The Cricket Legend

The Cricket Legend
The Maser Balster

Live Scores

10 March 2010

IPL-2010

IPL 2010 Preview - Deccan Chargers

Team Owner: Deccan Chronicle

Deccan Chronicle is a Hyderabad-based media organization, involved primarily in printing and publishing newspapers, and periodicals along with advertisement services. Established in 1938 Deccan Chronicle is the number one daily in Andhra Pradesh and the fourth most read English daily in India.  It enjoys the readership of more than a million people within the world.  It is also the only Indian newspaper with an international edition from London.  Deccan Chronicle’s venture into the Chennai market produced spectacular results within three months of its launch in March 2005 as it took over more than half the market share of the English dailies. 

The media group acquired the Hyderabad-based franchise from the IPL for $107 million on January 24, 2008. Later, another media group, Group M India picked up a 20 percent stake in the franchise.

Squad: Adam Gilchrist (Captain & wicket-keeper), Harmeet Singh, Bodapati Sumanth, Azhar Bilakhia, Herschelle Gibbs, Ryan Harris, VVS Laxman, Mitchell Marsh, Monish Mishra, Pragyan Ojha, Kemar Roach, Ashish Reddy, Venugopal Rao, Rohit Sharma, Rahul Sharma, Anirudh Singh, RP Singh, Dwayne Smith, Tirumalasetti Suman, Andrew Symonds, Ravi Teja, Chaminda Vaas, Arjun Yadav

Coach: Darren Lehmann

The Australian World Cup-winning cricketer replaced former India cricketer and fielding coach Robin Singh ahead of the 2009 season. It was a move inspired by the change in leadership and it worked wonders. Adam Gilchrist and Darren Lehmann played together for long and the franchise administration’s belief in the paring opened the pathway to success for them.

Playing in India after the South African sojourn last year will be a new challenge. Lehmann played for the Rajasthan Royals in the first season of the IPL and he enjoyed success then under Shane Warne, so he will know a trick or two for success in the sub-continent as well.

2009 Record: IPL Champions
2008 Record: Eighth

From one end of the spectrum to another, that is how anyone would describe the Deccan Chargers in the two seasons of IPL so far. The first season was nothing much to write home about except that this team was perhaps the biggest disappointment in the history of cricket where eleven players have been randomly been chosen to form a team. With the likes of Gilchrist, Gibbs, Styris, Symonds, Afridi and Vaas in the side, they were expected to steamroll one opposition after another. But all they could bring home were two wins and a lot of questions to be answered for the most expensively assembled team in the competition.

A change in administration, support staff and leadership along with change in host nation brought them some much needed cheer and luck as it turns out. When they started the second season under Adam Gilchrist in South Africa, they were unbeaten in their first four games and many saw them as contenders early. A mid-season slump meant that instead of topping the league charts they only ended up fourth and just about qualified for the semi-finals, ahead of Kings XI Punjab on run-rate.

Once in the knock-outs though, they were a team transformed as Gilchrist’s 85 off 35 balls took care of the Delhi Dare Devils and a spirited effort in the final helped them trump the other high flying team of the tournament, Bangalore Royal Challengers. No one though begrudged Gilchrist and his men the victory deserving their efforts.

Strengths & Weaknesses:

Their biggest strength continues to be their batting line-up. VVS Laxman was said to be the one weak link there but his performances in South Africa last year combined with his experiences in the English county circuit have more than made up for his shortcomings. He now plays the pivotal role in the innings while the likes of Adam Gilchrist, Herschelle Gibbs, Andrew Symonds and Rohit Sharma have the license to go after the bowling.

Symonds and Gibbs are two big names for them who haven’t yet produced the magic that we know they can. They have had the odd innings which lit up the games but a consistent run of good form throughout the tournament is what is being asked of these two fantastic players. Gilchrist got his last time around ending the highest run getter with 495 runs.

Their bowling really clicked in the helpful conditions in Africa but this year’s tournament may reveal more weak areas this time around. RP Singh was the Purple Cap winner with 23 wickets to his name but this time around he is not in the same kind of rhythm and form, while the Indian wickets can be a back breaker for any bowler in the T20 game. Chaminda Vaas is now slower than most but has lost none of his guile though it remains to be seen how much of him they will use.

The one player the Deccan Chargers will miss this time round is Fidel Edwards. The West Indian fast bowler did good damage with the ball in South Africa but injury will keep him out this time around. In that sense, their new purchase at this year’s auction should be an ideal replacement. In his short stint in international cricket, Kemar Roach has made a name for himself and the best we know of him is when he rattled the Australian captain Ricky Ponting with his pace earlier in the winter. A repeat performance in the IPL will raise his and his team’s stock much higher.

