Monthly Archives: August 2014

Verbattle junior, senior at Mangalore on August 1, 2

Mangalore :

The Mangalore zonal selection for Verbattle Junior will be held on August 1 and the selection for the Verbattle senior competition will be held on August 2 here.

The zonal selection round will be held at Samruddhi Bhavan between 9.30 am to 1 pm and between 1.30 pm to 4 pm. The team that would emerge as the sole winner among hundreds of teams participating will be awarded a grand cash prize of Rs. 1 lakh in the Junior Category. The winning team from the Beginner level will receive Rs 30,000; the winning team from Senior Category will receive Rs 50,000.

Verbattle, the country’s largest and most successful inter-school debate competition conducted by Verbattle Foundation had kicked off its tenth edition with Verbattle Beginner competitions in Bangalore on July 21.

Verbattle will be hosted and supervised by Deepak Thimaya. This year, around 1,200 students of schools and colleges are expected to actively participate in the Verbattle competition.

The selection process for the first round of Verbattle is physically conducted for two days in each of the three zones of Karnataka, namely Mangalore, Hubli and Bangalore. The selected teams are then brought to Bangalore, 27 teams from each zone, and in a spread of three weeks, the ensuing events are conducted in Bangalore. The semi-finals and finals for Verbattle Junior and Senior will be held on August 22nd, 2014. The final debates will be moderated by Thimaya and judged by some of the eminent personalities from the state.

Deepak Thimaya said: In the last nine years, we have brought together thousands of school and college students on a common platform. We have given out Rs. 21 lakh as prize money since its inception. This year Verbattle aims to make the tournament bigger and a platform of great learning experience.

Till date Verbattle has conducted 20 state level competitions in Karnataka – nine Verbattle Junior and five Verbattle Senior and also five Verbattle Beginner competitions in Bangalore. For the first time a South India level competition – Verbattle South – was held in January, 2012 after state level competitions in Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Kerala along with Verbattle Karnataka. Currently Verbattle is organizing state, regional, national and international competitions along with its other activities such as Verbattle Forum, Club and Leadership programs.

Schools and colleges interested to participate can register by logging on to www.verbattle.com.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Mangalore / Stanley Pinto, TNN / July 30th, 2014

How Starbucks is localizing to crack the Indian coffee chain market

In January 2011, when Starbucks chairman and CEO Howard Schultz made his maiden India visit to sign the 50:50 JV with Tata Global Beverages, hopping over to Asia’s largest coffee maker Tata Coffee’s 8,258 sq feet roasting facility at Kushalnagar near Coorg made perfect sense. After witnessing the plant first hand, his team pointed out that the coffee at the roasting facility matched the global espresso blend that Starbucks prides itself on.

(The store in Horniman Circle…)
(The store in Horniman Circle…)

So for the first time ever in Starbucks’ history, the company pinned its faith on a partner-owned roasting facility, outside the five plants it owns across the world, including one at Amsterdam. Local coffee, global taste.


WHAT’S IN STORE

That set the ball rolling for a slew of localization initiatives which the JV kickstarted from October 2012, as it launched its very first outlet in Mumbai. The store in Horniman Circle, which can accommodate 120 people, has hand-carved wooden screens, tables of solid Indian teak, painted vintage trunks and old leather-bound books, harking back at Mumbai’s mercantile past.

As for the grub, there’s Konkani Twist or a Reshmi Kebab Roll, jostling for mouth-share with the standard Blueberry Muffin or the Classic Breakfast Chicken Sandwich—all coming from the Tata-owned TajSATS, India’s largest provider of meals to domestic and international airlines. While the coffee variants are largely untouched, the beans and espresso blend at the heart of the coffee are locally sourced. Even the Tata Tazo tea range throws up a spice-infused Chai Tea Latte—distinctly Indian. Similarly, when Starbucks opened shop in Delhi’s Connaught Place in February 2013, the ropework design of the store stood out as a local theme, along with food offerings, such as Murg Kathi Wrap and Murg Tikka Panini.

The Pune store, on the other hand, honours the rich copper culture of the city through copper artifacts and even has a traditional Indian swing for customers to sway. While certain elements in its food kitty are customized to suit local taste-buds, things are no different when Starbucks launched its 50th store in the country at Chennai earlier this month, which is the only outlet vending a ‘pour-over set’ single brew serving merchandise, typical of the filter coffee culture down south.

Procurement, store decor, F&B, merchandise— across locations , Tata Starbucks has set out to garner neighbourhood connect, to create what its CEO Avani Davda claims as the “third place” between the office and home. Unlike rival Cafe Coffee Day, which operates across multiple formats on a franchisee model, Tata Starbucks prefers operating the third place on its own, with an average covered floor area of 1,000-1,200 square feet. Much of that is governed by homegrown research that points to a more leisurely cafe culture in India than the west, where it is an on-the-go, grab-a-bite, kiosk-led approach with tiny outlets located near workplaces. That explains why Starbucks gets about a fourth of its revenue here from food as against 20% globally.

Though Davda’s cuppa of choice is Sumatra or a vanilla latte in the morning, she would any day welcome the growing consumption of Chai Tea Lattes from her stores. Unlike in most countries, Starbucks realized that India is largely a tea-drinking nation and has now solidified that beverage selection on its menu. It has also launched the India Estates Blend – a country-specific blend developed with Tata Coffee, and the India Espresso Roast, which is sourced locally through the coffee sourcing and roasting agreement with Tata Coffee.

LATE, YET RELEVANT

As the local theme gains momentum, Starbucks’ late entry into the country’ Rs 1,200 crore coffee chain market must not be overlooked. When it finally entered in 2012 after a botched entry in 2007 with Future Group’s Kishore Biyani , the domestic market was nearing saturation, with quite a few players snapping up prime properties in the top ten cities.

Though the JV never compromised on real estate, Starbucks President, China and Asia, John Culver said forging a sense of community will be key, while inaugurating the Horniman Circle outlet. Surely, the $14.89 billion Starbucks has also drawn lessons from the localization bids of other food retail chains, particularly KFC and McDonald’s. While the former ranks Paneer Zinger and Veg Twister as its top-sellers, McDonald’s McAloo Tikki and Masala Grill scorch the tables.

But since such chains operate across multiple formats, some of them even resort to differential pricing across different formats or locations, to cater to a broader consumer base. But Starbucks is clear about its premium pricing and aware of its international brand following.

TataStarbucksKF09aug2014

“We now have an average customer who is very well informed, and has exposure to international brands and experiences… although price and convenience play a part in their spending decisions, they are also more and more influenced by a brand’s values,” says Manmeet Vohra, Director-Marketing & Category, Tata Starbucks.

THE NAYSAYERS

The Indianizing influence, particularly from a brand like Starbucks, has its own share of skeptics though. “People line up outside Starbucks for a global gourmet coffee experience with knowledgeable staff (partners) and baristas who can toss up the Starbucks experience…. unfortunately, the company has adopted a cookie-cutter approach (in India)….it’s like Zara saying it’ll sell salwar-kameez in India,” observes Harminder Sahni, Founder and MD, Wazir Advisors.

As a counter, Davda claims that a career at Starbucks starts with learning about coffee, often through coffee tasting and roasting events. “Our baristas are trained for specific periods by certified baristas, and each partner undergoes the training before undertaking their respective roles,” she says. Keeping the debate alive, former VPMarketing of Tata Coffee and brand consultant Harish Bijoor observes that Starbucks must not dilute its international flavor in order to grow in India.

“It must not become an Indian cafeteria from an American cafe,” says Bijoor, adding that strong brands are often inflexible. Even marketing guru Jagdish Sheth dismisses the ‘think global, act local’ approach of Starbucks, pointing out the new trend as ‘think local, act global’, with a slew of examples, such as Haldiram’s, Dabur and Pathak Pickles from India now riding high overseas with very ethnic offerings.

BANKING ON THE HOOD

But Tata executives, like Davda and Vohra, remain steadfast in their commitment to serve local communities and grow the business case around regions and neighbourhoods. It goes to explain why each outlet supports the surrounding ecosystem.

In Mumbai’s Horniman Circle store, for instance, Starbucks maintains the adjoining heritage park while in Gurgaon’s HUDA Metro Station store, partners take time out for regular cleanliness drives. Pradeep, one such partner, works the counter in Delhi’s Hamilton House branch at Connaught Place and keeps watch as the outlet’s assistant manager. Amid rope chandeliers and the surrounding wood, steel and concrete surfaces that resonates the character of the Lutyen’s-era building, Pradeep helps fellow partners with orders, calling out names of consumers alongside the order on delivery.

