Tag Archives: Michigan Cricket Academy

Practice on Saturday; T20 Fixture vs UM XI on Sunday, 22 August

Practice is, as usual, scheduled for 6 pm on Saturday evening at Lyon Oaks Park, weather permitting.  As ever, newcomers are most welcome. 

MCA’s T20 fixture against the UM XI will now be played on Sunday at Hartland, starting at 10.30 a.m.  The playing XII is:

Shyam Mayasandra (c)
Vasanth Krishnaswami
Kashif Akhtar
Sumit Garg
Anurag Yerabati
Pawan Canchi
Deepak Chilla
Ani Mayasandra
Jai Sura
Gordon Makin
Rohit Mogalyapalli
Neil Makin.

The address: Tag’s Sports Complex, Hartland (1535 North Old Highway 23, Hartland, MI 48353). The cricket ground is at the northern end of the complex — ie, beyond the bottom of the main parking lot, with the mini-golf range on one side and the baseball fields on the other. The owner of the complex requests that all food and beverages be bought from his complex, so please do not bring your own Gatorade, snacks, etc.

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Caterpillar Wins U.S. Corporate Cricket Championship; Coach Shyam Mayasandra (Chrysler) Bloody, but Unbowed

Last weekend saw the ninth annual U.S. Corporate Cricket Championship (formerly the Big Three Tournament), run by the Michigan Cricket Association. Nine teams competed, with many local players representing their companies, and other familiar faces appearing as guest players. MCA parent Neill Quinlan played for Chrysler, showing exemplary skill in the field (he took a steepling catch on the boundary against Henry Ford Health Systems) and also revealing a new side to his batting when he smacked the HFHS bowling all over the field in an aggressive cameo. Later on Saturday, MCA players arriving at Lyon Oaks for practice noticed what looked like a very familiar figure at the crease, batting for Chrysler in the day’s third match, against Daimler Finance, but were puzzled that the figure seemed to have a white beard. As soon as the batsman played a trademark flick off his legs, observers were left in no doubt: it was, indeed, MCA Coach and Chrysler guest player Shyam Mayasandra. He had not, in fact, grown a beard, but was wearing bandages around his face, because, earlier in the match, he had taken a top edge off a pull straight into his own chin, cutting his face and his tongue (Coach Shyam, of course, belongs to the generation that regards helmets as best suited – if at all – to motor-cyclists). After taking the blow, Coach Shyam retired briefly to be patched up, and then returned, bandaged, and unable to talk, to punish the bowling that inflicted his injury. Readers will not be surprised to learn that Coach Shyam carried out his plan to perfection, demonstrating not only admirable bravery, but also his usual skill in punishing the bad ball, to carry his bat for an unbeaten, and well-paced, 56, which drew great admiration from all around. His knock helped Chrysler defeat Daimler Finance, propelling them to a semi-final meeting the next day with another of this year’s new entrants, Caterpillar of Peoria; meanwhile, Ford, four-times champion, faced Daimler Finance in the other semi-final. Coach Shyam, Neill Quinlan, and the other Chrysler players fought hard against Caterpillar, but the Illinois opponent confirmed its status as tournament favorite with a solid victory, moving on to the final at Bloomer Park, where big-hitting Ford awaited. That final, played before a big crowd and web-cast live on the Internet, showed again the power of the young Caterpillar team. Winning the toss, they put Ford in, and despite some excellent batting from captain Rehan and other Ford players, restricted their opponent to 168, helped by excellent fielding and good death bowling by Yousaf (who had captained Ford in earlier years, before moving to Peoria). When, in the Caterpillar reply, the first wicket fell for only 16, there must have been some flutters in the Illinois camp, but that turned out to be Ford’s only success: a splendid unbeaten century by man-of-the-match Ram, ably supported by Aniruddh, saw Caterpillar home, with Ford’s fielding and bowling not quite sufficient to challenge what was clearly the tournament’s best team.

In addition to Neill Quinlan and Shyam Mayasandra, other MCA members and associates played a role in the tournament: Jayanth Canchi, father of MCA player Pawan and one of MichCA’s top umpires, stood in several matches, and MCA Joint Head Coach Vasanth Krishnaswami provided very enlightening color commentary. The web cast attracted viewers from across the world (at one point there were viewers in India and Pakistan), and has been archived at http://www.ustream.tv/channel/usccc. MCA members will recognize other familiar voices.

