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Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Baller Was Popping Pills And Girls

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Closeup of Pills[Mouth to Ears] Which basketball player turned up for his birthday while getting shaded by his estranged wife?

This baller was spotted in Houston over the weekend on his worst behavior. Enough of no love for him! When you get no love from your estranged wife what else can a man do? Bring on the groupies!

It was a weekend of pill popping and taking down an alleged three different broads. The thirst for attention was real with this man’s Instagram over the weekend. He gave himself birthday shout outs while his soon-to-be-ex-wife gave no mention of the special day. Sounds like shade to us.

Do you know who we are talking about?

BG Notes: Turned up = got wild and crazy. Shaded = disrespected. Taking down = picking up. Thirst = desire. Shout 0ut = public acknowledgment.

Athlete:

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Silver Fox Is Holing Up With A Married Actress

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silver fox[Open] Whoever said young ’uns have all the fun? There’s gossip doing the rounds about two senior actors who’ve reportedly got ‘very friendly’ while shooting at an outdoor location recently. The movie in question is a Hollywood production being filmed in India, the sequel of an international hit that was also shot here a few years ago.

If sources from the unit are to be believed, a fairly well known Indian character actress, who reprises her role from the earlier film, has charmed a Hollywood A-lister who’s recently been added to the new film. This silver fox, a hugely popular American star, has been to India often in the past on spiritual and philanthropic missions, but is filming locally for the first time.

Everyone from the crew to their co-actors have noticed that the pair share warm vibes, and rarely miss an opportunity to drive back to their hotel together in the same car when pack-up is announced. It’s not unusual for one to be holed up in the other’s vanity van or make-up room in between shots, and one source describes their friendship as “extremely touchy-feely”.

The actress, well-known for her raspy, gravelly voice, is married and a mother, and is well known in social circles outside Bollywood too. She’s starred in both blockbusters and indies, often taking mum parts, and has had considerable success in roles with comic undertones. Among those who’ve heard the rumours, there are a few who suspect there may be nothing more than a Platonic friendship between the two. “She’s a great talker, and she’s an even better listener. There’s a good chance she’s the only person on that set who has a worldview outside of films, and that’s probably what he’s drawn to,” a friend of hers offers.

Hollywood Actor:

Indian Actress:

Film:

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He Doesn’t Seal Music Deals With Just A Handshake

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[Hollywood Street King] He’s a powerful force in the music business, widely regarded as “a shrewd businessman.”

But during this music mogul’s sexual endeavors, that “shrewd” character is one he’s said to shelf. That’s because insiders reveal he is “very submissive” in the bedroom. Over the past 14 years, our blind item subject may have been playing patient to his bromancing doctor, but insiders say he’s been partaking in secret smash sessions with younger men “for decades.”

According to our industry insider, “after artists sign a label deal with his company, he celebrates the moment by giving them fellatio.”

We’re told the said ritual isn’t reserved just for his recording artists. Know why? Sources say the music moguls — who he’s granted labels under his company’s umbrella — who have proven successful with winning numbers also get the same celebratory “professional” treatment. Just ask L.A. Reid and Puffy!

Our mystery man is a two-time beard-bridegroom who came out for the first time early last year. Now, can you guess which “Soundtrack” maker I’m talking about?

Businessman:

His Recording Artists:

His Music Moguls:

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Oscar Runs

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ladies room 1[Naughty But Nice Rob] Which nervous celebrity BLEW UP the toilet at The Oscars?

Which celebrity who admitted that being part of The Oscars made her very nervous, got so worried that she needed a private bathroom backstage that she used over and over and over again!

After she left the private bathroom, “you could literally smell her fear,” one close source tells NAUGHTY BUT NICE ROB!

Clue: She didn’t win!

Celebrity:

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What The Limo Driver Found

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[Blind Gossip] During the Oscars, every limousine in the Los Angeles area is busy. One limo driver had a situation with his passenger last night, though, and had to call into his company to figure out what to do.

The passenger was a well-known actress, her significant other, and a couple of unknown guests. The driver reported that the pickup and the ride went fine, and that the passengers appeared to be enjoying themselves. After he dropped them off, though, he had found that they had left a little something behind.

It was a small plastic baggie of cocaine.

The driver immediately called back to the limo company in a panic. Should they call the passenger and tell her that she left something in the car? Should he throw it away so he wouldn’t get arrested if he got pulled over or if the car got searched for some reason? Should he leave it there and pretend not to know anything?

They decided he should simply hold on to the package until the end of the night and put it back on seat exactly where he had found it. The actress spotted it immediately when she got back into the car. She picked it up and excitedly yelled “Holy sh*t! Here it is!” She always has been rather energetic.

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Being Selfish As Usual

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me 1[Blind Gossip] This very famous Actor was absent from The Oscars last night. While you don’t have to go to the ceremony if you are not personally nominated, , stars typically show up to support their film/costar/director if one of them happens to get nominated. For example, even though Jennifer Garner did not get nominated herself, she was there to support Jared Leto and Matthew McConaughey and Dallas Buyers Club. It’s professional courtesy.

Our Actor was invited to the ceremony… but was a no show. At one of the after-parties, someone asked his Costar where the Actor was. The Costar said, “Being selfish as usual. Me, me, me. It’s all about [Actor]. If he isn’t the center of attention, there’s just no point (in showing).” The Costar usually has a pretty healthy sense of humor, but in this case, they definitely didn’t sound like they were kidding!

Missing Actor:

Costar:

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Boo Hoo In The Bathroom

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woman crying 8 [Blind Gossip] This Actress was one of the Oscar nominees. While she put on a brave and happy face when someone else won the Oscar for her category, she was caught crying in the bathroom later on. Nothing loud or overly dramatic. Just private little sobs of disappointment.

When another woman (who appeared to know the actress) quietly tried to give her a “You shouldn’t be upset because it’s such an honor just to be nominated” pep talk, The Actress claimed that she was not upset because she lost to [Oscar Winner]. She was upset because she was afraid that it was her “one big chance” and asked “What if I’m never nominated for anything ever again?”

The woman gave her a big hug and assured her that she would be. We think she’s right.

Actress:

Oscar Winner:

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His Bizarre Oscar Good Luck Charm

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lucky[Naughty But Nice Rob] Which male Oscar-nominated star’s good look charm is ladies’ panties?

He does not think of himself as a cross dresser but insists that wearing ladies underwear under his suit will help him win.

He has had the “lucky panties” for two years now and is convinced that he cannot win unless he is wearing them.

Only his stylist knows about it, but luckily for him – his stylist has LOOSE LIPS! WINK!

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BG12345: Tuesday

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5 15Good Morning, Blinders!

Up for some more gossip today?

Sure you are!

We have five new blind items for you, one per hour, starting at 1:00 pm EST.

Enjoy!

Love, Ace

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Party Persona Non Grata

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oscar cookies[Blind Gossip] Lots of celebrities attended Oscar parties yesterday. Oscar winners and nominees prefer the big parties like the the Vanity Fair Party or The Governors Ball, while music types gravitate more towards the Elton John Party or the Madonna Party.

Among the party guests yesterday was a well-known Reality Star.

While some of the lesser celebrities were happy to meet her and get their photo taken with her, some of the bigger celebrities gave her a wide berth. Two of them were a Singer and an Actress – who are friendly in real life – who were chatting on one side of the room with a few other people.

Someone representing the Reality Star came up to them and said, “[Reality Star] would like you to come over and take a photo with her in ten minutes.” The Singer and The Actress both politely declined, saying that they were in the middle of something.

After the rep walked away, though, The Singer and The Actress burst out laughing over the invitation! The Singer told the group, “Come over to her in ten minutes? Oh my god, she thinks she’s the star of this event!” The Actress shook her head and said, “The day that I purposefully walk across a room to take a photo with [Reality Star] is the day my career is over.”

Reality Star:

Singer:

Actress:

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Tuesday, March 4, 2014

George Lopez Explains Arrest for Public Intoxication

February 28, 2014 23:37:51 GMT
The 'Lopez Tonight' show host sprawled on the carpeted floor of a Canadian casino after his performance.

has spoken up about his arrest for public intoxication. The comedian passed out on the floor of a casino in Canada shortly after his performance on Thursday, February 27.


"Tied one on last night. Not feeling great this morning," he explained in a statement to People. "I was trying to sleep it off, unfortunately, it was on the casino floor."


TMZ was first to report that the TV show host had a little too much fun at the Caesars Windsor Hotel and Casino. Caesars alerted the police and put him in custody to sober up before releasing him.


A spokesperson for Windsor Police confirmed the incident to People, "We can confirm that at 11:25 P.M. Windsor police officers received custody of a male from the OPP Casino Enforcement Unit. The male was subsequently released with no charges."


Lopez is due to take the stage at the casino again on Friday, February 28.



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Justin Bieber Celebrated 20th Birthday With Family


His father Jeremy Bieber and Justin's half-siblings flew in to Atlanta, Georgia to help the pop star celebrate the occasion.

reached the age of 20 on Saturday, March 1 and he chose to celebrate it with a low key party surrounded by his family. Justin's father Jeremy Bieber flew to the pop star's new home in Atlanta, Georgia with his other children, 5-year-old Jazmyn and 4-year-old Jaxon, for some family time.

