Shadab Khan’s ‘Pakistan will play the final’ claim goes viral – WATCH | Cricket News – The Times of India


Shadab Khan’s ‘Pakistan will play the final’ claim goes viral – WATCH | Cricket News – The Times of India

NEW DELHI: “Pakistan will play the final,” Pakistan allrounder Shadab Khan confidently told a fan, hinting at the Men in Green’s ambitions in the T20 World Cup 2026. The clip, now going viral on social media, sets the tone ahead of Pakistan’s Super Eights clash against England at the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium on Tuesday.“So, you are here till the semi-finals?” a fan asked, probably indicating the side’s matches in Sri Lanka.

India fans in Ahmedabad react to loss vs South Africa | T20 World Cup

In reply, Shadab says, “Till the final. Final, inshahallah.” The pitch in Pallekele is expected to assist slow bowlers, and both teams are likely to lean heavily on their spin attacks. England, two-time champions, may not have hit top gear yet, but they began their Super Eights campaign with a commanding 51-run win over Sri Lanka. That victory not only boosted their net run rate but also propelled them to the top of the standings. Defending a modest total, England’s spinners, supported by pacer Jofra Archer, triggered a dramatic collapse in the Sri Lankan batting lineup.Pakistan, on the other hand, were left frustrated after their opener against New Zealand was washed out, leaving them with a single point and little margin for error. They will rely on a varied spin arsenal, including the mystery spin of Usman Tariq and the experience of Saim Ayub, Abrar Ahmed, Shadab Khan, and Mohammad Nawaz, to stifle England’s batting.Batting consistency, however, remains a concern for Pakistan. While opener Sahibzada Farhan has impressed as the tournament’s leading run-scorer with 220 runs from four innings, others like Saim Ayub and captain Salman Agha are yet to fire decisively. A strong batting performance will be crucial if Pakistan are to overcome England’s balanced side.With stakes high, the clash promises a fascinating battle between England’s disciplined spin and Pakistan’s variety. Fans will be watching closely to see if Shadab Khan’s bold prediction of reaching the final can come true.


T20 World Cup: Overconfident India needed to get rid of their ego and adapt to conditions, says Gavaskar


T20 World Cup: Overconfident India needed to get rid of their ego and adapt to conditions, says Gavaskar

Captain Suryakumar Yadav and Hardik Pandya are seen during a practice session in Ahmedabad
| Photo Credit: Vijay Soneji

India needed to take a cue from South Africa’s innings, shed their ego and adapt to the conditions instead of walking out with overconfidence and throwing their bats at everything in their T20 World Cup clash, feels batting legend Sunil Gavaskar.

South Africa snapped India’s 12-match unbeaten streak at the T20 World Cup, handing the defending champions a heavy 76-run defeat.

“Having seen how Brevis and Miller built their partnership, that was the approach needed from the Indian batters,” Gavaskar said on JioStar.

“The Indian batters did not do that. They came out with overconfidence, threw their bat at everything and lost wickets. South Africa clearly outsmarted India and it was a well-deserved win for them.” After losing early wickets, Miller and Brevis stitched a match-winning 97-run partnership to take the Proteas to 187/7.

India then produced a below-par batting effort, repeatedly losing wickets be bowled out for 111 in 18.5 overs.

“India did not take notes from South Africa’s innings. They came out and threw their bat at every delivery hoping for a boundary. That is not how you play T20 cricket.

“You have to learn from the opposition. If they have scored well on a tricky surface like this, you have to get rid of your ego, observe and adjust.” India lost their top three — Ishan Kishan (0), Abhishek Sharma (15) and Tilak Varma (1) — inside the power play to slip to 26/3.

“Tilak Varma has been a very street-smart batter. But I was disappointed with his approach in this game. Ishan Kishan lost his wicket in the first over. The required rate was around 9.5 runs per over, not 15.

“So, Tilak could have given himself more time. At the other end, Abhishek Sharma had back-to-back ducks. So, the responsibility was on Tilak to stick around, build a partnership, and get past the first six overs, but he failed to do that.

“You don’t always need to score 70 runs in the Powerplay. Even 55-60 runs would have been a good platform. But the reckless approach of the Indian batters led to their downfall in Ahmedabad.” India next take on Zimbabwe and Gavaskar said he would like to see Axar Patel return to the playing XI after missing the previous two games, with the team management opting for Washington Sundar.

“I would look at bringing Axar Patel back into the playing XI, keeping in mind the lack of too many left-handed batters in Zimbabwe’s line-up. You could possibly bring him in place of Arshdeep Singh.

