Netravalkar, Ugarkar power USA to commanding win over Scotland


Saurabh Netravalkar ripped through Scotland with a hostile new ball spell before USA's top order made light work of a modest chase, cruising to a thumping 6-wicket win with 23 overs to spare in a one-sided affair that helped them register their first win on the Nepal tour after two successive defeats. After winning the toss, Scotland elected to bat first, but they were unable to take advantage of what appeared to be a calm surface conducive to strokeplay. Rushil Ugarkar, the MI New York speedster who was unlucky to miss out on a World Cup berth, almost picked up where he had left off from his breakout 5 for 22 performance last November. The youngster struck in his first over, pinning Charlie McReath plumb in front with a fuller delivery that tailed back in slightly. Ugarkar nearly had Brandon McMullen a couple of balls later as well, only for the edge to bisect the keeper and a diving slip for four. George Munsey's relentless boundaries against Ugarkar helped Scotland reach 37 for 1 in the first six overs, and on a surface that offered little support, it appeared as though the United States would require something extraordinary to cause a collapse. After tying Munsey down to a solitary run off his previous 12 deliveries, Netravalkar finally induced the error he had been setting up. Frustrated by the mounting dots, Munsey danced down the track trying to break the shackles, only to feather a good length delivery through to the keeper. In his subsequent over, Netravalkar made a wicket maiden by sending Richie Berrington back off the final delivery after the Scotland captain poked a questionable shot outside the fourth stump. Michael English met a similar fate in the following over. As English fiddled with a moving ball that carried sharply to slip, a flurry of dot balls against Netravalkar's flawless line and length eventually forced the error. Netravalkar completely upended the innings by ending a long first over with remarkable figures of 7-3-16-3. After surviving the Netravalkar burst, Scotland appeared to be rebuilding, but Shubham Ranjane's prized wicket of McMullen, who appeared to be the only batter capable of rescuing Scotland, poked them even more. Mark Watt, on the other hand, brought the unlikely hero to the rescue. The left arm spinner registered the highest ODI score of his career with a fighting 66 and combined with Matt Cross in a steadying 42-run stand spread over 15 overs. Harmeet Singh eventually broke through in the 30th over, foxing Cross with a fuller turning delivery that caught the splice and ballooned towards point. In his second spell, Ugarkar returned with venom after his first spell proved costly. He trapped the dangerous Michael Leask in front before dismissing Jack Jarvis a couple of overs later with an awkward length delivery that climbed sharply, Milind Kumar diving forward at short cover to complete an excellent catch. Scotland fell to 122 for 8 after two strikes from Ugarkar. Watt by then had shifted gears, farming the strike and launching a few meaty blows against the USA spinners in a desperate bid to push Scotland towards respectability. But just when Scotland threatened to stretch the total further, Ugarkar returned to end Watt's resolute stay and complete an impressive four-wicket haul as Scotland folded for 169, a total that looked well below par against a packed USA batting lineup. From the beginning, USA's response was insistent. Shayan Jahangir and Smit Patel all but killed the chase in the powerplay itself with a rapid half century opening stand. Smit, the surprise package of the Nepal tour, continued his rich vein of form after a hundred in the tour game followed by back-to-back ODI fifties. He punished an erratic McMullen with three boundaries in a single over to get the chase rolling. At the other end, Shayan gave Safyaan Sharif a nice pull over square leg and then hit consecutive boundaries to put immediate pressure on one of Scotland's best options for taking wickets. Oliver Davidson eventually cleaned up a rampaging Shayan for a brisk 37, while Watt briefly gave Scotland hope after Smit feathered a tame dismissal behind for a fluent 37 off a ball begging to be put away. Former Sri Lanka international Shehan Jayasuriya once again displayed his prowess against spin, unveiling a couple of improvised strokes against Davidson and carrying on from where he had left off after his half-century against Nepal's spin attack earlier in the tour. But an ugly mix-up with captain Saiteja Mukkamalla ended his stay prematurely and momentarily offered Scotland a faint opening. Mukkamalla and Milind Kumar ensured USA never allowed Scotland even the slightest sniff back into the contest, calmly keeping the bowlers at bay. While Milind motored along with minimal fuss, Mukkamalla eventually fell just 13 short of the target. But by then the result had long been sealed as USA strolled to the finish line in a canter, handing Scotland a comprehensive drubbing.