♥?► Styx Tickets in Las Vegas, NV in Las Vegas, Nevada For Sale
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Styx TICKETS
Pearl Concert Theater At Palms Casino Resort
Las Vegas, NV
Sun, Jan 19 xxxx
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Lliam Flynn: You just said what's on my mind mate! If they want to bring JF in, drop Watto not Bailey. Even in this series, watto will fail miserably BUT he will do something good with the bat or ball in just one game to be given a chance to play the next series... Just pick him for ODIs & T20s but not for test matches.This test will be a ripper. It will give a good indication whether England is on the slide and the Aussies on the rise or the status quo as been re-asserted.FreddyForPrimeMinister: I don't necessarily want him out of the team, but I don't want him in the top 5. There's a nice spot that Bailey's keeping warm at 6 for him but guess what, he said he doesn't really want to bat there. He wants to open, three at a pinch. That's what annoys me about Watto. .. Short form cricket, he's the first bloke picked though.FreddyForPrimeMinister on (December 1, xxxx, 11:45 GMT) that's the difference freddy, England have regularly put up with just good enough is enough, that's why Australia come back much quicker than they go away, being average is just good enough.rickyvoncanterbury: He made 176 at the Oval. That was a pretty extraordinary innings.We don't need to change a winning team, we will canter to an Ashes series win but I think all us Aussies know Watson has had plenty of time to come good and hasn't. On his day he is among the best to watch but his conversion rate is no where near good enough for a top order batsman. I'd have no problem with him at 6 or 7 if his bowling warranted selection. He will probably score a double hundred in Adelaide though, especially against a weak English attack.This England side relishes adversity. In fact, considering their habitually poor starts to a series, they don't just relish it, they are inured to it. And this time the adversity comes with emotional hurt attached. After the traumatic defeat in Brisbane, one of their number is missing. The imperative in Adelaide will be to give Jonathan Trott some good news to sustain him through difficult times.Kevin Pietersen has become the image of England's "tight unit". He has slapped on the shades and the earphones and waved aside attention, especially attention from anybody resembling an Australian journalist. As he stares meaningfully into the mid-distance, one likes to imagine he is listening to something suitably reverberating. It would be a surprise to learn he is mentally crooning along to Robbie Williams.Alice Springs, Graeme Swann and Gary Ballance apart, seemed to bring as much benefit to those who did not play as those who did. There is nowhere better than the Northern Territory, the land beyond the black stump, to hole up for a while, stare down the critics, and concentrate on the task that lies ahead.That Alastair Cook now faces the sternest test of his captaincy should not be up for debate. The suspicion that this England side might be past its peak is stronger now than when they went 1-0 down to India in Ahmedabad a year ago but recovered to take the series. Cook's leadership is underpinned by many good qualities: personal weight of runs, conventional captaincy based on proven statistical data, and the authority arising from his understated toughness and essential fair-mindedness. But now he needs to drag a response from England that will tend to the more remarkable.It is as such times when a captain looks to his second in command - but when Cook does he discovers one of England's most pressing problems. Matt Prior is England's Player of the Year but has had such a thin time of late that those achievements seem a world away. When he received that award at a function in London - a debatable choice ahead of James Anderson and Cook himself - his acceptance speech was strangely uncertain, as if he was not entirely comfortable with the recognition. It amplified his reputation as the ultimate team man, but he has seemed discomfited ever since.Occasionally, a player becomes so overtaken by stress that, as in Trott's case, he can bear no more. More often than not, players are beset from time to time by something more mundane - demoralising periods of failure that bear heavily upon them but to which they are resilient enough to survive. Sometimes they bounce back, sometimes decline sets quietly upon them.Almost nine years after his England debut in an ODI against Zimbabwe in Bulawayo, Prior's career has hit problems. In his last six Ashes Tests, five of them during England's 3-0 series win in their own summer, Prior has scored only 137 runs at 15.20, hardly the contribution England would have anticipated from a player who before facing Australia last summer had a Test average of 44.34. He has not passed fifty in first-class cricket since May, a brief restorative period with Sussex proving just as unsuccessful.When Prior returned from New Zealand in March, the Auckland Test heroically saved and his own backs-to-the-wall hundred at the centre of it, he was hailed as a rival to Kumar Sangakkara as the best wicketkeeper-batsman in the world, a position achieved by maximum commitment. But as England retained the Ashes, he was outplayed by his opposite number, Brad Haddin. In Brisbane, too, it was Haddin who revived Australia's first innings from 132 for 6 in league with Mitchell Johnson, while Prior fell to two weak dismissals - a first-ball duck in the first innings, 4 in the second - two vacillating