MCA Joint Head Coach Shyam Mayasandra, after hitting 56 not out for Chrysler

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MCA Cricket Demonstration at Toledo Country Club

MCA ran a cricket demonstration for participants in the Toledo Country Club summer camp on Monday, as part of the camp’s International Week. The visit, suggested by Avinash Kommireddy of the Michigan Cricket Association Youth Committee, was hosted by Becca Gorman of TCC and camp teacher Michelle Kronmann, who both welcomed Gordon Makin of MCA, his father Michael, and his youngest brother Nigel to the stately Club (founded 1897), on the banks of the Maumee River in the southern part of the city of Toledo. The MCA visitors enjoyed lunch in the Club’s elegant dining room before the demonstration, at which a dozen young campers, ranging in age from four to ten, watched Gordon and his father explain the game and illustrate some basic cricketing skills in the Club parking lot. The campers then took turns to bat and bowl themselves. Several young novices proved themselves precociously skilled with bat and ball, and all were intrigued by the sport, as the pictures below may well indicate.


Gordon on strike, with Becca Gorman filming it all.


Gordon fears a bouncer might be coming.


Bowling basics.


Film analysis of the bowler’s action is being prepared.

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MCA Members Demonstrate the Game in Traverse City

On Monday morning two MCA players, accompanied by family members, participated in a cricket demonstration at The Children’s House, an independent Montessori school in Traverse City. The demonstration was part of the International Sports Week, run by the school’s PE teacher, Steve Maas, during the school’s summer camp. The cricket demonstration was led by Englishman Steven Ursell, a flight instructor at Northwestern Michigan College, and his Australian colleague, Cameron Kerr, with the support of Children’s House parent Tania Santos, who grew up in South Africa. American-born MCA cricketers Gordon Makin and Neil Makin, accompanied by their younger brother Nigel and father Michael, left their Dexter home at 4.30 a.m. in order to reach the Children’s House (a very impressive facility on eight beautifully landscaped acres, educating children from birth until twelve years of age) by nine on Monday morning. Some fifteen children participated enthusiastically in the morning’s cricket activities, even though inclement weather restricted them to the school’s gymnasium. MCA representatives were delighted to hear of considerable interest in cricket, both from Steve Maas, who hopes to introduce the sport to his PE curriculum, and from local expatriate adults from cricketing countries, who were warmly encouraged to participate in MichCA competitions.  Perhaps a Traverse City C. C. will emerge soon? 

Once the children had left, Steven Ursell, Cameron Kerr, Gordon Makin, and Neil Makin took advantage of the fine facility and the indoor balls to show off their claimed cricketing skills, before Tania Santos generously invited the entire MCA party to lunch in downtown Traverse City.  Some of Steve Maas’s pictures can be found in the week’s Children’s House newsletter, while MCA’s own photographs can be seen below.

Neil Makin and Steve Maas help a young enthusiast pad up.

Gordon Makin tries to beat the bat

Steven Ursell and Gordon Makin flight the ball to novice batsmen

Gordon Makin batting, Steven Ursell keeping

Neil Makin issues instructions, while Cameron Kerr bowls

 Nigel Makin insists that he knows best

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US Corporate Cup This Weekend

One of the Midwest’s biggest cricket tournaments takes place this weekend – MichCA’s annual U.S. Corporate Cup (T-20 format), in which nine teams will compete this year: Altair, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Caterpillar, Chrysler, Daimler, Ford, General Motors, Henry Ford Health Systems, and NYX. The schedule for Saturday has been announced as follows:

9 am – 12:15 pm — Ford vs NYX at Belle Isle, Chrysler vs HFHS at Lyon Oaks, Altair vs GM at Bloomer;
12:30 pm – 3:45 pm — Ford vs BCBS at Belle Isle, DMF vs HFHS at Lyon Oaks, GM vs CAT at Bloomer;
4 pm -7:15 pm — BCBS vs NYX at Belle Isle, Chrysler vs DMF at Lyon Oaks, Altair vs CAT at Bloomer.

