1
CM YK ND-ND SPORT 15 THE HINDU FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 2015 NOIDA/DELHI Lampard to stay at Manchester City English Premier League champion Manchester City announced it had secured the services of Frank Lampard until the end of the season despite the midfielder signing for New York City in June Button ties the knot British former world champion Jenson Button confirmed via Twitter that he has married his long-term girlfriend, Japanese-Argentine model Jessica Michibata (in pic) Telecast schedule South Africa vs West Indies, third Test, TEN Cricket, 2 p.m. A mind game and a puzzle that you solve with reasoning and logic. Fill in the grid with digits in such a manner that every row, every column and every 3x3 box accommodates the digits 1 to 9, without repeating any. The solution to yesterday’s puzzle is at right. su l do l ku SYDNEY: Footwork is the es- sence of batsmanship. It’s that precious ability of a batsman to judge the length of a delivery and respond with appropriate feet movement. In Australia, successful bat- ting, unless the length demands otherwise, is a lot about going back and using the depth of the crease. This not only enables the batsman to shorten the length but also gives him more time to play the horizontal bat shots — the cut and the pull — that can be so effective in Australia. This method could also force the paceman to pitch the ball further up and then the bat- sman, unless the ball is swing- ing, can get on to the front foot and essay the drive. Good footwork — that alters the length of a bowler — is a lot about decisiveness. Cheteshwar Pujara’s foot- work though has been indeci- sive. The team-management’s decision to send him at No. 6 in the second innings at the MCG was a reflection of Pujara’s lack of confidence. He has appeared tentative, been unsure of his off-stump, and subsequently paid the price. He is getting into half- cock positions — neither fully forward nor back — and been caught in no-man’s land. Balance is a critical necessity for a batsman and there is no way Pujara’s weight can be well distributed if he is half forward to deliveries demanding a dif- ferent footwork pattern. The bowlers have been find- ing him out, often pitching be- tween six to eight metres before the stumps, just outside the off. Pujara, neither forward nor back, has been nicking these deliveries. Pujara has not really moved his feet to cover the swing from the pacemen in the manner a No. 3 batsman should. Crouching stance One also gets the impression that Pujara has been crouching a tad too much in his stance. This is precisely why the right- hander is finding it hard to get on top of the bounce on the sur- faces here. This might have been the rea- son why Pujara, unable to sway away, ducked right into a Mitchell Johnson bouncer at the MCG. In the instance, the helmet grill saved this batsman. Because of his stance, his left elbow is not high enough as the bat meets the ball. Consequent- ly, he has struggled to cope with lift. Pujara’s grip — while he is not bottom-handed in true sense of the term, his right hand still dominates — can actually en- able him to play the cut and the pull on these wickets. The right- hander, however, has to stay upright and travel back in his crease to execute these shots. The batsman could also be gripping the bat too hard. Puj- ara has not been defending the rising deliveries with soft hands. There are two sets of move- ments that have been success- fully employed in Australia. Being classically back and across, as the legendary Sunil Gavaskar was against fast bowlers. The other, one that has again fetched batsmen plenty of runs down under, is the back and back movement. Considering the ball does not keep low here for most part, this technique has its admirers. While the bouncing delivery remains a distinct threat for sub-continental batsmen down under, the Aussie pacemen do pick up wickets aplenty with their swing or seam movement on or just outside off. Actually, they disrupt foot- work with bounce and then find the nicks with deviation. Coming into the series, Puj- ara averaged 15.00 in two Tests in New Zealand. In England, it was 22.20 from five Tests. The batsman needs to have a close look at his technique. A determined cricketer with old-fashioned values, Pujara still has interesting possibili- ties. He has to sort out his foot- work first. High time Pujara sorted out his footwork CRICKET / His lack of confidence might have prompted the team-management to send him at No.6 at the MCG CAUGHT IN NO-MAN’S LAND: Cheteshwar Pujara fails to read this delivery from Mitchell Johnson in the third Test at the MCG on Friday. — PHOTO: SCOTT BARBOUR/GETTY IMAGES S. Dinakar SYDNEY: The touring Indian cricketers and the Australian team were, on Thursday, host- ed by Prime Minister Tony Ab- bott for an afternoon tea at his official residence on New Year’s Day here. Players from both sides posed for the official photo ses- sion with Abbott at Kirribilli House, his second official residence. Dressed in their casual Team India T-shirts and trousers, the