Thursday, 7 March 2013

Valentino Rossi Quits F1


Seven time MotoGP world champion Valentino Rossi has said that his dream of racing in F1 is over and his sole focus from now on is to improve his fortunes in the premier two-wheeler racing championship.
The 34-year-old driver from Italy has been a staunch supporter of Ferrari for many years and backs Fernando Alonso and Kimi Raikkonen as his favorites. He had even tested for Ferrari in 2010.

In 2010, Rossi had hoped to be a part of Formula 1 but was skeptical about his fortunes if he had indeed made the transition from two wheels to four wheels. 
“There are not many changes in a man’s body between 22 and 34 so I still have some time left. I would consider shifting to cars, probably rallying, after that before I finally decide to take it easy … I know F1 would’ve been easier but by the time I finish MotoGP, I will be too old for F1.”
Now that he has turned 34, Rossi reckons that he would not make it to F1. In a recent interview with Sky Italia, Rossi said, “Unfortunately, I’m done with Formula 1. I will continue racing for as long as I’m competitive and I will continue to support Ferrari, (Fernando) Alonso and (Kimi) Räikkönen.”
With this news, it is confirmed that Rossi will be unable to emulate John Surtees who remains the only person to become a Champion on two and four wheels, having won several bike racing events before becoming Formula 1 world champion in 1964. 

Undertaker returns to WWE on RAW


Undertaker made his much elusive return to WWE in dramatic fashion. As most of us expected, Undertaker returned on this week’s Old School RAW. The show opened up with Undertaker’s gong and the crowd went absolutely berserk.

WWE, however, had spoiled Taker’s return on WWE.com and many seemed irritated by this move by the WWE. For long, people were discussing news of the Undertaker suffering from injuries and there were plans of WrestleMania happening this year without its greatest symbol, the Undertaker.
But now, amidst all that doubt, Taker has returned to WWE and most probably will set up a match against Punk at WrestleMania.
A Fatal Four Way between Punk, Orton, Sheamus and Big Show on RAW today will decide who will be Taker’s opponent for WrestleMania.
However, the biggest news that we need to savor in for now is that Taker is back. Here’s a video showing Taker’s return on RAW today.


Why Y2J Never Joined TNA


Chris Jericho was with MLW Radio for part 2 of the interview and Konnan had a few interesting questions for him. Jericho spoke about why he did not join TNA and whether he had talks with officials.
Jericho said,
“The main reason is that I always wanted to work for Vince McMahon ever since I was a kid. I’ve never worked for anybody else since I stepped through the doors in August of 1999 and I never will work for anyone else. I don’t want to go to Japan. I don’t want to go to Mexico for shots. I don’t want to go work in TNA. I’m a WWE guy. That’s the way it’s always going to be.
“I’m sure TNA is a great company to work for. I’m sure you can do really well there or make some great money or whatever. It doesn’t matter to me. I work for the big leagues. There’s no reason for me to go anywhere else.”
Jericho on what he felt about Chris Benoit and his views on concussions in the industry
“I was like everybody else. Shocked. A sense of ‘what the [expletive]‘ happened. Denial. Betrayal. How can he do this?
“I look back at it now, and I was really close with him, but he got considerably stranger and stranger the last six months of his life. I was like, what’s with this guy? What’s wrong with him? And now I know the reason why. It’s because his brain got worse and worse.”

