What he said (via Times Of India):
“Whatever you tell No. 10 or No. 11, they always do what they want to do.”
Virender Sehwag is one relieved skipper.
Batting minnows, Varun Aaron and Umesh Yadav, knocked off the required 11 runs to secure victory in the first ODI against West Indies at Barabati Stadium, Cuttack.
Prior to the ODI series, the third Test match between the two sides ended in a thrilling draw with the scores tied. Then too, it was left to the tailenders to complete the job.
Sehwag said:
I was sitting in the same place and not moving! It’s good to win another nail-biter. Whatever you tell No. 10 or No. 11, they always do what they want to do. I just told them to play till the end and whatever happens is fine. Rohit and Jadeja batted really well in that partnership and we should have won it easily from there, but still good to end up winning. We hope to learn from our batting mistakes in the coming games.
Darren Sammy was the disappointed captain—again.
Sammy said:
Everytime you lose it is quite disappointing. We just didn’t have the last spark to take us past the finish line. The opening bowlers did well to give us a start and we fought all the way to the end, but it wasn’t enough. We could have done things differently, we even bowled 23 extras, but I would like to commend the boys. They fought with never-say-die spirit and it is going to stick.
What he really meant:
“When tailenders bat, they do what they want to and don’t want to, too.”
What he definitely didn’t:
“Isn’t cricket a game of glorious uncertainties? So what if I’m missing fingernails?”
What he said:
"She has more potential at golf than I do at tennis.”
Irish golfer, Rory McIlroy, believes that girlfriend Caroline Wozniacki would be better at golf than him at tennis.
Speaking to the Irish Examiner, McIlroy said (via Tennis.com):
Being a tennis player her upper body is pretty strong. She has more potential at golf than I do at tennis. The thing is that when I play tennis the competitive side in me comes to the fore and I want to play well every time but it just doesn’t happen. I would get more frustrated because I want to be able to grasp tennis straight away.
The golfer disclosed that Wozniacki is something of a mental coach to him.
McIlroy said:
"When Caroline and I might discuss our own sport, I am very interested in how she prepares herself for the mental side of big tennis tournaments like how she goes about setting goals or whatever.That sort of discussion gives me a good insight into how she deals with similar issues I might face."
What he really meant:
“She could probably drive like Tiger.I couldn’t serve like Roddick, though.”
What he definitely didn’t:
“Soon, I’ll be caddying up for Caroline.”
What he said:
“It’s time we got real. The concept of honorary posts is rubbish.”
Abhinav Bindra is no proponent of the status quo when it comes to Indian sports and its administrative bodies.
India’s only individual Olympic gold medallist continues his tirade against the satraps plaguing the system in an article in the Hindustan Times applauding Ajay Maken’s National Sports Federation (NSF) bill seeking accountability and transparency in the running of sports bodies.
[Bindra devoted a whole chapter in his autobiography,A Shot At History: My Obsessive Journey to Olympic Gold, to his experiences with Indian bureaucracy.
A sampling (via Deccan Chronicle):
The tone is patronising, the manner feudal, the atmosphere unwelcoming. I am their job, but I feel like their burden. These are bookkeepers, who look like they feel a physical pain in parting with money that is not really theirs, who have little understanding of sports yet will interrogate you suspiciously… It is humiliating, it is tiring.
]
Bindra writes:
Running sports is not a joke and instilling professionalism and passion is what we should be striving for. After all, the ultimate aim is to win medals at the highest level. Keeping aside personal glory, my Olympic gold is embarrassing when I look at the country’s history of participation in the Olympics!
Bindra is all for the provision seeking to limit tenure in administrative posts.
Bindra said:
“At age 70, priorities change. It is a stage in life when one likes to play with grandchildren rather than worry about athletes’ tickets and visa problems. Fair enough, but stop meddling in everything.”
What he really meant:
“There is no free lunch. It’s administrators who enjoy perks of office while they would have sports persons and the public believe that they are doing them and the country a favour by providing their services gratis. It’s just lunch money—from taxpayers.”
What he definitely didn’t:
“Gold medals for our officials too when we win. How about that? Do I hear an aye?”

What he said:
"Tonight I can see myself in the mirror and say, Yeah, you fight enough."
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga is satisfied with his level of play despite losing his third successive Sunday match to Roger Federer in 15 days. (via Tennis-X.com)
The Frenchman succumbed to the Swiss master at the World Tour Finals in London.
What he really meant:
“Starting with the man in the mirror, I’m not asking him to change his ways. Just lose a little less.”
What he definitely didn’t:
“Man, Roger fights more.”
What he said:
“I got the feeling that I was the villain as soon as Sachin went.”
Ravi Rampaul is anointed villain of the piece when the Indian first innings story in the third Test did not go per script.
Sachin Tendulkar missed his 100th international hundred (once again) caught behind for 94 off Rampaul.
The pacer’s moment of joy was short-lived as the Wankhede crowd made their displeasure known.
Rampaul said:
I got the feeling that I was the villain as soon as Sachin went. When I was back to the boundary I got ‘abused’ in a way but that’s how cricket goes. I know I have let a lot of Sachin fans down and heart broken. But we can’t just let him go out there and play freely. We had our jobs to do such as he had his job to do.
What he really meant:
“If my job makes me enemy to the crowd, so be it. I play for my side.”
What he definitely didn’t:
“Sachin’s my hero. I’d never plan him out.”
Image by Getty Images via @daylife
What she said:
“Djokovic is amazing but I have a soft spot for Tipsaravic. For 20mins thought the umpire was saying chip sandwich?!?”
Welsh actress, Kimberley Nixon, was at the London ATP World Tour Finals (ATF) catching the action.
Nixon was well aware of Novak Djokovic’s exploits this year. But his fellow Serb, Janko Tipsarevic, came under her radar for the first time.
What she really meant:
“For better or verse, Serb names could be worse!”
What she definitely didn’t:
“I don’t really follow tennis. I merely play it by ear.”

