Thursday, February 28, 2013

I would have gladly traded those 175 runs: Tendulkar





The Hindu HEARTBREAK HUNDRED: A stupendous innings by Sachin Tendulkar wasn't enough to see India home in the fifth ODI against Australia in Hyderabad. Chasing 350, India fell short by three runs in a thriller. File Photo: K.R. Deepak





Tendulkar pained at the 3-run loss against Australia in 2009



Sachin Tendulkar says he would have “gladly traded” his knock of 175 against Australia in 2009 for an Indian victory even though he “certainly” rates it as one of the very best in his glorious ODI career.


Chasing 351 runs in the fifth of the seven-match ODI series at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium in Hyderabad, Tendulkar fell awfully close to pulling off an unlikely win with an incredible innings.


“It was certainly one of my best innings, but I would have gladly traded those 175 runs for a victory,” Tendulkar said about the match which India lost by three runs.


He scored those runs off 141 balls and smashed 19 fours and four sixes. Tendulkar completed 17,000 runs in ODIs during the course of that innings.


“It was one of those days when nothing seemed to be out of place. I was able to execute my strokes well. Our middle order failed, but Suresh Raina batted fluently. We had a good partnership of 137. Suresh was caught behind at 299 in the 43rd over.


“Harbhajan Singh fell soon after, to make it 300/6, but I believed we were very much in control. It was a question of hanging in there, running well and ensuring that bad balls were dealt with harshly,” he said.


“We were only 19 away when I tried to lift (Clint) McKay over short fine-leg, only to be caught by (Nathan) Hauritz. It was a huge disappointment. The lower order tried hard, but more wickets fell, and we fell short by three runs,” Tendulkar wrote in a piece for BCCI’s official website.


Tendulkar mentioned about the comparisons made between that knock and his back-to-back hundreds against the same opponent in Sharjah back in 1998.


“I have been asked on a few occasions to compare the 175 with the back-to-back hundreds against the same team at Sharjah in 1998. I don’t think a comparison can be made. The expectations were way higher at the final stages of the tri-series in Sharjah,” he said.


“The Hyderabad hundred was scored in the middle of a bilateral series, and hence the circumstances were very different, physically and even mentally.”


The pressure was certainly there on that November evening as well as the series was tied at 2-2 going into the fifth ODI.


“The seven-match series against Australia was even when we took the field for the crucial fifth game at Hyderabad. The winner would take a 3-2 lead, and the loser would be under tremendous pressure before the last two matches,” Tendulkar said.


The stadium in Uppal, which was back then a newly-built one, came in for praise from Tendulkar.


“I had pleasant memories of the Lal Bahadur Stadium in Hyderabad. It was the venue where I had scored 186 against New Zealand in 1999-00. The new Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium has a much better facility. The ground was well-maintained, and the arrangements excellent for players and spectators,” Tendulkar said.


“Of course, we weren’t thinking about all that when Australia went on the offensive after winning the toss and electing to bat. Openers Shane Watson and Shaun Marsh put on 145 at a run a ball, and the middle order continued with the attack. When they finished with 350/4, not many gave us a chance,” he said.


Tendulkar almost chased the target on his own but, with just 19 runs short, he got out and the rest choked, falling short by three runs with two balls still to go.


“One of the good things about chasing a big total is that there is no ambiguity regarding the strategy you have to adopt. We knew we had to go for it from the outset and play strokes. I felt that I wasn’t timing the ball well, and went in for a change of bat. I shifted to a brand new willow, and that changed things,” he said.


“Australia had a decent bowling line-up comprising four pacemen in Ben Hilftenhaus, Doug Bollinger, Clint McKay and Shane Watson. Nathan Hauritz was their main spinner, with the likes of Adam Voges chipping in with his left-arm spin. Mike Hussey also sent down a few overs that evening.”




More In: Cricket | Sport








via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/sport/cricket/i-would-have-gladly-traded-those-175-runs-tendulkar/article4462369.ece

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Bodos set free Visakhapatnam engineer





via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/andhra-pradesh/bodos-set-free-visakhapatnam-engineer/article4460569.ece

Tamil Nadu men beat Karnataka, women lose tamely





via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/sport/other-sports/tamil-nadu-men-beat-karnataka-women-lose-tamely/article4460062.ece

Economic Survey 2013-14 tabled in Parliament




  • Foreign Exchange reserves remains steady at $ 295.6 billion at December 2012 end

  • Economic Survey calls for curbing import of gold to contain current account deficit

  • Tax base to be widened, prioritising expenditure to check fiscal deficit

  • Survey pitches for hike in diesel and LPG prices to cut subsidy burden

  • Economic Survey projects 6.1 to 6.7 per cent growth rate for 2013-14


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via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/economic-survey-201314-tabled-in-parliament/article4458091.ece

Fresh snowfall in Srinagar





The HIndu Taxi drivers clear snow from their vehicles on the banks of the Dal Lake following fresh Snowfall in Srinagar on Wednesday.Photo: Nissar Ahmad






via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/fresh-snowfall-in-srinagar/article4458022.ece

Sports in pictures





via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/sport/sports-in-pictures/article4457854.ece

News in pictures





via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/news/news-in-pictures/article4457827.ece

Day in pictures





via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/day-in-pictures/article4457808.ece

Monday, February 25, 2013

India clinch first Test by eight wickets





The Hindu India's Ravinder Jadeja celebrate the wicket of Nathan Lyon of Australia during the first Test at M.A.Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai on Tuesday. Photo: K. Pichumani




India clinched the first cricket Test against Australia with a comfortable eight-wicket victory to take a 1-0 lead in the four-match series here on Tuesday with their spinners taking all the 20 wickets for only the third time in their Test history.


The Indians took about 25 minutes in the morning to finally bring an end to the stubborn last wicket partnership between Moises Hendriques (81 not out) and Nathan Lyon (11) as Australia folded up for 241 in their second innings, leaving the hosts a small victory target of 50.


The hosts lost both their openers Murali Vijay (6) and Virender Sehwag (19) before overhauling the target with more than two full sessions to spare.


Cheteshwar Pujara brought about the winning run off Nathan Lyon to trigger off scenes of celebrations in the galleries and the Indian dressing room as the players congratulated and hugged each other.


It was a commendable show by the Indians, who have been under pressure of late following a series of indifferent performances in recent times, as they dominated the game right through at the M A Chidambaram stadium where the conditions suited the home team.


Dhoni and Ashwin


While captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni expectedly got the man-of-the-match award for his game-changing knock of 224, off spinner Ravichandran Ashwin scalped 12 wickets in the match to also play a stellar role.


The margin of victory could have been bigger had the Indians managed to get rid of the last wicket pair on Monday itself.


The two teams will now travel to Hyderabad for the second Test be played at the Rajiv Gandhi International stadium from March 2 to 6.


This was the third time that Indian spinners managed to take all the 20 wickets in a match.


The first time that Indian spinners bagged all the 20 wickets was at this same venue against England in 1972-73 while the second such instance was against New Zealand in Auckland in 1975-76.


Resuming at the overnight score of 232 for nine, Australia could add just nine runs to their tally much to the relief of the Indians who had a frustrating time trying to dismiss the last-wicket pair.


It took the Indians just nine overs this morning to put an end to Australia’s resistence when Ravindra Jadeja broke the agonisingly long last-wicket partnership between Henriques and Lyon.


Lyon, who showed a lot of grit and temparament to hang on, was dismissed by left-arm spinner Jadeja, caught by Murali Vijay at short-leg.


Henriques followed up his first innings half century with another gutsy unbeaten 81 and together with Lyon added 66 runs for the final wicket to take the match into the fifth and final day and prevent India from recording an innings victory.


Chasing the paltry 50-run target, India suffered two early blows in the form of openers Sehwag and Vijay, whose flop show with the bat continued.


The opening duo of Sehwag and Vijay put on 16 runs before the former was the first one to depart.


Vijay started his innings with a bang, smacking Lyon straight over his head for a six, his only scoring shot of the innings.


But that was all the local boy could manage in the innings as he was caught by Henriques at mid—off off James Patinson when he tried to go a big drive in the next over.



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via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/sport/cricket/india-clinch-first-test-by-eight-wickets/article4454742.ece

Man held for killing drunk son





A 55-year-old daily wage labourer stabbed his son to death in his house on Dharmaraja Koil Street in Thirunindravur on Sunday night.


Sundaramoorthy was upset with his eldest son, Balamurugan (28), a heavy vehicles driver, who was an alcoholic. Balamurugan constantly pawned or sold off household items to buy alcohol, the police said.


He would return home in a drunken rage and assault his wife Dhanalakshmi. The couple lived a block away from Sundaramoorthy and his younger son Durgabalan (18).


Around 6.30 p.m. on Sunday, Balamurugan came home drunk and asked his wife to lend money for more alcohol. When he began hitting her, Sundaramoorthy and Durgabalan intervened.


