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Photos



Feb 15, 2012

Eoin Morgan gets low in his stance

Eoin Morgan gets low in his stance
© AFP
Feb 15, 2012

Shahid Afridi eventually dismissed Alastair Cook for 102

Shahid Afridi eventually dismissed Alastair Cook for 102
© AFP
Feb 15, 2012

Ravi Bopara made another half-century

Ravi Bopara made another half-century
© Getty Images
Feb 15, 2012

Peter Trego pulls during his fifty

Peter Trego pulls during his fifty
© BPL T20
Feb 15, 2012

Alastair Cook became the first England captain to make consecutive ODI hundreds

Alastair Cook became the first England captain to make consecutive ODI hundreds
© AFP
Feb 15, 2012

Alastair Cook celebrates consecutive hundreds

Alastair Cook celebrates consecutive hundreds
© Getty Images
Feb 15, 2012

Jonathan Trott made 23 before a lazy dismissal

Jonathan Trott made 23 before a lazy dismissal
© AFP
Feb 15, 2012

Alastair Cook swept well in making his second hundred of the series

Alastair Cook swept well in making his second hundred of the series
© Getty Images
Feb 15, 2012

Alastair Cook was again in excellent form

Alastair Cook was again in excellent form
© Getty Images
Feb 15, 2012

A frustrated Kevin Pietersen leaves the crease

A frustrated Kevin Pietersen leaves the crease
© AFP
Feb 15, 2012

Kevin Pietersen was trapped lbw by Saeed Ajmal

Kevin Pietersen was trapped lbw by Saeed Ajmal
© AFP
Feb 15, 2012

Alastair Cook gave England another solid start

Alastair Cook gave England another solid start
© AFP
Feb 15, 2012

Lonwabo Tsotsobe claimed a hat-trick

Lonwabo Tsotsobe claimed a hat-trick
© Getty Images
Feb 15, 2012

Matt Henry hit five sixes in a cameo of 42 off 17 balls

Matt Henry hit five sixes in a cameo of 42 off 17 balls
© Getty Images
Feb 15, 2012

Lonwabo Tsotsobe is congratulated on one of four wickets

Lonwabo Tsotsobe is congratulated on one of four wickets
© Getty Images
Feb 15, 2012

Clouds loom over the Hagley Oval

Clouds loom over the Hagley Oval
© Getty Images
Feb 15, 2012

Australia players with a patient at Sydney Children's Hospital

Australia players with a patient at Sydney Children’s Hospital
© Getty Images
Feb 15, 2012

Australia players prepare to meet patients on a visit to Sydney Children's Hospital

Australia players prepare to meet patients on a visit to Sydney Children’s Hospital
© Getty Images
Feb 15, 2012

Hashim Amla was part of a quick 81-run opening stand

Hashim Amla was part of a quick 81-run opening stand
© Getty Images
Feb 15, 2012

Richard Levi is bowled for a 32-ball 63

Richard Levi is bowled for a 32-ball 63
© Getty Images
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Warner happy to be passed over for captaincy

CB Series

Warner happy to be passed over for captaincy

February 15, 2012
Cricket +
David Warner loses his middle stump, Australia v India, Commonwealth Bank Series, 1st ODI, Melbourne, February 5, 2012

