Monday, February 25, 2008

West Indies v South Africa - Second Test


Queen's Park Oval, Port-of-Spain, Trinidad

WI: CG Greenidge, DL Haynes, GA Headley, EdeC Weekes, CH Lloyd, *G StA Sobers, +PJL Dujon, MD Marshall, MA Holding, J Garner, CA Walsh.
SAF: BA Richards, *TL Goddard, B Mitchell, RG Pollock, AD Nourse, DJ Cullinan, +JHB Waite, MJ Procter, HJ Tayfield, AA Donald, NAT Adcock.

Debuts: Nil
Umpires: D Sang Hue & DM Archer
Toss: South Africa

The second Test in Trinidad will go down in history as one of the most brutal, attritional matches in ATG history, played as it was on a veritable minefield of a pitch at the Queen's Park Oval. The ball spat and shot off the cracked and spiteful surface from the word go, and it has to be said that West Indies' first innings total of 189 after being inserted by Trevor Goddard was a most commendable effort. Without hamstring victim Viv Richards (who was probably glad to miss the match), West Indies' innings was helped along by Greenidge and Haynes' gutsy opening stand of 60 - the highest partnership of the match - and some extraordinarily shoddy fielding from the South Africans. Five catches went down, with the woefully tentative Waite guilty of three drops behind the stumps, and two wickets from no balls only served to compound the tourists' errors.

South Africa were poised at 76-2 in reply shortly after lunch on day two, but by tea their innings was all over as Michael Holding delivered one of the most lethal spells yet seen in ATG Tests. Once the pugnacious Goddard was prised out for 51 after nicking a Holding snorter through to Dujon, the innings fell apart as Holding ripped through what remained of the line-up. 'Whispering Death' finished with figures of 7-30 off 16 overs, by far his best ever ATG return, as South Africa crumbled to 94 all out, their second consecutive first innings total of under 100. West Indies were guilty of three dropped catches themselves, but the Springboks batted in shocking fashion, seemingly lacking the spirit necessary to deal with Holding's onslaught. Extras was joint second top scorer with 10, and West Indies' lead of 95 put them well and truly in the box seat.

South Africa's bowlers struck back well in the second innings though, and with Goddard unable to bowl due to a hand injury, Messrs Procter, Donald and Adcock shared the bowling duties between them as West Indies were bundled out for 137 midway through the third afternoon. Greenidge was struck a fearful blow in the ribs from Procter's very first ball of the innings, and the tone was set as the home batsmen were made to suffer a taste of the medicine so ruthlessly administered by their own bowlers. Allan Donald was a particularly fearsome prospect, claiming 4-63 off 19 hostile overs, but two further dropped catches again hampered South Africa's cause, and a spirited last wicket stand of 27 between Garner and Walsh proved highly frustrating.

As it was, the tourists were left needing 233 to win, normally a more than reachable fourth innings target, but on this pitch it looked like a cricketing Everest. Nonetheless, South Africa began in undaunted fashion, and with Richards in vibrant form a famous victory looked possible. However, Richards went for 48, bowled by a shooter from Holding shortly before stumps on the third day, and when four wickets went down for 23 runs on the fourth morning, South Africa were on the ropes at 132-7, with Marshall doing the damage this time round. Procter and Tayfield steeled themselves though, and when Walsh floored a sitter off Sobers to give Tayfield a life, the pendulum seemed to be swinging back towards the Springboks. Procter finally went for an admirable 29, but with Donald carving 11 valuable runs, Tayfield was able to steer South Africa to 191-8, the highest total of the match and just 42 runs away from victory.


However, Donald then went lbw courtesy of a scuttler from Walsh, and in the next over Tayfield (22) was on the receiving end of a brute of a delivery from Holding, and in taking evasive action the ball lobbed off the splice to Lloyd in the covers and West Indies had won. It had been a tremendously hard fought victory, but the celebrations were muted, and both sides joined forces in their condemnation of what had been a woefully substandard wicket. Good fortune meant that there had been no serious injuries to report, and that was probably the most positive result to come from a Test that will go down in cricketing infamy. West Indies now stand 2-0 to the good in the series, and with three Tests to play any sort of comeback from the battered South Africans now seems highly unlikely.

