Internet Edition. October 18, 2008, Updated: Bangladesh Time 12:00 AM 
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No cricket at 2016 Games: Rogge



AFP, India



International Olympic Committee chief Jacques Rogge on Friday rejected growing demands from the cricket community to include the popular Twenty20 format at the 2016 Summer Games.

"Twenty20 cricket will not feature in London 2012 or for that matter in 2016," Rogge told reporters on the sidelines of the Commonwealth Youth Games here.

"We are adding two more disciplines for the 2016 Games. The new sports that could be added are squash, softball, baseball, karate, rugby and golf.

"But there is no cricket."

Leading cricketers like Australian captain Ricky Ponting have called for cricket's shortest version to be included in the Olympics, although only 10 nations play the game at the top level.

Ponting said after the Beijing Olympics in August that it was only a matter of time before the sport's newest form was included in the Games, given its popularity in South Asia.

"I actually think it's inevitable Twenty20 cricket will be an Olympic sport," Ponting said in a speech to mark the 100th anniversary of the birth of legendary Australian player Donald Bradman in August.

"You think about the audiences in South Asia, 22 or 23 per cent of the world's population is based in that area.

"The IOC could do a lot worse than put cricket into the Olympics."

The explosion of Twenty20 cricket over the last few years led to the successful organisation of the Indian Premier League earlier this year.

The International Cricket Council also held the inaugural World Twenty20 championships in South Africa in September last year. The next event will be held in England in 2009.



Nobody can tell me when to quit: Tendulkar

PTI, Mohali

Part of the 'Fab Five' on whom demands have been made for quitting the game, Sachin Tendulkar on Friday made it clear that no one can dictate to him as to when he should stop playing.

"Nobody need to tell me how long I should play. I will play as long as I want. I don't need X, Y or Z to tell me when I should stop playing", an unusually combative Tendulkar told reporters shortly after he became the world's highest run-getter in Test cricket.

"When I started playing nobody told me I should play." he said in remarks often punctuated by barbs at commentators.

Tendulkar said he does not need to prove anything to anyone. "All this 19 years I didn't have to prove anything to anyone. I don't need to prove anything to anyone. What I have to do is to contribute to whatever my team's requirements are.

"I don't have to answer to what X, Y or Z writes. They are only views, they are not correct always. They are only opinions. I don't have to worry about whatever is said in the opinions. I just focus on the game. So many things are said, it is not necessary that they are always right. They are only opinions".

In an apparent reference to reports in the media of late that senior cricketers like Anil Kumble, Rahul Dravid, VVS Laxman and himself should quit, Tendulkar said to him what he thought was important.

Taking a dig at columnists, he said "I don't know how they know what is in my mind. In fact, I myself don't know".

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