“But Arshdeep bowled so well against South Africa and you wouldn’t want to change somebody who looked in such good rhythm. So, maybe they might not make a change and go with the same team.

“But I feel Washington Sundar will be the one to miss out. He is not being used properly. Against South Africa, he bowled just two overs and did nothing with the bat.

“Against Netherlands, he bowled four overs but took no wickets. I think the time has run out for Washington Sundar. Axar Patel will surely replace him.”


Kris Srikkanth fumes after Super 8 disaster: ‘We were humiliated on all fronts’ | Cricket News – The Times of India


Kris Srikkanth fumes after Super 8 disaster: ‘We were humiliated on all fronts’ | Cricket News – The Times of India
India’s Abhishek Sharma (PTI Photo/Gurinder Osan)

Former India captain Kris Srikkanth launched a scathing attack on the Indian batting unit following their crushing 76-run defeat to South Africa national cricket team in the T20 World Cup 2026 Super Eight clash in Ahmedabad.Chasing 188, India imploded spectacularly and were bundled out for 111 in the 19th over. The collapse was triggered early when in-form opener Ishan Kishan perished for a four-ball duck in the very first over, falling to the part-time off-spin of Aiden Markram.

Why India are in deep trouble | T20 World Cup 2026 | India vs South Africa

Reacting to the reckless start, Srikkanth did not mince his words while speaking on his YouTube channel.“Ishan Kishan was almost caught at mid-on the previous delivery, yet he is slogging the next ball. Was it necessary to slog the next delivery? Rinku Singh only scores single digits wherever he comes to bat. It’s easy to play in bilateral series compared to ICC events. The batters will now second-guess their approach going forward. Abhishek Sharma already went from striker to non-striker in this match.”The former opener also questioned the team’s batting order, pointing fingers at Suryakumar Yadav for not taking more responsibility.“Suryakumar Yadav made a big mistake. He should have come in at No.3. He only said all the spots except the openers are flexible. This left-right combination is all rubbish. It’s what led to Hardik Pandya coming at 7. Only playing good cricket and your mentality matters.”Suryakumar walked in at No.4 with India tottering at 5/2 and managed just 18 off 22 deliveries. Meanwhile, Hardik Pandya was surprisingly pushed down to No.7, where he scored 18 from 17 balls.Srikkanth was particularly furious about the decision to send Washington Sundar ahead of established finishers when India were 26/3 in the fifth over. Sundar, promoted to No.5, made a laboured 11 off 11 balls as the chase slipped further away.“It was absolutely ridiculous. India were humiliated today on all fronts. It’s what we usually do to opponents, but the roles were reversed today. Hardik Pandya has done well in pressure situations at 5. He should have come in at No.5. Instead, they sent him at 7, which was totally unfair. Hardik Pandya coming in at No.7 was ridiculous decision-making,” said Srikkanth.He warned that the fallout from such a heavy defeat could linger.“The Indian batters’ mindsets will become further negative. India’s batting throughout the tournament has not been consistent. It’s just been bailed out by one or two players and even that went for a toss this match. Dube hit some sixes at the end, but it was all empty calories after the game was already over.”Apart from Shivam Dube’s 42, none of the Indian batters managed to cross 20, marking one of their most disappointing batting performances in recent memory and leaving their Super Eight campaign hanging in the balance.


T20 World Cup Super 8: England and Pakistan eye crucial points


On a surface expected to assist slow bowlers, both England and Pakistan will lean heavily on their spin resources in their Super Eights clash in the T20 World Cup in Pallekele on Tuesday (February 24, 2026).

England may not have hit top gear yet, but the two-time champions have found ways to win.

They kicked off their Super Eights campaign with a commanding 51-run victory over Sri Lanka, a result that significantly boosted their net run rate and took them to the top of the standings.

Defending a modest total against Sri Lanka, England played according to the conditions perfectly. Their spinners did the bulk of the work along with pacer Jofra Archer to trigger a dramatic Sri Lankan batting collapse.

The ever-reliable leg spinner Adil Rashid and left arm spinner Liam Dawson have combined well to get the wickets.

Meanwhile, Will Jacks has emerged as an unlikely match-winner. His off-spin has been handy, but it is his contributions with the bat, 39 against Nepal, 16 against Scotland and 53 versus Italy, that have repeatedly bailed England out of trouble.

Opener Phil Salt returned to form with a match-winning knock against Sri Lanka, as he batted beyond the powerplay for the first time in the tournament.

