West Indies Cricket Team vs Scotland National Cricket Team Match Scorecard : Full Batting, Bowling Stats and Tactical Breakdown
West Indies beat Scotland by 35 runs at Eden Gardens, Kolkata, completing a statement win built on Shimron Hetmyer’s explosive 64 and Romario Shepherd’s historic hat-trick-laced 5/20. If you’re searching for the complete West Indies Cricket Team vs Scotland National Cricket Team Match Scorecard, this guide covers every run, wicket, partnership, and tactical decision from the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 Group C fixture-including full batting cards, bowling figures, fall of wickets, ball-by-ball timelines, and the story behind why Scotland’s chase unraveled so dramatically. This wasn’t a routine associate-versus-full-member mismatch. Scotland actually controlled large stretches of this contest, and understanding exactly where the game turned tells you far more about both sides than the final score line suggests.
Match Result Summary
West Indies Cricket Team vs Scotland National Cricket Team Match Scorecard, West Indies won by 35 runs after posting 182/5 in 20 overs and restricting Scotland to 147 all out in 18.5 overs. Scotland’s national cricket team won the toss and chose to field first at Eden Gardens, a decision that looked shrewd through the Power Play but ultimately backfired once Hetmyer took control in the middle overs. The result places West Indies firmly ahead in Group C’s early standings and hands them momentum heading into their next fixture, while Scotland will need to regroup after a chase that promised far more than it delivered.
Quick Match Facts
- Result: West Indies won by 35 runs
- Venue: Eden Gardens, Kolkata
- Toss: Scotland won, elected to field first
- Player of the Match: Shimron Hetmyer (64 off 36 balls)
- Format: T20I, ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026, Group C
- Series context: Second-ever men’s T20I meeting between the two nations
Eden Gardens has long been considered a batting-friendly venue with true bounce and minimal lateral movement once the ball loses its hardness, and this match followed that pattern closely-West Indies’ acceleration after the tenth over reflected exactly the kind of surface that rewards clean hitting over subtle variation.

West Indies Batting Scorecard: How 182/5 Was Built
West Indies posted 182/5 in 20 overs, powered by Hetmyer’s 64 off 36 balls and explosive finishing cameos from Rovman Powell and Sherfane Rutherford. The innings shifted from cautious accumulation to outright aggression the moment Hetmyer settled at the crease around the tenth over, and that shift alone decided the eventual margin of victory. Brandon King and Shai Hope gave West Indies a measured opening, working the gaps against the new ball without taking excessive risk. Neither opener was overly troubled by Scotland’s swing bowling, but both eventually fell attempting to force the pace once the required acceleration point arrived. Their dismissals inside a single over could have derailed the innings against a stronger middle-overs attack-instead, it simply cleared the stage for Hetmyer.
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Full Batting Card
| Batter | Dismissal | Runs | Balls | 4s | 6s | SR |
| Brandon King | c Munsey b Davidson | 35 | 30 | 4 | 1 | 116.67 |
| Shai Hope (c, wk) | b Leask | 19 | 22 | 2 | 0 | 86.36 |
| Shimron Hetmyer | c McMullen b Sharif | 64 | 36 | 2 | 6 | 177.78 |
| Rovman Powell | c Jones b Currie | 24 | 14 | 1 | 2 | 171.43 |
| Sherfane Rutherford | c Jones b Currie | 26 | 13 | 4 | 1 | 200.00 |
| Romario Shepherd | not out | 6 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 200.00 |
| Matthew Forde | not out | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 50.00 |
Extras totaled 7 (1 bye, 2 leg-byes, 4 wides). Jason Holder, Akeal Hosein, Shamar Joseph, and Gudakesh Motie did not need to bat, a clear sign of how comprehensively the top and middle order finished the job.
West Indies Fall of Wickets
- 54-1 (Shai Hope, 8.2 overs)
- 58-2 (Brandon King, 9.2 overs)
- 139-3 (Rovman Powell, 15.3 overs)
- 175-4 (Shimron Hetmyer, 18.6 overs)
- 175-5 (Sherfane Rutherford, 19.1 overs)
The 58/2 to 175/4 stretch inside roughly ten overs is the single most important number in this entire scorecard. That’s a surge of 117 runs off just sixty-odd balls, and it represents exactly the window where Scotland’s bowling plans came apart against Hetmyer’s dominance on the leg side. Powell and Rutherford’s cameos, arriving late in the innings, converted an already strong position into a genuinely imposing one-Powell’s 24 off 14 balls at a strike rate above 171 and Rutherford’s 26 off 13 at exactly 200 both came at a stage when Scotland’s bowlers had no fresh tactical options left to try.
