I am retired Sourav Ganguly 445 x 250 - 74k - gif www.wittysparks.com | ... last match ... 576 x 423 - 43k - jpg sribasu.info | Ganguly, who retired from ... 240 x 220 - 30k - jpg thatscricket.oneindia.in [ More from thatscricket.oneindia.in ] | ... match, others are Sourav Ganguly ... 304 x 375 - 14k - jpg www.bharatwaves.com | |||
Ganguly retired after the Nagpur ... 128 x 96 - 5k - jpg vs.rediff.com [ More from imagecache03.pixsy.com ] | Sourav Ganguly retired 320 x 260 - 41k - jpg images.keralaonline.com | Ganguly retired after the Nagpur ... 120 x 90 - 3k - jpg get2pc.com | ... Ganguly who retired on Nov 10, ... 254 x 320 - 15k - jpg fullymad.blogspot.com | Ganguly retired after the Nagpur ... 136 x 81 - 3k - jpg vs.rediff.com | ||
In 2000, after the match fixing ... 320 x 236 - 86k - jpg www.kanpurnagar.gov.in | Nagpur: Ganguly, who has retired ... 240 x 220 - 24k - jpg thatscricket.oneindia.in | ... for the retired Sourav Ganguly, ... 468 x 738 - 53k www.dailymail.co.uk | Ganguly overtakes Bradman 150 x 100 - 4k - jpg www.blogcatalog.com | ... the retired Sourav Ganguly, ... 273 x 400 - 21k - jpg indiancricket1.blogspot. |
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Friday, March 27, 2009
RETRIED PHOTOS
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Sourav GangulY Articles
Title | Element | Action | Member | Date | View |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ganguly Goes Back to School | | | | Mar-17-09 9:17pm | Details Current |
Sourav will make a good politician: wife (New Kerala) | | | | Feb-18-09 2:09am | Details Current |
Sourav will make a good politician: wife | | | | Feb-17-09 9:49pm | Details Current |
Sourav Ganguly starts his second career as tv reality show anchor | | | | Feb-10-09 9:49am | Details Current |
Ganguly, Anand, Bindra compliment each other | | | | Jan-16-09 5:01pm | Details Current |
Sourav Ganguly eyeing political debut? | | | | Dec-27-08 2:32pm | Details Current |
Sourav Ganguly eyeing political debut? | | | | Dec-27-08 1:16pm | Details Current |
Ganguly now features in calendar | | | | Dec-27-08 5:16am | Details Current |
ganguly retirement, Cricinfo - 'I never considered retirement' - Ganguly | | Abuse | | Dec-24-08 11:06am | Details (Deleted) |
BBC to make documentary on Sourav Ganguly (Express India) | | | | Nov-21-08 10:42am | Details Current |
Dada joins BCCI technical committee | | | | Nov-21-08 4:35am | Details Current |
Dada joins BCCI technical committee | | | | Nov-21-08 4:35am | Details Current |
Life after cricket: Ganguly starts by penning columns | | | | Nov-14-08 11:18pm | Details Current |
Warm homecoming for Sourav Ganguly | | | | Nov-12-08 12:35am | Details Current |
Ganguly Retired days Images, Sourav Ganguly Retired, Ganguly Celebrating Last Day Pictures, Photos, Stills | | | | Nov-11-08 10:54am | Details Current |
ganguly family photos
In a Bollywood film industry dominated by powerhouse families the Ganguly brothers and their family connections serve as an important bridge between the clans.
Contents[hide] |
[edit] Brief history of the Ganguly Family
The celebrated Ganguly family, epitomized by Ashok Kumar (born 1911), Sati Rani Devi (born 1916), Anoop Kumar (born 1924) and Kishore Kumar (born 1929), serve as one of the most important bridges between the powerhouse families of Indian cinema. The Ganguly family connection is carried further through the networks created by Kishore Kumar's multiple marriages. He was married, at one time or another, to Ruma Guha Thakurta (1950-58), Madhubala (1960-69), Yogeeta Bali (1975-78) and Leena Chandavarkar (1980-87).
