Monday, 30 July 2012

Hockey Raises Hope After Good Fight Against NetherLands

Hockey Raises Hope After Good Fight Against NetherLands


Back in the Olympics after a hiatus of eight years, past masters of the game India produced a valiant fightback in the second-half before losing 2-3 to world number three The Netherlands in their opening Group B match of the men's hockey competition on Monday. India, returning to the Olympics after a gap of eight years, started off the match with a fast attack, but the Netherlands came close to scoring on the counter before Birendra Lakra effected a fine clearance.


On Monday, eight time winners India gave tough fight to much higher ranked Netherlands before going down 2-3 in their opening London Olympic Games pool B men's hockey competition here. The Netherlands, the World No.3, opened up a 2-0 lead within the first half hour mark, but the Indians rallied back remarkably during a four-minute blitz after half time to draw parity at the riverbank arena. However, the European powerhouse struck the winner from a penalty corner midway into the second session to log full points.

Indians, ranked tenth in the world played well, particularly in the midfield, but their forwards were often found lacking, as they made a mess of a number of golden opportunities. But the defence looked solid, with V Raghunath cutting out some beautiful Dutch moves. Indian skipper Bharat Chettri also shone under the bar making some brilliant saves.
The Indian players' nerves were on display in their opening match, where all but two of their players were making the maiden appearance in Olympic Games. India's fightback began in the 45th minute when Tushar Khandekar's cross from the left flank struck the far post and rebounded into the circle. An opportunist Dharamvir Singh capitalised on the chance by beating goalkeeper Jaap Stockmann with a firm shot.

Three minutes later India were level at 2-2 when Gurwinder Chandi picked up a short pass from Gurbaz Singh inside the circle and dribbled past a defender before pushing the ball towards Shivendra Singh, who tapped in for India's second goal. Penalty corner specialist Mink van der Weerden reclaimed the lead for The Netherlands when he sent in a drag flick just under the cross-bar.

Hockey, in which India has an impressive record with eight Olympic gold medals, is officially the national sport. The Golden Era of hockey in India was the period from 1928 - 1956 when India won 6 consecutive gold medals in the Olympics. During the Golden Era, India played 24 Olympic matches, won all 24, scored 178 goals (at an average of 7.43 goals per match) and conceded only 7 goals. The two other gold medals for India came in the 1964 Tokyo Olympics and the 1980 Moscow Olympics. 

Hockey alone has provided 11 metals (8 gold, 1 silver and two bronze medals). Apart from the three in shooting, the Indians have got two each in athletics and wrestling and one apiece from weightlifting, tennis and boxing.

We all know what happened in Chile in 2008. India was playing the qualifiers and was unable to qualify for the Beijing Olympics. It was the first time since 1928 that Indian men were not representing our National Game at the mega event. Since then there have been a lot of changes that have happened in Indian hockey.

Four years later India has got the chance to undo what happened to them in Chile.
In the last three decades, Indian hockey has lost the connection that it once had and people now have more reasons to criticize the most loved game than to like it and without fail they are doing it.

London Olympics provides good opportunity to regain the fans back the national pride - Hockey ! With good fight in first match  against Netherlands, we can expect better show in coming matches !

Saturday, 28 July 2012

Michelle Frangilli does a 10 to win gold !

Lord's witnessed a fantastic game of archery on Saturday, the wind swirling round the historic Lord's stadium and 4,000 fans holding their breath, the Italian rock took the pressure on his broad shoulders, let the seconds tick down, when Michele Frangilli released the last arrow left his bow there was a hush, a whirr, a thud, a roar in spectators. The arrow went 70 metres down to hit the edge 10 point circle. The moment was stuck at Lord’s with gold win celebration. This golden shot gave Italy gold medal in archer. 

Michelle Frangilli does a 10 to win gold !

 Nerves are an unwelcome companion in any sport but, in archery, where a steady hand is so paramount, they are especially deadly. But Michelle Frangilli won over his nerves made most commendable thing to make a 10 when pressure so high and stakes were so high.

A dream came true, hearts were broken, a dynasty crumbled - all on the fickle flights of arrows on Saturday. Michele Frangilli's final shot earned Italy the Olympic archery team gold medal at Lord's Cricket Ground, denying the United States in the cruellest of fashions at the climax of a pulsating men's final. The Americans, led by world number one Brady Ellison, had the gold within their grasp as Frangilli stepped to the line needing a perfect 10 to win.

Thursday, 26 July 2012

London Olympics Few Hour Away - Clocks Ticking Faster !

London Olympics Few Hour Away - Clocks Ticking Faster !
Have you ever wondered how the Olympics started? In Olympia, Greece the Olympic Games were held every four years. First Olympic game was recorded in 776 BC; that was about 3,000 years ago. At that time this great festival took place to honor the Greek gods. Olympics were held during the great festival. The Olympics were called Olympiad in Greece. 



London is all set to dazzle the world with a grand opening ceremony to launch the greatest show on earth featuring over 10,000 athletes over the next fortnight, a spectacle that has seen the cost escalating to £9.3 billion ($14.5 billion).

Eighty-one athletes in London will form the largest Indian contingent ever to march at the Olympic Games. But if numbers could turn into Olympic success, a country of 1.2 billion should have grabbed at least 1000 qualifications and maybe 100 medals. If not that, then what’s the reason for India hoping to come home with a medals kitty heavier than ever before? 

Sixteen years ago in Atlanta, which was 16 years after India’s last Olympic medal and 44 years after the last individual medal, Leander Paes changed India’s ‘participation-matters’ outlook. An athlete has to soak in the pride, the honour to represent the country before he could mount the podium with the five rings and the national anthem sends a tear rolling down the cheek. That’s how Leander won that bronze and made every Indian believe: “It’s not beyond us.” 



Armed with a new-found self-belief, India's top athletes will seek to script a fresh chapter in the country's Olympic history as they go into the 30th edition of the sporting extravaganza from tomorrow with a realistic chance of winning medals.

Never before has an Indian contingent raised so much expectations and London could just be the launching pad for a new sporting era.






Five moments that will make Olympic history at the London Games:-
 
USAIN BOLT - If Bolt can overcome in-form fellow Jamaican Yohan Blake, he will become the first man to achieve the 100m and 200m Olympic sprint double twice.

MICHAEL PHELPS - Needing only two medals to equal the record of 18 held by Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina, Phelps will have plenty of chances.

BRAZIL FOOTBALL TEAM - Despite being the most successful team in World Cup history with five titles, Brazil have never won Olympic gold. 

OSCAR PISTORIUS - South Africa's "blade runner" is set to be the first double amputee athlete to compete at the Olympics after being selected for the 4x400m relay.

SAUDI WOMEN - For the first time in Olympic history, every country represented at the Games will include female athletes after Saudi Arabia agreed to send two women to compete.


One of the most telling images in the past 30 years of sports television was the moment at the Opening Ceremony of the 1996 Olympic Games when Muhammad Ali, shaking from the growing effects of Parkinson’s disease, courageously lifted the torch and sent a flame up to the Olympic cauldron.

Viewers from world wide are awaiting the most comprehensive coverage of an Olympic Games ever. Settle back and enjoy it !




Wednesday, 25 July 2012

Sports Vista on Facebook Now

Sports Vista



Here is the link for Sports Vista on Facebook - 

 http://www.facebook.com/SportsVista 

Come like the page ! Welcome to world of Sports Vista !!! :-)


Tuesday, 24 July 2012

Yellow Jersey to Yellow metal ! Now Bradley is ready for Olympics

Bradley Ready for Olympics
Bradley Wiggins has become the first British rider to win the Tour de France in the race's 109 year history. Prime Minister David Cameron congratulated him shortly after the finish in Paris on Sunday.

The British rider is now hoping for London 2012 glory in the men's road race and the individual time trial. Bradley Wiggins became the first British rider to win the Tour de France as compatriot Mark Cavendish claimed a fourth consecutive final-stage victory. Wiggins, 32, finished in the chasing peloton in Sunday's final stage around the streets of Paris with a winning margin of three minutes and 21 seconds. Evans, who made history by becoming Australia's first champion in 2011, finished nearly 16 minutes behind Wiggins, although he did suffer with stomach problems during the final week.


 But even that may not eclipse the feats of Wiggins, whose procession on the Tour de France has set new standards for the cycling boom, and captured the public’s imagination like few athletes before him. 

Wiggins also has power to add gold in London. He will be part of the road-race squad attempting to propel Mark Cavendish to the Olympic title on Saturday. In the time trial four days’ later, Wiggins will try to win his fourth Olympic gold, and seventh medal in total.

After making history in Paris, Tour de France champion Bradley Wiggins is heading home to London hoping to add an Olympic gold medal to go with his yellow jersey. The first Briton to win cycling's event will start the Olympic time trial August 1 as a big favourite for the gold. 

  
After donning his winner's yellow jersey on the Champs-Elysees, Wiggins immediately turned his focus to Olympic race in just over a week. He even promised to forgo the Tour winner's traditional glass of champagne.

Saturday, 21 July 2012

INDIA GO UP 1-0

INDIA GO UP 1-0
India had an all-round performance to show for their efforts against Sri Lanka on Saturday. India were back and roaring at  Hambantota as they defeated the home team Sri Lanka by 21 runs in the 1st ODI and took a 1-0 lead in the 5 match series. Indian batsmen made merry on a good batting wicket and scored 314/6 in 50 overs. Sri Lanka could manage only 293/9 and ended 21 short of the target. Virat Kohli was adjudged the Man of the Match for his 106 in 113 balls.

Virat Kohli's century is his 12th in ODIs and fourth against Sri Lanka. However, it is his first century in Sri Lanka. No batsman has scored more hundreds than Kohli in 2012. Kohli has posted three successive centuries against Sri Lanka in ODIs.

Kohli became the first player to register four hundreds in ODIs this year. His fourth century against Sri Lanka is his 12th in ODIs. Kohli became the first visiting player to post a hundred at Hambantota

Kohli's tally of 596 runs at an average of 149.00 is a record in five innings in succession, eclipsing Matthew Hayden's aggregate of 529 at an average of 132.25 in 2007.
 
The 173-run stand between Sehwag and Kohli is the fifth-highest second-wicket stand for India against Sri Lanka. It is, however, India's second-highest such stand in Sri Lanka. Kumar Sangakkara's 133 is the fourth-highest score by a Sri Lankan batsman in an ODI defeat. While Tillakaratne Dilshan has made the highest such score twice (160), Sangakkara has also made 138 in the loss to India in Jaipur in 2005. Sri Lanka's score of 293 is their fifth-highest in an unsuccessful chase and the second-highest score in a failed chase in home ODIs. The highest remains 411 against India in Rajkot in 2009.
 
India's 314 is their 16th 300-plus score against Sri Lanka and their third such score against Sri Lanka in 2012. It is also the most number of 300-plus scores India have made against any team.

Brief scores: India 314/6 in 50.0 overs (Virat Kohli 106, Virender Sehwag 96, Suresh Raina 50, Thisara Perera 3/70) beat Sri Lanka 293/9 in 50.0 overs (Kumar Sangakkara 133, Thisara Perera 44, R Ashwin 2/46, Irfan Pathan 2/37) by 21 runs

Man-of-the-match:
Virat Kohli for his 106-run innings which helped India set a daunting total of 314 on the board

Thursday, 19 July 2012

India tour of Sri Lanka - Trailer before T20 World Cup Begins

India tour of Sri Lanka - Trailer before T20 World Cup Begins

India tour of Sri Lanka 2012 will begin on Saturday, July 21, 2012 in Sri Lanka. India tour of Sri Lanka 2012 will consist of 5 ODI and Only T20 match to be hosted by Sri Lanka in Jul-Aug 2012. Hope India regains some form just before T20 World Cup, which is being held in Sri Lanka later this year from September 18 to October 7. This Tour will be a Trailer before T20 World Cup Begins ! Come Roar and Cheer for Men in Blue !!!

Tuesday, 17 July 2012

Tour de France 2012: Bradley Wiggins ready to be first Briton to win 99th Tour de France


Tour de France 2012: Bradley Wiggins ready to be first Briton to win 99th Tour de France
Wiggins will become the first Briton to win the 99th Tour de France in Paris on Sunday. This win would be a great gift for Briton’s before London Olympics begin which the 99th Tour de France. Only with his monumental achievements last year – he won the Tour’s green jersey and the World Championship – and his sporting X factor did the public finally recognise his talent by voting him the BBC Sports Personality of the Year. 

Wiggins has achieved massively on the track at Olympics and World Championships but, for most of his sporting life, he has also received precious little recognition. Vigorously avoiding complacency and dragging himself out of the comfort zone afforded by his medal-laden Olympic career has been a big part of Wiggins emergence as a road racer. However, if he can arrive in Paris in yellow on Sunday to lift 99th Tour de France, people will be stopping him in the street for the rest of his life. With Tour de France triumph, he will get ready to glorify this year with fourth gold medal at Olympics.

