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Sultana leads the way as Bangladesh draw level with Super-Over victory

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[File photo] Nigar Sultana held Bangladesh's innings together with 54 off 104 balls ( pic Asian Cricket Council)

A tense Super-Over victory at the Shere Bangla National Stadium kept Bangladesh alive in their three-match ODI series against Pakistan. Captain Nigar Sultana was Bangladesh’s match-winner with the bat, scoring the game’s only half-century before hitting the winning boundary in the Super Over.

Chasing eight to win the one-over eliminator, Bangladesh needed two off the last ball, with Sultana on strike for the first time after Sobhana Mostary had been stumped off  Nashra Sandhu’s bowling. Sultana stepped out and lofted Sandhu over mid-off for four, bringing the series scoreline to 1-1 with the third and final ODI to be played on Friday.

Having chosen to bat first, Bangladesh were in a solid position at 92 for 2 in the 32nd over, with Fargana Hoque having put on 49 for the third wicket with Sultana. Hoque’s run-out dismissal, however, sparked a slump, with Bangladesh losing seven wickets while scoring just 77 runs off the last 18.1 overs of their innings. Sultana was ninth out, in the final over, having scored 54 off 104 balls. Left-arm spinners Sandhu and Sadia Iqbal were Pakistan’s most successful bowlers with two wickets apiece.

Pakistan’s chase got off to a strong start with Sadaf Shamas and Sidra Ameen putting on 41, but both openers fell in the 20s. It was a sign of things to come: in all, five Pakistan batters got into the 20s but none of them got to 30, as Bangladesh chipped away at the wickets, legspinner Rabeya Khan leading the way with 3 for 29.

In a match of small margins, Bangladesh batted through their 50 overs as well as all six balls of their Super Over, while Pakistan were bowled out in 49.5 overs and lost both their Super-Over wickets with one ball still remaining. The match went into a tiebreaker after Sandhu was run out while trying to take the winning single in the last over of normal play, bowled by Fahima Khatun.

Brief scores:
Bangladesh 169 for 9 in 50 overs (Nigar Sultana 54, Fargana Hoque  40, Nashra Sandhu 2-27, Sadia Iqbal 2-32) tied with Pakistan 169 (Sadaf Shamas 29, Sidra Ameen 22, Aliya Riyaz 21, Nida Dar 27, Najitha Alvi 22;  Rabeya Khan 3-29) – Bangladesh won by one-over eliminator

 



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Sri Lanka women rue missed opportunities

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With two Player of the Match awards, Nilakshika Silva was the standout performer during the women's T20 World Cup. Not too often Sri Lankan players outperform their captain

Sri Lanka’s women flew home from Manchester yesterday reflecting on what might have been after a semi-final place slipped through their fingers by the narrowest of margins. Sri Lanka and West Indies both finished on six points with three wins apiece, but the Caribbean side progressed thanks to a superior net run rate.

Much of the soul searching centred on those fateful 90 minutes in Bristol. Having lost a crucial toss on a green top and been asked to bat first, Sri Lanka got their approach horribly wrong. Instead of weathering the new ball storm, they went on the offensive, losing their top three inside the first two overs and effectively conceding the contest. West Indies later struggled to chase down the modest target, suggesting that a more measured approach might have yielded a very different outcome. Hindsight, however, is always a wonderful thing.

One of Sri Lanka’s proudest achievements was knocking defending champions New Zealand out of the tournament. It was their first ever victory over the White Ferns in a Women’s T20 World Cup and one of the biggest upsets of the competition.

Missing out on a semi-final also meant missing out on a lucrative prize purse of USD 800,000, the equivalent of around USD 50,000 for each member of the squad.

While there were plenty of regrets, this was nevertheless Sri Lanka’s finest campaign at a Women’s World Cup. More importantly, by finishing among the top three in the group they secured automatic qualification for the 2028 Women’s T20 World Cup, which will be hosted by Pakistan.

Captain Chamari Atapattu led from the front, producing a memorable campaign highlighted by the first century by a Sri Lankan at a Women’s T20 World Cup. However, her fellow top-order batters Vishmi Gunaratne and Harshitha Samarawickrama failed to make the expected impact, with Vishmi eventually losing her place for the final two matches.

Nilakshika de Silva was outstanding, producing match-winning knocks against New Zealand and Scotland while excelling in the field with some exceptional catching. On this occasion, she even outshone her captain, something that does not happen very often.

