Showing posts with label England Vs India ODI live. Show all posts
Showing posts with label England Vs India ODI live. Show all posts

Sep 8, 2011

India vs England 3rd ODI Live streaming/Highlights 2011

Fri Sep 9
12:00 GMT | 13:00 local
17:30 IST 3rd ODI - England v India
Kennington Oval, London
India vs England (Ind vs Eng)3rd ODI live streaming 2011, Sept 9th at Kennington Oval. Broadcast of India vs England live streams 2011 free online cricket. Ind vs Eng 2011 Live streaming 2nd ODI telecast on Sky Sports and Star Cricket. India Tour of England 2011 live. Watch India vs England 3rd ODI Live Streaming 2011,India vs England 3rd ODI Live score,India v England 3rd Odi 2011 Highlights,India vs England Live score
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India vs England 3rd ODI Premiew


Virat Kohli plays some football during practice, The Oval, September 8, 2011
Virat Kohli has been lively in the field but needs a big score to justify his billing
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September 8, The Oval
Start time 1400 (1300 GMT)

Big Picture
This has not been an Indian summer. In any sense. The grim September weather has dominated the start of the one-day series, washing out the opening match and chopping the second down to 23 overs a side. Added to the dank weather, injuries have robbed the numerous India supporters in the crowd the chance of seeing many of their World Cup heroes. It hardly sounds the recipe for a stirring contest, yet the injuries have allowed India a glimpse of the future. The only hope of pulling a positive or two from out of the wreckage of this tour is for some young talent to flourish. Also, though it feels unlikely, there is still the possibility of silverware at stake.
India's batting has been invigorated by coloured clothing. On his way to a blistering 19-ball 40 at the Rose Bowl, Suresh Raina was unrecognisable from the man who compiled a 42-ball pair in the final Test at The Oval. Parthiv Patel, meanwhile, has been Sehwag-esque at the top of the order in bullying England's new-ball bowlers off their plans. But the star has been Ajinkya Rahane.
He has made 155 runs from 130 balls in his three outings against England and more than the volume has been the quality of his stroke-making. Short balls have been pulled easily, full ones driven fluidly and his technique strong throughout. Short-form runs - as Raina proved this summer - are no guarantee of class but allied to Rahane's first-class average of 67.72, India fans have plenty reason for excitement.
The problem India has is with the ball. Praveen Kumar, despite an off-colour showing at the Rose Bowl, is reliable, as is Munaf Patel, but beyond that the ranks are thin. Varun Aaron was flown in to give India the pace they have lacked all summer but has so far served the drinks. The emphasis of this one-day series should now be a view to the future so it's a pity Aaron can't get a game.
Eoin Morgan's injury leaves England without their best one-day batsmen but gives Ravi Bopara an opportunity to find his feet on the international stage he looks in danger of slipping off. The other player looking to establish himself is Ben Stokes. England's lower-order finishing was a major weakness at the World Cup and the management hope Stokes's crisp-hitting can solve the issue. As of yet, though, he hasn't had the chance.
 Form guide
(Most recent first)
England WNWWW
India LNLLW
 In the spotlight
It was only a cameo - and it ended in frustratingly soft fashion - but at the Rose Bowl, Ian Bell showed why he deserves a berth in England's top order. It took Bell four years to crack Test cricket but he is fast-establishing himself as one of the classiest in the game and now has ODIs in his sights. In Southampton he struck four perfectly-timed fours to race to 25 without breaking sweat. Though he gave it away soon after a big score at The Oval wouldn't be a surprise.
Virat Kohli presence is one of the reasons India's fielding has been sharper in the one-dayers than during the Test series. Lively and bristling with confidence he has also bowled a few overs. But he's supposed to be one of the brightest batting talents in India and while Raina, Rahane and even Parthiv have all prospered at times this series, Kohli has been subdued. He'll hope The Oval will spark a turnaround.
 Team news
If the weather proves as good as the forecasts suggests so there should be a 50-over contest at The Oval and England will bring Jonathan Trott back to No. 3. That will reopen the obligatory debate about his scoring rate but will may also force Samit Patel out the side. Patel took five wickets in his last ODI appearance at The Oval in 2008 so has fond memories. If England prefer his spin option, Bopara could miss out.
England (possible) 1 Craig Kieswetter (wk), 2 Alastair Cook (capt), 3 Jonathan Trott, 4 Ian Bell, 5 Ravi Bopara, 6 Ben Stokes, 7 Tim Bresnan, 8 Graeme Swann, 9 Stuart Broad, 10 James Anderson, 11 Jade Dernbach
India's search for a fifth bowler means Ravindra Jadeja could come into the side ahead of one of the batsmen that played at the Rose Bowl, most likely Manoj Tiwary.
India (possible) 1 Ajinkya Rahane, 2 Parthiv Patel, 3 Rahul Dravid, 4 Virat Kohli, 5 Suresh Raina, 6 MS Dhoni (capt/wk), 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 R Ashwin, 9 Praveen Kumar, 10 Munaf Patel, 11 R Vinay Kumar.
 Pitch and conditions India vs England 3rd ODI 2011
The weather is set to be much improved at The Oval. 'Sunny intervals' and a temperature high of 23 degrees is sweet relief after the damp encounters in Durham and Southampton. None the less by the time evening draws in it will be cold in London. The Oval should prove a good pitch for the batsmen but evening dew is always something for the captains to consider.
 Stats and trivia

