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Tendulkar becomes No.1 ODI batsman


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sunil vyas
WHY SACHIN IS BEST
by sunil vyas on Mar 12, 2008 06:02 PM  | Hide replies

Tendulkar has shone as the one man gladiator for India. SOMEONE once said "an expert is someone who knows more and more about less and less until he knows everything about nothing". The same applies to those experts who have conferred upon themselves the right to come hard upon someone who I would term a national asset. Tendulkar outweighs statistics and numbers. That is reflected in his altruistic and dedicated batting which thoroughly impresses the cricket experts. Tendulkar is a match-winner, although in a team of 11 when everyone gives his best it would be an overstatement, but the number of times that Sachin has put India within sniffing distance of a victory is a sign of his class and commitment. Many criticize him for he has not won some one-day finals in the last few years? But how many of these finals would we have reached but for Sachin? Does it not take a match-winner to win the matches which take us to the final?

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p tripathy
Re: WHY SACHIN IS BEST
by p tripathy on Nov 27, 2009 03:16 PM
Sachin is the best as he is not playing for India nor for himself. He is playing for cricket. He is contributing in the enhancement of the ultimate boundary of cricket. He is creating cricket, which the future generation will play. He is a grate cricketer.

P K Tripathy
Bhopal

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sunil vyas
RE:WHY SACHIN IS BEST
by sunil vyas on Mar 12, 2008 06:03 PM

Sachin is a match winner in his own right. It is not just because of his cricketing brilliance. Its because of his sheer presence, which motivates the players and also sends shock waves into the opposition. I still remember Shane Warne in Channel 9 recollecting his duels with Sachin. Nothing can unsettle this genius. He goes on and says for a player like Sachin "we need to work out many strategies to get him out". This is where Sachin becomes a match-winner. He always keeps the opposition guessing. Kapil Dev, Gavaskar, Vengsarkar, Azhar, Dravid, Laxman, Ganguly are match-winners, but Sachin is greater than them because whether he scores or not, he keeps the opposition on their toes. The very fear of the rival bowlers makes Sachin a match-winner. Tendulkar holds the record for winning the maximum `Man of the Match' awards in one-day internationals. India has won almost 80 per cent of the one-dayers in which Sachin has scored a century. Sachin is an emperor in world cricket

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gopal gupta
RE:WHY SACHIN IS BEST
by gopal gupta on Mar 15, 2008 03:14 AM
Absolutely Sunil. Sachin´s presence and unnoticed guidance given by him to all the so called captains goes unnoticed. Also he is the real team man. Even in Bhajji´s racial comment case in Aus - it was Sachin who added weight to the India side ...people don´t see his overall contribution to the Indian cricket ...some people just play blind when Sachin plays super!!!!

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Riven Sethi
Australian History Part IV
by Riven Sethi on Mar 11, 2008 06:07 PM

They wanted Norfolk to stand as a place of terror where any unruly convict could be sent. They finally convinced the government back in London to recall him in 1845.

By the mid-1800s, the transportation of criminals to Australia had slowed down. Reformers like Maconochie published reports critical of how the transported convicts were treated. New British prisons, patterned after American penitentiaries, made the costly transportation of convicts halfway around the world less attractive to the government. Finally, a gold rush brought thousands of new immigrants into Australia. In 1868, the last transport reached Western Australia, the only remaining convict outpost.

Between 1788 and 1868, 160,000 convicts were transported to Australia. But this did little to deter crime in Britain. The government was unable to convince the "criminal class" that transportation was a terrible punishment when most convicts chose to remain in Australia after serving their sentences. What transportation did accomplish, however, was the creation of a new people and eventually a new nation known, ironically, for its law-abiding people and low crime rate. When transportation ended, about 40 percent of Australia%u2019s English-speaking population had come to the "land down under" as convicted criminals. Transportation to Australia worked but not as its originators intended.

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Riven Sethi
Australian history Part III
by Riven Sethi on Mar 11, 2008 06:07 PM

By contrast, the place of ultimate terror was Norfolk Island, 1,000 miles east of Sydney. Set aside for the worst adult criminals, this island prison kept convicts working in chains. Guards unmercifully flogged prisoners for the slightest rule violation. Desperate to get off the island, convicts sometimes would draw lots to kill each other so that the murderer would be taken to Sydney for trial.

But even Norfolk Island had its moment of enlightenment. Scotsman Alexander Maconochie came to Australia as a government official in favor of reforming convicts rather than brutalizing them. He proposed a system of rewarding convicts with "marks" for hard work and good behavior. After earning a certain number of these marks, the convict would be set free. Thus the actual length of time a convict served depended on how fast or slowly he earned his marks.

In 1840, Maconochie got a chance to try out his mark system when he was made commandant of Norfolk Island. He immediately ended flogging and gave each convict a plot of land to grow vegetables and tobacco.
Much to the surprise of everyone but Maconochie, his system worked. During his five years as commandant, he discharged almost a thousand convicts. Only 2 percent of them were ever convicted again of a serious crime. But Maconochie had many enemies who wanted to keep the old system. They didn%u2019t care whether Maconochie%u2019s system worked on Norfolk.

