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Kumara and Asitha strike early after England go 62 ahead
Two early strikes gave Sri Lanka hope as England extended their lead to 97 runs at lunch on the third day of the third Test at The Oval.
Three wickets apiece for Josh Hull and Olly Stone had preserved a 62-run advantage for the hosts in the first innings but Ben Duckett and Ollie Pope, England’s outstanding performers first time out, both fell cheaply before lunch.
Sri Lanka resumed day three on 211 for 5 with a deficit of 114 and, despite three of their players passing fifty, no one went on to get a big score that might have pushed them ahead of England, who were attacking at the start of their second innings.
Duckett picked out mid-on off Asitha Fernando’s 12th delivery, a full, straight one that Duckett, having scored an aggressive 86 in the first innings, mistimed as he tried to go down the ground and departed for just 7.
Sri Lanka introduced Lahiru Kumara for the last over of a morning session extended because of the bad weather that blighted the first two days and he struck with his fourth ball as first-innings centurion Pope edged onto his stumps.
Dan Lawrence, seeking his first score of note since taking over for the injured Zak Crawley at the top of the order at the start of this series, was not out 20 at the break.
Earlier, debutant Hull made amends for dropping Dhananjaya de Silva during a gloomy second evening when he had the Sri Lanka skipper caught with his 11th ball of the day, his attempted pull sailing off the top edge to deep backward square.
Dhananjaya had added just five runs to his overnight score and his dismissal preceded a 20-minute stoppage as a short, sharp rain shower swept through South London.
It also sparked a procession of five wickets for 52 runs in 13.3 overs, Hull, Stone and Chris Woakes sharing four of the five wickets to fall with Gus Atkinson off the field nursing a tight quad. Spinner Shoaib Bashir claimed the last wicket.
Woakes struck in the second over after the rain break, his first ball drawing an edge and Joe Root holding on at slip to end Kamindu Mendis’ innings on 64, having added 10 to his overnight score.
Stone put down a yet-to-score Kumara at mid-on to deny Hull a fourth wicket in almost a carbon copy of Hull’s mistake off Bashir when Dhananjaya was on 23 the previous day.
Stone peppered Milan Rathnayake with a couple of short deliveries before his length ball drew a waft outside off stump and Jamie Smith gathered behind the stumps. Bashir then had Asitha Fernando caught by Smith reverse-sweeping to close the innings.
Brief scores: [at lunch day 03]
England 325 and 35 for 2 (Lawrence 20*) lead Sri Lanka 263 (Dhananjaya de Silva 69, Kamindu Mendis 64; Olly Stone 3-35, Josh Hull 3-53) by 97 runs
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Tickner five-for wraps up innings win for New Zealand
Half-centuries from Stephen Doheny and Lorcan Tucker and a cameo from Mark Adair delayed the inevitable for Ireland before they slid to defeat by an innings and 79 runs against New Zealand. They had begun the third day on 65 for 2, following on with two more days to play and trailing by 246 runs.
They were bowled out for 232 in their second innings, with Blair Tickner hastening New Zealand’s march to victory with his maiden five-wicket haul in Test cricket.
Temperatures finally dropped below 20 degrees Celsius in Belfast – signalling respite from a heat wave in the region – and rain brought an early end to the first session. By then, Ireland had been reduced to 131 for 5.
Nathan Smith – who had taken a six-for in the first innings – plucked out nightwatcher Thomas Mayes within the first five overs of play. A full inswinger had Mayes edging to second slip. At the other end, opener Doheny, who resumed on 26, was nimble-footed in response to early swing.
Despite the overhead clouds, Smith from one end and Tickner from the other bowled with a short-ball plan in mind. The strategy paid dividends when Tickner picked up his third wicket of the innings, in the 26th over: he angled a bouncer into Harry Tector’s shoulders, and he ducked into the ball, which pinged off his bat handle to second slip.
More concerning for Ireland was Curtis Campher retiring hurt on 4, another consequence of a bouncer. He had been struggling against the short deliveries when one reared up and pinged his left hand. He had to walk off for scans, and Ireland played with one batter down thereafter.
Doheny was the third consecutive batter to walk off after facing a snorter; he fended at a Tickner short delivery, and gloved it to gully shortly before the end of the first session.
When New Zealand walked out for the second session, the clouds had partially cleared, and the Dukes ball’s swing had dissipated. New Zealand shuffled their fielders out to pack the off side, and Lorcan Tucker took full toll of deliveries outside off.
Tucker pinged drives away from his body, and evaded the short balls that came his way, bringing up his fifty off 69 deliveries. However, any hopes of an Ireland rearguard disappeared when he fell off his next ball. He swung across the line at another bouncer and miscued it over the keeper’s head, straight to Daryl Mitchell running in from the slips.
Adair, slotting in at No. 9, played with panache thereafter. He had his own solution to Tickner and Zak Foulkes directing bouncers at his grille: he kept shuffling into the leg side to make room for cross-batted swats, over the relatively vacant midwicket boundary.
Eventually, this run-scoring option slowed when the bowlers either angled their bouncers into the leg side, or aimed yorkers at his feet. He still raced away to an unbeaten 44 off 47 – Ireland’s quickest knock in this Test by far.
The game came to a belated end when Reuben Wilson was the last batter out, stuck in his crease as he wafted at a delivery outside off, and edged it to the keeper. Tickner completed his five-for with this wicket, and New Zealand seald a dominant win with four sessions to spare.
They now head to London, where they will prepare to face England in a three-Test contest. Ireland, meanwhile, wait for India to arrive on their shores at the end of June for a T20I series.
