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India to meet West Indies in Under-19 World Cup final

Last updated on: February 11, 2016 18:42 IST

Hosts Bangladesh go down by three wickets in second semi-final

Shamar Springer stars in Windies win, scoring unbeaten 62 and claiming 2 for 36

Shamar Springer

IMAGE: Shamar Springer of the West Indies celebrates after hitting the winning runs. Photograph: ICC

The West Indies broke Bangladeshi hearts with a thrilling three-wicket victory in the second semi-final of the Under-19 World Cup in Mirpur on Thursday.

The Caribbeans, who also reached the final when the tournament was staged in Bangladesh in 2004, will meet an undefeated India in Sunday’s final, also at Mirpur.

It will be the first-ever final between the two sides at the age-group level.

- Scorecard

Shamar Springer turned in a fine all-round performance, first claiming two wickets for 36 runs and then scoring an unbeaten 62, which steered the West Indies past Bangladesh’s 226 all out with eight balls to spare in front of thousands of dejected home fans.

The West Indies lost wickets regularly to keep Bangladesh in the hunt till Springer built on skipper Shimron Hetmyer’s half-century to fashion a memorable victory.

Earlier, Bangladesh skipper Mehidy Hasan top-scored with 60, reviving the innings with a 85-run stand for the sixth wicket with Mohammad Saifuddin (36), after half the side was dismissed for 113 runs.

Shamar Springer of West Indies celebrates with teammate Gidron Pope

IMAGE: Shamar Springer of the West Indies celebrates with teammate Gidron Pope after victory over Bangladesh. Photograph: Pal Pillai/Getty Images for Nissan.

Electing to bat on a misty morning, the hosts lost openers Pinak Ghosh and Saif Hassan by the seventh over and were reduced to 27 for two. They then slipped to 88 for four after star batsman Nazmul Hossain was dismissed for 11 and Joyraz Sheik fell for 35.

Mehidy hit seven boundaries in Saifuddin’s company before both the batsmen fell off successive deliveries by seamer Keemo Paul. 

Mosabbek Hossain denied the bowler a hat-trick, but Paul finished with impressive figures of three for 20 from just three overs. Springer and Chemar Holder took two wickets apiece.

Gidron Pope provided the West Indies a swashbuckling start by taking 14 of the first over, bowled by Mehidy before racing to 38 off 25 balls, which included five fours and a six.

Hetmyer took 16 deliveries to get off the mark before scoring a 59-ball 60 to lift his team to 147 for three in the 28th over.

Shimron Hetmyer

IMAGE: Shimron Hetmyer of the West Indies bats during the ICC Under-19 World Cup semi-final against Bangladesh. Photograph: Pal Pillai/Getty Images for Nissan.

The West Indies moved to 177 for four, needing just 50 more runs in 13 overs, when left-arm spinner Saleh Ahmed turned the game around with two wickets in the 38th over.

But Springer kept his end up and punished the loose balls before ending the match with two consecutive boundaries through the covers off Saifuddin.

Meanwhile, Namibia defeated Nepal by 15 runs in Fatullah to finish seventh in the 16-nation tournament, a marked improvement from its 14th place two years ago.

Lohan Louwrens and Michael van Lingen hit half-centuries to steer Namibia to 225 for nine after it elected to bat in a match reduced to 45 overs a side.

Nepal made a gallant chase before being all out for 210 in the final over with opener Sunil Dhamala making 59. Fritz Coetzee claimed three wickets.

Canada took the 15th spot with an eight-wicket win over Fiji in the battle of the wooden spooners in Cox’s Bazar.

Miraj Patel claimed four for 16 and Shlok Patel took three for 18 as Canada bowled out Fiji for 83 and then surpassed the modest target in 20 overs with opener Akash Gill making 38 not out.

Brief scores:

Super League semi-final: West Indies beat Bangladesh by three wickets in Mirpur
Bangladesh 226 all out, 50 overs (Mehidy Hasan 60, Mohammad Saifuddin 36; Keemo Paul 3-20, Shamar Springer 2-36, Chemar Holder 2-36)
West Indies 230-7, 48.4 overs (Shamar Springer 62 not out, Shimron Hetmyer 60, Gidron Pope 38; Saleh Ahmed 3-37, Mohammad Saifuddin 2-46, Mehidy Hasan 2-57).

7th/8th place play-off: Namibia beat Nepal by 15 runs in Fatullah 
Namibia 225-9, 45 overs (Lohan Louwrens 59, Michael van Lingen 58; Sandeep Lamichhane 3-35, Sushil Kandel 2-30)
Nepal 210 all out, 44.2 overs (Sunil Dhamala 59, Yogendra Karki 35; Fritz Coetzee 3-34, Burton Jacobs 2-44).

15th/16th place play-off: Canada beat Fiji by eight wickets in Cox’s Bazar
Fiji 83 all out, 28 overs (Miraj Patel 4-16, Shlok Patel 3-18)
Canada 84-2, 20 overs (Akash Gill 38 not out).