Live cricket

Friday, 25 November 2011

The Undertaker’s Health & Return, WWE Officials Pressured by Iron

It’s said that independent wrestler Gregory Iron, who has cerebral palsy, has some people unhappy in WWE after his recent Twitter campaign to get him a spot in the 2012 Royal Rumble. Because of Iron’s petition, some in the company feel pressured to not anger the fans who sign his petition, since WWE is so serious about Twitter these days, and they don’t want to come off as cruel to someone with a disability.
- The Undertaker has had another hip and shoulder operation since he’s been away from the ring. Last year around this time there was doubt in Taker’s health for WrestleMania but the latest word is that he’s recovered well and is ready for Miami.
We don’t know yet who Taker’s opponent is for WrestleMania 28 but word is that it has already been decided on. WWE officials have reportedly decided on the top three WrestleMania matches, including John Cena vs. The Rock, and Taker’s match will be the #2 top match on the card.

Monday, 21 November 2011

West Indies openers make solid start


Lunch West Indies 80 for 0 (Barath 37*, Brathwaite 35*) v India
Live scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Adrian Barath and Kraigg Brathwaite gave West Indies one of their best batting sessions of the series on the opening day of the final Test against India at the Wankhede Stadium. Their patient effort was only the third West Indian Test half-century opening stand of the year, and bolstered a side that was missing their most experienced batsman, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, due to a calf strain.
After losing the toss, MS Dhoni had hoped moisture in the pitch would help his quick bowlers early on, but both Ishant Sharma and debutant Varun Aaron - taking the place of the rested Umesh Yadav - got little sideways movement. Both bowlers consistently hit the 140kph mark, and though there were a couple of plays-and-misses, West Indies' young openers had few serious alarms. The ball was changed in the fifth over as it went out of shape, but even the newer cherry didn't cause much to discomfort to Barath and Brathwaite.
Spin was introduced as early as the ninth over of the match, with Pragyan Ojha trying to exploit the West Indies' well-documented trouble against the turning ball. He got some extra bounce, and a few deliveries to spin, though not enough to impede West Indies' serene progress.
Both Barath and Brathwaite showcased a tight defence, and there were few flamboyant strokes, with the pair preferring to capitalise on the leg-stump deliveries on offer. The first caution-to-the-wind shot came from the usually stoic Brathwaite, who charged out and swatted R Ashwin's second delivery over midwicket for four in the 19th over. Barath also caned Ashwin for a couple of boundaries a few overs before lunch, but he had been mostly measured in the rest of the session.
Their efforts took West Indies to lunch at 80 for 0, a scoreline Darren Sammy would have gladly accepted when he had won the toss and chosen to bat.

Monday, 14 November 2011

Bad light stalls India's charge

If it is Eden gardens, it must be Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman. Add bits of Gautam Gambhir, Virender Sehwag and Sachin Tendulkar, and you know the opposition has had a bad day. All the specialists who got out would have been kicking themselves even as Dravid made his way to his fifth century after his 38th birthday, behind only four men on that count, all of whom finished before he started. India won the toss on an easy-paced track, and all their batsmen looked good before three of them found fielders with their attacking shots. Dravid and Laxman, though, didn't seem in any mood to let this opportunity pass, and added 140 for the fourth wicket at a rate of four per over, which matched up to the rest of the innings.
A lot about this day didn't seem right. The Eden Gardens stands were empty on the Monday morning, West Indies were bowling and the keeper came up to the stumps in the fourth over, and the deep point went back at the same time. However, the defensive fields failed to exercise much control: the 47th over was the first maiden of the innings.
The bowlers' failure to match those defensive fields with accuracy, the batsmen's willingness to take risks, and a lightning quick outfield worked as a team. From the moment they lost the toss West Indies seemed resigned to what Darren Sammy called "a disciplined" effort. It showed in how Kemar Roach, replacing the sick Ravi Rampaul, wasn't even given the new ball. Not that Sammy made any difference to the kind of start that was expected. Sehwag drove and pushed his first over for fours after Gambhir had driven Fidel Edwards for four in his first.
In his next over Sammy asked Carlton Baugh to call for his helmet and sent the point fieldsman to the boundary. Still Sehwag and Gambhir hit a boundary each. The two added 66 in 12 overs before Sehwag got too adventurous. With the mid-on back he tried to drag Sammy over midwicket, but couldn't find the elevation. After that wicket, Gambhir settled down a bit. He respected the spinners a bit before taking the risks. One of the risks was when he drove in the air and wide of mid-off, the other a loft off Devendra Bishoo over midwicket. The second of those took him to 48 off 76, and his first half-century against West Indies duly arrived.

