|
Pathan scripts downfall of Zimbabwe
Sachin to inform of his availability today
Kaif supporters accuse Ganguly of bias
Backroom politics ahead of BCCI AGM
Independent authority sought for conducting BCCI poll
|
|
India, Sweden warm up
for Davis Cup tie
Sania breezes into second round
Central Command win
Indian Air Force defeat CRPF
Heena triumphs
Chandigarh lads win 19-0 in Subroto Cup
Sangrur swimmers lift overall trophy
|
Pathan scripts downfall of Zimbabwe
Harare, September 20 Pathan returned figures of 7 for 59
and bowled unchanged after lunch to nail the hosts, who resumed the
second session at 75 for 5 on the opening day of the match at the Harare
Sports Club ground. The young Gautam Gambhir then took centrestage with
a rollicking unbeaten 95 as the visitors reached 195 for one at close,
taking a lead of 34 runs, with nine wickets in hand. The seasoned Rahul
Dravid was giving Gambhir company on 49 in a highly satisfying day for
the Indians. Pathan and Harbhajan Singh bowled unchanged in the second
session and as the wickets fell, there was no cause to bring back Anil
Kumble or Zaheer Khan. Pathan struck in his very first over after lunch
when Hamilton Masakadza (27) was declared leg before wicket. Charles
Coventry (37) and Andy Blignaut (13) put on 43 runs for the seventh
wicket, but it was a stand in which three or four chances and some
near-chances went abegging. Pathan finally found an edge of
Blignaut’s bat, which was safely accepted by Dinesh Kaarthick behind
the stumps. Coventry was troubled by the short deliveries aimed at him
by Pathan, but he once did succeed in pulling him beyond the deep fine
leg fence for six runs. Coventry then attempted a sweep off Harbhajan,
but it took the top edge, for Rahul Dravid to run from the slips and
complete the catch. Coventry made 37 runs. The end came quickly as
Pathan wrapped up the innings in almost no time. Blessing Mahwire (1)
was plumb leg before wicket to Pathan as he played back and then, after
a few flourishing shots, Keith Dabengwa (18) edged a low catch to V.V.S.
Laxman at second slip. Most of the dismissals came in the slip cordon
behind the batting crease which explained the life in the pitch for
medium-pacers. Scoreboard Zimbabwe (Ist innings) Taylor c Dravid b
Pathan 4 Duffin c Laxman b Pathan 12 Ebrahim c Karthik b Zaheer 14
Taibu c Kaarthick b Pathan 0 Masakadza lbw Pathan 27 Streak c
Gambhir b Harbhajan 14 Coventry c Dravid b Harbhajan 37 Blignaut c
Kaarthick b Pathan 13 Dabengwa c Laxman b Pathan 18 Mahwire lbw Pathan
1 Mwayenga not out 14 Extras (b1, lb3, w1, nb2): 7 Total (all out,
44.2 overs): 161 Fall of wickets: 1-4, 2-31, 3-31, 4-31, 5-75, 6-79,
7-122, 8-136, 9-138. Bowling: Pathan 15.2-4-59-7, Zaheer 7-1-24-1,
Ganguly 4-2-10-0, Kumble 7-1-19-0, Harbhajan 8-3-45-2. India (Ist
innings) Gambhir not out 95 Sehwag c Taibu b Streak 44 Dravid not out
49 Extras (lb-2, nb-5): 7 Total (1 wkt, 43 overs): 195 Fall of
wicket: 1-75. Bowling: Streak 11-3-34-1, Mahwire 10-3-40-0, Blignaut
5-0-37-0, Mwaynga 8-1-47-0, Dabengwa 9-1-35-0. — PTI |
Sachin to inform of his availability today
Mumbai, September 20 He had been given time till September 21 to inform to the ICC if he would be fit enough to play in the Super Series to be held in Australia in the second week of October. The master batsman also said his elbow injury was progressing well and he was following the rehabilitation programme chalked out by the doctors for him. Speaking about the current controversy surrounding the Indian captain
Sourav Ganguly and coach Greg Chapell. Tendulkar said he did not know what exactly happened apart from what he read in the newspapers. He, however, said every player must ensure that whatever happens in the dressing room should remain there and not even a word should come out.
