Bangladesh keep nerve to win thriller with Sri Lanka at T20 World Cup

Bangladesh keep nerve to win thriller with Sri Lanka at T20 World Cup
Bangladesh’s Tawhid Hridoy hits a 6 during the ICC men’s Twenty20 World Cup 2024 group D cricket match against Sri in Grand Prairie, Texas on June 7, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 08 June 2024
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Bangladesh keep nerve to win thriller with Sri Lanka at T20 World Cup

Bangladesh keep nerve to win thriller with Sri Lanka at T20 World Cup
  • Bangladesh made a shaky start and were struggling at 28-3 in the sixth over before Liton Das and Towhid Hridoy put together a crucial 63-run partnership

DALLAS, United States: Bangladesh emerged victorious from a gripping encounter with Sri Lanka in Texas with the two-wicket victory getting them off to a winning start in Group D of the T20 World Cup.

Rishad Hossain produced a brilliant spell of leg-spin as Bangladesh fought back to restrict Sri Lanka to 124-9.

Then Liton Das (36) and Towhid Hridoy (40 from 20 balls) put Bangladesh in command before some excellent pace bowling from Nuwan Thushara (4-18), in his second spell threatened a late twist in the plot.

But veteran Mahmudullah Riyad showed all his experience at the end to see Bangladesh over the line with an unbeaten 16.

It was the final of four games at the Grand Prairie Stadium and the Dallas crowd have been treated to some top entertainment on a surface which offered some bounce and produced good contests between bat and ball.

Sri Lanka made a fast start, rattling their way to 53-2 in six overs and they progressed to 100-3 after 14 overs with Pathum Nissanka’s 47 from 28 including eight boundaries (one six).

But then the 21-year-old wrist spinner Rishad struck twice in successive balls to totally change the momentum of the innings.

Charith Asalanka’s sweep shot found Shakib Al Hasan at deep backward square and he snaffled up the catch.

Sri Lanka skipper Wanindu Hasaranga was the next victim of Rishad’s spin, edging a sharply turning delivery to Soumya Sarkar at slip.

Dhananjaya de Silva who made a solid 21 off 26 balls was then beaten by Rishad’s flight and was stumped by the alert Liton.

Sri Lanka were just able to add 24 runs from the final six overs losing six wickets in that period.

Rishad finished with career-best T20I figures of 3-22 from his four overs.

Mustafizur Rahman finished with 3-17 from four overs while Taskin Ahmed also bowled well for his 2-25.

Bangladesh made a shaky start and were struggling at 28-3 in the sixth over before Liton and Hridoy put together a crucial 63-run partnership.

Hridoy hit Hasaranga for three consecutive sixes before he was trapped leg before on the next ball and when Hasarange removed Liton, there was a glimmer of hope for Sri Lanka.

A brilliant diving catch in the deep from Maheesh Theekshana saw the back of Shakib Al Hasan to leave Bangladesh at 109-6.

Thushara then returned to the attack and removed Rishad and Taskin to increase the pressure but when Mahmudullah dispatched a loose full toss from Dasun Shanaka for six over mid-wicket, the nerves eased and victory was soon secured.

Bangladesh were playing their first game of the tournament after an unimpressive warm-up campaign saw them lose a three-game series to the USA and then lose by 60 runs to India.

Skipper Najmul Hossain was delighted.

“Everybody’s body language was great, we gave our 120 percent. Very important for Liton, he’s been struggling a bit but he showed his skill today. I think he batted really well. Hridoy was really courageous, the way he played that over really helped us,” he said.

Sri Lanka have now lost both their opening games after suffering a defeat to South Africa in their opener.

“If batters put up 150-160, our bowling attack can win games,” said Hasaranga.

“The last two games the batters didn’t do the job. It’s tough”.


Head’s hundred seals Australia win over England in 1st ODI

Head’s hundred seals Australia win over England in 1st ODI
Updated 20 September 2024
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Head’s hundred seals Australia win over England in 1st ODI

Head’s hundred seals Australia win over England in 1st ODI
  • Australia, set 316 for victory, finished on 317-3 with six overs to spare as they went 1-0 up in a five-match series
  • Australia captain Mitchell Marsh hailed an “exceptional” team performance: The way we were able to pull it back (in the field) was great.

