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Thursday, May 7, 2009

ICC World Twenty20, 2009 India Squad

MS Dhoni
Captain/keeper
Age 27 years 301 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium
Virender Sehwag
Vice-captain
Age 30 years 196 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak

Gautam Gambhir
Age 27 years 202 days
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak
Harbhajan Singh
Age 28 years 305 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak
Ravindra Jadeja
Age 20 years 149 days
Playing role All-rounder
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Slow left-arm orthodox
Zaheer Khan
Age 30 years 209 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm fast-medium

Praveen Kumar
Age 22 years 214 days
Playing role Bowler
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium
Pragyan Ojha
Age 22 years 241 days
Playing role Bowler
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Slow left-arm orthodox
Irfan Pathan
Age 24 years 189 days
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm medium-fast
Yusuf Pathan
Age 26 years 168 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak
Suresh Raina
Age 22 years 158 days
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak
Ishant Sharma
Age 20 years 244 days
Playing role Bowler
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast
Rohit Sharma
Age 22 years 4 days
Playing role All-rounder
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak
RP Singh
Age 23 years 149 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm fast-medium
Yuvraj Singh
Age 27 years 143 days
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Slow left-arm orthodox


ICC World Twenty20 Pakistan Squad

Younis Khan
Captain
Age 31 years 156 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium, Legbreak
Ahmed Shehzad
Age 17 years 162 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak
Fawad Alam
Age 23 years 208 days
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Slow left-arm orthodox
Kamran Akmal
Wicketkeeper
Age 27 years 111 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Misbah-ul-Haq
Age 34 years 341 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak
Mohammad Aamer
Age 17 years 21 days
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm fast-medium

Saeed Ajmal
Age 31 years 202 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak
Salman Butt
Age 24 years 209 days
Playing role Batsman
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak

Shahid Afridi
Age 29 years 64 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium, Legbreak googly

Shahzaib Hasan
Age 19 years 130 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak

Shoaib Akhtar
Age 33 years 264 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast

Shoaib Malik
Age 27 years 92 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak

Umar Gul
Age 25 years 20 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast-medium
Yasir Arafat
Age 27 years 53 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium

ICC World Twenty20 Bangladesh Squad

Mohammad Ashraful
Captain
Age 24 years 301 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak
Abdur Razzak
Age 26 years 323 days
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Slow left-arm orthodox
Junaid Siddique
Age 21 years 186 days
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak
Mahmudullah
Age 23 years 89 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak
Mashrafe Mortaza
Age 25 years 211 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast-medium
Mithun Ali
Age 19 years 80 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Mushfiqur Rahim
Wicketkeeper
Age 20 years 245 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Naeem Islam
Age 22 years 124 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak

Raqibul Hasan
Age 21 years 208 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak

Rubel Hossain
Age 19 years 123 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium-fast

Shahadat Hossain
Age 22 years 270 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium-fast
Shamsur Rahman
Age 20 years 333 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Shakib Al Hasan
Age 22 years 41 days
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Slow left-arm orthodox

Syed Rasel
Age 24 years 305 days
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm medium-fast
Tamim Iqbal
Age 20 years 45 days
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Slow left-arm orthodox

T20 World Cup Australia Squad

Ricky Ponting
Captain
Age 34 years 137 days
Playing role Higher middle order batsman
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium
Michael Clarke
Vice-captain
Age 28 years 33 days
Playing role Lower middle order batsman
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Slow left-arm orthodox
Nathan Bracken
Age 31 years 235 days
Playing role Bowler
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm fast-medium
Brad Haddin
Wicketkeeper
Age 31 years 194 days
Playing role Wicketkeeper batsman
Batting Right-hand bat

Nathan Hauritz
Age 27 years 199 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak
Ben Hilfenhaus
Age 26 years 51 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast-medium
James Hopes
Age 30 years 193 days
Playing role All-rounder
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium
David Hussey
Age 31 years 294 days
Playing role Lower middle order batsman
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak
Michael Hussey
Age 33 years 343 days
Playing role Opening batsman
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium
Mitchell Johnson
Age 27 years 184 days
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm fast
Brett Lee
Age 32 years 178 days
Playing role Bowler
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast
Peter Siddle
Age 24 years 161 days
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast-medium
Andrew Symonds
Age 33 years 330 days
Playing role All-rounder
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium, Right-arm offbreak
David Warner
Age 22 years 190 days
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak
Shane Watson
Age 27 years 322 days
Playing role All-rounder
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast-medium

Bopara ton holds England together

England v West Indies, 1st npower Test, Lord's, 1st day
 
England 289 for 7 (Bopara 118*, Swann 7*, Edwards 4-53) v West Indies
 
Ravi Bopara was an immediate success after being promoted to No. 3 as he held England's batting together at Lord's  

Every time England have started a series in recent memory it has been preceded by talk of new eras before failing, often spectacularly, to deliver but Ravi Bopara's assured century, in his first innings at No. 3, suggests that this time might be different. It was a vital innings as the home side wobbled against the pace of Fidel Edwards, who claimed three quick wickets to rattle the middle order, but Bopara found crucial support from Matt Prior and Stuart Broad as honours ended even on 289 for 7, although West Indies rued a batch of dropped catches.

