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Bryce’s maiden ton in vain as Ireland knock Scotland out of contention for Women’s World Cup

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File photo: Sarah Bryce scored her maiden ODI century but it wasn't enough for Scotland [Cricinfo]

Scotland and Ireland signed off from the Women’s World Cup Qualifier with a thriller that saw Ireland complete their highest successful chase, off the last ball of the game and with one wicket in hand, and knock Scotland out of contention of the World Cup. Both teams finished on four points.

The result leaves the race for the second World Cup spot down to two teams on the final day of the tournament, where Bangladesh play already-qualified Pakistan and West Indies meet Thailand. Bangladesh are currently in second place and have some wriggle room. They do not need to beat Pakistan to qualify, and could get there with a loss, provided West Indies do not go past their net run-rate. West Indies must beat Thailand by a big margin in order to give themselves a chance of getting to the World Cup.

Both Scotland and Ireland will be disappointed at missing out, especially after Scotland beat West Indies in their opener and were in the mix going into this game. They needed to beat Ireland to stay in contention and gave themselves as good a chance as they could after posting their highest ODI score of 268 for 7.

Captain Kathryn Bryce was the architect of the total and scored her first ODI century to help Scotland recover from 19 for 3 in the powerplay to set Ireland a challenging target. Bryce has also scored two half-centuries in the qualifier and with 293 runs, is the leading run scorer.

Her innings was a wonderful mix of accuracy and aggression as she pierced gaps in the Irish field and struck 14 fours and two sixes, mostly through the covers and over mid-wicket. Bryce shared in four half-century stands: a run-a-ball 62 with Ailsa Lister, 65 with Katherine Fraser, 51 with Priyanaz Chatterji and 52 off 30 balls with Rachel Slater, who was with her when her hundred came up. Bryce got there with a slash over the covers off the 122nd ball she faced. She went on to score 31 more runs off the next 15 deliveries and showed off an excellent ability to accelerate at the death.

Ireland’s prospects of reaching the World Cup were gone after their third loss earlier in the week and they approached their innings like a side with nothing to lose. Sarah Forbes and Gaby Lewis put on 109 for the first wicket and Forbes went on to her first ODI fifty to set Ireland up well. Forbes was run out when she ran from the non-striker’s end almost to Lewis, who swept and turned down a single but it was too late to send Forbes back. Amy Hunter was caught behind two balls later and Lewis, on 61, followed in the same fashion and Scotland were clawing their way back.

Orla Prendagast looked good for her 33 but popped a simple catch to Lister at mid-on in the 35th over, with Ireland still 89 runs away from victory. Scotland dismissed Leah Paul, Louise Little and Sophie MacMohan in the space of 23 deliveries and at 209 for 7, Ireland looked out of the game. But Laura Delany had not yet had her full say. She had No.8 Jane Macguire for company and they put on 53 runs for the eighth wicket to leave Scotland scrambling.

Delaney reached fifty off 55 balls at the end of the 47th over, with Ireland still needing 20 runs off the last 18 balls. Byrce took matters into her own hands. She already had figures of 2 for 37 from seven overs and brought herself on to bowl the 48th and 50th over. She conceded seven runs in the 48th over. Ireland needed 13 from 12. Slater was tasked with the penultimate over and six runs were scored off her first five balls before she had Macguire caught on the leg side boundary as she tried to leave as little as possible to do in the last over. Macguire was dismissed for a career-best 28 and Ireland seven to win off the last over.

It was all up to Bryce. She started with a dot ball to Delany and then gave away a single which brought the new batter, No.10, Ava Canning, on strike. She took guard on middle stump, Bryce bowled it on that line and Canning scooped the ball out to long-on, where a diving fielder could not get to it in time to haul it in. That boundary left Ireland needing two runs off the last three balls and still Bryce wasn’t done. She bowled Canning, who played a loose drive, and Ireland needed two off two. Cara Murray padded the ball to the off side and Ireland ran one to level scores. With tensions running high, Delany tried to flick the final ball, missed and it trickled off her pad but she ran with all she had to seal Ireland’s win in the most epic of Celtic clashes.

