Thursday, April 7, 2011

why things looks small once achieved.earliar job used be my dream but once its achieved looks very normal in my life.finally i am territory manager in business octane.still my old habbit that i am searching for some goods friends out here in corporate life.people say you can never get good friends in job but i am unable to accept it.always when i enter in office i remember my college days.life is so boring without friends.one thing life has shown me that love has taken over friendship.earliar when i was in school we used to consider friendship on top but college has changed my thinking and same is experienced in job.
but at last let me tell if you have true friends then nothing can beat you.help me god to have some more new good friends here in mumbai as i have always got in last 16yrs.
ALL THE BEST TO ME......

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

in my 16yr career in hostel life i have seen variety of boys.but 1thing was very common in evry variety.each and every boy react to a girl very similarly on his 1st call or meet.and also continue the talk in very similar way.the best part that boys do that dey will not leave any chance of making girl believe dat he is d best person 4her n when girls get attracted towards boy den simple answer every boy has dat i was yr good frnd infact bestest frnd...huh
similar story rescently im watching rite now wid very close colleague of mine.why dont boys understand dat girls rely get hurt....
hello gys.
it has been long tym away from blogging.today i felt like writing some thing out here in front of whole world.
now i am in mumbai and finally i got my first job.after btech,mba was really a good learning experience in delhi.
now i am in business octane solution pvt limited in andheri.people in mumbai are very polite.my new mates in company are very helping.
so in a nut shell im enjoying mumbai.wish me all the best for my future....

Saturday, March 13, 2010

mumbai indians win,yusuf ton could not save rajasthan

he second-fastest Twenty20 hundred, a 37-ball assault from Yusuf Pathan, as delicate as it was brutal, wasn't enough on a day that precious little was contributed by the other Rajasthan Royals players. Ambati Rayudu, considered unlucky to have not played for India yet, combined with Jharkhand youngster Saurabh Tiwary to help Mumbai Indians to a target that just about dodged the Yusuf-shaped bullet. It took special death bowling from Zaheer Khan and Lasith Malinga in the end to deny Rajasthan 19 runs in the last two overs.

The it's-good-to-be-back ad campaign of the IPL could well have been meant exclusively for Yusuf. In his first innings back in India, he shook a dying match up and gave Mumbai a right scare. The Yusuf show began when Rajasthan needed 143 off 57. He scored 54 off the next 11 balls he faced, 26 other deliveries got him 46, and when he finally got out he left Rajasthan 40 to get off 17 deliveries.

Of the nine fours and eight sixes he hit in a frenetic period of play, three shots stood out - and they were not sixes. The length deliveries and full tosses were all murdered, but in the 13th over - he was 57 off 22 by then - Ryan McLaren bowled a decent enough yorker to him. Yusuf opened the face late, beautifully late, and guided it for four. The next ball was not more than a couple of inches short of being a yorker, but on the stumps, and he managed to get under it, and still hit it to long-off for four. The third yorker of the over was neither wide nor straight, in between, and he leaned back to make space and steered it even later than the one before. More brutal hits preceded a moment of inspiration for Mumbai.

Arguably the best fielder in India, R Satish, returning from ICL, followed up his earlier direct-hit run-out and a special caught-and-bowled with Yusuf's dismissal. He bowled full and straight to Paras Dogra, the other batsman, then dived in his follow through to field the ball, and reverse-flicked - blind to the stumps - to catch a backing-up Yusuf short.

Dogra, who had scored 18 off 20 in the 107-run stand until then, opened up in the same over, and hit two fours and two sixes to bring down the target to 19 off 12.

Zaheer and Malinga, though, with Harbhajan Singh injured and not available to bowl, performed like champs. Eleven near-yorkers from the duo in the last two overs meant even the two wides they bowled were not enough for Rajasthan.

It was fitting for Mumbai that Indian cricketers helped them come back at crucial times: they had become the first team in the three seasons of IPL to play with only three overseas players. Kapil Dev and friends could afford a wee smile too. Rayudu, Sathish and Ali Murtaza - who took a wicket with his first ball - are all returning from the ICL.

Rayudu and Tiwary added 110 runs in 63 balls to help Mumbai Indians recover from a triple-strike in the first third of the innings. Shane Warne didn't have to wait too long to find out if Tendulkar "will open and face [Shaun] Tait", with Tendulkar walking out to open with Sanath Jayasuriya.

Jayasuriya took apart Dimitri Mascarenhas, and Tendulkar did the honours for Tait, taking 10 runs from the four balls that Tait bowled to him. Mascarenhas hit back with two wickets in one over, and at 70 for 3 in 6.3 overs, the onus was on the Indian batsmen.

Rayudu immediately showed glimpses of what made observers talk of him as a potential international. He wristily flicked the first ball he faced for four, lest anybody forgot he's from Hyderabad.

It was just as well that Tendulkar didn't survive long enough to give the viewers the much-awaited contest against Warne: the latter was off colour and duly had an off day, going for 29 runs in three overs. There was no turn for Warne, and he bowled too many half-volleys. Tiwary took full toll, and hit him down the ground for two fours and a six. By the time Warne took himself off, Mumbai had reached 121 in 12 overs. Tiwary had reached 26, and Rayudu 23, off 17 balls each.

Part-time offbreaks from Abhishek Jhunjhunwala and Yusuf went for full-time hitting. Rayudu hit three successive Jhunjhunwala deliveries for a huge six and fours either side of long-on. When he next smacked a six off Yusuf, he had reached 53 off just 30 deliveries, and Mumbai had rocketed to 166 in 16.3.

Tiwary reached his fifty by hitting Amit Uniyal, whose change-up delivery was the quicker one, to the long-on boundary. In fact it was all clean hitting down the ground from the two: out of the 108 they scored between them, only 16 came behind square.

Rayudu and Tiwary didn't see the innings to the close, but Harbhajan Singh and Ryan McLaren contributed to Tait's horror day, taking 22 off his last two overs. Each one of those runs mattered in the end.

frnds





my new frnds in m.b.a.





i am back

after long time i am here again to write some thing about myself and whats happening near by me.
so now i have completed my b.tech and i am pursuing m.b.a. from IIPM(indian institute of planning and management,delhi).i was not having any option because i dint cleared any of the exams thats why i opted for this college as this college give admission to any tom dick and harry.i joined this college on 25th august 2009.presently i am in 2nd trimester and exams are from 15th of march.m.b.a. is very interesting course.one need to have good communication ,social behaviour and knowledge of indian market.these 3things can really help any one in m.b.a.