Smart stats

  • Rahul Dravid scored his 36th Test century and his fifth of the calendar year. Only Ricky Ponting, Jacques Kallis and Sachin Tendulkar are above Dravid on the list of highest Test centurions.
  • Dravid scored five hundreds in a year for the second time in his career. The previous year when he scored five centuries was 2002, He went past Ian Bell to become the highest run-getter in 2011. Bell, however took eight innings fewer than Dravid.
  • Dravid's hundred is also his fourth at Eden Gardens bringing him joint-second with VVS Laxman on the list of highest century-getters at the venue. Mohammad Azharuddin is on top with five centuries in seven matches.
  • In the Indian innings, there were fifty-plus stands for each of the first four wickets. This was only the fourth such instance for India in Tests against West Indies.
  • With their 12th century stand, Laxman and Dravid moved joint-second on the list of Indian batting pairs with the most century partnerships. Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar are on top with 19 hundred stands.

After lunch, coinciding with the control on run flow, Gambhir drove in front of his body and picked out short cover. Seventeen runs had come in the previous six overs. Tendulkar got off with trademark boundaries, a flick through square leg, and a drive between mid-off and extra cover. Two more hit-me deliveries arrived, and he was 20 off 28. As he slowed down to take breath, West Indies created two chances against him: Bishoo didn't get an lbw call his way, and a bat-pad off Sammy fell between the desperate keeper and bowler.
Soon, though, Tendulkar toe-ended a long hop, and the crowd, which had grown to a slightly more impressive number since the morning, lost its voice. That brought out the most prolific batsman at Eden to start a partnership with the man just behind him. Dravid was already in the middle of a well-paced innings. The sight of Dravid usually brings respite to the bowling sides when he is following a rampant Sehwag, but here he began with a couple and a four in the first over he faced. Soon he was 18 off 16, having hit four fours, one of which was a punch against the turn of Marlon Samuels, deliberately in front of square to beat deep point.
At 37 off 53, he had hit seven boundaries. Then followed that tighter session - 80 runs as opposed to 132 in the first - and two wickets at the other end. He didn't hit another boundary for the next 100 balls he faced. Still, those 100 balls brought him 41 runs and involved the 15 minutes before tea when he and Laxman remained cautious. In the 68th over of the innings, Dravid lofted Bishoo over mid-off for the 20th six of his career.
By then Laxman too had moved on from his 1 off 15 to 30 off 47 through some Laxman shots. The milestones came up without fuss. Dravid reached his fifth century of the year, level with his best year in terms of centuries, 2002, with a flick past square leg. Laxman brought up his eighth score of 50 or more in his 10th Eden Test with a well-placed couple deep on the on side. That shot was also indicative of his innings, of how he kept finding gaps through the defensive fields. Dravid went on to celebrate with the 21st six of his career, this time a slog-sweep off Samuels.
Just before stumps, though, he gifted youngster Kraigg Brathwaite with a wicket when he went back to a cut a fullish delivery. Not yet sated, he went back with disgust on his face. Inexplicably India sent out a nightwatchman. Ishant Sharma lasted only one ball, but in pure technical terms he did his job as bad light made sure there was no further play.

Dravid century leads India's Eden domination

India 346 for 5 (Dravid 119, Laxman 73*, Gambhir 65) v West Indies
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Rahul Dravid plays an attacking shot, India v West Indies, 2nd Test, Kolkata, 1st day, November 14, 2011
Rahul Dravid scored his fifth century of the year © AFP
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Related Links
Players/Officials: Rahul Dravid | VVS Laxman
Series/Tournaments: West Indies tour of India
Teams: India | West Indies
If it is Eden gardens, it must be Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman. Add bits of Gautam Gambhir, Virender Sehwag and Sachin Tendulkar, and you know the opposition has had a bad day. All the specialists who got out would have been kicking themselves even as Dravid made his way to his fifth century after his 38th birthday, behind only four men on that count, all of whom finished before he started. India won the toss on an easy-paced track, and all their batsmen looked good before three of them found fielders with their attacking shots. Dravid and Laxman, though, didn't seem in any mood to let this opportunity pass, and added 140 for the fourth wicket at a rate of four per over, which matched up to the rest of the innings.
A lot about this day didn't seem right. The Eden Gardens stands were empty on the Monday morning, West Indies were bowling and the keeper came up to the stumps in the fourth over, and the deep point went back at the same time. However, the defensive fields failed to exercise much control: the 47th over was the first maiden of the innings.
The bowlers' failure to match those defensive fields with accuracy, the batsmen's willingness to take risks, and a lightning quick outfield worked as a team. From the moment they lost the toss West Indies seemed resigned to what Darren Sammy called "a disciplined" effort. It showed in how Kemar Roach, replacing the sick Ravi Rampaul, wasn't even given the new ball. Not that Sammy made any difference to the kind of start that was expected. Sehwag drove and pushed his first over for fours after Gambhir had driven Fidel Edwards for four in his first.
In his next over Sammy asked Carlton Baugh to call for his helmet and sent the point fieldsman to the boundary. Still Sehwag and Gambhir hit a boundary each. The two added 66 in 12 overs before Sehwag got too adventurous. With the mid-on back he tried to drag Sammy over midwicket, but couldn't find the elevation. After that wicket, Gambhir settled down a bit. He respected the spinners a bit before taking the risks. One of the risks was when he drove in the air and wide of mid-off, the other a loft off Devendra Bishoo over midwicket. The second of those took him to 48 off 76, and his first half-century against West Indies duly arrived.