History of the Ganguly family begins with Kunjalal Ganguly, a pleader (advocate) by profession coming from a long line of lawyers[1], and his wife Gouri Rani Devi, granddaughter of Raja Shibchandra Banerjee and sister of classical singer Dhananjay Banerjee. The celebrated brothers and their sister, who gave birth to the Mukherjee's of Bollywood, were born these two. Supposedly, Kishore Kumar inherited his sense of comedy from Kunjalal. Also, the most popular film featuring all three Ganguly brothers - Chalti Ka Naam Gaadi - was, supposedly, insprired by Kunjalal's Chrysler[2] that he bought in 1928, a year before the birth of his youngest son.
If Rattan Bai from their extended family network is ignored, Ashok Kumar was the first person in the family to go into the film industry. His daughter Preeti Ganguly, son-in law Deven Verma and granddaughter Anuradha Patel also became accomplished actors.
SOURAV CHANDIDAS GANGULY
Ganguly is a left-handed batsman and a right-handed medium-pace bowler. Ganguly is naturally right-handed, but became a left-handed batsman at a young age so that he could use his brother, Snehasish’s equipment.
Ganguly has been nicknamed Bengal Tiger, Prince of Calcutta, Lord Snooty by his opponents, and affectionately Dada (which means elder brother in Bengali) by his team-mates.
Ganguly went on to become the captain of the Indian cricket team from 2000 to 2005. He led India to the 2003 World Cup finals, and holds the Indian captaincy record for the most Test victories.
Following an exit from the national team in early 2006, Ganguly was recalled to the Indian test side in December, staging a successful comeback in the 2006 - 2007 Indian tour of South Africa.
International career
Ganguly made his One-Day International debut for India against West Indies in 1992 scoring just 3 he was dropped immediately. He returned to International cricket four years later, following a good domestic record, he was recalled into the national side for a Test series in England. He made his Test debut at Lord’s, scoring a century he became only the third cricketer to score a century on debut at Lord’s, after Harry Graham and John Hampshire. (Andrew Strauss has also since accomplished this feat). In the next Test match at Trent Bridge he scored another century, 136, sharing in a 255 run stand with Sachin Tendulkar.
In 1997 Ganguly scored his maiden ODI century, opening the innings he scored 113, in his side’s 238, against Sri Lanka later that year he won four consecutive Man of the match awards in the Sahara Cup with Pakistan the second of these was won after he took 5/16 off 10 overs, his best bowling in a ODI. After a barren run in Test cricket his form returned at the end of the year with three centuries in four Tests all against Sri Lanka two of this involved 250+ stands with Sachin Tendulkar.
In January 1998, he had one of his most memorable performances in the final of the Independence Cup at Dhaka against Pakistan he scored 124 as India successfully chased down 315 off 48 overs, winning the Man of the match award. In March 1998 he was part of the India team that beat Australia his biggest impact came in Calcutta as he took three wickets having opened the bowling with his medium pace.
In the 1999 World Cup Ganguly smashed 183 against Sri Lanka at Taunton, the innings took 158 balls and included 17 fours and 7 sixes. It is the second highest in World Cup history and the highest by an Indian. His partnership of 318 with Rahul Dravid is the highest ever in the World Cup and is the second highest in all ODI cricket.
In 1999/00 India lost series to both Australia and South Africa in the five Tests Ganguly struggled scoring 224 runs at 22.40. However his ODI form was impressive with five centuries over the season taking him to the top of PwC One Day Ratings for batsmen.[1]
In 2000, after the match fixing scandal Ganguly was named the captain of the India team. In the Champions Trophy of that year he scored 2 centuries but his second in the final was in vain as New Zealand won by four wickets.
In 2003 under his captaincy India reached the World Cup Final, where they lost to the Australians.
While he has achieved significant success as captain, his individual performance deteriorated during his captaincy, especially after successes in the World Cup, the tour of Australia in 2003 and the Pakistan series in 2004. Following indifferent form in 2004 and poor form in 2005, he was dropped from the team in October 2005. He remained active on the first-class cricket scene in hopes of a recall, but his performance was a mixed bag - he hit a couple of centuries in domestic cricket, but his English county stint in 2005 and subsequent appearances in the Challenger Trophy were failures.