Bradley Wiggins
Bradley Wiggins, who has put heart and soul and a lot more besides into trying to win the Tour de France. He is also becoming a big name in Spain apparently. A poster of five-time Tour champion Miguel Indurain, used to adorn the young Wiggins’ bedroom wall in Kilburn and on Tuesday Wiggins received Indurain’s personal neckerchief, which the legendary Basque uses when running the bulls in Pamplona. It had a good luck message written on it. Wiggins’s joy and pride was unconfined and will be scarcely matched if he wins on Sunday. 


Tour de France leader Bradley Wiggins has promised to support Chris Froome's attempts to win the famous race. He also maintains he would have no problem with taking a support role in future races and has also insisted he will stay with Team Sky until he retires. Wiggins also emphasizes that, in future Tours, he will ride in support of whoever is designated as the team leader. That includes team-mate Chris Froome, currently second overall, who has been so impressive over the past two and a half weeks. Wiggins leads Sky team-mate Froome, who is second, by two minutes and five seconds with five stages remaining. 

There has been speculation that Froome, 27, may feel he has to leave Sky to win the Tour but Wiggins insists he will aid his team-mate in the future. Froome echoed Wiggins’s words, making it quite clear that he would be happy to ride for Wiggins again next year if the centenary Tour was considered more suited to him.

Monday, 16 July 2012

Indian Contingent for London Olympics - Wrestling


Indian Contingent for London Olympics - Wrestling
The Bronze glory at Beijing, Bronze medallist Sushil Kumar and his long-time friend and fellow grappler Yogeshwar Dutt are ready for London Games. They carry Indian expectations in wrestling. They have enough experience to make the London Olympics a memorable event. A bronze in the Beijing Games four years ago came as a surprise but now Sushil is ready for the gold at the London Olympic Games and bring some glory to wrestling arena in India.

Traditionally Indian wrestling isn't just a sport - it's an ancient subculture where wrestlers live and train together and it dates as back as Middle Ages, traces of which have been found in the Mahabharata and Ramayana. Wrestlers used to belong to gyms called akharas, where wrestlers live under strict rules. Wrestlers' diets consist of milk, almonds, ghee, eggs and chapattis. The sport is on the decline, but there are still many akharas left and some dedicated people who are working to keep this ancient part of Indian culture alive.

As the nation prepares to head to London for the 30th edition of the Olympics, India will hope to add to the tally of the two bronze medals the sport has won for the country so far. Sushil Kumar ended India's 56-year wait for a wrestling medal at the last Olympics in Beijing. India's first-ever medal in wrestling came through the legendary KD Jadhav, way back in the 1952 Helsinki Games. After 2008, the sport of wrestling has progressed by leaps and bounds. The high-points definitely being the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi. Hosts India had set themselves a target of 100 medals from the CWG and was lent a big hand by the wrestlers.

Sushil was the lone medallist in the previous Olympics in wrestling, will look to improve upon his performance, while his long-time friend, Yogeshwar, would like to forget his debacle of last Olympic outing and put up an improved performance on the big stage. Yogeshwar would not want to settle for anything less than gold in London after he missed a sure shot medal in the dying moments of his quarterfinal bout in Beijing.

With a total of five wrestlers to represent India at the Olympics this year, the country is hoping nothing less than a couple of Gold from its athletes and pair of Sushil and Yogeshwar Dutt are key-players in wrestling.  Yashvir, who has closely witnessed Sushil and Yogeshwar’s ascent to the higher echelons of the sport, said the wrestlers have gained a lot of experience since their first Olympics in Athens in 2004 and are focused to make the quadrennial event this time around. Other hopefuls are - Amit Kumar, Narsingh Yadav and Geeta Kumari.

Hoping to see Indian Wrestlers bringing some glory for India and the wrestling game and set an example for future generation to cheer and play wrestling

Sunday, 15 July 2012

Chris Froome keen to lead, Bradley Wiggins is called “Le Gentleman”



Team Sky duo Bradley Wiggins and Chris Froome currently occupy the top two places in the overall Tour de France standings.  Chris Froome cleared the air that he will be riding to orders to help ensure that his team leader becomes the first British rider to win the Tour de France.

