Friday, July 10, 2009

india and pak finance matter

As per PCB's television rights contract with the Dubai based TV Channel Ten Sports, Pakistan are bound to play at least two bilateral series against India, who are reluctant to resume cricket ties due to strained relations between the two countries.

"The network which has signed a USD 140.5 million dollars contract with the PCB expects to earn a major chunk of its revenues from broadcasting the bilateral series with India," one official said.

He said that already Board and the network had lost revenues worth USD 40 million due to the cancellation of the India's Test tour to Pakistan earlier this year.

To make matters worse for the PCB, it could face rising production costs from its television rights holders if they are forced to play their home series at neutral venues.

"Suppose if we are to play our home series against New Zealand in Abu Dhabi and Dubai and then the Tests in New Zealand, it will affect our net income eventually. This is because playing Tests in New Zealand would mean the production costs will go up for the network," he said.

The Indian Cricket Board has not scheduled any bilateral series with Pakistan in the new Future Tour Program effective from April, 2012, saying that they can find slots for Pakistan when the relations between the two countries improve at the government level.

england match

Katich and Ponting take control with tons

The Bulletin by Andrew McGlashan

July 9, 2009

Text size: A | A Australia 249 for 1 (Katich 104*, Ponting 100*) trail England 435 (Pietersen 69, Collingwood 64, Prior 56, Johnson 3-87, Hauritz 3-95) by 186 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details


Ricky Ponting produced a chanceless hundred as Australia set themselves for a huge first innings © Getty Images



Related Links
Players/Officials: Simon Katich | Ricky Ponting | Graeme Swann
Matches: England v Australia at Cardiff
Series/Tournaments: Australia tour of England and Scotland
Teams: Australia | England


Australia's bowling has lost its aura in recent times, but the batting order remains a powerful line-up led by one of the greatest to play the game. Ricky Ponting continued his prolific Ashes record with his 38th Test century, passing 11,000 runs in the process, while Simon Katich continued his rebirth as an opener with his first ton against England to lead Australia to an impressive 249 for 1 in reply to the home side's 435 on the second day in Cardiff.

If it was honours even at the end of the opening exchanges, it is now Australia who hold the advantage and will have designs on batting well past England's total to remove the danger of batting last. It was quite a turnaround for the tourists, who were given the run-around during the first session with England adding 99 in 16.5 overs of sparkling batting from the lower order, in particular Graeme Swann.

However, Australia's progress from the moment Ponting and Katich joined forces was methodical, attritional and thoroughly professional as they added 189. It was a lesson to England's batsmen who, despite collectively managing a very respectable total, individually wasted numerous starts. The pitch held few demons for batsmen who were set, which highlighted the value of Australia's two top-order players building on their foundations.

Katich could have departed for 10 when Andrew Flintoff, in the middle of a hostile spell that accounted for Phillip Hughes, couldn't hold a low return chance but Ponting didn't offer a chance in his 155-ball hundred that arrived off the penultimate ball of the day. Katich had brought up his own century moments earlier from 214 balls when he pulled Flintoff to fine leg. He is far removed from the batsman who was bemused by reverse swing in 2005 and it's one of cricket's great comeback stories.

Ponting already has a record that stands up with the legends and became the fourth batsman to pass 11,000 Test runs when he moved to 41, joining Sachin Tendulkar, Brian Lara and Allan Border with enough time in his career to finish top of the pile. He has also scored hundreds in four Ashes series, a record matched by only Don Bradman and Steve Waugh.


Prime Numbers

8

The number of centuries Ricky Ponting has scored against England. Only six batsmen have scored more hundreds in Ashes contests.
50.68

Ponting's average against England, at the end of the second day's play. The only country against whom he averages less than 50 is India (47.02).
48.07

The average partnership between Ponting and Simon Katich. It's their fifth century stand, and the highest, in 28 innings.
57.42

Katich's Test average in the last 14 months. In 29 innings he has scored six centuries and seven fifties.
31.49

Katich's strike rate against Graeme Swann and Monty Panesar in his unbeaten 104. Against the fast bowlers his strike rate was 69.56.




And he'll have his mind set on doubling this innings before he's finished on a surface that may yet make the fourth innings a testing proposition. There was turn for Swann and Monty Panesar, especially from the footmarks, but it was slow and the batsmen had time to adjust. Katich often waited on the back foot to clip Panesar with the spin through the leg side, while Ponting cashed in whenever Swann over pitched. Swann sent down six maidens in his first 11 overs, ripped a couple past Katich's outside edge and could have had him leg before on 56, but when he started to force the issue there were more loose deliveries to be picked off.

Andrew Strauss tried various combinations, but found it difficult to build pressure as the batsmen found release through well-run singles and deft placement. James Anderson wasn't at his best while Stuart Broad was forced to leave the field for some treatment on his calf during the final session. As Ravi Bopara found yesterday success against a poor West Indies team needs to be put into context.

It was no surprise that the most hostile pace force was Flintoff, playing his first Test since Antigua in February, and as with his brief innings his first spell rekindled memories of Ashes contests past. He'd been held back from the attack during the half hour Australia batted before lunch and Hughes raced into his innings with a series of crisp off-side boundaries.

