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Why cricket needs more men like Bedi

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Bishan Singh Bedi

Rex Clementine in Bangalore

India is mourning the death of their former Test captain Bishan Singh Bendi, who passed away in Delhi at the age of 77. Bedi’s cricketing achievements are well documented. He was India’s highest wicket taker in Test match cricket before Kapil Dev went past his record.

Bedi was also captain of the Indian team during some of their finest hours. He was coach of the Indian side that consisted some of their all-time greats. But more than anything, it was Bedi’s courage to be different and frankness that fans admired.

‘Bedi’s death has robbed the game of a voice willing to speak the truth to power,’ wrote Wisden’s Editor Lawrence Booth.

Cricket is a big business these days and so much is at stake for not only the current players but even former cricketers. India has lucrative pension schemes for retired cricketers and no one dares to say anything that will upset the BCCI. Bedi though called a spade a spade.

Bedi played First Class cricket for Delhi and Northamptonshire. Of his 1560 First Class wickets, more than 400 came for the English county. He captained the Delhi side that reached four Ranji Trophy finals and won the title twice.

Bedi’s last ODI in fact was against Sri Lanka in the 1979 World Cup, a game which India went onto lose.

Apparently, Bedi was floored by a Tony Opatha bouncer. When it was Opatha’s chance to bat, Bedi greeted him with a vicious full toss that sent Opatha sprawling to the ground. Slow bowlers can retaliate too!

As captain of India, during the Jamaica Test match of 1976, he declared the innings twice as he suspected that West Indies quicks were keen to send his bowlers to the hospital than getting them out.

The Delhi cricket ground popularly known as Feroz Shah Kotla has a stand named after Bedi.

A few years ago, the name of one of India’s iconic cricket grounds was changed from Feroz Shah Kotla to Arun Jaitley Stadium. Arun Jaitley was a former Finance Minister of India. Bedi protested. He wrote to the authorities asking his name to be taken off the stand and his membership from the Delhi District Cricket Association to be cancelled.

Bedi was a bit like Arjuna. Or the right way to put it is that Arjuna is like Bedi. Both fierce fighters on and off the field, they both had powerful enemies in cricket.

Bedi was remembered all over India yesterday. There was a book launch in Bangalore. The title of the book is ‘Lords of Wankhede’. The book co-authored by former India cricketer W.V. Raman and cricket writer R. Kaushik chronicles India’s journey in world of cricket between their two World Cup wins in 1983 and 2011.

Some prominent names of Indian cricket like Dilip Vengsarkar and V.V.S. Laxman turned up for the book launch and we are treated with some fabulous stories.

Vengsarkar of course was part of the Indian side that won the 1983 World Cup. He recalls the euphoria in India after they beat the mighty West Indies at Lord’s when no one expected them to do so.

“The Indian board invited West Indies for a bilateral series later that year and we were at the receiving end,” Vengsarkar recalls about the series which Clive Lloyd’s side swept 3-0 in Tests and 5-0 in ODIs.

“One of the memories of that series is Gordon Greendige and Vivian Richards competing against each other to find out who hit the ball the furthest.”

Vengsarkar played in over 100 Tests for India. He was also the Chairman of Selectors who handed the captaincy of the Indian team to M.S. Dhoni at a time when he was unknown.

Vengsarkar was left stranded on 98 in the SSC Test match in 1985 where India escape with a draw. India were losing that Test match but together with last man Maninder Singh, Vengsarkar puts up a crucial partnership that robs Sri Lanka time to chase down the target. Draw is ensured but with Vengsarkar is denied a century by just two runs as Maninder throws away his wicket playing a cross batted shot to Saliya Ahangama.

The following year India are in England and at Lord’s Vengsarkar is nearing a Test hundred. In walks last man Maninder Singh and India’s number four reminds him not to throw away his wicket like in Colombo. Maninder behaves and Vengsarkar goes onto score a hundred at Home of Cricket.

Vengsarkar’s cricketing feats are quite unique and among them are three Test hundreds at Lord’s.



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Kavith top scores as Maris Stella post 270 runs

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Under 19 Cricket

Kavith de Silva with a half century (78) and Hashmika Nethshan and Dasun Nethsara with valuable knocks of 40s helped Maris Stell post 270 runs against St. Aloysius’ on day one of the Under 19 cricket encounter at Karandeniya on Tuesday.

‎For St. Aloysius’ Dulsath Nimviru and Oshada Devinda took four wickets each.

‎Meanwhile the Under 19 Division I tier B match between Ananda and Isipatana ended in a no decision.

Match Scores

‎Maris Stella post 270 at Karandeniya

‎Scores

‎Maris Stella 270 all out in 79.1 overs (Hansaka Perera 29, Kavith de Silva 78, Hashmika Nethshan 45, Dasun Nethsara 41, Ameesha Fernando 25; Dulsath Nimviru 4/100, Oshada Devinda 4/68)

‎St. Aloysius’ 54 for 2 in 16 overs

(Gimhan Hansaka 34; Savindu Sathsara 2/15)

No decision at Ananda Mawatha

‎Scores

‎Ananda 204 for 9 decl. in 64.2 overs

(Danindu Sellapperuma 21, Himira Kudagama 43, Lithma Perera 28, Binara Umayanga 39, Rashan Dilaksha 29; Tharindu Naveen 2/21, Dasith Senal 3/56)

Isipatana 110 for 5 in 46 overs (Navindu Umeth 48, Dewshan Deneth 23; Himira Kudagama 4/23) (RF)

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Harmanpreet masterclass seals second-highest chase in WPL, Mumbai Indians go 8-0 against Gujarat Giants

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Harmanpreet Kaur led the chase of 193 from the front [Cricinfo]

Captain Harmanpreet Kaur’s unbeaten 71 off 43 balls powered Mumbai Indians (MI) to a seven-wicket win over Gujarat Giants [GG], as they chased down 193, the second-highest successful chase in WPL history.