NOTTINGHAM: Travis Head’s superb career-best 154 not out saw depleted world champions Australia to a seven-wicket win over England in the first one-day international at Trent Bridge on Thursday.

Australia, set 316 for victory, finished on 317-3 with six overs to spare as they went 1-0 up in a five-match series to make it 13 ODI wins in a row against all opponents.

Earlier, Marnus Labuschagne was the unlikely hero with the ball as Australia fought back after losing the toss.

England, on 201-2 off 30 overs, were set for a colossal total as Ben Duckett eyed a hundred on his home ground.

But left-hander Duckett departed for 95 when caught and bowled by part-time leg-spinner Labuschagne, who also removed Harry Brook — out for 39 in his first innings as England captain — in similar fashion soon afterwards.

Labuschagne returned ODI-best figures of 3-39 as England, succumbing to spin, lost their last six wickets for 59 runs.

First-choice leg-spinner Adam Zampa marked his 100th ODI with 3-49 from his full 10 overs.

Labuschagne then completed a fine all-round display by making 77 not out off 61 balls in an unbroken partnership of 148 with fellow 30-year-old Head.

But the outcome might have been different had Head been caught early in his innings, with the player of-the-match telling Sky Sports: “I got lucky and Jofra (Archer) bowled a hell of a spell at the start. Glad I can continue.”

Australia captain Mitchell Marsh hailed an “exceptional” team performance by saying: “The way we were able to pull it back (in the field) was great.

“I think the calmness in the group has been great. There’s illness flying around, it builds resilience in the team.”

Brook, leading England in just his 16th match at the relatively youthful age of 25, accepted the hosts had posted a “below-par score.”

Australia lost Marsh early in their chase when he holed out off Matthew Potts.

Three balls later Head, the hundred hero of Australia’s World Cup final win over India last year, almost fell in single figures.

His slashing square-cut off Potts flew to deep point only for Brydon Carse, in too far off the boundary rope at Brook’s request, just failing to hold what would have been a spectacular leaping catch.

Fast bowler Archer topped speeds of 90 mph (145 kmh) in his first ODI after over a year out with injury.

But opener Head came through to completing a sixth century in 66 ODIs.

He went to exactly 150 by launching Liam Livingstone for a spectacular six over long-on, with the spinner’s nine overs costing an expensive 75 runs.

Head then surpassed his previous highest ODI score of 152, against England at Melbourne two years ago, with the left-hander facing 129 balls, including 20 fours and five sixes, in total.

After Brook won the toss, both Duckett and Will Jacks completed brisk fifties.

But Zampa struck when Jacks (62) holed out to cover to end a partnership of 120 with Duckett.

Test opener Duckett pressed on before chipping Labuschagne’s fourth delivery back to the bowler as a 91-ball innings, including 11 fours, ended tamely.

And when Brook fell the same way, England were 232-4 off 35 overs.

Australia have several players sidelined by illness and injury, including experienced fast bowlers Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood.

The series continues at Headingley on Saturday.


English county side Essex fined after racism probe

English county side Essex fined after racism probe
Updated 18 September 2024
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English county side Essex fined after racism probe

English county side Essex fined after racism probe
  • Half of Essex’s fine is suspended for two years
  • The county have also been cautioned over their future conduct after being reprimanded by the Cricket Regulator

LONDON: English county side Essex have been fined £100,000 ($131,000) after admitting a failure to address “systemic” racist language and conduct at the cricket club between 2001 and 2010.
Half of Essex’s fine is suspended for two years and the county have also been cautioned over their future conduct after being reprimanded by the Cricket Regulator (CR).
The CR panel said the length of time covered by the charge and the systemic use of racist and discriminatory language suggested a culture that was “embedded” across most levels of the club.
The panel added: “This conduct continued without meaningful challenge from either Essex’s management or other senior playing members of the club even when it was brought to their attention.”
The panel accepted in mitigation Essex’s early admission of the charge and the punishments handed to individuals arising from the separate independent review commissioned by the club.
The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB)’s own investigation had been prompted by allegations of racism made by former players Jahid Ali, Maurice Chambers and Zoheb Sharif.
ECB chief executive Richard Gould said: “Racism has no place in our sport. I’m appalled by what those who experienced racism at Essex have been through, and the way this behavior could become normalized.
“It is vital that as a sport we listen and learn from their experiences, and ensure that no one suffers like that again.
“I welcome the action Essex has taken in recent years to address these issues and become a more inclusive club, and the commitment it has shown to make further progress.”


