
March 3, 2008
Rivals on-field, friends off
Posted by George Binoy on 03/03/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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Iqbal Abdulla, Ravindra Jadeja and Wayne Parnell at breakfast after the final
© Cricinfo Ltd
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Most matches at the Under-19 World Cup have been played in relatively friendly spirits, which was why the difference in attitude during the second innings of the final stood out. India were visibly pumped up even before they began their defence and their aggression on the field was
plainly visible.
Several celebrations - the send-off they gave JJ Smuts and Ravindra Jadeja's manic sprint towards short third man after dismissing Jonathan Vandiar - were extremely charged up and none than Virat Kohli's release of emotion after India dismissed the South African wicketkeeper Bradley Barnes off the last ball of the match to win the World Cup by 12 runs.
So what happened? Was the aggression purely a pressure tactic because India were defending a low target in the adrenaline-filled atmosphere of a World Cup final? There was a bit more to it than that.
Continue reading "Rivals on-field, friends off"
March 2, 2008
Fans, cameras, attention
Posted by George Binoy on 03/02/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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India Under-19 captain Virat Kohli holds aloft the World Cup
© Getty Images
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Chaos broke loose at the Kinrara Oval the moment Siddarth Kaul bowled Bradley Barnes to win India the final by 12 runs. A sizeable number of fans leapt over the boundary boards and invaded the field to congratulate the Indian players. The organisers haven't had to deal with large numbers right through the tournament and the security was sparse. The players were too busy celebrating a hard-fought win and did not see the crowd coming. Soon they were engulfed. Their thorough preparations had overlooked the best way to escape untouched in the event of a World Cup victory. A look at old video tapes of 1983 would have helped immensely.
Virat Kohli had his shirt tugged. I think he lost his cap as well and security personnel had to drag him away from the fans. Virat had been bursting with excitement moments before but looked shaken as he walked off. It was the same with the other players as they struggled to get off the field on their own, needing to be pried away from the mob by security men. Then it began to rain really hard.
Continue reading "Fans, cameras, attention"
March 1, 2008
Magic drains and disappearing puddles
Posted by George Binoy on 03/01/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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It was fitting that the semi-final had not been reduced to a farcical 20-over contest, and we had the fabulous infrastructure to thank for that
© George Binoy
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During the interval after the rain ceased and before play began, Wayne Parnell, the South African captain, and the team's media manager stood staring intently at the ground. Their attention was focused on a puddle created by the ground staff, who had mopped up water from the covers and dumped it on the outfield. It was a sizeable amount of water and the puddle was not small. However as Parnell stared at the puddle, it disappeared right before his eyes. The outfield drains so quickly at the Kinrara that a supersopper, not that they have one, is rendered redundant.
The claims from the ground staff that they could have started play in an hour on Friday evening if the monsoonal showers had stopped were not empty boasts. I woke up at 5am this morning and it was raining – a radio commentator said the showers had started at 3am. It rained incessantly until around 11am, that's about eight hours and yet the umpires strode out to call play at precisely 12.20 pm. The drainage here must rank among the best in the world.
The players had arrived at the ground before 10am and most of them were sitting inside their tents while the weather delayed the start. There was music from the South African tent while several Pakistan players took walks around the ground. The moment the rain stopped, both sets of players took the field, knowing that play would begin sooner rather than later. Somehow word got around that the match was starting and several Pakistan fans also turned up, despite the delay. It was fitting that the semi-final had not been reduced to a farcical 20-over contest, and we had the fabulous infrastructure to thank for that.
February 29, 2008
When it stops raining, Kinrara starts draining
Posted by George Binoy on 02/29/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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Watching the water drain at the Kinrara Oval is a spectacle in itself
© Dileep Premachandran
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The second semi-final to decide which team would play India on Sunday was finely poised. Pakistan had lost two early wickets chasing 261 but Ahmed Shehzad and Umair Amin were rebuilding the run-chase with a plucky counterattack. Each boundary, every outside edge, and even mistimed shots were cheered by several Pakistan fans. The party ended abruptly with the heavy clouds, which had gathered during the dinner break, bursting shortly into the Pakistan innings. The rain was monsoonal and it was relentless until the cut-off time.
