Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Irfan Pathan in small screen cameo
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
World-Top players to watch out for at the finals
The following lists the 'big five' of the tournament who bring lofty reputations to South Africa plus five, perhaps not well known beyond their own fans, who could grab attention.
THE BIG FIVE
Lionel Messi (Argentina)
Already being talked of as potentially one of the all-time greats, Messi had a taste of the World Cup four years ago as an 18-year-old and then was the inspiration behind Argentina's Olympic gold medal in Beijing.
But it has been his stunning displays in big games for Barcelona that has led people to mention in him on the same terms as Johan Cruyff, Ferenc Puskas and his compatriot Diego Maradona.
A brilliant finisher and a genius with the ball at his feet anywhere close to the danger zone, the only question is whether his team mates will provide him with the quality of service he relishes.
Messi's remarkable four-goal performance in Barca's Champions League victory over Arsenal in April will long be remembered and he now has the perfect stage to show anyone who has not noticed yet that he is a very special talent and can deliver for country as well as club.
Wayne Rooney (England)
Capable of scoring from any angle and playing any role in the attack, the Manchester United forward is still only 24 years old and this tournament is by no means his last chance at glory on the international stage.
Rooney, who can operate effectively as a lone striker or alongside a bigger target man, has it all -- an ability to run at defenders, lead the line, play as a second striker and track back into deeper roles. But the main reason defenders fear him so much is his clinical finishing.
He may suffer from not having a threatening strike partner in the England set-up but if anyone is capable of shouldering all the responsibility for scoring and creating goals it is Rooney.
Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal)
Ronaldo's billboard presence has certainly helped the Real Madrid winger's marketability but it his deft touch, pace and imagination that makes the 25-year-old such a handful.
In many ways a throwback to the days of wingers who hugged the touchline and made fools of fullbacks with clever trickery, Ronaldo will aim to enjoy the World Cup more than four years ago when he was criticised for his role in the controversial dismissal of his then Manchester United team mate Rooney.
The question is whether he plays in a good enough team to truly shine to the best of his ability.
Kaka (Brazil)
Every World Cup needs a brilliant Brazilian and with the premature decline of Ronaldinho and Adriano, it falls on the elegant midfielder Kaka to deliver that special something the team in gold are expected to provide every four years.
Injury disrupted Kaka's season at Real Madrid last term but, after the disappointment of losing in the quarter-finals four years ago, a fit Kaka in a more balanced Brazil lineup will have the perfect chance to show his class. He is light-footed on the ball, a superb passer and has a striker's instinct for goal.
Samuel Eto'o (Cameroon)
Three-times African Footballer of the Year and a three time Champions League winner, Eto'o has been stung by criticism from former Cameroon forward Roger Milla that he had not truly delivered for his country.
Two African Cup of Nations titles and important goals in qualification for these finals suggest Eto'o, has some justification in considering the comments unfair. The finals present a great chance for him to cement his reputation as one of the finest forwards produced by the continent.
FIVE TO WATCH OUT FOR
Teko Modise (South Africa)
Largely because he plays in domestic South African football with Orlando Pirates, midfield playmaker Modise has mostly escaped attention outside his home continent but the 27-year-old now has the chance to show his quality on a global stage.
Modise is the ideal central midfielder for the quick-passing style of Brazilian coach Carlos Alberto Parreira. As well as having the right vision and imagination he possesses impressive pace. If he performs at his best a nice contract from abroad should bring him just reward from this tournament.
Ri Myong-guk (North Korea)
There will be few busier goalies at the World Cup than Ri Myong-guk but North Korea's 'Gatekeeper of the Iron Wall' thrives under pressure.
Ri gave up his dreams of becoming a striker to answer his country's goalkeeping call and will face some of the world's deadliest forwards when North Korea face Brazil, Portugal and Ivory Coast in Group G.
Ri is an inspirational figure for his team mates and has been known to sing North Korea's rousing national anthem when the going gets tough.
Marek Hamsik (Slovakia)
The 22-year-old playmaker with spiky dark hair was Napoli's top scorer in his first two seasons after joining the Serie A club in 2007. Effective on the left and in the middle, he played a key part in sending Slovakia to their first World Cup.