“I’m still learning the one-day game as I’ve said to people about Test cricket” © Getty Images 
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David Warner has admitted he is still a novice in ODI cricket and understands why he was passed over for the stand-in captaincy of the Australian team for Friday’s CB series match against Sri Lanka in Sydney.
While Steve Waugh has expressed his surprise at former captain Ricky Ponting being preferred to lead the team in Michael Clarke’s enforced absence due to injury, Warner said he was happy to have been excused from the additional pressure of taking the captaincy after making a quiet start to the ODIs. He also acknowledged his own modest record in the format – 268 runs at 20.61 in 13 matches – as a valid reason not to thrust the top job upon him just yet.
“It’s exactly what John [Inverarity] said, basically telling me what I already knew about being under Michael Clarke and getting some experience for future years and hopefully lead the country one day,” Warner said at the Sydney Children’s Hospital. “I’m thoroughly enjoying that role behind Michael there and obviously appointing Ricky as captain is due to his experience and an opportunity for me to be under him as well, he’s led the country for many years and I’m looking forward to being his vice [captain].
“I’ve not had a great start to the one-day series and I’m looking to put numbers on the board. The selectors have noted they don’t want to put any extra pressure on myself, and I felt the same thing and agreed with what they had to say. I take that on board and I thoroughly respect the decision.
“I’m still learning the one-day game as I’ve said to people about Test cricket. Test cricket was all about me trying to set a foundation for myself and a base for how to go about my game and I’ve established that at the moment. Now it’s back to one-day cricket, where I’ve got to focus on what works for me at the top of the order, how to approach my game, it’s not T20 cricket, I’ve got 50 overs and I’m still going about that how I am, I’m still talking to the experienced guys like Michael Hussey, Punter and Michael Clarke as well.”
Communication has been raised as an issue for kicking around over the past few days, particularly relating to Brad Haddin’s uncertain public standing in relation to the national team. However the players appear comfortable with the messages being relayed to them from the selectors, as Warner, David Hussey and Shane Watson all stated when asked about their dealings with Inverarity’s panel.
“I think the selectors in my case have always been thorough with me, they’ve said what I had to do to get back into the team,” Warner said. “That was two years ago with the one-day stuff as well, and looking to the future before I made my Test debut, they were always calling me, saying ‘you’re close, but some big runs on the board and you’re in line’. They have always been thorough with me and I’ve respected what they have done to date by me.”
Hussey said he had perceived very little change between the panel as led by Andrew Hilditch and the current one helmed by Inverarity. “I haven’t noticed any changes at all,” Hussey said. “All I know is John’s called me to come back to the Australian ODI team and Twenty20 team so I am very happy with the communication thus far and hope it continues.”
As for Watson, who expressed the view that Haddin had been left “in limbo”, the allrounder said his own dealings with the current selection panel had been clear and concise on his somewhat convoluted road back from injury.
“I have [had communication], especially through the first couple of weeks and a month I had contact with the selectors,” he said. “But in the end the most important thing for me is to get fit because it doesn’t matter what you say when you’re not playing you need to be out there playing to be able to show what you can do.”
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Tied ODI’s

Tied matches
Team 1 Team 2 Ground Match Date Scorecard
Australia West Indies Melbourne Cricket Ground 11 Feb 1984 ODI # 247
England Australia Trent Bridge, Nottingham 27 May 1989 ODI # 567
Pakistan West Indies Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore 22 Nov 1991 ODI # 690
India West Indies W.A.C.A. Ground, Perth 6 Dec 1991 ODI # 692
Australia Pakistan Bellerive Oval, Hobart 10 Dec 1992 ODI # 773
West Indies Pakistan Bourda, Georgetown, Guyana 3 Apr 1993 ODI # 829
India Zimbabwe Nehru Stadium, Indore 18 Nov 1993 ODI # 852
New Zealand Pakistan Eden Park, Auckland 13 Mar 1994 ODI # 894
Zimbabwe Pakistan Harare Sports Club 22 Feb 1995 ODI # 980
New Zealand Sri Lanka Sharjah Cricket Stadium 11 Nov 1996 ODI # 1142
India Zimbabwe Boland Park, Paarl 27 Jan 1997 ODI # 1169
New Zealand England McLean Park, Napier 26 Feb 1997 ODI # 1181
Zimbabwe New Zealand Queens Sports Club, Bulawayo 1 Oct 1997 ODI # 1235
West Indies Australia Bourda, Georgetown, Guyana 21 Apr 1999 ODI # 1440
Australia South Africa Edgbaston, Birmingham 17 Jun 1999 ODI # 1483
Pakistan Sri Lanka Sharjah Cricket Stadium 15 Oct 1999 ODI # 1514
Australia South Africa Docklands Stadium, Melbourne 18 Aug 2000 ODI # 1621
South Africa Australia Senwes Park, Potchefstroom 27 Mar 2002 ODI # 1821
South Africa Sri Lanka Kingsmead, Durban 3 Mar 2003 ODI # 1979
South Africa England Chevrolet Park, Bloemfontein 2 Feb 2005 ODI # 2219
England Australia Lord’s, London 2 Jul 2005 ODI # 2258
Ireland Zimbabwe Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica 15 Mar 2007 ODI # 2535
New Zealand England McLean Park, Napier 20 Feb 2008 ODI # 2682
India England M.Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore 27 Feb 2011 ODI # 3110
England India Lord’s, London 11 Sep 2011 ODI # 3191
India Sri Lanka Adelaide Oval 14 Feb 2012 ODI # 3239
Records includes the following current or recent matches:
India v Sri Lanka at Adelaide, Commonwealth Bank Series 5th match, Feb 14, 2012 [ODI # 3239]
England v Pakistan at Abu Dhabi, 1st ODI, Feb 13, 2012 [ODI # 3238]
Australia v India at Adelaide, Commonwealth Bank Series 4th match, Feb 12, 2012 [ODI # 3237]
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‘Must be ruthless in finishing games off’ – Jayawardene

