Bumrah revels on big stage

Jasprit Bumrah made his IPL debut in front of a packed house, but the Gujarat youngster wasn’t fazed by the occasion

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Apr-2013Mumbai Indians’ Jasprit Bumrah, a virtually unknown teenager from Gujarat, had a memorable IPL debut on Thursday, taking 3 for 32 against Royal Challengers Bangalore. He didn’t have the best of starts, though, being taken for three fours in his first four deliveries by Virat Kohli.He then had Kohli lbw off his fifth ball, and celebrated exuberantly. “He had hit me for three boundaries in that over and so I was angry,” Bumrah told the IPL website. “I am always like this on the field.”Bumrah was picked for the match ahead of more experienced contenders like Dhawal Kulkarni and Abu Nechim, but wasn’t fazed by the occasion. “It was the first time that I played in front of such huge crowd but I wasn’t paying any attention to the crowd. The more you focus on the inside, the better it is.”Mumbai have a line-up including some of the biggest names in cricket, including Sachin Tendulkar and Ricky Ponting, players any youngster would dream of meeting. “I did feel a little overawed by all the big players in the team initially. But they were so welcoming and friendly, they made me feel at ease.”He hit the headlines with a Man-of-the-Match performance in the final of the Syed Mushtaq Ali tournament, and he impressed Mumbai’s coach John Wright earlier in the tournament with his bowling in the league stage in Ahmedabad. “John Wright had come to watch one of our T20 matches and he watched me bowl in two games,” Bumrah said. “He didn’t talk to me or hint anything. After he went, I got a call asking if I was interested in signing a contract with the Mumbai Indians.”One of the things that make Bumrah difficult to deal with initially is his unusual action, with stiff hands and bowling well wide of the crease. It looks ungainly but his coach Kishore Trivedi, father of Rajasthan Royals and Gujarat medium-pacer Siddharth, doesn’t want him to alter the action. “There were many who felt that we should change his action but I was reluctant,” Trivedi told . ” He is a natural and there was no point in making drastic changes. It would’ve led him nowhere.”

Notts wrap up second victory

Nottinghamshire were held up by rain and further defiance from Durham’s last pair before clinching their second win from two games in the County Championship by 114 runs

15-Apr-2012
ScorecardNottinghamshire were held up by rain and further defiance from Durham’s last pair before clinching their second win from two games in the County Championship by 114 runs.Needing to take one wicket on the final day they were driven back to the pavilion by rain after just two overs. And, following a 30-minute break, No. 11 batsman Mitch Claydon proceeded to his maiden half-century to keep Durham’s slim hopes of victory alive.The Australian’s previous best for Durham was 40 out of an all-out total of 114 against Lancashire at Old Trafford in 2008. Claydon was sent in below Graham Onions, who was dropped in the slips by Nottinghamshire after they claimed the extra half hour on the third evening.Resuming on 18, with the total on 203 for 9, Claydon took 10 off Andy Carter’s opening over today. The visitors persisted with Carter even though Claydon kept clattering him to the boundary.Andre Adams was also unable to grab the scalp he wanted to complete a five-wicket haul and eventually made way for the left-arm spin of Samit Patel. There were eight fours in Claydon’s 53-ball half-century, but after 50 runs had been added he was caught at long-on by Luke Fletcher off Patel for 55.

Ireland's Wilson extends Surrey deal

Gary Wilson, the wicketkeeper batsman currently with Ireland at the World Cup, has extended his deal at Surrey and is now contracted until 2012

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Mar-2011Gary Wilson, the wicketkeeper batsman currently with Ireland at the World Cup, has extended his deal at Surrey and is now contracted until 2012.Wilson, 25, had a productive 2010, scoring his maiden first-class and ODI centuries and averaging 43.62 in his six first-class games for Surrey.Although Steven Davies is Surrey’s first choice wicket keeper, Wilson was able to force his way into the side on the strength of his batting, justifying his selection with 125 against Leicestershire at Grace Road in late August last year.Wilson said he is looking forward to continuing his development with Surrey: “It is brilliant to be extending my deal,” he said. “I really enjoy playing for the club and feel I can make a big contribution as we continue to move the team in a positive direction. Following my performances last year, I am looking to continue scoring runs and push my case for selection at all times.”Surrey coach Chris Adams added: “Gary is a hugely popular member of the playing staff here both in the dressing room and around the club in general. I am very pleased he has extended his contract and look forward to him continuing to develop his game over the next two years.”

