Tuesday, September 30, 2008

I can't take a day without you.

change of plans,
didnt go night cycling,
instead we went for movie @ 2am.
managed to sneak into the M18 movie.
walked frm cineleisure to espanade @ stayed till abt 7am.
i'll blog abt this agn another time.




i'm sorry baby,
i was wrong, i let you down,
i won't let it repeat again, i promise you.
please not get affected by it anymore.
i'm sorry:(
with all my heart; I Love You.



Monday, September 29, 2008

IPL courts England stars

Indian Premier League chairman Lalit Modi has stated he is "certain" the second edition of the tournament will feature some of England's top players.

IPL officials are currently gearing up to follow this year's hugely successful inaugural Twenty20 event, which saw the Rajasthan Royals emerge victorious.

While the majority of cricket's top nations saw their star players take part in the event, English players were conspicuous by their absence with only Hampshire all-rounder Dimitri Mascarenhas taking an ultimately peripheral role for Rajasthan.

Participating players have been able to double or even triple their annual incomes through a few weeks with the IPL, with India's Mahendra Singh Dhoni the top earner on US 4.5 million for three seasons with the Chennai Super Kings.

However, although there are scheduling issues as the IPL calendar clashes with the English domestic season, Modi is confident the 2009 tournament will see the likes of Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff (pictured right and left respectively) in action.

"As for the influx of English players I am certain that the DLF Indian Premier League will definitely see the likes of Flintoff and Pietersen playing next year," the IPL chief told PA Sport.

In the meantime, Modi, who is now one of the leading figures in world cricket, is promising the 2009 IPL season will be bigger and better than its first outing.

However, he has ruled out any immediate prospect of the League expanding from its current eight franchises.

"One can only expect much bigger and better things from the adrenalin packed Twenty20 format, which is fast paced and exciting and so appeals to a global audience," Modi added.

"As for the DLF Indian Premier League, we have identified areas of improvement around spectator comfort and the in-stadia experience, which we will rigorously implement in the coming season.

"That being done we will also be sitting down with the franchises in October to discuss and evolve improvement areas for the next season.

"As of now I do not think we will be adding to the number of franchises. However, that is a decision we will take slightly later in the year.

"There is already talk of franchises playing matches overseas and then there is the Champions League Twenty20, which we have just announced.

"As for expanding the number of franchises, that decision will be taken only after the initial three years. All I will say is that the sky is the limit and hopefully our franchisees will utilise these opportunities to their advantage."

Hayden doesn't have retirement plans till 2011 World Cup

Australian opener Matthew Hayden has said that he had no plans to retire from one-day cricket in the near future, and that he wanted to continue to be a member of Aussie squad at least till the 2011 World Cup.

"The big thing is I haven't lost my passion for one-day cricket and while I'm performing there, I'll keep playing it. The significant part of my decision is whether Matthew Hayden is affecting the team negatively in the run to the World Cup? I don't see that being a consideration yet. I'm as motivated now as I've ever been. That's really driving my insatiable appetite for runs," Hayden was quoted as saying by the Herald Sun.

Recently Hayden's tenure in Australian team has come under scanner with both Shaun Marsh and Shane Watson knocking at the doors of the selectors for the opening slot in the run to the 2011 World Cup.

Although Hayden, who will turn 37 next month, remains the first-choice, national selectors Andrew Hilditch, Jamie Cox, David Boon and Merv Hughes are of the opinion that he must hang the boots now, said the report.

Marsh and Watson have forged a formidable partnership, posting 70-plus stands in three of their first six innings together.

In particular, Marsh, son of former Australian vice-captain Geoff, has been a revelation, averaging 47.57 in his first eight outings in the international arena.

Australian coach Tim Nielsen said the national selectors are planning to sit down with Hayden to discuss his future. "The selectors will sit down with him and work out where he's moving over the next 12 months and how he'd like to go about that," added Nielsen.

Goodbye Ganguly?

This week could see the end of an unforgettable era, with Sourav Ganguly “set to quit” international cricket if not selected for the Australia series. The team for the first two tests will be chosen on Wednesday.

If Ganguly, 112 short of 7,000 Test runs, does retire, he would be the first of India's ‘Fab Five’ — the others being Sachin Tendulkar, Anil Kumble, Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman — to call it a day, bringing to a close what has been Indian cricket’s most dramatic chapter.

Sources close to the former India skipper told HT Ganguly’s mind was made up. “He said there is no point in trying to make yet another comeback after this,” said the source. “He has nothing to prove to anyone anymore.”

Ganguly, who had not spoken to (or been spoken to) by any selector in the recent fortnight since his axing from the Irani Cup squad, was philosophical. “I’ve seen it all, whatever happens, happens,” was his view, the source added.

Interestingly, in the two years since South Africa and Ganguly's spectacular return from the wilderness, he has played 21 Tests, making 1667 runs at a very respectable 45.05, which is higher than his Test career average of 41.02.

According to the selectors, “everyone who’s played first class cricket” was in line for a Test call up. But Ganguly will probably be battling for a berth alongside the much younger Yuvraj Singh and S. Badrinath. And if the new selectors are looking to begin the process of transition, he is where they will likely start.

YAYNESS; 2 days of holiday!

GOOOOOOOODAY YOU.
[haaa, sounds stupid but i don't feel like using helloo you].


I'm now @ Ter-ry's block waiting for him to finish his class.
Its only 4.06pm.
& lesson aren't supposed to end yet.

Even better,
my lesson ended at abt 3.30pm plus plus.
HOW GOOD IS THAT!???(:
i like(:

Today's module: communications,
& for presentation,
WE COULDNT REFER TO THE PPT,
NOR COULD WE HAVE ANY REFERENCES(paper,words writen on arm etc.)
more of "presenting from your own understanding" kind of thing.
GAHH.
Super stressful i tell you!
At the same time, there was a time limit:(

But, of course,
i seriously think this method helps to make sure you understand,
& present from what you have learnt/ can rmb.

HOILIDAYYYYYYYYYYY TMR + HOLIDAYYYYYY on WED(:
2 days in a row.
YAYNESS!

Probably overnight cycling later or tmr.
HOHO.
probably.

Eh, i don't know what else t blog,
& this post is getting boring.
BOOO.

Anw, I'm gonna go to the lib ltr to get my RJ& all done,
while waiting for Ter-ry to finish his meeting.

