Follow Us

Tuesday 4 November 2014

Pakistan Winning Numbers Game

Incredible stats from day four in Abu Dhabi

Statistical highlights from day four of the second Test between Australia and Pakistan at Abu Dhabi
603 – The target set by Pakistan is the third highest in Tests against Australia.
Only twice before were they asked to chase a total in excess of 600 – by England in Brisbane in 1928 and South Africa in Perth in 2012.
Australia’s defeat against England in 1928 still remains the largest ever defeat in terms of runs.
Stats table day four
56 – Number of balls Misbah-ul-Haq needed to complete his 100, making it the joint-fastest century in history of Test cricket.
His innings equaled the mark set by West Indian legend Viv Richards, also scored 100 in the same number of balls against England at Antigua in 1986.
The next fastest century was from 57 balls by Adam Gilchrist against England at the WACA in 2006.
Interestingly, the record of slowest century also belongs to Pakistan – Mudassir Nazar (off 419 balls against England at Lahore in 1977).
Misbah’s hundred was also second fastest in respect to minutes taken, with the Pakistan captain reaching three figures in 74 minutes – that’s 1.3 runs in every minute - and just four minutes short of the world record set by Australia’s Jack Gregory (70) in 1921 against South Africa.
Stats table day four
21 – Number of balls in which Misbah-ul-Haq scored his fifty.
Misbah’s half-century was the quickest in the history of red-ball cricket, breaking Jacques Kallis’ record of 24-ball 50 against Zimbabwe at Cape Town in 2005.
The previous Pakistan record was by Shahid Afridi who whacked fifty off 26 balls against India at Bangalore in 2005.
5 – Number of sixes hit by Misbah-ul-Haq – the most by any Pakistan batsman in a Test innings against Australia.
Two batsmen had previously hit four sixes – Ahmad Shahzad at Dubai in 2014 and Mohammad Yousuf at the MCG in 2004.
101 – Misbah-ul-Haq’s score in both the innings.
His dual centuries marked just the second time in the history of Test cricket that a batsman has reached three figures in each innings with identical scores. The only other batsman to do so was Sri Lanka’s Duleep Mendis (105 & 105) against India at Chennai in 1982.
Stats table day four
9 – Number of Pakistan batsmen who have scored a century in each innings of a Test – three of them (Younis Khan in Dubai; Misbah-ul-Haq and Azhar Ali in Abu Dhabi) achieved the feat in this series.
Misbah is also the only second Pakistan captain after (Inzamam-ul-Haq against England at Faisalabad in 2005) to hit twin centuries.
40 – Misbah-ul-Haq (40 years and 158 days) also became the first ever batsman aged over 40 to score twin centuries.
The previous oldest batsman to accumulate 100 in each innings of a Test was Don Bradman (39 years and 127 days) against India at Melbourne in 1948.
2 – Azhar Ali and Misbah-ul-Haq marked the second instance of two batsmen from the same team hitting centuries in each innings of the same Test.
The only time it happened before was in 1974 when the Chappell brothers (Ian and Greg) each notched twin tons against New Zealand at Wellington in 1974.
36 – Number of times Michael Clarke has been dismissed ‘bowled’ in 107 career Test matches.
The only other Australian batsmen who has been bowled more often than him was Steve Waugh (39) in 168 matches and Allan Border (53) in 156 matches.
12 – Number of players Australia have used at number three since Ricky Ponting’s last innings against South Africa at Cape Town in 2011.
The twelve batsmen who have been used by Australia in some capacity at first drop since then are: Glenn Maxwell, Nathan Lyon, Alex Doolan, James Faulkner, Ed Cowan, Michael Clarke, David Warner, Phillip Hughes, Rob Quiney, Shane Watson, Shaun Marsh and Usman Khawaja.
3 – Number of times Pakistan have declared innings against Australia in this series.
It is first time that Pakistan have declared against the Baggy Green in three consecutive innings.

Friday 3 October 2014

In-form allrounder suffers hamstring injury in CLT20 and is also unlikely to feature in ODI series versus Pakistan

In-form allrounder suffers hamstring injury in CLT20 and is also unlikely to feature in ODI series versus Pakistan 

Mitchell Marsh will miss Australia's Twenty20 international against Pakistan in the VB Tour of the UAE opener on Monday (3am AEDT)and is unlikely to play in the ODI series following after picking up a hamstring injury playing for Perth Scorchers in the Oppo Champions League Twenty20.
Marsh now faces an anxious wait as to discover the full extent of the injury, which is complicated by surgery to the same left hamstring two years ago, with Cricket Australia seeking expert opinion from specialists, including the original surgeon.
Marsh "felt a pinch" in the field while captaining the Scorchers in their final CLT20 group game on Tuesday night and spent eight overs off the field before returning.
He later blasted 63 with the bat, including consecutive sixes to finish the game.