The semi-finals will be played on Sunday (times and grounds tba), with the final scheduled for 3 pm at Bloomer Park. Family activities are planned for the final, which will be web cast live.

Several familiar faces will be involved in the tournament, including MCA Joint Head Coach Shyam Mayasandra and MCA parent Neill Quinlan, both of whom will be playing for Chrysler, last year’s runners-up.

Tournament Flyer

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MCA Defeat HFHS in Tight Match

On Sunday, MCA’s T-20 team kept its Contenders’ Trophy hopes alive with a tight victory over Henry Ford Health Systems C. C., defending a total of 113/6 to win by seven runs. Man of the match was Pawan Canchi, whose figures of 3/19 were the best among several impressive performances by MCA’s bowlers, while MCA’s senior batsmen had earlier built a solid total, led by Neill Quinlan’s well constructed 30.

MCA’s Joint Head Coach and T20 Captain, Shyam Mayasandra, had no hesitation in batting when he won the toss at Canton on Sunday afternoon. He and Gordon Makin opened, but the latter, losing patience in the third over, was out for two, trying to smash to leg a ball from Nilesh that kept low. Shyam Mayasandra, beginning to open his shoulders, was then given out lbw to Ram for twelve in the fourth over, although there was a suspicion of bat about the dismissal, and it was left to Neill Quinlan to anchor the innings, which he did with exceptional patience and care for sixteen overs, hitting the bad ball, rotating the strike, and running between the wickets with exemplary skill. Kashif Akhtar hit three fours in his twenty-one before misjudging a ball from the unpredictable Arbab, having shared a thirty-eight run third-wicket partnership with Neill, while Rohit Mogalayapalli was bowled by Arbab for three, emulating Gordon. Vasanth Krishnaswami was caught behind off Tanu for eleven, after he and Neill put on thirty-two for the fifth wicket. Ani Mayasandra’s quick-fire sixteen not out, with support from Anurag Yerabati, took MCA to respectability at the end. Chamila Kannangara, Pawan Canchi, and Neil Makin were not required to bat.

With the pitch somewhat unpredictable and the outfield slow and rough, a target of 117 was not as simple as it looked, and when Chamila began his excellent spell (4-0-14-1) with the wicket of Prasad, clean bowled, MCA tails were up. Fellow new-ball bowler Anurag was equally parsimonious (3-0-12-1), and when he had Asif caught by Pawan at short third man for three, HFHS looked in trouble. When Rohit Mogalayapalli, whose bowling once again showed exceptional maturity, had Nilesh lbw for seven in the seventh over, HFHS were in deeper trouble at 25/3. Danger man Ali shared a fourth-wicket stand of 37 with Suman, but when both batsmen went on 62 (Suman falling first, lbw, to Shyam Mayasandra, and then Ali caught by Rohit, mistiming Pawan to mid on), HFHS were again on the rack. Rohit and Ram made things interesting, but both fell to Pawan, Rohit caught by Neill, Ram caught behind by Gordon. After sixteen overs HFHS needed 42 to win, with three wickets remaining, but MCA were short of bowling options – the two opening bowlers had one over left, Pawan was bowled out, Shyam Mayasandra had only one left, meaning that the match was still very much in the balance – who was to bowl the key seventeenth over? At this point, with all to play for, Kashif Akhtar, nursing a very sore right shoulder, was called upon to bowl, and, for the second time in his career and the first time in ten years, opted to bowl left-handed. No one who has seen Kashif field will doubt his natural athleticism, but his over of slow-left-arm spin provided further proof, as he bowled Rushiyal and had Tanu caught by Shyam, ending his cameo with 2/9. Shyam Mayasandra gave up only two runs in the eighteenth over, and HFHS were left needing eighteen to win off twelve balls. The death overs fell to Chamila (who gave up just three runs in the nineteenth) and then Rohit, youngest player on the field, who started the final over with a no ball hit for a single, but conceded only five more as Arbab and Rajesh desperately threw the bat; the MCA fielders kept their heads (having performed well throughout the match, despite the condition of the outfield), and when the last delivery of the match clipped Rajesh’s off stump, MCA were home and dry. The only serious blot on the Academy’s copy book, as they celebrated the team’s second victory of the season, was the disappointingly high tally of wides – by far HFHS’s highest scorer at 42.