— UNI |
Kaif supporters accuse Ganguly of bias
Allahabad, September 20 Kaif, who impressed
in the tri-series preceding the ongoing Test series against Zimbabwe,
was left out of the first Test and also ignored for the second Test,
which began in Harare today. The slogan-shouting fans gathered before
the Civil Lines residence of the cricketer here and accused Ganguly of
being biased against Kaif. They later burnt an effigy of Ganguly. —
PTI |
Backroom politics ahead of BCCI AGM
Kolkata, September 20 The centre of activity is fast shifting to a five-star hotel — which has been the venue for elections since last three AGMs — in South Kolkata with the arrival of the principal players owing allegiance to the two rival factions. BCCI President Ranbir Singh Mahendra is already in town and the ruling group, led by former Board chief Jagmohan Dalmiya, has been engaged in meetings among themselves to finalise the strategy for the elections. Political heavyweight Sharad Pawar, who
unsuccessfully contested against Mahendra last year, is at the centre of all discussions with the opposition lobby repeatedly claiming that he would again throw his hat in the ring. “As far as my knowledge goes, Pawar will be contesting,” Rajsingh Dungarpur, a leading light in the opposition camp, said from Mumbai. So far the Maratha strongman has kept both his supporters and But as per the BCCI constitution, a representative could announce his candidature even on the floor of the AGM. A BCCI functionary belonging to the ruling faction, however, said, “If they (Pawar and his group) want a contest, we have nothing to say. They will again bite the dust.” Dungarpur, however, exuded confidence that Pawar would win by a handsome margin. A further dimension has been added to the meeting following the recent rift and the much-publicised patch up between national team coach Greg Chappel and skipper Sourav Ganguly in Zimbabwe and the dissidents could raise the matter at the AGM. Meanwhile, an influential BCCI official belonging to the ruling group said the slew of court cases which have been slapped against the
Board in the last few days were meant to “disturb the AGM”. The opposition lobby, spearheaded by former BCCI chief I.S. Bindra and Dungarpur, has held some informal discussions in Mumbai and the activity in the camp would pick up once the big names land in the city. The last edition of the AGM was witness to acrimonious scenes with legal battles and even murder threats vitiating the atmosphere before the meeting ended inconclusive. The Pawar versus Mahendra duel for the top BCCI post had ended in a tie, before Dalmiya gave his casting vote to ensure his nominee’s victory. With the present secretary S.K. Nair completing his three-year term, interest also surrounds the possible choice of candidate from the ruling group for the coveted post. The names of BCCI joint secretary Goutam Dasgupta and National Cricket Academy Director and former Test cricketer Brijesh Patel are being heard in this respect.
