Home
Ganguly denies comments appearing in Bengali daily
Australian News.Net Saturday 11th October, 2008 (ANI)
Bangalore, Oct.11 : With India posting a fighting 313 for eight against Australia at the close of the third day's play at Bangalore's Chinnaswamy Stadium, south paw Sourav Ganguly, who contributed a solid 45 to the cause, said on Saturday that he had never made any of the controversial statements being attributed to him by the Bengali daily Aajkal with regard to his omission from the Indian team in 2005-06 and the negative statements against several team mates.
"The reports of an interview from a Bengali daily published in other newspapers are false. I have not given such an interview to anyone. I request you to clarify with me before publishing views from other sources," Ganguly'said in a statement that was read out in the press box by an Indian team official.
Aajkal had earlier quoted him as saying: "I have played badly in only one series (in Sri Lanka). Yet every Tom, Dick and Harry is playing in the team. There are players who haven't scored in the last three series for India, even for the last one year. There are some who have changed their hairstyle more than they have scored for India."
He was also quoted as saying that being dropped for the Irani Cup prompted him to call it a day and that he was tired of constantly being made the scapegoat in India's failures.
Dilip Vengsarkar, the former chairman of the selection committee which dropped Ganguly for the recent Irani Cup, said Ganguly will get "more than what he asked for", after the series is over.
"I won't answer him now as this is not the right time because India are in the middle of a Test series [against Australia] and it might affect the focus of the team," Vengsarkar said.
Sunil Gavaskar said Ganguly should not have made these comments ahead of a crucial Test series.
Email this story to a friend
Have your say on this story
|
 |
 |
- Oz Muslim women start fighting back against a repressive patriarchal system
Melbourne, Nov 20 : Muslim women in Australia are starting to fight back against a repressive patriarchal system in which controversial Sheikh Taj al-Din al-Hilali is seen as a champion of women's rights. [read story]
- All Test players must address over rate crisis: Ponting
Brisbane, Nov.20 : Australian cricket captain Ricky Ponting believes all Test players owe it to the game to address the over rate crisis, which is ruining it at present. [read story]
- Extremist groups using Facebook, MySpace, YouTube to 'recruit members'
Melbourne, Nov 20 : Social networking sites like Facebook, MySpace, YouTube, which have millions of users, are being used by extremist groups to recruit members, experts have warned. [read story]
- Hayden admits this summer might see his career end
Sydney, Nov 20 : Australian opener Mathew Hayden (37), who is believed to have been told by the Cricket Australia (CA) selectors that his career will not last more than a year from now, has said that he is no certainty to be around once this summer is over. [read story]
- Australia, Japan score wins in World Cup qualifiers
Sydney, Nov 20 (DPA) Football fans were convinced Thursday that Australia would make it to a third World Cup, after their team snatched a goal in injury time to clinch a 1-0 victory over Bahrain in Manama. [read story]
|
|
 |
 |
|
|