Showing posts with label Dravid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dravid. Show all posts

Saturday, 7 July 2012

Arjuna Award will be a great honour, says Yuvraj Singh

BCCI to nominate Dravid for Khel Ratna, Yuvi for Arjuna


Indian cricketer Yuvraj Singh hopes to be second time lucky after being nominated for the Arjuna Award.

The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) on Saturday recommended names of Yuvraj and batting great Rahul Dravid for Arjuna and Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Awards respectively.

"It will be an honour if I get the award. I didn't get it last time around so I hope I get it this time," Yuvraj, who has successfully recovered from a rare germ cell caner, told reporters at the launch of his cancer foundation YouWeCan.

Yuvraj was also nominated for the Arjuna Award in 2007 when Dravid was considered for the Khel Ratna, India's highest sporting honour.

The BCCI nominated Yuvraj for the prestigious sports award considering his man of the series performance at the 2011 World Cup.


Sunday, 2 October 2011

Afridi Said Akhthar Autobiography

Did not question Tendulkar’s greatness: Afridi


A file photo of Shahid Afridi
 
 
A day after claiming that he saw Sachin Tendulkar’s legs trembling while facing Shoaib Akhtar, Pakistan’s former captain Shahid Afridi has now stated that he did not intend to question the Indian batting icon’s greatness, and was only talking about one incident.

“I am not denying what I have said. I have seen that Tendulkar was not at all comfortable against Shoaib in Kolkata Test in 1999. It was Shoaib’s first tour of India and he bowled out Sachin without giving him a chance to open his account. He also claimed (Rahul) Dravid’s wicket in both the innings,” Afridi told ‘PTI—Bhasha’ from Karachi.

“Shoaib was in full form on that tour and had tremendous speed. He terrorised almost all the batsmen in the world at that time. I have seen Sachin trembling as I was fielding at square leg. I am still saying that.
“But this was only one incident. He never spared Shoaib after that. We all have seen what happened in 2003 World Cup,” he added.

Afridi went on to state that the Indian batsman does not need his certificate.

“Sachin is one of the best batsmen and the whole world knows this. He does not need mine or anybody else’s certificate. His records speak for him,” Afridi said.

The controversy—prone former captain on Saturday backed Akhtar’s claim that Tendulkar was uncomfortable against his pace, saying that he had once witnessed the Indian batsman “trembling” while facing the pacer.

Afridi, who retired after revolting against his own board and has a history of making controversial remarks, said Tendulkar was uneasy against Akhtar, a claim which the pacer made in his recently—launched autobiography ‘Controversially Yours’.

Thursday, 22 September 2011

Dravid Comeback in ODI On Sachin Suggestion

Dravid backs Tendulkar’s suggestion on new ODI format


Rahul Dravid. File photo: V Sreenivasa Murthy
Rahul Dravid. File photo: V Sreenivasa Murthy
It might have been rejected by the ICC but Sachin Tendulkar’s suggestion to revamp the ODIs by splitting the format into four innings of 25 overs each has got the backing of his Test teammate Rahul Dravid.

“It is interesting (suggestion). I don’t know why the ICC has rejected it, but it’s a good idea that Sachin has given and is worth experimenting,” said India’s batting mainstay of the England tour on the sidelines of a promotional event in Mumbai last night.

“It has been tried out in Australia (in domestic cricket) and the plus and minus points should be looked into,” he added.

Tendulkar had written a letter to the ICC to change the format of the ODIs from two innings of 50 overs to four of 25 overs like a Test match but the world council’s Chief Executive Haroon Lorgat rejected it.
“There is no need to change the format,” Mr. Lorgat told reporters in Colombo on Wednesday.

Saturday, 6 August 2011

Dravid Say's Retire From ODIs

Dravid to retire from ODIs


“This ODI series is going to be my last,” said Rahul Dravid on Saturday. File photo
AP “This ODI series is going to be my last,” said Rahul Dravid on Saturday. File photo
He will, however, be available for both the Twenty20 International and ODIs in England, which will be his last limited-overs games.
Reading out a prepared statement here on Saturday, Dravid said: “I am honoured and privileged to be picked in the one-day team. I was obviously a little surprised. Since I was not picked for the last two years I had not informed the selectors or the board of my desire to solely focus on Test cricket.
“At the end of this ODI series, I would like to announce my retirement from ODI and T20 cricket and concentrate purely and solely on Test cricket. I am committed to give my best to India in the current series.
“This ODI series is going to be my last.”