pushes to leg against the offspin of Nathan Lyon.The observation by England's team director, Andy Flower, in the wake of the Brisbane Test that it was not just Mitchell Johnson who had wrecked England, but that soft dismissals against Lyon could not be ignored seemed aimed at Prior as much as anybody. It even encouraged speculation that Jonny Bairstow, far from being out of favour, could replace Prior at Adelaide and bat at No 7. Bairstow, after all, had been on stand-by in Brisbane before Prior's recovery from a calf injury was confirmed on the morning of the first Test.It is just about possible to contend that Bairstow in Adelaide, on a slow, low drop-in pitch, might have a better chance of making runs than Prior in his current frame of mind. But then England move to Perth, where more pace and bounce can be expected, and where Prior, such a strong cutter, might just come back into his own, bent as he will be upon proving Australian suggestions that England are vulnerable against fast bowling are, in his own words "just plain wrong".England, in any case, showed what they thought of the theory that Prior might be stepped down in Adelaide by batting him at No. 4 in Alice Springs and declaring their first-innings before Bairstow, coming in well down the order, got too many runs for it to be embarrassing. Prior looks bound to play his 59th consecutive Test in Adelaide.Obviously I am in a slump of form," Prior accepted in his ghosted column in the Daily Telegraph. "The only thing you can do is front up and get stuck in." But the uneasy feeling remains that as well as his struggles with Achilles problems, the vice-captaincy has not sat easily on him. To combine the formidable equilibrium of Cook with the more vigorous, outspoken Prior, on the face of it, was a sound move, but the longer he goes without a meaningful score, the more one wonders if the additional role really suits him.Prior's pugnacious nature has shone through before, in good times and bad, never more so than when he phoned up Kevin Pietersen at the height of his stand-off with the ECB Haddin, by contrast, is clearly an ideal foil for Michael Clarke. Haddin steadies Clarke's captaincy on the field, and he is even more important off it, the solid senior professional who acts as a conduit between the players and a captain who can become a little distant from the earthier aspects of a cricket dressing room.Prior has conquered tough times before. It is too late in any case to consider moving to America and taking up baseball like he did the first time he was dropped after 10 Tests by England, back in xxxx after a bungling keeping display on a tour of Sri Lanka. Now, unusually, it is his batting which is under review. But his pugnacious nature has shone through before, in good times and bad, never more so than when he phoned up Pietersen at the height of his stand-off with the ECB and told him that the dispute was damaging the dressing room and had to end.Ahead of him lies Alan Knott's England record of 269 dismissals, but he would be foolish to look that far into the distance. If he focuses his craggy stare on anything, it should be Adelaide and Haddin in particular because a recovery would begin by outdoing his opposite number. That he would outperform Haddin was regarded by many observers as a formality in May, but six Tests into a 10-Test contest, it is Haddin whose stock has risen. If Prior does not reverse the trend, England's task will be so much harder.All players go through slumps in form from time to time, but Prior's has come at a most unfortunate time for England. However, he is the kind of player who can get out of a slump quickly, because he attacks the bowling. A little slice of luck, a couple of balls hitting the middle of the bat and he'll be away again. Let's hope it happens in the next couple of tests.David Hopps: Since Prior doesn't play ODIs and Sangakarra hasn't kept wicket in test cricket for 3 years, I'm not sure in which capacity Prior could be said to be challenging Sanga as a WK/batsman. These days players in different formats can't really be judged against each other.I'd give Prior one more game to try and make some sort of impact, otherwise Bairstow should be wicket-keeper for 3rd game. CLASS is permanent, and Prior is CLASSY - he would still easily be my first choice England wicket-keeper for tests if FORM wasn't an issue. No doubts or excuses from anyone as far as I can see that Prior is severely out of FORM - full stop. Yes the Australian bowlers have been excellent at devising and executing plans to each player including Prior, but I somehow doubt that a wide long-hop outside leg-stump was part of any bowling plan and yet Prior STILL flirted with it and popped an easy catch. That spells horrible form and temperament to me, but I have no doubts a class player like Prior can shake it off sooner or later. For England's sake this Ashes series, it had better be sooner.gsingh7 on (December 1, xxxx, 13:04 GMT), that's because he was better than Dhoni as a Test match batsman and the fact that Sangakarra is no longer a wicketkeeper. His form is abominable at the moment but if he can get back to batting the way he was then he will be better than Dhoni again. If he can't then ce la vie and he may not be a Test keeper for too much longer. Mitty2. Who has said Matt Prior would be more suited to Adelaide? Can't remember anybody arguing that? The piece suggests that he would be more suited to Perth, and that arguably Jonny Bairstow might be more suited to Adelaide. some were claiming him to be above dhoni and sangakarra in tests. but his form this year does not