Sussex finds the way to finish things off

Completely contrasting finishes to the two teams’ innings have seen Sussexclaim a morale-boosting 26 run win (under the Duckworth/Lewis method) overLancashire in a tense National League match between the sides at Hove today.For large periods of this match, the hosts appeared to be in trouble. Uponwinning the toss, they almost immediately found themselves in difficulty;Ian Austin (1/32), Andy Flintoff (1/37) and Glen Chapple (2/62) allstriking quickly to reduce the score to 64/4. It was only, in fact, when aswashbuckling Will House (80*) and Dutchman Bastiaan Zuiderent (68), inonly his second appearance for Sussex’s first team this season, joined toadd a breathtaking 141 runs for the fifth wicket that there came arestoration.Even then, though, there was no guarantee that Sussex’s final tally of213/6 would prove large enough on what looked a good batting wicket. Thissuspicion received reinforcement when Andy Flintoff (41) and NeilFairbrother (41) took charge of the early stages of Lancashire’s reply,lifting the score to 92/2 in quick time. Two errant shots in quicksuccession temporarily changed the balance, however, and Sussex’s bowlerswere intermittently able to drop on to a more nagging line and length astheir opponents chased a revised target of 219 to win from 41 overs. Thematch again appeared headed in the visitors’ favour as Graham Lloyd (28)and Warren Hegg (20) lifted the score to 142/4 with a flurry of singlesbut, once Robin Martin-Jenkins (2/37) summoned the ability to find a waythrough Hegg’s gate, things began to unravel. Martin-Jenkins and BillyTaylor (2/30) quickly accounted for a further three victims before JamesKirtley (4/45) – having earlier claimed two at the start of the innings -returned to capture another two wickets and put the finishing touches on acollapse which had, by then, seen Lancashire surrender its final sixwickets for the addition of a miserable fifty runs.The loss, one it could ill afford, leaves Lancashire anchored to the footof the Division One table. Sussex, although still fighting its own battleto avoid relegation, has meanwhile gained for itself some much neededbreathing space ahead of both Kent and Lancashire in the same zone.

Waqar backs Wasim

Pakistan captain sympathized with his new ball partner Wasim Akramafter the left-armer went wicketless in the Asian Test Championshipopener against Bangladesh.”I think he bowled pretty well and saw a couple of catches dropped ofhis bowling,” Waqar said in the post match conference.”I think I was a bit lucky and got a couple of cheap wickets whileWasim was unfortunate that despite bowling well, he couldn’t get anywickets. But it should not be a concern,” Waqar said.Waqar said it was a great feeling to start the domestic season with acomprehensive and confortable victory and the win, no matter it wasagainst the minnows, would give his boys a world of confidence.”Naturally there is always a room for improvement. When we will sitdown again, we will try to rectify our mistakes. I don’t want to throwthe weaker areas in the background,” the skipper said.Waqar agreed that the opponents were an ordinary lot but emphasizedthat the conditions were difficult. “It was very hot out there,” hesaid.”Bangladesh are new to Test cricket and will surely get better,” hesaid.Bangladesh coach Trevor Chappell and skipper Naimur Rahman werecritical of their batting and blamed it for the defeat.”The conditions were good for batting and I thought it would be hardwork for the bowlers to get the batsmen out. But our batsmen got outthemselves,” the Australian said. But Rahman was even more aggressive.”We should have shown sense in the middle. The top order wasdisappointing and we should have played better. I expected that thebatsmen will learn from their mistakes of the first innings. Butdisappointingly, they didn’t.Chappell opined that his guys felt the pressure of being up against aformidable Pakistan with world class players. However, he played downa magnificent performance by Danish saying he didn’t deserve 12wickets in the match.”It was always an uphill task for Bangladesh although I think Pakistanwas not at its full strength. Danish Kaneria bowled well but he wascertainly not unplayable. But probably he didn’t deserve that manywickets.