Although that sounds like the last word on the matter, it is entirely dependent on this week's events. Elsewhere in the interview Froome indicated the extent of his ambition and his desire to be treated as a potential Tour winner sooner rather than later. Team Sky's strategy this month, which has roots going back four years, is to maximise Wiggins's talents and minimise his weaknesses in order to put him on the top step of the podium in Paris next Sunday. 

Wiggins is currently 2min 5sec ahead of Froome, who sits just behind him in the general classification, and the Sky leader can expect to take a further two minutes out of his principal rivals – Cadel Evans and Vincenzo Nibali – in next Saturday's penultimate stage, a 53.5km time trial in which the final order will be determined before the ceremonial procession into Paris.


After finishing second in last year's Vuelta an Espana, a race he might have won but for Sky's tactical confusion, and attracting interest from other top teams, Froome signed a new – and very lucrative – four-year contract with the British outfit. For the moment Sky are perfectly placed with their leader and his first lieutenant at the top of the standings heading into the final week. 

Bradley Wiggins, Britain’s Tour de France leader, was christened “Le Gentleman” by the French media on Sunday after the race came under attack from saboteurs and Wiggins slowed the peloton in order to help a key rival. The yellow-jersey group, about 50 strong, had just crested the main climb of the day, the Mur de Pegure, when reigning champion Cadel Evans experienced the first of three rapid punctures as unidentified spectators scattered the road with tacks. This was an extraordinarily reckless action given that it took place just before a descent on which riders would reach almost 70mph. 

 

Wiggins, riding alongside one of his leading rivals, Vincenzo Nibali, immediately ordered the peloton to slow down, initially because he felt that Evans deserved a chance to regain contact, but also with the growing and scary realisation that other riders were similarly suffering punctures at an alarming rate. 

Then Wiggins himself suffered a mechanical failure and had to change bikes, and was quickly paced back to the bunch which slowed to a crawl before the organisers officially neutralised racing, allowing Evans and others to comfortably regain contact before the end of the stage. Those ahead in the break were allowed to race on, with Luis Leon Sanchez claiming the win. 

After the race, team directors reported that 30 of the key group had suffered punctures, or had arrived at the finish with tacks in their tyres. Four Tour cars and three motorbikes also either had punctures or tacks embedded in their wheels.

Federer sets his sight on Olympics


Federer sets his sight on Olympics
Roger Federer has come up with full vengeance this summer at Wimbledon along with London Olympics to seek gold in both tournaments. Having won Wimbledon, now he sets his sight on London Olympics with almost impeccable Swiss timing, Roger Federer has a last chance to fill the remaining spot in his bulging trophy cabinet on the court that witnessed the blooming of a tennis genius. Roger loves Wimbledon which will also host the Olympic tennis tournament in a few weeks and at 30, and with a record 17 grand slam titles to his name, Federer knows time is running short. 
Now, it is a trivalry, with emergence of Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic, who have been dominant in last two seasons of Slams. The recent domination of Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic has left Federer waiting for a 17th major since he won the Australian Open in 2010. Federer is fast losing his touch while he is nearing 31, so he has to fight it out against Nadal and Djokovic. It was foolish to discount him from this year's grass court grand slam, a title he has won six times, which he won for seventh time. But his best chance of glory on the lawns of south-west London might come a few weeks later at the Olympics. From the moment he surprisingly lost to James Blake in the quarter-finals of the Beijing singles four years ago, Federer has been eyeing his shot at gold in London on Aug. 5. 
But while the 17-time Grand Slam winner watches from the wings as Djokovic and Nadal contest the big prizes. But returning to No. 1 in grand fashion with Wimbledon win was absolutely like the old Roger Federer. Not only does he have to deal with Nadal, now he’s got Djokovic and there’s still Murray and maybe Del Potro in line-up. Let's not forget the extraordinary run of 32 consecutive Grand Slam quarter-finals, a record that surely will never be broken. And of course the Olympics is a substantial and realistic goal later in the summer. 


Some believe that tennis does not need the Olympics. However, Nadal's joy at winning in Beijing proved how much the title meant to him and should Federer crown his career this year it could become one of the iconic images of the London Games. Federer clearly believes Olympic recognition is good for tennis.  Federer has twice carried the Swiss flag at the opening ceremony and it would be a surprise if that were not to happen again. After all, he is Switzerland's greatest sportsman and, each summer in London, he has become almost royalty.