Scores
WI 1st Inns 189 (Haynes 44)
SAF 1st Inns 94 (Goddard 51; Holding 7-30)
WI 2nd Inns 137 (Donald 4-63)
SAF 2nd Inns 193 (Richards 48; Marshall 4-51)


WEST INDIES WON BY 39 RUNS


Man of the Match: MA Holding

Sunday, February 17, 2008

West Indies v South Africa - First Test


Bourda, Georgetown, Guyana

WI:
CG Greenidge, DL Haynes, GA Headley, IVA Richards, CH Lloyd, *G StA Sobers, +PJL Dujon, MD Marshall, MA Holding, J Garner, CA Walsh.
SAF: BA Richards, *TL Goddard, B Mitchell, RG Pollock, DJ Cullinan, JN Rhodes, +JHB Waite, MJ Procter, HJ Tayfield, AA Donald, NAT Adcock.

Debuts: Nil
Umpires: D Sang Hue & RG Gosein
Toss: South Africa

South Africa took the field in good spirits on the first morning of this series; their batsmen had shown good form in the warm-up match, Curtley Ambrose was ruled out of this match and possibly the whole series for West Indies with a hamstring injury, and to cap it all Trevor Goddard won the toss and was able to bat on a decent looking Bourda strip. However, by tea time on day one South Africa's stock had plummeted dramatically: it was West Indies who were now batting, the Springboks having been blown away for just 80 in a dramatic start to the series.

Malcolm Marshall had been the main destroyer, taking full advantage of what little live grass there was in the pitch, and he claimed 4-12 as South Africa's innings was reduced to 32-5 after a calamitous first 90 minutes for the tourists. Only Richards (21), Waite (22) and Tayfield (13) reached double figures, and with Marshall resting, Holding (3-29) and Walsh (3-24) took care of the tail in an innings that had lasted just 34.1 overs.

It was now down to West Indies' batsmen to hammer home their advantage, and led by Viv Richards' sixteenth ATG century, Garry Sobers' team set about constructing a lead approaching 300 over the course of the next day and a half. At 62-3 the innings wobbled briefly, but Richards hammered a brutal 108 from just 133 balls, dominating a 151 run fourth wicket partnership with Clive Lloyd (50) as South Africa's bowlers were put to the sword. Both Procter and Donald received particularly harsh treatment, and the Springboks' fielding was ragged, with John Waite looking alarmingly unsure behind the stumps. Fifties from Dujon and Holding - his first at this level - bolstered the latter part of West Indies' innings, and a final total of 378 gave the hosts a lead of 298 after only two days' play.


South Africa needed to make a better fist of things second time around - they could hardly do any worse - and Graeme Pollock was at the forefront of the counter-attack, striking a sublime 113 that more than matched Richards' effort for the West Indies. The Springboks were handily placed at 158-2 shortly before tea on day three, but Goddard's contentious lbw dismissal by Garner for 52 precipitated a slide from which there was no escape. Marshall returned to remove Pollock via the outside edge - one of seven victims for Dujon in the match - but aside from a gutsy last wicket stand of over an hour between Donald and Adcock, there was little further resistance as the hosts' four-pronged pace attack found life in a wicket that had rendered South Africa's bowlers impotent.

An innings defeat at any time is a harsh blow to take, but in the first match of a series it is a particularly crushing setback. South Africa need to bounce back quickly in the second Test, and they may be without Mike Procter in Trinidad, the Springboks' all-rounder having been felled by a Joel Garner bouncer towards the end of South Africa's second innings here. Whatever Procter's fate though, one cannot help but wonder whether South Africa have already been dealt a knockout blow in the series.

Scores
SAF 1st Inns 80 (Marshall 4-12)
WI 1st Inns 378 (Richards 108, Dujon 54, Holding 53, Lloyd 50, Greenidge 43)
SAF 2nd Inns 280 (RG Pollock 113, Goddard 52)


WEST INDIES WON BY AN INNINGS & 18 RUNS


Man of the Match: MD Marshall

Friday, February 15, 2008

West Indies v South Africa - Tour Match

West Indies Board XI v South African XI
Beausejour Cricket Ground, Gros Islet, St Lucia

4 Day Game
Umpires: HBD Jordan & FCP Kippins


WIB XI: AF Rae, *JB Stollmeyer, RB Richardson, AI Kallicharran, SM Nurse, CL Hooper, +JL Hendricks, IR Bishop, CC Griffith, AL Valentine, BP Patterson.
SAF XI: BA Richards, *TL Goddard, B Mitchell, AD Nourse, DJ Cullinan, JN Rhodes, +JHB Waite, PM Pollock, HJ Tayfield, PS Heine, NAT Adcock.

South Africa's first ATG tour of the Caribbean got under way in St Lucia, and a perfect strip at the picturesque Beausejour Cricket Ground gave the tourists' batsmen, if not their bowlers, the opportunity for a profitable work out ahead of the first Test in Georgetown.

The South Africans took their time amassing a total of 371-5 before Goddard declared on the second afternoon, an innings centered around Bruce Mitchell's 462 minute, unbeaten, 155. It was an innings of two halves, full of confident strokes on the first day but stolid on the second, and it was almost outshone by Daryl Cullinan's confident 79 off 101 balls, an innings that threatens to rob the out of touch Jonty Rhodes of his place for the first Test.

Jeffrey Stollmeyer's West Indian team responded in kind though, and the Springboks' bowling attack - minus the rested Procter and Donald - lacked penetration as the hosts passed South Africa's total with only four wickets down. Richie Richardson led the way with a clinical innings of 162 from just 186 deliveries, and his second wicket partnership of 220 with the obdurate Rae (65) lasted most of the third day. Rae was dropped twice before he had scored though, and the South Africans were unusually lacklustre in the field for most of the Board XI's innings. Adcock and Heine both bowled commendably, Peter Pollock and Tayfield did little to enhance their Test claims, and Stollmeyer was able to declare at lunch on the final day 44 runs to the good at 415-4.

Although the game was now consigned to a draw, Barry Richards put on a solo masterclass over the course of the final two sessions, bludgeoning a hundred off 95 deliveries after being dropped first ball by Stollmeyer off Patterson. Richards eventually scythed his way to 142 (144 balls; 22 x 4, 2 x 6), and the fact that the scoreboard read 182-2 upon his dismissal showed just how dominant he had been. South Africa thus appear to be in confident mood with the bat ahead of the first Test, especially with Graeme Pollock to add to the mix, but Trevor Goddard will want to see better form from his bowlers in what promises to be an enthralling series.

Scores
SAF XI 1st Inns 371-5 dec. (Mitchell 155*, Cullinan 79, Goddard 49)
WIB XI 1st Inns 415-4 dec. (Richardson 162, Kallicharran 78*, Rae 65, Hooper 60*)
SAF XI 2nd Inns 203-2 (Richards 142)

MATCH DRAWN

Saturday, February 9, 2008

West Indies v South Africa - Series Preview

There has been great anticipation in the Caribbean leading up to the visit of the Springboks, and this battle between two true cricketing heavyweights has the potential to produce some great entertainment over the course of the five Tests. Both sides enter this series with recent victories over Australia under their belts, and South Africa have the possibility of taking over at the top of the ATG rankings with a comprehensive series win here.

West Indies seem to be settling down under Garry Sobers' captaincy, and they will have two scores to settle in the upcoming weeks: their last home series was the 4-0 drubbing inflicted by Pakistan, and on the previous occasion that these two sides met, the Springboks ran out comfortable 3-1 winners in South Africa. West Indies will be looking to exorcise both these ghosts, and they look to be running into the necessary form to be able to do just that.

South Africa are led once again by Trevor Goddard, captain in all of the Springboks' 44 ATG Tests to date, and their squad contains no surprises. The likes of Procter, Donald, Peter Pollock, Adcock and Heine should relish bowling in the Caribbean, although Graeme Pollock and co. should receive a stern test from the home bowling attack. All in all it should be a highly competitive series, and one where it is not easy to pick a winner ahead of time.

South Africa squad
TL Goddard (c), AD Nourse (v/c), NAT Adcock, DJ Cullinan, AA Donald, PS Heine, DT Lindsay, NBF Mann, B Mitchell, PM Pollock, RG Pollock, MJ Procter, JN Rhodes, BA Richards, HJ Tayfield, JHB Waite.



