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Haggett takes three to reduce Glam

Kent’s sole winter recruit Calum Haggett bagged 3 for 38 runs toensure the hosts made the most of a rain interrupted opening day with Glamorgan.

12-Jun-2013
ScorecardMarcus North top-scored for Glamorgan•Getty ImagesKent’s sole winter recruit Calum Haggett bagged 3 for 38 runs toensure the hosts made the most of a rain interrupted opening day with Glamorgan.Haggett, who joined having undergone heart surgery barely 18 months beforehand,enjoyed two useful spells from the Nackington Road End after Glamorgan hadelected to bat in overcast conditions.Kent, who dropped England Lions spearhead Matt Coles for personal reasons,included on-loan Durham seamer Mitchell Claydon, but it was Haggett and CharlieShreck who made good use of the new ball.Shreck saw chances go down at first and third slip during a naggingly accurateopening burst, leaving Haggett to enjoy two breakthroughs in the opening 10overs. Haggett had Will Bragg caught behind byGeraint Jones when he shuffled tentatively forward to feather acatch to the wicketkeeper and make it 10 for 1. While Shreck toiled without success from the Pavilion End, Haggett celebrated asecond scalp when Ben Wright shouldered arms to a delivery that held its line topeg back off-stump.Former Surrey skipper Stewart Walters then joined up with Australianleft-hander Marcus North to add an attractive 60 inside 20 overs for the thirdwicket.On a pitch that appeared to be easing, neither man looked in trouble as actingKent skipper Jones introduced first-change seamers Darren Stevens and Claydon. Neither looked effective during their respective stints and it came as nosurprise when Jones reverted to his opening attack half-an-hour before lunch.The move paid almost immediate dividends when Walters wafted at a widehalf-volley from Shreck to be caught behind five minutes from the interval.With the St Lawrence floodlights on and rain forecast, Glamorgan’s North movedsmoothly through to 46 with three boundaries to his name until he was given out caught at the wicket off Haggett. He appeared puzzled by thedecision as he grudgingly departed.Two rain breaks and drizzle either side of tea served as a pre-cursor to theweather that followed and by 5pm umpires Steve Garratt and Neil Mallender hadlittle option but to abandon play for the day.

Sri Lanka hold their nerve to reach semi-final

A victorious Sri Lanka will play in Cardiff on Thursday. A humbled Australia will start pondering the Ashes, and the state of disrepair their cricket has fallen into

