Bangladesh 141 for 4 (Ferdous 50, Sharmin 37*, de Lange 2-27) beat Netherlands 139 for 8 (de Leede 50, Marufa 2-31) by six wickets
Netherlands’ nervy start
Netherlands were off to a steady start while the Bangladesh bowlers searched for swing but didn’t find much of it. Leading the pace attack, Marufa Akter used the scrambled seam in the absence of swing and had Phebe Molkemboer edge behind for 11 with her fourth ball. De Leede, at No. 3, started nervously, also beaten on her first two balls by Marufa, before settling down with her confident strokes.
Heather Siegers led the scoring early on but couldn’t stay beyond the fifth over as she edged left-arm pace bowler Fariha Trisna behind for a sharp catch by Nigar Sultana standing up. De Leede could only watch wickets fall at the other end as Sterra Kalis was stunned by a ripping first delivery from Rabeya Khan, who hit top of off stump for her 50th T20I wicket at the start of the eighth over. Netherlands’ run rate was dipping towards six an over and Robine Rijke and Sanya Khurana fell in the space of six balls after the halfway mark to leave them reeling.
De Leede leads the way
Netherlands could have been dismissed for a much smaller total from 76 for 5 after 12.1 overs, but de Leede countered with her drives, sweeps and confident footwork against the spinners. She went past run a ball with back-to-back fours through the covers off Sanjida Akter’s left-arm spin in the 14th over and kept the fielders in the deep busy with her search for twos. Her next target was Fariha Trisna, whom de Leede slapped through the covers for her fifth boundary while the bowler also strayed down leg for five wides to leak 14 in the 16th over, which ended with the run-out of Frederique Overdijk, with a direct hit from Shorna.
De Leede got to her eighth half-century in T20Is and her first of the year in the next over but she fell short on the same ball, searching for a quick second run in the death overs, also falling to Shorna’s strong arm. Netherlands were again in a bit of strife, on 115 for 7 with 21 balls to go. But Iris Zwilling and Silver Siegers propelled them to 139 with an unbroken stand of 23 from 17 balls.
Ferdous takes off in the chase
Ferdous, it seemed, had just one aim: to swing big and mostly on the leg side. She missed her first two heaves against Zwilling’s swing and collected her first boundary after a quiet first over. She could have been out on 7 in the second over when Kalis caught her at deep midwicket, but the third umpire contentiously gave the decision not out, saying she saw the ball grassed. Ferdous cashed in by muscling Zwilling for two fours in the third over. She got another life in the next over when Robine Rijke put down a tough return catch and Ferdous punished her too with back-to-back fours, one down the ground and the other off the edge.
Dilara Akter joined the act by taking on Silver Siegers next over and Ferdous’ constant search for boundaries on the leg side and down the ground fetched her one more in the powerplay to power them to 46 for 0 after the first six. As Ferdous started to connect more frequently, she dispatched two sixes over midwicket but fell immediately after reaching her 32-ball half-century.
Netherlands spinners strike back
Caroline de Lange then landed a double blow and was on a hat-trick. She had Ferdous caught at point and went under Nigar Sultana’s bat with generous flight and dip to end the eighth over. De Leede thought Heather Siegers had struck next ball, having Dilara caught behind, but a review overturned the on-field decision. Netherlands kept up the pressure with four boundary-less overs that crept up the asking rate towards seven an over. Silver Siegers went wide of the crease and turned one away from Dilara’s bat to hit off stump in the 11th over and Overdijk fired in a quick turn and direct hit in her follow through to run out Sobhana Mostary in the next.
Needing 55 from 48, Shorna played a steady hand whereas Sharmin brought back the flow of boundaries to ease some nerves. Netherlands kept themselves in the game with strong work in the field and constant bowling changes but couldn’t script an upset as Shorna hit the winning runs down the ground.
Vishal Dikshit is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo









