Tag: Cricket

  • Telangana: Cricket betting racket busted in Mahbubabad, 4 held

    Telangana: Cricket betting racket busted in Mahbubabad, 4 held

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    Hyderabad: A Task Force team from Mahbubabad district along with theSR Nagar police busted an online IPL cricket betting racket in Mahabubabad district on Monday and arrested four people. The joint team seized Rs 5.50 lakh from the possession of the accused.

    The accused were identified as V Ramakrishna, T Vikram, Ch Praveen and Anand Kiran. Two of them were from Andhra Pradesh.

    According to the Superintendent of Police (SP), Sharat Chandra Pawar,  the main accused V Ramakrishna from Eluru was the organiser (punter) of the betting racket.

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    “Ramakrishna used to  maintain records about an investment of bet money in a team, and the amount promised/won was being transferred online,” he said.

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    #Telangana #Cricket #betting #racket #busted #Mahbubabad #held

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • The revival of Test cricket is a fine thing – but ODIs would like a word | Jonathan Liew

    The revival of Test cricket is a fine thing – but ODIs would like a word | Jonathan Liew

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    I got a little teary the other night. It’s a really stupid story. You know that famous scene in Coronation Street when Hilda Ogden comes home from the funeral and there’s a parcel of Stan’s belongings on the table, and she opens Stan’s glasses case and suddenly, despite herself, she starts to weep uncontrollably? Well, it was like that, except rather than a dead husband I was mourning an era of English Test cricket. And instead of a pair of glasses, it was an interview with Graeme Swann on the Rig Biz sports comedy podcast.

    The bulk of Swann’s interview is not, admittedly, an abundant source of pathos. But among the many anecdotes on Andrew Flintoff’s drinking and Paul Collingwood’s sexual prowess is a segment where Swann recounts his time playing with Kevin Pietersen for England. And for all they achieved together, there is not a great deal of residual affection there. “Me and Kev always hated each other,” Swann remembers. Pietersen is described as “a bit of a dickhead”. This is good content, no notes.

    But then Swann starts talking about the 2012 text-message scandal involving Pietersen and Andrew Strauss, and that got me. I can’t explain it. “A bit of a soap opera,” is how Swann described it, and with the benefit of distance it is weirdly poignant to recall how big this silly little tiff seemed at the time. For a week the front pages were consumed with tales of slurs, rumours, crisis summits, YouTube disses. It mattered. I mean, it didn’t matter. But it felt like it did. And to hear it being repackaged as bog-brush banter on a second-rate podcast: on some level, something important has been lost here.

    The sacking of Pietersen in 2014 was a genuine national news story. By way of tangent, I tried to recall if the England men’s Test team had generated a single nationally resonant story since. Headingley 2019, maybe. Certainly not the 2015 Ashes. More often than not, when English cricket has punctured the broader consciousness, it has been through controversy: the Yorkshire racism scandal, the Ben Stokes trial (at which we all learned that nobody really knew who Ben Stokes was). A national sport essentially reduced to a fleeting curiosity in the space of a decade. What happened? And as the English summer of 2023 clanks sleepily into gear, what are we all still doing here?

    At which point: enter Bazball. I want to believe in this thing, I really do. I want to believe in the noble mission of Stokes and Brendon McCullum to save Test cricket by scoring at 5.5 runs per over. I love the way this team play and the memories they have already created. I like Harry Brook’s little face. I want to believe that English red‑ball cricket can somehow reinflate itself to the size it was before it needed to be saved, a time when it simply was.

    Kusal Mendis rattles off a run during Sri Lanka’s first Test victory against Ireland
    Kusal Mendis rattles off a run during Sri Lanka’s first Test victory against Ireland. Photograph: Ishara S Kodikara/AFP/Getty Images

    But let’s face it: I’m not the target market here. Last week I read an interview with Sri Lanka’s Kusal Mendis, who is playing in the Test series against Ireland: Ireland’s first two-Test series, a landmark occasion that has attracted barely a word of mention. Mendis smashed a brisk 140 in the first Test and afterwards explained how he thought Test batting was evolving. “The future of Test cricket is not to play out so many dot balls,” Mendis told Cricinfo. “Apart from the start, I don’t see a big difference in the ODI and Test formats.”

