Australian spinner Bryce McGain is expected to miss the forthcoming opening test against India. The match is scheduled for next week. The absence of spinner Bryce McGain would cause a big loss to the winning prospectus of Australian team.
McGain suffered a shoulder injury some time ago and is unlikely to attend the tournament on health grounds. He was introduced in the national team at age of 36 and suffered injury last month during the Australia ‘A’ tour of India
Confidence comes naturally when one is competent, seems to be the catchline for India bowling coach Venkatesh Prasad who is ready for upcoming four-day test series against Aussies beginning October 9.
The coach, busy in the practice sessions at Chinnaswamy Stadium said that his bowlers are prepared to face the Australians and have a player-specific strategy to face the opponents. He affirmed,"We have got some plans for each and every Australian batsmen and are working on that."
The Australian Happiness Index 2008 has put forward the fact that Australian men put Sex and Internet surfing on the first five positions in their happiness index. On the other hand, women keep happy while they hangout with their friends and cuddle their pets.
While rest, relaxation and entertainment marked topmost positions on the happiness index of both men and women; spending quality time with your partner also made it to the top four for both men and women.
Melbourne, Oct 3 : The Indo-US civil nuke deal and New Delhi’s agreement with France, herald a new de facto non-proliferation framework that will have profound implications for Australia’s policies on climate change and the exporting of uranium.
Melbourne, Oct 3 : Want to crack a job interview without any blunders? Well, then here are some things, which the interviewers don''t expect you to do during the one on one session.
The survey carried out by a career website over more than 3000 managers and human resources professionals brought forth the worst interview faux pas by job seekers that failed them to land the job.
Fifty one per cent of managers said ''dressing inappropriately'' for an interview was the biggest mistake a jobseeker could make.