Winning or losing means little in final that decides nothing

“This is a call out to anyone who wants to play us. We’d love to have a fixture or two.” – Ryan Cook, Netherlands coach, on his team’s looming downtime.

Telford Vice / Harare Sports Club

NEITHER a bang nor a whimper accompanied the end of the men’s World Cup qualifiers ended at Harare Sports Club (HSC) on Sunday. Instead the final was a strange dance; a two-step of torpor and twitchiness conducted by teams on different trajectories towards a common goal. 

Dasun Shanaka and Scott Edwards appeared with the trophy on the outfield on Saturday for the obligatory photo shoot, and greeted each other with the hearty handshakes and hugs of brothers. Perhaps the clearly warm words they exchanged concerned the fact that the decider was not a decider. By virtue of reaching the final, both teams will go to the World Cup in India in October and November.

That made Sunday’s match irrelevant. Even so, the Netherlands brought to it the same preppy energy that has propelled them throughout the tournament. They have had so much fun proving their point — that they belong at the global showpiece — that they were enthusiastic to prove it again. Sri Lanka, World Cup champions in 1996, skulked around the ground projecting a faint air of either embarrassment that they should have to put up with qualifying in the first place, or boredom with being there having done the job they came to do.

How had the realisation that they would have to qualify land with the Sri Lankans? “It was uncomfortable,” Chris Silverwood said. “It was a responsibility that we took very heavily. We knew we had to come here and perform. It’s tricky when you come to these places. One of the things that has been really pleasing for me is that every time we have been asked a question, we’ve managed to find solutions. That’s a sign of a good developing team, which is what we have here.”

The difference in the teams’ approach was captured across seven balls deep in the doldrums of the Lankan innings, each episode starring the irrepressible Logan van Beek. Sahan Arachchige reverse swept the first of those deliveries, bowled by Saqib Zulfiqar, into van Beek’s hands as he dived at a shortish backward point. Two balls later Charith Asalanka bunted Zulfiqar to midwicket and set off on a single that was never there. van Beek hustled to the ball and bustled his throw, which glanced the stumps with Asalanka millimetres from safety. Four balls after that Shanaka lazily dinked van Beek to mid-on, where Vikramjit Singh took a simple catch.

That took the Lankans from 180/3 to 183/6, and shrunk a total that had looked bound for at least 350 to 233. But, unlike teams like West Indies and South Africa, Sri Lanka do not often beat themselves. So it didn’t matter that their opponents were the most plucky, enterprising, ambitious team at the qualifiers. Objectively, the Lankans are a better side than the Dutch. Good luck telling the Dutch that.

They prevailed over the United States, Nepal, West Indies, Oman and Scotland — and lost to Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka — to reach the final. But Sri Lanka swept all before them: the United Arab Emirates, Oman, Ireland, Scotland, the Netherlands, Zimbabwe and West Indies. In the Super Six game between the finalists in Bulawayo two Fridays ago, the Lankans were dismissed for 20 fewer runs than on Sunday and still won by 21.

The matchwinning performers then were Dhananjaya da Silva, who took guard at 34/4 and was ninth out for 93, and Maheesh Theekshana, who dismissed Bas de Leede, Zulfiqar and van Beek in the space of seven of his deliveries. On Sunday, in the absence of a compelling batting remedy, the winning was done by Dilshan Madushanka, who removed Vikramjit, Wesley Barresi and Noah Croes in a new-ball spell of five overs that cost nine runs. And by Wanindu Hasaranga, who struck with his first delivery of the match by trapping Teja Nidamanuru in front and did the same to Zulfiqar four overs later to reduce the Dutch to 49/6 after 12. Hasaranga was denied two more wickets by umpire’s call, and Theekshana hastened the end by taking the last four for seven runs.

You can bring as much energy, enthusiasm, hustle and bustle to a contest as you can carry. But it will likely count for little if your opponents are the demonstrably superior side and, importantly, are able to corral enough of that superiority even when they don’t need to win. The Lankans did that on Sunday. 

They twice topped 300 but it’s with the ball that they left their mark on the tournament. Going into Sunday’s game none of the nine other teams had taken more wickets than their total of 64, nor banked a better bowling average than their 18.68, nor a better economy rate than their 4.78, nor more five-wicket-hauls than their three — all by Hasaranga. 

Not that most of the crowd cared. As expected, in the absence of Zimbabwe’s team they threw their support behind the Dutch, who had the good grace to applaud them from the field. A small section of fans on the grass bank had turned out to shout for Sri Lanka, and were joyous in their appreciation of the ground announcer splashing some papare music amid the usual fare.

They knew their team would win long before that was confirmed. They also knew the victory didn’t count for much, and that the going won’t be as easy once they get to the World Cup. The Dutch knew their impressive display in the qualifiers would have been expunged from most memories by the time they arrived in India.

As things stand they will not play a competitive match before that happens. “We’ll go back home and try and put a couple of fixtures together,” Ryan Cook said. “They don’t have any at the moment on the international circuit. This is a call out to anyone who wants to play us. We’d love to have a fixture or two. Our guys have not been to the subcontinent many times before. It would be good to have some fixtures somewhere in the subcontinent as well.”

Financial backing, too, was thin on the ground for the men in orange. “The 50-over World Cup, in particular, presents an opportunity playing India and other countries in India. That brings a lot of eyeballs to the screens. Hopefully we will be able to pick up a sponsor or two, and bring a bit more revenue into the game. It will take a bit of work from our end, and here’s a full invitation to any sponsors out there who feel like being on the front and the side of the shirt in the World Cup.”

No such pleas and promises were made after the game that was played between the pitch table and the boundary on the northern side of the ground on Saturday. HSC’s groundstaff have prepared the surface and the outfield for 10 matches in 22 days, and they have done so expertly and unerringly. Secure in the knowledge that they knew what they were doing with only the final to play, they pitched stumps in the outfield and spent some time in the sun enjoying the fruits of their hard work. Neither torpor nor twitchiness was in evidence.

