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TT snatched defeat from the jaws of victory...

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  • TT snatched defeat from the jaws of victory...

    ..NSW need 19 to win off last over and TIES the game..going into a bowl off/bat off - one more over....with moronlike field placing by TT's superhero tactician and captain and opting to give his 'strike' bowler Rampaul another go - after conceding 18....ah bway...
    Henriques masterminds unlikely NSW win

    The Report by Sidharth Monga
    September 28, 2011
    Text size: A | A
    Trinidad & Tobago 139 for 6 (Simmons 41, Henriques 2-27) tied with New South Wales 139 for 8 (Warner 38, S Ganga 3-26, Narine 2-26)
    Super Over New South Wales 18 beat Trinidad & Tobago 15 by three runs
    Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
    How they were out



    His four-over spell of 2 for 27 was only the start of Moises Henriques' contribution to New South Wales' win © Associated Press
    Enlarge Related Links
    Matches: New South Wales v Trinidad & Tobago at Chennai
    Series/Tournaments: Nokia Champions League T20
    Teams: New South Wales | Trinidad & Tobago



    On a sluggish track built to suck all skill out of cricket, Moises Henriques found plenty of it to help New South Wales first to an improbable tie and then a win through the Super Over. For the second match in a row, Trinidad & Tobago lost the script after having defended spiritedly for most of the match. Henriques manoeuvred the field - something that was arguably easier than it should have been - in the last over to help NSW get the 16 runs they needed for the tie, and then played around with the same bowler, Ravi Rampaul, some more to score 18 in the Super Over. Lendl Simmons hit a six and a four in the chase, but with four required off the last ball, drilled Steve O'Keefe straight down long-off's throat.
    The tournament is fast resembling different actors acting out the same play with a little improvisation here and there, but to their credit the actors today made it very dramatic. The story for most of the Hyderabad and Chennai games has been: sizzle at the start, struggle with the slowness and lowness in the middle and scramble in the end. Both the teams sizzled to begin with (T&T score 40 in first 5.3, NSW 43 in the first six), both struggled once the ball became soft (T&T managed 21 in the next 5.3 overs, going six overs without a boundary; NSW's next six overs brought 30, and they didn't score a boundary for 8.5 overs). It was the scramble that would decide that match, and T&T's 61 off the last six matched NSW's 50 off their last four to produce the third tie in Champions League history.
    Like all sluggish tracks do, this one in Chennai too took a lot skill out of the equation for about 39 overs. The bowlers couldn't bowl wicket-taking deliveries, but they could stifle the batsmen by bowling slow, stump to stump, and short of a length. The batsmen found it incredibly hard to time the ball. Simmons and Warner didn't face those problems at the top, although Warner did play out a maiden from Samuel Badree. Simmons hit through the line, and Warner punished width as they got their respective sides to good starts.
    O'Keefe's non-spinning delivery in the seventh over started the first-innings turnaround, dismissing Adrian Barath. Sunil Narine's flicked legbreak induced the top edge from Shane Watson in the seventh over of the chase. Mud-wrestling followed in both innings as frustrated batsmen played intemperate shots to lose their wickets. Henriques got Simmons and Darren Bravo, Sherwin Ganga accounted for Warner and Daniel Smith. T&T: 69 for 3 after 11.5, NSW: 72 for 3 after 11.5.
    T&T's scramble began in the 15th over when Steven Smith offered them two long hops, which were hit for fours by Denesh Ramdin. In the same over, Billy Bowden, the third umpire, reprieved Darren Ganga, who went onto add a further 11 off 7. The real game-breaking scramble came through a two-over association between Ravi Rampaul and Kevin Cooper, which brought them 25 runs. It wasn't all skill: two of their boundaries came through pulls through long-on and long-off. Rampaul finished with an unbeaten 15 off 7.
    Rampaul wasn't done with the scramble, though. He would bowl two out of NSW's last three overs, with 36 to defend. He began with a no-ball, a call he contested heatedly. The replays showed his front foot well in, and no replays of the back foot was available. Be that as it may Rampaul came back with a smashing yorker on the free-hit, and followed it up with Simon Katich's wicket in the same over.
    With 16 to defend, Rampaul began the last over with his trusted practice of going round the stumps and bowling yorkers on off and outside off. Henriques wreaked havoc with his head by walking across and flicking the first two past short fine leg. These were two incredible shots: they were not length balls but near yorkers, and he whipped them late in order to miss the fielder. He could only manage a single off the third ball, but trusted Pat Cummins enough to take a couple off the fourth.
    Selected earlier today for the Australian national side to tour South Africa, Cummins made room, got a length ball, and somehow squeezed it between mid-on and midwicket for four. Cruelly it came down to two required off the last ball. Would T&T still offer the tie on the platter? They bowled the last ball with just four fielders inside the circle, but one of them- midwicket - wasn't quite at the edge of the circle. Cummins found that man, and we were going into the Super Over.
    NSW sent the form-man, Henriques, to bat ahead of Shane Watson. T&T persisted with Rampaul, who persisted with bowling round the stumps. He began with a dot, but a poor throw from their worst fielder - Bravo - allowed Henriques a second off the second ball. The way the game panned out, T&T would have taken any other man than Henriques on strike. Henriques hit fours off the next four balls: through such varied areas as midwicket, point, mid-on and fine leg.
    More drama followed just before T&T could bat their Super Over. T&T saw the ball being tossed up to O'Keefe, and wanted to promote Bravo, originally slated to bat at 3. Ranjan Madugalle, the match referee, was alert and wouldn't have any of it. With Bravo still kicking the ground, O'Keefe began to bowl left-arm spin to two right-hand batsmen. With 15 required off last three, Simmons managed to clear a leaping long-on. O'keefe followed it up with a wide. Cummins followed it up with a misfield at square leg to allow a four. Simmons timed the last ball perfectly, but it was pitched just too close to him to allow the elevation. It was a matter of inches in the end.