Kolkata hand Bangalore a pasting

Angelo Mathews starred with the ball before the fireworks from Kolkata Knight Riders openers eased them to two wins in two games

The Bulletin by Siddarth Ravindran14-Mar-2010
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out
Angelo Mathews starred for Kolkata for the second successive time•Getty Images

It wasn’t as resounding a thrashing as that delivered by Brendon McCullum’s ruthless innings against the same opponents in the tournament opener two years ago but it was still a massive win for Kolkata Knight Riders in front of a heaving Eden Gardens crowd. Angelo Mathews followed up his fire-fighting with the bat on Friday by starring with the ball to pin down Royal Challengers Bangalore, before fireworks from Kolkata’s openers ensured their team began their campaign with victories over both of last year’s finalists.Kolkata were in control right from the start when Bangalore’s young batting talent failed, and the visitors were left to thank the experienced Jacques Kallis, who made a mad dash from South Africa after playing the Pro20 final on Friday evening, for holding the innings together. However, even his battling, an unbeaten 65 on a slowish track, couldn’t spare Bangalore the eventual hammering.Their troubles began when the surprise move to open with Sreevats Goswami didn’t work out. The pint-sized Goswami was hemmed in by a series of Charl Langeveldt bouncers, and his ploy of backing away to heave the ball to the leg side didn’t come off. Nor could Manish Pandey replicate the wonderful form of his domestic season, looking tentative in his short stay before his attempt to flat-bat Mathews down the ground ended in a bottom-edge on to the stumps.Next in Bangalore’s youth brigade was Virat Kolhi, talked up by coach Ray Jennings as a future Indian captain, who lasted four deliveries before striking a dipping delivery from Murali Kartik to deep midwicket. With two deliveries left in the Powerplay, Bangalore were down to 20 for 3.Kolkata’s new-ball bowlers had done their job, and they were backed up by some intelligent bowling from Mathews and Kartik to put Bangalore on the mat. Mathews sent down several slower bouncers which the batsmen struggled to pick, and Kartik varied his pace and effectively used the assistance provided by the track.It was Kartik who provided the fervent crowd their next chance to scream. Bangalore’s new signing, Eoin Morgan, had started his IPL career confidently with a sensationally-timed off-drive for six off the second delivery he faced, but he was bowled by a short, slow ball, through with his reverse-sweep before the ball arrived.All the while Kallis was starved of the strike, though he had shown glimpses of form, including a ferocious lofted cover drive. He set about rebuilding with the help of another veteran, Rahul Dravid, putting on 38 with some old-school textbook batting. Dravid was looking in fine touch before he contrived to drag a full, wide ball from Mathews on to the stumps.There was more sedate run-gathering with Robin Uthappa after that, and it wasn’t until the 15th over that Kallis opened up, clouting Rohan Gavaskar to the extra-cover boundary. Uthappa got his first boundary in the same region, before Mathews struck twice in four balls. Kallis then started to get innovative, walking across the stumps to paddle-sweep a ball for four to bring up his fifty, and repeating the stroke in the final over. There was a sweet, straight hit for six as well, and the 14 runs in the 20th over lifted Bangalore to 135.It was an underwhelming total on a benign track, but not as tiny a target as the Kolkata batsmen made it seem. Manoj Tiwary may not have much of a reputation as a Twenty20 player, but it was his early onslaught that made the match such a one-sided encounter.After three steady overs, Tiwary blasted Kallis for 14 in the space of four balls in the fourth, including a powerful swipe over midwicket for six. Much of Bangalore’s chances now depended on how effective their spearhead Dale Steyn was, but Tiwary crashed his second delivery over long-off for six more, before a couple of driven boundaries from Brad Hodge made it 17 off the over.The last major threat was Anil Kumble, who also failed to make an impact, with Tiwary picking him for two fours in his first three balls to take Kolkata 60 for 0 after 5.3 overs, effectively ending the contest.Things were less frenetic after that, and though both openers fell the delivery after they reached their half-centuries, Kolkata eased to a victory that will reinforce the belief in the side and among their fans after the abysmal shows of last season.

