Posts Tagged ‘Cricket’

IPL Season 2 – What the storyline looks like

Monday, April 20th, 2009

The second season of the IPL is finally here and what a start it has been to the tournament! After a splendid opening ceremony, we saw the two finalists from last year being beaten comprehensively. The matches so far have been a pleasant change from last year where the sole aim of the teams was to outhit each other. We have already seen that that strategy won’t work this year. The conditions seem much more helpful for the bowlers, especially the seamers. And batsmen will actually need to focus on playing themselves in, not missing out on the bad deliveries and playing some daring and innovative shots once set. It will, rather happily, not be a situation of step on front foot and swing the bat.

What this means for the teams

In this edition, the teams that will succeed will be the ones whose seamers can bowl tight in the initial overs – and garner wickets for the spinners bowling later. More importantly, the teams in the final four will be the ones that have their batsmen scoring the most singles and twos in the process of getting set. While we will see the occasional 100 from 40 balls knock, we will more likely see the 60 from 40 balls with 30 runs in boundary hits. And as this becomes the key, the teams that can save the singles and cut down the twos will be more successful. We will see a twenty20 tournament that will be a throwback to the era of one day cricket before WC96. Where the ‘Dean Jones’ kind of batsman is preferred to the ‘Kris Srikkanth’ kind. Finally, as most people point out, the performance of the senior cricketers in the teams will be critical especially in the first half of the tournament. Based on all this and the way the next few matches go, where do the teams stand? Who do we think are the favourites ? Watch this space for more…

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IPL Preview: Mumbai Indians

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

After previewing the four semifinalists, it is now the turn of possibly the most popular team in the Indian Premier Leaugue – the Mumbai Indians.

Team: Mumbai Indians

Captain: Sachin Tendulkar

Coach/Mentor: Shaun Pollock

Trump Card: Zaheer Khan

X-Factor: Lasitha Malinga

Whats changed from last season: More additions than losses and some really positive ones too – JP Duminy, Mohammed Ashraful and Kyle Mills made their way in during the auction but the best purchase was made off season via the signing of Zaheer Khan. Shikhar Dhawan also makes his way into the team.

In 2008, the Indian Premier League’s most expensive team came absolutely undone during the auction through some uninspired signings. This coupled with talisman’s Sachin Tendulkar’s absence resulted in a number of poor performances. Incredibly, the team picked itself up after the infamous slapgate incident involving captain Harbhajan Singh. The inspiration didn’t come from expensive signings but from local players like Abishek Nayar. It was strange to watch the Mumbai Indians not make the semifinals considering they always seem to dominate Indian domestic cricket. This season, some shrewd signings and no fitness problems should ensure that Mumbai start better and make their way into the semifinals.

The Batting:

Sachin Tendulkar will of course be the talisman – any doubts that he might find the going tough in the IPL were put to rest last month during that incredible 160 against the Kiwis. He is fit and his presence in the Mumbai Indians’ squad will also probably mean that they will be the neutral Indian fan’s favourite. I think this format of the game will quite suit the new Tendulkar of the old. Opening with him will be Old Lankan war horse – Jayasurya; the two proving that 20-20 is not necessarily a young man’s game. At 3 should be Shikar Dhawan, signed from Delhi (for Ashish Nehra!) and following will be JP Duminy. Duminy looks a class signing but its always a risk signing a young player for a million bucks on the back of one brilliant season (read Kolkotta and Ishant Sharma). Mohammed Ashraful is one of those players who looks spectacular when he comes off but is frustratingly inconsistent. Dwayne Bravo, Ryan Mclaren and Graham Napier will all perform the roles of the all rounders. Abishek Nayar, Ajinkya Rane, Pinal Shah will all provide the local flavour with Nayar hoping to build on his performances from last season.

The Bowling:

As mentioned earlier, the big signing is that of Zaheer Khan (an exchange with Bangalore for Robin Uthappa), Zaheer is arguably in the running for the best fast bowler in the World right now. Clearly, he is enjoying the responsiblity and the Mumbai Indians will be looking to him to lead the charge. He will get good support from Kyle Mills and Lasitha Malinga. Malinga should be the real X-factor here, and if he gets into rhythm quickly, a number of Indian batsman might struggle to pick him.

