Sanjay manjrekar

  1. Sanjay Manjrekar vouches for 35
  2. He Would Follow It With Low Scores: Sanjay Manjrekar Dismisses 'Crisis Man' Tag For Ajinkya Rahane
  3. Sanjay Manjrekar
  4. ‘In his prime, Kohli would…’: Manjrekar dismayed at ‘greedy’ Rohit
  5. Sanjay Manjrekar Profile
  6. Sanjay Manjrekar vouches for 35
  7. He Would Follow It With Low Scores: Sanjay Manjrekar Dismisses 'Crisis Man' Tag For Ajinkya Rahane
  8. ‘In his prime, Kohli would…’: Manjrekar dismayed at ‘greedy’ Rohit
  9. Sanjay Manjrekar Profile
  10. Sanjay Manjrekar


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Sanjay Manjrekar vouches for 35

India is slated to take on Australia in the World Test Championship final on 7th June. The men in blue qualified for this coveted summit clash for the consecutive second time and their priority will be to lift the ICC Test mace. The Indian team has been practicing on English soil to prepare them for the WTC final. Cheteshwar Pujara has been one of the backbones of the Indian batting lineup. The 35-year-old has bailed his side on multiple occasions and the onus will be once again on him to utilize his potential at the Oval where the WTC final will take place. The right-handed batsman plied his trade for County giants Sussex and has shown a classic batting display. Sanjay Manjrekar backs Indian top-order batsman to shine in WTC final Pujara has consistently delivered for the team, having churned out three centuries and one half-century in the campaign. He will further provide solidity to the Indian side in the WTC Final. Ace commentator Sanjay Manjrekar also lavished praises on the player. In an interaction with ESPN Cricinfo, the former Indian cricketer revealed Pujara is the most dependable player for India and they will need him in this WTC final. “He has always played County cricket, whether India have a tour scheduled in England or not. Because there's T20 cricket going on in India at the time. He was dropped last year, and we saw how life after Pujara could be, and it wasn't that great. Today, Pujara is the most dependable player in the Indian lineup,” Read More:

He Would Follow It With Low Scores: Sanjay Manjrekar Dismisses 'Crisis Man' Tag For Ajinkya Rahane

Sanjar Manjrekar dismissed the notion of Ajinkya Rahane being India's crisis man after his brilliant knock of 89 in the 2023 World Test Championship (WTC) final. Rahane is playing his first match for India in 18 months after the veteran batter lost his place in the team following India's defeat against South Africa. Rahane's brilliant knock under pressure came despite him suffering from a finger injury and led to many calling him India's 'crisis man' as he once again got runs in tough situations. However, an ex-Indian cricketer has dismissed this notion and stated that the former vice-captain has a habit of following a good knock with a string of low scores.

Sanjay Manjrekar

• Test debut(cap 25 November 1987v Last Test 20 November 1996v ODI debut(cap 5 January 1988v Last ODI 6 November 1996v Domestic team information Years Team 1984–1998 Career statistics Competition Matches 37 74 147 145 Runs scored 2,043 1,994 10,252 5,175 37.14 33.23 55.11 45.79 100s/50s 4/9 1/15 31/46 9/38 Top score 218 105 377 139 17 8 383 14 0 1 3 1 – 10.00 79.33 22.00 – 0 0 0 10 wickets in match – 0 0 0 Best bowling – 1/2 1/4 1/2 Catches/ 25/1 23/0 103/2 64/0 Source: 16 January 2013 Sanjay Vijay Manjrekar ( help· info) (born 12 July 1965) is an Indian cricket commentator and former Domestic career [ ] Manjrekar was born in Manjrekar made his Domestically, he enjoyed success in the 1990–91 season, scoring four centuries and one half-century in eight first-class appearances. During the season, he scored his highest total, 377, He won a second Ranji Trophy final in 1996–97, captaining his team, by this stage renamed Mumbai. Manjrekar scored 78 runs in the match, in which both sides only batted one innings. International career [ ] In late 1987, Manjrekar made his international debut, facing the Manjrekar scored his final international century against Commentary career [ ] After retiring from professional cricket, Manjrekar began working as a cricket commentator. In April 2017, while commentating on an IPL match between During the In 2021, messages shared by Twitter users showed Manjrekar mocking Jadeja's English. References [ ] • ^ a b c . Retrieved 16 January 2013. • . Re...

