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Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Ind Vs Aus World Cup quarter-final Cricket Live Score

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India vs Australia Indies (Ind Vs Aus) ICC World Cup quarter-final Live Cricket Score.

Current world cup holders Australia take on tournament favourites India for a place in the semi-finals. Viewers from around the world will be glued to their television sets in what should turn out to be a closely contested match that could go down to the wire.

Date: 24th March

London Start Time: 09:00

Venue and Pitch

The match will take place at the Sardar Patel Stadium in Motera, Ahmedabad. The pitch will offer a bit of bounce during the start of each innings but will settle down after that. The team that wins the toss will look to bat first and look to get a total in excess of 270 in order to put pressure on the opposition.

Team News

Australia have concerns over the form of captain Ricky Ponting and Cameron White. The bowling of Jason Krejza will be severely tested by the Indian batsmen and Australia will be depending a lot on their pace trio.

Virender Sehwag is expected to play in this game and that means either Yousuf Pathan or Suresh Raina will have to be left out. After Pathan’s poor showing in the last 6 games, Raina who is also a brilliant fielder will most likely get the nod.

Match Odds

It was 8 years ago that Australia took on India in a world cup final and defeated them by a massive margin. India 8/11 have the upper hand this time because they are playing at home and the wicket will suit their spinners. However, Australia 6/5 know that if they get a few quick wickets, the pressure of playing at home will get to the Indians and could cause another batting collapse.

Top Batsman

Mitchell Johnson has said that he plans to take out the dangerous Virender Sehwag 10/3 with short pitch bowling. Sachin Tendulkar 10/3 and Yuvraj Singh 11/2 will be the other key players to watch out for.

Shane Watson 7/2 failed in the last game but Mr. Consistent will be the key wicket for the Indians. Michael Clarke 9/2 has been in great form and along with Michael Hussey 11/2 will look to anchor the Australian innings.

Featured Bet

Either Sachin Tendulkar or Virender Sehwag will score a century in this match and a total close to 300 will be on the cards if India bats first.

Match Predictions

India have the advantage of playing at home and because of the conditions have their noses ahead of the Australians. They should move on to the semi-finals and most probably face Pakistan.

Best Bet: Virender Sehwag 10/3

India vs Australia (IND VS AUS) Quarter-Final

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IND VS AUS Quarter-Final: World Cup 2011 gets perilous today.

India vs AustraliaCricket News Updates! Today is the day this World Cup gets perilous. India take on Australia in Motera and we are guaranteed to lose either the winners of the last three World Cups or the hosts and favourites. After 33 days of preamble the juices are well and truly flowing.

And what a perfect match up it is. In the light blue corner we have the Indians who will take to the field with the finest ODI batting line up known to mankind. At the top of the order sit two of the all time greats; Virender Sehwag and Sachin Tendulkar .

As an Englishman I was brought up to believe there would never be a pair to match Hobbs and Sutcliffe. Haynes and Greenidge came close, Langer and Hayden fell just short, but Sehwag and Tendulkar leave the legendary Englishmen narrowly in their wake.

Despite both being right handed they are magnificently contrasted. Tendulkar is technically perfect, quick on his feet and willing to bat all day. Sehwag hasn't moved his feet in 10 years even to run between the wickets, is technically suspect against the short ball and gets bored more quickly than a five year old boy in an interior furnishings shop. But he possesses the best eyes and speediest hands in the known universe. He has also hit his first ball for four on each of the five occasions he has batted. That is just ridiculous.

Next up is an array of quality in-form batsmen; Gambhir, Yuvraj, and Kohli supported by the big hitting Pathan and Dhoni. With that kind of strength in that kind of depth what hope is there for any bowling attack? Well, as luck would have it for all of India's opponents to date, hope there is aplenty as the lower order has consistently thrown away match winning positions through an over-eagerness to score mammoth totals and a baffling inability to read the match situation.

In part this desperation to score so heavily is the result of anxiety over a gruesomely mediocre attack. Zaheer Khan is currently relied on to provide both containment and wickets. Harbhajan continues to frustrate while the dismally benign Pathan and Munaf Patel may as well negotiate their figures with the opposing side before the start of play. However, the welcome but insanely delayed introduction of Ashwin adds wicket-taking potential. I would play him and Chawla, dispense with a second seamer and return to the giddy days of the early 70s when India frequently took to the field with three quality spinners.

In the rather migraine-inducing yellow corner sit the current champions, Australia. Unbeaten in 34 matches until their rousing trouncing at the hands of Pakistan on Saturday, they have adopted the unique and seemingly perverse strategy on the sub-continent of packing their side with fast bowlers. But when you've tried ten spinners in four years, none of whom consistently averages below 40 with the ball, why not put your faith in what you do best?

And so far it's pretty much worked for Australia, partly because all three pacemen, Tait, Johnson and Lee, are so different. Lee is the steadiest of the three but is hugely experienced in Indian conditions and still pushing 90 mph. Tait can go for 12 in an over but also beat the very best batsmen for pace, and Johnson is the worst kind of bowler to face. He has no clue what he'll bowl from one delivery to the next and is thus the perfect man to break up those tricky mid-innings partnerships when the batting side are cruising.

Add to that the steady trundlers of Shane Watson and you have a decent attack. If I were Australian I'd be pushing for the inclusion of David Hussey at the expense of Cameron White to add some flat brisk off spin and effective earnest nudges in the middle overs, but otherwise the Australians have for once got their team selection almost spot on.

