Y DRAVID TAKE MORE
sachin's record is
here is his profile-
Full name Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar
Born April 24, 1973, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Current age 33 years 177 days
Major teams India, ACC Asian XI, Mumbai, Yorkshire
Also known as ???? ????????;
Nickname Tendlya, Little Master
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly
Height 5.05 ft
Education Sharadashram Vidyamandir School
Statsguru Test player, ODI player
Batting and fielding averages
class mat inns no runs hs ave bf sr 100 50 4s 6s ct st
Tests 132 211 22 10469 248* 55.39 35 41 41 82 0
ODIs 368 359 35 14405 186* 44.45 16773 85.88 40 73 1536 154 109 0
First-class 228 353 37 18872 248* 59.72 59 87 149 0
List A 455 444 49 17957 186* 45.46 51 91 144 0
Bowling averages
class mat balls runs wkts bbi bbm ave econ sr 4 5 10
Tests 132 3330 1893 37 3/10 3/14 51.16 3.41 90.00 0 0 0
ODIs 368 7349 6194 142 5/32 5/32 43.61 5.05 51.75 4 2 0
First-class 228 6617 3748 61 3/10 61.44 3.39 108.47 0 0
List A 455 9525 7822 189 5/32 5/32 41.38 4.92 50.39 4 2 0
Career statistics
Statsguru Tests filter | Statsguru One-Day Internationals filter
Test debut Pakistan v India at Karachi - Nov 15-20, 1989 scorecard
Last Test India v England at Mumbai - Mar 18-22, 2006 scorecard
ODI debut Pakistan v India at Gujranwala - Dec 18, 1989 scorecard
Last ODI India v England at Jaipur - Oct 15, 2006 scorecard
First-class span 1988/89 - 2005/06
List A span 1989/90 - 2006/07
Notes
Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1997
Profile
When he became the first batsman to score 50 hundreds in international cricket, Sachin Tendulkar established himself as the greatest of all Indian cricketers. Recognised by Sir Donald Bradman as his modern incarnation, Tendulkar has a skill - a genius - which only a handful have possessed. It was not a skill that he was simply born with, but one which was developed by his intelligence and an infinite capacity for taking pains. If there is a secret, it is that Tendulkar has the keenest of cricket minds. At times in a Test series he looks mortal. But he learns every lesson, picks up every cue, dominates the opposing attack sooner or later, and nearly always makes a hundred. His bravery was proved after he was hit on the head on his Test debut in Pakistan, when he was only 16; and his commitment to the Indian cause has never been in doubt. If captaincy - or rather the off-field management of men less skilled than himself - was beyond him at his first attempt, his reading of the game, and his manifold varieties of bowling, have shown the same acute intelligence. His cricket has been played in the right way too, always attacking, and because he knew that was the right way rather than because he was a child of the one-day age, as he himself modestly said. The awe of opponents was as great as that of crowds. But the finest compliment must be that bookmakers would not fix the odds - or a game - until Tendulkar was out. Surpassed Sunil Gavaskar, his guru, as the leading century-maker in Test cricket with his 35th three-figure score in November 2005.
Kapil Dev Ramlal Nikhanj (born 6 January 1959, Chandigarh), better known as Kapil Dev, is an Indian former cricketer who was regarded as one of the greatest all-rounders to have played the game. His most famous achievements were captaining India to their first and only World Cup title in 1983, and holding the record for the most Test match wickets, between 1994 and 1999. He is now retired from the game, but is still involved in the administration.
Kapil Dev was a right-arm pace bowler noted for his graceful action and potent outswinger, and was India's main strike bowler throughout most of his career. He also developed a fine inswinging yorker during the 1980s which he used very effectively against tailenders.
As a batsman he was a natural striker of the ball who could hook and drive effectively. A naturally aggressive player, he often helped India in difficult situations by taking the attack to the opposition.
His nickname was The Haryana Hurricane - he used to represent the Haryana cricket team, although he is himself a Punjabi.
Kapil made his international cricket debut against Pakistan at Faisalabad in 1978-79 and became an instant success with the Indian masses when he hit two clean sixes on his way to his first half-century in the 3rd Test of that series. When Pakistan returned for a six-Test series in 1979-80, Kapil was the man of the series and the main factor behind the 2-0 win for India. More success followed in the next season in Australia, where he helped India defend a small second-innings score at Melbourne against a formidable Australian batting line-up. He was the man of the series against England, both in the home series of 1981-82 as well as the "away" series in 1982. Following India's disastrous tour of Pakistan in 1982-83, he was appointed the captain and within a few months of taking over the captaincy, he led India to the World Cup win of 1983. His best bowling analysis of 9/83 came the same year against West Indies at Ahmedabad.
