Monday, March 21, 2011

How the teams stack up in the World Cup quarterfinals

1st quarterfinal: Pakistan vs West Indies
Venue: Dhaka
Date: March 23

Pakistan's form: Inconsistency has been Pakistan cricket's second name. However, in this tournament they seem a determined lot. They lost to New Zealand but raised the bar against bigger teams like Sri Lanka and Australia to top Group A. Will West Indies be easy pickings?

What makes them dangerous: Their unpredictability. With them, the opposition doesn't know what's in store. Pakistan have a potent bowling attack which can dismantle any batting line-up, as Sri Lanka and Australia already know. With the bat, they have enough experience in the middle order too.

Players to watch out for: Skipper Shahid Afridi, who has led with vigour and panache and also been extremely effective with his leg-breaks: 17 scalps at 11.47 make him the highest wicket-taker in the tournament. His tally includes two five-wicket hauls too. Seamer Umar Gul is the other man in form and is equally dangerous both with the old and new ball.

West Indies' form: Patchy so far. They still haven't beaten any Test team except Bangladesh in the last two years. Looked threatening against minnows but struggled against the big boys like England, India and South Africa. Have often failed to hold their nerves in crunch situations.

What makes them dangerous: They are a compelling blend and have quite a few match-winners. Players like Chris Gayle, Kieron Pollard, Devon Smith and Darren Bravo can take the game away from the opposition within no time. They have a good bowling attack which can be effective under any conditions. Besides, they are a vastly improved fielding unit.

Players to watch out for: Openers Chris Gayle (162 runs @ 54) and Devon Smith (293 @ 48.83) have provided solidity to the West Indies batting lineup while Kieron Pollard (179 runs, SR 158.40) has given the team momentum lower down. Kemar Roach (13 wickets @ 12) and Sulieman Benn (12 wickets @ 19.83) have been instrumental with the ball.

2nd quarterfinal: India vs Australia
Venue: Ahmedabad
Date: March 24

India's form: Have blown hot and cold so far. Haven't clicked as a unit at key moments and that cost them dearly against South Africa and England. Bangladesh, Ireland and Netherlands did not pose much threat while the West Indies surrendered meekly. Scope for improvement given they are one of the favourites.

What makes them dangerous: The batting. The top seven is probably the most potent in the world. If they click as a unit, they have the ability to tear apart any bowling attack and bat the opposition out of the game. Crowd support and knowledge of local conditions are other factors that can work for the team.

Players to watch out for: Yuvraj Singh (284 runs @ 94.66 and 9 wickets @ 25.22) has held the middle order together with great responsibility. Openers Sachin Tendulkar (326 @ 54.33) and Virender Sehwag (327 @ 65.40) have also made their starts count. Zaheer Khan (15 wickets @ 14.86) has been right on the money and has provided the breakthroughs whenever needed.

Australia's form: The Australian juggernaut was on a roll before they being confronted with a spirited Pakistani side. With rain disrupting the game against Sri Lanka, they haven't beaten any big team except New Zealand. They were also stretched by minnows Canada and Kenya.

What makes them dangerous: Australia are a good all-round side and most of their players are multi-utility players. They know what it takes to perform in pressure-cooker situation too. Many players in the side were the part of the 2007 World Cup and 2009 Champions Trophy winning teams.

Players to watch out for: Michael Clarke has been the man in form with an average of 112.50. Openers Shane Watson (265 runs@53) and Brad Haddin (279 runs @ 55.80) are doing the job perfectly and so are the pace trio of Brett Lee, Mitchell Johnson and Shaun Tait, who share 32 wickets among them.

3rd quarterfinal: South Africa vs New Zealand
Venue: Dhaka
Date: March 25

South Africa's form: Have looked the most complete team. Have covered most of the bases and that has reflected in their performance. Unlike other teams, they crushed minnows Netherlands and Ireland with precision. They were ruthless against Bangladesh and West Indies while clinching victory out of the jaws of defeat against India. Their only loss came against England in Chennai.

What makes them dangerous: They have a man for every job. Their batsmen provide enough cushion for their pacers, who are the best in the world. This time, they have variety in their attack too and the spinners have stood up to be counted.