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Riven Sethi
Australian Histry Part II
by Riven Sethi on Mar 11, 2008 06:05 PM

In addition, the government assigned newly arrived convicts to them to help work the land. As it turned out, most ex-convicts never returned to Britain but stayed in Australia to become landowners or wage workers.

More Penal Experiments

The number of convicts transported to Australia increased dramatically when more ships became available following the Napoleonic Wars (1804%u20131815). The peak year was 1833 when 36 ships transported nearly 7,000 convicts. By this time, areas outside Sydney had been opened up for settlement under the convict assignment system. One of these was the large island south of the mainland, now called Tasmania.

Beginning in 1834, Tasmania became the site of perhaps the world%u2019s first juvenile prison. Convicted boys aged 9%u201318 were isolated from adult convicts at Point Puer (Latin for "boy"). Considered too young or ignorant for assignment, they were given a basic education, taught a trade, instructed in religion, and punished for misbehavior. Although they were subjected to flogging and solitary confinement, the training they received probably provided them with more opportunities than they would have had growing up in London%u2019s slums.

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Riven Sethi
Australian History --- Who are they?????
by Riven Sethi on Mar 11, 2008 05:58 PM  | Hide replies

From 1750 to 1850, Britain rose as the first industrial society. With the invention of steam-driven machines, factories sprouted in Britain%u2019s cities. People in the countryside flocked to work in the factories, which mass-produced goods. This rapid transformation from a farming society to an industrial one is known as the Industrial Revolution. It brought great wealth to Britain.

It also brought the problems of industrial society. Workers labored long hours for wages that barely kept them and their families alive. Their children typically went to work in factories and mines shortly after reaching age 6. Many children were orphaned or abandoned and lived in the streets. To survive, many people in London%u2019s crowded slums stole and robbed.

The Industrial Revolution, which brought tremendous wealth to Britain, had spawned a major crime wave. Beggars, pickpockets, and thieves swarmed London%u2019s streets. Honest citizens feared this "criminal class" from the slums. They demanded action to stop the crime wave.

British authorities already punished criminals severely%u2014often by hanging. There were over 200 death penalty offenses, most of them for stealing and other property crimes. Since no prisons existed as we know them today, hanging criminals was one of the few options available.

Another option was to banish, or deport, criminals to some faraway place. Called "transportation," this penalty had been used by the British since the time of Queen Elizabeth I (1533%u20

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Riven Sethi
RE:Australian History --- Who are they?????
by Riven Sethi on Mar 11, 2008 05:59 PM
Another option was to banish, or deport, criminals to some faraway place. Called "transportation," this penalty had been used by the British since the time of Queen Elizabeth I (1533%u20131603). In fact, about 40,000 convicts were transported to the British colonies in America where they worked off their sentences. But the transportation of lawbreakers to America ended abruptly in 1776 when the Revolutionary War began.
With crime rising and the American colonies rebelling, Britain had to find another place to send its convicted felons. As a temporary solution, prisoners were crammed aboard old rotting warships, called "hulks." The hulks stayed anchored on the Thames River, which links London to the sea. By day, the convicts labored on London%u2019s docks and other public works.

The government considered several places to dump its glut of convicts. Finally, in 1786, Prime Minister William Pitt (the Younger) decided to establish a convict colony at Botany Bay, halfway around the world in Australia.

Australia, which the British called New South Wales, had been explored by the Dutch in the early 1600s. But in 1770, Captain James Cook had landed at Botany Bay, establishing British claims to the huge, uncharted continent. Prime Minister Pitt believed that a convict colony along with a military presence at Botany Bay would assure British naval and commercial supremacy in the South Pacific.



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Riven Sethi
RE:RE:Australian History --- Who are they?????
by Riven Sethi on Mar 11, 2008 06:00 PM
Sending prisoners to far-off Australia would also make transportation a much harsher punishment. Most slum dwellers in their life never traveled more than 30 miles from where they were born. Sending them to what was then considered the remotest place on Earth, with little likelihood of return, would be a horrific punishment. The government hoped this punishment would strike terror in the hearts of would-be criminals.

Pitt%u2019s government decided to transport the prisoners aboard the hulks to Botany Bay without any on-site preparation and only Captain Cook%u2019s nearly 20-year-old reports as a guide. Thus the British launched a bold experiment in penology (the treatment of criminals). If successful, the experiment would empty the hulks along the Thames, solve the riddle of what to do with criminals, and even deter people from committing crimes.

The first British fleet to transport convicts to Australia consisted of 11 ships, including two navy warships. The commander of the fleet was Captain Arthur Phillip. Captain Phillip had been appointed governor of Australia by King George III.

