Friday, June 24, 2011

About Indian Cricket 


About indian cricket

India national cricket team

India
India cricket crest

India cricket crest
Test status granted
1932
First Test match
England at Lord'sLondon, 25–28 June 1932
Captain
Coach
Official ICC Test and ODI ranking
1st (Test)
2nd (ODI) [2]
Test matches
- This year
447
14[1]
Last Test match
South Africa at Durban,
26-30 Dec 2010
Wins/losses
- This year
109/139[2]
8/3
As of 31 December 2010
The Indian cricket team is the national cricket team of India. Governed by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), it is a full member of the International Cricket Council (ICC) with Test and One Day International (ODI) status.
The Indian cricket team is currently ranked first by the ICC in Tests and second in ODIs.[3] As of October 2010, the Indian team has played 445 Test matches, winning 108, losing 138 and drawing 198 of its games, with 1 match ending in a tie.[4] India has a relatively better record in One Day Internationals, winning 52% of matches played. Currently, Gary Kirsten is the head coach while Mahendra Singh Dhoni is the captain in all forms of the game.[5] Under the leadership of Dhoni, the Indian team has set a national record for most back-to-back ODI wins (9 straight wins)[6] and has emerged as one of the most formidable teams in international cricket.[7]
Although cricket was introduced to India by European merchant sailors in the 18th-century and the first cricket club in India was established in Calcutta in 1792, India's national cricket team did not play their first Test match until 25 June 1932 at Lord's.[8] They became the sixth team to be granted Test cricket status.[9] In their first fifty years of international cricket, India proved weaker than Australia and England, winning only 35 of the 196 test matches.[10] The team, however, gained strength near the end of the 1970s with the emergence of players such as Sunil GavaskarKapil Dev and the Indian spin quartetErapalli Prasanna and Srinivas Venkataraghavan (both off spinners), Bhagwat Chandrasekhar (a leg spinner), and Bishen Singh Bedi (a left-arm spinner). Traditionally much stronger at home than abroad, the Indian team has improved its overseas form since the start of the 21st century. It won the Cricket World Cup in 1983 and was runners-up in 2003 under Sourav Ganguly. India have also been the Runners in 2000 ICC KnockOut Trophy, and the Joint Champions along with Sri Lanka in 2002 ICC Champions Trophy led by Sourav Ganguly in both the instances. India also won the inaugural World Twenty20 under Mahendra Singh Dhoni in 2007. The current team contains many of the world's leading players, including Sachin TendulkarRahul Dravid and Virender Sehwag who hold numerous cricketing world records.[11]
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