Friday 23 March 2012

Harbhajan Singh Biography of Indian Cricketer

This is about harbhajan singh biography
Full name    Harbhajan Singh Plaha
Born     3 July 1980 (age 31)
Jalandhar, Punjab, India
Nickname     bhajji, The Turbanator (English language media)
Height     5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Batting style     Right-hand
Bowling style     Right-arm off break
Role     Bowler
International information
National side     India
Test debut (cap 215)     25 March 1998 v Australia
Last Test     21 July 2011 v England
ODI debut (cap 113)     17 April 1998 v New Zealand
Last ODI     11 June 2011 v West Indies
ODI shirt no.     3
Domestic team information
Years     Team
1997–present     Punjab
2005     Surrey
2008–present     Mumbai Indians
Career statistics
Competition     Test     ODIs     FC     List A
Matches     97     229     161     279
Runs scored     2,118     1,190     3,526     1,532
Batting average     18.57     13.22     19.80     13.67
100s/50s     2/9     0/0     2/13     0/0
Top score     115     49     115     49
Balls bowled     27,569     12,059     41,508     14,551
Wickets     405     259     682     327
Bowling average     32.13     33.40     28.64     31.69
5 wickets in innings     25     3     39     3
10 wickets in match     5     0     7     0
Best bowling     8/84     5/31     8/84     5/31
Catches/stumpings     42/–     69/–     75/–     88/–

 full name Harbhajan Singh Plaha About this sound pronunciation (help·info) (Punjabi, born: 3 July 1980 in Jalandhar, Punjab, India) in a Ramgarhia Sikh family is an Indian cricketer. A specialist bowler, he has the second-highest number of Test wickets by an off spinner behind Sri Lanka's Muttiah Muralitharan.

Harbhajan made his Test and One Day International (ODI) debuts in early 1998. His career was initially beset by investigations into the legality of his bowling action and disciplinary incidents that raised the ire of cricket authorities. However in 2001, with leading leg spinner Anil Kumble injured, Harbhajan's career was resuscitated after Indian captain Sourav Ganguly called for his inclusion in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy team. In that series victory over Australia, Harbhajan established himself as the team's leading spinner by taking 32 wickets, becoming the first Indian bowler to take a hat trick in Test cricket.

A finger injury in mid 2003 sidelined him for much of the following year, allowing Kumble to regain his position as the first choice spinner. Harbhajan reclaimed a regular position in the team upon his return in late 2004, but often found himself watching from the sidelines in Test matches outside the Indian subcontinent with typically only one spinner, Kumble, being used. Throughout 2006 and into early 2007, Harbhajan's accumulation of wickets fell and his bowling average increased, and he was increasingly criticised for bowling defensively with less loop. Following India's first-round elimination from the 2007 Cricket World Cup, Harbhajan was replaced by other spinners in the national squad for both formats. He regained a regular position in the team in late 2007, but became the subject of more controversy. In early 2008, he was given a ban by the International Cricket Council (ICC) for racially vilifying Andrew Symonds. The ban was revoked upon appeal, but in April, Harbhajan was banned from the 2008 Indian Premier League and suspended from the ODI team by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) for slapping Sreesanth after a match.
He was conferred the Padma Shri, India's fourth highest civilian honour, in 2009.

