Pakistan Super League 2022

2022 Pakistan Super League is the seventh season of the Pakistan Super League, a franchise Twenty20 cricket league which was established by the Pakistan Cricket Board in 2015. The league began on 27 January 2022, with the final scheduled to take place on 27 February.

ICC Announced Schedule of 2022 ICC T20 World Cup 2022.

The International Cricket Council has announced the schedule for the 2022 ICC T20 World Cup 2022. Accordingly, the mini-World Cup to be held in Australia will take place on October 16

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23 March 2012

Pakistan prevail in dramatic final

Pakistan 236 for 9 (Sarfraz 46*, Hafeez 40, Razzak 2-26, Shakib 2-39) beat Bangladesh 234 for 8 (Shakib 68, Tamim 60, Cheema 3-46) by two runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Shakib Al Hasan loses his leg stump, Bangladesh v Pakistan, Asia Cup final, Mirpur, March 22, 2012
Shakib Al Hasan's dismissal with Bangladesh needing 58 off 39 balls was one of the game's turning points


When their gut-wrenching disappointment dies down, Bangladesh will remember that they were just one stroke away from the Asia Cup title. And see it as clinching evidence of their progress. When their sense of relief passes, Pakistan will remember that they were tested to the hilt, but came through somehow. And see it as confirmation of their renowned ability to win the big moments.
But for the moment, Bangladesh will be gutted; gutted at what could have been, gutted that it wasn't to be. They had lost their first tournament final by two wickets to Sri Lanka in 2009. The margin was two runs today.
What wouldn't Shahadat Hossain give to take back the 50th over of Pakistan's innings bowled by him which went for 19? What wouldn't Nazimuddin and Nasir Hossain give to take back their innings of 16 off 52 balls and 28 off 63 in the chase?
In a game that came down to four runs needed off the last ball, several passages of play could be said to have been decisive. Sarfraz Ahmed's 46 off 52, which turned 199 for 8 into 236 for 9. Shahid Afridi's 32 off 22 and 1 for 28 in ten overs with the ball. Shakib Al Hasan's dismissal with Bangladesh needing 58 off 39.
Bangladesh had themselves to blame for allowing a target that had seemed gettable at the start to turn into a daunting one. It was Nazimuddin's clueless crawl of an innings that invited pressure despite Tamim Iqbal's fourth consecutive half-century. Tamim's departure to Younis Khan's third sharp catch further increased the pressure on the hosts in their first chase in a tournament final.
While the plan could have been for Nazimuddin to be the anchor and Tamim to be the aggressor, the former became completely subdued after being beaten four times in five deliveries by Umar Gul in the second over, leaving run-making duties completely to his partner.
Tamim responded by hitting Gul out of the attack with four fours in nine deliveries. All shots bore the mark of a man in top form, with the highlight being a punch through point played with his feet off the ground. Nazimuddin continued to dig a deeper hole for himself, treating Mohammad Hafeez with utmost respect and allowing him to get through five overs for only 10 runs.
Realisation belatedly dawned on him, but by then, he had got into such a rut that he was mistiming almost everything. Bangladesh were not able to get anywhere close to dominating, which they should have given the way Tamim was batting. In the same Shahid Afridi over in which Tamim brought up his fourth half-century of the tournament, off 48 balls, Younis finally ended Nazimuddin's misery with a running catch at long-off. By then, Nazimuddin had used up 52 balls for his 16.

Sarfraz Ahmed plays one to the leg side, Bangladesh v Pakistan, Asia Cup final, Mirpur, March 22, 2012
Sarfraz Ahmed's 46 off 52 balls gave Pakistan's bowlers something to defend.