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Zimbabwe’s unhappy days are here again

“Had we gotten over the line today people might not have asked about 2018. Unfortunately we didn’t and it’s another moment a lot of us will live with for a long time.” – Craig Ervine

Telford Vice / Harare

“YOU are not watching the game?” It was less a question than an astounded admonishment, and it came from a man guarding the gate at a Harare hotel on Tuesday. The game at Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo, he didn’t need to say. Between Zimbabwe and Scotland. The game Zimbabwe had to win to clinch the last remaining place in the field for this year’s men’s World Cup.

That the man on the gate was also not watching the game was not pointed out to him. Doubtless he would soon be up to speed with events in the City of Kings, some 440 kilometres away from the nation’s capital. But first he was duty-bound to grant access to the hotel to someone who had had the temerity to nip out to a supermarket when they should have been holed up in their room watching The Game.

At Harare Sports Club big screens beamed the action to a throng that had gathered on a bleak winter’s morning. There seemed to be more sunshine in Bulawayo, and it shone on a steadily swelling, already singing and dancing crowd. They had reasons to be cheerful about Zimbabwe’s prospects. Craig Ervine had won the toss and fielded, and the Scots had been reduced to 170/7 in the 43rd over; not least because Sean Williams took 3/30 in his first 7.1 overs.

But Michael Leask and Mark Watt put their team back on track for a defendable total with a stand of 46 off 33. Fifty-five runs flowed off the last five overs. Scotland’s 234/8 was 14 runs bigger than their effort in the teams’ World Cup qualifying match at the same ground in March 2018 — which was tied.

How did Williams feel about that? “I’m not really one to live in the past, I’m looking forward to the future,” he said immediately after the innings. “I don’t really like to fall backwards. I like to fall forwards. Hopefully today we can do that.”

The anxiety caused in the home side’s ranks by the Scots’ fightback was made plain when Richard Ngarava, who bowled the last over, took animated exception to Joylord Gumbie missing the stumps with an underarm lob that might have resulted in a runout rather than the bye that accrued off the final delivery.

One run matters, especially when you’ve given away too many. And even if 235 should be well within the range of a team who harbour, in Williams and Sikandar Raza, the tournament’s top two runscorers, who have made four of the 20 centuries we’ve seen in the competition. But they scored those runs when it mattered less than it did on Tuesday.

“The expectation that we play with and the expectation they play with is entirely different,” David Houghton said when he popped up onto our screens during the interval. His words proved prophetic.

Zimbabwe have chased down 291 to beat Nepal and 316 to beat the Netherlands in the past two weeks. But that was against attacks that didn’t bristle with Chris Sole and his 150 kilometres an hour lightning strikes, or the nuggety nous of Brandon McMullen — who between them knocked over the top four inside eight overs with only 37 scored. “The best bit of advice I’ve been given is always bowl as quick as you can,” Sole said with a smug smile after the match.

Raza and Ryan Burl shared 54 off 61 and Burl and Wessly Madhevere put on 73 off 74, and Zimbabwe remained on course to haul in the target. But when Madhevere was trapped in front by Watt in the 31st the home side were six down with 71 required. Burl was their last hope, and it took a small miracle to snuff it out.

Having driven Leask through the covers for four and swept him for six off consecutive deliveries, Burl unleashed another sweep. At midwicket, McMullen, hobbled by a tweaked ankle, turned and dashed for all his worth. And stuck up his hands to take the catch with his back turned to the pitch. He was Willie Mays, taker of the most famous catch in baseball history, without a mitt. In the crowd, a young man in a cap stood and wept.

There was no way back from 197/9. The instant the formality of defeat was confirmed, the happy delirium in the stands that has become the anthem of cricket in this country crashed into the saddest of silences. Another man in the crowd, his head wrapped in a Zimbabwe flag, stared balefully into the distance. The camera happened on Williams’ wife, Chantelle Williams, who wore a similar look. For them, it seemed, there was no future to fall into. In 2018 Zimbabwe failed to qualify for the World Cup, despite also playing the qualifiers at home, for the first time since they made their inaugural appearance in 1983. Now it’s happened again.

“Everybody is gutted,” Ervine said. “It would have been nice to put those demons from 2018 to bed. Had we gotten over the line today, people might not have asked about 2018. Unfortunately we didn’t and it’s another moment a lot of us will live with for a long time.”

The result was good for the tournament — one of Scotland or the Netherlands, who clash at the same ground on Thursday, will join fellow qualifiers Sri Lanka in India in October — but catastrophic for the growing number of cricketminded Zimbabweans.

People like the man guarding the gate. What did he think? How did he feel? It would have been cruel to ask.

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Caribbean cookie crumbles, Scotland’s flowers bloom

“This is probably one of the lowest points I’ve had with the team.” – Jason Holder

Telford Vice / Harare Sports Club

OH flowers of Scotland! It’s not so much that they beat West Indies in their men’s World Cup qualifier at Harare Sports Club (HSC) on Saturday. After all they now own consecutive victories over them, having won the T20 World Cup match between the teams in Hobart in October. 

It’s also not that the Scots have come out on top in 16 of the 27 white-ball internationals they have played from December 2022. Nor that they are 12th in the ODI rankings, above Nepal, the Netherlands and the United Arab Emirates — the other three teams who were included in the ICC pecking order for the first time in June 2018. Nor that they have easily the highest winning percentage of those teams since then. From June 2018 they have won 38.12% more of their ODIs than the Dutch.

Nor is it that Scotland have beaten Ireland, the UAE and Oman — and lost only to Sri Lanka — during the qualifiers despite the absence from their ranks of 108 caps worth of white-ball international experience. Brad Currie, Josh Davey and Michael Jones have opted to stay with their counties, while Brad Wheal is injured but likely would have done the same.