 

"He's not playing the T20 and he's unlikely to be OK for the one-dayers," said Kountouris.
"The timelines are just too tight and we're probably not going to have a crack at it I don't think.
"He's moving around OK and seems OK. We'll wait and see for the Test matches how he progresses. There's certainly enough time for the Test matches.
"It's just a matter of getting his bowling back up, that's going to be the tricky part."
The first Test against Pakistan starts on October 22, with the team scheduled to play a four-day warm-up match in Sharjah starting on October 15.
Kountouris said if Marsh's injury is confined to the scar tissue it would work in the 22-year-old's favour, describing it as "not a bad outcome".
"Trying to decipher what's new, what's old, what's abnormal, what's normal is a bit hard," said Kountouris.
"So we're getting some opinions from back home from the guy who did the surgery, just to double-check with what we're doing.
"The consensus is that he's only torn the scar tissue but we're still looking into it.
"If that's the only thing that's happened it's going to be a sort of mild hamstring strain.
"It might get better really quickly or it might get better very slowly. That's what we don't know because of the unique nature of the injury."
Marsh joined his Australia teammates at the ICC Academy for a training session under lights on Thursday night, but did not take part in any activities.
Kountouris said his recovery was hard to predict but said he would "definitely be ready as a batter before he's ready as a bowler".
Marsh's injury leaves 12 fit players from the original 14-man ODI squad in early September, including Mitchell Johnson who is on track with his recovery from a rib injury and trained with the rest of the squad in Dubai on Thursday night.
Hobart Hurricanes' elimination in their CLT20 semi-final means Cameron Boyce (T20) and Ben Hilfenhaus (Test) are expected to link up with the squad on Friday, while left-arm orthodox spinner Stephen O'Keefe arrived late on Wednesday night.
With the rest of the Test players – Alex Doolan, Peter Siddle and Chris Rogers – set to arrive on Sunday, the team has plenty of cover available.

Saturday 19 April 2014

Moores named England coach

ECB unveil new appointment

Peter Moores has been recalled as England cricket coach five years after being dramatically axed from the job.
The England and Wales Cricket Board announced the appointment at a media conference with Moores, managing director Paul Downton and England captain Alastair Cook at Lord's on Saturday morning London time.
England have been without a head coach since Andy Flower stepped down as team director in January following the 5-0 Ashes thrashing in Australia.
Limited overs coach Ashley Giles, the former England spinner, appeared to be in pole position to replace Flower but his cause was not helped by the team's embarrassing loss to minnows the Netherlands at the recent World Twenty20 in Bangladesh.
Moores, now at Lancashire, Nottinghamshire's Mick Newell and Sussex's Mark Robinson, all of whom have overseen County Championship success, are understood to have been interviewed during the past week as has Australian Trevor Bayliss; the former Sri Lanka coach.
In a two-year spell from 2007 to 2009, former Sussex wicketkeeper Moores led England in seven Test series, starting with a 3-0 win over West Indies, after replacing Duncan Fletcher.
He was forced out in 2009 following a rift with Kevin Pietersen that cost the star batsman the England captaincy, although other players were said to be unhappy with Moores' management style.
Moores won't have to deal with Pietersen this time around after the ECB sensationally terminated the international career of their all-time leading run-scorer following the Ashes debacle -- a decision they've still to fully explain.
Shortly after his England exit, Moores joined Lancashire in February 2009, having previously guided Sussex to the County Championship title in 2003.
Lancashire had not won the championship outright since 1934 but their long wait ended in 2011.
They were though relegated the following season but returned to the First Division in 2013.
England's next match, a one-day international against Scotland in Aberdeen on May 9, is less than a month away.

Monday 14 April 2014

William and Kate visit host city ahead of World Cup

William and Kate visit host city ahead of World Cup

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge showed off their cricket skills today as the royal pair attended an ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 event in Christchurch.

With his wife on strike, Prince William rolled the arm over, offering up a couple of friendly full-tosses to help get the Princess off the mark. When tasked with a young kiwi batsman, the Duke found his line and length, forcing a sturdy forward defence from the junior.

