MCC committee supports umpire referrals

The referral system did not see a single decision overturned during the English season © Getty Images

The MCC World Cricket Committee has called for an extension of the player referral system used in the Friends Provident Trophy during the English season into Test cricket with more use to be made of the technology available.It recommended a continuation of the current system whereby two appeals against umpiring decisions are allowed per innings by both the fielding and batting sides. However, unlike the ECB experiment where only a ‘clear of obvious mistake’ could be over-ruled by the third umpire the cricket committee wants the TV official to be able to make his own decision with the help of more sophisticated technology.It said that Ultra Motion cameras – the extra-slow replays – should always be available to provide evidence of thin edges and bat-pad catches or lbws.During the Friends Provident Trophy the third umpire could only use standard replays to form his decision, and no decisions were overturned, but the committee wants the introduction of Hawk-Eye into the process, although adds its accuracy would have to be independently verified first. During a recent meeting in Cape Town the cricket committee met with the makers of Hawk-Eye who guaranteed the accuracy of the system to within 5mm.The MCC has offered to assist with the increased costs of the cameras for the trial period, but also concluded that the trials should take place in a Test series, where the highest quality of technological presence is available.The committee felt that the game should make use of Hawk-Eye to assist in the tracking of deliveries for lbw decisions up to the point of impact with the batsman, but that the predictive path technology, currently used on television to predict where the ball might have gone thereafter, should not be used by the third umpire.But they added that other technology, such as Snickometer and Hot-spot, should not be used for initial trials although didn’t rule out an introduction in the future.”The committee feels that the player challenge system could have a positive effect on the spirit of the game,” said a statement. “A batsman who gets an obvious edge on a ball but is given ‘not out’ may be more inclined to walk in the knowledge that he would certainly be given out by the third umpire, if the fielding side made a challenge.”The committee recognised that to dispute an umpire’s decision is contrary to the Spirit of Cricket but felt that the system is nonetheless worth trialling when utilised in tandem with the extended availability of technology to the third umpire. However, the trial must be conducted in such a way as to assist the umpires in every possible way and all challenges to umpiring decisions in the trial must be made in a way which maintains the umpires’ dignity and authority over the game.”The format and success of the World Twenty20 was also praised, but the committee warned of the dangers of increasing the number of matches played and feels the current level set by ICC – three home games in a summer – should remain.However, they reiterated their view that some teams play too much Test and ODI cricket, adding: “Twelve Tests is considered a reasonable limit and the maximum number of games in a one-day international series should be five. The committee is worried that players will increasingly suffer from tiredness and injury as a result of their increased schedules, as well as having no time to play in their own domestic cricket. “

The captain who wasn't

Back in action: Shaun Pollock has been miserly in the ODI series after missing out in the Tests © AFP

I’m bringing Polly back
Although Shaun Pollock was dropped in favour of younger bowlers in the Tests, he remains integral to South Africa’s attack when it comes to ODIs. Two nights back, in a high-scoring game, he finished with figures of 10-2-30-0. And it was back to business as usual today: he might have been lucky with the bounce for Kamran Akmal’s wicket but it pitched in a faultless area. He finished with 10-1-29-1 and little wonder he feels happier in this format.Are you really a fast bowler?
Fast bowlers rarely make good fielders, hidden away at fine leg or third man. The likes of Brett Lee, Mitchell Johnson and James Anderson are changing that notion, and on the basis of his catch today, the unlikely name of Charl Langeveldt could be added to that list, if only temporarily. With a figure not as lithe and lean as the aforementioned, Langeveldt raced after a skier from Shahid Afridi from short fine-leg. He approached the deep square-leg boundary where, over his shoulder, he latched on while also falling over. Catch of the day, hands down.The captain who wasn’t … but was
Younis Khan never satisfactorily explained why he turned down the Pakistan captaincy but when Shoaib Malik went off the field after the 10th over of the innings, Pakistan had a dilemma on their hands. Salman Butt is the official vice-captain provided he’s in the playing XI. Mohammad Yousuf was an option, as was Afridi. Pakistan eventually turned to Younis, so often the stand-in during the Inzamam-ul-Haq days. Such was the immediate burst of enthusiasm and energy from Younis into the side, and so much did he seem to enjoy it, you wondered why he turned it down in the first place? fingers
Pakistan surely isn’t the worst fielding side in the world. However, judging by tonight’s display, they should not have many contenders to the throne. While the ground fielding left much to be desired as the home side relaxed following the early breakthroughs, Gul, who was mysteriously placed in the covers, let a Smith aerial drive through his palms. Next over, an AB de Villiers mistimed flick and an Abdur Rehman mistimed dive made that two dropped chances. Afridi, normally one of the safest in the side, grassed a caught-and-bowled off Smith before Misbah-ul-Haq’s dive to his weaker hand not only resulted in yet another dropped catch, but four additional runs for the South African captain. And there was still time for Misbah to misjudge an Albie Morkel skier at square leg. With five dropped catches, a few going through the legs and a couple of run-out chances being missed, it was surprising to see Shoaib Malik take the winner’s cheque. And if you thought that was that for Smith’s luck …A start to remember
As Gul ran in to open the bowling for Pakistan, much rested on his shoulders to provide the early breakthrough. Gul duly obliged. As his swinging delivery crashed into the stumps off the inside edge of Smith’s bat, Pakistan thought they had the perfect start. Only for Asad Rauf, the umpire, to extend his left arm and signal a no-ball. As the free hit was delayed due to movement by the sight screen, Smith crouched and pondered. A single taken and Herschelle Gibbs, centurion in the last match, had his first ball miss the bat and crash into his pads after yet more sight-screen delays. Gul, dejected after the reprieve he offered Smith, was clearly ecstatic to see the back of Gibbs.

