World Cup2011

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Thursday, March 31, 2011

Shahid Afridi proud of Pakistan's performance

Shahid Afridi proud of Pakistan's performance

Shahid Afridi pronounced himself "proud" of his team's performance in the World Cup and hoped that their reception on arrival in Pakistan would reflect the side's achievement in getting to the last four at a time when expectations were significantly lower.

Pakistan lost by 29 runs to India in Mohali in a scrappy match, in which they were generally off their game with bat, ball and, most damagingly, in the field. They were in with a chance at various stages, including when they began the chase, only to let it slip each time.
Afridi said the batting, their weaker suit, had been problematic again. There were several starts but no stand greater than the opening one of 44. "We were struggling to build partnerships right through the tournament," he said. "The matches where we had partnerships we made good scores. Because we couldn't make partnerships, today we struggled and played some bad shots at the wrong time as well."
But their run-in to the game, with only one loss in seven matches, came after another period of turmoil which saw them lose three key players in last year's spot-fixing scandal, including a dangerous new-ball opening pair in Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir. To add to the instability, Afridi wasn't appointed captain until two weeks before the tournament began but an unheralded Pakistan side beat Sri Lanka, Australia and West Indies en route to the semi-final.
Afridi had said before the tournament he wanted his team in the last four and despite the loss, seemed in generally upbeat mood. "I am proud of my team and the boys have done a great job in this World Cup. A few of the youngsters are very promising and we played as a unit. Winning and losing is something different but we really played really good cricket and no one was expecting us to play cricket like this. As captain I'm very happy."

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

ICC Cricket World Cup, 2nd Semi-Final: India v Pakistan at Mohali, Mar 30, 2011

ICC Cricket World Cup, 2nd Semi-Final: India v Pakistan at Mohali, Mar 30, 2011 

ICC Cricket World Cup, 2nd Semi-Final: India v Pakistan at Mohali, Mar 30, 2011 
india win the toss and decided to bat first.

ICC Cricket World Cup Trophy 2011

ICC Cricket World Cup Trophy 2011


Former India Test cricketer Syed Kirmani at the Reliance Mobile ICC Cricket World Cup Trophy preview in Mumbai on Wednesday and hoped India will end the 28-year-old wait and win it next year.

ICC Cricket World Cup Trophy 2011


ICC Cricket World Cup Trophy 2011


ICC Cricket World Cup Trophy 2011


 ICC Cricket World Cup Trophy 2011

Kirmani, a member of the ICC Cricket World Cup 1983 squad, recalled the triumph of the Kapil Dev-led side and said the country’s win taught the fraternity that any team could humble the world champions on its day.
Wishing good luck to the Indian team for the event beginning in February, he said, “The performance this year is a good omen. We had been waiting for 28 years to win the ICC Cricket World Cup. Hopefully, this will happen in 2011 and Sachin Tendulkar’s dream to win the ICC Cricket World Cup in his career is fulfilled.”
The ex-stumper praised India for its emphatic win over Australia in Bangalore, and said the Test showed the five-day game still had the capacity to attract spectators.
“It was an excellent performance. Everyone, in fact, you people (media) had said Test cricket should not be played. It will dim. Now see what sort of results are coming out. Two days ago, everyone felt it (Bengaluru Test) was going to be a draw. But now you see what has happened.”
Terming the win as “historic”, Kirmani said it was good to see youngsters contributing in the team’s victory.
Singling out Tendulkar for praise, he described the batting maestro as a ‘legendary cricketer’. “Whenever he bats, he makes history or crosses some milestones. Hopefully, he will make some unbreakable records.”

mohali cricket stadium

mohali cricket stadium 


Punjab is a state of my country about whom you will hear very less, but will find it's pieces everywhere.
Whenever there is a wealth survey of each state, Punjab acquires the best of places... The fact remains that India has a total of 29 International cricket grounds, including 19 of test match grounds but Mohali cricket ground at Chandigarh in Punjab is one of the most beautiful looking of them.
1. A total of 16 Floodlight towers :- Yes... when most of International cricket grounds have 4 or 6 floodlight towers, Mohali ground has 16 of them. This was done because of a reason which turned a problem into a blessing 

Mohali Ground is very near to an India Air Force base, which results in planes/flights passing over the grounds virtually every hour. This meant that the floodlight towers at Mohali can't be too tall... but when PCA

All in all, a job very well done.

