Cricket: Yuvraj fit to play in May after cancer treatment

The ace all-rounder was diagnosed with cancer in October and was being treated in Boston.

Indian cricketer Yuvraj Singh is expected to be fit to play in May after undergoing treatment for lung cancer in the United States, his physiotherapist said Sunday.

Jatin Choudhary told television channel Headlines Today that the ace all-rounder, 30, was diagnosed with cancer in October and was being treated in Boston.

The disease was in its early stages, said Choudhary.

“Once he is done with chemo in March, his rehabilitation would be complete by April end and he would be perfectly fit to play in May,” Choudhary told the Press Trust of India news agency.

Yuvraj s family said last November that the all-rounder had been battling a golf ball-sized non-malignant lung tumour which first affected him during India s triumphant World Cup campaign.

On Wednesday, the cricketer rejected reports that he had undergone surgery, tweeting “I m just on medication!”

He was named man of the tournament following the World Cup victory at home in April after scoring 362 runs and grabbing 15 wickets in nine matches.

The World Cup star played in two of the three home Tests against the West Indies in November but was not picked for the four-Test series in Australia.

Yuvraj, who was unavailable for the ongoing triangular one-day series in Australia, has also opted out of the Twenty20 Indian Premier League (IPL) which starts in April.

Yuvraj, who has not played a one-day international since the World Cup final against Sri Lanka in Mumbai last year, has so far scored 8,051 runs in 274 matches with 13 centuries.

He has also made 1,775 runs in 37 Tests since making his international debut in 2000.

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Australia beat India by 65 runs in 1st ODI

Australia scored 216 for five and dismissed India for 151 off 29.4 overs.

Australia beat India by 65 runs in the first tri one-day series international at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Sunday.

In a match reduced to 32 overs a side by rain, Australia scored 216 for five and dismissed India for 151 off 29.4 overs.

Debutant and man-of-the-match Matthew Wade clubbed 67 off 69 balls and David Hussey an unbeaten 61 off 30 balls for Australia, who scored at 6.75 runs an over.

But the tourists were always chasing the game after the dismissals of Sachin Tendulkar (2) and Gautam Gambhir (5) in the opening four overs.

Virat Kohli topscored with 31 off 34 balls for India and the tourists  last hope, skipper M.S. Dhoni, hit 29 off 38 balls before he was the second-last batsman out.

Paceman Clint McKay was the best of the Australian bowlers with four for 20 off 4.4 overs.

The next match in the series takes place in Perth on Wednesday between India and Sri Lanka.

Match scores: Australia 216 for 5 (32 overs); India all out 151 (29.4 overs).

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India and IPL without Sahara

In a huge blow to team India’s sponsorship, “Sahara India” on Saturday announced the end of their business relationship with the BCCI and pulled out of the IPL by withdrawing from Pune Warriors’ ownership at the last minute.

Sahara has sponsored team India; For 11 years. It was paying Rs 3.34 crore per  Test, One-day and T20 International match under the new terms.

“It was an emotional decision for us to start this sponsorship but our emotions were never appreciated and many genuine situations were not given due consideration at all,” the statement read.

Sahara, which entered the IPL last year with the now separated Kochi Tuskers Kerala, had issues with the BCCI.

Sahara’s key player in the IPL is, the devastating all-rounder Yuvraj Singh, who is currently recovering from lung tumor in the U.S.

His absence in the IPL this season impelled Sahara to ask the BCCI that the price of the batsman be added to their overall purse for the player’s auction but it was turned down.

Sahara is apparently also unhappy with the fact that Royal Challengers Bangalore were allowed to buy replacement player Chris Gayle this season.

“The manner in which Gayle was bought was not liked by many franchises including Sahara,” a Sahara official said.

Despite the pull-out, Sahara said that it would pay its sponsorship fee for the next few months giving time to the BCCI to find a new sponsor. It also promised to pay the dues of its IPL players and staff.

Having withdrawn from cricket under BCCI, Sahara claimed it would put in Rs. 1000 crore in a welfare foundation which would help develop “20 Rural and Urban Sports Promotional Centres including  Cricket promotional Centres.”

Sahara also announced that a support fund for retired and present players who, have nothing but cricket in their lives and face problems with Medical bills and other family issues etc.

Every year minimum 10 crore will be distributed; Rs 3 crore for cricketers. Rs 7 crore for all other faculties related to cricket.

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India afraid of losing to Pakistan: PCB chief

Zaka Ashraf says India will not resume cricket ties with Pakistan because it fears losing.

The subcontinent s arch rivals have not played each other in a series since 2007, with subsequent terrorist incidents providing security rationales for not resuming.

Pakistan Cricket Board Chairman Zaka Ashraf noted that India s prime minister and cricket board president had said play between the nations could resume.

Ashraf then speculated “maybe they are afraid of playing against Pakistan because the way our team is performing and the way their team is performing in Australia.”

Pakistan leads 2-0 against England in three-match series while Australia routed India 4-0.

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India beat Australia in second T20

India on Friday beat Australia in their T20 international cricket match by 8 wickets. With this victory, India leveled the series 1-1 in the two-match series.

