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Day 5 Highlights - 2Nd Test: New Zealand V India Highlights At Napier, Mar 26-30, 2009 - 3/30/2009 7:35:11 AM


Watch Cricket Video Highlights of Day 5 Highlights - 2nd Test Highlights: New Zealand v India Highlights at Napier, March 26-30, 2009. Watch New Zealand v India, 2nd Test, Day 5 Highlights. On eCric you can watch NZ v IND (India v New Zealand) 2nd Test Highlights, Day 5. Day 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 of 3rd Test, New Zealand v India 2009 will also be available on eCric.

Match: Day 5 - 2nd Test: New Zealand v India
Venue: Napier
Date: March 30, 2009





2Nd Twenty20 (T20) Highlights: South Africa V Australia Highlights At Centurion, Mar 29, 2009 - 3/30/2009 7:35:08 AM

Robin Peterson in action during 2nd Twenty20 - South Africa v Australia, March 29, 2009
Watch 2nd Twenty20 (T20) Highlights - South Africa v Australia Highlights, Centurion, March 29, 2009. Watch South Africa v Australia, 2nd Twenty20 (T20) Highlights for free on eCric.

Match: 2nd Twenty20 - South Africa v Australia
Venue: Centurion
Date: March 29, 2009





Ponting's Interview:



Cricket Highlights : India V New Zealand - 2Nd Test (Day 05) - 3/30/2009 7:35:05 AM

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Indians manage to escape from defeat thanks to Gautam Gambhir and VVS Laxman. All the batsmen other than stand in captain Virendra Sehwag did their job well to secure the game and keep their series lead. This is a lost chance for New Zealand team. But still they have a hope left. And Indians are happy with this result and now they won't loose the series. It'll be either level or victory. One point in this game is Indians lost their captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni, hope he will be back in next game. And for New Zealand everything has to be keep like this game and they need little bit of luck.

India Vs New Zealand Day 5 Highlights 2Nd Test - 3/30/2009 7:35:01 AM

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2Nd Twenty20 (T20) Highlights: South Africa V Australia Highlights At Centurion, Mar 29, 2009 - 3/30/2009 7:34:20 AM

Robin Peterson in action during 2nd Twenty20 - South Africa v Australia, March 29, 2009
Watch 2nd Twenty20 (T20) Highlights - South Africa v Australia Highlights, Centurion, March 29, 2009. Watch South Africa v Australia, 2nd Twenty20 (T20) Highlights for free on eCric.

Match: 2nd Twenty20 - South Africa v Australia
Venue: Centurion
Date: March 29, 2009





Ponting's Interview:



Cricket Highlights : India V New Zealand - 2Nd Test (Day 05) - 3/30/2009 7:34:17 AM

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Part II



Indians manage to escape from defeat thanks to Gautam Gambhir and VVS Laxman. All the batsmen other than stand in captain Virendra Sehwag did their job well to secure the game and keep their series lead. This is a lost chance for New Zealand team. But still they have a hope left. And Indians are happy with this result and now they won't loose the series. It'll be either level or victory. One point in this game is Indians lost their captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni, hope he will be back in next game. And for New Zealand everything has to be keep like this game and they need little bit of luck.

India Vs New Zealand Day 5 Highlights 2Nd Test - 3/30/2009 7:34:11 AM

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Cricket Highlights : India V New Zealand - 2Nd Test (Day 04) - 3/29/2009 3:34:03 AM

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Part I

Coming soon
Gambhir and Sachin Tendulkar manage to keep the game alive till the last day with the help of Rahul Dravid. India is still 62 runs behind New Zealand and they have big task in the first day. Indian batsmen went bit slow in the forth day, but it's good for them that the lost only one wicket and got over two hundred runs. New Zealands will try to get rest of the wickets before Indians go too far in the fifth day. But Indians will do their best to remain in the wicket in the fifth day.

Cricket Highlights : England V West Indies - 3Rd ODI - 3/29/2009 3:34:01 AM

England's poor batting





Fireworks from Chris Gayle



England face another humiliating defeat in West Indies. After loosing the first game due to mistake of the coach, West Indies players bounced back well in to the series and now leading as 2-1. They are heading in to a clear series victory and the only thing that can ruin the eminent victory is the pay dispute between West Indies players and the cricket board. Some players are threatening to join IPL incited of England tour in next month and also now there is a news that they might boycott the fifth ODI in this series. That's not good for the gama :(

India Vs New Zealand Day 4 Highlights 2Nd Test - 3/29/2009 3:33:57 AM

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1St T20I Highlights: South Africa V Australia Highlights At Johannesburg, Mar 27, 2009 - 3/28/2009 10:01:15 AM

Mark Boucher
Watch 1st Twenty20 (T20) Highlights - South Africa v Australia at Johannesburg, March 27, 2009. On eCric you can view South Africa v Australia, 1st T20 Highlights, Johannesburg

Match: 1st Twenty20 - South Africa v New Zealand
Venue: Johannesburg
Date: March 27, 2009




Cricket Highlights : India V New Zealand - 2Nd Test (Day 03) - 3/28/2009 10:01:11 AM

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New Zealands keep their dominance of the game for the third day also. And they are well set to record victory here and balance the series. After dismissing India well below their total, they invited them for a follow on. Virendra Shewag couldn't do much in the second innings also, when the third day's play stopped, India needs two hundred and sixty seven runs to avoid innings defeat. The situation suggest that only a miracle can stop their defeat. But in cricket you can believe in miracles.

India Vs New Zealand 2Nd Test Highlights Day 3 - 3/28/2009 10:01:08 AM

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New Zealand V India, 2Nd Test, Napier, 3Rd Day, March 28, 2009 Part-1 - 3/28/2009 10:01:05 AM

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New Zealand V India, 2Nd Test, Napier, 3Rd Day, March 28, 2009 Part-2 - 3/28/2009 10:01:01 AM

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New Zealand V India, 2Nd Test, Napier, 3Rd Day, March 28, 2009 Part-3 - 3/28/2009 10:00:56 AM

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Cricket Highlights : Australia V South Africa - 1St Twenty20 - 3/27/2009 7:25:15 PM

Aus Innings




SA Innings



Superb batting performance from Mark Baucher secure the victory of the first twenty20 game for the South Africa. The game was moving towards both sides from the beginning. At first Australians were struggling. The great innings from David Hussy took them in to a competitive total. Then South Africans were struggling after loosing five wickets in the half way. But Morekal and Baucher build up good partnership and quick batting from Morekal and well settled innings from Baucher ensured the victory is theirs.

Cricket Highlights : India V New Zealand - 2Nd Test (Day 02) - 3/27/2009 7:25:10 PM

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New Zealand is maintained their first day's good form and went for a big score. And they managed to take three Indian wickets before the second day's play ends, even though one wicket is Indian night watchman Ishant Sharma. There is a big task left for the veteran Indian batsmen Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar who are at the crease at the moment. They are still more then five hundred runs behind and have lost their inform openers. It will be nice to see how Indian middle order will cope the situation without the backbone of their middle order, captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni. Anyway the pressure is with New Zealand as they had to win this game to keep the series balance. Indians will be happy with a draw as they have won the first game easily and lead the series at the moment. By the way 'the fashion of the cricket' IPL is only three weeks away. Get ready to enjoy. We will bring all the live coverage and highlights.

South Africa Vs Australia 1St T20 Highlights - 3/27/2009 7:25:05 PM

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India Vs New Zealand 2Nd Test Highlights Day 2 - 3/27/2009 7:24:58 PM

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Zealand V India, 2Nd Test, Napier, 2Nd Day, March 27, 2009 Part-1 - 3/27/2009 7:24:54 PM

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Zealand V India, 2Nd Test, Napier, 2Nd Day, March 27, 2009 Part-2 - 3/27/2009 7:24:50 PM

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New Zealand V India, 2Nd Test, Napier, 2Nd Day, March 27, 2009 Part-3 - 3/27/2009 7:24:46 PM

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Cricket Highlights : India V New Zealand - 2Nd Test (Day 01) - 3/26/2009 7:40:44 PM

Superb centuries by Ross Taylor and Jesse Ryder were the highlights of day one of the second Test against India as New Zealand reached 351 for four at stumps in Napier. The pair put on a record fourth-wicket partnership of 271 runs to dig the home side out of a hole after another sorry start left them 23 for three early in the day. Taylor's 151 was just three runs shy of his highest Test score and included 26 boundaries and one six, while Ryder was unbeaten on 137 when play ended at McLean Park. James Franklin was 26 not out but was lucky to be there after surviving a caught behind appeal and seeing Yuvraj Singh drop him in the slips. Yuvraj had a bad day in the field as he also dropped Taylor when the stylish 25-year-old right-hander was on four and it proved to be costly. Having won the toss and opted to bat on the batsman friendly wicket, New Zealand skipper Daniel Vettori would have been disappointed to see early wickets fall as the hosts slipped to 23 for three inside the opening 11 overs. But Taylor and Ryder turned the tide superbly, hitting boundaries all round the ground as the previously dominant Indians were given a taste of their own medicine.