Kate Middleton

Word of Australia’s intimidatory bowling during the Ashes must have drifted across the Tasman, as the Prince was greeted with head-high full tosses when he took over at the crease.

Unlike his countrymen, Prince William calmly negotiated the threatening deliveries before sending a few over the bowler’s head.

Christchurch’s Hagley Oval will host the opening ceremony and three pool matches, including the first match between hosts New Zealand and 2011 runners-up Sri Lanka.

Richard and William

World Cup ambassador and Blackcaps legend Richard Hadlee said the occasion wasn’t lost on those who met the famous couple.

“It’s a very special occasion for those who attended, especially the youngsters who had the opportunity to meet royalty, and for even us old fellas too,” said New Zealand’s greatest cricketer.

“It’s absolutely wonderful and I think it shows that the royals really care in showing a lot of interest in the activities and what we’re doing here in Christchurch.”

William and Kate will be at the Australian event on Wednesday in Sydney.

World Cup

Thursday 20 March 2014

Aussies win warm-up thriller










View: Full Scorecard
Australia’s opening pair of pocket dynamos have stolen the show and propelled their team to a narrow victory in the practice fixture against New Zealand in Fatullah ahead of the ICC World Twenty20 tournament.
If it was a low-key build-up the Australians wanted, George Bailey’s men most certainly got what they were after.
Maybe 200 locals turned out to witness the early stages of the warm-up contest between the trans-Tasman opponents, and they soon discovered it was to be ‘warm’ in name only as David Warner and Aaron Finch turned up the heat on a Black Caps attack that had no answers to a remarkable onslaught.
Bailey had no hesitation in batting first, and Warner and Finch strode imposingly to the crease like a pair of bare-knuckle brawlers keen to get their mitts into anything.
The eight-over exhibition that followed could well send shockwaves through the tournament – some four days before Australia have even played their first official shot in anger.
Quick Single: Full ICC World Twenty20 schedule
After Warner took six balls to find his first runs, Finch added two boundaries in the second over before picking off-spinner Kane Williamson as his chief target, and sending him for four fours and a six.
Warner obviously took his partner’s exploits as some kind of challenge, and duly outdid him, taking 23 from the following over, including 6,6,4,6 from spinner Ronnie Hira’s first four deliveries.
The left-hander raced to his 50 from just 20 balls, proving in the process that a change of scene and a long-haul plane flight has done absolutely nothing to diminish his stunning form.
In the end, it was Australia coach Darren Lehmann who invoked what could only be described as a self-imposed mercy rule, withdrawing Warner (65 from 26) and Finch (47 from 22) from the action in order to provide his other batsmen with some valuable time in the middle.
Through a combination of brute force and some exquisitely deft touches, particularly from Finch, the Australian opening stand had reached a dizzying 113 from just 48 deliveries.
After such a frenzy, the pace inevitably slowed, and an approach more befitting a practice match followed, with Shane Watson (27), George Bailey (19) and Brad Hodge (25) all spending valuable time in the middle as the Australians seized on the flying start to work their way comfortably to an even 200.
That’s not to say the final 12 overs – which still garnered 87 runs – were sedate, with Watson hitting three consecutive sixes off Hira before holing out to long off attempting a fourth, while the second of Hodge’s sixes was arguably the biggest of the afternoon.
Allrounder Glenn Maxwell will be disappointed to have again missed out, with the right-hander swinging across the line to off-spinner Anton Devcich and being trapped lbw for two, but generally speaking, Lehmann will be delighted with the form shown and opportunities seized upon by his key batsmen.
Quick Single: Watson praises Boof's influence
Mitchell Starc, seemingly revelling in his role as Australia’s spearhead in the now prolonged absence of ‘the other Mitch’, conceded just a couple of runs off his opening over and presently appears a man capable of threatening in even the most batsman-friendly T20 conditions.
But it was Nathan Coulter-Nile who made the initial breakthrough, finding the edge of Kane Williamson’s bat, with Brad Haddin doing the rest to dismiss the opener for 17.
Brendon McCullum announced his arrival with two fours from the same bowler, before he and Martin Guptill settled into a partnership that consistently stuck to the required rate of around 10 an over until McCullum attempted one too many midwicket heaves, and was caught on the fence by Maxwell off James Muirhead’s bowling.
Muirhead was courageous enough to continually flight his leg-breaks, and he was rewarded a second time for his valour, with the prized wicket of Martin Guptill, who batted sublimely for his innings-topping 62 from 34 balls.
Fellow tweaker Brad Hogg then ensured he was still very much in the selectors’ minds, snatching the limelight back from the man 23 years his junior with the wickets of Ross Taylor and Colin Munro in consecutive balls.
He could have had three in the over had he managed to hang onto a difficult chance running back towards the sightscreen.
The double blow brought to the crease the dangerous sixth-wicket pairing of Corey Anderson and the familiar face of former West Australian keeper-batsman Luke Ronchi, and the pair seemed to set themselves for a do-or-die counterattack with 43 runs required from the final four overs.
Bailey reintroduced Starc into the attack in the hope of the left-armer coming to the party with a decisive wicket, and the big quick delivered in his final over, grabbing two wickets before Coulter-Nile iced the deal with a tidy final over that prevented New Zealand reaching the target of 201.
What had been originally billed as a separate five-over-contest then served solely as match practice for the two sides.

