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Sunday 30 December 2012

1st ODI India v Pakistan


India Innings - Close
 
 
Runs
Balls
4s
6s
Gambhir
 
b Irfan
8
1710
Sehwag
 
b Junaid Khan
4
1110
Kohli
 
b Junaid Khan
0
500
Yuvraj Singh
 
b Junaid Khan
2
300
Ro Sharmac Hafeezb Junaid Khan
4
1400
Raina
 
b Hafeez
43
8820
Dhoninot out
 
113
12573
Ashwinnot out
 
31
3920
Extras
 
2nb 9w 11lb22
 
Total
 
for 6227(50.0 ovs)

Bowler
O
M
R
W
Irfan9.02581
Junaid Khan9.01434
Gul8.00380
Ajmal10.01420
Hafeez10.02261
Shoaib Malik4.0090
Fall of wicket
 
17Sehwag
17Gambhir
19Kohli
20Yuvraj Singh
29Ro Sharma
102Raina

Pakistan Innings - Close
 
 
Runs
Balls
4s
6s
Hafeez
 
b Kumar
0
100
Jamshednot out
 
101
13251
Azhar Alic Ro Sharmab Kumar
9
3800
Y Khanc Ashwinb Dinda
58
6031
Misbah-ul-Haq
 
b I Sharma
16
2410
Shoaib Maliknot out
 
34
3530
Extras
 
1nb 3w 6lb10
 
Total
 
for 4228(48.1 ovs)

Bowler
O
M
R
W
Kumar9.03272
I Sharma10.00391
Dinda9.10451
Ashwin10.00340
Yuvraj Singh5.00330
Raina2.10230
Kohli2.50210
Fall of wicket
 
0Hafeez
21Azhar Ali
133Y Khan
172Misbah-ul-Haq
187Shoaib Malik

Pakistan 228 for 4 (Younis 58, Jamshed 101*) beat India 227 for 6 (Raina 53, Dhoni 113*, Junaid 4-43) by six wickets


Fortunes swung in an absorbing opening one-dayer, but it was Pakistan who held their nerve to record a six-wicket win and go one-up in Chennai. Junaid Khan had India reeling with a remarkable spell of swing bowling, MS Dhoni bailed India out with a tenacious, unbeaten century but the target of 228 wasn't enough to test Pakistan. Nasir Jamshed played a composed, yet chancy century, but nevertheless took the responsibility of finishing the job he had started.
The difference was in the way the teams batted against the new ball. India were put in and ended up losing 5 for 29 by the tenth over. Dhoni toiled masterfully, fighting off cramps to take India to a respectable total, but not quite a winning one. Pakistan too looked shaky when they came out against the moving ball, but ensured they didn't lose wickets in a clump early, unlike India.
The morning had ingredients you wouldn't normally associate with one-day cricket in India - morning start, overcast conditions, a green pitch, moisture. The left-arm seam duo of Junaid and Mohammad Irfan hit the timber with such regularity that they might well have come out wielding axes rather than cricket balls. Reputations counted for nothing as India's top order was exposed for their lack of technique against the moving ball against two seamers with a combined experience of 15 ODIs.
Virender Sehwag, Gautam Gambhir, Virat Kohli and Yuvraj Singh were all bowled through the gate, playing down the wrong line to full, swinging deliveries. Dhoni and Suresh Raina came together at 29 for 5 and focused on picking up singles rather than counterattacking their way to a recovery.
The innings could have finished earlier had Misbah not put down Dhoni at midwicket on 16. The drop was to cost Pakistan 97 runs. The boundaries had dried up during an attritional phase in which only two boundaries were scored in the space of nearly 30 overs.
Dhoni's innings was of two contrasting parts. He nudged and poked his way to fifty off 86 balls, hitting just two boundaries and a six. The plan was to delay the slog till the final block of ten overs. His next 61 came off just 39 balls. As the innings closed, Dhoni could barely stand. In a bid to conserve energy, Dhoni focused on hitting out and it was a blessing in disguise for India as he regularly found the gaps, helping India ransack an unlikely 81 off the last ten overs.
Dhoni bashed the free hit off Junaid over wide long-on for the first six of the innings, launched Ajmal out of the ground over long-on and brought up his century with a six over extra cover. His stand of 125 with Ashwin was India's highest for the seventh wicket. Dhoni's march towards his century featured an array of shots on both sides of the wicket, including the helicopter shot, the pull and the squirt past gully.
India held control at the start of the innings when Mohammad Hafeez misjudged a viscious inswinger and lost his off stump, giving Bhuvneshwar Kumar a wicket off his first ball in ODIs. Bhuvneshwar dismissed a shaky Azhar Ali cheapy to reduce Pakistan to 21 for 2 after 10.2 overs. Thereafter, the initiative slipped from India due to a combination of bad luck and poor fielding.
Jamshed was let off thrice in his innings, on 7, 24 and 68. He first set off for a single that should never have happened, scampered back but there was nobody to back Bhuvneshwar's throw. He was then let off by the umpire, who failed to spot an inside edge to the pads on its way to slip. Later, Yuvraj spilled a sitter at point at a time when India were desperate for a wicket.
In between, Jamshed impressed with his temperament and it helped that he had the experienced Younis Khan to guide him. The pair focused on preserving wickets, preferring to keep with the asking rate rather than exceed it. Younis didn't allow the spinners to settle, picking Yuvraj for boundaries through the on side. Yuvraj was India's best spinner in the T20s, but he wasn't as effective today. Raina leaked two sixes in an over, thereby forcing Dhoni to look at other options.
Ashok Dinda broke the stand when he had Younis chipping a low catch to Ashwin at midwicket, and he ought to have had Jamshed as well, had Yuvraj hung on at point. As Jamshed began to tire, Misbah and Shoaib Malik scored boundaries to take Pakistan closer. Jamshed reached his century with a pull, drawing comparisons with his innings against Australia in Abu Dhabi in August, also scored under excessive humidity.



