'If I didn't believe, I'd have stayed home' – Tendulkar

Sachin Tendulkar refuses to believe that India’s 24-year wait for a second world title hangs heavy around his neck © GNNphoto

Heading into his fifth, and likely final, World Cup, Sachin Tendulkar admits that the expectation of millions of Indians isn’t as daunting as made out to be, and that if it was, he would have stayed home. “It’s not just me, but the entire nation which dreams about this,” he told reporters in Jamaica. “It’s extremely important. We have tried our best in the past and we will continue to do that.”If there has been no success in the recent past, it doesn’t mean that we will never achieve it. If we lose hope, then we may as well be back in India. But we have hope and we have pride.”Tendulkar, one-day cricket’s highest run-scorer (14, 783 from 381 games) missed India’s tour to the West Indies last year, but believed they could do well in the World Cup. “I am looking forward to having a good World Cup. I am hoping that both my batting and bowling will come good,” he said. “I am not under any pressure at this time I feel quite confident and I am ready to go.”Tendulkar was a highlight at the 2003 World Cup, hitting a record 673 runs as India rode on eight consecutive wins to reach the final against Australia.Greg Chappell, India’s coach, said the side had a good chance of clinching their second title but wouldn’t let the pressure get to them. “We are one of a number of teams who have a good chance of doing well. We are quietly confident that we have the make-up to do well in the tournament and that’s the important thing.”Rahul Dravid, the captain, believed India were one of the most balanced sides in the tournament. “We have a pretty good team and we are very confident. I know that all the other teams will be aiming to play their best cricket but we are very confident that this is going to be a very good tournament for us.”India play two warm-up matches at Jamaica, against the Netherlands and West Indies, on March 6 and 9, before heading to Trinidad where they face Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Bermuda in the first round of the World Cup.

Selection for South Africa Tests postponed

Rahul Dravid, Sourav Ganguly and Anil Kumble will have to undergo routine tests at the NCA © AFP
 

The selection of India’s squad for the first two Tests against South Africa has been postponed from March 9 to March 17. The selectors will now meet in Bangalore instead of Mumbai.Dilip Vengsarkar, the chairman of selectors, had requested a postponement for picking a squad for the Tests starting March 26, so that players could take part in the Deodhar Trophy scheduled between March 14 and 26. “The Deodhar Trophy is a significant tournament on the domestic calendar and would have lost its value if we had announced the Test team on Sunday,” Vengsarkar told Cricinfo. “We want those who returned immediately after the Test series in Australia to appear in this tournament. But those who stayed back for the CB one-day series deserve these 15 days of rest.”Anil Kumble, Rahul Dravid, Sourav Ganguly, VVS Laxman, and Wasim Jaffer are expected to turn out for their respective zones in the tournament that marks a close to the 2007-08 domestic season. Sachin Tendulkar, Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Ishant Sharma are among those who will get a break before the South Africa series.In an earlier interview, Vengsarkar had pointed out that it was with the amount of international cricket being played, it was difficult to get players in the national side to play domestic cricket.South Africa will arrive in Chennai on March 21 for three Tests, the first of which begins at the MA Chidambaram stadium on March 26. The next second and third Tests will be played in Ahmedabad and Kanpur between April 3-7 and 11-15.Meanwhile India’s Test specialists will have to undergo routine tests at the NCA over the next three days in accordance with a BCCI policy, which states that players who have been out of action must undergo periodic check-ups prior to all selections. Laxman, Jaffer, Ganguly, Dravid, VRV Singh, Pankaj Singh and Kumble haven’t been part of the side since the Adelaide Test in January and will need to go through fitness tests before their names are cleared for selection. They will undergo tests under Paul Chapman, the trainer at the NCA, Paul Close, the physiotherapist, and Dav Whatmore. The NCA will in turn forward the reports to the board on Saturday.