Alrightos,
blog agn ltr,
if i have things t blog abt(;

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Prince of Kolkata lives on hope

When the new selection committee meets for the first time in Mumbai on Wednesday, all eyes will be on the batsmen they choose for the first two Tests against Australia. There is a strong chance that Sourav Ganguly will figure prominently in the discussion.

Broadly, there are two arguments in favour of his recall after the omission from the Irani Cup squad. One, the selectors don't want to risk a newcomer considering the quality of the opposition India will face. Two, few from the pool of possible replacements have done anything of late to suggest that they are ready for the test.

There is no question mark over openers Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir. The same can be said about Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar and V.V.S. Laxman. With M.S.Dhoni, Anil Kumble, Harbhajan Singh, Zaheer Khan and Ishant Sharma set to occupy the other berths in the XI provided they are fit, there is room for just one more. Unless the selectors, headed by K. Srikkanth, go for the unlikely option of a fifth bowler or an allrounder in the form of Irfan Pathan, this slot has to go to a batsman. Going by S. Badrinath's selection for the Irani Cup tie ahead of Ganguly, it can be assumed that the former has an edge over the former India captain. But according to someone whose inputs are going to be taken seriously at the meeting, Badrinath will face competition from Ganguly.

"There are a few alternatives," said an insider who claimed to have spoken to the new selectors. "Given that Brett Lee and Mitchell Johnson form the frontline of the Aussie attack, you need someone who has the experience of handling such quality. Barring Sri Lanka, Ganguly has been India's most prolific batsman over the last two years."

What happens to the effort to look beyond the seniors in that case? "That has to be done in the near future, but not in the first two Tests against Australia," said the source. Ganguly's will be the keenest of those ears waiting to listen what happens in Mumbai.

Michael Vaughan left out of winter tour

Easy come, easy go. At a time when governments are playing fast and loose with public money, Geoff Miller and his fellow selectors could be accused of doing the same with the ECB's. Just weeks after giving Michael Vaughan a central contract worth a substantial six-figure sum, and arguing strongly that he still has what it takes to rediscover his best form, the selectors have had a change of heart.

Vaughan's exclusion from the 15-man touring party for the two Test matches against India in December to be announced today was revealed by Miller over the weekend, an action that gives rise to further claims that the former England captain continues to benefit from preferential treatment.

Whether Miller's pre-empting of today's announcement came as a result of a leak to a national newspaper, or whether it is an attempt to ease Vaughan's disappointment is unsure. Whatever the case, it was unnecessary. Vaughan is not the first England cricketer to be left out of a winter squad, and he will not be the last.

The manner of Vaughan's exclusion is strange - after all, cricketers do not often sit down with selectors to discuss the merits or otherwise of their selection as Vaughan appears to have done - but the decision is the right one. Despite professing a desire to win back his place by scoring a significant volume of runs for Yorkshire, Vaughan has failed to do so since stepping down from the England captaincy in August. The runs have come in a trickle not a flood and, having made one leap of faith by awarding him a central contract, the selectors were not about to make another.

The right decision, then, but it does call into question Miller's earlier judgment and, to some extent, that of Kevin Pietersen who pushed hard for a contract for his predecessor. The selectors will call upon recent experience to justify their actions: Andrew Strauss rediscovered his form last winter in New Zealand only after an enforced absence in Sri Lanka. But Strauss was fortunate that his replacement, Ravi Bopara, failed to capitalise on the opportunity and if Bopara is the man who benefits from Vaughan's absence now, he is unlikely to be so accommodating again. Bopara has learnt from his scarring Sri Lanka experience, and says he is a better player and tougher character for it.

Whether Vaughan's replacement will be Bopara or Owais Shah is one of four intriguing decisions the selectors have been pondering, the other three being the identity of the two wicketkeepers and a spinner to partner Monty Panesar. If consistency is deemed important, then Bopara could well get the nod, given that he was in the squad for the last Test at the Brit Oval. He has also had a better domestic season, scoring 1,256 first-class runs at 54.60, compared with Shah's 1,012 at 42.16, although both, it should be noted, played against second-division attacks.

Both are good players and my own preference would be for Shah on the basis that he has proved, in a way that Bopara has yet to, that he has the temperament for the highest level. It was Shah, remember, who was called up as a replacement on England's previous tour to India in 2006 and made a feisty 88 and 38 in the furnace of the Wankhede stadium in Bombay. Given that there is only one warm-up match between the one-day internationals and the Tests, Shah's presence in the one-day team is an advantage.

Both Matt Prior and Tim Ambrose are recipients of increment contracts and are likely to get the nod behind the stumps. Prior's performance in the one-day series against South Africa, and Ambrose's modest returns will, in all likelihood, mean a chance for Prior when the first Test starts in Ahmedabad. James Foster, though, can consider himself unfortunate if recognition eludes him. I reckon him to be the outstanding wicketkeeper in England, Chris Read included, and after a season that has seen him score almost a thousand first-class runs at an average of more than 40 he deserves his chance in place of Ambrose.

England's late-season rally against South Africa was inspired by the performance of the quick bowlers but a more balanced attack will be required in India, especially if the pitches are prepared to suit Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh. Who, then, will be Sancho Panza to Panesar's Don Quixote? There are worryingly few options: Gary Keedy has been a good performer for many years now for Lancashire, but has probably not done enough this season to earn him a place on the tour, while Samit Patel, good batsman that he is, is no front-line spinner.

The choice, then, rests between Graeme Swann and Adil Rashid, Yorkshire's promising young leg spinner. With 65 first-class wickets, Rashid is the joint second highest wicket-taker in the country this year and his selection, whilst risky, would at least give some fillip to an area of the game that is in dire need of attention. Swann (32 wickets) is part of the set-up, though, and will probably get the nod, leaving Rashid to gain more experience in the development squad, which is due to be in India at the same time.

Likely 15: Pietersen, Strauss, Cook, Bell, Collingwood, Flintoff, Prior, Broad, Harmison, Anderson, Panesar, Ambrose, Sidebottom, Swann, Bopara.

Dravid out to rebuild The Wall

India coach Gary Kirsten has declared embattled batsman Rahul Dravid is ready to salvage his career against Australia.

The man known as "The Wall" for his once impregnable defence has started to crack in recent years, despite a stellar average of 53.92 after 125 Tests. Dravid averaged a modest 35.64 in 10 Tests in 2007 and has fared little better this year, averaging 36.13 in nine matches.

His inability to find any rhythm, let alone hit the ball off the square, was painful to watch at times in Australia last summer but, despite this, he remains a feared opponent having averaged 45.78 in 23 Tests against the world champions.