— PTI |
|
Independent authority sought for conducting BCCI poll
Chennai, September 20 The elections are slated to be held during the BCCI’s annual general meeting
(AGM) in Kolkata on September 22-23. “It is necessary that an independent authority be appointed to act as chairman of the BCCI in the said AGM so as to ensure that the
conduct of the election is totally fair and transparent,” the plaintiff, Netaji Cricket Club, a member of the Tamil Nadu Cricket Association, contended. Submitting that elections to the managing committee of the BCCI are scheduled to be held on September 22, the club apprehended that Board President Ranbir Singh Mahendra, who is again contesting for the post, would allegedly misuse his powers as the chairman of the AGM to subserve his ulterior motives and that of former BCCI and ICC President Jagmohan
Dalmia. Contending that it was necessary to safeguard the honour of the country and to ensure that a body which represented the country
did not bring disrepute to it due to malafide actions of its officials, the planitiff said an independent
authority should be appointed, having absolute powers to scrutinise and approve the list of representatives for member associations, eligible to vote in the
AGM. — PTI |
|
Dilshan, Samaraweera crack centuries
Colombo, September 20 Dilshan, who scored a career-best 168, and Samaraweera (138) put on 280 for the fifth wicket as Sri Lanka recovered from 48-4 to post a healthy 449-7 at stumps on the opening day. Their partnership was Sri Lanka’s best for the fifth wicket in Test cricket, surpassing the previous highest of 234 between Aravinda de Silva and Sanath Jayasuriya against Bangladesh at Colombo in 2002. Dilshan, declared fit just before the match after being struck on the elbow during a practice session, hit one six and 19 fours in his fourth Test hundred, his first since March 2004. His previous best was an unbeaten 163 against Zimbabwe at Harare in 1999. Samaraweera hit 20 fours in his fifth Test century before being caught at short mid-wicket off Syed Russel, bowling with the second new ball. Chaminda Vaas also made merry, scoring a brisk 61 not out off just 57 balls with one six and 10 fours. Scoreboard Sri Lanka (1st innings) Jayasuriya lbw b Rasel 13 Atapattu c Mashud b Hossain 11 Sangakkara b Rasel 5 Jayawardene b Hossain 2 Samaraweera c Nafees b Rasel 138 Dilshan c Mashud b Ahmed 168 Vaas not out 61 Herath lbw b Hossain 1 Muralitharan not out 24 Extras:
(b-4, lb-10, nb-11, w-1) 26 Total: (7 wickets, 90 overs) 449 Fall of wickets:
1-28, 2-28, 3-33, 4-48, 5-238, 6-397, 7-400. Bowling: Rasel 20-2-125-3, Hossain 19-3-104-3, Ahmed 8-2-33-1, Rafique 23-1-92-0, Haque Jr 18-2-70-0, Ashraful 2-0-11-0.— AP |
Neha goes down fighting; Rushmi loses
Kolkata, September 20 In other matches, fifth seed Antonella Serra Zanetti of Italy demolished Chinese Taipei’s Chia-Jung Chuang 6-2, 6-3, while eighth seed Rika Fujiwara overcame Spaniard Atantxa Parra Santonja 6-4, 1-6, 6-4 and Emila Salerni of Argentina vanquished Hungarian Melinda Czink 6-4, 7-5. Both Americans of Indian origin played their hearts out in a match lasting two-and-a-half hours. Sunitha broke Neha in the first, ninth and 11th games and was broken in the fourth and 10th games in the first set, that went on for 55 minutes. While Sunitha spiced up the set with some smashing forehand crosscourts and down-the-line winners, Neha replied by moving to the net and firing in two aces. But Neha’s efforts were not enough as Sunitha bagged the set 7-5. In the second set, Neha moved into top gear, breaking Sunitha in the fourth game with a fine down the line winner, but Sunitha broke back in the next game. When it seemed that the set would go into-tie-breaker, with Neha leading 5-4 and Sunitha serving, Neha broke her, aided by an inexplicable drop volley at the net, which Sunitha shot wide to hand over the set to her opponent 4-6. Having won the second set, Neha looked the aggressor for the first part of the decider. But it was Sunitha who kept her nerves as unforced errors rocketed for both players. Sunitha broke Neha in the crucial ninth game, after exchanging breaks in the two opening games, and served out the match with a forehand down-the-line winner to pocket the set 6-4 and the match. In another match, Rushmi found the going tough against fourth seed Camerin, who had lost to Sania Mirza in the second round of the US Open. The 6-2, 6-0 scoreline indicated the domination Camerin had in the match, but the Indian did not give up hope after holding her serve for the second and the last time in the match, trailing 2-4 in the first set. A pep-up gesture from her mother in the stands was returned with a stoic shake of the head. Thereafter Camerin won eight games on the trot to seal the issue.
