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Is Ponting Ishant's you know what?


Sachinism

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in b4 someone complains about 'B!tch'
so what happened to the zero tolerance policy ? talking abt the word used in title
I WINZ!
:haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha: :hysterical::hysterical::hysterical::hysterical::hysterical::hysterical::hysterical::hysterical:
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I still can't believe how this young guy has come along. Only 20 years old with pace, bounce and he's improved every time you watch him play. He's got a beautiful slower ball now to add to his other deliveries, but best of all he really understands HOW to bowl to different batsmen. There's a huge difference in bowling well and truely understanding how to use the conditions against certain batsmen. It took Zaheer years to understand this and apply it but Ishant is already bowling consistently and putting the batsmen under immense pressure. Plus his accuracy is magical. He's bowling against some of top batsmen in the world on these flat tracks remind me of another fiery bowling warrior: Courtney Walsh!! He made Ponting look silly and now he's doing the same to Michael Clarke and the ball is reversing now!!!

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that ball was an absolute peach..no one cud have survived that kinda delivery..and this guy is jut 20..boy oh boy have we got a real talent here..the expression on Punters face was priceless..he was like WTH where did that come from..man Ishant is a gem :yay::dance::icflove:

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Sharma cashing in at Punter's expense Daniel Brettig October 22, 2008 http://www.smh.com.au/news/sport/cricket/sharma-cashing-in-at-punters-expense/2008/10/21/1224351253046.html MOHALI: Indian paceman Ishant Sharma's "unusual angles" have utterly confounded Australian captain Ricky Ponting. Since his outstanding 123 on the first day of the first Test in Bangalore, an innings ended by his "old nemesis", Harbhajan Singh, Ponting has had no answer to his new one. Bowling with increased pace and all of the same movement that first worried Ponting in Australia last summer, Sharma has defeated Ponting three times in as many attempts, meaning he has now taken the scalp of perhaps the world's premier batsman five times in as many Tests. Ponting says in addition to being a fine pace bowler, Sharma is an operator capable of posing questions that very few international pacemen can conjure. In Mohali, Ponting was beaten in the first innings by an inswinger that had him lbw on the back foot, and in the second he was bowled between bat and pad by an unplayable off-cutter that uprooted his off stump. "This game, the ball he got me with in the second innings is going to get me out 95 times out of 100, I think," Ponting said. "There's not much I can do about that and the ball in the first innings was fairly similar. He's using the swinging ball very well. He's unusual with the angles he creates as well as a fast bowler. There's not many quicks that you face around the world that swing the ball back into the right-handed batsman, so he's posing challenges for us there, and that's three innings in a row he's got me out." Ponting said he knew how Sharma was trying to get him, by moving the ball into him at pace and gaining the sort of bounce only available to a bowler of considerable height. But he is yet to find a way of countering this. "All our batsmen just need to think about ways that we can make it more difficult for them, and that's all you can do as a batsman sometimes," he said. "You identify when a bowler's having a good trot against you and you've got to find ways to combat what they're doing. That's what international cricket is all about. My challenge over the next few days is to look at some of the vision - I know the ways he's trying to get me out but I've got to find a way to combat them."

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Sharma cashing in at Punter's expense Daniel Brettig October 22, 2008 http://www.smh.com.au/news/sport/cricket/sharma-cashing-in-at-punters-expense/2008/10/21/1224351253046.html MOHALI: Indian paceman Ishant Sharma's "unusual angles" have utterly confounded Australian captain Ricky Ponting. Since his outstanding 123 on the first day of the first Test in Bangalore, an innings ended by his "old nemesis", Harbhajan Singh, Ponting has had no answer to his new one. Bowling with increased pace and all of the same movement that first worried Ponting in Australia last summer, Sharma has defeated Ponting three times in as many attempts, meaning he has now taken the scalp of perhaps the world's premier batsman five times in as many Tests. Ponting says in addition to being a fine pace bowler, Sharma is an operator capable of posing questions that very few international pacemen can conjure. In Mohali, Ponting was beaten in the first innings by an inswinger that had him lbw on the back foot, and in the second he was bowled between bat and pad by an unplayable off-cutter that uprooted his off stump. "This game, the ball he got me with in the second innings is going to get me out 95 times out of 100, I think," Ponting said. "There's not much I can do about that and the ball in the first innings was fairly similar. He's using the swinging ball very well. He's unusual with the angles he creates as well as a fast bowler. There's not many quicks that you face around the world that swing the ball back into the right-handed batsman, so he's posing challenges for us there, and that's three innings in a row he's got me out." Ponting said he knew how Sharma was trying to get him, by moving the ball into him at pace and gaining the sort of bounce only available to a bowler of considerable height. But he is yet to find a way of countering this. "All our batsmen just need to think about ways that we can make it more difficult for them, and that's all you can do as a batsman sometimes," he said. "You identify when a bowler's having a good trot against you and you've got to find ways to combat what they're doing. That's what international cricket is all about. My challenge over the next few days is to look at some of the vision - I know the ways he's trying to get me out but I've got to find a way to combat them."
100 outta 100,mate!u just didnt have a clue! admit it:D
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Ponting said he knew how Sharma was trying to get him, by moving the ball into him at pace and gaining the sort of bounce only available to a bowler of considerable height. But he is yet to find a way of countering this. "All our batsmen just need to think about ways that we can make it more difficult for them, and that's all you can do as a batsman sometimes," he said.
Keep trying Ricky but there is NO answer. Sharma can bowl it at pace to get it to swing into you if you play outside the line. If they counter the inside movement and try to play inside the line then Sharma can bowl it straight that would get an edge to slips. That's the way he got Ricky out in Australia with the ball holding it's line and just slightly moving away. You can run, but YOU CAN'T HIDE!!!!!!!
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