Thursday, December 31, 2009
Sri Lanka May Lose Chance Of Hosting 2011 Cricket World Cup
The current situation has arisen following the report presented to the ICC by one of its Coordinating Officer James Fitzgerald who visited Sri Lanka recently.
The report presented to the ICC by Fitzgerald states that the three grounds presented by the Sri Lankan officials to host the matches were not prepared for the games and that there were no signs of the grounds being ready in time for the first game.
Fitzgerald has stated in his report that the Hambantota ground where two matches are scheduled to be held and the Pallekele ground where three matches are to be played had several issues related to the completion of construction while the grounds at the R. Premadasa Stadium has been damaged by an event that was recently held at the venue.
It is learnt that the R. Premadasa Stadium and grounds had been damaged due to the 60th anniversary celebrations of the Sri Lanka Army in September and the SLFP convention in November held at the venue.
It is also learnt that the Hambantota and Pallekele stadiums were deemed unfit by the ICC as they were constructed without adhering to the accepted quality standards.
Victory of England in Test Cricket Against South Africa
DURBAN, South Africa — Off-spinner Graeme Swann claimed five wickets for the second time this series as England beat South Africa by an innings and 98 runs in the second cricket Test on Wednesday.
South Africa was dismissed for 133 in its second innings after adding just 57 runs before losing its last four wickets just 70 minutes into the final day's play.
England captain Andrew Strauss was delighted with his side's performance.
"This was not far off the best performance I've seen from this team, certainly away from home," Strauss said, but he urged his team not to get carried away.
"We'll have to keep our feet on the ground in Cape Town," Strauss said. "We had some fantastic performances here with the two century-makers Ian Bell and Alastair Cook, and Graeme Swann has bowled well on wickets on which there has not been a huge amount of turn."
South Africa captain Graeme Smith acknowledged that his team had simply not been good enough.
"England outplayed us the whole middle part of the test and they deserved their victory, but hopefully we can bounce back quickly," said Smith. "We have to look at ourselves in the mirror... we weren't up to standard here. We weren't as precise as we needed to be with the ball."
Swann finished off the game by trapping tailender Dale Steyn lbw for three runs to finish with figures of 5-45 and claim the man of the match award for the second time in the series.
Swann has taken 14 wickets in the first two Tests.
"It's been a bit of a dream the last 12 months. The pitches in South Africa have been slower and turned more... we didn't expect that, but it means I get to do a lot of work," Swann said.
South Africa staggered to 76-6 by stumps on the fourth day needing 156 runs to make England bat a second time.
England's first success of the morning came after just 11 balls when Swann forced Morne Morkel back onto his stumps and trapped him in front for 15 with a quicker ball. Morkel had batted grittily for 51 minutes starting on Tuesday afternoon and hit three fours.
Next to go was the last recognized batsman Mark Boucher, giving seamer Stuart Broad his fourth wicket of the innings.
Boucher gloved the ball down leg to wicketkeeper Matt Prior, but England had to wait for third umpire Steve Davis to call it out after on field umpire Amiesh Saheba originally called it not. Boucher's 29, with three fours, came in 91 minutes.
Paul Harris batted for an hour to make 36, the highest score of the innings. He hit five fours and was the ninth man out when he mistimed a flick to the leg-side off James Anderson and was caught by Broad (4-43) at mid-on.
Eight balls later Swann struck the final blow by getting Steyn.
After the first Test in Pretoria ended in a draw, Wednesday's win puts England 1-0 up in the four-match series, with the third Test starting in Cape Town on Jan. 3.
South Africa will reflect that that they were simply outplayed by England, whose bowlers were more effective. The Proteas top six batsmen, too, will realize that they owe the team a big effort in the third test.
Much speculation has surrounded the composition of the Proteas attack in Durban, where veteran seamer Makhaya Ntini was retained in spite of the encouraging debut of Friedel de Wet in the Pretoria test.
There will no doubt be renewed calls for Ntini, who went wicketless in Durban, to be replaced by De Wet.
