Ramiz Raja removed as PCB chairman

Shehbaz Sharif, the Pakistan prime minister and board patron has nominated a 14-member committee led by Najam Sethi

Umar Farooq21-Dec-2022Ramiz Raja is no longer chairman of the PCB. His removal from the post and the current board was formally initiated by the Prime Minister of Pakistan, Shehbaz Sharif, who is also patron of the cricket board.A 14-member management committee, headed by former board head and prominent media analyst Najam Sethi, and including former Pakistan captains Shahid Afridi and Sana Mir will take interim charge of affairs. The committee will have 120 days in which they are expected to change the PCB’s constitution, bringing back the 2014 version to replace the current one (put in place in 2019).”The cricket regime headed by Ramiz Raja is no more,” Sethi tweeted late on Wednesday. “The 2014 PCB constitution stands restored. The Management Committee will work tirelessly to revive first class cricket. Thousands of cricketers will be employed again. The famine in cricket will come to an end.”

The more formal notification of events had been issued earlier from the Prime Minister’s office and a summary from the Ministry of Inter-Provincial Coordination (IPC) which confirmed speculation that had built over the last couple of days, prompted by Pakistan’s defeat in Karachi to England. That loss completed an unprecedented 0-3 home whitewash.”Constitution of a management committee to manage the affairs of PCB with full executive powers with the aim of effecting the restoration of Departmental Cricket Structure and other allied matters, including the nomination of a Board of Governors and election of chairman, as stipulated in the 2014 constitution, within a timeframe of 120 days,” the notification said. “The management committee of PCB shall comprise of the Chairman/Chief Executive & required members.”Related

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  • 'It has become a joke' – Ramiz Raja on being ousted as PCB boss

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  • 'There's been famine for the last four years' – Najam Sethi out to revive domestic cricket in Pakistan

The notification has to be sent to the Law and Justice division to be legally vetted, before being put in front of the cabinet for approval. That is expected to be a mere formality. It is not clear at the moment what implications – if any – this has on the senior executive in the board, though ESPNcricinfo believes there will be a cull. The 2014 constitution did not have scope for a CEO, for instance, with the chairman doubling up in that role. At the moment, the CEO is Faisal Hasnain and the COO – for whom there is a role – Salman Naseer.On Wednesday, Pakistan also announced a squad for the Test series against New Zealand which begins from December 26 in Karachi. New Zealand’s squad are due to arrive on Wednesday evening for their first series of any kind in Pakistan since 2003 – to a board in flux. Both the Pakistan captain Babar Azam and coach Saqlain Mushtaq have come under scrutiny after the loss to England but it is unlikely either of those positions change so soon – in any case Saqlain’s tenure ends in February 2023.Though Ramiz’s expected departure will be the headline consequence, the main order of business for the new committee is the repeal of the current board constitution to reinstate the 2014 version. In fact, the summary sent by the IPC to the prime minister’s office is not specifically about a board change. Its main concern is the constitutional revamp whereby department teams can return to domestic cricket. It is in this roundabout way that the current administration led by Ramiz is being removed – because the 2019 constitution does not recognise departmental cricket, the old constitution that does is being brought back and an interim management committee will be tasked to carry that out.A 14-member management committee, headed by Najam Sethi, is expected to take interim charge of affairs•Associated Press