The Report by Daniel Brettig17-Jun-2013
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Mahela Jayawardene was in dazzling form, caressing his way to an unbeaten 84•Associated PressA victorious Sri Lanka will play in Cardiff on Thursday. A humbled Australia will start pondering the Ashes, and the state of disrepair their cricket has fallen into. Led by Mahela Jayawardene’s silken unbeaten 84, Sri Lanka stuttered into a Champions Trophy semi-final against India by defeating a collective whose captain Michael Clarke watched disconsolately from The Oval balcony.Their slim chances of qualifying long since expired, Australia offered a last gasp via Clint McKay and Xavier Doherty, who added 41 for the final wicket. They were only separated by a blinding return catch from Tillakaratne Dilshan, whose exultant celebrations underlined the anxiety that had crept into a team who looked comfortable winners for most of the journey.Once Jayawardene had lifted Sri Lanka to 253 for 8 after an uncertain beginning, passing 11,000 ODI runs on the way, Australia’s chances of qualifying became largely theoretical. India in their pomp might have been a chance to reach 254 in 29.1 overs, but not a team that had failed to top 250 in two previous matches and been distracted by all manner of off field woes, from Clarke’s fragile back to David Warner’s choices of drinking spots and punching bags.This left Angelo Mathews’ team to ride out a brief spell of hitting from Glenn Maxwell, a doughty rearguard from Adam Voges, and a pesky last stand by the final wicket pair of McKay and Doherty, who conjured the second best partnership of the innings. As in India earlier this year, this served mainly to expose the appalling lack of application shown by many of the batsmen.Australia’s troubles were best summed up by their stand-in leader George Bailey, who dozed off at the wrong moment and found himself run out, helping to end a Champions Trophy defence that never really began. Apart from the emergence of James Faulkner they have precious little to show for the past two weeks.Sri Lanka’s innings had flirted with mediocrity in the face of some diligent bowling until Jayawardene’s delayed arrival, which signalled a late innings surge. Lahiru Thirimanne had been promoted ahead of Jayawardene at an uncertain 20 for 2, and the switch allowed the senior man to make merry in the later overs against the older ball after Thirimanne composed an important, steadying 57.Given the scenario confronting them, Australia’s batsmen were forced to play on instinct, and Shane Watson’s cover drive from the first ball of the innings made for a promising portent. But as has become the norm Watson flattered to deceive, bowled in the second over when making a hare-brained attempt to cut Nuwan Kulasekara off the stumps.Phillip Hughes showed himself adept at edging past the bails, twice gaining boundaries in those fortuitous circumstances. But the use of only half the bat did not suggest permanence, and it was no great surprise when he glided Kulasekara into Kumar Sangakkara’s gloves.Having come in at No. 3, Maxwell offered entertainment, cracking five boundaries and one six in the manner that earned him his exorbitant IPL contract. But Sri Lanka always had Lasith Malinga to use in case of emergencies, and he duly yorked Maxwell in his first over after the Victorian had swung once too often.Bailey has been a middle order resuscitator of sorts in the two previous games, but the team has not responded fruitfully enough to his leadership. He was to slip up badly here, dawdling in mid-pitch when trying to pinch a leg bye and finding himself run out at the non-striker’s end by Kulasekara’s direct hit.The innings then petered out in a manner sadly familiar to those who have watched Australia away from home in recent months. Only Doherty and McKay gave the impression they genuinely cared to win the contest, something not so surprising when observing the recent record: they have not won overseas in an international match in any format this year. Quite apart from the problems unearthed by Warner’s Birmingham misadventures, this is no trend to take into an Ashes series.Overcast skies and a desire to know his eventual target had encouraged Bailey to send Sri Lanka in. Mitchell Johnson’s first two deliveries of the match were poor; the first clattered to the backward point boundary, the second scuttling to fine leg off the pads. But his third was straight and too quick for Kusal Perera, who was clearly lbw.Sangakkara hinted at the genius that had guided Sri Lanka to a stirring chase against England on this ground last week, but found himself tied down by McKay’s persistent line and subtle movement. Having already chanced a desperate single, Sangakkara was offered a fraction of extra width and lashed out, but managed only to slice a drive to Maxwell.At that moment Australia could envision a slim target, but Thirimanne was sent in to steady the innings in Dilshan’s company, leaving Jayawardene in reserve. A serviceable job was done, gaps found every now and then the Australian bowlers were not gifted any wickets. It took Doherty to split them with a ball that straightened just enough to take an edge, Watson diving alertly to his right at slip.Mathews played a halting innings in Jayawardene’s company before losing his off bail to a nicely pitched delivery from Faulkner, but Dinesh Chandimal was busier and more effective in a fifth-wicket stand of 65 in 56 balls. The Australians did not bowl too much that was loose, but were left to marvel at Jayawardene’s knack for manipulating the field as the score mounted.In what is becoming a pattern as familiar as Australian defeat, the wicketkeeper and agitator Wade became embroiled in a profane joust with Jayawardene. Ninety-nine Sri Lankan runs from the final 13 overs meant the Australians could start thinking less about niggle and more about the Test matches to come.

All-round Mosaddek stars for Bangladesh

Mosaddek Hossain produced a superb all-round display with a century followed by three wickets to help propel Bangladesh Under-19s to a 38-run win against England Under-19s

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Aug-2013
ScorecardMosaddek Hossain produced a superb all-round display with a century followed by three wickets to help propel Bangladesh Under-19s to a 38-run win against England Under-19s. The home side suffered their second successive defeat after their 46-run loss to Pakistan on Tuesday.The visitors amassed 286 for 4, propped up by Mosaddek’s unbeaten 110 off 113 balls as he struck nine fours and a couple of sixes. He also added 156 for the third wicket with opener Sadman Islam, who made 86 off 126 balls. Tom Barber was England’s most successful bowler on the day, picking up two wickets.The home side’s reply was going smoothly until Mosaddek’s offspin caught them napping. He collected three wickets, including that of captain Ben Duckett who made 56. Haseeb Hameed top scored with 67 off 96 balls while Will Rhodes smashed three sixes in his 32, but it was not enough. Seamer Rifat Pradhan also took three wickets, though he was slightly expensive.Bangladesh take on Pakistan in the next match of the tri-series on Friday, at Market Harborough.

