Visakhapatnam, Raipur, Kanpur shortlisted as alternative IPL venues

IPL chairman Rajiv Shukla has said Visakhapatnam, Raipur and Kanpur are being looked at as alternative home venues for Mumbai Indians and Rising Pune Supergiants

Arun Venugopal in Rajkot14-Apr-2016IPL chairman Rajiv Shukla has said that Visakhapatnam, Raipur and Kanpur are frontrunners to be alternative home venues for Mumbai Indians and Rising Pune Supergiants after a Bombay High Court ruling ordered matches after April 30 to be moved out of Maharashtra due to a state-wide drought. He also said Delhi, Bangalore and Kolkata were in contention to host the three playoff games – the Eliminator, Qualifier 2 and final – that were scheduled to be played in Pune and Mumbai.Shukla confirmed he would meet with representatives from both franchises in Delhi on April 15 to formulate a revised arrangement, which will later be ratified by the IPL governing council. He said, however, that the Maharashtra Cricket Association and the IPL would request the Bombay High Court for permission to host the match between Supergiants and Mumbai in Pune on May 1 due to difficulties involved in shifting equipment.”Since there is a match on April 29 and May 1 in Pune – back-to-back matches – it will be almost impossible to move the equipment in 24 hours to another venue,” Shukla told reporters in Rajkot. “That’s a technical problem, so we are going to appeal tomorrow to the Bombay High Court if they can allow one more match in Pune. The other matches will be shifted. We decided yesterday that we are not going for an appeal. We will be implementing the verdict given by the court.”Kings XI Punjab were scheduled to play three home matches in Nagpur in May and Shukla said the franchise will shift those games to Mohali and Dharamsala.He also suggested that Jaipur was a prospective venue if either Mumbai or Supergiants expressed interest. “The RCA can’t host the match but the government has approached us to host the match,” Shukla said. “We will put Jaipur also as an option. Let’s see how the franchises react. We can host [matches without RCA being there]. There is a sports council of the government.”Shukla revealed Supergiants had requested the use of Eden Gardens as a home venue but said the IPL rules may not allow it.”Technically, it’s very difficult because it is the designated home ground of a franchise,” he said. “So far two matches of Gujarat Lions are slotted in Kanpur. If these franchises want Kanpur then those two matches will be played in Rajkot.”While Chennai and Ranchi were ruled out, Shukla said he was waiting to hear from the Madhya Pradesh Cricket Association on Indore’s availability. “The MPCA secretary is checking with the authorities because the Kumbh Mela is going on and all the security forces have been deployed there.”Shukla said the biggest logistical challenge was movement of equipment: “It is a gigantic exercise. Then all those things – the look and feel of stadium, ticketing, maintenance of ground and wickets – will have to be looked into as well.”The court’s ruling came after a Public Interest Litigation questioned the hosting of matches in Mumbai, Pune and Nagpur, and the order affects 13 games in the tournament. Mumbai was scheduled to host four matches after April 30, including the tournament final on May 29. Pune will miss out on six matches, including the Eliminator and Qualifier 2, while Nagpur will not host any fixtures this season.While hearing the PIL filed by Loksatta Movement, a Hyderabad-based NGO, last week, the court sought an explanation from the BCCI and the three state associations on why water should be “wasted” on hosting games when the state faced one of its worst ever droughts. In the next hearing, the court allowed theopening match to be held as scheduled in Mumbai on April 9, but earlier this week asked the BCCI if matches could be shifted out of Pune.In its defence, the BCCI had stated that less water was used to prepare the ground for an IPL game when compared to an international fixture. The board also stated that it intended to use treated sewage water for ground preparation in Mumbai and Pune. Mumbai and Supergiants had also proposed to contribute INR 5 crore to the Maharashtra chief minister’s drought relief fund and supply 40 lakh litres of water to drought-hit areas at their own cost.