Nepal's Lamichhane denied US visa, will miss T20 World Cup 2024

He has not been granted a US visa to take part in the tournament

ESPNcricinfo staff30-May-2024Nepal legspinner Sandeep Lamichhane will miss the T20 World Cup 2024 after his visa application to the USA was rejected for a second time.His initial application was turned down last week, following which the Cricket Association of Nepal (CAN) and the Nepal government intervened on his behalf, but despite their efforts he was turned down again.”Despite taking necessary initiatives, along with the diplomatic note, from the government of Nepal, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Youth and Sports, National Sports Council, CAN and International Cricket Council (ICC) for cricketer Sandeep Lamichhane’s visit to participate in the 2024 ICC Men’s T20 World Cup in the United States and West Indies, the US Embassy has expressed its inability to give travel permission (visa) to national player Lamichhane to play the World Cup,” CAN said in a statement.The board said it remains committed though to helping Lamichhane secure a visa for future travel to the US.Related

  • Lamichhane lands in West Indies, will play Nepal's last two World Cup league games

  • Netherlands vs Nepal – the one match neither team can afford to lose

  • Lamichhane denied US visa for T20 World Cup

  • Lamichhane acquitted of rape by Nepal court

  • Lamichhane sentenced to eight years in jail for rape

“The US Embassy in Kathmandu and other US consular posts around the world have made a concerted effort to ensure that members of national cricket teams who qualify for the appropriate visa class are able to travel in time to compete in the World Cup,” a spokesperson of the US Embassy in Kathmandu said last week, according to “We cannot comment on individual visa cases as visa records are confidential under US law.”Lamichhane, one of Nepal’s most prominent cricketers, was arrested in October 2022 after being accused of the rape of an 18-year-old woman. He was immediately suspended by CAN. After a trial in January 2024, he was found guilty only to be acquitted on appeal by the Patan High Court in May, because of “a lack of evidence”. CAN allowed him to resume playing cricket with immediate effect.The T20 World Cup this year will be co-hosted by the USA and the West Indies. Nepal play their first game in a Group D clash against Netherlands on June 7 in Dallas, Texas. Their second game is against Sri Lanka in Lauderhill in Florida on June 11. Then they move to the Caribbean to play two games against South Africa and Sri Lanka.

Friendly rivalry promises lots of fire, but weather could well spoil the fun

Blair Tickner will make his Test debut in Mount Maunganui, while Stuart Broad will line up alongside James Anderson

Vithushan Ehantharajah15-Feb-2023

Big picture: Tim Southee, Ben Stokes, and friendly fire

As the New Zealand government declared only the third state of emergency in the country’s history because of Cyclone Gabrielle, the sun shone between intermittent bouts of rain in Mount Maunganui.The site of the first Test between New Zealand and England sits slap-bang in the middle of the Bay of Plenty, one of the six regions covered by the declaration signed at 8.43am by the minister for emergency management, Kieran McAnulty. Yet, conditions allowed the teams to train in the outdoors at Bay Oval, though nets took place in the greenhouse-like indoor area just off the main field.The way in which both teams have adapted to ever-changing conditions seemed to sum up the feeling going into this series between familiar opponents. And yet, while stranded New Zealand players were able to join the main squad two days out from the start of the first Test, their preparations were thrown a curveball with another stress fracture for Kyle Jamieson and the impending birth of Matt Henry’s second child. Nature, one way or another, finds a way.Related

  • Broad in the present on return to scene of past glories

  • Boult overlooked as Jamieson's replacement

  • England's chance to 'show the world how good they are'

  • Robinson not a fan of ping-ball 'gimmick'

Combined with the loss of Trent Boult to franchise cricket, there is a quiet sense of dismay that this first Test of the New Zealand summer is coming around with a bit-part bowling attack and inclement weather. Tim Southee, new in the big chair, might already be lamenting the stress Kane Williamson left.Ticket demands for the day-nighter starting Thursday have been strong, heartening given this was a return to unrestricted crowds after the Covid-19 restrictions in place for the 2021-22 season. But now, there is a nagging sense this match and series could underwhelm.England would feel responsible for making sure that’s not the case, of course, certainly given the prospect of limited playing time in Mount Maunganui, depending on which forecast you believe. After all the revelry of cliff-jumping, golf and barbecues punctuated by cricket, they have switched back on to training hard and spreading the word of the cleansing power of going at 4.77 an over.England panned the pink Kookaburra ball verbally, ahead of maybe doing the same physically. “This pink ball, in these conditions, might be suited to going harder even,” opener Ben Duckett said, and you could see his point. The only problem may be a pitch that only saw the light of day on Tuesday and looked exceptionally green, which is no surprise given the howling winds and rains over the last few days that have prevented the groundstaff from even waving at the surface. Wednesday should allow for some work to go into it.Kane Williamson needs another 39 runs to become New Zealand’s most prolific Test batter•Getty Images

