fghanistan 96 for 3 (Nabi 42*) beat Kenya 93 (Ouma 39, Hotak 3-19) by seven wickets
Scoecard and ball-by-ball details
Scoecard and ball-by-ball details
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Related Links
Review 2013 : Speeding upwards
News : Jubilant Afghanistan seek tougher opponents Blogs : Should Full Members play competitive Associates like Afghanistan and Ireland more frequently? Features : Afghanistan's road to World Cup 2015 Preview : Afghanistan on brink of 'national celebration'
Matches:
Afghanistan v Kenya at Sharjah
Series/Tournaments:
ICC World Cricket League Championship
Teams:
Afghanistan
| Kenya
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Afghanistan secured their passage to Australia and New Zealand in 2015
by beating Kenya comprehensively for the second time in succession in
Sharjah, sealing their maiden World Cup qualification. They finished
second in the World Cricket League Championship - nine wins in 14
matches - and joined Ireland as the second Associate team in the 2015
World Cup, while the remaining two spots for Associates will be decided
by a qualifying tournament in New Zealand in 2014.
Afghanistan had to beat Kenya to prevent UAE from gaining qualification
and their bowlers delivered once again. Having dismissed Kenya for 89 on
October 2, Afghanistan skittled them for 93 today, ensuring their
batsmen had a facile target to achieve their World Cup goal. They did it
in 20.5 overs to reach their third global tournament, having appeared
in the World Twenty20s in 2010 and 2012.
Before their wickets began to tumble, however, Kenya had been stifled:
their run rate was less than one during the first 15 overs. Karim Sadiq
provided Afghanistan their first wicket, trapping Irfan Karim lbw in the
sixth over for 3 off 27 balls. The second came one over later, with
Mohammd Nabi bowling the debutant Gurdeep Singh for 1 off 23 deliveries.
Gurdeep, at 15 years and 258 days, was the second youngest player to appear in an ODI.
Morris Ouma had just struck the innings' first boundary, off the last
ball of the 16th over, when he lost his partner Collins Obuya the next
ball. Their partnership of 9 had taken seven overs, leaving the innings
with no momentum. Kenya then had their largest stand - 53 between Ouma
and Rakep Patel for the fourth wicket - but after that was broken when
Patel missed a cut off Hamza Hotak, there was no more resistance.
Ouma followed for 39 an over later - run out by Samiullah Shenwari - and
Hotak and Hamid Hassan made short work of the lower order. Afghanistan
took seven wickets for 24 to dismiss Kenya in 43.3 overs. It was Kenya's
third sub-100 score against Afghanistan in five days; they had been
routed for 56 in the Twenty20 on September 30.
Needing only 94 to join cricket's elite at the World Cup, Afghanistan's
chase began poorly when they lost the opener Mohammad Shahzad for 1 in
the second over. They scored slowly too, but their bowlers had given
them the luxury of being able to do so while seeing off the new ball. By
the time the umpires took the players off for lunch, Nawroz Mangal and
Asghar Stanikzai had taken the team to 24 for 1 in nine overs.
Mangal found the long-off boundary in the first over after the
resumption, which went for nine runs to give Afghanistan impetus.
However, they were jolted severely in the 11th, Shem Ngoche bowling
Stanikzai with the first ball and trapping Mangal lbw with the last to
reduce Afghanistan to 34 for 3.
Any worries of a collapse, however, were allayed by Mohammad Nabi and
Hashmatullah Shaidi, who shared a 62-run stand for the fourth wicket to
kill the contest. Nabi was aggressive, scoring at nearly a run a ball
and accelerated towards the finish with two huge sixes. He sealed the
World Cup berth with a smash to the midwicket boundary.
They will join Pool A at the World Cup along with Australia, Bangladesh,
England, New Zealand, Sri Lanka and another qualifier. Afghanistan's
progress means that Netherlands, UAE, Scotland, Kenya, Namibia, Canada,
Uganda, Hong Kong, Nepal and Papua New Guinea will have to compete for
the last two Associate berths.
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