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বুধবার, ৩০ মার্চ, ২০১১

Sachin eyes glory in Mumbai

tanvir ১১:৩৩ PM


India's Sachin Tendulkar led a charmed life to hit a crucial 85 in Wednesday's semifinal win against Pakistan before targetting his first World Cup title in front of his home fans in Mumbai.
Tendulkar was dropped four times in his man of the match innings to anchor India to 260-9 against their arch-rivals before his team's bowlers applied the pressure and the brakes to secure a 29-run win in the hotly-anticipated clash.
"The final in Mumbai will be a fantastic occasion. We will focus on the job in hand and try to get the job done," said Tendulkar of Saturday's title match against Sri Lanka.
Tendulkar again missed out on making 100 international centuries but has the satisfaction of having played in all five of India's World Cup wins over Pakistan.
Now he hopes to be at the forefront of Saturday's campaign where India will look to capture a second World Cup title, 28 years after their first and only triumph.
"It's always memorable to play against Pakistan and to be on the winning side five times against them is a memory I will always cherish.
"But it was a brilliant effort in the field and by the bowlers. When we batted we had to make sure we got a fighting total. I thought 310 or 315 would have been a good par score.
"Then the ball started stopping and spinning and something closer to 270 was par."
India skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who won the toss and batted, said it was important to treat the slowing PCA Stadium pitch -- and the Pakistan attack for whom left-arm seamer Wahab Riaz grabbed five wickets -- with respect.
"We got off to a fantastic start through Virender Sehwag and Sachin (48 runs in 5.5 overs) but as the game progressed the wicket got slower, and in the middle overs it was difficult to score," said Dhoni.
"It was important to just play the bowling with respect. 260 was a good score for this pitch. It was turning. We read the wicket wrong and that's why we went with three seamers, but in the end the seamers bowled really well too.
"We don't have bowlers who can bowl 140mph plus, overall we rely on deception - change of length, line and pace."
Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi admitted his team had missed their chances to dismiss Tendulkar who was dropped on 27, 45, 70 and 81 in a butter-fingered fielding performance.
"I'd like to congratulate the Indian team and the Indian nation for this great victory, and wish them all the best for the final," he said.
"We missed some opportunities and they played better than us. We didn't make partnerships and we played some irresponsible shots.
"I want to say sorry to my nation - we tried our level best."
India off-spinner Harbhajan Singh, who took 2-43, said the semi-final would have made a great title match.
"This was like a final. Whenever India and Pakistan play the pressure is always double. It was a big match for us and for them," he said.
"We bowled and fielded well and I think we deserved to win. We played good overall cricket. I am looking forward to going to Mumbai and playing in the final."

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রবিবার, ২৭ মার্চ, ২০১১

Ponting mulling his future

tanvir ৮:১৩ PM

ICC Cricket World Cup 2011

Ponting mulling his future


Ricky Ponting said on Sunday he will decide his international future over the next few days, but insisted he still has a lot to offer Australian cricket

