a seven-match series and, to his amazement, the game’s popularity has only grown in the country.

Lee’s night out!

“This has probably been the series with the most interest since I’ve been coming here,” Lee said adding “I’ve been on a few tours now with the Australian side, and it’s always been massive, but the last couple of weeks have been huge.

“I think the Twenty20 [World Cup victory] has had a lot to do with it, which is great for world cricket and great for India. This is where cricket is, this is the home of cricket. There would have been a couple of thousand people waiting for us at the hotel,” he told Australian newspaper The Age.

Following the success of his debut single with Asha Bhosle last year, Lee will record and release his first studio album in India during breaks in his cricketing schedule. Also, having fielded and rejected several approaches from movie producers due to time constraints, Lee hopes to grace India’s silver screens after his cricketing career.

He is also in the process of forming a charitable fund in India.

“Steve Waugh is loved over here because he has done so much charity work, and that’s how I would like to be remembered as well: someone who enjoyed his cricket, but also put a fair bit back in,” Lee said.

“Hopefully, I’ve only scratched the surface. There’s heaps of other things as well I want to do over here, like may be a movie.”

The fast bowler was effusive in his praise for the cricket-crazy public of India and said they gave him a feeling which he never encountered while playing anywhere else.

“Even though there are so many people, never once have we felt threatened. We’re never worried about going anywhere.

“It’s different when we tour England, South Africa or New Zealand because they love the home side, and that’s not a bad thing. But here they just cheer you, and you get goose bumps when you walk onto the field. It’s just ‘Wow’. You don’t see that in Australia,” Lee added.

Categories: Cricket News

Whatmore takes on Indian role

October 10, 2007 crickinfo Leave a comment

AUSTRALIAN cricket coaching continues to export to India with the appointment of Dav Whatmore to the position of director of operations at India’s national cricket academy.

The former Bangladesh and Sri Lanka coach had earlier been seen as a successor to Greg Chappell, who quit as coach of the India team.

However, Whatmore was surprisingly left off the shortlist for the post when South African Graham Ford turned the job down in June.

Whatmore was apparently offered the position as the first director at the new academy by Ravi Shastri, who sits on the coach appointment board.

India has been without a coach since early April and the board has advertised the post.

Whatmore guided Sri Lanka to the World Cup in 1996 and helped unfancied Bangladesh reach the World Cup second round for the first time this year after a shock win over India.

“The contract is for three years and I’ll be in Bangalore by the end of this month,” Whatmore told a local paper.

“The specifics have to be worked out, but I expect the NCA to be operational for 8-10 months (a year). Eventually, one would like Indian coaches to impart all the training but, if needed, one may call specialists from overseas. However, one doesn’t have to cross that bridge right now.

“I know Ravi’s on the coach-appointing committee, but I didn’t bring up what happened in June. I’ve known Ravi for a number of years. We understand each other well and I’m looking forward to a formal association with him.”

Chappell recently accepted an appointment to the Rajasthan training academy, while Dennis Lillee has long run a fast bowling institute in Chennai and Australian John Gloster is a physio with the Indian team.

* Test captains Graeme Smith of South Africa and New Zealand’s Daniel Vettori will play in the official Indian Premier League next year according to officials.

The Twenty20 league, to be organised by the Board of Control for Cricket in India in April, has also signed up South Africa opener Herschelle Gibbs, West Indian veteran Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Pakistan batsman Mohammad Yousuf.

Other new players in the official list are Chaminda Vaas of Sri Lanka, former Australian opener Justin Langer, Scott Styris of New Zealand and current South African internationals AB de Villiers and Ashwell Prince.

The induction of the 11 new players takes the count of international cricketers joining the IPL to 22.

Categories: Cricket Article

Fleming vows to let Vettori rule

October 10, 2007 crickinfo Leave a comment

Stephen Fleming has promised he will not be a de facto captain on New Zealand’s Test tour of South Africa following his demotion from the leadership after a decade in charge. However, Fleming will try to relieve the pressure on his successor Daniel Vettori by giving him advice on when to bowl himself.

“It’s more just giving him the confidence to come on and bowl because I think that’s his biggest adjustment,” Fleming told the Press. “It’s up to Brendon [McCullum] and myself to give him the confidence or [suggest] maybe that a change is required. That’s probably the only time I would look to influence his captaincy otherwise I would give him his space and let him work his magic.”

Fleming is back with the national squad after a lengthy stint in county cricket during which there was constant speculation over his future and whether he would sign with the Indian Cricket League. He said he was slightly uneasy about returning to New Zealand but his concerns had quickly disappeared.