New Zealand lead by 94 as wickets tumble


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details3:23

Rogers: Best day of cricket this season

The pink ball and green pitch have combined to produce a vivid brand of cricket over the first two days at Adelaide Oval, where a three-day Test now appears a near certainty. At stumps on the second evening, it was Australia who had the upper hand but in a match full of rapid momentum swings, New Zealand were well and truly still in the contest. Their lead of 94 runs with five wickets in hand could yet develop into a target that will challenge Australia.That the third innings was already half over was an indication of how quickly this Test had progressed. Runs were at a premium, with only three players having so far reached half-centuries, and none having made hundreds. On the first day 12 wickets had fallen and on the second, 13 more tumbled, but it was a not-out decision that may yet have the greatest impact on the result of the match, a reprieve for Nathan Lyon, who usually bats at No.11 for Australia.The scene was this: Australia were 8 for 118 in reply to New Zealand’s 202, and Lyon top-edged an attempted sweep off Mitchell Santner into his shoulder and up to slip. New Zealand’s appeal was denied on field by umpire S Ravi, and Brendon McCullum asked for a review, confident that Australia would soon be 9 for 118. But despite evidence that would have convinced most courts of law, the third umpire Nigel Llong was unswayed.After five minutes of replays, Llong upheld Ravi’s decision. There was a clear Hot Spot on the top edge of Lyon’s bat, and he had walked halfway to the dressing room. There also seemed to be a deviation in the ball’s course. But nothing showed up on Snicko, which appeared to create enough doubt in Llong’s mind. To add to the farce, he checked also if it could have been lbw off Lyon’s shoulder, but seemed not to notice that the Eagle Eye replay was of the previous delivery.It was a costly call for New Zealand. Lyon and Peter Nevill went on to compile the highest partnership of the match, adding a further 72 runs after the review. Undeterred by his near miss, Lyon continued to sweep with the enthusiasm of an Olympic curler, and the shot brought him plenty of runs, including the second six of his Test career. At the other end, Nevill played the perfect innings for the moment, his 66 the top score of the match so far.Eventually Lyon was caught at gully off Trent Boult for 34, but Mitchell Starc hobbled to the crease in spite of the stress fracture in his foot, and thumped 20 runs off one Mark Craig over and 24 in total. He was not out when Nevill holed out to deep cover off Doug Bracewell, and Australia had somehow turned what seemed a certain hefty deficit into a 22-run first-innings lead.It also meant that New Zealand would face the challenging task of batting under lights, when the pink ball seems to swing most. And even without Starc, Australia’s pace trio of Josh Hazlewood, Peter Siddle and Mitchell Marsh asked some serious questions of the New Zealand top order. Martin Guptill had no answers, caught at gully for 17 when he drove at a fullish outswinger from Hazlewood, completing a disappointing series with the bat.Shaun Marsh’s return to Test cricket ended in a run-out for 2•Cricket Australia/Getty Images

His opening partner Tom Latham again survived the early overs but could not push on. In every innings of this series, Latham has reached double figures but never has he scored more than 50. This time, he too drove at Hazlewood and edged behind to Nevill for 10. Most importantly for New Zealand’s hopes, Kane Williamson also fell cheaply, a faint tickle behind off Mitchell Marsh ending his innings on 9.Australia are adamant they need an allrounder in case a fast man breaks down, so in the absence of Starc there were great expectations on Marsh to step up. Getting rid of Williamson was the perfect start; dismissing McCullum was a bonus. On 20, McCullum prodded forward and was struck on the pad by Marsh; McCullum challenged the umpire’s out decision but it was an ambitious review, and he had to depart.One more wicket was to come, Ross Taylor trapped right in front by Hazlewood for 32, and nobody was more relieved than Steven Smith, who had put down Taylor at slip off Hazlewood before he had scored. The pink ball was easy enough for the 42,372 spectators to see under the floodlights but Smith seemed to have trouble watching it into his hands, also putting down BJ Watling later in the night on 2, also at slip off Hazlewood.By stumps, Watling was on 7 and Santner had 13, and with the score at 5 for 116, they and the tail needed to stick around for as long as possible on day three to set Australia a challenging target. Quite what such a target would be was unclear, for the Australians had collapsed to 8 for 116 themselves earlier in the day. Although the first session brought only 62 runs, the fewest of any session in the series, the match was moving at rapid pace.New Zealand seemed to have taken control of the game in that first session, collecting six wickets and doing almost nothing wrong. The fast bowlers swung the ball and kept the runs tight, the spinners extracted turn and wickets, and the fielding was as outstanding as anything seen so far in the series. Especially memorable was McCullum’s diving stop at mid-off, then his roll and throw to have Shaun Marsh run out for 2.Marsh had nobody to blame but himself for his call and hesitation, and it was the second wicket of the day after Tim Southee hooped the ball brilliantly to have Adam Voges caught at slip for 13. Mitchell Marsh replaced his brother and prodded an edge behind for 4 off Doug Bracewell, and it was just reward for Bracewell’s nagging lines and the pressure that he built.Bracewell bowled with such impressive economy that he could have been AAA-rated by Standard & Poor’s, his 12.1 overs bringing him 3 for 18 at less than 1.5 an over. Smith was the only Australian batsman to show the necessary patience and he reached his half-century from 108 balls, but he could not help going after the spin of Mark Craig, who turned the ball enough to catch Smith’s inside edge as he danced down the pitch and Watling moved quickly to take a sharp catch.Smith’s 53 had given Australia a base, but Craig soon added Siddle, caught in close for a duck, and Santner bowled Hazlewood for 4 to bring Australia to their knees. Unfortunately for New Zealand, when Lyon went to his knees for a sweep and was reprieved in the third umpire’s room, the momentum shifted back Australia’s way.

