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November
13
India win after Windies
storm out in disrupted match
RAJKOT: India won the third One-day International
against the West Indies when the Caribbean team stormed
off the field after fielder Vasbert Drakes was hit by a
bottle thrown by a spectator.
Chasing the West Indies' score of 300 for five in 50
overs, India was 200 for one in 27.1 overs. The home
team was declared winner by 81 runs under the
International Cricket Council (ICC)'s Duckworth-Lewis
calculation formula, used to decide matches that don't
run their full course.
Under the formula, India needed to have scored 119 runs
when the match was stopped. The home team's score of 200
secured it an 81-run win. Match referee Mike Procter
said the West Indies didn't want to resume the match
after the bottle-throwing incident. "The West
Indies did not want to resume and I agreed with them
completely," Procter said.
"I took the measures... to prevent injuries to
players." Procter said he declared India the winner
because it was "miles ahead of West Indies."
Rowdy spectators also interrupted the first two games of
the seven-match series in Jamshedpur and Nagpur last
week, both won by the West Indies. Police had to move in
to curb violent fans before the matches could resume.
India's run-chase was spearheaded by opener Virender
Sehwag, who smashed an unbeaten 114 -- his third one-day
century -- and shared a record 196-run opening stand
with skipper Sourav Ganguly. Sehwag struck two sixes
over mid-wicket -- against off-spinner Chris Gayle and
leg-spinner Mahendra Nagamootoo -- and dispatched the
ball to the fence 17 times in his unconquered 82-ball
knock.
Ganguly posted an 83-ball 72, which contained nine
boundaries, but was caught by Shivnarine Chanderpaul off
Drake's three balls before the match was disrupted.
Earlier, the Windies were spurred by a record
fourth-wicket stand of 149 from 146 deliveries between
Ramnaresh Sarwan and Chanderpaul after being asked to
bat first by Indian skipper Ganguly.
Sarwan smashed two sixes and six boundaries in his
88-ball knock of 84, taking the Indian bowlers apart
during his partnership with Chanderpaul. Chanderpaul hit
eight boundaries, notching up 74 runs from 77 balls to
bolster the Windies' total after opener Gayle set the
scene with a 68-ball 72, which contained two sixes and
12 boundaries.
Sarwan and Chanderpaul surpassed the Windies' previous
best fourth-wicket stand of 126 against India by Carl
Hooper and Jimmy Adams in 1995.
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