There has been idle chat about forfeiting an innings, which is exactly the kind of pub fare that England are all about. And Southee, as per Brendon McCullum’s estimation, is always willing to push the game on and it wouldn’t be a surprise if this turns into a friendly captaincy duel with Stokes. These two disciples of Baz haven’t made their names by taking backward steps.The pair even hung out during the Hamilton warm-up match when Southee finished a bowling spell and Stokes was chilling on the sidelines. No cricket was discussed, merely catching up and reminiscing about past interactions. The T20 World Cup last October, the previous series between them last June – they did not need to root through the memory bank for particularly long. As far as Test series go, there aren’t many as friendly as this. But make no mistake – the product on the field will be the better for it.

Form guide

New Zealand DDLLL
England WWWWW

In the spotlight: Neil Wagner and Ben Duckett

At 36, Neil Wagner may be more vital than ever for New Zealand. Boult’s decision to step back from Test duty, Colin de Grandhomme’s outright retirement, and Jamieson’s injury mean the bowling attack is going through something of a transition. Regardless of the long- and short-term issues that have arisen, it was probably about time given the age profile of a group that has served New Zealand with the utmost distinction. The task of bowling to England’s batters with a ball that doesn’t move all that much sounds daunting, but Wagner, even with his powers waning, has the requisite attitude to rise to that challenge. Of course, Wagner’s bumper barrages will tide New Zealand over when the ball goes quiet, but the theatre he creates every time he has the ball will be a challenge to the machismo of a top order that has pretty much had it going its own way since coming together. New Zealand need every bit of the Wagner that has 15 dismissals at an average of 22.93 at Bay Oval.Ben Duckett is the man in possession at the top of the order, and rightly so after a hugely impressive return to the Test set-up in Pakistan, six years after his previous appearance. But while his angular, sweep-dominant style was ideally suited to those slow, low pitches, the more seam-friendly challenge in New Zealand could be an important marker ahead of an Ashes series in early-season England, and against one of the most potent pace attacks in the world. In the ODIs in South Africa, Duckett’s low-base cut shot proved his downfall on more than one occasion, and Pat Cummins et al would doubtless be taking notes. His attitude fits the England outlook like a glove, but can his technique prove sufficiently transferrable?

Team news: Stuart Broad back, Blair Tickner set for debut

Injuries and life events mean New Zealand will have two debutants in their XI. Blair Tickner has been confirmed as one of them, but a decision on the other will be made on the morning of the Test after a final look at the pitch. The call-up of Scott Kuggeleijn gives Southee an all-round option to call upon while Jacob Duffy or Ish Sodhi are the full-time pace and legspin alternatives. One imagines Sodhi is the third of the three options given the ball in use and the state of the pitch.New Zealand: 1 Tom Latham, 2 Devon Conway, 3 Kane Williamson, 4 Henry Nicholls, 5 Daryl Mitchell, 6 Tom Blundell (wk), 7 Michael Bracewell, 8 Scott Kuggeleijn/Jacob Duffy, 9 Tim Southee (capt), 10 Neil Wagner, 11 Blair TicknerStuart Broad is set to return and the batting line-up is staying as is from the Pakistan series. Consistency, as ever, is the name of the game, even with a different-colour ball and playing hours (it’s a 2pm start, with the 20-minute break coming first). There was a school of thought that perhaps Olly Stone’s extra pace could be a neat alternative to James Anderson and Ollie Robinson, particularly given the ball can be hard to pick up as the artificial lights take over and bouncers will be necessary once the lateral movement stops. But the best XI will take to the field, no questions asked.England: 1 Zak Crawley, 2 Ben Duckett, 3 Ollie Pope, 4 Joe Root, 5 Harry Brook, 6 Ben Stokes (capt), 7 Ben Foakes (wk), 8 Ollie Robinson, 9 Jack Leach, 10 Stuart Broad, 11 James Anderson2:28

How will England line up for first Test vs New Zealand?