“It’s been surprisingly relaxed,” he said. “I wasn’t nervous but I guess a little apprehensive about how I’d slide back in but it’s a pretty good squad, a good group of guys. I’ve no axe to grind. I was disappointed I was not captain anymore but it was a small component of what I want to do and where I want to be.”

Fleming will bat at No. 3 in South Africa and he sees the two-Test series as a good opportunity to lift his average, which sits at 39.64 after 104 matches. “My Test average should be up higher than 40 and that’s something I want to achieve but I’ve never been a great goalsetter,” he said. “I tend to put my energy into match situations rather than goals or achievements.”

After the South Africa trip Fleming will settle into the Wellington first-class side to prepare for home Test series against Bangladesh and England.

Categories: Cricket Article, IPL News

Smith signs up to play in new BCCI Twenty20 series

October 10, 2007 crickinfo Leave a comment

Test cricket captains Graeme Smith of SA and New Zealand’s Daniel Vettori would play in the official Indian premier league (IPL) next year, officials said yesterday .The Twenty20 league, organised by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), has also signed up South African opener Herschelle Gibbs and West Indian veteran Shivnarine Chanderpaul.

Pakistani batsman Mohammad Yousuf, also associated with the breakaway Indian Cricket League — bankrolled by Zee Telefilms — was also among the players named by the IPL yesterday.

Other new players in the official list are Chaminda Vaas of Sri Lanka, former Australian opener Justin Langer, Scott Styris of New Zealand and SA’s AB de Villiers, Ashwell Prince and Albie Morkel.

Among players named earlier were retired Australian greats Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath and Sri Lankans Mahela Jayawardene and Sanath Jayasuriya.

“We had promised the cricket-loving masses of India some truly international class high-octane action through the Twenty20 format in the IPL,” said BCCI vice-president Lalit Modi.

“It is in line with this promise and philosophy that we have signed some of the best cricketing talent on display internationally, including more than five players that have captained their respective countries,” said Modi.

The league in April will offer $3m in prize money and will have eight teams, which will be bought by franchisees. The top two sides will qualify for the international Champions Twenty20 League to be played in October next year, at a venue that has still to be decided.

The sides could include up to four internationals, teaming up with domestic players and local youngsters. Smith said he looked forward to playing in the Indian Twenty20 competition.

Cricket SA (CSA) says it will not stand in the way of contracted players approached to play in the IPL, provided this does not clash with their commitments to SA’s Test squad or the one-day international squad.

“The premier league is an initiative of the BCCI and as such is recognised by the International Cricket Council (ICC) and consequently by CSA,” said CSA CE Gerald Majola.

However, there is still no final clarity on the position of players who have signed up for the rival Indian Cricket League (ICL), which has not got the blessing of the BCCI.

Majola has said players joining the ICL would not be allowed to play in matches organised by CSA. Five South Africans — Andrew Hall, Nicky Boje, Lance Klusener, Loots Bosman and Johan van der Wath — have signed up for the ICL.

Categories: Cricket News, twenty20

India to go all out at Vadodara

October 10, 2007 crickinfo Leave a comment

After regaining confidence by winning in Chandigarh, India are now looking to go all out for victory when they take on Australia in the fifth one-dayer of the seven-match Future Cup series on Thursday.

The Reliance Stadium pitch is expected to be a belter, with the curator expecting a 300-plus score by the team batting first. So the toss may be crucial, as both teams will like to put a huge score on the board and place their opponents under as much psychological pressure as they can.

World ODI champions Australia have a 2-1 lead in the series and are expected to come hard at Team India after their narrow loss in Chandigarh.

But there is good news for captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni as some of the problems that cropped up during the losses in Kochi and Hyderabad seem to have been solved with the win in Chandigarh.

The famed Indian batting line-up was a disappointment at the start of the series. But in Chandigarh, India preferred to go with their best opening combination – Sourav Ganguly and Sachin Tendulkar.

The duo did the trick as they added 91 runs for the opening wicket, which built the foundation of the Indian innings. The middle-order is also regaining form as Yuvraj Singh – who hit a century in Hyderabad – and Dhoni blasted the Australians in Chandigarh.

It will be a big occasion for Tendulkar Thursday. He will be playing his 400th ODI.

The series is an acid test for Dhoni – the first 50-over series as captain for the 26-year-old from Ranchi. The newly-appointed captain came out with flying colours as he led a bunch of raw youngsters to victory in the recently concluded Twenty20 World Championships in South Africa.

But his captaincy was criticised when India lost in Kochi and Hyderabad and were also placed precariously in the opening match in Bangalore, which was washed out due to heavy rain.

For Dhoni there were problems aplenty at the start of the series as the team seemed to be suffering from the Twenty20 hangover, but gradually the Indians have rediscovered their form.

