Big Picture
And yet, both will go into their meeting in Mumbai wondering what could have been. Nepal were 11 runs from 8 balls away from victory in their opening against England, while Scotland spurned 30 runs in their innings against the same opponents, which might have afforded them more room to cash in the nerves they elicited in an ultimately unsuccessful defense of 152.
A comprehensive defeat to West Indies on Sunday closed all mathematical avenues for Nepal’s progression, before England’s second number on their Auld enemy was to come through another sketchy situation against Italy on Monday to secure their own Super Eights spot. And so, what might have been a genuine winner-takes-all bout is anything but. Regardless of the result, both teams will be heading home.
The mullering at the hands of Italy felt like a blow to that cause, even though that should not be the case. It is counter-productive to pit Associate nations against one another to deem who is worthy of a bigger slice of pie, be that funding or opportunities against major sides, particularly when the deck is stacked against them on those grounds in the first place.
These are issues Scotland know plenty about, even if their surprise entry into this tournament is their sixth visit to a T20 World Cup. Between the 2024 T20 World Cup and this one, they had played just seven T20Is outside of qualification tournaments, and only three against a Full Member (a series against Australia in September 2024). They themselves have a statement to make on Tuesday.
Scotland’s initial three-match residence in Kolkata featured a 73-run win against Italy, as they became the first side at this World Cup to breach 200. That was sandwiched by losses to West Indies and England, though the latter did play out in front of a crowd of more than 40,000. This will be similarly well-attended.
As such, there is plenty of familiarity on the ground for this encounter, which will been played out on what has been a game Wankhede track. Nepal’s three matches at this venue to Scotland’s none gives them a sizable advantage, but their batting has not come close to replicating the heights Kushal Bhurtel, Dipendra Singh Airee and Lokesh Bam threatened to take them to against England over a week ago.
Scotland, too, have errors to learn from, particularly their leg-side missteps against England when it came to the sweep shot. “The nature of the wicket [at the Wankhede] probably looks even slower than Kolkata and might take more turn,” Tom Bruce said on Monday. We shall see.
Form guide
Nepal: LLLWW (last five completed T20Is, most recent first)
Scotland: LWLLL
In the spotlight
Team news
Nepal have been relatively consistent with their selections, sticking by 10 players and shuffling between Sher Malla (offbreak), Lalit Rajbanshi (left arm orthodox) and Sompal Kami (medium-pace) for the final spot. The suggestion on the ground is they may go in unchanged from the West Indies match after Kami provided some handy but ultimately moot lower-order runs with an unbeaten 26. Should they err towards spin, Malla may get the nod over Rajbanshi, whose single over against Italy went for 19.
Nepal (probable): 1 Aasif Sheikh (wk), 2 Kushal Bhurtel, 3 Rohit Paudel (capt), 4 Dipendra Airee, 5 Aarif Sheikh, 6 Lokesh Bam, 7 Gulsan Jha, 8 Karan KC, 9 Sompal Kami/Sher Malla, 10 Nandan Yadav, 11 Sandeep Lamichhane.
Scotland (probable): 1 George Munsey, 2 Michael Jones, 3 Brandon McMullen, 4 Richie Berrington (capt), 5 Tom Bruce, 6 Michael Leask, 7 Matthew Cross (wk), 8 Mark Watt, 9 Oliver Davidson, 10 Brad Wheal, 11 Brad Currie.
Pitch and conditions
Temperatures are expected to reach as high as 33 degrees Celsius in Mumbai, which will likely exacerbate the slow, turning nature of the surface that Scotland expect to encounter. That this will be an evening game in Mumbai puts chasing on the table. Though three sides have fallen short when doing so in the five matches at this venue so far – USA against India, Nepal against England and England against West Indies – there are mitigations to be found pertaining to strength of opposition and lack of intent within those examples.
Stats and trivia
- This is only the third T20I meeting between Nepal and Scotland.
- Richie Berrington is 23 runs off 3,000 in T20s
- Scotland wicketkeeper Matthew Cross is three catches away from 50 in T20Is
Quotes
“We certainly want to see a lot more thought going into how we play our cricket. We’re a very energetic side, a very passionate side with a great following that have come to watch us play. So we’d like to give that following something to remember this World Cup by.”
Nepal consultant coach Nic Pothas wants to give the fans something to take away from this campaign
“I actually thought the wicket played really well in Kolkata, and obviously that was our third game there too, so, you know, you back yourself to be learning quite quickly on that wicket and on that surface. So, looking ahead, it’s about us adapting to conditions very quickly. We’ve obviously watched some games that have been here.”
Tom Bruce on Scotland adjusting to new conditions ahead of their first match in Mumbai
Vithushan Ehantharajah is an associate editor at ESPNcricinfo