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'ప్రతిరోజు నన్ను నేను మెరుగుపరుచుకుంటా'

ప్రపంచకప్​లో విజయ్ శంకర్ స్థానంలో టీమిండియాకు ఎంపికైన మయాంక్ అగర్వాల్.. ఈటీవీ భారత్​తో ముచ్చటించాడు. ఆటగాడిగా తనని తాను ప్రతీరోజు మెరుగుపరుచుకుంటానని చెప్పాడు.

'ప్రతీరోజు నన్ను నేను మెరుగుపరుచుకుంటా'
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Published : Jul 1, 2019, 6:58 PM IST

ఈటీవీ భారత్​తో మయాంక్ అగర్వాల్ ముఖాముఖి

గాయం కారణంగా ప్రపంచకప్​కు దూరమయ్యాడు విజయ్ శంకర్. అతడి స్థానంలో ఆడే అవకాశం దక్కించుకున్నాడు యువ ఆటగాడు మయాంక్ అగర్వాల్. ప్రతిరోజు తన ఆటను మెరుగుపరుచుకుంటానని చెప్పాడీ క్రికెటర్. ఐపీఎల్​లో విదేశీ ఆటగాళ్లతో కలిసి ఆడటం తనకెంతో ఉపయోగపడిందని అన్నాడు. మరెన్నో విషయాల్ని ఈటీవీ భారత్​తో పంచుకున్నాడు.

28 ఏళ్ల మయాంక్ అగర్వాల్.. ఆస్ట్రేలియా పర్యటనకు ఎంపికై టెస్టుల్లో అరంగేట్రం చేశాడు. అందులో ఆడిన తొలి మ్యాచ్​లో రెండు ఇన్నింగ్స్​ల్లో వరుసగా 76, 42 పరుగులు చేసి ఆకట్టుకున్నాడు.

గత 24 నెలల్లో లిస్ట్-ఏ క్రికెట్​లో 1747 పరుగులు చేశాడు మయాంక్ అగర్వాల్. ఇంగ్లాండ్ పరిస్థితుల్లోనూ ఆడిన అనుభవముంది. ఆ దేశంలో ఆడిన 6 మ్యాచుల్లో 88.40 సగటుతో 442 పరుగులు సాధించాడీ క్రికెటర్. అందులో 3 సెంచరీలు ఉన్నాయి.

ప్రపంచకప్ నుంచి గాయం కారణంగా వైదొలగిన విజయ్ శంకర్.. టోర్నీలో ఇప్పటివరకు ఆడిన మ్యాచుల్లో మొత్తం 58 పరుగులే చేశాడు. రెండు వికెట్లు తీశాడు. పాకిస్థాన్​తో మ్యాచ్​లో వేసిన తొలి బంతికి వికెట్ సాధించాడు.

TEAM INDIA CRCIKETER VIJAY SHANKAR
టీమిండియా క్రికెటర్ విజయ్ శంకర్

ఇది చదవండి: ప్రపంచకప్​ నుంచి విజయ్ శంకర్ ఔట్

ఈటీవీ భారత్​తో మయాంక్ అగర్వాల్ ముఖాముఖి

గాయం కారణంగా ప్రపంచకప్​కు దూరమయ్యాడు విజయ్ శంకర్. అతడి స్థానంలో ఆడే అవకాశం దక్కించుకున్నాడు యువ ఆటగాడు మయాంక్ అగర్వాల్. ప్రతిరోజు తన ఆటను మెరుగుపరుచుకుంటానని చెప్పాడీ క్రికెటర్. ఐపీఎల్​లో విదేశీ ఆటగాళ్లతో కలిసి ఆడటం తనకెంతో ఉపయోగపడిందని అన్నాడు. మరెన్నో విషయాల్ని ఈటీవీ భారత్​తో పంచుకున్నాడు.

28 ఏళ్ల మయాంక్ అగర్వాల్.. ఆస్ట్రేలియా పర్యటనకు ఎంపికై టెస్టుల్లో అరంగేట్రం చేశాడు. అందులో ఆడిన తొలి మ్యాచ్​లో రెండు ఇన్నింగ్స్​ల్లో వరుసగా 76, 42 పరుగులు చేసి ఆకట్టుకున్నాడు.

గత 24 నెలల్లో లిస్ట్-ఏ క్రికెట్​లో 1747 పరుగులు చేశాడు మయాంక్ అగర్వాల్. ఇంగ్లాండ్ పరిస్థితుల్లోనూ ఆడిన అనుభవముంది. ఆ దేశంలో ఆడిన 6 మ్యాచుల్లో 88.40 సగటుతో 442 పరుగులు సాధించాడీ క్రికెటర్. అందులో 3 సెంచరీలు ఉన్నాయి.

ప్రపంచకప్ నుంచి గాయం కారణంగా వైదొలగిన విజయ్ శంకర్.. టోర్నీలో ఇప్పటివరకు ఆడిన మ్యాచుల్లో మొత్తం 58 పరుగులే చేశాడు. రెండు వికెట్లు తీశాడు. పాకిస్థాన్​తో మ్యాచ్​లో వేసిన తొలి బంతికి వికెట్ సాధించాడు.

TEAM INDIA CRCIKETER VIJAY SHANKAR
టీమిండియా క్రికెటర్ విజయ్ శంకర్

ఇది చదవండి: ప్రపంచకప్​ నుంచి విజయ్ శంకర్ ఔట్

WORLD MOON LANDING SMALL STEPS
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS/UNIVERSAL NEWSREEL/UNIVERSAL ARCHIVES/NASA/BRITISH MOVIETONE/ SOVIET TV ARCHIVE
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only
LENGTH: 9:15
SHOTLIST:
Disclaimer: British Movietone is an historical collection. Any views and expressions within either the video or metadata of the collection are reproduced for historical accuracy and do not represent the opinions or editorial policies of The Associated Press.
UNIVERSAL NEWSREEL
Archive : White Sands, New Mexico, United States - May 1952
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE++
1. Slate: SPACE PIONEERS: Mice and Monkey soar 38 Miles in Rocket
2. Various of scientist placing mouse into wheel
UPSOUND (English) Narrator: "Air force scientists prepare to launch a rocket into upper space manned by two white mice and Albert the Monkey. Every precaution is taken to ensure their return safe and sound from their spectacular journey into space. " (upsound continues over shots 3 and 4)
3. Close of Albert the monkey
4. Mice being placed on capsule
5. Various rocket launch
UPSOUND (English) Narrator: "They're off at 2,000 miles per hour. Inside the missile, an automatic camera shows the mice running on the sides of their cage. A parachute opens to ease the rocket and its precious cargo to a gentle landing. Anxious scientists rush to the scene and discover the animal crew has weathered the flight safely. Its Albert's moment of triumph, he's the world's first space cadet." (upsound continues shots 5-9)
6. Close of mice in space
7. Various of parachute and landing
8. Mid of scientists taking animals from craft
9. Close of Albert the monkey strapped to seat
SOVIET TV ARCHIVE
Archive : Star City, Kazakhstan (former USSR) - 4 October 1957
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE++
10. Wide of Sputnik launch
11. Various of Sputnik animation
BRITISH MOVIETONE
Archive : November 1957
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE++
12. Slate: The Dog in the Rocket
13. Various newsreel footage of "Laika" in space suit, dog being put into pressurized cabin during training
UPSOUND (English) Narrator: "This is the story of the Russian space dog and how it was trained for its fantastic job. These Movietone pictures are the first newsreel story of an event that has amazed the world. They have a pressurized space kennel, and they seem to like it."
14. Various of rocket launch
15. Mid of dogs in spacecraft
UPSOUND (English) Narrator: "A small automatic camera films their reactions at a height of about 60 miles. It certainly appears that the dogs are reasonably content, even if they don't know what's coming off."
UNIVERSAL NEWSREEL
Archive : 1958
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE++
16. Slate: First US Satellite Launched!
17. Various newsreel footage of launch of first US satellite, Explorer
UPSOUND (English) Narrator: "At Cape Canaveral Florida, the Army's Jupiter C rocket is readied for America's second attempt to launch a space satellite. Any one of tens of thousands of things can go wrong with catastrophic results, but all that can be done to assure perfection has been done. The moment is at hand the countdown reaches; zero. Some three minutes later, Explorer is in orbit, broadcasting to the world its coded scientific data."
BRITISH MOVIETONE
Archive : May 1959
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE++
18. Slate: Voyagers in Space
19. Various newsreel footage of monkeys, Able and Baker, being launched in Jupiter missile, landing and recovery
UPSOUND (English) Narrator: "Almost zero hour at Cape Canaveral and enlarged 16-millimetre pictures show a monkey especially-trained and conditioned for voyaging in space. Two monkeys had been selected for the job, they call them Abel and the Baker, A and B, of course. Each one, carefully space suited, was placed in a small compartment in the nose cone of a Jupiter missile. And now, they're off. Radio signals at once send out a message to the rescue teams standing by. In fact, the monkeys came down safely near Antigua, reported none the worse. After blazing the trail for human space travel."