Rashid falls short but Yorks secure draw

ScorecardAdil Rashid fell one run short of his 10th first-class hundred•Getty Images

A difficult week for Jason Gillespie might have ended in defeat, so he will be thankful for small mercies. Yorkshire’s unbeaten start to the defence of their 2014 Championship title was under threat here and it took a solid day-long rearguard action to keep his record of defeats since becoming Yorkshire’s first-team coach at just three from 53 Championship games.There was no carrot dangled for Somerset, which would have gone against the grain a little for a man whose cricket philosophy is inherently positive. But from five down overnight with a lead of only 124, it would have been difficult and risky to try to make a game of it, at least one that would have given both sides a chance.Moreover in the back of many Yorkshire minds would have been the sequence of successful run chases that Somerset pulled off against Yorkshire between 2009 and 2011: 479 in 85.3 overs for a four-wicket victory in 2009; 364 in 65.4 overs to win by six wickets in 2010; and 228 in 40.1 overs without losing a wicket in 2011.The draw was almost assured by lunch, by which time Somerset had managed to prise out only Jonny Bairstow in addition to the third evening’s five wickets. Adil Rashid built on a superb personal record against Somerset, against whom he has scored three centuries in 17 first-class innings. He almost had a fourth, missing out tantalisingly on 99 when he stepped across to flick a ball around the corner from the offspin of Johann Myburgh only to find Alfonso Thomas, lurking at short fine leg.Nonetheless, one run hardly detracted from the value of the innings, holding Yorkshire together for more than three hours. Tim Bresnan and Liam Plunkett took the total further out of reach before Steve Patterson, who had an excellent match all-round, went past 40 with the bat for the second time to go with his five wickets.Patterson’s bowling was the redeeming feature of Yorkshire’s efforts with the ball, which fell some way short of the standards to which we have become accustomed. Conceding a first-innings lead of 47 after scoring 438, even taking into account that it has been a good batting pitch, was an undistinguished performance from which only Patterson emerged with credit, going for only three an over compared with an average above five for the other three seamers.”To come away with a draw is a pass mark but we were well below par with the ball, barring Steve Patterson, who was outstanding,” Gillespie said. “Our batting needs to be more ruthless. We are getting a lot of starts. Jack Leaning got a good hundred and Tim Bresnan got a hundred in the lower order but it is our top six that needs to do the business more consistently.”I’m incredibly pleased with our fightback today and the way all the lads chipped in and got us to safety but there is a lot of food for thought and improvements that need to be made.”Rashid’s solid, patient performance is encouraging, particularly after another episode of frustrated ambitions in the Caribbean, where his lack of opportunity with England prompted Dickie Bird, the Yorkshire president, to ask for him to be allowed home.The player himself took it all rather more calmly. “It was good to be involved in the England side,” he said. “It is always a good experience. At times it was frustrating not to play but to be involved is a step forward. I’m not looking ahead, though. I have always been the kind of person to concentrate on the here and now and let the future take care of itself.”Yorkshire move to 76 points, 12 behind new leaders Durham. The 10-day break before Yorkshire’s next Championship match comes at a good moment. Ryan Sidebottom, injured in the opening match of the season, will return to face Middlesex on June 7, which will allow one of his colleagues to enjoy the benefits of a rest.Somerset, arguably, suffered through the lack of a top-class specialist spinner in their side, which was a source of frustration for director of cricket Matt Maynard. He is allowed only two registered overseas players at any one time and had to deregister Abdur Rehman so that Chris Gayle and Sohail Tanvir can play in the NatWest Blast on Friday, a situation complicated by the 21-day period required between re-registering a player and picking him.”If we had played Abdur in this game and then deregistered him, he would not have been available to play against Nottinghamshire here (on June 14),” Maynard said. “I think Yorkshire are more comfortable against the spinners than Notts so we decided he would miss this game. It’s daft, I know, but those are the rules.”Yet a draw against the champions is not too shabby a result for Somerset, after losing their opening three matches. Coming on the heels of a win against Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge, moreover, it seems to have set Somerset on an upward curve.The performance of the Overton twins is encouraging, of course. Jamie’s 18-ball 50 is reckoned to be the quickest by a number 11 batsman in first-class cricket since such things were recorded in balls rather than minutes, from 1983 onwards. If Somerset can keep both on the field this could be a significant year in their respective careers.The other consequence of the meandering last day is that Graeme Hick’s status as the last batsman to score 1000 first-class runs before the end of May remains intact, with James Hildreth denied a last opportunity to add to his 915.

Devon Thomas 99* gives Leewards first win

A round-up of WICB Professional Cricket League Regional 4 Day Tournament matches

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Mar-2015

File photo: Devon Thomas could not get to a century, but he got Leewards home•West Indies Cricket Board

Leeward Islands recorded their first win of the competition, in the penultimate round of matches, beating Jamaica by four wickets. Leewards chased down a target of 165 for the win, anchored by a knock of 99 not out from captain Devon Thomas. Thomas had come at 11 for 2, with both openers gone, and the team on very shaky ground. He did not get any solid support from the middle or lower order either, as none of the other batsmen made more than 13, until No. 8 Jeremiah Louis who remained unbeaten on 18 and combined with Thomas for an unbroken 59-run stand.Jamaica had batted first and were shot out for 175 with pacer Gavin Tonge leading Leewards’ charge, with 4 for 34. Leewards had looked like they would take a massive lead at 142 for 1, with opener Sherwin Peters hitting a century, but seamer Damion Jacobs thwarted those plans with figures of 7 for 54. Leewards were bowled out for 285, but Jamaica’s batsmen could not kick on from starts in the second innings – the only contribution of note came from Chadwick Walton, who made his second half-century of the game – and were bowled out for 274. Spinners Anthony Martin and Rahkeem Cornwall were the destroyers-in-chief the second time round for Leewards, sharing nine wickets between them.Guyana drew with Trinidad & Tobago, taking seven points from the match, to ensure they go into the final round of games with a comfortable lead of 22 points over second-placed Barbados. They play their final game against Windward Islands, from March 20.Guyana chose to bat and got 291 courtesy contributions all through their order – five of their top eight scored between 44 and 63. T&T had similar contributions from their top and middle order, with three batsmen getting 70 or more – with getting to a hundred – to give them the first-innings lead despite Devendra Bishoo’s six-for. For the third time in the match, there were contributions through the top order without anyone kicking on in Guyana’s second innings, helping them to 266 for 5 declared. That gave T&T a target of 218. They got to 99 for 3 in 32 overs before stumps were called on the match.Barbados and Windward Islands, Nos. 2 and 3 on the points table, began the round separated by two points. They ended the round no different, picking up eight points apiece in a draw. They go into the final round 22 and 24 points behind Guyana respectively.Barbados chose to bat and were set up by a maiden first-class double-century from Shai Hope and a maiden first-class century from Sharmarh Brooks. The pair added 237 after Barbados made a terrible start, being reduced to 2 for 2. That partnership was the rock on which their total of 480 was built. Windwards made a fist of getting the first-innings lead, though, themselves enjoying a fine partnership early in the innings: Devon Smith and Tyrone Theophile added 269 for the opening wicket, both getting to hundreds. However, there was something of a collapse thereafter, as Windwards lost all 10 wickets for 147 runs. Barbados scored a brisk 167 for 5 declared in their second innings, setting Windwards 232 in a bid to extend their lead on the points table. It didn’t quite come off, but they did more than half the job, Windwards falling to 101 for 6 in 45 overs before the end of play.

