Showing posts with label steel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steel. Show all posts

Saturday, August 24, 2013

CPL: Amazon Warriors trounce T&T Red Steel to reach final

Latest News

Friday, August 23, 2013 | 7:18 AM

PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad (CMC) — A thoroughly professional and clinical performance in the field and with the bat by the Guyana Amazon Warriors secured them a place in the finals of the inaugural Caribbean Professional League (CPL) after beating T&T Red Steel by seven wickets in the first semi-final played at the Queens Park Oval Thursday night. Red Steel were routed for 103 off 19.3 overs when sent in by the Warriors who then successfully chased down their target reaching 107-3 off 16.2 overs. Tillakaratne Dilshan, playing his first match of the League for the Warriors was named man of the match, striking 39 from 29 balls with three fours  and one six during the Warriors innings and picking up two wickets when the Red Steel batted for 14 runs off four overs.Ramnaresh Sarwan hoisted  Kevon Cooper for a boundary to mid wicket to finish undefeated on 18 while William Perkins, playing his first match of the competition scored 18 off 19 balls with three boundaries. Red Steel had their confidence lifted when Lendl Simmons was caught by Sulieman Benn pulling at Fidel Edwards for eight.Perkins was caught at extra cover by Samuel Badree miscuing a flick off Benn and Dilshan was deceived by a slower delivery from Cooper offering a tame return catch to the bowler. Sarwan and James Franklin came together to feature in an unbroken stand of 29 for the fourth wicket to steer the Amazon Warriors to the finals.When Red Steel batted they seemed to lose wickets in pairs — Adrian Barath and  Darren Bravo with the score on 32,  Kevon Cooper and Sulieman Benn at 101, Darren Bravo and Fidel Edwards on 103. Cooper, with two sixes in his knock, topscored with 27 of 17 balls before holding out to James Franklin at long on off Sunil Narine. Dwayne Bravo, who got a fighting 26 was also caught  by  Franklin  at deep cover off Lasith Malinga, another Sri Lankan getting a first taste of Caribbean Professional League cricket. Apart from Dilshan’s fine spell, the consistent Krishmar Santokie bagged two for 20 and Malinga ended with two for 18. The second semi-final will be played at the same venue Friday with Barbados Tridents facing the Jamaica Tallawahs.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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CPL: Amazon Warriors trounce T&T Red Steel to reach final

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Captain Bravo steers TT Red Steel to one-run win

Sport

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (CMC) — An impressive all-round performance from captain Dwayne Bravo steered the Trinidad and Tobago Red Steel to a thrilling one-run victory over the Antigua Hawksbills in their rain-affected CPL T20 match on Sunday night at Queens Park Oval.Chasing a revised target of 134 off 15 overs, the Hawksbills were restricted to 132 for eight, giving the Red Steel their second win of the tournament. The Red Steel, who had won the toss and opted to bat, scored 169 off 20 overs before rain caused the loss of 90 minutes of play and forced a Duckworth/Lewis revision of the target.The Hawksbills came close to pulling off a surprise win when they entered the last over needing 19 runs and with Jamaican Sheldon Cotterell in a dismissive mood. He smashed two sixes in the over, including clearing the fence off the last ball, but his midnight, heroics that included 19 off seven balls, were unable to produce a win for the Antiguan team.In his team’s innings, Bravo slammed 46 off 25 balls in sharing a 73-run fourth-wicket stand with his brother Darren Bravo (38) that propelled the Red Steel to a challenging total beyond 150.He then returned to capture two wickets for 14 runs and also held a catch to cheaply dismiss opposing captain Marlon Samuels. Bravo was fittingly named Man-of-the-Match.The Red Steel batsmen cleared the boundary five times, with four of the sixes coming from the bat of the captain as he gave the innings some critical momentum in the last six overs. The Red Steel smashed 101 off their last 10 overs in an aggressive display of power-hitting that put them in position to press for their second victory of the tournament.However, they were forced to get the opposition in check after a threatening start by West Indies and Hawksbills opener Johnson Charles, who smashed a boundary-studded 46 off 28 balls.Once Charles was bowled by a slower ball from Bravo, the Red Steel took a firm grip on the match, as the Hawksbills slipped from 41 for one in four overs to 85 for five by the 10th.Wickets fell regularly and the Hawksbills struggled late in the match but, with some late hitting from Australian Ben Roher (25) and Sheldon Cotterell, they managed to get into a position where the Red Steel were greatly bothered in the last over.Eight were needed from the last two balls bowled by seamer Delorn Johnson, but the Red Steel got over the hurdle inspite of the closing six from Cotterell.