BRITISH MOVIETONE
Archive : May 1959
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE++
20. Wide of press conference
21. Tilt down of monkey on capsule
22. SOUNDBITE (English) Col. Robert Holmes:
It's encouraging to us to think that an animal can be exposed to space environment conditions without having undue operations in its basal physiology, and one can reasonably then hope that the same situation will apply to the human."
BRITISH MOVIETONE
Archive : April 1961
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE++
23. Slate: Man in Space
24. Various of rocket launch
UPSOUND (English) Narrator: "The Earth looked a delicate blue, floating in a black sky. So said the first man in space after his fabulous journey of 108 minutes, Major Yuri Gagarin. A 27-year-old Soviet Air Force officer whose name will live in history." (upsound continues over shot 25)
25. STILL of Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin
SOVIET TV ARCHIVE
Tyuratam test range (now the Baikonur Cosmodrome), Kazakhstan (then part of the USSR) - 12 April 1961
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE++
26. Various of rocket launch
27. Close of Gagarin's face on a screen
SOVIET TV ARCHIVE
Archive : Moscow, Russia - April 1961
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE++
28. Mid of Gagarin standing in car and waving
29. Wide of crowds in Red Square
30. Close of Gagarin receiving flowers
NASA - MUST COURTESY "NASA"
Archive : Kennedy Space Centre, Florida, US - 5 May 1961
++4:3++
31. Various of rocket launch, capsule Freedom 7 on top of rocket
UPSOUND: (English) "Three, two, one, zero ... Liftoff"
32. Various of Alan Shepard in flight
UPSOUND (English): "Oh roger, liftoff and the clock has started.... (inaudible) Yes sir, reading you loud and clear.... On the periscope, what a beautiful view."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Archive : Washington D.C., US - May 1961
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE++
33. Wide of congress applauding President John F. Kennedy
34. Wide of Kennedy shaking hands
35. SOUNDBITE (English) President John F. Kennedy:
"I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal before this decade is out of landing a man on the moon and returning them safely to the earth."
UNIVERSAL ARCHIVES
Archive : 1962
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE/MUTE++
36. Wide of rocket launch
37. Astronaut John Glenn in capsule
38. Animation of capsule orbiting Earth
39. Glenn in capsule
40. Kennedy presenting Glenn with medal
41. Wide of banner, reading (English): "Astronaut John H. Glenn, Jr."
42. Mid of Glenn sitting on car, waving
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Archive : Cape Kennedy (now Cape Canaveral), Florida, US - July 1964
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE/MUTE++
43. Various of Ranger 7 rocket on launch pad
NASA - MUST COURTESY "NASA"
Archive : July 1964
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE++
44. View of Moon from Ranger 7 spacecraft
UPSOUND (English): "From a TV camera aboard the Ranger 7 spacecraft, about 17 minutes from lunar impact, the area covered by the initial picture approximately 450,000 square miles."
BRITISH MOVIETONE
Archive : February 1966
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE/MUTE++
45. Animation of Luna 9 spacecraft landing
46. Wide of observatory
47. High shot of telescope
48. Mid of man looking through telescope
49. Animation of Luna 9 spacecraft transmitting
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Archive : February 1966
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE/MUTE++
50. Various of Moon's surface, captured by Luna 9 spacecraft
51. Various of UPI office receiving pictures of Moon's surface captured by Luna 9 spacecraft
NASA - MUST COURTESY "NASA"
Archive : 1966
++4:3/MUTE++
52. Animation of NASA's Surveyor 1 landing on Moon, transmitting
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Archive : Cape Kennedy (now Cape Canaveral), Florida, US - January 1967
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE/MUTE++
53. Mid of NASA  Apollo 1 astronauts Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee
54. Various of astronauts training in capsule
55. Wide of capsule on launch pad
56. STILL of fire-damaged capsule
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Archive : Washington D.C., US - January 1967
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE/MUTE++
57. Various of astronaut coffins arriving at Andrews Air Force Base
BRITISH MOVIETONE
Archive : Cape Kennedy (now Cape Canaveral), Florida, US - November 1968
++MUTE++
58. Various of Apollo 8 crew training
59. Wide of control room