Partnership Breakdown
The most damaging stand of the innings was the 50-run partnership between Hetmyer and Powell, which came off just 19 balls for the third wicket. That single burst turned a total that might have finished around 150-160 into one nearing 180, and it’s the kind of acceleration that separates competitive T20 totals from genuinely difficult ones.
Scotland Bowling Scorecard: Where Control Slipped
Brad Currie was Scotland’s most economical bowler with figures of 2/23, but his early breakthroughs weren’t backed up during the middle-overs phase. Mark Watt and Safyaan Sharif, tasked with containing West Indies once the powerplay restrictions eased, leaked a combined 84 runs across eight overs without a matching return in wickets.
Full Bowling Card
| Bowler | Overs | Maidens | Runs | Wickets | Economy |
| Brandon McMullen | 1 | 0 | 7 | 0 | 7.00 |
| Brad Currie | 4 | 0 | 23 | 2 | 5.75 |
| Mark Watt | 4 | 0 | 38 | 0 | 9.50 |
| Safyaan Sharif | 4 | 0 | 46 | 1 | 11.50 |
| Olly Davidson | 3 | 0 | 23 | 1 | 7.66 |
| Michael Leask | 4 | 0 | 42 | 1 | 10.50 |
Sharif’s economy rate of 11.50 stands out as the costliest spell of the innings, largely because he was the bowler specifically targeted during Hetmyer’s six-hitting phase in the closing overs. Watt’s figures of 0/38 are almost as telling-four overs bowled without reward against a set batter is precisely the kind of mismatch that swings a T20 innings decisively.
Why Scotland’s Bowling Plans Failed Against Hetmyer
Scotland’s attack relies heavily on left-arm variations from Watt and disciplined seam bowling from Currie and Davidson, a combination that has troubled full-member sides before. Against Hetmyer specifically, the issue wasn’t pace or bounce-it was repetition. Once Hetmyer identified that both Watt and Sharif were bowling similar lengths on the stumps, he was able to premeditate his shots without significant risk, turning good-length deliveries into six-hitting opportunities rather than defensive options.
Scotland Batting Scorecard: The Chase That Fell Apart
Scotland’s chase collapsed from a promising 133/6 to 133/9 within the space of three balls, as Romario Shepherd’s hat-trick over gutted the innings at a stage when the target of 183 was still realistically within reach. Before that dramatic collapse, Richie Berrington and Tom Bruce had built genuine momentum with a partnership that made the chase look thoroughly competitive.
Full Batting Card
| Batter | Dismissal | Runs | Balls | 4s | 6s | SR |
| George Munsey | c Hetmyer b Joseph | 19 | 15 | 3 | 0 | 126.67 |
| Michael Jones | c Rutherford b Holder | 1 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 20.00 |
| Brandon McMullen | b Shepherd | 14 | 12 | 1 | 1 | 116.67 |
| Richie Berrington (c) | c Joseph b Holder | 42 | 24 | 3 | 2 | 175.00 |
| Tom Bruce | lbw b Motie | 35 | 28 | 1 | 2 | 125.00 |
| Matthew Cross (wk) | c Rutherford b Shepherd | 11 | 11 | 1 | 0 | 100.00 |
| Mark Watt | c Shepherd b Holder | 15 | 12 | 2 | 0 | 125.00 |
| Michael Leask | c Powell b Shepherd | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0.00 |
| Olly Davidson | b Shepherd | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0.00 |
| Safyaan Sharif | c Holder b Shepherd | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0.00 |
| Brad Currie | not out | 2 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 66.67 |
Extras totaled 8 (1 leg-bye, 1 no-ball, 6 wides).
Scotland Fall of Wickets
- 7-1 (Michael Jones, 1.2 overs)
- 31-2 (Brandon McMullen, 4.3 overs)
- 37-3 (George Munsey, 5.4 overs)
- 115-4 (Richie Berrington, 13.2 overs)
- 122-5 (Tom Bruce, 14.3 overs)
- 133-6 (Matthew Cross, 16.2 overs)
- 133-7 (Michael Leask, 16.3 overs)
- 133-8 (Olly Davidson, 16.4 overs)
- 133-9 (Safyaan Sharif, 16.6 overs)
- 147-10 (Mark Watt, 18.5 overs)
The Berrington-Bruce Rebuild
After losing three wickets for 37 runs inside six overs, Scotland’s chase looked all but finished before it had properly begun. Berrington and Bruce’s partnership from 37/3 to 115/4-a stand worth 78 runs-is arguably the most impressive piece of batting in the entire match given the situation they inherited. Berrington’s captaincy under pressure showed in his shot selection, rotating strike patiently before accelerating once the platform was secure, while Bruce complemented him with clean hitting through the covers. This partnership alone proves Scotland’s batting unit is capable of competing seriously against full-member bowling attacks when conditions allow for it.
