Hasan hits double-ton for Karachi Whites

A round-up of the second day of the ninth round of Division Two in the Quaid-E-Azam Trophy 2011-12

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Dec-2011Mohammad Hasan hit his maiden first-class double-century, while Behram Khan hit a maiden hundred, to carry Karachi Whites to a mammoth 551 for 7, declared, against Lahore Shalimar at the National Bank of Pakistan Sports Complex in Karachi. Both batsmen were at the crease, already past a hundred, when play resumed with Karachi Whites on 287 for 4. The opener, Behram, went on to make 175, while Hasan got to 251 at a healthy strike-rate of almost 79, before Karachi Whites declared. Lahore Shalimar had employed ten bowlers without much success, and then lost their openers cheaply to go to stumps on 58 for 2.Khan Research Laboratories (KRL) took a 44-run first-innings lead against Lahore Ravi at the Lahore City Cricket Association Ground. The visitors’ innings was built around cameos from most of the line-up, Yasir Arafat being the stand-out scorer with 78. The Lahore Ravi bowlers, too, mostly all contributed – Asif Ashfaq had the best figures, 4 for 50. The hosts then wiped out the deficit for the loss of one wicket, finishing the day on 55 for 1.Hyderabad put on a solid batting show to get to 500 for 7, declared, against Multan at the Bahawal Stadium in Bahawalpur. Their bowlers then knocked over three Multan wickets cheaply, to give their side complete control. Hyderabad’s total was driven by an unbeaten 200 from Rizwan Ahmed – his best first-class score – and knock of 133 from Lal Kumar.Peshawar’s bowlers knocked over Quetta for 145 in 46.3 overs, to give their team a 94-run lead at the Arbab Niaz Stadium in Peshawar. Riaz Afridi caused most of the damage, taking 5 for 37, as none of the Quetta batsmen could manage more than Ata-ur-Rehman’s 45. Afridi was backed up by Afaq Ahmed and Waqar Ahmed, who took four wickets between them. Peshawar, on the back of an unbeaten 61 off 73 balls from opener Mohammad Fayyaz, extended their lead to 180 at stumps. They finished the day on 86 for 1.Driven by a quick century from captain Khurram Shehzad, Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited (SNGPL) took a 266-run first-innings lead against United Bank Limited at the Jinnah Stadium in Sialkot. Shehzad’s 122 came off 136 balls and included 24 fours. SNGPL’s charge to 393 at over four and a half runs an over was given an extra fillip by a knock of 97 from Ali Waqas. SNGPL’s bowlers consolidated their side’s position in the match by knocking over two wickets quickly in United Bank’s second innings, to leave them 45 for 2 at stumps on day two.

Criciúma tenta manter sequência de resultados positivos contra o Oeste

MatériaMais Notícias

Ainda na zona de rebaixamento da Série B, o Criciúma terá o Oeste como próximo adversário na competição. Nos últimos três jogos, sob o comando do técnico Mazola Júnior, o Tigre conquistou sete pontos. Venceu o Avaí e Paysandu e empatou com o Boa Esporte.

O treinador quer que a equipe mantenha o desempenho em campo, já que no início da competição, o Carvoeiro deixou a desejar.No momento, o Tricolor está na 17ª colocação. O comandante fez questão de destacar a importância de pontuar nas próximas rodadas para sair do Z-4.

– Quanto mais tempo tivermos para treinar essa equipe, melhor. A gente provou isso no jogo do Paysandu, no jogo do Avaí, e vamos tentar ir buscar esse pontos que perdemos nos jogos fora de casa. Vamos ter que recuperar, pois, caso contrário, a balança não vai fechar nunca – afirmou Mazola Júnior.

O próximo desafio do Criciúma na Segundona é neste sábado, contra o Oeste. O jogo será às 19h, na Arena Barueri.