Sangakkara continues blistering form

Pace-setters Basnahira North suffered their first defeat in the tournament when they received a 192-run thrashing at the hands of Kandurata under lights at the Premadasa Stadium. Captain Kumar Sangakkara once again set the tone for his team’s second successive win with a brilliant knock of 96 off 84 balls that led them to an imposing 296 for 5. Tharanga Paranavithana (75) who shared a 118-run third wicket stand with Sangakkara and Chamara Kapugedera (60 not out) were also among the runs. Basnahira North were bundled out for a disappointing 104 with Extras (21) being the top scorer.Wayamba kept their hopes of reaching the final alive when they defeated Ruhuna by 39 runs in a match reduced to 22-overs-a-side due to rain in Kurunegala. Wayamba rattled up 143 for 5 with Jehan Mubarak making an unbeaten run-a-ball 47. Ruhuna were never in the hunt following Farveez Maharoof’s double strike in his first over and were bundled out for 104. Legspinner Kaushal Lokuarachchi cleaned up the innings with 4 for 24. Wayamba’s second win in three games increases their points tally to nine, equal with second placed Kandurata. Ruhuna, who missed their captain Sanath Jayasuriya (who is abroad) for this game, are virtually out of the final with two defeats in as many matches.

Team Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
Wayamba 3 2 1 0 0 10 +0.541 594/122.0 528/122.0
Basnahira North 3 2 1 0 0 10 -0.030 506/128.2 596/150.0
Kandurata 2 2 0 0 0 9 +2.047 570/98.2 375/100.0
Basnahira South 2 0 2 0 0 0 -1.389 397/100.0 527/98.2
Ruhuna 2 0 2 0 0 0 -2.046 206/72.0 247/50.2

Pakistan eye series whitewash

Younis Khan returns after a two-match rest © AFP
 

Match facts

Saturday April 19, 2008 Start time 15.00 local time (10.00 GMT)

The Big Picture

The series predictably stands at 4-0 with Bangladesh perched on the edge of another series whitewash. They showed stiff resistance in the third match in Lahore, nearly upsetting the home side in a high-scorer, and in Multan, showed the hunger to bat out the 50 overs after tottering at 109 for 8 in the 29th over. These performances, however, weren’t enough to keep the series alive. Shakib Al Hasan’s batting has been their biggest gain but he has lacked support from an inconsistent top order.The series may be already in the bag for Pakistan, but they need one more win to break their existing 18-year-old record of ten consecutive victories. The dead rubber will be witnessed by the President Pervez Musharraf, and that should be an added incentive for the home team, who said before the series they wouldn’t settle for anything less than a 5-0 sweep.

Form guide – Pakistan

Last five matches – WWWWWPlayer to watch: Salman Butt has topped the run charts among both teams with 315 at an average of 78.25 which makes him the obvious trump card for Pakistan. The bowling may not be of the highest quality, but to his credit Butt has made the most of it. He has scored at a strike rate of 92, and Bangladesh have struggled to keep him in check. His last three knocks, all above 50, have been the deciding factors in Pakistan’s dominance.

Form guide – Bangladesh

Last five matches – WLLLLPlayer to watch: Shakib Al Hasan has run into some excellent form of late: before his 75 in Lahore, he had registered four single-digit scores in his previous games. Not the quickest of scorers, unlike his more flaboytant peers at the top, Shakib took the attack to Pakistan with a 73-ball knock that night and gave his side some hope of pulling off an upset. His 108 in Multan showed his determination to push the score to some respectability, when many would have imagined an early finish to the innings at 109 for 8. With 187 runs in four games, Shakib tops the table for the highest run-getter for Bangladesh.