Their home matches will not be played in Hyderabad due to political problems but in Vishakhapatnam, Cuttack and Nagpur. Now that is good in two ways – one, the teams hasn’t had much luck in Hyderabad in the first IPL season or even in the 2009 Champions League T20. So a change of locale should suit them just like last year. And two, the pitch at Hyderabad is one of the best batting pitches in the country. Playing elsewhere would afford their spinners much more turn and Pragyan Ojha will be rubbing his hands in glee at the prospect. 

IPL 2010 Preview - Royal Challengers Bangalore

Team Owner: Vijay Mallya
IPL 2010 Preview - Royal Challengers Bangalore


The Bangalore-based UB Group is a corporation of diverse companies having a sharp focus on the brewery and alcoholic beverages industry. Under the chairmanship of Vijay Mallya, the group has flourished into a conglomerate of over 60 companies in India and abroad. In India, they market most of its beer under the name Kingfisher, which is also the name of their domestic-cum-international airlines. Apart from being a dogged businessman, he also has a passion for cars and sports, especially Formula One and horse-racing. He is the first Indian to own a Formula One team, Force India.

The Bangalore franchise of the IPL was won by Vijay Mallya, who paid USD111.6 million for it in the auction held in 2007. It was the second highest bid for a franchise, next only to Mukesh Ambani's Reliance Industries' bid of $111.9 million for the Mumbai team.

Squad: Anil Kumble (captain), KP Apanna, Balachandra Akhil, Mark Boucher (wicket-keeper), Rahul Dravid, Dillon Du Preez, Sreevats Goswami, Jacques Kallis, Virat Kohli, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Praveen Kumar, Vinay Kumar, Abhimanyu Mithun, Eoin Morgan, Manish Pandey, Kevin Pietersen, Steven Smith, S Sriram, Dale Steyn, Ross Taylor, Robin Uthappa, Roelof Van Der Merwe, Cameron White.

Coach: Ray Jennings

Ray Jennings's career as a keeper-batsman almost entirely spanned South Africa's year of isolation. He was South Africa's number one choice behind the stumps for more than a decade, but limited to only 14 appearances for his country against rebel touring sides. When South Africa returned to the fold he was expected to be handed the gloves, even though he was then 38, as much as a reward for his service as anything, but the selectors opted to pick Dave Richardson.

Jennings, a fitness fanatic and disciplinarian, started coaching at Gauteng before moving to Easterns and from there to South Africa A. His appointment as South Africa's coach came in October 2004, surprising many as he had a reputation as speaking too bluntly for some of a more sensitive nature which has more than once landed him in hot water. He didn’t have a very successful stint with them and after the first season disaster replaced Martin Crowe as the coach of this IPL franchise, where he has had much better results.

2009 Record: Runners-up    
2008 Record: Seventh

Their story so far in the IPL has been no less exciting than the eventual 2009 champions Deccan Chargers. They had gotten off to the worst start possible in 2008. They were not only defeated on the ground but in a way humiliated on their home turf when Kolkata Knight Riders’ Brendon McCullum (158 not out off 73 balls) ground them into submission in the first ever IPL game. It was a crushing blow from which they really couldn’t recover and there were problems galore during the tournament’s course as they managed only four wins to finish a lowly seventh. Only one of their frontline batsmen, skipper Rahul Dravid managed to score more than 300 runs in the tournament and they had to even bench their costliest foreign player, Jacques Kallis, due to his poor form. The failure incensed owner Vijay Mallya so much that he announced a host of changes for the second season.

In South Africa last year, they started well with a win in their first game under new captain Kevin Pietersen but a string of four losses meant that they were once again staring at an early exit from contention. That is when Pietersen had to leave for England duty and Anil Kumble became their third captain in two seasons. Kumble’s intensity had an immediate impact on the team as they won seven out of their remaining nine games to finish third in the league and qualify for the semis.

In the semi-final, they shocked 2008 finalist Chennai Super Kings by six wickets and were well on their way in the final as well, having restricted Deccan Chargets to just 143 in their twenty overs. But the pressure of the chase got to them and they ended runners-up by a mere 6 runs. Even so, Vijay Mallya couldn’t have been happier with his team’s performance.

Strengths & Weaknesses: 

A major headache awaits Anil Kumble and Ray Jennings when they sit to pick their first choice eleven. It is a problem of plenty and not a bad one to have unless it affects the balance of the side, which is exactly the point here. The foreign players for this side are all match winners in their right and it will be a major riddle to select the best four out of them. Sample this list: Jacques Kallis, Ross Taylor, Roelef Van der Merwe, Mark Boucher, Dale Steyn, Dillon Du Preez, Steven Smith and Cameron White. And this list doesn’t include Kevin Pietersen, new signing Eoin Morgan and Jesse Ryder. While the first two will be away for most part due to international duties, the Kiwi is out injured.