    This is an increasingly prevalent view: that the evolution of Test cricket, driven by Stokes’s England, is taking it firmly in the direction of white-ball cricket, with higher scoring rates, instinctive aggression, and the effective elimination of the draw. Indeed, listen to a proselytiser such as McCullum or Eoin Morgan and you will hear that this is the only viable future for the longest format: quicker games, bigger thrills, more interest. Sounds great. One question: how’s ODI cricket doing these days?

    Because it turns out there already is a format with no draws where teams score at 5.5 runs an over, and people don’t really like it very much. Over the past few years there is a growing consensus that ODIs are nearing the end of their useful creative lifespan, that they have become staid and formulaic. Two-innings Test cricket with a swinging, spinning red ball will always be a richer product. But let’s roll the Bazball tape through to its logical conclusion: not a few months or a few years, but five or 20 years. At what point does cheery novelty begin to crystallise into routine?

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    There is of course so much to admire in this brilliant England team and the way they play the game. But it is no more a magic formula or survival manual than any other style to have emerged in Test cricket’s 150 years. This is a game whose glory lies in its texture, its contrast of tones and shades and paces and approaches, not just the fast but the slow, not just the instinctive but the regimented, not just the instant gratification but the delayed, too.

    For lovers of the long game there will always be a seductive appeal in the idea of the quick fix, the one giant heave that will put the vase back on its pedestal. But in sport, as in marketing or politics, there is always a danger in modelling yourself on your biggest rival: there’s a reason they’re your rival in the first place.

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    #revival #Test #cricket #fine #ODIs #word #Jonathan #Liew
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Telangana: 37-yr-old man dies of heart attack while playing cricket

    Telangana: 37-yr-old man dies of heart attack while playing cricket

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    Hyderabad: A 37-year-old man from Husnabad town died on Friday, reportedly of cardiac arrest while preparing to bowl in a local cricket tournament.

    Shanigaram Anjaneyulu, a resident of Sundagiri, Chigurumamidi mandal, Karimnagar district, is married and has two children. According to the reports he suffered a cardiac arrest as he was about to bowl and collapsed on the ground.

    Despite performing CPR, and calling an ambulance, the people around him could not revive him. He was rushed to the government hospital of Husnabad where he was declared dead by the doctors.

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    #Telangana #37yrold #man #dies #heart #attack #playing #cricket

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Bangladesh spinner Taijul Islam becomes first cricketer to achieve this feat in 146 years of Test cricket history – Kashmir News

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    Bangladesh spinner Taijul Islam becomes first cricketer to achieve this feat in 146 years of Test cricket history – Kashmir News

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    #Bangladesh #spinner #Taijul #Islam #cricketer #achieve #feat #years #Test #cricket #history #Kashmir #News

    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Kim Cotton becomes first female on-field umpire in men’s international cricket

    Kim Cotton becomes first female on-field umpire in men’s international cricket

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    Dunedin: Kim Cotton of New Zealand made history on Wednesday, becoming the first female on-field umpire to stand in a men’s international match between two ICC full-member countries.

    Cotton officiated the second T20I between New Zealand and Sri Lanka at the University Oval in Dunedin on Wednesday.

    The 45-year-old, who previously umpired in 16 women’s ODIs and 44 T20Is, first marked her presence in men’s cricket as a TV umpire during a tied T20I between India and New Zealand in 2020.

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    The New Zealander was one of the on-field umpires for both the 2022 Women’s World Cup final (50-over) and the 2023 Women’s T20 World Cup final in February.

    Previously, Claire Polosak was the first female umpire in a men’s international in 2019 when she stood in an ODI match between Oman and Namibia, both associate nations.

    Polosak had also become the first female match official in a men’s Test match as the fourth umpire during a 2021-22 Border Gavaskar Trophy Test match between India and Australia in Sydney last year.