    Innings Dot balls 4s 6s Powerplay 16-20 overs NB/Wides
    Trinidad & Tobago 56 15 1 40/0 50/3 1/4 New South Wales 49 14 0 43/0 50/5 3/6

    Sidharth Monga is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
    Feeds: Sidharth Monga © ESPN EMEA Ltd.

  • #2
    While Bravo who couldn't make the side blasts Chenai to victory...

    Bravo blasts Chennai Super Kings to victory

    The Report by Firdose Moonda
    September 28, 2011
    Comments: 4 | Login via | Text size: A | A
    Chennai Super Kings 146 for 6 (Bravo 45*, Duminy 4-20) beat Cape Cobras 145 for 7 (Shah 45, Bravo 2-23) by four wickets
    Scorecard and ball-by-ball details



    When the going got really tough, Dwayne Bravo took off for Chennai Super Kings (file photo) © AFP
    Enlarge Related Links
    Players/Officials: Dwayne Bravo
    Matches: Chennai Super Kings v Cape Cobras at Chennai
    Series/Tournaments: Nokia Champions League T20
    Teams: Cape Cobras | Chennai Super Kings



    Chennai Super Kings got their title defence back on track with a chase that covered the spectrum from blue to yellow and all the colours in between against Cape Cobras. Michael Hussey got the pursuit of 146 off to a positive start, but JP Duminy's four wickets wrested the advantage back, and put the Cape Cobras in the pound seat. MS Dhoni and Dwayne Bravo's 43-run partnership helped Chennai recover but Vernon Philander dismissed Dhoni to give the Cobras another sniff. Then, Bravo made a mockery of Dale Steyn, scoring 17 runs off his last over, the 19th of the innings, to paint the Chidamabaram Stadium in the colour of the home team.
    With 23 runs required off the last two overs, Chennai needed someone to launch them over the line, and Bravo took it upon himself to do so. First, he mowed a Steyn slower ball which turned into a full toss over midwicket, and carved the next delivery behind point for four, before playing a classy inside-out cover drive to ensure the Super Kings succeeded in a tricky chase on a slow pitch.
    Hussey set the tone when he picked up from where he left against the Mumbai Indians with an authoritative knock upfront. In M Vijay's company, he put the Super Kings on the right path before Duminy came on to bowl. He started bowling in the Powerplay and did not hesitate to flight the ball, drawing Hussey forward and giving Dane Vilas enough time to complete the stumping.
    Justin Ontong extracted good turn and bounce from his end, and Duminy capitalised on the pressure he was creating. In his second over, Duminy enticed S Badrinath to play a lofted drive straight to short cover. A quiet third over was followed by an eventful fourth in which Duminy got rid of Wriddhiman Saha who swept to deep square leg, and Suresh Raina who played too early and handed a return catch.
    MS Dhoni held himself back and came out at No.6, at a time when the Super Kings needed to play catch-up. Dhoni and Bravo played cautiously for three boundary-less overs against Robin Peterson's crafty spin, Philander's slower balls and Justin Kemp's offcutters. Bravo broke the drought when Philander got his line wrong and allowed the pull to fine leg.