T20 World Cup Fast Approaching


T20 World Cup Fast Approaching
Cricket’s shortest version returns after 2 years for first time in Asia. With T20 World Cup fast approaching, the expectations of Indian fans will rise up once again. The Twenty20 World Cup will be staged from September 18 to October 7 in Colombo, Hambantota and Pallekele, with the women`s group stages in Galle. The ICC also announced the launch of more tickets for all matches of the Twenty20 World Cup from June 12 onwards. T20 World Cup schedule has been declared by ICC which will host 27 matches.

ICC Chief Executive Haroon Lorgat expressed his thoughts that it is the first ICC World Twenty20 tournament in Asia. This year`s event promises to be even more explosive as player skills in the T20 format have expanded and cricket fans from around the world are dashing to be in Sri Lanka. Upali Dharmadasa, President of Sri Lanka Cricket conveyed that ICC World Twenty20 Sri Lanka 2012 will be a sporting spectacle not to be missed by any fan. 

The ticket prices will start from USD 0.25 for the single group games and the final will be priced between USD 2.50 and USD 45. The Women`s Twenty20 World Cup will be free of charge for spectators in the group stages, which will be played in Galle. The semi-finals and final will be played on the same day on the same ground as the men`s semi-finals and final and will be covered by the same ticket.

The International Cricket Council has chosen Sri Lanka's star pacer Lasith Malinga as the official event ambassador for the World Twenty20 Championships to be held in the island nation from September 18 to October 7. ICC CEO Haroon Lorgat said Malinga's popularity transcends Sri Lanka and he is ideal choice for the role. Malinga will be the face of the event's advertising campaign in the host nation and will promote it globally as well.

The first match is going to be played between Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka on September 18 as the inaugural match of the cup. The 20 day long tournament will conclude with the final match played at the Premdas Stadium on October 7. Despite the T20 fever of IPL donning the cricket World right now, T20 World Cup is expected to throw a lot of suprises for audiences.

Indian Contingent for London Olympics - Badminton


Indian Contingent for London Olympics - Badminton
With little over two weeks left for the Olympics to start, let’s have a look at India Contingent for the Games. Let’s start from most hopeful – Badminton. The two-decade old quest for an elusive Olympic medal in badminton may end in London for Indian shuttlers. India will be fielding a formidable outfit comprising five shuttlers, with an eye on clinching three medals. Incidentally, this will be the biggest Indian badminton contingent after the sport gained entry into the Olympic Games in Barcelona in 1992, with Saina leading the way. 

Saina Nehwal is a top contender for a medal finish at London. Saina Nehwal has undoubtedly raised the bar for Indian shuttlers. World No.5 and extremely popular, she is looked upon as a strong medal prospect at the London Olympics. She may or may not like to be under such rising expectations, but it has been inspiring her peers to give their best and even win a medal in the mega event.

The women's doubles pair of Jwala Gutta and Ashwini Ponnappa, who claimed bronze at the World Championships, and the mixed team of Valiyaveetil Diju and Jwala are also among the favourites to finish on the podium. Jwala-Ashwini complement each other quite well on the court. If Jwala controls the game and finds gaps in the rival court with immaculate accuracy, Ashwini is the workhorse who not only retrieves well but can also stuns rivals with power-packed smashes. The elegant Ponnappa from Bangalore possesses one of the most powerful smashes in the world. A hard-working shuttler, who does a lot of court coverage, plays behind Jwala. Whether it is with Ashwini Ponnappa in women's doubles or Valiyaveetil Diju in mixed, Jwala has always succeeded in exploiting rivals' weakness with her creative approach.

In Diju, India have a world-class doubles player. The tall Kerala shuttler possesses an attacking return and picks a lot of points by attacking from the net. Asian girls always find him a major threat. Valiyaveetil Diju is currently among the most feared doubles players in the world. His returns on the first serve are deadly. Diju and Jwala were the runners-up at the Indian Open at Hyderabad in 2009. The duo also reached the final in World Super Series Masters final in Malaysia the same year. Riding on these performances, the duo had reached the career-best ranking of world number six in August 2010.

The same cannot be said about men's singles shuttler Parupalli Kashyap. But if the lanky lad can reproduce the game he displayed at the Indonesia Open, he can do wonders. Parupalli Kashyap will represent India in the London Olympics in men's singles badminton event while Jwala Gutta's participation in both women's doubles and mixed doubles. This will be the first time that any of the Indian badminton doubles pairing will get a direct entry in the history of Olympics. As for Jwala, she became the first Indian to qualify for two badminton events - mixed and women's doubles - in the Olympics.

