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20 April 2024

Bangladesh keep alive quarter-final hopes

Tamim Iqbal of Bangladesh pulls the ball away for four runs during the 2015 ICC Cricket World Cup match between Bangladesh and Scotland at Saxton Field on March 5, 2015 in Nelson, New Zealand. (Getty Images)

Published
By Agencies

Bangladesh kept their World Cup quarter-final hopes alive when they defeated Scotland by six wickets in Nelson on Thursday, achieving the second highest successful run-chase in tournament history.

In a Pool A match of tumbling national records, Bangladesh overtook Scotland's 318 with 11 balls to spare.

Each time Scotland felt they had made a significant breakthrough as Bangladesh narrowed in on the target, up stepped another batsman to maintain the pace.

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Tamim Iqbal top scored with 95, Mohammed Mahmudullah added 62 and Mushfiqur Rahim produced 60 before Shakib Al Hasan (not out 52) and Sabbir Rahman (not out 42) finished the game off.

Batting is Bangladesh's strength and to haul in Scotland's 318 they played without panic to produce the second highest successful chase by any team - behind Ireland's 329 against England in 2011 - in a World Cup match.

Bangladesh must now beat either a floundering England side, or so far unbeaten New Zealand, in their last two games to be assured of a quarter-final berth.

Scotland did not make it easy for Bangladesh but for the second game in succession, following last week's loss to Afghanistan, they succumbed to the pressure.

Bangladesh started the chase one-man down after Anamul Haque dislocated his right shoulder cutting off a Preston Mommsen boundary after Scotland were sent into bat first.

They were effectively two down when Soumya Sarkar was dismissed in the second over leaving Tamim and Mahmudullah to start the innings on a near-perfect batting strip.

After 10 overs, when Scotland were 39-2, Bangladesh were 62-1. At the 20-over stage, when Scotland were 94-2, Bangladesh had widened the margin to 123-1.

Tamim, who became the second Bangladeshi to pass 4,000 ODI runs, and Mahmudullah put on a Bangladesh World Cup record partnership of 139, and following Mahmudullah's dismissal in the 24th over Mushfiqur kept the pace up.

Tamim, who produced miserable totals of nought and 19 in his previous two World Cup innings, found his form when Bangladesh needed it and was five runs short of a century when he was trapped leg before wicket.

Bangladesh appealed but there was never any doubt he was plumb in front, and at 201-3 with 19 overs left they remained in charge and with a chance to emulate their effort at the 2007 World Cup when they made the final eight.

However, for Scotland after 12 matches and 16 years since they debuted in cricket's one-day showpiece tournament they have yet to savour a win and are definitely now out of the competition.

Their hopes were boosted when man-of-the-match Kyle Coetzer made 156 in what was the first World Cup century by a Scotland batsman, heading the previous best of 76 by Gavin Hamilton against Pakistan in 1999, and was their second-best individual ODI score.

Scotland's 318-run total was their third highest ODI total and their best at a World Cup, surpassing the 210 against Afghanistan last week.

But, like the West Indies and United Arab Emirates before them, they failed to defend a total on the Saxton Oval wicket.

Josh Davey was the most successful bowler for Scotland with two for 68, while the most productive bowler for Bangladesh, Taskin Ahmed, took three for 43.

Scoreboard:

Scotland


K. Coetzer c Soumya b Nasir 156
C. MacLeod c Mahmudullah b Mortaza 11
H. Gardiner c Soumya b Taskin 19
M. Machan c and b Sabbir 35
P. Mommsen c Soumya b Nasir 39
R. Berrington c Mushfiqur b Taskin 26
M. Cross c Sabbir b Taskin 20
J Davey not out 4
M. Haq c Soumya b Shakib 1
A. Evans not out 0
Extras (lb1, w5, nb1) 7
Total (8 wkts, 50 overs) 318
Did not bat: I Wardlaw
Fall of wickets: 1-13 (MacLeod), 2-38 (Gardiner), 3-116 (Machan), 4-257 (Mommsen), 5-269 (Coetzer), 6-308 (Berrington), 7-312 (Cross), 8-315 (Haq)
Bowling: Mortaza 8-0-60-1 (1nb, 1w); Shakib 10-0-46-1 (1w); Taskin 7-0-43-3 (2w); Rubel 8-0-60-0 (1w); Mahmudullah 5-0-29-0; Sabbir 7-0-47-1; Nasir 5-0-32-2;

Bangladesh

Tamim Iqbal lbw Davey 95
Soumya Sarkar c Cross b Davey 2
M. Mahmudullah b Wardlaw 62
Mushfiqur Rahim c MacLeod b Evans 60
Shakib Al Hasan not out 52
Sabbir Rahman not out 42
Extras (w8, nb1) 9
Total (4 wkts, 48.1 overs) 322
Did not bat: Anamul Haque, Nasir Hossain, Mashrafe Mortaza, Rubel Hossain, Taskin Ahmed
Fall of wickets: 1-5 (Soumya Sarkar), 2-144 (Mahmudullah), 3-201 (Tamim Iqbal), 4-247 (Mushfiqur Rahim)
Bowling: Wardlaw 9.1-0-75-1 (2w); Davey 10-0-68-2 (5w); Evans 10-1-67-1; Machan 7-0-45-0; Haq 10-0-49-0 (1nb, 1w); Berrington 2-0-18-0;

Result: Bangladesh won by six wickets

Toss: Bangladesh
Umpires: Simon Fry (AUS), Bruce Oxenford (AUS)
TV umpire: Rod Tucker (AUS)
Match referee: David Boon (AUS)

Scotland innings

Kyle Coetzer stroked Scotland's first World Cup century to fire his team to an impressive 318 for eight against Bangladesh in their World Cup clash in Nelson on Thursday.

The 30-year-old's 156 at Saxton Oval was also the highest score by a batsman from an associate nation at the global showpiece and ensured his team would post their highest score against a test nation.

After several balls on 97 where he was unable to lay bat on ball, he brought up the milestone in style by slamming Rubel Hossain over long on for his second six. He also hit 12 boundaries in the first 100 runs.

Scotland were reduced to 38 for two in the 10th over after being asked to bat by Bangladesh captain Mashrafe Mortaza, but Coetzer shared in a 141-run partnership with captain Preston Mommsen (39) and 78 runs with Matt Machan (35) to anchor the innings.

Scotland enjoyed their third 300-plus score in one-day internationals, having also achieved the mark against Ireland in 2011 and Canada in 2014.

After Coezter was dismissed in the 45th over with Scotland 269 for five, Richie Berrington (26) and Matt Cross (20) combined for a quickfire 39 runs that saw their side past 300.

While Saxton Oval is a high-scoring ground, the total could be tough for Bangladesh who suffered an injury blow when batsman Anamul Haque dived to prevent a boundary in the 31st over and appeared to dislocate his right shoulder.

He was immediately treated by medical staff but did not re-appear on the field during the remainder of Scotland's innings.