World Cup Preview #2: England

England may have won the Ashes soundly, but their one-day form has been less than stellar. That expression is pretty stupid in this case - in fact, their form has been the opposite of stellar. I don't know what exactly that is, but it's bad. They're missing two hugely influential players though - Broad and Swann - and having them back in both the batting and bowling ranks will be a huge boost. Anyway, here's the preview in the format I'm using.


Andrew Strauss


Andrew Strauss will do quite well in the World Cup. He will play a total of 147 cuts, but will never cross 35.




Matt Prior



Matt Prior's form indicates that he will succeed in his reinstatement at the top of the order, but, looking for quick starts, he will actually struggle to convert them if he does make them.


Jonathan Trott



Jonathan Trott will continue to perform at #3, and his batting will provide viewers with some relief. Literal relief, that is - you can always take a pee break when Trott's at the crease.



Kevin Pietersen


Kevin Pieterson will fail against the weaker teams, and there will be (wrong) calls to drop him for Yardy or Wright. He will respond with a hundred (and a couple of wickets) against the West Indies to shut them up. Okay, I could swear I wrote the same stuff for Yuvraj. Weird.

Ian Bell


Ian Bell is in the form of his life, and he looks set to make it count on the biggest stage. Or is he? He is. Is he? Switching the order of words in a sentence is a fun way to complicate things, just like Bell's been doing with the selectors for ages. They just don't know where to put him.


Eoin Morgan



Eoin Morgan is secure in his position as a finisher, and a bloody good one he is, too. He's a good bet to struggle in the subcontinent, though, because he loves using the pace coming onto the bat, and he may not get it. And also {insert leprechaun joke}.

Paul Collingwood



Paul Collingwood looked like getting in good nick recently, and his nurdling will be extremely important lower down the order for England. His slower-than-a-speeding-bullet bowling will be pretty handy too. How's that for an original phrase describing Colly's bowling?


Stuart Broad


Stuart Broad, if he is fully fit, will be a handful in the tournament, and not in a dirty way (even I don't get that one). But considering his past experiences with Yuvraj in World Cups, I won't be surprised if it's his time of the month when England play India in the group stage. Yes, he's a werewolf.

Graeme Swann

Graeme Swann is England's most important player, and he will perform as per expectations. He will also find his way into a Bollywood movie, making a cameo playing himself. The hero will find himself in trouble outside a cricket stadium, and Swann and Brett Lee will come to his rescue using a bat and a ball. You heard it here first, all right?

Tim Bresnan


Tim Bresnan will keep bowling steadily. Missing pie, he will ask for some at the hotel, but instead will be given a math lesson by the bellhop's 4-year old son. His head will hurt and he will tweet the whole time.


James Anderson




James Anderson might not get the conditions he loves, but he has shown that he can adapt. And he will.


Michael Yardy






Michael Yardy will get to play if Bell/Morgan/Colly struggle, or if it's an especially good pitch for spinners. It's going to be a quiet World Cup for him.


Luke Wright




Luke Wright's medium-pace might be handy. That is all.



Ajmal Shahzad




Ajmal Shahzad will get a new, less grinny picture taken. He's basically injury back-up. He will get one advertisement when he is mistaken for Snoop Dogg.



James Tredwell


James Tredwell, 63, is also just Swann's stunt double. He was only picked because he isn't fat, and makes some mean pasta (one of those isn't true).




England could do pretty well, actually, definitely top 4 material, but the lower middle order needs to fire.
Official-looking prediction: Quarter-finals.

World Cup Preview #1: India

The big daddy of tournaments is not far away, and there are a lot of teams to cover, so I thought I'd get a head start with the previews. First up, obviously, is India.

The squad was mostly what it was expected to be - I know there was some surprise about Ojha and Rohit Sharma initially, but Ojha had been out of the frame in limited-overs games for a while, and Rohit... well, never mind. Chawla is the sort of wild-card 15th player who was probably only picked to give Dhoni the option of playing five bowlers, because none of the other bowlers (no, not even Ashwin) can bat at #7.

