Wednesday, 19 March 2014

Netherlands v Zimbabwe, World T20, Group B, Sylhet

Unchanged Netherlands choose to bat

Zimbabwe were asked to chase in what is a must-win game for them against Netherlands. Having lost the first match of the tournament to Ireland, only victory will keep Zimbabwe's hopes of competing in the main draw alive.
Brendan Taylor was pleased his bowlers will get first use of a surface that could have purchase for the spinners upfront. With turn expected to be a factor, Zimbabwe made one change to their XI. They replaced one legspinner, Tafadzwa Kamungozi, with another, Natsai Mushangwe. There was still no place for allrounder Malcolm Waller.
Netherlands' captain Peter Borren decided to defend, bucking the trend of chasing in this tournament so far. He wanted to take advantage of, "Zimbabwe being under a bit of pressure having just lost," and said he did not expect much dew later on.
Netherlands are in a fairly comfortable position. The beat the UAE comprehensively to put points on the board but another win will allow them to put one foot in the competition proper.
Zimbabwe: 1 Hamilton Masakadza 2 Sikandar Raza 3 Brendan Taylor (capt & wk), 4 Vusi Sibanda 5 Sean Williams, 6 Elton Chigumbura, 7 Timycen Maruma, 8 Prosper Utseya, 9 Tinashe Panyangara, 10 Tendai Chatara, 11 Natsai Mushangwe
Netherlands: 1 Stephan Myburgh, 2 Michael Swart, 3 Wesley Barresi, 4 Tom Cooper, 5 Peter Borren (capt), 6 Ben Cooper, 7 Logan van Beek, 8 Mudassar Bukhari, 9 Timm van der Gugten, 10 Pieter Seelaar, 11 Ahsan Malik

 

Eng vs Ind, 7th Warm up Match, Dhaka - Scores, Commentary

Match Info

Match: England vs India, 7th Warm up Match , T20 WC Warm up Matches 2014

Date: Wed, Mar 19, 2014 

Start Time: 1:30 PM GMT 

Venue: Shere Bangla National Stadium, Dhaka

Umpires: Richard Illingworth , Richard Kettleborough 

3rd Umpire: Kumar Dharmasena

Match Referee: Ranjan Madugalle

AUSTRALIA VS NEW ZELAND WARM UP MATCH ICC WORLD T20

AUS bang 200
on chasing NZ is going nice
  Australia innings (20 overs maximum) R B 4s 6s SR

DA Warner retired out 65 26 7 5 250.00
AJ Finch retired out 47 22 9 1 213.63
SR Watson c Guptill b Hira 27 18 0 3 150.00
GJ Maxwell lbw b Devcich 2 4 0 0 50.00
GJ Bailey b Anderson 19 17 2 0 111.76
BJ Hodge c Neesham b Mills 25 20 0 2 125.00

CL White not out 6 6 0 0 100.00
BJ Haddin b Mills 0 2 0 0 0.00

DT Christian not out 8 5 1 0 160.00

Extras (w 1) 1



  Total (7 wickets; 20 overs) 200 (10.00 runs per over)
Did not batNM Coulter-Nile, JP Faulkner, GB Hogg, MA Starc, JM Muirhead, DE Bollinger

Fall of wickets 1-113 (Warner, 7.6 ov), 2-113 (Finch, 7.6 ov), 3-117 (Maxwell, 9.1 ov), 4-145 (Watson, 12.4 ov), 5-173 (Bailey, 16.1 ov), 6-188 (Hodge, 18.1 ov), 7-189 (Haddin, 18.4 ov)
  Bowling O M R W Econ  
KD Mills 4 0 21 2 5.25
  TA Boult 4 0 36 0 9.00
  KS Williamson 1 0 24 0 24.00 (1w)
RM Hira 2 0 44 1 22.00
  JDS Neesham 2 0 27 0 13.50
CJ Anderson 3 0 23 1 7.66
AP Devcich 3 0 15 1 5.00
  C Munro 1 0 10 0 10.00
  New Zealand innings (target: 201 runs from 20 overs) R B 4s 6s SR

MJ Guptill not out 20 13 2 1 153.84
KS Williamson c Haddin b Coulter-Nile 17 12 2 1 141.66

BB McCullum not out 4 1 1 0 400.00

Extras
0



  Total (1 wicket; 4.2 overs) 41 (9.46 runs per over)
To batCJ Anderson, RM Hira, MJ McClenaghan, NL McCullum, KD Mills, AP Devcich, C Munro, JDS Neesham, L Ronchi†, TG Southee, LRPL Taylor, TA Boult

