India beat West Indies by 48 runs in 2nd ODI; level series 1-1 | Octoober 11, 2014

Dwayne Smith drives down the ground off his toes, India v
West Indies, 2nd ODI, Delhi BCCI

Dwayne Smith drives down the ground off his toes, India v
West Indies, 2nd ODI, Delhi. BCCI

Amit Mishra exults after bowling out Kieron Pollard, India v
West Indies, 2nd ODI. BCCI

Amit Mishra exults after bowling out Kieron Pollard, India v
West Indies, 2nd ODI. BCCI

West Indies committed hara-kiri after being in a commanding position for a better part of the chase, in pursuit of India’s modest total. Opener Dwayne Smith’s powerful hitting coupled with the ferocious long handle of Kieron Pollard carted the Indian bowlers to all parts and were cruising at one stage before Amit Mishra spun a web around the batsmen, coupled with Mohammed Shami’s superb return spell to clean up the middle order. The lower order provided as much resistance as a baddie in a badly made commercial  potboiler as Ravindra Jadeja made light work of the lower order to take India to a comfortable win.

Smith yet again showed what a devastating hitter of the ball he can be but it was not all about brute force alone. His burgeoning reputation as a T20 player has not taken away his ability to strike a balance between going for the big hits

Earlier in the day, Virat Kohli made a thumping return to form with cautiously constructed half-century helped India reach a total of 163 for seven. After a landslide defeat in the first ODI, Indians yet again got off to a terrible start with the openers failing yet again as Jerome Taylor’s pace rattled the batsmen early on and none of the batsmen really got going. MS Dhoni’s typical late cameo, scoring a solid unbeaten 51 ensured that Indian bowlers had a total to bowl against.

With the pitch offering some grip and on the slower side and it was Ambati Rayudu got off to a good start before falling cheaply to Sulieman Benn. Kohli then teamed up India’s saviour in recent times, Suresh Raina to construct the innings steadily.

While the local boy was spending his time at the crease, Raina was his fluent self, striking the ball to the ropes with effortless ease.

The runs were not free-flowing but the strike was rotated and the camaraderie between the duo meant that India had every chance of accelerating towards the end and getting to 300. After both of them scored fifties, disaster struck and Raina played a needless shot under the circumstances and Taylor’s return spell did the trick for the West Indies.

Kohli didn’t last too long either and he wouldn’t get his three figure score here. Wickets fell quickly and Dhoni was running out of partners to launch one of his characteristic late boundary burst. Jadeja’s  stay at the crease ended on a whimper. Dhoni, however soldiered on found the fence a few times and was ably supported by Bhuvneshwar Kumar at the death. Bhuvneshwar, typically put a hefty price tag on his wicket but the day belonged to the Indian bowlers who came together in an hour of crisis a

Brief scores:

India 263 for 7 in 50 Overs (Virat Kohli 62,Suresh Raina 62, MS Dhoni 51*; Jerome Taylor 3 for 54) beat

West Indies 215 (Dwayne Smith 97, Darren Bravo 26, Kieron Pollard 40; Mohammed Shami 4 for 36, Ravindra Jadeja 3 for 44) by 48 runs.

India.com

A 50 in ODI cricket after a long wait - Virat Kohli will be a relieved man...

A 50 in ODI cricket after a long wait – Virat Kohli will be a relieved man…

Oops.. MS Dhoni avoids a collision with Andre Russell, India
v West Indies, 2nd ODI, Delhi

Oops.. MS Dhoni avoids a collision with Andre Russell, India
v West Indies, 2nd ODI, Delhi

Darren Bravo lost a bail to Mohammed Shami, India v West
Indies, 2nd ODI, Delhi, ©BCCI

Darren Bravo lost a bail to Mohammed Shami, India v West
Indies, 2nd ODI, Delhi, ©BCCI

MS Dhoni goes on attack ......

MS Dhoni goes on attack ……

Brian Lara v Sachin Tendulkar is a pointless debate – and a grand one | Barney Ronay | Tuesday 19 March 2013

Cricketing greats Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara enjoy each others company at the Wimbledon Tennis

Cricketing greats Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara enjoy each others company at the Wimbledon Tennis

Watching the televised endgame to the waterlogged second Test in Wellington – a cosy space-filling, sofa-bound affair that cricket has always, from the days of the hair-oiled and unapologetically brusque Peter West, done better than any other sport – the Spin was struck by a number of things. First by the familiar low-key excellence of Ian Ward in the anchorman role, a presenter who manages to be nice without being anywhere close to bland, and to remain at all times attentively expert while still teasing the bulk of the chat out of his revolving roster of furtively suited ex-pros. And not to mention doing all this while resembling increasingly some elegantly ravaged fin de siecle decadent levered out of the casino and into a light blue business suit and persuaded to discuss at great length Australia’s dearth of spin options with Shaun Udal and Dominic Cork.