Behrendorff gives Western Australia control

Western Australia 1 for 36 and 211 lead South Australia 191 (Behrendorff 4-55, Hogan 3-38) by 56 runs
ScorecardFile photo – Jason Behrendorff claimed four wickets for WA•Getty Images

Western Australia recovered from a mediocre first innings to roll South Australia for 191 and take control of proceedings on day two of the Sheffield Shield match at Adelaide Oval.The Redbacks were never able to get into a rhythm, with a 52-run stand between Callum Ferguson and Tom Cooper the most substantial partnership of the innings.Jason Behrendorff and Michael Hogan shared the majority of the wickets for the visitors, who ensured that two days of the match went by without a single batsman on either side passing 50.The Warriors fared somewhat better second time around, seeing off the new ball spells of Chadd Sayers and Joe Mennie, before Kane Richardson bowled Marcus Harris a little less than four overs before stumps.Even so, WA are now well placed to push for an outright result with a lead of 56 and nine wickets in hand.

Cricket Council USA adds to governing body conundrum

Former USACA presidential candidate Mahammad Qureshi has made the initial steps towards the creation of another governing body to rival both the USA Cricket Association and the American Cricket Federation. Qureshi, the chief executive and founder of Cricket Council USA, announced the appointment of six CCUSA regional directors on Tuesday, including several former USACA administrators.CCUSA officially classifies itself as a “sports and entertainment management organization” with its annual US Open T20 tournament held in Florida every December since 2008 for a cash purse ranging from $50,000 to $100,000. The announcement of eight regional bodies modelled on USACA’s eight administrative regions, followed by the appointment of the six regional directors, appears to be a thinly-disguised move at posing a challenge to USACA’s status as the ICC’s officially recognised national governing body in the USA.”CCUSA has always been determined to be a leader in player development, and all the affiliated regions share that vision,” Qureshi said in a press release on Tuesday. “We’re thrilled to work together to enhance the future of cricket in United States of America and build a pathway to a national team success at world stage.”Among the appointees announced are former longtime USACA board member Krish Prasad from New York, former USACA South East Regional administrator and current South Florida Cricket Alliance president Melton Taylor, former USACA Central West regional director Mustafa Hemani from Texas and former USACA selector Dawood Ahmed from Washington, D.C. Crucially, though, from a governance standpoint, CCUSA has no constitution and no annual general meeting with an election to decide these positions, which are ICC requirements.”The Regional Directors for Cricket Council USA were offered the position based on their achievements relating to cricket throughout the years,” Sofian Qamar, CCUSA’s vice-president of operations, told ESPNcricinfo via e-mail when asked about the appointment process for the regional directors.CCUSA’s business affairs have had ties with controversial figures in recent years. Banned Pakistan player Danish Kaneria was allowed to play at the 2013 US Open T20. Former CCUSA vice-president and US Open T20 tournament director Jeff Miller – who ran the US Open T20 tournament in 2010, 2011 and 2013 – pleaded guilty last summer in Florida to a second-degree felony charge of grand theft relating to an initial arrest on felony mortgage fraud charges in 2009.Florida-based Qureshi, who ran unsuccessfully for executive board positions in the last three USACA elections – including two failed presidential runs against Gladstone Dainty in 2008 and 2012 – filed for Chapter 11 personal bankruptcy in 2011 with more than $30 million in debts at the time, according to local Florida media reports. However, CCUSA’s tournaments have continued to draw consistent interest and participation from clubs all around the country and Qureshi maintains a loyal following.Notably, the language in CCUSA’s recent releases has put extra emphasis on their role in the development of cricket through the hosting and management of various T20 tournaments around the country. The ICC changed the language in its Associate membership criteria in January so that its member governing body no longer has to be the “sole” governing body in the country but rather the governing body that is responsible for the “administration, management and development of cricket in the country.”In the absence of a letter from the country’s national olympic committee certifying it as the recognised governing body, the ICC maintains discretion to make a final judgment. ICC chief executive David Richardson recently told ESPNcricinfo though that the ICC viewpoint is that all factions must come together in order for cricket to move forward in the USA rather than the ICC choosing between the USACA, ACF or a third party such as CCUSA.

