SportsAdda CMS

Blog

  • Imam-ul-Haq joins Peshawar Zalmi for Pakistan Super League

    Imam-ul-Haq joins Peshawar Zalmi for Pakistan Super League

    Pakistani opener Imam-ul-Haq will play for the Peshawar Zalmi’s in the fourth addition of the Pakistan Super League (PSL). The team confirmed on February 13.

    Peshawar Zalmi’s Chairman Javed Afridi Spoke on Imam’s inclusion saying, “With The Inclusion of Imam ul Haq, our squad has further strengthened.” The southpaw batsman becomes the 21st member of the squad, which also includes the likes of Wahab Riaz, Kamran of Akmal And Kieron Pollard; and is captained by former Windies skipper Darren Sammy.

    Imam has played 29 T20 matches with an average of 40.61, scoring 853 runs. In ODIs, He has scored five centuries alongside as many half-centuries, scoring 1090 runs, proving his worth in the limited-overs formats.

    The PSL is slated to start on February 14, with the final scheduled to be played on March 17 in Karachi. 

     

  • Gabriel apologises to Root for homosexual comments

    Gabriel apologises to Root for homosexual comments

    West Indies fast bowler Shannon Gabriel has come clean over the verbal altercation with England’s Joe Root, tendering an ‘unreserved apology’ to the batsman for his alleged homosexual comments. 

    In the third Test match between West Indies and England, stump mics picked up Joe Root saying to Gabriel,” there’s nothing wrong with being gay” in response to something said by the pacer. Gabriel revealed that in the spur of the moment, he has passed a vulgar comment to Root saying “Why are you smiling at me? Do you like boys?” 

    “To my team-mates and members of the England team, especially their captain Joe Root, I extend an unreserved apology for a comment which in the context of on-the-field rivalry, I assumed was inoffensive and sporting banter,” Gabriel said “I know now that it was offensive and for that, I am deeply sorry. 

    “The exchange was on and England’s captain Joe Root was looking at me intensely as I prepared to bowl, which may have been the unusual psychological strategy with which all Test cricketers are familiar.”

    The fast bowler was fined 75% of his match fee and given a four-match ban by the International Cricket Council (ICC) which means he will miss the first four ODIs of the impending series against England. 

     

  • Fernando shines as Sri Lanka defy odds

    Fernando shines as Sri Lanka defy odds

    Vishwa Fernando took four wickets as underdogs Sri Lanka heeded new captain Dimuth Karunaratne’s call to “compete in every session” on the first day of the first Test against South Africa at Kingsmead on Wednesday.

    South Africa, overwhelming favourites against a team seemingly in disarray, were bowled out for 235. Sri Lanka were 49 for one at the close.

    Left-arm opening bowler Fernando dismissed both South African opening batsmen cheaply as the hosts found themselves floundering at 17 for three after being sent in on a pitch which offered bounce and swing on a partially overcast morning.

    Fernando, 27, playing in his fourth Test, went on to claim career-best figures of four for 62. Kasun Rajitha took three for 68.

    Wicketkeeper Quinton de Kock, batting at number six because South Africa picked five specialist bowlers, gave the South African innings some respectability by hitting 80 off 94 balls before he was last man out.

    Sri Lanka lost Lahiru Thirimanne, caught behind off Dale Steyn for nought, but Karunaratne batted confidently to be 28 not out at the close, while new cap Oshada Fernando went on the attack when South African captain Faf du Plessis turned to spin bowling as the light faded to finish on 17 not out.

    Sri Lanka came into the match having lost six of their most recent seven Tests and with several changes in playing personnel, including the dropping of regular captain Dinesh Chandimal, and selectors.

    Fernando seizes opportunity 

    Vishwa Fernando arguably owed his place in the team to the fact that three of Sri Lanka’s leading fast bowlers were missing because of injury. But he produced a superb opening spell, having Dean Elgar caught behind and bowling Aiden Markram with a ball which swung back into the stumps.

    Fernando dismissed Elgar with his fourth delivery before a run had been scored and should have had the wicket of Hashim Amla two balls later. He appealed passionately for a leg before wicket decision and the Sri Lankans were ruled to have taken too long before asking for a review of umpire Aleem Dar’s decision.

    Replays showed the ball had pitched in line and would have hit the stumps – and that Sri Lanka’s request for a review had come three seconds before the maximum 15 seconds allowed.

    The lapse was inexpensive as Amla made only three before being caught low down at second slip by Kusal Mendis off Suranga Lakmal, who had an outstanding first spell of one for six in seven overs.

