Munsey, McCreath Power Scotland to Victory in Tri-Series Opener

GLASGOW: George Munsey and debutant Finlay McCreath powered Scotland to a convincing 39-run victory over the Netherlands in the opening match of the T20 tri-series here at Titwood on Sunday.

Chasing a 161-run target, Netherlands were bundled out for 121 in 18.1 overs.

In pursuit of the target, Netherlands started poorly, losing three wickets in only 4.3 overs. Max O’Dowd was the first to go on a golden duck in the second over.

Zach Lion-Cachet was trapped lbw while Scott Edwards was run out as Scotland reduced them to 36-3.

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The early hiccups jolted the Netherlands, as they never got going in the chase. Their top scorer, Michael Levitt, was also sent back after scoring a 30-ball 36. His innings featured two sixes and two boundaries.

Eventually, the Netherlands were 72-5 at the halfway stage of the innings. With 89 required off the last 10 overs, it was a daunting task for the visitors.

Scotland struck at regular intervals, never allowing the Netherlands to recover after a shambolic batting display from the top order. The whole team was bundled out for a meagre score.

For Scotland, Mark Watt, Safyaan Sharif and Jack Jarvis claimed two wickets each.

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Earlier, Scotland scored 161 for the loss of eight wickets in their allocated 20 overs, thanks to a 57-run sixth-wicket stand between debutant Finlay McCreath and Matthew Cross.

Finlay McCreath top-scored with 40 off 28 balls, hitting four boundaries and a six, while Matthew Cross played second fiddle with his 33 off 24 balls.

The duo’s partnership steered Scotland out of trouble as, at one stage, they were reduced to 76-5.

For the Netherlands, Aryan Dutt was the standout bowler, taking three wickets in his quota of four overs while Kyle Klein and Zach Lion-Cachet chipped in with two wickets each.

READ: Dale Steyn makes bold prediction about winner of Tendulkar-Anderson trophy

Rafael Nadal’s sensational career ends as Netherlands defeat Spain in Davis Cup

The glittering career of superstar Rafael Nadal in professional tennis came to an end on Tuesday as the Netherlands eliminated Spain in the Davis Cup quarter-finals.

The 38-year-old Spaniard, a 22-time Grand Slam winner, was defeated in the first singles rubber and after Carlos Alcaraz won the second match to send the tie to a doubles decider, the Dutch triumphed to snatch a 2-1 win.

Nadal was beaten 6-4, 6-4 by Botic van de Zandschulp in the opening singles clash, before Alcaraz defeated Tallon Griekspoor 7-6 (7/0), 6-3.

In the deciding doubles rubber, Van de Zandschulp and Wesley Koolhof secured a 7-6 (7/4), 7-6 (7/3) victory to set up a semi-final clash with Canada or Germany.

After years ravaged by injuries and not having played an official singles match since July, doubts hung over Nadal’s involvement in the tie.

They were resolved when captain David Ferrer confirmed he would play in the first singles rubber of the opening finals clash.

Nadal appeared emotional during the Spanish national anthem, and over 10,000 fans filled the arena with chants of “Rafa, Rafa,” when it ended.

“I was having an emotional day, nerves before what could be my last singles match as a professional,” said Nadal. “The emotions of hearing the national anthem for the last time as a professional were very special.”

Rafael Nadal had won his last 29 Davis Cup singles matches out of 30 played — after debuting in the tournament in 2004.

Despite giving every ounce of his energy in the second set and buoyed by immense home support, Nadal fell short.

“In the beginning, I think we were both nervous… the crowd was tough, understandably,” said Van de Zandschulp. “That is what it is to play against Rafa in Spain — he is probably the biggest sportsman here in Spain that ever lived.”

Given his diminished physical condition Nadal, ranked 154th in the world, attempted to keep points short, with big serves and occasional flashes of his lethal forehand, followed by a classic fist pump and roar.

World number 80 Van de Zandschulp sought to put Nadal on his backhand and the indoor hard-court tournament was far from an ideal surface for the record 14-time Roland Garros winning ‘King of Clay’.

The Dutchman opened up two break points at 4-4 and took the second with a fine cross-court winner to claim the lead, and then converted his second set point to dampen Spanish spirits.

