Team

  • Australia
  • Bangladesh
  • Canada
  • England
  • India
  • Ireland
  • Kenya
  • Netherlands
  • New Zealand
  • Pakistan
  • South Africa
  • Sri Lanka
  • West Indies
  • Zimbabwe

Monday, March 21, 2011

Yuvraj shines; India-WI don't


Forty thousand fans had packed into the MA Chidambaram stadium in Chennai to watch Sachin Tendulkar score his 100th international century. If any of them came in 5 minutes late, they would have missed watching him bat entirely. That's how long the little master lasted in his first real failure in the 2011 World Cup.

What they did get to see was a Yuvraj Singh special, authored in a style that only Yuvraj can author.

Both teams made two changes, with India's expected and West Indies' surprising. Sehwag was rested, after picking up a knee infection and Nehra was axed. In their places came Raina and R Ashwin. West Indies were without Chris Gayle and Kemar Roach, with Kirk Edwards and Ravi Rampaul replacing the two. Rampaul proved to be a splendid replacement and was successful in the first over, getting Sachin Tendulkar to nick one to the keeper. In a good moment for the game, Sachin walked when the umpire didn't give him out. Virat Kohli finally returned to the top order - where he rightfully belongs - and showed the value of having him there rather than shuffling with the batting order. The pitch was a strange one, with the Windies quick generating a lot of bounce, and Gambhir and Kohli did well to weather the initial spells of the West Indian quicks which contained plenty of chin music. It eased out eventually, though the odd delivery was still apt to kick off a length. However, Gambhir got too adventurous for his own good, and Rampaul picked up his second wicket when Gambhir upper cut straight to third man.

That heralded India's best phase of the match with Virat Kohli and Yuvraj Singh combining for what turned out to be a match-winning partnership. It realised 122 runs at a fair clip of 5.11 runs per over and established a solid base India to take advantage of. The most remarkable thing about the partnership was how Kohli and Yuvraj kept the run flow steady. Their stand was not about a trickle of runs after the loss of the openers and big boundaries later - it was more balanced, and only the first full over in which they came together was a maiden. After that, runs flowed. Both batsmen reached fine half-centuries and both looked set for bigger things. However, a rush of blood caused Kohli's downfall and gave Rampaul his third wicket.

Yuvraj meanwhile, was in physical trouble and had to call for assistance numerous times during his stay at the crease. He revealed later that he had picked up a stomach bug and that his nausea was not due to the Chennai heat. Whether it was the external factors or internal, Yuvraj battled gamely on.

In sight was an ODI hundred - which he had last scored on 26 Jun 2009, coincidentally against the same opposition. Yuvraj admitted that he did feel nervous about getting to the hundred and that he had wanted it badly. In the event, he did get to the landmark, and as the subsequent Indian innings proved, it was to be be a very valuable knock from Yuvraj.

From 218/3 in 41.3 overs, India did their by-now-famous collapsing act and failed to capitalize on a good start for yet another time. They even contrived to be all out yet again. Fifty more runs were added for the 7 remaining wickets for India to be all out for 268. Yuvraj's hundred had looked valuable even when India were cruising - in the context of their collapse, it became crucial.

Ravi Rampaul, who was in the side only because Roach wasn't fully fit, made full use of the opportunity grabbing 5/51 - his best ODI figures. Although India collapsed, he fully deserved his wickets having been the stand-out West Indian bowler.

When the West Indies came out, they had a clear-cut plan of attacking the bowling in the initial overs, perhaps in an effort to maximize scoring options before the ball became soft. Kirk Edwards was the initial aggressor, but he fell to Ashwin after which Darren Bravo took up the mantle.

Dhoni used Ashwin from the first over and bowled him for a long spell of 8 overs during which he troubled the batsmen and got the wicket of Edwards. Bravo was looking good and Smith seemed to have got his eye in, but West Indies lost Bravo at an inopportune moment when he fell to a rank bad ball from Raina, which he ended up hitting down Harbhajan's throat. Just like it had been for India though, for the second wicket, Bravo and Smith got together for the West Indies' best stand of the match. At 154/2 in the 31st over, West Indies seemed very much on course to end their run of defeats against top nations.