players were photographed with Abbott, with the BCCI posting the pictures on its Twitter handle. “The Indian cricket team was hosted for afternoon tea by Australian Prime Minister To- ny Abbott on the first day of the new year, on Thursday,” the BCCI said. There was another photograph of the newly-ap- pointed India captain Virat Kohli, his Australian counter- part Steve Smith and Abbott. Mahendra Singh Dhoni was not seen in any of the photos posted. It remains unclear whether he attended the event or not. — PTI Australia Prime Minister hosts tea for Indian players ONE FOR THE ALBUM: Australia Prime Minister Tony Abbott poses for a photo with the Indian cricket team on Thursday. — PHOTO: BRENDON THORNE/GETTY IMAGES SYDNEY: Former Australia all- rounder Greg Matthews has an interesting suggestion for Virat Kohli on dealing with Austra- lian sledging. Matthews told The Hindu, “He (Kohli) should tell them back, ‘Yes, I am a spoilt brat, and I have a big house, and I drive a Ferrari, and I have a great insurance. What’s your problem?’ That will put the Aussies back.” The former off-spinner and left-handed batsman, said, “In- stead, he (Kohli) is talking about it at press conferences, it’s bothering him and will eventually affect his game. Focus on the game “You have to let go and focus on your game. I think what’s said on the ground should stay on the ground.” The 55-year-old Matthews represented Australia in 33 Tests in the ’80s and early ’90s, scoring 1,849 runs and picking up 61 wickets. His First-Class record as a left-handed batsman and an off-spinner — 8,872 runs and 516 wickets from 190 matches — makes him among the most successful cricketers from New South Wales, a powerhouse in Australia’s tough Sheffield Shield. Bad boy reputation In his playing days, Mat- thews had the reputation of be- ing Australia’s ‘bad boy’. He has no regrets. “I was abused with all kinds of words, the kind of stuff you cannot imagine or publish. “In my time, every team in world cricket, apart from the West Indies, sledged. “I took it in my stride... and I gave it back. But I never carried it with me when I left the field.” Matthews, who played a key role for Australia in the tied Test in Madras (1986) with a 10-wicket match haul, re- vealed, “It was a tense game, and I was called names by a section of the crowd, I remem- ber. “I also gave Chandrakant Pandit, who had hit me over mid-on earlier, a proper send- off, going almost half way back to the pavilion with him. “Wicketkeeper Tim Zoehrer asked me, ‘What’s the matter, you just got him out. But I wanted to give him (Pandit) a send-off.” The former all-rounder said he crossed the line only once in Pakistan in the 1983 Test at the MCG. “I went to the Pakistani dressing room in the evening. Imran Khan opened the door and I said to him, “I am sorry about that,” and guess what Imran’s answer was. He said, “Don’t worry, you said the right thing.” Matthews claimed he could easily get his former New South Wales teammate Steve Waugh worked up. “I’ve shared rooms with him. I knew every button in his body and knew exactly what to say to him. I was amazed when others told me Steve was unflappable on the field.” The former all-rounder re- vealed he once got Merv Hughes to bowl 11 successive bouncers at him in a domestic match. “After every ball, I would run up to Merv and say things to him like, ‘You know Merv, I like your friendly moustache!’ He would run in angrily and bounce at me again. Bouncers rarely get you out “The bouncer rarely gets you out and it allowed me to play him more easily. I wanted him to do just that.” When Matthews talks, there is rarely a dull moment. Per- haps, there is a message in words to the Indians. What’s said on the ground should stay there: Matthews Greg Matthews. PHOTO: AFP S. Dinakar MUMBAI: Ravindra Jadeja’s se- lection for the ICC World Cup in Australia-New Zealand from February 14 has become uncer- tain following a shoulder injury he suffered while practising in Australia. The experienced 26-year-old all-rounder provides perfect balance to the team in the shorter version of the game and his non-availability for selec- tion on January 6 — when the selection committee will meet to pick the team for the Tri- series (Australia, India and En- gland) and the World Cup — could turn out to be a setback to India’s campaign. Undergoing rehab According to reliable sourc- es, Jadeja suffered a shoulder tear while throwing during a practice session in Australia and returned home for diag- nosis and rehabilitation. Jadeja is now undergoing treatment at the NCA rehabilitation centre at SRMC, Chennai. Realising the value Jadeja brings to the team, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) is in the process of ob- taining clarity on replacement rules for ICC events. Over the next three days, it will also seek opinion from medical experts on the extent of recovery Jade- ja has made since returning home and the time it will take for him to resume playing. Usually the selection com- mittee is given a fitness report of players and it would be in- teresting to see