Afghanistan's victory over Ireland in the fourth One-Day
International (ODI), enabling them to take an unassailable 2-1 lead in
the five-match series, has been sullied by a reprimand handed to
Mohammad Nabi for a breach of ICC code of conduct, on Tuesday (July 17).
The
charges on Nabi were levied by Alan Neill and Chettithody Shamshuddin,
the on-field umpires, and Royl Black, third umpire, after the
Afghanistan ex-skipper was found guilty of violating Level 1 Article
2.1.1 of the ICC Code of Conduct for Players and Player Support
Personnel which relates to "conduct that is contrary to the spirit of
the game"
During Ireland's chase of 230 on
Sunday, Ed Joyce was dismissed in a controversial manner in the sixth
over, after the batsman had dispatched the ball towards extra cover
fence and stopped mid-way through, assuming the ball had crossed the
boundary. Much to Joyce's chagrin, Nabi, the fielder in the deep,
retrieved the ball with a diving effort and threw it back to the
non-striker's end where Yamin Ahmedzai whipped off the bails.
The
umpires asked Asghar Stanikzai, the Afghanistan captain, to backtrack
his appeal but he refused, sending a miffed Joyce on his way back. Later
on, photographic evidence revealed that Nabi was well past the boundary
line while fielding the ball.
The early exit of a
batsman in form made a telling impact on Ireland's chase, as they
folded for 150, 79 runs short of Afghanistan's total. Barry Chambers,
the Irish team's media manager, had taken to twitter to vent out his
anger at the turn of events. Nabi admitted to his offence and accepted
ICC's sanction.

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