Sunday, October 25, 2009

National school games from Oct 26

STAFF WRITER 18:44 HRS IST

Panaji, Oct 24 (PTI) The Directorate of Sports and Youth Affairs, Goa will conduct the 55th National School Games in football, baseball and taekwondo for the year 2009-10 from October 26 to 30 at the Nehru stadium, Fatorda.

Addressing a press conference, Susan D'Souza, Directorate of Sports and Youth Affairs, Goa said in all 24 states will participates in different categories.

She said Goan boys and girls have been undergoing rigorous training for the last 15 days and hoped that they would bring laurels to the state.

Delhi, Punjab, Chandigarh, Madhya Pradesh, Goa, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Manipur, Kerala, Uttarakhand, Tamil Nadu, Assam, Bihar have so far confirmed their participation in the event, stated Suzan.

Schiavone wins Kremlin Cup

MOSCOW, Oct 25: Italy’s Francesca Schiavone won just the second title of her career on Sunday by defeating Olga Govortsova of Belarus 6-3, 6-0 in the Kremlin Cup final.

The 29-year-old veteran, ranked 24th in the world and seeded eighth in Moscow, won in one hour 17 minutes to record her second win in three head-to-head meetings with Govortsova.

The finalists traded breaks throughout a closely-fought first set, but it was Schiavone, the 2005 runner-up here, who was the more consistent.

Oz pip India to go 1-0 up in the series

Praveen, Harbhajan heroics in vain • Ponting and Co solid with bat

VADODARA, Oct 25: Praveen Kumar and Harbhajan Singh’s batting heroics took India agonisingly close to a sensational win before the hosts slumped to a four-run defeat against Australia in the first match of the seven-ODI series on Sunday.

At 201 for seven in their pursuit of a 293-run victory target, India seemed heading for a comprehensive defeat before Praveen (40 not out) and Harbhajan (49) came up with a defiant 84-run stand off 57 balls for the eighth wicket that nearly took them home.

Much to the disappointment of the crowd, India eventually managed 288 for eight, put together by cameos from Gautam Gambhir (68), Virat Kohli (30), MS Dhoni (34), Praveen Kumar and Harbhajan.

Earlier, Ricky Ponting (74) led from the front and was amply supported by Mike Hussey (73), Tim Paine (50) and Cameron White (51) as the visitors rattled up 292 for eight after opting to bat first on a featherbed track.

Faced with the daunting task of scoring at 5.86 per over, the star-studded Indian line-up came a cropper against some disciplined bowling and tight fielding to be left struggling at 201 for seven with the last 10 overs remaining.

Harbhajan and Praveen brought down the target to 30 from the last 15 balls and then nine from the last six.

But once Harbhajan departed off the second ball of the final over from Peter Siddle, India lost the momentum and Australia stopped the hosts four runs short of their total.

Earlier in the innings, Gambhir played the sheet-anchor’s role after the cheap dismissal of openers Virender Sehwag and Sachin Tendulkar to top-score with 68 off 85 balls with six fours and a six in it.

Dhoni and Kohli, surprisingly promoted to number four in the batting order, made starts before getting out when in their 30s.

After being 167 for three in the 35th over, the Indians lost three quick wickets - Gambhir, Suresh Raina (9) and Dhoni - while adding only 19 runs and it became 201 for seven at the fall of Ravindra Jadeja in the 40th over.

Harbhajan and Praveen kept the hosts in the hunt with some lusty hits to raise visions of a come-from-behind victory, but in the end it proved of no avail.

With this win, Australia surged to their second successive victory at this venue over the home team, having beaten the hosts by nine wickets in 2007 at this ground.

The thrilling victory put the visitors 1-0 up in the series ahead of the second day/night encounter at Nagpur on October 28.

Though India came close, their top-order batting, bowling as well as fielding were thoroughly exposed by the Australian team which is riding on a high after whipping England 6-1 and then retaining the Champions Trophy in South Africa.

Scorecard

Australia: Shane Watson lbw b Nehra 5; Tim Paine c Dhoni b Sharma 50; Ricky Ponting lbw b Jadeja 74; Cameron White c Raina b Nehra 51; Michael Hussey c Kohli b Sharma 73; Adam Voges c Gambhir b Harbhajan 3; James Hopes run out (Sehwag) 14; Mitchell Johnson not out 14; Brett Lee b Sharma 0

Extras: (b-0, lb-2, nb-2, w-4) 8

Total: (for eight wickets in 50 overs) 292

Fall of wickets: 1-5 (Watson, 1.2 overs), 2-102 (Paine, 18.6), 3-151 (Ponting, 29.3), 4-227 (White, 42.2), 5-233 (Voges, 43.5), 6-256 (Hopes, 46.3), 7-291 (Hussey, 49.1), 8-292 (Lee, 49.6)

Bowling: Praveen Kumar 10-0-77-0 (2w); Ashish Nehra 10-0-58-2 (1nb); Ishant Sharma 10-0-50-3 (1nb); Harbhajan Singh 10-0-57-1 (2w); Ravindra Jadeja 9-0-39-1; Suresh Raina 1-0-9-0

India: Virender Sehwag c Paine b Lee 13; Sachin Tendulkar c Ponting b Watson 14; Gautam Gambhir lbw b Johnson 68; Virat Kohli c Watson b Voges 30; Mahendra Singh Dhoni c Lee b Watson 34; Suresh Raina c & b Johnson 9; Ravindra Jadeja lbw b Hauritz 5; Harbhajan Singh b Siddle 49; Praveen Kumar not out 40; Ashish Nehra not out 2

Extras: (lb 10, w 14) 24

Total: (For eight wickets in 50 overs) 288

Fall of wickets: 1-25 (Sehwag, 4.2 overs), 2-45 (Tendulkar, 8.1), 3-103 (Kohli, 20.4), 4-167 (Gambhir, 34.1), 5-183 (Raina, 36.3), 6-186 (Dhoni, 37.2) 7-201 (Jadeja, 39.5), 8-285 (Harbhajan Singh, 49.2)

Bowling: Brett Lee 6-0-28-1; Peter Siddle 9-0-55-1 (3w); Shane Watson 10-0-70-2; Mitchell Johnson 10-0-59-2 (5w); James Hopes 2-0-10-0; Adam Voges 4-0-22-1; Nathan Hauritz 9-1-34-1 (PTI)