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Rafael Nadal fought back from 0-30 down at the start of the second set but could not convert it into a hold and his opponent secured the first break when the Spaniard went long, consolidating to ramp up the pressure.

Down a set and a break, Nadal, hunting for a foothold, survived heavy pressure on his serve in the third game for a nervy hold that led to the loudest roar of the night.

Van de Zandschulp broke for a second time to take a 4-1 lead but Nadal showed his never-say-die spirit by claiming a break back in the sixth game.

He consolidated, surviving a break point to claim back-to-back games for the first time, as he gave everything in what could prove his final match.

However, in the 10th and final game, Nadal went long to concede match point and then hit a shot into the net to hand his Dutch opponent victory.

“I’m not in the rhythm of competition,” admitted Nadal. “I’ve been self-critical enough with myself to improve, even when I’ve won — today I will not be tough on myself, this was all I had.”

Alcaraz kept Nadal’s dream of a final Davis Cup win alive with a strong performance in the second rubber.

“I did it for Rafa,” admitted the world number three after winning his singles match to force a doubles decider.

Alcaraz won all seven points in a first-set tie-break which ended Griekspoor’s resistance.

The world number 40 was unable to put pressure on Alcaraz’s serve and the Spaniard sealed the straight sets win to love in the ninth game.

He and Granollers came unstuck in the first set of the doubles with 35-year-old Koolhof, also retiring after the Davis Cup, in fine fettle at the net.

Spain took their third break point for a 2-1 lead in the second set to wrestle back in, but the Dutch got back on serve at 4-4 with a Van de Zandschulp cross-court winner.

Another tie-break ensued and the Dutch edged it again to bring the curtain down on Nadal’s career.

READ: Two key members to leave England’s coaching staff

Netherlands beat Germany in shoot-out to win Olympic men’s hockey gold

The Netherlands beat Germany in a shoot-out to win the men’s Paris Olympics hockey gold Thursday, breaking a 24-year drought in what they hope will be the first of a Dutch double.

A tense game ended all square at 1-1, with fourth-quarter goals in quick succession from Dutch captain Thierry Brinkman and Germany’s Thies Prinz.

The match went to a shoot-out, with each player going one-on-one with the goalkeeper.

The first two efforts for each side were saved before Brinkman put the Dutch 1-0 up.

Dutch keeper Pirmin Blaak then saved again from Prinz, giving the Netherlands the edge over their bitter rivals.

Thijs van Dam and Justus Weigand both netted for the Netherlands, leaving Duco Telgenkamp with the chance to win the match.

The 22-year-old nonchalantly scooped the ball beyond Jean-Paul Danneberg in the German goal to give the Dutch their first gold medal in the men’s competition since 2000.

The Netherlands face China in the Paris Olympics women’s Hockey final on Friday.

The Germans and the Dutch share a lengthy rivalry as two of the great powerhouses of world hockey.

Germany, the reigning world champions, came into the match with the confidence of knowing they had edged the pool game between the sides 1-0.

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They also had history on their side having won all four of their previous Olympic finals including against the Dutch in London in 2012.

For their part, the Dutch team were keen to bounce back from what was seen as a disastrous campaign in Tokyo, which saw them finish sixth — their worst result since 1984.

The first half was played at a furious pace as both sides looked for a way through the tightly organised defences.

That made for just four shots at goal, three of them falling to Germany, who also had the only penalty corner which Tom Grambusch was unable to convert.

It was the Germans, under the watchful eye of Chancellor Olaf Scholz in the stands, who dominated possession with 62 percent over the first 30 minutes.

The Dutch, cheered on by another vast army of orange-clad supporters, began to assert themselves as the game moved into the third quarter.

They made their dominance count in the opening minute of the fourth quarter.

Koen Bijen flicked the ball across goal for Brinkman to stab home on the volley from close range.

Shortly after, Gonzalo Peillat — an Olympic champion with Argentina in 2016 — hooked brilliantly off the German line as Bijen’s flick appeared to be heading in.

Immediately the Germans were up the other end, forcing a penalty corner which Prinz, on his second attempt, slammed past Blaak.

