Wednesday, December 30, 2009

BRAIN LARA CAREER


Brian Charles Lara, TC, OCC, AM (born 2 May 1969, in Santa Cruz, Trinidad and Tobago) is a former West Indian cricketer, who is widely regarded as one of the greatest batsmen of all time.[1][2] He topped the Test batting rankings on several occasions and holds several cricketing records. He holds the record for the highest individual score in first-class cricket, with 501 not out for Warwickshire against Durham at Edgbaston in 1994, which is the only quintuple hundred in first-class cricket history.[3] He also holds the record for the highest individual score in a test innings after scoring 400 not out against England at Antigua in 2004.[4] Remarkably, he is the only batsman to have ever scored a hundred, a double century, a triple century, a quadruple century and a quintuple century in first class games over the course of a senior career.[5] [6] Lara also holds the test record of scoring most number of runs in a single over in a Test match, when he scored 28 runs off an over by Robin Peterson of South Africa in 2003.[7]

Lara's match-winning performance of 153 not out against Australia in Bridgetown, Barbados in 1999 has been rated by Wisden as the second best batting performance in the history of Test cricket, next only to the 270 runs scored by Sir Donald Bradman in The Ashes test match of 1937.[8] Muttiah Muralitharan, rated as the greatest Test match bowler ever by Wisden Cricketers' Almanack,[9] and the highest wicket-taker in both Test cricket[10] and in One Day Internationals (ODIs),[11] has hailed Lara as his toughest opponent among all batsmen in the world.[12] Lara was awarded the Wisden Leading Cricketer in the World awards in 1994 and 1995[13] and is also one of only three cricketers to receive the prestigious BBC Overseas Sports Personality of the Year, the other two being Sir Garfield Sobers and Shane Warne.[14] Brian Lara is popularly nicknamed as The Prince of Trinidad or simply The Prince.[1] On the 27th November 2009 he was appointed an honorary member of the Order of Australia. [15]

RICKY POINTING CAREER



Ricky Ponting:

Ricky Thomas Ponting (born 19 December 1974 in Launceston, Tasmania, Australia), nicknamed Punter, is the current captain of the Australian cricket team. He is a specialist right-handed batsman, slips and close catching fielder, as well as a very occasional bowler. He represents the Tasmanian Tigers in Australian domestic cricket and plays in the Indian Premier League with the Kolkata Knight Riders.

Ponting made his first-class debut for Tasmania in November 1992, when just 17 years and 337 days old-becoming the youngest Tasmanian to play in a Sheffield Shield match. However he had to wait until 1995 before making his One Day International debut, during a quadrangular tournament in New Zealand in a match against South Africa. His Test debut followed shortly after, when selected for the first Test of the 1995 home series against Sri Lanka in Perth, in which he scored 96. He lost his place in the national team several times in the period before early-1999, due to lack of form and discipline, before becoming One Day International captain in early-2002 and Test captain in early-2004.

After being involved in over 139 Tests and 300 ODIs, Ponting is Australia's leading run-scorer in Test and ODI cricket, with more than 23,000 international runs as of September 2009. He has scored 38 Test centuries—behind only Indian Sachin Tendulkar (43)—and third for most runs and centuries in ODIs behind Tendulkar and Sanath Jayasuriya.

GAUTHAM GAMBHIR CAREER


International career:

Gambhir made his ODI debut against Bangladesh in the TVS Cup in 2003. In his third match, he scored 71 and was named Man of the Match. His maiden century (103 off 97 balls) came against Sri Lanka in 2005. In 2004, he made his Test debut against Australia in the fourth and last Test match of the Border Gavaskar Trophy but did himself no favours by getting out for 3 and 1. He made amends in his second Test, however, scoring 96 against the South Africans. His maiden Test century came against Bangladesh in December 2004. Gambhir then made a number of starts in the home series against Pakistan in 2005, but was able to make only one half-century in six innings. He made 97 in Zimbabwe later that year, but failed to reach 30 against Sri Lanka at home, repeatedly struggling against Chaminda Vaas, and was subsequently dropped from the Test team. He was replaced in Tests by Wasim Jaffer, who made a double hundred and a hundred in seven Tests.

While Gambhir was out of the Test team, he played a number of One Day Internationals for India between 2005 and 2007. However, he was not selected for the 2007 Cricket World Cup as the selectors opted for a top-order of Sourav Ganguly, Virender Sehwag, and Sachin Tendulkar. After India's first-round exit from the tournament, Gambhir was selected for the One Day International on India's 2007 tour of Bangladesh. Gambhir scored his second century on that tour and was subsequently selected for the One Day International on India's tour to Ireland in 2007. He scored an unbeaten 80 against Ireland in the first game of that tour and was awarded the man of the match award for that effort. In the post-match interview, he indicated that performing more consistently was a top priority for his career as he had done so in the past. [4]

Gambhir was selected in India's squad for the 2007 ICC World Twenty20, which India went on to win in South Africa, beating Pakistan in the final. Gambhir performed well in the shortest form of the game, ending the tournament as India's top run scorer, with 227 at an average of 37.83, including three half-centuries which included a crucial 75 runs off 54 balls against Pakistan in the final.[5]

2008 started well for Gambhir. At home, he scored an unbeaten 130 in the Ranji Trophy final to help Delhi beat Uttar Pradesh by nine wickets just two days before the team for the ODI tournament in Australia was to be announced.

Gambhir was forced to miss the Test series in Australia due to a shoulder injury. In the 2007-08 CB Series, he scored an unbeaten 102 at The Gabba against Sri Lanka in a match washed out due to rain. Three weeks later at Sydney, he scored a career-best 113 off 119 balls against Australia, in a high scoring match which India lost by 18 runs. He finished the CB series as the leading run-scorer with 440 runs.

In 2008 Gambhir finally solidified his place in the Indian Test team with a string of high scores. Opening the batting with Delhi teammate Virender Sehwag, he scored 858 runs at over 61 in seven matches as of December including a double century against Australia in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy. However in the same match he was involved in controversy when he was found to have thrown an elbow at Australia all-rounder Shane Watson while taking a run. Gambhir denied the charges in a media conference on the day of the incident, claiming the elbowing was unintentional, but pleaded guilty in the disciplinary hearing and served a one-Test ban for the incident. Despite missing the last match, Gambhir still topped the run-scorers list for both teams.

He was the leading run-scorer in the Test series against England in December 2008 and against New Zealand in early-2009, meaning that he had achieved this feat in three consecutive series.

Gambhir played his first major Test series outside the sub-continent, having toured New Zealand in 2009. In the second Test match he scored a match saving 137 in the second innings. He stood more than five sessions in the middle and faced over 430 balls. This innings led Virender Sehwag, Gambhir's opening partner, close friend and captain for the match, to call him 'The Second Wall' in reference to Rahul Dravid. He then scored 167 in the second innings of the Third Test to give India an unassailable lead, but rain helped the New Zealand batsmen to hang on for a draw. Gambhir, with 445 runs in six innings at an average of 89, helped India win 1-0 to script a series win in that country after 41 years.

He was named as the ICC Test Player of the Year for 2009, and was briefly ranked the No. 1 batsman in the ICC rankings in July.

He continued his run in the late-2009 Test series against Sri Lanka at home. He scored a century in the second innings of the First Test in Ahmedabad to force a draw after the visitors had taken a first innings lead of more than 300, and then combined in a double century opening partnership with Sehwag on the first day of the Second Test in Kanpur, scoring 167 himself and helping India to score more than 400 runs on the opening day. This set up their score of 642 and an innings victory. Following the match, Gambhir returned to the top of the ICC rankings.

Gambhir withdrew from the Third and final Test against Sri Lanka at the Brabourne Stadium in Mumbai in order to attend his sister's wedding.

ISHANT SHARMA PROFILE


Ishant Sharma (Hindi: ईशांत शर्मा, Punjabi: ਇਸ਼ਾੰਤ ਸ਼ਰਮਾ) (born 2 September 1988, in Delhi, India), is an Indian cricketer. He is a right arm fast bowler at pace around 145 km/h - (90 mph).

He delivered the second fastest ball ever bowled by an Indian bowler when he clocked 152.6 km/h (94.8mph) at Adelaide against Australia on 17 February 2008. The fastest one still belongs to Javagal Srinath who clocked 154.5 at the 1999 World Cup. [1]

He has a high arm delivery action and is able to move the ball in both directions.

At the age of 18, Sharma was called to join the Indian squad for the tour of South Africa in 2006-07. However, after receiving the call and organizing travel arrangements, it was decided not to send him on the tour.[2] He has then grabbed all the opportunities that came to his hand and succeeded in both forms of the game. He has earned the nickname Lambu (meaning Tall Guy), which refers to his lean and tall build, measuring 193cm. [3]

[edit] Domestic & First-Class Career
Ishant plays for Delhi in domestic cricket and has taken 19 wickets in four first class games, including a five wicket haul against Baroda on the opening day of a match Delhi drew after failing to bowl Baroda out on the fourth day.[4]

Ishant toured England with the India Under-19s in 2006 and Pakistan in 2006–07.

He has played three youth tests and six youth one day internationals for India, and is yet to lose a match for them.

[edit] Rise In International Cricket
In May 2007, he was selected in the test team for the Bangladesh tour and played as a replacement for the fast bowler Munaf Patel. Over there he played for his national side in the second test where he bowled 3 overs including one maiden and conceded only five runs without taking a wicket.[5] Later on, he was called for the tour of England in July-August 2007.

Ishant Sharma got a call back in the team in the 3rd Test Match during Pakistan's tour of India in December 2007 due to injury of India's frontline pacers Zaheer Khan, RP Singh, and Sreesanth.[6] On the batting paradise pitch, Sharma toiled hard for cementing and securing his place permanently in the Indian team while picking 5 wickets during the third test in Bangalore.[7] This performance earned him a place in India's squad for the tour of Australia.


Sharma at fielding practice.Sharma was left out in the Boxing Day Test at Melbourne during the Border-Gavaskar Trophy as India retained their main fast bowlers, Zaheer Khan and RP Singh. However, in January 2008 Sharma was called to represent India once again to replace the injured Zaheer Khan in the second test at the SCG. Sharma started the first day of the match strongly and was involved in a controversial decision from Steve Bucknor when Andrew Symonds nicked the ball to keeper MS Dhoni off his bowling but was given not out. He bowled reasonably in the match, however without much luck.