New Zealand Innings (Day 01)





The Indians suffered a setback even before the Test began when captain MS Dhoni was a late withdrawal with a back problem. But they would have been buoyed by the start they had with Tim McIntosh, Martin Guptill and Jamie How - in for the injured Daniel Flynn - all dismissed early. McIntosh was unlucky to be given caught behind off Ishant Sharma for 12 but How could have no complaints as he edged a yorker from Zaheer Khan right on to his stumps. Khan struck again at the start of his next over when Martin Guptill tried to fend off a bouncer only to see the ball fly to gully where Virender Sehwag, taking over the captaincy duties, took a diving catch. Ryder then saw off the hat-trick ball and he and Taylor guided the Black Caps to 98 for three by lunch. While the Indians enjoyed the upper hand in the morning session, the afternoon belonged to New Zealand's batsmen.

In the fourth over after the interval Taylor brought up his half-century with his 11th four of the innings and three overs later Ryder joined him when he struck a boundary through cover to bring up his 52. The pair continued to pile the pressure on the Indian bowlers waiting to pick off the bad ball, and some that were not so bad either, and they also rotated the strike well to keep the runs flowing. Taylor moved quickly into the 90s with three successive boundaries off Yuvraj, although the last one was somewhat streaky as he was dropped by Rahul Dravid at first slip. He then faced several nervous deliveries while on 99, surviving an lbw shout from Harbhajan Singh and almost causing Ryder to be run out after opting for a quick single only to change his mind and send his partner back. But he finally cut loose with a drive off Khan in the final over before tea to reach his third Test century.

His 18th four helped him to 103 in 151 balls before he hit another two deliveries to the rope to get New Zealand to 233 for three at tea. Ryder's second successive century came in equally expansive fashion early in the final session when he steered a full-ish, wide Khan delivery through cover point to bring up 103 in 147 balls to become the first New Zealander since Nathan Astle in 1996 to score back-to-back tons in Tests. Taylor then brought up his 150 but in the next over he holed out to Yuvraj in the deep having added just one more run to bring to an end to a highly entertaining 204-ball innings. That left Ryder and Franklin to take New Zealand to the close although Franklin was lucky to survive. Overall it was a tough day for Yuvraj. In addition to two dropped catches he also conceded 14 runs in his only over. Harbhajan was the most economical with six maidens in his 26 overs for one for 61. Khan was the main wicket-taker with two for 94 off 23 (four maidens), while Munaf Patel struggled, his 18 overs costing 78 runs.

Cricket Highlights : India V New Zealand - 2Nd Test (Day 01) - 3/26/2009 7:35:04 PM

Superb centuries by Ross Taylor and Jesse Ryder were the highlights of day one of the second Test against India as New Zealand reached 351 for four at stumps in Napier. The pair put on a record fourth-wicket partnership of 271 runs to dig the home side out of a hole after another sorry start left them 23 for three early in the day. Taylor's 151 was just three runs shy of his highest Test score and included 26 boundaries and one six, while Ryder was unbeaten on 137 when play ended at McLean Park. James Franklin was 26 not out but was lucky to be there after surviving a caught behind appeal and seeing Yuvraj Singh drop him in the slips. Yuvraj had a bad day in the field as he also dropped Taylor when the stylish 25-year-old right-hander was on four and it proved to be costly. Having won the toss and opted to bat on the batsman friendly wicket, New Zealand skipper Daniel Vettori would have been disappointed to see early wickets fall as the hosts slipped to 23 for three inside the opening 11 overs. But Taylor and Ryder turned the tide superbly, hitting boundaries all round the ground as the previously dominant Indians were given a taste of their own medicine.

New Zealand Innings (Day 01)





The Indians suffered a setback even before the Test began when captain MS Dhoni was a late withdrawal with a back problem. But they would have been buoyed by the start they had with Tim McIntosh, Martin Guptill and Jamie How - in for the injured Daniel Flynn - all dismissed early. McIntosh was unlucky to be given caught behind off Ishant Sharma for 12 but How could have no complaints as he edged a yorker from Zaheer Khan right on to his stumps. Khan struck again at the start of his next over when Martin Guptill tried to fend off a bouncer only to see the ball fly to gully where Virender Sehwag, taking over the captaincy duties, took a diving catch. Ryder then saw off the hat-trick ball and he and Taylor guided the Black Caps to 98 for three by lunch. While the Indians enjoyed the upper hand in the morning session, the afternoon belonged to New Zealand's batsmen.

In the fourth over after the interval Taylor brought up his half-century with his 11th four of the innings and three overs later Ryder joined him when he struck a boundary through cover to bring up his 52. The pair continued to pile the pressure on the Indian bowlers waiting to pick off the bad ball, and some that were not so bad either, and they also rotated the strike well to keep the runs flowing. Taylor moved quickly into the 90s with three successive boundaries off Yuvraj, although the last one was somewhat streaky as he was dropped by Rahul Dravid at first slip. He then faced several nervous deliveries while on 99, surviving an lbw shout from Harbhajan Singh and almost causing Ryder to be run out after opting for a quick single only to change his mind and send his partner back. But he finally cut loose with a drive off Khan in the final over before tea to reach his third Test century.

His 18th four helped him to 103 in 151 balls before he hit another two deliveries to the rope to get New Zealand to 233 for three at tea. Ryder's second successive century came in equally expansive fashion early in the final session when he steered a full-ish, wide Khan delivery through cover point to bring up 103 in 147 balls to become the first New Zealander since Nathan Astle in 1996 to score back-to-back tons in Tests. Taylor then brought up his 150 but in the next over he holed out to Yuvraj in the deep having added just one more run to bring to an end to a highly entertaining 204-ball innings. That left Ryder and Franklin to take New Zealand to the close although Franklin was lucky to survive. Overall it was a tough day for Yuvraj. In addition to two dropped catches he also conceded 14 runs in his only over. Harbhajan was the most economical with six maidens in his 26 overs for one for 61. Khan was the main wicket-taker with two for 94 off 23 (four maidens), while Munaf Patel struggled, his 18 overs costing 78 runs.

India Vs New Zealand 2Nd Test Highlights Day 1 - 3/26/2009 7:34:59 PM

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India Vs New Zealand 2Nd Test Highlights Day 1 Part-3 - 3/26/2009 7:34:47 PM

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New Zealand V India, 2Nd Test, Napier, 1St Day, March 26, 2009 Part-1 - 3/26/2009 7:34:55 PM

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India Vs New Zealand 2Nd Test Highlights Day 1 Part-2 - 3/26/2009 7:34:51 PM

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Cricket Highlights : England V West Indies - 2Nd ODI - 3/24/2009 9:43:21 PM

Shiv Chanderpaul rounded off a week of personal honours and awards with his 10th one-day international hundred to lead West Indies to a series-levelling 21-run victory, at a packed Providence Stadium, to help ease the memories of Friday's farce. His unbeaten 112 enabled the home side to post a challenging 264 for 8 on another slow surface and despite Andrew Strauss's third ODI ton, and first since June 2005, England pulled up short. Unlike Chanderpaul who had Ramnaresh Sarwan for company, Strauss's innings was a lone hand and he couldn't form a crucial stand with anyone. Fifty partnerships came with Owais Shah and Dimitri Mascarenhas but they weren't enough. Dwayne Bravo set England back on their heels with two wickets in three balls when he removed Shah and Paul Collingwood. From there Strauss was always fighting against the tide against tight bowling and lively fielding. Boundaries were hard to come by all day - except for Chanderpaul - and West Indies' medium-pacers were difficult to get away. Strauss, though, produced a fine hand and continued his outstanding form of the tour in registering his fourth hundred of the trip off 125 balls. He doesn't have the range of shots of some other batsmen, but played to his strengths and realised that if England were to have any hope, he had to remain until the end.

