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Showing posts with label ICC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ICC. Show all posts

Zaheer, Tendulkar rested for West Indies tour

Thursday, June 18, 2009

India's cricket selectors on Wednesday rested key players Sachin Tendulkar and Zaheer Khan for the limited-overs tour of West Indies starting later this month.
Tendulkar, the world's most prolific Test and one-day batsman, is recovering from a finger injury that he aggravated during the Indian Premier League (IPL) in South Africa last month.
Bowling spearhead Zaheer was rested as he was suffering from a shoulder injury, the selectors said in a media release.
Left-handed batsman Suresh Raina was also not considered for selection after he sustained a hairline fracture on his thumb.
"Raina been advised two weeks' rest," the release said.
Left-arm quick Ashish Nehra returned to the squad after four years on the sidelines, thanks to his impressive show in the IPL where he picked up 19 wickets for the Delhi Daredevils.
All-rounder Abhishek Nayar earned his maiden call-up to the Indian squad while opener Murali Vijay also made a comeback in the absence of the injured Virender Sehwag.
Sehwag missed the World Twenty20 in England with a shoulder injury.
India, who won the inaugural T20 Worlds in South Africa two years ago, lost both their Super Eight matches to the West Indies and hosts England to be knocked out before the semi-finals.
The Indians have been on the road since February, sparking fears of player burnout and a growing list of injured players.

India's squad:
Mahendra Singh Dhoni (capt), Yuvraj Singh (vice-capt), Gautam Gambhir, Rohit Sharma, Yusuf Pathan, Harbhajan Singh, Murali Vijay, Subramaniam Badrinath, Abhishek Nayar, Dinesh Karthik, Ishant Sharma, Praveen Kumar, Rudra Pratap Singh, Ravindra Jadeja, Pragyan Ojha, Ashish Nehra.

Coach: Gary Kirsten (RSA)

India' schedule in West Indies:

June 26: First one-dayer, Jamaica

June 28: Second one-dayer, Jamaica

July 3: Third one-dayer, St. Lucia

July 5: Fourth one-dayer, St. Lucia

Mathews' super save legal, says MCC

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Angelo Mathews's spectacular six-saving move against the West Indies in a World Twenty20 match has been deemed legal by Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), the guardian of cricket's laws, who said it was "good for cricket".
Mathews was on the wide long-on boundary Trent Bridge on Wednesday when Ramnaresh Sarwan lofted a Ajantha Mendis delivery towards him.
He caught the ball inside the ropes before, realising his momentum would take him over the boundary, he flung the ball in the air.
Mathews's foot then went over the boundary and, seeing the ball was about to land over the rope and so go for a six, jumped up and hit it into play.
After watching several replays, third umpire Ian Gould informed on-field officials Billy Bowden and Simon Taufel that three runs only had been scored.
"The MCC Laws sub-committee had recently discussed fielding such as this and felt that such brilliant and quick-thinking acts should not be outlawed," said MCC assistant secretary John Stephenson said Thursday.
"MCC is happy with the Law as it is written and occurrences such as the one yesterday, while extremely rare, are good for the game of cricket as a whole. It is also pleasing that two of the committee's members were involved in making the correct decision on the field of play."
Mathews's move was deemed to have prevented a six as Law 19.3 states that a boundary will be scored when "the ball touches the boundary, or is grounded beyond the boundary or a fielder, with some part of his person in contact with the ball, touches the boundary or has some part of his person grounded beyond the boundary."
Sri Lanka beat the West Indies by 15 runs although both sides had already qualified for the second phase Super Eights after each defeating Australia.
Both teams begin their Super Eights programme at Lord's on Friday. Sri Lanka face Pakistan and West Indies take on defending champions India.