— UNI |
India, Sweden warm up
for Davis Cup tie
New Delhi, September 20 But with the NSCI throwing open its tennis courts to the Davis Cup team, the Indian and Swedish teams had no problem having full sessions, as there are four courts at the teams’ disposal. Leander Paes’ quest to find the perfect combination for the crucial tie continued as the Indian team went through punishing practice sessions today. With Mahesh Bhupathi joining the squad, the Indians were in full strength, and tested their skill and endurance spread over two sessions. The Swedes, unable to cope with the heat and humidity, practised in the morning and late evening. The heat and humidity is putting some kind of pressure on the visitors, which is sweet music to the ears of Leander. He has been striving hard to make up his mind about the final composition of the Indian squad. Prakash Amritraj, Rohan Bopanna and Harsh Mankad are on “trial” as the captain would settle for nothing, but the best. Harsh, who joined the squad on Sunday evening, after being assured of a “fair deal” by Leander, is toiling hard to impress the skipper. And so does Rohan Bopanna, and to some extent Prakash Amritraj, though Prakash’s slot is more or less certain. Bhupathi arrived here from Kolkata. He practised quietly, though he and Leander are sure to play in the doubles. But Leander has given no inkling about his playing in the singles. He had talked of an injury he had suffered in the French Open, and the final decision would eventually boil down to his fitness, how much load his limbs would be able to take in the three-day contest. His focus during the past three days has been on hard grind, allowing no distraction to the players. The media was kept at a respectable distance at the NSCI ground today, while the team practised. The NSCI courts were in perfect shape — trim, firm, with an even bounce. And that is a big relief for the Indian and Swedish players after practising on the hard deco-turf courts. Surprisingly, no doctor has been attached with the Indian team. Dr Vece Paes, who has been named as the team doctor, is yet to join the team while the All India Tennis Association has not drafted in anybody to fill in for him at the practice sessions. The Swedes got a taste of the heat and humidity when Andreas Vinciguerra suffered from dehydration last evening. Meanwhile, the Swedes were bolstered with the arrival of their No. 1 player Thomas Johansson. Though Sweden have not named their final squad, veteran Jonas Bjorkman is expected to bear the burden of the clash —
a la Leander. |
Sania breezes into second round
Kolkata, September 20 Setting the centre court ablaze with power-packed forehand crosscourt winners, the third-seeded Hyderabadi girl sealed the issue in 54 minutes. The Japanese, way behind Sania in the rankings, seemed all at sea against the Indian’s aggression and was broken in the fifth and seventh games of the first
set, which lasted 28 minutes. World number 34 Sania continued her onslaught in the second set and literally toyed with her rival, making her run all over the court. Towards the end, Namigata seemed totally drained and was only waiting for her misery to end. Sania would meet Melinda Czink of Hungary for a place in the quarterfinals. Czink humbled Ma Amila Salerni of Argentina 6-4, 7-5. Meanwhile, Sunitha Rao of the USA won a humdinger against compatriot Neha Uberoi in three sets 7-5, 4-6, 6-4 even as India’s Rushmi Chakravarthy surrendered meekly to a much superior Maria Elena Camerin in straight sets 2-6, 0-6 in first-round matches. In other matches, fifth seed Antonella Serra Zanetti of Italy demolished Chinese Taipei’s Chia-Jung Chuang 6-2, 6-3, while eighth seed Rika Fujiwara overcame Spaniard Atantxa Parra Santonja 6-4, 1-6, 6-4 and Emila Salerni of Argentina vanquished Hungarian Melinda Czink 6-4, 7-5. Sunitha broke Neha in the first, ninth and 11th games and was broken in the fourth and 10th games in the first set, that went on for 55 minutes. While Sunitha spiced up the set with some smashing forehand crosscourts and down-the-line winners, Neha replied by moving to the net and firing in two aces. But Neha’s efforts were not enough as Sunitha bagged the set 7-5. In the second set, Neha moved into top gear, breaking Sunitha in the fourth game with a fine down the line winner, but Sunitha broke back in the next game. When it seemed that the set would go into-tie-breaker, with Neha leading 5-4 and Sunitha serving, Neha broke her, aided by an inexplicable drop volley at the net, which Sunitha shot wide to hand over the set to her opponent 4-6. Sunitha broke Neha in the crucial ninth game of the third set, after exchanging breaks in the two opening games, and served out the match with a forehand down-the-line winner to pocket the set 6-4 and the match.