Sreesanth Biography of Indian Cricketer

This blog is about Sreesanth 
Full name     Sreesanth
Born     6 February 1983 (age 28)
Kothamangalam, Kerala, India
Nickname     Sree, Gopu
Batting style     Right-handed
Bowling style     Right-arm fast-medium
Role     Bowler
International information
National side     India
Test debut (cap 253)     1 March 2006 v England
Last Test     2 January 2011 v South Africa
ODI debut (cap 162)     25 October 2005 v Sri Lanka
Last ODI     2 April 2011 v Sri Lanka
Domestic team information
Years     Team
2002-present     Kerala
2008-2010     Kings XI Punjab
2009     Warwickshire
2011-present     Kochi Tuskers Kerala
Career statistics
Competition     Tests     ODIs     FC     List A
Matches     24     53     64     80
Runs scored     263     44     573     127
Batting average     11.43     4.00     9.71     6.04
100s/50s     0/0     0/0     0/0     0/0
Top score     35     10*     35     33
Balls bowled     4,753     2,476     11,364     3,796
Wickets     79     75     191     104
Bowling average     35.16     33.44     34.02     34.47
5 wickets in innings     3     1     6     1
10 wickets in match     0     0     0     0
Best bowling     5/40     6/55     5/40     6/55
Catches/stumpings     5/–     7/–     12/–     9/–
Sreesanth (Malayalam:About this sound pronunciation (help·info) (born February 6, 1983 in Kothamangalam, Kerala, India), is an Indian cricketer. He is a right-arm fast-medium-pace bowler and a right-handed tail-ender batsman. In first class cricket, he plays for Kerala and in the Indian Premier League, he plays for Kochi Tuskers Kerala. He is the first Kerala Ranji player to play Twenty20 cricket for India.

Sreesanth was a national breakdancing champion when he was in eighth grade.
Early years

Sreesanth was born to Shanthakumaran Nair and Savithri Devi. He has one elder brother and a sister.His brother Dipu Santhan owns a music company in Kochi and his sister Nivedita is a television actress in Kerala. His brother in law, Madhu Balakrishnan is a famous South Indian playback singer.

Sreesanth initially was a leg-spinner in his childhood, modelling his action on India's leading Test wicket-taker Anil Kumble, who was to become his Test captain. However, his habit of bowling yorkers led him to convert to fast bowling, after being encouraged by his elder brother.Following in the footsteps of fellow Kerala fast bowler Tinu Yohannan, who earned selection to the National Cricket Academy in 2000, Sreesanth was selected for the MRF Pace foundation in Chennai. He then made his first-class debut against Goa in the 2002-03 domestic season, claiming 22 wickets in seven matches in the Ranji Trophy and winning selection for South Zone in the Duleep Trophy squad in the same season.

He was selected for India-A side in a tour match against the visiting New Zealand side at Rajkot. He claimed one wicket in twelve overs after being restricted with a hamstring injury. He also missed five Ranji Trophy games in that season, although he still travelled with the side for away games. This led to rumours that an astrologer convinced him to take a break from competition to preserve his longevity in the sport, which Sreesanth categorically denied, maintaining that he was training only to regain his fitness.

In November 2004, Sreesanth entered the record books when he took a hat-trick against Himachal Pradesh in a Ranji trophy game, the first time it was achieved by a Kerala bowler, earning him the nickname The Prince of hat-tricks[citation needed] amongst Keralites. He was selected to represent India B in the Challenger Trophy in October 2005, a domestic limited-overs tournament.He performed impressively in that tournament, earning the Man of the Series award and being the leading wicket taker (7) with the third best bowling average.This led to his selection to Indian team for the home ODI series against Sri Lanka.
ODI career

Sreesanth was given the new ball in the first ODI against Sri Lanka in Nagpur. After being punished early by Kumar Sangakkara and Sanath Jayasuriya, Sreesanth returned to claim his first two ODI wickets at the end of the match.He was left out of the team and was later recalled for the fourth, fifth and sixth ODIs as coach Greg Chappell tinkered with the line-up. He was retained in the squad but did not play in the 5 match series against South Africa, but played all five matches in the tour to Pakistan, recording a haul of 4/58 in the fifth ODI against Pakistani cricket team in Karachi. A good home series against the England in April 2006, in which he claimed 10 wickets at an average of 16.3, including a career best 6/55 in the final match at Indore (in which he was awarded the man of the match award),led to him subsequently being awarded a BCCI contract, in the C-grade in May.

His disappointing economy rate led him to be left out of the ICC Champions Trophy squad of 14, with the beneficiary being R. P. Singh. He made an unexpected come back to the blue squad due to the injury to Ajit Agarkar later in the tournament. He was also out of the Indian ODI team for the England tour.

Inn 2011 Cricket World Cup, Sreesanth was selected due to injury to Praveen Kumar. He was expensive in the first game going wicketless at 53 runs in 5 overs. he was selected in the final where he gave away 52 runs for 8 wicketless overs.
Test career
Sreesanth bowling in the nets.