The match had to be postponed until Saturday but if you spoke to any of the ground staff, they said that if the rain had stopped in time, they could have got the ground ready for play in a jiffy despite the amount of rain.
The Kinrara Oval drains fabulously. Sitting in the press box, I could see puddles of water gathering near the covers but a few minutes later they had disappeared on their own, seeping through the grass.
The ground staff told me the venue had been designed and built by a New Zealand company and they had installed state-of-the-art drainage facilities. The ground slopes gradually as you move from the pitch towards the boundaries and the grass is planted on sandy soil which is ideal for water to percolate. There are also layers of gravel below the sand but the key to the fantastic drainage are the slit pipes that have been placed about three metres under the soil with a gap of one metre between each pipe. The water from the surface seeps into these pipes and it flows towards the larger drains outside the boundary. With the kind of rain Malaysia gets, the Kinrara needs the best drainage it can get.
February 28, 2008
Hoping for a big final, and an endless journey back home
Posted by George Binoy on 02/28/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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If Tim Southee wins the Man-of-the-Tournament award, the trophy will have to be couriered home
© Getty Images
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It's preview day ahead of the semi-final between Pakistan and South Africa so the team hotel is a must-visit for journalists. Step into the lobby and you are bound to bump into players, coaches, media managers and several others associated with the tournament. Several teams were in transit today, some were arriving in Kuala Lumpur, others preparing to leave Malaysia, while a few were heading out to see the sights.
India were scheduled to visit the Petronas Towers and were milling around the lobby. They had just emerged from a tight semi-final last night and were quietly confident, awaiting the outcome of tomorrow's game. If you ask a senior cricketer, which team they'd rather face in the final, most would spout the routine "It doesn't matter as long as we play to our potential etc etc".
The India U-19 players have got on splendidly with the South Africans but most of them would rather play Pakistan in the final. The reasons are several: Pakistan are the only other unbeaten side in the tournament, an India-Pakistan final would draw sizable crowds and create
atmosphere, and there's the lingering memory of the 2006 final, where Pakistan routed India for below 100.
When asked whether this Indian outfit was stronger than the side in 2006, the Pakistan coach Mansoor Rana kept a straight face and said "I can't judge, I only saw the Indian team for six overs in 2006."
**
Continue reading "Hoping for a big final, and an endless journey back home"
February 27, 2008
New Zealand's Kanpur connection
Posted by George Binoy on 02/27/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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New Zealand U-19 bowlers Trent Boult and Anurag Verma before their semi-final against India
© George Binoy
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There were two players born in Kanpur playing the semi-final between India and New Zealand. One was Tanmay Srivastava, India's No. 3 batsman, while the other was New Zealand medium-pacer Anurag Verma, whose family migrated when he was nine years old. And by coincidence, Tanmay bowled Anurag during the final overs of New Zealand's innings and Anurag duly returned the favour by having Tanmay caught in India's chase. Were they aware that they were born in the same city? You bet.
Anurag's family moved to New Zealand in 2000 and he says that he never played serious cricket while he was in India, only after-school games with friends. After his shift to New Zealand, a friend asked him to play for his team on Saturdays, and he's been playing ever since.
Continue reading "New Zealand's Kanpur connection"
February 25, 2008
Déjà vu for Ali Asad and Imad Wasim
Posted by George Binoy on 02/25/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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Pakistan players mingle with their fans after the match
© George Binoy
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When the dust settled on the quarter-final between Australia and Pakistan, Imad Wasim and Ali Asad might have felt a bit of déjà vu. They had been here before: winning a knock-out match against Australia at an Under-19 World Cup by bowling them out for a low score.
In 2006, Pakistan qualified for the finals by scuttling Australia for 124 after setting a target of 288. Wasim took 3 for 16 with his left-arm spin in that match while Asad had helped rescue Pakistan from 80 for 5 with 69 from 86 balls.
Fast forward two years and there are two significant differences: it was a quarter-final and Australia were batting first. Wasim took 2 for 21 today as Australia were bowled out for 129 and, after Pakistan were reduced to 32 for 3 during their chase, Asad struck an unbeaten 63 off 70 balls to take Pakistan into the semis.
The Australians were understandably downcast after their defeat - their campaign had been weaker than in 2006. The Pakistan team, however, were bubbling with excitement. They cheered loudly as Asad went up to collect his Man-of-the-Match award and raised their volume while he answered questions with a smile that would not go away.
