London:Indian Parliamentarians are not the only ones who get annoyed when the cricket team does badly, the British are no different and after Andrew Flintoff's men succumbed to their second successive defeat at the Ashes, an MP has called on Prime Minister Tony Blair to bring back the team before Christmas.
London:Tony Blair got into the pre-Ashes fever in London but was forced to admit that if England's cricketers play like him, then arch-rivals Australia have nothing to fear.
London:England's tour of Zimbabwe is set to go ahead after the British Government reiterated that it could not force cricket chiefs to pull out.
London:British Prime Minister Tony Blair said he doesn't think England's cricketers should tour Zimbabwe, but added that the decision rests exclusively on the shoulders of international cricket chiefs.
Cape Town: The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB)'s final appeal to have its World Cup opener against Zimbabwe in Harare on February 13 switched to South Africa on safety grounds was rejected by independent commissioner Justice Albie Sachs at a hearing on Friday.
Cape Town: The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB)'s final appeal to have its World Cup opener against Zimbabwe in Harare on February 13 switched to South Africa on safety grounds was rejected by independent commissioner Justice Albie Sachs at a hearing on Friday.
Johannesburg: World Cup chief Ali Bacher on Tuesday welcomed England's decision to go ahead with its World Cup game in Harare next month, saying it had "committed itself to the principles of international cricket".
Johannesburg: World Cup chief Ali Bacher on Tuesday welcomed England's decision to go ahead with its World Cup game in Harare next month, saying it had "committed itself to the principles of international cricket".
London: Protesters invaded the Lord's ground in London on Tuesday as English cricket authorities met to decide whether to reject British premier Tony Blair's call to boycott Zimbabwe during next month's World Cup.
London: Protesters invaded the Lord's ground in London on Tuesday as English cricket authorities met to decide whether to reject British premier Tony Blair's call to boycott Zimbabwe during next month's World Cup.