Sunday, May 24, 2009

IPL2 MEGA FINALS ROYAL CHALLENGERS VS DECCAN CHARGERS


























Johannesburg: For the second year in a row, the Indian Premier League was won by a team that had a fairytale run to the title. If it was Team Jaipur that went from underdogs to champs last year, this time it was the turn of a squad that could do nothing right last year, Team Hyderabad, to pull off an amazing turnaround.
Hyderabad rose from rock bottom, shaken and stirred, to pull off a sensational victory in the final
here at the Wanderers, thus adding another chapter to the sweet irony of lastyear’s wooden spoon holders. If 2008’s number seven and eight teams were destined to make the final, it was perhaps only apt that the number eight won the title. Knight Riders may well derive some hope for next year.
The IPL ended in spectacular fashion as one IT city barely held off the other in a match that went down to the wire. Defending a mere 143 runs, Adam Gilchrist’s men provided
the much needed spark to swing their side’s fortunes in an exceptional manner. Some electric fieldwork by Andrew Symonds, Rohit Sharma and Herschelle Gibbs, excellent left-arm spin from Pragyan Ojha and aggressive captaincy by Gilchrist worked wonders. Gilchrist’s hurricane innings in the semifinal had single-handedly given his team a ticket to the final. On the flip side though, it burdened his team with the expectation of a repeat performance. In retrospect, it seemed like the third ball of Hyderabad’s innings had decided the fate of the final when Gilchrist was clean bowled by Anil Kumble, trying to come down the track and completely missing the line.
Kumble’s genius needs a mention despite his team losing at the end. He reserved his best for the allimportant clash and when it came, his figures of 4-16 from four overs grabbed the opposition by the throat.
After Gilly left, scoring runs became tough hell for a seemingly mentally-subdued side. Herschelle Gibbs
batted through the innings, anchoring one end. But there was no acceleration forthcoming from the other end. Andrew Symonds briefly flourished, but Kumble cut his innings short. Rohit Sharma too did his bit, but Hyderabad’s 143/6 seemed barely adequate.
The Challengers began their chase well. with Jaccques Kallis providing a stable start, Roelof van der Merwe’s run-rate boost adding meat to the effort and Ross Taylor indulging in some sensible strokeplay.
FINAL HYD VS ROYAL CHALLENGERS HYD RISE LIKE A PHOENIX ... End IPL II In A Blaze Of Glory
Johannesburg: To the credit of Team Hyderabad, they did not flinch when faced with a situation in the final of IPL II at the Bull Ring on Sunday.

They did it once before against Mumbai Indians in the league stage when they did well to hold their nerve and they did it again when it mattered the most.
Ball by ball they gained in confidence with each falling wicket just as Royal Challengers dug a hole which they found tough to get out of. A target of 144 from 120 balls
came down to 100 from 82, 65 from 48 and the sequence remained in that order till the
end. There was always the need to surge but a vigilant Hyderabad, also a bit lucky, never provided the chance.
Two stumpings by Gilchrist, the second one a stunner, along with excellent spells from Ojha and Symonds further dented Roy
al Challengers. Vijay Mallya's outfit, though, bat deep with the
likes of Praveen Kumar, Vinay Kumar no mugs with the bat. Not to talk of Robin Uthappa, who till recently was in the Indian scheme of things.
But the tide had turned clearly in favour of Hyderabad with the wicket of Rahul Dravid.


RC CUT CHENNAI TO SIZE

Johannesburg: Lalit Modi may have first conceived the idea of a grand Twenty20 spectacle that the Indian Premier League (IPL) is, but one still has to wonder who is writing the script.
Last year, the team that wasn’t even considered an underdog, criticised for poor player-selection, accused of spending the least among eight franchisees, won the trophy. This year, two teams that had ended up as 2008’s wooden-spooners have done the unthinkable. Royal Challengers and Hyderabad last year’s No. 7 and 8 will clash in the final of IPL 2009.
The two IT cities have surprised the bookmakers which make this T20 extravaganza so exciting and, for the second year in succession, have ensured that anything is possible in this extremely unpredictable format.
It is hard to project a player-versus-player contest here. Will it be Adam Gilchrist’s willow-power against Praveen Kumar and Jacques Kallis’ new ball attack? Rohit Sharma’s finesse or Andrew Symonds’ belligerent hitting against Anil Kumble’s precision? This could also be a battle for youngsters like Virat Kohli and Manish Pandey competing with T Suman and Azhar Bilakhia. On the face of it, this could be anyone’s trophy. The atmosphere at the Wanderers
can get quite intimidating when close to 50,000 spectators will fill up the stands.
On paper, Hyderabad definitely look the better side. The loss to Royal Challengers at Centurion on Thursday notwithstanding, they have a top-order boasting of some of the biggest names this format can think of. Even if one of these players — Gilchrist and Gibbs or Symonds and Sharma bats to his full potential, it will be enough to wipe out any opposition. Gilchrist showed precisely that in the first semifinal, cracking one of the best T20 knocks ever.
For Royal Challengers too, the batsmen have been at the helm in the last few matches. In fact, it has been at least one of the top-order men in every game delivering the goods. Ross Taylor did it in a crunch match against the Knight Riders when he struck a 41-ball 81 to take the match away singlehandedly from the opposition. Kallis and Utthappa demolished Mumbai in a partnership that was absolutely dominating. Virat Kohli has been consistent and Manish Pandey, of course, became the first Indian to score a century in IPL the other day.
Scoring runs, as aggressively as possible, will be the key to the game on a track that hardly has anything for the bowlers.