Dravid's place in the Indian team has been the subject of much debate, particularly as he has managed to escape the axe which looks to have ended the career of fellow veteran Sourav Ganguly.

That may be in part due to Dravid being one of the true gentlemen of the sport, but niceties won't help him score runs against an Australian attack which has a point to prove. Dravid's return of 46 and 69 for a Rest of India team - which was almost a full-strength Test side - pleased not only his followers but Kirsten and captain Anil Kumble.

"I think it turned out to be a good outing for him," Kirsten said.

"He is a key player for us and has been successful for years. He knows now we face Australia, the world No.1 team and it should boost his confidence."

Kirsten, the former South African batsman, was also buoyed by the efforts of spinners Kumble and Harbhajan Singh in the clash against a Delhi side featuring Indian spearhead Ishant Sharma.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

PCB serves legal notice on Moin Khan

The Pakistan Cricket Board has countersued Moin Khan with its own defamation notice in response to a suit filed by the former test captain earlier this week.

"The notice was served on Friday and now we are waiting for Khan's reply," PCB spokesman Mansoor Suhail said Saturday.

Khan demanded the PCB pay him 100 million Pakistan rupees (US$1.3 million) in a defamation notice filed Wednesday over the cricket board's claims he was involved in coercing batsman Mohammad Yousuf to join the rebel Indian Cricket League.

The PCB has responded by asking Khan to pay 250 million Pakistan rupees (US$3.2 million) in damages for his allegations of wrongdoing by the board.

"This instant reply should be treated as a notice .... and unless your client pays an amount of Rs250 million (US$3.2 million) as damages within a period of 14 days after receiving this reply, appropriate legal action will be initiated," PCB lawyer Tafazzul Rizvi said in the defamation notice.The notice alleges that Khan did not repay the full amount of a player fee to Yousuf at the time of signing his contract with the ICL last year.

The ICL is a Twenty20 league that is not internationally recognized because it runs in competition to the officially sanctioned Indian Premier League.

Rizvi said in the notice to Khan's lawyer Imran Aziz Qureshi that Khan actually received US$82,500 from the organizers of the ICL as the first installment of a player contract to be paid to Yousuf, "but the amount paid to Yousuf by him (Khan) was only US$52,000."

The notice further said that Yousuf returned the money to Khan when he came to know that any player participating in the ICL would be barred from representing his national team.

Khan joined the ICL in 2007 as coach of the Hyderabad Heroes team. He coached the Lahore Badshahs in the 2008 season.

Brad Haddin's spot is for keeps

It is seven years since Brad Haddin made his first trip to India in Australian colours.

In 2001, he made a flying visit to cover for Adam Gilchrist before the unforgettable second Test in Kolkata, but flew home as soon as the incumbent indicated that, typically of most 'keepers, he would not be giving up his spot that easily.

The lesson was duly learned by a young Haddin, and earlier this year when he finally made his Test debut in the West Indies, the pain of a broken finger, suffered inside his first session as Australia's Test gloveman, could not dissuade him from playing throughout.

"I'm actually lucky I didn't play (in 2001), I don't think I was ready to play Test cricket seven years ago," Haddin, 30, said.

"The experience was great, I was only here a short time, I was in and out in a couple of days because Adam was fine, but seven years down the track I feel pretty comfortable."

Haddin chuckled when reminded of the broken digit, suffered when a ball sprayed wide early in the first session of that first Test in Jamaica.

"That (the broken finger) I couldn't believe," he said.

"It's just one of the things that comes with the trade. If I could turn back the clock I might've let it go for four wides but it happened.

"Looking back it was good not having one Test and having to miss a couple, otherwise Gilly's record and Heals' record stands, they played most of their careers without missing games so looking back I'm glad I didn't have to."

In India, Haddin's role as the team's barometer and sergeant-major in the field will take on added importance, since it is easy to become distracted by the noise, heat and sheer mania of subcontinental cricket.

"I think it's important over here as a 'keeper that your tempo's consistent, because you do get long, hot days and it can get quite draining," Haddin said.

"You don't want to be high at the start and have low patches and fluctuate too much during the game, you've got to make sure you have an even tempo so your game and the fielding is on even keel."

Vital, too, will be his role at No.7, where he will need to make runs while also ensuring he does not become another statistic in the fevered batting collapses that often come about at some stage of an Indian series.

To that end, Haddin is grateful for last year, when he proved a great success while playing as a middle order batsman.

"I really enjoyed the atmosphere (batting) over here last time, it was different with the crowd and the heat but it was something you don't often experience, that sort of hostile crowd anywhere in the world," he said.

"There's so many people here and you're out right in the middle of it and it is quite hostile but it's something you've got to deal with and another challenge you're looking forward to.

"NSW versus WA at the SCG when there's 200 people there you don't have the luxury of playing in these pressure situations where you have to deal with the crowd.

England cricket coach jailed over child porn videos

A New Zealand-born fitness coach with the England cricket team was jailed in Britain overnight for six months for downloading "disgusting" child porn movies.

Marques Church, 31, who has worked with star players including Michael Vaughan and Kevin Pietersen, was arrested after running up a £23,000 ($62,670) on his laptop in just a month, Britain's Daily Mail reported .

The internet account was paid for by the England and Wales Cricket Board, which launched an urgent inquiry into the huge bill.

Horrified officials found 13 indecent video clips involving children as young as four in a folder on the machine marked "incomplete".

Leicester Crown Court was told that 10 of the films were categorised as Level Four and one at Level Five, the most serious category.

Police were called and Church, who specialised in strength and conditioning training, was arrested at his home in Loughborough, Leics.

He said he had been through a relationship breakdown and was a "low point" in his life, and claimed he had deleted the images after looking at them.

He began working with the England cricket team in April last year but resigned when the offences came to light in June.

Jenny Carter-Manning, defending, said Church had committed the offences during a 'truly awful time' in this life. His fiance of eight years had left him, his father's mutiple sclerosis worsened and a grandparent died.

He had suffered what could only be described as a "total breakdown" she claimed.

Church, who admitted five counts of making indecent images of children, claimed he had no sexual interest in children and intended to return to New Zealand as soon as possible.

Passing sentence Judge Michael Pert, QC, told him: "It should be made clear these are video films you deliberately obtained of young girls involved in sexual activity with adult men.

"That sort of material is wholly unacceptable and only brought about by the exploitation of young children in countries where there is little money.

