Thursday, 16 June 2011

Sanjay goes bald for 'Agneepath'

Sanjay Dutt has gone partially bald! No no' its not any hair fall but it's the 45-degree temperature at the Diu that made the actor do so. Sanjay had to wear a prosthetic make up to pose bald for his forthcoming film 'Agneepath'. In the beginning Sanju Baba managed to don the look but the raising heat made the make up melt and leak from the actor's head.

This disturbed him in acting and started irritating his eyes. So, the actor decided to shave off his hair partially fromhis forehead. Well must say, Sanju, what a conviction for your work...

Indian American wins city council seat in Texas


 An Indian American has edged past a candidate of Pakistani origin to win a city council seat in Sugar Land, Texas.
In unofficial results, Harish Jajoo edged Pakistani American attorney and investment manager Farha Ahmed on June 11 in the runoff election for the city council seat in District 4 in Sugar Land.
Mr. Jajoo secured 1,473 or 52.38 per cent of the total votes, while 1,340 or 47.62 per cent polled for Ahmed. Mr. Jajoo had a 915-724 advantage in pre-Election Day balloting, while Ahmed polled better on voting day, getting 616 votes to 559 for her opponent.
The tight contest was marred by a flier, circulated before the election and quoting a Pakistani newspaper, erroneously insinuated that Ahmed would represent Afia Sidique, a woman dubbed as “Lady al Qaeda,” in a criminal case.
Siddiqui is a U.S.-educated Pakistani neuroscientist who was sentenced to 86 years in prison in a New York District Court in 2010 for trying to shoot US soldiers at a police station in Afghanistan in 2008. She was shown on the flier in two grainy mug shots along with Ahmed’s photo.
Ahmed issued a statement saying she is a civil litigation attorney and could not represent Siddiqui in a criminal case.
Ahmed did say, however, that she was approached a few years ago “by attorneys and human rights groups to help gather information to find two missing American children who were believed to have been kidnapped overseas.”
“It is inappropriate for me to discuss the details of the case any further other than to state that the children were found. I would also like to humbly request that the identities of the children be safeguarded for their protection,” she said.
Ahmed did not issue any further clarification to indicate if this work involved Siddiqui or her children.
Mr. Jajoo, through a statement said that, “I want to assure you that my campaign had nothing to do with this mailer, and I do not condone this type of tactic. I also believe that the voters deserve to hear from my opponent on this issue as well.”
On results, Mr. Jajoo said, “This culminates a tough race and validates that my campaign was based on right message, right priorities and right approach. I am humbled by the support and enthusiasm of my district voters.”
Mr. Jajoo also said he received a call from Ahmed the night of June 11 after the results were declared “to congratulate me and I invited her to work with me on the issues important to her.”
He said in a press statement that his priorities as a member of the council would be “public safety, infrastructure and quality of life” in Sugar Land.
The swearing-in ceremony is scheduled for June 21.
Mr. Jajoo and his wife, Shashi, have two children.