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    #Kim #Cotton #female #onfield #umpire #mens #international #cricket

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Cricket match turns ugly: Youth killed during fight with umpire over ‘wrong’ decision

    Cricket match turns ugly: Youth killed during fight with umpire over ‘wrong’ decision

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    Bhubaneswar: In a tragic incident, a youth was stabbed to death during a cricket tournament at Mahisalanda village in Cuttack district, the police said on Monday.

    The deceased youth has been identified as Lucky Rout (22), a resident of Manhisalanda village, where a cricket match was underway between teams from Berhampur and Sankarpur.

    Batting first, Sankarpur scored 114 runs. During the chase, one Berhampur batsman was declared out by the umpire. However, the accused threatened the umpire to declare it as a ‘no ball’.

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    Following this, a verbal duel ensued between the members of the Berhampur team and the umpire. Lucky, who was a spectator, had intervened to save the umpire, Cuttack DCP Pinak Mishra told reporters.

    The main accused, who has been identified as Samutiranjan Rout alias Muna, lost his cool and before anyone could understand anything, he attacked Lucky with a knife. Lucky was shifted to the SCB Medical College, where he died, Mishra said.

    Four accused persons have been arrested following the incident.

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    #Cricket #match #turns #ugly #Youth #killed #fight #umpire #wrong #decision

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Shocking Incident: Umpire killed for giving wrong ‘no-ball’ during cricket match – Kashmir News

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    Umpire killed for giving wrong ‘no-ball’ during cricket match

    In a shocking incident, an umpire was killed by a youth for reportedly taking a wrong decision on no-ball during a cricket match in Mahisalanda ground under Choudwar police station  on Sunday.

    The deceased has been identified as Lucky Rout and the accused as Muna Rout.

    According to sources, an altercation broke out between two teams due to the umpire’s decision. Soon, the situation took a heated turn, as Muna attacked lucky on his head with a bat. As a result Lucky fell unconscious on the spot. But Muna continued the brutal attack and stabbed Lucky with a sharp weapon.

    Locals rushed Lucky to hospital soon. However, he was declared brought-dead by doctors there.

    Meanwhile, tension escalated in the area following the incident.

    On being informed, the local police reached the spot and initiated a probe into the matter. (Agencies)

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Remembering Australian cricket legend Shane Warne

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    It seems almost impossible to believe, but 12 months have gone by since we reported the tragic passing of Shane Warne. One of Melbourne’s most famous sons, the Australian cricketer was without doubt among the most talented players of his, or indeed any, era. Yet his almost magical skills on the field of play are only a small part of the legend that was Shane Warne.

    Ruffling feathers with the ball of the century

    This year will mark 30 years since Warne first took to the field of play at the Home of Cricket, Lord’s Cricket Ground in London. Plenty has changed in 30 years. Today, nobody would look twice at a cricketer with bleached hair and an earring, but the staid members in their MCC ties were bemused and concealing smirks – just who did this chap think he was?

    The answer came around 17 seconds after he was thrown the ball. His first delivery pitched way outside leg stump, spun all the way around Mike Gatting, which was a long way even then, and struck the top of off stump. Gatting’s look of bewilderment as he walked off would be repeated another 707 times before Warne retired from test cricket 15 years later.

    Never a dull moment

    It doesn’t take a cricketing genius to recognize Warne’s extraordinary talent – but it was arguably a cricketing genius who described him best. When Warne passed, Sachin Tendulkar took to Twitter in tribute and said there was “never a dull moment, on or off the field, with Warnie around.”

    Some of those off-field moments landed Warne in hot water, but he always owned his falls from grace and bounced back. To the general public, it just proved that he was only human like the rest of us. Let’s be honest, the adulation afforded to the likes of George Best, Alex Higgins, Diego Maradona and Warne’s old buddy Ian Botham, demonstrate that we all have fondness for a flawed genius.