Hoggard and Bopara star amid injuries

Sri Lanka Board President’s XI 298 for 9 dec and 77 for 8 (Hoggard 5-25) lead England XI 134 (Bopara 47) by 241 runs
Live scorecard

Ravi Bopara starred with bat and ball © Getty Images

Matthew Hoggard demonstrated his imperturbability in the face of a bowling crisis, while Ravi Bopara rose to the occasion with both bat and – less expectedly – the new ball, as England’s cricketers turned their fortunes upside down on a frenetic second day at the Nondescripts Cricket Club in Colombo.At the tea break, England were bracing themselves for embarrassment. Their batting had imploded for 134, less than half the 298 for 9 on which their opponents had declared overnight, and to make matters worse, they had been reduced to a solitary fit fast bowler in Hoggard. With Steve Harmison already receiving treatment for a back spasm, James Anderson reported soreness in his left ankle while warming up in the innings break and took no further part in the day.And so Hoggard did what he has done so often in the course of his 64-Test career, and hoisted the entire burden of the attack onto his own perpetually stooped shoulders. First, he inflicted Upul Tharanga’s first failure in three innings by bowling him for 5, then he bagged three further wickets in four balls – Tillakaratne Dilshan edged low to Owais Shah at slip, Jehan Mubarak was trapped lbw for a second-ball duck, and Chamara Kapugedera fended his first delivery to Paul Collingwood in the gully.In between whiles, Bopara, maintaining a brisk line and length, picked up a bonus wicket as Malinda Warnapura played across the line to a straight one. Hoggard then wrapped up a fine spell by removing the attritional young keeper, Kaushal Silva, with a thin nick to the keeper, and finished with the superb figures of 9-3-25-5.Only the opener, Mahela Udawatte, showed any measure of control. He had negotiated his way to 45 from 83 deliveries before Bopara, who had earlier completed the run-out of de Silva, found the thinnest of edges through to Matt Prior. He was the eighth man out, and with Lokuarachchi in hospital, England needed just one more breakthrough to wrap up the innings, but Welegedera and Amerasinghe made it through to the close.It was entertaining cricket, but it wasn’t quite what England had had in mind when Michael Vaughan and Alastair Cook had walked out to open their innings at the start of play. This was meant to be a day in which the top-order gained valuable time in the middle ahead of next week’s first Test at Kandy. Instead Vaughan fell for a duck, losing his off stump to a beauty from the left-armer Sujeewa de Silva, to set the tone for a day of batting collapses.Ian Bell was the next to go, after a chaotic 16-ball innings in which he was dropped at slip on 1 and caught at square leg on 3 off a no-ball. de Silva made it third time lucky when he grazed the inside edge of a loose defensive stroke, before his fellow left-armer, Chanaka Welagedera, inflicted another failure on the out-of-form Kevin Pietersen. He was pinned lbw for 1.Cook looked in fluent form for his 35, until he missed a sweep at Kaushal Lokuarachchi and was given out lbw, but Owais Shah at No. 5 looked anything but. With Bopara enhancing his claims for a Test spot with every passing minute, Shah required 34 balls and more than an hour at the crease before he recorded his first run, and was eventually bowled through the gate for 26 as he drove without conviction at Ishara Amerasinghe.The pair had at least added an important 54 for the fifth wicket, but Bopara was the one to make his opportunity count. He survived one life on 17 when Lokuarachchi dropped a tough caught-and-bowled chance – so tough, in fact, that he was forced to leave the field with a broken finger. He picked off four fours in the course of his innings, including a pair of pulls off de Silva, and a half-century was there for the taking until he drove uppishly to short cover with only the tail for company.England’s tail, once again, did not cover itself in glory. Prior managed 10 from 27 balls before edging Kapugedera to first slip, while the remainder didn’t manage a single run between them. Hoggard and Anderson were both bowled for ducks, and Harmison didn’t come out to bat. The last four wickets fell for 11 runs in 20 balls and Muttiah Muralitharan will be licking his lips.