Sreesanth was selected for his first Test squad in the home series against England in March 2006, in place of Zaheer Khan. He claimed 4/95 in his debut appearance in the 1st Test in Nagpur, where he opened the bowling with Irfan Pathan.He was ruled out of the second Test in Mohali due to illness, but recovered and captured five wickets as well a 29* with the bat in the Third Test in Mumbai. With the axing of Pathan, Sreesanth became India's leading pace bowler on the tour of the West Indies. He missed the second Test due to an injury but managed to claim his best match figures of 5/72 in the 4th Test in Kingston, Jamaica.

Sreesanth's most significant performance to date in Test cricket was his role in the 1st Test of India's 2006 tour to South Africa at Johannesburg. After losing the limited-overs series 4-0, Sreesanth produced took 5-40 in a display of pace and swing to help dismiss South Africa. This performance helped to bowl South Africans out for just 84, leading to first Indian win on South African soil, for which he was named man of the match. Again, Sreesanth's emotional antics, which have led him to be regarded by some commentators as eccentric, were frequently noted. He was fined after breaching the International Cricket Council's advertising logo policy, and also for "conduct contrary to the spirit of the game" after sending off Hashim Amla after dismissing him.He was also involved in a highly-publicised confrontation while batting against paceman Andre Nel. Nel delivered a series of fast balls at Sreesanth's upper body and after Sreesanth ungainly evaded one delivery, taunted him by gesturing to his chest, indicating that he felt Sreesanth was lacking in courage. On the next ball, Sreesanth gave him the charge and hit the ball straight over the bowler's head into the stands for a six. He then whirled his bat in enthusiasm and danced down the wicket, making fun of Nel and performing a dance.Later, Sreesanth said that he would not repeat anything of the sort, since he could be suspended for violating the code of conduct.Even though he went unpunished for the Nel incident, he was fined 30% of the match fee for running towards Hashim Amla after picking up his wicket, and wearing a branded garment under the jersey.

Sreesanth courted controversy once again during the fourth day of the second test of India's 2007 tour to England at Trent Bridge. He was fined half of his match fee for deliberately shoulder barging England captain Michael Vaughan whilst walking back to his mark. He also bowled a beamer at batsman Kevin Pietersen, which the latter had to take drastic action to avoid. Sreesanth however did immediately apologise afterwards. After the match he said that the ball had slipped from his hand. Soon afterwards, he bowled a no-ball where he overstepped the crease by roughly 2 feet (0.61 m), leading to speculation it was deliberate; the delivery was a bouncer to Paul Collingwood. Former England captain Michael Atherton called for Sreesanth to be banned for the Pietersen beamer, saying that Sreesanth could not control his on-pitch emotions.

After leaving out of the Indian team for about a year and half, Sreesanth was called back to play the home Test series against Sri Lanka in November 2009. Sreesanth played the second Test in Kanpur and picked up five wickets in the first innings, which helped India win the match by an innings and 144 runs.Sreesath was awarded the Man of the Match for taking six wickets in the match.After the match, Indian captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni praised him as one of the best bowlers of reverse swing.
World Twenty20 Championship, 2007

In September 2007, Sreesanth joined the Indian team in South Africa for the inaugural Twenty20 World Cup following his omission for the one-day series in England. Although his performance in the tournament lacked consistency, Sreesanth managed breakthroughs at critical junctures that were vital to his team's success. During the semifinal match against Australia which India won, Sreesanth got the vital wickets of the Australian openers Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden. The latter proved to be decisive in turning the match round in India's favour. In the final against Pakistan, Sreesanth proved expensive with the ball, but became the centre of Indian celebrations as he held on to the catch in the last over that ended Pakistan's innings and made India World Twenty20 champions.
Indian Premier League

