logo
#

Latest news with #MakhayaNtini

Gibbs, Taylor, Dilshan, Irfan, Yusuf, Finch to lead teams in The LEGEN-Z T10 League's first season
Gibbs, Taylor, Dilshan, Irfan, Yusuf, Finch to lead teams in The LEGEN-Z T10 League's first season

India Gazette

time27-06-2025

  • Sport
  • India Gazette

Gibbs, Taylor, Dilshan, Irfan, Yusuf, Finch to lead teams in The LEGEN-Z T10 League's first season

New Delhi [India], June 27 (ANI): The LEGEN-Z T10 League has officially unveiled its roster of star international cricketers for its inaugural season. South African legends Herschelle Gibbs and Makhaya Ntini, Sri Lanka's opener Tillakaratne Dilshan, New Zealand's veteran batter Ross Taylor, former India all-rounders Yusuf Pathan and Irfan Pathan and former Australian skipper Aaron Finch are among the international players. India's grassroots talent is excited and ready to share the field with world-class names. The LEGEN-Z T10 League, built on the powerful slogan 'Gali Se TV Tak', has already created a massive buzz among cricket lovers and aspiring players. The 74 Indian players who have been handpicked from local streets after the trials await a great opportunity to play with their favourite cricketer. From being fans and watching legends on television, they are now teammates in the same dugout. This transformation -- from gully to global, from streets to stadiums is the very essence of 'Gali Se TV Tak.' Their journey is a rags-to-riches sporting fairytale, which itself is proof that if you have talent, dreams do come true. Venkatesh Prasad, Chairman of The LEGEN-Z T10 League and former India pacer, said: 'To see players like Ross Taylor, Dilshan, and Yusuf Pathan playing alongside raw Indian talent is a dream come true for us. Our goal has always been to blend grassroots talent with international experience.' Chiranjeev Dubey, Founder and CEO of the league, added: 'The LEGEN-Z T10 League is about giving recognition and a platform to undiscovered talent. With these global icons coming on board, the dream of taking tennis ball cricket from the gullies to television is becoming a powerful reality for us.' Speaking about the local players, Co-founder and CMO of the League, Meenakshi Aggarwal said, ' Watching boys from local gullies share the field with global legends is a proof of how dreams can become reality with the right platform and support. The LEGEN -Z T10 League truly represents the new India.' Surender Agarwal, COO, The LEGEN-Z T10 League, said, 'During the trials, we were truly impressed by the raw talent and passion we witnessed from every corner of the country. The energy, skill, and determination these players brought to the field assured us that India's streets are brimming with future stars.' Ravikant Bhatt, Chief of Cricket Advisory Committee, LEGEN-Z T10 League, said, 'We've scouted talent from the corners of the country, places where dreams are often bigger than resources. These 74 players represent the soul of Indian tennis ball cricket. Their hunger, discipline, and raw potential convinced us they were ready for the big stage.' Full squad Team MP Spartans:Herschelle Gibbs (Captain), Lakshita Ranasinghe, Rashard Fuller, Makhaya Ntini, Akshay Rathod, Surjeet Singh Deol, Pavan Bhardwaj, Honey Yadav, Shivam Sharma, Rohit Manjhi, Abhishek Pathak, Dinesh Kumar, Rohit, Amey Shinde, Prashant V K, Ashish Gavit Team Southern United:Tillakaratne Dilshan (Captain), Martin Guptill, Brown Williams, Parwinder Awana, Nayeem Mohammed, Mandeep Awana, Nilimesh Roy, Shivam Kulthe, Gupta Manish, Akash Kumar, Yuvraj Rao, Akbar Baig, Kalvick Ray, Adnan Bin Khalid, Ravi Swami, Jay Kumar Team Royal Challengers Delhi:Ross Taylor (Captain), Keith Ingram, Praveen Kumar, Anureet Singh, Fazil Ali, Nimesh Patel, Abhishek Yadav, Kohinoor Turki, Ravi Kumar Dixit, Kshitij, Pandurang Magar, Shivesh Pandey, Mohammad Yasir, Yuvraj Uike, Arjun Vasita, Vijendra Singh Nagarwal Team Rajasthan Raiders:Yusuf Pathan (Captain), Shaun Marsh, Eddie Lilele, Jerome Chinia, Ashish Goyal, Ved Prakash Manda, Shubham Rastogi, Anas Kaagzi, Vijay Meena, Himanshu Kumar, Abhishek Bhati, Saurabh Pandey, Nikhil Singh Pawar, Nafish, Atul Chandela, OMSAI Rathod Team Mumbai Stars:Irfan Pathan (Captain), Asghar Afghan, Thandi Thasabala, Paveen Kumar, Rishi Dhawan, Shaurya Chakre, Rajendra Sakpal, Himanshu Gautam, Tushar Dangodra, Nikhil Patil, Mayank Walia, Ankit Raj, Surjeet Tinku, Nitish Vishwakarma, Chintan Vavadiya, Abhay Pratap Singh, Sachin Paswan Team Bengal Tigers:Aaron Finch (Captain), Christofer Mpofu, Sudeep Tyagi, Yassen, Mohd Hussain, Umang Sethi, Kevin Rodrigues, Mohammad Mujtaba, Refar Ali, Mohammad Naaz, Sorabh Soni, Pramod Kumar, Avinash Rana, Raj Shekhar Malik, Manas Dutta, Vipin Verma, Priyanshu Pratap. (ANI)