Also, a certain starter will be the new kid on the block Dhawal Kulkarni – the highest wicket taker in the recently concluded domestic season. He was on that plane to New Zealand but didn’t get a match on the tour. If Dilhara Fernando plays and bowls well, it will be a pure bonus as he gets tonked around in every form of the game. Harbhajan Singh will be looking to make amends for his stupidity in last season and his recent performances in New Zealand augur well for Mumbai. Overall, the Mumbai Indians have an excellent bowling line up and if Zaheer and Harbhajan come good, it’s going to be tough going for the opposition.

The squad:

The Indians: Sachin Tendulkar, Shikhar Dhawan, Harbhajan Singh, Zaheer Khan, Dhawal Kulkarni, Yogesh Takawale (wk), Chetanya Nanda. Abhishek Nayar, Ajinkya Rahane, Rohan Raje, Jaydev Shah, Pinal Shah, Rahil Shaikh, Saurabh Tiwary

The Foreigners: Dwayne Bravo, Jean-Paul Duminy, Dilhara Fernando, Sanath Jayasuriya, Ryan McLaren, Lasith Malinga, Kyle Mills, Mohammad Ashraful, Graham Napier, Luke Ronchi (wk)

Picture Courtesy: NDTV

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India beat Australia at Perth!

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

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The fortress has finally been breached. As expected it was not one or two individuals who stormed the fortress but an entire team led by a very able general.

India beat Australia in Perth after playing some fantastic cricket over four days. This has to be without a doubt India’s most memorable victory overseas. For all the brouhaha about being such a dangerous venue for India, Perth has been kind to the Indian team- Kapil Dev got his 400th wicket here, Tendulkar took one giant step forward in his career when he hit 114 in 1992, Kumble took his 600th wicket on the second day and now we have beaten the Australians.

Consider the odds- full strength (barring Hayden) Australian line up, four dangerous fast bowlers, a fast pitch and coming off a very emotional two weeks after accusations and counter accusations have been bouncing off the two teams. And India had two players coming in after a full year away from the side, a very inexperienced bowling line up, and yet managed to win the game in four bloody days!

Team Performance

What is most heartening about the test win is that almost every player contributed: Jaffer and Sehwag gave us two good starts and Sehwag took those two crucial wickets on the fourth day. Dravid made that fine 93 in the first innings and reminded us why he is considered to be one of the best at the number 3 in the line up. Tendulkar made a crucial 71 in the first innings. Laxman made a top class 79 in the second innings and continued to be a big thorn in the Australian plans.

Ishanth Sharma has been bowling so well in all three test matches he has played that it seems to me that Sreesanth is going to find it tough to get his spot back. His first spell on the fourth day was absolutely top class and the way he tormented Ricky Ponting will be a talking point for years to come. RP Singh was fantastic in the first innings, swinging the ball both ways and pitched in with two crucial wickets in the second.

Irfan Pathan- it is so good to see the smile back on his face. Crucial wickets in both the innings and pitching in with an invaluable 40 in the second innings as a night watchman. The decision to keep him out of the final eleven in the first two matches seems utterly ridiculous now.

And Anil Kumble, at the age of 37, he hits his first 100, he takes his six hundreth wicket and leads India to such a victory. It couldn’t have happened to a more committed cricketer and the way he is going, it looks like he definitely has another two years of test cricket in him. Expect a post about him soon.

The Australian Performance:

The Australian team never really got out of second gear in this test match. Barring Brett Lee, Andrew Symonds, and Michael Clarke to a certain extent, none of the other players established their authority in the course of the four days. Shaun Tait looked totally out of sorts and surely there must have been tremendous pressure on him considering all the expectations. One feels for Chris Rogers, Hayden will come straight back into the squad in Adelaide and he will probably continue there for another couple of years.

Ricky Ponting’s dream run over the past two years has ended and it looks like the law of averages has finally caught up with him. The 16 overs which Symonds and Clark bowled on the third day as Ponting tried to catch up with the over rate clearly made a big difference in the final result.

The Final Result:

The Perth test couldn’t have come at a better time for both the test series and world cricket. All the nonsense that has been come out of the Indian and Australian medias finally stopped as everybody started to take stock of the drama that was unfolding at the WACA. More importantly, this victory should give heart to the other teams that Australia can be beaten and beaten at home, but as Mitchell Johnson and Stuart Clark showed in that fantastic partnership, the Australians fight and fight hard till the last man.

On to Adelaide. Can the Indians do the unthinkable and make it in two in a row? Or will the Aussies revert to the status quo and kill the series at the Oval. It all remains to be seen.

Watch the video of Ponting struggle Ishant Sharma here

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Sydney Test: Harbhajan Suspended

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

The BCCI is repeatedly being criticized by the western press for its appeal against Harbhajan but I strongly believe it isn’t doing enough. The BCCI is an extremely strong organization but it will ultimately acquiesce to the ICC. That’s how it works and the Indian team will have no option but to continue this tour and continue playing in such disgraceful conditions. The BCCI will make noises and try and force the ICC to revoke the Harbhajan suspension but I am not convinced any of it will happen.

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Indian cricket getting screwed:

The manner in which the match referee has suspended the Harbhajan Singh without taking into account the fact that he was provoked into making such a statement is frankly absurd. Besides, there is still NO EVIDENCE that Harbhajan made that statement. And why not take the sledge in context of the way the Australians were winding Harbhajan up? If it did happen that is.

Men of honour and true servants of the country like Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar will continue to maintain silence and play out the rest of the tour. We as fans will forget all of this and move on to the new games and continue to pump cash into the game. And yet, I get the uneasy we are getting screwed by the ICC. Why does Ricky Ponting, a man who has no credibility whatsoever get such a say in things and somebody like Tendulkar doesn’t?

I won’t be shocked if Ricky Ponting, Brett Lee and Adam Gilchrist put on false PR facades over the next 2 months and start to charm us Indians. The money these cricketers stand to make from Indian sponsorship and especially the Indian Premier League is too important for them to worry about national pride. That is going to absolutely make me sick.

The defeat at Sydney:

Yes, the defeat hurts and its adding to the pain leading to increased outrage. Anil Kumble’s decision to sign an off-field pact with Ricky Ponting is frankly laughable, this is like signing something with your spouse that says ,”When either of us cheats on the other we will warn the other party accordingly .” Are you kidding me ? And with Ricky Ponting?!

The team made us proud by fighting through incredibly poor decisions in the first innings. we fought really hard to take the first innings lead. And we could have very well saved the test match if not for unbelievable decisions on the final day. Rahul Dravid and Saurav Ganguly could have well saved the match. And who the hell made Ricky Ponting the umpire? Men like RP Singh and Ishanth Sharma fought so hard after years of toiling playing in front of 20 people and a dog and yet their efforts ended up in a defeat and not an honourable draw.

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Letter to the Indian team

Sunday, January 6th, 2008

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Dear Guys,

You made me proud with your performance in the SCG test. As fans, while we would like to see victories, what we really want is to that you guys tried your best, applied yourselves and gave us good cricket.Australia is hard enough to beat (especially at home) playing eleven men against eleven. But when the men in black and white play for them, victory is almost impossible. Almost all umpiring errors went in their favour but the team still fought manfully and that’s all I ask for.

Dravid, Laxman, Sachin & Ganguly: You have given us such joy over the last few years. We have been quick to praise good batting and even quicker to criticize and bay for your blood at each failure. Each one of you has been written off as being over the hill and you have taken the criticism in your stride and responded beautifully with the bat. Though I would love to have seen atleast one of you save this match, I think to blame you would be unfair given the fashion in which you were dismissed (all except Sachin, that is). Sachin, I love the way you have been batting in this series. The SCG dismissal to an indecisive shot was disappointing. I hope that won’t stop you from playing like you did in Perth, 1991.

Yuvraj, Jaffer: I don’t know what has happened to the form you displayed just last month. I know Australia is a hard place to play cricket but you are picturing demons where none exist. It is disappointing that you haven’t even managed to stay at the crease for some period of time. The absolute lack of willingness to fight it out in the middle irks me. I am not suggesting you be dropped right away but I think the tether is short. There are fighters like Karthik on the bench and you would need to do something with the next opportunity, if you get one. My simple advice: watch how Dravid has played and look at Dhoni’s second innings performance.