What he said:
“But what do I care if he says hello to me or not?"
Yannick Noah is not regretful—one bit—for stirring up a hornet’s nest with his comments in French daily, Le Monde, accusing Spanish players of systemic doping.
Noah said that all players, not just Spanish, should have access to this “magic potion” that has Spaniards out-performing their French counterparts.
Noah defended his last week’s comments saying:
"If I chose this turn of phrase, it was to address the authorities … in order to start a debate.”
Noah added:
"I am a bit frustrated that there are two weights and two measures in terms of doping, whether it’s Spain or another country.Of course all Spanish athletes aren’t doped … (But) are (the French) worse than the others? I don’t think so."
Noah’s remarks have been met with derision and wide-spread condemnation.
Rafael Nadal called for a media gag on Noah.
Noah responded:
"I went through the same thing 30 years ago, when I was 20. I spoke about doping and drugs and everyone had a go at me.I couldn’t respond to everyone. To Toni Nadal, Rafael’s uncle, who’s told his nephew never to say hello to me again. But what do I care if he says hello to me or not?"
Noah pointed out existing cases of Spanish doping including high-profile names such as cyclist Alberto Contador and steeplechase champion Marta Dominguez.
"The cyclist who ate some meat that helped him pedal faster and who was cleared by his federation, the case of (Dominguez) stopped by the police and then cleared.My question is the following: Is this not all orchestrated? In the Puerto case, I have the feeling that the affair has been smothered, that names have been hidden."
The Frenchman reiterated his opposition to all forms of drug abuse:
I am against all forms of doping, but I’m hypersensitive when it comes to injustice. There are too many cheats winning these days. In Spain and elsewhere.At which point is an athlete considered to have doped? When he takes a product that makes him run faster, makes him stronger, helps him recover more quickly? Or when he tests positive? The answer to the question is not the same, depending on the country.
There are side effects which you never read about on the front pages of the newspapers.We know there have been problems in the past with Italian footballers who are now seriously ill.
What Yannick Noah really meant:
“We won’t have much to discuss anyway. I want to talk ‘dope’. He doesn’t.”
What Yannick Noah definitely didn’t:
“It’s only words
And words are all I have
To take your pride and titles away.”
Read Yannick Noah’s full interview to Le Monde here.

What he said:
"There’s nothing to be heartbroken about.A bowler needs to bowl on every kind of wicket. A batsman never says he is heartbroken if it is a green top. They simply play on any wicket."
Gautam Gambhir is unsympathetic to Ravichandran Ashwin’s cause. The Tamil Nadu spinner lamented that the Wankhede pitch for the third Test against the Windies was unhelpful to spinners.
Gambhir added:
There will be many occasions where he will have to bowl on wickets that are more flat than this one. So there is no need to feel cheated.
It is a great challenge and everyone should try to accept it and get the best out of it.
That’s what Test cricket is all about. You don’t get a five-wicket haul or a hundred easily. You have to work hard for it.
The Delhi batsman believes that Ashwin is one for the long haul.
"He has taken two five-wicket hauls in this series and has a great future ahead.” said Gambhir.
What he really meant:
“Good for me ,nine times out of 10, wickets in India are batsmen friendly. I’d be groaning too if every pitch was Mohali.”
What he definitely didn’t:
“Ashwin, I’d like to roll my arm over if you’re tired.”
In August this year, I published an article making the case for Dow Chemicals’ disassociation from the 2012 London Olympics.
The chemicals giant is sponsoring an eco-friendly wrap over the London Games’ main stadium.
However, Dow fail to recognise their liability towards the victims of the 1984 Bhopal gas tragedy.
Dow are the owners of Union Carbide, the defendants in the class action suit filed by the Indian government on the behalf of disaster’s victims and survivors.
A letter addressed to the Indian Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, has yet to be responded to.
Inertia reigns.
What he said:
“When one kid says something it’s not painful for us."
Rafael Nadal kids not in his response to Yannick Noah’s allegations of systemic doping by Spain’s elite athletes.
Noah, writing for French daily Le Monde, said:
“Today if you don’t have the magic potion, it’s hard to win. How can a nation dominate sport virtually overnight like this?"
Noah began his article thus:
When I still milled around on the courts with my racket, we weren’t ridiculous, far from it, against our Spanish friends.
It was the same on the soccer fields, the basketball halls or on the roads of the Tour de France. Today they are running faster than us, are much more stronger and only leave us the bread crumbs.
We look like dwarves. Did we miss something? Did they discover some avant-garde techniques or training facilities that nobody before them had imagined?
Nadal reacted angrily to the Frenchman’s allegations.
He said:
"What he said is completely stupid. This guy does not deserve to write in newspapers anymore."
Nadal added:
He knows better than anybody that to say that today is a totally stupid thing because you know how many anti-doping controls we have during the season, year by year.
So in my opinion, the article that he wrote was from a kid and when one kid says something it’s not painful for us.
The French tennis federation were equally trenchant in their criticism.
Their statement read:
The French Tennis Federation wishes to express its disagreement with Yannick Noah’s comments made in Le Monde newspaper.
Against the plague of doping in sport, baseless accusations and provocative comments are inappropriate, and the worst attitude would be to give up.
What Rafael Nadal really meant:
“Sounds like French whine to me.”
What Rafael Nadal definitely didn’t:
“I’m so beefy because Alberto Contador’s butcher is mine too.”