Cricket entering a new era with IPL, mongoose bat, pink ball: Hayden

Chennai, Mar.31 (ANI): Former Australian opener Matthew Hayden believes cricket is entering a new and exciting era with the advent of Twenty20 competitions like the Indian Premier League (IPL), the introduction of the revolutionary long handle-short blade “Mongoose Bat” and the pink cricket ball.

Hayden has caused a stir in the ongoing third edition of the IPL with his Mongoose bat that generates extra hitting power with its long handle and short blade.

And, with the MCC and Durham trialling a pink ball in Abu Dhabi and day-night Tests on the agenda, Hayden, 38, claims the game is changing faster than ever.

“Cricket”s landscape is colourful. Test cricket is your Rembrandt and the other formats are there to be painted in different and exciting ways,” The Sun quoted Hayden, as saying.

The pink cricket ball, which has been used under lights for the first time in a four-day game, has received a mixed response with players saying that it was not very difficult to see but some viewers outside the field faced problems to spot the ball from a distance.

The ball is being tested as part of a bid to eventually play the five-day Test format under lights to make the game more popular.

ICC president David Morgan said Tests will be played under lights by 2012 although plans to have a night-time Test against Bangladesh this summer were scrapped. (ANI)

Pink cricket ball gets mixed response

London, Mar 30 (ANI): The pink cricket ball, which has been used under lights for the first time in a four-day game, has received a mixed response with players saying that it was not very difficult to see but some viewers outside the field faced problems to spot the ball from a distance.

Michael di Venuto and Kyle Coetzer saw the pink ball brilliantly yesterday. The Durham pair both hit tons for the county champions against MCC, the traditional curtain raiser to the season.

The ball is being tested as part of a bid to eventually play the five-day Test format under lights to make the game more popular.

The game started on Monday at 2.30 p.m. local time and the ball became a deep reddish hue by the time the lights came on.

Durham finished on 3-329 in 96 overs, with Michael di Venuto making 131 and Kyle Coetzer 123 not out.

Di Venuto said the colouring was fine but there were “more concerns with the seam”.

The players wore whites and the sightscreens were also the usual white during the game, The Sun reports.

ICC president David Morgan said Tests will be played under lights by 2012 although plans to have a night-time Test against Bangladesh this summer were scrapped.

Gloucestershire swing bowler Jon Lewis sent down the historic first delivery with the pink ball. (ANI)

Pink cricket ball for MCC-Durham curtain raiser

London, Mar 29 (ANI): The annual curtain raiser match between the MCC and Durham, the Champion County, will be played under floodlights with a pink ball which is likely to change the future of Test cricket

The annual curtain-raiser has shifted to Abu Dhabi where Durham will meet an MCC side boasting experience in the form of Mark Ramprakash and promise in the diminutive shape of James Taylor, Leicestershire’s talented 20-year-old batsman.

Keith Bradshaw, the chief executive of the MCC, said today’s match will be played under floodlights with a pink ball, an innovative way to make longer version of the game interesting.

“If the ball stacks up here, performs well, holds its shine and shape and the players have good visibility, then that’s as good a test as any,” The Independent quoted him, as saying.

“I would like to think that if the tests go well and the ball stacks up that we could implement this fairly quickly,” he said.

“The research we undertook showed there was a willingness among fans to attend day-night Test cricket.

“I would encourage the ICC and other boards that if the trial goes well, let’s implement it as soon as we can. If it stacks up and we get good reports, then why not?” (ANI)

Scientists find meteorite that came from innermost asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter

Washington, September 18 (ANI): In a very rare finding, scientists have discovered an unusual kind of meteorite in the Western Australian desert and have uncovered that it came from the innermost main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

Meteorites are the only surviving physical record of the formation of our Solar System.

However, information about where individual meteorites originated, and how they were moving around the Solar System prior to falling to Earth, is available for only a dozen of around 1100 documented meteorite falls over the past two hundred years.

According to Dr Phil Bland from the Department of Earth Science and Engineering at Imperial College London, the lead author of the study, “We are incredibly excited about our new finding. Meteorites are the most analysed rocks on Earth, but it’s really rare for us to be able to tell where they came from.”