However, just as they had outdone India in their initial innings, they out-did India's collapse also. 154/2 underwent so many changes in both the runs column and the wickets column that it almost became impossible to tell when a wicket was falling or had just fallen. West Indies lost 8 wickets for the addition of 34 runs to implode spectacularly.

The rot was started - as it has always been - by a Zaheer Khan special. Smith had quietly got to his half-century and effortlessly changed gears that he crossed 50 a long while ago and seemed set for a century. However, Zaheer got one to pitch outside off and then jag back in through Smith's defences to rattle the stumps. Smith was leaving for 81 superb runs off 97 balls, and he would have had a right to expect that he had done the bulk of the work and that the rest of the batsmen of the Windies would put their hands up (rather than their feet up) and guide the team home.

It was to be a vain hope. In a match where the team that played the less incompetent cricket won - as opposed to a match in which the team playing better cricket wins - India's feat of 50/7 was trumped by West Indies 34/8.

After Smith, Pollard went. Pollard tried to hit Harbhajan out of Chennai when there was no need for a shot of that kind and ended up holing out. Darren Thomas was the victim of a good ball and good reflexes, being stumped by Dhoni off Yuvraj and when Sammy had gone so far for a non-existent single that even Munaf Patel had time to run him out, the writing was on the wall for West Indies. They lost wickets almost like clock-work and were bowled out for 188.

The eventual 80-run margin was flattering to India and possible only because of the West Indian collapse. Both teams have plenty to work on ahead of their knock-out matches. West Indies have got themselves into good positions against each of South Africa, England and India and then blown it away. They must expect more from themselves. In Darren Bravo, they have one of the finest young batting talents. In Gayle and Pollard - amongst the game's most brutal hitters and in Roach - amongst the fastest bowlers. Add to that the abilities of the support cast such as Ravi Rampaul, Andre Russel, Ramnaresh Sarwan et al, and it must seem criminal that they win so little. With the talent at their disposal the men from the Caribbean can legitimately feel extremely unhappy if all they have to show for their efforts in the 2011 World Cup are victories against Bangladesh, Ireland and Netherlands.

As for India, the most feared batting line-up pre-tournament seems to have developed a strange disease. Their batting for about 40 overs lives up to its 'best in the tournament' tag. And then it seems to want to apologize for itself and cram in 10 overs of bad batting that rivals the 40 overs of great skill that preceded it. It hurt India badly against England and South Africa, and it almost did so against West Indies.

Perhaps India should explore taking the batting power-play much earlier, before the 30th over when it has always had set batsmen at the crease. They should probably re-evaluate what a good score during a batting power-play is, and know that 30/0 is far better than 35/4. The failure of the lower middle-order - Dhoni, Yusuf, Raina (in the one match) - has hurt India's chances. In going for 50 runs in the batting power-play they have lost a bunch of wickets. It hasn't helped that Harbhajan seems to have forgotten that he has Test centuries and hasn't contributed the runs expected of him. Zaheer has always been a hit-or-miss kind of batsman, while Nehra and Munaf sometimes seemed to exist purely for comic relief. THe whole world and its uncle was clamouring for R Ashwin's inclusion in the side. After a successful World Cup debut, he's sure to be in the starting eleven. One of the unforeseen benefits of having him could well be his providing some batting resistance in the lower order. The undeniably greatest gain for India is that Yuvraj Singh is hitting the ball at back to near his most fluent best and Yuvraj in such form is always amongst the most dangerous ODI batsmen in the world. His bowling has also been on the mark more often than not and as three Man-of-the-Match awards show, he's been India's most valuable player in the league stages.

The quarter-finals await for both teams. On recent evidence, both need to be more consistent in various aspects of their game to look like teams capable of winning three tough matches on the trot. But then, the same could be said of almost any team in the knock-outs!

We will expose Australia's weakness: Yuvi


Indian batting star Yuvraj Singh reckons that India have a good chance to beat Australia in the quarter-finals as the defending champions are not the same intimidating force due to retirements of some key players.

