Associate nation will be keen to pull off another upset
Big picture
In a tangible sense, that would make Sunday very hard on Namibia, especially, the quality of spin that Afghanistan have, in conditions that favour them. But from a more optimistic lens, it’s a chance for them to try and spring some surprises of their own. They did have to beat a Test-playing nation in Ireland to get this far in the World Cup, and beating another one will be a feat they’ll look forward to.
Form guide
Afghanistan LWWWW (last five completed matches, most recent first)
Namibia WWWLW
In the spotlight
Team news
Afghanistan could be inclined to leave Karim Janat out after he endured four sixes at the hands of Asif Ali on Friday. The experience of Hamid Hassan might be a tempting replacement option, but they also have left-arm seamer Fareed Ahmad should they want more variety in the line-up.
Afghanistan: (possible) 1 Hazratullah Zazai, 2 Mohammad Shahzad (wk), 3 Rahmanullah Gurbaz, 4 Najibullah Zadran, 5 Mohammad Nabi (capt), 6 Asghar Afghan, 7 Gulbadin Naib, 8 Karim Janat/Hamid Hassan/Fareed Ahmad, 9 Rashid Khan, 10 Naveen-ul-Haq, 11 Mujeeb-ur-Rahman.
Namibia have been unchanged for two games and are likely to stay that way.
Namibia: (possible) 1 Craig Williams, 2 Zane Green (wk), 3 Gerhard Erasmus (capt.), 4 David Wiese, 5 Michael van Lingen, 6 JJ Smit, 7 Jan Frylinck, 8 Pikky Ya France, 9 Jan Nicol Loftie-Eaton, 10 Ruben Trumpelmann, 11 Bernard Scholtz
Pitch and conditions
The forecast has Abu Dhabi’s temperature hovering about 32 degree celsius during the start of this afternoon fixture. As always, the surface is expected to favour the spinners, and the long boundaries make this ground a bowling captain’s favourite. Anything more than a par score will take really good batting.
Stats and trivia
- The average first innings score in Abu Dhabi during the World Cup has been 127. In all cricket played there this year, the average is 162.
- In 2021, no team has scored as quickly as Afghanistan have. Their average run rate is 9.1 and they hit a boundary every five balls; the next best team is England, with an average scoring rate of 8.6 and a boundary every 5.7 balls.
- Namibia have bowled 72.3 overs at the World Cup so far, and 40.3 of them have been from left-arm fast bowlers; the left-armers have taken 14 wickets and have an economy of 6.4 at the moment.
Quotes
“When he injured his finger during the warm-up games, it was a massive blow for us. The initial report from the specialist was for him to return home for an operation. And he will still get that when he’s back but he has decided to stay on and our medical staff is managing that finger as best as we can. So far, his decision to stay on has really paid off. He’s an inspirational leader and he’s put together a few great performances and hopefully that finger can stay intact for another few games. Then, he’ll probably head home to the [operation] theatre and a long recovery period.”
Albie Morkel, Namibia’s assistant coach, talks about Gerhard Erasmus’ resolve
“The mood in the camp is a bit dull at the moment. When you lose a close game, it is like this, but you have to get back. We have to back Karim [Janat]. It can happen to anybody, as it has happened before. So we will get back soon.”
Fast bowler Naveen-ul-Haq talks about the mood after the Pakistan loss
Varun Shetty is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo
Source: ESPN Crickinfo