Bangladesh mauled by Sussex

Published May 19, 2005

HOVE (England), May 18: Just nine days before the first Test at Lord’s, Bangladesh suffered a crushing innings and 226 runs on the final day of their three-day game against an under-strength Sussex on Tuesday. Michael Yardy, who had earlier hit a career-best 257, doubled his career tally of five first class-wickets by taking five for 83 with his occasional left-arm spin as Bangladesh, following on, were bowled out for 196.

That at least was some improvement on their first innings 127.

Mushfiqur Rahim top-scored, hitting 63 before being stumped off Yardy by Tim Ambrose.

Bangladesh captain Habibul Bashar did not bat after being forced to retire hurt on Monday after being struck by a Jason Lewry bouncer when on 22 during the tourists’ woeful reply to Sussex’s 549 for seven declared.

Bangladesh have one more three-day game in which to restore morale before the two-Test series gets underway, against Northamptonshire starting from Friday.

 

Scoreboard SUSSEX (1st Innings):
 
R.R. Montogomerie c Rajin b Talha                       49
C.D. Hopkinson run out                                        64
M.H. Yardy c Ashraful b Aftab                           257
M.J. Prior c Rajin b Aftab                                     51
T.R. Ambrose c Mushfiqur b Enamul                     78
S.A. Heather b Enamul                                            7
J.J. van der Wath not out                                       16
L.J. Wright lbw b Enamul                                        1
EXTRAS     (B-1, LB-8, W-1, NB-16)               26
TOTAL       (for seven decl, 116.5 overs)           549
FALL OF WKTS: 1-71, 2-204, 3-299, 4-475, 5-513, 6-539, 7-549.
DID NOT BAT: C.D. Nash, M.J.G. Davis, J.D. Lewry.
BOWLING: Mashrafe Mortaza 27-5-96-0; Shahadat Hossain 22-3-84-0 (2nb, 1w); Talha Jubair 22-1-136-1; Emanul Haque Jr 33.5-2-174-3 (13nb); Aftab Ahmed 12-1-50-2 (1nb).
Scoreboard BANGLADESH (1st Innings):
 
Shahriar Nafees lbw b Wright                                16
Nafees Iqbal c Ambrose b Lewry                          12
Habibul Babar retired hurt                                     22
Aftab Ahmed c Ambrose b van der Wath                1
Mohammad Ashraful lbw b Wright                          2
Rajin Saleh c Ambrose b Davis                             19
M. Rahim c M’merie b van der Wath                    18
Mashrafe Mortaza b Lewry                                   17
Talha Jubair b van der Wath                                    0
Enamul Haque Jr b Lewry                                       7
Shahadat Hossain not out                                        1
EXTRAS     (B-1, LB-9, NB-2)                          12
TOTAL       (all out, 47 overs)                           127
FALL OF WKTS: 1-32, 2-42, 3-59, 4-59, 5-102, 6-102, 7-103, 8-126, 9-127.
BOWLING: Lewry 10-1-42-3; Wright 9-4-18-2 (1nb); van der Wath 13-5-21-3 (1nb); Hopkinson 3-0-6-0; Davis 10-2-26-1; Yardy 2-0-4-0.
Scoreboard BANGLADESH (2nd Innings):
Shahriar Nafees c Nash b van der Wath                16
Nafees Iqbal b Yardy                                            33
Aftab Ahmed c Montgomerie b Wright                  33
Mohammad Ashraful c sub b Yardy                        7
Rajin Saleh c Wright b Yardy                                10
Mushfiqur Rahim st Ambrose b Yardy                   63
Mashrafe Mortaza b van der Wath                          0
Enamul Haque c Ambrose b van der Wath              0
Talha Jubair c Ambrose b Yardy                             5
Shahadat Hossain not out                                      12
Habibul Bashar absent injured -
EXTRAS      (B-7, LB-5, W-1, NB-4)                17
TOTAL        (all out, 63.3 overs)                        196
FALL OF WKTS: 1-30, 2-88, 3-100, 4-102, 5-125, 6-132, 7-132, 8-151, 9-196.
BOWLING: Lewry 11-4-14-0; Wright 18-3-56-1; van der Wath 12-3-31-3 (4nb, 1w); Yardy 22.3-6-83-5.
RESULT: Sussex won by innings and 226 runs.
UMPIRES: N.L. Bainton and A.A. Jones.—Agencies

Opinion

Editorial

Sustainable path?
Updated 13 Jun, 2026

Sustainable path?

The FY27 budget is the first clear signal that the government is ready to transition from stabilisation to growth.
Prioritising education
13 Jun, 2026

Prioritising education

THOUGH the improvement in the country’s literacy rate may be slight, as highlighted by the Economic Survey, it ...
Poverty’s rise
13 Jun, 2026

Poverty’s rise

AS attention turns to the government’s plans for the coming fiscal year, one set of figures deserves particular...
A difficult story
Updated 12 Jun, 2026

A difficult story

Unless productivity becomes the dominant target of economic policy, Pakistan will continue to oscillate between crises and fragile recovery.
Rough waters
12 Jun, 2026

Rough waters

AMONGST the key potential triggers for fresh conflict in South Asia is water. The Indian state is behaving in an...
Politicised football
12 Jun, 2026

Politicised football

ALMOST three-and-half years since Lionel Messi led Argentina to FIFA World Cup glory, the latest edition of...