Phillip Hughes dies after two-day battle

December 7, 2014
Russell Jackson – Healing by putting your bat out
December 5, 2014
Samir Chopra – Grieving for a stranger
December 4, 2014
Mark Nicholas – The spirit of Hughes, the spirit of cricket
December 3, 2014
News – Emotional farewell for Hughes
Brettig – Lessons of Hughes’ life unforgettable in death
Monga – Adelaide turns out for its adopted son
News – ‘His spirit is still with me’ – Clarke
Video – Clarke’s tribute to Phillip Hughes
Video – ‘See you in the middle’
Video – Phillip Hughes, forever young
Video – Macksville remembers its favourite son
Video – Adelaide mourns Phillip Hughes
Gallery – Australia farewells Phillip Hughes
Video – A sad and sombre day for world cricket – EdwardsDecember 2
News – No pressure on players for quick Test return
News – Hughes family wants big crowd at funeral
News – ‘It’s going to be pretty bloody hard’ – Harris
News – Swap between first two games of Australia tri-series
Inbox – On growing disenchanted with the game, and the bouncer
News – Mehrab Hossain extends support to Abbott
December 1
News – Adelaide confirmed as first Test venue
Tour diary – Not a shot you just get on with
News – 408 for 6 declared; 63 overs
Sidharth Monga – Macksville prepares for Hughes’ final homecoming
November 30
News – Clarke pays tribute to his ‘brother’ Hughes
News – Kohli to attend Hughes funeral
Video – Adelaide cathedral honours Hughes
Ian Chappell – Playing the Test the best way to honour Hughes
Tony Cozier – Outlawing the bouncer not the right response to Hughes’ death
November 29
News – Hughes funeral on December 3, Gabba Test delay confirmed
News – ‘Our dressing room will never be the same’ – Clarke
Martin Crowe – Towards a kinder, gentler game
Video – When could the Gabba Test be held?
Video – A nation in mourning
News – BCCI offers help in healing process
November 28
News – Gabba Test in doubt as players mourn
Chris Hartley – Living with Tuesday
Features – #putoutyourbats
Simon Barnes – Every innings is an act of courage
Philip Brown – An unpredictable subject
Gallery – The day after in pictures
News – ‘Best for players to play the Test’ – Chappell
Video – ‘Hughes death has impacted the cricket world’ – Kumble
Video – Coverdale: A lot of questions no one has answers to
Video – ‘Cricket unimaginable in these circumstances’ – Gillespie
News – ‘Not been easy to concentrate’ – Mathews
News – Teams to play ODI as tribute to Hughes
Video – ‘Hughes was an outstanding talent’ – Cook
Video – ‘A huge loss for cricket’ – MathewsNovember 27
News – Phillip Hughes dies aged 25
News – Hughes suffered extremely rare, freak injury to neck
News – Clarke goes above and beyond
Obituary – The country kid who moved a nation
Timeline – A summary of Phillip Hughes’ career
Reactions – ‘Gone too soon’
Chappell – ‘Hughes will be remembered for uncomplaining attitude’
Coverdale – A precocious talent, a humble man
Mark Nicholas – A prizefighting artist
Coverdale – ‘Hughes was one of the genuinely nice guys’
Video – Melinda Farrell on the life of Phillip Hughes
Video – ‘We love you’
Video – Hughes suffered rare injury
Video – ‘A cherished son, brother, friend and team-mate’ – Sutherland
Audio – ‘He blitzed us off the park in 2009’ – SteynNovember 26
News – Hughes still critical, Sheffield Shield round abandoned
News – Counselling over cricket – ACA boss
Reactions – ‘A top man’
Iain O’Brien – Living and working with the bouncer
Coverdale – Hope for Hughes, feel for Abbott
Brettig – We’ve all been hit
November 25
News – Hughes in critical condition after being hit by bouncer
News – Distraught players offered counselling for Hughes blow
Video – ‘He appeared to black out, and fell face first’
Features – The inherent dangers of batting

Marsh ton puts WA in command

Shaun Marsh notched a timely century and Cameron Bancroft fell only one run short of his second in as many matches as Western Australia built a commanding lead over Queensland on day two of the Sheffield Shield match at the WACA Ground