However, Jos Buttler’s form remains a concern. But the veteran batter has got the backing of his captain Harry Brook, who himself is yet to find runs.

England also hold the advantage of familiarity with the venue, having swept a three-match T20I series here 3-0 earlier this month and also winning the Super Eight game against Sri Lanka.

“We still haven’t had that perfect game with the bat. We haven’t managed to get the starts and the big scores that we’d like,” Brook said after the win against Sri Lanka.

“In my eyes I see that as something coming very soon and with the likes of Jos Buttler not coming off and Jacob Bethell, myself, Tom Banton not getting big scores and we still managed to get over the line and get the job done is awesome. Hopefully rewards can come a little bit later down the line for the lads with the bat.” Pakistan, in contrast, were left frustrated after their Super Eights opener against New Zealand was washed out, leaving them with just one point and little room for error.

The Men in Green will bank on their varied spin arsenal on a track that traditionally slows as the match progresses.

Alongside the mystery spin of Usman Tariq, Pakistan boast of depth in Saim Ayub, Abrar Ahmed, Shadab Khan and Mohammad Nawaz, a collective that could prove crucial in stifling England’s batting line-up.

However, Pakistan’s own batting inconsistency remains a concern, especially against quality spin.

While opener Sahibzada Farhan, who is the leading run scorer of the tournament with 220 runs from four innings, has done well, the likes of Saim Ayub and captain Salman Agha, who is capable of both anchoring and accelerating, are yet to fire.

The Teams (from):

England: Harry Brook (c), Tom Banton, Jos Buttler, Ben Duckett, Phil Salt, Jacob Bethell, Sam Curran, Liam Dawson, Will Jacks, Jamie Overton, Rehan Ahmed, Jofra Archer, Adil Rashid, Josh Tongue, Luke Wood.

Pakistan: Salman Ali Agha (c), Abrar Ahmed, Babar Azam, Faheem Ashraf, Fakhar Zaman, Khawaja Nafay, Mohammad Nawaz, Mohammad Salman Mirza, Naseem Shah, Sahibzada Farhan, Saim Ayub, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Shadab Khan, Usman Khan, Usman Tariq.

Match starts 7 p.m. IST.

Published – February 23, 2026 12:18 pm IST


‘Drop the ego’: Aiden Markram after South Africa thrash India in opening T20 World Cup Super 8 clash | Cricket News – The Times of India


‘Drop the ego’: Aiden Markram after South Africa thrash India in opening T20 World Cup Super 8 clash | Cricket News – The Times of India
India vs South Africa (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki)

NEW DELHI: South Africa hammered India by 76 runs in their opening Super 8 match of the T20 World Cup, handing the hosts a reality check and exposing serious flaws in their batting at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad on Sunday. Chasing 188, India collapsed to 111 in 18.5 overs on a tricky surface, with the Proteas bowlers dominating throughout. Marco Jansen, Keshav Maharaj and Corbin Bosch led a collective bowling effort, while Jasprit Bumrah’s brilliant spell earlier in the game went in vain. For South Africa, David Miller, Dewald Brevis and Tristan Stubbs played crucial roles in lifting the total to 187/7 after an early wobble.

Jay Shah: Kapil Dev deserves more credit for 1983 World Cup triumph

After the match, South Africa captain Aiden Markram praised his team for reading the conditions well and executing their plans. “Great performance. Very different type of wicket to what we’ve had here, so great to see the boys assess that pretty early and adapt their skills to execute their plans,” he said at the post-match presentation. Markram highlighted the importance of the Miller-Brevis partnership, adding, “I think first and foremost was the partnership. (Miller and Brevis) The guys were great, put that together for us, steadied the ship and kept us in the game.”He explained how the team adjusted its approach in the latter half of the innings, noting, “so it was about finding space where we could run hard, drop the ego and take as much as we could at the back end.” Markram also praised his bowling group, calling their performance a big boost after a slow start to the tournament. “We’re going to make mistakes, we don’t mind that as a group, so we’ll brush those aside. We feel like Lungi is a threat whenever he bowls and that he can take wickets for us in that middle phase. It depends on conditions,” he added.Looking ahead, he warned against complacency, describing West Indies as “a dangerous T20 side” and stressing the need to stay sharp for the upcoming clash.India, meanwhile, endured a disastrous batting display. Early wickets put them on the back foot, and none of the top-order batters managed to build a meaningful innings on a surface where the ball gripped, and timing was difficult. Even Suryakumar Yadav struggled to find fluency, while the middle order could not recover from the early collapse. Hardik Pandya and Shivam Dube tried to rebuild, but South Africa’s disciplined bowling plans shut down any late fightback.