"Happy Birthday son. Wow 20!" Jeremy, who reportedly just separated from his younger children's mother Erin Wagner, tweeted. Justin's mom Pattie Mallette, who split from Jeremy when Justin was 2, also tweeted, "Happy Birthday YOU KNOW WHO! I love you. Xoxo". Justin himself tweeted a smiley face. Earlier this week he wrote, "Bday week. wish the world would learn to believe in the goodness in people and be kind to one another. together we can change the world :)".

Bieber has also received numerous happy birthday wishes from his friends. Manager Scooter Braun tweeted, "Happy 20th birthday @justinbieber! See u soon! Been a pleasure to be a part of your journey. Love yah." posted a photo of them together and tweeted, "Happy Birthday to YOU @justinbieber !!!" A friend named Johnny Shahidi posted a photo of Bieber blowing candles on his birthday cake.

Bieber will appear in court in Miami on Monday, March 3 to face charges for DUI, driving with an expired license and resisting arrest last month.

© AceShowbiz.com


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Monday, March 3, 2014

Amanda Bynes Resurfaces on Twitter, Tells Fans 'I Love You'


The 'Easy A' actress has sent her first tweet in months, telling her fans that she is busy with her study at the Fashion Institute for Design and Merchandising.

has just sent her first tweet after months of break from the social media. The "" star sent a message on Saturday, March 1 to tell fans that she was doing well with daily life. "Hi everyone! I'm busy studying at @FIDM but I want to say I love you to my fans! Xoxo Amanda," she wrote.

Bynes apparently also has deleted her controversial tweets, removing posts in which she talked about plastic surgery or calling public figures "ugly." She additionally changed her profile photo with what appears to be her project at school and her bio simply reads, "Fashion Student."

A source at the Fashion Institute for Design and Merchandising told E! News in January that Bynes was "very nice, friendly and chatting with her classmates." The source continued saying that Bynes was "originally going to be a fashion design major but has now decided to pursue merchandise product development. She is enrolled part-time for the winter quarter."

The former child star's lawyer recently entered a no-contest plea to "wet reckless," which stemmed from a 2012 accident in which she crashed into a police car. The judge then sentenced her to three years of probation. She is also required to attend a 3-month alcohol education program and pay fines.

© AceShowbiz.com


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French Director Alain Resnais Dies at 91


French president Francois Hollande confirms the death of the filmmaker, who is popular with his movies 'Hiroshima Mon Amour' and 'Last Year at Marienbad' among others.

French director Alain Resnais, who is popular with his works such as "Hiroshima Mon Amour" and "Last Year at Marienbad", has passed away. He was 91. The acclaimed filmmaker passed away on Saturday night, March 1 in Paris. The New York Post reports that the sad news was confirmed by French president Francois Hollande who called him one of France's greatest filmmakers.

Actor Pierre Arditi talked about the director with France2 television on Sunday. "The most precious thing I can remember is when he would sit crouched on his long legs, resting his head in his hands, and devoured the actors with his lovely blue eyes as though we were diamonds. And of course when you get a look like that you become a diamond," he said.

As reported by The Guardian, French foreign minister Laurent Fabius also paid tribute to Resnais on Sunday. He called the late-director "a very great talent" who was "universally known."

Resnais was born on June 3, 1922, in the village of Vannes, in Brittany. He was interested in films when he was a child and directed his first film "L'Aventure de Guy" when he was 14. He later moved to Paris and studied acting.

Resnais received a lifetime achievement award at the Cannes Film Festival in 2009. In addition to the two popular titles, his other credits included 1955's "Night and Fog", 1977's "Providence", 1980's "Mon Oncle d'Amerique" and 1999's "Smoking/No Smoking". His most-recent movie "The Life of Riley" was premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival last month.

© AceShowbiz.com


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Jean-Claude Van Damme Did His Most Epic Split Yet in Space


Dressed up as an astronaut, the 53-year-old actor did the gravity-defying stunt in between two satellites.

recreated his epic split on top of two moving Volvo trucks, taking it high above and higher than the sky. The actor balanced himself in between two satellites floating in space for a new parody.

The ""-inspired spoof was created by Linh Mai and Last Cause Films. It showed Van Damme in astronaut suit, defying gravity with an epic split before floating off. The same narration and song from the Volvo ad were used.

"I've had my ups and downs," the 53-year-old's voice was heard. "My fair share of bumpy roads and heavy winds. That's what made me what I am today. Now I stand here before you. What you see is a body crafted to perfection. A pair of legs engineered to defy the laws of physics and a mindset to master the most epic of splits."

Since his had been released and became viral last year, celebrities like and had tried to top off the stunt with their own epic split. Tatum between two food carts and made a horizontal split as they were moved farther apart. Norris in between two flying planes in a video created by a Hungarian animation firm Delov Digital.

© AceShowbiz.com


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Lea Michele: Cory Monteith and I Talked About Kids and Growing Old Before His Death


Michele says in a new interview that she and her late boyfriend 'talked about children and what we would look like when we grew old, and who would be fat and how we would stay thin.'

opens up about conversations she had with boyfriend before he passed away last year. The "" star graces the cover of U.K.'s April issue, wearing an orange dress. In an interview for the spread, Michele shares that she talked about many topics with her late boyfriend, including their physical appearances when they get old.

"We talked about a lot of things," she tells the magazine. "We talked about children and what we would look like when we grew old and who would be fat and how we would stay thin. We talked about where we wanted to go and what we wanted to do. We were done. We were it. When you're at that place in your life with someone, you talk about everything. But today I feel like I was given the best part of Cory and I'm thankful for that."

"I lost my grandfather a couple of years ago and I always feel that he's watching over me. I feel the exact same way about Cory. Every day when I go running, I feel like he's pushing me to run harder," she adds.

The 27-year-old star is currently promoting her debut album "". The record, which will be released on March 4, features a tribute song for Monteith, "If You Say So". "It's about my last conversation that I had with him," she tells Seventeen magazine. "I spoke to a woman who lost her son, and she mentioned how grateful she was that the last words she said to her son before he died were, 'I love you.' Mine were that as well. [The song] is just about that."

© AceShowbiz.com


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Spike Lee's Former Brooklyn Block Vandalized Following Gentrification Rant


Lee's childhood home and a house next door on Washington Park in Fort Greene have been vandalized with a message 'Do the Right Thing' three days after his rant against gentrification.

A home on Washington Park in Fort Greene, Spike Lee's former childhood home, and the house next door have been vandalized. The incident took place only three days after Lee ranted against gentrification in Brooklyn during an African-American History Month lecture at Brooklyn's Pratt Institute.


Vandals left a message at the 165 Washington Park home, which he mentioned in his rant, on Friday, March 28. They spray-painted the wall with "Do the Right Thing", a reference to his movie. The vandals, however, only managed to write half of the title. "I think that Spike needs to stop mentioning the house in his comments. He can say whatever he wants, but don't mention that," said Arnold, Lee's half-brother who lives in the house, as quoted by New York Daily News.


The house next door, meanwhile, suffered worse damage. In addition to the message written on the brownstone, the owner found her front window broken. "I was very angry about that," Dianne Mackenzie said of the damage, as quoted by NBC New York. "It's mindless and it's senseless and it's pretty stupid."


Mackenzie did not say whether the vandalism was related to Lee's remarks. "They can speculate all you want, but I don't know why. It's not something that happens in this neighborhood. It's not usual," she said. Police are currently investigating the incident.


Lee said that some people had "Christopher Columbus Syndrome" during his 7-minute rant on Tuesday. "You can't just come in the neighborhood and start bogarting and say, like you're mother******g Columbus and kill off the Native Americans," the director told the audience.


On Wednesday, Lee explained his rant during an appearance on "Anderson Cooper 360". "My problem is that when you move into a neighborhood, have some respect for the history, for the culture," he shared.


 


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Paula Patton Posts Cryptic Message After Robin Thicke Split


The 'Baggage Claim' actress seemingly addresses her separation from the 'Blurred Lines' singer, posting a message which reads, 'If you love something let it go.'

seemingly addresses her separation from in her latest Instagram post. The mother of one has uploaded a photo which reads, "Everything happens for a reason. If you love something let it go, if it comes back it's yours, if it doesn't, it never was, and it's not meant to be."

The "" actress and her singer husband released a joint statement on Monday, February 24, saying that they "mutually" decided to separate after nine years of marriage. "We will always love each other and be best friends," the statement read.

Only three days after announcing the separation, the R&B singer told a TMZ videographer that he was trying to save his marriage. When approached at a Washington D.C. airport, Thicke said, "I'm just trying to get her back." He additionally dedicated a song called "Lost Without You" for Patton during his concert in Fairfax, Va. "For y'all that don't know - me and my wife separated, but I'm trying to get my girl back," he told the crowd. "She's a good woman."

In other news, a colleague who recently played with Thicke told FOX411 that he did not think the couple would split. According to DJ Joe Bermudez, Thicke and Patton "looked really happy. I would never have guessed that this was coming." He added, "A lot of people blame the 'Blurred Lines' video for their split but I don't see it. I feel like this is out of the blue. They looked very much in love to me."

© AceShowbiz.com


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Polish PM urges `firm pressure` on Moscow over Ukraine

Warsaw: Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk on Sunday urged the West to exert "firm pressure" on Moscow over its threats to Ukraine as hundreds of people protested outside the Russian embassies in Warsaw and London.

"The only way to stop Russia and also prevent tragic conflicts in this part of the world is through firm pressure and obstinacy on the part of Europe, the United States and Canada," Tusk told reporters.