Pitch and conditions

The cyclone has played havoc with preparations for the groundstaff, too, but the conditions were pristine on Wednesday, blue skies, baking sun. The drainage is impressive and the surface is understandably green after so long under the covers. As of 2pm local time, there was a light grey streak through the middle, but Stokes was reticent to judge the pitch on aesthetics outright: “Watching Test matches in New Zealand in the past, [I] don’t think you can look too much into the wickets when they’re green like that.” England played on a greener-looking surface at Hamilton, which produced 775 runs in 151.3 overs across both days. So who knows…

Stats and trivia

  • New Zealand have played three previous Tests at Bay Oval. They won the first two by handsome margins: by an innings and 65 runs on England’s previous visit, the venue’s inaugural fixture in November 2019, and by 101 runs against Pakistan in December 2020. But the most recent produced a shock defeat, by eight wickets to Bangladesh last January.
  • England have not won a single Test in New Zealand for 15 years, dating back to their 2-1 series win in March 2008. Since then they have drawn five and lost two of their seven matches, both by innings to settle each of their last two tours.
  • Anderson and Broad need five more wickets between them to become the most prolific partnership in Test history. Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath claimed 1001 wickets in 104 games together between 1993 and 2007. Broad and Anderson currently have 997 from 132 appearances, having first played together on the 2008 tour of New Zealand.
  • Williamson, in his 91st Test, needs another 39 runs to overhaul Ross Taylor’s mark of 7683 runs to become New Zealand’s leading run-scorer in Test cricket.
  • Stokes needs seven more wickets to reach 200.

Quotes

“It’s been unusual for us as a country. A lot of people going through tough times. Hopefully, the weather can hold off we can get some cricket in. There’s not been lot of international cricket in New Zealand this summer, so hopefully, we can give people something to watch and look forward to.”
“The batting group have got a huge understanding of what they can do now because we’ve let them be free. It’s almost like they get themselves in first and second gear and then all of a sudden they’ll go up to fifth because they see that as an opportunity to pounce and really put teams back under pressure.”

Hobart Hurricanes look to have the strength for title push

They should not be significantly hit by international call-ups with the only question mark being the spin depth

Alex Malcolm08-Dec-2021Captain Matthew Wade
Coach Adam GriffithSquad
Scott Boland, Tim David, Nathan Ellis, Peter Handscomb, Ben McDermott, Riley Meredith, Mitch Owen, Wil Parker, D’Arcy Short, Matthew Wade, Mac Wright, Sandeep Lamichhane (Nep), Caleb Jewell, Joel Paris, Harry Brook (Eng), Josh Kann, Jordan Thompson (Eng), Tom Lammonby (Eng, replacement), Jordan Cox (Eng, replacement), Tom Andrews (replacement)In Joel Paris, Harry Brook, Jordan Thompson
Out James Faulkner, Dawid Malan, Colin Ingram, Will Jacks, Nick Winter, Johan Botha, Keemo PaulLast season
Hurricanes stumbled in the last game of the season. They needed only to beat last-placed Melbourne Renegades to play finals but fluffed their lines, conceding 150 after bowling well early and then crumbled in the chase finishing 12 runs short of their target to miss the finals on net run-rate. Hurricanes were without Matthew Wade for most of the tournament but he was available for the finals and they could have done some damage given they had the talent. A couple of areas they did struggle in was in the spin department with Sandeep Lamichhane playing just 8 games for the season, while only three batters struck at above 130 which left them too far behind the rate in a number of chases, particularly late in the season.International impact
They are set to be relatively unaffected by international duty with Wade now out of the Test side and Ben McDermott, who will miss at least the first game with a groin injury, was not called into the Australia A squad. The only man who will miss some games is Scott Boland as he is part of the Australia A squad early in the tournament but they do have cover in their fast-bowling stocks.Player to watch
Tim David is possibly the most exciting prospect in Australian T20 cricket. He has already played international cricket with Singapore but is an Australian citizen and has made a huge impact in leagues around the world this year, playing in the PSL, the Blast, Hundred, the Royal London Cup and the CPL before spending the second half of the IPL training with Royal Challengers Bangalore. He is the exact prototype Australia is looking for in terms of a middle-order/death power-hitter. He’s a good fielder and can bowl either offspin or medium pace. A big tournament will put him right in the frame for Australia’s T20 side.Key stat
Hurricanes’ main concern last season was their spin department. While their pace bowlers took 60 wickets at 24.96, the spinners took just 20 wickets at 32.90 – the worst in the tournament.