Royal Challengers Bangalore won by 6 wickets


Result Royal Challengers Bangalore won by 6 wickets (with 7 balls remaining)

Chennai Super Kings innings (20 overs maximum) R B 4s 6s SR
PA Patel lbw b Kallis 36 27 7 0 133.33
ML Hayden c Pandey b Vinay Kumar 26 19 2 1 136.84
captain wicketkeeper MS Dhoni c Vinay Kumar b van der Merwe 28 30 0 0 93.33
SK Raina c wicketkeeperBoucher b Kumar 20 19 1 1 105.26
JA Morkel not out 20 17 1 1 117.64
JDP Oram c Uthappa b Vinay Kumar 9 7 0 1 128.57
S Badrinath not out 1 1 0 0 100.00
Extras (lb 3, w 3) 6

Total (5 wickets; 20 overs) 146 (7.30 runs per over)

Did not bat SB Jakati, L Balaji, M Muralitharan, MS Gony

Fall of wickets1-61 (Hayden, 6.6 ov), 2-69 (Patel, 8.4 ov), 3-104 (Raina, 14.1 ov), 4-125 (Dhoni, 17.2 ov), 5-140 (Oram, 19.2 ov)

Bowling O M R W Econ
P Kumar 4 0 26 1 6.50
JH Kallis 4 0 26 1 6.50 (1w)
R Vinay Kumar 4 0 38 2 9.50
A Kumble 4 0 30 0 7.50
RE van der Merwe 4 0 23 1 5.75 (2w)

Royal Challengers Bangalore innings (target: 147 runs from 20 overs) R B 4s 6s SR
JH Kallis c Patel b Gony 9 7 2 0 128.57
MK Pandey b Jakati 48 35 7 0 137.14
RE van der Merwe b Morkel 2 5 0 0 40.00
R Dravid lbw b Muralitharan 44 39 6 0 112.82
V Kohli not out 24 17 1 2 141.17
LRPL Taylor not out 17 12 0 2 141.66
Extras (lb 3, nb 2) 5

Total (4 wickets; 18.5 overs) 149 (7.91 runs per over)

Did not bat RV Uthappa, wicketkeeperMV Boucher, P Kumar, R Vinay Kumar, captainA Kumble

Fall of wickets1-17 (Kallis, 1.4 ov), 2-22 (van der Merwe, 2.5 ov), 3-94 (Pandey, 12.3 ov), 4-110 (Dravid, 15.1 ov)

Bowling O M R W Econ
JA Morkel 3 0 26 1 8.66
MS Gony 2 0 23 1 11.50 (1nb)
SB Jakati 4 0 29 1 7.25
SK Raina 3 0 23 0 7.66
M Muralitharan 4 0 15 1 3.75
L Balaji 2 0 16 0 8.00
JDP Oram 0.5 0 14 0 16.80 (1nb)

Friday, May 22, 2009

TEAM DELHI GILLYTONED


Centurion: Adam Gilchrist is the new Nizam and Hyderabad are a step away from being the champions of Indian Premier League II.
No, Team Delhi didn't do anything wrong, just that they were dazzled by an old man's frenzy that threw them out of the IPL, yet again in the semifinals.
Gilchrist went back in time, probably to March 23, 2003, when he rattled India in an

opening burst to help Australia retain the World Cup.
There was a sense of deja vu as Ashish Nehra ran into bowl, and Gilchrist put him out of the park with effortless ease, just as he had done some six years back. The assualt, though, started with a brutal attack on the best bowler of the tournament, Dirk Nannes.
Chasing 154, he took 21 off

