I have no faith in this Indian bowling attack

The more I watch one-dayers, the more convinced I am that this is a gamethat revolves how well a side can force the opponents to be on thedefensive. ‘Pressure’ is the keyword, and it plays an important role nomatter what the reputation of a player is.The obvious game plan is to put up a reasonable score on the board andthen try to restrict the other side. It was no different in the secondone-day international played at Cuttack, which, in my opinion, is bestdescribed as a flop show by the Indians.

© AFP

I think England did pretty well to score 250 after being asked to batfirst. There was some moisture in the wicket, but the Indian seamersfailed to make full use of it. Once again, Nasser Hussain impressed mewith his approach to the game. He played a good hand of 46 though hethrew away his wicket at the wrong time.Michael Vaughan and Paul Collingwood played excellent cricket. Theyshowed the Indian batsmen the importance of taking quick singles andconverting the ones into twos. It was the run out of Vaughan that gavethe Indians some respite.The target of 251 runs was never expected to be a tall order for theimposing Indian batting line up. All it needed was for one of thebatsmen to play a long innings and India were through. That, however,did not happen, as the three run outs turned out to be crucial inIndia’s defeat.

© CricInfo

I must applaud the commitment showed by this English team. Theirfielding was brilliant and this meant that the Indian batsmen wereconstantly under pressure. And once Sachin Tendulkar was unluckily runout, the pressure on other batsmen multiplied manifold and they meeklysuccumbed to it.I have written in previous columns that there is nothing to choosebetween the two teams. Now that the series is tied at 1-1, the remainingmatches are bound to be much closer affairs. I can only wish and hopethat the Indian batting comes good sooner than later as I haveabsolutely no faith in the Indian bowling attack.Nothing seems to be in sync when India is in the field. If the bowlershave to make an impression, they have to get back to the basics.Ganguly, for his part, must back his bowlers with better fieldplacements. The bowlers, meanwhile, will have to remind themselves thatit is important that they bowl on one side of the wicket (and to thefield set for them) if they are to reap any rewards at the highestlevel.Before ending, I must congratulate the England team for their fine allround display which helped them to pull off a remarkable win on Indiansoil.

Karnataka complete emphatic innings win over Goa

Aided by a fine four wicket haul by Mohd Aleem, Karnataka scored anemphatic innings and 147 run win over Goa in their P Ramachandra RaoTrophy (Under-22) match at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bangalore onFriday.Resuming at a hopeless 85 for 5 on the final day, Goa’s second inningsfolded up with the addition of just 58 runs. Overnight batsman, AJadhav (27) departed caught in the slips by Mahesh off Chaitra. Then GPhadte (28) was caught behind by Shambal off Chaitra. Dharmichand whoreplaced Chaitra, had N Haglekar (3) caught and bowled off his firstball. Then in the 46th over, Aleem trapped G Narvekar (4)leg before and two balls later had Gonsalves (0) caught behind tosignal victory to Karnataka.Earlier, in reply to a paltry score of 80 by Goa, Karnataka declaredtheir first innings at 370 for nine aided by fine centuries by ARMahesh (103 not out) and S Ponnappa (153). Resuming at 178 for 1, onthe second day, Karnataka lost overnight batsman Amit Kumar (15) inthe second over of the day, bowled by D’Souza. Three overs later newbatsman S Shinde (2) was caught at mid off by Gonsalves off Jakati.This brought in AR Mahesh to the centre. Both Ponnappa and Maheshforged a 92 run partnership for the fourth wicket in 23 overs.Ponnappa after a 306 minute stay departed when he was caught byGonsalves at mid wicket off Jakati. Ponnappa during his stay faced 250balls and found the boundary ropes 15 times and managed to clear itonce. Though wickets kept falling at regular intervals Mahesh went onto complete his century. Mahesh during a 222 minute stay, faced 164balls and hit nine fours and three sixes. Karnataka skipper S Shindedeclared the innings with the score at 370/9.

Rangers dealt Aaron Ramsey injury blow

Rangers boss Gio van Bronckhorst has been hit with a worrying injury blow to Ibrox midfielder Aaron Ramsey…

What’s the latest?