Kagiso Rabada lets his bowling do the talking — but Australian seamers have telling say
Kagiso Rabada lets his bowling do the talking — but Australian seamers have telling say

The Independent

time11-06-2025

  • Sport
  • The Independent

Kagiso Rabada lets his bowling do the talking — but Australian seamers have telling say

A great many ills ail South African cricket but there is one area in which the nation is in rude health. The form and fortunes of the side may have fluctuated since their re-admittance to the Test game in 1992 but found always within the undulating terrain have been fast bowling riches, diamonds of seam and swing quarried out of the earth. Allan Donald and Shaun Pollock were followed by Makhaya Ntini, who carried the side through to Dale Steyn, Morne Morkel and Vernon Philander, the trio tessellating with complementary skills in the last South African Test team to conquer the world. If another coronation is to come this weekend then a sparkling showing by the latest jewel in the South African crown will have had a major part to play. These can not have been straightforward weeks for Kagiso Rabada, dealing first with the speculation that filled a sudden and initially unexplained absence from the Indian Premier League and then the repairing of relationships required by the disclosure of a positive test for a recreational drug. Ban served in time to take the field for this World Test Championship final at Lord's, the great Rabada let his bowling do the talking. After re-arranging Mitchell Starc 's furniture to complete a wonderful 5-51, there was no grand gesture or overzealous celebration, no nod at the noise that had surrounded him; a quiet character at heart was content to take his teammates' embrace and gently lift the ball towards the pavilion having moved past Donald's tally for outright fourth on the list of South African Test wicket-takers and helped dismiss Australia for 212. The problem for the Proteas is that their final foes are just as resource rich. Come the close, the defending champions were already on top, 22 almost faultless overs delivered largely by Starc, Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood ripping through the South African top order, exposing the stark dichotomy between their seam strength and relative batting weakness. There was nothing loose on which to latch; Aiden Markram, Ryan Rickleton and Wiaan Mulder all fell cheaply trying to force the pace before Tristan Stubbs let one slip through the gate. It took Temba Bavuma 31 balls to escape the straitjacket and get off the mark – plenty of graft will be required to erase an overnight deficit of 169, which looks large at this juncture if Australia continue in such style. South Africa will surely have felt a perhaps necessary first-innings lead was within reach after Rabada's brilliant burst. It had been a strange Australian innings brought crashing down by two separate collapses. While half-centuries from Steve Smith and Beau Webster lifted Australia from a shaky start through an afternoon session of relative calm, a morning of 69/4 dealt irrevocable damage before Rabada returned to clean up the tail in a remarkable post-tea period of five wickets for 30 runs. Among a competitive field, Rabada is perhaps the purest pace bowler South Africa have ever produced, an immaculate action and complete toolbox taking him to record after record. He is durable, too, in part because of the economy of his approach, smooth speed generated without undue contortion or stressing of the sinews. In Marco Jansen, he has found a fine foil, the left-armer adding venom and variety alongside his new-ball partner. It had been bright sunshine rather than slate skies expected to greet the two teams at Lord's this week but on a mizzly morning, the venom and variety that has helped the Proteas make an unlikely run to this showpiece left the defending champions firmly on the back foot. A gloom still engulfed Lord's as Bavuma won a good toss, the moisture clearing but the floodlights very much on for the opening session. Australia were soon trudging in the mire. Their recent predilection has been for a dasher at the top of the order to go with the doughtier Khawaja, David Warner replaced latterly by youngster Sam Konstas and, in a conditions specific move in Sri Lanka, Travis Head. Labuschagne, however, shares his partner's preference to soak up pressure rather than transfer it, the new-look opening duo preparing to be patient with heavy clouds cloaking the ground. Khawaja was extracted after 20 scoreless balls, pouched safely by David Bedingham at first slip having been squared up by Rabada, who soon struck again. Labuschagne's elevation to open in turn saw Cameron Green pushed up to three – which also proved the ball that dismissed him as Aiden Markram's sharp snag at second slip made sure of another strike in the over. Labuschagne crawled only to 17 before he, too, feathered an edge through off Jansen. When Head – match-winner against India two years ago – fell cheaply to the lanky left-armer thanks to an outstanding catch down the leg-side from Kyle Verreynne, South Africa were cock-a-hoop. They might have made more of their early ascendancy, too, Smith surviving a tight review before the interval before Beau Webster escaped an LBW thanks to a phantom inside-edge, the umpire and South Africa seeing ghosts even with the Australian stone dead in front. Smith appeared to be making serene progress towards another Lord's century yet fell in unlikely fashion to the part-time tweaking of Aiden Markram for 66. After his reprieve, the giant Webster played with confidence and composure but beyond the colossus Australia crumbled, Alex Carey cleaned up reverse sweeping a full ball from Keshav Maharaj and captain Pat Cummins done for by a peach from Rabada. Webster had flashed outside off stump with impudence throughout his knock but was caught in the cordon for 72 before Jansen and Rabada ensured the tail would not wag. It may not be long, though, before their bowling boots are strapped back on again.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store