Most Recent Updates

Saturday, 23 January 2016

Win the Series 2-1

Anderson 82* sets up Punishing New Zealand Win

Corey Anderson limped off the field with 15 overs of the third T20 still remaining, but by then he had done enough to tilt the match, and the series, decisively New Zealand's way. He had smashed an unbeaten 42-ball 82 to power New Zealand to a total of 196, and by the end of his second over, when he pulled up with cramps, had picked up two wickets to help reduce Pakistan to 36 for 4.


A good start is critical in a chase of such magnitude, and Pakistan did not make one. Failing to get on top of a short ball from Trent Boult, Mohammad Hafeez sliced a high catch into the point region. In the next over, Ahmed Shehzad picked out deep square leg while looking to pull Anderson, before Mohammad Rizwan ran himself out hurtling needlessly from his crease. Shoaib Malik struck three sweetly-timed fours off Boult, but the required rate brought out a miscued slog in the next over; Anderson had his second, and New Zealand were firmly on the road to victory.
In the end, Anderson was not required to come back onto the field as New Zealand wrapped up the match with close to four overs still remaining. Only two Pakistan batsmen reached double figures as they only just scraped past the 100 mark.
This was surely not the finish Pakistan had envisioned when Shahid Afridi chose to bowl after winning the toss. But the portents were clear right from the first ball of the match, which Martin Guptill flat-batted to the cover boundary. Carrying on from where he left off in Hamilton, Guptill tore into Anwar Ali, who replaced Umar Gul in Pakistan's seam attack, spanking him for another four and a six off the last two balls of the first over.
With Guptill in an equally punishing mood against Imad Wasim's hitherto unhittable left-arm spin, New Zealand reached the half-century mark as early as the start of the fifth over. They could have gotten there earlier, had more if not for Mohammad Amir's efforts to tie up Kane Williamson at the other end, bowling with pace and giving him no room.
Guptill was looking unstoppable until Afridi brought himself on and pulled things back with his skiddy topspinners from just back of a length. He forced Guptill to miscue a slog-sweep and hole out, and gave away only seven runs from his first two overs. In between, a brilliant piece of fielding from Rizwan at midwicket ran out Colin Munro at the non-striker's end.
Not long after, Williamson had holed out off Wahab Riaz, and Ross Taylor had retired hurt with a side strain. But New Zealand still had the momentum, with Anderson already underway with two fours and a six off his first twelve balls.
Anderson was not at his most fluent, but his method of clearing his front leg to make swinging room brought him rich dividends whenever anything was pitched in his hitting zone. All four of his sixes flew over the arc between deep midwicket and long-on, with those two fielders made to look like spectators.
With the leg-side boundary packed and a sweeper square on the off-side, third man was usually inside the circle. This gave Pakistan's seamers little margin for error when they tried to fire in the yorker, as Anderson made room, freed his arms, and carved the ball over or wide of that fielder for four of his six fours, with Wahab, who went for 43 in his four overs, receiving special attention for this form of punishment.

14:45

Pakistan Vs New Zealand Series


14:38

Australia Vs India 5th ODL

5th ODI: India avoid whitewash with Manish Pandey's super ton




#INDIA beat #AUSTRALIA by 6 wickets at the SCG. Australia take series 4-1.
Century! Manish Pandey brings up his maiden century and India are 2 runs short of victory off 3 balls.
WICKET! Mitchell Marsh gets rid of Captain Cool Dhoni for 34India 6 off 4 balls.






08:22

Tuesday, 6 January 2015

Australia v India: David Warner in Phillip Hughes tribute during ton

Australia v India: David Warner in Phillip Hughes tribute during ton


Batsman David Warner scored a century and paid tribute to Phillip Hughes as Australia dominated day one of the fourth Test against India in Sydney.


Warner hit 101 and on reaching 63, he took off his helmet and kissed the ground near the spot where Hughes was fatally injured, when on 63 runs.
"I'm always going to pay tribute to my mate," said Warner. "Every time I play here I'll definitely be doing that."
He shared an opening stand of 200 with Chris Rogers (95) in Australia's 348-2.
It was Warner's 12th Test century and third of the series with the 28-year-old needing just 108 balls to reach the milestone.