Surrey, Middlesex to stage two-day warm-up in July

Match to take place behind closed doors at Kia Oval in preparation for possible August Championship

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Jun-2020Surrey and Middlesex are set to take the field for the first time this season at the Kia Oval in July, as county cricket inches towards a return in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic.The match is scheduled to be a two-day red-ball encounter, on July 26-27, and is intended as a warm-up fixture for the proposed return of the County Championship in August – potentially in a regional format, comprising teams from the North, South and West, and a final at Lord’s.Though the details of the warm-up match are still to be confirmed, the contest is set to take place behind closed doors at the Kia Oval but with a live stream to broadcast the action.Surrey are one of two counties, along with Lancashire, who chose not to furlough their players during the pandemic, albeit the players – like Middlesex’s – have agreed to a salary reduction during the lockdown.”I’m really excited to hopefully see cricket return to the Kia Oval at the end of July and then for the rest of the season,” said Alec Stewart, Surrey’s director of cricket.Sussex, meanwhile, have emerged as one of the four counties that are understood to prefer a 50-over competition rather than first-class cricket when the season does get underway.ALSO READ: Counties not to face sanctions if they fall under salary collar – PCA chairmanA final decision on the chosen format is expected by July 7 but, speaking to ESPNcricinfo earlier this week, Daryl Mitchell, the PCA chairman, hoped that the differences of opinion would not undermine the plans for cricket’s resumption.”Everyone is preparing as if we’ll be out there early August,” said Mitchell. “There’s still work to be done around the safety aspects and what hotels look like, and what protocols would be put in place for four-day cricket … [but] it’s a case of getting back into it over the next few weeks and once we get that decision players will be able to focus.””We need all 18 counties to buy into whatever competitions we can for the last couple of months of the season,” he added. “I am confident now. More confident than I would have been three, four, six weeks ago I guess. Things are moving in the right direction.”

South Africa complete 5-0 sweep after DLS win

A floodlight failure with the home team 135 for 2 brought an early end to the game after Sri Lanka had been bowled out for 225

The Report by Andrew Fidel Fernando16-Mar-2019It was perhaps a merciful ending, though an utterly frustrating one for spectators at Newlands. South Africa were on course for another big victory, with 91 runs to get – eight wickets and 132 balls remaining – when the floodlights failed. The teams went off the ground and the crowd hoped that the electricians and engineers could rectify the problems, but 90 minutes after play stopped, the umpires had had enough. Play was called off – the lights situation not having improved. South Africa were 41 runs ahead on the Duckworth-Lewis-Stern calculations, and as such, completed a 5-0 sweep of the series.Sri Lanka, perhaps, will be the happier of the two teams about the lights malfunction. Their bowlers did not seem capable of halting South Africa’s advance, though they did at times slow the opposition’s scoring rate. Aiden Markram and Rassie van der Dussen, meanwhile, will be miffed that valuable time in the middle has been denied them. The two had put on a 57-run partnership for the third wicket, with Markram batting particularly well on 67 off 75 balls.JP Duminy, who is retiring after the World Cup, was also deprived of a farewell one-day innings at his home ground.It was with the ball that South Africa won the match, however. Sri Lanka produced yet another insipid top order performance, slipping to 141 for 7 in the 41st over, before a 61-run eighth-wicket stand between Priyamal Perera and Isuru Udana added a sheen of respectability to the innings, pushing them up to 225 all out.But despite the decent finish, Sri Lanka’s total was still modest, given the good batting conditions. South Africa’s attack, hunting as a pack, had been persistent and disciplined – Imran Tahir and Kagiso Rabada picking up five wickets between them. Many of Sri Lanka’s wounds, however, had been self-inflicted as well. Kusal Mendis, who top-scored with 56, was run out for the second time in the series, after a serious miscommunicaton with Priyamal. Angelo Perera and Dhananjaya de Silva departed to soft dismissals as well.Rabada had South Africa’s best figures, taking 3 for 50 – two of those wickets coming in his final over, when Udana, then Priyamal, holed out attempting big legside shots. Through the course of the innings, Rabada had bowled with excellent pace, even if the Newlands track did not offer much movement. Tahir, meanwhile, was as indomitable as usual, taking 2 for 33 in his last ODI on home soil – the sharp-spinning legbreak taking the outside edge of both Oshada Fernando and Angelo Perera’s bats.The Sri Lanka innings had all its usual pitfalls, almost as if they were following some sort of formula for failure. The first wicket fell in the fourth over – Avishka Fernando edging Lungi Ngidi to third slip. Upul Tharanga departed next over, nicking off to Rabada. Oshada Fernando and Mendis attempted to rebuild the innings – slowly – putting on 49 off 83 balls. Once Oshada was out, Mendis tried again with Angelo Perera – playing his first international in almost three years – as they put on 62 for the fourth wicket. But at no point were Sri Lanka able to build a partnership that really put South Africa under threat. After Angelo was out to Tahir, Mendis, Thisara Perera and Dhananjaya de Silva all lost their wickets in quick succession, and Sri Lanka seemed headed for a score of less than 200Priyamal and Udana began their own partnership with caution, not venturing a boundary for 19 balls, before finally Udana walloped a Rabada bouncer through midwicket for four. Through the death overs, the pair were adventurous, hitting three more fours and a six, before Udana was caught at deep midwicket by Tahir, who judged the high chance well. Anrich Nortje finished off the innings, taking 2 for 35.Lasith Malinga bowled well with the new ball, dismissing Quinton de Kock for 6 (the first time he’s fallen for less than fifty this series), while keeping the other batsmen’s scoring in check. But all South Africa had to do was wait out his spell and score off the remaining bowlers, so modest was the target.Markram should have been out on 14, had Oshada Fernando held on to a low chance to his left at short cover, but as it happened, the batsman survived and hit several sumptuous offside boundaries. He passed 50 for only the second time in his ODI career and had just moved to his highest one day score when the teams went off the field. Van der Dussen was on 28 not out.