Asked if South Africa had the ability to take 20 wickets to win a Test match, Smith said: "We came close (to 20 wickets) in Pretoria. Obviously we have to make the right decisions with selections for Cape Town, and see how we make it work there."
Openers did the trick for India
It capped off a very good year for Indian cricket, both in Tests and ODIs, the obvious exceptions being the ICC tournaments.
As far as the ODIs go, we did lose the home series against the Australians, the only blip, but the series could have gone either way. But the team travelled to Sri Lanka twice as also to the West Indies and New Zealand and emerged on top, which has to make 2009 a special year, with the icing being the Test honours.
Most of the good results were set up by the openers — all three. What a year they have had, Sehwag and Gambhir in Tests and Sehwag and Sachin in the ODIs. And with captain Dhoni around to maneuver the middle order with aplomb, it isn’t a wonder really that the year has been such a good one.
The advent and increasing acceptance of T20 cricket has quickened up the ODIs, something 50-over cricket did to Tests. Not all of the change has been for the good though, certainly not for the bowlers. With teams slowly taking to the batting powerplay, even if they have not perfected the art, bowling has become more challenging.
One of the other things to have changed during the year is the way cricketers look at Pakistan. If 26/11 forced the cancellation of India’s tour to Pakistan and the consequent security issues during the general elections in India forced the move of the second edition of the IPL to South Africa, the incident involving the Sri Lankan team, has meant that no team is willing to visit Pakistan.
The IPL has become so popular that it has started to set off a new trend in world cricket. The possibility of more players following the Andrew Flintoff example of becoming a freelancer cannot be ruled out. Already Andrew Symonds seems to have ruled out trying for an Australia place again while Shahid Afridi has made clear his intentions of not playing Test cricket anymore.
I am not very comfortable with this but perhaps that is the way of the future. But one thing that must be kept in mind is that a person has to first establish himself in the international circuit before he can contemplate such moves. Flintoff has got that value behind him and so can afford to take his chances but that need not apply to a newcomer.
The thing is that the trend itself cannot be arrested. Just 3-4 years of international cricket can take a lot out of your body, the travel, time away from family and various pressures. An early move to the IPL may become the norm, which is a loss to international cricket.
Original at hindustantimes.com
Twenty20 Will Finish Pakistan Cricket'
Pakistan captain Mohammed Yousuf says he's worried too much Twenty20 cricket will "finish" cricket in his country.
The reigning Twenty20 world champions have taken a liking to the game's shortest format but Yousuf feels an over-emphasis is undermining players' ability to bat successfully in Test and even one-day cricket.
His comments came after Pakistan's 170-run defeat by Australia in the first Test, where, despite the hosts declaring in both innings, the tourists were dismissed for 258 and 251 on a placid MCG wicket.
In their past 14 Tests Pakistan have only passed 350 runs in an innings twice and the failures, according to Yousuf, relate to Twenty20 cricket.
"It used to happen before but now because of Twenty20 cricket no player knows how to stay at the wicket anymore," Yousuf told cricket website Cricinfo.
"Batsmen are finding it very difficult. I know the format has money, players get it and boards do but if Pakistan hypes up Twenty20 too much, Test and ODI cricket will really go down."
Pakistan hold the best win-loss ratio in international Twenty20 cricket and claimed the world championship in England earlier this year.
The format's popularity in Pakistan means most players are playing that form of the game at club level, and Yousuf says that has left the current crop of players unsuited to the longer forms of the game.
"Both in Tests and ODIs we have problems," Yousuf said.
"We struggle to bat 50 overs. Against New Zealand we couldn't make 212 in 50 overs. Everyone played shots and got out.
"Until players play with discipline and play ball to ball and leave balls they are supposed to we will struggle in ODIs, let alone Tests.
"If you see a ball, hit it because you have to score. But if you are going to slog all the time what is the point? I could have hit jumping out but unless you get a ball to hit what is the point?
"That is the point of Test cricket. It is necessary that Pakistanis, the media, the board, the fans realise that we (need to) play as little Twenty20 as possible.
