New ‘Legends’ cricket tourney to bring back classic bowl-out format

The World Championship of Legends will be played at Edgbaston from July 3-13. (SUPPLIED)
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Updated 25 June 2024
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New ‘Legends’ cricket tourney to bring back classic bowl-out format

  • Broadcaster Mandira Bedi will host event from July 3-13, featuring top former international players

NEW DELHI: The new World Championship of Legends cricket tournament taking place in the UK from July 3 to 13 will bring back the classic bowl-out format reminiscent of early 20-over games.

The tournament takes place at the grounds of Edgbaston and Northamptonshire County Cricket Club in the UK.

The WCL, co-owned by Bollywood icon Ajay Devgn, will feature some of the game’s top former international players.

The decision to adopt the bowl-out method for resolving tied matches harks back to the early days of T20 cricket. This format, where bowlers try to hit the stumps unguarded by a batter, is aimed at making games more exciting for fans.

Harshit Tomar, co-owner of the WCL, said recently that the 2007 game between India and Pakistan, where the format was used, remained one of his “favorite memories, hence we want to revive it and keep it very original.”

Popular television presenter and actress Mandira Bedi will host the event.


India hammer England to book T20 World Cup final with South Africa

Updated 28 June 2024
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India hammer England to book T20 World Cup final with South Africa

PROVIDENCE, Guyana: Left-arm spinners Kuldeep Yadav and Axar Patel took three wickets apiece as India thrashed defending champions England by 68 runs in Guyana on Thursday to set up a T20 World Cup final against South Africa.
England, set a challenging target of 172, slumped to 103 all out inside 17 overs, wrist spinner Kuldeep finishing with figures of 3-19 and the orthodox Patel 3-23.
India, bidding for their first major title since the 2013 Champions Trophy, will now play South Africa — also unbeaten at this tournament after a nine-wicket hammering of Afghanistan in their semifinal — in Saturday’s final in Barbados.
The Kensington Oval clash will also be India’s second appearance in successive global showpiece games after they lost on home soil to Australia in last year’s 50-over World Cup final.
“It’s very satisfying to win this game,” said India skipper Rohit Sharma after his team gained revenge for a humiliating 10-wicket loss to England in the semifinals of the 2022 T20 World Cup.
“We worked really hard as a unit. To win like that was a great effort from everybody.”
Rohit laid the foundations by top-scoring with 57 in a total of 171-7 after his side were somewhat surprisingly sent into bat by England skipper Jos Buttler.
It was the opener’s third fifty of the tournament and second in as many games following his blistering 92 against Australia.
India were 40-2 in the powerplay after Virat Kohli (nine) and Rishabh Pant (four) both fell cheaply.
But a third-wicket stand of 73 between Rohit and Suryakumar Yadav (47), spanning a rain delay of over an hour, turned the tide.
Patel, the player of the match, said: “I knew that the wicket was stopping and had something for the bowlers...Our batters told us the pitch wasn’t easy to hit the ball. We felt it (171) was a good total.”
Defeat meant the only Test side that England had beaten at this event were co-hosts the West Indies, with the title-holders also losing to Australia and South Africa.
“India outplayed us, certainly,” said Buttler. “We let them maybe get 20-25 too many (runs) on a challenging surface that they played well on. They fully deserved to win.
“They’ve got some fantastic spinners. Our two (Adil Rashid and Liam Livingstone) bowled well but in hindsight, probably should’ve bowled Moeen (Ali) in our innings with the way spin was playing.
“But with a good score and their brilliant bowling attack, it was always going to be a tough chase.
Buttler launched England’s reply with a brisk 23. When he attempted to reverse sweep Patel’s first ball, however, he clipped a gentle catch off the toe-end of the bat to wicketkeeper Pant.
Fellow opener Phil Salt was then clean bowled by Jasprit Bumrah’s well-disguised slower ball.
England then saw 34-2 become 35-3 when Patel bowled dangerman Jonny Bairstow for a duck.
Moeen was then stumped by Pant and when Sam Curran was lbw to Kuldeep, England were in dire straits at 49-5 in the ninth over.
Wickets continued to tumble and when Livingstone, the last of England’s specialist batsmen, was run out for 11 after a dreadful mix-up with Jofra Archer, England were all but beaten at 86-8.
Archer struck a couple of defiant sixes but Bumrah ended the match when he had the England paceman lbw for 21 with a low full toss.