    Temba Bavuma and Du Plessis rode out the early storm and gradually started to change the momentum in a 72-run partnership which was ended in the last over before lunch when Du Plessis was caught down the legside by wicketkeeper Niroshan Dickwella off Rajitha for 35.

    Bavuma looked the most assured of the South African batsmen but was run out for 47 off 68 balls, with seven fours, when a straight drive by De Kock ricocheted off bowler Fernando’s boot into the stumps at the bowler’s end. After numerous replays television umpire Ian Gould decided Bavuma had narrowly failed to get his bat behind the crease.

     

  • England drop below Australia in the Test rankings

    England drop below Australia in the Test rankings

    Following their 2-1 series loss against West Indies, the English cricket team had to suffer the added ignominy of falling behind arch rivals Australia in the official ICC Test rankings, with Joe Root’s side slipping two places to fifth. Australia ended their home summer on a high with a Test series win against Sri Lanka, and therefore find themselves in 4th position, behind India, South Africa and New Zealand respectively. 

    England’s rank below Australia is likely the remain a status quo ahead of the Ashes with the former slated to play only one four-day-fixture against Ireland in the form of red ball cricket. Australia, on the other hand, has no more Test matches until August when they lock horns with familiar foes once again for the Ashes Urn.

    Despite the team’s slump in form in the Test rankings, individual players benefitted from this Caribbean sojourn; as Joe Root climbed up three places to once again reclaim his position in the top five for the batsman. Jos Butler too climbed eight places, from 34th to 26th In the ICC rankings.   

     

  • The unnecessary chaos of the Indian team selection

    Over the past year or so, the Indian selection panel have found themselves in hot water on several occasions over their choices. From picking players who coaches claim were ‘injured’, to dropping ‘injured’ players who have claimed to be fit, MSK Prasad and Co. have had a lot to contend with. This coupled with the irrational rest policy has often led to the fans and media question the fluidity and rationality of the selection committee.

    Even before India’s sojourn ‘Down Under’ began, captain Virat Kohli and coach Ravi Shastri have almost robotically been reiterating the same tunes of how they fancy playing a fixed team ahead of the World Cup. Nevertheless, the starting 11 of the team has constantly incurred changes, with MS Dhoni’s minor hamstring injury in New Zealand being the only enforced change.

    With only five International games to go for India before the World Cup, the team still have question marks over the preferred middle-order combination. Will Dinesh Karthik be the unlucky man to sit out or will Ambati Rayudu be placed on the bench? Or will the team sacrifice Kedhar Jadhav’s all-round abilities in preference of two specialist batsmen in Karthik and Rayudu? Several questions left unanswered despite the series Down Under being the perfect opportunity to finalize these queries.

    The batting position of MS Dhoni has been a topic of debate, even within the team. Vice-captain Rohit Sharma prefers to see the talisman at four, while captain Kohli enjoys Dhoni as the finisher at 5. Coach Shastri has a different view of his own as well. Also, Dhoni, who was previously thought of as the weak link in the team, is now being played up as the most important cog in the Indian team by MSK Prasad.

    Under Pressure

    Also, the selectors and team management have tended to overhype a new player which puts on an avoidable extra burden on said players. Take for instance 19-year-old Shubman Gill, who made his debut in the ODI series against New Zealand. The selectors, team captain and coach heaped praises on young Gill who in comparison to those sold himself short in the couple of games he got to play.

    Secondly, Vijay Shankar has been talked up as a potential back-up for Hardik Pandya come the World Cup, yet the former has been employed as a pure batsman in the T20 series against New Zealand. Even in the few ODI games that Shankar played, he was underused as a bowler, with Kedhar Jadhav bowling more overs than him and didn’t have a lot to do with the bat as well due to India’s top-order performing well.

    In the bowling department, India seem a little more balanced with Mohammed Shami’s impressive bowling Down Under all but sealing his slot as India’s third seamer behind Jasprit Bumrah and Bhuvneshwar Kumar. Even the spin duo of Yuzvendra Chahal and Kuldeep Yadav have worked wonders playing in tandem, but one must keep in mind the World Cup is being played in conditions historically hostile to the turning ball. If the team were to play with a solitary spinner, there seems to be no clarity on who gets preference, and which pacer replaces the other.

    Pant or Rahane?

    William West/ AFP

    In a recent interview, Indian selector Prasad mentioned they are still looking into the performances of Rishabh Pant and Ajinkya Rahane as the 15th player in that squad. Given that logic, it seems almost laughable that neither of the duo were given a chance in these beta phases, with both expected to join the squad having last played International cricket in the white of India as long ago as January.

