Wednesday 13 June 2007

Cricket schedule for 2007

2007

West Indies in England
DateMatchVenue
Sat, May 12 - Mon, May 14 Somerset v West Indians - Match drawnTaunton
Thu, May 17 - Mon, May 21 First TestLondon
Fri, May 25 - Tue, May 29 Second TestLeeds
Fri, June 1 - Sun, June 3 MCC v West Indians - Match drawnDurham
Thu, June 7 - Mon, June 11 Third TestManchester
Fri, June 15 - Tue, June 19 Fourth TestChester-le-Street
Thu, June 21 England A v West IndiansWorcester
Sun, June 24 Derbyshire v West IndiansDerby
Tue, June 26 PCA Masters XI v West IndiansArundel
Thu, June 28 First Twenty20 internationalLondon
Fri, June 29 Second Twenty20 internationalLondon
Sun, July 1 First ODILondon
Wed, July 4 Second ODIBirmingham
Sat, July 7 Third ODINottingham
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Pakistan and Sri Lanka in Abu Dhabi
DateMatchVenue
Fri, May 18First ODIAbu Dhabi
Sun, May 20Second ODIAbu Dhabi
Tue, May 22Third ODIAbu Dhabi
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Afro-Asian Cup
DateMatchVenue
Tue, June 5Asian XI v Africa XI, Twenty20 ODIBangalore
Wed, June 6Asian XI v Africa XI, 1st ODIBangalore
Sat, June 9Second ODIChennai
Sun, June 10Third ODIChennai
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India and South Africa in Ireland
DateMatchVenue
Sat, June 23Ireland v IndiaBelfast
Sun, June 24Ireland v South AfricaBelfast
Tue, June 26India v South Africa, 1st ODIBelfast
Fri, June 29Second ODIBelfast
Sun, July 1Third ODIBelfast
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Bangladesh in Sri Lanka
DateMatchVenue
Mon, June 25-Fri, Jun 29First TestColombo
Tue, July 3-Sat, Jul 7Second TestColombo
Wed, July 11-Sun, Jul 15Third TestKandy
Fri, July 20First ODIColombo
Sun, July 22Second ODIColombo
Tue, July 24Third ODIColombo
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India in England
DateMatchVenue
Sat, July 07 - Tue, July 10Sussex v IndiansHove
Fri, July 13 - Sun, July 15England A v IndiansChelmsford
Thu, July 19 - Mon, July 23First TestLord's
Fri, July 27 - Tue, July 31Second TestTrent Bridge
Fri, Aug 03 - Sun, Aug 05Sri Lanka A v IndiansLeicester
Thu, Aug 09 - Mon, Aug 13Third TestThe Oval
Thu, Aug 16Scotland v Indians, ODIGlasgow
Sat, Aug 18England A v IndiansNorthampton
Tue, Aug 21First ODIRose Bowl (D/N)
Fri, Aug 24Second ODIBristol (D/N)
Mon, Aug 27Third ODIEdgbaston
Thu, Aug 30Fourth ODIOld Trafford (D/N)
Sun, Sep 02Fifth ODIHeadingley
Wed, Sep 05Sixth ODIThe Oval
Sat, Sep 08Seventh ODILord's
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Australia in India
DateMatchVenue
Tue, Sep 25Australia team arrival
Sat, Sep 29First ODIBangalore
Tue, Oct 2Second ODIKochi
Fri, Oct 5Third ODIHyderabad
Mon, Oct 8Fourth ODIGuwahati
Thu, Oct 11Fifth ODIBaroda
Sun, Oct 14Sixth ODINagpur
Wed, Oct 17Seventh ODIMumbai
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Pakistan in India
DateMatchVenue
Fri, Nov 2Pakistan team arrival
Tue, Nov 6First ODIFaridabad
Fri, Nov 9Second ODIMohali
Mon, Nov 12Third ODIKanpur
Thu, Nov 15Fourth ODIGwalior
Sun, Nov 18Fifth ODIJaipur
Thu, Nov 22 - Mon, Nov 26First TestDelhi
Fri, Nov 30 to Tue, Dec 4Second TestKolkata
Sat, Dec 8 - Wed, Dec 12Third TestBangalore

Twenty20 WC: India, Pak in same group

India has been drawn with arch-rivals Pakistan and minnows Scotland for the group stages of the inaugural Twenty20 World Cup to be held in South Africa in September.

The three teams have been pooled in Group D of the tournament which will see 12 countries.

Group A has South Africa, West Indies [Images] and Bangladesh while Group B features world champions Australia, England [Images] and Zimbabwe. New Zealand [Images], Sri Lanka [Images] and Kenya form Group C.

The teams were seeded based on their rankings in Twenty20 format as of March 1, 2007.

The group stages will be followed by the Super Eights, made up of the top two teams in each group. The top four teams from the Super Eights will advance to the semi-finals, South African cricket chief Gerald Majola said on Tuesday.

Johannesburg, Cape Town and Durban have been chosen as the venues for the Twenty20 World Cup.

