Category Archives: cricket and life

England send four players to Sri Lanka to experience Asian Conditions

ESPN Staff

England  has sent four players to Sri Lanka either side of Christmas in the latest example of their desire to expose their young cricketers to Asian conditions. Scott Borthwick, from Durham, Essex’s Tom Westley, Ben Foakes, now at Surrey, and Will Tavare of Gloucestershire will play for clubs in Sri Lanka in the coming months having been identified by Graham Thorpe, the England Performance Programme (EPP) lead batting coach, and Peter Such, the lead spin bowling coach, as cricketers who would benefit from the experience. Continue reading

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In Appreciation of Kumar Sangakkara as he moves elegantly into his Twilight Years

 

JANAKA MALWATTAJanaka Malwatta, courtesy of ESPNcricnfo, where the title is “The last of Sanga”

Kumar Sangakkara‘s stellar ODI career is approaching its final denouement. He has already played his last ODI in Sri Lanka. It is very much hoped that he will continue to grace Test cricket yet a while, but after the current tour of New Zealand and the small matter of a World Cup, his ODI adventure will be over.

kumar square drivesKUMAR TALKS unity cup hires-48-2 Kumar’s classical square drive and his encouragement of young cricketers during Unity Cup in Singapore

It has been quite some ride. As Sangakkara has grown into his game, his performances have reached stratospheric levels. The statistics are mind-boggling. In 2014, he scored 2868 runs across the three formats of international cricket, beating Ricky Ponting’s record for runs scored in a calendar year. He has scored over 1000 runs in ODIs in a calendar year for the last four years running, and has done so six times in total. He has accumulated 13,580 ODI runs, which puts him third on the all-time list. He has 20 ODI hundreds and a staggering 93 ODI fifties. He has 472 ODI dismissals to his name, 376 as wicketkeeper, including 96 stumpings. He has won, among others, the ICC’s ODI Cricketer of the Year award in 2011 and 2013, and the Man of the Match in the 2014 World T20 final. Continue reading

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Sri Lankan Andri Berenger in UAS World Cup Squad

Courtesy of The Nation, 25 January 2015

Andri BerengerFormer St. Peter’s College and Sri Lanka Youth cricketer Andri Berenger has qualified to represent the United Arab Emirates (UAE) at the forthcoming World Cup in Australia-New Zealand. He will become the only cricketer to represent two countries in two World Cups having played with the Sri Lanka team at the 2010 Under-19 Youth World Cup in New Zealand.

Berenger will open the batting for UAE who are coached by former Pakistan fast bowler Aquib Javad. He has represented the UAE in four ODIs and has an average of 38 with two half centuries.

The UAE team last featured in a competition against the Pakistan A team and lost the series 3-2.  Berenger made a highest score of 77 in the series and was adjudged man of the match in a game the UAE won. Now 23, Berenger showed plenty of promise at St. Peter’s College but for some reason did not make the higher grade after representing Sri Lanka in the Under-19 Youth World Cup.

In 2009 he was the best all-island U-17 player scoring four hundreds and in the following year was adjudged the best wicket-keeper batsman.

Berenger has also bagged a corporate sponsorship from sports equipment marketer Head.

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UAE returns to World Cup after two decades

The Island 2 February 2015

United Arab Emirates makes a comeback to cricket’s flagship event after a gap of nearly two decades – its last and only appearance was in 1996 – thanks to some strong performances in the ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier tournament in 2014.

With the exception of a lone defeat to Scotland in the group stage, it had won all its matches heading into the final, before finishing second-best against the same opponent to take the fourteenth and final spot at ICC Cricket World Cup 2015. UAE spent a good couple of weeks as part of the ICC’s High Performance Programme tour of Australia and New Zealand to get acclimatised to the conditions they’ll face down under. It came out of the tour, where it played six matches, with two wins – by four, and seven wickets, against Northern Territory and Papua New Guinea, respectively.

Mohammad Tauqir will captain the side in the tournament and will be supported closely by vice-captain and experienced former leader Khurram Khan.

 

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“Cricket heals” — Lessons for the World from Kumar Sangakkara

Mark Reason, courtesy of the Dominion Post, 7 January 2015, where his title is “Sri Lankan batsman Kumar Sangakkara’s calling to help his nation heal”

HEALING POWERS:  Sri Lanka's Kumar Sangakkara leaves the field after scoring 203 in the second test. Sri Lanka’s Kumar Sangakkara leaves the field after scoring 203 in the second test, New Zealand….Getty Images

