Archive for the ‘One Day Matches’ Category

Australia 2-1 lead against New Zealand

Australia Vs New Zealand

Australia won the match with the help of Brad Haddin. Before the match Brad stated that ‘it is the most important game of the series’. Brand’s 110 was highest ODI score. Ricky Ponting analyzes the pitch with costars and resolved that problem at Seddon Park.

Ponting combined with Haddin 151- run partnership and ponting made 69 runs. Ponting ODI captaincy career for a remarkable 20 victories. His bowlers gave 245 target to the New Zealand. Haddin loves batting against New Zealand. His averages was 52.06 against New zealand.

In New zealand bowlers, Mason gave 68 runs of his ten overs. When Haddin was on 8, Shane Bond missed the catch. Haddin did a good work with seven fours and five sixes in Shane Bond’s bowling. New Zealand five down in the 30th over. Styris continued his consistent series with 41 and combined with Gareth Hopkins for a 67-run.

Johnson did take three wickets as well and the final three New Zealanders fell for five runs and they were bowled out with 22 deliveries still available.

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NSW has edge over Victoria today

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NSW’s batting might tilt the balance in their favour when they cross sword with VB in the first semi-final of the Airtel CLT20 today.

Simon Katich’s men emerged from the group stage with an impeccable all-win record before tasting their lone defeat against Trinidad & Tobago, an outfit that remains alien to defeat in the tournament so far.

The NSW, however, can consider themselves unlucky to have found themselves at the receiving end of Kieron Pollard’s stunning batting pyrotechnics as the power-hitter lit up the Friday night sky with an unbeaten 18-ball 54.

Barring that morale-sapping four-wicket defeat, Katich and his men have not put a foot wrong in the tournament, firing mostly in unison which remains the secret of their progress so far.

Not that there has not been any individual brilliance on display from the outfit which includes the likes of David Warner and Brett Lee.

In fact the mere sight of David Warner, with Phillip Hughes in tow, opening the innings is good enough to send shivers down any bowling unit which is aware of the left-hander’s hitting prowess. .

A swashbuckler with an uncomplicated game and a simple philosophy that the balls are meant to be hit, Warner has already made his mark with the bat and if he can conjure up a similar performance today, Victoria would be doing the catching up job for the remainder of the match today.

Hughes, on his part, is not really a dud with the bat either.

He seems to have taken his game to a new level after his secret meeting with Sachin Tendulkar and the left-hander gave an ample display of that in the match against Trinidad & Tobago, slamming a free-scoring 83 runs off 64 balls.

Katich himself is there to lend stability to the middle order and Moises Henrique may not have set alight the tournament so far but there cannot be any question about his ability.

Their bowling looks equally formidable and any attack that has Brett Lee, Stuart Clark and Doug Bollinger is bound to earn the respect of the opponents.

Lee has been in consistent form, measly with runs and regular with wickets, and the speedster also has a reputation of raising his game on big-match occasions.

Stuart Clark doesn’t boast Lee’s speed or flamboyance but the reticent pacer has few equals when it comes to efficacy and he has been among the wickets regularly. .

Victoria, however, would go out today to prove that they are no push-overs.

The team under Cameron White had a rather roller-coaster group stage campaign with surprise defeats against the lowly Wayamba Elevens and stunning triumph over Delhi Daredevils at their den at Ferozeshah Kotla.

White would be worried with the batsmen’s form and he himself would have to lead from the front today if the side is to win.

The bowling looks better with Shane Harwood, Peter Siddle and Clint McKay in form but all would depend on how they fare against the Warners and Hugheses today.(source)

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Brian Lara wants to help Windies

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Brian Lara is prepared to join other Carribean cricket legends in rescuing the game in the region ahead of the Australia tour.

Lara admits he is happy not to be involved in the current set-up following years of poor on-field results and off-field controversy, including a recent players’ strike that has only just been resolved.

The once powerful Windies look set to arrive Down Under in disarray , but the 40-year-old is willing to play his part in dragging their game back to its feet.

“Not much other than encouraging the guys,” Lara said when asked on radio 2UE what his involvement in West Indies cricket was.

“There is so much wrong with it at the moment that I’m very happy that I’m not in there causing some of the problems.