Lalit Modi likely to get life ban from BCCI

The BCCI is set to ban former IPL chairman Lalit Modi for life in a Special General Meeting in Chennai on September 25

ESPNcricinfo staff02-Sep-2013The rise and fall of Modi

2005 – Becomes one of the youngest BCCI vice-presidents

2007 – Announces the franchise-based IPL and Champions League T20

2008 – The sale of eight IPL franchises fetches more than $720m, and the first season proves immensely popular. Modi becomes the most high-profile cricket official in the world

2009 – Modi is defeated in the Rajasthan Cricket Association election but retains his BCCI post as he is also on the board of the Punjab Cricket Association

2010 – Modi reveals the new Kochi franchise’s share-holding pattern, triggering a set of controversies that lead to his suspension after the third IPL season. He is forced into exile in London

2013 – Likely to receive a life ban from the BCCI after a disciplinary committee files its report

The BCCI is set to ban former IPL chairman Lalit Modi for life in a Special General Meeting in Chennai on September 25. The SGM will act upon the report filed by a special disciplinary committee constituted to look into various charges related to financial irregularity against Modi.The committee, comprising BCCI vice-president Arun Jaitley, former IPL chairman Chirayu Amin and BCCI’s finance committee chairman Jyotiraditya Scindia, had filed a 500-page report in July after investigating charges against Modi, who was suspended minutes after the conclusion of the IPL 2010 final.Despite the board being divided over president N Srinivasan’s role in handling the spot-fixing scandal that rocked IPL 2013, the SGM is set to unanimously ban Modi from BCCI. “The committee has suggested a life ban and almost everyone is set to back the recommendation,” a BCCI official told ESPNcricinfo. “Despite the existing differences, the meeting should get over quite quickly.”SGMs, which strictly discuss a pre-fixed agenda, require a three-fourth mandate for a decision to be ratified. This effectively means that 24 votes would be enough to get Modi banned in a house of 31 votes, including 27 full members, National Cricket Club in Kolkata, Cricket Club of India in Mumbai, All-India Universities and the president’s vote.Following the revelations of irregularities in the bidding process and ownership patterns of certain franchisees, the BCCI had laid down several charges against Modi and appointed a committee of Jaitley, Amin and then BCCI president Shashank Manohar. Following Modi’s charges that Manohar harboured a personal bias against him, an SGM in July 2010 had inducted Scindia into the committee in place of Manohar and also ratified the charges against Modi.If Modi is handed a life ban at the SGM, his only route back to cricket administration in India will be through the courts.

Court delays BCCI meet on Modi

The Patiala House Court has stayed the BCCI’s SGM on September 25, when the board was supposed to ban former IPL chairman Lalit Modi for life from all BCCI affairs

Amol Karhadkar21-Sep-2013The Patiala House Court in New Delhi has stayed the BCCI’s special general meeting (SGM) on September 25, when the board was supposed to ban former IPL commissioner Lalit Modi for life from all BCCI affairs. A district court judge issued the stay order after an application filed by Modi.In response, a BCCI official told ESPNcricinfo their legal cell will challenge the order on Monday and clarify the “gross misrepresentation” of facts made to the court on Modi’s behalf.”The plaintiff (Modi) has prima facie shown the notice of the SGM has been issued without proper authority,” the judge noted. “He has also shown that he shall suffer irreparable loss which cannot be compensated in terms of money by the report of the Disciplinary Committee being considered in an unauthorised manner. The balance of convenience thus lies in favour of the plaintiff. The defendants are thus hereby restrained from holding the SGM scheduled for 25.09.2013.”Modi’s counsels Swadeep Hora and Abhishek Singh argued before district judge Ruby Alka Gupta that the SGM notice, circulated by BCCI secretary Sanjay Patel on September 2, was illegal since Patel’s appointment was not in accordance with the BCCI constitution. Since only the president of the BCCI can fill up a mid-term vacancy of a principal office-bearer, Patel’s appointment by a working committee meeting with the president having stepped aside was illegal, they contended.The counsels said that since N Srinivasan had stopped discharging his duties as BCCI president on June 2 and Patel was appointed on June 10, the notice of SGM “issued ‘on the instructions’ of the President. The said notice is thus stated to be illegal, non-est and contrary to the rules and regulations of the BCCI.”The BCCI’s disciplinary committee had found Modi guilty on eight different charges of “various acts of indiscipline and misconduct” after conducting an investigation that lasted almost three years. The charges, relating to irregularities in various financial and administrative matters of the IPL, including the sale of franchise and media rights, were pressed by the BCCI in 2010 soon after Modi’s swift and dramatic exit from the league he founded.