Root century galvanises England

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsJoe Root has come a long way since he was part of a demoralised England squad that left Australia with a 5-0 whitewash and apparitions of Mitchell Johnson, vaudevillian moustache to the fore, lurking around every corner. Australia will now recognise that improvement only too well after Root’s rapid, sure-footed century galvanised England at the start of the Investec Ashes series.On a slow Cardiff surface, as if designed to nullify Johnson, a recourse that England might turn to all summer, Root blossomed from the outset as he struck 134 from only 166 balls, an innings of attacking intent that made light of England’s initial loss of three wickets for 43 on a grouchy Cardiff morning.With England imperilled, Root needed good fortune to get through his first few deliveries from Mitchell Starc, an inside edge saving him from an lbw decision first ball and Haddin then dropping a very takeable one-handed catch to his right from the next delivery as he dug at a full, wide one. Australia barely reacted, as if they imagined it might be a bump ball. But it was a duck they could have done with: instead, he has broken the chains. There was a reminder of Root’s first Ashes hundred at Lord’s when he edged temptingly between Haddin and first slip early in his innings and went on to make 180.Since that Australia whitewash, Root has averaged 85.41 in 13 Tests. It has been an emphatic response, ranking him alongside Australia’s Steven Smith as one of the most exciting young batting talents in the game. Root was once derided as a plodder, Smith as technically adrift. Yet they will refresh this age-old contest, as the best young players indubitably do.Joe Root leaves the pitch after making 134 from 166 balls•Getty Images

If Jos Buttler and Ben Stokes are the embodiment of England’s one-day enterprise, Root bears their hopes on his slim shoulders in this Ashes series. His departure, at 280 for 5, with nearly 18 overs remaining left England facing an awkward phase with the second new ball soon due and the further loss of Stokes, after a rumbustious half-century, and Buttler reasserted Australia’s threat.Producing deliberately slow pitches, if that proves to be England’s aim, could reduce the appeal of the series to damaging effect, although suspicion of English subterfuge should be tempered by the recognition – as Graeme Swann shrewdly put it on Test Match Special – that you can’t take pace out of a Cardiff pitch when there is not any in it in the first place.No matter, the danger of killing England’s renewed appetite for cricket before the salivating had begun was not evident on the first day as Root’s enterprise was entertaining enough. His third-wicket stand of 153 in 39 overs with his Yorkshire team mate – and one-time room mate – Gary Ballance was the bedrock of England’s innings.He fell in a manner that would have irked him, driving at a wide one from Starc, whereupon Shane Watson held the catch at slip. Later than it might have been, Starc must have thought. Starc then bowled Stokes with a beauty, holding his index finger to his mouth in a gentle admonishment of Stokes’ pre-series fight-fire-with-fire hype. Buttler then chipped Josh Hazlewood tamely to mid-on.Starc was as blustery as the south Wales weather, the low pressure rushing in whenever he had to align himself against left handers. Hazlewood bowled a probing line and could grow into the series as a more-then-useful replacement for the injured Ryan Harris, if not with quite the same bullish intent. Both finished with three wickets. Nathan Lyon, too, cleverly introduced early in the day by Michael Clarke, quickly claimed the wicket of Alastair Cook and would be reasonably content to go at three an over when England intend to counter his offspin aggressively.As for Johnson, reaper of 37 wickets in the last Ashes series, he finished wicketless and expensive. Outside Australia and South Africa, where slower pitches reduce his physical threat, his record puts him back in the realm of mere mortals. A streaky first boundary for Cook was a rare success. There was barely a bouncer to be seen all day and when it came, it was hooked over the sightscreen for six by Ben Stokes. The wrong sightscreen, to be fair, a top edge which flew high above the wicketkeeper Haddin.After the pre-series hoopla of the past few weeks – largely repetitive and tiresome this time around, a consequence of three Ashes contests in two years – the first Test could not begin too soon. There were squally morning showers to contend with, national anthems – Wales being forever in confusion about the extent of its sporting allegiance – and Cook, who chose to bat in expectation of settled afternoon weather, found the morning a demanding one.Three England wickets with only 43 on the board – Cook himself, Adam Lyth and Ian Bell dismissed – represented a potent opening to the series for Australia on a sluggish pitch. In the first over, from Starc, two balls reached Haddin on the second bounce, the second of them almost getting a third one in. It looked ominous, but the keeper and slips came up a few yards – a reluctant walk, particularly for an Australian – and nobody much minded after that.It was Hazlewood, who probably owed his involvement to the injury-enforced retirement of Harris, who made the first incision with his sixth delivery in Ashes Tests. Lyth had clipped Hazlewood confidently to square leg to record England’s first boundary but when he tried a repeat the ball flew low to David Warner at gully.For Cook to fall to offspin in the 14th over of the morning, Lyon already three overs into his spell, was not in the script. But Lyon found gentle turn, Cook attempted his favourite cut shot and Haddin held the edge. Lyon was immediately withdrawn.There was a failure for Bell, too, Starc’s inswinger quickly trapping him lbw. It was a marginal decision but one which England were correct not to review. Starc had been wayward against the left-handers but his inswing carried more threat against right-handers, as Bell had discovered. He now has six scores of 0 or 1 in his last nine Test innings.That left the bulk of the day with Root and Ballance. Root’s off-driven and cut boundaries against Starc signalled the start of England’s fight back and Ballance, the more subdued, awoke to take two boundaries off Johnson in the last over of the morning. He occasionally looked unsettled when Johnson fired the ball into his body from around the wicket, and safely edged a few that might have carried on a quicker surface, his stout, broad defensive bat coming with a slight sense of vulnerability.By tea the dominant memory was the crispness and authority of Root, especially driving on the front foot. There were a few frisky moments, too, and he survived an Australian review on 62 when Nathan Lyon sought an lbw decision, on the sweep, replays showing that the ball had struck Root outside the line of leg stump.He reached tea only seven short of his hundred, but this time there would be no faltering with a century in his range, as there had been twice against New Zealand at Lord’s in May. Instead, it was Ballance who succumbed for 61 in the second over after tea, playing all round a straight one.Root brought up his hundred with the shot that had been a hallmark of his innings, cover driving Hazlewood, before, feeling his back a little, he soft-pedalled beneath the aggression of Stokes. The battle has begun; runs had rushed ahead at nearly four an over just as England had suggested they would, but Australia could claim that the spoils were evenly shared.

