Thursday 25 February 2016

Sri Lanka vs UAE talking points: 'Slinga' Malinga's return, brittle batting and Mirpur's dodgy tracks

Watch-out for T20 World Champions Sri Lanka. They might have more than a fair share of ageing veterans in the team but they are none the worse for it as they proved in the Asia Cup T20 league encounter against minnows UAE on Thursday night.
The veteran bowlers, in fact, were the toast of the evening as they efficiently defended a small target despite the commendable efforts of UAE’s former Mumbai junior batsman Swapnil Patil (37 from 36 balls). The mix and efficiency displayed by the old warhorses also proved they are an extremely potent force in this format of the game.
The spearhead, of course, was Lasith Malinga. The ‘Slinga’ had not bowled a ball since November as a bad knee kept him out of the game. His entire bowling practice was spread over the past two days. Nobody could have guessed that though considering the skilful manner in which he despatched four key UAE batsmen.
ImageAFP_380
Watch-out for T20 World Champions Sri Lanka. AFP
His two spells had all the markings of the seasoned old professional that he is. The four overs no doubt would help him whip up the competitive juices and bring him some sort of a rhythm in the run-up to sterner games against the big guns of T20 cricket, India and Pakistan.
Malinga’s two wickets in the first spell grabbed the UAE batting line-up by their throat. Later, just when they seemed to be wriggling out of the stranglehold he packed off the last threat, Patil, with a deceptive slower one.
His haul of 4-26 puts him in the right frame of mind for the bigger battles in the coming days. The challenge though would be for the speedster to keep himself fit over the next week or so.
On the best of days, Malinga’s slinging action is a nightmare to batsmen in T20 cricket. His unusual action where the release of the ball does not come from an overhead arc but from the side is a disconcerting aspect for batsmen.
Then there is his scorching pace. He also has a deceptive bag of deliveries which includes yorkers, bouncers and slower ones that bewilders batsmen. But since Malinga is a rhythm bowler he needs everything to fall in place together.
A skilful, experienced batsman may be able to sort him out. But what chance did a team of inexperienced batters have against this lethal strike bowler? UAE batsmen allowed him to not just slip into a comfortable tempo but also get increasingly confident of doing what he does best –browbeat them.
It seems logical, therefore, that rival batsmen would target the other bowlers in Sri Lanka’s armoury.
But there is a problem. And the name of the problem (for rivals) in Rangana Herath. Another veteran, Herath too had been out of international T20 cricket for quite a while but got into his groove early in the tournament. The stocky left-arm spinner who has a low ball-release bowled with all the control and confidence of yore.
The third warhorse, Ruwan Kulashekara, moved the new ball just enough to ask questions of batsmen. He is not anywhere near the class of Malinga but is nevertheless a very handy medium pacer. He has the experience to keep the batsmen guessing with subtle variations.
Lanka’s other fast bowler, young Dushantha Chameera, is quick and could be a threat on helpful tracks.
The champions’ Achilles heel, though, is the batting. Their best batsman Dinesh Chandimal saved them from ignominy with a brilliant 50 in a low total of 129 for 8. Although he struck a decent opening partnership with Tillekaretna Dilshan, the latter never looked comfortable.
Dilshan in the past was a destroyer of fast bowling. He would come up with fearless, innovative strokes. But against the UAE on Thursday he struggled to scratch up 27 runs in the partnership of 68. If Angelo Mathews, he and the others do not quickly work up a worthwhile support to Chandimal the world champions will be in deep trouble.
The biggest talking point in the match against the UAE was not Lanka’s varied bowling or indifferent batting but the unusual bounce in Mirpur pitches.
It is difficult to understand why such pitches are being laid out for T20 matches where the thrill for spectators is in seeing batsmen pile up runs, not struggle for survival.
If the extra bounce and green top pitches were part of hosts’ to ambush stronger sides, it may not work out to plan.
On such pitches most medium pacers would be a threat and hence the matches could be decided by the team that bats sensibly. And stronger sides will inevitably have better firepower in batting.
The Asia Cup was supposed to be an appetiser for the WorldT20 event starting in India next month. But the pitches laid out for the event defeat that purpose.