Wednesday, February 6, 2008

New Zealand v Pakistan - Series Summary

On paper it was a series New Zealand had no right to draw; they were twice bowled out for under 100 in the first Test, they conceded a first innings lead in all three matches and three of their top six averaged under 14 for the series. However, thanks to the herculean efforts of Richard Hadlee, one masterful innings from Martin Donnelly and a Pakistani implosion on the final day of the final Test, a draw was precisely the outcome earned by the tenacious Kiwis. After being well and truly Waqared in Hamilton, Donnelly's 208 on recall secured a worthy draw in Christchurch, and after Hadlee had twice held the batting together in Napier, debutant Dipak Patel spun Pakistan to defeat on a McLean Park minefield. Jack Cowie and Stewie Dempster were also handed debuts during the series, and whilst none of the new Blackcaps set the world alight, all three should be in reckoning again when the Kiwis next take the field.

However heroic New Zealand's comeback though, this series will always be remembered for Waqar Younis's 10-44 in the first Test in Hamilton. The swing he generated raised doubt in some quarters but simple awe in most, although it was interesting to note that in his absence the ball hardly deviated off the straight during the second Test in Christchurch. Nonetheless, his performance was remarkable, as was Wasim Akram's 163* from number eight in a second Test that rapidly became the 'tale of the tails;' indeed, the top orders of both sides failed to make much of an impact over the course of the series as a whole. One man certainly making an impact was the chirruping Moin Khan, who replaced the injured Wasim Bari for the first Test then kept his place for the series, but despite some high octane cameos with the bat and a haul of 17 catches in the three Tests, his keeping was not always watertight, and there will be a battle for the gloves before Pakistan's next series.

New Zealand Batting
MP Donnelly 302 runs @ 75.50, RJ Hadlee 265 @ 44.17, GM Turner 139 @ 23.17, SL Boock 92 @ 23.00, CS Dempster 84 @ 21.00

New Zealand Bowling
RJ Hadlee 17 wkts @ 22.29, J Cowie 11 @ 30.45, JR Reid 6 @ 30.67, SL Boock 6 @ 35.33

Pakistan Batting
Wasim Akram 262 runs @ 65.50, Saeed Anwar 187 @ 37.40, Zaheer Abbas 179 @ 35.80, Javed Miandad 168 @ 33.60, Saeed Ahmed 119 @ 23.80

Pakistan Bowling
Waqar Younis 24 wkts @ 9.54, Fazal Mahmood 15 @ 19.20, Wasim Akram 9 @ 31.00, Imran Khan 7 @ 34.43


SERIES DRAWN 1-1


Players of the Series: RJ Hadlee & Waqar Younis

New Zealand v Pakistan - Third Test


McLean Park, Napier

NZL: GM Turner, CS Dempster, BE Congdon, MD Crowe, MP Donnelly, *JR Reid, RJ Hadlee, +KJ Wadsworth, DN Patel, SL Boock, J Cowie.
PAK: Hanif Mohammad, Saeed Anwar, Saeed Ahmed, Javed Miandad, Zaheer Abbas, *Imran Khan, +Moin Khan, Wasim Akram, Intikhab Alam, Fazal Mahmood, Waqar Younis.

Debuts: DN Patel (NZL)
Umpires: SJ Woodward & RS Dunne
Toss: New Zealand

With New Zealand still in with a chance of squaring the series after the draw in Christchurch, it was likely that a result wicket would be prepared for the third and final Test in Napier, but the pitch at McLean Park simply did not look up to Test standard. Both captains voiced their displeasure at the cracked and uneven surface, although John Reid was probably able to afford himself a private smile. For Pakistan a fit again Waqar Younis was back to terrorise New Zealand's batsmen, whilst with the pitch expected to turn later in the match, the Kiwis handed an unlikely debut to Dipak Patel.

John Reid bravely elected to bat upon winning the toss, and the pundits who predicted that 200 would be a good score on this wicket were proved right as New Zealand were bowled out for 184 inside the first day. That they got that far was largely due to Richard Hadlee, whose 59 was a great knock in the circumstances, and Dipak Patel, who batted very bravely for a gutsy 26, adding 61 for the seventh wicket with Hadlee after facing his first ball on a Fazal Mahmood hat-trick. Waqar had again been the main destroyer though, swinging the ball late to claim another five wicket haul, and the Kiwis had done well to garner as many runs as they did.