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of Cricket Australia

Wednesday 19 March 2014

England fell 20 runs short chasing India's 178-4 Moeen Ali top scoring with 46 off 38 balls.

England v. India

ICC World Twenty20 2014 Warm Ups

Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur: Wednesday 19 March 2014 19:30 (day 1 of 1)
Last updated: 16:29

Toss: England won the toss and elected to bowl.

Umpires: Richard Kettleborough, Richard Illingworth
Video Official: Handunnettige Dharmasena
Reserve Officials: Nigel Llong

Result: India win by 20 runs
India 1st innings   Runs Balls Mins 4s 6s SR
Rohit Sharma c Alex Hales b Jade Dernbach 5 8 13 0 0 62.50
Shikhar Dhawan c James Tredwell b Tim Bresnan 14 15 21 2 0 93.33
Virat Kohli not out
74 48 75 8 0 154.17
Yuvraj Singh c Jos Buttler b Chris Jordan 1 5 7 0 0 20.00
Suresh Raina c Chris Jordan b Ravi Bopara 54 31 34 6 2 174.19
*+MS Dhoni not out
21 14 24 1 1 150.00
Extras (b 0, lb 3, nb 1, w 5) 9  
Total (4 wkts, 20.0 overs) 178  
Fall of Wickets:
1-15 (Rohit Sharma, 3.1 ov, 15 runs), 2-30 (Shikhar Dhawan, 4.3 ov, 15 runs), 3-39 (Yuvraj Singh, 5.6 ov, 9 runs), 4-120 (Suresh Raina, 14.5 ov, 81 runs)
Did not bat:
Ajinkya Rahane, Ravindra Jadeja, Ravichandran Ashwin, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Shami Ahmed, Amit Mishra, Mohit Sharma, Stuart Binny, Varun Aaron
Bowling Overs Maidens Runs Wickets Extras
Moeen Ali 1 0 4 0
Jade Dernbach 3 0 27 1 3 w
Tim Bresnan 3 0 31 1 1 w
Chris Jordan 4 0 37 1 1 nb
Ravi Bopara 2 0 25 1
Stuart Broad 2 0 14 0
James Tredwell 4 0 20 0 1 w
Stephen Parry 1 0 17 0
England 1st innings   Runs Balls Mins 4s 6s SR
Michael Lumb st MS Dhoni b Suresh Raina 36 25 30 6 1 144.00
Alex Hales b Bhuvneshwar Kumar 16 14 21 3 0 114.29
Moeen Ali c Ajinkya Rahane b Ravindra Jadeja 46 38 36 4 1 121.05
*Eoin Morgan c Yuvraj Singh b Ravichandran Ashwin 16 16 17 1 0 100.00
+Jos Buttler st MS Dhoni b Ravindra Jadeja 30 18 27 2 2 166.67
Ravi Bopara b Shami Ahmed 6 4 10 1 0 150.00
Tim Bresnan not out
3 5 6 0 0 60.00
Chris Jordan not out
1 1 1 0 0 100.00
Extras (b 0, lb 2, nb 1, w 1) 4  
Total (6 wkts, 20.0 overs) 158  
Fall of Wickets:
1-43 (Alex Hales, 4.6 ov, 43 runs), 2-58 (Michael Lumb, 8.1 ov, 15 runs), 3-87 (Eoin Morgan, 13.1 ov, 29 runs), 4-128 (Moeen Ali, 16.6 ov, 41 runs), 5-145 (Ravi Bopara, 18.2 ov, 17 runs), 6-157 (Jos Buttler, 19.4 ov, 12 runs)
Did not bat:
Luke Wright, James Tredwell, Stuart Broad, Stephen Parry, Chris Woakes, Ian Bell, Jade Dernbach
Bowling Overs Maidens Runs Wickets Extras
Bhuvneshwar Kumar 3 0 27 1
Shami Ahmed 3 0 29 1
Ravichandran Ashwin 4 0 20 1
Suresh Raina 4 0 23 1
Ravindra Jadeja 3 0 23 2
Amit Mishra 2 0 21 0
Varun Aaron 1 0 13 0 1 w 1 nb