Brief scores:
New Zealand 490 for 8 dec in 119 overs (Rachin Ravindra 121, Tom Blundell 186, Dean Foxcroft 98; Mark Adair 3-66) beat Ireland 179 in 45 overs (Andy McBrine 73*, Mark Adair 40; Nathan Smith 6-40, Ben Sears 2-27) and (f/o) 232 in 63.2 overs (Stephen Doheny 57, Lorcan Tucker 50, Mark Adair 44*; Nathan Smith 2-53, Blair Tickner 5-76) by an innings and 79 runs
[Cricinfo]
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Ambidextrous spinner Shashini Gimhani in Sri Lanka’s T20 World Cup squad
Batter V8shmi Gunaratne, wristspinner Shashini Gimhani and seamer Kavya Kavindi have been picked in Sri Lanka’s squad of 15 for the Women’s T20 World Cup in England starting on June 12.
Chamari Athapaththu was named captain of the team and will be representing Sri Lanka in her tenth T20 World Cup.
Rashmika Sewwandi, Dewmi Vihanga, Inoka Ranaweera were left out of the squad that played the series against Bangladesh earlier this month.
Gimhani, 17, is an ambidextrous wristspinner who has played seven T20 internationals, having made her debut as Sri Lanka’s youngest international at the age of 15.
The squad will depart for England on June 3.
Sri Lanka are in Group 2 along with England, New Zealand, West Indies, Ireland and Scotland. They play the opening game of the tournament against England at Edgbaston on June 12, followed by fixtures against New Zealand in Southampton (June 16), West Indies in Bristol (June 21), Ireland also in Bristol (June 23), and Scotland in Manchester (June 26).
The top two teams from Groups 1 and 2 qualify for the semi-finals at The Oval on June 30 and July 2. The final is on July 5 at Lord’s.
Sri Lanka squad for Women’s T20 World Cup
Chamari Athapaththu (capt), Hasini Perera, Vishmi Gunaratne, Harshitha Samarawickrama, Imesha Dulani, Nilakshika Silva, Kavisha Dilhari, Hansima Karunarathne, Kaushini Nuthyangana, Sugandika Dassanayaka, Nimasha Madushani, Shashini Gimhani, Kawya Kavindi, Malki Madara, Mithali Ayodhya
(Cricinfo)
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Messi to represent Argentina at sixth World Cup
Lionel Messi will play in a sixth World Cup as he captains holders Argentina at the 2026 tournament.
The forward, who will turn 39 during the tournament, was named in Lionel Scaloni’s 26-man squad on Thursday after leading his country to a third World Cup triumph in Qatar four years ago with a penalty shootout victory over France.
With 26 appearances, Messi holds the current record for the most World Cup matches by any player – and will join Portugal forward Cristiano Ronaldo, 41, as the only male players to appear in a sixth edition of football’s biggest event this summer.
Aston Villa’s Emiliano Martinez, who was named the goalkeeper of the tournament in 2022, has been selected, as have Manchester United’s Lisandro Martinez and Tottenham’s Cristian Romero, who missed the end of the Premier League season with a knee injury.
Liverpool midfielder Alexis Mac Allister and Chelsea midfielder Enzo Fernandez are also among the five British-based players in the squad for the finals, which will be held in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
Atletico Madrid’s Julian Alvarez and Inter’s Lautaro Martinez are among 17 players who lifted the trophy in 2022 returning to bid to retain it.
Argentina are in Group J and begin their campaign in Kansas City against Algeria (Wednesday, 17 June, 02:00 BST), before they play two games in Dallas, against Austria (Monday, 22 June, 18:00 BST) and Jordan (Sunday, 28 June, 02:00 BST).
Messi had been substituted during Inter Miami’s latest Major League Soccer match on Monday, but his club said he had not sustained an injury and was suffering from “muscle fatigue” in his left hamstring.
He has made 198 appearances for Argentina and will reach the 200-mark if he plays in both of his country’s friendly matches – against Honduras in Texas (Sunday, 7 June, 01:00 BST) and then against Iceland in Alabama (Tuesday, 9 June).
Notable absentees include in-form Aston Villa attacker Emi Buendia, whose Europa League final stunner was named goal of the tournament, forward Paolo Dybala, whose season at Roma has been disrupted by injury, and 18-year-old Real Madrid winger Franco Mastantuono.
With one cap, Benfica winger Gianluca Prestianni also misses out, after Fifa said he would sit out the first two games of the tournament for abusing Vinicius Jr.
Argentina World Cup squad
Goalkeepers: Juan Musso (Atletico Madrid), Geronimo Rulli (Marseille), Emiliano Martinez (Aston Villa).
Defenders: Leonardo Balerdi (Marseille), Nicolas Tagliafico (Lyon), Gonzalo Montiel (River Plate), Lisandro Martinez (Manchester United), Cristian Romero (Tottenham), Nicolas Otamendi (Benfica), Facundo Medina (Marseille), Nahuel Molina (Atletico Madrid).
Midfielders: Leandro Paredes (River Plate), Rodrigo de Paul (Inter Miami), Valentin Barco (Strasbourg), Giovani lo Celso (Real Betis), Ezequiel Palacios (Bayer Leverkusen), Alexis Mac Allister (Liverpool), Enzo Fernandez (Chelsea).
Forwards: Julian Alvarez (Atletico Madrid), Lionel Messi (Inter Miami), Nicolas Gonzalez (Atletico Madrid), Thiago Almada (Atletico Madrid), Giuliano Simeone (Atletico Madrid), Nico Paz (Como), Jose Manuel Lopez (Palmeiras), Lautaro Martinez (Inter Milan).
[BBC]
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