T20 World Cup: Munsey, Leask power Scotland to big win over Italy

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Last updated on: February 09, 2026 18:39 IST

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George Munsey's quickfire fifty and Michael Leask's all-round show helped Scotland rout debutant Italy by 73 runs in Kolkata.

Michael Leask

IMAGE: Scotland's Michael Leask celebrates a wicket during the T20 World Cup match against Italy in Kolkata on Monday. Photograph: ANI Photo

Key Points

  • Scotland registered an emphatic 73-run victory against Italy.
  • George Munsey, who survived a reprieve on 41, smashed a quickfire 84 off 54 balls.
  • Michael Leask smashed 22 from five balls before grabbing 4/17 with the ball.

All-rounder Michael Leask starred with a late cameo and a four-wicket haul after opener George Munsey's attacking fifty as Scotland thrashed debutants Italy by 73 runs in their T20 World Cup Group C match in Kolkata on Monday.

 

The left-hander Munsey, who survived a reprieve on 41, dominated the bowling with a fluent 84 off 54 balls (14x4, 2x6) before Leask gave the final flourish in a 22 not out from last five balls, smoking Thomas Draca for two sixes and two fours at the Eden Gardens.

After his quickfire cameo, the off-spinner took a wicket off the first ball of the innings and returned figures of 4/17. Italy folded for 134 for nine in 16.4 overs as captain Wayne Madsen did not bat after suffering a shoulder injury earlier in the game.

Scotland

IMAGE: Scotland's players celebrate the wicket of Italy's J J Smuts. Photograph: ANI Photo

West Indies, Scotland and England now take the top-three spots in group C, separated by net run-rate. Scotland have played two matches while England and WI have played one each.

Italy's chase began poorly as Leask struck with the very first ball, removing Justin Mosca.

He remained the busiest man on the field, breaking partnerships at crucial moments.

JJ Smuts briefly lifted Italy's spirits, taking 23 runs off Brad Wheal's third over with a sequence of 6, 4, 6, while Anthony Mosca added another big hit.

Despite losing three wickets inside the first 28 balls, Italy showed fight through Ben Manenti (52 off 31), who scored the country's first-ever T20 World Cup fifty.

He reached the landmark in 29 balls, hitting Oliver Davidson over midwicket for six.

Ben and his brother Harry added 73 runs off just 46 balls to raise hopes, with Harry scoring 37.

But Leask broke the stand against the run of play, dismissing Harry, and Ben followed in the next over soon.

The off-spinner then removed Grant Stewart and Gian-Piero Meade in the space of four balls to finish to cap his spell.

Scotland also had a point to prove, having lost to Italy -- their only defeat in four matches -- at last July's European qualifiers to miss a direct World Cup berth.

A dramatic late entry following Bangladesh's refusal to play India on security grounds brought them back into the tournament, and they responded in style against their European rivals.

Earlier, opener Munsey struck an attacking fifty before Brendon McMullen and Michael Leask unleashed a late blitz as Scotland piled up 207 for 4, the first 200-plus total of this T20 World Cup, against Italy in their Group C match.

Munsey struck a fluent half-century

George Munsey

IMAGE: Scotland's George Munsey celebrates his half-century . Photograph: ANI Photo

The left-hander Munsey, who survived a reprieve on 41, dominated the bowling with a fluent 84 off 54 balls, striking 14 fours and two sixes, as he shared a tall 126-run opening stand with Michael Jones (37 off 30) to put Italy on the back foot.

Scotland, who had looked rusty in their 35-run defeat to West Indies in the opener, were far sharper this time, scoring freely from the outset.

After Munsey fell, McMullen maintained the charge with four sixes in an unbeaten 41 off 18 balls, while Leask gave the final flourish in a 22 not out from five balls, taking 22 off Thomas Draca in the final over.

Apart from getting the toss right, little went Italy's way.

Their troubles deepened when captain Wayne Madsen injured his left shoulder after an awkward dive in the fourth over and had to walk off. He will not take further part in the game.

Having lost to Italy in their only defeat in four matches at last July's European qualifiers to miss a direct World Cup berth, Scotland also had a point to prove.

They made a dramatic late entry into the tournament following Bangladesh's refusal to play India on security grounds.

Munsey set the tone immediately, pulling and driving Ali Hasan for back-to-back boundaries in the first over.

Italy's bowlers persisted short and wide and the aggressive opener cashed in.

He was dropped on 41 when Anthony Mosca spilled a skier at cover, a lapse that proved costly as Munsey raced to his 14th T20 fifty off just 30 balls with a six against Ben Manenti.

Jones, who was watchful early on, joined the charge as Scotland reached 91 without loss at the halfway mark.

Munsey grew increasingly destructive after his fifty before Italy finally broke through in the 14th over when Grant Stewart claimed their first-ever World Cup wicket.

The opener failed to clear long-on and was caught by Harry Manenti.

Jones departed soon after, but McMullen provided the late surge along with Leask.

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