Late strikes set up sumptuous third day

Though the crowds in Lahli have not got to see a Sachin Tendulkar special yet, they have already witnessed two days of cracking cricket as control of the game swung wildly from one side to the other

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Oct-2013
Scorecard
File photo – Zaheer Khan got the ball to reverse both ways in his spell of 4 for 59•BCCIThough the crowds in Lahli have not got to see a Sachin Tendulkar special yet, they have already witnessed two days of cracking cricket as control of the game swung wildly from one side to the other. Despite a series of shifts in momentum, the teams were fairly evenly placed after two days, setting the scene for a challenging Mumbai chase – including, fans will hope, a famous Tendulkar effort – on Tuesday.Mumbai had clearly had the better of the first day, finishing only 34 behind Haryana and still had six wickets remaining, but their batting was clueless against the snaking deliveries from medium-pacer Joginder Sharma, who picked up his first five-for in nearly three years.Joginder’s gentle medium-pacers wouldn’t be something most batsmen would worry about, but in the first hour on a green track, he was deadly, finishing with 5 for 16 in 11 overs. Ajinkya Rahane and Aditya Tare, two heavy run-scorers, were dismissed off successive deliveries in the fifth over of the day, and suddenly Mumbai were no longer the team on top. It took some hitting from the nightwatchman Dhawal Kulkarni for Mumbai to huff and puff to a two-run lead as Joginder had a series of batsmen nicking behind to the keeper or the slips.Haryana opener Nitin Saini’s 25th birthday didn’t quite go to plan as he was caught behind off a rearing Zaheer Khan delivery for 9. There were no more early wickets for Mumbai, though, as Sunny Singh unleashed a series of crisp boundaries to make a 78-ball 63. Opener Rahul Dewan was less adventurous but stuck around, working his way to 44.Even after those two were dismissed, there was no collapse as Haryana quietly stretched their advantage to reach 186 for 4. Offspinner Jayant Yadav, who didn’t get to bowl, was promoted to No. 5 and he was instrumental in them reaching that position, but the innings soon unravelled.Zaheer was getting the old ball to reverse, moving it both ways, and left-arm spinner Vishal Dabholkar also posed plenty of problems. Ajay Jadeja, who came in at No .7, poked and prodded for 20 deliveries before edging a catch to second slip to get a duck. Wickets tumbled almost every over and Haryana were soon 206 for 9, and in danger of being bowled out before stumps. Harshal Patel hit consecutive sixes off Dabholkar and took the innings to the third day.The lead is now 222, not out of Mumbai’s reach but not a straightforward one either. Their mighty batting line-up has a task on its hands.

Panesar makes Essex move permanent

Monty Panesar’s future has been resolved with Essex revealing his has signed a two-year contract.