Playing five bowlers would be the wrong option, though - we have enough bowlers hidden among the batsmen to make up for the 5th bowler. Fatraj Singh himself has traded enough batting points for bowling points to be able to bowl 10 overs on his own.


Virender Sehwag



Virender Sehwag will continue to try to score a 30-ball 40 every game, with the occasional 40-ball 70 thrown in, just for variation. The latter will always be match-winning efforts.



Sachin Tendulkar


Sachin Tendulkar will play the game in World Cup mode. That's the highest level of difficulty for opposing teams, and he's the boss in every level.


Gautam Gambhir



Gautam Gambhir will play the role of the batsman he replaces: if Sehwag gets out, he will attack; if Sachin gets out, he'll look to bat the whole innings.



Virat Kohli



Virat Kohli is our run-machine, also looking to bat through the innings, especially when chasing.


Yuvraj Singh



Yuvraj Singh will play some classy cover drives, hit a six or two, waste many balls, take a couple of economical wickets, and then score one match-winning century on a flat track to 'silence his critics'.


Yusuf Pathan



Yusuf Pathan won't get as much time to bat as he has lately, since our top order will be strong again, and he may not score too many at the death. Unfortunate, but realistic.


Suresh Raina




Suresh Raina's recent form may lead to him being dropped, and then picked again when my Yusuf prediction comes true. He's a super finisher and should be playing. He will be mentally naming every area of the field 'midwicket'. He will win a couple of games on his own.


MS Dhoni


MS Dhoni will score a couple of 30's and 40's when batting first, pushing his average back up to 50 in the process. He'll randomly pick Chawla in a crunch game, a decision that will be vindicated when Chawla does well. He will be praised for this.


Harbhajan Singh


Harbhajan Singh will bowl very well against major teams, but will be hit by the minnows, especially Bangladesh. In a game against Australia, he will abuse Mitchell Johnson in Punjabi, and will later claim that he was actually calling him a 'popular vegetable that looks like a lady's finger, eaten with potatoes'. Yeah, figure that one out on your own.

Praveen Kumar


Praveen Kumar will impress everyone with his super swing bowling at the beginning, and will take wickets too, but will always end with figures like 2-56 or 6-81 if he bowls at the death. He will hit one six, and never smile (this picture is a fake, damn those nasty Photoshoppers).
Zaheer Khan






Zaheer Khan will be the Man of the Tournament. He's gotta be, if India are to win the World Cup. Against England, he'll get Prior out first ball and send him off by throwing jellybeans at him.



Munaf Patel



Munaf Patel will take plenty of wickets and keep the runs to a minimum provided he never bowls in a Powerplay or between overs 40-50. He will stun everyone with some electric fielding and great catches. He will also be undismissed throughout the tournament.

Ashish Nehra




Ashish Nehra will be brought in when Patel has a bad day, and will have a worse day. A maiden fifty won't help his cause.



Ravichandran Ashwin


Ravichandran Ashwin will get a game on a slow track. He will take 1-49 and score 10 from 13 balls, and will bowl a couple of carrom balls that largely go unnoticed.


Piyush Chawla



Piyush Chawla, as I mentioned before, will be picked for a crunch game because Dhoni's left pinky was itching. He'll take 4-38 and score 32 in a match-winning effort, only to be dropped for the next game.



Official Prediction: Semi-finals. They may end up champions and I'd love that, but I'm not about to jinx them. Also, the bowling is kinda thin.

Swann departs as injuries mount for England

After arriving in Australia in October it is perhaps understandable – just a week before the start of February – that the long tour is starting to take its toll.

Mentally it must be draining especially after the joy of winning the Ashes. The One Day series has more than a whiff of 'after the lord mayors show' about it. Many will be eyeing the date when they can fly home and be reunited with friends and family.
But the physical effect of the tour is also having an impact. Stuart Broad was the first to go during the second test at Adelaide but since the completion of the test series a number of players have had to pull out.

Tim Bresnan is already home with a calf strain and Graeme Swann has also been ruled out of the rest of the ODI series with a back injury - two players almost certain of being included in England's first choice XI.