Rameez propels UAE past Scotland with maiden ODI ton

The middle-order batsman scored an unbeaten 121 and added 125 with Ashfaq Ahmed to help steer UAE to their highest successful chase in ODIs

ESPNcricinfo staff23-Jan-2018
Scorecard Peter Della Penna

Middle-order batsman Rameez Shahzad capped off a superb run of form in the UAE tri-series, producing a career-best 121 not out off 115 balls to lift the hosts to a four-wicket triumph over Scotland, their first win of the tournament.After posting a pair of fifties earlier in the series against Ireland, Rameez kicked on past three figures for the first time in 11 ODIs to lead UAE to their highest successful chase in ODI cricket, besting a chase of 281 against Afghanistan in 2014. Rameez surpassed Andy Balbirnie in the process to become the leading scorer in the tri-series, ending with 258 runs at an average of 86.00.Scotland’s imposing total was set up by fifties from vice-captain Richie Berrington and captain Kyle Coetzer, who opted to bat after winning the toss. The pair added 84 for the third wicket before Coetzer fell for 75 to his opposite number Rohan Mustafa. Berrington carried on to finish with 90 off 95 balls, including another key 76-run stand with George Munsey, who contributed a brisk 47 off 29 balls.But the Scotland innings sputtered after Munsey and Berrington fell and left them six down at the end of the 42nd over. Legspinner Imran Haider snared Munsey before Berrington succumbed to medium pacer Mohammad Naveed and UAE continued to restrict Scotland’s tail, holding them to just 42 runs over the last eight overs.Rameez made Scotland pay for the late-innings lull. After Scott Cameron and Mark Watt struck early in UAE’s chase, Rameez arrived and wrested control back for UAE, teaming with Ashfaq Ahmed for a 125-run third-wicket stand. By the time Ashfaq finally departed for a career-best 92 off 87 balls, UAE’s target had been reduced to 125 off the final 19 overs.Rameez cantered the rest of the way, striking a trio of fours off Cameron at the start of the 40th over to move into the 90s before a single to start the 41st took him to a century off 91 balls. He received the necessary support late in the chase from Adnan Mufti, who made 38 off 29 balls before losing his wicket with just 12 needed off the last 21 balls. A single by Rameez off the first ball of the 50th over clinched victory.The win for UAE took them level with Scotland at two points on the tri-series table, though Scotland officially took second place on the net-run-rate tiebreaker behind winners Ireland.

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