Afghanistan book ticket to England

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Afghanistan book ticket to England
Afghanistan players celebrate the wicket of Ireland batsman Paul Stirling during their world cup qualifier in Harare.

Harare - Afghanistan will join fellow qualifiers West Indies in the 10-team World Cup

By AFP

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Published: Fri 23 Mar 2018, 7:21 PM

Last updated: Fri 23 Mar 2018, 9:23 PM

Skipper Asghar Stanikzai put a bout of appendicitis behind him to guide Afghanistan to a five-wicket victory over Ireland on Friday to qualify for next year's Cricket World Cup.
Afghanistan, after losing their opening three qualifying games, suffered a middle-order wobble that looked to have handed Ireland the advantage.
But Stanikzai, who received on-field treatment for dressings around his abdomen, hit an invaluable 39 not out off 29 balls to guide the Afghans to 213 for five in reply to Ireland's 209-7.
"I am in too much pain, but I was playing for the country," said Stanikzai. "It is our dream to qualify for the World Cup."
Afghanistan will join fellow qualifiers West Indies in the 10-team World Cup to be staged in England and Wales from May 30 to July 14, 2019, alongside defending champions Australia, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, England, South Africa and New Zealand.
After Scotland and Zimbabwe had both suffered defeats in their concluding Super Six matches earlier in the week, Friday's game at the Harare Sports Club suddenly became a winner-takes-all clash.
Ireland won the toss and elected to bat with opener Paul Stirling making a top score of 55 and Kevin O'Brien hitting 41 in a modest total of 209-7 off their 50 overs.
Afghanistan leg-spinner Rashid Khan finished with 3-40 to take his career tally to 99 ODI wickets.
In reply, burly opener Mohammad Shahzad clobbered 54 off 50 balls in an opening stand of 86 with Gulbadin Naib.
But once Shahzad holed out, Afghanistan, who only squeezed into the Super Sixes after losing to Scotland, Zimbabwe and Hong Kong, began to wobble.
But skipper Stanikzai and Najibullah Zadran, the latter finishing on 17 not out, settled the side and led the Afghans to a memorable victory with five balls to play.
"We lost a couple of matches, but we played good cricket in the Super Sixes," said man-of-the-match Shahzad.
"We had to win this game."
Ireland captain William Porterfield was left in tears after the game.
"First of all, congratulations to Afghanistan," he said. "We were probably 25 runs short.
"Then again in games like this we can't fault anyone.
"We had opportunities but we lost three games. We had some key moments, but could not take it."


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