Saturday, January 29, 2011

Hafeez, Afridi star in series-levelling win

A solid maiden ODI century from Mohammad Hafeez, a monstrous assault in the death overs led by Shahid Afridi and a spirited performance in the field were features of a roaring comeback by Pakistan in the ODI series, which they leveled 1-1 with a 43-run win at the AMI Stadium in Christchurch. Hafeez counter-attacked after Pakistan had been dented in their start and dropped anchor in the middle overs to set up a launching pad for Afridi and Umar Akmal to smash 126 runs in the last ten overs. Faced with a stiff chase, New Zealand fought hard but timely breakthroughs meant they were always struggling to measure up to the asking rate, eventually leading to their downfall.

The greenish appearance of the track proved deceptive as the movement off the seam that Ross Taylor had banked on when opting to field proved negligible. At the same time, conditions weren't too easy for the batsmen early on either as the pitch played slow and low and the ball didn't come on. Hafeez, who has often squandered starts since his promotion to the top of the order, lost two partners, Ahmed Shehzad and Kamran Akmal, to deliveries that appeared to stop on the batsmen. But New Zealand's seamers lacked discipline and failed to apply pressure consistently, which allowed Hafeez to wrest the initiative.
The short square boundaries at the AMI Stadium were inevitably favoured as the bowlers didn't help their cause by consistently pitching short. Not long after he had nipped out two wickets, Tim Southee was pulled for consecutive boundaries by Hafeez; Hamish Bennett, struggling to bowl into the wind and dropping significantly in pace, was welcomed with a swipe to fine leg and six over long-on while Jacob Oram, in the very over he dismissed Younis Khan, was dispatched over midwicket.
New Zealand had a few chances to limit the damage. Hafeez was dropped on 49 by Brendon McCullum, diving full length to his right and failing to hold on to a difficult catch; Misbah-ul-Haq, who added 94 with Hafeez, was given a reprieve through a missed stumping by McCullum, and Bennett dropped a relatively simple catch off Afridi that, otherwise, could have checked the one-way traffic towards the end of the innings.
Even as Pakistan tried to rebuild their innings, Hafeez was at ease, displaying an excellent ability to adapt, rotating the strike with Misbah and threading the gaps with adept footwork and timing. He stepped out to smash debutant Luke Woodcock for a straight boundary, lofted Oram over the in-field and, after securing his century and taking the batting Powerplay, scooped and slogged Southee for successive fours before signing off by heaving Kyle Mills for a six.
By the time he fell, Umar had warmed up with a couple of meaty hits and Afridi only had to join in. He targeted Oram, who was struggling with his lengths, in the 46th over, hammering him for two sixes on the leg side and a boundary through cover. The seamers either bowled too full or dragged the ball too short and Afridi, paddling, swatting and slapping, collected sixes over fine leg, cover point and long-on on his way to equalling the fastest half-century - off 19 balls - by a batsman in New Zealand, a record also held by McCullum.
New Zealand began brightly in their reply with Martin Guptill and Jamie How capitalising on the short boundaries to add 44 in quick time. But Pakistan's seamers, unlike the New Zealand bowlers, relied more on variations in pace with Sohail Tanvir, Wahab Riaz and Umar Gul ensuring the pressure of a big chase never diminished. How holed out to deep midwicket, failing to pick the slower ball; Ross Taylor, after a watchful start, stabbed at a good-length delivery to be caught at slip by Younis and Guptill, after four boundary-less overs in the second Powerplay, punched Riaz to point where Shehzad clung on to a low chance.
The hosts were in the hunt when Scott Styris and Kane Williamsom preserved their wickets, picked out the gaps to ensure a steady flow of ones and twos and accumulated 81 runs for the fourth wicket to stage a recovery. But while the seamers had picked up the wickets and restrained the batsmen, the slow bowlers, too, proved difficult to step up against, adding to the pressure on New Zealand. Afridi and Hafeez got through their overs quickly and gave little away. Hafeez eventually broke the stand as Styris failed to clear deep midwicket and when Williamson and McCullum departed within three runs of each other - bowled by Riaz and run out by Umar respectively - the game was all but sealed.
Pakistan's approach to their innings was reminiscent of the strategy they had adopted in the 1999 World Cup, progressing slowly with wickets in hand in the middle overs to set the stage for a violent surge in the last ten. Not a bad thing to prepare for the 2011 edition in much the same way.