ESPNcricinfo staff31-Oct-2013Monty Panesar’s future has been resolved after Essex revealed he has signed a two-year contract.Panesar, who endured a troubled 2013, spent the final months of the season on loan at Essex and took 14 wickets in six County Championship matches.Currently in Australia on England’s Ashes tour, Panesar, who was courted by several clubs, has now made his move to Chelmsford permanent and will seek to rebuild his career.”I loved playing for Essex last season,” Panesar said. “In the short time I was there, I was made to feel very welcome, both in the team and around the club.”I will always remember how the supporters and members gave me a heart-warming round of applause when I first came on to bowl at Colchester last August. It helped me to feel respected and loved as a cricketer after experiencing a challenging time in my life.”I am determined to play my part in inspiring the team to be successful in all competitions. I want to help the club build towards the kind of success they enjoyed in its glory days under legendary captains Keith Fletcher and Graham Gooch.”I love the ‘family feel’ of the club, and value the role Essex has played in helping me move towards my best, and gain selection for this winter’s Ashes Series.”Panesar’s tumbled into obscurity last season having only months before played a vital role as England claimed a famous series victory in India. His form for Sussex disappeared and his attitude was questioned. Panesar’s issues came to a head on a now infamous night out in Brighton when he was arrested for urinating on a nightclub bouncer. He was subsequently sacked by Sussex.But a fresh start at Essex did not prove the end of his indiscretions and he was handed a suspended County Championship ban for “potentially threatening and intimidating behaviour towards a member of the opposition”.Despite his increasing baggage, Panesar was selected on England’s Ashes tour and welcomed the chance to resurrect his international career, saying, “It’s an incredible boost I needed as a cricketer and as a person, after a chapter in my life I’m ashamed of.”If Essex can return Panesar to his best, he will prove a most valuable asset as they try to return to Division One of the County Championship after a narrow failure in 2013. They have lacked a quality spinner for a number of years and Panesar has the potential to fulfil the role.”We are delighted that Monty has decided to join our Club,” Essex chief executive Derek Bowden said. “He liked his time here at the end of last season and we enjoyed having him. He was on top of our list for new players and it’s great to finalise his signing in good time for next season”

North steers Warriors with hundred

Last time England were preparing for a Gabba Test, Marcus North was one of the incumbents in the Australia team, but this time around he has had to settle for being one of the most in-form domestic batsmen in the country

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Nov-2013
Scorecard
Marcus North scored his second hundred of the Sheffield Shield season•Getty ImagesLast time England were preparing for a Gabba Test, Marcus North was one of the incumbents in the Australia team, but this time around he has had to settle for being one of the most in-form domestic batsmen in the country. On the first day of Western Australia’s match against South Australia at the redeveloped Adelaide Oval, North scored his second hundred of the Sheffield Shield season as the Warriors reached 6 for 269 at stumps.The redevelopment of the ground enticed 6974 spectators through the gates, the most seen on a Sheffield Shield day in Adelaide since day five of the 1995-96 final, and they witnessed a competitive day’s play on which the South Australia captain Johan Botha collected 4 for 71. But it was North, relishing his new role as an opener, who really made a statement by reaching 110 and racing to the top of this year’s Shield run tally.The Warriors won the toss and acting captain Shaun Marsh chose to bat, and although they made an encouraging start with a 62-run opening stand, spin caused them problems as the innings wore on. All six wickets that fell on the first day went to the slow bowlers, with the legspinner Adam Zampa contributing two wickets alongside the four picked up by Botha.Cameron Bancroft (26) and John Rogers (37) helped North push Western Australia to 1 for 156 before the wickets started to fall a little more regularly, and Marsh was unable to push his Test credentials, lbw to Botha for 4. His brother Mitchell Marsh was lbw to Zampa for 2, but at stumps Western Australia had steadied through Ashton Agar, who was unbeaten on 39, and the wicketkeeper Sam Whiteman, who was on 30.

Bowlers keep Bengal on top

Bengal are looking for yet another three points after the bowlers toiled manfully on a lifeless track to reduce Services to 261 for 6 at stumps on the third day in Palam