Unfairly, for neutrals of a certain age and perspective, nothing Scotland did at HSC on Saturday mattered as much as the confirmation of the unhappy transformation of the men in maroon to maroon macaroons, to crumbling Caribbean cookies. They are fragile and easily chewed, swallowed and forgotten; mere morsels of empty calories. And now, for the first time, they are not good enough to go to a World Cup: Saturday’s result means West Indies have no chance of qualifying for this year’s tournament in India in October and November. 

It’s been a long time coming — since 1995, when the Windies’ domination of the global game started to slip. For 20 years from the start of the inaugural World Cup in 1975, when they triumphed, they won 265 of the 452 matches they played — a success rate of 58.63% — and lost only 121. Since then they have won 355 and lost 536 of 999; a winning percentage of 35.54. The difference is 23.09%.

That’s a hopelessly inadequate way to gauge decline. Rather the truth of it is in the West Indians’ sloped shoulders and slow movement, in their bleak disbelief at having played another poor stroke, in their desperate trudge through the memories of how good their elders and betters were used as they make their way towards the boundary.

In 1976, Tony Greig, England’s unpleasantly aggressive South African-born captain, was rightly castigated for saying, before the start of a Test series that would define the era, “You must remember that the West Indians, these guys, if they get on top are magnificent cricketers. But if they’re down, they grovel, and I intend, with the help of [Brian Close] and a few others, to make them grovel.”

Thus provoked by an undeserving beneficiary of a deeply racist society drawing too close a connection with slavery, Clive Lloyd’s West Indians whipped their former masters 3-0. The real sadness of their current state is that now they are struggling under the weight of their own accumulated failures.

The assumption that the good times would keep on rolling in the Caribbean, and other teams’ efforts to catch up, notably Australia’s, cost West Indies their place at the top of the pile. This we have known for ages. But the past seven days have brought push to shove with rude and indecent haste.

Last Saturday, in front of a roaring, rollicking HSC crowd of 21,000 in a ground built for 10,000 — around 4,000 of the extra 11,000 were accommodated on the rugby field next door, which was equipped with a big screen — they were beaten by Zimbabwe. These things happen, especially against a confident, skilled, talented, ably captained, cleverly coached, passionately supported home side.

But, at Takashinga on Monday, the Netherlands ran West Indies off their feet; first piling up 374/9, their record ODI total, to tie the match and then dominating the super over thanks to Logan van Beek’s heroics with bat and ball. 

And then came the bonnie Scots, well drilled and flinty, and not at all awed. Winning the toss on another damp Harare morning helped, but it still needed proper bowling to reduce the Windies to 81/6 inside 21 overs. Brandon McMullen knocked over the top order of Johnson Charles, Shamarh Brooks and Brandon King in the space of 14 of his deliveries and at the bargain price of seven runs. Jason Holder and Romario Shepherd staved off utter ignominy with a stand of 77, but a target of 182 was never going to be enough to hold Richie Berrington’s side. They knew it, and wended their way to victory with seven wickets standing and 6.5 overs to spare. 

Christopher McBride slapped the first ball of the reply, a full toss from Holder, straight into midwicket’s hands. But Matthew Cross and McMullen snuffed out any hope of a fightback with a partnership of 125. Cross took his team home with an unbeaten 74.

Unlike on Monday, when, led by Holder, the West Indians kept up a lively level of chatter in the field until deep into the Dutch innings, a forlorn and desolate silence prevailed as the Scots chased the runs. The last ball of the 12th over captured the mood — Akeal Hosein bowled to McMullen, who swept to midwicket, where Kyle Mayers shelled the catch. For good measure, the throw back to the middle sailed high and wide of everything and a bonus run accrued.   

“No difficult questions, please,” Holder implored as he arrived for a press conference. “There are no easy questions,” he was promptly told. For instance, had he known a more dismal moment in his more than 10 years and 251 matches as a West Indies international?

“This is probably one of the lowest points I’ve had with the team, but there’s still a lot of positives,” Holder said. “I was really happy and excited for Nicholas [Pooran, the tournament’s second-highest runscorer] and the way he has played throughout this competition.

“It’s good to see some of the younger guys get an opportunity on a big stage, and try to grasp it. I don’t think all is lost. There’s a lot of young guys in the group who can definitely develop and turn things around for West Indies cricket. We’ve got a young crop of guys. We’ve just got to put some support around them.”

Pooran turns 28 in October. Shai Hope and Roston Chase, the Windies’ next most successful batters in the qualifiers, are 29 and 31. Their leading wicket-takers are Alzarri Joseph, Mayers and Hosein, who are 26, 31 in September and 30. That’s not a lot of youth. But, if you’re Holder, struggling for little reward as your 32nd birthday looms in November, maybe almost everybody else seems younger and fresher.  

“It’s disappointing, especially after last year’s effort in the T20 World Cup where we didn’t qualify [for the second round]. I’ve had the luxury of playing in two 50-over World Cups and a couple of T20 World Cups. They’re special occasions. This one will definitely hurt, as the one last year did. But there’s no point moping and keeping our heads down. We’ve got to find a way to turn our cricket around and head in the direction we need to head in consistently. There’ve been too many fluctuations between good and bad performances.”

There was no such gloom in the eyes of Doug Watson, Scotland’s coach and a South African far more pleasant than Greig: “That’s a proper blueprint for how we want to play. Bowl a team out — we dropped one catch unfortunately — and then someone in the top four batted through the innings. That’s what we’re looking to do in all our games. 

“It shows that we can compete at this level. We realise we have to play at our best to compete. It’s tough cricket. Games like this are a real highlight for us and we look forward to them. We see it as a privilege to play in them.”

No-one intercepted Watson as he left the room. Holder was asked to stop and pose for selfies. It’s not much, but at least the Windies will have that when they are sent homeward to think again. 

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Windies woe after van Beek’s Dutch double

“You just go out there, keep your head still and hope for the best.” – Logan van Beek’s advice for super over success.