Team news

With the series already in the bag, Pakistan are likely to give an opportunity to Naumanullah, the 32-year-old batsman who has been prolific in the domestic circuit but hasn’t played an international game yet. Wahab Riaz, the left-arm fast bowler, will play instead of Sohail Khan. Bangladesh are likely to play the same team which lost in Multan.Pakistan (likely) 1 Salman Butt, 2 Kamran Akmal (wk), 3 Mohammad Yousuf, 4 Shoaib Malik (capt), 5 Younis Khan, 6 Misbah-ul-Haq, 7 Naumanullah, 8 Shahid Afridi, 9 Mohammad Asif, 10 Wahab Riaz, 11 Umar Gul.Bangladesh (likely) 1 Tamim Iqbal, 2 Junaid Siddique, 3 Aftab Ahmed, 4 Mohammad Ashraful (capt), 5 Shakib Al Hasan, 6 Mahmudullah, 7 Mashrafe Mortaza, 8 Farhad Reza, 9 Dhiman Ghosh (wk), 10 Syed Rasel, 11 Abdur Razzak.

Pitch and conditions

The pitch looks like a typical subcontinent track which should offer plenty of runs. The captain winning the toss will want to bat first and put the runs on the board.

Stats and trivia

  • Pakistan need to one more win to register their 11th successive ODI victory, which will be a record for them.
  • Pakistan have dominated the day-night games at the National Stadium, winning five out of six games.
  • Mohammad Yousuf is the highest run-scorer at this venue for Pakistan, with 697 runs in 11 matches.

    Quotes

    “Winning is winning, it’s not in our hands who our opponents are.”
    Shoaib Malik“If we bat first and put up a total something like we posted in third game then we have a chance in the last match.”
    Jamie Siddons, the Bangladesh coach

  • Essex in with chance of promotion as Danny Law dazzles

    Danny Law hit a six and four off consecutive balls to help keepEssex’s hopes of promotion from the National League Division Two.Essex needed 12 in the last over with one wicket left against Durhamat Chester-le-street.Law swung two full tosses of Neil Killeen over square leg for six andfour to seal Essex’s victory.Earlier Durham made 188 for 8 in 43 overs. Simon Katich (63) and PaulCollingwood (50) were the main scorers with Ashley Cowan taking 3 for51. As rain interrupetd the match twice, the target for Essex wasrevised to 167 in 33 overs. Essex were at one stage 92 for 2 in the21st over and were making merry. Nicky Phillips then removed RonnieIrani (23), debutant Will Jefferson (50) and Steve Peters (2). Essexrecovered thanks to the stand of 30 in four overs between Law and PaulGrayson.When 31 were needed in 5 overs, Killeen removed Grayson (18), JamesFoster (10) and Ashley Cowan (0). In the penultimate over, Ian Hunterremoved Ricky Anderson (1) and just gave two runs with Law not gettingthe strike.But Law batted superbly in the last over to end with 27 not out in 20balls.

    Twenty20 tournament to be held in Fujairah

    The Gulf News reports that a ten-team tournament will be held in Fujairah between June 21 and August 2.Called the Crown Prince Cup, the event will feature four teams from Fujairah and six from other emirates. Matches will be played under Twenty20 rules.”More and more UAE nationals are having a growing interest in cricket, so I can promise you that in the future there will be a UAE cricket team with 100% Emirati representation, “Sultan Saif Al Samahi, Chairman of Fannan Sports and Cultural Club, said. “Of course, youth form Fujairah will get their chance in that dream”.”This is a chance to mingle with different communities such as the Indian, Pakistanis, Sri Lankans and Bangladeshis, who have a great passion for the game,” Ahmad Ebrahim Saif, chief coordinator for the tournament, said. “We are sure that, during and after the tournament, there will be more UAE nationals who will find this game very interesting.”Matches will take place at the Municipality Cricket Ground and at the cricket ground of the Fujairah Indian School.

