Zimbabwe drew first blood in the first of three T20I matches played at Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo today. Namibia won the toss and chose to field.
Zimbabwe made a quick start in the game with Marumani and Bennett reaching a century-run stand with the hosts posting 211/3 in their allotted twenty overs.
With the ball, Zimbabwe were not quite at their best, but the cushion provided by the batters was more than enough to see them over the line.
In response, Namibia made a decent fist of the chase, and it was encouraging to see them play smart rather than go hell for leather, especially in the Powerplay, by picking the gaps.
Had either Jan Nicol Loftie-Eaton or Jan Frylinck batted deeper, the result could have been very different as the visitors only managed to get to 178/7 handing Zimbabwe a 33-runs victory.
Brian Bennett was made the player of the match for his superb knock of 94 runs off 51 balls. His knock included 8 fours and 4 sixes.
After being asked to bat first, Brian Bennett and Tadiwanashe Marumani provided Zimbabwe with the ideal foundation through a 124-run opening stand. The openers were watchful in the early stages before Marumani found his rhythm. That allowed Bennett to settle into his groove, and soon the runs began to flow from both ends.
Marumani departed, but Bennett carried on before falling for 94. The big opening stand laid the perfect platform for Ryan Burl and Sikandar Raza, whose cameos powered Zimbabwe to 211.
From there, Raza and Masakadza tightened the screws and pushed up the required run rate.
The tourists struggled to find the big overs they needed to keep the chase on track, and while Ruben Trumpelmann briefly flickered hope for Namibia, his departure proved the final nail in the coffin.
For Zimbabwe, Richard Ngarava and Blessing Muzarabani were carted around a bit, but Wellington Masakadza was the most economical, going for under six runs per over on a batting-friendly surface.
212 may have seemed daunting, but it was very much a gettable total on this surface, where batters could hit through the line.
Namibia’s hopes rested on a strong start, and they delivered with 61 runs in the Powerplay thanks to Jan Nicol Loftie-Eaton and Jan Frylinck.
Zimbabwe looked listless until Sikandar Raza took matters into his own hands to break the flourishing stand. One brought two, as Wellington Masakadza struck in the very next over, leaving Namibia to rebuild with two new batters at the crease.
A quick turnaround awaits the two teams, with the first two games of the series scheduled on back-to-back days. The second T20I will again be played in Bulawayo on Tuesday, 16th September.
It will start a bit later than the series opener, with the first ball at 11.30 am GMT.
Namibia will look to take the series to a decider, while Zimbabwe will aim to put the series to bed.