Rob Page has revealed that the Gers ace sustained a knock whilst playing for his country last week.

Speaking about the midfielder and his team-mate Gareth Bale, the 47-year-old told Sky Sports, via STV: “They both struggled towards the end of the game. You could see both of them were holding their groins and hamstrings.

“They both had a tough 95 minutes. But we’ll have another night and we’ll make that decision in the morning whether we involve them in the 23. They’re not going to start.”

Livid

This update will surely leave the Ibrox faithful livid, as the Juventus loanee appears to have suffered a big injury setback at the worst possible time.

Ramsey has struggled for fitness since arriving in Glasgow in January and finally made his full Premiership debut for the club prior to the international break. He started the 2-1 win over Dundee away from home and scored his first goal for the Scottish giants as he converted from close range after Kemar Roofe’s effort was saved.

The ex-Arsenal man followed that up with an impressive showing for his country against Austria. As per SofaScore, he won four of his six duels and created two chances in the middle of the park as he registered a rating of 7.3 in the World Cup play-off encounter.

These two performances suggest that he was finally starting to find his feet after a difficult time with injuries. However, that appears to have ended swiftly as he has been hit with another body blow, and it remains to be seen how long he will be sidelined with this latest knock.

FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast. FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast.


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Therefore, supporters will be livid as he may not be able to build on the foundations he has built for himself in the last two games for club and country. They will be frustrated by his fitness issues and potentially question Ross Wilson for sanctioning a deal for him in January when they might have been able to bring in a player with a better injury record.

Hopefully this turns out to be a minor issue for the Welshman and he will be available for selection when it comes to the Old Firm derby on Sunday. Rangers face a huge clash with Celtic in the Premiership this weekend, and losing Ramsey would be a bitter blow for Van Bronckhorst’s side.

AND in other news, Rangers played a masterclass over Ibrox “dafty” whose value plummeted 50% in 1 year…

Bid at auction to face Muralitharan

Muttiah Muralitharan, the Sri Lanka offspinner, is offering his fans the opportunity to bid on eBay for the chance to face him.The charity auction, at ebay.co.in, ends on December 11, and all the funds raised will go to Muralitharan’s own charity, the Foundation of Goodness which was set-up in 2004 following the tsunami which devastated the country.The highest bidder will face ten deliveries from Muralitharan on December 16 at the Seenigama Oval in Galle.

Hussey stars in low-scoring contest

Scorecard and ball-by-ball commentary
How they were out

Jon Lewis struck early blows as England fought back after a poor batting performance, but their lack of runs proved crucial in the end © Getty Images

A committed bowling display led by John Lewis easedEngland’s pain, but it was not enough to preventanother defeat that was set up by a dire battingeffort. After England spluttered to 155 all out in 42overs on a strange surface, the home team copied themistakes and dropped to 4 for 48 before sweating to afour-wicket victory.Despite gaining an unlikely position of strengththrough Lewis’s three-wicket opening, England againreleased the pressure and Michael Hussey respondedwith a match-sealing 46. Hussey worked with MichaelClarke and Brett Lee, who finished on 20 aftersurviving a torrid spell from Andrew Flintoff, tosteer the side out of trouble. However, they werefortunate to claim a bonus point from an encounterthat turned out to be relatively even.Adam Gilchrist, the stand-in captain, committedAustralia’s first serious lapse as he heaved Lewis toJames Anderson at fine leg on 8 and Matthew Hayden wasthird out for 19 to a similar dismissal. AfterAnderson had ended Brad Hodge’s one-match opening atNo. 3 for 0, Lewis enticed Andrew Symonds (4) intoa wild flash that he nicked to Paul Nixon. Lewisfinished with 4 for 36 from his ten overs whileAnderson was also impressive in claiming 2 for 29.”You can’t fault what we did in the second half,” Flintoff said. “You can’t fault the commitment and the way they never gave up.”Hussey and Clarke, who played sensibly for 36off 62, crawled forward in a 45-run stand, but Lewiscame back to force Clarke’s exit with a leg-sidecaught-behind and when Cameron White was lbw toAnderson for 5 Australia were 6 for 108. It could havebeen worse as Hussey looked guilty when surviving ahuge appeal for an edge on 19, but the shout was notsupported by Daryl Harper.The television replays were inconclusive and Hussey later defended his decision to stand his ground. “I’m not a walker, unlike ‘Gilly” [Gilchrist], who walks when he nicks,” Hussey said. “I take the good decisions with the bad. I just leave it up to the umpires to make the decision.” The ruling became more crucial with each run he scored and added to a poor day for the visitors.England wasted their most entertaining opening of theseries with a horrific top-order collapse of 5 for 19and they needed 31 from Jamie Dalrymple to eke out thefinal total. The debutant Mal Loye and Andrew Straussgave the innings a huge boost by bringing up the 50from 61 balls, but it was the high point of anotherdisastrous batting performance against Australia.

