Player of the Match
Player of the Match

Thank you for your company and hope you enjoyed our coverage. It's time for me, Rvel Zahid, to say goodbye on behalf of my co-commentator Danyal Rasool and our scorer Sudeep Pojari. We will see you very soon. Adios!

Despair on one hand and joy on the other. It was a well-fought game between these two spirited teams. In the end, the quality and experience of the Zimbabwe side proved far superior as the two centurions made sure there were no hiccups along the way. The home team would be very delighted to bag the first win in front of a jam-packed crowd; enterprising knocks from Craig Ervine and Sean Williams - who slammed Zimbabwe's fastest-ever century - ensured the game was only headed in one direction. The duo completely deflated Nepal's spirits and were at no stage flustered.

Fans certainly got their money's worth in the tournament's opener. But there were plenty of positives for Nepal as well. They were superb with the bat as Kushal Bhurtel led the way with a spellbinding 99 and Aasif Sheikh chipped in with 66 with decent contributions from the middle-order batters. The platform was set to go berserk in the last 10 overs but Zimbabwe managed to put a lid on the score at the death thanks to their well-oiled bowling attack. Nepal's star player Sandeep Lamichanne failed to provide them with breakthroughs and went wicketless in his spell, conceding 77 in his quota of overs. Nobody looked threatening enough to rip through Zimbabwe's batting line-up and so Nepal needs to go back to the drawing board and come up with better bowling plans for their next game.

Rohit Paudel, Nepal Captain: "I thought we did not bowl to our expectations, especially in the middle overs. We could have done better but having said that, they batted really well. We thought anything around 280 to 300 would be a good score but when I saw the wicket later, I felt we were 10 to 15 runs short. Maybe 310 to 315 would have been par. I would say to keep our head high and look forward to the next game against USA."

Craig Ervine,  Zimbabwe Captain: "We didn't start really well, dropped catches cost us but credit to the guys for pulling it back. We thought that 280/290 would be chaseable because the wicket looked very nice. We thought there would be a little bit more movement early on but the wicket played really well today. The conditions were very good, their openers batted well but we didn't take our early chances. Credit to them, they put us under pressure in the early part of their innings. We were just trying to break down into small chunks during the chase, and trying to concentrate on where the gaps are and what the bowlers are trying to do. I think it's well played today, rest day tomorrow and a quick turnaround when we play the Netherlands next on Tuesday. I feel pretty ecstatic, we knew it was a decent wicket to bat on so it was about giving ourselves a chance. It's been really good, leading up to this and scoring some runs. Hopefully, I can continue like this. As a team, we always like to dominate batting second. You look all around the wicket, from the 10 over mark to the 40 over mark, there are five fielders in the ring so there are always boundary options. I thought we were staring down the barrel of 340 but our bowlers did really well to pull things back. I thought 290 was below par."

Prem Karki: "We have to give credit to Medhevere for his good partnership with Ervine"

Ranil Herath: "Hats off to Zimbabwe for the professional way chasing a big target even though not a top league opponent."

Sawin: "What Nepal lacks is a good pair of pacers" I agree. The pitch had enough assistance for the bowlers but they lacked a potent pace attack

Thilini: "That was a fantastic and exciting chase by Zimbabwe. Congratulations to Craig Ervine and Sean Williams."

44.1
1lb
Paudel to Ervine, 1 leg bye, Tossed up on a length, goes on with the arm towards leg stump, nudged away to square leg and Zimbabwe register an emphatic win against Nepal. The hosts get the first points on the table and are off to a brilliant start to the tournament. Nepal did well with the bat but just couldn't make enough inroads with the ball and were up against classy batters who are adept in their home conditions

END OF OVER:
44 | 19 Runs | ZIM: 290/2 (1 run required from 36 balls, RR: 6.59, RRR: 0.16)

  • Sean Williams102 (70b)
  • Craig Ervine121 (127b)
  • Gulsan Jha8-0-56-1
  • Sandeep Lamichhane10-0-77-0

Manisha Kharya: "That's the fastest century in ODIs for Zimbabwe by Sean Williams!"

43.6
4
Gulsan Jha to Williams, FOUR, Superb Williams superb! He has a century and he pumps his fists in ecstasy! That's what it means to him, a well-crafted century as he clatters this through the off-side to sweeper. The entire crowd erupts as he gets to the milestone. Williams makes batting look so easy and he is at his best when he's chasing down totals

KabooPradeep Gurung : "It's Nepal's old habit to start any tournament with loss and then come back and qualify through net run rate.Hope for all round performance in remaining games. "m!

