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Bangladesh caught out at the last as South Africa win at T20 World Cup

<span>Keshav Maharaj celebrates after Mahmudullah is caught by Aiden Markram in the final over.</span><span>Photograph: Adam Hunger/AP</span>
Keshav Maharaj celebrates after Mahmudullah is caught by Aiden Markram in the final over.Photograph: Adam Hunger/AP

Just 18 months ago, the little corner of Brooklyn where McDonald and Church avenues meet was officially named Little Bangladesh. It’s the city’s newest neighbourhood, home to its fastest-growing community.

The number of ­Bangladeshi-­Americans living in New York has tripled in the past decade, and now runs to approxi­mately 100,000.

Related: ICC cashes in as India versus Pakistan delivers a New York nail-biter | Taha Hashim

Apparently just about a quarter of them had come to Long Island to watch their team beat South Africa. It was the second-biggest crowd they have had here during the tournament, a little smaller than India’s, but just as loud.

They had a lot to cheer – everything, in fact, except the one thing they wanted.

Bangladesh played one of the better games any team have turned in at the Nassau County ground, but still lost by four runs. Their batters ­managed the chase brilliantly until the final over, when they needed to score 11 off Keshav Maharaj. But Jaker Ali was caught by Aiden Markram on the straight boundary trying to hit the six that would win it for them, and so was ­Mahmudullah. Markram had to leap high to take that one, and had only an inch or two of spare ground in which to land.

Mahmudullah couldn’t believe it, and stood his ground a while, ­waiting for a review that never came. It meant Taskin Ahmed needed to hit the last ball for six to win. He couldn’t. They had already been robbed of four leg byes that had ricocheted away off Mahmudullah’s pads. The umpires have him out lbw. He overturned it on review, but the runs had already been struck off. It was a shame it ended that way. Bangladesh deserved better, especially Towhid Hridoy, who had held everything together with his fine 37.

They were chasing only 113. South Africa’s innings was a wreck. Bangladesh had brought Tanzim Hasan Sakib to bolster their fast bowling, and gave him the first over. Three deliveries in, this was looking like a dubious move. Quinton de Kock carted him for a six over square leg and then a four through long-on. But he dismissed Reeza Hendricks lbw for a golden duck with his sixth ball, and things immediately started to fall apart. Hendricks has now made four, three and zero in the tournament. His role seems to be mainly ornamental.

Hasan bowled De Kock, then had Tristan Stubbs caught at cover for a duck. In between, Ahmed bowled Markram with a delivery that moved just enough off the pitch. By the end of the powerplay, South Africa were 25 for four, and had managed to hit exactly seven scoring shots between them, three of them the boundaries scored by De Kock. They rotated like a stopped clock. Luckily for them, they have one of the stronger middle-orders. Heinrich Klaasen and David Miller batted through the next 14 overs together and put on a match-winning 75, largely against Bangladesh’s spinners.

Klaasen raced ahead with a couple of sixes off Hossain, while Miller, who was celebrating his 35th birthday, tucked in behind him. Taskin finally broke the partnership when he bowled Klaasen for 46, and when Hossain got Miller in the next over, the innings spluttered out. They still came out on top in the end. In this tournament South Africa, who have a reputation for ­losing games they ought to win, seem to be winning all the ones they ought to lose.