‘In his prime, Kohli would…’: Manjrekar dismayed at ‘greedy’ Rohit

Team India endured quick setbacks in a mammoth 444-run chase against Australia in the Rohit Sharma reacts after being given out lbw on the fourth day of the World Test Championship Final.(AP) Rohit reviewed the leg before call unsuccessfully; shortly after, Pujara was also dismissed while attempting an uncharacteristic ramp shot. Also read: Former India batter Sanjay Manjrekar spoke about Rohit Sharma's dismissal in great detail, stating that the India opener became “greedy” as he faced Lyon and hadn't put a foot wrong througout his innings before the dismissal. “Rohit Sharma didn't put a foot wrong. T20 and Test match have absolutely no connection. He struggled in IPL, but come Test cricket, he didn't put a foot wrong unless that happened. It happened when a spinner came on after the three quality spinners went out. You suddenly felt there's a chance to get some runs and a T20 shot came out of the psyche of Rohit Sharma,” Manjrekar told ESPNCricinfo. “The ball came straight, it was nothing special. Maybe, there was a lapse of concentration, a bit too eager for runs. Once he went down on his knees, much to his chagrin, it was shorter than he would've liked. He became greedy to pick up a few runs.” Manjrekar further drew a comparison, stating that a prime Virat Kohli would never allow the bowlers a chance once he was set at the crease, and that differs him from Rohit. "With some batters, you can say there's a genuine problem of lapse of concentration. This is a guy who got ...

Sanjay Manjrekar Profile

Sanjay Manjrekar pursued technical perfection like a man obsessed, but for a batsman hailed as the next Sunil Gavaskar, he ended up with a career that was largely unrealised. Though he never saw his father Vijay bat, those who did couldn't help commenting that the technical rectitude was inherited. His century against a four-prong West Indian pace attack at Bridgetown in 1988-89 was masterful, and he followed it up with a double and single century in Pakistan. But he only managed one other century - a laboured if match-saving effort in Zimbabwe's inaugural Test. He struggled to find his rhythm and form on bouncy pitches in Australia and South Africa, and never recaptured that poise and balance. Manjrekar made an unsuccessful attempt at reinventing himself as an opener in 1997, and faded out of the international scene. He kept wicket occasionally, and often regaled team-mates with his singing. He now works as a television commentator and media pundit.

Sanjay Manjrekar vouches for 35

India is slated to take on Australia in the World Test Championship final on 7th June. The men in blue qualified for this coveted summit clash for the consecutive second time and their priority will be to lift the ICC Test mace. The Indian team has been practicing on English soil to prepare them for the WTC final. Cheteshwar Pujara has been one of the backbones of the Indian batting lineup. The 35-year-old has bailed his side on multiple occasions and the onus will be once again on him to utilize his potential at the Oval where the WTC final will take place. The right-handed batsman plied his trade for County giants Sussex and has shown a classic batting display. Sanjay Manjrekar backs Indian top-order batsman to shine in WTC final Pujara has consistently delivered for the team, having churned out three centuries and one half-century in the campaign. He will further provide solidity to the Indian side in the WTC Final. Ace commentator Sanjay Manjrekar also lavished praises on the player. In an interaction with ESPN Cricinfo, the former Indian cricketer revealed Pujara is the most dependable player for India and they will need him in this WTC final. “He has always played County cricket, whether India have a tour scheduled in England or not. Because there's T20 cricket going on in India at the time. He was dropped last year, and we saw how life after Pujara could be, and it wasn't that great. Today, Pujara is the most dependable player in the Indian lineup,” Read More:

He Would Follow It With Low Scores: Sanjay Manjrekar Dismisses 'Crisis Man' Tag For Ajinkya Rahane

Sanjar Manjrekar dismissed the notion of Ajinkya Rahane being India's crisis man after his brilliant knock of 89 in the 2023 World Test Championship (WTC) final. Rahane is playing his first match for India in 18 months after the veteran batter lost his place in the team following India's defeat against South Africa. Rahane's brilliant knock under pressure came despite him suffering from a finger injury and led to many calling him India's 'crisis man' as he once again got runs in tough situations. However, an ex-Indian cricketer has dismissed this notion and stated that the former vice-captain has a habit of following a good knock with a string of low scores.