Although he had little success, the management retained him for the third test match at Perth. On the fourth day of the match he bowled an exceptional spell to Australian captain Ricky Ponting that resulted in his wicket and helped India claim victory.[8] He used the pace and bounce of the WACA wicket to trouble the batsmen. In the following test played in Adelaide he picked up two wickets and impressed everyone with his bowling. He didn't bowl above 140-145 km/h mark in the test matches so that he could bowl longer spells as needed in this version of the game. He clocked a highest of 147.7 km/h(91.1 mph) at the Adelaide test his highest till then.

On February 10, 2008, Sharma bagged four important wickets in the 4th ODI of CB Series against Australia. He ended up with the figures of 4/38 and claimed the man of the match award.[9] He scalped two important wickets on February 18, 2008 versus Australia

HERO OF RAJASTHAN ROYALS

CAPE TOWN: Rajasthan Royals needed a Super Over to beat Kolkata Knight Riders at Cape Town here on Thursday after both teams played out a tie.

Taking strike first, Kolkata’s Chris Gayle smacked 15 runs (three fours) off Kamran Khan’s Super Over. In reply, Royals’ Yusuf Pathan greeted Ajantha Mendis with a six, and followed it up with another couple of hits to the fence. Royals’ needed four balls to get the 16 runs required to win.

Earlier, eighteen-year-old Kamran bowled a sensational last over to prevent Kolkata from getting seven runs of the last over to overhaul the target of 151.

Knight Riders was left in the lurch by the last-ball run out of Ishant Sharma after Kamran had got rid of Sourav Ganguly (46 runs, 30 balls) with his fifth ball.

Knight Riders made a sluggish start chasing 151; openers Chris Gayle and Brendon McCullum played out three overs for ten runs before Gayle launched into Mascarenhas’ second over with two huge straight hits for maximum. Mascarenhas got his own back three balls later when McCullum’s ambitiously lofted shot was caught by Kamran Khan who held on to the ball through an energetic tumble.

Meanwhile, Gayle continued to hound Mascarenhas, striking two savage blows for four and six over mid-off in the sixth over and compelling Royals’ skipper Shane Warne to bring himself on in the seventh.

Warne strikes


With Knight Riders coasting at 60 for one in the ninth over, Warne struck a telling blow by tempting Gayle in the air and deceiving him into a mishit that swirled into the hands of Ravindra Jadeja at long on. Gayle’s 40 contained four sixes.

Warne rang in the bowling changes as Laxmi Ratan Shukla departed seven runs later.

Pathan sizzles


Earlier, Yusuf Pathan hit 42 runs to revive a Rajasthan Royals innings which ended on 150 for six.

Pathan faced 21 balls, stroking six boundaries and two sixes. Ishant Sharma, Anureet Singh and Ajantha Mendis took two wickets apiece.

Rajasthan had collapsed to 14 for two inside the first three overs.Jadeja (22) and Mascarenhas (27) tried to repair the damage in the middle order.

But when Sharma accounted for Jadeja, caught by Yashpal in the covers and Anureet bowled Mascarenhas, Rajasthan was left in need of a lower order partnership to get a defendable total.

Abhishek Raut (21 not out) hit briskly at No. 7 to push the total to 150. Shane Warne was unbeaten on two.


scoreboard

Rajasthan Royals: G. Smith c Gayle b Mendis 15, P. Valthaty c Sharma b Anureet 5, R. Quiney c Gayle b Ishant 6, Y. Pathan c Yashpal b Mendis 42, R. Jadeja c Yashpal b Ishant 22, D. Mascarenhas b Anureet 27, A. Raut (not out) 21, S. Warne (not out) 2, Extras (lb-3, w-7) 10, Total (for six wkts.in 20 overs) 150.

Fall of wickets: 1-8, 2-14, 3-70, 4-73, 5-112, 6-125.

Kolkata Knight Riders bowling: Ishant 4-0-36-2, Anureet 4-0-35-2, Agarkar 1-0-14-0, Mendis 4-0-19-2, Ganguly 3-0-23-0, Gayle 4-0-20-0. Kolkata Knight Riders: C. Gayle c Jadeja b Warne 41, B. McCullum c Kamran b Mascarenhas 3, L. Shukla c Rawat b Kamran 13, B. Hodge c Rawat b Munaf 5, S. Ganguly c Rawat b Kamran 46, S. Bangar c Smith b Kamran 2, Yashpal Singh c Raut b Warne 20, Agarkar (not out) 1, Ishant (run out) 1, Extras (lb-8, w-9, nb-1) 18, Total (for eight wkts in 20 overs) 150.

Fall of wickets: 1-25, 2-60, 3-67, 4-71, 5-94, 6-143, 7-149, 8-150.

Rajasthan Royals bowling: Pathan 4-0-27-0, Mascarenhas 4-1-29-1, Warne 4-0-25-2, Kamran 4-0-18-3, Munaf 3-0-36-1, Jadeja 1-0-7-0.

YOUSAF PATHAN DEBUT


Yusuf Khan Pathan (born 17 November 1982 in Baroda) is an Indian cricketer. Pathan made his debut in first-class cricket in 2001/02. He is a hard hitting right-handed batsman and a right-arm offbreak bowler. His half-brother Irfan Pathan is also an Indian cricketer. Though younger to Yusuf, it was Irfan who entered the Indian team first.

Following his impressive performances in the 2007 Deodhar Trophy and the Inter-state domestic Twenty20 competition held in April 2007, Pathan was made a part of the Indian squad for the inaugural Twenty20 World Championship, held in South Africa in September 2007. He made his Twenty20 international debut in the final against Pakistan. He opened the batting for India in the match, and scored 15 runs in the process.[1]

After a good domestic season in 2007/08, he was signed by the Rajasthan Royals in the Indian Premier League for USD 475,000 (INR 1.9 crore). In the 2008 IPL season, he scored 435 runs and took 8 wickets. He recorded the season's fastest half century (from 21 balls) against the Deccan Chargers, and was also the Man of the Match in the final against the Chennai Super Kings.

Following his good showing in the IPL, he was selected for the Indian one-day team. After the IPL though he played all the games in the Kitply Cup and Asia Cup he got to bat only four times.He couldn't perform very well with the bat and the ball in the Asia Cup and in the Kitply Cup and so he wasn't selected for the Series.against Sri Lanka. He performed well in domestic circuit and impressed the selectors and was selected for the England ODI series in November. He scored a fifty off just 29 balls in the second ODI against England in Indore, on his 26th birthday. [2].

Yusuf had made his One-Day International debut for India against Pakistan at Dhaka on 10 June 2008. He has become a permanent feature of the national One-Day International team, but has yet to make his test debut [3].

Even though Pathan could not repeat his first IPL performance in the second season, he was selected in the Indian team to play the 2009 ICC World Twenty20 championships in England. In the second of the Super 8 matches of India, he made an unbeaten 33 from 17 balls against England, despite his team losing the game and crashing out of the tournament before the semi-finals.

IRFAN DROPPED

Off-colour pacer Irfan Pathan on Monday conceded he hasn't performed well enough to merit selection in the Indian one-day team but vowed to make a comeback, saying he has age on his side. Talking to reporters with elder brother Yusuf by his side at a promotional event here this afternoon, the 24-year-old junior Pathan said, "I have been ignored purely on the basis of my drop in performance and I am working hard towards it." Irfan, however, said it was disappointing to be ignored for next month's Tri-series in Sri Lanka and the ICC Champions Trophy in South Africa.



"For the last six years, if I have done slightly bad, I'm getting dropped. But I don't have any excuse. I'm not a person who runs for an excuse. "It's very simple, if I am dropped then something is wrong somewhere. Reason is always performance... Obviously the selectors felt, I'm not up to the mark so I've to work hard and go to that level," Irfan said.



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However, the pacer, who made it to the top earlier than his elder brother Yusuf, said he has age by his side. "Not many people have achieved what I've at at the age of 23-24 and I am very happy for that."



However, the ace bowler from Baroda believed that he did not do that badly recently. "If you look at my performance, I finished among the top six bowlers in the Indian Premier League II with 17 wickets and 196 runs (with the bat). In the West Indies series, I just got to play one match and was dropped."



... contd.

IRAFAN PATHAN DEBUT


Irfan Pathan (Hindi: इरफ़ान पठान) pronunciation (help·info), born Irfan Khan (Hindi: इरफ़ान ख़ान on October 27, 1984 in Baroda, Gujarat, India) is an Indian cricketer who has been a member of the Indian national cricket team since late 2003. Beginning his career as a left-arm fast-medium swing bowler (evoking comparisons with Pakistan's Wasim Akram), Pathan improved his batting skills to become a bowling allrounder, even opening the batting on occasions. This led to critics comparing him with former Indian allrounder Kapil Dev.[1] The improvement in his batting also coincided in a steady loss of pace and bowling form. After opening both the batting and bowling in late 2005 and early 2006, Pathan was dropped from the team in both Test and One Day International (ODI) forms of the game by the end of 2006 and by 2007 was no longer in the squad. He returned to international cricket in September 2007 for the inaugural World Twenty20, where he took three wickets and was man of the match as India beat Pakistan in the final.

CRICKET TEAM PROFILE


The Indian Cricket Team is the official cricket team of India. Cricket is not just a game but a religion in India, with millions of Indian fans at home and abroad praying for the success of the Indian Cricket Team. The Indian Cricket Team is one of the strongest and most challenging cricket teams in the world, rated at par with teams like Australia, South Africa, England and Pakistan. The Indian cricket team is the highest paid (in terms of sponsorships) sports team in the world.

India has produced several outstanding cricketers of the world, who have become legends of the game itself. Among Indian cricketing legends include the names of players like Vijay Merchant, CK Naidu, Lala Amarnath, Erapalli Prasanna, Vinoo Mankad, Farokh Engineer, BS Chandrasekhar, Bishen Singh Bedi, Gundappa Viswanath, Sunil Gavaskar, Kapil Dev, Mohinder Amarnath, Mohammed Azharuddin, Anil Kumble, and the world's most popular living cricketer Sachin Tendulkar, who's also a part of the India's ICC World Cup 2007 squad.

