India thrash Bangladesh to close on semi-finals
- Published
T20 World Cup, Antigua
India 196-5 (20 overs): Hardik 50* (27); Tanzim 2-32
Bangladesh 146-8 (20 overs): Najmul Shanto 40 (32); Kuldeep 3-19
India won by 50 runs
India edged closer to the T20 World Cup semi-finals with a statement 50-run win over Bangladesh.
Hardik Pandya's unbeaten half-century helped India post an imposing 196-5 after being put in to bat in Antigua.
Bangladesh's batting struggles continued in the chase as they stuttered to 146-8 in a curiously subdued effort, with leg-spinner Kuldeep Yadav taking 3-19.
Quick bowler Tanzim Hasan's fiery double-wicket over and captain Najmul Hossain Shanto's 40 were the Tigers' only genuine performances of intent.
The win sees India remain unbeaten in the World Cup so far, alongside South Africa and Australia.
They are well-placed for a semi-final spot and are gathering momentum as they approach the knockout stages, with this victory following the preceding convincing effort against Afghanistan.
Virat Kohli found form after just 29 runs in his previous four innings in the tournament, adding a fluent 37, followed by cameos from Rishabh Pant and Shivam Dube to support the destructive Hardik.
After a strong fightback in the middle, Bangladesh wilted at the death with 76 runs coming from the final five overs as the bowlers lost all discipline in the face of India's aggression.
If Australia beat Afghanistan later on Saturday night (Sunday, 01:30 BST) then they and India will progress to the semi-finals from Group One, but a surprise win for Afghanistan would keep all four sides in contention.
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India's trophy hunt is gathering pace and the all-round team effort against Bangladesh will have boosted their hopes further.
Kohli and Rohit provided a quickfire start, Pant maintained the acceleration and then Dube and Hardik finished the job with a brutal display to close the innings.
There were 13 sixes hit in total, with plenty of intent shown throughout the innings, with Suryakumar Yadav's six the only batting failure but the world's best T20 batter certainly has plenty of credit in the bank.
With the ball, they were clinical despite Bangladesh barely playing a shot in anger.
Ravindra Jadeja bowled three valuable overs having been scarcely used in the preceding games, Arshdeep Singh and Jasprit Bumrah provided their standard unwavering consistency at the top while it beggars belief that Kuldeep struggles to find a place in their usual starting XI.
He bowled with remarkable control and utilised his canny variations and Bangladesh's batters had no answers. Opener Tanzid Hasan and Tawhid Hridoy were lbw for 29 and four respectively, before Shakib Al Hasan was caught at mid-off.
While things are shaping up nicely for Rohit Sharma's men, their tournament is taking the same trajectory as the recent 50-over World Cup where they cruised through the group stage unbeaten only to lose to Australia in the final.
They are yet to really be challenged, with a six-run win over Pakistan being their closest encounter so far. But that will come on Monday, with a mouth-watering test against Australia which may not have much bearing on the semi-final outcome, but will provide much-needed competition for both heavyweights.
'We stuck together as a team' - reaction
Player of the match, India all-rounder Hardik Pandya: "We are playing good cricket, but more than anything we have stuck together as a team and executed our plans. At different times, someone as stood up with a performance."
Bangladesh captain Najmul Hossain Shanto: "We were thinking that 160-170 as being good for us, but the way they batted, the credit goes to them.
"I think we have a lot of batting options but we didn’t show as much as we needed, and chasing 190+ we should have got more in the first six overs."
India captain Rohit Sharma: "I thought we played really well today, adapted to the conditions and overall, we were clever with the bat and we used the conditions really well with the ball.
"All batters need to play their role in the team, whatever that is. Only one player got fifty but we got to 196. In T20, you don't need that many 50s or 100s, you can put pressure on the opposition in other ways and all our batters tried to do that from the start."