No Human Can Accept tat there is somethin else superior than them!!!!,
I suppose this wud Answer ur qn!!!
2006-09-30 08:31:33
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answer #3
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answered by jason 2
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They dont. You assume something and throw a question based on your wild assumption. Then you will ask why Indians are racists?
2006-09-30 06:25:29
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answer #4
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answered by slender 2
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Hi Meena, they are more courteous. Check with these poeple.
2006-09-30 05:45:27
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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that's a false statement!!
i am an indian an asume ricky ponting as my guru!!
i love ricky's batting,honesty and much more about him!!
i even have a collection of his shirts!!
i have all info on ricky and here it is for u-
Full name Ricky Thomas Ponting
Born December 19, 1974, Launceston, Tasmania
Current age 31 years 285 days
Major teams Australia, ICC World XI, Somerset, Tasmania
Playing role Higher middle order batsman
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Height 1.78 m
Education Mowbray Primary; Brooks Senior High School, Launceston
Statsguru Test player, ODI player
Batting and fielding averages
class mat inns no runs hs ave bf sr 100 50 4s 6s ct st
Tests 105 175 24 8792 257 58.22 14937 58.86 31 34 999 57 120 0
ODIs 256 250 29 9293 164 42.04 11715 79.32 20 53 789 119 108 0
Twenty20 Int. 4 4 1 131 98* 43.66 84 155.95 0 1 11 7 3 0
First-class 199 336 49 17123 257 59.66 64 68 203 0
List A 322 316 41 11461 164 41.67 23 68 138 0
Twenty20 5 5 1 151 98* 37.75 104 145.19 0 1 3 0
Bowling averages
class mat balls runs wkts bbi bbm ave econ sr 4 5 10
Tests 105 527 231 5 1/0 1/0 46.20 2.62 105.40 0 0 0
ODIs 256 150 104 3 1/12 1/12 34.66 4.16 50.00 0 0 0
Twenty20 Int. 4 0 0 0 - - - - - 0 0 0
First-class 199 1422 757 14 2/10 54.07 3.19 101.57 0 0
List A 322 349 269 8 3/34 3/34 33.62 4.62 43.62 0 0 0
Twenty20 5 0 0 0 - - - - - 0 0 0
Career statistics
Statsguru Tests filter | Statsguru One-Day Internationals filter
Test debut Australia v Sri Lanka at Perth - Dec 8-11, 1995 scorecard
Last Test Bangladesh v Australia at Chittagong (CDS) - Apr 16-20, 2006 scorecard
ODI debut Australia v South Africa at Wellington - Feb 15, 1995 scorecard
Last ODI Australia v West Indies at Kuala Lumpur - Sep 24, 2006 scorecard
Twenty20 Int. debut New Zealand v Australia at Auckland - Feb 17, 2005 scorecard
Last Twenty20 Int. South Africa v Australia at Johannesburg - Feb 24, 2006 scorecard
First-class span 1992/93 - 2005/06
List A span 1992/93 - 2006/07
Twenty20 span 2004 - 2005/06
Notes
One-Day International Player of the Year - 2002
Test Player of the Year - 2003
Test Player of the Year - 2004
Allan Border Medal 2004
Wisden Cricketer of the Year 2006
Profile
Acclaimed by academy coach Rod Marsh as the best teenage batsman he had ever seen, Ricky Ponting began with Tasmania at 17 and Australia at 20, and was given out unluckily for 96 on his Test debut. He was and remains the archetypal modern cricketer: he plays all the shots with a full flourish of the bat and knows only to attack, and his breathtaking, dead-eye fielding is a force in the game by itself. A gambler and a buccaneer, he is a natural at one-day cricket. He has had his setbacks, against probing seam attacks and high-class finger-spin, which, when out of form, he plays with hard hands. In the 1990s there were off-field indiscretions that led him once to admit publicly to an alcohol problem, but he overcame the issues and became part of the heartbeat of one of Australia's most successful teams. After the retirement of Ian Healy he took over as the man who led the singing of the victory song.
With many lessons learned, Ponting's growing maturity was acknowledged by the ACB when he saw off competition from Shane Warne and Adam Gilchrist to succeed Steve Waugh as Australia's one-day captain early in 2002. It was a seamless transition: Ponting led the successful 2003 World Cup campaign from the front, clouting a coruscating 140 not out in the final, and acceded to the Test crown when Waugh finally stepped down early in 2004. A broken thumb suffered in the Champions Trophy in England forced him to watch Gilchrist lead Australia's first series victory in India for 35 years from the dressing room, although he returned for the final Test. Batting-wise his first year as captain was one to forget, but he began his second with 207 against Pakistan, joining Don Bradman and Greg Chappell as the only Australians to reach four double-centuries.
By the time an eagerly-awaited Ashes series got underway the cracks in an almost invincible Australian side were beginning to appear. A humiliating one-day loss to Bangladesh caused the first ripple of dissent against his leadership style, and this grew as the contest progressed. A heroic 156 helped save the Old Trafford Test, but on September 12, 2005, Ponting became the first Australian captain since Allan Border in 1986-87 to taste defeat in an Ashes series. The result hurt and the pain lingered throughout the summer, rising again when Ponting reacted angrily to pre-recorded jokes from Phil Tufnell during the Allan Border Medal. While his record in charge is tainted - in his defence he recovered to win 11 of 12 Tests last summer - his batting remains untarnished and Waugh believes his successor will hold the game's run-scoring record when he retires. The world's leading strokeplayer, he finished 2005 with 1544 runs and posted twin hundreds three times in five months, joining Sunil Gavaskar as the only other man to achieve the feat, and the double effort in his 100th Test at the SCG was magnificent. He also owns more centuries than anyone but Sachin, Steve and Sunny and at the age of 31 is far from finished.
2006-09-30 05:03:16
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answer #6
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answered by aki 4
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