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ICL Edelwiess 20s Finals Preview
By Gaurang March 31 2008
Despite the desperate efforts of the BCCI to suffocate and strangle the ICL, it has actually grown in popularity. The addition of two more teams in the form of the Lahore Badshahs and the Ahmedabad Rockets was a great move, bringing more regional balance to the tournament.

The fact that two other grounds besides the somewhat limited Panchkula facility were obtained also increased the viability of the tournament.  The crowds in Hyderabad in particular have been quite impressive in support of their home team, the Heroes, who came back from a drubbing in their first game against the Lahore Badshahs to end up with the second best record in the league.

 

The four finalists are the Lahore Badshahs, the Hyderabad Heroes, the Chennai Superstars, and the Kolkata Tigers.  The Badshahs have been the powerhouse team of the league.  The fact that they are composed exclusively of ex-Pakistan internationals gives them a cohesion and class that the other teams simply do not have.  The Badshahs’ 7-0 record in the league phase is ample testimony to this fact, and they are clearly the prohibitive favorites to win the tournament. 

 

However the three other teams are much more evenly matched.  The Chennai Superstars, the defending champions have gelled into a very useful outfit, the best part of which is that they are not overly reliant on their international stars, with local talent such as the mercurial Ganapathi Vignesh and Rajagopal Sathish with the bat and Thiru Kumaran with the ball have led the team despite having international talent galore in the form of captain Stuart Law, Ian Harvey, Russell Arnold, Shabbir Ahmed, etc.   

 

The Kolkata Tigers have also got a lot of local strength with Abhishek Jhunjhunwala and Rohan Gavaskar with the bat, and Abu Nechim with the ball supporting the internationals including captain Craig McMillan, Lance Klusener, Nantie Hayward, Andre Adams, etc.

 

The Hyderabad Heroes have been the surprise package of the tournament.  They were absolutely demolished by the Lahore Badshahs in their first match losing to the Pakistani squad by a massive nine wickets, having been dismissed for a paltry 86 after choosing to bat first. But they simply picked themselves up off the floor and proceeded to win 4 out of the next 6 matches with local players Stuart Binny and Ambati Rayudu with the bat and Alfred Absolem and Indrashekhar Reddy with the ball, supporting the internationals including captain Chris Harris, Justin Kemp, Abdul Razzaq, Nicky Boje, Jimmy Maher, etc.

 

The Lahore Badshahs are odds-on favorites and if they make it to the finals, as is likely, whoever meets them will be the underdogs, especially as the finals are best of three.  The best chance of an upset is for the Kolkata Tigers to spring a surprise on them in the semi-finals, a one-off game, and knock them out at that stage.

 

The next week promises to be very exciting and fans who want to take a break from the desultory proceedings induced by lifeless pitches in the India versus South Africa Test series just need to switch the channel to follow the ICL semis and finals.

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Re: ICL Edelwiess 20s Finals Preview
Posted by: Birbal (IP Logged)
Date: 2008:04:01:00:07:27

Can the Tigers Stop the Badshahs?

I think they can if they get lucky and the Badshahs have an off day...which after going 7-0 they are bound to have at some point...

_____

ICL Ko Support Karo Yaro...

BCCI Ko Joote Chappal Maro....

Re: ICL Edelwiess 20s Finals Preview
Posted by: Birbal (IP Logged)
Date: 2008:04:01:00:28:56

Good to see the LOCALS are represented in the top bracket..not just the internationals...

Most runs...

Player Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 0 4s 6s 
L Klusener 7 7 2 220 73 44.00 176 125.00 0 2 0 22 7 
(Kolkata Tigers) 
RP Patil 7 7 1 213 66* 35.50 150 142.00 0 3 0 23 10 
(Mumbai Champs) 
Hasan Raza 7 6 2 209 98* 52.25 142 147.18 0 1 2 20 8 
(Lahore Badshahs) 
IJ Harvey 7 7 1 206 58 34.33 166 124.09 0 1 0 22 7 
(Chennai Superstars) 
S Sriram 7 7 1 202 52* 33.66 149 135.57 0 1 0 17 1 
(Ahmedabad Rockets) 
RP Arnold 7 6 1 200 69 40.00 151 132.45 0 2 1 19 3 
(Chennai Superstars) 
AA Jhunjhunwala 7 7 1 200 62 33.33 188 106.38 0 2 1 15 3

Best Strike Rate...(minimum 100 runs)

Ganapathi Vignesh 184.61
Rajagopal Sathish 148.45
Hasan Raza 147.18
Chris Cairns 143.37
Raviraj Patil 142.00
Stuart Binny 139.24

_____

ICL Ko Support Karo Yaro...

BCCI Ko Joote Chappal Maro....



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2008:04:01:00:29:50 by Birbal.

Re: ICL Edelwiess 20s Finals Preview
Posted by: Birbal (IP Logged)
Date: 2008:04:01:18:16:03

I am predicting the Kolkata Tigers to WIN this thing...

_____

ICL Ko Support Karo Yaro...

BCCI Ko Joote Chappal Maro....

Re: ICL Edelwiess 20s Finals Preview
Posted by: Birbal (IP Logged)
Date: 2008:04:01:21:11:26

For The Players, By The Players...


Nice column by Ajit Wadekar...


For the players and by the players. That's the USP of the Indian Cricket League and what better way to understand its worth than following the rise of some of the domestic stars in the competition. The overseas recruits have been around for quite some time at the international stage and they have been the guiding force for most of the youngsters who were given a platform to showcase their skills through the ICL.

And despite a battery of internationally acclaimed bowlers like Shane Bond, Michael Kasprowicz, Nantie Haywards, Azhar Mahmood and Mohammad Sami gunning for glory in the tournament, Chennai Superstars Thiru Kumaran has stole the limelight with 14 wickets to be the highest wicket taker in the tournament so far.

The medium pacer bowls within his limitations but is not afraid to give his all for the cause of the team and that has been the main reason behind his success. He also claimed the tournament's first hat trick in the very first match against Lahore Badshahs and that would have been an icing on the cake.

The other medium pacer who has been very impressive in the tournament is Delhi Giant Taduri Sudhindra. That boy has a very good out swinger and in the game against Hyderabad Heroes showed that he has a big heart. With their strike bowler Shane Bond not getting wickets, Sudhindra bowled his heart out to claim three important wickets and kept the team in the hunt.

Then there is Alfred Absolom of Hyderabad Heroes, who took seven wickets for just 15 runs against Ahmedabad Rockets and even has the best strike rate and bowling average in the tournament. Sridhar Iyer of Mumbai Champs bowled with an ecomony rate of 3.25 in a Twenty20 tourament and Abu Nechim also made his mark for Kolkata Tigers with his slinging action and raw pace.

In the batting department, Kolkata Tigers Abhishek Jhunjhunwala, Hyderabad Heroes Ambati Rayudu and Stuart Binny showed that they are slowly but surely mastering the Twenty20 format. They are all quick learners and have made the most of the inputs given to them by their more experienced international stars.

The semifinals kick off on Wednesday and though the Lahore Badshahs are the overwhelming favourites, one cannot help but not put all money on them. The Law of Averages can catch up with anyone anytime and I hope the team can overcome that challenge.

_____

ICL Ko Support Karo Yaro...

BCCI Ko Joote Chappal Maro....

Re: ICL Edelwiess 20s Finals Preview
Posted by: Birbal (IP Logged)
Date: 2008:04:03:20:00:30

Karachi Based Saad Shafqat

writes how much of a HIT Lahore Badshahs have become in Pakistan...


Saad Shafqat

April 3, 2008





"You and your Lahore Badshahs," said this friend of mine recently after I sent an SMS asking her to switch on the television and tune in to the right channel. Indifferent to the game herself, she duly passed the message on to her husband, and thereafter, as she describes it, time stood still.

It was the night when Hasan Raza was blazing his way to 98 not out from 52 balls in Chandigarh. Coming in against the Mumbai Champs at 28 for 2, with two golden ducks behind him, he conjured up an innings from nothing almost. Perfectly pitched balls headed straight for the wicket were carved over square leg for six. Yorkers aimed at off stump were deflected for a boundary past wide third man. Replays showed Raza twisting the face of his bat, adjusting his footwork, even changing his mind, in the split-second after the ball left the bowler's hand.

