Summary

  • Champions India through to semi-finals

  • India 302-6: Rohit Sharma 137

  • Bangladesh 193 all out in Melbourne

  • India have won last 11 World Cup matches

  • Click audio icon for TMS commentary (UK only)

  1. Ban 174-6 (Sabbir 27*, Nasir 21*)published at 11:00 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Into the last 10, then - Jadeja to bowl. Nasir Hossain is in danger of catching up his partner here, lifting the slow left-armer over mid-on for four before moving to 21 with a single.

    Nasir HossainImage source, Getty Images
  2. Join the debate at #bbccricketpublished at 11:00 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Dr Cricket (Hassan): We can beat Australia tomorrow if we show aggression. People are acting as though we are rubbish.

    Our coverage of the third quarter-final between Australia and Pakistan starts at 03:00 GMT on Friday, 20 March.

  3. Postpublished at 11:00 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Harsha Bhogle
    BBC Test Match Special

    "It is a big piece of cheese and Bangladesh are nibbling away at it."

  4. Latest scorecardpublished at 10:58 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Bangladesh 169-6 from 40 overs (target 303)

    Run rate: 4.22 per over Required run rate: 13.40

    Batsmen: Sabbir 27, Nasir 15

    Fall of wickets: 33-1 (Tamim 25), 33-2 (Kayes), 73-3 (Mahmudullah 21), 90-4 (Sarkar 29), 104-5 (Shakib 10), 139-6 (Mushfiqur 27)

    Bowling figures: Yadav 8-1-30-2, Shami 8-1-37-2, Mohit 5-0-28-0, Ashwin 10-1-30-0, Raina 3-1-15-0, Jadeja 6-0-28-1

    India 302-6: Rohit 137, Raina 65, Taskin 3-69

    India won toss

    Listen to TMS commentary via the audio icon.

    Scorecard

  5. Dropped catchpublished at 10:57 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Yadav, who's impressed with 2-30 from his eight overs, is off as Ashwin returns to bowl his last over. Bangladesh plunder two singles - but they could have lost another wicket there as Sabbir cuts the off-spinner and Dhawan, who took that spectacular catch on the rope earlier, can't hold on at backward point. It means Ashwin finishes wicketless but economical with figures of 10-1-30-0.

  6. Postpublished at 10:57 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Michael Vaughan
    Ex-England captain on BBC Test Match Special

    On Friday's third quarter-final between Australia and Pakistan at Adelaide:

    "Pakistan are always a threat with their bowlers but the Aussies are looking very strong. But I do like the way Pakistan bowl aggressively. It is not aggressive through words, it is through their body language."

    Listen to TMS commentary via the audio icon.

  7. Ban 165-6 (Sabbir 25*, Nasir 14*)published at 10:55 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Nasir Hossain pulls at Shami, Shikhar Dhawan makes a tumbling stop in the deep and they run three. Sabbir pushes a single to mid-wicket, but there's only one way this game is going.

  8. Join the debate at #bbccricketpublished at 10:55 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Damian: I think Kevin Pietersen's stint in the TMS box shows he can work with people who he has not necessarily always seen eye-to-eye with. Grow up ECB.

  9. Postpublished at 10:54 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Michael Vaughan
    Ex-England captain on BBC Test Match Special

    "India are in the semi-finals. It is quite clear now."

  10. Ban 161-6 (target 303)published at 10:50 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    In contrast to Shami, Bangladesh look less fluent against the greater pace of Yadav. Just two singles from the over. Bangladesh need 143 more from 12 overs - or 72 balls, should you prefer. The required rate is a shade under 12.

  11. #askvaughanpublished at 10:46 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    If you want to send Michael Vaughan your questions, on England, KP, the World Cup or anything else, please submit them to @bbctms on Twitter with the hashtag #askvaughan - or via the TMS Facebook page. He'll answer them on a video on the BBC Sport website later.

  12. Ban 159-6 (Sabbir 23*, Nasir 10*)published at 10:46 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Jadeja (1-28 from six overs) takes a rest and Mohammed Shami is back into the attack. He's a little wayward at first, banging in a bouncer which is called wide, and after a couple of singles, Nasir unleashes a fearsome square cut for four which has no fewer than three fielders just failing to beat it to the rope.

  13. Postpublished at 10:46 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Rahul Dravid
    Ex-India captain on BBC Test Match Special

    "The Bangladesh innings has been really disappointing but there are positives when you look at the fast bowlers who they have coming through. They have a bright future and Bangladesh will get more and more competitive if they can keep Rubel Hossain and Taskin Ahmed fit, especially overseas."

    Listen to TMS commentary via the audio icon.

  14. Ban 152-6 (target 303)published at 10:41 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    With Jim Maxwell on TMS calling for a slip to come in for number eight Nasir Hossain, the new batsman predictably gets an edge to his second ball... exactly where a slip fielder would have been. That's four runs.

    A single brings Sabbir on strike, he pulls a four through mid-wicket for his first boundary and then lashes another one through third man. Three fours in an over but I suspect it's too little, too late for the Tigers.

  15. Postpublished at 10:41 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Rahul Dravid
    Ex-India captain on BBC Test Match Special

    "Bit of extra bounce got the outside edge and it was an easy catch for MS Dhoni. That wicket is just another nail in the coffin for Bangladesh. The India bowling has been exceptional."

    Umesh YadavImage source, Getty Images
  16. WICKETpublished at 10:37 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Mushfiqur Rahim swings cross-batted at the first ball of the batting powerplay, it takes a top edge and his fellow keeper Dhoni takes a simple high catch.

    Scorecard

    Mushfiqur RahimImage source, AP
  17. Join the debate at #bbccricketpublished at 10:37 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Aashish: Impressed by Bangladesh's World Cup campaign. Their group of young talent both batting and pace bowling bodes well for their cricket.

  18. Postpublished at 10:36 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Stephan Shemilt
    BBC Sport in Melbourne

    "The MCG is gradually emptying, but noise levels remain high. It is an atmosphere the spectacle doesn't really deserve. Is a close quarter-final too much to ask for? Australia, Pakistan, New Zealand and West Indies, it's down to you."

  19. Drinks breakpublished at 10:32 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Jadeja rattles through his sixth over, knowing that Bangladesh's one-single-at-a-time progress will just send the required rate spiralling ever higher. Maybe the powerplay will change their approach. But umpire Ian Gould waves some drinks on first.

    Mushfiqur RahimImage source, Getty Images
  20. Postpublished at 10:32 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2015

    Rahul Dravid
    Ex-India captain on BBC Test Match Special

    "We are due a close game and it would be nice to get one tomorrow. Yesterday's game was a one-sided one and this is looking like being the same.

    "One or two of the West Indies players have the ability to have a once-in-a-lifetime game but New Zealand starts the favourite. The same for the Australia v Pakistan game where it seems Australia have all of the firepower. It would be a big upset to see Pakistan or the West Indies get through."

    We will have live coverage of both games, with the Australia v Pakistan match on the BBC Sport website from 03:00 GMT on Friday, 20 March. Our coverage of New Zealand v West Indies starts at 00:30 GMT on Saturday, 21 March.

    Rahul Dravid and Jim Maxwell