    Duminy then turned from hero to villain by over-running a Dhoni catch at deep cover, and the Cobras' fortunes worsened from that moment. Bravo unleashed a six over extra cover off a Philander slower ball to keep the asking-rate under control. Even Dhoni's departure did not affect his resolve, and he hauled Chennai to their first win.
    The Cobras would have rued not scoring enough runs after being dragged back from a position where they looked set to score over 170. They had a stuttering start, when R Ashwin trapped Richard Levi lbw with his first delivery. Herschelle Gibbs fizzed for a while, but fell after trying to pull a length ball from Doug Bollinger.
    Thereafter, Owais Shah's responsible, yet busy knock and his partnership with Duminy troubled Chennai. The pair complemented each other, with Duminy the energiser and Shah the sage. Albie Morkel removed both in the same over to peg the Cobras back just when they looked set to take off.
    With the pressure building and the Super Kings deploying a series of slower deliveries, some of which were a touch short, the Cobras became edgy. Bravo's variations proved particularly problematic and the innings ended with the Cobras unable to find a boundary off any of the last 29 deliveries. Bravo's real contribution, however, came much later in the piece.

    Innings Dot balls 4s 6s Powerplay 16-20 overs NB/Wides
    Cape Cobras 50 10 3 48/2 30/4 0/9 Chennai Super Kings 51 11 3 47/2 48/1 (19.4) 0/6

    Firdose Moonda is ESPNcricinfo's South Africa correspondent
    Feeds: Firdose Moonda © ESPN EMEA Ltd.

    Comment


    • #3
      I thought of Bravo myself as TT went through this foolishness, giving away matches in the last over, on the last ball too. Bravo is a good death bowler... personally I would have put a slow bowler and not Rampaul...but to concede 4 consecutive fours... in that last over. But hindsight is 20/20.

      In the match v Mumbai Ganga also conceded the two runs... I would have pulled the field in on that last ball. ANyway, armchair critics like me can run wi mout.

      I must give the TT side credit as they did not go there and roll over like Guyana did last year.
      Peter R

      Comment


      • #4
        Not no armchair critic Peter - what was the cricketing reason to give Rampaul the ball after conceding 18 runs in the final over? He was either tired or off. Badree bowled well in his opening spell as well. What was the cricketing reason to have a packed offside field in the super over, leaving acres of space on the onside which was so easily taken advantage off. Why did Rampaul come around the wicket? TT had that match sen up with 3 overs to go and threw it away - totally.

        Comment


        • #5
          poor ravi, i like ravi as player and is bad luck for him dat him join mervyn dillon in that hall of shame .... south africa need six off the last ball of the match in order to win ... mervyn bowls ... south africa wins

          Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

          Comment


          • #6
            Happens a lot..even Courteney get licks in a last over....BUT that should have been Ravi's LAST over for the game....no super over.

            BTW - yu see how Bravo (older one) getting on??

            Comment


            • #7
              his music video yuh mean?

              Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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