Amazon Warriors thrash St Lucia Stars

2017 Hero Caribbean Premier League – Match 21

Guyana Amazon Warriors 101-3 (Mohammed 42*, Guptill 38, Shillingford 1-20) beat St Lucia Stars 100-7 (Ryder 29, Rashid 2-19, Emrit 2-26) by seven wickets

Another loss for the St Lucia Stars means they have now played eight matches without a win in the 2017 Hero Caribbean Premier League. A victory for Guyana Amazon Warriors takes them above Barbados Tridents, to fourth in the table. 

After being put into bat by the Amazon Warriors on a typically difficult Providence Stadium pitch the Stars innings never got going and they limped their way to 100 for 7 from their 20 overs. The Amazon Warriors chased the target for the loss of just three wickets and with 32 balls to spare.

This was a pitch on which attacking stroke-play was rarely rewarded and after a slow start the Stars attempted to hit their way out of trouble, but that only hastened their downfall. Regular wickets punctured any chance that they might scrap their way to a competitive total.

This season the Stars have been heavily reliant on the runs scored by openers Johnson Charles and Andre Fletcher. Here their opening partnership lasted only ten balls after Fletcher looked to cut loose following a tight start and was caught at long off by Rashid Khan off the bowling of Veerasammy Permaul. Only two balls later Shane Watson was gone too, the victim of some confused running and a direct hit from backward point. At the end of the PowerPlay the Stars were 26 for 2.

Things quickly got worse for when Charles attempted to respond to the pressure of the scoreboard by taking on Rayad Emrit. He could succeed only in picking out Permaul at long-on to fall for a scrappy 15 off 22 balls, leaving the Stars 35 for 3 after 7.4 overs.

Ryder became the fourth batsman dismissed when he pushed for a second run, despite an injured knee, and was run out by a tidy throw from mid-wicket. The Stars remote hope of a decent total was all but ended when Daren Sammy was given out leg before wicket on the back foot to Khan for 19 off 24.

It was asking a lot of the Stars lower order to elevate them to an imposing total. After Sammy’s dismissal they only managed to add 27 for 3 in their final 4.5 overs with Jerome Taylor hitting a six off the last ball of the innings.

The Amazon Warriors chase got off to the worst possible start when Chadwick Walton was brilliantly bowled by Taylor for a first ball duck. When Martin Guptill was stumped off the bowling of Rahkeem Cornwall the Stars may have believed that they could pull off the most unlikely of victories.

However, when defending such a small total they needed to take regular wickets to maintain the pressure. They were unable to do that and the aggression of Sohail Tanvir, again promoted to open, ensured the run rate never became a concern. Tanvir scored 38 from 29 balls and his partnership of 51 with Jason Mohammad took the Amazon Warriors within 28 of victory when he was stumped. Mohammad’s unbeaten 42 took the Amazon Warriors to victory with more than five overs to spare, giving them a crucial net run rate boost in the race for a Play Off place.

Upcoming Fixtures

Wednesday: St Kitts & Nevis Patriots v Trinbago Knight Riders, 6.00pm

Thursday: Jamaica Tallawahs v St Lucia Stars, 8.00pm

For images from this match visit https://mm.gettyimages.com/mm/nicePath/gyisports?nav=pr538082992 where they can be downloaded and used for free. Credit: CPL via Getty Images.

For further information please contact:

Peter Miller 

Mobile: +447769119636

Caribbean Mobile: + 1 (758) 729 2012

Head of PR and Communications

Hero Caribbean Premier League 

On The Corner With EPOC | Vote For Policies And Not Politicians

Residents of St Thomas are chiding successive governments for not following through on plans to develop the eastern parish.

Despite often complaining of being the forgotten parish, the residents have remained loyal to their two political representatives.

The People’s National Party’s Dr Fenton Ferguson has controlled St Thomas Eastern for the past 24 years, while the Jamaica Labour Party’s James Robertson has been member of parliament for St Thomas Western for the last 15 years.

But speaking during The Gleaner’s On the Corner series with Keith Duncan, co-chairman of the Economic Programme Oversight Committee (EPOC), last Thursday, Hansel Whyte challenged residents of the parish to not blindly vote along party lines but to do so based on policies proposed and delivered to develop the parish.

