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Oman v Ireland

Match955
Date Wednesday 13 February 2019
VenueAl Amerat, Oman
ResultIreland won by 15 runs
TypeTwenty20 International
Summary Ireland 159-5 (Overs 20, PR Stirling 71, A Balbirnie 34, L Tucker 22*, Fayyaz Butt 2-19)
Oman 144-9 (Overs 20, Jatinder Singh 22, Aamir Kaleem 21, Mohammad Nadeem 25, Fayyaz Butt 25*, PKD Chase 2-42, J Little 2-24, GH Dockrell 2-20, Simi Singh 3-15)
Report

Ian Callender (Belfast Telegraph) reports:

Stirling gets off to winning start

On the day that he became Ireland’s leading run-scorer in Twenty20 cricket, Paul Stirling won his first competitive match as Ireland captain. It was by no means the perfect performance but after no wins in their last five T20 internationals and only one in the previous 12, the result was all that mattered in the in their opening game of the Quadrangular tournament in Al Amarat.

Stirling was named man of the match after scoring 71 against hosts Oman and after bringing up his 14th half century in his 86th match, he overtook William Porterfield’s tally of 2,039 runs in the shortest format. Thanks to their inspirational skipper, Ireland were in a commanding position after 14 overs, on 122-1, but Stirling’s dismissal, five balls after he lost Andrew Balbirne, left Ireland limping to the finish line, only 37 runs coming off the last six overs.

At 70-2 in the ninth over, Oman were on course to repeat their victory in the last meeting between the teams, at the World Twenty20 in 2016, but Simi Singh took three wickets in the next over and suddenly it was 76-6. But after so long without a victory, even from that position it was never going to be straightforward for Ireland and, sure enough, first Mohammad Nadeem and then Fayyaz Butt got after the experienced Boyd Rankin and Peter Chase to reduce the target to 37 from three overs, almost exactly the same scenario as in the warm-up game on Sunday when the Oman Development XI won.

Crucially, though, this time the last pair was at the wicket and, to their credit, Rankin, Chase and the impressive Josh Little conceded only one boundary and 21 runs in those last 18 balls and, finally, Ireland’s Call could be sung in the dressing room after a T20 international. Stirling’s first task of the day was to present an Ireland cap to Shane Getkate – the first debutant since Singh in May 2017, 32 matches ago. The Instonians all-rounder is Ireland’s 700th cap and batting at No 6, he got off the mark first ball and hit his first boundary off his seventh delivery before he was run out in the last over.

Cleverly Introduced into the bowling attack by Stirling after Singh’s game-changing over with two new batsmen at the wicket, he conceded jus t seven runs in his first two overs and is a certain starter again tomorrow when they meet Scotland, who lost yesterday’s opening game to Netherlands by seven wickets. As expected Stuart Thompson and Andy McBrine were left out of yesterday’s line-up although Harry Tector has been forced to wait for his debut with Lorcan Tucker selected to bat at second wicket down. He proved the selectors right with three boundaries in his unbeaten 22 as Ireland threatened to lose their way completely in those last six overs.

Kevin O’Brien, frustratingly, was again caught on the boundary in only the sixth over but Stirling took advantage of two dropped catches – there were six in the innings - to strike 11 fours and a six before he was caught at long-on. In the end he had done enough – just.

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