Stanbic Bank 20 Series 2010-11

Coventry guides nine-wicket win

The Report by Liam Brickhill

November 21, 2010

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Matabeleland Tuskers 158 for 1 (Coventry 67*, Horton 56*) beat Southern Rocks 154 for 8 (Taibu 60, Staddon 2-24) by nine wickets
Scorecard

Charles Coventry lines up a big shot during his 67 0ff 40 balls, Matabeleland Tuskers v Southern Rocks, Stanbic Bank 20 Series, Harare, November 21, 2010
Charles Coventry lines up a big shot during his 67 0ff 40 balls © Zimbabwe Cricket
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Charles Coventry secured an honourable end to Matabeleland Tuskers' Twenty20 campaign as his boundary-laden half-century took them to a nine-wicket win over Southern Rocks at Harare Sports Club and third place in the final standings. Entering after Neil Carter had been removed early in pursuit of Rocks' 154 for 8, Coventry shared in an unbroken 126-run partnership with Paul Horton, who hit an unbeaten fifty of his own, as victory was achieved with 10 balls to spare.

Carrying a niggling injury that has curtailed his bowling in this tournament, Carter has been used as a top-order pinch-hitter and launched Tuskers' innings with three successive boundaries in left-arm seamer Tendai Chisoro's second over. Elton Chigumbura struck back for Rocks with his very first ball as Carter gave himself room and slashed out to deep cover where Tendai Chitongo held a superb catch, diving to his left.

Coventry got off to a fluent start, collecting boundaries off his national team-mates Chigumbura and Chamu Chibhabha. But where Coventry might often have been accused of throwing away his wicket too quickly, today he played himself in carefully as seven overs of careful accumulation passed before he broke free.

When the charge did finally come, it was explosive, and successive sixes helped plunder 22 off Chigumbura's final over. With Tuskers hurrying towards their target, former Zimbabwe Under-19 legspinner Chitongo was crunched for six over the cover boundary and offspinner Keith Kulinga's second over was dismissed for 11. After Horton went to his fifty, Coventry finished the job two balls into the 19th over, slapping Chitongo to midwicket to seal the win and third place for Tuskers.

It was a disappointing end for Rocks, who had a nightmare season in 2009-10 but came back strongly this time round and appeared to be the form team of this tournament. Their batting had been their most impressive facet, but today it was the batsmen that let the side down. With Sikandar Raza and Chigumbura both falling early, it was left to Tatenda Taibu to repair the innings with a typically enterprising half-century. But he found precious little support, with the middle order being skittled cheaply as medium-pacers Keegan Meth and Bradley Staddon picking up two wickets apiece.

Liam Brickhill is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo

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Liam Brickhill Assistant editor Liam grew up hating cricket. That relationship began to thaw during England's ill-fated 1997 tour of Zimbabwe, which set the scene for an epiphanic conversion during Henry Olonga's triple-wicket miracle against India at the 1999 World Cup. He had a brief spell with ESPNcricinfo in 2004, before heading off to Rhodes University to study journalism and English literature. After four years of diligent work in various university cricket nets and the odd student bar, he returned to the fold in 2010 and all was forgiven. He still holds out hope that his time with ESPNcricinfo will somehow lead to a "right place at the right time" Test debut, maintains a burning passion for associate nation profiles, and holds the office tea mug-carrying record, with five.
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