CENTURION, South Africa — Jacques Rudolph struck a career-best 83 as the Nashua Titans began their Champions League Twenty20 campaign with a 39-run win over Perth Scorchers at SuperSport Park here Saturday. The Proteas batsman carried his bat in an innings that lasted 59 deliveries, including three sixes and nine fours, and shared in a superb 109-run opening stand with Henry Davids (54 off 38) to help the host post 163 for four. In reply, the Australian side never got going in the face of a polished bowling display, led by C.J. de Villiers' 3-16, and eventually ended on 124 for seven despite a lone fighting innings by Mitchell Marsh (52 off 41). Chargers out of IPL Indian Premier League side Deccan Chargers has been expelled from the tournament, the cricket board said Saturday, despite a last-ditch effort by the team owners to pull it back from the brink. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) said the termination of the franchise stands after Deccan Chronicle Holdings, owners of the team, failed to meet a Friday deadline to submit $19 million as guarantee money. The BCCI now is free to decide whether to float a new tender to replace the IPL franchise belonging to the financially strapped Deccan Chronicle, a media company, unless the team's owners opt to take the case to a higher court. The BCCI, which owns the popular IPL tournament, had terminated the Chargers last month over a series of violations including non-payment of player's fees, but the decision was challenged by the team owners in the Bombay High Court. The court appointed an arbitrator to hear the dispute and also asked the owners to pay up the guarantee money as a pre-condition of remaining in the tournament. The Deccan Chronicle, which bought the team for $107 million before the inaugural IPL in 2008, announced Friday it had agreed to sell the franchise to a Mumbai-based real estate company. The owners did not reveal how much the deal was worth but local media reports put the figure at around $190 million. But the Deccan Chronicle still failed to pay the guarantee money by the stipulated time and the court refused to extend the payment deadline. The franchise again approached the arbitrator who passed a “status quo order” late Friday. The BCCI appealed the arbitrator's order Saturday and the court ruled in favor of the BCCI. “The Honorable High Court was pleased to stay the order of the arbitrator after hearing both the parties. Thus, the termination of DC (Deccan Chargers) franchise stands,” BCCI secretary Sanjay Jagdale said in a statement. Among the leading players signed up by the franchise are Kumar Sangakkara of Sri Lanka, South African fast bowler Dale Steyn and Australian batsman Cameron White. — Agencies