I will have to work out on my flaws in nets: Raina

Stand-in captain Suresh Raina on Thursday admitted the need to spend some time with coach Duncan Fletcher in the nets in order to iron out some flaws in his batting.
Raina who could muster only 74 runs from five ODIs was repeatedly out trying to play the wild slog over deep mid-wicket or extra cover.
“I need to spend some time in the middle. I just can’t go out there and play big shots. I will look to have a couple of sessions with the coach,” Raina stated at the media conference after his team lost the final ODI by seven wickets.
The skipper however wanted to stress on the positives. “It is disappointing that we lost the last two matches but I am happy that we won the series. We need to enjoy the moment,” he said.
Raina felt that turning point was definitely getting all out for 251 with 15 balls to go.
“I feel we fell short by at least 25 to 30 runs. But full credit to Andre Russell for the manner in which he bowled at the death.”
The batting of Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli and Parthiv Patel along with Amit Mishra’s bowling was a big plus for this young team.
“Our fielding has also improved after sessions with new fielding coach Trevor Penny.”
About the upcoming Test series, Raina said that all those who have been selected are raring to go. “Obviously we have prepared well and the seniors who will join us will have to get acclimatised in the next few days.”
Man of the series Rohit said, “It was important for me to get some runs as I wanted to make this tour count. I am glad it came off well.”
Asked about his game plan, he answered, “I kept telling myself that I had to stay in the middle as long as possible. I wanted to take the game through to the end. But it is indeed very disappointing to lose two consecutive matches. I wanted to be around till the 48th or 49th over but it happened otherwise.”
West Indies skipper Darren Sammy lauded his bowlers for bringing them back in the match when it looked like Kohli and Rohit would take the game away.
“Credit to all the bowlers who came back very well. It looked like we would chase 300 at one stage.”
He was ecstatic about Darren Bravo’s match-winning effort of 86.
“We all know what Bravo is capable of doing. About Sarwan, we had to take a decision. Sarwan was cramping, thought it would be good for the team if a new batsman came in.
Although we won the last two matches but we need to start well in order to win the series,” the skipper said.
Sammy was hopeful that the team would do even better in the Test series and is taking inspiration from their victory against Pakistan
For man-of-the-match Russell, staying “positive and bowling in the right areas” helped.
“We have been playing good cricket over the past two games. I tried to remain positive and bowl in right areas.”
With the wicket offering some assistance, Russell admitted that it was a good strip to bowl on in the morning.
“It was a good wicket to bowl on in the morning. One or two of the Indian batsmen are not accustomed to the short ball, so I tried to use it as a surprise weapon.”

Virat Kohli and Manoj Tiwary consolidate after early losses

Gayle's absence reflected in the sombre mood at Sabina Park
The final ODI of the five-match Digicel series got underway under the shadow of the Chris Gayle versus the West Indies Cricket Board conflict which turned from bad to worse after a stormy Wednesday night meeting between the two parties.
This reflected in the arena; the atmosphere was sombre.
On a surface with some juice, India was 73 for two after 15 overs here on Thursday. Much of the cricket was compelling.
Openers Parthiv Patel and Shikhar Dhwan were fired out early by the West Indian paceman. Then Virat Kohli and Manoj Tiwary, rightfully batting down the order, consolidated.

Bounce and carry

The surface at the Sabina Park had pace, bounce and carry. Batting demanded guts and application.
Kemar Roach worked up pace, extracted lift. Andre Russell too got the ball to climb.
Parthiv attempted the pull Rusell but found the ball coming on to the bat too quickly. The miscued stroke was held brilliantly by Anthony Martin.Dhawan, back in the squad, did not appear comfortable. He attempted to cut Roach and was picked up at first slip.
Kohli is a positive batsman who relishes a combat. Without being overly aggressive, he is a busy batsman. Kohli's straight-drive off Roach was a top-shot. Then, he cover-drove Sammy.
Sammy won the toss and opted to field. Adrian Barath replaced Danza Hyatt in the West Indies team. S. Badrinath and Praveen Kumar made way for Dhawan and Vinay Kumar in the Indian eleven.