Right next to where he stands, about one-fifth of the food section has local offerings—”Chatpata Paratha Wraps and Tandoori Paneer Rolls are the highest selling food items in this outlet,” claims Pradeep. Though Davda will be happy to see local grub flying off the tables, for Tata Starbucks, food accounts for just 25% of its Rs 16 crore revenue. It is the core beverage category that Davda will be watching closely after ensuring that the beans at least are sourced and brewed in India.

source: http://www.articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com / The Economic Times / Home> Magazines> Corporate Dossier / Moinak Mitra, ET Bureau / July 25th, 2014

Vartika Katiyar is SP for Kodagu

Vartika Katiyar took charge as the new Superintendent of Police of Kodagu on Tuesday.

Earlier, she was the Additional Superintendent of Police of Gokak for one year, and she is the first woman holding the post of SP in Kodagu.

Speaking to presspersons at Madikeri, Ms. Katiyar said she was inspired to join the Indian Police Service to serve society and senior women police officers.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Mysore – August 06th, 2014

Don’t Throw Out Your Leftover Coffee Grounds!

When you’ve finished with your morning pick-me-up, and you’re ready to get rid of the breakfast rubbish, put your used coffee grounds aside for a simple, smart reuse. Get started, by trying some of these easy-to-follow great ideas from the Hometalk community.

1. Fertilizer

For a beautiful, luscious garden, give your flowers a dose of nitrogen-rich coffee grounds. Pamper your plants, like Penny did for her roses, using recycled coffee grounds.

Roses Growing With Coffee Grounds via Hometalker Penny
Roses Growing With Coffee Grounds via Hometalker Penny

2. Compost

Who knew that your morning boost could be the missing ingredient in your compost mixture? Follow this tutorial to start a great compost pile using coffee grounds, for a superb organic addition to your mixture that will also naturally suppress the smell of decomposing materials.

Start a Great Compost Pile via Hometalker Old World Garden Farms
Start a Great Compost Pile via Hometalker Old World Garden Farms


3. Pest Control

As much as you may love your Italian roast, critters and pests do not! Try out this idea, using recycled coffee grounds in your home to keep unwanted bugs away. Other Hometalkers utilize recycled coffee grounds in the garden to keep slugs and snails off of plants.

Deal With Ants in the House via Hometalker HomeSpot HQ
Deal With Ants in the House via Hometalker HomeSpot HQ

4. Wood Stain

This trick is the trifecta – the inexpensive, recycled, and non-toxic alternative to store-bought, chemical woodstain. Try this vinegar and coffee mixture to stain and age wood.

Vinigar and Coffee Stain via Hometalker Frugal Ain't Cheap
Vinigar and Coffee Stain via Hometalker Frugal Ain’t Cheap

5. Concrete Stain

The rich color of coffee can be used for more than just wood tinting- this Hometalker changed the look of her concrete walkway by staining the stones using coffee grounds mixed with vegetable oil, and ironite.

How to Stain Concrete via Hometalker ThriftDee
How to Stain Concrete via Hometalker ThriftDee

6. Air Freshener

Coffee is a natural deodorizer, and can be used in tight spaces, like under your sink or in your refrigerator, to diffuse stale odor. You can even disguise deodorizing grounds in a beautified display, like this mason jar flower vase project, which disguises fresh-smelling recycled coffee grounds as soil.

Coffee Used Grounds and Mason Jar Flower Vase via Hometalker Rethink Simple
Coffee Used Grounds and Mason Jar Flower Vase via Hometalker Rethink Simple


7. Body Scrub

Their coarse texture and crisp, rich scent make recycled coffee grounds ideal for exfoliating skin. Check out this simple two-ingredient DIY hand and body scrub mixture for an all-natural refreshing and cleansing upcycle.