West Indies Innings Highlights



He gambled on holding back the Powerplay and took it in the 44th over with Steve Harmison for company. Strauss reached his ton, but rain started to fall (this time D/L was well in West Indies' favour) and two balls after the resumption he was bowled round his legs by Kieron Pollard. West Indies were home, but it always looked as though they had a few too many. Chanderpaul has always been revered in his home country and has been showered with a host of awards in recent days. On Saturday, Chanderpaul Drive was unveiled as the latest honour and he gave the home support plenty of reasons to cheer him with another masterful innings. England paid for giving him a life on 27 when Matt Prior dropped a bottom edge off Mascarenhas, to further ignite the wicketkeeping debate, and from then on Chanderpaul was commanding. His most nervous moment came on 80 when he pulled a high full toss from James Anderson down to long leg where Harmison held a brilliant catch, but after a brief remonstration by Chanderpaul it was rightly called no-ball for being over waist height. When he tucked a single to midwicket off his 126th ball the full house rose to cheer his achievement, and moments earlier he had also become just the third West Indies batsman to pass 8000 ODI runs after Desmond Haynes and Brian Lara.

England Innings Highlights


He combined with his fellow Guyanese, Sarwan, to add 133 in 29 overs for the third wicket after the openers had fallen early. Sarwan ticked along with ease, then suddenly found another gear as he effortlessly chipped Gareth Batty over deep midwicket for six and crunched Mascarenhas over long-off for an even bigger boundary as his half century came off 58 balls. With the third-wicket stand developing nicely and the mandatory change of ball after 34 overs West Indies opted to take the batting Powerplay. Sarwan soon fell, driving the deserving James Anderson to mid-off where Collingwood took a low catch, but Chanderpaul again showed his innovation. When Strauss set a deep off-side field he hit over the leg side, then when that gap was plugged he backed away and went over mid-off. Stuart Broad was affected, losing his cool when Aleem Dar called a leg-side wide and sent down third consecutive wides later in the over. Chanderpaul had the confidence to bring out the reverse sweep against Broad and repeated the dose against the medium-pace of Mascarenhas and Collingwood. A clutch of late wickets meant the damage in the final 10 overs was limited, but England still had their work cut out.

Ravi Bopara and Kevin Pietersen both dragged into their stumps before Strauss and Shah added 50 in 12 overs to set a platform. However, Bravo then showed why he is so valuable to West Indies as he found late swing to trap Shah leg before and then snaked one through Collingwood's loose drive. In combination with Darren Sammy he strangled the life out of the middle order and Sammy removed Matt Prior through a smart catch from Denesh Ramdin. Whereas Prior had come up too early against Chanderpaul, Ramdin stayed low and benefited. England appeared to be setting their hopes on a late dash from Mascarenhas as he played sensibly alongside Strauss, but a misunderstanding resulted in a crucial run out. Strauss tried his best, but there was too much to do and it was another left-hander's innings that proved the matchwinner.

Cricket Highlights : Australia V South Africa - 3Rd Test (04Th & Final Day) - 3/24/2009 9:43:19 PM

wenty-nine days of Test cricket across three months and more than 10,000 kilometres has not been enough to split the world's two best teams. After the battles at home and away the final outcome was Australia 3, South Africa 3. The net result is that Australia are still the No. 1-ranked team in the world and South Africa remain second. The numbers might be soon forgotten but the quality of cricket that has been on display will be remembered for years to come. The final Test of a long, fiercely-contested and highly-entertaining summer ended with ten minutes to spare on the fourth day. It was the first of the six Tests between these two sides this season that failed to reach the fifth day. Every match produced a result and threw up individual performances that showed the five-day format at its very best. At the WACA in December it was Mitchell Johnson's scarcely believable eight-wicket haul followed by an even more surprising effort from AB de Villiers and the South Africans, who completed the second-highest chase in Test history. In Melbourne it was the arrival of JP Duminy, whose 166 stamped him as a world-class player. At the SCG it was the spine-tingling sight of Graeme Smith walking down the steps with an hour to play, ready to bat with a broken hand to try and save the match.

Final Days Highlights





In Johannesburg it was Marcus North's century on debut, combined with Johnson's breathtaking unbeaten 96. At Kingsmead it was the 20-year-old Phillip Hughes, who refused to back down against one of the meanest pace attacks in the world, and became the youngest man in history to score two centuries in a Test. And in Cape Town it was the return of the forgotten man Ashwell Prince to score 150 as an opener, followed by a Johnson hundred that was a footnote to the match but possibly the start of a new chapter for Australia. There wasn't a boring match among them. The evenness of the overall contest bodes well for future bouts between these two teams - the series will become more frequent and will no longer be held back-to-back - which are, along with India, unquestionably the current superpowers in Test cricket. "Right at the moment that's the way it is," Ricky Ponting said. "I'm not sure if that will always remain the same because there are a number of other very good Test sides out there as well. Whenever you mention rankings and things you've always got to throw India into that as well because they are a very formidable team, mainly at home but they are starting to put some better performances on the board away from home as well.

"But as far as we're concerned, we'd like to think that with what we've done in the last few months, bringing on a new generation of Australian players, that we can maintain a really high level of Test match cricket. If we do that and play somewhere the way we've played in the first couple of weeks of this Test match tour and then I think we'll take some knocking out of that No. 1 ranking." It was a strange scenario at the end of the Newlands match. Australia had lost and it was a hefty defeat by an innings and 20 runs. Yet there were smiles in the dressing room as the match slipped away, in part because there was the entertainment of Johnson's hundred but also because the result of the dead rubber could be quickly erased from the Australians' memory.

As Ponting's men had their photos taken with the series trophy and lapped up the atmosphere in the twilight with Table Mountain in the background, the South Africans also celebrated. It was the second time they had beaten Australia by an innings - the first came in Durban in 1969-70 - and they had rediscovered the form that deserted them after their 2-1 win in Australia. The re-emergence of Prince and centuries to AB de Villiers and the stand-in captain Jacques Kallis gave the Newlands crowd plenty to cheer, as did the nine-wicket match haul from Paul Harris. Kallis said his men would celebrate the strong performance but would also reflect on a series that was over too quickly.

"[We're] obviously elated with the win," Kallis said. "The guys really pitched up here on day one and we played the type of cricket that we know we can play. But it is frustrating that we didn't turn up like that on the first day of the series. Having said that Australia played some really good cricket and put us under pressure." The difference in the first two Tests was the incisiveness of the attacks on helpful pitches and South Africa's experienced unit led by Dale Steyn and Makhaya Ntini was outbowled by Australia's young group. It wasn't until the flat surface in Cape Town that Steyn found the sort of spark he had boasted in Australia. "Sometimes you get on a wicket that helps you as a bowling attack and you try and bowl teams out and you forget what really works, and that's hitting good areas," he said. "We did that exceptionally well in this Test match and that's what was lacking in the first two Test matches. I think the guys have learnt a lot. On a green wicket you've got to bowl exactly the same way as if you're bowling on a flat wicket and that's what gets you the wickets, not searching for those miracle balls that pitch leg and hit the top of off."

The miracle balls might not have come for South Africa in this series but across the six Tests there have been more than enough miraculous feats from both teams. Fans will look back on the past three months as a golden summer for Test cricket.

West Indies Vs England 2Nd ODI Highlights - 3/24/2009 9:43:14 PM

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West Indies V England, 2Nd ODI, March 22, 2009 - 3/24/2009 9:43:03 PM

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, West Indies V England, 2Nd ODI, Providence 22/03/2009 Part-2 - 3/24/2009 9:42:59 PM

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Cricket Highlights : ICC Women's World Cup Final - England V New Zealand - 3/23/2009 9:31:09 PM

England woke up on Sunday morning to find their women crowned world champions for the third time following a final in which they had the edge throughout against New Zealand in Sydney on Sunday. As Jonny Wilkinson had kicked his rugby side to glory in 2003 in the same city, so England's Nicky Shaw sealed success for her team to see them home, having taken a career-best 4 for 34. This match was not quite as nail-biting as the rugby final but certainly had its moments. Though at one stage England were coasting in their chase of 167, they eventually made it home by four wickets. And while Shaw earned the player of the match - unlike Wilkinson - she wasn't even supposed to play. Although vice-captain, it was only an injury to premier allrounder Jenny Gunn that meant her last-minute inclusion. It proved a stroke of fortune for England. The final had promised to be a much tight affair with the best two sides in the competition contesting the ultimate honours, but Shaw's wicket burst helped keep New Zealand to a modest total and then England's big batting guns had just too much firepower when it counted.

