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    Indian schoolboys break record!

    Schoolboys rewrite record books with 721-run stand

    NEW DELHI (AFP) - A pair of Indian schoolboys did the unthinkable when they put on a "world record" 721 for the opening wicket off 40 overs in a one-day cricket match, the Times of India reported.

    Shaibaz Tumbi and B. Manoj Kumar achieved the feat on Wednesday playing for St Peter's High School against St Philips High School in an under-13 inter-school match at Secunderabad in southern India.

    Tumbi hammered 324 off just 116 balls and Kumar 320 off 127 deliveries in an eye-defying display of aggressive batting. The pair smashed 103 fours during their stand but not a single six at the huge Parade ground.

    Their feat also eclipsed the previous best stand, in any form of cricket, of 664 between Indian batting superstar Sachin Tendulkar and former Test batsman Vinod Kambli in an inter-school match in Mumbai in February 1988.

    "We feel nice to have broken the Tendulkar-Kambli record. We knew our individual scores and were told about the world record only when the innings ended," one of the boys told reporters

    St Philips also conceded 77 extras, including 57 wides and three no-balls, meaning the Tumbi-Kumar duo had 10 extra overs to continue with their run-riot.

    "There was a competition between us after reaching 200 that who will complete a triple-century first. We then decided that each will play three balls in an over," said Tumbi.

    "I never knew I was breaking a world record. I was just playing for myself and my school. I only realised when I returned to the pavilion that I'd broken a record by scoring a triple-century."

    The St Philips batsmen wilted after the onslaught and were dismissed for a paltry 21, losing by a whopping 700-run margin.

    Three world records were struck -- highest total, highest stand and highest margin of victory -- in any form of limited-overs cricket at any level, according to former Indian cricket board statistician Mohandas Menon.

    The previous one-day record was 630-5 off 45 overs by United Cricket Club against Bay Area in a league match in California, United States, The Times said.



    http://uk.news.yahoo.com/16112006/32...s-721-run.html




    #2
    Lol that's crraaazy scoring

    I used to have a BDM bat when I was little
    Like blood on iron

    Comment


      #3
      I have a BDM bat

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by The_Milkman
        I have a BDM bat
        How much better can you get than a BDM bat? And of course the answer is none. None better.
        Like blood on iron

        Comment


          #5
          Must have been fun for the fielding team. Yes, great batting and all that, but at 13 years old, in a clear mismatch, they should have retired on 100 and let the next batsman have a go. Those sort of records are no good for the game.
          I'm playing all the right notes. Not necessarily in the right order. I'll give you that, sunshine.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by mersey86
            Must have been fun for the fielding team. Yes, great batting and all that, but at 13 years old, in a clear mismatch, they should have retired on 100 and let the next batsman have a go. Those sort of records are no good for the game.
            your just jelous

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              #7
              Maybe, but I have coached rugby, cricket and football over the years. The worst thing for children/young people is a huge mismatch. If you are the better team its no challenge, if you are the lesser team its embarrassing and dispiriting. I once coached a school rugby team which got hammered. My advice: "walk back slowly to the halfway line and if you kick for touch kick into the trees". Coaching soccer more recently, if my team is obviously going to win I switch the team around so kids who never score are in attack.
              If these boys follow the path of those who set the record then the world has some great new cricketers in the pipeline, but I do think some limitations should be placed on these things.
              Then again my highest score is 62, so I probably am jealous as well.
              I'm playing all the right notes. Not necessarily in the right order. I'll give you that, sunshine.

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                #8
                Originally posted by mersey86
                Maybe, but I have coached rugby, cricket and football over the years. The worst thing for children/young people is a huge mismatch. If you are the better team its no challenge, if you are the lesser team its embarrassing and dispiriting. I once coached a school rugby team which got hammered. My advice: "walk back slowly to the halfway line and if you kick for touch kick into the trees". Coaching soccer more recently, if my team is obviously going to win I switch the team around so kids who never score are in attack.
                If these boys follow the path of those who set the record then the world has some great new cricketers in the pipeline, but I do think some limitations should be placed on these things.
                Then again my highest score is 62, so I probably am jealous as well.
                This is India we're talking about though, batting is what it's all about. The other team could well have come out and scored 520

                OK as is they got 21

                You do have to wonder why they ever played each other in the first place really
                Like blood on iron

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                  #9
                  Originally posted by mersey86
                  Must have been fun for the fielding team. Yes, great batting and all that, but at 13 years old, in a clear mismatch, they should have retired on 100 and let the next batsman have a go. Those sort of records are no good for the game.
                  Correct

                  Still, what a **** team the others must have been
                  Originally posted by Gordon Brown
                  (1995)
                  "A weak currency is the sign of a weak economy,which is the sign of a weak government"

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                    #10
                    Losing a 40-over match by 700 runs. Not even England could manage that.
                    .
                    Suppose you have a physicist and a sociologist standing at the side of a field, observing a set of events unfolding on the field. The physicist does [describes] it using the terminology of mass and velocity and frequency of radiation and the rest. And the sociologist does it by describing it as a rugby match.



                    May the Lord bless this post.

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                      #11
                      Originally posted by Neil Young
                      Losing a 40-over match by 700 runs. Not even England could manage that.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Whilst a great feat amazing even they are going to be in the spotlight now for ever if they make it all the way.

                        Hope they do it
                        Quit your jibber jabber!!!

                        Jermaine, you know the song Billie Jean...is it about the tennis player??

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                          #13
                          Originally posted by Neil Young
                          Losing a 40-over match by 700 runs. Not even England could manage that.
                          It's a bit early in the tour to be saying that.
                          "The man who never alters his opinion is like standing water, and breeds reptiles of the mind."
                          -- William Blake

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                            #14
                            Quit your jibber jabber!!!

                            Jermaine, you know the song Billie Jean...is it about the tennis player??

                            Comment


                              #15
                              WOW great batting won by 700 runs that just crazy!

                              and with 6s aswell, well done lads!
                              "Your nickname was never 'Ace'! Maybe 'Ace-hole'."

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