Even so, selecting four of those remaining names means that the balance of the side will be seriously tinkered with every time they have to make a change. This will place a lot of onus on the Indian players, young and old. And unless the whole equation comes out right, they will struggle to find the right combination on the Indian pitches. Why are pitches important here? Because playing in South Africa allowed their foreign players to have a bigger say in the scheme of things than they did in the first season.

Jacques Kallis and Ross Taylor especially were changed players. Though Taylor might yet again fire in the batting friendly conditions here again in India, Kallis may struggle a bit with his bowling. The other question mark pertaining to him is whether he can regain his touch with the bat from last year when it seemed he could do no wrong as a 33-year-old T20 player.

And so the pressure to perform will be high on the likes of Robin Uthappa, Manish Pandey, Virat Kohli, Praveen Kumar, Abhimanyu Mithun, Vinay Kumar and Sreevats Goswami. A couple of these players have had a brilliant domestic season, Kohli has been making waves on the ODI scene but again the untested ones remain a problem. Rahul Dravid and Kumble were exceptional last year and so they would have to be this season as well. With their age, form and fitness again a bit of a talking point, it remains to be seen if the Bangalore Royal Challengers can go one better than last time. 

IPL Cricket: IPL 2010 Preview - Chennai Super Kings

Team Owner: India Cements
IPL 2010 Preview - Chennai Super KingsOne of the leading cement manufacturing companies, India Cements Ltd. was established in 1946 and the company has since witnessed rapid growth in its stature. They are now the largest producers of cement in South India and has nearly 28% market share in that part of the country. Industrialist N Srinivasan is the vice-chairman and managing director of India Cements. He also has a keen interest in sports and his passion extends to golf and chess as well as cricket. He is the president of the Tamil Nadu Cricket Association as well as the secretary of the BCCI.

He also placed a winning bid of USD 91 million for the Chennai franchise of the IPL in 2008. It was the third highest bid after more than 110 million dollars were paid for the Mumbai and Bangalore franchises.

Squad: MS Dhoni (captain & wicket-keeper), Ravichandran Ashwin, Hemang Badani, Subramaniam Badrinath, George Bailey, Lakshmipathy Balaji, Chandrasekhar Ganapathy, Manpreet Singh Gony, Matthew Hayden, Michael Hussey, Shadab Jakati, Arun Kartik, Justin Kemp, Albie Morkel, Muttiah Muralidaran, Makhaya Ntini, Jacob Oram, Parthiv Patel, Thisara Parera, Suresh Raina, Thilan Thushara, SudeepTyagi, Murali Vijay

Coach: Stephen Fleming

The former New Zealand captain has an astute cricketing brain which, in his playing days while leading the Kiwis, was considered to be one of the best in the business. Graceful and determined, Stephen Fleming will go down as his country's most successful captain and one of their best batsmen after an international career that spanned 15 years. He owns a series of records, including the first New Zealander to pass 7000 Test runs, a landmark reached during his final series against England in 2008. During his last innings, in Napier, he did just enough to lift his career average over 40. Nine Test centuries is a poor return for such a talent, but Fleming was always more worth than his statistics revealed.

In the first season of the IPL, he was just another player in the side while in the second season he took over from Kepler Wessels but remained active as player-cum-coach. Later in 2009, he passed up on the opportunity to be New Zealand coach and now has also relinquished his playing duties to become full time coach of the Chennai Super Kings.

2009 Records: Semi-finalists
2008 Record: Runners-Up

One look at the joint record of the Super Kings in the two seasons and it seems that they have always been deemed favourites at the very start on both occasions. It can be attributed to the fact that they have Indian captain MS Dhoni leading them and he is known to be one of the more charismatic captains in world cricket today. They had a solid 2008 season, qualifying for the semi-finals with ease. In the first ever IPL final they lost out to the Shane Warne’s Rajasathan Royals, the team to beat that year. 

2009 was expected to be their year in many ways. They already had a strong squad and further bolstered it by brining England all-rounder Andrew Flintoff as the most expensive player in the IPL. That move however didn’t work for Flintoff couldn’t set the stage alight before he left for international duty mid-season. But one man who did perform for them was Mathew Hayden, ending up with 572 runs and the Orange Cap. Riding on his batting might, the Chennai Super Kings won five games in a row to end up second in the league with eight wins overall. But they lost out in the semis to Royal Challengers Bangalore. This will be one aspect that skipper Dhoni would really want to look at if he wants to be third time lucky.

Strengths & Weaknesses: Their strength mainly lies in the fact that none other than the Indian captain will be leading them. And if anyone has been watching him lead, it is no doubt that he is one of the best captains in the business today. The batting won’t be dependent on him alone and he can juggle his bowling resources carefully. They even have extra keepers in the squad to allow him to rest and not take undue pressure, for they realise the importance of a fit MS Dhoni, something that seems lost on the Indian think tank.