  • England have won four of their seven ODI games against India at The Oval but lost a high-scoring thriller the last times the teams met here in 2007.
  • From that team in 2007 India have only two surviving players - MS Dhoni and Rahul Dravid.
  • If England win at The Oval it will be their fifth successive victory in completed ODI games  Quotes
"We've played some unbelievable cricket this summer, especially in the test matches, so we don't want the one day series to be a bit of a damp squib at the end. It's important we carry on the momentum, because we want all three forms of the game to be going in the right direction in the next few years."
Graeme Swann hopes to extend England's run of victories.
"I had done no preparations before coming here. But I learnt as I went along."
Ajinkya Rahane suggests he has no need for warm-ups.     source for preview:cricinfo
India vs England 3rd ODI Highlights

Next part will be uploaded here soon.....

Sep 5, 2011

India vs England 2nd ODI Live streaming/Highlights 2011

India vs England 2nd ODI live
Tue Sep 6 13:00 GMT | 14:00 local 18:30 IST 2nd ODI - England v India The Rose Bowl, Southampton
India vs England (Ind vs Eng)2nd ODI live streaming 2011, Sept 6th at The Rose Bowl. Broadcast of India vs England live streams 2011 free online cricket. Ind vs Eng 2011 Live streaming 2nd ODI telecast on Sky Sports and Star Cricket. India Tour of England 2011 live. Watch India vs England 2nd ODI Live Streaming 2011,India vs England 1st ODI Live score,India v England 2nd Odi 2011 Highlights,India vs England Live score
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Match facts

James Anderson warms up for an England net session, Rose Bowl, September 5 2011
September 6, Rose Bowl Start time 1400 (1300 GMT)

