Dhoni Urges India

India captain MS Dhoni has urged his side to finish their difficult summer with a flourish in Friday's final one-day international against England in Cardiff.
A dramatic tied match at Lord's on Sunday gave England, who are 2-0 up with one to play, the one-day series but Dhoni's team have one last chance to get an international win this summer.
They were beaten 4-0 in the Test series, lost the only Twenty20 and were 2-0 with one no result going into the fourth one-dayer.
And Dhoni has demanded his side - who have been decimated by injuries - do not relax now that the series is gone.
"Every game is important," Dhoni told reporters after Sunday's game at Lord's.
"Despite the fact we have lost the series every game is an international game. We all know we have lost the series but it is important to get the most out of that game and we want a victory in the final game of the whole series."
For some of the younger players Friday's match is their last opportunity to impress their captain before England play five one-dayers in India before Christmas.
Dhoni has lost eight players to injury on this tour including big names such as Sachin Tendulkar and Virender Sehwag and expects the youngsters to make way for the established players when they host the five-match series.
Players such as 22-year-old Ravindra Jadeja, 24-year-old Ravichandran Ashwin and 23-year-old Ajinkya Rahane have featured in this series but may have to take a back seat when the veterans are fit again.
Dhoni added: "We have quite a few players who we have to get fit and who will be back in the one-day squad."
"We will not be as good a fielding side as we are now but you shouldn't forget that most of the grounds in India are quite small and there is not as much opportunity for the batsmen to take twos and threes."
"Everybody is considered but you have to see who is available. It becomes difficult when you have senior players who are missing this series."
"They always get the upper hand so it is tough for the youngsters but this is a good grooming period and once their time comes we all know they will be there for the next five or ten years."

Inexperienced bowlers

India take one of their most inexperienced bowling attacks into a crucial Test match and yet it is something they cannot afford to think about. Too often, when you miss out on a star, you focus on what you don't have and there will be moments when England's batsmen get set that that thought will return. But it doesn't count for much and India must focus on what they do have.
For a start, they must hope they have four bowlers at any one point on the ground during the match. It has been a much-ignored fact amidst all the criticism that at almost all times during this series MS Dhoni has been a bowler short. Everytime he has looked for a fresh pair of legs he has found nobody. At Edgbaston India will at least take the field with four bowlers.
With Zaheer Khan out of the series a lot will depend on the other seamers. RP Singh has been included in the squad, but he hasn't played for India in a good long while. Zaheer, critically, also had experience. With 79 Tests to his name, he equals the sum total of RP (13), Ishant Sharma (36), Praveen Kumar (5) and Sreesanth (25)!
While Ishant is the most experienced, Praveen has been India's star so far. He was the leading Indian on the Castrol Index in the second Test - and the second overall, behind Stuart Broad - so important were the seven England wickets he claimed. He has taken four more wickets than Ishant in the series so far and I look forward to seeing him take more of a leadership role in the bowling attack.
The choice of spinner, after Harbhajan Singh's pull-out, will be interesting given that there are five left-handers in the opposition line up. Both Pragyan Ojha and Amit Mishra, who should strictly speaking be preferred since he was the original selection, turn the ball into the left-hander and there is nobody in this side who can take it away since Virender Sehwag cannot yet bowl and Suresh Raina, well...hasn't really been turning the ball!
This is an excellent opportunity for Mishra even if he hasn't looked particularly penetrative in the couple of games he has played so far. England are not the world's greatest players of leg-spin bowling, but this is a very good batting line-up. Still, a fit and hungry leg-spinner, even if inexperienced, is better than no spinner at all.
Predictably, the focus will be on Sehwag, but one must tread with caution here. It is entirely possible he will get India off to a great start but he has very little cricket behind him. It is one thing to bat in the nets and quite another to be up against the best new ball attack in these conditions. That is why I believe the more crucial opener will be Gautam Gambhir.
This is India's best batting line-up and they have now been in the country long enough even if they have been playing catch-up all along. They must put enough runs on the board for the bowlers and that is why, whatever the conditions, I believe India will bat first this time, if they have the option.

