Showing posts with label Number. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Number. Show all posts

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Proteas eyeing Test number one spot

Updated February 15, 2012 17:21:55

South Africa open hostilities Friday against New Zealand on a six-week tour it hopes will climax with a 3-0 Test sweep that would see England toppled from the top of the Test rankings.

The tour begins in earnest with a Twenty20 international in Wellington but most attention will focus on next month's Test series as South Africa, currently second in the ICC world rankings, look to become top dogs.

England's lead in the rankings was slashed to a single point after their humiliating 3-0 whitewash against Pakistan, meaning South Africa can overtake them if they post a similar scoreline in the Test series against New Zealand.

However, the Proteas have never managed a clean sweep in a three-Test series against the Black Caps and coach Gary Kirsten conceded his charges may have trouble adapting to unpredictable wickets.

"For any team it takes a bit of time to adjust to the weather and wickets," he said. "The wickets can be quite different every time you come here."

The tour, including three Twenty20 internationals, three one-day internationals and three Tests, will provide a gauge for New Zealand coach John Wright of how far his team has come following his appointment in December 2010.

Wright guided the Black Caps to the semi-finals of last year's World Cup in a campaign which included a shock quarter-final win over South Africa that was marred by an ugly spat after Proteas batsman AB de Villiers, now the one-day and Twenty20 skipper, was run out.

New Zealand also scored a rare Test victory on Australian soil to draw a series with the Baggy Greens in December and Wright has unearthed a rich seam of young talent, including batsman Kane Williamson and seamer Doug Bracewell.

And they are confident after a string of comprehensive wins over Zimbabwe over the past month in a Test match, three one-dayers and two Twenty20 matches.

Kirsten, whose team is coming off a Test series win over Sri Lanka last month, said the World Cup bust-up with New Zealand was in the past and his players would not be drawn into a slanging match with the home side.

"I don't think we're going to be worrying too much about what New Zealand are doing," he said.

"We feel if we play really good cricket and don't say anything we're going to win more games than we'll lose. If New Zealand feel they want to get verbal with us, that's their business."

AFP

Tags: australian-football-league, sport, south-africa, new-zealand

First posted February 15, 2012 17:21:55


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Saturday, May 21, 2011

56: Joe DiMaggio and the Last Magic Number in Sports

56: Joe DiMaggio and the Last Magic Number in SportsSeventy baseball seasons ago, on a May afternoon at Yankee Stadium, Joe DiMaggio lined a hard single to leftfield. It was the quiet beginning to the most resonant baseball achievement of all time. Starting that day, the vaunted Yankee centerfielder kept on hitting-at least one hit in game after game after game.

In the summer of 1941, as Nazi forces moved relentlessly across Europe and young American men were drafted by the millions, it seemed only a matter of time before the U.S. went to war. The nation was apprehensive. Yet for two months in that tense summer, America was captivated by DiMaggio's astonishing hitting streak. In 56, Kostya Kennedy tells the remarkable story of how the streak found its way into countless lives, from the Italian kitchens of Newark to the playgrounds of Queens to the San Francisco streets of North Beach; from the Oval Office of FDR to the Upper West Side apartment where Joe's first wife, Dorothy, the movie starlet, was expecting a child. In this crisp, evocative narrative Joe DiMaggio emerges in a previously unseen light, a 26-year-old on the cusp of becoming an icon. He comes alive-a driven ballplayer, a mercurial star and a conflicted husband-as the tension and the scrutiny upon him build with each passing day.

DiMaggio's achievement lives on as the greatest of sports records. Alongside the story of DiMaggio's dramatic quest, Kennedy deftly examines the peculiar nature of hitting streaks and with an incisive, modern-day perspective gets inside the number itself, as its sheer improbability heightens both the math and the magic of 56 games in a row.


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