Jamaica Gleaner

PAKISTAN BEAT INDIA BY 10 WICKETS

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PAKISTAN CRUSHED India by 10 wickets for the first-ever victory against their archrivals in a Twenty20 (T20) World Cup game yesterday.

Mohammad Rizwan (79 not out) and captain Babar Azam (68 not out) struck superb unbeaten half centuries and eased Pakistan to 152-0 in 17 overs and five deliveries in Group 2 of the Super 12s.

Fast bowler Shaheen Afridi (3-31) had earlier rattled India’s top order by removing both openers – Rohit Sharma and KL Rahul – in his first two overs before skipper Virat Kohli’s 57 off 49 balls took the 2007 champion to 151-7.

“We executed our plans well and the early wickets were very helpful,” Babar said. “We weren’t thinking of the record against India at all. I only wanted to back all our players who’ve been preparing well.”

Babar won the toss and opted to chase. The decision paid off. Both Babar and Rizwan toyed with Indian bowlers as Kohli’s men in blue struggled with the wet ball when dew settled in the second half of the game.

IMPRESSIVE BURST

Earlier, Afridi’s impressive burst of two quick wickets put India on the back foot from the onset. Kohli and Rishabh Pant (39) tried briefly to unsettle the attack, with Pant hitting two sixes before he skied a catch to Shadab Khan (1-22) while attempting a sweep in the 13th over.

Pakistan’s bowlers – especially Haris Rauf and Afridi – varied their pace intelligen­tly in the death overs that didn’t allow even batting maestro Kohli to accelerate. Kohli was finally undone by Afridi’s slower bouncer in the penultimat­e over as he topedged a catch to Rizwan behind the stumps.

Babar and Rizwan were hardly troubled by either the pace of Jasprit Bumrah or the two spinners in a perfectly orchestrat­ed run chase with the wet ball coming onto the bat nicely.

Babar reached his half century in style by lofting spinner Varun Chakravart­hy over midwicket for a six before Rizwan raised his fifty with a pulled four off Bumrah in the 15th over.

Rizwan stamped Pakistan’s supremacy in style by clobbering a six and two boundaries off Mohammed Shami and then finished off the game in the same over by scampering for two runs.

It was Pakistan’s first-ever victory by 10 wickets against any opposition in a T20, while India also faced the ignominy of losing by such a margin for the first time.

The victory was Pakistan’s first win against India in a T20 World Cup which dates back to 2007 when India won the inaugural tournament by beating Pakistan in the final. Pakistan won the 2009 edition.

“Some quality bowling from Pakistan didn’t let us get off the blocks,” Kohli said, while admitting Pakistan outplayed his team.

“When you lose three early wickets, it’s very difficult to come back, especially when you know the dew is coming. We’re certainly not a team that presses the panic button, it’s the start of the tournament, not the end.”

New Zealand, Afghanista­n, Scotland and Namibia are the other teams in the group.

In the other game on the day, half centuries by Charith Asalanka and Bhanuka Rajapaksa rallied former T20 World Cup champions Sri Lanka to a five-wicket victory over a sloppy Bangladesh side in their bad-tempered opening Super 12 match.

Asalanka made a splendid unbeaten 80 from 49 balls and Rajapaksa smashed 53 from 31 to help carry Sri Lanka to 172-5 with seven balls to spare.

Earlier, Bangladesh posted a challengin­g total of 171-4 after being put in to bat.

 ?? AP ?? Pakistan’s Mohammad Rizwan (left) plays a shot as India wicketkeep­er Rishabh Pant looks on during their ICC Twenty20 World Cup match in Dubai, United Arab Emirates yesterday.
AP Pakistan’s Mohammad Rizwan (left) plays a shot as India wicketkeep­er Rishabh Pant looks on during their ICC Twenty20 World Cup match in Dubai, United Arab Emirates yesterday.

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