Balamurugan then attempted to take away the registration certificate of his moped from a safe in the house. This infuriated Sundaramoorthy who took a knife from the kitchen and stabbed his son in the stomach.


Other family members rushed Balamurugan to a government hospital nearby but he died on the way, the Thirunindravur police said.


Sundaramoorthy was arrested on charges of murder and remanded in judicial custody on Monday.



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via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/chennai/man-held-for-killing-drunk-son/article4452882.ece

Fighting Haryana rallies to get past Services





Kerala’s P.J. Jomol flicks the ball past Himachal Pradesh defenders Anjali Kumari and Shilpa Thakur. Photo: K.Ananthan




Haryana withstood the challenge of Services in an exciting five-set thriller in a men’s Group A match of the Federation Cup volleyball tournament here on Monday.


The encounter lasting well over two hours saw a see-saw battle for supremacy before Haryana won 23-25, 25-22, 25-21, 16-25, 15-13.


Having won its first match against Rajasthan 25-23, 25-21, 25-23 late on Sunday night, Services seemed in control during the opening phase of the first set, setting up an early lead of 9-4. With V.G. Prakash, Sujith Sebastian and Kuldeep Singh continuing on with their good work, Services had things clearly going its way as Haryana rather surprisingly failed to measure up at this stage.


Finding their touch


But only for a while did Haryana fumble. With Sube Singh and Surjeet Singh finding their touch at the net and Narender Singh putting up a plucky display, Haryana successfully clawed its way back. And soon the scores were tied at 11-11 and it proceeded the same way until 17-all. Services then dug deep into its reserves and it was soon match point. Haryana saved three match points before the Army men took the first set at 25-23.


The improved performance of Gurpreet Singh for sure had a bearing on the fortunes of Haryana in the second. Lagging behind in the earlier phase, the offence got a boost from Gurpreet and Haryana jumped into a four-point lead at 15-11. Services did try its best to get into the game but was unable to stop Haryana taking the set 25-22. The third set was a replica of the second and Haryana, trailing initially, took it at 25-21.


The timely substitution of Binesh Augustine with Prakash and the introduction of Pankaj Sharma helped Services take the fourth 25-16 and push the match into the decider.


The fifth was yet again evenly contested. The lead changed hands several times but after 10-all, Haryana grabbed the initiative through some effective spiking by Sube Singh to emerge a worthy winner. Haryana took the final set 15-12.


Easy for Kerala


Earlier, host Kerala women began their campaign on a rousing note, toying with Himachal Pradesh in straight sets at 25-15, 25-13, 25-17.


With the experienced Tiji Raju, P.V. Sheeba and skipper N.P. Bijina holding fort at the net and young S. Rekha chipping in well, Kerala brooked no reply from the Himachal girls.


TN men down Punjab


Later, Tamil Nadu men defeated Punjab 25-20, 25-15, 25-19 in Group B. The match was one-sided as Tamil Nadu clicked in all departments of the game and intelligently saw off the brute strength of its rival.




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via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/sport/other-sports/fighting-haryana-rallies-to-get-past-services/article4453149.ece

All eyes on Bansal’s Rail Budget





More trains or more hike? On the eve of Rail Budget, Patna-Gaya passanger train presents a bleak picture. Photo:Ranjeet Kumar





The Railway Budget will be presented tomorrow



All eyes will be on Railway Minister Pawan Kumar Bansal on Tuesday on whether he yields to pressure of hiking passenger fares yet again or looks at other measures to mobilise resources to offset the burden of the recent diesel price hike.


Mr. Bansal had on January 22 hiked passenger fares across-the- board after the Railways faced a loss of about Rs 25,000 crore in the passenger segment.


Railways had aimed to mop up an additional revenue of Rs 6,600 crore but the fuel hike had wiped out Rs 3,300 crore, Mr. Bansal had said.


The Rail Minister held several round of discussions with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Finance Minister P Chidambaram and the Planning Commission in connection with the Rail Budget. He is also understood have discussed the possibility of fare hike with Congress president Sonia Gandhi.


However, sources said a section of the Congress is not inclined towards effecting another round of fare hike as general elections are not far away.


Mr. Bansal is all set to announce a slew of passenger-friendly measures such as improvement in catering service, maintaining cleanliness at rail premises, introducing Braille stickers in coaches for visually-challenged passengers and development of stations in his maiden Rail Budget.


While there are possibilities of minor tinkering in freight rates despite resistance from the industry due to the slow economy growth, there will be some announcements of freight schemes to attract more loadings in the next fiscal 2013-14.


With Mr. Bansal heading Rail Bhavan and the key ministry back with the Congress party after almost one-and-a-half decade, speculation is rife about announcement of 100 new trains including AC double deckers, extension and increase of some popular passenger services.


Though the Congress is opposing the Trinamool government in West Bengal, MoS Railways Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury might have his say with likely provisions for new trains including Berhampur-Sealdah passenger, a direct train for New Jalpaiguri from the capital and pantry cars for Bengal-bound trains.



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via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/all-eyes-on-bansals-rail-budget/article4451937.ece

No space for occupational therapists in State



The All India Occupational Therapists’ Association celebrates its 60th anniversary next week but those in the profession are disgruntled.


For a long time now, occupational therapists say, their services have remained unrecognised by the State government.


Occupational therapists work with the orthopaedically-handicapped, those with neurological and psychiatric problems and with children. Yet, the State does not appoint therapists in its hospitals. As a department, occupational therapy has existed in government hospitals but neglect has resulted in its closure. This is especially traumatic for poor families that have children with special needs.


“Many of us have our own private practices but the poor cannot afford the facility as it is very expensive,” says Joseph Sunny, organising secretary of the anniversary celebrations.


An order instructing hospitals to appoint occupational therapists was issued by the health and family welfare department 11 years ago. But it remains on paper.


Even the institute for rehabilitation medicine in K.K. Nagar has not followed the order. It is yet to find a replacement for the post that fell vacant after the retirement of the last therapist. A senior official at the hospital says a letter has been sent to the officials concerned.


The city has several special schools but there is just one post for a therapist. These schools, however, make do with special educators.


“There have been no surveys on how many children need help to overcome problems like learning difficulties, ADHD, autism or sensory processing disorders. Such children need the services of occupational therapists. We get patients from other cities and towns. Patients would benefit if there were therapists closer home,” says Mr. Joseph.


Paediatric consultant Anuradha Srinivasan uses the services of a therapist in the child development clinic at Mehta’s Hospital to help children with ‘a range of conditions including learning difficulties, eye-hand coordination, speech delay and sensory processing disorders.’


Therapists may also be called in to work with neonates, especially those born pre-term. “It will be more meaningful if an occupational therapist is around,” she says.


According to Suresh Devaraj, dean of SRM College of Occupational Therapy, the only college in the city offering the course, less than a dozen ‘inclusive schools’ in the private sector in Chennai have therapists to provide support.


While none of the government medical colleges offer the course, only three private institutions in the State admit students to such courses every year.


SRM University admits just 15 students now whereas the first batch had around 45 students, says V. Vanjinathan who runs Samvardhana, an organisation for children with learning difficulties.


“We want to work in the State and reach out to all children. Under the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, inclusive education has been mandated but unless schools have an occupational therapist, it is going to be a long haul,” Mr. Joseph says.


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via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/chennai/no-space-for-occupational-therapists-in-state/article4449628.ece

Man gets death for raping, murdering minor girl





A local court on Monday awarded death sentence to a man for raping and killing a seven year old girl in 2011.


Terming the case as “rarest of rare,” Additional District Judge Chandresh Khare awarded capital punishment to Panchamlal (30), on the basis of evidence submitted by the prosecution.


Panchamlal, of Sunachar village in Jabalpur district of Madhya Pradesh, had lured the minor girl to his house and raped her on May 12, 2011, prosecution officer Sushil Soni told PTI.


When the girl raised an alarm, Panchamlal strangulated her and later dumped her body on a loft inside his house.


As the girl did not return home till late in the night, her parents then informed the police.


Based on suspicion, police took Panchamlal in custody for questioning as the girl was spotted with him for the last time.


Panchamlal later broke down and revealed the entire story to police, following which the victim’s body was seized from his house and sent for autopsy, Soni said.


A case under sections 302 (murder), 363 (kidnapping), 366, 376 (rape) and 201 of IPC was registered against him and submitted for trial after the probe.


Following this, the court on Monday awarded him death sentence for murder, life imprisonment for kidnapping and seven-year sentence each for rape and destruction of evidence in the case.



Keywords: Jabalpur rape



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via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/man-gets-death-for-raping-murdering-minor-girl/article4451915.ece

La Traviata shows out





La Traviata showed out when the horses were exercised here on Monday morning.


Inner sand


800m: Sombrero (Bernard) 54, 600/42. Moved freely. Fortuner (Kavraj), Xailees (Merchant) 55, 600/40. They finished level. Matter Of Heart (T.Mahesh), Moon Raker (Roushan) 55, 600/41. Both moved level freely.