Australia smash England for 193 in 2nd T20

Australia smash England for 193 in 2nd T20
Updated 13 September 2024
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Australia smash England for 193 in 2nd T20

Australia smash England for 193 in 2nd T20

Cardiff, UK: Jake Fraser-McGurk top scored with 50 as Australia set England a demanding target of 194 to keep a their three-match T20 series alive in Cardiff.
England looked set for a chase in excess of 200 as the tourists made another rapid start with captain Travis Head smashing 31 off just 14 balls.
Australia were cruising along at 119-2 in the 13th over before Fraser-McGurk’s flashy innings came to an end when he was caught off the bowling of Liam Livingstone.
Just like in the opening game of the series, which Australia won by 28 runs, it was left to the English spin attacking to limit the damage.
Livingstone also took the wicket of Marcus Stoinis but was surprisingly given only three overs despite being the pick of the bowlers with figures of 2-16.
But Josh Inglis’ 42 off 26 balls put momentum back into the Aussie innings before Cameron Green and Aaron Hardie hit Sam Curran for 20 off the final over to post a total of 193/6.


England’s new white-ball era off to shaky start in loss to Australia in first T20 cricket match

England’s new white-ball era off to shaky start in loss to Australia in first T20 cricket match
Updated 12 September 2024
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England’s new white-ball era off to shaky start in loss to Australia in first T20 cricket match

England’s new white-ball era off to shaky start in loss to Australia in first T20 cricket match

SOUTHAMPTON, England: A new era for England’s white-ball teams got off to a shaky start with a 28-run loss to Australia on Wednesday in the first of three T20 matches between the fierce cricket rivals.
Australia was put into bat and dismissed for 179 with three balls remaining — an under-par score at the Utilita Bowl in Southampton given the team smashed 86 off the powerplay and was 118-2 after 10 overs. Travis Head hit a 19-ball fifty in his knock of 59 to get the Australians off to a rapid start.
England, with a batting lineup missing injured captain Jos Buttler and including uncapped Jordan Cox and Jacob Bethell, stumbled to 52-4. After Liam Livingstone (37) and Sam Curran (18) threatened a fightback with a 54-run partnership for the fifth wicket, England lost three wickets in 10 balls to plunge to 113-7 and was eventually all out for 151 with four balls left.
The other matches in the T20 series are in Cardiff on Friday and Manchester on Sunday. Then comes a five-match ODI series between the teams, where Buttler — England’s white-ball talisman — may return from his right calf injury that will cause him to miss the T20s.
With the 30-year-old Jamie Overton also selected for the first time, England’s lineup included three uncapped players as well as a stand-in captain in Phil Salt. Australia’s more-established team had too much for the hosts, with the 86-run opening partnership between Matthew Short (41 off 26 balls) and Head building an excellent platform.
Head crashed 30 runs off the first over bowled by Curran, who quickly disappeared from England attack.
It took the arrival of spinners Adil Rashid and Livingstone to slow the run-rate, and Australia started to quickly lose wickets — with the last eight departing for 61.
In the chase, the 23-year-old Cox was out for an unconvincing 17 off 12 balls and the 20-year-old Bethell managed only 2. Overton was also in the top seven of an inexperienced and fragile batting lineup, and made 15.
Australia’s fielding was brilliant, with Tim David’s catch — on the dive after turning round and running into the leg side — to remove Cox particularly standing out.


A remarkable act of batting defiance

A remarkable act of batting defiance
Updated 05 September 2024
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A remarkable act of batting defiance

A remarkable act of batting defiance
  • Ian Bestwick recently added his name to those of the great ‘blockers,’ facing 137 deliveries and scoring zero runs in an English county league match

Cussedness — deliberate obstinacy — is a behavioral trait often associated with people in northern England. My experience of this quality stems from an upbringing in mining communities in Derbyshire, in the East Midlands.

When Ian Bestwick strode out to bat for Darley Abbey Cricket Club’s 4th X1 in Division Nine South of the Derbyshire County Cricket League on Aug. 24, he could have had little idea that he was about to take cussedness to a new level.