Two-Ingredient Hand Scrub via Hometalker Cupcakes and Crinoline
Two-Ingredient Hand Scrub via Hometalker Cupcakes and Crinoline

Get more inspiration for your house and garden! For more ideas on how to cleverly recycle your household waste, check out the Repurposing and Upcycling topic on Hometalk .

source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com / Huff Post / Home> The Blog> HomeTalk / April 04th, 2014 (08/04/2014)

12th Plan outlay for Coffee Board by month-end

Nirmala Sitharaman plans to have a meeting of all stake-holders of the coffee industry in Bangalore and for the Tea Industry in Guwahati.

Bangalore :
Union Ministers have assured Karnataka coffee growers that the 12th Five-Year Plan for the Coffee Board would be announced by August end.

In their meeting, coffee growers told Minister of Commerce Nirmala Sitharaman that the 12th Plan outlay for coffee is overdue by about two years and many small and large growers are eagerly awaiting the Plan proposals as they have held back some investments because of the impending notification.

After patiently hearing growers’ problems, she assured them that the notification will be made by the end of August. The growers also have urged Union ministers to revisit the Kasturirangan Report and remove plantations from the preview of the act for Karnataka and Tamil Nadu, just as it has been done for Kerala. The members of the delegation that met the Union Ministers included D Govindappa Jayaram, chairman, and K Kurian, vice-chairman, of the Karnataka Planters Association; MS Jayaram, president, Thirthamallesh, secretary, Nanda Belliappa and MS Boje Gowda of the Karnataka Growers Federation; Peter Mathias, president, and Ullas Menon, Secretary-General, United Planters Association of Southern India.

The planters’ delegation was in New Delhi from July 29 to August 1 to discuss issues with Commerce Ministry officials and Nirmala Sitharaman. The delegation also met newly-elected MPs from Karnataka and apprised them on various issues. Pollution control norms for pulping were also brought to the ministers’ attention. Growers urged them to consider studies done by the University of Agricultural Sciences, Bangalore. Ministers assured the delegation that SCTL for growers above 10 hectares would be looked into. They also said that recoveries of loans which have become non-performing assets and those before the Debt Recovery Tribunal would not be brought under the SARFAESI Act for any plantation lands.

Meetings
Nirmala Sitharaman suggested plans to have a meeting for all stake-holders of the coffee industry in Bangalore and for the Tea Industry in Guwahati.

She also suggested that the Rainfall Insurance Plan will be modified to include all plantation losses caused due to heavy rainfall, drought or heavy pest attacks, such as white stem borer or stalk/bean/leaf rot (Koleroga) etc. She also said she would explore ways of including research scientists from the agricultural department for doing research on coffee, as well as getting some funding from the Agricultural Ministry for the same.

The Ministers also assured help in getting the approval of the National Horticultural Package (for Pepper) for Karnataka.

source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com / Business Line / Home> Agri-Biz / The Hindu Bureau / Bangalore – August 03rd, 2014

Harshika Poonacha, darling of audiences, back to Bigg Boss

harshikaKF06aug2014

Sandalwood actress Harshika Poonacha who was recently eliminated from the house of popular Kannada reality show Bigg Boss is all set to make her comeback on the show. The reason behind Harshika’s re-entry to Bigg Boss was because audiences have been demanding her comeback on the show.

And the makers of the show had no other choice, but to relent to the audiences demand. She will be once again seen on the TV show from Sunday onwards.

Hope her re-entry will be a pleasant one, and she remains in the show for long.

Recently we saw Sandalwood director Guruprasad making a wild card entry into the controversial reality show currently on air on a popular Kannada TV channel. The show, in its second season, is being hosted by Kannada superstar Sudeep.

Director Guruprasad is mostly known for portraying realistic stories on screen. Thus we wonder whether the filmmaker will be able to fight back against all the allegations and backbiting that happen on the show.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> Entertainment> Kannada / TNN / August 03rd, 2014

The Daily Grind: Coffee Planet

Photo credit
Photo credit

It may come as little surprise that the Arab world is considered one of the fastest growing coffee markets in the world, with the UAE one of its most active centres.

Caffeine devotees across the UAE drink nearly twice as much of the popular beverage as anywhere else in the GCC, helping create a vibrant and diverse coffee and café scene, and providing the perfect marketplace for businesses looking to tap into the increasingly diverse and sophisticated tastes of their customers.

One such business is Coffee Planet – a UAE-grown and Dubai SME 100 ranked company which, according to managing director Robert Jones, will see the largest growth levels in its history this year.