Telford Vice / Takashinga

TWO teams came to Takashinga on Monday dreaming of better days in the men’s World Cup qualifiers. One left holding a handful of hope, the other plunged into pointless purgatory. No such tension prevailed across town at Harare Sports Club, where one side already knew they were bound for bigger things when they took on their hapless, homeward-bound opposition.

The Netherlands are that hopeful side, having earned two precious Super Six points. But, as with all things worthwhile, they didn’t come easily. Instead it needed a super over to separate them from West Indies in a match that was left tied after 748 runs had been scored. The Windies will also progress from the group stage, but with no Super Six points. For a team who have won two World Cups and reached the final of another, that is a catastrophe.

In the super over, Logan van Beek clubbed Jason Holder for three sixes and three fours; all 30 of the Netherlands’ runs. Then van Beek took the ball, claimed two wickets, and kept the damage in West Indies’ reply to eight runs.

“We’ve got two points, that’s the main thing,” van Beek said. “That’s what we came here to do. We’ve given ourselves a chance to qualify [for the World Cup].” Did he expect those points to be so difficult to secure? “It was always going to be hard. West Indies come out and bully you in how they hit the ball. As a bowler it’s intimidating. But we held our nerve. They got away [to 374/6], but [between innings] some of our boys said that’s not enough. You just go out there, keep your head still and hope for the best.”

Christchurch-born van Beek’s grandfather, Sammy Guillen, played eight Tests for West Indies and New Zealand from December 1951 to March 1956. He wore his multiculturalism with pride: “I’m still West Indian, still Dutch and still Kiwi. My grandfather will be upstairs chuckling to himself that I actually hit the ball over the boundary and not to a fielder.

“I’ve trained a lot to bowl yorkers and to hit sixes. Sometimes the opportunity presents itself and you try to take it with both hands. If you stick at it long enough you’re going to have a moment like this. Just keep turning up and you never know what could happen.”

For the second time in three days — in the wake of West Indies’ loss to Zimbabwe at HSC on Saturday — Darren Sammy found himself lumped with having to make sense of it all. “We’ve got ourselves to blame, two crucial matches with points on offer where we’ve got ourselves into good positions and we’ve let it slip,” Sammy said. “It’s a true reflection of where we are as a team. A lot of things have to change. Some of the decisions we made makes you question what’s going on.

“I watched the way the Netherlands batted and the way they ran between the wickets, those are the things I need to try and instil in my team. It was a lesson for our guys. I can safely say we’re the worst fielding team in this competition. We cannot display this kind of attitude and call ourselves an international team.”

That the Dutch could keep abreast of a target 77 runs bigger than any they had successfully chased seemed unlikely. But as the runs rained up, down and all around in a brilliantly run 90-ball stand of 143 shared by Scott Edwards and Teja Nidamanuru, who hammered 111 off 76, Holder was heard loudly exhorting his teammates in the field to “be your brother’s keeper!” It’s a lesson the Windies will want to learn ahead of the challenges they will face in the coming days. 

Zimbabwe, who beat the Windies and the Netherlands, will take four points forward. Either Sri Lanka or Scotland will join the home side on that perch after their match at Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo on Tuesday. The other game in the City of Kings, between Ireland and the United Arab Emirates at Bulawayo Athletic Club, is a dead rubber.

Unbeaten Zimbabwe lurched into a higher gear at HSC on Monday, putting up their record total of 408/6 and thrashing the United States by 304 runs — the second-biggest win in all 4,602 men’s ODIs yet played. Mercifully the yankees, who lost all four of their matches, are going home. As are Nepal, the UAE and, surprisingly, Ireland.

The Irish have been among the louder voices protesting the World Cup’s reduction to 10 teams, which was the case in 2019 and will be again in India in October and November. Not since 1992, when nine teams lined up, has the field been so small.

Ireland made their World Cup debut in 2007, when there were 16 teams, and they were among 14 in 2011 and 2015. They have won only seven of their 21 World Cup games and tied another, but their successes have tended to be if not seismic then significant — over Pakistan and Bangladesh in 2007, England in 2011, and West Indies and Zimbabwe in 2015.

The Irish have in the past made a decent case for a bigger World Cup, but they didn’t put their runs and wickets where their mouths are to get there this time. Muddled, unclear, uncertain selection let them down, and will cost them a USD1-million World Cup participation fee.

Happier stories in the qualifiers have been told not only by the Dutch but also by Oman and Scotland, who both beat Ireland. The Scots earned two Super Six points for overcoming Oman despite being depleted by players opting to stay with their English counties rather than turn out for the national side.

The Netherlands, too, have been significantly undermined by county commitments. That didn’t matter on Monday, when the most motivating place the Dutch could be was with their backs against the wall. They will never forget Takashinga.

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Zimbabwe can see clearly now the mist has gone

Could it be that cricket, in the absence of the suspended national football team, has filled the void to become the people’s game in Zimbabwe?

Telford Vice / Harare Sports Club

ARE we in San Francisco? The Namib Desert? Nuwara Eliya? Newfoundland? On top of Table Mountain? No, that really is Harare out there draped in wan, wintry mist early on Saturday morning. It is eight degrees Celsius, or not nearly warm enough to play cricket. Except maybe in the northern reaches of Yorkshire.

But in two hours the first ball will be bowled in the day’s men’s World Cup qualifying matches: between Nepal and the Netherlands at Takashinga, and Zimbabwe and West Indies at Harare Sports Club. Happily by the time that happens the funereal sky clears to reveal the familiar vast cornflower blue dome that hovers upturned over this country for much of the winter, replete with temperatures in the mid-20s.

With matches starting at 9am because of the lack of daylight and floodlights at all four grounds in use in Harare and Bulawayo, batting is best avoided until the sun is well up and has dealt with the morning’s moisture. The numbers back that up: the team batting second had won only four of the dozen games in the tournament before Saturday, and two of those trend-bucking wins were achieved in mismatches. In eight games, teams have lost from two to four wickets with nine to 25 runs scored inside the first 10 overs. What would Saturday’s airborne veil of additional dampness do to that theory? Not enhance it, as it turned out.

At Takashinga, Nepal stumbled to 7/1 in the third over when Aasif Sheikh dragged Logan van Beek onto his stumps. But Kushal Bhurtel and Bhim Sharki stabilised the innings with a stand of 39 off 75, only for the last nine wickets to fall for 121 and leave the Netherlands a measly target of 168. They mowed it down in 27.1 overs with seven wickets standing to clinch their place in the Super Six.

All of which passed without the nation’s eyes blinking. They were fixed on HSC, where at a still chilly 8am the stands were already starting to swell with spectators. Shai Hope won the toss and chose to field — like every captain has done in all 14 matches in the tournament. But the building crowd had something to warm them in the shape of a patient, careful opening partnership by Joylord Gumbie and Craig Ervine that yielded 63 runs and endured into the 16th over. So much for the condensation considerations.

The throb of president Emmerson Mnangagwa’s helicopter overhead — he holds meetings across the road at Zimbabwe House — flooded the scene after three overs, but Gumbie took back ownership in the sixth with a slashed six off Alzarri Joseph.

Thus emboldened, the denizens of Castle Corner, many of them wearing white hard hats and red overalls, took to booing Keemo Paul when he dared to run past their stand. The beef goes back to the 2016 under-19 World Cup in Bangladesh, when Paul, in his delivery stride, ran out non-striker Richard Ngarava to end the match.

Zimbabwe had been nine-down in search of three off six to win that match. The result put the Windies in the quarterfinals — they won the title that year — and the Zimbos on a plane home. The Castle Corner faithful will never forgive Paul for adhering to the rules, just as they will never berate Ngarava for costing his team the game by stealing ground.

With that came a flashback to Tuesday’s game between Zimbabwe and the Dutch at HSC, where Max O’Dowd was serenaded by the crowd with the same Shona song he had learnt to sing during an earlier visit to the country. Something has shifted in the culture of cricket in this country if the same all-black section of the crowd that feels the freedom to hail a white opponent can also heap scorn on a black player in a team who have championed black excellence for so long, and all in the space of three days. Could it be that cricket, in the absence of the suspended national football team, has filled the void to become the people’s game in Zimbabwe?

The jeers had barely subsided when Rovman Powell dropped Ervine at mid-on off Kyle Mayers. It was the first of four spilled chances, three of them off Joseph’s bowling. Another flashback, this time to Thursday at HSC, where the faces of Hope and Nicholas Pooran dimmed with disbelief when they were asked, during their press conferences, about their readiness for Saturday’s big match.

For them, they didn’t say out loud, the match wasn’t that big. For Zimbabwe, and Zimbabweans, it was huge. And it showed from both sides of that equation, not least in the good vibrations coming from a ground now packed to capacity; perhaps beyond.

With Paul taking three wickets and Joseph and Akeal Hosein sharing four, the West Indians were able to limit Zimbabwe to 268. Sikandar Raza and Ryan Burl scored 68 and 50 and shared 87 in a stand that started at 112/4 in the 25th. But its end, when Hosein trapped Burl in front in the 41st, started a slide of 6/69. Zimbabwe’s total was their lowest in their three matches in the qualifiers and the first time they have been dismissed in four ODIs.

But the Windies’ listlessness in the field followed them to the crease. Brandon King and Mayers began the reply solidly enough with a joint effort of 43, and Mayers did his bit with a sturdy 56. It was the latter’s dismissal in the 21st, when he failed in the not insignificant task of clearing the 2.03-metre Blessing Muzarabani at long-off, that gave the narrative the beginning of its decisive turn.

Hope and Pooran, both century-makers on Thursday, were cleared away for 30 and 34 by Raza and Ngarava. When Tendai Chatara, who went for 46 in his first seven overs, reduced West Indies to nine-down by bowling Roston Chase off the edge in the 43rd with 44 required, the game was up and the crowd knew it. Their roar was louder than any helicopter.

Chatara ended it, and the collapse of 6/58, a dozen deliveries later when Joseph bunted a simple catch to Raza at short midwicket. Hosein, the non-striker, took the defeat, by 35 runs, especially hard: teammates and opponents alike couldn’t prise him from his haunches for more than a minute. This time the noise from the crowd was less raucous, more satisfied — the expression of a collective mind comfortable in their new knowledge. It was a clear day in Harare and they could see forever. 

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Slamming Sammy, happy Houghton

“Today was really poor. It’s about taking responsibility and we didn’t do that today, and hence we didn’t deserve to win.” – Darren Sammy

“I’ve tried to show the guys a fair amount about life: go to game parks, go do some fishing, go see some lions, go see some elephants. It’s not all about the humdrum and day-in and day-out cricket.” – David Houghton

Telford Vice / Harare Sports Club

WEST Indies won the first two men’s World Cups and reached the final of the third, but they stirred concerns of elimination from this year’s tournament when they lost to Zimbabwe in Harare on Saturday. Zimbabwe, who have never come close to winning the trophy and failed to qualify for the 2019 edition, took an important step towards regaining their place on the global game’s most important ODI stage.

Zimbabwe won the World Cup qualifying match at Harare Sports Club by 35 runs despite being dismissed for 268, their lowest total in their three games in the tournament. The result confirmed the home side’s place in the Super Six. West Indies are also assured of staying in the running for one of the two berths in the July 9 final at HSC, as are the Netherlands. Both finalists will qualify for the World Cup in India in October and November.

But the Zimbabweans have beaten both of their fellow Super Sixers, which means they will take four points into the next stage of the qualifiers. Neither the Windies nor the Dutch currently have any points to bank for the Super Six. That will be the case until Monday, when they face off at Takashinga, also in Harare.

