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Sri Lankan cricket team struggle to breathe in New Delhi due to air pollution

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Pollution stops play at Delhi Test match as bowlers struggle to breathe
Sri Lanka say conditions in smog-hit Indian capital left players vomiting, and some of them took to field wearing face masks




Sri Lanka’s players wear anti-pollution masks during the match in Delhi. Photograph: Altaf Qadri/AP
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Michael Safi in Delhi

@safimichael
Sunday 3 December 2017 15.47 GMTLast modified on Monday 4 December 2017 01.15 GMT

A cricket Test match between India and Sri Lanka was repeatedly interrupted on Sunday with claims players were “continuously vomiting” due to hazardous pollution levels in the Indian capital.

Commentators said it was the first recorded instance of an international match being halted due to the toxic smog that afflicts much of north India year-round but worsens to hazardous levels during winter months.

Airborne pollution levels 15 times the World Health Organisation limits confronted players on the second day of the third Test at the Feroz Shah Kotla stadium in Delhi on Sunday.

As the haze worsened, many Sri Lankan players returned from lunch wearing face masks before complaining to umpires, who halted play for 20 minutes to consult with team doctors and match officials.

The match resumed but was interrupted twice more as bowlers Lahiru Gamage and Suranga Lakmal left the field mid-over with breathing difficulties.

“We had players coming off the field and vomiting,” the Sri Lanka coach Nic Pothas told reporters after the match.

“There were oxygen cylinders in the change room. It’s not normal for players to suffer in that way while playing the game.”


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A paramedic speaks to Sri Lanka’s Lahiru Gamage after he complained of shortness of breath. Photograph: Altaf Qadri/AP
Pothas said Lakmal was “continuously vomiting” in the changing room. “I think it’s the first time that everybody has come across that situation,” he said.

“There aren’t too many rules regarding pollution. What we are going to do tomorrow is in the hands of the match referee. They will have meetings tonight to put in some sort of a precedent if it happens like this tomorrow.”

The Indian bowler Kuldeep Yadav was also seen sporting a face mask as he brought drinks to teammates on the field.

Umpires were awaiting Lakmal’s return to the field when the Indian skipper, Virat Kohli, elected to declare with his side cruising on 536 runs with three wickets in hand.

The interruptions drew boos from the crowd for Sri Lanka’s opening batsmen as they made their way to the crease, where they played without masks.

The acting president of India’s cricket board was also unimpressed and said he would write to his Sri Lankan counterpart about the incident.

“If 20,000 people in the stands did not have problems and the Indian team did not face any issue, I wonder why the Sri Lankan team made a big fuss?” CK Khanna said.

It is the latest professional-grade match in Delhi to be affected by air pollution after two matches in the domestic Ranji Trophy tournament were abandoned in the city when it was engulfed in smog in November 2016.

Some Indian fans accused the Sri Lankan side of being melodramatic but the cricket writer Ayaz Memon said the episode sent an “unedifying message” about pollution in the city.


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Sri Lanka’s captain Dinesh Chandimal fields in a mask. Photograph: Altaf Qadri/AP
Schools were shut and doctors declared a public health emergency in Delhi last month as pollution levels spiked to levels 40 times the WHO safe limits, likened to smoking at least 50 cigarettes in a day.

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United Airlines briefly halted flights into the capital and foreign diplomats voiced fears the city could become a “non-family” posting due to the polluted environment.

Doctors warn against physical activity in the smog but around 30,000 runners still participated in an annual half-marathon in the city in November.

Delhi officials have been accused of not preparing for what has become an annual crisis each winter, while the Indian government has played down the urgency and health risks associated with the problem.

The extremely poor air in the city is the result of a combination of road dust, open fires, vehicle exhaust fumes, industrial emissions and the burning of crop residues in neighbouring states. Indian weather agencies also blame dust stormsthat originate in the Gulf.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...lhi-test-match-as-bowlers-struggle-to-breathe

India cricket test players battle on through thick New Delhi smog

By Kelly Murray and Sugam Pokharel, CNN



Updated 0713 GMT (1513 HKT) December 4, 2017






Sri Lanka's cricket team wears anti-pollution masks as they play the second day of their third test match in New Delhi, on Sunday December 3.
Story highlights
  • Sri Lanka coach says players were vomiting as pollution levels soared
  • India coach says his team wasn't too bothered by the smog

New Delhi (CNN)Test cricketers from Sri Lanka and India have resumed play Monday despite soaring air pollution levels that left players vomiting and struggling to breathe.