Fall of wickets 1-37 (Williamson, 4.1 ov)
  Bowling O M R W Econ
  MA Starc 1 0 2 0 2.00
View wicket NM Coulter-Nile 1.2 0 9 1 6.75
  SR Watson 1 0 12 0 12.00
  DT Christian 1 0 18 0 18.00

Tuesday, 18 March 2014

Ireland v UAE, World T20, Group B, Sylhet

Ireland look to maintain intensity

Match facts


March 19, 2014
Start time 1930 local (1330 GMT)

Big Picture

The Irish seem to instantly ignite emotions in fans wherever they go. In the 2011 World Cup, they had Indians dancing and cheering for them after their historic upset of England in Bangalore. In the 2014 World T20, it took them one game to get thousands shouting "Ireland, Ireland" in Sylhet during their victory over another Full Member, Zimbabwe. They are the bosses of the Associate world, always among the neutral's favourites, the loveable underdogs. Imagine how many more converts they'll make if they get through to the Super 10, which will give them at least four games against the big guns.
For that to happen, they will need to come through UAE and Netherlands, opponents they are expected to beat. How will the tag of favourites sit with them? On paper, the amateurs of UAE should be no match for them. Ireland boast several players who have done years of hard yards on the English domestic circuit. They have one of the most exhilarating limited-overs batsmen in Paul Stirling, they have a classy young spinner in George Dockrell, they have a range of experienced seamers and batsmen led by a man who knows that when he speaks, he often does so on behalf of the lower rung of cricket. William Porterfield is conscious of the importance of his position, and he does not throw words around lightly.
Even Porterfield was moved enough to say "you never lose" when you need seven off two overs, something Ireland almost managed to do in their opener against Zimbabwe. It took a scrambled bye off the last ball to take them home. There should not have been any room for complacency against a Test nation, but it arguably seemed to have crept in towards the finish. Complacency could become an issue against UAE, but now that they have almost stalled at the finish line once, Ireland will be wiser.
UAE went down without much fight to Netherlands, a side they had beaten twice before. Heaven help them if they field and bowl like they did in their opening match. Their performances against Ireland and Zimbabwe will be significant pointers to where they stand at this level. They did show some spunk with the bat, recovering twice after losing quick wickets to Netherlands. Having already played under lights in Sylhet, they won't have to make the adjustments Ireland will need to.
Form guide (official T20s, including internationals)
Ireland WLWWW
UAE LLLWW

Watch out for

It is the cricket world's loss that it does not get to, or does not want to, watch a lot of Ireland games. Because when he is in touch, Paul Stirling can provide as much entertainment as some of the leading lights of the shortest format. More often than not, it is his unwillingness to downshift that derails him, but often, he has inflicted so much damage so soon that the contest is all but over.
Kamran Shazad was one of the few positives for UAE against Netherlands, surprising batsmen with the deceptive pace and bounce he generated off a slow pitch. Both the wickets he picked up were off shortish deliveries that climbed too quickly for strokes to be timed. UAE will be in need of all the ammunition they can come up with.

Team information

Alex Cusack took a mighty hammering against Zimbabwe, going for 53 runs in four overs. Ireland have the option of bringing in the experienced Tim Murtagh. Young spinner Andy McBrine did a fine job on T20 debut and should partner Dockrell again.
Ireland (possible) 1 William Porterfield (capt), 2 Paul Stirling, 3 Ed Joyce, 4 Andrew Poynter, 5 Gary Wilson (wk), 6 Kevin O'Brien, 7 Stuart Thompson, 8 Max Sorensen, 9 Alex Cusack/Tim Murtagh, 10 George Dockrell, 11 Andy McBrine.
Left-arm spinner Shadeep Silva went for plenty against Netherlands. UAE have another slow left-armer in the squad in Ahmed Raza, who is their only option with some experience.
UAE (possible) 1 Amjad Ali, 2 Faizan Asif, 3 Khurram Khan (capt), 4 Swapnil Patil (wk), 5 Shaiman Anwar, 6 Rohan Mustafa, 7 Amjad Javed, 8 Vikrant Shetty, 9 Shadeep Silva, 10 Kamran Shazad, 11 Manjula Guruge

Pitch and conditions

Sylhet started out as a slow pitch on debut but became better and better for batting as afternoon turned to evening and the Netherlands openers found it came on nicely at night with some dew around. The toss will not be as important as Brendan Taylor felt it was for the afternoon match. The night will also bring pleasant weather amid the tea gardens that surround the stadium.

Stats and trivia

Ireland have beaten UAE in all four T20s the sides have played
Ed Joyce's strike-rate of 90.76 is the lowest for players who have scored at least 300 career T20 international runs. His team-mate Gary Wilson ranks second on that list.

