Monday, June 22, 2009

Finally Pakistan Won the WORLD CUP T20













CONGRATULATION


Pakistan played very excellent inning and won the T20 World Cup. It was a great effort from all the Pakistani players specially SHAHID AFRIDI AND KAMRAN AKMAL. It was an amazing victory of Pakistan.

Younus Khan Interview: “I am really very happy for the victory, and I am also thank to all Pakistani peoples.” He also said “I am going to take retirement from T20 Cricket”. This victory is mark in the name of BOB WOOLMER, because he suggests PCB (Pakistan Cricket Board) to being me captain of Pakistani Team” He also gives thanks to GOD and Pakistani People for Prays”

MAN OF THE MATCH: SHAHID AFRIDI

MAN OF THE TORNAMENT: TDILSHAN

Friday, June 19, 2009

Dilshan Batting Give Edge To Srilanka in Final


One Man Show showed his talent in T20 Format. Tillakaratne Dilshan Unbeated 96* Take Srilanka in Final. Srilankan Master Blaster have a great series so far he is top Runer in the T20 World Cup. In Semifinal he was not stop at any moment because he knew that if he stop then team will stop only T.M. Dilshan played confidentially other player not supported him very well but his individually performance take srilankan batting in top of the game. In the Bowling Side Only Bravo have some Success he Took 2 Wickets in an over and other Taylor, Ben and pollard Took each Wicket. In Reply West Indies Had bad Start only 1st Over W.Indies Lost 3 Wickets after that no chance for recovery to Windies. Srilanka 4 M (Mathew, Malinga, Muralidharan, Mandis) took9 Wickets. Where WIndies Skipper Made 63* no One supported him other hand at last Srilanka Stunning Performance Give Edge to Qualify in Final. Now Let see in Sunday Will Srilanka Perform The same. Hopefully Final will be Crucial.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

South Africa Miss Pakistan Hit


Yesterday Pakistan Was in good Form in Batting or Bowling Order. and South Africa miss the chance to qualify in T20 Final Round. On the Other Hand Pakistan All rounder Shahid Afridi (BOOM BOOM Afridi) had played a very Fantastic Cricket for Pakistan. and Pakistan Finally reached in his Target (T20 Final). Pakistan had full support from Crowd and from Pakistan Couch.
Now if Pakistan want to Win T20 World Cup. They have to play Fantastic not like previous T20 Final.
Best Performance from Batting Order
SHAHID AFRIDI
51 Runs (34 Balls)
Shoaib Malik
34 Runs (39 Balls)
Kamran Akmal
23 Runs (12 Balls)
Best Performance from Bowling Order
Shahid Afridi
4 Overs -16 Runs -2 Wickets
Saeed Ajmal
4 Overs - 23 Runs - 1 Wicket
Mohammad Aamer
4 Overs - 30 Runs - 1 Wicket


Monday, June 15, 2009

Pakistan Saved In Tornament





Before This match Pakistan Looking Head to Semifinal but all eye on Umer Gul, Afridi, Kamran Akmal & Saeed Ajmal but Saeed Ajmal takes a big part to in Pakistan in Semifinal Round. He Took 4 Wickets for just 19 Runs. But Akmal, Gul & Afridi also done his job with there Department. Pakistani Captain Says" We were still Short 20 to 25 Runs in first Inn. We have to made almost 180 runs but Irish Bowled very well beginning till end". Even Irish Captain said "It was great experience to us we hope we will come as a strong unit next time".

Wicket Taker Bowlers in a que in T20 Format.

Wicket Leading Bowler in a Row

  1. 1. Umer Gul has taken 10 Wickets with an average of 9.10 with the best of 5/6.
  2. 2. Lasith Malinga taken also 10 Wickets with an average 11.70 at the best of 3/17.
  3. 3. Wayne Parnell takes 8 Wickets at the best average of 8.87.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

England Consoldate win get india home





One of the Favourite Team of T20 World Cup was upset yesterday against England. India won the toss and chose to field first that was great idea also indian bowler done great job including Ravinder Jadeja & Harbhajan Singh. They took 2, 3 wicket in the match but in the reply indian had just short 3 runs. England's Consolidated effort take india home. Match turning point was that when Yuvi stumped with sharp hand of Foster after that Pathan & Dhoni tryed to achived target but English bowler win the race. Now India have only one match against South Africa but its not valuable to India.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