India v Sri Lanka, Commonwealth Bank Series, Adelaide

‘Must be ruthless in finishing games off’ – Jayawardene

February 14, 2012
Cricket +
Lasith Malinga celebrates after having Suresh Raina caught down the leg side, India v Sri Lanka, Commonwealth Bank Series, Adelaide, February 14, 2012

Mahela Jayawardene: “He [Lasith Malinga] created the pressure for us, otherwise we probably would have lost in the 46th-47th over.” © AFP 
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Related Links
Players/Officials: Mahela Jayawardene
Series/Tournaments: Commonwealth Bank Series
Teams: India | Sri Lanka
It was a bittersweet night for Sri Lanka.
They were set for a big total at 3 for 168 after 35 overs with the batting Powerplay at hand, but they contrived to end up with only 236. Angelo Mathews, the man who brought Sri Lanka heartbreakingly closein Perth against Australia, let the game slip with two full tosses in the 49th over of the chase, and then pulled it back with two direct-hits. Lasith Malinga bowled these four overs towards the end to keep Sri Lanka alive: four runs in the 39th, a maiden with a run-out in the 41st, five in 45th, and four and wicket in the 48th. Then, in the final over, he failed to make two collections and would have got them run-outs, and went for three over extra cover off the last ball. And spare a thought for the young Dinesh Chandimal. Yet another good innings, but one that ended in a suicidal run-out and short of being the decisive one.
The overall fielding, too, went from being flash to flaccid. There were four direct-hit run-outs, but Kumar Sangakkara dropped a sitter, and then Malinga missed those two run-outs. It can be difficult to decide how to feel after such a night. Mahela Jayawardene wouldn’t blame the fielding for sure. “But I think the fielding got us into the game,” he said. “The run-outs and the way we stopped at least 20-25 runs on the field, on a hot day, on a bigger ground as well. We didn’t give them any easy twos. Only the last few fumbles. That’s the thing. Make or break situations. We have got to be ruthless.”
Jayawardene said his instinct told him to trust Mathews, and that he will learn a lot from this night. Mathews bowled the 49th over with 24 runs required and Malinga to bowl the last. He slipped up, though, and bowled two full tosses – one of them a no-ball – that went for six and four. “This is how these guys are going to learn,” Jayawardene said. “The more games these guys play, they will become better finishers and they will take more responsibility. That’s probably why I had my gut feeling, giving the ball to Angie in the 49th over.
“I feel he is ready now to take more responsibility. Apart from those couple of bad balls, I thought he bowled a very, very good over. So let’s put them in these situations, let them learn. I am quite happy, we are headed in the right direction, we are close, playing two top teams. Once we get that win we can get come momentum going.”
Malinga’s bowling is the reason why Sri Lanka not only came back from the dead but were the favourites in the last over. With the ball, Malinga hardly faltered, except – if you were harsh – with the final ball, which Dhoni went deep into his crease to get under. “He [Malinga] bowled beautifully,” Jayawardene said. “I mean, you love to have a guy like that in the field. You know he is going to deliver for you. He did in the last three-four overs.
“He changed ends as well. It wasn’t a problem for him. He didn’t give a single loose ball. He created the pressure for us. Otherwise we probably would have lost in the 46th-47th over. Lasith has been the difference. He has been in these situations, you know. We have lost some matches, he has won some matches for us, no issues with him. He will come back strong.”
However, with Malinga, when you have three runs to defend off the last ball, you expect him to pull through. Jayawardene thought so too. “Well, 10 overs to go, they had a run a ball, I am sure they will be disappointed,” Jayawardene said. “I was disappointed when we had one ball, four runs. I would back Malinga to finish it off. I am happy with the two points after the amount of mistakes we made in the last few overs and in the entire game. To come back with two points, it is always good. But not a win in our column. Hopefully we get that and some momentum going forward.”
Jayawardene felt that India would be more disappointed with the tie, but know his side needs to start winning games. They now need four wins from their last five games, which is a tough ask. “The last bit, we aren’t finishing games off, we are making mistakes,” he said. “But overall I thought we came back strongly in this game. 230 was not good enough on this surface. After making so many mistakes, I should be happy, but at the same time the way we are making mistakes we need to be a bit more focussed. And try and be ruthless in finishing games off. That’s what you expect, especially with these two teams.”
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India v Sri Lanka