SA spinner Aaron Phangiso reported for suspect action; doubtful for ICC World T20

Johannesburg: South Africa spinner Aaron Phangiso has been reported for a suspected illegal bowling action during a domestic 50-over match, the country's cricket board said today.
The 32-year-old, who has been included in the Proteas squad for the ICC World Twenty20 2016, has been reported after helping his domestic side Highveld Lions into the final of South Africa's provincial 50-over competition on Wednesday when he took 2/38 in eight overs.
File photo of Aaron Phangiso. Getty Images
File photo of Aaron Phangiso. Getty Images
"Aaron Phangiso of the bizhub Highveld Lions has been reported for a suspected illegal bowling action during the Momentum One-Day Cup match against the Warriors at Bidvest Wanderers, Johannesburg, on 24 February 2016," the Cricket South Africa (CSA) said in a statement.
"Phangiso's action will now be scrutinised further in accordance with the CSA Regulations for the Review of Bowlers Reported with Suspected Illegal Bowling Actions. He is required to undergo independent analysis by a member of the ICC Panel of Human Movement Specialists and is permitted to continue bowling until the results of the testing are known," the CSA said.
Reports said that Phangiso, who has played 16 ODIs and nine T20Is, is expected to be tested tomorrow at the ICC-accredited High Performance Academy at the University of Pretoria.
Fourteen days after that test, an ICC-appointed specialist will furnish the body with written report which will determine whether Phangiso's action is legal or not, according to a report.
The time frame for his testing means that Phangiso's performance in the World T20 could be affected. Even if he is tested immediately, the 14-day period for the analysis would only conclude on 10 March. He will hope that he is cleared before South Africa open their World Twenty20 campaign against England in Mumbai on 18 March.
Changes to squads are allowed until 8 March, which may see South Africa's selectors look for another back-up spinner to Imran Tahir.
It is the latest setback for Phangiso, who early this year was prevented from boarding an international flight following South Africa's ODI series win in India because he was drunk and disorderly and CSA had subsequently handed him an unknown sanction.
This week, Phangiso had to apologise for being caught on camera pretending to sniff an unknown substance off his leg during South Africa's T20 against England at the Wanderers.

Ex-WWE star 'The Great Khali' severly injured during wrestling event in Uttarakhand

Dehradun: Former WWE wrestler Dalip Singh Rana, better known by his ring name 'The Great Khali', suffered a severe head injury during the Continental Wrestling Entertainment show at Haldwani, Uttarakhand.
Khali sustained a head injury last night during the first show of 'The Great Khali Returns Series' while fighting against foreign wrestlers — Mike Knox and Brody Steel — at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Gaula Par, Haldwani. The doctors suspect that Khali has suffered injuries to his chest as well but the exact nature of injuries are yet to be known.
File photo of 'The Great Khali'. Getty Images
File photo of 'The Great Khali'. Getty Images
"Khali has been under observation and tests are being conducted on him to know whether he has suffered injuries to his chest as well," one of the organisers of 'The Great Khali Returns Series' told PTI.
After Khali sustained severe head injuries, he was airlifted from Haldwani this morning and bought to a speciality hospital in Dehradun.
Khali received seven stitches on his head last night before being flown to Uttarakhand capital. The second show of this series is scheduled to be held here on February 28.
Khali was crowned the World Heavyweight Champion in 2007.

