Bangalore Royal Challengers v Delhi Daredevils:

It was a dismissal that summed up Bangalore’s shambolic displays in this competition. Misbah-ul-Haq, who finally revealed why so many consider him a master of the Twenty20 IPL, smashed one hard to long-off. For a while, it looked as though it might be four, but Shoaib Malik, wo was placed on substitute for Gautam Gambhir, made good ground to stop the ball .

It was the last ball of the 16th over and the scoreboard was hardly moving, Cameron White ran across for the first and turned quickly for the second one ,and atlast he achieved it. Misbah, perhaps used to more leisurely step by step, didn’t respond, and Malik’s throw to the bowler was passed on to Dinesh Karthik behind the stumps. White, who now has a 57 runs in the IPL.

Unlike in Test cricket, where you can have a poor session, or a one-day game, where you can be whacked in the Powerplays before staging a comeback, Twenty20 is an unforgiving format. A couple of bad overs and the game slides out of reach. Given the rain in the air and the cool conditions, Rahul Dravid would have been justified in expecting something special from his quick bowlers when they emerged to defend 154. Instead, Dale Steyn apart, they dished up the sort of rubbish that Geoffrey Boycott would have fancied his mum to hit.

For Delhi, Glenn McGrath and Farveez Maharoof had been almost immaculate, conceding 28 from eight overs and taking four wickets along the way. The contrast with Zaheer Khan and Praveen Kumar couldn’t have been more stark. Bangalore’s duo, both internationals, went for a whopping 70 from five overs, with Bharat Chipli’s brilliant catch at point gifting Praveen a wicket.

Bowling half-volleys and long hops to Sehwag isn’t clever at the best of times. To do so when your team had half a chance thanks to Misbah’s late flails was beyond the pale. Sehwag tried to defend his mates, saying: “The wicket was flat, good to bat on, and Gautam and I played really really well”, but in reality, the pitch was nowhere near as inert as some of Bangalore’s big-name players were.

Dravid was diplomatic as always, though he admitted that conceding 91 from the first seven overs wasn’t the best way to defend a modest target. “Given the conditions, I thought it was a good, fighting total,” he said. “Their top two are the guys in form and if we could have cracked one, or even both of them, open, we might have had a chance. But yes, we could have bowled a little better.

The consolation prize, and that’s all that Bangalore will win this season, came in the shape of a tidy spell from Anil Kumble and a superb allround display from Sreevats Goswami. With just one wicket in his previous six outings, the $500,000 investment on Kumble was looking rather generous, but on Monday night the old tricks and temperament scripted a nice turnaround.

Tillakaratne Dilshan was smartly stumped by Goswami off a big legbreak and Dinesh Karthik then miscued one to cover for White to take a fine catch. Had a contentious caught-and-bowled appeal against Shikhar Dhawan been upheld, Kumble’s figures would have been 4-0-18-3. As it was, the spells from him and Steyn weren’t quite enough to camouflage the inadequacies of others.

Goswami, who has spent the last few weeks training alongside Mark Boucher, was as relaxed behind the stumps as he was in front of it. Bangalore’s batting displays in this competition have been dire to put it mildly, and it was no surprise that his 39-ball half-century elicited huge cheers from a sizeable crowd. He ran the singles and twos with purpose and also pulled the ball with immense power for a little man.

He got an opportunity after quite a long wait,” said Dravid. “He’s got something about him. He showed some pluck and some fight out there.” Cautious against the accurate Maharoof, he chose his moments well, picking off Pradeep Sangwan, his Under-19 team-mate and Rajat Bhatia with aplomb.

Ultimately though, even Goswami had to cede centrestage to the real heroes, Delhi’s dynamic bowling duo. “Both of them hardly gave anything,” said a smug Sehwag later. “They know where to bowl and how to bowl.

Play of the Day:

Australian way doesn’t impress Pidge……….
When Bharat Chipli edged one behind off Glenn McGrath, he stood there and waited for the umpire to make his decision, in the time-honoured Australian way. Steve Davis, Australian himself, said no, and a snarling McGrath was left to snipe constantly at Chipli until a miscued pull ended his stay. Even then, McGrath appeared to be saying “not out, not out” to taunt the young batsman.