    The Indian selection process has seemed like a slot machine at a casino, where everyone is unsure of what numbers it is going to spit out, with myriad combinations to mull over. Coupled with the bipolar nature of the management and the selectors, it feels like avoidable chaos for a team who are in such an important year of their chronicle. 

     

  • Windies aiming to become world’s No. 1 team, says Holder

    Windies aiming to become world’s No. 1 team, says Holder

    West Indies captain Jason Holder said on Tuesday that his side’s main goal is to become the world’s number one team after their impressive series victory over England.

    England comfortably claimed a consolation win in the third Test, but back-to-back thumping triumphs in Barbados and Antigua had already secured the hosts an unassailable 2-0 series lead.

    “We have got to keep improving in the three facets of the game and be clinical and lot more consistent,” said Holder, who missed the game in St Lucia through suspension for a slow over-rate.

    “Our bowlers have done an outstanding job. It is up to our batsmen to contribute more.

    “We need to continue to build and not rest on our laurels. Our number one goal is to be the number one team in the world so there is a lot to improve on.”

    The West Indies have been a shadow of the side which totally dominated world cricket for much of the 1970s and 80s, and after years of struggles, sit eighth in the current ICC rankings, ahead of only Bangladesh and Zimbabwe.

    The Caribbean outfit does not play a Test until after the World Cup, which finishes in July, with a five-match one-day international series against England next on the agenda.

    Chasing an improbable 485 to win on Tuesday, the West Indies were bowled out for 252 despite a battling, unbeaten 102 from Roston Chase.

    “I had a chat with Roston before his innings,” said Holder.

    “He was a little disheartened with his dismissals in this series so it is good to see him knuckle down and get some runs, especially in the context of the day. It would have been easy for us to be rolled over.”

    Questions over England

    England salvaged some pride and confidence in St Lucia, with Mark Wood’s fiery spell which saw him take a maiden Test five-wicket haul in the first innings a high point.

    Joe Root’s players face a potential career-defining 2019 as England host both the World Cup and an Ashes series.

    But questions remain, especially at the top of the order where openers Rory Burns and Keaton Jennings struggled for runs in the first series since Alastair Cook’s retirement.

    “I think they’ve all shown what they are capable (of) and the challenge is to do it more regularly,” England coach Trevor Bayliss told Sky Sports.

    “The early-season Championship matches will play a big role for those at the top. If they score a lot of runs early season it will go a long way to helping them play in that first Ashes Test.”

     

  • West Indies’ Gabriel charged by ICC over alleged homophobic remark

    West Indies’ Gabriel charged by ICC over alleged homophobic remark

    West Indies fast bowler Shannon Gabriel was charged with a breach of conduct by the ICC on Tuesday after allegedly making a homophobic remark in an exchange with England captain Joe Root during the third Test.

    Stump microphones picked up an interaction on the third day in St Lucia between Gabriel and Root, in which the latter responded: “Don’t use it as an insult. There’s nothing wrong with being gay.”

    The ICC, cricket’s governing body, said Gabriel had been charged with a breach of its code of conduct in relation to the “personal abuse” of a player, umpire or match referee.

    “The charge, which was laid by match umpires, will now be dealt with by Match Referee Jeff Crowe. Until the proceedings have concluded, the ICC will not comment further,” it said in a tweet.

    Root refused to reveal what Gabriel said to him when asked by reporters.

     

  • Guptill ton helps Kiwis thrash Bangladesh in first ODI

    Guptill ton helps Kiwis thrash Bangladesh in first ODI

    Bangladesh set New Zealand a modest run chase of 233 after suffering an early collapse and the Black Caps overhauled it in 44.3 overs, finishing at 233 for two.

    It is Bangladesh’s fifth tour to New Zealand and they are yet to win a match in any format, with their next chance coming in the second ODI in Christchurch on Saturday. 

    Guptill and Henry Nicholls pressed their case to open the batting at the World Cup as New Zealand made light work of the target. 

    Guptill, returning from injury, put a poor run of scores behind him with a commanding 117 not out. 

    He had been averaging less than 10 since his last international innings of note, a big-hitting 138 against Sri Lanka in early January. 

    Guptill’s effectiveness against Bangladesh was more controlled, with the batsman under no pressure and content to pick off loose deliveries. 

    His 15th ODI century came off 103 balls and included six fours and three sixes.

    Nicholls looked comfortable in just his third outing since being promoted up the order, scoring 53 before a tame dismissal when the ball hit his pad and rolled onto the stumps.

    Veteran batsman Ross Taylor also contributed an unbeaten 45. 

