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India beat the weather and the clock to sweep Bangladesh 2-0

Less than 24 hours after sparking off a near-unthinkable push for victory in a game in which only 35 overs had been bowled in the first three days, India’s batters completed the task they had started by smashing down their target of 95 in just over an hour.
The highlight of India’s performance on Tuesday came from another record-breaker from the fourth day; Ravindra Jadeja’s triple-strike started a slide for Bangladesh in an extended first session, in which they were bowled out for 146. India lost three wickets in pursuit before Rishabh Pant hit the winning runs in the chase set up by a 43-ball fifty from Yashasvi Jaiswal and extended their lead at the top of the WTC points table with a 2-0 series sweep.
The 312 balls India batted for in this Test is the second fewest they have faced – and the fourth-fewest overall – to win a Test match, behind the 281 against South Africa in Cape Town earlier this year.
Bangladesh started the day on 26 for 2, and with Jadeja starting things off in the company of Akash Deep, suffered a collapse of 7 for 55. Ravichandran Ashwin and Jasprit Bumrah also finished with three each. Jadeja first broke the stubborn stand of 55 between Najmul Hossain Shanto and Shadman Islam when he struck in three successive overs, also sending back Litton Das and Shakib Al Hasan. Bangladesh went from 91 for 3 to 94 for 7. After that, Bumrah wiped out the tail. There were no demons in the pitch, no vicious turn, just tight and skiddy bowling from Jadeja and the mounting pressure.
Bangladesh were trailing by 26 when the day of 98 overs started and it was Ashwin who struck first. After using the sweep effectively in his unbeaten century in the first innings, Mominul Haque fell to the same shot when he handed a catch to leg slip for 2. Many might have expected Bangladesh to buckle under pressure but Shadman replied with a string of boundaries against Ashwin. He struck three confident cover drives and a back-foot cut for four fours in seven balls against Ashwin, which gave Bangladesh confidence and the lead.
A few loose deliveries from Mohammed Siraj leaked a few more boundaries; he was struck for two fours each by Shadman and Shanto in his opening spell, although one of them would have been a chance had third slip been in place.
It’s possible Jadeja was the last one to get the ball because only left-hand batters had been at the crease. But it took him only two balls to strike. Shanto missed a reverse sweep on his first ball against Jadeja to lose his leg stump before the bowler extracted extra bounce on a pitch that has been keeping low to have Litton caught behind on the cut for 1. Between those two overs, Akash Deep pitched one up to Shadman soon after the batter’s half-century, and the push to gully ended his 101-ball stay.
Jadeja was all over Bangladesh by now. In his third over he sent back Shakib with an innocuous delivery bowled slow through the air, which Shakib only chipped back to give Jadeja figures of 2.2-1-3-3 early in his spell.
With Bangladesh seven down for 94, Rohit Sharma brought back Bumrah and the spearhead did his job straightaway. His third ball of the fresh spell was a beauty that got Mehidy Hasan Miraz’s edge. It was only Mushfiqur Rahim who delayed the inevitable, extending the lead towards 100. He saw off the quicks and belted two back-to-back fours against Jadeja.
Bumrah trapped Taijul Islam lbw to extend the first session at the stroke of lunch before Mushfiqur frustrated the hosts further. He started to farm the strike with only one wicket left but again it was Bumrah who made the difference. Back for one over before lunch, his slow offcutter at 125kph went through a big swing from Mushfiqur on the last ball of the session as he put to waste all his hard work.
India again came out all guns blazing as Bangladesh didn’t use any pace in search of wickets. Rohit missed a big swing to the leg side in the first over and when he middled a sweep, he found deep backward square-leg in Mehidy’s second over. Shubman Gill was trapped lbw for 6 by Mehidy to a delivery similar to the one that kept low and dismissed Rohit on Monday. Otherwise India cruised in their chase thanks to Jaiswal’s third half-century of the series. He muscled his back-foot punches and sweeps and came down the track to smash a few boundaries, including a six, down the ground. His brisk partnership of 58 with Virat Kohli nearly saw India through except that Jaiswal miscued a swing to the off side with only three runs required.
