Beacuse they had green shoes and socks on!


The s2h guy came up with a "surprise surprise, what do we have here?" comment.Rahul M wrote:stan, times now reported before the match that adrian missed due to an injury.
Saffron socks of Yindoos, white ball..and green socks of Purelanders..interesting combination.anishns wrote:what are joo talking about? Did u notice the saffron socks of the yindoo team....SS/RSS influence is getting stronger...
http://www.punemirror.in/index.aspx?pag ... §xslt=A product of G.V. Raja Sports School, Thiruvananthapuram, Sreejesh has taken a break in his academics to concentrate dedicatedly on hockey. When asked about his inspiration for taking up the national game his straightforward answer couldn’t get genuine than that. “Inspiration? Hmmm… I cannot name any as I am from Kerala and I never heard of any famous name until I started playing in 2001,” he said.
Talking about the most memorable match of his career he said, “The 2009 Champions Challenge was a real good learning experience and at such a high competitive level I could really test my skills to the peak of performance against tough teams.” Born in Kumarapuram (Kerala), Sreejesh made his international debut in the under-21 team where his performance was noticed by every selector. It didn’t stop there; he was awarded the best goalkeeper in MCC Murugappa Gold Cup tournament in Chennai while representing Indian Overseas Bank.
http://sports.rediff.com/report/2010/ma ... kistan.htmAsked why Sreejesh Raveendran manned the Indian goal instead of Adrian D'Souza, he said, "There is no injury or anything on Adrian. We have two very good goalkeepers and we thought Sreejesh would do well today."
What is that which gets the goat of all aussies- be it chappells riccs and et al. we yindians are at the receving end."If Mr Read wants to send a message why did he pick the Indian team. My players were struck on the face in that match against Pakistan and matches involving Australia, England and other countries were much more physical involving graver offences by their players.
"I have never ever experienced a player being handed a three-match penalty in my life -- be it Olympics , World Cup or Champions Trophy. Three match is half of the World Cup. To penalise a player by suspending him half of a World Cup for an unintentional foul was enormous," said Brasa.
The experienced coach, however, made it clear that he was not suggesting that Read had acted in that way because he was from Australia, against whom India play on Tuesday.
"I am not even suggesting that he was biased against us as he is an Australian. I am just talking about his decision as a tournament director," he said.
Dileep saar would have replied "know your place coolie"krisna wrote: What is that which gets the goat of all aussies- be it chappells riccs and et al. we yindians are at the receving end.
krisna wrote:http://sports.rediff.com/report/2010/ma ... r-read.htm
What is that which gets the goat of all aussies- be it chappells riccs and et al. we yindians are at the receving end."If Mr Read wants to send a message why did he pick the Indian team. My players were struck on the face in that match against Pakistan and matches involving Australia, England and other countries were much more physical involving graver offences by their players.
"I have never ever experienced a player being handed a three-match penalty in my life -- be it Olympics , World Cup or Champions Trophy. Three match is half of the World Cup. To penalise a player by suspending him half of a World Cup for an unintentional foul was enormous," said Brasa.
The experienced coach, however, made it clear that he was not suggesting that Read had acted in that way because he was from Australia, against whom India play on Tuesday.
"I am not even suggesting that he was biased against us as he is an Australian. I am just talking about his decision as a tournament director," he said.
The only bad part is the resting of Yuki Bhambri.The Indian Davis Cup team received a good news ahead of their World Group first-round tie against Russia, in Moscow as world No.6 Nikolay Davydenko pulled out with an injury.
India are playing in the World Group for the first time since 1998 and they couldn’t have drawn a tougher opponent. Among the other three in the Russian squad for the March 5-7 tie, Mikhail Youzhny is ranked 13 in the world, Igor Kunitsyn 107 and Teimuraz Gabashvili 109. Dmitri Tursunov, the probable replacement for Davydenko, is No.111. Apart from Davydenko’s withdrawal, the Indians have also been in for a mild surprise in terms of playing conditions. “The court has been made on an ice skating rink with plywood, and could play a little slow. That would suit Somdev,” the captain said.
However, the conditions have been typically cold with the temperatures below the freezing point. It has been forecast that the temperature this weekend will be around -10 degree Celsius. The team, including Rohan Bopanna and reserve players Sanam Singh and Ashutosh Singh, have been practising since Sunday, while the senior duo of Leander Paes and Mahesh Bhupathi, who played in Dubai last week, were expected to join on Wednesday.
FIDE rankings:India, meanwhile, experienced a two-spot slide in the latest update after enjoying a four-spot jump in the previous one. The Bhaichung Bhutias are now No.132 in the world and No.23 in Asia. Asian No.1 Australia were at the 23rd spot in the world rankings.
World champion Viswanathan Anand slipped one rung to be placed fourth in the latest world rankings after trading places with Vladimir Kramnik. K. Sasikiran jumped from 83rd to the 46th spot by taking his rating from 2653 to 2686. Surya Shekhar Ganguly posted his career-best rating by moving from 2654 to 2672 and from the 80th place to the 55th spot. However, P. Hari Krishna slipped 15 places to be ranked 69th after his rating came down from 2672 to 2660. On the brighter side, India jumped to the fifth spot in World rankings with the average of its top-10 players being a whopping 2641, behind Russia (2730), Ukraine (2689), China (2645) and France (2642).