    Mohammad Mithun was the pick of Bangladesh’s hitters, grinding out a hard-fought 62 after coming to the crease with Bangladesh reeling at 42 for four after a decision to bat first backfired.

    Mohammad Saifuddin provided support with a gritty 41 as Bangladesh were bowled out for 232 with seven balls of their allotted 50 overs remaining. 

    Spinner Mitchell Santner and paceman Trent Boult took three wickets apiece for New Zealand. 

    The Black Caps struck early when Tamim Iqbal departed for five in the second over and Liton Das soon followed, leaving Bangladesh at 19 for two. 

    A rattled Mushfiqur Rahim was struck on the helmet by a Boult bouncer and was out for five just a few balls later.

    Defiant Soumya Sarkar smashed 30 off 22 balls before he was caught and bowled by Matt Henry.

    Sabbir Rahman summed up Bangladesh’s batting woes when he was stumped trying to sweep Santner to the boundary.

    Rahman’s foot slipped as he crouched for the shot and he tumbled to the ground just outside his crease as wicketkeeper Tom Latham whipped off the bails.

     

     

  • England thrash Windies to claim consolation win

    England thrash Windies to claim consolation win

    England ended a disappointing Test series with the consolation of a comprehensive victory over the West Indies on the fourth day of the third and final Test in St Lucia on Tuesday.

    Thrashed in the first two matches of the series to surrender the Wisden Trophy after ten years in English possession, the tourists gained a measure of consolation in completing a 232-run victory with a day to spare.

    Set an improbable target of 485 after Joe Root declared his side’s second innings at 361 for five following his dismissal for 122, the home team were eventually dismissed for 252 deep into the final session when Ben Stokes had Keemo Paul caught and bowled.

    Paul, hobbled by a leg injury which prevented him from bowling throughout most of the England second innings, only came out to bat as last man to allow Roston Chase to complete a deserved fifth Test century.

    Chase was on 97 when Shannon Gabriel was ninth out, but the young all-rounder hung around long enough for the tall right-hander to reach three figures, cutting Joe Denly to the backward-point boundary to achieve the landmark.

    He finished unbeaten on 102 off 191 balls with 12 fours and one six embellishing his innings.

    Anderson burst

    James Anderson, who blew away the West Indies top order with three wickets before lunch, had no more success with the ball but his devastating early impact ensured that it was only a matter of when, not if England would have completed a massive victory on the Fourth day.

    Moeen Ali also claimed three wickets while Mark Wood, the tearaway fast bowler who took five wickets in the first innings, snared the important scalp of Shai Hope as the West Indies slumped to 35 for four before lunch.

    His six wickets and impact on the game earned him the ‘man of the match’ award.

    “I watched Gabriel all season knocking us down and thought I had to get some back for us,” he said of his raw pace. “I’m not thinking as far ahead as the Ashes. We’ve got a great squad and there’s Plenty more cricket to go.”

    West Indies’ only period of relative comfort at the crease came in the afternoon session when Chase and Shimron Hetmyer put on 45 runs for the fifth wicket.

    They undid all their good work however when, on the stroke of the mid-session drinks break, Hetmyer was run out for 19 coming back for a third run as Denly’s throw from the cover boundary to wicketkeeper Jonny Bairstow found the left-hander short of His ground.

    Anderson triggered the West Indies slide with just the third delivery of the innings when John Campbell, facing his first ball, sliced a booming drive to Ali at gully.

    Campbell’s opening partner, Kraigg Brathwaite, offered little resistance himself when he prodded indecisively at a full-length delivery and Stokes held the catch at second slip.

    Worse was the follow for the West Indies when Bravo, troubled by a finger injury which kept him off the field for the entire England second innings, followed a delivery from Anderson for Root to complete a comfortable catch at first slip.

    England clearly had a swift declaration on their minds at the start of the day’s play with Root and Stokes resuming at 325 for four.

    They belted 36 runs at a run-a-minute until the skipper miscued a low full-toss from Gabriel and Hetmyer held the catch diving forward at midwicket to prompt the declaration.

    Kemar Roach finished with one wicket in the innings, lifting his tally to a series-leading 18.

    His exploits earlier in the series, especially the five-wicket haul on the second day of the first Test in Barbados when England were routed for 77, earned him the ‘man of the series’ accolade.

    “All the hard work has paid off,” he said in reflecting on his performances over the three Tests. “I am very proud of this team and I want us to work even harder and get better following this series win.”

     

  • Top performers of NZ v IND T20I series

    Rohit Sharma was India’s leading run-scorer in the recently concluded T20I series. Find out who were the other top performers on the All Cricket App.