ICC rejects plea for Eden Gardens extension

The ICC has rejected the BCCI's request to reconsider moving the Group B match between India and England from Kolkata. The match, scheduled to be held at the Eden Gardens on February 27, will now be played at an alternate venue, which the Indian board needs to finalise by January 31.
On Thursday, the ICC, after many deliberations, ruled out Kolkata as a host venue after its inspection team deemed the stadium unfit and expressed strong concerns about various facilities in the ground being ready in time for the game. Following the decision, the Cricket Association of Bengal president, Jagmohan Dalmiya, sent a plea to the ICC through the BCCI asking for a ten-day extension to finish the remaining work. Dalmiya received support from Shashank Manohar, the BCCI president, who sent in a separate "forwarding letter" to ICC chief executive, Haroon Lorgat, echoing the CAB's request.

However, Lorgat said the ICC could not be swayed at the last minute and conveyed his message to Manohar in an email late Friday night. "I told him the ICC could not accommodate the request," Lorgat told ESPNcricinfo. "There was too much of planning and too much of logistics that would be involved,"
It is understood that the ICC refused to climb down from its original stance because, having spoken to its stadium and ground-preparation experts again, the consensus remained that there was no guarantee Eden Gardens would be ready for the February 27 game. The feeling at the ICC was that Dalmiya, having found himself in a tight corner, was acting out of desperation. They believed things could not be sorted out in ten days, especially since Dalmiya had conceded to the ICC's inspection team on their January 25 visit that a further 20 days would be needed to get the ground ready.
The status of the other three group matches scheduled to be hosted by Kolkata - Ireland v Holland, South Africa v Ireland and Zimbabwe v Kenya - remains unclear at the moment. The ICC has clarified that there will be no further inspections of the venue. It is for the BCCI and CAB to let them know if Kolkata can host those three matches.
"The big commercial game was India v England. The other matches involve Associates, which cannot be big money spinners. It is now for the CAB to take a call and if they want to save the face, they could get the ground ready for the other three matches," an official close to the negotiations said.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Murali to end international career with World Cup

Muttiah Muralitharan has said he will retire from all international cricket after the 2011 World Cup. The 38-year-old offspinner, who had retired from Test cricket in July last year, will continue to play in domestic Twenty20 competitions.
"This World Cup will be my last outing," Muralitharan said. "My time is up. I have signed up to play for two years in the IPL. I am also looking at similar work in New Zealand and perhaps England."

Muralitharan, who holds the record for the highest number of wickets in both Test and one-day cricket was part of Sri Lanka's World Cup winning side in 1996. He is one of three spinners in Sri Lanka's squad for the 2011 tournament, the other two being left-arm spinner Ranagana Herath and Ajantha Mendis. "This is my fourth World Cup. We won in 1996 and came close in 2007 by reaching the final. This would be a memorable one for me and for Sri Lankan fans."
Since quitting Tests, Muralitharan has played only three international matches - two ODIs and a Twenty20 game during Sri Lanka's tour of Australia in October-November 2010. He has been rested from the side for the first two ODIs of the three-match home series against West Indies which starts on January 31, Sri Lanka's final commitment before the World Cup.
He played for Chennai Super Kings in the first three seasons of the IPL, including their triumphs in the 2010 edition of the tournament and the Champions League in the same year. He was bought by the new Kochi franchise in the 2011 IPL auction for $1.1 million.
In July, Muralitharan had said there were plans in the pipeline for him and former India legspinner Anil Kumble to open a spin-bowling academy in Bangalore. However, while announcing his retirement after the World Cup on Friday, he said he had no immediate plans to start coaching. "There are plenty of coaches and lots of talented people out there. I will take things as they come. For the moment, I am not looking at any coaching stints."

Duminy stars in series-levelling win

JP Duminy orchestrated a South African fightback to level the series after India had seemed set for a maiden series win in the country. The hosts had collapsed to 118 for 5 through a combination of some headless-chicken running and constricting bowling from India's part-time spinners. But Duminy's responsible knock hauled South Africa to a challenging total before India's batsmen, barring Virat Kohli, folded on a sluggish Port Elizabeth pitch.