warrant him in even top 5 wk batsmen in tests . sorry to say, but sub continent wk batsmen are leading the way in tests as well as odis along with ab deviliers(whose wk skills are overrated though.Also, on the issue of a supposed Eng weakness against fast bowling and the comment on Prior's play now being more suited to the slower and lower Adelaide, can it stop? Literally the major consensus from Eng fans in defense of an underwhelming batting display that was papered over by Bell last Ashes was: "our batsmen are more suited to the truer, bouncier and faster pitches". This was especially in reference to Cook and Prior but now that Prior did fail on the bouncier Gabba, he's suddenly more suited to the slower pitches. Please, he averages over 40 for a reason. It's a form slump, nothing more - blaming the pitches for Prior's pitfalls when he's scored all over the world against all kinds of attacks is like saying Eng have a better team on paper to Australia when they're losing 1-0: it has no relevance whatsoever.Papua New Guinea came desperately close to securing a spot in the top six, and Ura was a big reason why. His two best scores were against the two toughest teams in Group B. He hit a 100 in an emphatic win over the Netherlands and 56 in a frustrating loss to Afghanistan. He was the second-highest scorer in the tournament, and had the most runs of any opening batsman. Although not physically imposing, his timing is crisp and he tied for the most sixes at the event with 14. He's only 24-years-old so PNG have plenty of years to build around him.One of only two players to remain from last year's Tournament XI, Stirling continues to evolve from being just a devastating hitter at the top of the order to an allrounder who makes a handy contribution with the ball. Kenya's Steve Tikolo, Nepal's Paras Khadka and Stirling were the only players to be in the top 20 for both runs and wickets. He was named Man of the Match twice. The first time was against Namibia for making 52 in 36 balls, and the second against Hong Kong for scoring 77 off 46 and taking 4 for 10 in four overs. He arguably should have had a third award for his belligerent 76 off 43 balls against Afghanistan in the final, but Trent Johnston won out in a sentimental vote seeing as it was his last T20 match for Ireland. Stirling has a growing reputation for saving his best when it matters most for Ireland and this tournament was no exception.After starting 1-3 in Group B, Scotland were very nearly eliminated from contention for the top six before the play-offs began but they bounced back in a big way only to fall just short of a spot in Bangladesh. Machan was a big reason his team stayed in contention until the bitter end against the Netherlands. He scored four half-centuries, tied with teammate Calum MacLeod for most in the tournament, including one in each game against the Netherlands. He was the leading tournament run-scorer and set a new event record, breaking Paul Stirling's total of 357 runs from a year ago.The Dutch wicketkeeper started poorly with back-to-back ducks against Afghanistan and Papua New Guinea before making modest contributions with the bat during the rest of the group stage, but his team may not have secured a spot in Bangladesh were it not for his fearless 75 not out against Scotland in the play-offs. The Netherlands looked shell-shocked after failing to chase the UAE's 117, but Barresi put the team on his back a day later to knock off Scotland's 147. He had the second-most dismissals behind the stumps in the tournament with 10.Along with Stirling, Khadka is a mainstay from the xxxx Tournament XI. With more than half of Nepal's games being broadcast either online or on television at this tournament, many cricket fans outside of Kathmandu will have gotten their first glimpse of why this man means so much to his country. His raw stats don't tell the full story as his numbers are not as glamorous compared to others in the list, not to mention those outside of the XI. After a first-day win over Denmark, Khadka stayed to the end with 54 not out as Nepal chased Kenya's 182. The performance validated Nepal's ambitions of finishing in the top six, though they might not have progressed to Bangladesh without his Man-of-the-Match performance against Hong Kong, when he anchored the chase of 143 with a cool 46 in 39 balls.Khurram Khan steered the host country into the main draw in Bangladesh with his all-round exploits. At 42, Khan has showed no signs of slowing down, and was his team's leading scorer at the event, finishing ninth overall. A Man-of-the-Match performance with 2 for 18 and 67 not out against Hong Kong ensured UAE would finish in the top three of Group A and get two cracks at securing a spot in Bangladesh. They would only need one though after thwarting the Netherlands in defense of 117.Shenwari can easily get lost in the plethora of bowling options available to captain Mohammad Nabi, and he wasn't even handed the ball in two of Afghanistan's nine games, but he outshone the rest of his teammates over the previous 16 days to be named Player of the Tournament. The legspinning allrounder nabbed three Man-of-the-Match awards during the event, the most by any player, for his performances in wins over Papua New Guinea, Kenya and in the semifinal against Nepal. His 5 for 13 against Kenya was one of only four five-wicket hauls in the tournament, but Shenwari was a much more consistent threat than the other three who pulled it off, and he wound up tied for third overall in the tournament wickets' column with 16.In a team full of young guns, Dar is the wily old fox still