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Liam Livingstone trumps Shai Hope to square series in battle of captain’s hundreds

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Liam Livingstone's maiden ODI hundred was a true captain's innings [Cricinfo]

In the battle of captain’s centuries, there was one clear winner. Liam Livingstone’s devastating 124 not out from 85 balls trumped Shai Hope’s far more sedate 117 as England sealed victory in the second ODI by five wickets.

That it was Livingstone’s maiden 50-over century is one thing. But leading an inexperienced group, the responsibility he assumed to see England home in a chase of 329 – and thus square the series at 1-1 – in such jaw-dropping fashion is worthy of the highest praise.

The tourists looked up against it after Phil Salt’s 59 and Jacob Bethell’s 55 – his maiden international half-century – had been the only scores of note in the top four. But a watchful stand between Livingstone and Sam Curran (52) evolved into a match-twisting epic of 140 from just 107 balls.

The acceleration at the end that brought victory with 15 balls to spare is showcased best in the breakdown of Livingstone’s approach into the final 10 overs, with 100 still to get. He headed into this period on 46 from 57, before striking 78 off his final 28 deliveries.

Left-arm spinner Gudakesh Motie – 4 for 41 in the first ODI – was taken down for 14 and 16 at the start of the back straight to nurse his worst figures of 0 for 71. Jayden Seales was carted for 26 in an over, before debutant Shamar Joseph was thumped for 24. No one was safe. All in all, Livingstone thumped nine sixes among his 14 boundaries.

Aside from a hacked edge from Livingstone on four that flew between Hope and a wide first slip, there was little Hope could do to turn back the tide. Earlier in the day, his 17th century had seemingly done the main graft to put West Indies at a commanding position at the halfway stage with 328 for 6, meaning England needed to complete the second highest ODI run-chase in the Caribbean.

Hope arrived at the start of the fourth over and batted through to the end of the 47th. There was vital support from Keacy Carty – whose 71 came in a third-wicket stand of 143 – and Sherfane Rutherford – his punchy 54 providing the majority of 79 for the fourth. Cameos from Shimron Hetmyer and Matthew Forde helped ransack 93 from the final 10 overs, even if Livingstone’s final flourish make that look well below par.

Livingstone’s decision to bowl after winning the toss was immediately vindicated by the removal of both West Indies openers in the first 19 deliveries. John Turner was responsible for both initial strikes for his first wickets in international cricket, the second of which was the prized wicket of Evin Lewis. The hero of the first ODI was snared down the leg side for just four following Thursday’s match-winning 94.

But things unravelled, characterised by England’s use of nine bowlers for only the second time in ODIs. That they could have dismissed Hope on 60 also cut them deep.

From 12 for 2, consolidation was the initial aim for Hope and Carty, who could have been removed on eight. An English squeeze involved three fielders at backward point, but Bethell – the middle of them – could only palm a skewed drive from Carty which would have given Turner a third dismissal.

The pair made it out of the Powerplay on 41 for 2, a figure bumped up in the 10th over by Hope’s first boundary – a stunning back-foot launch over extra cover for six off Turner. A brace of straight drives off Saqib Mahmood – the only change to the XI from the first ODI, with Jamie Overton sitting out – and a second six, lofting Adil Rashid over cover, was then followed by some quiet rotation.

Once satisfied the early losses had been offset, risks were taken to lift the run-rate. However, having cleared midwicket after Bethell dropped short to bring up his 42nd fifty-plus score, from 66 deliveries, it was a botched defensive push that should have brought his innings to an end on 60. A edge of Bethell bounced out of the hands of Salt behind the stumps.

Carty was soon moving to his fourth ODI fifty from 62 deliveries. He was then given two lives when a top-edge took Turner over the boundary at deep fine leg, then the fielder dropped a far simpler chance off the very next ball. Both came as Archer nailed his short-ball plans.

That miss would only cost three runs, as Rashid returned to bowl Carty through the gate at the start of the 31st. But that brought Rutherford to the crease, who ended up striking seven boundaries – three of them sixes – for a fifth half-century from just 35 deliveries.

Though he was dismissed a ball later – caught at deep cover attempting to replicate the six over the same region that took him to fifty – Hetmyer’s breezy 24 off 11 kept the pressure on. He was also dropped on 2 by Will Jacks down at long-on.

Once Hetmyer was dismissed, caught by Archer at gully off a Rashid googly, Hope pressed down on the accelerator. After leaning into a drive off his 118th delivery to move to 100, he smeared Rashid for a four and six to wide long-on as 13 was taken off the 36-year-old’s final over.

Hell-bent on throwing his bat at everything sent his way, Hope misread a slower delivery from Archer that was well-taken by Livingstone charging in from long-off. Forde then picked up the baton for the final straight, striking three successive sixes off Mahmood in the final over to lift the hosts to 328 for 6.