1,000m: Beforememoryfades (Neeraj), Edith Piaf (rb) 1-9, 600/40. Former started three lengths behind and finished level. Windmill Lady (Sandeep Jadhav) 1-5, 600/40. Moved well. One Wish (rb) 1-7, 600/40. Moved freely. Edge Of Glory (rb) 1-9, 600/42. Moved freely.


1,200m: Starring (Fortune), Seven Seas (C.Rajendra) 1-21, 600/39. They were well in hand and finished level. La Traviata (Neeraj), Swift Memories (Sandeep Jadhav) 1-20, 600/38. Former started two lengths behind and easily finished level. Former should make amends.


1,400m: Monza (N.Jodha) 1-38, 1,000/1-11, 600/44. Moved fluently.


Outer sand


800m: Fortune Favours (Sandesh) 57, 600/42. Easy.


Race track


600m: Ice Rink (Ranjane), Magic Vision (rb) 36.5. Former finished four lengths ahead.


1,000m: To The Moon (S.Kamble) 1-3.5, 600/35. Moved well. Mega Star (S.Kamble), Zorro (rb) 1-7.5, 600/38. Former superior. Queen Of Venus (D.A.Naik), Nirbhaya (Baria) and Silverio (Akshay) 1-6.5, 800/50.5, 600/35. First named was the pick. Demonstrator (T.Mahesh), Corregio (Pasha) 1-3, 800/51, 600/36. They moved neck and neck freely. VivaCapri (Ikram), Palace Girl (V.Walkar) 1-8, 800/53, 600/38. They finished level freely. Universal Joy (T.Mahesh) 1-10, 600/39. Moved freely. Suzonia (Bernard) 1-2.5, 600/34.5. Pressed.


1,200m: Spirit Of Ecstasy (Neeraj) 1-22, 600/37. Moved well. Only One (S.Kamble), Gift Wrapped (rb) and Dolmabache Palace (N.Bhujbal) 1-19, 1,000/1-4, 600/36. Belle Brise (Khalander) 1-16.5, 600/36.5. Moved well. Oriental Masti (S.S.Rathore), 1-18, 600/37. Moved freely.


Gate practice (Inner sand)


1,000m: Mint Approach (Rupesh), Colourful Prince (Sandeep Jadhav) 1-6.5, 600/40. They moved level freely. A bay filly (Hateef/OffshoreAnna) (app) 1-5, 800/51, 600/38.5. Moved attractively. Note. Sindbaad(rb), Hawker (Pasha) and Embraer (R.K.Mahesh) 1-10, 600/41. Sindbaad finished well clear. A bay filly (Ace/Blue Horizon) (rb), Natalian Express (Pardeshi) 1-8.5, 600/40. Former better. Gatravat (P.Naidu), Padmakosa (Merchant) 1-6.5, 800/52.5, 600/40.5. They jumped out well and finished level. Wentworth (S.S.Rathore), Everyverre (rb) 1-10.5, 600/41. They were easy. This Ones For You (rb) 1-6.5, 800/53.5, 600/40.5. Moved well.


Mock race (Race track) — Feb. 24


1,200m: Windsor Queen (S.Sunil), Querida (J.Chinoy), Gates Of Heaven (D.A.Naik) and Toptrick (Neeraj) 1-14.5, 600/37. Won by: 1-1/2, 1/2, 6. Windsor Queen who was racing third till bend comfortably won. Gates Of Heaven was well in hand and finished third.



Keywords: Mumbai racing



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via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/sport/races/la-traviata-shows-out/article4451797.ece

Stocks of existing banks slump on bourses





Shares of existing banks lost value on the bourses on Monday amid the RBI issuing guidelines for new bank licences.


More than a dozen corporates, including big names such as Aditya Birla Group, M&M, L&T, as well as state-owned PFC, LIC and India Post, are likely to apply to the Reserve Bank for licence to open banks.


The biggest loser was Canara Bank, whose stock was down 1.98 per cent in the afternoon trade.


The stock of Allahabad Bank was down 1.66 per cent, while that of Bank of Baroda slumped 1.57 per cent.


However, shares of State Bank of India was trading in the positive territory and surged 0.71 per cent on the BSE and touched a high of Rs 53.65.


Among others, Vijaya Bank stock was down 0.28 per cent, Punjab National Bank was down 1.44 per cent, Bank of India down 1.34 pc, Indian Overseas Bank down 1.13 pc).


Some of the leading private sector banks also tanked on the bourses. Shares of ICICI Bank was down 0.61 per cent and HDFC Bank was down 0.27 per cent on the BSE during the afternoon trade.


Commenting on the downslide, marketmen said the decline in the sector was largely because the new guidelines would increase competitiveness among existing players. Moreover the decline was also in tandem with a host of mid-cap and small-cap companies that crashed in the stock market today.


While announcing comprehensive guidelines for new bank licences on February 22, the Reserve Bank said interested entities can file their applications by July 1.


As per the new norms, entities with a minimum track record of 10 years would be eligible for licence after clearance from sector regulators, enforcement, investigative agencies such as I-T Department, CBI and ED.


The minimum paid-up capital for setting up a bank will be Rs 500 crore. The cap on the foreign investment, including FDI/FII and NRI, has been set at 49 per cent.



Keywords: bank stocks



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via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/business/markets/stocks-of-existing-banks-slump-on-bourses/article4451856.ece

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Chennai-B’lore double-decker AC train goes on trial run











  • The Hindu The train has anti-climbing technology to prevent coach pile-up in a mishap, air suspension system with multiple shock absorbers and GPS-based passenger information system. Photo: R. Ragu




  • The Hindu The train has anti-climbing technology to prevent coach pile-up in a mishap, air suspension system with multiple shock absorbers and GPS-based passenger information system. Photo: R. Ragu










The Chennai-Bangalore AC double-decker train was taken out on a trial run to Bangalore on Sunday.


According to an official, the test run would establish whether the train would encounter any ‘interference’ from fixed structures, including track-side installations, over-head equipment or platforms en route.


The 14-coach rake, including 12 passenger coaches, a power car and pantry, was designed and developed with several safety and passenger comfort features by the rail coach factory in Kapurthala. Some of its features include anti-climbing technology to prevent coach pile-up in a mishap, an air suspension system with multiple shock absorbers and GPS-based passenger information system.


The red-and-yellow double-decker train pulled out of platform 2 at Chennai Central around 8.30 a.m. for the test run which was carried out under direct supervision of an inspection team from the Research Design and Standards Organisation (RDSO), ministry of railways.


Packed to capacity, each of the passenger coaches of the double-decker train will accommodate 120 travellers.


Meanwhile, the official said the inspection team was taking a closer look at the Jolarpettai platform as they were not happy with the clearance achieved by the rake. The train’s designated stoppages are at Perambur (up direction only), Arakkonam, Katpadi, Ambur, Jolarpettai, Bangarapet, Krishnarajapuram and Bangalore Cantonment. The train has halted at Jolarpettai and will return only on Monday.



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via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/chennai/chennaiblore-doubledecker-ac-train-goes-on-trial-run/article4449640.ece

Indian women top table, enter next round





Indian team celebrate the solitary goal by Rani (centre), against Russia at the National Hockey stadium in New Delhi on Sunday. Photo: Rajeev Bhatt





TOPICS


sport Hockey


It was a scrappy performance from the Indian women in their final game of the round two of Hockey World League against Russia.


India won 1-0 to finish on top of the points table, advancing to the next round.


The game was rendered inconsequential after Malaysia lost its game earlier in the day as India and Japan, the top placed teams in the fray, were assured of a spot in the next round regardless of India’s result. The teams were locked goalless at half time, India failing to breach the Russian defence due to a combination of poor finishing, conceding a lot of turnovers and not learning from past mistakes.


India continued to attack from the left flank but could not get the breakthrough. Even midfield possession, India’s strength so far, was not up to the mark.


Fitness problems


The Indians were also outrun and beaten in fitness, indicating there was still a lot of improvement required. The second half was similar though the Indians were more attacking and managed to earn a couple of penalty corners that were wasted.


The Indian women finally broke the deadlock in the 51st minute through one of their rare attacks from the right, Anupa Barla’s hit into the striking circle deflected on to the board by Rani Rampal.


Russia had its chances, earning three penalty corners and coming close on several other occasions, but was unable to score. Its best chance came in the 33rd minute with Ekaterina Shaburova having only Indian goalkeeper Yogita Bali to beat but hit straight to her.


Japan moves up


Earlier, Japan beat Malaysia 4-0 to become the first team to move into the next round. Kazakhstan defeated Fiji by an identical margin in another game.


