The Buzz

Bangladesh fans lose their cool

The innings-and-129 run defeat to South Africa was not taken too well by Bangladeshi supporters in Bloemfontein

The innings-and-129 run defeat to South Africa was not taken too well by Bangladeshi supporters in Bloemfontein. Bangladesh have had a dismal tour so far - they lost the ODIs 3-0 - and the fans lost their cool as the team boarded their bus on Saturday.
The Daily Star reported the players were greeted by abusive fans, and Mashrafe Mortaza, the vice-captain, lost his calm. He got into a verbal tiff with the supporters, and a few other players joined in. However, things were brought under control soon enough.
"They actually used abusive words and some of our players also reacted as they were also frustrated after the defeat. It's nothing so big," Mohammad Ashraful, the Bangladesh captain, said. "We watched the match sacrificing many things but it was frustrating the way they performed and some players' behaviour was also frustrating," said a supporter.
Full post
Wristy business

Manoj Prabhakar, the former India medium-pace bowler, believes Australia's fast bowlers need to adjust their wrist positions to produce the sort of reverse swing that is necessary to be effective on Indian wickets.

Jamie Alter
Jamie Alter
25-Feb-2013
Manoj Prabhakar, the former India medium-pace bowler, believes Australia's fast bowlers need to adjust their wrist positions to produce the sort of reverse swing that is necessary to be effective on Indian wickets.
Prabhakar, to whom swing came naturally, felt the Australian pace bowlers were naturally inclined towards achieving bounce and seam as opposed to swing. "If you don't know how to seam the ball you cannot survive in Australia, if you do not know how to swing the ball you cannot survive on the subcontinent," he said. "Their wrist position is not good enough to get late reverse swing," he said. They can seam the ball, they can get reverse swing, but not late swing. Unless you swing it late, reverse swing is not useful."
Prabhakar had served as Delhi's bowling coach last year and worked with a raw Ishant Sharma. "Initially when I met him he was not swinging the ball, he only had a leg cutter because he was hitting the deck hard and holding the ball very tight," Prabhakar said."Now he is doing wonders, because he is holding the ball really loose with the fingers and he is snapping the wrist. That is the main reason why the Indians are getting more swing than the Australians."
Ishant leads the wicket-taking tally in the Test series with 11 in two games, so Prabhakar has a point.
Full post

Showing 1341 - 1350 of 1365