"One domestic tournament is enough and a World Cup apart from that, but my belief is that you have to reduce Twenty20 heavily.
They shouldn't play it in club cricket - even there you play 20 overs, not 40-over matches.
"I only have two to three years left in my career but I worry Twenty20 will finish Pakistan's cricket."
Younus Khan’s Chances of Playing in Sydney
LAHORE: The chances of Younus Khan appearing for Pakistan in the New Year Test in Sydney have reduced significantly after no further decision was taken on the Pakistan team management’s request to call up the former captain to bolster the batting. The second Test is due to begin on January 3 and given the considerable travel time between the two countries, even if the request is accepted on Thursday (today) and Younus is asked to leave the same day, he might struggle to be ready in time for the Test on Sunday.
In any case, it appears as if the selection committee is not entirely convinced of the need for Younus, at least without him having attempted to find some kind of form first in domestic tournament Pentangular Cup starting on January 2. “It is not like the team is losing just because he isn’t there,” a member of the selection committee was quoted as saying on Wednesday. “The Pentangular is happening and that would be a good way for him to play and get some practice. The Sydney Test is looking very unlikely right now and no decision was taken today. And who will he replace there? Various batsmen have scored some runs here so it might be unfair to drop them,” he added.
Initially, the selection committee appeared to be waiting for the result of the first Test in Melbourne, which Pakistan ultimately lost by 170 runs, before taking a decision. Mohammad Yousuf, Pakistan’s captain, reiterated after the match that the side needed Younus and that a request had been made some time ago. But there appears to be a gap in communication: one selector claims that no official request has come in writing to them from Australia and another said that PCB chief Ijaz Butt had received the request and was going to consider it after discussing it with the selectors.
Amid the confusion, it is increasing likely that Pakistan will have to do without Younus as they attempt to level the series in Sydney. Pakistan’s batting struggled in both innings of the first Test, bowled out for 258 and 251 on what was widely acknowledged to be an unusually placid MCG surface.
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Afridi Makes Big Bash Splash
Shahid Afridi has made big impressions all over the world playing for Pakistan and he continued that trend with South Australia on Tuesday night in the Twenty20 Big Bash when he made an immediate impact by taking 4-19 against Western Australia at the WACA Ground.
But now he wants to get cracking with the bat.
Afridi burst onto the world stage as a 16-year-old in 1996 with a blistering century off a record 37 balls in his first-ever one-day international innings, and ever since has been one of the great enigmas with the bat.
He is capable of being one of the most devastating batsmen in the abbreviated forms of the game, but the bowling of the now 29-year-old has continued to improve and it was his leg-spinners that earned him man-of-the-match honours as the Redbacks beat the Warriors.
Afridi enjoyed the bounce and turn he got from the WACA wicket to claim the wickets of Luke Ronchi, Ashley Noffke, Aaron Heal and Nathan Coulter-Nile, and he's always liked plying his trade on the pitches in Australia.
"That was a good track for bowlers, especially when I was getting good turn and bounce from it. I always enjoy bowling in Australia and in this situation my team needed me as a bowler. I always enjoy cricket, especially in Australia and India," Afridi said.
"You can learn a lot of things from here if you play with cricketers and on good tracks. If you perform here it matters a lot so always I'm very keen to perform. Over the past two and-a-half or three years I've totally focused on my bowling and I always enjoy my bowling here in Australia. Certainly I am looking forward to performing with my bat here as well."
Afridi's South Australian debut didn't get off to the ideal start, though, when he was caught first ball trying to hit spinner Heal out of the ground.
Now he is looking forward to finding form with the bat as he uses the Big Bash as preparation for Pakistan's upcoming one-day series with Australia.
"It was the first game and every new member had their own pressure, and when I hit the ball in the air I thought it was going to be a home run, but I didn't get one," he said.
"Compared to IPL (Indian Premier League) and all the other tournaments, this tournament is right up there. It's good cricket, good pitches and this is good preparation for me before playing in the one-dayers against Australia. Hopefully if I perform well I will go with good morale into that so it's very important for me."
