Bangladesh V England

A good first days play for England in the second Test. Good knocks from both Michael and Marcus at the top and well sustained by Nasser Hussain- unbelievably the reason he got out in the first Test was because in his eyeline there was a massive 12 foot cobra! Now that is just unacceptable - i don't care what excuses you give - that is just dangerous. I mean what if it had harmed somebody - or even the sheer scare could have given someone a heart-attack. Not to mention the fact that if Nasser Hussain took his eye of the ball he could have been splattered - it was very fortunate that nothing happened. Anyhow back on with the game and England are in a very strong position - they need to capitalise. Good to see they dropped Gareth Batty from the side and brought in Martin Saggers and Richard Johnson. I think in these conditions Kabir Ali would have done very well actually.

Anyhow England in a very strong position.

Stumps - Day 2

England 326

Bangladesh 93/4 (38.0 ov)

Bangladesh trail by 233 runs with 6 wickets remaining in the 1st innings

scorecard @ stumps day - 2

Look at these BD guys against England on their home soil:



Habibul Bashar        1    2   0    60   58   30.00  46.15   -  1    -  -
Javed Omar            1    2   0    30   27   15.00  29.12   -  -    -  -
Rajin Saleh           1    2   0    19   11    9.50  52.77   -  -    1  -


Javed Omar scored 2,
Habib scored 18,
Kapali score duck,
Rajin 24*

Same guys against Pakistan on "foreign" soil:



Habibul Bashar        3    6   0   379  108   63.16  58.75   1  3    1  -
Javed Omar            3    6   0   187  119   31.16  34.95   1  -    2  -
Rajin Saleh           3    6   0   186   60   31.00  34.31   -  1    4  -

Was it our bowling problem that we couldn't bowl these guys out at lower score?

England are in total control at the moment - i don't think they'll throw it away from here.

sign Nassir Hussian was damn unlucky - i reckon he should have probably made it to his ton - i think he was over eager to get there in the end. A simple catch for the bowler. Anyway an easy win now for England - the weather is the only hope for Bangladesh - already they would have to break the record for the highest successful last innings chase if they were to win! :p

Youhooo - easy win for England in the end - Richard Johnson did very well - what I didn't get is that why the hell Man Of The Series award went to Matthew Hoggard? Surely it should have gone to Marcus Trescothick? I mean he was the one player who performed in both Tests - and possibly Michael Vaughan too.

okay now - surely Robert Croft will come into the side? - and i assume Rikki Clarke will lose his place when Andrew Flintoff is fit - more selection worries for David Graveney and Duncan Flectcher.

BD batsmen committed collective suicide during their second innings. Couldn't beleive my eyes at the type of shots they were playing.

After putting up an admirable show in Australia and Pakistan they seemed to have lost it all yet again.

though Bangladesh's confidence must be absolutely shattered - especially after that defeat in the final Test against Pakistan - that must have been heart-breaking for them - I have to say though that bad things can usually happen to young sides - if the players are new to the game or don't have too much experience it can absolutely destroy them - these are the times where you really rely on the more experienced and motivational members of the side to lift the rest of the team - good Coach is vital as he needs to put the belief back into all the players.

Tour match

BCB Development Squad v England XI

Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka

5 November 2003 (50-over match)

Result: England XI won by 167 runs

scorecard 4 tour match

First ODI

Flintoff rushes England past the winning post](http://uk.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/CRICKET_NEWS/2003/NOV/558735_BDESHENG2003-04_07NOV2003.html)

England 146 for 3 (Collingwood 36*, Flintoff 55*) beat Bangladesh 143 (Hannan Sarkar 30, Flintoff 4-14, Giles 3-29) by 7 wickets
Scorecard

A fine allround performance from Andrew Flintoff, the Man of the Match, swept England to a comfortable seven-wicket victory at Chittagong in the first of three one-day internationals against Bangladesh.

First Flintoff grabbed 4 for 14 as Bangladesh crumbled after a useful start, then he ambled in after three quick wickets had gone down and biffed a rapid half-century, from only 45 balls, to speed England home. Flintoff was aided with the bat by Paul Collingwood, in his first ODI since injuring his shoulder at the start of the last English season. They put on 91 for the fourth wicket, and Collingwood rounded things off by clouting Alok Kapali for three successive fours to complete the formalities with 24.3 overs to spare.

England had wobbled slightly after a busy start in which they had reached 39 by the end of the seventh over. Suddenly, though, Mushfiqur Rahman took two wickets in successive balls to stem the tide. First Vikram Solanki (10) waltzed down the wicket, but only skyed his heave straight to Jamaluddin Ahmed at mid-on. The batsmen crossed, and next ball Marcus Trescothick (28) played his trademark dab towards third man, only to guide the ball straight to Hannan Sarkar in the gully (39 for 2).