Big Picture
At Chester-le-Street on Saturday, and at the sixth time of asking, India's cricketers finally enjoyed the better of one of this season's international tussles with England. However, with England on the ropes at 27 for 2, chasing 275, the victory that MS Dhoni's men were surely anticipating was thwarted by the onset of grim autumnal weather, and the match finished as a dispiriting wash-out.
Now, 48 hours later, the squads have relocated from the country's northern-most venue to its most southerly, Hampshire's Rose Bowl, where the series resumes in earnest at 0-0 with four to play. India's resolve in the Durham opener was a timely reminder of the class they still exude in limited-overs cricket, even with an injury-ravaged squad that now includes Rohit Sharma, whose finger was broken by Stuart Broad on Saturday, and Sachin Tendulkar, who missed the match with a foot injury, and is flying home from the tour.
However, England will recognise the errors that they made in that opening contest, and besides, their captain, Alastair Cook did not accept the widely-held view that his team would have lost had the match been played to a conclusion. Certainly, after the start that they enjoyed, in which England's short-pitched approach was found out in a solid 82-run opening stand from Parthiv Patel and Ajinkya Rahane, India might have hoped to get closer to 300. However Tim Bresnan and the ever-improving Jade Dernbach regained a decent measure of control at the death.
It is with the bat that England have rather more to prove. Cook's own failure can be mitigated by the glut of runs he racked up in the ODI series against Sri Lanka earlier in the year, but it is his opening partner, Craig Kieswetter, who is looking more of a problem. His stiff-armed technique was mercilessly probed by the swing of Praveen Kumar, and a return of 6 from 19 balls was not what England required from such a devastating striker of a cricket ball.
A flatter track at the Rose Bowl could aid him in that respect, but with Kevin Pietersen rested for this series, and the youngster Ben Stokes still awaiting his first significant international innings, there's a shortage of proven power-hitting to bolster England's ambitions. If they want to be taken seriously as an ODI outfit - and that is one of Andy Flower's stated aims since reaching the Test No.1 status - then the opportunity to get one over the 50-over World Champions is not something that England will want to pass up.
Form guide
(Most recent first)
England NWWWL India NLLWW
In the spotlight
Eoin Morgan's one-day pedigree is not exactly in doubt, but as England start to build towards the 2015 World Cup, it is increasingly clear how central to their plans he is going to be. This season began with the quiet confirmation of his vice-captaincy role in the Twenty20 team, and continued in Dublin last week with his first experience of leadership - a hard-fought victory in which his 59 earned the Man of the Match award. As for the coming contest, no England batsman is more at home at the Rose Bowl. In three appearances, he's never made less than 43, and against Australia and Pakistan last summer, he bossed the games with a brace of brilliant unbeaten hundreds.
Praveen Kumar's joie de vivre was one of India's few redeeming features in the Test series, but in the 50-over format, his hard-to-handle swing bowling looks like adding another degree of menace, particularly in English conditions. He bowled four of India's 7.2 overs at Chester-le-Street, in which time he delivered 20 dot-balls and two key wickets, as neither Cook or Kieswetter found a viable method to negotiate him. With little pace on the ball, and substantial lateral movement to thwart any attempts at aggression, he has the ability to thrive in the Powerplay overs, so long as his impeccable line and length does not waver.
Team news
Graeme Swann ought to be fit for selection after fighting a virus at Chester-le-Street. Ben Stokes, who dropped a catch at gully in his only meaningful contribution to that match, is likely to be given another chance to stake his claim in the middle order.
England (possible) 1 Craig Kieswetter (wk), 2 Alastair Cook (capt), 3 Jonathan Trott, 4 Ian Bell, 5 Eoin Morgan, 6 Ben Stokes, 7 Graeme Swann, 8 Tim Bresnan, 9 Stuart Broad, 10 James Anderson, 11 Jade Dernbach
Rohit Sharma's broken finger necessitates yet another middle-order rejig, although neither of the two batting replacements, Ravindra Jadeja nor Manoj Tiwary, have yet linked up with the squad, which means Amit Mishra - who impressed with the bat in the Test series - could feature. Tiwary could, at a pinch, be thrown into the game straight off his plane on Wednesday. Tendulkar's absence means Rahane stays at the top of the order
India (possible) 1 Ajinkya Rahane, 2 Parthiv Patel, 3 Rahul Dravid, 4 Virat Kohli, 5 Suresh Raina, 6 MS Dhoni (capt/wk), 7 Amit Mishra, 8 R Ashwin, 9 Praveen Kumar, 10 Munaf Patel, 11 R Vinay Kumar
Pitch and conditions India vs England 2nd ODI 2011
Clear skies for the preview day, but there's yet more rain forecast for the match itself. The pitch is hard and true, and potentially loaded with extra bounce, if the Sri Lanka Test is anything to go by.
Stats and trivia

