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By Peter Della Penna in Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Scorecard I Ball-by-Ball Commentary
After surviving an early onslaught from opening batsman Khushroo
Wadia, USA bowled Canada out for 131 but a failure to accelerate in the
middle overs doomed USA’s chase as they lost by 10 runs to Canada on
Friday night inside the Central Broward Regional Park stadium at the
2011 ICC Americas Division One T20 tournament in Lauderhill, Florida.
Wadia was named Man of the Match after top scoring on the evening with
56 in 35 balls including eight boundaries and a six.
“Khushroo was batting well throughout the innings and throughout the
week,” said Canada captain Jimmy Hansra. “Khushroo’s been having amazing
form. He’s helping us out for sure in the top order. Today we had a bit
of a collapse in the middle that tells you about the inexperience in
the squad, but we fought back hard. It’s low total games here in
Florida. Unfortunately the wickets aren’t suitable for T20 cricket, but
we battled hard, we fielded well and I think that’s when the young squad
comes in handy.”
Canada won the toss and elected to bat first in the late afternoon
sun. Wadia and Jason Sandher got Canada off to a brilliant start with a
72-run opening stand that could have potentially been nipped in the bud
before a run was put on the board. Sandher slashed the second ball of
the innings from fast bowler Usman Shuja high in the air toward Muhammad
Ghous on the third man boundary, but Ghous reacted poorly to the ball
coming off the bat and it eventually landed a few yards to his right
before bouncing over the rope for four. It was a harbinger of things to
come as USA’s fielding on the evening remained lackluster with several
half-chances left on the table.
In the fifth over,
Wadia
feasted on Shuja’s bowling for 22 runs, punishing the USA pacer for
straying in line by hitting four of the five boundaries in the over on
the leg side. Left-arm spinner Bhim George finally broke the stand on
the last ball of the ninth over by clean bowling Sandher for 23 with one
that kept low. Wickets fell fast and furious for the rest of the
innings as the next nine partnerships combined to produce fewer runs in
the last 11 overs than Wadia and Sandher did in the first nine.
Image (right) - Khushroo Wadia was named Man of the Match for his
56 in 35 balls, with eight fours and one six. [Courtesy: Peter Della
Penna/DreamCricket]
Wadia crossed 50 in 32 balls during George’s next over, bashing a six
over long on but George got revenge three balls later as Wadia chipped a
half-tracker straight back to the spinner, who held on to a low return
catch. Ghous claimed his first wicket of the tournament bowling Hansra
for 9. George took his third when he had Usman Limbada stumped by Akeem
Dodson for 1 to make it 99 for 4 and Jonathan Snow holed out to deep
midwicket off the bowling of Orlando Baker to make it 107 for 5 in the
15th.
Trevin Bastiampillai and Hamza Tariq tried to reestablish momentum
for Canada as their 18-run stand for the sixth wicket was Canada’s
second largest of the innings. However, their partnership ended when
Bastiampillai was foolishly run out for 22 trying to steal a run off a
misfield. Canada could only add six runs for the final four wickets as
Baker claimed two more while Steve Massiah took one and then ran out
Grant Broadhurst off his own bowling to wrap up the innings four balls
early as Canada was bowled out for 131 in 19.2 overs.
USA’s chase got off to a rocky start when Gowkaran Roopnarine was
clean bowled without scoring by medium pacer Satsimranjit Singh Dhindsa
to make it 3 for 1 in the first over. Sushil Nadkarni was then joined by
Aditya Mishra and USA’s two most impressive batsmen this week added 39
for the second wicket in 6.1 overs before Hansra’s off-spin had Mishra
out caught for 19 when a massive inside edge ricocheted off Mishra’s
pads straight to Grant Broadhurst at short third man.
While Nadkarni played fluently at the other end, Massiah came in and
struggled to time the ball, scoring 3 runs off his first 11 deliveries.
Nadkarni started to display more aggression to keep the scoring rate
healthy, launching leg-spinner Junaid Siddiqui into the stands twice as
part of a 16-run 12th over to make it 75 for 2. It was USA’s only
double-digit over of the innings while Canada did it four times in their
turn at bat.
Nadkarni perished for 40 at the start of the 13th when he edged
Broadhurst’s medium pace through to the keeper Tariq. With Quasen Alfred
sitting out of the lineup, the rest of the batting order lacked the
firepower to reach the ropes, let alone clear them. USA only registered
five fours in the entire innings and had none from the time Massiah hit
one on the fourth ball of the 11th over by Hansra until the second ball
of the final over.
Massiah was caught on the boundary for 17 off the bowling of Siddiqui
to make it 81 for 4 and Japen Patel was next to go for 10 to give
Dhindsa his second. Dhindsa’s third scalp came when he bowled Timroy
Allen for 12 and USA’s chances of winning were rapidly slipping away at
111 for 6 in 18.4 overs. Shuja was run out on the next delivery trying
to stretch one into two. George then came in at number nine and took a
two off the final ball of the 19th over as USA needed 18 to win with six
balls remaining.
The door was left slightly ajar by Canada after a first ball wide
from left-arm spinner Zahid Hussain was followed by a single from Dodson
and a boundary by George to turn the equation into 12 from four balls.
However, Canada slammed the door shut when George was caught by Limbada
on the midwicket boundary for 6 before Hussain bowled Dodson on the
fourth ball of the over for 7 to leave USA at 120 for 9. Number 11
batsman Ghous needed to hit sixes off the final two balls for USA to win
but he could only manage a single on the fifth ball, sealing the game
for Canada before Baker defended the last ball as USA finished at 121
for 9, 10 runs short of Canada’s total.
“It was a commendable effort by Team USA to get back into the game
after Canada were off to a brilliant start,” said Massiah. “I thought in
the middle overs we lost our way a bit but obviously we’ve seen through
the tournament that it gets difficult batting second, especially
playing the third game today on this track. I wouldn’t take away
anything from Canada. I thought they bowled well in the end and the
seamers proved to be a little too much for us.”
USA now stands tied for second place with Bermuda at 3-1 while Canada
tops the ladder at 4-0. Bermuda won earlier in the day by 10 wickets
over Cayman Islands while Suriname scored their first win of the week as
they beat Argentina by five wickets to leave their fellow South
Americans winless.
Barring a stunning upset by Suriname, Canada is in line to finish
first while Cayman Islands needs to beat Argentina to avoid creating a
three-way tie at 1-4 for fourth place. USA takes on Bermuda on Saturday
morning at 9:30 a.m. EST in a battle to decide second place. Live
coverage on DreamCricket.com begins at 9 a.m.