Archive for the ‘Bangladesh - zimbabwe’ Category

Tamim gatecrashes Coventry’s party

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Charles Coventry made the joint highest individual score in an ODI but his effort was outweighed by a sparkling, cool-headed century from Tamim Iqbal, who broke the record for the most runs in an innings by a Bangladesh batsman. Coventry’s blockbuster innings pushed Zimbabwe beyond 300, far more than Bangladesh have chased before, but the visitors were rarely troubled as they hunted down the target to take their third consecutive series.

Two things which stood out in Tamim’s innings were the calmness he displayed, even when the required-rate started to soar, and the clean straight hitting – each of his six sixes were in the arc between long-on and long-off.

Bangladesh needed a solid opening stand after Coventry inspired Zimbabwe to 312, and Junaid Siddique and Tamim provided them that. Both openers were particularly harsh on Elton Chigumbura, who pitched the ball too short right through his opening spell. Junaid was the aggressor, hammering his way to a 27-ball 38 before, as has so often been the case, he threw away the start with a loose shot.

Junaid’s dismissal, and the introduction of Zimbabwe’s spinners, sucked the momentum out of the chase. Mohammad Ashraful took his time to settle, and Tamim cut out the big hits for a while, which made the asking-rate make a steady slide upwards.

Tamim was generally content to knock the ball around, but had short bursts when he hit out to keep Bangladesh in touch. One such was in the 22nd over; Malcolm Waller was blasted over long-on and long-off off consecutive deliveries, followed by a powerful cut for four. He also come down the track and cracked Price over long-on to push Bangladesh’s run-rate up to six. There was a similar volley of brutal hitting in the 36th over, Hamilton Mazakadza being taken for a couple of big sixes.

Raqibul Hasan was also a calming influence, nudging the ball around for comfortable singles to keep the strike rotating. He added 119 with Tamim at nearly a run-a-ball before falling in the 37th over. Soon after, Chigumbura dropped a dolly at long-on, Tamim getting a reprieve on 118. Two new batsman and Zimbabwe could have applied more pressure. However, Bangladesh’s best batsman, Shakib Al Hasan, made a 12-ball 19 and Tamim also opened out to slam the door shut on Zimbabwe. By the time Tamim was dismissed the target was only 34 away, which Bangladesh knocked off with 13 deliveries to spare.

It was the flattest of tracks, and Zimbabwe could have piled on even more than 312 had Coventry got a little more support. It was a superbly paced innings from him; Coventry provided the impetus after the early dismissal of Mark Vermeulen, then tempered his aggression when wickets tumbled around him in the middle overs, before finishing off with an awesome display of power hitting. What made it even more astonishing was that the next highest score in the innings was 37, 157 less than Coventry. It was also his first ODI century, and he had never before crossed 106 in any form of senior cricket.

He stomped on the gas soon after reaching his hundred in the 38th over, particularly targeting the swathe from long-on to midwicket, where he slammed six of his seven sixes. Still, at the end of the 42nd over he was on 129, and the world record didn’t seem in his sights. By the end of the 47th he was on 180, and all the interest was around whether he would make an ODI double-century, a feat not achieved in 2872 previous one-dayers.

He only managed three singles in the 48th, but a massive six over long-on took him 191 with the final over still to come. A drive to cover on the first ball took him off strike, and he wasn’t back facing the bowling till the final delivery; Tawanda Mupariwa was dismissed off the second and Prosper Utseya faced the next three. Two were needed to equal Saeed Anwar’s 12-year-old mark, and a tired punch straight past the bowler gave Coventry a share of the record. His final 91 had come off 43 deliveries.

Bangladesh would have been facing a far smaller target had Syed Rasel held on to a simple catch at deep square leg when Coventry was only 13. Coventry was then dropped on 137 in the 44th over, with Mahmudullah the culprit at square leg. Coventry celebrated by plundering 16 each off the next two overs, the crowds behind midwicket kept busy by the balls hammered by Coventry.

In the end, his effort didn’t prove to be enough, as Tamim, a placid pitch and shoddy Zimbabwean bowling and fielding combined to ruin Coventry’s day. A month ago, the most Bangladesh had chased successfully was 250, a mark they have improved on twice since, a sign of the progress they have made.