Match tied
Sri Lanka innings (50 overs maximum) R B 4s 6s SR
View dismissal WU Tharanga c †Dhoni b Vinay Kumar 0 2 0 0 0.00
View dismissal TM Dilshan c †Dhoni b Pathan 16 23 1 1 69.56
View dismissal KC Sangakkara c Gambhir b Ashwin 31 56 2 0 55.35
View dismissal LD Chandimal run out (Sharma/†Dhoni) 81 91 6 1 89.01
View dismissal DPMD Jayawardene* lbw b Vinay Kumar 43 49 2 0 87.75
View dismissal AD Mathews run out (†Dhoni) 17 30 1 0 56.66
View dismissal NLTC Perera c Kohli b Ashwin 5 9 0 0 55.55
View dismissal KMDN Kulasekara c Gambhir b Vinay Kumar 12 25 0 0 48.00
SMSM Senanayake not out 22 14 3 0 157.14
View dismissal SL Malinga run out (Raina/†Dhoni) 0 0 0 0
HMRKB Herath not out 1 1 0 0 100.00
Extras (lb 3, w 5) 8
Total (9 wickets; 50 overs) 236 (4.72 runs per over)
Fall of wickets 1-0 (Tharanga, 0.2 ov)2-28 (Dilshan, 7.1 ov)3-79 (Sangakkara, 19.4 ov)4-173 (Jayawardene, 36.2 ov),5-178 (Chandimal, 37.3 ov)6-184 (Perera, 39.4 ov)7-210 (Mathews, 46.3 ov)8-232 (Kulasekara, 49.3 ov),9-235 (Malinga, 49.5 ov)
Bowling O M R W Econ
View wickets R Vinay Kumar 10 1 46 3 4.60 (1w)
View wicket IK Pathan 9 0 38 1 4.22 (2w)
U Yadav 9 0 51 0 5.66
View wickets R Ashwin 10 1 30 2 3.00
RA Jadeja 10 0 58 0 5.80
RG Sharma 2 0 10 0 5.00 (2w)
India innings (target: 237 runs from 50 overs) R B 4s 6s SR
View dismissal G Gambhir run out (Kulasekara) 91 106 6 0 85.84
View dismissal SR Tendulkar c †Sangakkara b Kulasekara 15 24 2 0 62.50
View dismissal V Kohli lbw b Perera 15 25 1 0 60.00
View dismissal RG Sharma run out (Jayawardene) 15 27 2 0 55.55
View dismissal SK Raina c †Sangakkara b Malinga 8 19 0 0 42.10
MS Dhoni*† not out 58 69 3 1 84.05
View dismissal RA Jadeja c Jayawardene b Perera 3 10 0 0 30.00
View dismissal R Ashwin c Senanayake b Malinga 14 13 1 0 107.69
View dismissal IK Pathan run out (Mathews) 8 5 0 1 160.00
View dismissal R Vinay Kumar run out (Mathews) 1 2 0 0 50.00
U Yadav not out 0 0 0 0
Extras (lb 1, w 6, nb 1) 8
Total (9 wickets; 50 overs) 236 (4.72 runs per over)
Fall of wickets 1-24 (Tendulkar, 5.6 ov)2-61 (Kohli, 14.1 ov)3-94 (Sharma, 21.5 ov)4-118 (Raina, 27.4 ov),5-178 (Gambhir, 40.3 ov)6-184 (Jadeja, 43.3 ov)7-212 (Ashwin, 47.4 ov)8-223 (Pathan, 48.4 ov),9-233 (Vinay Kumar, 49.5 ov)
Bowling O M R W Econ
View wickets SL Malinga 10 1 53 2 5.30 (1w)