Coach Andy Flower faces a real task now to motivate his players to try and rescue the series – England are 3-0 down of course- while trying to keep his players fresh and fit with a World Cup on the horizon. Fans watching the live score goalwire will know that the side will have one eye on the main event.

What these games have taught us is that beyond England's first choice XI there are definitely weaknesses and they will only win the World Cup with their strongest side possible on show and live scores goalwire fans will realise this.

If that means resting players in the upcoming matches with Australia – even if it sacrifice any hope of winning the series – Flower may see that as a sacrifice worth making with greater challenges imminently ahead.

Insights: Afridi

Another one that was just lying around. Old, I know, but so what?

Click on the image, it may not be showing completely for some dumb reason.


For cricket fans of the 90s

This one was just lying around.


Billy the Worm: Issue 7 (I think)

Here's one after almost a year. It's better than that last one, but that's not saying much.

Fun fact: There's cricket on the TV throughout the strip. Really.

Click to be able to read it. Because that's the point, right?

Watson marks himself out as more than a cricketer

As the final over approached, Shane Watson held the key to the game in his hand. After smashing a century which England Captain Andrew Strauss described as “one of the great one day innings”, Watson and Australia required four runs off the final Ajmal Shahzad over. The Queenslander duly hit a monster six over long on.

Celebrations began for a victory which puts a plaster over the bloody wound of England’s tour of Australia.

The match was put into context for Watson as pictures of his ravaged home State filtered across the globe. Born in Ipswich, a town in the state of Queensland, Watson rightly recognised the current devastation caused by flooding as more important than a game of cricket.

"My mind and heart have been there, I haven't really been thinking about the cricket too much to be honest." said a solemn Watson after his unbeaten 161, the fifth highest ODI score by an Australian.

One of the only Australians who saw his stock rise after a disastrous Ashes campaign, the opener marked himself out as not only an excellent cricketer, but an excellent man after the disastrous flooding across Australia’s east coast.

In an era of sportsmen devoid of social responsibility, Watson’s decision to visit his home town where members of his family still live before travelling to join up with the rest of the Australian squad in Hobart shows the man behind the cricketing persona. Known as a pantomime villain to the travelling England contingent, Watson has drawn nothing but praise for his decision to return home and help out in any way he can.

Although his mind will clearly be on his home town, he will rue that he was unable to score runs in the Ashes series in the same manner he has at the start of the ODI series. Lamented for his inability to convert half centuries into match winning scores, it will provide only small relief that he was able to guide his country to success in the highest run chase in an ODI at the famous MCG.

Those over at Big free bet will likely see his odds fall to repeat the feat in the next one day international against England.

Watson’s innings was punctuated with monster blows off of hapless English bowling; five of his boundaries came early on in his innings as he looked to get his side well above the run rate early on. Although dropped by Jonathan Trott on 48, the big hitting opener looked to continue in an aggressive manner and take the game to England. By the time the final blow came from Watson’s blade, England had run out of ideas as defeat beckoned.

With the World Cup following hot on the heels of this series, Watson looks in good shape both with ball and bat, and bigfreebet will likely install him as the leading contender for man of the tournament.

You feel Watson would quite happily forgo any plaudits and awards for some respite for his suffering home town.

Australia name their World Cup squad

Australia's attack will contain some serious pace at the World Cup.


"That's hot" - Paris Hilton on the Aussie pace attack
Now that that's out of the way, I can talk about the others. There was plenty of uncertainty going into the selection, and one or two picks could be debated upon, but I think this is pretty well done.

Shane Watson, Brad Haddin (wk), Ricky Ponting (capt), Michael Clarke, Michael Hussey, David Hussey, Cameron White, Tim Paine, Steven Smith, John Hastings, Mitchell Johnson, Nathan Hauritz, Brett Lee, Shaun Tait, Doug Bollinger.

Xavier Doherty may have been preferred of late, and he may even have (slightly) impressed, but going back to Hauritz was the right call in the end. He may still be shit, but he's the best they've got, and he's been very handy in limited-overs cricket despite his Test form.