The results: India 1 (Rani Rampal) bt Russia 0; Japan 4 (Ayaka Nishimura, Aki Mitsuhashi, Akiko Kato, Aya Ueda) bt Malaysia 0; Kazakhstan 4 (Natalya Gataulina, Vera Domashneva 2, Gulnara Imangaliyeva) bt Fiji 0.




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via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/sport/hockey/indian-women-top-table-enter-next-round/article4449296.ece

Vijays Conquer maintains form





Vijays Conquer, who maintains form, may repeat in the Prince Mouzam Jah Bahadur Memorial Cup (1,200m), the main event of the races to be held here on Monday (Feb. 25).


GOLD SOVEREIGN PLATE (1,600m), rated upto 25, 4-y-o & over (Cat. III), 1-40 p.m.: 1. Fashionista (2) A M Tograllu 60.5, 2. Bernabeu (1) K. Anil 59, 3. Jaz Elle (3) Chary 59, 4. Classic Wish (6) P. S. Chouhan 58, 5. Khalis Gold (5) Asbar 56.5, 6. Architect (7) Nitin Singh 53.5, 7. Kohinoor Adhira (9) Ajit Kumar 53.5, 8. Great Guns (8) J. Vikas 53 and 9. Anangalekha (4) Khurshad 50.5.


1. Classic Wish, 2. Khalis Gold, 3. Kohinoor Adhira


SUPER BRAVE PLATE (Div. I), (1,400m), (Cat. II), maiden 3-y-o only (Terms), 2-10: 1. Aware (1) P. S. Chouhan 55, 2. Half Moon Bay (6) Kuldeep Singh 55, 3. Midnight In Paris (8) Khurshad 55, 4. Ranjha (3) A M Tograllu 55, 5. Concours (2) S. Nayak 53.5, 6. Goldie (4) R. Vaibhav 53.5, 7. Ice Barrier (7) Deep Shanker 53.5, 8. Kohinoor Punch (9) Ajit Kumar 53.5 and 9. Princess Cruise (5) Kiran Naidu 53.5.


1. Ice Barrier, 2. Goldie, 3. Aware


SUPER BRAVE PLATE (Div. II), (1,400m), (Cat. II), maiden 3-y-o only (Terms), 2-40: 1. Flamboyant Star (3) Deep Shanker 55, 2. Magical Punch (4) Kuldeep Singh 55, 3. Racing Ahead (8) P. S. Chouhan 55, 4. Vocation (1) R. Vaibhav 55, 5. Golden Art (6) Ajit Kumar 53.5, 6. Most Impressive (2) Kiran Naidu 53.5, 7. Over Look (5) K. Anil 53.5, 8. Par Excellence (9) S. Nayak 53.5 and 9. Royal Glory (7) Sai Kumar 53.5.


1. Vocation, 2. Racing Ahead, 3. Flamboyant Star


PELICAN PLATE (Div. II), (1,200m), rated upto 75, 4-y-o & over (Cat. II), 3-10: 1. Bloody Mary (3) Kuldeep Singh 60, 2. Hurricane Dancer (2) A. Imran Khan 57, 3. Shatakshi (9) C. Henrique 54.5, 4. Prince Prashant (4) A. K. Pawar 53, 5. Pacific Star (5) P. S. Chouhan 52.5, 6. True Friend (1) Asbar 52, 7. Sweet Candy (6) K. Anil 51.5, 8. Cannon Ten (7) Sai Kumar 50 and 9. Sun Bird (8) Harinder Singh 50.


1. Shatakshi, 2. Bloody Mary, 3. Pacific Star


EAGLE EYE PLATE (1,400m), rated upto 50, 4-y-o & over (Cat. III), 3-40: 1. Big Boss (8) R. Vaibhav 61, 2. Golden Dash (7) Ajit Kumar 61, 3. Lady Luck (5) Sai Kumar 60, 4. Montego Bay (10) J. Vikas 60, 5. Ace Star (13) D. K. Ashish 57.5, 6. Bang On Target (9) K. Anil 56, 7. Sitting Pretty (3) A. Imran Khan 55.5, 8. Stolen Date (12) Kiran Naidu 54, 9. Symbol Of Honour (4) C. Henrique 53, 10. Foudre Rouge (1) Sai Vamshi 52.5, 11. Ground Crew (2) A. K. Pawar 51.5, 12. Kohinoor Reventa (11) A M Tograllu 51.5, 13. Silver Arnage (14) Khurshad 49.5 and 14. In Reality (6) Harinder Singh 49.


1. Golden Dash, 2. Ace Star, 3. Sitting Pretty


CIRCAR CUP (1,400m), (Cat. II), 4-y-o & over (Terms), 4-15: 1. Ashwa Shakti (1) P. S. Chouhan 61, 2. Chal Bhai Chal (6) A. Imran Khan 61, 3. Cristiano (5) Chary 61, 4. Silver Crown (4) N. S. Parmar 61, 5. Da Xia (9) Ajit Kumar 59, 6. Dusty Lady (2) P. Trevor 59, 7. Oasis Vision (7) A M Tograllu 57.5, 8. Aerosmith (3) S. John 56.5 and 9. Jewel In The Crown (8) Sai Vamshi 55.


1. Aerosmith, 2. Chal Bhai Chal, 3. Ashwa Shakti


PRINCE MOUZAM JAH BHADUR MEMORIAL CUP (1,200m), 4-y-o & over (Cat. I), 4-45: 1. Proof (9) P. S. Chouhan 62, 2. Vijays Conquer (1) A M Tograllu 60.5, 3. Al Sarraah (7) A. Imran Khan 54.5, 4. Days Of Thunder (4) P. Trevor 52.5, 5. Molecule (3) D. K. Ashish 52.5, 6. Anacostia (11) Kuldeep Singh 50.5, 7. Alberton Star (10) Sai Kumar 50, 8. Aphrodisiac (12) Chary 50, 9. Indian Epic (5) Sai Vamshi 50, 10. Key Note (2) Harinder Singh 50, 11. Ice Lolly (8) A. K Pawar 49 and 12. Rio Grande (6) R. Vaibhav 49.


1. Vijays Conquer, 2. Al Sarraah, 3. Proof


HOT CHOCOLATE PLATE (1,200m), (Cat. II), 3-y-o only (Terms), 5-15: 1. Baazigar (1) A. Imran Khan 59, 2. Black Bolt (7) Harinder Singh 55, 3. Chocolate Soldier (3) A M Tograllu 55, 4. Dandelion (4) P. S. Chouhan 55, 5. Field Smasher (2) D. K. Ashish 55, 6. Greek Star (6) Sai Vamshi 55, 7. Nano Belle (5) C. Henrique 53.5, 8. Power Drive (8) Kiran Naidu 53.5 and 9. Sherman Oaks (9) A. K. Pawar 53.5.


1. Baazigar, 2. Dandelion, 3. Sherman Oaks


PELICAN PLATE (Div. I), (1,200m), rated upto 75, 4-y-o & over (Cat. II), 5-45: 1. Secret Angel (2) P. S. Chouhan 60, 2. Scubarioo (9) Kuldeep Singh 58.5, 3. Elegant Approach (4) S. John 55.5, 4. Power Planet (5) Kiran Naidu 51.5, 5. Robust (10) A M Tograllu 51.5, 6. Hidden Power (3) D. K. Ashish 51, 7. Mr Glorious (7) Asbar 50.5, 8. Speed Striker (1) Khurshad 49.5, 9. Exclusive (8) A. K. Pawar 49 and 10. Gold Medal (6) Harinder Singh 49.


1. Secret Angel, 2. Power Planet, 3. Elegant Approach


Day’s best: Vijays Conquer


Double: Baazigar – Secret Angel


Jkt: 5, 6, 7, 8 & 9; Tr (i): 1, 2 & 3; (ii): 4, 5 & 6; (iii): 7, 8 & 9. Tla: all races.



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Sreekanth pilots Murioi to victory





Mr. M.A.M.Ramaswamy’s Murioi piloted by B.Sreekanth won the Poonawalla Breeders Multi-Million, in a thrilling finish from Starry Eyes, the stellar attraction of the races held here on Sunday (Feb. 24). The winner is trained by S.Ganapathy.


1. BLURR TROPHY (1,200m), Cl. V, rated 01 to 26: Tropical Zone (Sandesh) 1, Arabian Lord (Trevor) 2, Athos (Neeraj) 3 and Amazing Smile (I.Pardeshi) 4. 1/2, 1-1/4, 1-3/4. 1m 11.90s. Rs. 32 (w), 15, 14 and 22 (p). SHP: Rs. 36, FP: Rs. 67, Q: Rs. 55, Tanala: Rs. 420 and Rs. 337. Favourite: Tropical Zone. Owners: Mr. Vivian Verma & Capt. Naresh S.Vaswani rep. Naresh Equine Brds & Trds Pvt Ltd. Trainer: Sanjay Kolse.