Ottis Gibson … the one who got away

Ottis Gibson oversees an England training session © Getty Images

But for the difference of a few days, Ottis Gibson might well now be in Barbados, overseeing the preparation of the West Indies team for the forthcoming tours of Zimbabwe and South Africa as head coach. Instead, the widely travelled former Barbados and West Indies allrounder leaves South Africa on Monday for the Test series in Sri Lanka as the officially appointed bowling coach to the England team.Gibson has been in South Africa for the past two weeks on his first assignment since the confirmation of his full-time contract with the England and Wales Cricket Board. It is a one-on-one project with Steve Harmison aimed at getting England’s leading fast bowler, literally out of action since July with injury, technically and physically ready for the three Tests in Sri Lanka.As Gibson explained it during a net session at the Wanderers Stadium, England got in with their proposition days before he was to make a presentation to the West Indies Cricket Board in support of his application for the head coach vacancy.He first forwarded his interest and his CV to WICB cricket operations officer Tony Howard back in June and was subsequently asked to make a formal presentation on October 19. By then, following South African Allan Donald’s departure, he had been assigned to the England job on a temporary basis for the separate tours of Sri Lanka, for five ODIs in early October and for the forthcoming three Tests.”Things went very well in the ODI series in Sri Lanka which England won for the first time,” Gibson said. “I’d worked with the head coach Peter Moores before so he knew what I am capable of doing. He told me he wanted me to stay on.”Acquainted with his well-publicised interest in the West Indies job, the ECB moved quickly and submitted a permanent contract on his return from Sri Lanka. “The decision was whether to take it or wait for something else,” Gibson stated.By the time he went back to Barbados, with his young son, for a week’s holiday following the initial Sri Lankan trip, his mind was made up. There was no longer any point in pursuing the presentation to the WICB which ultimately named Australian John Dyson as head coach.”The England offer was what was on the table and I accepted within a day of it being put,” Gibson added. “I got back in touch with Howard and told him what was happening from the England side and that was that,” he explained. “They [WICB] didn’t indicate whether they wanted me for the job or anything like that, just that it was my decision to make.”While he was “absolutely delighted” to be with an England team that is “on the up”, with several promising young fast bowlers to work with, Gibson was convinced that there was still enough talent in the West Indies for him to have had a go at lifting them out of their lengthy decline.”When I was in Barbados, a lot of my friends told me I had done the right thing to take the England job, given the state of West Indies cricket,” he said. “I made my decision but I wouldn’t have put in for the West Indies in the first place if I didn’t believe that, with the right people around me, I could make a difference.”Gibson, looking as lithe and athletic as a 38-year-old has any right to, enjoyed a dream all-round season with Durham in the County Championship. He earned the prestigious Professional Cricketers’ Association Player-of-the-Year award on the votes of the players, and was beseeched by Durham to stay one last season.But he has no qualms about moving into coaching. “Durham’s success [winning the one-day title and finishing second in the Championship] and my own made you feel that you could go on for another year but you had to be realistic,” he said.In spite of his record – ten wickets in an innings against Hampshire, 80 wickets at an average of 20.85 overall, mostly from swing bowling in the high 80mph range, and 576 hard-hitting runs at 27.52-Gibson said he had to appreciate he was 38 and “not getting any younger”.Durham was the last of his many stops as player. Apart from two Tests, 15 ODIs and two A-team tours with the West Indies, he also represented Barbados, Border Gruiqualand West and Gauteng in South Africa and Glamorgan and Leicestershire prior to his two seasons with Durham.”The truth is that an opportunity like this, to be involved with an international team, might not come around again and I’ve always wanted to go out and prove myself as a coach,” he noted. A few days later and he might well have had the chance with the West Indies.