India set up the last-eight clash with Australia on Thursday after pummeling West Indies by 80 runs on Sunday with Yuvraj putting up a fine all round show by scoring his maiden World Cup century and taking two wickets.

"They have won five games. The teams are equal at the moment. Whosoever plays better on the particular day will win the match. No doubt, Australia is a top side having won the title for last three years.

"However, players like Glenn McGrath, Shane Warne, Adam Gilchrist are not there in the team. Ricky Ponting has not been in form. We will focus and try to win the match by exposing their weakness," Yuvraj said.

Man-of-the-match, Yuvraj, who scored 113 said, batting up the order helps in getting a big score since you could bat for a long period.

"I wanted to get a 100. You bat at four you get to play more balls than at five. I thought I would not hit the ball in the air and keep it to the ground. This is the first game that I was hitting the ball well.

"It is a big moment for me and Indians and the nation. I feel happy. I need to continue the form in the quarter-final. It was very hard tough times for me. As I say tough people stand out even during tough times."

Yuvraj also oozed confidence of facing Australia's fearsome pace attack without any trouble.

"We do not have any issue with the short ball. We have been a number one Test and One-day side in the world. If we had problems with the short balls, we would not be on top. We know definitely that they have pace and get wickets on their pace. We are prepared for it," he said.

"If you are thinking of winning the World Cup, it does not matter (who you play). You need to beat the best sides such as Australia, Pakistan and Sri Lanka to win the Cup."

On India not being able to bat the quota of 50 overs, he said, "It will be an issue for you (media), if we do not win the games. We are happy that we are getting ready for the quarter-final.

Asked whether he felt dehydrated during Sunday's knock, he said, "It was not dehydration but stomach cramps. A couple of guys are having some problem with a stomach bug."

Asked about his reaction when Sachin walked back to pavilion despite the umpire signalling not out, he said, "Not surprised. He felt that he has to walk and he walked. It is a personal decision. It should be left to the person concerned."

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

England need win and run-rate boost against tricky Irish


England's narrow win against Netherlands last week and the tied match with India on Sunday means that their run-rate (0.126) is relatively far below that of the West Indies (1.879) and India (0.870) as well as South Africa (0.766), the latter having played one match less in the group.

England's bowling has been their weak spot having conceded two of their highest three World Cup totals (292 and 338) in their previous matches with the main culprit on both occasions being opening bowler James Anderson.

The good news, however, is that their batsmen have been in top form and have at least matched both scores, with skipper Andrew Strauss's aggregate of 246 runs topping the scoring charts so far.

However, the expected return of in-form Stuart Broad after a stomach upset and Tim Bresnan's career-best performance should help the bowlers put up a morale-boosting show against a mediocre batting line-up.

Ireland's batting, led by the experienced Ed Joyce and brothers Niall and Kevin O'Brien, fought stubbornly but the lack of meaningful partnerships cost them a win against Bangladesh despite restricting them to a modest 205.

Ireland would probably hope to bat first not only because it is their strength but also because they could be sent on a massive leather hunt if England get first crack at a flat batting pitch at the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium which saw a record 676 runs on Sunday.

Hat-trick hero Malinga destroys Kenya



The 27-year sling-action bowler, who missed Sri Lanka's opening two matches due to a back strain, trapped Tanmay Mishra (nought) lbw with the last ball of his seventh over.

At the start of his next over he clean-bowled Peter Ongondo and Shem Ngoche in successive balls to complete his hat-trick.

Malinga then bowled Elijah Otieno to complete a career-best 6-38 in his 7.4 overs, improving on his figures of 5-34 against Pakistan at Dambulla last year.

Malinga's ferocious bowling derailed Kenya, who opted to bat, after they were on course for a total of around 200 following half-centuries from brothers David Obuya (51) and Collins Obuya (52).

Kenya, shot out for 69 against New Zealand and 112 in their match against Pakistan, started disastrously with Nuwan Kulasekara dismissing opener Morris Ouma (one) in the second over before Malinga had Seren Waters (three) lbw in the next.

