Showing posts with label World Cup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World Cup. Show all posts

Sunday, July 27, 2008

AFC Challenge Cup’08- Team Profile: India

The History India is most frequently associated with the sport of cricket but any expedition into the nation would reveal that football is rapidly encrypting itself into the people’s DNA. Not that football is something new for the Indians. India qualified (by default, after their opponents withdrew) for the 1950 World Cup but since the players did not wear football boots, they were not allowed to participate in the competition by FIFA. Although India have since then never come even remotely close to qualifying for the football World Cup, they have established themselves as one of the giants in South Asian football. India finished in an enviable fourth pace at the 1956 Melbourne Olympics and won the gold medal at the 1962 Asian Games. That was the golden period in Indian football as the national team reached the semi-finals of the next two Asian games. India also finished runners-up in the Asian Cup in 1964. The nation then agonizingly went through a barren patch but the nation managed to rise to the surface in the 1990s. India won the South Asian Football Federation Cup in 1993, 1997 and 1999 and then again in 2005 and finished runners-up in 1995 and 2008. India won the Nehru Cup in 2007 and reached the quarter-finals in the AFC Challenge Cup in 2006. India also won the LG Cup in Vietnam in 2002 under Stephen Constantine. The Indian national football team is affectionately termed as the Bhangra Boys. The squad is also known as the Wonder Boys and in recent times have come to be acknowledged as the Men In Blue(because of the blue colour of their shirt). At the moment India are ranked 153 in the world. The Squad Goalkeepers: Subrata Pal, Subhashish Chowdhary, Arindam Bhattacharya. Defenders: Surkumar Singh, Mahesh Gawli, Deepak Mondal, Anwar Ali, Gouramangi Singh, Syed Nabi, Sameer Naik Midfielders: N P Pradeep, Climax Lawrence, Renedy Singh, Clifford Miranda, Krishnan Ajayan, Mehrajuddin Wadoo, Bungo Singh, Steven Dias Strikers: Bhaichung Bhutia, Sunil Chhetri, Abhishek Yadav, Tarif Ahmed, Sushil Kumar Singh Key Players Subrata Pal: India boast of one of the most capable goalkeepers in the AFC Challenge Cup’08 in Subrata Pal. He is currently the number one both for India and for his club Kingfisher East Bengal. Pal is known for his sharp reflexes and aggression and was one of the best players at the Nehru Cup 2007. Deepak Kumar Mondal: Deepak Mondal is a rock in the defence for India and is one of the best in the nation. The Mohun Bagan defender is expected to be at his best for India in the competition. Mahesh Gawli: Mahesh Gawli plays as a defender and the Dempo star has to remain strong as ever in front of the Indian citadel for his team to progress far in the competition. Climax Lawrence: Dempo midfielder Climax Lawrence is one of the best medios for India and shall be in starting line-up. He is a very responsible player who can be intelligently effective. Naduparampil Pappachen Pradeep: NP Pradeep is just 25 years of age but has already established himself in the starting line-up for India. He is a talented and skillful midfielder who has performing consistently for India since his debut for the national side in 2004. Mehrajuddin Wadoo: Mehrajuddin Wadoo is a Kashmiri footballer who has developed to be one of the best in the country. He is a versatile player who can play as a defender, a striker or a midfielder but he is usually deployed as an attacking midfielder both for East Bengal and for India. P.Renedy Singh: Renedy Singh is a veteran midfielder and is a much respected and loved figure in the Indian football scenario. He plays for JCT at the moment and shall be a threat for any team from the left side of the Indian midfield. Sunil Chhetri: Sunil Chetri is the darling of several Indian football followers and has been the find of Indian footballer in the last few years. The AIFF Player of the Year 2007 striker is known for his ball control, dribbling, shooting and work ethic and has been playing for India since 2004. He has already gelled in previous international competitions for India and the AFC Challenge Cup’08 could be one more tournament in which he exhibits his skills. Abhishek Yadav: Abhishek Yadav is also going to be an important part of the India set-up for the AFC Challenge Cup. The Mumbai FC striker is the tallest Indian footballer and is expected to be a star of the tournament. Tarif Ahmed: Tarif Ahmed is a recent call-up to the Indian national football team and scored in all the friendly matches that India played in Portugal recently. He is an upcoming talent that could come in handy in the competition. Baichung Bhutia: Baiching Bhutia is acknowledged as one of the best players in India and is lauded for bring Indian football onto the international arena. The Mohun Bagan striker is the current Indian national team captain and has been playing for the country since 1997. He has featured in 55 matches and has scored 21 goals and is the nation’s most capped player as well as the highest goalscorer. India’s hopes of winning the AFC Challenge Cup’08 very much rests on his shoulders. The Coach The Indian national football team is coached by Robert Douglas Houghton. He is popularly known in India as Bob Houghton and hails from England. Bob Houghton had a pretty much decent playing career as he featured for Fulham and Brighton & Hove Albion and even managed Hastings United in the Southern League when he was just 21 years of age and was still playing for the club. He then managed Maidstone United and was assistant to (sir) Bobby Robson at Ipswich Town. After coaching several club sides outside England, including Malmo, At-Ittihad and FC Zurich, and the Chinese and Uzbekistan national football team, Bob Houghton landed in India in June 2006 and was an instant hit. Bob Houghton mingled with the Indian national footballers very well and slowly but steadily seeped in the foreign ideas of coaching into the Indian scenario. He guided India to Nehru Cup triumph in August 2007 but suffered a slight disappointment when India lost to Maldives in the final of the SAFF Cup in 2008. Bob Houghton is well respected within the Indian football community and the players like him very much, insisting that Houghton is someone who understands the players very well and treats them in likewise manner too. Recent Form India lost the final of the SAFF Cup 2008 in June to Maldives 1-0 in what was quite a disappointment for a nation that is considered as a heavyweight in South Asian football. The Indian national squad then traveled to Portugal for three friendly matches with local clubs and won all those matches. They beat Gouvela Select 2-0 with goals from Climax Lawrence and Tarif Ahmed. In their next match in Portugal, India beat GD Gafanha 3-2 at Estadio da Gafanha, thanks to goals from Bengo Singh, Sunil Chetri and Tarif Ahmed. India ended their Portugal adventure on a high by thrashing Gouveia Xi 4-0 with goals from Abhishek Yadav, Sunil Chetri and Tarif Ahmed. India lifted the first Gouveia Cup instituted by Mayor Alvaro Amaro. India then played a warm-up match for the AFC Challenge Cup in Hyderabad against Malaysia. The match ended in a 1-1 draw. Subhankar Mondal Goal.com

Sunday, July 20, 2008

ECB leave England in 50-over mire

By Scyld Berry
Last Updated: 12:23am BST 20/07/2008

Successful England teams: this is the objective of our governing body, the England and Wales Cricket Board. They used to want England to be No 1 in Test and one-day cricket by 2007, then by 2009; but those honourable intentions have been revised downwards to plain 'successful'. Still, that is no reason why England followers should be forced to accept second best. Or rather fifth best, which is what England were at the last World Cup.

Not since 1992, indeed, have England been one of the top four countries at a World Cup. Successful? A team who aren't an international embarrassment at 50-over cricket would be a start, and there is still no sign of that, England having been whopped 3-1 by New Zealand home and away.

Last week, when the ECB decided on a new domestic structure, the county chairmen last week had the opportunity to do something about the abysmal state of 50-over cricket in England - and did absolutely nothing. England are the only one of the eight major cricket-playing countries never to have won a global tournament (the World Cup or Champions Trophy) and the ECB, by their actions, are manifestly happy for it to stay that way. They want to line their pockets with two 20-over competitions. A successful England team at 50-over cricket? Empty words.
The first-class counties are free to play 20-over cricket until hell freezes over, and then to play 20-over cricket on the ice - provided they pay their own way. But they don't: even if/when new money pours in to the English Premier League, the counties will still rely for half their revenue on the £30?million generated by the England team. Yet the county chairmen call the tune.

A conscientious government would haul up the governing body of an under-performing sport who react to four World Cup embarrassments in a row by maintaining the status quo. It's no use arguing that 50-over is going to be wiped out by Twenty20. India will play 50-over internationals as long as there are a hundred advertisement breaks in every game.

England will play seven one-dayers in India in November, and you can already hear the breast-beating that will take place when England are overwhelmed, but now is the time to do something about it. World Cups until 2015 are integral to the International Cricket Council's broadcasting deal; and the 2019 tournament has been promised to England, so the ECB aren't going to look that gift horse in the mouth.

