India vs Bangladesh, Final
BAN 120/5 (15.0 Ovs)
IND 122/2 (13.5 Ovs)
India won by 8 wkts
Bowlers, Dhawan help India regain title in rain-affected final.
India demonstrated its dominance in Twenty20 cricket and regained
continental supremacy, downing host Bangladesh by eight wickets in the
final of the Asia Cup at the Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium here
on Sunday.
Bangladesh found its total of 120, after having been asked to bat, too
meagre to challenge the efficiency of the Indians who completed the run
chase with seven balls to spare. The match was reduced to a 15-over
affair after a thundershower delayed the start by two hours.
Shikhar Dhawan played the lead with a chanceless 60 (44b, 9x4, 1x6)
while Virat Kohli (41 not out) supported him ably in a 94-run stand for
the second wicket. Captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni produced late fireworks,
scoring 20 off just six balls (two sixes and a four), to ensure India’s
sixth Asia Cup title. This was the 10th win in 11 matches for India —
an encouraging statistic ahead of the ICC World T20.
Rohit Sharma struggled to time the ball and paid the price for playing
away from the body, edging one to Soumya Sarkar at slip off Al-Amin
Hossain. Dhawan took up the cudgels after his partner’s dismissal and
joined hands with one of the finest strokeplayers in the game, Kohli, to
advance the run chase. Kohli, who averages around 80 in chases, and
Dhawan shared six boundaries in the fifth and sixth overs which fetched
29 runs and eased some pressure.
Those two overs tilted the advantage towards India and realising the
need for immediate corrective measures, Bangladesh captain Mashrafe
Mortaza took the bowlers — Abu Haider Rony and Shakib Al Hasan — off.
The skipper introduced his surprise package — off-spinner Nasir Hossain —
who was drafted in place of left-arm spinner Arafat Sunny. Nasir put
the brakes on the Indian scoring, but that seemed to have little effect
on the situation as Mortaza himself remained comparatively expensive at
the other end.
Dhawan recovered from a slow start, hitting eight boundaries and a six
to reach his 50 off 35 balls. After 10 overs, India reached a healthy 71
for one and looked set for a comfortable win when the left-hander was
brilliantly caught by Sarkar at point off Taskin Ahmed.
The match could have gone either way at that point, but Dhoni, promoting
himself up the order, had other ideas. With India needing 22 of 14
balls, he smashed two sixes and four in the 14th over bowled by Al-Amin
Hossain to seal the contest.
Mahmudullah on fire
Earlier, Bangladesh reached 120 for five, bolstered by some forceful hitting towards the end by Mohammad Mahmudullah (33 not out).
Earlier, Bangladesh reached 120 for five, bolstered by some forceful hitting towards the end by Mohammad Mahmudullah (33 not out).
India found success through Ashish Nehra who got Soumya Sarkar (14) in
the second over before young pacer Jasprit Bumrah dismissed the other
opener, Tamim Iqbal.
Shakib, moving up the order, hauled the host out of the crisis, but fell
when he mistimed a slog sweep off R. Ashwin. With Mushfiqur Rahim
caught short by Virat Kohli and Mortaza falling for a duck, it was left
to Mahmudullah to rescue the innings.
He sent Hardik Pandya out of the park twice and also hit a boundary as
Bangladesh collected 21 runs off the penultimate over. It proved
inadequate.
Indian players and support staff pose with the trophy after winning the Asia Cup Twenty20 international cricket final match against Bangladesh in Dhaka on Sunday. India won the Asia Cup for the sixth time by eight wickets.
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