Stats of Viru


A statistical evaluation of Virender Sehwag’s overall career shows a cricketer with remarkable, unique characteristics.
Here are three reasons why he’ll go down in history…
1. With regards to destructive capabilities, Sehwag has few peers. In Test match history, only three batsmen have a strike-rate in excess of 80 runs per 100 balls – Sehwag (82.23), Adam Gilchrist (81.95) and Kapil Dev (80.91).
2. Sehwag is one of only four batsmen in history to score two Test triple-hundreds – a feat Donald Bradman could only match, not exceed.
3. Out of all the Indian batsmen to have played Test cricket, only four have scored more career runs than Sehwag’s 8,586 – VVS Laxman (8,781), Sunil Gavaskar (10,122), Rahul Dravid (13,288) and Sachin Tendulkar (15,746*).
Sehwag is, without question, a modern day great; however, like all batsmen, there comes a time when form is brought under close cross-examination. A temporary dip in productivity is anticipated in all batsmen, but Sehwag’s dip currently resembles a canyon.
virender sehwag india ipl
This graphic gives a stark indication of just how far Sehwag’s stock has fallen in recent years, leading to his exclusion from the remainder of the current India v Australia Test series.
Four Horsemen of the Sehwag Statspocalypse
1. In his career, Virender Sehwag has recorded a duck in 8.89% of his Test innings. The figure for the last 3 years though, is an astonishing 13.89%.
2. The red bars are an indication of Sehwag’s percentage of 50+scores.
In the past three years he has converted just 19.44% of his innings into 50+ scores, compared with 33.33% in the first 84 Test matches of his career.
Most tellingly, and as indicated by the green bars, Sehwag’s just not sticking around at the crease long enough to make a substantial contribution to the Indian team totals.
3. Between 2001 & 2010, Sehwag’s average innings duration was 63.81 deliveries; in more recent times that figure has dropped to just 34.81 deliveries per innings – under six overs in total.
4. If we take Sehwag’s last three years as a career of its own, it looks like this:
20 Tests, 1036 runs at an average of 28.77.
If this had been Sehwag’s overall career, it would have put him up there with some of the giants of the game like Craig White, Ranjan Madugalle and Ashod Mankad.
Clearly it’s folly to compare him with these middle-ranking cricketers, but we are trying to establish whether Sehwag’s cricketing problems are terminal. There has been very little to suggest otherwise, in what has been a particularly bleak period for Sehwag.
The statistics don’t tell the full story – they rarely do –  but it is abundantly clear that Sehwag has failed to adapt his weaknesses into strengths. Whilst the batting bravado may never leave him, there is a need for circumspection opening the batting, especially for a team like India where form has been fleeting in the Test arena.
Sehwag has lost the ability to score big runs, hit sixes and occupy the crease for extended periods of time. If he is to resurrect his flagging career, it would appear that he needs to work just as hard on his mental attributes as he does his physical ones.
Test cricket without Sehwag would be a far hollower place; Test cricket with a limping, wallowing Sehwag is hollower still.

Biological Passports Acclaimed by Fed Murray


Roger Federer and Andy Murray, who have been outspoken in calling for more stringent anti-doping measures in tennis, welcomed the introduction of biological passports for players.
The International Tennis Federation announced the move in London on Thursday, after a meeting of the Tennis Anti-Doping Programme working group that includes representatives from the ITF, ATP, WTA and grand slam tournaments.
The ITF said there was unanimous support for the introduction of the passport, which is used to detect variances in biological make-up that might indicate doping and has been introduced in cycling.
“That’s good news,” Federer said Thursday as he prepared to launch his defence of the Indian Wells ATP Masters title.
“We have to do everything to ensure our tour is as clean as it possibly can be.
“That’s what it’s about — that the cheaters think twice, that they get caught if they do cheat. I think it’s just a matter of that.”
Federer said he believed players were prepared to accept the measures, even though increased testing means more intrusion into players’ lives.
One reason, he noted, was the long-delayed admission by Lance Armstrong that he used banned drugs in all seven of his Tour de France victories.
The American’s confession came after he was stripped of those titles and banned from cycling for his role in systematic doping on his US Postal Service team.
“The cycling issue has been around for quite some time, but what happened this year was obviously super-extreme and I think that really gets you sort of thinking,” Federer said.
ATP executive chairman and president Brad Drewett said the men’s circuit was behind the move.
“The players have been clear that they support increased investment in anti-doping and we feel that this is the most effective way to show the world that tennis is a clean sport,” he said.
The introduction of the Athlete Biological Passport will require the TADP to increase the number of blood tests every year.
In addition, the working group also recommended an overall increase in the amount of testing, especially outside competitions, with additional funding provided by all the governing bodies in tennis and administered by the ITF.
Federer said the dearth of tests he faced early last year showed that testing needed to be stepped up.
“If you got lucky like I did last year, Rotterdam, Dubai, Indian Wells, I won all three tournaments and didn’t get tested once. That shouldn’t be OK,” he said.
US Open champion Andy Murray of Scotland also welcomed the move.
“It’s one of the best ways to ensure your sport stays as clean as possible and it’s good tennis has made that jump,” he said of the biological profiling system that is considered one of the most effective methods of detecting the use of performance-enhancing drugs and blood boosters like EPO.

Nadal Misses Olympics


Nadal Misses Olympics

Rafael Nadal kept his spirits up during a seven-month injury layoff with a little extra golf and fishing, but the pain of missing the London Olympics was slow to fade.

