Rahul may get another chance to prove himself

January 5, 2015

Sydney, Jan 5: If K L Rahul was looking for an assurance after essaying perhaps three of the worst shots by a debutant Test batsman, he would have found them in the words of the now-retired Test captain MS Dhoni shortly after the drawn Melbourne Test.

Rahul chance

“We are not deciding on him depending on just this one match, we will have to give him more matches and he is definitely someone who looks good,” he said when asked about what he made of Rahul’s debut.

You would have forgiven the right-hander when he first swept Nathan Lyon in the first innings and the resultant top-edge was floored by Peter Siddle.

You may blame it on nervous energy – it was a Boxing Day Test, the venue was the fabled Melbourne Cricket Ground where even empty seats intimidate you more than a full-house stadium in England or New Zealand, he was batting at No 6 instead of his usual opening slot and he had been handed a Test cap ahead of the experienced Suresh Raina.

When he repeated the same shot off the very next ball, this time to only get out, you may have thought he had suffered brain-freeze. If you were frustrated with the manner of his batting, you would have been seething in anger when he miscued a pull off Mitchell Johnson in the second innings. Rahul had been sent ahead of Cheteshwar Pujara at No 3 and he had thrown away a golden opportunity just like that.

It’s of course easy, and even justified to some extent, to get infuriated with his approach to batting but the team management may well give him another go for he is too good a player to be cast aside after just one bad show.

During India’s first practice session after the third Test here at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Sunday, Rahul got another extended run in the ‘nets’ after starting with the first batch. After finishing with his batting stint, the 22-year-old had a long discussion with team director Ravi Shastri whose suggestions obviously carry a lot of weight in the dressing room. Often, what you see during India’s practice sessions is not what you get, but still it was an encouraging sign from the batsman’s point of view.

For those who have seen Rahul play for various age-group sides of Karnataka, his home State, it was bizarre to see him bat the way he did. It didn’t make any sense because it was just not him.

When he raked in over 1000 runs during Karnataka’s victorious Ranji Trophy campaign in the last season he hardly played a stroke in anger; even when he had gone past the three-figure mark on three occasions. He is a level-headed person and has an unflappable temperament. That’s why he has had so much success as an opener. Yes, he does like to keep himself busy but not necessarily by playing extravagant shots. Maybe, as Dhoni pointed out, he just wanted to play the release shot and get going.

“We shouldn’t really judge him on just one performance,” Dhoni had stressed. “He is someone who really looks very compact and good. And this is the era of cricketers where they want to play the shots to get out of pressure situations. It can be taken as a positive and also he is someone who loves playing his strokes, so overall I was quite happy with his approach. It didn’t pay him in this game but he is definitely someone for us to look ahead in the future,” he had reasoned.

Fair point. If those shots had come off well, people would have been appreciating his positive attitude for a debutant but the problem is when they don’t you look awful and you really have no excuse to offer. Rahul should back his ability and play his natural game which is to play the ball on its merit and not fall for the bait.

In the first innings, Steven Smith had brought the field up and asked Lyon to toss up the ball to lure the batsman into clearing the field and in the second innings Johnson perhaps played on his ego and did him in with a bouncer. Hopefully he would have learnt his lessons and bat more with some responsibility, if he gets another opportunity to play.

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News Network
April 27,2020

Lahore, Apr 27: Pakistan batsman Umar Akmal has been banned from all forms of cricket for three years for failing to report spot-fixing offers, the Pakistan Cricket Board announced Monday.

Umar, who turns 30 next month, pleaded guilty to not reporting the fixing offers which led to his provisional suspension on February 20 this year.

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Agencies
January 26,2020

Mumbai, Jan 26: Boxing great Mary Kom has been selected for the Padma Vibhushan, the country's second highest civilian award. Olympic silver medallist and reigning badminton World Champion PV Sindhu has been named for Padma Bhushan as the names of Padma awardees were disclosed on Saturday on the eve of the 71st Republic Day.

Rated as one of the most successful amateur boxers of all time, Mary Kom won bronze at the 2012 London Olympics and has won gold at the boxing World Championships for a record six times. She has won a total of eight medals at the World Championships, the most recent of which came in October 2019 in Ulan Ude, Russia. The 36-year-old is now looking to qualify for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

Sindhu became the only Indian woman to win an Olympic silver when she reached the final of the women's singles event at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazi. In August last year, the 24-year-old became the first Indian to win gold at the badminton World Championships.