Mainly, though, as the day passed in a companionable pretence of hope (“back over to Michael now at a deserted Basin Reserve”), Sky staged a lengthy, well-informed discussion about Brian Lara. The Spin isn’t really sure why, other than the obvious fact that there is no time when it is not a good time to have a long discussion about Brian Lara, but on this occasion this was framed around the horribly pointless, horribly interminable, horribly irresistible ambient debate about who was a better batsman, Lara or Sachin Tendulkar: a discussion that under new proposals put forward to the EU could soon be banned in public places, which is punishable by ritual flogging in many of the world’s more despotic outposts and which, reduced to its familiar interminable thrashings-out tends to end up recreating the exact physical sensation of arguing interminably about who would win a race between a satsuma and the colour green, while having a breadstick driven up your nostril into the front quarters of the brain. But which remains, for all it migrainous tedium, somehow also a brilliantly insatiable topic of conversation.

The main reason for this is Lara, who may or may not have been the better player, but who, as Sky’s video selection ably demonstrated, was in his peak moments one of the most viscerally exciting athletes imaginable in any discipline, every movement an expression of the most unearthly sporting talent.

And happily this is a timely moment to talk about Lara. It is now 20 years since the last great West Indian announced himself, in the winter of 1993, with his first Test hundred: not the usual agonising trudge, but a jaw-droppingly fine 277 on the third and fourth days in Sydney against Craig McDermott, Merv Hughes and Shane Warne. After which Lara produced the two and half years that would define him, scoring just under 3,000 Test runs at 61 including in just his 16th Test his first world record mark, 375 against England in Antigua. This was followed that summer by his enduring 501 not out against Durham (off – gulp – 427 balls) and three brilliant hundreds against England in the summer of 1995.

If Lara’s finest innings was perhaps the match-winning 153 against Australia in Bridgetown in 1999, it is this early period that seems to sum him up: not so much the weight of run scoring – Jonathan Trott had the same number of hundreds the same number of matches into his Test career – but a concatenation of unsurpassable peaks. This is the key to the Lara-Tendulkar debate, and in fact the only thing really worth saying about it. Tendulkar obviously wins on pure accumulated stats. Lara wins on visceral sporting elegance and also on the extremity of his peaks.

It is a question of differing frequencies. Lara’s five best innings are superior to Tendulkar’s five best. But Tendulkar has many more best innings, each one a separate perfectly self-contained draught of the homogenised high-grade matter that is Sachin Tendulkar. If Tendulkar’s kind of greatness was the only kind of greatness the sport would be tonally diminished. But a sport whose giants were all Laras would leave you yearning now and then for the cool, clear, beautifully still artistry of a Tendulkar.

For whom, incidentally, the correct comparison is probably not Lara but Jacques Kallis: a fellow technician in a similarly stable team who scores hundreds at the same rate and at a slightly higher average, but who also happens to have the same number of Test wickets as Jimmy Anderson and is therefore statistically the greatest cricketer of all-time (there is a problem here for militant Tendulkar fans: their man may win the Lara battle on points, but bring in the world’s greatest all-rounder and Sachin starts to look a bit like Kallis without the wickets).

It is, as The Spin has ably demonstrated while thrashing out its own variation above, still the grandest and most pointless cricketing debate of the past 20 years. And really the broader point is the only real point worth making here. Emerging over a six-year span of notably high-spec Test match bowling talent, all three – Lara, Tendulkar and Kallis – are and were truly great. But then, what a time it was for that kind of thing.

At the time the stand-alone greatness of extant Test cricketers in the 1990s and 2000s was simply a given. Category A specimens, All-Time XI candidates, real-deal merchants: they were everywhere. Shortly after the turn of the century you could have picked a world XI that ran: Hayden, Dravid, Ponting, Tendulkar, Lara, Kallis, Gilchrist, Warne, McGrath, Pollock, Muralitharan. Every member of this team, with others in reserve, would be a decent shout in an all-time composite team to play the all-time composite cricketers of Mars.

