Dutch too good for Scots

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Posted on 23rd March 2007 by admin in Group A Match Reports


Billy Stelling and Ryan ten Doeschate spurred the Netherlands to a landmark victory over Scotland in their World Cup Group A match on Thursday.

The Dutch won by eight wickets, their first victory over Scotland in the three one-day internationals the countries have contested and only their second win in 14 World Cup matches.

Scotland, who were put in to bat, were dismissed for 136 in 34.1 overs.

The Netherlands replied with 140 for two to win with 26.1 overs to spare.

Medium pacer Stelling claimed career-best figures of three for 12 from eight overs, while Ten Doeschate scored an unbeaten 70.

Both teams were aiming to win their first match at the tournament following crushing defeats by champions Australia and top-ranked South Africa.

The South African-born Stelling’s previous best performance was the three for 41.

Stelling owed some of his success to Luuk van Troost, the Dutch captain, who dropped himself from the team to make room for the seamer.

Stelling might have taken more wickets had Daan van Bunge, who was hit for six sixes in an over by South Africa’s Herschelle Gibbs last week, not dropped two slip catches off his bowling.

The Scotland batsmen paid the price for injudicious strokeplay on a pitch that offered movement off the seam with the new ball.

That made the Netherlands’s collection of trundlers look lethal as they reduced Scotland to 15 for four in the seventh over.

Ryan Watson and Neil McCallum steadied the innings with a stand of 24 for the fifth wicket before McCallum and Colin Smith added 38 runs to push Scotland past the half-century mark.

Glenn Rogers, top-scorer with 26, and McCallum (24) were the only batsmen to cross the 20-run mark.

Kiwis cruise on Vincent, McCullum

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Posted on 23rd March 2007 by admin in Group C Match Reports


Canada – in common with most of the associate nations thus far – chose to insert their fancied opponents on winning the toss. And for a few brief moments, enjoyed parity with New Zealand, as their opening seamers used the sultry, steamy early morning conditions to make Lou Vincent and Stephen Fleming poke and prod outside their off stump.

The first two overs yielded only two runs and, with a little bit of luck, should have yielded a wicket, maybe even two. Vincent, who is yet to impose himself on this tournament with the bat, was particularly uneasy around his off stump to the huge swing generated by Anderson Cummins.

His survival seemed touch and go until he decided to plonk his front foot out and have a go. Cummins was carted over extra-cover – and the stranglehold was broken.

Even so, the Canadians bowled the first 10 overs close to perfectly – the Kiwis could manage just 41 runs in that period, and it wasn’t for lack of trying. From then on, though, it was pure mayhem as the Kiwis batted with an eye on the record books.

Vincent got his touch and timing back; Fleming gritted it out early on but once the change bowlers arrived to provide their regular diet of half volleys, the Kiwi skipper prospered through drives and patented flicks off the pads. A back injury that forced Umar Bhatti to retire didn’t help the Canadian cause; his replacement, Henry Osinde, went for 28 off his first two overs and from there on, the Kiwis grew remorseless.

Fleming and Vincent added 142 for the first wicket in a tick over 21 overs before the former fell to an exceptional catch at short mid on. Future opponents are apt to take note: Fleming tends to whip off his pads rather more often than most and just occasionally, fails to keep the shot down.

Vincent had worked up a good head of steam by then, though, and scarcely missed a beat in his increasingly assured shotmaking; Peter Fulton took over from Fleming and started off like a rocket. The partnership for the second wicket built up a considerable head of steam, and from that point on it was just a procession of batsmen lining up and teeing off on the hapless bowlers and increasingly shoddy fielders.

While Vincent proceeded to his century at one end, Scott Styris came out and bludgeoned seven fours in a blink; Jacob Oram scorned the ground and went airborne thrice in an unfinished cameo, and Brendan McCullum, finding the bowling in total disarray, took pitiless toll with five huge sixes and a four that got him to the fastest ever 50 in World Cup history, off just 20 balls.

Canada, with the ball and in the field, was steam-rollered into submission; the relentless assault was so much of a downer that towards the end, the Canadian fielders were dropping outfield catches as if the ball were too hot to hold on to.