Jahurul Islam did not last long against Ajmal's doosra and gave Younis his second catch, at slip. With Nasir also struggling to get going, Tamim decided to take on Gul but only found extra cover with a mis-hit pull, Younis diving forward to take another excellent catch.
Carrying his nation's hopes once again, Shakib walked in at 81 for 3 and pulled his first delivery for four. Afridi and Gul responded with consecutive maiden overs. Shakib set about targetting Hammad Azam and Cheema as Bangladesh tried to keep the rate from galloping out of control.
It rose above eight. Shakib swung Cheema over midwicket for six. Despite Shakib's hitting, Nasir's struggle had begun to hurt Bangladesh. It was similar to the way the innings had cantered and stalled alternatively when Tamim and Nazimuddin were batting.
Nasir finally holed out off Gul in the 43rd over. Shakib coolly scooped the last ball of that over past short fine leg. But an attempt to repeat the stroke in the next over off Cheema resulted in his leg stump being rattled.
With 47 needed off five overs, Mushfiqur Rahim swung Cheema straight to deep midwicket. This Bangladesh side does not easily roll over though. Mahmudullah and Mashrafe Mortaza smashed Gul for three fours in four balls in the 47th over. It came down to 19 needed off 15. Mortaza then paddled Ajmal into the hands of short fine leg.
With Mahmudullah still around and four needed off two, Abdur Razzak turned Cheema onto his stumps, and, in an ironic end, Shahadat, could not get the last ball away for more than a leg-bye.
As Misbah-ul-Haq embraced Cheema, there were tears in the Bangladesh dressing room. They had been favourites to crack on their biggest day as a cricketing nation. A fourth consistent performance on the trot was expected to be beyond them. But they gave an extremely creditable account of themselves, especially with the ball.
Pakistan are masters of the big moment, though, and somehow find a player who performs. Wicketkeeper Sarfraz, who had a highest ODI score of 24 and a strike-rate of 62.35 before this game, weighed in with a 52-ball 46.
Bangladesh's bowling was tight and their fielding was energetic, as it had been throughout the tournament. Pakistan were not allowed to get away, except in the last over. Bangladesh's leading ODI wicket-taker Abdur Razzak rose to the occasion, with figures of 10-3-26-2. But Shahadat proved expensive once again in a horror last over which contained two no-balls and went for 19.
Bangladesh's discipline till then had kept Pakistan under relentless pressure. And that pressure had brought wickets. Their openers, Hafeez and Nasir Jamshed - who had a century and a double-century stand earlier in the tournament - failed to clear the infield in their attempts to hit out. Younis and Umar Akmal got rough decisions, Misbah's hesitation ran him out, and Azam and Afridi threw it away.
Afridi was his normal hit-or-depart self, and another promising innings was soon terminated, after a few breathtaking strokes, with a mis-hit to long-off. There was no knowing at that stage that it would turn out to be one of the most important knocks of the game.
Gul could not repeat his salvage act from the tournament opener against Bangladesh, and Sarfraz was the unlikely candidate for a mini-recovery. He ensured Pakistan batted the full 50 overs and Bangladesh finally fell apart in the last one. Shahadat served up waist-high full tosses, and short and wide deliveries to be carted for 19, and left Pakistan's strength, their bowling, with a decent score to defend.
A chase in a final was something Bangladesh had never encountered before. It did inhibit the usual freedom of a couple of their batsmen, and that was the difference in the end.
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21 March 2012