Glenn McGrath removes Ed Joyce, one of his three wickets © Getty Images

They lost 3 for 1 in eight balls to fall to 5for 71 as Glenn McGrath showed he had recovered from aminor groin problem by taking 3 for 24. His firsteight overs included a hat-trick chance when heremoved Ed Joyce for 5 and Paul Collingwood for afirst-ball duck to Gilchrist catches.Ian Bell’s run-out was the worst of the dismissalsafter he was involved in a massive mix-up withCollingwood the delivery after Joyce had fallen. Bellglided Mitchell Johnson to gully and then performed astuttering do-si-do with his partner while CameronWhite dived, mis-fielded and then back-handed the ballon to the stumps. It was a stunning piece of work toend a terrible communication breakdown.At that point the batting mood dropped from optimisticto black humour after the encouraging 52-run openingpartnership. Flintoff, who was leading the teaminstead of Michael Vaughan, made a brief attempt at arecovery with 27, which included three fours, but hefell swiping Brett Lee to deep square leg where Hodge collected a fine running and diving catch.

Mal Loye slog-sweeps Brett Lee for six before falling for 36 © Getty Images

Hodge was called into the side while Ricky Pontingrested and he made sure the captain was not missed inthe field, even if he was unable to match hisperformance with the bat. Strauss also fell to anoutstanding effort from Hodge when he pulled McGrath.The ball lobbed in front of square leg, and Hodgeleapt at full length to accept a stunning one-handedcatch. Strauss posted a hard-working 18 after Loye’sbreathtaking start to his international career earneda run-a-ball 36.Vaughan’s hamstring tear provided a space in the squadfor Loye, who was spending the off-season withAuckland in New Zealand, and it did not take him longto put his signature on the game. Dropping down on oneknee to Lee, he produced an outrageous and stunningslog-sweep for a six behind square leg to jump to 11.The shot has been part of his repertoire sinceTwenty20 was invented, but it was a shock to see itagainst one of the game’s fastest bowlers.

Runs, runs, runs…

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Shahid Afridi set Lahore ablaze with a 78-ball century © AFP

