Thursday, February 12, 2009

NEPAL, NATURALLY: ACC U-17 ELITE CHAMPIONS

U-17 ELITE CUP
NEPAL, NATURALLY: ACC U-17 ELITE CHAMPIONS

Nepal, playing close to perfect cricket, in front of a raucous partisan crowd estimated to be 8,000 strong, beat Malaysia by 10 wickets in the Final of the ACC U-17 Elite Cup at Tribhuvan University. They have now won ACC age-group championships in all categories, including women.

"We just couldn't cope with the pressure," said Malaysia's captain Keithan Goonasageran afterwards, "playing in front of a crowd like this for the first time shook a few of our players but really it was the spot-spot-spot bowling of Nepal's spinners that hurt us."

Malaysia’s first 50 took 13.2 overs, their next 50 took 20 as the Nepali spinners, backed up by athletic fielding and acute placement choked the life out of the vaunted Malaysian middle-order. Goonasageran, victim to leg-spinner Rochak Bhatta, in charging down the wicket at the start of the 31st over, in a hapless attempt to break the stranglehold the most culpable of the Malaysian batsmen. “The boys weren’t taking enough singles,” said Malaysia’s coach Haris Abu Baker.

Malaysia showed enough talent to suggest that their status as ACC Elite nation is assured, little wicket-keeper/opener Zubair Norazmi played some sublime drives, as did Goonasageran himself but they were few and far between. A little more game-skills, like the Nepali players have, and Malaysia would not have succumbed so easily. “On talent the teams are quite close,” said Nepal’s coach Roy Dias, “Malaysia have improved a lot since 2005 (the last time the two teams met, in the ACC U-19 Cup Final). What is most satisfying from the neutral point of view is that two countries with 100% local players have reached the Final and played good cricket.”

Nepal have actually been under-performing in this tournament now, coming through hard-fought games against Hong Kong and UAE not totally convincingly but today they played like champions. The bowlers did what they could and the batsmen – just two of them needed – Sagar Pun and Aakash Pariyar did the rest.

Sagar Pun’s had a quiet tournament up to the Final, this from a local Twenty20 phenomenon, today he was a Virender Sehwag. Late cuts were interspersed with dynamic strokes in front of the wicket, touch was alternated with power: all assured, completely unstoppable. Even when he gave a chance, when on 34, he got away with it. “We lost heart things didn’t go our way early on, we kind of gave up,” admitted Malaysia’s captain. He’d have needed a fielder in the crowd to catch the 6 with which Sagar Pun reached his 50 and took Malaysia past 100 at the start of the 21st over.

Pun and Pariyar hustled for each other, pressured the fielders, dived, scrambled and did everything they could to win the game for Nepal. They did so much no one had to do anything else.

Sagar Pun and Aakash Pariyar

The Deputy Prime Minister of Nepal presented the ACC U-17 Elite Cup to winning captain Prithu Baskota in front of the thousands staying on for the prize-giving, the match being carried live from the start by Nepal TV 2. Cricket’s big in Nepal and it’s going to get even bigger and better.

ACC U-17 Elite Cup
Final: Nepal v Malaysia at Tribhuvan University
NEPAL WON BY 10 WICKETS
Malaysia won the toss and chose to bat
Malaysia: 124 off 37.1 overs (Z.Norazmi 31, K.Goonasageran 28; P.Baskota 3-16)
Nepal: 125 for 0 after 23.3 overs (S.Pun 65*, A.Pariyar 53*)
Man of the Match: Sagar Pun (Nepal)


