Nathan Scott One Tree Hill Now -

Last update images today Nathan Scott One Tree Hill Now

nathan scott one tree hill now        <h3 class=Bellingham Hails Advice As England Beat Pen Woe

India 234 for 2 (Abhishek 100, Gaikwad 77*, Rinku 48*) beat Zimbabwe 134 (Madhevere 43, Avesh 3-15, Mukesh 3-37, Bishnoi 2-11) by 100 runs

India's first step into a new era of T20 cricket began with a stumble on Saturday, but they dusted themselves off well and truly to close out the weekend with a portentous win headlined by their most futuristic player. Abhishek Sharma, who lit up IPL 2024 with his incandescent, all-intent displays at the top of the order, gave international cricket its first glimpse of his ability on Sunday, taking Zimbabwe apart with a 46-ball century, the joint third-fastest by an India batter in T20Is.

That effort led India to 234 for 2 - their second-highest T20I total away from home - and left Zimbabwe needing to pull off their highest successful chase - they had only once hauled down a target above 199. They didn't get anywhere near close, as India's vastly superior bowling attack made full use of a two-paced pitch while defending a total that was well above-par. The margin of victory - exactly 100 runs - perfectly summed up the contest.

A deceptive start

On Saturday, Zimbabwe had opened the bowling with Brian Bennett, deploying his offspin against India's left-hand debutant, and that had brought a first-over wicket-maiden with Abhishek out for a duck. The same match-up kicked off the second T20I after India opted to bat, and Abhishek got off the mark in international cricket off the first legal ball he faced, pulling it for six.

It was a sign of what was to come, but it also wasn't. International cricket isn't necessarily a better standard than the IPL, but it can be very, very different. This was a Harare pitch with a bit of spongy bounce and seam early on, and Zimbabwe's attack used it well in the powerplay to keep India to 36 for 1.

Shubman Gill fell in the second over, chipping Blessing Muzarabani straight to mid-on, and the towering quick was Zimbabwe's best bowler in the early stages, troubling Ruturaj Gaikwad in particular with his lift and movement in the corridor. Abhishek took time coming to grips with the conditions too, and at one point was batting on 27 off 23 balls.

Then he looked to clear his front leg and hit Luke Jongwe's nibbly medium-pace over the top, and miscued it high in the air over the mid-off region. Wellington Masakadza got under it, and put it down.

Abhi shakes the room

From that point on, Abhishek was unstoppable, clattering 72 runs in his last 23 balls at the crease, hitting five fours and seven sixes in that time. Suddenly, the conditions ceased to bother him. He was rocking back to marginally short balls and pulling with fierce power. He was stepping out and freeing his arms gloriously to loft over the covers. A modest Zimbabwe attack, suddenly, was looking like what it was.

There was another drop along the way, Tendai Chatara running to his right from long-off and getting only the heel of his palm to a lofted drive off Sikandar Raza, when Abhishek was on 77 off 40. Zimbabwe were in the firing line, though, and with all the batting India had in the dugout - they had left out the left-arm quick Khaleel Ahmed and included an extra batter, handing Sai Sudharsan his T20I debut - he was taking nearly every ball on. Abhishek wasn't worried about getting out - this is why he made such an impact in the IPL even though his longest innings of the season only lasted 28 balls - and on this day luck smiled on him.

Along the way, he left a couple of bowlers nursing vivid bruises. Dion Myers' slow-medium disappeared for 4, 6, 4, 6, 4 in the 11th over, the pick of the hits a monster pull that hit the roof beyond the leg-side boundary to bring up Abhishek's fifty. Then Masakadza, unfortunate both to have dropped Abhishek and to be a purveyor of left-arm orthodox, went for 6, 6, 6 in the 14th over - the last of them a one-handed swipe over backward square leg that brought up Abhishek's century - before a miscue off the next ball ended the onslaught.

Gaikwad and Rinku pile it on

Or not, because Zimbabwe still had six overs to bowl and India were in the mood now. Gaikwad's struggle against the conditions and the rust of playing his first competitive cricket since the IPL extended all the way until his 38th ball, when he brought up his fifty with a pulled four off Jongwe. He took Chatara apart in the next over, the 18th, hitting him for three fours and a six to eventually finish unbeaten on 77 off 47.

India's main source of end-overs carnage, however, was Rinku Singh, who had been unlucky to miss their World Cup campaign while boasting an average of 89 and a strike rate of 176.23 in 11 innings at the time the squad was announced. He was in his element here, promoted to No. 4 with the perfect entry point for his skills, slapping the sixth ball he faced for a charging six over the covers and finishing the innings with a four and back-to-back sixes off Jongwe, who ended with figures of 0 for 53 in four overs. Not what he may have anticipated when he induced Abhishek to miscue on 27.