Getting rid of departments was insisted upon by Imran Khan, when he was Prime Minister, who had for long wanted Pakistan’s domestic scene to replicate that of Australia’s – a provincial model, with six teams made up of Pakistan’s provinces playing in all tournaments. But with Imran’s exit in April 2022, a group of former board members has begun urging the government to go back to the previous domestic structure in which departmental teams such as WAPDA, SNGPL and PIA were part of the first-class circuit – a number of those members, unsurprisingly, make up the proposed interim management committee. Imran’s orders to abolish departmental cricket, the notification read, had been revoked by Sharif, who succeeded him as premier.The PCB had been criticised for abolishing departmental cricket, as it rendered hundreds of cricketers jobless at a stroke. It is worth noting that a number of department sides had shut down their sporting operations even before Imran’s change and, in the current economic climate, there might not be much appetite for such organisations to hire a squad of cricketers.Sethi was head of the PCB in one capacity or another from 2013 until 2018, though the stint was initially embroiled in legal battles with his predecessor Zaka Ashraf; he resigned once Imran became Prime Minister in August 2018. As the first chairman of the league, he oversaw the birth of the Pakistan Super League (PSL) and was in charge when the very first visits by international sides were made to Pakistan, ending a period of isolation that began after the 2009 terror attacks on the Sri Lanka team in Lahore.For Ramiz, whose position has been under constant speculation since Imran’s ouster as Prime Minister, the change will bring to an end a short but eventful tenure. It was Imran who had brought in Ramiz in September 2021 on the premise that a former cricketer was best placed to handle cricket matters in the country. But time had been running out for him since the day Imran and his government was ousted in April in divisive circumstances after a vote of no-confidence in the country’s parliament. The impact of that change is still playing itself out across the political spectrum of the country but, unusually at the time, the impact on the PCB was negligible. Usually, with a change of government, a change of the chairmanship and board administration is inevitable and immediate. But as the new government, with a vast coalition of several political parties, worked its way through the most pressing priorities in the country – not least a spiralling economic crisis – Ramiz stayed under the radar and continued in the position.However, momentum against him built after Pakistan’s 0-3 loss to England at home – a run that now includes the Test side losing four Tests in a row at home for the first time in the country’s history and not having won any of the six home Tests played in 2022. Over the last few days, Sethi as well as other senior members in the proposed management committee had begun making a play among political circles in Islamabad.Ramiz has taken on a more hands-on role with cricketing matters during his stint but as a result has been associated more closely with the team’s results than, for example, his predecessor Ehsan Mani. He will no doubt point to achievements in overseeing the completion of two of the highest-profile visits to Pakistan in over a decade – by Australia and England – and being in charge when Pakistan made the semi-final and final of consecutive men’s T20 World Cups and the final of the Asia Cup.December 22, GMT 0645 The story and headline were amended after Ramiz was formally removed as chairman.

Sam Hain, Carlos Brathwaite give Birmingham Bears qualification hope

Duo score half centuries as Bears beat Worcestershire Rapids by 17 runs

ECB Reporters Network16-Jul-2021Birmingham Bears kept alive their hopes of Vitality Blast qualification with a 17-run victory over arch-rivals Worcestershire Rapids at Edgbaston.Victory would have secured the Rapids a quarter-final place but they now have work still do to, at Leicestershire on Sunday. The Bears, meanwhile, must beat Northamptonshire Steelbacks at home and hope that other results go their way.After choosing to bat, the Bears made 169 for 5 thanks to Sam Hain’s classy unbeaten 83 from 53 balls. Overlooked by England’s selectors recently, Hain batted beautifully in an unbroken sixth-wicket stand of 106 in 67 balls with Carlos Brathwaite.The Rapids’ reply fell short at 152 for 6. Jake Libby top-scored with 36 from 34 balls, but the pursuit never properly escaped the shackles imposed by the spin of Danny Briggs, who took 2 for 18 from his four overs.The loss of early wickets has been a recurring problem for the Bears through the group stage and it happened again as they lost both openers in the first eight balls when Ben Dwarshuis and Dillon Pennington shattered the stumps of Ed Pollock and Adam Hose respectively.Pennington struck again in his second over when Will Rhodes chopped to short third man. Kyle Mayers, making his debut, lifted Ed Barnard for six but perished trying to repeat the shot when he found only long on.When Rob Yates chipped a return catch to Brett D’Oliveira it was 63 for 5 but Hain and Brathwaite counter-attacked with verve and 40 from a furious assault in the last two overs gave their bowlers something to work with.The Rapids then also lost both openers cheaply as D’Oliveira was bowled by Briggs and Jack Haynes lifted the spinner to deep mid-wicket.Daryl Mitchell and Libby rebuilt shrewdly with a stand of 53 in 39 balls before both perished trying to up the run-rate. Mitchell pulled Craig Miles to Hose on the rope and Miles was then the catcher when Libby heaved Rhodes to leg.Ben Cox reverse-swept Jake Lintott to short third man and Ed Barnard’s dangerous cameo ended when Miles plucked out his middle stump. A target of 29 from the last two overs proved well beyond the Pears after the first of those overs, from Brathwaite, cost just six.