She has also won two silver and two bronze medals at the World's in the past, thus making her only the second woman after Chinese two-time Olympic gold medallist Zhang Ning to win five medals in the competition.

Indian women's hockey captain Rani Rampal, who has been the face of women's hockey in the country and played a pivotal role in the team qualifying for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, is among those who have been nominated for the Padma Shri award.

Women's football stalwart Oinam Bembem Devi, former cricketer Zaheer Khan, shooter Jitu Rai, former hockey captain and coach M.P. Ganesh and archer Tarundeep Rai are the other sportspersons to be selected for the Padma Shri award.

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News Network
March 10,2020

New Delhi, Mar 10: Six-time world champion M C Mary Kom (51kg) and world number one Amit Panghal (52kg) were among three Indian boxers who secured Olympic berths by advancing to semifinals of the Asian Qualifiers here on Monday, taking the total number of the country's Tokyo-bound pugilists to eight.

Second-seeded Mary Kom notched up a comfortable 5-0 win over Philippines' Irish Magno in her quarterfinal bout for a ticket to her second Olympic Games. She won a bronze in the 2012 London Olympics when women's boxing was first introduced at the showpiece.

The 37-year-old will square off against China's Yuan Chang in the semifinals. Chang is a former Youth Olympics champion.

Earlier, world silver-medallist and top seed Panghal edged out familiar foe Carlo Paalam of Philippines in a 4-1 split verdict to be assured of his maiden Olympic appearance and a medal at the qualifiers.

In the last Indian bout of the day, world bronze-medallist Simranjit Kaur (60kg) upstaged second seed Namuun Monkhor of Mongolia 5-0 to secure her first Olympic place.

With this, the number of Indian boxers securing Olympic berths went up to eight after Satish Kumar (+91kg), Pooja Rani (75kg), Vikas Krishan (69kg), Lovlina Borgohain (69kg) and Ashish Kumar (75kg) advanced to the semifinals on Sunday.

"I dedicate my Olympic quota to my uncle Raj Narayan, it's his birthday and he is someone who gives me a lot of courage," said Panghal after his bout.

World bronze-winner and Commonwealth Games silver-medallist Manish Kaushik, however, lost 2-3 to third seed Chinzorig Baatarsukh of Mongolia after an intense battle but is not out of contention for an Olympic berth just yet.

Kaushik has to win the box-off between losing quarterfinalists as the top six boxers will claim Tokyo tickets in the 63kg category. He will face Australia's Commonwealth Games champion Harrison Garside in the box-off. The two clashed in the CWG final in 2018 with Garside ending up on the winning side.

Panghal started India's winning run on Monday by managing to pull off a close win.

The 23-year-old, who is the reigning Asian Games and Asian Championships gold-medallist, had earlier beaten Paalam in the semifinals of the 2018 Asian Games and the quarterfinals of 2019 world championships, which were also split decisions.

"I followed the instructions given by my coaches. I ensured that he didn't get on top of me. I think I was pretty consistent in all three rounds," Panghal said.

Next up for Panghal is China's Jianguan Hu, who stunned world bronze-medallist and fourth seed Kazakh Saken Bibossinov 5-0.

"I have beaten him in the Asian Championships and I know how to get the better of him," Panghal said of his next opponent.

The Haryana lad didn't exactly look at his best during the bout but his trademark counter-attacking game fetched him the desired result against a rival, who is challenging him more with every fresh encounter.

Mary Kom, on the other hand, put out a near-perfect performance against the very spirited Magno. The Manipuri dictated the pace of the bout, drawing from her huge reservoir of experience to put Magno on the backfoot with a very effective counter-attacking strategy.

Simranjjit, also an Asian silver-medallist, will face third seed Shih-Yi Wu of Taiwan in the semifinals after a fine performance against Monkhor. Simranjit's right hand connected accurately all through.

Kaushik, who was up against an Asian Games silver-medallist, started well but lost steam in the face of relentless body shots by Baatarsukh, a two-time podium finisher at the Asian Championships.

Baatarsukh had lost to Kaushik in the second round of the world championships last year and he exacted revenge with an aggressive takedown of the Indian, especially in the final three minutes.

However, former junior world champion Sakshi Chaudhary (57kg) failed to secure an Olympic berth after going down to Korea's Im Aeji in the quarterfinals.

The 19-year-old Chaudhary lost 0-5 to Im, who is also a former world youth champion. Only the semifinalists are entitled to an Olympic berth in the women's 57kg category of the ongoing event.

Her next shot at Tokyo qualification would be the world qualifiers in May, provided she is selected for it.

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