On a blustery day, Hashim Amla returned to his awesome run-scoring form. He took his time initially assessing the pitch in the early overs, but soon unfurled his full range of strokes to pick up plenty of boundaries. Zaheer Khan was punched past backward point and later pulled to midwicket, Munaf Patel was crunched past mid-off while Ashish Nehra was caressed past extra cover. A slash to third man off Yuvraj Singh brought Amla his 12th half-century, during which he broke Zaheer Abbas' 28-year record for the fastest man to make 2000 ODI runs.
Graeme Smith rarely found the middle of the bat or his timing and finally miscued an attempted swat to mid-off. Morne van Wyk, a surprise pick in South Africa's World Cup squad who was playing his first one-dayer in more than three years, proved a more solid partner to Amla. Yuvraj Singh and the other part-timers were getting the ball to turn, though it was slow spin, but one of those deliveries moved enough to take the outside edge of van Wyk's bat to fly to first slip.
South Africa were 106 for 2, but India edged ahead when a mistimed pull from Amla trickled towards short fine leg, just outside the inner circle - Amla went for a suicidal second run and it ended in suicide, as he was caught well short.
The worries increased for South Africa when Yuvraj prised out another big wicket in the next over, that of AB de Villiers, adjudged caught-behind though it was unclear whether he edged the ball, but he can't complain much as he was stumped as well off that delivery. The misery continued when Faf du Plessis, who made such a composed half-century on debut on Tuesday, perished to some senseless running.
Duminy and Johan Botha then set about ensuring South Africa built a competitive score. Duminy cut out the Hollywood shots and nudged the ball around for singles, while Botha hit a series of leg-side boundaries, the pick of which was an effortless flick off Zaheer. Yuvraj ended that stand at 70, getting his third wicket with a tossed-up delivery that beat Botha's sweep.
Eyebrows were raised when left-arm spinner Robin Peterson was picked ahead of highly rated legspinner Imran Tahir, but he responded with an important 31, which ended with him sacrificing his wicket to save Duminy.
Duminy, meanwhile, had brought up his fourth half-century in five innings with a gorgeous off-drive, and eased South Africa's concerns over the performance of their lower-middle order. With four wickets still remaining heading into the batting Powerplay, Duminy helped plunder 45 runs off the final five overs and India's batsmen had a challenge ahead of them.
The Indian chase got off to a dreadful start as Rohit Sharma's batting woes continued, chasing and missing the first two deliveries from Lonwabo Tsotsobe, being carving the third to backward point. The other opener Parthiv Patel, who has had only one net session to adapt to South African conditions after flying in as a replacement for Sachin Tendulkar, was in far better touch but in the 10th over he was lbw missing a full delivery from Tsotsobe.
Kohli was the bright spot of the day for India, playing one of his finest international innings. He started with a couple of classy extra cover drives and was rarely troubled on a track where most found shot-making difficult. He was a touch tied down against the quicks , but opened out against the amiable left-arm spin of Peterson. Kohli hammered Peterson for 32 runs off 21 deliveries, including two effortless sixes over long-off.
While Kohli was crafting a stunning innings which will further his case for a starting spot in the World Cup, the rest of the middle order stuttered. Yuvraj fell to an outstanding diving catch from Smith after top-edging a paddle-sweep, Suresh Raina hung around for a while without really convincing , before missing an arm-ball from Peterson. India's hopes evaporated when MS Dhoni was dismissed after scratching around for eight balls, and lower-order game-changer Yusuf Pathan lasted all off three balls.
At 128 for 6, even with Kohli unbeaten on 76, the game was up for India. The climax was drawn out by a 50-minute rain interruption ,after which there was eight balls of play before the showers returned and South Africa were declared winners on the D/L method.
The series-levelling victory sets up a decider in Centurion on Sunday, though that match could be affected by rain.

Innings Dot balls 4s 6s PP1 PP2 PP3 Last 10 overs NB/Wides

South Africa 131 18 1 54/0 22/1 (11-15) 45/1 (46-50) 68/1 2/10
India 112 10 3 32/2 17/1 (11-15) - - 0/6

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Nerveless Woakes seals record win

Chris Woakes showed nerves of steel on his international debut to seal England a thrilling one-wicket victory at Adelaide and a world-record eighth Twenty20 win on the trot. Woakes finished unbeaten on 19 from 15 balls as he struck the final ball over midwicket having lost Graeme Swann at the start of the last over with four needed.
Ajmal Shahzad faced two dot balls before scrambling to the non-striker's end then Woakes scythed Shane Watson, who produced an outstanding all-round display with 59 and four wickets, through backward point to level the scores and ensure, at worst, England couldn't lose. They really shouldn't have pushed it so close having always been in control of the asking rate, but it's a credit to their belief that they could still pull through for victory despite a late clatter of wickets.