West Indies Bowling Scorecard: Shepherd’s Historic Spell
Romario Shepherd finished with figures of 5/20 from three overs, including a hat-trick that made him the first West Indies bowler ever to take one in T20 World Cup history. His economy rate of 6.66 made him the standout performer among a disciplined West Indies attack that gave Scotland no room to build sustained momentum.
Full Bowling Card
| Bowler | Overs | Maidens | Runs | Wickets | Economy |
| Matthew Forde | 2 | 0 | 15 | 0 | 7.50 |
| Jason Holder | 3.5 | 0 | 30 | 3 | 7.82 |
| Romario Shepherd | 3 | 0 | 20 | 5 | 6.66 |
| Shamar Joseph | 4 | 0 | 26 | 1 | 6.50 |
| Gudakesh Motie | 4 | 0 | 29 | 1 | 7.25 |
| Akeal Hosein | 2 | 0 | 26 | 0 | 13.00 |
Jason Holder’s figures of 3/30 are easy to overlook next to Shepherd’s headline haul, but his early wicket of Michael Jones inside the second over set the tone for a chase that never found stable footing until Berrington and Bruce intervened. Shamar Joseph’s dismissal of George Munsey, meanwhile, ended what had briefly looked like a positive start for Scotland’s top order.
The Anatomy of a T20 World Cup Hat-Trick
Shepherd’s hat-trick came in the 17th over, removing Michael Leask, Olly Davidson, and Safyaan Sharif on consecutive deliveries. What made the spell so devastating wasn’t raw pace-it was variation. The first wicket came from a slower ball that beat Leask’s attempted slog, the second from a nip-backer that caught Davidson’s inside edge, and the third from a full delivery that trapped Sharif dead in front. Three completely different dismissal types in three balls is a rare feat, and it’s precisely why this spell now sits among the tournament’s defining moments.
Match Timeline: Ball-by-Ball Turning Points
The two biggest momentum shifts of the match were Hetmyer‘s arrival at 58/2 in the West Indies innings and Shepherd’s hat-trick over at 133/6 in Scotland’s chase. Here’s how both innings unfolded across the key phases.

West Indies Innings Timeline
- 1.2 overs: King and Hope settle West Indies into a watchful start after Scotland choose to field first.
- 6.0 overs: West Indies reach 33/0 at the end of the powerplay, a solid but unspectacular platform.
- 8.2 to 9.2 overs: Hope and King fall in quick succession, leaving West Indies at 58/2 and needing a rebuild.
- 10th over onward: Hetmyer arrives at the crease and immediately shifts the tempo, targeting Watt and Sharif specifically.
- 15.3 overs: Powell departs after a blistering 24 off 14 balls, but by this point the acceleration is already locked in.
- 16.5 overs: West Indies cross 150, having added exactly 92 runs in the previous seven overs.
- 18.6 to 19.1 overs: Hetmyer (64 off 36) and Rutherford (26 off 13) both fall in the same over, but West Indies are already safely past 175.
- 20th over: West Indies close on 182/5, a total that ultimately proves 35 runs too many for Scotland.
Scotland Innings Timeline
- 1.2 overs: Michael Jones departs cheaply, Scotland slipping to 7/1 inside the second over of the chase.
- 5.4 overs: Munsey’s dismissal leaves Scotland at 37/3, in serious early trouble against the new-ball attack.
- 13.2 to 14.3 overs: Berrington (42 off 24) and Bruce (35 off 28) rebuild steadily to 122/5, keeping realistic hope alive.
- 16.2 to 16.6 overs: The innings implodes from 133/6 to 133/9 in the space of five deliveries, capped by Shepherd’s hat-trick.
- 18.5 overs: Scotland are bowled out for 147, sealing a 35-run defeat.
Why Scotland Lost Despite Winning the Toss
Scotland’s real mistake wasn’t the decision to field first-it was allowing Hetmyer to bat almost unchallenged for close to ten overs once West Indies had slipped to 58/2. Sharif and Davidson had both extracted early success against King and Hope with the new ball, and Scotland had every reason to feel they’d won the powerplay battle on a surface offering some seam movement early on.
But once Hetmyer settled in, Scotland’s attack had no consistent answer for his hitting on the leg side. Four of his six sixes came off repeated length deliveries rather than genuinely varied ones, and Watt’s four overs for 38 runs without taking a wicket reflect exactly where that lack of control cost Scotland the game. This single stretch-58/2 ballooning to 175/4 inside ten overs-represents the true difference between a defendable target and a match-winning one.