Goswami wins Under-19 spoils……..
It was a contest within a contest, two of India’s victorious Under-19 team facing off against each other. Sreevats Goswami won it handily enough, taking Pradeep Sangwan for a six and three fours in the over. It was just about the only thing Bangalore savoured on a night when they were once again outclassed.

Last-over blues……….
Bowling himself for one hugely expensive over probably cost Virender Sehwag and Delhi victory in their last game against Kings XI Punjab. This time, he bowled out McGrath and Farveez Maharoof and left the final over to Rajat Bhatia. With Misbah-ul-Haq on strike and in a rampant mood, it wasn’t an inspired gamble. The 24 runs Bhatia conceded at least gave Bangalore something to defend.

All we need is just a little patience……..
Dale Steyn was working up considerable pace in his second over, with Gautam Gambhir not scoring off the first four balls. But just as Bangalore started to dream of a maiden, Gambhir showed off his orange-cap powers with a dazzling straight drive and an elegant push through cover.

Are you Jonty in disguise?
Chipli may have done no more than rile McGrath with bat in hand, but at least he could claim the catch of the match, a stunning dive to his left at point to send back Sehwag. The only problem was that Delhi already had 91 on the board by then, with Sehwag careering to 47 from just 19 balls.

On the ball……….
Cameron White has been a major flop with bat in hand, but he does bring some Australian virtues to Bangalore’s fielding. When Gambhir cut one to deep backward point and set off, White’s throw to Goswami was just about perfect. Gambhir didn’t even wait for the umpire, jogging all the way back to the pavilion.

Delhi beat Rajasthan & Chennai trounce Mohali

Delhi beat Rajasthan

Delhi Daredevils thrashed Rajasthan Royals by nine wickets in the third match of the Indian Premier League on Saturday night at the Ferozeshah Kotla.

Gautam Gambhir 58 not out off 46 balls (7×4, 1×6) and Shikar Dhawan, 52 not out off 41 balls (7×4) shared a 112-run partnership for the second wicket to guide the homeside to 132 in 15.1 overs after Sehwag (12)’s early dismissal. Read more…

Presentation Ceremony ICL Twenty20 Championships 2008(VIDEO)

1st Session Day 3 1st Test Ind v SA @ Chennai Full Higlights (VIDEO)

Sehwag plunders fastest triple ever:

A breathtaking triple-century from Virender Sehwag, by far the fastest in terms of balls faced (278), was the centrepiece as India utterly dominated proceedings on the third day at the MA Chidambaram Stadium. Sehwag scored 257 runs in the day, finishing it on 309, the same score he made at Multan back in 2004. The fusillade of strokes produced 108 runs between lunch and tea, and he shared in two double-hundred stands, another record.

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Aussies eyeing IPL action before Windies:

Australia’s leading cricketers are likely to be granted a fortnight of paydirt in the Indian Premier League (IPL) before they tour the Caribbean. 

Cricket Australia (CA) is yet to announce what sort of role the likes of Ricky Ponting, Andrew Symonds and Brett Lee will have in the inaugural IPL season before the world champion team leaves for the West Indies in May.

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Imran Farhat shines in Lahore Badshahs’ victory:

Former Pakistani opener Imran Farhat hit a blazing half-century to lead Lahore Badshahs to a 38-run win over local favourites Chandigarh Lions in an ICL Twenty20 match in Panchkula on Sunday night. 

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BCCI to fund Olympic disciplines:

The cash rich Board of Control for Cricket in India on Saturday said it would officially announce the funding of the five disciplines of the Olympic sports by the end of this month and would restrict its help to only individual sports to start with.

BCCI Chief Administrative Officer (CAO) Professor Ratnakar Shetty said the Cricket Board and the Sport Ministry are in talks and the modalities are being worked to ensure effective disbursement of funds and proper accountability. 

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Delhi IPL team well balanced: Sehwag

Delhi Daredevils captain Virender Sehwag on Saturday insisted that his team has a good balance even though they could afford Australian tour hero Ishant Sharma because of his “high price“. 

Sehwag said the gangling fast bowler was among the players he listed but decided not to bid for him because the franchisee would not have got other top players the team wanted. 

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