TENDULKAR ON TOP

TENDULKAR WANTS TO BE TOP FROM HIS CARRIER:

Here the top role for the Indian team is tendulkar were his start up with the year at 16 and still his carrier is continuing towards goal. As he started his first debut against pakistan in the year 1989. Now the current session is going to be ICC CHAMPION TROPHY which is going to be held at south Africa, that is going to start on next week 22nd. As team Indian players were already started to go SA.

At last series of final match which held at Srilanka were at final against India VS Srilanka he scored 138, he completed his 44th century, but still he will continue and score more runs. so he will be continue.............................. "MASTER BLASTER"

GAMBIR BACK TO THE TEAM

TEAM MET ENJOYING AS GAMBIR BACK:


Over the past tri-series Gambir could not make mark into the team, because of some injuries he couldin gets into the team. As of now Dhoni said that he is fit and came back to the team, It was a another strength to the team in the top order, As of now Gambir, Tendulkar, Dravid were the strong line up into the batting side. But we al missing the Shewag fire factor who is going to misses the complete champion throphy this time. We were waiting for his back into the team. So were is the party to night for the indian team.

Sachins Ton makes to easy victory


Sachin complete his 40th century:


Here the great news for the Indian fans. As all we know about triangular series were held up these days. In the final match srilanka and India were last stand to play the final cup. As Dhoni once again won the toss and elected to bat first. Indian opener has been changed Dinesh has been ruled out Dravid to open a bat with Sachin. First wicket partnership goes to 96 runs. Dravid were out with 56 runs scored with a six. Back to back Dhoni placed to first down, he and Sachin were played a beautiful knock sachin scored 134 and Dhoni scored 50+. yuvi cames back with the 35+ overs has bang with the bat over 50 runs not out. At last they manage at 50 overs play scored 319 runs.

Srilankan plays:

At initially they open with a bat with the great knock and they were struggling in the opening four wickets were lost. Captain Kumara plays some good knock and cant able to reach the score at lost 275 runs they managed.
INDIA GOT THE THROPHY

'Azhar questions selectors' move to select Dravid


Azar Smart Move towards Selectors:

Azar raises the question against the Selectors to bring back the Dravid. As he overall performing well. As selector didnt pick it up for a long years.

To bring Rahul Dravid back in the one-day international squad, former Indian skipper Mohammad Azharuddin today said that a youngster should have been preferred instead. 


"It would have been better then if instead of Dravid, a young player was given the opportunity to play for the Indian team and has been placed in the team also.

The decision of the Selection Committee on the issue is wrong.

The veteran of 99 Test matches and 334 ODI's threw his weight behind champion batsman Sachin Tendulkar and said there was no question of his retirement as he was playing well.

He said that both VVS Laxman and Yuvraj Singh impressed him a lot. 

Azharuddin were said about the game would benefit,  if it more players are involved in running sport center.

Sachin talks splended over the ODI

ODI can be split into two:

Sachin says that one-day cricket to be split into two innings of 25 overs each to bring more balance into the matches.


The premier Indian batsman, who holds the records for most ODI runs and hundreds, backed the format despite doubts whether it would survive Twenty20's increasing popularity.

"I'm for 50-over cricket," he told Times Now channel on Friday at a bat endorsement function. "I was thinking of probably 25 overs each to start with and again you go and play 25 overs."

Tendulkar recalled the 2002 ICC Champions Trophy final in Sri Lanka where the hosts batted their full innings for two days in a row only for rain to force the match to be abandoned both times. The teams were declared joint winners of the tournament.

"This is also because in certain places, in day-night matches the conditions are completely different when you bat or bowl second.

"So both sides (will) get to bat when the lights are not on. Then both bat when the lights are on, 25 overs," he said. "So it is not so heavily dependent on toss."

In the Indian sub-continent, slow pitches can render chasing a target tough or dew in the night can make fielding difficult in the later stages.

The debate over one-day cricket's future has intensified after the England board last month dropped 50-over cricket

The secreat of sachin mission

He has been a cricketing icon for almost 20 years. But who have been Sachin Tendulkar's idols? Well, the master batsman did let us know in the course of a TV interview a couple of days ago that over the years he made a conscious effort to blend Sunil Gavaskar's defence with Viv Richards' ruthlessness to evolve a batting style of his own.


                 Tendulkar could not have been more judicious in choosing his heroes. As everyone associated with the game knows perfect batting is an ideal blend of attack and defence. The ability to adapt oneself to a given situation in a match is priceless. There are times when quick runs are paramount, at other times runs and time are of equal importance or perhaps the situation calls for a grim fightback based on a sterling defence. And these days with cricket being played in three formats the need to adapt and change cannot be overemphasized if one wants to be a successful cricketer.