ACC U-17 Elite Cup 2009

Venue : Kathmandu, Nepal
Dates : 4 – 12 February 2009

Scorecard


NEPAL v MALAYSIA at Tribhuvan University, 12/2/2009

40-overs a side
Toss won by: Malaysia, chose to bat

MALAYSIA R B 4s 6s
†Zubair Norazmi c P.Baskota P.Airee 31 29 6 0
Faisal Rosmanizam c K.Gurung B.Karki 5 29 0 0
*Keithan Goonasegaran st A.Pariyar R.Bhatta 28 59 4 0
Kamarul Azhar c K.Karki P.Baskota 9 20 1 0
Syadhat Ramli c A.Pariyar P.Baskota 2 6 0 0
Ahmad Adnan lbw P.Baskota 1 8 0 0
Kavintheran Kumar c+b R.Bhatta 1 20 0 0
Ramdan Samsudin run out 21 19 2 1
Ammar Rusli b A.Karn 9 18 1 0
Pavithren Nadaesan run out 1 4 0 0
Bakri Zulkifeli not out 0 0 0 0
Extras: b1, lb2, w13 16
Total 124 /10 37.1 ovs

Fall of wickets:
1-34(10.5 ovs), 2-40(11.4 ovs), 3-68(19.2 ovs), 4-73(21.4 ovs), 5-77(23.5 ovs), 6-86(30.1 ovs), 7-87(30.3 ovs), 8-121(36.1 ovs), 9-123(36.6 ovs)

NEPAL Bowling O M R W
Krishna Karki 4 2 14 0
Avinash Karn 5 0 15 0(2w)
Bhuwan Karki 8 2 18 1(1w)
Pradeep Airee 4.1 0 31 1(9w)
Prithu Baskota 8 2 16 3
Rochak Bhatta 6 0 15 2
Bivek Dali 6 0 15 2

NEPAL R B 4s 6s
Sagar Pun not out 65 60 7 3
†Aakash Pariyar not out 53 81 7 0
Prithu Baskota
Pradeep Airee
Nischal Chaudhary
Bhuwan Karki
Krishna Karki
Bivek Dali
Kirten Gurung
Avinash Karn
Rochak Bhatta
Extras:b1, lb2, w4 7
Total 125 for 0 23.3 ovs

MALAYSIA Bowling O M R W
Ramdan Samsudin 5 1 28 0
Kavintheran Kumar 3 0 14 0(3w)
Pavithren Nadaesan 8 0 30 0(1w)
Ammar Rusli 3.3 0 16 0
Kamarul Azhar 2 0 12 0
Ahmad Adnan 2 0 22 0

NEPAL WON BY 10 WICKETS
Man of the Match: Sagar Pun (Nepal)

Umpires: Imtiaz Amjad (Oman), Mohammad Riyaz (Maldives)
Match Referee: Buddhi Bahadur Pradhan (Nepal)
Scorers: Dhiraj Gyawali (Nepal), Pabitra Raut (Nepal)

GROUP A GROUP B
Singapore Bahrain
Nepal Kuwait
Qatar UAE
Hong Kong Malaysia

Match Schedule:
February 4 Nepal v Qatar at Engineering Ground, Pulchowk
Bahrain v Kuwait at Tribhuvan University Ground, Kirtipur
Hong Kong v Singapore at Army School Ground, Bhaktapur
February 5 Hong Kong v Qatar at Tribhuvan
Bahrain v UAE at Engineering Ground
Kuwait v Malaysia at Army School
February 7 Malaysia v UAE at Tribhuvan
Qatar v Singapore at Engineering Ground
Nepal v Hong Kong at Army School
February 8 Nepal v Singapore at Tribhuvan
Bahrain v Malaysia at Engineering Ground
Kuwait v UAE at Army School
February 10 SF1: Nepal v UAE at Tribhuvan
SF2: Qatar v Malaysia at Engineering College
7th/8th Playoff: Singapore v Kuwait at Army School
February 11 3rd/4th Playoff: UAE v Qatar at Engineering Ground
5th/6th Playoff: Hong Kong v Bahrain at Army School
February 12 FINAL: Nepal v Malaysia at Tribhuvan