Ricky Ponting on potential Usman Khawaja return: 'He's going to find it difficult'

Ponting still a fan of out-of-favour Khawaja, but thinks we didn’t see his best at international level

ESPNcricinfo staff18-May-2020Ricky Ponting believes inconsistent form and “not being able to produce his best” in international cricket has made Usman Khawaja’s prospects of a Test recall “difficult”.Khawaja last played for Australia during the 2019 Ashes in England, where he lost his No. 3 spot to Marnus Labuschagne, and was left out of the home Tests against Pakistan and New Zealand in November-December.Fresh doubts over Khawaja’s immediate future emerged in April when he wasn’t offered an annual retainer by Cricket Australia. Trevor Hohns, the selection convener, said at the time that Khawaja was “one of the unlucky ones”, before explaining how poor form in the Sheffield Shield – he made 202 runs at 18.36 in 11 innings – hurt his prospects.Ponting believes Khawaja may be able to turn it around yet should he score “truckloads of runs” for Queensland this coming summer, but a recall probably still remains a tall order.”I honestly think now he’s going to find it difficult [to get back into the Australian team] and I feel for him,” Ponting told . “I love Usman Khawaja, I got really close to him over the last 10 years since he made his debut and I talk to him quite regularly.”I’ve always felt he’s a very good player and we probably never saw the absolute best of him at international cricket. We saw glimpses of it, and dribs and drabs, but not the consistently good player I thought he could have been for Australia.”Thirty-three-year-old Khawaja, who has also been out of Australia’s ODI side since the end of the 2019 World Cup round-robin games, remains steadfast in his belief of being among the top-six batsmen in the country.”Without sounding arrogant, I still feel like I’m one of the top-six batsmen in the country,” Khawaja told Fox Sports. “Age is just a number and if you’re performing, you’re performing; it’s not like I’m 37 or 38 and coming into right at the end of my career.”My playing against spin has been right up there as some of the best in the county. Bar maybe Steve Smith, who is an absolute genius. But the most important thing is to score runs.”

Isuru Udana's 48-ball 84* in vain as South Africa clinch series

Fifties from Reeza Hendricks and Rassie van der Dussen helped the hosts set a target that proved to be beyond Sri Lanka’s reach