Johannes Grosse came close to a winner two minutes from time with Blaak again making a good stop and the Dutch then failed to capitalise on a penalty corner — their only one of the game — in the final minute, sending the game into a dramatic shoot-out.

READ: Arshad Nadeem ends Pakistan’s 32-year wait with Paris Olympics Gold

Netherlands crush Romania to reach Euro 2024 quarter-finals

The Netherlands swept into the Euro 2024 quarter-final as Donyell Malen scored twice in a 3-0 win over Romania in the Last 16 on Tuesday.

Cody Gakpo gave the Dutch an early lead but they were unable to convert pressure into a crucial second goal until the Liverpool forward set up Malen with seven minutes remaining in Munich.

Romania were gritty but outclassed, lacking the quality to punish their opponents’ profligacy before Malen added his second on the counter in stoppage-time.

The victory put the Netherlands on course for a Euro 2024 quarter-final clash with Turkey or Austria.

“We played a good game. I’m very pleased. Especially after the last game we needed a reaction and today was a good step in the right direction,” Gakpo said.

“We talked a lot about the aggression, the intensity and defending like a team. It was a good step.

“Sacrifice something for each other and work really hard to be at your best. Good game overall.”

Ronald Koeman’s side will need to improve their effectiveness in front of goal should they wish to emulate their manager, who was a player for the Dutch when they won the 1988 Euros on German soil.

Koeman said, “The only critical point was that it took us too long to score the second one”, but praised the performance overall.

“We are Dutch, we have to play well. The performance today was outstanding and that’s why we have a chance to continue,” added the 61-year-old coach.

“This is the level we need. If we drop our level, we won’t make the final.”

Romania coach Edward Iordanescu said his team “tried to surprise the Netherlands today and it worked — until the 20th minute,” but added he saw “good things that can inspire us for the future”.

Prior to the game, Netherlands’ captain Virgil van Dijk said his side lacked energy and the “will to win” in the loss to Austria in the group stage of Euro 2024.

But the Dutch were still strangely flat in the early stages despite Van Dijk’s rallying cry.

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Group E winners Romania, whose 3-0 victory over Ukraine in their opening game, was just their second-ever win in the Euros, pinned the Dutch back early.

Romania went close when Dennis Man latched onto a superb diagonal ball from Nicolae Stanciu, but the Parma winger blasted over.

The Dutch broke Romania’s momentum shortly after when Gakpo got on the end of a sweeping move to open the scoring on 20 minutes.

Jerdy Schouten sliced a perfect, long pass through the midfield to Xavi Simons, who found Gakpo on the left flank.

Gakpo eluded Andrei Ratiu and seemed to catch goalkeeper Florin Nita off-guard, blasting in at the near post.

The goal ignited a period of Dutch dominance, Stefan de Vrij heading inches wide five minutes later.

The Netherlands wasted a perfect chance to double their lead with half-time approaching when Denzel Dumfries picked Bogdan Racovitan’s pocket and found Simons, who got tangled up and failed to get a decent shot away.

Koeman’s team squandered an array of opportunities early in the second half.

Memphis Depay and Van Dijk went agonisingly close before Gakpo’s second was ruled out by VAR for offside.

With every missed chance, the nerves in the Dutch camp seemed to grow, but Romania lacked the quality to truly punish them.

Gakpo, the player of the match, took matters into his own hands with seven minutes remaining, dribbling through a crowded penalty area and finding Malen who tapped home.

“We work very hard with each other to do our best and I’m happy I could assist Donnie with his goal today,” Gakpo said.

With Romania launching a final attack, Malen broke through on the counter and slid the ball into the goal in the fourth minute of stoppage-time to seal the victory.

The 93rd-minute goal meant substitute Malen was the first Dutch player to score at least two goals in a Euros knock-out tie since Marc Overmars and Patrick Kluivert in a 6-1 win against Yugoslavia in 2000.

READ: David Miller breaks silence on T20I retirement

Kylian Mbappe-less France draw with Netherlands at Euro 2024

France drew 0-0 against the Netherlands without Kylian Mbappe as both teams took a step closer to the last 16 of Euro 2024 on Friday, while Ukraine earned an emotional win over Slovakia.

Kylian Mbappe watched from the bench as an unused substitute in Leipzig, the new Real Madrid recruit forced to wear a mask in training this week after breaking his nose in France’s opening game of the Euro 2024.