"You have fuelled that trade. You would not be the first person with a sexual interest in young children to deny it.

"We have to take these matters seriously - these are disgusting offences.'

The court was told Church had been a rugby player in his native country before coming to live in Britain several years ago.

He accompanied the England cricketers on their tour of New Zealand for the first Test earlier this year and travelled with the A team to India last year.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Julian Beever Street Art

Amazing pavement art done by Julian Beever. Unreal.




Hair, Birthday, Shoots & You,I Love.

HELLOHELLOOOHELLOOOOOO.


Now's 2.06 am alr. GAHH
i'll start blogging frm thursday.
Skipped school for that day(:
& headed to HOYU with B to highlight our hair.


Didnt know which colours to pick.
GAHHH.
& those fashion colours would most probably fade to grey or smth.
So in the end, i did orange highlights.
The dye rlly smells like orange(the fruit)!
but currently, it looks more like red than orange.
hmmmmmmm, shall wait for it to slowly fade off.


Anyway,
i've still got till next year to try different colours on my hair,
for freeeeee(:


Ter-ry highlighted his hair too.
Butbutbut, its super duper uber un-obvious.
& looks exactly like pure blackkk.
tsktsktsk,
wanna just claim the products only right!!


This was after the bleaching. The colour looks so monkey-ish right!
initially i thought they highlighted wrong colour. lol
:




& this was after they applied the tomato-ish dye on my hair:



Next,
remember me mentioning that i wanted to reach school in time for CE Talk??
nahhhh,
at 12.15, i was ONLY in the middle of hair bleaching!
grrrr.


& also, i didnt manage to reformatt leoppy due to the lack of time.
thus, i only completed 1/3 of the tasks.
so much for skipping school:(


Continuing,
headed to causeway to ge the cake before heading to school.
Ate lunch/dinner & went to the outside lib area to supposedly
give DOng a 'birthday surprise'.
But i guess he sort of knew alr lah.
MEOW.(tired of usng rahh).




Watched meet the spartans with B, Shu& Reuter,
& then bused to bugis to go to NAFA with B.

Up to the studio for his shooting.
& in the end,
i ended up getting dragged in tooo.
very paiseh okay! +.+
couldnt even smile properly luh!
hahahahaha,
wait till i see the photos.
Heh.
left NAFA @ abt 10 plus plus& home @ abt 11 plus.
Bathed & off to lalaland soon aft that, as usual.



Okayokayy.
I need to do RJ alrr.
Luckily this Faci's damn nice.
RJ open till tmr noon(:



bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb


Woooof, TSK!
i-bags:(

b, loveyoumuchhhhhhhhhhhhh.

grrrrr,bitesyourarm.


Thursday, September 25, 2008

Special Forces - Et Cetera


http://thecobrasnake.com/partyphotos/nocturnal/index.html

HIPSTER RUNOFF says "Ravers are like the beta version of Modern Japanese people"...
とは関係無いのですが、
Lastnightsparty@kobeというのを見て思ったんだが、あそこって結局
写ってる人がかっこ良いだけの事なん じゃないかと。 だったら、楽しきゃそれでいーじゃん的
こっちのが好きに思えた来たのであった。
いや、こっちも充分いい被写体ばっかなんだけど。 えらそーにゴメンサナイ。
あと、こういうとこもあるんですが、他にもHIPSTER RUNOFFさんちに色々リンクしてあるので、
見比べたら楽しいかも。

(Music)Special Forces - Et Cetera
http://solidgoldberger.blogspot.com/2008/06/special-forces_27.html

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Kapil Dev joins Territorial Army

Former Indian cricket captain and all-rounder Kapil Dev, was on Wednesday commissioned into the Territorial Army (TA) as an honorary lieutenant colonel.

Indian Army chief General Deepak Kapoor piped the badges of the rank on the shoulders of Dev, at a ceremony at the Army Headquarters here this afternoon. He was later felicitated at the Territorial Army headquarters mess in the evening in the presence of host of dignitaries who been members of the Territorial Army for years and achieved major milestones in other careers. They included Major (retired) Subir Saha, the former Chairman and Managing Director of the ONGC, and Brigadier K. P. Singh Deo, a former Cabinet Minister, besides others.

"This is my second innings. Earlier I fought for the country in my white uniform. Now, I will do the same in my olive green army uniform," Kapil said proudly.

Kapil, 50, was commissioned into the 150 TA (Infantry) battalion of the Punjab Regiment.

"I am proud I have been given this rank. It took six months for the things to materialise, with the file moving from the home ministry to the defence ministry," said Kapil, as his wife and daughter looked on.

Kapil will also be the brand ambassador of the Territorial Army and help train golfers of the army.

Territorial Army sources said that his induction would help in attracting talent as the army is facing a major officer crunch.

Bradman bat sells for $145,000

Sir Donald Bradman's first Test cricket bat will stay in Australia after fetching a record price at auction.

Arguably the most famous piece of willow in Australian cricket history, Bradman's bat was snapped up by an Australian bidder for $145,000 - $25,000 more than the upper pre-sale estimate for the auction in Melbourne.

It had been feared the bat - which was signed by the entire 1928-29 Australian team as well as the conquering English who won the series 4-1 - could have ended up overseas.

But a spokeswoman for Melbourne's Leski Auctions said the bat would remain on home soil after being bought by a private vendor.

"This is a record price for a cricket bat and there were several bidders, all of them within Australia, hoping to win the auction," the spokeswoman said.

Despite being in the hands of Australia's greatest-ever cricketer, the bat did not see much action in that first Test in Brisbane in 1928-29, as the "Don" scored just 18 and 1 in Australia's 675-run thrashing by England.

Bradman was dropped after his inauspicious debut, and later donated the bat to a competition run by The Sun newspaper in Sydney to help raise money to endow a Don Bradman Cot for the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children.

Brett Lee shoulder's bowling responsibility

Paceman Brett Lee says he's ready to lead Australia's inexperienced bowling attack in the Test cricket series in India.

Australia's 15-man squad includes the uncapped fast bowlers Doug Bollinger and Peter Siddle and spinners Bryce McGain and Jason Krejza

Lee says he'll need to shoulder extra responsibility as the team's senior bowler.

"I know there's going to be a lot of pressure on me as a bowler to lead an Australian attack," he said.

"But that's what I enjoy and I've enjoyed it the last couple of years.

"The pitches aren't conducive to fast bowling over here for the quicks, myself and Mitch and the other fast bowlers.