Difficult captaincy
Kapil lost the captaincy in early 1984. He regained it in March 1985 and guided India on a Test series win over England on their tour in 1986 right till the World Cup 1987 when he faced the blame for India's loss to England in the semifinal, as he holed out to deep mid-wicket triggering a collapse that led to the unexpected loss.
The captaincy period was on the whole a difficult one for him as it was mired with reports of differences with Sunil Gavaskar, as well as his own inconsistent form as a bowler.[citation needed]
[edit] Records in Test cricket
Kapil Dev's career performance graph.
Enlarge
Kapil Dev's career performance graph.
By the end of 1983, Kapil already had about 250 Test wickets in just five years and looked well on his way to becoming the greatest wicket taker ever. However, following a knee surgery in 1984, his bowling declined as he lost some of his majestic jump at the crease. He continued to be effective, if not devastating for another ten years and became the second bowler ever to take 400 wickets in Test cricket in 1991-92. In early 1994, he became the highest Test wicket taker in the world, breaking the record held by Richard Hadlee. Kapil's record was broken by Courtney Walsh in 1999. Shane Warne is the current record-holder.
Kapil is the only player to have completed the all-rounder's double of 4,000 Test runs and 400 Test wickets.
lee
Profile of bratt lee:-
Full name Brett Lee
Born November 8, 1976, Wollongong, New South Wales
Current age 29 years 355 days
Major teams Australia, New South Wales
Nickname Bing
Playing role Bowler
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast
Height 1.87 m
Relations Brother - S Lee
Statsguru Test player, ODI player
Batting and fielding averages
class mat inns no runs hs ave bf sr 100 50 4s 6s ct st
Tests 54 60 11 1033 64 21.08 1832 56.38 0 3 123 15 15 0
ODIs 140 63 25 702 57 18.47 842 83.37 0 2 33 22 34 0
Twenty20 Int. 3 2 1 58 43* 58.00 41 141.46 0 0 5 2 0 0
First-class 89 103 18 1579 79 18.57 2833 55.73 0 5 26 0
List A 169 79 33 811 57 17.63 0 2 38 0
Twenty20 3 2 1 58 43* 58.00 41 141.46 0 0 0 0
Bowling averages
class mat balls runs wkts bbi bbm ave econ sr 4 5 10
Tests 54 11098 6636 211 5/30 8/123 31.45 3.58 52.59 10 7 0
ODIs 140 7167 5592 250 5/22 5/22 22.36 4.68 28.66 11 6 0
Twenty20 Int. 3 60 72 1 1/26 1/26 72.00 7.20 60.00 0 0 0
First-class 89 17681 10180 372 7/114 27.36 3.45 47.52 16 2
List A 169 8738 6673 288 5/22 5/22 23.17 4.58 30.34 12 6 0
Twenty20 3 60 72 1 1/26 1/26 72.00 7.20 60.00 0 0 0
Career statistics
Statsguru Tests filter | Statsguru One-Day Internationals filter
Test debut Australia v India at Melbourne - Dec 26-30, 1999 scorecard
Last Test Bangladesh v Australia at Chittagong (CDS) - Apr 16-20, 2006 scorecard
ODI debut Australia v Pakistan at Brisbane - Jan 9, 2000 scorecard
Last ODI Australia v England at Jaipur - Oct 21, 2006 scorecard
Twenty20 Int. debut New Zealand v Australia at Auckland - Feb 17, 2005 scorecard
Last Twenty20 Int. South Africa v Australia at Johannesburg - Feb 24, 2006 scorecard
First-class span 1994/95 - 2005/06
List A span 1997/98 - 2006/07
Twenty20 span 2004/05 - 2005/06
Notes
Bradman Young Cricketer of the Year - 2000
Wisden Cricketer of the Year 2006
Profile
If Brett Lee were a Ferrari ... No. There is no if. He is already the fastest in the world, equal with Shoaib Akhtar at a flicker above or below 100mph, and always seems on the verge of striking a body or a wicket. At the 2003 World Cup, during which he took a ferocious hat-trick against Kenya, Lee was a polished star, while Shoaib was a novelty act. It was the same in the 2004-05 VB Series - Lee's pace was blinding; Shoaib's was hamstrung. When Lee releases the throttle and begins that smooth acceleration, the spectator stays his drinking hand. The leaping, classical delivery may produce a devastating yorker, a devilish slower ball or a young-Donald outswinger. Add a dash of peroxide, a fruity vocabulary, a trademark jump for joy, a stylish bat, a streak of sadism when bowling at tailenders, a pop group (Six And Out), and an endearing dedication to a job at a gentleman's outfitters, and you have the 21st century's first designer cricketer - not to mention a priceless pin-up boy.
