Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Delhi boys party at home


Delhi's street-wise batsmen scrapped their way to 191, a total that put pressure on Bangalore's top order and just when they needed to hold their nerve, they faltered, giving Glenn McGrath three wickets in his first spell and leaving the middle-order with too much to do. Rahul Dravid and Jacques Kallis could not sustain an assault and Bangalore fell short by 10 runs, registering yet another loss. Delhi, however, now go into their big game against the unbeaten Chennai team, with a triumph behind them.

Frenetic farewell
Ross Taylor leaves the IPL shortly and he would have liked to go on a high. He scored quickly, got his team off to a brisk start, and, on the verge of seeing off McGrath, miscued a catch to Shikhar Dhawan at midwicket. McGrath, who had already sent Praveen Kumar packing, then tempted Wasim Jaffer into pulling from outside off, the ball merely ballooning to mid-on. McGrath's first spell read 3-0-23-3 and he had done his bit.
The pigeon returns
On the wrong side of 30 and battling to lift their team to a much-needed win, Dravid and Kallis managed a rousing 87-run partnership with barely a shot played in anger. But it would not be enough.
McGrath returned for a final over and had Dravid (38), becoming the first bowler to pick up four wickets in an IPL match, ending with 4 for 29. Kallis (54) blustered on, meaty shoulders opening up towards the death but when he played around an arm ball from Daniel Vettori with two overs to spare and 30 still needed, the game was up.
Classic Gambhir
If at all there is something that can be termed a classic in this nascent form of the game it is the manner in which Gautam Gambhir bats. With no interest in aesthetics and little regard for accepted batting norms, he carves the ball in the arc spanning third-man to long-off with aggressive regularity.
On the day it was not a sustained assault, and that was understandable with wickets falling more often than the Kotla faithful liked. Rather, Gambhir's 86 lasted only 10 balls less than the course of the entire Delhi innings and 12 of the 54 balls he faced crossed the ropes, one without bouncing first.
Making them count
The innings' fourth over bowled by Zaheer went for 18, with Sehwag launching a six over midwicket, flicking one off the pads for four and brutally hitting the third into the first floor of the stands at long-on.
The other big over was the 14th, when Sunil Joshi's loopy deliveries landed perfectly for Dhawan (50) and Gambhir to clatter 19, via a pull over midwicket, a loft over long-on and a scorching cover-drive. Those two overs made the difference between a merely healthy total and one that would give their bowlers the breathing room they needed in the face of an inevitable counter-attack.

Sledging a waste of time, but also an art: Dhoni


We will be squaring off against a very good Delhi team on Friday. The Daredevils have very good bowlers in the form of Mohammed Asif and Glenn McGrath. It will be important for us to get off to a good start. We have to make sure that this duo does not make any inroads into our batting when we bat. Even when we bowl, it will be crucial to get as many dot balls going as possible. Virender Sehwag is in great form and it will be crucial for us to start off well with the ball as well.
One of the reasons why the Indians run foul with authorities is because there is very little sledging in first-class cricket in India.The Harbhajan-Sreesanth issue has been dealt with, and the former has been banned for 11 games. All players at this level know the limits they have to stay within, and once they go beyond these limits, they will be fined. Harbhajan Singh is a matchwinner and he must know that there is no greater high than playing well for one's team. However, if he gets on the wrong side of the law, he will not be able to do that. One of the reasons why the Indians run foul with authorities is because there is very little sledging in first-class cricket in India. It's when these youngsters get into the international level that they see and hear what the other teams are saying and some of them try it, but without the expertise of their foreign counterparts. I have said this in the past: sledging is an art, and our players must learn it well before practicing it. Otherwise bans and fines will always be handed out to them.
I personally find sledging a waste of time. I would rather preserve energy and try to get the opposition out by concentrating on doing my job well. I focus on the game, getting my plans right and then executing them well, so sledging is not for me at all. However, there are a few guys in the team who are pretty good at the chit-chat and I don't stop them if they don't go beyond the limits.
If somebody is getting under your skin, there is a way to give it back. I am all for aggression and not taking anything lying down from the opposition. It is important to give as good as you get, but it's even more important to know how to do it. Coming back to the Super Kings, I am proud of the way we came back from the edge to pull off a victory against the Royal Challengers. The Bangalore bowlers were able to swing the ball right till the 18th over. However, 180 was a good score, and while we were falling behind in the middle, we finished well to win the game.
Interestingly, we were unable to swing the ball at the start of the Bangalore innings. However, at around the 14th over, we realised that we had not been shining the ball. It was a schoolboy error, but we were lucky to detect it in time! After that, we got Jacques Kallis and Mark Boucher in quick succession, and that turned the tide for us.

Shoaib cannot play in IPL: BCCI sources


Though the Pakistan Cricket Board has cleared Shoaib Akhtar to play in the Indian Premier League for Kolkata Knight Riders, the controversial fast bowler still cannot play in the Twenty20 League as per the cricket board's recent decision. "Unless he is cleared to play for Pakistan, he cannot play in the IPL. This was the decision taken by the special general body of the BCCI at Bangalore before the start of the Twenty20 event," informed BCCI sources here on Wednesday. Akhtar's appeal against the five-year ban imposed by the PCB for indiscipline was on Wednesday rejected by a three-member appeal tribunal which, however, said he was free to resume his career overseas. Farrukh Aftab, chairman of the appeal tribunal, has said that the temperamental pacer can play in the IPL promoted by the BCCI but cannot play for Pakistan internationally or nationally. Akhtar was bought for $425,000 (approx Rs 1.7 crore) by the Kolkata franchise team owned by Bollywood star Shahrukh Khan's Red Chillies Entertainment.