The blend of senior and junior players did the trick in Chandigarh though it is time former captain Rahul Dravid found his form. He relinquished captaincy to concentrate on batting, but hasn’t yet proved that his decision was right.

Another problem for Dhoni is the opening spell by his seam bowlers, especially Zaheer Khan, who has been bowling too many wides and too many deliveries down the wrong line, and thus allowing the famed Australian opening batsmen to get off to flying starts.

But Irfan Pathan – now coming on as first change bowler – should be all fired up on his home ground. His performance in the Twenty20 World Championships had proved that he was hungry to come back. It’s no different for off-spinner Harbhajan Singh.

Harbhajan and left arm spinner Murali Kartik, who played his first ODI in Chandigarh after a gap of 20 months, posed lots of problems for the Australians in India’s eight-run win.

But all said and done, the secret for Team India lies in staying composed and not being intimidated by the Australians.

Categories: Cricket News

Like life, cricket is a great leveller

October 10, 2007 crickinfo Leave a comment

The beauty of sport is nobody knows what is going to happen, what comes next, which way the ball will roll. India won the Twenty20 World Championship though few thought it possible. But, in cricket and in life, there is a catch.

This is not pessimism, just cold realisation of reality. Cricket has demonstrated that as soon as anyone thinks he is on top of the game, events prove him wrong. Cricket is a leveller (Sanath Jayasuriya, in hot form at one time in T20, made three successive zeroes towards the end!) it bites back, hard.

Last month, momentous (and completely unanticipated) developments have shattered conventional wisdom.  Experience is considered precious but events suggest we over value this quality. When India appointed a new, raw and untested captain, doubts were raised but observers now think Mahendra Singh Dhoni is India’s answer to Imran Khan – strategy savvy, spunky and with the right touch of confidence.

When Rohit Sharma, Joginder Sharma and Yusuf Pathan were picked ahead of seniors, and trusted, there was apprehension but no disaster unfolded, the kids coped.

Experts thought Twenty20 would be a wild slog but cricket surprised everyone. Shahid Afridi and his disciples who tried to belt every ball out of the park failed to make an impact. Instead, Yuvraj Singh hit not one crude shot as he despatched bowlers into outer space.

Bowlers, under severe pressure because of the short format, were expected to be slaughtered but they responded admirably. Pace bowlers retaliated by bowling straight and full and mixing pace, The success of Tweny20 lies in its ability to deliver tighter, more competitive finishes.

While cricket is levelled in this manner, it has also made a giant technical leap forward. Now on, it will forever be sharper, slicker and more refined. But the new series is a new ball game, Australia will certainly come hard at India. Cricket has a tendency to bite back.

Categories: Cricket Article, twenty20

Vettori, Styris sign with Indian league

October 10, 2007 crickinfo Leave a comment

Black Caps skipper Daniel Vettori and all-rounder Scott Styris have signed to play in the Indian Premier League next year.

The pair are among 10 current internationals the organisers have recently signed and follows the signature of former captain Stephen Fleming, who signed last month.

The Indian Premier League is a Twenty20 competition that has been set-up to rival the rebel Indian Cricket League and has been approved by the ICC and New Zealand Cricket.

South African skipper Graeme Smith, Pakistan batsman Mohammad Yousuf and Sri Lankan seamer Chaminda Vaas are among three of the other players to join the competition that already includes Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath.

Categories: Cricket News, IPL News

CSA leaves out ICL players from domestic league

October 10, 2007 crickinfo Leave a comment

South African cricketers who have signed up to play in the Indian Cricket League (ICL) have been left out of the country’s domestic competition starting on Thursday.

The players include Lance Klusener, Nicky Boje, Johan van der Wath and Loots Bosman.

Their exclusion follows a ruling by the general council of Cricket South Africa that it would prevent local players from signing with the ICL.

The CEO of the KwaZulu-Natal Cricket Board, Cassim Docrat, said today they had no alternative but to follow the dictates of their national body.

“We shall see how this situation develops”, said Docrat.

But the CEO of the South African Cricketers Association, Tony Irish, said they were not happy with the ruling.

He said they would investigate whether the matter could be taken up legally.

Categories: Cricket News, icl info

Chanderpaul signs up for Indian Twenty/20 Cricket League

October 10, 2007 crickinfo Leave a comment

Guyanese and West Indies batsman Shivnarine Chanderpaul is among ten more players who have signed up for the Indian Twenty/20 Cricket League.

Set to join the league, along with Chanderpaul are the South Africans Graeme Smith, Herschelle Gibbs, Ab de Villiers, Ashwell Prince and Albie Morkel.

They will be joined by New Zealanders captain Daniel Vettori, Scott Styris, Australian Justin Langer and Chaminda Vaas, the ninth Sri Lankan to sign up.

Categories: Cricket News, twenty20