ICC World Twenty 20 - 2009 Schedule

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Fri 5 17:30 local, 16:30 GMT
1st Match, Group B - England v Netherlands Lord's, London

Sat 6 10:00 local, 09:00 GMT
2nd Match, Group D - New Zealand v Scotland Kennington Oval, London

Sat 6 14:00 local, 13:00 GMT
3rd Match, Group C - Australia v West Indies Kennington Oval, London

Sat 6 18:00 local, 17:00 GMT
4th Match, Group A - Bangladesh v India Trent Bridge, Nottingham

Sun 7 13:30 local, 12:30 GMT
5th Match, Group D - Scotland v South Africa Kennington Oval, London

Sun 7 17:30 local, 16:30 GMT
6th Match, Group B - England v Pakistan Kennington Oval, London

Mon 8 13:30 local, 12:30 GMT
7th Match, Group A - Bangladesh v Ireland Trent Bridge, Nottingham

Mon 8 17:30 local, 16:30 GMT
8th Match, Group C - Australia v Sri Lanka Trent Bridge, Nottingham

Tue 9 13:30 local, 12:30 GMT
9th Match, Group B - Netherlands v Pakistan Lord's, London

Tue 9 17:30 local, 16:30 GMT
10th Match, Group D - New Zealand v South Africa Lord's, London

Wed 10 13:30 local, 12:30 GMT
11th Match, Group C - Sri Lanka v West Indies Trent Bridge, Nottingham

Wed 10 17:30 local, 16:30 GMT
12th Match, Group A - India v Ireland Trent Bridge, Nottingham

Thu 11 13:30 local, 12:30 GMT
13th Match, Group F - Ireland vs New Zealand Trent Bridge, Nottingham

Thu 11 17:30 local, 16:30 GMT
14th Match, Group E - England vs South Africa Trent Bridge, Nottingham

Fri 12 13:30 local, 12:30 GMT
15th Match, Group F - Pakistan vs Sri Lanka Lord's, London

Fri 12 17:30 local, 16:30 GMT
16th Match, Group E - India vs West Indies Lord's, London

Sat 13 13:30 local, 12:30 GMT
17th Match, Group E - South Africa vs West Indies Kennington Oval, London

Sat 13 17:30 local, 16:30 GMT
18th Match, Group F - New Zealand vs Pakistan Kennington Oval, London

Sun 14 13:30 local, 12:30 GMT
19th Match, Group F - Ireland vs Sri Lanka Lord's, London

Sun 14 17:30 local, 16:30 GMT
20th Match, Group E - England vs India Lord's, London

Mon 15 13:30 local, 12:30 GMT
21st Match, Group E - England vs West Indies Kennington Oval, London

Mon 15 17:30 local, 16:30 GMT
22nd Match, Group F - Ireland vs Pakistan Kennington Oval, London

Tue 16 13:30 local, 12:30 GMT
23rd Match, Group F - New Zealand vs Sri Lanka Trent Bridge, Nottingham

Tue 16 17:30 local, 16:30 GMT
24th Match, Group E - India vs South Africa Trent Bridge, Nottingham

Thu 18 17:30 local, 16:30 GMT
1st Semi-Final - TBC v TBC Trent Bridge, Nottingham