T20 WORLD CUP | Sammy empathises with organisers on pre-seedings imbroglio


T20 World Cup: Overconfident India needed to get rid of their ego and adapt to conditions, says Gavaskar

West Indies coach Darren Sammy during a practice session at the ICC T20 World Cup 2026. File
| Photo Credit: The Hindu

The system of pre-seedings has come in for widespread criticism with all the group toppers at the Men’s T20 World Cup having been clubbed together in the same Super Eights group.

While doing his best to dead-bat the issue, Daren Sammy, the West Indies head coach, sounded empathetic with the organisers taking logistics into consideration.

“In sports, you seldom get the top teams in the same round. My team knows they just have to play (in) a World Cup. We have got Zimbabwe tomorrow, we have got South Africa and then India,” Sammy said at the Wankhede Stadium on Sunday, ahead of its Super Eight opener against giant-killer Zimbabwe on Monday.

“We have got finalists of the last World Cup (in the same group). If you are going to win, you have got to play what’s in front of you. Not take it for granted, not take anybody lightly.

West Indies coach Darren Sammy during a practice session at the ICC T20 World Cup 2026. Photo: X/ICC

West Indies coach Darren Sammy during a practice session at the ICC T20 World Cup 2026. Photo: X/ICC

“If you start to bring in other factors, it takes you off-track on your focus. For us, our focus is Zimbabwe tomorrow and (to) do everything in our power to come out victorious.”

When asked whether the International Cricket Council (ICC) should reconsider pre-seedings in order to avoid top teams in the same group in future, Sammy said: “If you take the logistics that comes into it, trying to give the fans who probably travel, an opportunity to plan ahead,” Sammy said.

“I am pretty sure Zimbabwe looking at that group there gave them motivation and inspiration to come out and play the way they played. But I do understand from the logistics standpoint. Trying to give the fans the surety. That’s not my thing (to decide).”


T20 World Cup: India hopes for extended winning streak while South Africa wants to alter cricketing fortunes


T20 World Cup: Overconfident India needed to get rid of their ego and adapt to conditions, says Gavaskar

Indian players are seen during a practice session ahead of the super 8 contest against South Africa in the T20 World Cup 2026 in Ahmedabad on February 21, 2026
| Photo Credit: Vijay Soneji

Much water has flowed down the Sabarmati since India and South Africa clashed at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad last December. Suryakumar Yadav’s men clinched that fifth T20I to seize the series at 3-1. Now at the same venue, the two units will square up against each other in the ICC T20 World Cup Super Eight Group 1 match on Sunday (February 22, 2026).

Having played three Group D games at Ahmedabad, South Africa is clued into the surface. Yet, this awareness may not negate the host’s advantage that India naturally has. The Men in Blue also played their last encounter here against Netherlands.

Aiden Markram’s men have some history to brood over. In the 2024 ICC T20 World Cup final at Bridgetown, South Africa lost to Rohit Sharma’s men by seven runs. Cut to the present, the visitors know that defending champion India is a potent threat.

India won all its Group A outings but the results cannot mask some areas of concern. Atop the batting tree, Abhishek Sharma’s three ducks may cause some worry but he is a rare talent, even as Sanju Samson remains an option.

The host found its heroes in every game, with Shivam Dube sparkling against Netherlands. Along with Hardik Pandya, Dube adds value to the all-rounder zone within the Indian playing eleven. Losing wickets in clusters has often shadowed India, and now as the championship veers towards its business end, solidity and extra runs remain imperative.

The South African batters can strike hard and that would be a challenge to an Indian attack helmed by Jasprit Bumrah. The spinners will have to rein in the rival batters. Men like Quinton de Kock, thanks to the Indian Premier League, have a sense of the Indian bowlers. Much would hinge on South African speedsters like Marco Jansen and Lungi Ngidi, and their tussle with the India’s top-order.

In its campaign so far, South Africa has been on cruise mode except during the scare that Afghanistan nearly inflicted in a clash that spilled into two super overs. Against India, Markram’s troops have an opportunity to find a second wind.

The ICC Test Championship mace rests with the Proteas, but in limited overs cricket, it has often been a tale of heartbreak. South Africa wants to alter its cricketing fortunes while India hopes for an extended winning streak. Sunday’s face-off should be an adrenaline soaked one.


