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What happened to TEAM INDIA?

Its Bermuda people; Heck the world record aint worth it.

Have to agreee with ya.......:tup:

Similar is the case with Srilankans when they beat netherlands on their homeground while staeling the world record of highest total made in a oneday international from Sth africa. But what about when teams like minnows beat the major ones, say Ireland vs Pakistan can shut everyones's mouth.

Inziii was a very good player one of my fav of all time, but i was'nt expecting him to loose against Ireland. Indeed he's sad with some other players after the woolmer incident.

Huge changes should have to be made to save cricket in Pakistan, best thing is to hand over cricket departement to Imran khan, he can bring the life back.

Kick out some players playing by political reference...........

Akmal, Hafeez, Imran and younis has to be kicked out.... thats my thinking, bring up some players from Under-19 there r some very good ones.
 
Records mean nothing. Winning world cup is everything. As a cricket lover I like to watch a good match but Indian record was so one sided it was really no match. With Pakistan out of WC, I can watch matches without any emotional involvement and not wait for the Over to finish for going to the toilet. Ha Ha

I sincerely hope India beat Sri Lanka; else Subcontinent Cricket would go the same way as Hockey. Just "Also ran" in the major events.
Not that I particularly want India to win the world cup; I simply dislike watching a one sided match; Can you imagine Bangla Desh and Australia in semis?? Bangal Desh may be a spirited team, but I hate to waste my sleep and watch a team getting licked. I like close finishes.
It wasn't a good match. It was a good victory. We notched up a positive net run rate which enhances our chances to qualify to the Super Eight's.
 
Its Bermuda people; Heck the world record aint worth it.

So what?

Srilanka played bermuda, did they manage it? Did any test playing team manage it against any of the rookies? NO.

So i shall give credit.
 
I would like to know about the indian friends views on the defeat from Sri Lanka, I has made surges in India, it is an alarming situation that the world class player of both Pak and India failed to deliver the goods, they are enjoying good status and millions of rupees spent on them to bring what? Shame to the respective nations

Regards

Mansoor
 
I would like to know about the indian friends views on the defeat from Sri Lanka, I has made surges in India, it is an alarming situation that the world class player of both Pak and India failed to deliver the goods, they are enjoying good status and millions of rupees spent on them to bring what? Shame to the respective nations

Regards

Mansoor

gotta agree with ya on this one the India & Pakistani players have been given the best of attention yet they have given us the worst of performances in this 07-cricket world cup.
 
Saturday, 24 March 2007

Is India's slip good for cricket?
By Mukul Kesavan
Author of 'Men in White'

For Indian fans, India's all-but elimination from the cricket World Cup so early in the competition is a crushing disappointment.

For the television channels that bought rights to beam the tournament to these fans, Friday's defeat is a financial disaster.

But for the tournament itself, nothing could have been more tonic than the purging of Pakistan and India, the dysfunctional giants of South Asian cricket.

Instead of these glowering bruisers, it looks as though the extravagantly gifted Sri Lankans and the plucky Bangladeshis shall represent South Asia in the next round, the Super 8.

Since the Reliance World Cup hosted by India in 1987, South Asia's cricketing nations have become more and more influential in the conduct and administration of the one-day game.

Some of this influence has to do with cricketing success: since India won the Cup in 1983, Pakistan and Sri Lanka have won it in 1992 and 1996 respectively.

Mainly, though, the balance of power in world cricket has shifted from England and Australia towards the sub-continent for commercial reasons: the dawning realisation that India owns the only mass audience there is for the game.

One-day allure

Cricket was always popular in India, but the coincidence of World Cup success in 1983 and the creation of a national television audience in the early Eighties (Doordarshan, India's sole, government-owned television station at the time, created a pan-Indian network in 1982) expanded and deepened the fan base of the game.

Crucially, this new audience was exclusively drawn to one-day cricket, the shorter form of the game.

There were several reasons for this. Limited overs matches were over in a day, they were never inconclusive and they had a gladiatorial quality that Test cricket with its longeurs, wholly lacked.

The arena-like excitement of ODIs was tailor-made for that great South Asian sport, chauvinism.