Didier Deschamps included Mbappe in his matchday squad but elected not to risk his star striker, with qualification for the knockout phase largely assured.

“Of course Kylian is one of the best players in the world, so a player like that who is not on the pitch is a loss for us. But other players performed really well,” said France midfielder Aurelien Tchouameni. “We hope he comes back as soon as possible.”

Dutch midfielder Xavi Simons had a goal controversially ruled out for offside in the second half, while Antoine Griezmann, captaining France in Mbappe’s absence, was guilty of wasting his team’s two best opportunities to score.

“I had two chances, but they got caught up in my feet. It’s a real shame,” said Griezmann.

“We have to work (on scoring). I think that defensively we were OK, tactically we were fine, we’re just missing this goal for the strikers but it’s going to be fine.”

Simons thought he had fired the Netherlands ahead with 20 minutes left but Denzel Dumfries was deemed to be interfering with France goalkeeper Mike Maignan and the goal was disallowed after a lengthy VAR check.

“For me, it was a valid goal, but he didn’t give it. It’s a shame,” said Dutch captain Virgil van Dijk. “One point is good. We haven’t lost, it’s all in our hands.”

Poland, who lost 3-1 to Austria in Berlin, became the first team dumped out following the draw between France and the Netherlands in the late Group D fixture.

France will play the eliminated Poles in their final group match on Tuesday. They are level on four points at the top with the Dutch, who face Austria at the same time.

On the other hand, Ukraine’s players shed tears of joy as the team playing in their first international tournament since Russian forces invaded in February 2022 came from behind to beat Slovakia 2-1 to move second in Group E.

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Their first win of Euro 2024 also earned a message of congratulations from the country’s president Volodymyr Zelensky.

Roman Yaremchuk came off the bench to hit the winner in Duesseldorf.

After a bruising 3-0 defeat by Romania in their opener, Ukraine showed spirit to fight back with Mykola Shaparenko levelling early in the second half following Ivan Schranz’s opener.

Zelensky said, “Way to go guys!” in a message on social media network X, saying the result showed his country can “take a punch and overcome obstacles”.

“The players showed the spirit of Ukraine on the pitch and deserved the win,” said coach Serhiy Rebrov.

Poland are heading for the exit despite the return of talisman Robert Lewandowski from a thigh injury.

Lewandowski, who missed Poland’s opening loss to the Dutch, came on as a substitute but could not help his team make inroads against Ralf Rangnick’s sturdy Austrian side.

Poland striker Krzysztof Piatek levelled Gernot Trauner’s opener, but Christoph Baumgartner restored the lead for Austria in the second half and Marko Arnautovic sealed the win with a late penalty.

After their second defeat of the tournament, Poland coach Michal Probierz insisted Lewandowski was fit to play.

“He was fully fit and he has practised with the team,” said Probierz.

On Saturday, Belgium will attempt to bounce back from a shock 1-0 loss to Slovakia in their Group E opener as they play Romania in Cologne.

Portugal can secure a last-16 spot if they beat Turkey in Dortmund, while Czech Republic and debutants Georgia are searching for their first points in Group F as they meet for the first time in Hamburg.

READ: Azhar Mahmood reveals reason behind backing Shadab Khan in T20 World Cup

Sri Lanka thump Netherlands to seal consolation victory in T20 World Cup

SAINT LUCIA: A combined team effort earned Sri Lanka their only victory in the ongoing ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024 as they thumped the Netherlands by 83 runs here at Daren Sammy National Cricket Stadium on Sunday.

In the last Group D fixture, the Netherlands bundled out for 118 in 16.4 overs while chasing a mammoth 202.

The Dutch side got off to a flying start courtesy of a 45-run opening partnership between Michael Levitt and Max O’Dowd (11), with the former scoring the bulk of runs.

Nuwan Thushara provided the breakthrough to force Sri Lanka’s comeback as he removed O’Dowd in 4.3 overs.

Meanwhile, Levitt, who scored 31 off 23 with the help of two boundaries and three sixes, fell prey to Maheesh Theekshana in the next over to leave the Netherlands reeling at 47-2.