Smart stats

  • Rahul Dravid scored his 36th Test century and his fifth of the calendar year. Only Ricky Ponting, Jacques Kallis and Sachin Tendulkar are above Dravid on the list of highest Test centurions.
  • Dravid, who scored five hundreds in a year for only the second time since 2002, went past Ian Bell to become the highest run-getter in 2011. Bell, however took eight innings fewer than Dravid.
  • Dravid's hundred is also his fourth at Eden Gardens bringing him joint-second with VVS Laxman on the list of highest century-getters at the venue. Mohammad Azharuddin is on top with five centuries in seven matches.
  • In the Indian innings, there were fifty-plus stands for each of the first four wickets. This was only the fourth such instance for India in Tests against West Indies.
  • With their 12th century stand, Laxman and Dravid moved joint-second on the list of Indian batting pairs with the most century partnerships. Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar are on top with 19 hundred stands.

After lunch, coinciding with the control on run flow, Gambhir drove in front of his body and picked out short cover. Seventeen runs had come in the previous six overs. Tendulkar got off with trademark boundaries, a flick through square leg, and a drive between mid-off and extra cover. Two more hit-me deliveries arrived, and he was 20 off 28. As he slowed down to take breath, West Indies created two chances against him: Bishoo didn't get an lbw call his way, and a bat-pad off Sammy fell between the desperate keeper and bowler.
Soon, though, Tendulkar toe-ended a long hop, and the crowd, which had grown to a slightly more impressive number since the morning, lost its voice. That brought out the most prolific batsman at Eden to start a partnership with the man just behind him. Dravid was already in the middle of a well-paced innings. The sight of Dravid usually brings respite to the bowling sides when he is following a rampant Sehwag, but here he began with a couple and a four in the first over he faced. Soon he was 18 off 16, having hit four fours, one of which was a punch against the turn of Marlon Samuels, deliberately in front of square to beat deep point.
At 37 off 53, he had hit seven boundaries. Then followed that tighter session - 80 runs as opposed to 132 in the first - and two wickets at the other end. He didn't hit another boundary for the next 100 balls he faced. Still, those 100 balls brought him 41 runs and involved the 15 minutes before tea when he and Laxman remained cautious. In the 68th over of the innings, Dravid lofted Bishoo over mid-off for the 20th six of his career.
By then Laxman too had moved on from his 1 off 15 to 30 off 47 through some Laxman sots. The milestones came up without fuss. Dravid reached his fifth century of the year, level with his best year in terms of centuries, 2002, with a flick past square leg. Laxman brought up his eighth score of 50 or more in his 10th Eden Test with a well-placed couple deep on the on side. That shot was also indicative of his innings, of how he kept finding gaps through the defensive fields. Dravid went on to celebrate with his 21st six, this time a slog-sweep off Samuels.
Just before stumps, though, he gifted youngster Kraigg Brathwaite with a wicket when he went back to a cut a fullish delivery. Not yet sated, he went back with disgust on his face. Inexplicably India sent out a nightwatchman. Ishant Sharma lasted only one ball, but in pure technical terms he did his job as bad light made sure there was no further play.