Amit Shetty30-Nov-2013
ScorecardFile photo: Ashoke Dinda was the pick of Bengal’s bowlers•ESPNcricinfo LtdBengal are looking for yet another three points after the bowlers toiled manfully on a lifeless track to reduce Services to 261 for 6 at stumps on the third day in Palam.The possibility of Bengal getting the final four wickets looks more realistic than Services getting 171 runs to claim the lead with Soumya Swain (56*) being the only established batsman standing, going into the final day.For Bengal, Ashoke Dinda picked up 3 for 75 in 24 overs, but motivation was hard to come by on a track where some of the bouncers were gathered by wicketkeeper at an ankle height. Off-spinner Saurashish Lahiri capped his first-innings century with two crucial wickets of Yashpal Singh (11) and Vishnu Tiwari (71).The highlight of the Services innings was a 131-run partnership for the sixth wicket between Tiwary and Swain. The duo batted for nearly 40 overs to frustrate the Bengal bowlers, who had reduced the home team to 123 for 5 immediately after lunch. Tiwary lasted 150 balls and hit seven fours while Swain, who batted with a hand injury, faced 175 balls hitting six fours. Tiwari was the more aggressive of the two, using the sweep shot often and to good effect against the spin duo of Lahiri and Iresh Saxena.Having staged an impressive recovery, Tiwari tried to play a slog sweep off a Lahiri delivery that was flat and straight and was as plumb as it could get, which handed the initiative back to Bengal late in the day.The day’s play could be divided into two parts: Till an hour after the lunch session, Bengal were in complete command on a pitch that had nothing for the bowlers. The turn on offer was very slow, the edges were not carrying to the slip cordon but Dinda and Shib Paul plugged away like workhorses.Pratik Desai and Anshul Gupta added 65 for the first wicket before Dinda struck with a short ball outside off. Anshul jabbed at it and the resulting lob was pouched by Anustup Majumdar at gully. Desai was in an aggressive mood, striking eight fours in his half-century, but was lucky to survive when Rohan Banerjee at second slip dropped a dolly off Paul’s bowling. As if to celebrate the reprieve, Desai drove the bowler through covers soon after.But an eventful over from Dinda – the 21st of the innings – brought about Desai’s end. The first ball was pulled by Desai to mid-wicket boundary. Dinda followed it up with a fuller length and Desai’s drive bisected the slip cordon and sped to the boundary to signal his fifty. An angry Dinda then followed it up with another bouncer which Desai tried to hook and the skier was collected by Paul at short fine leg.Nakul Verma didn’t stay long at the wicket as his nervous prod was snapped up by Majumdar at silly point. At 89 for 3, Services’s two best batsmen Rajat Paliwal (25) and Yashpal Singh (11) batted for the next 10 overs before an inspirational piece of stumping from Wriddhiman Saha saw the back of Yashpal.Lahiri invited Yashpal to go for a drive but the batsman had misread the length and in the process lost balance of his back leg. Saha whipped the bails off in a flash as Services went into lunch at 122 for 4. Just after lunch, Dinda swayed away from his usual short-full ploy as he got one to pitched on middle and move a shade to peg back Paliwal’s off-stump.At 123 for 5, Tiwari and Swain joined hands to build a partnership that yielded positive results for the next three and half hours before one poor shot undid all the hard work.

Anderson hits fastest ODI century in mismatch

Corey Anderson bludgeoned the West Indies bowlers to score the fastest ODI century, off just 36 balls, eclipsing the record of 37 balls set by a 16-year-old Shahid Afridi in 1996