His idol is former Czech creative midfielder Pavel Nedved, who also plied his trade in Italy with Lazio and Juventus after making a name for himself at Euro 96.
With his pace and keen eye for goal Hamsik could follow in the footsteps of his hero in catching the eye of some bigger clubs while on international duty in South Africa.
Giovani Dos Santos (Mexico)
An exciting talent who has yet to live up to his promise in European club football -- where he has struggled for opportunities with Barcelona and current club Tottenham Hotspur -- the half-Brazilian forward has shone at international level.
He was voted Player of the Tournament in the 2009 CONCACAF Gold Cup and delivered a sublime performance in World Cup qualifying against Costa Rica where he scored with a 20 metre strike and then created the other two goals.
Light-footed and imaginative, he has drawn comparisons with Ronaldinho and if Mexico can get their flowing passing game going expect Dos Santos to be at the heart of it.
Samir Handanovic (Slovenia)
Slovenia's surprise qualification had much to do with the superb performances of goalkeeper Handanovic. He kept clean sheets in seven of 12 games and was the hero of the playoff win over Russia after a series of fine saves in the dying minutes.
A superb shot-stopper but also a good organiser, Slovenia coach Matjaz Kek has named him the best goalkeeper in the world and if he lives up to his billing Handanovic could well find himself with one of the world's big clubs after the finals.
(Writing by Simon Evans; additional reporting by Peter Rutherford, Sonia Oxley and Mark Gleeson; Editing by Ken Ferris; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)
Buzz Up Buoyant Proteas eye Test series success over W.Indies
PORT OF SPAIN: South Africa have every reason to start their three-Test series with West Indies on Thursday at Queen's Park Oval in a confident mood.
The South Africans swept the preceding limited-overs matches, comprising two Twenty20 and five One-day Internationals.
Though the visitors would concede that Tests are far different, they enter the series with the confidence of returning to the winning habit, and the full knowledge that their opponents appear to be in disarray.
But the Proteas' vice-captain Jacques Kallis was still cautious about a West Indies side, which is quite unpredictable.
"This is a very different form of the game, and in many ways this is a fresh start to the tour," he said.
"The West Indies can be a very dangerous side, and it is important that we set our standard from the start.
"We've just got to be on the top of the game, and control it, and if we play to our true potential, we will walk away with the series."
No doubt West Indies have been under pressure from their demanding public, which has become sick not so much by the losses, but the manner in which their side has meekly surrendered matches from positions of comfort.
It was clearly evident throughout the limited-overs matches, where West Indies could easily have won one of the T20Is, and two or three of the ODIs had they played more professionally.
"When we watch South Africa, we know they are beatable," said embattled West Indies captain Chris Gayle.
"We came close, and we fell short, but one positive we can take away is that we know they are beatable. We just hope that we can change things around for the Tests.
"We can beat them! We have done it once in South Africa, so there is no reason we can't beat them on home soil."
Naturally, both sides have made changes to their line-ups to boost their chances in the longest format of the game.
The South Africans have strengthened their batting with the choice of Ashwell Prince in the middle-order ahead of left-hander David Miller.
They have also fortified their bowling with Paul Harris replacing Roelof van der Merwe, and Wayne Parnell returning to the line-up for veteran Charl Langeveldt.
The West Indies selectors have resisted the urge to make sweeping changes, with left-handed batsman Brendan Nash, as well as the uncapped pair of off-spinner Shane Shillingford and fast bowler Nelon Pascal shoring up the bulk of the limited-overs squad.
South Africa have dominated West Indies in Tests since their re-entry into international cricket following international isolation.
They have won 14, and lost three of the 22 matches between the two sides, and two of the wins came at Port of Spain in 2001 and 2005 in the two Tests the sides have played here.
West Indies have slumped to six losses and five draws in their last 11 Tests, after their sensational innings and 23-run victory over England last year at Kingston.
Nine of the last 10 Tests at this venue have finished in an outright win, which gives rise to the assertion that the pitch is a result-oriented surface.
