Afghanistan set Australia 274 to win: Champions Trophy cricket – live

Key events

That’s all from me. Jim Wallace has dipped his fingers in ice and is ready to describe what could be a classic runchase. Goodnight!

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England fans, look away now

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Adam Zampa’s reaction

Ah, mixed bag tonight mate. I struggled to find my length but managed to create a couple of chances through the middle. The wicket definitely changed and got slower during the innings.

[What’s your message to the batters?] Protect the stumps, definitely, and play straight. These guys love to hit the stumps, especially Rash.

We’re happy with that score but they’ve put us under pressure before and we’ve had some great battles with them. Tonight’ll be no different.

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Australia need 274 to reach the semi-finals

That was a fascinating innings which showcased the best of 50-over cricket. It ebbed and flow throughout: 3 for 1, 159 for 3, 199 for 7. Eventually the marvellous Azmatullah Omarzai hustled Afghanistan to what should be a competitive total on a used pitch.

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WICKET! Afghanistan 273 all out (Noor c Inglis b Dwarshuis 6)

Afghanistan steal a bye off the last ball but Australia review successfully for caught behind. Inglis thought there was a very thin edge and UltraEdge backed him up.

And now you can breathe.

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WICKET! Afghanistan 272-9 (Azmat c Carey b Dwarshuis 67)

Azmat turns down a single off the first ball, pummels four down the ground, turns down another single and then slaps a short ball towards deep extra cover. Carey charges in front on the boundary and just holds on. Even with only two balls remaining after this, that’s an important catch.

Azmattulah Omarzai goes for a pulsating 67 from 64 balls, an innings that included five sixes.

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49th over: Afghanistan 268-8 (Azmat 63, Noor 5) Glorious hitting from Azmat, who pulls Ellis over midwicket for a huge six. Ellis responds expertly with two dot balls, only for Azmat to rock back and hammer another six over long off. What a player!

Ellis ends with slightly unflattering figures of 10-0-60-1. He largely bowled well but had the misfortune to run into a rampant Azmat.

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Fifty from Azmat

48th over: Afghanistan 254-8 (Azmat 50, Noor 5) That was similar to the infamous Jonny Bairstow dismissal at Lord’s in 2023, though this would have been a run-out rather than a stumping. And Smith wasn’t captain on that occasion. And it was England. And okay maybe it wasn’t that similar.

Still, it’ll be interesting to see exactly what happened – I think Inglis enquired about the run-out, though it doesn’t seem to be a particularly vocal appeal.

Meanwhile, Azmat drives Dwarshuis for a single to bring up a skilful, beautifully judged fifty from 54 balls. He’s a world-class ODI allrounder, and he keeps proving it against the big boys.

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Smith withdraws run-out appeal

Now then, this is interesting. Noor Ahmad walked out of his crease after completing that single off the last ball of Ellis’s over, after which Inglis broke the stumps. The umpires went upstairs for a run-out referral, only for Steve Smith to withdraw the appeal.

I’m not 100 per cent sure because we haven’t seen enough replays but had that gone upstairs I’m fairly sure Noor would have been out.

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47th over: Afghanistan 248-8 (Azmat 48, Noor 3) Azmat smashes a pace-on delivery from Ellis back over his head for a mighty six. Sheesh, that’s a stunning shot. Another massive swipe over extra cover plugs between two fielders on the boundary edge and brings two runs.

A single off the last ball allows Azmat to keep the strike. This has been an intriguing arm-wrestle of an innings, with both teams on top at different stages. Right now, I haven’t a clue who’s in the ascendancy.

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46th over: Afghanistan 238-8 (Azmat 39, Noor 2) Noor Ahmad, a limited batter but not a complete rabbit, needs to play for Azmat at the other end. Four overs to go.

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WICKET! Afghanistan 235-8 (Rashid c Maxwell b Dwarshuis 19)

Rashid Khan’s violent cameo is over. He slashed Dwarshuis over backward point for four, then clubbed a cross-bat shot straight to Maxwell running in from long on. That wicket could shave 20 runs off Australia’s chase because Rashid is so dangerous, even when he’s dealing mainly in false strokes.

Glenn Maxwell takes the catch. Photograph: KM Chaudary/AP
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45th over: Afghanistan 230-7 (Azmat 37, Rashid 15) Ellis has three overs left so he should bowl out from this end. He wasn’t brilliant with the new ball but has been in his element with the old. A fine over is tarnished when Rashid, on the charge, toe-ends a short ball psat short third for four.

That fortunate boundary is the first off Ellis in this spell of 4-0-17-1.

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44th over: Afghanistan 223-7 (Azmat 34, Rashid 11) Rashid, swinging like Leatherface, gets lucky again when he mishits Dwarshuis into the open spaces. Azmat takes a single to bring up 1000 ODI runs in only 31 innings; that’s the same as David Warner, one better than Brian Lara.

