Read + Write + Report
Home | Start a blog | About Orble | FAQ | Blogs | Writers | Paid | My Orble | Login

Cricket News - by Craig Hill

Cricket Australia is pleased to announce a partnership with UAE based company Fourth Dimension International Limited that will see Cricket Australia develop a Cricket Education Program for delivery in educational institutions initially in India.

Plans are already being developed by Fourth Dimension International Limited and Cricket Australia to expand this innovative Program into countries such as South Africa, Canada and China in the future, as well as selected countries in the Middle East, Europe and other parts of Asia.

The Fourth Dimension International Cricket Education Program is a six year progressive competency based program with participants undergoing cricket development activities and learning in addition to their regular schooling. School students from 10 to 15 years will learn about the breadth and depth of cricket, from playing and umpiring, to coaching and administration. Students completing the International Cricket Education Program will learn the intricacies of the game along with the business of cricket.

Cricket Australia Announces International Education Program


The first Programs to run in India are likely to take place in schools in Mumbai. Representatives from Fourth Dimension International Limited and Podar Enterprise were recently in Melbourne to finalise the agreement between Cricket Australia and Fourth Dimension International Limited. Pictured above, Ranjeet Prakash representing Fourth Dimension International Limited (left) and Rajiv Podar from Podar Enterprise (Centre), recently met with Cricket Australia’s General Manager of Game Development Damien Bown (left) to sign the agreement and celebrate the strengthening of Australia-India relations through cricket.

Under this agreement, Cricket Australia will take responsibility for developing a Program that will enable Fourth Dimension International Limited to set up a sustainable infrastructure for cricket coaching, umpiring and administration. After commencing in Mumbai, the Program will move to other parts of India in the near future. International Cricket Education Program will see successful students achieve the Diploma of Cricket from Cricket Australia and Fourth Dimension International Limited.

Cricket Australia’s General Manager of Game Development Damien Bown sees this Program as a logical extension of Australian cricket’s emerging presence globally: “The Australian cricket playing, coaching, umpiring and administration infrastructures are highly regarded on the world stage. This partnership with Fourth Dimension International Limited will not only see Cricket Australia supporting cricket’s growth globally, but will also provide new opportunities for cricket to continue to grow its investment in grassroots participation, volunteering, coaching, umpiring and administration – which is critical to securing the next generation of cricket’s players and fans”.
66
Vote
   


Chairman of selectors Andrew Hilditch will hold mid-season reviews with players, it has been revealed.

Cricket Australia contracted players were sent emails on Friday asking them to schedule a meeting where they will be able to discuss their playing futures with Hilditch.

The move is designed to give players a better indication of where they sit with national selectors.

Cricket Australia General Manager Cricket, Michael Brown, who advised CA contract players of the latest half-yearly review discussions earlier today, said selector/player discussions had been a routine part of the continuing communication between selectors and players for some years.

Andrew Hilditch


The next discussions would be in person where possible but playing and travel requirements meant some catch ups would be by phone.

This is in addition to the regular discussions between selectors and CA contract players at state matches throughout the summer.

Paceman Nathan Bracken welcomed the initiative, saying it would help clear the air for players aggrieved at being overlooked for national duties.

"I think it's just put it in a formal situation. When you look at it we are a professional outfit but we are a business as well, and everybody goes through reviews," he said.

"Obviously you're going to be getting the feedback or information that you're after and asking the right questions."

"So you put forward your case and I've found that in every meeting that I've had with the selection panel they've been very honest and very straightforward."

Bracken, ranked No.2 in the one-day international bowling rankings, believed he was still capable of adding to his five-Test tally despite not being selected in any squads this summer.

"I guess the time that I feel I can't five something to a Test side or two a four-day side I won't be pushing my case anymore," he said.

"Once that stops I'll look at doing something else."
39
Vote
   


Brett Lee Has Ankle Surgery

January 5th 2009 11:17
Australian paceman Brett Lee had surgery on his injured left ankle on Saturday to correct a long-standing problem and is expected to be out of action for up to five months.

The surgery involved the removal of bone fragments that had been causing pain at the back of the ankle.

The fast bowler suffered a stress fracture of a metatarsal bone during the second 3 Mobile Test against South Africa in Melbourne.

As that injury is expected to keep him out of cricket for some time, it was decided that it would be an appropriate time to address his ankle problem.

Brett Lee Has Ankle Surgery
Brett Lee Has Ankle Surgery


It is not the first time Lee has injured his left foot. He missed Australia's World Cup success in 2007 in the Caribbean after injuring his left ankle in New Zealand in February.