Afridi doesn't want to be playing Test cricket at the moment due to the amount of games being played in all formats, but has taken a keen interest in the battle at the MCG and sees the first hour as crucial if Pakistan has any chance of a highly-improbably run chase.
"I want to give time to my family as well and until the 2011 World Cup I just want to focus on playing one-day and Twenty20 cricket," Afridi said.
"The first one hour is very important for both teams. This is the crucial wicket of (Mohammad) Yousuf and Umar Akmal."
"Umar is obviously playing positive and attacking cricket, which I like in him, and the first hour is crucial and important."
Pakistan Players Show Interest in IPL Auction
At least twelve Pakistan cricketers have applied to the IPL to be included in the next player auction which takes place next month ahead of IPL 3.0.
After missing out on Visa's earlier this month the players were told by IPL commissioner Lalit Modi that the only way they could play in the next IPL would be to take part in the next auction, even if they were already had IPL contracts.
"There is an auction coming up on January 19. If there are spots open at the auction point. They can then apply through the auction" said Modi.
"As far as reversing these contracts is concerned, it's a very difficult system because we have a system in place. And we can't abuse the system. And everybody was given a fair chance to be able to go out there and prove their case and also present their NOC's and letters"
"As they have missed the deadline, the teams have replaced these players and signed new contracts. So there are contractual obligations that come into place," he said."
Although no further details have been announced Kamran Akmal, Sohail Tanvir, Misbah-ul-Ha have all expressed interested in taking part in the auction.
Gayle in the clear
Pakistan Eye Dual Spin Attack at SCG
Pakistan admit they need more than the expected recall of spinner Danish Kaneria and even the possible return of ex-skipper Younus Khan to beat Australia in the second cricket Test at the SCG.
While they would undoubtedly be a big help, the tourists were on the back foot from the start of the first Test as they lost by 170 runs on Wednesday and accepted they had to get better.
"All areas have to improve," captain Mohammad Yousuf said bluntly.
Pakistan's fielding, in particular, was woeful.
Australia also dropped some catches, but Pakistan's missed opportunities on day one set the tone.
Pakistan still had a slim chance at the start of the final day, at 3-170 and chasing 422.
But Mitchell Johnson's two wickets in two balls during the first over shut the door.
"I (was) 70 per cent confident maybe we will win, because 251 is 90 overs if we don't give early wickets, maybe they are more under pressure," Yousuf said.
"But the first over put us under pressure - Johnson's first over killed us."
Yousuf confirmed that Kaneria had recovered from the finger injury that forced him out of the Boxing Day Test side and will be fit for the second Test starting on Sunday.
The captain has also spoken to Younus and is hopeful he will join the squad in Australia soon, but it is now up to Pakistan's selectors.
Younus has not played for Pakistan since resigning abruptly from the captaincy last month.
One of the main reasons that Younus resigned was ructions within the team, but Yousuf has no doubt that he can return.
"When I spoke to him he is happy to come to play - he is a good person," Yousuf said.
"Obviously Younus is a very experienced player and a very good player.
"He's got a 50 average in Test matches, we miss him a lot, he is a very crucial No.3 (batsman)."
Yousuf also hopes to play two spinners in Sydney, if the wicket is right, and thinks this might be a problem for the home side.
"Some games I saw in Sydney, if it behaves the same it may be difficult for Australia," he said.
There were some encouraging signs in Melbourne and Yousuf singled out young paceman Mohammad Aamer and batsmen Umar Akmal and Misbah-ul-Haq for praise.
But overall, Pakistan head north knowing Australia have the upper hand in the three-Test series.
"We lost but we are looking forward to two Test matches," Yousuf said.
"The series is not finished yet, hopefully we are trying harder the next game."
Aamer Youngest Fast Bowler to Take Five Wickets
Mohammad Aamer, at 17 years and 260 days, become the youngest fast bowler in history to claim a five-wicket haul in Tests.
The left arm fast medium bowler from Gujjar Khan achieved this feat by taking five for 66 in Australian second innings on the fourth-day of the first Test match at Melbourne Cricket Ground on Tuesday (December 29).