Collingwood avoided the hat-trick, but shortly afterwards Michael Vaughan was gone for 9. He dragged his back foot forward trying to sweep, and Khaled Mashud whipped off the bails. The TV replays showed that Vaughan had not quite slid his foot back in time, and the red light signalled a wicket for the left-arm spin of Manjural Islam Rana, from only his third ball in international cricket.

That made it 55 for 3, but it was the end of Bangladesh’s brief hopes. While Collingwood consolidated, Flintoff hit out. He flailed a six over midwicket off Jamaluddin, another debutant, without remotely timing it – then clouted another over long-on, off Manjural, just to show how it should be done. There were also eight fours, one of which nearly decapitated the umpire at the bowler’s end, as he sprinted to 55 not out.

Earlier Bangladesh had fallen to pieces after a decent start. They reached 50 for the loss of only one wicket, but lost four more with the score on 65 and another one run later. Some lower-order resistance pushed the total to a more respectable 143, but it was never going to be enough. Apart from Flintoff’s four wickets, there were signs of a return to form for Ashley Giles, who took 3 for 29 – although he was slightly flattered by those figures.

Giles conceded eight runs from his first over and Flintoff 12, but after that the procession started as Bangladesh’s batsmen capitulated. Habibul Bashar began with a neat boundary, but Flintoff removed him with a poor ball, a leg-side bouncer which Habibul tried to pull but only succeeded in gloving to Chris Read (50 for 2). Then, at 65, Rajin Saleh top-edged an attempted sweep off Giles into the covers and the wheels really came off.

Hannan Sarkar, the only batsmen to settle, survived a good shout for a catch behind – but that only angered Flintoff, who banged the next ball in and Sarkar did glove it through to Read. Sarkar’s 30 was more than Nos 2 to 7 managed between them.

Two balls later Khaled Mahmud – who was given the bird by a noisy and enthusiastic crowd – edged an attempted drive to give Read his third catch, and Giles claimed his second wicket when Kapali played back to a ball crying out for positive footwork, and was as lbw as it is possible to be. That basic error was typical of an innings undermined by inappropriate shots and poor technique.

Bangladesh limped to three figures thanks to an eighth-wicket stand of 34 between Mashud and Manjural, but by then the game was effectively over as a meaningful contest. The last-wicket pair of Jamaluddin and Tapash Baisya chipped in with 36 as well.

It all left England looking near-certainties to complete a clean sweep in this short series – and left battle-scarred Bangladesh still looking for their first ODI win against another Test-playing country since they upset Pakistan in the 1999 World Cup.

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Delighted as a Bowler

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Massive as a Batsman

England slaughtered Bangladesh! - nice to have Andrew Flintoff back in form - 55 runs and 4 wickets. :k:

BD's extremely poor run continues. In the second ODI they were routed by 7 wickets by England.

BD 134/9 off 50 overs.
England 137/3.

Back to the drawing board for Dave Whatmore.

I think no teams should use performance against Pakistan to analyse whether there is an improvement in their team or not. BD's team looked like tigers against Pakistan, now they are cats again.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Changez_like: *
I think no teams should use performance against Pakistan to analyse whether there is an improvement in their team or not. BD's team looked like tigers against Pakistan, now they are cats again.
[/QUOTE]

Yes but they performed well against Australia in Australia, so give them some credit.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by ehsan: *
Yes but they performed well against Australia in Australia, so give them some credit.
[/QUOTE]

Yes, they do deserve credit, but not as much as would be given if compared performance against Pakistan. Pakistan had almost lost a test-match against them.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Changez_like: *

Yes, they do deserve credit, but not as much as would be given if compared performance against Pakistan. Pakistan had almost lost a test-match against them.
[/QUOTE]

Well that's Pakistan cricket team for you. :)

I feel sorry for Bangalis. Having hard time scoring even 100 runs… :smack: I guess they need to tour Pakistan once again to get back…:french:

Again Andrew Flintoff gets the job done - he is one of the best all rounders in the world at the moment - Flintoff now has equalled Ian Botham's record of the most 6's in Limited Overs Internationals by any English player so congratulations to him.

Anyhow Bangladesh must be in absolute Disaray - i dunno what they are gonna do to be honest - they were so to win against Pakistan and now that defeat is really costing them dearly - confidence is low - psychologically they are at a disadvantage - their game is poor and more than anything else i think they are slightly lacking the desire to go out there and win.

they have to put behind what happened in past - and focus on future.

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FLINTOFF FLINTOFF

Andrew Flintoff is now (rightly so) the number 1 All-Rounder in One Day International Cricket - well done mate. That was like a one man wrecking crew out there - he really did take the game to Bangladesh and he deserved all 3 of his Man Of the Match Awards plus his Man Of the Series Award too.

Anyway Sri Lanka is next - that will be an entirely different story.

I personally don’t think Flintoff is any better than Kallis. Kallis :k: