Follow us

SL vs NED | Twitter reacts as umpire awards five penalty runs to Dutch owing to Mendis' sloppy glovework

no image
no image

Penalty runs are indeed a rare occurrence in cricket, often seen as an avoidable mistake by a team. Unfortunately, Sri Lanka found themselves on the wrong side of the rulebook on Saturday when wicketkeeper Kushal Mendis failed to collect a ball cleanly, allowing it to thus hit his helmet.

The Netherlands had a challenging start after choosing to bat first in Lucknow, scoring 48 runs but losing two wickets by the end of the first powerplay. Kasun Rajitha and Dilshan Madushanka posed significant difficulties for the Dutch, leaving them at 103/6 after 25 overs. The middle-order batsmen, Sybrand Engelbrecht and Logan van Beek, then formed a record seventh-wicket partnership, accumulating over 100 runs. This partnership put Sri Lanka in desperate need of a breakthrough. However, luck didn't seem to be on the side of the bowling team, as nothing went in their favor in the subsequent events.

In the second ball of the 43rd over, Karunaratne bowled a slower length ball outside off to Engelbrecht, who was beaten on the drive. Unfortunately, Mendis, the wicketkeeper, failed to gather the ball safely, and it ended up hitting his helmet which was placed behind him. As a result, the umpire signaled a penalty in favor of the Netherlands, and their scoreboard was boosted by an additional 5 runs.

The incident quickly garnered reactions on Twitter, with many expressing surprise and commenting on the unexpected penalty awarded by the Sri Lankan captain.

That's how Sri Lanka's fate is!

Rules are rules for everyone!

Yeah! Take that.

Hahaha! Hasney ka kya hi! xD xD

That 5 big runs!

Yeahhh buddyyy!

It is all destiny mean?

Sad!

Yeah wkt looks like that!

Jocker mean? Lol got it! xD xD

Comments

Leave a comment

0 Comments

read previous‌IND vs NZ | Sarfaraz and Pant’s audacious fightback eclipsed by rain and second new ball with Kiwis on command
New Zealand need 107 runs to win with ten wickets and a day in hand to seal an emphatic win in Indian soil. Sarfaraz Khan’s 150 coupled with Rishabh Pant’s 99 set up India’s 462 runs, albeit the second new ball did the trick for the Kiwis with the hosts losing the last seven wickets for 29 runs.
AUS vs SL | Twitter trolls Australia as Glenn Maxwell pays the price for shambolic misuse of DRSread next
Australia’s reputation as a ‘tournament team’ has only grown with time given their unprecedented ability to handle pressure. However, it became apparent on Monday that the present outfit isn’t cut from the same cloth as their predecessors with the way they let a wicket slip due to bad DRS calls.
View non-AMP page