Kohli who looked good for a three—figure mark was unfortunately run—out at 94 (104 balls, 10x4) but his fourth wicket partnership of 110 runs with Rohit (57, 72 balls, 2x4, 1x6) laid the foundation for the visitors to put up a stiff total.
But another failure from skipper Suresh Raina (0) and Yusuf Pathan’s (30, 29 balls, 2x4, 1x6) failure to make it count after getting set put paid to India’s hopes of posting a huge total.
From 189 for three in 35.5 overs, Indian batsmen blew away a golden opportunity to post a 300 plus total on a wicket where the ball was coming onto the bat.
If Virat was unlucky as he was beaten by fantastic throw from the deep by Ramnaresh Sarwan going for a second run, Rohit was guilty of throwing it away after doing all the hard work.
Skipper Raina would like to forget this series in a hurry as he compiled a poor 74 runs in five matches. Yusuf on his part was looking good to fire all cylinders but failed to handle the extra bounce.
Kohli’s innings was blemish free and it looks like he would walk into the first XI of the Test team after such a quality performance.
The Delhi youngster batted with lot of responsibility as he first steadied the ship with a 58—run third wicket partnership with Manoj Tiwary (22, 22 balls, 1x4, 1x6) and then a century stand with Rohit Sharma.
Skipper Raina will have to take bulk of the blame as India failed to consume 15 deliveries in the end which might mean that they finished atleast 25 runs short of what they were supposed to score.
Put into bat after Darren Sammy won the toss, India lost openers Parthiv Patel (6) and Shikhar Dhawan (11) by the seventh over as both were done in by the extra bounce in the strip.
Parthiv wasn’t in position to pull a Russell bouncer and was holed out at midwicket while Dhawan failed to negotiate a rising delivery and was cramped for room going for a cut shot off Kemar Roach. He was snapped up in the first slip.
Kohli started clipping Russell delightfully to midwicket fence off the eighth ball he received.
The next boundary was rather a streaky edge past slip off Sammy but he made it up with a delightful cover drive in the West Indian skipper’s fourth over.
Manoj for the first time looked comfortable in his short international career. A six off Sammy which hit the wooden roof of the club’s bar was a breathtaking shot. Just when he looked like geting into the groove, he edged one from Kieron Pollard straight to Carlton Baugh.
India now had the best batting passage of the innings as two best young batsmen put their wares out on display.
Both Kohli and Rohit looked to hit down the ground and picked up runs with ease as the 100 runs came up in the 22nd over.
Kohli was careful in his shot selection and hit fours off leg—spinner Anthony Martin and Russell in successive overs.
The former India colts skipper bisected a Martin delivery through the backward point region and then spanked Russell through covers.
He reached his half century in the 23rd over with a single off Martin having faced only 63 deliveries. He celebrated it with a cheeky steer for four off Lendl Simmons.
Rohit having settled into a nice groove at the other end, slammed returning Roach over midwicket for an effortless six in the 36th over.
However, Kohli dismissal led to a dramatic collapse.
India were to suffer another blow almost immediately when skipper Raina played an ill—advised lofted shot to be out in the deep off Pollard.
Rohit and Pathan were well and truly into a repair act when Sharma was cleaned up by Martin.
Russell struck twin blows in one over when he had Pathan (30) caught behind and Amit Mishra (0) bowled in his eighth over, the 46th of the innings.
Scorecard
India: S Dhawan c Sarwan b Roach 11, P Patel c Martin b Russell 6, V Kohli run out (Sarwan ) 94, M Tiwary c Baugh b Pollard 22, R Sharma b Martin 57, S Raina c Barath b Pollard 0, Y Pathan c Baugh b Russell 30, R Ashwin not out 8, A Mishra b Russell 0, V Kumar c Baugh b Roach 2, I Sharma b Russell 0
Extras (lb—1, w—19, nb—1) 21
Total (All out, 47.3 overs ) 251
Fall of wickets: 1—15, 2—21, 3—79, 4—189, 5—190, 6—225, 7—245, 8—246, 9—249
Bowling: Roach 10—0—52—2, Sammy 6—0—48—0, Russell 8.3—0—35—4, Pollard 8—0—39—2, Martin 10—1—39—1, Simmons 5—0—37—0.