Tendulkar Wants To Enjoy His Batting Againsed England

A billion-plus fans in India would be expecting a record 100th ton when Sachin Tendulkar walks out to bat against England in the first cricket Test at Lord's but that is the last thing on the batting maestro's mind as he simply wants to enjoy during the tour.
Sachin, who is on a vacation here with his family, insists that enjoying the game is the key to success.
'I am not thinking of records,' Sachin was quoted as saying by The Daily Telegraph.
'I am just thinking of enjoying this tour. The secret to any performance is not in chasing records. I think about, 'What is the best way to enjoy the game, and how can I enhance that enjoyment factor?'
'If I enhance the enjoyment then, naturally, the standard of play becomes higher. To me, that is more important. If I am playing well, things can happen. I don't need to go around chasing them. It is a process. You construct a solid foundation and build on it.'
Besides spending time with family, Tendulkar has been training here for the four-Test series while his team mates are set to join him soon from the West Indies.
Tendulkar said that being in England enables him to balance life by doing thing he will not be able to do in India due to the crazy fan-following.
'When I spend time in England, it is different. I get to do certain things that I wouldn't be able to do in India: to go into the park with my children, to do whatever they want to do, whether it be a game of soccer or cricket. I enjoy the best of both. The idea is to balance life in India with life away from India, to get the best of both and to be a happy man.'
When asked about retiring from the game he has played for over 20 years, Sachin said: 'I haven't. I am enjoying every moment. It has been fun. In fact, I am looking at how to enjoy the game more and how to improve the standard of play. It is about getting better. Nobody knows what is going to happen tomorrow. At least today I know that I want to enjoy cricket, to enjoy the moment.

Soccer Fans Celebrate Messi's Birthday

Fans of ace footballer Lionel Messi have celebrated his birthday with much fun and vigor in Kolkata.
Flags, banners and even posters depicting Messi could be seen fluttering in different parts of the city on Friday to celebrate the Argentine's birhday.
Messi fans also cut a massive cake designed in to a football field and exchanged pleasantries on the occasion.
Supporters shared their hopes for Messi with mediapersons in the upcoming tournaments.
"Today it is Messi's 24th birthday hence we wrote an email to Messi and prayed that he plays well in the Copa American tournament.
"We requested him to play well and we would like to see the champion trophy in his hands after he wins the tournament," said Uttam Saha, a Messi fan.
He also spoke about the giant cake ordered to make the celebrations more special.
"The cake that you saw is of 80 pounds and its size is three and half feet (width) by five feet (length). Since Messi is a footballer hence we made the design of a field done in the cake," he added.
Twenty four year old Messi belongs to Argentina and currently plays for club FC Barcelona.

Rugby World Cup In New Zealand


New Zealand marked 100 days to the start of the Rugby World Cup on Wednesday by rolling out a welcome mat on the steps of Parliament and promising fans the hospitality of "a stadium of four million people."
The slogan refers to New Zealand's population and advertises a country almost uniquely devoted to rugby. But it also, unconsciously, highlights the fact this may be the last Cup solely hosted by a nation as small as New Zealand.
The tournament is the fourth-largest sports event in the world in terms of global television audience after the FIFA football World Cup, the Summer Olympics and the Tour de France. Increasing staging costs have made it likely future tournaments will only be hosted by rugby's wealthiest participants.
England paid a $140 million fee to the International Rugby Board to host the 2015 tournament and Japan paid almost $190 million for the 2019 event. The 2015 Cup is expected to earn the IRB around 200 million pounds ($320 million) in broadcasting rights, sponsorship and merchandizing and to inject around 2.1 billion pounds ($3.3 billion) into the British economy.
Experts have found it more difficult to quantify the economic benefits to New Zealand from this year's tournament. The organizing committee expects to spend around NZ$300 million ($240 million) in staging the tournament and to receive around NZ$268 million (US$214 million) in ticket sales, its only source of revenue as host.
The tournament is expected to leave organizers with a deficit of around NZ$39 million ($31 million) which jointly will be met by taxpayers and the New Zealand Rugby Union.
The wider economic costs and benefits to New Zealand are more difficult to estimate. Organizers expect as many as 85,000 overseas visitors will flock to New Zealand during the tournament but the global economic downturn has made that figure less certain.
Some economists believe New Zealand will spend more than NZ$700 million ($570 million) on infrastructure projects including airport upgrades, roads and public transport directly associated with the Cup. In turn, some economists believe the return to the country from tourist spending and other sources may be as low as NZ$150 million ($123 million).
New Zealand is recovering from the setback of a deadly earthquake which rocked Christchurch in late February which killed more than 180 people and forced World Cup organizers to relocate seven matches because of damage to infrastructure, hotels and the rugby stadium in the south island hub city.
The mood of Prime Minister John Key, as he rolled out the welcome mat on Wednesday with IRB vice president Bill Beaumont, was decidedly upbeat. The welcome mat featured greetings in the languages of each of the tournament's 20 participating nations.
Beaumont said he was confident of New Zealand's state of readiness for the World Cup, with the first match between the All Blacks and Tonga 100 days away.
"Preparations are well on track," he said. "Tomorrow I will visit the ... Otago Stadium which will be handed over to tournament organizers in August as planned."
The Otago Stadium, in Dunedin, has been specially built for the World Cup and will not have held an international sports event before the tournament. While there have been some construction delays, Rugby New Zealand 2011 chief executive Martin Snedden said it would be handed over to its new owners on Aug. 1, as planned.

