South Africa A win series after drawn match

South Africa A played out 56 overs in the fourth innings with the loss of only two wickets to deny Sri Lanka A a chance to square the two-match series

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Jul-2012Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsSouth Africa A played out 56 overs in the fourth innings with the loss of only two wickets to deny Sri Lanka A a chance to square the two-match series. South Africa had beaten the visitors by an innings in the first match in Durban.Sri Lanka A started the day with opening batsman Dimuth Karunaratne, on 99 overnight, reaching his century in the first over of the morning with an off-drive to the boundary. Karunaratne, who had scored 83 in the first innings, went on to take Sri Lanka past 300 and completed 150 runs in the process. He declared the innings soon after, giving a target of 349 runs in a minimum of 71 overs to the home team.South Africa A lost openers Dean Elgar and Reeza Hendricks with only 37 runs on the board, but Stiaan van Zyl, 39 off 140 balls, and Faf du Plessis, 55 off 120, combined together in an unbeaten 93-run partnership as the game meandered to a draw.

Rawalpindi clinch title after Super Over

Teenage left-arm spinner Raza Hasan was the hero for Rawalpindi Rams as he kept his nerve in the Super Over to hand them the Faisal Bank Super Eight T20 title

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Jul-2011
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Teenage left-arm spinner Raza Hasan kept his cool in the Super Over to give Rawalpindi the title•Dr Naeem Ashraf

Eighteen-year-old left-arm spinner Raza Hasan was the hero for Rawalpindi Rams as he held his nerve in the Super Over to hand them the Faysal Bank Super Eight T20 title. Rawalpindi seemed to have fluffed their chances of victory against Karachi Dolphins at the Iqbal Stadium when they managed only one run in the final four balls of their chase of 165 to leave the game tied. But after they smashed 16 in the Super Over it was Karachi’s turn to flounder, scoring only one off the final four deliveries of their over to slump to defeat. Sohail Khan took five wickets for Karachi but it wasn’t enough to secure victory.Awais Zia did all the scoring for Rawalpindi in the Super Over, slapping two fours and a six to negate the effect of the two dot balls he played. It was a tough target for Karachi but Khalid Latif began with a big six over long-on. The 18-year-old Hasan, though, hit back by getting Latif to top-edge to short fine-leg off the next ball. The third delivery saw a dropped catch which resulted in a single, and then Hasan bowled three dot balls in a row as Shahzaib Hasan struggled to get bat on ball.There was plenty of drama before the closing skirmish too. Karachi had made a sluggish start after being sent in, reaching 34 for 1 in five overs, before the batsman of the tournament, Rameez Raja, gave the innings some impetus with two fours and two sixes in the sixth over. His partner Asad Shafiq was dismissed lbw by Hasan for a 26-ball 36 and that again slowed the Karachi innings. Though they had blasted 91 in the first ten overs, and had wickets in hand, they could only add 73 in the last ten.Rawalpindi’s chase got off to a horror start as Sohail struck twice in the second over. Zia slammed six fours in eight deliveries to inject some momentum into the chase before another double-strike from Sohail, in the sixth over, left Rawalpindi gasping at 56 for 4. A flurry of boundaries from Adnan Mufti kept them alive before a couple of sixes from Hammad Azam evened the game.Two big hits from Mohammad Rameez made it 22 needed off the final three overs with three wickets in hand. Sohail returned to revive Karachi, getting Rameez with a slower yorker and giving away only three runs in the 18th over. Rawalpindi scrambled 10 off the next over and when Umar Amin muscled the second ball of Azam Hussain’s final over for six, Rawalpindi needed only two to win off four deliveries. They couldn’t get them, though, and Amin watched helplessly as wickets fell off the final two balls with the scores level. Any momentum Karachi may have gained from clawing back to tie the game proved meaningless in the Super Over as Hasan repaid the faith his captain showed in him.