Among the emerging talents, two youngsters caught the eye. Fast bowler Mithali Ayodha impressed with her lively sling arm action and ability to generate pace, while Kaushani Nuthyangana was a bundle of energy behind the stumps, displaying sharp glovework and infectious enthusiasm throughout the tournament.

Rex Clementine in Manchester

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Zafar, Feroza lead Pakistan to consolation win

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Gull Feroza and Ayesha Zafar shared a 79-run stand [Cricinfo]

Pakistan won the basement battle against Netherlands in a low-scoring game, with Gull Feroza’s half-century inspiring them to a 37-run win. In a low-scoring contest where momentum ebbed and flowed, Feroza held the first innings together to put on 126 for Pakistan, their joint-highest score this tournament.

Netherlands appeared on course initially with a bright start from Heather Siegers, but lost their way dramatically after she was dismissed as Pakistan squeezed them through spin. The last seven wickets fell for just 13 runs, with Fatima Sana returning to the attack to apply the coup de grace, knocking back the stumps three times in the final over to send Netherlands’ last three batters on their way as they folded for 89.

Pakistan won the toss and opted to bat, recovering from an uninspiring start thanks to a 79-run second-wicket stand between Feroza and Ayesha Zafar. But the Netherlands hit back through Silver Siegers and Iris Zwilling, the latter arguably the pick of the Netherlands attack. They triggered a Pakistani collapse which saw them lose 5 wickets for 24 runs, including the early loss of Sana, who had promoted herself up to four, her highest T20I batting position. It pegged Pakistan back from what had looked like a score in excess of 140 to one Netherlands genuinely fancied chasing.

Heather Siegers breezy start meant it was the Netherlands who looked as if they might pip Pakistan, but there wasn’t much to back her up after Diana Baig sent her on her way. Pakistan’s spinners asphyxiated the Dutch, and as the asking rate ballooned, the Netherlands began to shrink away. It was, in the end, a tame capitulation from a Dutch side that promised so much more for the best part of this game.

Feroza stands tall

Trying to remain oblivious to the bedlam all around is among Pakistan cricket’s more challenging tasks, but Gull Feroza managed exactly that. With Pakistan managing only a sedate start and suffering the early loss of Muneeba Ali, Feroza put on a 79-run partnership with Ayesha Zafar. She was the more aggressive partner through that second-wicket stand, particularly after the halfway mark.

The attack was launched with a couple of nifty boundaries off Hannah Landheer in the tenth over, and another pair against Heather Siegers in the one that followed. Between the tenth and 14th overs, Pakistan enjoyed their best spell with the bat, smashing 36 in four. Though a collapse would soon follow, they had, thanks to Feroza, built up just about enough of a buffer to give their bowlers breathing space.

The review that almost wasn’t

Netherlands made an inspired start against South Africa on Thursday, and were aware anything close to that would virtually guarantee victory in pursuit of 127 today. Heather Siegers began threatening just that racing along to 24 in 15 with the side racking up 31 in the first 20 balls. But Diana Baig came back from being smashed for two boundaries off her first two balls strongly, in perhaps the most consequential moment of the match.

Siegers missed an attempted steer into the onside, and it hit her high on the pad. The umpire was quick to turn down Pakistan’s half-hearted appeal, but Sana reviewed at the last moment, and Hawk-Eye spat out three reds. Netherlands brightest spark was gone, and they never recovered that position of strength in the game again.

Pakistan’s spinners overrun Netherlands

Once Siegers departed, a thin layer of pressure appeared to descend on the Dutch, one they could never quite shrug off. The following over saw a hare-brained attempt at a single end up in a run-out thanks to a direct hit from Eyman Fatima. A Sana over aside, Pakistan turned almost exclusively to spin, rushing through their overs and watching the asking rate pile up. Nashra Sandhu was most effective at stifling the batters, maintaining a tight line that gave nothing away. She would end up registering figures of 3-0-8-1 through the middle, with the Netherlands managing just 23 in seven overs since Siegers’ dismissal.