Thursday, 10 November 2011

South Africa ahead after incomprehensible day

South Africa 81 for 1 (Smith 36*, Amla 29*) and 96 (Watson 5-17, Harris 4-33) need 155 runs to beat Australia 284 (Clarke 151, Steyn 4-55) and 47 (Philander 5-15, Morkel 3-9)
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Shane Watson is pumped up after his five-for, South Africa v Australia, 1st Test, Cape Town, 2nd day, November 10, 2011
Shane Watson completed his five-for in just 21 balls © Getty Images
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South Africa's batsmen were on course for a most extraordinary Test victory by stumps after Australia had contrived to be splintered for 47, and in doing so kick away a dominant position on an incomprehensible second day at Newlands.
In all, 23 wickets fell for 294 runs, 19 of them in an uninterrupted landslide of skilful bowling and abject batting between lunch and the first hour after tea.
Australia's 47 was their lowest total since 1902 and fourth lowest of all time, overshadowing the fact that South Africa had themselves been routed for a comparatively bountiful 96 in the afternoon, and left the hosts with a target of only 236 having given up a first-innings lead of 188.
Graeme Smith and Hashim Amla played with poise and power in the chase, demonstrating that the Cape Town surface was far from the treacherous strip it had appeared when the Australians batted a second time. In what must have felt to the tourists like the final insult, Amla sliced the final ball of the day to gully, where Michael Hussey dropped it.
The cascade of wickets added further lustre to a monumental 151 by the Australian captain Michael Clarke, who had shepherded the tail on the second morning to reach an ultimately handsome total of 284 from the overnight tally of 214 for 8. But he and his team will now feel aghast at how they have managed to surrender so much hard-won ground in a single innings.
After Clarke's masterclass, a staggering spell from Shane Watson, and a merely excellent one from Ryan Harris appeared to have placed the match in Australia's keeping. But they were 13 for three by tea and lost a frantic 6 for 8 on resumption.
Vernon Philander and Morne Morkel were the chief executioners for South Africa, bowling magnificently in helpful conditions, but it must be said they had plenty of help from the batsmen.
At 21 for 9, Australia were still five short of the lowest innings in Test history, but Peter Siddle and Nathan Lyon put their batting counterparts to shame with a last-wicket stand of 26. Their determination contrasted with the unbridled panic of others on a pitch that, while difficult, was never so poor as to be threatening the slimmest total in Tests.
Morkel had Phillip Hughes and Hussey edging consecutive balls either side of the break into the slip cordon. Philander swung and seamed the ball to continue the most striking of debuts, but was helped by a handful of ordinary shots from Australia's batsmen.
The worst of these was played by the wicketkeeper Brad Haddin, an ugly smear at a ball nowhere near the line or length to attack, and the rest either edged deliveries that seamed away or simply missed others that fizzed unerringly towards the stumps.
Until Siddle and Lyon came together, there was no semblance of calm shown by the visiting batsmen. Australia appeared to be unsettled significantly by the back stiffness that forced Shaun Marsh out of No. 3 in the order. He eventually shuffled to the middle at eight down, in obvious pain, and was lbw second ball.
Jacques Rudolph began neatly in the company of Smith, adding 27 before he pushed at a Siddle delivery going across him and was taken behind. It was Australia's only success in 17 overs, only one fewer than the whole of their second innings.
Such a plot twist seemed unfathomable when Watson and Harris were tearing through South Africa in the hour after lunch. Aided by a seaming pitch and alert use of the DRS, Watson and Harris orchestrated a tumble of wickets that, at the time, felt definitive. The hosts surrendered 9 wickets for 47 runs, momentarily looking as though they might fall short of the follow-on mark when 83 for 9.
Watson transformed what had previously been a quite sedate start to South Africa's innings in the first over after lunch. His second ball struck Hashim Amla in front, and the batsman was given out on referral to the third umpire. Jacques Kallis' miscalculated a pull shot off the sixth ball, that lobbed into the slips off bat and body. As with Amla, he was given out on referral to television.
A handful of overs later Watson did for Graeme Smith, knocking a seaming delivery back onto his stumps, and next ball Ashwell Prince was palpably lbw to a full delivery that swung back in. AB de Villiers fell next, bat and pad wedged closely together but adjacent, and lbw to Harris on referral. Watson had a fifth wicket inside four overs when Mark Boucher was pinned lbw on the back foot - his referral would be unsuccessful.
Vernon Philander edged to third slip, Morne Morkel was run out by Peter Siddle's direct hit while taking a haywire single - the day's only wicket not taken by a fast bowler - and after the briefest of nuisance stands, Imran Tahir was bowled by Harris.
In the morning session there had been little indication of the tumult to follow. Resuming at 214 for 8 in front of a sparse crowd, Clarke and Siddle showed the intent to score, but might both have been out inside half an hour. Philander's first ball of the day flew off the edge of Clarke's bat through second slip, but Graeme Smith hadn't posted one. Siddle had only five when Steyn found his edge towards backward point, where Tahir allowed the chance to slip completely through his fingers as he tumbled forward.
The batsmen made South Africa curse these early misses, playing with level eyes, plenty of enterprise and some luck to add 59 in all, the second highest partnership of the innings. Clarke went on to turn his century into a truly momentous score, responsible for comfortably more than half of his side's total. As it transpired, in one knock he easily scored more than what both sides would manage in the second and third innings of the match.
Eventually Siddle miscued Morkel to cover, and the last man Lyon hung around while Clarke fired off two more boundaries to pass 150. Clarke lost his leg stump when trying to swing Morkel for another, but he walked off knowing he had given his men a chance.
Marsh's place in the field was taken by the 12th man Trent Copeland, whose demotion from the XI meant Mitchell Johnson shared the new ball with Harris. There was little early movement, the sun arriving to coincide with the start of the South African innings, and after two expensive overs Johnson was withdrawn without delivering a ball to Smith, with whom he was expected to have a mini-battle.
Harris worked into a typically exacting spell. Moving the ball a little both ways, he made Rudolph use his bat, and eventually the batsman played around one that straightened the merest fraction to pluck out off stump. Amla and Smith made it through to lunch, but obliteration waited on the other side of the interval - for both sides.

