9:24 PM IST, 5:54 PM LOCAL TIME: Victory belongs not to the louder team... but to the one that refuses to whisper defeat. Who held their nerve when everything seemed to be slipping away? Zimbabwe. Absolutely Zimbabwe. After posting a competitive 247/6, powered by a magnificent unbeaten 111 from Ben Curran and a blazing 58 from Brad Evans, the hosts watched Bangladesh fight back through Tanzid Hasan (57) and Towhid Hridoy (60). At 207/5 and later needing just 57 from the last 10 overs, Bangladesh looked favourites. But cricket has a wicked sense of humour, doesn't it? Zimbabwe ripped through the lower order, bundled Bangladesh out for 234 in 48.1 overs, clinched a thrilling 13-run victory, and sealed the three-match ODI series 2-0 with a game to spare.
Let's rewind a bit....
How did the first Powerplay belong to Bangladesh? Through pace. Pure pace. Taskin Ahmed struck in the very first over, clean bowling Brian Bennett for a duck, before returning to remove Innocent Kaia (4) and reduce Zimbabwe to 8/2. Nahid Rana then joined the party, beating Craig Ervine (9) for pace to leave the hosts wobbling at 32/3, and by the end of the mandatory Powerplay, Zimbabwe had crawled to only 37/3 after 10 overs. Could things have gone any worse for the home side? Perhaps. But Ben Curran had other ideas. Calm head. Soft hands. Strong resolve. Sometimes survival is the first step towards domination.
So who rebuilt the innings? Ben Curran. Again and again. First came a stubborn 34-run stand with Wessly Madhevere (15), taking Zimbabwe to 50 in 13.2 overs, before the drinks break arrived with the score at 61/3 in 14 overs. Curran quietly completed his fifty off 59 balls, while Madhevere absorbed pressure beautifully before falling to Mehidy Hasan Miraz, who finished with an economical 2/32. The rescue mission did not stop there. Alongside Sikandar Raza (33), Curran added a vital 68-run fifth-wicket partnership, taking Zimbabwe past 100 in 25.1 overs and 131/4 at the second drinks break. Bangladesh searched desperately for breakthroughs. Curran simply kept batting.
Did Zimbabwe save their best for last? Oh yes. After Raza departed at 134/5 and Clive Madande followed at 148/6, Bangladesh sensed a finish. Instead, they walked into a storm. Ben Curran marched to a superb century off 122 deliveries, his second ODI hundred, while Brad Evans unleashed controlled aggression from the other end. They both did an unbeaten 99-run seventh-wicket partnership. Evans blasted his half-century off 36 balls, smashing five sixes, while Zimbabwe plundered 85 runs in the final Powerplay, including 22 runs off the last over, to finish on 247/6. Was it 15 or 20 runs above par? Considering where they stood at 148/6, it certainly felt that way.
Now... The Chase!!!
How did Bangladesh begin the chase? Carefully... before Zimbabwe struck back. Blessing Muzarabani removed Soumya Sarkar (5), while Brad Evans produced a sharp edge from Najmul Hossain Shanto (9) to leave Bangladesh at 38/2 after 10 overs, mirroring Zimbabwe's difficult start almost perfectly. Tanzid Hasan, however, looked composed from the beginning, while Towhid Hridoy settled in to rebuild. Bangladesh reached 50 in 12.2 overs, and by the drinks interval at 15 overs, they had recovered to 64/2, needing 184 more. Zimbabwe had won the Powerplay. Bangladesh had survived it.
Who grabbed control in the middle overs? Bangladesh... slowly but surely. Tanzid brought up his fifty off 59 balls, the pair added a crucial 50-run third-wicket stand in 63 balls, and Bangladesh reached 100 in 22 overs. At the second drinks break, they were comfortably placed at 129/3, although the dismissal of Tanzid for 57, bowled by part-time off-spinner Brian Bennett, gave Zimbabwe fresh hope. Towhid Hridoy continued calmly, completing his half-century off 83 balls, while Nurul Hasan joined him to keep the chase under control. At 169/4, Bangladesh still appeared comfortably ahead. The required rate remained manageable. Zimbabwe needed magic. Or maybe just one wicket.
And then... came the twist. The final Powerplay belonged entirely to Zimbabwe. Nurul Hasan's brisk 38 briefly kept Bangladesh in command, helping the visitors reach 200 in 41.3 overs, but Richard Ngarava's clever change of angle removed him at 207/6. That wicket changed everything. Blessing Muzarabani dismissed Rishad Hossain, Sikandar Raza trapped Taskin Ahmed lbw, Brad Evans cleaned up Shoriful Islam with a beauty, and despite Mehidy Hasan Miraz battling hard with 27, Ngarava returned to finish the job by having his opposite captain caught in the deep. Bangladesh lost five wickets for just 27 runs, collapsing from 207/5 to 234 all out. Zimbabwe had turned a losing position into a remarkable victory.
What decided this contest in the end? Partnerships... and pressure. Ben Curran's unbeaten 111 anchored the innings when Zimbabwe desperately needed stability. Brad Evans' fearless 58 off 38 transformed a decent total into a winning one. Bangladesh had two fifty-makers as well, but unlike Zimbabwe, they could not find one batter to finish the chase. Zimbabwe believed. Bangladesh blinked. The hosts backed their experienced pacers, squeezed every over in the death, and refused to let the game drift away. That stubbornness earned them not only the match, but the series as well.