Bollinger aims for final flourish

Doug Bollinger has admitted that it would be “devastating” to concede a one-day series whitewash to England, but is confident Australia can regain some pride in the final two matches after their late surge at Old Trafford nearly pulled off a stunning come

Andrew McGlashan28-Jun-2010Doug Bollinger has admitted that it would be “devastating” to concede a one-day series whitewash to England, but is confident Australia can regain some pride in the final two matches after their late surge at Old Trafford nearly pulled off a stunning comeback.England lost six for 18 in 38 balls as a comfortable chase turned into a nerve-jangling conclusion before Tim Bresnan edged James Hopes to seal victory and give the hosts an unassailable lead in the series.
Bollinger had been a major factor in the late jitters as he removed Graeme Swann and Stuart Broad in his last over with reverse swing, while the recalled Shaun Tait and legspinner Steven Smith also made England sweat.However, for a large part of the match Australia had been a distant second best once the opening stand of 75 between Shane Watson and Tim Paine was broken, leaving the visitors in the almost unknown position of having to save face at The Oval and Lord’s this week.”We’d love to stop them, 5-0 would be devastating,” said Bollinger.
“But we’ve just got to go out there and do everything properly and hopefully win the next two; 3-2 would still be disappointing but it would be two good wins.”It isn’t the start we wanted being 3-0 down but there isn’t much we can do. Everyone went out and played their guts off and sometimes it just doesn’t work out. We can’t whinge about it, we just have to try and finish well in these two one-dayers before the T20s and Tests against Pakistan.”Bollinger, though, conceded that England have made huge strides with their one-day game since the 6-1 thrashing by Australia last year and will be a tough side to compete with after the confidence gained from recent limited-overs success.”They’ve come on massively, especially with winning the Twenty20 they are sky high at the moment,” he said. “Everyone in their team has got their game together. We have to lift 10-15 percent and we are capable of doing that. Nobody likes a winning team unless it’s your own but we’ll be alright.”Despite Australia’s problems in the series, Bollinger has continued his impressive form of the last nine months which as seen him become the team’s premier strike bowler. The partnership with Tait, who was limited to two-over spells by Ricky Ponting in his first ODI since February 2009, certainly gave the attack an added dimension after it had looked pedestrian in the opening two encounters.”It was good to drag them back a bit in those last 10 overs and that means everything is starting to come together,” said Bollinger.
“Hopefully we can build on that. We’ve been very successful in the last few years and a couple of losses probably isn’t that bad even though nobody likes to lose.”

Carey cracks 90 but SA struggle as Lyon bags three

Alex Carey carried his white-ball form into the Sheffield Shield, making 90 off 85 balls, but South Australia struggled as Nathan Lyon loomed ominously with three scalps