It’s not often that a fantastic 199 is overshadowed but three other stupendous hundreds made it a day of revelry for the Pakistan batsmen, amassing a mammoth 679 for 7 declared on the second day of the first Test at Lahore. Younis Khan was unlucky to miss out on what would have been a cracking double-hundred, but superbly-timed centuries from Mohammad Yousuf and Kamran Akmal, interspersed by a manic classic from Shahid Afridi, put even that innings in the shade.India’s riposte, in the 13 overs that were possible before the light faded, was fiery with Virender Sehwag, rattling seven fours in his 35-ball 36, leading them to 65 for no loss. Rahul Dravid, opening the innings for the second time in three Tests, gave him company as India began climbing one mighty mountain. Both staved off a peppering of short stuff from the erratic Shoaib Akhtar and Sehwag soon counterattacked with characteristic panache. Yet, with 414 still needed to avoid the follow-on, having endured a thorough battering for two days, it may turn out to be India’s biggest challenge in a while and considering the forecast of rain for the next two days, they might just be tempted to keep one eye on the met department.Controlled hundreds like Younis’s, or aggressive ones like Yousuf’s, or even rapid ones like Akmal’s, the fastest by a wicketkeeper, can take a game away, but by virtue of its sheer rage and destructive impact, Afridi’s 78-ball century probably had the most demoralising effect. It was like watching the skies on a festival night, with rockets flying off in all directions, lighting up the Gaddafi Stadium. Seven howitzered sixes, four successive ones off Harbhajan Singh in one over, the second most expensive in Tests, and seven other whiplashed fours tell a tale of its own and the fact that he scored his last 82 runs in 47 balls explains the ferocity of the scoring. But it became doubly stunning because of the manner in which it was executed. To clear the infield is one thing, to summon a primal force and lambast the bowling, despite fielders patrolling the boundary line, is quite another astonishing thing altogether.His partnership with Akmal took Pakistan to a different strata as the game began resembling a Twenty20 played out in whites. To concede 500 would have been bad enough; to be torn apart for 179 runs in the next 20.2 overs must have been heart-rending. Though he was the more silent partner of the two, Akmal produced a sparkling gem of his own and broke Adam Gilchrist’s 84-ball record for the fastest century by a wicketkeeper. He breezed along at close to a run-a-ball, reaching his fifty off 50 balls, before stepping on the pedal and joining Afridi in a clattering party.Both these, though, came after the two overnight batsmen had set the stage. Younis and Yousuf were relentless in their pursuit this morning and seamlessly shifted gears against a withering line-up. Twenty eight off the first five overs, 47 off the first 10, 94 in the first hour, 158 before lunch. When Yousuf came in yesterday, Younis was on 60. At a certain stage this morning, he was within touching distance of overtaking him. The rollicking pace he set, with a certain unassuming calm, left India in quite a hopeless situation. The array of strokeplay, covering the entire spectrum, was stunning; the manner of execution, gorgeous; and the consistency with which he managed it, simply admirable. When he square drove, the fielders usually just watched; when he pulled, you couldn’t but marvel; when he swept, even the most ambitious of sweeps, it was almost as if there was no other way.

Younis Khan went past 150 but was unlucky to miss a double hundred © Getty Images

Younis, at the other end, savaged his way to his 150 with a fine square-drive in the second over of the day. He went at a fair clip himself, charging the singles and smacking a couple of cracking hoicks, but he showed that he was equally adept at playing second fiddle. Once Yousuf got close to his score, he awoke and cashed in on large dollops of largesse from Sachin Tendulkar, whipping him for 15 runs in an over and leaving India with a double-barelled attack to contend with. He fell marginally short of his first home double-hundred, taking off for an over-ambitious single, but had provided the platform for a commanding total.Spare a thought for the bowlers. After a harrowing start yesterday, they found themselves being ground to the dust. Agarkar’s second over of the day went for 13, heralding a deluge that never appeared to end; Irfan Pathan was forced to dig it in short – hardly threatening when delivered at around 125 kph – and was soon ripped apart in the Afridi-Akmal carnage; Harbhajan was thundered high and handsome – Afridi alone clobbered him for 59 runs in 39 balls; and Anil Kumble, despite his shimmering moments, was adeptly dismantled.On a day when shoulders dropped and helplessness set in, the one real moment of joy for India came after the dismissal of Rana Naved-ul-Hasan, brilliantly caught by Sourav Ganguly at mid-off. Back-pedalling to catch a lofted drive, he thrust out his right hand at full stretch and, despite initially mis-judging the trajectory, pulled off an absolute beauty. It was like a stunning goal being scored in the final minutes of a football game, with all remaining hope long dashed.

