World T20: Blackout at Eden Gardens Delays New Zealand-Bangladesh Match by 15 Minutes
Umpires Michael Gough and Johan Cloete led the teams off the field with Bangladesh precariously placed at 45 for six after 11 overs as they chased a consolation victory in the tournament.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: March 26, 2016 11:54 pm IST
![World T20: Blackout at Eden Gardens Delays New Zealand-Bangladesh Match by 15 Minutes](https://s.ndtvimg.com/images/content/2016/mar/806/new-zealand-vs-bangladesh-eden-gardens.jpg)
Highlights
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The High Court end towers went off after 11th over.
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Bad light the players left the field as it took about 15 minutes.
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New Zealand crushed Bangladesh by 75 runs.
The iconic Eden Gardens stadium was embarrassed due to a recurrence of a blackout when one of the four flood light towers went off, delaying the World T20 Super 10 match between New Zealand and Bangladesh by 15 minutes. (World T20: Kane Williamson, Ish Sodhi Guide New Zealand to Victory Over Bangladesh)
Just after Grant Elliott bowled the 11th over with Bangladesh reeling at 45/6 in their chase of 146, the High Court end towers went off, bringing back the memories of India-Sri Lanka ODI match way back on December 24, 2009.
With bad light the players left the field as it took about 15 minutes to restore the proceedings.
Incidentally, this is the same tower which had tripped on previous occasions.
The India-Sri Lanka match in the ODI series was held up for 23 minutes because of power failure in the same tower. In another incident during an IPL 2008 match of Deccan Chargers versus Kolkata Kinght Riders the play had to be stopped for 25 minutes.
What later followed was a blame game between the Cricket Association of Bengal (CAB) and the Calcutta Electric Supply Corporation and it remains to be seen what the administration led by former India captain Sourav Ganguly has to say about the mess in a world tournament.
Blackouts is a regular phenomenon at the gigantic football venue of Saltlake Stadium with the most embarrassing being the blackout during an India vs Japan pre-World cup match in 2005.