"So we definitely have our work cut out but we're looking forward to the challenge and it's always a great place to play cricket."

Veronica Maggio

Inga problem remix feat Petter och Veronica Maggio


Tired from noisy electro-sound? She will heal you smartly.
veronicamaggio.com

Which is good? (re-Post)


http://blog.honeyee.com/jessica/

This entry was deleted what kind of reason it was?

HELLOHELLOO
i'm now in the library, as usual.
hehh.



Skipped lessons ystr.
didnt mean to okay!
I purposely told my maid to wake me up much much earlier the night before.
& when she did, i went back to sleep.
alarm rang, i switched it off, & told myself a few minutes more.



Then, my maid came in to wake me up agn at 6.25am.
Still, i couldnt wake up.
& finally at 6.50am, i was like "Oh Shit".
hahaha,
i knew that even if i rushed,
i wasnt gonna make it on time.
Besides, i hadnt chosen my clothes for school.



So i decided to go back to sleep, wake up at a later timing,
& reach school during break 2.
But nahh,
after waking up at 9, washing up etc.,
i sat at the table & looked at the clock.

I miscalculated the timing. *.*
i forgot that it takes me 1&1/2 hrs to get to school,
& not 1 hr.
GAHGAH.



Sososo,
i decided to skip school,
& go down for a sunswim-tann(:

left hse @ abt 3.30pm,
& waited damn long for the bus.
grrrr.

yepyep,
i went to school @ FOURTHIRTY4.30
hehhhh.
when everyone had ended their lessons& were walking out of school,
i was walking in.
Lol.



went to the lib for a while,
to kf to meet Junhao
& to the above-the-pool-resorty-area.
waited for Ter-ry to finish his swim.



Then to Mos burger @ amk for dinner.
Walked arnd& waited for bus, & home.



RAHHH, i woke up later than what i wanted to AGAIN.
not really late, but later than my target.
& it was raining&the wind was stronggggggggg.
(now imagine a scene where piglet is being blown by the wind,
& he's holding on tightly to the pole. HAHAAHA)
ever since school started, i've been having difficulty waking up:(
Must kick away that bad habit, aka, lazynesss!

Enterprise today.
Rahh,
About econs, demand& supply.
Actually i think it's okay,
just that there's alot to read up on&find out abt.
so much to do, so little time.


Skipping class tmr agn(:
plans for tmr:
-Down to hoyu @ 10 to change the colour of my hair [Finally(:(:(: ]
-Back to school, hopefully by noon to attend CE talk.[ err, like so... just to attend talk!?]
-Send leoppy to IT helpdesk, formatt everything!
- & then HEHH HEHH HEHH. shhhhh.



Okeyydokk,
my icecream+brownie is here!!
heeeeee.

btw,
looklook!





hmmmmm. someone search for 'enterprise faci" & ended up @ my blog.

& abt ikea?? hmmmmmmmm.

& wth, someone searched for Glenys too.

Ice-cream's melting!

BYEEE(:

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Brett Lee on Indian mission

Brett Lee has declared himself ready to put to rest the frustration of 2004 and prove he is a man for all conditions by conquering India.

In a 68-Test career that has yielded 289 wickets - the fifth most by an Australian - Lee is yet to play a Test on Indian soil.

He didn't make the trip for the 2001 series because he required elbow surgery, while three years later he was forced to carry the drinks as Glenn McGrath, Jason Gillespie and subcontinent specialist Michael Kasprowicz teamed superbly to help claim a remarkable series win.

As the Australian team flew into Jaipur yesterday, Lee, who will turn 32 in November, said he had a burning desire to succeed in India - a country where he is idolised.

"I know there is going to be a lot of pressure on me as a bowler to lead an Australian attack but that's what I enjoy," he said. "I look at this as being a massive challenge and a great opportunity that I know myself and the rest of the guys are looking forward to."

Lee has arrived in India just weeks after the breakdown of his marriage, but the pin-up quick says he is ready to focus on cricket.

"I have gone through a difficult time of my life which I have to accept. It's about now coming over to India and playing cricket," he said.

The debonair Lee has been a long-time favourite of Indian businesses, and his name and image are splashed on billboards and in magazines.

Lee knows it is up to him to set an example for his fellow bowlers, who have played Twenty20 and one-day internationals in India but also have yet to taste Test conditions. The metronomic Stuart Clark and left-armer Mitchell Johnson are expected to partner Lee in the series opener in Bangalore, starting October 9, with the late-blooming Bryce McGain set to be the frontline tweaker.

Australia are confident tight security measures in India will ensure the squad is safe throughout the seven-week trip. A bomb squad patrols the vehicle entrance to the team's Sheraton Hotel in Jaipur, while the players' rooms are in a segregated part of the complex which is under guard by the army. Anyone who enters this area must go through a metal detector.

More than 30 soldiers, some carrying machine guns, greeted the Aussies when they arrived in the early hours of yesterday morning.

Australia yesterday had a light recovery session in and around the team hotel pool and will begin official training today at the Rajasthan Cricket Academy.

Pakistan backflips on Shoaib

Pakistan cricket authorities have permitted controversial paceman Shoaib Akhtar can play in a domestic cricket tournament - just one week after barring him from the same event.

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) said Akhtar can play in a Twenty20 event without paying a $110,000-dollar fine that he owes from an earlier disciplinary breach, contradicting an earlier statement from a PCB legal adviser.

The 33-year-old paceman was banned for five years in April for criticising the PCB's failure to award him a central contract. It was later reduced by an appeals commission to 18 months but the commission also imposed the fine.

Lahore High court suspended the ban in July but upheld the fine.

"We never barred him from playing the domestic event," PCB chief operating officer Shafqat Naghmi told AFP.

Akhtar was not initially included in any of the 13 teams due to compete for the national T20 title from October 4-8 after PCB legal adviser Taffazul Rizvi said last Tuesday that Akthar could not play.
But his name was included recently in the Islamabad team for the event, which will serve as selection test for a four-nation event in Canada.

Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe and Canada are competing in the event, which will be held in Toronto from October 10-13.

The PCB last month included Akhtar in a 15-man squad for the Champions Trophy, but two days later the PCB changed its stance and said Akhtar could only play if he paid the fine.

The trophy was, however, postponed for 12 months over security fears.

Akhtar returned home early Tuesday after playing two first-class matches for Surrey in the English county season. He managed just one wicket in two matches and failed to help Surrey avoid relegation to Division Two.

Akhtar said he will play in the domestic event.