the position BCCI takes after getting all opinions and, most important- ly, ODI captain M.S. Dhoni’s view. India is slated to play the first warm-up game against Austra- lia on February 8 and the sec- ond against Afghanistan on February 10 at Adelaide. It needs to be seen whether the BCCI will give the green signal to the selection commit- tee to choose Jadeja hoping that he will be fit to play by the first warm-up game. The selection committee picked Gujarat all-rounder Ax- ar Patel as replacement for Ja- deja in the Test squad and he could become a straightaway choice in the event of the BCCI not receiving favourable re- ports on Jadeja’s fitness. Will Jadeja be able to win the fitness race? G. Viswanath SYDNEY: As the cricket caravan moved to Sydney, the mood in the Australian camp was som- bre despite the excitement of the New Year. It was here that Phillip Hughes lost his life after being felled by a short-pitched deliv- ery at the SCG. Brad Haddin played in that match, representing New South Wales against South Australia. And it is at the SCG that Austra- lia meets India in the final Test, beginning on January 6. Those traumatic moments could play out before his eyes again. Haddin would need to keep a lid on his emotions when the match gets underway. He said, “It’s a very difficult moment for us.” But with the Test series on, it’s business as usual for the cricketers. Asked about M.S. Dhoni’s shock retirement from Tests, Haddin said, “The great thing about Dhoni was his temper- ament. No matter where the game was going you wouldn’t know. He had a pretty even tem- po through whatever situation was going on and that’s why he’s had such longevity in the game.” Haddin added, “I was very surprised at his retirement. He’s been a great servant of Indian cricket, the way he handles him- self and the team, the calmness he brings to a very, very big job in captaining the Indian cricket team. “He was great to play against and a true gentleman of the game. I think he’s left Indian cricket in a better place than it was when he took over.” On Indian pacemen’s short- pitched ball tactics against him at the MCG, Haddin said, “It was pretty easy to get a plan because we knew what was coming. I hit two fours and they went back to conventional bowling. If that’s their plan, I’ll combat them whatever way I see fit. If their bowlers want to bang it down halfway for an hour-and-a-half then go for your life.” Talking about Australia’s de- layed declaration on day five at the MCG, Haddin said, “We won the series, that’s the main thing we took out of it. “I think we earned the right to play the way we did in Mel- bourne. We’ve played India to- tally out of the series. Come Sydney, if we get ourselves into that situation, it’d be different because we’ve taken India out of the series.” Sombre mood, but business as usual for the Aussies Special Correspondent CHENNAI: Tamil Nadu qualified for the knockout stages of the Col. C.K. Nayudu Trophy (un- der-23) after drawing its match against Maharashtra here on Thursday. At Malappuram, Kerala moved into the quarterfinals with a three-wicket win over Saurashtra. Kerala topped the pool with 15 points from four games, ahead of Tamil Nadu (13). At New Delhi, seamer Ankit Singh Kushwah’s five for 19 helped Madhya Pradesh regis- ter a massive 198-run victory over the host. The scores: At Chennai: Tamil Nadu 216 & 226 for four in 67 overs (B. Rahul 65, M. Shahrukh Khan 59, N. Jagadeesan 38 n.o., J. Kaushik 47 n.o.) drew with Maharashtra 131. Points: TN 3, Mah- arashtra 1. At Malappuram: Saurashtra 164 & 284 lost to Kerala 330 & 121 for seven in 48 overs (Akshay Chandran 37 n.o., Sagar Dodia four for 28). Kerala 6, Saurashtra 0. At New Delhi: Madhya Pradesh 304 & 228 for five decl. bt Delhi 217 & 117 in 41.3 overs (Gagan Bhatia 60, Ankit Singh Kushwah five for 19, May- ank Jain three for 39). MP 6, Delhi 0. At Muzaffarnagar: Uttar Pradesh 542 & 142 for two in 35 overs (Almas Shaukat 69, Rakhshan Faraz 60 n.o.) drew with Himachal Pradesh 466 in 128 overs (A.K. Rana 121 n.o., P.S. Chopra 110, A. K. Kaushik 86, Ankit Rajpoot three for 114). UP 3, HP 1. At Barwala: Haryana 214 & 321 bt Assam 251 & 196 in 67.4 overs (Ma- nasjyoti Gogoi 32, Jogeswar Bhumiz 30, R.K. Tewatia three for 75). Harya- na 6, Assam 0. At Nagpur: Vidarbha 489 & 263 for six in 48 overs (D.D. Ahlawat 101 n.o., J.M. Sharma 84, Tabrez Khan three for 103) drew with Railways 309 for nine in 125.4 overs (A.P. Yadav 137, A.P. Bawa 65, P.S. Singh 57, Sidd- hesh Neral three for 61, Shahnawaz Khan three for 61). Vidarbha 3, Rail- ways 1. At Hyderabad: Bengal 223 & 371 for five decl. in 164 overs (Writtick Chatterjee 98, Sandipan Das 97, Ankit Keshri 77, Purab Joshi 52) drew with Hyderabad 233 & 18 for no loss in 10 overs. Hyderabad 3, Bengal 1. At Jaipur: Mumbai 374 & 246 for seven decl. in 44 overs (Armaan Jaffer 67 n.o., S.M. Yadav 64, Shashank Singh 56) drew with Rajasthan 300 & 205 for eight in 57 overs (A.N. Garhwal 70, S.S. Dobal 56, Sagar Trivedi three for 43, T.U. Deshpande three for 61). Mumbai 3, Rajasthan 1. TN and Kerala qualify