363 was never chaseable, but skipper John Davison, for the space of 9.4 overs, put the frighteners on the Kiwis with an assault that fetched him 50 off just 23 balls, and rocketed Canada to 52 after 5 overs, and 73 at the end of nine, before an attempt to hit a Mason bouncer ended up as a looping skier held, with evident gratitude, by the bowler himself.

In course of that assault, Davison – with Geoff Barnett playing a sublime second fiddle – underlined the dictum that a bowler is only as good as you let him be. The other day, Mason was metronomic, landing the ball on a dime, using millimetric movement either way to tie the batsmen up, and forcing errors with his nagging accuracy.

Today, confronted by a batsman prepared to glide forward and drive with breathtaking power through the covers or over the straight, or rock back and swing out on the on side, the metronome broke down, the accuracy went for a toss as Davison blasted 36 runs off 22 deliveries from the paceman, including 8 breathless fours. At one point, as the batsman creamed four successive boundaries, the ice-cool Mason of the other day was reduced to mouthing some very audible obscenities.

Darryl Tuffey, getting a bowl in this Cup for the first time, fared no better – 16 runs came off 9 deliveries, including one towering six and a thunderous four through the covers.

Once Davison left, the Kiwis got back into their groove in the field. The Canadians continued to bat well, with Barnett, Ashish Bagai, Ian Billcliff, all batting with considerable composure and good skill. However, the run rate, which at the height of the Davison blitz was a tick over 10, could not be maintained; the required run rate, which had been brought down to 6.38, began climbing again, and the Kiwis spread the field out and settled down to choke the opposition.

From then on it was mathematical: the pressure climbed, the Canadians succumbed. This phase permitted Vettori another long bowl; the bowler who went through the 2003 World Cup with two wickets to show for his efforts doubled that tally in his previous game, and added two more here. It also allowed Vincent another opportunity to showcase his lightning swift reflexes – his strike rate on run outs is fast eclipsing anything Ricky Ponting ever did.

To their credit, though, the Canadians gave the Kiwi bowlers a longer workout than they would have hoped for, with the lower order proving unusually sticky. With Shane Bond to blast wickets out, the bowling seemed just that tad underwhelming; Canada should sufficient courage, and cricketing skill, to go past their highest ever score in World Cups (on a day when the Kiwis posted their highest ever World Cup total).

They came within 4 deliveries of lasting the full 50 overs, but against that, Dhaniram retired hurt and did not come out to bat, as Canada ended on 249 giving the Kiwis a win by 114 runs, and an unbeaten record in the group.

Jayasuriya century fires Sri Lanka to easy win

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Posted on 22nd March 2007 by admin in Group B Match Reports


Hindsight is a beautiful thing – and if it is someone else’s cock-up that you can see in your rearview mirror, it’s even better.When doing its homework ahead of today’s key game against Bangladesh, Sri Lanka likely noticed a few things: one, that Bangladesh depends on a slew of slow left arm spinners to apply the choke after the seamers have done their stuff and two, that in the game against India, the Bangla spinners could weave such tight lines mainly because India hobbled in the initial overs, never making any attempt to take singles or otherwise proactively push the two lead seamers off their line and length.

On being inserted by Bangladesh at the Queen’s Park Oval, Trinidad, Sri Lanka sought to learn from India’s mistake, and went hard at Mashrafe Mortaza and Syed Rasel. Both openers were beaten, even embarassed, on occasion; both openers should, given a smidgen more luck for Bangladesh, have been out early.

Two Jayasuriya edges flew at catchable height through the second slip region; in the 4th over, Upul Tharanga took off as if he had heard the starter’s gun at the Olympic 100 meters final and Rasel, fielding on the follow through, missed the stumps with Tharanga yards out of his ground.

Rather than worry about the seaming ball or the near mishaps, the two openers threw their bats hard at anything even remotely in hitting range, and ensured that the Bangladesh bowlers did not have the luxury of bowling their favorite lines and lengths.

It was only in the 15th over that Bangladesh finally grabbed an opportunity: Mohammad Rafique dropped one short outside off, Tharanga rocked back and punched and Aftab, at backward point, timed his jump perfectly, plucking the ball one handed from overhead while fully airborne. Tharanga was not at his most convincing in the 26 off 37 knock; his idiosyncratic calling on quick singles created at least four run out opportunities during the first wicket stand that were missed.