Wednesday, 9 November 2011

Sourav Ganguly's Last Innings

Laxman, Tendulkar take India to comfortable win


India 209 (Sehwag 55, Dravid 54, Sammy 3-35) and 276 for 5 (Tendulkar 76, Laxman 58*, Sehwag 55) beatWest Indies 304 (Chanderpaul 118, Brathwaite 63, Ojha 6-72) and 180 (Chanderpaul 47, Sammy 42, Ashwin 6-47) by five wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Sachin Tendulkar cuts during his half-century, India v West Indies, 1st Test, New Delhi, 4th day, November 9, 2011
He might not have got the much-talked-of hundred, but Sachin Tendulkar set India on their way © AFP
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Analysis : The Kotla encore
Players/Officials: VVS Laxman | Sachin Tendulkar
Series/Tournaments: West Indies tour of India
Teams: India | West Indies
India raced through the longish home stretch of 124 runs to register their first win in seven Tests. Anchoring the innings was Sachin Tendulkar, who overtook Rahul Dravid as the leading run-getter in chases, and rushing through it was VVS Laxman, who calmed any nerves there might have been after Dravid's wicket early in the day. Along the way Laxman passed 1000 runs in chases, including an eighth score of fifty or more. It was also the third time since last summer that Laxman was in the middle at the successful completion of a 200-plus chase.
From the moment Darren Sammy slipped down leg twice in the first over of the day, going for eight runs, West Indies began losing whatever little grip they had on the match. Fidel Edwards rejuvenated them momentarily with a reversing inswinger to send Dravid back, but Laxman announced his arrival with two leg-glanced boundaries. Forewarned of the reverse, Laxman played late, without much back lift, and kept the accurate ones from Edwards out.
Helping India was the fact that Edwards, and West Indies as a bowling unit, didn't have the control to exercise the perfect mix of offence and defence required in defending mid-range totals. Laxman continued to ease India through the chase, and when he punched and flicked Edwards for two boundaries in the 56th over, they reached 200 and the contest was all but over. In the first hour of play India smashed 56 runs, including 11 fours. The possibility of Tendulkar's 100th international hundred - overnight he needed 67 out of the 124 India required - was a little thought in the corner of the mind, and that is where it seemed it would remain.
However, the last three of those 11 boundaries were hit by Tendulkar in successive Ravi Rampaul overs, a flick to square leg, a picture-perfect cover drive and a push - a mere push - through point. Tendulkar now needed 41 out of the remaining 67 runs, and with the game relatively secure Laxman eased up a bit. Tendulkar kept picking the boundaries, and Laxman singles, until the equation came down to 24 out of 43 runs required. Then Tendulkar went to pull a Devendra Bishoo googly, and was deceived by the low bounce. Rod Tucker made another correct lbw call in what has been a good match for him.
Along with Tendulkar went any thoughts of extending the first session to get a result before the lunch break. Laxman and Yuvraj Singh didn't want to do anything stupid.
Sammy removed Yuvraj with a shooter when the scores were level and he nearly got MS Dhoni with another grubber next ball, but that could only delay India's third-highest successful chase. West Indies were left with memories of the Jamaica Test earlier this year, when they had caught India cold but failed to convert it into a Test win.

Tuesday, 8 November 2011

Ashwin, Sehwag give India edge


India 209 and 152 for 2 (Sehwag 55) need 124 to beat West Indies 304 and 180 (Chanderpaul 47, Sammy 42, Ashwin 6-47)
Live scorecard and ball-by-ball details
R Ashwin appeals against Darren Bravo, India v West Indies, 1st Test, New Delhi, 3rd day, November 8, 2011
I'll have five, and then some: R Ashwin during his match-turning spell in his debut Test © AFP
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Smart stats