Nannes' first over, employing all the shots that could have been played. Anything short was hooked or pulled mercilessly, and if the bowler dared to pitch it up, it was driven down the ground.
Spinners came on as early as the fifth over, but there was no shift in momentum. Gilly slammed Pradeep Sangwan and when he hit three sixes off a Virender Sehwag over, the writing was on the wall.
Looking clueless and disspirited, Delhi merely hoped that Gilly would play a wrong shot and get out. He edged one to get out in the 10th over, but by then the score was 102, off which the legend had con
tributed 85 (35b, 10x4, 5x6).
The rest was child's play and with the likes of Andrew Symonds around, it took Hyderabad eight more overs to reach the target.
Earlier, Gilly's decision to play medium-pacer Ryan Harris paid off as he dismissed Gautam Gambhir and David Warner in the first over.
The Hyderabad attack was looking all charged up, but Sehwag knew how important it was for him to stay at the wicket. The Delhi dasher never took

a backward step and kept counter-attacking the Hyderabad attack. Standing tall, he carted Harris and RP Singh around the park and Tillekeratne Dilshan (65, 51 balls), too, gave him excellent support.
The strategy break broke Viru's rhythm and right after the interval, the skipper missed the line of a Symonds delivery to be caught plumb in front.
But Dilshan carried on with the good work that he had been doing right through the tournament, finding the gaps and keeping the scoreboard ticking.
He was joined by AB de Villiers, who attacked right away and it seemed that a score of 170 was on the cards.
But RP struck right when the game was drifting from them, inducing an edge off AB, and Hyderabad were back in the hunt. Both RP and Harris were excellent in the last few overs, pitching it right up in the blockhole and varying the pace, which made it difficult for a well-set Dilshan to give the final push to the innings.
But with the kind of form Gilchrist was in, it wouldn't have made much of a difference either.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Schedule: ICC Twenty20 Cricket World Cup 2009



Group AGroup BGroup CGroup D
IndiaPakistanAustraliaNew Zealand
BangladeshEnglandSri LankaSouth Africa
IrelandNetherlandsWest IndiesScotland
Group EA1, B2, C1, D2Group FB1, A2, C2, D1

DateLord'sTrent BridgeThe Oval
Fri, 5 JuneOpening ceremony

England v Netherlands
22:00 IST



Sat, 6 June
India v Bangladesh
22:00 IST
New Zealand v Scotland
14:30 IST

Australia v West Indies
18:00 IST

Sun, 7 June

South Africa v Scotland
18:00 IST

England v Pakistan
22:00 IST

Mon, 8 June
Ireland v Bangladesh
18:00 IST

Australia v Sri Lanka
22:00 IST


Tues, 9 JunePakistan v Netherlands
18:00 IST

New Zealand v South Africa
22:00 IST



Wed, 10 June
Sri Lanka v West Indies
18:00 IST

India v Ireland
22:00 IST


Placement for the Super Eight stage is determined as follows:
The first two teams in each group are placed 1 or 2. They will retain this position for the Super Eight stage, irrespective of whether they finish first or second in their group, unless they are knocked out by the team 3 in their group. In this instance, team 3 replaces the position of the team they knock out.

DateLord'sTrent BridgeThe Oval
Thu, 11 June
D1 v A2 (18:00 IST)
B2 v D2 (22:00 IST)

Fri, 12 JuneB1 v C2 (18:00 IST)
A1 v C1 (22:00 IST)


Sat, 13 June

C1 v D2 (18:00 IST)
D1 v B1 (22:00 IST)
Sun, 14 JuneA2 v C2 (18:00 IST)
A1 v B2 (22:00 IST)


Mon, 15 June

B1 v A2 (18:00 IST)
B2 v C1 (22:00 IST)
Tues, 16 June
D1 v C2 (18:00 IST)
D2 v A1 (22:00 IST)

The teams finishing first and second in groups E and F, based on points obtained in the Super Eight stage will compete in the semi-finals
DateLord'sTrent BridgeThe Oval
Wed, 17 JuneREST DAYREST DAYREST DAY
Thu, 18 June
Women's semi-final
A1 v B2 (18:00 IST)

Men's semi-final
E1 v F2 (22:00 IST)


Fri, 19 June

Women's semi-final
B1 v A2 (18:00 IST)

Men's semi-final
F1 v E2 (22:00 IST)

Sat, 20 JuneREST DAYREST DAYREST DAY
Sun, 21 JuneWomen's final
14:30 IST

Men's final
19:30 IST

Closing ceremony