2. SERUM INSTITUE OF INDIA TROPHY (1,000m), Cl. II, rated 60 to 86: Borderline (I.Pardeshi) 1, Emerging Star (V.R.De Sousa) 2, Jimbo (Daniel Grant) 3 and Hawk Of The Wind (Zervan) 4. Sh, Nk, 2. 58.02s. Rs. 76 (w), 38 and 27 (p). SHP: Rs. 60, FP: Rs. 496, Q: Rs. 148, Tanala: Rs. 1,080 and Rs. 314. Favourite: Hawk Of The Wind. Owners: Mr. & Mrs. C.F.Palia. Trainer: M.P.Jodha.


3. BOURBON KING TROPHY (1,600m), Cl. III, rated 40 to 66: Papakura (Trevor) 1, Winston (Daniel Grant) 2, Smooth Operator (Sandesh) 3 and Que Sera Sera (C.S.Jodha) 4. 1, 3/4, 2-1/4. 1m 35.24s. Rs. 28 (w), 15 and 20 (p). SHP: Rs. 45, FP: Rs. 49, Q: Rs. 23, Tanala: Rs. 346 and Rs. 226. Favourite: Papakura. Owners: Mr. Champaklal Zaveri, Mrs. Bindu C.Zaveri, Miss Niti N. Desai & Miss Harsha N.Desai rep. Zaveri Stud Farm Pvt Ltd. Trainer: S.S.Shah.


4. RUSI PATEL TROPHY (1,400m), Cl. I, rated 80 and upwards: Hachiko (Sandesh) 1, Deja Vu (J.Fortune) 2, Vittoria (Daniel Grant) 3 and Spirit Of Mercy (Trevor) 4. 4-3/4, 1-1/4, 1. 1m 21.70s. Rs. 24 (w), 17 and 28 (p). SHP: Rs. 38, FP: Rs. 90, Q: Rs. 54, Tanala: Rs. 603 and Rs. 244. Favourite: Hachiko. Owners: Mr. & Mrs. Vijay B.Shirke, Miss Avanti V.Shirke and Miss Gayatri V.Shirke. Trainer: M.K.Jadhav.


5. INTERVALVE (INDIA) LTD TROPHY (2,400m), Cl. IV, rated 20 to 46: Sophisticated (B.Sreekanth) 1, Razeena (Daniel Grant) 2, Dancing Splendour (Dashrath) 3 and Roswald (S.Zervan) 4. Not run: Antonius Maximus. 3-3/4, 1-1/2, Sh. 2m 32.73s. Rs. 40 (w), 12, 10 and 19 (p). SHP: Rs. 32, FP: Rs. 96, Q: Rs. 60, Tanala: Rs. 212 and Rs. 114. Favourite: Roswald. Owner: Mr. M.A.M.Ramswamy. Trainer: Karthik G.


6. POONAWALLA BREEDERS’ MULTI-MILLION (Gr. I) (1,400m), 3-y-o only: Murioi (B.Sreekanth) 1, Starry Eyes (David Allan) 2, Marinsky (S. Zervan) 3 and Dancing Prances (Dashrath) 4. Nk, 3-1/4, 3/4. 1m 22.98s. Rs. 175 (w), 49, 17 and 21 (p). SHP: Rs. 57, FP: Rs. 1,555, Q: Rs. 330, Tanala: Rs. 3,913 and Rs. 2,096. Favourite: Starry Eyes. Owner: Mr. M.A.M.Ramaswamy. Trainer: S.Ganapathy.


7. HONG KONG JOCKEY CLUB TROPHY (1,200m), Maiden 3-y-o only: Dynamo (R.Hughes) 1, Silver Streak (Trevor) 2, Glorious Reward (V.R.De Sousa) 3 and Zaagros (S.Kamble) 4. Not run: Ancient Warrior. Sh, 6, 3/4. 1m 11.40s. Rs. 15 (w), 11, 12 and 23 (p). SHP: Rs. 26, FP: Rs. 25, Q: Rs. 39, Tanala: Rs. 177 and Rs. 58. Favourite: Dynamo. Owners: Mr. & Mrs. K.N.Dhunjibhoy and Mr. & Mrs. Z.K.Dhunjibhoy rep. Five Stars Shipping Co Pvt Ltd. Trainer: Shyam S.Habbu.


8. LE GRIS CHEVAL TROPHY (1,200m), Cl. III, rated 40 to 66: Grande Dame (Zervan) 1, Mable (R.K.Mahesh) 2, Zidaan (Trevor) 3 and Arctic Minstrel (J.Chinoy) 4. Not run: Stormy Wind. 1, 1/2, 1-1/2. 1m 11.00s. Rs. 20 (w), 15, 14 and 18 (p).SHP: Rs. 48, FP: Rs. 124 (w), Q: Rs. 47, Tanala: Rs. 464 and Rs. 261. Favourite: Grande Dame. Owners: Mr. Haresh N.Mehta & Mr. Manav H.Mehta rep. Rohan Bloodstock Pvt Ltd. Trainer: Mansoor Shah.


Jackpot: 70 per cent: Rs. 8, 054 (122 tkts), 30 per cent: Rs. 1,462 (288 tkts).


Treble: (i) Rs. 2,656 (6 tkts). (ii) Rs. 708 (64 tkts).


Super Jackpot: 70 per cent: Rs. 12,452 (40 tkts), 30 per cent: Rs. 2, 482 (86 tkts).



Keywords: Mumbai races



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Domingo pleases





Domingo and Amistad pleased when the horses were exercised here on Sunday morning.


Inner sand


800m: Brave Vision (Bernard), Good Looking (Roushan) 52, 600/39. Former easily finished one length in front. Latter was pushed. Distant Promise (Roushan) 52, 600/39. Moved well. Amara (Roushan), Augustus (Bernard) 51, 600/38. Former started two lengths behind and finished level. Diamondzip (T.S.Jodha), Monarchos (Khalander) 52, 600/38.5. They were pushed and finished level. Trisara (Pasha) 54, 600/40. Moved freely.


1,000m: Defining Moment (I.Shaikh), Kohima Girl (Khalander) 1-7, 600/40. Former easily finished two lengths ahead. Dreams Of You (Zervan), Swashbuckler (Kharadi) 1-9, 800/54.5, 600/40. They moved level freely. Amistad (Zervan), Gran Turismo (Kharadi) 1-6, 800/52, 600/39. Former started two lengths behind and finished level. Note former. Domingo (Daniel Grant), Andraste (Pereira) 1-5, 600/38.5. Former strode out well and finished a distance ahead. Former pleased. Campeon (I.Shaikh), Carlton House (Khalander) 1-7.5, 600/40. They ended level. Chicharito (Merchant) 1-11, 600/43. Easy. Eastern Summit (Khalander) 1-6.5, 600/40. Moved well.


1,600m: Alecto (T.S.Jodha) 1-52.5, 1,400/1-39.5, 600/45. Moved freely. Montezuma (Kharadi), Monet (Zervan) 1-49.5, 1,400/1-35, 1,000/1-6, 600/39. They moved neck and neck freely. Caesars Star (C.S.Jodha) 1-53, 600/41. Moved freely.


Outer sand


800m: Mr. Morrison (app), Turkana (D.K.Ashish) 50, 600/38. Former finished five lengths ahead.


1,000m: Fortune Favours (rb), Copper Glow (Pardeshi) 1-11, 600/42. Former ended three lengths in front.


1,600m: Delgado (Jethu) 1-52.5, 600/41.5. Moved freely. Song Dynasty (T.S.Jodha) 1-49, 1,400/1-36, 600/40. Urged in the last part.



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Palm Springs wins Alcock Arabian Million





Palm Springs (G.Sai Vamshi up) won the Alcock Arabian Million, the main event of the races held here on Sunday (Feb. 24). The winner is the property of Mr M.Rams Krishna Reddy and is trained by L.D’Silva.


1. PRINCE KHARTOUM PLATE (Div. II), (1,100m), (Cat. II), maiden 3-y-o only (Terms): Rahul’s Diamond (P.S. Chouhan) 1, Stamp Of Class (A. Imran Khan) 2, Any Given Day (Ashhad Asbar) 3, Deal Maker (Deep Shanker) 4. 4-1/4, 4-4/14 & nk. 1m 05.71s. Rs. 6 (w), 6, 6 & 8 (p), SHP: Rs. 15, FP: Rs. 17, Q: Rs. 10, Tanala: Rs.41. Favourite: Rahul’s Diamond. Owner: Mrs. Surekha Rachupalli. Trainer: R.H. Sequeira.


2. REPUBLIC PLATE (1,400m), rated upto 25, 4-y-o & over (Cat. III): Kohinoor Adhira (Ajit Kumar) 1, Itsy Bitsy (Kiran Naidu) 2, Fashionista (P.S. Chouhan) 3, Vijetha (A Imran Khan) 4. Not run: Merry Maid. 1-3/4, 1-3/4 & 3/4. 1m 27.73s. Rs. 20 (w), 9, 10 & 8 (p), SHP: Rs. 29, FP: Rs. 168, Q: Rs. 102, Tanala: Rs. 421. Favourite: Victory Sky. Owner: Mr. Rathan Nalla. Trainer: A. Vatsalya.