Beyond that, this is one squad where you really cannot find any weakness per say. The opening pair of Mathew Hayden and Parthiv Patel has worked for them in the last two seasons and lest there be any problem, Murali Vijay can always step in. The middle order too is in able hands with Dhoni, Suresh Raina and S Badrinath capable of handling any situation. Then they have the big hitters in Jacob Oram and Albie Morkel with a very interesting addition of Justin Kemp this season.

The bowling too is quite balanced. Return to Indian conditions will play into the hands of L Balaji and Murali while Thisara Parera will also be handy with his experience of playing in sub-continental conditions. All in all a squad which has ample cover for every position in the side and therefore a strong performance should be expected from this team once again. 

IPL 2010 Preview - Delhi Daredevils

Team Owner: GMR Group
IPL 2010 Preview - Delhi Daredevils
GMR Group is a global infrastructure major with interests in airports, energy, highways, urban infrastructure, manufacturing sector and agri-business including sugar and ferro-alloys. They are led by G.M.Rao, a mechanical engineer by profession and their founder. He established his business empire in 1978 and he recognized the huge business potential in the infrastructure space, especially with the opening up of the power sector in the 90s in India. Under his guidance and vision, the company is also modernizing the Delhi International Airport and also developing the new Greenfield International Airport at Hyderabad.

The GMR group won the franchise rights for Delhi in the 2007 auction for a bid of 84 million USD.

Squad: Gautam Gambhir (captain), Rajat Bhatia, Tillakaratne Dilshan, AB de Villiers, Moises Henriques, Kedar Jadhav, Dinesh Karthik (wicket-keeper), Sarabjeet Ladda, Farveez Maharoof, Mithun Manhas, Amit Mishra, Andrew McDonald, Dirk Nannes, Ashish Nehra, Wayne Parnell, Shashi Ranjan, Aavishkar Salvi, Virender Sehwag, Pradeep Sangwan, Sarandeep Singh, Joginder Singh, David Warner, Umesh Yadav.

Coach: Greg Shipperd

Gregory Shipperd is a former Australian first-class cricketer and coach, and he has now been in charge of the Delhi Dare Devils since their birth in 2007. As a player, he represented Western Australia from 1977 to 1984 and finished his career with the Tasmanian Tigers in 1990-91. He then went on to coach Tasmania and is also the current coach of Victorian Bush Rangers.

A right-handed top order batsman, Shipperd never played a Test or ODI for Australia but has coached Tasmania for eleven seasons and guided them to their maiden Sheffield Shield final in 1993-94.  He also has to his credit the slowest First-Class century ever scored by an Australian taking 481 minutes to score his hundred runs.

2009 Record: Semi-Finalist
2008 Record: Semi-Finalist

The Delhi Dare Devils have always had a decently strong squad and since the beginning there never really was any doubt that they would be challenging for the prize. And they did just that in the first two seasons. However their cupboard is still shorn of silverware and that is amazing to say the least. In 2008, they were placed fourth in the league and then ran into eventual champions Rajasthan Royals in the semis. It was their deficiency in the middle order that people blamed for their exit.

In simple terms, the 2009 IPL season was a step-up for this team. They finished top of the league and were considered prime contenders in South Africa as well, but yet again were halted in the semis by eventual champions Deccan Chargers. Just like the season before, their free-flowing batting became stuck when it mattered the most.

Strengths & Weaknesses:

Over the last couple of years, just one look at their squad was sufficient to know that they didn’t really have a well balanced side. In the first year they had some really good players who are well known exponents in their respective arts. It was forgivable for the competition was only in the first year and several lessons would be learnt. But Delhi did not learn theirs. In 2009, they again went out to play with a side that was top heavy and very weak in the middle order. That proved to be their undoing last year just as it was in 2008.

In Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir, they boast of two very fine batsmen at the top of the order and some equally gifted ones in Tilakratne Dilshan and AB de Villiers. While these four will fire on most occasions and sometimes Dinesh Karthik will chip in as well, on the rare occasion they do fail, Delhi collapse. And in the last two seasons that has happened in the semi-finals without fail, otherwise they would have been champions. This is their weakness and one which was thought to have been addressed when they bought both Paul Collingwood and Owais Shah. But the two didn’t get to play much and we know what happened.

They have offloaded Shah and brought in Moises Henriques into the side but along with David Warner and Dirk Nannes, there will be plenty of foreign names to choose from and it will be a selection headache for new captain Gambhir. One solution could be to allow Warner and Sehwag to open and the skipper himself coming in at number three, allowing the batting to run deep. But that will again be dependent on which four foreign players they choose to play in their eleven.