Debutant Lyon puts Australia in control

Sixteen wickets fell on the second day in Galle, where Australia finished in a powerful position to push for victory thanks to Nathan Lyon’s five wickets on debut

The Report by Brydon Coverdale01-Sep-2011
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsNathan Lyon struck with his first ball in Test cricket and finished with 5 for 34•Associated Press

After eight months of soul-searching, Australian cricket finally has something to be excited about. A few things, in fact: Nathan Lyon’s five-wicket haul on debut, including a wicket with his first delivery in Test cricket; the performance of the other debutant, Trent Copeland, who struck with his second ball at international level; and the return to form of the new captain Michael Clarke, whose confident half-century capped off a strong day for his side.And the most encouraging thing for Australia’s fans is that they were in a powerful position to push for victory against Sri Lanka in Galle. Australia closed the second day at 115 for 6, hardly the sort of score most sides would crow about that early in a Test, but on a day when 16 wickets tumbled on a pitch so dusty it was almost a health hazard, Clarke’s men were unequivocally on top against a lacklustre Sri Lanka.Of course, plenty of work remains to be done, and their lead of 283 runs with four wickets in hand is no guarantee of victory against a side boasting batsmen like Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene. But the longer the match wears on, the more impressive Australia’s first innings of 273 appears, and the hosts will need the biggest total of the match to pinch victory.After Lyon’s spin and Shane Watson’s reverse swing demolished Sri Lanka for 105, Australia’s top order wobbled and Rangana Herath picked up some late wickets to keep Sri Lanka, at least theoretically, in the contest. When rain forced an early close, Australia were 115 for 6 with Usman Khawaja on 2 and Mitchell Johnson on 3, and they were happy to get off the field after Herath claimed three late wickets.The most important dismissal was that of Clarke, who had shown his class against spin in compiling 60 from 80 balls. He was nimble on his feet and flicked Herath wristily through midwicket, a shot which VVS Laxman would have been proud of, and he cleared the boundary over mid-off with a wonderful lofted drive against Suraj Randiv.Eventually, Clarke fell when he top-edged an attempted sweep off Herath, and Michael Hussey (15) departed next ball when he was adjudged caught at bat-pad on review. It was a tough call on Hussey, for while the replays suggested possible contact between glove and ball, the footage was not conclusive but the on-field umpire’s not-out decision was overturned.Herath made it three victims in two overs when Brad Haddin edged to slip for a duck, but Sri Lanka needed a pile of wickets after Australia recovered from 5 for 2 in the fourth over. Shane Watson had fallen off the first ball of the innings, when he slashed Chanaka Welegedara to gully, and soon afterwards Ricky Ponting departed in comical fashion when he miscued a pull off Suranga Lakmal.Ponting lost his grip as he played the stroke and his bat flew out towards midwicket, and the fielder, Herath, did well to keep his eyes on the ball and completed the take. Phillip Hughes was positive in his 28, but was lbw to Tillakaratne Dilshan when he went for a sweep to a fullish delivery, and HawkEye didn’t save him when he asked for a review of Richard Kettleborough’s decision.Smart stats

Nathan Lyon became the ninth Australia spinner to pick up a five-wicket haul on Test debut. He is also the 30th Australia debutant to pick up a five-wicket haul.

With the wicket of Kumar Sangakkara, Lyon became the 14th bowler overall and the second Australia bowler to pick up a wicket off his first ball in Tests.

Sri Lanka’s 105 is their sixth-lowest total in home Tests and their lowest ever in Tests in Galle. It is also their second-lowest total against Australia.

The 18 runs aggregated between the fifth and tenth wickets is the second-lowest for Sri Lanka in Tests. The lowest is eight runs against England in 1982.

When Shane Watson fell first ball, it became the 27th instance of an Australia opener being dismissed off the first ball.

Australia have not lost a Test match since the Kolkata Test against India in 2001 after taking a 150-plus lead at the end of the second innings. (Click here for matches lost when Australia have batted first and here for matches when they have fielded first.)

