First Time In Afghan Cricket History
Afghanistan Hired The English Coach Andy Moulz For Training Of Nation Cricket Team
It,s First Time In The History Of Afghan Cricket To Hire a British Coach
This Is Big Sports News Of Today
In 1997 Andy Played In English County For Lancashire And Latest At Intentional Level Andy Have Coached The Cricket Teams Of Scotland And Kenya.
Andy
Say That When His Friend Heared This News That I am Going To
Afghanistan To Lead The Afghan Cricket Team As Coach. He Asked Me Are
You Really Going To Afghanistan For Coaching
He
Said That Afghan Government Assured Him That Taliban Are Not Against
Cricket And Taliban Shall Not Interfere In Their Coaching
Andy Mole z Was An Opening Batsmen For Lancashire And Later they were Gone To Coaching
Cricket Not Played Before 2001 In Afghanistan But Currently It,s Today,s No 1 Sports Which Is Played in Afghanistan
The
Condition Is That Children And Youth playing Cricket In Afghanistan And
They Have Not Any Empty Space Where A Cricket Match Was Not Going To Be
Played
Afghan Cricket Coach Kabir Khan Resign On Personal Grounds
Last October, when the national team beat the Kenyan team And qualified for the World Cup was celebrated in the capital and gunfire continued throughout the Whole night in the Capital City
The CEO Of Afghan Cricket Board Said That Cricket Is Not Longer A Sport But More Then It Has Become A Passion
BRISTOL: Graeme Swan believes England “do not have a cat in hell's
chance” of winning next year's World Cup unless they add more firepower
to their top-order batting.The CEO Of Afghan Cricket Board Said That Cricket Is Not Longer A Sport But More Then It Has Become A Passion
Afghanistan is the world's number eleven teams at the time. But in the past, including the Pakistan won against the big teams. Next year's World Cup, their first goal is to come in the first eight teams.
England Can Not Won The WC2015
Sunday saw England captain Alastair Cook suggest that the team's prospects for the tournament in Australia and New Zealand were “very good”.
But former England off-spinner Swan was far more pessimistic.
Swann, speaking to BBC Radio's Test Match Special as rain washed out the first one-day international against world champions India in Bristol without a ball bowled on Monday, insisted England were “so far behind other teams” in their approach to the limited-overs game.
“If he (Cook) truly believes England can win this World Cup...I am the greatest patriot there is but we do not have a cat in hell's chance,” Swan said.
Opening batsman Cook's position in the one-day side has been called into question, with many pundits arguing his orthodox approach, while well-suited to Test cricket, has increasingly little place in a one-day context where big hitters dominate at the top of the order.
Free Web Directory URL Submit “I love Cooky totally, but I do not think he should be bothering playing one-day cricket any more,” said the 35-year-old Swan, who played 60 Tests and 79 O Dis for England before retiring during the team's 5-0 Ashes thrashing in Australia.
“Let young people (play) who want to smash it everywhere,” he added as he called for promising batsmen James Vince and Jason Roy to be added to the squad.
If the rain had held off in Bristol, England would have given an ODI debut to dynamic Nottingham shire opener Alex Hales.
The 25-year-old scored England's first Twenty20 international century when he made 116 not out from 64 balls against Sri Lanka at the World Twenty20 in March

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