The Report by Andrew Fidel Fernando22-Mar-2019
Reeza Hendricks and Rassie van der Dussen produced a scintillating second-wicket century stand, upon which was founded yet another comfortable South Africa win. The hosts took an unassailable 2-0 lead in the three-match T20I series with this 16-run victory in Pretoria, but don’t let that margin fool you. Sri Lanka never seemed to have the measure of their target of 181.Sri Lanka’s No. 8 batsman Isuru Udana produced another magnificent show of lower-order hitting, walloping six sixes and eight fours in his unbeaten 48-ball 84. But even when he arrived at the crease, the required run rate was almost 12 an over. He managed to get Sri Lanka only within sight of the target, without ever really threatening it. Nevertheless, Udana has perhaps batted his way into a World Cup berth, having been good with the bat right throughout these South Africa limited-overs series.But it was really the 116-run stand between Hendricks and van der Dussen that was the centrepiece of South Africa’s victory. The partnership began with a boundary – van der Dussen crashing the last ball of the second over through the covers. Despite a quiet Powerplay, the stand blossomed between overs seven and 14 – South Africa travelling at over ten an over through that period. Thisara Perera, in particular, came in for punishment – van der Dussen clobbering a six over midwicket in his first over, before repeating the treatment twice in his second – an over that went for 19 runs in all.While van der Dussen was clearing the rope, though, Hendricks was lacing wayward balls through the infield, prospering through the covers in particular, where he hit four of his nine boundaries, but also through backward point and midwicket, where he hit the other five. Several of those boundaries came off genuinely good balls – Hendricks using his wrists to manufacture powerful strokes.Hendricks brought up his half-century off the 38th delivery he faced, cutting a Kamindu Mendis slow left-arm delivery powerfully behind point for four. Van der Dussen got to the milestone next over, off the 34th ball, and just when it started looking like the pair were setting South Africa up for a truly gargantuan score, Lasith Malinga injected himself into the attack, and had Hendricks hole out to mid-off, with a slower ball. He was out for 65 off 49 balls.Van der Dussen hit one more four, swatting Udana through midwicket on the 16th over, bowled by Udana. But he was himself out not long after when he ran at Akila Dananjaya, yorked himself and was bowled.The death overs for South Africa were largely handled by Duminy. David Miller was present at the other end, but struggled against Sri Lanka’s slower balls, and wound up only with a run-a-ball nine. Duminy, meanwhile, was industrious right throughout his innings, socking Udana over cover for four off the eighth delivery he faced, before hitting one more four and two sixes in his 17-ball 33 not out.In response, Sri Lanka were more or less pathetic in the first 14 overs, surrendering seven wickets and allowing the required run rate to climb over 14 an over. Avishka Fernando and Kusal Mendis both departed in the first over of the chase – Dale Steyn rushing Avishka with his pace before grazing Kusal’s off stump with an outswinger.At one stage, Chris Morris was even on a hat-trick, having had Niroshan Dickwella caught at mid-on before nicking Kamindu Mendis off the first ball. But Morris wasn’t the only South Africa bowler who was threatening the Sri Lanka batsmen. Dwaine Pretorius took 1 for 22, while Tabraiz Shamsi claimed 2 for 16 from his four overs. Opening bowlers Steyn and Morris had wreaked the most damage though, taking a combined five wickets.Udana’s outstanding lower-order hitting helped narrow the gap, but Sri Lanka’s top order was once again been unable to resist the South Africa bowlers – even those from a depleted attack. The next-best score after Udana’s was Thisara’s 22 as no batsman appeared capable of attacking for a significant length of time.

Mumbai Indians appoint Malinga as bowling mentor

After going unsold in the IPL auction last month, the Sri Lanka fast bowler will join Mumbai Indians’ support staff headed by his former captain Mahela Jayawardene

ESPNcricinfo staff07-Feb-2018Sri Lanka fast bowler Lasith Malinga has been named bowling mentor of Mumbai Indians ahead of IPL 2018. Malinga, who has had a long-standing association with the franchise, will join the support staff headed by his former captain Mahela Jayawardene and comprising bowling coach Shane Bond, batting coach Robin Singh and newly appointed fielding coach James Pamment. This will be Malinga’s first official mentoring role with any side.”It’s a great opportunity to be present with, and an honour to continue my association with Mumbai Indians,” Malinga was quoted as saying in a statement. “Mumbai has been my home away from home for the last decade. As a player, I have enjoyed the journey with Mumbai Indians and now as mentor, I look forward to the new chapter.”In his long and distinguished international career, Malinga, 34, has featured in 30 Tests, 204 ODIs and 68 T20Is for Sri Lanka. He has also played 127 games for Mumbai Indians in the IPL and Champions League T20 and is the highest-wicket taker for the franchise with 179 scalps at an economy rate of 6.88. However, Malinga, who had set his base price at INR 1 crore (USD 156,000 approx) , went unsold at the IPL auctions last month. Considering his lofty standards, he had underachieved last season: Malinga picked up 11 wickets from 12 games at an economy rate of 8.52.Malinga has been dogged by injuries over the last few years, and recently found himself out of the national side. Malinga, who has not played international cricket since a one-off T20I against India in September 2017, was “rested” for Sri Lanka’s T20I series in India. He was also left out of the touring squad to Bangladesh. Malinga subsequently said he didn’t know why he was being rested.

