Alex Blackwell – the first ever woman elected to the NSW board

The 34-year old former captain retired from all formats in February after a record 251 matches for Australia

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Jun-2018Former Australia captain Alex Blackwell has become the first woman in the 159-year history of New South Wales cricket to be elected to the board.Blackwell, 34, retired from all formats in February after a record 251 matches for Australia. She led her country to victories in the Ashes and the World T20, and was even more prolific in domestic cricket. It was only four months ago that she won her 14th Women’s National Cricket League Trophy for New South Wales.”I grew up loving the game and am grateful for all the opportunities that cricket has given me,” Blackwell said. “I want to continue contributing to the game and thank the Cricket NSW members for the faith they have placed in me to do that at Board level.”I have been fortunate to play during a rapidly expanding era in women’s cricket and being the first woman elected to the cricket NSW board continues that journey. Cricket in Australia has never been watched or played by more people, particularly women and girls, and I am keen to help ensure that continues.”There have been other women on the Cricket NSW Board – notably former director Rina Hore and current director Patricia Forsythe – but Blackwell is the first woman to be elected by members.Chief executive Andrew Jones pointed to this development as a consequence of governance reforms. “Until 2016 Elected Directors could only be drawn from a pool of 34 club, Zone and association delegates, all but one of whom were male,” he said. “Now members can nominate anyone for election they believe to be qualified. This important change allows members to elect people the calibre of Alex as directors without them needing to be delegates first.”Blackwell will continue captaining Sydney Thunder in the Big Bash League.

Harry Brook keeps pressure on Jonny Bairstow as George Hill grinds out hundred

Brook becomes leading run-scorer in the country with classy 76 as Hampshire toil

ECB Reporters Network12-Jun-2022Yorkshire 324 for 5 (Hill 131, Brook 76) vs HampshireHarry Brook continued his extraordinary LV= Insurance County Championship season with his ninth score over 50 as Yorkshire piled on the runs on a flat Ageas Bowl pitch.Brook, who was released from England’s Test squad to play in this match, has played 10 red-ball innings in 2022 with a lowest score of 41 and three centuries.Against Hampshire, he showed his class with 76 but it was George Hill who spent the majority of the day grinding out a 220-ball century, the second of his career, before eventually departing for 131. Yorkshire reached the close on 324 for 5.Last season, Sussex’s Tom Haines and Matt Critchley, then of Derbyshire, were the players with the most 50-plus scores, both with nine. Brook – who scored seven in 2021 – has already reached Haines and Critchley’s tally in half the number of matches.But it was Hill that caught the eye early on after his skipper Steven Patterson had chosen to bat first. His straight drives were a particular highlight in a slow-going morning session: he scuffed one past Kyle Abbott before opening the face of the bat the following ball, and he would later gloriously drive Keith Barker through mid-off as well.Related

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The straight drives were joined by a number of pull shots through midwicket, including to bring up his half-century in 131 deliveries.The 21-year-old lost Adam Lyth driving the accurate Ian Holland to third slip in the morning after a 51-run opening partnership and Will Fraine – a victim to Hill’s driving, run out while backing up at the non-striker’s end.Brook joined Hill, something that would have happened a number of times during their schooling at Sedbergh in Cumbria. The pair were national schools champions together in 2017.Hill had the choice of pretty much any professional sport, having also excelled at hockey, been ranked in England’s top-four tennis players in his age group and won another national cup in Sedbergh’s rugby team.Hockey, tennis and rugby’s loss was certainly Yorkshire’s gain as he showed patience to see off the new ball – which was Mohammad Abbas-less. As Sedbergh director of cricket Martin Speight told the Yorkshire website recently: “He’s very understated, and I don’t think he realises it yet, but a lot of people have said to me how calm he looks when he gets going. Once he’s in, he looks very calm and unflustered.”George Hill stands tall to cut•Getty Images

Those words rang true, especially once Brook had joined him as the pair reached a hundred stand in 154 balls, Hill accelerating to contribute 41 of them in good time. Two sixes back over Liam Dawson’s head proved his quality against spin bowling, matched by his pace mastery on show throughout.At the other end, Brook batted like a man who knows he is at the top of his game. His high back-lift, small backward-step trigger and his punchy flourishes were all lined up and timed together perfectly. He struck 11 boundaries in all – 10 fours and a six – with his wagon wheel fairly equal in all areas.He fell falling into James Vince’s leg-slip trap, but that failed to halt Hill from reaching his three figures with a guided cut shot to the boundary.The second new ball ended his 257-ball vigil as Abbott sneaked one through the gate to clip the bail between middle and off stump. Harry Duke had his off stump kissed by Holland as the shadows lengthened with the day’s blue skies only interrupted by the rare cloud.

