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Coca Cola Cricket competition widens its scale

The second season of Coca Cola Cricket Cup for under-16 players would feature 780 schools across 10 states, an increase of 80 schools from the previous season, it was announced at the launch of the event on Friday.

 

user-circle cricketcountry.com Written by Cricket Country Staff
Published: Jul 21, 2012, 12:07 PM (IST)
Edited: Jul 21, 2012, 12:07 PM (IST)

Coca Cola Cricket competition widens its scale

The selected boys get tips from former India players Lalchand Rajput, Saba Karim and Sanjay © Getty Images

 

Mumbai: Jul 21, 2012

 

The second season of Coca Cola Cricket Cup for under-16 players would feature 780 schools across 10 states, an increase of 80 schools from the previous season, it was announced at the launch of the event on Friday.

 

The second season of the tournament with former India stumper Syed Saba Karim as its chief mentor and another former batsman Lalchand Rajput as the chief selector to identify top talent offers Rs one lakh to the winning team and Rs 70,000 to the runners-up.

 

The state-level elimination would lead to the inter-state challenge to be held in Mumbai, Delhi, Hyderabad and rest of AP, Punjab, Baroda, Tamil Nadu – including Chennai which has returned to the fold, West Bengal, UP and MP.

 

Last season three cricketers were picked from the 15-strong team selected after the inter-state challenge, which took on a visiting Sri Lanka schools team in a series of matches, and sent on a month-long academic cum training stint in the UK.

 

The three Coca Cola cricket stars – Sarfaraz Khan (Mumbai), Akshay Brahmbhatt (Baroda) and Nitin Tanwar (Delhi) – had returned after a stint in UK between June 22 and July 18 and described their stay as a learning experience.

 

They trained and played matches almost every alternate day with Sarfaraz turning out for Hull Cricket Club in the Yorkshire League, Tanwar playing for the seniors team of Hymers College and Brahmbhatt wearing the colours of senior team of Cheadle Hume School.

 

“It was a very good experience. We could learn a lot on how to conduct ourselves and in being disciplined in our approach,” said Brahmbhatt.

 

Sarfaraz said that it was a good experience to bat on those wickets where the ball was seaming around a lot and not travelling fast because of its damp condition.

 

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The trio were put up with local families during their stay and “all three excelled in cricket and academics,” said Dr Samir Pathak of Hull CC who was present at the launch. (PTI)