Wednesday, November 27, 2013

ALL TIME RATINGS : ODI (21-07-2013)


                                                        Top 20 Batsmen

#RatingNameCountry
1743.2V Kohli
2733.6HM Amla
3717.5AB de Villiers
4706.1KC Sangakkara
5706.1GJ Bailey
6675.1TM Dilshan
7626.1SR Watson
8611.6S Dhawan
9608.3IJL Trott
10574.5MS Dhoni




11565.4MJ Clarke
12561AN Cook
13555.9Misbah-ul-Haq
14555G Gambhir
15554.3SR Tendulkar
16539.1V Sehwag
17520.8Mohammad Hafeez
18508.9RN ten Doeschate
19506.4RG Sharma
20505.3DPMD Jayawardene





























                                                         TopTeams

#RatingNameCountry
1675India
2635.1Australia
3629.7South Africa
4559.8Sri Lanka
5553Pakistan
6552.5England
7497.9Ireland
8429.2New Zealand
9404.2Bangladesh
10364.6West Indies




11292.8Zimbabwe
12258.5Afghanistan
13242.6Netherlands
14191.4Scotland
15148Canada
16147.9Kenya
























                                                         Top 20 Bowlers

#RatingNameCountry
1741.4Saeed Ajmal
2694.1SL Malinga
3660.8MA Starc
4648MG Johnson
5630.1CJ McKay
6621.4M Morkel
7618.5SP Narine
8607.7LL Tsotsobe
9603.3Junaid Khan
10601JM Anderson




11589.9ST Finn
12575.5Shahid Afridi
13574.2Mohammad Irfan
14572.7KAJ Roach
15571.8JC Tredwell
16546.1A Mishra
17543.1RA Jadeja
18538.4RJ Harris
19537.7R Ashwin
20537NLTC Perera

















ALL TIME RATINGS : TEST (23-10-2013)

Top 20 Batsman

#RatingNameCountry
1709CA Pujara
2687HM Amla
3653KC Sangakkara
4651MJ Clarke
5624AB de Villiers
6616AN Cook
7585MN Samuels
8584IJL Trott
9568SR Tendulkar
10567GC Smith




11560BRM Taylor
12546IR Bell
13544JH Kallis
14544S Chanderpaul
15533Younis Khan
16531V Sehwag
17525LRPL Taylor
18522KP Pietersen
19519R Dravid
20519MEK Hussey





























Top 10 teams

#RatingNameCountry
1879South Africa
2798England
3641India
4597Zimbabwe
5576Sri Lanka
6571Australia
7534New Zealand
8517West Indies
9502Bangladesh
10452Pakistan














Top 10 Bowlers

#RatingNameCountry
1656DW Steyn
2650GP Swann
3611JM Anderson
4579Saeed Ajmal
5561HMRKB Herath
6552SCJ Broad
7503PM Siddle
8479MG Johnson
9462M Morkel
10447RJ Harris
#RatingNameCountry
11439PP Ojha
12425Abdur Rehman
13406BW Hilfenhaus
14405Z Khan
15401ST Finn
16389S Shillingford
17385Harbhajan Singh
18377KAJ Roach
19372NM Lyon
20369CT Tremlett

Nehru Trophy Boat Race

Location:Alappuzha, Kerala
To Commemmorate:The Visit Of Jawahar Lal Nehru To This Place
Centre of Activity:Punnamada Backwaters
Held In:2nd Saturday Of August, Every Year
Nehru Trophy Boat Race, the most colourful water sport in Kerala, is conducted at PUNNAMADA LAKE in Alappuzha on the second saturday of every August. This prestigious cultural event of Kerala has been attracting people from all over the world. Nehru Trophy Boat Race is a festival for the people of Alleppey the main attraction of which is the sportive sprits among the participants of the race.