McKenzie to lead South Africa A against West Indies

Neil McKenzie has replaced Boeta Dippenaar as captain of the South Africa A squad © AFP

Neil McKenzie, the Lions middle-order batsman, will captain a 12-member South Africa A squad to face West Indies in a four-day tour match starting on December 19.The A side will be looking to complete a double against visiting national teams after their 85-run win against the New Zealanders in November.However, their captain in that match, Boeta Dippenaar has not been selected for the game against West Indies after he stated his unavailability because of examinations. McKenzie had a good outing against the New Zealanders, scoring 182 and 34.Lonwabo Tsotsobe, the Warriors left-arm seamer who has impressed in the ongoing SuperSport series, has been rested at the request of Cricket South Africa’s (CSA’s) High Performance Centre. His place has been taken by right-arm fast bowler Monde Zondeki, who will be hoping to make an impact with his re-modelled bowling action.The national selection committee, headed by Joubert Strydom, also named two separate South Africa Composite XIs, comprising promising amateur and franchise players, to face Zimbabwe in the second and third matches of their Super Sport Challenge series.Zimbabwe have a 1-0 lead in the three-match series after their 10-wicket win in Potchefstroom in November.Zimbabwe are playing as a seventh franchise in the South African domestic structure for the current calendar year, as part of an initiative taken by the CSA to improve their cricket, but will not be taking part in the SuperSport series as it is already underway.South Africa A
Neil McKenzie (capt), Morne van Wyk (wk), Justin Ontong, JP Duminy, Gulam Bodi, Vernon Philander, Monde Zondeki, Johan Botha, Freidel de Wet, Charl Langeveldt, Robin Peterson (12th man)South Africa Composite XI (for second four-day match in Paarl)
Rusdi Jappie (Titans), Blake Snijman (Lions), Benji Hector (capt) (Cobras), Shaun Liebisch (Northerns), Wayne Madsen (Dolphins), Shane Burger (Lions), Wendell Bossenger (Diamond Eagles), Con De Lange (Cobras), Saidi Molongo (Dolphins) , Alan Kruger (Diamond Eagles), Brendon Reddy (Titans), Pepler Sandri (Cobras)South Africa Composite XI (for third four-day match in Kimberley)
Justin Kreusch (Warriors), Mohammed Akoojee (Diamond Eagles), Adrian McClaren (Diamond Eagles), Riaan Jeggels (Warriors), Pieter Koortzen (Diamond Eagles), Jean Symes (Lions), Wendell Bossenger (capt) (Diamond Eagles), Thandi Tshabalala (Diamond Eagles), Juandre Coetzee (Diamond Eagles), Sinethembu Mjekula (Warriors), Basheer Walters (Warriors), Frikkie Holtzhausen (Diamond Eagles)

England promise aggression after wake-up call

Ebony Rainford-Brent, one of England’s standby players for the Ashes trip, says the team are heading Down Under with more aggression after being shocked by the pace of the game’s development. England have been training at Loughborough over the winter, and will come out with a plan to be really positive.”We’re looking a lot more aggressive, a lot more attacking,” she told Surrey Cricket. “Australia and the Kiwis are really aggressive, they’ll bowl bouncers and hit over the top. The women’s game is coming on really quickly and I think that was a bit of a wake-up call for us as well.”We had to put our foot down and get more aggressive. We’re all really fired up. The girls are bowling well, really on top of it. The girls are feeling good, the coaches are feeling good. We’re ready to get off the bowling machines and get onto the grass.”Rainford-Brent would love to join them in February if she gets the call-up as she is fighting fit at the moment. She has been playing as a batsman because of a serious back injury, but it has not affected her recently, and she feels strong. In fact, the problem has had an unexpected benefit: improved batting as she has been concentrating hard on that discipline.”The winter’s been really good. I’ve not been bowling, so I’ve had long words with the coaches what I need to achieve as a batter. I think I’m coming on and understanding my game. I’ve not had any problems at all [with my back]. I’ve been doing loads of gym work. I’ve not had any problems, feeling really strong.”But whether she’s part of the action or not, she can sense a real momentum with England at the moment. “Hopefully we will have a good series and hopefully retain the Ashes. We want to hold on to that. We need to hit the ground running. We really want it. It’s the first time we can feel we’ve got the upper hand. If we win out there it would be an amazing win.”Meanwhile, the women’s squad has had a boost with the news that British fashion designer Paul Costelloe will supply their official formal wear. For formal occasions a suit with white trim and the ECB logo embroidered onto the left breast pocket will be complemented by a white cotton shirt. For more casual occasions, navy blue linen trousers have been chosen to be worn with a navy and white striped top.A white linen jacket completes the look. England women’s captain Charlotte Edwards commented: “It’s fantastic. The whole look gives us an identity as a team and both outfits are of really high quality.”

