Ireland hold on for last-gasp win
Ireland 164 for 7 (Stirling 60, Panyangara 4-37) beat Zimbabwe 163 for 5 (Taylor 59, Dockrell 2-18) by three wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
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Related Links
Features : Steve Davis' rude shock, Taylor's costly miss
Matches:
Ireland v Zimbabwe at Sylhet
Series/Tournaments:
World T20
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Some say the phrase "The luck of the Irish" refers to the good fortune
enjoyed by the citizens of that country when they took up mining, with
much success, in the United States. Others say it was coined in irony,
to reflect on the potato famine and wars that affected the country so
badly. After their last-ball win against Zimbabwe on St Patrick's Day,
Ireland's cricketers will be inclined to believe the former.
They restricted their Full Member opposition to what was considered a
below-par score on a ground hosting its first international match. In
response, they seemed to be having their own St Patrick's Day parade,
coasting towards a win at 61 without loss after the Powerplay and 99 for
1 at the halfway stage. Then, they started to stutter.
Tinashe Panyangara,
who went for 18 runs in his first over, changed ends and delivered a
double-wicket maiden in the 15th over to drag Zimbabwe back into the
game. Brendan Taylor made the bowler change ends again for his third
over and Kevin O'Brien took 15 runs off Panyangara before falling on his
sword in the 18th over. Still, Ireland needed only seven runs off the
last two overs. Zimbabwe needed a miracle.
Tendai Chatara had bowled intelligently to that point with 17 off three
overs and a wicket. He understood the conditions called for a change of
pace. With a slew of slower balls, he gave away only three in the
penultimate over. Ireland needed four off the last six.
Panyangara stepped up for the final over. The hallmark of his game is
death-bowling and he showed it with his third ball - a perfect yorker to
dismiss Ed Joyce. The next ball was almost as good but Max Sorensen dug
it out and set off for a risky single only to be run out by Sean
Williams at mid-off.
Ireland needed two runs. Zimbabwe still needed a miracle. The
penultimate ball was a low full toss which Stuart Thompson outside-edged
to third man. Ireland were one run away from a win, even as Zimbabwe
thought they could pull off a miracle.
Panyangara fired a yorker-length ball, Alex Cusack missed but ran
anyway. Taylor was not standing up to the stumps but threw under-arm
from his position. Had he hit, Cusack would have been run-out and a
super-over would have ensued. He missed and Ireland scrambled the bye
for a win.
After the match, a gutted Taylor had no explanation for his decision to
not stand closer. "I backed myself to hit the stumps," he said. "But
anyway, these things happen. I think we were still 20 runs short."
It turned out Zimbabwe were only two runs short, but Taylor held the
batsmen responsible for not capitalising on starts. He was the only one
who did, top-scoring with 59. The rest were frustrated by Ireland's
spinners and the sluggish surface.
Between them, Paul Stirling, George Dockrell and Andy McBrine gave away
only 68 runs in 12 overs and took four wickets. They pegged Zimbabwe
back from the outset - Stirling opened the innings with an over that
cost just four and then McBrine and Dockrell punctured the Zimbabwe
innings. Hamilton Masakadza was caught at short midwicket trying to
clear McBrine. Taylor was caught at the extra-cover boundary off
Dockrell, looking to break the shackles after Sibanda lost his wicket to
the pull shot.
After the Powerplay, Zimbabwe were well positioned at 56 for 1 and
looked set for a total of 180-plus. But, at 131 for 5 after 17 overs,
even 155 looked out of reach. Elton Chigumbura showed off his finishing
skills, scoring 16 off the last over, including two sixes, but Taylor
thought even 163 was not enough.
The way Ireland openers William Porterfield and Stirling started seemed
to rubber-stamp the Zimbabwe captain's opinion. They raced to 61 without
loss in the Powerplay, rendering Zimbabwe's early attack ineffective.
Even after they were both dismissed, Ireland marched on.
It was only when Panyangara was brought back from a different end that
Zimbabwe came alive again, inspired by his double strike. Prosper Utseya
kept O'Brien and Joyce quiet, so did Sean Williams, and Zimbabwe built
pressure.
O'Brien was not going to be stopped for too long, though, and when he
tore into Panyangara, it seemed Zimbabwe's comeback was short-lived. The
bowler, however, made up for his mistakes and delivered a final over
that could have seen Zimbabwe win. But it was St Patrick's Day and the
Irish have that luck.
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