RPGs Hit The Mainstream

Once upon a time, the formula for making a hit console game was simple: Throw in an appealing central character, give him a task, toss some dangerous-looking things at him, make him jump a lot, hand him a gun, and you were well on your way to the big time.
The thing you absolutely didn't do was make a geeky, nuts and bolts role-playing game filled with inventory screens, branching dialogue trees and drawn-out battles against
But that was then. These days, role-playing games have broken out of the garage and are taking up residence right next to the lucrative shooters and action games that seem to nab twice as many headlines.
Two new RPGS arrive this week in The Witcher 2 (sequel to a critically-acclaimed but relatively unknown PC outing from 2007) and a PC port of last year's Xbox 360 hit Fable III, and two of the most anticipated games of the next twelve months are massive, top-pedigree examples of the genre's best. Bioware's Mass Effect 3 and Bethesda's Elder Scrolls: Skyrim come on the heels of colossally successful predecessors: Mass Effect 2 sold over 2 million copies in just its first week, and 2006's Elder Scrolls: Oblivion was one of the Xbox 360's early smashes. Just a few months back, Bioware's swords and sorcery shtick Dragon Age 2 stormed shelves and, like the original, has sold exceedingly well.
All of a sudden, the geeks are calling the shots. But it hasn't always been this way.
While RPGs have been on the consoles for ages, they really came of age on the PC. In their 1990's heyday, most PC role-playing games were wedded, either explicitly or covertly, to the traditions established by pen-and-paper games like Dungeons and Dragons, relying on stats and random dice rolls rather than player skills. With a few exceptions, they were fantasy-themed, in the tried-and-true (or perhaps tired-and-true) Tolkien tradition.
Fable 3 Microsoft As marriages go, it was happy and productive, birthing a slew of epics like Baldur's Gate II, a four-disc (five, if you count its expansion) epic which sold two million copies back in the days when that was considered nearly impossible. But it was doomed to eventual divorce as its consumers grew from teens and students into busy thirtysomethings without the time for a 200+ hour video game, nor the willingness to keep a gaming PC handy. Gamers demanded entertainment that challenged their skills rather than their die-rolling luck, the orcs-and-goblins bit got tedious, and for a decade or more turn-based video games have been uncool enough to scare off almost everyone. (Everyone except the Japanese, who retain an insatiable appetite for the style.)
In short, the Western RPG had to change or die -- and it wasn't the only genre in that position.
Take the first-person shooter, today by far the most enduringly popular of all action games, and reliably responsible for locking down several slots on the annual bestseller charts. Years ago, shooters were the domain of super-competitive PC gamers who played blisteringly fast games like Quake II, wielding mouse-and-keyboard to shocking effect. and the pros were so good as to be godlike.
But one by one developers found they could make their shooters work just as well modern consoles, thanks to the twin-analog-stick controllers that became standard issue in the late 90s. And Halo -- originally a PC/Mac development, before anyone had heard of the Xbox -- was the first to really make it stick. Once PC shooters were all anyone wanted to play, but now they're an afterthought.
So too went RPGs, but here the trailblazers were Bioware and Bethesda - the same pair of developers responsible for Mass Effect 3 and Skyrim. And they did it with two epic, best-selling Xbox games: Bethesda's The Elder Scrolls: Morrowind, in 2002, and the following year's Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, from Bioware.
Although Morrowind actually came to the PC before the Xbox - and arguably was a better game on the PC, too - the Xbox version would end up being the most influential. Controlling much like Halo before it, Morrowind was an up-close-and-personal game that still carried much of the trappings of the earlier games in its series. Despite that, it was a huge success, to the surprise of some early critics who dismissed it as a niche game.
Then came Knights of the Old Republic -- but like the D&D-based epics of Bioware's past, and unlike Morrowind, Knights was turn-based. Its underlying combat system was a distant offshoot of Dungeons and Dragons, too, but it did such a good job hiding its roots, some players probably never realized they were playing a role-playing game. Mix that with the minds behind some of gaming's very best stories -- and slap the biggest name in all of sci-fi on it -- and you have a recipe for a best-seller.
Which is how it proved. In its day, Old Republic was the fastest-selling game on the original Xbox, giving a new generation of gamers an accessible gateway to the conventions of role-playing games. Its success didn't go unnoticed, and many traditionally PC-centric development houses began looking much more favorably on console platforms.
So while D&D-branded computer games live on, notably in the massively-multiplayer D&D Online and the upcoming action-oriented download Daggerdale, they're a different breed than their story-driven, number-heavy ancestors - spin-offs, not attempts to recreate the pen-and-paper experience on your PC. Or console. Often the less a console role-playing game shares with the computer games that spawned the genre, the better it sells.
You can see this reflected in the progress of the Mass Effect series, which was simplified significantly between its first and second installments in ways that riled some old-school gamers. Statements from Bioware indicate the third game will be cleaner still. And Morrowind followup Skyrim, too, has cannily trimmed its complex character stats system, going from eight core attributes to a trio of easily understandable scores.
Will this simplification make them more successful than their predecessors? You'd have to be nuts to bet against them. Skyrim is easily one of the year's most anticipated games, and Mass Effect 3 was too, until delays pushed it into 2012. Once reserved for the most Coke-bottle-bespectacled of gamers, the role-playing game now ranks as one of the console world's most popular. They might not be your daddy's D&D, but chances are he'll wind up playing them anyway.

