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Parvez Hossain Emon hits 53-ball hundred as Bangladesh brush off UAE

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Parvez Hossain Emon became Bangladesh's second T20I centurion

Parvez Hossain Emon smashed a 53-ball hundred to lead Bangladesh to 191 for 7 and set up a 27-run win for a 1-0 lead in the two-T20I series against UAE in Sharjah on Saturday. Big hits from Muhammad Waseem, Rahul Chopra and Asif Khan meant that UAE make a good fist of the chase, but clever death bowling from Mustafizur Rahman, who is headed for IPL 2025, gave Bangladesh victory.

Parvez’s century was only the second by a Bangladeshi in T20Is after Tamim Iqbal had scored an unbeaten 103 against Oman in the 2016 T20 World Cup. Parvez also set the Bangladesh record for most sixes in a T20I innings, hitting nine, beating Rishabh Hossain’s seven against Sri Lanka last year.

UAE had Muhammad Jawadullah to thank for keeping Bangladesh under 200 as the left-arm quick took four wickets. He became only the second Associate bowler to take a four-wicket haul against Bangladesh. The first was Hong Kong’s Nadeem Ahmed in the T20 World Cup in 2014.

UAE’s batters put pressure on Bangladesh’s attack, but a late collapse damaged their cause.

After Waseem’s fall in the 12th over with UAE at 103, Asif hit some massive sixes, giving Bangladesh a scare during his 21-ball 42. He took a liking to Mahedi Hasan, pasting him for three sixes down the ground in the 13th over. In all, Asif took the spinner for 23 off five balls at a strike rate of 460.

Wickets, though, kept falling at the other end. Chopra and Dhruv Parashar fell in successive overs, but Asif continued to go big, hitting Hasan Mahmud for a straight six and four in the 17th over.Sanchit Sharma and Muhammad Zuhaib fell in quick succession as well before Asif was the eighth UAE batter to be dismissed in the penultimate over. That meant game over.

In a surprising move, Bangladesh had offspinner Mahedi operating with the new ball against the right-handed Waseem, who launched him for six first ball. In that second over of the innings, Mahedi conceded 19 runs.

Waseem then tore into Tanzim Hassan,  hammering him for a six and two fours in the third over, before UAE lost two wickets in the space of four balls. Waseem then attacked Tanvir Islam with sweeps, taking 14 off another over, and then reached his fifty off just 32 balls in the tenth over.

Chopra was also similarly aggressive and had an answer for everything that Mahmud threw at him, including a scooped six. Chopra also struck Mustafizur for a superb boundary. The fall of Waseem and Chopra, though, hurt the chase.

Parvez offset the early dismissal of his opening partner Tanzid Hasan with a four and a six off Parashar in the third over. His second six, a belt over long-on against Matiullah Khan, went out of the stadium. Parvez also lined up Sanchit, hitting him for three straight sixes in an 18-run over.

The left-hand batter reached his fifty in the ninth over, with a straight four against the legspinner Haider Ali, before Parashar removed Towhid Hridoy to break a 58-run third-wicket stand. There was a short break from boundaries after that, but Parvez resumed the big-hitting the 14th over. The only one of his nine sixes that wasn’t hit down the ground came then as Parvez struck Zuhaib over square leg.

Jaker Ali also struck Zuhaib for a six but he fell off the next ball, caught at long-on, for 13. Parvez, though, kept swinging at the other end, hitting Zuhaib for his eighth six, breaking the Bangladesh record for most sixes in a T20I innings.

He got a life on 84 when he was caught down the ground but the bowler Matiullah had overstepped. Parvez struck his ninth six to move into 96 and went on to bring up his century in the penultimate over of the innings, with a quick single, before falling next ball.

The six-hitting mayhem, however, stopped whenever Jawadullah came into the attack. He conceded just one boundary in his four overs, picking up wickets at every opportunity.

Jawadullah removed the Bangladesh captain Litton Das, yorking him with his first delivery. He then removed Mahedi, Bangladesh’s new vice-captain, in the 12th over. Mahedi was late to Jawadullah’s hard length, falling caught behind for two. The dangerous Shamim Hossain was his next victim, given lbw swinging across the line, before Jawadullah signed off with Parvez’s wicket in the last over.

Impressively, Jawadullah only gave away six runs in the 20th over of Bangladesh’s innings, but his spell was not enough for UAE to topple Bangladesh.