"If Brett's rehabilitation program goes to plan he is expected to be available for selection for Australia for the ICC Twenty20 World Cup later this year," team physiotherapist Alex Kountouris said.

The Twenty20 World Cup begins in the first week of June and will be held in England.
37
Vote
   


SCG Turns Pink For McGrath Foundation

January 4th 2009 11:03
In what is believed to be a world first for a sporting event, all aspects of the 3 Mobile Test today turned pink to support the McGrath Foundation.

3 Mobile has turned the match stumps, grass signage, perimeter signage, and with adidas, the logos on the match shirts pink. This combined with the crowd wearing pink McGrath Foundation bandanas will see the 3 Mobile Test fully integrated with Cricket Cares partner the McGrath Foundation.

It is believed to be the first time at a major sporting event that a charity has been completely integrated; with the playing equipment, the player uniforms, the playing surface, the venue and the crowd all getting behind the McGrath Foundation’s cause.

SCG Turns Pink


Cricket Australia CEO James Sutherland was proud to be helping the McGrath Foundation:

“The McGrath Foundation does a tireless job of supporting women with breast cancer and Cricket Australia is glad that it can help assist in getting the public behind the cause,” Sutherland said.

“I’d also like to thank 3 Mobile for their wonderful support and passion in making the pink 3 Mobile Test possible, I’m sure all watching at the game or on television will see the brilliant pink signage and be reminded of the McGrath Foundation.”

3 Mobile CEO Nigel Dews was equally proud to support the McGrath Foundation:

“Being able to integrate our key sponsorship, major Charity Partner in the McGrath Foundation with the support of our staff who are distributing pink McGrath Foundation bandanas throughout the Sydney 3 mobile Test Match is a great example of us all working together to make a difference.”

The Australian team shirt features the hot pink of the McGrath Foundation thanks to 3 Mobile and adidas, and fans can win the unique shirts worn and signed by the Australian Test team by donating to the McGrath Foundation at www.mcgrathfoundation.com.au during the 3 Mobile Test in Sydney.

McGrath Foundation Board Member Tracy Bevan thanked the Australian public in advance for their support:

“We’ve always thought that we had some of the best looking cricketers in the world but they can only look better in pink – after all … doesn’t everyone!”
35
Vote
   


Sydney is the scene of the summer's final Test and could well be where Australia fights one last battle, at least for now, as the No 1 ranked Test nation in the world. One more loss would not only see Australia succumb to its first series whitewash at home in 122 years, but also hand the No 1 ranking to South Africa.

To topple the king in his own court requires nerves of steel, tremendous skill and brilliant strategy.

The Proteas have displayed all three. In Perth and Melbourne, they turned seemingly hopeless situations into positions of dominance.

They must now be convinced they can win from any position. Should Australia be in front again, it will be constantly looking over its shoulder. Anyone doing that inevitably takes their eye off the ball.

The series is dead but, other than the No.1 ranking, there is still much to be gained and lost, particularly for Andrew McDonald and Doug Bollinger.

Australian Cricket Team Fights For Top Ranking


The pair will make their Test debut in Sydney.

Both have earned the right and are more than just speculative selections for the future.

At last for Bollinger, he is in the right place at the right time.

He topped last summer's Sheffield Shield wicket tally with 44 at 15.44 but missed New South Wales' success in the final due to injury.

He then toured the West Indies and India but did not win the nod from selectors.

McDonald, largely unheralded outside of his native Victoria, has been thrust into the national spotlight following injuries to Andrew Symonds and Shane Watson.

A technically correct batsman and an underrated bowler who can move the ball in the air and off the seam, McDonald will not be out of his depth against the Proteas.

Strong performances in Sydney by he and Bollinger will give the pair reason to have their passports handy in 2009.

With Symonds injured, out-of-form opener Matthew Hayden will be one Australian player looking for a big score.

Since starting 2008 with back-to-back tons, Hayden has made only 313 runs at an average of 23.

The selectors have backed him to the hilt, believing a man of his standing deserves the extra opportunities afforded.

Michael Hussey's run of outs has largely slipped under the radar. He has made only 80 runs in his past six knocks but has received more than his share of ill fortune.

His position in the side is not at all imperilled - even with two more failures - but Australia needs him to again be the reliable accumulator in the middle order.

The Proteas have seen no need to change a winning formula, keeping the same XI which has played with much distinction this series.