John Hastings' inclusion, though, is a bit of a surprise. I haven't seen much of him, and he has only played two ODIs, but he had a good debut against India and was pretty decent when his teammates were getting smashed around. Teammates like Siddle, who has been left out - he can't really plug run flows in the shorter versions of the game. He's like their Sreesanth, but with more six-fors and hat-tricks. And other stuff.

David Hussey and Brett Lee were given the series against England to prove their worth, and while all they've done is prove that they are fit, that seems to be enough for the selectors. Even though they've gone with seven full batsmen (yes, including Clarke) plus Paine, the only two in the squad who can really be called tailenders are Tait and Bollinger. Steven Smith makes the cut as he is both/neither a batsman and/nor a bowler.

You've gotta feel for Callum Ferguson though - he spent a lot of time doing well and cementing his place in the side, then got injured, then wasn't allowed back in after recovering. Shaun Marsh hasn't been rubbish either. Michael Clarke had better score some runs.

Unpredictable Pakistan gear up for World Cup

With the 2011 ICC Cricket World Cup just around the corner, most of the teams which will be participating are currently honing their skills against the competition. As a result, Pakistan are currently over in New Zealand on a tour with the last fixture set for February 5th. Already they have lost two from their three T20 fixtures, and are currently battling out a two Test series before the real indicator of their expected effectiveness at the World Cup when they begin a six match ODI mini-series on January 22nd.

But Pakistan have not won an ODI series for more than two years, when they beat the West Indies 3-0 in 2008, and as a result most pundits aren’t taking their chances of lifting the World Cup too seriously. But it would not be the first time that they have shocked the cricketing world by shaking free from their perceived underdog status to defy the odds and claim a major international crown. Back in 1992, bolstered by the incredible form of captain and national icon Imran Khan, they defied the odds and claimed the trophy, and more recently in 2009 they recovered from a poor start to triumph in the T20 World Cup. That said, they are not many people's 2011 Cricket World Cup tips.

In the 50-over version of the game, they seem to have suffered a bout of stage-fright at the highest level in recent years, failing to get past the first round of matches in their previous two attempts. The problem with Pakistani cricket - apart from the obvious recent spot-fixing scandals of course - is that with the nation putting so much emphasis on their team's results it's almost impossible to live up to their enormous expectations.

This enormous pressure not to lose makes them appear to constantly be playing in a state of disharmony, with results being dependent on a number of star performers, rather than an all round strong team effort and even the Cricket World Cup betting suggests that people think things will be the same this time around.

As a result, they can be somewhat unpredictable and although they can beat anyone in the world on their day, they have also been known to struggle against minnows of the game such as Ireland - the side which eventually confirmed their elimination from the 2007 World Cup.

India's World Cup squad picked

So contrary to the recent preparations, India have gone without Rohit Sharma, well done to them. They've gone with three spinners - Piyush Chawla the legspinner and Ravichandran Ashwin to go with Harby's off-spin.

There was no place for Rohit Sharma, who should and will be disappointed, as the only back-up batsman India have picked is Yusuf Pathan.

Well, well. So there were surprises here - Ojha hasn't been picked for the limited-overs side in a while, so his exclusion was expected, but Chawla's been in the wilderness for some time. I'm not sure the latter was needed - maybe a reserve keeper (Patel) or fast-bowler could have been picked, but Chief of Selectors Srikkanth is positively raving about not thinking negatively about injury concerns. Seriously, he's foaming at the mouth as I write this. Courtesy NDTV.

Here's the squad:

Virender Sehwag, Gautam Gambhir, Sachin Tendulkar, Virat Kohli, Yuvraj Singh, Suresh Raina, MS Dhoni (c) (wk), Harbhajan Singh, Praveen Kumar, Zaheer Khan, Munaf Patel, Ashish Nehra, Yusuf Pathan, Piyush Chawla, Ravichandran Ashwin

Expect Ganguly fans to take to the streets again. I'm not sure why, and neither will they.

That's it for now. Dissection later, if any.

India's World Cup Squad

No, they haven't announced it yet, and I'm not sure when they'll do it, but it's likely to be soon (Jan 19 apparently), so here's what I think it should (and might) be. Because there just aren't enough opinions going around.

