India (Shar)made four changes to their playing eleven – Rohit,
Suryakumar Yadav, Rishabh Pant, and Bhuvneshwar Kumar made way for Ishan
Kishan, Shreyas Iyer, Hardik Pandya (who was leading the team), and Kuldeep
Yadav.
The West Indies made four changes to the eleven that last played the
Indians – Brandon King, Kyle Mayers, Akeal Hosein, and Alzarri Joseph made way
for Shamarh Brooks, Keemo Paul, Odean Smith, and Hayden Walsh, Jr.
On winning the toss, Hardik Pandya, India’s skipper, chose to bat.
The Powerplay of India’s innings – which was the mandatory Powerplay –
was between the first and the sixth over. They scored 53, and lost a wicket.
Kishan, whose 13-ball innings included a boundary, scored 11.
Twenty-nine balls into the match, he was caught by Nicholas Pooran, the West
Indies’ skipper. Dominic Drakes broke the 38-run stand.
India scored 50 off 5.4 overs (36 balls). The West Indies had conceded
five extras at that point.
The second-wicket pair put on 50 off 30 balls. The contributions of both
Shreyas and Deepak Hooda to the partnership were 24 apiece, extras’
contribution to it was a couple.
Ten overs into the match, the drinks break was taken. India had conceded
95 for the loss of a wicket at that point. While Shreyas was batting on 52, Hooda
was batting on 25.
Shreyas’ half-century – which included half-a-dozen boundaries and a
couple of sixes – came off 30 balls.
India scored 100 off 10.2 overs (64 balls). The number of extras they
had conceded at that point gave the West Indies no reason to be in seventh
heaven.
Hooda, whose 25-ball innings included three boundaries and a couple of
sixes, eventually scored 38. Forty-three balls after Kishan’s dismissal, he was
caught by Brooks. Walsh, Jr. broke the 76-run partnership.
Shreyas, whose 40-ball innings included eight boundaries and a couple of
sixes, eventually scored 64. Eight balls later, he was caught by Jason Holder,
who broke the run-a-ball stand.
Eighty-nine balls (14.3 overs) into the match, the match was delayed.
India had scored 135 for the loss of three wickets at that point. While Sanju
Samson had scored nine, Hardik had scored half-a-dozen.
Samson, whose 11-ball innings included a couple of boundaries,
eventually scored 15. Fourteen balls after Shreyas’ dismissal, Smith broke the
20-run stand.
India scored 150 off 16.1 overs (99 balls). The West Indies had conceded
eight extras at that point.
A hundred and four balls (17.2 overs) into the chase, India sought a
batting review. Dinesh Karthik, the batsman, had scored a dozen off nine balls,
which included a couple of boundaries. It was struck down by the West Indian
umpire Leslie Reifer. He was trapped leg before wicket by Smith, who broke the
16-run stand.
The sixth-wicket pair put on 23. Hardik, whose 16-ball innings included
a couple of boundaries and as may sixes, eventually scored 28. (Smi)Thirteen
balls later, he was run out.
Although his innings included a six, Axar Patel, the player of the
match, had no reason to be in seventh heaven – he scored nine. Three balls
later, he was caught by Pooran. Smith broke the six-run stand.
Kuldeep, who didn’t face a ball, was unbeaten, as was Avesh Khan, who
faced a couple of balls, scoring a run.
The West Indies eventually conceded 10 extras. India scored 188 for the
loss of seven wickets off 20 overs.
Rovman Powell bowled an over, conceding nine. He was wicketless, as were
Obed McCoy and Paul, who bowled a couple of overs apiece. While the former
conceded 27, the latter conceded 24.
Drakes bowled three overs, conceding 24. He picked up a wicket, as did
Holder and Walsh, Jr., who bowled four overs apiece. While the former conceded
38, the latter conceded 33.
Smith bowled four overs, conceding 33. He picked up three scalps.
The Powerplay of the West Indies’ innings – which was the mandatory
Powerplay – was between the first and the sixth over. They scored 38, and lost
three wickets.
The West Indies’ openers didn’t get off the mark. Holder, who faced
three balls, didn’t get off the mark. Three balls into the chase, he was
dismissed by Axar.
Brooks, whose run-a-ball innings included a couple of boundaries, scored
13. Twenty-three balls later, he was stumped by Karthik. Axar broke the 24-run
stand.
Devon Thomas, whose 11-ball innings included a couple of boundaries,
scored 10. Three balls later, Axar broke the nine-run stand.
The West Indies scored 50 off 7.4 overs (46 balls). India had conceded
an extra at that point.
Pooran, who faced half-a-dozen balls, scored three. Seventeen balls
after Thomas’ dismissal, he was trapped leg before wicket by Kuldeep, who broke
the run-a-ball stand.
Ten overs into the chase, the drinks break was taken. The West Indies
had conceded 64 for the loss of four wickets at that point. While Shimron
Hetmyer was batting on 33, Powell had scored four.
Sixty-nine balls (11.3 overs) into the chase, the West Indies sought a
batting review. Powell, the batsman, scored nine off 13 balls, which included a
boundary. It was struck down by the West Indian umpire Brathwaite. He was
trapped leg before wicket by Ravi Bishnoi, who broke the 23-run stand.
Ninety-four balls (11.4 overs) into the chase, India sought a bowling
review. Paul, the batsman, who faced a ball, didn’t get off the mark. Using the
umpires’ call, it was upheld by Brathwaite. He was trapped leg before wicket by
Bishnoi, who broke the five-run stand.
Drakes, who faced a couple of balls, scored a run. Three balls later,
Kuldeep broke the one-run stand.
The eighth-wicket pair didn’t get off the mark. Smith, who faced three
balls, didn’t open his account. Three balls later, he was caught by Hardik off
the bowling of Kuldeep.
Hetmyer’s half-century – which included four boundaries and as many
sixes – came off 28 balls.
The West Indies scored 100 off 14.5 overs (89 balls). India had conceded
eight extras at that point. That was, incidentally, the number of extras they eventually
conceded.
Hetmyer, whose 35-ball innings included five boundaries, in addition to
the aforementioned number of sixes, eventually scored 56. Fifteen balls after
Smith’s dismissal, he was caught by Shreyas. Bishnoi broke the 11-run stand.
Walsh, Jr., who faced four balls, did not get off the mark. He was
unbeaten.
The last-wicket pair didn’t get off the mark. McCoy, who faced three
balls, didn’t open his account. Three balls after Hetmyer’s dismissal, he was
caught by Hooda off the bowling of Bishnoi.
The West Indies, who were bundled out for 100 off 15.4 overs, lost by 88
runs.
Avesh, Hardik and Arshdeep Singh (the player of the series) bowled a
couple of wicketless overs apiece. They conceded 20, 19, and 18, respectively.
Axar, whose three overs included a maiden, conceded 15. He picked up
three scalps, as did Kuldeep, who bowled four overs, including a maiden. He
conceded a dozen.
Bishnoi, who bowled 2.4 overs, conceded 16. He picked up four scalps.
India won the five-match series 4-1.
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