2. A lake around the field :- A number of methods has been tried to stop spectators from coming onto the playing field, or even throwing something on it. Some grounds use Nets (as at Bangalore), while some go for the old fashioned method of employing extra cops. Mohali Cricket Ground has a man made lake - approximately a metre in height and breath, which keeps unwanted things out of playing area.

This doesn't mean that the playing field is shorter by any means... the boundary lengths at Mohali is more than 75 yards to each edge from the wickets on the pitch.

3. The greenest of them all :- As I said, Punjab is the state of my country which is quite wealthy as compared to others... and the biggest reason for it is their farmers. And seems like PCA has brought some special Punjabi soil for Mohali cricket ground because whenever you get a chance to watch a cricket match their, its greenery and its spectators friendly looks will take your heart away...!!

Probably equals the aura of Eden Gardens at Kolkatta, if not exceeds it.

4. The youngest of them all :- And what's more - Mohali cricket ground is the youngest test playing ground of India, having being built in 1983 and hosted it's first ever test match against West Indies from 10th of December 1994.
  The Pitch at Mohali :-

Nearly every foreign team that comes to India, feels exited by seeing
Mohali in their schedule. The reason for that is Mohali cricket ground has one of the greenest pitches of India... and as the outfield is lush green, the ball keeps its shine for a long time and allows the fast bowlers to exploit the conditions at the most. The proof for that being Indian team's demolition against West Indies in that first every team match and again against New Zealand in 1999 when they bundled out for just 83.