Zimbabwe keep series hopes flickering

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Zimbabwe’s batting has improved with each outing this series, and today they kept their hopes alive with a victory that brought Bangladesh’s winning run to a screeching halt. On a flat batting track the hosts briefly threatened to combust in another jittery display from the top order, but Hamilton Masakadza lit up the innings with a maiden ODI century, supported by a calm Brendan Taylor and a gung-ho Elton Chigumbura. Zimbabwe were in control when Chigumbura joined Taylor in the 39th over, and what proceeded to unfold turned a solid batting act into an exhibition of butchery.

The pair added 90 from 50 balls, Chigumbura racing to his half-century from just 26 balls, and 60 from the batting Powerplay lifted the total to 323, Zimbabwe’s best at the venue and against Bangladesh. In reply, the visitors came up with a batting effort as edgy as Tuesday’s had been powerful, with only Raqibul Hasan and Mahbubul Alam showing any fight.

Early signs indicated this game could be one for the bowlers when Zimbabwe slipped to 17 for 2 and then 60 for 3, but Masakadza and Taylor stood up to be counted. Zimbabwe’s top order will do well to take a few lessons from Masakadza, who assessed the situation smartly, bided his time against the bit of swing Mahbubul got and consolidated in the middle overs. He acted as a glue to guarantee Zimbabwe’s innings didn’t fall apart.

Quick to capitalise on even marginal errors in length, Masakadza stroked delicate drives between cover and backward point off either foot. With Taylor offering cool support the pair counter-attacked in an efficient manner, knocking the ball into the gaps and not trying to play the spinners too safely – a factor that had stifled Zimbabwe in the series opener. Boundaries didn’t flow – at one stage Zimbabwe went 11 overs without finding the ropes – but the run rate rarely dropped. The pair regularly spoke mid-pitch, no doubt stressing in the fact that all that was required was levelheaded batting, and that a wicket would put too much pressure on those to follow.

After a long absence playing cricket in England, Taylor came back strongly with a fluent half-century. He complimented his senior partner with an innings that relied solidly on on-side play. He judged singles superbly and his half-century came up from 62 balls without a boundary.

When Mahbubul came back to bowl the 35th over, Masakadza dumped him over midwicket for six to go past his previous best of 87. Two balls after bringing up three figures, Masakadza was bowled for 102, but the final chapter of the innings was adrenalin-fueled. Taylor picked his first four in the 40th over, a deft late cut, and Chigumbura was quickly into his stride, slamming a six over long-on and slashing through point.

An amazing one-handed six over extra cover by Taylor followed as Shakib returned, prompting Zimbabwe to take the batting Powerplay after 44 overs. Hitting cleanly through the line with meaty power and excellent timing, Chigumbura had Bangladesh scurrying for cover as the tone of the game changed dramatically, despite Taylor’s run out on 94. Whether it was pace or spin he backed his game, making room to hit through the line and depositing the ball over long-off and long-on. In the previous game, Chigumbura came down at No. 9 – today a promotion proved an excellent move.

Battered in the field, Bangladesh needed a commanding start but the top order’s approach snuffed those hopes. Tamim Iqbal poked the first ball loosely to first slip, Naeem Islam lost his leg stump to a wild slog against Chigumbura and Mohammad Ashraful, for the umpteenth time, skied to third man. The pressure mounted on the in-form Shakib but it proved too much. Immediately after swinging Chigumbura for six, Shakib tried the aerial route only to top edge to point, leaving Raqibul and Mushfiqur Rahim to salvage an increasingly hopeless situation.

With 324 to win, Bangladesh had to take some chances and Raqibul enjoyed a slice of luck on 9 when Prosper Utseya dropped a tough catch at cover-point. Mushfiqur targeted Masakadza’s gentle medium pace, going over the top for six and four in successive overs. It was an encouraging period of smart batting that briefly offered Bangladesh a glimmer of hope, as the pair added 68 at nearly a run a ball. Ray Price varied his pace to check the runs and the frustration resulted in Mushfiqur holing out to long-on, after which he took out Mahmudullah. Raqibul flayed the bat after crossing his sixth ODI fifty and Mahbubul picked up three successive sixes in a maiden half-century, but they were only delaying the inevitable.