Afghanistan now an international cricket force to be reckoned with

Updated 27 June 2024
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Afghanistan now an international cricket force to be reckoned with

  • The country’s men’s team produced one of the shocks of the 2024 T20 World Cup when they beat Australia to reach the semifinals

LONDON: It is a fool’s game trying to predict which matches in a tournament will produce a shock result. If the prediction is wrong, then one is likely to look foolish. If a shock or surprise result occurs, there is retrospective analysis of why it was so surprising and unforeseen. This situation has applied in the 2024 men’s T20 World Cup.

My reaction on waking up, in England, to the news that Afghanistan had beaten Australia was one of shock. Why was I shocked and should that have been my initial reaction? Perhaps it was because I predicted Australia would win the tournament. Perhaps it was because I had underestimated Afghanistan.

The team had lost to India by 47 runs in their previous match, after being thrashed by the West Indies by 104 runs. On this basis it was reasonable to assume that Australia had the upper hand, given that they were on a run of eight consecutive T20I victories, their longest winning streak in the format.

Both of my fellow Arab News podcasters had reported that one of the pitches at Kingstown, St. Vincent, had generated significant spin and had wondered how Australia would cope with Afghanistan’s high-quality spinners. Influenced by pitch reports, Australia opted to select an extra spinner, who was economical but claimed no wickets. Afghanistan’s batting has been patchy during the tournament, relying heavily on its openers, one of whom, Rahmanullah Gurbaz, is the tournament’s leading scorer, the other, Ibrahim Zadran, not far behind.

The team also feature the tournament’s leading wicket taker, Fazalhaq Farooqi, who played for the MI Emirates in the 2024 ILT20. Add in the captain Rashid Khan, one of the world’s leading spin bowlers with almost 150 T20I wickets, and the team has a solid spine. Support to that has not always been consistent but, against Australia, it appeared in the shape of Gulbadin Naib, whose medium pace claimed four wickets for only 20 runs, sparking a collapse of Australia’s middle order.

In that spell, Naib captured the wicket of Glenn Maxwell, who was threatening to win the match for his team. The minds of the Afghanistan players must gone back to Nov. 7, 2023, when they reduced Australia to 91 for seven in the 18th over, chasing 292 to win. A win could have propelled Afghanistan into the semifinals of the ODI World Cup.

However, fighting injury, cramp, dehydration and exhaustion, Maxwell, literally off his own bat, secured victory for Australia, surviving several missed chances in a score of 201. The scars of that loss will have run deep for Afghanistan and the memories must have resurfaced as Maxwell batted on a different level to his teammates. This time, the Afghan players held their nerve, a fine catch accounting for Maxwell, paving the way for a 21-run victory which they celebrated wildly.

Only one match, against Bangladesh, stood in the way of a semifinal place. Even the sceptics were forced to admit that an Afghanistan victory would not be a shock. In a tense, low scoring, rain-interrupted encounter the Afghan team held their nerve to triumph by five runs, although not without controversy.

In the 12th over, with Bangladesh two runs behind the recalculated target score, Afghanistan’s coach was seen on camera asking his players to slow down. Immediately, Naib, fielding at slip, threw himself to the ground, apparently suffering from cramp. He was treated and taken off the field, whereupon rain returned. On resumption of play, Naib then bowled the 15th over, taking a wicket which he celebrated by sprinting around the field.

