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Online exclusive: India wins the Cricket World Cup

India created World Cup history when it became the first host nation to win a Cricket World Cup. India defeated Sri Lanka by six wickets in the final of the Cricket World Cup in Mumbai. This was India’s second World Cup win in the one-day form of the game.

Meanwhile, back in Portland, international students from India pulled out all stops to see the match. The game was not televised in the United States, but this did not prevent the students from watching it through the early hours of Saturday morning on live streaming channels on the Internet.

“Electric, would be the word I would use to describe the atmosphere that night,” graduate student Sujit Reddy Kondaveeti, the vice president of the Indian Students Association said. “Everyone were shouting, screaming and cheering for every run we scored, hi-fi’s and hugs all around, no body moved from their places, not for a single bit. I don’t think there was ever a bigger match than this.”

Kondaveeti had checked out a projector and saw the game with 25 other cricket fans at his apartment. The students experienced raptures of ecstasy and jubilation when India finally hit the winning runs of the game.

Graduate student Rahulkumar Koche, who is also the event coordinator of the Indian Students Association said, “It was like a dream come true to me. I have no words to express my happiness when I saw the winning moment. Tears of happiness rolled down my eyes.”

Koche too had watched this game at home on a projector screen with a bunch of friends at home. “As an Indian, I am very proud of the Indian Cricket team. All the Indian students are very happy over India’s win in the World Cup that this makes us all very proud.”

Portland State’s Rec Club Council added Cricket to its arsenal of Rec Clubs last year. Cricket, often referred to as the gentlemen’s game, is the second most played game in the world, after soccer. It is popular in pockets of the globe ranging from Australia and New Zealand to England and the Caribbean.

The club is open to all Portland State students and a club fee of ten dollars is charged to utilize the club accessories, gear and training facilities.

 

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