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Friday, July 10, 2009

Impressive win for Arjun Academy

Arjun Cricket Academy defeated Young Challenger XI by 67 runs in their match of the Ratan Lal Sharma Memorial Monsoon Cricket League at Pt. RB Tiwari Stadium, Lucknow on Thursday. Batting first, Arjun Cricket Academy scored 173 runs losing all its wickets in 27.1 overs in the 30 overs-a-side match. In reply, Young Challenger XI, which was short of three players, could score 106 runs in 18.1 overs.

Brief Scores: Arjun Cricket Academy: 173 all out in 27.1 overs ( Kapez 45, M Shanawaz 24, Jibran Malik 21; Harshit Bajpai 3 for 27, Shatrughan Yadav 3 for 57, Abhishek 2 for 26);

Young Challenger XI: 106 for seven in 18.1 overs ( Prathul Mehta 31, Yunus Khan 28, Shatrughan Yadav 16; M Shanawaz 3 for 26).

T-T team announcedThe following players have been selected to represent Lucknow District Table Tennis Team in the forthcoming Junior State 'UP Cup' Table Tennis Championships scheduled to be held at Agra.

According to NK Lahiry, honorary secretary, District Table Tennis Association, the players should contact Amit Kumar Singh at Table Tennis Complex for details.

The team:-Junior boys' section: Kshitij Bisht, Ratan Kirty, Turab Ali; Stand-bye: Vikram Singh; Sub-junior boys' section:Kshitij Bisht, Akash Yadav; Stand-bye: Sagar Bisht; Cadet boys' section: Deepesh Bhagwani, Akash Dwivedi; Junior Girls' section: Khushboo Soni, Asha Singh; Sub Junior Girls' section: Priya and Pooja.

UPBA calendarThe Uttar Pradesh Badminton Association (UPBA) has announced its calendar of events for 2009-2010. As per the calendar, the Syed Modi Grand Prix Badminton Tournament will be held at Lucknow from December 15 to 20. According to UPBA officials, the tournament will carry a prize money of US$ 50,000.

Bridge tourneyDS Tandon and Dr DC Gupta emerged winners in the matchpoint pairs event held as a part of a bridge tourney at Lucknow Club. Twelve pairs played 11 rounds of 2 boards each.

DS Tandon and Dr DC Gupta won the matchpoint pairs with a good score which had 10 tops, 3 above average and no zeroes and with a margin of over a board. HK Verma and NN Rastogi overtook SK Richhariya and Cdr Srivastava in the last round to clinch second place.

The Results: 1. DS Tandon and Dr DC Gupta 64.55%; 2. NN Rastogi and HK Verma 59.09%; 3. SK Richhariya and Cdr RP Srivastava 57.27%; 4. BD Sarkar and Deepak Srivastava 53.18%.

Admission listThe Uttar Pradesh Sports Directorate has declared a list of players who have been selected for admission to state government-runs sports hostels in 15 sports. According to Deputy Director Sports (UP) Anil Kumar Banoda a list of the selected players has been pasted on the notice board of the directorate at Lucknow.

Cue sportsThe 40th UP State Senior Billiards and Snooker championship will be held at the Alexander Athletic Club, Meerut from July 29 to August 2 on a league cum knock-out format. The state billiards event will be played on July 29 and 30 while the snooker event will be played from July 31 to August 2 on the newly renovated billiards tables of the Alexander Athletic Club.


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Why aren't we in corporate event, ask Railways, Chemplast

Two leading cricket employers, Indian Railways and Chemplast, have expressed disappointment at being overlooked for BCCI's new corporate cricket championship, scheduled to be held in September to "create job opportunities that help cricketers to have a secure future".

The BCCI left the two teams out while sending out invitations for the inaugural edition of the 50-over day/night event to be held in Delhi; and while Railways, despite being the biggest recruiter, hasn't made the cut because it is a government agency and a full-fledged Ranji Trophy side — though another government organisation, Excise and Central Revenue, has been included — sources said Chemplast's exclusion was more contentious.

The Chemplast team are arch-rivals of India Cements, owned by BCCI secretary N Srinivasan, in the TNCA senior-division league. They employ India players Dinesh Karthik and Murali Vijay, former international Tinu Yohannan, and several first-class cricketers such as R Sathish, G Vignesh and R Jesuraj, among others.

