Gayle goes Gangnam style in West Indies win over England
PALLAKELE, Sri Lanka
West Indies' Chris Gayle dances as team mate Denesh Ramdin (L) looks on after dismissing England's Jonny Bairstow during the Twenty20 World Cup Super 8 cricket match at Pallekele, September 27, 2012. REUTERS Photo
Johnson Charles and Chris Gayle outgunned Eoin Morgan and Alex Hales to lead West Indies to a The “Gangnam Style” dance video is one of the most popular on YouTube. And it’s certainly caught on with West Indies allrounder Chris Gayle at cricket’s World Twenty20.
The video, which has been viewed more than 292 million times on YouTube, has inspired Gayle to celebrate with the rodeo-style dance whenever he takes a wicket at the tournament.
He danced twice during the match against Ireland and then repeated the act on Sept. 27 when he took the wicket of England’s Jonny Bairstow in his first over.
Gayle has promised his fans around the world that he will keep celebrating “Gangnam Style” as the World Twenty20 progresses.
West Indies defeated defending champion England by 15 runs to make an
exciting start to the Super Eights round in the World Twenty20.
Chasing
a daunting 180-run target, England came close with Eoin Morgan (71 not
out) and Alex Hales (68) putting on a resolute 107-run partnership for
the fourth wicket but in the end they fell short.
England had
lost Craig Kieswetter and Luke Wright for first over ducks but Hales,
who hit five boundaries and two sixes off his 51 balls, and Morgan’s
36-ball knock, with five sixes and four boundaries, defied West Indies’s
four-pronged spin attack.
England needed 125 runs in their last
10 overs but Morgan and Hales paced the innings well before Marlon
Samuels bowled an excellent last over, conceding only eight runs.
West Indies were set on their way for a big total by openers Johnson Charles and Chris Gayle. Charles
smashed three sixes and 10 well-timed boundaries in his 56-ball 84
while Gayle hit four sixes and six fours in his 35-ball 58.
West Indian captain Darren Sammy said spinners made the win possible.
“We backed ourselves to set a target and the openers got us going well,” said Sammy. “With (Sunil) Narine, Samuel, Chris (Gayle), we decided to maximise our spinners against England and it worked out.”
England skipper Stuart Broad was left disappointed.
“We
had to regroup, obviously losing two wickets in that first over hurt us
but we showed how good the wicket was. We were quite happy with our
effort with the ball and I think we’re disappointed not to win tonight,”
said Broad.
Earlier, Sri Lanka and New Zealand were locked on
174 runs at the end of 40 overs before a “super over” win left the hosts
and a 25,000 home fans delighted.
New Zealand paceman Tim
Southee restricted Sri Lanka to 13-1 but Lasith Malinga managed better,
finishing the New Zealand innings five short of his team’s total.
It was the seventh tied match in all Twenty20 cricket, with New Zealand involved in four of them. Tillakaratne
Dilshan (76) and Mahela Jayawardene (44) had put Sri Lanka on course
for a successful run chase before New Zealand pulled back through some
accurate bowling and fielding.
With Sri Lanka needing 21 off the
final two overs, Dilshan hit James Franklin for a six off the first ball
before he was run out off the next.
It boiled down to eight off
the final over. Lahiru Thirimanne hit a boundary off Southee’s
penultimate delivery but was run out off the final ball, luckily for New
Zealand the ball hitting the stumps after coming off Ross Taylor’s
knee.
New Zealand owed their total of 174-7 to a career best fifty by opener Rob Nicol.
Nicol,
who hit four sixes and three boundaries, put on a brisk 57 for the
opening wicket with Martin Guptill (38) and 42 for the second with
Brendon McCullum (25) before he fell in the 16th over. Nicol’s previous T20 highest was 56 against Zimbabwe at Hamilton earlier this year.
Sri Lankan spinner Ajantha Mendis, who took 6-8 in the first round match against Zimbabwe, went for 48 runs in four overs.
Top two teams from each group will qualify for semi-finals.
Compiled from AFP and AP stories by the Daily News staff.