A masterly century by young opener Shahriar Nafees fashioned Bangladesh's thumping 101-run victory over Zimbabwe in an inconsequential Champions Trophy qualifier at the Sawai Mansingh stadium in Jaipur on Friday.
Twenty-year-old Nafees hit an unbeaten 123 to help Bangladesh post a competitive 231 for 6 before their bowlers skittled out Zimbabwe for 130. It gave the Asian minnows a pride-salvaging win in the day-night encounter.
Both the teams had gone out of the reckoning even before the match, but the result helped Bangladesh prove a point or two.
Also read: Shahriar Nafees makes history
Habibul Bashar's men went into the match on the back of a humiliating 10-wicket loss to the West Indies. They had also gone down 2-3 to the Zimbabweans in a recent one-day series. In the end, it turned out to be a comprehensive win, as Zimbabwe failed to put up a semblance of a fight while chasing and being bowled out with more than five overs to spare.
Wicketkeeper-opener Brendan Taylor's 52 proved to be the lone bright spot in an otherwise gloomy evening for Zimbabwe.
Saqibul Hasan starred for Bangladesh with the ball, claiming three for 18, while Mohammad Rafique and Abdur Razzak picked two wickets each.
But the evening belonged to Nafees, who authored Bangladesh's batting revival after their miserable collapse against the Windies on Wednesday.
The left-handed opener, who is said to have the right temperament for taking on the leadership baton, cracked 17 fours and a six for his second one-day hundred.
The Dhaka-born player, who hit the headlines with a maiden Test century against Australia at Fatullah earlier this year, made the most of a half-chance on zero when he was reprieved by Elton Chigumbura in the fourth over of the innings.
Nafees shared two vital partnerships -- 84 runs off 122 balls for the third wicket with Hasan (36) and 80 off 85 balls with Bashar (30) for the fourth wicket.
Electing to bat, Bangladesh suffered an early setback, with Rajin Saleh and Aftab Ahmed falling with only 26 runs on the board.
Saleh, brought in place of the out of form Mohammad Ashraful, failed to justify his inclusion as he fell leg before to Ed Rainsford for six.
But the big blow for the Tigers was the loss of Aftab, who had been in brilliant form the other day against Brian Lara's men.
The diminutive youngster succumbed to a stunning catch by wicketkeeper Brendan Taylor who took the ball single-handed diving to his left.
But Nafees batted without restraint, feeding on the confidence given by Hasan who batted with maturity at the other end.
The opening batsman struck two fours in an Ireland over before Aftab fell, and three more in the 12th and 13th over of the innings by Ireland and Rainsford respectively.
He then turned his attention to Gary Brent whom he drove to the fence on both sides of the wicket off successive overs.
The dismissal of Hasan, caught by Rainsford off 19-year old leg-spinner Tafadzwa Kamungozi, slowed down the run flow.
Nafees reached his ton in 143 balls with a run down to third man off Rainsford.
Bashar then fell to Rainsford while trying to break the self-imposed shackles before Farhad Reza and Masharafe Mortaza returned in quick succession.
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