Agha, Hasan power Pakistan to 37-run win over Bangladesh in first T20
Agha scored 56 to help Pakistan post 201-7 before Hasan took 5-30 to dismiss Bangladesh for 164 in 19.2 overs at Gaddafi Stadium.
Pakistan's Hasan Ali (L) celebrates after taking his fifer (five wickets in an innings) with teammates at the end of the first T20I against Bangladesh in Lahore on May 28. (Photo: Getty Images)
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SKIPPER Salman Agha hit a career-best knock and pacer Hasan Ali claimed his first five-wicket haul as Pakistan beat Bangladesh by 37 runs in the first T20 international in Lahore on Wednesday.
Agha scored 56 to help Pakistan post 201-7 before Hasan took 5-30 to dismiss Bangladesh for 164 in 19.2 overs at Gaddafi Stadium.
The victory gave Pakistan a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.
Allrounder Shadab Khan, who made a quick 48, dismissed Bangladesh skipper Litton Das for a 30-ball 48 to end a 63-run stand for the third wicket. The partnership between Litton and Towhid Hridoy, who scored 17, had lifted Bangladesh from 37-2 but the later batters could not build on it.
Pacer Hasan ended Jaker Ali’s 21-ball 36, which included three sixes and a boundary. He then dismissed Tanzim Hasan for one and Shoriful Islam for five, capping a successful return to international cricket after a year-long injury lay-off.
“The last eight months were very tough because it was a career-threatening injury so I am happy to have contributed to the team’s win,” said Hasan, who underwent elbow surgery last year. “I did hard work during the rehab and it’s a reward for that hard work,” he added.
Bangladesh captain Litton said his team did not perform well in any department.
“All over the game, we didn’t bowl well, bat well and field well,” said Litton. “We have to come back strongly with two games still to play.”
Earlier, Agha struck a 34-ball 56, including eight fours and a six, while Hasan Nawaz’s 22-ball 44 with four sixes helped Pakistan reach over 200 after they won the toss and opted to bat.
Agha, whose previous T20 best was 51 not out against New Zealand in March, shared a 48-run stand with Mohammad Haris for the third wicket and 65 with Nawaz for the fourth.
Pakistan were 5-2 after losing openers Saim Ayub for a duck and Fakhar Zaman in the first two overs.
Shadab scored 48 off 25 balls to help Pakistan add 58 runs in the last five overs.
All six Bangladesh bowlers took at least one wicket, with left-arm seamer Islam claiming 2-32 in three overs.
The remaining two matches are on Friday and Sunday, also in Lahore.
(With inputs from agencies)
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AUSTRALIAN cricket fans could be watching Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma in an ODI for the last time when India tour Australia for a three-match series starting in Perth on Sunday.
Between them, Kohli, 36, and Rohit, 38, have played close to 600 one-day internationals. Both are currently active only in the 50-over format, but their future beyond this series remains uncertain.
Head coach Gautam Gambhir did not comment when asked this week whether the two senior players would continue under new ODI captain Shubman Gill, who will lead the side for the first time in Australia.
Kohli and Rohit last featured for India in the Champions Trophy final in March, when they defeated New Zealand.
If this turns out to be their final international series, the pair will play in front of large Indian-origin crowds in Perth, Adelaide (October 23), and Sydney (October 25).
Several Australian Test players, including batter Travis Head and pacers Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc, will use the ODI series as preparation for the upcoming Ashes.
The matches will mark Starc’s first appearance in international cricket this Australasian summer after his T20 retirement.
Marnus Labuschagne, drafted in to replace injured all-rounder Cameron Green, will look to continue his strong red-ball form in the white-ball format to strengthen his case for an Ashes recall.
Labuschagne, who was dropped from the Test squad for the West Indies tour, has returned to form with consecutive centuries in the Sheffield Shield for Queensland.
Cricket Australia said on Friday that Green had been ruled out of the ODI series due to “low grade side soreness” sustained in training and would likely return for domestic cricket.
He joins captain Pat Cummins on the sidelines, with Cummins yet to recover from lower back bone stress that could keep him out of the start of the Ashes.
Australia will also miss wicketkeeper Alex Carey for the Perth opener against India, along with spinner Adam Zampa.
Josh Philippe will take the gloves, while left-arm spinner Matt Kuhnemann gets a rare opportunity in Zampa’s absence.
The ODI series will be followed by a five-match T20I series starting in Canberra on October 29 as both teams prepare for the T20 World Cup in India and Sri Lanka next year.
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