“Last year we saw 35 percent overall growth,” he says. “At the end of Q1 this year we were up 38 percent compared to Q1 last year.”

Familiar to drivers across the emirates, Coffee Planet is well known as the brand of choice at petrol stations, but there’s much more to its success than that.

Since launching in 2005, Jones and his team have built something of an empire by stealth, gradually growing a business to be proud of, and one which many people might not even know they’ve interacted with.

“I like to say that we are like an iceberg,” continues Jones.

“Most people see us in the gas stations or supermarkets, but they don’t know that on the flight they are taking via Emirates or Etihad, they’ll be drinking our coffee. Or in the hotel where they have lunch, they’ll be drinking our coffee.”

Excerpt from –

The Daily Grind: Coffee Planet

source: http://www.elanthemag.com / Elan / Home> Innovation / August 01st, 2014

‘Mysore-Kodagu will be developed as tourism hubs’

Higher Education and Tourism Minister R V Deshpande said, tourist places in Chamarajanagar, Mandya and Kodagu districts will be developed by creating a tourism hub with Mysore under focus.

He was speaking after inaugurating a Yatri Nivas constructed by the Tourism department at a cost of Rs 3.90 crore at Kanakagiri, in Chamarajanagar taluk, on Sunday. He also took part in Mokshakalyana puja and Mukuta Sapthami puja of Sri Vijaya Parshwanatha Swami. He said, the State government would soon announce a Tourism Policy and would seek financial assistance from the Centre. “The Yatri Nivas will provide accommodation, food and basic facilities for tourists at nominal prices.

Another facility, which will include a prayer hall, open air theatre, rest rooms, etc, will be provided at a cost of Rs 4 crore. A proposal will be forwarded to the Union government in this regard.

Tourism will be given priority as it provides employment to numerous persons and also generates revenue for both the people and the government,” he said.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> District / Chamarajanagar – DHNS, August 03rd, 2014

THE SUNDAY INTERVIEW : ‘Life can be a fairy tale… or a mess’

Author Kavery Nambisan / by Special Arrangement / The Hindu
Author Kavery Nambisan / by Special Arrangement / The Hindu

Kavery Nambisan talks to the writer about her book A Town Like Ours, and juggling the roles of writer and surgeon.

Pingakshipura — where the hair on children’s head has turned white and the water runs black — is the town Kavery Nambisan created in her latest book, A Town Like Ours. Though a fictional account of a fictitious place, Nambisan’s words resonate with a dark, uncensored truth that brings to mind the fate of hundreds of villages across the country. Known for her highly perceptive and emotive style, Nambisan talks about her writing and her dual life as author and surgeon.

BookKF03aug2014

Excerpts from an interview:

Tell us a little about how you created Pingakshipura.

It grew around the character of Rajakumari. When I created this endearing, coarse-tongued prostitute and tried to imagine her life, the place that came to mind was a shapeless, noisy pell-mell town. I worked backwards from the town to what it must have been a decade or two earlier. I thought I had created Pingakshipura but, in actual fact, it was like the villages of Karnataka where I lived in my childhood that, over the decades, transmogrified into towns. The lopsided modernisation that we so timidly endorse in our greed for wealth leads to a distortion of the intrinsic fabric of society. The deep and abiding wisdom that is a part of village life is forever lost.

You choose to use Rajkumari to tell the story?

She is derived from a real characterYou know how you come across a person and she stays in your mind and cooks away in your imagination until she is no longer a strangerThe important thing about Rajakumari is not her beauty but her ability to think, and to believe in herself. Her unique position as a harlot gives her the fearlessness and the freedom to retain her dignity at all times.

As for using her voice to tell the story, who better than a whore to give an honest account of the goings-on in any place, who better to tease out the absurdities of life and people? Her voice is like the drumbeat of Pingakshipura, the collective voice of the town. She speaks in her language, namely Kannada which is also the language I grew up with in school.

Not every character’s story is resolved. This seems to be deliberate.

It is Rajakumari who speaks. She is keenly interested in the lives of four people; two couples and two children. My own experience is that the lives of seemingly disparate people come together due to the strangest of circumstances. And a novel is only a peeping-hole into something that happens somewhere. Life can be a charming fairy-tale but more often it is a mess. I look in and show what I see.