  • R Ashwin's 9 for 128 is the second-best match haul for an India bowler on debut behind Narendra Hirwani's 16 for 136 in Madras in 1988.
  • Ashwin also becomes the fifth India spinner and the seventh India bowler overall to pick up a five-wicket haul on Test debut. His second-innings figures of 6 for 47 are third behind Hirwani's twin eight-wicket hauls in 1988.
  • If India are to win the first Test, they have to equal the record fourth-innings chase in Delhi, by West Indies in 1987. On that occasion, West Indies chased the 276-run target with the help of Viv Richards' unbeaten 109.
  • Virender Sehwag scored a half-century in both innings for the fifth time in his career. It is also the 30th time that an India batsman has made a fifty-plus score in both innings against West Indies.
  • There have been ten leg-before dismissals in the game so far. On eight previous occasions, there have been more leg-before dismissals in Tests in India.
  • Tendulkar reached the 15,000-run landmark in Tests in his 182nd match. He has now scored 15005 runs at an average of 56.19.
R Ashwin's six wickets, which gave him the second-best match haul for an Indian debutant, and quick runs from Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Darren Sammy pulled the game in opposite directions to leave it in a state of delicate balance. India were left with 276 to get for a first win in seven Tests, which if managed would be their third-highest successful chase. Virender Sehwag then rudely shook the balance with his sixth half-century in chases, but Sammy pulled West Indies back with Sehwag's wicket, only for two highest run-getters in Test cricket and its fourth innings, Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar, to give India the edge with an assured partnership before stumps.
India had every reason to feel good about the chase: they had built some momentum, and only one of the 10 wickets to fall in the day was a direct consequence of the pitch's misbehaviour. The first session of the day, though, looked like the continuation of an exercise in making the Kotla pitch look brutish. India had started it yesterday, losing 10 wickets for 120 runs, and on this slow track with low but manageable bounce, West Indies found a way to lose four wickets in the first hour today. It could have been three wickets in the first three overs, but Ishant Sharma was denied one by the umpire and Ashwin failed to catch a half chance.
The beneficiaries, Kirk Edwards and Darren Bravo, added 27 for the fourth wicket. Edwards played positively, hitting three fours in the first four overs of spin, but for some reason he chose to leave alone a straight delivery to give Umesh Yadav his maiden Test wicket. More uncertain cricket followed. Bravo thrust his pad forward to Ashwin and was trapped by one that didn't turn as much as expected. Ashwin then cleaned up Marlon Samuels with one of his first carrom balls in Test cricket. He uses that variation regularly in limited-overs cricket, but had hardly done it on Test debut until he got through the defence of Samuels.
A familiar thorn in the side remained, though. Chanderpaul began with two fours off the first two balls he faced, using his wrists on both occasions to manipulate the off-side field. First he rolled them on the cut shot to beat the squarish third man, and then he pushed through a length ball, placing it to the left of point. Despite Carlton Baugh's careless dismissal, Chanderpaul kept scoring unaffected.
With an aggressive Sammy for company, Chanderpaul threatened serious damage. Ashwin, though, interrupted him three runs short of a fifty with an offbreak that didn't turn as much as he expected. It was a brave lbw decision by Rod Tucker, as this was bowled from over the wicket and pitched within the stumps, but proved to be correct because of the small degree of turn. Sammy, though, continued to exploit the open field sets for him. He found the gaps for couples, hit a four with the field up, and in the most Caribbean of fashions drove Ishant for a six even with the field back. It took a straight Ashwin delivery that stayed low to get rid of Sammy, the first signs of the pitch playing unmanageable tricks. Ravi Rampaul and Devendra Bishoo didn't throw it away, and added 23 for the last wicket.
Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir came out aggressive. A potentially game-changing moment arrived in the fourth over, when Sehwag was a touch early into a straight-drive, but Rampaul couldn't take the tough return catch to his right. India took 23 off the first four overs, but it would become challenging when pace was taken off.
Sammy did so as early as the fifth over, and the openers went into singles mode. Sehwag, though, didn't like the sight of Samuels' offspin that early in the innings, and drove him over extra cover for six. Even though Samuels came back with Gambhir's lbw, Sehwag continued to beat the slowness of the pitch. The fields were spread, the ball didn't come on, but Sehwag adjusted superbly to score behind square on the off side. The quicker balls he guided past slip, for the slower ones he arched back and used the wrists to impart power. Three of his five fours he hit there.
He did not hit everything behind square. He lofted Bishoo, the opposition's only specialist spinner, for a six over long-on in his first over. Quietly Dravid slipped into positive mode, too, driving two boundaries through midwicket and extra cover before Sehwag managed to reach a score of fifty in both innings of a match for only the fifth time in his career.
A typical slow-pitch dismissal followed when Sehwag chopped Sammy on. More control and interrogation was a natural expectation. Immediately West Indies bowled the first maiden of the innings. They could now have some control over where they bowled, but Tendulkar and Dravid remained resolute. Tendulkar avoided playing across the line, and made positive forward movements every time he could. Dravid scored only 17 off the last 73 balls he faced, and the partnership was worth only 57 off 25.5 overs, but the two were desperate to stay unbeaten in fading light, which they managed.
Just about. For two overs before stumps, running in classical Indian style, Dravid crossed the stumps without grounding his bat or his feet. A lazy bail and inconclusive replays saved him there, after which he berated himself. The reaction would have been much more severe had he been given out.

Monday, 7 November 2011

Windies get the better of 17-wicket day


West Indies 304 (Chanderpaul 118, Brathwaite 63, Ojha 6-72, Ashwin 3-81) and 21 for 2 (K Edwards 15*, F Edwards 0*) lead India 209 (Sehwag 55, Dravid 54, Sammy 3-35) by 116 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out
MS Dhoni loses his off stump to Darren Sammy, India v West Indies, 1st Test, New Delhi, 2nd day, November 7, 2011
Even MS Dhoni couldn't rescue India as they conceded a 95-run first-innings lead © AFP
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Related Links
Players/Officials: Rahul Dravid | Pragyan Ojha | Darren Sammy
Series/Tournaments: West Indies tour of India
Teams: India | West Indies

