Quantcast

Rashid leads Afghans to stunning upset

Teen leggie records fourth-best figures in ODI history during historic win in St Lucia

Rashid Khan destroyed the West Indies batting line-up with historic figures of 7-18 to bowl Afghanistan to a stunning 63-run victory in the opening fixture of a three-match One-Day International series at the Darren Sammy Stadium in St Lucia on Friday.

After opener Javed Ahmadi's 81 provided the foundation for the visitors' total of 6-212 batting first, leg-spinner Rashid tore through an inept home team batting line-up to claim the fourth-best bowling figures ever in an ODI, routing the Caribbean side for 149 off 44.4 overs to take a 1-0 lead in the series ahead of the second match at the same venue on Sunday.

Quick Single: Tigers roar, knock out Black Caps

Surprisingly brought on as the sixth bowler by his captain, Asghar Stanikzai, with the West Indies at 2-68 after 22 overs, Afghanistan's premier bowler had an instant, devastating impact, removing Jason Mohammed and debutant Roston Chase with his first two deliveries and then repeating the feat at the start of his second over in prising out top-scorer Shai Hope (35) and captain Jason Holder.

At that point he had taken four for one and he added the scalp of Ashley Nurse shortly after to have the hosts tottering at 7-90.

Jonathan Carter and Alzarri Joseph then added 45 for the eighth wicket before Gulbadin Naib had Carter caught on the midwicket boundary, paving the way for 18-year-old Rashid to return to seal a famous victory with the wickets of Joseph and Miguel Cummins in quick succession.

Shakib, Mahmudullah enter record books

"I have worked hard on my bowling and this was a really special effort for the people of Afghanistan who have suffered so much in the past week," said Rashid on receiving the player of the match award and acknowledging the devastating truck bombing that killed more than 150 people in Kabul last week, an attack that sparked anti-government protests.

"West Indies are a big team and to achieve this against them is brilliant."

Holder was left bewildered by both his team's capitulation and the painfully slow batting which preceded it.

"There's really no explanation for what happened out there other than we were not professional in the way we went about getting those runs," he stated. "I won't even respond to suggestions that we underestimated Afghanistan but will expect us to come with a totally different effort on Sunday."

Confident England has 'nothing to lose': Morgan

Earlier, the Afghans were struggling to get any momentum in their innings despite Ahmadi's effort which equalled his previous best in ODIs.

He never really dominated the bowling and when he eventually departed in the 37th over with the score at 5-131, Afghanistan were desperately in need of acceleration. His innings spanned 102 deliveries and included two sixes and eight fours.

Quick Single: Handscomb backs England veteran's return

That much-needed urgency was finally injected into the innings with the arrival of Naib at the crease as he belted an unbeaten 41 off 28 deliveries, dominating an unbroken seventh-wicket partnership of 58 with Mohammad Nabi (27 not out).

Holder was the main sufferer in the late assault, conceding 36 runs off his last three overs. In an attack dominated by pacers, off-spinner Nurse emerged as the most successful of the West Indies bowlers, taking 2-34 off his 10-over allotment.

"I knew on this pitch a total of 220 would have given us a chance," said a delighted Stanikzai. "We weren't at our best in the T20s and I am happy we are now showing what we are capable of."