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Taylor dreams big

tanvir ৮:০৬ PM

ICC Cricket World Cup 2011

Taylor dreams big

New Zealand batsman Ross Taylor pulls a ball while batting in the nets during the team's practice session in Colombo yesterday, ahead of tomorrow's semifinal clash against Sri Lanka. Photo: AFP
Moments after Daniel Vettori had enacted the last act of their disastrous Bangladesh tour (the series-ending press conference) in October, a fellow journalist quipped that New Zealand could end up losing everything before the World Cup but like the Germans in the football World Cup (twelve times semifinalists), they would be in the semifinals come what may.
New Zealand lost 4-0 to Bangladesh in October, conceded the next two one-day and Test series in India and at home to Pakistan but on Tuesday, they will be the only team outside the sub-continent to be in the last four.
At the P Sara Oval Ground here in Colombo, New Zealand's appearance was as improbable as it was for anyone finding out that Sir Don Bradman's only appearance in the sub-continent was at this very venue. But call it luck or the “John Wright effect”, Vettori's men have made it to their country's sixth semifinal in the World Cup after 1975, 1979, 1992, 1999 and 2007.
One might say that New Zealand were fortunate to face South Africa in a knockout game or that Wright's appointment was vital, but only the most optimistic, like that reporter in Mirpur, would have thought of this day.
“We are proud of our history of making semifinals. This team would like to make history and go the furthest and into the final. We genuinely believe we can do that and we want to make it on Tuesday,” said Ross Taylor after New Zealand's training yesterday.
Wright was keen to stress on unity more than his appointment as the New Zealand coach as the reason behind this sudden (but hardly surprising) rise into the semifinals.
“I think it is teamwork more than anything else. We often have to play against teams with higher quality bowling and batting so we have to rely on teamwork,” said Wright.
The team's No 1 batsman at the moment, Taylor, added that it was the experience in these conditions since October that really helped their cause in this campaign. Be it the heat, the turning slow tracks or the opposition, New Zealand spent most time in the sub-continent than even India before the World Cup began. Though they lost everything in sight, the Black Caps' underdog status became more firm as, according to Taylor, teams started to take the team even more lightly.
“We didn't play as well as we'd have liked but there was belief in the team. We knew we could win. I don't think a lot of other people gave us a chance. It probably made other teams take us lightly than they did normally. That played into our hands,” said Taylor.
“We had full belief. We didn't play as well as we'd have liked back then. We are learning from our mistakes. I believed we could have come this far,” he added.
Taylor, who blasted a 124-ball 132 against Pakistan in the first round in an aggressive display only a few have shown in this tournament, said that the match's magnanimity puts both New Zealand and Sri Lanka in equal footing ahead of the game, though he believed they carried momentum from their surprising 49-run win over South African at the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium in Mirpur. “It is a sudden death game. We will take a lot of confidence from our last game against South Africa. We have the advantage of playing against Sri Lanka in the preliminary stages and we did a few things wrong. Hopefully we can rectify that,” he said.
Taylor and the Kiwis arrived in Sri Lanka on Saturday evening but the batsmen in the Black Caps camp took heart from Jonathan Trott's 86 and especially the way he tackled the home team's trump card. “I saw bits of it but not the whole game. We can take some positives out of that. I think the way Trott batted was something we can take a leaf out of with our bat. The way they played Murali, because obviously he's a big factor in the way Sri Lanka beat us in the last match,” said Taylor.
Unlike Germany in football, New Zealand have been the perennial underdogs in this sport but have continuously defied odds (small population, injuries, etc) over the years. Taylor confirmed that it is a tag they enjoy.
“Most of the time New Zealand plays, we are the underdogs. It is something that we almost enjoy and we expect when we play it. Lot of teams expects to beat us and we enjoy the underdog tag,” he said.

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রবিন্দ্র সঙ্গীত

tanvir ১:৩৯ AM


আমি কান পেতে রই
আমি কান পেতে রই
ও আমার আপন হৃদয় গহন দারে
বারে বারে কান পেতে রই
কোন গোপন বাশির কান্না হাসির গোপন কথা শুনি
বারে বারে কান পেতে রই
ভ্রমর সেথা হয় বিভাগী
নিভিতো নীল পদ্ম লাগিরে-
কোন রাতের পাখি গায় একাকী সঙ্গীবিহীন অন্ধকারে
বারে বারে কান পেতে রই
কে সে মোর কিবা জানে
কিছু তার দেখি আভা
কিছু পাই অনুমানে
কিছু তার দেখি না আবার ।।

কে সে মোর কিবা জানে
কিছু তার দেখি আভা
কিছু পাই অনুমানে
কিছু তার দেখি না আবার ।।
মাঝে মাঝে তার বারতা
আমার ভাষা পায় কি কথা রে-
ও সে আমায় জানি পাঠায় বানী
গানের টানে লুকিয়ে তারে
বারে বারে কান পেতে রই
আমি কান পেতে রই আমি কান পেতে রই

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শুক্রবার, ২৫ মার্চ, ২০১১

সবাইকে মহান স্বাধীনতা দিবসের শূভেচ্চা

tanvir ১০:৪০ PM


আজ উত্তাল অগ্নিঝরা ২৬ শে মার্চ। জাতির জনক বঙ্গবন্ধু শেখ মুজিবুর রহমানের স্বাধীনতার ডাকে মুক্তিকামী জনতা স্বাধীনতার যুদ্ধে অকাতরে ঝাপিয়ে পড়ে। স্বাধীনতার জন্যে মুক্তিকামী মানুষ মৃত্যুকে পায়ে দলেছিল। বাঙালির চেতনায় ২৬ শে মার্চ তাই শাশ্বত অমলিন এক অধ্যায়।

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