Cricket – Former Stars Set to play on Ice at St Moritz

St Morits, Switzerland – A unique 2-day cricket event set against the backdrop of Swiss mountains is set to take place in Switzerland. The event includes two matches in 2 days. Lake St. Mortiz freezes into an extremely thick layer of ice which then gets covered by the soft falling snow, enabling the lake to withstand more than 200 tons of weight. So, Vijay Singh, CEO, VJ Sports saw this as an opportunity for some cricket near the alps. Two teams, Badrutt’s Palace DIAMONDS and ROYALS are set to take on each other.

Ice-cricket-Afridi-shoaib at St Moritz

The teams will feature former stars like:
Shahid Afridi, Virender Sehwag, Mohammad Kaif, Mahela Jayawardene, Lasith Malinga, Shoaib Akhtar, Michael Hussey, Graeme Smith, Jacques Kallis, Daniel Vettori, Nathan McCullum, Grant Elliot, Monty Panesar, Owais Shah, Tilakratne Dilshan & Ajit Agarkar.

Traditional cricketing gear, including the red-ball will be used but players will don sports shoes instead of spikes.

Cricket – Pakistan blind players await UAE visa for world cup

By Muhammad Asif Khan

Karachi – In an unprecedented development, the Pakistan team took the field without five of their main players against the arch-rival, India in a game of the ongoing Blind World Cup in Ajman, UAE. (Click here for video message from Sultan Shah President, PBCC)

Blind Cricket World Cup 2018 trophy

Terming the situation disappointing the president of the Pakistan Blind Cricket Council (PBCC), Sultan Shah urged the relevant quarters to resolve the issue at the earliest.

“We have been facing a lot of hardship in acquiring visa for our players despite untiring efforts, the situation is indeed disappointing. Apart from Pakistan, four Bangladesh players have also failed to get the UAE visa thus far”, Sultan Shah said

Badar Munir, Riyasat Khan, Sajid Nawaz, Mohsin Khan and Rashid failed to get UAE visa to travel to Ajman so far.

Pakistan Blind Cricket team

“Our staff has been in the UAE since January 2nd and in touch with relevant UAE authorities but to no avail so far. The treatment with the national heroes is embarrassing to say the least”, Sultan Shah added 

The fifth edition of the Blind Cricket World Cup is underway from January 8th in Pakistan and United Arab Emirates. Six teams including hosts Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka,

Bangladesh, Australia and Nepal are featuring in the tournament with the final match is scheduled to be played in Lahore on January 21st.

India, after refusing to travel to Pakistan, are playing their matches in Ajman, UAE.

“I appeal to both UAE and Pakistan governments to look into the matter on urgent basis”, Sultan Shah concluded

@mak_asif on twitter.

Yusuf Pathan gets banned of 5 months for doping

Yusuf Pathan was punished with a back-dated ban of 5 months on Tuesday for a doping violation. Significantly, his ban will end on January 14, having started on August 15 last year. The 35-year-old was banned after he inadvertently ingested a prohibited substance, which can be commonly found in cough syrups.

Thereby, Pathan will be available for the Indian Premier League (IPL) players’ auction on January 27 and 28 after not being retained by the Kolkata Knight Riders.

The Baroda cricketer had provided a urine sample as part of the Board of Control for Cricket in India’s (BCCI) anti-doping testing programme during a domestic Twenty20 competition on March 16, 2017, in New Delhi.

Yusuf Pathan

His sample was subsequently tested and found to contain Terbutaline, which is a specified substance and is prohibited both in & out of competition in the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) prohibited list of substances.

“On October 27, 2017, Mr Pathan was charged with the commission of an Anti-Doping Rule Violation (ADRV) under the BCCI Anti-Doping Rules (ADR) Article 2.1 and provisionally suspended pending determination of the charge,” said a BCCI statement on Tuesday.

“Mr Pathan responded to the charge by admitting the ADRV and asserting that it was caused by his ingestion of a medication containing Terbutaline that had been mistakenly given to him instead of the medication prescribed for him, which did not contain any prohibited substance.”

In his response, Pathan released a statement saying that he was confident of being cleared of deliberate usage and vowed to be more careful in future.

“Competing for India and my home state Baroda has been a matter of immense pride and encouragement for me and I would never act in any manner to bring my motherland or Baroda, in any kind of disrepute,” Pathan said.

“In hindsight, I should have been more careful and checked the status of the medications with BCCI’s dedicated anti-doping helpline.”

BCCI statement

The BCCI gave details of the violation adding that they are satisfied with Pathan’s explanation.

“The BCCI is satisfied with Mr Pathan’s explanation that he had taken Terbutaline inadvertently to treat an Upper Respiratory Tract Infection (URTI) and not as a performance-enhancing drug. Having considered all of the evidence and taken expert external advice, the BCCI has accepted Mr Pathan’s explanation of the cause of his ADRV, and on that basis has agreed that a period of ineligibility of five months should apply, together with the disqualification of certain results,” said the BCCI statement.

