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Rasooli, Atal and Mujeeb seal Afghanistan series win

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Mujeeb Ur Rahman's 4 for 21 included his maiden T20I hat-trick [ACB]

A third successive T20I half-century from Darwish Rasooli, an anchoring fifty from Sediqullah Atal and a maiden T20I hat-trick from Mujeeb Ur Rahman helped Afghanistan take an unassailable 2-0 lead over West Indies in the three match series.

Mujeeb grabbed four wickets in five deliveries spread across two different overs – and spells – to wreck West Indies’ pursuit of 190, and their downfall was swift thereafter. They were eventually bowled out for 150.

Before Mujeeb’s 4 for 21, Rasooli and Atal enjoyed a 115-run third-wicket stand to hold Afghanistan’s batting innings together. A late cameo from Azmatullah Omarzai on a turning surface made the total even more daunting.

The win made it a hat-trick of T20I series wins for Afghanistan. The two teams meet again on Thursday for what will be Afghanistan’s final T20I before the T20 World Cup. West Indies will seek a consolation win before their tour of South Africa.

West Indies’ chase started poorly. They lost newly promoted opener Alick Athanaze to a direct hit in the third over, and they could score only 29 in the powerplay, squeezed by Fazalhaq Farooqi’s opening spell.

Mujeeb, who bowled two overs in the powerplay, then returned in the eighth and went around the wicket to skid one straight through and hit No. 3 Evin Lewis’ pad before he could bring out a shot.

When right-hander Johnson Charles walked in next, Mujeeb came over the stumps and got a delivery to drift in beautifully from outside off and through the gate to peg back off stump as the batter drove away from his body. West Indies were 38 for 3.

But they were not going down without a fight, and Shimron Hetmyer’s assault on Rashid Khan and Noor Ahmad kept West Indies in the game. Hetmyer pumped six sixes in a 17-ball 46. Farooqi, however, dismissed him in the 14th over, and Rashid brought Mujeeb back for his third, with West Indies needing 68 runs in five overs.

Mujeeb kept his length back, and with West Indies desperate for big shots, Brandon King (50) came down the track and miscued the hat-trick ball down to long on. Mujeeb wheeled away in celebration, having become the third Afghanistan bowler to achieve the feat after Rashid and Karim Janat. Two balls later, T20I newbie Quentin Sampson failed to put bat on a googly, and Mujeeb had his fourth.

The lower order offered little resistance, as West Indies lost their last five wickets for 27 runs.

On Monday, Rasooli had smashed 84 in a 162-run stand with Ibrahim Zadran to set up Afghanistan’s series-opening win, and on Wednesday he combined just as effectively with Atal.

As in the first game, Afghanistan lost both openers inside the powerplay, and Rasooli ensured there were no stutters by taking the aggressive route with his square cuts, drives through the off side and flat-batted shots down the ground.

Helped by let-offs from the West Indies fielders, Rasooli reached his fifty in 22 balls – his third in a row for Afghanistan – while Atal was more watchful.

Rasooli powered along through the middle overs, taking down Khary Pierre and Gudakesh Motie. Atal and Rasooli fell in the 17th and 18th overs respectively, but with the big-hitting Mohammad Nabi and Omarzai walking in next, there was no respite for West Indies. Motie, left to bowl the 20th over, conceded 19 with Omarzai hitting him for back-to-back sixes, and Afghanistan posted 189 for 4.

Brief scores:
Afghanistan 189 for 4 in 20 overs (Ibrahim Zadran 22, Darwish Rasooli 68, Sediqullah Atal 53, Azmatullah Omarzai 26*; Maththw Forde 2-25, Shamar Joseph 1-35, Ramon Simmonds 1-39) beat West Indies 150 in 18.5 overs (Brandon King 50, Evin Lewis 13, Shimron Hetmyer 46, Khary Pierre 11; Fazalhqu Farooki 2-28, Mujeeb Ur Rahman 4-21, Azmatullah Omarzai 2-20, Rashid Khan 1-19) by 39 runs

[Cricinfo]



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Heartbreak for Gurbaz and Afghanistan as South Africa win after double Super Over

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No one was a bigger hero than Rahmanullah Gurbaz even though he ended up on the losing side [Cricinfo]

South Africa survived the T20 World Cup’s group of death by outlasting Afghanistan in a match that went into two Super Overs.

They had it won when the last over of regulation time began with Afghanistan needing 13 with one wicket in hand. Kagiso Rabada, though, bowled two no-balls, but a running error allowed them to tie the match. South Africa were then done and dusted but Tristan Stubbs hit a last-ball six to force a second Super Over. This one left Afghanistan needing four sixes off four balls; Rahmanullah Gurbaz, who scored 84 off 42 in regulation time, hit three of them, needed just a four to take it to the third Super Over after Keshav Maharaj bowled a wide, but hit straight to point.