Fri 19 17:30 local, 16:30 GMT
2nd Semi-Final - TBC v TBC Kennington Oval, London

Sun 21 15:00 local, 14:00 GMT
Final - TBC v TBC Lord's, London

Under-performing Bangladesh seek T20 redemption


Given Bangladesh's track record, few rivals will lose sleep over Mohammad Ashraful's men during the World Twenty20 tournament.
The Tigers have lost their last six T20 internationals, 13 of their last 14 Tests and 13 of their last 15 one-day matches, a record that will make even their most ardent supporters squirm.
But write-off Bangladesh at your own peril, as title hopefuls India famously discovered at the 50-overs-a-side World Cup in 2007 when they were knocked out in the first round.
Later the same year, the West Indies suffered the same fate when they lost to Bangladesh in the inaugural T20 Worlds in South Africa and failed to make the second round.
Those two wins in an otherwise dismal international record propelled Bangladesh to centre-stage and sparked a joyous frenzy in the cricket-crazy South Asian nation.
But success continues to elude Bangladesh and it will need a remarkable turn in fortunes for Ashraful's men to excel in the showpiece event of cricket's shortest format.
Bangladesh need to beat either defending champions India or Ireland in the preliminary round to make the Super Eights stage for the second successive time.
"We have a good team suited for Twenty20 cricket, so I am confident we can deliver if we play to out potential," Ashraful said. "We are not scared of taking on the best."
Bangladesh's chief selector Rafiqul Alam said his team's initial target was to repeat the 2007 feat and qualify for the Super Eights.
"I have a lot of confidence in this team which is a nice blend of youth and experience," he said. "The best thing is that the boys have played together for a long time at different levels and know their strengths.
"I am very hopeful that Bangladesh will play some quality cricket in England."
Desperate to see favourable results, Alam and his co-selectors have not hesitated to gamble with raw, young talent for the T20 Worlds.
Among the new faces are two hard-hitting batsmen in Shamsur Rahman, 20, and reserve wicketkeeper Mithun Ali, 19. Ali was picked in the 15-man squad despite the presence of frontline 'keeper Mushfiqur Rahim.
Bangladesh's fortunes will, however, still revolve around their experienced trio of skipper Ashraful, pace spearhead Mashrafe Mortaza and all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan.
The Tigers will be based in Nottingham where they play India on June 6 and then clash with Ireland on June 8.

Afghanistan to get its first cricket board

Afghanistan cricket took another step towards establishing itself Tuesday when President Hamid Karzai gave the go-ahead for creation of the country's first-ever national cricket board.
The president announced the step during a meeting with the team, which has been elevated to the international arena since the 2001 removal of the Taliban regime, a statement from his office said.
Afghanistan received ODI status for the first time earlier this year when the war-torn country finished in the top six of the 2011 World Cup qualifying event.
They will also attempt to qualify for the 2010 World Twenty20 championships in October.
It underscores a meteoric rise for a sport that only started building here in recent years, as thousands of refugees from years of crushing war started returning from exile in cricket-mad Pakistan after the Taliban was ousted.
The cricketers had previously fallen under the country's government-funded National Olympic Committee which regulates and manages all major sports in the country.
The cricket team had long called for its own structure and frequently complains about its lack of budget and facilities which fall way behind those of other cricketing nations.
"This is breaking news for the sportsmen of Afghanistan," the team's secretary general Taj Malook told AFP.
"We will get our own budget and attract the international and government support we need," he said. "This has been much needed."
Karzai will be the patron-in-chief of the new board, which is expected to be set up in the next days, Malook said.