“The hardest was the first one, the Olympics,” Nadal said of the prime tennis moments he was forced to forego as the pain and inflammation in his left knee kept him off the court.
After capturing his 11th Grand Slam title at Roland Garros last year, the Spaniard suffered a shock second-round exit at Wimbledon and didn’t play again until last month.
The injury denied him the chance to defend the Olympic singles gold he had won in Beijing, and making it even harder was the fact that Nadal was to have carried the Spanish flag in the London opening ceremony.
“That was a sad moment for me,” the 26-year-old Mallorcan said. “These opportunities are not forever, maybe only one time in life. I lost that opportunity.”
But Nadal, who said he can only hope to get another Olympic opportunity at Rio in 2016, revealed that as his recovery dragged on he never worried he wouldn’t return to the game at the highest level.
“I never thought about that,” he said. “It’s just, it was a long time, and it’s hard when it’s an injury that you don’t know when you’re going to come back.
“Sometimes it’s frustrating, every day you test yourself and you don’t feel you’re improving.”
Nadal, currently ranked fifth in the world, missed last year’s US Open, then skipped the Australian Open in January after a virus further slowed his preparations.
However, he said he was more than encouraged by his three-tournament comeback tour in Latin America, where he finished runner-up in Vina del Mar, Chile, before lifting trophies in Sao Paulo and Acapulco.
Horacio Zeballos, ranked 73rd in the world and playing in just his second ATP Tour final, rallied to beat Nadal in three sets in Vina del Mar.
The Argentine became just the third player, along with Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer, to beat Nadal in a clay court final. But the former world number one said he was, in fact, delighted with that performance in his first tournament back.
“I don’t consider myself that good that after seven months without competing and without practising a lot I will be back, I will be playing fantastic,” Nadal said. “That doesn’t exist for me.
“I played much much better than I thought, and in Acapulco I played a fantastic tournament,” he added of his Latin American swing.
Last Saturday, Nadal dismantled David Ferrer 6-0, 6-2 to end his compatriot’s three-year Acapulco reign and signal that Ferrer’s current position as the top-ranked Spaniard — one spot ahead of Nadal — could be in jeopardy.
“In the final at Acapulco, forget about if I was seven months away from tennis, I played much, much better than in a lot of finals when I am competing at 100 percent.
“I played one of my best matches probably ever on clay in the final,” Nadal said.
Nadal remained cautious, however, when it came to predicting whether that would translate into success on the hardcourts of Indian Wells, where the field for the first ATP Masters tournament of the year sees the “big four” of men’s tennis — Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer, Andy Murray and Nadal — all entered in the same event for the first time since Wimbledon.
Not only does the field include 49 of the top 50 men in the world, it will be Nadal’s first hardcourt outing in almost a year — since he withdrew from his scheduled semi-final against Murray at Miami last March with pain in that troublesome left knee.

New Zealand VS England 1st Test 3rd Day Play Abandoned


New Zealand VS England 1st Test 3rd Day Play Abandoned

Play was abandoned due to rain on the third day of the opening Test between New Zealand and England at University Oval on Friday, frustrating the Black Caps’ effort to extend a first innings lead.
New Zealand’s Hamish Rutherford (R) bats with England’s keeper Matt Prior during day three of their first cricket Test match, played at the University Oval park in Dunedin, on March 8, 2013. Play was later abandoned for the day due to rain.

New Zealand were 402 for seven when the umpires ordered players from the field shortly after tea, with Brendon McCullum unbeaten on 44 and Bruce Martin 17 not out, a 235-run lead.
The rain raises the prospect that New Zealand will be unable to convert their commanding position into a win, as the entire first day was also abandoned due to bad weather.


Tuesday, 5 March 2013

Pujara Ashwin Move Forward in ICC Rankings


India players have reaped the rewards for an innings and 135 runs win over Australia in the second cricket Test in Hyderabad by making a charge on the latest ICC Test Player Rankings released Tuesday.
The biggest gains have been made by batsman Cheteshwar Pujara and off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin, who have achieved their career-best rankings in batting and bowling, respectively.
Pujara, named Player of the Match for his double-century in the second Test, has jumped 12 places to a career-best 11th position while Ashwin, who had match figures of 6/104, is now at a best-ever eighth spot, having jumped three positions.
In the rankings for Test batsmen, second-ranked Australia captain Michael Clarke has dropped three ratings points and now trails No.1 ranked Hashim Amla by 13 ratings points. Murali Vijay, the other Test centurion in Hyderabad, has jumped 27 places to 60th.
In the rankings for Test bowlers, Australia’s fast bowler James Pattinson has broken into the top 20 in 20th (up by one) while other bowlers to improve their rankings include Harbhajan Singh in 25th (up by one), Ravindra Jadeja in 40th (up by 23) and Bhuvneshwar Kumar in 97th (up by 28).
The bowlers’ table is still headed by South Africa’s Dale Steyn.
Courtesy ; Sportskeeda

Dhoni imitating Kohli, Tiwary and Pathan

Dhoni imitating Kohli, Tiwary and Pathan


Sir Ravindra Jadeja's Facebook wall unleashed



Sir Ravindra Jadeja's Facebook wall unleashed


   


This is a fake FB Wall and should not be taken seriously. JUST For Fun