 

So now we know the secret of Tendulkar's greatness! Ever since his international debut in Pakistan in 1989 at the age of 16 he has been lording over the bowlers, who continue to struggle to breach his near-impregnable defence and often find themselves at the receiving end of his aggressive hitting. 

 

"Sunil Gavaskar and Vivian Richards are the batsmen that really inspired me," he said during the interview. "I wanted to be as solid as Gavaskar and as destructive as Richards, because that combination was always going to be lethal. I felt truly inspired by these two individuals on the field," he said.

 

So much has been written about Gavaskar's mode of batting which inspired a whole generation in this country. From 1971 to 1987 he displayed the rare combination of total technique, impeccable body balance and scintillating strokes to spectators in Madras and Melbourne, Lahore and Leeds, Colombo and Christchurch. 

 

Over the years, he left a trail of frustrated bowlers who, with a gesture of helplessness, turned to their captain as if to implore, "please take me off. There is no use bowling to this bloke. He's never going to get out." Indeed, so impeccable was his technique, so insatiable was his appetite for runs, so uncanny was his knack at building an innings, brick by brick, that he gave the impression of batting all day and every day. His batting was the epitome of the age old qualities of dedication, determination and concentration. 

 

Where Gavaskar scored over Geoff Boycott another master of technique and defensive batting was that he had so many strokes that he was ruthlessly unsparing on the bad ball. That was the point Tony Lewis made while writing about his 101 at Old Trafford in 1974. 

 

Many knowledgeable critics put it at the top of his 34-century list and Lewis' description illustrates why. "Quite unforgettable was his 101 out of 246 against England in 1974. Cold north-west winds drove in squalls, bringing only the seventh day of rain in Manchester since mid-February. The pitch was firm and bouncy. Willis, Old and Hendrick were hostile, whacking in the short balls. Underwood and Greig were the slower bowlers and they gave nothing away."

 

Gavaskar first demonstrated how brave he was. He kept his eye on the ball and swayed either side of the high bounce, but when the ball was pitched up, he was immediately forward to drive it straight. This is where Gavaskar was a better player than Boycott overall. Boycott lost his strokes or maybe through parsimony he cut them out. Gavaskar reduced risk too but never lost the spring off the back foot which sent him firmly into the drive."

 

Richards' batting was a law unto itself. Few batsmen have intimidated bowlers just by their walk to the crease as Richards did. The confident swagger said it all. And then it was not unusual for him to whip his first ball through mid wicket to the boundary even when it was pitched precisely where the bowler had intended. The level of his confidence was unparalleled and he had footwork with which the great natural batsmen are born and the power of lightning and bewildering reflexes. When he was in prime form the best bowlers were as helpless against him as all the rest. 

 

At a time when the fast bowler's stock ball whizzed past the batsman's nostrils Richards was the last hold out who shunned the helmet – even on his last tour of England when he was in his 40th year. The maroon cap was a reminder that no bowler however fast would threaten his domination. Richards was never content with mere survival. Bowlers had to be subjugated, to recognize that he was the master of all that he survived on a cricket field. With all the emphasis on attacking skills Richards was capable of technical excellence. 

 

As Vic Marks wrote in his tribute to Richards when he was chosen among Wisden's five cricketers of the century, "his forward defensive stoke which he sometimes played with exaggerated, ironic care, just to inform the bowler that he could have smashed a boundary but had chosen not to, could be as impenetrable as Boycott's. But he didn't use it that often. More frequently, he ignored the coaching manuals and relying on the keenest pair of eyes and phenomenal reflexes just trusted his instincts." 

 

Richards could destroy the bowling both clinically and ferociously. It is no surprise that the fastest Test century of all time - off just 56 balls - stands against his name. On that memorable day at St Johns's sixes were hit in every direction. He was known to launch a fearsome assault upon any bowler who enjoyed an international reputation. The higher the stage the better he performed.

Gambir missing his pening partne:

Cricketer Gautam Gambhir on Friday said that swashbuckling opener Virender Sehwag, who is sidelined due to injury, will be desperately missed by the team during the tour of Sri Lanka as well as the Champions Trophy. 

"Any team will miss Sehwag (Virender Sehwag) because he was in such a form, that would have been a great advantage for any team," Gambhir said.

Gambhir said this on the sidelines of ceremony held in Chennai, where he was appointed the brand ambassador of MRF. 

India has announced the squad for the Sri Lanka tri-series followed by the Champions Trophy, in which they have recalled Rahul Dravid and left out Sehwag due to his shoulder surgery.

Gambhir further sad that international cricket was all about handling pressure, and you have to continuously deliver for the team.

"When you are playing international cricket it's all about the pressure. You should know how to handle it and you should be able take that responsibility, which is very important and the responsibility only comes when the team starts expecting that you can deliver," he said.

The series in Sri Lanka, which also involves New Zealand, will be held from September 8 to 14.