K. Humpy has moved along, but Hou Yifan saw a major fall this time. I just checked the FIDE rankings over a long period for the major players. A few have seen continuous rise aka a straight line growth rate: Magnus Carlsen, Wang Yue, Levon Aronian among men and Hou Yifan among women. This is clearly unsustainable and is a major effect of the FIDE score inflation, which the chessbase folks are a bit loath to admit. Sasikiran is learning to play the game with the FIDE scale. He had seemed to have forgotten the art of rankings inflation when he played in ultra-competitive events and saw a 25+ point slide in the last update. He has gained back > 1/2 of the points he lost. He was in the 27+ regime before he fell down. Hari needs to buck up and this is a two to tango shite. One also notices that "lessons" learned in the Indian camp is percolating all the way to the top-10, even if it may be due to incest in playing National B games and what not. Self-averaging, if you may. That can hardly be said to be the case with the women's side. Harika is far far lower and so are the other ladies.India (Top-21): 1. Viswanathan Anand (2787), 2. K. Sasikiran (2686), 3. Surya Shekhar Ganguly (2672), 4. P. Hari Krishna (2660), 5. Sandipan Chanda (2635), 6. Parimarjan Negi (2634), 7. K. Humpy (2622), 8. G. N. Gopal (2604), 9. Abhijeet Gupta (2560), 10. S. Arun Prasad (2549), 11. P. Magesh Chandran (2543), 12. Abhijit Kunte (2528), 13. S. Kidambi (2520), 14. B. Adhiban (2510), 15. Sriram Jha (2506), 16. Vidit Gujarathi (2504), 17. Deep Sengupta (2496), 18-19. M. R. Lalith Babu, S. P. Sethuraman (2493 each), 20 21. Deepan Chakkravarthy, R. R. Laxman (2485 each).
India (Women Top-15): 1. K. Humpy (2622), 2. D. Harika (2473), 3. S. Vijayalakshmi (2466), 4. Tania Sachdev (2393), 5. Eesha Karavade (2366), 6. Meenakshi Subbaraman (2348), 7. Swati Ghate (2323), 8. Padmini Rout (2319), 9. Mary Ann Gomes (2318), 10. Nisha Mohota (2304), 11. Soumya Swaminathan (2288), 12. Kiran Manisha Mohanty (2259), 13. Bhakti Kulkarni (2242), 14. Kruttika Nadig (2236), 15. A. G. Nimmy (2225).
If Ritwik wants to get back to where he once was, he needs a miracle. And seeing him over so many years, sorry, no hope, not yet.Ace Indian squash player Saurav Ghosal rose a rung to a career best 29th spot in the latest PSA rankings, released on Wednesday. Ghosal benefited by his pre-quarterfinal appearance at the Case Swedish Open last month has 1672.50 points. Veteran Ritwik Bhattacharya and Harinder Pal Sandhu also moved up a place each to be positioned at 113th and 107th respectively.
In the women rankings, Anaka Alankamony, the world’s youngest ever player to win a WISPA title, climbed one spot to 77. Veteran Joshna Chinappa also improved her ranking by gaining a position to 34. However, Dipika Pallikal failed to hold on to her 46th position and slumped three positions to 49.
Karun Chandhok's long wait seems to be over as he becomes the second Indian to drive in Formula One after signing the deal with Hispania Racing team for the 2010 Formula One season, when the season starts in Bahrain next week.
Selection has been lopsidedCarl_T wrote:That is ok, the boy needs to focus on singles.
http://telegraphindia.com/1100305/jsp/s ... 180543.jspConsidering that a Davis Cup tie has only one doubles match and four singles matches, the selection seems lopsided. More so, when India have Yuki Bhambri, who was ranked as the No. 1 junior in the world. Bhambri opted out of the team to play in some nondescript tournament, but given the assurance of playing at the No. 2 spot in the singles, Bhambri would possibly not have refused.
Nobody in their right senses would advise Bhambri to miss an opportunity to play two Davis Cup matches against the likes of Mikhail Youzhny, the world No. 13 and world No. 38 Igor Andreev. The tension in a Davis Cup match would have helped Bhambri to toughen up and would have given him what he requires most at this time of his career — the experience of competing at the highest levels of the game. Furthermore a week of intense practice with a team full of Davis Cup experience would have taught him how to hone his game to its peak for important matches.
Pakistan forward Rehan Butt also had a few kind words for the suspended Indian forward. “You have seen the way an England player hit our Mohammed Irfan today (Thursday). For the same offence, Shivendra was suspended for two matches. I hope the tournament director have a look at the video and take similar action,” Butt said.
We are out. Saw the 3 matches. Except for PR Srejesh, yesterday's score would be some 8-2 and the first match would have been drawn.Stan_Savljevic wrote:Now the only possibility of a semifinal is if
Aus -- draw spain, lose to pakis
pakis -- beat aus, draw saf
india -- beat eng, beat saf
eng -- lose to india, beat spain
spain -- lose to eng, draw aus
wonderful...