Pakistan’s Wasim Akram held the previous record. The left arm fast bowler was 18 years and 253 days old when claimed five wickets for 56 in New Zealand’s first innings at Dunedin on February 11, 1985. The former Pakistan skipper also took five wickets for 72 in the second innings of the match.
Pakistan’s Nasim-ul-Ghani is the youngest bowler to take five wickets in a Test innings. The slow left-arm orthodox bowler was 16 years and 307 days old when he took five wickets for 116 runs in West Indies’ second innings at Georgetown on March 17,1958.
Shane Watson scored his maiden century in the 25th innings of 15th Test match by making an unbeaten 120 off 220 balls with 10 fours and a six. His previous highest was 93 in the first innings of the match. Pakistan’s fifth dropped catch of the match ensured Watson became the first Australian batsman since Michael Hussey (121) at The Oval in August 2000 to reach triple figures in a Test, breaking a team sequence of 20 unconverted half-centuries. In 12 innings as Australia’s Test opener, he has now scored 716 runs at the eye-catching average of 65.09. Shane Watson’s century was Australia’s 63rd in 54 Test matches against Pakistan.
With 93 in the first innings and an unbeaten 120 in the second, Shane Watson became the eighth Australian and 41st batsman overall on 42 occasions to score a hundred and a ninety in the same Test match. West Indian Shivnarine Chanderpaul is the only batsman who did the same twice.
Sunday, December 27, 2009
I was treated unfairly in the steroids case: Asif
He vowed to “tell everything” about his drug dramas. Banned for a year for testing positive to steroid nandrolone during the inaugural Indian Premier League (IPL) in 2008, Asif has only just returned to Test cricket. The lanky paceman began his Test career against
Pakistan, England T20 Dates Finalised
England and Pakistan will be landing in Dubai on February 16 to play two Twenty20 International on February 19 and 20 and both matches will be played in Dubai Sports City Stadium, an official from Dubai Sports City confirmed.
The two-match series was infact purposed by the ICC task-force[headed by ECB Chairman Giles Clarke] to help Pakistan in funds raising as the cash-strapped Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) facing difficulties in generate revenues due to international teams' refusal to tour Pakistan because of security reasons.
Last year, the ICC moved the Champions Trophy from Pakistan to South Africa and India refused to tour Pakistan after the Mumbai terror attacks. And PCB revenues have fallen sharply after it was forced to stop hosting international matches due to ongoing security concerns.
PCB's chief Ijaz Butt said that its annual revenues fell by 71 percent as they lost $40 million in revenues from the loss of the India series alone.
With no scheduled Twenty20 internationals before the Twenty20 World Cup in the West Indies in May, the England Board was eager to arrange two extra internationals in order to prepare for the T20 World Cup. The England team currently in South Africa will head to Dubai after concluding their tour. On other hand Pakistan finishing up their ongoing tour of Australia on February 5.
Dubai Sports City will also hosting England Lions and Pakistan A team from February 7 to 26 next year. They will be playing five one-dayer and 5 Twenty20s, scheduled for Sharjah, Dubai and Abu Dhabi.
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Scintillating Andrew Strauss Lights The Way As England Show Bulldog Spirit
England came back strongly against the South African bowling in the latter half of the second day and hauled themselves into contention in a match that appeared to be drifting away.
South Africa had managed 343, comfortably exceeding the past decade's first innings average of 300 and worth considerably more given the boggy slowness of the outfield. It was overcast all day too, respite from Saturday's Turkish bath, and sufficiently so to get the seam bowlers twitching. The ball usually swings in such conditions, and pitches tend to green up, the ball bruising the grass and nipping around off the seam. The South African pacemen, bodies loosened by a spot of bat swinging during some last-wicket shenanigans, preened, ready to dominate proceedings for the remainder of the afternoon.
Instead, they found Andrew Strauss batting as if the spirit of Chris Gayle had entered his body, carrying the attack to the South Africans in such emphatic manner that it must have dented their confidence in their capacity to scythe through what they might perceive as England's fragile batting order.