Bestwick was to face the might of Mickleover CC’s 3rd X1 bowlers. In 35 overs, these opponents had amassed a total of 271 for four declared, of which 19-year-old opening bat Max Thompson blasted 186. In the Derbyshire league, matches in Divisions 7 to 10 consist of 80 overs, with the team batting first limited to a maximum of half the overs. However, teams are allowed to declare their innings closed after 30 overs have been bowled. Perhaps Bestwick was piqued that Mickleover did not declare after 30 overs with their total on 192.

There has been many a cricketer who has felt that the opposition should have declared earlier than they did. This is one reason limited-over cricket was introduced. The reason for the introduction of the declaration option by this league at this level of cricket is not clear. It is also unclear why the matches are not “win or lose,” in which the team scoring the highest number of runs in a fixed number of overs is the winner.

A combination of the declaration option, which varies the number of overs available to both teams and which allows the possibility of a drawn match, provided the context for Bestwick’s innings. His team was young and inexperienced and had just been subjected to a battering. They also had to face 45 overs, since the overs unused by Mickleover were carried over. Added to this, both teams were near the foot of the table and desperate for points. An attempt to deny Mickleover points would be a logical justification for slow batting.

Bestwick took this attempt seriously. He batted throughout the innings, faced 137 deliveries and scored zero runs. Remarkably, he was dismissed early in his innings, but the delivery was declared a no-ball by the umpire, who was his captain. After that Bestwick grew into his task. It seems that he refused to run when he could have done so, not only off his own batting but also as the non-striker. This behavior was deliberately and determinedly stubborn, not helpful to others, and must have been of immense irritation to the opposition. One wonders what sort of remarks they may have made during the course of the innings.

The upshot of his efforts was that his team’s total score after 45 overs was a paltry 21 for the loss of four wickets. Nine of those runs were extras and a further four were scored in a single shot by Bestwick’s son, Thomas, with whom he shared a partnership of 11 in 24 overs. If the original intention was to deny Mickleover points this was partly achieved. They gained 18 points in achieving a winning draw as opposed to 27 on offer for an outright win. However, Darley Abbey gained only three points for scoring so lowly in a losing draw and, with three matches remaining, the points difference between them, Mickleover and one other team is 42 points, a gap which may be too much to bridge.

Reports have suggested that the mood in Darley Abbey’s team after the match was euphoric. Bestwick’s extraordinary feat of defiance and concentration made headlines not just in Derbyshire, but also in the UK’s national media and other parts of the world. Inevitably, comparisons have been made with slow scoring innings and players in professional cricket. There are many examples. The most frequently quoted in terms of number of deliveries faced without scoring a run was by New Zealand’s Geoff Allott, who failed to score from 77 deliveries in 1999. This effort helped his team secure a draw.

Other players have been cast as slow scorers, not always fairly. One example is Geoffrey Boycott, who was once dropped by England after scoring 246 in 555 deliveries against India in 1967 in a match which England won. Boycott described his exclusion as “the deepest wound of his professional career.”

Chris Tavare is another who acquired a reputation as a blocker. In his younger days in county cricket Tavare was an elegant attacking batter. At that time, England required an opening batter and he was asked to adapt his game for the sake of the team, something he achieved with notoriety. Among his slowest innings was one of 35 runs scored in Madras in six-and-a-half hours in 1982. Among Indians, a slow innings is referred to as “doing a Tavare”.

It remains to be seen if “doing a Bestwick” becomes part of cricket’s lexicon. While constructing this column the name Bestwick began ringing other bells. Digging deeper, I discovered a Billy Bestwick and, to my surprise, he was born less than half a mile from my birthplace in Heanor, Derbyshire, but a long time earlier in 1875. He played 323 matches for Derbyshire between 1898 and 1925, claiming almost 1,500 wickets. These included the rare feat of all 10 in an innings, all of which were bowled.

Billy Bestwick’s record would have been more impressive but for a verdict of “justifiable homicide” brought against him in 1907 after a man was killed in an establishment which he frequented. He was fired by Derbyshire and moved to South Wales, rejoining Derbyshire in 1919. After retirement he became a Test match umpire in which role he acquired a reputation for cussedness, upsetting several famous names with decisions of which they did not approve. In conclusion, it should not be assumed from these cautionary Bestwickian tales that cussedness, cricket and products of Derbyshire mining communities are synonymous, although I can think of many other examples.