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Tuesday 3 April 2018

Shadab fined 20pc of match fee for 'pointing finger, inappropriate comment' during T20I match

Celebrations after sending West Indies batsman Chadwick Walton back to the pavilion on Monday evening have cost young Pakistan spinner Shadab Khan 20 per cent of his match fee.
The International Cricket Council (ICC) on Tuesday — acting on a complaint by the on-field and the third and fourth umpires — found Shadab guilty of a Level One breach of the ICC Code of Conduct.
"The Pakistan wrist spinner was found to have violated Article 2.1.7 of the code, which relates to 'using language, actions or gestures which disparage or which could provoke an aggressive reaction from a batsman upon his/her dismissal during an international match'," the ICC said in its statement.
In addition to the fine, one demerit point was added to Shadab's record. According to ICC rules, a player is banned for a few matches after receiving four or more demerit points within a 24-month period.
"The incident happened in the ninth over of the Windies’ innings when Shadab, after dismissing Chadwick Walton, pointed his finger at the departing batsmen and also made an inappropriate comment," the ICC
Since Shadab admitted to breaching the code of conduct and accepted the fine proposed by Match Referee David Boon, a formal hearing was not held.
This is the first disciplinary action taken in the three-match Twenty20 International series being played between Pakistan and the Windies at Karachi's National Stadium.
Pakistan has won the first two games while the third is scheduled to be played tonight.
02:56

Saturday 24 February 2018

Qalandars vs Sultans: Can the league newcomers make it two wins out of two?

Confident after yesterday's unexpected seven-wicket win, Multan Sultans are going to face Lahore Qalandars in the third fixture of the Pakistan Super League (PSL) to be played in Dubai on Friday evening.
Though the Sultans are the new team on the block, their ability to ruffle the opponents' feathers was apparent in the PSL 2018's opening match.
On the other hand, Lahore Qalanders — who have been arguably the competition's worst side in the past two seasons — have now bolstered their line-up with the addition of Australian batsman Chris Lynn and left-handed Mustafizur Rehman among other measures.
Today's match is likely to be a tough fight as the Sultans have already shown their strength and the Qalandars are also expected to show their maximum potential.
A glance at Multan Sultans' compositions shows that they have assembled a sharp looking squad, leaving almost no loopholes. T20 veteran Shoaib Malik is leading the squad. The team is also equipped with run-machines like Pollard, Ahmed Shehzad, Darren Bravo, Kumar Sangakkara, Sohaib Maqsood and globetrotter Tanvir. With this composition, batting is their strongest suit.
Similarly, the Qalandars seem to be fully prepared for the challenge ahead. To overcome their shortcomings — resulting in an average performance in the PSL 2017 — the Qalandars with the help of Shoaib Akhtar have nurtured a fine blend of both batting and bowling. The core of their side is comprised of Brendon Mccullum, Umar Akmal, Sunil Narine, Fakhar Zaman, Yasir Shah and Chris Lynn. Teenage sensation Shaheen Shah Afridi and left-handed Mustafizur Rehman have made the bowling attack of the team more sharpen than before.

Multan Sultans

Shoaib Maik (captain), Ahmed Shehzad, Sohaib Maqsood, Abdullah Shafiq, Darren Bravo, Saif Badar, Umar Siddiq, Shan Masood, Sohail Tanvir, Kieron Pollard, Kashif Bhatti, Ross Whiteley, Kumar Sangakkara, Nicholas Pooran, Umar Gul, Mohammad Irfan, Junaid Khan, Imran Tahir (cover: Thisara Perera), Irfan Khan, Mohammad Abbas, and Hardus Viljoen.

Lahore Qalanders

Brendon McCullum (captain), Cameron Delport, Fakhar Zaman, Sohail Akhtar, Chris Lynn, Aamer Yamin, Bilawal Bhatti, Bilal Asif, Anton Devcich (replaced Angelo Mathews), Umar Akmal, Gulraiz Sadaf, Sohail Khan, Sunil Narine, Yasir Shah, Ghulam Mudassar, Mitchell McClenaghan, Raza Hasan, Mustafizur Rahman (cover: Dinesh Ramdin), Shaheen Afridi and Imran Khan.
00:13

Pakistan retain top T20 ranking after ICC error

Australian cricket chiefs have clarified that Pakistan still top the Twenty20 world rankings, despite Australia's victory in the T20 tri-series also featuring New Zealand and England.
Cricket Australia said this week that Australia would take the number one spot if they were unbeaten in the tri-series, a feat they achieved with a 19-run win over New Zealand in Auckland on Wednesday.
But in a statement late Thursday, it said a “clerical error” by the International Cricket Council meant the calculation was wrong and Pakistan retain the number one ranking.
When ratings points were rounded off, it said, Australia were second on 125.65, 0.19 points behind Pakistan on 125.84.
It means Australia have still not been rated the number one T20 side in the world since the shortest form of the game began in 2011.
Australia are currently ranked third in Tests and fifth in one-dayers
00:09

