Sports
Russell sizzles on comeback to give West Indies early lead
West Indies allrounder Andre Russell sizzled in his comeback game for West Indies to give the hosts a 1-0 series lead in the T20I series against England. Russell starred with both ball and bat as West Indies chased down the target set by England easily in the end with 11 balls to spare in Barbados.
After being asked to bat first, England got off to a terrific start by plundering 77 runs in the powerplay. Phil Salt got going with three fours in the very first over. Jos Buttler then picked a boundary each off the next two overs before paddling one fine for a six off Russell in the penultimate over of the powerplay. But it was the final over that hurt West Indies big time. Alzarri Joseph made a nightmarish start as he first conceded a four and a six to Salt before Buttler punished a free-hit for a boundary. And if that wasn’t enough, a slower ball down leg wasn’t collected by Nicholas Pooran as West Indies conceded five wides to eventually make it a 26-run over.
The first ball after the powerplay fetched a wicket as the dangerous Salt departed for a 20-ball 40, giving Russell his first wicket. Joseph continued to leak runs by conceding 17 in his second but that over also saw him get rid of Will Jacks, who had just hammered successive sixes. At the halfway mark, England 112 on the board and were well on their way to going past 200.
The second half of the innings was completely in contrast to the first one. Buttler had slowed down and mistimed a pull to get caught for 39 and Harry Brook failed to fire after getting outfoxed by a slower ball from Jason Holder. And if that wasn’t enough, England also lost Ben Duckett at a crucial juncture, handing over the finishing duties to Sam Curran and Liam Livingstone. The odd boundary did arrive and Livingstone threatened to give England a late push towards 200 after smashing Holder for back-to-back sixes but in a stunning collapse, England went from 165/5 to 171 all out. Russell removed the dangerous Livingstone in his final over and added the wicket of Rehan Ahmed before Joseph made amends with two more wickets to give West Indies complete momentum heading into the innings break.
If England made 13 in the first over to kickstart proceedings, West Indies went one step ahead as Brandon King took on Curran for two sixes and a four which was then followed by a massive six from Kyle Mayers off Will Jacks. While King’s rampage came to a halt after a stunning catch from Duckett, the hosts still made 59 in the first six overs, Mayers and Shai Hope then combined to smash Rehan for three sixes immediately after the PP to take control of the chase.
The chase followed a similar pattern to that of the first innings after the rollicking start. Mayers mistimed one against Adil Rashid to depart for 35 and Rehan made a strong comeback with the wicket of Pooran, Rashid was going through an excellent spell and accounted for the big wicket of Shimron Hetmyer as well which was also incidentally his 100th wicket in this format in his 100th game. Thankfully for the hosts, the rain arrived in the following over causing a break in England’s momentum.
West Indies were six runs ahead via DLS at that stage but play did resume around 40 minutes after the players left the field. Rehan then caused a huge dent post-resumption with a double wicket over that reduced WI to 123/6 but the batting side were still in with a chance with Russell walking out at No.8. Having already impressed with the ball in his first game in two years for WI, Russell saw Rovman Powell ease the pressure with successive sixes before unleashing himself. England just couldn’t stop the flow of boundaries as Russell and Powel caused mayhem before the former finished it off in the penultimate over.
Brief scores:
England171 in 19.3 overs (Philip Salt 40, Jos Buttler 39, Liam Livingstone 27; Akeel Hossain 1-32, Jason Holder 1-43, Andre Russell 3/19, Alzarri Joseph 3-54, Romairo Sheppard 2-22) lost to West Indies172/6 in 18.1 overs (Brandon King 22, Shai Hope 36, Kyle Mayers 35, Rovman Powell 31*, Andre Russel 29* ; Chris Woakes 1-15, Rehan Ahmed 3/39, Adil Rashid 2-25) by 4 wickets
Sports
Sai Sudharsan century, Padikkal 94* put India A in command
B Sai Sudarshan had retired hurt during the first four-day fixture between Sri Lanka A and India A, but returned to action with an unbeaten century on day two of the second game at Galle. He was unbeaten on 104 at stumps, and giving him company was Devdutt Padikkal, who was 94 not out.
Sai Sudharsan and Padikkal’s partnership was unbroken on 181 for the second wicket, leaving India A only another 119 runs behind Sri Lanka A’s first-innings total of 366.
India A had started positively, with Sai Sudharsan and his opening partner Aman Mokhade bringing up their half-century stand off just 63 balls. While Sai Sudharsan had hit five boundaries until that stage, Mokhade had hit four. But offspinner Keshara Nuwantha broke the stand at 66 when he had Mokhade caught for 38.