Brown eyes Zimbabwe Test return

Robin Brown sees a bright future for his players and a Test return in the near future © AFP
 

Zimbabwe’s route back to Test cricket may not have been finalised just yet, but their coach Robin Brown feels the day his side play a Test match again may not be as far away as people imagine.Despite putting up some late resistance, Zimbabwe were ultimately beaten comfortably, by an innings, in a four-day match against the Patron’s XI in Karachi. However Brown, who took over from Kevin Curran as coach in September last year, believes there are enough positives to draw on not just from this match, but other results in recent months.”Obviously, we’re very disappointed at not scoring enough runs and the result,” he said after the match. “Every match is a learning curve for us and is an opportunity to learn about different situations and experiences in matches, how to handle them, how to adapt. I’m happy with the way the guys performed.”Zimbabwe voluntarily suspended themselves from Test cricket in 2006 following concerns that their side wasn’t competitive enough at the top level, but according to the Future Tours Programme (FTP) they are due to host India for two Tests and three ODIs in May. Though the ICC has to take a decision on their status before they can play Tests again, Brown felt progress had been made.”We’ve had some good results in South Africa before this and we take positives from here as well. Test cricket is much harder of course, but we are getting useful experience and I don’t think we are too far away from competing on the Test stage,” he said.Brown was also confident that once Zimbabwe become a Test nation again, there is enough talent domestically for them to once again become a competitive side. “There is the depth of talent there. Schools cricket is very strong, the academies are up again and the U-19 sides are doing well. Guys in the team today have progressed from U-19 cricket.”Now when guys in the team go back to play first-class cricket in Zimbabwe, standards will definitely improve. Cricket will not die in Zimbabwe but it will improve.”

All-out attack: Gilchrist's top six

He says he didn’t know it at the time, but Adam Gilchrist’s 57-ball century against England in 2006-07 was the second-fastest in Test history © Getty Images
 

149* v Pakistan, Hobart, 1999-2000
It was one of the great comebacks after Australia fell to 5 for 126. They were chasing 369 for victory and the top order, boasting plenty of experience with the Waugh brothers, Michael Slater and Ricky Ponting, had failed. Gilchrist, on the other hand, was playing in only his second Test and he and Justin Langer combined for 238 in 59 overs to set up the win. His unbeaten 149 took just 163 deliveries, and featured 13 fours and a six. Steve Waugh later said he looked like he was playing in his own backyard. It was the first of many times that Gilchrist would turn a game on its head.204* v South Africa, Johannesburg, 2001-02
An emotional man, Gilchrist cried on reaching one of many milestones in the innings after being the victim of a vicious internet rumour. He was brutal throughout the performance which at the time was the fastest double-century in Test history, his 204 coming from 213 balls. Eight sixes were thrashed, most over midwicket, as he showed his amazing power in a performance that would remain his highest.122 v India, Mumbai, 2000-01
It was 99 for 5 when Gilchrist walked in. Only Matthew Hayden stood his ground in the hot cauldron as Harbhajan Singh ran amok. In a couple of hours he changed the face the game and the contest. Sweeping, cutting and lofting, he raced to an 84-ball century, the fastest by a visiting batsman on Indian soil. Even if he was playing his first Test in India, the foreign conditions didn’t matter. He took risks, survived clear chances and half chances, but never retreated.113 v Pakistan, Sydney, 2004-05
The scorecard shows Stuart MacGill as the Man of the Match and Ricky Ponting as the dominant batsman with 207, but it was Gilchrist’s 109-ball century that really wrested the match away from Pakistan. It was his 13th Test hundred – he passed Andy Flower’s record for a wicketkeeper-batsman – and featured scintillating striking towards the end. He brought up the milestone with a straight six off Shahid Afridi and had raced within reach thanks to consecutive sixes pulled off Mohammad Asif. For Yousuf Youhana and Shoaib Akhtar, who had also been part of the Pakistan team Gilchrist destroyed in Hobart five years earlier, there was a touch of déjà vu.102* v England, Perth, 2006-07
Only Viv Richards has reached a century faster than the 57 balls it took Gilchrist on his home ground in the 2006-07 Ashes. On a boiling Perth day he sizzled, taking to Monty Panesar (24 runs in an over that started with a dot) and Matthew Hoggard in a stunning burst, which included 12 fours and four sixes. Had he known about the record he could have broken it, but no message came from the dressing room, and he was glad he didn’t get there. “Viv deserves that mantle as the fastest hundred,” he said.149 v Sri Lanka, World Cup final, Bridgetown, 2006-07
It’s one thing to blast runs in any old ODI, but only the best of the best save their finest moments for the biggest stage. Gilchrist’s 149 in the World Cup final gave spectators reason to remember the match for pure cricketing brilliance, not its farcical finish in the dark. After morning drizzle made the fans nervously check their schedules for the reserve day, Gilchrist reminded them why they were there. He belted eight sixes in his 129-ball display, and for a while it seemed he could make 200 even in an innings reduced to 38 overs. He was so mesmerising that occasional boos came from the crowd when he gave the strike to Matthew Hayden. Squash ball or not, this was undoubtedly the pinnacle of a glittering ODI career.