3. PRINCE KHARTOUM PLATE (Div. I), (1,100m), (Cat. II), maiden 3-y-o only (Terms): Aventus (N.S. Parmar) 1, Proud Image (P.S. Chouhan) 2, Staminoizd (Harinder S) 3, Queen Of Stars (R. Vaibhav) 4. 4-3/4, 1-3/4 & shd. 1m 05.63s. Rs. 6 (w), 6, 6 & 19 (p), SHP: Rs. 17, FP: Rs. 21, Q: Rs. 14, Tanala: Rs. 130. Favourite: Aventus. Owners: M/s Poondla Venku Reddy and A. Raghava Reddy. Trainer: Satyanarayana.


4. H. P. MISTRY MEMORIAL CUP (1,400m), (Cat. I), 4-y-o & over (Terms): The Leader (Ch. K. Chary) 1, Surya Lakshmi (G. Sai Vamshi) 2, Proof (P.S. Chouhan) 3, Nasheeta (Kiran Naidu) 4. Hd, 1-1/4 & 1/2. 1m 24.89s. Rs. 17 (w), 7 & 14 (p), SHP: Rs. 30, FP: Rs. 206, Q: Rs. 93, Tanala: nil. Favourite: Proof. Owners: Dr. and Mrs. Syed Ainuddin Arif rep M/s VIF Stud and Livestock Pvt. Ltd. and Mr. S.A. Shehzad Abbas. Trainer: S. Abbas.


5. SOUTHERN GLORY PLATE (1,600m), rated upto 75, 4-y-o & over (Cat. II): Dark Avenger (A. Imran Khan) 1, Star Value (Kiran Naidu) 2, Sanjaa (A.M. Tograllu) 3, Lioness Heart (P. Sai Kumar) 4. 2-1/4, 1-1/4 & 3/4. 1m 38.13s. Rs. 18 (w), 8, 14 & 20 (p), SHP: Rs. 41, FP: Rs. 263, Q: Rs. 173, Tanala: Rs. 9922. Favourite: Win And Enjoy. Owners: M/s Mir Hyder Ali Khan and Laksh Bhatia. Trainer: S. Abbas.


6. CHARON PLATE (Div. I), (1,100m), rated upto 75, 5-y-o & over (Cat. II): Brianna (C. Henrique) 1, Young Sapper (P.S. Chouhan) 2, Crown Castle (N.S. Parmar) 3, Tico Tico (A. Imran K) 4. Not run: Rose Queen. 1-1/2, nk & 1/2. 1m 05.60s. Rs. 186 (w), 32, 9 & 8 (p), SHP: Rs. 27, FP: Rs. 1288, Q: Rs. 331, Tanala: Rs. 4287. Favourite: Tico Tico. Owner: Mr. R. Vijay Kumar Rao. Trainer: Anupam Sharma.


7. APPRENTICE JOCKEY A. PRAMOD GOUD MEMORIAL CUP (1,100m), rated upto 50, 4-y-o & over (Cat. III): Catalina (Kiran Naidu) 1, Yours Truly (B. Dileep) 2, Grenada (R. Vaibhav) 3, Break Away (A.K. Pawar) 4. 3/4, 1-1/2 & 3/4. 1m 06.11s. Rs. 44 (w), 11, 66 & 22 (p), SHP: Rs. 251, FP: Rs. 9149, Q: Rs. 1872, Tanala: Rs. 26209. Favourite: Desert Bloom. Owners: Mr. Baldev Singh and Ms. Seema Anand. Trainer: D. Netto.


8. ALCOCK ARABIAN MILLION (1,400m), 3-y-o only (Terms): Palm Springs (G. Sai Vamshi) 1, Fastest Finger (P.S. Chouhan) 2, Hometown Hero (A.M. Tograllu) 3, Staying The Best (S. John) 4. 1-1/4, 3/4 & 3/4. 1m 24.99s. Rs. 113 (w), 14, 5 & 14 (p), SHP: Rs. 18, FP: Rs. 464, Q: Rs. 95, Tanala: Rs. 1828. Favourite: Fastest Finger. Owner: Mr. M. Rama Krishna Reddy. Trainer: L. D’Silva.


9. CHARON PLATE (Div. II), (1,100m), rated upto 75, 5-y-o & over (Cat. II): Emerald Reef (Kiran Naidu) 1, Aarohan (P. Sai Kumar) 2, Travaldo (A. Imran Khan) 3, Mr. Khoashteep (P.S. Chouhan) 4. 3-1/2, shd & 2. 1m 04.98. Rs. 9 (w), 6, 35 & 8 (p), SHP: Rs. 139, FP: Rs. 245, Q: Rs. 276, Tanala: Rs. 1463. Favourite: Mr. Khoashteep. Owners: M/s Gunna Sandeep Reddy and A. Raghava Reddy. Trainer: Satyanarayna.


Treble: (i): Rs. 123 (438 tkts); (ii): Rs. 1728 (20 tkts); (iii): Rs. 3311 (21 tkts).


Consolation: Rs. 26501 (6 tkts).


Jackpot: Rs. 92754 (4 tkts).



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Indian girls’ win gold; boys settle for silver






TOPICS


sport squash


The Indian squash team won a gold and a silver medal at the 16th Asian Junior Team Championships which concluded on Sunday.


The Indian girls beat Hong Kong China 2-1 in a close tie.


Lakshya Ragavendran, the hero of Indian team in the semifinal, where she won the decider against Malaysia, played the first match. She was out of sorts and failed to match the pace of a relentless attacking player in Ho Tze Lok.


Her team trailing, the most consistent Indian player, Anaka Alankamony stamped her authority over Hong Kong number one player Ho Ka Po 3-0 in quick time. The stage was then set for an exciting thriller.


Aparajitha Balamurukan, who did not have a good match in the semifinals, was thoroughly charged up for the final. From the word go, Aparajitha played a high-paced attacking game laced with some delicate drops every now and then.


Aparajitha never relented as she won the decider 3-0 and got India their second win at the Asian Junior Women’s Team Championship after a 10-year wait.


The Indian boys faced their Pakistani counterparts immediately after the girls’ final match and lost 0-2. Deepak Mishra played the first match and never really got going as he lost in straight games.


Mahesh Mangaonkar was then up against Ali Bokhari. It was an extremely physical match with both players testing each other’s resolve.


It was touch and go with both players sharing the first four games. In the fifth, it was neck and neck upto the halfway point before Ali reeled off winners to take the match and title.


Results: Girls’ Final: India bt Hong Kong China (2-1) -- Lakshya Ragavendran lost to Ho Tze Lok 6-11, 4-11, 6-11; Anaka Alankamony bt Ho Ka Po 11-4, 11-5, 11-6; Aparajitha Balamurukan bt Choi Uen Shan 11-7, 11-9, 11-9;


Boys’ Final: Pakistan bt India (2-0); Bilal Zakir bt Deepak Mishra 11-7, 11-6, 11-9; Syed Ali Mujtaba bt Mahesh Mangoankar 11-5, 5-11, 9-11, 11-6, 11-7; Ammad Fareed vs Kush Kumar (match withdrawn).



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Gangjee opens season with top-10; Perera misses title





The Hindu Rahil Gangjee. File photo





TOPICS


sport golf


Indian golfer Rahil Gangjee carded a sedate two-under 70 to open his season with a fine top-10 finish at the Zaykabar Myanmar Open on Sunday.


Gangjee, who suffered an early setback in the form of a double bogey on the par-5 second hole, finished with a four-day total of 14-under 274 in tied seventh place.


Himmat Rai also suffered a double bogey though late in the round on par-3 15th but still finished with a 68 and moved to a creditable tied 13th at 12-under 276.


Sujjan Singh (67) made a good return from injury with a total of nine-under 279 alongside fellow Chandigarh youngster, Ajeetesh Sandhu (68) in tied 24th place. Shankar Das (69) finished in a tie for 39th at seven—under 281.


At the top, Thailand’s Chawalit Plaphol dashed Sri Lankan Mithun Perera’s hopes of making history when he birdied the last two holes to win the title.


Perera plays on the Indian PGTI Tour also, where he has won in the recent past.


Overnight leader Chawalit was tied with Mithun on 17-under heading into the last hole but the Thai set up a three-foot birdie putt with an exquisite approach shot at the par five 18th hole to win his fourth Asian Tour title at the Royal Mingalardon Golf and Country Club.


Chawalit closed with a three-under-par 69 while Mithun, aiming to be the first Sri Lankan to win on the Asian Tour, fought bravely with a sensational 65 at the $300,000 event, which is the curtain raiser for the 10th Asian Tour season.


