The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Seven-wicket win sees Scots crowned champions in Oman

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Scotland yesterday overpowere­d Oman at the Al Amerat Stadium to clinch the T20 Quadrangul­ar Series in remarkable fashion.

The Scots were playing catch-up after losing their opening match to Holland but restored hope with a thrilling win over Ireland on Friday.

It meant victory over the hosts would be enough to take the title providing Ireland beat the Dutch during yesterday’s final round of games.

The Irish duly obliged – winning with a six off the final delivery – to give Scotland their victory chance.

And a seven-wicket win over Oman left three sides locked on two wins each but with Kyle Coetzer’s men prevailing thanks to a superior net run-rate.

Adrian Neill shrugged off first game nerves to claim the man-of-thematch award.

The 6ft 8in former Aberdeensh­ire pace bowler helped dismiss the hosts for 111 with a devastatin­g burst of 3-21 before the Scots sealed a seven-wicket success.

Neill admitted: “I had a few butterflie­s this morning and felt a bit of nerves on the bus. I was a bit quiet and just kept the headphones on.

“But everything fell into place when I got on the field and it’s always nice to get early wickets. That obviously settled me. It’s a bonus to get the man-of-the-match but it was a real team effort.

“Ali (Evans) and Safy (Sharif) restricted them to very few boundaries and taking four wickets in the powerplay is always key in T20.

“There was a big buzz in the field and everyone was really up for it.

“Calum (MacLeod) and Richie (Berrington) batted really well especially after we had lost a couple of wickets. Great credit to them for seeing us home.

“Winning the tournament is a great effort by everyone especially after losing that first game to the Netherland­s.”

After electing to field, the Scots quickly reduced their rivals to tatters on 13-4 with debutant Neill claiming two early wickets.

Aside from his excellent bowling figures, spinner Mark Watt claimed 3-20 as Scotland continued to dominate.

There was some resistance from Sandeep Goud who hit 31no but Oman were all out for 111 in the final over.

The Scots were briefly wobbling on 42-3, with Coetzer, George Munsey and Matthew Cross all out cheaply, but MacLeod and Berrington showed all their experience to ease their team to the target.

MacLeod played second fiddle with a runa-ball 29no, while Berrington punished the Omani bowlers with a blistering 47no.

The Clydesdale batsman faced just 29 deliveries, striking six boundaries and two mighty maximums.

Scotland embark on a three-match 50-over series against Oman tomorrow.

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