Davis Cup: Korea trample India on day one

February 2, 2013

Ranjeet_Virali_MurugesanNew Delhi, Feb 2: Hope quickly gave way to uncertainty, and uncertainty to reality. India’s Davis Cup campaign, in the absence of its top players, got off to a miserable start with the home side trailing 0-2 against South Korea at the end of the opening day of Asia-Oceania Group ‘I’ tie at the RK Khanna Stadium here on Friday.

Ranjeet Virali Murugesan, the No.1 player for India in the tie, produced a below par performance during his 1-6, 0-6, 1-6 surrender to Min-Hyeok Cho before a cramping Vijayant Malik conceded the match when trailing 4-6, 5-7, 0-3 against Suk-Young Jeong.

Rankings matter little in Davis Cup and one hoped the two debutants would get the adrenaline rushing and raise their game. It had happened in the past but not today.

The drums, the noisy chants and even the fluttering national flags waved by Leander Paes and company at the sidelines could not inspire a change of fortunes. Not even Sania Mirza’ pressence in the stands. Firepower was missing and nerves got prominence.

Ranjeet, after leading 40-15 in the first game, slipped to drop his serve and could never revive his game. He was tight in his movements, struggled to put the ball in play and made a rash of errors. Cho easily wore him down in a few odd rallies with fluent hitting and whenever Ranjeet clambered to the net, he was treated to some rasping passing shots.

Bad struggle

In fact, Cho only grew better with each point, partly due to his Indian counterpart, whose game simply fell apart. So badly did Ranjeet struggle that he could hold his serve only once during the match.

The solitary blemish in the unranked Korean’s game was when he dropped his serve in the fourth game of the first set. But he swiftly recovered to reel off 12 games before Ranjeet held in the fourth game of the final set. It served momentary reprieve. Cho didn’t give away anything afterwards and closed the set and match with a forehand crosscourt winner, dropping only two points on the way.

It put curtains on a painful viewing and shifted focus on 22-year-old Vijayant, who now had the responsibility to put the home team on even keel.

He indeed showed promise with his power-packed strokes. The boy from Panipat fought for each point and stretched Jeong several times in the match. He served with purpose, fearlessly engaged in rallies but his forehand proved to be his undoing. He dropped his serve in the fifth game of the match following two forehand errors and Jeong, quick on feet and solid on serve, sprinted to take the lead.

Egged on, Vijayant carried his attacking game to the second set. A scorching backhand down the line gave him three breakpoints but he couldn’t convert any. Not even the fourth opportunity that came after the two deuces in the game before throwing it all away with a poor backhand.

He dropped his serve in the 11th game to lag 5-7 and immediately asked for a medical timeout. On return, the Korean comfortably served out the set and the match.

Vijayant got broken straightaway in the third set and in the third game fell to the ground grimacing after hitting a backhand return. His exit wrapped up a forgettable day for India, who would look up to their doubles exponent Paes and another debutant Purav Raja to get them their first point in the tie and another day to fight.

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News Network
June 24,2020

New Delhi, Jun 24: Star Bangladesh all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan deeply regrets his "silly mistake" of not reporting a corrupt approach by an Indian bookie to the ICC, leading to his one year suspension from the game.

Shakib was banned for two years, one year of it suspended, for failing to report corrupt approaches during an IPL edition by an alleged Indian bookie named Deepak Aggarwal.

"I took the approaches too casually When I met the anti-corruption guy and told them and they knew everything. Gave them all the evidence and they knew everything that happened," Shakib told Harsha Bhogle on 'Cricbuzz in Conversation'.

"To be honest, that's the only reason I was banned for a year, otherwise I'd have been banned for five or 10 years," he added on the ICC's investigation.

The 33-year-old, who was in brilliant form before the ban, amassing 606 runs in the 2019 World Cup in the UK, said he regrets how he went about the situation.

"But I think that was a silly mistake I made. Because with my experience and the amount of international matches I've played and the amount of ICC's anti-corruption code of conduct classes I took, I shouldn't have made that decision, to be honest."

Lesson learnt, Shakib's advice to all young criceters is to never take any such message lightly.

"I regret that. No one should take such messages or calls (from bookies) lightly or leave it away. We must inform the ICC ACSU guy to be on the safe side and that's the lesson I learnt, and I think I learnt a big lesson," he added.