It was a frenetic final session after Sri Lanka lost all ten of their wickets before tea. Lyon, the offspinner who this time a year ago had not made his state debut and was looking forward to starting a job as an Adelaide Oval groundsman, collected 5 for 34 as Sri Lanka crashed out for their sixth-lowest total in Test history.The last seven wickets fell in the space of 18 runs, a collapse triggered by an excellent spell of reverse-swing bowling from Watson, who took three wickets in two overs. But it was Lyon’s efforts that brought the greatest cheers from the Australia dressing room, not surprisingly given Australia’s struggles to find a Test-quality spinner in the post-Warne era.His first ball in Test cricket was near perfect: it drifted in from around the wicket and turned sharply away from the left-hander, Kumar Sangakkara, whose edge was snapped up beautifully by a diving Clarke at first slip. Only Arthur Conington in the 1890s had taken a wicket with his first Test delivery, and he finished his career with two. Lyon had five by the end of the day.He was helped by some below-par batting, but Lyon was still impressive in the bounce and spin he extracted, in an era when many Australian tweakers push the ball through too quickly. Angelo Mathews was bowled behind his legs when he missed an attempted sweep, Herath was caught in the deep off a slog sweep, and Randiv was sharply taken by Ponting at midwicket.Lyon completed his five-for with a terrific return catch high to his right to remove Welegedara, and he led Australia off the field in the knowledge the Test spin position was now his to lose. While Lyon was the star, it was Watson’s spell to the middle order that really rattled Sri Lanka.Watson tailed the ball dangerously with reverse swing and had Thilan Samaraweera (26) and Prasanna Jayawardene both trapped lbw in one over. In his next he came around the wicket to Tharanga Paranavitana, Sri Lanka’s top scorer with 29 off 115 deliveries, and swung the ball in for another clear lbw.Paranavitana and Samaraweera had steadied the innings somewhat with a 43-run stand after Australia picked up three early wickets. Mahela Jayawardene (11) was run out when Paranavitana pushed to the off side and Copeland backhanded a return to Brad Haddin, a piece of fielding reminiscent of Mark Waugh at his best.Both batsmen had been ball-watching, hesitating in the middle of the pitch, and replays confirmed Jayawardene was a few centimetres short when Haddin whipped off the bails. As if to highlight how off the pace Sri Lanka were, Paranavitana might have been run out had Jayawardene made his ground; while Australia appealed, he loitered in the middle of the pitch and a return to the bowler’s end could have ended his stay.It was the second celebration for Copeland. His first ball in Test cricket was driven through cover for four by Dilshan, but his second brought a breakthrough when Dilshan flashed irresponsibly and was brilliantly snapped up by Ponting at short cover. The dismissal summed up the day; Sri Lanka lacked application and Australia made the most of their chances.Now Australia need to make the most of their strong position. A 1-0 series lead is theirs for the taking.

Umar Akmal must 'stop being selfish'

Mohsin Khan, Pakistan’s chief selector and interim coach, has said that Umar Akmal needs to “stop being selfish” and learn how to convert starts into substantial innings in Test cricket

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Oct-2011

Mohsin Khan wants Umar Akmal to learn how to play long innings in Test cricket•AFP

Mohsin Khan, Pakistan’s chief selector and interim coach, has said that Umar Akmal needs to “stop being selfish” and learn how to convert starts into substantial innings in Test cricket. Akmal, a middle-order batsman, was dropped for the Test series against Sri Lanka in the UAE and advised to improve his game by playing domestic cricket.”There is no doubt over his [Akmal’s] potential or talent. But he has not done enough to remain in the team,” Mohsin said. “Basically we have given him a message. ‘Go and play domestic cricket and learn to play big innings. Learn to turn your thirties and forties into hundreds for the team. Stop being selfish.'”Akmal began the 2011-12 domestic season by scoring 95, 20 and 165 for Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited in their first two Quaid-e-Azam trophy matches. On the international circuit, however, he had not scored a Test century since his hugely impressive debut in 2009.After poor performances in 2010, when he averaged 24.33, Akmal was left out of the XI for the two Tests in New Zealand. He returned to the side for the Tests in the West Indies, but was dropped from the Test squad against Sri Lanka after scoring only one half-century in 2011, and struggling to play long innings in ODIs as well.”To tell you the truth, I was chief selector when we dropped Umar for the Test series [against Sri Lanka], but even if I had been the coach I would have still dropped him,” Mohsin said. “He would not have found a place in my team.””It is not my team or the PCB’s team. It is Pakistan’s team and those who are selected must justify themselves no matter how good they are.”Mohsin was appointed Pakistan’s interim coach to temporarily fill the vacancy created by Waqar Younis’ resignation after the tour of Zimbabwe. The PCB is in the process of finding a new coach for the national team. Mohsin has also served as chief selector since March 2010.”My aim has always been, like the Australians, to have equally capable players competing for one position in the national team and I think the selectors have succeeded in doing that,” he said. “I always wanted to coach the Pakistan team and for me it is a big challenge to also succeed as coach.”