Despite the loss, Sai Sudharsan and Padikkal kept India A going by steadily chipping into the hosts’ total. The runs kept coming at a steady pace for the visitors, who had, earlier in the day, bagged the last five Sri Lanka A wickets for just 61 runs.
Sri Lanka A had resumed on 288 for 5, with their captain Sahan Arachchige unbeaten on 83. He hit the second ball of the day, bowled by Gurnoor Brar, for four, but the fast bowler broke the sixth-wicket partnership on 35 when he had Chamika Gunasekara caught behind for 13 in the 92nd over. Arachchige, meanwhile, reached his century in the 94th over. He kept Sri Lanka A ticking in a steady eighth-wicket stand with Dilum Sudeera after Saransh Jain got Nuwantha for 1.
Sudeera contributed a handy 20 before Jain had him lbw in the 109th over, before Grunoor wrapped up the innings in the next over. He dismissed Arachchige for 127 and last batter Asanka Manoj two balls later to bowl Sri Lanka A out in 110 overs. That was lunch, and both Gurnoor and Jain finished with four wickets each. India A then carried the momentum into the next two sessions of the day.
Scores:
India A 247 for 1 in 63 overs (B Sai Sudharsan 104*, Devdutt Padikkal 94*; Keshara Huwantha 1-63) trail Sri Lanka A 366 in 110 overs (Nuwanidu Fernando 44, Sahan Arachchige 127, Anjala Bandara 42; Gurnoor Brar 4-77, Saransh Jain 4-92, Yash Thakur 2-46) by 119 runs
[Cricinfo]
Latest News
Hope returns, Roach out for West Indies after injury-hit Sri Lanka bat
Sri Lanka won the toss and made the surprise call to bat first on a North Sound surface with a fair covering of grass. West Indies lead the two match series 1-0.
Dhananjaya de Silva’s focus at the toss was on picking up 20 wickets and Sri Lanka’s inability to do so in the first Test, which he cited as a primary reason for their heavy defeat. Roston Chase was quite happy to bowl first, stating that it was what he would have done had he won the toss.
There were changes for both teams, with several of those injury-enforced. West Indies welcomed back Shai Hope with Joshua Da Silva making way. Kemar Roach also missed out with an injury, with Anderson Phillip replacing him to keep four pacers in the playing XI.
Sri Lanka made three changes, as Pathum Nissanka, Lahiru Kumara and Kasun Rajitha missed out. Nissanka underwent a wrist surgery, while Kumara suffered a hamstring injury in the first Test. Lahiru Udara, Prabath Jayasuriya and debutant pace-bowling all-rounder Isitha Wijesundera all came in.
With the pitch described as even, with a fair covering of grass with a tinge of green on it, Sri Lanka’s decision to bat first caught a few off-guard. West Indies’ four-pronged pace attack will once more look to test the Lankan top order – particularly in the first hour of play. The pitch was also expected to show some uneven bounce with a few cracks on it. Sri Lanka do have the extra spinner in their lineup, and will be hoping that when it comes time for them to bowl there will be some assistance for the slower bowlers.
The weather remained dry, but there was some forecast for rain.
West Indies: John Campbell, Brandon King, Kavem Hodge, Amir Jangoo Shai Hope (wk), Roston Chase (capt), Justin Greaves, Jayden Seales, Alzarri Joseph, Shamar Joseph, Anderson Phillip
Sri Lanka: Lahiru Udara, Nishan Madushka, Dinesh Chandimal, Kamindu Mendis, Dhananjaya de Silva (capt), Kusal Mendis (wk), Sonal Dinusha, Prabath Jayasuriya, Milan Rathnayake, Isitha Wijesundara, Asitha Fernando
(Cricinfo)
Sports
Juventus Training Camp from 6-10 July in Colombo
The much anticipated Juventus Training Camp organized by the Colombo Kickerz Football Academy will take place from 6th to 10th July at the CR&FC Grounds Colombo.
The Camp will be conducted by two official Juventus Academy coaches from Italy, and will provide 50 young footballers from across the country to participate in an intensive program based on the renowned Juventus methodology, focusing on technical development, tactical understanding, team work, discipline and personal growth.
Romario de Silva CEO of Colombo Kickerz Football Academy said that the objective of the Academy was to provide young footballers with access to world class coaching and international development opportunities.
He added that the Training Camp was made possible through the valued support of Hilton Colombo Residencies, Aitken Spence travels, The Pappare and Lady J.
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