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Afghanistan hold their nerve, UAE go down fighting in nail-biting finish

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UAE made a strong start to their chase of 171 [Cricinfo]

Afghanistan had the game sewn up. They were playing a second-string side with even their captain Rashid Khan among six players sitting out. But Asif Khan threatened to rip it wide open. A dead rubber had burst to life. Fareed Ahmad started the final over with 16 to defend and was bashed for 4 and 6 off the first two deliveries. An upset was looming and the left-arm quick felt it. Asif felt it, batting on 40 off 25. It never came to be.

Fareed had three chances to influence the outcome and he came up with the perfect option each time to close out the match: 4, 6, 2, dot, dot, wicket. And so,  UAE ended the tri-series winless but they came so very close. The emotions at the end were excruciating, particularly for Asif and the captain Muhammad Waseem. They’re going to make the Asia Cup very interesting.

Ibrahim Zadran was captaining Afghanistan for the 10th time in his career. Four of those games were against UAE. It is easy to see why he was the stand-in. He was cool when the runs didn’t come – 5 off 9 – and resplendent when they did. He looks so technically correct that even the shots in anger carried a stamp of class.

There was one moment when he looked totally out of place though. He was utterly deceived by left-arm spinner Haider Ali’s change of pace and trajectory – the flatter ball making the batter think he should play back when the length was fairly full. Ibrahim lost his stumps for 48 off 34. He might feel a lot better about his contributions in the pointy end of the chase, where soon after he went up to have an arm around Fareed, the bowler switched from bowling over the wicket to round the wicket and gave away no more runs.

It was a slow pitch and it showed when Afghanistan lost three wickets in 3.1 overs after a 98-run opening partnership. Karim Janat was 10 off seven balls at the time. He hit the only boundary during this spell too – a six, which are sometimes easier to pull off in these conditions especially against a bowling attack that didn’t camp in the good length spot for long enough. Often, they were too full or too short and that allowed Janat and the rest of his team-mates down the order to get underneath the ball.

So it didn’t matter that overs 13, 14 and 15 went for only 16 runs. The next three yielded 36. Afghanistan finished on a healthy 170 for 4. Haider (2 for 23) and Simjeet Singh (1 for 24) were the pick of the bowlers. Left-arm quick Muhammad Rohid was desperately unlucky with both of UAE’s dropped catches coming off his bowling. Rahmanullah Gurbaz enjoyed his second life going from 14 off 16 to 40 off 38.

UAE took to the chase with gusto, scoring almost twice as many boundaries as Afghanistan did in the powerplay (7 vs 4). Waseem was enchanting, depositing Mujeeb Ur Rahman inside out over cover for six. He produced another lovely piece of innovation, upper-cutting the debutant Abdollah Ahmadzai over deep third as he stalks Rohit Sharma on top of the six hitters’ table in T20Is and it was looking like UAE had the firepower to earn the consolation win that they desperately wanted.

However, in trying the same shot, Waseem feathered an edge behind and the greenest member of a side that was saving most of its firepower for the final had punched through an opening. Afghanistan rallied to turn an equation that read 67 off 48 balls into a rather more troubling 43 off 18. Mujeeb and Noor Ahmad, bowling in tandem from the 14th to the 17th overs, were virtually unhittable. Then it was the debutant’s turn but Abdollah leaked 16 runs all to Asif and the UAE bench started to stir.

Four more boundaries – one of them a dropped catch – across the last two overs kept the contest alive and created tension among the Afghanistan coaching staff but in the end, they just about squeezed through.

Brief scores:
Afghanistan 170 for 4 in 20 overs (Ibrahim Zadran 48, Rahmanullah Gurbaz 40, Karim Janat 28, Gulbadin Naib 20*, Azmatullah Omarzai 14*; Haider Ali 2-23, Simaranjeet Singh 1-24, Muhammad Farook 1-36) beat UAE 166 for 5 in 20 overs (Alishan Sharafu 27, Muhammad  Waseem 44, Muhammad Zohaib 23, Asif Khan 40, Harshik Kaushik 15*; Fareed Ahamed 1-35, Mujeeb Ur Rahman 1-27, Sharafuddin Ashraf 1-20, Noor Ahamad 1-23, Abdollah Ahamadzai 1-31)  by four runs

[Cricinfo]



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U – 19 World Cup: Andrew, McKenzie deliver West Indies comfortable win

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Micah McKenzie took four wickets in West Indies Under-19's win [Cricinfo]

West Indies wristspinners, Micah McKenzie and Vitel Lawes, combined to take six wickets on a surface that had plenty of turn and bite to close out a rain shortned contest against Ireland. Opting to bat first, the West Indies innings had earlier been held together by keeper-batter Jewel Andrew at No. 3 – his 66 off 82 consisted of four fours and four sixes, the majority of which came in the company of Jonathan van Lange,, during their fourth-wicket partnership of 67.