View wicket KMDN Kulasekara 10 0 39 1 3.90 (1w)
AD Mathews 5 0 35 0 7.00 (1nb, 1w)
View wickets NLTC Perera 9 0 45 2 5.00 (1w)
HMRKB Herath 10 1 33 0 3.30 (1w)
SMSM Senanayake 6 0 30 0 5.00
Match details
Toss Sri Lanka, who chose to bat
Points India 2, Sri Lanka 2
Player of the match MS Dhoni (India)
Umpires SD Fry and NJ Llong (England)
TV umpire BNJ Oxenford
Match referee AJ Pycroft (Zimbabwe)
Match notes
  • Sri Lanka innings
  • Powerplay 1: Overs 0.1 – 10.0 (Mandatory – 32 runs, 2 wickets)
  • Sri Lanka: 50 runs in 12.3 overs (75 balls), Extras 2
  • Powerplay 2: Overs 15.1 – 20.0 (Bowling side – 16 runs, 1 wicket)
  • Drinks: Sri Lanka – 64/2 in 16.0 overs (KC Sangakkara 23, LD Chandimal 22)
  • 3rd Wicket: 50 runs in 69 balls (KC Sangakkara 21, LD Chandimal 29, Ex 1)
  • Sri Lanka: 100 runs in 24.4 overs (148 balls), Extras 3
  • LD Chandimal: 50 off 56 balls (6 x 4)
  • 4th Wicket: 50 runs in 53 balls (LD Chandimal 24, DPMD Jayawardene 25, Ex 1)
  • Sri Lanka: 150 runs in 32.2 overs (194 balls), Extras 5
  • Powerplay 3: Overs 35.1 – 40.0 (Batting side – 18 runs, 3 wickets)
  • Drinks: Sri Lanka – 172/3 in 36.0 overs (LD Chandimal 76, DPMD Jayawardene 43)
  • Sri Lanka: 200 runs in 45.2 overs (272 balls), Extras 6
  • Innings Break: Sri Lanka – 236/9 in 50.0 overs (SMSM Senanayake 22, HMRKB Herath 1)
  • India innings
  • Powerplay 1: Overs 0.1 – 10.0 (Mandatory – 44 runs, 1 wicket)
  • India: 50 runs in 12.2 overs (74 balls), Extras 3
  • Powerplay 2: Overs 15.1 – 20.0 (Bowling side – 15 runs, 0 wicket)
  • Drinks: India – 79/2 in 17.0 overs (G Gambhir 38, RG Sharma 7)
  • India: 100 runs in 23.4 overs (142 balls), Extras 4
  • G Gambhir: 50 off 62 balls (4 x 4)
  • India innings: 1×5 ball over (30th over, bowled by SL Malinga, called by Umpire SD Fry)
  • India: 150 runs in 34.3 overs (206 balls), Extras 4
  • Powerplay 3: Overs 35.1 – 40.0 (Batting side – 23 runs, 0 wicket)
  • Drinks: India – 157/4 in 36.0 overs (G Gambhir 80, MS Dhoni 19)
  • 5th Wicket: 50 runs in 58 balls (G Gambhir 25, MS Dhoni 24, Ex 1)
  • India: 200 runs in 45.4 overs (273 balls), Extras 6
  • MS Dhoni: 50 off 64 balls (3 x 4, 1 x 6)
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Calm Dhoni delivers nerve-shredding tie