BRITISH MOVIETONE
Archive : Cape Kennedy (now Cape Canaveral), Florida, US - December 1968
++4:3/MUTE++
60. Wide of rocket launch
BRITISH MOVIETONE
Archive : Cape Kennedy (now Cape Canaveral), Florida, US - December 1968
++4:3/BLACK AND WHITE/MUTE++
61. Zoom in of STILL of Moon
62. Various of astronauts in capsule
63. View of Moon from capsule
64. Earth seen from Apollo 8
Disclaimer: British Movietone is an historical collection. Any views and expressions within either the video or metadata of the collection are reproduced for historical accuracy and do not represent the opinions or editorial policies of The Associated Press.
LEADIN:
50 years ago, NASA astronaut Neil Armstrong took one small step for man, and one giant leap for mankind.
But before man began exploring the cosmos, mice, dogs and monkeys paved the way.
STORYLINE:
It began as a tale of mice of monkeys.
In 1952, the United States sent two Philippine macque monkeys, Patricia and Mike, 36 miles into our atmosphere.
Fired at speeds of 2,000 miles per-hour, they became the first primates to reach such altitudes. Flying alongside the monkeys were two white mice.
The space race was now underway with the United States and the Soviet Union competing to be first to conquer the unknown.
The Soviet Union leaped ahead in space exploration by putting the Sputnik 1 satellite in orbit in 1957.
The 184-pound beeping ball was launched on 4 October 1957. It became the first man-made object to orbit the Earth.
Sputnik 2 followed on 3 November 1957, carrying a dog, called "Laika," Russian for "Husky" or "Barker."
The Soviets didn't have time to work out a re-entry strategy, so Laika died onboard the spacecraft.
The Soviet Union had experimented with launching dogs on short suborbital missions during ballistic missile tests, and some of them survived several such missions.
All of them were stray dogs - doctors believed they were able to adapt quicker to harsh conditions - and all were small so they could fit into the tiny capsules.
Just nine days before the launch, Doctor Vladimir Yazdovsky chose 2-year-old Laika for the mission.
Stories about how she was chosen vary. Some say Laika was chosen for her good looks - a Soviet space pioneer had to be photogenic.
Explorer 1 became the first successfully launched satellite by the United States, when it was sent into space on 31 January 1958.
On 28 May 1958, the Unites States sent two monkeys, Able and Baker, into space, aboard an Army Jupiter Missile. They reached a 300-mile altitude and returned to Earth unharmed.
The Soviet Union launched the first man into space, cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, in a 108-minute orbital flight on 12 April 1961.
American Alan Shepard made a suborbital flight in May 1961.
That same month, US President John F. Kennedy set a deadline of putting a man on the moon by the end of the decade.
On 20 February 1962, the United States sent John Glenn into space.
He became the first U.S. astronaut to orbit the Earth and spent 4 hours, 55 minutes and 23 seconds in space.
Ranger 7 was the first US space probe to transmit close images of the lunar surface back to Earth.
On 31 July 1964, Ranger 7 approached the moon and transmitted 4,316 images in the 15 minutes before it impacted the lunar surface.
The Soviet Lunar 9 was the first spacecraft to achieve a lunar soft landing and to transmit photographs of the Moon's surface back to Earth.
Launched on 31 January 1966, it reached the Moon on 3 February.
The United States followed in June that year, landing the Surveyor 1 spacecraft on the lunar surface.
On 27 January 1967, astronauts Virgil I. ″Gus″ Grissom, Roger B. Chaffee and Edward H. White II were killed in an electrical fire, trapped inside the Apollo 1 capsule at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
The Apollo 1 fire was shocking not only because of the deaths, but because the accident followed 16 consecutive successful flights of the Mercury and Gemini series.
In December 1968, three Apollo 8 astronauts orbited the moon.
The Apollo 8 mission is considered to be NASA's boldest and perhaps most dangerous undertaking.
That first voyage by humans to another world set the stage for the still grander Apollo 11 moon landing seven months later.
The mission was whipped together in just four months in order to reach the moon by year's end, before the Soviet Union.
By July 1969, Apollo 8 was overshadowed by Apollo 11′s Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin moon landing.
But without Apollo 8, NASA likely would not have met President John F. Kennedy's deadline of putting a man on the moon by the end of the decade.
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