BCCI opposition to Lodha reforms continues

The BCCI said its members have cited “practical difficulties” as the reason for not implementing all the recommendations of the Lodha Committee

Raunak Kapoor and Nagraj Gollapudi15-Oct-2016At the conclusion of an emergency meeting in Delhi on Sunday, the BCCI said its members have cited “practical difficulties” as the reason for not implementing all the recommendations of the Lodha Committee.The top brass of the BCCI as well as heads of various state associations said nothing had changed in their stance since the special general meeting on October 1. At the SGM, the BCCI had decided to selectively adopt the Lodha Committee recommendations, thus defaulting on the Supreme Court order from July 18, which had mandated the board to adopt all the reforms.A prominent BCCI office bearer said that its senior lawyer Kapil Sibal would, at the next hearing on October 17, argue that without a two-third majority the board could not enforce a diktat on its members to adopt the reforms. During the hearings last week, a three-judge bench of the Supreme Court had asked the BCCI to “unconditionally” accept the reforms and not “precipitate” the matter. The board’s emergency meeting in Delhi was a reaction to this, and was attended by all of its Full Members.”Our lawyers will put forward all our reservations and practical difficulties concerning implementing certain recommendations one by one on Monday,” the senior office bearer said. “We are confident that the court will allow us to present our arguments, after which we will decide the future course of action.”This office bearer also said BCCI president Anurag Thakur would file the personal affidavit that the court had asked of him on Monday. Thakur was asked to clarify whether he had sought ICC intervention against the implementation of the Lodha Committee’s recommendations, as ICC chief executive David Richardson had said last month.The BCCI’s emergency meeting on Sunday was about finding clarity regarding their next course of action. Both the board and its state associations need a two-third majority to pass any resolution.”The meeting was convened by BCCI to be more transparent and offer more clarity. We already had taken a stance at the SGM recently to stay together and today it was the case of just taking that forward,” a secretary of a West Zone state association said.The members also supported the board’s stance of taking the court on. “Why is the Supreme Court bothered about such a successful organisation like BCCI. It has been good to so many people, has developed such a successful product. It is not the court’s area,” the secretary of the state association said.In an attempt to up the ante, the court passed an interim order on October 7 stating the BCCI stop all funds to the state associations until they submit a resolution in writing to the court and the Lodha Committee about adopting all the reforms in toto.

Joyce resigns Sussex captaincy

Ed Joyce has stepped down from the Sussex captaincy a week after the club suffered relegation to Division Two of the Championship

ESPNcricinfo staff02-Oct-2015Ed Joyce has stepped down from the Sussex captaincy a week after the club suffered relegation to Division Two of the Championship. Luke Wright, the T20 captain, is a leading candidate to take over in the other two formats next season although Sussex are yet to confirm Joyce’s successor.Joyce stepped up after Michael Yardy resigned midway through 2012 and oversaw consecutive third-placed finishes in the following two seasons. The Ireland opener passed 1000 first-class runs each time but struggled for form this year, with only one Championship century. He made scores of 2 and 1 as Sussex were beaten by Yorkshire in the final round to fall out of Division One.”It has been an honour to captain Sussex for the last three-and-a half years,” Joyce said. “I couldn’t have asked for a more committed group of players and coaches to work with.”We’ve had a very tough year in 2015 but despite this, we’ve received overwhelming support from the majority of fans and this shows the unity and family feeling that Sussex engenders.”My increasing commitments with Ireland and the stage in my career that I’m at meant that the job this year became more a burden than a challenge to be relished. So the time is definitely right to hand over the reins to a new captain and whoever that is will have my full support. I’m also very determined to get back to scoring lots of runs and helping us back into the first division of the Championship and to performing much better in white-ball cricket.”We have so much talent in the dressing room and so many good people throughout the club that I’m certain we’ll bounce straight back from this season.”Joyce has another year on his Sussex contract to run and his experience at the top of the order should see him retain an important role, particularly after the retirement of Yardy.Wright finished the season as Sussex’s leading first-class run-scorer, with 1220, and also contributed more than 500 in the NatWest Blast as he captained them to the quarter-finals for the first time since 2012.Sussex’s cricket manager Mark Robinson said: “I’d like to thank Ed for all of his hard work and dedication that he has put into the job. He has always led the team with great integrity and commitment, and I’m sure that the new captain will appreciate having a player of the stature of Ed to be able to lean on for advice and support.”