Collins Obuya, whose five wickets helped Kenya upset Sri Lanka at the 2003 World Cup, hit four boundaries during his sedate 100-ball knock. His elder brother David hit three fours during his 106-ball innings.

But Malinga, who also took a World Cup hat-trick against South Africa in the 2007 World Cup, dismissed Collins Obuya in his second spell before destroying the tail.

Malinga's hat-trick is the seventh in all World Cup matches and came just a day after West Indian Kemar Roach recorded a hat-trick against the Netherlands in New Delhi.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Strauss has set the template for us - Bell


Ian Bell believes Andrew Strauss's brilliant 158 against India is a sign that England are well placed for success at this World Cup, as they get ready to return to Bangalore's Chinnaswamy Stadium to take on Ireland. England had to settle for a tie with the hosts on Sunday, but Bell said he and his batting colleagues would look at their captain's effort as the template for how to bat in this tournament.

"It's probably the best knock I've ever seen, to be honest with you, from an England player," Bell said. "It had everything. He hit his boundaries when he wanted to, he rotated the strike, he played his sweeps. He looked very, very hard to bowl to.

"If you can have a player like that at the top of the order, it really holds us in good stead. In the next game if it's not Straussy that goes on and makes a hundred, it's [hopefully] one of the other top four that does, because it really was for the rest of us a template for how you play a proper one-day innings. He's done that for a while for us."

However, Ireland's young spinner George Dockrell said his team would not be intimidated by the hefty and almost successful chase when they meet England on Wednesday. Ireland are still searching for their first win of the World Cup, after missing a golden opportunity against Bangladesh, and they know they will have to score big to challenge England, who could regain Stuart Broad after he missed the India game due to illness.

"With both teams getting 338, you can see that the pitch is very good and the outfield is quick, it's a small stadium," Dockrell said. "There's big scores out here in India, there are going to be games like this. I don't think we'll be daunted by that. We played one of the warm-up games in Nagpur, a lot bigger stadium and yet we got 290 against New Zealand, so I don't think we'll be too daunted by that.

"We're obviously disappointed with the game against Bangladesh and now we're looking forward to this England game and hopefully getting that first win. We took a lot of positives from that Bangladesh game. It was a very good bowling performance from us, the batting went wrong in a few places but we're quite confident still coming in to this game."

Dockrell is one of several members of the Ireland squad who have been handed county deals, after he was signed by Somerset last year, and his bowling colleague Boyd Rankin is another who is well known by the England players. Rankin has played with Bell at Warwickshire and, despite leaking 62 off his nine overs against Bangladesh, could be more of a handful in Bangalore.

"Boyd has got a lot of ability and is someone who I think could go a long way in this game," Bell said. "For Warwickshire I've seen him bowl some fantastic spells. He's got good pace and really good bounce. Playing at Dhaka isn't the easiest place to play as a big 6'6-plus guy. If you're slightly off line to someone as good as Tamim Iqbal you get punished.

"This wicket will probably have a little bit more pace and bounce than Dhaka did. He's someone you respect. We're going to have to play him well with the new ball. A lot of those guys are respected on the county circuit. There's a lot of experience now in their side, in county cricket, and it's a game that we're looking forward to and we're going to have to play well in. It's not a game that we can turn up in and just coast."

We can't improve our fielding much - Dhoni


India captain, MS Dhoni, has admitted his team fielded poorly against England, but said there were limits to how much it could improve its fielding. Instead, he said, the team needed to focus on its strengths.

"Maybe if we would have fielded slighted better, we would have won the game by one run because you realise in these games the importance of one run," Dhoni said. "I don't think we can improve the fielding very much because we have got quite a few slow fielders in the side.

"So I think if we were a different fielding side it would have been slightly better, but then you need to realise your strengths and definitely fielding is not a big part of it."

Apart from a dropped chance off Andrew Strauss early in his innings and one off Ian Bell at slip, India conceded quite a few runs by way of misfields. "If you are not 100% sure of something, you have got experienced players in the side whom you can always approach because at the end of the day the motivation is to take the best decision at the right time. That's what I was interacting with him since he was close to me."