Pakistan found batting just as difficult though, and with both openers gone before stumps on day one, the tourists' innings stumbled to a shambolic 135-8 midway through the second afternoon as New Zealand's seamers took advantage of the conditions. However, with the Blackcaps on the verge of an unlikely first innings lead, Pakistan's tail wagged once more, and much to the immense frustration of the home side exactly 100 runs were added for the last two wickets as Pakistan hauled themselves into the lead. Fazal Mahmood led the fightback with a career best 41*, and with last man Waqar (28), he took part in his second consecutive 50+ tenth wicket stand, a partnership of 62 swelling Pakistan's total to 235 and a lead of 51.


The momentum was now with the tourists, and although a rollicking opening stand of 85 off 16 overs from Turner (50) and Dempster (37) threatened to return the initiative to New Zealand, a third morning collapse reduced the Kiwis to 145-6 and Pakistan were back on top in what was becoming a game of wildly fluctuating fortunes. Hadlee was still there though, and with Wadsworth somehow surviving Imran's best spell of the series, the counter-attack was launched. Hadlee threw caution to the wind, and as a succession of flashing strokes got the scoreboard moving, Pakistan started to worry. Both batsmen were dropped as the pressure built, and by the time Waqar returned to remove Hadlee's middle stump, 63 runs had been added for the seventh wicket and Hadlee had gone on to make an audacious 71 from 72 balls. Wadsworth, Boock and Cowie continued the fight until just after tea, and New Zealand's eventual total of 247 set Pakistan 197 to win with over two days' play remaining.

Hanif again went early, but with Saeed Ahmed notching his first fifty of the series, Pakistan progressed to 121-3 on the fourth morning and looked set for victory. It was now New Zealand who were feeling the pressure, and with Patel and Cowie flooring relatively simple catches to give lives to both Zaheer and Javed, the game looked up for the Kiwis. Reid now turned to spin from both ends, and almost immediately Javed hoisted one high to long off, where Richard Hadlee - who else? - finally held onto a catch for New Zealand to give Patel his first ATG wicket. There was still plenty of batting to come for Pakistan, but for some reason blind panic now set in, and the innings fell apart in spectacular fashion either side of lunch.


Boock and Patel maintained their composure, and with victory in sight Pakistan collapsed in a heap. Zaheer and Imran were both bowled playing no shot, Moin, Akram and Intikhab all perished attempting ugly mows across the line, and when Boock trapped Waqar lbw for 0 (an exact reversal of the dismissal that gave Waqar his tenth wicket in Hamilton) it was all over. Pakistan were all out for 150 and New Zealand had recorded just their fourth ever ATG victory by the margin of 46 runs. Boock finished with 3-34 and Patel wound up with the remarkable figures of 4-22 from ten overs on what had proved to be an unforgettable debut. New Zealand had come back from the dead to draw the series, and Pakistan's self-destruct act had ended their fifteen match unbeaten run. Richard Hadlee's heroics with the bat earned him a most deserved man of the match award and maybe, just maybe, there could be some light at the end of what has been a very long tunnel for New Zealand.

Scores
NZL 1st Inns
184 (Hadlee 59; Waqar Younis 5-61)
PAK 1st Inns 235 (Zaheer Abbas 42, Fazal Mahmood 41*; Hadlee 4-57)
NZL 2nd Inns 247 (Hadlee 71, Turner 50; Wasim Akram 4-70, Waqar Younis 4-83)
PAK 2nd Inns 150 (Saeed Ahmed 51; Patel 4-22)

NEW ZEALAND WON BY 46 RUNS


Man of the Match: RJ Hadlee

Saturday, February 2, 2008

New Zealand v Pakistan - Second Test


Lancaster Park, Christchurch

NZL: GM Turner, CS Dempster, BE Congdon, MD Crowe, MP Donnelly, *JR Reid, RJ Hadlee, +KJ Wadsworth, J Cowie, SL Boock, DK Morrison.
PAK: Hanif Mohammad, Saeed Anwar, Saeed Ahmed, Javed Miandad, Zaheer Abbas, *Imran Khan, +Moin Khan, Wasim Akram, Intikhab Alam, Sarfraz Nawaz, Fazal Mahmood.

Debuts: CS Dempster (NZL)
Umpires: FR Goodall & BL Aldridge
Toss: New Zealand

After the record breaking events in Hamilton, there was always a danger that the second Test would be something of an anti-climax, and when the man himself, Waqar Younis, was ruled out of this match with a finger injury, there were mixed feelings amongst the fee-paying public in Christchurch. However, despite (or perhaps because of) the absence of the ten wicket man, we were treated to an excellent game of cricket nonetheless.

