LEADING THE WAY: West Indies captain Kraigg Braithwaite bats during the ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cup 2012 match against Zimbabwe at Endeavour Park in Townsville, Australia, yesterday. The Young Windies won by six wickets. —Photo: Getty Images

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Windies U-19s beat Zimbabwe by six wickets

l TOWNSVILLE

West Indies commanded top spot in Group C of the Under-19 World Cup with another collective bowling performance setting up their third victory in three matches yesterday.

Their fast bowlers struck early and there was no easing of pressure from the spinners either, as Zimbabwe were limited to a below-par total on a small ground at Endeavour Park

The West Indian chase, however, did not begin smoothly–they lost two wickets in the third over--but captain Kraigg Brathwaite stayed firm at his end to see the chase through. The only Test batsman in the tournament, Brathwaite was undefeated on 70 when the target was achieved in the 36th over.

West Indies will now face New Zealand in the quarter-finals on Monday (7.30 p.m. Sunday T&T time).

"You don't play four quicks to bat first," West Indies coach Roddy Estwick said after his team had won the toss.

Ronsford Beaton led the attack once again, giving away nothing at his end. In his fourth over, he produced a bouncer that reared up at Luke Masasire and kissed the glove on the way through to the wicketkeeper Sunil Ambris. That was the only wicket Beaton would pick up during an incredibly economical spell of 9-4-9-1.

Two balls later, left-arm fast bowler Jerome Jones got Matthew Bentley nicking to Ambris as well.

All-rounder Kyle Mayers could have had Ryan Burl in his first over but Kavem Hodge dropped the top-edged hook at third man. Mayers got Kevin Kasuza instead, bowled by a straight ball that the batsman played across to. Burl went on to play a proper hook against Justin Greaves, hitting the ball over the boundary of the adjacent ground, where India were batting against Papua New Guinea. He didn't last long, though, and was caught behind for 13.

Zimbabwe continued to struggle against pace and also against spin.

Left-arm spinner Akeal Hosein bowled three maidens in his 10-over spell of two for 16. His first wicket was that of Malcolm Lake, who had scored a blistering century against India. Lake was Zimbabwe's top scorer once again, making 31 before chipping the ball back to Hosein in the 32nd over. The tail managed to survive through to 50 overs, finishing on 148 for eight.

West Indies conceded 24 runs in extras, 18 of those through wides.

Brathwaite glanced the first ball of the chase off his pads to the fine-leg boundary, and then watched two of his teammates play loose shots.

Sunil Ambris, who had destroyed Papua New Guinea at this venue, pulled a short ball from Kieran Geyle--who was bowling left-arm spin-- straight to deep-square leg. The next ball, John Campbell slogged wildly across the line and top-edged to short third man. West Indies were six for two in the third over.

Although he took those early wickets, Geyle dropped far too short, allowing Brathwaite to pull him repeatedly to the mid-wicket boundary. The West Indies skipper lost two more partners cheaply, but remained unfazed. He was dropped during his half-century, by Andre Odendaal off leg-spinner Peacemore Zimwa at mid-on, but West Indies were well on course by then.

Mayers struck powerful blows to accelerate the chase on the home straight and knock Zimbabwe out of the World Cup. –ESPNcricinfo

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