Smart stats

  • Only three times have more than 17 wickets fallen in a day in a Test in India - on days two and three in Mumbaiin 2005 against Australia, and in Delhi against West Indies in 1987.
  • Since the beginning of 2007, Shivnarine Chanderpaulaverages 66.86 in Tests - with a 2000-run cut-off, only Kumar Sangakkara has a higher average.
  • Pragyan Ojha's 6 for 72 are the best figures by an India spinner in the first innings of a home Test since Anil Kumble's 7 for 48 against Australia in Chennai in 2004.
  • In ODIs, MS Dhoni has scored 340 runs since his last dismissal; in Tests he has been dismissed 15 times while scoring his last 338 runs.
  • The last time two spinners opened the bowling attack was in Mumbai in 2009, when Harbhajan Singh and Ojha shared the new ball against Sri Lanka.
Their batsmen tied themselves in knots, the edges their bowlers produced kept falling short, they took a wicket off a no-ball too, they saw the Indian openers plunder 89 runs in 12.3 overs, but even with what seemed a below-par total of 304 to defend, West Indies didn't give up. Carlton Baugh did sensational work behind the stumps; Darren Sammy, the captain who has to keep justifying his place in the side every time he walks out, took three wickets and had a hand in two others; and the other bowlers chipped in with timely breakthroughs to bowl India out for their lowest total at home in three-and-a-half years.
The 95-run lead they secured in the first innings could prove to be match-winning on a slow and low track where scoring runs remains a struggle. West Indies learned that when they lost five wickets for 48 runs in the morning session, and two for 21 in the evening. They would have wondered what the fuss over the pitch was all about when Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir all but blew them away. Then came two freak dismissals, an opening that their bowlers burst through.
There was no bursting through by the Indian bowlers in the morning. They tried honestly with stump-to-stump lines and restrictive fields. That five of the seven wickets they took today fell lbw spoke of India's accuracy, and that none of the 11 wickets to spin came through exploding deliveries and bat-pad catches pointed at the hard work required.
Sensational as 5 for 48 in the morning might sound, nothing happened for the first seven overs. They had to turn to the spin of Pragyan Ojha, who bowled straight, and trapped Baugh and Sammy in his first two overs of the day. That brought Ojha his first Test five-for.
Overnight centurion Shivnarine Chanderpaul could add only seven before an Ishant Sharma delivery stayed low and he was given lbw. Chanderpaul could be unhappy with two men at the other end: Ravi Rampaul, who had declined an easy single last ball, and the umpire Kumar Dharmasena, because the wide angle from round the stumps could have carried the ball down leg.
The rest fell soon enough, in stark contrast to how much West Indies had to struggle for their first wicket. Fidel Edwards must have walked under a ladder when coming to the ground: in his first three overs he produced two edges that didn't carry, one that was dropped, and bowled Sehwag off a no-ball. The Indian openers never thought of caution despite all that, and kept hitting boundaries, 10 between them.
While the batsmen's skill at livening up the game on a dull track shone through, it was also possible because West Indies were prepared to attack much more than India did. Perhaps the build-up of their attack didn't allow them the line-and-length business. Often Edwards and Ravi Rampaul bowled without either mid-off or mid-on, they pitched it up regularly, and the openers kept attacking.
The reward came unexpectedly, though, when a Sehwag straight drive ran Gambhir out. You could say luck had evened out, you could also say Gambhir held the bat in the wrong hand, which cost him some distance as he tried to make it back after having backed up. Three overs later Baugh made a good collection down the leg side. Sehwag had tried a vertical-sweep, and even though his back foot never left the crease, Baugh knew Sehwag would have to move it to resist backward momentum. He waited, he saw Sehwag lift it momentarily, and stumped him. The thought-processing happened in about two seconds.
Just as fast, it seemed, Sammy called back Edwards, who had gone for 49 in his five overs. Edwards responded by trapping Sachin Tendulkar with a skidder that moved in, a typical mode of dismissal on this track. Soon Baugh took a low catch off Devendra Bishoo to send VVS Laxman back.
Yuvraj Singh counterattacked, added 32 with Dravid, but immediately after tea drove Sammy straight to short cover. With half the side gone, and half of West Indies' total achieved, in walked India's captain. Four balls later, he walked back, having missed a straight delivery. Two runs later, Baugh was into the game again, catching a healthy leg-side edge when standing up to Sammy, sending back Ashwin.
Dravid and Ishant Sharma added 49 for the eighth wicket, Dravid reaching his sixth fifty-plus score past his 38th birthday. But West Indies' success lay in how, unlike four of those six efforts, Dravid couldn't convert this into three figures. Before Dravid was hurried into a pull off Rampaul, though, it was Marlon Samuels who broke through with Ishant's wicket. Rampaul followed up Dravid's wicket with a golden duck for Umesh Yadav.
The duck-hunt didn't end. The West Indies top order repeated the mistake from the first innings, allowing the spinners, who opened the innings, to bowl wherever they wanted to bowl. Kieran Powell fell for a duck, and Kraigg Brathwaite pushed down the wrong line just before stumps, making it 17 wickets for the day, setting up a delicious finish to the match.

Windies get the better of 17-wicket day


West Indies 304 (Chanderpaul 118, Brathwaite 63, Ojha 6-72, Ashwin 3-81) and 21 for 2 (K Edwards 15*, F Edwards 0*) lead India 209 (Sehwag 55, Dravid 54, Sammy 3-35) by 116 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out
MS Dhoni loses his off stump to Darren Sammy, India v West Indies, 1st Test, New Delhi, 2nd day, November 7, 2011
Even MS Dhoni couldn't rescue India as they conceded a 95-run first-innings lead © AFP
Enlarge
Related Links
Players/Officials: Rahul Dravid | Pragyan Ojha | Darren Sammy
Series/Tournaments: West Indies tour of India
Teams: India | West Indies