A misfield at backward point gives Rashid a couple of extra runs. Dwarshuis ends the over well by rushing consecutive deliveries past Rashid’s outside edge.

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43rd over: Afghanistan 217-7 (Azmat 31, Rashid 8) Er, yeah, that thing about batting normally for the next three overs. Azmat slog-sweeps Zampa for a huge six, the third time today that the first ball of a Zampa over has disappeared over the ropes.

Rashid Khan can’t resist joining in. He charges down the track and slices high in the air, with the ball somehow bisecting two fielders. Rashid gets two runs for that – and for his next stroke, a fast-handed sweep that is brilliantly stopped on the boundary by the diving Short. The quality of fielding these days never ceases to amaze.

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42nd over: Afghanistan 205-7 (Azmat 24, Rashid 3) Rashid Khan has hit 49 ODI sixes, including three against Australia at the last World Cup, so Australia will be wary of his threat. He’d prefer to come in after maybe 45 overs and is using the extra time to play himself in. Four singles from Ellis’s over. You’d expect Afghanistan to bat normally for maybe three more overs and then tee off.

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41st over: Afghanistan 201-7 (Azmat 22, Rashid 1) Azmat pushes Zampa for a single to bring up the 200, but there’s only one more run in the over. Afghanistan were looking at 300 in the middle of their innings; they’d surely take 260 now.

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40th over: Afghanistan 199-7 (Azmat 21, Rashid 0) Ten overs to go. Australia have pulled this back really well; from overs 31-40, Afghanistan scored 43 runs for the loss of four important wickets.

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WICKET! Afghanistan 199-7 (Gulbadin c Inglis b Ellis 4)

Gulbadin mishit a short ball from Ellis towards midwicket, where Short dives to take an outrageous one-handed catch – only for the ball to pop out when his elbow hits the ground.

It doesn’t matter in the end. Gulbadin slogs Ellis into outer space and is calmly caught by Inglis. That’s another very handy wicket for Australia because he can be a dangerous hitter.

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39th over: Afghanistan 197-6 (Azmat 20, Gulbadin 3) A superb bouncer from Johnson clonks Gulbadin on the top of the helmet and flies for four leg-byes. Johnson does well to concede only two from five balls after that. In fact that was a really good second spell of 4-0-12-1, even more so after his struggles with the new ball.

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38th over: Afghanistan 190-6 (Azmat 19, Gulbadin 1) Azmat pulls Ellis handsomely through midwicket, albeit only for a single. He’s a cracking player, Azmat, who averages 49 and 30 in his fledgling ODI career. And he hasn’t done it with cheap runs and wickets: his averages against the big teams, the ones in this Champions Trophy, are 46 and 29.

Or, to put it another way, he’s the key wicket now.

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Australia review for caught behind! Inglis thinks he has caught the dangerous Azmat. Er, he’s wrong. Azmat is not out. He drove off the back foot at Ellis but missed the ball by a distance. Steve Smith screws his face up in confusion; most of the team were sure they heard a noise.

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37th over: Afghanistan 186-6 (Azmat 16, Gulbadin 0) Gulbadin’s first leg ball flies away for four leg-byes. Extras moves to 30 not out.

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WICKET! Afghanistan 182-6 (Nabi run out 1)

A bizarre run-out does for Mohammad Nabi. Johnson bowled a short ball down the leg side that looked set to go for five wides until Inglis made a terrific leaping stop.

Nabi set off down the wicket and was sent back by Azmat. Inglis’s throw missed the stumps but Johnson – who read the play superbly – was there to grab the ball and underarm it into the stumps with Nabi well short.

That’s such a bonus wicket for Australia, who will now fancy their chances of hoovering up the lower order.

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36th over: Afghanistan 178-5 (Azmat 13, Nabi 1) The new batter is Mohammad Nabi, a man who made his ODI debut in a World Cup qualifier fifth-place playoff in 2009.

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WICKET! Afghanistan 176-5 (Hashmat c Labuschagne b Zampa 20)

Hashmat’s struggle comes to an end when he miscues a desperate kind of pull/sweep straight to backward square leg. He was so unbalanced that he fell over after playing the shot and was lying on his back as the ball looped to Labuschagne. Who knows, that wicket might be a blessing in disguise for Afghanistan because Hashmat’s bat had no middle today. He made 20 from 48 balls with one fortunate boundary.

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35th over: Afghanistan 175-4 (Hashmat 20, Azmat 11) Azmat cuts loose for the first time, slog-sweeping Short for six. That’s the first boundary Short has conceded in seven overs.

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34th over: Afghanistan 166-4 (Hashmat 19, Azmat 3) Another tight over from Johnson, whose is finding it much easier to control his line now that the ball isn’t hooping all over the place.

