Live Cricket India VS Australia : Sachin Tendulkar Breaks Record
Sachin Tendulkar Breaks Record
Sachin Tendulkar broke Brian Lara’s record for most Test runs in the final session of day one in Mohali when he hit Peter Siddle to third man for two runs. The record stood for nearly two years after Lara played his final Test and it was inevitable that Tendulkar would eventually break it. Incidentally, he is also one-day cricket’s leading run-scorer with 16,631 runs.
Tendulkar was expected to attain the feat in Sri Lanka recently but he endured a poor series with the bat, scoring just 95 runs in three Tests. It was only fitting, though, that he achieved the record against Australia, a team he has tormented several times in the past.
Live Cricket India VS Australia : Sachin Tendulkar Breaks Record
Watch India vs Australia 1st Test Match Live India vs Australia Online
India v Australia 1st Test Live, Watch India v Australia Online
Ricky Ponting and Anil Kumble pose with the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, Bangalore, October 8, 2008
Live India Vs Australia First 1st Cricket Test From Chinnaswamy Stadium Bangalore Online free- India Vs Australia cricket test series which starts from october 9th at Chinnaswamy stadium Bangalore the I.T. Capital of India has many special significance. First amnd foremost This India Vs Australia series at the home land is going to be the Final test of DADA the ever green former captain of Indian Team Sourav Ganguly. Having won 21 test matches of a total number of 49 played sourav is very much part and parcel of Indian Cricket history and we are going to miss this Tiger badly in the comuing days. Good Luck Tiger and Best wishes in Advance.
Watch India vs Australia 1st Test Match Live, India vs Australia Online
Greenland Shark
The Greenland Shark had never been filmed alive. Here is a video of the Greenland Shark. The Greenland shark is elusive. The underwater photographers had to dive to search for the Greenland shark. Guides leave to protect their boats. Finally, the weather breaks for divers to go underwater to search for the Greenland shark.
Donald Bradman and the birth of a legend
J.G.W. Davies was a distinguished classical scholar who became the chief psychologist at the War Office during the Second World War, secretary of the Cambridge University appointments board, an executive director of the Bank of England and treasurer and president of MCC. He opened the batting for Kent, played rugby for Blackheath and was three times the British (and therefore world) champion at Rugby fives. Yet he was best known for none of these things because, in 1934 at Fenner’s, he bowled Donald Bradman with an off break for the first nought he had ever made in England.
It was but one small measure of the extraordinary fame of the batsman born in Cootamundra, New South Wales, 100 years ago today. No wonder another relatively obscure cricketer who once dismissed him, Bill Andrews, of Somerset, entitled his autobiography The Hand that Bowled Bradman. Both because of the time in which he lived and the prowess with which he played, the most influential Australian who ever lived reflected glory like no other sportsman. Defeating him was like coming from behind to beat Tiger Woods in the last round of the Open, or outpacing Usain Bolt over 200 metres.
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