On reaching 63, David Warner took off his helmet and kissed the ground near the spot where Hughes was fatally injured, when on 63 runs



"It's very special," added Warner. "I haven't scored a hundred at home or the MCG and I was sort of talking myself out of it.
"I said to the players I might as well not play those two Tests because I couldn't score a run there."
The opening partnership was ended when Warner was caught in the gully by Murali Vijay off the bowling of Ravichandran Ashwin.
In the next over Rogers chopped a Mohammed Shami delivery onto his stumps to depart five runs short of his hundred, but stand-in captain Steve Smith (82 not out) and Shane Watson (61 not out) guided Australia to 348-2 at the close.
Australia hold an unassailable 2-0 lead in the four-match series, with emotions in the final match heightened because it is taking place at the same ground where Hughes, 25, died last year.
Cricket Australia unveiled a memorial plaque outside the home side's dressing room on Monday.
Meanwhile, India have announced their 15-man squad for the forthcoming World Cup, which will be held in Australia and New Zealand and starts on 14 February.
All-rounder Ravindra Jadeja (shoulder) and pace bowler Ishant Sharma (knee) are included, despite suffering injuries during the current tour of Australia.
India squad: Ravichandran Ashwin, Stuart Binny, Shikhar Dhawan, MS Dhoni (capt & wk), Ravindra Jadeja, Virat Kohli, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Akshar Patel, Ajinkya Rahane, Suresh Raina, Ambati Rayudu, Mohammed Shami, Ishant Sharma, Rohit Sharma, Umesh Yadav.



13:30

Thursday, 1 January 2015

Mahendra Singh Dhoni

Mahendra Singh Dhoni



India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni has retired from Test cricket.




The 33-year-old, who made his debut in 2005 and was captain for 60 of his 90 Tests, quit after India drew the third Test against Australia on Tuesday.
Dhoni has retired from Tests "in order to concentrate" on the 50 over and Twenty20 formats, with India's one-day World Cup defence starting in February.
The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) called Dhoni "one of India's greatest Test captains".

13:23

Australia v India

Australia v India: MS Dhoni secures Test draw but loses series



Australia drew the third Test against India to take an unassailable 2-0 lead in the four-match series.

The home side declared on 318-9 at lunch on the final day, setting India 384 to win in 70 overs.
Virat Kohli (54) and Ajinkya Rahane (48) led India's resistance after they lost three wickets for 19 runs.
Captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Ravichandran Ashwin then survived a nervous final hour to push India to safety, as they closed on 174-6.
Australia resumed their second innings on 261-7 and had been expected to bat aggressively to add runs quickly before declaring, but Shaun Marsh and Ryan Harris took their time in a 69-run partnership, also knowing a draw would be enough for Australia to clinch the series.
Marsh was run out for 99 shortly before lunch as he attempted a rash single to bring up his first Test century on home soil.
After the break, Harris struck with the second ball of the second over to dismiss Shikhar Dhawan for a duck before Lokesh Rahul continued his forgettable Test debut by falling for one to a Mitchell Johnson short ball, following his three in the first innings.
Josh Hazlewood then claimed his first Test dismissal of the Test, trapping opener Murali Vijay lbw for 11 to leave India 19-3 after 8.2 overs.
But Kohli and Rahane steadied the innings to leave Australia needing seven wickets in the final session.
Kohli fell to the first ball after the tea break, caught at backward square leg, before Chetshewar Pujara was bowled by Johnson for 21 while Rahane was caught at mid-wicket off Hazlewood, to leave India on 142-6 with 15 overs remaining.
However, Dhoni, who announced his immediate retirement from Test cricket after the match, and Ashwin saw off 11 of the overs before a draw was mutually agreed with four overs remaining.
The result sees Australia regain the Border-Gavaskar trophy.
13:10

Dav Whatmore named new Zimbabwe coach

Dav Whatmore named new Zimbabwe coach until end of World Cup


Australian Dav Whatmore has been named as the new coach of Zimbabwe.




The Sri Lanka-born 60-year-old has agreed a contract until the end of the World Cup in March 2015.


Whatmore, who coached Sri Lanka to the World Cup title in 1996, will take charge of his fourth international side having also led Bangladesh and Pakistan.


He said: "I know this team. I have seen them beating Pakistan, so the potential is there."




13:01