We Finally Have A Game On At Lauderhill!

A look at the action so far from Lauderhill, Florida, where after two abandonments in as many days we finally have a game running according to schedule. Also a huge photo gallery.

Both on Friday and yesterday there were supposed to matches at Lauderhill, Florida. Both were abandoned without a ball bowled, rain on Friday and poor drainage yesterday leaving the ground unplayable. Today we finally have a game and it looks like it will be played without interruption.

When the schedulers arranged Ireland v Pakistan they would have been envisaging it being to decide which of this teams qualified for the Super Eights alongside India. India have indeed won the group, but remarkably the other two full member nations in this group are battling not for qualification but to avoid last place in the group, each having suffered losses to lower ranked opposition – Pakistan losing to the USA (see here) and Ireland being beaten by Canada. There are three possible outcomes: an Ireland win sees them fourth and Pakistan fifth (net run rate is not a factor here, since third place Canada had definite results against both teams, and they beat Ireland so would finish above Ireland if they had equal points). A washout or a win for Pakistan would see them third, the washout on a split-tie with Canada who they beat, a win for Pakistan would mean undisputed third place.

Pakistan won the toss and decided to bowl first. The match started explosively with Shaheen Shah Afridi taking two wickets in the opening over (and being sufficiently close to a third that Pakistan burned a review attempting to get the not out decision overturned). Mohammad Amir made thar three wickets in the first two overs, and the fourth was not long delayed either. Pakistan kept these two bowlers going for the whole Power Play, and Ireland were 28-5 when it ended. That soon became 32-6. Finally Ireland had a partnership, Delany and Adair taking the score into the 70s. Imad Wasim got both them quickly , and when McCarthy’s wild shot against the same bowler resulted in his stumps being rattled it was 80-9. Ireland’s last pair, Josh Little and Ben White showed a degree of fight sadly missing from most of their supposed betters with the bat, and the 20 overs ended with the score 109-9, Little 22 not out. The Pakistan innings is just underway, with the score 6-0 after two overs, a straight driven four by Mohammad Rizwan the only highlight to date.

My usual sign off…

The World T20 Cup Latest

A look at developments in the T20 World Cup, including the eliminations of Sri Lanka and new Zealand, a revival in England’s fortunes and the situation currently unfolding in Florida. Also a large photo gallery.

This post looks at recent developments in the men’s T20 World Cup. I am typing it while waiting on developments in Florida (of which more later).

Sri Lanka became the first full member nation to be eliminated from the tournament, after a washed out match left them too far adrift to qualify. New Zealand’s elimination was confirmed in the small hours of this morning UK time when Afghanistan beat Papua New Guinea comfortably, a result which left Afghanistan and the West Indies both with three wins out of three, making the match between Afghanistan and West Indies a contest for who wins the group outright, with both sides certain of qualification.

Last night England played Oman in a match which they not only had to win, they had to win it by a very big margin due to net run rate being a factor. Had England been permitted to invent a result for this game to suit themselves they would not have dared to come up with what actually happened – they bowled Oman out for 48, Rashid taking 4-11 and Mark Wood and Jofra Archer each snaring three victims, and then blasted their way to the target in a preposterous 3.1 overs. This means that net run rate is effectively no longer a factor – if England beat Namibia and Australia beat Scotland then England will qualify for the super eights,

I call this one a quadrangular because there are four factors, three present at the Lauderhill ground (unlike the pop-up stadium at Nassau County, New York this is an authentic cricket ground) and one watching nervously on the outcome. The Lauderhill ground is situated close enough to Fort Lauderdale railway station for the railway to be useful for visiting journalists. The three participants who are present are respectively The USA cricket team, the Ireland cricket team and some decidedly grim local weather. The fourth participant in the drama, watching from afar, and desperately hoping that the weather will allow some cricket as a washout would mean elimination for them are the Pakistan cricket team. It hosed down in Florida earlier today, though Lauderhill was less badly hit than some parts of the state. At the moment it is dry, and the sun has even been spotted, but the ground is not yet dry enough for play to proceed, although there is an inspection due in 22 minutes time if the weather hold. Ireland need a match to happen, as like Pakistan they hanging on by their fingernails, while a washout would guarantee the USA qualification, so they will be the least bothered of the three teams waiting on developments.

My usual sign off…