Monday, April 9, 2007

THE NEW TEAM MANAGER SPEAKS ABOUT THE TEAM


India's new interim cricket manager Ravi Shastri said on Monday his major task was to ensure players recovered from the World Cup disaster and enjoyed their game again. "I make no promises. What my endeavour is to see a happy Indian team playing cricket," Shastri told the CNN-IBN news channel from Singapore where he is working as a TV expert for the World Cup. "Watching India playing in the last three to four months just gave me the impression that they were doing a 9-5 desk job with huge weight and expectations on their shoulders. "What I want to tell them is that this is sport and they should go out there and enjoy it. And if you lose in that fashion then I am ready to take it on the chin. "So, no promises whatsoever. I just want India to play happy and good cricket. And you guys watching should enjoy it too." Shastri, a former Test star-turned-commentator will serve as the team's manager for a tour of Bangladesh next month after Australian coach Greg Chappell declined to renew his contract. India, World Cup champions in 1983 and finalists in 2003, were knocked out in the first round of the ongoing tournament in the Caribbean after losing to Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. Shastri, 44, said his role was confined to the Bangladesh tour to give India's cricket chiefs sufficient time to find Chappell's successor for matches in England and Ireland in July. "I love challenges," said Shastri. "So, when I was asked whether you will put your hand up, I said yes. I never want to shy away from a challenge...and if I can help, nothing like it." Shastri said he agreed with Indian cricket officials that a young team should be picked for the Bangladesh tour with an experienced leader in Rahul Dravid in command.
" "You have to look at youth in whatever you do, in whatever walk of life at some stage," he said. "There is a shelf period for everything and if you have got to experiment, then do it against Bangladesh. I am not saying that Bangladesh is weak. They have thrashed South Africa, they have laid India low in this World Cup, so you can never take them lightly. "(But) there's going to be a lot of cricket to be played by India in the next 12 months, so if you want to give youngsters an opportunity then do it early. "When you are playing a Test match, you would like to be playing with your strongest side. So, it's not that the seniors are out of it totally but I would like to see youngsters given opportunities and see what happens." Shastri played down media speculation of a rift in the team between the senior and junior players. "I have read about it," he said. "When I reach Bangladesh I would try my best to clear everything out if there is a problem. No big deal." Asked if he was confident of the team's revival, Shastri said: "A good team doesn't become a bad team in two weeks and a bad team doesn't become an excellent one in two weeks. Be patient." Shastri, a right-hand batsman and left-arm spinner, retired in 1992 after playing 80 Test matches in which he scored 3,830 runs and claimed 151 wickets. He also made 3,108 runs and took 129 wickets in 150 one-day internationals. Widely hailed as possessing a sharp cricketing mind, Shastri led India in one Test match, securing victory over the West Indies on an under prepared wicket in Chennai in 1988 where debutant Narendra Hirwani grabbed 16 wickets.

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

EX SELECTORS BACK DRAVID AS CAPTAIN


Despite the recent World Cup debacle in the West Indies, skipper Rahul Dravid has found support from former Test stars, including ex-chief selectors Gundappa Vishwanath and Kiran More, to continue as the captain of the Indian team for future assignments.
Former India captain Vishwanath, said being India’s best batsman in the team at the moment he should continue to lead for the next couple of years. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) and the selectors should show more patience and continue with Dravid as the skipper.
“I don’t see any reason to change the leadership just because the team under performed in the Caribbean. Moreover, it was a collective failure of the batsmen, which led to the first round ouster in the World Cup and it is stupidity to blame Dravid alone for it. A captain can only be as good as the team,” Vishwanath told Cricketnext.com.
“After Dravid took over as the captain of the team, he has done quite well and his batting too has not been affected in any way and according to me he is the best candidate to lead India for at least the next two years as we don’t have anyone to replace him at the moment despite the fact that Virender Sehwag and Yuvraj Singh are being tipped as the future captains,” the former skipper added.
“I don’t think either of them (Sehwag or Yuvi) are ready to take over the mantle of captaincy right now as Sehwag is still struggling with his form and captaincy will be an additional pressure while Yuvraj is still too raw to fit into the captain’s shoe”, the former Karnataka star said.
“So under the circumstances I would persist with Dravid as he is our best bet and can surely deliver in the long run,” Vishy added.
More, who was instrumental in elevating Dravid to that position when he was the chief selector, said “it is unfair to even think about changing the captaincy now even after Dravid has shown a good percentage of success.”
“In my opinion, there is no way Dravid can be blamed for the World Cup debacle. There is nothing a captain can do if the team fails to score even 200 runs against Bangladesh or if it fails to chase 255 runs against Sri Lanka. I think Dravid did everything humanly possible to restrict the Sri Lankans in the crucial last match but his batsmen deserted him with lack of application,” the former stumper added.