While Steve Waugh unleashed him in a dramatic opening of 42 wickets in seven Tests before an elbow operation, Ricky Ponting gave Lee a blueprint for lasting success that doesn't rely solely on bouncers or yorkers. "The way that Ricky has captained my personal bowling over the last couple of years has just been brilliant," he said early in 2006. "Going back two or three years, I wasn't really sure what they wanted me to do." Lee's next statistical goals are 250 wickets and an average below 30, while status as an allrounder beckons after lifting his output to 31 an innings since his return from the wilderness in 2005.
Lee's career hasn't always been easy. He struggled against accusations of throwing, bean balls, stress fractures and other injuries, and had a strangely barren first Ashes series in 2001. Three years later he U-turned from ankle surgery, but was stuck in the pits of the dressing room as he ran drinks and sponges in nine consecutive Tests. He returned to the fold for the 2005 Ashes series and earned plaudits for his never-say-die attitude and brave performances with both bat and ball. He nearly pulled off a win for Australia with a battling 43 at Edgbaston, but his partner-in-crime Michael Kasprowicz fell at the contentious final hurdle. Andrew Flintoff's consoling of Lee seconds after the catch was 2005's defining image.
Lee's 2006 brightened further when he partnered Kasprowicz in a nail-biting win over South Africa that eased the pain of the previous near-miss. It was an important summer as he assumed the role of attack leader when Glenn McGrath first struggled for impact and then pulled out of tours to South Africa and Bangladesh to care for his sick wife. Lee moved into the position he had craved since crashing on to the Test scene with 5 for 47 against India, and he celebrated 89 international wickets for the season with lawnmower, hunting and leaping celebrations.
Cricinfo staff May 2006
LOWEST SCORE IN CRICKET
ODI # 2122
Sri Lanka in Zimbabwe, 2004, 3rd One-Day International
Zimbabwe v Sri Lanka
Harare Sports Club
25 April 2004 (50-over match)
Result: Sri Lanka won by 9 wickets
Series: Sri Lanka leads the 5-match series 3-0
Toss: Sri Lanka
Umpires: DJ Harper (Aus) and ID Robinson
TV Umpire: KC Barbour
Match Referee: MJ Procter (SA)
ODI Debuts: HMRKB Herath, MF Maharoof (SL).
Man of the Match: WPUJC Vaas
Zimbabwe innings (50 overs maximum) R M B 4 6
S Matsikenyeri run out (Herath) 4 14 12 1 0
BRM Taylor c Dilshan b Vaas 4 38 24 1 0
DD Ebrahim c Sangakkara b Fernando 7 14 10 1 0
*+T Taibu lbw b Fernando 0 1 1 0 0
E Chigumbura b Vaas 0 6 3 0 0
A Maregwede b Vaas 2 25 14 0 0
V Sibanda c Dilshan b Maharoof 4 24 15 0 0
ML Nkala not out 3 28 8 0 0
P Utseya lbw b Vaas 0 7 4 0 0
DT Hondo c Sangakkara b Maharoof 4 12 15 0 0
T Panyangara c Sangakkara b Maharoof 0 2 2 0 0
Extras (lb 3, w 4) 7
Total (all out, 18 overs, 89 mins) 35
FoW: 1-5 (Matsikenyeri, 3.2 ov), 2-18 (Ebrahim, 7.3 ov),
3-18 (Taibu, 7.4 ov), 4-18 (Taylor, 8.1 ov),
5-19 (Chigumbura, 8.4 ov), 6-27 (Maregwede, 12.3 ov),
7-27 (Sibanda, 13.4 ov), 8-28 (Utseya, 14.4 ov),
9-35 (Hondo, 17.4 ov), 10-35 (Panyangara, 17.6 ov).
Bowling O M R W
Vaas 9 4 11 4 (1w)
Fernando 6 2 18 2 (3w)
Maharoof 3 1 3 3
Sri Lanka innings (target: 36 runs from 50 overs) R M B 4 6
WS Jayantha not out 28 39 26 4 1
RP Arnold c Taibu b Hondo 6 20 20 0 0
DPMD Jayawardene not out 3 8 10 0 0
Extras (w 3) 3
Total (1 wicket, 9.2 overs, 39 mins) 40
DNB: *MS Atapattu, CRD Fernando, TM Dilshan, +KC Sangakkara,
HMRKB Herath, WPUJC Vaas, ST Jayasuriya, MF Maharoof.
FoW: 1-23 (Arnold, 4.6 ov).
Bowling O M R W
Hondo 5 0 11 1 (3w)
Panyangara 4.2 0 29 0
happy??
DUCKWORTH LEWIS METHID
You're thinking of the Duckworth-Lewis method. It is named after Frank Duckworth and Tony Lewis who devised the mathematical formula and it means a result can always be reached in a reduced overs match.