AAP09-Oct-2024Alex Carey has launched his red-ball summer by blitzing a quick-fire 90 for South Australia against New South Wales, before Nathan Lyon inspired a late collapse to put the Blues in command.Carey smashed 90 from 85 balls on day two at Sydney’s Cricket Central, as South Australia went to stumps at 227 for 7 in reply to NSW’s 366.After arriving at the wicket with the visitors at 87 for 3, Carey peppered the cow-corner boundary and regularly had the game stopped for lost balls in the scrubland.The left-hander hammered four sixes in his counter-attacking knock, going after Tanveer Sangha after the NSW spinner struck twice.Carey’s runs came after Travis Head also hit two sixes in his 30 for South Australia, batting at No.4 and not opening just six weeks out from the first Test against India.Head twice hit Sangha over the rope for six, before the legspinner beat the left-hander in flight when he tossed a ball up outside off stump and drew his edge.But, after making two half-centuries on Australia’s recent one-day tour of England, Carey stayed in white-ball mode. He hit back-to-back boundaries down the ground off quick Jack Nisbet, and also slog-swept Nathan Lyon for another six into the scrubland.Sangha was given the same treatment later in the day, before Carey reverse-swept and drove the spinner to the boundary.”Tanveer was bowling a pretty aggressive line around the wicket into some rough, so I felt like I had to be on the front foot and not just sit on the crease,” Carey said.”The intent was definitely there. I think when I am playing my best cricket I have a strong intent.”I just thought I had to be a little proactive.”The wicketkeeper-bat eventually bit off more than he could chew, caught in the deep trying to take on Lyon. His dismissal prompted another collapse of 4 for 5, with Lyon taking three wickets in 14 balls to finish with 3 for 45. Australia’s Test spinner had Daniel Drew caught-and-bowled for a duck, before he spun one out of the rough to bowl Ben Manenti for four.Captain Nathan McSweeney was run out on 55, adding salt into the wound for South Australia as the pressure from Lyon mounted.”I’ve been itching to get back playing. It’s what I love doing,” Lyon said. “I feel like I’ve been training the house down and in a really good headspace.”I had [spin coach] John Davison down last week, so just ticking those boxes with a really big summer ahead.”Carey’s knock came after fellow wicketkeeper Josh Inglis made 122 from 117 balls for Western Australia against Queensland. Earlier, Sangha (19 not out) and Liam Hatcher (26) added 42 for the final wicket for the Blues, giving the hosts a brief upper-hand when the pair then struck early with the ball.

Jasprit Bumrah set to make long-awaited comeback

The fast bowler is likely to be selected for the T20 internationals in Ireland next month

Nagraj Gollapudi27-Jul-20232:42

Rohit ‘quite positive’ about Bumrah’s impending return

Jasprit Bumrah is set to lead India’s pace attack once again as he is expected to be picked in the squad for the three T20 internationals in Ireland on August 18, 20 and 23. The squad is likely to be selected this week.”Bumrah is totally fit and he may go to Ireland,” BCCI secretary Jay Shah said in Delhi on Thursday.Bumrah underwent back surgery in March and has not played since the T20I series at home against Australia last September. As per the original timeline worked out by the medical staff at the National Cricket Academy in Bengaluru, Bumrah was only expected to return for the Asia Cup which starts on August 30.Related

  • Succession: What next for India in Tests?

  • Jasprit Bumrah 'bowling with full intensity'

The first hint that Bumrah’s recovery was progressing faster than expected came last week when the BCCI said in a media release that he was bowling at “full intensity” in the nets. Since he started rehab in April, Bumrah has incrementally built on his bowling workloads.

The tour of Ireland will be Bumrah’s second visit to the country: in 2018 he fractured his left thumb in the first match of the T20I series, forcing him to miss the first half of the England tour that year.Bumrah’s return will be a boost for India as they ramp up their preparations for the 2023 ODI World Cup. With Mohammed Shami also expected to return for the Asia Cup after a long rest (he last played the World Test Championship final in June), India will have their two best fast bowlers fresh for the two big global events.

Babar Azam: 'Soft dismissals the reason we lost'

“There were continuous discussions about chasing the total down, but when your main batters are dismissed, you start thinking differently”

Umar Farooq25-Mar-2022Pakistan captain Babar Azam rued “soft dismissals” after his side lost the series-deciding third Test against Australia in Lahore.Set a target of 351, Pakistan had finished the fourth day on 73 for no loss. On the final day, they were 165 for 3 at one stage but were eventually bowled out for 235, with Nathan Lyon picking up a five-wicket haul for the visitors.”We didn’t go defensive, we played positive cricket,” Babar said after the game. “You plan according to the situation. It’s not like you go out, play big shots and go for the runs. We had a good session early in the day but unfortunately we had soft dismissals and that’s the reason we lost the game.Related

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  • Lyon five-for, Cummins take Australia to 1-0 series win on final day

  • Cummins: 'Every individual has shown their game stands up to Asian conditions'