IPL pulls Sri Lanka players out of Chennai

The IPL 2013 matches in Chennai will not feature any Sri Lankan cricketers or match officials, the league’s governing council said after a meeting on Tuesday

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Mar-2013The IPL 2013 matches in Chennai will not feature any Sri Lankan cricketers or match officials, the league’s governing council said after a meeting on Tuesday. It said the decision was taken keeping in mind security concerns in Chennai.”The security of all involved in the IPL, whether players, spectators or those working in the stadiums, is of paramount importance to the BCCI,” the statement said. “The governing council decided that Sri Lankan players will not participate in the IPL 2013 league matches in Chennai and will advise the nine franchises accordingly.”The decision followed growing political tensions, stemming from the treatment of ethnic Tamils in Sri Lanka and capped by a letter written on Tuesday by the Tamil Nadu state government to the prime minister asking for a ban on Sri Lankan involvement in the Chennai leg of the IPL.The letter, written by the chief minister J Jayalalitha, was unequivocal in its stand.
“In such a hostile and tense environment, we apprehend that the participation of Sri Lankan players in the IPL tournament, with many games to be played in Chennai, will aggravate an already surcharged atmosphere and further offend the sentiments of the people.”Earlier this month the DMK, the main opposition party in Tamil Nadu and a key ally of the federal government, pulled out of the ruling coalition at the centre asking for sterner measures to redress alleged atrocities towards Tamils in Sri Lanka.Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) said it was monitoring the developments in India closely and was waiting for a travel advisory from the Sri Lankan government. “If there is a secondary threat to a player in a particular area then we will wait for the government’s advice,” Nishantha Ranatunga, the SLC secretary, told ESPNcricinfo. “We have written to Ministry of Foreign Affairs through our Minister of Sport to get feedback on our players’ safety.”The “ban” will affect Chennai Super Kings, who play all their eight home matches in Chennai; however, their Sri Lankan contingent consists of only two fringe players, Nuwan Kulasekara and Akila Dananjaya. Franchises that will be significantly hit, at least for the lone game they play in Chennai in the league phase, include Mumbai Indians (Lasith Malinga), Delhi Daredevils (Mahela Jayawardene), Sunrisers Hyderabad (Kumar Sangakkara) and Pune Warriors (Angelo Mathews). Chennai also hosts some of the knockout matches, where these players would be crucial if their teams make it that far.”We were first told by the IPL authorities about the problem in Tamil Nadu around a fortnight ago,” a franchise official said. “And after due consultations, almost all the franchises are happy losing one or two of their players for one game rather than the whole tournament.”It is not yet clear whether Super Kings will decide to withdraw their Sri Lankan players for the season but if so, the players will be compensated with their contract fees for the entire season.Sri Lankan players in IPL:
Nuwan Kulasekara and Akila Dananjaya (Chennai Super Kings)
Mahela Jayawardene and Jeevan Mendis (Delhi Daredevils)
Sachithra Senanayake (Kolkata Knight Riders)
Lasith Malinga (Mumbai Indians)
Ajantha Mendis and Angelo Mathews (Pune Warriors)
Kushal Janith Perera (Rajasthan Royals)
Muttiah Muralitharan and Tillakaratne Dilshan (Royal Challengers Bangalore)
Kumar Sangakkara and Thisara Perera (Sunrisers Hyderabad)

Ponting resists Somerset overtures

Ricky Ponting has effectively resisted Somerset’s overtures about a spell in county cricket, insisting that rest is his priority.

