Sunday, 25 November 2012

Shakib ruled out of first two ODIs against WI


Bangladesh allrounder Shakib Al Hasan has been ruled out of the first two one-day internationals against West Indies with a shin injury, team officials said on Sunday.
Shakib had an MRI scan on his right tibia bone in Khulna on Saturday after the close of fourth day's play."We have decided that he will take no further part in the second Test match and will miss the two ODIs in Khulna," physio Vibhav Singh said in statement.
"We will review his scan report with an orthopaedic specialist in Dhaka to decide the best management plan for Shakib," Singh said.
The first two ODIs of the five-match series will be held in Khulna on November 30 and Dec 2.

2nd Test: WI beat Bangladesh by 10 wickets


Tino Best took a career best 6 for 40 in an innings to set up a 10-wicket victory for West Indies in the second Test against Bangladesh in Khulna on Sunday.
Best helped West Indies skittle Bangladesh for 287 runs in their second innings on the fifth day, setting up a target of 28 runs to win for the tourists, who also won the first Test by 77 runs. The West Indies reached 30 for 0 in just 4.4 over complete a 2-0 sweep in the series.Kieran Powell smashed Naeem Islam for two successive fours to bring up the win while Chris Gayle was unbeaten on 20 at the other end. Bangladesh resumed play at 226 for 6 and lost a wicket on the fourth ball of the morning when Mahmudullah was caught by Denesh Ramdin off Veerasammy Permaul for two.
Best added three wickets in the morning to his three overnight, giving him a five-wicket haul in successive Tests. He struck with his first ball of the day, bowling Sohag Gazi for seven before the paceman uprooted the leg stump of Nasir Hossain with the batsman on 94.
Nasir, who began the day on 64, has now missed his maiden century in second successive Test after he was out for 96 in the first innings of first Test in Dhaka. Man of the Match Best removed the final wicket of Rubel Hossain for 14 a ball after the batsman was dropped by Fidel Edwards off Permaul.
The five-match ODI series between the teams begins on November 30.

SL vs NZ, 2nd Test, Day 1: Taylor, Williamson lift New Zealand


Ross Taylor cracked an unbeaten 119 and Kane Williamson was approaching a third Test century as the pair salvaged New Zealand's poor start against Sri Lanka to reach a comfortable 223 for two at stumps on the opening day of the second cricket Test on Sunday.
They added an unbroken 209-run partnership for the third wicket after New Zealand lost two wickets for 14 runs after winning the toss and electing to bat at P. Sara Oval. Taylor's eighth century included 10 boundaries and came off 241 deliveries. Williamson faced 229 balls and hit eight fours.Opener Martin Guptill was out first in the first over of the match when he edged a Nuwan Kulasekara ball to Angelo Mathews at slip. Brendon McCullum was trapped lbw by Shaminda Eranga in the fourth over. Seamer Nuwan Kulasekara returned 1 for 42.
After losing the first Test in Galle last week by 10 wickets, New Zealand must win this final Test to level the series. They are also under pressure to avoid losing their six straight Test this year, having lost one to South Africa and two each against the West Indies and India.
The Kiwis dropped seam bowling allrounder James Franklin to hand a first Test cap to Todd Astle, also an allrounder who bowls legspin. Astle has more than 2,000 runs and 129 wickets in first-class cricket.

2nd Test, day 4: Australia stamp their authority over South Africa


AB de Villiers and Faf du Plessis stonewalled the Australian bowlers for most of the evening session on Sunday, trying desperately to save the second Test and protect South Africa's No. 1 Test ranking.
Needing a record fourth innings of 430 to win after Australia captain Michael Clarke declared at 267 for 8 midway through day four, the South Africans slumped to 45 for 4 including the key wickets of skipper Graham Smith (0) and Hashim Amla (17).But old school friends du Plessis (19) and de Villiers (12) put on 32 runs in 29 overs to take some sting out of the Australian attack and help South Africa to 77 for 4 at stumps, keeping their slim hopes of forcing a draw alive. South Africa, still 352 behind with six wickets in hand, needs to avoid a series loss here to retain its No. 1-ranking.
The South African batting lineup contains plenty of batsmen who can occupy the crease, but two of them — Smith and Amla — are out and Jacques Kallis is hampered by a hamstring problem that means he has to come in down the order, can't bowl and is unlikely to play in the third Test.
Ben Hilfenhaus made an important breakthrough for Australia when he had Smith out in the first over, edging to Ricky Ponting at second slip. Nathan Lyon removed Amla just before tea, then struck again immediately after the interval when he had Jacques Rudolph (3) well caught at short leg by Ed Cowan to make the total 45 for 3. The South Africans didn't add a run before opener Alviro Petersen (24) was beaten by Peter Siddle and lost his stumps.
Du Plessis, who scored 78 in his Test debut innings here in Adelaide, and de Villiers must stick around for as many of the 90 overs as possible Monday if South Africa is any chance of repeating the fourth-innings victory of 2008. The South Africans are one of only two teams have scored more than 414 in the fourth innings to win a Test.
The West Indies scored 418 for 7 at Antigua to beat Australia in 2003, and the South Africans scored 414-4 in Perth in 2008 for an unlikely win over the Australians. The hosts have been in front of the game since winning the toss and amassing 550 in the first innings, with Clarke scoring 230 to become the first batsman ever to post four double centuries in a calendar year and David Warner and Mike Hussey scoring hundreds.
South Africa was dismissed for 388 on Saturday, 162 in arrears, but got back into the game by snaring 5 for 26 late on the third day as Australia wobbled after a decent start to its second innings.
The Australians resumed Sunday at 111 for 5 on Clarke (38) was first out, trapped lbw by Dale Steyn to end a 70-run sixth-wicket stand Hussey (54). It was the third time the pair had come to Australia's rescue after a batting collapse in this series, including the 272 stand in the first innings here and the big partnership in the drawn first Test in Brisbane, where Clarke finished unbeaten on 259.
Injured James Pattinson scored an unbeaten 29 and Hilfenhaus contributed 18 in an unbroken 47-run eighth-wicket partnership that ensured South Africa would have to chase a 400-plus total.
Morkel and Rory Kleinveldt ended with three wickets apiece, while Steyn had 2 for 50 in a bowling attack missing Vernon Philander, who was ruled out just before the match due to a bad back and Jacques Kallis, who hurt his hamstring in the 17th over and has only been able to bat since.
Kallis hasn't been able to field or bowl and is expected to miss the third Test, causing concern over the balance of the lineup for Perth after legspinner Imran Tahir's terrible return in Adelaide. Tahir had 0-80 in the second innings, giving him 0 for 260 from 37 overs in the match, among the worst figures in Test history for bowlers not taking a wicket.
Australia also will have to reshuffle their bowling combination for Perth, too, after Pattinson was ruled out on Sunday for the next four Tests. The 22-year-old Pattinson sustained a rib injury while bowling on Saturday and didn't return to the field until his nice cameo with the bat.