India and Pakistan had resumed cricket relations after a long chill in 1978, just as limited-overs cricket was starting to take off.

The compulsive need to confront the old enemy led to the creation of a cricket circus in the Gulf sheikhdom, Sharjah, where, on neutral ground, the sub-continent's blood feuds were re-played as one-day tournaments for the benefit of increasingly feverish and volatile audiences.

The fusion of chauvinism and television had two bad consequences: an obsessive fan base that tended to become deranged by defeat and the rise of contemporary cricket's stock villain, the corrupting bookie.

Defeat, especially at the hands of the old enemy, led to a) a suspension of cricketing relations (India stopped playing Pakistan in Sharjah after a sequence of defeats led to allegations of foul play) and b) to attacks on players or their property (Mohammad Kaif's home was attacked in 2003, and Mahendra Dhoni's house was damaged after India was defeated by Bangladesh in their opening match in the present tournament).

Corruption

The rise of the bookie and the phenomenon of match-fixing which nearly destroyed cricket's credibility as a competitive sport, was a by-product of the new South Asian audience for one-day cricket.

It couldn't have happened in an environment where the Test match was the dominant form.

Test cricket is harder to fix. It happens over a longer span, there are more innings, more variables, which makes it harder to fix and it never generates the steaming pressure-cooked excitement that leads to frenzied betting in the course of an ODI.

Test cricket's suspense is cumulative, and its metabolic rate too low for villains.

And these bookies, these villains are South Asian - located in India and Pakistan for the most part, countries where the criminalisation of betting has driven the betting 'industry' underground.

The corruption that bookies have brought to the game has had foreign recruits like the late South African captain, Hansie Cronje, but it remains a sub-continental blight.

Already Bob Woolmer's tragic death is being speculatively attributed to bookmakers worried that the Pakistani coach was about to blow the whistle on their racket in his forthcoming book.

Cricket will buckle under the weight of the sullen, thin-skinned nationalism that Indian and Pakistani fans bring to the game and it can certainly do without the bookie-driven corruption that feeds off this perverse enthusiasm.

The probable elimination of India and Pakistan will leave the World Cup in the West Indies a happier, less toxic tournament; it might even give the fans of these countries the time to actually play some cricket.

Or they could use the break to switch their loyalties to a sport that doesn't bring out the worst in them. Test cricket, anyone?

(Mukul Kesavan is a writer, and his book of cricket, Men in White, will be published by Penguin India this year)

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6491053.stm
 
i came across a really funny quote so ive got to share it...

"Product endorsements and money are governing our players. Even villagers like me can play better than our team," he said.

http://www.cricketworldcuplatest.co...d-be-sacked-says-indian-railway-mi-11859.html

This statement was made by our very own railway minister Lalu prasad yadav yesterday :rofl: :rofl:


who is better for the Indian team lalu or Dhoni ?? :rofl:







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Bangladesh won.......let the lunacy begin.......

Wonder whose house is gonna be burnt first?:disagree:
 
Ha Ha no house burnings happen but its the investment in advertisements for cricket which is going to burn. Dhoni's under construction house was damaged by some hooligans he was more than compensated.
 
Is there any one watching the game between South Africa vs Bangladesh......Uttar match fixing....... believe it or not:disagree:

Watch the way sth africa played...............
This world cup the worst in the history ever.
 
They are obviously gonna lose 19 balls remaining 89 runs or so needed. I will not be surprised if some loser team wins the world cup.
 
Australian already start the programme " save the chappel"..lol. he don t wanna die like Woolmer. But anyway Indian team was not fav anyway. Allegations were white boy was little rude and hard on brown boys.
 
Australian already start the programme " save the chappel"..lol. he don t wanna die like Woolmer. But anyway Indian team was not fav anyway. Allegations were white boy was little rude and hard on brown boys.

Awwwwww poor little brown boys with their pampered lifestyles :lol: He probably told them to get of their asses and train harder.....I think that both Pakistan and Indian cricketers need to realise that it is hard work that creates success.
 
Believe me.......biggest problem is over weight player and fitness problem...Aussies change thier team member very quickly. In india and Pakistan, players join the team with retirement plan....its game of fitness..
 
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