Cricket: Bermuda Relegated To Division 4

October 29, 2014

Nepal and Uganda have won promotion to Pepsi ICC World Cricket League Division 2 after progressing to Thursday’s [Oct 30] final of the Division 3 tournament in Kuala Lumpur, while both Bermuda and USA have been relegated to Division 4.

On the last day of group matches on Wednesday [Oct 29], Nepal defeated Malaysia by 36 runs by Duckworth-Lewis Method [D-L Method], and Uganda beat Bermuda by seven wickets to finish first and second, respectively, in the tournament table.

This means that, irrespective of the outcome of the final to be played at Kinrara Oval, Nepal and Uganda have secured berths in WCL Div.2, which will be played in Namibia from 17-24 January 2015. In contrast, USA and Bermuda have been relegated to Div.4, while Singapore and Malaysia have retained places in Div.3.

In the third match of the day, Singapore defeated USA by 32 runs in a reduced-over match.

At Bayeumas, Uganda took on Bermuda in a must-win match and achieved the result in style when it won by seven wickets.

Openers Roger Mukasa [86] and Arthur Kyobe [18] put on a 75-run partnership in less than 13 overs to help the African side chased down the target of 141 for the loss of three wickets in 24.5 overs. Man of the match Mukasa’s 68-ball knock included nine fours and two sixes.

Dion Stovell was Bermuda’s main wicket-taker, claiming two wickets for 30 runs in 6.5 overs.

Earlier, Bermuda’s tail-end rallied to help the side post a total of 140 in 39.5 overs.

After electing to bat first, Bermuda lost three wickets for 18 runs in 11.1 overs. A 27-run fourth-wicket partnership between Onias Bascome [18] and Dion Stovell [16] steadied the ship, but it was the 42-run stand for the seventh wicket between Malachi Jones [18] and Kamau Leverock [27] that helped the side to reach 140 in 39.5 overs.

For Uganda, three players claimed three wickets each, with skipper Frank Nsubuga conceding 26 runs, Henry Ssenyondo giving away 40 runs, and Davis Arinaitwe, the only player to claim five wickets in one innings to date in the tournament, conceding 42.

A delighted Uganda captain Nsubuga said: “We are so happy with the win today [Oct 29], and to qualify to WCL Div.2. We’re looking forward to it, but we will need to go back and work hard. We need to play a lot of cricket before we go to Namibia.

“Today [Oct 29] was much better than our last match, our batters performed really well. I think we will have a good final tomorrow. Whichever team will play the better cricket tomorrow will win the tournament.”

Gyanendra Malla plays to the boundary

Elsewhere, a valiant knock of 69 from opener Anwar Arudin was not enough to help Malaysia overcome Nepal, with the visitor sealing a 36-run victory by D-L Method at Selangor Turf Club.

After sending Malaysia in to bat, Nepal skipper Paras Khadka claimed four wickets to help dismiss the home side for 142 in 43.3 overs.

In response, Nepal’s Naresh Budhaayer [42 not out] and Gyanendra Malla [35] put on 69 runs for the second wicket. When rain interrupted play after the 25th over, Nepal was 89 for two, and when the match officials finally called the match off, Nepal was ahead by 35 runs on D-L Method.

Earlier, Anwar struck 11 fours and one six in his knock of 69, but wickets fell around him. Khizar Hayat and Derek Duraisingam each added 23 runs to help Malaysia reach 142 in 43.3 overs.

Nepal skipper and man of the match Paras Khadka starred with the ball, claiming four wickets for 20 runs, while Bhuban Karki took three for 34 and Shakti Gauchan snapped up two for nine runs.

Nepal coach Pubudu Dassanayake was delighted with his side’s performance. “I am very happy, because both yesterday [Oct 28] and today [Oct 29], the top order batted very well. The team has been playing so much Twenty20 cricket, they’ve been in Twenty20 mode, so I am really happy with today’s [Oct 29] result.”

The coach, who has played 11 Test matches for Sri Lanka, said Nepal is not happy just to qualify for WCL Div.2. “We want to dominate this tournament. I am happy that we finished on top, but tomorrow’s game is so important. We want to win Thursday’s [Oct 30] final and take that confidence through to WCL Div.2 in Namibia.”

In the third match of the day, Singapore defeated USA by 32 runs by D-L Method after USA fell 33 runs short of its revised target of 200 in a reduced-overs match.

Singapore posted a total of 225 for seven with Anish Paraam [72], Chaminda Ruwan [48] and Arjun Mutreja [44] the main contributors with the bat. Rain interrupted play with USA well-poised at 101 for the loss of two wickets in 23.2 overs, and when play resumed, USA had been set a revised target of 200 in 42 overs.

When Steve Taylor [56] was dismissed in the 27th over, USA began to lose wickets regularly and was eventually dismissed for 167 in 39.4 overs. The result sees Singapore jump to third on the points table, while USA finishes fifth and will be relegated to WCL Div.4.