After the formalities had been completed, the Pakistan players did something that I haven't seen so far in the tournament. They went up to the tents and shook hands with the few fans who had vociferously supported them through the match. Two security guards went with the players as they mingled with the crowd and you couldn't help but feel that, although it was better to be safe than sorry, the measure was a bit unnecessary.
February 24, 2008
Will the press descend again?
Posted by George Binoy on 02/24/2008 in Under-19 World Cup
The deputy president of the Malaysian Cricket Association, P Krishnaswamy,
who is also the chairman of the organising committee of the Under-19 World
Cup, had told me that he expected crowds, relatively speaking, to turn up
from the quarter-finals onwards. And sure enough, apart from the school
children who were being brought to the game to spread awareness, there was
a sizeable Indian contingent cheering their team on in the match against England.
There were a few English supporters as well but you had to search for them
because they weren't heard. They didn't have much to cheer about all day.
I haven't been to a Bangladesh game in the tournament but word is that
their support has been strong.
The press box at the Kinrara Oval has also been sparsely populated during
the first round of the tournament. Apart from the ICC officials,
television, and radio commentary crews, there are only a handful of
journalists: three from India, one from South Africa who works for the
official website, and a few from Sri Lanka. I've heard that there were
several Pakistan journalists in Johor so they should arrive at the Kinrara
for their quarter-final against Australia tomorrow.
However, there was a stack of uncollected media passes in the press box. I
spotted one belonging to a Mumbai journalist, who had applied for
accreditation but not yet made the trip to Kuala Lumpur. While travelling
by taxi, the journalist I was with got a call from a TV reporter in India
asking for sound bytes from Malaysia regarding India's progress. I had
heard that in 2006, the press box gradually filled up as India advanced in
the tournament and it was a packed house for the finals. There's no reason
to believe that 2008 will be any different if India are one of the teams
playing on March 2.
February 23, 2008
Howzat? Nicht aus
Posted by George Binoy on 02/23/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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Paul Baldwin (right) oversees a washed-out game in Scotland
© Donald MacLeod/The Scotsman
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On one of my first days in Kuala Lumpur, I met a man who said he was an umpire at the Under-19 World Cup. His name was Paul Baldwin and he said he was from Germany. An umpire from Germany? Paul Baldwin certainly wasn’t a German name. I had to wait nearly a week and made a trip to Penang to find out more.
Paul’s father was in the British Royal Air Force and he was posted in Germany so Paul moved there when he was 17. He didn’t play cricket for about five to six years because he says he just wasn’t interested.
“One day I saw a game of cricket at the air force base,” Paul says. “I then started playing and ended up being captain of the side.”
Paul took his first steps towards becoming an umpire during casual club games in Germany. Someone from the batting side would often stand in as the umpire. So one day when Paul was officiating, the opposition appealed for lbw when the batsman was miles outside his crease. Paul concurred. Paul's team-mates were livid and said he couldn’t umpire again until he took an umpiring course.
Continue reading "Howzat? Nicht aus"
February 22, 2008
Rival fans make their presence felt
Posted by George Binoy on 02/22/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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Members of Australia's Air Force Base and their families watch the cricket ...
© George Binoy
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I’ve been to a fair number of grounds at the Under-19 World Cup so far and
there haven’t been many fans coming to watch the cricket. The few that do
show up are mostly schoolchildren who have been brought in for their first
cricket experience, or the families of players who have traveled to
Malaysia to follow the cricket.
So when I saw a few people coming in nearly an hour early to the
Australia-Sri Lanka game at the Penang Sports Club, I assumed they were
related to the Australian cricketers. They had come well equipped with two
massive Australian flags, an over-sized ice box full of beer and soft
drinks – but mainly beer – an inflatable Wallaby and a pump to inflate it.
They were enthusiastic enough to haul a football goalpost about 50 yards
towards their tent so that they could drape their flags from it. I went up
to ask which cricketer’s family they were.