Brief scores:
India 285 for 9 dec ( Yashasvi Jaiswal 72, KL Rahul 68, Mehidy Hasan Miraz 4-41, Shakib Al Hasan 4-78) and 98 for 3 (Yashasvi Jaiswal 51, Virat Kohli 29*, Mehidy Hasan Miraz 2-44) beat Bangladesh 233 (Mominul Haque 107*, Jasprit Bumrah 3-50) and 146 (Shadman Islam 50, Bumrah 3-17, Jadeja 3-34, Ashwin 3-50) by seven wickets
(Cricinfo)
Foreign News
Secret Service shoots armed man outside White House

The US Secret Service shot a man outside the White House early on Sunday after an “armed confrontation”, the service said in a statement.
It had earlier received a tip-off from local police about a “suicidal individual who may be travelling to Washington DC from Indiana”, it said.
Its officers approached a man matching that description, “who brandished a firearm”, adding that shots were fired. The man is now in hospital in an “unknown” condition, it said.
President Donald Trump was not in the White House at the time, as he is spending the weekend at his Florida residence, Mar-a-Lago.
“As officers approached, the individual brandished a firearm and an armed confrontation ensued, during which shots were fired by our personnel,” the statement said.
The incident is now under investigation by Washington’s Metropolitan Police, which investigates all law-enforcement shootings in the District of Columbia.
[BBC]
Latest News
India crowned champions after pipping New Zealand in a tense final

Despite the stiff challenge posed by New Zealand, India clinched the ICC Champions Trophy 2025 by a four-wicket margin, marking the third time they won this title. Chasing 251 in the final on a tricky surface in Dubai, India were put under pressure both with the bat and ball but they managed to put in a collective effort that saw them get over the line to go through the tournament unbeaten, and add a seventh ICC senior trophy to their cabinet.
India got off to a rollicking start in the chase led by skipper Rohit Sharma. In a 105-run opening stand, Rohit dominated contributing 69 off 63 and setting the tone early. With the conditions favouring spin, both teams targeted the pacers well with Rohit’s assault nearly making a mockery of the chase. The first eight overs bowled by New Zealand’s pacers, sans their injured spearhead Matt Henry, saw Rohit race off to 47 in a team score of 59.
It forced Mitchell Santner to bring himself on but by and large the openers were able to keep the run-rate up even while toning down the aggression. Reaching 106 by 19 overs, India were firmly in the driver’s seat before New Zealand pulled things back.
Santner had Shubman Gill caught splendidly at cover by a leaping Glenn Phillips, who added to his highlights reel of eye-popping catches, while Michael Bracewell struck with his first ball turning one past Virat Kohli’s flick to trap him LBW for one. Losing two wickets in the space of four balls put the pressure back on India and New Zealand’s spinners began to apply the choke. Even a well-set Rohit had to cut the risks out while Shreyas Iyer settled in.
This brought about a phase of 11 dot balls in a row before Rohit gave charge to Rachin Ravindra only to be stumped. At 122/3, the game was tilting back to parity with India in need of another partnership.
Axar Patel and Shreyas Iyer mixed caution with aggression to push things back. The latter got a life early on when Will Young made a valiant attempt at the deep mid-wicket boundary to take a catch but stepped onto the ropes while tossing it back into play.
Iyer and Patel went about a sedate stand but added 62 crucial runs with Kyle Jamieson dropping a sitter at long on when Iyer was on 44. But that did not prove too costly as Iyer took on Mitchell Santner soon after in an attempt to clear short fine leg only to be taken by Rachin Ravindra. With the asking rate hovering around the run-a-ball mark, KL Rahul came in and lofted Santner for a six early on easing some nerves. But there was another twist on course as a well-set Patel miscued a loft off Bracewell to hole out to long off.
Needing 48 in as many balls, the final was still firmly in balance. But Rahul and Hardik Pandya got boundaries ever so often at the back-end to keep India well within the asking rate. Pandya’s 18-ball 18 was ended by a bouncer from Jamieson but India needed only 11 off 15 by this point. Some smart batting from Jadeja and Rahul thereafter saw India home staving off a stiff fight from New Zealand.