mohali cricket stadium




mohali cricket stadium




mohali cricket stadium


 mohali cricket stadium

mohali cricket stadium




mohali cricket stadium






India v Pakistan, 2nd semi-final, World Cup 2011, Mohali

India v Pakistan, 2nd semi-final, World Cup 2011, Mohali

  
The Big Picture
Beyond the hype this contest can perhaps be best viewed through the prism of the two captains. Shahid Afridi is the passionate, exhibitionist leader who doesn't mind showing his emotions on the field. He will shout, cajole, plead, laugh, roar and feel every pulsating moment of the contest. It's exactly what this Pakistan team needs after all those controversies, someone who can remind them of the school-boyish joy that this game can provide.
MS Dhoni is the uber-cool captain and, while he can be vocal while dealing with the press, he is almost invisible on the field. Silent nods of appreciation, a quiet word in the ear, calm instructions, a shrug of the shoulder is all you will get from him. And again, it's what this star-heavy team needs. Someone who can be calm and remind them of the basics of the game.
Pakistan - who told their players they could be here in the semi-finals? - almost renews itself with each crisis. That's how it has been always: Controversies. Paralysis. Rebirth. Success. And more controversies. This was a big tournament for the survival of Misbah-ul-Haq, in the middle of a great comeback. In a sense, the spot-fixing saga and its sordid aftermath was actually a blessing in disguise since it paved the way for his return. For Younis Khan, too, survival instinct, as a batsman facing a dip in form before the tournament, would have helped in dealing with that crisis. Playing his last tournament, Shoaib Akhtar knew this was the time to let his game do the talking. And for that man Afridi, mentally almost perennially young, this was the best chance to dazzle on the biggest stage. He has taken that chance and led the team with great passion. Kamran Akmal lives and breathes in amnesia. Bad memories don't haunt him - who else could have recovered so well after that nightmarish effort against New Zealand?
And yet nothing much has changed with the way they play cricket on the field. It's still the bowlers who win the games for them. For all that is mercurial about them, Pakistan have lost just one game in this tournament.
India have occasionally limped, at times choked, sometimes dazzled, before beating Australia to reach to the semi-finals. The progress card has the bowlers in the red, the batsmen guilty of not finishing the job, and the fielding has always been almost beyond redemption. Their mode of progress should actually have freed them up in some ways. The batsmen must have realised that they can't try too hard to cover up for their bowlers' weakness, by trying to pile on too much, with the batting Powerplay pulling the rug from under their feet a few times. The bowlers showed they are learning from the serial hiding by putting up a pretty disciplined effort against Australia. In some ways, the pressure must be off them, as not many would be surprised if they leak 300 runs.
It's the batting India depend on. Is there any chink in it barring those Powerplay debacles? Gautam Gambhir hasn't been at his personal best - were he playing at his optimum, he would have rendered Virat Kohli superfluous at No. 4. Yet Gambhir's slightly iffy form has made Kohli vital in that middle order. Prior to the tournament, it was felt that Kohli would be a misfit in the lower order, where Suresh Raina and Yusuf Pathan would be more dangerous, and that he might be wasted even further up. But Gambhir hasn't been at his fluent best and India have turned to Kohli to take them through the middle overs. Gambhir has always raised his game against Pakistan and his form will be crucial on Wednesday as it would then give the middle order the licence to attack.
Form guide
(completed matches, most recent first)
India WWLWWPakistan WWWLW
Watch out for...
Virender Sehwag In the past few games Sehwag has - curiously, for a batsman so wonderfully innovative as him - tried to hit every spinner through the off side. He would back away and try to drive, slice or cut and has fallen a few times in the process. Pakistan might well have a spinner bowling at him early and it will be fascinating to see whether Sehwag will retain that off-side bias or be more inclusive, and open, in his approach.
Umar Gul's yorkers: After Lasith Malinga, Gul has probably the best control over the yorker in world cricket today. There have of course been days when the radar has been awry but more often than not he has got them right. The Indian lower middle order will be fully tested by the yorkers, slower ones and the bouncers that he loves to bowl.
Sachin Tendulkar v Abdul Razzaq: Bowlers like Hansie Cronje and Razzaq, more than the Umar Guls and the Shoaib Akhtars, have been reasonably successful against Tendulkar. Cronje used to tease Tendulkar with deliveries shaping away from a length outside off while Razzaq specialises in the opposite: he slides the ball back in, looking for that lbw. He hasn't always had success, but it will be a mini-battle worth watching. Will Tendulkar opt for all-out attack or will he bat with relative care against Razzaq?
Zaheer Khan v Kamran Akmal: Kamran loves to square drive and Zaheer has been able to bend the ball back in to the right-hand batsmen this tournament with the new ball. This contest should be fun.
Umar Akmal v spin: India will rely a lot on the slow bowlers during the middle overs, and Umar is the middle-order batsman who loves to attack spin. He has laid into the likes of Daniel Vettori on the tour of New Zealand and is always itching to cut and slog-sweep.
Team news
The signs are that Ashish Nehra is likely to replace Munaf Patel. Even Yusuf Pathan has been sweating it out in the nets raising speculations that he might push R Ashwin hard for a spot in the team. Ashwin has been really good in the games he has played and has added some teeth to the attack while the nature of the patta track has made India think about bringing in Yusuf.
India (probable): 1 Virender Sehwag, 2 Sachin Tendulkar, 3 Gautam Gambhir, 4 Virat Kohli, 5 Yuvraj Singh, 6 MS Dhoni (capt & wk), 7 Suresh Raina, 8 Yusuf Pathan / R Ashwin, 9 Harbhajan Singh, 10 Zaheer Khan, 11 Ashish Nehra
Pakistan are thinking of playing three seamers. The choice of the third seamer is between Shoaib and Wahab Riaz. Afridi said Shoaib wasn't 100% fit today but a decision will be taken on the evening preceding the match.
Pakistan (probable) 1 Kamran Akmal (wk), 2 Mohammad Hafeez, 3 Asad Shafiq, 4 Younis Khan, 5 Misbah-ul-Haq, 6 Umar Akmal, 7 Shahid Afridi (capt), 8 Abdul Razzaq, 9 Saeed Ajmal / Abdur Rehman, 10 Umar Gul, 11 Wahab Riaz / Shoaib Akhtar.
Try picking the XIs for tomorrow's game by playing Team Selector.
Pitch and conditions
It's a batting pitch but what's eating up everyone is the dew factor. Read here for a report on the pitch.
Heavy storms, lightning and rain lashed Chandigarh late on Tuesday evening, immediately adding a light shroud of doubt over the game. For the whole day there were no signs, not even a hint of rain playing a spoil-sport but around 9PM, there were rumbling sounds of thunder accompanied by high-speed winds. The velocity of the winds were so strong that the heavy iron barricades manning the team hotel were blown away.
The weather forecast for Wednesday suggests sunshine during the day with minimal chance of heavy rain. Punjab Cricket Association officials said that they had studied the forecasts for the period ending March 31 and there was "zero precipitation" expected. In simple terms, there were no strong rains expected on the day of the match.
Stats and trivia

  • Afridi is the first bowler in World Cup history to take four wickets in a match on four different occasions in a tournament.

  • MS Dhoni is the only wicket-keeper captain who has played in 100 ODIs.