It turned out that they weren’t family. There’s a Royal Air Force base in
Butterworth, Penang and these fans were stationed there. There were about
ten before the start of the match but Grant, who appeared to be the chief
enthusiast, said he expected about 80 to come in. They have an Australian
Defence Force (ADF) cricket team and its banner, which has a pouncing tiger with
claws bared for a symbol, was signed by all the U-19 cricketers and hung
over the tent. The icing on the cake, however, was a “Bay 13” sign which
hung between the Australian flags, in honour of the famous stand at the
MCG which is renowned for its not-so-sophisticated behavior.
Continue reading "Rival fans make their presence felt "
February 21, 2008
'Let’s hope for the best'
Posted by George Binoy on 02/21/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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Nepal's players leave the field after completing a tight three-wicket win
© George Binoy
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Nepal finished third in Group C after a thrilling three-run victory against Namibia at the University Sains Malaysia. It was a finish meant for packed stands yet there were only a few Nepal supporters cheering on every dot ball towards the end of the Namibian run-chase. Overs were not an issue but the pressure had been mounting because the Namibian batsmen were simply not able to get Nepal’s spinners away. They were chasing a target of 165 and the equation had boiled down to six runs to win with two wickets in hand.
Morne Engelbrecht, the No. 9 batsman, swept the spinner in the air towards midwicket but the ball fell safe. The batsmen ran one but wanted another, the second run was fraught with risk. The throw at the bowler’s end was good and No. 10 batsman Elandre Oosthuizen was run out. The last pair added two more but with three runs to get, Engelbrecht was bowled by Gyanendra Malla. Nepal’s players converged on each other and celebrated in a heap before getting up to shake hands with the Namibians. As the jubilant Nepal players walked off, it was hard not to feel for their young opposition.
And right through it all, Paras Khadka, the Nepal captain, was egging his team-mates on. After each dot ball you could hear him clapping hard and shouting encouragements in Nepalese. He’s been in such situations before, most memorably during the 2006 Under-19 World Cup Plate Championship semi-finals against South Africa, when Paras bowled the last over with ten runs to defend.
Continue reading "'Let’s hope for the best'"
Malaysian kids make cricket-watching debut
Posted by George Binoy on 02/21/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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Cricket anyone?
© George Binoy
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University Sains Malaysia in Penang is one of the biggest educational institutions in the county: it has about 20,000 students and is spread over 500 acres. And nestled on the border of its campus, by the main road, is the cricket ground where the Under-19 World Cup matches are being staged.
Nambia are playing Nepal today, a match which will decide the third and fourth spots in Group C. There are between 100-200 schools kids in the tents so I head over to have a chat. Malaysia beat Zimbabwe on Wednesday so I assume they'll be pretty excited about it.
There's a solitary net with a matting surface in one corner of the ground and a couple of boys, who are about 13, are having a hit. A red plastic chair is being used as a makeshift set of stumps and the batsman isn't wearing pads. "Aren't you afraid of getting hit in the shins?" I ask. "No!" says Farhan. Soon enough, the bowler, Nasiruddin, bowls one on the legs and Farhan gets hit on the thigh. He rubs it off, smiles, and is ready to bat again.
Continue reading "Malaysian kids make cricket-watching debut"
February 20, 2008
James' i-Touch and Einstein's letter
Posted by George Binoy on 02/20/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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James Harris: "Ice Skating? We've been told, if we're terrible, not to go on"
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Starbucks has been a haunt on the tour so far, mostly because of the free internet which is great when you need to email stories the end of the day. It's not just the odd journalist who spends quality time there, several of the players go there too, to use the internet to keep in touch with people at home. It's a long tour with plenty of action happening so the families want constant updates.
"I spend a lot of time here communicating on the internet," says James Taylor, the England opening batsman, who hasn't been giving his middle-order team-mates a chance to bat. "It's free here. So I keep in touch with people back home on my i-Touch. It's the easiest way to communicate and it's cheap."
So how does Taylor spend his time when he's not playing matches or practicing? "When I have time off I generally just chill by the pool and just try and relax as much as I can. In the tense environment of the World Cup it's important to relax. I spend my time sun bathing by the pool, or
in my room watching DVDs or occasionally shopping."
In a foreign country, the weather and cuisine are favourite topics and the food in Malaysia is extremely different to the bread and meat based staples in England. "It's different [the Malaysian food] but you learn to adapt," Taylor says, before adding that "the odd McDonalds goes down
well."