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Nov-2014
ScorecardShaun Marsh’s hundred could add to the debate over Australia’s top six for the first Test against India•Getty ImagesShaun Marsh notched a timely century and Cameron Bancroft fell only one run short of his second in as many matches as Western Australia built a commanding lead over Queensland on day two of the Sheffield Shield match at the WACA Ground.Marsh’s hundred will add intrigue to the national selectors’ debate about the composition of the top six to face India in the first Test at the Gabba in December. Eighteen boundaries pinged off his bat and he now emerges as a solid competitor to Shane Watson and Alex Doolan for the No. 3 berth.Bancroft, meanwhile, was crestfallen to edge the Bulls captain James Hopes behind for 99, ending a union of 108 with Marsh following another of 107 with Michael Klinger.Hopes was a nagging threat throughout, but the rest of the Queensland attack was unable to maintain quite the same level of pressure, allowing Marsh to capitalise on the earlier good work of Bancroft and Klinger by raising the Warriors’ scoring rate under lights.

Taylor pleased with fighting effort

Zimbabwe captain Brendan Taylor said he had plenty of positives to take away from Harare, even though his team slumped to a nine-wicket defeat in four days

Firdose Moonda in Harare12-Aug-20144:46

We fought well for an inexperienced side – Taylor

The flicker that could be seen from close range in the Zimbabwe players’ eyes during the lead-up to this Test was exactly what it was suspected to be: anxiety of what awaited them when they faced the world’s best. Brendan Taylor can admit that now that his team have defied expectations of being walkovers after they put up as tough fight.”We were quite nervous in the beginning, to be honest with you, knowing that they were bringing their three-pronged pace attack” Taylor said. “But I’m happy with the guys. They held their own. For three days we were competitive and we fought hard.”Zimbabwe showed their willingness to front up from the first morning when Taylor opted to bat first despite knowing Harare Sports Club’s reputation for offering a bit to the bowlers early on.Taylor’s line-up took on Dale Steyn, Vernon Philander and Morne Morkel with stoic determination and the knowledge that at least the trio would not be able to count on the surface for too much assistance. “We didn’t give them the wicket that they wanted,” Taylor said. “But it was still very challenging.”A dry, abrasive surface, however, threw up other hurdles such as sharp turn during the first morning, and reverse-swing later on. This meant that the batsmen could not get comfortable and that feeding on scraps was always going to be Zimbabwe’s main strategy.Despite plenty of positives, Brendan Taylor said he was disappointed how some of his batsmen unravelled during the fourth day•Associated Press

“It was never easy but it was manageable,” Taylor said. “Even though the wicket was quite slow paced when Dale Steyn starts reversing, he is quick through the air so it doesn’t matter how slow the pitch is.”Zimbabwe only really experienced the wrath of a fired up Steyn on the fourth day when the seamer led the post-lunch assault that ultimately proved to be the hosts’ undoing. Five wickets fell for 26 runs in 10 overs, sending Zimbabwe tumbling from 98 for 2 to 124 for 7, and threatened to subject them to an innings defeat.Although there was not much Mark Vermeulen could do about the inswinger that trapped him on the front pad, Taylor was disappointed with the way some of the other batsmen unravelled during the collapse.”There were a couple of soft dismissals there. We could have cashed in and made it a lot better for our team,” Taylor said. Vusi Sibanda offered Dane Piedt a simple return catch, Taylor himself popped one up to short leg and Regis Chakabva left one he should have watched more carefully. Those were three dismissals Taylor felt could have been avoided had Zimbabwe “hung in there and put prices on our wickets.”Zimbabwe had a lesson on how to do that from South Africa on the second and third day when the likes of Faf du Plessis and JP Duminy played with the self-denial of monks. Their approach, which moved between blocking and leaving, was also the result of Zimbabwe having their best period in the game.Their seam bowlers lack the pace, bounce and bite of any of South Africa’s pack but they operated within their limitations to deny the world’s No.1 team the satisfaction of a steamroll.The respect South Africa showed to Zimbabwe’s attack did not go amiss and Taylor recognised that would only serve his men well in future.”Our seamers were exceptional. Tinashe didn’t get hit for a boundary in 30 overs in the first innings – that’s a huge plus. Tendai Chatara backed him up well and even Donald bowled some really good deliveries,” he said. “This will give them a lot of belief that they restricted two of the best batsmen in the world in AB de Villiers and Hashim Amla.”Chatara, who is just 23 years old and has only played five Tests, accounted for Amla while debutant John Nyumbu could count AB de Villiers among his five wickets. Both men will be an important part of Zimbabwe’s future plans. Overall, Taylor was pleased with the lessons he could take away from Harare.”A debut five-for is fantastic by anyone’s standards,” he said. “John looked like he’d been playing Tests for a couple of years. He was very responsible and thought his plans through. His line and length will only get better the more he plays.”A statement like that only leads to the inevitable lamenting of how lean Zimbabwe’s international calendar is and how seldom they play against top teams. It also means that when they do, they want to show their best side and Taylor does not believe they managed that entirely. “I wanted to go five days. I felt we were good enough to do that,” he said. “If we had a better session after lunch we might have done that.”But those post-mortems can be conducted in the days and weeks to come. Tonight, Taylor knows that even though Zimbabwe did not win, they have a reason to celebrate and the only thing their eyes need to do is smile.”For guys that haven’t played a lot of cricket, we can be very proud of 80% of the cricket we played.”

Giles admits 'bitter disappointment'

Ashley Giles has spoken for the first time about narrowly missing out to Peter Moores as England coach, saying that the decision had left him “bitterly disappointed”

ESPNcricinfo staff04-May-2014Ashley Giles has spoken for the first time about narrowly missing out to Peter Moores as England coach, saying that the decision had left him “bitterly disappointed”.Moores has been recalled for a second spell in charge after Andy Flower stood down following England’s 5-0 Ashes thrashing in Australia.Giles appeared to be in pole position to replace Flower. He had been England’s one-day coach since November 2012 and a member of the selection panel. But his cause was not helped by a poor run of results in one-day games in Australia and England’s humiliating loss to the Netherlands at the World Twenty20 in Bangladesh last month”I was confident,” Giles told . “I went into the interview and thought I had as equal a chance as anyone else, if not a better chance, having been close to the team and known what the systems are and, at the same time, not really had full control.”I can’t go into too much detail about that process, but I’m bitterly disappointed I didn’t get the job. At no time or stage does that mean I wish anyone in that side any ill going forward. We all want England to do well.”The Bangladesh coaching role is available following the resignation of Shane Jurgensen, but Giles did not sound in a rush to advertise his availability as he faced up to the first inactive spell of his working life. He also decided to resign as an England selector.”I think it’s important in the short-term to take some time out and reflect – with the family as well, because since I retired in 2007 I went straight into coaching and since then I’ve been pretty busy, as a selector and a coach,” he said. “It depends on opportunities, I guess, around the world and in this country. At the moment I’m not rushing.”I love coaching, I don’t think anything’s changed on that front. Of course, through recent experiences your confidence takes a little bit of a hit. But I enjoy working with players, improving players, that’s the buzz.”

Palmeiras x Sampaio Corrêa: 10 mil ingressos vendidos para volta em SP

MatériaMais Notícias

Já foram vendidos antecipadamente 10 mil ingressos para o confronto de volta entre Palmeiras e Sampaio Corrêa, pelas oitavas de final da Copa do Brasil. A partida está marcada para as 20h do dia 30, no Allianz Parque, em São Paulo, e define quem passa para as quartas de final da competição nacional.

A comercialização teve início na manhã desta segunda-feira e segue com exclusividade para sócios-torcedores do Verdão, respeitando os critérios de prioridade de acordo com a pontuação de cada membro do Avanti,por meio do site www.avantipalmeiras.com.br. A partir das 10h de quinta-feira, o público em geral terá acesso aos bilhetes pelo site palmeiras.futebolcard.com.

O confronto de ida entre Palmeiras e Sampaio Corrêa está marcado para as 19h15 desta quarta-feira, no Maranhão. Antes desse compromisso, o Verdão volta a entrar em campo pelo Campeonato Brasileiro, do qual é líder, enfrentando o Botafogo, às 16h deste sábado, em Brasília.