New Zealand Innings Highlights


Their all-round game was a credit, the bowlers taking wickets when it mattered, the fielders the catches and then their batsmen took advantage of bowling that was both too short and too full at times. And the most important thing was that, even though they went on to lose a few wickets, they held their nerve at the crucial point. The key passage of the game came in the New Zealand innings, kickstarted by Shaw who removed the dangerous Suzie Bates, then Amy Satterthwaite off successive balls. New Zealand went on to lose 6 for 92, Shaw dismissing form batsman Haidee Tiffen and Nicola Browne, becoming the first woman to take four wickets in a World Cup final. The wicket of Browne was an important one - she had offered New Zealand some hope, along with Lucy Doolan in an eighth-wicket stand of 62. Together they boosted their side from 7 for 101. Partnerships were badly lacking for New Zealand, in initial contrast to England who found themselves on 1 for 74 in their reply. The hard-working Caroline Atkins and Sarah Taylor seized the advantage quickly and entertained with some pure cricket shots. Having pleased the crowd with her typically strong shots, Taylor then perished to a soft one, such has been her wont this tournament.

England Innings Highlights


No matter, it simply brought the world's No. 1 batsman to the crease. Claire Taylor had arrived in the final averaging 75.75 for the tournament. She began by sparing no mercy on the New Zealand attack before Aimee Mason bowled her on 21, giving her opposition some hope (2 for 109). Atkins departed soon afterwards for 40, brilliantly caught by the tumbling Sophie Devine in gully off Doolan and New Zealand had a hint of a chance. Their determined bowlers continued to try their best but with Doolan again striking, with Edwards adjudged caught behind when she hadn't touched it. Lydia Greenway then fell top-edging to midwicket, before Beth Morgan ran herself out failing to push back into her crease. With 15 runs required and four wickets in hand, Tiffen then dropped a hard chance off Holly Colvin, but Shaw stood defiant, with some classy drives that belied the pressure of the final. Both sides had started nervously - the usually solid Tiffen consistently poking away from her body under Katherine Brunt's pace and swing, while the bowler and her fellow opener Isa Guha delivered some wides. But it was all about who held their nerve and, while England's bowlers struck golden rhythm and crucial wickets, New Zealand's batsmen were prone to losing their heads.

It could have been the same story for England at one point, but with a vast bank of experience from which to draw, they stood firm. England played the more complete cricket and deserved the trophy. They will now enjoy the benefit of the world No. 1 ranking for the foreseeable future - perhaps even until the World Cup in 2013. And with the World Twenty20 coming up, England are already looking a fair bet. For now, though, they will enjoy their first World Cup title since 1993.

Cricket Highlights : England V West Indies - 2Nd ODI - 3/23/2009 9:31:04 PM

Shiv Chanderpaul rounded off a week of personal honours and awards with his 10th one-day international hundred to lead West Indies to a series-levelling 21-run victory, at a packed Providence Stadium, to help ease the memories of Friday's farce. His unbeaten 112 enabled the home side to post a challenging 264 for 8 on another slow surface and despite Andrew Strauss's third ODI ton, and first since June 2005, England pulled up short. Unlike Chanderpaul who had Ramnaresh Sarwan for company, Strauss's innings was a lone hand and he couldn't form a crucial stand with anyone. Fifty partnerships came with Owais Shah and Dimitri Mascarenhas but they weren't enough. Dwayne Bravo set England back on their heels with two wickets in three balls when he removed Shah and Paul Collingwood. From there Strauss was always fighting against the tide against tight bowling and lively fielding. Boundaries were hard to come by all day - except for Chanderpaul - and West Indies' medium-pacers were difficult to get away. Strauss, though, produced a fine hand and continued his outstanding form of the tour in registering his fourth hundred of the trip off 125 balls. He doesn't have the range of shots of some other batsmen, but played to his strengths and realised that if England were to have any hope, he had to remain until the end.

West Indies Innings Highlights



He gambled on holding back the Powerplay and took it in the 44th over with Steve Harmison for company. Strauss reached his ton, but rain started to fall (this time D/L was well in West Indies' favour) and two balls after the resumption he was bowled round his legs by Kieron Pollard. West Indies were home, but it always looked as though they had a few too many. Chanderpaul has always been revered in his home country and has been showered with a host of awards in recent days. On Saturday, Chanderpaul Drive was unveiled as the latest honour and he gave the home support plenty of reasons to cheer him with another masterful innings. England paid for giving him a life on 27 when Matt Prior dropped a bottom edge off Mascarenhas, to further ignite the wicketkeeping debate, and from then on Chanderpaul was commanding. His most nervous moment came on 80 when he pulled a high full toss from James Anderson down to long leg where Harmison held a brilliant catch, but after a brief remonstration by Chanderpaul it was rightly called no-ball for being over waist height. When he tucked a single to midwicket off his 126th ball the full house rose to cheer his achievement, and moments earlier he had also become just the third West Indies batsman to pass 8000 ODI runs after Desmond Haynes and Brian Lara.

England Innings Highlights


He combined with his fellow Guyanese, Sarwan, to add 133 in 29 overs for the third wicket after the openers had fallen early. Sarwan ticked along with ease, then suddenly found another gear as he effortlessly chipped Gareth Batty over deep midwicket for six and crunched Mascarenhas over long-off for an even bigger boundary as his half century came off 58 balls. With the third-wicket stand developing nicely and the mandatory change of ball after 34 overs West Indies opted to take the batting Powerplay. Sarwan soon fell, driving the deserving James Anderson to mid-off where Collingwood took a low catch, but Chanderpaul again showed his innovation. When Strauss set a deep off-side field he hit over the leg side, then when that gap was plugged he backed away and went over mid-off. Stuart Broad was affected, losing his cool when Aleem Dar called a leg-side wide and sent down third consecutive wides later in the over. Chanderpaul had the confidence to bring out the reverse sweep against Broad and repeated the dose against the medium-pace of Mascarenhas and Collingwood. A clutch of late wickets meant the damage in the final 10 overs was limited, but England still had their work cut out.

Ravi Bopara and Kevin Pietersen both dragged into their stumps before Strauss and Shah added 50 in 12 overs to set a platform. However, Bravo then showed why he is so valuable to West Indies as he found late swing to trap Shah leg before and then snaked one through Collingwood's loose drive. In combination with Darren Sammy he strangled the life out of the middle order and Sammy removed Matt Prior through a smart catch from Denesh Ramdin. Whereas Prior had come up too early against Chanderpaul, Ramdin stayed low and benefited. England appeared to be setting their hopes on a late dash from Mascarenhas as he played sensibly alongside Strauss, but a misunderstanding resulted in a crucial run out. Strauss tried his best, but there was too much to do and it was another left-hander's innings that proved the matchwinner.

Cricket Highlights : Australia V South Africa - 3Rd Test (04Th & Final Day) - 3/23/2009 9:31:01 PM

wenty-nine days of Test cricket across three months and more than 10,000 kilometres has not been enough to split the world's two best teams. After the battles at home and away the final outcome was Australia 3, South Africa 3. The net result is that Australia are still the No. 1-ranked team in the world and South Africa remain second. The numbers might be soon forgotten but the quality of cricket that has been on display will be remembered for years to come. The final Test of a long, fiercely-contested and highly-entertaining summer ended with ten minutes to spare on the fourth day. It was the first of the six Tests between these two sides this season that failed to reach the fifth day. Every match produced a result and threw up individual performances that showed the five-day format at its very best. At the WACA in December it was Mitchell Johnson's scarcely believable eight-wicket haul followed by an even more surprising effort from AB de Villiers and the South Africans, who completed the second-highest chase in Test history. In Melbourne it was the arrival of JP Duminy, whose 166 stamped him as a world-class player. At the SCG it was the spine-tingling sight of Graeme Smith walking down the steps with an hour to play, ready to bat with a broken hand to try and save the match.

Final Days Highlights





In Johannesburg it was Marcus North's century on debut, combined with Johnson's breathtaking unbeaten 96. At Kingsmead it was the 20-year-old Phillip Hughes, who refused to back down against one of the meanest pace attacks in the world, and became the youngest man in history to score two centuries in a Test. And in Cape Town it was the return of the forgotten man Ashwell Prince to score 150 as an opener, followed by a Johnson hundred that was a footnote to the match but possibly the start of a new chapter for Australia. There wasn't a boring match among them. The evenness of the overall contest bodes well for future bouts between these two teams - the series will become more frequent and will no longer be held back-to-back - which are, along with India, unquestionably the current superpowers in Test cricket. "Right at the moment that's the way it is," Ricky Ponting said. "I'm not sure if that will always remain the same because there are a number of other very good Test sides out there as well. Whenever you mention rankings and things you've always got to throw India into that as well because they are a very formidable team, mainly at home but they are starting to put some better performances on the board away from home as well.

