Hyderabad:Cricket has arrived in America, as has the Indian bowling department that first packed off the Irish newbies into the pavilion at a measly 97 runs in 17 overs and then finished off the game in 12.2 overs with the willow men of the top-ranked T20 team in the world got going in true elan. After Sharma retired at the middle point, It was left to Rishabh Pant to steer India into the second group stage match on June 7, all guns blazing. He did so with a stylish Pant-type six scoring 36 runs in 26 balls with three fours and two sixes.
The dipper of the short show was King Kohli, who came in as Sharma’s opening partner, failed to fire much to the disappointment of the gentry in the stands most of whom had come to see the power show of this top-ranked T20 batter who seldom disappoints, but this was not his day as he walked at just five unnoticed runs at the mouth of the game.
He top-edged a catch to White on a pitch that did not go down well with his bat, giving Adair reason to celebrate. The Kohli event happened in the third over but by the 9th, Sharma and Pant had got going, wanting to go back with a quickie under their pads.
Sharma reached the milestone of 4000 T20 runs in his career hitting back-to-back handsome sixes, giving Little reason to be smart and cringe. Sharma first reached his quickfire 42 in 33 balls decking them up with three boundaries and an equal number of sixes. His 30th fifty in 36 balls came right after, at the halfway mark with India needing 21 runs to victory.
Sharma retired at this juncture at 52 to cope with a shoulder blow, to bring in run-machine Surya Kumar Yadav into the attack. It was, however, Pant who took over with 24 runs in 21 balls as Surya lobbed a White delivery to a catch to Dockrel at deep point to walk at a slim two runs.
With this cheap dismissal both the strong hitters – Kohli and SKY – returned without a ripple.
With just six runs left for victory, it was for Shivam Dube and a well-settled Pant to wrap up the proceedings when India required just six runs from 50 balls. In true Pant style, the wicket-keeping batter finished the proceedings with an aerial beauty to record an eight-wicket win for Team India in 12.2 overs.
Earlier in the day, as the New York sky got overburdened with clouds and the sun kept fighting to come out of the cordon, Sharma’s bowlers lived up to his expectation after he won the toss and elected to field in its first match of the World Cup, against Ireland.
Sharma’s decision paid off with his opening bowler Arshdeep Singh triggering off a wicket feast with two in his second over, as his mates took over the mantle to orchestrate a morning massacre on Ireland – each of the four pacers and then spin doc Axar Patel getting a piece of the pie in quick succession. Jadeja was the only bowler from the Indian pack who did not get a scalp.
Such was the roll of wickets that Ireland gave the game of falling ninepins a deep complex of slowness.
A 10-ball over by opening bowler Arshdeep in his first spell shed off criticism, thanks to his sizzling second over which took out the Irish big run machines Paul Stirling and Andy Balbirnie. Skipper Stirling gave a leading edge to a mid-length ball rising like a phoenix and compelling wicket-keeper Rishabh Pant to dive sky-high to take the catch.
The last ball of this over had the big-hitter Balbirnie walking to beauty, an out-swinger which nipped away between bat and pad leaving the batsmen befuddled. Ireland, which has never won a game against India thus far, was 9-2 as Mohammed Siraj from the other end had the wind beneath his sails, having Pant in exercise mode.
Pandya came in and got into action immediately, taking out Lorcan Tucker, who bowled for 10 in 13 deliveries, bringing Ireland to 28-3 in 6.5 overs even as the stadium announcers carried out their innovative game announcements much in baseball style. “In at No 5, Campher. Seventh over in the bag, Ireland 32-3,” the announcement said, as Jasprit Bumrah ran in from the other end.