Smart stats

  • Only three times have more than 17 wickets fallen in a day in a Test in India - on days two and three in Mumbaiin 2005 against Australia, and in Delhi against West Indies in 1987.
  • Since the beginning of 2007, Shivnarine Chanderpaulaverages 66.86 in Tests - with a 2000-run cut-off, only Kumar Sangakkara has a higher average.
  • Pragyan Ojha's 6 for 72 are the best figures by an India spinner in the first innings of a home Test since Anil Kumble's 7 for 48 against Australia in Chennai in 2004.
  • In ODIs, MS Dhoni has scored 340 runs since his last dismissal; in Tests he has been dismissed 15 times while scoring his last 338 runs.
  • The last time two spinners opened the bowling attack was in Mumbai in 2009, when Harbhajan Singh and Ojha shared the new ball against Sri Lanka.
Their batsmen tied themselves in knots, the edges their bowlers produced kept falling short, they took a wicket off a no-ball too, they saw the Indian openers plunder 89 runs in 12.3 overs, but even with what seemed a below-par total of 304 to defend, West Indies didn't give up. Carlton Baugh did sensational work behind the stumps; Darren Sammy, the captain who has to keep justifying his place in the side every time he walks out, took three wickets and had a hand in two others; and the other bowlers chipped in with timely breakthroughs to bowl India out for their lowest total at home in three-and-a-half years.
The 95-run lead they secured in the first innings could prove to be match-winning on a slow and low track where scoring runs remains a struggle. West Indies learned that when they lost five wickets for 48 runs in the morning session, and two for 21 in the evening. They would have wondered what the fuss over the pitch was all about when Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir all but blew them away. Then came two freak dismissals, an opening that their bowlers burst through.
There was no bursting through by the Indian bowlers in the morning. They tried honestly with stump-to-stump lines and restrictive fields. That five of the seven wickets they took today fell lbw spoke of India's accuracy, and that none of the 11 wickets to spin came through exploding deliveries and bat-pad catches pointed at the hard work required.
Sensational as 5 for 48 in the morning might sound, nothing happened for the first seven overs. They had to turn to the spin of Pragyan Ojha, who bowled straight, and trapped Baugh and Sammy in his first two overs of the day. That brought Ojha his first Test five-for.
Overnight centurion Shivnarine Chanderpaul could add only seven before an Ishant Sharma delivery stayed low and he was given lbw. Chanderpaul could be unhappy with two men at the other end: Ravi Rampaul, who had declined an easy single last ball, and the umpire Kumar Dharmasena, because the wide angle from round the stumps could have carried the ball down leg.
The rest fell soon enough, in stark contrast to how much West Indies had to struggle for their first wicket. Fidel Edwards must have walked under a ladder when coming to the ground: in his first three overs he produced two edges that didn't carry, one that was dropped, and bowled Sehwag off a no-ball. The Indian openers never thought of caution despite all that, and kept hitting boundaries, 10 between them.
While the batsmen's skill at livening up the game on a dull track shone through, it was also possible because West Indies were prepared to attack much more than India did. Perhaps the build-up of their attack didn't allow them the line-and-length business. Often Edwards and Ravi Rampaul bowled without either mid-off or mid-on, they pitched it up regularly, and the openers kept attacking.
The reward came unexpectedly, though, when a Sehwag straight drive ran Gambhir out. You could say luck had evened out, you could also say Gambhir held the bat in the wrong hand, which cost him some distance as he tried to make it back after having backed up. Three overs later Baugh made a good collection down the leg side. Sehwag had tried a vertical-sweep, and even though his back foot never left the crease, Baugh knew Sehwag would have to move it to resist backward momentum. He waited, he saw Sehwag lift it momentarily, and stumped him. The thought-processing happened in about two seconds.
Just as fast, it seemed, Sammy called back Edwards, who had gone for 49 in his five overs. Edwards responded by trapping Sachin Tendulkar with a skidder that moved in, a typical mode of dismissal on this track. Soon Baugh took a low catch off Devendra Bishoo to send VVS Laxman back.
Yuvraj Singh counterattacked, added 32 with Dravid, but immediately after tea drove Sammy straight to short cover. With half the side gone, and half of West Indies' total achieved, in walked India's captain. Four balls later, he walked back, having missed a straight delivery. Two runs later, Baugh was into the game again, catching a healthy leg-side edge when standing up to Sammy, sending back Ashwin.
Dravid and Ishant Sharma added 49 for the eighth wicket, Dravid reaching his sixth fifty-plus score past his 38th birthday. But West Indies' success lay in how, unlike four of those six efforts, Dravid couldn't convert this into three figures. Before Dravid was hurried into a pull off Rampaul, though, it was Marlon Samuels who broke through with Ishant's wicket. Rampaul followed up Dravid's wicket with a golden duck for Umesh Yadav.
The duck-hunt didn't end. The West Indies top order repeated the mistake from the first innings, allowing the spinners, who opened the innings, to bowl wherever they wanted to bowl. Kieran Powell fell for a duck, and Kraigg Brathwaite pushed down the wrong line just before stumps, making it 17 wickets for the day, setting up a delicious finish to the match.