Prendergast helps Ireland to ODI sweep over Zimbabwe
Ireland 182-6 (38.5 overs): Prendergast 67, Lewis 44; Tshuma 4-35
Zimbabwe 178 (49.1 overs): Mugeri-Tiripano 56, Mupachikwa, 45; Dalzell 4-36, McBride 3-22
Ireland won by four wickets
Scorecard
Orla Prendergast hit an unbeaten 67 as Ireland secured a two-game sweep in their one-day international series against Zimbabwe at Stormont.
Following a 97-run victory at the Belfast venue on Saturday, as well as a 3-0 win in the T20 series between the sides this month, the hosts won by four wickets on Monday.
Zimbabwe won the toss and elected to bat but lost their first three wickets for only 38 runs.
Alana Dalzell bowled opener Kelis Ndlovu for a first-ball duck before getting Loreen Tshuma to edge to wicket-keeper Amy Hunter for just four.
When Chiedza Dhururu was caught lbw by Ava Canning, the tourists' innings looked to be teetering on the brink of collapse.
Captain Chipo Mugeri-Tiripano steadied the ship with 56 from 92 balls, while Modester Mupachikwa chipped in with 45 to set Ireland a target of 178.
While Ireland lost an early wicket of their own, with Sarah Forbes caught by Biza off the bowling of Chigora for only three runs, captain Gaby Lewis provided 44 off 59 balls.
Mupachikwa stumped her fellow wicket keeper Amy Hunter for just 14 but what felt at the time like a potentially key wicket instead brought Prendergast to the crease.
Her 67 included seven boundaries and marked her second consecutive half-century in the one-day format as Ireland eased to victory in the 39th over.
Ireland return to action in a three-game T20 series against Pakistan in Dublin next month.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Nawaz's three-wicket over leads Pakistan to a 14-run win over West Indies
LAUDERHILL, Fla. (AP) — Mohammad Nawaz took three wickets in an over to propel Pakistan to a 14-run win over West Indies in Thursday's series-opening Twenty20 cricket international in Florida. Pakistan was sent in to bat and posted 178 for six, led by Saim Ayub's 57 from 38 deliveries. Speculation about that being above or below a par target at this venue was partially answered when West Indies openers Johnson Charles and 18-year-old rookie Jewel Andrew scored at just over six an over to the halfway point in reply. Ater conceding 20 runs in his first three overs, left-arm spinner Nawaz dramatically shifted the contest. He started the 12th over with a breakthrough to dismiss Andrew for 35 and end a 72-run opening stand, and added the wickets of Charles (35) and Gudakesh Motie (0) on the fourth and fifth balls as the West Indies slumped to 75-3. Skipper Shai Hope (2) scooped a full delivery from Ayub into the deep in the next over as West Indies lost four wickets for five runs. Ayub was voted player of the match for his half-century and bowling return of 2-20. Some lofty tail-end hitting from Jason Holder, who struck four sixes in his unbeaten, 12-ball 30, and Shamar Joseph, who hit 21 from 12, helped West Indies to 164-7 and made the final margin more respectable. That lopsided contest ended any chance of the West Indies starting the series against Pakistan on a better footing after comprehensive test and T20 series losses to Australia. The Australians wrapped up an historic 8-0 sweep in the Caribbean earlier in the week. ___ AP cricket:

Associated Press
2 hours ago
- Associated Press
Nawaz's three-wicket over leads Pakistan to a 14-run win over West Indies
LAUDERHILL, Fla. (AP) — Mohammad Nawaz took three wickets in an over to propel Pakistan to a 14-run win over West Indies in Thursday's series-opening Twenty20 cricket international in Florida. Pakistan was sent in to bat and posted 178 for six, led by Saim Ayub's 57 from 38 deliveries. Speculation about that being above or below a par target at this venue was partially answered when West Indies openers Johnson Charles and 18-year-old rookie Jewel Andrew scored at just over six an over to the halfway point in reply. Ater conceding 20 runs in his first three overs, left-arm spinner Nawaz dramatically shifted the contest. He started the 12th over with a breakthrough to dismiss Andrew for 35 and end a 72-run opening stand, and added the wickets of Charles (35) and Gudakesh Motie (0) on the fourth and fifth balls as the West Indies slumped to 75-3. Skipper Shai Hope (2) scooped a full delivery from Ayub into the deep in the next over as West Indies lost four wickets for five runs. Ayub was voted player of the match for his half-century and bowling return of 2-20. Some lofty tail-end hitting from Jason Holder, who struck four sixes in his unbeaten, 12-ball 30, and Shamar Joseph, who hit 21 from 12, helped West Indies to 164-7 and made the final margin more respectable. That lopsided contest ended any chance of the West Indies starting the series against Pakistan on a better footing after comprehensive test and T20 series losses to Australia. The Australians wrapped up an historic 8-0 sweep in the Caribbean earlier in the week. ___ AP cricket:
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Unreachable to unplayable - how England had mixed opening day
At the start of the 40th over - after two long rain delays, with cloudy skies and a green pitch at his disposal - Josh Tongue had the in-form Ravindra Jadeja in his sights. The first ball of the over flew past wicketkeeper Jamie Smith for four byes. The second was short, wide and flashed for four. The third was a beauty on a good length, nibbling away from the left-hander and taking the edge. From unreachable to unplayable, bizarre to brilliant. Three balls that encapsulated England in their entirety, as they restricted India to 204-6 on day one of the fifth Test at The Oval. Neither Tongue, nor India's batters, seemed to know what was coming next, as the sheepish giggle after Jadeja's wicket suggested. Four overs previously, a similar delivery accounted for Sai Sudharsan after a gritty 107-ball 38, while he had started the day with a nine-ball over that conceded 11 runs from wides. "Tongue looked like the bowler I would least like to face," former England captain Michael Vaughan told BBC Test Match Special. "You'd have no chance of lining him up - he was wide down the leg side, wide down the off side, half-volley, bouncer and then all of a sudden right in the perfect zone." Tongue was not the sole bowler guilty of inconsistency, though that was probably to be expected with England's depleted stock of quicks. Already without captain Ben Stokes through a shoulder injury and Jofra Archer and Brydon Carse for rotation reasons, late in the day their fortunes went from bad to worse. Chris Woakes, 14 overs into his legs and playing his fifth consecutive Test, sprawled over the boundary rope to try and save a four and immediately clutched his shoulder in agony and is unlikely to play a part in the rest of the match. Gus Atkinson was impressive on his return from a hamstring problem, with figures of 2-31 from his 19 overs, but England must be wary of over-working him, with Stokes as a case study. Tongue and Jamie Overton - playing just his second Test, three years after his first - offered little in terms of control and Joe Root and Jacob Bethell are part-time spin options. It is fair to say that stand-in skipper Ollie Pope has a headache. India fail to punish England's 'liquorice all sorts' Despite England's wayward day, however, India were unable to assert their dominance when they are in need of a win to avoid a series defeat. England bowled 20% of their deliveries down the leg side and attacked the stumps with just 12% - the second-lowest for any innings in the series. But, at the same time, they drew 24% false shots from India, the highest for day one throughout this series. But considering they were faced with tricky batting conditions, Tongue's erratic spell at one end and Atkinson's economic efforts at the other, perhaps it is of little surprise that India's minds were somewhat scrambled. "Tongue made India do things they don't want to do," former England batter Sir Alastair Cook told BBC Test Match Special. "He has bowled a couple of absolute jaffas, but liquorice all sorts is what we used to call them when you're bowling like that. When you face someone who's so inconsistent, you feel you've got to be scoring. "You think there's plenty of opportunities to score, but because it could be anywhere it really upsets your rhythm. It's that mental thing, knowing he's not bowling well so I should be going after him and he drags you into shots." India's stubborn pair of Karun Nair and Washington Sundar led them out of a pickle from 153-6, playing with assured control that the rest of the top order had been lacking. It was a curious day with neither side able to seize momentum for significant periods, but there is a sense that England missed their opportunity considering the conditions and India's loose dismissals. "England, if they're being brutally honest with themselves - on a pitch that they've bowled on today with 8mm of grass - there's been enough seam movement and swing that they would've fancied bowling India out today," Vaughan added. "They'll be thinking, if two of us bowled like Gus Atkinson then we'd have bowled them out." Woakes injury mars England's bizarre opening day Inconsistent England restrict India on day one of fifth Test - as it happened Get cricket news sent straight to your phone