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Captain Bravo steers TT
Red Steel to
one-run win

Monday, August 12, 2013

O"Brien steers TT Red Steel to first win

Sport

Sunday, August 11, 2013

PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad (CMC) — A half century from Irishman Kevin O’Brien and disciplined bowling from the Trinidad and Tobago Red Steel carried them to their first win in the CPL T20 tournament as they defeated Guyana Amazon Warriors by three runs at Queen’s Park Oval on Friday night.O’Brien hammered 70 off 47 balls in helping the Red Steel to post 159 off their 20 overs before their bowlers then restricted the Warriors to 156 for four to pull-off a narrow victory.In another last over decider, the Warriors needed 20 from six balls but fell just short despite the efforts of James Franklin (60 not out) and Christopher Barnwell (23 not out)who took them within striking distance. Kevon Cooper, with clever variations, managed to produce three dot balls in the final over that seemingly made the difference between victory and defeat.Following some less than impressive fielding, that allowed the Red Steel to put a challenging total on the board, the Amazon Warriors needed a good start from their openers but it never materialised.Paceman Fidel Edwards induced an edge from the in-form Lendl Simmons, in the third over with just 22 runs on the board, and soon the Warriors were 47 for three with opener Martin Guptil (6) and captain Ramnaresh Sarwan (4) also dismissed cheaply.The Warriors struggled in the middle overs before Pakistani T20 captain Mohammad Hafeez, with a fighting 35 off 38 balls, and some late hitting by New Zealander James Franklin gave them renewed hope.Franklin put on 31 for the fourth wicket with Hafeez and shared an unfinished fifth-wicket partnership of 78 with Barnwell that also most denied the Red Steel a victory.Captain Dwayne Bravo, who took two for 21 and wisely opted not to bowl at the death, seamer Kevon Cooper, left-arm spinner Sulieman Benn and young pacer Delorn Johnson all bowled well to keep the Warriors in check.Earlier when the Red Steel won the toss and opted to bat , Man-of-the-Match O’Brien posted an opening stand of 95 in 11.4 overs with Adrian Barath (29) and continued to dominate the bowling after Barath was caught behind.His half-century contained some massive sixes before he was second out, falling to an impressive diving catch by Hafeez. Ross Taylor gave the innings some late momentum as he scored 39 not out off 25 balls.Krismar Santokie took two for 25 for the Warriors before the Red Steel later held their nerve to register their first win.

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O"Brien steers TT Red Steel to first win

Monday, August 5, 2013

CPL: Al Hasan claims six as Barbados Tridents defeat TT Red Steel

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (CMC) — Bangladeshi all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan melted the Trinidad Red Steel with a sensational spell of left-arm bowling which set-up a four-wicket victory for Barbados Tridents in their CPL T20 match at Kensington Oval Saturday night.

Al Hasan grabbed six wickets for six runs in a four-over spell that mesmerised and crippled the opposition, before the Tridents were made to fight off  West Indies paceman Fidel Edwards , who took five for 22, and threatened to spoil their celebrations.Batting first after winning the toss, the Red Steel scored a less than adequate 52 off 12.5 overs. The Tridents wobbled and responded with 53 for six off eight overs.Edwards, with a lively burst of speed and accuracy, rattled the Trident’s top order as he picked up the wickets of openers Dwayne Smith (6) and Johnathan Cater (14) and middle-order batsmen Kyle Mayers (3), wicketkeeper Umar Akmal (0) and Shakib Al Hasan (1) before captain Keiron Pollard and Ashley Nurse stemmed the mid-pitch drama and guided the Tridents to their third win in three matches.Before an expectant capacity crowd, the Red Steel never showed signs of controlling the match. They seemed uninspired for the encounter and once openers Davy Jacobs and Justin Guillen were sent back with 15 runs on the board off three overs, wickets tumbled regularly as the Tridents ripped apart the opposition.They were 25 for three by the fifth over, with pacemen Jason Holder and Shannon Gabriel sharing the early wickets, before man-of-the match Al Hasan began his demolition job.Producing bounce and turn on a wicket that offered assistance, the left-arm spinner exposed the shortcomings of the opposing batsmen as they groped uncertainly and the Red Steel struggled to post 50 runs on the board.The last eight wickets perished for just 27 runs and the innings collapsed when Sulieman Benn lofted the fifth ball of Gabriel’s third over to Johnathan Carter.Chasing what appeared to be an easy target, the Tridents were off to a flying start as aggressive opener Johnathan Carter hit 14 off six balls, including two big sixes off left-arm spinner Sulieman Benn, but once he was sent back by Edwards, the Tridents struggled to close out the match.From 25 for one in the second over, the Tridents slipped to 39 for six in the sixth over, losing five wickets for the addition of 14 runs.Pollard and Nurse brought some stability to the innings and Nurse sealed the victory for the Tridents as he whipped the last ball of Edwards’ fourth over for a boundary.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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CPL: Al Hasan claims six as Barbados Tridents defeat TT Red Steel