Mohammad Yousuf st Dhoni b Kumble 173 (455 for 3)
Inzamam-ul-Haq lbw b Kumble 1 (456 for 4)
Younis Khan run-out (Harbhajan) 199 (477 for 5)
Shahid Afridi c Harbhajan b Agarkar 103 (647 for 6)
Rana Naved-ul-Hasan c Ganguly b Agarkar 9 (668 for 7)

Tasmania favour Butterworth over McNees

Adam Crosthwaite’s one-day performances with Victoria have helped earn a Pura Cup place© Getty Images

Tasmania, who won the ING Cup on Sunday, have called in Luke Butterworth for the Pura Cup match against Victoria at the MCG starting on Thursday. Butterworth, the allrounder who took one wicket in the Tigers’ seven-wicket victory over Queensland, has replaced Darren McNees.Adam Crosthwaite, the wicketkeeper, will make his first-class debut in place of Peter Roach for Victoria. Crosthwaite has been a regular in the one-day side this season and his impressive performances have pushed him ahead of the incumbent Roach, who was dropped after the win over South Australia.Crosthwaite, 20, has played 11 limited-overs matches for Victoria and was a member of the Australia under-19 team in the 2003 Youth World Cup in Bangladesh. He is also a graduate of the Victorian Institute of Sport, and will become the 802nd player to represent Victoria at first-class level.The Bushrangers are fourth on the Pura Cup ladder, ten points behind New South Wales and Queensland, who are level on 28 points, and need an outright victory to pressure their rivals with three matches remaining. Tasmania are second last on eight points.Victoria Cameron White (capt), Jason Arnberger, Adam Crosthwaite (wk), Matthew Elliott, Ian Harvey, Shane Harwood, Brad Hodge, Nick Jewell, Michael Lewis, Jonathan Moss, Graeme Rummans, Shane Warne.Tasmania Daniel Marsh (capt), Michael Di Venuto, Michael Bevan, George Bailey, Travis Birt, Luke Butterworth, Sean Clingeleffer (wk), David Dawson, Xavier Doherty, Brett Geeves, Adam Griffith, Damien Wright.

Lancashire reappoint Hegg

Lancashire have reappointed Warren Hegg as their captain for the 2004 season. Hegg, 35, made his debut for Lancashire in 1986, and has skippered them for the last two years. In 2003 Lancashire finished as runners-up in the County Championship, and won the Second Division of the one-day National League.Next year Hegg, who kept wicket for England in two Tests in Australia in 1998-99, will lead a team bolstered by the recruitment of the England allrounder Dominic Cork from Derbyshire. Hegg said today: “I’m thrilled that the club have decided to award me the captaincy again. It’s a huge honour to lead the team and I’m looking forward to a successful season next year.”