Team effort takes Bangladesh to historic final

Bangladesh 212 for 5 (Tamim 59, Shakib 56, Nasir 36*) beat Sri Lanka 232 (Kapugedera 62, Nazmul 3-32) by five wickets by D/L method 
Bangladesh made it to the final of the Asia Cup, defying pre-tournament expectations with consecutive victories against their more fancied neighbours. It was only the second time they had reached the finals of a one-day tournament. The bowlers restricted Sri Lanka to 232, but rain siphoned off ten overs and reduced the target to 212. The increased asking-rate, 5.30 an over, gave both teams a chance, but enterprising batting by Tamim Iqbal on a spiced-up pitch gave their chase a kickstart. The Bangladesh middle order withstood the pressure and gave the expectant crowd a reason to show up in similar numbers for the final, on Thursday.
Nasir Hossain proved once again why he is the find of the season for Bangladesh and Tamim put the farce of his earlier non-selection to rest. Nasir's calm half-century partnership with Mahmudullah ensured Bangladesh did not implode in the rush for a quick finish. The sea of green jerseys in the crowd were rewarded for staying in their seats even as Sri Lanka clawed back. Many clasped their hands in prayer once Bangladesh lost their fifth wicket, Shakib Al Hasan, but the temperament of the sixth-wicket pair showed why Bangladesh could start the finals not as underdogs, but contenders. India, waiting on the result of this game, will be headed home despite a better net run-rate because they lost to Bangladesh.
Sri Lanka were pegged back at the very beginning, when another Hossain, Nazmul, coming in for the injured Shafiul Islam, nipped out three top-order wickets. The middle order, led by Chamara Kapugedera, gave the innings some respectability, but Sri Lanka were not able to post a challenging score on a ground on which two big chases had already been completed in the tournament.
A mid-innings downpour gave the pitch the kind of zip missing during the afternoon. Lasith Malinga tested the top order with bouncers that fizzed past the helmet, while Nuwan Kulasekara got the ball to swerve in to the right-handers to castle Nazimuddin and flummox the captain Mushfiqur Rahim.
Bangladesh were three down for 40, but the passage of play was punctuated by some blistering strokeplay by Tamim. His balance and follow-through were exemplary, especially in his driving through the off side. Mahela Jayawardene tried to plug that gap with a short point, and later with two fielders up close at cover and extra cover, but Tamim was not deterred. He lofted one over the covers and then whipped consecutive boundaries through midwicket, showing his class on both sides of the wicket.
Shakib, after passing a tough test against some short bowling, settled in and crashed Suranga Lakmal for three consecutive boundaries through the off side. Tamim reached his half-century with a clip for four off Farveez Maharoof, and his pleasing strokeplay won the applause of the country's premier Sheikh Hasina, also in attendance. He was dropped by Sachitra Senanayake, after lobbing a simple chance back to the bowler, but Senanayake finally got his man when an uppish slash was taken at point. Tamim walked back to a hush from the expectant crowd, with their hopes pinned on Shakib.
Shakib's battle with Senanayake was a compelling one. Shakib got on top of him initially with boundaries over extra cover, but once the bowler shortened his length, Shakib looked edgy. Unsure of the bounce, he stabbed at two consecutive deliveries and nearly lobbed both for catches. Senanayake got one to skid through and trapped him in front of leg stump to give Sri Lanka hope, with the hosts still 77 runs adrift.
Sri Lanka were guilty of easing the pressure on the batsmen by feeding them balls full on the pads, which were clipped away to fine leg. Nasir and Mahmudullah kept out the inswinging yorkers, did not panic when they played the ball to the fielders, and calmly picked up singles. Tillakaratne Dilshan was brought on after the quicks failed to take wickets, but the pair didn't change their approach. A firm push by Nasir was parried by mid-on to the boundary, leading to wild celebrations and a victory lap.
The win was set up by Nazmul, who removed the power trio of Jayawardene, Dilshan and Kumar Sangakkara. Jayawardene missed a straight one, Dilshan chopped a delivery onto his stumps and Sangakkara spooned a catch to extra cover, bringing an end to an indifferent season with the bat for him.
Bangladesh came out with a sense of purpose, fielding with intent after winning the toss. They were aided by a surface which, though not the same used for the India-Pakistan game, appeared slower and suited their crop of bowlers. The medium-pacers bowled several slower deliveries to tighten the noose on the run-rate.
Kapugedera and Lahiru Thirimanne added 88 for the fourth wicket, but one of them needed to bat through the innings to set a competitive target. Upul Tharanga made a breezy 48*, but not for the first time since his demotion, he had to repair the damage done upfront, again raising questions about the structure of the batting line-up.
Kapugedera, under pressure to keep his place, made good use of his promotion, using his feet to the spinners. A stroke of luck, though, gave Bangladesh the breakthrough when Thirimanne missed a nudge off Abdur Razzak and was stumped after the ball deflected off Mushfiqur's pads onto the stumps.
Tharanga's arrival perked up the scoring, as he punished a wayward Shahadat Hossain for three quick boundaries. Kapugedera managed a face-saving half-century, but his innings was cut short by a sharp reflex-catch by Shakib at extra cover. Shakib struck with the ball soon after, getting two wickets. Boundaries by the lower order pushed Sri Lanka to 232, but one could sense that was always going to be inadequate.
It ended a mixed season for a travel-weary Sri Lanka, following the highs of Australia. Not too long ago, India were in their hotel rooms in Brisbane, hoping for a Sri Lankan defeat to push them into the CB Series finals. This time, in a hotel not far from the ground, they were ironically hoping for a Sri Lankan win. There were no back-door entries for a team which has suffered its worst away season in recent history
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17 March 2012

ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier, Results

1st Match, Group A: Afghanistan v Papua New Guinea at Dubai (DSC) - Mar 13, 2012
Papua New Guinea 112/6 (20/20 ov); Afghanistan 113/4 (19/20 ov)
Afghanistan won by 6 wickets (with 6 balls remaining)
2nd Match, Group B: Italy v Oman at Dubai (GCA) - Mar 13, 2012
Oman 89/9 (20/20 ov); Italy 90/1 (14/20 ov)
Italy won by 9 wickets (with 36 balls remaining)
3rd Match, Group B: Ireland v Namibia at Dubai (GCA2) - Mar 13, 2012
Namibia 160/8 (20/20 ov); Ireland 156/9 (20/20 ov)
Namibia won by 4 runs
4th Match, Group B: Uganda v United States of America at Sharjah - Mar 13, 2012
United States of America 123/8 (20/20 ov); Uganda 124/6 (19.2/20 ov)
Uganda won by 4 wickets (with 4 balls remaining)
5th Match, Group A: Canada v Netherlands at Dubai (DSC) - Mar 13, 2012
Netherlands 135/6 (20/20 ov); Canada 93 (16.4/20 ov)
Netherlands won by 42 runs
6th Match, Group B: Kenya v Scotland at Dubai (GCA) - Mar 13, 2012
Scotland 178/7 (20/20 ov); Kenya 164 (20/20 ov)
Scotland won by 14 runs
7th Match, Group A: Hong Kong v Nepal at Dubai (GCA2) - Mar 13, 2012
Nepal 130/6 (20/20 ov); Hong Kong 102/9 (20/20 ov)
Nepal won by 28 runs
8th Match, Group A: Bermuda v Denmark at Sharjah - Mar 13, 2012
Bermuda 116/7 (20/20 ov); Denmark 117/3 (19.1/20 ov)
Denmark won by 7 wickets (with 5 balls remaining)
9th Match, Group B: Ireland v Kenya at Dubai (DSC) - Mar 14, 2012
Kenya 71 (19/20 ov); Ireland 72/0 (7.2/20 ov)
Ireland won by 10 wickets (with 76 balls remaining)
10th Match, Group A: Canada v Papua New Guinea at Dubai (GCA) - Mar 14, 2012
Canada 167/5 (20/20 ov); Papua New Guinea 161/3 (20/20 ov)
Canada won by 6 runs
11th Match, Group A: Bermuda v Hong Kong at Dubai (GCA2) - Mar 14, 2012
Bermuda 161/5 (20/20 ov); Hong Kong 164/2 (17.3/20 ov)
Hong Kong won by 8 wickets (with 15 balls remaining)
12th Match, Group B: Italy v United States of America at Abu Dhabi - Mar 14, 2012
Italy 137/6 (20/20 ov); United States of America 129/8 (20/20 ov)
Italy won by 8 runs
13th Match, Group A: Afghanistan v Netherlands at Dubai (DSC) - Mar 14, 2012
Netherlands 149/6 (20/20 ov); Afghanistan 150/6 (19.4/20 ov)
Afghanistan won by 4 wickets (with 2 balls remaining)
14th Match, Group A: Denmark v Nepal at Dubai (GCA) - Mar 14, 2012
Denmark 82 (19.1/20 ov); Nepal 85/1 (12.4/20 ov)
Nepal won by 9 wickets (with 44 balls remaining)
15th Match, Group B: Oman v Uganda at Dubai (GCA2) - Mar 14, 2012
Oman 128/8 (20/20 ov); Uganda 132/7 (19.1/20 ov)
Uganda won by 3 wickets (with 5 balls remaining)
16th Match, Group B: Namibia v Scotland at Abu Dhabi - Mar 14, 2012
Namibia 192/3 (20/20 ov); Scotland 143/8 (20/20 ov)
Namibia won by 49 runs
17th Match, Group A: Canada v Hong Kong at Dubai (GCA) - Mar 15, 2012
Hong Kong 81/8 (20/20 ov); Canada 84/2 (14/20 ov)
Canada won by 8 wickets (with 36 balls remaining)
18th Match, Group B: Namibia v United States of America at Dubai (GCA2) - Mar 15, 2012
Namibia 177/4 (20/20 ov); United States of America 160/7 (20/20 ov)
Namibia won by 17 runs
19th Match, Group B: Ireland v Italy at Abu Dhabi - Mar 15, 2012
Italy 100/7 (20/20 ov); Ireland 104/8 (19.4/20 ov)
Ireland won by 2 wickets (with 2 balls remaining)
20th Match, Group A: Afghanistan v Denmark at Sharjah - Mar 15, 2012
Afghanistan 172/5 (20/20 ov); Denmark 83/9 (20/20 ov)
Afghanistan won by 89 runs
21st Match, Group B: Scotland v Uganda at Dubai (GCA) - Mar 15, 2012
Scotland 170/6 (20/20 ov); Uganda 136/9 (20/20 ov)
Scotland won by 34 runs
22nd Match, Group B: Kenya v Oman at Dubai (GCA2) - Mar 15, 2012
Kenya 176/5 (20/20 ov); Oman 141/9 (20/20 ov)
Kenya won by 35 runs
23rd Match, Group A: Bermuda v Netherlands at Abu Dhabi - Mar 15, 2012
Netherlands 125/9 (20/20 ov); Bermuda 121/8 (20/20 ov)
Netherlands won by 4 runs
24th Match, Group A: Nepal v Papua New Guinea at Sharjah - Mar 15, 2012
Papua New Guinea 137/8 (20/20 ov); Nepal 102/8 (20/20 ov)
Papua New Guinea won by 35 runs
