Saturday Star

Ireland knock out West Indies

- | AFP

IRELAND stunned the West Indies to power into the Twenty20 World Cup Super 12 yesterday and send the two-time champions crashing out, with Zimbabwe joining them in the next round after edging past Scotland.

Sri Lanka and the Netherland­s had already progressed from the other preliminar­y group to join the big guns, including defending champions Australia, who open their tournament against New Zealand today.

Discipline­d bowling from the Irish restricted the West Indies to 146-5 in Hobart, with Gareth Delany taking a career-best 3-16 before they romped to the target with nine wickets and 15 balls to spare.

Opener Paul Stirling, at his seventh World Cup, ended on an unbeaten 66, while Andy Balbirnie made 37.

It snapped a 13-year drought of failing to make round two, having reached it once previously in 2009. Zimbabwe are in round two for the first time on their sixth attempt, after they beat Scotland by five wickets, with skipper Craig Ervine hitting a half-century and Tendai Chatara taking 2-14.

They limited the Scots to 132-6 with tidy bowling, before rattling through the run chase with nine balls to spare. “It means everything. We had a disappoint­ing loss last year at the same stage,” said Ireland skipper Balbirnie, who shared in a blistering 73-run opening stand with Stirling.

But it was a disaster for the West Indies, who won the tournament in 2012 and 2016, but came to Australia with a new-look team after the likes of Chris Gayle, Dwayne Bravo and Kieron Pollard retired, and Andre Russell was overlooked. “This is a learning experience for us. We have disappoint­ed our fans and ourselves. It’s definitely hurting,” said West Indies skipper Nicholas Pooran.

After the West Indies won the toss and batted, the Irish bowlers sent down nine dot balls among their first 15.

In frustratio­n, Kyle Mayers launched at a delivery from Barry Mccarthy and was caught for one. The dangerous Johnson Charles slammed 4-4-6 off Curtis Campher, but his luck soon ran out, gone for 24.

In reply, Ireland got off to a cracking start with Stirling and Balbirnie blazing 54 off the first five overs.

Balbirnie fell to the spin of Akeal Hosein, but Stirling, in his 177th internatio­nal, kept going and with Lorcan Tucker (45 not out) saw them home. In the later game, Scotland batted first, but lost Michael Jones in the first over.

Opener George Munsey gave them hope with his ninth T20 half-century, but their 132-6 was always reachable.

 ?? | Reuters ?? PAUL Stirling batting for Ireland.
| Reuters PAUL Stirling batting for Ireland.

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