Scores:
Pakistan Women 126 for 6 in 20 overs  (Muneeba Ali 12, Gull Feroza 63*, Ayesha Zafar 32; Iris Zwilling 2-19, Heather Siegers 1-28, Hannah Landheer 1-19, Caroline de Lange 1-24, Silve Seigers 1-17) beat Netherlands Women  89 all out in 18 overs (Babette de Leede 30, Steere Kalis 12; Fatima Sana 3-12, Diana Baig 1-11, Nashra Sandhu 1-08, Ayesha Zafar 3-13) by 37 runs

[Cricinfo]

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Jangoo 233, Chase 194 put West Indies in commanding position

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Amir Jangoo turned his maiden Test ton into a mammoth 223 [Cricinfo]

Amir Jangoo amassed 233, RostonChase hit 194, and through a record-breaking 401-run partnership, the pair slow-roasted Sri Lanka on day three in Antigua. Their gargantuan stand delivered West Indies to a position of extraordinary strength, securing them a 318-run first innings lead. That in the four overs they got to bowl at Sri Lanka, West Indies dismissed the dangerous Pathum Nissanka, and created other chances, buoying them further heading into day four.

Jangoo and Chase now not only have the highest sixth wicket stand in the history of Test cricket, they also have the second highest partnership for West Indies, behind only Garfield Sobers and Conrad Hunte. Both batters improved on their previous first-class high scores, Chase easily beating his 137 not out, and Jangoo surpassing his domestic 218.

That Jangoo produced a knock of such astonishing concentration, and expansive range, in just his third Test innings was especially impressive. Until he got out attempting to accelerate about midway through the last session, his innings was largely chanceless. He batted 373 deliveries on his own, and he and Chase batted 100.2 overs, seeing out three complete sessions together. Though they had begun slowly, both batters sped up through the day and were finding boundaries off both the quicks and spinners through the second and third sessions of the day.

Sri Lanka’s attack found the pitch utterly docile for most of day three. They were missing their fastest quick Lahiru Kumara, who went off the field with a hamstring niggle early the previous day. Their quicks were earnest in the first hour, but once Jangoo and Chase saw out the second new ball (the ball was four overs old when day three began) with a period of disciplined batting, Sri Lanka’s quicks lost some venom, and captain Dhananjaya de Silva went increasingly to his spinners – Sonal Dinusha in particular.

The one exception for Sri Lanka was Milan Rathnayaka, who was intense in each of his day three spells, and created chances even in a dreary second session, having Chase dropped by a diving wide slip for 108. Later in the day, it would be Rathnayaka who would break the enormous stand, and would go on to complete a well-deserved five-wicket haul, finishing with 5 for 124. Dinusha, the left-arm spinning allrounder, conceded 234 runs himself in this innings, though he did also pick up two wickets, including that of Chase.

Patience had defined Jangoo and Chase’s batting in the first hour. Jangoo, for example, didn’t score off the first 15 deliveries he faced on day three, while Chase was only marginally less defensive. When conditions began to ease after the first hour, however, they began to slip into more fluent modes of operation. In the afternoon session, when the pair really propelled West Indies into the ascendancy, they plundered 136 runs at a rate of more than five an over. Jangoo was especially strong square of the wicket on the offside and down the ground. Chase was excellent through the covers. Jangoo, additionally, would sometimes tonk the spinners over the straight boundary.

Right through the day the pair would notch up milestones – both for themselves, and the partnership. The milestone that drew the most raucous celebration came soon after tea, when Jangoo completed his double with a sweep through square leg, leaping in the air as he took off for the run. Although only hundreds were in attendance, the house was on its feet for him, coach Daren Sammy and the West Indies dressing room giving him an especially warm ovation. Having come into the XI only as a replacement player for the injured Shai Hope, Jangoo has essentially made himself undroppable for the second Test.

After tea the pair took the scoring up even one further gear, Jangoo hitting some memorable sixes over square leg, while Chase continued to drive powerfully. Jangoo was out attempting to repeat a pulled six though the ball was not quite short enough for that shot. The resultant top-edge was gobbled up by the wicketkeeper. Chase was out much later, under-edging Dinusha into his stumps when a sweep went awry. He was six short of what would also have been his first double century.

Rathnayake would take two further wickets before West Indies declared the innings. Nissanka was out caught behind feeling for a Jayden Seales away-swinger first ball of the second over. Nightwatcher Kasun Rajitha could have been out too, had Jangoo at short leg held a sharp, low chance off the bowling of Kemar Roach.

Scores:
Scores: Day 3 Stumps
Sri Lanka 308 and 15 for 1 (Kasun Rajitha 4*, Nishan Madushka 2*; Jayden  Seales 1-5) trail  West Indies 626 for 9 dec (Amir Jangoo 233, Roston Chase 194; Milan  Rathnayaka 5-124) by 303 runs

[Cricinfo]

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