25th Match, Group A: Bermuda v Canada at Dubai (DSC) - Mar 16, 2012
Canada 175/6 (20/20 ov); Bermuda 103 (19.2/20 ov)
Canada won by 72 runs
26th Match, Group A: Denmark v Netherlands at Dubai (GCA2) - Mar 16, 2012
Denmark 117/9 (20/20 ov); Netherlands 122/3 (16.1/20 ov)
Netherlands won by 7 wickets (with 23 balls remaining)
27th Match, Group B: Namibia v Uganda at Abu Dhabi - Mar 16, 2012
Namibia 140/5 (20/20 ov); Uganda 136/6 (20/20 ov)
Namibia won by 4 runs
28th Match, Group B: Oman v Scotland at Sharjah - Mar 16, 2012
Scotland 158/5 (20/20 ov); Oman 106 (17.4/20 ov)
Scotland won by 52 runs
29th Match, Group A: Hong Kong v Papua New Guinea at Dubai (DSC) - Mar 16, 2012
Hong Kong 131/9 (20/20 ov); Papua New Guinea 132/6 (19.5/20 ov)
Papua New Guinea won by 4 wickets (with 1 ball remaining)
30th Match, Group B: Ireland v United States of America at Dubai (GCA2) - Mar 16, 2012
Ireland 160/6 (20/20 ov); United States of America 96 (18/20 ov)
Ireland won by 64 runs
31st Match, Group B: Italy v Kenya at Abu Dhabi - Mar 16, 2012
Italy 145/4 (20/20 ov); Kenya 146/3 (17.5/20 ov)
Kenya won by 7 wickets (with 13 balls remaining)
32nd Match, Group A: Afghanistan v Nepal at Sharjah - Mar 16, 2012
Afghanistan 157/6 (20/20 ov); Nepal 123/6 (20/20 ov)
Afghanistan won by 34 runs
33rd Match, Group B: Oman v United States of America at Dubai (DSC) - Mar 18, 2012
United States of America 141/7 (20/20 ov); Oman 111/7 (20/20 ov)
United States of America won by 30 runs
34th Match, Group A: Denmark v Hong Kong at Dubai (GCA) - Mar 18, 2012
Hong Kong 170/5 (20/20 ov); Denmark 135/9 (20/20 ov)
Hong Kong won by 35 runs
35th Match, Group A: Netherlands v Papua New Guinea at Abu Dhabi - Mar 18, 2012
Papua New Guinea 140/7 (20/20 ov); Netherlands 141/1 (16.4/20 ov)
Netherlands won by 9 wickets (with 20 balls remaining)
36th Match, Group B: Italy v Uganda at Sharjah - Mar 18, 2012
Italy 131/7 (20/20 ov); Uganda 118 (19.4/20 ov)
Italy won by 13 runs
37th Match, Group A: Afghanistan v Canada at Dubai (GCA) - Mar 18, 2012
Afghanistan 174/8 (20/20 ov); Canada 133/9 (20/20 ov)
Afghanistan won by 41 runs
38th Match, Group B: Ireland v Scotland at Dubai (DSC) - Mar 18, 2012
Ireland 159/5 (20/20 ov); Scotland 142/7 (20/20 ov)
Ireland won by 17 runs
39th Match, Group A: Bermuda v Nepal at Abu Dhabi - Mar 18, 2012
Nepal 151/6 (20/20 ov); Bermuda 127/5 (20/20 ov)
Nepal won by 24 runs
40th Match, Group B: Kenya v Namibia at Sharjah - Mar 18, 2012
Kenya 108 (18.4/20 ov); Namibia 109/3 (16.3/20 ov)
Namibia won by 7 wickets (with 21 balls remaining)
41st Match, Group A: Netherlands v Nepal at Dubai (GCA) - Mar 19, 2012
Nepal 85/7 (20/20 ov); Netherlands 86/4 (13.5/20 ov)
Netherlands won by 6 wickets (with 37 balls remaining)
42nd Match, Group B: Italy v Scotland at Dubai (GCA2) - Mar 19, 2012
Italy 136/8 (20/20 ov); Scotland 137/3 (18/20 ov)
Scotland won by 7 wickets (with 12 balls remaining)
43rd Match, Group B: Kenya v United States of America at Abu Dhabi - Mar 19, 2012
United States of America 90 (18.2/20 ov); Kenya 93/1 (10/20 ov)
Kenya won by 9 wickets (with 60 balls remaining)
44th Match, Group A: Afghanistan v Hong Kong at Sharjah - Mar 19, 2012
Hong Kong 103/9 (20/20 ov); Afghanistan 104/1 (11.1/20 ov)
Afghanistan won by 9 wickets (with 53 balls remaining)
45th Match, Group A: Bermuda v Papua New Guinea at Dubai (GCA) - Mar 19, 2012
Papua New Guinea 155/6 (20/20 ov); Bermuda 158/5 (19.3/20 ov)
Bermuda won by 5 wickets (with 3 balls remaining)
46th Match, Group B: Ireland v Uganda at Dubai (GCA2) - Mar 19, 2012
Ireland 179/5 (20/20 ov); Uganda 97 (19.5/20 ov)
Ireland won by 82 runs
47th Match, Group A: Canada v Denmark at Abu Dhabi - Mar 19, 2012
Canada 178/3 (20/20 ov); Denmark 123/4 (20/20 ov)
Canada won by 55 runs
48th Match, Group B: Namibia v Oman at Sharjah - Mar 19, 2012
Namibia 120/7 (20/20 ov); Oman 84 (18.4/20 ov)
Namibia won by 36 runs
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Philander stars in resounding South Africa win