Al-Qaeda's new chief, and its war within

Ayman al-Zawahiri has been at the centre of a stormy debate over the jihadist movement's future.
“Liberating the Muslim nation” reads Knights under the Prophet's Banner, “confronting the enemies of Islam and launching a jihad against them, require a Muslim authority, established on a Muslim land, that raises the banner of jihad and rallies the Muslims around it”.
“Without achieving this goal, our actions will mean nothing more than mere and repeated disturbances.”
Four weeks after Ayman Muhammad Rabi al-Zawahiri published al-Qaeda's seminal manifesto online, the forces unleashed by the tragic events of 9/11 led to the disintegration of the state he hoped would spearhead a global Islamist revolution. Taliban-ruled Afghanistan disintegrated in the face of western military power. In the years since, al-Qaeda has re-emerged resurgent, building ever more powerful in the arc of states from Mali to Indonesia.
But the real goal remains elusive: and now, as al-Qaeda's newly-appointed chief, it will be al-Zawahiri's goal to see what might be done to secure it.
Faced with deep and little-understood dissent within his ranks, and a storm of events across the Middle-East which seem to have rendered irrelevant al-Qaeda's core belief that Islamist-led violence would alone spearhead change, his prospects appear bleak.
Born into a well-connected upper-middle class family from suburban Cairo, al-Zawahiri grew up in a scholarly milieu: he is said to have excelled as a student, been drawn to poetry, and hated organised sports, seeing them as “inhumane”.
He was drawn to the teachings of the Islamist ideologue Syed Qutb as a teenager, and joined the Muslim Brotherhood when he was just 14. Qutb, whose works Milestones and In the shade of the Quran are foundational texts for the global Islamist movement, was executed in 1966, for his alleged role in a plot to assassinate Egypt's President, Gamal Abdel Nasser. Al-Zawahiri, with four other schoolchildren, set up an underground cell to stage an Islamist revolution.
In the years that followed, al-Zawahiri would train as a doctor and specialise as a surgeon. He married Cairo university philosophy student Azza Nowari in 1978; their wedding, held at the Continental Hotel, attracted attention in the liberal Cairo of the times: men were segregated from women, photographers and musicians were kept away, and joking banter was discouraged.
But following the assassination of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1981, al-Zawahiri was among hundreds arrested and tortured. Released after three years in prison, he fled the country, and began practising medicine in Saudi Arabia. There, he came into contact with Osama bin-Laden. He first travelled to visit bin Laden-funded jihad facilities in Pakistan in 1985, a relationship that would slowly mature until 2001, when the EIJ formally merged with al-Qaeda.
The two men became inseparable: the intellectual, serious al-Zawahiri providing the perfect foil to the enthusiastic but politically immature bin Laden. Both men helped plan 9/11; it was to be al-Qaeda's greatest moment: a spectacular gesture that would precipitate a civilisational cataclysm between Islam and the west and signal that the power of the United States was illusory.
Azza, al-Zawahiri's wife, and his youngest daughter Aisha would both die in November, 2001, pinned under the debris of an al-Qaeda guesthouse hit by American bombs in Afghanistan.
Al-Zawahiri himself would spend the rest of his life trying to clear away the wreckage from around al-Qaeda.
The schisms within
Now appointed commander of the organisation following the killing of his friend by United States special forces, al-Zawahiri also faces a war within. More than a few inside al-Qaeda are said to believe the job should have gone to Muhammad Ibrahim Makkawi, also known as Saif al-Adel: part of a small caucus of top al-Qaeda commanders, including Saeed al-Masri and Mahfouz Ould al-Walid, who are reputed to have opposed the 9/11 attacks, saying they would destroy the Islamist state in Afghanistan and thus retard the movement's progress. Ever since 2009, following the death of jihadist commander Muhammad Atef, Makkai has commanded al-Qaeda's military assets—which means al-Zawahiri will have to rely on his allies among the jihadist movement in Pakistan to exercise power, not the people who built the organisation. Part of the story about al-Qaeda's internal dissensions became public in 2009, when the jihad veteran Abdullah Muhammad Fazul published his memoirs online. Fazul, who joined the jihadist movement as a teenager in 1991, drew a sharp distinction between the jihadists grouped in what he called the “original al-Qaeda” and al-Zawahiri's Egyptian Jihad cadre.