The new meteorite, which is about the size of cricket ball, is the first to be retrieved since researchers from Imperial College London, Ondrejov Observatory in the Czech Republic, and the Western Australian Museum, set up a trial network of cameras in the Nullarbor Desert in Western Australia in 2006.

The researchers aim to use these cameras to find new meteorites, and work out where in the Solar System they came from, by tracking the fireballs that they form in the sky.

The new meteorite was found on the first day of searching using the new network, by the first search expedition, within 100m of the predicted site of the fall.

The meteorite appears to have been following an unusual orbit, or path around the Sun, prior to falling to Earth in July 2007, according to the researchers’ calculations.

The team believes that it started out as part of an asteroid in the innermost main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

It then gradually evolved into an orbit around the Sun that was very similar to Earth’s.

The new meteorite is also unusual because it is composed of a rare type of basaltic igneous rock.

According to the researchers, its composition, together with the data about where the meteorite comes from, fits with a recent theory about how the building blocks for the terrestrial planets were formed.

This theory suggests that the igneous parent asteroids for meteorites like today’s formed deep in the inner Solar System, before being scattered out into the main asteroid belt.

Asteroids are widely believed to be the building blocks for planets like the Earth, so the new finding provides another clue about the origins of the Solar System. (ANI)

Kiwis relieved about Sehwag’s absence during tri-series

Colombo, Sep.8 (ANI): New Zealand cricketers have expressed relief that swashbuckling Indian opening bat Virender Sehwag will not feature in the tri-series in Sri Lanka and in the upcoming Champions Trophy in South Africa because of a shoulder injury.

A shoulder injury means New Zealand avoid one of the most devastating strikers of a cricket ball.

It maybe recalled that during the recent one-day series in New Zealand, Sehwag had tonked 299 runs at an average of 74.25 to help India win by a margin of three games to one.

“It is a relief,” said vice-captain Brendon McCullum when asked about the significance of Sehwag not leading off the Indian order in against New Zealand on Friday.

“The way he played against us in the home summer, he was pretty terrifying at the top of the order,” stuff.co.nz quoted McCullum, as saying.

“He really tore us apart so to not have him in their team is a bit of a blow for them,” he added. (ANI)

Gul slams Western teams for crying foul on Asian’s “God gifted” reverse swing skills

Peshawar, June 24 (ANI): Pakistan speedster Umar Gul has said that reverse swing is an ‘art’ and critised the foreign teams, who had leveled ball tampering charges on their Asian counterparts.

Gul said western teams lacked skill and ability to reverse swing the cricket ball, and that is why they always accused Asian fast bowlers of foulplay.

“Whenever an Asian bowler performs and uses the reverse swing the western cricketing countries raise the issue of ball tampering against them,” said Gul.

He termed the allegations made by New Zealand captain, Daniel Vettori, as ‘baseless’, and said that he had developed the ‘art’ of reverse swing through immense practice.

“I think the art of reverse swing is also God gifted which can be improved through practice. I watched Wasim Akram and Waqar’s bowling videos and developed this art through repeated practice,” The News quoted Gul, as saying.

Gul, who is the leading wicket taker in the Twenty20 format of the game, said he did not expect the rousing welcome that the team received after they came back home with the ICC World Twenty20 Championship trophy.

Commenting on the upcoming Sri Lanka tour, where Pakistan has to play a three match Test series and a five match one-day international series, Gul said players would need time to switch to the five-day mode of the game, but expressed hope that Pakistan would carry on their form in the series.

“Though Test cricket is totally a different ball game and the team will take some time to adjust itself with Sri Lankan conditions but we will try to adjust with the conditions very soon and will hopefully perform well,” he said. (ANI)

Afridi’s father calls son’s ICC T20 final heroics “best gift on father’s day”

Karachi, June 23 (ANI): Pakistan all-rounder Shahid Afridi’s father, Sahibzada Fazl-ur Rehman is over the moon, after his son’s stupendous all-round performance helped Pakistan win the ICC Twenty20 Championship.

Ecstatic over the team’s brilliant performance to beat the favorites Sri Lanka in the final of the tournament at Lord’s, Rehman said his son has given him the best gift on father’s day.

“I am the proudest of all the Pakistani fathers because my son has given me the best gift on father’s day,” The Dawn quoted Rehman, as saying.