The second day of the international match was halted three times Sunday as a thick blanket of smog descended on Delhi's Feroz Shah Kotla Stadium.

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Then, the Air Quality Index (AQI) was over 200, which is considered "very unhealthy." On Monday morning it was around twice that, what's considered "hazardous," according to the AQI.
New Delhi residents have endured dense smog for weeks now that's prompted school closures, partial bans on private cars and a surge in patients at hospitals complaining of chest pain, breathlessness and burning eyes.
171204111322-delhi-cricket-match-sri-lanka-india-pollution-02-exlarge-169.jpg


Captain of Sri Lanka's cricket team, Dinesh Chandimal wears an anti-pollution mask during the cricket match in New Delhi on Sunday, December 3.
After Sunday's game in the five-day test, Sri Lankan coach Nic Pothas said some players had become physically ill.
"The match referee was in our change room and the doctors, and Suranga (Lakmal), poor guy, was just continuously vomiting. Doctors were in there as well. Dhananjaya de Silva was vomiting. It was tough," Pothas said, referring to two of the players.

The third time play stopped was because Sri Lankan fast bowler Lakmal walked off the field.
"I mean fast bowling is a very high intensity activity, and you could clearly see that two guys were struggling to perform that activity," Pothas said.
The match referee was seen getting advice from the doctor, but nevertheless, the game went on, with the majority of the Sri Lankan players resorting to wearing anti-pollution face masks.
171204144906-new-delhi-smog-041217-exlarge-169.jpg


An Indian woman and her child walk amid heavy smog on a street in New Delhi on December 4, 2017.
Flood lights had to be switched on because light readings were so low.
Bharat Arun, India's bowling coach, seemed to downplay the poisonous conditions, saying they weren't too bothered by it. He noted that captain Virat Kohli, who struck a career-best 243, batted for two days without a face mask.
"He didn't need a mask. We are focused on what we need to do. The conditions are the same for both the teams... I don't think we need to be thinking about what the opposition does. It's their problem to keep their bowlers fit," he said in response to reporters' questions about the pollution.
Kohli declared the innings on 536 shortly after the match was halted. Match commentators said that could have been because the game was being constantly stopped.
"Our intention was not to halt the play. We wanted to seek clarity of the situation... Safety of our bowlers and our players is paramount," Pothas explained. "The high level of air pollution in Delhi was well-documented, but what happened was a unique and abnormal case. It was not normal the way our players suffered."
171204111931-delhi-cricket-match-sri-lanka-india-pollution-03-exlarge-169.jpg


Officiating umpire Nigel Llong, third from right, addresses Sri Lanka's players wearing masks, during a brief break on Sunday's match.
In cricket, there aren't a lot of rules regarding pollution. The decision of whether to go on is ultimately up to the match referee.
Conditions aren't expected to improve any time soon; pollution levels are expected to remain high until winter ends.
Temperatures are forecast to remain in the low-20s (mid-70s Farenheit) this week with little to no wind and no chance of rain, according to CNN's weather team.

http://edition.cnn.com/2017/12/04/sport/cricket-delhi-pollution-intl/
 
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Even i would struggle to breathe if i played that badly. And considering 2 sri lankans scored century in delhi i suggest sri lankan board to make sure their batsmen breathe this delhi air in their future tours to save them from embarrassing defeats in future series.
 
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Even i would struggle to breathe if i played that badly. And considering 2 sri lankans scored a century in delhi i suggest sri lankan board to make sure their batsmen breathe this delhi air in their future tours to save them from embarrassing defeats in future series.

You do realize that the match was played in extremely toxic levels? Pollution was off the charts last month!
Its a major health hazard to hold sports events in such conditions


Capture.JPG
 
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You do realize that the match was played in extremely toxic levels? Pollution was off the charts last month!
Its a major health hazard to hold sports events in such conditions


View attachment 440708
Hows last month relevant to today? Anyway this is the best outing sri lankan team had in entire series when it comes to batting. I suggest u guys fill truck load of delhi air to make sure your pathetic team perform better in future series.
 
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I would say they should abandon the match even if they have to pay a fine and for some clean place and spend some days before resuming to play in another venue...though they shouldn't be fined because playing in such hazardous conditions in not part of their agreement.
 
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I would say they should abandon the match even if they have to pay a fine and for some clean place and spend some days before resuming to play in another venue...though they shouldn't be fined because playing in such hazardous conditions in not part of their agreement.
Kindly tell this to pcb they r begging for a series in india. Kindly advice them to save their fefde be it smog in delhi or shouting while begging for a bilateral series.
 
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Hows last month relevant to today? Anyway this is the best outing sri lankan team had in entire series when it comes to batting. I suggest u guys fill truck load of delhi air to make sure your pathetic team perform better in future series.
You are really disgrace to your country. People can't breath properly because of pollution in that city and you are here to tell us how great your cricket match performance was?
 
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Living next to India is horrendous, all the air pollution and rancid stench of India effect Pakistan too, the further from the border you get the cleaner it is
Feel sorry for pakistani punjabis.
 
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Hows last month relevant to today? Anyway this is the best outing sri lankan team had in entire series when it comes to batting. I suggest u guys fill truck load of delhi air to make sure your pathetic team perform better in future series.
You do realize the match was played in hazardous conditions and pretty much everywhere says it, yet the Indian authorities letting a sports event happen and putting the players at extreme risks is gross negligence regardless of the excuse. The performance of the game is irrelevant
You are being extremely thickheaded and in denial of the Delhi Government's sheer negligence for putting the health of SL players in danger.



Why Hold Match In Such Poor Air, Green Court Questions Delhi Government
A bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice Swatanter Kumar took exception over the failure of the AAP government to file a report on rising air pollution in Delhi despite its specific order.
Delhi | Press Trust of India | Updated: December 04, 2017 14:54 IST

by Taboola
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lanka-players-masks-bcci_806x605_71512286648.jpg


Sri Lanka players were seen wearing masks during the Sunday match.

The National Green Tribunal today came down heavily on the Delhi government for not filing a comprehensive action plan on ways to deal with severe air pollution in the city and slammed authorities for holding the India-Sri Lanka cricket match despite bad air quality.

A bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice Swatanter Kumar took exception over the failure of the AAP government to file the report despite its specific order.


During the hearing, the Delhi government said it needed more time to file the action plan as the chief secretary and environment secretary have been recently changed.

The tribunal, however, directed the government to file the report within the next 48 hours.

"Where is your action plan? Why have you not submitted it? What can we do if you keep on changing everybody? It's not our problem if people don't want to stick to you.

"You keep on doing meetings but tell us a single action or step you have taken in the last four days to combat air pollution," the bench said.

It said that the pollution in the city has already reached alarming levels yet the government was adopting a "lackadaisical" approach in dealing with the situation.


The green panel was also irked by the authorities for conducting the third Test between Sri Lanka and India on Sunday, which was disrupted due to the choking smog.



The Sri Lankan cricket team had complained of poor air quality that forced India to declare their innings.

"Every newspaper has been carrying headline that the air pollution was going to be higher this week. Still you took no action. Even the players were playing match wearing masks. You should have not held the match if the air quality was so bad.

Are people of Delhi supposed to bear this?" the bench said.

The tribunal also pulled up the city government for not introducing odd-even car rationing scheme at this point of time when the air quality is severe.

"You want exemptions for two-wheelers but you don't apply your mind that these 60 lakh vehicles cause the maximum pollution," it said.

It also said that despite stating before the tribunal that 4,000 buses would be introduced to decongest the city roads, the city government has not a single bus even after three years of assurance.

The tribunal had on November 28 asked the AAP government and four neighbouring states- Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan to submit an action plan on tackling pollution.

