vij
Senior Member
Posts: 213
|
Post by vij on Feb 11, 2010 23:19:37 GMT 5.5
|
|
|
Post by Ashok Harsana on Feb 13, 2010 19:12:33 GMT 5.5
Shud not forget Kunwar Pranav Singh of laksar. He has been a remarkable wrestler.
|
|
vij
Senior Member
Posts: 213
|
Post by vij on Feb 13, 2010 21:34:10 GMT 5.5
|
|
Balwan Singh Pundir
Guest
|
Post by Balwan Singh Pundir on Mar 10, 2010 15:39:41 GMT 5.5
Shaun tait his trying his best to break the record of a Gujjar Kasana Shoaib Akhtar. Best of luck to him but it is not easy. In Pakistan cricket he has been sacrificed as part of game but it is not easy to to deliver at that speed.
Us ek extra mile ke liye Cheete ki speed aur Sher ki takat chahiye.
WELLINGTON: Shaun Tait looks harmless enough while sipping his morning coffee. He appears less than ferocious while shopping for clothes. But tonight Tait becomes a vastly different beast, the most frightening bowler in the world - and Shoaib Akhtar's record for the fastest ball ever delivered will come under serious attack if Wellington's gale-force winds are at the South Australian's back during the Twenty20 match against New Zealand.
With Australian captain Michael Clarke vowing to obtain clarification from the umpires about the legality of David Warner's switch hitting, and New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori saying Warner should be free to bat left-handed, right-handed or standing on his head if he wants to, Tait was quietly eyeing off Akhtar's 161.3km/h world record from the 2003 World Cup.
Tait clocked 160.7km/h at the MCG earlier this month, and might never get a better chance to bump Akhtar off his perch than when forecast gusts of up to 50km/h hit Westpac Stadium tonight.
''I've never played here before - the wind, I've got to get the right end,'' Tait said. ''I don't want to be pushing into it. It doesn't always happen that you know you can bowl at that sort of speed but when the time does come, every now and again, you're always going to have a crack at the quicker ball. I look up at the screen reasonably often to have a look at the speeds myself. Sometimes you can't help yourself.
''When you hit that 160 mark as a fast bowler, that's a pretty special feeling. The adrenalin is pumping, the crowd in Melbourne was really getting into it when I did it there. But you've got to be careful not to put too much pressure on yourself.
''A couple of years ago, I bowled a few quick ones, and everyone started expecting me to do it every game. You don't do it again and people go, what's wrong with him? The main thing I've got to do is take wickets.''
Tait declined to bowl in the nets at the Basin Reserve, partly for fear of decapitating every member of his top order. Brett Lee (160.8 km/h) is the only other active bowler to have flirted with the magic 100 mile an hour mark (160.93km/h), and Kiwi officials confirmed Tait would be put on the clock, although the paceman is unconvinced about the accuracy of the radar.
''There are times when you bowl quicker ones but it only comes up 150 and you think, 'That can't be right,''' he said. ''You can tell when you're bowling around 160. Back home it seems like the Foxtel cameras are slower than the Channel Nine ones. When you get up to the 160 mark, it's slightly rewarding. It's not something I think about all the time - but it'd be great to bowl the fastest recorded ball of all time.''
Clarke wanted an official ruling on Warner's batting. ''He hits the ball just as well right-handed,'' the captain said.
Vettori welcomed the ''hysteria'' being created by Warner's move. ''I have no opposition at all to it as long as the white-line and lbw rules still apply,'' he said. ''I suppose the only issue is time because bowlers will stop and they'll have to change their field. But it's not something you want to be ruled out of the game … if you can switch-hit, it's probably the next big thing in cricket.''
|
|
|
Post by Deepak Dedha on Mar 18, 2010 16:13:20 GMT 5.5
Ashok bhai, are you referring to same Kunwar Pratap Champion who is in politics these days.
|
|
|
Post by Deepak Dedha on Mar 18, 2010 16:14:10 GMT 5.5
Sorry, its Kunwar Pranav Champion...
|
|
|
Post by Ashok Harsana on Mar 18, 2010 16:26:25 GMT 5.5
yes MLA from Luksar
|
|
|
Post by rajat vikal on Apr 7, 2010 10:40:29 GMT 5.5
bro i m also playing for punjab cricket under 17
|
|
|
Post by Ashok Harsana on Apr 7, 2010 11:04:14 GMT 5.5
Welcome to the Gurjar Samaj Forum , Rajat ji. We wish u best of luck for the future.
|
|
|
Post by Balbir Singh on Apr 7, 2010 14:01:15 GMT 5.5
Prince of Pakistan, Babar Gujjar, Kabaddi Player Punjabnewsline.com
HOSHIARPUR: Circle kabaddi super powers India (pool A) and Pakistan (pool B) continue to display their lethal weapons to demolish their opponents on the fourth day of the inaugural Rs 2.2 crore Prize Money Pearls World Cup Punjab 2010, being organized by the Punjab Government at the Outdoor Stadium here today. Punjab Deputy Chief Minister-cum-Sports Minister and chairman of the organizing committee, witnessed the matches. He was also introduced to the players.
Formidable Pakistan have virtually assured themselves a semi-final berth by routing Spain with an authoritative 61-31 margin in their Pool B encounter.
Sitting pretty at 44-8, Pakistan played at half pace and relaxed their grip over the match to allow Spain liberty to score points. Pakistan captian and rainder Imtiaz Alam, Babar Gujjar, known as Prince of Pakistan, and Yasir Cheema were the most outstanding players for Pakistan.
Daljit Singh Tajpuria, Rupinder and Harjinder gave good account of themselves. Raider Daljit earned maximum number of points for Spain.
Pakistan coach Jaffer Bhatti was satisfied with the performance of his players. “They are playing on the expected line.” Accoding to Bhatti, players from Canada, England, Pakistan and India are dishing out classic circkle kabaddi. These nations are expected to qualify for semi-finals.
|
|