H Metro

Chevrons choke after 4300km journey

- - Cricinfo

BRISBANE. - The high from the win over Pakistan might last a lifetime for some Zimbabwe fans, but for the players, it lasted barely 60 hours.

After that win on Thursday night in Perth, Zimbabwe celebrated, processed their emotions, packed up, made the 4300km journey to Brisbane, trained for and played the early game on Sunday.

A game they needed to win to have a realistic chance of qualifying for the semi-finals.

It required superhuman resilience to cast aside the mental and emotional fatigue, and perform on a sleepy Brisbane afternoon as they had on that electric night in Perth.

They couldn’t.

That showed in the way Zimbabwe went about the chase, several ordinary shots reducing them to 35 for 4 inside the powerplay.

The decision-making around how to exploit the powerplay appeared questionab­le when Milton Shumba was sent out to bat at No. 3.

Shumba has the lowest T20I strike rate of all the batters in the Zimbabwe middle order, and had endured a torrid T20 World Cup, having scored 55 runs in 64 balls in five matches before this one.

A miserable stay at the crease, where he looked shot of confidence, ended with eight runs in 15 balls.

There has only been one completed innings of at least 15 balls during the Super 12 stage of this World Cup with a lower strike rate.

Sean Williams, speaking after the match, defended the promotion, saying Shumba had “the ability and talent” to do the job for Zimbabwe.

“I think he strikes the ball really well. He’s a stroke-player of the ball. He plays the fast bowlers really well also. He’s a good puller of the ball,” Williams said.

“I think splitting up the senior players through the batting order is an option for us, even if it just hasn’t come off for Milton in the last two games.”

Even the use of the bowling options didn’t feel as tactically purposeful and precise as it had against Pakistan.

Blessing Muzarabani was the pick of the bowlers in the powerplay, effectivel­y picking up where he had left off against Pakistan, removing Soumya Sarkar and Litton Das.

But he wasn’t asked to bowl again, even though there were ostensibly no injury concerns.

Muzarabani said the decision had to do with the spinners being more difficult to handle and the pitch being slower than expected.

But given this was the Gabba, and Muzarabani is an in-form 6ft 8in fast bowler, it sounded unconvinci­ng.

Williams did allude to the challenge of playing spin, but didn’t sound fully sold on the idea.

“To be honest with you, I’m not 100% sure [why Muzarabani didn’t bowl out],” he said.

“What I can tell you is it was very difficult to face spin on that wicket, especially when the ball came slow through the air.

“It definitely had a little bit of purchase, not that much, but it was really hard to actually hit a boundary with the big boundaries out here.”

Evidence of the hangover was most evident in the outfield, where a spate of misfields and dropped chances helped Bangladesh post a total of 150, one they did not look on track for during the first half of that innings. There were at least four clear chances put down.

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