Friday, April 1, 2011

Nehra may miss final with injured finger


Left-arm seamer Ashish Nehra is likely to miss the 2011 World Cup final between India and Sri Lanka due to a finger injury he sustained during the semi-final game against Pakistan. 
Nehra is likely to get his finger operated and miss the first few weeks of the Indian Premier league. 

India are set to take on Sri Lanka at the Wankhede stadium in Mumbai on April 2. 

Since the injury was on his non-bowling hand, Nehra was able to get through three more overs in the match. However, there are worries he will not be able to field.
It was a bit of a surprise to see Nehra in the first XI during the semi-final, given that the man he replaced, R Ashwin, had been impressive in the two matches he had played in the tournament. Despite Nehra's performance of 2 for 33, and Munaf Patel's 2 for 40, India captain MS Dhoni said after the game that India had misjudged the pitch and should have played another spinner.
Ashwin may well have returned in place of either Nehra or Munaf for the final in any case, and will almost definitely be in the side if Nehra does not recover. The only other pace option India have is Sreesanth, who has been left on the sidelines since the first game of the tournament.
Nehra had missed the first two matches of the tournament with a sore back and was brought in for the group-stage game against Netherlands. Against South Africa in Nagpur, he went for 65 runs in 8.4 overs, 16 off which were scored in the last over of the game, consigning India to defeat. He was then left out for India's next two games, before returning for the semi-final.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

India maintain WC domination over Pak, enter final vs SriLanka in MUMBAI

India 260 for 9 (Tendulkar 85, Riaz 5-46) beat Pakistan 231 (Misbah 56) by 29 runs


India's dream of a World Cup triumph at home is one step closer after their bowlers suffocated Pakistan's batsmen to set up a 29-run victory in the semi-final in Mohali. Saturday's decider will now be a battle of the hosts, and while Sri Lanka might have been surprised by the strength of India's bowling effort, they would also have taken note of a slightly lacklustre batting performance.