The tournament takes a one-week break before resuming in mid-August.

“We’re batting”. The captains return after the toss.

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115 Not Enough against Saginaw

For the second time in three weeks MCA faced a Saginaw team short of players, and for the second time lost, despite sterling work by the Academy’s familiar firm of Mayasandra and Son, who contributed a total of 59 runs to MCA’s 115, overhauled by Saginaw in the eighteenth over for the loss of five of seven available wickets. This time it was not the quick-fire 23, including two sixes and one four, from Captain and Coach Shyam Mayasandra, that led the scoring for MCA, but the slightly more circumspect 36 from Ani Mayasandra (two fours). No other MCA batsman reached double figures.

Bloomer Park was unexpectedly dry on Sunday morning, Rochester Hills evidently spared the rains that had drenched more westerly parts of the metro area over the preceding 36 hours, and when MCA won the toss and elected to bat against an under-strength Saginaw, hopes were high of avenging the recent defeat by posting a good total and putting the opposition under pressure. A good opening stand between father and son, taking MCA to 48 in seven overs, gave further reason for optimism. Then the Saginaw captain Shami dismissed Shyam Mayasandra with an excellent catch off his own bowling (Shami later remarked that, having been hit for a six and a four off the preceding two deliveries, he was determined to get a hand to the ball, whatever the cost), but, with solid batting still to come, MCA continued to hope for a big score. Kashif Akhtar came and went quickly, hitting one four in his eight before pulling Shami (who took 5/22) to backward square leg; Anurag Yerabati played a couple of nice shots for his six, before falling lbw to Shami, and the same fate quickly befell Deepak Chilla. Rohit Mogalayapalli, fresh from his heroics at the national U-15 tournament, seemed very unlucky indeed to be given out caught-behind for 2, off a ball that might have bounced off the pitch immediately after hitting the toe of his bat. Jai Sura scored 3 before playing around a ball on the stumps from Shahzad and then, in the seventeenth over, Ani Mayasandra was run out in the most unfortunate manner, when his runner attempted a suicidal single. Another wicket quickly followed when Vasanth Krishnaswami was given out lbw attempting to sweep. In the final over Gordon Makin was run out for three as his partner attempted another risky run late in the innings. Eleventh man Neil Makin’s pull to backward square leg got him his first run in the T20 competition (to go with his “Chinese cut” for one for Motown against Grand Rapids in the 40-overs competition last month), and he was not out when Pawan Canchi was caught off the last ball of the innings for 2.

116 was not a large target, but MCA began their defence with some optimism, knowing that Saginaw would be all out when the seventh wicket fell. However, that moment never came, despite an excellent spell from Anurag (4-0-15-1), one wicket from Kashif Akhtar, and two from Shyam Mayasandra. When Saginaw were 19/3, after Rohit and Gordon had run out Vishal for 1, Rohit had taken a good catch off Anurag to dismiss Utkash for the same score, and the swashbuckling Ram had fallen to Kashif
Akhtar, Vasanth Krishnaswami taking the catch, for 10, prospects looked very good for the Academy. But only two more wickets fell – the dangerous Fahad for 10, lbw to Shyam Mayansandra, and Shazad for 16, caught by Kashif Akhtar, also off Shyam Mayasandra – and Salil guided Saginaw home with an unbeaten 36, supported by captain Shami (7 n.o.). Pawan Canchi bowled an economical over that troubled the batsmen, but MCA’s other bowlers lacked penetration, and the Academy was left to rue the absence of Anurag’s usual opening partner, Chamila Kannangara.

Ani Mayasandra was chosen as youth-man-of-the-match without the slightest hesitation.

Next up for MCA is HFHS C.C. on Sunday.