Sunday 11 February 2018

Three-nation tourney to serve as impetus for major events: Hasan Sardar

KARACHI: The first batch of Pakistan hockey team embarks for Muscat on Sunday to compete in the three-nation tournament being played there from Feb 14 to 20.
The first batch comprises 12 players while the second batch of nine players and five team officials will fly the following day.
The national carrier has provided free return air tickets to the team and officials.
Besides Pakistan, other two nations in the event include Japan and Oman. The competition will be played on double league basis.
“All the players are physically fit and looking forward to start the year on a winning note,” former Olympian and manager-cum-head-coach Hasan Sardar  on the eve of departure at the Abdul Sattar Edhi Hockey Stadium on Saturday as the players underwent their last practice session in the camp.
Sardar said besides giving the much needed international exposure to the players, the event will also serve as impetus for the tougher assignments ahead.
He said the team is shaping well and much stress has been laid on stopping goals, conversion of penalty corners and physical fitness. “The ratio of PC conversion is bit slow and needs further improvement,” he remarked.
The former Olympian said Mubashir Ali, who emerged as highest scorer of the national hockey championship at Sukkur, has been groomed to score goals on penalty corners.
The former centre-forward, who was declared Man of the Tournament at the Mumbai World Cup in 1981-82, reiterated that he had set his sight on the Jakarta Asian Games gold that gives direct ticket to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.
However, he was optimistic that a winning combination will be ready for the Commonwealth Games being held at Gold Coast, Austalia, in April.
He added that upon their return from Muscat, the players will re-assemble in the camp at the Abdul Sattar Edhi Hockey Stadium on Feb 27th or 28th to prepare for the Commonwealth Games.
Team:
Imran Butt, Mubashir Ali, Mohammad Rizwan Jr, Tasawwar Abbas, Abu Bakar, Fareed Ahmed, Mohammad Tauseeq Arshad, Umer Bhutta, Arsalan Qadir (vice-captain), Mohammad Rizwan Sr (captain), Shafqat Rasool, Amjad Ali, Faisal Qadir, Ammad Shakeel Butt, Azfar Yaqoob, Ijaz Ahmed, Ali Shan, Atiq Arshad, Shajeeh Ahmed, Atif Mushtaq and Tazeem-ul-Hasan.
Officials:
Hasan Sardar (manager-cum-head coach), Mohammad Saqlain and Rehan Butt (coaches), Shahid Ali Khan (goal-keeping coach), Nadeem Lodhi (video analyst), Waqas Mahmood (physiotherapist).
00:41

Sindh home minister says security promised for PSL 2018 final delivered in rehearsal today

Sindh Home Minister Sohail Anwar Siyal on Sunday said that the Sindh Government has delivered on its promise and is hopeful that all concerned parties will be satisfied with the arrangements made for the Pakistan Super League (PSL) 2018 final to be conducted in Karachi.
The comments were made while the home minister visited the National Stadium during a dress rehearsal for the final was underway in the metropolis. The final itself is expected to be held in Karachi on March 25.
"We have delivered all the promises we made for the security of the final; all security agencies have come together to make this event possible," Siyal said.
He added: "I hope this arrangement satisfies the ICC team that is visiting the country to review the preparations we have made. We will take any suggestions they make into consideration and hope that the final will take place in Karachi."
At least 8,000 personnel of different law enforcement agencies participated in the rehearsal, which took place in two parts: the first leg of the rehearsal stretched from the airport to the hotel, where the teams will be staying, while the second leg took place from the hotel to Karachi's National Stadium.
The city government had provided paramedic staff and fire brigade services for the rehearsal, while a control room had been created to monitor the movement of each and every person present in and around the stadium.
"We have 80 cameras set up in and round the stadium. These cameras are capable of zooming in on the crowd so everyone present in the stadium will be monitored," Qaisar Abbas, a member of the monitoring team, told DawnNews.
"Anyone who passes through any gate of the stadium will be passing in front of camera for facial recognition," Abbas said.
On the basis of the successful conduct of the rehearsal, recommendations will be made to the Federation of International Cricketers' Association, which will then decide whether or not to allow foreign players to participate in the PSL final.
A total of 34 matches will be played across different venues in Dubai, Sharjah and Lahore.
During the season, all teams will play against each other twice before the top four teams qualify for the play-off stage.
Last year, the PSL Season 2 final was held at Lahore's Gaddafi Stadium amid tight security.
It was seen by some as a watershed moment in Pakistan's cricketing history as it saw several foreign cricketers visit Pakistan under tight security years after a gun-and-bomb attack on a Sri Lankan side in Lahore.
Since the PSL 2 final, a World XI side and a Sri Lanka side have also played in Lahore. The PSL 2018 final is seen as the next step in PCB's long-term plan to bring international cricket back to the cricket-deprived nation.
00:37

