T20 World Cup: Namibia get past Oman in Super Over
Namibia's Gerhard Erasmus and David Wiese smashed 21 runs in the one-over eliminator and Oman could manage only 10.
Namibia's Gerhard Erasmus and David Wiese smashed 21 runs in the one-over eliminator and Oman could manage only 10.
Namibia's Gerhard Erasmus and David Wiese smashed 21 runs in the one-over eliminator and Oman could manage only 10.
Bridgetown (Barbados): Namibia's Ruben Trumpelmann became the first player to take wickets off the first two deliveries of a T20 international (T20I) as his team beat Oman via the Super Over in a thrilling T20 World Cup match here on Sunday night.
David Wiese and skipper Gerhard Erasmus smashed 21 runs for Namibia in the one-over eliminator with Oman managing 10 from the allotted six deliveries bowled brilliantly by the seasoned Wiese.
Asked to bat first, Oman were bowled out for 109 in 19.4 overs at the Kensington Oval. In reply, Namibia were also stopped at the same team score with Jan Frylinck making 45 off 48 balls and Mehran Khan taking 3/7 to force a Super Over.
This was after Namibia's South Africa-born left-arm fast bowler Trumpelmann made history. The 26-year-old achieved the feat when he dismissed opener Kashyap Prajapati and Oman skipper Aqib Ilyas for golden
ducks. Khalid Kail top-scored for Oman with a 39-ball 34.
Trumpelmann took another wicket in his second over and returned career-best figures of 4/21.
He trapped Kashyap Prajapati leg before wicket with an in-swinging yorker on the first ball of the match and then dismissed Ilyas with one that crushed onto the batter's toes.
In the process, Trumpelmann also registered the best figures for the team in T20 World Cup history. He beat the previous record of 3/17 set by him against Scotland in the 2021 edition held in the UAE.
Wiese too was among wickets, claiming 3/28 in 3.4 overs as Oman found it hard to tackle the Namibia bowlers.
However, defending a small total, Oman bowlers showed a lot of discipline and refused to go down without a fight, eventually managing to tie the game.
But, on the day, Nambia had the last laugh.
While many thought Namibia captain Erasmus would hand the ball to Trumpelmann to bowl the Super Over, he chose the 39-year-old Wiese for his years of experience and it paid dividends.
After the nervy win, player-of-the-match Wiese, who was also born in South Africa, said, "Aged a couple of years tonight. Don't have a lot of years left in me (laughs). It was emotionally draining evening."