Australia's real problem lies in the batting. Currently they have two lower order hitters opening the innings. This is fine as long as they do the decent thing and get out once the initial power plays are complete, allowing proper batsmen (Clarke and Hussey) to push the ones and twos. But the form of Ponting is a serious worry.

He has been fractious and out of sorts for about a year now. His feet are still moving in that firm decisive fashion that used to put the fear of God into bowlers, but his hands now take a while to catch up. He is clearly raging at the dying of the light but his players, inexplicably, appear to adore him.



Saturday, March 5, 2011

Cricket Live Score: AUS vs SL 2011 ODI Live Streaming

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Australia vs Sri Lanka (AUS vs SL) ICC World Cup Live Cricket Score.

Australia vs Sri Lanka Australia and Sri Lanka are both geared up to take on each other in one of the much awaited match of the World Cup tournament.

The last time when spectators saw these two teams take on each other was way back in the final of the 2007 world cup match. However, the outcome of this clash in not expected to impact the World cup future of the four test nations in this group as they are certain to make it to the quarterfinals.

Nevertheless, cricket fans will be much intrigued to experience the performance of the Sri Lankan trumpeted tri of Malinga, Murali and Mendies Vs the fast and furious trio of Lee, Tait and Johnson. Sri Lanka will also look forward to gain some psychological confidence after their recent loss to Pakistan while Australia faces their first big challenge of the tournament.

The pitch at Colombo is expected to be quite sluggish, thanks to the rain that poured down on Friday evening. With showers expected on Saturday morning, the pitch is expected to behave much slower and lousy.

Australia (probable) 1 Shane Watson, 2 Brad Haddin (wk), 3 Ricky Ponting (capt), 4 Michael Clarke, 5 David Hussey, 6 Cameron White, 7 Steve Smith, 8 Mitchell Johnson, 9 Jason Krezja, 10 Brett Lee, 11 Shaun Tait.

Sri Lanka (probable) 1 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 2 Upul Tharanga, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (capt & wk), 4 Mahela Jayawardene, 5 Thilan Samaraweera, 6 Angelo Mathews, 7 Chamara Silva, 8 Nuwan Kulasekara, 9 Lasith Malinga, 10 Ajantha Mendis, 11 Muttiah Muralitharan



Thursday, February 24, 2011

Cricket Live Score: AUS vs NZ 2011 ODI Live Streaming.

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Australia vs New Zealand (AUS vs NZ) ICC World Cup Live Cricket Score.

Cricket Live Score: AUS vs NZThe ICC World Cup 2011 match for today, the 8th one, featuring Australia vs New Zealand (NZ vs AUS), is happening at the Vidarbha Cricket Association Stadium at Nagpur.

Australia won the toss against New Zealand and chose to field.

New Zealand: 104/6 (25.5 overs)

MJ Guptill b Watson 10 (25b 2x4 0x6)
BB McCullum c Krejza b Tait 16 (12b 3x4 0x6)
JD Ryder c Haddin b Johnson 25 (31b 6x4 0x6)
LRPL Taylor b Tait 7(22b 1x4 0x6)
James Franklin c Haddin b Johnson 0 (3b 0x4 0x6)
Scott Styris c Haddin b Tait 0 (4b 0x4 0x6)
Jamie How (not out) 15 (36b 0x4 0x6)
NL McCullum (not out) 17 (24b 1x4 0x6)

Extras: 14

One of either Dayle Hadlee (Richard's brother) or Ian Chappell will be wearing a smug smile on Friday at the end of the Australia-New Zealand brawl at the Vidarbha Cricket Association Stadium in Nagpur. If your ears are being deafened by the clamour of sub-continental fans thrilled at having gotten the gamut of cricket’s spectrum for a full two months, brace yourself.

The trans-Tasman rivalry just got added to the din, with the two cricketing boards suggesting that the winner of the match will not just get vital points, but also get to hang on to the Chappell-Haddlee trophy for a year. As the teams contest their age-old give-and-take in India, fans will be treated to a show of patriotic vendetta along with the cricketing sparring. While both sides are coming off wins against lower-ranked sides, New Zealand routed their opponent brutally, while Australia managed to escape the consequences of a mediocre batting performance with some blistering pace bowling.

On Tuesday, the Dutch batsmen were able to extract 292 runs from the Nagpur wicket. Earlier, in the warm-up game New Zealand played here, their total of 311 was brashly endangered by Ireland, before they prevailed. New Zealand will, therefore, find the wicket kindlier for the experience and sweet memories from that outing. For all your money, the Vidarbha Stadium can be expected to produce another flurry of runs on Friday as well.
Australia

Australia’s batting has always had a good opening combination. With Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden providing blazing starts at the helm, it was always easy for the middle order to show form even when they lacked it. At present though, while Shane Watson has managed to replicate one half of the traditional Aussie impetus, Brad Haddin has not been of the same pedigree alongside him.

As a result, the middle order has had to beat a path of its own more often. While Ricky Ponting seemed to want to get a good grip on the track, playing the cautious bat against Prosper Utseya’s spin, Michael Clarke felt some good bat on ball against Zimbabwe, and will be skipping down in response to Daniel Vettori’s flight. Despite being a player who is comfortable attacking spin, David Hussey has strangely been falling to spinners all-month long. However, before having been second-guessed by Ray Price, he had struck a couple of blows to get the Aussies going towards the end of their innings. Cameron White has been finding it hard to time the ball, but Ponting is not worried too much. He averages 47 in India, and should find it easy to loft the ball straight on this flat pitch.

