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Player of the Match
Player of the Match

Pooran, Chase give West Indies first ODI series win since 2014

Evin Lewis finds a way to avoid the bug infestation at the Ekana Stadium Ekana cricket media

West Indies 247 for 9 (Pooran 67, Lewis 54, Naveen-ul-Haq 3-60) beat Afghanistan 200 (Najibullah 56, Rahmat 33, Cottrell 3-29, Chase 3-30, Hayden Walsh 3-36) by 47 runs

West Indies overcame a spirited Afghanistan fight fuelled by Najibullah Zadran's half-century to win their first ODI series since August 2014. The key architects of their win in the second ODI were Nicholas Pooran and Roston Chase - the former leading an excellent lower-order rally to make 67 while the off-spinning allrounder nicked out Afghanistan's top order in a superb spell of 3 for 30 to put the brakes, eventually leading to a 47-run win.

Afghanistan would rue a number of opportunities, not least of all the double-strike following a sixth-wicket stand of 68 between Najibullah and Mohammad Nabi. First, Sheldon Cottrell had Najibullah nicking behind for 56 while he attempted a slash with Afghanistan needing 70 off 67 balls. Off the first ball of the next over, rookie legspinner Hayden Walsh had Nabi lbw to extinguish any hopes of an Afghanistan rearguard. Walsh, who was only introduced in the 29th over, seemingly because Afghanistan had two set left-handers, finished with 3 for 36, including the final wicket to seal victory.

In many ways, the match was a throwback to the '90s. West Indies went in with a slow and steady approach, looking to launch later. The risk with that approach is it puts immense pressure on the lower order to score quickly from the outset. On challenging surfaces, like the one at the Ekana Stadium where Afghanistan played four spinners and West Indies two, it can be a tough ask. Fortunately, West Indies found a savior in Pooran, who negotiated Rashid Khan's threat with great caution, before taking apart the death bowling. He put in a high value on risk-free shots initially before seamlessly bringing out the big hits. The last 10 overs produced 86 runs to lift West Indies to 247 for 9.

In the chase, Afghanistan stuttered, recovered and then again played rash shots, like the one Hazratullah Zazai did to hole out to long-on and Asghar Afghan, the experienced former captain, heaving one to deep midwicket when the need of the hour was consolidation. Rahmat Shah looked in control, and overcame a short-ball barrage from Jason Holder to keep the runs ticking along. While he wasn't quite as comfortable while pulling or hooking, his cuts and punches square of the wicket were a visual treat. But his dismissal against the run of play threatened to blow the lid off. Sent back after a terrible mix-up with Ikram Alikhil, he was inches short of the crease when Pollard swooped in from mid-on to fire a throw to Alzarri Joseph, who removed the bails at the non-striker's end.

Alikhil and Najibullah hung in there, the escalating asking rate that went past six, not proving to be a bother. With the knowledge that Nabi was still to come, they kept picking the ones and twos and looked to take the game deep. Najibullah's half-century was an innings of two contrasts - watchful early on until he decided he had to take on the train of spin, by reverse sweeping his way, sometimes even against the turn, to boundaries. He reached his half-century by drilling Holder through extra cover and followed that up by swatting him over long-on in the same over to keep West Indies worried until the 38th over. Then he was dismissed, and the match turned again.

As comprehensive as the win seemed in the end, it wouldn't tell you the entire story. West Indies struggled with the bat, strangulated by a succession of fast darts and fizzy turn. They played out as many as 143 dots till the 36th over, before deciding the only way out was to attack. It could've well cost them if not for Pooran's rescue act.

Early on, openers Shai Hope and Ewin Lewis decided to take it slow and set a launchpad by accumulating 98 in 24.4 overs. Naveen-ul-Haq, the only seamer in the XI, struggled for lengths and was smacked for four boundaries by Hope in his first two overs, until Rashid turned to spin. A pulsating start soon turned into a solid one, before the innings failed to get out of second gear.

From time-to-time, Lewis produced the odd boundary. He sits on his left leg and looks to stay back, and when the spinners err, he takes full toll, which is what he did here. Hope, meanwhile, got bogged down. After motoring to 18 off 18, he managed all off 13 off his next 33 deliveries against Afghanistan's spinners. However, he was to contend with more spin, which brought more caution, eventually leading to his dismissal Rashid snuck past his bat with a ripping googly to trap him lbw.

Lewis was out in the next over, leaving Chase and Hetmyer with a steep task. Hetmyer played an uncharacteristic knock, shelving the slogs and the temptation to look for release shots when things didn't go his way, but that was only until he got to 34. After lofting Nabi inside-out over long-off for six, he flat-batted the next ball straight to long-on to once again waste another opportunity. That it came off the last ball of Nabi's spell made it that much more unacceptable from West Indies' point of view.

Pollard walked in needing to stay alive till the death overs, but he was foxed by left-arm spinner Sharafuddin Ashraf, reaching out to lob a simple return catch. On many other nights, this could've led to a proper meltdown and perhaps even the difference between victory and defeat. Fortunately, West Indies had Pooran's lower order rally to thank for lifting them to a total that proved just beyond Afghanistan's reach.

Afghanistan 2nd innings Partnerships

WktRunsPlayers
1st1Javed AhmadiHazratullah Zazai
2nd53Rahmat ShahHazratullah Zazai
3rd7Hazratullah ZazaiIkram Alikhil
4th18Asghar AfghanIkram Alikhil
5th30Najibullah ZadranIkram Alikhil
6th68Mohammad NabiNajibullah Zadran
7th0Mohammad NabiRashid Khan
8th7Sharafuddin AshrafRashid Khan
9th1Sharafuddin AshrafMujeeb Ur Rahman
10th15Sharafuddin AshrafNaveen-ul-Haq