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Fleming's easy
ton knocks Tigers down by 9 wickets |
April 02, 2007 (Link to
Scorecard)
The
Black Caps had their revenge on Bangladesh, a
side that had defeated them surprisingly in one
of the Warm-up games. On a hot and sunny day at
North Sound, Stephen Fleming got an 8th ODI
hundred to lead the Kiwis to a 9-wicket win with
as many as 20.4 overs to spare. This was after
the Bangladeshi batsmen put up an extremely mild
total of 174. New Zealand have now won their
first two Super Eight Matches.
Fleming won the toss at the Sir Viv Richards
Stadium in Antigua and he put the Tigers to bat
first on a track that promised to be good for
batting. It was an ideal opportunity for
Bangladesh to post a 250 plus total and then
hope that their bowlers produce some sort of a
magic in the latter part of the match. Things
started on a bright note with the new opening
combination of Tamim Iqbal (29) and Javed Omar
(22) putting on 55. Although it was a slow
start, it was one that saw the new ball off. The
Kiwis did have an early problem losing their new
ball bowler, Michael Mason in the 3rd over due
to a calf muscle strain. The introduction of
Jacob Oram saw the two openers depart. Oram
wouldn't be all that excited with his first
wicket that of Tamim, who was stumped out by
McCullum. Aftab Ahmed and Saqibul Hasan, the
next two batsmen had also got off to starts,
they scored twenties, but couldn't convert them
into meaningful ones.
Bangladesh collapsed in the match by losing
their next six wickets for the addition of only
18 runs. Disappointingly, their Captain Habibul
Bashar and the proven Mohammad Ashraful flopped
yet again. For Bashar, this seems to be a
tournament where he is resting on the shoulders
of his teenagers to perform in the middle. It
was only because of an attacking 30 not out from
the big hitting Mohammad Rafique that had got
Bangladesh to a respectable 174 before they were
bowled out in 48.3 overs. Shane Bond didn't pick
up wickets in a heap, but had suffocated the
batsmen by conceding a miserly 15 runs in 10
overs which included four maidens and two
wickets. Scott Styris enjoyed bowling in the sun
and with the keeper standing up to come up with
4 for 43 in 10 overs while Jacob Oram was once
again consistent with a three-wicket haul.
In reply, Peter Fulton became the first
casualty, getting the toe end of his bat in an
attempted lofted shot to be caught at mid on off
Syed Rasel. The big Fulton ran out of patience,
his ego affected with his 15 runs taking 30
balls. However, that was the only wicket that
the Bangladeshi bowlers would get for the rest
of the match with Stephen Fleming determined to
get the three figures score. Hamish Marshall
made good use of his opportunity to get a fifty,
the best part was that he got there with a six
with New Zealand having just another three runs
to win. It was a race between Fleming and
Marshall to get to their respective milestones
with the amount of runs to get being very few.
Both succeeded in style which made the victory
even more sweeter. Fleming's 102 not out took 92
balls with 10 fours and three sixes, all of them
coming towards widish long on region. Marshall's
innings wasn't all that flawless, his 50 had
come in 54 balls, with most of his runs coming
against the spinners.
Shane Bond was given the Man of the Match award
ahead of Fleming. The Bangladeshi bowling attack
didn't look good enough to pick up the wickets.
Mashrafe Mortaza, their best bowler couldn't
generate much speeds and was bowling in the mid
120kmph mark. The two frontline spinners - Abdur
Razzak and Mohammad Rafique were pathetic as
they kept on firing the ball at a flatter
trajectory onto the pads and never ever got any
turn off the wicket. This is something
Bangladesh have to seriously look at if they
have to compete at the highest level. It's
better if they include Shahadat Hossain, an
energetic fast bowler instead of the slow medium
pacer Syed Rasel, who lacks the required
aggression with the new ball. Overall, it was a
professional show put up by the Black Caps
atleast with the bat as they made no fuss in
chasing the target which they had got well
inside 30 overs. The minus point they get was
for allowing the last wicket pair of Bangladesh
to add up 34 runs and last 37 balls!
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