Dhoni: It was good to see some fight from you in the second innings of the match. But the shouldering the arms dismissal left much to be desired. Hope to see some better sense and blistering batting in the matches to come.

Harbhajan: I have always been critical of playing you in the team outside the subcontinent because I believe your bowling has lacked consistency. You have rarely shown us glimpses of the 2001 Harbhajan. But I liked the way you bowled for parts of this match: the flight and the bounce, mixing the top spinners well with the offies and not over using the doosra. Your batting style is quite comical really and I am always nervy when you are at the crease. The half-century in the first innings was no different but the determination to hang in (in both innings) was refreshing. I hope you can consistently show us some of the magic we have seen you produce.

R.P. Singh, Ishant: You guys should pat yourselves in the back and make these bowling spots your own. The first day effort from you guys was brilliant, especially you Mr. Singh. But you guys would do well to study the careers of pacers in recent times: Irfan Pathan, L. Balaji, Ashish Nehra (to name a few) and ensure you don’t repeat what these guys did. You have a captain that will back you. It is now upto you to put your heads down and work towards a long India career. Focus on your bowling and fitness instead of the bells and whistles that come with a spot in the Indian team.

Anil Kumble: You have shouldered the burden of bowling India to victory for over 15 years now. In return, we have criticized your bowling, dropped you from the squad, ridiculed your overseas record and tried to take the sheen off your home performances. You have continued wheeling away and picking up wickets in the bagful. In this match, you again displayed the grit, determination and talent that helped you recover from each of those setbacks. In addition to the bowling and batting, I admired the way you made no excuses at the end of the match, refusing to be drawn into controversy on the umpiring. Anil, take a bow. I can’t think of a more dignified person to lead this Indian team.

Guys, I’m realistic enough to realize that we will probably not be even tying this series. I just hope for two more performances like the one I saw in this match and if we still lose, we know you guys tried your best. The Aussies know that without the umpires, this game could have gone any which way. They will try to stamp their superiority coming hard at you in the next game at Perth. Show them that you pack a few punches too.

Best,

Prof

What did you think of the match? Did umpiring decisions cost us or were Australia simply the better team?

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Indian Cricket and English Football

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

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What do Indian cricket and English football have in common? Gary Kirsten and Fabio Capello – both are foreigners about to take charge of the national teams of the most passionate sport in India and England – cricket and football, respectively. And that’s not where the similarity ends.

Couple of months back, in a surprising move, Gary Kirsten was chosen to be the manager of the Indian cricket team, ahead of other luminaries such as Dave Whatmore (appointed as head of NCA instead), John Buchanan and Martin Crowe. He has no previous coaching experience but had a glittering test and ODI career for South Africa.

Meanwhile, after Steve McClaren was sacked following England’s disastrous exit from Euro 2008, the English FA said they would appoint a world-class manager and courted ex-Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho before the latter rejected the job. The FA has settled for Fabio Capello, an Italian with a great CV, and who has won trophies with big clubs such as Milan, Roma, Juventus and Real Madrid.

Before we look at their challenges, let’s look at some of the similarities between Indian Cricket and English Football…

1. Cricket is by far the most popular sport in India and the pressure on the Indian team and the manager is huge. The media and the fans expect the team to win every game.
The same goes for the English football team.

2. India have been under-achievers in the game and have won the World Cup just once, in 1983. Despite a great team consisting of Sachin, Dravid, and Ganguly, India has failed to claim the ultimate prize in the sport and has never won a test series in Australia, the powerhouse in World Cricket.

The last time England won the Football World Cup was at home in 1966. Since then, they have had superstars such as Shearer, Linekar, Gascoigne, Hoddle, Keegan, Beckham, Owen, Gerrard, and Lampard but they have not even reached the final of a major Championships.

3. India looked strangely out of sorts at the 2007 World Cup in the Caribbean and crashed out in the group stage itself. The 2006 Football World Cup witnessed the English footballers’ wives create a bigger impact than their spouses. And, in 2007, the English team failed to qualify for next summer’s European Championships.

4. The Indian cricket team and the English football team have often been described as chokers on the big stage lacking mental toughness.

5. Indian cricket and English football are run by powerful governing bodies – the BCCI and the English FA respectively, consisting of officials, mostly old men, who have never played the sport professionally.

