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*Official* Emerging Nations Cricket Thread

G. S. Kohli

International Vice-Captain
2nd of 5 ODI

South Africa Emerging Inn
295/8 (50)


Joshua Richards 43,Hermann 9, Musa Twala 28, (c) M. V. Buuren 43, Andile Mokgakane 70, extra 23,Matthew Boast 51 not out

RR 5.90

Victor Nyauchi 1 for 53, & Shumba 1 for 40, F Akram 8/0/26/2, B.Mavuta 10/0/66/4

Zim Emerging : 276 all out

2nd Unofficial ODI, Groenkloof Oval, Pretoria


ZWE
276/10
(45.2)

SA-E won by 19 runs.

❤🦾

Zimbabwe Emerging Inn
276/10 (45.2)
Joylord 12,w. Madhevere 55,shumba 19,captain Kaia 33,
Madande 40,Brandon Mavuta 47 ball 68 with 12 fours. Extra 21🤣


Matthew Boast 3 for 67,Heeden 2 for 66,Liam Elder 10/1/36/3,Cele 1 for 57,

Series level 2/2


SA lower order bounce back help their side to recore very well
 

G. S. Kohli

International Vice-Captain
3rd game One way affair as Zim beaten heavily

SA E lead 2/1

RESULT


3rd unofficial ODI, Pretoria, August 18, 2023, Zimbabwe Emerging Players tour of South Africa


(15.2/50 ov, T:130) 130/0
SA Emerging won by 10 wickets (with 208 balls remaining)

ZIMBABWE EMERGING PLAYERS • 129/10(31 Overs)

Tadiwanashe Marumani
31 (25)
Okuhle Cele
5/23 (7)
Milton Shumba
30 (52)
Andile Mokgakane
2/29 (8)

SOUTH AFRICA EMERGING PLAYERS • 130/0(15.2 Overs)

Jordan Hermann *
82 (58)
Tony Munyonga
0/16 (3)
Joshua Richards *
41 (35)
Wessly Madhevere
0/19
 

G. S. Kohli

International Vice-Captain
4th ODI
SA A won by 6 wkts
43 overs spares Zim A beat SA A in 5th ODI


I guess SA A might win series
 

Marius

International Debutant
The Malawi batsman with a better T20 average than Virat Kohli
Sami Sohail has a T20I average of 72.5 and is now trying to help his club in Eckington, Derbyshire avoid relegation

ByTim Wigmore, DEPUTY CRICKET CORRESPONDENT12 September 2023 • 5:06pm

Malawi batsman Samir Sohail holds a bat

'In a few years we could be playing the T20 World Cup,' says Malawi all-rounder Sami Sohail

When batting for Eckington Cricket Club as the club’s overseas professional, Sami Sohail has often been asked where he is from.
“I say, ‘I’m from Malawi’,” Sohail recalls. “They were like ‘where is Malawi’? I said ‘in Africa’. They were like ‘ah somewhere in South Africa.’ I said ‘no, Malawi is a different country.’
‌“Whoever you tell you come from Malawi they’re like, is it South Africa?’ Players don’t even know where Malawi is. That really annoys me because we’re an international team.”
‌For all the geographical ignorance of opponents in the Derbyshire League, their surprise at encountering a Malawian opponent is understandable. Sohail, who is 21, might well be the first Malawi cricketer ever recruited to be an overseas professional in English club cricket. To understand why, just glance at the records for the top Twenty20 international averages. Just above Pakistan’s Mohammad Rizwan and India’s superstar Virat Kohli is Sohail: in 26 matches, he has an average of 72.50 for Malawi.
‌“It’s a privilege and an honour to be amongst the top in the world,” Sohail says. “People are looking at the stats – there’s someone from Malawi who has done this.”

‌These deeds helped Sohail to become one of club cricket’s unlikeliest overseas players. Last year, Sohail visited family in the USA, timing his trip to coincide with trials for Minor League Cricket. He was selected for the Chicago Tigers in the competition, where he impressed some South African professionals, who then recommended him to an agent.
‌“He told me that it’s very surprising a club approaching a player from Malawi,” Sohail recalls. “They have opportunities to get players from all over the world. Choosing a play from Malawi is a great thing for the nation.