Jayasuriya was his usual self, flat batting cuts, hoisting flicked drives over the infield and, when occasion afforded, smoking cut-drives through the covers off either foot. Like Tharanga, he too looked edgy early on, survived his share of edges and run outs, but kept hitting away anyway, and, as is usual with him, soon found his range, power and timing.

He was coasting along when Mahela Jayawardene sent him back on an attempted run; the batsman turned awkwardly and appeared to have injured/twisted something in the knee region – he limped away, in evident pain, with 83/77 to his name, 52 of those runs coming off six fours and four sixes.

While Kumar Sangakkarra played in his usual languidly stylish fashion, Jayawardene focussed on finding a measure of form, and produced a patchwork quilt of an innings. For the most part, he seemed unsure of whether to go forward or back; often he was caught on top of the crease, in an indeterminate position, he seemed to struggle to work the bowling, especially the spinners, off the square.

Every now and again, though, he would unfurl a lovely hit , down on his knee, bat scything through the hitting arc, and powering the ball a long way over midwicket. Those shots, however, masked considerable uncertainty; two lapses also extended his tenure beyond its natural course. In the 29th over, Rafique tossed one up, Jayawardene looked to go inside out over cover but didn’t hit it too well, Bashar timed his jump superbly and got his hand to it, but then failed to cling on, with Jayawardene 24/50 at the time.

An over later, Jayawardene stayed back looking to cut Saqibul Hasan, but only managed to edge it behind. On this occasion, the umpire turned down the ferocious appeal.

In the 36th over, Jayawardene came down to Hasan, tried to go inside out, and either checked his shot, or was foxed by a ball that held up a touch. He ended up chipping the ball, off the toe of the bat, to the fielder at long off, for the softest of dismissals. On paper, his 46/70 looks halfway decent; break it down, though, and you found 44 dot balls in there. Rafique in particular tied him up – of 32 deliveries bowled to the Lankan captain, 23 were unscored of.

Sangakkarra is at his best when he is batting unhurriedly; once he has to shift from his languid style to the frenetic thrash of the slog, he tends to look not so good. In the 45th over, he swatted at Rasel and was lucky to be put down, Bashar again the culprit. Off the very next ball, he went for another swat, straighter this time, and Tamim Iqbal held at long on (56/55; Lanka 261/3).

Any doubts about Jayasuriya’s fitness were laid to rest when he walked out to resume his innings – the lure of a looming century was apparently too much to resist. And the way he ran a second run at Olympic speed, his knee is absolutely fine, as is the rest of him.

A flicked six to get thgings stated, a paddled four as follow up, a mishit hook, then a waltz down the track to power the ball over wide long on, and the century – his 24th – was his. He celebrated by carting the hapless Razzak over long off. Jayasuriya was lucky, shortly after his return to the crease, to be given not out when he missed with an attempt to reverse sweep; one more such attempt, however, ended up in the hands of short fine leg (109/87; 300/4).

Chamara Silva was his usual busy self, starting out slowly, creaming a six over extra cover as his second scoring shot, then motoring on through a mixture of big hits and intelligent pushes and flicks into the outfield. As the innings wound down, he opened out – the shot of the match had to be a superb, almost Viv Richard-esque, flicked six off an attempted yorker by Mortaza.

Sri Lanka ended on 318/4 – a totally professional performance, fired at the top by Jayasuriya and at the end by Chamara Silva with Sangakkarra playing backbone.

Bangladesh on the day suffered on two counts: the first, that Jayasuriya never gave their pacemen time to settle and, equally crucially, that their fielding and catching, brilliant against India, could not recapture that fine rapture.

There were some spectacular saves and catches – the moment of the innings, for me, was the diminutive Mohammad Ashraful, right on the line at midwicket, going up like a dolphin and, while a good two feet or more off the air, getting a hand to the ball, and retaining enough presence of mind to realize that if he came down with ball in hand it would be six, and to palm it into the field of play before touching down. But such moments of brilliance were punctuated with some ordinary moments as well, and the dropped chances and run outs cost the fielding side dearly, diluting the pressure the bowlers, especially the spinners, brought to bear.

On balance, this is Sri Lanka’s game by a mile; the point of interest in the second half will be to see if the three teens at the top of the Bangla batting lineup, and the unpredictable Ashraful, can put on a feisty display against the Lankan array of pace and spin.

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