In May of 1787, using Captain Cook%u2019s 20-year-old reports as their only guide, about 200 sailors and 700 convicts sailed into the unknown. The youngest criminal was a 9-year-old boy who had stolen some clothes and a pistol. The oldest was an 82-year-old woman convicted of perjury, or lying under oath.

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Riven Sethi
RE:RE:RE:Australian History --- Who are they?????
by Riven Sethi on Mar 11, 2008 06:01 PM
After a 252-day voyage across 15,000 miles, the ships reached Botany Bay. But Captain Phillip soon determined that Botany Bay was a poor harbor and the surrounding land was not suited for growing crops. He ordered the fleet northward to another location, which Captain Phillip named Sydney (after Lord Sydney, William Pitt%u2019s minister of colonial affairs).

The First Years

Governor Phillip had been given near absolute power to rule his convict colony. This included the authority to establish courts, proclaim martial law, and award grants of land in the new colony. He also had the authority to emancipate (set free) deserving convicts. Upon landing at Sydney, Governor Phillip announced to the convicts that%u2014if they wanted to eat%u2014they would have to work.

More than two years passed before any relief ships arrived from Britain. During this time, the colonists nearly starved. But somehow over the next few years, Governor Phillip used convict labor to plant crops, establish herds of livestock (mainly sheep), and construct buildings and roads necessary for the colony. In the meantime, the British government continued to empty out the Thames River hulks by transporting more than a thousand convicts to Sydney each year. By 1792, when Governor Phillip returned to Britain, New South Wales had survived five harsh years to become largely self-sufficient.


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Riven Sethi
RE:RE:RE:RE:Australian History --- Who are they?????
by Riven Sethi on Mar 11, 2008 06:03 PM
Who were these convicts transported to Australia? About three-quarters were young, single men and women. Most were common thieves (called "sneaksmen") from London and other British cities. Fewer than 5 percent were transported for violent crimes. Some were political offenders, mainly from rebellious Ireland and Scotland. Male convicts outnumbered females 6 to 1. Although none of the women were transported for prostitution, many were forced to become prostitutes after landing in Australia. Frequently, female convicts ended up as "prisoners of the prisoners" and were sold like slaves.

The "Assignment System"

"The sentence of the court upon you is, that you be transported beyond the seas for the term of your natural life." More commonly, criminals were sentenced to Australia for a specific term like 7 or 14 years.

After 1800, about 10 percent of the convicts arriving in Australia worked on government farms and public-works projects, such as roads and harbors. The other 90 percent were assigned to work for settlers who had received grants of land. The assigned convicts were dispersed throughout the colony to provide free labor until they had served their sentences.

How they were treated depended on who they worked for. In general, however, they lived in brutal conditions on meager rations.

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Riven Sethi
RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:Australian History --- Who are they?????
by Riven Sethi on Mar 11, 2008 06:04 PM
Even so, the convicts were not considered slaves or "property." They possessed rights under British law. For example, neither the government nor private masters could physically punish a convict without first getting the approval of a judge at a hearing. But approval was routine.

The most common court-authorized punishment was flogging by the "cat-o%u2019-nine-tails," a whip with nine leather cords. Convicts found guilty of minor offenses typically got 25 lashes on the back. More serious offenders drew up to 300 lashes, which would leave them gravely wounded.

While flogging kept convicts in line, a reward system also existed. "Gentlemen convicts" and those who exhibited good behavior were sometimes granted a "ticket-of-leave." This allowed the convict to work for wages and live virtually free. The only restriction was that such a person could not leave Australia until his or her sentence had expired. Deserving convicts also hoped to be emancipated by the governor.

To hold on to such a vast territory as Australia, the British government needed colonists to settle the land. Although it encouraged immigrants from Britain, few came. So the government called upon released convicts, who had served their sentences, to settle the land. It offered former convicts free land, tools, seed, livestock, and even food for one year.

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Riven Sethi
Thought of the Day
by Riven Sethi on Mar 10, 2008 07:25 PM  | Hide replies

If you have something to say, raise your hand, place it over you mouth and keep it there.

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Cricket
RE:Thought of the Day
by Cricket on Mar 11, 2008 07:14 AM
:-|

Finger on your lips!

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Riven Sethi
RE:Thought of the Day
by Riven Sethi on Mar 11, 2008 10:42 AM
:-) I can give headache to Anacin.

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Thought of the Day
by on Mar 10, 2008 07:22 PM

If you have something to say, raise your hand, place it over you mouth and keep it there.

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Another Indian
RE:another indian alias GAGAN alias ritwik alias siddharth
by Another Indian on Mar 10, 2008 05:04 AM
Yes

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Another Indian
RE:another indian alias GAGAN alias ritwik alias siddharth
by Another Indian on Mar 10, 2008 07:33 AM
No

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Another Indian
RE:RE:RE:RE:another indian alias GAGAN alias ritwik alias siddharth
by Another Indian on Mar 10, 2008 07:33 AM
No

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