This is how it works:
For example:
A team have lost five wickets after receiving 25 of their 50 overs when rain stops play.
At this point, using the table produced by the Duckworth-Lewis method, the team's remaining resources are valued at 42.2%.
If 15 overs are then lost because of the weather, the innings will be completed after only 10 more overs.
The D/L method says that, with 10 overs left and five wickets lost, the team has 26.1% of their resources left.
To compensate for the lost overs, we must calculate the resource % lost.
This works out to 42.2 - 26.1 = 16.1.
If the team had been chasing a total of 250 runs, their new target is calculated in the following way.
Resources available at the start = 100%
Resources lost = 16.1
Resources available after rain interruption = 83.9%
Then reduce team one's score in the following way. Multiply team one's runs scored by the recalculated resources divided by the resources available at the start.
That is: 250 x 83.9/100 = 209.75.
The target is then rounded to the nearest whole number, so the team batting second would be set a target of 210 to win.
Simple!
Source(s):
See http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/cricket/... for more details
DRAVID CARRIER
Details about Rahul Dravid are given below:
Full name : Rahul Sharad Dravid
.
Nick Name : The Wall
Date of Birth : 11.01.1973
Place of Birth : Indore, Madhya Pradesh.
Batting Style : Right Hand Batsman
Test Debut : Against England from 20.06.1996 to
24.06.1996 at Lords.
Last Test : Against West Indies from 30.06.2006 to
02.07.2006 at Kingston.
One Day Debut : Against Sri Lanka at Singapore on
03.04.1996
Last ODI : Against Australia at Chandigarh
on 29.10.2006
TEST MATCHES RECORD:
------------------------------...
Number of Test Matches : 104.
Total runs scored : 9049
Highest Score : 270
Strike record : 42.24
Centuries : 23
Half Centuries : 46
oONE DAY RECORDS:
------------------------------...
Matches : 300
Runs scored : 9681
Highest score : 153
Strike Rate : 70.50
Centuries : 12
Half Centuries : 72
PROFILE:
----------------
Rahul Dravid, a cricketer who seamlessly blends an old-world classicism with a new-age professionalism, is the best No. 3 batsman to play for India - and might even be considered one of the best ever by the time his career is done. He already averages around 60 at that position, more than any regular No. 3 batsman in the game's history, barring Don Bradman. Unusually for an Indian batsman, he also averages more overseas - around 60, again - than at home. But impressive as his statistics are, they cannot represent the extent of his importance to India, or the beauty of his batsmanship.
When Dravid began playing Test cricket, he was quickly stereotyped as a technically correct player capable of stonewalling against the best attacks - his early nickname was 'The Wall' - but of little else. As the years went by, though, Dravid, a sincere batsman who brought humility and a deep intelligence to his study of the game, grew in stature, finally reaching full blossom under Sourav Ganguly's captaincy. As a New India emerged, so did a new Dravid: first, he put on the wicketkeeping gloves in one-dayers, and transformed himself into an astute finisher in the middle-order; then, he strung together a series of awe-inspiring performances in Test matches, as India crept closer and closer to their quest of an overseas series win.
Dravid's golden phase began, arguably, in Kolkata 2001, with a supporting act, when he made 180 to supplement VVS Laxman's classic effort of 281 against Australia. But from then on, Dravid became India's most valuable player, saving them Tests at Port Elizabeth, Georgetown and Trent Bridge, winning them Tests at Headlingley, Adelaide, Kandy and Rawalpindi. At one point during this run, he carved up four centuries in successive innings, and hit four double-centuries in the space of 15 Tests, including in historic away-wins at Adelaide, Rawalpindi and Jamaica. As India finished off the 2004 Pakistan tour on a winning note, on the back of Dravid's epic 270, his average crept past Sachin Tendulkar's - and it seemed no aberration.
Dravid's amazing run was no triumph of substance over style, though, for he has plenty of both. A classical strokeplayer who plays every shot in the book, he often outscores team-mates like Tendulkar and Laxman in the course of partnerships with them, and while his pulling and cover-driving is especially breathtaking, he has every other shot in the book as well. He is both an artist and a craftsman, repeatedly constructing innings that stand out not merely for the beauty of their execution, but for the context in which they come. By the time he entered his 30s, Dravid was already in the pantheon of great Indian batsmen, alongside Tendulkar and Sunil Gavaskar. In October 2005, he was appointed captain the one-day side, began with a thumping 6-1 hammering of Sri Lanka in a home series, and was soon given responsibility of the Test side as well, taking over from the controversy-shrouded Sourav Ganguly. After two disappointing defeats to Pakistan and England, Dravid masterminded a historic series win in the West Indies, the first since 1970-71. What else could he achieve? Anything.
If you want to have more details about him, please visit the following websites:
http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/india/co...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/rahul_dravi...