— PTI, UNI |
Central Command win
Jalandhar, September 20 For Western Command, S. Tigga converted two penalty corners. K.H.R. Singh of the Eastern Command converted a penalty corner. Western Command struck again when Paramjit Singh converted another penalty corner. In the dying minutes of the game K.H.R. Singh converted another penalty corner for Eastern Command. Central Command thrashed Northern Command. For Central Command E. Munda, A. Guria, N. Tigga, G. Herenge, M. Bhengra were the scorers.
— TNS |
Indian Air Force defeat CRPF
Faridkot, September 20 In the second match, CRPF, Delhi, defeated Sikh Regiment Centre, Ramgarh, 3-0. Rajesh Kindo, S.K. Vashisht and Rajesh Kumar scored the goals. In another match, Friends Club defeated PSEB, Patiala, by 3-1. Kulwinder Singh, Sunny and Devinder Singh scored for Friends Club while Kuljit Singh scored for PSEB. In the All-India Baba Farid Cricket Tournament, Satnam Ji Cricket Academy, Sirsa, defeated Faridkot XI by six wickets. In the Baba Farid Football Tournament, Baba Farid Football Club, Faridkot, and DAV, Muktsar, made it to the final. |
Heena triumphs
Patiala, September 20 In the first match Heena beat Amandeep Kaur 11-1, 11-0. Then she combined with Daljit Kaur to defeat Manjeet Kaur and Amandeep 15-0, 15-0. Other results: handball: Patiala beat Faridkot 18-8; Hoshiarpur beat Mansa 10-7; Amritsar beat Nawanshahr 18-14. Lawn tennis: Jalandhar beat Hoshiarpur 2-0 (Roshani Batra beat Sunita 6-0, 6-1, Neetu Sodhi beat Kamla Devi 6-0, 6-1). Hockey: Moga beat Sangrur 1-0, Hoshiarpur beat Kapurthala 3-2. Volleyball: Muktsar beat Kapurthala 25-6, 15-16. Hoshiarpur beat Gurdaspur 24-26, 25-10, 25-13. Ropar beat Sangrur 25-17, 25-19. |
Chandigarh lads win 19-0 in Subroto Cup
New Delhi, September 20 Rakesh and Jaspal took full advantage of the porous defence of their opponents and helped themselves to five goals each while Rabin scored another three. Rinku and Manoj also added two goals to their team’s tally. In another match, Maharana Pratap Sports College, Dehra Dun, defeated Rajkiakrit Yougendra High School, Madhepura, Bihar 2-1. Manish scored both the goals for the victors.
— PTI |
Sangrur swimmers lift overall trophy
Ludhiana, September 20 In the women’s section, Sangrur secured thr first position while Ropar eves finished runners-up. Punjab Police swimmers retained the top honours in the men’s section and Ferozepore were second. In waterpolo, Punjab Police thrashed Jalandhar 19-4 to emerge champions. In the 100m breaststroke for women, Mankiran Kaur of Sangrur, with a timings of 1.25.45 secs, put to shade the previous record of 1.30.00 secs by Bindya Sareen in 1993. The second record was in the 50m backstroke as Hoshiarpur’s Gurbinder Kaur clocked 0.36.37 secs to establish a new record. The earlier record of 0.38.37 secs was set by Abhipsha Thakur of Ludhiana in 1997. The third record was in the 50m butterfly in the men’s section. Mohit Sharma of Hoshiarpur took 0.28.47 secs to create a new meet record. The last record of 0.29.03 secs stood in the name of Jaspreet Singh of Sangrur since 1999. |
HOME PAGE | |
Punjab | Haryana | Jammu & Kashmir |
Himachal Pradesh | Regional Briefs |
Nation | Opinions | | Business | Sports | World | Mailbag | Chandigarh | Ludhiana | Delhi | | Calendar | Weather | Archive | Subscribe | Suggestion | E-mail | |