‌“I’m so grateful for this opportunity. I really want other Malawians to follow this trend and I hope I’m motivating them – if you work hard and believe in yourself, all of us can get overseas contracts and represent our country.”
‌And so Sohail has spent the summer playing and coaching in the village of Eckington while living at the club chairman’s house 10 miles north, in Sheffield. “You’d not really see in club cricket a player from Malawi,” says Nathan Musselwhite, Eckington’s first-team captain. “All that mattered to me was the kind of person Sami was. From the conversations we had he was a great guy and wanted to come over to do his best for the team. He stood out with his love for the game and general positivity – as soon as I spoke to him over the phone, I thought he was our man.”
As well as his batting Sohail bowls medium pace
If Sohail hasn’t quite emulated his stellar T20 international record, he has enjoyed a fine season for Eckington in 50-over cricket. Batting in the middle order, Sohail averages 35 in his 21 games; he has also taken 24 wickets at an average of 24 with his medium-pace bowling. “I haven’t played on these kind of wickets so far in my career,” Sohail reflects. “It’s tricky as a batsman because it’s moving around both ways.”
‌While he inherited a love of the game from his parents, who hail from Pakistan, Sohail is emphatically a product of Malawi cricket. He moved to Lilongwe, the capital, aged three when his parents set up a grocery shop and restaurant there. Sohail learned to play the game with family and friends, especially the country’s South Asian community, at a private school in the city.
‌“It all started at school with friends who were interested in cricket,” he recalls, “Pretty much every day after school we used to hang out at the local club and play cricket: tennis ball, hardball, whatever.”
‌Sohail honed his game playing for clubs in Malawi. His performances led to him having trials with the national team and then making his Malawi debut aged 16.
‌From 2019, full international status was extended to all T20 matches between nations, giving greater profile to the feats of Associate players. “That was just motivation for us,” Sohail says. “We want to see Cricket Malawi on the cricketing map.”
tmg.video.placeholder.alt xBDvWkfu5K8

‌With interest in the sport developing in Malawi, Sohail earns a living from his cricket academy in Lilongwe; in between matches in Derbyshire, he is doing his ECB level two coaching course. “More schools are introducing cricket,” he says. “I’ve been getting lots of youngsters, who are interested in making a career in cricket.”
‌Sohail’s ultimate dream is to help Malawi make it to the world stage: “in a few years we could be playing the T20 World Cup”. Regional qualification tournaments as well as the Africa Cup T20 – a new competition launched by the Africa Cricket Association and Corcom Media Ventures – reflect the growth in live streaming of Associate cricket and have allowed Sohail to build his remarkable international record.
‌For all the importance of these new competitions, the English league system has also played a crucial historic role in developing players from emerging nations. But Sohail embodies clubs’ growing openness to players from beyond traditional markets.
“Attitudes are changing,” explains Rob Humphries, an agent for WSX Cricket. “We always get asked a lot for Aussies, Kiwis, South Africans – the culture fit tends to be easier, generally speaking. But after the success of Afghans recently, clubs have become more open. If you recruit the guy with the big first-class record overseas it doesn’t mean they’re going to perform. More visibility for Associate cricket – you’ve got access to the highlights and the stats and so on – really helps. And if you’re looking for an Associate player, why not go for the man with the highest T20 average in the world?”
With one game of the season left, Sohail’s focus is on helping Eckington secure the win that they need to escape relegation. But he is determined that it will not be his last stint as an overseas professional in England. “I’d love to come back,” he says. “I hope I’m the first of many to come here to represent Malawi.”
 

G. S. Kohli

International Vice-Captain
Expects Oman vs UAE final on sep 23


Game today

06:30 PM
Oman vs United Arab Emirates
at Doha


3rd Match, Gulf Cricket T20I Championship 2023
 

Daemon

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Mongolia debuted against Nepal and lost by 270 in their first ever T20I in the Asian Games lel. Some guy hit a 10 ball 50.
 

mackembhoy

International Regular
As much as I am an advocate for spreading the game and want more non test sides in the world cups.

Almost daft counting games like that as T20I for stat purposes. The likes of Buttler/SKY could probably get a hundred in 20 balls against Mongolia.
 

Prince EWS

Global Moderator
As much as I am an advocate for spreading the game and want more non test sides in the world cups.

Almost daft counting games like that as T20I for stat purposes. The likes of Buttler/SKY could probably get a hundred in 20 balls against Mongolia.
Yeah literally everyone getting T20I status is just annoying. I'm fine with them having T20 status automatically and whatever non-statistical perks come with it, but we should keep separate records below the first 25 teams or so.
 

TheJediBrah

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Yeah it's not the same. Even if in the past a lot of the records were against minnows (which I don't think was ever actually the case but anyway), at least the record holder was usually a world-class player or a strong top-class team.
 
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Shady Slim

International Coach
oh no not the sanctity of the fastest fifty in a t20 international record how else will cricket recover from this great mickey mousing of such an important figure
 

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