IPL-7 returns to Indian summer

May 2, 2014

IPL-7__in_indiaMumbai, May 2: As cricket's mega event comes back to country, teams would be hoping for change in fortunes in familiar surroundings

How Kings XI Punjab would have loved to have the entire IPL-7 in the UAE. They have won all their five matches there and are on top of the table. On the other hand, Mumbai Indians would have been so desperate to return to Indian shores. Yet to taste a win after five matches, a lot of questions are being asked about the Rohit Sharma's team management that comprises some of the most successful cricketers that have ever played the game.

Difficult to imagine how a support staff that includes Sachin Tendulkar, Anil Kumble, Ricky Ponting, John Wright, Jonty Rhodes and Robin Singh could not produce a single win.

On the contrary, Kings XI Punjab, without any high-profile names in their coaching staff, have believed in their abilities and given the freedom to their players to express themselves in the middle. Glenn Maxwell and George Bailey have been their success stories so far.

Though still a long way to go, one would imagine this to be KXIP's bright chance to crown themselves as IPL kings, come June 1 by carrying on the momentum in familiar surroundings of India. But it is still early days.

Teams like Mumbai Indians will only hope that luck changes for the better once they are in India. It is just a coincidence that the No. 1 team in the table with all five wins, KXIP, take on the last-placed MI in their first match in India at the hallowed Wankhede on Saturday.

It is an opportunity for Mumbai Indians to win back the faith of their supporters. Perhaps, the big-hitting Trinidadian Kieron Pollard found his timing right and nearly took Mumbai home with that hurricane knock on Wednesday night in Dubai. With a lot of questions being asked about Mumbai Indians' decision to retain players before, and their selection during, this year's auctions, Pollard needs to produce such knocks on a regular basis.

Conditions in India will not differ much compared to what were on offer in the UAE. As TA Sekar, director of GMR Sports, owners of Delhi Daredevils, said, "There won't be much difference in the conditions. In India, you can prepare pitches to your taste and the home side tends to have the advantage."

But as have been seen in the earlier editions, there will be runs galore, and targets in excess of 200 will be chased down with ease.

It is, perhaps, here that somebody like Kolkata Knight Riders captain Gautam Gambhir will be happy to get back his confidence. His team's batting coach WV Raman said, "There is no hard and fast rule that Gambhir returning to form cannot happen in UAE or that it has to happen in India. It is just a case of one good innings."

And, that one good innings did come in KKR's last game when he made 45 against Rajasthan Royals before departing for India after his first four outings showed 0, 0, 0, 1.

KXIP's head coach Sanjay Bangar said that the conditions are the same to all. He said: "Conditions in UAE are pretty similar to India. I think some pitches in India will help the bowlers a bit. It is equal for all the teams. It is just that every team has to cope up with the pitches in their own way."

Chennai Super Kings will play their home match at Ranchi's Jharkhand State Cricket Association's, the home of their captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni, against KKR in the first match of the India leg on Friday.

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March 7,2020

Melbourne, Mar 7: He will be supporting Australia for sure but former pacer Brett Lee feels an Indian victory in Sunday's T20 Word Cup final could be a "start of a major breakthrough" for the women's game in the cricket-mad country.

India and Australia will lock horns in what is expected to be a blockbuster title clash at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

"As an Australian, I'd love nothing more than for (Meg) Lanning's team to do the job. But if India were to win the World Cup for the first time, victory would do so much for women's cricket in a country that already adores the sport," Lee wrote in an ICC column.

"This could be the start of a major breakthrough, particularly with the amount of talent that is coming through."

The former speedster said Australia will have to look for ways to counter the in-form 16-year-old Shafali Verma.

"In Shafali Verma, India boast one of the most talented players in the world and you feel that for Australia to win the game, dismissing her will likely be their first job.

"I've been so impressed with the opener - it's staggering to believe she's only 16 with the confidence she has in her own ability and the way she strikes the ball so cleanly.

"She's such good fun to watch and I'm not sure the women's game has seen anyone like her for such a long time."

Shafali has been the star of the tournament, having amassed 161 runs at a strike rate of 161, consistently providing India solid starts, and that was not lost on Lee.

"To be the world's best T20 batter already shows just how far she has progressed in such a short space of time and the experience in this tournament will hold her in good stead for years to come.

"Even with the way she's played in Australia and her fearless brand of cricket, you still get the feeling she has more to come as well."

He reckoned Shafali may have another big score awaiting her.

"She's got a big score in her locker and there's probably no better place to do that than the MCG. Shafali is already a record breaker but if she can steer her side to their first Women's T20 World Cup title at just 16, then the sky really is the limit for her career."

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News Network
July 25,2020

New Delhi, Jul 25: Former India spinner Anil Kumble said that he has never understood why people compared him with Australia's Shane Warne.

Kumble was doing an Instagram live session with former Zimbabwe pacer Pommie Mbangwa and it was then that the spinner also talked about being the third-highest wicket-taker in Test cricket.

"It feels really wonderful to finish with these many wickets. I never bothered about statistics or what my average should be, I wanted to bowl the whole day and be the one to take wickets. To finish as the third-highest wicket-taker in Tests alongside Murali and Warne is very special. All three of us played in the same era, there were a lot of comparisons, I do not know why people compared me with Warne. Warne was someone really different and he was on a different plane," Kumble told Mbangwa during the interaction.
"These two guys could spin the ball on any surface so it became really difficult for me when they started comparing me with Warne and Murali. I learnt a lot by watching them both bowl," he added.

The Indian spinner announced his retirement from international cricket in 2008. He finished with 619 wickets in the longest format of the game.

He has the third-highest number of wickets in Tests, only behind Sri Lanka's Muttiah Muralitharan (800) and Australia's Shane Warne (708).

Kumble is the second bowler in the history of international cricket after England's Jim Laker to take all ten wickets in an innings of a Test match.

He had achieved the feat against Pakistan in 1999 at the Feroz Shah Kotla Stadium in Delhi. Kumble had bowling figures of 10-74 from 26.3 overs in the second innings of the Test match.
Kumble will be coaching Kings XI Punjab in the Indian Premier League (IPL). 

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March 27,2020

New Delhi, Mar 27: Batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar on Friday donated Rs 50 lakh to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, which has so far claimed 17 Indian lives and wreaked havoc globally.

Tendulkar's donation is so far the biggest contribution among India's leading sportspersons, some of whom have pledged their salaries while a few others have donated medical equipment to fight the dreaded outbreak, which has caused more than 24,000 deaths globally.

"Sachin Tendulkar decided to contribute Rs 25 lakh each to Prime Minister's Relief Fund and Chief Minister's Relief Fund in his bid to join the fight against COVID-19. It was his decision that he wanted to contribute to both funds," a source privy to the development, told PTI on conditions of anonymity.

Tendulkar has been associated with a lot of charity work and there has been umpteen times, he has taken up social causes, helped people, which has never been brought to public notice.

Among other prominent cricketers, the Pathan brothers -- Irfan and Yusuf -- donated 4000 face masks to Baroda police and health department while Mahendra Singh Dhoni, through a Pune based NGO, made a contribution of Rs 1 lakh.

Among athletes from other disciplines, wrestler Bajrang Punia and sprinter Hima Das are some of the prominent names to have donated their salaries in the battle against the dreaded virus which has led to a 21-day national lockdown.

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