Vernon Philander picked up his fifth five-wicket haul and second ten-wicket match haul in just his sixth Test. His bowling figures of 6 for 44 are his best so far.
Philander, who finished with 45 wickets after his first six Tests, narrowly missed out on equalling the record for becoming the fastest to reach the 50-wicket mark. This record belongs to Charles Turner of Australia, who achieved it in 1887.
Philander's 6 for 44 is the fourth-best bowling performance by a South African bowlers against New Zealand and the best since South Africa's readmission.
This is the 12th time since their readmission that South Africa have won a Test by a margin of nine wickets or more and the first such occasion against New Zealand. The run-rate of 5.19 is the second-highest for South Africa for a successful chase of a target between 100 and 200.
In the period since 1991, New Zealand have lost 12 Tests against South Africa. They have lost more only against Australia (17) and England (14) in the same period. Overall, South Africa improved their head-to-head record against New Zealand to 21-4.
Kane Williamson's 77 is his second-highest score and his fifth fifty-plus knock in Tests. His highest score is 131 against India in Ahmedabad in 2010
South Africa rode another irresistible performance from Vernon Philander to take a 1-0 lead in Hamilton, vanquishing the hosts by nine wickets inside three days. Philander continued his phenomenal success in a sublime six-Test career, demolishing New Zealand's lower order to finish with 6 for 44 in the second innings, and 10 for 114 in the match. His fifth five-wicket haul shrank his bowling average to 13.6, and Graeme Smith and Hashim Amla finished the win for South Africa with a smooth 98-run partnership in a chase of 101. 
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Doherty helps Australia to 64-run win

Xavier Doherty enjoyed his first taste of cricket in the West Indies, playing a key role in Australia's 64-run victory in the first ODI in St Vincent. After the debutant George Bailey top scored in Australia's 204 for 8, a total that was difficult to assess at the halfway point on a sluggish pitch, West Indies capitulated to be all out for 140, and their failure was all the more disappointing for the self-inflicted nature of several of the dismissals.
Batting was clearly not easy on a surface with such little pace, but too few of the West Indian batsmen showed the discipline required to stick around and chip away at the target. Darren Sammy displayed some late fight and compiled a 36-run partnership for the last wicket with Kemar Roach, but until that point they had lost their previous six wickets for seven runs.
Prior to that collapse, the chase appeared to be going well as Dwayne Bravo and Marlon Samuels built a confident 64-run stand and went after the spin of Doherty and David Hussey. The Australians hadn't managed to clear the rope at all during their innings but after Bravo pulled a Hussey long-hop for six, Samuels cleared the boundary three times in Doherty's first over.
Those sixes, all down the ground and struck with power, left Doherty scratching his head, but once Daniel Christian broke the partnership by sneaking a ball between bat and pad to bowl Bravo for 32, Doherty began his fightback. He claimed Samuels for 35, the result of both good bowling and a poor shot selection, as the batsman tried to force a ball through leg and instead edged to slip.
Carlton Baugh was lbw for a duck in the same over, attempting a slog sweep, and Andre Russell was stumped for 1, beaten by Doherty's turn and his own impatience. Kieron Pollard was one of the last remaining hopes for West Indies but he too failed to adapt to the slow pitch and chipped Christian to mid-on for 4 from 11 balls.
Doherty finished with 4 for 49 after he had Sunil Narine caught in the deep for a duck. Sammy didn't give up and struck three fours and three sixes, and showed that if someone had stuck around with him West Indies might have remained in the match. He was the last man out, caught at cover off Clint McKay for 35 from 20 balls, and it ended a limp batting display from the hosts.
The innings started encouragingly enough as the debutant opener Johnson Charles swivelled Brett Lee powerfully through midwicket for four in the first over and raced to 13 from 11 balls. But it started to go downhill when slashed at a wide delivery from McKay and was caught at third man.
Kieran Powell followed for 8 when he pulled Lee to Bailey at midwicket and West Indies were 23 for 2. That soon became 33 for 3 when Darren Bravo pushed to the leg side and took off for a quick single only to be beaten by Lee's direct hit at the bowler's end. Bravo made 4 from 15 balls and West Indies were in trouble. Australia's 204 for 8 was starting to look much better.
It was the fourth time in the past five years Australia had batted through an entire 50-over innings for so few runs, but on all four occasions they have won the game. They had Bailey to thank for getting them up to a defendable score, as the Australians also battled against the slow bowling of Samuels (2 for 29) and Narine (1 for 24).
Bailey's 48 had come from 67 balls and he struck five boundaries before he was caught at deep cover when he skied Roach in the second-last over of the innings. But by ticking the score over as he had, and by taking few risks, he ensured Australia batted out their overs after they slumped to be 99 for 4 in the 27th over.
Shane Watson had won the toss and chosen to bat and while he scored at nearly a run a ball in his 21 at the top of the order, the runs slowed when the ball lost its hardness. Watson was lbw to a Dwayne Bravo delivery that nipped back in and he injudiciously used up Australia's review, the replays showing he was plumb.
David Warner and Peter Forrest added 60 for the second wicket but it was slow going, especially for Forrest, who seemed unable to adjust to the conditions. Forrest had 26 from 64 balls when he was stumped off Samuels, advancing down the pitch and trying to force the run rate up, and it was the first of two wickets in the over as Warner followed four balls later.
Warner had made 40 from 55 deliveries and fell when he punched a catch to cover, where Pollard took a terrific diving one-handed catch. Samuels had got the rewards, but much of the credit also had to go to Narine, who had tied the batsmen down and to that stage had bowled five overs for 12 runs.
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Bangladesh v India, Asia Cup, Mirpur:Shakib, Rahim deliver incredible win


