. . . West Indies hammer Bangladesh

DHAKA.
The West Indies cricket squad bus was attacked by angry Bangladesh fans yesterday after the home team crashed to a nine-wicket defeat in the Cricket World Cup.
Two windows of the bus were shattered as it was leaving the Sher-e-Bangla stadium after the match, a police official said, adding that no player was injured.
“The fans thought it was the Bangladeshi team bus and they hurled stones at it,” said Imtiaz Ahmed, deputy commissioner of police in Dhaka.
“The window panes were shattered, but no one was injured.”
West Indian star Chris Gayle had tweeted: “This is ridiculous. Damn. World Cup with so much security and this happens. Big joke. Trust me I am not keen here. Every player lay flat.”
Yesterday’s incident came after the West Indies had destroyed Bangladesh by nine wickets in an embarrassingly one-sided contest, dismissing the World Cup co-hosts for just 58 runs – their lowest ever one-day total.
In front of a stunned capacity crowd of 25 000 in Dhaka, the home side’s batting imploded and they were all out in just 18.5 overs -sparking angry scenes from supporters who hurled placards from the stands.
The Caribbean side romped to their second win of the tournament in just 12.2 overs, with Chris Gayle making an unbeaten 37 and sit second in Group B with four points from three games, level on points with South Africa.
Spinner Sulieman Benn grabbed 4-18 and fast bowlers Kemar Roach and Darren Sammy claimed three wickets each as Bangladesh fell well short of their previous one-day low of 74, notching the fourth lowest score in World Cup history.
Junaid Siddique and Mohammad Ashraful were the only two batsmen who made it into double figures in a match that could prove pivotal to quarter-final hopes with India, South Africa and England also in Group B. West Indies skipper Sammy praised teammate Chris Gayle for a motivational speech that inspired his side. It was a brilliant performance by my team-mates. Chris Gayle wasn’t feeling well today but I thought he came out and showed how committed he is to the cause,” he said.
“He said ‘do not take Bangladesh lightly’. We were a little flat in the warm-up and he didn’t like that so he encouraged us to go out there and remember Bangladesh would be coming hard at us.”
“We’ve always fancied ourselves but it’s up to us to go out there and play competitive and consistent cricket,” he added.
Disappointed Bangladesh skipper Shakib Al Hasan was at a loss to explain his team’s disastrous showing, adding that he understood the fans’ frustrations.
“We have a lot of things to work on now. We have to sit down and think about it but hopefully we will come back strongly.”
He said reaching the quarter-finals was still possible after one win out of three so far, with the game against England in Chittagong now a “must-win”.

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