The Netherlands failed to recover from two quick wickets and kept losing wickets at an alarming rate. Skipper Scott Edwards played a fighting knock of 31 runs from 24 balls, however, he could not find support from the other end.

Thushara dismissed Edwards and Paul van Meekeren in three balls to wrap the Dutch innings at 118 in the 17th over.

For Sri Lanka, Thushara claimed three wickets, while Wanindu Hasaranga and Matheesha Pathirana bagged two wickets each.

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Earlier, the Netherlands opted to bowl first and reduced Sri Lanka to 39-2 inside the powerplay.

Kusal Mendis and Dhananjaya de Silva then joined hands to add 45 runs for the third wicket in 35 balls before Arryan Dutt sent the former back.

Mendis scored a 29-ball 46 with the help of five boundaries.

Dhananjaya de Silva (34) then added 39 runs with Charith Asalanka in a 21-ball partnership for the fourth wicket, pushing the team’s total to 123 in the 15th over.

Asalanka smashed five sixes and one boundary on his way to a 21-ball 46 before Logan van Beek sent him back to the pavilion.

Angelo Mathews (30*) and Wanindu Hasaranga (20) played quick valuable cameos to push the team’s total to 201-6 in their allocated 20 overs.

Logan van Beek topped the wicket-takers chart for the Netherlands with two wickets, while Vivian Kingma, Aryan Dutt and Paul van Meekeren managed one apiece.

READ: Bangladesh sink Nepal in low-scoring clash to reach T20 World Cup 2024 Super 8s

Netherlands win toss, choose to bowl first against Bangladesh

KINGSTOWN: Netherlands have won the toss and elected to field first against Bangladesh in the 27th match of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024 here on Thursday.

Bangladesh: Tanzid Hasan, Litton Das (wk), Najmul Hossain Shanto (c), Towhid Hridoy, Shakib Al Hasan, Mahmudullah, Jaker Ali, Rishad Hossain, Tanzim Hasan, Taskin Ahmed, Mustafizur Rahman.

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Netherlands: Michael Levitt, Max O’Dowd, Vikramjit Singh, Sybrand Engelbrecht, Scott Edwards (capt, wk), Bas de Leede, Logan van Beek, Tim Pringle, Aryan Dutt, Paul van Meekeren, Vivian Kingma.

HEAD TO HEAD

Matches 4, Bangladesh 3, Netherlands 1

READ: England coach opens up on Josh Hazlewood’s comments

Netherlands include injured Frenkie de Jong in Euro 2024 squad

Netherlands coach Ronald Koeman has included Barcelona midfielder Frenkie de Jong in his final 26-man squad for Euro 2024 despite the fact he is still recovering from an ankle injury.

Koeman has however left out left-back Ian Maatsen, who has played a key role in Borussia Dortmund’s progress to the Champions League final against Real Madrid on Saturday but has never played for his country’s senior side.

The coach has placed his trust at left-back in the duo of Nathan Ake, fresh from winning the Premier League title with Manchester City, and the veteran Daley Blind.

De Jong suffered the injury in Barcelona’s 3-2 defeat by Real Madrid in the Clasico on April 21 — the third time this season he had suffered ankle issues — but is expected to return to training on Saturday, just under two weeks before the Euros kick-off.

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Fitness concerns also surround Atletico Madrid forward Memphis Depay.

The Netherlands, who have won the European crown once in 1988, are in Group D with France, Austria and Poland.

They will play Canada on June 6 and Iceland four days later in warm-up games.

Netherlands’ squad for Euro 2024

Goalkeepers: Justin Bijlow (Feyenoord), Mark Flekken (Brentford/ENG), Bart Verbruggen (Brighton/ENG)

Defenders: Nathan Ake (Manchester City/ENG), Daley Blind (Girona/ESP), Stefan de Vrij (Inter Milan/ITA), Lutsharel Geertruida (Feyenoord), Denzel Dumfries (Inter Milan/ITA), Matthijs de Ligt (Bayern Munich/GER), Jeremie Frimpong (Bayer Leverkusen/GER), Micky van de Ven (Tottenham Hotspur/ENG), Virgil van Dijk (Liverpool/ENG)