Session History:

Day 1, In play (19:29:41) , India 1st innings - 0-0 (0.0); Rohit Sharma (0*), Shikhar Dhawan (0*).
Day 1, Between Innings (20:59:29) , India 1st innings - 178-4 (20.0); Virat Kohli (74*), MS Dhoni (21*).
Day 1, In play (21:11:34) , England 1st innings - 0-0 (0.0); Michael Lumb (0*), Alex Hales (0*).
Day 1, Result (22:27:26) , England 1st innings - 158-6 (20.0); Chris Jordan (1*), Tim Bresnan (3*).

Team Line-ups:
England: Michael Lumb, Alex Hales, Luke Wright, *Eoin Morgan, +Jos Buttler, Ravi Bopara, Chris Jordan, James Tredwell, Moeen Ali, Stuart Broad, Stephen Parry, Tim Bresnan, Chris Woakes, Ian Bell, Jade Dernbach.

India: Shikhar Dhawan, Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli, Yuvraj Singh, Suresh Raina, *+MS Dhoni, Ajinkya Rahane, Ravindra Jadeja, Ravichandran Ashwin, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Shami Ahmed, Amit Mishra, Mohit Sharma, Stuart Binny, Varun Aaron.

Monday 17 March 2014

Finch rises to World No.1

Opener takes top spot ahead of World T20 

 

Australia enters the ICC World T20 tournament with the world's top batsman in the format after Aaron Finch received a boost in rankings points after the series win against South Africa.
Finch jumped 37 points, which was enough to see him overtake England's Alex Hales and New Zealand skipper Brendon McCullum to claim top spot with 797 points.
However, McCullum is only three points behind heading into the tournament.
Finch's opening partner, David Warner, currently sits in eighth spot in the ICC Twenty20 batting rankings, with 685 points, well below his career high of 826 earned in May 2010.
Power at the top of the order is a mainstay of Australia's game plan for the World T20, with the dynamic opening duo heading a heavy-hitting line-up.
"There's plenty of them, they just keep coming, don't they," said Darren Lehmann when asked about Australia's hitters.
"Warner, Finch, and then Watson comes in, then you've got Maxwell, Bailey, Hodge, Haddin, Henriques and Christian, and even Mitch (Starc) can hold a bat, which is surprising for a bowler," added the coach, with a good-natured dig at the nearby left-arm paceman who becomes Australia's main weapon following Mitchell Johnson's withdrawal.

Bailey to captain Kings XI Punjab

Aussie T20 skipper handed IPL reigns

His first game for Australia was as captain, now his first game for the Kings XI Punjab in the Indian Premier League will also be as captain, after George Bailey was named to the position by the franchise today.
Bailey becomes the second Australian to captain the Kings XI after Adam Gilchrist's tenure for the past two years.
Kings XI coach Sanjay Bangar said Bailey was the only candidate considered for the captaincy from a squad that includes fellow Australians Mitchell Johnson, Glenn Maxwell and Shaun Marsh as well as India legend and former Delhi Daredevils captain Virender Sehwag.
"He was the unanimous choice. He has got success as a leader in the domestic tournaments like Sheffield Shield in Australia," Bangar said.
"He had also lead Australia in the Twenty20 format. And then the overall type of character he is, who can understand a range of players from the bigger names to ones that have limited ability. We are confident he has the ability to bring out the best from everyone.
"We required a player with past leadership experience. The second and crucial aspect was to have a player who was guaranteed a place in the team for all matches.
"Within that group we would definitely like to utilise the experience of senior guys like Viru, who are bound to perform the role of mentors. But on the field Bailey will be the captain."
Bailey has only played four IPL games previously, and none since 2010. Bought by the Chennai Super Kings, he was left to languish on the bench before being released in 2012.
However, Chennai's loss looks set to be Kings XI's gain with Bailey in a purple patch that has seen him win numerous awards this summer. Bailey was named Australia's ODI Player of the Year at the Allan Border Medal, and has been involved in Test, ODI and T20 successes over England and a T20 series win against South Africa.

