Sunday, July 22, 2012

RAMADAAN MUBARAK


Bukhari Announces Ramadan 2012 Start in India

Bukhari Announces Ramadan 2012 Start in India
The holy month of Ramadan has finally begun with the announcements of Shahi Imam of Delhi’s historic Jama Masjid confirming the sighting of the holy moon.
The news of Ramadan 2012 has bought a smile on the faces of all those thousands of Muslims, who sangMaghrib prayers awaiting for the announcement but finally went to sleep when they didn’t hear them.
Reports over the sighting of the holy moon cleared that the overcast sky blurred the sighting in maximum parts of the north India, Haryana to Bihar and Bengal reported that cloudy sky didn’t gave the people a clear view of the moon.
The moon was not seen even in those areas, which have not received rains since last several days. Since many areas including Delhi, Surat and Shahjahanpur could not get a chance of the moon sighting, Muslims in many areas will not be fasting tomorrow.
Usually it has followed a trend of starting fasting India one day after it begins in Saudi Arabia. But this year, there seems to be a change in this usual pattern. To ensure the beginning of the month from tomorrow, almost all the mosques had Maghrib prayers. Though for a brief time, moon gave its sight to some after the evening prayers.

Friday, January 13, 2012

INDIA RUIND AT PERTH


Australia v India, 3rd Test, Perth, 1st day

Warner's blazing ton destroys India

January 13, 2012
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Australia 0 for 149 (Warner 104*, Cowan 40*) trail India 161 (Kohli 44, Hilfenhaus 4-43, Siddle 3-42)
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
David Warner celebrates the fourth quickest century in Tests, Australia v India, 3rd Test, Perth, 1st day, January 13, 2012
David Warner leaps in celebration after scoring the fourth quickest century in Test cricket © Getty Images
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David Warner smote a magnificently brazen century to rush Australia to 0 for 149 after their quartet of fast bowlers dismantled India for 161 in dishearteningly familiar scenes for the visitors on day one of the third Test at the WACA ground.
In what was the joint fourth-fastest century in Tests, Warner utterly demoralised India in the company of the relatively obdurate but still free-scoring Ed Cowan. Warner was momentarily stopped by a blow to the head from Umesh Yadav, but recovered to clout his next two deliveries to the fence and moved from 95 to 101 with a rasping club over wide long-on from the bowling of the debutant Vinay Kumar. Unbeaten at the close, he did not give a chance.
The match is now streaking away from the tourists, who had placed themselves in a position of peril with another abject batting display. Sent in to bat by Michael Clarke on a pitch promising early movement in addition to its customary bounce and pace, India were 4 for 63 at lunch, and subsided not long after tea to undo the grafting of Virat Kohli and VVS Laxman, who added 68 in the afternoon to momentarily blunt the hosts.
That partnership aside, India once again failed to cope with the swing, seam and disciplined line of the home attack, comprising Ryan Harris, Ben Hilfenhaus, Peter Siddle and Mitchell Starc. Upon his dismissal of Laxman, Siddle sank to his haunches, in a sign of how much a hot day in Perth had drained Australia's bowlers despite their regular wickets, and he did not re-emerge after tea.
Hilfenhaus removed Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir at either end of the morning session before helping to round up the tail, while Siddle accounted for Rahul Dravid, bowled for the fourth time in five innings. Harris was sturdy in his first Test appearance since November last year, and had the wicket of Sachin Tendulkar to show for it. Starc nabbed two of the last four wickets.
Warner and Cowan began not long after tea, intent on building their most substantial opening stand together. There were a few nervy moments early as Zaheer Khan gained some early swing, and Cowan edged centimetres short of Tendulkar at first slip.
However Warner was striking the ball crisply, and he was given added impetus when Ishant Sharma chanced a few jibes. Warner responded with fighting words and a flailing bat, in what soon became a rare exhibition of unbridled batting aggression.
