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Younis Khan Was Right Choice for Pakistan team Captain?
Total of answers: 1467


Welcome, Guest · RSS 2024-05-03, 7:19 AM
Seven people including five policemen were killed and six Sri Lankan cricketers were injured in a shooting attack in Lahore.

Sri Lankan tour has been called off after the terrible incident. According to sources, unknown attackers opened fire on Sri Lankan cricket team bus near Liberty Market.

Intense trade of fire occurred between police and unknown attackers. CCPO Lahore Habibur Rehman said there were 12 attackers carrying rocket launchers; hand grenade, Kalashnikovs and Mousers who reportedly reached the site in rickshaws. Seven people including five cops were killed in the shooting.

Former cricket players have expressed their sadness over the incident and termed it a severe blow to Pakistan cricket. Despite several security warnings, it was Sri Lankan team who visited Pakistan. Now it seems that game of cricket will not add to our grounds for a longe ... Read more »
Views: 1058 | Added by: pakcricket | Date: 2009-03-03 | Comments (6)

Karachi's pitch may have killed the match but it has rejuvenated Younis Khan. His triple hundred will always be diminished by this docile track despite the pressure of chasing down a total of over 600. It shouldn't be. Much more illustrious Pakistan teams and batsmen have crumbled on as friendly surfaces. The pressure of the situation has been too great and their strength of character too weak. Indeed, which other Pakistan batsman has threatened to score a century?

Meanwhile, Younis has devoured this challenge with an innings that could earn him the highest ever score by a Pakistani. It would be well deserved. The new captaincy, a selection row, criticism of his leadership in the field, a score of over six hundred, and the bo ... Read more »

Views: 1008 | Added by: pakcricket | Date: 2009-02-25 | Comments (5)

 

The Pakistan Cricket Board is inquiring again into the circumstances of the forfeited Test at The Oval in 2006. It is an inquiry without a clear purpose. The match is now recorded as a technical defeat but the result is an irrelevance.

Although it was a moment when Pakistan cricket fought its corner in the world of cricket politics, two consequences have caused immeasurable damage. First, the rift between Inzamam-ul Haq and Bob Woolmer became ever wider. Second, the controversy ushered in Naseem Ashraf's disastrous reign as head of Pakistan cricket.

It was also the year that Mohammad Yousuf c ... Read more »

Views: 1272 | Added by: pakcricket | Date: 2009-02-18 | Comments (8)

They came, we saw, they conquered.

For all of us it was indeed like a midsummer night's dream when Ganguly and Dravid made the hallowed piece of turf at Lords their own, that June afternoon in 1996. In what may be branded an irony, while Ganguly's innings is widely remembered for his silken drives through the off side and the occassional pull, Dravid's will forver be etched in our mindsby the manner of his dismissal. On 95,he got A wafer thin edge of Lewis' bowling which was snapped up by Jack Russell and the umpire had enough doubts in his mind to have possibly given it not out. Dravid chose to walk. These would set the trend for the rest of their careers. Ganguly, ever majestic and royal, the maverick professor and Dravid the gentleman champion and a brilliant student of the game.

For a long time, the Professor would charge his wards up with inspirational words and when needed, inspirational deeds. He had come through a nasty system and he would not let his protege ... Read more »

Views: 1113 | Added by: pakcricket | Date: 2009-02-10 | Comments (0)

 

Observers of the game have been worried about the growing importance of Twenty 20 and how it could adversely affect batting skills. But the format could add value to the game, writes Daryll Cullinan in Businessday.

A prime example was Duminy’s lap over the keeper’s head off Australian quickie Shaun Tait during the recent Twenty 20 series. It was one of the most amazing shots I have ever seen. The ball is going to new places in the field.

The new kids on the block have fresh minds and seem less paranoid about adapting between limited-overs cricket and Test cricket. Fifty-over cricket affected scoring rates in Test cricket for the better. Fielding also drastically improved and the need for athleticism, strength and power quickly became paramount. Can Twenty 20 take it even further, and is i ... Read more »

Views: 926 | Added by: pakcricket | Date: 2009-02-03 | Comments (0)

 

Australian cricket is in a pickle. Fingers have been pointed at a wide range of suspects - management, selectors, coach, captain and senior players - and all of them are partly to blame, writes Peter Roebuck in the Sydney Morning Herald.