Sreesanth is associated with the Kings XI Punjab in the Indian Premier League. In the inaugural edition of the IPL in 2008, Sreesanth became the second leading wicket taker in the tournament after Sohail Tanveer , claiming 18 wickets. Sreesanth appeared only in the second half of the 2009 edition of the IPL. He could not play the initial matches of the season owing to a stress fracture. He left Kings XI Punjab after the 2010 Indian Premier League and signed for Kochi for the 2011 competition.
Altercation with Harbhajan Singh
Harbhajan Singh

On April 25, 2008, following the victory of his Kings XI Punjab's victory in the Indian Premier League over the Mumbai Indians at Mohali, Sreesanth was slapped under his eye by Harbhajan Singh, the captain of Mumbai. The incident came to light as Sreesanth was caught by TV cameras sobbing inconsolably on the field before the presentation ceremony. Sreesanth later downplayed the incident saying he had no complaints against Harbhajan who was "like an elder brother" to him. Harbhajan's team had lost their third consecutive match when he apparently reacted violently to Sreesanth's approaching him and saying "hard luck". The IPL banned Harbhajan from the remainder of the tournament and prohibited him from collecting his salary after finding him guilty. The BCCI launched a separate investigation into the incident and decided to ban Harbhajan for five ODIs, deeming him to have broken the code of conduct in his national contract.

In Australia earlier that year, Sreesanth stated that he would maintain an aggressive attitude on the cricket field, "Sreesanth's way is to be aggressive. Sreesanth will always remain Sreesanth."
Warwickshire

In August 2009, Sreesanth signed a deal to play for Warwickshire for the remainder of the English season.
Official warnings

Sreesanth is noted for his exuberant and emotional behaviour, especially whilst appealing for and celebrating wickets. Such trademark behaviour has seen him frequently fined for violating the player conduct guidelines of the International Cricket Council. In October 2009, the BCCI and Kerala Cricket Association issued separate warnings to Sreesanth for indiscipline, failure of which could invite drastic actions such as ban from domestic cricket.

He has been warned several times for indiscipline both on and off the cricket field. The BCCI issued a final warning to Sreesanth in October 2009, to mend his on-field behaviour, failure of which would invite a suspension from domestic matches.Following this, the Kerala Cricket Association also issued him a final warning for repeatedly violating code of conduct.This was after Sreesanth failed to turn up at the Kerala Ranji Trophy team camp in Kannur.

However, Sreesanth was recalled to the Indian squad for the first two Test matches against Sri Lanka in the following month. He got the selection after being out of the national team for more than a year and half. He replaced Ishant Sharma for the second Test in Kanpur and his bowling became instrumental in helping India win the Test match by an innings and 144 runs. Sreesanth's five wicket haul in the first innings of the match earned him the Man of the Match award also.

Bradley Johnson Not a Cheat 200

This is about Bradley Johnson Not a Cheat
Norwich Boss Paul Lambert has responded angrily to QPR Claims Bradley Johnson ''Conned'' the referee in last week's Premier League Game at Loft us Road.
Norwich won the game 2-1 after QPR mid fielder joey Barton was sent off following a clash with Johnson.
Barton, 29, and rangers boss Neil warnock were critical of Johnson for his part in the dismissal.
But lambert labelled QPR complaints ''ludicrous'' and insisted: ''My Player is Not Cheat.''

Pakistan vs New Zealand Highlights From Cricket

This Blog is about Pakistan vs New Zealand  In Cricket
Pakistan VS New Zealand 

In the 3rd ODI Muhammad Hafeez scored his maidan ODI cricket Century to help Pakistan to a 43 Runs win over the host team and now they will be traveling to face new Zealand in the 4rh ODI at Naiper on 1st Faburary 2011. You can tune in here to watch the live action of the match here, we will be placing the live streaming of the match shortly before it all starts on the night. Pakistan will be announcing their decision of the Captain for the World Cup 2011 and most likely it will be Afridi and he did no harm to that with a quick fired 65 Runs of just 25 balls.
Muhammad Hafeez century meant that finaly Pakistan opners are among the runs and it will be interesting to see how they go about in fourtj ODI at naiper, Younis Khan and Misbah Haq havnt scored much runs in the ODI series and they will be eager to prove a point or two going in to the World Cup 2011. While Muhammad Amir who is still out of the team due to the Controversy might be able to make a comebakc in the team during the World cup 2011.