Players to watch out for: Hashim Amla (299 runs @ 49.33) and AB De Villiers (318 runs @ 106) have been in the form of their lives. The spinning duo of Robin Peterson and Imran Tahir has taken the oppositions by surprise, sharing the bulk of the spoils during the league stages.

New Zealand's form: New Zealand's form has been patchy. They were brilliant in all departments against Pakistan in Pallekele but were ordinary against Australia and Sri Lanka. Against the minnows, they were dominant.

What makes them dangerous: New Zealand have quite a few match-winners in their side. On their day, players like Ross Taylor, Brendon McCullum, Daniel Vettori, Scott Styris, Jacob Oram can single-handedly win matches. They have a good record in ICC tournaments too.

Players to watch out for: Ross Taylor (245 runs@ 81.66) loves subcontinent conditions. Unlike his other teammates, he enjoys facing spin and is equally effective at the crease even when the ball is reversing. Opener Martin Guptill too has been solid. Tim Southee (14 wickets @ 15.07, eco: 3.95) has been a revelation.

4th quarterfinal: Sri Lanka vs England
Venue: Colombo
Date: March 26

Sri Lanka's form: Are bigger than the sum of their parts and one of the top favourites. Except for the loss against Pakistan, the Sri Lankans have been very clinical. Besides crushing the minnows and New Zealand, were looking good against Australia too before rain marred the tie.

What makes them dangerous: Team combination. The top order is getting runs, the pacers are among wickets and the spinners are always a force to reckon with. So far, the middle order hasn't contributed.

Players to watch out for: Kumar Sangakkara is the leading run scorer in the tournament. Muttiah Muralitharan has shown glimpses of his old form too.

England's form: Watching England has been as exciting as it has been frustrating. They huffed and puffed to victory against The Netherlands, lost to Ireland and Bangladesh but beat South Africa in a thriller and played one of the most exciting games of the tournament against India. They clinched another thriller against the West Indies, winning from an almost impossible situation. Is luck on their side this time?

What makes them dangerous: Just like Pakistan, England have been an unpredictable side. On paper, they look one of the best teams and have so far shown the ability to hold their nerves in crunch situation. Fringe players have risen to the occasion. England are a bunch of fighters who never give up.

Players to watch out for: Man-in-form Jonathan Trott (336 runs) has shown he has a good head on his shoulders. Spinner Graeme Swann (12 wickets @ 20.66) is showing his worth in conditions that favour batsmen more than bowlers.

India are better off facing world champs than Lanka at Motera

MUMBAI: For the most part, on Sunday evening, India would have been tempted to take the easy route ahead: lose to West Indies and avoid Australia in the quarterfinal.

After all, the world champions are a daunting mission, even if they are not in full flow; but the fact is India probably have a much better chance to quell Australia in Ahmedabad than the other option: Sri Lanka

The Lankans would surely have been trickier: their batting is versatile while their bowling has a mysterious ring to it, thanks to the three Ms: Malinga, Murali and Mendis. The Motera track would also have suited them better.

On paper, it would have been an equal battle, no doubt, with India even starting as slight favourites. But that itself would have been the tricky part: India would have slipped into complacency and could easily have ended up with egg, or worse, on their faces.

Now, they will be on their guard: they know giving Australia even a slim chance, a minor opening, is akin to jumping off a cliff. : India, themselves, are a dangerous side when they are pushed into a corner, when nothing but a victory can salvage them.

There are, however, better reasons for being more comfortable against Australia: first and foremost, the aura around them has long been busted; secondly, they don't even have the right balance or wherewithal to claw out of squishy holes.

After the defeat against Pakistan, they would even be somewhat tentative; this is the best time to hit them, before they recover their poise or arrogance. They have a flourishing top order and a menacing pace attack too; but the middle order lacks the old assurance, even with the return of Mike Hussey.

Most importantly, their spin component might not be good enough to stop the Indian run-machine. If India can survive the opening spell, or don't lose too many early wickets, they can reasonably expect to avenge the 2003 WC humiliation. Harbhajan, Ashwin and Yuvraj can then complete the final rites of Australia's demise.

In the other quarters, Pakistan are unexpectedly looking the most assured; they may have lost one match too but they don't look disjointed or dispirited at all. It almost looks like the quibbling before they came here didn't even happen.