The board must take responsibility for complacent appointments made and uninspired decisions taken over the past 18 months. In success mistakes can be buried, but once things start to go wrong they stand out like a night fire. Errors can become entrenched, eating into the culture.

Consider the decisions taken on the coaching side. Although the team has been struggling, another two years have been added to Tim Nielsen's contract. Nielsen is a fine fellow but unproven at this level ...

Nor did it seem sensible to ask Greg Chappell to lead the high p ... Read more »

Views: 894 | Added by: pakcricket | Date: 2009-02-03 | Comments (0)

 

Is cricket played as much with the head as with bat and ball? Though essentially a physical pastime, David Foot in his blog on the Guardian website tries to reason why the game in particular has appealed so much to men of letters, the poets, those with sensitive, philosophical natures.

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle loved the game's swaying statistics with one theory superseding another as entrenched batsmen were ground down and then outwitted. His friends believed that the capture of a wicket was to him as fulfilling as the villain's nadir in the final chapter.

Michael Vaughan is very bad at singing - well music in general really. By his own admission, he's an awful singer but it doesn't stop him from belting them out from time to time. It gets more interesting in The Five Minute Interview with John Ma ... Read more »

Views: 1307 | Added by: pakcricket | Date: 2009-02-03 | Comments (0)

In Pakistani cricket fortunes rise and fall with the sun. While only a few days ago I wrote about the myriad challenges being faced by Mohammad Asif, it now appears that Ijaz Butt, PCB Chairman, has all but mandated that Asif will be making a comeback and soon.

Suddenly, a drug arrest in Dubai, is a “minor” incident. Only in Pakistan can the Chairman of the PCB wash away a problem like this, with a casual comment. Asif has many problems, and as a young man he needs to sort them out. Give the man some time. Plus, does he just walk back into the squad? Sohail Tanvir, Umar Gul and Rao Iftikhar seem to be doing pretty well. Sohail Khan and Azhar Ali are knocking on the door. Does an unfit Asif who hasn’t played competitive cricket for a year have a place in the squad?

Views: 1218 | Added by: pakcricket | Date: 2009-01-31 | Comments (0)

IPL has come a big way in promoting the game of cricket or rather the 'instant cricket' in a very big way.

Many youngsters who would like to show-case their talents have welcomed this and have made most of the opportunity available to them.

However, it is necessary to take a careful look at the format of this 'limited-overs' game and see how far does to go to do justice to the young players to don the national colors and play at the highest level...viz the test match.

The obvious question that comes to the mind: is playing in IPL a 'must' to showcase the talent?

The logical answer that would come out is a big NO. The IPL games does not in any way project a player worthy of playing test matches.

These games hardly put to test the technicalities, temparament, approach, endurance, mindset etc required to play a five-day game (with no 'playing condition restrictions' that are applicable to the limited version of the game).

A champion in the IPL gam ... Read more »
Views: 875 | Added by: pakcricket | Date: 2009-01-31 | Comments (0)

Now before I get started, this isn't another ramble about how Test cricket is/will be dead. I don't believe that. Whilst the hit and giggle stuff bring people into the game, I think that as people enjoy and understand the game more, Tests begin to have more of an appeal.

But thats another story for another day. What this post is about, following from breeno's post about Test status and a competition, is my thoughts on what the ICC must do to stop cricket getting stagnant. Now I must add that I have no experience in organising a global competition, so bare with me if I make any mistakes.1) Infrastructure.

As pointed out in a recent blog, what Bangladesh and many other developing cricketing nations are lacking is quality infrastructure and, following from that, experts. The growth of cricket in those countries has been slowed by boards not focusing on grass roots. What many of those countries need is a way of encouraging and nurturing talent, right from school age childre ... Read more »
Views: 26281 | Added by: pakcricket | Date: 2009-01-31 | Comments (60)