Though England shot themselves in the foot with four drops, they were also guilty of spurning opportunities to make immediate amends with the bat. Salt looked on his way to redemption, carrying the start of the innings on his back, shrugging off the loss of Jacks in the fifth over to contribute 36 of England’s first fifty runs.

When Shamar Joseph, making his ODI debut with his namesake Alzarri rested, bounced out Jordan Cox for an agonising 4 off 19 deliveries, Bethell arrived to take England to 107 for 3 by the 20-over mark.

Both were culpable for relinquishing control. Salt skied the first ball of Forde’s new spell at the start of the 21st for 59, then Bethell dumped Roston Chase into the hands of long-off after reaching a maiden international fifty.

But the duo of Livingstone and Curran, players still with much to prove despite their experience, refused to panic. Curran initially took the reins as the aggressor, starting smartly with a six off Motie having noticed an extra fielder in the outfield meant the umpires would call it a no-ball. He contributed 31 of the initial 50 for the fifth wicket before Livingstone, after five overs without a boundary heading into the final 10, decided it was going to be all on him.

The starter pistol was set with a charge off Motie down the ground to bring up Livingstone’s fifty from 60 deliveries, before he signed off the 41st over with a slog-sweep over deep midwicket off the very next delivery. Back-to-back sixes in Motie’s next over – the second bringing up the century stand from 92 – also found the grass banks.

Pace was then put back on the ball, which played further into Livingstone’s favour. When Curran was dismissed a ball after the skipper had nudged his 77th ball down the ground to move to 100, Dan Mousley played his part to a tee – simply dabbing singles. The most important came at the start of the 48th over, giving Livingstone the strike for the honour of hitting the winning run.

Brief scores:
England 329 for 5 in 47.3 overs  (Liam Livingstone 124*, Phil Salt 59, Jacob Bethell 55, Sam Curran 52; Mathew  Forde 3-48) beat  West Indies 328 for 6 in 50 overs (Shai Hope 117, Keacy Carty 71, Sherfane Rutherford 54; John Turner 2-42, Adil Rashid 2-62) by five wickets

[Cricinfo]



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Bodies of 50 infants dumped at Trinidad graveyard

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A police statement said "unclaimed" bodies may have been dumped at the graveyard (BBC)

The remains of at least 50 infants and six adults have been dumped at a graveyard in Trinidad and Tobago, police say.

In a statement, the country’s police service (TTPS) said the bodies were found in the town of Cumuto, about 40km (25 miles) from the capital Port of Spain on Trinidad – one of the two islands forming the Caribbean nation.

A preliminary investigation shows it may be a case of an “unlawful disposal of unclaimed corpses”, it added. It is unclear if the incident is linked to gang violence in the country with one of the highest murder rates in Latin America and the Caribbean.
The police statement said five of the six adults – four men and two women – had identification tags on them. Two showed signs of having had post-mortem examinations.

The discovery was “deeply troubling”, police commissioner Allister Guevarro said. “Any individual or institution found to have violated that duty will be held fully accountable,” the commissioner said.

A state of emergency which gives police extended powers of search and arrest has been renewed since being introduced on 2 March.

The US state department has issued several travel advisories since then – due to crime as well as “a heightened risk of terrorism”.

(BBC)

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Malinga, Reddy sink Chennai Super Kings chase to defend under-par 194 in Hyderabad

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Eshan Malinga's three-for wrecked the CSK chase [BCCI]

Sunrisers Hyderabad pulled a victory out of nowhere thanks to four unheralded bowlers taking the smallest chance given to them. Three of Chennai Super Kings’ own unheralded bowlers might have been their inspiration. In an IPL season full of runs, the oppressed finally became oppressors.

After the first powerplay, ESPNcricinfo’s forecaster had the first innings total reaching 237. Jaamie Overton, Anshul Kamboj and Gurjapneet Singh prevented such nonsense. CSK were given a target of 194 and needed 84 off 60 balls with seven wickets in hand. They should have pulled off their first 190-plus chase in eight years.

But Eshan Malinga (3-29), Nitish Kumar Reddy (2-31), Shivang Kumar (1-18) and Sakib Hussain (1-32) just wouldn’t let them. On paper, there were weak links. On the field, there was none. Each of those four had an economy rate of 8 or lower and each of them picked up at least one wicket. Shivang dismissed Dewald Brevis for 0. Sakib wrecked Shivam Dube’s stumps and killed off all CSK hope. In the end, their contribution to victory was bigger than Abhishek Sharma’s 15-ball fifty and Heinrich Klassen’s 33-ball fifty.

CSK picked Matt Short over Akeal Hosein primarily so they could target Abhishek and Travis Head with offspin. For two overs it worked. They gambled on a third, and it backfired. Abhishek moved from 26 off 10 to 50 off 15 by moving leg side and making the room he needed to free his arms. Short had succeeded because he wasn’t giving any of that, but he couldn’t cope when the batter changed strategies.