Brief scores:
Ireland Women  269 for 9 in 50 overs  (Gabby Lewis 61, Laura Delany 57*, Sarah Forbes 55, Orla Prendergast 33, Jane Maguire 28; Katherine Fraser 2-37, Chloe Abel 2-50, Kathryn Bryce 3-49) beat  Scotland Women  268 for 7 in 50 overs  (Kathryn Bryce 131*, Alisa Lister 27, Katherine Fraser 33, Priyanaz Chatterji 26; Ava Canning 3-48, Cara Murray 2-48) by one wicket

[Cricinfo]



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Scotland opt to field against West Indies

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Richie Berrington in a huddle [Cricinfo]

Richie Berrington, the Scotland captain, called correctly as they elected to bowl against West Indies in a Group C  fixture at Eden Gardens.

As part of their winter training, Scotland were scheduled to have a fitness test for all their players in Edinburgh on Saturday. Instead, here they are in Kolkata, having received an invitation less than two weeks earlier to participate in the T20 World Cup in place of Bangladesh.

“It’s a fantastic opportunity for us, it’s been a quick turnaround but everyone’e excited to be here,” Berrington said. “A lot of hard work has gone behind the scenes to get here. Since coming, we’ve had fantastic preparation in Bengaluru.”

Scotland have some wonderful memories of playing West Indies at the T20 World Cup – famously beating them by 42 runs in Hobart during the 2022 edition.

Talking of memories, it can’t get bigger than winning the T20 World Cup, which the West Indies did at this storied venue ten years ago when Carlos Brathwaite made everyone remember his name.

Their captain Shai Hope believes there’s a part of them that has confidence that they can start their campaign well. Johnson Charles is the only member from that April day to be a part of the current West Indies squad in a playing capacity; Darren Sammy, their captain then, is head coach.

Scotland: George Munsey, Matthew Cross(w), Brandon McMullen, Michael Jones, Tom Bruce, Richie Berrington(c), Michael Leask, Oliver Davidson, Mark Watt, Brad Currie, Safyaan Sharif

West Indies: Brandon King, Shai Hope(w/c), Shimron Hetmyer, Rovman Powell, Sherfane Rutherford, Jason Holder, Romario Shepherd, Akeal Hosein, Matthew Forde, Gudakesh Motie, Shamar Joseph

[Cricinfo]

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Faheem Ashraf drags unconvincing Pakistan over the line after big scare

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Faheem Ashraf took Pakistan over the line [Cricinfo]

The T20 World Cup started off with a heart stopper of a finish as Pakistan secured, then threw away, and finally clinched a thrilling last-over win, warding off a heroic Netherlands fightback. Faheem Ashraf was more saviour than hero, riding his luck to smash 24 in the game’s penultimate over having survived a dropped chance, and finishing the game off with three balls to go. The three-wicket win keeps them on course for qualification to the next round, even as it seemed nine balls earlier that they were destined for another early exit.

Pakistan were well on course for victory at the halfway mark of the chase, needing 50 in nine overs, before Paul van Meekeren struck with a double-wicket maiden, and Pakistan collapsed under the weight of the slightest pressure. Babar Azam, who needed only to anchor with the chase under a-run-a-ball, found himself slogging aimlessly and holing out to Roelof van der Merwe, and run-scoring amnesia took hold – just 21 were made in the seven overs between the 12th and the 19th, with five wickets falling.

But Logan van Beek, who had struck earlier to dismiss Shadab Khan, found his first ball disappearing over cow corner for six. He varied the pace and got Faheem to scoop it straight up to long-on. Max O’Dowd got underneath it and got both hands to it, only to find to his horror the ball popping back out and harmlessly to his side. Faheem plundered two more sixes and a boundary before the over was out, and Netherlands realised their chance had gone.

Netherlands began brightly with the bat, and continued to target the Pakistan bowlers without worrying about the fall of wickets. The 79 they put up in the first ten was comfortably their highest ten-over score against Pakistan. Michael Levitt, Bas de Leede,  Colin Ackermann and Scott Edwards all chipped in with handy knocks as partnerships kept them ticking over. However, a poor final four overs cost them dear as they lost six wickets for 20 runs to finish 20 runs short of where they might have been.

Pakistan started as if they would make short work of the small chase. Saim Ayub flew out of the blocks, and once his cameo ended, Sahibzada Farhan followed in his footsteps. Netherlands appeared to have had the fight knocked out of them, and Pakistan’s win looked inevitably straightforward. Van Meekeren, and a heartbroken Netherlands side, made sure it was anything but.