Ex-WWE star 'The Great Khali' severly injured during wrestling event in Uttarakhand

Dehradun: Former WWE wrestler Dalip Singh Rana, better known by his ring name 'The Great Khali', suffered a severe head injury during the Continental Wrestling Entertainment show at Haldwani, Uttarakhand.
Khali sustained a head injury last night during the first show of 'The Great Khali Returns Series' while fighting against foreign wrestlers — Mike Knox and Brody Steel — at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Gaula Par, Haldwani. The doctors suspect that Khali has suffered injuries to his chest as well but the exact nature of injuries are yet to be known.
File photo of 'The Great Khali'. Getty Images
File photo of 'The Great Khali'. Getty Images
"Khali has been under observation and tests are being conducted on him to know whether he has suffered injuries to his chest as well," one of the organisers of 'The Great Khali Returns Series' told PTI.
After Khali sustained severe head injuries, he was airlifted from Haldwani this morning and bought to a speciality hospital in Dehradun.
Khali received seven stitches on his head last night before being flown to Uttarakhand capital. The second show of this series is scheduled to be held here on February 28.
Khali was crowned the World Heavyweight Champion in 2007.

Asia Cup: Rohit Sharma took his lifeline against Bangladesh, powering India to a near-perfect win

Based on where one's allegiance lies, fans of India and Bangladesh will remember the 2015 World Cup quarter-final for different reasons. Fans of the men in blue will fondly recollect an ODI masterclass from Rohit Sharma, ably supported by Suresh Raina and Ravindra Jadeja and a clinical bowling effort to get the opposition all-out for the seventh consecutive innings in the tournament.
Bangladesh fans, on the other hand, will remember it for one thing and one thing only -- the full-toss that had Rohit 'caught' and was wrongly ruled ‘no-ball’ by Aleem Dar.
Rohit made 47 runs off the next 25 balls he faced, en route a World Cup century.
That decision left Bangladesh fans fuming.
PTI
Rohit was doing what he does best -- get his eye in and make the start count. PTI
Back at the Sher-e-Bangla Stadium in Dhaka for the Asia Cup T20 tournament opener, Rohit got yet another lifeline, before turning on the style to help his side to a match-winning total. He scored exactly 50 per cent of India's total of 166. And this time around, the Bangladesh Tigers have only themselves to blame.
Shakib al Hasan, Bangladesh's star all-rounder, put down a straight-forward chance at point when Rohit was batting -- grafting hard, to be precise -- on 21 off 28 balls.
Not often in cricket can you point to one moment in a match and say : 'Yes, that decided the result.' This, however, was one such incident. That over from Taskin Ahmed, the 11th of India's innings, was without doubt the turning point of the match.
India went from 52 for 3 after 10 overs to 166 for 6 in 20. Rohit scored 62 of those off 26 balls on his way to a match-winning 83 off 54 deliveries. It was as if that drop by Shakib had turned on a switch inside Rohit's head.
Off the next five balls he faced, Rohit's innings went like this: 4 (a perfectly timed square cut past third-man), 6 (a delightful lofted cut shot over point), 4 (a delicate dab to third man), 2 (a pleasing extra-cover drive), and 4 (a swivelled pull past fine leg).
He did not turn back. He was in hit-every-ball mode. And not just mindless slogs, this was Rohit at his calculating best -- picking spots around the ground, lofting it into empty spaces in the outfield, clearing fielders on the boundary rope.
Rohit was doing what he does best in limited over internationals for India -- get his eye in and make the start count.
There was one remarkable shot that stood out. The ball after he reached his 11th T20I half-century, Rohit went down on his knees rather early to a full-ball from Shakib, almost 'yorking' himself. But such was his form on the night, he dug it out from beneath his chin with very little fuss, and powered it between two deep fielders to find the square-leg fence. Pure class.
Much like he did at the Melbourne Cricket Ground last March, Rohit played an innings of calculated aggression after taking his time to settle in. The pitch in Dhaka, a green-top, was a surprise to everyone but the Indian team would have had a knowing smile on their faces, as it resembled the track in Pune for the first T20I against Sri Lanka earlier this month.
The mindless batting on that track, where MS Dhoni's team failed to re-calibrate the par score and lost wickets in heaps, must have flashed across their minds.
Well, at least on Rohit's mind. Despite Shikhar Dhawan, Virat Kohli, and Suresh Raina falling to very similar rash batting as in Pune, Rohit stood steady at one end and alongside Yuvraj Singh, arrested the early slide. The 55-run stand between the two provided India the license to go after the bowling in the final 10 overs -- a clear indication of lessons being learned from the Pune debacle.
Yuvraj might have made only 15 runs, and his form must be a concern for Dhoni, but on the night it was a crucial partnership.
A partnership that set up an explosive finale from Rohit and India's emerging T20 rockstar, Hardik Pandya. The two put on 61 runs in 27 balls, exhibiting a breathtaking array of big shots. On a pitch where 140 would have been par, India finished with 166.
"I think overall, the wicket was difficult. Once you bat 20 overs and score 160, it might look like the wicket was a little easy. But I still feel that Rohit's batting was special. We required a partnership," Dhoni said after the match.
"When Hardik went in, he started playing the big shots. At that time, Rohit made sure that he got a little more strike and he himself will be there till the end.
“He used the pace of the bowler...I feel that was the kind of batting that was really needed and because of which Hardik could also express himself. We got those extra 15-20 runs. Otherwise we thought that 140 would be a very good score," Dhoni added.
With Ashish Nehra and Jasprit Bumrah snuffing out any possibility of a fiery start from Bangladesh, India had the match in the bag, nice and early, thanks to a clinical -- and remarkably symmetrical -- bowling effort. Four of the five Indian bowlers Dhoni employed finished with figures of 23 runs in four overs. If only Ravindra Jadeja had not bowled those two wides, it would have been a perfect five.
It was, however, a near-perfect win for Dhoni to start off the Asia Cup campaign. That's now six wins in seven matches for his well-settled unit, and who better than Pakistan to test the strength of this Indian team, as the bitter rivals prepare to take the field on Saturday.