India tour of New Zealand, 2008/09

India tour of New Zealand, 2008/09

February 2009
Wed 25 Floodlit Match
19:00 local, 06:00 GMT
1st T20I - New Zealand v India
AMI Stadium, Christchurch
Fri 27 Floodlit Match
19:00 local, 06:00 GMT
2nd T20I - New Zealand v India
Westpac Stadium, Wellington
Originally scheduled for March 6, 2009
March 2009
Tue 3 Floodlit Match
14:00 local, 01:00 GMT
1st ODI - New Zealand v India
McLean Park, Napier
Originally scheduled for March 8, 2009
Fri 6 Floodlit Match
14:00 local, 01:00 GMT
2nd ODI - New Zealand v India
Westpac Stadium, Wellington
Originally schedule for March 17, 2009
Sun 8 Floodlit Match
14:00 local, 01:00 GMT
3rd ODI - New Zealand v India
AMI Stadium, Christchurch
Originally scheduled for March 20, 2009
Wed 11 Floodlit Match
14:00 local, 01:00 GMT
4th ODI - New Zealand v India
Seddon Park, Hamilton
Sat 14 Floodlit Match
14:00 local, 01:00 GMT
5th ODI - New Zealand v India
Eden Park, Auckland
Wed 18 - Sun 22
11:00 local, 22:00 GMT
1st Test - New Zealand v India
Seddon Park, Hamilton
Originally scheduled for March 26-30, 2009
Thu 26 - Mon 30
11:00 local, 22:00 GMT
2nd Test - New Zealand v India
McLean Park, Napier
April 2009
Fri 3 - Tue 7
11:00 local, 22:00 GMT
3rd Test - New Zealand v India
Basin Reserve, Wellington

Adjusting to NZ conditions will be tough - Tendulkar

India in New Zealand 2008-09

Adjusting to NZ conditions will be tough - Tendulkar

February 12, 2009




Sachin Tendulkar does not want to disrupt a winning Twenty20 unit during India's tour of New Zealand © AFP

Sachin Tendulkar, who has toured New Zealand six times, has said the toughest task for India will be to adjust to the harsh local conditions. Tendulkar was confident that the seniors in the squad would help the younger players adjust, but he has ruled himself out of contention for the two Twenty20 internationals in New Zealand.

"It is a fairly new team and the challenge is definitely there. Playing in New Zealand, where the conditions are going to be tough, is a completely different experience," Tendulkar said in Mumbai.

Tendulkar said the wind plays an important role in venues like Wellington and one has to be wary of the changing conditions. "In places like Wellington from one end a bowler comes at 135kph with the breeze behind him and then suddenly you are facing someone else who is very slow and there is no wind. With the wind behind the bowler it affects the batsman as he can't keep his eyes open long. So it becomes tough as one needs to change the bat swing, balance and the rest."

India's tour of New Zealand was extended to include a third Test and a second Twenty20 international. The extra fixtures were included at the expense of the tour match which means India will have no practice games during their visit that includes two Twenty20 matches, five ODIs and three Tests. India will arrive in New Zealand on February 20, eight days earlier than originally scheduled, and will begin the tour with a Twenty20 match in Christchurch on February 25.

Napier will host the additional Test, the second of the three-match series, from March 26 to 30. The reworked schedule resulted in the dates for the second Twenty20 game and the first three ODIs being brought forward. The three-day warm-up match against a New Zealand XI in Lincoln between the ODIs and Tests has also been scrapped.

The axed practice match drew flak from former players but Tendulkar played it down. "International calendar is such that we need to adjust to such situations but it should not be a worry," he said.

Tendulkar pointed out that even if there were many rookies on the New Zealand trip the seniors in the management could guide them. "It is going to be a learning experience for the first-timers," he said. "We have a good balance of experience and youth and the seniors and coaches will guide the newcomers."

Asked if he would make himself available for the two Twenty20 clashes on February 25 and 27, Tendulkar said he did not want to "disturb" the balance of the Indian squad. Tendulkar hasn't played a Twenty20 international after featuring in India's maiden Twenty20 match, against South Africa in 2006, and said he had no intention to do so now.

In 2007 he took his name out of contention for the Twenty20 World Cup, opting to take a break. "I was tired and wanted to take a break after the England trip in 2007," said Tendulkar. "It was a conscious decision not to play then and I did not want to have feeling of not being able to give my best. I do not want to disturb the present winning combination. The team is doing well and I do not want to be part of the Twenty20 set-up."

India last toured New Zealand in 2002-03 and were beaten 0-2 in the Tests and 2-5 in the ODIs.