Cumbes in attack on Twenty20 call-off as rain hits.BOTH captains supported the umpires' decision to abandon the second Twenty20 International between England and Australia at Old Trafford Old Trafford commonly refers to two sporting arenas:
But Lancashire CCC CCC A very speculative grade assigned to a debt obligation by a rating agency. Such a rating indicates default or considerable doubt that interest will be paid or principal repaid. Also called Caa. officials were less than impressed after the game went the same way as last Sunday's. Umpires Peter Hartley and Nigel Llong Nigel Llong (born February 11 1969 in Ashford, Kent) was a cricketer with Kent. He made his debut in 1990 and won his county cap in 1993. He was a left hand bat and off spin bowler. Llong has since become an umpire, officiating his maiden first class match in June 2000. made the call at 8pm because of a damp outfield, particularly on the run-ups at the Brian Statham John Brian "George" Statham, CBE (born June 17, 1930, Denton, Manchester; died June 10, 2000, Stockport, Cheshire) was one of the finest bowlers in the history of cricket. Initially a bowler of a brisk fast-medium pace, Statham was able to remodel his action to generate enough End. England skipper Paul Collingwood Paul David Collingwood MBE (born 26 May 1976), is an English cricketer. He is a regular member of the England Test side and captain of the One-Day International team. He is also vice-captain of his county, Durham County Cricket Club. said: "We wanted to get out there and play, but you have to be realistic. "There's an area of concern in the run-ups and it's unfit for international cricket International Cricket is a cricket game for the Nintendo Entertainment System that was only released in Australia in 1992. Developed by Melbourne House (as Beam Software) and published by Mattel, it was the only cricket game released for the NES. . "The umpires have made a brave decision calling it off early. "The run-ups are the first thing you want to keep dry. Unfortunately with the thunderstorms we've had this afternoon that hasn't been possible." Australia captain Michael Clarke Michael Clarke may refer to:
"It's very difficult because there's such a good crowd in and both teams wanted to play, but even for me, 75 kilos, walking on it, it doesn't feel safe, so I can't imagine, Brett Lee running in, it's going to be safe for him. "Every game we play we want to satisfy the audience, but safety has to come first." It was a blow for England following the abandonment of the first T20 game two days earlier. They now have just two 20-over matches before next year's World Twenty20 in the Caribbean. "In the bigger picture, you want to get out there - not at all costs because it's not fit - but there's a few games before the World Cup and the team want to go out and show what they can do," Collingwood said. "We're desperate to get out there, but the conditions have taken over. "This is an international Twenty20 game and you have to be realistic. If the conditions are unfit, you have to take a brave stance." Clarke looked forward to the one-day series, which begins at the Oval on Friday, and the return of captain Ricky Ponting. "We get Ricky back in a couple of games which will be nice and hopefully we can get to the Oval and get a win under our belts," he said. But Lancashire chief executive Jim Cumbes slammed the decision to abandon. "If this was a domestic game, Lancashire versus Yorkshire on a Friday night with 16,000 people in, we'd have been playing," he said. "I don't see what the difference between that and international cricket is. "If we can't play international cricket in those conditions, we shouldn't be playing it. "If this was a Test match, a four-day game, I'd be right behind the decision, all I'm saying is there's people who've spend pounds 50 to come to this game tonight. "We've got to consider what competition we are playing here. This is a Twenty20 competition where we know we're not going to be playing in 100% conditions." Cumbes believes the outfield was playable and defended the Old Trafford groundstaff who have had to contend with a large amount of rainfall in recent weeks. "My groundsman said to me this morning that he was getting to the stage where water is actually coming up now because we've covered it for so long - we've had so much rain," he continued. "You put covers on and it sweats. "I had a look at it and I thought I would be treading and bringing water up - it's nowhere near that. "The spectators will understand if they see puddles on the outfield, if they see people slipping around in practice, if it's raining. They won't understand when they look at a field like this, and I have to say I sympathise." CAPTION(S): Frustrated spectators leave Old Trafford as the scoreboard tells the grim news |
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