Fortunately for South Africa, West Indies have been on the right side on only two occasions, and last year's match against England ended in a tense draw.
It typically offers a wide range of behaviour for the bowlers, with swing and lateral movement for the fast men, giving way to a spinner's paradise over the last couple of days.
With the Test series being played in the opening month of the Caribbean storm season, the weather report makes unhappy reading with scattered and isolated thunderstorms apparently on the horizon.
Squads: West Indies (from): Chris Gayle (captain), Dwayne Bravo (vice captain), Sulieman Benn, Darren Bravo, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Narsingh Deonarine, Travis Dowlin, Brendan Nash, Nelon Pascal, Denesh Ramdin, Ravi Rampaul, Kemar Roach, Darren Sammy, Shane Shillingford.
South Africa (from): Graeme Smith (captain), Jacques Kallis (vice captain), Hashim Amla, Johan Botha, Mark Boucher, Abraham deVilliers, Jean-Paul Duminy, Paul Harris, Ryan McLaren, Morne Morkel, Wayne Parnell, Alviro Peterson, Ashwell Prince, Dale Steyn, Lonwabo Tsotsobe.
- Paul Mitchell
Zimbabwe eye final upset, Lanka seek revenge
Giant-killer Zimbabwe will hope to cap their fairytale campaign with yet another stunning display while revenge will be high on Sri Lanka's agenda in the final of the cricket tri-series here on Wednesday.
Even though both India and Sri Lanka sent second-string squads for the low-profile tournament, few expected Zimbabwe to emerge as the table-topper with 13 points in their kitty.
The minnows twice beat India and both were comprehensive victories. As if to prove it was no fluke, they thumped Sri Lanka in Monday's dead rubber as well to finish their league campaign with three victories from four outings.
Key to their fortune has been Brendan Taylor's sensational form that has already earned the opener three Man of the Match awards.
In Taylor, Zimbabwe have got a batsman who have the skill and the temperament to see them through.
Hamilton Masakadza, Chamu Chibhabha, Tatenda Taibu and Charles Coventry are no dud with the bat either and they would put their best foot forward tomorrow to lift the title they have come so close to.
There bowling has been a revelation as well, especially their battery of spin bowlers. The likes of Ray Price, Prosper Utseya and Graeme Cremer have not only been accurate but also aggressive and the spirited support they got from the fielders made them all the more lethal.
In Monday's match, Sri Lanka threatened to run away with the game when Tillakaratne Dilshan and Upul Tharanga added 122 runs in 20-odd overs. Utseya's double strike then unhinged the Lankans and the Zimbabwean eventually bowled them out for 236 inside 48 overs.
Sri Lanka, however, would do everything tomorrow to prevent a repeat.
Skipper Dilshan will particularly expect Dinesh Chandimal, who scored his maiden ODI century against India the other day, to come good tomorrow and underline his talent with another significant knock.
In the bowling department, onus would be on Thilan Thushara and Dilhara Fernando to provide the early breakthrough and remove Taylor at the earliest.
Teams (From):
Sri Lanka: Tillakaratne Dilshan (capt), Angelo Mathews, Upul Tharanga, Thilan Samaraweera, Dinesh Chandimal, Lahiru Thirimanne, Chamara Kapugedera, Suraj Randiv, Nuwan Kulasekara, Thilan Thushara, Ajantha Mendis, Jeevan Mendis, Dilhara Fernando, Chamara Silva, Thissira Perera.
Zimbabwe: Elton Chigumbura (capt), Andy Blignaut, Chamu Chibhabha, Charles Coventry, Graeme Cremer, Craig Ervine, Greg Lamb, Hamilton Masakadza, Chris Mpofu, Ray Price, Ed Rainsford, Vusi Sibanda, Tatenda Taibu, Brendan Taylor, Prosper Utseya.
Sehwag back from injury, with a bang
For two days, Virender Sehwag was trying hard to meet the 7.30 am deadline to play his comeback match in the Capital's club circuit. While he had to skip his usual teams of choice � ONGC and Collage Group � in the process, the India opener was third time lucky on Tuesday, as he played alongside a few close friends for Rajnigandha Cricket Club in Lala Raghubir Cricket tournament.
