Hong
Kong - An All-Stars team containing some of the greatest
names in world cricket was beaten in the final of the Hong Kong
Sixes on Sunday by a team of little-known Sri Lankans.
Over two days of carnival cricket, the All-Stars - featuring captain
Shane Warne, Brian Lara, Glenn McGrath and Anil Kumble - had produced
explosive cricket in the tournament's unique five-overs-an-innings
format.
But
their run of success came to end when the young Sri Lankans refused
to be intimidated and posted 127 for three after five eight-ball
overs, a total that proved too much for their illustrious opponents,
who made 111 to lose by 16 runs.
Also
in the All-Stars squad were Zimbabwe's Heath Streak, England's
Geraint Jones and Craig McMillan of New Zealand, who won the man
of the tournament award for his brutal batting, though he went
for a golden duck in the final.
Sri
Lanka's surprise star was captain Indika De Saram who, under the
Sixes' quirky rules, scored 40 in the final after returning to
the wicket having earlier retired not out for 32.
Kaushalya
Weeraratne (32) and Jeewantha Kulatunga (28) also helped carry
the side to its first-ever Hong Kong Sixes victory, which brought
with it a winners' cheque of $100 000.
In
the All-Stars' final innings, Test cricket's top scorer Brian
Lara reminded the crowd of his glory days with four sixes lofted
over the hospitality marquees.
Geraint
Jones, currently out of favour for the England wicketkeeper role,
was a late call-up but his fielding caught the eye and in the
final he scored three huge sixes off his first three balls.
Former
Australian strike bowler Glenn McGrath was on the subs bench for
the title-decider after dislocating a finger while fielding earlier
in the day.
The
weekend saw nine national teams compete against the All-Stars
in 21 matches that lasted fewer than 45 minutes each.
With
the game's big hitters letting loose at the tiny Kowloon Cricket
Club, 275 sixes were scored and at least 40 balls were lost.
England,
who fielded Twenty20 specialist Darren Maddy and rising star Luke
Wright, fell in the quarter-finals.
India
had earlier crashed out at the qualifying stage to the disappointment
of their vocal supporters and the Sixes' organisers, who are keen
to boost the event's TV audience in the massive south Asia market.
New
Zealand and Pakistan were the losing semi-finalists.
Shane
Warne, 38, said he had enjoying playing alongside some old friends
and rivals.
"This
has been my first Sixes and it has been a great couple of days.
After we won the first few games, we really wanted to win the
whole thing.
"Watching
Brian (Lara) out there brings back some bad memories of bowling
to him," he joked.
"Glenn
(McGrath) is obviously an old mate and Anil Kumble I have total
respect for. We talk a lot about leg-breaks."
The
tournament, first held in 1992, produces frenetic cricket in which
six-a-side teams bat for only five overs each and every fielder
has to bowl, apart from the wicketkeeper.
Up
until the final the overs are six balls each.
It
has a long record of attracting the game's greatest names, with
Viv Richards, Sachin Tendulkar and Andrew Flintoff all appearing
in past years.
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