They have been fielding a club team for five decades, and have won all prestigious tournaments across India, including the Moin-ud-Dowla Trophy on six occasions and the KSCA Trophy thrice. In all, the team have nurtured 30 former Test cricketers, and won T20 tournaments in Kolkata and Mumbai recently.

"I'm completely baffled at BCCI's decision to not invite us for the corporate tournament. We're amongst the best sides in the country, as well as a major recruiter. We've won every major tournament in the country but if still we aren't considered good enough to be invited amongst 12 teams, then there's more than cricketing logic being used," former India wicketkeeper Bharath Reddy, the coach of the Chemplast team, told The Indian Express. "Maybe it's about likes and dislikes." Srinivasan was not available for comments.

Incidentally, Chemplast includes a number of players with an ICL past, and Reddy himself has recently returned from the 'rebel' league.

The BCCI's chief administrative officer Ratnakar Shetty, when asked about Chemplast's exclusion, said it was due to logistical problems.

"Earlier, we had planned to keep 16 teams for the corporate trophy, but there were many teams within the public sector and we were finding it difficult to place all of them. So, in the end, we decided to have only 12 teams for the inaugural edition. Therefore some teams lost out but next time the tournament will be for 16 teams," he said.

But the reasoning appears thin, especially when some of the corporate teams are struggling to field a full-fledged side as per the eligibility criteria. According to the letter sent by BCCI joint secretary Sanjay Jagdale, "Only permanent employees of the organisation are eligible, and the list has to be submitted to the board office by 31st July. Guest players are not allowed and the team needs to have a minimum of four first-class players, but two scholarships for under-19 players are allowed."

Cricketers are usually hired on contract by corporate teams ahead of big tournaments and then released immediately. According to sources, a couple of teams are having second thoughts because of the clause, and the board is reconsidering the issue.

Meanwhile, Abhay Sharma, the Railways coach, said he was disappointed that his team were not getting a chance. "We recruit so many cricketers every year at various levels. It's disappointing that we aren't part of the corporate tournament which is mooted to help create more employment avenues," he said.


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'I am concerned (Ganguly) will erode his brand, his stature by playing in the IPL'

The relationship between former Kolkata Knight Riders coach John Buchanan and Sourav Ganguly was one of the talking points of the Indian Premier League. In his book, The Future of Cricket: The Rise of Twenty20 (191 pages, Rs 295), Buchanan talks about all the things they agreed to disagree on. On June 17, Buchanan's contract as KKR's director of cricket was terminated. An extract by arrangement with the publisher, Orient Paperbacks:

Our 2008 captain Sourav Ganguly, the Prince of Kolkata, or Dada as he is affectionately nicknamed, is a fascinating character, a man of contradictions. I am sure psychologists would find him intriguing. I found him a gentleman to work with yet I finished the tournament still feeling I didn't know him.

I went into the IPL with an open mind about Sourav, who had been an antagonist of Australian sides I coached. He is a lovely person but lives in his own world. He used to drive Stephen Waugh crazy by being late for the toss. That might have been partly strategic but also he was simply unaware of its importance. He would be in the rooms, in his own world, when he would be told it was time for the toss. He would not be ready, and would have to get changed before meeting his by-now irritated opposing captain.

Ganguly has always had the ability to mentally unsettle his opponents. It was not always by design, but Waugh saw it as a lack of respect and common courtesy. At times I feel Sourav is guilty of that, but on other occasions I believe he is simply in his own world and loses track of time. He gives off the impression that he feels everything will happen in good time, but it will be in his good time. He is not too concerned with other people's views about him...

Adored by the Kolkata faithful, he was installed as captain of the Knight Riders side because he was the icon player, a hometown hero and an ex-Indian captain. Yet crowning him captain, while logical on paper, was a decision that I was to grapple with throughout the tournament.

I told the squad from the outset that my philosophy is anyone in our team should be able to lead the side. I told the group that I wanted to establish 11 leaders on the field, so it did not matter all that much who had a 'C' for captain next to their name. I made the comment that everyone should be a leader on the field and therefore the captain was not so important. The press interpreted that as me saying I didn't want Sourav as captain. I think Sourav was wary or at least uncertain of my philosophy too. I explained my rationale and I think he understood what I was trying to achieve, although I am sure he too grappled with thoughts of the coach wanting to replace him.

Just before leaving for South Africa for the 2009 tournament, I had an almost four-hour meeting in Mumbai with Sourav, Shah Rukh and Jai Mehta. We subsequently released a statement stressing that there would be only one captain, who would be fed suggestions from a core group of on-field strategists. Some, like Indian cricket legend Sunil Gavaskar, have been critical of the concept — and me — but Shah Rukh backed my desire for innovation. Only time and experience will tell if the idea will work in practice, but I think it can and will...

...It might seem strange, but this is why I question his suitability for and need to play T20. I am concerned that he will erode his brand, his stature by playing in the IPL. This is an ongoing conversation that we are having. Sourav has a three-year contract with the Knight Riders and of course believes he has the ability to play T20. But I have my doubts. One thing for sure, he is no longer an automatic selection for captain. I have made this point clear, much to the detriment of my popularity in India, but as coach I must always have the best interests of the team — not of any one individual, no matter how iconic — in mind.

I believe that for the likes of Ganguly, Tendulkar, Dravid and Ponting this T20 format has arrived too late in their careers. There is no doubt they can play this game, but I have my doubts they can play it at the pace the game demands. This fact is being demonstrated by their younger peers. Even Warne, Gilchrist and McGrath will struggle to keep up. It will be interesting to see how they go in the coming seasons...

...Ganguly was the model for the new breed of confident and combative Indian cricketers. Ganguly showed that Indian cricket could stand up for itself. He is similar in that way to Ian Chappell, who stood up for what he believed and was not afraid to take on the administration — but with Chappell you always got the sense he had thought his actions through, whereas with Ganguly it is not always by design, it's just the way he is.

Yuvraj Singh in a sense tries to be a modern-day Ganguly, but I don't think he has the charisma or the dignity with which Ganguly carries himself. That's not to say that Yuvraj does not have charisma or dignity but Ganguly has something extra about him, a presence, and whether you like him or not he commands respect...

Before the start of the tournament, I contacted Greg Chappell for advice on what to expect from Sourav. Greg, who I first met in Brisbane club cricket in the early 1970s, had gained an insight into Sourav and the inner sanctum of Indian cricket during his appointment as Indian coach (2005-07). Indeed Greg had taken the courageous decision to at one stage drop Ganguly from the Indian side.

"If you want the easy path, just get on-side with Sourav and tell him what he wants to hear and let him have his own way. If he is happy and in the team, you won't have any problems with him," said Greg.

But at the end of the tournament I told Sourav something he did not want to hear. "I really think your game was off the pace and the more you play T20, the more harm you will do yourself," I told him. "I felt I needed to say this to you before I left to go back to Australia — I wanted to be as honest as possible with you."

Sourav responded to my frank assessment by claiming he had at least one more year of 20-over cricket in him. He told me his main aim was to get into the Test side against Australia, an aim he did achieve before announcing his Test retirement. He basically said to me: "Thank you for your concerns, but I don't agree with what you are saying."


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Talks over West Indies players' strike fail

Talks between the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) and the players' union ended after just 23 minutes on Thursday when the board refused to negotiate while the players remained on strike.

The leading test players from the Caribbean have boycotted the series against Bangladesh, which began with the first test on Thursday, due to a dispute about contracts and payments.

While a makeshift West Indies team took the field in St. Vincent, negotiating teams from the board and the West Indies Players Association (WIPA) met at a hotel in the Trinidad capital to try to hammer out an agreement.

The meeting lasted just 23 minutes.

A statement from the board said they had agreed to pay what they called their 'former players' amounts based on previous negotiations as an "act of good faith" but no progress was made on the series of issues highlighted by the WIPA, including retainer contracts.

"WICB impressed upon WIPA that it was not prepared, consistent with good industrial relations practices, to negotiate under duress, and insisted that before any good faith negotiations commenced, the players' strike would first have to end," read the statement from the board.

"WIPA refused and the meeting, which had begun at 9.37 a.m., concluded at 10 a.m.."

None of the 13 players initially selected for the first test against Bangladesh appeared in the game and the board was forced to swiftly assemble a team featuring seven uncapped players, following the strike announcement on Tuesday.


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