Afridi took one for 20 in his quota of four overs, and later hit a swashbuckling 54 to seal Pakistan’s win by eight wickets.

Rehman said Afridi has brought back smiles on the face of thousands of people in the country, who have been forced to face adverse situations in the recent past.

“What I always tell him is that he should play for the country and for the people who adore him. I am elated that he gave the whole nation moments of happiness,” he said.

Afridi, who hails from the tribal Khyber district in the troubled North West Frontier Province (NWFP), is hugely popular in the region.

“I am really happy, Afridi played an excellent innings. I feel proud of my country,” said Abdul Jalal, who has been forced to take shelter in a refugee camp due to the ongoing military operation in Swat and Malakand Divisions of the NWFP.

Afridi struggled to score runs in the initial part of the tournament, but he continued to wreak havoc with his patent fast leg-spinners, and came good with the bat when it mattered most for the team.

With back to back half centuries in the semi-final and final match of the tournament, Afridi has once again proved that he is arguably one of the severest hitters of the cricket ball, and the ICC T20 trophy has only rejuvenated his ‘boom-boom’ style batting. (ANI)

Oz PM Rudd loves to roll a cricket ball over with staff in his office

Canberra (Australia), Apr.11 (ANI): Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd knows that hallway cricket is banned in the outer corridors of Parliament House, but this does not stop him from rolling a cricket ball over inside his office.

According to the Daily Telegraph, Rudd uses sport as a means of communicating with staff. After travelling and working most of the day, at 6.40 p.m., he starts walking around with a battered Sherrin football and a makeshift cricket ball.

He visits the cramped network of their small offices chatting about events and issues of the day. Then he will recruit teams – men and women – for 15 to 20 minutes of sport in the corridors or in the PM’s courtyard.

Occasionally he will apply his shiny RM Williams to a football, but he prefers cricket. And he prefers to bowl because, he has told staff, “batting is more embarrassing”.

The sports gear is eventually put away, and the Prime Minister continues with his official schedule and work.

By 7.15 p.m.; Rudd is back in his private study in The Lodge. (ANI)

England, Aussie cricketers to play charity cricket match on Mt. Everest

Melbourne, Jan.29 (ANI): Two cricketers from Australia have signed up to play a gruelling charity cricket match with a team of “Barmy Brits” on Mount Everest.

The two teams have been named Team Hillary and Team Tenzing will take on each other under the captainship of England captain Andrew Strauss and England vice-captain Alastair Cook in a bid to set a world record for playing the highest ever official sports match and raise 550,000 dollars for the Himalayan Trust and British children’s charity Lord’s Taverners.

According to news.com.au, Nick Toovey, originally from Gosford, and Dave Christie, from Melbourne, will slip into their cricket whites – and padded gloves – to slog it out on a wicket 5165 meters above sea level.

“There’s a bit of tension between the two teams. There’s been a fair bit of rivalry so far, it will definitely be a competitive game up there. And there could be a bit of swiping between the Australians and Britons with the Twenty20 World Cup and The Ashes coming up,” Toovey was quoted, as saying.

“We’re going to be up there for ANZAC day, so we’ll have a proper ceremony, and we were joking that we’d wake them all (the Brits) up at dawn and make them charge up the hill for revenge. I don’t know how they’ll take that,” he added.

But altitude alone could bring the cricket tragics from both nations down to size. They’ll face air with only 65 per cent of the oxygen found at sea level. Players already know the ball will bounce higher in such extreme conditions, and a NASA scientist is researching how the cricket ball might swing in the thinner air.

The pitch for the match will be hauled up the mountain by a sherpa or yak.

Self-confessed “cricket obsessive” Richard Kirtely dreamed up the Everest Test idea during a trip to the base camp of the world’s highest mountain in 2006.

He saw a group of fellow trekkers playing cricket on the Gorak Shep Plateau about a kilometer from base camp, and envisioned the perfect space to put a pitch.

Thirty playing spots have been filled in case players are struck down by acute mountain sickness, but only 11 will take the field for each team.

Two official umpires and four medics – including Sydney’s Breck Lord – will accompany the players as they climb to more than 5000m above sea level in 10 days.

A team of spectators dubbed the “Trektators”‘ll join them. (ANI)