There was heartbreak again for Thailand’s Kiradech Aphibarnrat, who lost in a play-off last year, as he settled for third following a 70. Hwang In-choon (67) of Korea, Darren Beck (69) of Australia and Angelo Que (70) of the Philippines were a further shot back in fourth.


“I’m happy but a first win in two years is not enough! I want to win more Asian Tour titles. I knew at the 17th hole that Mithun was on 17-under. Luckily, I managed to hole a 15-foot birdie putt (17) to tie for the lead,” smiled Chawalit, who registered 18-under 270 and won $ 54,000.


Chawalit, 38, was a figure of consistency through the week and held the lead for most of the round until Perera came charging home with five birdies in the last seven holes.


Perera finished 50th on the Asian Tour Order of Merit last year to earn an Asian Tour card for 2013 and his career has been on an upswing since then.


Despite his defeat, the Sri Lankan, who is the son to Nandasena, a famous name on the old Asian circuit during the 1980s and 1990s, remains upbeat of winning his first title on the region’s premier Tour.


“All you need is one good week to turn your life around.


I think the win is not far away for me. I’m sure my father and my country are proud of me. This week, I flew the Sri Lankan flag high,” said the 26-year-old, who was five shots off the lead at the start of the day.


Thai rising star Kiradech cut a forlorn figure as he failed to make amends for last year’s play-off defeat.


“I played good this week. I couldn’t make a putt on the front nine but tried hard. I think the key moment for me was when I birdied 15 to tie for the lead. Again, I couldn’t make birdie putts in the last three holes. It was still a good attempt from me.”



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India-Australia: 1st Test - Day 3





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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Student drowns





A school student drowned in the sea in Palavakkam on Friday afternoon, after he went for a dip with friends.


Neelankarai police identified the deceased as Balaji (17), a resident of Kurinji Nagar in Perungudi and a class XII student of a private school in Adyar. On Friday afternoon, Balaji and his four friends came to the Palavakkam beach in Palkalai Nagar and they went for a swim in the sea.


Few minutes later, the group came back to the sands but could not see Balaji. They alerted some locals who also searched for Balaji. Balaji’s friends then alerted the Neelankarai police who registered a missing case and launched a search. Balaji’s body was washed ashore around 9 a.m. on Saturday, the police said.



More In: Chennai | News







via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/chennai/student-drowns/article4446891.ece

Will it set the box office on fire?














  • At the audio launch of Vathikuchi










Vathikuchi


What it is about…


Fox Star Studios and A.R. Murugadoss Productions are jointly coming out with Vathikuchi, written and directed by P. Kinslin. The cast includes Dileepan, Anjali, ‘Pattimandram’ Raja, Saranya Ponvannan, Sampath, Ravi Mariya, Jayaprakash, Jagan, Sriranjani and Satheesh. M. Ghibran has scored the music. The first audio CD was released by actor Vijay in the presence of the unit members. The story is about a crime that takes place in broad daylight in the midst of a crowd.


Music highlights


There are nine songs in the album of which four are karaoke and one, the theme. ‘Kuru Kuru,’ written by Na. Muthukumar and sung by Sundar Narayana Rao, is good. ‘Amma, Wake Me Up,’ written by Pa. Vijay and the director, is based on Sivaranjani raga and sung by Sruthi, Anitha and Shabir. The rap portions are by Shabir who has also written it. An interesting number, it captures all that happens in a day in a girl’s life. ‘Kanna Kanna’ written by Arivumathi and sung by Sundar Narayana Rao is pleasing. ‘Ari Unnai,’ sung by Shabir with back-up vocals by Sai Charan and written by Yugabharathi, is good. The theme music is performed by Macedonian Philharmonic Orchestra.


What they say…


Producer A.R. Murugadoss: After Engaeyum Eppodum, we wanted to give aspiring directors and technicians opportunities. When my assistant director Kinslin mentioned this storyline, I thought it would make a good film and asked him to work on the screenplay.


Director P. Kinslin: I worked under A. Venkatesh for some time and then joined Murugadoss. I was with him for six years. When I expressed my desire to direct a film, he listened to my storyline and asked me to go ahead with the project. After seeing the rushes of the first schedule, he messaged me: ‘What I heard has been depicted well on celluloid. If music is incorporated, it will take the film to the next level.’ If Vathikuchi succeeds at the box office, it will pave the way for many new-finds to become directors and technicians.


Hero Dileepan: My brother Murugadoss’ assistant directors know me well. I was on the marketing side. When Kinslin chose me for the role, I informed my brother about it. He told me, “It’s not easy to enter filmdom and even more difficult to sustain your position. So work hard and repose trust in the director who has given you the break.” After being selected, I enrolled for dance, stunt and acting classes in Koothu-p-pattarai. This instilled in me the confidence to face the camera without any inhibition. As I play a share auto driver, I drove the vehicle for a few days to get a feel of it.


Music director M. Ghibran: This is my second film after Vaagai Sooda Va. Before entering movies, I scored the music for more than 800 advertisements shorts, 12 short and documentary films and 10 serials for Singapore TV in Chinese, Malay and Tamil languages. Vathikuchi has all the right ingredients to click at the box office.









via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/features/cinema/will-it-set-the-box-office-on-fire/article4446259.ece

Sam Peckinpah











  • Bring Me The Head of Alfredo Garcia




  • Straw Dogs




  • The Wild Bunch




  • Sam Peckinpah










WHO is he?


Controversial, influential American action film director and screenwriter who made movies between the 60s and the 80s, considered to be a part of the New Hollywood movement. Known for his unflinching portrayal of violence, Peckinpah is something of an inflection point in Hollywood history, with his bloody body of work separating the classicist, moralist studio era and the college-educated, blithely amoral Movie Brat generation.


WHAT are his films about?


Themes


There are no heroes in Peckinpah’s movies. Everyone is sick or, at best, flawed. However, Peckinpah, far from being misanthropic, moulds this overwhelming negativity into potent examinations of masculinity, xenophobia and greed. His Westerns are, in fact, post-Westerns that de-romanticise the Frontier, representing them not as the land of American pioneers who built a glorious nation but as a haven for no-good crooks, scheming opportunists and bloodthirsty mercenaries, and tear open the genre to study its ideological underpinning.


Style


Peckinpah’s movies are among the most flamboyant, stylistically gratuitous of New Hollywood films and are famous chiefly for their aesthetisation of screen violence, especially his use of slow motion action sequences which depict bodies being riddled with bullets in great detail. Peckinpah’s is a cinema of falling bodies. Equally remarkable is his extensive use of cross-cutting which, unlike in Hitchcock’s films, isn’t employed to increase narrative tension, but to jolt the audience with its disruption of space and chronology.


WHY is he of interest?


There are two basic ways in which Peckinpah’s cinema have, for better or worse, starkly impacted film culture. On the one hand, their ornate stylistics have inspired scores of popular filmmakers across the world like Martin Scorsese, John Woo and, more recently, Bejoy Nambiar, who are excited by the expressive possibilities of the medium, while on the other, they have rekindled the debate surrounding the limits of on-screen representation and the moral responsibility of filmmakers.


WHERE to discover him?


Highly controversial upon its release and still provocative, Straw Dogs (1971) involves a young American couple (Dustin Hoffman and Susan George) who move to the British countryside to have their life turned upside down. Quite possibly the most clear-eyed and conscious indictment of violence and misguided machismo among Peckinpah’s movies, the film is a critique of the toxicity of sexual repression and a jolting illustration of the web of oppression and tyranny that we all are caught in.









via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/features/cinema/sam-peckinpah/article4446321.ece

CinemaPlus Quiz





Some posers on the 85th Academy Awards and nominees….


1. Who is set to make his debut as the host of the Academy Awards ceremony?


2. What records have Quvenzhane Wallis and Emmanuelle Riva set with their nomination?


3. Name the composer and writer of ‘Pi's Lullaby’ sung by Bombay Jayashri.


4. Name the film that is just the fifth in the awards’ history to be nominated for both best picture and best foreign film.


5. The legendary composer of Lincoln has had 48 nominations in his chequered career to be the one with more nominations than any other living person. Name him.


6. Howard Berger, Peter Montagna and Martin Samuel are in the running to win the statuette for makeup and hairstyling in which film that is a biopic of an Oscar-nominated filmmaker?


7. Which category consists only of previous winners of the Oscars?


8. Which film is the first since Million Dollar Baby in 2004 to be nominated in the ‘Big Five’ categories?


9. What has the Academy Award for Best Art Direction been renamed?


10. Name the voice behind three James Bond theme songs set to make her maiden appearance at the ceremony to add some zest to the Academy's planned tribute to famous movie franchise.


ANSWERS


1. Seth MacFarlane.


2. At nine years and 85 years, they are the youngest and oldest lead actress nominee in Academy Awards history.


3. Mychael Danna and Jayashri herself respectively.


4. Amour. 5. John Williams.


6. Hitchcock.


7. Best Supporting Actor category.


8. Silver Linings Playbook.


9. ‘Academy Award for Best Production Design’.