A couple of metres either side, and Afghanistan would have had another shot at beating South Africa in a T20I for the first time. Losing semi-finalists last edition, now they are left needing more than just wins against UAE and Canada to make it out of the first round.

Allowed no soft launch by the draw, having lost the first match against New Zealand, Afghanistan came into this must-win encounter spin-heavy on a pitch with some grip. Quinton de Kock and Ryan Rickelton, though, scored twin half-centuries to give their taller bowlers with canny changes of pace just enough – it seemed – to defend despite an outlier effort by Gurbaz. However, Rabada and Marco Jansen made closing errors against the No. 10 Noor Ahmad. With two needed off the last three balls – first of those a free hit – the last pair took an improbable second to give South Africa a lifeline and the T20 World Cup its first double Super Over.

The skilled left-arm quick Fazalhaq Farooqi who would later make the error to cause the tie, got off to a superb start, swinging the ball each way and taking out Aiden Markram with a slower ball to expose two left-hand batters to offspinners. The shapes Rickelton’s body makes when playing shots can often be similar to de Kock’s, and he has for long been the natural heir. At times, South Africa have found it difficult to accommodate both in the same XI. They will be thankful they had these two here.

It was de Kock – only 6.94 per over against spin so far in his T20 career – who broke the shackles after a start of 12 for 1 in four overs. Whatever de Kock did, though, Rickelton did with more brute force. Left-arm wristspinner Noor, brought in this match as the only change, bore the biggest brunt of it. De Kock welcomed him with a six over long-on first ball, and two balls later Rickelton hit an even bigger one.

The duo even got to their fifties in the same over: the 11th, bowled by Mujeeb Ur Rahman. Rickelton took only 23 balls, de Kock 34, but it was de Kock who had taken on spin early on.

Taken down for 21 runs in his first two overs, captain Rashid Khan started the comeback for Afghanistan with the wickets of Rickelton and de Kock in the same over to reach 699 T20 wickets. The duo added 114 in 10.1 overs to take South Africa to 126 in the 13th over, but now began a new game. Afghanistan offered batters little pace, and only a couple of big blows from Jansen in the end took them to 187. That was just 63 runs off the last 7.3 overs.

Brief scores:
South Africa 187 for 6 in 20 overs (Ryan Rickelton 61, Quinton de Kock 59, Dewald Brevis 23, David Miller 20*, Marco Jansen 16; Fazalhaq Farooki 1-32, Azmatullah Omarzai 3-41, Rashid Khan  2-28) beat Afghanistan 187 in 19.4 overs  (Rahmanullah Gurbaz 84, Ibrahim Zadran 12, Daewish Rasooli 15, Azmatullah Omarzai 22, Rashid Khan 20, Noor Ahmed 15*; Lungi  Ngidi 3-26. Marco Jansen 1-42, Kagiso Rabada 1-38, George Linde 1-39, Keshav Maharaj 1-27) in the Super Over

Afghanistan [Super Over 1] 17/0 [Azmatullah Omarzai 16*, Rahmanullah Gurbaz 01*]
South Africa [Super Over 1] 17/1 [David Miller 01*, Dewald Brewis 06, Tristan Stubbs 10*; Fazalhaq Farooqi 1-17]

South Africa [Super Over 2]  23/0, [Tristan Stubbs 07*, David Miller 16*]
Afghanistan [Super Over 2] 19/2 [Mohammed Nabi 00, Azmatullah Omarzai 00*, Rahmanullah Gurbaz 18; Keshav Maharaj 2-19]

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Twelve sentenced to death by Gampaha High Court

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The Gampaha High Court has sentenced Twelve (12) individuals to death over the 2022 murder of former Polonnaruwa District Member of Parliament Amarakeerthi Athukorala and his security officer.

 

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Ghosts of 2016 writ large as England, West Indies meet again

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Gudakesh Motie sends one down in the nets on match eve [Cricinfo]

In a tournament that has so far been characterised by plucky challenges from unfancied underdogs, here’s a clash of big beasts to whet the appetite. Okay, so West Indies may not be among the big hitters on a global scale any more – hell, they didn’t even qualify for the ICC’s last two 50-over tournaments. But in a 20-over gunfight, they’ve proven time and again that their particular brand of physical might is right. Not least against Wednesday’s familiar foes at the Wankhede.