The all-rounder, whose ban ends on October 29, said he became a bit arrogant and never felt he was doing anything wrong by not reporting the bookie's approach immediately.

"Because you do most things right in your life, you tend to get arrogant with some decisions. You may not realise but you're doing wrong by the books. It never came to my mind that I am doing something wrong

"It was just a feeling of 'okay, what's going to happen, leave it' and I continued with my life. But that's the mistake I made. And that happens," Shakib said.

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News Network
April 2,2020

New Delhi, Apr 2: It was on April 2, 2011, when the Men in Blue went on to win their second 50-over World Cup title.

India won its first World Cup in 1983 and then had to wait for 28 years to again lift the title.
Going into the 2011 tournament, India went in as the clear favourites as the competition was to be played in the sub-continent.

Under MS Dhoni's leadership, India lost just one match in the competition against South Africa.
India had defeated arch-rivals Pakistan in the semi-final to set up a summit clash with Sri Lanka.

In the finals, Sri Lanka won the toss and opted to bat first. Mahela Jayawardene top-scored for Sri Lanka as he struck a century to take the team's score to 274/6.

India in their chase got off to a bad start as the side lost Sachin Tendulkar and Virender Sehwag with just 31 runs on the board.

But Gautam Gambhir and MS Dhoni stepped up and stitched a match-winning 109-run partnership.

Gambhir perished after playing a knock of 97 runs, but in the end, Dhoni and Yuvraj took the team over the line by six wickets.

The winning six struck by Dhoni is still viewed as one of the most exciting moments in India's sporting history. 

As the winning six was hit, Ravi Shastri was doing commentary then, and he famously remarked, "Dhoni, finishes it off in style, India lifts the World Cup after 28 years".
As soon as the match-winning shot was hit, Tendulkar erupted with joy and had tears to see his dream finally being fulfilled.

Earlier this year, former Indian batsman Sachin Tendulkar's famous lap around the Wankhede Stadium after the 2011 World Cup win, titled 'Carried On the Shoulders Of A Nation', was voted the greatest Laureus Sporting Moment of the last twenty years.

The lap after the World Cup is still edged into everyone's hearts.

Playing in his last mega 50-over tournament, it was the last chance for Tendulkar to lift the coveted trophy.

Before the 2011 World Cup, Tendulkar had played five tournaments (1992,1996,1999,2003 and 2007), and he fell short every time.

The closest he came to winning the trophy was in 2003 as India made the finals under the leadership of Sourav Ganguly.

But the Men in Blue fell short in the finals against Australia.

Then in 2007, the biggest setback was in store for the legend has India bowed out of the tournament in the group stages.

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Agencies
January 16,2020

New Delhi, Jan 16: Veteran cricketer Mithali Raj was on Thursday demoted to Grade B from A in the BCCI central contracts while Radha Yadav and Taniya Bhatia were elevated to the middle bracket.

Mithali not being kept in the Rs 50 lakh category was expected as the 37-year-old retired from T20s in September last year. However, she remains the ODI captain and plans to carry on till the 2021 World Cup.

T20 skipper Harmanpreet Kaur retained his A category contract alongside Smriti Mandhana and Poonam Yadav.

Radha and Taniya, who both had a Grade C contract worth Rs 10 lakh last year, have now entered Grade B (Rs 30 lakh).

Players getting a central contract for the first time are 15-year-old opener Shafali Verma and Harleen Deol, who like the teenager is an attacking batter.

Shafali has attracted a lot of attention ever since making her India debut last year. She recently made 124 against Australia A in Brisbane. The opener will be expected to deliver in the upcoming T20 World Cup Down Under.

Dropped from the list is Mona Meshram, who was in Grade C last year and hasn't played a single game in recent times.

The latest contracts run from October 2019 to September 2020.

Grade A (Rs 50 lakh): Harmanpreet Kaur, Smriti Mandhana, Poonam Yadav.

Grade B (Rs 30 lakh): Mithali Raj, Jhulan Goswami, Ekta Bisht, Radha Yadav, Taniya Bhatia, Shikha Pandey, Jemimah Rodrigues, Deepti Sharma.

Grade C (Rs 10 lakh): Veda Krishnamurthy, Punam Raut, Anuja Patil, Mansi Joshi, D Hemlatha, Arundhati Reddy, Rajeshwari Gayakwad, Pooja Vastrakar, Harleen Deol, Priya Punia, Shafali Verma.

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