West Indian cricket team in Bangladesh in 2002–03

West Indian cricket team in Bangladesh in 2002-03
 
  Bangladesh West Indies
Dates 29 November 2002 – 20 December 2002
Captains Khaled Mashud Ridley Jacobs
Test series
Result West Indies won the 2-match series 2–0
Most runs Alok Kapali (139) Ridley Jacobs (150)
Most wickets Tapash Baisya (8) Pedro Collins (12)
Player of the series Jermaine Lawson (WI)
One Day International series
Results West Indies won the 3-match series 2–0
Most runs Alok Kapali (121) Ramnaresh Sarwan (169)
Most wickets Mushfiqur Rahman (3) Vasbert Drakes (12)
Player of the series Vasbert Drakes (WI)

The West Indies cricket team toured Bangladesh from 29 November 2002 to 20 December 2002. The tour included two Tests and three One Day Internationals (ODIs) between West Indies and Bangladesh.[1]

ODI Series

1st ODI

29 November 2002 (D/N)
Scorecard
West Indies 
275/7 (50 overs)
v
 Bangladesh
90/5 (17 overs)
Ricardo Powell 88 (50)
Mohammad Ashraful 2/71 (9 overs)
Mohammad Ashraful 29 (25)
Vasbert Drakes 4/26 (8 overs)
No Result
MA Aziz Stadium, Chittagong
Umpires: AFM Akhtaruddin (BAN) and David Shepherd (ENG)
  • Bangladesh won the toss and elected to field

2nd ODI

2 December 2002 (D/N)
Scorecard
West Indies 
266/4 (50 overs)
v
 Bangladesh
182 (48 overs)
Ramnaresh Sarwan 102 (100)
Manjural Islam 1/20 (10 overs)
Mohammad Ashraful 44 (74)
Vasbert Drakes 4/18 (9 overs)
West Indies won by 84 runs
Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka
Umpires: Mahbubur Rahman (BAN) and David Shepherd (ENG)
Player of the match: Ramnaresh Sarwan (WI)
  • West Indies won the toss and elected to bat
  • ODI debut: Ehsanul Haqu (BAN)

3rd ODI

3 December 2002 (D/N)
Scorecard
West Indies 
281/5 (50 overs)
v
 Bangladesh
195/9 (50 overs)
Marlon Samuels 77 (101)
Sanwar Hossain 1/16 (3.3 overs)
Alok Kapali 89 (92)
Vasbert Drakes 4/33 (10 overs)
West Indies won by 86 runs
Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka
Umpires: AFM Akhtaruddin (BAN) and David Shepherd (ENG)
Player of the match: Vasbert Drakes (WIN)
  • West Indies won the toss and elected to bat
  • ODI debuts: Anwar Hossain (BAN), Daren Powell (WIN)

Test series

1st Test

8–12 December 2002
Scorecard
v
139 (54.1 overs)
Alok Kapali 52 (94)
Pedro Collins 5/26 (17.1 overs)
536 (160 overs)
Ramnaresh Sarwan 119 (228)
Talha Jubair 3/135 (31 overs)
87 (31.5 overs)
Hannan Sarkar 25 (29)
Jermaine Lawson 6/3 (6.5 overs)
West Indies won by an innings and 310 runs
Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka
Umpires: Dave Orchard (RSA) and David Shepherd (ENG)
Player of the match: Jermaine Lawson (WIN)
  • West Indies won the toss and elected to field.
  • Anwar Hossain (BAN) and Vasbert Drakes (WIN) made their debut in Tests.
  • Lawson's 6/3 off 6.5 overs was the second-most economical five-wicket haul in Tests.

2nd Test

26–30 December
Scorecard
v
194 (63.1 overs)
Sanwar Hossain 36 (63)
Daren Powell 3/51 (16 overs)
296 (93.3 overs)
Daren Ganga 63 (106)
Tapash Baisya 4/72 (21.3 overs)
212 (72 overs)
Alok Kapali 85 (111)
Daren Powell 3/36 (13 overs)
111/3 (21.3 overs)
Chris Gayle 37 (31)
Tapash Baisya 2/45 (9 overs)
West Indies won by 7 wickets
MA Aziz Stadium, Chittagong
Umpires: Dave Orchard (RSA) and David Shepherd (ENG)
Player of the match: Alok Kapali (BAN)
  • Bangladesh won the toss and elected to bat.

References

  1. ^ "West Indies in Bangladesh, Nov - Dec 2002 Match Schedule". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 14 April 2012.
  • v
  • t
  • e
International cricket tours of Bangladesh
Test and LOI tours
Afghanistan
Australia
England
India
Ireland
Kenya
New Zealand
Pakistan
Scotland
South Africa
Sri Lanka
West Indies
Zimbabwe
Tournaments hosted
World Cup
World Twenty20
Asia Cup
Multiple teams
Other tours
Bahraini
  • 2009–10
Danish
  • 1989–90
English
Hong Kong
  • 1983–84
  • 1994–95
Indian
  • 1985–86
Kenyan
  • 1994–95
Multi-national
  • 1999–2000
Pakistani
  • 1979–80
  • 1993–94
South African
  • 2010
Sri Lankan
United Arab Emirates
  • 2005–06
West Indian
Zimbabwean


Stub icon

This article on an international cricket tour of Bangladesh is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e