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November 8, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a Comment

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November 8, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Mohali, Chandigarh, India


Punjab Cricket Association Stadium

Ground profile

Punjab Cricket Association, PCA Cricket Stadium, Sector – 63, SAS Nagar, Mohali – 160059 (Phone: 0172 – 2232300/1/2)

Established 1993
Floodlights Yes
End names Pavilion End, City End
Home team(s) Punjab
Curator Daljit Singh
Current local time 17:07, Fri Nov 07, 2008 (UTC +0530)
External links Weather

Next match
Mon 10 November 2008 – Thu 13 Punjab v Rajasthan, Ranji Trophy Super League 09:30 local time
Full list of forthcoming matches
Records and statistics
Statistics Ground records | Statsguru Tests | Statsguru ODIs
First Test India v West Indies – Dec 10-14, 1994 scorecard
Last Test India v Australia – Oct 17-21, 2008 scorecard
First ODI India v South Africa – Nov 22, 1993 scorecard
Last ODI India v Pakistan – Nov 8, 2007 scorecard
Profile

What was a swamp with deep ravines in 1992 was turned into India’s best stadium within a span of two years. The Punjab Cricket Association Stadium at Mohali, on the outskirts of Chandigarh, is a truly world-class venue with excellent practice facilities, spectator-friendly outlook and sufficient provisions for the media. The pitch at Mohali had the reputation of being the livliest in the country – India were even rolled over for 83 on the first morning against New Zealand in 1999 – but it changed complexion drastically over the next few years and turned into a dead pitch producing high-scoring draws. There have also been some cracking one-dayers played on this ground, the most thrilling being the World Cup semi-final in 1996 when Australia squeezed past West Indies in a nail-biting finish.

Latest Articles

View the full list of 129 related articles

Latest Photos

Oct 19, 2008

A poor turnout for the Test
A poor turnout for the Test
© Getty Images

Oct 25, 2006

Smog envelopes the ground at Mohali
Smog envelopes the ground at Mohali
© AFP

Oct 6, 2006

Indian police patrol outside the Punjab Cricket Association ground
Indian police patrol outside the Punjab Cricket Association ground
© Getty Images

View the full list of 54 related images

November 7, 2008 Posted by | Grounds | Leave a Comment

Bangalore, India

India ground profiles – back to home

M.Chinnaswamy Stadium

Ground profile

M.Chinnaswamy Stadium, Karnataka State Cricket Association, Mahatma Gandhi Road, Bangalore – 560001

Also or formerly known as Karnataka State Cricket Association Stadium
Established 1969
Capacity 40,000
Floodlights Yes
End names Pavilion End, BEML End
Home team(s) Karnataka
Curator Narayan Raju
Current local time 17:02, Fri Nov 07, 2008 (UTC +0530)
External links Weather

Next match
Mon 10 November 2008 – Thu 13 Karnataka v Tamil Nadu, Ranji Trophy Super League 09:30 local time
Full list of forthcoming matches
Records and statistics
Statistics Ground records | Statsguru Tests | Statsguru ODIs
First Test India v West Indies – Nov 22-27, 1974 scorecard
Last Test India v Australia – Oct 9-13, 2008 scorecard
First ODI India v Sri Lanka – Sep 26, 1982 scorecard
Last ODI India v Australia – Sep 29, 2007 scorecard
Profile

Originally named the Karnataka State Cricket Association Stadium, the ground was eventually renamed after M Chinnaswamy, who was the president of the Indian board from 1977 until 1980, and was involved in the administration of Karnataka cricket for close to four decades. The foundation for the construction of the stadium was laid in May 1969 and building began in 1970.

The stadium was given Test status in 1974-75 and hosted West Indies in the opening match, although the stadium was only half-built. That match was also the debut of two West Indian greats, Gordon Greenidge and Viv Richards. The stadium also played host to Sunil Gavaskar’s swansong innings – a masterclass on a minefield – when India went down to Pakistan in the series decider in 1987.

The stadium was renovated before the two sides met each other again in another titanic encounter; the World Cup quarter-final in 1996, when floodlights were installed for the first time. Since then, Bangalore has proved to be a lucky venue for visiting teams with South Africa, Australia and Pakistan winning crucial games. South Africa’s historic series win in 2000, Michael Clarke’s sensational hundred on debut, Inzamam’s century in his 100th Test and Anil Kumble’s 400th Test wicket have been the highlights over the last decade.


