In an unprecedented incident, players of both the teams were called back from the dugout after the game’s last delivery was deemed a no-ball by the umpires at the Gabba
Sean Williams after being dismissed for 64 against Bangladesh yesterday. Pic/AFP
Veteran Zimbabwe batter Sean Williams described the last-ball drama as “extremely weird” after Bangladesh pulled off a win in a game of changing fortunes in the T20 World Cup here on Sunday.
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In an unprecedented incident, players of both the teams were called back from the dugout after the game’s last delivery was deemed a no-ball by the umpires at the Gabba.
“It was extremely weird. Obviously I’ve never experienced something like that in a cricket match before, but again, it just goes to show in a T20 game, there’s always a little bit of hope; anything can happen,” Williams said.
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Requiring five in the last ball, Blessing Muzarabani was stumped by wicketkeeper Nurul Hasan off Mosaddek Hossain’s bowling, as the Bangladeshi players and fans broke into a celebration.
Stumps were uprooted and the players were back in the dugout after shaking hands, but just then the TV umpires declared the final ball as a no-ball after finding Nurul to be guilty of collecting the ball fractionally in front of the stumps, making the stumping invalid.
Brief scores
Bangladesh 150-7 (N Shanto 71, A Hossain 29; B Muzarabani 2-13, R Ngarava 2-24) beat Zimbabwe 147-8 (S Williams 64; T Ahmed 3-19, M Rahman 2-15, M Hossain 2-34) by three runs
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