“Under BCCI ADR Article 10.10.3, Mr Pathan is entitled to the full credit against that period of ineligibility for the provisional suspension that he has been serving since 28 October 2017. In addition, there is discretion under BCCI ADR Article 10.10.2 to back-date the start date of the period of ineligibility still further on account of Mr Pathan’s prompt admission of his ADRV upon being confronted with it by the BCCI, and under BCCI ADR Article 10.10.1 on account of the delays in the results management in this case that are not attributable to Mr Pathan. In all of the circumstances, the five-month period of ineligibility will be deemed to have started to run on 15 August 2017 and end at midnight on 14 January 2018.”

Pathan has played 57 ODIs and 22 T20s for India and has represented Rajasthan Royals and Kolkata Knight Riders in the Indian Premier League (IPL).

Philander takes six as South Africa beat India in first test

CAPE TOWN – Seamer Vernon Philander took career-best figures as rampant South Africa claimed a 72-run victory over India on a gripping fourth day of the first test on Monday.

 

Set 208 for victory, India were skittled out for 135 in 42.4 overs in their second innings on a lively wicket with Philander the chief destroyer, recording figures of 6-42 for his first five-wicket haul in tests since 2013.

Philandar South Africa

India had looked to seize control of the test when they bowled South Africa out for 130 in the morning session, but found the home attack on the seamer-friendly wicket too much of a challenge.

After day three had been a washout, 18 wickets fell in 64 overs on Monday, all going to seamers.

South Africa resumed on 65 for two, but were only able to double their score before they lost their last eight wickets.

4 Cricketers In Jammu And Kashmir Arrested For ‘Respecting’ Pakistan National Anthem

SRINAGAR: Four Kashmiri cricketers were arrested on Sunday in Jammu and Kashmir’s Bandipora district for lining up as Pakistan’s national anthem was played before the start of a cricket match.

After a video went viral showing the players’ conduct in Arin village before the start of the match, police arrested the four.

pakistan-flag-wallpapers

Police said they were looking for the organisers of the match who arranged the shooting of the video.

In 2016 too, a video went viral showing local cricketers line up to “salute” Pakistan’s national anthem before the start of a match in Ganderbal district.

Police had arrested some of the boys then but they were let off after assurances from the parents.

India blind cricketers to play in UAE amid tensions with Pakistan

Dubai : The Indian blind cricket team left for the United Arab Emirates today to take part in the World Cup after failing to secure permission to play in neighbouring Pakistan.

The fifth edition of the tournament starts Sunday and ends on January 21, with Australia and the West Indies also to be based in UAE due to security concerns.

India had been due to play archrivals Pakistan, who they beat in the 2014 Blind Cricket World Cup final, in Faisalabad on Monday.

India Blind cricket team
But instead Pakistan has arranged for India’s games to be played in Ajman and Sharjah in the UAE because of tense relations between the nuclear-armed countries.

The fifth edition of the tournament starts Sunday and ends on January 21, with Australia and the West Indies also to be based in UAE due to security concerns.

The Cricket Association for the Blind in India (CABI) told AFP it had to make the last-minute schedule change because the Indian government did not respond to its request for permission to go to Pakistan.

“We are yet to receive any official communication from them. Till they write to us we are not allowed to go. So all our matches are shifted to Dubai (Ajman),” CABI president G K Mahantesh said.

“If we reach the final then it will be shifted from Lahore to Sharjah,” he said late Friday before leaving with the team.

Pakistan Blind Cricket Council (PBCC) expressed disappointment over the Indian foreign ministry’s silence on the event.

India and Pakistan’s senior cricket teams have not played a bilateral series since 2013 because of the tense political climate.

However Pakistan’s blind cricket team travelled to India for last year’s inaugural Twenty20 World Cup that was won by the host nation.

India won the 50-over World Cup for the Blind in 2014 in Cape Town, beating Pakistan in the final.

AFP

Pakistan Don’t Need to Beg India to Play Cricket: Javed Miandad

Karachi: Ex Pakistan’s captain and legend batsman Javed Miandad has called on Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) to forget about playing India in the near future and instead focus on improving the game’s structure.

“They don’t want to play with us so be it. Our cricket will not die if we don’t play with India. We should move on and forget about them,” Miandad told the media at a function in Karachi.
The veteran of 124 Tests said there was no need for the PCB to “beg” the BCCI for bilateral matches.
Javed Miandad
“They haven’t played against us since the last 10 years, so what? Has our cricket gone down? no we have done well. The Champions Trophy win is an example. Cricket cannot die in Pakistan. We have also survived without international cricket at home since 2009,” he pointed out.