This is a puzzle for they have two bowlers Dirk Nannes and Wayne Parnell who would be contesting for a spot alongwith Ashish Nehra. Henriques and Ferveez Maharoof are also in the fray and it is good to have so many options with the ball in what will be a keen challenge for the bowlers given that the Indian pitches won’t really support them. One advantage though could be playing at home, in Delhi, where the pitch will be under scrutiny once again and lack of bounce is to be expected since it is under continuous work. 

IPL 2010 Preview - Kings XI Punjab

Team Owner: Preity Zinta, Ness Wadia, Karan Paul, Mohit Burman
IPL 2010 Preview - Kings XI Punjab
Kings XI Punjab is owned and promoted by a consortium which includes leading Bollywood actress Preity Zinta and well known industrialists Ness Wadia and others. They are the self-proclaimed people’s team in the IPL with a vision of being the most significant, progressive and valuable franchise in the years to come.

Preity Zinta is a well renowned Indian film actress and as a co-owner, she is responsible for actively promoting the franchise and its team. A leader, visionary and perfectionist, Ness Wadia is the joint managing director of the Bombay Dyeing Pvt. Ltd., the flagship company of the Wadia Group. Mohit Burman, Director, Dabur India is the driving force behind the Dabur Group’s foray into several high growth and sunrise sectors of financial services like life insurance, annuities and asset management, besides agriculture and retailing. Karan Paul is the chairman of the Apeejay Surrendra Group, which is worth Rs.4500 crores, and looks after the financial planning of the franchise.

The group of businessmen together paid a total of USD 76 million to acquire the franchise in 2007.

Squad: Kumar Sangakkara (captain & wicket-keeper), Yusuf Abdulla, Love Ablish, Adrian Barath, Manvinder Bisla, Ravi Bopara, Piyush Chawla, Karan Goel, James Hopes, Mahela Jayawardene, Mohammad Kaif, Brett Lee, Vikramjeet Malik, Shaun Marsh, Irfan Pathan, Ramesh Powar, Bipul Sharma, Reetinder Singh Sodhi, Amanpreet Singh, Yuvraj Singh, S. Sreesanth, Shalabh Srivastava, Tanmay Srivastava.

Coach: Tom Moody

A player of international stature, Tom Moody was instrumental in Australia’s triumph in the 1999 World Cup. Moody was a medium pace swing bowler, a hard hitting batsman, a safe slip fielder and a natural leader during his playing days. He and Steve Waugh together became the first two Australians to win the world cup twice. Moody’s greatest service has been to Worcestershire and Western Australia leading both to all kinds of success. He called time on his international career in 2000-01. Moody came close to being India’s coach in May 2005 only to be piped to the post by Greg Chappell. That same year he was appointed Sri Lanka’s coach. He then led the Lankan team to the World Cup final in April 2007.

2009 Record: Fifth
2008 Record: Semi-Finalist

Comparing the two results, it would be easy to say that 2009 was a step down for this team. But if you saw them perform both at home and in South Africa, it would be easier to tell the difference and say that both results were indeed merited by their respective performances. In fact, it wouldn’t be wrong to even say that they probably over-achieved in 2008.
They had gotten off to a slow start in the tournament then, but recovered and learnt quickly from their mistakes to string together a winning combination. Shaun Marsh was the find of the season, finishing with highest runs scored (616) with an average of 68.44 and a strike rate of 139.68 in eleven innings. The other highlight was the Harbhajan Singh-Sreesanth saga, wherein the former slapped the latter for some on-field trouble and both players were duly banned. Apart from that, they made news winning nine of their last ten games but still went down by nine wickets in the semis to Chennai.
Seven wins and seven losses in 2009 meant that they couldn’t really go on a run like the first season and build up some momentum which could take them to the semis. Their star players shone for them but they missed key players, Sreesanth, Marsh and Lee at crucial junctures. In the end, it was a close run thing as they lost out on a last-four berth on run-rate.

Strengths & Weaknesses:

One of the biggest debating points for the team was the captaincy of Yuvraj Singh. Amongst the eight franchises, probably this was the only team wherein the skipper wasn’t actually in the scheme of things to lead his county. Seen from a different point of view, that is a weakness for captaincy is an art just like batting or bowling, and you need to practice that a bit as well.

This year Kumar Sangakkara takes over the reigns making it the fifth team in the fray to have a foreign player as captain. For the point discussed above, this is a very good thing. They will have some one with experience in T20 cricket as to how to lead the troops on the field when push comes to shove.

Also as compared to the last season, when they had to make do for long without their foreign players, this time quite a few of them will be available plus injury concerns seem not to be an issue either. A full squad for a competition this long is always desirable and the owners’ prayers seem to have been answered for once.