For years they have been haunted and taunted by the Australians, making the view at the summit all that much sweeter for them.

But they should take heed of history. Australia, under Mark Taylor, had a habit of losing dead Tests at the start of their reign.

And it takes only a few Proteas enjoying the view from the top a little bit too much for the same to happen to South Africa
42
Vote
   


The Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), the governing body for the Lord's Cricket Ground, has come out with some earth shattering revelations. No, it has nothing to do with changes in the fine print of the MCC coaching manual, or a selection of a woman as their next Chief Executive.

It is simply this that the MCC has decided to agree to host neutral Test matches at Lord's and more importantly, it has also consented to host some of the matches of the proposed Champions League! We are not alluding to the sport of soccer here; it is the extension of the Indian Premier League (IPL) that would be played between the best teams of the various T20 leagues across the world. So, a Chennai Super Kings, a Pura Milk Perth Riders, a Vodafone Londoners and an Auckland Blacks side (names are definitely fictitious!), may face off in the Champions League of Cricket, with some of the matches being played in London, more specifically at Lord’s.

The biggest issue that would be faced by the organizers – each one of them – is the lack of availability of a proper playing window under the current ICC’s FTP, which means that the only time all the Test playing nations would be shorn of an international commitment would be just after the Champions Trophy in September, and that too for a very short period of time. Squeezing in such an itinerary could take further toll on the player bodies.

But, with so much cash flowing around, the players themselves do not seem to be minding it too much, are they?
84
Vote
   



The second round of the IPL player auction has come and gone with not too many surprises. The two big named Australians to go under the hammer were James Hopes and Shane Watson - both Allrounders, both from Queensland. Hopes brilliant innings in the second final of the Commonwealth Bank series must have upped his currency in the auction. For me the surprise wasn't his US$ 300,000 price but the team that got him - he joins Brett Lee at Mohali. The team I expected to get Hopes was the team that got fellow Queensland Allrounder Shane Watson - the Jaipur Rajasthan Royals headed by Shane Warne. They spent the least on the first player auction and had more money left to spend but opted not for Hopes. Instead they went for the only English player in the draft - Dimitri Mascarenhas.

Victorian batting ace Brad Hodge has chosen to keep his commitment to Engish County side Lancastershire instead of going into the IPL player auction unlike team mates Cameron White and David Hussey.

The only other Australians to get drafted to were Western Australian and Bradman Young Cricketer of the Year Luke Pomersbach who went for US$150,000 to Mohali and Tasmanian fast bowler Brett Geeves went for US$50,000 in a surprise buy for Delhi. The March 18 is fast approaching for all the franchises to have their squads finalised.
77
Vote
   


Replacing the irreplacable

March 8th 2008 23:18
Australia in a spin trying to find the next Shane Warne
Say what you like about the man but one thing remains true about Shane Warne - he was the absolute master of his craft. He took the art of legspin bowling to a new previously unseen level and showed how a bowler could dictate terms and really be the difference in a cricket match (either test or one day).

His departure from Australian cricket left a gaping hole in the bowling line up - one that the previously all conquering Australians have not come close to filling. The heir apparent for much of Warne's career has been Stuart MacGill. The problem with him is he just doesn't bowl enough good deliveries. Sure he has some variety but he will almost always give you one or two balls each over that any self respecting batsman would gleefully dispatch to or over the boudary. Here was the true value of Warne - his ability to bowl an impeccable line and length for prolonged periods while also using all the trickery, variation and deception in his armoury. MacGill's first run as sole legspin option for Australia was a bit of a disaster with the Sri Lankan batsman taking him to the cleaners. It was then disclosed he was injured and needed surgery. He's back now but at 37 one has to wonder how much cricket he has got left to give. The other leading leg spin contender for the Australians is Bryce McGann who is 36!

At this rate I'd still say Australia's best legspinning option is Shane Warne - but with his animated likeness gyrating over Australian television screens this summer it looks like he has definitely taken up the Indian Premier League superannuation plan. Though anyone who watched that first final would have seen him in the crowd and his interview with Ian Healy showed how insightful he still is - talking about young Indian legspinner Piyush Chawla - Warne cast his analytical eye over the youngster and like what he saw. Warne talked about those traits he liked to see in a leg spin bowler - the main one being an attacking mindset and always looking to get a wicket. Warne now has a role at Cricket Australia as a spin bowling mentor. He like the rest of Australia will be hoping that a new young spinning sensation comes along.

