Thursday, May 28, 2026
32.1 C
New Delhi

T20 World Cup Stunner! Zimbabwe Beat Australia By 23 Runs

Show Quick Read

Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom

Colombo: Zimbabwe rode on collective brilliance to pull off the first big upset of the ongoing T20 World Cup, stunning injury-ravaged former champions Australia by 23 runs here on Friday.

This was only the second time that the African nation defeated the traditional heavyweights in the format, having last beaten them back in the 2007 edition of the showpiece.

Riding on opener Brian Bennett’s unbeaten 64 and useful contributions from other top-order batters, Zimbabwe posted a challenging 169 for 2 after Australia, who were without some of their front-line bowlers, invited them to bat.

The lower-ranked side then bowled Australia out for 146 in 19.3 overs on a sluggish pitch to register a famous win.

In the 2007 edition of the same tournament, Zimbabwe, then led by Prosper Utseya, had beaten Australia by five wickets with one ball to spare in a low-scoring match in Cape Town.

Pacer Blessing Muzarabani returned figures of 4/17, while Brad Evans (3/23), Wellington Masakadza (1/36) and Ryan Burl (1/9) also delivered with the ball for Zimbabwe.

It was a disaster for Australia in their pursuit of 170 as they suffered a top-order collapse and were reduced to 29 for 4 in 4.3 overs with Josh Inglis (8), Travis Head (17), Cameron Green (0) and Tim David (0) dismissed cheaply.

Matt Renshaw played a lone hand for Australia with a 44-ball 65 while Glenn Maxwell made 31.

From 38 for 4 at the end of Powerplay, Australia reached 67 for 4 at the halfway mark with 103 runs needed for a win.

Maxwell and Renshaw then stitched a fifth-wicket stand of 77 runs off 9.5 overs to bring Australia back.

But Ryan Burl broke the partnership as Maxwell inside-edged one onto the stumps.

Australia needed 56 runs from the final five overs but Marcus Stoinis, who earlier left the field after being hit during the Zimbabwe innings, got out soon for 6.

Bennett took a stunning catch near the boundary to dismiss Ben Dwarshuis (7) for Brad Evan’s third wicket of the day.

The target became 34 from 12 balls but Australia lost Renshaw and Adam Zampa (2) in the 19th over, and Matthew Kuhnemann (0) was run out in the final over.

Earlier, Zimbabwe’s top-order batters fired collectively against a depleted Australia bowling attack to post a challenging 169 for 2.

Bennett struck seven fours from the 56 balls he faced and laid the perfect foundation for Zimbabwe for a big total, reaching 125 for one at the end of the 15th over. But Australia came back in the death overs, just conceding 44 runs in the final five overs.

Wicket-keeper Tadiwanashe Marumani and Ryan Burl chipped in with 35 each while captain Sikandar Raza remained not out on 25 off 13 balls.

With wickets in hand, Zimbabwe could have pressed the accelerator much earlier and scored more. There was just one six in the innings.

In the absence of the likes of Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood, the Australian pace-bowling attack seemed to be lacking sting initially and the Zimbabwe bowlers capitalised on that, only to fumble in the end.

Adam Zampa was handled very nicely by the Zimbabwean batters, as he remained wicket-less, returning figures of 0/31 from his four overs.

The highlight of the Zimbabwe innings, after they were sent in to bat, was the 61-run stand for the opening wicket between Marumani and Bennett off 7.3 overs.

Marumani hit two fours off Ben Dwarshuis in the third over and three boundaries off Glenn Maxwell in the fourth over after a sedate start.

Bennett joined the party with two boundaries in the fifth over bowled by Matthew Kuhnemann, taking Zimbabwe to a decent 47 for no loss at the end of power play.

Zimbabwe were 61 for one and they moved to 79 for 1 at the halfway stage. They added 46 runs in the next five overs, reaching 125 for one at the 15th over mark.

Pacer Marcus Stoinis left the field in the 16th over, holding his hand in pain while trying a return catch of Burl.

From a full toss, Burl hit straight back at Stoinis, who tried to get hold of the ball. Stoinis grimaced in pain and immediately called out the physio, before leaving the field.

Cameron Green completed the unfinished 16th over and it turned to be lucky, with Burl getting out in the last ball. 

(This report has been published as part of the auto-generated syndicate wire feed. Apart from the headline, no editing has been done in the copy by ABP Live.)

Go to Source

Hot this week

Japan and China keep economic dialogue alive despite tensions — and India should pay attention

Japan and China are maintaining economic dialogue despite rising geopolitical tensions, signalling that Asia is recalibrating rather than decoupling — a shift that could create both opportunity and competitive pressure for India’s manufacturing ambit Read More

Pahalgam terrorists served food, given shelter by a local, NIA chargesheet reveals

The NIA chargesheet contains the testimony of a local named Bashir Ahmad Jothatd, who has been accused of harbouring the terrorists, saying that the three men emerged from behind the trees where he was checking on his horses Go to Source Read More

‘War left regime desperate for cash’: US sanctions authority overseeing Strait of Hormuz as Middle East conflict enters 90th day

The US administration has announced imposed fresh sanctions on Iran, targeting the country’s newly formed agency overseeing shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, as Washington continued its economic pressure campaign amid the ongoing war. Read More

She accused Trump of rape and is now being investigated by US Justice Department: Who is E Jean Carroll?

E Jean Carroll, who took Donald Trump to trial over rape allegations, is being investigated by the US Department of Justice. Read More

‘No Abraham Accords, no deal’: Trump warns peace talks may fail without Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar recognising Israel

Donald Trump warned he could walk away from a proposed regional peace deal unless Gulf Arab nations formally recognise Israel, linking any settlement with Iran to wider expansion of the Abraham Accords Go to Source Read More

Topics

Japan and China keep economic dialogue alive despite tensions — and India should pay attention

Japan and China are maintaining economic dialogue despite rising geopolitical tensions, signalling that Asia is recalibrating rather than decoupling — a shift that could create both opportunity and competitive pressure for India’s manufacturing ambit Read More

Pahalgam terrorists served food, given shelter by a local, NIA chargesheet reveals

The NIA chargesheet contains the testimony of a local named Bashir Ahmad Jothatd, who has been accused of harbouring the terrorists, saying that the three men emerged from behind the trees where he was checking on his horses Go to Source Read More

‘War left regime desperate for cash’: US sanctions authority overseeing Strait of Hormuz as Middle East conflict enters 90th day

The US administration has announced imposed fresh sanctions on Iran, targeting the country’s newly formed agency overseeing shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, as Washington continued its economic pressure campaign amid the ongoing war. Read More

She accused Trump of rape and is now being investigated by US Justice Department: Who is E Jean Carroll?

E Jean Carroll, who took Donald Trump to trial over rape allegations, is being investigated by the US Department of Justice. Read More

‘No Abraham Accords, no deal’: Trump warns peace talks may fail without Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar recognising Israel

Donald Trump warned he could walk away from a proposed regional peace deal unless Gulf Arab nations formally recognise Israel, linking any settlement with Iran to wider expansion of the Abraham Accords Go to Source Read More

From TRF handler to Telegram trail, NIA charge sheet ties Pahalgam attack to Pakistan

In the charge sheet, the National Investigation Agency (NIA) has identified Pakistan-based Sajid Jatt of the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) as the handler of the Pahalgam attack and traced Telegram accounts tied to the attack to Pakistan. Read More

Nvidia chief Jensen Huang joins advisory board of China’s Tsinghua University

Jensen Huang has joined the advisory board of Tsinghua University School of Economics and Management, strengthening Nvidia’s ties with China even as Washington tightens restrictions on advanced AI chip exports to Beijing. Read More

Iran Launches Retaliatory Strike On US Base After Attack Near Bandar Abbas

Iranian Revolutionary Guards say they struck an American air base at 4:50 am in retaliation for US attacks near Bandar Abbas Airport. Read More

Related Articles