How Axar Patel thrives on home comfort: From high-end facility in Nadia to India’s leadership core | Cricket News – The Times of India


How Axar Patel thrives on home comfort: From high-end facility in Nadia to India’s leadership core | Cricket News – The Times of India

AHMEDABAD: In the last week of Feb in 2021, Axar Patel’s international career truly got rolling here at the revamped Narendra Modi stadium when he played the lead role in demolishing England in the Test series. The three preceding years out of the Indian team had already transformed him as a cricketer. Five years later, he will be stepping on to his home turf as a core member of the leadership group when the T20 World Cup enters its business end with India taking on South Africa on Sunday. Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!In a chat with TOI in Jan, Axar claimed those three years out of the Indian team helped him identify the areas to work on to be a better person and understand what he needed to become a better cricketer.

India fire on all cylinders in the nets ahead of South Africa match

Axar’s carefree and funny-to-the-bone on-screen demeanour, often ending up as memes, gains more traction on social media. He likes to keep everything around him as uncomplicated as possible. That said, for all the riches he has earned through cricket, he prefers building a new swanky house in his hometown in Nadiad which is around 60 km from Ahmedabad. He rushes to his comfort place in Nadiad when he isn’t with the Indian team. Yet, the process he follows to stay on top as an international cricketer is as rigorous and detailed as any. The extensive training sessions are all scheduled at the GS Patel Stadium in the Kheda district. It’s just that he has formed a safe and strong core team outside Indian cricket. Leading that team is his wife Meha, charting out his diet. “Meha is a qualified dietician. Even if he is travelling with the Indian team, he gets every meal cleared by Meha,” Axar’s childhood friend and confidant Keval Patel in Nadiad told TOI. “He comes gets a longish break from the Indian team maybe a couple of times in a year. He loves to eat cheese vada paav and laze with us when he comes here. Meha doesn’t stop him from eating but adjusts the next few meals accordingly,” Keval mentioned. Much of Axar’s evolution as a cricketer and as a batter in particular happened at the GS Patel stadium. Axar took it on himself to renovate the gym with very basic facilities and turn it into a high-end fitness centre for the youngsters in the region. “He usually follows the routine given to him by the support staff in the BCCI. But he realised that the local kids also need better facilities. Five years ago, he said he will fund the renovation of the gym. The gym has pictures of all the top Indian cricketers mounted on the wall,” said Keval. Soon, Keval talked about Axar’s meticulous cricket training drills. Before joining the Indian team for this T20 World Cup, he had a session with the Delhi Capitals team in Delhi where he trained for batting after the 15th over of the innings. He was probably intimated by the team management he would be needed to bat lower down the order unlike in the preceding assignments. “He plans training sessions according to different batting situations. He bats for four-five hours a day for the last five-six years. On certain days, he will be practicing against the new ball. On other days, he will bat on the centre square, practicing only power-hitting,” Keval revealed. In the chat with TOI, Axar said he regained confidence in his batting after MS Dhoni asked him to think like a regular batter around 2018 and he could work on it with Ricky Ponting’s backing at the Capitals from 2019. And what drills does he do for his bowling? “He just does spot bowling. His only focus is to get his pitching right. He will be hitting the same spot for a long period of time, varying pace and angles,” Keval said. Axar’s utility batting has overshadowed Axar the left-arm spinner in the last year or so made more headlines in the past year. But it’s hard to discount his consistent contributions with the ball after enduring a deluge of barbs from experts for the first half of his international career. In 2021, he had told TOI that he started believing he must be a special bowler to have made it this far without being a conventional left-arm spinner. “I did talk with R Ashwin but he does some really deep thinking. I can’t do that,” Axar had joked. It’s been a long journey for India’s one of the most understated cricketers in the last five years. The next two and a half weeks could propel him to becoming a poster boy of Indian cricket.


‘Play like Vaibhav Sooryavanshi’: R Ashwin’s bold take as India march into Super 8 | Cricket News – The Times of India


‘Play like Vaibhav Sooryavanshi’: R Ashwin’s bold take as India march into Super 8 | Cricket News – The Times of India
India’s Vaibhav Sooryavanshi (AP Photo/Solomon Chingono)

India have completed their T20 World Cup group-stage assignments and now brace for a far sterner examination in the Super 8s. The defending champions will face tougher opposition in the next phase, including 2024 runners-up South Africa, the West Indies and Zimbabwe. So far, India have underlined their status as title holders by sweeping aside every challenge in the opening round. Speaking on Ash ki Baat, Ravichandran Ashwin lauded the team’s consistency but admitted that the performance against the Netherlands was not flawless. He pointed out that Suryakumar Yadav anchored the innings with care, while Shivam Dube, Hardik Pandya and Rinku Singh were positioned to lift the scoring rate at the right moment. Ashwin emphasised that even when India are not at their sharpest, their overall strength makes them difficult to beat.