Sunday 3 April 2016

Braithwaite heroics,Samuels' nerve drive to the world cup T20

KOLKATA: Carlos Brathwaite hit four consecutive sixes in the last over as the West Indies stunned England to lift the World Twenty20 title in Kolkata on Sunday.
The Windies went into the last over needing 19 to win and with expert death bowler Ben Stokes handed the ball, it looked like England would see out the win.
But Brathwaite held his nerve to fire the Windies to an unlikely four-wicket win with two balls to spare, leaving Stokes devastated on the field.
Marlon Samuels anchored the West Indies' run chase of 156 with an unbeaten 85, including nine boundaries and two sixes, after England had posted 155-9 in their 20 overs.
After being reduced to 11 for three, Samuels single-handedly kept the Caribbean team in the hunt with his 66-ball blitz.
Brathwaite finished on 34 not out off just 10 balls as the 2012 champions completed a hat-trick of titles after the women's clinched their maiden trophy earlier on Sunday.
The Under-19 team had already lifted the youth World Cup in February.
The Windies also became the first team to lift the World T20 twice.
England's batting hero Joe Root had hit Windies hard with a double strike when he shared the new ball with David Willey to get the West Indies' openers trudging back to the dug out.
Root struck on his first ball as Johnson Charles skied a catch to mid-wicket but the really big wicket came on the third delivery when Chris Gayle departed.
Gayle tried an ambitious slog after hitting a first-ball boundary but could only find the fielder at long-on to trigger wild celebrations in the English camp.
Willey then got semi-final star Lendl Simmons out leg before wicket for nought to leave the Windies tottering at 11 for three.

Samuels unbeaten 85

Samuels counter-attacked by hitting Chris Jordan for three boundaries in the sixth and last over of the powerplay that cost England 16 runs.
Samuels, who was given an early life after wicketkeeper Jos Buttler grassed a caught behind, stitched a 75-run partnership with Dwayne Bravo (25) to help the Windies rebuild.
Willey turned up for his second spell with a double strike to hurt Windies' hopes of reviving their chase as the asking-rate kept growing, but new man Brathwaite had other ideas.
Brathwaite managed an unbeaten 54-run stand with man-of-the-match Samuels to stun England.
“I can't really express how much of a top knock (by Samuels) that was. We couldn't turn back, it was a question of when not if,” said Brathwaite.
Bowling coach Curtly Ambrose was overjoyed.
“We believe we can chase any target because we've got some real firepower,” said the fast bowling legend.
“We believe we can chase any target because we've got some real firepower.”
Earlier West Indies' bowlers justified captain Darren Sammy's decision to field first as Samuel Badree and Andre Russell put England on the backfoot at only 23 for three in 4.4 overs.
Opening the attack for the Windies, leg-spinner Badree got Jason Roy clean out for a second ball duck and also accounted for struggling English skipper Eoin Morgan (5) in his third over.
Root (54), who struck his third half-century of the tournament, and Buttler (36) then came up with a fine re-building act to manage a 61-run fourth wicket partnership.
Medium-pacer Brathwaite got Buttler against the run of play when Bravo took a good catch at deep mid-wicket before celebrating with his customary 'Champions' dance.
Sammy soon cashed in on Bravo's catch to bring him on to bowl and the medium-pacer obliged with two wickets in his second over.
England's batting soon crumbled after Brathwaite got dangerman Root trudging back as a scoop shot turned out to be the in-form batsman's undoing.
Braithwaite and Bravo shared three wickets apiece to hit England hard.
David Willey's late cameo of 21 was studded with a boundary and two sixes and to give the England total some respect.
19:40

Mahela Jayawardene to play for somerset in T20 Blast

Mahela Jayawardene, the former Sri Lankan captain, has been roped in by Somerset and will play 12 out of 14 matches in the next season of the Natwest T20 Blast. The 38-year-old is the highest run-getter in the history of the World T20 and was a part of the Sri Lankan side that lifted the World T20 title in 2014.
Jayawardene joins West Indies' stalwart, Chris Gayle, who re-signed a six-month contract with the historic County in January this year. Somerset also have signed the experienced all-rounder Yasir Arafat to bolster their new ball attack.
"When a player of his experience and class becomes available, you have to snap them up," Matt Maynard, the director of Somerset's cricket, was quoted as saying by BBC Sport on Thursday (March 31). "Jayawardene is a batsman of undoubted class who scores his runs all around the wicket. He is a true professional and will have a major influence both on and off the field for us," he added.
Commenting on playing for Somerset, Jayawardene said that he was eager to make an impact for the club. "The club has a tradition of successful overseas players and I will be doing my best to join that illustrious list."
Post his international retirement, Jayawardene has been actively involved in the domestic T20 circuit. Playing for the Adelaide Strikers in the Big Bash League 2015-16 season, he scored 191 runs in seven innings including two half centuries. The elegant right-hander also amassed 299 runs at 49.83 in the first season of the Masters Champions League.
Besides playing, Jayawardene also took up a batting consultant role with the England national team ahead of their World T20 campaign.
03:53