Several hundred people protested in Warsaw brandishing signs comparing Russian President Vladimir Putin to Hitler and Stalin, while waving Polish, Ukrainian, EU and Belarusian flags.

"Don't Touch Ukraine", "Don't Touch Crimea" and "Free Ukraine", they chanted. Poland, which has been very active throughout the crisis in neighbouring Ukraine, called yesterday for an emergency NATO meeting to respond to the Russian military threat.

Hundreds also protested peacefully in front of the Russian embassies in Berlin and in London. British-based Ukrainians held up banners demanding "Hands Off Ukraine" and chanted "Stop the Occupation" and "Putin Is a Murderer".

In Berlin, around a dozen protesters lay down in front of a poster listing past Russian military interventions and ending with the question "Ukraine in 2014?".

British Foreign Secretary William Hague was headed to Kiev today for talks with the interim pro-Western government.

World leaders huddled for urgent consultations across global capitals after Russia's parliament voted yesterday to allow Putin to send troops into its western neighbour -- a decision US President Barack Obama branded a "violation of Ukrainian sovereignty".

In Warsaw, Tusk called for a "calm, balanced but also firm and united policy against Russia, based on disapproval of these kinds of actions and announcements by Moscow... To avoid a major conflict."


First Published: Sunday, March 02, 2014, 23:59

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Egypt frees Morsi`s son arrested in drugs case

Cairo: A son of deposed Islamist president Mohamed Morsi was freed on Sunday a day after being arrested on suspicion of possessing hashish, judicial sources said.

Police said they found two joints on 19-year-old Abdullah Morsi and a friend in a car parked by the roadside in Qalyubia province north of Cairo, security officials said yesterday.

They were released pending investigation after agreeing to give urine samples, judicial sources said, adding that the results had not yet been released.

Morsi's other son, Osama, had dismissed the accusations, saying the authorities were "fabricating the case" and that his brother's arrest was an attempt to "defame the family".

Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood have been the target of a relentless government crackdown since the Islamist was ousted last July after just a year in office.

Amnesty International says that more than 1,400 people have been killed, mostly Morsi supporters, in street clashes since his ouster.

Morsi himself and several Brotherhood leaders have been put on trial.


First Published: Monday, March 03, 2014, 00:16

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'We showed a lot of character' - Kohli

of your page where you want the widget to show up. --> 'Proud of our boys today' - KohliAmit Mishra bowled a parsimonious spell for two wickets, India v Pakistan, Asia Cup, Mirpur, March 2, 2014
Virat Kohli praised Amit Mishra, and said he could turn the ball "on any sort of wicket" © AFP

With three overs remaining, Pakistan needed 17 runs to win, with four wickets in hand. Three of India's frontline bowlers had one over left of their 10-over quotas. Virat Kohli decided to bowl out his two seamers first and leave R Ashwin to bowl the last over of the match. The strategy nearly worked; India took three wickets in five balls in the last two overs, and left Pakistan's last-wicket pair nine runs to get from four balls.

Two sixes from Shahid Afridi won Pakistan the match, but Kohli said he was proud of how India fought, and didn't think he had gone wrong in leaving Ashwin to bowl the last over.

"Not at all," he said, after the match. "I knew that if I put the seamers in before and Ashwin comes to bowl, they will go for it. Wickets is all we wanted. If Afridi and Umar Gul had just played singles they would have won easily. I took that risk of putting the seamers in and making them hit the ball.

"We almost pulled it off as well in the end. Those last two sixes were not quite off the middle of the bat. One side was a small boundary, but that's how it goes. We almost pulled it off and I'm really proud of the way the team showed character in the field and with the bowling as well - 245 against a team like Pakistan and on that wicket with the dew is not easy to defend, but I think the guys showed a lot of character."

Kohli said India had done particularly well to run Pakistan so close considering the experience gap between the sides.

"If you compare the experience of our team with their team, it's massive, it's huge," Kohli said. "And in international cricket it really counts a lot. You can get away with it in Twenty20, but in the 50-over format you need to show a lot of character and that's exactly what the boys did.

"If you see the kind of batsmen they had and our bowlers with the inexperience they had, still to put up that kind of fight… I mean you see Amit Mishra, he gave only 28 runs in 10 overs, took two wickets, bowled brilliantly against the likes of Misbah, Hafeez, Umar Akmal, Shahid Afridi. So I think it was a commendable effort and I'm really, really proud of the way the guys fought it out."

Kohli praised the efforts of Amit Mishra, who came into the side for the first time in the tournament and took 2 for 28 in his 10 overs. Kohli hinted the legspinner might start featuring more frequently in the team's plans.

"Well that's one thing you can say now," he said, when asked if Mishra should have come off the bench sooner. "If he went for 70 in 10 I don't think you would have asked me that question. But I've always been really impressed by Amit Mishra. He's an attacking bowler, which I like as well. He always likes to make the batsman take on that extra fielder inside the circle.

"The way he bowled with such a small target to defend I think it was brilliant on his part. The amount of character he showed, he certainly put his hand up. In the future as well, if we want to play with three spinners or we want to go with the same kind of bowling attack, he would certainly be one of our priorities. He's brilliant with the ball, turns it on any sort of wicket and today he showed what he could do. I'm really, really happy for him."

After seeing how the spinners had controlled the ball better than the pace bowlers when dew started playing a part against Sri Lanka, Kohli decided he would select Mishra as a third spinner against Pakistan.

"Well the last game, the way it panned out… even with the dew, if you can get the wicket to dry out, and these wickets are pretty dry, so if the bowler can bowl three deliveries in an over on an area, it's much better for the spinner. He has more of a wicket-taking chance compared to the fast bowlers. With dew coming in at the end, the fast bowlers tend to go for plenty of runs. That was the idea in the last game itself.

"Rohit Sharma had contained them [Sri Lanka] pretty nicely and there I made a decision that we should go with three spinners. These guys have a lot of right-handers in the squad as well and Mishra turns the ball, so I wanted that attacking bowler in the bowling line-up and it almost paid off for us. I think he and Ashwin were the difference in the game today. The way they controlled that situation was magnificent."

As had been the case in their previous match against Sri Lanka, India missed chances on the field, with a missed stumping from Dinesh Karthik proving particularly costly. Kohli repeated what he had said after the Sri Lanka game - India would have to play smarter cricket.

"We are making mistakes regularly, which we need to correct because they are costing us in international cricket," he said. "If we make three or four crucial errors in each game, it's quite costly in the end. That is one thing we have to learn from and improve on because there's quite a bit of inexperience in batting and bowling. People learn from mistakes and I hope in the coming games we don't repeat these mistakes and play more smartly at crucial times."

India still have a chance of reaching the final, but they will probably need other matches to end in upsets. Kohli said he was not going to worry about other results.

"Well, I've personally stopped putting my money on the games that are left in the tournament," he said. "In Australia [2011-12 tri-series] as well, we were watching another game, and Sri Lanka almost beat Australia and we could have made the finals, but that didn't happen. Last time in Asia Cup as well we were hoping Sri Lanka beats Pakistan or Bangladesh, either of the two, but that didn't happen. All we can do is put up a strong performance in our game, try and get a bonus point, and then see. We'll know by March 4 what happens. We're just looking to improve our cricket and correct our mistakes."

ESPNcricinfo staffClose Tournament Fixtures Tournament Results Bangladesh v Pakistan at Dhaka
Mar 4, 2014 (14:00 local | 08:00 GMT | 13:30 IST) Afghanistan v India at Dhaka
Mar 5, 2014 (14:00 local | 08:00 GMT | 13:30 IST) Bangladesh v Sri Lanka at Dhaka
Mar 6, 2014 (14:00 local | 08:00 GMT | 13:30 IST) Final: TBA v TBA at Dhaka
Mar 8, 2014 (14:00 local | 08:00 GMT | 13:30 IST) | Why Dhoni needs to speak out

It can't do Indian cricket any good when there is rampant speculation over the motives and methods of its highest-profile player

Steyn's spell from hell

No other bowler in the world today could have won the match in Port Elizabeth so suddenly and with such effect

Demented and orgasmic gesticulations

Viv Richards' over-the-top celebrations and a commentary row blighted the fourth Test of 1990 in Bridgetown

India batting thin on experience

The absence of MS Dhoni, Yuvraj Singh and Suresh Raina means India will go into the Asia Cup with an inexperienced middle order for the first time in a long time

The incredible life of Mohammad Nabi

Like the team he leads, Afghanistan's captain Mohammad Nabi has enjoyed a staggering rise in the world of cricket

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Yemen army plane makes emergency landing, crew abducted

Aden: Anti-government tribesmen kidnapped the six crew members of a Yemeni military plane today after it made an emergency landing in an eastern desert for technical reasons, military and local sources said.

The aircraft, a Russian-made Antonov-26 twin-engine turboprob, was carrying supplies from Sanaa to Masila oilfields in the east when a technical glitch forced it to land in Hadramawt province, said General Khaled al-Kothairi, who heads a military unit tasked with protecting oil companies.

The pilot, co-pilot, and four soldiers who were on board the aircraft, are safe, he said.

But another military official said that as soon as the jet landed, armed tribesmen captured the crew and a local government official confirmed they were abducted.

"Contacts are underway with the gunmen to secure the release of the crew and allow the army to repair the aircraft and return it to Sanaa," the military official said.

The armed forces have been flying supplies to Masila oilfields five times a week over the past few months, after tribesmen blocked roads in the region to protest against the killing of one of their chiefs.