No interim relief for Super Kings

A two-judge bench of the Madras High Court has refused interim relief to Chennai Super Kings Cricket Ltd. (CSKCL), which in a writ petition had asked for a stay on the recommendations of the Lodha Committee pertaining to Chennai Super Kings’ suspension. The court has adjourned the case to September 23, when it will hear “mantainability and merits”, and made it clear orally that any decision taken by the BCCI in the meantime will be subject to the court’s final orders.The Lodha panel had proposed suspension of two franchises – Super Kings and Rajasthan Royals – having found them guilty of breaching the IPL code of conduct in the 2013 IPL betting scandal. In a petition filed on August 17, the petitioner had asked the court to put an interim stay on the Lodha committee decision, quash the suspension and tell the BCCI to reinstate Super Kings into the IPL.Chief Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul and Justice TS Sivagnanam asked both the respondents – BCCI and India Cements Ltd – to file a counter and deferred the case. In response to a preliminary application moved by the Cricket Association of Bihar, petitioner in the 2013 IPL corruption scandal, the court asked it to file a counter as well, just like the respondents, within two weeks. After hearing all the parties, the judges adjourned the case to next month.A relieved BCCI insider confirmed that Friday’s working committee meeting will finalise the roadmap for ensuring smooth conduct of the IPL. The court hearing was slated hours before the governing council was to discuss the proposals of the five-member working group on conducting the IPL, which will then be forwarded to the working committee.On July 19, the governing council had formed the working group to study the Lodha committee order and suggest the future course of action. The working group met with all stakeholders and is set to present its recommendations.The working committee, the group that manages the affairs of the BCCI, will then take the final call on Friday evening. It remains to be seen if the working committee takes a decision on the matter or waits for the outcome of the court hearing on September 23.