Lenses and a new stance have helped Sibanda

Vusi Sibanda is more comfortable now that he has traded in his spectacles for contact lenses and has also developed a more stable stance

Firdose Moonda in Bulawayo30-Aug-2011

Vusi Sibanda can sight the ball better now that he uses contact lenses but still has problems with the pull shot•Associated Press

A strange thing happened to Vusi Sibanda when he stopped wearing glasses – he could see. Alright, it wasn’t exactly that dramatic, because Sibanda switched to contact lenses instead, but the change resulted in improved vision and, in turn, better form with the bat.The three years between 2008 and 2010 were particularly blurry for Sibanda. He failed to average over 20 in ODIs in any of them, a disappointing effort after the previous two years, where he maintained healthy one-day averages of over 35. Since the start of 2011 though his form has improved remarkably: he averages 44.00 in ODIs this year, and will be one of Zimbabwe’s key players during the upcoming series against Pakistan that starts with a solitary Test on September 1 and will feature three ODIs and two Twenty20 internationals thereafter.Two days before he got called up to Zimbabwe’s World Cup squad, Sibanda made a bold decision to aid his game. “We [Mashonaland Eagles] were playing a four-day game here in Bulawayo against Matabeleland Tuskers and I had to excuse myself to go to the optometrist,” Sibanda told ESPNcricnfo. “I had the tests done, got the lenses and came back to continue playing. I was quite nervous and had to stand outside the 30-yard circle while I got used to them.”The change had an immediate impact. “It became easier to pick the line and length of deliveries and I seemed to have a lot more time than I used to have.” Also, not having to wear glasses made Sibanda more comfortable at the crease. “It sounds a bit weird, but the glasses would start falling off because of the sweat and it would get annoying because I had to keep putting them back on.”The switch to lenses, that he had delayed for years because he did not like the idea of putting something in his eyes, was just the first of several adjustments Sibanda made to his game. Since 2008, Sibanda has spent a few weeks a year in Sydney with Michael Clarke’s mentor Neil D’Costa, where they have worked intensively on a few key areas.”I used to shuffle a lot in the crease and now I don’t have that trigger movement anymore,” Sibanda said. “With a more solid stance I can react faster.” He still is rushed into a shot sometimes though, particularly by the short ball, and calls himself a “compulsive puller.” The shot cost him his wicket four times in the series against Bangladesh. Sibanda dealt well with Bangladesh’s spinners on his way to three half-centuries in the series – one in the Tests, two in the ODIs. Still, he maintains that it is the quicks that he prefers to face. “I’ve always liked pace; spin used to be a bit of a problem for me.”The Bulawayo pitch, where the Test against Pakistan will be played, usually offers the spinners something. Sibanda, though, said he saw a fair bit of grass on the strip when he went to observe it. Even if it does turn, Sibanda’s recent form has made him confident he can deal with any conditions.

Gutsy Chanderpaul denies India

India will have to wait until 2016 to win more than one Test in a series in the Caribbean – a feat they’ve never achieved and were denied this time due to a resistance led by Shivnarine Chanderpaul.

The Bulletin by Siddhartha Talya10-Jul-2011
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Shivnarine Chanderpaul grafted to his 23rd Test century•AFP

India will have to wait until 2016 to win more than one Test in a series in the Caribbean – a feat they’ve never achieved and were denied this time due to a resistance led by their West Indian tormentor-in-chief Shivnarine Chanderpaul. He grafted his way to a 23rd Test century and was supported by Fidel Edwards in a decisive 37-over grind that made India rue their lack of effectiveness with the ball.Even though Chanderpaul’s partners failed to match his patience and eventually conceded their wickets to set a target of 180 in 47 overs, timely breakthroughs in the chase meant India’s priorities switched from forcing a win to securing their 1-0 lead. A day that began with the visitors in complete control, ended with West Indies achieving parity thanks, fittingly, to a batsman who became their most-capped Test player in this match.India’s late inroads on the fourth day, the fortuitous wicket of Darren Sammy – caught at short leg off a deflection from his chest – on the fifth morning and the subsequent run-out of Ravi Rampaul boosted their chances of wrapping up the game quickly. But Chanderpaul blocked out one end completely. He saw off the seamers with ease, driving and clipping them away for runs early and displaying solid defence and farming the strike when Edwards joined him. Unshakeable at one end, he forced the Indian bowlers to turn their focus completely towards Edwards, whose vigil guided Chanderpaul through to another landmark.Chanderpaul had been dropped on 25 by Rahul Dravid on the fourth day and offered another chance in his 90s – a brief phase where was troubled by the turn and Harbhajan Singh’s round-the-wicket line. He edged Harbhajan a couple of times past slip, once very narrowly past Dravid but reached his century with a tickle off Ishant Sharma and celebrated with a ritual kiss to the Windsor Park surface, much to the joy of a raucous Sunday crowd in the venue’s first ever Test.India’s seamers shone for much of the series, including the first innings where they kept probing away, but they faltered today in good batting conditions. They didn’t vary their lengths, and bowled too short: Ishant had the better of Sammy thrice in this series by pitching the ball on a length, but rarely did that today; instead, in his very first over, he was slashed for two boundaries. Munaf Patel roughed up Edwards early in his innings, whacking him on the ear when he missed a hook, but the bowlers repeated the dose too often after the batsman had learnt his lesson. Spin was India’s hope, with the ball spitting on the odd occasion and though it yielded success, it came long after India desired it.Smart stats