Latest Articles

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Latest Photos

Oct 11, 2008

Fans wave their support
Fans wave their support
© Getty Images

Oct 11, 2008

Fans cram in at the Chinnaswamy Stadium
Fans cram in at the Chinnaswamy Stadium
© Getty Images

Oct 7, 2008

An overview of the nets session at the Chinnaswamy Stadium
An overview of the nets session at the Chinnaswamy Stadium
© Getty Images

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November 7, 2008 Posted by | Grouds | Leave a Comment

Australia Squad

Australia tour of India, 2008/09

October 22, 2008


Ricky Ponting
Captain

Age 33 years 308 days

Playing role Higher middle order batsman
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium


Doug Bollinger

Age 27 years 90 days

Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm fast


Stuart Clark

Age 33 years 24 days

Playing role Bowler
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast-medium


Michael Clarke

Age 27 years 203 days

Playing role Lower middle order batsman
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Slow left-arm orthodox


Brad Haddin
Wicketkeeper

Age 30 years 365 days

Playing role Wicketkeeper batsman
Batting Right-hand bat


Matthew Hayden

Age 36 years 359 days

Playing role Opening batsman
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium


Michael Hussey

Age 33 years 148 days

Playing role Opening batsman
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium


Phil Jaques

Age 29 years 172 days

Playing role Opening batsman
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm medium


Mitchell Johnson

Age 26 years 355 days

Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm fast-medium


Simon Katich

Age 33 years 62 days

Playing role Batsman
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Slow left-arm chinaman


Jason Krejza

Age 25 years 282 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak


Brett Lee

Age 31 years 349 days

Playing role Bowler
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast


Shaun Marsh

Age 25 years 105 days

Playing role Lower middle order batsman
Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Slow left-arm orthodox

(added 22nd October)


Peter Siddle

Age 23 years 332 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast-medium


Shane Watson

Age 27 years 127 days

Playing role All-rounder
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast-medium


Cameron White

Age 25 years 65 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak googly

(added 4th October)


Bryce McGain
Withdrawn player

Age 36 years 211 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak googly

November 7, 2008 Posted by | Squads | Leave a Comment

India Squad – 3rd and 4th Test

3rd Test: India v Australia at Delhi, Oct 29-Nov 2, 2008

November 3, 2008


MS Dhoni
Captain/keeper

Age 27 years 119 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium


Subramaniam Badrinath

Age 28 years 65 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak


Rahul Dravid

Age 35 years 297 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak


Gautam Gambhir

Age 27 years 20 days

Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak


Sourav Ganguly

Age 36 years 118 days

Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium


Harbhajan Singh

Age 28 years 123 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak


Zaheer Khan

Age 30 years 27 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm fast-medium


VVS Laxman

Age 34 years 2 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak


Amit Mishra

Age 25 years 345 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak


Munaf Patel

Age 25 years 114 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium-fast


Virender Sehwag

Age 30 years 14 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak


Ishant Sharma

Age 20 years 62 days

Playing role Bowler
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast


RP Singh

Age 22 years 333 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm fast-medium


Sachin Tendulkar

Age 35 years 193 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak, Legbreak googly


Murali Vijay

Age 24 years 216 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak


Anil Kumble
Withdrawn player

Age 38 years 17 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak googly

November 7, 2008 Posted by | Squads | Leave a Comment

India Squad – 1st and 2nd Test

1st Test: India v Australia at Bangalore, Oct 9-13, 2008

October 1, 2008


Anil Kumble
Captain

Age 37 years 350 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak googly


Subramaniam Badrinath

Age 28 years 32 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak


MS Dhoni
Wicketkeeper

Age 27 years 86 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium


Rahul Dravid

Age 35 years 264 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak


Gautam Gambhir

Age 26 years 353 days

Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak


Sourav Ganguly

Age 36 years 85 days

Batting Left-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium


Harbhajan Singh

Age 28 years 90 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak


Zaheer Khan

Age 29 years 360 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm fast-medium


VVS Laxman

Age 33 years 335 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak


Amit Mishra

Age 25 years 312 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Legbreak


Munaf Patel

Age 25 years 81 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm medium-fast


Virender Sehwag

Age 29 years 347 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak


Ishant Sharma

Age 20 years 29 days

Playing role Bowler
Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm fast


RP Singh

Age 22 years 300 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Left-arm fast-medium


Sachin Tendulkar

Age 35 years 160 days

Batting Right-hand bat
Bowling Right-arm offbreak, Legbreak googly

November 7, 2008 Posted by | Squads | Leave a Comment

Australia tour of India, Sep-Nov 2008

Matches - Articles (333) - Photos (696) - Fixtures - Grounds - Squads - Records and statistics

Tour Match v RCA Centre of Excellence at Jaipur – Sep 27-28, 2008
Match drawn
Australians 218; RCA Centre of Excellence 122

Tour Match v Indian Board President’s XI at Hyderabad (Decc) – Oct 2-5, 2008
Match drawn
Indian Board President’s XI 455 and 292/4d; Australians 314 and 127/2

1st Test v India at Bangalore – Oct 9-13, 2008
Match drawn
Australia 430 and 228/6d; India 360 and 177/4

2nd Test v India at Mohali – Oct 17-21, 2008
India won by 320 runs
India 469 and 314/3d; Australia 268 and 195

3rd Test v India at Delhi – Oct 29-Nov 2, 2008
Match drawn
India 613/7d and 208/5d; Australia 577 and 31/0

4th Test v India at Nagpur – Nov 6-10, 2008
Stumps – Australia trail by 252 runs with 8 wickets remaining in the 1st innings
India 441; Australia 189/2
SM Katich 92* MEK Hussey 45* A Mishra 9-1-31-0 Harbhajan Singh 16-0-57-1

November 7, 2008 Posted by | Match results | Leave a Comment

Australia tour of India, 2008/09

September 2008
Sat 27 – Sun 28
09:30 local, 04:00 GMT
RCA Centre of Excellence v Australians
Sawai Mansingh Stadium, Jaipur
October 2008
Thu 2 – Sun 5
09:30 local, 04:00 GMT
Indian Board President’s XI v Australians
Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Uppal, Hyderabad
Thu 9 – Mon 13
09:30 local, 04:00 GMT
1st Test – India v Australia
M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore
Fri 17 – Tue 21
09:30 local, 04:00 GMT
2nd Test – India v Australia
Punjab Cricket Association Stadium, Mohali, Chandigarh
Wed 29 – Sun 2
09:30 local, 04:00 GMT
3rd Test – India v Australia
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi
November 2008
Thu 6 – Mon 10
09:30 local, 04:00 GMT
4th Test – India v Australia
Vidarbha Cricket Association Stadium, Jamtha, Nagpur

November 7, 2008 Posted by | Fixtures | Leave a Comment

Why India should seriously consider retaining Dhoni as captain for the rest of the series, whether Kumble plays or not

Give it to the keeper

October 26, 2008



Kumble or Dhoni? The Mohali Test has made the decision all too easy © AFP

Former Australia wicketkeeper Ian Healy is a sceptic when it comes to captaincy. He believes any suggestion it plays a significant role in achieving victory is purely self-promotion by the fraternity of skippers.

For the benefit of the court I’m displaying Exhibit A, a video of Australia’s second innings at Bangalore. Specifically, the period in the game when Anil Kumble was off the field and stand-in captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni led a vibrant India, a team that looked far superior to the one that performed in pedestrian mode a few hours later when the appointed captain was back in charge.

For the true non-believers this is Exhibit B: a video of the second Test, when Dhoni had the captaincy all to himself and a rampant India won by the biggest run margin in their history. Your honour, I rest my case for Dhoni to be appointed captain of India, not just for limited-overs and Twenty20 matches but Tests as well.

Yes, that’s right, a change of captain mid-series.

It’s not such a dramatic move if you consider the original reason for choosing Kumble as captain of the Test side. He was the ideal person to fill in for a short period until Dhoni was ready to do the job and also to avoid burdening the young keeper-batsman with a tough tour of Australia as his opening gambit in the Test captain’s job.

Anybody who watched the Mohali Test and still thinks Dhoni needs more grooming has attended too many dog shows. Dhoni is not only ready, his captaincy in Mohali was a major reason why India currently holds the psychological upper hand in this Test series.

If India doesn’t make the permanent change to Dhoni, they risk handing Australia a get-out-of-jail card. Whether Australia is in the right frame of mind to put that card to full use in this series is another question, but why would India want to dig an escape tunnel and chance their opponents stumbling upon it?

The best way to beat a good team is to attack them and try to provoke mistakes. In Bangalore, Kumble played a waiting game and Australia prospered, while in Mohali, Dhoni went on the offensive from the moment he won the toss, which helped send his opponents crashing to defeat.

There’s no doubt winning the toss made a huge difference, and having Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir set off aggressively also helped, but Dhoni did plenty to assist his own and the team’s cause. Most importantly he created an atmosphere where the players enjoyed the contest. Sehwag was a classic example. He had a smile from start to finish, enjoying his team-mates’ success and revelling in the fact that India was playing an aggressive brand of cricket. Dhoni is wise to involve his team in an exciting contest where victory is sought from the first ball, because it galvanises the better players in his team.

Zaheer Khan was like a man possessed, heavily involved in placing his field, and Sachin Tendulkar behaved like an exuberant 18-year-old when he took a vital catch in the second innings. However, the most conclusive evidence that Dhoni had created a winning atmosphere came from the opposing captain.

After the match Ricky Ponting said that India had outplayed his side from start to finish in all aspects, even fielding. An aging Indian side outfielding an athletic Australian side – the next thing you know, Dhoni will be turning water into wine.

Whether the Indian selectors choose Kumble as a bowler for the third Test is dependent on whether he’s fit enough to perform near his best. If he is, then he returns to the team because he has been a warrior for India and has brought great credit to himself and his country.

It would be a blessing in disguise to relieve Kumble of the captaincy so he can just concentrate on bowling well and rounding out a wonderful career in a manner befitting a successful and classy cricketer.

It has been said that good captaincy is like pornography – it’s hard to define but you know it when you see it. Usually when you do see it, a victory soon follows and after Dhoni’s great performance at Mohali, it might be the right time to ask Healy if he still thinks good captaincy doesn’t affect the result of a match.

November 7, 2008 Posted by | Features Oct 26 | Leave a Comment

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