"But as far as we're concerned, we'd like to think that with what we've done in the last few months, bringing on a new generation of Australian players, that we can maintain a really high level of Test match cricket. If we do that and play somewhere the way we've played in the first couple of weeks of this Test match tour and then I think we'll take some knocking out of that No. 1 ranking." It was a strange scenario at the end of the Newlands match. Australia had lost and it was a hefty defeat by an innings and 20 runs. Yet there were smiles in the dressing room as the match slipped away, in part because there was the entertainment of Johnson's hundred but also because the result of the dead rubber could be quickly erased from the Australians' memory.

As Ponting's men had their photos taken with the series trophy and lapped up the atmosphere in the twilight with Table Mountain in the background, the South Africans also celebrated. It was the second time they had beaten Australia by an innings - the first came in Durban in 1969-70 - and they had rediscovered the form that deserted them after their 2-1 win in Australia. The re-emergence of Prince and centuries to AB de Villiers and the stand-in captain Jacques Kallis gave the Newlands crowd plenty to cheer, as did the nine-wicket match haul from Paul Harris. Kallis said his men would celebrate the strong performance but would also reflect on a series that was over too quickly.

"[We're] obviously elated with the win," Kallis said. "The guys really pitched up here on day one and we played the type of cricket that we know we can play. But it is frustrating that we didn't turn up like that on the first day of the series. Having said that Australia played some really good cricket and put us under pressure." The difference in the first two Tests was the incisiveness of the attacks on helpful pitches and South Africa's experienced unit led by Dale Steyn and Makhaya Ntini was outbowled by Australia's young group. It wasn't until the flat surface in Cape Town that Steyn found the sort of spark he had boasted in Australia. "Sometimes you get on a wicket that helps you as a bowling attack and you try and bowl teams out and you forget what really works, and that's hitting good areas," he said. "We did that exceptionally well in this Test match and that's what was lacking in the first two Test matches. I think the guys have learnt a lot. On a green wicket you've got to bowl exactly the same way as if you're bowling on a flat wicket and that's what gets you the wickets, not searching for those miracle balls that pitch leg and hit the top of off."

The miracle balls might not have come for South Africa in this series but across the six Tests there have been more than enough miraculous feats from both teams. Fans will look back on the past three months as a golden summer for Test cricket.

West Indies Vs England 2Nd ODI Highlights - 3/23/2009 9:30:57 PM

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West Indies V England, 2Nd ODI, March 22, 2009 - 3/23/2009 9:30:52 PM

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, West Indies V England, 2Nd ODI, Providence 22/03/2009 Part-2 - 3/23/2009 9:30:48 PM

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England V New Zealand, Women's World Cup Final, Sydney, March 22, 2009 Part-1 - 3/23/2009 9:30:43 PM

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England V New Zealand, Women's World Cup Final, Sydney, March 22, 2009 Part-2 - 3/23/2009 9:30:39 PM

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South Africa V Australia, 4Th Test, 4Th Day, Cape Town, March 22, 2009 - 3/23/2009 9:30:35 PM

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South Africa V Australia, 4Th Test, 4Th Day, Cape Town, March 22, 2009 - 3/23/2009 9:30:30 PM

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South Africa V Australia, 3Rd Test, 3Rd Day, Cape Town, March 21, 2009 Part-1 - 3/23/2009 9:30:25 PM

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South Africa V Australia, 3Rd Test, 3Rd Day, Cape Town, March 21, 2009 Part-2 - 3/23/2009 9:30:19 PM

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West Indies V England, 1St ODI, Providence, March 20, 2009 - 3/23/2009 9:30:12 PM

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Cricket Highlights : India V New Zealand - 1St Test (Day 04) - 3/21/2009 1:10:07 PM

India broke a 33-year drought when a six-wicket haul by Harbhajan Singh spun them to a 10-wicket victory over New Zealand in the first Test here Saturday. Harbhajan's 6-63 wizardry, following an iconic 160 by Sachin Tendulkar, formed the cornerstone of India's first Test success in New Zealand since 1976. They wrapped the game up with more than a day to spare after New Zealand were all out in their second innings for 279, and India knocked off the required 39 runs in 5.2 overs. "It was a very special win because of a couple of players. Sachin getting a big hundred, Harbhajan getting his five wickets," said Indian captain Mahendra Singh Donhi. "It's great to play with Sachin. Whenever he scores those big hundreds you can't see anything better. I don't think there were any bad deliveries that weren't fetched for four. "And Harbhajan proved a point why he is among the best and got us important wickets at the right time," he said, adding the next target was to win a series in New Zealand for the first time in 40 years. A disappointed New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori admitted his side had been outplayed and would need a dramatic improvement to save the series. "In every aspect India showed us how to do it in this Test match," he said.Brendon McCullum kept the Test alive longer than expected with a fighting 84 at the New Zealand tail, but it had been a lopsided match from day one when the hosts' top order crashed to six wickets for just 60 runs on a benign wicket.

4th & Final Days Highlights





That highlighted the huge gulf in Test experience between the sides where India's top six batsmen boast a combined 502 Tests between them, compared to 54 for New Zealand. The hosts went into the fourth day at 75-3, fighting for survival after India had posted 520 in their first innings for a 241 run lead. On a pitch which offered minimal turn, Harbhajan had India on the verge of victory midway through the middle session when New Zealand were seven for 161. However, McCullum had other ideas, delaying the inevitable with a 38-run partnership with Vettori for the eighth wicket and 76 with Iain O'Brien for the ninth. In doing so he ensured India would have to bat again and spared New Zealand the embarrassment of an innings defeat. After New Zealand's recognised batsmen had failed in the first innings, they needed to produce substantial performances in their second turn at bat. But only Daniel Flynn offered any serious resistance, atoning in some way for his earlier dropping of Tendulkar when the Indian master batsman was 13 runs into what became 160. Brought to the crease after Tim McIntosh fell on the third ball of the innings, Flynn stood defiant in the middle for nearly five hours and faced 183 deliveries for his 67.

He survived one chance on 55 when dropped by wicketkeeper Mahendra Singh Dhoni off Harbhajan. But the relief was short-lived as he only added 12 runs before the wily spinner had the final say with a bat-pad catch to Gautam Gambhir nine overs after lunch. New Zealand had lost the wickets of Ross Taylor and Jesse Ryder before lunch. Taylor laboured for an hour to reach four when he ran out of patience and slashed at a short, rising delivery from Munaf Patel and was caught in the gully by Virender Sehwag. First innings centurion Ryder attempted to knock the confidence out of the Indians, belting a six and a four off a Zaheer Kahn over. This only hastened the introduction of spin, and the arrival of Harbhajan hastened the fall of wickets. In his second over Harbhajan had Ryder trapped leg before wicket for 21 and he followed with the dismissals of Franklin (14), Flynn, Vettori (21) and O'Brien (14). It was the 23rd time the off-spinner had claimed a five-wicket bag and took his career total to 321 dismissals. But it was Yuvraj Singh who ended the New Zealand innings with a quicker ball to McCullum which was top-edged to VVS Laxman at short fine-leg and his defiant 168-minute stand was over.

Gambhir, not out 30, and Rahul Dravid with eight then wasted no time wrapping up the match. The second Test starts in Napier on Thursday.