Coventry equals Anwars mark

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Zimbabwes Charles Coventry equalled the highest individual One-day International score on Sunday, but it also became the highest ODI score in a losing cause. Coventrys big-hitting party was gatecrashed by Tamim Iqbal, who helped Bangladesh wrap up the five-match series 3-1 on Sunday.
Coventry blasted an unbeaten 194 to equal former Pakistan opener Saeed Anwars 12-year record as Zimbabwe piled up 312-8 in their 50 overs. But Bangladesh opener Tamim then hit his countrys highest individual score of 154 as the tourists took victory with 13 balls to spare.
Coventry, playing his 15th ODI, dominated Zimbabwes innings with the next highest score being a modest 37. Coventry hit seven sixes and accelerated from 129 in the 42nd over to 180 in the 47th as fans wondered if he would become the first player in history to hit a ODI double century. But he had to settle for a share of Anwars record, although Bangladesh could have dismissed him earlier when Mahmudullah dropped him at square leg on 137.

top ten odi score

Shakib powers Bangladesh to mammoth score

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Shakib Al Hasan starred with a delightfully aggressive ton to charge Bangladesh to their highest ODI score. Tamim Iqbal laid the platform with a patient half-century before Shakib took over to set a mammoth target for Zimbabwe in the second ODI in Bulawayo.

The innings lacked in momentum before Shakib imposed himself on the proceedings with a typically feisty knock. A disciplined bowling effort by Zimbabwe combined with cautious batting saw Bangladesh reach only 108 for 1 by 25 overs but Shakib ensured that they finished strongly.

The feature of his innings was his skill in repeatedly picking the gaps: there were quite a few hits over extra cover, a few to the straight boundary and many swings to midwicket region. He started carefully, dealing in singles and twos to reach 15, before breaking free with two pulled boundaries. The explosion started in the 38th over bowled by the part-time spinner Sean Williams with Shakib, who was denied the services of a runner just prior to the over, swinging twice over midwicket boundary. He went on to crash Ray Price to the straight boundary before lifting Prosper Utseya over long-off and twice over extra-cover as he made full use of the batting Powerplay.

He was aided by some poor fielding effort as he was dropped twice in the inner circle: when he was on 59, Stuart Matsikenyeri spilled a sitter at midwicket off an attempted reverse-sweep against Utseya and when he was on 71, Price dropped another dolly off a top-edged paddle-sweep.

Shakib went berserk after the twin drops. He looted 19 runs, with the help of three boundaries that included a stunning six over long-off, in the 44th over bowled by Chamu Chibhaba and proceeded to indulge himself. He brought up the hundred in 63 balls and celebrated it with a cheeky scoop shot against Ed Rainsford before he was run out going for the third run after Mushfiqur Rahim had slashed to deep point. Rahim sought to make amends for his mistake by indulging in some big hitting in the end to push Bangladesh well past 300.

The platform was laid earlier in the day by Tamim who struck a serene partnership with Junaid Siddique at the top of the order. Only four fours came in the first fifteen overs and only one boundary was hit in the air. It not only reflected the intent of the batsmen but also the lines and length bowled by the new-ball bowlers Elton Chigumbura and Rainsford.

Chigumbura tended to hit short of the length and slipped in the occasional short delivery, while Rainsford hit the good length and generally brought the ball back into the left-handed batsmen. There were a few free four-balls that Siddique took toll of, but for the main part, the two seamers were steady. If there was to be any criticism, it has to be said that they perhaps strayed to the middle and leg line a touch too often against Tamim, which shows up in his wagon wheel: Tamim picked 48 runs on the on side.

For their part, the batsmen were absolutely focused on playing themselves in before going for their shots. Tamim, who received more short balls than Siddique, stayed adjacent to the line and punched the singles and twos to the leg side. There was a glide to the fine-leg boundary but the shot of his stay was a neat adjustment he showed against Chibhabha: He had shaped to cover-drive but adjusted to the slow pace by waiting a touch and gliding it to the third-man boundary.