43.5
2
Gulsan Jha to Williams, 2 runs, Shortens his length, on the legs and he shows the long handle, tries to heave the ball over the rope but it lands in front of long-on, they pick a couple
43.4
2
Gulsan Jha to Williams, 2 runs, A touch short and wide, pummels it off the backfoot towards deep extra cover and picks up a couple with ease. Only seven away from what would be a clinical win
43.3
6
Gulsan Jha to Williams, SIX, Clubbed! Rapacious loft for six, stand and deliver smack for half-a-dozen runs. Pitched a little short and in his hitting arc
43.2
4
Gulsan Jha to Williams, FOUR, Lands it on a length and offers plenty of room on the off side, he holds his stance and absolutely leathers it downtown, long-off runs across in vain as the ball crashes into the advertising hoardings. Sensational stuff!
43.1
1
Gulsan Jha to Ervine, 1 run, Length ball, angled across off, shuffles across and lifts it over mid-on

END OF OVER:
43 | 14 Runs | ZIM: 271/2 (20 runs required from 42 balls, RR: 6.30, RRR: 2.85)

  • Sean Williams84 (65b)
  • Craig Ervine120 (126b)
  • Sandeep Lamichhane10-0-77-0
  • Dipendra Singh Airee10-1-58-0

Swept with power

42.6
4
Lamichhane to Williams, FOUR, It's raining boundaries! This time he goes for the conventional sweep, full extension of the arms to meet this length delivery and there is nobody patrolling deep square leg region. Zimbabwe making this chase look pretty easy
42.5
4
Lamichhane to Williams, FOUR, That's stupendous batting! Lamichhane getting predictable with his plans as he reverse sweeps once again and earns another boundary
42.4
1
Lamichhane to Ervine, 1 run, Gives it a lot of air, hoys in a higher arc on a length, little of drift towards middle and leg, plays with the spin towards midwicket region and picks up another run
42.3
4
Lamichhane to Ervine, FOUR, Waited a touch and then premediated switch hit over the infielder to fetch another boundary. That's exquisite batting
42.2
0
Lamichhane to Ervine, no run, Slower through the air, leg-break from round the wicket on a length, driven back to the bowler
42.1
1
Lamichhane to Williams, 1 run, Takes a few steps out of his crease and pushes it down to long-on for a run

END OF OVER:
42 | 10 Runs | ZIM: 257/2 (34 runs required from 48 balls, RR: 6.11, RRR: 4.25)

  • Sean Williams75 (62b)
  • Craig Ervine115 (123b)
  • Dipendra Singh Airee10-1-58-0
  • Sandeep Lamichhane9-0-63-0
41.6
1
Airee to Williams, 1 run, A run-out chance gone begging! Airee can't collect it cleanly at the non-striker's end, Williams puts in a full-length dive but he was clearly struggling. That's how the day has been for Nepal, missed opportunities have cost them as Williams went for the sweep, didn't get underneath, sharp throw from square leg
41.5
2
Airee to Williams, 2 runs, A touch short and goes on with the arm towards middle, breaks his wrists to hit a chip-like shot down to square leg's right
41.4
1
Airee to Ervine, 1 run, Quick through the air on middle, he charges down to create his own length, presses it down to long-on and jogs through a single
41.3
4
Airee to Ervine, FOUR, Round the wicket, fuller delivery, quickly inverses his stance and executes the switch hit well, beats backward point and it trundles away for four
41.2
1
Airee to Williams, 1 run, Tossed up ball on middle and leg, makes room and whisks it away to cover for a run
41.1
1
Airee to Ervine, 1 run, Lobbed up, angled in from outside off, prodded down to long-off for a run

END OF OVER:
41 | 8 Runs | ZIM: 247/2 (44 runs required from 54 balls, RR: 6.02, RRR: 4.88)

  • Craig Ervine109 (120b)
  • Sean Williams71 (59b)
  • Sandeep Lamichhane9-0-63-0
  • Aarif Sheikh3.3-0-19-0
40.6
1
Lamichhane to Ervine, 1 run, Tossed up on a length outside off, stays back, stands tall and punches it away along the carpet towards extra cover
40.5
0
Lamichhane to Ervine, no run, Gives it a lot of air, spins away outside off, flays his bat out as the ball whizzes past the outside edge into the keeper's gloves
40.4
1
Lamichhane to Williams, 1 run, Round the wicket, lobbed up on a length around middle and leg, nudged away to the leg side for a run. Precision batting

Zimbabwe 2nd innings Partnerships

WktRunsPlayers
1st45CR ErvineJ Gumbie
2nd82CR ErvineW Madhevere
3rd164CR ErvineSC Williams