Singapore skipper Saad Junjua was thrilled with the result: “I am very happy with the team’s performance today [Oct 29], it was good. I was expecting two or three players to perform well, and today [Oct 29] was the right day, and they delivered.”

Points table as at Monday, 29 October:

TEAM P W T NR L PTS NRR
Nepal 5 4 0 0 1 8 1.985
Uganda 5 4 0 0 1 8 0.152
Singapore 5 3 0 0 2 6 -0.351
Malaysia 5 2 0 0 3 4 0.204
USA 5 1 0 0 4 2 0.165
Bermuda 5 1 0 0 4 2 -2.134

Scores in brief:
At Kinrara

  • Singapore 225 for seven, 50 overs [Anish Paraam 72, Chaminda Ruwan 48, Arjun Mutreja 44, Saad Janjua 22; Elmore Hutchinson 2-26, Danial Ahmed 2-31]
  • USA 167 all out, 39.4 overs/42 overs [D-L Method chasing a revised target of 200] [Steve Taylor 56, Fahad Babar 44; Vijay Kumar 4-43, Abhiraj Singh 2-28, Amjad Mahboob 2-37]
  • Singapore won by 32 runs [D-L method]
  • Player of the Match: Anish Paraam [Singapore]

At Bayeumas

  • Bermuda 140 all out, 39.5 overs [Kamau Leverock 27; Frank Nsubuga 3-26, Henry Ssenyondo 3-40, Davis Arinaitwe 3-42]
  • Uganda 142 for three, 24.5 overs [Roger Mukasa 86; Dion Stovell 2-30]
  • Uganda won by seven wickets
  • Player of the Match: Roger Mukasa [Uganda]

At Selangor Turf Club

  • Malaysia 142 all out, 43.3 overs [Anwar Arudin 69, Khizar Hayat 23, Derek Duraisingam 23; Paras Khadka 4-20, Bhuban Karki 3-34, Shakti Gauchan 2-9]
  • Nepal 89 for two, 25 overs [D-L Method chasing a revised target of 143] [Naresh Budhaayer 42 not out, Gyanendra Malla 35]
  • Nepal won by 36 runs [D-L Method]
  • Player of the Match: Paras Khadka

The fixtures for Thursday [Oct 30] are:

  • At Kinrara: Final – Nepal v Uganda*
  • At Bayeumas: 3rd place play-off – Singapore v Malaysia*
  • At Selangor Turf Club: 5th place play-off – USA v Bermuda**

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Comments (9)

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  1. Cricket: Bermuda Go Down By 10 Wickets - Bernews.com : Bernews.com | October 30, 2014
  1. St Kool says:

    Surely time to start pumping money in to sports we’re successful/productive at, and where our athletes actually deserve the support based on results – triathlon, sailing, rugby? Our cricket team have done nothing lately aside from getting free trips on the Govt dime. It’s time to tighten the purse strings until they actually deserve some support. Give their money to Tyler and Flora, who are doing wonders for our little island on the world stage.

    • PBanks says:

      Don’t Tyler and Flora already receive public funds as part of the BOA Elite Athlete programme?

  2. Islander says:

    Tyler and Flora don’t need the money. Have you see the sponsors they have already? I agree we aren’t doing to well in Cricket at the moment but I don’t think we should give up. We teach our kids that it isn’t all about winning as sport builds character. To give up on a program just because we aren’t doing as well as we expect would say alot about how we view everything here in Bermuda.

  3. Islander says:

    The coach, who has played 11 Test matches for Sri Lanka, said Nepal is not happy just to qualify for WCL Div.2. “We want to dominate this tournament. I am happy that we finished on top, but tomorrow’s game is so important. We want to win Thursday’s [Oct 30] final and take that confidence through to WCL Div.2 in Namibia.”

    Now this is great to read sad our Captain and Coach dont have this optimism being positive does have its benefits

  4. Triangle Drifter says:

    Can someone please tell us what justifies throwing millions at this sport? This team is an embarrassment.

    • PBanks says:

      Um, there hasn’t been “millions” thrown at this sport in a long time. But yes, the team is an embarrassment beyond reckoning.

  5. LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL says:

    We should scrap the senior program as it is now and put that money towards our youth programs to boost them even further. Compared to other nations, our youth program is a complete joke. Scrapping it will not remove any of the aspiring goals for the young colts either. I may seem a bit harsh, but Im thinking of scrapping from the 14 year olds and up. They would benefit best with their respective clubs. My reason for saying that is because their talents have peaked in the old ways of doing things here in Bermuda, which as we all know can not cut it at the high levels of cricket today. In other words, they are being prepared and groomed to fail maliciously on the international stage already. I don’t know about you, but I am tired of being beaten and embarrassed on the world stage every single year!! Even the Americans, who’ve just discovered cricket are warming us in a sport we’ve played for well over 100 years. We need a lot of work done starting from the ground up.

  6. MAKE MY DAY says:

    BDA cricket has gone downhill very badly in the last 35 yrs!! In a lot of areas we need to start-again from the bottom-up – if we are again going to compete in the International arena!! Today’s teams just do NOT have the experience or calibre of teams of the past!!