Jewel departed just six overs after van Lange, in the 33rd, and the rest of the batters struggled. No one besides him managed to cross the 30-run mark. Reuben Wilson scalped up van Lange, before returning to take out two lower-order batters to finish with figures of 3 for 50, closing out the innings with West Indies bowled out for 226.

His effort, complemented by James West’s economical 2 for 24 off seven overs, gave Ireland a realistic chance at chasing down the total. West also opened the batting for Ireland and top-scored for them, hitting a 55-ball 45 that was littered with eight boundaries. By the time he was Lawes’ first victim of the innings, in the 18th over, Ireland sat at a comfortable 82 for 2.

However, the going just got worse from there: Ireland lost four wickets to McKenzie, who spun his way through the middle order. Lawes held back his best over for his final one of the match, fizzing out Oliver Riley with its first ball, and then turning the ball prodigiously against Wilson and Bruce Whaley.

Ireland were on 164 for 7 by the time they played out Lawes’ over, needing an unlikely 62 off the final ten overs. The rain had the final say when it interrupted the match and delivered the final blow to Ireland’s hopes. The DLS par score had shot way past Ireland’s total, and when no further play was possible, West Indies walked away with a convincing spin display and a 25-run win to boost their chances in the Super Sixes.

Brief scores:
West Indies Under 19s  226 in 46.5 overs (Jewel Andrew 66; Reuben Wilson 3-50, Luke Murray 2-37, James West 2-24) beat Ireland Under 19s  164 for 7 in 40 overs (James West 45; Mica  McKenzie 4-36, Vitel Lawes 2-41)by 25 runs (DLS method)

[Cricinfo]

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U – 19 World Cup: Bowlers, Hogan help Australia breeze past South Africa

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Charles Lachmund wrecked South Africa U-19s [Cricinfo]

It took Australia U19s 32.5 overs, going at just around 3.5 runs an over for the majority of a belaboured chase against an excellent South Africa U-19 bowling effort. But they had that liberty after Charles Lachmond’s 3 for 29, and two wickets each from Will Byrom and Aryan Sharma, had bowled South Africa out for 118 all but ensuring the result of the match was in little doubt even at the halfway stage.

South Africa had been reduced to 37 for 4 inside the powerplay, failing to find answers against the raw pace and movement that Lachmund and Byrom found off the surface. Opener Jorich Van Schalkwyk was the sole bright spot for them, battling his way through this period and putting together a 30-run stand with Paul James, even as he was pinged on the helmet off a brutal Kasey Barton delivery.

Spinner Aryan proved to be particularly troublesome to face, as he kept spinning the ball away from the outside edge of the right-handers. He dropped two catches at point before coming into the attack, but made up for his fielding by scalping up two wickets of his own.

James kept one end steady once Schalkwyk was run out for a 26 off 55, but wickets kept falling at the other. He would eventually be the last batter out, for a 60-ball 34 .

In response, JJ Basson led a South Africa bowling attack that was incisive and economical. His spell of 3 for 41 was the highlight of a bowling effort that kept the Australia batters defensive, and also ensured that the Australia line-up lost three wickets for the first time in this tournament – in their fourth match of the tournament.

Steven Hogan never looked comfortable during his 73-ball 43, but timed short deliveries well while cutting late, and mowed down more than a third of the target by himself. He was the last Australian wicket to fall, as Basson’s third wicket. Alex Lee Young and Jayden Draper got together at the crease, and the latter smacked two fours in the 33rd over of the contest to bring it to a close.

Brief scores:
Australia 122 for 4 in 32.5 overs  (Steven Hogan 43, Jayden Draper 21*, Alex Lee Young 21*; JJ Basson 3-41) beat South Africa Under 19s  118 in 32.1 overs  (Paul James 34; Charles Lachmund 3-29, Will Byrom 2-16, Aryan Sharma 2-27) by six wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Abhishek blasts 14-ball fifty to hand India unassailable 3-0 lead against New Zealand

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Abhishek Sharma struck a 14-ball fifty, the second fastest for India in men's T20Is [BCCI]

India waltzed to their 11th straight series or tournament win in T20Is as they restricted New Zealand to 153, and chased it down with ten overs to spare. Jasprit Bumrah and Ravi bishnoi, the two bowlers brought in for this match, took five wickets between them for 35 runs, before Abhishek Sharma, Suryakumar Yadav and Ishan Krishan made light work of the target.