“There (will be) some involvement in the future, I am almost certain that is going to be the situation.

“I am not pushing myself on anyone and I’ve not been asked but I believe it’s a fait accompli that the likes of Sir Vivian Richards or Gordon Greenidge (or myself)… we all have to play a significant part in West Indies cricket in the near future.”

Lara fears the players’ strike coupled with Australia’s hunger to make amends for their Ashes loss leaves West Indies in danger of heavy defeat during the upcoming three-Test series.

But long term he sees some hope for his former team on the back of the success in the Twenty20 version of the game.

Lara has taken great heart from Trinidad & Tobago’s performance in reaching the semi-finals of the Champions League Twenty 20 and believes exposure at that level can only be good for all forms of cricket in the Caribbean.

“There is less talent (needed) and more luck so, yes, we can do pretty well in it,” he said of Twenty20 cricket.

“But what it’s done is create an opportunity for first-class cricket to excel along the same levels as international cricket.

“Victoria and NSW and Trinidad & Tobago are all being represented at that level (in the Champions League).

“That’s what I love about it; that first-class cricket is coming on the same level as international cricket.

“That can only be a positive thing.”(source)

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“India-Oz series will be hard-fought”

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Australia all-rounder Cameron White today echoed Ponting’s view that India would be a tough nut to crack at home.

“As Ponting said the Indians will be very hard to beat on their home soil and I too feel the same. I think it will be a good, hard and exciting cricket series between the two countries,” White, the captain of Victoria Bushrangers, told reporters ahead their Champions League semifinal match against domestic rivals New South Wales Blues here tomorrow.

“Even the Indians will get the support of thousands of home crowd,” he said.

Earlier, leaving for India, Ponting had yesterday said that India are a much tough opponent at home than when they are travelling.

White’s views were backed by Test regular Simon Katich, who though feels that Ponting’s men are a confident lot coming into the series, especially after their recent success in England and South Africa.

“I think the guys are very confident. They have performed very well in England as well as in the Champions Trophy in South Africa. Some of the guys in the team have played in IPL and in Champions League and know the conditions well,” Katich, who is the skipper of NSW, said.

Meanwhile, on tomorrow’s first semifinal encounter of the cash-rich Twenty20 tournament, both the NSW and the Victoria skippers feel the match would be a hard-fought affair but warned against expecting a high-scoring affair in the low and slow Feroz Shah Kotla wicket.

“It will be interesting to play Victoria in neutral venue. We have had lot of battles and good rivalry, so expect a tough game tomorrow,” Katich said.

“Hopefully, with Brett(Lee) in our side, we will draw more Indian support. But the match would be a low-scoring one because the earlier matches have shown that bowlers will have upperhand on this wicket,” he added.

White also expressed similar feelings, saying, “We know each other very well, the only thing is that we will be playing on a different venue than where we usually play each other. But it will be a hard pressure game.(source)

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ICC Champions Trophy 2009 to be launched in Johannesburg

The ICC Champions Trophy 2009 will be launched in Johannesburg on Thursday.

A number of current and former South Africa cricket players, as well as South African champions from other sports, are expected to be in attendance at the launch, an ICC release said.

For the first time the ICC Champions Trophy will feature only the top eight-ranked sides in the world in the only global multi-team 50-over-a-side tournament between the ICC Cricket World Cup 2007 in the Caribbean and the next edition of that event, in the Asian sub-continent in two years` time. (more…)

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Sri Lanka vs Pakistan Final One Day

Fast bowlers Mohammad Aamer and Naved-ul Hasan shared eight wickets between them as Pakistan finished the one-day series against Sri Lanka on a high with a commanding 132-run win in the final match in Colombo.

Aamer dismissed opener Upul Tharanga for a three-ball duck and later snared Mahela Jayawardene (31), Chamara Kapugedera (one) and Angelo Mathews (five), while Naved claimed the wickets of captain Sanath Jayasuriya (six), Kumar Sangakkara (16) as well as a couple of tailenders as Sri Lanka imploded under the pressure of an ever-increasing required run rate. (more…)

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Bangladesh take Series with Tight Win

Every time they step on the field, Bangladesh seem to be making history. After having beaten West Indies for the first time in Tests and ODIs, they today sealed their first ODI series win against the hosts. More importantly, this win came by way of their highest successful chase in the limited-overs format, reaching the requisite 275 with six balls to spare.