For all practical purposes, he wrote, the original al-Qaeda jihadists saw al-Makkawi as their commander. Even though, he wrote, al-Zawahiri “is called the number two man in the organization, but we don't have firsts and seconds in Islam, all are equal before God, and in any case I have never once taken orders from [him]”
Last year, Nasser al-Bahri, bin Laden's bodyguard until the events of 9/11, published memoirs which included a similar unflattering assessment of al-Zawahiri. “Bin Laden,” he argued, “is a born leader.” But Zawahiri had “generated a great deal of reserve, sometimes very harsh criticism,” al-Bahri wrote. “I doubt he has sufficient authority for such a position, even with his well-known authoritarianism and his penchant for centralizing power in himself.”
Kuwaiti cleric-turned al-Qaeda operative Suleiman Abu Gaith — who won notoriety by appearing in a video broadcast on al-Jazeera weeks after 9/11, proclaiming that “the storm of the planes will not stop” — also last year published an online manifesto highly critical of bin Laden's leadership.
Ghaith lashed out at al-Qaeda for “taking decisions in haste which led to a big defeat.” The poor decision making, he said, was a consequence of bin Laden being “encircled by a bunch of advisers who do not qualify to give advice”— a reference, presumably, to al-Zawahiri. He was also critical of al-Zawahiri's politics, which had led to “isolation of yourself and the mujahideen from the mainstream Islamic movements and from the Muslim world.”
Zawahiri has repeatedly attempted to defend himself. In 2008, responding to such criticisms, he said his critics, by refusing to countenance the loss of innocent life in a contest between grossly asymmetric adversaries, were in effect advocating capitulation. The voices of Islamist critics of al-Qaeda appear to have been growing ever louder.
The new ideologues
Even as al-Zawahiri's military success will depend on the cooperation he musters from Pakistani jihadist groups, the outcome of these debates could lie in the hands of a new generation of jihadist ideologues who have proved adroit in using new media to spread their message.
Key among the new ideologues are Libyan-born Muhammad Hasan Abu Bakr, who has occupied centre-stage in al-Qaeda's media campaigns since he escaped from Kabul's Bagram prison in 2005. Known by the alias Yahya al-Libi, Abu Bakr has delivered several impassioned video sermons, drawing from Islamic juridical tradition to argue al-Qaeda's cause.
Jarret Brachman, a counter-terrorism expert and former Central Intelligence Agency analyst, said this of al-Libi: “He's a warrior. He's a poet. He's a scholar. He's a pundit. He's a military commander.”
Libyan-born Jamal Ibrahim Ishtaywi, from the war-torn city of Misrata, and Kuwaiti national Khalid bin Abd al-Rahman al-Husaynan, a former prayer leader employed by the country's ministry of religious endowments, have also acquired great visibility.
Perhaps best-known, though, is the Yemeni-American preacher Anwar al-Awlaki — the English speaking face of al-Qaeda, whose sermons and books have been translated into a dozen languages. Al-Awlaki's words inspired the actions of Umar Farooq Abdulmutallab, a Nigerian national who attempted to blow himself up on a transatlantic jet in 2009, as well as the United States military psychiatrist, Nidal Malik Hasan, who killed 13 when he opened fire inside a military base in Texas
Barack Obama authorised the assassination of al-Awlaki in April 2010, making him the first citizen of the United States to be placed on the Central Intelligence Agency's death-list.
In a recent article, researcher Christopher Anzalone argued that these “charismatic communicators will play an increasingly important role in ensuring the survival of the transnational jihadi trend in the aftermath of bin Laden's killing”.
But will Zawahiri and the al-Qaeda he helped build guide that new jihadist current? Cut off from the mainstream of the Islamist movement in the Middle-East, where parties like the Muslim Brotherhood are poised to acquire power through democratic means; battered by relentless United States military pressure; isolated from his own organisation's most influential minds, Zawahiri more likely than not has often contemplated the terrible strategic error of 9/11.
He may in time come to be seen as the figure who presided over the death of the old al-Qaeda — not the man who gave it birth again after bin Laden's death.