It was in Nagpur that Jason Krejza debuted with 12 wickets against the Indian Test side. On Monday, he troubled the Zimbabweans with his flight and tweak, turning the ball square on occasion. While the Aussie batsmen had struggled against spin, it was high pace and aerial movement that Shaun Tait, Mitchell Johnson and Brett Lee used to knock over the Zimbabweans. Johnson picked up four, bowling full and straight, sliding a couple of quick swingers off the outside edge, and will hope to keep his radar going the same. The Kiwis will be in two minds whether to focus their preparations on Australia’s pace attack or on the spinning track.
The pinch of Michael-Hussey-deprivation felt by the Australian side will be aggravated now that he has had a good recovery from his hamstring surgery, becoming fit enough to be considered for the domestic Sheffield Shield matches in Australia. Add to that the great run of scores he had in the 2010 Chappell-Hadlee series and Australia’s dire need of a middle-order batsman capable of standing firm on the turning wickets, and Australian selector Greg Chappell might well be getting some hate-mail.
New Zealand
If the Australians are anxiously training against spin in the nets, New Zealand should be equally concerned about their own discomfort against turn. Having seen Harbhajan Singh and Ravichandran Ashwin topple the Kiwi batsmen in the practice game on Thursday, the likes of Krejza, Smith, Hussey and Clarke will undoubtedly rub their palms with delight when their turn comes. Jesse Ryder virtually yearned for the pavillion against India, flat-batting mistimed shots in trying to cope with the spinners, while Ross Taylor got out before he could bring out his repertoire of sweeps and flicks.
That the New Zealand bowlers utterly crushed the timid Kenyan batsmen at Chennai will not count for too much when Watson and Haddin take strike on Friday. Jacob Oram got some lift with his height, and has displayed a knack for picking up wickets early in his spells. Although Hamish Bennett, who picked up four wickets on Sunday, was effective with his tight lines, he may find it hard to keep his place if Kyle Mills is fit after having missed the team’s tournament opener due to a back problem. Mills does not, however, have a particularly forceful record against Australia, with an average of 31 and economy of over 5, and unless he’s fully fit, Bennett might have the edge over him.
Daniel Vettori is not as dominant against the Australians as he is with the rest of the world. His career bowling average of 31.32 and economy of 4.13 both shoot up playing against the Aussies. But playing on the turning Indian tracks may put a different spin on his stats.



Monday, February 21, 2011

Cricket Live Score: AUS vs ZIM 2011 Fifth ODI Live

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Australia vs Zimbabwe (AUS vs. ZIM) ICC World Cup Live Cricket Score.

Australia vs ZimbabweThe ICC World Cup 2011 match for today, the fourth one, featuring Australia vs Zimbabwe (Aus vs Zim), is happening at the Sardar Patel Gujarat Stadium, Motera, Ahmedabad.

Australia won the toss against Zimbabwe and chose to bat. Australia made a surprisingly slow start, with Haddin at one stage making just 16 runs off 41 balls.

Australia start their campaign for a fifth ICC Cricket World Cup trophy with a tricky opener against Zimbabwe on Monday.

Australia have been unbeaten in 22 matches in the last two tournaments played in South Africa (2003) and West Indies (2007), under Ricky Ponting.

They have won 23 back to back matches stretching to 1999 and have been unconquered in 29 ties, which includes the unforgettable tied match against South Africa in the semifinal 12 years ago.

On paper, Ponting's men hold a clear edge over the African nation led by Elton Chigumbara, but would be eager not to be tripped by the one-time minnows of the 50-over game as was the case 28 years ago in England.

The Aussies, fresh from a 6-1 rout of their Ashes nemesis England in the following ODI series at home, landed in India only to be rudely awakened by successive defeats in their two practice games against India and South Africa at Bangalore.

But they are sure to hit the strap on the run when their bid to clinch their fifth World Cup crown starts.

The Aussies have a fine batting line-up in which Shane Watson, who opens the batting, and Ponting are crucial in the top order to lay the platform for others to build upon.

But a question mark remains over the ability of the middle order batsmen in playing spin bowling on Indian pitches.

Watson has performed brilliantly with the bat in ODIs in the last year, having scored 832 runs and Zimbabwe's think tank would have talked about ways of stopping the Queenslander from taking the game away.

"It's much different and bigger responsibility in opening the innings than batting at number seven in the last World Cup, a role Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden did so beautifully throughout their career. It's a great responsibility and I'm looking forward to that challenge," said Watson.

Ponting, whose fabulous innings of 140 not out in 121 balls in the 2003 World Cup final buried Indian hopes, has come back into action after a long injury lay-off following a broken little finger sustained during the Ashes series against England. But he has quickly got into his stride with good half-century knocks in two practice games.

It's the form of the others which is a big worry for Australia. Without the presence of the injured Michael Hussey, who was adept in playing the slow bowlers on previous visits to the sub-continent, they lack a batsman around whom the other quick run-getters like Cameron White can play around.

The Indian spinners exposed the chink in the Aussie batting armoury in the practice game when they triggered a collapse and helped the hosts defend a meagre total with aplomb.