India v Sri Lanka, CB Series, Adelaide

Calm Dhoni delivers nerve-shredding tie

February 14, 2012
Cricket +
Sri Lanka 236 for 9 (Chandimal 81, Jayawardene 43, Vinay 3-46, Ashwin 2-30) tied with India 236 for 9 (Gambhir 91, Dhoni 58*, Thisara 2-45) 
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
MS Dhoni swings down the ground again, India v Sri Lanka, Commonwealth Bank Series, Adelaide, February 14, 2012

Once again, it came down to MS Dhoni’s skills in the death, and he got India to within a run of victory © Getty Images 
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The best death-overs bowler in the game went up against the best finisher in the business with four to defend off the last ball. It was only fair that neither Lasith Malinga nor MS Dhoni ended up on the losing side of that contest. Malinga’s wide full-length ball would have hoodwinked most batsmen who would have been setting themselves up for the swing to the leg side. Not the fleet-footed Dhoni, though, who calmly stretched across and carved high over the covers even as he teetered on one foot. The ball didn’t have the strength to beat Sachithra Senanayake on the boundary, but Dhoni and last-man Umesh Yadav bounded through for three runs to tie a nerve-wracking classic at the Adelaide Oval.
The beauty of the ODI format shone throughout the duration of the chase, with the best minds in the game feeling the pressure of a close finish. India were coasting on the back of another polished effort from Gautam Gambhir, whose faultless 91 showed he has moved on well from his Test-match woes. Dhoni had added 60 runs with Gambhir off 12.5 overs, leaving India needing 59 off 58. At that stage, Dhoni made the first decisive error, when he sold Gambhir dear after calling him for a single. Gambhir was caught short by a direct hit from Nuwan Kulasekara, and his fall gave Sri Lanka an opening; Dhoni would later say it cost India victory.
The wicket was followed by a 28-ball phase that yielded only 13 runs for the loss of Ravindra Jadeja’s wicket. Sri Lanka’s seamers bowled out of their skins, backed by enterprising field placements from Mahela Jayawardene that cut off the singles. With two overs of Malinga left, Dhoni went after Thisara Perera in the 46th, dumping him for a huge six down the ground, before R Ashwin skimmed another four over the covers. Malinga returned after a quiet over from Kulasekara, with India needing 28 off 18. Mistakes began to sprout from every corner now.
Malinga got Ashwin to sky a slower ball, and Kumar Sangakkara called for, and clanged the chance as he ran towards point. Ashwin continued blundering against the slower ball, heaving and missing one, before chipping straight to cover. With 24 needed off 12, Jayawardene turned to Angelo Mathews who trotted in from round the stumps to cut Dhoni’s swinging angle. Mathews lost the plot against Irfan Pathan, though, delivering a high no-ball that Irfan deposited over square leg for six. Irfan was run out next ball, sacrificing his wicket after failing to get a slower ball away. India needed a boundary, and Mathews obliged with another full toss that Dhoni swiped through midwicket to reach 50. Nine was needed off the last over, from Malinga.

Smart stats

  • In 131 ODIs between India and Sri Lanka, this was the first tie. In all, this was the 26th tie in ODIs, the sixth for India, the fourth for Sri Lanka, and the first at the Adelaide Oval.
  • It was the fourth tie in tri-series in Australia, and the first one in almost 20 years – the previous one was in December 1992.
  • MS Dhoni averages 83.41 in run-chases against Sri Lanka: in 20 innings he has scored 1001 runs, at a strike rate of 90.01.
  • Dhoni has played 108 balls from Lasith Malinga in ODIs, and scored 112 runs for one dismissal.
  • Gautam Gambhir averages 48.50 when batting second in ODIs, with five centuries and 19 fifties in 67 innings; when batting first, he averages 33.14. In run-chasesagainst Sri Lanka, he averages 64.27.
In the previous game, Dhoni chose to take the game to the very end. This time, he was forced to do so by Malinga’s unhittable lengths. While he bowled impeccably, Malinga’s fielding was ordinary, and he missed a couple of returns that would have yielded run outs in the last over. A couple off the first ball was followed by three singles before Vinay sacrificed his wicket to give Dhoni strike for the final ball. One could argue that Malinga should have gone full and straight, but the counter-argument would be that even a fractional error in length would have allowed Dhoni a free swing over the short square boundary. As it transpired, Malinga went wide, Dhoni went high and there was poetic justice in the denouement.
Sri Lanka were left ruing a collapse in their batting Powerplay, that left them at least 20 runs short. They stumbled from a heady 168 for 3 in 35 overs, losing 18 for 3 in the Powerplay, including the two set batsmen – Dinesh Chandimal and Jayawardene – who had added 94 runs without a fuss. The complexion of the game changed so drastically in that block, that Ashwin bowled with two slips in the 40th over.
Until then, Chandimal ran the show with admirable poise, imposing himself with a series of pulls and whips through the leg side, imparted with a flourish that was once the trademark of Marvan Atapattu. In his company, Jayawardene shrugged away the poor form that had dogged him since the South Africa tour, as Sri Lanka recovered from their sluggish start.
India made three crucial early strikes, which meant they were only one wicket away from the lower order even during the Chandimal-Jayawardene association. Vinay Kumar preyed on Upul Tharanga’s unending troubles outside the off stump, before Irfan celebrated his return to the venue where he made his international debut in 2003 with pleasing swing, and the wicket of Tillakaratne Dilshan. Ashwin then worked over Sangakkara with spin and variety to peg Sri Lanka back. Chandimal and Jayawardene fought hard to revive the innings, but India were the happier side after 50 overs.
Gambhir took charge of the chase with assurance, and it will be interesting if India will continue their rotation policy and bench him for the next game. Sachin Tendulkar’s rustiness, too, suggested the break from Sunday’s game didn’t do him much good. Tendulkar, Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma all perished after scoring 15 runs apiece, as Sri Lanka made timely dents. Suresh Raina’s failure meant India were wobbling at 122 for 4 in the 28th over. But they had just the right man coming in at that stage.
It wasn’t just the players that erred on the tense night. Umpire Nigel Llong’s miscounting meant Malinga only bowled five balls in the 30th over. India will believe they would have got the winning run off the ball that was missed. Sri Lanka will believe they could have got the tenth Indian wicket off it. How perfect then, that we will never know how it could have ended.
Innings Dot balls 4s 6s PP1 PP2 PP3 Last 10 overs NB/Wides
Sri Lanka 166 15 2 32/2 16/1(16-20) 18/3 (36-40) 50/3 0/5
India 163 15 2 44/1 15/0(16-20) 23/0 (36-40) 58/5 1/6
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Eric Simons to be replaced as India bowling coach