Sad that ‘world class’ Harbhajan is sidelined by Indian team management: Saqlain Mushtaq


Mirpur: Practitioners of the same art do have fellow feelings and no wonder pioneer of 'doosra' Saqlain Mushtaq feels sad about the manner in which the senior India off-spinner Harbhajan Singh has been sidelined by the team management.
While he terms Ravichandran Ashwin as a "world class bowler", he feels that Harbhajan not getting a single start during the last seven T20 internationals is "not doing the bowler's confidence any good".
"I am afraid that Indian cricket board and team management's treatment to Harbhajan has not been great. He was a world class bowler and is still a world class bowler. The emergence of Ashwin doesn't mean that you drop Harbhajan or put him under tremendous pressure," Saqlain told PTI during an interaction.
File photo of Harbhajan Singh. AFP
File photo of Harbhajan Singh. AFP
The 39-year-old Saqlain, who has 208 Test and 288 ODI wickets, said dropping a top-grade performer according to convenience is not the best example to set.
"Look from the time he got dropped (in 2011), he has made three comebacks which meant that when you needed him, you picked him and when the need was over, you dumped him. So the pressure that you have created on him, you have already
negated his past achievements.
"But what logically should have been done is that when his graph was going down, one should have given him a short break and brought him back. He should have been the first choice spinner supported by Ashwin. Instead you put self doubts in him and now made him the third or fourth choice spinner in the side," Saqlain did not mince words while explaining.
He feels when a player is making comeback, he is shaky and one needs to give him the confidence that he would be back to his best.
"In my 10 years for Pakistan, I have seen legends being dropped due to form or injury and after they came back, in first two or three matches, their confidence looked to have been shaken. But after five or six matches, their rhythm came back.
"Let me be very clear, even if Bhajji has 100 percent potential, he will not be able to perform because you people have made him feel like a No 4. At the end, players are only human with same kind of feelings and emotions. A good performance is emotion-driven. If you are in a good space mentally, your graph will go up and vice versa," Saqlain said.

