Ashes 2009, a series too close to call, says Roebuck

Sydney, July 4 (ANI): This year’s Ashes series between Australia and England promises to be a ripper because the two sides possess both experience and freshness to deliver what is asked of them, feels noted cricket columnist Peter Roebuck.

According to Roebuck, the general verdict is that the series is too close to call.

“As a rule, the urn changes hands only after the challengers discover a few great cricketers and get up a head of steam, or the holders implode by way of poor captaincy, breakaway tours or low morale. None of these factors is completely in place so the likeliest outcome is for the Australians to retain the Ashes after a tight, though not titanic, tussle,” feels Roebuck.

“While both sides have strengths and weaknesses that could be identified from Pluto. England have superior swing bowlers and spinners, Australia have a potent new-ball pair and a powerful batting line-up, all the more reason to predict a 2-2 draw,” he adds.

Under the African stewardship of Andy Flower and Strauss, which swears by steadiness, focus, resolve and a scorn of ego, besides avoiding distractions, eschewing excuses, spurning stardom, condemning complaint, a combative and pragmatic England team is being forged.

Roebuck believes that both Strauss and Flower are the right men for the right jobs, having the required experience and maturity to convert England into a competitive unit on the field.

“Strauss and his think tank have also dared to pack their side with bowlers. Avoiding the sort of half-cricketers favoured by cautious types, they chosen five batsmen and relied on them and lusty lower-order men such as Stuart Broad to muster the required runs. It worked. The bowling is led by James Anderson, Broad, Swann, Flintoff, Onions and perhaps Ryan Sidebottom.”

Australia, Roebuck says have more headaches than England but are also a slightly stronger side.

He believes the form of Captain Ponting and his deputy Clarke will be important. (ANI)

Australia must engage India more in wake of Singh’s enhanced authority

Melbourne, May 21 (ANI): There can hardly be a friend of India anywhere who does not rejoice at the electoral success of Dr. Manmohan Singh, the former Cambridge economics don.

The Kevin Rudd Government must swiftly take advantage of the new situation in India, reports The Australian.

Singh’s Government will be stronger on economic reform, though it is unlikely to move at dizzying speed. But Singh has identified energy and education as the two great blocks to Indian development. The nuclear deal addresses energy, but there will be much more liberalisation in the energy sector to come. It’s also likely that foreign universities will ultimately be allowed to establish campuses in India, both of which are obvious opportunities for Australia.

Rudd had planned to go to India in January, but Singh had a heart attack. Both Rudd and Foreign Minister Stephen Smith are determined to put India in the front rank of Australia’s foreign relations. Rudd is sure to visit India soon, says the paper.

Meanwhile, Indian and US intelligence agencies have concluded that a part of the Pakistani state that lent some support to the terrorists who attacked Mumbai last November, did so for a very specific reason, internal to Pakistan.

The Pakistani military was so desperate to escape US pressure to fight the Taliban in their northwest that they wanted to provoke a limited Indian military reaction. This would have justified abandoning the fight against the Taliban and rushing troops back to the Indian border.

The relevant intelligence agencies, including our own, further conclude that a further Pakistan-originated terrorist outrage after Mumbai would have virtually forced an Indian military response of some kind, even just a strike at terrorist training facilities in Pakistan.

Only the measured, moderate, mature leadership of Singh and his senior colleagues kept India calm in the face of the Mumbai outrage.

Now that Singh’s authority is massively enhanced, the dynamics have changed. One of the few good elements in the regional geo-strategic equation that we can rely on is steadiness in Indian policy, The Australian claims.

According to the paper, Singh stands now as one of the greatest statesmen in Asian history. He is the first Indian Prime Minister to serve a full term and win re-election since 1961. He has brilliantly expanded India’s centre, marginalizing both its Left and its Right. (ANI)

Sachin Is The Brand Ambassador Of Jaypee Cement

While launching its new brand campaign, cement maker Jaypee Cement, a wholly owned arm of the Jaypee Group, has appointed master blaster Sachin Tendulkar as its brand ambassador.

Mr. Manoj Gaur, Jaypee Group Executive Chairman, said, “Sachin and Jaypee Cement are a perfect fit as they stand for similar values of inner strength, endurance and ever lasting performance. These value have spurred both to set new benchmarks and made good the dreams and aspirations of all those who believe in Sachin and Jaypee Cement.”

Sachin would get around Rs 4 crore per endorsement on a yearly basis.

The company’s new campaign featuring Cricket legend is being released today, and it will make use of TV, print and OOH media.

The brand also sports a new tag line, ‘Andar Se Solid’ that consolidates the brand’s core values of faith, buoyancy and steadiness.

Previously, there were two products under the Jaypee Cement banner, named ‘Buland’ with the tag line Buland Bharat ka Buland Cement, and Buniyaad, which had the tag line Yugon Yugon ka Saathi.

At the present, both the products have been faded out, and there is only single cement product from the Jaypee Group.

At this time, the brands Sachin endorses comprise Adidas, Aviva, RBS (Royal Bank of Scotland), Canon, MRF and Boost.

In 2008, Cola major PepsiCo dropped Tendulkar as its brand ambassador as the company felt the cricket star was too old to fit in its ‘youngistan’ communication campaign.

World’s first successful VIKY robot assisted surgery to treat pancreatic tumours performed

Washington, Mar 25 (ANI): A surgeon at Fox Chase Cancer Center has successfully performed the world’s first minimally invasive distal pancreatectomy using the ViKY system’s revolutionary robotic, compact laparoscope holder.

Developed in France, the technology made its debut in a cancer setting in the United States at Fox Chase.

“Fox Chase is among only a handful of institutions worldwide using robotics or laparoscopy to treat patients with nearly all types of cancer. The use of technology, like the ViKY system, reinforces our Center’s commitment to excellence in minimally invasive surgical techniques for the care of patients with both benign and cancerous conditions,” said Robert G. Uzzo, MD, FACS, chairman of the department of surgery at Fox Chase.

Fox Chase surgeon Andrew A. Gumbs, MD, who specializes in minimally invasive hepato-pancreatic and biliary (HPB) surgery, said: “This system is so versatile that surgeons like me are able to use it for many different laparoscopic procedures, including those in the gastrointestinal, urologic, thoracic and gynecologic regions.”

Usually, in minimally invasive procedures, like a laparoscopic distal pancreatectomy, surgeons use both hands to manipulate the surgical tools and need an assistant to manipulate the endoscope-a thin, lighted tube equipped with a camera that allows the surgeon to view the surgical field.

Gumbs performed the first ever ViKY assisted minimally invasive distal pancreatectomy on a 65-year-old man who was diagnosed with two pancreatic cysts, one of which is potentially cancerous.

Currently, pathologists are evaluating the cyst.

Gumbs added: “The new ViKY robotic laparoscope holder acts as an extra hand during surgery, giving me stability and steadiness. The view of the surgical field is critical, so ViKY’s pinpoint accuracy helps me perform more complex procedures laparoscopically.”

Unlike typical laparoscope holders, the ViKY system’s holder is lightweight, easy to set up and use, and takes no floor space.

“The new ViKY robotic laparoscope holder acts as an extra hand during surgery, giving me stability and steadiness,” said Gumbs.

With the ViKY system, Gumbs got precise control of the laparoscope while he performed the distal pancreatectomy.

The endoscope moves according to the surgeon’s orders, either through voice recognition or footswitch control.

Minimally invasive surgical techniques, like the one performed by Gumbs, benefit patients in many ways, including a shorter hospital stay, faster recovery, quicker return to daily activity, less risk of infection and less scarring and bleeding. (ANI)