True Gaming Challenges

Achievements are weak. Players have been creating their own challenges like "Beat Skate Or Die without skating or dying" for years, but the official goals set by Xbox 360 achievements rarely stray from such nail-biting feats as "Beat level 1" or "Shoot in the general direction of 100 enemies with the shotgun". Similar achievement systems are in the works for Nintendo and Sony systems, but you can be sure that they will be equally sissy-fied.
For the sake of the many brave souls who perished while trying to complete an entire season of NBA Live '95 without allowing an opposing team to score a single point, we present these True Gaming Challenges to the current generation of gamers.
Freshly-Picked Tingle's Rosy Rupeeland - 15 True Gaming Challenge Points
Walk into a store (one that deals in import titles if you live in the U.S.) and bring this game to the counter. Hold it before you in plain sight the entire time. Do not wear a disguise of any sort. Do not laugh. Hand the game to the cashier and tell him or her, "This is for me. I play games like this. I love it."

Mass Effect - 10 True Gaming Challenge Points

Create a custom character that absolutely, positively, is not a mulatto.

Company Of Heroes - 35 True Gaming Challenge Points

Join a multiplayer game that bills itself as "noob friendly" without encountering a guy that's using a secondary account because the 100+ wins on his main account won't let him match up with (and destroy) actual beginners like you.

Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns Of The Patriots - 15 True Gaming Challenge Points

Explain the game's plot in its entirety to a third party without going "uh.." or scratching your head. Then take about ten seconds to describe what's enjoyable about the gameplay. If they actually want to play the game after this challenge is completed, give yourself 50 additional True Gaming Challenge points.

Spore - 10 True Gaming Challenge Points

Resist the urge to give the game a "Best Of Expo" award without having played it, regardless of your actual affiliation with any expos.

