Nepal: Failure to qualify for 2025 Asia Cup and ACC Emerging Teams Asia Cup is alarming for the Rhinos who are set to travel to the West Indies and the United States to participate in the T20 World Cup in less than two months’ time.
Nepal
failed to qualify for the ACC Emerging Teams Asia Cup for the first time since
2018 after they suffered a four-wicket defeat against Hong Kong in the
third-place playoff of the ACC Men’s T20 Premier Cup in Al Amerat, Oman on
Saturday.
The
Rhinos entered the tournament as one of the top favourites having won the last
edition of the ACC Premier Cup to qualify for their first Asia Cup, and also
boasting their recent success of securing their ticket to the 2024 T20 World
Cup—their only second World Cup and first since World T20 in 2014 in Bangladesh.
Last
year, in the build up to their Premier Cup success, they had taken the
cricketing world by storm with a masterclass performance, winning 11 of their
last 12 matches of the ICC Cricket World Cup League 2 to qualify for the ICC
Cricket World Cup Qualifier—introducing them as a rising power of cricket.
On
Friday, they lost to bitter rivals the United Arab Emirates in the semi-finals
that shattered their dream of booking a ticket to their second Asia Cup.
Now,
they are out of the map of another Asian tournament.
Despite
a fine bowling display from the Nepalis, Hong Kong chased down the 140-run
target with three balls to spare.
Nepal’s
key worry lies in their batting inconsistency, which has kept on haunting the
team and has been questionable since the turn of this year.
When
Monty Desai took over the Nepal job in February last year, he promised to bring
consistency in the team.
“The
players are skillful and it’s about how to bring consistency, understand their
strengths and execute those strengths on the field,” he said.
The
Indian coach indeed transformed Nepal’s batting into a strength that no one had
ever witnessed before as the Nepal team experienced a golden year in 2023.
But
the batting headache has resurfaced.
In
the inaugural tri-series of the ICC Cricket World Cup League 2 2023-2027
involving Namibia and the Netherlands in February, their poor performance with
the bat cost them three of the four home matches. They also had a below-average
performance in the subsequent T20I Triangular Series against the same sides,
losing the title to the Netherlands. Their tour of Hong Kong was also a
campaign to forget as they lost the Hong Kong T20I Tri-Series to Papua New
Guinea in March.
Captain
Rohit Paudel conceded that Nepal’s batting has been below-par in the Premier
Cup.
“If
we see our batting strength, we have done very well in the last one-and-half
years,” Paudel said after the match. “But we did not step up in this
tournament. We will have to reflect on that.”
Kushal
Bhurtel has been one of the biggest flops in the tournament. The opener was
dismissed for a duck on Saturday for a third successive match.
Skipper
Paudel, Kushal Malla and Gulsan Jha have also been big disappointments.
Opener
Aasif Sheikh scored a half-century against Qatar and 40 against Hong Kong in
the group stage, but failed to even touch the double digit figures in his last
three outings.
The
only bright spot of Nepal’s batting line-up in this tournament was Dipendra
Singh Airee
The
24-year-old all-rounder entered the history books by becoming the third man to
smash six sixes in an over in an international men’s T20 match during his
unbeaten knock of 21-ball 64 in Nepal’s group match against Qatar, joining the
ranks of Yuvraj Singh and Kieron Pollard in achieving the rare feat.
It
was Airee’s 44 not out that dragged Nepal to 139-8 against Hong Kong in the
third-place playoff on Saturday.
Asked
if Airee, who also took four wickets in the Premier Cup, could get a promotion
to the top order instead of coming in number six or seven, Paudel said,
“Dipendra has played as a finisher and it has worked so far. But it did not
work in this series.”
Paudel
added, “Actually, nothing worked well in this series.”
Airee
also topped Nepal’s bowling tally with eight wickets, two of them coming in
defeat against Hong Kong.
Abinash
Bohara also provided the strength to Nepal’s bowling unit taking seven scalps.
Lalit
Rajbanshi took six wickets in Al Amerat but his last over against Hong Kong
proved too expensive as Nasrulla Rana managed eight runs off three balls to
guide Hong Kong to an impressive victory.
But
Hong Kong truly owed their triumph to their opener Anshuman Rath, who defied
Sompal Kami’s lethal bowling and scored an unbeaten 65 off 50.
“It’s
a massive win,” said Hong Kong captain Nizakat Khan after recording their fifth
win over Nepal in the T20Is.
“We
have done really well in this tournament. I am happy with my boys and very
proud of them. We have stayed calm.”
Khan
went on, “Credit goes to Anshuman. He carried his bat all the way. When he was
there, we knew we could win this game. He took responsibility as a senior
player and that is all we wanted.”
“It
was a collective team effort.”
The
Premier Cup tragedy is alarming for the Rhinos, who are set to travel to the
West Indies and the United States to participate in the T20 World Cup in less
than two months.
Desai
will now need to quickly find the missing puzzle in his team, especially the
batting order, if they are to show the world they have substance, courage and
determination to fight when they travel to the global showpiece in June.
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