This trophy named as NEHRU TROPHY was donated by the late Prime Minister of INDIA Jawaharlal Nehru to the winners of the first boat race which was an impromptu one conducted in 1952 in honour of Panditji who visited Alappuzha

This aquatic festival fosters a sense of unity and fraternity and sports man spirit event and attaching foreign tourists also.
In the year 1952, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru visited the erstwhile Travancore-Cochin. On his way to Alleppey from Kottayam he was given a roaring reception by the people of Alleppey, escorted by the huge snake-boats. Having gone through the tremendous excitement of sailing in a snake-boat popularly known as Chundan, Jawaharlal Nehru donated a rolling trophy to be awarded to the winner.
The trophy is a replica of a snake-boat in silver, placed on wooden abacus on which the following words of Panditji are inscribed above his signature.

Aaranmula Boat Race

Location:Kerala
Main Attractions:100 Feet Long Boat Races
Centre of Activity:Village Aaranmula
Held In:August / September
The Aaranmula Boat Race is staged each year in the scenic village of Aaranmula in August/ September. This river carnival is part of the Aaranmula Temple festival. Masses throng the shores of the River Pamba to watch an imposing cluster of snake boats called 'Palliyodams'. Aranmula Uthrittathi Vallomkali is conducted in the Pamba River in front of Sri Parthasarathi Temple. Though, large snake boats take part in this festival they do not race with each other. Instead, they row in union, to the accompaniment of songs and reach their destination together because Lord Krishna is believed to be present in each boat. Since 1971 this procession has taken the present form of a race conducted by the Palliyoda Seva Sangh. Each boat, nearly 100 feet long, is a remarkable feat of craftsmanship, with the stem curved to resemble the hood of a snake and a tampering bow. Festooned with silk and gold spangled umbrellas, the boats are manned by a crew of more than 100 men.

Gilli thanda (Kittipulla) [கில்லி தண்ட (கிட்டிபுள்ளை)]

Gilli Danda or Guli Danda, Lippa, S-Cianco, is a traditional amateur sport, popular among rural youth in the Indian subcontinent and southern Europe. It is also know as dangguli in Bangla chinni-dandu in Kannada, kuttiyum kolum in Malayalam, viti-dandu in Marathi, kitti-pullu in Tamil, gooti-billa in Telugu, and Lappa-Duggi in Pashto. This sport is generally played in the rural and small towns of the Indian subcontinent.
 
The rules are different everywhere and you can have fun making your own rules. Imagine a game like cricket or baseball but without a ball! That's what 'Gilli Danda' is.
Thing Required:
  • Gilli Danda requires two wooden sticks - a 'Gilli' and a 'Danda'. The 'Gilli' is a small wooden piece which is about three inches long and 'Danda' - a stick, about 2 feet in length, is used to strike the Gilli.
  • 4+ Player
  • Open groud
How to play:
 
  • A small circle of four feet diameter is drawn. In the centre a small oblong shaped hole is dug which should be smaller than the gilli.
  • Two teams are formed. One bat and the other fields.
  • Fielders stand in a position from where they can catch the gilli.
  • The first player places the gilli in the hole and lifts it quickly high in the air with the danda and then strikes it. If he fails at first, he gets another turn. If the fielder catches the gilli before it touches the 
    ground, the batsman is out and the second player tries to hit the gilli. If the gilli is not caught, then the distance from the hole to the place where the gilli falls is measured with the danda. Each danda equals one point.
  • The fielder stands where the gilli had fallen and tosses it to the batsman. The batsman tries to hit the gilli while it is in the air. If it falls in the circle then he is out, if it falls outside the circle then he taps the tapered end and lifts it in the air and strikes while it is in the air. He gets three chances to hit the gilli. If he does not hit it, or is caught, he is out.
  • The game continues till all batsmen are out. The team changes side and continues the same way. The team with higher score wins. 
Warning :  
Gilli danda is a very dangerous game to play. Many a times the "Gilli" can go astray and hit one of the players or passersby, so it needs to be played carefully so that no players or passers get hurt.