Though not too much needs to be read into the practice ties, as Watson insisted earlier, Zimbabwe's think tank would surely have noted this stuttering performance with some glee as their own attack revolves around spin rather than pace as was the case in the past.

In bowling, Australia have a pace attack that can be handy for opposing batsmen even on the slow and low sub-continental wickets.

The biggest plus for them has been the return to what looks like the form of his old by spearhead Brett Lee who is expected to open the bowling with sling-arm action and speedy Shaun Tait with left-arm Mitchell Johnson coming in as first change.

Australia have an excess of riches in pace and medium pace with Watson and John Hastings, who is expected to play, coming in behind the top three. But they lack a top class front-line spin bowler barring Jason Krejza, who has been recalled after several months, to bowl the middle overs when the field is spread out.

Ricky Ponting will create the Australian record of making most appearances in ICC CWC matches when he will take field against Zimbabwe and will overtake former teammate Glenn McGrath in the process.

Ponting, who is also eying rare feat of winning three World Cup trophies as skipper, is tied with McGrath on 39 appearances till date.

Zimbabwe have not been hot property in ODIs over the last few months and barring a few victories over a less than full-strength India at home, have not really been up to the mark.

They have a reasonably sufficient batting line-up in which Brendon Taylor stands out with his ability and experience, but can find the going tough against the Aussie pace attack.

Zimbabwe are hoping that a spin-oriented attack, consisting of former skipper Prosper Utseya, left-armer Ray Price and Graeme Cremer would do the magic against the middle order of Australia.

"It is going to be tough to play the first match of the World Cup before the defending champions Australia. But I think the guys are prepared," leg spinner Cremer said.

Cremer also said the bowlers were learning the tricks of bowling on sub-continental tracks by watching seasoned bowlers like India's main trump card Harbhajan Singh.

"We have watched Harbhajan (Singh) bowl. At what speed he bowls and what length he bowls. It is good for us. And on the last tour to Bangladesh (in December 2010), we saw how our spinners bowled and their spinners, and there tracks are pretty similar to here," said the 24-year-old with 47 one-day wickets to his credit.

"Spin is one of our strengths with which we could take on the Australians, which is a tough team. We ought to restrict them to a low score," said Utseya.

Even with these factors which are likely to help them, the Zimbabweans have a huge task on hand in taming the three-time defending champions and cause the first big upset of the tournament as was the case in 1983 in England.

Teams:

Australia: Shane Watson, Brad Haddin (wk), Ricky Ponting (capt), Michael Clarke, Callum Ferguson, David Hussey, Cameron White, Tim Paine (wk), Steven Smith, John Hastings, Mitchell Johnson, Jason Krejza, Brett Lee, Shaun Tait, Doug Bollinger.

Zimbabwe: Elton Chigumbura (capt), Regis Chakabva, Charles Coventry, Graeme Cremer, Craig Ervine, Terry Duffin, Gregory Lamb, Shingirai Masakadza, Chris Mpofu, Ray Price, Tatenda Taibu, Tinashe Panyangara, Brendan Taylor, Prosper Utseya and Sean Williams.
Umpires: Asoka de Silva and Richard Kettleborough, Third umpire: Amish Saheba, Match Referee: Jeff Crowe

Approaching milestones

- Ricky Ponting would be setting a record for most appearances in the World Cup. At present, he shares the record with Glenn McGrath. Both have appeared in 39 games between 1996 and 2007.

- Australia have played 29 games in succession between May 27, 1999 and April 28, 2007 without losing - a record at the World Cup. With just one victory in the 2011 edition, Australia would be the first nation to play 30 consecutive games without losing. Apart from Australia, not even a single team has played ten consecutive games without losing. Australia's tally includes 22 consecutive games won by them between June 20, 1999 and April 28, 2007.

- Ponting is the only skipper to enjoy a cent per cent record, having won all the 22 world cup matches. He is all set to overtake Stephen Fleming's tally of 27 matches as captain.

- Ponting (954 at 59.62 in 22 games) needs 46 runs to become the first captain to aggregate 1,000 runs in the World Cup. In case of a hundred in any of the games during the present competition, he would be eclipsing Sourav Ganguly's record of three hundreds as captain.

Australia vs Zimbabwe in ODIs

The two countries have played 27 games against each other in ODIs. Australia have won 25, Zimbabwe 1 while the remaining game could not produce a result. The winning % for Australia is 96.15 and 3.84 for Zimbabwe.

Australia vs Zimbabwe in World Cup

Having won their first game against Australia in the 1983 World Cup by 13 runs, Zimbabwe have lost the next seven games - their winning % being 12.50 as against Australia's 87.50. Australia, except for the defeat in their first encounter against Zimbabwe, have won all their result-oriented games.

Overall World Cup Record

Australia have won 51 out of 69 contested (Lost 17 & NR 1) - winning % 74.63.

Zimbabwe have won 8 out of 45 played (Lost 33, NR 3 & Tied 1) - winning % 20.23.

Dave Lindahl Scam

Friday, August 20, 2010

Crocodile predicts Australian election winner

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Dirty Harry, a crocodile, has predicted that Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard will be re-elected.

The saltwater croc made his choice on Thursday in his enclosure in the northern city of Darwin when he snatched a chicken carcass dangling beneath a caricature of Gillard. Opposition leader Tony Abbott's chicken was left hanging.