India news

Eric Simons to be replaced as India bowling coach

February 14, 2012
Cricket +
Eric Simons has a word with Ishant Sharma, Nagpur, February 10, 2010

Eric Simons has worked with India since January 2010 © AFP 
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Related Links
Players/Officials: Joe Dawes | Eric Simons
Teams: Australia | India | South Africa
India will replace their bowling coach Eric Simons with former Queensland fast bowler Joe Dawes at the end of the tour of Australia. Simons’ contract expires at the end of the tour, ending a two-year tenure with the Indian team.
Simons, who joined India as a bowling consultant in 2010, was named coach of the Delhi Daredevils for the 2012 IPL season. A former South Africa allrounder, Simons was initially part of Gary Kirsten’s coaching staff, but remained with the squad when Kirsten did not renew his contract after the World Cup.
The topic of Simons’ contract was brought up at the BCCI working committee meeting in Chennai on Monday. Replacing him will be the first change India make to their support staff after losing their last eight away Tests.
Simons, however, said he was not going to stay with the Indian team beyond the Australia tour. “The full story is that after the World Cup, Duncan Fletcher asked me to stay on. I agreed to stay on until after the England tour. I was then asked to continue to Australia and told them that I would not be able to extend beyond that,” Simons said. “During the West Indies series in India, I was asked if I would reconsider and said that I could not, as I had effectively been away from home for two years. I was never going to continue beyond the Australian series.”
India’s new bowling coach, Dawes, played 76 first-class matches for Queensland between 1997 and 2005, often having to wait his turn behind Australia bowlers Michael Kasprowicz and Andy Bichel. His career was cut short by a knee injury following which he became involved in coaching. He started off with Queensland and also worked part-time for Middlesex and the Marylebone Cricket Club. He became bowling coach of South Australia in June 2011 and was also bowling coach of the Adelaide Strikers in the Big Bash League 2011-12.
“Joe has made a big impact in a short time,” South Australian Cricket Association director of cricket Jamie Cox said, “and while we are sad to see him go, we are very happy that one of our coaching staff has made the move into the international arena.
“Joe has made a great contribution with our young bowling group, known colloquially as the ‘Wolf Pack’. Working alongside Darren Berry, he has helped instill some real toughness and integrity into the group.”
Dawes worked well with the young bowlers at South Australia and has helped them reach the top of the table in the ongoing Ryobi Cup. Dawes said he was optimistic about the abilities of young India bowlers. “I have thoroughly enjoyed working with Darren Berry and being part of the culture he has fostered with the Redbacks and the Strikers,” Dawes said. “To be able to take that knowledge and apply it in the international arena was too great an opportunity to miss.
“I can also see lots of emerging talent within the Indian group and it is very exciting to be able to move into a strong system within the BCCI.”
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No need for inquiry into performance – Srinivasan

