Some of the stranger reasons for stoppages of play, including animal invaders, bomb threats and gravy

Steven Lynch23-Jan-2019 • Updated on 09-Feb-2025Flying antsDuring the third T20I between South Africa and India in Centurion in 2024, play had to be stopped for about 30 minutes when flying ants invaded the ground. Batting first, India posted 219 for 6 but when the players came out for the second innings, they were greeted by an uninvited guest: the flying ants. Arshdeep Singh somehow waded through them and bowled the first over but the umpires realised it was not easy. Concerned that the ants may enter the players’ eyes, they decided to halt the game. The big screen at the ground read: “Play suspended due to flying ants interfering with play”. When the ants’ intensity reduced, the umpires had an inspection and gave an all-clear.BeesNot for the first time in a South Africa v Sri Lanka fixture, bees decided to make an appearance. With Sri Lanka tottering at 194 for 8 in a must-win game against a charged South African attack, there was calm, laughter, and a bit of a lie down for 9 and 10, Isuru Udana and Suranga Lakmal in the 48th over.The delay only lasted a few minutes though, the polite Durham bees seeing themselves off unlike the ones in Johannesburg in 2017, that had demanded expert intervention.”Eventually a professional was summoned. One man lived out what must be the dreams of many aspiring beekeepers in South Africa, when he walked to the middle of a packed Wanderers stadium in his trademark baggy whites, nervelessly placed down his plastic box full of honeycomb, and masterfully opened up the lid. Before long he had ensnared his quarry, probably to wild cheers and fans offering to give him their numbers. All up, the bees had spent about 65 minutes in the middle, which many noted, was more time than some Sri Lanka batsmen had managed.”Match officials wait for the sun to move in Napier•Getty ImagesSun strike
“In my 15 years as an umpire, I haven’t seen this before. But there’s a first time for everything”, said South African umpire Shaun George to the host broadcaster at Napier’s McLean Park after India’s batsmen walked off the field due to sunlight falling directly into Shikhar Dhawan’s eyes, obscuring his vision. It was one of the rare cases of an international match being delayed due to great weather, but there have been multiple precedents at the ground, most recently a domestic Super Smash game between Canterbury and Central Districts. The setting sun has, in the recent past, rendered the London Stadium unusable for cricket, while the pitch in Manchester’s Old Trafford was reoriented after multiple instances of sun stopping play during County Championship games.