A clash of England and West Indies in a T20 World Cup is an inevitable opportunity to revisit one of the greatest finales of all time. Ten years ago in Kolkata, not quite to the month, Carlos Brathwaite launched Ben Stokes into the stratosphere time and time again to swipe the 2016 trophy from England’s grasp, almost as the engraver was getting to work.

But if the raw aggression of that moment left England feeling robbed, they could not say that they hadn’t been warned. For it was at the Wankhede, in their very first match of that same campaign, that they came a cropper in the face of an even more ferocious beating, as the mighty Chris Gayle blitzed 11 massive sixes in his 47-ball hundred.

Fittingly, those were the only two defeats of England’s knowingly naïve campaign. Perhaps they came too early in their ongoing white-ball awakening for the players to possess the street-smarts required to bring down an IPL-trained mean machine. But the lessons they learned would be invaluable, especially when the 2019 World Cup reached its own clutch moments.

England still have two survivors from that campaign – Adil Rashid and Jos Buttler, whose recognition of the value of six-hitting was his single biggest takeaway from that tournament; that, for a player who trusts his ability to clear the ropes, even the steepest of chases can be broken down into a handful of big hits when the match-up is right.

But, as Sam Curran noted after his nerveless death over had saved the day against Nepal, the lessons of that tournament cut both ways as they continue to echo down the generations. “I weirdly thought of the 2016 final, when Carlos got hold of Stokesy,” he told the BBC afterwards. “I was thinking, ‘Well, if I execute, he’s not going to hit me for six.'”

As for West Indies, Johnson Charles and Jason Holder remain from that squad of ten years ago, alongside their head coach, Darren Sammy – whose captaincy proved instrumental in drawing his players together to fight for a common cause. As he demonstrated on match eve, shooting the breeze with the media in a 15-minute address that touched every issue imaginable in West Indies cricket, his class of 2026 are unlikely to lack for motivation against these opponents.

History and precedent aside, this is a significant match-up for more basic qualification reasons. On the face of it, the jeopardy in Group C has been reduced by Bangladesh’s decision to withdraw, but Nepal are clearly itching for an upset and, as Scotland showed with a comprehensive win over the likely stragglers Italy, they have embraced their unlikely opportunity with gusto.

It’s an occasion that deserves to be savoured. As the weeks of uncertainty over India versus Pakistan ended up demonstrating, there’s still something precious about proper historical rivalries on the grandest stages that the game can offer. England and West Indies have each won two T20 World Cup titles, tying them with India as the most successful teams in the tournament’s history. Their storied pasts will inform the present on Wednesday night, as each team seeks to stride on into the future.

One of the main reasons for England’s angst in that Nepal run-chase was the unexpectedly brutal treatment meted out on Adil Rashid. Not only did he go wicketless for the first time in 25 T20I innings, dating back to the last World Cup, he was launched at a rate of 14 runs an over, the second most expensive T20I spell of three or more overs in his career. Nepal’s ability to pick his variations was the clincher, borne no doubt of their own familiarity with the art of legspin, and given his form coming into the tournament, there’s no question of Harry Brook losing any faith in Rashid’s impact. As the man himself said on this site last week, “you have to have a big heart as a spinner”. It’s about to be tested once more.

Quality spin remains an Achilles heel for England’s heavy hitters, and in Gudakesh Motie, they’ll be reunited with a left-arm spinner who knows how to cramp their style. Ten of his 40 T20I wickets have come in his frequent clashes with England, including a matchwinning haul of 3 for 24 in Tarouba two years ago. He was recently left out of their tour of New Zealand after a dip in form linked to a technical flaw, but last month he reasserted his trump-card status with a matchwinning haul in a rain-reduced game against South Africa.

Once again, England were quick out of the blocks with their starting XI. Just the one change from that fraught opener against Nepal, with Luke Wood’s left-arm seam making way from the heavier deck-hitting capabilities of Jamie Overton. He hits a long ball too, which might be useful down the order, given West Indies’ own six-hitting reputation.

England: Phil Salt, Jos Buttler (wk), Jacob Bethell,  Tom Banton,  Harry Brook (capt),  Sam Curran, Will Jacks,  Liam Dawson, Jamie Overton,  Jofra Archer, Adil Rashid.

West Indies know their XI, but have chosen not to divulge it just yet. There was not much reason to change a winning formula from their tournament opener against Scotland.

West Indies (probable): Brandon King,  Shai Hope (capt & wk),  Shimron Hetmyer, Rovman Powell,  Sherfane Rutherford,  Romario Shepherd, Matthew Forde,  Jason Holder,  Akeal Hosain,  Shamar Joseph,  Gudakesh Motie.

[Cricinfo]

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