IPL 2012 Squads Current Cricket Series and Schedules Live Scores and Updates
Tracknfieldgear On January 3, 2011

Batting icon Sachin Tendulkar and captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni were among the four Indian cricketers who found a place in former Australia captain Ian Chappell's '2010 World XI', which did not feature a single Aussie.Dashing opener Virender Sehwag and pace spearhead Zaheer Khan were the other two Indians in the XI, which features five South Africans."Four years ago the Australian cricket team was cock-a-hoop. They'd regained the Ashes and had accentuated their superiority by smashing England at the MCG on the way to an eventual 5-0 series victory. Now the team is in tatters and it's best illustrated by a contrast of World XIs chosen at the end of the calendar year," Chappell wrote in his article for 'The Daily Telegraph'.

"In 2006, Australia had six players in the XI, with Brett Lee 12th man. In the 2010 side, no Australian made the XI and Shane Watson is the 12th man," he pointed out."It's been a greasy dip for Australia since the retirement of bowlers Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath. The ride gathered pace when Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden called it a day. They have now hit the sand pit because of the struggles of the one player who kept the brake on the downhill ride, Ricky Ponting," he further explained.Chappell described Sehwag as the most dangerous batsman in the world right now."A dashing opener who can win a game in the opening session of a Test. The most dangerous batsman in world cricket," he said.

Chappell lavished praise on Tendulkar, saying the 37-year-old, who recently became the first batsman to notch up 50 Test hundreds, seems to be getting better with age."Unlike Ponting, Tendulkar defied the advancing years and enjoyed a marvelous resurgence. He even rediscovered the art of dominating bowlers," Chappell said. Explaining the reasons for picking Dhoni and Zaheer, Chappell said both have been consistent in their respective roles."Dhoni has batted consistently, scoring runs when India need them and doing an sufficient job with the gloves. He's a calm leader with some flair," Chappell said."Zaheer is a left-armer who has developed into a dangerous bowler with both the new and old ball. He performs well against good opposition," he added.

Among others who found a place in the XI were South African captain Graeme Smith, their middle-order mainstay Hashim Amla, prolific all-rounder Jacques Kallis, the aggressive A B de Villiers and tearaway pacer Dale Steyn."Smith is a solid opener who has the knack of making the tough runs when they're really needed. Hashim Amla is a player who really blossomed in 2010. He mastered the knack of scoring centuries and at an improved run rate," he said."Kallis's churned out runs with his usual competence, displayed a safe pair of hands and bowled with some of his old pace and fire," he added."De Villiers came of age. His ability to accelerate the scoring rate stood out like a beacon in a predominantly average-conscious South African team," he added.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Top