Rain - Gatecrasher And Spoilsport (31 October 1998)
Until 5 pm, the only cricketers in action yesterday were the Aussies, playing golf at KGC
31-Oct-1998
31 October 1998
Rain - Gatecrasher And Spoilsport
By Shakil Kasem
Beyond the boundary
Until 5 pm, the only cricketers in action yesterday were the Aussies,
playing golf at KGC. That spoke volumes for the way the day was
turning out to be. Cricket took a backseat as overnight drizzle
rendered the Bangabandhu Stadium quite inhospitable. And when our own
three-ball, with only Manzoor Ahmed and yours truly under the
umbrellas got caught in the rain on the 12th hole, things were
looking increasingly dicey. Apprehensions of the match being reduced
to a shoot-out raised their ugly heads.
Why a cricket match should be decided by someone trying to knock down
an inanimate object boggles the mind somewhat. That's a question that
must soon be answered at some point in the near future. A player's
skills ought to be pitted against an equally adept opponent, capable
either of defending or attacking, and thereby influencing an outcome
or a decision.
In the end a semi-final that lived up to its billing did set the
pulse racing for a packed house. South Africa raced to 240 in 39
overs. A stuttering start and Darryl Cullinan not being able to carry
on from where he left off still saw the Sri Lankans on a right royal
chase for the leather. Jacques Kallis, an imposing figure in his own
right, make his presence felt with a blitzkrieg hundred. Arjuna
Ranatunga used four spinners and Kallis hit them to all parts of the
ground and beyond.
Hansie Cronje pattered around, not quite his normal controlled self,
making a scratchy 20 odd. Kallis it was who shouldered the innings
and posted South Africa's daunting challenge to Arjuna's men. In any
match played on a reduced format, fielding is the key to keep matters
under control. For some strange reason the Sri Lankans were woefully
short of ideas in the field. The slippery outfield could be made the
villain, but the Sri Lankans perhaps paid heavily for some shoddy
work themselves.
South Africa were faced with worst nightmare staring them in the
face, immediately after the innings ended. Remember the 1992 World
Cup where they were asked to score 23 runs off one ball, after the
calculations were made when the rain came then? It was a shame that
after two clinical performances in this tournament whilst batting,
Hansie Cronje should be faced with the prospect of being done in by
the rules, and not by cricket.
The tournament, which had been going on like clockwork until now,
faced its first major hiccup, and this semi-final struggled to remain
alive as a cricket match through the major part of the day. The
weekend crowd gathered for this match, all 40,000 or more, were a
great testimony to the good-natured behaviour of the Bangladeshi
cricket lover. Whatever the outcome was, all across the world the
images of a patient, expectant multitude willing a cricket match to
breathe till late in the night did indeed have its own message.
Cricket rules OK, in Dhaka.
Source :: The Bangladesh Daily Star (https://www.dailystarnews.com)