Sad that ‘world class’ Harbhajan is sidelined by Indian team management: Saqlain Mushtaq


Mirpur: Practitioners of the same art do have fellow feelings and no wonder pioneer of 'doosra' Saqlain Mushtaq feels sad about the manner in which the senior India off-spinner Harbhajan Singh has been sidelined by the team management.
While he terms Ravichandran Ashwin as a "world class bowler", he feels that Harbhajan not getting a single start during the last seven T20 internationals is "not doing the bowler's confidence any good".
"I am afraid that Indian cricket board and team management's treatment to Harbhajan has not been great. He was a world class bowler and is still a world class bowler. The emergence of Ashwin doesn't mean that you drop Harbhajan or put him under tremendous pressure," Saqlain told PTI during an interaction.
File photo of Harbhajan Singh. AFP
File photo of Harbhajan Singh. AFP
The 39-year-old Saqlain, who has 208 Test and 288 ODI wickets, said dropping a top-grade performer according to convenience is not the best example to set.
"Look from the time he got dropped (in 2011), he has made three comebacks which meant that when you needed him, you picked him and when the need was over, you dumped him. So the pressure that you have created on him, you have already
negated his past achievements.
"But what logically should have been done is that when his graph was going down, one should have given him a short break and brought him back. He should have been the first choice spinner supported by Ashwin. Instead you put self doubts in him and now made him the third or fourth choice spinner in the side," Saqlain did not mince words while explaining.
He feels when a player is making comeback, he is shaky and one needs to give him the confidence that he would be back to his best.
"In my 10 years for Pakistan, I have seen legends being dropped due to form or injury and after they came back, in first two or three matches, their confidence looked to have been shaken. But after five or six matches, their rhythm came back.
"Let me be very clear, even if Bhajji has 100 percent potential, he will not be able to perform because you people have made him feel like a No 4. At the end, players are only human with same kind of feelings and emotions. A good performance is emotion-driven. If you are in a good space mentally, your graph will go up and vice versa," Saqlain said.

Wednesday 20 January 2016

India vs Australia, 4th ODI Live: Rohit, Dhawan get India off to steady start



87 / 1OVERS10.4R/R8.37Fours7Sixes5Extras1
Play in Progress
BatsmanStatusRB4s6s
Shikhar DhawanBatting363332
Virat KohliBatting9620
Extras : 1 (b - 0, w - 1, nb - 0, lb - 0, Penalty - 0)

Australian Open: Bhupathi starts with a win, Paes knocked out in the first round

Melbourne: Mahesh Bhupathi returned to Grand Slam action with a first-round win at the Australian Open but Leander Paes' bid fell flat at the first hurdle, in Melbourne on Wednesday.
Bhupathi, who is playing with Luxembourg's Gilles Muller, beat the Australian team of Alex Bolt and Andrew Whittington 7-6 (4) 3-6 6-4 in his tournament-opener at court seven.
Leander Paes with his  partner Jeremy Charady at the Australian Open. AFP
Leander Paes with his partner Jeremy Charady at the Australian Open. AFP
In the two hour and 13 minute contest, Bhupathi and Muller managed to save 12 breakpoints out of 15 they faced.
It was Bhupathi's third competitive event since bowing out of 2015 Wimbledon championships. He had missed the entire second half of the last year as he was busy with the conduct of his ambitious International Premier Tennis League (IPTL).
He had played at the Chennai Open and then at a Challenger tournament in Thailand, where he reached the semifinals with compatriot Purav Raja.
The 42-year-old Paes made an exit with French partner Jeremy Charady after losing his first round 3-6 4-6 to Colombian 12th seeds Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah.
Their challenge was over in 72 minutes as they squandered five of the six break chances.

Australian Open: Federer, Serena, Sharapova win in straight sets, advance to third round

Melbourne: Serena Williams has had so much success for such a long time that even in a second-round match she can set a record at the season's first Grand Slam event.
The six-time and defending champion beat No. 90-ranked Hsieh Su-wei 6-1, 6-2 on Wednesday at Rod Laver Arena, an all-time record 79th main draw match at the Australian Open.
She closed with an ace, her seventh, finishing in precisely an hour.
"It all started here — this is where I played my first Grand Slam right on this court and I'm still going, it's such an honor," said Williams, who has a 70-9 win-loss record at Melbourne Park since her debut in 1998. "I love it every time I come here."
Serena Williams in action in the second round of the Australian Open. Getty
Serena Williams in action in the second round of the Australian Open. Getty
She hit 26 winners, including one around the post that she thought may have been a first for her, at age 34.
"My first one I think," she said. "I was like, "Yay. Never too late."
Williams' next opponent will be 18-year-old Russian Daria Kasatkina, who beat Croatia's Ana Konjuh 6-4, 6-3, and she faces a potential quarterfinal match against Maria Sharapova, which would be a rematch of the 2015 final.
Sharapova reached the third round with a 6-2, 6-1 win over Aliaksandra Sasnovich in the first match completed on day three, when light rain caused an hour-long delay getting started on the outside courts.
Roger Federer extended his streak by reaching the third round for the 17th straight Australian Open.
Federer, playing his 65th consecutive major, advanced 6-3, 7-5, 6-1 over Alexandr Dolgopolov. He lost in the third round in his first two trips to Melbourne Park in 2000 and '01 and again last year — in between he won the title four times and lost one final during a run of reaching the semifinals or better in 11 straight years.
He didn't face a break point against Dolgopolov, his sometimes practice partner, and said "I thought I served great."
"Very happy, conditions are extremely quick," he said. "I had to serve well and as the match went on I started to feel better and better."
Seventh-seeded Kei Nishikori, the 2014 U.S. Open finalist, advanced with a 6-3, 7-6 (5), 6-3 win over Austin Krajicek, No. 15 David Goffin beat Damir Dzumhur 6-4, 0-6, 6-4, 6-2 and No. 19 Dominic Thiem had a 6-3, 6-1, 6-3 win over Nicolas Almagro.
Sharapova, the 2008 champion and four-time finalist at Melbourne Park, dropped two service games in the first set, including once when serving at 5-1, but was otherwise consistent except for some over-hit ground strokes.
"To come back here and play my first match on Rod Laver is always very special as you always get those first little jitters out of the way."
Other seeded players advancing included No. 12 Belinda Bencic, who had a 6-3, 6-3 win over Timea Babos, and No. 13 Roberta Vinci, who beat Irina Falconi 6-2, 6-3.
The 92nd-ranked Kateryna Bondarenko earned one of her biggest wins since returning from retirement after having a baby in 2013, beating two-time major winner and No. 23-seeded Svetlana Kuznetsova 6-1, 7-5.

'Heavy' match-fixing in lower levels of tennis, says anti-corruption official

Melbourne: Match-fixing is commonplace in tennis's lower levels and efforts to fight it are inadequate, a senior anti-corruption official told AFP after cheating claims rocked the sport during the Australian Open.
After an explosive report claimed match-fixing was repeatedly going unpunished, Chris Eaton of the International Centre for Sport Security (ICSS) criticised tennis's "opaque and secretive" anti-corruption body.
The controversy is just the latest to hit the tainted sports world after claims of a doping cover-up shook athletics and multiple scandals engulfed football's governing body, FIFA.
Representational image. Reuters
Representational image. Reuters
Eaton, directory of integrity at the ICSS, said professional betting analysis showed "nil manipulation" of matches at the top levels of tennis, where players are highly paid and less susceptible to bribery.
"However in the second and lower levels, manipulation indicators are heavy and regularly occurring," the former FIFA security chief said via email.
"We are not the only sport integrity organisation to observe this."
Eaton's comments follow the BBC and BuzzFeed report that said 16 players who had reached the top 50 over the past decade had repeatedly been suspected of fixing matches, but never punished.
Three matches at Wimbledon had fallen under suspicion and at least eight of the "core group" of players on the fixing radar were at the Australian Open Grand Slam tournament, which began on Monday, it said.
Tennis authorities rejected any suggestion that evidence was suppressed and defended the workings of the Tennis Integrity Unit, which was set up in 2008 and has landed 18 convictions, including six life bans.
The BBC and BuzzFeed report's claims are backed up by anecdotal evidence including from Serbian world number one Novak Djokovic, who said he was once offered $200,000 to fix a match in Russia.
Retired American player Andy Roddick said a fellow former professional had told him he could probably name "at least 8-9" of the 16 suspected of repeatedly fixing matches.
'Operating in the shadows'
Eaton said hundreds of thousands of dollars can be made by gamblers using accumulators to bet on the outcomes of multiple matches, a practice that is especially popular in eastern Europe and Russia.
It creates a powerful incentive to fix matches -- something which is particularly easy to do in tennis, which has many poorly paid players and where it only takes one bribe to secure the desired outcome.
Eaton said tennis was the third most popular sport, behind football and cricket, for betting worldwide "and as a direct consequence it is third in the magnitude of identified suspicious matches".
"Tennis is not as lucrative for fixing as football or cricket. But it takes less corruptive effort to fix individual outcomes in a tennis match, so the frequency of winning on a single match can be vastly higher than in cricket and football," he said.
Eaton also hit out at the "poor choice of structure and process" for the Tennis Integrity Unit, saying it needs to be more open and relies too much on betting analysis, rather than field investigations.
"Integrity is by definition open and transparent. The TIU is neither... by operating in the shadows they fail to practice what they preach," he said, calling for a "new independent and integrated integrity model.
"If not, then tennis will continue to be targeted at its most vulnerable levels, and as intimidated or compromised players and others advance they bring that vulnerability with them."
His comments chime with top players Roger Federer and Andy Murray, who both said they were glad to see the issue of match-fixing brought to light and would like to see more details.