It should be pointed out that Chawla is just 19 years old a full four years younger than when Warne made his debut!!! And almost old enough to call Stuart MacGill dad. India might have found their next bowling sensation. For Australia - the search goes on...
92
Vote
   


India has inflicted a defeat to Australia in the final game of the Commonwealth Bank one day tournament and in the process won it. It is the second time in a row the Australians have lost the finals 2-0.

Much has been made of the controversies that have plagued the summer of cricket - racism, sledging, the IPL player auction and now the tackling of a nude spectator - sometimes the actual cricket has gone unnoticed which is a shame.

India won this series because of the magnificent blend of youth and experience. There are many stalwarts of Indian cricket that have been neglected for this tournament - batsmen the calibre of Raul Dravid, Sourav Ganguly and VVS Laxman and bowlers like Zaheer Khan and Anil Kumble. But what dropping players like this means is that India has been able to blood a very very exciting generation of new, young cricket talent. The young dynamo batsmen Gautam Gambhir (26), Robin Uthappa (22) and Rohit Sharma (20) have developed under the watchful eye of master batsman Sachin Tendulkar and what a thrill it must be for those youngsters to bat with someone of that stature.

The Indian bowling has been equally blessed with new young talent - Man of the match Praveen Kumar is just 22 years old and Sreesanth is just 25 years. Irfan Pathan is 23 years old and injured find of the series Ishant Sharma is 19!! Couple those quicks with the most exciting young leg spinner in the world 19 year old Piyush Chawla and the future of indian cricket is very very bright. My only concern is 19 year olds making millions of dollars playing 20/20 but kudos to indian cricket for finding and getting those youngsters into the team.

The Australians haven't had much to be happy about since the lucky win in the Sydney test right back at the start of the year. In the one day arena they started with all guns blazing but had their form desert them at the crucial moment.

The one shining light I think it should be said was the bowling of Nathan Bracken. He has been the outstanding bowler in international one day cricket for the past few years and it was good to see him recognized as the player of the tournament. Looking back at his career it seems strange that he has never found a regular berth in the test team. With Brett Lee's express pace partnering Stuart Clark it seems to me that at this stage Bracken would be the ideal change bowler. Australia has been obsessed since th retirement of McGrath and Gillespie to find the quickest bowlers possible rather than the best. Shaun Tait and Mitchell Johnson just don't bowl accurately enough often enough and I feel that Bracken should be in the test team.

So a season of intrigue has ended and we await with some interest to see if the Indian Premier League 20/20 tournament will be the saviour of cricket or an exercise in corporate profitability.
98
Vote
   



Need to punish 'bad boy' undoes the Green and Gold

It was there to see at the SCG on Sunday night. Australia lost, the all conquering almighty team of the past two decades came crashing down and it was all due to one man. The turbinator, the man publicly named as an obnoxious weed - Harbhajan Singh brought the downfall of Australia by his mere presence.

How is this you ask? The Australians got themselves into trouble with some early poor shot selection and bad luck (Ricky Ponting underedged a pull shot that went cannoning into leg stump - two overs later Matthew Hayden did exactly the same thing but the ball missed the stumps and rolled away for a boundary).

At 3 for 24 Australia was in dire trouble when Andrew Symonds came to wicket and joined Matthew Hayden in a furious counter attack that saw them reach a 100 by the 18th over. They took the game by the scruff of the neck and shook it violently back to Australia's favour with the kind of intelligent power cricket that has been the hallmark of this team. Commentators were likening it to the world series finals of 2006 when a game down and 3 for 10 in the second game Symonds then joined by Ricky Ponting bludgeoned the Sri Lankan making 358. Hayden and Symonds had put on a hundred run partnership when the Indians then turned to Harbhajan - he hasn't been bowling particularly well of late and he didn't bowl particularly well here - BUT the two batsman at the centre of the childish schoolyard spat with the indian off spinner both decided he had to go. The thing is after they had dominated the game and got the Indians on the back foot Symonds and Hayden could quite easily have milked the bowling, taken five singles an over and just accumulated another 80 more runs then set up for a guns blazing finale with both of them past 100. BUT Harbhajan had to be taught a lesson and the two tried to arrogantly hit him out of the attack. It was an attack of stupidity that really did cost the Australians the match as the Indians settled down to chase a moderate total of 237 when they should have been chasing a much more daunting total of more than 320!