The Report by Kanishkaa Balachandran01-Jan-2014
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsCorey Anderson broke Shahid Afridi’s record for the fastest ODI ton•AFPA record that stood for more than 17 years was finally broken on New Year’s Day in 2014. Corey Anderson bludgeoned the West Indies bowlers to score the fastest ODI century, off just 36 balls, eclipsing the record of 37 set by a 16-year-old Shahid Afridi in 1996. Anderson finished unbeaten on 131 and such was his savagery that he even managed to overshadow Jesse Ryder, who motored to the sixth quickest ODI century of all time. The pair powered New Zealand to a scarcely believable 283 in just 21 overs.This, after there were fears of yet another washout. The chase turned out to be a mere formality as West Indies limped to 124 for 5, having lost the game in the head the moment they walked back to the dressing room for the short innings break.Irrespective of the format, this was the fastest ever international century. While it’s true that the grounds in New Zealand are not the biggest, many, if not all, of Anderson’s hits would have cleared the rope at any venue across the world. He blasted 14 sixes, two behind Rohit Sharma’s world record of 16 and New Zealand’s sixes tally stood at 22, another world record. India hit 19 sixes in the same match in which Rohit smashed 209 against Australia, but that was off 50 overs. New Zealand managed all those in just 21. West Indies’ bowling figures were similarly remarkable, for the least expensive economy rate was 11, by Nikita Miller.Anderson and Ryder, both powerful left-handers, were proving hard to distinguish in the middle. Dwayne Bravo inserted New Zealand in what he thought was good bowling conditions but New Zealand batted like they were on a different planet. Length balls were punished, the fuller ones scooped and the shorter stuff biffed square of the wicket. The margin for error was so little that the exasperated attack failed to find the right lengths to contain the batsmen. Toe crushers seemed the only solution, but there were hardly any.Walking in at the fall of Ross Taylor’s wicket in the eighth over, Anderson scored his first boundary by pulling Bravo one bounce to deep midwicket. He then sent Sunil Narine several rows over deep midwicket and it was the first of several hits in the region. There was a competition for spectators, wearing orange t-shirts, to bag $100,000 for taking one-handed catches. Anderson and Ryder gave the crowd plenty of chances, but none of the spectators could win the jackpot.Even the umpire had to take cover when an Anderson biff off Jason Holder scorched to the straight boundary. Two bowlers who bore the brunt of Anderson were Sunil Narine and Ravi Rampaul, who conceded four sixes in an over each. Against Narine, Anderson employed the slog and cleared the area between deep midwicket and long-on. One of those landed several yards behind the last row of spectators and another brought up his fifty, off just 20 balls.Rampaul was punished for bowling too full and he gave away four consecutive sixes, including one that looked like a mis-hit, but still had enough mileage to clear long-off. Narine and Rampaul conceded 24 and 26 respectively and the prospects of scoring the fastest ODI century was more than a reality, as Anderson ended the Rampaul over needing 16 off seven balls. Given his manic scoring rate, the world record was seriously under threat.Afridi had never heard of Anderson

Shahaid Afridi admitted that he had never heard of Corey Anderson until he broke his record for the fastest one-day hundred.
“I never heard his name and early morning my nephew told me about his feat and I sort of said the first news of 2014 is of my record being broken,” he said.
“I must say it’s a great achievement and Anderson deserves all the praise. Records are meant to be broken and I knew it would be broken someday. But I sort of wanted this record to stand until I retire because it has been a big pride for Pakistan and for me and whenever my name comes the record is mentioned.
“Now Anderson’s name will come but I am sure with the advent of Twenty20 cricket this record will surely be bettered in the future. I had never expected it to be broken by a new player. I thought the way Gayle batted and hit sixes or the way Warner bats, they were favourites to break my record.”

Consecutive boundaries took him to 93 of 33, the second of those, off Lendl Simmons, being an ungainly slash to backward point. He ended that over on 95 off 35 and nothing less than a six was needed off his next ball to seal the record. As it happened, the planets were aligned at the right moment and Anderson brought up the record with a massive slog over long leg off Miller.Anderson broke the very record that announced Afridi to international cricket – his first innings for Pakistan, in his second match, at the Nairobi Gymkhana against a Sri Lanka attack that had only months earlier helped win them the World Cup. Afridi’s knock ended at 101 but Anderson didn’t stop there. An audacious slap over cover off a Bravo slower ball that looped ever so slowly outside off, was symptomatic of the control he had over the bowling.In the midst of Anderson’s carnage, it was easy to forget the significance of Ryder’s century, more for himself. This was only his second match for New Zealand since the horrific incident outside a Christchurch pub last year where he was assaulted and hospitalised. Ryder was miraculously back on his feet before the domestic season and won his place back in the ODI squad.The initial pyrotechnics from Brendon McCullum set it up for Ryder to swing his arms. True to his style, Ryder’s shots were effortless. He was able to loft through the line with ease, pull the seamers nonchalantly when they bowled too straight. Half-volleys were pierced wide of the packed off-side field and a six over long-off brought up his fifty off 23 balls. Three boundaries in an over off Bravo helped him speed towards his century and he got there with a single to short fine leg in the 19th over. It was also the sixth-fastest ODI ton, off just 46 balls.The match was a no-contest by the end of the fourth over, with West Indies tottering at 19 for 3. There was no choice but to play in fifth gear, and in the process fell to fielders in the deep. Ryder, who could do nothing wrong, too helped himself to a wicket. Bravo helped himself to 56, but it was inconsequential – his side was totally outclassed.With the series tied at 1-1, the teams head to Nelson, another popular holiday destination. They will hope for better weather. Those who braved the cold in Queenstown and stayed on were truly rewarded.

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