England Vs West Indies 1St ODI Highlights - Coach Messes Up - 3/21/2009 1:09:58 PM

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Cricket Highlights : Australia V South Africa - 3Rd Test (Day 02) - 3/21/2009 1:10:02 PM

Ashwell Prince and Jacques Kallis scored centuries Friday to take South Africa to 404 for three wickets at stumps on the second day of the third Test for a lead of 195 runs over Australia. Prince smashed 19 boundaries and two sixes to hit 150 in six hours for his 11th Test century. He was eventually out caught down the leg-side off Ben Hilfenhaus. Umpire Steve Bucknor, standing in his 128th and last Test, gave Prince not out, but the decision was overturned on referral by TV umpire Billy Bowden. Prince added 160 runs for the third wicket with Kallis, whose 102 not out represented his 31st Test hundred and his first since scoring 132 against India in Ahmedabad in April 2008. Kallis hit 14 fours and two sixes. Kallis and A.B. de Villiers (39 not out) added an unbroken stand of 82 to stumps for the fourth consecutive partnership of 65 or more in the innings. De Villiers hit five fours and a six in 64 balls. Australia, which leads 2-0 in the three-match series, was bowled out for 209 in its first innings at Newlands on Thursday. Prince said it would be ideal for the Proteas to get 300 to 350 runs ahead on the first innings. "But it will still take a lot of batting to get there," he said. "It is a major plus that we have seven wickets in hand, and we are looking to bat most if not all of Saturday the pitch might still be good. Hopefully, there will be deterioration on days four and five." Australia coach Tim Nielsen said his team would like to get the remaining wickets for about 100 runs Saturday, but admitted the bowlers had failed to exert pressure on South Africa. "We are a fair way behind, and we have to make sure they don't get miles ahead," Nielsen said. "It was good in a way that the Aussies' young attack had had a very hard day. It was the kind of experience they could learn from, and they needed to rebound and bowl well on Saturday."

Day 02 Highlights




Prince has had an up-and-down summer. He fractured his right thumb just before the Perth Test in December and missed the entire series in Australia as replacement J.P. Duminy excelled in a 2-1 win. Prince was then left out for the first two home Tests. The dropping of Neil McKenzie and injury to captain Graeme Smith meant there were two places in the top six, but Prince could only be accommodated as an opener. And, while he may still prefer to bat in the middle-order, he showed on Friday that he cannot be left out of the Test team. Prince was watchful in the first hour on Friday, adding just eight runs to his overnight score of 37, but later in the day's first session he picked up a few boundaries. Fast bowler Mitchell Johnson came in for some punishment as the left-handed batsman drove, pulled and hooked him to the fence. Between lunch and tea, Prince added 49 to his score as he and Kallis took a liking to the leg spin of Bryce McGain. The 36-year-old test debutant was smacked for several boundaries around the park, conceding 102 runs in 11 overs, two of which were maidens.

Prince took five balls to move from 89 to his century and went from 93 to 105 by hitting fours to point, mid-off and midwicket off the first three balls of McGain's second spell. "There isn't a lot of rough out there for him, and there was not a lot of turn," Prince said of McGain. "We were just positive, and when I was in the 90s I backed myself to take a couple of blows to get there." Nielsen believed McGain bowled too full or too short a lot of the time. "When you play against quality players, it's not as simple as just running in to bowl," Nielsen said. "He must learn from today." Kallis began his innings slowly, and took a couple of blows to the body and one to the head from the Australian seamers early on. He accelerated with his boundary-hitting off McGain. The only wickets to fall Friday were debutant opener Imraan Khan in the first session, Hashim Amla just after lunch, and Prince an hour into the final session. Khan went to a one-handed return catch to Peter Siddle for 20 off 71 minutes. He added 65 with Prince, while Amla hit eight fours in scoring 46 to put on 97 with Prince for the second wicket. Siddle's economy rate was the opposite to McGain's. The fast bowler ended the day having bowled 23 overs and conceded 35 runs.

India Vs New Zealand Day 4 Highlights 1St Test - 3/21/2009 1:09:54 PM

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IPL T20 FINAL 2008 Rajasthan Royals Vs Chennai Super Kings 2008 - 3/21/2009 1:09:49 PM

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New Zealand V India, 1St Test, Hamilton, 4Th Day, March 21, 2009 PART-1 - 3/21/2009 1:09:45 PM

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New Zealand V India, 1St Test, Hamilton, 4Th Day, March 21, 2009 PART-2 - 3/21/2009 1:09:41 PM

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South Africa V Australia, 3Rd Test, 3Rd Day, Cape Town, March 21, 2009 PART-1 - 3/21/2009 1:09:37 PM

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South Africa V Australia, 3Rd Test, 3Rd Day, Cape Town, March 21, 2009 PART-2 - 3/21/2009 1:09:32 PM

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Cricket Highlights : Australia V South Africa - 3Rd Test (Day 02) - 3/20/2009 7:26:56 PM

Ashwell Prince and Jacques Kallis scored centuries Friday to take South Africa to 404 for three wickets at stumps on the second day of the third Test for a lead of 195 runs over Australia. Prince smashed 19 boundaries and two sixes to hit 150 in six hours for his 11th Test century. He was eventually out caught down the leg-side off Ben Hilfenhaus. Umpire Steve Bucknor, standing in his 128th and last Test, gave Prince not out, but the decision was overturned on referral by TV umpire Billy Bowden. Prince added 160 runs for the third wicket with Kallis, whose 102 not out represented his 31st Test hundred and his first since scoring 132 against India in Ahmedabad in April 2008. Kallis hit 14 fours and two sixes. Kallis and A.B. de Villiers (39 not out) added an unbroken stand of 82 to stumps for the fourth consecutive partnership of 65 or more in the innings. De Villiers hit five fours and a six in 64 balls. Australia, which leads 2-0 in the three-match series, was bowled out for 209 in its first innings at Newlands on Thursday. Prince said it would be ideal for the Proteas to get 300 to 350 runs ahead on the first innings. "But it will still take a lot of batting to get there," he said. "It is a major plus that we have seven wickets in hand, and we are looking to bat most if not all of Saturday the pitch might still be good. Hopefully, there will be deterioration on days four and five." Australia coach Tim Nielsen said his team would like to get the remaining wickets for about 100 runs Saturday, but admitted the bowlers had failed to exert pressure on South Africa. "We are a fair way behind, and we have to make sure they don't get miles ahead," Nielsen said. "It was good in a way that the Aussies' young attack had had a very hard day. It was the kind of experience they could learn from, and they needed to rebound and bowl well on Saturday."

Day 02 Highlights




Prince has had an up-and-down summer. He fractured his right thumb just before the Perth Test in December and missed the entire series in Australia as replacement J.P. Duminy excelled in a 2-1 win. Prince was then left out for the first two home Tests. The dropping of Neil McKenzie and injury to captain Graeme Smith meant there were two places in the top six, but Prince could only be accommodated as an opener. And, while he may still prefer to bat in the middle-order, he showed on Friday that he cannot be left out of the Test team. Prince was watchful in the first hour on Friday, adding just eight runs to his overnight score of 37, but later in the day's first session he picked up a few boundaries. Fast bowler Mitchell Johnson came in for some punishment as the left-handed batsman drove, pulled and hooked him to the fence. Between lunch and tea, Prince added 49 to his score as he and Kallis took a liking to the leg spin of Bryce McGain. The 36-year-old test debutant was smacked for several boundaries around the park, conceding 102 runs in 11 overs, two of which were maidens.

Prince took five balls to move from 89 to his century and went from 93 to 105 by hitting fours to point, mid-off and midwicket off the first three balls of McGain's second spell. "There isn't a lot of rough out there for him, and there was not a lot of turn," Prince said of McGain. "We were just positive, and when I was in the 90s I backed myself to take a couple of blows to get there." Nielsen believed McGain bowled too full or too short a lot of the time. "When you play against quality players, it's not as simple as just running in to bowl," Nielsen said. "He must learn from today." Kallis began his innings slowly, and took a couple of blows to the body and one to the head from the Australian seamers early on. He accelerated with his boundary-hitting off McGain. The only wickets to fall Friday were debutant opener Imraan Khan in the first session, Hashim Amla just after lunch, and Prince an hour into the final session. Khan went to a one-handed return catch to Peter Siddle for 20 off 71 minutes. He added 65 with Prince, while Amla hit eight fours in scoring 46 to put on 97 with Prince for the second wicket. Siddle's economy rate was the opposite to McGain's. The fast bowler ended the day having bowled 23 overs and conceded 35 runs.

Cricket Highlights : Australia V South Africa - 3Rd Test (Day 01) - 3/20/2009 7:26:51 PM

The final figures may not indicate it, but this was a day of rock climbing. Australia would scuttle a couple of meters only to be roped in; South Africa started sloppily but found their footing; Australia briefly regained stability but before they could inch ahead the home side pulled the ground from beneath. With each burst of wickets South Africa improved and at the end of an engrossing opening day the honours lay firmly in their hands. After a fraught first hour, when everything went against them, they hit back with three bursts - the biggest being when they dismissed Australia's top order for 23 runs in nine overs. Aided by 16 fiery overs from Dale Steyn, South Africa rounded off the day with their new opening pair jogging unscathed to stumps through 14 busy overs. After sloppy (78 for 3 in Johannesburg) and authoritative (119 for 0 in Durban) mornings having won the toss, Australia began their quest for a whitewash by surviving a tricky start and gaining in confidence only to slip. And therein lay the impetus South Africa needed. Stroke-making wasn't easy against a springy new ball and a vigorous opening spell but Australia were helped by a slew of missed chances and dropped catches. The openers had scrapped through the first hour - in which only 29 runs were scored - but once Phillip Hughes was out in the 23rd over, Australia's top order folded.