No more a youngsters' game


Glenn McGrath shattered the twin myth that Twenty20 is essentially a youngsters' game with an obvious bias towards batsmen as the beanpole Aussie claimed IPL's first four-wicket haul to guide Delhi Daredevils to a 10-run win against Bangalore Royal Challengers on Wednesday.Chasing 192 for victory, the Bangalore outfit came close to the target, thanks to efforts by Jacques Kallis (54 off 44 balls) and Rahul Dravid (38 off 30 balls), but it did not prove enough in the end as they ended up on 181 for five

Ban upheld, but Shoaib can play in IPL



Controversial fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar's international career virtually came to an end after an appellate tribunal, on Wednesday, upheld the five-year ban imposed on him.
It, however, said he can play in the cash-rich Indian Premier League.
The appellate tribunal, in its interim ruling, said Akhtar cannot play any match in or for Pakistan, but allowed him the liberty to play anywhere else in the world.
Justice (retd) Aftab Farrukh, heading the appellate tribunal, said the ban will stay because Shoaib did not try to reform himself.
"Basically he has not tried to reform himself and has continued to violate discipline. That is the view of the tribunal, so the ban stays," he told reporters in Lahore


"This is also the order of the disciplinary committee of the Board that he can't play for or anywhere in Pakistan domestically or internationally. But there is no bar on him playing anywhere else in the world," Farrukh added.
Farrukh said the tribunal had taken the decision in view of the unconditional apology submitted by Shoaib on Monday to the nation, his team and the Board for his actions.
He said the tribunal will resume proceedings against the overall ban in June.
Akhtar had appealed against the five-year ban, imposed on him by the Pakistan Cricket Board for breaching the players' code of conduct after he criticized the Board in media when he was already in the probation period.
The interim order basically appears to be a move to allow him to play in the Indian Premier League.
But the million dollar question is that whether the IPL will allow him to play in their League because earlier also their stance was clear that they wouldn't allow a banned player to play in their league. And the tribunal has not lifted the ban.
Farrukh also criticised Shoaib for the irreparable harm he had done to Pakistan cricket, his teammates and the trust of the nation.

Indian Premier League lives up to the hype


After 15 months away it has been great to get back into international cricket out here in Jaipur. I didn't know what to imagine from the Indian Premier League, but the games have been intense, hard-fought and the sideshows spectacular. If the buzz around the grounds is a guide, then the IPL is even bigger than anyone predicted.
Things were a bit chaotic for the first few days. Players from all over the world were coming and going, the official gear had not turned up and it was hard to know what was happening from one day to the next. I would not say that things were badly organised, but people were getting carried away with the excitement.
Life is always frenetic around cricket in India. The place was made for Twenty20. You expect the dressing-rooms to start shaking in the build-ups, with entertainment booming outside. And the media are lapping it up. I even read that I've learnt Hindi - fortunately, the article was in English.
More than a week in, the dust is settling. Teams have realised that you don't always need to blast 200 to win and we've been getting some close games. Anybody can beat anybody on the day (or night). That is part of the attraction.
I try to have fresh ideas for each game. If you can take your opponent by surprise, even just for a few minutes, it can be a big advantage. So I may put in an extra spin bowler or mix up some of the batsmen to get another big hitter in the middle order.
Unfortunately, most of the spinners are being smashed around. Boundaries are so small that you can deceive a guy in the flight and still see the ball fly for six off the top edge. I suppose Twenty20 is about big hits and supporters go crazy when it clears the ropes, but a 55-metre boundary does not make for much of a balance.
You have to adjust quickly and as best you can. I've been asked whether there is much talking in the middle between the Aussie players, but by the time I have thought about moving a fielder - and then managed to convey the message above the din - there isn't time for a kind word or a sledge.
Playing against my old team-mates is strange. Overall, we are going well - Andrew Symonds, Mike Hussey and Adam Gilchrist have cracked lightning hundreds, Matty Hayden and Simon Katich have also scored runs, Shane Watson has been brilliant for the mighty Rajasthan Royals and Brett Lee has cranked up the pace.
The only guy who is yet to fire is Ricky Ponting, who has had a couple of first-ballers. I am sure he will have a wry smile on his face when he leaves for the West Indies tour shortly. He must be keen to get back to the longer form of the game.
We know each other's games inside out and I was pleased to use a bit of that knowledge to get rid of Gilchrist when we played against Deccan Chargers last Thursday. Sometimes he can be weak against spin early on, so I called up Yusuf Pathan's off spin for the third over and we got him stumped.
The Royals have sneaked under the radar with three wins in a row. On Thursday we play Kolkata Knight Riders, when I go head-to-head as coach with my old pal, John Buchanan. That side of my role has been good fun. Darren Berry and Jeremy Snape do a lot of the back-up work. If I ever become an international coach, I'd be happy with those two as assistants.
I feel like I've been on Jeremy's couch a couple of times and he has done some good stuff with the youngsters. Dimi Mascarenhas should be in contention for Thursday, but it is a shame he is the only English player on view. Well done to Rod Bransgrove, the Hampshire chairman, for seeing the bigger picture and releasing him.
Nothing to my mind will be able to compete with the IPL. Having said that, I have been reading about Sir Allen Stanford's proposals based around England. If he wants somebody to pick and captain an All Star XI, I'd love to have a go.

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