Monday, May 21, 2007

Live Scores-Pakistan Vs Srilanka-2nd ODI

20-05-2007 at Abu Dhabi
Pakistan beat Sri Lanka by 98 runs
Pakistan won the toss and decided to bat
Pakistan Innings
313 for 9 (50.0 overs)
Sri Lanka Innings
215 all out (39.5 overs)

Pakistan Innings


Runs
Balls
4s
6s
Salman Butt c and b C M Bandara
74
81 11 0
Imran Nazir

b C R D Fernando
17
14 4 0
Yasir Hameed c and b C M Bandara
50
53 7 0
Mohammad Yousuf run out

37
45 2 0
Shoaib Malik

b C M Bandara
27
19 2 1
Kamran Akmal c T M Dilshan b M F Maharoof
38
46 4 0
Shahid Afridi c C M Bandara b M F Maharoof
1
5 0 0
Abdul Razzaq

b C R D Fernando
16
25 0 0
Mohammad Sami

b M F Maharoof
22
12 3 1
Umar Gul not out

0
0 0 0
Mohammad Asif not out

5
4 1 0
Extras

4nb 17w 5lb 26

Total

for 9 313 (50.0 ovs)

Bowler
O
M
R
W
P D R L Perera 10.0 2 67 0
C R D Fernando 10.0 0 71 2
M F Maharoof 10.0 0 65 3
C M Bandara 10.0 0 56 3
T M Dilshan 10.0 0 49 0

Fall of wicket

45 Imran Nazir
143 Yasir Hameed
167 Salman Butt
207 Shoaib Malik
233 Mohammad Yousuf
237 Shahid Afridi
278 Kamran Akmal
309 Mohammad Sami
309 Abdul Razzaq


Sri Lanka Innings


Runs
Balls
4s
6s
W U Tharanga c Imran Nazir b Shahid Afridi
48
57 9 0
C K Kapugedera

b Mohammad Sami
20
16 4 0
B S M Warnapura lbw b Mohammad Asif
5
14 1 0
D P M D Jayawardene

b Mohammad Asif
61
69 6 1
L P C Silva c Abdul Razzaq b Shahid Afridi
21
29 3 0
T M Dilshan lbw b Shoaib Malik
10
18 0 0
H A P W Jayawardene lbw b Shahid Afridi
1
3 0 0
M F Maharoof c Salman Butt b Mohammad Sami
17
18 3 0
C M Bandara c Yasir Hameed b Umar Gul
11
16 2 0
C R D Fernando not out

2
4 0 0
P D R L Perera

b Umar Gul
0
1 0 0
Extras

6nb 5w 8lb 19

Total

all out 215 (39.5 ovs)

Bowler
O
M
R
W
Mohammad Asif 10.0 0 59 2
Mohammad Sami 6.0 1 27 2
Umar Gul 3.5 0 38 2
Shoaib Malik 10.0 0 46 1
Shahid Afridi 10.0 0 37 3

Fall of wicket

37 C K Kapugedera
49 B S M Warnapura
113 W U Tharanga
153 L P C Silva
172 T M Dilshan
176 H A P W Jayawardene
188 D P M D Jayawardene
205 M F Maharoof
214 C M Bandara
214 P D R L Perera

Umpires: S L Shastri, R B Tiffin
Pakistan: Imran Nazir, Salman Butt, Yasir Hameed, Shoaib Malik, Mohammad Yousuf, Shahid Afridi, Abdul Razzaq, Kamran Akmal, Mohammad Sami, Mohammad Asif, Umar Gul
Sri Lanka: W U Tharanga, B S M Warnapura, C K Kapugedera, D P M D Jayawardene, L P C Silva, T M Dilshan, H A P W Jayawardene, C M Bandara, M F Maharoof, C R D Fernando, P D R L Perera

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Hoggard set to miss rest of Test

England's Matthew Hoggard seems certain to miss the rest of the first Test against the West Indies after tearing a thigh muscle on Saturday.

The seamer left the field before lunch on the third day after suffering the injury during his follow-through.

Hoggard did not take to the field on Sunday and is believed to have suffered a grade one tear which could rule him out of further matches in the series.

His absence will limit England's options as they push for victory.

England's pace attack largely misfired on day three on Saturday and it was left to spinner Monty Panesar to take up the responsibility of providing some control.

Durham paceman Steve Harmison faded badly after a decent start and failed to take a wicket from his 22 overs, while Liam Plunkett's two scalps came at a cost of 81 runs.