The venue was Modern School grounds and a strong opposition in Air India, sprinkled with current and former first-class players, fitted in Sehwag's scheme of things ahead of the Asia Cup.
The India opener showed his complete recovery by fielding in the deep and even bowling the final over and claiming two wickets. But that was a little trailer. The real Sehwag show started past 1 pm, when he opened the innings while chasing 297 in 40 overs. Sehwag scored 69 off 38 balls, with eight fours and four sixes. But the knock was viewed independently from the context of the Group-B league game.
All shots in bookThe first two deliveries were cracked to the point boundary and the third went for a straight six. The 50 on board came within the first three overs, as Sehwag played and missed just once. He had rehearsed all the shots in the manual within the first five overs, including the upper cut he had innovated.
A club game may not be the exact indicator to his form but Sehwag's intent at the crease showed a method amid the madness. He presented the full face of the bat to each ball, allowed 14 dot balls, and ran 11 singles and a double.
Sehwag was dismissed as he tried to go under and hit a fast off-break from Ajit Chandela to be caught at wide long-on.
Looking unhappy to have missed out on more vital match practice � he will play for ONGC in another tournament on Thursday � before leaving for the Team India camp in Chennai, Sehwag still enjoyed the company of his friends in the dressing room as the match simmered up to a high-scoring thriller. Amardeep Sonkar carried on his good work with the ball (4 for 65) to score 82 in the middle-order as Ragnigandha CC scored a two-wicket victory.
Brief Scores
Air India: 296 for 9 in 40 overs (C Madan 74, N Sharma 56, R Prakash 51, Deepak Joon 42, A Sonkar 4/65, V Sehwag 2/13, R Rathore 2/36)
Rajnigandha Club: 299 for 8 in 39 overs (A Sonkar 82, V Sehwag 69, T Jain 56, T Pant 35 n.o., K Singh 2/50, Y Chahal 2/52)
Friday, June 4, 2010
Spirited Zimbabwe stun India again
HARARE, June 3 (PTI): A listless India received their second mauling in a week at the hands of hosts Zimbabwe, who crushed them by seven wickets in the ongoing cricket tri-series here today. In a shock repeat of the tournament opener, India dished out yet another pathetic display in all three departments of the game to suffer a crushing defeat with 11.4 overs to spare that seriously jeopardised their chances of reaching the June 9 final.
SCORECARD
India: Karthik c Taibu b Lamb 33, Murali Vijay st Taibu b Lamb 21, Virat Kohli c Taibu b Utseya 18, Rohit Sharma run out (Chigumbura/Cremer) 13, Suresh Raina run out (Blignaut) 3, Ravindra Jadeja c Masakadza b Blignaut 51, Yusuf Pathan lbw b Price 15, Amit Mishra c Coventry b Cremer 0, Ashok Dinda c Taylor b Lamb 16, Pragyan Ojha not out 7, Umesh Yadav not out 3. Extras: (LB-7, W-7) 14, Total: (for 9wickets in 50 overs) 194, Fall of wickets : 1-58, 2-63, 3-86, 4-92, 5-95, 6-127, 7-128, 8-176, 9-190. Bowling: Blignaut 10-1-22-1, Price 10-0-37-1, Lamb 10-0-45-3, Utseya 10-0-41-1, Cremer 10-0-42-1.
Zimbabwe: Masakadza c Kohli b Jadeja 66, Taylor c Vijay b Ojha 74, Coventry c Pathan b Jadeja 20, Chigumbura not out 16, Taibu not out 13. Extras: (LB-5, W-2, NB-1) 8. Total: (For threewickets in 38.2 overs) 197. Fall of wickets : 1-128, 2-161, 3-170. Bowling: Ashok Dinda 8.2-0-54, Pragyan Ojha 10-0-35-1, Umesh Yadav 4-0-20-0, Amit Mishra 9-0-56-0, Ravindra Jadeja 7-0-27-2.