It had earlier directed the Central Pollution Control Board, Delhi Pollution Control Committee and every state pollution control boards to file ambient air quality analysis before the tribunal on monthly basis and also put up on their websites to enable the concerned authority to take effective steps to control air pollution.

https://www.ndtv.com/delhi-news/aft...ourt-slams-delhi-government-over-smog-1783310
 
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You are really disgrace to your country. People can't breath properly because of pollution in that city and you are here to tell us how great your cricket match performance was?
Spare your feelz for pakistanis heard they didnt enjoyed that much in lahore either.
 
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A new type of Delhi Belly.

:rofl::omghaha:
So the lankans saw the humiliation ahead. They couldn't get the wickets of Indians then they started to complain like a teen ...

They didn't want another humiliation like the second match..:omghaha:
 
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You do realize the match was played in hazardous conditions and pretty much everywhere says it, yet the Indian authorities letting a sports event happen and putting the players at extreme risks is gross negligence regardless of the excuse. The performance of the game is irrelevant
You are being extremely thickheaded and in denial of the Delhi Government's sheer negligence for putting the health of SL players in danger.



Why Hold Match In Such Poor Air, Green Court Questions Delhi Government
A bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice Swatanter Kumar took exception over the failure of the AAP government to file a report on rising air pollution in Delhi despite its specific order.
Delhi | Press Trust of India | Updated: December 04, 2017 14:54 IST

by Taboola
Sponsored Links

Sponsored
This 17-year-old's Body Cannot Prevent Bleeding From Even A Small Bruise In Her Body (Milaap.org)
15 Foods That Combat Diabetes (drhealth)


8SHARES
2COMMENTS
lanka-players-masks-bcci_806x605_71512286648.jpg


Sri Lanka players were seen wearing masks during the Sunday match.

The National Green Tribunal today came down heavily on the Delhi government for not filing a comprehensive action plan on ways to deal with severe air pollution in the city and slammed authorities for holding the India-Sri Lanka cricket match despite bad air quality.

A bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice Swatanter Kumar took exception over the failure of the AAP government to file the report despite its specific order.


During the hearing, the Delhi government said it needed more time to file the action plan as the chief secretary and environment secretary have been recently changed.

The tribunal, however, directed the government to file the report within the next 48 hours.

"Where is your action plan? Why have you not submitted it? What can we do if you keep on changing everybody? It's not our problem if people don't want to stick to you.

"You keep on doing meetings but tell us a single action or step you have taken in the last four days to combat air pollution," the bench said.

It said that the pollution in the city has already reached alarming levels yet the government was adopting a "lackadaisical" approach in dealing with the situation.


The green panel was also irked by the authorities for conducting the third Test between Sri Lanka and India on Sunday, which was disrupted due to the choking smog.



The Sri Lankan cricket team had complained of poor air quality that forced India to declare their innings.

"Every newspaper has been carrying headline that the air pollution was going to be higher this week. Still you took no action. Even the players were playing match wearing masks. You should have not held the match if the air quality was so bad.

Are people of Delhi supposed to bear this?" the bench said.

The tribunal also pulled up the city government for not introducing odd-even car rationing scheme at this point of time when the air quality is severe.

"You want exemptions for two-wheelers but you don't apply your mind that these 60 lakh vehicles cause the maximum pollution," it said.

It also said that despite stating before the tribunal that 4,000 buses would be introduced to decongest the city roads, the city government has not a single bus even after three years of assurance.

The tribunal had on November 28 asked the AAP government and four neighbouring states- Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan to submit an action plan on tackling pollution.

It had earlier directed the Central Pollution Control Board, Delhi Pollution Control Committee and every state pollution control boards to file ambient air quality analysis before the tribunal on monthly basis and also put up on their websites to enable the concerned authority to take effective steps to control air pollution.

https://www.ndtv.com/delhi-news/aft...ourt-slams-delhi-government-over-smog-1783310
Are people on sri lankan board stupid who agreed for the venue without checking first? Stop whinning and please explain why only in delhi your batsmen performed?
 
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