They haven’t made any big purchases in the off-season but a low key one - that of Mohammad Kaif and he alone is the reason for cheer. As a T20 player, Kaif won’t find many takers but the players who know him will tell that he is a complete player. One feels that Rajasthan Royals made a mistake letting him go in South Africa last year just as they have done this year and their loss will be Punjab’s gain. He will play the anchor role in the middle order which is fast becoming increasingly important in T20 cricket as well and will allow the batsmen around him to play shots at will. His inclusion will also mean that the combination of four foreign players to be chosen can be tinkered around with as per the requirements. Any team that affords this sort of balance is a fantastic prospect. 

IPL 2010 Preview - Rajasthan Royals

Team Owner: Emerging Media, Shilpa Shetty, Raj Kundra
IPL 2010 Preview - Rajasthan Royals
Emerging Media is a media group focused on sports development in the Indian sub-continent. The company began as Investors in Cricket (IIC), founded in 2005, to create and commercialize sports that have relevance in the Indian sub-continent. Through this subsidiary, Emerging Media launched India’s first cricket talent hunt and reality show (Cricket Star), after developing a partnership with Leicestershire county cricket club, and staging the first international club T20 championship. Emerging Media has been a significant and long-standing investor in Indian cricket, and they paid USD 67 million to own the Jaipur franchise in the IPL which has only enhanced their reputation.

Shilpa Shetty, the famous Bollywood actress, bought a twelve percent stake in the 2008 champions in partnership with her husband, industrialist and producer Raj Kundra. They paid an estimated 16 million USD for the same. Shilpa gained cult status after she won the UK reality show, Celebrity Big Brother. Her career and her personal life have only rocketed skywards after that and she spices up the media campaign for her team, presenting stiff competition to other Bollywood owners in the IPL.

Squad: Shane Warne (captain), Swapnil Asnodkar, Johan Botha, Faiz Fazal, Abhishek Jhunjhunwala, Kamran Khan, Michael Lumb, Damien Martyn, Dimitri Mascarenhas, Morne Morkel, Sumit Narwal, Naman Ojha, Munaf Patel, Yusuf Pathan, Amit Paunikar, Syed Ahmed Quadri, Abhishek Raut, Amit Singh, Graeme Smith, Shaun Tait, Siddharth Trivedi, Shrikant Wagh

Coach: Shane Warne

A living legend, the greatest spinner ever, Shane Warne is captain and coach of this IPL franchise. The second highest wicket taker in Test cricket brings in vast experience and is a master strategist as seen in the first season of the tournament, when he was single handedly credited with the team’s success by players and onlookers alike. Given that he is a committed to the core player, one can see the Australian flair in his play and the work ethics he brings to the table with him. He knows the game in and out and there can be no greater inspiration for this team. He has never really lead Australia and the first season was his first coaching stint, and it paid out in a marvelous way.

2009 Record: Sixth
2008 Record: Champions

Prior to the start of the inaugural IPL season, many considered the Royals as possibly the weakest team in the IPL giving them little chance of competing well in the tournament. However the Royals built up an impressive 11-3 record in the league, which included a consecutive 5-game and 6-game winning streak and an undefeated record on their home ground resulting in a spot at the top of the points table. They made good this run of momentum and eventually were crowned inaugural champions brushing aside two most favored teams of the competition in the finals, Delhi Dare Devils and Chennai Super Kings.

It was widely believed that playing in India suited the eventual champions a bit too much for even their lesser players shone brightly. This notion was proved to be true when the IPL went to South Africa in 2009 and the conditions became a bit too hot to handle for the inexperienced youngsters in the side. The pressure increased on the foreign players and they were found short as wrecker in chiefs in 2008 Sohail Tanvir and Shane Watson were missing for most of the action. End result was a poor finish for the champions as they even failed to make the knock-out stages finishing a lowly sixth.

Strengths & Weaknesses: 

The return to home conditions this third season of the IPL will surely play to their strengths once again. Shane Warne is a shrewd man and he will know that the confidence he inspired in his team two seasons ago was mostly down to the same reason. Now that they are back, all he needs to do is revise his pep talks from 2008 and get the adrenaline pumping again. Only this time he can add to it by saying that the title that was theirs has been taken away.

It is a side that has a lot riding on its foreign players. But that is true for any side in the IPL. What stands them apart is the fact that they need their young guns to fire if they are to do well. And that is a heavy ask if they cannot find any form. But that shouldn’t really be a problem for they have endured a hard domestic season and are more or less aware of where they stand. T20 should help them feed off their learning and it could be an event to watch out for the youngsters from Rajasthan.

The other highlight would be two Australian players in the side apart from Warne. Damien Martyn and Shaun Tait will return to high profile action after considerable time. Martyn is indeed a good purchase for the side for they let go off Mohammad Kaif. The former Australia middle order batsman can pace the innings and at the same time attack the bowling with flair. The only question remains is whether he will be able to bring it to the table?