Ind v Eng, 2nd Test, Day 3: Pietersen and Panesar 'bajaao' India's band


Kevin Pietersen and Monty Panesar are two distinctly different personalities. Of that there can be no argument. Pietersen is brash, abrasive, über confident, has problems with authority and is a pure natural talent. He is something of a rebel, having left his native South Africa to forge a career in England and for whom he today drew level with on a record 22 Test centuries. He has not found acceptance easily, let wants to be loved. He is a superstar, as at ease on the cover of GQ as in the nightclubs of trendy south London.
Panesar, the first Sikh to player for England, is gawky, gangly and often caricatured. He is a bundle of nerves when he gets a wicket, fumbling to find outstretched palms when they're in front of his face. He isn't a natural athlete, and doesn't come across as much of a natural anything. He isn't cool or overly confident and is more likely to be found playing video games in his bedroom back in Luton.Thus it was remarkably endearing to find these two contrasting cricketers at the center of what was without doubt one of England's best days – if not the best – in India. A day that has left them with a very strong chance at victory on day four in Mumbai, and one that will level the series at 1-1. It was these two cricketers, one the diva and the other deemed surplus to England's needs in Ahmedabad, which left India battered and bruised on Sunday.
Pietersen in flow is a treat to watch, and his 186 will rank as a truly memorable innings. It took something extraordinary to outdo Alastair Cook, who batted in a different league in Ahmedabad, but after Pietersen's century the captain's 22nd Test century was shoved into the background. This was a high-quality innings, one of the best played by an England player in India. It grabbed India's attack by the scruff of the neck shook the bowlers ragged.
Certainly no England batsman before him has played this way before, with his team coming off a big defeat and hoping to stay alive in the series. His strokes, bold and brazen, were of a superior class to anything any other batsman on either side could have envisioned playing. There were paddles, reverse-paddles, cheeky dinks and slog-sweeps. There was a whipped four off Pragyan Ojha, taken two feet outside off stump and dumped over midwicket for four. There was a six – his third – which was pure disdain, like this was net practice. Two of Pietersen's sixes were slog-swept massively with three men on the boundary. It was audacious.
As Mike Atherton pointed out, the hallmark of Pietersen's "utterly brilliant" 186 was that it created the illusion of a flat pitch. Where the rest of England's batsmen, barring Cook, showed how difficult it was, Pietersen was so adept with his footwork and bat speed that the track suddenly went out of the picture.
The pitch was doing plenty, but India's trio of spin bowlers failed to make it matter. There were a few close shouts and a few play-and-misses, but overall R Ashwin and Harbhajan Singh erred on the shorter side. Ball after ball Cook and Pietersen, especially, were allowed to cut. Of Pietersen's runs, 108 came on the offside; 33 in the arc between point and gully and 56 between cover and mid-off. When he wasn't offered rank short balls, Pietersen used his crease to manufacture runs.
Ashwin's figures of 42.3-6-145-2 will have left him uncertain about what he needs to do in Test cricket to cement his place as India's lead spinner. Too many short balls littered the field with singles, doubles and boundaries. The spinner who has wreaked havoc against New Zealand and West Indies in five Tests had been made to look like an impostor. Ojha finished with the most wickets, and his dismissal of Pietersen changed the tone of the afternoon. But he too was guilty of bowling short often.
Harbhajan, in something of an unexpected Test return after 14 months, proved with figures of 21-1-74-2 that he has not improved in the interim. As he was when dropped from the team last August, Harbhajan was listless. Too much on the leg stump, too flat and drifting down. In comparison, Panesar found drift and turn and bounce. Why? Because he flighted the ball, hit the rough and used his head. Harbhajan will be considered lucky to have added to his 98 previous Tests and could be stuck on 99 barring injury to one of Ashwin or Ojha in the future.
To then watch Panesar get the ball to spit and jump later in the day and out-bowl their India counterparts was startling. After Ahmedabad, MS Dhoni called on the Wankhede curator to produce a spinning wicket. He got just that. Unfortunately for Dhoni, it was Panesar – a bowler ripe for the conditions - who exploited the turn and bounce. He varied his pace cleverly, pitched the ball into the rough and made India's batsmen feel for everything.
In the final session of play on day three, spin accounted for seven Indian wickets. Numbers two to seven managed 41 runs between them. Subtract Gautam Gambhir's resourceful unbeaten 53 and India would have folded by now, instead of leading by 31 runs with three wickets remaining. It was as abject an Indian performance as can be at home in conditions supposed to favor them.
Sample the list of dismissals: Virender Sehwag edged to gully; Cheteshwar Pujara inside-edged to short leg; Sachin Tendulkar was caught dead on the crease when playing back; Virat Kohli, inexplicably, hit a full toss to mid-off; Yuvraj Singh gloved to short leg; and Dhoni, whose technique to spin has been suspect, nicked to slip. Apart from Pujara, each dismissal had a common factor – insecurity.
With the ball gripping and turning, India's batsmen were unsure of what approach to take. Sehwag and Dhoni played at big-turning deliveries with hard hands. Tendulkar was set up by Panesar for the second time in the match, following up deliveries that pushed him forward by ones that left him unsure of what line to play down. Yuvraj was thrusting in the dark aimlessly and Kohli ... well, Kohli is probably the best person to describe what he was doing chipping a full toss to mid-off.
Ashwin's brain freeze minutes before stumps was also a howler. Just why he danced out to loft to mid-off is anyone's guess. Panesar will take it, because it gave him ten wickets for the match – just the second time an England spinner managed the feat since Hedley Verity in 1934. Where India's spinners bowled like novices, Panesar was a magician.
"Kya team India baja payega angrezon ka band? (Will Team I
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...