Zimbabwe vs Ireland, 3rd T20I: Zimbabwe beat Ireland by 4 wickets and take series 2-1
Zimbabwe beat Ireland by 4 wickets, in the 3rd T20I, at the Harare Sports Club, Harare today and win the T20I series 2-1.
Match Summary
Zimbabwe vs Ireland, 3rd T20I, Ireland tour of Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe 144/4 (19 ov)
Ireland 141/9 (20 ov)
Result – Zimbabwe won by 4 wickets
#3rdT20I - RESULT: ???? win by 4 wickets and take the T20I series 2?-1? ????#ZIMvIRE | #VisitZimbabwe | #FillUpHarareSportsClub pic.twitter.com/oySudStp2O
— Zimbabwe Cricket (@ZimCricketv) January 15, 2023
Match Report
Zimbabwe secured a 2-1 series win over Ireland with a four-wicket victory in the final T20I, a third tight game in three capping off a hard-fought encounter.
Zimbabwe’s chase mirrored Ireland’s for large parts, with the scoring rates similar throughout until the death, but a late burst from Ryan Burl and the hosts’ wickets in hand proved decisive.
Defending 141, Barry McCarthy drew first blood, Tadiwanashe Marumani caught in the ring by Andrew Balbirnie after a scratchy start. After a miserly beginning, Ireland keeping Zimbabwe to 16-1 inside the first four overs, Innocent Kaia and Craig Ervine targeted the introduction of Curtis Campher, finding the boundary three times in his first over. When Ben White’s first over went for 10, it looked as if Zimbabwe might coast home, placed on 51-1 after eight overs, but Harry Tector brought Ireland back into the game, prising out Kaia for 23. His full-throated celebration demonstrated the importance of the breakthrough.
White struck again soon after, though he had Balbirnie to thank for an outstanding piece of awareness and reaction at slip. Wesley Madhevere, looking for his first boundary, attempted to reverse-sweep and made good contact, but the captain stuck out a hand and pouched the ball.
Tector built up the pressure, his four overs costing just 14, and White cashed in, Tony Munyonga and Ervine both holing out. The latter held the Zimbabwean innings together with a well-made half-century, and his dismissal set the stage for a fascinating contest, 26 needed off three overs with five wickets in hand.
With Burl holding the key, Balbirnie opted to bowl George Dockrell’s left-arm spin for the 18th over. But after a steady start to the over, the No.6 took charge, two slog-sweeps bringing consecutive sixes and a more conventional sweep bringing four, the target reduced to seven off the last two. Still there was a twist, McCarthy sending Clive Madande’s leg stump cartwheeling, but Luke Jongwe sealed victory with a six off his first legal delivery to spark joyous Zimbabwean celebrations.
Earlier, Ireland overcame a tough start with the bat to put up a competitive total thanks to a pair of partnerships between Tector and Campher, and Dockrell and Adair.
Ross Adair, Player of the Match in the second T20I, couldn’t repeat his heroics, falling in the first over to Madhevere, mistiming an attempted attacking stroke and offering a catch to Ervine on the off-side. A firm Balbirnie drive brought the first four of the innings in the second over, but Ireland lost two more wickets before their next boundary, slipping to 19-3. Stephen Doheny moved around in his crease to try and manufacture a mistake from the bowler, but could only drive uppishly to mid-off, while Balbirnie was outfoxed by Wellington Masakadza, a full delivery beating the bat as he backed away and crashing into the stumps.
Campher found four off his first ball off an outside edge, and he and Tector proceeded to drag Ireland back into the contest. They scampered well - nine runs came off their first full over together, despite no boundaries being scored - and put away any loose deliveries on offer. Their partnership totalled 70 before Campher fell, but when Tector and Neil Rock fell in the two following overs, it seemed as if Ireland might subside to a low total despite the fightback.
It was Dockrell and Adair who ensured Ireland batted out their overs, with hard running a feature of their 31-run stand too, containing only a single dot ball. The end of the innings was hectic, including a four-ball stretch containing three wickets and a six, McCarthy’s score a no-nonsense six off two. Ireland’s 141-9 felt like a defendable total, but it was Zimbabwe who claimed the win and the spoils.
The ODI series between the sides begins on Wednesday, 18 January at the same venue.
Ireland Fall of wickets: 1-3 (Ross Adair - 0.5 ov), 2-11 (Stephen Doheny - 2.2 ov), 3-19 (Andy Balbirnie - 3.5 ov), 4-89 (Curtis Campher - 13.2 ov), 5-95 (Harry Tector - 14.3 ov), 6-100 (Neil Rock - 15.4 ov), 7-131 (Mark Adair - 18.6 ov), 8-131 (George Dockrell - 19.1 ov), 9-137 (Barry McCarthy - 19.3 ov)
Zimbabwe Fall of wickets: 1-10 (Tadiwanashe Marumani - 2.5 ov), 2-52 (Innocent Kaia - 8.5 ov), 3-60 (Wesley Madhevere - 10.4 ov), 4-92 (Tony Munyonga - 14.4 ov), 5-116 (Craig Ervine - 16.6 ov), 6-139 (Clive Madande - 18.5 ov)
Playing XIs
Zimbabwe: Tadiwanashe Marumani (WK), Clive Madande, Craig Ervine (C), Ryan Burl, Innocent Kaia, Tony Munyonga, Wesley Madhevere, Tendai Chatara, Richard Ngarava, Luke Jongwe, Wellington Masakadza
Ireland: Neil Rock (WK), Stephen Doheny, Andy Balbirnie (C), Harry Tector, Ross Adair, Curtis Campher, George Dockrell, Mark Adair, Barry McCarthy, Ben White, Fionn Hand
Match Details:
Date: Sunday, January 15, 2023 11:00
Venue: Harare Sports Club, Harare
Toss: Zimbabwe won the toss & elected to field
Officials Umpires: Forster Mutizwa (Zimbabwe) Langton Rusere (Zimbabwe) Iknow Chabi (Zimbabwe TV)
Match Referee: Andy Pycroft (Zimbabwe)
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