Shivnarine Chanderpaul’s century is his 23rd in Tests. He is fourth on the list of West Indian batsmen with most Test centuries.

With his sixth century against India, Chanderpaul moved above Gordon Greenidge on the list of West Indian batsmen with most Test centuries against India. Garry Sobers and Viv Richards (eight each) and Clive Lloyd and Everton Weekes (seven each) are above Chanderpaul.

The 106 balls faced by Fidel Edwards is the second-highest number of deliveries faced by a No.10 West Indian batsman in an innings. Andy Roberts, who faced 181 balls against India in Kolkata in 1983, is on top.

The 222 balls faced in the ninth-wicket stand between Edwards and Chanderpaul is the highest ever for the West Indies for the ninth wicket in Tests. The highest is 382 balls in the partnership between JP Duminy and Dale Steyn against Australia in 2008.

MS Dhoni’s win-loss ratio of 5.00 is the best among captains who have led in at least 25 Tests. Steve Waugh is next, with a win-loss ratio of 4.55 in 57 Tests as captain. Dhoni is yet to lose a single series as captain.

While Chanderpaul weathered most of the bowling, Edwards, who arrived with the lead just 113, showed he was adept at handling the short-ball barrage, knocking them down off the back foot, swaying out of the way quickly and showing the full face to both the seamers and Harbhajan when they bowled fuller. When Praveen Kumar found a bit of reverse, he drove him through the line after getting to the pitch, and negotiated the turn and bounce despite a cluster of close-in fielders on the leg side. He offered India hope, however, with some needless extravagance. He smashed a slower one from Ishant over mid-off and swung another over midwicket. Having got away on a couple of occasions, he was third time unlucky when Suresh Raina forced another loose shot to mid-off. Devendra Bishoo edged a catch to slip shortly after, leaving Chanderpaul stranded when he’d have been hoping to frustrate India further.Edwards’ performance did fire him up however, and he bowled with fierce pace, and got dangerous swing with the new ball. Abhinav Mukund was trapped in front first ball, playing across the line and Dravid was unsettled by some scorchers that he erred by playing at. He survived a stormy first spell with M Vijay, who put India on course with fluent batting in conditions that considerably eased out after tea.Singles were easy to come by, and the bad balls were comfortably dispatched. Vijay took Sammy for a couple of boundaries, including one that was off his favourite swing over midwicket, while Dravid punished Bishoo’s half-tracker first up, prompting the bowler to switch to a round-the-wicket line outside leg stump. That had an effect on Vijay, who, after playing out five such deliveries in an over, felt the urge to employ a cross-batted heave off Ravi Rampaul’s first ball of a new spell. He miscued it to mid-on, but the chase was still on with Raina promoted up the order. Though he infused the innings with some urgency, running smartly between the wickets, his stay, and India’s hopes of a successful chase, ended when he scooped a catch back to Rampaul. The captains ended the game at the first opportunity just before the mandatory 15 overs began.In the end, MS Dhoni was satisfied with a 1-0 result, but could India have rounded off with a stronger statement of intent ahead of a tougher assignment in England? For West Indies, too, this was a satisfactory end. The start of the season was marred by the spat between senior players, including Chris Gayle, and the board. But a Test win over Pakistan led by their under-pressure captain Sammy, two draws against India secured from positions of weakness, the rise of Rampaul, the successful return of Edwards, the impressive debut of Kirk Edwards and Chanderpaul’s evergreen reliability were all welcome results.

