India 2 (Rohit 85, Dhawan 31, Aminul 2-29) Bit 154 Bangladesh 6 people with 8 turnstiles (Naim 36, Sarkar 30, Mahmudullah 30, Chahal 2-28)
In the 100th T20I, Rohit Sharma's 43 ball 85 helped India to chase 154 with 26 balls to save and raise the level of the T20I series for Bangladesh. It was the third fastest inning in Rohit's T20Is 50 times, well below the Bangladeshi cap.
India is slightly late for Jekyll and Hyde T20I teams. Since the beginning of 2018, they have achieved a record of 7-7 during their first blow, but have done much better while chasing. Thursday's victory was the 13th in 16 completed games.
Rohit extends his sublime running
Rohit entered the series with a score of 300, including a double, in three tests against South Africa, and all forms were on display at the Rajkot stadium full of running. Every shot he shot along the ground seemed to find a gap when pulling, driving, cutting or sometimes defending with a slightly open face. One of them was that one of those scenes escaped from Al-Amin Hossain in the fifth of India. Innings competed endlessly between the reverse and the short third person.
When he went in the air the result was much better. In his inning there were six six. The other side managed only two between them. For 10 days there were only two, including three, in the off-spin of Mosaddek Hossain. The second, which started the century opening ceremony with Shikhar Dhawan, took Rohit to the 70s.
At that time, Dhawan hit 24 balls 28 times. Bangladesh kept one opener quiet by denying the width, but none of their plans affected the other.
Bangladesh starts bright
In Bangladesh, Bangladesh enjoyed productive power play, gaining the opener's urgency and irregular bowling and defense in India with zero favorably to 54.
Khaleel Ahmed, a left arm quick, hit four straight fours in the last four balls in Delhi. Here he recognized three consecutive guns in the first three balls and made them seven times in a row. Khaleel caught the ball guilty for a touch that was too short for the ball to go through the ball, and Mohammad Naim chases him out each time he has a chance to pull through midwick or ja.
Liton Das, on the other hand, was incredibly lucky to beat the yard in the arena with a break in Yuzvendra Chahal in sixth place. Rishabh Pant collected the ball without problems and stabbed the stump, but the third referee, Anil Chaudhary, ruled that he collected the ball little by little in front of the stump. Liton hit the next two balls. The first was a free blow, injuring four people.
Spinner strikes back
It will be almost repeated in the 13th when Chahal beat the advancing Soumya Sarkar with the wrong thing.
At that point Bangladesh was 103 of 4. Their last seven overs brought them 49 runs at the cost of four turnstiles. Two major spinners in India, Chahal and Washington Sundar, were primarily responsible for keeping quiet. Chahal caught the ball and made good use of the transformation and gave it two turnstiles. He could have a third if he had a lbw appeal to Liton, who kept him for eighth after beating him with his google, but Liton did not know where the ball ends after hitting the pad and got out of the crease. anyway.
Washington intelligently changed his pace and bowled the stimulating length. He later said that when he reached the batter, he wanted the ball to bounce up to hip height.
Bangladesh has never regained lost momentum. There was a pair of bright knocks at Sarkar (20 to 30) and Mahmudullah (21 to 30), but the rest of the Bangladeshi batters did not actually move. Khaleel kept running and allowed 22 in two overovers when dying, but the rest of the bowlers didn't give the batter any speed or length. Chahal threw the stump off the ball and refused to make right hitters easily accessible to the leg, and Deepak Chahar cleverly used a slow guard to give eight runs between the 18th and 19th overs.
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