All attention will now turn to Brisbane, Australia has to win this match to stay in the final series and more importantly get back that air of invincibility. I would recommend instead of going after Harbhajan they concentrate on their own brilliant game and maybe teach him a lesson that way. To everyone else in the cricket world Harbhajan has given you the answer as to how to beat the Australians - as Arjuna Ranatunga before him, you have to beat them at their own game and really really get under their skin.

100
Vote
   


Just when you thought the whole idea of the IPL player auction couldn't get more crazy...

it has. The actual auction has taken place and is full of such bizarre contradictions and extravagent spending that you would think that there is no poverty in India and that the streets are paved with gold.

Now before we begin with the analysis of this draft let's just take a moment to consider that the all conquering Australian team are supposedly touring Pakistan during the duration of the competition meaning they would have a limited influence on the tournament.

So let's start with Andrew Symonds - the $1.47million dollat man [insert cash register noises here]. Mr Symonds has been blessed with circumstances here. The big hitting awesome fielding Australian would be the perfect 20/20 cricketer. But with Australia going on tour no one would pay that amount of money from him right? Well his own incredible stupidity actually helped up his price. He claimed that he would not go to Pakistan even if the rest of his team went as it was too dangerous. So far so good. He then went on to say that it was his undrstanding that all international tours were on an invitational basis and that he would kindly decline the Cricket Australia offer to tour. He obviously hasn't read his Cricket Australia contract and my guess on the basis of those comments is that he isn't the smartest joker in the pack (and when we are talking Australian cricketers, that's not a very smart pack to begin with). His comments were lept upon those who also can't read with glee that he would be playing in India no matter what. So Hyderabad forked out $1.47 million dollars for his talents on the assumption that he would be playing for them no matter what only to find that in his Cricket Australia contract if he refused to go to Pakistan they could (would and should) stop him playing for the mercenary money in India.

If Symonds is a little dim then perhaps he gets some of it from his captain Ricky Ponting. In a press conference after the auction Ricky P claimed he was 'dissappointed' with getting 'only $400,000 ' in the auction. He wondere why that was - maybe his poor form around the time of the auction but he wondered aloud that maybe it was the Harbhajan Singh incident at the Sydney test though he noted his international teamate at the centre of it was now Mr $1.47million. Punter did some more pontificating on the reasons - he sais he's always been good at endorsements (A fact that I cannot deny as I have seen him whore hiimself out for ads for vitamins, deodurants, cars, phones, banks, fried chicken and oils - you know what I mean). BUT RICKY, baby, DO YOU HONESTLY THINK ANYONE IS GOING TO FEEL SORRY FOR YOU BECAUSE YOU ARE ONLY GETTING $400,000 to play 40 days of cricket????? I tell you cricketers are going to get a bad name.

That is with the exception of Michael Clarke - A man who did put some level of principle above the money when he decided to spend time with family and go fishing with an aging father over the IPL. Someone has some morals. Also in that category is England's Andrew Flintoff who showed his true sportsmanship (not for the first time) by saying the England Cricket Board has always done 'alright by him'.

This is money driven madness and the stupidity of it can be seen when you take a look at young Indian fast bowler Ishant Sharma - he has played in a handful of tests and one day internationals - sure the kid shows enormous promise BUT the 19-year old has been signed up for $1.01million!!!!!!!!! Stop and think about that folks - as a 19 year old he is going to make in 40 days of cricket what some entire villages in India make in a decade!! This is insanity and someone has to stand up and speak out about it. Wouldn't it be wonderful if somoene in the IPL showed they were only playing for the love of the game by donating half of their income to charity in the developed world??? Of course this is unlikely to happen, I'd like to see a program maybe where the relative cricket boards in each country take some of the players money and re-invest it into the game. So a new generation of Pontings, Tendulkars and Jayasuriyas can come through and endorse hamburgers and high calorie soft drinks for years to come.
83
Vote
   


IPL player auction

February 21st 2008 14:21
So it's come to this

In what has to be a move for the detriment of the game cricketers are today being auctioned off to the new Indian Premier League - made up franchises, with made up uniforms playing a made up game to make cricket look and feel like football. The net result is going to be an end to international cricket.

The first thing I think you'll see go is the One Day form of the game - if you had to truncate the game of cricket then this is perfect, it takes roughly the equivalent time of a day's play at a test match and you will more often than not see 400 runs scored (and anything upto 600) in a day with plenty of wickets and great fielding. 20/20 you may if you are luck get to see the same amount of runs scored but there is little planning and stategy which means more comes down to luck and you have an equal chance of seeing a no contest. Which is far more boring than any one day match or any day of test cricket will ever be. I think this will also lead to the end of the one day cricket world cup which I would value more highly over a 20/20 world cup.