Continue reading "James' i-Touch and Einstein's letter"
February 19, 2008
From one World Cup to another
Posted by George Binoy on 02/19/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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The celebration after his first wicket in Trinidad
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For almost all the players involved, the Under-19 World Cup is the most publicised event they've been part of on the international circuit. But there's one who has had a bigger experience: this is Malachi Jones' second World Cup but unlike others who played the U-19 tournaments in 2004 and 2006, Malachi's prior World Cup experience was in the Caribbean in 2007.
Bermuda have just been thrashed by ten wickets in their Group D match against England at the Royal Selangor Club. Malachi scored 2 and didn't take a wicket in 5.4 overs. Believe it or not, he feels the heat more in Malaysia than he did in the West Indies, both literally and figuratively.
He was the youngest member of the Bermuda squad in the Caribbean and not much was expected of him then but he's one of the senior boys in the U-19 team with international experience. "I have to produce more than I did at the senior level, so I feel a little more pressure on my game," Malachi says. "I think it's getting to me a little bit. I'm trying to settle down and not worry about the team looking up to me so much."
Continue reading "From one World Cup to another"
February 17, 2008
Cricket really can take you places
Posted by George Binoy on 02/17/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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"For me, cricket has taken me everywhere. You’ve got to grab your opportunities"
© George Binoy
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While walking around the Kinrara Oval on Saturday, a journalist friend pointed someone out to me who said that he was a fast bowler who had bowled Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid at the nets when India were in Kuala Lumpur for the DLF Cup in 2006. So I went up to him and asked him who he was and felt quite sheepish when he replied that he had been playing for the Malaysian national side for 15 years and captained them for eight. Suresh Navaratnam is 33-years-old now. He began playing for Malaysia in 1993, at the age of 18 and led the country from December 1998 to 2006.
A common gripe, and a realistic one, in smaller cricketing countries is that you can’t make a living out of playing cricket. Suresh, though he understands the larger problems, has had an extremely different experience with the sport. “People say, in this country, that cricket won’t take you anywhere,” Suresh said. ”But for me, cricket has taken me everywhere. You’ve got to grab your opportunities.”
Suresh’s family is originally from Sri Lanka – his grandfather was from there – but his parents were born in Malaysia and so was he. He took up the game at the age of 12, under the influence of his father and uncles who used to play actively. Why choose cricket when other sports were so much bigger in Malaysia? “I just followed my father,” he says.
Suresh was born in 1975, and during his formative years cricket was a rarity on local television. Yet he says his early heroes were Javed Miandad and then Steve Waugh. He used to read about the sport in papers and when people went to England and returned, he would soak up information from publications like Wisden and The Cricketer. A local channel used to telecast an hour cricket highlights once a week. They were mostly old matches involving England and West Indies but he used to watch and it was around then that he began to admire Curtly Ambrose.
His family had a significant impact on his early cricket days but his father died a year after Suresh was 14, a year after he began playing cricket. In some ways, he says, that became an encouragement for him to do well. He rose through the ranks of school cricket, played for his state, Selangor, then went on to play at the junior levels for Malaysia before breaking into the national side at the age of 18.
In 1996, Suresh got a major break. Graham Halbish, who was with the Australian cricket board at the time, brought two Australian teams - the seniors and an A side – to Malaysia to play a Super 8s tournament. It was an experimental format – eight players in a team and 14-overs-a-side contest. Suresh was part of an international team captained by Allan Border which included players like Sanath Jayasuriya, Aravinda de Silva and Chaminda Vaas, fresh from their World Cup victory. Suresh was the only Malaysian in the squad.
Even though he went on to represent Malaysia in the Commonwealth Games in 1998, that Super 8 tournament, though it failed to take off as a concept, is Suresh’s favourite cricketing experience. He played against the best Australian players of the time – Mark Taylor, Ricky Ponting, Mark Waugh, Michael Slater – and future stars such as Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden who were part of the A team.
Suresh’s performances must have caught Halbish’s eye for Halbish invited Suresh to Australia to play for his club Mulgrave. So in August 1996, he was playing the Super 8s and in October he was in Australia, where he went on to play for four seasons.
Suresh says cricket’s given him a lot. He went to university in Malaysia to study sports science and he got picked for the course primarily because he was a national player. He admits that he’s had a lot of luck along the way but says that you’ve just got to keep at it.
