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Subah ka nashta Sir John sang (desi khabaron ka adda)


Sir john

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..Pak has never played there but regardless of the opposition' date=' [b']that is still a legend but they dont leave anyone. I remember prasad lost it and threw his water bottle at the crowd
just curous. can you elaborate?
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Ex-cricketer Parthasarthi dead Jaipur: Former India Test cricketer Parthasarthi Sharma passed away here on Wednesday after fighting a long battle with cancer. He was 62. A right-hand middle-order batsman, Sharma was suffering from gallbladder cancer for the last few months. He was in the ICU and breathed his last this morning after his condition deteriorated. He is survived by his wife and a son. Parthasarthi was the only cricketer from Rajasthan after Hanumanth Singh who played Test cricket for India. RIP to him. he played 5 test and 2 ODI for india. www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/33958.html

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http://www.cricinfo.com/ci/engine/match/64476.html Prasad was fielding near the boundary and the crowd was teasing him.so he pissed and threw his water bottle and offocurse, the Pakistan ki maa ki Ch is pretty common
Legend is true ofcourse. In 2001 series, the crowd was shouting "Nagma" when Ganguly came to bat and "Zero" when Agarkar came. So, they treat it like a zoo experience.
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Laser-guided bomb developed With technical support from Dehradun-based Instruments Research and Development Establishment (IRDE), a laboratory of the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), the country has developed its first laser-guided bomb (LGB), a weapon that can illuminate a target and then decimates it with accuracy. Two successful flight trials of the LGB were conducted for the IAF at the Chandipur test range in Orissa in January this year. :yay::yay::yay::yay:

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here is his photo. 12174.jpgFormer India cricketer Parthasarthi Sharma dies Parthasarthi Sharma, the former India and Rajasthan cricketer, has died at the age of 62. Sharma, who had been suffering from gallbladder cancer, played five Tests for India between 1974-77, averaging 18.70 with a high score of 54, and two ODIs. A right-hand middle-order bat, Sharma had a successful start to his Test career, making 54 and 49 on debut against West Indies in Delhi in '74-75. He was less successful in the next Test, though, and was dropped for the rest of the series. He returned for India's tour of the Caribbean in 1975-76 but played one Test, opening with Sunil Gavaskar, and two more the following season at home to England. However, a highest score of 29 in those six innings brought his Test career to an end. His first-class career with Rajasthan and Central Zone spanned two decades during which he scored 4372 runs averaging 38.69 in the Ranji Trophy, and 1379 runs at an average of 38.31 in the Duleep Trophy. He was a mainstay of the Rajasthan side that repeatedly won the Central Zone championship and finished runners-up several times in the national competition. He was also part of Central Zone's maiden triumph in the Duleep Trophy in 1971-72. Post his playing days, Sharma coached the Rajasthan Ranji team and went on to become an acclaimed coach. One of his famous wards is Gautam Gambhir, who credited his transformation, from Test sidelines to being India's first-choice opener, to Sharma. "He is one man who has changed not only me as a player, but a lot of other players as well," Gambhir said. "The kind of technical knowledge he has is phenomenal. "When I got dropped from the Test squad, and had this problem of falling across too much, I had tried everything possible. But he made that change possible. That was something I was working on for a long time, but the one thing that he changed, I give a lot of credit to him. "He changed me completely as a player. My stance, my grip, my falling across, and the way we discussed how to go about things. [it was of] tremendous help to me, overall, as a person to and how to approach my cricket. A lot of credit goes to him for my performances over the last couple of years." "I had seen him grow right from a ten-year-old boy," Salim Durrani, former India and Rajasthan cricketer said. "He had shown tremendous promise and talent. I feel he should have played a longer period for India" Former India captain Bishen Bedi also paid tribute. "In the domestic arena he was an outstanding batsman," Bedi, who remembers Sharma's century against North Zone in the Duleep Trophy semi-final in Chandigarh in 1976, said. "It was an interesting match in that our own officials thought the opposition were favourites. But he [sharma] played a brilliant knock and gave us a hard time till I bowled him. We were lucky to scrape through." North had made 327 in their first innings and Central fell two runs short, enabling North to qualify based on a first-innings lead. Bedi shared many a social evening with Sharma and if there was a regret he felt that Sharma could have worked a little harder - something that would have helped him play for longer at the international level.

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