India clinch series with massive win at Hyderabad

Even the Indian women would not have imagined that England would succumb so meekly in this five-match women’s one-day international series. At the Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium in Hyderabad, India took an unassailable 3-0 lead in the series, thereby closing the door on England. A thumping 113-run win settled the issue, with India outplaying England in every department of the game.England won the toss, but little else for the rest of the day, and put India in to bat on a flat track. Early in the day, there was palpable movement in the air for England’s seamers, but the Indians were upto the task. Jaya Sharma (9), back at the top of the order, was the first to go, and Anju Jain (8) followed her to the pavilion. At this stage, India were in a spot of bother at 31/2. Skipper Anjum Chopra, however, steadied the ship; her innings was not pretty, and far from her best, but it served its purpose.Not attempting anything fancy, Chopra saw off the accurate medium-pace of Lucy Pearson. The left-arm seamer ended with an impressive first spell of 7-2-10-1. Having done all the hard work, however, Chopra was unable to make a big score and fell on 12 (50 balls).The fall of Chopra’s wicket brought Mithali Raj and Mamatha Maben together. A 52-run partnership for the fourth wicket ensued, with Maben and Mithali playing sensibly throughout. Knocking the ball into the gaps and collecting singles for the best part of their partnership, the pair did not miss out when the loose ball was on offer. Mithali, usually a free-stroking bat, was not at her best, but managed 38 (71 balls, 4 fours) before falling to the spin of Clare Connor.In the presence of Arundhati Kirkire, who played some innovative cricket, Maben brought up her half century. The Bangalore all-rounder, who last played for India way back in 1993, when the team travelled to England for the World Cup, had been unable to find a place in the Indian team until this series. Maben also suffered a serious setback in 2000, when she dislocated her shoulder on the opening day of the CricInfo Rani Jhansi Trophy. The domestic season of 2001, however, saw her stage a strong comeback, scoring consistently throughout the year. Making a half-century in just the third game after her comeback, she has justified her selection, something that took eight long years to happen. Maben remained unbeaten on 56 (86 balls, 5 fours).Kirkire’s almost run-a-ball 34 (4 fours) ended in the last ball of the Indian innings. The Maben-Kirkire pair had added 75 for the fifth wicket and taken India to 191 in 50 overs.Attempting to chase a challenging target, England never appeared to be in the running. Caroline Atkins and Arran Thompson made 21 apiece, but no other batsman looked at all comfortable out in the middle. The Indian seamers kept a tight line from the very outset, cutting out England’s chances of getting a flying start. The loss of wickets at regular intervals continued to be a problem that dogged England. With no partnerships materialising, the visitors were soon at sea, with the score reading 70/9 after 37 overs. It was only a matter of time before the last wicket fell, on 78, bringing the match to a close.For the Indians, seamer Sunita Singh sparked off the collapse, ending on 10-3-9-2. The Western Railways seamer will be especially happy with her effort given that the wicket was so good for batting. Singh was well supported by the off-spin of Nooshin al-Khader (2/24). Towards the end of the innings Mithali Raj, brought on to bowl her very slow floaters, turned out to be the surprise package, scalping three wickets for four runs off 4.3 overs.After the match was over, Mithali, delighted to receive the Woman of the Match award, had this to say. “It feels great to do well in my home ground, in front of all those who have supported me. When I came in to bat, we had lost both openers and the captain, so I needed bat sensibly. As vice-captain, it was my duty to take the team out of the situation it was in, and that is what I did,” she said.Chopra was less restrained and began by congratulating her players for the series win. “Mithali and Mamatha batted really brilliantly to get us into such a good position. Don’t forget Arundhati Kirkire’s knock; that too came at just the right time,” she began. The skipper went on to add, “It was a planned batting effort. We wanted Mithali to bat out the full 50 overs, while players at the other end took the initiative. When we came on to bowl, things were a bit tight initially, but Sunita and Nooshin gave us the breakthroughs and things became much easier,” she said of the comprehensive victory.Clare Connor, utterly disappointed at the result, began by saying, “We didn’t expect to be beaten so easily. But there is a fair bit of the tour to go yet. We will now be focussing on the Test, where we can regain some pride by putting in a good showing.” The England captain went on to spell out some of the areas that let the team down. “We really did not build any partnerships, and that is something you have to do in any form of the game to succeed. We also lacked the freedom to play shots, something we hope to sort out soon.”Judging by her remarks, as well as the showings thus far on the tour, England clearly have a few things to sort out before the one-off Test at Lucknow.

Santh, Yousaf share honours on shortened first day

The Goa under-19 team had to struggle all the way in the face of a good bowling performance by Kerala and were perched precariously at the end of the first day with only 71 runs on the board while losing eight wickets along the way in the Cooch Behar Trophy South Zone league match at the Medical College Ground in Trivandrum on Tuesday.Play started only at 1 pm due to overnight rains and put in to bat, Goa made a disastrous start losing opener SS Sandesh (1) in the seventh over of the day. S Santh who picked up the wicket of Sandesh struck again, trapping SD Saheel (7) in front of the stumps. His partner TA Yousaf then removed the other opener AA Swapnil (9). Goa were in dire straits with three of the top order batsmen dismissed and with only 25 runs on the board. But Santh was not finished and he struck once more when he had SK Suraj (4) caught behind.Goa’s innings was in real disarray, when Yousaf shattered the defence of KK Sagun (4) with only 33 runs on the board. Then R David (20) and RA Aditya (14) struggled along to take the Goa innings past the 50-run mark in the 20th over of the innings. But in the very next over Aditya departed, offering a return catch to NK Aneesh.NN Gautham then gave David some company, while taking the score to 71 before he was trapped leg before by Aneesh. David himself did not last long. Seven balls later, he struggled to reach his crease and was run out with no runs added to the score. Almost at once, Goa found some help by way of bad light which put an end to the proceedings. At this stage, Santh had taken three wickets for 17 while Yousaf had two for 23.

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