6. Indian cricketers and English footballers are often considered over-paid, and lacking the willingness to fight for each other. Are the sports being ruined by too much popularity, hype and money?

Real Challenge

It’s a terrific challenge for Kirsten and Capello. While Kirsten, who has previously criticized everything about India during his playing days, has neither the ego nor the dictatorial attitude of his predecessor Greg Chappell, he is a regarded as an intelligent cricketer. He not only has the task of instilling confidence and mental toughness into a team that has a new-found resolve following the Twenty-20 win and recent series victories over England and Pakistan. His other main task is to phase out ageing stars and blood a new, talented group of youngsters for the 2011 World Cup.

Capello too has the task of removing the mental block that England players seem to have when it comes to crucial matches. He has the balls to drop Gerrard or Lampard if he thinks it would benefit his team. This is the guy who has dropped Totti, Del Piero, Davids, Ronaldo, and Beckham during his long and productive club career. Moreover, the FA has to utilize his skill in such a manner that it benefits the whole coaching framework in England.

But there are certainly mixed feeling about these appointments. why does India, a nation of a billion-plus people and numerous ex-stalwarts in cricket, have to appoint a foreign manager? Why does England, the nation that takes pride in inventing football, lack world-class English managers? Do you think this is indeed a good trend?

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Boxing Day Matches: Contrasting Results

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

Melbourne: Australian juggernaut rolls on

Here is an idea, I suggest the ICC ban this Australian team from Test match cricket for a period of two years. It seems ridiculous? Well, they did ban Zimbabwe for an entire year to give the team to get its act together. This ban might just do the trick and help the rest of the world catch up with Australia. Cause frankly, it has all got really really boring. Fifteen consecutive test victories is an amazing stat but what it hides is the fact that how dominant Australia has been in those victories. The only thing that is unpredictable about test matches involving Australia is how long the team takes to pummel the opposition into the ground.

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The Melbourne test match just went to prove what a lot of Indian fans knew before hand- this team was under prepared and didn’t have the mental strength to stand up to the Australians. The BCCI in its infinite wisdom decided one warm match up would be enough practice for the Indian team. This is Australia for heavens sake!- not England or Pakistan. Its a bit like going into a heavy weight bout against Mohammed Ali with a week’s preparation.

The Rahul Dravid we have come to love and admire, decided that this was the stage for him to go into to his little shell. Yuvraj Singh’s performance again raised questions on whether he is going to be India’s best answer to Michael Bevan. Sachin Tendulkar left me wondering when was the last time he got a test century against a good bowling attack- he seems to get a phenomenal number of fifties and sixties but hardly goes on to hit a hundred anymore. Ganguly’s performance in both the innings suggested that men like Dravid and Tendulkar could do well by taking a six month sabbatical.

Much has been spoken about how weak our bowling attack is but the bowlers (barring Harbhajan) deserve a lot of credit. A 337 victory doesn’t do any justice to their performance. I thought Zaheer bowled well and so did RP Singh in patches. Kumble was absolutely brilliant and led from the front and the only way we are going to get anything from this tour is if this man can take a bagful of wickets. Harbhajan seems to be going through the motions and is living on the performances in Kolkotta and Chennai in 2001.

I don’t care if we end up losing 4-0, that might not be such a shock at all but what I guess every Indian cricket fan is hoping for is a fight. We saw that on the first day when we did brilliantly to restrict the Australian team to less than 400. Can we do that over five days? Stranger things have happened. West Indies just won a test match!

Port Elizabeth: West Indies pulls off a shock win

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The utter shambles that West Indies cricket has found itself in over the past few years can be best described by the fact that the victory in Port Elizabeth represents their first test victory in three years. But what a test match it was, West Indies absolutely dominated the Springboks and after four days of action completed a memorable victory.

What stood out for me was the character which the West Indies batsman showed to post a huge first innings score. Men like Marlon Samuels have flattered to deceive time and time again, fantastic talent no doubt but without the appetite to go on and make the big centuries. Chanderpaul showed again why in the absence of Lara and Sarwan that he is the mainstay of the lineup. The pace attack of Powell,Taylor and Edwards backed up by Bravo bowled consistently through the match. If all this is the result of Gayle’s captaincy and the coaching of John Dyson- then long may it continue.