Gautam Gambhir scored 56 and Brad Hogg took one wicket. India overhauled the victory target in 19.4 overs for the loss of two wickets.

Earlier Australia set India a target of 132 to clinch the T20 international. Aaron Finch top-scored for Australia with 36 followed by Matthew Wade 32. Australia were bowled out for 131 runs after winning the toss. Praveen Kumar with 2-21 was India’s most impressive bowler.

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Pakistan can whitewash England: Afridi

Former Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi feels the team is capable of handing out a 3-0 whitewash to world number one England given the way it dominated the first two Tests.

Pakistan enjoy an unassailable 2-0 lead over England.

“I think Pakistan will complete a clean sweep in the third Test. They can whitewash England,” Afridi said.

Afridi said Pakistan enjoyed a psychological hold over the English batsmen.

“I see this series as the best opportunity for Pakistan to win the series 3-0. As they keep on winning they are getting hungrier for success and that is always the first sign of a team turning into a top class side,” he said.

“Another good thing is that all the players realise their responsibility and are contributing and supporting each other on the field.”

The allrounder, who will join the team for the one-day and Twenty20 matches against England from next week, said Pakistani players have made winning a habit.

“After winning the first two Tests, the morale and confidence in the team is very high,” he said.

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FIFA to consider allowing 4th sub in extra time

The International Football Association Board is set to meet in England on March 3.

FIFA will discuss the possibility of allowing teams to use a fourth substitute in extra time when its rules-making panel meets next month.

The International Football Association Board is set to decide at a meeting in England on March 3 if increasing the current quota of three replacements would help improve matches and reduce injuries.

“The FIFA Task Force Football 2014, the medical committee and the football committee support the proposal in order to maintain the technical level until the 120th minute and to protect the health of the players,” FIFA said Wednesday.
Goal-line technology tests will return to the agenda of the rules panel, which is known as IFAB.

The panel will receive progress reports on tests involving eight systems, and decide which will proceed to a scheduled second round of testing starting in March.

FIFA said a final decision to approve goal-line technology can be taken at a further IFAB meeting on July 2. It could take place in Kiev, the day after the 2012 European Championship final in the Ukraine capital.

IFAB will also consider trials of the five-referee system, using additional assistants beside each goal to support referees  decision-making, which conclude at Euro 2012.

The panel will also reconsider allowing Islamic female players to wear a hijab, five years after the headscarf was banned for safety reasons.

FIFA vice president Prince Ali of Jordan also urged IFAB to respect cultural traditions and approve a headscarf held in place by a safe Velcro fastener.

IFAB, which is comprised of the four British associations plus FIFA delegates, will also consider amending the so-called “triple punishment” of sanctioning certain fouls with a penalty kick, red card and suspension.

Other proposals on the agenda include assessing tests at the 2011 Copa America where referees used vanishing spray on the grass to mark the 10 yards (9 meters) that defensive walls must retreat from the ball once placed for a free kick. Rules are amended with six of the eight available votes. Each British association  from England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales  has one vote and FIFA officials have four.

Changes typically take effect on July 1 ahead of the following season, but can be fast-tracked for a major tournament if the panel agrees.

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Water-skiers break world record in Australia‎

Dozens of water-skiers in Tasmania splashed their way to a new world record for the highest number to be pulled behind a single boat.
A total of 154 skiers from all over the world set off on the record attempt to ski a full nautical mile inside Australia’s Macquarie Harbour in Strahan.

Despite nine skiers falling along the way, the 145 remaining on their their skis were enough to beat the previous record of 114 set by the same team.

The 114ft catamaran, which normally takes tourists on tours of the area, was specially modified with different propellers and a 308ft aluminium boom to prevent skiers’ ropes from becoming tangled.

Organisers said five miles of ski rope was used for the new record which The Guinness Book of Records is expected to offically recognise within the next few month.

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Misbah shines to lead Pakistan from darkness

Following the Pakistan cricket team has often been a veritable health hazard for their supporters, pledging allegiance to a supremely talented but highly fractious bunch that would veer from the sublime to the ridiculous in the blink of an eye.

Even at the start of this decade, the team functioned more like a secret society where any newcomer would struggle to breathe in a dressing room polluted by air thick with suspicion.

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Not so long ago, local media would report stories about senior players holding clandestine meetings at a former captain’s residence to take an oath to betray the incumbent.

A former coach would call the players “mentally retarded” and a captain would blame poor fielding on team mates busy ogling girls in the outfield.

Of course, any players named denied the allegations.

Even for such a disjointed side, the 2010 spot-fixing scandal would mark a new low, culminating with the imprisonment of the then captain Salman Butt and bowlers Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif for agreeing to bowl deliberate no-balls in the Lord’s test against England.

Less than a year-and-a-half on and Pakistan have not only survived the crisis but emerged stronger under Misbah-ul-Haq’s understated captaincy, revelling in consistency and shrugging off their notorious unpredictability.

