Bangladesh beat Dutch to turn heat on England

CHITTAGONG, Bangladesh, (Reuters) – Bangladesh made  short work of their Dutch opponents in a Group B match to keep  their World Cup quarter-final hopes very much alive yesterday  but England will not be amused.

Ryan ten Doeschate

The six-wicket victory at the Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium  catapulted the co-hosts to the fourth place in the group,  leapfrogging England, with six points from five matches.

Bangladesh face South Africa in their final group assignment  on Saturday but could be assured of a quarter-final berth even  before that if England, trailing them by one point, go down to  West Indies on Thursday.

Four teams from each group make it to the quarter-finals and  Bangladesh fancy their chance after the comprehensive win  against the Dutch.

“It was a nervous game because we had to win to stay in the  contest,” Bangladesh captain Shakib Al Hasan said.

“We’ll be watching that (England v West Indies) match very  closely but it’s still within our hands and if we do well  against South Africa (on Saturday) we’ll qualify.”

While that would probably require an even better  performance, Bangladesh did well against the winless Dutch.

LONELY BATTLE

Shafiul Islam’s first spell — the pace bowler conceded only  seven runs from his first six overs, three of which were maidens  — stifled the Dutch batsmen after their skipper Peter Borren  had decided to bat first.

The decision came to haunt Borren as Bangladesh soon  unleashed their battery of left-arm spinners, most prominently  Abdur Razzak (3-29), who tormented them with a nagging line and  length as runs dried up.

The Dutch batsmen did not help their cause either with four  of them running themselves out.

For them, Ryan ten Doeschate (53 not out) waged a lonely  battle before running out of partners as the Dutch folded for  160 in 46.2 overs.

Bangladesh wobbled early in their chase, losing the  scoreless Tamim Iqbal to the fourth ball of the innings but  Imrul Kayes’ (73 not out) second successive half-century saw  them home with 8.4 overs to spare.

That triggered another celebration in the port city which  had declared the day a public holiday.

Army troops, police and the elite Rapid Action Battalion  force were on hand to ensure the celebration remained under  control and the teams are not stranded, as was the case when  Bangladesh humbled England on Friday.

Shakib gave credit to where it was due — his bowlers.

“We bowled in good areas, kept the pressure and got the  wickets. Our pacers have not been among the wickets in the  tournament but they have been quite economical. It helps the  spinners.

“Razzak bowled very well today, he is a key player for us.”