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Rain threat to Guwahati ODI
April 07, 2006 22:18 IST
With the series already decided, pre-monsoon rain has further dampened the interests of eager cricket lovers in Guwahati ahead of the fifth one-dayer between India and England [Images] on April 9.
Cricket administrators and sports lovers are keeping their fingers crossed as intermittent showers, unlikely at this time of the year, have cast doubts on the staging of the match at the Nehru stadium.
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The city was lashed by heavy rain on Thursday, resulting in the outfield at the stadium getting flooded. The met office's forecast of more rain is bad news for cricket fans."If there is no further rain the match will be definitely on, but the outfield will be slow," curator Sunil Baruah predicted.
The prevailing weather has come as a headache for the Assam Cricket Association (ACA) as international level matches are rarely allotted to such venues.
However, the ACA will not lose financially in case the match is washed out, as the expenses would be met through insurance claims.
But officials feel that the match should have been allotted at a better time of the year.
An ACA official, however, pointed out that giving up this date for another match in a rainless period would mean waiting till 2007 when the Zimbabweans are scheduled to visit the country.
But the authorities are leaving no stone unturned to stage the match.
"This is a part of our effort because if it rains no one can stop it. But we are trying our best to put up the best conditions for play on Sunday," Apurba Das, a groundsman, said.
While the pitch is well-covered, every effort is being made to dry the outfield.
But the disadvantage with the Nehru stadium, which is not an exclusive cricket venue, is that the drainage system is not up to the mark when compared to other cricketing venues in the country, Das said.
Both teams are expected to reach Guwahati tomorrow afternoon and practice later in the evening.