He drove Zaheer through mid off, pulled Yadav wide of mid on, and greeted Vinay's entry to Test cricket with the most impudent straight six. Warner would save his most telling blow for Ishant, who delivered a length ball only to watch it sail back over his head and rows back into the crowd.
Cowan was moving along quite swiftly himself, driving and pulling with good sense, and together he and Warner looked the most perfect of contrasts. In the space of 17 overs Warner had sprinted to 80, on what now looked the most friendly of pitches.
Peter Siddle had VVS Laxman caught at slip, Australia v India, 3rd Test, Perth, 1st day, January 13, 2012
Peter Siddle broke India's innings by dismissing Virat Kohli and VVS Laxman just before tea © Getty Images
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Warner's eagerness to attack brought him one moment's discomfort when he was too swiftly through a hook at Yadav and suffered a blow to the side of the head and helmet. After gathering himself and calling for new headgear, he spanked the next two balls to the boundary - there was toughness to go with the terrorising of India's bowlers.
His century duly and deservedly arrived before the close, and a sell-out crowd rose unanimously to salute two hours of awe-inspiring destruction.
India's openers fared very differently. They were confronted by a pitch that looked green but was already beginning to show evidence of cracking, which suggested it was not as moist as it appeared. Nonetheless there was still plenty of swing, seam and bounce on offer to Australia's bowlers, requiring astute judgment of line and length.
Sehwag had been at the centre of plenty of pre-match bluster surrounding his natural method, and the batsman looked tentative in his brief stay. Sehwag only faced four balls, the last of which was a beautifully pitched Hilfenhaus away swinger that flicked the edge and was well held by Ricky Ponting in the cordon.
Dravid walked to the wicket having been bowled in three out of four innings, and played at more than he might otherwise have done to avoid a repeat. He struggled for timing, however, and was so intent on defence that when Siddle delivered a leg side ball of full length, Dravid's unnecessarily conservative posture turned it into a yorker that clattered into middle stump via the pads.
Tendulkar drew applause for a trio of straight drives from Siddle that recalled his sparkling 114 at the ground in 1992, but was not in total command. Harris was rewarded for two unstinting spells before lunch when he seamed one back to pin Tendulkar in front of the stumps.
Next over Hilfenhaus ended Gambhir's stony-faced occupation, whizzing an offcutter across the left-hand batsman to prompt a push away from the body and an edge through to Brad Haddin. Gambhir admonished himself for succumbing to a nick for the fifth time in as many innings, the victim of another intelligent display of full, fast bowling from Australia.
Laxman and Kohli were more or less India's last hope of a substantial total, and their batting in the first hour of the afternoon was suitably grave. Starc, Hilfenhaus, Harris and Siddle continued to bowl well, but neither batsman offered quite so much in the way of probing bats that their predecessors had done. The ball grew older, the pitch settled under the sun, and the batsmen grew a little more comfortable.
The stand was gathering strength and tea was less than 10 minutes away when Siddle made a critical break. Bowling full and swinging wider, he tempted Kohli to press too eagerly forward, and the low chance was held by Warner at point. In Siddle's next over Laxman pushed firmly at a length delivery and offered a catch to Clarke at first slip.
Starc had been threatening to bowl the perfect inswinger for most of the day, and it was Vinay Kumar who received it to be palpably lbw. MS Dhoni played an ordinary stroke at Hilfenhaus to be caught in the slips, though Zaheer's ugly smear at the same bowler was arguably worse. Ishant edged Starc behind to complete what had become a procession - the last six wickets falling for 30.
Daniel Brettig is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
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© ESPN EMEA Ltd.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