  • India have played two previous internationals at The Rose Bowl ... and the first came against Kenya in the Champions Trophy in 2004, when Rahul Dravid - the only survivor from that fixture - made 30 not out from 16 balls in a 98-run win 
  • England have played in six of the 12 ODIs at the venue, and have won four of them, including each of their last two games against Pakistan and Australia.Quotes
"There is no point me trying to become something I'm not. I have to play to my strengths. I have to pick the gap like I do in Test cricket." Ian Bell wants to play his one-day cricket with the same poise that he has shown in Tests in recent months          Source for Preview:Cricinfo.com
India vs England 2nd ODI Live Scorecard

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Sep 2, 2011

India vs England 1st ODI Live streaming/Highlights 2011

India vs England ODI live
Sat Sep 3
09:15 GMT | 10:15 local
14:45 IST 1st ODI - England v India
Riverside Ground, Chester-le-Street
India vs England (Ind vs Eng) 1st ODI live streaming 2011, Sept 3rd at Chester-le-Street. Broadcast of India vs England live streams 2011 free online cricket. Ind vs Eng 2011 Live streaming 1st ODI telecast on Sky Sports and Star Cricket. India Tour of England 2011 live. Watch India vs England 1st ODI Live Streaming 2011,India vs England 1st ODI Live score,India v England 1st Odi 2011 Highlights,India vs England Live score
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Jade Dernbach has become a central part of England's limited-overs plans, Chester-le-Street, September 2 2011



September 3, Chester-le-Street
Start time 1015 (0915 GMT)