Watson will feel the defeat particularly acutely having almost pulled the match back for Australia. Eoin Morgan, in his first major innings since September, had eased 43 off 33 balls when he drove to cover and Michael Yardy fell first ball as he failed to get his bat out of the line of a short ball. But Woakes, a replacement for Stuart Broad in the England squad, showed why he was sent in ahead of Swann when he pulled Shaun Tait for a mighty six and was there to see his side home.
Australia were still some way short of the standards they set themselves having lost momentum with the bat after a fine start, the combined eight overs of Tait and Brett Lee went for 81, and their fielding display included a number of errors. They should have struck first ball of the innings but Steve O'Keefe dropped a regulation chance at square leg as Ian Bell went to pull Tait. Bell responded with three boundaries, including an effortless back-foot drive which oozed the class he has shown all tour.
England clearly weren't going to hold back in the first six overs. It was thrilling cricket to watch as the sides traded boundaries and wickets. Steven Davies drove his second ball to cover to give Brett Lee a wicket on his international return then Bell was given a second life, again off Tait, when David Warner dropped a tough chance at backward point.
Bell, playing his first Twenty20 international since 2008, unleashed an uppercut over third man of which Virender Sehwag would have been proud and Kevin Pietersen didn't want to be left behind as he joined in the boundary hunt. Australia continued to lapse in the field as O'Keefe let one through his legs at deep square-leg with England scoring at more than 10-an-over.
The batsmen didn't want to rein themselves in, however, even though the asking-rate was plummeting, and Bell drove Mitchell Johnson's third ball to cover. O'Keefe, meanwhile, must have feared how his evening would develop when Pietersen hit his first two balls for four and six but the left-arm spinner struck back when Pietersen failed to clear a leaping David Hussey at mid-off. It was a needless shot in terms of the run-rate, but England's tactic - which has reaped rich rewards - has been to go hard regardless in the first six overs.
The situation was made for steady accumulation and for a period Morgan and Paul Collingwood calmly ticked off the runs. It was hard to tell which batsman had barely played an innings since the end of the English season. Morgan pulled Lee for six then placed him perfectly over mid-off, but kept losing partners when Collingwood top-edged a sweep and Luke Wright walked across his stumps. And for once, Morgan couldn't finish the game himself.
Australia had threatened a far greater total than 157 when Watson was cutting loose to take Swann's first over for 26 on the way to a 27-ball half-century. He added 83 for the first wicket with Warner, but when the pair were separated the innings struggled to regain momentum and Australia failed to double their score.
Watson struck one boundary off Bresnan so hard that his bat broke, but the real damage came against the spinners. Yardy's opening over cost nine before Watson took Swann's first three deliveries over midwicket for increasingly large sixes and he added another boundary to reach fifty. Yardy, though, is a canny operator and fired one past Watson's attempted cut to give England a much-needed boost and he later had Warner taken at deep midwicket.
Despite Watson's departure Swann was whipped out of the attack but when he returned he produced a tight three overs which only went for 14. Hussey struggled to find his usual striking range, and though he eventually pulled Bresnan over midwicket for six. he then missed a perfect yorker next ball. England's bowlers were superb in the closing overs and the final result once again showed how the smallest of margins can make the difference in Twenty20 cricket.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Batsmen, Australians cash in during ground-breaking auction

At the end of the largest and most brazen two-day sports 'auction' in the world, the Indian Premier League took the first clear, decisive step towards its fourth season. Ending months of controversy around the League's own financial deals and its teams' ownership holdings, the ten franchises finally shook hands with the 139 cricketers who will form the core of the high-profile domestic Twenty20 event that begins in India on April 8.