India news

No need for inquiry into performance – Srinivasan

February 13, 2012
Cricket +
Zaheer Khan removed Upul Tharanga and Kumar Sangakkara with seam movement, India v Sri Lanka, CB Series, 2nd ODI, Perth, February 8, 2012

N Srinivasan on India’s performance in Australia: “We lost the Tests in Australia but have started the ODI series quite well.”© Associated Press 
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N Srinivasan, the BCCI president, has said there is no need for a formal inquiry into India’s performances despite the team losing the Test series 0-4 in Australia after a similar result in England.
“This is the same team that eight months ago was the toast of India when we won the World Cup. Yes, we lost in England but then we did well at home [against England and West Indies]. We lost the Tests in Australia but have started the ODI series quite well,” Srinivasan said, when asked if the BCCI was going to hold an inquiry into India’s Test performances in Australia. “I have always maintained that it is not proper to have a discussion on the team’s performance while the tour was still on.
“I think it is very premature to talk of an inquiry. There is no need for an inquiry at all if you ask me.”
Srinivasan was reiterating his stand on the issue. He had dismissed the need for an inquiry even after India’s tour of England.
“Let the team come back and it is then for the selectors, the coach and the others to decide what needs to be done to improve performance, if it is considered so necessary.”
India lost their No. 1 Test ranking to England during the 0-4 whitewash in the summer of 2011. They did not win any of the limited-overs games in England either. They then beat England 5-0 in the ODIs at home, and won the Tests and ODIs against West Indies. However, India’s overseas form continued to be poor and they lost the Border-Gavaskar trophy to Australia during another 0-4 whitewash in the Tests.
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BCCI against key points in Woolf report

ICC news

BCCI against key points in Woolf report

February 13, 2012
Cricket +
The BCCI’s working committee has rejected the key recommendations of the Woolf report concerning the restructuring of the ICC, the Indian board president N Srinivasan has said. This is the first formal response from any national board to the recommendations – made public ten days ago – and, given the BCCI’s dominant position in world cricket, could render the report a non-starter for all practical purposes.
“The working committee discussed all the main recommendations of the report submitted to the ICC by a committee headed by Lord Woolf. The working committee was of the opinion that these recommendations were not acceptable and rejected it,” Srinivasan said after the meeting in Chennai. “The working committee was in particular not agreeable to the changes in the structure of the management of ICC that had been proposed.”
Srinivasan, however, did not specify which of the several recommendations of the Woolf report the BCCI was opposed to.
The suggestions of the review are not binding on the ICC, which will examine it at the next board meeting in April.
The ICC’s independent governance review, headed by Lord Woolf, had called for sweeping changes in the administration of cricket and the functioning of its governing body. It recommended a restructuring of the ICC’s executive board to make it more independent and less dominated by the bigger countries and also a re-examination of the rights and benefits of the Test-playing Full Member nations, calling for measures to increase transparency in dealings by the ICC and its members.
The most important recommendation concerned revamping the ICC’s executive board, its top decision-making body, to reduce the numerical strength of the Full Members and to offset their influence by bringing in independent directors, in keeping with best corporate governance practices.
The board currently comprises the heads of all Full Member nations, three representatives from the Associates and Affiliates and the ICC’s president, vice-president and chief executive. Woolf’s plan incorporated five independent directors – three from within the game and two from outside to bring in diversity of opinion and experience – with voting rights and the additional stipulation that they should not be in a minority. It suggested that the Full Member nations eventually have four representatives, and the Associates two, with the chairman, president and chief executive making up the desired dozen.
It also suggests that an ICC director should not concurrently hold any leadership or executive post with their home boards. For example, N Srinivasan is currently both an ICC director and president of the Indian board but, if the recommendations are accepted, he can’t retain both posts. As for independent directors, they must not have recently held positions of authority on any member board or any commercial body that has had significant contractual relationships with the ICC.
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