Ganguly has 22 centuries in ODIs, in terms of number of centuries in ODIs, he is only behind [2] Sachin Tendulkar, Sanath Jayasuriya and Ricky Ponting. Sourav, along with Sachin Tendulkar, formed by far the most successful opening pair in One Day Cricket, having amassed the highest number of century partnerships (20) for the first wicket. Together, they have scored 5,927 runs at an average of 48.98 [3].
Ganguly is the fourth player to cross 11,000 ODI runs and third player to cross 10,000 ODI runs and so far the fastest in ODI history, after Sachin Tendulkar. He also reached 6000, 7000, 8000 and 9000 ODI runs milestones in the fewest number of matches. Sourav can bowl medium-pacers as well, but has under-achieved in this aspect in Test matches, taking 28 wickets in 84 matches, at an average of 52.47. As of 2006, he is the only Indian captain to win a Test series in Pakistan (although two of the three tests of that series was led by Rahul Dravid).
In 2004, he was awarded the Padma Shri.
His older brother Snehasish Ganguly played first-class cricket for Bengal.
Sourav Ganguly’s international cricket career could be easily bisected into 2 halves, the pre and the post Y2K eras. The significance of the year 2000 lies not only in the fact that he became the captain of the Indian team but also in the fact that the ICC introduced the one bouncer per over rule in ODIs starting from that year. This introduction of the rule by the ICC had a negative impact on Sourav Ganguly’s batting average, which plunged from a high 45.5 before the year 2000 to a low 34.9 between the 5 year period of 2001-2005 [4]. Also, against Test playing nations (which included Zimbabwe and Bangladesh), his overall average plunged further down to 30.66, as did his ‘away’ average which fell to 29. He managed to score only (6) centuries between 2001-2005, of which 3 centuries were against Kenya & 1 was against Namibia.[5] This sudden drop in his batting average against Test playing nations after 2001 was clearly a result of the short pitched bowling he had to encounter from opposition bowlers. As S.Rajesh, the assistant editor of Cricinfo analyzes, Ganguly has been dismissed numerous times fending off the short ball.[6]
Also, Ganguly’s Test career had been riddled with lean patches, the first of which stretched for 3 years from Dec 1999 to Dec 2002 [7], during which his batting average fell to 31.77 in 36 consecutive Test matches over 60 innings. The next biggest lean patch of his career occurred after the 2003 World Cup, when his ODI average fell to 28 and this was when his place in the team was questioned by numerous Indian cricket fans. He averaged 24.95 in 25 ODI matches between August 2004 and September 2005 [8], before being finally dropped from the ODI side.
Despite his hot and cold streaks Sourav Ganguly is only the third Indian Test match batsman to maintain a career average that never dipped below 40 runs per innings for his entire Test career. The other two who achieved this feat are Sunil Gavaskar and Mohammad Azharuddin.
Ganguly also shares with G.R. Viswanath the Indian record for scoring at least 10 or more centuries and never being on the losing side in every match in which they had scored a century. He also shares with Mohammad Azharuddin the record of scoring two consecutive hundreds in his first two Test matches, though Azharuddin bettered that by scoring a third consecutive hundred in his third Test match.
Ganguly has the highest Test and ODI aggregate of any left-handed batsman India has produced and his 13 Test and 22 ODI centuries are also a record for any Indian left-hander.
It was, however, as captain of the Indian team that Ganguly’s biggest achievements occurred. He led India in 49 Test Matches, winning 21 of those, including 12 of them outside India. All three figures are records for Indian Test captains. He also led India to their first series wins in both Tests and ODIs in Pakistan, a feat that had eluded India for over 50 years. Ganguly also led India to more Test wins (12) outside India between 2000 and 2005 than all Indian captains had done between 1980 and 2000. He led India to victory over Steve Waugh’s Australia in the 2001 Border-Gavaskar trophy which is considered one of the greatest in Indian cricket history.
Rahul Dravid once commented, "On the off-side, first there is God, then there is Ganguly”.
