31 January,2016 07:00 AM IST | | PTI
Sarfaraz Khan, Avesh and Lomror help India beat NZ by 120 runs to enter quarters
Pacer Avesh Khan (4-32) celebrates the wicket of New Zealandu00c3u00a2u00c2u0080u00c2u0099s Josh Finnie at the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium in Mirpur on Saturday.
Mirpur: India on Saturday stormed into the ICC Under-19 World Cup quarter-finals after producing a clinical all-round performance to wallop New Zealand by 120 runs in their penultimate Group âD' encounter here.
Pacer Avesh Khan (4-32) celebrates the wicket of New Zealand's Josh Finnie at the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium in Mirpur on Saturday. Pic/ICC
Put into bat on a slow track, the three-time champions scored 258 for eight with Sarfaraz Khan continuing his fine form hitting a polished 74.
Left-handed opener Rishabh Pant and middle-order batsman Armaan Jaffer contributed 57 and 46 respectively. Another significant innings came from all-rounder Mahipal Lomror, who scored a quickfire 42-ball-45.
In reply, New Zealand were decimated for 138 in only 31.3 overs with pacer Avesh Khan bowling a deadly opening spell to finish with figures of 4-32 in 10 overs which also earned him the Man of the Match award.
Lomror could have also got the award as he capped his 45 with figures of 5-47 in 7.3 overs to polish off the tail.
Avesh Khan on fire
The âBoys in Blue' virtually wrapped up the match in the first 10 overs of New Zealand's chase as Avesh reduced them to 16 for four wreaking havoc. He hit the perfect length and speed of around 135 kmph proved to be ideal at this level.
The Madhya Pradesh lad, who has already played first-class cricket, has the ability to hit the deck and also move the ball back into the right handers with a few that holds its line.
The slip catching was also pretty good with Washington Sundar holding on to couple of good catches.
Earlier, India had two stand-out partnerships in their score of 258. Pant and Sarfaraz added 89 for the third wicket after they were reduced to 19 for two. The second was between Armaan and Lomror that yielded 55 runs for the sixth wicket.
Pant and Sarfaraz, played contrasting innings on a slowish track. The Delhi glovesman hit seven fours and two sixes but in general played second fiddle to the stockily built Mumbai lad whose 74 off 80 balls had nine boundaries.
But it was young Armaan, nephew of former India opener Wasim Jaffer, who kept his cool running well between the wickets to score 46 off 49 balls with two boundaries.
India will next play Nepal on Monday. "Our first aim to make the quarter-finals has been realised but we cannot afford to relax. We need to top the group, so the match against Nepal will be very important," said captain Ishan Kishan.