Day 01 Highlights





Paul Harris had Hughes in his first over, sweeping one that pitched just outside off stump, and next over Australia were dealt a massive blow when Ricky Ponting drove loosely at a full and late away-swinging delivery from the debutant Albie Morkel and feathered a thin edge to Mark Boucher. Makhaya Ntini's exemplary yet wicketless opening spell of 7-5-6-0, at a consistently good pace to keep the two left-handed openers guessing, was better, but Steyn's burst just after lunch yielded wickets. Steyn rattled the stumps of Michael Hussey - the ball after he raised 3000 Test runs, the 33rd Australian to do so - and Michael Clarke in consecutive overs to further dent Australia.

Steyn ran in hard during that passage but Morkel and Jacques Kallis weren't as threatening, and Simon Katich and Brad Haddin prospered, one steadfast, the other counter-attacking. Katich had been the chief beneficiary of South Africa's sloppiness in the morning - reprieved on 4 when Kallis failed to refer what looked a plumb lbw shout and on 9 when the debutant Imraan Khan dropped a sitter at point - and the sole survivor of Australia's top-order wobble. Efficiently, he cut out all flash as he gritted and grimaced along. South Africa's two double-strikes had forced Katich to cut out most of his strokes and he held up one end well. As the bowlers slacked he cashed in on a spate of wide deliveries to move through the forties and on to his half-century, from 138 balls. The runs-to-deliveries quotient reflected his graft.

The pair had added a promising 71 and Australia seemed to have found a solid footing. Everything changed when Harris was reintroduced. Having faced a few strangling overs, Katich attempted his first aggressive shot and top-edged a sweep to the man who had earlier reprieved him at point. The responsibility now grew on Haddin, who until this time had played well under pressure. His placement fetched him a flurry of boundaries after he came to the middle and a stroke-filled 42 helped pull Australia out of a tight situation. But, as the second session, the final began South Africa's way. Harris rapped Haddin in front of middle and leg and the appeal was upheld, even after the batsman referred it to the third umpire. Andrew McDonald nudged uncertainly and held his ground to add 32 with Mitchell Johnson, only for Ntini to take two in two balls, becoming the highest wicket-taker at Newlands - the ground on which he made his debut - with 53. Steyn added Johnson, attempting to hit another one over the infield, and the journeyman debutant Bryce McGain became the last man to be dismissed, at 209.

The manner in which Ashwell Prince, opening for the first time in Tests, and Imraan went about their task in the shadows of stumps reflected the good work done by a rejuvenated home side in the field. Imraan showed few nerves in accumulating an unbeaten 15, while Prince slipped into his new role with assurance to make a sparkling 37 not out - so much so, that he lofted McGain for six minutes before stumps. South Africa have every reason to be pleased with their day's work. The jitters at base camp look miles below now.

Cricket Highlights : India V New Zealand - 1St Test (Day 03) - 3/20/2009 7:26:47 PM

Munaf Patel trapped night watchman Kyle Mills (2) plumb in front of the wicket on the last ball of the day, as India maintained their stranglehold in the Test. Mills was sent in as the night watchman after Harbhajan Singh dismissed Martin Guptill to reduce New Zealand to 68/2. India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni kept a gap in the covers and Guptill fell into the trap as he tried to drive through the gap but could not keep the half-volley down and scooped to mid-off where Virender Sehwag dived to his left to take the catch. Guptill played well hitting 7 fours in his 48-run knock. Guptill and Daniel Flynn put up a 68-run stand to steady New Zealand after Zaheer Khan struck in his first over to take the first Kiwi wicket without a run on the board. Zaheer got the first breakthrough when Tim McIntosh edged a delivery to first slip where Sachin Tendulkar lunged forward to take the catch. McIntosh stood his ground but umpire Ian Gould raised the finger straightaway. Tendulkar hurt his finger in the process and left the field. With this wicket, Zaheer became the seventh Indian to take 200 wickets in Test cricket. Earlier, Zaheer hit his 3rd half-century off 45 balls as India were bowled out for 520 in their first innings.

3rd Days Highlights



Zaheer hit 8 fours in his half-century to stretch India's lead to 241 runs and frustrate New Zealand who were looking to wrap up the Indian innings after dismissing Harbhajan Singh (16) and Ishant Sharma (6). The end of the Indian first innings came when Munaf Patel (9) tried to slog sweep a Daniel Vettori delivery by one hand and was caught at fine leg by Chris Martin, leaving Zaheer unbeaten on 51. Harbhajan hit a six and 2 fours before hitting a Kyle Mills delivery to mid-off where Kiwi skipper Daniel Vettori dived to his left to take the catch. Ishant hit one four before Vettori had him caught behind by Brendon McCullum. Shortly before that, Iain O'Brien ended Sachin Tendulkar's magnificent innings to reduce India to 443/7. O'Brien got the prized wicket when Tendulkar edged a bouncer to first slip for Ross Taylor to take the catch. Tendulkar was looking to play the delivery on the leg side but the ball left him and took the edge. Tendulkar's magnificent innings of 160 runs was studded with 26 fours and was instrumental in putting India in control of the Test.

This was after O'Brien dismissed captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni to reduce India to 429/6. O'Brien broke the 115-run partnership between Tendulkar and Dhoni when he had the Indian captain caught behind by Brendon McCullum. Dhoni hit 7 fours in his 47-run knock before gloving a bouncer to McCullum. Tendulkar hit 150 for the 18th time in Test cricket with the help of 150 fours to take India to 407/5 after lunch. This is the 71st century partnership that Tendulkar was involved in. Only Rahul Dravid is ahead of him for being involved in 74 century partnerships. Before lunch, Tendulkar hit his 42nd century in Test cricket and at the end of the first session of the day, India led by 105 runs. Tendulkar achieved his 42nd century, his fourth against the Kiwis, with a flick to square leg off James Franklin and his century was studded with 15 boundaries. Though he was cautious in the start of his innings on Day 2, Tendulkar opened up after reaching 50 and raced to 70 in no time.

And on Day 3, Tendulkar was nothing but outstanding. Specially amazing to watch were his two drives through the covers off consecutive overs by Chris Martin. Both the deliveries were on the same line but were of different length and the Master dispatched both the deliveries, one off the front foot and the other off the back foot, to the fence with ease and both the shots had perfect balance and superb timing. Tendulkar's century came after India lost Yuvraj Singh early on Day 3 to be at 314/5. Martin got the Kiwis the first breakthrough of the day when brought ball in from round the wicket, Yuvraj shouldered arms only to see his off stump castled. Yuvraj hit 4 fours in his score of 22. The breakthrough came after Sachin Tendulkar and Yuvraj resumed the Indian first innings at 278/4.

Australia Vs South Africa 3Rd Test Highlights Day 2 - 3/20/2009 7:26:42 PM

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India Vs New Zealand 1St Test Day 3 Highlights - 3/20/2009 7:26:39 PM

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New Zealand V India, 1St Test, Hamilton, 3Rd Day, March 20, 2009 Part-1 - 3/20/2009 7:26:33 PM

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New Zealand V India, 1St Test, Hamilton, 3Rd Day, March 20, 2009 Part-2 - 3/20/2009 7:26:29 PM

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New Zealand V India, 1St Test, Hamilton, 3Rd Day, March 20, 2009 Part-3 - 3/20/2009 7:26:24 PM

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Day 1 Highlights - 1St Test: New Zealand V India Highlights At Hamilton, March 18-22, 2009 - 3/19/2009 7:46:44 PM

Daniel Vettori
Watch Cricket Highlights of New Zealand v India Highlights, 1st Test, Day 1 Highlights at Hamilton on March 18, 2009. Day 1, 1st Test Highlights, India v New Zealand (NZ v Ind) will be available on eCric.net - Cricket Video Highlights for Free.

After clinching their maiden ODI series win in New Zealand, India will face the biggest challenge of all - the Test series. The Indians had an easy time on flat pitches during the ODI series, but faced a tough challenge on a lively track in the 5th ODI. New Zealand won the T20 series 2-0, Indians came back with a ODI series win 3-1 and it should be an exciting Test series coming up.

