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10-year ban for bowling 92-run over

Bangladesh authorities come down hard on Dhaka club cricketer who bowled wides and no-balls in umpiring protest

Bangladesh on Tuesday imposed a 10-year ban on a bowler who deliberately lost a match by conceding 92 runs off just four legal deliveries in protest at umpiring decisions.

Sujon Mahmud from Lalmatia Club was found guilty by the Bangladesh Cricket Board of bringing the game into disrepute.

Lalmatia Club were barred indefinitely from competition, with their coach, captain and manager punished with five-year bans from the Dhaka Second Division League.

In a 50-over match last month, Lalmatia Club were dismissed for just 88 off 14 overs before opponents Axiom Cricketers reached 0-92 from four legal balls.

 

Image Id: 830EC4DA896B42C18BEC752E479FA6F5 Image Caption: The scorecard from the 92-run over

Sujon bowled 13 wides and three no-balls in the first over, all of which reached the boundary and cost his side 80 runs.

Batsmen can score off such illegal deliveries but they do not count as part of a bowler's regular six-ball over. 

Axiom opener Mustafizur Rahman smashed three fours off Sujon's four legitimate balls to take his side home in just 0.4 overs in Dhaka.

The cricket board also imposed a ten-year ban on another bowler, Tasnim Hasan, and blacklisted his club Fear Fighters after they threw a separate match in similar fashion.

"We have found in our investigations that the bowlers bowled wides and no-balls deliberately to damage the image of our cricket," the board's disciplinary committee chief Sheikh Sohel told a press briefing.

"In neither case would a win or loss have mattered for the promotion or relegation of their respective clubs."

Quick Single: How bowler conceded 92 in just four balls

Lalmatia Club secretary Adnan Rahman had admitted Sujon bowled the wides and no-balls as a protest against poor umpiring. The secretary alleged the umpires did not even allow his team captain to see the coin after the toss.

The BCB also suspended for six months the umpires overseeing both the discredited matches. 

The most runs conceded in an over in international cricket is 36 – a six from every ball – which has happened in both limited overs formats, and twice in first-class cricket but never (yet) in a Test match.

The most runs off an over in a first-class match is the 77 Wellington's Bert Vance conceded against Canterbury in 1990. A series of full-tosses and no-balls dotted the 22-ball over as Wellington tried to induce Canterbury to chase a target in the hope of forcing a result.

In ODI cricket, Herschelle Gibbs blasted six straight sixes off Netherlands bowler Daan van Bunge in the 2007 World Cup in St Kitts, while in T20 internationals Yuvraj Singh sent Stuart Broad into the stands off six consecutive balls in the 2007 World T20 in Durban.

The most runs from an over in Test cricket is 28, which has been reached twice – by Brian Lara off Robin Peterson's bowling at the Wanderers in 2003, and by George Bailey who took the long handle to James Anderson in Perth during the 2013-14 Ashes whitewash.

Bailey's massive Anderson over

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