Zimbabwe’s productive performance in the group stage means they would finish the Super Six with 10 points if they win all of their next three games. That would make them difficult to dislodge from the top of the standings, and with that a place in the final and a World Cup berth.

West Indies coach Darren Sammy admitted to being “extremely disappointed” by his team’s effort — or lack thereof — on Saturday. He let loose at his press conference with what could be called a stream of unhappy consciousness, particularly about his charges’ dismal showing in the field, where they dropped four catches.

“If we continue to display this type of fielding … we’ve spoken about it for the last few games,” Sammy said. “If you keep giving the opposition’s best batters chances, eventually the cricket gods will catch up with you. They did with us today. But, that said, [a target of 269] on that [good] surface … These are things we are trying to change. We’ve seen it happen in times past. Today was really poor. It’s about taking responsibility and we didn’t do that today, and hence we didn’t deserve to win.

“When you put on a display of fielding like this, and then you get yourself in good positions and you take the game for granted, the cricket gods will make you pay. That’s exactly what I’m going to tell them in the dressing room. We did not deserve to win. We did not play to win today.

“We’ve made our road to the World Cup more difficult, but I don’t give up on anything. I’m going to keep on encouraging the boys to be better, because the train that I’ve started here is going to be moving. Whoever wants a ticket they’ve got to come and buy it at the ticket office, and at the moment some of us are not buying that ticket for the train to move on.

“We found ourselves in positions with both ball and bat to knock them over. We didn’t. When you throw the first punch you don’t let the opposition come back. Today we kept Zimbabwe close by. They deserved to win.

“They kept their cool. They kept taking wickets. They kept taking the chances we offered them. It was a good victory for them but it’s a big lesson for us. You can’t play with the game of cricket and take it for granted.

“When I took this job I wanted to change a couple of things. Mindset — that’s slowly getting there — preparation, performance. All these things have to be done on a consistent basis. That’s what we are trying to work on. We’ll now have to look at personnel as well. The journey is not over. It’s just continuing.

“But there’s no time to cry and think about it too much. We’ve got to get our game face on. Monday becomes very important for us.”

Zimbabwe coach David Houghton turned 66 on Friday, a fact he used to motivate his team: “I said to the guys yesterday I’d like a birthday present, and that would be the win today. I got what I asked for. It doesn’t happen very often.”

The Zimbabweans’ loss to the United Arab Emirates in the 2018 qualifiers, more than four years before Houghton was appointed coach, sealed their absence from the 2019 World Cup. That, too, was fuel for the fire Houghton is trying to light: “I said to the guys we had a clear path in 2018. We only had to win the last game and we could have been at the World Cup and they messed it up. We’ve still got to do the job.”

Craig Ervine and Sikandar Raza have praised Houghton for reviving Zimbabwe’s fortunes. What did he think? “It’s hard for me to sit here and take credit for the way our guys are playing,” Houghton, his country’s inaugural Test captain, said. “I think I’ve given the guys a little bit more belief in their own ability. There is so much more quality, depth and skill in this team than there was in the days when I played. All we needed to do was get it out of them.

“For that to happen they had to start enjoying what they were doing at practice; have really quality practices and have fun. And have some enjoyment off the field. I’ve tried to show the guys a fair amount about life: go to game parks, go do some fishing, go see some lions, go see some elephants. It’s not all about the humdrum and day-in and day-out cricket. I’ve managed to bring relaxation to the guys that allows them to bring out the skill that they have.”

Zimbabwe surged to victory on the wings of the passionate and joyous support they received from a capacity crowd that saw the ground sold out before the end of the first innings. Those who were turned away were accommodated in a fan park, equipped with a giant television screen, on a nearby rugby field.

“It’s fantastic; we love our fans,” Houghton said. “We know the noise that they make and the aura they bring to us playing at home. I’m glad I’m not one of the opposition. They talk about a 12th man in football. For us, they’re our 13th, 14th and 15th men.”

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Busy, busy, busy at World Cup qualifiers

“Most of our boys have watched the West Indies only on television.” – Monty Desai, Nepal head coach

Telford Vice / Harare

WINTER’S dusk descends hard and fast in Zimbabwe, banishing the day’s warmth and flooding the sudden gloom with an invasive chill in an instant. Even so, the West Indian and Nepalese players took the opportunity to linger in each other’s company on a rapidly darkening outfield after their match in the men’s World Cup qualifiers at Harare Sports Club on Thursday.

Alzarri Joseph, sitting on the turf languidly, held court in one gaggle. In another Jason Holder stood all of his 2.01 metres tall, chatting and smiling and clearly enjoying the moment. Most of the talking was done by the West Indians, most of the listening by the rapt Nepalese.

One of the topics discussed might have been their workload. Including warm-up matches, Thursday’s game was the Windies’ fourth in nine days. They will have played two more by Monday evening. Nepal have been on the park five times in the same nine days, with another match to come on Saturday. Stand by for the Super Sixes, the place play-offs and the final. 

The finalists, who will meet at HSC on July 9, will have played 10 matches in 27 days. This year’s IPL champions, Chennai Super Kings, played 16 times in 59 days. If all of those games in both tournaments went down to the last ball, the finalists at the qualifiers would have been on the field for 1,000 overs and CSK for 640. The internationals would have worked 36% harder than the IPL sides in 45.76% of the time it took to complete the latter. Fifteen of the players who featured in the IPL, which ended 21 days before the qualifiers started, are among the 151 in the squads in Zimbabwe.

The 10 teams will play all 34 games in the tournament proper — minus the warm-ups — in the space of 22 days. The same programme was followed in the previous edition of the qualifiers, also in Zimbabwe, in March 2018. 

Shai Hope has never played in the IPL, but he’s here. As West Indies’ captain and first-choice wicketkeeper-batter, he has been on the field for 269.5 of the 381.4 overs — more than 70% — his team have spent batting and fielding in the qualifiers. How was he holding up?