The India Cricket Team has participated in all the ICC Cricket World Cups since 1975. India won the 1983 World Cup, beating the then World Champions West Indies in a low socring final match. The team reached to the World Cup semi-finals in 1987 and 1996, and were runners-up in the 2003 ICC Cricket World Cup in South Africa.



The India cricket team has been rated as one of the favorite contenders to lift the ICC Cricket World Cup 2007 in the West Indies. India is placed in Group B of the ICC World Cup 2007 groupings, along with Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Bermuda. The team will start its World Cup 2007 campaign against Bangladesh on March 17, 2007 in Trinidad and Tobago.

DINESH KARTHIK


A talented youngster from Tamil Nadu, Dinesh Karthik was highly talked about by many from his junior days. After impressing the selectors, he was one of many wicketkeeper/batsmen that India tried out after Nayan Mongia and before settling on MS Dhoni. His ODI debut was against England in the Natwest challenge in September 2004. Dinesh shortly got his first Test cap against the mighty Australians in 2004 but was axed after just one fifty in ten Tests. Karthik may look like the shy boy next door but on the cricket field he has shown the ability to attack under pressure and improvise. He has displayed batting talent but his keeping has not been up to the mark which has often been the reason he has been out of the side. After Dhoni's entry, Karthik has always played second fiddle to the Jharkhand dasher, but in 2007, he stamped his authority in the Indian Test team with an impressive show in the opening slot. He scored his first Test ton in the second Test at Dhaka in 2007.2008-09 marked a reversal of fortunes for Karthik as he led the hunt as India's second-choice wicketkeeper, behind MS Dhoni. He scored three Ranji trophy centuries, captained Tamil Nadu to the semi-finals and two centuries in the Duleep Trophy. He made sure he stayed on the selectors' radar with an outstanding performance in the second season of the IPL, despite coming lower down the order in a team filled with stars. He scored 67 in his comeback ODI against West Indies, after a two-year hiatus. He is now selected to play for the Champions Trophy, which is proof enough of his genius and consistency. Being of the aggressive mould, he still has not managed to capitalize on a permanent berth in the Test squad.

SREESANTH FIRST WICKET

First MatchIndia vs England, 1st TestSreesanth is ecstatic after knocking over Kevin Pietersen's stumps. Pietersen was dropped by Laxman at second slip on the first ball of the over, but Sreesanth had his man when the batsman failed to judge the bounce and chipped the ball onto his stumps.
The South-Africa-born batsman, after a struggle at the crease, was out for 15.

SREESANTH DEBUT

Shantakumaran Sreesanth, who was called twice for running on the pitch on day 1 in the first Test against England, is confident that he will not repeat the act.
"Yes, the warning did worry me a bit. It had happened in the Irani Trophy game also, when I was called off the bowling. But I was confident that I wouldn't repeat it," said the debutant Kerala pacer, who finished the day with two wickets for 56 in 18 overs.
The 23-year-old had made his one-day international debut at the same venue, the Vidarbha Cricket Association ground, against Sri Lanka last October.
"Both debuts were good. It was good to make both the debuts on the same ground."
Sreesanth, who provided India the first wicket -- that of opener Andrew Strauss -- said the dismissal was well-planned. "You can say I had planned the first wicket. I was just looking to basically bowl a good line and the ball went to second slip," he said. "I thanked God after getting the first wicket. It was great getting the wicket of Andrew Strauss, who is a world-class batsman. I just kept doing the basics well and it was great to get that first wicket." He also added that he got a lot of support from his team mates, who kept encouraging him throughout the day's play.
"Rahul Dravid said, 'enjoy the game and believe in yourself'. Those are just normal words, but it matters a lot. In fact, all the players in the team supported me."
Though it was his debut match, he said he did not put any undue pressure on himself.
"I took it as just another first class game and just went out and enjoyed myself. I was confident of myself. The important thing I have learnt is that you need to have persistence. You need to have faith in yourself."
The pacer felt that the ball started to reverse swing early as the 16th over of the innings.
"It was good for us that the ball started reversing early; it happens because of the dry wickets and SG balls. In first class cricket we got a lot of wickets through reverse swing. So we are used to it," he said.
He added that Kevin Pietersen is one of his favourite batsmen and his dropped catch by V V S Laxman at slips did not affect him. "One wicket I really wanted is Pietersen. He is one of my favourite batsman and it was great to get his wicket," he said. "You have to accept, as a fast bowler, that there will be dropped catches off your bowling. You should be ready for it and be confident that you can produce another wicket-taking delivery."

SREESANTH PROFILE


Name : Shanthakumaran Sreesanth.
Nationality : Indian
Date of Birth : 06 February 1983, Kothamangalam, Kerala.

S Sreesanth is one of the many exhilarating young fast bowling prospects in India. He is a right-arm fast-medium-pace bowler, and also a right-handed tailender. Owing a good action and honest pace, he was called up to the national squad in 2005 after a stalwart presentation in the Challenger Trophy, at the age of only 22.

Batting Style:
Right Hand Batsman

Bowling Style:
Right Arm Fast Medium

Test Debut:
India v England at Nagpur - Mar 1-5, 2006

Latest Test;
India v South Africa at Kanpur, Apr 11-13, 2008

ODI Debut:
India v Sri Lanka at Nagpur - Oct 25, 2005

Latest ODI:
Australia v India at Brisbane, Mar 4, 2008

T20I Debut South Africa v India at Johannesburg, Dec 1, 2006
Last T20I Australia v India at Melbourne, Feb 1, 2008
First-class Debut 2002/03
Last First-class South Zone v West Zone at Chennai, Feb 5-9, 2009
List A Debut 2002/03
Last List A Hyderabad (India) v Kerala at Visakhapatnam, Feb 15, 2009
Twenty20 Debut South Africa v India at Johannesburg, Dec 1, 2006
Last Twenty20 Chennai Super Kings v Kings XI Punjab at Durban, May 20, 2009

SURESH RAINA PROFILE

Aged 15, Suresh Raina was spotted by Indian selectors playing for Uttar Pradesh under-16s and was drafted into India's under-19 tour of England where he notched two fifties. Aged 16, he made his first-class debut for Uttar Pradesh against Assam in February 2003, although didn't play another match until the following season.Following injuries to Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly he was selected for the Indian Oil Cup 2005 in Sri Lanka, but was dismissed for a golden duck on debut to Muttiah Muralidaran. Since then, Raina has enjoyed a love-hate relationship with the selectors on account of some hot-and-cold consistency. In June 2008, he was drafted into the side for the Kitply Cup but it wasn't until the subsequent Asia Cup that Raina showed what a potentially lethal batsman he can be. He scored two centuries and two half centuries in that series and thus sealed his reputation as clean striker of the ball. Since then he has been a regular in the ODI and Twenty20 International setup and has delivered on numerous occasions. He did, however, have a disastrous World Twenty20 2009, a series he will be looking to put behind him at the earliest.It is because of inconsistent performances like this that the selectors have not shown faith in him for the longest version of the game. Raina is more of an attacking cricketer that may come across as reckless at times because of his affinity for fast runs. He is a vital member of his Chennai franchise in the IPL and an extremely sharp fielder.

ANIL KUMBELE


Full Name: Anil Kumble
Born: October 17, 1970, Bangalore, Karnataka
Major teams: India, Karnataka, Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Surrey
Batting style: Right-hand bat
Bowling style: Legbreak

Achievements: Highest wicket-taker for India in ODIs and Tests; best bowling figure by an Indian in a ODI (6-12 against West Indies); one of only two bowlers ever to have taken all 10 wickets in a Test innings; only the second player (after Shane Warne) to score 2000 runs and take over 500 Test wickets; Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1996

Anil Kumble has been an Indian Cricket player and Captain of the Indian Test Cricket team. A right handed batsman, Kumble specialized in Right Arm Leg Spin (Legbreak Googly) bowling. He has taken the third biggest number of wickets in the history of Test Cricket, having taken more than 300 wickets in Test matches.

Early Life
Anil was born on 17th of October 1970 at Bangalore, Karnataka. Fondly known as Jumbo, as a kid he joined a Cricket Club named Young Cricketers. He was a very brilliant student and finished his Bachelor in Mechanical Engineering from Rashtreeya Vidyalaya College of Engineering, Bangalore in the year 1991-92.

He started playing First Class Cricket for Karnataka team with a match against Hyderabad in the year 1989, and managed to grab 4 wickets in the match.

Debut in Cricket
Anil made his debut in the One Day International (ODI) Cricket with the Australasia Cup tournament at Sharjah in the year 1989-90, in a match against Sri Lanka. He took 1 wicket in this match, and gave 42 runs.

His Test Cricket career began with a Test Series against England played at Manchester in August 1990. Anil took 3 wickets and gave 105 runs in 43 overs out of which 7 were maiden ones.

The 10-wickets Charisma
Anil Kumble has to his credit the fame of having taken all the 10 wickets in a single Test innings. He achieved this rare feat in February 1999 in a Test match played against Pakistan in Delhi. Apart from Jim Laker, he has been the only bowler in the world to have done so till date.

Days of Captaincy
He also represented the Test Cricket team of India in the year 2007 when the reigning Captain Rahul Dravid resigned from the post. He led India to Test Series against Pakistan and Australia, in which the National team won by 1-0 and lost by 1-2 respectively.

Vital Statistics
Throughout his Test Cricket career, Anil Kumble played 132 Test matches in which he managed to grab 619 wickets at the loss of 18355 runs, with an average of 29.65 runs. During his Test career he scored 2506 runs with an average of 17.77 runs. His highest score in Test Cricket was 110 not out.

As far as One Day International (ODI) Cricket is concerned, Anil played 271 ODI matches throughout his career in which he took 337 wickets giving away 10412 runs with an average of 30.80 runs. He scored 938 runs with an average of 10.53 runs in the ODI matches he played, his highest score being 26.