Inevitably, there has been a levelling out. There are as ever brilliant cricketers knocking about the place. But the current world XI – at a stab: Cook, Smith, Amla, Sangakkara, Clarke, Kallis, De Villiers, Steyn, Philander, Ajmal, Anderson – is a tangible step down from giddily unassailable to merely very good. If this sense of decline is tangible, it is also politically fraught. It is customary at this point to rage with ubi sunt zeal against the rise of the new world: the distractions of the new formats, the altered gravity of the roving global Twenty20 league, with its short-termist concerns, its stupefying riches, its greatness-skewering sense of dilution.

On the other hand, too many domestic cricketing setups are in a state of turmoil – only in England and South Africa does first-class cricket seem more rather than less organised than it was previously – for this to all be the fault of the IPL, or the BPL, or the SPL or even the FLT20L. It is simply a time of change and adjustment. And perhaps it is the right moment to accept that what it is to be a great cricketer has simply changed a little. What De Villiers, or Amla, or MS Dhoni have managed – excellence in three utterly diverse formats through a rolling calendar of disorientating demands – is not to be undervalued. Perhaps there is, if not greatness, then something close to it here under extreme pressure.

Or at least something that was never quite asked of Lara in his prime, a genius who undoubtedly missed out on a fortune by only just scraping into the T20 era, but whose career was at least agreeably narrow-focus. More likely it is simply cyclical, the greatness dearth – albeit cyclical in a way that is related not just to the standard wax and wane of global talent stocks, but also to the cycle of muddle and confusion beyond, the sense of a sport in the process of shaking itself down into a new and hopefully more coherent shape.

The West Indies may yet produce another Brian Lara but, as CLR James wrote in Beyond a Boundary, genius cannot exist in isolation from it surroundings. Cricket’s recent past looks not just like a land peopled by giants, but something calmer and more settled, a mini golden age with little more in the way of distraction beyond the familiar sedate, deliciously irresolvable questions of competing cricketing ultimacy.

• Extract taken from The Spin, the Guardian’s weekly email on the world of cricket.

via the guardian

Samuels shines in West Indies win | October 8,2014

Marlon Samuels struck 126 not out and took two wickets on his return to the international scene.

Marlon Samuels struck 126 not out and took two wickets on his return to the international scene.

Marlon Samuels produced a match-winning performance to fire West Indies to victory in the first one-day international against India.

The 33-year-old struck 126 not out and took two wickets on his return to the international scene as the tourists completed a 124-run victory in Kochi with nine overs to spare in the opening game of the five-match series.

Samuels anchored the West Indies innings at Nehru Stadium as they finished their 50 overs 321-6, before bowling the hosts out for 197 despite late resilience from Ravindra Jadeja (33 not out) after opener Shikhar Dhawan had made 68.

Having been put into bat, Dwayne Bravo’s side made a steady start with 34 runs coming off the opening seven overs before the captain was removed for 17 by Mohammed Shami (4-66).

Darren Bravo (28) and Dwayne Smith (46) pushed the total towards three figures before Samuels arrived at the crease in the 18th over.

The run-rate began to increase quickly and Samuels’ 165-run partnership with Dinesh Ramdin (61) put the tourists in sight of 300.

Ramdin was dismissed in the 46th over, but Samuels remained unbeaten to finish his 116-ball innings with 11 fours and four sixes.

Jadeja (1-58) and Amit Mishra (1-72) were the only wicket-takers aside from seamer Shami, whose proved to be expensive.

India began their response well as Ajinkya Rahane (24) and Dhawan shared an opening stand of 49, however Jadeja, Ambati Rayudu (13) and Shami (19) were the only other batsmen able to get into double figures.

Strike bowler Ravi Rampaul ( 2-48) led the West Indies attack brilliantly with some tight bowling, while his fellow bowlers kept disciplined lines to help reduce India to 114-5.
The dangerous Virat Kohli (two), Suresh Raina (nought) and captain MS Dhoni (eight) all fell cheaply, leaving Jadeja stranded with the tail.

With 14 overs remaining they needed 167 runs with just one wicket remaining, and although Shami and Jadeja showed some fight it was left to Rampaul to seal the win.

The pace bowler produced a leg-stump yorker to bowl Shami and put the Windies in front in the series.

via Sportal