hanging around to impart not just wisdom, but plenty of skill as well. The left-arm spinner took 17 wickets, which was second overall, and the most of any slow bowler at the tournament. Twice he took 4 for 17, against the USA and Canada, but his most important contribution came in the play-offs against Papua New Guinea. With qualification into the World Twenty20 at stake, he chipped in with a vital 22 in the first innings before taking 3 for 26 and effecting a run out in a 29-run win to book a place for Hong Kong in Bangladesh.The medium pacer had to shoulder a bigger load at this tournament without Timm van der Gugten, but he more than handled it. Bukhari finished with 16 wickets overall, tied for third in the tournament with Shenwari. He was named Man of the Match twice, first in a win over Nepal with figures of 3 for 15, and later against Kenya with a return of 3 for 14. There has been much turnover in his team's bowling options over the past few years, but he has remained a constant and useful presence.Sorensen is a fast bowler chiseled out of granite and he possessed the requisite intimidation factor both with physique and pace to keep opposing batsmen in check. He finished with 14 wickets, which only puts him tied for eighth, but part of that is down to the fact that Ireland had a group game washed out and also played two less games by virtue of booking a place straight into the semifinals after an undefeated run in Group A. A more telling stat was his average of 10.64, which put him behind only Shenwari and Ahsan Malik for bowlers in the top 20 wickets' list. His lethal spell of 4 for 15 against UAE in the semifinal meant Ireland's 147 was too steep a target.Malik and Sorensen were the only two bowlers in the tournament to bowl and take a wicket in every one of their team's games. Malik took 12 in seven group games, but was just as prolific in the playoffs, taking eight in the final three matches of the tournament. His value was not just a knack for taking wickets but also in his ability to keep batsmen off balance. He was difficult to get away and his 5.67 economy rate was the second best of any pace bowler in the top 20 wickets list at the tournament. Fair pick peter! But I say Sharad deserved a place as well..undoubtedly the best finisher in the tournament.Thanks a lot to www.espncricinfo.com for continuous news and reviews about T20 world cup qualifying round. we cant compare to paras with other cricketer because paras is one man army, he did job well batting fielding, bowling, captaincy.. now nepal will participate in T20 world cup because of paras and veshakar.. thanks god you give us captain like paras khadka.Sharad should have been in the team. He was the best finisher in the tournament. We was responsible for 3 crucial wins for Nepal. Happy to see Paras in the list.Quite a good list!! I think Tikolo and Veshwakar deserved a mention too!! Probably Geraint Jones as WK.Would like to see have seen Basant Regmi of Nepal (14 wickets at 14.5 economy rate of 6.09) picked ahead of Munir Dar. Lovely bowler with a proper pure action and some nice flight and guile. Also the grand old man of Kenyan cricket Steve Tikolo deserves to have been picked: 236 runs at 39.33 (S/R 162.75) and 11 wickets at 10.72 (E/R 6.43), having not played any international cricket for 2 1/2 years and at the age of 42! Legend. Sri Lanka head coach Graham Ford has said the upcoming series against Pakistan in the UAE will be a tough challenge for his team. Ford added that Pakistan have been on the move of late despite the fact that their home venue is the UAE whereas Sri Lanka have been relatively dormant recently. "The advantage Pakistan's got is that they have played a lot of international cricket in the last six-eight months whereas unfortunately we haven't played nearly as much because of weather and various other things," Ford said. "We've done as much as we can to make sure we are sharp and ready but nothing's quite the same as being match-tight and match-sharp. They have got an advantage from that point of view and they have got some fantastically talented cricketers." In the past eight months, Pakistan have played four Tests, 23 ODIs and eight T20s compared to Sri Lanka who have played no Tests, 17 ODIs and five T20s. The first Test against Pakistan, which starts on December 31 in Dubai, will be Sri Lanka's first in nearly ten months and Ford said the players were keenly looking forward to the tour. They have been out of cricket for a while and their energy and their effort in the training sessions has been exceptional. It is a great group to work with and motivation is never really anything of a problem," Ford said. "I am not sure whether people realize just how proud these guys are to represent their country and they have often shown their characters when the chips are down. The time out of real top-class international cricket and tours being cancelled has made them hungry.On their last tour to the UAE in xxxx, Sri Lanka lost the three-Test series 1-0, the five-match ODI series 4-1 and also went down in the only T20. This time around they will again be involved in three Tests in addition to five ODIs and two T20s. The team is scheduled to leave for the UAE on December 6."When Sri Lanka went their last it didn't go all too well," Ford said. "Hopefully we can show that we have made some progress. They are a very tough team to beat in the UAE and they are playing good cricket no matter where they play. They have done well against South Africa just recently. It really will be a tough challenge for us.
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