2012 WCT20 - Sri Lanka Vs Zimbabwe
It ought to be one of the key
tournaments from a perspective of being an event involving all the top
cricketing nations with the qualifiers.
And in that context, it would be appropriate to expect a grand opening
event as the curtain raiser.
And how does the 2012 T-20 World
Cup kick off? The day chosen is a Tuesday - a working day, the venue chosen is
a distant Hambantota, and the team playing the home team is a clueless
Zimbabwe, a side that has lost it’s last dozen games in this format.
That a country that sees generally
vibrant and full stadiums was more than half empty was a statement that the ICC
had bungled big time in it’s planning of this event. “It's a packed crowd here in Hambantota” was
perhaps the only time something positive about this game was echoed, but this senile
comment from an aging commentator was quite simply another meaningless expression
that had nothing to do with reality.
If there was some hope of a
contest around the midway mark of the Sri Lanka innings, Zimbabwe quite simply
fell apart after that. Whilst Prosper
Utseya and Graeme Cremer bowled well, the rest of the bowlers were wayward. Add
a display of abysmal fielding, once a big positive for Zimbabwean sides, and the writing was clearly on the wall.
That the Zimbabwean batting fell
apart came as no surprise, the camera shots of the celebrating crowd became
more entertaining that the batting in the middle.
The post match show was interesting
as Jatin Sapru quizzed the minds of Kevin Peirtersen, Saurav Ganguly and Wasim
Akram for some interesting analysis aided by Dermot Reeve’s graphical presentation
and theory.
Cricket fans however may have to
bear with a few more days of one sided games, much as this format can produce a
shocking result!
And ever seen a tournament where
a ‘warm-up game’ is played the day after it has started? Well, England warm-up with Pakistan a day
after the first official game today!
Labels: Cricket, Hambantota, ICC World T20, Jatin Sapru, Kevin Peirtersen, Saurav Ganguly, Sri Lanka, T20 WC, Twenty20 World Cup, wasim Akram, Zimbabwe