Friday, November 23, 2007

Nervous 90s: Is Tendulkar caught in a jinx?

When Sachin Tendulkar got out for 97 in the Gwalior One-Day International against Pakistan, it was the sixth time the Master Blaster fell in the Nervous 90s in 2007.

Is this some kind of a jinx which is following him?

"The person who should be getting worried is Tendulkar. I am not worried. I think he is batting like he is 10-12 years younger. This is the vintage Tendulkar. I have not seen him bat like this in a long, long time. While he might dispute that this is his second wind because he says he never lost the first wind, I think you ask the opposition if they are worried about Tendulkar or not. I think 90s are making a heck of a lot of difference at the top of the order. The Indian team is winning. We lost 3-4 to England but he did a wonderful job there too," says Ayaz Memon of the DNA.

But the batsman in question is Sachin Tendulkar - the best batsman or perhaps the best cricketer who ever took to the field.

If it were any other batsman people would have said that considering the fact that he was scoring those many runs it should be celebrated. But can we deny the fact that over the last few months once he gets to the 90s, he is looking for those streaky shots, which perhaps don't exist and gets out.

"Well, Nervous 90s is a very famous phrase in cricket. I think Tendulkar has really found his rhythm now. Over the last three-four months after a spell of being out of sorts he is really competing," Ayaz counters.

"It is question of bad luck along with some nervousness and this is what the game is all about. Even the greatest batsmen can have failures when they are near a landmark. He has 41 ODI centuries and 37 in the Tests. If he were a nervous sort of guy he would have never ever got those 100s. I don't think he has got nervous overnight. It is a combination of many thing and I hope that he get a 100 in his next innings," Ayaz hopes.

I’ve been rewarded for consistency: Ganguly

Having been included in the Test team ahead of an in-form Yuvraj Singh, Sourav Ganguly said it was a reward for consistently performing well in the side for the last few months.

"I've been in this situation even before. But I had best performance in the team in last eight to ten months... So when you perform you are rewarded," Ganguly told reporters after the first day's play in the opening Test against Pakistan at the Ferozeshah Kotla ground in Delhi.

The left hander agreed Yuvraj was strongly pushing for a place in the team after his match-winning performances in the one-dayers and ICC World Twenty20 but said at the highest level of sports it was always like that.

"Yuvraj is pushing for a place... But at this level of sports someone will always be knocking at the door for a place. And that's how it should be. When me and (Rahul Dravid) were young we also were knocking at the door with seniors like (Navjot Singh) Sidhu, (Ravi) Shastri and others in the team.

"It is good because it keeps you on your toes. It is a process and it goes on," he added.

Ganguly rated India's performance as good on the "typical Kotla" wicket on the first day of the Test.

"We bowled in right areas and closing the day at 210 for 8 at the typical Kotla wicket was good." Asked if there was anything wrong with the Indian bowlers as Pakistan were 142 or 8 and went on to cross the 200 mark, Ganguly gave credit to the ninth wicket partnership between Misbah-ul Haq and Mohammad Sami

Great start to Kumble's stint: Ganguly

New Delhi: The Indian team was pleased with its bowling performance of the opening day of the first Test against Pakistan, but would have liked to bowl them out, Sourav Ganguly said here on Thursday.

Pakistan finished Day I of the first Test on 210-8, but India had the chance to kill off their first innings under 200, when they had been reeling at 142-8 at tea on a wicket that generally favours batsmen in the beginning.

"It was a good wicket to bat on but we bowled fantastically well, in the right areas and got great results. The ball did a bit in the morning because of the moisture, but it got better during the afternoon," Ganguly said at the end of the first day's play.

Ganguly was all praise for new Test captain Anil Kumble, who started his innings with a credible performance both as skipper and bowler.

"He (Kumble) was amazing today. The way he handled the bowlers and the field placements, and made me bowl 12 overs," the former India captain, who took the crucial wicket of Mohammad Yousuf just after the lunch interval, said adding that he enjoys his bowling and it's something which does not involve pressure.

Ganguly, however, mentioned that Pakistan did well to claw back during the later stages of the day's play. "We knew a partnership had to come along, and it happened for the ninth wicket. Mohammad Sami batted really well with Misbah to take it to the second day."

The Bengal batsman added that the team was also pleased with fast bowler Munaf Patel's efforts.

"We are very happy with Munaf. He had to go through a lot of talks regarding his fitness and attitude. I thought it was really harsh on him. But he has made a terrific comeback," Ganguly said on Munaf, who removed Pakistan captain Shoaib Malik for a duck.

Asked if the southpaw felt the pressure of facing the axe to accommodate the in-form Yuvraj Singh, Ganguly replied: "I don't think so. I have had a brilliant 10-11 months since my comeback, and I have been one of the better performers in the Test version.

"Yuvraj has done tremendously well for India in the One-Dayers and is in sublime nick at the moment, and is a genuine match-winner for us. It feels good that he is pushing for a place in the Test side," he explained.

"We have four more days to go, and there is a lot of cricket left in the match," the former captain concluded hinting that Pakistan could still give India a tough fight.

Captain Kumble did everything right

New Delhi: Till the eve of the first Test, it looked that fate had conspired against Anil Kumble in his first Test as India captain.

India suffered a body blow with injuries ruling out fast bowlers S Sreesanth and RP Singh. However, the skies cleared up (the cloudy morning might have indicated otherwise) for a fruitful beginning, as Zaheer Khan removed opener Salman Butt early on the opening morning. The joy doubled no sooner, as the left-arm pacer got rid of Younis Khan, who has often proved to be a thorn in India's flesh of late.

And then, the veteran leg-spinner came in to his own. Kumble had got all 10 from the pavilion end in 1999, but he brought himself on as first change from the Tata End. The result: the leg-spinner outdid Yasir Hameed to scalp his first Test victim as India captain.

India tightened the screws on Pakistan further. Mohammad Yousuf's recent form could easily be described as ominous, and despite the precarious situation Pakistan found themselves in, he could turn the tide on the visitors' favour anytime.

Sourav Ganguly's military mediums have deceived the best of the lot, and Kumble's decision to bring him on for a second spell proved to be a master move. The former India captain scalped the dangerous Yousuf, trapped leg before as India had their tails up and twitching.

The picture painted by the Indian bowlers might have reflected devils at the Kotla wicket, but it was largely Pakistan's own doing that saw them collapse. Save the dismissal of Kamran Akmal, which might hint at things to come during the fourth innings (Kumble had him bowled with the one that kept low), the visiting team perhaps reflected the uncomfortable and quick shift from One-Day cricket to Tests.

The Pakistani wicketkeeper-batsman, in the limelight for all the wrong reasons, displayed signs of his former self during last year's Karachi Test, when he bludgeoned the Indian bowlers en route to an 81-ball hundred. He raced away to 30 but captain Kumble couldn't put a foot wrong on Thursday. The third highest wicket-taker in Tests got Akmal for his 50th at one of his favourite venues in just his sixth Test.

Though India would have loved to take guard on the first day after a splendid bowling performance typified by their new captain, Misbah-ul-Haq remained glued to the wicket ably assisted by No. 9 batsman Mohammad Sami, to quash most of the hard work of the Indians.

Nonetheless, on the first day of his 119th Test and first as captain, Anil Kumble led his side by example.

SA surmount Kiwis in a cliffhanger

New Delhi: An unbeaten 52 from 45 deliveries by AB de Villiers rallied South Africa to a 3-wicket victory in a nail biting finish against New Zealand in the one-off Twenty game at the New Wanderers stadium in Johannesburg on Friday.

Chasing a modest target of 130 the home side were on course till a middle order collapse allowed the Black Caps to crawl back in the game.

JP Duminy (33) and de Villiers batted authoritatively as the home side looked in control but after Duminy's dismissal the Kiwis fought back, sending back Boucher (7), Pollock (6), Morkel (9) and Philander (2) quickly to set a humdinger of a finish.

But a cool headed de Villiers held the fort for South Africa and a flick off the legs by Johan Botha (6) off the penultimate ball saw the Springboks home.

Earlier, a late blitz by pacer Kyle Mills took New Zealand to 129-7 in their allotted 20 overs. Mills top scored for the visitors with a fighting knock of 33 in 24 balls.

