Bangladesh Vs West Indies ICC World Cup Highlights - June 17, 2019

Bangladesh 322 for 3 (Shakib 124*, Liton 94*, Tamim 48) beat West Indies 321 for 8 (Hope 96, Lewis 70, Hetmyer 50, Mustafizur 3-59, Saifuddin 3-72) by seven wickets.

Shakib Al Hasan delivered one of the incomparable World Cup exhibitions, hanging a tyrannical 124 not out to his two-wicket pull as he tied down Bangladesh's most astounding pursue in an ODI. All the while, he achieved 6000 ODI runs, turned into Bangladesh's most noteworthy run-scorer at a World Cup, the second after Mahmudullah to make two centuries for Bangladesh in the competition, and added his name to one more one of the six Bangladesh century remains in World Cups. That separated, he likewise took Bangladesh past West Indies' 321 with 8.3 overs to save in Liton Das' organization.

Shakib came in, as he has done all competition, at No. 3 in spite of Liton's consideration in Bangladesh's XI. At 52 for 1, Tamim Iqbal and Soumya Sarkar had given a begin like the one during their success against South Africa; this remained constant both as far as the scoring rate just as the sort of new-ball bowling they had confronted. Going in with five quick bowlers, West Indies were bowling quite short, with little to demonstrate a Plan B.

This played into Bangladesh's hands on a ground with short limits. Tamim drove the underlying assault, slicing and pulling limits, and every so often hopping over the bob to punch on the ascent through the off side as West Indies depended on industriousness instead of flexibility with their strategies. As indicated by ESPNcricinfo's ball-by-ball information, 112 balls were short or shy of a decent length. Bangladesh made 177 keeps running against those conveyances and lost two wickets.

It took a sharp bit of handling from Sheldon Cottrell in his bowling finish to give West Indies a half-possibility, one that he brought as he tore down the stumps at the striker's end even as Tamim missed the mark hoping to jump over into his wrinkle. It was about when downpour showed up, however insufficient to drive the players off. Soon after, Bangladesh lost Mushfiqur Rahim got down the leg side with an over left for the 20-over DLS cut-off. Be that as it may, as they explored that circumstance, remaining barely in front of the DLS standard score, the sun crawled out. What's more, with it came to a stage up from Shakib.

It was not, carefully, a luxurious inning. In any case, that was down to West Indies' lengths. The force was Shakib's staple, yet not the high-scoring alternative that it typically is. It generally helped him get off strike, off the toe and off the under-edge frequently. Be that as it may, amidst this laborious aggregation, Shakib played some amazing cuts and delivered a few splendid punches down the ground to discover limits. Taking all things together, six of his 16 limits interfered with wide mid-off and mid-on. Basically, he blunted West Indies' assault at his ribs, while remaining arranged for scoring openings on the front foot. With the sporadic spells Shannon Gabriel and Oshane Thomas bowled, the nonattendance of a spinner, and a limping Andre Russell for the fifth bowler, West Indies lost their hold through the center overs.

That made it much simpler for Shakib and Liton, whose opportunity prompted some hazard taking. In any case, top-edges fell between combining defenders, edges flew either side of the manager - separated from those that were helped past him - and when West Indies had started handling what Shakib had done, Liton himself had dashed to fifty on World Cup debut.

The 189-run fourth-wicket stand was assembled to a great extent on an outline of dynamic assaulting until the 38th over, which started with three sixes off Gabriel, every one of them off the back foot from Liton. The first and third were bouncers, sent in profound square-leg's heading, while the second was a slug over mid-off to a full ball. Before its finish, the two were doing anything they desired. Twenty-four fell off that over, this World Cup's most costly one and Bangladesh were 294 for 3. There were no hiccups from that point on.

The day had started with success at the hurl, and a lady over to Chris Gayle, who was compromised enough by Mohammad Saifuddin's inswinger to remain inside the line and edge behind in the fourth over for an 11-ball duck. It was the ideal begin. And after that Saifuddin didn't bowl for the following 25 overs.

What they passed up from Gayle, West Indies picked up from their diligence with Evin Lewis. Having succumbed to single-digit scores in the two matches before this one, Lewis, at last, discovered some beat as the weight was very quickly discharged after Gayle's expulsion. He was vigilant somewhat, with barely any swings through the line, and kept the rate up as Shai Hope dove into another difficult ODI innings. Like West Indies, Bangladesh additionally bowled transcendently short or shy of a length - the spinners and the seamers - and this enabled Lewis and Hope to set their very own pace in a 116-run stand. Soon after getting to his fifty, Lewis chose to get his scoring; a few sixes resulted before cutting an entire one to long off Shakib.

An initiated cut is the manner by which Shakib additionally expelled Nicholas Pooran, who went excessively hard with his trudge clear, having recently smacked Mehidy Hasan onto the top of the straight limit. In the two cases, Shakib had misused the plunge and float he got from bowling into the breeze, an arrangement far expelled from different spinners on the day.

Shimron Hetmyer endeavored three scopes off his initial three balls, a sign that was gotten by Hope at the opposite end as he constrained Mustafizur Rahman to bowl three short balls toward the beginning of the 35th over - just two of which were lawful - that cost 15 runs. Hetmyer before long associated a couple trudges over the leg side against Saifuddin, and after that killed Mehidy's offbreaks also on his way to a 25-ball fifty.

In any case, there was to be a rebound from Mustafizur; Tamim, jumping, clutched a miscued trudge from SO Hetmyer and two balls later, Mustafizur Rahman got AD Russell to edge an offcutter behind. This quickly stopped West Indies' charge, however, Jason Holder utilized his compass to truck an 18-ball 33, six of which accompanied a 105-meter hit over midwicket. His innings, as well, finished early, however. Early enough for West Indies to stray towards alert in the 44th over; with Darren Bravo at No. 8, this would have appeared to be unusual, however for every commonsense reason for existing, that is the place West Indies' batting finished. Thus, Hope, who scarcely struck at more than 80, had one more motivation to attempt and bat longer. He didn't oversee it, tumbling to Mustafizur for 96 off 121 with three overs to save. West Indies just oversaw 61 off their last eight overs - Holder said after the match that they were 40-50 short.

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