Scotland’s chase, in fairness, proved their batting depth is genuinely competitive at this level. The Berrington-Bruce stand from 37/3 to 115/4 showed they can match a full-member attack stroke for stroke when conditions allow. The eventual collapse wasn’t really a batting failure so much as one over of elite fast-bowling execution from Shepherd-his slower-ball variation and a nip-backer that beat Davidson’s inside edge exposed Scotland’s lack of a genuine finisher capable of absorbing pressure once panic set in at 133/6.
Tactical Lessons for Both Sides
For West Indies, the takeaway is straightforward: their middle order, when set, can turn any position into a match-winning one within a handful of overs. That flexibility gives their captain enormous tactical freedom in future fixtures, since a slow start no longer guarantees a modest total.
For Scotland, the lesson is more structural. Their new-ball bowling remains genuinely threatening against top-order batters, but their middle-overs containment-particularly against left-handers hitting straight-needs sharper variation. Relying on Watt and Sharif to bowl similar lengths repeatedly gave Hetmyer exactly the predictability he needed to premeditate shots safely.
Key Stats and Records From the Match
Romario Shepherd’s hat-trick is the first by any West Indies bowler in T20 World Cup history and only the tenth overall in the tournament’s history. A handful of other numbers from this scorecard carry similar significance for context.
- Hetmyer’s 64 off 36 balls included six sixes, with 44 of his 64 runs coming directly from boundaries.
- Scotland’s innings collapsed from 133/6 to 133/9 across just three deliveries in the 17th over.
- This was only the second-ever men’s T20I meeting between the two sides, Scotland had won the previous encounter by 42 runs at the 2022 T20 World Cup in Hobart.
- West Indies’ powerplay yielded 33 runs without loss, a platform that supported the eventual late-innings acceleration.
- Shepherd’s economy rate of 6.66 was the best among all bowlers in the match.
- Berrington’s strike rate of 175.00 was the highest among Scotland’s specialist batters.

Head-to-Head Record: West Indies vs Scotland
West Indies now lead the men’s T20I head-to-head 1-1 against Scotland after this result leveled the overall series. Scotland’s 42-run win in Hobart during the 2022 T20 World Cup remains their only victory over West Indies in this still-young rivalry, which makes this Eden Gardens result a firm statement response from the Caribbean side heading into the rest of the tournament. Historically, West Indies’ white-ball squads have leaned on explosive middle-order hitting to overcome slow starts, a pattern that repeated itself almost exactly in this match. Scotland, for their part, continue to show they can trouble established teams in patches, even if closing out a chase against elite death bowling remains a work in progress, West Indies Cricket Team vs Scotland National Cricket Team Match Scorecard.
Frequently Asked Questions:
Who won the West Indies vs Scotland match?
West Indies won by 35 runs, posting 182/5 and restricting Scotland to 147 all out in 18.5 overs.
Who was named Player of the Match?
Shimron Hetmyer, for his 64 off 36 balls featuring six sixes.
What was the standout bowling performance in the match?
Romario Shepherd’s 5/20 in three overs, including a hat-trick in the 17th over, the first-ever T20 World Cup hat-trick by a West Indies bowler.
What was the toss decision in this match?
Scotland’s national cricket team won the toss and chose to field first at Eden Gardens.
Where was the West Indies Cricket Team vs Scotland National Cricket Team Match Scorecard played?
Eden Gardens, Kolkata, as part of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 Group C fixture.
What is the head-to-head record between West Indies and Scotland?
This was only the second men’s T20I meeting between the two teams, Scotland won the first by 42 runs at the 2022 T20 World Cup, and West Indies leveled the series with this Eden Gardens win.
How many sixes did Shimron Hetmyer hit?
Hetmyer hit six sixes during his 64-run innings off 36 balls, at a strike rate of 177.78.
What caused Scotland’s batting collapse?
Scotland collapsed from 133/6 to 133/9 in three balls after Romario Shepherd took a hat-trick during the 17th over of the chase.
Who were the top scorers for Scotland in the chase?
Richie Berrington top-scored with 42 off 24 balls, followed by Tom Bruce with 35 off 28 balls.
What was West Indies’ powerplay score in the match?
West Indies reached 33/0 in the mandatory powerplay overs before accelerating later through Hetmyer and the middle order.
Did any bowler take more than one wicket in an over?
Yes, Romario Shepherd took three wickets in the 17th over of Scotland’s innings, completing a hat-trick that reduced the total from 133/6 to 133/9.