Supporters of slain tribal chief Said Ben Habrish have vowed to avenge him by preventing authorities from repairing the pipeline that links Masila oilfield to Al-Daba port on the Gulf of Aden.

The move is aimed at depriving the cash-strapped government of Yemen, an impoverished country that relies on oil revenues from a small oil production industry, to shore up its budget.

Tribesmen have blown up pipelines in the restive Hadramawt province and in February they ambushed a military convoy that was escorting technicians on their way to repair a pipeline, killing four soldiers and wounding others.


First Published: Sunday, March 02, 2014, 22:56

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5 Indians among 11 foreigners killed in blast in Qatar

Doha: Five Indians were among 11 expatriates killed in a deadly blast at a Turkish restaurant here in Qatar's capital.

The blast tore through the Turkish restaurant, which is attached to a mall in Doha and next to a petrol station on Thursday, killing 11 people, five of them Indians.

Qatar government has announced a probe into the explosion that also injured 35 people. The Indian victims have been identified as Riyas Kizhakemanolil, Abdul Saleem Palangad, Zakaria Padinjare Anakandi, Venkatesh and Shaikh Babu, The Peninsula reported.

Four Nepali nationals and two people from the Philippines were also killed in the explosions. The Indian Embassy is in contact with all concerned to repatriate the bodies to their native places, Ambassador Sanjiv Arora said.

Of the 10 injured still undergoing treatment, eight are adults and two children. They comprise three Nepalese, three Pakistanis, two Filipinos, one Egyptian and one Indian, Gulf Times reported.

Qatari Prime Minister and Interior Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Nasser bin Khalifa Al Thani visited the site.

The Interior Ministry announced the formation of a special committee to investigate the incident and a report is expected to be submitted by the end of this week.

"The investigation is going in full swing and the initial report is expected to be issued by the end of this week," local Arabic-language Al Sharq newspaper reported today.

With serious concern being raised about the safety of gas tanks and cylinders used in eateries, especially those based in petrol station complexes, Qatari authorities are gearing up to launch inspection campaign at eateries across the country to ensure that they comply with the safety standards and requirements, the paper said.

The campaign will be launched soon, with participation of the Civil Defence Department, Ministry of Municipality and Urban Planning and other departments, it said.

Earlier, preliminary investigations suggested a gas tank on the roof of the restaurant and gas cylinders on neighbouring roofs exploded, the Qatar News Agency had reported.

The blast was the second major incident in Qatar after a fire in Villaggio Mall killed 19 people, including 13 children in May 2012.


First Published: Sunday, March 02, 2014, 14:26

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Pink-ball experiment hits Sheffield Shield

Australian cricket is ready for its own twilight saga. This week's round of Sheffield Shield matches will be played with pink balls under floodlights and Cricket Australia hopes it will be the first step towards hosting a day-night Test in less than two years, most likely against New Zealand in 2015-16. But exactly what it will deliver over the next four days is a mystery.

The main question surrounds the visibility of the balls as the sun goes down, and their longevity throughout an innings. Will fielders and batsmen be able to pick them up under lights? Will they swing? Will they need to be changed throughout the innings? By the end of the week, those questions will have been addressed and James Sutherland, the Cricket Australia CEO, hopes a greater number of day-night games will be scheduled next summer.

"The endgame here is to explore opportunities for Test cricket to be played as day-night matches," Sutherland said. "We want to be satisfied that the conditions in Australia are good enough. There's no doubt we'll learn a bit next week and hopefully we'll have greater confidence that this concept can work.

"It's about securing the future relevance of Test cricket as a sport of choice not just here but all around the world. Hopefully, next week will prove to be a step in the right direction. Without conducting trials in serious first-class competition, we won't know how far away we are. That's why next week's matches are an important advancement in our plans."

Whether the pink ball proves an advancement for the quality of batting on display remains to be seen. Test opener Chris Rogers is colour blind and said he would not play in a pink-ball match again after being part of a trial in Abu Dhabi, while Victoria's captain Matthew Wade, who also has a form of colour-blindness, is unsure how he will go when the lights kick in at the MCG against Tasmania.

"I just had a little net [session] and it seems all right," Wade said on Friday afternoon. "I think the interesting thing will be when the lights come on. That will be the challenge for me, I think. I'm pretty good with the red and the green, but when it's an off-colour I struggle to pick the ball up as quick. I can still see it fine, but it's a bit more blurred than what it normally is. It's pretty good during the day. We'll just have to see how it goes at night."

It is not the first time day-night Sheffield Shield cricket has been trialled. Yellow and orange balls were experimented with during the 1990s but the yellow was difficult to see and the orange looked as if it had a comet-like tail when moving through the air. Nor is it the first time pink balls have been used for day-night first-class cricket.

Beginning in 2009-10, occasional domestic first-class games in the West Indies have been played under lights with pink balls, and it was also trialled for the first time in a county match when Kent played Glamorgan in September 2011. Kent batsman Joe Denly said that the first ball he faced swung but after that it did nothing in the air, and lost its brightness very quickly.

Michael di Venuto, who is now Australia's batting coach, scored 131 in a floodlit pink-ball first-class match for Durham in Abu Dhabi in March 2010 and he said it was "easy to pick the ball up, especially at the start when it was really good". South African batsman Morne van Wyk, who scored 125 in a pink-ball trial in Potchefstroom in 2012, said batting was particularly difficult as the sun went down but became easier as conditions darkened.

The round of day-night matches begins on Monday with Victoria hosting Tasmania at the MCG, Queensland playing Western Australia at the Gabba and South Australia hosting New South Wales at Adelaide Oval. The Queensland captain James Hopes said teams might have to adjust their tactics to account for the different ball and playing hours.

"If the pitch is even a little bit flat, I reckon you have got to bat first because you really want to bat in the daylight," Hopes told the Courier-Mail. "The great unknown is the night time. Maybe if you bat first and get seven or eight wickets down, you might declare and send them in for a few overs at night."

Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. He tweets here

RSS Feeds: Brydon Coverdale © ESPN Sports Media Ltd.


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Moor leads Rhinos to easy win

Why Dhoni needs to speak out

It can't do Indian cricket any good when there is rampant speculation over the motives and methods of its highest-profile player

Steyn's spell from hell

No other bowler in the world today could have won the match in Port Elizabeth so suddenly and with such effect

Demented and orgasmic gesticulations

Viv Richards' over-the-top celebrations and a commentary row blighted the fourth Test of 1990 in Bridgetown

India batting thin on experience

The absence of MS Dhoni, Yuvraj Singh and Suresh Raina means India will go into the Asia Cup with an inexperienced middle order for the first time in a long time

The incredible life of Mohammad Nabi

Like the team he leads, Afghanistan's captain Mohammad Nabi has enjoyed a staggering rise in the world of cricket


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Blasts rock north Nigerian city, many feared dead

Maiduguri: Two explosions blasted a crowded marketplace in northeastern Maiduguri city on Saturday night, and many are feared killed and wounded in the birthplace of Nigeria's Boko Haram terrorist network, witnesses said.

Bloodied people screaming for help were running out of buildings billowing with smoke, they said. Trader Mallam Samalia said some people were blown apart.

The second blast caught people trying to help those injured in the first explosion in the Bintu-Suga neighborhood of the Ngomari suburb, he said.

It appeared to be a car bomb, from a pickup truck loaded with wood, Samalia told The Associated Press by telephone. "I'm seeing people carrying bloody bodies," he said. "There are parts of bodies littering the street."

Mechanic Yahaya Adamu said he was on his way home when he heard the blasts, two minutes apart. "There's black smoke everywhere now," he said. "I'm running home to see if my family is safe."

The police commissioner did not immediately answer his phone to confirm the reports.

It was the first attack in months in Maiduguri, capital of Borno state and the headquarters of a military force tasked with suppressing the 4-year-old Islamic uprising that has killed thousands.

More than 300 people were killed in February alone in attacks increasing in frequency and deadliness, all in the neighboring states of Yobe and Adamawa.

There is growing anger at the military's apparent inability to halt the attacks, with soldiers reportedly abandoning checkpoints in two recent attacks that killed nearly 100 people, including 59 students, because they are outnumbered and outgunned.

That anger will be fueled by reports that a military fighter jet targeting extremist hideouts bombed a village in Yobe state and killed at least 20 civilians on Friday, according to survivors.

Borno, Yobe and Adamawa state cover one-sixth of Nigeria and have been under a state of emergency since May.


First Published: Sunday, March 02, 2014, 21:56

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After vacating Bangkok`s streets, Thai protesters look to courts

Bangkok: Anti-government protesters in Thailand have retreated to a central Bangkok park, freeing up traffic after blocking big intersections for more than a month, but Thailand's four-month political crisis looks no closer to a solution.

The protesters, who moved to Lumpini Park over the weekend after orders from protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban, are now banking on judicial intervention from courts hostile to Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra to bring down her government.

"Bangkokians are able to go to work more easily but the state of play in Thailand has not changed since protesters scaled back," said Siripan Nogsuan Sawasdee, a political analyst at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok.

"He (Suthep) realises that the fate of the government won't be determined by his group but lies in the hands of independent organisations - the anti-corruption body and the courts."

Demonstrators seeking to overthrow Yingluck took to the streets in November and have since blockaded ministries, occupied government offices and, in January, set up camp at major traffic intersections in Bangkok.