Strauss and Andy Flower have managed to instil a new ethos in the team, one of playing without fear, and it is uncanny the effect such an attitude can have. Strauss pulled strongly with that satisfying clump that denotes a shot well struck from the very centre of the blade, drove ferociously and once, in an over that dismantled the flagging Makhaya Ntini, cut witheringly, so that he reached a galumphing half century from just 49 balls.
If it was not to last, then it had lit the way. Only when the giant Morne Morkel went round the wicket and tucked him up from just back of a length, did he appear vulnerable. One strong lbw shout was immediately reviewed at Strauss's instigation, and overturned on the grounds that the third umpire, suspecting the thinnest of inside edges, had detected a noise from the stump mic to which he is privy, but it was a close run thing.
The review took 10 seconds fewer than it would take Hicham el Guerrouj to run the 1500m in his world record mark of 3min 26sec. Shortly afterwards, a similar delivery missed his pads and uprooted his leg and middle stumps.
But Strauss had made 54, sharing an opening stand of 71 with Alastair Cook, who in his 50th Test (at just 25, the youngest England player to reach that mark) had batted with the solidity and sound judgment that has been missing for a while.
Cook was not to be tempted outside off-stump, played straight in defence, twice pulled Dale Steyn emphatically and had not been afraid to clump Paul Harris over midwicket as a prelude to the tea interval. When bad light intervened, as it threatens to do on each day of this match, he had made 31 of England's 103 for one, with Jonathan Trott, operating as he does on a different timescale to everyone else, settling in nicely on 17.
As ever though, especially with an early start once more, the first hour or so tomorrow will provide a strong clue to the direction this game will take: lose wickets and South Africa can take charge; see the morning out and it is England who will be looking for a decent first-innings lead.
Having taken three vital wickets in the nick of time on Saturday, England were hoping for further inroads first thing, but instead encountered a fierce counterattack from AB de Villiers, architect of the run out of his captain and thus with some ground to make up, and that terrier of a cricketer, Mark Boucher.
With Boucher taking the lead role, the pair added 63 for the sixth wicket, taking England to within two overs of the second new ball without a breakthrough before Graeme Swann came to the rescue, right on cue, and, from round the wicket, winning a verdict only after his request for review.
It gave England a new ball and one end open to exploit. Yet it was De Villiers who, having completed his half century, was caught at the wicket off Stuart Broad. Swann then disposed of both Morkel and Harris to further lbw decisions, each disputed but upheld, before Steyn, one of the better No10s around, and Ntini, not quite so noteable, added 58 together.
Steyn's fierce hitting of Swann put a question mark against Strauss's decision to persist with his spinner, who was searching for a fifth wicket, and dented the figures that nonetheless put into the shade the idea of seamers dominating the match. It took James Anderson to finish things off.
The umpire decision review system was given a full airing. Seven times play was halted significantly while first the players convened a meeting (nine of them in a huddle for one such) and then the third umpire made his deliberations. More than 20 minutes of a truncated day were lost.
Of those reviews, only two were upheld, which if nothing else gives some indication of the excellence of the umpiring in this series, Aleem Dar and Steve Davis at Centurion together with Dar and AM Saheba in this game.
There have been none of the so called "howlers", for the eradication of which the process has been designed. Occasionally, the duplicity of the players has been shown up, which is to the good.
Why for example, would Matt Prior and the slips appeal vehemently for a catch at the wicket, and then when quizzed by Strauss, following a not-out verdict, decide that it should not be reviewed? By and large the system is working well for a work in progress but it is still cumbersome, sluggish and, an essential element, deprives the game of the drama of a slow Steve Bucknor death.
Tasmania Signs Rana Naved
Dangerous Pitch May Harm India
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Pakistan leaves out one of its best
PAKISTAN has left former captain Younus Khan out of the 16-man squad for the three-Test series in Australia beginning on Boxing Day at the MCG.
Younus quit the side last month saying he had lost control of the players and his cricket board says he has not been in contact or played since.