English batting Collapse against South African Bowler

Magic With the Ball done the job
All rounder Performance head to South Africa in the T20 WC

Last time win against Pakistan give some edge to England but yesterday they didn't continue winning track. English batting order suffered against South African Bowlers in the beginning of inning English opener gone only for just4 runs of the board, where Peitersen and Owaise Shah try to build his pressure against South Africa but Fielding and Bowling not to did that at last England just take on a Board only 111 which is not enough in T20 however South Africa made it easily. Jaques Kallis made his 57 not out and South Africa win easily by win 7 wicket. Man of the match gone to Jaques Kallis who took 2 wicket and made 57*. Now England have to win all there game otherwise no space for English Cricket

Abdul Razzaq Back for Smashing


Now Happy News for Pakistan that Pakistan's Master Blaster is Back Name Abdul Razzaq yesterday PCB request to replace injured Yasir Arafat Now today ICC approved. A. Razzaq Who is waiting for approval for playing in National Team is very exciting to play T20 World cup. Remember that Razzaq Left Pakistani team When Selector not Selected for T20 World cup 2007. Abdul Razzaq who knows as the finest ending player in T20 format. He also showed his skill in ICL Team Hyderabad Heroes. As Pakistan face Middle Order Player Problem now it will be hopefully fine as A.Razzaq comes. We hope Pakistan Give Some Possitive response after A. Razzaq come back.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009




Shahid Afridi carried Pakistan into the Super Eights at the expense of a spirited but outclassed Dutch side at Lord's, as he ripped his top-spinning legbreaks through a succession of bamboozled defences to deliver his team a thumping 82-run victory with the superb figures of 4 for 11 from four overs. For the Netherlands, the end came with unseemly haste as they lost their last nine wickets for 52 in 10.2 overs, but they still left the tournament with their heads held high after last week's unforgettable floodlit triumph over England.
Today, however, the greater class and knowhow of the Pakistanis came to the fore. They produced a chastened display after their error-strewn effort against England at The Oval on Sunday, and though their batting was kept on a tight leash by some determined Dutch bowling, the prospect of defeat was never seriously entertained. Netherlands were set 176 for victory, but thanks to their superior net run-rate going into this game, they could still have gone through with a score of 151 or more. In the end, the calculations were academic.
Netherlands were given a typically brief but belligerent start from their pinch-hitter, Darron Reekers, who smashed three fours from his first five balls including two stand-and-deliver slaps over long-on from Mohammad Aamer, but that, realistically, was as good as their run-chase got. From his very next delivery, Reekers miscued another wild wallop, and Sohail Tanvir claimed a well-judged catch at deep midwicket.
It wasn't a faultless display by any stretch of the imagination, and Pakistan's fallible catching again resurfaced when Alexei Kervezee was gifted two lives in consecutive overs. But Afridi struck with his first delivery of the match when he slid a topspinner through Bas Zuiderent's defences, and Peter Borren followed one over later when he top-edged a sweep off Saeed Ajmal. Kervezee's chancy innings came to an end in the same over as he galloped down the wicket to slap what would have been their first boundary in front of square for seven overs, but was defeated by the doosra and stumped by a mile.
At 49 for 4 in the ninth over, the Dutch resistance had been all but crushed, and Afridi stepped forward to grind them down even further. Though he fumbled a run-out opportunity to let Tom de Grooth get off the mark first-ball, Afridi struck with the first ball of his third over, a full flat topspinner that flattened the leg stump. Two balls later, Daan van Bunge yorked himself as he charged down the track and was easily stumped for a duck, and though Ryan ten Doeschate stemmed the procession with a six over midwicket off Shoaib Malik, his same-over dismissal - again to a yorker-length stumping - reduced the score to a sorry 71 for 7.
Afridi had time to claim one more wicket in his superlative four-over spell, as Edgar Schiferli flogged a lofted drive to deep mid-off, before Kamran Akmal completed his fourth stumping of the match - again off Ajmal - as Dirk Nannes was dragged out of his ground. It was left to Umar Gul to seal the contest with 14 balls to spare, when he splattered Pieter Seelaar's stumps with another full-length delivery. Pakistan's captain, Younis Khan, may have derided Twenty20 matches as "fun" after their defeat against England, but this was a very serious performance indeed.
The tone of the Pakistan performance was set during their six Powerplay overs, in which they raced to 50 for 1. Salman Butt, singled out by his captain after the England match for the woeful state of his fielding, responded with the aggression of a man whose job was on the line as he whipped his first ball, from Nannes, through midwicket for four, before launching Schiferli over the covers and into the Mound Stand for six.
Just as Butt was beginning to cut loose, however, he drilled ten Doeschate to Borren at mid-off for 18. Malik launched his innings with two fours in three balls before being badly dropped by Zuiderent at backward point on 14, and when Akmal found his range with a brace of sixes in consecutive overs, Pakistan had reached 77 for 1 with 11 overs remaining, and looked as though they were pulling clear.
But Netherlands showed from a similar position against England that they are a side who will not give up, and Borren combined with the 21-year-old offspinner, Seelaar, to put the brakes back on the innings. Having reached 41 from 29 balls, Akmal found himself frustrated in a beautifully slow and teasing second over from Seelaar, which ended with an ambitious drill over midwicket, and a heart-in-the-mouth juggling catch from Schiferli in front of the Tavern Stand.
The Dutch bowlers maintained their discipline admirably as the overs ticked away. If in doubt they went full, sometimes offering full-tosses, but there was scarcely a long-hop in evidence. Younis dented ten Doeschate's figures by clearing his front foot to swipe Pakistan's fourth six of the innings, then belted Seelaar for two more in two balls to hoist his team past 150 with 15 balls remaining. But Seelaar kept his cool, and his line and length, and before the over was out, de Grooth at long-on had intercepted Younis's next shot in anger.
Schiferli maintained the full-and-straight approach to deny Afridi the room to swing his arms, although he did finally connect with one to drill Nannes out of the ground with four balls remaining. The bowler responded by uprooting his leg stump with the very next delivery, but as Afridi would later go on to show with the ball, sometimes there is simply no stopping him. When the mood takes them, there is sometimes no stopping Pakistan either.