Auction weekend in Bangalore oscillated wildly between the extremes of both spends, lavish as well as careful, ending with a general sloppiness towards the end. What began with the first of four $2m signings on Saturday morning ended with Mohammed Kaif's name finally pencilled into the IPL roster, after being met with silence across the floor not once, but twice on Sunday. Almost like a sudden afterthought, Kaif was hauled onto the IPL4 gravy train, the last cricketer aboard, concluding the 353-man auction used to reshuffle the League's overall player pool.
At the end of the prolonged display of corporate wealth, cricket tactics and Bollywood showbiz (in that order), which ran live on national television across India, teams were left dealing with either a shrunken wallet or depleted ranks. If Gautam Gambhir broke the $2m salary mark on Saturday, the relatively-unknown Australia allrounder Daniel Christian, who has played three Twenty20 internationals, was the highest-paid player signed up on Sunday, at $900,000 by the Deccan Chargers. Deccan now have 14 cricketers in their roster, and still have $2.13m left unspent from their $9m salary 'cap'. Current IPL champions Chennai Super Kings filled 18 slots, of the maximum squad strength of 30, during the auction itself. At the other end are the Rajasthan Royals, who signed just eight cricketers (Rahul Dravid and Pankaj Singh the only Indians among them) at the auction and are now left with a mere $800,000. They now have less than Christian's wage to hire at least another 18 cricketers to field a competitive team in the IPL.
Rajasthan and all the other teams will now have to find the remainder of their squad from among India's domestic player pool, officially called the 'uncapped' players, who now unofficially form the source of much confusion between the franchises. The uncapped players can only be paid a fixed sum depending on their experience in domestic cricket and there is doubt among franchises as to whether the guidelines imposed by the IPL governing council in this regard would, or indeed could, be legitimately followed.
The first XI's of many sides were pencilled in as much as possible on the first day itself, and the second was spent trying to fill in the overseas quota and the remaining gaps in team plans. If the first auction in 2008 was marked by the stampede to nab names that create spectator interest and a 'fan base', 2011 had the franchises, not the concept of 'icons', calling the shots. No takers then for some of the high-earning cricketers of the first phase of the IPL like Sourav Ganguly and Sanath Jayasuriya, nor the need to seek random, occasional short-game performers from overseas like Herschelle Gibbs, Jacob Oram or even the born-again Shivnarine Chanderpaul. Every soundbite that emerged on doting television channels talked about 'youth', the Twenty20 format, and the team's 'plans' for the future.
The heavy sums during auction weekend were spent on impact players, who are now expected to win matches single-handedly, as well as those meant to serve as genuine multi-taskers. If the player on auction was Indian, a fat pay cheque was a given, regardless of what the cricketer's speciality is. Gambhir was the highest-paid specialist batsman at $2.4m, closely followed by the allrounders Yusuf and Irfan Pathan, who between them picked up $4m.
On the flat wickets, quick outfields and short boundaries of India, all long handles were welcomed. Of the top 25 earners from the auction (excluding the retained players), there are only six specialist bowlers: Dale Steyn at $1.2m, Muttiah Muralitharan ($1.1m), Johan Botha ($950,000), and Zaheer Khan, Sreesanth and Piyush Chawla (all $900,000).
Yet, the 35 slots between $900,000 and $400,000 are full of bowlers, as many as 17, with Sunday's frantic buying including happy contracts for more than half a dozen Indian seamers. It opened with Umesh Yadav's remarkable $750,000 bid, Munaf Patel got $700,000 and Laxmipathy Balaji $500,000. Vinay Kumar was bought for $475,000, Ashok Dinda for $375,000 and Twenty20 specialist Manpreet Gony went for $290,000. The younger Indian seamers - Abhimanyu Mithun, Jaidev Unadkat and Sudeep Tyagi - were separated by $10,000 between the $260,000 to $240,000 bracket. Ajit Agarkar signed on once again with Kolkata for $210,000.
The heavy presence of as many as six Australians - Darren Lehmann, Michael Bevan, Geoff Lawson, Geoff Marsh, Dav Whatmore, Shane Warne (player-coach) and David Shipperd - heading support staffs among the ten teams explains the signing of 38 Australians amongst the 87 overseas players who will compete in IPL4. The South Africans are next with 20 of their players getting contracts. The southern hemisphere's cricket calendar works perfectly for both these nations' players to accommodate the IPL into their schedule, even as their third rugby-playing partner New Zealand is unable to hustle its most competitive cricketers into the tournament.
England's best will always find themselves having to grapple between their domestic season, early international fixtures and the IPL. The West Indians dispute over the unsigned board contracts may be settled by the silence from the entire League towards cricketers from the Caribbean as a whole.
While smaller nations may take some heart from Dutchman Ryan Ten Doeschate's $150,000 contract with Kolkata, Bangladesh or Zimbabwe players' entry into the IPL will still depend not on the team owners' knowledge of the game, but on the open-mindedness of those in charge of a franchise's cricket operations. Pakistan's players' entry, though, will have to rely on a thaw in both the political freeze between India and its neighbour, as well as the immovable timidity of the League.
The final round of the IPL auction ended in farce as 28 players were put back into auction, ostensibly because they had been asked for by the franchises. Yet 13 of the 28, including eight international cricketers, were not bid for by a single franchise, with no explanations given as to why they had been put onto the list. The three biggest names left out of the auction - Ganguly, Jayasuriya and Chris Gayle - were not on the list and will not be a part of IPL4. Ganguly and Jayasuriya may have missed out because of their age but Gayle's omission is as inexplicable as the man's own persona. Among those bid for as second thoughts were Jesse Ryder of New Zealand, Rusty Theron of South Africa, Adam Voges and Moises Henriques from Australia, and Dmitri Mascarenhas and Michael Lumb of England. A few first-class cricketers, known mostly to the overseas coaches who make up most of the franchises' support staff, pulled in some surprise contracts right at the end.
Only two more Indians made that final cut: left-arm spinner Murali Kartik and Kaif, whose name was suddenly called for the third time. He was one of the earliest on the leftover list to be called up again, but met with silence for the second time in a day. Third time around, Kaif drew bids from Pune, Deccan and Bangalore, and eventually went to the Royal Challengers Bangalore for $130,000. The auction finally drew to a close with the three groups of men and women who had been tossing around numbers for Kaif rocking back and forth with laughter. The heaviest wallets in Indian cricket had much to celebrate: for six weeks this summer, they will own and control the biggest and some of the most gifted names in the sport.