Commentators were unimpressed. Some have felt that the “spirit of cricket” was impugned. Others have called for the International Cricket Council to invoke a penalty against Naib for “time-wasting” under its Code of Conduct. These include a match-fee fine, suspension points and an in-match five-run penalty.

No action has been taken so far. Afghanistan’s captain appeared irked by Naib’s behavior or, maybe, it was the instruction from the coach. He is Jonathan Trott, a South African-born cricketer who played 127 times for England. In the semifinals, he was faced with plotting the cricketing downfall of the country of his birth. It did not go well.

On a poor pitch, Afghanistan was dismissed for 56 in 11.5 overs, South Africa winning by nine wickets. Until that match, Trott’s star players had performed to the top of their abilities and the supporting cast had done so when required. Two of them, Naib and Mohammad Nabi were part of the squad which joined Division 5 of the World Cricket League in June 2008. The team rose rapidly into Division 2, enabling it to enter the 2009 qualifiers for the 2011 ODI World Cup. Although it failed to do so, one-day international status was granted.

Since then, continued development was rewarded with full membership of the ICC in 2019. One of the requirements to be fulfilled is that of having a funded women’s team with pathway structures in place, participation in at least one ICC women’s World Cup in the previous four years, or feature on the ICC rankings table. This is not being fulfilled.

The women’s team was first established in 2010, playing in only one tournament. In 2020, the Afghanistan Cricket Board awarded 25 central contracts, but the squad was disbanded following the Taliban capture of the country in August 2021 and the subsequent ban on women’s sport. Many of the team’s players are understood to be in Australia.

The Taliban’s different policy toward the men’s team is a recognition that cricket is the country’s most popular sport, holding particular significance amongst Pashtun men. The team’s success offers legitimacy to the regime at home. Other countries’ concerns about human rights are brushed aside. So far, the ICC has adopted soft diplomacy. It can hardly change that now the team is even more successful. Had it not been so, these issues would not be in such sharp profile. How they play out is unpredictable.

Those who did not foresee Afghanistan’s success have been made to look foolish. As if further proof was needed, I revisited a website which offered odds on which teams would reach the semifinals prior to the tournament. Remarkably, the most favored were India, South Africa, England and Afghanistan. Taking heed of that website would have eliminated any mention of shock and Afghanistan in the same sentence. Despite the semifinal loss, Afghanistan’s men’s team are now a force not to be underestimated in future.


South Africa beats Afghanistan to reach the Twenty20 World Cup final, ending a long cricket drought

Updated 27 June 2024
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South Africa beats Afghanistan to reach the Twenty20 World Cup final, ending a long cricket drought

  • Reeza Hendricks hit a six and a four off consecutive deliveries to lift South Africa to 60 for 1 in the ninth over, easily surpassing Afghanistan’s 56