Bangladesh 293 for 5 (Tamim 70, Nasir 54, Jahurul 53, Shakib 49, Mushfiqur 46*) beat India 289 for 5 (Tendulkar 114, Kohli 66, Raina 51) by five wickets
Mushfiqur Rahim and Shakib Al Hasan delivered an improbable win for Bangladesh that left Sachin Tendulkar's record 100th international century in the shade and threw the Asia Cup wide open. As the focus remained on Tendulkar's achievement for most of the match, Bangladesh did what they had threatened to do in the tournament opener against Pakistan - they showed that they could chase big totals under pressure against Test opposition.
Bangladesh had asked India to bat knowing that chasing has been easier on the Mirpur pitch in this tournament than batting first. Though the strategy had not worked against Pakistan, India did not have an Umar Gul or a Saeed Ajmal to stop a side hungrier than they were for success.
Shakib and Mushfiqur did not succumb to the gnawing tension that an asking-rate of above eight runs an over brings. Instead, India's bowlers crumbled against their aggression. Shakib blitzed 49 off 31 deliveries and were it not for a close stumping decision going against him, might have finished the game on his own.
With 66 needed off 50 deliveries, Shakib was adjudged stumped off R Ashwin with replays showing enough doubt for the benefit to have gone to the batsman. Mushfiqur, who had said yesterday that India's thin bowling unit gave Bangladesh confidence, slammed 46 off 25 as Bangladesh won with four deliveries left.
A steady build-up from Tamim Iqbal and Jahurul Islam had left Bangladesh with a climbing asking-rate. With Nasir Hossain in control at one end, Shakib gave Bangladesh hope with hitting that was as uninhibited as it was daring. He took 18 runs off the 37th over, bowled by Ashok Dinda, with a couple of swings over midwicket and thick edge to third man. R Ashwin dropped it short, and was punched and pulled for boundaries. It was now Irfan Pathan's turn. A slash followed another pull, and the momentum had shifted in Bangladesh's favour.
India managed to sneak in some quiet overs after Shakib fell. It came down to 37 needed off 24. India's quick bowlers were having problems in controlling their deliveries and full tosses had been dished out often. The 48th over was when it fell apart for them. Irfan bowled a wide outside off stump. MS Dhoni ran upto him with some advice. Irfan bowled a length ball on Mushfiqur's pads next. Flicked over deep square leg for six. A stern-looking Dhoni had more words for Irfan. A high full toss followed from around the wicket. Swung over deep midwicket for six more.
With 16 needed off 12, Praveen began the 49th over with a waist-high no-ball. Sliced over point for four. A length delivery followed. Mushfiqur wound up and dispatched it over long-on. Game over. Mushfiqur roared on the field; Shakib did an encore in the dressing room. Bangladesh had only their third ODI win over their big neighbours.
When Tamim and Jahurul were ensuring that Bangladesh did not lose too many wickets during the middle overs, it had seemed that Bangladesh were not far away from coming short against the stiff asking-rate. Tamim again displayed his recent penchant for buckling down to play a long innings while Jahurul picked up the scoring after a slow start. The duo kept getting the odd boundary but could not really dominate. They fell after reaching their fifties, trying to keep up with the requirement, but Shakib and Mushfiqur stunned India with their refusal to give in.
Defeat would have been the last thing on India's minds when, after a year of hype and expectation, Tendulkar got his 100th international century in the country where he had equalled Sunil Gavaskar's then-record 34 Test centuries in 2004 on way to his highest Test score. It wasn't one of Tendulkar's better hundreds and will ultimately be remembered only for being the one that brought up the unprecedented landmark. In fact, it was his second-slowest innings of 100-plus in ODIs and ended up restricting India's progress. They ended up on 289 for 5, an underwhelming outcome considering their power-packed batting line-up had had a platform of 173 for 1 in the 36th over.
Bangladesh's attack was persevering but limited. Tendulkar duly milked them to finally go past a landmark that hardly anyone knew existed before he got close to it, but put tremendous pressure on the player himself in a frenzied build-up that lasted a year.
Tendulkar had motored to 80 off 102 deliveries but took another 36 before he took his hundredth run, off Shakib Al Hasan. The monkey off his back, he belatedly took charge, hitting consecutive boundaries off Shahadat Hossain before a slog ended up in the keeper's hands. Tendulkar's departure came immediately after Suresh Raina's brisk innings had ended after having kept India going amid his senior partner's quest for the century. Raina hit 51 off 38 and built on a 148-run second-wicket partnership between Tendulkar and Kohli, who looked set to become the first India batsman to score three consecutive ODI hundreds until he played on for a breezy 66.
The hosts should have had Kohli with the first ball of the sixth over, when Shafiul Islam struck him on the back leg in front of middle stump, but umpire Paul Reiffel remained unmoved. Kohli's form took over after that, and with Tendulkar batting as safely as he does during some of his long Test innings, India motored along without giving Bangladesh half a chance more.
Bangladesh had themselves to blame for allowing Tendulkar to settle with a generous sprinkling of wide deliveries from their fast bowlers. His first four scoring shots were all boundaries, as he cashed in on width to drive and punch through the off side.
Shafiul had Gautam Gambhir playing on early off a forcing flat-footed drive, but Kohli did not take long to get going after his reprieve. The field hardly moved as he flicked and cover-drove for fours in consecutive overs.
Spin was expected to be a major factor on a dry-looking pitch but Tendulkar and Kohli negotiated Bangladesh's slow army without any problems. The scoring-rate did take a slight beating as singles dominated but Tendulkar soon found the freedom to slog sweep Shakib Al Hasan over wide long-on. With his feet moving precisely now, he made room to cart Shakib inside-out over extra cover to reach his first international fifty in 13 innings. As he passed 80, Tendulkar took his time amid some nerves. Meanwhile, after having contemptuously worked his way to another fifty, Kohli played on against Abdur Razzak.
Raina's slog sweeps and lofted shots over extra cover kept the runs coming, though, but Tendulkar was clearly feeling the pressure at the other end. He played out a maiden to Mashrafe Mortaza on 83, and on several occasions took off for non-existent singles before being sent back. The century arrived in the 44th over, and Tendulkar's relief was evident. With the innings in need of a final burst, Dhoni slammed 16 off the 50th over to get India to 289, but for once Bangladesh chased with as much faith as their fans have in their team
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