MS Dhoni - India


Full name Mahendra Singh Dhoni
Born July 7, 1981, Ranchi
Current age 29 years 187 days
Major teams India, Asia XI, Bihar, Chennai Super Kings, Jharkhand
Also known as Mahi
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Fielding position Wicketkeeper
Batting and fielding averages

Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 54 82 9 2925 148 40.06 4849 60.32 4 20 321 51 148 25
ODIs 172 153 39 5733 183* 50.28 6489 88.34 7 37 442 119 170 55
T20Is 26 25 8 451 46 26.52 404 111.63 0 0 26 13 11 3
First-class 95 148 12 5087 148 37.40

7 34

256 44
List A 228 205 49 7735 183* 49.58

13 48

237 70
Twenty20 79 72 24 1698 73* 35.37 1321 128.53 0 7 131 55 32 19
Bowling averages

Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 54 3 18 19 0 - - - 6.33 - 0 0 0
ODIs 172 1 12 14 1 1/14 1/14 14.00 7.00 12.0 0 0 0
T20Is 26 - - - - - - - - - - - -
First-class 95
48 39 0 - - - 4.87 - 0 0 0
List A 228
39 36 2 1/14 1/14 18.00 5.53 19.5 0 0
Twenty20 79 - - - - - - - - - - - -

Pakistan seal crushing win on dramatic day

What Pakistan inflicted on New Zealand on a dramatic third day in Hamilton was nothing short of an embarassment. On a still-placid track, the hosts were victims of some incisive Pakistan bowling but let themselves down through some equally inept batting, transforming a Test that had been closely-fought on the first two days into a hopelessly one-sided contest in just one session.
Pakistan's build-up to this Test had been hijacked by the spot-fixing hearings in Doha but they managed to infuse plenty of significance to a Test that otherwise appeared as a sideshow. Missing several of their first-choice players, for reasons ranging from allegations of corruption to indiscipline and fitness, Pakistan were propelled to victory on the back of strong performances from their inexperienced players under a fresh captain. Misbah-ul-Haq's team had held South Africa to two draws in the UAE, but this win, for all the distractions off the field and though against a less prominent opposition, would go miles in restoring some pride after a turbulent few months.
For New Zealand, who had challenged India in their Test series there, it marked another low, and a dispiriting start - discounting the Twenty20 series prior to this - to John Wright's tenure as coach.
Pakistan's lower order, including its bowlers, had played a crucial role in stretching the first-innings lead to 92 after the loss of two early wickets in the day. And the confidence with which they went about extending their team's advantage with the bat, showed in the way they attacked on the field in the session after tea.
While New Zealand dropped catches, Pakistan hardly gave anything away. While New Zealand's seamers often overpitched to the tailenders, the Pakistan bowlers backed their superior pace by varying their lengths. And while Daniel Vettori was negotiated safely, his left-arm spinning counterpart Abdur Rehman never seemed far from taking a wicket.
Rehman was the pick of the Pakistan bowlers in the first innings, strangling New Zealand's run-flow with a spate of maidens in the session after lunch on the first day. It was no surprise then that Misbah turned to him as early as the ninth over in New Zealand's second attempt.
Rehman doesn't rely too much on spin but plenty on alterations in place and length. He should have had Brendon McCullum out lbw almost immediately with a quick straighter one, but just an over later he fooled Tim McIntosh, who stepped out to a flighted delivery that was held back, played inside the line and was stumped. The psychological edge he had gained over Martin Guptill in the first innings, tying him down with five straight maidens, reaped rewards in the second, as the batsman top-edged an ill-planned slog-sweep. The icing on the cake was the wicket of Vettori, done in by a bit of turn from the footmarks and trapped plumb.
Rehman had been the beneficiary of three dropped catches during his stand of 72 with Adnan Akmal that took Pakistan in to the lead, but, barring an early lapse from Taufeeq Umar at slip, the visitors were ruthless on the field. Ross Taylor had begun his innings with a couple of confident drives but he was unable to beat a direct-hit from Misbah while attempting a risky single. And when Kane Williamson inside-edged Wahab Riaz onto his pads, the spontaneous appeal for an lbw did not distract Azhar Ali at slip from diving low to claim a catch that was later upheld.
In the interim, Riaz was fortunate to get a caught-behind decision against McCullum - the ball deflected off his thigh - and his extra pace accounted for Jesse Ryder first ball as he failed to bring his bat down in time against an inswinging yorker. Umar Gul wrapped up the innings, when he had debutant Reece Young caught at deep square leg off a short delivery, and then bounced Chris Martin not long after he had completed 100 runs in Test cricket. From 60 for 2, New Zealand collapsed to 110 all out, including losing four wickets for one run and the humiliation was only 19 runs away.
New Zealand had tried hard to even things out on the third morning, but as has been the trend throughout this Test, Pakistan pulled them back to surge ahead. Williamson and Southee's resistance in the first innings ended quickly on the second day, Misbah and Shafiq led the team's recovery after they had been reduced to 107 for 4, and Adnan's counterattack today compensated for the early departure of the overnight duo.
When the seamers strayed on the pads, Adnan flicked them elegantly to the fine-leg boundary; he cut powerfully when they dropped short and drove when they pitched up. His boundary-filled 66-ball stay not only gave Pakistan the lead but eased the burden off those who followed, and their carefree batting yielded more runs. His approach rubbed off on Rehman, who broke a 30-ball runless drought with two sixes off Vettori, while Gul and Tanvir Ahmed did their bit down the order, including smacking Brent Arnel for 15 in an over. The last four wickets added 111, and by the time Martin claimed Ahmed as his 500th first-class victim, the foundation for victory, as it turned out, had been firmly laid.