Moscow: Somdev Devvarman let advantage slip out of hands, losing the opening rubber 7-6 (8) 6-7 (4) 3-6 4-6 to Igor Kunitsyn as India conceded lead to injury-hit Russia in the Davis Cup World Group first round tie here today.
...
That is ok, mah boi needs to focus on singles.BijuShet wrote:From DNA : Somdev Devvarman bites dust after initial dominationMoscow: Somdev Devvarman let advantage slip out of hands, losing the opening rubber 7-6 (8) 6-7 (4) 3-6 4-6 to Igor Kunitsyn as India conceded lead to injury-hit Russia in the Davis Cup World Group first round tie here today.
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With seven months to go until the start of the Commonwealth Games in New Delhi, the partially completed main stadium is a messy building site and the swimming complex a pile of rubble.
Infrastructure projects linked to the Games, including flyovers and metro rail network extensions, are badly lagging. And, with the monsoon expected to arrive in June and July, preparations could be blown further off course.
Outside the Commonwealth Games office, the countdown clock is ticking down to the October 3 start of an event that India hopes will showcase its ability to organise major sports events and put it on course to host an Olympics.
Instead, it risks a debacle, with nervousness growing as deadlines slip repeatedly, particularly for the main Jawaharlal Nehru stadium and the Shyama Prasad Mukherjee swimming complex.
"The deadlines are being pushed further every time," Mike Hooper, chief executive of the London-based Commonwealth Games Federation (CGF), which owns and controls the Games, told AFP in an interview.
"In October last year we were told most of the venues will be ready by December, except the Jawaharlal Nehru and swimming stadiums which they said would be ready by March. Now that deadline has shifted to June.
"We struggle to understand that. If the venue construction programme does not adhere to what are self-imposed deadlines now, it will impact adversely the operational obligations."
He and others involved in the organisation stress that building the venues is one thing: testing and getting them ready to host thousands of athletes and spectators is another.
"We need to test their operational readiness at least two months before the start of the Games," Hooper said.
Hooper's concerns were echoed by CGF president Michael Fennell, who took a first-hand look at all the venues last week and went away a worried man.
"There remains quite a high level of concern about some of the venues being completed in time so that proper test events can be held," he told reporters in New Delhi.
"There is a lot of work still to be done. We still have areas of concern and we have discussed these openly and frankly with the organising committee."
The Indian organisers have been maintaining their line that everything will be ready in time.
Games Organising Committee chairman Suresh Kalmadi has compared the process to an Indian wedding in which everything looks disorganised from the outside but comes together at the last minute.
"There is no need to push the panic button," he was quoted as saying by the Press Trust of India news agency.
"We are going to have the best-ever Commonwealth Games. I would like to assure the entire country that all pending work will be completed within the deadlines.
"The Delhi Games would be better than Melbourne and Manchester. We will show the world what we are capable of."
A sports ministry official coordinating with various Games' committees scoffed at Kalmadi's tall claims.
"Kalmadi does not know what he is talking about," he said, requesting not to be named.
"The Games were awarded to us way back in 2003. If only the officials had planned in a better way, things would not have come to a head.
"But they have been spending all of their energies in ego clashes with one another," he said, referring to Kalmadi's ugly spat with Hooper in public last year.
Kalmadi had objected to Hooper's continued presence in New Delhi, saying he was of "no use" to the organising committee. The outburst prompted Sports Minister Manohar Singh Gill to broker a truce in London.
Both Kalmadi and Hooper claim they have "moved on" since that slanging match.
"Kalmadi now refers to me as his good friend," laughed Hooper. "We have said let's focus on the issues and make sure everything is done in a timely manner. "After all, all of us want the same outcome -- to have a great Games!"
One foreign contractor working on the stadiums, who asked not to be named, is in no doubt that preparations are heading for a dramatic conclusion.
"It really is going to go down to the wire," he told AFP.
Ace Indian shuttler Saina Nehwal touched a new high as she zoomed into the top-five of the world rankings at a career-best fifth spot following her stupendous show in the All-England Badminton Championships earlier this month.
Saina, whose previous best on the chart was the sixth spot she attained last year, surprised one and all by becoming the first Indian woman to reach the semifinals of the prestigious All-England Super Series Championships.
Saina lost to Tine Rasmussen of the Netherlands in the semifinals of the event.
Riding on her fantastic show, the Indian gained a couple of spots in the latest list with 58516.7646 points in her kitty.
Chinese shuttlers dominate the top half of the women’s rankings with Yihan Wang leading the pack followed by Wang Lin, Xin Wang and Jiang Yanjiao respectively.
In the men’s rankings, Chetan Anand dropped a rung to 10th but P Kashyap gained one spot to be 29th. Arvind Bhat remained static at 36th but Anup Sridhar slipped to 40th, a loss of one position. In the mixed doubles rankings, Jwala Gutta and V Diju’s pair slipped one spot to 10th in the latest list.