"I am disappointed on not getting the number of wickets I wished but I have just returned from fitness problems so it will take some time to gain full rhythm," he said.

"I will play in the domestic T20 event to prove my fitness and want to play for Pakistan as soon as possible," said Akhtar, whose last match for Pakistan was the third Test against India at Bangalore in December 2007.

Agence France-Presse

BCCI names strong squad

Firebrand Shantha Sreesanth, left-armer Irfan Pathan and promising young wrist spinner Piyush Chawla will take the attack to Australia as part of a strong Board President's XI named to play the tourists in Hyderabad next week.

The BCCI selected aristocratic left-hander Yuvraj Singh as captain while also choosing part-time internationals Subramaniam Badrinath, Wasim Jaffer, Aakash Chopra, Rohit Sharma and Parthiv Patel.

Yuvraj has not been a regular part of the Indian Test side for the past two years, but will appreciate the chance to test out the Australian bowlers in their only serious preparatory fixture of the tour.

Chopra's selection may mean he is back in the frame to play as a dour opening batsman, having combined usefully with Virender Sehwag to blunt the Australian attack in 2003-2004.

He was less successful later that year in India and has been on the outer since, using the spare time to do some writing on the game.

Sreesanth - he of the excitable on-field behaviour - Pathan and Chawla all possess the skill to stretch the Australians, Chawla impressing all with his guile during this year's Twenty20 Indian Premier League.

The match is at Hyderabad's Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium from October 2-5.

Monday, September 22, 2008

England cricket coach on child porn charge

A New Zealand-born fitness coach with the England cricket team is to be sentenced in Britain this week after he admitted downloading child pornography.

Marques Church, 31, was arrested after running up a 61,000 dollars bill on an Internet connection account paid for by the England and Wales Cricket Board.

When officials investigated the bill, they found 14 indecent images of children on Churchs laptop in a folder marked incomplete.

The images included pictures of an 11-year-old girl and a four-year-old boy, the Mail Online website reported.

Church, who has worked with star players including Michael Vaughan and Kevin Pietersen, was understood to have resigned from his job as the teams strengthening and conditioning coach.

At a hearing in Loughborough Magistrates Court, prosecutor Lynn Manning said Church had become obsessed by the images after a breakdown in his long-term relationship and was previously of good character.

Church will be sentenced at Leicester Crown Court on Friday.

Symonds returns to the field

Australian all-rounder Andrew Symonds, who was dropped from the India tour due to his ‘go-fishing’ fiasco, has made a low-profile return by appearing for his club side Gold Coast Dolphins in Brisbane.


While the Ricky Ponting-led team took off for the sub-continent, Symonds was batting for the Club. He hit a composed 52-ball 30, including his trademark straight six.

“It was nice to get out there and have a hit and run around and catch up with a few of the boys. I am looking forward to getting back into a bit of a routine at Bulls training this week,” Symonds was quoted as saying by the Courier Mail.

Queensland Chairman of Selectors, Ray Phillips, who watched Symonds play, said, “He wants to play for Australia again and playing club cricket is the first step in that goal,” Phillips said.

“We didn’t prompt him to play,” he added.

Symonds was sent home by the Australian team management after he missed an important meeting and went fishing in Darwin during the ODI series against Bangladesh last month.

The 33-year-old Symonds, who first declared he was contemplating retirement but later promised to return a “better person”, was also promising at the bowling crease. He finished with the figures of two for 25 off 8.1 overs.

Symonds may also get a chance to play when Queensland takes on visiting Indian Premier League team, the Kolkata Knights Riders in a series of Twenty20 matches as a season warm-up.

Australia arrive for India tour

Ricky Ponting's Australia arrived in India on Monday for a four-Test tour, setting aside security worries following deadly bomb blasts in the country and in neighbouring Pakistan.

The 15-man squad will spend the next week training in Jaipur before flying to Hyderabad for a four-day match against the Indian board president's XI from October 2.

That will be Australia's only warm-up before the first Test opens in Bangalore on October 9. The remaining Tests will be played in Mohali, New Delhi and Nagpur.

The highly-anticipated tour had been placed in doubt after five coordinated bomb blasts ripped through crowded markets in New Delhi on September 13, killing more than 20 people.

A suicide attack on the Marriott Hotel in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad on Saturday that killed 53 people and wounded 266 forced Ponting to admit security concerns were on his mind before the team left Australia.

"I've done it all day today, I've had a lot of discussions with my wife about those exact issues," Ponting said in Sydney on Sunday.

"Our advice was not to go to Pakistan and the advice that we received the last few weeks to tour India has been positive."

Australia cancelled a Test tour of Pakistan in March and also raised security concerns about this month's Champions Trophy there, forcing the tournament to be put off by a year.

Australian squad: Ricky Ponting (capt), Matthew Hayden, Phil Jaques, Michael Clarke (vice-capt), Simon Katich, Michael Hussey, Shane Watson, Brad Haddin (wicket-keeper), Brett Lee, Stuart Clark, Mitchell Johnson, Doug Bollinger, Peter Siddle, Bryce McGain, Jason Krejza.
Hellooooo you.
as you can see,
i've beeeeen rllyyy................LAZY!
i've not updated since err, wed?
& i'm lazy to even reply tags.
GAHHH.
nonono, i'm not catching Ter-ry Tann's lazyness.
lol.


anyway, i'm here to blog,
mainly to take my revenge.
GRRR.
& so,
put your hands together to welcome...
FOOJIAMINGWILSON aka The DINO.
you've got to agree with me, he seriously looks like a dinosaur!
& for revenge, i've decided to give him a little makeover! *smiles widely*
looklook!
PRETTY HOR?! BANGS LEH! SO STYLEEE!!
hahahahahahaha.
be glad i never put the others okay!(:


alrightos.
today's module was communications.
BAH.
this sem's not good:(
because As are harder to get:(
BOOOO!


got home early today(:
8.15pm.
hahahahaha, not that early, but earlier compared to usual!
but, i still havent done RJ:(
LAZY LUH.


my next poll shall be:
WHO'S A BETTER MANICURIST?
so, stay tuned alrightos.




HEEEEEEEE.


LOVEYOUBABY!
*bitesyourarm*

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Ponting puts his record to the test

Rickey Ponting has the greatest record of any regular Test captain but his most demanding assignment will be retaining the Border-Gavaskar Trophy with such an inexperienced side.