  • Nathan Lyon tames Lahore as Australia's ghosts disappear

  • Pakistan were eager to learn from Australia, but ignored one key lesson

“We had a simple plan – to take the momentum in hand first and then think [about the target] after the tea. After lunch, we had a plan to play normal cricket. We weren’t able to decide whether to go for a win or a draw. But with all those wickets falling, we decided to go deep as much as we could but we were positive throughout. There were continuous discussions in our dressing room about chasing it down.”But when your main batters are dismissed, you obviously start thinking differently. Still, Sajid [Khan] and I were trying to build a partnership and extend as much as we could, hoping we could draw. Yet we never held back, kept on playing shots and utilised whatever came in our area. So the mindset was positive but it didn’t go in our way.”Overall, Babar was happy with his side’s performance, even insisting that they had “dominated the first two Tests”. Both Tests had ended in draws. In the series opener in Rawalpindi, only 14 wickets fell across five days. In Karachi, Pakistan batted out 171.4 overs to save the match.”Overall the series went well, especially the Karachi Test where we dominated and saved the match,” Babar said. “Unfortunately, I got out but even then we had our mind set on chasing. But mistakes are part of the game and it’s too early to think about changes [in the side]. We don’t have to forget their recent performances. Our entire team is experienced now, we have developed a good combination and I have full faith in them.”Throughout the series, Pakistan were faced with some selection dilemmas. In the first Test, they were missing Faheem Ashraf and Hasan Ali because of injuries. The duo returned in the second Test, but for the third, Ashraf was replaced by Naseem Shah as Pakistan went with five specialist bowlers.That left them with a long tail. In the first innings of the Lahore Test, Pakistan lost their last five wickets for 14 runs, and in the second, for 68.When asked about Hasan’s performance – he picked up two wickets in two Tests – and if legspinner Zahid Mahmood could have been picked, Babar said: “The main thing is the combination and you pick players accordingly. We have our offspinner [Sajid] who is a good batter and Nauman Ali is coming along with a good bowling show. I don’t think even their legspinner [Mitchell Swepson] got enough help. Most of the wickets were taken by offspinners. Hasan Ali is a matchwinner, he gave his best effort but sometimes things don’t go your way. It’s part of the game. There are ups and downs but I have my belief in him and it’s still there as ever before.”Throughout the series, the pitches were a big talking point. Pakistan had been pushing to produce spin-friendly tracks but all three Tests were dominated by fast bowlers until the final day of the series.”There is always a home advantage and you definitely have to take advantage of it,” Babar said. “Rest it’s in the curator’s hands and I think they prepared good pitches at all three venues. It had turn and break and helped both our and their bowlers. I think cricket was played well. We only lost by one session, otherwise in all three games our effort was commendable.”