They want Yingluck to resign to make way for an appointed "people's council" to overhaul a political system they say has been taken hostage by her billionaire brother and former premier, Thaksin Shinawatra.

Yingluck faces several legal challenges, the most significant being negligence charges for mishandling a disastrous rice subsidy scheme.

The scheme paid farmers above the market price and has run out of funds, prompting farmers - normally the prime minister's biggest supporters - to demonstrate in Bangkok.

Hundreds of farmers joined anti-government protesters led by Buddhist monk Luang Pu Buddha Issara in a rally at the Finance Ministry on Monday, demanding faster payments.

Yingluck has been given until March 14 by the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) to defend herself. It will then decide whether there is a case to pursue.

"It seems likely she will be found guilty," said Kan Yuenyong, an analyst at the Siam Intelligence Unit think tank.

"At that point, she will have to suspend her duties if the case goes to court. The endgame that protesters are hoping for is a way to suspend the whole cabinet so that an interim, so-called neutral, prime minister can be elected," Kan said.

Red Mobilisation

The confrontation broadly pits middle-class Bangkokians and southern Thais against supporters of Thaksin and Yingluck who mostly hail from the poorer, rural north and northeast.

The protesters rejected and disrupted a snap election called by Yingluck for February 2. Fresh elections were held in five provinces on Sunday and passed off peacefully.

But there is still no date set for elections in nine southern provinces where there was no voting on February 2, meaning it is still impossible to get a quorum to open parliament, elect a prime minister and get a government with full powers.

Yingluck heads a caretaker administration with only limited spending and borrowing powers, which has complicated the rice scheme problems and other aspects of government business.

She has kept away from the capital for much of the past two weeks. On Monday morning, Yingluck went to the Centre for Maintaining Peace and Order, the body set up to oversee a state of emergency imposed in January.

She spent several days last week in the north, a stronghold of the "red shirt" movement loyal to her brother Thaksin.

Thousands of "red shirts" have gathered in Nakhon Ratchasima, northeast of the capital, and some of their leaders have threatened to come down to Bangkok if Yingluck was removed from power, adding to fears of civil strife.

"The red shirt mobilisation is extremely worrying. They really see this situation as the work of the elite who are trying to undermine their democratic rights," analyst Kan said.

Twenty people have been killed in protest-related violence in Bangkok since November 30 and three in eastern Trat province.


First Published: Monday, March 03, 2014, 13:04

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NATO chief says Russia threatens Europe`s `peace and security`

Brussels: NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen urged Russia on Sunday to stop its military activity and threats against Ukraine, saying Moscow's action threatened "peace and security in Europe."

"Russia must stop its military activity and its threats," he said in a brief statement before opening crisis talks with NATO's 28 ambassadors. "Today we will discuss the implications for European security."

Speaking as Ukraine's interim authorities accused Russia of triggering "a red alert" with what was "actually a declaration of war", Rasmussen said he had convened the North Atlantic Council "because of President Putin's threats against this sovereign nation."

"What Russia is doing now in Ukraine violates the principles of the United Nations Charter. It threatens peace and security in Europe. Russia must stop its military activities and its threats."

"We support Ukraine's territorial integrity and sovereignty. We support the right of the people of Ukraine to determine their own future without outside interference.

"And we emphasise the need for Ukraine to continue to uphold the democratic rights of all people and ensure that minority rights are protected.

"Ukraine is our neighbour, and Ukraine is a valued partner for NATO." It was urgent to de-escalate "this dangerous situation," he concluded.


First Published: Sunday, March 02, 2014, 20:56

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Rain intervenes after Clarke passes 150

of your page where you want the widget to show up. --> Kimber: And then came the rainAustralia 494 for 7 (Clarke 161*, Warner 135, Smith 84, Duminy 4-73) v South Africa
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Michael Clarke celebrates a hard-fought hundred, South Africa v Australia, 3rd Test, Cape Town, 2nd day, March 2, 2014
Michael Clarke scored his 27th Test century © Getty Images

On day one it was a test of the body, on day two of the mind. Michael Clarke brought up a hard-fought century after spending 24 balls stuck on 99, but rain halved the second day's play in Cape Town and left Australia wondering how they could make their hefty first innings a winning score with only three days still to play and South Africa yet to bat.

When the tablecloth billowed out over the mountain and brought rain an hour into the second session, the players ran off the field with Australia at 494 for 7. Clarke was unbeaten on 161, Ryan Harris was on 4 and JP Duminy was improbably on a hat-trick after claiming three wickets in the session. But the likelihood of a rain-induced declaration meant he would probably have to wait until the second innings for his chance.

Australia's best hope of victory might be to avoid even requiring a second innings. But on a pitch that remained good for batting the odds of a draw, and thus a drawn series, shortened with the loss of three hours of play. Before the weather intervened, Clarke moved past 150 for the tenth time in his Test career, Steven Smith missed the chance for a fifth Test hundred and South Africa continued to struggle without the injured Dale Steyn.

Duminy finished the day with 4 for 73, including three wickets after lunch as the Australians sought to lift their run-rate following the strong start provided by the top order. For the first time since the Boxing Day Test of 2009 against Pakistan, Australia began a Test innings with five consecutive partnerships of 50-plus as South Africa initially continued their unwanted trend of managing only one wicket per session.

In his first innings of the series, Shane Watson made his intentions clear by striking three sixes in a 32-ball 40 but he departed when he tried to go over the top once too often, holing out to long-off from the bowling of Duminy. Brad Haddin (13) also chipped a catch to mid-off off Duminy and next ball Mitchell Johnson was out on review when South Africa asked for a replay and found he had tickled a catch down leg side.

However, that was the last ball of Duminy's over and the rain arrived before he had the chance to push for a hat-trick, leaving him wondering whether he could become only the second South African after Geoff Griffin in 1960 to achieve the feat. Duminy's wickets were too late to have any real impact, though, and the morning was all about Clarke and his desire to reach triple figures after surviving a bouncer barrage from Morne Morkel on Saturday.

Clarke began the morning on 92 but took nearly 50 minutes to reach his hundred as Kyle Abbott tied him down with disciplined bowling after he moved with one run of the milestone. On 99, Clarke faced 23 deliveries from Abbott and one from Philander before he finally brought up his century with a drive to the cover boundary when Philander over-pitched, ending a nervous period that featured a few aborted run attempts - and near run-outs - and a couple of edgy wafts.

There was also a leave to an Abbott delivery that fizzed just over the top of the stumps; having not scored a hundred since the Adelaide Ashes Test, Clarke seemed as nervy as a man trying for his first, not his 27th. After he reached the hundred the runs started to come a little more freely and he played a couple of superb cover-drives off Abbott, and moved past 150 with another boundary pulled through midwicket off Abbott.

It was Smith who had done most of the scoring while Clarke was in the nervous nineties. Of particular note was Smith's aerial driving down the ground against the fast men - he cleared the boundary off both Philander and Morkel but there was little risk involved in the strokes as he struck the ball cleanly and followed through perfectly down the line. His 184-run stand with Clarke ended when he played on to a skiddy ball from Dean Elgar on 84.

That Elgar and Duminy, both part-time spinners, were South Africa's only wicket takers on the second day, was notable. Hamstrung by Steyn's hamstring strain, Graeme Smith had to rotate through the bowlers as best he could but their spearhead was sorely missed. Steyn did not take the field at all on day two, although he was considered an outside chance of bowling in Australia's second innings. South Africa just have to make sure there is one.

Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. He tweets here

RSS Feeds: Brydon Coverdale © ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

1st T20I: South Africa v Australia at Port Elizabeth
Mar 9, 2014 (14:30 local | 12:30 GMT | 18:00 IST) 2nd T20I: South Africa v Australia at Durban
Mar 12, 2014 (18:00 local | 16:00 GMT | 21:30 IST) 3rd T20I: South Africa v Australia at Centurion
Mar 14, 2014 (18:00 local | 16:00 GMT | 21:30 IST) | Why Dhoni needs to speak out

It can't do Indian cricket any good when there is rampant speculation over the motives and methods of its highest-profile player

Steyn's spell from hell

No other bowler in the world today could have won the match in Port Elizabeth so suddenly and with such effect

Demented and orgasmic gesticulations

Viv Richards' over-the-top celebrations and a commentary row blighted the fourth Test of 1990 in Bridgetown

India batting thin on experience

The absence of MS Dhoni, Yuvraj Singh and Suresh Raina means India will go into the Asia Cup with an inexperienced middle order for the first time in a long time

The incredible life of Mohammad Nabi

Like the team he leads, Afghanistan's captain Mohammad Nabi has enjoyed a staggering rise in the world of cricket

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Karthik lets it slip again

Dinesh Karthik has missed two important stumpings in two matches, and has lost his wicket at times when he could have helped India towards stronger totals

Before bowling the fourth ball of his eighth over against Pakistan, R Ashwin waved to his fielders at deep backward square leg and deep midwicket. With a sweep of his right arm, Ashwin indicated he wanted both of them to move a few steps to their right.

Ashwin, bowling around the wicket, had clearly set his field for the sweep. It was obvious to anyone watching that he was going to shift to a leg-stump line. Sohaib Maqsood knew this, and it looked like he wanted to upset Ashwin's calculations when he tried to squirt the next ball - quick, full, on leg stump - down the ground in a slightly inside-out manner. Ashwin moved alertly to his left and stopped the ball.

