Its first paragraph was quite dramatic. “Indian opener Virender Sehwag has dramatically raised the temperature surrounding Thursday’s first Test against Australia in Bangalore by loudly claiming the Australians cheated to win the spiteful Sydney Test match in January.”
October 14, 2008
Raj reflects…
October 13, 2008
An extended net
Among the many things to emerge from the Brisbane Test of 2003, one of the storylines was of Rahul Dravid’s extended hit in the second innings and how it helped him for the rest of the series ( coming as he was with no record to speak of in Australia and relatively poor form into the match).
Forward fast to 2008 and Bangalore. India goes into the first Test with three of the Fab 4 not having a hit for the better part of a month and a bit. Sachin, because of injury and VVS and Saurav for not being part of the Irani Trophy ( or the warm up game against Australia. Granted that Saurav had a hit against New Zealand A, but that was neither here nor there).
Step forward Ricky Ponting. And his insistence on bowling his part time spinners for extended periods to the three batsmen.
49(126) SRT , 42(142) VVS , 47(115) and 26(68)SCG later, history may just be repeating itself.
PS:- VVS Laxman played in the Irani Trophy.. My apologies for mis-stating this in the post. Thanks Rahul for pointing this out
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October 10, 2008
Whither "restraint of trade" ?
South Africa’s move to bring Kent allrounder Ryan McLaren into the national side has failed after the county did not release him from his three-year contract. McLaren, who’s on a Kolpak deal until 2010, has withdrawn from the ODI squad to face Kenya and Bangladesh.
So, whatever happened to “he is just a player and he should be allowed to play wherever he chooses” and “it is grossly unfair for a cricketing body to prevent a player from plying his trade” and “sporting bodies cannot dictate what contracted players should do”, you know, the usual bile directed towards the BCCI whenever the ICL issue crops up.
October 9, 2008
Day 1 – Playing for the draw
It started with the toss – playing Watson and White with absolutely no match practice behind them was the first indicator.
White’s selection did not surprise me – Australia lost Perth because of over rates and they were not going to repeat that mistake again.
But playing 8 batsmen and going light in the bowling department pointed to a team that was intent on grinding things out, playing time and only when losing was no longer an option was it going for a win ( shades of Sydney 2007).
The second indicator was Ricky Ponting’s innings – he had to exorcise his ghosts and so the 100 could not be better timed. It was the post 100 innings that surprised me. 102 in 185 balls was stretched to 123 in 243 balls – 58 balls for an additional 21 runs when the Indians were there for the taking.
The final indicator – the session by session breakdown of the runs scored
Lunch – 70/1 in 26 overs ( RR 2.69)
Tea – 91/1 in 30 overs ( RR 3.03)
EOD – 93/2 in 33.2 overs (RR 2.79)
Granted that the early loss of a wicket and the assistance available to the seamers called for consolidation in the first session. And the partnership between Katich and Ponting did well to turn the heat on India in the second session.
It is the approach in the 3rd session that intrigues me. India was there for the taking , Ponting had already scored a 100 and the game was favorably poised for the Australians. And yet, instead of ramming home the advantage, the Australians decided to adopt a wait and watch approach.
And the wicket in the last over of the day’s play definitely did not help. Ideally, Australia should have had at least 300 runs on the board as this would have been the ideal cushion for a bunch of players making their debuts in India.
400 is the minimum Australia should be targeting. If they continue at the current rate, it will take them an additional 52 overs – effectively 5 sessions to get 400.
5 sessions out of 15 for 1 completed innings – not the intent expected from a team that has not previously lost at the Chinnaswamy stadium.
Pricky, take a bow!
Good, solid, old school batting.. Lots of guts.. Plenty of determination.
A well deserved first century on Indian soil.
October 8, 2008
Another feather in the BCCI’s cap
The BCCI and Cricket South Africa (CSA) organised an umpires’ exchange programme under which two umpires from India will officiate two first-class matches in South Africa’s domestic competition while two South Africans will stand in Duleep Trophy games in India. CSA has a similar programme with New Zealand Cricket for the past 11 seasons.
Another blast from the past
For those lucky enough to see it, it was an hour to remember!
The hour that will live forever
By Stephen Brenkley at Headingley
Sunday, 25 August 2002
October 7, 2008
You and me Pricky, both
I’ve said to the boys right from the start that we have to play a brand of cricket that’s going to take the game late into the fifth day because that’s how most Test matches end up here, whether it be a result or a draw.
After all, prolonged and painful trumps quick and easy. Every single time!