Midfielders: Frenkie de Jong (Barcelona/ESP), Ryan Gravenberch (Liverpool/ENG), Teun Koopmeiners (Atalanta/ITA), Tijjani Reijnders (AC Milan/ITA), Jerdy Schouten (PSV Eindhoven), Xavi Simons (RB Leipzig/GER), Joey Veerman (PSV Eindhoven), Georginio Wijnaldum (Al Ettifaq/KSA)

Forwards: Steven Bergwijn (Ajax), Brian Brobbey (Ajax), Memphis Depay (Atletico Madrid/ESP), Cody Gakpo (Liverpool/ENG), Donyell Malen (Borussia Dortmund/GER), Wout Weghorst (Hoffenheim/GER)

READ: Ricky Ponting predicts highest run-scorer, wicket-taker for T20 World Cup 2024

Netherlands make two changes to T20 World Cup squad

AMSTELVEEN: The Netherlands have made two changes to their squad for the upcoming ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024, due to the injuries to Fred Klaassen and Daniel Doram.

The injured duo was replaced by Saqib Zulfiqar and Kyle Klein, who was initially named as a travelling reserve. Meanwhile, Klein’s brother will now travel with the Dutch squad as a reserve player.

Left-arm pacer Klaasen was ruled out owing to recurring symptoms from a previously sustained stress fracture in his lower back, meanwhile, left-arm spinner Doran is out with a broken hand.

Leg spinner Zulfiqar has played the last of his six T20Is in 2019, however, he is an active member of the Netherlands’ ODI team. He has played 15 ODIs and was also part of the World Cup 2023 squad.

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Kyle Klein, a right-arm fast bowler, made his international debut earlier this year, representing the Dutch side in four games.

The Netherlands are currently playing a tri-series involving Scotland and Ireland.

In the T20 World Cup, they are placed in Group D with South Africa, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Nepal. They will kick off their T20 World Cup campaign against Nepal on June 4 against Nepal at Grand Prairie Stadium in Dallas.

Netherlands’ updated squad for T20 World Cup

Scott Edwards (c, wk), Aryan Dutt, Bas de Leede, Kyle Klein, Logan van Beek, Max O’Dowd, Michael Levitt, Paul van Meekeren, Saqib Zulfiqar, Sybrand Engelbrecht, Teja Nidamanuru, Tim Pringle, Vikramjit Singh, Vivian Kingma, Wesley Barresi.

READ: Ricky Ponting reveals reason for rejecting India’s head coach role

Key players dropped as Netherlands announce squad for T20 World Cup

AMSTELVEEN: The Netherlands have announced a 16-member squad for the upcoming ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024, scheduled to take place in June in the West Indies and the United States of America (USA).

The Netherlands have left out experienced all-rounder Roelof van der Merwe and batter Colin Ackermann from their T20 World Cup squad, in favour of younger and more promising players.

Young hard-hitting batter Michael Levitt, who rose to prominence after hitting a scintillating century against Namibia in February, made it into the Dutch squad for the mega-event.

Wicketkeeper Scott Edwards will continue to lead the squad, which also features star all-rounder Bas de Leede.

“We have been able to select a well-balanced team which we are confident will be able to perform in the conditions against the opposition we face in the US and West Indies,” Netherlands head coach Ryan Cook said.

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“All of the players have been training well and have been involved in the recent ProSeries with some exciting performances showing the growing depth and quality in Netherlands cricket.

“We have managed to perform admirably in the last two World Cups we have participated in and will be determined to rise to the challenges we face ahead to reach the next round of the tournament.”

The Dutch team is placed in Group D with South Africa, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Nepal. They will kick off their T20 World Cup campaign against Nepal on June 4 against Nepal at Grand Prairie Stadium in Dallas.

Netherlands squad for T20 World Cup

Scott Edwards (c, wk), Aryan Dutt, Bas de Leede, Daniel Doram, Fred Klaassen, Kyle Klein, Logan van Beek, Max O’Dowd, Michael Levitt, Paul van Meekeren, Sybrand Engelbrecht, Teja Nidamanuru, ⁠⁠Tim Pringle, Vikram Singh, Viv Kingma, Wesley Barresi

READ: Shahid Afridi lauds Pakistan batters’ strike rates in second Ireland T20I

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