TAROUBA: A long, tortuous World Cup title drought is closer than ever to ending for South Africa after a nine-wicket win over first-time semifinalist Afghanistan at the global Twenty20 cricket tournament on Wednesday.
Marco Jansen and Kagiso Rabada set the foundations for the lopsided victory with destructive opening bursts of pace bowling to have Afghanistan reeling at 20-4 in the fourth over, and eventually all out for a paltry 56.
The South Africans lost just one wicket in pursuit of its first semifinal win at a global men’s limited-overs tournament, with Reeza Hendricks hitting a six and a four on consecutive deliveries to lift South Africa to 60 for 1 in the ninth over.
Hendricks was unbeaten on 29 from 25 balls in an unbroken 55-run second-wicket stand with skipper Aiden Markram, who finished 23 not out.
The South Africans will face either d efending champion England or India in the final at Barbados on Saturday.
“One more step — it’s an exciting challenge for us,” Markram said in a post-match TV interview. “We’ve never been there (in a final) before, and nothing to be scared of.
“It’s an opportunity that we’ve never had and, and we’ll be really excited about that opportunity.”
The South Africans lost six and tied one — against eventual champion Australia in 1999 — of their previous seven trips to the semifinals of a World Cup in either the one-day or T20 formats.
Markram said those stats belonged to the teams that played those matches, and his lineup was full of belief.
Afghanistan captain Rashid Khan won the toss and opted to bat in his team’s first ever appearance in a World Cup semifinal. Everything went South Africa’s way after that.
Jansen (3-16) took wickets in the first and third overs and Kagiso Rabada (2-14) opened with a double-wicket maiden as Afghanistan slumped to 20-4 after 3.4 overs.
The opening pair that had carried Afghanistan so well during the tournament was gone, exposing the middle and lower order to a South Africa bowling attack hitting form at the perfect stage.
Rahmanullah Gurbaz (0) faced three balls before he edged to slip and was out to Jansen in the first over. Ibrahim Zadran (2) was beaten by a Rabada inswinger and bowled on the first ball of the third over.
Anrich Nortje (2-7) chimed in with two wickets as the pacemen continued to rip through the Afghanistan innings before wrist spinner Tabraiz Shamsi took three wickets in 11 deliveries — all lbw decisions to balls keeping low — to finish off Afghanistan for 56 in 11.5 overs.
Azmattullah Omarzai top scored with 10, the only Afghan batter to reach double figures.
South Africa lost only opener Quinton de Kock — bowled by Fazalhaq Farooqi for five in the second over — in the run chase.
“We just wanted to come out in this game and hit our straps, the way we’ve been doing throughout the entire tournament,” Rabada said of South Africa’s bowling onslaught. “We just felt that we needed to continue in that vein.
“And today it just happened for us.”
Asked if this is the team to finally end South Africa’s World Cup drought, Rabada was confident: “We 100 percent believe that this is the team.”
Afghanistan was playing in the last four for the first time, and it entered the match with three of the five leading bowlers in the tournament and two of the top three batters, based on runs scored.
South Africa remains unbeaten at the tournament, but had to endure tough contests and narrow wins over Nepal, Netherlands, Bangladesh and England and only beat West Indies with five balls to spare in the Super Eight stage.
“A lot of our games have been really close and I know there’s a lot of people back at home in the early hours of the morning, waking up and we’re giving them a lot of gray hair!” Markram said. “So hopefully this evening was a little bit more comforting for them.”


Afghanistan hail Lara inspiration in T20 World Cup heroics

Updated 25 June 2024
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Afghanistan hail Lara inspiration in T20 World Cup heroics

  • Afghanistan reached the last four for the first time courtesy of a knife-edge, eight-run victory over Bangladesh
  • Rashid Khan: ‘I think we have proved one person right was Brian Lara, the only person who mentioned Afghanistan will be in the semis’