    Casino life – a real bloke’s bloke

    Australian comedy singer Kevin Bloody Wilson was one of many to write songs in Warne’s honor, like Hero of Ancient Greece. It opened with the words “A cricketing legend all Australian boy, A real bloke’s bloke and we all loved him for it.” Warne liked to drink beer, smoke cigarettes and play the pokies at the casino just like a million other “Australian blokes” of his generation.

    But to use the gambling terminology, Warnie knew no other way than to go all in. Most of us might look at a list of minimum deposit casino platforms and choose somewhere to play cricket pokies like Cricket Star or Cricket Hero for perhaps $10. That would hold little appeal for Warne, who would be straight across to the casino’s high roller tables, and buying champagne and cigars all round, too!

    Known the world over

    Shane Warne was known everywhere he went. But unlike so many famous athletes, he always found time to say hello, sign an autograph and pose for a selfie. Whether he was working his magic in the middle, chatting with those curmudgeons in the Long Room at Lord’s or getting into another scrape at a nightclub or casino, Warnie knew no other way than to be himself.

    A year on from his passing, the cricketing world is a quieter place, and has lost a certain lustre. We’ll never forget Shane Warne.



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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • DSC Beamer Cricket Shoes for Mens (Light Weight | Economical | Durable)

    DSC Beamer Cricket Shoes for Mens (Light Weight | Economical | Durable)

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    EVA SOCK LINER: The Sock liner (also called insole) is the first layer of soft foam which our foot rests on inside the running shoe. DSC has developed EVA Sock liners made of foam which offer cushioning and make sure your foot fits comfortably inside the shoe.
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    Designed For: All age groups playing recreational and amateur cricket.

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  • Afghanistan vs Pakistan: Afghanistan Men’s Cricket Team Wrote History in the First T20I – Kashmir News

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    Afghanistan vs Pakistan: Afghanistan Men’s Cricket Team Wrote History in the First T20I

    Mohammad Nabi and Najibullah Zadran remained unbeaten as Afghanistan secured a 6-wicket victory over Pakistan in the first T20I at the Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium on Friday.

    Earlier, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Mohammad Nabi and Fazalhaq Farooqi claimed two wickets apiece as Afghanistan restricted Pakistan at 92 for 9 in 20 overs. Meanwhile, Azmatullah Omarzai, Naveen-ul-Haq and Rashid Khan claimed a wicket each. Imad Wasim was the top scorer for Pakistan with an 18-run knock. Pakistan skipper Shadab Khan had won the toss and opted to bat against Afghanistan.

    Afghanistan Men’s Cricket Team Wrote History in the First T20I

    Afghanistan men’s cricket team wrote history on Friday (March 24) when they defeated Pakistan by 6 wickets in the first T20I of the three-match series at Sharjah cricket stadium in UAE. This was the first time that Afghanistan have beaten Pakistan in this format of the game. It was quite a dominant win too as Afghanistan bowled out Pakistan for their fifth lowest total ever in T20Is before chasing it down with 2.1 overs remaining in the game.

    Afghanistan used six bowlers and all of them picked at least one wicket. Rashid led from the front and finished with a spell of 1 for 15 from his four. Faalhaq Farooqi, Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Nabi picked 2 wickets each while Azamatullah and Naveen-ul-Haq got a wicket each. This was a second-string Pakistan outfit alright with stars like Mohammad Rizwan, Babar Azam, Shaheen Shah Afridi missing, but Afghans ensured they took big advantage of it and displayed a brilliant effort.

    Rashid Khan says he is happy to finally win against Pakistan. Adds it is a different feeling while playing for the national team and it is always special. Reckons the pitch here always behaves differently but the mind set was to bowl well. Shares they want to do well at the top-order and also improve throughout the next matches.

    Shadab Khan says he wants to give a chance to the youngsters and hopes they do well in the next match. Reckons as professionals they have to adopt to the conditions and play accordingly. On the bowlers, they bowled really well and had many positives.

    Mohammad Nabi wins the Player of the Match. He says it was a tough score to chase on this ground. Adds his aim was to bat till the end. Reckons sometimes have to play this kind of knocks to win the match.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )