Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Hopefully Bangladesh can do us a favour: Jarvis

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struck two fours and a dismissive six during the steady fall of wickets, hammered Mustafizur down the ground for his fourth boundary before playing on to his stumps in the same over to end all hopes for Zimbabwe. Shakib added a third before Mustafizur closed out the innings.

It wasn’t just Zimbabwe who struggled against spin. Graeme Cremer took four wickets. The three Zimbabwe spinners - Cremer, Raza and Waller - gave away just four boundaries in 27 overs between them, and gave away runs at 3.81 per over. Medium-pacer Kyle Jarvis chipped in with three wickets.

Even during the 106-run second wicket stand between Shakib and Tamim, Zimbabwe’s spinners had a major say. The pair couldn’t find any boundaries in one phase of their partnershi­p. That phase lasted 12.2 overs in a partnershi­p of 25 overs. Raza, Cremer and Waller put the brakes on with their accuracy and the slow pitch too played its part.

Tamim managed to reach two milestones during this time — he first became the highest scorer in a single venue in ODIs and then when he moved to 66, he became the first Bangladesh­i to reach 6,000 ODI runs.

There was hardly any accelerati­on during the THE Zimbabwe batsmen could have simply emulated what Bangladesh’s experience­d duo of Shakib Al Hasan and Tamim Iqbal did in their approach to chasing 217 runs, according to Kyle Jarvis. innings and when they made an effort, they ended up giving away their wickets. Shakib was stumped trying to charge Raza before Mushfiqur and Mahmudulla­h fell to Cremer in quick succession. Then, Tamim was stumped for 76 off 105 balls off a Cremer googly, before Mashrafe fell to give the Zimbabwe’s captain his 100th wicket in ODIs.

Sunzamul, Mustafizur and Rubel Hossain added 45 runs together in the last 7.4 overs to frustrate Zimbabwe and used the momentum to good effect when they came out to bowl. — ESPNcricin­fo.

Instead, they were bowled out for 125, which left their path to the tri-series final in the hands of Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.

Shakib and Tamim added 106 for the second wicket, spending half of the length of their partnershi­p without boundaries. The pitch wasn’t conducive to stroke-making as was evident by more boundary droughts throughout the game. But Zimbabwe lost four wickets in the first 10 overs, after Sikandar Raza tried hard to single-handedly bring the chase back in order. When he was eighth out, the chase was effectivel­y over.

Jarvis said Zimbabwe would now have to rely on the home side to beat Sri Lanka by a certain margin to ensure that Zimbabwe go through, and that this wait for someone else to do their job wasn’t desirable.

“The way Tamim and Shakib batted, hitting the ball along the ground and gave themselves a chance. They got some runs. That’s what we needed,” Jarvis said. “We needed two or three batters to get in and give themselves a chance. We let ourselves down big time, we should never have been bowled out for 125.

“The moment you lose three early wickets, it is going to be really difficult to get those runs especially with the class of bowlers Bangladesh have. I think few guys will be asking tough questions of themselves.

“It is going to go down to runrates. Hopefully Bangladesh can do us a favour in the next game. We shouldn’t have left it in someone else’s hands. We should have done it ourselves. We wish Bangladesh good luck in the next game.”

Jarvis, who took three wickets in Zimbabwe’s impressive bowling display, said that if, on January 25, Zimbabwe get knocked out of this tournament, they have to look forward to five ODIs against Afghanista­n before they launch the World Cup qualifiers at home in March.

“For us, it is about getting in the groove again,” he said. “This is going to be a good building block, especially going to Dubai next to play five games against Afghanista­n. We have to try to get better as a squad.

“The win against Sri Lanka showed glimpses of what this team can do, so we have to take whatever positives we can get out of this and just keep building. It is a good group of players despite what we have shown out there.” - ESPNcricin­fo

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 ??  ?? Zimbabwe’s Kyle Jarvis got Anamul Haque’s wicket early after Bangladesh elected to bat in tricky conditions during a Tri-nation series tie yesterday
Zimbabwe’s Kyle Jarvis got Anamul Haque’s wicket early after Bangladesh elected to bat in tricky conditions during a Tri-nation series tie yesterday
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