Analysts say Australia's elections on Saturday could be the closest contest since 1961 when a single seat decided who governed.


The crocodile used a similar technique to correctly predict that Spain would defeat the Netherlands in the World Cup last month. He joined an octopus named Paul in Germany, said to have correctly picked the winner for the final plus seven other games.


Australian Election Eve

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Poll shows dead heat on eve of Australian election.

Australia's top candidates for prime minister campaigned furiously Friday -- election eve -- as incumbent Julia Gillard was tied with coalition challenger Tony Abbott in a national opinion poll based on the country's complicated preferential voting system.

In Saturday's election, Gillard is the candidate of the left-of-center Labor Party; Abbott represents a conservative coalition.

The Newspoll published Friday morning puts the two political blocs at 50-50.

"People would have seen the polls today and what the polls are telling them is there is a very, very real risk that they will wake up on Sunday and Mr. Abbott will be prime minister," Gillard told the Nine Network's "Today " show Friday morning about the choice facing Australian voters.

"They've got a choice between my positive economic plan to keep investing in jobs, to keep improving schools -- people know I'm passionate about improving education -- to keep improving hospitals and to build the National Broadband Network. Or they can take a very big risk. A very big risk with Mr. Abbott for their futures. It's about work choices for Mr. Abbott. It's about a grocery tax and, of course, it's about going back to the days of cutting schools and hospitals. That's what he stands for."

Noting that Gillard's standing in the polls has eroded in recent days, Abbott said, "I think Labor has found it a bit desperate ... I think they've found it a bit shrill and I just think that they don't have a record to defend and under those circumstances I think they become very negative and very personal and I don't know that that's a good look from a prime minister."

Abbott, a 52-year-old fitness fanatic, said he stayed up all Thursday night and was planning to do the same Friday night in a final push to gain the lead. He appeared at a flower market and a fish market Friday morning.

Gillard, 48 and the nation's first woman prime minister, spent Thursday night in the key southeast state of New South Wales, where she rubbed elbows with voters in a pub and entered a raffle in which she drew her own ticket -- twice.

Gillard served as deputy prime minister under Kevin Rudd when he led the Labor Party back to power in December 2007. But she rose to the top job last June, when the Labor Party unceremoniously dumped Rudd, whose popularity was plummeting -- in part over his stance on how to handle global warming and a proposed system of emissions trading.

Soon after, as she appeared strong in the polls, she called the snap election for Saturday. But Abbott -- who had little national campaign experience -- emerged with surprising effectiveness and broader public appeal than many pundits had anticipated.

Read more here:


Thursday, April 29, 2010

NASA Balloon Crashes in Australian Outback

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Huge NASA Science Balloon Crashes in Australian Outback.

A huge NASA balloon loaded with a telescope painstakingly built to scan the sky at wavelengths invisible to the human eye crashed in the Australian outback Thursday, destroying the $2 million astronomy experiment and just missing nearby onlookers, according to Australian media reports.

In dramatic video released by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), the giant 400-foot (121-meter) balloon is seen just beginning to lift its payload, then the telescope gondola appears to unexpectedly come loose from its carriage. The telescope crashes through a fence and overturns a nearby parked sport utility vehicle before finally stopping.

"No one was injured. A mishap investigation board is being convened," NASA officials said in a statement released late Thursday.




The attempted balloon telescope launch took place at the Alice Springs Balloon Launching Centre, near the town of Alice Springs, in the northern territory of Australia.

The wayward balloon overturned one car, but missed another parked nearby with local Alice Springs couple Stan and Betty Davies, who had come to watch the launch, still inside.

"We were sitting in our car and preparing to move it out of the way and we were actually about a foot of being wiped out," ABC quoted Davies as saying.

The balloon was carrying the Nuclear Compton Telescope (NCT), a gamma-ray telescope built by astronomer Steven Boggs and his colleagues at the University of California, Berkeley, California to study astrophysical sources in space. The telescope was dragged about 450 feet (137 meters) before finally coming to a stop, NASA officials said.

"Today was a terrible day for a lot of people," wrote Eric Bellm, a graduate astronomy student at the UC Berkeley, in a blog chronicling the science mission. "For the NCT team, we've poured our hearts into this instrument for years. It was an almost unfathomable shock to find ourselves cleaning up the wreckage of our gondola rather than watching it lift off towards space."

The unmanned research balloon was built by NASA's Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility in Palestine, Texas and expected to haul its two-telescope payload up to an altitude of about 120,000 feet (36,576 meters). That's about 23 miles (37 km), though smaller home-built balloons have been built to reach high altitudes as well.

In his account of the crash, Bellm said an investigation into the balloon's launch failure will be performed, though a first glance found that at least some of the components for the Nuclear Compton Telescope appear to have survived relatively intact. The science team has cleaned up the wreckage and returned it to a staging hangar, he added.

"Damage to the NCT payload, project assets and area surroundings are currently being assessed," NASA officials added in their statement.

Ravi Sood, director of the Alice Springs Balloon Launching Centre and a professor at Australia's University of New South Wales, confirmed that no one was hurt in the incident, but added that sometimes balloon launches can go awry.

"Ballooning, that's the way it happens on occasions but it is very, very disappointing. Gut-wrenching actually," he told ABC.