I am also very interested in the way we keep secrets from each other, the way we speak half-truths and get away with it all the time. We try to shield our own ‘imagined’ dignity or shield that of others. But see what dilemmas we can end up with. Would it not have been easier for Manohar to tell his wife about his longing for children instead of doing what he did? Or for Saroja to be utterly honest with Sampathu?

A Town like Ours seems to underline your own worries about where rural India is headed.

I guess that runs like a theme through the book, although it is not talked about much. Yes, I am depressed about the destruction, the thinning away, of our link with Nature. It is like humanity is steadily losing blood, getting more anaemic by the day and, instead of treating the cause, is trying to pep itself up by using the magic tablet of modernisation.

Is this the kind of fiction you believe in writing, one that reflects on and mirrors reality?

I did not plan anything. When I started, all I knew about writing was that you had to tell a story. I like stories that make me smile or laugh (sometimes with bitterness). But what really moves me is the grand canvas of living. We humans have a greater capacity for grief than for joy, don’t you think? At least, that is the case with me. I try to be honest, that’s what I do when I write. Everything flows from there. Injustice of all sorts fills me with disbelief about our future and I write so I can change that disbelief into something more hopeful.

Are there any similarities/overlaps in the two facets of your life: writer and surgeon?

Surgery is all about knowledge, skill and team-work. Writing, on the other hand, is done in isolation; it is a bizarre mix of observation, experience, memory and imagination, a chipping- away until something comes out on the page. But both writing and surgery require a certain confidence and the ability to take risks. Who knows what your novel will turn out to be like? In surgery, the risk is that each human body behaves differently and, although you think you know it well, it always throws up surprises. When I open an abdomen, or take on something else, I should be prepared to handle the innumerable variations. Especially in a rural area where you cannot cry for help. You succeed by staying abreast of progress, by keeping your faculties sharp and your mind open to learning. Once you say, “Yes, I can do this for you,” to a patient, you go all the way in the best way possible. By nature, I’m a risk-taker. That’s how I’ve survived as a writer and a surgeon.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> Sunday Magazine> The Sunday Interview / by Swati Dastur / August 02nd, 2014

India A in Australia: Robin Uthappa’s men register 5th consecutive win

Manoj Tiwary

In the Quadrangular A Team ODI tournament that is reaching its closing stages in Australia, India registered their fifth straight win on the trot, against Australia A, on Thursday. The loss ended Australia A’s five match unbeaten run that started in the first match of the tournament against the same opponents. Chasing 229 for win, India reached home with 5-wickets to spare.

Ambati Rayudu(77) and Kedar Jadhav(52) stitched together a 101-run partnership after India A lost three wickets early in the chase. Rayudu batted cautiously for his half-century, while Jadhav continued to be the aggressor. The Maharashtra batsman struck two sixes and three boundaries in his knock, which was eventually ended by Cameron White.

Sanju Samson joined Rayudu and continued from where Jadhav left; the duo added 52 off 59 balls that set India on course for the win. Parvez Rasool contributed 20 off 16 to guarantee a victory. The Kerala wicketkeeper-batsman finished on an unbeaten 49 from 51 balls.

Earlier in the day, White won the toss and decided to bat first at the Marrara Oval, Darwin. Opener Marcus Stoinis batted briskly for his 58, before falling to Akshar Patel. The breakthrough opened the gates for Manoj Tiwary who bagged his maiden five-wicket haul of his career by getting rid of the next five batsmen.

Peter Nevill (23) got stumped by Samson, while the captain did not last long. Phil Hughes, who scored the incredible record-breaking double century in his last outing, became the second batsman to be stumped off Tiwary’s leg-spin in the match, for 58.

Akshar Patel was extremely effective, bowling economically and also picking up important wickets. The left-arm spinner cleared off the tail that sneaked in some quick runs towards the end of the innings. Australia were eventually bowled out with 228 on board in the final over of the innings.

Indian skipper Robin Uthappa failed once again with the bat and is without a single half-century in this entire tour. In the end, it turned out to be a convincing victory for the visitors. The two sides will meet again in the finals on Saturday.

source: http://www.sportskeeda.com / Sports Keeda / Home> Report> Cricket / by Pradeep Kalamagam / July 31st, 2014