England's South Africa tour called off after Covid-19 outbreak

ODI series had been postponed on three separate occasions following virus scare

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Dec-2020England’s tour of South Africa has been called off following the outbreak of Covid-19 among both teams’ camps and staff at their hotel. The three ODIs have officially been postponed, with a possibility they could be played at a later date.The decision came after the opening ODI of the series was pushed back three times in four days, having originally been scheduled to take place at Newlands on Friday, before failed attempts to stage games at Paarl on Sunday, and at Newlands again on Monday.With England due to fly home on a chartered flight on Thursday, and with the squad still awaiting the ratification of two unconfirmed positive tests within the camp, CSA had hoped to be able to host back-to-back ODIs on Tuesday and Wednesday. However, news that the tour would be abandoned out of consideration for the “mental and physical health and welfare of players from both teams” came on Monday afternoon.ALSO READ: England blame ‘unacceptable’ Newlands nets after claims of protocol breachThe announcement was made via a joint statement from CSA and the ECB, although ESPNcricinfo understands that the decision to pull out came at the behest of the English board.Earlier on Monday, an England team spokesman hit back at suggestions that the players had breached Covid protocols during an unsanctioned practice session at Newlands on the eve of the scheduled first ODI, claiming that they had been given permission to set up a secure cordon around the nets, in spite of their proximity to a construction site, due to the “unacceptable” standards of the pitches they had been provided on the Newlands square.The chief executives of both boards cited player welfare as a primary concern in the decision to curtail the tour, with players understood to be uneasy about recent developments and the fact that the bio-secure bubble had been breached.The three-match ODI series forms part of the qualification process for the 2023 World Cup via the ICC’s new Super League, and the boards signalled their intention to stage the series at a later date. With England due to tour Bangladesh, Pakistan, Australia and West Indies next winter, on top of the T20 World Cup in India, it will be a challenge to find a suitable window.”The decision was taken jointly by the two boards to ensure the mental and physical health and welfare of players from both teams,” the statement said. “CSA and the ECB will now work together to determine when the three-match series, which forms part of the ICC Cricket Men’s Super League, can take place in the future.”Kugandrie Govender, CSA’s acting CEO, said: “The concern over the mental health impact of recent events on all involved is not one that we as CSA or the ECB take lightly and the decision to postpone the tour is the most responsible and reasonable course of action for us.”I would like to thank the ECB for the continued positive relations and we look forward to hosting the England team in the near future.”Paarl lies empty ahead of the postponed first ODI•Getty Images

Tom Harrison, the ECB’s chief executive, said: “We have always maintained that the welfare of our players and management is paramount. We were concerned about the potential impact that recent developments might have on the wellbeing of the touring party, and so after consultation with Cricket South Africa we have jointly made the decision to postpone the remaining matches in this series, in [the] best interest of the players’ welfare.”I would like to thank Cricket South Africa for their support and understanding on this matter and look forward to working with them to identify a time when we can return to play these fixtures in the future.”The postponement of the series will cast further doubt on the viability of South Africa’s scheduled home series against Sri Lanka, Australia and Pakistan this season, not least with the number of infections rising by 43% in the Western Cape last week.It is understood that CSA will lose in the region of US$2 million in broadcast revenue from the postponement of the three ODIs, and any further cancellations would have significant financial ramifications.

Alex Carey's Geneva jaunt and AB de Villiers' unlikely replacement

The latest snippets from the Vitality Blast, including Nicholas Pooran at number seven, Paul Nixon’s prophetic tweets, and Lewis McManus’ freak run-out

Matt Roller29-Jul-2019After winning just twice in 2018, Middlesex have already bettered their record from last season, and are now third-favourites with the bookies to win the Vitality Blast – not to be sniffed at, given they have reached the knockouts just once since their 2008 success.They have managed that despite the absence of AB de Villiers, who picked up injuries to both hands in last week’s win at The Oval to miss two of the seven games he had signed for, much to the club’s frustration.That injury was also a source of frustration for Glamorgan and Gloucestershire, whose marketing departments had both appealed to the AB factor in advertising those games; Middlesex themselves have plastered his face on billboards at various London stations, and are confident he will return for Thursday’s fixture against Kent.De Villiers’ replacement for those two games was Berkshire batsman Dan Lincoln, who hit a useful 30 in defeat at Cheltenham. In a throwback to the 1920s ideal of playing one sport in the winter and another in the summer, Lincoln also plays in goal for non-league side Bognor Regis Town. “Congratulations, Dan,” the club tweeted. “Just some minor shoes to fill.”***Yorkshire are set to go into the second half of the T20 Blast group stages without an overseas player, with coach Andrew Gale admitting that the hectic nature of the worldwide schedule meant they would struggle to find a replacement for Nicholas Pooran.”You can’t really do it like-for-like”, he told the , “because there aren’t many of those players out there. There’s a lot of cricket going around the minute. There’s the Canada [Global T20] tournament going on, and there’s a lot of players playing in that.”Pooran’s impact on the Blast was minimised by rain, though he did plunder 122 runs at a strike rate of 184.84 in his three games.
Eyebrows were raised when he came in at No. 7 in Yorkshire’s first game against Derbyshire, but the move simply represented the irrelevance of traditional batting orders in T20.”[Pooran] is at his best… in the last ten overs of the innings,” said Gale. “It just so happened at Chesterfield that he was coming in at seven because we’d lost more wickets than we would have wanted at that stage.”Adil Rashid prepares to bowl during a practice session•Getty Images