The failed balloon launch in Australia marked NASA's second balloon science campaign this month at the remote site. On April 15, NASA's balloon science program launched Tracking and Imaging Gamma Ray Experiment (TIGRE), a gamma-ray telescope, to search the galactic center of the sky for emissions from radioactive materials, NASA officials said.

That launch, which sent the telescope and its balloon to an altitude of 127,000 feet (38,709 meters), went according to plan, the space agency said.

The balloon's next payload to fly, an X-ray telescope called HERO aimed at mapping the galactic center for NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, was targeted for May, Australian officials added.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Australian economy at end of 2009

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Australian economy ends 2009 with strong growth.

Australia's economy grew strongly in the final three months of 2009, capping a year in which it was the only major economy to avoid recession.

The nation grew 0.9% from the July-to-October quarter, its biggest expansion since March 2008, the government's statistics bureau said.

Australia's growth was "the envy of the developed world," Treasurer Wayne Swan said.

For the whole of 2009, Australia's economy expanded 2.7%.

By contrast, the economies of the UK, Germany and Japan shrank 5% in 2009, and the US contracted by 2.4%.

In the fourth quarter of 2009, Australia said machinery and equipment spending surged almost 11% from the previous three months.

It avoided the worst of the slump due to huge government spending and massive Chinese demand for its commodities.

Stimulus spending

Since the end of 2008, the government has introduced a number of multi-billion dollar stimulus packages, including increased infrastructure spending and cash handouts to most Australians to lift consumer spending.

Australia's economy only contracted in the final three months of 2008.

It therefore avoided recession, which is generally defined as two consecutive quarters of negative growth.

This week, the central bank has raised interest rates, for the fourth time since October, to 4% from 3.75% to cool its growing economy.

Australia was also the first developed nation to raise interest rates - from 50-year lows - as the economic crisis eased.

Related Articles:

China economy in 2009,
Indian Economy in 2009-10,
US economic growth modest,
Danger of World Economy in 2010,
Japan still world's 2nd largest economy,
US Economy grew faster in 4Q of 2009,



Tuesday, February 2, 2010

New ATP, WTA Tennis Ranking 2010

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A Rankings Shake-Up in Men’s Tennis.

RafaelNadal & SerenaWilliamsFebruary 02 2010 : After the men’s singles event at the Australian Open notable for Roger Federer’s dominance and Rafael Nadal’s knees, the new rankings that came out Monday reflected both story lines.

After retiring during a quarterfinal match against Andy Murray because of a knee injury, Nadal fell to No. 4 from No. 2, his lowest ranking since May 2005. Nadal is expected to miss at least month because of a tear in his right knee.

Novak Djokovic, who lost in the quarterfinals to Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, rose to No. 2 from No. 3, his highest ranking ever. He is followed by Andy Murray, the Australian Open runner-up.

With his victory in Melbourne, Federer secured his No. 1 position. It is his 268th week in the top spot, tying Jimmy Connors for third place in total weeks at No. 1. Federer will soon pass Ivan Lendl, who was No. 1 for 270 weeks. Pete Sampras holds the record with 286 weeks at No. 1.

ATP Tour Rankings

1. (1) Roger Federer, 11,350 points
2. (3) Novak Djokovic, 8,310
3. (4) Andy Murray, 7,800
4. (2) Rafael Nadal, 7,670
5. (5) Juan Martin del Potro, 6,400
6. (6) Nikolay Davydenko, 5,290
7. (7) Andy Roddick, 4,150
8. (8) Robin Soderling, 3, 375
9. (10) Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, 3,235
10. (14) Marin Cilic, 2,970

On the women’s side, the Australian Open champion, Serena Williams, maintained her grip on the No. 1 ranking. Li Na, who with Zheng Jie became the first Chinese players to reach the Australian Open semifinals, soared to 10th from 17th. She is the first Chinese player to reach the top 10.

Sony Ericsson WTA Tour Rankings

1. (1) Serena Williams, 9,195 points
2. (2) Dinara Safina, 6,480
3. (4) Caroline Wozniacki, 5,995
4. (3) Svetlana Kuznetsova, 5,861
5. (6) Venus Williams, 5,526
6. (7) Victoria Azarenka, 4,960
7. (5) Elena Dementieva, 4,705
8. (8) Jelena Jankovic, 3,845
9. (10) Agnieszka Radwanska, 3,605
10. (17) Li Na, 3,500


Monday, February 1, 2010

ATP and WTA Tennis rankings

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Federer, Serena Williams to hold on to No. 1 rankings

Roger FedererFebruary 01 2010 : Roger Federer and Australian Open women's champion Serena Williams will maintain their No. 1 rankings when new ATP and WTA rankings are released on Monday.

Federer, who played Britain's Andy Murray in the Australian Open men's final on Sunday, will begin his 268th week as No. 1 and match Jimmy Connors, currently in third place, for total number of weeks as world No. 1.

Pete Sampras leads the career list with 286 weeks at No. 1, followed by Ivan Lendl with 270.

If Murray beats Federer at Melbourne Park, he could move to No. 2. Otherwise, projections have Novak Djokovic taking over No. 2, Murray third and injured Rafael Nadal dropping to No. 4.

It marks the first time that Nadal will drop out of the world's top three since his debut there in June 2005.

Nadal has been cleared of a recurrence of the knee tendinitis that sidelined him for nine weeks last year. A small muscle tear sustained at the Australian Open, where he lost in the quarter-finals to Murray, will keep him out for the next month.