I'll start with the XI: the top 3 pick themselves, and it's arguably the best one going around. Sehwag, Sachin and Gambhir will only have the two practice matches to gel with the rest of the team, though, as they are currently cooling their heels at home, while Vijay is going about his business being inadequate.

Kohli has been stellar at #3, but he will have to move down the order with Gambhir back. This complicates things, as Yuvraj and his ego are at #4, and both can take their time to get going. I think the situation should decide where they bat - Yuvraj first when batting first, and Kohli first while chasing. Exception: Yuvraj first on a flat track, always.

Raina and Dhoni are at #6 and #7, but both are floating finishers, so they can actually pop up anywhere. #7 is a big question: do we go with a batsman or the spinning all-rounder? A month ago, if we were to opt for a batsman, it would be a toss-up between Rohit Sharma and Saurabh Tiwary. Sharma hasn't taken his chances of late (but the series vs RSA isn't over yet) and even though Tiwary did, he has been dropped - so he looks out of contention, which is unfortunate. Yusuf Pathan and his century (just one innings) seem to have nudged ahead, big game-changer that he is. Accommodating him, though, would mean leaving out one of Raina, Yuvraj and Kohli, which looks pretty implausible. Playing 7 batsmen looks extremely likely.

With the stocks so full, we won't have to worry about seeing Jadeja or Ashwin being useless at #7, or at any position for that matter, because Zaheer, PK and Harby pick themselves. Some time ago I might even have said that Nehra picks himself, but seeing his current form (and Munaf's), I don't think so anymore. Nehra can fill in for an opening bowler or be used when conditions favor him, but Munaf, with his accuracy, is a better choice as a first-change bowler.

I looked up Nehra's stats for the post-comeback period (starting 2009), and was pretty astonished at his economy rates (save for 2 series). Yes, there are some high-scoring and some pointless matches in there, but expensive is expensive (killer line, I know). When he's good, he's really good, but there will be these frequent spells where he just comes in and gets the faeces (we like to be technical) smashed out of him. Yes, he's good at the death, but you don't include a player just because he can bowl 2 good overs between 45-50. If you'd done a good job in the first 40 overs, maybe you wouldn't need to shut it down so much later on.

So that's 4 main bowlers, and then Sehwag, Raina, Yuvraj and Pathan/Sharma make one decent 5th bowler between them. That is the XI. The obvious subs are: Rohit, Yusuf, Nehra/Munaf, Ashwin. The others could be a back-up keeper, a batsman, or a fast (not really) bowler. So that's probably Parthiv Patel, Murali Vijay, or Sreesanth. It's unlikely that the extra keeper will be in the squad, so that rules out Patel. Which leaves Crap and Crappier (in no particular order). Sree is no limited-overs bowler, but our bowlers are more likely to be injured (Zak, Nehra, Munaf have the Platinum Healthcare plan), so Vijay may miss out.

Which leaves the squad to be composed. Which means I have to type it out.

Virender Sehwag, Gautam Gambhir, Sachin Tendulkar, Virat Kohli, Yuvraj Singh, Suresh Raina, MS Dhoni (c) (wk), Harbhajan Singh, Praveen Kumar, Zaheer Khan, Munaf Patel, Ashish Nehra, Yusuf Pathan, Rohit Sharma, Ravichandran Ashwin.

Can I see some agreement/disagreement/abuse?

Pointless Notes: How awesome would be to see a wildcard like Rahane, Chawla, Irfan, even Dravid? Slightly amusing at first and then the heat would be on. Literally, effigies and all.

England break record as winning run continues

With the players and fans still basking in the glow of their famous Ashes test victory the first of two T20 internationals took place, a form of the game where England can rightly call themselves the world's best.

The last time the two sides met in a T20 international was the World Cup final back in May, a game that saw England finally win a ICC competition after several failed and often humiliating attempts.

In the aftermath of that game the predictable Aussie excuse was that it wasn't really a legitimate form of cricket. A quick hit, a bit of fun, but nothing that really reflects the quality of a team.