 Zimbabve vs Bangladesh 1st Test Day3
 Match Status: Stumps
1st Innings
370 in 131.0 Overs
Run Rate: 2.82
2nd Innings
92/4 in 34.3 Overs
Run Rate: 2.67
BAN
1st Innings
287 in 96.2 Overs
Run Rate: 2.98
Zimbabwe lead by 175 runs
Zimbabwe 92/4(34.3 overs) RR: 2.67
Bangladesh 287(96.2 overs) RR: 2.98)
Zimbabwe 370(131.0 overs) RR: 2.82
Playing XI
Zimbabwe Vusi Sibanda, Tino Mawoyo, Hamilton Masakadza, Brendan Taylor (C), Craig Ervine, Tatenda Taibu (W), Elton Chigumbura, Ray Price, Brian Vitori, Chris Mpofu, Kyle Jarvis

Bangladesh Tamim Iqbal, Imrul Kayes, Shahriar Nafees, Mohammad Ashraful, Shakib Al Hasan (C), Mushfiqur Rahim (W), Mahmudullah, Abdur Razzak, Shafiul Islam, Rubel Hossain, Robiul Islam

Friday, 5 August 2011

Dravid Tell About Sachin's Secret

Child-like enthusiasm is Sachin's secret: Dravid


ONE OF A KIND: Sachin Tendulkar has stayed true to his game, according to many former England captains. Here he gets a standing ovation from the crowd when he takes the field on the last day of the first Test against England at Lord's.
AFP ONE OF A KIND: Sachin Tendulkar has stayed true to his game, according to many former England captains. Here he gets a standing ovation from the crowd when he takes the field on the last day of the first Test against England at Lord's.
 
A child-like enthusiasm for the game is the reason why Sachin Tendulkar has completed over two decades in international cricket despite the pounding that his body has taken, feels his long-time teammate Rahul Dravid.

“Sachin's longevity comes down to the joy that he still gets from playing. After 20 years of international cricket he still has a child-like enthusiasm. That's not an easy thing to do when you have been travelling and playing so much and your body has taken a pounding,” Dravid said in the latest edition of Wisden Cricketer magazine.

“He is great at preparing for games. Not only in terms of his skills but also getting his mind right. His batting has changed with time — with his body and age.

“That's the beauty of it. The game has changed, the bowlers have changed and he has changed along with that.
“Every time he has changed he has been successful. He hasn't seen too many bad patches in his career,” he added.
Dravid was not the only one paying tribute to the batting icon.

Five former England captains, including the Ashes-winning Michael Vaughan, revealed how the diminutive right-hander tormented and mesmerised them in equal measure in the same magazine.

Adjustments
Nasser Hussain said Tendulkar has made some adjustments to his strategy over the years. “Technically and mentally Sachin has changed little over the years but he has changed his game plan. He began as flamboyant, extravagant stroke-maker who had all the shots and simply loved the game. Once the records and the hundreds started to be racked up, he turned into a run-machine,” Hussain said.
“There are two types of cricketers; there are guys like myself and Mike Atherton who played the game because that's what we did; there are players like Graham Gooch and Alec Stewart who have the game in their blood, who would be lost without the game. “Sachin is in the second group. He is not driven by money, he is driven by batting,” he added.
Andrew Flintoff said he craved for Tendulkar's respect whenever he bowled at him.
“...with Tendulkar, when I bowled to him, I actually wanted him to respect me. I want him to walk off that field thinking that Flintoff is a good player, he can bowl. I want to impress him,” he said.

Seasoned player
Graham Gooch said even at the start of his career, Tendulkar came across as a seasoned player.
“No one had ever seen him in 1990. As a 17-year-old it was evident that the lad had great skill, great balance, great timing, an eye for the ball,” he said.
“For one so young he had a poise and composure about his batting. You don't often get that in young players; you get the talent and the stroke-making but poise, authority and composure normally come later.

Wednesday, 3 August 2011

Dravid enjoys touring England

He puts his hand up in troubled times


ADAPTABLE: The impressive facet of Dravid's batting in the two Tests in England was the strokeplay. He's taken a few risks, staying beside the line more often than is customary for him, to harness the ball's pace.
AP ADAPTABLE: The impressive facet of Dravid's batting in the two Tests in England was the strokeplay. He's taken a few risks, staying beside the line more often than is customary for him, to harness the ball's pace.
 
