JOHANNESBURG: Opener Karim Sadiq dreams of scoring a century on Friday and snatching a place at the 2011 World Cup for mighty minnows Afghanistan.
The war-torn country face Namibia in their last World Cup Qualifier Super 8 fixture and victory would lift them to six points on the standings and offer a slender chance of squeezing through on net run rate.
But the Afghans will require plenty of favours from rivals among the eight survivors on a day when Ireland, who became the first qualifiers on Wednesday, face Kenya, Scotland play United Arab Emirates and Canada meet Netherlands.
So intriguing is the situation that the second-placed Canadians could fail to make the fourth-place cut-off for World Cup slots while bottom-of-the-table Scotland still hold a mathematical chance.
Sadiq, whose 92 runs and two wickets helped Afghanistan to a 42-run midweek victory over Scotland, insists a team of cricket warriors have not abandoned hope of completing a fairytale rise from obscurity to the World Cup.
"I hope to score a century on Friday and give my country a big chance of getting to the World Cup," he told AFP between taking phone calls from well wishers at home.
Coach Kabir Khan, a former Pakistan Test paceman, insists failure is a word long banished from the Afghan cricket lexicon as they seek to defy overwhelming odds and reach the pinnacle of the world one-day game.