Brydon Coverdale23-Mar-2012Ricky Ponting has effectively resisted overtures from Somerset this year, declaring that county cricket is not on his radar at the moment.Although he has not officially retired from ODIs, Ponting is now effectively a Test-only player for Australia and after the series in the West Indies in April he will have no cricket on his schedule until the home summer starts in October.That means a five-month break for a man used to life on the road with the national team and Somerset, who privately make no secret of their admiration for his talents, harbour ambitions to tempt him into county cricket before he retires. But Ponting, who has two young children, has said that rest will be a preferable option over the Australian winter.”It [county cricket] doesn’t really fit into what I’m looking at doing,” Ponting said in Melbourne. “I’m looking forward to having a bit more time pre-season with the Tasmanian Tigers this year back in Hobart and spending a bit of time with the family so county cricket is probably out of the question.”Ponting finished the 2011-12 season captaining Tasmania while the regular leader George Bailey was on international duty in the West Indies and although he failed to reach double-figures in the Sheffield Shield final, his state form was generally very good. Despite not being part of Australia’s ODI side any more, it has still been a hectic few months for Ponting,”I’ve got to look at what my best preparation is, post the West Indies, and that will probably be to have a couple of months off. It’s been a hard 12 months for me personally and around my cricket.”With things not going as smoothly as I wanted at the start of the year, I had to train harder and work harder on my game and think more about my game than ever before. It’s taken its toll a little bit, so I need to have a chance to refresh and recharge my batteries and get a solid pre-season under my belt before the Australian summer.”

Partying supporters send message to ICC

A beaming Cricket Ireland president, Basil McNamee, was among the dozens
of delighted Irish fans awaiting their heroes at the team hotel in
Bangalore on Wednesday night

Siddarth Ravindran02-Mar-2011A beaming Cricket Ireland president, Basil McNamee, was among the dozens
of delighted Irish fans awaiting their heroes at the team hotel in
Bangalore on Wednesday night, savouring “the best victory in Ireland’s
cricket history”. The stunning upset of England, their fiercest sporting
rival, not only threw Group B wide open and injected excitement into a
long-drawn league phase that was expected to be boringly predictable, but
also brought into focus the ICC’s decision to shut out Associate nations
from the 2015 World Cup.”This win is just a dream come true,” McNamee told ESPNcricinfo. “It also
sends out a message that Associates can’t be taken for granted by
everybody, that we can surprise.” Ireland’s back-from-the-dead victory
gives them a real chance of making it to the quarter-finals, with two wins
from their remaining four matches likely to ensure their qualification.Ireland’s position was bleak after defeat in the opening game to
Bangladesh, and sliding to 111 for 5 against England. The resilience they
showed in constructing the largest ever World Cup chase particularly
pleased McNamee. “We were used to being defeated. So when victory comes, a
victory against England, it’s absolutely wonderful,” he said. “Not only
that, our boys played so well. It looked several times that we were going
to be second-best again but our boys dug in.”The travelling Ireland supporters had plenty of anxious moments in the
tense chase, relief and joy finally taking over when John Mooney clipped a
boundary to midwicket off the first ball of the final over. It was nearly
two hours later that the Ireland team arrived at the hotel to a rousing
reception from the already partying fans.William Porterfield and the rest of the side soaked in the applause and
cheers from the fans who turned the lobby into a sea of green and white.
“It was great to see so many of our supporters out here,” a composed
Porterfield told ESPNcricinfo. “It was even better to give them something
to cheer about.”Ireland broke a slew of records and charted new ground in their win –
fastest World Cup century for Kevin O’Brien, biggest World Cup chase, and
their first victory over England being the prominent ones – and
Porterfield said the team hadn’t yet realised the enormity of the
achievement. “We got to let this sink in still,” he said. “We’ve all grown
up dreaming of moments like this in a World Cup, and we’re going to enjoy
this time with our family and friends and have a couple of drinks.”It was the end of a day that he said “definitely eclipsed any Irish
cricket has had” but even then he was not distracted from the task ahead
for Ireland. “We’ve got another four games left in the group, and
hopefully we can give our fans something more to cheer about,” he said.
“We’ve got to back this up in our next few performances and hopefully
qualify for the next stage.”

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