مران الأهلي | انتظام السولية وسافيو.. وعلي معلول يخضع لـ برنامج علاجي

استأنف الأهلي تدريباته بعد ظهر اليوم الأحد بدون راحة، وذلك بعد الفوز على الزمالك مساء أمس بثلاثية نظيفة، في بطولة الدوري المصري الممتاز.

واستهل الفريق المران بجلسة تدريبات بدنية في الجيم قبل أن يستكمل اللاعبون الذين شاركوا في اللقاء أمس تدريباتهم بمران استشفائي، فيما خاض بقية اللاعبين وحدات تدريبية متنوعة شهدت بعض الفقرات البدنية وتدريبات التصويب على المرمى، قبل أن يختتم كولر فقرات المران الجماعي بتقسيمة قوية شارك فيها فريقان من اللاعبين.

واجتمع كولر بالجهاز الفني المعاون له في حضور سيد عبدالحفيظ، مدير الكرة على هامش المران الجماعي؛ لمناقشة بعض الأمور الفنية والإدارية.

وانتظم عمرو السولية وبرونو سافيو، لاعبا الفريق في التدريبات الجماعية للفريق والتي أقيمت بعد ظهر اليوم الأحد على ملعب التتش بالجزيرة.

وقال الدكتور أحمد أبوعبلة طبيب الفريق إن السولية تعافى من الإصابة التي تعرض لها في عضلة السمانة، كما تخلص سافيو من آلام الركبة.

طالع أيضًا | كريم فؤاد يطير إلى النمسا لإجراء جراحة الصليبي

وأوضح طبيب الفريق أن الثنائي خضع لفحص طبي اليوم أثبتت جاهزيتهما للمشاركة في التدريبات الجماعية.

وواصل ياسر إبراهيم مدافع الفريق تنفيذ برنامجه التأهيلي والتدريبي منفردا، وذلك على هامش المران الجماعي.

وبدأ ياسر إبراهيم مدافع الفريق في خوض تدريبات الجري حول الملعب، قبل استكمال تدريباته في الجيم.

وقال أبوعبلة إن ياسر إبراهيم تخلص من الإصابة العضلية التي تعرض لها مؤخراً، وسوف يشارك في التدريبات الجماعية للفريق تدريجياً عقب لقاء البنك الأهلي.

ووضع أبو عبلة، برنامج علاج طبيعيا واستشفائيا لمدة ٤٨ ساعة للاعب الفريق علي معلول، للتخلص من الإجهاد العضلي، على أن ينتظم بعدها اللاعب في التدريبات الجماعية بشكل طبيعي.

ويستعد الأهلي لمواجهة فريق البنك الأهلي ضمن منافسات الجولة الخامسة عشرة من الدوري الممتاز والمحدد لها السابعة مساء الثلاثاء المقبل.

فيديو | عبد الرزاق حمد الله يقود اتحاد جدة للتتويج بلقب السوبر السعودي على حساب الفيحاء

حقق اتحاد جدة لقب كأس السوبر السعودي بالفوز على حساب الفيحاء، بهدفين دون رد، من توقيع المهاجم المغربي عبد الرزاق حمد الله.

أحرز حمدالله هدف اتحاد جدة الأول في شباك الفيحاء، في الدقيقة الخامسة من عمر اللقاء.

وتسبب لاعب وسط اتحاد جدة طارق حامد في نيل لاعب الفيحاء عبد الرحمن السفري بطاقة حمراء بسبب تدخل قوي على اللاعب المصري في الدقيقة 25 من الشوط الأول من اللقاء.

وقرر حكم لقاء السوبر السعودي إلغاء هدف اللاعب البرازيلي رومارينيو في كأس السوبر السعودي في الدقيقة 39 من عمر اللقاء وذلك عقب اللجوء لتقنية الفيديو.

اقرأ أيضا..فيديو | عبد الرزاق حمد الله يسجل هدف اتحاد جدة الثاني أمام الفيحاء

وأكدت تقنية الفيديو تواجد الثنائي حمد الله ورومارينيو معًا في مصيدة التسلل، ليتم إلغاء الهدف لتظل النتيجة كما هي تفوق العميد بهدف دون رد أمام الفيحاء.

