3 minute read
By heck, this could be a good T20 World Cup, you know. All of this in just the first couple of days and Nepal haven’t even played yet. (We’re led to believe Nepal will be the most fun of all.)
Even if we had the time, we have no particular ambition to recap every game of this tournament. It’s hard to overlook any of these first three though.
Game 1 (again) – Aaron Jones peppers beef
The first ever international cricket game is thought to have taken place between the United States and Canada in 1844. The first game of the 2024 T20 World Cup was also between these two teams and seriously it was not half bad.
Canada set the US 195 to win. That seemed a pretty tall target come the first ball of the US innings and it grew a few more centimetres when Steven Taylor was out off the second. However, number four bat Aaron Taylor went full pongo, cow-cornering 10 sixes. (Unless the only one we missed went elsewhere, all 10 headed in that same direction.) That got him to an unbeaten 94 off 40 balls, which – as you might imagine – won the match.
Game 2 – Papua New Guinea give the West Indies a few palpitations
For those of us unfortunate enough to have got our first exposure to Papua New Guinea via the improbably-themed children’s book Cannibal Adventure by Willard Price, it’s quite nice to get a very different angle on the place.
PNG almost got themselves a long-term conversational topic as well, taking regular wickets to make West Indies’ pursuit of 137 pretty damn uncomfortable.
We were struck that Roston Chase – he of the weird eight-for – has apparently become a key T20 batter for the Windies, coming in at four. Maybe by the end of the tournament he’ll have rebranded himself Roston “Successful Run” Chase.
Game 3 – a Super Over, but so much more
All right Mrs Trumpelmann, is your Ruben playing out today?
What a pleasure it was to see one of the great names in cricket performing for Namibia today. Ruben Trumpelmann (Ruben Trumpelmann! Remember the name!) took wickets with the first two balls of the match to dismiss Oman for 109, ending up with the seemingly match-winning figures of 4-21. However, Namibia only managed 109-6 in reply and being as wickets don’t count in T20, it was Super Over time. (Mehran Khan, 3-7 off three overs, could conceivably have bowled a fourth for Oman.)
David Wiese – formerly of South Africa – followed up his 3-28 in the 20 overs with 13 off four balls when Nambia batted and then bowled the other Super Over and took 1-10 to secure the win. (They call it a Super Over, but we’re struck that there’s always two of them.)
Nassau County International Cricket Stadium
As a sometime denizen of the Old Trafford party stand, the Nassau County International Cricket Stadium utterly fascinates us. It’s essentially a pop-up cricket stadium in a New York park.
The pitches were prepared in trays in Adelaide and sent over in shipping containers.
The 34,000 capacity temporary venue in Eisenhower Park hosts its first game today: South Africa v Sri Lanka.
As a bizarre (and very American) footnote, the ground will apparently be well stocked with police snipers because a pro-ISIS group has threatened to target it.
Just to be clear, we absolutely are not going to be recapping every match of this tournament, but stick with us anyway by getting our email.