    Kallis flays hapless New Zealand


    Scorecard and ball-by-ball commentary
    How they were out

    Kallis went on, and on, and on to his 29th Test hundred© Cricinfo Ltd

    A masterful 131 from Jacques Kallis, his 29th Test hundred, put South Africa well in charge of the second Test against a demoralised and embattled New Zealand. Kallis and Hashim Amla, who was unbeaten on 89, shared in a 220-run stand for the third wicket – their second huge partnership in a week.What made it all the more depressing for New Zealand was the speed at which Kallis stole the momentum. Chris Martin had bowled impressively in the morning session, removed an out-of-form Graeme Smith in addition to Herschelle Gibbs. New Zealand’s fielding, so shabby in the first Test at Johannesburg, was a vast improvement today too – led by Lou Vincent, who ought to have run out Amla in the fifth over of the day.But from a rare position of relative strength, New Zealand’s bowlers utterly lost the plot after lunch. Whereas in the morning Martin and Iain O’Brien were pitching it up, their strategy in the afternoon revolved around bouncers. Kallis pounced, creaming fours through (and over) extra cover and pulling leg-side strays through midwicket with quite ominous power. Right from the off, it was clear this wasn’t to be one of his stodgy days.This was Kallis at his cavalier best, a near-flawless innings of technical perfection – and pleasing to the eye, too. The strategy, if they had one, of dropping the ball short was so flawed as to be laughable. Kallis flayed them over point; backward of square; over and through midwicket, not to mention crunching drives through his favoured cover region. He sped to a hundred, his 29th and fifth in seven innings, from 143 balls, while passing 1000 runs for the calendar year. Never has he been in such imperious form.Amla was less commanding but wonderfully effective, and is clearly benefiting from batting so often with a man of Kallis’ experience. The slightest err in line from New Zealand’s bowlers was seized upon, timing the ball beautifully off the back foot – particularly off Martin who, after his long morning spell, was now tiring. Without Jacob Oram (hamstring) and their spearhead, Shane Bond, the onus fell on the gangling O’Brien and Mark Gillespie, the debutant.Gillespie resembles an All Black No. 8 rather than a Black Cap No.10, and was deceptively quick with a heavy ball that bounces off a length. After tea, New Zealand finally ended their baffling bouncer strategy and Gillespie was rewarded for an excellent over to Kallis when he found one to jag back on him, trapping him in front.The most disappointing factor of New Zealand’s day, if not the most crucial, was the hammering Daniel Vettori received. Amla and Kallis took 16 from his first four overs and from there he never settled. Short balls were pulled for six; half-volleys cracked through cover. With Vettori dispatched, New Zealand’s last semblance of control was lost – and not even a defensive over-the-wicket tactic could dam the runs.For the second time in two days bad light came to rescue New Zealand as South Africa went to stumps leading by 84.

    Adcock not offered Redbacks contract

    Nathan Adcock retained his one-day place last summer after being dropped from the Pura Cup side, but his prospects for 2008-09 look bleak © Getty Images
     

    Nathan Adcock’s South Australia career is hanging in the balance after the Redbacks did not give him a contract in their first round of offers. Shane Deitz, the wicketkeeper-batsman, also missed out, while the New South Wales players Greg Mail and Grant Lambert have declined a move to Adelaide.It is a remarkable fall for Adcock who started the 2007-08 season as captain. However his poor batting form – his first-class average for the campaign was 13.83 – first cost him the leadership and now a contract.”Obviously Nathan’s disappointed but he understands where we’re going,” the South Australia coach Mark Sorell said. “He’s taken it really well. His batting performance overall was down on what we expected. That doesn’t rule him out in the next round of negotiation and also even in performance down the track in club cricket.”Sorell will not rush to appoint next season’s captain, although he admitted he was keen on cementing Adcock’s replacement. “We need to get our squad sorted,” he said, “but come May 15 we will have our final list of offers and we will know where our squad is at.”The management has drawn on last year’s lessons when an 11th-hour appointment meant Adcock barely had time to settle after replacing Darren Lehmann. “I’d be quite keen to establish our leadership early,” Sorell said, “so everyone knows what we’re doing.”Graham Manou, who took over the Pura Cup leadership in February, is a strong contender but Sorell was offering no promises. “We’ve got some candidates for that position,” he said, while acknowledging that Manou was the stand-out contender from the current group.Adcock and Deitz could yet receive lifelines if they are handed second-round deals on May 15, and until then they also have the option of being picked up from the transfer pool by other states. Deitz made two fifties in 16 Pura Cup innings, with an average of 20.25, and appeared only once in the one-day competition.Instead of looking at local talent, the Redbacks picked four targets at New South Wales and were successful in picking up Aaron O’Brien and Tom Cooper as they attempt to bolster the state’s inconsistent batting. Sorell said O’Brien, who also offers left-arm orthodox bowling, was “an exciting player, a good all-round cricketer” and the 21-year-old Cooper was “a guy for the future”.Sorell plans to analyse the state’s recruitment and retention system after finding it “really disappointing” to miss out on some key batsmen in Mail and Lambert. Mail is studying to be an investment banker while Lambert’s decision was based on family reasons. “The downside of attacking those sorts of players is that they are more entrenched where they are,” Sorell said. “We had some hurdles there.”South Australia had previously made an unsuccessful bid for the opener Chris Rogers and were unable to secure their own No. 1 player Ryan Harris. Rogers ended up at Victoria while Harris will move to Queensland. The state will continue to look for new signings in the next few weeks.South Australia’s local contract holders Graham Manou, Mark Cosgrove, Daniel Cullen, Daniel Harris, Paul Rofe, Mark Cleary, Cullen Bailey, Callum Ferguson, Daniel Christian, Cameron Borgas, Peter George, Gary Putland.The imports Michael Klinger, Aaron O’Brien, Tom Cooper.The rookies Jake Brown, James Smith, Jason Donnelly, Jake Haberfield, Chadd Sayers, Andy Delmont.Players on the transfer list Nathan Adcock, Simon Roberts, Ken Skewes, Shane Deitz, Ben Cameron, Jason Borgas, Tom Plant.