After South African skipper Graeme Smith put New Zealand in to bat, the home side looked to continue their domination from the Test series as the Black Caps failed to bring any momentum in the innings. None of the Kiwi batters could make any impact as South Africa with some disciplined bowling ran through their top order.

Shaun Pollock did the early damage picking the wickets of Brendon McCullam (9) and Jamie How (14) with only 34 runs on the board. Post the early losses, the Kiwi batsmen fell like ninepins with the home side tightening the screws by not allowing any of the batsmen to prosper in the middle.

Scott Styris held one end up for some time but with 27 runs against his name he fell to a Dale Steyn delivery in an attempt to accelerate the scoring rate.

New Zealand after Styris's dismissal were tottering at 98-7 in the 17th over but Mills with the rub of the green going his way was able to bring some respectability to the New Zealand total.

Teams:

South Africa: Graeme Smith (capt), AB de Villiers, Jacques Kallis, JP Duminy, Mark Boucher (wk), Shaun Pollock, Albie Morkel, Vernon Philander, Johan Botha, Charl Langeveldt, Dale Steyn.

New Zealand: Brendon McCullum (wk), Lou Vincent, Jamie How, Ross Taylor, Scott Styris, Gareth Hopkins, DL Vettori (capt), Kyle Mills, Mark Gillespie, Jeetan Patel, Michael Mason.

SriLanka name 14-member squad for 1st Test

Colombo: Sri Lanka has picked seven specialist batsmen in a 14-member squad named for the first cricket Test against England next week.

The lineup led by Mahela Jayawardene also includes four fast bowlers and two spinners while Prasanna Jayawardane will be the specialist wicketkeeper.

Middle-order batsman Thilan Samaraweera and uncapped Chanaka Welegedara, who were part of the squad to Australia, have been dropped and Farveez Maharoof is sidelined due to injury.

Upul Tharanga, who did not play a match in Australia, will return to his usual opening slot with Sanath Jayasuriya, after Marvan Atapattu retired from international cricket earlier this week.

The first match of the three-Test series will be played Dec 1-5 in Kandy.

The squad: Mahela Jayawardene (Captain), Kumar Sangakkara, Sanath Jayasuriya, Upul Tharanga, Michael Vandort, Chamara Silva, Jehan Mubarak, Prasanna Jayawardane, Muttiah Muralitharan, Chaminda Vaas, Dilhara Fernando, Lasith Malinga, Malinga Bandara and Sujeewa de Silva.

Kumble gets thumbs up from ex-skippers

New Delhi: Never in the history of the game has anyone made his debut as captain after playing as many as 118 Test matches.

Anil Kumble brought the experience of 17 years of international cricket into the job when he led the team on the first day of the first Test against Pakistan at the Ferozeshah Kotla on Friday and former captains, who are in the playing XI, are impressed with the veteran leg-spinner's debut at the helm.

The coin didn't fall in his favour but Kumble wasn't crestfallen.

"It is great feeling. It is an honour to be captain of India," Kumble said after the toss.

Kumble left the emotion behind in the dressing room and did not take long to warm to the job. There were three former captains - Sachin Tendulkar, Sourav and Rahul Dravid - to lead and the most successful of them had words of high praise for Jumbo.

"He handled the field placements very well and most importantly made the me bowl. That was very good," Ganguly said.

In fact the decision to bowl Ganguly proved to be a masterstroke as he used the conditions superbly; choking the runs and picking up the big wicket of Mohammad Yousuf.

"He used the bowlers very well. Immediately he brought in Sourav Ganguly and Ganguly got him a wicket. That's what you need. Some deadly changes and one or two wickets and that changes the complexion of the game," former India skipper Krish Srikkanth said.

And although Kumble's own bowling was as penetrative as ever; earning him four wickets, he resisted the temptation to over bowl himself.

"He did a great job. He brought himself in and got the wickets. Bringing Sourav Ganguly on and getting Yousuf's wicket was a key factor," former Pakistan skipper Waqar Younis said.

Tougher days than the first one at Kotla will inevitably come but Kumble left no one in any doubt that he will be up to the challenge.