Paul Collingwood was also employed by Strauss, the all-rounder taking 1-34 off 11.5 overs.

Day three washed out-Live India Vs Bangladesh

Day three of the first Test between Bangladesh and India has been called off due to bad weather.

There had been only 20 overs bowled on day two and the decision taken on Sunday by umpires Daryl Harper and Billy Doctrove was a straightforward one.

Heavy rain fell overnight and morning showers refused to clear, leaving the officials to conclude there was no chance of play.

Weather permitting, the match is scheduled to restart 30 minutes early at 9.30am local time on Monday.

Centuries from Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly had left India at 6-384 after the first two days' play, although the match now appears bound for a draw.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

England v West Indies 1st Test

WestIndies Hit back Against England!
Spinner Monty Panesar took four wickets for England but West Indies fought back bravely on day three of the first Test.

Panesar bowled Devon Smith and trapped Ramnaresh Sarwan (35), Daren Ganga (49) and Runako Morton lbw as they slumped to 187-5 replying to 553-5 at Lord's.

But Dwayne Bravo (56), Shiv Chanderpaul (63no) and Denesh Ramdin (60) feasted on bad bowling as they closed on 363-7.

England were hampered by the absence of Matthew Hoggard, who did not bowl after suffering a thigh strain before lunch.

He may be available on Sunday after having a scan and England will need to polish the Windies off quickly and bat positively to prevent this game drifting towards a draw on a surface which has flattened considerably.

The home side's bowling was anything but inspired and Steve Harmison looked more like the man who endured an Ashes nightmare last winter than the one who was on top of the world in the Caribbean three years ago.

Indeed, the visitors, all of whom got starts, would have been in an even healthier position had they shown better judgement against slow left-armer Panesar, even though he bowled with great control.

After England declared on their overnight total, Chris Gayle and Ganga coped well with the movement through the air that Hoggard generated and the brisk opening spell delivered by Harmison at around the 90mph mark.

A change brought almost instant rewards when Liam Plunkett's second ball, a full delivery, beat a leaden-footed effort from Gayle (30) and knocked back off-stump.

Smith rode his luck to take over the role of aggressor from Gayle, cracking Plunkett and Hoggard on the up through the covers for three sumptuous boundaries with lunch approaching.

With Hoggard going off wincing in considerable pain, the home side were running out of ideas until Smith played for turn that was not there and Panesar had his first victim with his first ball.

Sarwan began positively but was never really comfortable against the spinner, although life was easier against Harmison, who sent a succession of deliveries down the leg-side.

Plunkett's accuracy also suffered when he replaced him and England were desperate for a lift.

Up stepped Panesar to deceive Sarwan (35), Ganga (49) and Morton - who saw Paul Collingwood drop a chance high at second slip when a Plunkett delivery reared up - with straightish deliveries, which umpire Asad Rauf bravely ruled would have gone on to hit the stumps.

However, Bravo successfully knocked Panesar out of his stride after tea by coming down the track to drive him twice through long-on.

With no great turn on offer, other than occasionally from the rough patches, there was a bit of immunity for the talented all-rounder and successive heaves over mid-wicket and long-on brought him 10 runs which took him past 50 off 50 balls.

Stand-in skipper Andrew Strauss was again short of options and shuffled his bowlers around to force a breakthrough.

Even the dogged Collingwood had no answer to Bravo's impeccable timing and placement until, inexplicably, the Trinidadian tried to launch him into the crowd and succeeded only in finding Alastair Cook at deep mid-wicket.

England had a window of opportunity and Chanderpaul, who began cautiously, could have fallen soon after when he offered no shot to Panesar, but this time Rauf rejected a strong lbw appeal.

Ramdin could equally have been given out by Rauf when he pushed forward uncertainly - it was no different to the three successful shouts.

But the duo survived those scares to play a succession of handsome shots, none better than the two late cuts the wicket-keeper launched off Panesar.

Chanderpaul flicked Collingwood off his hips to take the score up to 300 and then edged wide of the keeper to bring up his fifty, and the runs continued to flow after the new ball was taken.

Harmison's confidence was shot by the end with the big Durham man finding it almost impossible to bowl anything straight, and when he did it was usually too full.

Ramdin three times collected pairs of boundaries off him, driving and cutting with real aplomb to emphatically record his fifth Test fifty and erase any doubts about whether the follow-on could be avoided.

Even though he edged Plunkett to second slip minutes before the close, just as they were on the tortuous tour of Australia, all the demons were once more causing disarray in English minds.