Cricket Players Wasti Wajahatullah Biography

This is about Cricket Player Wasti Wajahatullah
Batting style     Right-hand bat
Bowling style     Right-arm offbreak
Career statistics
Competition     Tests     ODIs
Matches     6     15
Runs scored     329     349
Batting average     36.55     23.26
100s/50s     2/-     -/1
Top score     133     84
Balls bowled     18     55
Wickets     -     3
Bowling average     -     23.00
5 wickets in innings     -     -
10 wickets in match     -     n/a
Best bowling     -     3/36
Catches/stumpings     7/-     5/-

Biography
 Wajahatullah Wasti (born November 11, 1974 in Peshawar) is a Pakistani cricketer. He is a right-handed batsman and a right-arm offbreak bowler.

 He played in six Test matches between February 1999 and May 2000, but soon found himself out of the side after much criticism on his performance. His best ODI performance was a classy, stroke-filled 84 against New Zealand in the 1999 Cricket World Cup semifinal, which Pakistan won by nine wickets. Wasti has also tried his hand at List A cricket.

Waqar Younis

This is about Cricket Player Waqar Younis
Biography
Full name Waqar Younis Maitla
Born November 16, 1971, Vehari, Punjab
Major teams Pakistan, Glamorgan, Karachi, Lahore, Multan, Rawalpindi, Surrey
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling Style Right-arm fast
Often credited as the bowler who made the reverse swing popular, Waqar Younis was one of Pakistan’s premium strike bowlers for many years. Having made his debut in the late 1980s when it was customary to bowl fast and short balls, Waqar instead began bowling deliveries that were fast and full. He did not strike gold instantly, but gradually started to master the technique which also included a lot of late inswing. His good deliveries were almost impossible to play and many a time crashed into the stumps. He was also once considered to be the world’s fastest bowler. However his pace and action strained his body and he was out with injuries on a few occasions.

Waqar Younis had the habit of aiming at the wickets rather than the batsman. This was a novel tactic and he was so successful with it that he became the player to have the best strike rate among bowlers who took 200 Test wickets.
After a long 11 years of cricket, Waqar Younis seemed to lose his touch in 2000. However, taking into consideration his immense talent and swashbuckling record he was appointed skipper of the Pakistani national squad in 2001. However, the team did not perform well under him and after the disastrous 2003 World Cup, Waqar Younis was removed as captain. It was the end of the road for this very gifted cricketer and he announced his retirement in 2004. After retirement he has taken to commentary and coaching.
livescore.warofcricket.com provides the profile of Waqar Younis and other cricketers around the world.

Cricket Player Zulqarnain Biography

This Blog is about Cricket Player Zulqarnain 
Biography
Full name Zulqarnain Haider

Born April 23, 1986, Lahore

Major teams Pakistan, Lahore Blues, Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited, Pakistan Under-19s, Rawalpindi
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper
There was a time when it was not at all certain that Zulqarnain Haider, a tall and lanky wicketkeeper from Lahore, would ever build on his debut, which came in a heavy loss in a Twenty20 against South Africa in February 2007. But after some good domestic results he found a place on the 2010 England tour as Kamran Akmal's understudy, and when the senior keeper's lapses became too frequent, Haider was given a Test debut at Edgbaston. He was out to his first ball feathering a catch behind, but his characterful and determined 88 in the second innings formed the basis of a fightback.
That innings was testament to his character as his road to the top has been made in difficult personal circumstances. He took part in the Under-15 World Cup in England in the summer of 2000 at the age of 13. Four years later, at the Under-19 World Cup in Dhaka, he scored a vital 23 not out from 18 balls, and claimed three catches, as Pakistan took the title in the final against West Indies.
A broken finger after his Test debut ruled him out for the remainder of the tour and then his career appeared to come to an extraordinary, and worrying, end when he fled the one-day series against South Africa in UAE for London claiming he had received death threats following the fourth ODI. He sought asylum in London fearing for his safety, but returned to Pakistan eventually in 2011.