Next ball, Maqsood jumped down the track. He had started too early, though, and Ashwin sent down a carrom ball wide of leg stump. Maqsood tried to flick, missed, and was stranded yards down the pitch. Behind him, the ball bounced off Dinesh Karthik's gloves.

The field change should have alerted Karthik that he might soon need to collect the ball down the leg side. He should not have been surprised by the carrom ball either. Ashwin had taken his first wicket with that delivery, bowling Sharjeel Khan through the gate.

With the match situation thrown in the mix, Karthik's error looked even more glaring. Chasing 246, Pakistan were 168 for 4 in the 38th over. The partnership between Maqsood and Mohammad Hafeez had just gone past 50. They added another 32 and took Pakistan to 200 before Ashwin dismissed Hafeez. Pakistan won by one wicket, in the last over, and it took two sixes in two balls from Shahid Afridi to get them home.   

In India's previous match, Karthik had missed a stumping when Kumar Sangakkara was on 30. He went on to make 103 and win the match for Sri Lanka. It was one of a series of errors the fielders made, and Virat Kohli, India's captain, spoke after the game of the need to play smarter cricket.

A part of his concern had been directed at India's batting too. Against Sri Lanka, they had slumped from 175 for 3 to 215 for 7, and Karthik had played one of the needless shots that had brought them to that situation.

Against Pakistan, Karthik walked in to bat with India on 103 for 4 in the 24th over, having lost Rohit Sharma and Ajinkya Rahane in the span of five overs. This was a big test for India's new middle order. For a while, it looked as though they were passing it, with Ambati Rayudu busy at one end and Karthik hanging in at the other.

Their partnership had just crossed 50 when Karthik moved to sweep Hafeez from outside off stump. The ball landed well short of sweeping length, and Karthik changed his stroke to an uncertain lap. The ball bounced a little extra, took the top-edge, and nestled into the hands of short fine leg.

It was a soft dismissal, and it came at a bad time for India. Yes, it was the batting Powerplay, after India had already lost four wickets. Their priority at that stage must have been to reach the 40-over mark without losing another. Karthik was out for a 46-ball 23.

India's squad at the Asia Cup is full of inexperienced players, and a large part of this inexperience is concentrated in the middle order. Karthik isn't inexperienced. He made his international debut nearly a decade ago. He has played 70 ODIs, and 23 Tests for good measure.

Karthik has had the misfortune of being a wicketkeeper-batsman in the MS Dhoni era, and it's meant he has seldom had a long run in the side. But the selectors have valued his talent enough to pick him as a specialist batsman in 47 ODIs and seven Tests. They have valued it so much that he has batted in the top five in 42 of his one-day innings, and has opened the batting 20 times.

Despite this, Karthik has an average of 27.48, a strike-rate of 73.15, seven half-centuries and a highest score of 79. It's fair to say he has rarely grabbed his chances.

From September 2009 to August 2010, he made double-digit scores in 17 straight ODI innings but only made two half-centuries. All but two of those 17 innings came as opener or at No. 3. He was dropped after scoring 9, 0 and 0 in the three innings that followed, and didn't play an ODI for nearly three years.

Karthik returned to the side for the Champions Trophy last year, on the back of some heavy scoring in first-class cricket and in the IPL. He showed ominous form in the warm-up games, scoring two hundreds, but reverted to type when the competitive games began. Replacing Yuvraj Singh, he scored two half-centuries in 12 innings over the course of three ODI tournaments, and was dropped once again.

Dhoni's side strain gave Karthik another opportunity, but he has let it slip in the most literal way possible, in two successive matches. As Afridi's match-winning six soared into the Mirpur sky, Dhoni's IPL franchise, Chennai Super Kings, pressed the send button on a tweet.  

"Do you think we missed Dhoni today as a captain / keeper / finisher? #missuMahi," it said.

Karthik Krishnaswamy is a senior sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo

© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.


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In-form Vijay stars in big Tamil Nadu win

Central Zone

Three wickets apiece from Imtiaz Ahmed and Piyush Chawla helped set up Uttar Pradesh's five-wicket win against Rajasthan in Jaipur. Rohit Sharma was the only Rajasthan batsman to offer some resistance, scoring 58, as Imtiaz and Chawla ran through their line-up to bundle the team out for 171. Uttar Pradesh lost three quick wickets during the chase, but Mohammad Kaif (59) put up fifty-plus stands with Suresh Raina and Akshdeep Nath to take the team home in 38.1 overs.

Naman Ojha's 94 nearly guided Madhya Pradesh to victory, but tight bowling from Railways resulted in MP falling eight runs short. MP, chasing 257, lost Jalaj Saxena in the third over, but Ojha waged a counterattack by combining with Mohnish Mishra and Rameez Khan for two big partnerships. MP needed 64 off the last 10 overs, but Anureet Singh (4 for 49) dented MP's progress with strikes at regular intervals and in the end, the team could only make 248 for 9 from their 50 overs. Railways, batting first, had been propelled by starts from all their top order, but it was Mahesh Rawat's 67 and his 77-run association with Arindam Ghosh that helped them to 256 for 6.

South Zone

Fifties from M Vijay and Baba Aparajith helped Tamil Nadu cruise to a 125-run win against Hyderabad in Bangalore after the match was reduced to 45 overs per side. Vijay and Aparajith added 142 runs for the second wicket to buoy Tamil Nadu to a mammoth 280 for 4. Aparajith struck four fours and two sixes during his 91, while Vijay's run-a-ball 90 included six fours and three sixes. With 206 runs and fifty in each of his three games, Vijay is currently the leading run-scorer in the tournament. Akshath Reddy and Ashish Reddy both scored forties for Hyderabad, both only four batsmen managed to reach double digits during their chase. Lakshmipathy Balaji and Rahil Shah snared three wickets each to skittle Hyderabad out for 155 in 35.5 overs.

Ricky Bhui's unbeaten century helped Andhra chase down 269 against Goa with four wickets remaining. Bhui drilled eight fours and six sixes during his 79-ball 103, and added an unbroken 84 with Dasari Swaroop Kumar to take Andhra home in 48.4 overs. The platform for the team's chase, however, had been laid by the captain Prasanth Kumar's 90. Amit Yadav was the pick of Goa's bowlers and finished with 3 for 45. Goa, put in to bat, had made 268 for 6 on the back of fifties from Sagun Kamat (65) and Harshad Hanumant Gadekar (61), but it was ultimately not enough.

A strong batting display from Karnataka, led by a century from Robin Uthappa, helped the team crush Kerala by 104 runs in Alur. Uthappa hit 11 fours and two sixes during his run-a-ball 104, while KL Rahul (51) and Karun Nair (60) both scored fifties to lift Karnataka to 317 for 5. Rohan Prem led Kerala's chase with a quick century (103) of his own, but barring a 32 from Robert Fernandez, he received little support from the other end. Vinay Kumar finished with 5 for 34 to run through Kerala in 46.2 overs, bowling them out for 213.

West Zone

Gujarat won their third straight match in the tournament, beating Baroda by a comfortable 73 runs in Rajkot. That Gujarat would cruise to a win was not apparent at the start, when Irfan Pathan took out Parthiv Patel with the first ball of the game. Gujarat's other opener, Dhruv Raval, was also out for a duck, to Munaf Patel. But then Ruju Bhatt steadied the innings with 86 and Jesal Karia boosted the total with a rapid 53, to set Baroda 240. Baroda's innings was off to an even worse start than Gujarat's though; they lost half their side inside the first nine overs. They never recovered, eventually folding for 166 in the 39th over. Close to half those runs came off the bat of Irfan Pathan - he made 79 off 88.

A 114-run association between Sushant Marathe and Iqbal Abdulla paved the way for Mumbai's five-wicket win against Saurashtra in Rajkot. Marathe (88) and Abdulla (55) both scored half-centuries and whacked 14 fours between them to help Mumbai chase down 245 in 48.3 overs. Saurashtra, batting first, had earlier scored 244 for 7. Their innings was built on the back of Arpit Vasavada's unbeaten 99, and his partnerships with Bhushan Chauhan (46) and Sheldon Jackson (53). For Mumbai, Dhawal Kulkarni took three wickets.


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Japan mission leaves for talks with North Korea

Tokyo: Japanese government and Red Cross officials left on Sunday for talks in China with their North Korean counterparts in a rare meeting that might help improve frosty relations.

The delegation headed to Shenyang for the Red Cross talks about possible visits by Japanese to the graves of family members who died in North Korea decades ago, or missions to collect their remains.

The team includes Keiichi Ono, who heads the foreign ministry's Northeast Asia division. The government talks will be held on the sidelines of the Red Cross meeting.

While there were few details of the agenda for the meeting which starts tomorrow, officials are hopeful that good discussions might help bridge the gap between the two nations, said Osaku Tasaka, head of the international division at Japan's Red Cross.

"We don't know exactly what kind of agenda items (North Koreans) will bring," he told reporters. "This meeting is designed specifically for the remains. But if discussions on this theme make progress, I hope it will also make a positive impact on other subjects."

Ties between the two countries have long been strained, though they periodically try to resume dialogue with the ultimate -- and so far elusive -- goal of establishing formal diplomatic relations. Officials from the two Red Cross societies last met in August 2012 and this led to talks by government officials in November of that year.

They had planned to meet again in December 2012 but that was cancelled after Pyongyang announced its plan to launch a long-range missile.

One of the thorniest issues between Tokyo and Pyongyang is the fate of Japanese citizens who were kidnapped by North Korean agents in the 1970s and 80s to train its spies.