Kidderminster deal puts club on flood standby

Worcestershire have signed a deal which will allow county cricket to be transferred to Kidderminster Victoria CC at 48 hours notice in the event of a repeat of last summer’s floods at New Road.The county will invest a total of £50,000 into the Chester Road ground over a five-year period which will initially be invested in improving facilities for players and umpires.”Our relationship with Kidderminster goes back many years and last summer they really helped us out when we needed it most,” Mark Newton, Worcestershire’s CEO, explained. “By the end of the summer it became clear that we needed to develop a robust contingency plan to deal with any repeat in future years and a key part of this plan is to secure an alternative venue at short notice in an emergency.”This agreement is initially for five years and will mean we can transfer 1st XI cricket at 48 hours notice if necessary.”

Abbas Ali stars in Giants' six-wicket win

Scorecard

Abbas Ali’s unbeaten 64 guided the Delhi Giants to an easy win (file photo) © Cricinfo Ltd
 

Abbas Ali smashed an unbeaten 64 as the Delhi Giants easily chased down the Mumbai Champs’ 115 at the Tau Devi Lal stadium in Panchkula. There was more bad news for the Champs as Brian Lara, who captained them in the first edition, was ruled out of the tournament after failing to recover from a left-arm fracture.After they had posted a modest total, the Champs’ hopes were raised as they took two early wickets, including the big one of captain Marvan Atapattu. Ali, though, was unconcerned by the loss of wickets as he plundered 16 runs off a Tino Best over, the highlight of which was a huge six over long-off. Ali, who was the third-highest scorer in the inaugural edition of the ICL last year, put on a 41-run stand with Avishka Gunawardene for the third wicket.Left-arm spinner Avinash Yadav broke the partnership with his first ball, foxing Gunawardene with an arm ball. Former Australian fast bowler Michael Kasprowicz, playing his first ICL game, struck another blow in the next over by getting Abhinav Bali to edge through to the wicketkeeper. However, there were no further alarms for the Giants as Nic Pothas, the former South African wicketkeeper, and Ali guided them to a six-wicket win.Earlier, the Champs, after opting to bat, turned in an unconvincing batting performance with several of their batsmen getting starts but not scoring at the rate demanded by the Twenty20 game. After the openers put on a brisk 41-run stand, former South African allrounder Dale Benkenstein struck, getting Saman Jayantha to hole out to Shane Bond at long-off.Only 20 runs came off the next five overs and even captain Nathan Astle was unable to force the pace. With the runs drying up, the pressure told and Kiran Powar and Shreyas Khanolkar fell in quick succession. Astle lifted a couple of sixes off T Sudhindra but the Giants gave away only seven runs in the final two overs. Ali then backed up the good work of the bowlers to ensure the Giants opened their campaign with a comfortable victory.

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