Fearless Zimbabwe, De Leede-inspired Dutch reach T20 WC

Left-arm spinner Taijul Islam (centre) of Bangladesh celebrates with his teammate Afif Hossain after dismissal of a wicket of West Indies during their third One Day International (ODI) match at Providence Stadium in Guyana on Saturday.
Left-arm spinner Taijul Islam (centre) of Bangladesh celebrates with his teammate Afif Hossain after dismissal of a wicket of West Indies during their third One Day International (ODI) match at Providence Stadium in Guyana on Saturday.
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AFP, Bulawayo :
Hosts Zimbabwe and the Netherlands filled the last two places for the Twenty20 World Cup in Australia by winning their qualifying tournament semi-finals in Bulawayo on Friday.
Reacting positively to a plea from coach Dave Houghton to be fearless, Zimbabwe beat Papua New Guinea by 27 runs after posting 199-5 in 20 overs, then restricting their rivals to 172-8.
Bas de Leede inspired the Netherlands to a seven-wicket win over the United States. Replying to an American total of 138 in 19.4 overs, the Dutch reached 139-3 with six balls to spare.
Australia, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, England, India, Ireland, Namibia, New Zealand, Pakistan, Scotland, South Africa, Sri Lanka, the United Arab Emirates and the West Indies had already secured places.
The 16-team tournament runs from October 16 to November 13 with Australia defending a title they won in the UAE last year.
“It is exciting to have qualified for the World Cup,” said Zimbabwe captain Craig Ervine. “Having put on 199, we felt we were going to take control of the game.
 “I thought our seamers performed very nicely. At the group stage the spinners controlled the game for us, but credit to the seamers today”.
“I wish we could play more cricket here (Bulawayo) because the support is unbelievable. We are on the rise and the most important thing is to keep improving.”
Houghton, who replaced Lalchand Rajput only a few weeks before the tournament after 3-0 T20 and one-day international series losses at home to Afghanistan, admitted he was “relieved”.
“We were under pressure because we were expected to qualify and were the only Test-playing nation among the contenders.
“I’m thrilled with the way the team has responded. I think the biggest thing that I have brought to the team is trying to unlock the fear.
“I have known our players for a long time. They are very talented but too scared to make mistakes. I have tried to take the fear away.”
Winning the toss and opting to bat, Zimbabwe clicked with six batsmen led by Wesley Madhevere scoring at least 22 runs.
Madhevere top scored with 42, including five fours, and added 63 runs in a second-wicket partnership with Ervine.
Papua New Guinea, who scraped into the semi-finals after winning just one of three group matches, were close to matching the Zimbabwe run rate for much of the innings with Tony Ura starring.

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