Twenty20 comes home to England

Cricket's newest format returns to its birthplace when England hosts the ICC World Twenty20 next month.
But, as with all the other forms of one-day cricket first played in England at county level, the 'mother country' has found herself having to play catch-up with the rest of the world.
Originally conceived as a fun way of bringing new audiences, particularly those who couldn't watch cricket during the working day, into the game, Twenty20 has taken the sport by storm.
Tournaments such as the Indian Premier League (IPL) are now far more lucrative per match for a player than five-day Test cricket, the traditional pinnacle of the sport.
India, whose administrators were originally hostile to Twenty20 because they feared its commercial impact upon the 50-over game, won the inaugural global tournament in South Africa two years ago.
Nine members of that winning squad, which defeated arch-rivals Pakistan by five runs in a thrilling final in Johannesburg, will be coming to England.
But, in what above all other types of cricket is a game heavily weighted in favour of batsmen, India will be without master run-maker Sachin Tendulkar, who has now opted out of Twenty20 internationals.
Generally short boundaries and fielding restrictions put a premium on big-hitting batsmen and in Yuvraj Singh they have someone who struck England's Stuart Broad for six sixes in an over in South Africa.
Tendulkar, who himself played in this year's IPL, warned it was important that openers Yuvraj and Gautam Gambhir were refreshed after failing to find top form in the IPL.
"I think the key would be how soon they can shed the fatigue factor," Tendulkar said.
Wicket-taking bowlers are an invaluable commodity in a game where economy rates can go out the window and India look to have a promising pace attack.
Left-armer Rudra Pratap Singh, who took 12 wickets in South Africa in 2007, will be supported this time around by Zaheer Khan and Ishant Sharma.
Pakistan, starved of international cricket at home after a terror attack on the Sri Lanka team bus in Lahore in March made the country a 'no-go zone', will fancy their chances of going one better this time around.
"I thought Australia would thrash them in the one-off T20 match in Dubai but it was the other way round and now, if Pakistan play to their potential, they can win the title," Pakistan great Wasim Akram told AFP this month.
Australia have dominated all forms of cricket during the last decade except Twenty20 and captain Ricky Ponting is determined to improve both his and the team's record.
"The past couple of games I've played have been very poor," he said. "In the two games in South Africa I made one in each. It's not great form going into a World Cup."
However, at least he is set to take part - which is more than England captain Andrew Strauss.
The opening batsman has opted out of the tournament because he thinks he isn't a good enough Twenty20 player.
Worryingly for tournament organisers, the attention of much of the British media, and indeed home cricket fans, appears firmly fixed on the Ashes Test series at home to Australia which comes after the World Twenty20.
England, for all their experience, have never won a major international one-day tournament and they head into this event with injury doubts over star performers Andrew Flintoff (knee) and Kevin Pietersen (Achilles).
But the IPL and subsequent international form of Ravi Bopara has shown England that there is life beyond "Freddie" and "KP".
Sri Lanka and New Zealand have repeatedly punched above their weight in international tournaments and could do so again during a tournament that will take place at three of English cricket's most historic venues - Lord's, the Oval and Trent Bridge.
And the West Indies could yet put a largely disappointing tour of England behind them in this format.
Meanwhile, Bangladesh and Ireland, who have both enjoyed shock wins on the global stage in the past, will dream of further upsets although, with both Scotland and the Netherlands taking part, there is also the capacity for some hugely lopsided results too.
For the first time the corresponding women's tournament will run in parallel with the main men's event, with both finals taking place on the same day at Lord's where, thanks in part to Twenty20, permanent floodlights are now a feature of the ground.
The tournament gets underway on June 5.

ICC hits back over Pakistan World Cup claims

Friday, May 15, 2009


The International Cricket Council (ICC) on Thursday hit back at Pakistan over a legal challenge launched by the Asian giants after they were stripped of matches in the 2011 World Cup.
The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) said Saturday it would challenge the ICC decision to move matches out of the country over security fears. The PCB branded the decision legally flawed.
But the ICC Board said on Thursday that they had not decided to remove the PCB as a joint host of the event, but only that the matches assigned to the PCB should be played outside Pakistan.
ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat said: "We are naturally disappointed that the PCB has chosen to pursue its grievance with the ICC through legal channels but, having received correspondence from its lawyers, we have now responded.
"We used our response to clarify inaccuracies and misunderstandings in the PCB's claim, including confirmation of the fact that the agenda and the Board papers for the recent ICC Board meetings did very specifically raise the question of whether the World Cup 2011 matches assigned to the PCB as joint hosts should be relocated outside of Pakistan.
"We also pointed out that the ICC Board agreed only that the matches should be moved away from Pakistan, not that the PCB should be removed from its position as a joint host of the event itself.
"The suggestion the ICC Board was not empowered to decide that matches should be moved away from Pakistan and that such a decision was 'legally flawed' is also incorrect and without foundation."
The ICC insisted that concerns over security were paramount.
"We need to deliver a tournament that is safe, secure and, above all, successful and it was on that basis that the decision was taken that matches could not be played in Pakistan," added Lorgat.
"We hope the PCB realises that by attempting to pursue the matter through legal channels, it will result in the diversion of funds and resources better served to ensure a safe, secure and successful tournament in 2011, something that will benefit all our members, including Pakistan."