وأهدر لاعب وسط الاتحاد عبد الرحمن العبود ركلة جزاء في مواجهة الفيحاء في الدقيقة الثانية من الوقت المحتسب بدل الضائع للشوط الأول من نهائي السوبر السعودي لينتهي الشوط الأول بتقدم الاتحاد بهدف دون رد.

وفي الشوط الثاني وبرأسية من حمد الله في الدقيقة 48 سكنت شباك الفيحاء وضع اللاعب المغربي ثاني أهداف العميد في كأس السوبر السعودي.

ونجح الاتحاد في الحفاظ على شباكه نظيفة في نهائي السوبر السعودي هذا الموسم لينتهي اللقاء بالفوز 2-0 أمام الفيحاء ويتوج باللقب.

وكان الاتحاد فاز الخميس الماضي بنتيجة 3-1 أمام النصر في نصف النهائي، بينما تأهل الفيحاء للنهائي بتحقيق الفوز بهدف نظيف أمام الهلال. فيديو فوز اتحاد جدة أمام الفيحاء (2-0)

Mumbai humbled by the other Shane

The prospect of a final face-off between Sachin Tendulkar and Shane Warne had dominated the build-up to this clash, but on the field it was overshadowed by an imposing performance from Shane Watson

The Bulletin by Siddhartha Talya20-May-2011
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Shane Watson was all over Mumbai Indians•AFP

The prospect of a final face-off between Sachin Tendulkar and Shane Warne had dominated the build-up to this clash, but on the field it was overshadowed by an imposing performance from Shane Watson. Not only did he deliver a fitting farewell for his captain from competitive cricket, he also left Mumbai Indians under serious pressure to keep their qualification chances alive following a third straight defeat. For someone who had struggled to capitalise on starts through this tournament, Watson compensated with a splendid all-round effort, with each of his crushing blows serving Mumbai a painful reminder of what they should have achieved on a good pitch.The Tendulkar-Warne contest should have been a non-event as left-arm spinner Ankeet Chavan trapped Tendulkar twice in front, only for umpire Paul Reiffel to think otherwise. Backed up by his disciplined bowling at one end, Watson dismissed T Suman and Ambati Rayudu in successive overs from the other, depriving the hosts of the attacking start they would have hoped for after choosing to bat. And just as Kieron Pollard had warmed up at the death after muscling a couple of boundaries, Watson cleaned him up to restrict Mumbai to a below-par total, one that was given some respectability by a classy half-century from Rohit Sharma.It didn’t take long for Watson to set about punishing Mumbai, as he smote Harbhajan Singh for two massive sixes over midwicket in the second over of the chase. He followed that up by drilling Lasith Malinga past mid-off in an over that perhaps produced his only moment of discomfort. Malinga responded venomously, knocking back Watson’s chin with a bouncer – it escaped the grill, there would have been some pain but Watson didn’t flinch. His own response? A memorable counterattack, pulling Malinga each time he dropped short, his next seven balls producing three fours, a flat six and a stunned crowd not used to seeing their star-studded home team being overwhelmed in that manner.A sense of resignation was felt in the crowd, if not among the players, when Watson smacked Harbhajan for three consecutive fours in his comeback over, while Rahul Dravid, happy to play the supporting role, showed his own class with some delightful boundaries off Pollard and Munaf Patel. The pair remained unbeaten, Rajasthan cantered home, marking a satisfactory end after their turmoil-filled build-up to the tournament.Rohit had won praise from Warne as one of the most exciting talents in Indian cricket, and he undoubtedly would have impressed his opposing captain with his performance today. He quickly took the lead in the stand with Tendulkar, his stand-out shot being an imposing drive against Warne through extra cover, matched by a delightful punch in the same region off Johan Botha who couldn’t restrain Rohit despite chasing him as he made room.Rohit used his feet well to spin, and stepped up in the late overs after Tendulkar perished to an upper cut off Amit Singh. Warne though, wasn’t finishing his spell without a cheer. His final victory with the ball was the stumping of Rohit, stunned by the turn and losing his bat to square leg with a wild swing gone bad. At the end of the game, Warne was still smiling while Mumbai stayed baffled.

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