Brampton, July 30, 2023: The Montreal Tigers triumphed over the Toronto Nationals at the TD Cricket Arena by 23 runs after a wet outfield forced a delayed start in Global T20 Canada, reducing the match to six overs a side. Fans were treated to high octane action as Chris Lynn and Muhammed Waseem played breathtaking strokes in the partnership of 63 runs to set up the Montreal Tigers for a big victory. Their efforts were furthered by a solid display from the Tigers’ bowling attack.
Meanwhile, the first encounter of the day between the Brampton Wolves and the Mississauga Panthers was abandoned due to a wet outfield, forcing both teams to walk away with a point each. The Toronto Nationals won the toss and elected to field first. However, openers Chris Lynn (38*) and Muhammad Waseem (24) unleashed a barrage of power hitting. At the end of the two over powerplay, the Montreal Tigers were 26/0. The second and third over proved to be massively lucrative for the Tigers with 35 runs coming off them as the opening duo took apart Saad Bin Zafar and Zaman Khan.
The onslaught continued when Sikandar Raza was dispatched for 18 runs, soon after.
Sherfane Rutherford (8) took little time to join the offense but was run out as Zaman Khan delivered a top-quality final over, conceding just two runs to limit the Montreal Tigers at 77/2.
The Nationals began their chase with openers, Darren Bravo (15) and JJ Smit (16) bogged down by a shrewd four run over from pacer, Kaleem Sana. At the end of the two over powerplay the Nationals were falling behind at 19/0. Andre Russell, making his first appearance of the tournament, bowled well to limit the Tigers to just nine runs in the third over and turn up the pressure. While both openers showed intent, they struggled to find boundaries.
Muhammad Afridi bowled another disciplined over conceding just six runs, before Darren Bravo and JJ Smit tactically retired out in quick succession to bring in Sikandar Raza (7) and skipper Hamza Tariq (10). Andre Russell bowled a tight fifth over conceding only six runs. Facing an insurmountable target of 37 runs in six balls, the Nationals inevitably fell short by the end of the innings at 54/2 to give the Tigers a dominant 23 run victory.
The Montreal Tigers won by 23 runs.