Gladiators bounced back to even the two-match series.
Hero Caribbean Premier League
to give Revellers a fighting
chance of recovering, after
Hayley Matthews and Shabika
Gajnabi struck with successive
deliveries to remove both openers
Jodian Morgan and Britney
Cooper cheaply.
Revellers slumped to seven
for two in an uphill battle, then
33 for four with just 20 balls
remaining, despite an exciting
innings from Natasha McLean
who hit two boundaries before
holing out to Kyshona Knight
at deep cover for 14.
At one stage, King and
Henry had added 22 in 12 balls
to leave the equation at 12 from
nine balls before King was run
out as the Gladiators held on
to leave both sides with a win
apiece from the two matches.
Earlier, Knight and Matthews,
who scored an impressive
54-run opening stand for
Gladiators in their first match,
laid the foundation for their
come-back win with their a
41- run first wicket stand in
game two.
Matthews , 26 from 23 balls,
picked up a couple of boundaries
while Knight pulled one
four in her 15 from 13 balls.
The two women’s T-10
matches, staged ahead of the
men’s T20 semi-final and final,
were organized by the Hero
Caribbean Premier League
(CPL), Cricket West Indies
(CWI) and the government of
Trinidad and Tobago.
Grenada government praises
Anderson Peters’ historic gold
For Less All Makes & Models, Domestic & Import
H E R E A R E J U S T A S A M P L I N G O F T H E B R A N D S W E H A V E A V A I L A B L E
By Rawle Titus
Gladiators rebounded to
beat Revellers by three runs to
square a two-match T10 series
featuring the leading women’s
cricketers in the Caribbean last
weekend in Trinidad.
Gladiators, powered by a
41-run opening stand between
Kycia Knight and Hayley Matthews,
secured revenge over
Revellers, who trounced them
by eight wickets in the opening
match two days earlier.
Revellers, without star player
Stafanie Taylor, struggled
to maintain a run rate on the
chase and stumbled to 63 for
six after Gladiators, batting
first, were restricted to 66 for
six in their ten overs at the
Brian Lara Cricket Academy.
Chinelle Henry’s unbeaten
17 and Stacy-Ann King’s 11
off five balls were not enough
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By Azad Ali
The Grenada government
has praised the
achievement of Anderson
Peters following his historic
capture of gold in the
men’s javelin at the recent
World Championships in
Qatar.
The gold medal was
the first for Grenada’s in
the field event at a World
Championship and only
the second gold overall,
following on from Kirani
James’ success in Daegu
in 2011.
In a statement the Ministry
of Youth Development,
Sports, Culture,
and the Arts said Anderson
historic win has made
him the first Grenadian to
win a World Championship
medal in the field events.
He is also the second athlete
in Grenada history to
become a World Champion,
with Kirani James being the
first.
Peters measured 86.89 on
his fourth attempt which
proved to be the winning
mark, upsetting a field
which saw defending World
Champion Johannes Vetter
of Germany forced to settle
for bronze with a throw of
85.37 and Estonia’s Magnus
Kirt clinched silver with a
mark of 86.21.
Peters, a 21-year-old student
at Mississippi State
University in the United
States, said he hoped his
success served as an inspiration
for the tiny Caribbean
island.
Gladiators,
Revellers
draw T-10
series
Anderson Peters, of Grenada,
throws during the the
men’s javelin throw fi nal at
the World Athletics Championships
in Doha, Qatar, Sunday,
Oct. 6, 2019. Associated
Press / David J. Phillip
/BayRidgeNissan.com