Saturday 29 December 2012

Tony Greig commentator & ex England dies 66


Tony Greig, ex-England captain, dies aged 66 after heart attack

Former England captain Tony Greig has died aged 66 after suffering a heart attack in Sydney.
The South Africa-born 66-year-old was diagnosed with lung cancer two months ago.
The all-rounder played 58 Tests for England from 1972-77, including 14 as skipper, before giving up the captaincy to join Australian media magnate Kerry Packer's breakaway World Series.
He later became a popular television commentator in Australia.
"He was a massive character," said BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew. "Whatever he did, Tony was huge - as a character, as a man, as a cricketer."
Former England captain Sir Ian Botham described Greig as "an amazing guy, just full of energy".
"He revolutionised the game and it had to be done," he added.
Australian broadcaster Channel Nine said Greig died at about 13:45 local time on Saturday, after being rushed from his home to St Vincent's Hospital earlier in the day.
Greig, who stood 6ft 6in, scored 3,599 Test runs at an average of 40.43, took 141 wickets with his off-spin and medium pace at 32.20 apiece, and was named one of Wisden's Cricketers of the Year in 1975.
He told Channel Nine colleagues before having surgery last month: "It's not good. The truth is I've got lung cancer. Now it's a case of what they can do."
   He tweeted on Christmas Day: "Merry Christmas and a Happy, Healthy and Prosperous New Year to you all. Would love to be at Test but son Tom and I will be tuned in."
Greig, who played for Sussex and qualified for England through his Scottish parents, provoked controversy in 1976 when, as England captain, he said he intended to make West Indies "grovel" in the home Test series.
England were beaten 3-0 but the following winter he led them to their first series victory in India since the Second World War.
After presiding over three wins, six draws and five defeats he relinquished the England captaincy in 1977.
   Greig was a central figure in recruiting several England players for the controversial World Series, which ran in opposition to Test cricket from 1977-79 and featured international stars earning much higher salaries.
Although several players were banned from representing their country, World Series Cricket helped revolutionise the sport with increased player wages and presentational changes such as the introduction of coloured clothing.
Greig lived in Sydney from the late 1970s until his death and became a popular voice around the world with his enthusiastic and opinionated commentary style for Channel Nine, often wearing a large panama hat and inserting car keys into playing surfaces as part of his pitch reports.
"He changed cricket in the way we know it now," said fellow broadcaster Botham. "The players of today have a lot to thank Tony Greig - and Kerry Packer - for.
"Flamboyant is the word - he was larger than life and very much an extrovert. He made things happen."
England & Wales Cricket Board chairman Giles Clarke said: "Tony Greig was a magnificent and fearless cricketer capable of changing games with ball or bat. He was a determined supporter of players' rights in his later years."
Former Australia captain Bill Lawry, a long-term colleague in the commentary box, said: "He's been a great friend of mine for 33 years.
"He's well known right throughout the world, well loved and respected. World cricket has lost one of its great ambassadors."
Australia captain Michael Clarke said: "I was only speaking with Tony a couple of days ago so news of his passing is absolutely devastating. He has been a great mentor for me.
"Cricket will be much poorer for his loss. We will never forget the lasting legacy Tony leaves us with."
Australia Prime Minister Julia Gillard described Greig as "a wonderful example of someone who came to Australia from somewhere else in the world and embraced his adopted country as his own".
International Cricket Council chief executive Dave Richardson said: "Tony played a significant part in shaping modern cricket as a player in the 1970s and then provided millions of cricket lovers with a unique insight as a thoughtful and knowledgeable commentator."
   Current England Test and Sussex wicketkeeper Matt Prior tweeted: "Can't believe one of my heroes Tony Greig has passed away. One of the greatest voices in cricket and will be sorely missed. #RIPGreigy."