  • Zaheer Khan is the second Indian bowler after Javagal Srinath (44 wickets) to take more than 40 wickets in World Cups.
    For more stats click here
    Quotes
    "I feel I have been batting really well. It is just that in some situation I could not bat flamboyantly. If you bat at 5, 6 or 7, and if the top order does really well, it does not give opportunity to lower-order batsmen. The last game was an ideal game where I could have got a bit more runs which were needed at that point of time. So form has been a worry it is just that sometimes there were not many opportunities and when there was an opportunity and there were times I was not able to score in a particular game".

  •  

    2nd Semi-Final: India v Pakistan at Mohali

    2nd Semi-Final: India v Pakistan at Mohali
    India
    Pakistan
    Match scheduled to begin at 14:30 local time (09:00 GMT)
    Current time: 11:09 local, 05:39 GMT | Match begins in: 3:21


    Tuesday, March 29, 2011

    Sri Lanka reach final with tense win

    ICC Cricket World Cup, 1st Semi-Final: Sri Lanka v New Zealand at Colombo (RPS), Mar 29, 2011 
     
     
    New Zealand 217 (48.5 ov)
    Sri Lanka 220/5 (47.5 ov)
    Sri Lanka won by 5 wickets (with 13 balls remaining)
    Sri Lanka reach final with tense win
     

    New Zealand vs Sri Lanka

    New Zealand vs  Sri Lanka 
    ICC Cricket World Cup, 1st Semi-Final: Sri Lanka v New Zealand at Colombo (RPS), Mar 29, 2011
     New Zealand won the toss and elected to bat

    1st Semi-Final: Sri Lanka v New Zealand at Colombo








    1st Semi-Final: Sri Lanka v New Zealand at Colombo




    1st Semi-Final: Sri Lanka v New Zealand at Colombo


    1st Semi-Final: Sri Lanka v New Zealand at Colombo




    1st Semi-Final: Sri Lanka v New Zealand at Colombo

    The Battle of Mohali

    The Battle of Mohali

    I was watching a cricket chat show the other day, which had Harsha Bhogle, Tony Greig and Sunil Gavaskar discussing about the World Cup. This was during the quarter-finals, when Tony Greig made a comment, something on the likes of 'I feel really pumped up about India-Pakistan; it's almost like the Ashes.' Before he had finished, Harsha was quick to cut into him, 'No, Tony, it's definitely NOT the Ashes. The Ashes are a polite discussion, with the waiters asking the people involved 'Do you want more tea, Sir'? compared to the rivalry that is India-Pakistan'.

    I won't try to hype it up, because it really doesn't need it. If you've been watching cricket, you'll just know. Just know. It's India vs Pakistan. On 30th March, 2011. At Mohali. For a place in the World Cup 2011 final.

    Despite all the talk of peace and unity (the Indian and Pakistani PM's will be watching the match together) and taking it as 'another' match, don't be fooled. India-Pakistan is never a 'take-it-easy' match. Yes, sports and politics should really not be mixed, but that doesn't work over here. Not in a matchup like this.

    It's very simple actually. Despite whatever India and Pakistan might have achieved in this WC, the team losing will immediately be labelled failures. Everything else they've done till now will be discounted. India does not want to lose to Pakistan. Pakistan does not want to lose to India. It's a question of their pride.

    There's just too much tension still simmering over. Despite a period of peace between 2003-2007, the 2007 Mumbai attacks have set it all back. India and Pakistan are back on the same cold terms, they used to share before 2003.

    On the field, they'll all try to be normal. Dhoni will be his 'Captain cool' persona, Sachin will be just Sachin, Afridi's gonna be the dasher he always is and Bhajji will be the typical feisty Punjabi. But don't let it fool you. There's gonna be pressure. Heart-stopping, spine-tingling pressure. The sort of pressure which can make a sane guy play the rashest of strokes. Or drop the easiest of catches.

    Just ask Miandad. Or better still, Chetan Sharma who got biffed for six by Miandad in the final of the AustralAsia cup, to let Pakistan secure an unlikely victory. Or Sachin Tendulkar, who despite being the great he is, admits he couldn't sleep on the nights leading up to the India-Pakistan match in the 2003 World Cup.