G-Mac delighted with start to US Open

Graeme McDowell insisted he was delighted to kick off the defence of his US Open crown with a fine 70 at Congressional.
The Ulsterman produced a very consistent display with two birdies and just a single bogey to put himself amongst the early pacesetters.
"Very happy with the way I played today [Thursday]," he told Sky Sports. "I drove the ball beautifully which is a big key on this golf course - you've got to play it from the fairway to have a chance and I positioned the ball really well.
"I hung in there well and any greens I missed I scrambled well and the only bogey of the day was on one with a gap wedge in my hand out of the right bunker and I plugged it in the front bunker and made five there, but I really hung tough after that and gave myself.
"I gave myself a bunch of chances, I couldn't quite convert - it would have been nice to pick up one of those on 17 or 18 - but dream start and happy with it."
With nine straight pars on his back nine, McDowell produced just the kind of consistent, error-free golf required at a US Open and insists he is relishing the task in hand.
"You've only got to look at the scoreboard today [Thursday], no-one's going crazy, the pins were gentleish today but no-one's really gone that deep," he continued.
"Like I said you've got to drive it great to have a chance to score, but if you do that you can fire at a few pins.
"But as we know this golf course is going to get tougher and tougher and tougher so I'm really pleased with the way I controlled the ball today [Thursday] because I'll need to continue to do that this weekend.
"I feel really, really good this week. There's been a lot of talking about the past and I was really ready to get here and start moving towards the future again.
"It's been a great 12 months and I wouldn't change it for the world, but I'm happy to be here, hand the trophy back and start talking about what I want to achieve in the rest of my career."

Newey impressed by Vettel approach

Red Bull design guru Adrian Newey believes Sebastian Vettel's level-headed attitude has been the key to his success.
Reigning Formula One world champion Vettel is currently romping away this year as the 23-year-old leads the standings by 60 points ahead of a chasing pack spearheaded by McLaren's Jenson Button.
Newey, who has spent virtually his entire career working in F1, has been left amazed by the cool approach adopted by Vettel for one so young.
"The very special thing with Sebastian is how mature he is at this age," said Newey on formula1.com.
"I've seen so often that when drivers suddenly rise from obscurity to incredible stardom and fame that it goes to their head.
"They lose ground and their head gets a bit too big. Sebastian is remarkably level headed.
"He is a very private man and isn't into the fame at all. He thinks a lot about what he does and rarely makes the same mistake twice, and he is very hard working.
"He is always in the paddock in the evening, speaking with his engineers, going through the data and reflecting on what he did in the car.
"I think that's one thing all great drivers have in common."
Newey, the most successful designer in F1 with seven titles to his name with Williams, McLaren and now Red Bull, concedes the pressure of striving to be the best does take its toll.
"It's a constant stress so it is simply the level I live on," added Newey.
"I find my biggest enemy is time. The job is very time consuming - and can be over consuming if you are not careful.
"To find enough time for the family - to have a life outside Formula One - I really have to snatch this time.
"Then when I find myself idle for an hour, I almost feel guilty about it because I am not doing something. So time is the biggest pressure.
"Of course, there is also the pressure to do well. If you are doing badly then you want to do well, and then when you do, you are under pressure to maintain it. It's the eternal circle."
Naturally for Newey, the pressure for this season is obvious as he said: "We have to win the championship - nothing less."

Chelsea, Arsenal appeal to Taarabt

Adel Taarabt admits he could be tempted by a move to a big-four Premier League club such as Chelsea, but values playing regularly at QPR.
Taarabt was instrumental in Rangers' promotion to the top-flight last season, and was named Championship Player of the Year for his efforts.
His fine form has reportedly turned the heads of some of the country's biggest clubs, with Liverpool and Manchester United among those to be linked with the 22-year-old.
But while the Moroccan says he would like a move to a high-profile side, he admits he would prefer to play every game for Rangers than warm the bench at Chelsea.
He told Football365.fr: "I like the London clubs. I do not hide my liking for Chelsea.
"I would prefer to play regularly at QPR to being on the bench for a season at Chelsea. Now, if they told me I'd play 20 games per season, I think I'd be very tempted."
The midfielder, who scored 18 goals in 44 games for Rangers last season, also spoke about a move to Arsenal to link up with fellow Moroccan Marouane Chamakh.
"The idea is very appealing. Especially since there is also Samir Nasri, who I know very well," he added.
"But after that, there is a real possibility of playing the minimum."
Former Tottenham man Taarabt, who is contracted at Loftus Road until June 2013, claims clubs interested in his services have been in contact with QPR.
Asked if he would like a move to a big club in England, he replied: "It's currently what I'm trying to achieve. Today, I have a two-year contract with QPR.
"Yes, there is contact but I cannot say more, as you can imagine."

West Indies vs India 5th ODI | June 16, 2011, India in West Indies, 2011|Photo Gallery

















PCB fines Afridi but grants NOC


West Indies vs India, 5th ODI
Venue: Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica   Toss: West Indies (Elect to field)


West Indies InningsRB4s6sSR
 L Simmonsc A Mishra & b V Kumar6160037.5
 A Barathlbw A Mishra17461036.96
 R Sarwanretired hurt75945179.79
 M Samuelsnot out282530112
 D Bravost P Patel & b A Mishra86993686.87
 K Pollardnot out241331184.62
 C Baugh(wk)dnb00000.00
 D Sammy(c)dnb00000.00
 A Russelldnb00000.00
 K Roachdnb00000.00
 A Martindnb00000.00
 Extrasb - 0, lb - 9, w - 9, nb - 1, Total - 19
 Total: (255 for 3 in 48.4 overs)255 (5.24 runs per over)
Fall of Wickets
1/12 (Lendl Simmons, 4.2 ov.), 2/53 (Adrian Barath, 15.2 ov.), 3/213 (Darren Bravo, 45.1 ov.)

Bowler OMRWEcon
 Vinay Kumar 924615.11
 Ishant Sharma 9.404905.07
 Amit Mishra 1014624.6
 Ravichandran Ashwin 1015005
 Suresh Raina(c) 603505.83
 Yusuf Pathan 10707
 Virat Kohli 301304.33

India InningsRB4s6sSR
 S Dhawanc R Sarwan & b K Roach11261042.31
 P Patel(wk)c A Martin & b A Russell6110054.55
 V Kohlirunout (C Baugh)9410410090.38
 M Tiwaryc C Baugh & b K Pollard222211100
 R Sharmab A Martin57722179.17
 S Raina(c)c A Barath & b K Pollard04000
 Y Pathanc C Baugh & b A Russell302921103.45
 R Ashwinnot out8710114.29
 A Mishrab A Russell01000
 V Kumarc C Baugh & b K Roach280025
 I Sharmab A Russell02000
 Extrasb - 0, lb - 1, w - 19, nb - 1, Total - 21
 Total: (251 all out in 47.3 overs)251 (5.28 runs per over)
Fall of Wickets
1/15 (Parthiv Patel, 3.4 ov.), 2/21 (Shikhar Dhawan, 6.6 ov.), 3/79 (Manoj Tiwary, 15.6 ov.), 4/189 (Virat Kohli, 36 ov.), 5/190 (Suresh Raina, 36.5 ov.), 6/225 (Rohit Sharma, 42.6 ov.), 7/245 (Yusuf Pathan, 45.2 ov.), 8/246 (Amit Mishra, 45.3 ov.), 9/249 (Vinay Kumar, 46.6 ov.), 10/251 (Ishant Sharma, 47.3 ov.)

Bowler OMRWEcon
 Kemar Roach 1005225.2
 Darren Sammy(c) 604808
 Andre Russell 8.303544.12
 Kieron Pollard 803924.88
 Anthony Martin 1013913.9
 Lendl Simmons 503707.4

Umpires: Ian Gould (Eng) & Norman Malcolm (WI)

Third Umpire: Joel S Wilson (WI)

Match Referee: Jeff Crowe (NZ)