Let's be honest about it. You would never see such a rabbit-out-of-the-hat innings in Test cricket, and even in ODI cricket you would have to go months, at least, before one came along. In Twenty20 cricket, by contrast, such magic tricks abound. There are rumblings that this is the dominant future of international cricket, and these rumblings are threatening to become an avalanche. The configuration of this game - skill and conflict compressed to the point where risk-taking simply overflows - is forcing it to happen.

Take a league competition enhanced by the addition of regional pride, a generous sprinkling of international stars, a top commentary team, and shapely cheerleaders dancing to music, and you've got a concept that goes from zero to water-cooler talk in the space of just a few matches.

The Indian Cricket League also has the extra charm of being forbidden fruit. It has not been a priority for the major news outlets and wire services. India's BCCI, the most powerful cricket board in the known universe, has declared it "unauthorised". Luckily for the ICL, everybody loves an underdog who stands his ground and fights, and the controversy has become its own best advertisement. And since the competition has its genesis in discontent over television rights, the one thing you can trust the league's owners to be good at is television coverage.

In Pakistan, fans have been switching allegiances fast. Like a Mughal cavalry cutting a swath across the horizon, the ICL's sole Pakistani entry has lit up the sky and commandeered a passionate following. They have had some natural advantages. The fans, already cheerless and disenchanted with an underperforming national team, have been smarting from the snub of Australia's refusal to tour their country. Distractions such as the latest Shoaib Akhtar-PCB saga only compound the weariness.

Into this emptiness of the heart, the Lahore Badshahs have settled easily. The only team in the tournament where all the players are of the same nationality, they are mentored by a coach (Moin Khan) and a captain (Inzamam-ul Haq) who played a role in Pakistan's 1992 World Cup victory and today sit comfortably as icons of the Pakistani game. These two have the credentials to guide and inspire any team in the world. The players under their charge have gone flat out, giving their best, and at the same time displayed an enviable camaraderie and a cowboy coolness that any cricket outfit would kill for.




Like a Mughal cavalry cutting a swath across the horizon, the ICL's sole Pakistani entry has lit up the sky and commandeered a passionate following. They have had some natural advantages. The fans, already cheerless and disenchanted with an underperforming national team, have been smarting from the snub of Australia's refusal to tour their country. Distractions such as the latest Shoaib Akhtar-PCB saga only compound the weariness









Most of all, it is their skill and verve that has made them the terror of the tournament. Pakistani players' traditional weaknesses - short attention span, needless innovation, bravado, and recklessness - have emerged as formidable strengths in Twenty20 cricket, carrying the Lahore team to within touching distance of the title and the winner's cash prize of nearly US$625,000.

Even when they were most strenuously tested - defending 151 against Ahmedabad Rockets in Hyderabad - they showed scant respect for the textbook, and got out of jail with medium-pacers Rana Naved-ul-Hasan and Azhar Mahmood bowling back-of-the-hand wrist-spin at the death. Not for these lads the conventional theory of bowling fast and furious into the blockhole. Instead, they used slower balls with loopy topspin to extinguish their opponents' final embers of hope.

"Badshah" is a fitting label for a winning club. In Urdu the word means "king", yet the term's first syllable also resonates in English, casting the team in a menacing light. Most appropriately, the name honors both Lahore, which has known glory as an imperial Mughal capital, and its greatest patron, the Emperor Akbar, who is a celebrated ambassador of Hindu-Muslim unity and remains the most revered of the Mughal kings.

In the semi-final, the Badshahs will hope they continue living up to the memory of Akbar. They are up against the Kolkata Tigers, a team representing another imperial capital. Captained by New Zealander Craig McMillan and coached by South African Daryll Cullinan, it is a formidable side with several international stars, including Lance Klusener, Upul Chandana and Andre Adams. Whatever happens in the endgame, the Lahore Badshahs will depart the tournament with a reputation. Before the competition, the organisers had expressed hope this team would add a new dimension to the league. They certainly have, by a distance.

_____

ICL Ko Support Karo Yaro...

BCCI Ko Joote Chappal Maro....

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