Wii Fit - 25 True Gaming Challenge Points

Use the Wii Board regularly for its intended purpose, and not as a tray to keep your Cheetos bag and Mountain Dew steady while you watch Lazy Town.

Madden NFL 2009 - 30 True Gaming Challenge Points

After playing through one season and realizing you're pretty much done until Madden 2010, sell the game to your local Gamestop for more than $3.

Portal - 15 True Gaming Challenge Points

Rocketjump your way through the entire game.

Experts Cricket In Battling

India made an astonishing recovery to snatch a one-run victory over South Africa in the second one-day international at the Wanderers Stadium on Saturday to level the five-match series at one match each.
Munaf Patel took two wickets in what proved to be the final over to finish with four for 29, with Yuvraj Singh taking a low catch at gully to end the match when Wayne Parnell cut powerfully in an attempt to score the winning runs.
South Africa seemed in control when they made an aggressive start to their innings after Lonwabo Tsotsobe produced career-best bowling figures of four for 22 as India were bowled out for 190 on what is usually a high-scoring ground.
Captain Graeme Smith and JP Duminy took South Africa to within 71 runs of victory with seven wickets in hand and less than half the overs used up. But Duminy played a rash shot against part-time off-spinner Rohit Sharma and was caught at long-on. It still looked comfortable for the hosts as Smith and David Miller added 32.
But as with the Indian innings, the batting powerplay proved disastrous for the batting side. Smith was out to the first ball of the powerplay, bowled off an inside edge by man of the match Patel for 77 and Miller went in the next over when he top-edged an attempted pull against a slower bouncer by Zaheer Khan.
South Africa lost their last six wickets for 37 runs in what was almost an action replay of the Indian innings. "We played some good cricket for 70 overs of the game," said Smith, who was captaining South Africa for a record 139th time. "Some of our decision making at the back end of the game wasn't good enough but Munaf bowled really well."
Indian captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni, whose side had lost their last six wickets for 21 runs, said: "It's a big win for us. We were 40 to 45 runs short in our innings but the bowlers bowled in the right areas and put a lot of pressure on the South African batsmen."
Dhoni said the the bowling of off-spinner Harbhajan Singh, who took one for 32 in ten overs, had changed the game. "The South African batsmen had momentum when he came on and they lost momentum against him."
Tsotsobe led a superb performance by the South African bowlers and fielders after India won the toss and batted. Yuvraj Singh made 53 and Dhoni scored 38 but neither batsman was able to dominate during a fourth wicket stand of 83 off 107 balls. Singh reached his half-century off 67 balls when he glanced Tsotsobe for his fourth boundary - but he was out next ball when he pushed a slower delivery from Tsotsobe to mid-off.
Tsotsobe, bowled eight of his ten overs during powerplay overs as he followed up his man of the match performance in the first game in Durban, where he took four for 31 and helped South Africa to a 135-run win.
Tsotsobe was entrusted with the first over of the batting powerplay and struck with his first ball when he had Suresh Raina palpably leg before wicket, struck on the back pad by a full delivery. He then bowled Dhoni off an inside edge as the powerplay proved disastrous for India, who lost four wickets for 14 runs, with Tsotsobe having a hand in another wicket when he took a sliding catch at third man to dismiss Zaheer Khan off Dale Steyn's bowling.
Sachin Tendulkar equalled Sanath Jayasuriya's world record of 444 one-day international appearances but struggled to 24 off 44 balls as India made a slow start. Tendulkar did not field during the South African innings and there was no immediate explanation of the reason.