West Indies will have to get everything right at the start itself to pull off an upset. They need a towering performance from either Gayle or an over-powering one from Roach; otherwise, they are too brittle to finish off a match. They have already disintegrated under pressure, not once but twice.

South Africa face an unpredictable Kiwi side and will begin a little more confidently. They will, however, feel the world closing in on them: it is the knockout stage and they know things can go awfully wrong any time now. They have, no doubt, the strongest line-up, with enough firepower in pace and variety in spin. New Zealand won't find it easy to get past them.

Sri Lanka probably have the easiest match; England have clearly looked tired and uninspired. They have the players to make one last lunge for it but do they have the chutzpah for it? Worse, they will be playing Sri Lanka at home, which is never an easy proposition; and despite the presence of Swann, they might get trapped in a spin tangle.


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So, the possible semifinal line-up: India vs Pakistan and South Africa vs Sri Lanka.

India are bookies' favourite to lift World Cup

MUMBAI: India might face the monumental task of overcoming four-time champions Australia in the quarterfinal at Ahmedabad on March 24, but for bookies, MS Dhoni & Co are the runaway favourites to win the 2011 World Cup.

Top betting site Ladbrokes is offering odds at 3/1 for India to lift the trophy on April 2 in Mumbai. In other words, a bet of Rs 1,000 on India will earn you a profit of Rs 3,000 if Team India justifies its billing. Another leading betting website, Williamhill, also tips the hosts to win the Cup. While India get top billing at 3/1, South Africa, at 10/3, are the next close favourites. Another betting site, www.bet365.com, gives South Africa, at 3/1, the top billing, with India only slightly behind at 10/3.

At Ladbrokes, India gets favourable odds at 8/13 to beat Australia on Thursday night, while for the Aussies, the figure is 5/4. Williamhill too tips India, at 4/6, to vanquish the Oz (6/5). South Africa, who topped Group B, the pool in which India were placed, and Sri Lanka are the other teams favoured to win the crown, says Ladbrokes. The Proteas enjoy odds of 7/2, while the Lankans are tipped at 9/2.

If Ladbrokes' estimation comes true, India are likely to meet Lanka or South Africa in the final. For both eventualities, the odds are at 5/1.

As for the other quarterfinals, Shahid Afridi's Pakistan are tipped to beat the West Indies at Mirpur. South Africa, the bettors think, should not have a problem against the Kiwis at Mirpur, while Lanka are expected to have it easy against England at Colombo.

If the Cup goes the bookies' way from here, it should be an India versus Pakistan semifinal at Mohali, with Dhoni's boys making it to the summit clash.

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Somdev jumps to number 73 in singles ranking

NEW DELHI: Reaping rich reward for his fantastic run at the Indian Wells Masters, Somdev Devvarman on Monday jumped 11 places to achieve his career-best singles ranking of 73 in the latest ATP list.

Somdev reached the pre-quarterfinals in Indian Wells, eventually losing to finalist and top seed Rafael Nadal but not without giving a good fight to the world number one Spaniard.

Rohan Bopanna, who along with Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi of Pakistan reached the semifinals of the doubles event at the same tournament, also improved his ranking by four places to 15.

The Indo-Pak pair had lost to eventual champions Alexandr Dolgopolov and Xavier Malisse.

Leander Paes (7) and Mahesh Bhupathi (5), however, remained static.

In the WTA list, Sania Mirza broke back into the top-100 as she stands 99th in the singles list with a jump of eight places.

This week Sania is seeking to qualify for the Miami event in the USA. She has been seeded 19th and will take on Chinese Xinyun Han in the first round.

The doubles title win at the Indian Wells tournament helped Sania jump 21 places to 33.

Sania and Elena Vesnina of Russia had beaten Bethanie Mattek and Meghann Shaughnessy in the summit clash.

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India should play three spinners against Australia, feels Akram

NEW DELHI: Former Pakistan captain Wasim Akram feels that India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni should use three specialist spinners in the quarterfinal against Australia in order to exploit the weakness of Ricky Ponting's men against slow bowlers.

"If the wicket in Ahmedabad offers turn, then MS Dhoni should definitely opt for three spinners since the Aussies don't play spin that well," Akram told said in an interview.