    One of the neighbours will party deeply into the night. The other will mourn for the next four years

    Afradi tells teammates to avoid watching talk shows

    Afradi tells teammates to avoid watching talk shows


    MOHALI: Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi has instructed his teammates to avoid watching news bulletins and talk shows on TV channels ahead of his team’s cricket World Cup semi-final against old and arch rivals India in Mohali on Wednesday.
    “I’ve heard that the media here has created quite a hype around our World Cup semi-final against India. But I’m not watching it. Whenever they start flashing some story about it, I just change the channel and go to something else. I have no time for it,” he said.
    Afridi said Pakistan are in India to play a World Cup semi-final and that’s it.
    “There is no war, nothing like that. It’s a big cricket match for both the teams and I want to just focus on it,” he stressed.
    The flamboyant all-rounder said he is also advising his teammates to do the same. “I’ve asked all the players to avoid watching news or discussions on TV shows and bulletins. It might distract them.”
    Afridi is seen as a vital cog for Pakistan as they look to floor India in their own backyard.
    “I know that as captain and the team’s senior player, I have a huge responsibility. I’ve been really working hard and am confident that I’ll lead from the front against India. It’s a huge match not just because it’s against India but because a win in it will give us a place in the final.”
    The all-rounder, who is the tournament’s most successful bowler with 21 wickets, is pleased with his team’s preparations. “We’ve had some really good training sessions here. The boys are all focused and best part is that they are all relaxed and not taking any pressure.”
    “How they will handle the pressure in the match is going to be the key and I’m confident that they will not face any problems in doing that. We are a good side and have the guts to face any situation,” the skipper added.

    Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011

     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011::Grouped Photo of Pakistan Cricket Team
     Pakistani Cricket Team fro worldcup 2011::Grouped Photo of Pakistan Cricket Team
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011::Grouped Photo of Pakistan Cricket Team
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
     Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011
    Pakistani Cricket Team for worldcup 2011::Shahied Afradi
    for more click here:pakistan vs india cricket

    ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 News

    ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 News


    Umar Gul has said that the pressure will be lifted off him if Shoaib Akhtar plays




    Umar Gul is the man who operates in the shadows of his more colourful companions of the Pakistani bowling pack. Behind his captain Shahid Afridi among Pakistan's leading wicket-takers at this World Cup - 14 wickets to Afridi's 21 - Gul has emerged as the searing inquisitor with the new ball en route to Pakistan's arrival into the semi-final.
    It will all come to a head in Mohali on Wednesday when Gul opens the bowling against the strongest batting contingent of the event. It is his first spell that could dictate how the rest of his team's overs go, but Gul has identified what he needs to do. "The first three wickets in the top-order are very crucial for us. They are depending on the top three. I am looking for these three batsmen." Now these are words tailor-made for screaming headlines, ("Gul targets top three", "Gul wants to rip through India top order") but Gul delivered them as if he were saying something routine. Like telling the physio about his ankles or ordering room service.
    Were Gul to run into India's top three in their hotel corridor between now and Wednesday afternoon, there would be handshakes, smiles and pleasant chit-chat. It is a fact that most of the fans on both sides find hard to to digest, particularly two days before the World Cup semi-final that once again sets up one of the most over-heated rivalries in sport.
    Gul said that given the strength of the Indian batting, the World Cup had taken his bowling to the rhythm it needed at the right time. "Our bowling is very good. Afridi is the leading wicket-taker. I am happy with my performance and form. We have a bit of an advantage with our bowling but I am happy with the way the batsmen played in the quarter-final." He said that the ideal combination for Wednesday would be the Pakistani bowlers being on top of their game on a friendly wicket, and the batting giving the start like it had against the West Indies.
    The advantages of working with coach Waqar Younis and assistant coach Aaqib Javed, both fast bowlers of skill and nous, had found strong echoes at the World Cup, according to Gul. "I've only fully understood in this World Cup how much help I have got from them." On the tour to New Zealand, Waqar had informed Gul that he would be bowling with the new ball in the World Cup. "For the last one-and-a-half-years, I wasn't able to deliver with the new ball because of which I lost my form." In the last two-three months, however, working with both Waqar and Aaqib, had brought it all back, rhythm, confidence and success. "It's been like I was bowling in the past, I've got my new-ball skills back, which is good for the team."
    One of the biggest dilemmas facing Pakistan is whether to play Shoaib Akhtar in what could be one of his last matches. Shoaib was dropped following Pakistan's defeat to New Zealand but Gul dismissed the talk that he had been omitted because of issues within the team about Shoaib's conduct. "He was rested after the New Zealand match so that he can focus on his fitness. The way he has been practicing for three days, I hope he will do well."
    Shoaib's partnership with medium-pacer Abdul Razzaq and also the spin option of Mohammed Hafeez at the start has worked well enough, but Gul welcomed the idea of sharing the new ball with Shoaib. Asked whether he personally would like to partner Shoaib against India, Gul said, "Of course. He is our most experienced bowler and he has done very well in the past, especially against India. A little bit of pressure will be lifted off me too if he plays because in the last couple of matches, when Shoaib wasn't there, all the pressure was on me."
    Gul was asked whether he agreed with what MS Dhoni had said about the match actually being bigger than a final. He said, "See, I don't think Dhoni was talking for himself, he was speaking about the expectations of the Indian people. As a player, no one would say this (a semi-final) is bigger than the final, but every cricketer feels the pressure of their people. We also feel the same pressure - our people also feel that we must beat India in each match. You can say that, if we were speaking not for ourselves, but for Pakistan's people, then yeah, it's a final and we will try to win.