The teams are expected to arrive approximately five-seven days before the first match. Two rounds of warm-up matches will be played on September 8 and 9.

"The launch event is planned to take place on July 26 in Johannesburg. It will set the tone for the build-up to the non-stop cricket action coming to Wanderers in Johannesburg, Newlands in Cape Town and Kingsmead in Durban", Steve Elworthy, one of the managers of Cricket South Africa, said.

"The two semi-finals will be played on September 22, while the final will be staged back at Wanderers, Johannesburg, on September 24, which is Heritage Day in South Africa," Elworthy added.

I can contribute with the ball in England: Ganguly

Recalled to the Indian one-day team, Sourav Ganguly [Images] says that apart from his regular role with the bat, he could also be useful as a bowler in the favourable conditions of England [Images] and Ireland.

"I think I can contribute with the ball. It [conditions] will definitely help the ball to move around in England. We are going in the second half [of the summer] and I hope everyone lifts their game," Ganguly told CNN-IBN.

Ganguly felt England would miss Andrew Flintoff [Images] in the ODI and Test series if the talismanic all-rounder fails to recover from the ankle injury.

"Obviously they'll miss Flintoff, who is not a part of their team. Flintoff makes a lot of difference to their squad. But it will be a good series," he added.

Ganguly, along with Sachin Tendulkar [Images], was included in the ODI squad that will play three matches against South Africa in Ireland (June 26-July 1) and another against Pakistan in Glasgow, Scotland (July 3).

The two were rested for the one-day series in Bangladesh last month.

They, however, were part of the Test squad that beat Bangladesh 1-0 and are among the 16 that is to play three Tests in England in July-September.

An Aussie can be a good coach for India: Ponting

Australian captain Ricky Ponting [Images] on Wednesday said he saw no reason why an Australian coach could not do a good job in India when quite a few of them were doing well with teams around the world.

"I think Tom Moody has done some terrific job in Sri Lanka [Images] leading them to the World Cup final and I can't see why an Australian coach could not fit and do a good job here", Ponting, who was here to participate in a training programme for children, told reporters.

On Sunil Gavaskar [Images] reportedly being opposed to having an Australian coach for Team India, he said, "it is up to those guys. But if you look around us, you can see a lot Australian coaches doing pretty good job with teams around the world."

On BCCI's efforts to find a coach for Indian team, he said, "it is important that they get a coach on board" and end the current "dilemma" on the issue.

Referring to the current Indian team, Ponting said it was important that all "senior players really make sure that they stick together", leading the way and providing directions to the younger lot.

"That is what has been the Australian strength", he said.

To a question on the role of the coach in a team, he said, "cricket is run by the captain while the coach takes care of the technical side. But with the game getting as hectic as it was at the moment, the coach was important in mapping out programmes well, organising training session and ensuring a happy environment".

"We were lucky to play under some good coaches", he said while naming stalwarts like John Buchanan. "They made the job of the players much easier", he added.

Reacting to changing rules of the game, Ponting said, "whenever the rule changes are made, it would be nice if the actual players are consulted".

Most of the players have a pretty good idea of what the rules of the game should be, he said.

But, the Australian stalwart did not appear to be in favour of the Twenty20 matches.

"Though currently there appeared to be no threat of the Twenty20 matches taking over the one-day games, care had to be taken to ensure that it did not occur," he said.

"Twenty20 cricket has its own place," he said, adding more and more cricket was making it more difficult for the players.

The increasing cramped schedule of matches also did not find favour with the ace cricketer, who said, "it has been an issue that players have been battling for some years. It is the hardest thing in the world of cricket. We should agree on 15 Test matches and 35 one-day internationals (in a year). If it is so, players will be pretty happy".

About their supremacy in world cricket, Ponting said, "we have beaten all sides in the world but it is important that we do not relax and be happy over what we have achieved".

On his take at being an Indian coach, he said, he was not thinking of retiring yet and taking up the job of a coach but added it would be a great job to be an Indian coach.

Mittal eyes an English football club

After the successful take over of French steel company Arcelor, the world's richest Indian, Laxmi Mittal, is eyeing another grand acquisition. This time it is in the field of sport.

The 'Iron Man of India' has emerged a contender to buy English Premiership football club Birmingham City after making an initial inquiry, The Daily Telegraph reported on Wednesday.

The 56-year-old Mittal, at 19.25-billion-pounds twice as rich as Roman Abramovich, the Russian millionaire owner of Chelsea, is yet to follow up on his preliminary inquiry, the newspaper said.

Besides Mittal, a London-based NRI, another unnamed business magnate from the Far East is also said to be interested in the club and likely to make a formal bid later this week.

David Sullivan and David and Ralph Gold, owners of Birmingham, which caused a flutter by getting promoted to the top league of the competition, are looking to sell the club and would be glad to finish with a speedy handover.

Besides Chelsea, Manchester United, Liverpool, Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur are the other English Premiership clubs that have been bought over by business tycoons in recent years.