Pallanguli

Pallanguli


Pallanguli is played in the Southern India. Traditional game for India and favourite game for Tamil community. It is called the gambling game by men and favourite game for ladies.The board has 14 cups with each player controlling seven. In each cup six seeds are placed. To play the game, players lift the seeds and distribute one seed in each hole. If the seeds are finished, the player goes on to his opponent’s side of the board. If the seed fall into a cup with an empty cup beyond, the seeds in the cup beyond the empty hole are captured by the player and put into his store.These two pieces pallanguli was used in 1940's era and made from teak wood. It is very heavy for its size and available in multi sizes and made from different form of products, example made from brass, wood, marble and so on. Type of seeds used to play this game normally cowrie or seashell, tamarind seed or others. 

Kho-Kho

             Kho-Kho ranks as one of the most popular traditional sports in India. The origin of Kho-Kho is difficult to trace, but many historians believe, that it is a modified form of 'Run Chase', which in its simplest form involves chasing and touching a person. With its origins in Maharashtra, Kho-Kho in ancient times, was played on 'raths' or chariots, and was known as Rathera.
Kho-Kho
              Like all Indian games, it is simple, inexpensive and enjoyable. It does, however, demand physical fitness, strength, speed and stamina, and a certain amount of ability. Dodging, feinting and bursts of controlled speed make this game quite thrilling. To catch by pursuit - to chase, rather than just run - is the capstone of Kho-Kho.The game develops qualities such as obedience, discipline, sportsmanship, and loyalty between team members.

                               The rules of the game were framed in the beginning of the 20th century. At Gymkhana Poona, a Committee was formed in 1914, to frame its rules. The first ever rules on Kho-Kho were published from Gymkhana Baroda, in 1924. In 1959-60, the first national Kho-Kho championship was organised in Vijayawada (Andhra Pradesh). The Government has initiated the following awards for the game: Arjuna Award, Eklavya Award for men, Rani Laxmi Bai award for women, Veer Abhimanyu award for boys under 18, and Janaki award for girls under 16.

How the game is played
                               Each team consists of twelve players, but only nine players take the field for a contest. A match consists of two innings. An innings consists of chasing and running turns of 7 minutes each. Eight members of the chasing team sit in their eight squares on the central lane, alternately facing the opposite direction, while the ninth member is an active chaser, and stands at either of the posts, ready to begin the pursuit. Members of the chasing team have to put their opponent out, touching them with their palms, but without committing a foul. All the action in Kho-Kho is provided by the defenders, who try to play out the 7 minutes time, and the chasers who try to dismiss them. A defender can be dismissed in three ways: 1) if he is touched by an active chaser with his palm without committing a foul, 2) if he goes out of the limits on his own, 3) if he enters the limit late.
                     Defenders enter the limit, in batches of three. After the third and last defender of batch is out, the next batch must enter the limits, before a 'kho' is given by the successful active chaser. Defenders have full freedom of movement on both sides of the central lane, but the active chaser cannot change the direction to which he is committed. He cannot cross the central lane. An active chaser can change position with a seated chaser, by touching him from behind by palm, and uttering the word 'kho' loudly, and simultaneously, chase or attack is build up through a series of 'khos' as the chase continues with a relay of chasers.
At the end of the innings there is an interval of 5 minutes and an interval of 2 minutes, in between the turns. Each side alternates between chasing and defence.
               Kho-Kho can be played by men, women, and children of all ages. The game requires a very small piece of evenly surfaced ground, rectangular in shape, and 27m by 15m. The only equipment required are the two poles. The game lasts no more than 37 minutes.

Domestic seasons and tournaments
               The following championships are organised for this game:
            National Championships, Junior National, Sub Junior National Championship, School Championship, Mini School Championship, Primary Mini School Championship, National Women Championship, All India Inter University Championship and Federation Cup

Organisations involved with the sport in India
              The primary sports body for this game is called the Kho-Kho Federation of India (K.K.F.I.). It has its branches in all the states and it has been conducting Mini, Junior and Open National Championships for both sexes, in many parts of India.

Key Players
               A number of players have bagged the Arjuna Award. Some of these players are:
Shri Shekhar Dharwadkar, Shri Shrirang Inamdar, Usha Nagarkar, Nilima Sarolkar, Achala Devare.