Friday 14 March 2014

South Africa v Australia - Third T20I

South Africa v Australia - Third T20I



Australia have wrapped up the T20 series two-nil thanks to Mitchell Starc and Aaron Finch, crushing South Africa by six wickets in Centurion.
Set a modest 129 to win, Finch plundered the wayward Proteas attack to all parts of the sold out SuperSport Park, particularly devastating through the offside across the surface of dewy grass and soaking sawdust.
Australia rattled off 55 from the mandatory six-over powerplay without concern before Finch fell in the ninth over for 39 off 21 balls, attempting to launch Imran Tahir on to the overlooking Gautrain tracks.
From there it was academic, Shane Watson (35) and Glenn Maxwell (17) put on 38 and George Bailey and Brad Hodge the remaining 22 to guide Australia to the target and the series win.
The victory was set-up by Australia’s bowling unit, given first crack in the field after captain Bailey’s second ‘heads’ call came up trumps at the toss.
Limited in game two, Starc went for the jugular in game three, literally, collecting Quinton de Kock on the throat with a vicious bouncer that left the young opening batsman shook up and needing treatment from the Proteas' medical staff.
Consistently above 140kph throughout the night, Starc’s pace and swing had the South Africans reliving their worst nightmare, only this left-arm quick had a white ball, wore canary colours and fashioned a less pronounced moustache.
Striking with the new ball and old, Starc’s booming inswinger was too good for Hashim Amla, trapping him plumb before scattering Albie Morkel’s stumps the ball after being tanked for six.
Australia’s bank of allrounders paid off again, with Maxwell the other star with the ball, producing spin and bounce that accounted for the prize wickets of Faf du Plessis and JP Duminy, in tandem with Moises Henriques who bowled tight in his first match of the tour.
The slow, tacky wicket plus poor shot selection accounted for three South African wickets, Brad Hogg the luckiest, capturing the big wicket of the returning AB de Villiers on the mid-wicket rope with a rank
long-hop, followed by an embarrassed grin.
Watson’s only over went for 11 but he more than made up for it when it was his turn to have a swing, thumping two enormous sixes, the first off Morkel that rivalled the bowlers own monster hit that went 25 rows back.
Australia heads to Bangladesh with five straight wins and two series win under their belt, full of confidence and belief that this could be their year to lift the World T20 trophy.