Under unexpectedly bright skies, Netherlands, put in to bat by Salman Agha, who was surprised at the amount of grass on the pitch, put the pressure on Pakistan early. The first ball was dispatched by Michael Levitt for four, who hit the shot of the game with a glorious pulled six off Shaheen Shah Afridi in his following over. Netherlands are top heavy, with most of their destructive batting potential concentrated in the top five, but it didn’t stop them taking risks to keep their run rate as high as they possibly could.

Edwards said post-match that he thought Netherlands weren’t at their best in any of the three departments, but one of their routes to victory would have been Levitt producing a big knock to boost their total. He looked on course to do just that in the powerplay, and appeared to have connected cleanly when he slashed Mohammad Nawaz back over his head high.

It looked to be heading over the rope until Babar, seemingly out of nowhere, burst into frame and let the ball plant into his palms, before scooping it back up into the field of play a moment before he exited it. He had barely broken stride while Afridi, on the same wavelength, came across to complete the catch and make the game’s crucial early breakthrough.

So often a point of weakness for Pakistan, it was a sign of a flawless fielding and catching performance, one that didn’t give Netherlands an inch. And, as witnessed at the end, every inch did matter.

The fears of Netherlands tailing after the fall of the top five were well-founded, after all. Edwards dismissal meant the loss of Netherlands’ last proper attacking batter, leaving them denuded for power at the end. Abrar Ahmed was varying his pace and line superbly and kept building the pressure, while Saim Ayub, mysteriously held back and bowled just once, took two quick wickets in his only over. Salman Mirza and Afridi applied the coup de grace as the last six folded cheaply; Netherlands had gone from 127 for 4 to being dismissed for 147.

It is perhaps just as well for Pakistan that Faheem pulled a rabbit out of the hat, because they might have otherwise spent the rest of their careers explaining how this one slipped out of their fingers. Pakistan were the most prepared team of any at this tournament, having played 34 T20Is since the end of May, all engineered to ensure they were acclimatised to whatever situation a T20I could throw at them.

And this one wasn’t throwing much either. In 11 overs, they had cruised to 98 for 2, 50 away against a mismatched opponent having a poor day with the ball. But when 41-year-old van der Merwe galloped in from the deep to take a stunning catch diving forward, fear of failure seemed to take an iron hold on Pakistan. Two balls later, Usman Khan chopped on, and just when Pakistan might have wanted Babar to play the same sedate way he already was, he had a low-percentage hoick off van der Merwe to pick out long-off.

And all the while, runs suddenly became endangered species. Pakistan blocked and hacked in panic, getting nowhere as the asking rate piled up. Between the 11th and 18th overs, it had ballooned from just over five to just under 15. Few games have turned on such a dime with no discernible change in circumstances. Pakistan had Faheem, and perhaps O’Dowd, to thank that it twisted once more in their ultimate favour.

Brief scores:
Pakistan 148 for 7 in 19.3 overs  (Shaibzada Farhan 47, Saim Aub 24, Salman Agha 12, Babar Azam 15, Faheem Ashraf 29*;  Paul van Meekeren 2-20, Aryan Dutt 2-33, Logan van Beek 1-46, Kyle Klein 1-23, Roelof van der Merwe 1-13) beat Netherlands 147 in 19.5 overs (Michael Levitt 24, Scott Edwards 37, Bas  de Leede 30, Colin Ackermann 20, Aryan Dutt 13; Shaeen Shah Afridi 1-2, Salman Mirza 3-24, Saim Ayub 2-07, Abrar Ahmed 2-23, Moammad Nawaz 2-38) by three wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Trump threatens tariffs for countries trading with Iran

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[pic BBC]

US President Donald Trump has signed an executive order threatening to impose additional tariffs on countries that continue to trade with Iran.

The order, issued on Friday, does not specify the rate that could be imposed, but uses 25% as an example. It says the tariff could apply to goods imported into the US from any nation that “directly or indirectly purchases, imports, or otherwise acquires any goods or services from Iran”.

Trump has not directly commented on the order but reiterated “no nuclear weapons” for Iran when speaking from Air Force One on Friday night.

It comes as talks continue between senior US and Iranian officials in Oman, following several weeks of threats from both sides.

Trump threatened a 25% tariff of countries doing business with Iran earlier this year, in a post to Truth Social.

On 12 January, he wrote: “Effective immediately, any country doing business with the Islamic Republic of Iran will pay a tariff of 25% on any and all business being done with the United States of America.”

At the time, no further detail was provided on how the tariffs would work in practice.

[BBC]

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