Friday 28 December 2012

2nd T20 India v Pakistan

India win by 11 runs and levels the T20 series 1-1


India team
G Gambhir, AM Rahane, V Kohli, Yuvraj Singh, SK Raina, RG Sharma, MS Dhoni*†, B Kumar, R Ashwin, I Sharma, AB Dinda
Pakistan team
Nasir Jamshed, Ahmed Shehzad, Mohammad Hafeez*, Kamran Akmal†, Umar Akmal, Shoaib Malik, Shahid Afridi, Sohail Tanvir, Umar Gul, Saeed Ajmal, Mohammad Irfan

Ind 192/5 20 overs


India Innings - Close
 
 
Runs
Balls
4s
6s
Gambhirlbwb Gul
21
1140
Rahanec and bGul
28
2640
Kohlirun out (Ajmal)
 
27
2230
Yuvraj Singhc Shoaib Malikb Gul
72
3647
Dhoni
 
b Gul
33
2340
Rainanot out
 
1
100
Ro Sharmanot out
 
4
210
Extras
 
1nb 5lb6
 
Total
 
for 5192(20.0 ovs)

Bowler
O
M
R
W
Irfan4.00200
Tanvir4.00440
Gul4.00374
Ajmal4.00420
Shahid Afridi3.00330
Hafeez1.00110
Fall of wicket
 
44Gambhir
53Rahane
88Kohli
185Yuvraj Singh
187Dhoni



Pak 181/7 20 overs


Pakistan Innings - Close
 
 
Runs
Balls
4s
6s
Jamshedc Kohlib Ashwin
41
3241
Shehzadst Dhonib Yuvraj Singh
31
2931
U Akmal
 
b Dinda
24
1711
Hafeezc Rainab Dinda
55
2663
Shahid Afridic Ro Sharmab Kumar
11
511
K Akmalc Kohlib Dinda
5
310
Shoaib Maliknot out
 
3
300
Gulc Yuvraj Singhb I Sharma
5
510
Extras
 
4w 2lb6
 
Total
 
for 7181(20.0 ovs)

Bowler
O
M
R
W
Kumar4.00461
I Sharma4.00341
Dinda4.00363
Ashwin4.00281
Raina2.00120
Yuvraj Singh2.00231
Fall of wicket
 
74Jamshed
84Shehzad
146U Akmal
163Shahid Afridi
168Hafeez
172K Akmal
181Gul

Yuvraj Singh smashed 72 to give India a series-levelling 11-run win over Pakistan in the second Twenty20 international in Ahmedabad.
The left-hander hammered seven sixes in his 36-ball effort, with Mahendra Dhoni making 33 to take India to 192-5.
In reply, Nasir Jamshed made 41 and Mohammad Hafeez a 26-ball 55, but Ashok Dinda claimed 3-36 as Pakistan finished on 181-7.
A five-match one-day international series begins in Chennai on Sunday.
After his side won the series opener by five wickets, Hafeez won the toss and invited the home side to bat.
India openers Gautam Gambhir and Ajinkya Rahane shared 44 before both fell to Umar Gul (4-37), with Virat Kohli making a steady 27 until being run out by Saeed Ajmal.
That saw Dhoni join irrepressible left-hander Yuvraj, who plundered two maximums off Sohail Tanvir and took three more off Ajmal's next over before eventually holing out off Gul to end a partnership of 97.
Pakistan started their chase with confidence as openers Jamshed and Ahmed Shehzad added a stand of 74 that was ended when the former was removed by Ravichandran Ashwin.
Shehzad followed, stumped off the spin of Yuvraj, but Hafeez altered the momentum, striking two sixes off successive Ashwin deliveries.
However, paceman Dinda made a decisive intervention late in the innings, accounting for Hafeez and both Kamran and Umar Akmal to ensure Pakistan fell short.