The Last Moments
Anil Kumble played his last ODI match against Bermuda at Port of Spain on 19th of March, 2007. In this match, he took 3 wickets and gave away 38 runs. His last Test Cricket match was against Australia during the Border Gavaskar Trophy, played in October 2008 at Delhi. In this match, Anil took 3 wickets, and gave away 126 runs combining both the innings.

Anil retired from his Cricket career gracefully on the 2nd of November 2008. He was conferred with the Padma Shri award by the Government of India in the year 2005.

WALL OF INDIAN TEAM


Rahul Dravid, a cricketer who seamlessly blends an old-world classicism with a new-age professionalism, is the best No. 3 batsman to play for India - and might even be considered one of the best ever by the time his career is done. He already averages around 60 at that position, more than any regular No. 3 batsman in the game's history, barring Don Bradman. Unusually for an Indian batsman, he also averages more overseas - around 60, again - than at home. But impressive as his statistics are, they cannot represent the extent of his importance to India, or the beauty of his batsmanship.

When Dravid began playing Test cricket, he was quickly stereotyped as a technically correct player capable of stonewalling against the best attacks - his early nickname was 'The Wall' - but of little else. As the years went by, though, Dravid, a sincere batsman who brought humility and a deep intelligence to his study of the game, grew in stature, finally reaching full blossom under Sourav Ganguly's captaincy. As a New India emerged, so did a new Dravid: first, he put on the wicketkeeping gloves in one-dayers, and transformed himself into an astute finisher in the middle-order; then, he strung together a series of awe-inspiring performances in Test matches, as India crept closer and closer to their quest of an overseas series win.

Dravid's golden phase began, arguably, in Kolkata 2001, with a supporting act, when he made 180 to supplement VVS Laxman's classic effort of 281 against Australia. But from then on, Dravid became India's most valuable player, saving them Tests at Port Elizabeth, Georgetown and Trent Bridge, winning them Tests at Headlingley, Adelaide, Kandy and Rawalpindi. At one point during this run, he carved up four centuries in successive innings, and hit four double-centuries in the space of 15 Tests, including in historic away-wins at Adelaide and Rawalpindi. As India finished off the 2004 Pakistan tour on a winning note, on the back of Dravid's epic 270, his average crept past Sachin Tendulkar's - and it seemed no aberration.

Dravid's amazing run was no triumph of substance over style, though, for he has plenty of both. A classical strokeplayer who plays every shot in the book, he often outscores team-mates like Tendulkar and Laxman in the course of partnerships with them, and while his pulling and cover-driving is especially breathtaking, he has every other shot in the book as well. He is both an artist and a craftsman, repeatedly constructing innings that stand out not merely for the beauty of their execution, but for the context in which they come. By the time he entered his 30s, Dravid was already in the pantheon of great Indian batsmen, alongside Tendulkar and Sunil Gavaskar.

In October 2005, he was appointed captain the one-day side, began with a thumping 6-1 hammering of Sri Lanka in a home series, and was soon given responsibility of the Test side as well, taking over from the controversy-shrouded Sourav Ganguly. While his captaincy stint started encouragingly with ODI victories against Pakistan and England, it soon nosedived with an embarrassing defeat against Bangladesh which led to an early exit from the 2007 World Cup. As a Test team, though, India had plenty to celebrate under Dravid, winning their first Test in South Africa and achieving two historic away series wins in the West Indies and England. Dravid stepped down from the captaincy after the 2007 England tour. A poor run in a one-day series at home against Australia saw Dravid dropped from the subsequent series against Pakistan. As he waited for the Tests to begin, Dravid notched up two centuries, one a double, in consecutive Ranji Trophy games for his state side, Karnataka.
Amit Varma November 2007

GANGULY CAREER STATICS

Career Statistics

Tests:

Cumulative Test batting average never fell below 40 runs per innings

He joined another select brand of 3 batsman who made tons in their 1st two Test innings.

Sourav was only the 3rd batsman in the world to score a century on debut at Lords.

His 131 still remains the highest by any batsman on his debut at Lord’s.

Has gotten out on 99 twice in tests only 8 batsman have fallen so. The others are MJK Smith, G Boycott, RB Richardson, JG Wright, MA Atherton, Saleem Malik, GS Blewett

ODI's:

Second Fastest after Viv Richards to reach 6,000 ODI Runs in 147 Innings and Sachin Tendulkar to 10,000 in 263 Innings

Cumulative ODI batting average never fell below 40 runs per innings after his 84th Innings

GANGULY NICK NAME

Sourav Chandidas Ganguly also known as "Dada" is an Indian cricketer. Born 8 July 1972, lives at Barisha in Kolkata, formerly Calcutta, West Bengal, he made his One Day International debut against Australia in 1992, and a Test debut versus England in 1996. He went on to become the captain of Indian cricket team from 2000 to 2005. He has led India to the World Cup 2003 finals, and holds the Indian captaincy record for the most Test victories. Following an exit from the national team in early 2006, he was recalled to the Indian Test side in December, staging a successful comeback in the 2006 - 2007 Indian tour of South Africa.

Ganguly is a left-handed batsman and a right-handed medium-pace bowler. He is a natural right-hander, but converted to the southpaw stance at a young age so that he could use his left-handed brother, Snehasish Ganguly's equipment.

Nicknamed Bengal Tiger, Prince of Calcutta and also affectionately called Dada (elder brother in Bengali) by his team-mates and Lord Snooty by his opponents, he is an aggressive player on and off the field. He made his one-day international debut in 1992, but his talents did not truly receive the recognition they deserved until India's 1996 tour of England when he scored centuries both in his debut Test as well as the next match (the second and third Tests of the series). Ganguly is only the third cricketer ever to score a century on debut at Lord's, after Harry Graham and John Hampshire (Andrew Strauss has also since accomplished the feat). Rahul Dravid once commented, "On the off-side, first there is God, then there is Ganguly”. He scored 183 against Sri Lanka at Taunton in the 1999 Cricket World Cup, the highest by an Indian in World Cup cricket. He became captain within a year after the world cup and scored 2 centuries in the 2000 champions trophy immediately after. While he has achieved significant successes as captain, his individual performance deteriorated during his captaincy, especially after successes in the world cup and the tour of Australia in 2003 and the Pakistan series in 2004. Following indifferent form in 2004 and poor form form in 2005, he was dropped from the team in October 2005. He has since remained active on the first class cricket scene in hopes of a recall, but his performance has been mixed - he has hit a couple of centuries in domestic cricket, but his English county stint in 2005 and subsequent appearances in the Challenger Trophy were failures.

Consistent batting failures of the Indian cricket team, more so than his own mediocre to good performances in the domestic circuit led to his recall to the Indian Test squad in November 2006. Although India lost 2-1, Sourav Ganguly was the highest run getter for India, and only batsman to hit more than 200 runs in total. On January 12th 2007 he was recalled for the one day squad as well, where India play host to West Indies and Sri Lanka in a one day tournament. On January 21st, Ganguly hit a match winning 98 against the West Indies.

Sourav Ganguly made his international debut against Australia in India's tour of Australia in 1992. He didn't score much and was dropped from further matches. Four years later, following a good domestic record, he was recalled into the national side for a Test series against England in England. He made his Test debut at Lords, with a century in that match and repeated the feat in the match which followed. He was retained for the One day team and he went on become a regular in both forms of the game. One of his most memorable performance was in the final of the Independence cup at Dhaka against Pakistan, when the entire Pakistan team walked back in stating bad light along with the umpires, but Ganguly refused to come in. Ganguly scored 124 in that match in darkness, while Hrishikesh Kanitkar scored the winning runs with a boundary.

In 2000, after the match fixing scandal Ganguly was named the captain of the India team. In 2003 under his captaincy India reached the World Cup Final, where they lost to the Australians. Ganguly has scored over 10,000 runs in One Day Cricket and over 5,000 runs in Test cricket, including 12 centuries in Tests and 22 in ODIs. In terms of number of centuries in ODIs, he is exceeded by Sachin Tendulkar and Sanath Jayasuriya. Sourav, along with Sachin Tendulkar, formed by far the most successful opening pair in One Day Cricket, having amassed the highest number of century partnerships (16) for the first wicket. Together, they have scored 5,308 runs at an average of 45.37. Sourav has been succeeded by Virender Sehwag as opener.

He is the third player to cross 10,000 ODI runs and so far the fastest one to do so, after Sachin Tendulkar and Inzamam Ul Haq, and reached 6000, 7000, 8000 and 9000 ODI runs milestones in least number of matches played. Sourav can bowl medium-pacers as well, but has under-achieved in this aspect in Test matches, taking 25 wickets in 84 matches, at an average of 52.47. In 2004, he was awarded the Padma Shri. As of 2006, he is the only Indian captain to win a Test series in Pakistan (although two of the three tests of that series was led by Rahul Dravid).

Sourav Ganguly's 10 year international cricket career could be easily bisected into 2 halves, the pre and the post Y2K eras. The significance of the year 2000 lies not only in the fact that he became the captain of the Indian team but also in the fact that the ICC introduced the one bouncer per over rule in ODIs starting from that year. This introduction of the rule by the ICC had a negative impact on Sourav Ganguly's batting average, which plunged from a high 45.5 before the year 2000 to a low 34.9 between the 5 year period of 2001-2005. Also, against Test playing nations (which included Zimbabwe and Bangladesh), his overall average plunged further down to 30.66, as did his 'away' average which fell to 29. He managed to score only (6) centuries between 2001-2005, of which 3 centuries were against Kenya & 1 was against Namibia. This sudden drop in his batting average against Test playing nations after 2001 was clearly a result of the short pitch stuff he had to encounter from opposition bowlers. As S. Rajesh, the assistant editor of Cricinfo analyzes, Sourav Ganguly has been dismissed numerous times fending off the short ball since 2001 and his average of 11.92 against the short ball has been the lowest among contemporary Indian batsman who played more than 80 ODI matches. The former captain has also been uncomfortable while attempting the 'pull' and the 'hook' shots when bowlers have dug it in short, often lasting less than five(4.89) balls before being dismissed.

Also, Sourav Ganguly's Test career had been riddled with lean patches, the first of which stretched for 3 years from Dec 1999 to Dec 2002, during which his batting average fell to 31.7 in 36 consecutive Test matches over 60 innings. The next biggest lean patch of his career occurred after the 2003 World Cup, when his ODI average fell to 28 and this was when his place in the team was questioned by numerous Indian cricket fans. He averaged 23.5 in 20 ODI matches between Sep 2004 and Sep 2005, before being finally dropped from the ODI side.