List of Most Man of The Matches Awards in Odis

Player Span Mat Awards
SR Tendulkar (India) 1989-2012 463 62
ST Jayasuriya (Asia/SL) 1989-2011 445 48
JH Kallis (Afr/ICC/SA) 1996-2013 325 32
RT Ponting (Aus/ICC) 1995-2012 375 32
Shahid Afridi (Asia/ICC/Pak) 1996-2014 378 32
IVA Richards (WI) 1975-1991 187 31
SC Ganguly (Asia/India) 1992-2007 311 31
BC Lara (ICC/WI) 1990-2007 299 30
PA de Silva (SL) 1984-2003 308 30
Saeed Anwar (Pak) 1989-2003 247 28
AC Gilchrist (Aus/ICC) 1996-2008 287 28
KC Sangakkara (Asia/ICC/SL) 2000-2014 369 26
NJ Astle (NZ) 1995-2007 223 25
DL Haynes (WI) 1978-1994 238 25
Yuvraj Singh (Asia/India) 2000-2013 293 25
A Ranatunga (SL) 1982-1999 269 24
Inzamam-ul-Haq (Asia/Pak) 1991-2007 378 24
V Sehwag (Asia/ICC/India) 1999-2013 251 23
HH Gibbs (SA) 1996-2010 248 22
CH Gayle (ICC/WI) 1999-2013 255 22
SM Pollock (Afr/ICC/SA) 1996-2008 303 22
Wasim Akram (Pak) 1984-2003 356 22
A Symonds (Aus) 1998-2009 198 21
ME Waugh (Aus) 1988-2002 244 21
SR Waugh (Aus) 1986-2002 325 21
CG Greenidge (WI) 1975-1991 128 20
MS Atapattu (SL) 1990-2007 268 20
MD Crowe (NZ) 1982-1995 143 19
L Klusener (SA) 1996-2004 171 19
MS Dhoni (Asia/India) 2004-2014 243 19
DPMD Jayawardene (Asia/SL) 1998-2014 412 19
V Kohli (India) 2008-2014 134 18
WJ Cronje (SA) 1992-2000 188 18
Javed Miandad (Pak) 1975-1996 233 18
Abdul Razzaq (Asia/Pak) 1996-2011 265 18
TM Dilshan (SL) 1999-2014 277 18
Mohammad Yousuf (Asia/Pak) 1998-2010 288 18
M Azharuddin (India) 1985-2000 334 18
SR Watson (Aus) 2002-2014 173 17
Waqar Younis (Pak) 1989-2003 262 17
AR Border (Aus) 1979-1994 273 17
SP Fleming (ICC/NZ) 1994-2007 280 17
DM Jones (Aus) 1984-1994 164 16
G Kirsten (SA) 1993-2003 185 16
JN Rhodes (SA) 1992-2003 245 16
S Chanderpaul (WI) 1994-2011 268 16
AB de Villiers (Afr/SA) 2005-2013 159 15
Shoaib Malik (Pak) 1999-2013 216 15
B Lee (Aus) 2000-2012 221 15
CL Hooper (WI) 1987-2003 227 15
GD McGrath (Aus/ICC) 1993-2007 250 15
Younis Khan (Pak) 2000-2013 253 15
A Flintoff (Eng/ICC) 1999-2009 141 14
Mohammad Hafeez (Pak) 2003-2014 146 14
Aamer Sohail (Pak) 1990-2000 156 14
PD Collingwood (Eng) 2001-2011 197 14
Ijaz Ahmed (Pak) 1986-2000 250 14
R Dravid (Asia/ICC/India) 1996-2011 344 14
GR Marsh (Aus) 1986-1992 117 13
AJ Lamb (Eng) 1982-1992 122 13
Shakib Al Hasan (Ban) 2006-2014 133 13
NS Sidhu (India) 1987-1998 136 13
Imran Khan (Pak) 1974-1992 175 13
MJ Clarke (Aus) 2003-2014 236 13
Saleem Malik (Pak) 1982-1999 283 13
M Muralitharan (Asia/ICC/SL) 1993-2011 350 13
HM Amla (SA) 2008-2013 85 12
PV Simmons (WI) 1987-1999 143 12
G Gambhir (India) 2003-2013 147 12
RR Sarwan (WI) 2000-2013 181 12
SK Warne (Aus/ICC) 1993-2005 194 12
GW Flower (Zim) 1992-2010 221 12
MG Bevan (Aus) 1994-2004 232 12
ME Trescothick (Eng) 2000-2006 123 11
GA Gooch (Eng) 1976-1995 125 11
K Srikkanth (India) 1981-1992 146 11
WU Tharanga (Asia/SL) 2005-2013 171 11
DC Boon (Aus) 1984-1995 181 11
MEK Hussey (Aus) 2004-2012 185 11
A Flower (Zim) 1992-2003 213 11
N Kapil Dev (India) 1978-1994 225 11
WPUJC Vaas (Asia/SL) 1994-2008 322 11
RJ Hadlee (NZ) 1973-1990 115 10
KP Pietersen (Eng/ICC) 2004-2013 136 10
DJ Bravo (WI) 2004-2014 158 10
AJ Stewart (Eng) 1989-2003 170 10
SB Styris (NZ) 1999-2011 188 10
A Jadeja (India) 1992-2000 196 10
GC Smith (Afr/SA) 2002-2013 197 10
DR Martyn (Aus) 1992-2006 208 10
CL Cairns (ICC/NZ) 1991-2006 215 10
RB Richardson (WI) 1983-1996 224 10
CZ Harris (NZ) 1990-2004 250 10
DL Vettori (ICC/NZ) 1997-2013 275 10

Shahid Afridi wins 2013 Best ODI bowling performance award for his majestic 7 wkts for 12 runs.

Included in the team as an all-rounder, Shahid Afridi took home the award for Best ODI Bowling Performance of 2013 at the ESPNcrickinfo awards held on Friday.
The awards recognise the best individual batting and bowling performances of the year in cricket. They are voted on by an independent jury of former cricketers, commentators and ESPNcrickinfo’s senior writers.
India’s Rohit Sharma won the ODI Batting Award for while Sachin Tendulkar took home the award for Cricketer of the Generation.
Previous winners of the prestigious cricket awards include Dale Steyn, Virender Sehwag, Shahid Afridi and Kumar Sangakkara.

