Monday, April 28, 2008

Chennai win fourth straight match


Chennai Super Kings beat Royal Challengers Bangalore by 13 runs in an Indian Premier League match at the Chinnaswamy Stadium on Monday.
It was the Chennai team's fourth straight win in as many matches and the Bangalore team's third defeat in four matches. Chennai are now the only unbeaten team in the competition and palpably, lead the standings after four round of matches.
Chasing 179 to win, Bangalore made a sedate start before an 89-run second-wicket partnership between Wasim Jaffer (50) and Ross Taylor (53) put them on course. Jaffer and Taylor's half centuries were the first two by the Bangalore team in the competition.
However, once Jaffer departed, Bangalore kept losing wickets at regular intervals and came up short.
Jacques Kallis (14), Mark Boucher (4) and Virat Kohli (12) all fell in a bid to accelerate while captain Rahul Dravid added another duck to his Twenty20 resume as the Royal Challengers collapsed like a pack of cards.
Earlier, skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni joined Michael Hussey to exhibit some lusty hitting as their fourth wicket stand of 95 took the Chennai Super Kings to a competitive score of 178 for five in 20 overs.
Electing to bat first, Dhoni (65) gave ample demonstration of his class superseding his Aussie partner as the two consolidated the position after the Super Kings were 83 for three at one stage.
Dhoni got his eye in before unleashing a fierce assault on the Royal Challengers in the later overs.
He plundered 45 runs off 16 deliveries at one stage disfiguring the bowlers' analysis to a great extent before trying for another big hit only to be caught in the last over.
Dhoni's contribution in the last 45 runs he added with Hussey (47) was an amazing 43 and his 65 came off 30 balls with 9 fours and three sixes. He had reached 50 in 24 balls earlier.
Matthew Hayden , Parthiv Patel and Suresh Raina fell after a slow start with only 83 runs coming off 12 overs. But the Royal Challengers lost the ascendancy once Dhoni came to the crease.

Slap costs Bhajji Rs 2.67 crore

Harbhajan Singh would never even have imagined in his wildest dreams that the angry slap he planted on S Sreesanth's face would make him poorer by more than two and a half crore of rupees!
The temperamental off spinner was fined 100 per cent of his match fees when he was handed out an eleven-match ban for his unprovoked assault on India teammate Sreesanth after the Mohali game between Harbhajan's Mumbai Indians and the latter's King's XI of Punjab on April 25.
The Punjab-born Harbhajan had been purchased by the Mumbai franchise team owned by Reliance Industries for a whopping $ 8,50,000 (approximately Rs 3.4 crore).
"There are no separate match fees for IPL matches and the players are given only allowances. The match fee is calculated on a pro-rata basis of the amount he had been bought for by his franchise owner and the number of matches he's able to play", a top Cricket Board source informed
As per this calculation the player, termed "Turbanator" by the Aussie press, stood to lose Rs 2.671 crore - or close to Rs 25 lakh per match - for the 11 ties he would miss following the verdict by IPL match referee and former Test stumper, Farokh Engineer.
It must rank among the costliest-ever slaps in world history, and certainly a record-setting one in cricket!
The lone consolation, if it can be called so, is that the man who handed out the punishment also hailed him as the best-ever off spinner India has produced.
One wonders what legendary predecessor Erapalli Prasanna, Engineer's one-time teammate and pal, would make of this statment, not to talk of another great who's among Harbhajan's staunchest critics - Bishen Singh Bedi.