Shoaib Akhtar to miss Pakistan's T20 camp

Pakistan fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar said Wednesday he would skip the Twenty20 team's conditioning camp at a luxury holiday resort due to a skin problem.
"I have skin problems in the groin... a doctor advised me a week's rest, so I will miss the conditioning camp starting from Thursday," Akhtar told AFP.
The 33-year-old Akhtar was selected for Pakistan's 15-man squad despite question marks over his fitness. He played only four Twenty20 games last year owing to fitness and discipline problems.
When Akhtar returned in February this year, he was dropped from the team after getting just one wicket in the two one-day matches against Sri Lanka. He was later ruled out of the Test series against Sri Lanka because of knee problems. The series was abandoned after a deadly attack on the Sri Lanka team in Lahore.
Akhtar played four one-day matches in Pakistan's latest one-day series against Australia in United Arab Emirates, taking three wickets without completing 10 overs in any of the matches.
Pakistan's World Twenty20 squad will undergo fitness drills at the Pakistani hill resort of Bhurban before playing three practice matches ahead of the second World Twenty20 tournament starting in England from June 1.
Akhtar hoped he would be fit in time for the practice matches.
"I will be fit when the practice matches start and will play these matches. Playing Twenty20 is a great challenge and hopefully I will be up to it," said Akhtar.
The mercurial paceman was also included in the inaugural World Twenty20 squad held in South Africa in 2007 but was expelled two days before the event on disciplinary action for assaulting team-mate Mohammad Asif with a bat.

India gives rebel ICL players a second chance

Wednesday, April 29, 2009


Manohar said the decision was taken after some ICL players "admitted they made a mistake in joining the rebel league"
India's cricket chiefs on Wednesday said players signed up with an unauthorised Twenty20 league would be allowed to play in official matches if they severed links with the rebel body.
Local players with the Indian Cricket League (ICL) can play domestic first-class matches if they end their rebel contracts by May 31, but must wait for a year to be eligible for international cricket, officials said.
Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) president Shashank Manohar said the decision was taken after some ICL players "admitted they made a mistake in joining the rebel league."
"We have decided to grant amnesty to ICL players and welcome them to return to the BCCI fold," Manohar told reporters after a meeting of the BCCI's working committee here.
"The players will not be given any international assignment for one year after they quit the ICL as a punishment. But they can play in domestic competitions with immediate effect.
"They have been given amnesty time till May 31."
There are at least 85 Indian players aligned with the ICL, which is bankrolled by India's largest listed media company, Zee Telefilms.
The ICL, headed by the country's lone World Cup winning captain Kapil Dev, also signed on foreign stars such as the retired Brian Lara and Inzamam-ul Haq, and current players like New Zealand fast bowler Shane Bond.
The ICL organised two tournaments in 2008, but their next edition in March this year was cut short due to security concerns following the Mumbai attacks.
There was no immediate reaction from ICL officials, who were planning to hold a tournament in October.
ICL players were banned from official cricket around the world at the behest of the powerful Indian board which organises its own Twenty20 competition, the Indian Premier League.
The second edition of the IPL, featuring the world's top stars and Indian players, is currently being played in South Africa.
The International Cricket Council (ICC) earlier this month rejected an application by the ICL for "authorised unofficial" status, saying it did not meet its criteria.
"Authorised unofficial" status would have allowed ICL players to play Test, one-day or Twenty20 cricket for their respective countries.
With India clearing the decks for the return of its ICL players, other nations may follow suit and allow their players to take part in official cricket.
There are an estimated 60 foreign players associated with the ICL.