Dravid enjoys touring England — his understated manner blends right in
Rahul Dravid enjoys touring England — his understated, self-deprecatory manner blends right in — but he'd have liked a less exacting time of it, at 38.
Thus far, he has been asked to keep wicket, open the innings, and face the press after the Ian Bell incident. None of these is pleasant; the risk far outweighs the reward. But it seems the only time Dravid calculates equations of risk and reward is when he subjects deliveries to austere scrutiny — during the actual act of batting.
Every time something not entirely pleasant needs doing, Dravid, to borrow one of his pet phrases, “puts his hand up”. Many great cricketers have held the view that what's good for them is good for the team; but Dravid — like V.V.S. Laxman, Sachin Tendulkar, and Anil Kumble — has worn his greatness selflessly.
There's a reason middle-order batsmen, however good their technique, are loath to open. They aren't used to its many intangible demands.
There's a subtle difference between walking out at once and batting one-drop, even if you're in second ball.
“I have grown up, a middle-order batsman,” said Dravid, explaining it. “All my routines have been set for so many years. One of the things I find is when there is a 10-minute period, I am rushed. At one-down, sometimes I could be in after the first ball, but I would have had some breathing space, maybe 15-20 minutes.”
At least at Trent Bridge, unlike at Lord's, Dravid knew before the Test that he had to open. He could prepare accordingly. Once he had dealt with the particulars of opening, of stilling the rush, he could trust his natural game. It's a style fashioned from patience.
“I have been lucky with my temperament when it comes to batting,” he said. “I recognise I have to bat for a long time to score runs. I can't score boundaries like Sehwag, Sachin or Laxman. Over the years I have practised it. Every time I do it, I get better at it.”

Tight technique
The key to batting time is tight defensive technique — which, however, is nothing without the ability to leave the ball. It's this ability that has so despaired England's bowlers, who have confessed they are sick of bowling to him.

Important art
“When you come to England you know that leaving the ball is an important art,” said Dravid. “Standing in the slips, I have watched English players bat on their wickets and seen what kinds of length they leave. Then you obviously have to practise it in the nets. When you are in form and playing well, your judgement is better and confident.”
Not that he hasn't played and missed or nicked behind. He has had the fortune needed to survive, but more often than not he has allowed dangerous deliveries to spend their spite; he hasn't involved himself in the transaction.
The other impressive facet of Dravid's batting in the two Tests was the strokeplay. During his incredible run between 2000 and 2006, when he averaged nearly 62 in 72 Tests, he was denying himself less; he scored more than half his career's fours and 10 of the 19 sixes in this time. He's taken a few more risks here in England, staying beside the line more often than is customary for him, to harness the ball's pace.
A lot of it has to do with the ball staying harder for longer on the lush grounds here and bouncing higher from the pitches: it opens up Dravid's back-foot game, which has more scoring strokes — the cut, the pull, which he doesn't bring out as often these days, the flick off the hip, and the steer, which he's used to great effect here.
Boundary-hitting in India, especially when the ball softens, demands a rapid acceleration of the hands through the ball, not his strongest quality.
What will satisfy Dravid and his fans the most about the two centuries is the context: they've come against a disciplined, hostile, penetrative attack in difficult conditions. In the dark days of 2007 and 2008 (1411 run from 25 Tests at 32), such innings were rare. His subsequent renaissance was largely against lesser attacks. The centuries here brought to mind Dravid in his diligent pomp.
“I have had really high moments but also some lows, during which I have doubted myself,” said Dravid. “But I love batting. That's something that has never gone away from me. I could always find joy in going to the nets and batting. A lot of Test cricket is about balancing your emotions. Once you leave after the day's play at 7, it's how you take cricket away from your mind. Over the years I have got better at that.”

Discordant note
The lone discordant note is defeat: only one of Dravid's 32 centuries before this tour had come in a losing cause; it's now three of 34. He'll be doing everything in his power to ensure it doesn't happen again. But he'll only get by with a little help from his friends.

Sunday, 24 July 2011

Cricinfo Spl news Dravid - An honest star

Dravid - An honest star

There aren't too many men in world cricket as honest and articulate as Rahul Dravid when he's happy to open up. He spoke to the press after his unbeaten 103.
(Excerpts)
On whether two hundreds in four Tests have added a season to his career: That's the one thing I've learned from Sachin. He doesn't talk about the future; he just focuses on the present. He's been a great motivation for me. I just want to focus on the now.
On his lean period: When runs don't come you start to question yourself. The tour of West Indies gave me a lot of confidence, getting runs in Jamaica and Barbados which were pretty challenging wickets. There have been stages when I've doubted myself but that's just natural being a professional sportsman when you go through some tough times. You just have to enjoy what you do and keep trying to get better.
On making a century at Lord's: To miss out in my first Test here [he made 95] was something that stayed with me a little bit. It's not that if I hadn't got this hundred it would have been the end of the world. But it was there in the back of my mind. For it to come in this situation feels really good. There are some great names on that Honours Board and it's the most talked about Honours Board by international players. It's just nice to be on it.
On having a great career in Tendulkar's shadow: In some ways it suits me. The pressure is on him a lot of the time and I can slip by and get on with business.