    Sri Lankan stars to miss inter-provincial Twenty20

    Jehan Mubarak will lead Kandurata in Mahela Jayawardene’s absence © Getty Images
     

    With the Indian Premier League just days away from its launch, followed immediately by the conclusion of the Indian Cricket League’s second season, Twenty20 cricket has caught on like a virus. Sri Lanka will have its own version with its inaugural six-team inter-provincial tournament scheduled to take off on Thursday.With the national team away in the Caribbean, and a few seniors set to take part in the IPL, the tournament has opened the doors for many budding cricketers trying to make their mark at this level. The inter-provincial limited overs series which was held in December and January was, however, fortunate to have the full contingent of national players.Jehan Mubarak and Kaushalya Weeraratne will have big shoes to fill when they lead Kandurata and Wayamba respectively, which shared the inter-provincial limited-overs title. Weeraratne will be taking over from Kumar Sangakkara and Mubarak from Mahela Jayawardene. With the unavailability of Chaminda Vaas, Tillakaratne Dilshan and Sanath Jayasuriya (all to IPL) Basnahira North will be led by Thilina Kandamby, Basnahira South by Prasanna Jayawardene and Ruhuna by Indika de Saram respectively.However for the first two matches on April 17 and 18, both Mubarak and Weeraratne will not be available due to their commitments in the West Indies. In their absence, Wayamba will be led by Jeevantha Kulatunga and Kandurata by Thilan Samaraweera as the province’s vice-captain Chamara Kapugedera is also in the Caribbean. In addition, Ajantha Mendis, Mahela Udawatte and Ishara Amerasinghe (all Wayamba), Thilan Thushara (Kandurata), Nuwan Kulasekera (Basnahira North), Upul Tharanga (Ruhuna) who are all also in the Caribbean, will miss the first two games as they are due to return only on April 18.One unique feature is the introduction of a Schools Invitation XI, led by Dinesh Chandimal, which comprises as many as eight of the 14 cricketers who represented Sri Lanka in the Under-19 World Cup in Malaysia. Ashan Priyanjan, Thisara Perera, Dimuth Karunaratne and Sachith Pathirana – four from the World Cup squad – have been included in the Ruhuna, Wayamba and Kandurata teams.Sidath Wettimuny, the Inter-provincial committee chairman, said there would be mixed reactions to exposing a Schools XI to Twenty20 cricket, but reasoned that it would expose them to the domestic level and give an opportunity to play under pressure against the best cricketers in the country.Each team will play five matches in the first round before which the top four teams qualify to play in the Super Four round on a league basis. The top two teams in the Super Four will qualify for the final, whcih carries prize money worth Rs 2,250,000. The losing finalist will receive Rs 1,125,000.The Man of the Tournament carries prize money worth Rs 50,000 while the Man of the Final gets Rs 25,000.