IND VS AUS 3RD TEST


Australia will adapt faster to the WACA - Ponting

January 11, 2012
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Curator Cameron Sutherland inspects the WACA pitch before the 3rd Test, Perth, January 9, 2012
The WACA pitch is expected to be fast and bouncy© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
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News : Bouncy pitch awaits India at WACA
Players/Officials: Ricky Ponting
Series/Tournaments: India tour of Australia
Teams: Australia
Ricky Ponting believes Australia will adapt more rapidly than India to what he expects to be a traditionally fast and bouncy WACA pitch for the third Test. Ponting had been critical in recent years of the way the Perth ground had lost its uniqueness, comparing the surface on which South Africa chased down 414 in December 2008 to a flat Adelaide pitch.
However, Cam Sutherland, the curator, has tried to bring back the character of WACA pitches of old during the past couple of seasons. In December 2010, Australia played four fast men in Perth and earned their only win of the Ashes campaign. Sutherland hopes the surface will be at least 20% quicker than the one on which India won a Test in January 2008, and Ponting is hopeful of plenty of bounce.
"As Australian players growing up on fast, bouncy pitches - obviously this is the fastest and bounciest wicket in the world - we should be able to adapt to these conditions a bit quicker than the Indians," Ponting said. "We all enjoy playing here. The last few Tests we've played at the WACA it's starting to get some of its old characteristics back again. The pace and bounce is certainly coming back.
"I know a lot of the associations [around Australia] have been under pressure to get drop-in wickets. As soon as you start getting drop-in wickets the characteristics of each ground are gone. The last thing you'd want at the WACA is to come here and play cricket on a slow, dead, docile pitch. It's not what cricket is supposed to be like here in Western Australia.
"Everyone who comes and watches cricket in Perth wants to see batsmen ducking and weaving out of the way of short balls, batsmen getting great benefit for their shots down the ground, lots of square-of-the-wicket shots being played. If we get a fast, bouncy one this week, then I'm sure with the batting talent on display you'll see a lot of great highlights throughout the week."
Four days out from the third Test against India, which starts on Friday, the pitch was nearly as green as the outfield, and a couple of days later it was still sporting more grass than the average Test surface. However, Ponting said he was reluctant to take too much notice of how the pitch looked until at least the eve of the match.
"There's a bit of grass on the wicket at the moment," he said. "It is pretty green. But we're a day and a half out from the start of a Test match and with the sun out like it is, I think the wicket will change a little bit between now and Friday morning. I haven't read too much into the wicket yet."
Australia's selectors will need to decide whether to take a four-man pace attack in to the Perth Test for the second summer in a row, with the left-armer Mitchell Starc having joined the squad following the win in Sydney. The offspinner Nathan Lyon could be rested if the pitch looks like a fast-bowling paradise on the morning of the match.
Lyon has taken only two wickets in the series and the WACA is unlikely to offer him any more assistance than the conditions in Melbourne and Sydney. Ryan Harris is likely to come in as a straight swap for the injured James Pattinson, leaving Starc and Lyon to fight for the final place in the attack. Michael Hussey said Starc had shown plenty of promise in his first two Tests against New Zealand.
"He's an outstanding prospect, a great athlete," Hussey said. "He's got height, he's got the advantage of being a left-armer and the advantage of being able to swing the ball. It's good to see he's bowling with some confidence and he's a great prospect for the futur

SRK KAT FILM BIGINS

Its first time we will see bollywood badshah with bollywood most beautifull actress katrina kaif .
Today project starts with little puja sa uday chopra twitted.Its yet untiteled n whats name will be it has to see.
film is likely to realise on the eve of diwali  2012....
As kat say , she is so nervous to share with king of romanse on big screen and exited too.,,Anushka sharma fvrt of ysrj is also in this film..


sadique jameel

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

RA.ONE.......WILL WRITE A HISTORY

RA.ONE IS THE UPCOMING MOVIE
 this is on the verge of history. its first and latest treler is realy awesome,,...
Shahrukh khan has done that  was never done in bollywood..
Its  a bollywood costly movie till now........
SO BE READY TO WATCH THIS MOVIE
 Sadique jameel