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LONDON:
England spin bowler Monty Panesar wants cricket to be played for
enjoyment.
"You
have to try and be competitive, but play the game in the right
spirit," Panesar said Monday at the opening of a new scheme
to get children in cities to play cricket.
England
plays India in the third test starting Thursday after a stormy
second test at The Oval when India tailender Zaheer Khan accused
England's fielders of throwing candy at him. India bowler Sree
Santh was also fined 50 percent of his match fee after barging
England captain Michael Vaughan.
India
won the test, and leads the three-match series 1-0.
Panesar
bowled Monday to around 40 children, aged 7-12, who hit the tennis
ball with plastic bats. Organizers hope the "Urban Cricket"
arena in Brixton, south London, will keep bored children out of
trouble with police — and maybe also produce future cricketers.
"We're
trying to help at grass-roots level, trying to get more people
involved in cricket," Panesar said. "Hopefully there
could be the next Andrew Flintoff or Kevin Pietersen."
Similar
schemes will be started in Birmingham, Sheffield, Newcastle and
Cardiff, Wales.
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