India and Pakistan have not played bilateral cricket since 2012 owing to political tensions between the two countries after the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks. The former captain urged the PCB to manage its finances better.

“Today the PCB is financially stable but there is a need for proper accountability of where the money that comes from the ICC is spent.

“There is a need to reduce the administrative expenses of the board and get rid this army of advisors, consultants and employees. The PCB can easily function without paying such heavy salaries to an over-sized staff,” he said.

PCB will decide if Pakistan will go to India or not for Asia Cup: Najam Sethi

Karachi: Asia Cup cricket tournament 2018 has been hit by one controversy after another, which has put the future of the tournament, which is scheduled to be hosted in India in September next year, in doubt.

Rumours started doing rounds that Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) will opt out of hosting the tournament all together, stating the central Government’s cautious approach in the recent past to have Pakistani cricketers play in the country.

Pakistan Cricket Board has hit back saying that they can too exercise their ‘right’ to to pull out of the 2018 Asia Cup. Earlier in October, representatives from India and Bangladesh were absent from the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) meeting in Lahore, after they had raised an issue to Pakistan hosting the Emerging Teams Asia Cup, which will be held in April 2018.

PCB chairman Najam Sethi said that Pakistan too is concerned about their Government’s approval to travel to India for the continental showpiece.

“I also raised the point that since the BCCI is still awaiting an approval from the government to hold the Asia Cup and wants the visa clearance of all the participating teams, the PCB will decide whether to go to India or not because we are also bound by our government’s clearance,” Sethi told media.

“The ACC Development Committee head and Sri Lanka Cricket chairman Thilanga Sumathipala tried to convince India and Bangladesh that they were also invited to attend the meeting [in Lahore] but they did not come. So the committee, with majority members’ votes, went on to make the decision in favour of Pakistan,” Sethi added.

In 2014, both BCCI and PCB had signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) which stated that the two countries would play six bilateral series between 2015 and 2023.

According to the 2014 agreement, India was scheduled to play six series against Pakistan, four of them were going to be Pakistan’s home series.

While the BCCI has repeatedly snubbed Pakistan’s request for resumption of ties, the PCB wants its Indian counterpart to honour its commitment under the MoU signed, which is subjected to clearance from the Government of India.

Pakistan was expected to generate bulk of revenue in these eight years by hosting India, but since BCCI denied playing the series in wake of tensions between the two countries, the PCB suffered huge financial losses due to it.

Earlier this year, the BCCI had rejected the PCB’s demand for compensation for not honouring the MoU, saying that the MoU was not binding and also raised the issue of security problems in Pakistan.

In May, the PCB had sent a legal notice to its Indian counterpart for failing to honour the MoU.

“If Pakistan wins the case, India will have to give us the matches and for that purpose the Future Tours Programme (FTP) will be changed. And if we lose, the same FTP with some minor changes may go ahead,” Sethi said on Wednesday.

Earlier, the PCB had maintained that they would only approve the new FTP proposed by the International Cricket Council (ICC) after the dispute with India over resumption of bilateral series is resolved.

The 14th edition of the Asia Cup will be held from September 15 to 30, 2018 in India.

Cricket – Former Pakistan and Indian U19 CWC stars urge players to seize opportunities

Dubai: India and Pakistan have traditionally done well in the ICC U19 Cricket World Cups, having reached the final five times each in an event that is acknowledged as a stepping stone in the development of all participants – players and match officials.

Pakistan made the final of the inaugural edition in 1988 and are the only side to have won back-to-back titles when the Sarfraz Ahmed-led side defeated India in the 2006 final to follow up their 2004 victory. Pakistan also made the final in 2010 and 2014. On the other hand, India have won titles in 2000, 2008 and 2012 while also playing the final in 2016 when the Windies won their first title.

Pakistan’s former captain Inzamam-ul-Haq is all praise at the opportunity that the U19 CWC provides while the likes of India opener Shikhar Dhawan, Chinaman bowler Kuldeep Yadav and Pakistan all-rounder Imad Wasim too have fond remembrances from their time at the tournament.

India players reflect on the U19 CWC:

Shikhar Dhawan (played in 2004): “The under-19 Cricket World Cup is a great platform for youngsters as they get an early feel of international cricket. The tournament provides players the opportunity to not just iron out their flaws but also to understand how things pan out in top tournaments.

“I feel this tournament has gained in importance over the years with so many players prospering after doing well in the tournament. Look around and you will see that a number of players in each international side figured in past Under-19 World Cups. I have some great memories from the tournament since I was the leading scorer and player of the tournament in 2004. The tournament helped me gain in confidence and prepare better for senior cricket.”

Ravindra Jadeja (played in 2006 and 2008): “I think everyone appreciates the importance of this tournament, which brings together the best junior cricketers from around the world. It is a great learning ground and helps players comprehend what international cricket is all about.

