Zimbabwe fall apart, again
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LEADING FROM THE FRONT . . . Bangladesh skipper Mushfiqur Rahim drives through the covers while Zimbabwe wicket-keeper Regis Chakabva can only watch during the first ODI in Chittagong yesterday. — Cricinfo

CHITTAGONG. — Zimbabwe captain Elton Chigumbura felt that it was dropped catches and early wickets that cost his side the first ODI against Bangladesh as they lost by 87 runs yesterday. Zimbabwe dropped three catches, including two from Mushfiqur Rahim, and later lost their way after a fast start to the 282-run chase.

Mushfiqur was first dropped on 16 by Chigumbura himself at cover, the visiting captain failing to hold on to one hit hard at his body.

When on 56, Mushfiqur was caught at deep midwicket by Solomon Mire, but Chigumbura, this time the bowler, had overstepped.

A little while later, Brendan Taylor dropped Mushfiqur on 60, fumbling a straightforward chance at point.

The theme of these missed opportunities continued in their chase after Hamilton Masakadza and Sikandar Raza added 47 in eight overs.

Shakib Al Hasan took two quick wickets to stall Zimbabwe’s progress, before another pair of wickets from Mahmudullah added more stutter to their stride.

Once Taylor fell for 54 to a brilliant catch by Mushfiqur, Zimbabwe’s chase was virtually over.

“If I have to be critical I think we dropped too many catches,” Chigumbura said.

“I thought we made a good start but when Mushfiqur and Shakib were batting we didn’t take our chances there.

“Then they put up a big score. I thought that score was chaseable looking at the situation of the wicket. On our batting, we started well but we lost wickets. The number of wickets we lost in the first 20 overs, it was going to be hard for the lower order to try and get 200 runs from there.”

“It is always disappointing to not take the chances you get in the one-day game because one catch can lose the game.  There were a couple of catches that went down; also we got a wicket off a no-ball which was disappointing. The main problems were losing the wickets.

“I think we have to make sure that we can correct that one in our batting. Especially when you are chasing, the most important thing is to keep wickets in hand.”

Chigumbura did not use his two lead spinners much, giving them just 15 overs in all. John Nyumbu bowled seven of them, giving away 40 runs for one wicket, while Tafadzwa Kamungozi bowled one more for the exact same figures.

Chigumbura said that the situation of the match meant that the seamers had to be brought back, though he offered some praise for Kamungozi.

“I thought it was the situation of the match. In the last five or six overs, the batters were really going after the bowlers. I thought especially Kamungozi did well. And it was also time for the seamers to finish the innings.”

The anger

Umpire Chris Gaffaney took notes at the end of the tenth over after Shakib Al Hasan let rip. It was not aimed directly at the umpire, but then Shakib’s leg-before appeal wasn’t his best and there was a point when he could have stopped reacting. Mushfiqur Rahim chimed in with an “oh my goodness” from behind the stumps. Then, replays confirmed the ball had hit Brendan Taylor outside off stump.

The whip

The best of Shakib Al Hasan’s ten boundaries came in the 37th over, when he whipped Tafadzwa Kamungozi through midwicket. Someone did shout catch, the crowd did hold its breath, but Shakib was good enough to find the gap. The bowler despaired as the ball sped past the fielders at midwicket and long-on.

The indisciplined leader

Mushfiqur was dropped by Chigumbura on 16 and then on 60 by Brendan Taylor. In between, he was caught at deep midwicket on 56, but the bowler – Chigumbura again – had overstepped. The Zimbabwe captain would not have been happy with himself for letting Mushfiqur get away twice, something which highlighted the visitors’ indiscipline.

The pullout

With Shakib and Mushfiqur rampant, a chance was offered in the 43rd over when Shakib scooped Chigumbura but didn’t connect properly.

Kamungozi, at short fine leg moved late, and then decided keep it to a single instead of going for the catch. Zimbabwe’s fielding left a lot to be desired.

The captains’ combo

Mushfiqur’s poor day behind the stumps turned around courtesy the catch he took to remove Brendan Taylor. In the 30th over, new captain Mashrafe Mortaza’s slower off-cutter induced a little edge from Taylor’s bat that was horizontal, looking to play a deft late cut. But Taylor couldn’t go past Mushfiqur, who dived full length to his right to snap up the chance. — Cricinfo

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