World T20: Afghanistan register opening win

Mohammad Shahzad brought the house down with his colourful strokeplay, scoring 61 off 39 balls


Afp March 08, 2016
Mohammad Shahzad (R) is watched by Scotland's Matt Cross as he plays a shot during World T20 match in Nagpur on March 8, 2016. PHOTO: AFP

NAGPUR: Afghanistan got off to winning start on the opening day of the World T20 after respectively overcoming a spirited Scotland in Nagpur on Tuesday.

In the second match of the day, favourites Afghanistan rode on an entertaining fifty from Mohammad Shahzad to beat Scotland by 14 runs.

Choosing to bat, Afghanistan built on an 82-run second wicket partnership between skipper Asghar Stanikzai (55 not out) and Shahzad (61) to post 170 for five.

World T20: Sibanda powers Zimbabwe to opening win

Wicketkeeper-batsman Shahzad brought the house down with his colourful strokeplay, including the trademark 'helicopter shot' borrowed from his favourite player MS Dhoni.

His 39-ball stay, laced with five boundaries and three sixes, gave the side enough momentum to keep the total out of the reach of Scotland, who could only muster 156 for five in their 20 overs.

The Preston Mommsen-led side got off to a flying start only to lose the plot after the departure of their openers George Munsey (41) and Kyle Coetzer (40).

Sammy hails Gayle as T20's ulimate destroyer

At 84 for no loss, Scotland looked set to overhaul their target, but spinners Samiullah Shenwari and Rashid Khan had other ideas.

The leg-spin duo shared three wickets between them to hurt the Scotland chase by stifling the flow of runs amidst the growing run-rate.

New Zealand planning WT20 Crowe tribute

Though guilty of a few slip-ups in the field, Afghanistan also produced a crucial run out in the 11th over as Scotland lost three of their batsmen in the space of 10 deliveries.

Matt Machan then tried hard to get the chase back on track with a hard-working 36, but Afghanistan kept their nerves to get an expected result in their favour.

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