Want to brush off India loss – Amla

Hashim Amla has urged South Africa not to overreact after their defeat to India on Sunday and pinned their uncharacteristic blow-out at the MCG on “a few mistakes” from which they could “move on” fast.”Everybody in the team has played enough to know that you do win and lose games. There can only be one winner and one loser. So, let’s not get too dramatic about it,” Amla said in Sydney, where South Africa are preparing to face West Indies. “We didn’t play good cricket, but we take the knock on the chin. We know we have a few more games in the round-robin phase, and guys have been playing well. So we don’t want to dwell too much on it. But going into the next game we certainly know we’ve got to perform better.”South Africa’s 130-run loss on Sunday was their worst at a World Cup, while batting second, but it is not likely to have a significant impact on whether they qualify for the knockout stages. At worst, it could impact where they finish in the group and who they face in the quarter-finals, but for Amla that does not really matter.”You want to finish as high as possible but if you qualify for the quarter-final, so be it,” Amla said. “If you want to win a World Cup you’re going to need to play the best teams to win it. There’s no trying to avoid anybody.”Instead of focusing on opposition they will face only in three weeks’ time, South Africa are concentrating on the aspect of their game they need to improve now: top-order batting. It’s a concern South Africa seemed unlikely to have, especially with the likes of Amla and AB de Villiers in their ranks, and one they tried to brush off as nothing serious after the showing against Zimbabwe.In the aftermath of that game, where they thundered to 339 after being reduced to 83 for 4, de Villiers was right to defend his frontmen. He reminded critics that the top four were precisely the reason South Africa had won matches in the past and if the sometimes soft middle order had hardened up enough to make up for it when they didn’t, there was actually a lot to be pleased about.All that was reversed against India, when South Africa recovered from a stumbling start but were then shot out for under 200 and lost 7 for 44 along the way. Amla called it a one-off.”We didn’t manage to string enough big partnerships closely together and we lost wickets at key times. Things like that happen,” he said. “You don’t want it to happen, and fortunately over the last few years it hasn’t happened to us too often – getting bowled out for 150 or 160. We just want to brush it off, take the knock on our chin, and get our heads up for the next game.”That change will have to stem from the top, where the partnership between Amla and de Kock is yet to show what it is capable of. In 32 innings together, Amla and de Kock have scored 1551 runs at an average of 48.46; at the World Cup, they have managed just 10 and 12 with de Kock appearing out of touch and Amla fumbling instead of playing fluently. Both problems, Amla hopes, are temporary.”I’d love to score runs every game but I don’t think it’s possible. It’s been a slow start and hopefully it gets better. I’m feeling good. Everybody goes through a few games in which they don’t score runs,” he said. “Quinny is striking the ball really well. On any given day, he can kick into first, second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth gear. Although he hasn’t got many runs I don’t think anybody in the team is too concerned with him not getting enough batting time because he does hit a lot of balls in the nets and he does put a lot of care into his batting.’Since his comeback from an ankle ligament tear, which was expected to keep him out for up to three months and two games of the World Cup but healed in a month, de Kock has only had one score over 20 in seven innings. That came in a warm-up game against Sri Lanka in Christchurch, when he made 66, and Shaun Pollock believes de Kock could still be working through the lack of match time in his own mind.”Quinton would have loved to have a nice series against West Indies before coming to the World Cup. He is probably a bit short on match time. It’s more from a mental perspective because technically we know what he can do,” Pollock said. “It’s about trying to get into the rhythm.”Luckily for de Kock, and for South Africa, there is still some time to do that. “The round-robin phase does allow you, if you do have a hiccup like we did on Sunday, some time to get back and align everything in the right way,” Amla said. “But it’s still early in the competition.” So, as they say in Australia, for Amla there are “no big dramas at the moment.”

Rhinos' top order sets up big win

A strong first-innings display with the bat set Mid West Rhinos up for a nine-wicket win against Mountaineers at the Mutare Sports Club. Rhinos, after being inserted, rallied around century stands for the first and third wickets, as Bothwell Chapungu (74), Bradley Wadlan (75) and Prince Masvaure (65) all stroked fifties to lift the team to 419.Mountaineers never really got going in their reply, as Michael Chinouya (4 for 74) and Neville Madziva (3 for 21) wrecked their top order, ensuring that the team folded for 206. Rhinos enforced the follow on, and Mountaineers put up a more stern resistance in their second essay, as Forster Mutizwa hit an unbeaten 127, with 16 fours. However, Kudzai Sauramba, who made 55, no other batsman stayed long enough at the other end to provide Mutizwa enough support, as Mountaineers were bowled out for 310.It meant that Rhinos needed 99 for victory, and they amassed that target inside 14 overs, thanks to an unbroken, 91-run partnership for the second wicket between Wadlan and Masvaure.An all-round effort from pacer Taurai Muzarabani, who took a hat-trick and scored a vital 70, paved the way for Mashonaland Eagles‘ nine-wicket win over Matabeleland Tuskers. The win was Eagles’ second in five Logan Cup games this season but wasn’t enough to lift them from the last position on the table, although it brought them close to Mountaineers’ tally of 16.Tuskers had reached a promising 280 for 5 on the first day after being put in to bat but Muzarabani bundled them out early on the second morning. He dismissed John Nyumbu, Brian Vitori and Steve Chimhamhiwa off successive deliveries in the 98th over, before returning to dismiss Keith Dabengwa, who top-scored for Tuskers with 141 off 268 deliveries. Muzarabani’s 5 for 63 was his maiden five-for in first-class cricket.Fifties from opener Simbarashe Gupo (89) and Greg Lamb (64) propped up the Eagles innings but lack of support from the other batsmen left them tottering at 242 for 9. Muzarabani then stitched together a valuable 140-run, tenth-wicket partnership with Brighton Mugochi, the only century stand in the match. Both batsmen went on to notch up fifties before Mugochi was dismissed by Chimhamhiwa for 61. Muzarabani remained unbeaten on 70 off 114 deliveries with nine fours and a six.With a lead of 75, the Eagles attack, led by Trevor Garwe’s 4 for 24, bundled Tuskers out for 127. A 49-run, opening partnership between Keith Kondo and Gupo set up the 53-run chase, which they completed in 13 overs for the loss of one wicket.