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CER Announces Team for U-19 National Tournament – Kishan Patel Selected; Two MCA Players Among Reserves

Central East Region has announced its team for the U-19 National Tournament, originally scheduled for Detroit during the first weekend in August, but now rescheduled for Los Angeles over 19-22 August. Kishan Patel is among those selected, while two other MCA players are among the reserves:

1.   Abhijit Joshi  Captain
2.   Fahad Babar  Vice captain
3.   Srijay Kumar
4.   Aashay Chavan
5.   Jason Fox
6.   Kishan Patel
7.   Bilal Ismail
8.   Salman Ahmad
9.   Shubhankar
10. Wasim Patel
11. Talha Zamir
12. Jacques Gerber
13. Akhil Sridher
14. Shoib Choudhery
 
Reserves:
Haris Ahmed
Vaibhav Ganesh
Zakaria Uddin
Rohit Mogalayapalli
Gordon Makin

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MCA Players Thrive at National U-15 Tournament

MCA contributed three players to the Central East Region team that finished in third place in the national U-15 tournament in Newark, N.J. last week. Reports on each of CER’s four matches have already been posted to the MCA web site. Two MCA players were adjudged “man-of-the-match”; they can be seen receiving their awards on a video embedded in the DreamCricket report on the final day’s play and the awards ceremony.

The same two players were also included in DreamCricket’s unofficial Tournament XI: USA Cricket National U-15 Championship – Top performers and Tournament XI – USA Cricketer. The XI consists of three New Yorkers, three from North West (the first and second-place regions), two from Atlantic (which had two teams in the tournament), one from Southwest, and the two from CER.  The three Northwest players are all from California Cricket Academy, which is the only club/academy to have contributed more players than (much smaller) MCA.

Coach Shyam’s photographs from the tournament can be seen on the MCA Flickr stream (see link on the right of the MCA home page). CER coach Sunil Kumar’s photographs can be found here.

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CER Seals Third Place with Tight Victory over Hosts Atlantic

“Is it not passing brave to be a king, / And ride in triumph through Persepolis?”. Indeed it is, but it was North West, not Central East, who might have been quoting Christopher Marlow at the end of the U-15 national tournament tonight after their efficient victory over New York, whose star batsmen missed out, allowing the Californians to ease to their third straight championship.

Yet Central East and their coach Sunil Kumar had very good reason to feel themselves, if not kings, then at least princes, riding through New Jersey’s Persepolis tonight, after defending a modest total of 118 with some excellent bowling and fielding, not to mention nerves of steel, to take a well-deserved third place, defeating host region Atlantic by six runs at Watsessing Park, Newark. For the first time in four matches it was not an MCA player who top-scored for CER, but skipper Parth Joshi, whose 31 was the key innings for the Midwesterners; Parth then went on to share the death bowling with MCA’s Rohit Mogalayapalli (whose brisk 19 would also prove to be vital). Parth took 3-23, including the final wicket – that of no. 10 batsman Nazir Mehdi, brilliantly caught by Samvit Tirunnalayi, diving at short extra cover — with eight balls remaining and the hosts just seven runs short of a great rear-guard victory. Cheers and tears were in equal proportions on the boundary as CER players and supporters embraced ecstatically, while Atlantic sought solace.