In the end, India's 260 for 9 was enough as their bowlers did a fine job, but had Pakistan helped themselves, the target could have been so much more gettable. Sachin Tendulkar was dropped four times in his 85, MS Dhoni was put down once and while Wahab Riaz was extremely impressive in collecting five wickets, Umar Gul had one of his most forgettable days, wilting under the pressure of a World Cup semi-final.
By contrast, India's display in the field was much more professional, and that was the difference in a match that lived up to the extreme pre-match hype. The decision to leave R Ashwin out to make room for Ashish Nehra was an odd choice on a pitch offering plenty of spin, but Nehra and his bowling colleagues built the pressure and gave Pakistan's batsmen little to attack after they made a promising start and reached 70 for 1.
The Indians didn't give away an extra until the 37th over of the innings, and the way they put together strings of dot balls and tight overs was key to their success. Munaf Patel picked up two victims and Yuvraj Singh made up for his golden duck with a pair of wickets, but the most important breakthrough came when Harbhajan Singh bowled Umar Akmal for 29.
Akmal had struck a pair of sixes off Yuvraj, driving him over the sight screen and pulling him over midwicket, and anything was possible while he was at the crease. But Dhoni called on Harbhajan to replace Yuvraj, and with the first ball of his spell he came around the wicket and pushed one across Akmal, taking the off stump when the batsman played for the spin.
Shahid Afridi also fell to Harbhajan when he skied a catch off a full toss, and the obdurate Misbah-ul-Haq was left to steer the chase. He found it difficult to lift his tempo and was the last man out, caught on the boundary for 56 in the final over, but he ate up 76 deliveries and had he shown some more intent earlier, Pakistan might have had a chance.
It was a disappointing end for Pakistan after their top order gave them hope. Mohammad Hafeez made an encouraging 43 before a string of eight dot balls from Munaf brought a brain-fade as Hafeez tried a premeditated paddle sweep from outside off stump and edged behind to Dhoni.
Soon after, the loss of Asad Shafiq brought the Mohali crowd to life, when he tried to cut a Yuvraj delivery that was much too full and straight, and the middle stump was knocked back. Shafiq had made 30 and had displayed a cool temperament until that point, but the required run-rate started to balloon, and Pakistan never recovered.
But while India have booked a place in the final, they must hope they haven't used all their good fortune too soon. Tendulkar might be the finest batsman of his generation, but today he was the luckiest, dropped on 27, 45, 70 and 81. It seemed as though he was going to bring up his 100th international century with one of his least convincing innings.
Misbah at midwicket was the first to put him down, before Younis Khan spilled a regulation chance at cover, both off the bowling of Afridi. The third opportunity came when Kamran Akmal didn't move his hands quickly enough to a thick edge, again off Afridi, and while that was a tough opportunity, a pull to Umar at mid-on from the offspin of Hafeez should have been taken.
Before he had any of those lives, Tendulkar had survived two very tight calls on 23: an lbw decision that was given out by Ian Gould but on review proved to be spinning down leg, and a near-stumping the next delivery when he just got his back foot down in time after losing his balance reaching outside off. When Tendulkar was finally taken at cover by Afridi off the bowling of Ajmal, Pakistan's relief was evident.
Soon after, a scratchy Dhoni, who was also dropped by Kamran, made the mistake of challenging Simon Taufel on an lbw decision. Dhoni had 25 when he missed a Riaz delivery that pitched just in line and was hitting the stumps. It was the second outstanding call by Taufel, who had given Virender Sehwag lbw in a similar fashion earlier, even though the left-armer's angle meant pitching outside leg was a possibility.
Riaz was the man who Afridi had to thank for keeping Pakistan in the contest after India made a strong start and reached 114 for 1 off their first 18 overs. After Gautam Gambhir was stumped wandering down the pitch against Hafeez, Riaz grabbed two wickets in two balls - Virat Kohli caught at backward point and Yuvraj bowled by a low full toss for a golden duck.
Nobody looked as fluent as the crease as Sehwag, who took 21 off Gul (0 for 69) from the third over of the innings. What looked like a 300-plus total in those early overs became 260 when Suresh Raina helped them recover from their middle-order failures.

It was enough, but India's batsmen will need to improve if they want to lift the trophy on Saturday. For now, they can dream of their first World Cup in 28 years.
MOM:SACHIN TENDULKAR

Sri Lanka reach final with tense win

Sri Lanka 220 for 5 (Dilshan 73, Sangakkara 54) beat New Zealand 217 (Styris 57, Mendis 3-35) by five wickets

Sri Lanka nearly did a South Africa against 'Dark horses' New Zealand, but managed to hold on to clinch a nervous 5 wicket win and head to Wankhede where they will play either India or Pakistan making it an all-Asia final. 


The Kiwis would have been on a high coming into the game, having sent back the much-fancied South African team, but playing Sri Lanka in their own den would always prove to be a tough ask. The Asian country proved why they are so strong at home romping home to a 5 wicket win. 

It was however, not all one way traffic for Sri Lanka as New Zealand looked well set to post a total in excess of 250 when Ross Taylor and Scott Styris were at the middle. The duo had put on a 70+ stand after New Zealand had lost their top 3 in a hurry. 

Taylor and Styris found the going tough initially with the spinners keeping things in check, but they ensured there were no further setbacks and for a team that bats deep it was crucial that they had wickets in hand to up the ante towards the end. From 84/3 the duo added 77 precious runs to put their team in a good position at 161/3 after 39 overs. With a power packed batting line up to follow and 2 set batsmen at the crease, New Zealand would have set themselves a minimum target of 250. That was before their horrible collapse, their target kept reducing with every wicket that fell and they were eventually bundled out for 217. Styris was their best batsman, getting to his first 50 of this WC. 

Taylor dispatched a rank long hop from Ajantha Mendis straight into the hands of Upul Tharanga. The right hander was uncharacteristically serene during his vigil at the crease and had he been playing his natural game, the ball would've disappeared out of the ground. That was the body blow for the Kiwis and it gave Sri Lanka the opening they were desperate for. 