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CMYK

ND-ND

SPORT15THE HINDU FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 2015

NOIDA/DELHI

Lampard to stay at Manchester CityEnglish Premier League champion Manchester City announced ithad secured the services of Frank Lampard until the end of theseason despite the midfielder signing for New York City in June

Button ties the knotBritish former world champion Jenson Button confirmedvia Twitter that he has married his long-term girlfriend,Japanese-Argentine model Jessica Michibata (in pic)

Telecast scheduleSouth Africa vs West Indies, third Test,TEN Cricket, 2 p.m.

A mind game and a puzzle

that you solve with

reasoning and logic. Fill in

the grid with digits in such

a manner that every row,

every column and every

3x3 box accommodates

the digits 1 to 9, without

repeating any. The

solution to yesterday’s

puzzle is at right.

su ldo lku

SYDNEY: Footwork is the es-sence of batsmanship. It’s thatprecious ability of a batsman tojudge the length of a deliveryand respond with appropriatefeet movement.

In Australia, successful bat-ting, unless the length demandsotherwise, is a lot about goingback and using the depth of thecrease. This not only enablesthe batsman to shorten thelength but also gives him moretime to play the horizontal batshots — the cut and the pull —that can be so effective inAustralia.

This method could also forcethe paceman to pitch the ballfurther up and then the bat-sman, unless the ball is swing-ing, can get on to the front footand essay the drive.

Good footwork — that altersthe length of a bowler — is a lotabout decisiveness.

Cheteshwar Pujara’s foot-work though has been indeci-sive. The team-management’sdecision to send him at No. 6 inthe second innings at the MCGwas a reflection of Pujara’s lackof confidence.

He has appeared tentative,been unsure of his off-stump,and subsequently paid theprice. He is getting into half-cock positions — neither fullyforward nor back — and beencaught in no-man’s land.

Balance is a critical necessityfor a batsman and there is noway Pujara’s weight can be welldistributed if he is half forwardto deliveries demanding a dif-ferent footwork pattern.

The bowlers have been find-ing him out, often pitching be-tween six to eight metres beforethe stumps, just outside the off.Pujara, neither forward norback, has been nicking thesedeliveries.

Pujara has not really movedhis feet to cover the swing fromthe pacemen in the manner aNo. 3 batsman should.

Crouching stanceOne also gets the impression

that Pujara has been crouchinga tad too much in his stance.This is precisely why the right-

hander is finding it hard to geton top of the bounce on the sur-faces here.

This might have been the rea-son why Pujara, unable to swayaway, ducked right into aMitchell Johnson bouncer atthe MCG. In the instance, thehelmet grill saved this batsman.