Harmanpreet paced the chase to near perfection, finding support from Amanjot Kaur and Nicola Carey, as MI extended their perfect head-to-head record against Giants to 8-0. MI also maintained their remarkable streak of never losing a WPL match when Harmanpreet scores a fifty, this being the 10th such instance.

Giants began briskly after being put in, with Sophie Devine and Beth Mooney taking on the returning Hayley Matthews for four boundaries in the second over. Devine got an early reprieve, when Shabnim Ismail induced an edge in the opening over and wicketkeeper G Kamalini put down the chance. The miss proved inconsequential as Ismail struck again in the third over, this time having Devine nick behind for 8, with Kamalini holding on.

With Anushka Sharma sidelined through injury, Kanika Ahuja was promoted to No. 3. She ensured the momentum did not dip, getting off the mark with a powerful drive through the covers, and combining with Mooney to inflict damage. After Mooney’s departure, she continued the same alongside Ash Gardner. The pair carried Giants to 99 for 3 at the end of 10th over. Gardner fell in the 10th over and Ahuja followed in the 11th, but Giants had laid a solid platform by then.

MI clawed their way back into the contest after Ahuja’s dismissal. Ayushi Soni, brought in for Anushka, struggled to find fluency, while her partner Georgia Wareham continued to find the gaps regularly. Soni was on 7 off 10 balls at the end of the 16th over when she retired out, becoming the first player in WOL to do so. The move paved the way for Bharti Fulmali, who ensured it paid dividends.

Fulmali survived two lbw appeals in the 17th over from Amanjot, both overturned in her favour. She then launched a late onslaught, taking on Carey with two fours and a six in the 19th, before going even harder in the final over. Fulmali smashed two fours and two sixes off Amanjot as Giants plundered 39 runs across the last two overs, finishing on 192.

Hayley Matthews returned to the top of the order after missing the first two matches with injury. Despite losing her opening partner Kamalini in the third over, she ensured MI made a positive start. However, her stay was short-lived, ending on 22 off 12 balls. That dismissal brought Harmanpreet and Amanjot together, and the pair began to rebuild.

Amanjot soon found her rhythm, unfurling a flurry of boundaries against Wareham and Tanuja Kanwar, while Harmanpreet ticked along at better than run-a-ball through the first 10 overs.

Once set, Amanjot shifted gears, taking on Renuka Singh and Gardner with a series of cleanly struck sixes. The breakthrough for Giants came through Devine, whose slower ball accounted for Amanjot and ended a 72-run partnership.

Harmanpreet, though, remained unfazed and continued to dictate terms, with Carey joining her at a stage when MI required 84 off 48 balls.

Carey swung the momentum decisively in the 16th over, hammering five boundaries off Renuka, who continued to struggle for accuracy. The over slashed the equation to 39 needed off 24 balls.

Harmanpreet soon brought up her half-century off 33 deliveries, and Giants compounded their woes with a series of fielding lapses, putting down three chances of her.

Harmanpreet made them pay, pouncing on the width offered by wayward bowling to keep the chase firmly on track. With four needed off five balls, she sealed the contest by hitting a boundary, through the gap between deep square leg and deep midwicket.

Brief scores:
Mumbai Indians Women  193 for 3 in 19.2 overs  (Gunalan Kamalini 13, Hayley Maththews 22, Amanjot Kaur 40, Harmanpreet Kaur 71*, Nicola Carey 38*; Renuka Singh 1-39,  Kashvee Gautam 1-33, Sophie Devine 1-29) beat Gujarat Giants Women 192 for 5 in 20 overs (Beth Mooney 33, Kanika Ahuja 35, Ashleigh Gardner 20, Georgia Wareham 43*, Ayushi Sani 11, Bharti Fulmali 36*; Shabnim Ismail 1-25, Hayley Maththews 1-34, Nicola Carey 1-36, Amelia Kerr 1-40 ) by seven wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Lanka Premier League draft set to take place on March 22

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The sixth edition of the LPL will take place in July-August 2026 [Cricinfo]

There will be no auction for this year’s Lanka Premier League, Sri Lanka Cricket has announced, with a player draft set to take place instead on March 22.

The sixth edition of the LPL had originally been slated for early December 2025, but was postponed on account of ensuring the readiness of venues for the 2026 World Cup set to be co-hosted by Sri Lanka and India. The league has since been scheduled to take place from July 8 to August 8, which is the SLC’s preferred window.

This will be the first time since 2022 that a draft system is being utilised in the LPL, with both of the past two seasons hosting player auctions.

“During the draft, franchises will select both Sri Lankan and overseas players for the upcoming season of Sri Lanka’s premier domestic T20 tournament,” an SLC media release confirmed.

The inclusion of a sixth team had also been mooted prior to the competition’s postponement, however there have been no developments on that front since. Each of the first five editions of the LPL saw five teams representing Colombo, Galle, Kandy, Dambulla and Jaffna compete.

Earlier this year, Jaffna Kings – formerly the longest-standing franchise, having joined in the tournament’s second edition – and Colombo Strikers were terminated by SLC for “failure to uphold contractual obligations.” As a result, the LPL currently has no franchise owners with a history stretching back beyond 2024. New owners for both the Jaffna and Colombo teams are yet to be announced.

[Cricinfo]

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