Friday, November 6, 2009
NZ win toss, elect to bat in 2nd ODI vs Pakistan
ABU DHABI: Pakistan brought back middle-order batsman Shoaib Malik after New Zealand won the toss and opted to bat in the second day-night international at Abu Dhabi Stadium here on Friday.
Malik was rested in the first match on Tuesday which Pakistan won by 138 runs to take a 1-0 lead in the three-match series. Allrounder Malik replaced young batsman Umer Akmal.
Paceman Kyle Mills returned for New Zealand after missing the first match due to a sore shoulder as one of two changes in the side. Also included was Neil Broom with Ian Butler and Nathan McCullum dropped.
The third match will be played here on Monday.
Squads:
Pakistan: Younus Khan (captain), Salman Butt, Khalid Latif, Mohammad Yousuf, Shoaib Malik, Kamran Akmal, Abdul Razzaq, Shahid Afridi, Saeed Ajmal, Umar Gul, Mohammad Aamir.
New Zealand: Daniel Vettori (captain), Brendon McCullum, Aaron Redmond, Martin Guptill, Ross Taylor, Scott Styris, Jacob Oram, Neil Broom, Tim Southee, Shane Bond, Kyle Mills
Umpires: Bruce Oxenford (AUS), Zameer Haider (PAK), Tv Umpire: Asad Rauf (PAK)
Match Referee: Andy Pycroft (ZIM).
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
David Shepherd Has Dead
He stood in 92 Test matches, the last of them in June 2005, and officiated in three World Cup finals.
Shepherd had the hearty frame and smiling, ruddy face of a West Country landlord. But once he donned the umpire's white coat, he became a formidable adjudicator, as a generation of batsman will testify. He had a sharp eye and an exceptional rapport with the players – virtues that the International Cricket Council recognised when they appointed him for three successive World Cup finals.
Overall, Shepherd stood in 92 Test matches and 172 one-day internationals, figures that only the Jamaican Steve Bucknor and the South African Rudi Koertzen have bettered. But he retained a sense of modesty about his own achievements – and indeed about the role of umpires as a whole. "The game isn't about us," he used to say. "It's about the players."
David Robert Shepherd was born on December 27 1940 at Instow, a village in Devon where his parents ran the post office. The business was eventually passed down to David's older brother in the early 1960s, and until recently Shepherd liked to help out, delivering newspapers whenever he had a break in his hectic sporting itinerary. His wife Jenny observed that "some of our neighbours thought it was funny to see him on the telly one day and then on their doorstep at 6.30am the next".
After attending grammar school in Barnstaple and St Luke's College in Exeter, Shepherd set out on a career as a teacher – an experience that was to inform his expert handling of professional cricketers later in life. He made a belated entry to the first-class game at the age of 25, when his maiden appearance for Gloucestershire produced a rumbustious century against Oxford University.
Most of Shepherd's innings were uncomplicated affairs. According to Dickie Bird, later his umpiring partner in many a Test: "David hit the ball hard, and he often hit it for six. But he wasn't the most mobile. Even early in his career, he always carried a lot of weight."
Physical jerks and gym sessions never came naturally to a man who had a particular enjoyment of the tea-break. On one pre-season training run at Gloucestershire, Bird recalled: "David set off at a reasonable pace, but he was soon puffing, and he ended up hitching a lift on a milk float."
On another occasion, his county booked him into a health farm in Bristol. According to Shepherd's friend and team-mate Jack Davey: "David was supposed to be following a strict regime of carrot juice and enemas. But he had a large sash window in his room, and after dark he would pop down to the local pub and have a meal with the landlord. At the end of a week's stay, he had lost precisely one ounce."
By the time Shepherd retired from the game in 1979, he had scored 12 centuries and 55 half-centuries in his 476 innings during 282 matches. In all, his meaty right-hand bat had clocked up 10,672 runs. He had taken two first-class wickets with his medium pace.
But he was by no means ready to leave the game. A friend suggested that he should try his hand at umpiring, as it offered "the best seat in the house". Within a couple of seasons he had been promoted to one-day international level, making his debut during the 1983 World Cup.
He was soon attracting comment with his trademark hops and skips whenever the score reached "Nelson". The number 111 – which has become associated with Admiral Nelson because he had one eye and one arm – is considered to be unlucky among club cricketers, and Shepherd was incorrigibly superstitious throughout his life. "Friday the 13th is a terrible day," he once said. "I always tie a matchstick to my finger so I am touching wood all day."
It is hard to think of a more popular official than Shepherd. In the words of his friend and colleague, Barrie Leadbeater: "He had such a lovely nature, and his mannerisms – like the hop and the skip – were all completely natural. He had been doing that since he was a boy. He didn't have to put on a persona, as with some other umpires."
In his good matches, Shepherd was largely unnoticeable. But there was one occasion when he attracted the wrong kind of attention. In a Test between England and Pakistan at Old Trafford in 2001, the home side lost three wickets to balls that Shepherd should have ruled inadmissible because the bowlers had overstepped. He was crushed by the media storm that followed, and went so far as to offer his resignation before being talked around by his friends and fellow umpires.
