Saturday, 28 July 2012
Afridi as the polio celebrity champion
07:58
cr, Cricket, t20, test match, worldcup
The government just nominated the Pakistani cricketer, Shahid Afridi as the polio celebrity champion who declared his intentions of ensuring that no child in Pakistan is left unvaccinated and is paralyzed by Polio.
Afridi joined hand for the cause of polio eradicated initiative in Pakistan and signed a MoU (Memorandum of understanding) with the spokespersons of Prime Minister’s Monitoring and Coordination cell for Polio eraditcation, Rotary international, UNICEF and WHO.
Bill gates, the owner of Microsoft made a post on his facebook page regarding the Pakistani cricketers valiant effort which read, “Great to have support of leading Pakistani wicket taker Shahid Afridi, who recently joined Rotary’s “This Close” campaign to support the fight to end polio.”
It is truly grand that our cricketers and various other several celebrities too are making efforts to make this homeland of ours a better place.
Afridi joined hand for the cause of polio eradicated initiative in Pakistan and signed a MoU (Memorandum of understanding) with the spokespersons of Prime Minister’s Monitoring and Coordination cell for Polio eraditcation, Rotary international, UNICEF and WHO.
Bill gates, the owner of Microsoft made a post on his facebook page regarding the Pakistani cricketers valiant effort which read, “Great to have support of leading Pakistani wicket taker Shahid Afridi, who recently joined Rotary’s “This Close” campaign to support the fight to end polio.”
It is truly grand that our cricketers and various other several celebrities too are making efforts to make this homeland of ours a better place.
Afridi announced his retirement In
07:56
cr, Cricket, t20, test match, worldcup
Shahid Afridi, the Pakistan allrounder, has said that he may consider retiring from ODI cricket to give selectors a chance to build a strong, young team for the 2015 World Cup being held in Australia and New Zealand.
He said that he would reassess his future after the team returned home from Sri Lanka in mid-July. "People expect a lot from senior players, so I must sincerely review my performance [in ODI cricket]," Afridi told ESPNcricinfo. "I want to step aside for new players [to come through], so that Pakistan can build a good team for the 2015 World Cup. But I must, first, check if anyone is ready to take my place in the team, so that my retirement won't be unfair to the team."
Afridi, who was dismissed for scores of 2, 17, 0 and 9 in the ODIs against Sri Lanka, said that even if he retired from ODI's, he would still continue playing the Twenty20 format. "[I had decided that] the day I became a burden to cricket I would walk away [from the game]. I am considering [whether or not to retire from ODIs] and would consult some senior players and friends before making a decision. But even if I retire from ODI's I will continue to play Twenty20 cricket."
Pakistan were shoddy in the field, in the ODI's, with several dropped catches and missed run-out opportunities, allowing Sri Lanka to gain the upper hand. Afridi attributed the 3-1 series loss to poor fielding. "Fielding has been our weakness ever since I started playing cricket," he said. "We didn't play as we expected, but Sri Lanka were strong in their own conditions. They used the conditions very well."
In the past Afridi had announced his retirement on a number of occasions. First, in 2006, he decided to take a temporary sabbatical from Test cricket to concentrate on ODIs. Then in 2010, he announced his Test retirement after Pakistan lost the first Test against Australia at Lord's. A year later he announced a "conditional" retirement from international cricket to protest against the way he was "humiliated" by the PCB, who had stripped him of his ODI captaincy.
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