Laxman and Dhoni give India the edge

Laxman and Dhoni give India the edge

India 228 for 6 (Dhoni 57, Laxman 57*) trail Pakistan 231 (Misbah 82, Kumble 4-38) by three runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out



VVS Laxman bailed India out of trouble with some gorgeous shots down the ground and through midwicket in his unbeaten 57

A match that appeared to be drifting inexorably in Pakistan's direction in the afternoon session was left tantalisingly poised after a 115-run partnership between Mahendra Singh Dhoni and VVS Laxman pushed India back into contention. Shoaib Akhtar bowled with tremendous pace to dismiss both openers, and there were two wickets too for Sohail Tanvir on debut, but after slumping to 93 for 5, India would have been satisfied to end the day just three runs adrift.

Dhoni and Laxman eased the immediate pressure with scampered singles, a pattern broken only when Dhoni cut Mohammad Sami powerfully for four. Laxman then played two magnificent strokes down the ground off Tanvir, and Dhoni greeted Danish Kaneria's reintroduction with a savage cut for four, but at tea, it was still Pakistan that were dictating terms.

The complexion of the game changed after tea though, with Dhoni's straight swat off Kaneria revealing India's positive intent. Laxman laced some gorgeous shots down the ground and through midwicket, while Dhoni muscled the ball through the off side field whenever he was afforded the width.

Shoaib Malik rotated his bowlers often, using Shoaib's pace in short bursts, and both batsmen were largely content to see him off. Even then, the runs came at four an over as the partnership mounted rapidly. A push through cover took Dhoni to 50, but his movement thereafter was hampered by the ankle that he had injured in Jaipur.

John Gloster, the Indian physio, came on to give it some strapping, but it was clearly a factor as he charged a Kaneria leg break to get the thinnest of edges through to Kamran Akmal. His 57 had spanned just 93 balls, and been the dominant part of a partnership similar to that which saved the Lord's Test for India in July.

Laxman eased to his own half-century soon after, Anil Kumble played one flamboyant square drive off Shoaib, and the fag end of the day was all about consolidation. When the umpires offered the light at the scheduled close, with Pakistan well behind the over-rate, both Laxman and Kumble had little hesitation in walking off.

The situation when Dhoni arrived to a raucous ovation had been very different. Rahul Dravid, who had played some lovely shots in his 38, saw his off stump knocked back by a Tanvir delivery that pitched on middle and leg and left him a shade. Coming soon after Ganguly's departure - bowled off the inside edge to give Tanvir his first Test scalp - it put a severe dent in India's hopes of establishing a first-innings lead.

The unlikely figure of Mohammad Yousuf had provided a telling blow minutes earlier. A sizeable crowd had cheered Sachin Tendulkar all the way to the crease, but when there was a mix-up between him and Dravid over going for a second run, Yousuf's throw to the keeper found him inches short.

Another run-out, albeit a much more bizarre one, had precipitated the end of the Pakistan innings in the morning. Neither Munaf Patel nor Zaheer Khan could break through with the relatively new ball, and after 40 more minutes of being thwarted, Kumble brought himself and Ganguly on.

And it was off Ganguly's bowling that the 87-run partnership - a Pakistani record for the ninth wicket against India - was finally broken. Misbah-ul-Haq, who had faced 243 balls for his 82, played one to point and set off. He seemed to have made his ground when Dinesh Karthik's throw came in. But rather than get his body in the way, Misbah chose airborne evasive action and the ball struck the stumps. When the third umpire handed down his decision, the crowd erupted.

It took Kumble just two balls to clean up Kaneria, leaving India's vaunted batting line-up to chart their own course on a pitch predicted to be at its best for batting on the second day. Though Karthik went before lunch, fending at a Shoaib delivery that moved away, Dravid and Wasim Jaffer proceeded to put on 56 without too many alarms.

Shoaib was the biggest threat, combining the odd unplayable delivery with some wayward stuff. Clearly unhappy with the landing area on the pitch, he asked for sawdust, changed his boots and then kicked a ball away in frustration on his followthrough when he couldn't find rhythm.

The second coming proved to be luckier. Dismayed to see Billy Doctrove turn down a leg-before appeal against Jaffer in the opening over of the innings, he returned to thud one into the pads at serious pace. In the ensuing 6.2 overs, India would lose 4 for 22 and stumble towards an abyss. Fortunately for them, neither Laxman nor Dhoni were in freefalling mood