Here's the latest from my summer sporting interlude. The Cricket World Cup is here, and it would be rude not to ... these are the first two of my three trips down the M4 corridor of uncertainty.
Hopperational Details
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Date & Venue
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Friday 7 June
2019 at the County Ground, Bristol
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Result
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Pakistan v Sri Lanka. No Result.
Match abandoned due to weather without
a ball being bowled.
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Competition
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Cricket World
Cup 2019
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Hopstats
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The 10th
venue on my cricket-watching list.
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Context
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Early days in
the group stage of the tournament.
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In one sentence
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Frustration
for everyone.
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So what?
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One point
each. So something must have happened, and I was there. Tick. Controversial.
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Pix
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... and so, wait a week or so and hope for better weather ...
Hopperational
Details
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Date & Venue
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Saturday 15
June 2019 at the Cardiff Wales Stadium
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Result
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South Africa beat Afghanistan by 9
wickets (Duckworth-Lewis Method)
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Competition
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Cricket World
Cup 2019
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Hopstats
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The 11th
venue on my cricket-watching list.
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Context
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At the time
of ticket purchase, this would not have been expected to be a 9th
v 10th game in the group stage.
It is a must-win match for the underperformers of South Africa if they
are to retain a notional chance of progression to the semi-finals.
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In one sentence
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South Africa
won the toss, made the correct call to bowl first as part of managing the
weather conditions, and did what they had to do with the bat once Afghanistan
had collapsed to a low total without using their overs and time.
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So what?
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It is still
unlikely that South Africa will qualify, but they would need to get some good
wins against New Zealand and Australia particularly as teams already ahead.
They also play Pakistan and Sri Lanka. On today’s performance, Afghanistan
will go home with more experience, but that’s all.
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Match Report
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The
Afghanistan openers Hazrat and Noor Ali Zadran did OK against Rabara and
Hendricks with the new ball, and they got to 56-1 off 15 overs. Then Phehlukwayo and Morris put the brakes
on as the power play ended and the field could be set to reduce the chances
of boundaries. Afghanistan then
collapsed from 69-2, having had two breaks for rain, after 20 to 77-6 after
25 as Imran Tahir took two wickets in his first over and Morris and
Phehlukwayo did their bit in cleaning up the tail. The rain breaks had helped South Africa
much more than Afghanistan. A total of
125 would never be defensible, but even more crucial was that they put back
over 15 overs worth of time back into the day. It would have been worse but for an
entertaining cameo of 35 by Rashid Khan who messed up Tahir’s bowling figures
temporarily before the bowler got him.
Tahir had 4-49, Morris 3-13 and Phehlukwayo 2-18 which tells the
story. The game had by now been reduced to a 48-over contest. As I eventually
drove away from Cardiff later, towards the most magnificent rainbow I have
ever seen in my life and leaving apocalyptic clouds over Elton John at one of
this city’s other stadia, the rain came in again.
To be fair,
South Africa were always ahead of the Duckworth-Lewis target, scoring at six
an over, but the nearest we came to a Rocketman was Phehlukwayo’s winning shot,
the first and only six of the day. He
had been promoted to number three after Amla and de Kock had respectfully seen
off the new ball and gone on to a hundred partnership. They looked set for a ten-wicket win before
de Kock was caught for 68. Amla was
determined to remain at the crease, and he was 41 not out at the end.
I had a go at keeping a ball-by-ball record. It takes some practice, and is quite hard when there is not another person to look out for signals and such like. Like Marmite, you'll either think this is really interesting or something to be avoided at all costs, especially if you are next to the group of beery men in banana costume.
It has to be
said that I appear to be headed for another one-sided contest on Monday, and
so far my personal experience of this tournament has been disappointing from
a sporting point of view, and certainly not value for money when I take into
account travel, parking and food costs on top of the ticket prices. I’ve liked the quirkiness of the grounds,
the enthusiasm of the tournament volunteers (“Cricketeers”), the passion of
the overseas supporters for the game, the family atmosphere, and I suppose
the group stage programme is not bad at £10.
The merchandise and stadium food, as ever, is overpriced but with a
better range of choice than some football events that I have attended. The
shuttle bus services have been OK but with an element of chaos in the
organisation. The driver at Bristol took the wrong route and the one at Cardiff
did some damage to an adjacent tree as we arrived. Regular blog readers will
recall that I saw two high-quality contests in Chennai last year for next to
nothing and I will look back on those games more fondly.
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Pix
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Learn Welsh through cricket, lesson 1. |
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I assume that this is what happens if you do a joint degree in Physical Education and Marketing |
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Rahmat Shah hanging on in there. |
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SA's Quinton de Kock kept on his toes |
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Hashim Amla pushes another single |
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The nation's media searching out fans who are sleeping or otherwise worthy of ten seconds of exposure on the big screen. |
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The resident gulls are a bit of a nuisance to be perfectly honest. Hold on tightly to your overpriced chips. |
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What Next?
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Follow @GrahamYapp
on Twitter! I’m off to Taunton tomorrow for West Indies v Bangladesh, and
then with three more group stage games to come before the end of the month.
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