HIL: Whetton's early goal helps Punjab Warriors beat defending champions Ranchi Rays

Chandigarh: Australian Jacob Whetton scored an early field goal to hand Jaypee Punjab Warriors a 2-0 victory over defending champions Ranchi Rays in their opening match of the Hockey India League (HIL), in Chandigarh on Tuesday.
Under the newly introduced scoring system, a field goal is counted as two and the hosts did enough to defend their early strike to pocket full points from the encounter.
Whetton found the opposition net as early as in the second minute of the match to give the early lead to Punjab Warriors which they stoutly defended for the remaining 68 minutes of the match to stun the title holders.
Whetton slotted home a fine fiel goal from a counter-attack after he was brilliantly assisted by Punjab Warriors skipper Sardar Singh, who switched base from Delhi Waveriders this season.
Sardar Singh in action. Image Credit: Twitter @HockeyIndiaLeag
Sardar Singh in action. Image Credit: Twitter @HockeyIndiaLeag
Punjab Warriors caught Ranchi, partly co-owned by India cricket captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni, napping in a counter-attack when Sardar set it up for Whetton from the right with a brilliant pass and the Australian did enough to dodge past an onrushing Ranchi goalkeeper Tyler Lovell to shot home the goal.
Punjab Warriors looked more orgainsed than their opponents.
After Whetton's early strike, Ranchi got a golden opportunity to draw level in the 18th minute but skipper Ashley Jackson's flick from a penalty corner was blocked by Punjab Warriors goalkeeper Tristian Clemons. Ranchi had another scoring chance after in the opening half but Jackson's slap shot did not trouble Punjab Warriors custodian.
After the cross-over, Punjab Warriors came out with more purpose and attacked Ranchi goal at ease and in the process earned three penalty corners but the chances went in vain.
While Whetton's try from the first penalty corner hit the right post, the effort from the second set piece went wide.
Punjab Warriors had another scoring opportunity in the final quarter, but Christopher Ciriello's effort did not yield result.
Ranchi came out all guns blazing in the final quarter but their forwardline failed to get the final touch which could have earned them atleast a draw.
Punjab Warriors will meet last year's bronze medallist Delhi Waveriders in their next match in Chandigarh on Thursday, while Ranchi will play Uttar Pradesh Wizards in Lucknow on Friday.
After the match, Whetton thanked Sardar for the fine assist and also lauded his team's backline to hold on to the lead.
"It was good that Sardar provided the ball in time and I was there at the right place for the goal. Also, we put up a very good defensive performance as well, so it was a good win," Whetton, was adjudged player-of-the-match said at the post-match presentation.