The National - News

Brown wants UAE’s ‘journey to continue’ after dejection

- PAUL RADLEY

Dougie Brown has urged the UAE players to bounce back stronger from the dejection they feel at missing out on playing at a home Asia Cup.

Hong Kong, rather than UAE, will enter a group containing India and Pakistan at the event in Dubai next week, after beating the national team in the final of the qualifier in Malaysia on Thursday.

While the UAE’s leading players have opportunit­ies to look forward to in franchise, short-format cricket in the coming weeks, the immediate future for the national team is suddenly bare.

Rohan Mustafa, Ahmed Raza and Mohammed Naveed are among many UAE players listed in the draft for the Afghanista­n Premier League T20, which takes place in Dubai today.

While that is a distractio­n, it is unlikely to greatly diminish the disappoint­ment felt by the players after the tournament in Kuala Lumpur.

“While it is hurting at the moment, we have a hell of a lot to look forward to,” coach Brown said.

“The journey we have been on for the past few months has been a ridiculous­ly positive one. That needs to continue. We need to make sure that what we are feeling at the moment we don’t feel too regularly.

“When you have lost by a really small margin, when you have fought so hard to win the game, it is gut-wrenching. We just need to keep working hard individual­ly and as a team.”

Brown also believes the game’s administra­tors need to look into an alteration to the Duckworth-Lewis-Stern method employed in ran-affected matches.

The national team saw their total of 176-9 revised up by just two runs after their innings in the final was reduced to 24 overs – only after they had faced 15.2 overs already.

“I thought the whole idea of Duckworth-Lewis was to stop these rain mismatches happening,” Brown said.

“To be credited with an extra two runs, having set your stall out to bat the 50 overs and having the majority of your innings to be at a 50-over tempo, to be adjusted by two runs, I thought was incredibly harsh, and not in keeping with the modern game.”

Hong Kong lost their one-day internatio­nal status after failing to make the second round of the World Cup Qualifier in March.

However, it has been confirmed their matches against India and Pakistan at the Asia Cup will have full-ODI recognitio­n. “Any opportunit­y to play against a Full member nation is always exciting,” Simon Cook, the Hong Kong team coach, said.

“The gap between the Full member nations and the top Associates is closing. You just have to look at the Scotland v England game recently to see that on any given day a top Associate can compete with a Full member.

“We are fortunate to be part of the ACC which allows us the opportunit­y to come up against Full member teams more often, in tournament­s such as the Asia Cup.”

When you have lost by a really small margin, when you have fought so hard to win the game, it is gutwrenchi­ng DOUGIE BROWN UAE coach

 ?? ACC ?? UAE lost in the final of the Asia Cup Qualifier to Hong Kong in Malaysia last week, thus missing out on the chance to rub shoulders with India and Pakistan in Group A of the main tournament
ACC UAE lost in the final of the Asia Cup Qualifier to Hong Kong in Malaysia last week, thus missing out on the chance to rub shoulders with India and Pakistan in Group A of the main tournament

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