With four weeks to go before the start of the Cricket World Cup, the Herald lists the stories that have defined the tournament.
No 5: South Africa robbed
Anyone complaining about the mathematically complex but inherently fair Duckworth-Lewis Method to resolve rain-affected matches need only look to the 1992 World Cup to see why it exists.
South Africa required 22 runs from 13 deliveries to beat England when Sydney's skies opened for an estimated 12 minutes. The playing conditions said any reduction in target was proportionate to the lowest-scoring overs of the side batting first to take into account 'the benefits' of chasing.
Thus 22 off 13 was reduced to 22 off one and then, in what seemed a cruel gag, 21 off one because a rogue leg bye hadn't been accounted for.