Despite his hot and cold streaks Sourav Ganguly is only the third Indian Test match batsman to maintain a career average that never dipped below 40 runs per innings for his entire Test career. This is more due to his initial career graph, which plummeted alarmingly in the second half of his career. Whereas his contemporaries like Dravid, Tendulkar, Sehwag and Laxman have shown steady improvement in their career graphs, his own happens to have a pronounced downward trend. The other two who achieved this feat are Sunil Gavaskar and Mohammad Azharuddin.

Sourav Ganguly also shares with G. R. Viswanath of India the record for scoring at least 10 or more centuries and his team either winning or drawing each and every match in which he scored a century. He also shares with Mohammad Azharuddin the record of scoring two consecutive hundreds in his first two Test matches, though Azharuddin bettered that by scoring a third consecutive hundred in his first three Test matches.

Sourav Ganguly has the highest Test and ODI aggregate of any left-handed batsman India has produced and his 12 Test and 22 ODI centuries are also a record for any Indian left-hander.

SOURAV GANGULY

The year 2000 saw Sourav Ganguly being named the captain of the team India for the one-day series. The series won by India is best remembered for South African captain Hansie Cronje’s revelation of being involved in the match fixing scandal along with some Indian cricketers. The scandal caused a lot of hue and cry in the cricket fraternity and Indian cricket almost came to a stand still with two of the most experienced cricketers slapped with bans imposed on their cricket careers.

But Sourav’s success story as the captain of Indian side had just started as later that year, India went to the final of the Mini World Cup or ICC Knockuut (now known as ICC Champions Trophy) but the next series saw the most embarrassing and biggest defeat ever for India against Sri Lanka in Sharjah. Chasing a score of 300 runs the whole Indian team, including the batsmen like Sachin, Sourav, Rahul and Yuvraj bundled out for just 54 runs handing over a 245 run defeat to India, then a world record. In the same series Indian batting surrendered to the guile of Muttiah Muralitharan with Murali finishing his best figures in the ODIs: 7-30, that too against India which probably had the best batting line up against spinners.

The year 2001 witnessed the invincible Australian side touring India, riding high on their world record of consecutive 16 wins, the team came here to win what their captain Steve Waugh called the final frontier. Aussies drubbed India in the very first test match of the series and it seemed Waugh’s wish to beat India in its own backyard would come true.

The next match was in Kolkata where Harbhajan’s hat-trick and the historic partnership between VVS Laxman and Rahul Dravid not only turned the match as well as the series head on. The three most talked about factors of the series were Harbhajan ‘The Tubanator’s lethal bowling, batting of Very Very Special Laxman and tactics of Sourav Ganguly of making Aussie captain Steve Waugh wait for the toss and his match strategy.

But Sourav the captain achieved a milestone in the India’s tour to England in the year 2002. Though India managed to draw the test series it was in the Natwest triangular series that India won from England.

The same match which witnessed the Indian captain waving his shirt in the Lord’s balcony. The match remains to be a real thriller which saw India chasing down the daunting task of 325 runs giving India two more cricketing heroes, Yuvraj and Kaif. Both of whom were trying to get a foothold in the international arena.

The best thing about Ganguly’s captaincy was him backing the talented but out of favour players. Be it Virender Sehwag, Harbhajan Singh, Zaheer Khan, Ashish Nehra, Yuvraj Singh or Mohammed Kaif. Ganguly prepared a whole new bunch of young cricketers who were ready to fight it out in the middle. And the world saw the new face of Indian cricket a young, aggressive and hungry for win team.

The very same year India became the joint winner of the ICC Champions trophy with Sri Lanka. But ahead lied a tough series for India in New Zealand India was drubbed comprehensively 5-2. Ganguly’s captaincy came under the hammer as India went to World Cup South Africa.

The World Cup 2003 did not start on a happy note for India as they lost to Australia in just their second game of the tournament. Ganguly not only drew flak from people back home but also saw everyone asking him to quit captaincy.

But then came the turn around with India going on a winning spree which unfortunately came to an end in the World Cup final with India losing to Australia again. And India’s hope to recreate the feat of Kapil’s devils came to an end.

Later in 2003 India toured Australia where they were considered the underdogs. Sourav who was susceptible against the bouncers took Aussies by surprise in the very first match by scoring a hundred. Though India took the lead in the second test but they could manage to draw the test series only and lost the finals of the one-day series.

But Australia tour was followed by India’s tour to Pakistan in 2004 after defeating Pakistan in one-dayers. Sourav and company repeated the feat in the test series. Though the series is still remembered for Sehwag’s 309 it was Indian bowlers, most of whom were backed by Sourav, who turned the game in India’s favour.

Later that year Australia came to India to win what they called their “final frontier” and much to world’s surprise beat India with a margin of 2-1 in the test series. The series also saw Ganguly being dragged into controversy when he pulled out of the Nagpur test protesting against the green top pitch.

Ganguly’s captaincy came under the hammer again in the year 2005 when Pakistan team toured seeking revenge for their defeat on the home soil. It was the last series of the Sourav and coach john Wright duo and India wanted to present him with a win in the series. But India won neither in tests nor in one day series. Where Pakistan drew the test series they beat India in comprehensively in the one-day series. Again Ganguly was the target of the criticism from both people and India for his poor batting form. Things got worse for Ganguly as he was slapped with match ban for his team’s poor bowling rate. And it seemed Ganguly’s captaincy has lost its effectiveness. John Wright’s association with Indian team ended and BCCI appointed Greg Chappell as the new coach of the Indian team.

Came India’s tour to Zimbabwe where the spat between Ganguly-Chappell took place. Chappell asked Ganguly to sit out and a controversy took place.

Chappell accused Ganguly of being insecure about his place in the side and a leak of his mail to the board let the cat out of the hat creating a media furor and resulting in Ganguly losing not only his captaincy but also his place in the side.

Ganguly’s deputy Rahul Dravid was given the captaincy of the side and harsh treatment was meted out to Dada by coach and selectors especially chief selector Kiran More. With More even going to an extent of saying, “As long as I am the chief of selector committee Ganguly will not play for India.”

The behaviour of Chappell and More called for public outrage over Ganguly’s omission and treatment meted out to him. It was then that Ganguly appeared in a TV ad asking people, “Apne Dada ko bhoole to nahin na?” The Ganguly emotional commercial may have touched the strings of general public’s heart but selectors remained unaffected. Ganguly further lost his place in the test side as well surprising even Sharad Pawar then BCCI president. Left out in the cold Ganguly’s career seemed to have come to and end.

MS.DHONI ODI CAREER

ODI career:

ODI Career of Dhoni. Brown line indicates 10 match average while the orange line indicates career average progression.The Indian team in the 2000s saw the use of Rahul Dravid as the wicket-keeper to ensure that the wicket-keeper spot didn't lack in batting talent.[23] The Indian cricket establishment also saw the entry of wicket-keeper/batsmen from the junior ranks with talents like Parthiv Patel and Dinesh Karthik - both India U-19 Captains in the test squads.[23] With Dhoni making a mark in the India-A squad, he was picked in the ODI squad for the Bangladesh tour in 2004/05.[25] Dhoni did not have a great start to his ODI career, getting run out for a duck on debut.[26] In spite of an average series against Bangladesh, Dhoni was picked for the Pakistan ODI series.[27] In the second match of the series, Dhoni in his fifth one-day international, scored 148 in Vishakapatnam off only 123 deliveries. Dhoni's 148 erased the earlier record for the highest score by an Indian wicketkeeper,[28] a record that he would re-write before the end of the year.

Dhoni had few batting opportunities in the first two games of the Sri Lankan bilateral ODI series (October-November 2005) and was promoted to No. 3 in the third ODI at Sawai Mansingh Stadium (Jaipur). Sri Lanka had set India a target of 299 after a Kumar Sangakkara century and in reply. India lost Tendulkar early. Dhoni was promoted to accelerate the scoring and ended the game with an unbeaten 183 off 145 balls, winning the game for India[29] - an innings described in Wisden Almanack (2006) as 'Uninhibited, yet anything but crude'.[30] The innings set various records including the highest score in ODI cricket in the second innings,[31] a record that still stands. Dhoni ended the series with the highest run aggregate (346)[32] and was awarded the Man of the series award for his efforts. In December 2005, Dhoni was signed by BCCI to a B-grade contract, skipping the initial C-grade level due to his performance on the cricketing field.[33]


Dhoni bowling in the nets. He rarely bowls at international level.India scored 328 in 50 overs with Dhoni contributing 68 in their first match of 2006 against Pakistan. However the team finished poorly, scoring just 43 runs in the last eight overs and lost the match due to Duckworth-Lewis method.[34] In the third match of the series, Dhoni came in with India in a precarious situation and scored 72 runs off just 46 balls that included 13 boundaries to help India take a 2-1 lead in the series.[35][36] The final match of the series had a repeat performance as Dhoni scored 77 runs off 56 balls to enable India win the series 4-1.[37] In recognition of his consistent ODI performances, Dhoni overtook Ricky Ponting as number one in the ICC ODI rankings for batsmen on April 20, 2006.[38] His reign lasted just a week as Adam Gilchrist's performance against Bangladesh moved him to the top spot.[39]

Two canceled series in Sri Lanka, one due to the withdrawal of South Africa from the Unitech Cup due to security concerns[40] and the replacement 3-match ODI bilateral series against Sri Lanka washed due to rain,[41] was India's prelude to another disappointing tournament - DLF Cup 2006-07. Dhoni scored 43 runs as the team lost twice in three games and did not qualify for the finals. India's lack of preparation showed in the 2006 ICC Champions Trophy as they lost to West Indies and Australia, though Dhoni scored a half-century against West Indies. The story of the ODI series in South Africa was the same for both Dhoni and India as Dhoni scored 139 runs in 4 matches and India lost the series 4-0. From the start of the WI ODI series, Dhoni had played 16 matches, hit just two fifties and averaged 25.93. Dhoni received criticism on his wicket keeping technique from former wicketkeeper Syed Kirmani.[42]

Preparations for the 2007 Cricket World Cup improved as India recorded identical 3-1 victories over West Indies and Sri Lanka and Dhoni had averages in excess of 100 in both these series. However, India unexpectedly crashed out the World Cup after losses to Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. Dhoni was out for a duck in both these matches and scored 29 runs in the tournament. After the loss to Bangladesh in 2007 Cricket World Cup, the house that Dhoni was constructing in his home-town Ranchi was vandalized and damaged by political activists of JMM.[43] The local police arranged for security for his family as India exited the World cup in the first round.[44]

Dhoni put behind his disappointment in the World cup by scoring 91* against Bangladesh after India were left in a tight spot earlier in the run-chase. Dhoni was declared the man of the match for his performance, his fourth in ODI cricket. He was also later adjudged the man of the series after the third game of the series was washed away. Dhoni had a good Afro-Asia Cup, getting 174 runs in 3 matches at an average of 87.00, with a blitzkrieg 139 not out of 97 balls, a Man Of The Match innings, in the 3rd ODI.