ARNOS VALE, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines: Afghanistan captain Rashid Khan hailed the inspiration of cricket legend Brian Lara for helping them secure a place in the T20 World Cup semis for the first time.
Afghanistan reached the last four for the first time courtesy of a knife-edge, eight-run victory over Bangladesh on Monday, a win that also saw mighty Australia eliminated.
“I think we have proved one person right was Brian Lara, the only person who mentioned Afghanistan will be in the semis,” said Rashid.
“I think we told him that when we met him in the welcome party. When you get that kind of great, great statement from a legend, as a team, I think it gives you lots of energy.”
Afghanistan will face undefeated South Africa in the first semifinal in Trinidad on Wednesday.
India will tackle defending champions England in the second semifinal in Guyana on Thursday.
Defending a modest total of 115-5 against Bangladesh in their final second round Super Eights match on a bowler-friendly surface, Rashid finished with figures of 4-23.
Naveen-ul-Haq took 4-26 as Bangladesh were dismissed for just 105, chasing a revised target of 114 off 19 overs.
On a night of fluctuating emotions there were also three rain delays which saw various mathematical equations come into play.
Had Bangladesh scored their runs in 12.1 overs, they would have won the match and claimed the remaining semifinal spot.
There was tension after Bangladesh fell behind the asking rate at the end of the 11th over when Afghanistan all-rounder Gulbadin Naib went down with cramps just as the threat of more rain appeared.
Rashid insisted the incident was not a device to keep his side ahead of the run rate should the match be halted permanently.
“He had some cramp, I don’t know what happened to him and I don’t know what’s going on in social media but that doesn’t matter,” said the captain.
“It’s just a field injury which comes and then we haven’t lost any overs, the rain came and we just went off, it’s not something like brought a massive difference in the game.
“We came back on field after five minutes and there was no massive difference. For me, it’s just like a small injury, you have to take some time.”
South Africa made the semifinals with seven wins in seven matches but they have been pushed to the limit.
Against Nepal in the opening round, they won by just one run.
However, South Africa have defeated Afghanistan in their only two other T20 meetings — by 59 runs at Barbados in the 2010 World Cup and 37 runs in Mumbai six years later.
“It’s a big achievement for us as a team and a nation being in the semifinals and with the cricket we have played in the whole tournament I think we deserve it,” added Rashid who played in that 2016 defeat, where he went wicketless for 51 runs.


Rohit stars as India beat Australia to reach T20 World Cup semifinals

Updated 24 June 2024
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Rohit stars as India beat Australia to reach T20 World Cup semifinals

  • India captain’s dashing innings — he faced just 41 balls, including seven fours and eight sixes — was the cornerstone of a total of 205-5
  • Australia eventually finished their reply on 181-7, with left-arm quick Arshdeep Singh taking 3-37

GROS-ISLET, Saint Lucia: Rohit Sharma led from the front with a blistering 92 as India beat Australia by 24 runs in St. Lucia on Monday to seal their place in the semifinals of the T20 World Cup.
The India captain’s dashing innings — he faced just 41 balls, including seven fours and eight sixes — was the cornerstone of a total of 205-5 made after he lost the toss.
Australia eventually finished their reply on 181-7, with left-arm quick Arshdeep Singh taking 3-37.
India will now face defending champions England in Thursday’s semifinal in Guyana.
Defeat meant Australia’s fate was no longer in their own hands.
Afghanistan, who produced a stunning upset in beating Australia by 21 runs last time out, will qualify for the semifinals if they defeat Bangladesh later Monday in the concluding Group One game of the Super Eights.
Australia lost David Warner for just six when the veteran left-handed opener was undone by a full-length delivery from Arshdeep that he could only edge to Suryakumar Yadav at slip.
Travis Head, whose superb century crushed Indian dreams of a 50-over World Cup final win on home soil last year, kept Australia in the hunt with a well-made 76 off 43 balls.
His second-wicket stand of 81 with skipper Mitchell Marsh looked to be turning the tide.
But Marsh was brilliantly caught one-handed on the boundary by a leaping Axar Patel off Kuldeep Yadav for 37.
Left-arm wrist-spinner Kuldeep then bowled dangerman Glenn Maxwell for 20 with a superb ‘wrong-un’ on his way to fine figures of 2-24 in his maximum four overs.
And when Head holed out off a superbly-disguised slower ball from paceman Jasprit Bumrah, Australia were all but beaten at 150-5 in the 17th over.
Earlier, India star batsman Virat Kohli holed out for a five-ball duck off Josh Hazlewood, with Tim David taking a fine running catch over his shoulder.
But fellow opener Rohit then cut loose. He was particularly severe on Mitchell Starc, the only change to the Australia team following their upset defeat by Afghanistan.
He hit the left-arm fast bowler for 29 runs in a third over where he struck four sixes — two in successive balls over extra-cover, a monster hit over deep midwicket and a top-edged full toss over the wicketkeeper.
But with Rohit threatening the first hundred of this tournament, Starc bowled him with an excellent yorker.