The next thing that 20/20 cricket will effect is the players - the results are already quite clear in Australia where the majority of the current playing squad have signed up - but more intriguingly, there are several recently retired players who are also signed up for this competition. My gut feeling is that the likes of Warne, McGrath and Gilchrist have taken the money and run from playing for their country - I know they will protest this but I think it's clear for all to see.

I think if cricket is to survive the ICC has to step in a regulate this form of the game - I know they have sanctioned this tournament and the IPL but with $56 million dollar sponsorship and a billion dollar TV rights package one wonders whether this is for the betterment of the game or the pockets of those involved at every level.

Personally I will try and keep away from watching this form of cricket (though being a cricket obsessive that might be difficult). My main problem with the game is it really comes down to luck and the skill of a batsman and the skill of a bowler are secondary to the manufactured excitement of seeing a ball going into or over the fence.

Today's auction will also see the end of any dignity the cricket playing community had - now reduced like farm animals at the yearling auctions the players only value will be financial, They will go chasing endorsements and advertising dollars and lose sight of why they gained that recognition in the first place - In Australia every summer we get subjected to more and more advertisements featuring cricketers, selling everything from Cars to phones, to deoderant and fried chicken. I fear we will see these clunkheads nearly 24/7 with this new competition and the further bestowing of demigod status. Anyone who has heard these players speak (especially in light of recent race controversies) should know that this is not a good idea. If I want to see badly behaved sportsmen getting payed ridiculous sums of money for a few hours entertainment then I will stick to the footy (which is at least much more entertaining than 20/20 cricket). Yes today's auction is the final resting point for the journey into money that cricket took under the guidance of the late Kerry Packer. It is a sad day for the game as 20/20 shows a complete lack of vision. Sure there will be players, officials, umpires and commentators telling you that this is definitely not the case - but they will be doing so with large bundles of cash in their pockets.
93
Vote
   


Andrew Symond stands tall

October 22nd 2007 00:04
Andrew Symonds clears the air


Andrew Symonds
The highs and lows of the sport


In a recent interview Andrew Symonds has made it clear he did not complain about rowdy racists slurs during the one-day series in India. During the seventh match in Mumbai boisterous fans were heard to chant derogatory names at the Aussie who still managed to be on the winning side at the end of the day.

Andrew Symonds batting
In action on the pitch


Emphasizing he did not wish to make and issue out of the incident he spoke to the Syndey Morning Herald stating,"Over the past couple of weeks, I have felt as though I have been put in a situation that is not of my making…I never made a complaint at any venue, but I did answer media questions asking whether I had heard the chants aimed at me in Vadodara."

That’s not to say when local authorities tried to deny the incident he wasn’t concerned, Symonds has said, “I tried to defuse the original situation by interacting with the crowd," and went on "I feel that the print and TV media have badly misrepresented my views at times over the past three matches."

Andrew Symonds
Sweet Victory


The English born adopted Aussie player comes from West Indies heritage and is acutely aware of the presence of racism in all sports. Trying to avoid the off field limelight he spoke to the Australian saying, “It is pleasing to see the authorities here in Mumbai tackling the issue following the seventh one-day match..I would much prefer the focus be on the cricket and for the cricket to be played in an atmosphere where players and spectators can enjoy a good day out, full of excitement and go home having had a great day of sport."

Andrew symonds practice
Practicing his craft


Brilliant in the field, the right handed batsman who can also bowl off spin is a strong all rounder in the squad. Managing to not lose focus on the job at hand his international profile was increased by the incident which thankfully coincided with him playing some exceptional cricket during the series.
68
Vote
   


Oracle of Delphi's Blogs

16875 Vote(s)
224 Comment(s)
162 Post(s)
399 Vote(s)
0 Comment(s)
4 Post(s)
69010 Vote(s)
435 Comment(s)
962 Post(s)
44322 Vote(s)
3344 Comment(s)
388 Post(s)
74 Vote(s)
0 Comment(s)
1 Post(s)
25274 Vote(s)
271 Comment(s)
324 Post(s)
Moderated by Oracle of Delphi
Copyright © 2012 On Topic Media PTY LTD. All Rights Reserved. Design by Vimu.com.
On Topic Media ZPages: Sydney |  Melbourne |  Brisbane |  London |  Birmingham |  Leeds     [ Advertise ] [ Contact Us ] [ Privacy Policy ]