But the West Indies team should be warned- not long ago another team showed pulled off a shock victory against this same South African team and then went on to blow it all away in the remaining two test matches.

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“Sachin, don’t be afraid of failure”

Wednesday, August 2nd, 2006

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Sanjay Manjrekar in a recent newspaper article, criticised Sachin’s approach to the game and seemed to cast doubts and raised questions on the timing of his injuries:

“…There was another moment too: Tendulkar deciding to give the 2005 Super Series Test a miss. I thought that was a great opportunity not to be missed at any cost for someone like him. What a great stage that was to show off your individual brilliance. Tendulkar said he had not fully recovered from the elbow injury. But just eight days later he was running down the pitch hitting Murali out of the ground in that knock of 93 against Sri Lanka in the ODI at Nagpur.

That Super Series actually was another evidence of how the two great men think. There was Lara, in Australia, hopelessly short of match practice, yet looking at every chance as an opportunity to play another memorable innings. Working on the principle that the more chances you give yourself, the more the chances of success. Tendulkar is not willing to take that chance. The Tendulkar of today gives me the impression that his main focus is not to fail!…”

These are strong words from a player whose admiration for Sachin is obvious to all who have heard him talk about the little master. Nobody questions Sachin’s commitment to the team or the game but with age, it is true that the Sachin of the old is slowly fading away and it is hard for many to accept this.

Many of the measured(?)(hehe) responses to this article:

“…”It is a grave mistake by Manjrekar. We all know Tendulkar’s passion for cricket and I have no doubt in my mind that Sachin would never purposely avoid tours. It is a far-fetched suggestion.” Former off-spinner Shivlal Yadav termed the comments as nothing but a publicity seeking stunt by Manjrekar. …”

“… Former selector Pranab Roy vouched for Tendulkar’s commitment. “During my stint with the selection committee, I never found Sachin Tendulkar wanting in commitment. I do not agree with Manjrekar. No one should raise such questions about a great player like Tendulkar. …”
“… Another former selector Sambran Banerjee said: “I think this is not at all a valid point. It is a very bad comment. Sachin is beyond such things. …”

Beyond such things… hmmm … why I wonder?

Sachin’s response to this article seems to indicate that he is quite ticked off:

“I don’t want to comment much but I feel sorry that an ex-India player has made statements without checking the facts and without talking to the people concerned. I also find it surprising that he has made the statements without being in the dressing room and knowing the true situation”

I have been getting the feeling that Sachin is overly sensitive to journalists’ comments these days.

Watch this space for Sachin’s response with the bat when the tour to Sri Lanka begins!

- Prof

__________________________________________________________________________

Update

Quite a few readers have asked me why I have offered no opinions on the issue.While the post was not initially written to offer an opinion, I have decided to add my two cents to this.

Manjrekar is entitled to his opinion and honestly, he knows and understands Sachin better than most of us and the critics of his piece. While I wouldn’t dream of questioning Tendulkar’s commitment to the team, in recent years, he seems to have become more sensitive to the criticisms  that come from various quarters: is this because he has been beyond all that for so many years now?

Sachin must remember that when fans and viewers give him so much, it is only natural that they will expect things in return and results not to their liking, people are bound to criticize.

Fans and critics must also remember that Sachin of the old has slowly eveolved in a more mature fifity overs kind of player. There is still a lot he can and does contribute to the team and the game. But, he will never be the player of old again. No player will be after seventeen years at this level playing day in and day out.

The more important question of whether Sachin should play only when he deems himself fit. I think Sachin understands the context of a match, a series both to his legacy as a player and to the team’s growth. Hence, if Sachin declares himself fit to play or unfit to, he should be given the freedom: as long as he continues to deliver which I am sure he will.

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How did they manage this!

Thursday, July 27th, 2006

Goldsborough 2nd XI knew they were in for a tough match against Dishforth- leaders of the fourth division in the North Yorkshire Nidderdale league (4th division in North Yorkshire? that league has EIGHT divisions!) but after 12 overs, the scoreboard read 5 for 10 – with the 5 runs coming from 4 byes and one leg bye.

Thats right, not one batsman managed to score a run! The funny thing is that every single batsman got out caught, all of them did put bat on ball.

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