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Veja abaixo a divisão de dias e horários das pré-vendas de acordo com a classificação do Avanti:

1ª Pré-venda
Início da pré-venda: 20/05/2019 – 10h
– Sócios Avanti 5 estrelas (de 81 a 100% de Rating)
– Sócios Avanti do Plano Diamante
– Sócios do clube social que também são sócios Avanti (independentemente do plano)

2ª Pré-venda
Início da pré-venda: 20/05/2019 – 15h
– Sócios 4 estrelas (de 61 a 80% de Rating)
– Sócios Avanti do Plano Platina

3ª Pré-venda
Início da pré-venda: 21/05/2019 – 10h
– Sócios Avanti 3 estrelas (de 41 a 60% de rating)
– Sócios Avanti do Plano Ouro

4ª Pré-venda
Início da pré-venda: 21/05/2019 – 15h
– Sócios Avanti 2 estrelas (de 21 a 40% de rating)
– Sócios Avanti do Prata Superior

5ª Pré-venda
Início da pré-venda: 22/05/2019 – 10h
– Sócios Avanti 1 estrela (de 1 a 20% de rating)

6ª Pré-venda
Início da pré-venda: 22/05/2019 – 15h
– Todos os sócios Avanti Palmeiras

VALORES DOS INGRESSOS

Gol Norte – R$ 90,00 [R$ 45,00 meia-entrada]
Gol Sul – R$ 120,00 [R$ 60,00 meia-entrada]
Central Leste – R$ 130,00 [R$ 65,00 meia-entrada]
Central Oeste – R$ 200,00 [R$ 100,00 meia-entrada]
Superior Norte e Sul – R$ 100,00 [R$ 50,00 meia-entrada]
Superior Leste e Oeste – R$ 110,00 [R$ 55,00 meia-entrada]
Superior Visitante – R$ 100,00 [R$ 50,00 meia-entrada]

Obs.: a venda de ingressos para o setor Central Leste acontecerá apenas após o início da comercialização para o público em geral pela internet, sem a incidência dos benefícios do programa Avanti.

POSTOS DE VENDA

Bilheterias do Allianz Parque (Rua Palestra Italia – Portão A) – SOMENTE DIA DO JOGO
Endereço: Rua Palestra Italia, 214
Perdizes – São Paulo/SP
CEP 05005-030
Horário de atendimento: dia 30 de maio, das 10h até o intervalo da partida
*Disponível apenas para retiradas

IMPORTANTE: as bilheterias do Portão A não realizarão venda de ingressos na data da partida, apenas retiradas das entradas compradas pela internet.

Bilheterias do Allianz Parque (Av. Francisco Matarazzo – Portão B)
Endereço: Avenida Francisco Matarazzo, 1705
Água Branca – São Paulo/SP
Horário de atendimento: dias 28 e 29 de maio, das 10h às 17h, e dia 30, das 10h até o intervalo da partida
*Disponível para venda de ingressos e retiradas

Bilheterias do Allianz Parque (Rua Padre Antônio Tomás – Portão C) – SOMENTE DIA DO JOGO
Endereço: Rua Padre Antônio Tomás
Água Branca – São Paulo/SP
Horário de atendimento: dia 30 de maio, das 10h até o intervalo da partida
*Disponível para venda de ingressos e retiradas

Obs.: os demais postos de venda serão divulgados nos próximos dias.

ATENÇÃO: De acordo com Lei 14.590 de 11/10/2011, é obrigatório o cadastramento dos torcedores na aquisição de ingressos nas bilheterias. Essa Lei vale para todos os ingressos (inteira e meia-entrada) de todos os setores do estádio.