Dhoni was nominated as the vice-captain of the ODI team for the series against South Africa in Ireland and the subsequent India-England 7-match ODI series.[7] Dhoni, who received a 'B' grade contract in December 2005, was awarded an 'A' grade contract in June 2007. And also he was elected as captain of Indian Twenty-20 Cricket Team for the World Twenty20 in September 2007. On 2 September 2007 Mahendra Singh Dhoni equalled his idol Adam Gilchrist's international record for the most dismissals in an innings in ODI by catching 5 English players and stumping one.[45] He led India to the ICC World Twenty 20 trophy in South Africa with a victory over arch rivals Pakistan in an intensely fought final on 24 September 2007, and became the second Indian captain to have won a World cup in any form of cricket, after Kapil Dev. Dhoni took his first wicket and ODI wicket on September 30, 2009. He bowled Travis Dowlin from the West Indies. In the ongoing series between India and Australia, Dhoni hit an aggressive 124 runs in just 107 balls, in the second ODI, and a measured knock of 71 runs in 95 balls, along with Yuvraj Singh, saw India home by 6 wickets, in the third ODI.

Sachin career

Summary of Tendulkar’s ODI and Test Statistics

Profile:

Full name: Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar
Born: April 24, 1973, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Current age: 34 years
Major teams: India, ACC Asian XI, Mumbai, Yorkshire
Nickname: Tendlya, Little Master
Batting style: Right-hand bat
Bowling style: Right-arm offbreak, Legbreak googly
Height: 5 ft 5 in
Education: Sharadashram Vidyamandir School

One Day Internationals
Matches: 417 (1989-)
Innings: 407
Aggregate: 16361
Average: 44.34
Best Score: 186*
50’s : 89
90’s: 17
100’s: 42
Strike Rate : 85.49

Test Matches
Matches: 146 (1989-)
Innings: 237
Aggregate: 11782
Average: 55.58
Best Score: 248*
50’s : 49
100’s: 39
200s: 4

World Cup matches
Matches: 36 (1992-)
Innings: 35
Aggregate: 1796
Average: 57.94
Best Score: 152
50’s : 13
100’s: 4
Strike Rate : 88.21

Rohit sharma career

Playing career:

Sharma made his List A debut for West Zone against Central Zone in the Deodhar Trophy in March 2006, at Gwalior[4]. It was his unbeaten innings of 142 in 123 balls against North Zone at Udaipur in the same tournament[5], that brought him into the limelight[6]. Performances for the India A sides in Abu Dhabi and Australia followed, leading to him being selected for the 30 member probables list for the Champions Trophy[6], although he did not make the final squad. This was before he had made his Ranji Trophy debut[6]. He was also selected for the Challenger Trophy.

First-class:

Sharma at fielding practice.Sharma made his First-class debut for India A against New Zealand A, at Darwin in July 2006[7]. He made his Ranji Trophy debut for his First-class side Mumbai in the 2006/2007 season. Though he was unable to contribute much in the initial matches,[8] he scored 205 off 267 balls in the match against Gujarat.[8]. Mumbai went on to win the tournament with Sharma scoring a 50 in the final against Bengal.[9].

International:
Sharma was first selected for the limited-overs matches on India's tour to Ireland in 2007. He made his One Day International debut against Ireland at Belfast,although he did not bat in the match[10].


Sharma bowling in the nets.Sharma eventually made his mark at the international stage on 20 September 2007, when he led India to victory by scoring an unbeaten 50 (which came off 40 deliveries) against South Africa in the 2007 ICC World Twenty20[11]. The win reserved India a berth in the semifinals of the tournament. At one stage India were 61-4, but his partnership of 85 runs with skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni helped India to post a total of 153-5.[11]. He was eventually declared Man of the Match[11]. Sharma then proceeded to score 30 runs off 16 balls in the final against Pakistan[12].

Sharma scored his maiden ODI half-century against Pakistan, at Jaipur on 18 November 2007[13] and was selected as part of India's 16-man squad for the CB series in Australia[14]. Here, he scored 235 runs at an average of 33.57 with 2 fifties[15], including his score of 66 in the 1st final at Sydney[16].

Indian Premier League:
Sharma was signed up by the Deccan Chargers franchise for a sum of US$ 750,000 a year[17]. He was one of the leading run scorers in the 2008 IPL season with 404 runs at an average of 36.72[18]. He also held the coveted Orange Cap for a brief period.

In the 2009 IPL season he was appointed the vice-captain of the Deccan Chargers. He took a hat-trick against the Mumbai Indians, removing Abhishek Nayar, Harbhajan Singh and JP Duminy. In a match against Kolkata Knight Riders where 21 was required off the last over, Sharma scored 26 off the over from Mashrafe Mortaza to seal a win. He was named the best under-23 player of the tournament.

Rohit sharma profile


Rohit Gurunath Sharma (Marathi:रोहित गुरुनाथ शर्मा) (born 30 April 1987, in Bansod, Nagpur, Maharashtra) is an Indian cricketer. Sharma is a right-handed middle-order batsman and occasional right-arm offbreak bowler. Having started his international playing career at the age of 20, Sharma quickly exhibited his athletic fielding and cool temperament to compliment his graceful strokeplay. He is pegged by many analysts to be a permanent fixture on the Indian cricket team in the next decade.[1].


Early life:
Sharma completed his primary education at Our Lady Of Vailankanni High School, Mumbai. He was later enrolled in the Swami Vivekanand International School[2] on a scholarship, after his talent was noticed by the school's cricket coach at a summer camp[1]. He excelled in the Giles and Harris Shield school cricket tournaments[1], after which he was selected for the Mumbai Under-17 team [1]. He was later chosen for India's Under-17 and Under-19 teams, and made his mark at the 2006 U-19 World Cup in Sri Lanka, finishing among the top run-getters in the tournament[3]. He was enrolled as a student at Rizvi College, Mumbai, before he was called up to the national side.

Playing career:
List A
Sharma made his List A debut for West Zone against Central Zone in the Deodhar Trophy in March 2006, at Gwalior[4]. It was his unbeaten innings of 142 in 123 balls against North Zone at Udaipur in the same tournament[5], that brought him into the limelight[6]. Performances for the India A sides in Abu Dhabi and Australia followed, leading to him being selected for the 30 member probables list for the Champions Trophy[6], although he did not make the final squad. This was before he had made his Ranji Trophy debut[6]. He was also selected for the Challenger Trophy.

First-class:

Sharma at fielding practice.Sharma made his First-class debut for India A against New Zealand A, at Darwin in July 2006[7]. He made his Ranji Trophy debut for his First-class side Mumbai in the 2006/2007 season. Though he was unable to contribute much in the initial matches,[8] he scored 205 off 267 balls in the match against Gujarat.[8]. Mumbai went on to win the tournament with Sharma scoring a 50 in the final against Bengal.[9].

International:
Sharma was first selected for the limited-overs matches on India's tour to Ireland in 2007. He made his One Day International debut against Ireland at Belfast,although he did not bat in the match[10].


Sharma bowling in the nets.Sharma eventually made his mark at the international stage on 20 September 2007, when he led India to victory by scoring an unbeaten 50 (which came off 40 deliveries) against South Africa in the 2007 ICC World Twenty20[11]. The win reserved India a berth in the semifinals of the tournament. At one stage India were 61-4, but his partnership of 85 runs with skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni helped India to post a total of 153-5.[11]. He was eventually declared Man of the Match[11]. Sharma then proceeded to score 30 runs off 16 balls in the final against Pakistan[12].

Sharma scored his maiden ODI half-century against Pakistan, at Jaipur on 18 November 2007[13] and was selected as part of India's 16-man squad for the CB series in Australia[14]. Here, he scored 235 runs at an average of 33.57 with 2 fifties[15], including his score of 66 in the 1st final at Sydney[16].

Indian Premier League:
Sharma was signed up by the Deccan Chargers franchise for a sum of US$ 750,000 a year[17]. He was one of the leading run scorers in the 2008 IPL season with 404 runs at an average of 36.72[18]. He also held the coveted Orange Cap for a brief period.