Yorkshire will welcome Adil Rashid back into their squad this week – with Moeen Ali and Jack Leach ahead of him in the Ashes pecking order, he is likely to be available for the rest of the tournament.***It was a long weekend to remember for Alex Carey, the wicketkeeper-batsman who was one of the World Cup’s breakout stars.Alex Carey bats, watched by Tom Banton•Getty Images

After missing out on Australia’s Ashes squad, Carey travelled from the Ageas Bowl to Hove on Friday morning, only to realise that he was ineligible for Sussex’s game against Surrey since he was still in the country on his national team visa.That meant booking the first possible flight out of the country – not as easy a task on a mid-summer Saturday morning – to have his visa stamped on the way back, resulting in a quick round trip to Geneva before a Sunday morning ride down to Taunton.Characteristically, Carey was unfazed, and hit a 46-ball 78 to set up a vital Sussex win. If this start is anything to go by, Sussex will be booking him a pre-match city break on a weekly basis.***Leicestershire were roundly thrashed in their first three games of the Blast, to the extent that coach Paul Nixon had to engage in some firefighting on Twitter.”3 international bowlers, bowled well we hit our shots 5-10 yards away from where we wanted to and that’s the game… we will do the same to the oppo next ….” he replied to a fan, in what appeared to be a case of foolhardy optimism.But lo and behold, in a rain-reduced 11-over game against pre-tournament favourites Nottinghamshire, they blitzed 125 for 3 thanks to Arron Lilley’s 66*, and defended it comfortably.Nixon’s bio says he is an “Ex Eng Cricketer, Leicestershire CCC Head Coach and After Dinner Speaker” – perhaps he should throw prophet in there, too.***Hampshire are longing for the glory days of 2010 and 2012, after a win and two defeats has left them languishing towards the bottom of the South Group.Back when they won the competition, Hampshire were innovators, using a series of top-quality spinners and skiddy medium-pacers, with specialist wicketkeeper Michael Bates often stood up to the stumps for all 20 overs.Hampshire are a much-changed side since their T20 title wins in 2010 and 2012•Getty Images

Their attack is much-changed, but they still have possess an excellent gloveman in the shape of Lewis McManus. His sharp-thinking brought about an MS Dhoni-style run-out in Wednesday night’s loss at Sussex, and he waited for Laurie Evans to leave his crease before whipping off the bails.It was no surprise, then, to learn that Bates has been working with McManus, and that the club are benefitting from his genius behind the stumps despite his premature release.Bates is the subject and co-author of a newly-released book, , in which he opens up about his struggles with the bat and the difficulty of coming to terms with his axing.While it seems unlikely that Bates’ role – keeping wicket and batting in the tail – will become part of the mainstream, his book offers an unusual and intriguing perspective on the changing demands on keepers, and the demise of the specialist.

David Warner signs with St Lucia Stars for maiden CPL stint

Former Australia vice-captain has been brought in to replace opener D’Arcy Short, who will be touring India with Australia A during the CPL

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Jun-2018David Warner will make his first appearance in the Caribbean Premier League (CPL) later this year, after being signed by the St Lucia Stars. The franchise announced that he will come in as a replacement for Australia’s D’Arcy Short, who they said is unavailable for the tournament because he is touring India as part of an Australia A squad in August and September.Warner is currently into the third month of a one-year ban handed to him by Cricket Australia for his part in the Newlands ball-tampering scandal, but has started to make his way back into competitive cricket. He was not allowed to play the IPL, but has since signed up with Global T20 Canada franchise Winnipeg Hawks for the league that will begin from June 28, and also committed to playing in the NT Strike League in Darwin starting in July, alongside Cameron Bancroft who is also serving a CA ban for the same issue.Speaking about the signing, Stars’ general manager, Mohammad Khan said: “We are excited to bring David to the St Lucia Stars. David is arguably one of the greatest batsmen of the modern era and a winning player. He is going to add a lot of value on the field and in the dressing room as we pursue our first title.”

Abdur Razzak's final over hands Dhanmondi win

A round-up of the Dhaka Premier League matches held on April 20, 2017

Mohammad Isam20-Apr-2017In the first close contest of this season’s Dhaka Premier League, Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club registered a five-run win over Prime Doleshwar Sporting Club at the BKSP-4 Ground in Savar.Needing 15 runs off the last over in a truncated game of 38 overs a side, Doleshwar’s Mohammad Sharifullah managed to hit a solitary boundary as Abdur Razzak conceded only nine runs off the deciding six balls.That Doleshwar’s chances were alive until the last over was largely due to a 108-run fourth-wicket stand between Puneet Bisht (83) and Marshall Ayub (42). But a sluggish start earlier meant there was too much to be done in the last eight overs. Shahadat Hossain picked up two wickets for Dhanmondi, while Razzak’s 3 for 39 in eight overs earned him the Player-of-the-Match award.Earlier, Dhanmondi Club amassed 235 for 7 in 38 overs, piloted by a 123-run second-wicket stand between Fazle Mahmud (55) and Imrul Kayes (67) before Nurul Hasan’s unbeaten 47 off 41. Habibur Rahman and Arafat Sunny took two wickets each.Gazi Group Cricketers cruised to an eight-wicket win, led by their bowlers, against Legends of Rupganj at the BKSP-3 Ground in Savar. Overnight rain had effected a 30-minute delay before the match got underway, reducing the contest to 47 overs a side.Gazi Group’s left-arm pace bowler Abu Hider took full advantage of the overcast conditions by picking up two early wickets during his four-wicket haul. Offspinner Parvez Rasool picked three wickets, while Mahedi Hasan bagged two, bowling out Rupganj for 156 runs in 44 overs.For Rupganj, No. 9 Mosharraf Hossain top-scored with 37 while No. 4 Mahmudul Hasan made 30.In reply, Gazi Group wrapped up the chase in 36 overs, with opening batsman Jahurul Islam closing out the game unbeaten on 62 off 106 with six fours. Mominul Haque contributed with 44 off 53 balls.Uday Kaul missed out on a century by just six runs but his effort helped Abahani Limited snaffle a 32-run win over Brothers Union at Khan Shaheb Osman Ali Stadium in Fatullah.Kaul struck just five fours in his 120-ball knock that spanned 41 overs. He added 96 for the opening stand with Liton Das (48) before adding a further 88 runs with Nazmul Hossain Shanto, who struck a 56-ball 49. Mahmudullah also fell one run short of a half-century, but Shuvagata Hom’s 17-ball 44 – studded with seven fours and a six – propelled Abahani to 327 for 6 in 50 overs.Opener Junaid Siddique’s century kept Brothers Union on track with his 112-ball 114, clobbering eight fours and three sixes. He added 86 runs for the second wicket with Mizanur Rahman and another 61 runs for the fourth wicket with Myshukur Rahman.However, when captain Alok Kapali fell for 6 in the 38th over, Brothers Union lost two more wickets in quick succession, including that of Siddique in the 41st over. No. 10 Nihaduzzaman kept his side in the chase with an unbeaten 32-ball 41, but it insufficient as Brothers Union could only manage 295 for 8 in 50 overs.For Abahani, Shuvagata finished with 3 for 45 from 10 overs and Mohammad Saifuddin ended on 2 for 50 after he dismissed the openers.

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