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Shamar hogs limelight after Cummins, Hazlewood show

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Hazlewood and Cummins picked four apiece (Cricbuzz)

Pat Cummins (4-41) and Josh Hazlewood (4-44) picked up four-fers to give Australia opening day honours in the Adelaide Test against West Indies even as the visitors’ debutant Shamar Joseph stole a wee bit of the limelight. Put in to bat first in overcast conditions, West Indies suffered a dramatic collapse of 6 for 35 but Shamar first put on a gusty 55-run final-wicket stand to frustrate the hosts and then struck with his first ball in Test cricket to dismiss ‘new opener’ Steve Smith cheaply.

With a cloud cover overhead, Cummins had no hesitation in going against venue history by sending the inexperienced opposition in to bat first. Australia’s new-ball bowlers were very disciplined in their respective opening spells but without much success. With the ball moving a fair bit, West Indies openers hit survival mode early on and had to work hard for their runs. There were quite a few plays and misses and a couple of edges too that evaded the fielders.

Cummins brought himself on in the 10th over and got the breakthrough almost immediately. He lured Tagenarine Chanderpaul into a drive with a full ball outside off and the opener duly took the bait, sending a thick outside edge to gully. In the same spell, the Australia captain cleaned up Kraigg Brathwaite with an absolute peach to end his defiant 45-ball stay in the middle.

What followed was a series of poor judgement and shot selection from the inexperienced line-up, and a total lack of application as Australia took control of proceedings. West Indies had only begun to rebuild when Hazlewood returned into the attack ahead of Lunch and sent Alick Athannaze packing with a nip backer that came back in to disturb the woodwork as the batter looked to leave but without covering his off-stump.

Kirk McKenzie and debutant Kavem Hodge did well to hold Australia off for the next hour through their fourth-wicket partnership that began before Lunch. However, once that was broken, Hazlewood and Cummins ripped through the middle and lower order. Hazlewood kick-started it with the wicket of Hodge in the over before McKenzie brought up his half-century. After a patient stay in the middle, Hodge paid the price for a lapse in judgement as he sent a thick outside edge to gully attempting a drive off a full ball outside off. McKenzie himself didn’t last long after the milestone, nicking behind as both set batters fell nine runs apart.

Hazlewood picked up his fourth when another West Indies debutant, Justin Greaves, lazily drove away from body to offer short cover a regulation catch. At the other end, Cummins removed Joshua da Silva and Alzarri Joseph in his succeeding overs. The former was set-up with the short ball ploy and eventually ended up pulling one straight to deep square leg while the latter edged to second slip. Sandwiched between the two was Mitchell Starc’s only wicket of the day, that of Gudakesh Motie.

The play in the afternoon session was extended by half an hour but Australia’s hunt for that final wicket stretched 15 minutes past Tea as Shamar decided to entertain the crowd. Windies’ third debutant of the match, Shamar took on Hazlewood’s short ball challenge well and scored a couple of boundaries on the trot and then smoked a six over cow corner. The no. 11’s gutsy knock has been in stark contrast to the other batters, who did not show any application and kept wasting their starts after getting an eye in. He fell for 36 eventually, taking West Indies to a respectable 188 from a precarious 133/9 at one stage.

Australia and Usman Khawaja were edgy with the bat in the beginning with the opener getting an early reprieve on three off Alzarri Joseph’s bowling. However, Shamar came into the attack as first-change bowler and struck gold with a jaffa as he nicked off Australia’s newest Test opener, Smith, on 12. He again dented the home team’s recovery flow by bouncing out Marnus Labuschagne for just 10.

Khawaja and new no. 4 Cam Green saw through the remainder half an hour without any further damage through there were a few nervy moments for the duo with Shamar particularly asking questions of batters consistently. Nevertheless, Australia ended the day well in control with 59/2 on board, their deficit reduced to just 129.

