
COLOMBO: In cricket, as in life, beginnings often decide outcomes, and on Monday Zimbabwe ensured theirs was decisive in their Group B clash of the ICC T20 World Cup. Oman, on the receiving end of early and telling blows from the pacers, were unable to recover from a top-order collapse and slipped to a heavy eight-wicket defeat at the Sinhalese Sports Club (SSC) in Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Struck early by Zimbabwe’s tall seamers, Oman found themselves chasing the contest almost immediately, a position from which they never truly emerged as they slid to 17 for 4 and were bowled out for 103.
All-rounder Sufyan Mehmood, one of the few Oman players to impress on the day, admitted the damage done at the top proved fatal.
“We could not recover from the early fall of our top four batters,” he said, pinpointing the phase that defined the contest.
“The tall pacers from Zimbabwe exploited the conditions very well as the pitch provided extra bounce.”
Bowled out in 19.5 overs, Oman were left defending a total that offered little room for error.
“It was a small target to defend,” Sufyan said. “Had we got around 140–150, we could have taken the game close.”
He added that the surface behaved differently from what the side had encountered in their preparations. “The wicket here at the SSC provided extra bounce and both Blessing Muzarabani and Richard Ngarava used their height effectively to get our batters in trouble inside the powerplay.”
For the record, Zimbabwe’s three tall pacers, Muzarabani, Ngarava and Brad Evans, shared nine wickets for just 51 runs.
Despite the scale of the defeat, Sufyan struck a defiant tone, insisting Oman would approach the remainder of the tournament with belief rather than regret. “We are positive despite the defeat as we have nothing to lose in the upcoming games. We will fight.”
Skipper Jatinder rues batting failure
Oman captain Jatinder Singh echoed the sentiment that his side’s troubles stemmed squarely from their batting. “We were asked to bat first, and I don’t think we put enough runs on the board. It’s too much to ask the bowlers to defend 104; as a batting unit, we simply didn’t click.”
While acknowledging the challenges posed by the surface, Jatinder was clear that conditions alone could not explain the result.
“The bounce on this particular pitch was a bit more than we experienced in the practice matches. You need around 160 or 170 to give your bowlers a total they can actually fight with.”
Still, the Oman skipper drew encouragement from individual performances and the team’s overall effort in the field. “Sufyan Mehmood bowled really well, as did Faisal Shah. Our fielding was also quite good, so we can carry those things forward.”
In the immediate aftermath of the defeat, Jatinder said the message in the dressing room was one of resilience rather than despair.
“I told them not to let their heads drop. It’s only the start of the tournament. You have to keep believing because miracles can happen. We are the ones who have to make the difference; we have to be warriors out there.”
From the other side, Zimbabwe captain Sikandar Raza was satisfied with how decisively his team seized the initiative. “I thought we bowled exceptionally well. We read the pitch correctly and executed our plans perfectly. This was about as clinical as we can be.”
Despite the extra bounce, Oman head coach Duleep Mendis was critical of his batters’ selection of shots. “There were plenty of bad shots from our players. We were bounced out.”
Raza revealed that the extra bounce came as no surprise. “We watched the previous game closely. I looked at the history of this ground and the role the grass plays. I knew that with our three tall bowlers, we would find bounce regardless.”
Managing his pace resources, particularly with Blessing Muzarabani returning from a back injury, was also part of Zimbabwe’s planning.
“I wanted him to bowl three in the powerplay, but I also wanted to keep an over in reserve for the death just in case.”
Summing up his side’s effort, Raza praised the bowlers’ response whenever pressure was applied. “Every time I asked the boys to step up, they delivered, whether by taking a wicket or keeping things tight.”
For Oman, the lesson from their opening night was stark: the match was lost in the opening exchanges. With the tournament still young, correcting those early-innings lapses will be crucial if they are to keep their campaign alive.
Oman next play hosts Sri Lanka on February 12 at the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium in Kandy, a good two and half hours drive from Colombo. On Tuesday, the team travelled to Kandy in the morning for a training session. The match on Thursday begins at 11am local time (9.30am, Oman time).
Oman then face Ireland at the SSC on February 14 before concluding their Group B engagements against former world champions Australia in Kandy on February 20.