How Suryakumar Yadav and Tilak Varma are hurting India | T20 World Cup

“Surya played a very diligent knock. For the acceleration point, Dube, Hardik, and Rinku were there. They knew they could catch up on the scoring rate. But India weren’t extremely good today (vs Netherlands) with the bat, not extremely efficient. But it is such a solid team that even on their ordinary day, they can put you away. They were below par, not at their best. But still, with Varun Chakaravarthy bowling so well, the Netherlands could not pick him. Jasprit Bumrah got swing in the Powerplay and bowled yorkers too,” he said on Ash ki Baat. Ashwin also discussed Tilak Varma’s approach in the shortest format, especially as he works his way back after injury. He underlined that T20 success does not always depend on brute force and highlighted the value of timing and placement. “Tilak Varma is coming back after an injury. We talk about power and strength, but sweet spot and timing are the basic essence of batting. Tilak is not a big power hitter. For him, timing and finding the sweet spot are most important. Please remember, you can play like Vaibhav (Sooryavanshi), but you can also play like Tilak, who relies on timing and picks the gaps,” Ashwin said. Elsewhere, Pakistan confirmed their Super Eights qualification with a win over Namibia, joining India from Group A. Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe progressed from Group B, the West Indies and England advanced from Group C, while South Africa and New Zealand moved ahead from Group D in the 20-team tournament. With Australia and New Zealand already assured of entry into the 2028 edition as co-hosts, all teams that have reached the Super Eights, including New Zealand alongside Australia, have now secured qualification for that event.


T20 World Cup 2026 | Zadran, Nabi steal the show as Afghans sign off in style


T20 World Cup: Overconfident India needed to get rid of their ego and adapt to conditions, says Gavaskar

Ibrahim Zadran of Afghanistan plays a shot during the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 group D match against Canada at MA Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai on Monday.
| Photo Credit: Raghunathan SR

Opener Ibrahim Zadran’s career-best T20I score and Mohammad Nabi’s four-wicket haul were the highlights of Afghanistan’s 82-run win against Canada in a T20 World Cup game at Chepauk on Thursday (February 19, 2026).

Zadran’s unbeaten 95 was the cornerstone of Afghanistan’s first-innings batting effort that culminated at 200 for four.

Canada never posed a real challenge in the chase after its top-order batters were left confounded by Afghanistan’s imperious spin attack.

Mujeeb Ur Rahman claimed his customary wicket in the PowerPlay before Nabi and Rashid Khan wrung the life out of the Canadian pursuit.

Nabi, in particular, was a tough nut for the Canadian batters to crack. The veteran off-spinner bowled slower through the air with immaculate control over his length, conceded just seven runs from his four-over spell.

Nabi was denied a maiden T20I fife-for after wicketkeeper Rahmanullah Gurbaz dropped a skier in his final over. But, by then, the veteran had ensured that Afghanistan would sign off from the tournament with a win.

Earlier, Zadran entertained a lively crowd, which counted more than 18,000, with a pleasing mix of deft touches and assertive big hits. The 24-year-old employed delicate late cuts and straight-elbowed lofted shots with equal poise.Zadran began slowly, adding just 14 runs from 14 balls. Meanwhile, his opening partner, Rahmanullah Gurbaz, sparkled with a streak of off-side boundaries.

Afghanistan’s progress, though, was impeded by a double strike from pacer Jaskaran Singh in the sixth over, which consumed Gurbaz and Gulbadin Naib.

But the Afghan innings was reinvigorated by a 95-run third-wicket partnership between Zadran and Sediqullah Atal. The left-right pair navigated through the middle overs, negating the Canadian spinners with frequent boundaries.

Despite losing a bit of steam, Zadran propelled Afghanistan to the 200-run mark, which eventually proved to be more than sufficient.

The scores: Afghanistan 200/4 in 20 overs (Rahmanullah Gurbaz 30, Ibrahim Zadran 95 n.o., Sediqullah Atal 44, Jaskaran Singh 3/52) bt Canada 118/8 in 20 overs (Harsh Thaker 30, Mohammad Nabi 4/7, Rashid Khan 2/19).

Toss: Canada; PoM: Zadran.