At the centre of the accomplishment once again was Shakib Al Hasan, pulling West Indies back from a flying start, and then seeing his team through a tricky chase with a calm 65. Mohammad Ashraful, who got to back-to-back fifties for the first time since 2006, set up the Bangladesh reply after the openers struggled on a sluggish pitch that made it difficult to stroke the ball cleanly. The Shakib-Ashraful combination outdid an exceptional effort from Travis Dowlin, whose maiden international century lifted a fledgling West Indies to a fighting total.

Ashraful and Shakib came together after a sensible third-wicket partnership between Ashraful and Raqibul Hasan had ended, thanks to the pressure created by a slow pitch and tight bowling. Nevertheless, they had added 52 after the openers fell in a quick succession. (more…)

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India Aim to Bounce Back from Batting Debacle

India will be looking to edge closer to a rare one-day international series victory against the West Indies in the Caribbean before embarking on a well-earned break from the game.

They face West Indies in the last two ODIs of four this coming Friday and Sunday at the Beausejour Cricket Ground here.

India and West Indies shared the first two ODIs last Friday and Sunday at Sabina Park in Jamaica.
The visitors won the opening fixture by 20 runs, and the home team rebounded two days later to secure the second ODI by eight wickets.

On their five previous trips to the Caribbean in bilateral ODI series, India have only once overcome West Indies, and this was 2-1 in a three-match contest seven years ago. (more…)

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India looks to return to form in series of ODIs against West Indies

KINGSTON, Jamaica — India enters Friday’s four-match one-day international cricket series against the West Indies with a vast gulf between the sides in the ICC rankings but knowing full well recent history suggests the home side will be no pushover.

The West Indies, ranked No. 8, whipped third-rated India in the recently concluded World Twenty20 in England to help consign the defending champions to an embarrassingly early exit as archrival Pakistan stole the glory.

The visitors also have troubled memories of their most recent journeys to the Caribbean for one-day matches. Two years ago, their World Cup dream turned into a nightmare as they crashed out in the first week of the tournament after losses to Asian neighbours Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.

A year previously, in 2006, a star-studded Indian side was brushed aside 4-1 by the home team.

India’s captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni is keen to shake off the disappointment of the sobering Twenty20 campaign and continue India’s good progress in the 50-over version of the game.

India’s last series in this format was way back in March when it brushed aside New Zealand 3-1 away from home. It has only lost three of its last 19 one-day matches dating back to last August, a streak which has thrust it to third spot, just a fraction behind Australia in the ratings.

A 4-0 clean sweep here would propel India past the world champions into second behind South Africa.

That task is made more difficult by the lengthy injury list that has robbed the tourists of its most potent batsmen, in Virender Sehwag (shoulder) and Sachin Tendulkar (finger), and bowler Zaheer Khan (shoulder).

It puts an even heavier burden on Dhoni, the world’s No.1-rated batsman, and left-handers Gautam Gambhir and Yuvraj Singh.

But it does offer opportunities for the younger brigade, led by Rohit Sharma and including uncapped Murali Vijay, and the recalled left-arm pacers RP Singh and Ashish Nehra.

The West Indies’ victory over India in the recently concluded World Twenty20 helped seal a semifinal spot. Captain Chris Gayle said his players were keen to keep that positive vibe going during this series.

“We were happy to be in the Twenty20 and happy to make the semifinals but we’re disappointed in the way we lost the game,” Gayle said. “We’re now focused on rebounding by winning here against India.”

“We’re working hard to get a strong start on Friday and capitalize on that throughout the series,” he added. “There are always a lot of areas to work on in cricket; there’s always room for improvement. We want to get our game sorted out as quickly as possible. I’m sure we’ll get the job done.”

Pace bowler Fidel Edwards (back injury) is absent for the Caribbean side but 20-year-old newcomer Darren Bravo, the flashy left-handed batsman and brother of ebullient all-rounder Dwayne, is in line for a debut.

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