That argument looks a little hollow in the wake of their test hammering and the way they approached the first T20 at Adelaide suggests they are ready to take these sort of matches far more seriously.

Shane Watson raced to a 31-ball 59 in an opening stand of 83 with David Warner from just nine overs as the hosts threatened to blast an unreachable score. But the moment Watson fell to Yardy the runs began to dry up, with just 74 added in 11.2 overs and only five boundaries coming in the second 10 overs.

England's innings began with intent and the final Australian score of 157 was looking modest as the visitors flew along to 85/3 after ten, those watching the live scores were convinced the side would romp home.

But Shane Watson led the fight-back, ending with final figures of 4-15 and as three quick wickets fell England needed just four runs from the final over with two wickets remaining, suddenly the score made much less comfortable reading.

That was one wicket, when Graeme Swann was clean bowled by Watson. The next two deliveries to Shahzad were dot balls. With the nerves palpable across the Adelaide Oval a leg-bye brought 21-year-old Chris Woakes on strike with three runs needed from two.

The headline writers were sharpening their pencils as the youngster chopped the ball away for two that levelled the scores and then with the field in for the final delivery confidently clipping the ball off the pads to seal a dramatic record-breaking eighth consecutive T20 win.

Roy and Harby: Teammates # 2

Hey, I had two ideas, why waste gold?

They have more in common than they realize, and not just the redneck thing.

Roy and Harby: Teammates

They just might get along. Money unites.
Click to enlarge.

RSA v IND: Player scores for the series

India (average score: 4.7)

8 - Sachin Tendulkar (326 runs at 81.5): Looked the most comfortable (Indian) batsman in the Centurion Test, didn't contribute to the Durban Test victory, and showed a batting masterclass at Cape Town. Points off for not farming strike at Centurion on the fifth day, an innings defeat could've been avoided at the very least.

8 - Zaheer Khan (10 wickets at 24.6): Showed how valuable he was through his absence at Centurion, and when he came back you could see how he is, like, 80% of the bowling attack. He also had an extremely vital partnership with Laxman at Durban. Quick lower-order wickets at Cape Town may have won us the game, though, so points off for not being able to provide breakthroughs then.

8 - Gautam Gambhir (242 runs at 60.5): Very good series for him, barring the first innings of the series. He showed his adaptability to the situation again, counter-attacking at Centurion and knuckling down at Cape Town.

7.5 - Harbhajan Singh (15 wickets at 29.6): Overcame a pretty bad performance at Centurion to take 13 wickets in the nest 2 Tests, including a 7-for at Cape Town. Bowled the best we've seen from him in a while. Scored 40 important runs in Sachin's company, including a stunning six off Steyn.

Lessons from the Ashes

· Shane Watson: Was one of the rare Australian batsmen who looked comfortable at the crease, till the moment he kept getting out. Unfortunately for him and the team, it was always after he got a start. He was the 2nd leading run getter for Australia with 435 runs at an average of just over 48, but the fact that he didn’t score a single century in 5 tests should give pause to those who think that Watson is a long term prospect as an opener.
· Simon Katich and Phil Hughes: Katich never really got going despite a typical crabby 2nd innings at Adelaide, before injury ruled him out for the rest of the series, and possibly ended his career. Phil Hughes was the shadow of a batsman he was when he made his debut, and he was a horrid replacement for Katich, with his technique laid bare upon stern examination. He might still have a bright future ahead, but he has lots of work to do.

· Ricky Ponting: The strain of becoming the first Aussie skipper to lose three Ashes series resulted in a public meltdown at the MCG. It was sad to see a great player disintegrating before our very eyes, and even as he trudged off in the 2nd innings of that Test after getting his stumps splattered, one could sense that it was probably his last Test innings. He had a terrible series, where he was outscored by Peter Siddle and had only a solitary 50 to his name. The only good thing that happened to him this series was that he didn’t have to be present at the SCG as the losing captain, when Strauss lifted the urn.

Kallis bats on

This one is just for the irritation, I felt like speaking through Harby.
Click to enlarge.