The Bold Voice of J&K

India outplays Pakistan in T20 World Cup

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STATE TIMES NEWS

Colombo: Ishan Kishan merged power with finesse for a fifty before Jasprit Bumrah destroyed Pakistan top-order with his malevolently talented right-arm, powering India to a T20 World Cup Super Eight berth clinching one-sided 61-run win here on Sunday.

Jammu celebrates
JAMMU: Jammu erupted in celebration following the thrilling victory of the India national cricket team over the Pakistan national cricket team in today’s highly anticipated India-Pakistan cricket match.
The win sparked scenes of jubilation across the city, with a large crowd gathering at Bharat Mata Chowk and other locations to celebrate the triumph. Amid chants of patriotic slogans and waving of the national flag, the atmosphere at the iconic city square turned

Kishan’s supersonic 77 (40b) on a tacky Premadasa pitch was worth its weight in gold, carrying India to a competitive 175 for seven after they were asked to bat first. It was easily one of the most entertaining T20I knocks by an Indian batter if one factors in degree of difficulty.
Pakistan needed a strong Power Play segment to chase 176 on this surface. But Bumrah (2/17) and Hardik Pandya (2/16) jettisoned big-hitting Sahibzada Farhan, Saim Ayub and Salman Ali Agha to bowl out them for 114, reducing the much-anticipated match into a no-contest. India now lead 8-1 in all T20 World Cup encounters.
Pandya started the bedlam in the first over of Pakistan’s chase, as his snorter got big on Farhan and he could only sky it to Rinku Singh.
Entered the irrepressible Bumrah. The premier pacer unleashed himself on Pakistan batters in his first over itself.
Ayub could not handle a devilish inswinging yorker to get caught in front of the wicket. Agha was as clueless as an exchange student in a foreign country against Bumrah’s back of length delivery, scooping it to Panyda at mid-wicket.
Pakistan was in all sorts of trouble at 13 for three, and which soon became 34 for four after Babar Azam’s horrendous slog sweep off Axar Patel saw his stumps getting rearranged.
Their Powerplay produced 38 for four compared to India’s 52 for one, and that massive difference continued to widen as the match progressed.
Pakistan did not have either skill or resolve to get out of the marshy land, and continued to perish against Indian spinners through the middle overs as Kuldeep Yadav, Axar, Tilak Varma and Varun Chakravarthy kept them under an unbreakable spell.
Earlier, Kishan shared an 87-run alliance with Tilak for the second wicket in which the latter’s contribution was a princely 11.
The match, which had several preceding dramatic weeks because of the admixture of sports and politics, started off on an unusual note as Pakistan skipper Agha brought himself on for off-spin and accounted for Abhishek Sharma.
The off-spin continued through Ayub (3/25) in the power play and it fetched the desired result.
Abhishek went for a loft off Agha but could not clear Shaheen Shah Afridi at the edge of the circle in the final ball of the first over.
But for the next 7.4 overs, Kishan converted the Premadasa into his own little kingdom, shots flying all around the vast corners of this venue.
The left-hander started with an arrogant chin-high pull off pacer Afridi that thundered into the hoardings beyond the mid-wicket fence.
But that was a mere appetizer. The Jharkhand man soon dismantled an armada of Pakistan spinners.
Agha and Ayub were dispatched for a four each, while leg-spinner Abrar Ahmed was carted for a six and four off successive deliveries.
The four was a spectacular shot. Despite the slowness of the deck, Kishan lent power and placement to the late cut through his malleable wrists, forcing the ball sped to the third man fence.
Later, leg-spinner Shadab Khan too was clobbered for a six as Kishan raced to his fifty in just 27 balls, impressive considering the less than ideal conditions for shot-making and an opposition, who has already played a couple of matches in this part of the world.
Tilak did not precisely struggle, but did not look entirely comfortable either as Kishan took it upon himself the duties of pushing the score ahead.
But Kishan’s attempt to give himself space and carve Ayub over mid-wicket had disastrous consequences.
He missed the ball altogether to lose the bails as Pakistani players heaved a sigh of relief.
From there, they clawed back, and Ayub was at the forefront of their revival.
The offie jettisoned Tilak (25, 24b) and Hardik Pandya (0) off consecutive deliveries as India suddenly slipped to 126 for four from 126 for two in the 15th over.
Skipper Suryakumar Yadav (32, 28b) and Shivam Dube (27, 17b) could not flex their whole muscle but did enough to add 33 runs to take India past the 150-run mark.
Dube also handled mystery spinner Usman Tariq, who was kept back till the 11th over, stealing a couple of boundaries.
Tariq too had his moment when he priced out Suryakumar in the 19th over.
But a 15-run final over by Afridi in which Dube and Rinku Singh tore into him pushed India into the 170 territory.

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