A 3-0 series win with two matches to go, on the back of two players who are not in India’s first-choice XI right now, is as emphatic a challenge as any as India get ready to defend their world title at home; this series winning streak started before the said World Cup two years ago.

Harshit Rana took a wicket in the first over, Bumrah flattened the off stump first ball, and Kishan and Abhishek hit multiple boundaries in their first overs despite a golden duck for Sanju Samson on a night where India dominated their conquerors from Tests and ODIs.

Abhishek went on to register India’s second-quickest half-century in just 14 balls, almost mocking New Zealand’s plan to bowl at his pads and take away his room. Not as spectacular as Abhishek, Suryakumar still continued his comeback to form with an unbeaten 57 off 26 balls.

Perhaps tongue in cheek, Mitchell Santner said after the last match that you need 300 against “these guys”. Devon Conway wanted to start accordingly even though he had fallen to Rana four times in four innings on this tour. All he managed, though, was a mis-hit to mid-off, this time to an on-pace delivery. At mid-off, Hardik Pandya took a brilliant overhead catch, and in the next over created a much simpler chance for Bishnoi with a short ball to Rachin Ravindra.

India are used to bowling at least one over of Varun Chakravarthy in the powerplay, and asked the replacement for the resting No. 1 T20I bowler in the world to play the same role. Bishnoi’s unusual action and trajectory conceded just one run in the fifth over to Tim Seifert and Glenn Phillips.

At 34 for 2, you’d expect New Zealand to be forced to take risks against Bumrah in the last over of the powerplay, but Bumrah didn’t even need a risk for a wicket. He was quick and accurate, and the ball straightened a touch to have Seifert playing inside the line and losing his off stump.

Phillips and Mark Chapman had to play the first two overs outside the powerplay out before they took on Kuldeep Yadav and Shivam Dube to reach 75 for 3 in ten overs. And then Bishnoi and Bumrah came back. Bishnoi had Chapman caught at the wicket with a 105kph non-turning delivery. Once this 52-run partnership ended at 86 for 4, wickets kept falling regularly as the batters had to keep taking risks. Santner’s 27 off 17 balls took New Zealand past 150, but it looked grossly inadequate on a good batting surface.

Any misgivings New Zealand might have had about the inadequacy of their total thanks to the first-ball wicket of Samson were dissipated by the blinding bat speed of Kishan, who dismissed Matt Henry for 6, 6 and 4 after getting one sighter in. Almost as if offended by someone upstaging him even before he had had strike, Abhishek charged first ball at Jacob Duffy, who followed him, but still deposited him over midwicket.

Abhishek followed it up with two fours. He and Kishan two added 53 in 19 balls, with Kishan eventually falling to a flipper from Ish Sodhi.

When Kishan got out for 28 off 13 deliveries, Abhishek was on 23 off six already. Bowler after bowler tried to bowl outside leg to Abhishek, but he kept charging at them and backing away to go over the off side. By the time he got inside the line of one and pulled it over fine leg for six – just for variation – he had brought up his fifty inside the powerplay.

Abhishek missed his hero and mentor Yuvraj Singh’s record by two balls, and at 94 for 2, India missed their highest powerplay total by one run.

Suryakumar dominated the hitting and the strike post powerplay as New Zealand kept searching for non-existing answers. He played the signature flick over backward square leg, but was equally fluent on the off side. The last missing piece of a dominant side fell in place.

Brief scores:
India 155 for 2 in 10 overs  (Abhishek Sharma 68*, Suryakumar Yadav 57*, Ishan Kishan 28; Matt Henry 1-28, Ish Sodhi 1-28) beat New Zealand 153 for 9 in 20 overs (Tim Seifert 12, Glenn Phillips 48, Mark Chapman 32, Daryl Mitchell 14, Mitchell Santner 27; Harshit Rana 1-35,  Jasprit Bumrah 3-17, Ravi Bishnoi 2-18, Hardik Pandya 2-23)by eight wickets

[Cricinfo]

 

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