ICC doesn't rule out Champions Trophy switch

Despite repeated statements from the ICC that the Champions Trophy will go ahead in Pakistan next month, suggestions that the tournament might be switched to an alternative country continue to circulate. David Richardson, the ICC’s general manager of cricket, said on Friday it was not too late to take such action.His comments come at a time when the ICC appears to be fighting a losing battle in its bid to persuade players from several countries that there are not major safety issues over staging the event in Pakistan. “We’re very short of time now,” Richardson said after meeting with James Sutherland, Cricket Australia’s chief executive, Paul Marsh, the head of the Australian Cricketers’ Association, and Australia’s captain and vice captain Ricky Ponting and Michael Clarke. “If we’re going to relocate now it needs to be made within the next few days. Operationally it would be difficult, but it’s certainly not an option that would be discarded at this point and it could be relocated.”Although the ICC has issued vehement denials, there continue to be reports in the English media that some Test grounds there are on standby to host games at short notice. However, should players refuse to travel to Pakistan then the ICC’s hand might be forced.Were that to happen, the ICC would face substantial financial penalties from ESS, who have a long-term broadcasting contract with them. That stipulates that if the venues for any major tournament are switched at less than three months’ notice then they will be entitled to compensation that is likely to run into millions of dollars.The ICC had hoped that the findings of its fact-finding mission to Pakistan earlier this week would sway players wavering over playing, but it seems not to have worked. Meetings with New Zealand and Australia team members are reported to have been less than productive.The ICC will meet players from England and South Africa next week and much could depend on their reaction. Were only one country to decline to send a side, then the ICC would in all likelihood replace them with Bangladesh, ranked ninth in the ODI rankings at the time of the qualification cut-off date in March. Were two to back out then in theory Ireland, ranked tenth, would be invited.

UAE and Hong Kong name squads

Tabarak Dar will lead Hong Kong in the Asia Cup © HKCA
 

United Arab Emirates and Hong Kong have named their 15-member squads for the Asia Cup in Pakistan, which gets underway next month.Saqib Ali will lead the UAE side, who are coming off a disappointing campaign in the ICC Intercontinental Cup, managing just one win in seven matches. Saqib was the only one to play all seven games, and he was the team’s leading run-getter, with 690 runs at an average of 57.50. With 17 wickets each, medium-pacer Arshad Ali and left-arm spinner Khurram Khan were the top wicket-takers for the team, and will lead the attack in Pakistan. UAE are in Group A along with Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.Hong Kong are grouped alongside India and Pakistan, and they didn’t have much success during a ten-day tour of Pakistan earlier this month, losing four of their five matches. Tabarak Dar, their captain and opener, scored an unbeaten century in the loss to Sheikhupura, and finished the tour as the top run-getter. Offspinner Nadeem Ahmed was the leading wicket-taker, with eight scalps in four games.UAE squad: Saqib Ali (capt), Fahad Alhashmi, Alawi Shukri, Aman Ali, Amjad Ali (wk), Amjad Javed, Arshad Ali, Indika Batuwitarachchi, Nizel Fernandes, Khurram Khan, Mohammad Tauqir, Salman Farooq, Shadeep Silva, Vikrant Shetty, Zahid Shah.Hong Kong squad: Tabarak Dar (capt), Afzaal Haider, Ashish Gadhia, James Atkinson, Toby Brown, Hussain Butt, Irfan Ahmed, Courtney Kruger, Roy Lamsam, Munir Dar, Nadeem Ahmed, Najeeb Amar, Skhawat Ali, Wakas Barkat (wk), Zain Abbas, .

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