February 16, 2008
Papua New Guinea: How many Aminis?
Posted by George Binoy on 02/16/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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Colin and Charles Amini are continuing the family tradition
© George Binoy
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Most of us are influenced – to a certain extent at least – by our parents, and they by their parents. So when all the members of your family sitting at your dinner table are national cricketers, it’s only natural that you tend to take up the sport. That’s precisely what happened to Colin and Charles Amini. Colin’s the captain of the Papua New Guinea Under-19 side and Charles jnr, his younger brother, is also part of the squad. Their aunt, Cheryl, is the media manager of the Papua New Guinea team, and she talked me through several generations of cricketers from the Amini family.
Her grandfather, Amini (Colin and Charles jnr’s great-grandfather), began playing cricket in the early 1900s. He used to form a team and travel by boat to Port Moresby, the capital city and main cricketing centre of Papua New Guinea, to challenge the city teams. And so it began.
Continue reading "Papua New Guinea: How many Aminis?"
February 15, 2008
Players feel the heat in opening ceremony
Posted by George Binoy on 02/15/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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Bermuda's Under-19 squad beat the heat by wearing shorts
© George Binoy
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| For all practical purposes the Under-19 World Cup began for the teams the
moment they landed in Kuala Lumpur. The build-up to the first round of
matches has been hectic: apart from practice sessions and warm-up matches,
the teams have had to attend seminars on anti-corruption and anti-doping,
go for photo shoots, do introduction videos for television, sign miniature
bats for sponsors, and meet the competition. England and India even found
time to attend a charity function. In short, everything has been new and
most of the players are soaking it all in.
However, the tournament was officially opened on Friday during a short
ceremony at the Kinrara Cricket Academy and the teenagers had to shed
their jerseys and shorts and get spruced up. You couldn’t help but feel
for them as they stood in single file on the field, looking spiffy but
sweaty in their blazers, trousers and boots. Not all of them came
completely formally dressed though: Bermuda beat some of the heat by
wearing bright red Bermuda shorts with their blazers, while South Africa
might not have been the smartest in their collared t-shirts but they
certainly looked more comfortable.
The media contingent had grown considerably and there were several local
journalists, from print and television, as well as one from Papua New
Guinea. The families of the players also formed a sizable section of the
crowd. The families of Bermudian players Rodney Trott and Malachi Jones
were here, as well as several parents of the Australian and Ireland teams,
who announced their presence by applauding loudly when their teams walked
out. There were loud cheers for the local Malaysian team and when Pakistan
marched out, the claps were almost in respect for the champions of 2004
and 2006.
Continue reading "Players feel the heat in opening ceremony"
February 14, 2008
With a little help from dad
Posted by George Binoy on 02/14/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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Clive Rose's on-field performances will be closely watched by his father, Jude
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| The diversity of teams involved in the Under-19 World Cup offers a unique opportunity to meet journalists from different countries and gain an insight into cricket and its intricacies in various nations.
However, there were hardly any at the team hotel on Thursday and so when I saw a man with a backpack and camera at the Club Aman, where Australia were playing West Indies in a warm-up match, I labeled him as a journalist from a distance.
Turned out that I was wrong. He was Jude Rose, whose son Clive is a left-arm orthodox spinner in the Australian Under-19 squad. He’s in Malaysia following Australia’s, and Clive’s, progress in the tournament. Jude was there first but there are more coming. Fast bowler James Pattinson’s father is expected as are allrounder David King’s and captain Michael Hill’s.
Continue reading "With a little help from dad "
February 13, 2008
A quiet beginning
Posted by George Binoy on 02/13/2008 in Under-19 World Cup

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Wayne Parnell, South Africa's U-19 captain, signs miniature cricket bats
© George Binoy
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The sun hadn't risen when the plane landed in Kuala Lumpur at 6.50 am, which was odd. What was perhaps odder was that the average Malaysian was oblivious to the fact that their country was hosting a 16-team international tournament, due to begin in a few days time. The businessman on the flight didn't know until he saw the headline about Pakistan's defeat in the in-flight paper. Badminton, he said, was Malaysia's biggest sport. The woman in an electrical appliance store was wide-eyed and said "Cricket World Cup? Here?" while the cashier at a fast food chain didn't know either, though his outlet was a five-minute walk from the hotel where the teams were staying.
It's the first time the Under-19 World Cup is being staged in a non-Test country and the build-up to it has been quiet. Perhaps that's the way it should be, to reduce the pressure and spotlight on the teenage contenders. I spotted two small banners advertising the tournament at the airport and none on the drive into Kuala Lumpur. But walking towards the team hotel, it was impossible to miss the decorations in red, pink and gold. False alarm. The dressing up was for the Chinese New Year and not the U-19 World Cup. There were no banners in the lobby either announcing that the cream of cricket's teenagers were in Malaysia.
Continue reading "A quiet beginning"
February 20, 2006
The end of the road
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/20/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
Sarfraz Ahmed slept with the World Cup last night and you can hardly blame him considering it looked to have slipped away from him yesterday. The Pakistan team savoured their victory today, as the Indians made a hasty retreat back home – although, to be fair, it was always their schedule to fly out of Colombo early this morning. However, I expect they are now fairly happy with that planning.
Continue reading "The end of the road"
February 19, 2006
Final drama
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/19/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
What an extraordinary match; 180 runs, 20 wickets, 60 overs. They are the bare numbers but don’t do justice to the sheer drama of today. One minute Pakistan had been routed for 109 – World Cup over. Twenty minutes of chaos later India were 9 for 6. As they say, cricket’s a funny old game.
Continue reading "Final drama"
February 18, 2006
Dancing the night away
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/18/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
This evening was the closing dinner for the World Cup, an event attended by the two main finalists and the two teams who contested the Plate final – New Zealand and Nepal. There were the usual speeches which we can gloss over, the main fun came after the official part of proceedings had been done and dusted.
Continue reading "Dancing the night away"
February 17, 2006
Pakistan passion
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/17/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
Was that the Aussies choking that I watched today? “The pressure got to us,” said Moises Henriques, their captain. The favoured outcome of today’s match was the powerfully consistent Australians (at least in this tournament) to out do the talented but inconsistent Pakistanis. But that depended on which Pakistan arrived. For 17 overs it seemed for all the world that it was the reckless version, but then an extraordinary turnaround occurred. When Pakistan were 80 for 5 we all feared another one-sided final, that’s what it was – but for the other side.
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February 16, 2006
Meeting expectations
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/16/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
It wasn’t the worst of days for Sameera de Zoysa, Sri Lanka’s stand-in captain, against Zimbabwe. Called on as a replacement for Angelo Mathews he scored 63 and his side won to keep themselves in with a shout of winning the Super League play-off. So when Sri Lanka’s coach said: “I thought he struggled with some of his field settings, and that’s why we gave away a few too many runs,” he can probably consider himself a tad unlucky.
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February 15, 2006
Leaving in a rush
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/15/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
What a way to go – 58 all out and in front of the TV cameras to boot. There was nowhere to hide for England. Over the last few years the senior side has largely eradicated those collapses that so typified the 1990s, and when a clump of wickets do crash together – as at Lord’s last summer when they slumped to 21 for 5 against the Aussies –someone, on that occasion Kevin Pietersen, is usually there to at least give a score some respectability.
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February 14, 2006
Smile for the cameras
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/14/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
The crowds for this tournament have been non-existent, even for Sri Lanka’s matches, but at least the semi-finals and final should have a few more people taking notice of the action as the games are being beamed around the world. Today the Premadasa Stadium was getting the finishing touches as it prepares to host the first semi-final – England against India – a day/night match tomorrow. The ground certainly has a different feel than the others used in the tournament.
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Jayasuriya's triple century
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/14/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
Mine will be a ‘Jayasuriya Triple Century’ please, and for him a ‘Border’s burger’. For the uninitiated that’s two chicken breasts with chips and a burger with all the trimmings (how Sri Lankan) at the Cricket Club Café in Colombo, an amazing place crammed full to bursting with memorabilia from every avenue of the sport. It, therefore, won’t surprise people when I say I have spent a few evenings down there since arriving in town.
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February 12, 2006
Time for reflection
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/12/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
Today was a ‘Poya Day’ in Sri Lanka - a Buddhist ritual which happens four times a month and equates to the four phases of the moon. This was a full-moon day, the most important of the phases and a monthly national holiday in Buddhist tradition. Yesterday there were lavish parades around the streets of Colombo, involving herds of dressed-up elephants, as the city prepared itself for a day of worship.