Brief scores:
Bangladesh 191 for 7 in 20 overs (Tanzid Hassan 10, Parvez  Hosain Emon 100, Litton Das 11, Jaker Ali 13, Towhid Hridoy 20, Muhammad Jawadullah 4-21) beat UAE 164 in 20 overs  (Muhammad Waseem 54, Rahul Chopra 35, Asif Khan 42;  Hasan Mahmud 3-33, Mustafizur Rahman  2-17, Tanzim Khan  2-22, Mahedi Hassan 2-55) by 27 runs

[Cricinfo]

 



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South Africa go into semis unbeaten despite Raza’s heroics

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Sikandar Raza ended his tournament with a half-century and 3 for 29 [Cricinfo]

South Africa took an unbeaten record into the T20 World Cup semi-finals after overcoming an inspired performance from Sikandar Raza (73 off 43 and 3 for 29). Aiden Markram’s men successfully chased down a target of 154 in Delhi and will now travel to Kolkata to face New Zealand in the first of what they will hope are two knockout matches.

He scored 73 of the 98 runs that Zimbabwe got while he was in the middle. That included 12 of the team’s 13 boundaries. His strike rate was nearly 170. The other end’s was 86.

Between overs 4.3 and 16.3, Raza was all that mattered. He showed game smarts when he saw South Africa turn to their change bowler to get out of the powerplay and smashed Corbin Bosch for 15 runs. He showed a simplicity of method. Clearing the front leg was the only premeditation he afforded himself. From there, if the ball was pitched up, he would present the full face and crack it through the off side. If it was short, he would go horizontal bat and whack it over the leg side.

Kwena Maphaka19, was playing only his second game of the T20 World Cup. He was able to hit speeds in the low 140kph. He got movement with both the new ball and the old one. He signed off his spell – 4-0-21-2 – with a wicked offcutter that the batter just wasn’t ready for. And he took down the man who was taking down everyone else. Maphaka went around the wicket to Raza in the 17th over and got one to straighten on the batter, who, playing for the initial angle and closing the bat face, ended up popping a skier to David Miller at point.

With Kagiso Rabada, Keshav Maharaj and Marco Jansen rested ahead of the semi-finals, South Africa’s bench players had an opportunity to step up and they did pretty well. Left-arm spinner George Linde opened the bowling and came away with figures of 3-0-22-1. Anrich Nortje chipped in with 4-0-29-1.

Opening the bowling in the chase, he recorded the 41st instance of an off-spinner dismissing a left-hand batter in this T20 World Cup. Quinton de Kock was out for a duck.

Raza turned his sights on his opposite number then. He stashed the ball on top of a bent middle finger. The carrom ball grip. Markram didn’t clock it. He only responded to the length of the ball which was a touch short. Markram went back and wound up to hit it over the leg side. Next second, his middle stump was on the ground. Undefeated South Africa were 14 for 2 in the third over.

At the other end, Brad Evans produced a back-of-the-hand bouncer that hit Ryan Rickelton on the helmet and left him in the South Africa team doctor’s care for several long minutes. Eventually he was cleared of his concussion and he seemed set on showing he wasn’t too fazed by the blow, hitting three sixes off his next five balls. But when he tried to take on Evans’ short ball again, he toe-ended it and Ryan Burl on the deep-square-leg boundary took a great catch (after initially running in too far). Back playing a day game, Zimbabwe’s fielding mistakes vanished. They don’t play a lot of floodlit cricket back home and dropped several catches when they gave up 254 against West Indies and 256 against India.

South Africa finished the powerplay on 43 runs and lost three wickets in the process. That paired Brevis (42 off 18) with Miller and resulted in some of the most eye-catching strokeplay of the game, even if Brevis wasn’t particularly interested in following one of the balls he hit into the crowd at long-on. The fourth-wicket partnership steadied the chase with 50 runs in 25 balls.

Castle Corner was in the crowd in Delhi. Dancing all the way. Zimbabwe drew on those positive vibes to break the stand that was taking the game away from them, Blessing Muzarabani knocking over Miller to pick up his 12th wicket and go to No. 2 on the list of top wicket-takers in this tournament and Raza dismissing Brevis four balls later. South Africa were 101 for 5 in the 11th over chasing 154. They were still favourites but they had been pushed.

Brief scores:
South Africa 154 for 5 in 17.5 overs  (Dewald Brevis 42, Ryan  Rickelton 31, David Miller 22, Tristan Stubs 21*, George Linde 30*; Sikandar Raza 3-29, Blessing Muzarabani 1-32, Brad Evans 1-22) beat Zimbabwe 153 for 7 in 20 overs (Brian Benett 15, Dion Myers 11, Sikandar Raza 73, Clive Madande 26*; George Linde 1-22, Kwena Maphaka 2-21, Lungi Ngidi 1-29, Anrich Nortje 1-29, Corbin Bosch 2-40)  by five wickets

[Cricinfo]

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One killed and 11 injured at Dubai and Abu Dhabi airports as Iran strikes region

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One person has been killed and 11 injured at airports in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, as Iran launched attacks across the Middle East in response to a massive and ongoing attack against it by the US and Israel.

