*** India v Canada latest World Cup rain victim at wet Lauderhill | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

India v Canada latest World Cup rain victim at wet Lauderhill

AFP | Lauderhill, United States

The Daily Tribune – www.newsofbahrain.com

The ill-fated Florida leg of the T20 World Cup was hit by another abandoned match on Saturday with a wet outfield leading to the India and Canada game being called off.

Not a ball has been bowled at Broward County Stadium with all three scheduled games at the Florida venue abandoned due to rain. While there was little precipitation on Saturday the outfield remained wet in one troublesome corner of the field.

The umpires called the game off at 11.30 am local (15:30 GMT) -- an hour after the scheduled start with both teams shaking hands in front of the pavilion.

“The rest of the field was ok, it was just that corner,” said Canada coach Pubudu Dassanayake. “It was an officials’ call, both teams wanted to play and they worked really hard to get the game going but there are areas on the ground that have not improved from yesterday,” he added.

India had already qualified for the Super Eights stage of the competition while Canada were eliminated but the game still drew India fans keen to see their team.

“It was disappointing I think for fans but even for the team we were really looking forward to play a game and we were expecting better conditions, batting conditions,” said India batting coach Vikram Rathour.

“As a team I think it was important for us to get a game but again something that we can’t control, we don’t control. So, it’s unfortunate that we couldn’t get a game here,” he added. Rathour said there had been concerns about whether a game in wet conditions could have led to players getting hurt.

“There’s always a concern when you play a game in conditions like this that some injury can happen. You’re already in Super Eight and you don’t want that to happen.

That’s the last thing you want to happen before you enter the serious part of the tournament,” he said. After the excitement of the opening games in Dallas and then the big crowds in New York, the Florida leg of the tournament has been a disappointing wash-out.