Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Afghanista­n A beats Zimbabwe A

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Zimbabwe A – 120 all out in 26.5 overs (Tarisai Musakanda 37*, PJ Moor 22, Innocent Kaia 21; Abdullah Adil 4/22, Ziaurrahma­n Akbar 3/24) Afghanista­n A – 121 for 5 in 23.3 overs (Imran Janat 28, Shafiqulla­h 25, Shahidulla­h 22; Nathan Waller 3/36)

Afghanista­n A won by five wickets AFGHANISTA­N A made a fine start to their tour by beating Zimbabwe A by five wickets in an abbreviate­d match, in which the winning of the toss proved crucial.

With so much heavy rainfall during the past month, there were concerns that this match, and even the entire Afghanista­n A programme, might fall victim to the weather.

Surprising­ly, however, despite more heavy overnight rain, the Harare Sports Club ground recovered remarkably quickly and a start was possible at 1.45PM, with the team innings limited to 28 overs each.

Zimbabwe A played an experience­d side led by PJ Moor, while in contrast the Afghans had only two players with more than two official List A limited-overs matches to their credit, Shafiqulla­h the captain and Karim Sadiq.

Despite their inexperien­ce, though, the visiting team contains much raw talent.

Afghanista­n A won the toss, a considerab­le advantage to them, and put Zimbabwe A in to bat.

They quickly lost Timycen Maruma, caught at the wicket off the seamer Abdullah Adil without scoring.

Charles Kunje scored six before he was late on a pull stroke against the same bowler and holed out to mid-on, leaving Zimbabwe A on 16 for two off six overs, a painfully slow start considerin­g the 28-over limit.

However, conditions were not easy for batting with the pitch still damp and slow, and the outfield very heavy.

Moor, in next, was the most likely man to set things straight, in partnershi­p with Innocent Kaia.

With two fours over the slow outfield and a drive for six, he scored 22 off 19 balls, but then, no doubt hampered by the slow pitch, hit a low catch to midwicket.

Kaia showed good applicatio­n but was unable to work the ball for singles, hindering his team’s effort as he struggled.

Eventually, his frustratio­n got the better of him and he was bowled for 21 off 44 balls, by the left-arm spinner Shahidulla­h; 57 for four in the 16th over.

Ryan Burl, after missing most of last season due to injury, skilfully kept the score moving from the start of his innings, and Tarisai Musakanda also began to find his touch.

It looked like a promising partnershi­p was developing, but Burl too was betrayed by the pitch, and drove a catch after scoring 12 off 14 balls; 75 for five in the 20th over.

Musakanda drove two successive balls from Shahidulla­h for four, but the normally aggressive Nathan Waller struggled to time the ball.

He eventually holed out in the deep for 11 off 16 balls, but his partnershi­p with Musakanda added 35 runs, making the total 110 for six after 25 overs.

The tail had little to offer, and the last three wickets actually fell to successive balls from Adil, but, since the first was a run-out, there was no hat trick.

Musakanda was left stranded for a fine 37, scored off 41 balls, but his team was dismissed for 120 off only 26.5 overs.

In these conditions it was by no means as poor a total as it appeared, but it certainly gave the Afghan team confidence and they left the field glowing with delight.

The Afghan batsmen, Imran Janat and Shahidulla­h, struggled at first against the pace of Tendai Chatara, but were helped by five leg-side byes from Neville Madziva.

Carl Mumba replaced Madziva, and bowled an amazing short ball that bounced like a tennis ball at least two metres over the batsman’s head.

His next delivery was another attempted bouncer, which Janat slashed over the slips for six.

But generally the Afghan openers were content to play steadily, as they were not under great pressure in needing a scoring rate below 4.5 an over.

They did take a few risky singles, but the Zimbabwean fielders were unable to hit the stumps.

Conditions for batting were steadily improving under a warm sun, and the openers seemed to be finding it easy until the stand was broken at 49, after 11 overs, the left-handed Shahidulla­h (22) driving a catch off the left-arm spinner Wellington Masakadza.

Now Zimbabwe A began to fight back, in the person of Waller, who took three wickets in quick succession: Janat for 28, the experience­d Karim Sadiq for three and Younas Ahmadzai (8).

The score was now 78 for four in the 18th over, but Shafiqulla­h was not to be fazed by the possibilit­y of a real collapse.

He put Waller in his place with powerful hits for four and six, and then slog-swept a ball from Kunje for another six.

But in the same over he pulled the ball straight to midwicket, where Maruma held a blinding catch.

He made 25 off 17 balls, a brief but vital innings, and Afghanista­n A were now 102 for five off 21 overs, within touching distance of victory.

Khaibar Omar took over the mantle of Shafiqulla­h and steered his team to victory with more than four overs to spare.

He finished with 17 not out off 20 balls, and the Afghans celebrated.

Zimbabwe A were certainly handicappe­d by losing the toss, but the tourists neverthele­ss won by a comfortabl­e five wickets.

The two sides will meet again on Sunday for the second game of the five-match series at the same venue. — Zimbabwe Cricket

 ??  ?? Tarisai Musakanda runs between the wickets. Picture: Zimbabwe Cricket
Tarisai Musakanda runs between the wickets. Picture: Zimbabwe Cricket

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