In the 2009 IPL season he was appointed the vice-captain of the Deccan Chargers. He took a hat-trick against the Mumbai Indians, removing Abhishek Nayar, Harbhajan Singh and JP Duminy. In a match against Kolkata Knight Riders where 21 was required off the last over, Sharma scored 26 off the over from Mashrafe Mortaza to seal a win. He was named the best under-23 player of the tournament

shewage vice captain of india profile



Virender Sehwag profile :
Full name Virender Sehwag
Born 20 October 1978 (1978-10-20) (age 31)
Delhi, India
Nickname Viru
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right arm off spin
Role Opening batsman
International information
National side India
Test debut (cap 229) 3 November 2001 v South Africa
Last Test 24 November 2009 v Sri Lanka
ODI debut (cap 123) 1 April 1999 v Pakistan
Last ODI 8 November 2009 v Australia
ODI shirt no. -
Domestic team information
Years Team
1997 – present Delhi
2003 Leicestershire
2008 – present Delhi Daredevils
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 71 211 134 281
Runs scored 5,955 6,730 10,442 8,683
Batting average 50.46 33.98 48.79 33.65
100s/50s 16/19 11/35 30/37 12/52
Top score 319 130 319 130
Balls bowled 2,497 4,027 7,128 5,632
Wickets 30 87 94 133
Bowling average 42.93 40.67 39.58 36.33
5 wickets in innings 1 0 1 0
10 wickets in match 0 n/a 0 n/a
Best bowling 5/104 3/25 5/104 4/17
Catches/stumpings 55/– 80/– 113/– 104/–
Source: CricketArchive, 28 November 2009

Virender Sehwag About this sound pronunciation (Hindi: वीरेंद्र सेहवाग) (born 20 October 1978, in Delhi, India), affectionately known as Viru, is one of the leading batsmen in the Indian cricket team. Sehwag is an aggressive right-handed opening batsman and an occasional right-arm off-spin bowler. He played his first One Day International in 1999 and joined the Indian Test cricket team in 2001. In April 2009, Sehwag became the only Indian to be honored as the Wisden Leading Cricketer in the World for his performance in 2008.

Sehwag holds multiple records including the highest score made by an Indian in Test cricket (319), which was also the fastest triple century in the history of international cricket (reached 300 off only 278 balls). Sehwag also holds the distinction of being one of three batsmen in the world to have ever surpassed 300 twice in Test cricket, and the only one to score two triple centuries and take a five-wicket innings haul.In March 2009, Sehwag smashed the fastest century ever scored by an Indian in ODI cricket, from 60 balls.

Sehwag was appointed as vice-captain of the Indian team under Rahul Dravid in October 2005 but due to poor form, he was later replaced by V. V. S. Laxman in December 2006 as Test vice-captain. In January 2007, Sehwag was dropped from the ODI team and later from the Test team as well.During his term as vice-captain, Sehwag skippered the team in place of injured Dravid in 2 ODIs and 1 Test. Following his return to form in 2008 and the retirement of Anil Kumble, Sehwag has been reappointed as the vice-captain for both Tests and ODIs. By early 2009, Sehwag had reestablished himself as one of the best performing batsmen in ODI cricket.

sania mirza profiles


Achievements:
First Indian woman to reach the fourth round of a Grand Slam tournament
First Indian woman to win a WTA singles title (Hyderabad Open in 2005)
WTA's Most Impressive Newcomer for the year 2005
Padma Shri Award in 2006
In a cricket obsessed country like India, tennis player Sania Mirza's hysterical fan following speaks volumes about her achievements. Mirza's meteoric rise to stardom has made her an inspiration for the young sports enthusiasts across the country. By becoming the first Indian woman to reach the third round of a Grand Slam tournament at the 2005 Australian Open, Mirza proved that tennis in India is not merely dominated by the male counterparts. She improved her Grand Slam performance by reaching the fourth round of the US Open in the same year. Read on to know more about the profile of tennis star Sania Mirza.

Childhood
Sania Mirza was born to Imran Mirza (a sports journalist) and Nasima Mirza (homemaker), on 15 November 1986. Brought up in a devout Muslim family in Hyderabad, Sania had the passion for tennis at a very early age and started playing the game, when she was six years old. She attended Nasr School in Hyderabad and graduated from St. Mary's College. Trained by her father, Sania was motivated by her family to take the game seriously.

Career
Sania Mirza took up tennis as her profession in 2003. She was a debutante in the India Fed Cup team held in April 2003. Her maiden event fetched her instant recognition, because she won all the three single matches. She went on to win the 2003 Wimbledon Championship Girls' Doubles title, by pairing up with Russia's Alisa Kleybanova. Sania didn't have to turn back thereafter. Soon, she became the highest ranked Indian female tennis player. She managed to acquire the 27th position in singles, while she was ranked 18th in the doubles event.

In 2004, Sania Mirza emerged as the runner-up at the Asian Tennis Championship. She holds the distinction of being the first Indian woman to make it to the Grand Slam tennis tournament. In the early 2005, she set a record by becoming the first Indian woman to enter the fourth round of a Grand Slam event at the 2005 US Open, by tasting victory over Mashona Washington, Maria Elena Camerin and Marion Bartoli. In the same year, Mirza managed to enter the third round of the Australian Open, but eventually lost to champion Serena Williams. The year 2006 proved to be a purple patch for Sania Mirza, as she notched up three top 10 wins of the year.

Sania Mirza won a silver medal in the Women's Singles event and a gold in the Mixed Doubles event (teamed up Leander Paes) at the 2006 Doha Asian Games. During the 2007 summer Hard Court season, Mirza came with best results of her careers. She finished eighth in the 2007 US Open. She was chosen to represent India at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, in the Women's Singles and Doubles events. By winning the Mixed Doubles event at the 2009 Australian Open, with Mahesh Bhupathi, Mirza emerged as the first Indian woman to win a grand slam event. In the present time, Sania Mirza is the toast of the nation as exemplified by the growing brand endorsements and the spawning of a number of Sania fan sites in the net.

Yuvaraj singh profile


Full Name: Yuvraj Singh
Born: December 12, 1981, Chandigarh
Major teams: India, Punjab, Yorkshire
Batting style: Left-hand bat
Bowling style: Slow left-arm orthodox

Achievements:
More than 1000 ODI runs in the 2005-06 season
4000 runs in ODI career with 7 centuries
Yuvraj Singh is an Indian Cricket player and has served the Indian One Day International (ODI) Cricket team as its Vice-Captain since the year 2007 to the year 2008. Yuvraj is famous for having hit 6 sixes in a over bowled by Stuart Broad during a Twenty-20 match against England in the 2007 World Twenty-20 Cricket tournament.

Early Life
He was born on 12th of December 1981 at Chandigarh to Yograj Singh, a former Indian Fast Bowler and Punjabi Movie Star. Yuvraj began playing Cricket at quite an early age, and as the Captain of the Under-19 Cricket team of Punjab in the final match of Cooch-Behar Trophy 1999-2000, scored 358 runs against Bihar Under-19 Cricket team. After this, he was also a part of the Under-19 National Cricket team that participated in Under-19 World Cup Cricket tournament held in Sri Lanka in January 2000. Mohammed Kaif was the Captain of the Indian team, which eventually won the championship.

One Day International (ODI) and Test Debut
Yuvraj Singh made his debut in the One Day International (ODI) Cricket with a match against Kenya played on 3rd of October 2000 at Nairobi. Although he didn’t get a chance to bat in the match, he took no wicket and gave away 16 runs in the match. In his next ODI match against Australia just 4 days after the debutante one, Yuvraj showed his batting prowess by scoring 84 runs off just 80 balls. He began his Test Cricket career with a match against New Zealand played on 16th of October 2003 at Mohali. He scored 25 runs in the match, including 3 Fours and 1 Six.

Remarkable Achievements
Basically Yuvraj is a Left Handed batsman and often he bowls as a Left Arm Orthodox Spinner. He is considered to fare better as a batsman facing Spin Bowlers in comparison to Fast Bowlers. Yuvraj is also said to be one of the efficient fielders the Indian Cricket team has got, and according to a study he was the 4th ranked fielder in the world in terms of having maximum number of effected run-outs in One Day International (ODI) Cricket matches between 1999 and 2005. In the 131 ODI matches he played during the tenure, Yuvraj as a fielder made 21 run-outs possible.

Overall Performance
In his overall Test Cricket career till April 2009, Yuvraj Singh has played 28 Test matches in which he has scored 1387 runs including 3 centuries and 6 half-centuries, with an average of 35.56 runs and a highest score of 169 runs. He has managed to grab 7 wickets giving away 316 runs with an average of 45.14 runs in these matches.

As far as his One Day International (ODI) Cricket career is concerned, he has played 232 ODI matches till April 2009 and has scored 6850 runs including 11 centuries and 40 half-centuries with an average of 37.43 runs and a highest score of 139 runs. In these matches, he took 72 wickets and gave away 2849 runs with an average of 39.56 runs.

Yuvraj Singh is the Captain of the Kings XI Punjab team of the Indian Premier League 2009, and in a match against Kolkata Knight Riders played on 21st of April 2009 at Durban, he scored 38 runs off 28 balls, although he couldn’t get his team the victory in the match, as Kolkata Knight Riders won by 11 runs.

Indian cricket team captian profile


Full Name: Mahendra Singh Dhoni
Born: July 7, 1981, Ranchi, Bihar
Major teams: India, Jharkhand
Batting style: Right-hand bat
Fielding Position: Wicketkeeper

Mahendra Singh Dhoni is one of the best known Indian Cricket players, who was made the Captain of the Indian Cricket team in the year 2007. One of the most flamboyant Indian Cricket stars ever, Dhoni is also fondly known as Mahi by the huge number of his fans particularly comprising of a big percentage of females. And not only his looks and style Dhoni equally proved to be a hard hitting batsman and one of the best Captains the Indian Cricket team has ever seen.

Early Days
Dhoni was born in Ranchi, the state capital of Jharkhand on the 7th of July 1981, and was brought up in the same city. His parents originally hailed from a village in Uttarakhand. In his childhood Dhoni played Badminton and Football, and was sent by his Football coach to play Cricket. He began the journey as the wicketkeeper at the Commando Cricket Club in the year 1995, and was selected for the Under-16 Vinoo Mankad Trophy in the year 1997-98.

The Beginning
Dhoni entered the Bihar Cricket team in the year 1998-99, and was further selected for the India-A Cricket team in the year 2004. Later the same year, he made his debut in the National Cricket team of India.

The Charisma Begins
In his 5th One Day International (ODI) Cricket match against Pakistan, Dhoni scored 148 runs which was the biggest score made by an Indian wicketkeeper till then. He managed to accomplish this score just off 123 balls in the match played at Vishakhapatnam on the 5th of April 2005. Later the same year, he scored 183 not out against Sri Lanka in the Bi-lateral One Day International (ODI) Series, outclassing his own record. This match was played at Jaipur and India had to outsmart a huge 299 runs score set by the Sri Lankans. Dhoni got India this great victory with his wonderful 183 runs within just 145 balls. This score set a yet another record for being the highest score made in the second innings of a One Day International (ODI) Cricket match, and still lies unbeaten by any other batsman. At the end of the Series, Dhoni finished with highest total score of 346 runs and grabbed the coveted Man of the Series award.