There was a plan to target Hughes with the short ball, but both Anderson and Broad offered too much width and allowed Hughes to free his arms. After the interval, though, the challenge went up a few levels as Flintoff was immediately thrown the ball. He began with three rapid bouncers to Hughes from around the wicket, probing the middle-and-leg line that Steve Harmison utilised for England Lions, throwing in a few verbals for good measure, then beat the left-hander with one that cut away off the seam.

It was a marvellous duel between a seasoned campaigner and a young, cocky batsman with Flintoff coming out on top. Switching to over the wicket he cramped Hughes for room as he tried another cut and Matt Prior held a sharp, low chance to his right as Flintoff stood in the middle of the pitch, arms aloft in celebration but it proved England's only moment of joy.

Australia began the day hoping to restrict England to well below 400 and that looked on the cards when Mitchell Johnson removed Broad with the aid of some thigh pad. However, Swann was immediately at his busy, cheeky best and the fifty stand with Anderson came up off 38 balls.

The introduction of Nathan Hauritz brought even greater acceleration as Swann immediately made a statement against his fellow offspinner. He lofted him over wide mid-on then slammed him straight down the ground for another boundary as Peter Siddle lost sight of the ball on the rope. The best of the lot, however, was his impish reverse sweep to complete an over that left the crowd in raptures. By the close, though, the English fans were more subdued and it was the Australians waving their flags.
Andrew McGlashan is assistant editor of Cricinfo

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Sun Jun 28 20:00 UTC+0530 2009

2nd ODI - West Indies v India. Sabina Park Kingston Jamaica

India 188/10 (48.2)
West Indies 192/2 (34.1)

West Indies won by 8 wickets

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Fri Jul 3 19:00 UTC+0530 2009

3rd ODI - West Indies v India. Beausejour Stadium Gros Islet St Lucia

West Indies 185/7 (27.0)
India 159/4 (21.5)

India won by 6 wickets (D/L method)

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Sat Jul 4 10:00 UTC+0530 2009

1st Test - Sri Lanka v Pakistan. Galle International Stadium

Sri Lanka 292/10 (80.2) & 217/10 (56.2)
Pakistan 342/10 (94.0) & 117/10 (44.3)

Sri Lanka won by 50 runs

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Sun Jul 5 19:00 UTC+0530 2009

4th ODI - West Indies v India. Beausejour Stadium Gros Islet St Lucia

West Indies 27/1 (7.3)


No Result

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Wed Jul 8 15:30 UTC+0530 2009

1st Test - England v Australia. Sophia Gardens. Cardiff

England 435/10 (106.5)
Australia 249/1 (71.0)

Stumps, Day 2

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Thu Jul 9 19:30 UTC+0530 2009

1st Test - West Indies v Bangladesh. Arnos Vale Ground. Kingstown. St Vincent

Bangladesh 42/0 (18.5)


Stumps, Day 1

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Sun Jul 12 10:00 UTC+0530 2009

2nd Test - Sri Lanka v Pakistan. P Sara Oval. Colombo

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Thu Jul 16 15:30 UTC+0530 2009

2nd Test - England v Australia. Lords. London

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Fri Jul 17 19:30 UTC+0530 2009

2nd Test - West Indies v Bangladesh. National Cricket Stadium. St Georges. Grenada

Coming Soon

gavaskar

Gavaskar rues loss of innocence

Cricinfo staff

July 10, 2009

Text size: A | A
Sunil Gavaskar: "You rarely see fielders go up to applaud somebody getting a half-century any more" © PA Photos



Sunil Gavaskar, the legendary opening batsman who is credited with giving Indian cricket a voice, has lamented cricket's loss of innocence. Speaking on the eve of his 60th birthday, Gavaskar said while the game has become more attractive to watch today some of the old values have gone out of it.

Gavaskar, who played 125 Tests between 1971 and 1987 and was the first batsman to score 10,000 Test runs, said that the win-at-all-cost system has brought the unpleasant things that happen in the game have come to the fore.

"I think in a sense the romance is gone. The appreciation of the game, whether it was by your own team or by the opposition, is not quite so much.

"You rarely see fielders go up to applaud somebody getting a half-century any more. Players are aware that the TV cameras are on them. So they might have just one clap and that's it - almost as if to say that if you have more than two or three claps for the opposition, then it's a kind of weakness. I don't think that's a correct thing."

When asked if he would have been happier playing today when there is far more money and fame, Gavaskar said: "Maybe not, for the simple reason that there was an innocence about the game when I was kid, which is perhaps not quite there now. I think I would prefer the innocence of the game that was there when I was a teenager."

Gavaskar, who has been a trenchant and vocal voice against sledging, repeated his opposition to what he termed as "nothing but abuse of the opposition".

"Sometimes players get away saying things to the opposition on the field that they would never get away with saying to anybody off the field. One day this might lead to a physical confrontation on the field.

"Are you trying to tell me the Bradmans, the Benauds, the Cowdreys, the Soberses did that? They didn't. There might be a joke or two, where even the butt of the joke laughs. A little gamesmanship did not affect us either. Today it is not that."

The biggest challenge the game faces today, according to Gavaskar, is the gap in quality between the top Test teams and the rest. He said while it was difficult to make all 10 teams equal cricketing powers, at least having six strong teams would be a big step forward. However he did not believe Test cricket was under threat from the game's newest format. Instead, he said Twenty20, like ODIs, would help Tests become more attractive.