    1st Semi-Final: Sri Lanka v New Zealand

    1st Semi-Final: Sri Lanka v New Zealand
    ICC Cricket World Cup, 1st Semi-Final: 
    Sri Lanka v New Zealand at Colombo (RPS), Mar 29, 2011

    Sri Lanka Vs New Zealand
    Sri Lanka Vs New Zealand 1st semi final

    Monday, March 28, 2011

    Shoaib Akhtar retires

    Shoaib Akhtar retires

    It's the colour we remember, Shoaib

    Over 13 years Shoaib Akhtar played too few Tests, had too many injuries, got into too much trouble but left behind indelible memories
     Eventually we all get old and the bad times matter less. The last year of Shoaib Akhtar's career has held this one truth of life in it. There have been the usual disciplinary scrapes till the very end. In this World Cup alone, he has been the single biggest contributor to the team kitty of fines; usually for harmless breaches of curfew but also once for a scrap with Kamran Akmal after the Ross Taylor drops.
    But something about Shoaib over the last year or so has somehow placed him in a different light. Maybe it's because he has been in the spotlight less than he once used to be. It has been good for him. Maturity might not be the right word; an expansion of the mind is probably a better way of putting it. With no other cricketer in the current side can you have, for example, a conversation about the troubles that ail Pakistan the country, not the cricket. There are some moments when he veers into spheres inhabited by cranks, but many reasoned ones also, words and thoughts of a man who has travelled the world and taken it in, not kept it out as so many of Pakistan's players have.
    He was never a monster really, though it wasn't either simply that he was misunderstood. His private life should always have remained his private life but he retains the self-obsession of most celebrities, which make precisely that a difficult balance to achieve. He speaks regularly of how difficult it is for him to live a regular life in Pakistan. He probably doesn't want it any other way.
    Perhaps he has just come to terms with not being able to do what he used to, not being who he once was. Even the run-up was shortened last year in the Asia Cup, in his most improbable comeback ever, something he would have considered an affront to his masculinity just two years ago. He even told a tale recently of offering advice to Mohammad Amir two years ago on how to cope with what was about to happen to his life. Amir didn't take it up apparently and who would've blamed him: Shoaib Akhtar, the role model for adjusting to celebrity, doesn't quite work.
    But if you look now at what Amir has done and scour through the worst episodes of Shoaib's life, you can only be reminded of what the noted Pakistani writer Nadeem Farooq Paracha pointed out once. Corruption in Pakistan cricket has tainted all kinds of men including some who cloak it with great righteousness and morality. It is not the least of Shoaib's achievements that for everything he has done, he has never done this, as he pointed out repeatedly in his farewell. An obsessive, clingy patriotism drove him in this regard and it still does.
    This is all necessary to record because increasingly the man Shoaib is at least as, if not more, compelling than the cricketer Shoaib. The story of his cricket is well-formed, but hollow. Surgeons across the world are richer for him, as are lawyers, but not spectators and his teams, who didn't get enough. Over 13 years he has only 46 Tests to show, missing almost as many as he played. He was a fabulous sight and a fine bowler, much smarter and better rounded than the image he himself created and encouraged, of the fastest bowler on the planet. 
    for  more click here::Shoaib Akhtar retires

