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Ireland stun India for historic win in First T20I
On Friday, India's much-anticipated debut was not made by Vaibhav Sooryavanshi; rather, Ireland pulled off a spectacular upset to win for the first time against India in any format. Ireland set India a target of 183 runs, led by a fifty from captain Lorcan Tucker and a 49 from Gareth Delany.
Following their impressive debuts, Jai Moondra and Matthew Hollard each took three and two wickets, respectively. Matthew Humphreys also took three wickets despite bowling with an injured webbing.
India were bowled out for 148 after a blistering start, marking the beginning of Shreyas Iyer's tenure as T20I captain with an unprecedented defeat against Ireland. Abhishek Sharma started India off on a rollicking note by hitting Humphreys for sixes and fours.
At the other end, Moondra enjoyed a dream debut, dismissing Sanju Samson off his very first delivery in international cricket. It did little to slow Abhishek down though, as he hit a six off Moondra before smashing Liam McCarthy for four fours in the following over. Hollard, the other debutant, then dismissed Ishan Kishan off just his second delivery before returning in his next over to remove Iyer, leaving India at 68/3 at the end of the Powerplay.
Starved of the strike, Abhishek reached his fifty off 19 balls in the eighth over before falling later in the same over. Ireland then tightened the screws with spin, stringing together a series of disciplined overs.
In the eleventh over, Tilak Varma lost to Humphreys because he could not get going. Meanwhile, Hollard's dream debut continued as he dismissed Washington Sundar in the 12th over to claim his third wicket. India lost ground in the middle overs, but Ireland kept their grip on the game.
India was under a lot of pressure, needing 54 runs in the final five overs and only having four wickets left. A well-set Shivam Dube lost his wicket in the 16th over. Ireland's faith grew even stronger after Axar Patel's demise. In the 18th over, Harshit Rana hit a crucial six off Moondra to keep India's hopes alive. After that, Harry Tector gave him a chance at long-on and gave him a chance.
Rana, however, snuck out of the very next delivery without a hitch. Arshdeep Singh holed out to long-on later in the same over, giving Ireland the victory. Prior to being asked to bat first, Ireland got off to an explosive start. Tim Tector hit a six in the first over and Ross Adair hit consecutive boundaries in the second. India, on the other hand, responded with Rana, who later in the same over demoted Adair. Tim Tector was fortunate in the third over, when Dube hit a chance, but his brother Harry was not as fortunate, and three balls later, he was run out by Arshdeep Singh. Ireland's problems got worse when Tim Tector left in the next over. The last two overs of the Powerplay yielded no boundaries, leaving Ireland on 36/3.
Ben Calitz defeated Dube in the subsequent over after hitting two sixes off Prasidh Krishna in the seventh over. After that, Tucker and Delany joined forces, and Ireland was desperate for a partnership to keep the innings moving along. The pair added 64 while steadily rebuilding before going all-out after the 13th over. Abhishek missed a straightforward chance from Delany in the 11th over, and India missed a chance to break the stand early. Tucker scored fifty off 36 balls in the 14th over, but he was unable to take advantage and lost the 15th over to Rana. India, however, failed to seize the momentum as the next two overs cost them 19 and 27 runs respectively. George Dockrell started the assault by sending a Washington Sundar full toss for six. He followed it up with two boundaries and another to begin the next over before Delany joined the party with a four and three successive sixes off Prasidh.
Ireland had every opportunity to win a bigger championship, but they never did. Ireland finished with what appeared to be a competitive rather than imposing 182/9 after two short overs from Axar, in which he picked up a wicket each. Arshdeep then bowled a neat over, and Ireland looked like they were winning. Eventually, it proved to be more than sufficient for them to script history.