Sri Lanka had adopted a similar strategy during their clash against the Aussies on a turning track at the Premadasa stadium in Colombo on March 5. However the Lankan spin-trio of Muttiah Muralitharan, Ajantha Mendis and Rangana Herath did not get a chance to showcase their skills as the match got washed out.

However, Akram added that in case the pitch at Ahmedabad is a flat one, then the ploy to stack the side with spinners may backfire on India.

"Playing so many spinners on a batting track may spell doom for India since the slower bowlers will not get much assistance from the surface," Akram said.

India have played with two specialist spinners in four out of the six league games in this tournament. However they haven't played a single match yet with all three spinners ( Harbhajan Singh, R Ashwin and Piyush Chawla) in the eleven.

One major worry for Team India, going ahead into the knockout stages, will be the back-to-back batting collapses against South Africa and the West Indies. While they lost nine wickets for only 29 runs against the Proteas in Nagpur, Dhoni and company performed marginally better on Sunday losing their last seven wickets for the addition of only 51 runs.

Akram mentioned that despite this recklessness by the most-famed batting line-up in the world, there is not much reason to worry for the fans.

"Yes, the India batting has collapsed badly twice. But I don't think there is any major reason to worry as these things happen by chance. At the same time, you have to plan your innings and cannot afford to slog every delivery. I am quite sure the experienced Indian middle-order will learn a lot out of their mistakes," concluded Akram.

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Sehwag sports numberless jersey in World Cup

NEW DELHI: Rival bowlers desperate to see the back of India's flamboyant opener Virender Sehwag early at the World Cup can now blame the back of his shirt when they are being smashed to all corners of the ground.

The dashing opener, who used to have the number 44 on his back, is now sporting a numberless jersey at the tournament after advice from numerologists.

It seems to work with Sehwag in top form at the World Cup where he has 327 runs from five games at an average of 65.40.

Sehwag is not alone in his quirks and superstitions as most of the players in the Indian team are known to consult astrologers and numerologists while adhering to set routines in the hope of success.

Captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni sports number seven, since his birth date is July 7, while Yuvraj Singh has a 12 to match his birthday of December 12.

Yuvraj also sports a black thread - believed to ward off evil spirits - on his wrist on advice from his mother.

Promising Indian batsman Virat Kohli has no qualms in admitting he is superstitious.

"Earlier, I used to wear the same pair of gloves with which I'd been scoring," he told the Kolkata Telegraph.

"That phase has gone as now I look for comfort. Now the superstition revolves around wearing black wristbands."

Paceman Zaheer Khan attributes at least some of his success to his lucky charm -- a yellow handkerchief that he keeps with him in every crucial match.

But it was a red one which did the trick for former Australian skipper Steve Waugh, a gift from his grandparents, while India's Mohinder Amarnath, who played in the 1983 World Cup winning team, kept a red handkerchief with him.

Sachin Tendulkar is known to put on his left pad first and is fussy about his favourite bats. He would rather use a battered, taped-up bat than trust a new one.

His family doesn't watch TV when he is batting, fearing that he will get out early if they do.

Even fans try to do their bit to help their teams.

A radio station in New Delhi is running a campaign which urges listeners to do the same thing routinely on each day that India play.

So there are fans drinking milk before the start of a match or sitting on the left side of the sofa all through the game.

"I only eat non-vegetarian stuff while watching India play," said Pritam Sinha who works as a research associate in Delhi.

"Be it fish, chicken or mutton. It brings India good luck and wards off evil forces."

Former India captain and opener Krish Srikkanth recalled how members of the 1983 World Cup winning squad were asked not to move from their positions when Kapil Dev was batting to glory in a key match against Zimbabwe.

"The point was I was standing outside the dressing room on a cold, windy day, with a cup of coffee in my hand. And I didn't move for the next two hours or so! I wanted to go to the toilet, but Man Singh (the manager) said 'no'," recalled Srikkanth of the match at Tunbridge Wells in England.

"To tell you the truth it wasn't easy. Actually, it was tougher than battling it out there in the middle.

"Believe me, it stayed that way till Kapil walked back with a triumphant 175 not out. Not just me but the entire team stood at the same spots.

"It was one of the greatest knocks in any form of cricket, but I would like to think that I had, in my own little way, made a small contribution."

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