If the ECB staged a domestic 50-over competition in July and August, with time for the players to practise, England might have a chance of winning a World Cup. As it is, they don't.
Exploiting the 20 overs of powerplay is essential to a 'successful' 50-over team. But how can that be done on early-season pitches when survival has to be the aim, not power?

Match-winning spin is another essential if a World Cup is to be won, especially the next one in Asia. In this year's Friends Provident Trophy only two spinners have taken four wickets in an innings: both modest off-spinners born several thousand miles from Britain, Gareth Breese and Greg Lamb.

Was complacency the correct response last week? Or a 50-over competition played in high season on hard pitches, in place of the second 20-over competition, which could have unforeseen consequences. Younger players could get into bad habits by playing so much 20-over cricket. Spectators, too, could get hacked off.

The county chairmen have not done what is in the best interests of English cricket. The ECB should change their wording to read: "successful England teams - except in one-day internationals". By their fruit we shall know them - and it is fruit which has been designed, by self-interest, never to ripen. source: telegraph.co.uk

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

’83 Cup magic

’83 Cup magic

— The summer of 1983 not only transformed the face of Indian cricket but instilled in the minds of its followers the belief that its team can win against the best. The World Cup squad under Kapil Dev which had landed on English shores as rank underdogs went on to script a golden piece of history when it humbled and shocked two-time Cup winners, defending champions and then the most-feared side – the mighty West Indies in the final at Lords to return home as heroes. A relatively low score of 183 proved to be more than enough in the end when Mohinder Amarnath trapped last man Michael Holding in front of the wicket for the maiden title. Given India’s dismal track record in the previous two editions, little did anyone know then that a resourceful team of sedate and aggressive batsmen like Sunil Gavaskar, Krish Srikkanth, Sandeep Patil as well as genuine all-rounders like the captain Kapil himself, Amarnath, Ravi Shastri and Roger Binny would conjure up an unbelievable feat against the formidable favourites. Twenty-five years hence as the country gears up to honour these gentlemen – some of whom are now legends in their own right while some have literally become forgotten entities – and celebrate ‘the greatest triumph till date’, the euphoria may not be as intense as it was then but the legacy continues to inspire the current crop of cricketers and the upcoming talents. While the older generation recalls and relives the magical feat of ‘Kapil’s Devils’ in nostalgia, the next generation has the luxury of a complete team to look up to and emulate.The 1983 Cup triumph set a new trend. The world started respecting and recognising India as a force to reckon with. Another major feat was achieved two years later in Australia when it won the World Championship of Cricket under the able leadership of Sunil Gavaskar, which only bore testimony that the ’83 feat was no fluke but a superlative performance when it mattered. Winning soon became a habit albeit there were inconsistencies to follow later in the decade. Nevertheless, India acquired its rightful status, thanks to the ’83 feat. The bottomline of the famous triumph at the ‘Mecca of Cricket’ was that cricket which already was a game for the masses in the Indian context became a passion – an infectious craze that led people to the stadiums in large numbers while keeping millions glued in front of the television. With over a billion people, India today is a hub of the game which has acquired the status of a flourishing industry. Cricketers are no less than demi gods while the brands they endorse earn the loyalties of the consumer. The concept of T20 cricket and professional leagues like the IPL and ICL have become instant hits. In a way, cricket which has become a money-spinner is invariably playing the catalyst’s role in the Indian economy, thanks largely to its passionate followers who still regard the ’83 feat as the magic mantra behind the game’s elevation to a religion. SourcE: ASSAMTRIBUNE EDITORIAL

Monday, June 23, 2008

Kapil's Devils relive 1983 triumph


Kapil's Devils relive 1983 triumph
June 18, 2008Nostalgic moments of a historic victory were relived by members of 'Kapils Devils' as BCCI felicitated the 1983 World Cup heroes in New Delhi on Sunday night.

The Indian team, then considered underdog in international cricket, created history when they shocked two-time World Champions West Indies in the final at Lord's in June 25, 1983 to lift the Prudential World Cup Cup which is till date considered one of the greatest moment in Indian sports.After 25 years of that triumph, the day was once again relived when the 14 cricketers along with then manager P R Mansing were felicitated by the BCCI.