The Australian team left for a four-Test tour of India on Sunday with just four in the 14-man squad having played Test cricket there.

n 44 Tests as skipper, Ponting has lost only four Tests, but significantly two of them have been against India and one of those was the only match he played there on the previous Test tour four years ago.

Missing the first three matches on the 2004 tour through injury, when Adam Gilchrist led Australia to its first Test series victory in India for 35 years, Ponting returned for the last Test only to lose narrowly on a dreadful pitch.

The other loss against India came during the third Test last summer in Perth before Australia drew the final Test in Adelaide to seal a difficult 2-1 series victory.

Because Australia already holds the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, Ponting needs only to draw this series to retain the most hard-fought piece of silverware in Cricket Australia's cluttered cabinet.

But even that will be tough given that Australia has won just four Tests in India from six series since Bill Lawry's team triumphed there 3-1 in 1969.

Ponting said the tour would be "a great challenge for all of us".

"We've got a bit of inexperience around the side and India are obviously a very experienced team," he said.

"I was just looking through their team the other week and it's hardly changed in the last seven or eight years, whether it be batsmen or bowlers.

"They'll play their conditions well, but the flip side of that is whenever we've toured the sub-continent in the last 10 years, we've upheld our standards and against India in India of late we've done very, very well."

Ponting has an exceptional record in one-day cricket, twice leading Australia to World Cup glory undefeated, and as a Test captain has a winning percentage of 75, better than any other skipper who has led his side in more than 10 Tests.

Steve Waugh is next with a winning percentage of 72 from 57 Tests in charge and Don Bradman third with a 62.5 per cent success rate in 24 Tests as captain.

For Ponting to maintain that record, it will take something between an exceptional performance and a miracle given that none of his bowlers have played a Test in India and his spinners, Bryce McGain, 36 and Jason Krejza, 25, have not played Test cricket at all.

"Even some of our more senior players like Brett Lee haven't played a Test there so we are reasonably inexperienced in Test-match conditions in India but all the guys have played their fair share of one-day cricket there," Ponting said.

"What has been great about the last 12 months is how competitive we've been in Tests since this big change of players.

"We've got great depth and it's exciting to see these other guys getting an opportunity."

Australia's 2004 success was built around an attack of Glenn McGrath, Jason Gillespie, Michael Kasprowicz and Shane Warne. Injury prevented Warne playing in the last Test of the series, which Australia lost on a spinning pitch.

Of the four who have previously played Tests in India, Ponting, Michael Clarke, Matthew Hayden and Simon Katich, Katich may not even get a game depending on injuries and team balance.

It would continue a very unlucky career for Katich, who scored centuries in his previous two Tests opening the batting during the West Indian tour when Hayden was injured.

Should a fit Hayden return to the top of the order with Phil Jaques and Shane Watson slot into the all-rounder's position at number six in place of the absent Andrew Symonds, as expected, there would be no obvious opening for Katich in a middle order that includes Clarke and Mike Hussey.

Ponting said he absence of Symonds would be a big disadvantage.

"It's no good worrying about it, but you miss his skills and personality around the team," he said.

"He's a terrific bloke to have around and he will be when he comes back, if he wants to comes back."

ICC action against Aussies for showing "double standards" : Inzamam

Former Pakistan cricket captain Inzamam-ul-Haq has demanded of the ICC to penalize the Aussies for first canceling a series in Pakistan in March and then getting the ICC Champions Trophy postponed this month citing "security reasons", but going ahead with the India tour beginning later this month despite last Saturday's serial blasts in New Delhi.

The ICC's inaction on the matter was "encouraging" other teams to violate tour commitments, the Dawn quoted Inzi as saying.

He said: "Australia has been the only country which has refused to tour Pakistan steadfastly. And I don't think this is going to change unless other cricket boards and the ICC do something about it."

Inzamam, who is currently with the rebel Indian Cricket League (ICL), said the ICC's inaction is the only reason why Aussies have violated tour commitments in Pakistan. Another tour cancellation by an international side would spell doom for Pakistan cricket and it was important that the ICC backed his country in such a situation.

"I don't think Pakistan cricket can afford to have another tour postponed or cancelled on security grounds. It would be a big setback for our cricket," Inzamam said and added: "I don't think there is anything wrong with our security arrangements and in Pakistan people are passionate about good cricket and want teams to come and play."

Inzamam also blamed the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) for not doing enough to stage the Champions Trophy at home. He said the PCB needed to be more firm and put its foot down against postponement of the mega event. "Being apologetic for our cricket and security wont help, we need to stop it," he added.

Ponting hoping for friendly series in India

Australia captain Ricky Ponting has vowed there will no repeat of the bitter feuding that marred his team's last series against India when the sides lock horns again next month.

Ponting is expecting both teams to be on their best behaviour for the four-test series, to be played on the Indian subcontinent in October and November.

Both teams have been put on notice by their boards after relations between the sides plunged to an all-time low during India's tour of Australia last season, forcing the International Cricket Council (ICC) to intervene and broker a truce.

The Indian board suspended the tour for two days after their spinner Harbhajan Singh was found guilty of racially abusing Australia's only black player Andrew Symonds.

The crisis was averted when the ICC agreed to India's demands to sack West Indian umpire Steve Bucknor and Harbhajan's charges were downgraded to the lesser offence of using abusive language.

Ponting told reporters before the team flew out of Sydney on Sunday that he expected the series would be played hard but fair.

"There's been a very healthy rivalry between India and Australia in one-day and test cricket and our last few test encounters have been very good and some very close results," he said.

"Hopefully this is another great series played in the right spirit."

Ponting also expressed his confidence in the security arrangements for the tour after the trip was almost cancelled because of a bombing in New Delhi last week.

Australia's planned tour of Pakistan and this year's Champions Trophy in Pakistan were both postponed because of safety fears.

"Our advice was not to go to Pakistan and the advice that we received the last few weeks to tour India has been positive," Ponting said.

The Australians have dominated world cricket for the past decade but India pose the biggest threat as they continue rebuilding after the retirements of Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath, Adam Gilchrist and Justin Langer.

The Indians won last year's inaugural Twenty20 World Cup, beat the Australians away from home in their triangular one-day series and only lost the test series 2-1. Australia are also missing key all-rounder Symonds.

"There's no doubt they have got a lot more experience than we have going into this series," Ponting said.

"But I think we made too much of the conditions in India a lot of the time before we get there.

"I think quite often the less that you talk about it and the more you just get to understand it, the people and the conditions, the better off you are over there."