10. Dame Shirley Bassey.



Keywords: CinemaPlus Quiz










via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/features/cinema/cinemaplus-quiz/article4446312.ece

Film review: Ameerin Aadi Bagavan - Brain drain





Ameerin Aadhi-Bhagavan




When a story features two look-alikes, one is unbelievably good and the other incorrigibly evil. An unwritten rule in cinema, you could say. But in an attempt to break clichés, director Ameer makes both of them roguish! So Ameerin Aadhi-Bhagavan (A) has two bad men who are similar in looks and nature. The villains (the screen teems with them) aren’t very clever either! AAB leaves the viewer in a quandary because it doesn’t have a conscientious character, but for the ever-sober mother of Aadhi (Sudha Chandran) who is busy looking sad throughout. Incidentally, her equation with her son reminds you of Rajnikanth and his mom in Thee of the 1980s.


As AAB opens with an income tax raid on the house of two brothers notorious for their illegal granite quarries, you tend to sit up in shock — you have only recently watched Special 26, the Akshay Kumar-starrer that has a similar beginning! But soon you find that Ameer’s anti-hero, Aadhi, is much less intelligent and AAB much less riveting. Of course, after that the story of AAB takes a different course.


It’s been quite a while since ‘Jayam’ Ravi had a release. You saw him last in Engeyum Kaadhal, a year and a half ago. The young man seems to be choosing his roles with an eye on variety. If his loin-cloth attire in Peraanmai exemplified his urge to be different, so does his effeminate avatar as Bhagavan in AAB. A role Prakash Raj played to perfection in Appu. Ravi has worked hard and it shows. And he seems to have undergone a voice training course. Gone is his not-so-appealing tone of the past. (Santhosh Subramaniam was an exception.) Ameer must have been quite a taskmaster. Looking menacing even while sporting a smile, Ravi’s Bhagavan will be remembered for long.


A big break in Tamil for Neetu Chandra, the female lead who’s constantly puffing away, lighting a cigarette or sipping a drink. In between she does perform well and does a good job in action also. AAB showcases her skill in martial arts effectively. But her character gets predictable after a point. Instead of subtitling the conversations that are in Hindi, Ameer has voice-overs translating the exchanges into Tamil. So the lack of lip sync gives the feeling that you are watching a dubbed film. And Hindi-speaking characters conveniently switch over to Tamil now and then!


The final ‘Bhagavan’ number and the RR preceding it are peppy strains from Yuvan Shankar Raja.


A contrast to Bhagavan, Aadhi is a nincompoop almost — all brawn and no brain! At the airport it appears as though he’s seen through his partner’s act, yet he allows himself to be a sitting duck! A bait is being dangled right under his nose, but Aadhi is oblivious to it! Exasperating! Aren’t underworld dons supposed to be perceptive and sensible? He takes too long a time to react to the predicament he is in and even when he does, his lack of acumen is obvious. Very contrived at times, the character tests your patience. And so does AAB — towards the end. Trying to go completely commercial, Ameer falters here.


You don’t expect the maker of a film such as Raam to create predictable situations and indiscreet characters, do you?










via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/features/cinema/film-review-ameerin-aadi-bagavan-brain-drain/article4446263.ece

Film review: Haridas - Story of action and emotions





Haridas




When was the last time you saw such poignant performances from the entire cast of a film? Director GNR. Kumaravelan stumps you with Haridas (U) an intense presentation Tamil cinema can be proud of. Seeming glitches are smoothened out with care and logical explanations are offered for every cause and action. Autism as a theme can never be handled realistically by our filmmakers is the general idea. A desi movie in the league of say, a Rain Man, can only be a pipedream you think. So you enter the hall without much expectation because neither Kumaravelan’s Ninaithalae Inikkum, the Tamil remake of the Malayalam film, Classmates, nor his second film, Yuvan Yuvathi, were out-of-the-world creations.


But the moment Haridas opens you realise you will be treated to a unique visual experience. You are. Kumaravelan impresses.


The bonding between a father and his 10-year old autistic son, and the boy and his empathetic school teacher forms the fulcrum of Haridas. Sivadas, the father, gropes in the dark, trying to understand the mind of his motherless son, Hari, who seems to live in a world of his own. But the moment Sivadas understands his son’s calling, a world of hope opens for the duo.


In a story of emotions Kumaravelan has weaved in plenty of action too. At no point does Haridas sags. Intelligent editing (Raja Mohammad) is also a reason. Cinematographer Ratnavelu is another asset of Haridas.


The role of Sivadas (Kishore) travels on two parallel tracks — on the one hand he’s a conscientious policeman, who has the crucial assignment of nabbing a cantankerous anti-social element (Pradeep Rawat) and on the other he’s a devoted dad. Kishore straddles the parts with aplomb. Every role he has donned so far — be it a henchman, a smuggler or a kingpin with a kind heart, Kishore is an actor who vests it with ample dignity. Kumaravelan has tapped the actor’s potential well. He has rightly made him the protagonist of Haridas. He’s a protagonist who can deliver. Theatrics is kept to a minimum even in the scene in the rain where Sivadas cries out helplessly to his son.


Her maiden release after marriage was a dampener. Murattukaalai seemed a wrong choice for Sneha. But she returns to prove her mettle in Haridas. Those expressive eyes and body language that convey her thought processes effortlessly place Sneha apart.


The relevant and spellbinding lyric of the song ‘Annaiyin Karuvil …’ by Annamalai deserves special mention. The title score is lilting but Vijay Antony’s RR gets too loud at times. Sound mixing has to be blamed in certain scenes where dialogue gets inaudible.


For those who’ve watched Meghna Gulzar’s Closer, a well-researched study of autism, it should be clear that Kumaravelan has been very true to facts and doesn’t make any cinematic exaggerations. Obviously he has done plenty of homework to make the child look authentically autistic. And kudos to him for making Prithviraj play the difficult character of the child Hari quite commendably.


Yugi Sethu is in his element as the psychiatrist, and it’s a different Raj Kapoor you see in Haridas. He’s not the loud villain he usually is, but a martinet of a coach who gracefully accepts his fault.


Watch Haridas. He deserves to be supported.










via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/features/cinema/film-review-haridas-story-of-action-and-emotions/article4446268.ece

Film review: A Good Day to Die Hard - No trouble in little Russia





A Good Day to Die Hard




When our favourite action hero John McLane (Bruce Willis) keeps saying “I am on vacation,” we believe him. Because this isn’t John McLane in a Die Hard film. This is John McLane in what’s a Walk-in-the-Park film!


Halfway into the film, when McLane asks his kid: “You got a plan?”


“Not really. I kinda thought we would just wing it, you know. Running in, guns blazing! Make it up as we go,” says Jr.


That’s also probably what the makers were thinking while shooting for the latest instalment of the franchise, which also happens to be the weakest Die Hard film. Because, McLanes running in, guns blazing is what happens in one set-piece action sequence after another.


But don’t get me wrong.


A Good Day to Die Hard packs enough car on car action that makes Transformers look like Toy Story, plenty of explosions to blow our minds to bits and endless good old machine gun fire to give you a super hyper adrenaline rush.


Bullets rain, trucks fly, choppers slice through buildings, roofs collapse and walls crumble. Men and matter, metal and motor, and of course, brick and mortar are all severely harmed during the making of this blast of an action entertainer.


While Die Hard movies are usually about the wrong guy at the wrong place at the wrong time, when McLane is least in the mood for action, this one stretches that premise all the way to Russia just because the stakes have to get bigger with every film.


In the original Die Hard, he saves a building. In Die Hard 2, he saves an airport. In Die Hard With a Vengeance, he saves a city. In Live Free or Die Hard, he saves a country. Going by that trend, in A Good Day to Die Hard, obviously he has to save a continent. And it doesn’t get more dangerous than mysterious Russia!


But the big difference this time is that McLane doesn’t even see it as a challenge. Killing bad guys in Russia is his idea of father-son time. Just an excuse to get to know his kid better. Fathers around the world teach their boys to play ball, this is how McLane plays. All the world’s a video game for killing bad guys. Real danger. Real blood. Real bullets.


The problem: This game seems too easy, especially when we have two McLanes. At no point do they seem like they are having a tough time. The stakes are too low. Despite shifting action to sinister Chernobyl and the impending threat of a nuclear explosion, radioactivity is conveniently neutralised with the McLanes having nothing to do with it.


With just one or two more possible instalments left, we can bet John McLane saves the world next and/or the planet after that.


We can only hope he breaks a sweat and works hard for it.


Your vacation is over, McLane. Report back to duty.










via The Hindu Newspaper http://www.thehindu.com/features/cinema/film-review-a-good-day-to-die-hard-no-trouble-in-little-russia/article4446269.ece