Because of his stance, his leftelbow is not high enough as thebat meets the ball. Consequent-ly, he has struggled to cope withlift.

Pujara’s grip — while he is notbottom-handed in true sense ofthe term, his right hand stilldominates — can actually en-able him to play the cut and thepull on these wickets. The right-hander, however, has to stayupright and travel back in hiscrease to execute these shots.

The batsman could also begripping the bat too hard. Puj-ara has not been defending therising deliveries with softhands.

There are two sets of move-ments that have been success-fully employed in Australia.Being classically back andacross, as the legendary SunilGavaskar was against fastbowlers.

The other, one that has againfetched batsmen plenty of runsdown under, is the back andback movement.

Considering the ball does notkeep low here for most part, thistechnique has its admirers.

While the bouncing deliveryremains a distinct threat forsub-continental batsmen downunder, the Aussie pacemen dopick up wickets aplenty withtheir swing or seam movementon or just outside off.

Actually, they disrupt foot-work with bounce and then findthe nicks with deviation.

Coming into the series, Puj-ara averaged 15.00 in two Testsin New Zealand. In England, itwas 22.20 from five Tests. Thebatsman needs to have a closelook at his technique.

A determined cricketer withold-fashioned values, Pujarastill has interesting possibili-ties. He has to sort out his foot-work first.

High time Pujara sorted out his footworkCRICKET / His lack of confidence might have prompted the team-management to send him at No.6 at the MCG

CAUGHT IN NO-MAN’S LAND: Cheteshwar Pujara fails to read this delivery from Mitchell Johnson in the third Test at the MCG onFriday. — PHOTO: SCOTT BARBOUR/GETTY IMAGES

S. Dinakar

SYDNEY: The touring Indiancricketers and the Australianteam were, on Thursday, host-ed by Prime Minister Tony Ab-bott for an afternoon tea at hisofficial residence on NewYear’s Day here.

Players from both sidesposed for the official photo ses-sion with Abbott at KirribilliHouse, his second officialresidence.

Dressed in their casual TeamIndia T-shirts and trousers, theplayers were photographedwith Abbott, with the BCCIposting the pictures on itsTwitter handle.

“The Indian cricket team washosted for afternoon tea byAustralian Prime Minister To-ny Abbott on the first day of thenew year, on Thursday,” theBCCI said. There was anotherphotograph of the newly-ap-pointed India captain ViratKohli, his Australian counter-part Steve Smith and Abbott.

Mahendra Singh Dhoni wasnot seen in any of the photosposted. It remains unclearwhether he attended the eventor not. — PTI

Australia Prime Minister hosts tea for Indian players

ONE FOR THE ALBUM: Australia Prime Minister Tony Abbott poses fora photo with the Indian cricket team on Thursday. — PHOTO: BRENDON THORNE/GETTY IMAGES

SYDNEY: Former Australia all-rounder Greg Matthews has aninteresting suggestion for ViratKohli on dealing with Austra-lian sledging.

Matthews told The Hindu,“He (Kohli) should tell themback, ‘Yes, I am a spoilt brat,and I have a big house, and Idrive a Ferrari, and I have agreat insurance. What’s yourproblem?’ That will put theAussies back.”

The former off-spinner andleft-handed batsman, said, “In-stead, he (Kohli) is talkingabout it at press conferences,it’s bothering him and willeventually affect his game.

Focus on the game“You have to let go and focus

on your game. I think what’ssaid on the ground should stayon the ground.”

The 55-year-old Matthewsrepresented Australia in 33

Tests in the ’80s and early ’90s,scoring 1,849 runs and pickingup 61 wickets.

His First-Class record as aleft-handed batsman and anoff-spinner — 8,872 runs and516 wickets from 190 matches— makes him among the mostsuccessful cricketers from NewSouth Wales, a powerhouse inAustralia’s tough SheffieldShield.

Bad boy reputationIn his playing days, Mat-

thews had the reputation of be-ing Australia’s ‘bad boy’.

He has no regrets. “I wasabused with all kinds of words,the kind of stuff you cannotimagine or publish.

“In my time, every team inworld cricket, apart from theWest Indies, sledged.

“I took it in my stride... and Igave it back. But I never carriedit with me when I left the field.”

