T20 World Cup: Namibia shock Sri Lanka in opening game

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Namibia's JJ Smit plays an attacking shot against Sri Lanka in the ICC Men's T20 World Cup
Namibia all-rounder JJ Smith smashed an unbeaten 31 off 16 balls as he helped his side accelerate at the back end of the innings
ICC Men’s T20 World Cup, GMHBA Stadium, Geelong
Namibia 163-7 (20 overs): Frylinck 44 (28), Smit 31* (16); Madushan 2-37
Sri Lanka 108 (19 overs): Shanaka 29 (23); Scholtz 2-18, Shikongo 2-22, Frylinck 2-26
Namibia won by 55 runs
Scorecard; Table

Namibia, ranked 14th in the world, shocked Asia Cup champions Sri Lanka to win by 55 runs as the Men’s T20 World Cup started in spectacular fashion.

Having lost the toss, Namibia fell to 35-3 and 93-6 before Jan Frylinck (44 off 28 balls) and JJ Smit (31 not out off 16) hit 70 off the final 37 balls to haul them to an above-par 163-7.

In reply, Sri Lanka, who are eighth in the world, were bowled out for 108.

Namibia’s only other win over a Test nation was against Ireland in 2021.

Netherlands play the United Arab Emirates in Group A from 09:00 BST.

Scotland and Ireland’s campaigns start on Sunday, when they face West Indies and Zimbabwe respectively in Group B.

The top two sides from each group qualify for the Super 12s, which start on 22 October. The winner of Group A and runner-up from Group B will face England.

Sri Lanka flatter to deceive but Namibia impress

Sri Lanka, who are led by former England head coach Chris Silverwood, came into the tournament in Australia as some people’s outside bet for the title because of their impressive Asia Cup victory just five weeks ago.

However, the conditions are very different to those faced in the United Arab Emirates, and after a good start with the ball, creaks started to appear.

Their fielding was tidy enough, but their bowling, both line and length, became ragged as the Namibia innings progressed and they were put under pressure by Frylinck and Smit, who both understood the need to hit straighter much better than their team-mates.

They hit six fours and two sixes between them, but before that it had been a tepid batting display from Namibia, with little power or guile to find the boundary.

The associate nation were superb with the ball from the get-go though, and their catching and ground fielding was faultless throughout.

Nicol Loftie-Eaton took a brilliant catch at deep mid-wicket to dismiss Wanindu Hasaranga, before Michael van Lingen was quick off the mark to run out Pramod Madushan.

Left-arm spinner Bernard Scholtz claimed 2-18, pace bowler Ben Shikongo – who had an lbw review for a hat-trick turned down – took 2-22 and Frylinck 2-26.

The result means Sri Lanka will realistically need to win both of their remaining games – potentially by large margins because of the effect this result will have on their net run-rate – to stand a chance of qualifying for the Super 12s.

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