    India v Pakistan, 2nd semi-final, World Cup 2011, Mohali

    India v Pakistan, 2nd semi-final, World Cup 2011, Mohali

    Games don't come much bigger than an India v Pakistan World Cup semi-final, so it's no surprise Mohali, which will host the match on March 30, has become the most sought-after destination in India. The Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh will be there, and so will industry heavyweights, and IPL franchise owners, Mukesh Ambani and Vijay Mallya. Not only is there a mad scramble for tickets on the black market, but all the hotels are reportedly booked within a 25-kilometre radius and there is even a shortage of parking space at the airport for those with private planes.
    The stakes for the game were raised (as if a place in the World Cup final was not enough) on Friday when Singh sent a note to Pakistan prime minister Yousuf Gilani, and president Asif Zardari, inviting them both to the contest, the first such gesture since the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks.
    "I propose to be at Mohali to watch the World Cup semi-final match between India and Pakistan to be held on 30th March," the note said. "There is huge excitement over the match and we are all looking forward to a great game of cricket that will be a victory for sport. It gives me great pleasure to invite you to visit Mohali and join me and the millions of fans from our two countries to watch the match."

    world cup 2011 cricket news

    world cup 2011 cricket news
    Shahid Afridi and Abdul Razzaq sprint during Pakistan's practice session in Mohali 
    for more updates click here:

    Pakistan Vs India cricket history

    Pakistan Vs India cricket history
    Pakistan Vs India cricket history
    1975
    One-day cricket was new, so new that Sunil Gavaskar played for a draw in the first ever World Cup match (he scored 36 not out off 174 balls). The South Asian giants didn’t progress to the semi-finals, only managing wins against minnows Sri Lanka and East Africa. Pakistan’s defeat from the jaws of victory against eventual winners West Indies was the high point for either nation. At that moment, one-day cricket and South Asia seemed ill-suited to each other. Pakistan had the better tournament but not by enough to gain a clear early advantage.

    India 1 Pakistan 1
    1979
    India still hadn’t got the hang of one-day cricket, managing to lose all three matches and finish bottom of their group thanks to a defeat to Sri Lanka, who were still considered minnows then. Pakistan fared better, reaching a semi-final against West Indies that they threatened to win until Viv Richards ripped out the middle order with three wickets.

    Pakistan were sowing the seeds of a reputation for unpredictability but they achieved much more than India in this tournament.
    India 1 Pakistan 2
    1983
    India’s World Cup. Everybody expected West Indies to complete a hat-trick of victories and a loss to India in the group stages didn’t especially dampen those expectations. Both India and Pakistan progressed to the semi-finals, India more convincingly on the back of some fine batting. Pakistan’s stuttering World Cup ended with another semi-final exit at the hands of West Indies.

    In the final at Lord’s, India's score of 183 was five runs less than Pakistan had scored against West Indies in the semi-final. That’s where the comparisons ended. India produced an incredible performance in the field. A towering, swirling hit from Viv Richards was held by Kapil Dev and forlorn hope became genuine ambition. India’s medium pacers were all over the two-time champions, Mohinder Amarnath taking 3 for 12.
    That’s the moment the world changed. South Asia was now obsessed with one-day cricket and the World Cup. India had also outdone Pakistan.
    India 2 Pakistan 2
    1987
    The first World Cup held in South Asia, indeed anywhere outside England. The tournament was engineered for an India-Pakistan final, with Pakistan favourites on paper. All went smoothly until the semi-finals when both home nations were undone by upstarts England and Australia.

    Both nations were equally traumatised and wounded. At least, India had their World Cup win in the bag. Pakistan had nothing except a run of semi-final appearances to soothe them. Imran Khan declared that defeat had made him understand what the World Cup meant to the people of Pakistan.
    India 3 Pakistan 3
    1992
    Pakistan’s World Cup; the year of the cornered tiger. Coloured pyjamas and satellite television transformed the World Cup franchise when it reached Australia. None of the South Asian nations were expected to excel on bouncy pitches, but Pakistan squeezed into the semi-finals again. In the process, they were dismissed for 74 by England and lost their first ever World Cup encounter with India, made famous for a squabble between Javed Miandad and Kiran More.

    Facing a near-impossible run chase in the semi-final against New Zealand, Inzamam-ul-Haq produced an iconic innings, allowing Wasim Akram to execute a thrilling final flourish against England. Pakistan had their World Cup win and Imran Khan had the keys to his cancer hospital.
    Pakistan’s reputation as the most dangerously unpredictable one-day nation was firmly established.
    India 3 Pakistan 4
    1996
    A return to South Asia produced a South Asian winner, but it was neither big beast. Instead, former-minnows Sri Lanka refined the art of pinch-hitting and stormed their way to victory at Lahore’s unfortunately named Gaddafi Stadium. The collapse of the podium at the winner’s ceremony and some worrying moments with floodlights added an air of farce and incompetence to the tournament.

