Place for historiansTrent Bridge stadium boasts of an excellent library that can help the cricket historians. There are over 15,000 rare cricket books inside the library. Among the collection, there is a book with compilation of scores of matches played as far back as 18th century. One rare book, that has a collection of just scores,hermes birkin, is reportedly worth 27,000 pounds. There are also some Indian books. One book is more than 110 years old. It is called Parsi Cricket by MV Pavri. It was written in 1901. Another book is Who's Who of Indian Cricket by MH Maqsood. It was published in 1941. It is makes for an interesting read. Guess who will make it to the who's who list of Indian cricket if it were to be published today?When will Viru come?One question that is in the minds of everyone over here is when will Virender Sehwag come. But few seem to have the answer. At every press conference, this question is asked. Even the English journalists have started asking the question. India skipper MS Dhoni politely says the manager will answer the question but when asked, Anirudh Chaudhry says he will let the media know whenever a decision is made. "I've no information from the BCCI," says the manager. When the question was directed to a BCCI official, he too claimed ignorance,michael kors handbags. "He was not expected for the second Test any way. We will talk about it later," said a BCCI official. All this prevarication leads to one obvious question: Will Viru come here at all?Jelly bean is passeAs Kevin Pietersen says, there is no hatred between the teams in the current series. The jelly bean incident, which overshadowed India's win here in 2007, is history now. "I think the guys are more mature now -- they understand their responsibility to the team and (they know) that silly little things aren't helping the team win," Andrew Strauss said on Thursday. "The way we look at any Test match, everything we do has to be to help the team win. I think we have learned lessons from that," explained the England skipper.ï؟½ MS Dhoni reciprocated his counterpart's comments,hermes birkin.ï؟½ "A bit of chit-chat goes around. You have a few boundaries that need to be followed but if you are within that line, it's fair enough. Until nobody is getting personal, it's fair enough," the India skipper said.Related articles: There cannot be a bigger record- GangulyPakistan step up hunt for new coachSri Lanka fears blackout of Murali milestone
__DEFINE_LIKE_SHARE__