 “For me, this tournament will always remain special since I was part of the team that won it in 2008 under Virat Kohli. Virat has since gone on to become one of the best batsmen of his generation and also a successful captain.”

Kuldeep Yadav (played in 2014): “I was wicket-less against Pakistan in the first game…I got a hat-trick against Scotland which was really important for me and for the team as well. Later on I performed well in remaining matches. Now (I also have a hat-trick) against Australia, never dreamed of taking a hat-trick against a side like Australia. I’m now with two hat-tricks – one in the U19 World Cup and one in ODI matches.

“It’s a big stage to represent your country, you will get a lot of publicity. It is obviously important to perform well in the U19 World Cup. Later on you can develop your skills for the future and to play for the senior team. Enjoy, play hard and believe in yourself.”

Pakistan players reflect on the U19 CWC:

Imad Wasim (played in 2006 and 2008): “As a young player it is a great learning curve. To play in front of 10 thousand, 15 thousand people – plus it was live on television – so as a young cricketer it was a great experience, gave me a lot of confidence when I played for Pakistan later on.

“In 2006, we won the Under 19 World Cup and that was the best and biggest memory for us. Under-19 cricket is so important – the confidence takes you into first-class cricket and you keep developing there. We are all friends, there is no rivalry. I played with Virat (Kohli), (Ravindra) Jadeja, (Wayne Parnell), Tim Southee, (Kane) Williamson, (Steve) Smith, they were all in our batch and they were fantastic players.”

Inzamam-ul-Haq (played in 1988): “I’d advise all players in the U19 World Cup to go out, enjoy the tournament and try to do their very best. At the age of 17 or 18, the experiences that you gather are never forgotten. That kind of experience does not come again. Players learn a lot, which can’t be done from any other source.

inzamam-1

“My base is the U19 World Cup. We lost in the final in 1998 (to Australia) but got an idea of international cricket. The earlier you get that experience, the better the grooming is. There was a lot to learn for us – Mushtaq (Ahmed), Aaqib (Javed), Shahid Anwar, Zohar Ali, Shakeel Khan, all who went on to play for Pakistan. There were also others who could not play for Pakistan but did very well in domestic cricket.”

Shadab Khan (played in 2016): “All teams have potential international players. If you perform well, lots of doors open for you in your country. Pressure situations come – you are playing against the best from other countries. They are all good, so you have to show your worth. In my first match, I took five wickets in four overs against Afghanistan.

“I feel very nice to meet the (present) Under 19 players. I’ve also gone through this level. My message for players is – don’t take pressure, your skills will help you, don’t worry about the result.”

 

Pakistan won Silver in Asian men’s Netball Championship, Gold goes to India

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia – Mudassar Arain, President, Pakistan Netball Federation (PNF) has informed that 5th day of Asian Men’s Netball Championship 2017, the following matches were played for 3rd Position and Grand Final Match.
Final match was played between Pakistan and India teams. After trilling finish India won the match by 51-50 goals and secured 1st position, while Pakistan got silver medal in this mega event. Pakistan dominate in first three quarters by scoring, 13-11(1st Quarter), 25-23 (2nd Quarter), 40-36 (3rd Quarter) and finish the last quarter by 51-50 goals in favor of India.
Pakistan Netball team
3rd Position match was played between Singapore and Malaysia team. Singapore the won by 50-48 goals and secured 3rd position.
Pakistan Netball team will coming back to the Karachi Airport at 3:30 pm on Monday.
Zafar Iqbal Awan, Chairman, PNF, Mudassar Arain, President, PNF and Muhammad Riaz Secretary, PNF congratulation to Pakistan Netball team for winning Silver medal in Asian netball Championship 2017.

In what can be considered a thrilling encounter, the Indian national netball team has managed to overcome arch-rivals Pakistan in the finals of the Asian Netball Championships by the narrowest of margins.

The Indian side ended up victors by a scoreline of 51-50 and hence beat Pakistan, closing out brilliantly to lift the coveted trophy. India have never before won the tournament, making this particular victory against their bitter rivals even sweeter.

The encounter was held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and the round robin format pitted India against Pakistan earlier on in the competition as well where Pakistan were victorious.

India were not considered big favourites to achieve victory in the tournament, but battled it out across various stages of the competition to finally reach the final. Of all the Asian teams involved in the tournament, Pakistan led the way comprehensively with a total of 16 points and a win over India. India were second overall with 13 points, their defeat coming at the hands of their arch-rivals.

In the final, however, the tables turned and India put in a spirited performance till the very end where they held their nerve and managed to scrape through and realise a famous win against their age-old rivals.

Hockey and cricket generally come to mind when an Indo-Pak sporting rivalry is mentioned but this time Netball grabbed all attention.