Big Picture
Autumn is closing in and the football season is in full swing. A major Test series has been wrapped up with aplomb, and now attention turns to a lengthy round of what might, in some quarters, be regarded as After-the-Lord-Mayor's-show ODI fixtures. Not so long ago, such a scenario would have guaranteed a slackening of English interest and, coincidentally or not, culminated in a crushing defeat. But not anymore. For a variety of reasons, the coming fortnight ought to contain some of the most keenly fought contests of the year.
As a reference point, take the last ODI meeting between these two teams - that incredible World Cup tussle in Bangalore back in March. A Sachin Tendulkar hundred appeared to have propelled India towards a hefty victory, only for the innings of Andrew Strauss's one-day life to haul the game back in England's direction. A stunning late spell from Zaheer Khan tipped the scales once again, only for England's tail to scramble their way to a tie.
What happened next hardly needs spelling out. India surged to their second World Cup victory, while England staggered to a quarter-final battering by Sri Lanka in the most harum-scarum campaign of all time. Six months on, therefore, both teams have a great deal to prove. India, as reigning World Champions, will be seeking to confirm their one-day pre-eminence in their biggest bilateral series since that final in Mumbai; England will want to use this stage to prove they are a far better limited-overs outfit than they recently appeared to be.
So far this summer, England have already had the better of one of the World Cup finalists, Sri Lanka, and on the evidence of India's tour so far, they will be expecting to emulate that achievement in the coming weeks. Strauss has stepped aside to concentrate on his Test future, but his replacement Alastair Cook showed an astounding change of pace in his first ODI series for 15 months, leading from the front with a century at Lord's, and 95 from 75 balls in the series-turning victory at Trent Bridge. A new-look team has no place for Kevin Pietersen, after the decision was taken to rest him for the remainder of the summer, but England's momentum and self-belief is sure to carry over, to some degree, from their Test series whitewash.
India's fortunes surely cannot slip any lower than they are at present. There were glimpses of a resurgent attitude in the Twenty20 defeat at Old Trafford, where the debutant Ajinkya Rahane showcased a technique and temperament that bodes well for future challenges, and where even the exposed Suresh Raina found a method to combat his short-ball uncertainties - his baseball smack for six off Stuart Broad wasn't entirely convincing but mighty effective.
They lack a glut of senior players from that World Cup campaign - Zaheer, Harbhajan Singh, Gautam Gambhir, Yuvraj Singh, Ishant Sharma and Virender Sehwag have all fallen by the wayside in the course of an arduous tour, which leaves the ever-green Sachin Tendulkar to carry the burden of expectation once again, as he embarks on his latest quest for that elusive 100th international hundred. Rahul Dravid, recalled to the ODI team for a farewell campaign, will provide a sturdy sidekick, but all things considered - not least, the ropey Indian fielding that prompted Nasser Hussain's controversial "donkey" comment - England will believe they've got the beating of this team.
As West Indies, Australia and India all demonstrated in cricket's recent past, when you're the No. 1 in the world in one format, the expectation is that you should emulate that achievement across the board. With 10 series wins in their last 12 bilateral engagements, England do have something on which to build. But if India deny them in the coming five games, they'll feel they've lost more than just the summer's consolation prize.
Form guide
(Most recent first)
England WWWLL
India LLWWW
In the spotlight
Jade Dernbach was a shock call-up to England's World Cup squad this winter. Uncapped and largely unknown, he vaulted into the knock-out stages via the England Lions tour to the Caribbean, and came within a whisker of playing in that ten-wicket quarter-final defeat against Sri Lanka. But as this summer has progressed, so his extraordinary virtues have made themselves known. Not since Darren Gough was in his pomp have England possessed a one-day bowler so full of tricks and variation, and even Gough's slower balls lacked the subtlety that Dernbach brings to the mix. In consecutive fixtures, his death bowling proved too canny for Ireland in Dublin and India at Old Trafford, and while his methods are now well-known, few batsmen have managed to decode him.
Generally speaking, it's not wise to read too much into a single Twenty20 performance, but on a tour of few highlights from an Indian point of view, the composure shown by their debutant opener, Ajinkya Rahane, was a very welcome development. He came into the contest boasting a first-class average of 67 after learning his trade in the Ranji Trophy, and the confidence with which he dismissed England's short-ball attack gave the impression of a player with substance. In a batting order crying out for technical proficiency to replace a raft of ageing greats, he's clearly a man to watch.
Team news
Graeme Swann, who might have celebrated the Twenty20 victory a bit harder than he intended, is a doubt for Durham after suffering a stomach complaint - a decision will be made in the morning. In Pietersen's absence, Ian Bell is likely to slot in at No. 4, although there may be a temptation to blood the new boy, Ben Stokes, in front of his home crowd at Chester-le-Street.
England (possible) 1 Craig Kieswetter (wk), 2 Alastair Cook (capt), 3 Jonathan Trott, 4 Ian Bell, 5 Eoin Morgan, 6 Ravi Bopara, 7 Samit Patel, 8 Tim Bresnan, 9 Stuart Broad, 10 James Anderson, 11 Jade Dernbach
India have no fitness issues to report - aside from the glut that have already decimated the squad, of course.
India (possible) 1 Ajinkya Rahane, 2 Sachin Tendulkar, 3 Rahul Dravid, 4 Virat Kohli, 5 Suresh Raina, 6 Rohit Sharma, 7 MS Dhoni (capt / wk), 8 R Ashwin, 9 Praveen Kumar, 10 Munaf Patel, 11 R Vinay Kumar
Pitch and conditions Ind vs Eng 1st ODI 2011
A seam-friendly surface, and grey Northern skies are on the agenda. The prospect is for showers, and nippy autumnal temperatures.
Stats and trivia

  • India are unbeaten in ODIs against England since 2007, having won 5-0 in their home series in November 2008, and tied their most recent match back in March. However, England took the spoils in the last series in this country four years ago, winning the rubber 4-3 after a seven-wicket win in the decider at Lord's. 
  • England have won four of their previous eight ODIs at Chester-le-Street, including each of their last three against Pakistan, Australia and New Zealand. Their only previous match at the venue against India, in 2002, was a wash-out. 
  • Two players remain from that 2002 fixture, and no prizes for guessing which they are. Sachin Tendulkar scored 105 not out and Rahul Dravid (keeping wicket) made 82, before rain prevented a probable India win.Quotes
"Let's not get too carried away with four years' time. The most important thing is what we do tomorrow."
Alastair Cook believes that the planning for the next World Cup is secondary to the challenge of beating the current World Champions
"There are fresh faces with the mindset to do well and have had time to prepare."
Virat Kohli thinks India's build-up to the ODIs - which included three tour games - will stand them in good stead.            Source for preview:cricinfo.com
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