Tennis Secrets Of The Professionals

This article which you are about to read on tennis psychology has been written because I have been made aware of the interest people have in this subject and this is understandable when you consider how getting a grasp on this will definitely improve your game considerably.
For ease of writing I have referred to He and Man but of course everything I say could just as equally apply to She or woman.
Tennis psychology is nothing more than understanding the workings of your opponents mind, and gauging the effect of your own game on his mental viewpoint, and understanding the mental effects resulting from the various external causes on your own mind.
You cannot be a successful psychologist of others without first understanding your own mental processes, you must study the effect on yourself of the same happening under different circumstances. You react differently in different moods and under different conditions. You must realize the effect on your game of the resulting irritation, pleasure, confusion, or whatever form your reaction takes. Does it increase your efficiency? If so, strive for it, but never give it to your opponent.
Does it deprive you of concentration? If so, either remove the cause, or if that is not possible strive to ignore it.
Once you have judged accurately your own reaction to conditions, study your opponents, to decide their temperaments. Like temperaments react similarly, and you may judge men of your own type by yourself. Opposite temperaments you must seek to compare with people whose reactions you know.
A person who can control his own mental processes stands an excellent chance of reading those of another, for the human mind works along definite lines of thought, and can be studied. One can only control ones, mental processes after carefully studying them.
A steady phlegmatic baseline player is seldom a keen thinker. If he was he would not adhere to the baseline.
The physical appearance of a man is usually a pretty clear index to his type of mind. The stolid, easy-going man, who usually advocates the baseline game, does so because he hates to stir up his torpid mind to think out a safe method of reaching the net. There is the other type of baseline player, who prefers to remain on the back of the court while directing an attack intended to break up your game. He is a very dangerous player, and a deep, keen thinking antagonist.
He achieves his results by mixing up his length and direction, and worrying you with the variety of his game. He is a good psychologist. The first type of player mentioned merely hits the ball with little idea of what he is doing, while the latter always has a definite plan and adheres to it. The hard-hitting, erratic, net rushing player is a creature of impulse. There is no real system to his attack, no understanding of your game. He will make brilliant coups on the spur of the moment, largely by instinct; but there is no mental power of consistent thinking. It is an interesting, fascinating type.
Now before you read any further let me just jump in here and say that I really do hope you are finding this interesting and indeed helpful. I have written this because I do believe that we need to know more about this subject, so, having said that, lets continue.
The dangerous man is the player who mixes his style from back to fore court at the direction of an ever alert mind. This is the man to study and learn from. He is a player with a definite purpose. A player who has an answer to every query you propound him in your game. He is the most subtle antagonist in the world. He is of the school of Brookes.
Second only to him is the man of dogged determination that sets his mind on one plan and adheres to it, bitterly, fiercely fighting to the end, with never a thought of change. He is the man whose psychology is easy to understand, but whose mental viewpoint is hard to upset, for he never allows himself to think of anything except the business at hand. This man is your Johnston or your Wilding. I respect the mental capacity of Brookes more, but I admire the tenacity of purpose of Johnston.
Pick out your type from your own mental processes, and then work out your game along the lines best suited to you.
When two men are, in the same class, as regards stroke equipment, the determining factor in any given match is the mental viewpoint. Luck, so called, is often grasping the psychological value of a break in the game, and turning it to your own account.
We hear a great deal about the shots we have made. Few realize the importance of the shots we have missed. The science of missing shots is as important as that of making them, and at times a miss by an inch is of more value than a, return that is killed by your opponent.
Let me explain. A player drives you far out of court with an angle shot. You run hard to it, and reaching, drive it hard and fast down the side line, missing it by an inch. Your opponent is surprised and shaken, realizing that your shot might as well have gone in as out. He will expect you to try it again, and will not take the risk next time. He will try to play the ball, and may fall into error. You have thus taken some of your opponents confidence, and increased his chance of error, all by a miss.
If you had merely popped back that return, and it had been killed, your opponent would have felt increasingly confident of your inability to get the ball out of his reach, while you would merely have been winded without result.
Let us suppose you made the shot down the sideline. It was a seemingly impossible get. First it amounts to TWO points in that it took one away from your opponent that should have been his and gave you one you ought never to have had. It also worries your opponent, as he feels he has thrown away a big chance.
The psychology of a tennis match is very interesting, but easily understandable. Both men start with equal chances. Once one man establishes a real lead, his confidence goes up, while his opponent worries, and his mental viewpoint becomes poor. The sole object of the first man is to hold his lead, thus holding his confidence.
If the second player pulls even or draws ahead, the inevitable reaction occurs with even a greater contrast in psychology. There is the natural confidence of the leader now with the second man as well as that great stimulus of having turned seeming defeat into probable victory. The reverse in the case of the first player is apt to hopelessly destroy his game, and collapse follows.
Let me finish this article by saying that there is a lot of information available on the psychology of tennis, just waiting for you to dig up. Try your local bookstore, your local library, my blog, and the internet, and you will be amazed at what you can find.