Showing posts with label Tour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tour. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

West Indies squads for Sri Lanka tour

Jason Holder - Cricket Funnda

Selection committee of West Indies Cricket Board announced the all three squads for Sri Lanka tour. Fast bowler Jason Holder lead the West Indies in Tests & ODI's while Darren Sammy will be skipper in T20I . West Indies will play two tests, 3 ODI's & two T20I.

West Indies Test Squad:

    Jason Holder
      Kraigg Brathwaite
        Devendra Bishoo
          Jermaine Blackwood
            Carlos Brathwaite
              Darren Bravo
Rajendra Chandrika
Shane Dowrich
Shannon Gabriel
Shai Hope
Denesh Ramdin (wk)
Kemar Roach
Marlon Samuels
Jerome Taylor
Jomel Warrican


West Indies ODI Squad:

Jason Holder
Devendra Bishoo
Jermaine Blackwood
Carlos Brathwaite
Darren Bravo
Jonathan Carter
Johnson Charles
Andre Fletcher (wk)
Jason Mohammed
Sunil Narine
Denesh Ramdin (wk)
Ravi Rampaul
Andre Russell
Marlon Samuels
Jerome Taylor


West Indies T20I Squad:

Darren Sammy
Samuel Badree
Dwayne Bravo
Darren Bravo
Jonathan Carter
Johnson Charles
Andre Fletcher (wk)
Jason Holder
Sunil Narine
Kieron Pollard
Denesh Ramdin (wk)
Ravi Rampaul
Andre Russell
Marlon Samuels
Jerome Taylor

Another Crisis for Caribbean Cricket

Phil Simmons - Cricket Funnda

Former West Indian player and current coach suspended from his post due to his statement on the ODI team selection for Sri Lanka tour. According to him there is lack of quality & talented players in the squad. He represented West Indies in 26 Tests & 143 ODI's and popular as quality all-rounder.

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

West Indies new skipper


#WestIndies #Test #Squad for #SriLanka #Series#JasonHolder (Captain)#KraiggBrathwaite (Vice...

Posted by Cricket Funnda on Saturday, 5 September 2015

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Pakistan on road to Worldcup


Pakistan cricket team take off from Lahore to New Zealand for two one day internationals before ICC CWC 2015. 1st ODI scheduled on 31st Jan and second will be on 3rd Feb. Pakistan's fast bowler Junad Khan did not go with team due to injury.

Friday, January 16, 2015

Amla makes history



Amla made a run-a-ball 66 at the top of the order to reach the 5,000 ODI run mark in his 101st innings, comfortably quicker than the legendary Viv Richards and current Indian superstar Virat Kohli, both of whom took 114 innings to get to the milestone. 

Amla and de Villiers sets up easy SA win


Hashim Amla became the fastest South African batsmen to reach 5000 ODI runs a run-a-ball 66 in his 101st innings and set South Africa up to take the series lead. He starred in a 99-run third-wicket stand with AB de Villiers, in which runs were scored at 6.82 to the over before de Villiers and David Miller posted 123. That ensured even when South Africa fell away and lost 5 for 34, they still had enough despite the two-hour-45-minute rain interruption.
West Indies' target was adjusted to a 229 off 33 overs and then 226 off 32 overs when rain returned again but they were only in with a chance of chasing it when Chris Gayle was at the crease. He plundered 41 runs off 24 balls but his high-risk style of play left him vulnerable to an early dismissal. When it came in the sixth over, it sparked a top-order collapse of 4 for 38 which gave way to a lower-order folding of 6 for 46. Imran Tahir claimed three of those wickets chiefly through well-executed googlies and sliders to bring up his 50th ODI scalp.
Jason Holder, in his first match as captain, would have wanted more from the men he said were ready to show fight. He shouldered the bulk of that responsibility when he opened the bowling, brought himself back on at crucial times, tasked himself with targeting the South African lower-order and ran an impressive 9.8 kilometres in the field but he learnt that one man cannot do the job on his own. Just ask Gayle.
After missing out on Wednesday night's T20, also at Kingsmead, with a recurrence of his back problem, Gayle approached this innings as though it was two days' ago. He flung his bat at everything, despite the steep target. "I am trying to understand it, but I can't," Michael Holding lamented, when discussing Gayle's strategy, or lack thereof. It only took the introduction of Dale Steyn to cause Gayle to run out of luck and allow South Africa the only inroad they needed.
Gayle should have modelled his innings on Amla's to start with. He saw off a tricky opening period, when Jerome Taylor found the right length to dismiss both Rilee Rossouw, who racked up a fifth duck in 10 innings, and Faf du Plessis, a first duck in 61, in the Powerplay. But West Indies failed to cash in on their early breakthroughs and lost their lines.
They offered so much width. Amla was able to treble his score from 13 off the first 19 balls he faced to 39 by the time he'd faced 40. AB de Villiers, sent in earlier than usual at No. 4, was also off to a speedy start. 17 runs came off 15 balls.
Andre Russell tried to make the extra bounce work in his favour by holding back his length but the South African pair were quick to pounce on anything short. They brought up a hundred inside 17 overs and a massive total was looming but Amla was in such a hurry to get there, he underestimated Russell's arm. He was run-out but South Africa's momentum was not.
They promoted David Miller ahead of JP Duminy and de Villiers immediately adjusted his pace. He slowed down to allow Miller to settle and the pair formed the spine of South Africa's total. They shared the highest partnership of the innings of 123 runs and batted for a ball shy of 20 overs, to take South Africa to the brink of a flourishing finish as West Indies flagged in the searing heat.
It was only when both holed out that West Indies had the opportunity to come back into the match. Russell used fancy footwork to run Farhaan Behardien out - the second time on this tour his boot has ushered the ball on its way to breaking the stumps - had Duminy caught behind off a short ball and Philander in the deep before a storm swept through.
It was accompanied by gale-force winds, of the literal kind, which only made it more difficult for South Africa when they took the field and met the other Gayle-force. West Indies were off to a flier but they needed support from the rest of the line-up, particularly the experience.
But Marlon Samuels was run out lazily, Dwayne Smith was deceived by a slider and Jonathan Carter beaten by the googly. Vernon Philander was rewarded for consistent effort towards the end and Steyn cleaned up the tail as the inevitable outcome was completed.