We know Shaun Tait will. He has been in stupendous from this past season, especially in the KFC T20 Bash, and has even managed to return back to the national fold thanks to that. In 2008, Shane Watson benefited from playing under Warne and his international career just shot from there. This could be Tait’s year. 

IPL 2010 Preview - Kolkata Knight Riders

Team Owner: Shah Rukh Khan, Red Chillies Entertainment
IPL 2010 Preview - Kolkata Knight Riders
Red Chillies Entertainment is a film production company owned by none other than Bollywood’s leading personality Shah Rukh Khan in partnership with good friends, actress Juhi Chawla and industrialist Jay Mehta. The prestigious banner has some of today’s biggest hits under its belts, including Paheli, Main Hoon Na, Om Shanti Om and Billu Barber. Apart from production, the company also boasts of a state-of-the-art visual effects studio known as Red Chillies VFX.

Shah Rukh Khan is a household name in India and a brand in himself. He is an exceptional actor, one who is guaranteed success at the box-office. He is also an ardent sports lover, who didn’t intend to be an actor always. In fact, he always wanted to be a cricketer or a footballer and acting came to him by default. In 2007, he bought the IPL franchise for the city of Kolkata.

Squad: Sourav Ganguly Sourav (captain), Varun Aaron, Iqbal Abdulla, Ajit Agarkar, Eklakh Ahmed, Ashoke Dinda, Chris Gayle, Rohan Gavaskar, Brad Hodge, Harshad Khadiwale, Murali Kartik, Charles Langeveldt, Angelo Mathews, Brendon McCullum, Ajantha Mendis, Chirag Pathak, Cheteshwar Pujara, Wriddhiman Saha, Owais Shah, Ishant Sharma, Laxmi Ratan Shukla, Manoj Tiwary, Ganapathi Vignesh.

2009 Record: Eighth
2008 Record: Sixth

They started off as the self-proclaimed contenders for the title in the first season, all the more made elaborate with that belligerent Brendon McCullum ton in the very first IPL match. But after a whirlwind start to their campaign, they fell flat on their face losing consecutive games because of lack of quality replacements for Chris Gayle and McCullum who left for international duty. Even the arrival of Shoaib Akhtar couldn’t rejuvenate the side.

If the going was poor in 2008, it got desperate in the 2009 season. They might just accept that some one had to finish eighth and they deservedly did because of the mess that had been created. Former coach John Buchanan floated ridiculous ideas, ranging from removing Sourav Ganguly from captaincy to passing it to McCullum, to even proposing a three captains theory. Thankfully enough we didn’t see that for the shambles on field didn’t allow them much respite. It wouldn’t be unfair to say that last season was a bad joke for them.

Coach: Dav Whatmore

Davenell Frederick Whatmore is a former international cricketer who represented Australia. He had a very short international career playing just seven Test matches and a single ODI. At first-class level, he scored over 6,000 runs for Victoria. But it was in the coaching arena that he found his true calling.

After retiring from professional cricket in 1989, he coached Sri Lanka in two separate spells during the first of which he won the 1996 ODI World Cup. In between those spells, he also coached Lancashire where he won the National League in 1998 and 1999, and the NatWest Trophy in 1998. From 2003 to 2007, he had been coaching Bangladesh. Under his coaching, Bangladesh enjoyed relative success, most memorably beating India in the 2007 World Cup and then qualifying for the Super Eight stage.

His coaching record is quite a distinguished one and for that reason, he is in high demand. India and Pakistan have both lined for his services but somehow things didn’t work out with either on the international stage. The BCCI still hired him in the capacity of the director of their National Cricket Academy and then led the under-19 Indian team to a memorable World Cup win in 2008. It is little wonder that he is the chosen man to replace John Buchanan.

Strengths & Weaknesses:

With the return of Sourav Ganguly to the helm of affairs, Kolkata Knight Riders have one of the best captains in modern day cricket and his presence alone makes sure that a great thinking process is behind each and every move of the franchise.  With him in the side they are not only assured of an amazing leader of men but also a brilliant batsman and a crowd puller, all in one.  But he has his limitations too, especially since he retired from international cricket some time back and has been trying to stay in shape for the IPL games. It is his last year contracted to the franchise and he ought to have sets his sights on winning the IPL crown, to re-affirm that he is still the best when it comes to donning the captaincy hat.

Along with Rajasthan Royals, they were the worst hit in terms of losing their Pakistani players. Umar Gul and Shoaib Akhtar could have been very useful with the new ball and this year they have parted ways with Ricky Ponting as well. But in come Shane Bond and Owais Shah (through a transfer) and the two can prove to be good assets if given a longer run in the scheme of things. 