Misbah and his men have clearly banished the nightmares of their previous meeting with England to take an unassailable 2-0 lead against the same opponent in a ‘home’ series in the UAE and are eyeing a clean sweep.

The latest success follows their series victories over New Zealand, Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka in a highly rewarding 2011 when they won six of the 10 tests, losing just one.

“After the spot-fixing scandal the players discussed things and we unanimously agreed that we need to just do well,” Misbah recently told the Geo News channel.

“I am happy that we have been playing with lot of focus, dedication and discipline. The players have lots of faith in each other and their abilities to perform under pressure.”

Forced to host teams in the Gulf due to security concerns, Pakistan have achieved a great deal under the quiet stewardship of a 37-year-old captain who is unlike any of his predecessors.

Misbah does not warrant comparison with either Inzamam-ul-Haq or Younus Khan as a batsman, lacks Shahid Afridi’s flamboyance and is not as articulate as Butt at presentation ceremonies.

WELL-KNIT UNIT

However, shoehorned into captaincy after Butt’s ignominious exit, Misbah has achieved what most others could not.

He has won eight of the 12 tests he has been in charge of the team and is yet to lose a series as skipper.

More importantly, Pakistan finally look like a well-knit unit of honest triers who have complete faith in their phlegmatic leader and his single-minded pursuit of victory.

“It’s better to win by playing defensively, instead of losing by playing aggressively,” Misbah said before the start of the series against England.

This safety-first approach is hardly a surprise, coming from a man whose fatal scoop shot in the final of the 2007 Twenty20 World Cup allowed arch-rivals India to walk away with the trophy.

Misbah may not have secured his place among Pakistan’s great captains yet but in the first two tests against world number one ranked England, he has shown tactical acumen and flexibility to get the best out of his team mates.

In absence of Asif and Amir, Umar Gul is relishing leading an inexperienced pace attack while spin twins Saeed Ajmal and Abdur Rehman have ruthlessly exposed the technical deficiencies of the English batsmen.

The second test in Abu Dhabi was a proof of the team’s never-say-die attitude and Misbah’s excellent captaincy.

With England chasing a meagre 145-run victory target, Misbah opened with Mohammad Hafeez’s gentle off-breaks and withdrew Gul after just three overs so that he could unleash the Ajmal-Rehman dynamic duo on the tentative batsmen.

Vindicating his decision completely, the spin trio shared all 10 wickets, shooting out England for 72 in just over 36 overs for a memorable series-clinching victory.

For their volatile fans, it was a heart-warming display of the team’s collective grit and many would believe Misbah applied some of the management lessons he learnt as a degree student in Lahore.

It is this steady progress that convinced coach Mohsin Khan that Pakistan, currently ranked fifth, can become the top test playing nation.

“I think this team has the capacity to become the world’s best team,” he said in Abu Dhabi.

“Our target should be to gradually come in the top three in both tests and one-day cricket, and then gradually go to world number one.”

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T20 behind India collapse: Imran Khan

India were humiliated 4-0 in the recent test series against Australia.

Pakistan cricket legend Imran Khan has blamed the lucrative Twenty20 Indian Premier League for India s recent dismal Test showing, saying the focus should be on the game s longer format.

India were humiliated 4-0 in the recent series away to Michael Clarke s Australians to record eight successive overseas Test defeats following a similar hammering in England last year.

“I can only use one word to describe India s form… consistent. To lose eight Test matches in a row overseas is an achievement,” Imran, the former Pakistan captain, said in the first annual Tiger Pataudi Memorial Lecture in Kolkata on Monday night.

“It s a wake-up call for Indian cricket. A team that won the World Cup and was number one in Tests a few months back is in the doldrums.

“If you want to be the leaders you can t keep losing. If you pay so much emphasis on Twenty20 cricket, you ve got to pay hugely.”

The annual IPL tournament revolutionised cricket when it burst on to the scene in 2008 with a high-octane blend of international star players, short matches and Bollywood glamour.

Imran, who led Pakistan to their only World Cup triumph in 1992, said Test cricket should always be the top priority, as it is the greatest examination of players  temperament and technique.

“India has to decide soon whether it prefers glamour, Bollywood and money to Test cricket,” he said. “In my 20 years of cricket, I never made so much money as a mediocre player in T20 does today.

“The connoisseurs will rate a player by his Test record and not what he s done in T20s. Test cricket is the ultimate test of a player and that s the reason Test records carry value.

“Talent can excel in one-dayers, but in Test cricket, your temperament and technique is tested besides the talent.”

Imran also said India needed to overhaul their domestic cricket to make it more competitive.

“In India and Pakistan, there s a huge jump from first-class cricket to international cricket,” he said.

Imran — now an increasingly influential politician in Pakistan — also paid glowing tribute to former India captain Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi, who died in September of a lung infection aged 70.

Nicknamed “The Tiger” for his brilliant fielding, Pataudi quit Tests in 1975 with 2,793 runs in 46 matches and six centuries despite losing the sight in his right eye in a car accident in England.

“If Tiger hadn t lost an eye, he would have broken all records,” said Imran. “His quality of strokes was amazing. Mere mortals couldn t play them.”

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