#‎CricinfoAwards‬: And the winners are:
Test batting: Shikhar Dhawan (Mohali v Aus);
Test bowling: Mitchell Johnson: (Adelaide v Eng);
ODI batting: Rohit Sharma (Bangalore v Aus);
ODI bowling: Shahid Afridi (Georgetown v WI)
http://es.pn/awardsLive
#CricinfoAwards: And the winners are: Test batting: Shikhar Dhawan (Mohali v Aus); Test bowling: Mitchell Johnson: (Adelaide v Eng); ODI batting: Rohit Sharma (Bangalore v Aus); ODI bowling: Shahid Afridi (Georgetown v WI) http://es.pn/awardsLive

Monday 10 March 2014

Two Legends In One Pic





Fastest bowler and the fastest batsman of the history.


Wednesday 5 March 2014

Afridi goes ‘Boom Boom’ in win against Bangladesh


DHAKA: Pakistan defeated Bangladesh by three wickets to book their place in the final of the Asia Cup. 

Bangladesh won the toss and elected to bat setting a record target of 327 for Pakistan. In response Pakistan got off to a steady start behind openers Ahmed Shahzad’s century (103 off 112) and Muhammad Hafeez’s 52 of 55 balls.
After Shahzad’s dismissal the run rate increased and it seemed the match was no longer within the reach of Pakistan. Once again Shahid Afridi proved to be the difference maker. In a similar performance to that against India, Afridi went into ‘Boom Boom’ mode blasting 59 of 25 balls in an innings which included seven sixes.
Afridi opened the doors for a Pakistan win and it was Fawad Alam who ensured that there was no looking back. The left-hander hit 74 off 70 balls including a couple of late inning sixes.
Pakistan set a new record of achieving their highest chase when Umar Akmal hit the winning stroke.
Earlier, Bangladesh piled up a huge total of 326 runs for three wickets, which is their highest-ever total in an ODI innings.
Opener Anamul Haque made 100 off 132 balls with six boundaries and four sixes. This was his second century in One-day International cricket. This was also the second individual hundred by a Bangladeshi batsman in this tournament.
Among other batsmen, Imrul Kayes scored 59 from 75 balls with five fours and two sixes, Mominul Haque hit 51 off 47 balls with six fours, Mushfiqur Rahim smashed 51 off 33 balls with eight fours while Shakib Al Hasan playing for the first time in the tournament blasted an unbeaten 44 from just 16 balls with six fours and two sixes.
During the Bangladesh innings Pakistani spinner Abdur Rehman was stopped from bowling in the match when he delivered three consecutive above the wait no-balls in the 11th over.

Most Man Of The Matches Awards In ODI.

Afridi, Ponting and Kallis at number 3 in the list of players to have won the most man of the match awards in ODIs.

1) Tendulkar 463 ODIs- 62 MOM
2) Jayasuriya 445 ODIs- 48 MOM
3) Afridi 377 ODIs- 32 MOM
-Kallis 325 ODIs- 32 MOM
-Ponting 375 ODIs- 32 MOM



Tuesday 4 March 2014

Guess This Shot???

What a shot it was.. Remembered? It is called good cricketing shot.

Give Respect, Get Respect

AFRIDI 59 on 25 balls
Man Of The Match

Sunday 2 March 2014

Magical Afridi wins it for Pakistan at the death



Shahid Afridi smashed back-to-back sixes in the final over to clinch a dramatic one-wicket win over India in their Asia Cup clash in Mirpur.

Shahid Afridi celebrates Pakistan's victory
With just last-man Junaid Khan in support, Afridi launched Ravichandran Ashwin over the ropes to move Pakistan a step closer to claiming a place in the final.
India, who had posted 245 for eight, now face the prospect of missing out on next Saturday's decider after their death bowling was again called into question.
It had looked very different when Bhuvneshwar Kumar struck twice in the penultimate over to leave Pakistan needing 10 from the final six balls.
Ashwin then immediately bowled Saeed Ajmal around his legs, but when Junaid got off strike Afridi (34 not out) ended the game in typically brutal fashion with two balls to spare.
Rohit Sharma (56) and Ambati Rayudu (58) hit half-centuries for India before Ravindra Jadeja smacked an unbeaten 52 from 49 balls to leave Pakistan with a testing total to chase on a slow pitch.
Ajmal underlined the effectiveness of the slow bowlers with three for 40, while Mohammad Hafeez and debutant Mohammad Talha grabbed two wickets apiece.
Hafeez then paced the Pakistan chase with 75, from 117 balls, but was fifth man out in the 44th over with 200 on the board.
Afridi picked up the slack and while the tail fell around him the all-rounder dramatically dragged his side across the line, finishing unbeaten on 34 from 18 balls.