Oman survived a batting collapse to pip Hong Kong just by 12 runs in a do-or-die T20 World Cup qualifier on Wednesday to reach the finals in Australia next year.
Oman joined Scotland, Namibia, Netherlands, Papua New Guinea and Ireland, who had already booked their places in the 2020 showpiece but are still competing for the winner’s trophy in UAE.
Chasing just 135 to win, Hong Kong collapsed to 18-5 with left-arm seamer Bilal Khan taking three of the wickets to fall on his way to match figures of 4-23.
Scott McKechnie, who top scored with 44 off 46 balls, helped steady the ship with a partnership of 52 for the sixth wicket with Haroon Arshad (20) but Hong Kong struggled to get the ball away in the tough, heavy conditions and finished on 122-9.
Oman had also found it hard going, slipping to 42-6 by the end of the ninth over.
However, they were indebted to opener Jatinder Singh, who carried his bat for 67 with seven boundaries and a six, as well as tail-enders Aamir Kaleem (17) and Naseem Khushi (26 off just nine balls) to take them to a defendable target.
“We’ve had early mornings, we’ve sweated a lot, and this is our reward,” said Jatinder.
“Bilal was lethal today, he was unplayable, getting the yorkers right, bang on target. He was marvellous.”
Earlier, George Munsey belted 65 as Scotland made 198 before UAE were all out for 108, with nine balls left. Mark Watt and Safyaan Sharif took three wickets for the Scots.
Scotland had struggled in group play and finished only fourth in their seven-team group.
“Not gone our way on this trip but nice to get over the line in the must-win game,” said opening batsman Munsey. Hosts UAE, whose squad had been diminished by the suspension of four players after corruption investigations, only narrowly missed an automatic World Cup berth when they finished third in their group on net run rate.
“We turned up when we were pushed into a corner,” said captain Ahmed Raza
Scotland defeated Oman in the fifth-place play-off by five wickets at the ICC T20 qualifiers on Thursday.
Chasing 167, Scotland reached the target for the loss of five wickets with five balls to spare.
Both sides had already qualified for next year’s World Cup in Australia so the match was a dead rubber.