"Younus wanted to rest, but he didn't play in the domestic cricket since the one-day series against New Zealand," chief selector Iqbal Qasim said. "He didn't give his availability to us and therefore we did not select him."
Mohammad Yousuf, who quit the side to join the Indian Cricket League two seasons ago, will retain the captaincy for the Tests after returning to the team following the collapse of the rebel league.
"Mohammad Yousuf has been appointed to continue as captain of the team for Tests and the one-day series in Australia . . . Shahid Afridi will be the captain for Twenty20," the Pakistan Cricket Board said in a statement.
Yousuf has led the side during the series against New Zealand with the third and deciding Test to start tomorrow at Napier.
Younus was Pakistan's leading run-scorer on the 2004-05 tour of Australia, but Yousuf scored a memorable century in Melbourne. The side has also lost its colourful captain Izamam-ul-Haq.
Younus, 32, played for South Australia last summer and said he would make a comeback for the Australian tour.
The former captain averages 53.73 from 63 Tests and is one of the side's most successful batsmen.
Sixteen of the 18 players in New Zealand will fly directly to Australia, while all-rounder Yasir Arafat and back-up wicketkeeper Sarfraz Ahmed have been dropped from the touring squad.
Former captain Shoaib Malik survived a push for him to be axed after a poor run during the New Zealand series.
Despite having fat sucked from his stomach in order to approximate fitness, erratic fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar was not included in the squad.
Pakistan cricket is struggling to make up a massive revenue shortfall as no side will tour the country following the terrorist attack on the Sri Lankan team bus this year.
It has apparently proposed a one-day series in England next year against a World XI and a series against India at neutral venues.
India has refused to tour since the terrorist attacks in Mumbai last year.
Australia will play a two-Test series and two Twenty20 match series against Pakistan in England next year.
The Pakistan board met a special ICC task force in Dubai this week to discuss ways to improve its financial position. Reports claim its revenue is down 71 per cent for the year and that the board lost $40m from the loss of the India series. The ICC moved the Champions Trophy from Pakistan to Mumbai over security concerns.
The Indian Premier League announced this week that no Pakistan players would be included in the next tournament as its government had refused to provide them with visas.
Squad: Mohammad Yousuf (c), Salman Butt, Khurrum Manzoor, Imran Farhat, Shoaib Malik, Fawad Alam, Faisal Iqbal, Misbah-ul-Haq, Kamran Akmal, Danish Kaneria, Saeed Ajmal, Umar Gul, Mohammad Asif, Mohammad Aamer, Abdur Rauf, Umar Akmal
India achieves number-one in world cricket
India’s batting prowess in their test series win over Sri Lanka has catapulted them to the vaunted number one position in the cricket world rankings sponsored by Reliance Mobile. The Indians achieved the feat with a 2-0 win over neighbours Sri Lanka on Sunday.
India would be the third team after Australia and South Africa to emerge at the top of the cricket pile since the rankings were first introduced in May 2001.
Starting from number three
India started from the third position trailing South Africa with three points and Australia on the log but surged to the first position with 119 ratings. Victory over Sri Lanka by an innings and 144 runs in Kanpur and by an innings and 24 runs in Mumbai earned Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s side the much-needed five ratings points which have given it the much coveted number-one position.
The series whitewash means that India could finish 2009 as the highest-ranked side after starting the year in third place behind Australia and South Africa.
Although, Australia still have a chance with their ongoing test series against the West Indies which will conclude before the year ends, even a 3-0 clean sweep will not be enough for Ricky Ponting’s side to challenge India’s top spot.
South Africa had gone top of the test rankings in August after Australia lost the Ashes to England, but will have an opportunity to regain its position when it goes against England later in the month in a four-test series. A series win by 2-0 or better will give Graeme Smith’s South African side its number-one spot but anything less will result in an increase to India’s lead.
The number-one ranking in the most challenging and demanding format of the game hence the competitive hassling that goes on. India, having attained the position albeit temporarily, would be desirous of keeping the smiles permanent on the faces of their fans – the largest support group the world over in the game and its players.
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