But it is not clear if government officials will discuss that in the upcoming talks, Japanese diplomats have said.

North Korea, meanwhile, craves trade with Japan yet blasts its military alliance with the United States, its 1910-45 colonisation of Korea and its treatment of ethnic Koreans in Japan.


First Published: Sunday, March 02, 2014, 18:02

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Clarke's two Cape Towns

of your page where you want the widget to show up. --> Cullinan: Both captains would take a drawRain and wind buffeted Newlands on day two, almost as savagely as Morne Morkel had rounded on Michael Clarke 24 hours before, under sunny skies and the gaze of Table Mountain. Both the ground staff and Clarke were made to look decidedly uncomfortable, whether it was the former hanging on desperately to errant covers or the latter reeling from blows to the head. But neither were swept away either, holding on to secure the preservation of the pitch and the establishment of a total that virtually inures Australia from series defeat.

By the time the weather forced him indoors, Clarke had soared to an unbeaten 161, which given his desire to pursue a Test match and series victory in the time remaining may not progress too much further. It was a performance of rare courage and wonderful depth, its layered construction containing a series of compelling chapters in the traditions of great literature. If not quite so visceral as his repelling of Morkel's assault, Clarke's 24-ball vigil on 99 was another passage to savour, ending fittingly with a crisp cover drive and a bat raised in weary, even groggy triumph towards the dressing room.

Clarke had played a very similar stroke on this ground in November 2011 to reach his other century at Newlands, the spiky, counter-punching 151 that provided one of the first indications that the captaincy would serve to grow him considerably as a batsman. Before this match, Clarke regarded it as his finest Test hundred, taking into account a sporty pitch, overcast skies and a South African bowling attack even stronger than the one he faced this time - a fully fit Dale Steyn the difference. He had received a few blows that day too, before pouncing on the bowling.

But there was a hollowness to that innings, a sense of empty achievement provided by the fact that when Australia batted a second time they were rounded up for a measly 47. Clarke was still ruing that innings, and his inability to hold back the raging tide himself, when he spoke about it a year later, ahead of the home series with South Africa in late 2012. Cape Town had come to mean something bitter to Clarke, despite his personal achievement.

Michael Clarke was tested by a barrage of short balls, South Africa v Australia, 3rd Test, Cape Town, 1st day, March 1, 2014
Michael Clarke had a tentative 24-ball vigil on 99 before reaching his century © Getty Images

"Personally I think it's probably the best hundred I've made for Australia," Clarke said at the time. "I needed to make runs for the team, they had a very good fast bowling attack in conditions that suited fast bowling, and while I managed to get through my first 10 balls I think I got hit in the head three or four times, hit in the gloves another six times or so, and I managed to turn that around and score some runs.

"But when I say that I think it's my best Test hundred, it's one of the most irrelevant Test hundreds because of how the game panned out. I was very disappointed in the second innings, I didn't make many runs. I'd just scored 150 so I was the one player who was in form and I needed to make runs in that second innings."

If he had used his bat like a rapier in the first innings of 2011, there was considerably less swash in Clarke's buckle when he walked out to bat at Newlands this time around. A lack of runs in the lead-up had been getting to him more than he would admit publicly. It was telling to hear Shane Warne speak of Clarke as a "worrier" ahead of the Test, and to say he had spent much of their dinner together reminding Australia's captain of the progress made by the team even though their leader had not been raising the personal tallies he expected.

While David Warner's supremely confident century and a pair of top-order partnerships had cushioned Clarke from the new ball, and Steyn's tender hamstring reduced the firepower of his opponents, the sense of personal expectation, the series scenario and the threat of Morkel all weighed heavily. Clarke did not shirk the fact that he would be battered by Morkel, nor that he would look ugly while doing so. Day one was as much about survival as scoring, and in this Clarke achieved his goal admirably while also breaking his sequence of outs.

A new morning brought gladder tidings for Clarke, facing up to bowlers tired by earlier exertions and also handicapped by a sharp cross-breeze to rival anything at the WACA Ground in Perth. But he had one more obstacle to overcome before reaching three figures in the shape of a searching spell from Kyle Abbott, who maintained the most disciplined line to create pressure when the scoreboard indicated that there was none.

Clarke would not force a shot that was not there, South Africa's fielders became briefly tigerish where for much of the series they had been slothful, and three maiden overs ticked by. One Abbott delivery passed over Clarke's stumps by millimetres. Steve Smith, making his own mark on the match with a jaunty contribution to test the will of any bowler, kept the scoreboard moving at the other end. Ultimately, Clarke was given a sight of Vernon Philander, and creamed a drive through cover to reach 103. It was the shot most resembling those of 2011.

As two innings they could not have been much more different, and Clarke now hopes for a similar disparity in the final result. "That's probably a better question asked at the end of this game because if we don't get the result we're after then it will sit alongside the other 150," he said afterwards. "I will never, ever take for granted scoring a hundred for Australia. I've never scored an easy hundred, it's always been tough, especially against a very good attack."

For the moment, the Cape Town of Clarke's mind is one of clouds, rain and a hellish result, the kind that will always haunt him. But his century has opened up the possibility of Australia achieving a victory as glorious as the vista seen when the clouds roll away. Should it be done, Clarke will not look more fondly upon a single innings. The Cape Town Test of 2014 will allow the 2011 version to be forgotten.

Daniel Brettig is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. He tweets here

RSS Feeds: Daniel Brettig © ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

1st T20I: South Africa v Australia at Port Elizabeth
Mar 9, 2014 (14:30 local | 12:30 GMT | 18:00 IST) 2nd T20I: South Africa v Australia at Durban
Mar 12, 2014 (18:00 local | 16:00 GMT | 21:30 IST) 3rd T20I: South Africa v Australia at Centurion
Mar 14, 2014 (18:00 local | 16:00 GMT | 21:30 IST) | Why Dhoni needs to speak out

It can't do Indian cricket any good when there is rampant speculation over the motives and methods of its highest-profile player

Steyn's spell from hell

No other bowler in the world today could have won the match in Port Elizabeth so suddenly and with such effect

Demented and orgasmic gesticulations

Viv Richards' over-the-top celebrations and a commentary row blighted the fourth Test of 1990 in Bridgetown

India batting thin on experience

The absence of MS Dhoni, Yuvraj Singh and Suresh Raina means India will go into the Asia Cup with an inexperienced middle order for the first time in a long time

The incredible life of Mohammad Nabi

Like the team he leads, Afghanistan's captain Mohammad Nabi has enjoyed a staggering rise in the world of cricket


View the original article here

Bangladesh's 'disinterested' players under scrutiny

Why Dhoni needs to speak out

It can't do Indian cricket any good when there is rampant speculation over the motives and methods of its highest-profile player

Steyn's spell from hell

No other bowler in the world today could have won the match in Port Elizabeth so suddenly and with such effect

Demented and orgasmic gesticulations

Viv Richards' over-the-top celebrations and a commentary row blighted the fourth Test of 1990 in Bridgetown

India batting thin on experience

The absence of MS Dhoni, Yuvraj Singh and Suresh Raina means India will go into the Asia Cup with an inexperienced middle order for the first time in a long time

The incredible life of Mohammad Nabi

Like the team he leads, Afghanistan's captain Mohammad Nabi has enjoyed a staggering rise in the world of cricket


View the original article here

North Korea frees Australian Christian missionary

Seoul: North Korea freed an Australian missionary who had been jailed for promoting Christianity on Monday, releasing a picture of a handwritten confession by the elderly man who was arrested last month.

John Short was picked up at Beijing airport by an Australian embassy vehicle and did not speak, according to Reuters Television journalists at the airport.

He was accused by Pyongyang of committing a crime by distributing tracts from the bible at a Buddhist temple in Pyongyang on Kim Jong Il's birthday, a national holiday in North Korea to mark the ruling dynasty's second leader.

"I deeply apologise for what I have done by spreading my Bible tracts on February 16th the birthday of his excellency Kim Jong Il," Short said in the confession released by KCNA and dated March 1.

Short admitted wrongdoing and apologised, KCNA said, and released photos that showed him authoring a three-page handwritten confession and using red ink to mark each page with his thumbprint.

"I realise that the mass media of the USA and the western countries who say that the DPRK is the closed country and has no religious freedoms is inaccurate and wrong," Short said in the confession, which was written in English using language consistent with North Korean propaganda.

North Korea, officially known as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), said it had decided to deport 75-year-old Short partly in consideration of his age.

Short's wife Karen endorsed her husband's Christian mission, saying that she would not change anything despite his jailing in Pyongyang.

"He's done what he's done because that's what he believed to do, other people it's their own life and choice, we're all free to choose," she told Reuters Television in Hong Kong.

Pyongyang has held American missionary Kenneth Bae for more than a year and convicted him of trying to overthrow the state.

While North Korea espouses freedom of religion it is ranked as one of the world's most oppressive regimes in that regard.

A United Nations report issued last month identified a lack of religious freedom in a state whose human rights abuses it likened to those of Nazi Germany.

In a rare media conference last week, a South Korean missionary held in North Korea confessed to spying in the North at the behest of the South Korean intelligence agency and attempting to build an underground church in the country.


First Published: Monday, March 03, 2014, 10:51

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We are on the brink of disaster: Ukraine PM Arseniy Yatsenyuk

Kiev: Ukraine's Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk on Sunday warned his crisis-hit country was on the "brink of disaster", accusing Russia of declaring war in a bleak appeal to the international community.