SACHIN TALKS ABOUT INDIAN COACH

The spat between coach Greg Chappell and senior players in the Indian cricket team has taken a dramatic turn.
After media reports which claimed that Chappell was not happy with the World Cup squad and his accusation that some senior players were acting like a mafia, comes another sensational news that Sachin Tendulkar has slammed the coach for questioning his attitude towards the game and the team.
In an article in national daily The Times of India Tendulkar has been quoted as saying that he was shattered and hurt by the coach questioning his attitude.
The Times of India has quoted Tendulkar as saying: "I've given my heart and soul to Indian cricket for 17 years. No coach has ever mentioned, even in passing, that my attitude was not correct. Cricket has been my life. I am shattered beyond words and I feel helpless. I've never felt so bad in my entire career. World Cup was our passion, our collective dream. Tell me, even as the world goes on talking about our defeat at the World Cup, has anyone spared a thought to ask what we are going through?"
For over 17 years, Tendulkar's confrontations with the best bowlers in the world have been the stuff legends are made of.
But with the World Cup debacle, this is one confrontation that the Little Master had so carefully avoided all these years but just couldn't anymore.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

WHO WILL TAKE THE WORLD CUP



THE WORLD CUP FEVER HAS STARTED AGAIN and all the people are wishing that their favourite team wins the world cup .The favourites to win the world cup are


1.AUSTRALIA:

Having one two consecutive world cups and a world cup at the year 1987 and seeing their winnig street in the world cup they are the most probable to win the cup once more.With players like ponting ,hayden,mcgrath gilchrist they stand a very good choice


2.SOUTH AFRICA:
Being the closest of rivals of australia they too stand a very good chance of winning.They have the record of beating australia by chasing highest runs ever in cricket history .having players like pollock,kallis,gibbs they are the strong conteneders for the world cup.

3.NEW ZEALAND:
The kiwis having an excellent set of all rounders and bowlers give a very good competition to the other nations .having players like bond,oram,styris they give a very good challenge


4.Except these nations the other nations like SRI LANKA , ENG LAND have equal chances in the world cup
if you think there are any mistakes please do write a comment

THE WOOLMER'S STORY




Bob Woolmer
England
Player profile
Full name Robert Andrew WoolmerBorn May 14, 1948, Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, IndiaDied March 18, 2007, Kingston University Hospital, Jamaica, West Indies (aged 58 years 308 days)
Career statistics
Test debut
England v Australia at Lord's - Jul 31-Aug 5, 1975
Last Test
England v Australia at Lord's - Jul 2-7, 1981
ODI debut
England v Australia at Manchester - Aug 24, 1972
Last ODI
England v West Indies at Lord's - Aug 28-29, 1976
First-class span
1968 - 1984
List A span
1969 - 1983
NotesWisden Cricketer of the Year 1976
Profile
Bob Woolmer belongs to a select band of Test cricketers who enjoyed success as international coaches when their playing days were over. Indeed Woolmer might be said to be the first to make a bigger impact as a coach, in four years with South Africa, than as a player. For whatever reason, and it might simply have been that his array of gloriously timed off-side strokes made him look a better batsman than he was, he had a disappointing Test career - especially for a man who, in only his second Test, saved England as they followed on against Australia by holding out for 499 minutes against Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson to score 149. Although he added two more hundreds, also against Australia, he first interrupted his Test career by signing for World Series Cricket in 1977, then ended it forever by joining the rebel South African tour of 1981-82. As a coach, his pioneering use of computers to show, for example, where opposing batsmen scored their runs may have stemmed from an experience of his own, batting against Mike Brearley's Middlesex. "Knowing I liked the cover-drive, he had Mike Selvey bowling at me wide of off stump, with two slips and two gulleys. In 45 minutes, I scored 12. Then I chased another wide one from Selvey and was caught at second slip." In the 1996 World Cup, Graeme Hick was a notable victim of Woolmer's computer-based analysis, which revealed that if Hick could be kept scoreless for a spell, he tended to flick an off-stump ball in the air to midwicket. The trap was sprung by Fanie de Villiers, and Brian McMillan took the catch. Woolmer was creative and adventurous. But his coaching was based on a simple premise: the more enjoyable he could make the game, the better his players would respond. No two fielding-practices were alike when Woolmer was in charge. After a spell as the ICC's high-performance manager, he was announced as Pakistan's new coach in June 2004, and signed a contract to remain in charge until the 2007 World Cup. But the tournament was, tragically, to be his last; 24 hours after Pakistan were sent home from the World Cup, he was found unconscious in his hotel room and pronounced dead a few hours later in a Kingston hospital. It later transpired he had been murdered.

THE AUSTRALIANS ON TOP


THE AUSTRALIANS ARE ON A VERY GOOD STREET OF VICTORIES
after defeating ireland and scotland they have also defeated good teams like
west indies and south africa very easily these wins shows there ability
and also that they are back after the defeats against england and new zealand
now i think they have good chances of winning the world cup and according to me
they are the number one contenders for the cup

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

THE GREAT INDIAN TEAM HAS DONE IT AGAIN


THE GREAT INDIAN TEAM HAS DONE IT AGAIN after having so much hopes
and millions of people praying for the indian victory the indian's have lost there
matches with bangladesh and srilanka and by this they are out of the world cup
this was one of the worst performance by the indian cricket team in the history of world cup
what to say lets hope better in the 2011 world cup as for indian cricket team there is always next time