“Government comes and government goes, and everyone come make promises that the parish will be developed and up to now we haven’t seen anything,” Whyte said.

“Vote for policies, not politicians, because we are not getting anywhere.”

Follow through and make plans work

Prime Minister Andrew Holness announced earlier this year that a town centre would be constructed in St Thomas, along with a four-lane highway from Harbour View to Bull Bay. He also said three roads between Bull Bay and Morant Bay would be upgraded.

Whyte, who has resided in the parish for the past 31 years, is however fearful that if there is a change of government after the next general election, these plans for the parish could be abandoned.

“Whenever a member of parliament or a prime minister come and say they are going to do something to develop St Thomas, as soon as there is a change of government, there is a change of plan,” Whyte said.

“All we are asking them to do is just follow through. If there is a good policy in place that can generate income, follow through and make it work.”

Duncan agreed with Whyte’s sentiment as he shared the view that “no matter which administration is in power, they need to follow through on the development plan for St Thomas”.

Whyte further lamented the lack of decent employment opportunities for persons within the parish and said he believed it was one issue the government of the day needs to focus on.

“People with all degree have to be packing bag in supermarket, a work inna bar or run taxi,” Whyte said.

“So we have to think about St Thomas, and if we really want to move St Thomas forward. The politicians need to put aside politics and work with the policies that are there.”

ryon.jones@gleanerjm.com

On The Corner With EPOC | Gov’t Urged To Lift Party Restrictions To Aid Small Business

In declaring entertainment the lifeblood of St Thomas, one resident is resolute that the Government should establish special zones for party events within the parish to the benefit of small business folk.

“It is the number one source of income,” said businessman Hansel Whyte last Thursday as The Gleaner’s On the Corner series with Economic Programme Oversight Committee (EPOC) Co-chairman Keith Duncan made a stop in Duhaney Pen, St Thomas.

Whyte, who operates a small loan company, pointed to vendors, bartenders and wholesales as beneficiaries of the social events.

The businessman, who has lived in the parish for more than 30 years, said the round-robin format of parties required patrons and promoters to travel far apart between events to lend equal support.

However, he argued, the cut-off time stipulated by law makes this difficult, and the events are being shut off before promoters can get maximum mileage.

“Sunday to Thursday is 12 a.m., while Fridays and Saturdays, we can go up until 2 p.m. But most times, the police reach before the liquor even cold. We know the police only enforce the law, so we don’t fault them for following instructions, but the Government need to sit down and revisit that legislation, not just to aid St Thomas, but the wider Jamaica,” added Whyte.

On same topic, fellow businessman and St Thomas native, Denver Howell, noted that several residents continue to turn to farming for a livelihood despite unfavourable results.

However, Howell said the parish’s many natural resources see it primed to capitalise on health tourism, and focus should be shifted to that area sooner than later.

“We have the Blue Mountain range. Many visitors just want to go into the mountainside and listen to the birds sing and look at the beauty of the mountainsides,” said Howell, who employs up to 100 persons through his One Touch group of companies, which includes transportation and gas stations.

Upgrade Princess Margaret for health tourism – businessman

While stating that the abundance of water sources in the parish speaks well for health tourism, St Thomas businessman Denver Howell said upgrading the Princess Margaret Hospital in the capital, Morant Bay, would be a prerequisite to tapping into the market.

“We have to start training young people in this area. We can’t remain stuck at the same stage; we have to move into new territory,” Howell said.

“St Thomas has nothing except resources. … We have to make use of our natural resources if we’re to experience growth.”

syranno.baines@gleanerjm.com

On The Corner With EPOC | ‘They Are Raping The Parish’ – St Thomas Residents Demand Greater Share Of The Revenue From Its Resources

For years, residents of St Thomas have complained that they are not benefiting from the numerous resources in the parish.

Those cries were repeated last Thursday as The Gleaner On The Corner, with the Economic Pro-gramme Oversight Commit-tee (EPOC), made its latest stop in Duhaney Pen.

Leading the charge was businessman Denver Howell, who argued that St Thomas is being raped, with none of its resources used to move the parish forward.

“How can it be that the water from St Thomas supplies Kingston and yet still the people who live in the hills of St Thomas where the water is coming from have to bore the pipeline to get a little water to do the basics?” asked Howell to loud cheers from his neighbours.

Howell noted that the parish is uniquely blessed with construction aggregate, which has been used to build numerous hotels, highways and roadways outside of the parish with no monetary returns from the material.

“It has been said that St Thomas have the best aggregate but yet we don’t have a proper road. It’s foolishness,” declared Howell.

The businessman argued that if successive governments had collected even a small contribution from every litre of water and tonne of aggregate to leave the parish, St Thomas would be among Jamaica’s most developed and richest parishes.

With co-chairman of EPOC Keith Duncan engaging the audience as he outlined the role of EPOC in monitoring the Government’s performance under the three-year International Monetary Fund standby agreement, Howell argued that St Thomas would take off if a more active role was played in applying taxes to the resources.

In the meantime, Winston Thompson charged that over the years, respective administrations have favoured urban Jamaica at the expense of rural communities.

“The people here try hard to access social services but is just pure runaround we get. This country seem to only check for town areas and tourist resorts and avoid investments in the rural communities because they fear it will fail,” charged Thompson.

Fellow St Thomas resident Elaine Edwards agreed, as she argued that despite the willingness of the people of the parish to work, employment opportunities are scarce because of a lack of state investment.

“Government can do way more,” charged Edwards. “We have a lot of resources that can be put to good use and create employment, we just need the Government’s assistance and we’re not getting much, if any.”

syranno.baines@gleanerjm.com

Patriots overpower Tallawahs to qualify

2017 Hero Caribbean Premier League – Match 20

St Kitts and Nevis Patriots 208-3 (Gayle 71*, Lewis 69, Santokie 1-23) beat Jamaica Tallawahs 171-7 (Griffith 42, Powell 31, Shamsi 3-35) by 37 runs

Fifties from Evin Lewis and Chris Gayle powered the St Kitts and Nevis Patriots to a 37-run victory over the Jamaica Tallawahs in Match 20 of the 2017 Hero Caribbean Premier League (CPL). The Patriots victory confirms their qualification for the Play Off stage and pulls the Tallawahs into a mid-table scrap with Barbados Tridents and Guyana Amazon Warriors. 

The Patriots win was set up by an excellent team batting effort which saw them post a massive score of 208 which proved too many for the Tallawahs, even on a good batting pitch.

After being put into bat by the Tallawahs, Lewis and Gayle were relatively becalmed in the Powerplay phase, striking just two boundaries each. Gayle should have been caught on the third man boundary by Odean Smith when on 16 off 17 balls.

Once the field dropped back the Patriots, perhaps liberated by there being fewer close fielders, picked up the scoring rate, scoring 27 off the next two overs before a sharp rain shower delayed play. Half an hour off the field did not appear to disrupt the rhythm of Lewis and Gayle who continued where they left off. Their partnership of 110, of which 80 came in boundaries, was eventually broken in the twelfth over when Lewis skied a leg side ball from Smith high in the air. 50 of Lewis’ 69 runs and all of his six sixes came on the leg side.

Lewis’ demise brought Carlos Brathwaite to the crease, elevated to number three with 7.3 overs remaining. Brathwaite’s innings was short but destructive, his two fours and two sixes contributed to a 13-ball 26, lifting the Patriots to 151 for 2. Meanwhile Gayle, whose innings hadn’t until that point got going was beginning to lose what little momentum he had, having gone 23 balls without a boundary.

It was then that he finally launched as Mohammad Sami’s last over was taken for 25 with Gayle striking two sixes and a four. Whatever Gayle could do, his partner Mohammad Nabi could do better. In an astonishing assault Nabi scored 29 off just 12 balls and it could have been more were it not for a spectacular boundary save by Lendl Simmons. Nabi’s brilliant cameo and a last ball six from Brandon King, off just his first ball, took the Patriots to 208 for 3 from their 20 overs – the highest score of Hero CPL 2017. Gayle finished unbeaten on 71 off 55 balls.

The Tallawahs innings begun with a new opening partnership in Glenn Phillips and Trevon Griffith. The pair hit some good-looking boundaries in the Powerplay but could only score 48 runs in the phase, increasing the required run rate from 10.45 to 11.50. In the 2.5 overs after the Powerplay the Tallawahs struck just two more boundaries and the rate climbed further still. The growing pressure soon accounted for Griffith, caught off a leading edge for 42 off 32.

Soon after Phillips was gone too. He had strangely struggled for timing and that eventually cost him as he picked out deep mid-wicket off the bowling of Tabraiz Shamsi. An over later Kumar Sangakkara followed, caught top-edging a sweep against Nabi. The wicket of Simmons, picking out Brathwaite at deep mid-wicket, all but ended the Tallawahs faint hopes of victory with 110 required off 43 balls. Shamsi’s incisive spell of 3 for 35 had dealt a fatal blow to the run-chase.

Some powerful late hitting from Andre McCarthy and Rovman Powell briefly threatened to open the match up once more but in the end the task was too steep, although it did help protect their Net Run Rate from more significant damage.

Upcoming Fixtures

Tuesday: Guyana Amazon Warriors v St Lucia Stars, Providence, 6.00pm

Wednesday: St Kitts & Nevis Patriots v Trinbago Knight Riders, 6.00pm

For images from this match visit https://mm.gettyimages.com/mm/nicePath/gyisports?nav=pr538082992 where they can be downloaded and used for free. Credit: CPL via Getty Images.

For further information please contact:

Peter Miller 

Mobile: +447769119636

Caribbean Mobile: + 1 (758) 729 2012

Head of PR and Communications

Hero Caribbean Premier League 

Beverage company builds basic school

WESTERN BUREAU:

Beverage manufacturing and distribution company Kisko Products has gifted the people of Lower Buxton in St Ann with a basic school valued at $7.6 million.

The school, which will house more than 33 students, contains three classrooms, an office, a sick bay, fully equipped kitchen, dining area, as well as student and staff bathrooms, was constructed with the help of Food for the Poor and Helping Hands Jamaica, which is based in Toronto, Canada.

The early childhood education institution is part of the Lower Buxton Primary School infant department, and was constructed in three days with the help of Kisko staff, who travelled all the way from Canada to assist with the project.

“As Christians, we are called to give back,” said Mark Josephs, president of Kisko, which has both Jamaican and Canadian ownership. He explained that he and his family are setting a firm foundation in relation to Jamaica’s early childhood education system.

 

Positive projects

 

No stranger to funding charity projects on the island, this is the second school Kisko has built on the island the first being the Kinloss Basic School in Trelawny, two years ago.

Josephs and his mother Glenor are hoping other Jamaican-owned companies doing well overseas will be inspired to participate in positive projects that have the capacity to make a difference to the lives of the less fortunate in Jamaica.

“It was heartening to be able to change the environment that the students had become accustomed to. Many were unable to attend school because there was no space for them. That no longer exist with this new facility,” said, Glenor, the matriarch of the 40-year-old organisation.

Their efforts were lauded by Food for the Poor’s project coordinator, Marcus Irons, who said the company had come this far because of their faith in God and the entrenched belief that it’s not all about making money.

Chairman of the school board, Jasper Lawrence, described the gift to the community as Christ-like compassion, one that transcends barriers.

“This investment is not only in the structure, but in the quality of life of generations to come,” Lawrence said, adding that the greatest appreciation the beneficiaries could show is to genuinely care for the facility.

Janet.silvera@gleanerjm.com

Twitter launches first-ever In Stream Video Sponsorship for a T20 cricket league with the Hero Caribbean Premier League and Hero Motocorp

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

ISSUED ON BEHALF OF TWITTER

21st August 2017

Fans can catch the best sixes, fall of wickets, Play of the Day and #HeroFanOfTheMatch videos on Twitter through an In-Stream Video Sponsorship partnership with Hero during #CPL

 India, 21 August 2017: Twitter today announced an in-stream video sponsorship partnership with the Hero Caribbean Premier League (@CPL) and Hero MotoCorp (@HeroMotoCorp), the world’s largest two-wheeler manufacturer. This is the first such deal for any T20 cricket league globally. Twitter is where live cricket conversation happens and through this partnership, title sponsor Hero MotoCorp will ensure that fans will be able to watch the best moments from #CPL17 in their timelines.

https://twitter.com/CPL/status/898149920686788608

https://twitter.com/CPL/status/898152447713005568

The fifth edition of the #CPL has taken off in grand style with some exciting encounters stealing the show in the first two weeks. The excitement will now go up a notch with fans never having to miss key moments from the matches.

Twitter’s In-stream video sponsorship enables publishers to monetize video content while making it easy for advertisers to reach engaged audiences and sponsor exclusive content.

Twitter plays a key role in facilitating both content creators and brands to capture the excitement from broadcast and distribute it to fans and audiences across the platform, far beyond their existing followers. Audiences can immediately relive that moment or experience it for the first time on their mobile phones while they engage in conversations on Twitter. So don’t miss out on the action and catch the buzz on Twitter!

“Twitter has always been the destination for live sports conversation. Twitter’s In Stream Video Sponsorship has been adopted by more than 300 premium media partners across 20+ countries and it will help fans watch premium sports video content from the Caribbean Premier League. We’re excited that this will ensure cricket fans on Twitter don’t miss out on magic moments like Fabian Allen’s catch at the start of the season.“ said Aneesh Madani, Head of Sports Partnerships, Asia Pacific, Twitter.

“We are delighted to be the first T20 cricket league globally to do an In Stream Video Sponsorship deal with Twitter and our title sponsor Hero. We saw Twitter as a natural ally for match videos to drive conversation and monetization. Hero has been a special partner for us and it’s great that they will be promoting the best Hero CPL videos to fans on Twitter right in their timelines.“ quipped Jamie Stewart, Commercial Director, Hero Caribbean Premier League

“We are thrilled to be the first title sponsor of a T20 cricket league to have an InStream Video Sponsorship campaign run on Twitter that brings some of the best videos from the Caribbean Premier League to cricket fans in India. Twitter is a key partners of ours and this is yet another signal in Hero’s commitment to sports.“ said Mr. J Narain, Head of Sports, Hero MotoCorp.

About Twitter

Twitter is what’s happening in the world and what people are talking about right now. From breaking news and entertainment to sports, politics, and everyday interests, see every side of the story. Join the open conversation. Watch live streaming events. Available in more than 40 languages around the world, the service can be accessed via twitter.com, an array of mobile devices, and SMS. For more information, please visit about.twitter.com, follow @TwitterIndia, and download both the Twitter and Periscope apps at twitter.com/download and periscope.tv.

About Hero CPL

First started in 2013, the Hero Caribbean Premier League (CPL) is a franchise-based T20 format cricket tournament that combines two of the most compelling aspects of Caribbean life – dramatic cricket and a vibrant Carnival atmosphere. Combining broadcast and digital viewership over 149 million fans watched the 2016 season to make it one of the fastest growing leagues in world cricket. Jamaica Tallawahs are the current Hero CPL champions and the other competing teams are Barbados Tridents, Guyana Amazon Warriors, St. Kitts & Nevis Patriots, St. Lucia Stars and Trinbago Knight Riders. The 2017 tournament will run from 4 August – 9 September 2017. For further information visit www.cplt20.com.

Media Contacts

Nathan Burman

nathanburman@twitter.com

 

Chirag Bhanushali

Creation

chirag.bhanushali@creation.io

+91-9769521055

Peter Miller

UK Mobile: +447769119636

Caribbean Mobile: + 1 (758) 729 2012

Pollard fifty not enough to save Tridents

2017 Hero Caribbean Premier League – Match Report 16

St Kitts & Nevis Patriots 84-1 (Gayle 38*, Hafeez 30*) beat Barbados Tridents 168-6 (Pollard 63*, Smith 33, Badree 2-27) by 17 runs (DLS Method)

The St Kitts & Nevis Patriots pulled four points clear of the Barbados Tridents in third place of the Hero Caribbean Premier League table with a comfortable victory in Match 16. An underwhelming start to a defense of 169 by the Tridents meant the Patriots were 84 for 1 after 9.3 – and 17 ahead of the Duckworth-Lewis-Stern par score when tropical rains brought an early end to the match. 

Warner Park has historically been the highest scoring venue in the Hero CPL, with an average first innings score of 160, and an average first innings winning score of 180, and it soon became apparent that this was another excellent pitch for batting when Dwayne Smith struck a four and a six in the first over to get the Tridents up and running.

The Tridents batted aggressively through the Powerplay, scoring 51 runs, but lost three wickets as well. Both Kane Williamson and Smith were caught attempting to hit consecutive boundaries – Williamson picking out deep square leg and Smith mis-timing to mid-on. In between those two dismissals Christopher Barnwell was trapped leg before wicket by a ball that skidded on from Samuel Badree who finished with figures of 2 for 27.

After the Powerplay the Tridents were quickly four down as some poor running and excellent fielding saw Akeal Hosein run out, leaving the Tridents 62 for 4. Following a brief period of consolidation Shoaib Malik was dismissed too as he looked to accelerate the innings in the 13th over by taking on a Hasan Ali short ball. He could only top edge the shot which was well caught by Mohammad Nabi at fine leg despite a swirling wind.

With Malik’s dismissal the pressure on Kieron Pollard to elevate the Tridents to a competitive total increased. Seemingly aware of the additional responsibility Pollard took care against the spin of Nabi, who finished with 0 for 23 from his four overs. However, against the medium pace of Carlos Brathwaite and the pace of Hasan Ali, Pollard showed clear intent to capitalise and hit cleanly and powerfully with the wind to lift the Tridents in the latter stages of their innings.

Pollard’s power was on full display as he hit six sixes and just one four in his unbeaten 63 off just 40 balls. Nicolas Pooran also hit two sixes in a useful 14-ball cameo. The Patriots dared to bowl the spin of Tabraiz Shamsi at the death and the last over cost 15 runs, meaning the Tridents scored 75 runs off their last six overs and finished with 168 for 6.

Only three scores lower than 168 had ever been defended at Basseterre and the Patriots were given an early boost by a first over in which the first five balls from Hosein were all wides. When Hosein finally discovered his radar Evin Lewis stuck a straight six down the ground only to be dismissed off the last ball of the over, top edging another leg side delivery.

The rest of the Powerplay brought no let up in the scoring rate as Gayle and Mohammad Hafeez took the Patriots to 59 for 1 after six overs with 18 of them coming from six balls bowled by Wahab Riaz.

The field dropping back could not stem the flow of runs and two more boundaries lifted the Patriots to 84 for 1 after 9.3 overs when the rain begun to fall.

Upcoming Fixtures

Saturday: Guyana Amazon Warriors v Trinbago Knight Riders, 12.00 & St Kitts & Nevis Patriots v St Lucia Stars, 21.00

Sunday: Guyana Amazon Warriors v Barbados Tridents, 18.00

For images from this match visit https://mm.gettyimages.com/mm/nicePath/gyisports?nav=pr538082992 where they can be downloaded and used for free. Credit: CPL via Getty Images.

For further information please contact:

Peter Miller 

UK Mobile: +447769119636

Caribbean Mobile: + 1 (758) 729 2012

Head of PR and Communications

Hero Caribbean Premier League

Spinners, McCullum send Trinbago Knight Riders through

2017 HERO CARIBBEAN PREMIER LEAGUE – MATCH REPORT 17

Trinbago Knight Riders 131-3 (McCullum 65*, Darren Bravo 27) beat Guyana Amazon Warriors 130-5 (Mohammed 66) by 7 wickets with 25 balls to spare

A mature, sensible knock from the experienced Brendon McCullum, who scored 65 off 45 balls, guided Trinbago Knight Riders to a seven-wicket win over Guyana Amazon Warriors in match 17 of the Hero Caribbean Premier Leauge (CPL). This was after Knight Riders’ twirlers had displayed all of their skills to restrict the target to a very gettable 131. Their victory means Knight Riders have become the first team to qualify from the group stages for the Playoffs which will take place in Trindad from 5th to 9th September.

McCullum’s innings set the bedrock for Knight Riders’ pursuit and allowed his side’s other batsmen the freedom to play as they wished. Darren Bravo and Colin Munro took the opportunity to attack, striking 11 off 8 and 27 off 19 respectively, while Denesh Ramdin enjoyed some time in the middle, finishing on 20 off 19.

The role of platform-building is not one McCullum often plays, with him more often choosing to attack from ball one, but it’s a job he performed with aplomb, as he put the result beyond doubt before exploding, taking 20 runs off a Roshon Primus over and bringing the game to an early finish.

McCullum didn’t have everything his own way, and was troubled in particular by 18-year-old Afghan Rashid Khan, who finished with exceptional figures of three overs for 11 runs. McCullum survived two consecutive LBW appeals from the leg-spinner, but made sure he capitalised on his reprieves, striking four fours and four sixes, before Ramdin brought an end to proceedings with another six with Knight Riders victors by seven wickets and with 4.1 overs remaining.

Earlier, after Dwayne Bravo won the toss and chose to bowl, Knight Riders’ spinners played a key part in restricting Amazon Warriors to a chaseable total. Their trio of slow bowlers – Sunil Narine, Nikita Miller, and Khary Pierre – conceded just 60 off their combined 12 overs, with Narine’s 1-11 off 4 overs the standout. Meanwhile the seamers – Robert Frylinck, Ronsford Beaton, and Dwayne Bravo – went for 68 runs off their eight overs. Captain Bravo in particular came in for some punishment, going for 35 off his three overs.

The main resistance came from Jason Mohammed, who bided his time before adding some late acceleration. In the face of consistent bowling and the loss of batting partners, he reached 50 at exactly a run a ball, before striking two fours and a six in his next eight balls, the last of which, also the last of the innings, bowled him for 66.

He was assisted by Gajanand Singh, who joined Mohammed for a 63-run partnership, of which his share was a run-a-ball 27. At the half-way stage their side’s 130-5 appeared competitive, with the pitch seemingly not conducive to quick scoring, but that reckoned without the class of McCullum.

The result sends Trinbago Knight Riders through to the knockouts, and leaves Guyana Amazon Warriors facing an uphill struggle to qualify.

Guyana Amazon Warriors are next in action tomorrow, when they take on Barbados Tridents at home. Trinbago Knight Riders next play on Wednesday, away at St. Kitts and Nevis Patriots.

Upcoming fixtures

Guyana Amazon Warriors v Barbados Tridents, Providence, 20th August, 6pm

St Kitts & Nevis Patriots v Jamaica Tallawahs, Basseterre, 21st August, 6pm

For images from this match visit https://mm.gettyimages.com/mm/nicePath/gyisports?nav=pr538082992where they can be downloaded and used for free. Credit: CPL via Getty Images.

For further information please contact:

Peter Miller
Mobile: +447769119636
Caribbean Mobile: + 1 (758) 729 2012
Head of PR and Communications
Hero Caribbean Premier League 

Tion Webster selected for Barbados Tridents for Hero CPL 2017

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

ISSUED ON BEHALF OF BARBADOS TRIDENTS 
Bridgetown, Barbados. 19 August 2017

The Barbados Tridents have replaced Raymon Reifer with Tion Webster for the remainder of the 2017 Hero Caribbean Premier League (CPL). Reifer has been called in the Test squad for the West Indies’ Test tour of England. 

Webster is an exciting young cricketer from Trinidad & Tobago who made his first-class debut in the recently concluded 2016-17 four-day regional competition. He made a first-class hundred in his second match against Barbados and also claimed two wickets in his two matches.

Speaking of Webster’s selection for the rest of the tournament Robin Singh, coach of the Tridents, said: “While it is sad that we lost the services of Raymon for this year’s event we are delighted to see him getting a place in the West Indies squad for the prestigious tour of England.

“We look forward to welcoming Tion to the Tridents family and we are sure he will be a success for our team and in his future career.”

ABOUT THE HERO CARIBBEAN PREMIER LEAGUE: First started in 2013, the Hero Caribbean Premier League (CPL) is a franchise-based T20 format cricket tournament that combines two of the most compelling aspects of Caribbean life – dramatic cricket and a vibrant Carnival atmosphere. Combining broadcast and digital viewership over 149 million fans watched the 2016 season to make it one of the fastest growing leagues in world cricket. Jamaica Tallawahs are the current Hero CPL champions and the other competing teams are Barbados Tridents, Guyana Amazon Warriors, St. Kitts & Nevis Patriots, St. Lucia Stars and Trinbago Knight Riders. The 2017 tournament will run from 4 August – 9 September 2017. For further information visit www.cplt20.com.

-End-

For further information please contact:

Peter Miller

Mobile: +447769119636

Caribbean Mobile: + 1 (758) 729 2012

Head of PR and Communications

Hero Caribbean Premier League