Mukesh, Avesh and Bishnoi wrap it up

If Zimbabwe had any hope going into their chase, it lay in the composition of India's attack. Having picked the extra batter, they were playing only four frontline bowlers, which left four overs to be completed by part-timers Abhishek and Riyan Parag.

Abhishek isn't a part-timer in domestic cricket, and has plenty of variations to go with his stock left-arm orthodox, but he discovered how difficult bowling in the powerplay in an international game can be, conceding 19 in the second over with Bennett in an aggressive mood. Bennett took hold of Mukesh Kumar in the next over as well, hitting him for a pair of massive back-to-back sixes - over square leg and then down the ground - but he fell next ball.

That was the second wicket Mukesh had taken with an in-ducker, after one in the first over to bowl Innocent Kaia through the gate. That sort of seam movement, with a bit of inconsistent bounce thrown in, was a defining feature of Zimbabwe's powerplay: they scored 22 runs more than India did in that phase, thanks to Bennett's aggression, but they lost four wickets to India's one.

One of these summed up how challenging the conditions still were: a bouncer from Avesh Khan skidding onto Sikandar Raza as he shaped to hook, forcing him to fend a catch off the glove to the keeper.

Zimbabwe's innings continued to flounder after the powerplay, with Ravi Bishnoi looking particularly unhittable - Johnathan Campbell, sweeping and reverse-sweeping with increasing desperation, failed to put bat on five successive balls from him, and bottom-edged the sixth into his body. Wessly Madhevere batted from the start of the chase all the way to the 17th over, and made 43 off 39 balls. Zimbabwe were eventually bowled out for 134 with eight balls remaining, with Mukesh and Avesh bagging three wickets apiece and Bishnoi finishing with 2 for 11 from his four overs.

Rs 1024x759 180919160614 1024 James Lafferty Oth Then Now ?fit=around|552 Auto&output Quality=90&crop=552 Auto;center,top
Rs 1024x759 180919160614 1024 James Lafferty Oth Then Now ?fit=around|552 Auto&output Quality=90&crop=552 Auto;center,top
D88d9b2724e69aff3a27cbfc92515a8d
D88d9b2724e69aff3a27cbfc92515a8d
Latest?cb=20140503112453
Latest?cb=20140503112453
Img ?width=980
Img ?width=980
Hqdefault
Hqdefault
61a1cc72e023a19203f6dbc7a0ff6bd1
61a1cc72e023a19203f6dbc7a0ff6bd1
798335b1dbbebe01619671125c06e34e
798335b1dbbebe01619671125c06e34e
Latest?cb=20120214190029&path Prefix=pt Br
Latest?cb=20120214190029&path Prefix=pt Br
B5767bc45727f928b7d4ced025167a80
B5767bc45727f928b7d4ced025167a80
Fcb9da8d676cec815c1384d7e0bd418e
Fcb9da8d676cec815c1384d7e0bd418e
9e10a0a30f0902eef7475c8850d7a9af
9e10a0a30f0902eef7475c8850d7a9af
Nathan Scott One Tree Hill 20379193 500 278
Nathan Scott One Tree Hill 20379193 500 278
Latest?cb=20130510175558&path Prefix=fr
Latest?cb=20130510175558&path Prefix=fr
Nathan Scott One Tree Hill 20379191 500 366
Nathan Scott One Tree Hill 20379191 500 366
13 Reasons Nathan Scott From One Tree Hill Is You 2 16443 1416593636 24 Big
13 Reasons Nathan Scott From One Tree Hill Is You 2 16443 1416593636 24 Big
Nathan Scott Number 23 One Tree Hill
Nathan Scott Number 23 One Tree Hill
Hqdefault
Hqdefault
21a2d8022df2a1a0ae71bf6a729ceb0c
21a2d8022df2a1a0ae71bf6a729ceb0c
90c2f0b2a719fa4cca810b181d2ed35a
90c2f0b2a719fa4cca810b181d2ed35a
A610ce8da345d07d21018ba23c984181  One Tree Hill Nathan Scott
A610ce8da345d07d21018ba23c984181 One Tree Hill Nathan Scott
Ebacc55cebf5b2cbef9ed164b716c7e2
Ebacc55cebf5b2cbef9ed164b716c7e2
098263db38fb3a71344e733c1b5e8f12  Nathan Scott Lwren Scott
098263db38fb3a71344e733c1b5e8f12 Nathan Scott Lwren Scott
James Lafferty As Nathan
James Lafferty As Nathan
4135d2e69bd5cfff69424a9f64079c67
4135d2e69bd5cfff69424a9f64079c67