India's badminton coach Pullela Gopichand is hoping for more than one medal from his wards at the London Olympics. Gopi says that apart from Saina, the two doubles pairs Jwala Gutta-Ashwini Ponappa and Jwala-V Diju also have an outside chance of winning a medal. Gopi feels that Saina would be targeted by the Chinese since she won the last two tournaments.

7/8 For Roger At Wimbledon


7/8 For Roger At Wimbledon
Roger Federer, unmoved by the tide of hysteria that was closing in around him, sang his song like only he can on a bitter-cold London evening to claim his 17th Grand Slam title with a 4-6, 7-5, 6-3, 6-4 win. Final stroke silenced the will of a nation that was urging, pleading, begging its hero, 25-year-old Andy Murray, to bring home the title.

As expected, there were going to be tears at the end of this Wimbledon men’s final, because both Roger Federer and Andy Murray have some precedent there. In the end, they came from the winner and the runner-up. Federer’s tears began almost before he fell to the court in triumph, tears of joy and relief as he won his seventh career title at Wimbledon, the 17th major of his career, the first in 2½ years.

Roger Federer left the door tantalisingly ajar for local hero Andy Murray in the Wimbledon men's singles final, then slammed it shut to win a record-equalling seventh Wimbledon title and in so doing return to the top of the world rankings. The Swiss great, contesting his eighth final at the All England Club, flirted with danger in the second set after losing the first but just when Murray looked like ending 76 years of plucky British failure Federer gave a stunning reminder of his genius to win 4-6 7-5 6-3 6-4 on Centre Court. 

For the second time in three grand slam finals against Murray he reduced the Scot to tears, although this match, unlike the others, was a contest to savour.  At 30 years and 335 days he also became the oldest men's champion since Arthur Ashe in 1975 and, to put the icing on the cake, the win gave Federer his seventh Wimbledon crown and the world No. 1 ranking, which will take him past Pete Sampras' record of 286 weeks at the game's top. He's the second oldest player, at the age of 30 years and 335 days, to hold the No. 1 ranking, following Andre Agassi at 33 years and 131 days.

Number of championship wins for Federer at the Wimbledon as he equalled William Renshaw's and Pete Sampras' world record of winning the coveted singles title on seven occasions each. Federer has won in 2003 to 2007, 2009 and now in 2012, while Renshaw did it in the era of Challenge Rounds in 1881 to 1886 & 1889, and Sampras more recently in 1993 to 1995 & 1997 to 2000 (both years inclusive).

RECORD 17 GRAND SLAM TITLES

Wimbledon, 2003-2007, 2009, 2012; U.S. Open 2004-2008; Australian Open 2004, 2006, 2007, 2010; French Open 2009. 

MAJOR HIGHLIGHTS OF ROGER’S CAREER -

* In 2003, becomes the first Swiss man to win a grand slam after beating Mark Philippoussis in the Wimbledon final. 

* Is the only man to win five consecutive titles at two different grand slams - Wimbledon and U.S. Open. 

* Is the first man to win Wimbledon-U.S. Open double four years in a row. 

* Is the only man in the professional era to win three consecutive majors twice in his career when he captured the 2007 Australian Open title. 

* Equalled Bjorn Borg's record of five consecutive Wimbledon titles in 2007. 

* His run of reaching 10 consecutive grand slam finals is snapped by Novak Djokovic in the 2008 Australian Open semi-finals. 

* The 2008 five-set epic at Wimbledon is regarded by many as the best ever tennis match. He lost the match to Rafael Nadal. 

* His 2009 French Open crown made him the sixth man - after Fred Perry, Don Budge, Rod Laver, Roy Emerson and Andre Agassi - to have won all four grand slam titles during his career. Nadal has since become the seventh to achieve the feat. 

* Breaks American Pete Sampras's record of 14 grand slam titles with his 15th win in the 2009 Wimbledon final to reclaim the world number one spot from Nadal. 

* In 2009, becomes the first man to reach seven successive Wimbledon finals since the abolition of the Challenge Round in 1922. Reaches a record-equalling eighth Wimbledon final in 2012, extending his overall major final appearance record to 24. 

