cricinfo.com About cricinfoblogs
Blogs home
First Class, first person Blues Brothers Rob's Lobs Tour Diaries Pak Spin Girls Aloud
Beyond The Test World On The Circuit What's New The Surfer It Figures The IPL Buzz


Cricinfo Blogs Home

« Sponsors run Indian cricket: Pawar | | A bloated shambles of a competition »

Australia plan to attack Murali

Posted on 04/28/2007 in World Cup 2007





Muttiah Muralitharan has told Brad Hogg that batsmen can't pick his wrong'un © AFP

Ricky Ponting wants wickets in hand during the middle stages of the final so they can attack Muttiah Muralitharan and the other Sri Lankan spinners.

"We can be a bit more aggressive and a bit more positive against them and try and put their slow-down sort of guys through the middle, put them under a bit pressure," he said in the Herald Sun.

Muralitharan told Brad Hogg during the week that batsmen can’t pick him. Robert Craddock says in The Australian Hogg’s wrong’un is close to being the World Cup’s most effective weapon. Craddock also profiles Tom Moody and looks at his stint coaching Sri Lanka.

In the Sydney Morning Herald Alex Brown writes how Australia-Sri Lanka clashes rate among the most spiteful match-ups in international cricket.

Simon Hughes, writing for Daily Telegraph, outlines the strategy Sri Lanka should adopt, suggesting that Muralitharan be introduced as soon as Ponting walks in.

Tim Lane says in The Age Australia are on the verge of domination not even achieved by West Indies.

Michael Clarke tells AAP facing Shaun Tait in the nets will help the Australian batsmen deal with the threat of Lasith Malinga.

Viv Richards tells Tait not to change a thing, Jon Pierik reports in The Australian.

"Tait has been reasonably erratic, but when you have an individual of that pace he is going to cause some havoc, as the South Africans found out," Richards said. "I would never, ever change the sort of action he has."

It’s Glenn McGrath’s last game of his record-breaking career and his column appears in The Hindu.

"The other record I am keen on holding on to - playing the fewest number of balls despite playing four World Cups. I have only faced four balls in World Cup cricket."

Jenny McAsey, writing in The Australian, looks back at Australia’s first World Cup triumph in 1987.

Showers are forecast for the final, according to Reuters.

Breeda Jayasuriya, mother of Sanath Jayasuriya, talks of his remarkable comeback after he retired last year from one-day internationals, in an interview to the Daily News.

Patrick Kidd, writing for The Times, pulls out some interesting figures since the 'long-drawn yawn' began 47 days ago.

Wars have been declared and ended in less time than it has taken to stage the 50 matches before today’s final

Categories
Ashes (172) Australian cricket (538) Bangladesh cricket (16) Betting/Corruption (1) Bob Woolmer (8) Bowling actions (3) Champions Trophy (16) Charity (4) Commentary (54) Corruption (1) Cricinfo (2) Cricket books (4) DLF Cup (2) English cricket (481) Falkland Islands (1) France (1) ICC (56) ICC World Twenty20 (18) IPL (7) India in Australia, 2007-08 (64) Indian Cricket (356) Indian Cricket League (14) Indian Premier League (79) Irish cricket (3) Miscellaneous (114) New Zealand cricket (130) Obituaries (13) Offbeat (102) Pakistan cricket (62) Pakistan in England (55) Racism (1) South African cricket (56) Sri Lankan cricket (36) Stats (2) Technology (5) Television (18) Twenty20 (30) Umpires (36) West Indies cricket (81) Women's cricket (7) World Cup 2007 (133) Zimbabwe cricket (27)
Recent Posts
CMJ gets the giggles Ganguly's unfinished dream All sorts at Lord's Trumper about to stand test of time What's happened to the Bleak Caps? Playing a Broad bat A tale of two Sidebottoms The downfall of Marlon Samuels Leave team-building to the captain Why Noffke should face West Indies
Archives
May 2008April 2008March 2008February 2008January 2008December 2007November 2007October 2007September 2007August 2007July 2007June 2007May 2007April 2007March 2007February 2007January 2007December 2006November 2006October 2006September 2006August 2006July 2006June 2006May 2006April 2006March 2006February 2006January 2006December 2005November 2005October 2005September 2005
cricinfo picks

'Cricket should talk'

Anil Kumble on what it's like to be India's Test captain


'I didn't go out and bat as captain'

Talking Cricket - 2: Mark Taylor on Allan Border's legacy


Beware the football threat

Jayaditya Gupta on the IPL v EPL battle


'Why would you want to play five days for a draw?'

Talking Cricket: Mark Taylor on the art of captaincy


Rearguard to the rescue

The Numbers Game looks at the best lower-order pairs



cricket links
The Guardian The Daily Telegraph The Times The Independent The Age Sydney Morning Herald The Australian NZ Herald SuperSport BBC Rediff
© Cricinfo 2008
website stats