12th Dec 2014.
NZ Cricketer Peter Ingram Injured - Away from the Field !!
Posted on the 04 January 2015 by Sampathkumar Sampath
He needed to secure time
off from his teaching job at Francis Douglas Memorial College before confirming
his place in the squad – but an injury is going to keep this Kiwi out – nay,
nothing sustained on a Cricket field but on the farm field !!!
Wridhimann
Saha had a rough decision – apparently there was no snick but was adjudged
caught – he put his down and started walking. This morning in the Expert panel
Sanjay Manjrekar alongside Hayden and Wasim Akram said : ‘if a batsman walks
out before given out – it is showing disrespect to the Umpires’ – the Aussie
spoke further ……. It sounds rather different – there are two aspects : 1)
gentlemen Cricketers would walk when they are out – though Umpire may still be
in doubt 2) players have no other go but to walk towards the pavilion when
given out by the Umpire – most players of repute would do that without showing
great show of fuss on the perceived wrong decision !!!!
Injuries in the field are
not new – and not all were accidental – there have been times from bodyline to
bloodbath in Sabina park and more when batsmen were left bloodied – recent
times have seen sad passing away of Phil Hughes, an Umpire Hilel Awaskar
passing away in Israel !, Omar Phillips getting injured in WI – and Virat Kohli
getting struck on the helmet by Mitchell Johnson – all players rushing to
Kohli, who went on to make a solid century and perish eventually of another
bouncer. There were bouncers hurled at
tail, one which was somewhat ungainly hit by Shami … all part of the game.
A couple of decades ago, a
promising Cricketer would end up a good job in a PSU (mostly banks) – now we
have some who breathe and play Cricket only – still earn more than what was
earned by their former colleagues. Players after retirement generally end up in
media commenting on the game or turn to coaching. New Zealand and some other players are
different – the players do many other things too.
Central Districts opener
Peter Ingram ended a roller coaster week on a high after being included in the
New Zealand cricket squad for next month's tri-series in Sri Lanka. Ingram
replaced Jesse Ryder in the 14-man squad after Ryder was ruled out yesterday
with an elbow injury. It represented a remarkable change of forturne for the
31-year-old New Plymouth teacher Ingram, who wasn't included in the list of New
Zealand Cricket's 20 contracted players announced earlier. A hard-hitting and
prolific runscorer at domestic level, it appeared his short international
career may have ended when he was dropped for the second test against Australia
in March, amidst concern at his lack of foot movement against quality attacks.
Sadly, the good news is not
to last longer. Peter Ingram has
suffered back and knee injuries after being run over by his tractor. According
to Taranaki Daily News, Ingram was moving cattle on his farm when his tractor
keeled over on a steep bank. "I jumped off the tractor and the bank was so
steep I landed about five meters in front of it and then it's run me over and
crushed a couple of vertebrae and dislocated my knee," Ingram said. Ingram
was flown to hospital after he hobbled a kilometer to find help from his
neighbours. He spent six days in hospital before being discharged. The back
would heal up but due to knee trouble, he may not be able to bowl. He had a
share of the world record Twenty20 opening partnership of 201 runs with regular
opening partner Jamie How. The same pair also hit the highest opening wicket
stand in New Zealand first-class cricket of 428 runs, against Wellington in
2009-10.
At Adelaide, the wrecker-in-chief
was not a fast bowler. One can
understand, Indians playing pacers not well – but in a land which had master
batsman against spinners, it is surprising that spinners of opponents have been
successful too – it is not about Abdul Qadir, Iqbal Qasim, Shane Warne,
Muralitharan, Underwood, Gibbs of olden days – in many recent tours and even at
home, Indian batsmen of clay have floundered against spinners. Remember Ajmal, Swann,Monty Panesar,Moen
Ali,Shane Shilingford and now Lyon.
Nathan Lyon continued
bowling an impressive brand of offspin to earn Australia not only a handy
first-innings lead but also enough time to build a target and have a second
crack at India in Adelaide. Lyon claimed three of the five wickets to fall on
the fourth morning - Peter Siddle took the other two - to complete his sixth
five-wicket haul as India were dismissed with just under an hour to go before
lunch.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
12th Dec 2014.
12th Dec 2014.