Tuesday 24 April 2012

Mark Waugh

Mark Waugh Biography 

Mark Waugh has long lived in the shadow of his older twin brother Steve yet he has fashioned his own career in cricket.

But in the literary stakes the closeness that is reflected in their cricket achievements might as well be as wide as the Nullarbor Plain.

Steve, through his continuing involvement with his annual diaries, has fashioned a reputation of respect for the game and its history while also revealing a keen insight into the traditions of cricket and of Australians.

Mark, through his biographer, does not show the same depth of quality in this record of his career.

For a blow-by-blow account of his life, there wouldn't be a statistic out of place in this book. But that is its fault.

There is too much tedious reference to old score sheets and series averages to grip the reader and give a real insight to the subject.

Large tracts of clear interview text defined by placement in italics leap out of pages to give a broken view of Waugh's opinion on matters, or those of team-mates and family. And because this is a biography, as opposed to an autobiography, the reader is left with a sense of detachment from the subject.

When he does speak Waugh is free and frank. In the early stages he is very open about how his relationship with his partner developed, while later on he gives no doubt about his feelings on the dealings in matters related to his much publicised brushes with the corrupt side of the game.

It is easy to imagine the reason for the indignance he felt at how people treated him over accusations, but he can't escape the reality that his earlier receipt of cash for information did leave him vulnerable to people's sensibilities on the subject. To think otherwise is to be as naive as he claimed to be in initially accepting money for advice.

As a professed gambler, Waugh did not seem to see the vulnerable position he was in.

When news broke that a fine that had been required of he and Shane Warne by the Australian Cricket Board for their misdemeanours, and had then been hushed up, Waugh said, "I was disappointed how it was portrayed because I couldn't understand how such a simple thing could become such a big deal. People were drawing conclusions left, right and centre. I was surprised at how big an event it was."

Oh really?

In being critical of journalists who passed comment on the situation at the time, Waugh pulled out the line about journalists never having played the game.

"The thing with those guys is that they've never played the game, so I find it hard to accept that people who haven't played the game are criticising you all the time when they haven't been there and done that."

Some would say that it's just as well the journalists hadn't "been there and done that" otherwise the facts about associations with gamblers might have remained submerged among cricket's secret society.

And they say players never read the newspapers!

"I think you have to have played some sort of sport at some level to understand the pressures, the whole set-up. It's not necessary, but it would definitely help you get insight into the game," he said.

Taken a step further, Waugh's reasoning could be said to mean that golf journalists, and fans for that matter, would need to have played at the same level as Tiger Woods to appreciate how he handles pressure.

Or to have played basketball to the same level as Michael Jordan to appreciate how skilful he really is.

Such criticism is really nonsense and suggests a degree of shelter from the real world that professional sports people are all too often sheltered from while everything is laid on for them.

There is no doubt Waugh was entitled to feel aggrieved over the shocking treatment he and several other players received from the International Cricket Council (ICC) who denied them the processes of natural justice, of innocence until proven guilty, when unsubstantiated allegations were made by M K Gupta that he had paid money to Waugh, Alec Stewart, Brian Lara, Dean Jones, Hansie Cronje, Aravinda de Silva, Arjuna Ranatunga, Martin Crowe and Saleem Malik.

That Gupta was not required to front up with evidence before investigations were started against the players was an indictment of ICC processes. He never did show which was further proof that the initial stance had been wrong.

But these were difficult times as the ICC attempted to get out of a free fall that had hit the game as match-fixing allegations rocked their image. Given his earlier involvement, however, Waugh still had less reason to be upset than several of the other players concerned.

By the same token there are some interesting moments of analysis of cricket and cricketers in the book, albeit briefly, none more revealing than the thoughts of the Australians facing the might of the West Indies in 1994/95.

"The West Indies is a hard place to play because it's so casual, you get in a relaxed mood and feel like you're on holidays. It always lulls you into a false sense of security, then all of a sudden you're at war. It's really hard to change from one to the other.

"We didn't say it, but deep down we were probably thinking we couldn't win. Looking back, I think a lot of the players didn't want to be there. We were just hoping to get through the tour without getting too much damage to our reputations. We were always going to struggle with that attitude ...

"Their bowling was exceptional, especially [Malcolm] Marshall, [Curtly] Ambrose and [Courtney] Walsh. I think Ambrose is the best fast bowler I've ever played against. Even back then he was relentless. Never bowled any bad balls. If he wanted to stop you scoring, he could do that; if he wanted to step up and intimidate you, he could do that too. He could do everything."

Let there be no doubt that Waugh has made an outstanding contribution to cricket. His international record speaks for itself: 125 Tests, 7949 runs, 173 catches, 59 wickets; 244 ODIs, 8500 runs, 85 wickets and 108 catches.

He has been a quality batsman whose finest innings have been fit to rank with some of the greatest in the game.

At the height of the match-fixing crisis, Waugh claimed he was naive, some said he was greedy. The readers of this biography can make up their own minds. Whatever their conclusions, they are not likely to be as forgiving as Waugh might like to think he is entitled to expect.

His approach is in sharp contrast to that of his long-time team-mate Warne in his own book published last year.

Mark Waugh
Mark Waugh
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Mark Waugh
Mark Waugh 173 vs West Indies 2000/01 MCG
Mark Waugh 20 vs ASIA XI as captain, 2000 in Dhaka

Steve Waugh


Steve Waugh Biography 

Stephen Rodger Waugh (born June 2, 1965) was the captain of the Australian Test cricket team from 1997-Jan 2004.

Making his debut as an all-rounder complementing his batting with handy medium pace, Steve came into the Australian ODI and test teams in the summer of 1985-86 (against New Zealand and India respectively), at one of the lowest ebbs the Australian team had reached with a succession of series losses. He proved crucial in both fields in Australia's surprise win in the 1987 World Cup.

His batting began to deliver on its promise when Australia regained the Ashes in 1989, with his first test century finally arriving after a succession of scores in the nineties. However, a run of poor form led to his being dropped from the Australian side in 1992, ironically to be replaced by his twin brother Mark Waugh.

Returning to the team against the West Indies in 1992-93, Steve built a reputation throughout the 1990s as perhaps the most solid batsman in world cricket. Lacking the attacking flair of Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara, his reputation for strength of will saw him make many centuries for his team, often under pressure and batting with the tailenders. Like most Australian players, he has an array of strong off-side shots. His trademark shot against spin bowling is the "slog sweep" which he gradually developed later in his career—theoretically technically unsound, it has proven highly effective against the spinners and even against faster bowlers at times. Waugh does not play the "hook shot" and is regarded as vulnerable to short-pitched bowling, a theory that has been widely tested by his opponents. Despite looking ungainly when facing it, he is rarely dismissed through it.

Waugh's ability to continue to play despite a back injury that largely prevented him bowling further enhanced his reputation. Waugh, along with the bowling of Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath, provided perhaps the major foundation upon which the Australian team rose to become what was widely regarded as the best team in the world by the mid-1990s.

Waugh took over the captaincy of the one-day side in 1997-98, as planning began for the 1999 World Cup. Producing several reasonable scores in a side struggling early, Waugh saved his best for two crucial games against South Africa, scoring 120 against South Africa in the last game of the "Super Six" to ensure Australia's progression to the semi-final, and then 56 in the semi, which was tied.

Upon the retirement of Mark Taylor in 1999, Waugh assumed the test captaincy, and turned an already successful side into a dominant one that in many cricket watchers' views ranks with Sir Donald Bradman's 1948 Invincibles and the West Indian teams of the 1980s as one of the best cricket teams of all time. Steve Waugh's ruthless approach has led to a succession of drubbings of hapless, outclassed opposition and a record run of 16 consecutive Test match wins, easily eclipsing the previous record of 10 by the West Indies.

Waugh lost the one-day captaincy, and indeed a spot in the one-day side, in 2001-02, but in typical style, declared that he wished to regain a place in the team. A wish he never achieved.

Waugh departs from the distinctly Anglocentric, ockerish, and politically conservative traditions of Australian cricket in his interest in India. Waugh helps to raise funds for a leper children's colony, "Udayan", in Calcutta Whilst hardly a novel thing for a celebrity to do, it is highly novel for an Australian cricketer. He reportedly also encourages his players to learn about and enjoy the countries they visit and play in—presumably partly to reduce the siege mentality of some previous Australian teams playing in south Asia, but also seemingly for a genuine desire to use cricket to build bridges.

Waugh is a keen photographer and has produced several "tour diaries" which feature his images. In his latter years as a cricketer, he has written for a number of newspapers. He insists on writing them himself rather than with the assistance of professional journalists.

Waugh is married to Lynette and has three children.

Steve Waugh retired from international cricket, after the fourth test against India on January 6, 2004. Steve saved the Australian team from defeat in his final test by an innings in which he scored 80. A record number of fans and spectators bid farewell to Waugh at the Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG).

Steve Waugh
Steve Waugh
Steve Waugh
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Steve Waugh

Ricky Thomas Ponting


Ricky Thomas Ponting Biography

Full Name: Ricky Thomas Ponting
Date of Birth: December 19, 1974
Place of Birth: Launceston, Tasmania
Marital Status: Married Rianna Jennifer Cantor in June 2002
Children: daughter, Emmy Charlotte, born on July 26, 2008
Parents: Graeme (played for Mowbray) and Lorraine (sister of Greg Campbell)
Siblings: Drew and Renee (both younger)
Ponting is the eldest of three children; he was born and raised in Launceston, Tasmania by parents Graeme and Lorraine. Ricky started playing cricket at age 7, and showed immediate promise. He was known to be rich in talent ever since he was 12 when he became the youngest person in the world to have a bat sponsor as he was signed by Kookaburra. Obviously people knew that in the future he would be a star. Ponting excelled in junior levels as he was already playing 1st/A Grade cricket when he was 12 and had made it into Youth State and National sides with ease.

He attended school at Mowbray Primary and then Brooks Senior High School in Launceston, and then attended the Commonwealth Bank Cricket Academy from 1992 to 1993.

Ponting reached international standards at a young age for a batsman, making his One Day International debut in early 1995 and making his Test debut at the end of the year aged 20. However, his progress was not unhindered. He lost his place in the team several times due to lack of form and discipline issues, before rising to the ODI captaincy in early 2002 and becoming Test captain in early 2004. As of March 2008, he is the second highest ranked ODI batsman and ranked third amongst Test batsman in the ICC ratings.

Ponting is considered one of the best cricketers in modern cricket, and is ranked 2nd in the One-Day International Batting chart. He has scored over 9,500 Test runs at an average near 60, but since the February 2002 tour of South Africa (when he was elevated to the ODI team captaincy) he has scored 24 of his Test centuries and averaged above 74, leading to comparisons with Sir Donald Bradman.

Ponting is also Australia's leading ODI run-scorer and century maker he has the second most centuries ever, behind only Tendulkar. His century against the West Indies in Jaipur at the 1996 Cricket World Cup made him the youngest ever World Cup centurion, and his unbeaten 140 against India in the 2003 Cricket World Cup final was the highest by a captain in a World Cup final. In 2007 Cricket World Cup match against South Africa at St Kitts, Ponting became the first Australian to reach 10,000 runs in ODI Cricket and the 7th in world cricket to achieve this distinction.

Like many Australian batsmen, Ricky Ponting is particularly strong against pace bowling, with the full array of back foot shots, including the pull, hook, and square cut. Early on, he was regarded as a near-compulsive hooker, but he has lately moderated this tendency. He tends to move across his off stump, and has therefore been regarded as vulnerable to LBW early in his innings. He is less adept against spin bowling, particularly on very helpful spinning pitches such as those in India where his average is just 12.28.

After his first 30 Tests in just under four years his average was 38.62, and after rising into the mid-40s had dipped again to 40.50 after 45 Tests. Since that time his average has consistently risen; his averages in recent calendar years are 70.93 in 2002, 100.20 in 2003, 41.00 in 2004, 67.13 in 2005 and 88.86 in 2006.

Ponting occasionally bowls medium pace, and has also experimented with off-spin. He is an outstanding fieldsman square of the wicket or at silly point, with fast reactions and hand-eye coordination and (especially in the one-day game) a reputation for hitting the stumps to run out opposition batsmen. A report prepared by Cricinfo in late 2005 showing that since the 1999 Cricket World Cup, he had effected the second highest number of run-outs in ODI cricket of any fieldsman, with the sixth highest success rate.

Ponting is a keen supporter and number one ticket holder of the North Melbourne Football Club in the Australian Football League. On 9 August 2007, Ponting appeared on The AFL Footy Show where he talked about his desire to join the club's board. He also supports Blue Square Premier side Altrincham F.C.after befriending chairman Geoff Goodwin. He owns 500 shares in the club and attended a pre-season friendly in 2009.

After marrying long-time girlfriend—law student Rianna Jennifer Cantor in June 2002, Ponting credited her as the reason for his increased maturity. On 26 February 2008, it was announced that they were expecting their first child. Daughter Emmy Charlotte was born in Sydney, Australia on 26 July 2008.

Ricky Thomas Ponting
Ricky Thomas Ponting
Ricky Thomas Ponting
Ricky Thomas Ponting
Ricky Thomas Ponting
Ricky Thomas Ponting
Ricky Thomas Ponting
Ricky Thomas Ponting





Monday 23 April 2012

Abdul Razzaq


Abdul Razzaq Biography
 
Full name Abdul Razzaq
Born December 2, 1979, Lahore, Punjab
Current age 31 years 163 days
Major teams Pakistan, Asia XI, Hampshire, Hampshire 2nd XI,Hyderabad Heroes, ICL Pakistan XI, Khan Research Labs,Lahore, Lahore Lions, Middlesex, Pakistan International Airlines,Surrey, Worcestershire
Also known as Abdur Razzaq
Playing role Allrounder
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 46 77 9 1946 134 28.61 4741 41.04 3 7 230 23 15 0
ODIs 262 226 57 5063 112 29.95 6214 81.47 3 23 382 124 33 0
T20Is 26 24 9 346 46* 23.06 274 126.27 0 0 17 20 2 0
First-class 117 183 27 5254 203* 33.67 8 28 32 0
List A 322 277 67 6342 112 30.20 3 33 46 0
Twenty20 71 66 17 1376 109 28.08 958 143.63 1 5 122 66 9 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 46 76 7008 3694 100 5/35 7/155 36.94 3.16 70.0 4 1 0
ODIs 262 251 10845 8503 267 6/35 6/35 31.84 4.70 40.6 8 3 0
T20Is 26 19 315 360 18 3/13 3/13 20.00 6.85 17.5 0 0 0
First-class 117 18564 10818 340 7/51 31.81 3.49 54.6 11 2
List A 322 13761 11032 364 6/35 6/35 30.30 4.81 37.8 13 3 0
Twenty20 71 64 1271 1552 79 4/13 4/13 19.64 7.32 16.0 2 0 0
Recent matches
Bat & Bowl Team Opposition Ground Match Date Scorecard
0/14, 3 Pakistan v India Mohali 30 Mar 2011 ODI # 3147
1/4 Pakistan v West Indies Dhaka 23 Mar 2011 ODI # 3142
2/8, 20* Pakistan v Australia Colombo (RPS) 19 Mar 2011 ODI # 3139
1/24 Pakistan v Zimbabwe Pallekele 14 Mar 2011 ODI # 3132
0/49, 62 Pakistan v New Zealand Pallekele 8 Mar 2011 ODI # 3123
8, 1/16 Pakistan v Canada Colombo (RPS) 3 Mar 2011 ODI # 3116
3, 0/23 Pakistan v Sri Lanka Colombo (RPS) 26 Feb 2011 ODI # 3109
8*, 0/23 Pakistan v Kenya Hambantota 23 Feb 2011 ODI # 3105
- Pakistan v England Fatullah 18 Feb 2011 Other OD
4, 3/31 Pakistan v Bangladesh Dhaka 15 Feb 2011 Other OD
Profile
Abdul Razzaq was once rapid enough to open the bowling and remains composed enough to bat anywhere, though he is discovering that the lower-order suits him nicely. His bowling - the reason he was first noticed - is characterised by a galloping approach, accuracy, and reverse-swing. But it is his batting that is more likely to win matches. He boasts a prodigious array of strokes and is particularly strong driving through cover and mid-off off both front and back foot. He has two gears: block or blast. Cut off the big shots and Razzaq gets bogged down, although patience is his virtue as he demonstrated in a match-saving fifty against India in Mohali in 2005. Just prior to that he had also played a bewilderingly slow innings in Australia, scoring four runs in over two hours. When the occasion demands it though, as ODIs often do, he can still slog with the best of them: England were pillaged for a 22-ball 51 at the end of 2005. and then again for nearly 60 runs in the last three overs of an ODI in September the following year.

Abdul Razzaq
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Abdul Razzaq - The Attack !
Abdul Razzaq vs New Zealand 34 off 11 balls Last 3 Overs YouTube

Imran Nazir


Imran Nazir Biography

 Imran Nazir an other gift of Allah for the Pakistan in the cricket player’s team. But the distrust was that as he offers more genuine promise than most. He is predominantly strong off the back foot, loves forcing all the way through the covers. His hostile behavior towards his cricket passion has had him made as a one-day player. In the initial period of his entrance he couldn’t perform well in his first few Tests.
Ultimately, on the other hand, Glenn McGrath and Co noticed his method and deficient of footwork rather cruelly in two Tests matches against Australia. The preference of Mohammad Hafeez, Yasir Hameed, Imran Farhat and Taufeeq Umar moved him upward level, which enhance his career charm and He became National squad against South Africa in 2006-07 because of the consistency in performances in in-land matches. And he was selected for World Cup 2007 team on his volatile performance 39-ball 57-scores, but his three failure match series won’t polish his performance and become a slight decline of his image in the Pakistani people. Over all his performance made him one of the best fielders in the Pakistan cricket team, so he is considered as to be the 1st Pakistani to flip-flop (while intercepting a square cut).
His career-best performance of 160 adjacent to Zimbabwe in the World Cup retained him for the following such tours to Abu Dhabi and Scotland whereas Imran also is being elected for Pakistani cricket training camps. Then he was selected in Twenty20 World Championship and rewarded by a “Central Contract” in July 2007 before representing Pakistan in the home ODI series in opposition to South Africa. Later-on he coupled with the unsanctioned Indian Cricket League and performed very well for the Lahore Badshahs, but when the PCB pardoned players to have severed ties with the ICL, Imran Nazir was soon called back into the ODI side.

Imran Nazir 
Imran Nazir 
Imran Nazir 
Imran Nazir 
Imran Nazir 
Imran Nazir 
Imran Nazir 
Imran Nazir 

Shoaib Akhtar


Shoaib Akhtar Biography

Shoaib Akhtar is a former professional cricketer who played testes and One Day International matches for the Pakistan national team in ICC organized events. He has been dubbed as The Rawalpindi Express after the place where he was born and he is arguably the fastest bowler the world of cricket has ever seen, easily clocking 150 km/hour on many occasions. He became the first man to bowl a delivery over 100 miles/hour or 161.3 km/hour, which is the fastest delivery ever bowled in the history of cricket against England. Moreover, not only did he achieve a speed of 100 miles/hour on his delivery, he achieved it twice during one single match and that is something that makes him very unique in the world of fast bowlers. His prowess lay in being able to bowl fast and precise Yorkers as well as quick bouncers and these abilities made him one of the greatest as well as most feared bowlers of all time, the likes of which had not been seen in international cricket since the times of Michael Holding, Joel Garner, Jeff Thompson, Dennis Lillie, Malcolm Marshall and the likes – players who depended on raw pace to pick up wickets.

However, Shoaib Akhtar was also a very controversial figure and it followed him wherever he went. It has been said that he was very selfish and not a team man. The Pakistan team management once sent him home from Australia in the middle of a series because of an alleged poor behavior on his part. In 2006, he was perhaps involved in the biggest controversy when WADA found Shoaib Akhtar guilty of taking performance enhancing drugs and the ICC banned him from playing cricket. This ban was however lifted and he returned to the Pakistan national side the following year and almost immediately, got himself banned by the Pakistan Cricket Board or the PCB for fighting with team mate and fellow opening bowler Mohammad Asif during a training session.

He was selected to play for the Kolkata Knight Riders for the inaugural IPL but injuries blighted his season and he played only a handful of matches. Akhtar was so injury prone that he only managed to play a total of 46 tests and 163 One Day Internationals in his 12 year international career, taking a total of 425 wickets in all. Shoaib Akhtar, in spite of all his short comings, is truly a legend of the game and no matter what happens, cricket will always remember this flamboyant star.

Shoaib Akhtar
Shoaib Akhtar
Shoaib Akhtar
Shoaib Akhtar
Shoaib Akhtar
Shoaib Akhtar
Shoaib Akhtar
Shoaib Akhtar

Saeed Anwar


Saeed Anwar Biography

Saeed Anwar is a former Pakistani cricketer who was an opening batsman. He is most notable for scoring 194 runs against India in Chennai, the highest in any One Day International. He was an opener for Pakistan and generally opened with aamer Sohail.
Education
Saeed Anwar graduated from NED University, Karachi in 1989 and is an engineer by profession. He was planning to go to the United States for his Master’s studies before becoming a professional test Cricketer.
Personal Life
He faced a personal tragedy in 2001, when his daughter died after a prolonged illness. As a result he turned to religion. He made his return to Cricket after a long hiatus and was one of the most consistent Pakistani batsmen in the 2003 World Cup.
On 15 August 2003, he announced his retirement from Cricket after he was dropped from the squad for the upcoming One-Day International tournament in Sharjah. He devoted his life to preaching Islam across Pakistan with the Tablighi Jamaat. He led the funeral prayers for his former team mate Wasim Akram’s spouse, Huma Akram, in Lahore. He is also believed to be responsible for Yousuf Youhana’s conversion to Islam in 2005. Youhana was the only Christian on the Pakistan cricket team till then and was said to be heavily influenced by Aanwar and the Tablighi Jamaat.
Career
An opening batsman capable of annihilating any bowling attack on his day, Anwar was an attacking batsman in one-day matches and once settled in Test matches, scored quickly and all over the field. His success came from good timing.Anwar became famous for his trademark flick. He was able to lift a ball that had pitched outside off stump for six over midwicket. Anwar’s timing and ability to score quick runs made him a crowd favourite. He was named as a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1997.
Anwar was the first Pakistani batsman to score a century against India on Indian soil in a one-day match. He has the highest Test batting average (59.06) of any Pakistani against Australia, and once scored three consecutive centuries against them. He scored a classic century against South Africa in Durban, which allowed Pakistan to win a Test match for the first time in South Africa.
On 21 May 1997 in Chennai, Anwar scored 194 against India in India in an ODI match. Charles Coventry equalled the feat on 16 August 2009, against Bangladesh. This was the highest individual score by any batsman in the world till Sachin Tendulkar scored an unbeaten 200 against South Africa on 24 February 2010 which later was surpassed by Virender Sehwag’s 219.
Anwar is a member of the exclusive club of batsmen who have scored three successive hundreds in ODIs, with hundreds against Sri Lanka, West Indies and Sri Lanka during the 1993–94 Champions Trophy in Sharjah. He scored two successive hundreds on three other occasions in his career, and was the first batsman to complete this feat in ODIs.
Records
Anwar (194) and Charles Coventry (194*) shared the record for highest individual score in an ODI match. Anwar has scored two or more successive hundreds on four occasions. He holds the highest Test batting average (59.06) of any Pakistani against Australia in Test matches, and made 20 hundreds in One Day Internationals as a Pakistan opening batsman.

Saeed Anwar
Saeed Anwar
Saeed Anwar
Saeed Anwar
Saeed Anwar
Saeed Anwar
Saeed Anwar
Saeed Anwar