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RESULT
1st T20I (N), Lucknow, November 14, 2019, West Indies tour of India
(20 ov, T:165) 134/9

West Indies won by 30 runs

Player Of The Match
32* (22) & 2/17
kieron-pollard
Report

Evin Lewis, Kieron Pollard take West Indies 1-0 up

The opener blasted 68 off 41 balls while the captain played an all-round role in the comfortable victory in the first T20I

Evin Lewis plays a sweep as Rahmanullah Gurbaz and Rashid Khan look on  •  AFP

Evin Lewis plays a sweep as Rahmanullah Gurbaz and Rashid Khan look on  •  AFP

West Indies 164 for 5 (Lewis 68, Pollard 32*, Naib 2-24) beat Afghanistan 134 for 9 (Najibullah 27, Williams 3-17, Pollard 2-17) by 30 runs
West Indies continued their dominance against Afghanistan, following a 3-0 ODI sweep with a comfortable 30-run win in the first T20I on Thursday. Powered by Evin Lewis' 68 off 41 at the top of the order, West Indies put up 164 for 5. Afghanistan's chase never took off and they eventually subsided to 134 for 9, with Kesrick Williams' picking up 3 for 17.
Lewis blasts off
At the end of three overs, West Indies were 10 for 1, with Lewis batting on 1 off 8 balls. For six overs after that Lewis discovered the cheat codes to this game. After 9 overs, West Indies were 88 for 1, with Lewis on 60 off 31 balls. In that six-over period, he had blasted 59 runs in 23 balls, seemingly finding the boundary at will.
Mujeeb Ur Rahman had given just seven runs in his two overs till then, and taken the wicket of opener Brandon King. Lewis ransacked him for a 16-run over. Fareed Ahmad offered a nippy left-arm option but saw his first over disappear for 17 runs. Lewis had hit a zone where the ball was magnetically drawn to the sweet spot on his bat. His strokes were dotted all around the ground - straight, wide, square and fine. It was a period of mayhem unlike any other in the match. True, the bowlers didn't really bowl tightly and offered length and width for Lewis to merrily free his arms, but the pace of scoring he hit was still incredible. Apart from that six-over period, in which Lewis scored more than 75% of the runs that came, the rest of the West Indies innings hovered around the run-a-ball mark. That was also the pace that Afghanistan scored at. Those anomalous six-overs were, in fact, the difference between the two teams.
The Afghanistan redemption
In the face of an onslaught like Lewis', it would have been easy for Afghanistan to disintegrate and merely wait for their turn to bat. Instead, they regrouped, they sussed the areas, and more crucially the pace, at which they would have to bowl and hauled West Indies' projected score into the competitive territory.
Gulbadin Naib, who has seen a career's worth of ups and downs in the past six months, was at the forefront of the fightback. Naib bowled a variety of slower balls: off the back of the hand, off-cutters, under-cutters, and did it all well enough for none of West Indies' array of big hitters to get a handle on. Rashid Khan, whose first over had gone for 15 runs, also found his groove after that, and proved to be his usual miserly, un-readable self. Taking the pace off proved to be the key on this surface, with the ball sticking into the pitch and not coming on to the bat.
The last 11 overs yielded only 76 runs, and ten of those runs came off the last two balls, when Kieron Pollard muscled a six and a four, purely through force and having stayed in the middle long enough to be able to execute.
West Indies bowlers shut Afghanistan out
Afghanistan might have felt confident at the innings break, given a target of 165 and the promise of dew for West Indies' bowlers to deal with. But to take advantage of the dew when it did start to affect the bowlers, Afghanistan needed two things to happen - to have some of their main batsmen at the crease, and to not be under severe required-rate pressure. The opposite happened, with the West Indies bowlers showing considerably more zip and discipline than the Afghans had. Hazratullah Zazai's stand-and-deliver method wasn't as effective against bowlers who could move the ball, and though he didn't get out, he couldn't get the runs flowing. With two wickets having fallen in the first three overs and Zazai's leaden-footedness, Afghanistan stuttered. Only Asghar Afghan and Najibullah Zadran showed any measure of comfort and dominance, but they couldn't score quickly enough to threaten the target. When they both fell, quickly followed by Mohammad Nabi, it became a matter of only reducing the margin of defeat for Afghanistan.

Saurabh Somani is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo

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