Quotes

"We know how dangerous UAE can be, especially in subcontinent conditions. We have played two games against them in the qualifiers and they were very good games. That is our next test."
William Porterfield

 

Netherlands v Zimbabwe, World T20, Group B, Sylhet

All or nothing for plucky Zimbabwe

Match facts
March 19, 2014, Sylhet Start time 1530 (0930GMT)
Big Picture

Tendai Chatara bowled economically and took the crucial wicket of Paul Stirling, Ireland v Zimbabwe, World T20, First Round Group B, March 17, 2014
Tendai Chatara's gave away only 20 runs from his four overs against Ireland, and he will be crucial to Zimbabwe's hopes of booking a place in the main draw © ICC
Enlarge

A player unhappy over non-selection, a public war of words, an investigation, a team's management scrambling to save face, a clearance, and a group of men responding on the field with a thumping victory to show none of the behind-the-scenes issues are affecting them too much. Sounds a lot like Zimbabwe, doesn't it? But it's not.
This was how Netherlands began their World T20 outing. By comparison, Zimbabwe's first few days at the event have been calm.
Brendan Taylor's men shook off months of inactivity by featuring in the match of the qualifiers so far. Their opener against Ireland went down to the last ball but they ended up on the wrong end of the result.
It's last-gasp time for Brendan Taylor and Co. Having recognised the importance of qualifying for  the main draw and slipping up early, they have   to win their next two matches and hope someone else (Ireland) stumbles along the way. Their fate may already be out of their hands, but Zimbabwe have a reputation to protect and, after the hurt of Monday, can be expected to be fierce in their attempts to do so.
Netherlands have already showed the fight of a wounded group. After losing their ODI status earlier this year and with the backroom drama, they turned in a clinical performance against the UAE to demonstrate the threat they could pose at this event. Victory over Zimbabwe will set up a showdown with Ireland, if they beat the UAE. Netherlands will want nothing less than to take it down to the final match of the group and to give themselves every chance of playing in the main draw.
Form guide
(completed matches, most recent first)
Zimbabwe LLLLW
Netherlands WWWLW
Watch out for
He does not have Tinashe Panyangara's obvious never-say-die attitude or his toe-crunching yorker but Tendai Chatara has determination of his own which serves Zimbabwe just as well. Chatara is miserly and gave away only 20 runs in the four overs he bowled against Ireland. He has also perfected the slower ball and can change his pace to suit conditions and fox batsmen.
Stephan Myburgh will feel right at home playing against Zimbabwe, because they used to be his neighbours. Myburgh was born in Pretoria and played some of his cricket for Northerns before moving to Netherlands. Myburgh has already made his presence felt in the tournament, with the only half century for his team so far, and will want to make an even bigger impact against the team South Africans think of as their little brothers.
Team news
Zimbabwe do not need to make drastic changes after a decent all-round showing against Ireland, but there are areas of their line-up they can tinker. Vusi Sibanda could be brought up to open the batting with Hamilton Masakadza, which may allow for Malcolm Waller to slot in at No.4. If Waller plays, Zimbabwe will have an extra spin option and could bring in big-hitting bowling allrounder Shingi Masakadza to bolster the lower order.
Zimbabwe: 1 Hamilton Masakadza 2 Sikandar Raza/Vusi Sibanda, 3 Brendan Taylor (cpt, wk), 4 Vusi Sibanda/Malcolm Waller, 5 Sean Williams, 6 Elton Chigumbura, 7 Timycen Maruma/Shingi Masakadza, 8 Prosper Utseya, 9 Tinashe Panyangara, 10 Tendai Chatara, 11 Tafadzwa Kamungozi
Netherlands may not want to tinker with a winning combination, especially one that earned such a comprehensive victory over UAE, but they may revise aspects of their seam department. Logan van Beek was expensive, which could see Vivian Kingma debut, although inexperience could count against him in a crucial match.
Netherlands: 1 Stephan Myburgh, 2 Michael Swart, 3 Wesley Barresi, 4 Tom Cooper, 5 Peter Borren, 6 Ben Cooper, 7 Logan van Beek, 8 Mudassar Bukhari, 9 Timm van der Gugten, 10 Pieter Seelaar, 11 Ahsan Malik
Conditions
The international cricketing world got a first look at the Sylhet surface on Monday and it proved a typically Bangladeshi one. It was slow and took turn but there was also a little on offer for the seamers, especially as the afternoon wore on. Zimbabwe found some swing and Taylor said he felt as though his team was always in the match. It's expected to be a warm and humid day so there should be more of the same. As a result, batting is tricky to a newcomer at the crease but for those who get themselves in, there are runs to be found.
Stats and Trivia
  • Netherlands and Zimbabwe have never played a T20 international against each other before. The only Full Members Netherlands have played against are England, Pakistan and Bangladesh, twice. They have won two of the four games.
  • The Dutch also have a much higher winning percentage than Zimbabwe. Of the 23 matches Netherlands have played, they've won 13 (56.5%) while Zimbabwe have only won four out of 29 (13.8%).
    Quotes
    "They are all experienced players and have played enough cricket. It has to come from within themselves. I am pretty sure that they know what they need to do to improve."
    Brendan Taylor believes Zimbabwe's batsmen have what it takes to come back strongly
    "It's going to be a tough game against a team we haven't played very often. We can say that they have a varied attack and a dangerous batting line-up."
  •  

    Bangladesh v Nepal, 6th Match, Group A

    Brief scores

    Nepal: 126/5 (20 overs) lost to Bangladesh 132/2 (15.3 ov)

    Build-up: Bangladesh start as favorites

    Nepal might have won their opening encounter convincingly but Bangladesh will still start as clear favorites. The host nation got their campaign going with a thumping victory over Afghanistan. The spin-laden Bangladesh know the conditions much better and the home crowd will be egging them forward. That said, Nepal will be looking to shake off the tag of pushovers and will be coming at the hosts with all that they have got.

    Toss: Bangladesh opt to bowl

    Mushfiqur Rahim clearly feels comfortable with chasing targets. The bowling does have the requisite firepower to restrict Nepal. The track will be aiding turn and it will be a formidable task for the Nepal batsmen to counter the tweak attack

    Wicket: Reza strikes early

    Nepal were not allowed to get away quickly in the powerplay overs. The openers struggled to beat the infield and a wicket was always in the offing. It finally came in Farhad Reza's first over. Khakurel attempted to slog across the line but spooned a catch to mid off.

    Wickets: Double strike by Al-Amin Hossain. Score: 39/3 (6.3 ov)

    Al-Amin Hossain gave the home crowd a lot of joy by picking two wickets in three balls. Sagar Pun chipped the firsty ball straight to over and G Malla was caught plumb in front by a ball zooting in. Bangladesh had once again applied the choke successfully.

    Bangladesh cricketer Farhad Reza reacts after the dismissal of the Nepal cricketer Subash Khakurel during the T20 WC sixth qualifying cricket match between Bangladesh and Nepal at the Zohur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium in Chittagong on March 18, 2014.
    [© ]


    Partnership: Nepal fight back

    Just when Bangladesh were about to take a stranglehold of the game, Nepal gought back with a spirited stand between Paras Khadka and Sharad Vesawkar. The latter was quite content to play himself in while the former got the boundaries. Together, they added more than fifty in a brisk manner but the most important impact of the stand was that they had arrested the slide. It set it up nicely for the batsmen to follow to come and have a go towards the end.

    Finish: The surge that never came

    While Khadka and Vesawkar did the first part of their job quite well, the job was still not finished. Nepal still needed some lusty blows towards the end to get near a competitive total. Khadka fell in the process of procuring the runs but Vesawkar struggled to get going. There were a lot of heaves and misses that left Bangladesh with a pretty comfortable target in the end.

    Partnership: Blistering stand sets the tone

    Tamim Iqbal and Anamul Haque wasted no time in exerting Bangladesh's dominance with the bat as well. Nepal were sent on a leather hunt as both batsmen employed the long handle to good effect. The former was the aggressive of the duo and he continued from where he left off against Afghanistan

    Wicket: Nepal finally strike. Score: 63/1 (7.5 ov)

    It was too little too late for Nepal when Tamim Iqbal was dismissed and the opening stand finally broken. The hosts had raced away to 63 in the 8th over when Tamim's aggression got the better of him. He came down the track to cart spinner Regmi but got an outside edge to short third man

    Wicket: Confusion ends Anamul knock

    Horrendous confusion brought an end to Anamul's fine knock. In the 11th over of the innings. He cut one to point and went for a single only to see his partner standing right beside him at the other end. It was a wicket against the run of play but Nepal did not mind it.

    Victory: Shakib blazes away

    With victory getting closer, Shakib Al Hasan gave the crowd much more to cheer about as he finished things off in style . He tonked 3 sixes in the 15th over and then another six and a four in the next over to help Bangladesh register a comprehensive 8-wicket win.

    ENGLAND VS W.INDIES WORLD T20 WARM UP MATCHES

    England 131/7 v West Indies 132/3 (16.1/20 ov)
    West Indies won by 7 wickets (with 23 balls remaining)