Harbhajan banned from IPL

Ace off-spinner Harbhajan Singh was banned from playing in the Indian Premier League after he pleaded guilty to slapping Indian teammate S Sreesanth at the end of the match between Kings XI Punjab and Mumbai Indians in Mohali last week.
The temperamental bowler was also fined 100 per cent match fees from the third IPL match.
Lalchand Rajput, coach of his team, Mumbai Indians, was fined 50 per cent of his match fee for making no attempt to stop the physical attack on the Kings XI Punjab bowler.
Sreesanth was let-off with a warning that his "aggression on the field will in future be taken seriously".
"After looking into the video footage in the presence of Sreesanth, complainant Neil Maxwell (Kings XI Punjab CEO), Harbhajan and Lalchand Rajput, (Mumbai Indians coach), and managers of both sides, and considering the submissions from both sides and in view of Harbhajan's admission, Match Referee Farokh Engineer found him guilty of level 4.2 offence," IPL Chairman and Commissioner Lalit Modi told media after Engineer's hearing at the Maurya Sheraton hotel, Delhi, on Monday.
"Accordingly, Harbhajan Singh has been banned for the rest of the IPL matches, besides fined 100 per cent of his match fees," added Modi.
As per the ICC Code of Conduct, physically assaulting a fellow-player, match official or spectator, constitutes a Level 4 offence, which entails maximum punishment of life ban or a minimum of five Tests or 10 ODIs ban.
Modi said the BCCI can conduct its own hearing into the episode and Harbhajan has the liberty to file an appeal in this case.
He said video footage of the incident showed Harbhajan shaking hands with the Kings XI Punjab players, but when he came to Sreesanth he slapped him.
Harbhajan and Sreesanath were later summoned to the room where the media briefing was held. Admitting his fault, Harbhajan said: "I have accepted the punishment which had been handed down by the IPL. I did something wrong, which should not have happened in the first place. To me, Sreesanath is like a younger brother and we will be playing together. When I come back I will bring glory to the country. I ask for forgiveness from the people of India."
Sreesanath did not utter a word. At Engineer's request, both hugged each other.
"We are all human beings and mistakes do happen," said Engineer, adding "a very, very fair hearing was given to all sides. No track record was taken into account, because what actually happened is lot more serious than you guys think."
The former India wicketkeeper said, "Harbhajan stepped out of line and paid the penalty".
Asked what made him slap Sreesanth, Harbhajan did not reply, but was quick to express his gratitude to the Board of Control for Cricket in India for standing firmly behind him in his verbal spat with Andrew Symonds during the Indian team's visit to Australia few months back.

Will Bhajji get away lightly?


It is a crucial day for Harbhajan Singh, as the Match Referee - Farokh Engineer, will take a final call on the Sree-Bhajji controversy. The decision will be on whether to ban him or not for slapping Sreesanth in a match against Kings XI Punjab on Friday. Pacer Sreesanth is also likely to be questioned and reprimanded for provoking Bhajji. The hearing in the case is scheduled on April 28 in New Delhi and the big question is, will Bhajji get off from the scuffles of the match referee lightly? In what has been seen as a trial of a habitual offender, Harbhajan Singh's fate will be decided in a hearing at the nation's capital. Harbhajan Singh is going to be tried under level 4 of the ICC code of conduct. If found guilty Bhajji could be banned for between five Test matches or 10 ODIs or even a life ban. Bhajji will be tried under clause 4.2 for physically assaulting another player. It is the image of the inaugural Indian Premier League that could take a major hit, if Bhajji is not allowed to take part in the rest of the IPL matches. Going by the Match Referee's indications, Bhajji might get away with a five-match ban. BCCI likely to reprimand Sree Pacer Sreesanth is likely to be questioned on his role and to scrutinise his behaviour in the slap gate scandal. Sources said that Sree infact did provoke Bahjji after the match and also throughout the match his behaviour had been under the scanner. He is likely to be reprimanded for provoking Bhajji which led to the entire row. Bhajji's tainted past In 1998, Harbhajan Singh was fined for altercation with Australia's Ricky Ponting. In 2000, Bhajji was sent back from the National Cricket Academy due to misdemeanour. In 2001, 'The Turbanator' was charged of bad behviour in South Africa. In 2002, Harbhajan has an altercation with police outside team hotel in Guwahati. In 2008, the biggest of them all was Bhajji's row on racism brought by Andrew Symonds in Sydney.

Privacy Policy / Disclaimer