Brief scores:
Australia 59/2 in 21 overs (Usman Khawaja 30*; Shamar Joseph  2-18) trail  West Indies 188 in 62.1 overs  (Kirk McKenzie 50, Shamar Joseph 36; Pat Cummins 4-41, Josh Hazlewood 4-44) by 129 runs



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Commander of the Navy pays courtesy call on Speaker of the Parliament

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The Commander of the Navy, Vice Admiral Damian Fernando paid a courtesy call on the Speaker of the Parliament, Dr Jagath Wickramaratne at the Office of the  Speaker, today (7 July
2026).

The meeting marked the Commander of the Navy’s first official interaction with the Speaker following his assumption of command of the Sri Lanka Navy. During the cordial discussion, they exchanged views on the Navy’s role in matters of national importance.

The formal meeting drew to a close with an exchange of mementoes, signifying the importance of the occasion.

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Woman suspected of Monaco bomb attack found dead in Ukraine

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Interpol Interpol issued a red alert requesting the location and arrest of 39-year-old Anastasiia Berezovska

The woman suspected of carrying out a parcel bombing in Monaco which injured a sanctioned Ukrainian multi-millionaire and his family has been found dead, Ukraine’s security service (SBU) has said.

A cross-border manhunt had been launched for Anastasiia Berezovska, a Ukrainian woman who officials believed had fled the wealthy city-state after planting the bomb in the entrance hall of an apartment building on 29 June.

The 39-year-old’s body was found with gunshot wounds to the head, according to the SBU.

Two people including a current officer within Ukraine’s Ministry of Defence (MoD) have been detained on suspicion of murder.

Berezovska arrived in Ukraine two days after the attack on 1 July, the SBU said in its statement, citing law enforcement sources.

There, she communicated with her family and two men – a former law enforcement officer and a current officer in the MoD’s main intelligence directorate.

The two men were investigated as possible accomplices in the Monaco attack based on information that they “repeatedly transferred funds” to Berezovska’s “crypto and bank accounts”.

The intelligence officer subsequently confessed to Berezovska’s murder and said he had done so with “another suspect”, the agency said.

It continued: “During the search of the former law enforcement officer’s home, a basement room resembling a torture chamber was found.

“Both suspects were detained on suspicion of committing murder with premeditation by a group of individuals.”

An investigation is ongoing with the “personal assistance” of the head of the intelligence directorate Oleg Ivashchenko.

Monaco’s deputy prosecutor Morgan Raymond said Berezovska had spent days casing out the residence and was “disguised as a man” during the attack last Monday.

Three people were injured, two of them seriously, when a package exploded just as they entered the building shortly after 21:00 local time (19:00 GMT).

Berezovska was believed to have fled in a hire car to Italy and onwards to Germany – where special forces searched an apartment rented by a 39-year-old Ukrainian woman “currently on the run” in the central state of Hesse on Thursday, police said.

Interpol issued a red notice alerting police worldwide that she was a fugitive wanted for attempted murder, placing an explosive device on a public road with criminal intent and criminal conspiracy on Friday.

The SBU said Ukrainian authorities had shared all available information with officials in Monaco, with who its prosecutor general was in “close co-operation”.

Law enforcement authorities were working to identify “other suspects” in the attack, it added.

Interpol A woman with dark hair and a serious expression. She wears a striped black and white shirt. On her right arm there appears to be a tattoo of a snake and she is carrying several items in her left hand.
Police released an image of Berezovska on CCTV, pointing to a distinctive tattoo on her arm which they said “possibly” depicted a snake

Authorities in Monaco have not confirmed the victims’ identities, but local media reported Vadym Yermolaiev, his partner and his 13-year-old son had been targeted.

Yermolaiev, a real estate developer, was named the 39th richest Ukrainian by Forbes magazine in 2020 with a reported fortune of $230m (£173.8m).

He has major interests are in wine and alcohol in Crimea, which Russia illegally annexed in 2014, and has been the subject of sanctions imposed by the government in Kyiv since 2023.

He is a Cypriot citizen, having renounced his Ukrainian citizenship in 2019, and has been living in Monaco.

BBC map showing the location of an explosion in the north of Monaco near the border with France. The principality of Monaco is located in the southeast of France on the Mediterranean coast, around 15km (10 miles) to the east of Nice. The map also labels the French commune (town) of Beausoleil which lies across the border from Monaco.
(BBC)
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Balogun reprieve in vain as Belgium beat USA to set up Spain quarterfinal

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Matt Freese of the United States reacts after Belgium's third goal scored by Hans Vanaken of Belgium [Aljazeera]

Belgium dumped USA out of their own World Cup on Monday, as Charles De Ketelaere’s brace secured a 4-1 win that was eclipsed by the bitter row over Folarin Balogun’s ban.

Victory means the Belgians face Spain in the quarterfinals, while the USA follow the other World Cup cohosts, Canada and Mexico, out of the tournament with elimination in the round of 16 after a thoroughly flat performance.

All attention pre-game had been on Balogun’s place in the USA starting lineup, after US President Donald Trump had asked FIFA to review the striker’s one-game suspension for a red card, and the governing body controversially obliged.

Belgium’s starting lineup had a few surprises of its own, with Kevin De Bruyne and Jeremy Doku among the heavyweights benched. But coach Rudi Garcia’s gambit proved inspired, with De Ketelaere grabbing an early goal to puncture the feel-good vibes in Seattle.

Malik Tillman grabbed one back from a free kick, but De Ketelaere swiftly restored Belgium’s lead. A catastrophic piece of goalkeeping by Matt Freese and a late Romelu Lukaku goal left the Americans dead and buried.

FIFA’s move to suspend Balogun’s ban after he was sent off in the previous round against Bosnia and Herzegovina has been slammed by football fans, pundits and players around the world, but there were no such misgivings among the Seattle crowd.

A colossal roar greeted the stadium announcement of Balogun’s name in the starting lineup, vastly dwarfing the cheers even for USA talisman Christian Pulisic.

The “USA” thunderclap then echoed around the stadium, utterly drowning out a small corner of chanting Belgium fans in the opening minutes.

But the American party was swiftly silenced. The majority of 67,000 fans fell silent in the ninth minute as De Ketelaere scored, easily tapping home from close range after Nicolas Raskin’s cross evaded some lax defending.

It was the first time the Americans had conceded the opener all tournament. With the atmosphere deflated, no immediate fightback was visible on the pitch either. The midfield was outgunned, and the defence looked nervous.

On the half-hour mark, Balogun drew a foul on the edge of the area and whipped the crowd back to life. He waved his arms frantically as Tillman – fresh from scoring a free kick against Bosnia – lined up the ball.

Tillman’s shot deflected off the Belgian wall and spun into the net, and the stadium shook.

But the joy was again short-lived. In the 33rd minute, De Ketelaere leapt up to meet Leandro Trossard’s cross, and comfortably out-jumped an off-balance Tim Ream to score his second.

The US inched back into the game as the first half closed out, with Balogun blasting over from a long Tillman throw, then narrowly failing to catch a long ball, again from the Bayer Leverkusen midfielder.

US coach Mauricio Pochettino switched formation at half-time, sending Gio Reyna into the number 10 role and pushing Weston McKennie out to the right. The Americans resumed play with more intensity, pushing higher up the pitch.

But self-inflicted disaster struck in the 57th minute. Freese came out to collect a Belgium long ball, turned to evade the charging De Ketelaere, but then hesitated with his pass.

De Ketelaere jabbed the ball to Hans Vanaken, who made no mistake with an open goal from long range.

Pulisic limped off with an injury minutes later, and with him went the US dreams of reaching a first World Cup quarterfinal since 2002.

His replacement, Sebastian Berhalter, flashed an ambitious shot narrowly wide in the 79th minute, and Balogun had a close-range effort saved soon after.

But Chris Richards handed the ball to Lukaku in stoppage time, and the veteran striker did not hesitate to seal the rout.

[Aljazeera]

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