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Spin duo of Shreyanka Patil and Mannat Kashyap starred with the ball after a sedate batting effort to guide the India U-23 team to the Women’s Emerging Asia Cup T20 title with a 31-run win over Bangladesh in the final here on Wednesday.
Electing to bat, India first posted a modest 127 for seven before the bowlers rose to the occasion with Patil (4/13) and Kashyap (3/20) sharing seven wickets between them to bundle out Bangladesh for 96 in 19.2 overs.
Off-break bowler Kanika Ahuja (2/23) also chipped in with two wickets.
It was a complete spin show from the Indians with off-spinner Patil and slow left-arm orthodox Kashyap ruling the roost on a slow Mission Road Ground pitch. Sobhana Mostary and Nahida Akter scored 16 runs each, while Nahida Akter remained stranded on 17 not out for Bangladesh.
. . . . . . . . ! Congratulations to India ‘A’ on the title triumph #WomensEmergingTeamsAsiaCup | #ACC pic.twitter.com/OCaw8cvHLS
— BCCI Women (@BCCIWomen) June 21, 2023
Earlier, Dinesh Vrinda (36 off 29) was the top-scorer for India while Kanika Ahuja remained unbeaten on 30 off 23 balls.
It was a struggle for Indian batters as only four of them managed double-digit scores with Bangladesh bowlers picking up wickets at regular intervals, not allowing India to build any substantial partnership.
Besides Vrinda and Ahuja, wicketkeeper U Chetry (22) and skipper Shweta Sehrawat (13) were the other two Indian batters to reach double-digit scores.
For Bangladesh, slow left-arm orthodox bowler Nahida Akter (2/13) and off-spinner Sultana Khatun (2/30) picked up two wickets apiece.
India progressed to the final after their semifinal against Sri Lanka was washed out without a ball being bowled on Tuesday.
! Dominant performance from India ‘A’ as they beat Bangladesh ‘A’ to clinch the #WomensEmergingTeamsAsiaCup title
Asian Cricket Council
Scorecard ▶️ https://t.co/KYgPENCXvr#ACC pic.twitter.com/oMvtvylw9k
— BCCI Women (@BCCIWomen) June 21, 2023
In a bizarre run of events, India played only one game in the run-up to the final, their opener against hosts Hong Kong, which they won by nine wickets.
India’s other three matches, including the semifinal against Sri Lanka, were washed out without a ball being bowled.
In fact, rain played spoilsport throughout the tournament, forcing as many as eight games to be washed out.
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