Match: Day 1, 1st Test - New Zealand v India
Venue: Hamilton
Date: March 18, 2009

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Day 1 Highlights - 3Rd Test: South Africa V Australia Highlights At Cape Town, Mar 19-23, 2009 - 3/19/2009 7:46:49 PM

Albie Morkel and South Africa Team
Watch Day 1 Highlights, 3rd Test Highlights: South Africa v Australia Highlights at Cape Town, March 19-23, 2009. You can watch Australia v South Africa (AUS v RSA), 3rd Test Highlights, Day 1 Highlights for free. On eCric, South Africa v South Africa, 3rd Test Highlights will be available to all members.

Match: Day 1 - 3rd Test: South Africa v Australia
Venue: Cape Town
Date: March 19th, 2009





Cricket Highlights : Australia V South Africa - 3Rd Test (Day 01) - 3/19/2009 7:46:40 PM

The final figures may not indicate it, but this was a day of rock climbing. Australia would scuttle a couple of meters only to be roped in; South Africa started sloppily but found their footing; Australia briefly regained stability but before they could inch ahead the home side pulled the ground from beneath. With each burst of wickets South Africa improved and at the end of an engrossing opening day the honours lay firmly in their hands. After a fraught first hour, when everything went against them, they hit back with three bursts - the biggest being when they dismissed Australia's top order for 23 runs in nine overs. Aided by 16 fiery overs from Dale Steyn, South Africa rounded off the day with their new opening pair jogging unscathed to stumps through 14 busy overs. After sloppy (78 for 3 in Johannesburg) and authoritative (119 for 0 in Durban) mornings having won the toss, Australia began their quest for a whitewash by surviving a tricky start and gaining in confidence only to slip. And therein lay the impetus South Africa needed. Stroke-making wasn't easy against a springy new ball and a vigorous opening spell but Australia were helped by a slew of missed chances and dropped catches. The openers had scrapped through the first hour - in which only 29 runs were scored - but once Phillip Hughes was out in the 23rd over, Australia's top order folded.

Day 01 Highlights




Paul Harris had Hughes in his first over, sweeping one that pitched just outside off stump, and next over Australia were dealt a massive blow when Ricky Ponting drove loosely at a full and late away-swinging delivery from the debutant Albie Morkel and feathered a thin edge to Mark Boucher. Makhaya Ntini's exemplary yet wicketless opening spell of 7-5-6-0, at a consistently good pace to keep the two left-handed openers guessing, was better, but Steyn's burst just after lunch yielded wickets. Steyn rattled the stumps of Michael Hussey - the ball after he raised 3000 Test runs, the 33rd Australian to do so - and Michael Clarke in consecutive overs to further dent Australia.

Steyn ran in hard during that passage but Morkel and Jacques Kallis weren't as threatening, and Simon Katich and Brad Haddin prospered, one steadfast, the other counter-attacking. Katich had been the chief beneficiary of South Africa's sloppiness in the morning - reprieved on 4 when Kallis failed to refer what looked a plumb lbw shout and on 9 when the debutant Imraan Khan dropped a sitter at point - and the sole survivor of Australia's top-order wobble. Efficiently, he cut out all flash as he gritted and grimaced along. South Africa's two double-strikes had forced Katich to cut out most of his strokes and he held up one end well. As the bowlers slacked he cashed in on a spate of wide deliveries to move through the forties and on to his half-century, from 138 balls. The runs-to-deliveries quotient reflected his graft.

The pair had added a promising 71 and Australia seemed to have found a solid footing. Everything changed when Harris was reintroduced. Having faced a few strangling overs, Katich attempted his first aggressive shot and top-edged a sweep to the man who had earlier reprieved him at point. The responsibility now grew on Haddin, who until this time had played well under pressure. His placement fetched him a flurry of boundaries after he came to the middle and a stroke-filled 42 helped pull Australia out of a tight situation. But, as the second session, the final began South Africa's way. Harris rapped Haddin in front of middle and leg and the appeal was upheld, even after the batsman referred it to the third umpire. Andrew McDonald nudged uncertainly and held his ground to add 32 with Mitchell Johnson, only for Ntini to take two in two balls, becoming the highest wicket-taker at Newlands - the ground on which he made his debut - with 53. Steyn added Johnson, attempting to hit another one over the infield, and the journeyman debutant Bryce McGain became the last man to be dismissed, at 209.

The manner in which Ashwell Prince, opening for the first time in Tests, and Imraan went about their task in the shadows of stumps reflected the good work done by a rejuvenated home side in the field. Imraan showed few nerves in accumulating an unbeaten 15, while Prince slipped into his new role with assurance to make a sparkling 37 not out - so much so, that he lofted McGain for six minutes before stumps. South Africa have every reason to be pleased with their day's work. The jitters at base camp look miles below now.

Cricket Highlights : India V New Zealand - 1St Test (Day 02) - 3/19/2009 7:46:36 PM

India were poised to set a substantial first innings lead over New Zealand when they ended the second day of the first Test here Thursday one run behind and with six wickets in hand. Steady batting by India, restricted by New Zealand's defensive approach and their own reluctance to take risks, led them to 278 for four at the close when bad light ended play six overs early. With Sachin Tendulkar unbeaten on 70 and Yuvraj Singh on eight, and strong batting to follow, the way was clear for India to dominate the Test. New Zealand -- after scoring a meek 279 on a placid wicket -- managed just four wickets during the day. Verinder Sehwag was run out early, Gautam Gambhir and Rahul Dravid both reached 50 but failed to make their centuries and VVS Laxman fell on the second delivery with the new ball. Chris Martin, dropped for the West Indies series early this year, celebrated his recall as the most effective of the bowlers, taking the wickets of Gambhir and Laxman to produce figures of two for 53 off 20 overs.There was no urgency about the Indian innings, in part because of the defensive fields set by Daniel Vettori in an attempt to force the visitors into taking the initiative if they wanted to keep the board ticking over.

India Innings Highlights





Instead, Gambhir, Dravid, Laxman and Tendulkar were prepared to sit back and wait for the loose deliveries, which led to New Zealand sending down 21 maidens, seven by Martin and five by Jesse Ryder out of his total seven overs. Tendulkar had faced 135 balls for his 70, and was fortunate not to be out for 13 when Daniel Flynn was able to get his fingertips to a top edge but could not hold the ball. Gambhir, who was trapped lbw off a no-ball from Kyle Mills' first delivery of the day when on six, went on to make 72 off 135 deliveries. But his concentration failed to a reverse swing delivery from Martin, which was edged through to wicketkeeper Brendon McCullum, ending a 105-run partnership with Rahul Dravid for the second wicket. Dravid went soon after, bowled by O'Brien with a ball that nipped back between bat and pad, with his 138-ball innings including 12 boundary shots which contributed 48 of his 66 runs. Tendulkar and Laxman added 61 in 28 overs for the fourth wicket before Martin took Laxman with the second new ball, caught by Ross Taylor at first slip for 30.

But while Martin was frugal at one end, Tendulkar was particularly harsh at the other on Kyle Mills, who proved the most expensive of the New Zealand bowlers with none for 70 off 15. The first Indian wicket to fall was Virender Sehwag, who had tormented New Zealand with his explosive hitting through the recent one-day series and looked equally comfortable in the Test. He was undone by an accurate throw from James Franklin and run out in the third over of the morning. Gambhir had pushed a Mills delivery wide of gully and after taking an easy single the pair were over-ambitious chancing a second, with Franklin hitting the stumps from 40 yards out and Sehwag was gone for 24.

With Rahul Dravid's long term position under a cloud, it was pleasing to see him play fluently today. Given his recent struggles, this series may well be his last. Given that he has been foremost in raising India's standards overseas, it would have been sad for him to fade away without experiencing a victory in New Zealand. Now that he has been selected, he has begun his campaign in an assured manner, and it took a beautiful delivery to dislodge him. If he can turn back the clock to happier times abroad, it will go a long way towards securing an Indian triumph. Another hopeful sign for India was the stability provided at the top of the order by Gautam Gambhir. Aside from two matches in Zimbabwe, he had never played a Test outside Asia. After some indifferent form in the coloured format, one could be forgiven for thinking that Gambhir might be unable to prosper outside the subcontinent. While the manner of his dismissal was disappointing, he has demonstrated signs that his prolific scoring can be replicated across the world.