Sussex sign fifth T20 Blast overseas player to highlight county cricket's recruitment problem

Obed McCoy will fly in for short stint after IPL knockout stages

Matt Roller27-May-2022Recruitment in county cricket has never been tougher, as evidenced by Sussex’s decision to sign a fifth overseas player for their T20 Blast campaign in Obed McCoy.The pandemic’s effect on the Future Tours Programme has seen countless postponed tours rearranged at short notice, leaving counties in the dark as to who will be available when. Some players have also faced visa issues due to a Home Office backlog.Counties can register up to three overseas players simultaneously but only field two in a single playing XI and Sussex had initially planned to split their slots for the Blast between Mohammad Rizwan and Rashid Khan.But it became apparent on the day Rizwan’s signing was confirmed that things would not be that straightforward, with Pakistan announcing new dates for their ODI series against West Indies right in the middle of the Blast’s schedule.Related

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Sussex initially signed Josh Philippe as a partial replacement but his availability was then limited by an Australia A tour to Sri Lanka. That prompted the recruitment of Tim Seifert as a third keeper-batter for a short stint in the middle of the season.But Rashid’s involvement in the IPL knockout stages – his Gujarat Titans side are in Sunday’s final – and an Afghanistan tour to Zimbabwe means he will only play the final six group games. That means McCoy, the West Indies fast bowler, will join for around four games as a replacement – albeit hardly a like-for-like one.Sussex have remained upbeat publicly with a club statement declaring they were “delighted” to announce McCoy’s arrival. However, the preparation of an infographic outlining which of their five recruits will be available for which match underlines the sense of chaos – not least with an asterisk reminding supporters that their plans were subject to change.”Obed will be a fantastic addition to our team,” James Kirtley, their T20 head coach, said. “He is an up-and-coming world class T20 cricketer. Fresh off a very successful IPL, he can bowl with pace and has great skills at the death.”Sussex started the season with a defeat at home to Glamorgan on Thursday night in front of a crowd of just 2,209 at Hove, suggesting the involvement of big-name overseas players has done little to help ticket sales. They travel to Bristol on Friday night to play Gloucestershire.

Gazi Group go top with sixth successive win

A round-up of the Dhaka Premier League matches played on May 3, 2017

Mohammad Isam03-May-2017Gazi Group Cricketers took the top spot in the league with their sixth successive win, and handed Partex Sporting Club their sixth loss in six matches.After being invited to bat, Partex posted a competitive 270 for 9 on the back of half-centuries from opener Jatin Saxena and middle-order batsman Irfan Sukkur. Hossain Ali and Abu Hider picked up two wickets each for Gazi Group.They started the chase positively with openers Anamul Haque and Jahurul Islam adding 68 for the first wicket. Jahurul moved to 96, including 11 fours and a six, before retiring hurt. He did not return to bat, but a chain of cameos from the middle and lower order helped Gazi Group seal the chase with four wickets and six balls to spare. For Partex, Raijbul Islam and Jubair Ahmed took two wickets each.Sheikh Jamal Dhanmondi Club ran up 309 for 7 and crushed Brothers Union by 92 runs in Fatullah. Their fourth successive victory took them to third place with 10 points.It was Prashant Chopra who laid the foundation for the win with his fourth List A century, which contained seven fours and three sixes. Legspinner Tanbir Hayder, who has played two ODIs for Bangladesh, then derailed the chase with his first five-wicket haul in List A cricket.Chopra was assisted by Fazle Mahmud, who made 78 off 75 balls, and Abdullah Al Mamun, who made 59 off 54 balls. Then they went from 277 for 2 to 300 for 7, but the late collapse did not cost them in the end.Brothers Union had a brisk start in their chase with openers Mizanur Rahman and Junaid Siddique adding 49 in seven overs. Farhad Hossain, the No. 3 batsman, sustained the momentum with his seventh List A fifty, but the middle order and the lower order crumbled. They were eventually bowled out for 217 in 43.5 overs.Khelaghar Samaj Kallyan Samity picked up their second win of the season after thumping Victoria Sporting Club by 57 runs at the BKSP-3 ground in Savar. Victoria, winless in six matches, are on the verge of being relegated.After being sent in, Khelaghar piled on 303 for 7 with opener Robiul Islam Robi scoring his first List A century – 107 off 115 balls, including 15 fours and one six. He added 102 for the first wicket with Salauddin Pappu who hammered five sixes and as many fours in his 51-ball 60. Robi then added 64 for the fourth wicket with Nazimuddin before Masum Khan (31*) and Dolar Mahmud (25) made cameos to push the total past 300.Rubel Mia, who took three wickets with his offspin, then struck six fours in his 46 and gave Victoria a good start in their chase. The middle over, however, could not build on his work. Arafat Sunny later struck three sixes and two fours in his unbeaten 47 off 41 balls, but it only served to reduce the margin of defeat. Suraj Randiv took three wickets while Tanvir Islam picked up two wickets for Khelaghar.

Matt Critchley's six-for spins Derbyshire to victory at Chesterfield

Derbyshire’s young spin attack of Matt Critchley and Hamidullah Qadri carried the home side to a thrilling 39-run victory over Northamptonshire in the Division Two County Championship match at Chesterfield

ECB Reporters Network25-Jul-20181:13

Somerset silence stubborn Worcestershire

ScorecardDerbyshire’s young spin attack of Matt Critchley and Hamidullah Qadri carried the home side to a thrilling 39-run victory over Northamptonshire in the Division Two County Championship match at Chesterfield.Critchley, 21, took 6 for 106 to become the first Derbyshire legspinner to claim 10 wickets in an innings for 68 years while 17-year-old offspinner Qadri finished with 3 for 66 as Northants slipped to 274 chasing 314. Alex Wakley made an excellent 68 but his dismissal saw Northants lose their last six wickets for 47 runs as Critchley and Qadri ran through the lower order.Northants had been slight favourites at the start but much depended on Wakely, who had scored a century in the first innings on a pitch that was taking increasing spin.Wakely and Richard Levi played carefully against some accurate bowling through the first 10 overs until Critchley made the first breakthrough when he pinned Levi lbw with a short ball that scuttled through.The odds again appeared to be with Northants as Wakely and Steven Crook added 40 to reduce the target below three figures but a game that had fluctuated throughout took another turn when both fell in successive overs. Wakely’s defensive push was defeated by Qadri and in the next over, Critchley got one to spit at Crook who was caught by Alex Hughes diving at second slip.Seekkuge Prasanna drove Qadri for four and then dispatched Critchley for six over long on but the latter claimed his fourth victim when Josh Cobb missed an attempted pull. Derbyshire took another big stride towards victory when Prasanna was bowled playing back to Critchley and when Qadri span one through Brett Hutton’s defence, it was only a matter of when the win was confirmed.Nathan Buck hit Critchley for two fours but when he went for another big shot, a top edge was held by Wayne Madsen running back from first slip to seal Derbyshire’s first win at Queen’s Park since 2008.

Jeremy Solozano suffers concussion after blow to head, Shai Hope replaces him as concussion substitute

Solozano will now return to the team hotel and “begin undergoing the appropriate protocol”

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Nov-2021Shai Hope has replaced debutant Jeremy Solozano as his concussion substitute in the West Indies XI after Solozano was confirmed to have suffered a concussion. Solozano spent the night in a Colombo hospital under observation after he was hit on the head while fielding on the first day of the opening Test against Sri Lanka. His scans on Sunday showed no structural damage.Solozano will now return to the team hotel and “begin undergoing the appropriate protocol,” CWI confirmed in a tweet as lunch was taken on the second day of the Test.

Solozano was taken off the field on a stretcher on Sunday and transferred to a hospital from the Galle Stadium in an ambulance for scans, after being hit on the helmet while fielding at short leg. The incident happened just before the lunch break. Solozano was taken to a hospital in Colombo, which is more than an hour away by road.He was hit on the front of the helmet near the forehead on the fourth ball of the 24th over when Sri Lanka captain Dimuth Karunaratne pulled a short ball from Roston Chase. The batter had middled the ball and Solozano had barely any time to react or take evasive action.Solozano lay still on the ground for several minutes after that but appeared conscious as he got medical attention and players of both teams surrounded him. He was also seen talking briefly before his forehead was covered with a towel, probably because of the heat as the mid-day sun was beating down hard.A worried-looking Phil Simmons, the head coach, came down the dressing room stairs and stood near the boundary rope before Solozano was stretchered off the field and into the ambulance near the boundary.Solozano, the 26-year-old left-hand batter from Trinidad, who had played 40 first-class games before this, was earlier handed his Test cap by Simmons before play and was set to open for West Indies later in the game. He had played in the 2014 Under-19 World Cup, and has also represented West Indies A. He scored 74 off 216 balls in the second of the two intra-squad “Best vs Best” matches in Antigua before the Sri Lanka tour, with lead selector Roger Harper praising his “application, patience and composure”.

Late wickets lift England on rainy first day

Australia rue missed opportunities as top three squander starts

Alex Malcolm05-Jan-2022Australia’s quest for another Ashes whitewash could well be washed away by Sydney’s weather after just 46.5 overs were bowled on the opening day at the SCG with rain interrupting play four times and ultimately ending the day prematurely.In between times, England put in an improved bowling performance on a good batting surface with Australia’s top three all squandering starts. James Anderson, Mark Wood and Stuart Broad all picked up important scalps with Anderson and Wood producing a superb spell with a changed ball late in the afternoon to shift the momentum of the day.More rain is forecast to fall over the coming days in Sydney. Australia will be left frustrated not only with the weather but the wasted opportunities. Marcus Harris got started for the third consecutive innings in this series and looked completely at ease but now has just one half-century to show for it after nicking Anderson to slip for 38. David Warner also looked in superb touch but fell to a loose drive off Broad, while England finally might have found a weak point in Marnus Labuschagne’s game with Wood finding his outside edge for the second straight innings after he had compiled a composed 28 on one of his most prolific grounds in Test cricket.Rain ruined the opening session of the day. The toss and the first delivery were both delayed by 30 minutes. Once the pitch was unveiled from under the covers a distinct tinge of green did nothing to deter Australia captain Pat Cummins from batting first after winning the toss. England skipper Joe Root said he would have done the same.England didn’t get much of a chance to test out that grass as just 12.3 overs were bowled prior to lunch with rain interrupting play twice. Warner and Harris were untroubled, reaching 30 without loss at the break.Warner looked sharp post-lunch moving to 30 himself with six boundaries. He punished a number of deliveries overpitched as England’s seamers had trouble finding a consistent length. He and Harris combined for their second successive 50-run stand and the pair looked well-positioned to add many more to that tally.But out of nowhere, Warner’s arch-nemesis Broad found a breakthrough in trademark fashion. From around the wicket, he offered up a full enough length to tempt Warner into a drive, but it wasn’t a half-volley and it shaped away late to catch the edge. Zak Crawley held the catch well at second slip. Broad now has Warner 13 times in Test cricket, and given Warner’s contribution in this series to date, England fans may lament that Broad has only played two of four Tests.Another rain delay came just an over later and an early tea was called with Australia 1 for 56 after just 21.6. Harris and Labuschagne then cruised through the first hour of the evening session and England’s bowlers barely threatened as Australia reached 100 for the loss of just one wicket for the third time in the series.But the game changed with a ball change after the original ball went out of shape in the 30th over. Anderson and Wood came on from either end and made back-to-back breakthroughs. Harris was flat-footed nicking a good length away-swinger from over the wicket, having dealt superbly with the now customary around the wicket examination through most of the day.It was the fourth time Harris had faced more than 100 balls in a Test innings and he had rarely looked more comfortable at this level. He was scarcely beaten and played some sensational shots off both feet. But he walked off with only 38 to show for it and the anguish on his face suggested he knew it was a golden opportunity missed.Labuschagne fell in the next over with Wood’s extra pace squaring him up on the back foot in almost exactly the same fashion as at the MCG. This time he nicked to keeper Jos Buttler who held the chance to England’s delight.It created an awkward period of an hour for Steven Smith and Usman Khawaja to negotiate, with Khawaja playing his first Test since 2019. But that hour was reduced to just six overs as rain fell again. There was enough time for Khawaja to unfurl a majestic pull shot, reminiscent of the one he played to get off the mark in his debut Test against England at the SCG 11 years ago.

Rilee Rossouw joins Somerset for T20 Blast

Hampshire’s former Kolpak star signs as overseas player after making quite an impression at Taunton in 2017

Matt Roller06-May-2022Somerset hope that the addition of Rilee Rossouw to their core of talented young batters will take them one step further in the T20 Blast this season after losing to Kent in the 2021 final.Rossouw spent three seasons at Hampshire as a Kolpak player from 2017-19 and blitzed 156 off 113 balls against Somerset at Taunton in the Royal London Cup early on in his time with them. “I remember how the members and supporters reacted to that even though I was playing for the opposition,” he said in Somerset’s press release announcing his signing. “That is something that I’ve never forgotten.”Rossouw left Hampshire after the Kolpak loophole ended with the UK’s departure from the European Union and has spent the last two-and-a-half years on the T20 circuit. After a couple of quiet tournaments, he averaged 39.28 at a strike rate of 167.68 in the PSL this season, taking Multan Sultans to the final and providing a reminder of his abilities.Related

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He will add further firepower to a batting lineup featuring Tom Banton, Will Smeed, Tom Abell and Tom Lammonby, and will be available for the entire competition before joining up with Oval Invincibles for the Hundred later in the summer.Andy Hurry, their director of cricket, said: “Having looked at the strengths and the quality that we currently have within the T20 squad, as well as considering the global, domestic and international cricket concurrently being played during the Blast, including England Test and ODI England fixtures, we felt that adding additional explosive firepower to the batting unit would dovetail perfectly with the very strong group of players within the squad and also enhance our ability to go one step further this season.”Rossouw is Somerset’s fourth overseas signing of the season and it remains to be seen which seamer he joins in their side for the Blast. Matt Renshaw is only contracted for the County Championship and the Royal London Cup and will be in Sri Lanka on Australia A’s tour during June, but Peter Siddle and Marchant de Lange are both under contract for the Blast and will effectively be competing for one spot in the side.

South Africa bounce back on eventful day

The second morning began with Australia firmly on top; the third will start with South Africa in a position of strength

The Report by Brydon Coverdale04-Nov-2016
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsWhen Australia and South Africa play, you should expect the unexpected. Not literally, of course, because then it wouldn’t be unexpected anymore. But in recent Tests between these two nations there have typically been more swings than a children’s playground, more roundabouts than Canberra. It is always hard to predict the direction of the contest. Such has been the case over the first two days at the WACA.The second morning began with Australia firmly on top; the third will start with South Africa in a position of strength. By stumps on day two, the visitors had a lead of 102 runs with eight wickets in hand, a quite unbelievable state of affairs only eight hours earlier. Dean Elgar was on 46 and JP Duminy had 34, and South Africa had completely loosened the tight grip Australia had held on the match the previous evening.It all started with David Warner dabbling outside off and edging Dale Steyn to slip on 97. Strange things then started to happen. Firstly, Steyn failed to complete his next over; clutching his right shoulder he walked off the field, a sorry sight for South African fans, who have seen their team win a Test without him only once in the past eight years. Late in the day, Steyn’s injury was confirmed as a fracture that ruled him out of the entire tour.Vernon Philander, Kagiso Rabada and debutant Keshav Maharaj ran through Australia’s order with renewed vigour, completing a remarkable collapse of 10 for 86 that began with the single wicket taken by South Africa’s best bowler, perhaps of all time, who was otherwise absent. Philander became the leader, and they applied constant pressure on Australia’s batsmen.Philander and Rabada found some reverse swing, and Maharaj bowled impressively, keeping things tight enough at his end while also picking up a few wickets. He is the first specialist spinner in Test history to make his debut at the pace-friendly WACA, and he justified his inclusion by dismissing Australia’s captain Steven Smith, wicketkeeper Peter Nevill, and then Mitchell Starc.The wicket of Smith was particularly jaw-dropping, mostly for the brazen – though legitimate – lbw decision given by umpire Aleem Dar. Smith, yet to score, advanced down the pitch from his fourth delivery and could not get bat on ball, which prompted a zealous appeal from Maharaj but a half-hearted one from his team-mates. It was, as the police might say, just a routine enquiry – until Dar unholstered his finger.Steven Smith was lbw for a duck as Australia lost all 10 wickets for 86 runs after being 0 for 158•Cricket Australia/Getty Images

Smith looked dumbstruck, and immediately asked for a review. The broadcaster’s technology suggested he was well down the pitch – 2.8 metres from the stumps when struck – but the ball was hitting in line, and was going on to clip the top of leg stump. The umpire’s decision stood: Maharaj had his first Test wicket, and Australia were starting to wobble at 3 for 168.Already Usman Khawaja had been and gone, bowled for 4 by a beauty from Rabada, who angled one in from around the wicket and sneaked through the batsman’s defences. Shaun Marsh, who had batted so solidly with Warner in a 158-run opening stand, fell to a similar delivery from Philander for 63 – he did get his pad in the way, but Nigel Llong’s lbw decision was also upheld on review.There was precious little resistance from the rest of Australia’s order, although Adam Voges and Peter Nevill at least reached the 20s. But Mitchell Marsh, under pressure to hold the No. 6 spot after selector Rod Marsh said last week “he needs to get a Test hundred I reckon”, fell a hundred runs short. He was lbw for an eight-ball duck to Philander, and perhaps the biggest worry was the distance by which he missed the ball.Voges spooned a return catch to Rabada for 27, Starc was caught at midwicket for a duck off Maharaj, Nevill was caught at slip off Maharaj for 23, though was unlucky Australia’s reviews were exhausted for he appeared not to have touched the ball. Josh Hazlewood was taken at gully off Philander for 4 and Nathan Lyon was caught at slip off Philander for 0. Peter Siddle remained unbeaten on 18, having helped Australia squeeze into the lead.It was a quite remarkable collapse; not on the scale of Australia’s 47 all out in Cape Town, of course, but remarkable mostly because South Africa achieved all but one of the wickets without their best bowler. Australia went rapidly from complete dominance to serious danger of conceding a first-innings lead. By the change of innings, the Test was effectively all square.Still, South Africa needed to avoid the kind of top-order wobbles that had left them at 4 for 32 on the first morning. Stephen Cook and Elgar provided a more solid opening stand on this occasion, although Cook still could not survive for too long, and was caught for 12 pulling Siddle to midwicket.The loss of Hashim Amla, who chopped on to Hazlewood for 1 – his first-innings duck meant a Test aggregate of one run in this match, equalling his career worst – had the potential to give Australia the momentum, but they could not find another breakthrough. By stumps, Elgar and Duminy had moved the total on to 2 for 104.On the first day, Australia’s bowlers had run through South Africa for 242, and their openers had then cruised to 105 without loss. The question was not whether Australia would take the lead, but by how much. That was even more the case when the score moved along to 0 for 158. Then the unexpected began to happen. Who knows, then, what might happen on day three?

Butt ton secures WAPDA's maiden title

Salman Butt’s stoic century thwarted Habib Bank’s push for a win and ensured that WAPDA claimed the Quaid-e-Azam 2016-17 title, their maiden tournament win, on the basis of a first-innings lead

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Dec-2016
Scorecard
File photo – Salman Butt’s unbeaten 105 on the final day was his fourth century of this season•AFP

Salman Butt’s second century of the match, a stoic 337-ball effort, thwarted Habib Bank Limited’s push for a win on the fifth day of the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy final and ensured that Water and Power Development Authority claimed their maiden title on the basis of a first-innings lead.Resuming from an overnight score of 83 for 2 in a chase of 444, the overnight pair of Butt and Mohammad Saad stretched their third-wicket partnership to 90 before the latter was dismissed, the only WAPDA wicket to fall on the day. Butt and Aamer Sajjad then battled their way to a draw, adding 72 runs off 50.4 overs in an unbroken fourth-wicket partnership.Butt, whose 125 was instrumental in his side securing the first-innings lead, ended the fifth day unbeaten on 105, having hit 16 fours.Habib Bank tried 10 bowlers in all during the fourth innings but the only bowler to pick up a wicket on the fifth day was Imam-ul-Haq, who dismissed Saad for 40. Sajjad was unbeaten on 25 off 141 balls.Butt’s 105 not out was his fourth century of the tournament, one of only three batsmen to have scored four or more centuries in the competition. He finished as the sixth-highest run-getter with 741 runs in 16 innings at an average of 49.40. The top spot on the run chart was occupied by his team-mate Kamran Akmal, who scored 1035 runs in 14 innings with five centuries. Akmal scored 35 in the only innings he played in the final. Imam-ul-Haq, who struck 200 not out in Habib Bank’s second innings, ended as the third highest run-getter with 848 runs in 20 innings.

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