Kumar Sangakkara is more than a cricketer. When he scores runs, Sangakkara is not just playing a game or plying a trade. The great Sri Lanka batsman is treating a nation whose body still floats on the putrid waters of the civil war and the 2004 tsunami. Sangakkara serves his country when he bats. He is a man from beyond the boundary.
Does that sound grandiose to you, a little far-fetched? It is hard to think otherwise in this golden land where for many sunburn is the biggest daily danger. But when Sangakkara speaks of “the potential of cricket to be more than just a game … a sport so powerful it is capable of transcending war and politics”, he is thinking of home.
My Sri Lankan doctor friend put it simply. “Cricket heals,” he said.
Perhaps we should think of Sangakkara as the Great Healer. Every time he went down on one knee at the Basin and rippled a cover drive to the ropes, Sangakkara was tending another countryman left desolate or homeless by civil war and flood. Neville Cardus could have been thinking of Sri Lanka when he wrote, “Without cricket there can be no summer in that land.”
Sangakkara’s first cricket coach, D H de Silva, “a wonderful human being who coached tennis and cricket to students free of charge”, was shot on a tennis court by insurgents. They put two bullets in his stomach. As he lay on the ground, the rebels pressed the barrel to de Silva’s head. The gun jammed.
Such tales are Sangakkara’s history. He grew up in the damp hills of Kandy where frequent drizzle moistened a pitch that was forever green. As a boy Sangakkara learned to play against swing and seam and bounce and carry. His current teammates from Colombo may have looked on this Basin pitch as a foreign surface, but when Sangakkara came out onto the green grass, he saw only home.
He wasn’t an heroic boy, not like Mahela Jayawardene. Crowds of 10,000 used to come to watch the 13-year-old prodigy bat in Colombo. Sangakkara was just another lad with a bit of talent. Fittingly when he came down from the hills to the big city, he did not join Colombo Cricket Club, with its colonial history of tea and timber, but the Nondescripts.
Back then Sangakkara did not tell boyhood stories of his Tamil friends who hid in his Sinhalese parents’ house in order to avoid being butchered in the race riots. He talked instead of his dream to one day play for his country. Sangakkara’s teammates sat back and laughed.
None of them would have believed that this boy from the hills would become perhaps the greatest batsman of them all, greater than even Arjuna Ranatunga and Sanath Jayasuriya and Jayawardene. Sangakkara’s current test average of nearly 60 is even more astonishing given that his first 40 tests were played as a wicketkeeper-batsman who went in at No 3. Purely as a batsman he averages nearly 70.
It was a privilege to be at the Basin on Saturday afternoon when the people of the capital gave Sangakkara a standing ovation on passing 12,000 test runs. The next day Brendon McCullum ran to shake Sangakkara’s hand when he reached his double century. The reaction from crowd and captain did New Zealand proud.
Many may not remember that Sangakkara and his teammates were in a New Zealand dressing room when the early sketchy news of the devastating tsunami first leaked in by text on Boxing Day in 2004. Typical of the man Sangakkara returned home and joined Muttiah Muralidharan’s relief convoy, taking food and supplies out to people whose lives had been smashed.
In the MCC spirit of cricket lecture that he gave at Lords in 2011, Sangakkara remembered: “In the Kinniya Camp just south of Trincomalee, the first response of the people who had lost so much was to ask us if our families were OK. They had heard that Sanath and Upul Chandana’s mothers were injured and they inquired about their health. They did not exaggerate their own plight nor did they wallow in it.”
Cricket heals.
When Sangakkara is out of touch, as he was early on this tour, and driving everyone mad with his endless demands for throw-downs in the nets, it is partly because he must give something back to his people.
Five years after the tsunami, Sangakkara was on the team bus in Pakistan, on what seemed like a truly ‘nondescript’ day, when terrorists attacked. “As I turn my head I feel something whizz past my ear and a bullet thuds into the side of the seat, the exact spot where my head had been a few seconds earlier. I feel something hit my shoulder and it goes numb.”
When Sangakkara returns home, he is told by a soldier, “It is OK if I die because it is my job and I am ready for it. But you are a hero and if you were to die it would be a great loss for our country.” Sangakkara is overwhelmed. “How can this man value his life less than mine?”
So when Sangakkara is asked to not retire, he cannot refuse. When he wins the man of the match in the final of the 2014 T20 World Cup, Sangakkara knows that cricket is more than a game. When he hits the four that takes him to his 200 on Sunday afternoon, it is not a destructive shot because Sangakkara is a healer.
He says, “With me are all my people. I am Tamil, Sinhalese, Muslim and Burgher. I am a Buddhist, a Hindu, a follower of Islam and Christianity. I am today, and always, proudly Sri Lankan.”