Just as they did with the ball, New Zealand had made sure that India wouldn’t run away with the game with the ball as well. Despite a sustained effort from India’s spinners, they managed to get to a competitive total.
Daryl Mitchell fought his way to a 101-ball 63 as he absorbed and tried to revert the pressure exerted by India’s spin quartet. The four of them had not only dragged the game back in India’s favour after a rapid start in the powerplay but changed the colour of the innings overall on a slow surface sticking to straight lines largely.
Early on, it was New Zealand that did all the running thanks to an attacking Rachin Ravindra at the top. The leading run-scorer of the tournament showcased the form he was in with some delectable shots off the pacers. Hardik Pandya was picked up for 16 in an over while Mohammed Shami too was flicked elegantly making Rohit Sharma turn to his spin weapon earlier than at any point previously in the tournament.
Varun Chakaravarthy started with a googly that went for four byes first up but created the chance that India was after with Ravindra top-edging a slog-sweep. But Iyer, running across from deep midwicket, could not hold on to the opportunity. Ravindra now had two chances put down in as many overs with Shami failing to latch on to a tough return chance before. But Chakaravarthy still managed to break a 58-run opening stand in that over trapping Will Young plumb LBW while missing a flick. After 10 overs, Ravindra was looking in ominous form hitting 37 off the 69 they had raced to.
But Kuldeep Yadav turned the innings on its head with his first delivery of the game – a wrong ‘un that sneaked past Ravindra’s dab. He pulled things further towards India in his following over when he deceived Kane Williamson in the air and accepted a simple return-catch.
At 75/3, New Zealand were now made to take the foot off the accelerator as they risked a crash and burn. Both Tom Latham and Daryl Mitchell went the conservative way even as the boundaries dried up against the spinners. Ravindra Jadeja and Axar Patel kept the pressure up through the middle overs allowing no freebies even when there was no extravagant turn on offer. The final saw India’s spinners being required to bowl more than they did in any game in the tournament, and that they managed to collectively bowl within stump lines for 37% of the time meant that New Zealand’s risk-taking always came with a greater threat than usual.
Their 33-run stand off 66 balls contained only one boundary before Latham missed a sweep to be LBW against Jadeja. Mitchell, however, did not deviate from the template that he had for himself and stitched together another dour 57-run stand with Glenn Phillips for the fifth wicket. Both batters were also dropped once each against an uncharacteristically poor day on the field for India’s catchers. But Phillips couldn’t make the most of it as he was bowled by a googly from Chakaravarthy for 34.
Mitchell, meanwhile, brought up a hard-fought fifty and began to switch gears alongside an adventurous Michael Bracewell. Their 45-run stand powered New Zealand past 200 but just when they were sizing up for a big finish, Mitchell ended up spooning Shami to cover. But Bracewell was able to keep the momentum going with some smart batting against the pacers in the death overs. He brought up his fifty in the final over and dragged New Zealand past the 250-mark with 35 coming in the last three overs bowled by pace.
Brief Scores:
New Zealand 251/7 in 50 overs (Daryl Mitchell 63, Michael Bracewell 53*; Varun Chakaravarthy 2-45, Kuldeep Yadav 2-40) lost to India 254/6 in 4 overs (Rohit Sharma 76, Shreyas Iyer 48) by 4 wickets
[Cricbuzz]
Latest News
New Zealand elect to bat first in Champions Trophy final

New Zealand won the toss and elected to bat first in the Champions Trophy final.
Playing XIs
New Zealand: Will Young, Rachin Ravindra, Kane Williamson, Daryl Mitchell, Tom Latham (wk), Glenn Phillips, Michael Bracewell, Mitchell Santner (capt), Kyle Jamieson, Nathan Smith, Will O’Rourke
India: Rohit Sharma (capt), Shubman Gill, Virat Kohli, Shreyas Iyer, Axar Patel, KL Rahul (wk), Hardik Pandya, Ravindra Jadeja, Kuldeep Yadav, Mohammed Shami, Varun Chakravarthy
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