ICC World Cup 2011 League 2011 / Features

Date and Time Match Weather

Sat Feb 19          
08:30 GMT | 14:30 local
14:00 IST
1st Match, Group B - India v Bangladesh
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur

N/A

Sun Feb 20
04:00 GMT | 09:30 local
09:30 IST
2nd Match, Group A - Kenya v New Zealand
MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chepauk, Chennai

N/A

Sun Feb 20          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
3rd Match, Group A - Sri Lanka v Canada
Mahinda Rajapaksha International Cricket Stadium, Sooriyawewa, Hambantota

N/A

Mon Feb 21          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
4th Match, Group A - Australia v Zimbabwe
Sardar Patel Stadium, Motera, Ahmedabad

N/A

Tue Feb 22          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
5th Match, Group B - England v Netherlands
Vidarbha Cricket Association Ground, Nagpur

N/A

Wed Feb 23          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
6th Match, Group A - Kenya v Pakistan
Mahinda Rajapaksha International Cricket Stadium, Sooriyawewa, Hambantota

N/A

Thu Feb 24          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
7th Match, Group B - South Africa v West Indies
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi

N/A

Fri Feb 25
04:00 GMT | 09:30 local
09:30 IST
8th Match, Group A - Australia v New Zealand
Vidarbha Cricket Association Ground, Nagpur

N/A

Fri Feb 25          
08:30 GMT | 14:30 local
14:00 IST
9th Match, Group B - Bangladesh v Ireland
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur

N/A

Sat Feb 26          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
10th Match, Group A - Sri Lanka v Pakistan
R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo

N/A

Sun Feb 27          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
11th Match, Group B - India v England
Eden Gardens, Kolkata

N/A

Mon Feb 28
04:00 GMT | 09:30 local
09:30 IST
12th Match, Group A - Canada v Zimbabwe
Vidarbha Cricket Association Ground, Nagpur

N/A

Mon Feb 28          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
13th Match, Group B - Netherlands v West Indies
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi

N/A

Tue Mar 1          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
14th Match, Group A - Sri Lanka v Kenya
R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo

N/A

Wed Mar 2          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
15th Match, Group B - England v Ireland
M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore

N/A

Thu Mar 3
04:00 GMT | 09:30 local
09:30 IST
16th Match, Group B - Netherlands v South Africa
Punjab Cricket Association Stadium, Mohali, Chandigarh

N/A

Thu Mar 3          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
17th Match, Group A - Canada v Pakistan
R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo

N/A

Fri Mar 4
04:00 GMT | 09:30 local
09:30 IST
18th Match, Group A - New Zealand v Zimbabwe
Sardar Patel Stadium, Motera, Ahmedabad

N/A

Fri Mar 4          
08:30 GMT | 14:30 local
14:00 IST
19th Match, Group B - Bangladesh v West Indies
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur

N/A

Sat Mar 5          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
20th Match, Group A - Sri Lanka v Australia
R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo

N/A

Sun Mar 6
04:00 GMT | 09:30 local
09:30 IST
21st Match, Group B - England v South Africa
MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chepauk, Chennai

N/A

Sun Mar 6          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
22nd Match, Group B - India v Ireland
M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore

N/A

Mon Mar 7          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
23rd Match, Group A - Canada v Kenya
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi

N/A

Tue Mar 8          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
24th Match, Group A - New Zealand v Pakistan
Pallekele International Cricket Stadium

N/A

Wed Mar 9          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
25th Match, Group B - India v Netherlands
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi

N/A

Thu Mar 10          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
26th Match, Group A - Sri Lanka v Zimbabwe
Pallekele International Cricket Stadium

N/A

Fri Mar 11
04:00 GMT | 09:30 local
09:30 IST
27th Match, Group B - Ireland v West Indies
Punjab Cricket Association Stadium, Mohali, Chandigarh

N/A

Fri Mar 11          
08:30 GMT | 14:30 local
14:00 IST
28th Match, Group B - Bangladesh v England
Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong

N/A

Sat Mar 12          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
29th Match, Group B - India v South Africa
Vidarbha Cricket Association Ground, Nagpur

N/A

Sun Mar 13
04:00 GMT | 09:30 local
09:30 IST
30th Match, Group A - Canada v New Zealand
Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai

N/A

Sun Mar 13          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
31st Match, Group A - Australia v Kenya
M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore

N/A

Mon Mar 14
03:30 GMT | 09:30 local
09:00 IST
32nd Match, Group B - Bangladesh v Netherlands
Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong

N/A

Mon Mar 14          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
33rd Match, Group A - Pakistan v Zimbabwe
Pallekele International Cricket Stadium

N/A

Tue Mar 15          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
34th Match, Group B - Ireland v South Africa
Eden Gardens, Kolkata

N/A

Wed Mar 16          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
35th Match, Group A - Australia v Canada
M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore

N/A

Thu Mar 17          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
36th Match, Group B - England v West Indies
MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chepauk, Chennai

N/A

Fri Mar 18
04:00 GMT | 09:30 local
09:30 IST
37th Match, Group B - Ireland v Netherlands
Eden Gardens, Kolkata

N/A

Fri Mar 18          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
38th Match, Group A - New Zealand v Sri Lanka
Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai

N/A

Sat Mar 19
03:30 GMT | 09:30 local
09:00 IST
39th Match, Group B - Bangladesh v South Africa
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur

N/A

Sat Mar 19          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
40th Match, Group A - Australia v Pakistan
R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo

N/A

Sun Mar 20
04:00 GMT | 09:30 local
09:30 IST
41st Match, Group A - Kenya v Zimbabwe
Eden Gardens, Kolkata

N/A

Sun Mar 20          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
42nd Match, Group B - India v West Indies
MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chepauk, Chennai

N/A

Wed Mar 23          
08:30 GMT | 14:30 local
14:00 IST
Quarter Final - TBC v TBC (A1 v B4)
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur

N/A

Thu Mar 24          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
Quarter Final - TBC v TBC (A2 v B3)
Sardar Patel Stadium, Motera, Ahmedabad

N/A

Fri Mar 25          
08:30 GMT | 14:30 local
14:00 IST
Quarter Final - TBC v TBC (A3 v B2)
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur

N/A

Sat Mar 26          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
Quarter Final - TBC v TBC (A4 v B1)
R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo

N/A

Tue Mar 29          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
Semi Final - TBC v TBC
R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo

N/A

Wed Mar 30          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
Semi Final - TBC v TBC
Punjab Cricket Association Stadium, Mohali, Chandigarh

N/A

Sat Apr 2          
09:00 GMT | 14:30 local
14:30 IST
Final - TBC v TBC
Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai

N/A

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

ICC rankings for Tests and ODIs

ICC Test Championship

5 Dec 2010
Team Matches Points Rating
India 38 4893 129
South Africa 32 3712 116
England 39 4355 112
Australia 37 4061 110
Sri Lanka 27 2951 109
Pakistan 26 2275 88
West Indies 25 2128 85
New Zealand 29 2318 80
Bangladesh 19 131 7

ICC ODI Championship

12 Dec 2010
Team Matches Points Rating
Australia 36 4595 128
India 39 4713 121
Sri Lanka 33 3892 118
South Africa 25 2873 115
England 28 3147 112
Pakistan 27 2704 100
New Zealand 29 2651 91
West Indies 18 1207 67
Bangladesh 32 2121 66
Ireland 11 425 39
Zimbabwe 34 1272 37
Netherlands 6 103 17
Kenya 8 1 0

Developed by David Kendix