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Monsieur oizo - Positif (New album will be out November..cant wait)


yana..
by *suo-me on deviantART


www.myspace.com/oizo3000 Tracklist
1. Hun
2. Pourriture 2
3.
Z
4. Cut Dick
5. Two Takes It
6. Rank
7.
Bruce Willis is Dead
8. Jo
9.
Positif
10. Lambs Anger
11. Erreur Jean
12. Steroïds
13. Gay Dentists
14. Pourriture 7
15. W
16. Lars Von Sen
17. Blind Concerto
Positif is massive crazy tune...


It's my holiday,today....

紹介して欲しい音楽や写真やWEBサイト等、ございましたら、お知らせくださいませ。
ブログ主へのメッセージでも良いですよ。

If you have music,photograph or a WEB site want to introduce it, please inform them.
Even a message to this blog owner.


https://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=9159863428035412557&postID=8761041261368570707

loaded2003@gmail.com

Electric Youth - Replay...Y.M.O rise again!!!

Electric Youth - Replay (Demo)
electric youth. at discodust ymo based electro with girlie vox...i love it...


http://dwantsyourkiss.deviantart.com/art/ssosaka08-nite-98445176

Friday, September 19, 2008

Shoaib action backed by science

Shoaib Akhtar's action has been officially queried by several umpires, most recently on his last international appearance in New Zealand on Feb 28. On that occasion, Pakistan used the official six-week remedial period to send him to Perth, where the University of Western Australia's high-speed cameras recorded the above film at 200 frames per second.

According to Daryl Foster, the UWA lecturer now acting as Pakistan's bowling coach, Shoaib has an anatomical difference to most people. He has tremendous flexibility, so he can hyperextend his arm (or bend it the `wrong' way). That has led umpires to query the action.

In frame three of the sequence, Shoaib's arm begins to hyperextend. By frame seven, the angle has reached its peak of around 40 degrees. Then it begins to straighten again until the release, in frame 11, when the arm is straight.

"Opinions differ, but I think it is a slight advantage for a fast bowler," Foster said. "You get the effect of a longer lever, which gives you that bit of extra time to get all the force together, and a bit of extra whip."

The UWA team argue that Shoaib does not bend his elbow forward in delivery, as 1950s bowlers like the Australian Ian Meckiff so notoriously did, and so should not be considered a `chucker'. Certainly, his hyperextension is involuntary, and he could not avoid it if he tried.

However, a pedant could argue that the wording of Law 24.3 - which states that in a fair delivery "the elbow joint is not straightened partially or completely" after the hand has reached shoulder height - tends to disallow Shoaib's action.

Ponting needs to show patience to tackle spin: Chappell

Former Australian skipper Ian Chappell says that Ricky Ponting needs to change his technique and show more patience to succeed against spin in India.

Ponting has compiled more than 10,000 Test runs and averaged 58.37 in his glittering career, but the one black spot has been his form in India. In eight Tests he has a mere 172 runs at a staggeringly low average of just 12.28.

"Playing good spinners has always been Ponting's achilles heel. He tends to push out at the ball when defending rather than letting the ball come to him," Chappell was quoted as saying in Herald Sun Friday.

"Good players of spin reach out to smother the spin in attack, but in defence let the ball come to them.

Ponting has been particularly tormented by Harbhajan Singh.

Chappell, who conquered India in 1969-70 with 324 runs at 46.28, said Ponting would need to rethink his approach against spinners in the Indian tour.

"Ponting has been dismissed for so many low scores, he hasn't found a method that will allow him to survive this danger period.

"The important things are finding a survival method, watching the ball off the pitch really closely, working out what shots you can and can't play and learning you have a fraction of a second longer to play the ball off the pitch when compared to Australia."

Chappell said it was crucial Ponting worked his way into his innings, rather than attack from the start.

"Adjusting to playing good spin bowling in India is the toughest challenge facing an Australian batsman," Chappell said.

"Ponting's desire to dictate gets him into a bit of trouble in India. He hasn't displayed the patience required at the start of an innings when you are facing good spinners in India."

Ponting has unfinished business in India in more ways than one after missing out on being a real part of Australia's 2004 series win because of a broken thumb.

Sri Lanka lifts domestic ban on ICL players

Sri Lanka lifted the domestic ban Friday on cricketers who have signed up with the unsanctioned Indian Cricket League.

Shane Fernando, the media manager for Sri Lanka Cricket said administrators discussed an appeal by former national players who are part of the ICL and decided to lift the ban, allowing them to play for local clubs.

Former national captain Marvan Atapattu, batsmen Russel Arnold and Avishka Gunawardena plus leg spin bowler Upul Chandana are the Sri Lankan players in the ICL.

However they will not be able to play for the national team unless the International Cricket Council recognizes the league. The ICC as yet has not approved the ICL, a Twenty20 tournament that runs in competition with the officially approved Indian Premier League.

The announcement came just two days after the Bangladesh Cricket Board slapped a 10-year ban from all forms of cricket on 13 players including former national captain Habibul Bashar for signing with the ICL.

7 songs for holiday

DVAS - Ambient Room (SymbolOne Remix)
DVAS, Not Divas at Kunk - Budapest

Little Jinder - Eat My Fear (Drop The Lime remix)
CONTESTS: Remix Little Jinder's "Polyhedron", get on her new EP at the culture of me

Justice - Planisphere (MMMatthias Remix)
Heartsrevolution + MMMathias + JeTaimeElectronique at Empreintes-digitales

Royksopp - What Else Is There? (Vitalic Remix)
Dear Ibiza 16: Vitalic at Different Is Dangerous

Crystal Castles - Courtship Dating (J-La Bootleg)
Remix Sunday 111 at Palms Out Sounds

Girlfriend 2008 - Original Mix

Sigur Ros - Saeglopur (MMMathias Remix)
BOTR vol 07 at The World Forgot



www.myspace.com/briankim

(Sasha Invol2ver Remix) Ladytron - Destroy Everything You Touch and Apparat - Arcadia


www.myspace.com/raphaelcwx

My all time favorite song is remixed by Sasha...Ladytron one is so deep...

Ladytron - Destroy Everything You Touch (Sasha Invol2ver Remix)
Apparat - Arcadia (Sasha Invol2ver Remix) ...is good enough,too...
M83 - Couleurs (Sasha Invol2ver Remix) ...これはいまいち...


http://www.7digital.com/artists/sasha-(2)/invol2ver/09-Destroy-Everything-You-Touch/