Sloppy Pakistan face litmus test


Who'd have thunk it, that Pakistan and Netherlands would be taking on each other in a group game in which Pakistan might do and still die? Such has been the way with this strangest of groups but clarity has now emerged. Netherlands, to progress and thus consign Pakistan to a fate they seem worryingly resigned to, can afford to lose, but by no more than 24 runs. If Pakistan chase, then they must do so with roughly three overs to spare.
The problems are Pakistan's. Not for a moment since they landed in England have they looked like a team that is playing in a World Cup. Younis Khan's bizarre, careless dismissal of the format and the tournament seems to have filtered through to the side. Anyway you'd think, given their lack of international games recently, that Pakistan would be itching to rip through a Ramadan 20/20 night tournament in Karachi's Pakistan Chowk, let alone a World Cup. The attitude is, however, only the most overarching concern: on the field, they are the worst fielding side, have an unsettled batting order and are rusty with the ball. Beyond that, they're fine.
Netherlands, on the other hand, have accorded this tournament the respect it deserves and have shown, with that fabulous opening win, just why the format is celebrated. As well as skill, the Netherlands will remind one and all, Twenty20 rewards discipline, hard work and bravery. The problem for them, of course, is to recreate the intensity of Friday, something which often proves beyond associate nations and lower-ranked sides.

Cricket is a bat-and-ball team sport that is first documented as being played in southern England in the 16th century. By the end of the 18th century, cricket had developed to the point where it had become the national sport of England. The expansion of the British Empire led to cricket being played overseas and by the mid-19th century the first international matches were being held. Today, the sport is played in more than 100 countries.
The rules of the game are known as the Laws of Cricket. These are maintained by the International Cricket Council (ICC), the governing body of cricket, and the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), the club that has been the guardian of the Laws since it was founded in 1787.
A cricket match is played on a cricket field at the centre of which is a pitch. The match is contested between two teams of eleven players each.
In cricket, one team bats, trying to score as many runs as possible without being dismissed ("out") while the other team bowls and fields, trying to dismiss the other team’s batsmen and limit any runs being scored. When the batting team has used all its available overs or has no remaining batsmen, the roles become reversed and it is now the fielding team’s turn to bat and try to outscore the opposition.
There are several variations in the length of a game of cricket. In professional cricket this ranges from a limit of 20 overs per side (Limited Overs Cricket) to a game played over 5 days (Test cricket). Depending on the length of the game being played, there are different rules that govern how a game is won, lost, drawn or tied.