Dhoni said he likes to let his bowlers choose their own field and it is only when things don't go to plan that he steps in. "I always give the liberty to the bowlers to set the field," he said. "If the fast bowler wants a particular field, even if i am not very happy with it, I believe in the skill of the fast bowlers, and give him the first preference to pick his own field. If it is not successful, then I implement my own field."

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Heavyweights clash at R Premadasa


When the World Cup comes to colourful Colombo on Saturday, the tournament will begin in earnest for two subcontinent teams. Both Pakistan and Sri Lanka opened with massive wins over Associate nations, but this will be their first real test in the competition. None of the smaller teams in Group A seem capable of challenging the Test nations, so the game will be important in terms of placings for the quarter-finals. And in a tournament whose first week has been loaded with one-sided matches, two teams packed with dynamic players also promise some high-voltage entertainment.

Past records might suggest Pakistan have an edge - they have beaten Sri Lanka in each of their six encounters in the World Cups and have won their previous five games at the R Premadasa - but that will count for little. The two sides have not faced each other in cricket's showpiece tournament since 1992, and the Premadasa has undergone extensive redevelopment. What will help Pakistan, though, is the relative lack of controversy surrounding the current team, a low-profile lead-up and the confidence of a recent series win, in New Zealand, behind them.

Sri Lanka's advantage is that most of their players have had a taste of how the new track will fare during the domestic limited-over tournament held in January. Traditionally, this has been a bat-first venue, especially in day-night games where the team chasing has won only one of the past 13 matches, but it remains to be seen how the re-laid pitch fares .

Form guide
(Most recent first)
Sri Lanka WWWLW
Pakistan WLWWW

Pitch and conditions
The pitch will be the centre of attention since it's a re-laid track, and Saturday's game will be the first international game to be played on it. It may not be too high scoring a game, if the domestic matches played since the stadium was re-developed are anything to go by. The highest score batting first in the one-dayers played in January was 225, a total which was easily defended. Kumar Sangakkara, the Sri Lanka captain, though, expects the bare surface to be good for batting.

Watch out for…
Thisara Perera was outstanding with the ball against Canada, and picked loads of wickets whenever he got a chance in 2010 as well. He worked up real pace in Hambantota, and has provided the team management with the welcome headache of working out how to accommodate him, Lasith Malinga, Nuwan Kulasekara and Angelo Mathews in the XI. He also adds muscle to Sri Lanka's lower-middle order.

Shoaib Akhtar has weathered stacks of controversies and fitness problems to become one of the few constants in Pakistan's team. There has not been any talk of injuries for eight months, a minor miracle given his past record. Age hasn't slowed him down too much either; even at 35 he remains among the quickest bowlers in the world.

Team news
Pakistan have hinted they will stick to the same combination that played Kenya, which means Wahab Riaz and Saeed Ajmal are likely to remain on the bench. Waqar Younis has said Pakistan are pondering how to use Abdul Razzaq better, but for now he will continue to be an impact batsman at No. 8 and opening the bowling.

Pakistan (probable): 1 Mohammad Hafeez, 2 Ahmed Shehzad, 3 Kamran Akmal (wk), 4 Younis Khan, 5 Misbah-ul-Haq, 6 Umar Akmal, 7 Shahid Afridi (capt), 8 Abdul Razzaq, 9 Umar Gul, 10 Abdur Rehman, 11 Shoaib Akhtar

The main concern for Sri Lanka is the fitness of their pace spearhead, Malinga, who has a back strain. He missed Sri Lanka's opening game, but he did bowl in the nets on Friday. The physio will take a call on Saturday whether Malinga will play. If he doesn't, Sri Lanka could stick to the same XI that beat Canada.

Sri Lanka (probable): 1 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 2 Upul Tharanga, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (capt & wk), 4 Mahela Jayawardene, 5 Chamara Kapugedera, 6 Thilan Samaraweera, 7 Angelo Mathews, 8 Thisara Perera, 9 Nuwan Kulasekara, 10 Ajantha Mendis, 11 Muttiah Muralitharan