His next appointment was at Northampton, where the Australian tourists made a point of consoling and reassuring him. Shepherd later admitted that he had been worried about that Old Trafford Test from the moment when he discovered that Eddie Nicholls, his fellow umpire, had been billeted in Room 111.
In 2005 Shepherd was offered the opportunity to end his career with an Ashes Test at Lord's – a gesture that would have needed the approval of the ICC board, as only neutral umpires have stood in Tests since 2002. Characteristically, he refused, saying that the whole thing would have created too much fuss.
David Shepherd, who died on October 27, is survived by his wife. Source of news..
India vs Australia, 2nd ODI,
The 2nd ODI of the 2009 Hero Honda Cup 2009 between India and Australia will begin in Nagpur on Wednesday, 28th October 2009.
It will be a day/night match starting at 2.30 pm India time and 0900 GMT.
Australia won the 1st ODI at Vadodara by a very small margin and is looking to take a 2-0 lead.
However the Aussies have been hit badly by injuries to their pace spearheads, Bret Lee and James Hopes. Both are out of this match with injuries.
Australia has now won 5 ODIs in a row. India will look to win this match and equalize the series. To their benefit Yuvraaj Singh is available for this match.
Pitch and conditions - This is the the 1st ODI at the the Nagpur and it is expected to be flat and excellent for batting. However, dew in the evenings could make captains check before batting first,
Live Scores - Ball By Ball Live Commentary
Below are the Options to watch live Cricket Streaming
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Steve Phillips
Phillips said that the Yanks shouldn’t start C.C. Sabathia on three days rest and should instead start Chad Gaudin. Oh really, Steve. It’s the ALCS and you think it’s smart to start a guy like Gaudin who has a career 4.50 ERA over the guy you paid $161 million to bring in? I know Gaudin has an awesome fire crotch Shitzhu-like beard, but Sabathia is a workhorse so let him carry you like an elite pitcher should.
So what did Sabathia end up doing? Shoved eight innings of one-run ball right up Phillips’ ass. You can check this out to get a better idea of how we feel about Mr. Steve Phillips.
Source of this news...
Sunday, September 13, 2009
Ken Block
Editor's Note: Indeed, this has been a video-heavy day, so maybe this will be the last video of the day. Maybe.
What would you do if Ken Block showed up at a DiRT 2 launch event and offered to take you for a ride in his WRX STI rally car? You'd say yes.
But would you scream? These fans sure did. Gives new meaning to the phrase "scream like a girl," doesn't it?
This video is an interesting contrast the other Block video that came out today -- his practice session with Chris Atkinson in a rear-drive '78 Ford Escort Mk2.
UNLV Football
It’s unrealistic to expect the likes of local high school football standouts Xavier Grimble, Alex Turner and others to reject scholarship offers from top college programs to stay home and play at UNLV.
Getting the rare opportunity to compete at an elite level — Grimble is committed to Southern California and Turner to Stanford — is something so special you’d be foolish to pass on.
But playing for UNLV is still an attractive option.
That is the message Rebels coach Mike Sanford and local recruiting coordinator Kris Cinkovich have preached since Sanford became coach in December 2004.
It’s a message that is finally starting to stick.
Sanford’s roster for the season opener on Sept. 5 against Sacramento State included 13 who went to Southern Nevada high schools. Another half-dozen locals, athletes who graduated last spring, are preferred walk-ons and red-shirting this year.
Sanford does a tremendous job of identifying locals he believes can develop into a productive player. Most of these athletes don’t have the measurables, publicity or perceived talent to be recruited by major conferences.
While the top-tier recruit will probably always pass on UNLV, it is the athlete who flies under the radar that the Rebels should continue targeting.
That was the case during the Sacramento State game. The staff invited a handful of local players — the athletes sat in the same section and wore name tags identifying them as recruits — to watch the Rebels 38-3 victory.
Palo Verde linebacker Daniel Godkin and safety Tyrone Blake and Cimarron-Memorial running back Stephen Nixon were part of the group. Godkin and Nixon have each been offered a scholarship — by UNLV and other comparable schools.
So, why pick UNLV?
The chance to do something special at your hometown university, and do it in front of family and friends, is a major selling point.
Sure, a recruit could find success at Navy or UNR, two of the schools competing with UNLV for Godkin’s services. But being a contributor in UNLV’s turnaround could turn a local high school legend into one of the city’s all-time notable players.
Also, being a quick drive from a home-cooked meal at your parents’ house or a good night sleep in a familiar bed is appealing.
There are also several reasons to pass on UNLV.
Part of the college experience is leaving home and finding your niche in a different city. College is a time to make new friends and experience new things.
Moving into a dorm room at UNLV, a common practice for all locals on scholarship, doesn’t exactly scream a new experience.
You also have to consider UNLV lacks football tradition, its stadium is located off campus and the program often takes a back seat to the Rebels’ basketball team.
Ultimately, each recruit will make his decision on personal preference — some want to leave the nest and experience new things, while others cherish the opportunity to shine locally.
Just don’t blame UNLV’s coaches for not recruiting the area. They have done a good job of selling the program and proving staying at home to get the college football experience is a viable option. Source of news