Siddique unfurled a couple of off-side boundaries and also hit a big shot, hitting Chigumbura over mid-on and was looking good when he was run out. He pushed Utseya, who brought himself on in the 11th over, to the left of short midwicket, was caught in a yes-no situation with Tamim and couldn’t get back to his crease in time. Tamim, himself, was run out soon in a comical fashion. He had missed to connect a leg-side delivery but was stranded in the middle due to a faulty call from Shakib and was easily run out by the keeper. However, it didn’t prove to be a major set back as Shakib set the stadium ablaze with his power-hitting.

World Cricket Schedule 2009-10

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009
Australia in England
Date Match Venue Time
July 8-12 First Test Cardiff 1530 IST
July 16-20 Second Test Lord’s 1530 IST
July 30-Aug 3 Third Test Edgbaston 1530 IST
Aug 7-11 Fourth Test Leeds 1530 IST
Aug 20-24 Fifth Test Kennington Oval 1530 IST
Aug 30 First T20 Old Trafford 1900 IST
Sept 1 Second T20 Old Trafford 2330 IST
Sept 4 First ODI Kennington Oval 1730 IST
Sept 6 Second ODI Lord’s 1445 IST
Sept 9 Third ODI The Rose Bowl 1900 IST
Sept 12 Fourth ODI Lord’s 1445 IST
Sept 15 Fifth ODI Trent Bridge 1900 IST
Sept 17 Sixth ODI Trent Bridge 1900 IST
Sept 20 Seventh ODI Chester-le-Street 1445 IST
Pakistan in Sri Lanka
Date Match Venue Time
July 4-8 First Test Galle 1000 IST
July 12-16 Second Test Colombo 1000 IST
July 20-24 Third Test Colombo (SSC) 1000 IST
July 30 First ODI Dambulla 0930 IST
Aug 1 Second ODI Dambulla 0930 IST
Aug 3 Third ODI Dambulla 1900 IST
Aug 7 Fourth ODI Colombo (RPS) 1430 IST
Aug 9 Fifth ODI Colombo (RPS) 1430 IST
Aug 12 Only T20 Colombo (RPS) 1800 IST
Bangladesh in West Indies
Date Match Venue Time
July 9-13 First Test Kingstown 1930 IST
July 17-21 Second Test St George’s 1930 IST
July 26 First ODI Roseau 1900 IST
July 28 Second ODI Roseau 1900 IST
July 31 Third ODI Basseterre 1900 IST
August 2 Fourth ODI Basseterre 2330 IST
Pakistan in Sri Lanka
Date Match Venue Time
Jul 30 First ODI Dambulla 1000 IST
Aug 1 Second ODI Dambulla 1000 IST
Aug 3 Third ODI Colombo 1000 IST
Aug 7 Fourth ODI (D/N) Colombo 1430 IST
Aug 9 Fifth ODI (D/N) Colombo 1430 IST
Aug 12 Only T20I (D/N) Colombo 1900 IST
New Zealand in Sri Lanka
Date Match Venue Time
Aug 18-22 First Test Galle 1000 IST
Aug 26-30 Second Test Colombo 1000 IST
Sept 2 First T20I Colombo 1900 IST
Sept 4 Second T20I Colombo 1900 IST
Tri-series in Sri Lanka
Date Match Venue Time
Sept 8 Sri Lanka vs New Zealand Colombo 1000 IST
Sept 10 Sri Lanka vs India Colombo 1000 IST
Sept 12 India vs New Zealand Colombo 1000 IST
Sept 14 Final Colombo 1000 IST
ICC Champions Trophy
Group A: Australia (1), India (4), Pakistan (5), West Indies (8)

Group B: South Africa (2), New Zealand (3), Sri Lanka (6), England (7)