They have pretty heavy firepower in the likes of Brendon McCullum and Chris Gayle but the downside is that the duo won’t be available for much of the first few weeks. That time is enough to dislodge their challenge but Ganguly and Brad Hodge being propped up the order seems to be an ideal pairing. Their Sri Lankan players Angelo Mathews and Ajantha Mendis will be key to their fortunes and just like this duo, it can be said that the Knight Riders are indeed the dark horses of the tournament. 

IPL 2010 Preview - Mumbai Indians

Team Owner: Reliance Industries Limited
IPL 2010 Preview - Mumbai Indians


The Reliance Group is India’s largest private sector enterprise, with businesses in energy and materials value chain. The Group’s annual revenues are in excess of USD 27 billion. The flagship company, Reliance Industries Limited, is a Fortune-500 company and is the largest private sector company in India. It is headed by a charismatic persona Mukesh Ambani.

He is a chemical engineer from the University of Bombay and pursued MBA from Stanford University, USA. He directed and led the creation of the world’s largest grassroots petroleum refinery at Jamnagar. He also set up the largest and most complex information and communications technology initiative in the world in the form of Reliance Infocomm Limited. He is ranked 42nd amongst the World’s Most Respected Business Leaders and is the richest Indian in the world.

The Reliance Group bought the Mumbai franchise of the IPL with a record highest bid of USD 111.9 million.

Squad: Sachin Tendulkar (captain), Dwayne Bravo, JP Duminy, Shikhar Dhawan, Dilhara Fernando, Sanath Jayasuriya, Zaheer Khan, Dhawal Kulkarni, Chandan Madan, Lasith Malinga, Ishan Malhotra, Ryan McLaren, Ali Murtaza, Graham Napier, Abhishek Nayar, Kieron Pollard, Ambati Rayudu, Rajagopal Sathish, Syed Sahabuddin, Rahul Shukla, Harbhajan Singh, Aditya Tare, Saurabh Tiwary.

Coach: Robin Singh

Although he was born in Trinidad and Tobago, Robin Singh spent most of his cricketing career in India, making his debut in one day internationals against West Indies on March 11, 1989. However he had to wait another seven years to secure a regular place in the Indian team. Singh was known for his middle-lower order batting and medium-pace bowling as well as his ground fielding skills. He was noted for his quick batting in the closing stages which made him an integral part of the side that competed in the 1999 Cricket World Cup. During his playing days, he was regarded as one of the best fielders of the Indian cricket team. Robin Singh was the fielding coach for the Indian team until October 2009 after which he took up this role with Mumbai Indians. 



Bradman is the greatest, Sachin comes only second: Waugh

Sachin Tendulkar can come only second behind legendary Don Bradman in the list of all-time greatest cricketers, feels former Australia captain Steve Waugh.

"Don Bradman is the greatest, there is no debate. Don is the number one and then come the rest. And among the rest, Tendulkar probably is as good as anyone. So legitimately he may be the second best cricketer to have played the game," Waugh said.

"But then people will say the same for Gary Sobers and W G Grace too. So its difficult to say," added Waugh, who is here as a member of the Laureus Sports Academy.

Waugh also said it was dangerous to see Test cricket losing out quality fast bowlers to Twenty20 format.

"It is dangerous for Test cricket that we are losing the quicks. It is a Twenty20 influence.

IPL: Sachin Tendulkar signs first IPL theatre tickets costs 11 lakhs


Just 1 more day to go before the third edition of IPL kick starts in Mumbai that will be see the holders Deccan Chargers and Kolkata Knight Riders locking horns for the season opener.
This season will saw an addition in the broadcasting system with UFO Moviez set to broadcast matches in theatres and multiplexes and guess what today the batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar has signed the first theatre ticket which has been auctioned for Rs. 11 Lakhs!!
The ticket was auctioned today in Mumbai with a base price of 5 lakhs rupees and was hammered down with an big price for 11 lakhs rupees to a single person who can catch all the IPL matches live and exclusive this season.
The amount raised from this auction will go to Sachin’s charity foundation “Apnalaya” that takes care of underprivileged childrens.
Talking to DNA, Sachin was quoted saying: “This is a brilliant initiative especially for interior regions of our country where cricket fans can not experience the stadium energy. I am happy to give away this first theatre ticket and wish all my fans a wonderful experience in theatres.”
As an IPL fan I am really excited to see the tournament going into the theatres and news comes in that UFO Moviez has inked a deal with all the well-known multiplexes that includes the likes of Cinemax, INOX, Fame and PVR.

PCB bans Younis Khan, Mohd Yousuf for life

In an unprecedented move, the Pakistan Cricket Board handed out life bans to top players Younis Khan and Mohammad Yousuf following an inquiry into the team's disastrous tour of Australia. The PCB also banned Shoaib Malik and Rana Naved for one year,

Sachin

Sachin