* His record run of reaching 23 consecutive grand slam semi-finals is snapped by Robin Soderling in the last eight of the 2010 French Open. That record is widely considered as one of the most astonishing in sport as it means Federer finished in the top four at a major for almost six successive years. His streak is more than double the previous record held by Ivan Lendl, who reached 10 consecutive major semis.

Five Point Wimbledon For Serena


Five Point Wimbledon For Serena
American powerhouse Serena Williams recovered from a second-set wobble to defeat Agnieszka Radwanska and take her Wimbledon women's title tally to five. The 30-year-old American won her fifth Wimbledon title last Saturday on Centre Court, beating Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland 6-1, 5-7, 6-2 to claim her 14th major championship. With grand slam final debutant Radwanska playing despite a respiratory problem, it appeared the sixth-seeded Williams could choose how long she wanted the match to last when she took the opening set for the loss of one game in 35 minutes.

Radwanska had been so severely affected by an upper respiratory illness over the last few days that she withdrew from the doubles and cancelled her pre-match media commitments. The 23-year-old, the first Pole to reach a Grand Slam final for 75 years, recovered sufficiently to play, but she might have wished she was back in her sick bed in the first set. Radwanska, who was aiming to take the world number one position with a win - showed admirable resilience and a fair slice of talent in the second set to level the match.

After hitting a backhand winner on match point, she fell onto her back to the grass. She then rose with a grin as big sister Venus — another five-time Wimbledon champion — smiled and applauded, along with the rest of the crowd. After shaking hands with Radwanska, Williams climbed into the box where her family was seated. She hugged her father, Venus, their mother and others.

Williams has now equalled her sister Venus’s tally of five titles at the All England Club, but more significantly the 30-year-old’s 14th Grand Slam crown is her first at the majors since her last Wimbledon triumph in 2010. Inspired by the painful memory of her shock French Open first round exit against Virginie Razzano last month, Serena has spent the last month in a determined bid to re-establish her primacy. It is mission accomplished, but only just. 

Serena, who pocketed a cheque for £1.15 million, is the first woman over 30 to win Wimbledon since Martina Navratilova in 1990 and she needed all the experience gathered over her illustrious career to survive a remarkable revival from Radwanska. Williams is the first woman in her 30s to win a Wimbledon title since Martina Navratilova, who won at the All England Club in 1990 when she was 33.

Saturday, 14 July 2012

Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar - A Surging River of Genius



Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar - A Surging River of Genius
First and foremost, I would love to say about the epitome of cricket a.k.a. God of Cricket that "When God wanted to play cricket, he created Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar". 
 Having spent half of his current life in cricket field ! Sachin is still going strong. At this juncture, when success lies in every corner of your life, 'what next' becomes the most-asked question? And it's nothing different for Tendulkar, who perhaps is the biggest victim of demands in this country.

The pride of Indian cricket and a perennial crowd-favorite Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar was born on April 24, 1973, in Mumbai. As aspiring young cricketer Sachin wanted to be a fast bowler. He even undertook trials at the MRF pace foundation, Chennai, but his short stature proved to be a hindrance for bowling. Meeting Mr. R. Achrekar, his Cricket Coach and changing his school to Shardashram Vidya Mandir in Dadar marked a turning point in Sachin's cricket career.

Sachin at the age of 16, he made his International debut in ODI’s India vs. Pakistan at Gujranwala and Tests debut India v Pakistan at Karachi around 1989/90. And since then he has been an integral part of the Indian cricket team, and has not looked back ever since. Tendulkar has scored 51 centuries in Test cricket from 188 matches and 49 tons from 463 ODIs he has played so far in his international career spanning nearly 23 years.

The first thing that comes to mind about Sachin is the will to win, the fear and respect of the rivals -- he has it all. India's star batsman is sheer genius. We can actually feel that he is a super human and a scenario of eleven versus one on the cricket field which is called the Tendulkar fantasy.

He knows every shot in the book and makes his own improvisations. As he sees the ball leaves the bowler's hand, he would have already decided where to hit it. His shots have tremendous power and he times the ball perfectly, making him one of the best batsmen in the world. He is also an effective bowler and also one of the best fielders. In IPL 2012, he stepped down from captain-ship. Their campaign stuttering due to continuous batting failures.

Sachin’s humility, patience, persistence and vision are a confluence of all these in one surging river of genius. His records are like a river bursting its banks. Now, the surging river is reaching the sea where he can perform at his will and the young cricketers in the team are following his path to be the next maestro. Hope he serves cricket many more years to come, in one or other way.