"It is not important for me, the ranking issue and losing a few spots - that's normal when you are not able to compete," Nadal said.

There will be movement on the women's side, with Li Na becoming the first Chinese player ever to enter the top 10 when she reaches a career high No. 10 following her semi-final run.

Justine Henin, who was unranked and playing on a wild-card entry at her first major in two years, still needs to play another tournament before she gets an official ranking.

Williams, who beat Henin in Saturday's Australian Open final, has extended her current stretch at No. 1 to 15 weeks. Projections provided by the WTA show Williams will begin her 88th career week as the top-ranked player.

Dinara Safina is projected to be No. 2, followed by US Open finalist Caroline Wozniacki at a career-high No. 3, French Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova at No. 4 and Australian Open quarterfinalist Venus Williams at No. 5.

Projections also show Victoria Azarenka, who lost to Serena Williams in the quarter-finals, to be No. 6, followed by Elena Dementieva at 7. It's the first time that Olympic gold medalist Dementieva, who lost to Henin in the second round here, has dropped out of the top 5 since September, 2008.

Jelena Jankovic is projected to be No. 8, Aznieszka Radwanska 9 and Li at 10.

Serena beats Henin to win Australian Open title

Serena Williams
Li said after her quarter-final win over Venus Williams that her goal was the top 10, but she may have to revise her expectations higher.

"So exciting, maybe I will have a beer tonight," said Li, who lost in the semi-finals to Serena Williams. "My goal this year was top 10, but it's only January, and it's come quickly."

Henin, who quit in May 2008 while holding the No. 1 ranking, has to play three tournaments before she re-enters the rankings.

The 27-year-old Belgian lost the Brisbane International final to US Open champion Kim Clijsters in Henin's first tournament back. After her finals appearance at Melbourne, another good showing at her next tournament, which is expected to be in March at Indian Wells, California, could see Henin return in the top 50.

Clijsters returned to the rankings at No. 19 ahead of the fourth and last event of her comeback season at Luxembourg, where she was ousted in the second round.

For more All About Tennis:

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Australia provides attacks dossier to India

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Most attackers of Indians in Australia are youth.


Indians in Australia
January 27 2010 : Australia government has handed over to India a police dossier of high-profile attacks on Indians over the past year, which reveals that nearly half of the attackers were juveniles.

The dossier, prepared by Victoria Police, was handed over in recent weeks, after Australian foreign minister Stephen Smith telephoned his Indian counterpart S M Krishna on January 11 to express his condolences over the murder of Indian student Nitin Garg in Yarraville.

"It shows nearly half of those arrested between March 2009 and January 5 - three days after the Garg killing - were under 18," the Age newspaper reported.

The dossier shows that among the 18 high-profile cases, two cases of assault reported in May and June last year remained unsolved, the paper said.

Sources said the Australian government initially resisted providing more information to Indians as it deemed racial appearance to be a limited indicator of ethnicity because it was only based on a subjective police assessment.

It claimed people described as Indians could originate from countries such as Mauritius and Fiji.

The dossier shows that of the 18 cases, two people were run over by a train and there was no foul play. While three cases remained unsolved, 33 people have been arrested over the remaining 13 cases.

Indian youths in Australia

Under pressure from the Indian government, Australia has finally informed New Delhi about action taken in 18 high profile cases of assaults against persons of ‘Indian appearance.’ According to the dossier submitted to the government, nearly half of those arrested so far or on the run are juvenile or under 18 years of age.

As the dossier lists attacks till January 5, it does not include many recent high profile cases including the murder of a youth from Punjab whose body has still not been sent back. Australia earlier resisted India’s demand to be informed about the cases involving Indians because it claimed that appearance was a limited indicator of ethnicity and the person could originate from about 20 countries such as Mauritius, Fiji and Malaysia.

However, what tilted the balance was the conversation External Affairs Minister S. M. Krishna had with his Australian counterpart Stephen Smith last week.

According to sources, Mr. Krishna insisted on Australia giving a detailed report on the action taken in cases of violence against Indians. The Ministry of External Affairs did not subscribe to the Australian hypothesis that appearance was a limited indicator of ethnicity and pointed out that the attacks on Indian nationals were too many to be explained away with such arguments.

Of the 18 high profile cases against persons of Indian appearance between March 2008 and January 5 this year, two were run over by train and no foul play was suspected. Three cases remain unsolved and 33 have been arrested in the remaining 13 cases.

Friday, January 22, 2010

Indians attacked in Australia

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Two more Indians assaulted in Australia


Indians attacked in Australia
January 22 2010 : Despite assurances by Australian leadership, attacks on Indians continued with two more youths, including a cabbie, being brutally assaulted and robbed in separate overnight incidents in Brisbane.

The Indian community in Brisbane says it fears two bashings last night were copycat crimes triggered by a spate of attacks on students in Melbourne and Sydney.

Two Indian men were bashed on the city's south side in separate incidents, but police say there is no evidence to suggest they were racially targeted. One Indian man was attacked at a phone box near Macgregor State High School, police said.

They say he was making a phone call to his home in India when he was punched twice in the head. His cigarettes and his wallet were then stolen. Police say the other incident involved an Indian taxi driver with two drunk passengers, who punched him repeatedly in the head over a fare dispute.

"Generally the clearest indicator [of the motivation for an attack] are comments made by the offenders to the individuals," Acting Commissioner Kathy Rynders said.

"Both complainants in these matters have said there were no comments in relation to their ethnicity by the offenders during last night's attack." But the taxi driver who was attacked last night, Sandeep Goyam, is now considering returning to India.

"I don't think I will be much longer in this country," he said. Police have already charged two men over the attack on Mr Goyam, but the assaults have shaken the Indian community in Brisbane.

The Queensland president of the Global Organisation of People of Indian Origin, Umesh Chandra, says locals fear the assaults in Brisbane were triggered by the spate of attacks on Indians in Melbourne and Sydney.

"I firmly do believe that it is part of the chain reaction and it is a copycat because what's happened there, people have been talking about something like that possibly happening here," he said.

"And here it is right on our doorstep. It's happened last night. And there is a fear that this could escalate." Mr Umesh says the Indian community would like police to make details of the crimes and arrests public so they can see something is being done.

He says a tough approach by authorities would also help repair Australia's international reputation. Mr Umesh has just returned from India and he says people there are very aware of the attacks on their countrymen.

"They are very, very aware. They are very worried," he said. Even though police are playing down any racial motivation for last night's attacks, they have extra security planned for Australia Day.

"We certainly have a big operation planned for Australia Day," Queensland's Acting Police Commissioner Rynders said. "Across the state we've got extra police deployed. We will be deploying them according to the intelligence.

"But we have no concerns at this point in time and there's no intelligence to indicate that any particular member of our communities are being targeted by any individuals."


Thursday, January 7, 2010

Attacks on Indians : India News Updates

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Attacks on Indians in Australia

Attacks on Indians
January 08 2010 : The war of words intensified on Thursday between India and Australia over the continuing attacks on Indian students in Australia since May 2009. Two Indians have also been killed in recent attacks.

India on Thursday toughened its stand saying Australia must take urgent remedial action to ensure that no such attacks happen again. Australia has been saying that India and the Indian media are drumming up jingoistic hysteria over what are not racist crimes.

Racism versus urban crime

Sanjay Srivastava started off the discussion by saying that the students studying in Australia thought that the crimes were a mixture of urban crime and racism.

He said, “You can either have a war of words or try and do something concrete. The Indian Government can ask the Australian government to look at the sets of rules and regulations that put Indian students in dangerous job, working late nights, etc. So, I think we need to move beyond simply trading words.”

In order to look at concrete steps, the identification of the disease needs to be made a priority. There are 200,000 immigrant populations in Australia, none of the settlers are being attacked. It’s the new breed of Indian students who are being attacked.

KC Singh agreed and felt that there should be a recognition of the real problem.

It happens only is Australia

Should Australia have been much more introspective about its educational programmes holding out to students from India?

Padma Rao came on rather assertively at this point of the discussion and said that India had a long way to go before it could question other people’s educational and racial policies.

“I am not even beginning to go down the road and mention crimes committed in the name of caste and gender in this country,” added Rao.

Tarun Vijay expressed shock at Padma’s Rao’s argument and felt that her argument wasn’t an argument at all.

“I believe that the Aussies are the most atrocious and horrendous racists on this planet. These people should be taught a lesson and they should be banned. Indian students shouldn’t be allowed to go to Australia,” stressed Vijay.

PM for top security of Indians abroad

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Friday said his government's top priority is to protect the Indian students and workers living abroad.

Addressing the 8th 'Pravasi Bharatiya Diwas' here, the Prime Minister said: "Security of overseas workers and students is top priority."

His assurance came amid violent attacks on Indians living in countries like Australia. He said the government is planning safety nets for the returning workers.

He also said that Indian will soon return to high growth path of 9 to 10 percent and infrastructure, agriculture, education and health are key priorities of the government.

No racist attack against Indians in Australia : Sreenivasan

Stating that the attacks against Indian students in Australia were not connected with racism, Federation of Indian Associations in Australia President Vasan Sreenivasan claimed that many attacks against Indians were for robbery.

Talking to reporters here, he alleged that the media was portraying such attacks as racist.

Recently, a car owned by an Indian in Australia met with an accident and caught fire. But, a national television channel reported that the car was set ablaze by racist attackers, he charged.

Mr Sreenivasan also said as a person living in Australia for more than two decades, he never felt any racial discrimination there.

Normally Indians living in Australia were wealthy people and this was one of the main reasons which makes them more prone to attacks from robbers, he said.

Unfortunately, incidents of attacks were portrayed in media as racist attacks, he said, adding, this would create more problems for Indians living in Australia.

Attacks on Indian students not racially motivated : Assn

Asserting that attacks on Indian students were not racially motivated, Federation of Indian Associations of Victoria (FIAV) today said the Australian and state governments were taking many steps for the safety and security of the Indians studying there.

The media is blowing up the issue, FIAV President Vasan Srinivasan told reporters here.

Srinivasan said he had been staying in the State of Victoria for the last over 15 years and had not faced any such problems. The attacks on Indian students were not racially motivated, he said.

The Federation had taken various initiatives like holding meetings with government, police and student representatives to ensure safety and security of the Indian students.

The Federation of Indian Associations of Victoria was formed in 1989 by a group of resident Indian migrants. The mission of FIAV was to protect, sustain and empower the community in Victoria, he said.

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