"This is the red alert, this is not a threat, this is actually a declaration of war to my country," he told reporters in English, a day after Russia's parliament approved the deployment of troops to Ukraine.

"If President Putin wants to be the president who started a war between two neighbouring and friendly countries, between Ukraine and Russia, he has reached his target within a few inches. We are on the brink of the disaster."

US leader Barack Obama has branded Russia's parliament vote a "violation of Ukrainian sovereignty" and told his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in a phone call that Moscow's reported deployment of troops outside bases that it leases from Ukraine in the Crimea peninsula had broken international law.

Yatsenyuk today appealed to the international community.

"We believe that our Western partners and the entire global community will support the territorial integrity and unity of Ukraine and will do everything they can in order to stop the military conflict provoked by the Russian Federation," he said.


First Published: Sunday, March 02, 2014, 20:00

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Ukraine mobilises army as West warns Russia

Kiev: Ukraine on Sunday warned it was on the brink of disaster and called up all military reservists after Russia's threat to invade its neighbour drew a sharp rebuke from the United States and NATO.

The dramatic escalation in what threatens to blow up into the worst crisis between Moscow and the West since the Cold War came as pro-Kremlin forces seized control of key government buildings and airports in the predominantly Russian-speaking Crimean peninsula.

Russia's parliament yesterday voted to allow President Vladimir Putin to send troops into its western neighbour -- a decision US President Barack Obama swiftly branded a "violation of Ukrainian sovereignty".

And NATO's chief declared that Russia's actions in the former Soviet state were a threat to peace and security in Europe.

Ukraine's new pro-Western Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk also warned any invasion "would mean war and the end of all relations between the two countries."

"We are on the brink of a disaster," Yatsenyuk told the nation in a televised address. "This is not a threat. This is a declaration of war on my country."

As world leaders held urgent meetings on the crisis, pro-Moscow gunmen were controlling large swathes of the rugged Black Sea peninsula that has housed Kremlin navies since the 18th century.

Witnesses said Russian soldiers had also blocked about 400 Ukrainian marines at their base in the eastern Crimean port city of Feodosiya and were calling on them to surrender and give up their weapons.

The largely untested interim team that took power in Kiev just a week ago braced for Moscow's first possible invasion of a neighbour since a brief 2008 confrontation with Georgia by putting its military on full combat alert yesterday.

Ukraine's national security and defence council said it would call up all reservists and start preparations for a possible invasion from its giant neighbour to the east.

Ukraine says Russia has already sent 30 armoured personnel carriers and 6,000 additional troops into Crimea to help pro-Kremlin militia gain broader independence from Kiev.

Putin said yesterday he had a duty to protect ethnic Russians in Crimea and southeastern swathes of Ukraine which have ancient ties to Moscow and look on Kiev's new pro-EU leaders with disdain.

But NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen, speaking before an emergency meeting of the transatlantic alliance, told Russia to stop its military activity and threats against Ukraine, saying its action threatened "peace and security in Europe".

The US and its Western allies have threatened to boycott the June G8 summit in the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi.


First Published: Sunday, March 02, 2014, 20:27

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Bopara and Parry give cause for optimism

of your page where you want the widget to show up. --> Croft: A dismal West Indies batting performanceIt wasn't pretty, it wasn't without fortune and it wasn't convincing but, like a starving man presented with week-old bread, England are in no position to quibble over the style of any victory.

Going into this game, England had lost 16 of their last 19 games in all formats against Test-playing opposition. They had lost seven of their last nine ODIs and five in a row across the limited-overs formats. They were desperate for a win to inject some confidence into a squad that has, so far, crept tentatively into a new era.

Defeat would have had damaging consequences. Not only would it have sealed the result of the series, but it would have increased the pressure on Ashley Giles, in particular, and risked the morale of the squad just ahead of the World T20.

Stephen Parry gets through his action, West Indies v England, 2nd ODI, North Sound, March 2, 2014
Stephen Parry's debut was encouraging and suggested he could play a useful role in the World Twenty20 © Getty Images

As Stuart Broad, the captain, admitted afterwards: "We've probably fallen short in the real pressure scenarios in the past year. It would have been a huge setback to lose today, having done some great things. It would have been like slamming your head against a brick wall really.

"We just needed the top order to play us through and take responsibility. We didn't manage to do that, and we had a Champions Trophy final-type wobble in the middle. But we got over the line, and that's the most important thing.

"I would have been hugely disappointed sat here 2-0 down after some of the cricket we've played. On Friday, we played 75% of the cricket, and lost the game.

"To get over the line should give the changing-room a huge amount of confidence and belief - because we've not won two games in a row since July."

Even if the result had gone the other way - and but for an umpiring decision that went against Dwayne Bravo it might have done - there would have been some encouraging aspects to the performance. England's bowling, with their four spinners accounting for eight of West Indies' wickets, was much improved from the first game, while their fielding, already showing the influence of Paul Collingwood, was a key difference between the sides.

The close proximity of the fielders to the bat in the circle - England usually have them on the edge, thereby regularly surrendering quick singles - was classic Collingwood and noticeably increased the pressure on the West Indies batsmen.

Stephen Parry, a veteran of just six first-class games at the age of 28, went some way to justifying his surprise selection with three wickets on a debut that earned him the Man-of-the-Match award. He is not a spinner that is particularly pleasing on the eye and offers little of the traditional skills of flight or dip but, much in the manner that Michael Yardy fulfilled a valuable role for England in the World T20 of 2010, he has something to offer in the shorter formats.

He was admirably composed and, in taking the important wicket of Lendl Simmons the ball after having been hit for six, holding the following delivery back just a fraction and inviting a repeat of the stroke, he demonstrated pleasing confidence and nerve. He will not always find the conditions so helpful or the batsmen so obliging, but the unfazed character bodes well.

But perhaps it was the composure shown by Ravi Bopara that was most heartening. Bopara's talent has never been in question and, in his 101 ODIs, he has shown glimpses of quality that have made his inability to deliver more consistently all the more maddening. All too often, notably in the Champions Trophy final and in the ODI in Adelaide in January, he has appeared to freeze under pressure.

Here, however, he was calmness personified. While Broad was more than a little fortunate - he could have been caught three times before he made 6 and was reprieved on review before he had scored - Bopara knew there was no hurry and did not play a false stroke in the eighth-wicket partnership that took his side to victory. Again, there will be bigger moments in bigger games, but this was an unbeaten 38 worth far more than some of his half-centuries thrashed with the pressure off.

Broad's captaincy is intriguing, too. He appeared noticeably more aggressive than Alastair Cook might have been, utilising two legs slips at one stage and again opening the bowling with a spinner. Indeed, England utilised two part-time spinners in the Powerplay.

Still, victory should not mask the fragility of England's batting for the second game in succession. Bearing in mind the trial against spin anticipated in Bangladesh, their struggles against Sunil Narine, in particular, are a worry. Luke Wright has been horribly exposed in this series and the manner of Jos Buttler's dismissal, desperately uncomfortable trying to evade a bouncer, will have fast bowlers the world over taking notice. He will face many quicker bowlers on many quicker wickets.

It is a situation that does nothing to vindicate the management's decision to dispense with the services of Kevin Pietersen, but it would be disingenuous to suggest that is the only problem. Eoin Morgan has also been sorely missed, while Ian Bell and Cook will return to the first choice ODI side.

It is worth noting, too, that since the ODI series in January, England's No. 3 batsman - a combination of Joe Root, Ben Stokes and Wright - have scored just 91 runs between them in 13 innings; a run of scores that reads: 3, 2, 15, 70, 0, 1 and 0. Suffice it to say, Jonathan Trott has not been effectively replaced.

While the tired pitch - slow, low and, in many ways, utterly unsuited to promoting limited-overs cricket as a form of entertainment - resulted in some desultory cricket - there were only nine fours in the entire West Indies innings - it did provide a good example of what to expect in Bangladesh.

It will be encouraging for them, then, that both Morgan and Alex Hales were able to return to the nets during the game and might play in the deciding game on Wednesday.

George Dobell is a senior correspondent at ESPNcricinfo

RSS Feeds: George Dobell © ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

3rd ODI: West Indies v England at North Sound
Mar 5, 2014 (09:30 local | 13:30 GMT | 19:00 IST) 1st T20I: West Indies v England at Bridgetown
Mar 9, 2014 (14:30 local | 18:30 GMT | 00:00 IST) 2nd T20I: West Indies v England at Bridgetown
Mar 11, 2014 (14:30 local | 18:30 GMT | 00:00 IST) 3rd T20I: West Indies v England at Bridgetown
Mar 13, 2014 (14:30 local | 18:30 GMT | 00:00 IST) | Why Dhoni needs to speak out

It can't do Indian cricket any good when there is rampant speculation over the motives and methods of its highest-profile player

Steyn's spell from hell

No other bowler in the world today could have won the match in Port Elizabeth so suddenly and with such effect

Demented and orgasmic gesticulations

Viv Richards' over-the-top celebrations and a commentary row blighted the fourth Test of 1990 in Bridgetown

India batting thin on experience

The absence of MS Dhoni, Yuvraj Singh and Suresh Raina means India will go into the Asia Cup with an inexperienced middle order for the first time in a long time

The incredible life of Mohammad Nabi

Like the team he leads, Afghanistan's captain Mohammad Nabi has enjoyed a staggering rise in the world of cricket


View the original article here