Date Match Venue Time
Sep 22 Group B – South Africa vs Sri Lanka (D/N) Centurion 1800 IST
Sep 23 Group A – Pakistan v West Indies (D/N) Johannesburg 1800 IST
Sep 24 Group B – South Africa v New Zealand Centurion 1300 IST
Sep 25 Group B – England v Sri Lanka (D/N) Johannesburg 1800 IST
Sep 26 Group A – Australia v West Indies Johannesburg 1300 IST
Sep 26 Group A – India v Pakistan (D/N) Centurion 1800 IST
Sep 27 Group B – New Zealand v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 1300 IST
Sep 27 Group B – South Africa v England (D/N) Centurion 1800 IST
Sep 28 Group A – Australia v India (D/N) Centurion 1800 IST
Sep 29 Group B – England v New Zealand (D/N) Johannesburg 1800 IST
Sep 30 Group A – Australia v Pakistan Centurion 1300 IST
Sep 30 Group A – India v West Indies (D/N) Johannesburg 1800 IST
Oct 2 1st Semi-Final (D/N) – (A1 v B2) Centurion 1800 IST
Oct 3 2nd Semi-Final (D/N) – (B1 v A2) Johannesburg 1800 IST
Oct 5 Final (D/N) Centurion 1800 IST

Ashraful ton charges Bangladesh to easy win

Monday, August 10th, 2009

A disciplined bowling performance restricted Zimbabwe to a below-par 207 before Mohammad Ashraful led the chase with a breezy ton to help Bangladesh clinch a facile win in the first ODI in Bulawayo. Mark Vermeulen hit a fluent 92 on his comeback after five years but didn’t find much support from his team-mates.

On an easy-paced track, Bangladesh didn’t have any problems against the weak Zimbabwean attack. Ashraful built on a good platform laid by Tamim Iqbal and Junaid Siddique; he never looked in any problem and took a special liking to the left-arm spin of Ray Price. In the 15th over, bowled by Price, he hit four boundaries including a handsome six over long-on.

It was an imperious performance as he moved down the track and backed away outside leg stump to force errors from Price. The best shot was a neat inside-out lofted drive over extra cover off Price. He also played some delightful shots to the seamers, the highlight of which was a neat swivel pull off Hamilton Masakadza. He brought up his third ODI hundred with a delicate late cut off Mazakadza. It was his day; not only did he pick up a wicket off the first ball he bowled but also brought up 3000 ODI runs.

Ashraful’s task was made easier by the brisk start provided by the openers. Tamim started off with two fours in the first over – a cut and an off drive – but it was Siddique who started off like a runaway express against Chamu Chibhaba. He hit three successive off-side boundaries in the second over, a caressed cover drive being the highlight, and followed it with two successive boundaries in the fourth over before hitting one straight to mid-off.

Prosper Utseya introduced spin as early as the sixth over, bringing himself on, but neither he nor Price could pose any problems as Tamim and Ashraful eased themselves with several classy drives and cuts.

The victory was set up earlier by some disciplined bowling from the Bangladesh. Only Vermeulen resisted the disciplined attack with a degree of comfort. He has a troubled past and last played for Zimbabwe in 2004 but today put on a pleasing show as he caressed his way to a fine half-century. His best shot came in the 12th over against Nazmul Hossain when he stood tall to play a punchy cover drive, one of the many off-side shots he hit. Vermeulen has been always strong off the back foot and today was no different.

He repeatedly rocked back to punch the ball on either side of the square. There was a delicate late-cut boundary against Shakib Al Hasan which stood out in his play against the spinners. He was a touch lucky to survive a palpable shout for lbw when Shakib rapped him on the pads with an arm ball and he was also dropped by Nazmul at deep midwicket off the same bowler. However, Vermeulen shrugged it off and proceeded to look comfortable against spin and seam. Post fifty, he grew more cautious and proceeded to deal in singles and looked set for a hundred when he was run out eight runs short of the landmark.


There wasn’t much support from his team-mates barring, to an extent, Brendan Taylor. Taylor started off with a flicked four but the shot of his stay was a firm cover drive for three against Syed Rasel. He nudged his way around and was beginning to build a partnership when he was adjudged lbw against Shakib when he perhaps got an inside edge.

Bangladesh’s disciplined bowling fetched them two early wickets. Rasel induced an edge from Masakadza in the first over with a delivery that shaped away while Nazmul coaxed Chibhaba into nicking behind. Elton Chigumbura threw his bat in the end to get some handy runs in the batting Powerplay but Zimbabwe fell short of a competitive score.

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