Yuvraj Samra etched his name into the history books with a scintillating century, but it wasn’t enough to prevent New Zealand from securing their passage to the Super Eight stage with an eight-wicket win in Chennai.
Samra, at just 19 years old, became the youngest player to score a T20 World Cup fifty before powering on to 110—the highest ever score by an Associate batter against a Full Member in the tournament.
However, Canada’s inability to defend 173 was a story of profligacy in the field and a clinical counter-attack from Glenn Phillips (76*) and Rachin Ravindra (59*).
Despite an early wobble at 30 for 2, the Black Caps made light work of the target, finishing the chase with nearly five overs to spare.

Phillips and Ravindra take charge
After Jaskaran Singh and Dilon Heyliger provided early hope by removing Tim Seifert and Finn Allen, the Phillips-Ravindra partnership (146 off 73 balls) effectively killed the contest.
Phillips was particularly brutal against the spinners, switch-hitting Saad Bin Zafar for six and treating the wrist-spin of Ansh Patel with utter disdain.
Canada’s indiscipline—manifested in overthrows, no-balls, and dropped catches—gifted the Black Caps momentum they never relinquished. By the time Phillips brought up his 22-ball fifty, the outcome was a formality.
Nepal’s ‘Cardiac Kids’ stun Scotland in Mumbai thriller
SUMMARY: Nepal 171 for 3 (Airee 50*, Bhurtel 43, Leask 3-30) beat Scotland 170 for 7 (Jones 71, Kami 3-25) by seven wickets
Nepal ended a 12-year drought for a T20 World Cup victory with a riotously received seven-wicket win over Scotland at the Wankhede.
In a game of fluctuating fortunes, veteran seamer Sompal Kami provided the mid-innings spark with the ball before Dipendra Singh Airee’s explosive 50* off 23 balls completed a high-octane chase that sent the heavily Nepali crowd into a frenzy.

The Airee Impact
Chasing 171, Nepal seemed to be stuttering when Michael Leask’s three-wicket burst reduced them from a steady 74 for 0 to 98 for 3. With the required rate climbing toward 12, Airee arrived to “skewer” the Scottish resolve.
He struck four fours and three sixes, taking 20 runs off a single Leask over to swing the pendulum. Alongside Gulsan Jha (24*), Airee ensured there would be no repeat of the near-misses that have plagued Nepal’s recent major tournament history.
Earlier, Scotland appeared set for a total north of 190. Michael Jones (71) was in regal touch as Scotland raced to 131 for 1 after 15 overs. However, the introduction of Sompal Kami changed everything.
Kami produced a masterclass in change-of-pace bowling, deceiving Jones with a knuckleball before plucking a stunning one-handed return catch to remove Brandon McMullen. Scotland lost 6 for 30 in the final four overs—a collapse that proved fatal once Airee found his range in the second innings.
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