“I’m not sure at the moment, I’ll be able to answer that question in the morning,” Hope said after Thursday’s game, in which he batted for 43.3 overs for his 132 and was behind the stumps for Nepal’s innings of 49.4 overs.

“We got some time off after the first game, which was good. But these games are going to come at a much faster turnover, so we’ve got to make sure our recovery is on point and we focus a lot more on how we do things off the field.”

That time off was three days between a game against the United States on Sunday and Thursday’s match. Happily for the Windies, all four of their games have been in Harare — Bulawayo is a 35-minute flight away — as is their showdown with Zimbabwe on Saturday.

Nicholas Pooran hasn’t been as busy as Hope — 237.4 on-field overs, or more than 60% of the total. “This is what we signed up for,” Pooran said after scoring 115 on Thursday. “Unfortunately we have to qualify for the World Cup. It’s a tough road. We need to get some rest tonight, recover tomorrow, and turn up on Saturday.”

Nepal, Oman, Scotland and Ireland will have only one day off between each of their four group games. “I would have preferred one more day of rest inbetween but it is what it is, we just have to get on with it,” Monty Desai, Nepal’s head coach, said on Thursday.

Desai’s team face the Netherlands at Takashinga, also in Harare, on Saturday in what looms as a shootout for third place in group A — and thus for a spot in the Super Sixes. “It’s straightforward: Netherlands or us,” Desai said. “It’s all a mental game now. We’ll get ready mentally and trust our skills.”

Nepal played the first of their 111 white-ball internationals in March 2014. Only eight of them have involved countries that were full members at the time. They have had three games each against Zimbabwe and Ireland and one against Bangladesh. And, on Thursday, West Indies — who followed the stand of 216 Hope and Pooran shared by bouncing out the Nepalese to nail down victory by 101 runs.

Not that you would have thought they had been roughly dealt with as they mingled willingly with the winners on the outfield. Nepal looked like winners themselves, and they were. To get to the qualifiers they had to finish among the top three teams in World Cup League 2, a competition that ran from August 2019 to March this year in which each of the seven teams played 36 matches. Nepal won 19 games to finish behind Scotland and Oman.

“Most of our boys have watched the West Indies only on television,” Desai said. “For them it was a proud moment to play against a Test nation. Maybe the batsmen got distracted by the occasion and the barrage of short balls. But it’s OK. For us it’s a pure learning experience.”

Even in the aftermath of defeat, in the sniping cold and gathering dark of an outfield far from home. Maybe they were tired, but they were also happy.

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Harare Sports Club fire won’t stop Zimbabwe’s leaping flames

“Why give them booze now? See, they’re drunk and talking nonsense.” – Castle Corner’s serenade to Max O’Dowd. Yes, it’s a good thing.

Telford Vice / Harare

MEN’S World Cup qualifying matches at Harare Sports Club will continue thanks to prompt action taken by firefighters to douse a blaze at the ground on Tuesday night. Three more group games are scheduled to be played there from Thursday to Monday as well as four Super Six matches and the final on July 9.

Photographs and video footage posted on social media at around 10pm (local time) showed the fire raging mere metres from stands at the southern end of the ground. Tall flames appeared to have engulfed the stand.

Sources have told Cricbuzz that the fuel for the fire was thatched roofing that had been removed from a building that is being renovated and laid at floor level. How the thatch came to be alight is not known.

HSC is across Fifth Street from Zimbabwe House, a heavily guarded and important government building that served as a residence for Robert Mugabe soon after his election as prime minister in 1980. It is now used for high-level meetings that sometimes involve president Emmerson Mnangagwa — no doubt a factor in the Harare Fire Brigade’s rapid response to the emergency.

The briefly towering inferno was put out before the stand suffered any damage. An ICC security team inspected the scene on Wednesday, and were satisfied that the situation would not pose a risk to spectators’ safety in the remaining matches at HSC would not be put at risk by the situation. The ground has been cleared for play.

Zimbabwe Cricket said in a statement on Wednesday that “no damage was caused to any of the structures at the ground” and that Thursday’s match between Nepal and West Indies “will not be affected and proceed as scheduled”.

The fire roared in the area of the facility that is the most populated and noisiest during matches, and which is close to a popular bar called Castle Corner — which used to sport a thatched roof until the ongoing renovations. But no spectators were in evidence when the flames were seen leaping about six hours after Zimbabwe chased a target of 316 to beat the Netherlands by six wickets with a ball short of 10 overs to spare.

The match was well-attended, as all of the home side’s recent games have been, by an enthusiastically vocal crowd who made a significant contribution to a spectacle that realised 634 runs and 10 wickets. And which culminated in the desired result, from Zimbabwe supporters’ perspective.

For the fans’ fire to be extinguished by a forced move of HSC’s fixtures to another venue would have been unkind and unfair. It would likely also have had an impact on Zimbabwe’s chances of reaching the World Cup in India in October and November, the prize for both finalists in the qualifiers. Buoyed by their passionate following, Zimbabwe have won both of their group games and are gearing up for a showdown against West Indies at HSC on Saturday.

Doubtless the crowd would follow their beloved team anywhere they might go at home, but few grounds worldwide have the friendly fortress atmosphere that is HSC’s hallmark. Even opposition players have a soft spot for them. Max O’Dowd posted a video on social media after Tuesday’s match that showed him singing along to one of the crowd’s Shona chants, which he learnt on a previous visit to Zimbabwe. His caption read: “Just want to say thank you to Castle Corner for singing my favourite song! Best crowd in the world!”

The refrain the crowd dedicated to O’Dowd before singing it translates as: “Why give them booze now? See, they’re drunk and talking nonsense.” Drunk on beer, perhaps. On cricket, definitely.

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Zimbabwe’s deferred dream

“The scars of 2018 are always going to be there, whether we qualify here and supposedly put it to bed or not.” – Craig Ervine on Zimbabwe’s failure to qualify for the 2019 World Cup.