Sediq’s stylish strokeplay had the effect of hiding Hashmat’s struggles. His only boundary was a bottom-edge through Inglis’s legs and he has made 19 not out from 46 balls.

That’s far from ideal, though even dot balls aren’t entirely without merit when you have a lower middle-order like Afghanistan’s. They can cause mayhem if they come in the at the right time, as they did against England on Wednesday. Mohammad Nabi arrived at the crease with exactly 10 overs remaining.

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33rd over: Afghanistan 162-4 (Hashmat 18, Azmat 1) Azmat is a fine player, the ICC’s men’s ODI player of the year for 2024, so Australia would love to get him early. Short almost does so when he zips successive deliveries past the edge. For an occasional spinner, he’s doing a helluva job with the ball; even great white-ball quicks like Joel Garner or Jasprit Bumrah would be happy with figures of 6-0-12-0.

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32nd over: Afghanistan 161-4 (Hashmat 17, Azmat 1) As it turned out, that non-review in the 29th over only cost Australia 10 runs. That was an increasingly lovely innings from Sediq, 85 from 95 balls with six fours and three sixes. We should see plenty more of him in the next decade.

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WICKET! Afghanistan 159-4 (Sediq c Smith b Johnson 85)

Outstanding work from Steve Smith, both as captain and fielder. He gambles by bringing back Spencer Johnson – whose radar was all over the place early on – and is rewarded instnatly. Sediq drives to short cover, where Smith swoops forward to take a difficult low catch with almost no fuss.

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31st over: Afghanistan 159-3 (Sediq 85, Hashmat 16) Australia’s most economical bowler today, Matt Short, returns and restores order with another boundaryless over. He has figures of 5-0-11-0 and has yet to be hit for four.

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30th over: Afghanistan 156-3 (Sediq 83, Hashmat 15) Sediqullah Atal is playing the innings of his life. Again he swipes Zampa’s first ball for six, this time over mid-on, a gorgeous shot that takes him into the eighties. He does have an ODI hundred, but that was against Zimbabwe in a bilateral series; this is against Australia in a quarter-final.

Mind you, Sediq has had a helping hand: replays show he would have been out in the previous over had Australia reviewed.

Hashmat has a moment of fortune too when he’s sent back by Sediq. Short throws to the wrong end with Hashmat stranded halfway down. Australia are starting to look rattled.

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29th over: Afghanistan 145-3 (Sediq 75, Hashmat 12) Sediq brings up the fifty partnership by slapping a poor ball from Ellis for four.

Ellis has a huge shout for LBW turned down when Sediq pushes around a straight one. Australia think long and hard about a review but decide against it. That looked really close; it probably just pitched outside leg stump.

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28th over: Afghanistan 139-3 (Sediq 70, Hashmat 11) Zampa returns after a thrifty spell of 4-0-8-0 from Short. Sediq skips down to drive his first ball over mid-off for six.

Tell you what, the age profile of the Afghanistan team is such that they could have have a helluva side at the 2027 World Cup. The top three are all 23, Azmat and Fazalhaq are 24, Rashid Khan 26, Mujeeb 23, Noor Ahmad 20.

Sure Mohammad Nabi, the President, is 40 but he’s got at least another 10 years in him.

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27th over: Afghanistan 131-3 (Sediq 63, Hashmat 10) Steve Smith is starting to juggle his bowlers. Ellis returns after a one-over spell from Dwarshuis and concedes only a couple of singles. This is fascinatingly poised. My instinct is that Australia are ahead, but only just.

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26th over: Afghanistan 129-3 (Sediq 62, Hashmat 9) Before this tournament Sediq’s only ODI innings were gainst Bangladesh and Zimbabwe. He’s only 23 but you can see what the fuss is about; he’s elegant, rotates strike well against spin and wasn’t fazed when the ball kept going past his outside edge early on.

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25th over: Afghanistan 126-3 (Sediq 61, Hashmat 7) Dwarshuis replaces Maxwell, who bowled a pretty good spell of 6-1-28-1. Sediq, who is playing superbly now, picks a slower ball and belts it for four. Afghanistan’s tempo and shot selection with the bat have improved so much since Jonathan Trott became their coach.

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24th over: Afghanistan 116-3 (Sediq 52, Hashmat 6) It’s important that Australia keep chipping away. The earlier they can get Afghanistan’s lower-order hitters in the better; Mohammad Nabi, Rashid Khan and Gulbadin Naib are usually out in the middle for a good time rather than a long time. But if Afghanistan reach, say, 220 for 4 after 40 overs, Australia could enter a world of pain.

Shorrt doesn’t looking like take a wicket but he’s keeping things nice and tight: he has figures of 3-0-5-0.

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source: theguardian.com


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