‘In his prime, Kohli would…’: Manjrekar dismayed at ‘greedy’ Rohit

Team India endured quick setbacks in a mammoth 444-run chase against Australia in the Rohit Sharma reacts after being given out lbw on the fourth day of the World Test Championship Final.(AP) Rohit reviewed the leg before call unsuccessfully; shortly after, Pujara was also dismissed while attempting an uncharacteristic ramp shot. Also read: Former India batter Sanjay Manjrekar spoke about Rohit Sharma's dismissal in great detail, stating that the India opener became “greedy” as he faced Lyon and hadn't put a foot wrong througout his innings before the dismissal. “Rohit Sharma didn't put a foot wrong. T20 and Test match have absolutely no connection. He struggled in IPL, but come Test cricket, he didn't put a foot wrong unless that happened. It happened when a spinner came on after the three quality spinners went out. You suddenly felt there's a chance to get some runs and a T20 shot came out of the psyche of Rohit Sharma,” Manjrekar told ESPNCricinfo. “The ball came straight, it was nothing special. Maybe, there was a lapse of concentration, a bit too eager for runs. Once he went down on his knees, much to his chagrin, it was shorter than he would've liked. He became greedy to pick up a few runs.” Manjrekar further drew a comparison, stating that a prime Virat Kohli would never allow the bowlers a chance once he was set at the crease, and that differs him from Rohit. "With some batters, you can say there's a genuine problem of lapse of concentration. This is a guy who got ...

Sanjay Manjrekar Profile

Sanjay Manjrekar pursued technical perfection like a man obsessed, but for a batsman hailed as the next Sunil Gavaskar, he ended up with a career that was largely unrealised. Though he never saw his father Vijay bat, those who did couldn't help commenting that the technical rectitude was inherited. His century against a four-prong West Indian pace attack at Bridgetown in 1988-89 was masterful, and he followed it up with a double and single century in Pakistan. But he only managed one other century - a laboured if match-saving effort in Zimbabwe's inaugural Test. He struggled to find his rhythm and form on bouncy pitches in Australia and South Africa, and never recaptured that poise and balance. Manjrekar made an unsuccessful attempt at reinventing himself as an opener in 1997, and faded out of the international scene. He kept wicket occasionally, and often regaled team-mates with his singing. He now works as a television commentator and media pundit.

Sanjay Manjrekar

• Test debut(cap 25 November 1987v Last Test 20 November 1996v ODI debut(cap 5 January 1988v Last ODI 6 November 1996v Domestic team information Years Team 1984–1998 Career statistics Competition Matches 37 74 147 145 Runs scored 2,043 1,994 10,252 5,175 37.14 33.23 55.11 45.79 100s/50s 4/9 1/15 31/46 9/38 Top score 218 105 377 139 17 8 383 14 0 1 3 1 – 10.00 79.33 22.00 – 0 0 0 10 wickets in match – 0 0 0 Best bowling – 1/2 1/4 1/2 Catches/ 25/1 23/0 103/2 64/0 Source: 16 January 2013 Sanjay Vijay Manjrekar ( help· info) (born 12 July 1965) is an Indian cricket commentator and former Domestic career [ ] Manjrekar was born in Manjrekar made his Domestically, he enjoyed success in the 1990–91 season, scoring four centuries and one half-century in eight first-class appearances. During the season, he scored his highest total, 377, He won a second Ranji Trophy final in 1996–97, captaining his team, by this stage renamed Mumbai. Manjrekar scored 78 runs in the match, in which both sides only batted one innings. International career [ ] In late 1987, Manjrekar made his international debut, facing the Manjrekar scored his final international century against Commentary career [ ] After retiring from professional cricket, Manjrekar began working as a cricket commentator. In April 2017, while commentating on an IPL match between During the In 2021, messages shared by Twitter users showed Manjrekar mocking Jadeja's English. References [ ] • ^ a b c . Retrieved 16 January 2013. • . Re...