Bopara's display stood out for its maturity and calmness. He scored a hundred in his previous Test innings before being dropped and has now been thrust back in such a key position. He was also one of the clutch of players to have recently returned from the IPL and, while it wasn't the best of days for all of them, Bopara and Edwards showed that the adjustments can be made.

The No. 3 position has become the most vexing position in England's batting order since Michael Vaughan vacated it towards the end of last summer. The last hundred from the position was Vaughan's 106 against New Zealand in the corresponding fixture last summer. Ian Bell and Owais Shah were unable to take their opportunity and so the mantle has been passed to Bopara, the most exciting of England's new-look selections, and he has responded in full to the confidence shown by Andy Flower and Andrew Strauss. This will be his position for the Ashes.

He had two lives, on 76 and 100, as West Indies' fielding fell apart in the final session and survived a perilously close lbw on 40 against Sulieman Benn that was heading towards middle. However, his strokeplay, especially his driving, was classy from the beginning and he showed the best footwork of England's top five.

His hundred arrived off 207 balls after a fairly length wait in the 90s, but even then his nerves didn't show. After tucking the ball into the leg side he calmly saluted the ground before making a rectangle symbol, imitating writing to his team-mates - he wanted his name on the honours board straight away. That's confidence for you.

West Indies missed a real chance to take a grip on this match. Edwards' post-lunch spell of 6-2-15-3 reduced them to 109 for 4 and when Prior fell shortly after tea a total of 193 for 5 could have gone either way. But the visitors were then struck by a spate of dropped chances - still a problem in this improving West Indies side - as six were put down in the final session. Broad was dropped five times in making 38, with Chris Gayle guilty for one at first slip, alongside the two lives given to Bopara.

Three of those chances came off Edwards, who deserved better support after producing the spell that put West Indies on top during the middle session. For the first two hours the bowling had been too short on a pitch offering little, despite Gayle's decision to bowl, and Andrew Strauss had been their only success when cutting at Jerome Taylor. There had clearly been a team talk during the interval about bowling fuller and it worked with great effect.

Sharma heroics ensure Deccan win

Deccan Chargers v Mumbai Indians, IPL, Centurion

Deccan Chargers 145 for 6 (Sharma 38) beat Mumbai Indians 126 for 8 (Duminy 52, Sharma 4-6) by 19 runs
Mumbai Indians squandered a crucial opportunity to grab a spot in the top four, losing to Deccan Chargers by 19 runs in a see-saw game where they had held the cards for the most part. An unlikely hat-trick by Rohit Sharma, which included the wicket of a threatening JP Duminy, followed up on a pivotal double-strike by RP Singh to remove the explosive pair of Sachin Tendulkar and Sanath Jayasuriya to shut Mumbai out of the game.
Deccan Chargers 145 for 6 (Sharma 38) v Mumbai Indians
Mumbai Indians' bowlers kept Deccan Chargers on a leash, limiting them to 145 for 6   
Failure up the order had proved pivotal in Deccan Charger's stark turnaround after emerging frontrunners in the tournament with four consecutive wins, and proved their undoing yet again as they struggled to a competitive score on a sluggish pitch at Supersport Park. In a competition where spinners have thrived, it was Mumbai Indians' pace attack that gave them the initiative, with their two new inclusions Dhawal Kulkarni and Rohan Raje impressing in their respective spells.

Glichrist's decision to bat was motivated by a hard, dry surface which he felt would last out the day, but Deccan did have to contend with an out-of-touch Gibbs struggling to find his groove at the other end. Mumbai bowled to a plan, and while Lasith Malinga seemed intent on targeting the batsman's toes, his new-ball partner Kulkarni concentrated on probing the right-hander with the away swinger. He didn't have to wait too long as Gibbs, desperate for some form, was sucked into a drive off just his fourth ball that he edged to Tendulkar to finish with two ducks in his last three innings.

Tirumalasetti Suman merited a promotion after chipping in with useful contributions in the middle order in each of Deccan's three successive defeats, and almost justified the move with two sweetly-struck sixes over the bowler's head in Harbhajan Singh's first over. But he failed to live up to the promise, giving into temptation trying to cut a short ball from Dwayne Bravo who induced an edge with some extra bounce.

It's not very often that Gilchrist cedes the floor to another batsman, but his guarded approach with Suman going strong at the other end, assumed a naturally aggressive tone once he fell, signaled by a monstrous six over deep midwicket - again off poor Harbhajan - that landed on the roof. But Mumbai's new selections continued to be vindicated as even the seasoned Gilchrist failed to curb his frustration with the modest run-rate, swinging across the line to be bowled by an unspectacular, yet accurate Rohan Raje.

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