Tudo sobre

Allianz ParqueCopa do BrasilIngressosPalmeirasSampaio Corrêa

Mooney's ten gives Ireland title

John Mooney took his second five-wicket haul of the match to help Ireland to their fourth Intercontinental Cup title, beating Afghanistan by 122 runs in Dubai

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Dec-2013
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsJohn Mooney (right) finished with figures of 10 for 81 to take Ireland to a 122-run win•ICC/Saleem Sanghati

John Mooney took his second five-wicket haul of the match to help Ireland to their fourth Intercontinental Cup title, beating Afghanistan by 122 runs in Dubai. Afghanistan were battling against the tide at the end of the third day, at 136 for 5 chasing 347 but a 114-run stand for the sixth wicket between Rahmat Shah and Mohammad Nabi gave them hope. Ireland struck back after lunch via Mooney who ran through the tail.Rahmat and Nabi had come together on the third day with the score on 86 for 5 and added 50 till stumps. After a watchful first few overs on the fourth morning, Afghanistan scored their first boundary when Rahmat drove Mooney through mid-off. Rahmat survived a shout for lbw on 43 off the seamer Max Sorensen, and Nabi too got the benefit of the doubt in an lbw appeal off Kevin O’Brien. Nabi and Rahmat frustrated Ireland for an entire session as Afghanistan went into the break at 188 for 5, needing a further 159.Ireland finally struck seven overs into the second session when Sorensen trapped Nabi lbw for 49. Five overs later, Samiullah Shenwari was bowled off a length ball by Mooney and from then on, there was no looking back for Ireland as Mooney took a wicket in each of his next three overs. He trapped Mirwais Ashraf lbw, had Dawlat Zadran edging to slip and wrapped up the game when Izatullah Dawlatzai edged to Joyce at third slip.Mooney finished with match figures of 10 for 81, to go with his 5 for 45 in the first innings. Rahmat was stranded on 86.

Unresponsive pitch frustrates Boult, Gazi

New Zealand ended the fourth day of the first Test with an 85-run lead, but an unresponsive pitch meant Trent Boult and his fellow seamers endured another difficult outing – the second in a row

Mohammad Isam in Chittagong12-Oct-2013

Trent Boult could only pick up one wicket on the fourth day•AFP

New Zealand ended the fourth day of the first Test with an 85-run lead, but an unresponsive pitch meant Trent Boult and his fellow seamers endured another difficult outing – the second in a row. The placid surface, the shower that forced an early finish and the poor weather forecast for Sunday have drastically reduced the probability of a result in Chittagong.”It’s very tough out there,” Boult said after Bangladesh amassed 501 in their first innings. “It is a flat surface and pretty unresponsive. The ball tended to scuff up quite quickly as well, so the new ball was very important, but it very testing as a seam bowler specifically.” Boult managed to dismiss Tamim Iqbal last evening to reach 50 Test wickets, and trapped Abdur Razzak lbw in the morning session.New Zealand will look to increase their lead substantially before giving Bangladesh a crack at a target but given their cautious start – Peter Fulton and Kane Williamson took nearly 25 overs to add 69 runs – and the time already lost due to rain, prospects of a result have dipped considerably.Boult disagreed, though: “I think we have a lot of batting to do, [put together a] couple of partnerships. The final session got called off with rain but we can’t get too far ahead of ourselves. We have to get a few more runs and see what happens from there. It’s a good opportunity for some good cricket to be played. I can definitely see a result if that happens. Hopefully the weather stays away.”Sohag Gazi, who made his maiden Test century, he pointed out the difficulty faced by the bowlers on a docile pitch. “We will try to win the match by getting them all out as quick as we can. But having said that, the wicket has offered no help, so if a batsman decides to play straight, it is hard to get him out. We will try to apply pressure through dot balls.”Given their near-perfect Test record against Bangladesh, one might have expected New Zealand to be more aggressive in the second innings but Hamish Rutherford, with 32 off 45 balls, was the only batsman who had a strike-rate over 50. The Bangladesh spinners kept things tight, and captain Mushfiqur Rahim gave only five overs to his seamers.Gazi, Shakib Al Hasan and Abdur Razzak used the crease well to create different angles for the batsman but the lack of spin was frustrating. Shakib, in search for turn, switched to over the wicket, but the ones he hoped to turn across Fulton and Williamson, continued straight and sometimes past the wicketkeeper.

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