John Reid won the toss and elected to bat, perhaps a brave decision given the humid conditions and New Zealand's dismal showing with the bat in the first Test, and when the Kiwis slumped to 56-4 shortly after lunch, history seemed to be repeating itself. The recalled Martin Donnelly was still there though, and under his stewardship New Zealand began one of the most tenacious fightbacks in their history. 52 runs were added with Reid (29), then Hadlee passed 1000 career runs during a wonderfully fluent 76 (having been dropped on 6 by Moin) as 127 runs were added for the sixth wicket. Donnelly too was missed, floored on 53 by Imran off Sarfraz, and on the second day the Kiwi left hander made sure that Pakistan paid the full price for their profligacy.

With Donnelly at the helm, the Blackcaps extended their innings from 244-6 at the close on day one to 485-9 at stumps on the second day, Donnelly's share finally coming to 208, a national record. In all he batted for 607 minutes, faced 399 balls and struck 16 fours and two sixes, but mere statistics cannot describe the importance of his innings to New Zealand cricket. He added 98 with Wadsworth (51), equalling New Zealand's record partnership for the seventh wicket, and then a remarkable stand with Boock realised 124 runs for the ninth wicket, equalling the world record set by Davidson and Lillee in the very first ATG Test of all, before Donnelly was eventually out, caught behind off Fazal, who got through a mammoth 48 overs on his way to his best Test figures. Boock recorded his first ever fifty before Reid declared, and from the position of 56-4 New Zealand had fought back wonderfully well.

However, on a pitch that was still true, Pakistan then set about making a statement of their own over the next day and a half. First, Saeed Anwar cracked his second ATG hundred as he and Hanif posted 140 for the first wicket then, after a mini-collapse from the middle order, Zaheer and the ebullient Moin both contributed half centuries as Pakistan passed 300 with only five wickets down. When Zaheer fell to the disappointing Cowie for 65 close to stumps on day three, Pakistan were 322-6, and it was at this stage that Wasim Akram entered the arena to play one of the most remarkable innings in ATG history.

When Moin fell to Morrison for 58, Pakistan were 399-7 and still 86 runs in arrears, and this became 400-8 when Intikhab was caught behind off Reid for 0, but it was at this point that Akram decided to cut loose and throw caution to the wind. He had already passed 50 at this stage, but now the runs flowed in a torrent and the Kiwis were simply swept away. 22 runs came from one Morrison over, including three consecutive sixes, and Akram's second ATG hundred when it came had taken an even 100 balls. 74 runs were added with Sarfraz (18) for the ninth wicket, a national record, and another national record was set for the tenth wicket as Akram and Fazal put on 68 before Fazal was bowled by the persistent Morrison for 12. Akram was left undefeated on 163, struck off just 169 balls and including 15 fours and five sixes, and Pakistan's total of 542 - their second highest ever - had given them a lead of 57 with four sessions of play remaining in the match.


A draw now looked to be the only possible outcome, but when New Zealand lost three wickets for six runs to slip to 97-5 on the last morning, it was sweaty palms time in the Kiwi camp. However, Donnelly and Hadlee stepped up to the plate again, and a partnership of 86 for the sixth wicket calmed the nerves. Hadlee went for 48, but Donnelly passed 50, and with Wadsworth also digging in, New Zealand were able to make their way to safety and the haven of a draw. This was a very good result for the Blackcaps after their pasting in the first Test, and with Donnelly restored to the colours their batting now looks to have more backbone. However, the Kiwis' bowling attack still looks impotent when the pitch is offering no assistance, and whilst this remains the case one cannot see New Zealand winning on a regular basis any time soon.

Scores
NZL 1st Inns 485-9 dec. (Donnelly 208, Hadlee 76, Boock 51*, Wadsworth 51; Fazal Mahmood 6-120)
PAK 1st Inns 542 (Wasim Akram 163*, Saeed Anwar 122, Zaheer Abbas 65, Moin Khan 58, Hanif Mohammad 42)
NZL 2nd Inns 275 (Donnelly 72, Turner 54, Hadlee 48; Fazal Mahmood 4-80)
PAK 2nd Inns 14-1

MATCH DRAWN


Man of the Match: MP Donnelly

Blogger template 'Greenich' by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Jump to TOP