Matthews, who played a keyrole for Australia in the tied

Test in Madras (1986) with a10-wicket match haul, re-vealed, “It was a tense game,and I was called names by asection of the crowd, I remem-ber.

“I also gave ChandrakantPandit, who had hit me overmid-on earlier, a proper send-off, going almost half way backto the pavilion with him.

“Wicketkeeper Tim Zoehrerasked me, ‘What’s the matter,you just got him out. But Iwanted to give him (Pandit) asend-off.”

The former all-rounder saidhe crossed the line only once inPakistan in the 1983 Test at theMCG.

“I went to the Pakistanidressing room in the evening.Imran Khan opened the doorand I said to him, “I am sorryabout that,” and guess whatImran’s answer was. He said,“Don’t worry, you said the rightthing.”

Matthews claimed he couldeasily get his former NewSouth Wales teammate SteveWaugh worked up. “I’ve shared

rooms with him. I knew everybutton in his body and knewexactly what to say to him. Iwas amazed when others toldme Steve was unflappable onthe field.”

The former all-rounder re-vealed he once got MervHughes to bowl 11 successivebouncers at him in a domesticmatch.

“After every ball, I would runup to Merv and say things tohim like, ‘You know Merv, Ilike your friendly moustache!’He would run in angrily andbounce at me again.

Bouncers rarely

get you out“The bouncer rarely gets you

out and it allowed me to playhim more easily. I wanted himto do just that.”

When Matthews talks, thereis rarely a dull moment. Per-haps, there is a message inwords to the Indians.

What’s said on the ground should stay there: Matthews

Greg Matthews. — PHOTO: AFP

S. Dinakar

MUMBAI: Ravindra Jadeja’s se-lection for the ICC World Cupin Australia-New Zealand fromFebruary 14 has become uncer-tain following a shoulder injuryhe suffered while practising inAustralia.

The experienced 26-year-oldall-rounder provides perfectbalance to the team in theshorter version of the game andhis non-availability for selec-tion on January 6 — when theselection committee will meetto pick the team for the Tri-series (Australia, India and En-gland) and the World Cup —could turn out to be a setback toIndia’s campaign.

Undergoing rehabAccording to reliable sourc-

es, Jadeja suffered a shouldertear while throwing during apractice session in Australiaand returned home for diag-nosis and rehabilitation. Jadejais now undergoing treatment atthe NCA rehabilitation centreat SRMC, Chennai.

Realising the value Jadejabrings to the team, the Board ofControl for Cricket in India(BCCI) is in the process of ob-

taining clarity on replacementrules for ICC events. Over thenext three days, it will also seekopinion from medical expertson the extent of recovery Jade-ja has made since returninghome and the time it will takefor him to resume playing.

Usually the selection com-mittee is given a fitness reportof players and it would be in-teresting to see the positionBCCI takes after getting allopinions and, most important-ly, ODI captain M.S. Dhoni’sview.

India is slated to play the firstwarm-up game against Austra-lia on February 8 and the sec-ond against Afghanistan onFebruary 10 at Adelaide.

It needs to be seen whetherthe BCCI will give the greensignal to the selection commit-tee to choose Jadeja hopingthat he will be fit to play by thefirst warm-up game.

The selection committeepicked Gujarat all-rounder Ax-ar Patel as replacement for Ja-deja in the Test squad and hecould become a straightawaychoice in the event of the BCCInot receiving favourable re-ports on Jadeja’s fitness.

Will Jadeja be able towin the fitness race? G. Viswanath

SYDNEY: As the cricket caravanmoved to Sydney, the mood inthe Australian camp was som-bre despite the excitement ofthe New Year.

It was here that PhillipHughes lost his life after beingfelled by a short-pitched deliv-ery at the SCG.

Brad Haddin played in thatmatch, representing New SouthWales against South Australia.And it is at the SCG that Austra-lia meets India in the final Test,beginning on January 6.

Those traumatic momentscould play out before his eyesagain.

Haddin would need to keep alid on his emotions when thematch gets underway. He said,“It’s a very difficult moment forus.” But with the Test series on,

it’s business as usual for thecricketers.

Asked about M.S. Dhoni’sshock retirement from Tests,Haddin said, “The great thingabout Dhoni was his temper-ament. No matter where thegame was going you wouldn’tknow. He had a pretty even tem-po through whatever situationwas going on and that’s why he’shad such longevity in the game.”