Comeback
In November 2006 Ganguly was selected by the national board of selectors, chaired by Dilip Vengsarkar, in the team for the three-Test series against South Africa. The decision came after India could not reach even the Semi-finals of the Champions Trophy, held in India, as well as losing the opening three games of an ODI series with South Africa. The selectors decided to back experience in a total reversal of coach Greg Chappell’s mission to inject fresh blood into the Indian cricket team and Ganguly was selected alongside VVS Laxman and Zaheer Khan, who had also been removed from the Test team recently. Ganguly and Zaheer both fared well. Ganguly emerged as the leading run getter for India in the recently concluded Test series with South Africa.
After being dropped from the side for almost eight months, Ganguly was recalled to the Test team for the series against South Africa in December 2006, after an injury to Yuvraj Singh. And after the recall, in his first warm up match against Rest of South Africa, he scored 83 runs when his team was in troublesome position at 69/5. This knock helped India win against Rest of South Africa.
He went on to play a crucial knock in the first test match, scoring 51 not out in the first innings in a low scoring game. India went on to win the match, its first win in South African soil for 17 years. Though India ended up losing the next two test matches and thus the series, Ganguly emerged as the top run scorer for India, with an aggregate of 214.
In the next series against Sri Lanka, his performance of 168 runs from 3 matches earned him the "Man of the Series Award". It was his first MoS Award in 6 years.
On January 12, 2007 after his successful Test comeback he was recalled for the ODI team, 15 months after he was dropped from the ODI side, as India played host to West Indies and Sri Lanka in back to back ODI tournaments. He staged an excellent comeback by scoring a match-winning 98 run knock in Nagpur on his return in the first ODI. Based on his performances (which included a Man of the Series Award in the Sri Lankan series). Ganguly was named to the World Cup Squad. He scored 66 runs against Bangladesh in India’s opening game at the 2007 World Cup however India lost this match and were knocked out of the tournament in the group stage.
HIS PHTOS GALLERY
Photographs | Description |
---|---|
Youth and Childhood photos | Some vintage pics! |
The rookie. | Sachin5.gif(26.2kb) |
Portrait#1 (B/W) | Sachin11.gif(8.2kb) |
Portrait#2 | Sachin7.jpg(11.3kb) |
The Cover drive. | Sachin1.jpg(7.5kb) |
One of his explosive cuts.(Look for cover!) | Sachin4.jpg(52.9kb) |
The mighty pull. | Sachin3.jpg(11.9kb) |
Down the wicket and into the stands. | Sachin5.jpg(24.5kb) |
A Century, perhaps. | Sachin6.jpg(57.9kb) |
Stumped! | Sacstump.jpg(15.1kb) |
With his team and the Sahara Cup-97. | Sah97.jpg(36.1kb) |
The captain and the trophy. | Sachin.jpg(24.6kb) |
History Of Sachin Tendulkar - Is he a World Class Player at such a young age?
Member rating: No Rating | Words: | Submitted: Tue Aug 12 2003
On the left is an image preview of every page of this document, and below are the first 150 words with formatting removed:
History Of Sachin Tendulkar- Is he a World Class Player at such a young age? Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar was born on 24th April 1973 in a middle class Maharashtrian family at Mumbai. He took to cricket after he was 10 years of age and he played his international cricket at 16. This goes to show that this man was born with instinctive ability and he mastered this game to perfection in no time. This 5 ft 4 inch wizard of Indian Cricket did his schooling from Shardhashram High School at Dadar, Mumbai. He was coached by Mr. Ramakant Achrekar for whom he's got high esteem. He came into the limelight when he along with Vinod Kambli, his team-mate and close friend scored a massive 664 run partnership in school cricket. From then on there was no looking back for this little genius who has become a sort of a torment for...
CHILDHOOD PHOTOS
Tendulkar - Childhood |
Young Tendulkar Batting |
Tendulkar with School team |
Tendulkar with childhood friends |
Tendulkar with Kapil Dev & Azharuddin |
Young Sachin Bowling |
Raising his bat |
Attitude.. |
Coy.. |