Authorities in Abu Dhabi confirmed a drone targeting Zayed International Airport (AUH) was intercepted, leading to “falling debris” killing one person and injuring seven.

Dubai International Airport (DXB) – the world’s busiest by passenger traffic – was damaged in an “incident” that injured four staff, according to authorities, who did not give further details.

Thousands of flights have been grounded to and from the region, in one of the most serious disruptions to global travel since the Covid-19 pandemic.

Across the Gulf, Iran has used ballistic missiles and drones to launch large-scale attacks on US allies and assets, after Iran’s supreme leader was killed in the ongoing US-Israel air offensive launched on Saturday morning.

Qatar, Bahrain, Jordan and Kuwait – all home to US military bases – said they had intercepted missiles fired towards them, but falling debris appeared to have caused widespread damage.

“I probably saw about 15 missiles being launched from behind my house yesterday,” Dubai resident Becky Williams told the BBC, referring to missiles fired by UAE authorities aimed at intercepting incoming Iranian projectiles. “You can hear the interceptions happening in the air.”

On the Palm Jumeirah, Dubai’s luxury man-made archipelago, the five-star Fairmont The Palm hotel was struck by a large explosion on Saturday afternoon. Video verified by the BBC shows a fire raging as black smoke rises into the sky.

Authorities also confirmed debris from an intercepted drone had caused a “minor fire” on the outer facade of the five-star Burj Al Arab hotel.

Also in Dubai, debris from an “aerial interception” caused a fire in a berth at the Jebel Ali deep sea port – the world’s ninth busiest.

Another 34-year-old Dubai resident said: “What we’ve lived through over the past 24 hours is a fraction of what others have been living through in areas of conflict so it puts things in perspective”.

In Bahrain, the interior ministry said the airport was damaged after being targeted by a drone. There were unconfirmed reports of continuing attacks on Sunday morning.

Reuters People run across a road with black smoke in the background.
Authorities say they have intercepted multiple missiles and drones over Dubai since Saturday, including at Jebel Ali port [Cricinfo]

In Bahrain, the interior ministry said the airport was damaged after being targeted by a drone. There were unconfirmed reports of continuing attacks on Sunday morning.

On Saturday, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said they had struck the headquarters of the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet, located in Bahrain’s capital Manama. Huge plumes of black smoke were seen rising from an area near the base.

Meanwhile, Oman’s state news agency reported Duqm commercial port was targeted by two drones, injuring one worker. Oman has been a key mediator in the US-Iran talks for years and had so far been spared Iranian attacks.

In a press conference overnight, Qatari officials said Iran had launched 65 missiles and 12 drones On Saturday – most of them were intercepted, but there has been some damage and eight people were injured by the fallout.

The Gulf states had made efforts to ease tensions with Iran in recent years,. They have worked hard to mediate a diplomatic solution to the crisis and have refused to let the US launch attacks from its bases in their countries.

But that wasn’t enough to prevent direct military strikes on their territory. And now with the violent death of Iran’s supreme leader, the future looks uncertain not only for Iran, but for the region.

[BBC]

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Unchanged India opt to bowl; Hosein replaces King for West Indies

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Suryakumar Yadav and Shai Hope lead their teams out for the anthems [Cricinfo]

Having spent the first five matches wanting to bat first – and getting their wish in four of those matches even though they won just one toss – India elected to chase on a slightly overcast Kolkata night. Eden Gardens has historically been a difficult ground to defend, which is why even Shai Hope’s West Indies would have chased had they won the toss.

India chose to stick with the XI that won them the first of four must-win matches they found themselves facing after the defeat to South Africa last Sunday. That means Sanju Samson continued to stay in as the opener and the wicketkeeper at the expense of the lower-middle-order muscle of Rinku Singh, who also lost his father between the two matches. Rinku was back with the squad after the funeral.

West Indies made one change to the XI that lost to South Africa in their last match. They left out opener Brandon King for the left-arm spin of allrounder  Akeal Hosein.  That meant West Indies had three varieties of spin at their disposal: offspin of Roston Chase,  left-arm spin of Hosein, and a mix of left-arm fingerspin and wristspin of Gudakesh Motie.

India Abhishek Sharma,  Sanju Samson (wk),  Ishan Kishan,  Tilak Varma,  Suryakumar Yadav (capt),  Hardik Pandya,  Shivam Dube,  Axar Patel,  Arshdeep Singh,  Jasprit Bumrah,  Varun Chakravarthy

West Indies Roston Chase,  Shai Hope (capt, wk),  Shimron Hetmyer,  Rovman Powell,  Sherfane Rutherford,  Romario Shepherd,  Jason Holder,  Matthew Forde,  Akeal Hosein,  Gudakesh Motie,  Shamar Joseph

[Cricinfo]

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