Telford Vice / Harare

ONE word. Eight letters. Landlocked but bordered by mighty rivers north and south, one of them adorned by the world’s most arresting waterfall. A past of trouble and strife. A present of no news is good news. A future not yet certain. A place of, above all, resilience. Zimbabwe is all of this, and more.

It is, for instance, where 10 teams have gathered to tussle over which two of them will go to the men’s World Cup in India in October and November. Those sides will be West Indies and Sri Lanka, convention will chorus. Things may be that simple, but it is to be hoped they are not.

They weren’t in 2018, when Afghanistan not only qualified for the World Cup but thumped the Windies in the final. Zimbabwe, also then the hosts, were shut out of a World Cup for the first time after they made their tournament debut in 1983. The home side and Scotland, in particular, suffered seriously from poor umpiring decisions.

“The scars of 2018 are always going to be there, whether we qualify here and supposedly put it to bed or not,” Zimbabwe captain Craig Ervine said on Saturday. “That’s probably something that even when I’m 80 years old I’m still going to be thinking back to; that moment against the UAE.” The United Arab Emirates all but sealed the Zimbabweans’ fate by winning a rain-affected Super Six game by five runs.

The 2018 qualifiers reflected the changing shape of cricket in that, for the first time, current Test-playing teams were involved: Zimbabwe, West Indies, Afghanistan and Ireland. Three of them are back this time but the Afghans, a rising force in the world game, have made it through the front door of direct qualification.

The next new kids on the big block could be Nepal, who have won 13 of their 14 internationals this year, all of them ODIs. They will expect much from leg spinner Sandeep Lamichhane, their all-time leading wicket-taker with 189 strikes in 86 games in the two formats. “When he’s in the team, whenever we need a wicket he delivers,” Nepal captain Rohit Paudel said on Saturday. “When he’s not there we struggle to get wickets.”

Lamichhane’s cricket prowess has made him a star far beyond the boundary. But he is in Zimbabwe controversially having been allowed by the Nepal Supreme Court to leave his country despite being charged with rape. The court’s decision was welcomed jubilantly in Nepal, and Lamichhane is unlikely to face protest action in a place where people have their own problems to live with.     

Nonetheless there is drama in the fact that Zimbabwe and Nepal will clash on the first day of the tournament at Harare Sports Club on Sunday. The Nepalese are accustomed to playing in front of vast crowds at home, but Zimbabwe are among the best supported non-Asian teams. Time was when they struggled to draw more than a smattering of spectators even in their own backyard. Why had the numbers swelled?  

“A lot of it is down to our head coach, Dave Houghton,” Ervine said. “He’s changed things around for us. We are playing an exciting brand of cricket and we’re winning games, and a lot of people want to get involved with that. That’s what’s been happening over the last year or so. Qualifying for the [2022] T20 World Cup also brought in a lot of support for us. If we qualify for the 50-over World Cup it will make a massive difference for our country.”

Another cause of Zimbabwe’s burgeoning fanbase is that the national football team has been suspended from competition since February 2022 because of government interference. Football is easily the country’s most popular sport, even though the national side have never reached a World Cup. The cricket team, while they are among the lesser entities on the global scale, swim in a smaller pond and punch further above their weight than their football counterparts.  

Zimbabwe have won five of their eight completed white-ball games this year, and their chances of being one of the last two teams standing are enhanced by the Netherlands and Scotland sending depleted squads across the equator. Five of the seven bowlers the Dutch deployed in their shock win over South Africa in the T20 World Cup in Adelaide in November have put county ahead of country. For the same reason the Scots are missing four players.

Sunday’s other match is at Takashinga, also in Harare, where West Indies will take on the United States — who put up 312/6 in a warm-up match at Bulawayo Athletic Club on Tuesday, only for Ireland to win by five wickets with 29 balls to spare. That result didn’t raise the hopes of West Indies assistant coach Carl Hooper, who was asked at a press conference in Bulawayo on Saturday whether the Windies — twice winners of the World Cup in each of the white-ball formats but now a spent force — could dwindle further.

“If we don’t qualify we go a step lower,” Hooper said. “Never did I think I’d live to see the day where West Indies are trying to qualify for major tournaments. I sat in Australia [where the Windies failed to reach the second round of last year’s T20 World Cup], and here we are in Zimbabwe.

“No disrespect to the other teams but we’re playing against the likes of the USA, Nepal and Scotland. Even Afghanistan is ahead of us. Bangladesh has gone ahead of us. So this is distressing. This game continues to remind you that until you start doing the right things you can go lower.”

Like Zimbabwe’s pitches, which tend towards flat. But the fact that matches will start at 9am local time gives fast bowlers reason to be cheerful. That’s 30 minutes earlier than in 2018, when the qualifiers were played in the longer days of March. With no floodlights in operation the idea is to make the best use of the available sunlight — of which there is, happily, an abundance even in winter. But the earlier start will add to the batters’ challenge in the initial overs. How much?

We’ll know by the time the final is played at HSC on July 9. All present will also know what life is like in Zimbabwe, albeit it for three scant weeks and from the pampered perches offered in some of the better hotels.

As some visitors were ferried towards one of those hotels in Harare from the airport on Friday, their driver pointed out two men running down the road for all their worth. They were chased by a throng of people. All involved had left a parked minibus, where police were in attendance.

The minibus, our driver explained with a languid laugh, had been operating as a taxi but without a permit, and had been pulled over by the cops as a consequence. The running men were the driver and the conductor, who held the takings. The people in pursuit were the passengers, who were desperate to get their money back.

It seems always thus in Zimbabwe: rights, wrongs, and attempts, however hopeless, to get back to better days that never existed. Past and future are fuzzy. What’s in sharp focus is now. Or, as a waiter at a boundaryside pub at HSC said on Saturday, aghast that two patrons had declined another drink because they had a big Sunday of work looming: “What do you mean tomorrow? We are talking about today.”

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