Kane Williamson and Styris did well to take Sri Lanka close to the 200 run mark, but the youngster was outfoxed by Lasith Malinga soon after. Murali had a dream send off, getting a wicket off the last ball of his home career. The Kiwis innings had capitulated; from 192-5 they slid to 217 all out in the 49th over. They lost the last 7 wickets for a mere 56 runs and their total looked at least 30- 40 runs short against the strong Sri Lankan batting line up. 

It proved to be a competitive total nonetheless, but not enough. Sri Lanka's brittleness in the middle order was exposed by New Zealand but not before an emphatic show by the top order had laid the stage for a win. They did make it difficult for themselves with the middle order failing to back the good show by the top order, but what eventually mattered was that they will be playing in probably the biggest game of their lives at the Wankhede stadium, Mumbai. 

The openers have played a big part in Sri Lanka's success so far at the WC, and they provided a steady opening stand to help the team dispel any jitters early on. Upul Tharanga continued from where he'd left off against England launching the second ball of the innings for a 6. It was smooth sailing for Lanka from there, till a flying Jesse Ryder held on to a blinder of a catch to send back Tharanga. 

Sri Lanka seemed unperturbed after the opener's dismissal as Kumar Sangakkara and Dilshan steadied the ship and took them closer with a good stand of over 100. The left hand- right hand combination kept the runs ticking and both soon notched up their 50s. Dilshan fell with Sri Lanka needing 58 to win and the Sri Lankan middle order, which was hardly tested in the WC so far, came up a cropper in finishing the game. Mahela Jayawardene, Kumar Sangakkara and Chamara Silva fell in the space of 25 runs to offer the Kiwis some hope. 

It was a case of too little too late however for the Black Caps as T Samaraweera and A Mathews stuck to their tasks and guided Sri Lanka into the finals. 

Monday, March 28, 2011

Indo-Pak Unpredictable Clash


New Delhi: India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni and his Pakistan counterpart Shahid Afridi will be involved in an engrossing battle of wits in the eagerly- awaited World Cup semi-final in Mohali on Wednesday.
Afridi's team ended Australia's unbeaten 34-match streak at the World Cup with a win in a league match, while Dhoni's side knocked the defending champions out of the tournament in the quarter-finals.
Dhoni and Afridi have so far proved adept at reading the situations and did not hesitate embracing unorthodoxy, like opening the attack with a spinner in a bid to wrong-foot the opposition.
The Indian captain opened the bowling with off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin in the quarter-final against Australia on a slow Ahmedabad track and the move paid off as the spinner removed in-form Shane Watson (25) in the 10th over.
Dhoni needs to intelligently use his limited bowling resources again as he has so far not seriously felt the absence of a fifth specialist bowler, thanks to part-time spinner Yuvraj Singh's 11 wickets in seven matches.
The Indian captain was also proved right when he included Suresh Raina in place of hard-hitting Yusuf Pathan against Australia. Raina did not let his captain down as he was involved in a match-winning stand of 74 with Yuvraj.
"I prefer to go by instinct (in some situations)," said Dhoni.
India have so far lost just one game, against South Africa when their last nine wickets fell for 29 runs, and Dhoni was quick to remind his batsmen not to play for the gallery but for the team.
Pakistan have so far looked a disciplined and well-knit unit, thanks to Afridi's leadership qualities.
Afridi may not have shown his batting prowess, but has done well as a leg-spinner and fielder. He is the tournament's leading bowler with 21 wickets in seven matches.
He has persisted with wicketkeeper-batsman Kamran Akmal, who had an off-day against New Zealand when he let off Ross Taylor early in the innings. The New Zealander went on to score a century in his team's victory.
It was the only defeat suffered by Pakistan, but Afridi did not regret his decision as Akmal grew in confidence with each game and was involved a century stand in his team's quarter-final win over the West Indies.
Afridi's moves to promote Akmal as an opener, bring Asad Shafiq in the middle order and playing off-spinner Saeed Ajmal against the West Indies have also paid off.