When Parth won the toss for the third consecutive time, and CER batted for the fourth successive day, there was hope that openers Gordon Makin and Rohit Mogalayapalli could make it four-out-of-four sound starts, but in the ninth over Gordon let his back foot slide out of his crease as he tried to block an off break from Sharma and was stumped for six, ending the first-wicket partnership on a modest total of 22. Rohit batted on, hitting two fours, in a good partnership with Parth, whose own 31 was the highest score of the match. But Rohit was caught off a top edge when pulling, and Parth was yorked, as Atlantic applied pressure with both spin and pace. Among the other batsmen, only MCA’s Ani Mayasandra, who hit two powerful fours in a rapid 12, reached double figures, and CER were all out for 118 in the 39th over. No one was surprised that Atlantic had bowled so well – they had, after all, restricted South West to 130 in a match their supporters felt they had thrown away – and it was equally predictable that tournament Best Bowler Ryan Persaud had the best figures in today’s match – 8-2-9-3. Now the question was – could CER, a team with better batting than bowling in the first three matches respond by putting pressure on the hosts, and, especially, on their best batsman – Persaud and Rishi Patel? As against South West the day before, CER opened with spin – Nauman Khan’s leg breaks from one end, and Vivek Joglekar’s off breaks from the other. An early breakthrough was required, and Vivek duly provided it when he had Patel brilliantly caught by Arjun Ahuja for two in the second over. Medium-pacer Arnav Sridher and leg-spinner Arsalan Babar came on first- and second-change (and bowled equally well), meaning that Atlantic faced no pace at all until the second half of their innings. Kiwi William Gilliard and Persaud scored forty runs between the two of them, but CER consistently took wickets and fielded well enough (their best performance in the field this week) to keep the brakes on throughout the innings. When Gordon stumped Gilliard off Arsalan and Arnav found the ball to dismiss Persaud, whom he had consistently troubled, for 21, Atlantic were clearly under the cosh. Two run-outs told of the pressure, while Parth’s excellent caught-and-bowled – a rolling dive to dismiss Silva under the batsman’s own nose — and Arjun’s catch of Khan, pulling Arnav hard to midwicket, showed that CER could field with the best. However, no. 8 Ghous Agha and Mehdi both belied their lower-order places by hitting out, so that the pressure now told on CER: a missed stumping, a missed run-out, and two drops off consecutive balls in the covers. Even after Agha went for 14, clean bowled by Rohit in his first over (the 36th), Atlantic, nine down, continued to fight, buoyed by raucous support from the boundary. Mehdi pushed on, punishing every bad ball and leaving every wide (which was cheered like a six as Atlantic’s supporters grew in hope), while eleventh man Narayam played out eight dot balls without looking troubled. CER supporters were anxious, Atlantic’s fans ever more hopeful, until Mehdi’s hard drive nestled in the small hands of nine-year-old Samvit, who was immediately buried under a pile of team mates.

At the closing ceremony MCA’s Rohit and Gordon picked up their Man-of-the-match trophies, along with Parth, and Rohit celebrated finishing the tournament as CER’s top run scorer and the only CER batsmen to score double figures in each match. No CER man had the numbers of the top batsmen in the tournament, but some of the highest scores in other matches came under less pressure than had been faced by CER’s leading run-scorers, two of whom were MCA players. MCA’s third player, Ani Mayasandra (top-scorer among MCA youth players in MichCA’s T-20 league), twice in the tournament showed how valuable big-hitting can be, and was probably CER’s unluckiest batsman in terms of marginal decisions. Meanwhile, CER’s bowlers had good reason to be happy – Nauman Khan, Vivek Joglekar, and Arsalan Babar had proved that spin could be deadly early in the match, while Parth, Rohit, and Arjun had all bowled very well in different matches under intense late-innings pressure (today’s death bowling by Rohit and Parth was the final key to the match); Ani’s left-arm pace, so effective this year in Michigan, was used less than might have been expected. In the field, Parth, Vivek, Nauman, Rohit, and Arjun all made major contributions to CER’s improvements, while Gordon’s keeping, although not perfect, was very respectable (and always came after his contributions as an opening batsman, three of which were of significant duration).

Only the most optimistic CER supporter could have hoped that the region would finish in first or second place, so third place, achieved at the expense of the host, was a very satisfying result, not least because only four of the current team are “true U-15s”. They will hope to leave a legacy for next year and the years to come, as CER’s youngest team will aim to rise from princes to kings.

Coach Shyam’s Expert Comments:

“It was a thrilling roller coaster ride all the way to the 10th wicket. Both sides’ weakness in playing spin was exposed, as indicated by the low totals. Also a factor was the ground size, the biggest CER played in so far, as evidenced by the very few fours and no sixes. All the MCA boys scored modestly, albeit making a contribution of nearly 40 runs in the 118 total. It must be admitted that the day belonged to Chicagoans in the CER contingent for the first time in the tournament. Nauman Khan and Arsalan Babar were great finds for CER, and are sure to do well in future. Vivek Joglekar did great as well, but it was Parth Joshi who performed as a true all rounder, not to mention his captaincy under a pressure situation on the field and confusing communication from off the field. Arnav, Arjun and Samvit executed their roles admirably. Near the end of the match there were some signs of frayed nerves on the boundary, but there were plenty of sporting gestures from the supporters of both sides as the two teams left the field.”

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