Showing posts with label Bangladesh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bangladesh. Show all posts

Tuesday, 5 April 2016

Younis Follows Afridi After Pakistan Failure

Twenty20
Younis steps down 
Waqar Younis has resigned as the Pakistan coach following his side’s disappointing performances in the World Twenty20 in India and the Asia Cup in Bangladesh.

Waqar is the latest to step down from his role with the country following the captain Shahid Afridi’s resignation as the T20 captain. The Pakistan team manager, Intikhab Alam, had called Afridi “absolutely clueless in terms of on-field tactics and off-field leadership” in a report.

Waqar had offered to step down last Tuesday, saying he would “literally put [his] hands together and beg for forgiveness”. He has now ended his second term as the Pakistan coach, after being appointed in 2014 following another stint in charge between 2010 and 2011.

Pakistan won only three of the eight games they played at the World Twenty20 and the Asia Cup and Waqar wrote a highly critical report of how the team was performing which was leaked. In it, he attacked the PCB for not allowing him input on squad selection and he was also disparaging as to Afridi’s captaincy.

“I am resigning from my post today with a heavy heart,” said Waqar, before referring to his report. “I want my recommendations to be implemented. They were not acted on when I first made them in 2015.”


Tuesday, 15 March 2016

Black Caps Leave India Dhoni and Dusted


Kane Williamson’s gamble to compromise on speed and pick three specialist spinners paid off as New Zealand humbled hosts India by 47 runs in a spin-dominated Super 10 contest of the World Twenty20 on Tuesday.

Opting to bat first, New Zealand posted 126-7 in the Group Two contest on a prodigiously turning track at Nagpur’s VCA Stadium, seemingly a below-par total against the host nation who are famed for their proficiency against spin bowling.

New Zealand’s three-pronged spin attack, however, ensured it was more than enough as Mitchell Santner (four for 11), Nathan McCullum (two for 15) and the Indian-born Ish Sodhi (three for 18) wrecked the hosts who folded for 79 in 18.1 overs. Williamson said it was not an easy decision to drop the pace duo of Tim Southee and Trent Boult to accommodate the spinners.

“Obviously that was tough, they are world class bowlers,” the Kiwi captain said. “But at the same time we are looking to do the best we can in these conditions. Certainly the spinners paid off today. The wicket spun a lot and they bowled very well on it.”

The first three balls of the match contained the kind of drama and excitement that fans would be expecting from the sixth edition of the tournament in cricket’s emotional and financial home in India.

After Williamson won the toss and decided to set a target, Martin Guptill nonchalantly hit the first delivery from Ravichandran Ashwin over the bowler’s head for a six. The off-spinner settled score in the very next ball, trapping the batsman leg before with a delivery that, replay suggested, would have gone over the stumps.

New man in Colin Munro reverse hit the next ball for a six but threw his wicket in the next over. As wickets kept tumbling at the other end, Corey Anderson (34) tried to steady the innings and it was Luke Ronchi’s (21 not out) 11-ball cameo that took them past the 125-mark. The Indian fans expected the chase to be a stroll in the park but Santner, who was adjudged man-of-the-match, and McCullum had other ideas.

They blew away India’s top order, reducing them to 26-4 in the fifth over to derail their chase. Virat Kohli (23) resisted the onslaught for a while but Sodhi struck a crucial blow with his very first ball to send back the Indian batting mainstay.

Home captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni waged a lone battle with a run-a-ball 30 but the celebrated ‘finisher’ could not get his team over the line.

New Zealand beat India at their own game with their spinners claiming nine of the 10 wickets but Dhoni insisted the defeat was more down to his team’s careless batting.

“It was our batting that let us down,” the home captain said after India’s fifth futile attempt to beat New Zealand in Twenty20 Internationals.

“There were quite a few soft dismissals. It was not like the deliveries got a lot of batsmen out. Maybe it was our shot selection... there was no partnership also,” Dhoni rued.


Sunday, 29 November 2015

Siddle Runs Secure Australia Win


Peter Siddle struck the winning runs under the Adelaide Oval floodlights to seal a series-winning victory against New Zealand after Australia had all but collapsed late on day three of the third and final Test.

With his side deduced to 185-7 in pursuit of a victory target of 187 and having to overcome the emotion of his grandmother’s death during the course of the game, Siddle pushed two runs past point and his injured batting partner Mitchell Starc hobbled up and down the pitch with a broken foot to complete the three-wicket win. Batsman Shaun Marsh had earlier fallen just short of a half-century but his 49 anchored important stands with Adam Voges and his younger brother Mitchell in cricket’s inaugural day-night Test.

Australia wrapped up the series 2-0, ending New Zealand’s run of seven consecutive series without loss, dating back to 2013. Fired by a five-wicket haul by swing specialist Trent Boult, New Zealand mowed through the top order to leave the hosts 115-4 shortly after the dinner-break. Their bowlers returned to capture late wickets and turn what should have been a procession into a cliff-hanger.

The 187-run target ultimately proved too little to defend and Siddle’s inelegant shot to seal the win sparked a thunderous roar from the crowd of 33,923. Paceman and man-of-the-match Josh Hazlewood was vital for Australia, capturing a career-best 6-70 in the absence of injured spearhead Mitchell Starc to limit New Zealand to 208 in the third innings.

Boult dismissed Voges for 28 straight after the dinner-break but all-rounder Mitchell Marsh joined his older brother at the crease and compiled a brisk 28 to push Australia within 26 runs of their target. Mitchell Marsh bashed a six over the head of spin-bowling all-rounder Mitch Santner but was out swiping at the next delivery, the skied top-edge well-caught by a scrambling Kane Williamson.

The final runs trickled rather than gushed and Shaun Marsh grew jumpy as victory and his 50 approached. His tentative push at Boult ended in the safe hands of Ross Taylor in the slips leaving Australia 11 runs short of their total. Wicketkeeper Peter Nevill then fell for 10 to leave Australia two runs short of the victory with three wickets in hand.

The match was won earlier in the day, however, when Hazlewood took three wickets to restrict New Zealand to 92 runs on top of their overnight total of 116-5. Hazlewood struck with the ninth ball of the day to remove wicketkeeper BJ Watling for seven and had Mark Craig nick behind for 15. He later wrapped up New Zealand’s innings by bowling Boult for five, with Mitchell Marsh capturing 3-59.


Sunday, 11 October 2015

No Blues for New South Wales


Domestic one-day cup leaders NSW underlined their early-season dominance with an emphatic 75-run win over last year’s champions Western Australia, in a repeat match-up of the 2014 final.

NSW compiled an imposing 5-264 and WA were never really in the hunt, eventually being bowled out for 189 after 44.4 overs.

The result secured the Blues a third hefty win on the trot.

Australian Test fast bowler Mitchell Starc (4-23) again led the way for NSW, ripping through the WA top-order before fellow paceman Gurinder Sandhu (4-29) ended any hopes of a fightback with an inspired second spell.
Starc is comfortably the competition’s top wicket-taker with 14 scalps after three matches, at an unlikely average of five.

Earlier, Ed Cowan hit 100 and along with Nic Maddinson (74) laid the foundation for a big
NSW total with an opening partnership of 133.