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Carib Steel loses final appeal

UK Privy Council agrees with Court of Appeal, rules in favour of Price Waterhouse in alleged negligence case

THE UK Privy Council dismissed the defunct Caribbean Steel Company’s case against Price Waterhouse (PW) over alleged negligence in the accounting firm’s valuation of a company, which the maker of steel products bought in the mid-1990s.The 15-year-old legal battle ended yesterday, after the final court handed down its decision, which, among other things, stated that the way how PW approached the valuation of a surplus in the pension fund of Caribbean Cable Company — in which a majority stake was bought by Carib Steel — was not negligent.More specifically, it was decided that Carib Steel’s borrowings from the pension fund — up to $3.6 million by early 1995 — did not diminish the $13.8 million surplus included in PW’s evaluation.“They were receivables repayable on demand,” said the board of the Privy Council. “The board notes that it was not alleged that PW ought to have had doubts as to the company’s ability to pay on demand.”What’s more, yesterday’s decision said that “there is no reason to doubt that Carib Steel believed that the valuation was a reasonable one, but the purchase price did not represent any of PW’s bases of valuation”.Using three valuation methods, PW determined that Carib Cable could be valued at $43.5 million, if an estimated annual maintainable net earnings figure to which an appropriate multiplier of 6.5 was applied; $14.4 million, if the company was liquidated; and $48.3 million, if the company was able to expand into additional export markets, based on Carib Cable’s management forecast.Carib Steel entered into a non-binding agreement to buy a 50.1 per cent stake in Carib Cable for $32 million in late 1994 and engaged PW to conduct a valuation of the cable and wire-maker before going ahead with the transaction.“The purchase price was agreed prior to PW’s valuation and Carib Steel did not subsequently seek to adjust it,” said the Privy Council document published on its website. “It was significantly higher than PW’s estimate of the value of the shareholding in the company’s existing circumstances, but significantly less than its potential value after the injection of new working capital in order to develop new export markets.“That prospect must have provided the motivation for the purchase.”The accounting firm found that Carib Cable’s expansion, which was being funded by debt, had previously been stalled as a result of a workers strike combined with a drop in existing sales from the general uncertainty surrounding the elections in early 1993 and a delay in the budget of that year. As a result Carib Cable ended up in liquidity problems, where the company amassed indebtedness of almost $77 million by August 1994.In 1998, Carib Steel sued PW and claimed special damages of $38.4 million, which included the cost of acquisition of the shares and the fees paid to PW for the pre-acquisition valuation report and the post-acquisition audit.“The essence of the claim was that the value of the pension fund had been materially depleted by the company borrowing from it and that Carib Steel would have acted very differently if it had known of the borrowing prior to its acquisition of a majority shareholding,” said the Privy Council document.PW denied liability and counter-claimed $940,000 in respect of unpaid fees for auditing Carib Steel’s accounts for the year ended 31 March 1996.At first, Carib Steel actually got a favourable ruling in the Jamaican court.In mid-2006, the judge determined that the loss from the acquisition was the amount attributed by PW in its valuation to Carib Cable’s pension fund surplus — $13.8 million — and he awarded damages in that sum together with interest and costs.In 2011, the Court of Appeal of Jamaica set aside the original judgement and ruled for PW on the claim and counter-claim with interest and costs.“The court considered that the trial judge had not given satisfactory reasons for rejecting the evidence of PW’s expert and had been wrong to prefer the evidence of Carib Steel’s expert, who in the court’s view was lacking in relevant expertise,” the board added. “The court considered also that Carib Steel’s claim failed on causation of loss.”The Privy Council agreed with the Court of Appeal.“Set against the known bank indebtedness of almost $77 million in less than three years, for the reasons explained in PW’s valuation report, it is hard to see what difference an additional borrowing of $1.4 million over recent months would have made to Carib Steel’s decision whether to inject $32 million in return for 50.1 per cent of the equity,” said yesterday’s decision. “The board, therefore, agrees with the Court of Appeal’s conclusion that Carib Steel’s decision to invest that sum was not one for which it had shown that it could properly blame PW.”The parties will have 28 days in which to lodge written submissions about the order to be made for the costs of the proceedings before the Privy Council, which will otherwise be that Carib Steel must pay PW’s costs.

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Carib Steel loses final appeal