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Certainly not nondescript
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/12/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
Nondescripts is an unassuming cricket ground, the only one of the five used for this tournament that hasn’t hosted a Test or ODI. But while it may not have held international matches, it certainly has an impressive production line of international players. Reading the honours board on the back wall of the pavilion is like a who’s who of Sri Lankan Cricket.
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February 10, 2006
The only way to travel
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/10/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
You’ll have read the occasional passing reference to tuk-tuks in this diary already, but the three-wheeled vehicles have become such a part of my everyday life around Colombo that I felt they deserved an entry of their own. The question is really, where do I start? Is it the hair-raising cornering? The total disregard for the rules of the road? Or the confrontations with traffic many times bigger and stronger?
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February 7, 2006
Anyone seen the score?
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/07/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
After two matches at the SSC, Colombo’s second biggest ground following the Premadasa Stadium, it was time to take a look at another of the town’s multitude if venues. Like Antigua is said to have a beach for every day of the year, I’m sure this place can match that for cricket grounds. They are everywhere, of all shapes and sizes, and very conveniently three of them (and, as if by magic, three of four for this tournament) are within about 100 yards of each other.
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February 6, 2006
Nepal aim to climb their Everest
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/06/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
In many ways, the World Cup is bigger news in the lesser-known cricketing nations. This was well demonstrated today with two journalists from Nepal covering the clash against England, while there are also journalists from Uganda, Ireland and Scotland covering their countries. And they are only the ones I know about.
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February 5, 2006
Younger team, bigger win
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/05/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
In their current form there are not many sides that could outdo the full Australian side when it comes to a crushing one-day win. So, it comes as no surprise, that when it does happen it is another Australian team that manages it. While South Africa suffered a 57-run drubbing at Sydney, the Under-19 version were crushed by 175 runs in Colombo.
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February 4, 2006
It never rains, but it pours
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/04/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
Here, with my finest weather-presenting impression is the forecast for Colombo. It’s hot, and stays hot all day and all night, but when it rains, boy, does it rain. Yesterday evening I was sat in the Sri Lankan office of Cricinfo, putting together an entry for this blog, when I realised I could hear water cascading down the window panes. Funny time to wash the windows, I thought, before opening the door to see sheeting rain. Within minutes the road outside the office resembled a river and the dusty surface had turned to mud.
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February 3, 2006
The full experience
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/03/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
A refreshing aspect to my early days in Colombo has been the attitude of the players and management that I have so far come across. It is fair to say that, at times, dealing with full international teams can be a frustrating and impersonal affair, as you are directed through one official channel then another before being told there is ‘no comment’. Nothing of the sort here, those I've met have been happy to talk and ensure the World Cup is shown in the best possible light.
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February 2, 2006
England in a positive spin
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/02/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
Who says England can’t win a match with spin? The probable threesome for the senior tour of India – Shaun Udal, Ian Blackwell and Monty Panesar – won’t be giving Virender Sehwag and Rahul Dravid nightmares, but the Under-19 side today showed the way, bowling England to a moral boosting warm-up win. To India’s Under-19 team Graeme White, Nick James and Moeen Ali will have sounded like a similar prospect to that facing the full squad next month. But they proved that with the backing of some thoughtful captaincy and the confidence to throw the ball up anything is possible. Food for thought as Vaughan and Co. prepare for their next challenge.
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February 1, 2006
Life in Colombo
Posted by Andrew McGlashan on 02/01/2006 in Under-19 World Cup
Forgive me if some of my comments over the next few weeks seem slightly
clichéd or old-hat. This is my first trip to the subcontinent and it
doesn’t matter how much you hear from other people, there is nothing like first-hand experience.
My flight left Dubai in the early hours of Wednesday morning, meaning
there was very little sleep beforehand and, with the journey taking just four hours, very little sleep on board. So, it was with slightly bleary eyes that I stared out of the window as we descended into Colombo, the lush, green landscape appearing out of the haze. However, any feeling of weariness was soon cast aside as my senses were sent into overdrive on entering the bustling – and at first glance, chaotic - Colombo life.
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