    Earlier, India and Pakistan had fought an emotional quarter-final at Bangalore. India won thanks to a late assault by Ajay Jadeja against Waqar Younis. Briefly, Pakistan looked in the hunt, with Aamer Sohail and Saeed Anwar giving India's bowlers some tap and rowing with them too. But once Sohail lost his head, Pakistan’s reply petered out. For the first time, India had directly eliminated Pakistan from a World Cup.
    A few days later, it was India’s turn to feel pain, as a failed run chase and crowd disturbance ended their World Cup with a semi-final defeat to Sri Lanka at Eden Gardens.
    India 4 Pakistan 4
    1999
    The World Cup returned to England and Wasim Akram’s Pakistan made it to the final. In the process, they lost again to India, as well as Bangladesh. India’s poor form in the Super Six stage cost them a semi-final place, while Pakistan’s equally poor form in the Super Six stage didn’t matter because of their success in the group stage.

    Pakistan had beaten Australia in the group stage, but Australia were peaking as they reached the final and Pakistan had left their best form behind them. Akram urged his players to relax, and perhaps they overdid it as Shane Warne led a humiliating rout, Pakistan dismissed for 133.
    Pakistan had now reached two World Cup finals and three semi-finals without ever beating India.
    India 4 Pakistan 5
    2003
    India rising, Pakistan collapsing. South Africa was a new venue for the World Cup and signalled a redefinition of the World Cup rivalry between India and Pakistan. Pakistan were in dreadful form, with too many players past their best. India, meanwhile, were experienced yet still hungry. Their batting order was beginning to look formidable.

    When the two teams met in Centurion, Pakistan compiled a decent 273. Shoaib Akhtar had bowled the fastest recorded delivery earlier in the tournament. How would India’s batsmen stand up to him, Wasim Akram, and Waqar Younis? To answer the question, Sachin Tendulkar cut Akhtar for six over backward point, and India's first hundred runs in their chase came off 73 balls. Pakistan were demolished and dumped out of the tournament.
    India reached the final but Australia were red-hot. India were never in the game, a variation on Pakistan’s defeat in 1999.
    India 5 Pakistan 5
    2007
    The tournament that never happened. Two wins between them, and those over Bermuda and Zimbabwe, India and Pakistan may as well have not turned up. This was especially true of Pakistan, whose coach Bob Woolmer was found dead in his hotel room, and had to help the police with their inquiries into his death. Painful memories for all supporters of India and Pakistan, which makes both teams' revivals in World Cup 2011 even sweeter.

    India 5 Pakistan 5
    2011
    The tournament’s best batsmen meet the tournament’s best bowlers in a World Cup semi-final in Punjab. It is the first time that India and Pakistan have faced each other at this stage of the tournament, and this World Cup analysis is neatly poised. The winner on Wednesday will shift history in their country’s favour.

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    Sunday, March 27, 2011

    pakistan vs india cricket

    pakistan vs india cricket

    PM Gilani to visit India for Pak-India semi-final

     PM Gilani to visit India for Pak-India semi-final

    Prime Minister Syed Yousuf  Raza Gilani will go to India to watch first semi-final of ICC World Cup being played between the teams of Pakistan and India on March 30.

    According to the spokesman of Presidential House, PM Gilani held two-hour meeting with President Asif Ali Zardari and it was decided in the meeting that PM Gilani will go to India to watch Pakistan-India semi-final to be played in Mohali on March 30.
    It should be mentioned here that Indian Premier Manmohan Singh invited President Zardari and PM Gilani to come over to watch ICC World Cup’s first semi-final between the teams of the two countries.
    Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani will visit Mohali to witness the World Cup semi-final match between India and Pakistan.
    Earlier, Prime Minister Gilani met with President Asif Ali Zardari at presidency.
    According to the sources, a meeting discussed the invitation of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to Gilani and Zardari.
    Later, president’s spokesman Farhatullah Khan Babar confirmed that Prime Minister Visit in India.

     

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    Saturday, March 26, 2011

    Sri lanka Vs England 4th Quarter Final

    ICC Cricket World Cup, 4th Quarter-Final: Sri Lanka v England at Colombo (RPS), Mar 26, 2011 
    England won the toss and elected to bat
     
     
     
    Sri lanka Vs England 4th Quarter Final 


     
     
     Sri lanka Vs England 4th Quarter Final 
     
     
     
     
    Sri lanka Vs England 4th Quarter Final 
     
     
     Sri lanka Vs England 4th Quarter Final