 – The Dominion Post

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The Spirit of Cricket at Wellington

Quotation of the New Year: “Or maybe, given the goodwill plainly clear between these teams, in stark contrast to the dogfight across the Tasman, Sri Lanka will reflect that there is little shame in being bested by a pair of batsmen like this. Likeable, intelligent, highly-skilled, respectful, unyielding and improving, Williamson and Watling lived out everything this New Zealand team hopes to be, and in fact, is already becoming.” — Andrew Fidel Fernando in his article after the 4th day of the Second NZ-Sri Lanka Test Match at Wellington: New Zealand’s friendly neighbourhood game-changers”

New Zealand v Sri Lanka - 2nd Test: Day 4 Kane Williamson and BJ Watling after their record breaking and game-changing partnership of 365 runs —Pic from Getty

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The Kohli-Johnson Confrontation enters the Press Event at MCG

 

K vs J 22 K vs J 33 Johnson out of line in spat with ‘hated’ Kohli | The New Daily …. thenewdaily.com.au360   “but Kohli wants to go on with it”

Sai Mohapatra’s Report

Their on-field banter spilled over to the press conference room as Virat Kohli didn’t care for the call ‘what happens on the field remains on the field’. The trigger point being when Mitchell Johnson threw a ball back at the striker end after Kohli played one in the follow through, it hit Kohli and that got two of them going throughout the day at the MCG.

“I was really annoyed with him hitting me with the ball, and I told him that’s not on,” Kohli said. ” ‘Try and hit the stumps next time, not my body.’ You have got to send the right message across. I am not there to take to some unnecessary words or chats from someone. I am going there to play cricket, [and to] back myself. There’s no good reason that I should respect unnecessarily some people when they are not respecting me.” Continue reading

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The Hanging of Dr Usman revives the Tale of the Attack on the Cricket Entourage at Lahore in March 2009

The Pakistani government’s recent judicial execution Aqeel Ahmed alias Dr Usman alias Kamran alias Nazir Ahmed for his key role in an attack on their military HQ — read within the context of ISIS beheading activities and the ISIS’s worldwide appeal for like-minds in the West to resort to high-profile symbolic killings, revives our attentiveness to the vulnerability of high-profile sportsmen on official duty for their countries. Not only sportsmen but also officials as Broad, Taufel and others will tell you in the instance of the Lahore attack.  So, this reminder will be via a series of images –supplemented by point form thoughts below.

32a--Gaddafi plus cops _45529976_006965365-1- Police and security in a tizz at Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore Continue reading

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Home Umpires favour Own Teams in Cricket Test Matches

Eurasia Review… http://www.eurasiareview.com/15122014-home-umpires-favor-teams-cricket-test-matches/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+eurasiareview%2FVsnE+%28Eurasia+Review%29 

batsThe introduction of neutral umpires in Test cricket led to a drop in the number of LBW decisions going in favor of home teams, a study has revealed. The findings from research by economists, published by the Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, come amidst renewed debate on whether neutral umpiring is still required in Test matches following the introduction of the Decision Review System (DRS). Continue reading

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Sri Lanka v England, seventh one-day international: as it happened … working backwards in review

 

– SRI LANKA (302/6) BEAT ENGLAND (215) BY 87 RUNS
– SRI LANKA WIN SERIES 5-2
– Dilshan hits 18th career ODI hundred
– Root top-scores with 80 in England reply
Sri Lanka say goodbye to Sangakkara and Jayawardene
Cook is natural leader of England, says Downton
Sri Lanka v England: scorecard

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16.36 So that is the end of England’s tour to Sri Lanka. Has anything been concluded or are there now more unanswered questions than ever? They have been outplayed for much of the series and Sri Lanka fully deserve their 5-2 win. The England selectors will meet on Friday to decide their squad for the tri-nations tour Down Under in January, which is expected to be very similar, if not identical, to the World Cup squad the following month. Does Alastair Cook stay? We will find out with the announcement on Saturday. Thank you for joining today. Cheerio.

16.28 These are great scenes. Not so for the England guys. Don’t know where they are. Crying in the changing room one presumes.

16.26 In case you need reminding, this is Jayawardene and Sangakkara’s final ODI on home soil after two phenomenal careers. The entire Sri Lankan team is doing a lap of honour round the park but all eyes are on the two of them.

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The Ali Cousin Brothers: Working Class to County Cricket Class … and as British as Any Muslim can be

Scyld Berry, in The Telegraph, 4 October 2014 … where the title readsMoeen Ali reflects on his incredible journey from Birmingham tarmac to the hallowed turf of Lord’s”

It is the size of an Olympic swimming pool, only it is covered in rough tarmac. It is set in a scruffy park in south Birmingham, through which a tornado went nine years ago, but here Moeen Ali, the find of the English season, learned to play cricket. “We used to live there,” said Moeen, driving down Stoney Lane and pointing to a row of rundown terraced houses. “I don’t live far away now, in fact I never want to leave this area. I love it here.”

STONEY LANE PARK Proving ground: England spin bowler Moeen Ali sits in Stoney Lane Park, the patch of tarmac in Sparkhill, Birmingham, where he started playing cricket. Photo: Andrew Fox

 Because of the multiracial harmony? “Yes, that was very good, it was really mixed when I was growing up. That’s why I don’t have a problem when it comes to people’s origin – because I was raised to mix in and feel normal and be a straight sort of person. I feel safer living in a community like this than going to a posher area. I went to a school called Nelson Mandela primary over there from the age of three.” Continue reading

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