He scored good number of runs in a consistent manner for a period of time, and soon grabbed the No. 1 position in the One Day International (ODI) Cricket rankings issued by International Cricket Council (ICC) in the year 2005-06.

volleyball rules



Volleyball is an Olympic team sport in which two teams of 6 players are separated by a net. Each team tries to score points by grounding a ball on the other team's court under organized rules.[1] This article focuses on competitive indoor volleyball; numerous other variations of volleyball have developed, most notably the Olympic spin-off sport beach volleyball.

The complete rules are extensive. But simply, play proceeds as follows: A player on one of the teams begins a rally by serving the ball (tossing or releasing it and then hitting it with a hand or arm), from behind the back boundary line of the court, over the net, and into the receiving team's court. The receiving team must not let the ball be grounded within their court. They may touch the ball as many as three times. Typically, the first two touches to set up for an attack, an attempt to direct the ball back over the net in such a way that the serving team is unable to prevent it from being grounded in their court.

The rally continues, with each team allowed as many as three consecutive touches, until either (1): a team makes a kill, grounding the ball on the opponent's court and winning the rally; or (2): a team commits a fault and loses the rally. The team that wins the rally is awarded a point, and serves the ball to start the next rally. A few of the most common faults include:

causing the ball to touch the ground outside the opponents' court or without first passing over the net;
catching and throwing the ball;
double hit: two consecutive contacts with the ball made by the same player;
four consecutive contacts with the ball made by the same team.
The ball is usually played with the hands or arms, but players can legally strike or push (short contact) the ball with any part of the body.

A number of consistent techniques have evolved in volleyball, including spiking and blocking (because these plays are made above the top of the net the vertical jump is an athletic skill emphasized in the sport) as well as passing, setting, and specialized player positions and offensive and defensive structures.

ALL OLYIMPICS GAMES

For the 776 BC to 393 AD Games see Ancient Olympic Games. For the 1612 revival see Cotswold Games. For the most recent Games in Beijing, see 2008 Summer Olympics. For the upcoming Games in Vancouver, see 2010 Winter Olympics. For other uses, see Olympics (disambiguation).

The Olympic Games are a major international event of summer and winter sports, in which thousands of athletes compete in a wide variety of events. The Games are currently held every two years, with Summer and Winter Olympic Games alternating. Originally, the ancient Olympic Games were held in Olympia, Greece, from the 8th century BC to the 5th century AD. In the late 19th century, Baron Pierre de Coubertin was inspired by Olympic festivals to revive the Games. For this purpose, he founded the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in 1894, and two years later, the modern Olympic Games were established in Athens. The IOC has since become the governing body of the Olympic Movement, whose structure and actions are defined by the Olympic Charter.

The evolution of the Olympic Movement during the 20th century forced the IOC to adapt the Games to the world's changing social circumstances. Some of these adjustments included the creation of the Winter Games for ice and snow sports, the Paralympic Games for athletes with physical disabilities, and the Youth Olympic Games for teenage athletes. The IOC also had to accommodate the Games to the varying economical, political, and technological realities of the 20th century. As a result, the Olympics shifted away from pure amateurism, as envisioned by Coubertin, to allow participation of professional athletes. The growing importance of the mass media created the issue of corporate sponsorship and commercialization of the Games.

The Olympic Movement currently comprises international sports federations (IFs), National Olympic Committees (NOCs), and organizing committees for each specific Olympic Games. As the decision-making body, the IOC is responsible for choosing the host city for each Olympic Games. The host city is responsible for organizing and funding a celebration of the Games consistent with the Olympic Charter. The Olympic program, consisting of the sports to be contested at each Olympic Games, is also determined by the IOC. The celebration of the Games encompasses many rituals and symbols, such as the Olympic flag and torch, as well as the opening and closing ceremonies. There are over 13,000 athletes that compete at the Summer and Winter Olympics in 33 different sports and nearly 400 events. The first, second, and third place finishers in each event receive gold, silver or bronze Olympic medals, respectively.

The Games have grown in scale to the point that nearly every nation is represented. Such growth has created numerous challenges, including boycotts, doping, bribery of officials, and terrorism. Every two years, the Olympics and its media exposure provide unknown athletes with the chance to attain national, and in particular cases, international fame. The Games also constitute a major opportunity for the host city and country to promote and showcase themselves to the world.

kabbadi in olympics

KABADDI IN THE INTERNATIONAL ARENA :
KABADDI-TODAY IN ASIA …. TOMORROW IN OLYMPICS

The Ancient Olympics were fundamentally of religious importance, with the contests alternating between sacrifices and ceremonies honouring both Zeus (whose colossal statue stood at Olympia), and Pelops, divine hero and mythical king of Olympia famous for his legendary chariot race, in whose honor the games were held. Gradually, the number of events increased to twenty, and the celebration was spread over several days. Winners of the events were broadly admired and were immortalized in poems and statues. The Games were held every four years, and the period between two celebrations became known as an Olympiad. The Greeks used Olympiads as one of their methods to count years.

Baron De Coubertin, who is the father of Modern Olympics, searched for a reason for the French defeat in the Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871). He thought the reason was that the French had not received proper physical education, and sought to improve this. Coubertin also throught of a way to bring nations closer together, to have the youth of the world complete in sports, rather than fight in war. In his eyes, the revival of the Olymipic Games would achieve both of these goals. The interest in reviving the Olympics grew when the ruins of ancient Olympia were uncovered by German archaeologists in the mid-19th century.
The five inter-linked Olympic Rings are symbol of the modern Olympics. These five rings represent the unity of the five continents, while the colours (red, blue, green, yellow, black) were chosen since each nation has at least one these colours in its national flag. The rings were introduced at the 1920 Antwerp Games. The rings are also featured on the Olympic Flag, which is hoisted at each celebration of the Games.

The official Olympic Motto is “Citius, Altius, Fortius”, a Latin phrase meaning “Swifter, Higher, Stronger”. Coubertin’s ideals are probably best illustrated by the Olympic Creed :
“The most important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to take part, just as the most important thing in life is not the triumph but the struggle. The essential thing is not to have conquered but to have fought well.”


KABADDI IN THE CONTEXT OF OLYMPIC GAMES
Kabaddi, the popular Asian Game with its roots in India has all the ingredients to make it an Olympic sport. This combative sport befits the motto of the Olympics ‘Altius, Citius & Fortius’ since it involves agility, good muscular co-ordination, presence of mind, dare, quick reflexes, good lung capacity, and an ability to anticipate the opponent’s moves. The unique feature of this sport is that it is a combination of a team game and an individual effort. The attack in Kabaddi is an individual effort while the defense is a team effort. Thus it has both the thrills of an individual as well as a team game for the spectators. Kabaddi is perhaps the only sport that is closely related to “Yoga”, the ancient Indian science that advocates a healthy mind in a healthy body. The attacker or raider in Kabaddi has to withhold his breath while chanting Kabaddi-Kabaddi and invade the opponent’s territory, where he has to try to touch as many opponents or antis as possible while warding off their combined efforts to capture him. With holding breath is akin to “Pranayama” of yoga, a means to control body and mind. Pitching one’s wits against those of seven opponents and remaining unscathed is no mean task ! This calls for tremendous fitness of body and mind. The game is thus most suitable for youngsters. Kabaddi is basically a combative out door sport, which can also be played on synthetic mat surface indoors. This makes Kabaddi an all weather sport.
A large chunk of the worlds population play this game since the game requires no special equipment or kit but has all the appeal which a combative team game such as soccer, enjoys. A look at the population chart of the most populated countries of the world and the Kabaddi playing countries tells its own story of the number of people who revel in this sport. [The Kabaddi playing countries are depicted in red].

Kabaddi playing countries among the most populated countries of the world :

1. China 1,273,111,290

2. India 1,029,991,145

3. United States 278,058,881

4. Indonesia 228,437,870

5. Brazil 174,468,575

6. Russia 145,470,197


7. Pakistan 144,616,639


8. Bangladesh 131,269,860


9. Japan 126,771,662


10. Nigeria 126,635,626

11. Turkey 66,493,970

12. Iran 66,128,965

13. Ethiopia 65,891,874

14. Thailand 61,797,751

15. United Kingdom 59,647,790

16. Vietnam 79,939,014

17. Philippines 82,841,518

18. Egypt 69,536,644

19. Germany 83,029,536

20. Mexico 101,879,171

KABADDI IN THE INTERNATIONAL ARENA:

The 1st Asian Kabaddi Championship was held in the year 1980 at Kolkata [India]. Kabaddi was included as a demonstration game in the IX Asian Games hosted by India in year 1982. In the year 1984, an open Inter-National tournament was organized at Bombay (now renamed Mumbai), in India. During the Tri-Centenary celebrations of the city of Calcutta, an Inter-National Invitation Kabaddi Tournament was organized in the city. Kabaddi was included in South Asian Federation Games at Dhaka, Bangladesh in 1985. In the XI Asian Games held in the year 1990 at Beijing, China, Kabaddi was included as a main discipline. After the XI Asian Games, 1990, Kabaddi has been regularly featuring in the Asian games as a main discipline. The NIKE International Kabaddi Gold cup tournament started especially for women in 1995. The first Asian Championship in Kabaddi was organized in Calcutta, in the year 1980. A good will tour was organized in the year 1981, in which the Indian men & women teams visited Thailand, Japan and Malaysia to play exhibition Kabaddi matches. Kabaddi was included as a demonstration sport in the 1st Afro-Asian Games organized at Hyderabad [India]. The African Countries received the game very enthusiastically. The 1st World Cup was organized at Mumbai [India] by the South Canara Sports Club, in which twelve teams from various countries including U.K., Canada, Germany, and West Indies took part, taking Kabaddi one more step up the international ladder.

To date, the game is very popular in Japan, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, China, Maldives, Bhutan, Sri-Lanka, Pakistan, Nepal, Iran and Bangladesh and is making appreciable progress in the countries of England, France, Korea, Germany, UAE, West Indies and Canada. The game has recently been introduced to USA, Mauritius, Afghanistan, Kazakhstan and Brunei.