Haddin added, “I was verysurprised at his retirement. He’sbeen a great servant of Indiancricket, the way he handles him-self and the team, the calmnesshe brings to a very, very big job incaptaining the Indian cricketteam.

“He was great to play againstand a true gentleman of thegame. I think he’s left Indiancricket in a better place than itwas when he took over.”

On Indian pacemen’s short-pitched ball tactics against himat the MCG, Haddin said, “It waspretty easy to get a plan becausewe knew what was coming. I hittwo fours and they went back toconventional bowling. If that’stheir plan, I’ll combat themwhatever way I see fit. If theirbowlers want to bang it downhalfway for an hour-and-a-halfthen go for your life.”

Talking about Australia’s de-layed declaration on day five atthe MCG, Haddin said, “We wonthe series, that’s the main thingwe took out of it.

“I think we earned the right toplay the way we did in Mel-bourne. We’ve played India to-tally out of the series. ComeSydney, if we get ourselves intothat situation, it’d be differentbecause we’ve taken India out ofthe series.”

Sombre mood, but business asusual for the AussiesSpecial Correspondent

CHENNAI: Tamil Nadu qualifiedfor the knockout stages of theCol. C.K. Nayudu Trophy (un-der-23) after drawing its matchagainst Maharashtra here onThursday.

At Malappuram, Keralamoved into the quarterfinalswith a three-wicket win overSaurashtra.

Kerala topped the pool with15 points from four games,ahead of Tamil Nadu (13).

At New Delhi, seamer AnkitSingh Kushwah’s five for 19helped Madhya Pradesh regis-ter a massive 198-run victoryover the host.

The scores: At Chennai: Tamil Nadu 216 & 226

for four in 67 overs (B. Rahul 65, M.Shahrukh Khan 59, N. Jagadeesan 38n.o., J. Kaushik 47 n.o.) drew withMaharashtra 131. Points: TN 3, Mah-arashtra 1.

At Malappuram: Saurashtra 164 &284 lost to Kerala 330 & 121 for sevenin 48 overs (Akshay Chandran 37 n.o.,Sagar Dodia four for 28). Kerala 6,Saurashtra 0.

At New Delhi: Madhya Pradesh304 & 228 for five decl. bt Delhi 217 &117 in 41.3 overs (Gagan Bhatia 60,Ankit Singh Kushwah five for 19, May-ank Jain three for 39). MP 6, Delhi 0.

At Muzaffarnagar: Uttar Pradesh542 & 142 for two in 35 overs (AlmasShaukat 69, Rakhshan Faraz 60 n.o.)drew with Himachal Pradesh 466 in128 overs (A.K. Rana 121 n.o., P.S.Chopra 110, A. K. Kaushik 86, AnkitRajpoot three for 114). UP 3, HP 1.

At Barwala: Haryana 214 & 321 btAssam 251 & 196 in 67.4 overs (Ma-nasjyoti Gogoi 32, Jogeswar Bhumiz30, R.K. Tewatia three for 75). Harya-na 6, Assam 0.

At Nagpur: Vidarbha 489 & 263 forsix in 48 overs (D.D. Ahlawat 101 n.o.,J.M. Sharma 84, Tabrez Khan threefor 103) drew with Railways 309 fornine in 125.4 overs (A.P. Yadav 137,A.P. Bawa 65, P.S. Singh 57, Sidd-hesh Neral three for 61, ShahnawazKhan three for 61). Vidarbha 3, Rail-ways 1.

At Hyderabad: Bengal 223 & 371for five decl. in 164 overs (WrittickChatterjee 98, Sandipan Das 97, AnkitKeshri 77, Purab Joshi 52) drew withHyderabad 233 & 18 for no loss in 10overs. Hyderabad 3, Bengal 1.

At Jaipur: Mumbai 374 & 246 forseven decl. in 44 overs (Armaan Jaffer67 n.o., S.M. Yadav 64, ShashankSingh 56) drew with Rajasthan 300 &205 for eight in 57 overs (A.N. Garhwal70, S.S. Dobal 56, Sagar Trivedi threefor 43, T.U. Deshpande three for 61).Mumbai 3, Rajasthan 1.

TN and Keralaqualify