Overton is 7 for 86 in the middle overs this season. He is its third-highest wicket-taker in this phase of the innings, and his success comes from his hit-the-deck style of bowling. CSK have also course-corrected a little bit. They threw him into the death overs against Tim David in Bengaluru and he got pulverised. Over the last three matches though, Overton has been given a role more suited to his strengths and he’s responded beautifully. The ball to dismiss Abhishek, minutes after he’d been dropped for 51, was a brute, rearing up at the unsuspecting batter and snagging his edge through to the keeper. Only Prasidh Krishna (7.2), Jofra Archer (11.4) and Prince Yadav (12.1) have a better bowling average than Overton (14.6) when they all go into the wicket.

For three straight IPLs, Klaasen had maintained a strike rate above 170. This time it’s down in the 140s. He is starting slow. He is being more selective with his shots. The upshot of all this caution is three fifties in six innings. Despite this change in his batting, Klaasen remained just as destructive against wristspin as he has always been, surprising Noor Ahmad with a switch hit in the 13th over. Klaasen made 24 of his 59 runs against Noor at a strike rate of 185. The other SRH batters totalled 9 off 11.

In pre-season, CSK really dove into turning Kamboj into a death bowler. They understood it was a gaping hole in their team dynamics. The worst of it was felt in Bengaluru when soon after he dismissed David with a pin-point yorker from around the wicket, it was revealed that he had overstepped. Kamboj nailed the yorker here too and Klaasen dragged it onto his stumps. This time the no-ball did not show up.

SRH ended facing the last 16 balls of their innings without their best source of boundaries. Gurjapneet from the other end alternated between going for the blockhole and getting the back-of-the-hand slower ball to kick up off the pitch. Together, this unlikely duo recorded a nice little high: where all 18 of the last 18 deliveries had to be bowled in IPL 2026, CSK giving just 17 runs slotted in right behind one of the best bowling teams of the tournament, Gujarat Titans’ effort, against Kolkata Knight Riders, when they gave up just 15 runs in overs 18, 19 and 20.

CSK outscored SRH in the powerplay 76 for 3 to 75 for 2, and the reason for it was a man who started the season being bounced out. Ayush Mhatre now has 68 runs against fast bowling at a strike rate of 226.66. He laid waste to Praful Hinge, teaching him not to bowl short with a down-to-up pull shot for six, and leaving him backed against that corner as he drove on the up over the off side again and again. Mhatre hit five boundaries in that over – the third of the innings. He was batting like he’d never heard of a concept called running between the wickets. Ironically enough, that’s what did him in.

Mhatre injured his left leg responding to a quick two from Ruturaj Gaikwad. The physio had to come out twice in two balls. In the dugout, there was heightened tension. Head coach Stephen Fleming couldn’t sit still, while batting coach Mike Hussey looked pensive. From the days of the dad’s army, this team’s fortunes now swing up or down based on an 18-year-old’s output. On Saturday, it swung inexorably down. CSK made 62 for 1 in 4.1 overs. Mhatre pulled up on 4.2. CSK spent the next 8.4 overs barely knowing where their next boundary was coming from. They made 58 runs and lost four wickets.

CSK know what it feels like to be on the wrong side of a Malinga. They lost a title that way. Seven years later, their efforts to put a simple league game out of sight was being blocked by a man with the same name.

Eshan Malinga bounced Gaikwad out. His ability to access the yorker length – or close to it – produced two more wickets. Short (34 off 30) and Sarfaraz Khan (25 off 19) were left ruing how well they had hit those balls, because all their power really did was make sure the ball carried to deep midwicket. At the presentation, Malinga said he was getting reverse swing as well.

Dube continued to struggle in the finisher’s role as CSK’s chase fizzled out. They were running away with the game in the powerplay. They were favourites even at the halfway mark of the chase. Not being able to pull it off is another example of how their flawed mega-auction strategy is still following them.

Brief scores:
Sunrisers Hyderabad 194 for 9 in 20 overs (Abhishek Sharma 59, Travis Head 23, Heinrich Klaasen 59, Nitish Kumar Reddy 12, Salil Arora 13, Shivang Kumar 12; Mukesh Choudhary 2-21, Anshul Kamboj 3-22, Jamie Overton 3-37, Gurjapneet Singh 1-34) beat Chennai Super Kings 184 for 8 in 20 overs (Rutraj Gaikwad 19, Ayush Mhatre 30, Maththew Short 34, Sarfaraz Khan 25, Shivam Dube 21, Jamie Overton 16, Anshul Kamboj 13*; Praful Hinge 1-60, Eshan Malinga 3-29, Nitish Kumar Reddy 2-31, Sakib Hussain 1-32, Shivang Kumar 1-18) by 10 runs

[Cricinfo]

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Stubbs, Miller win Delhi Capitals a thriller against Royal Challengers Bengaluru

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David Miller went 6, 6, 4 to clear the game [BCCI]

One needed off two balls.

David Miller has been here before in IPL 2026. Against Gujarat Titans he had turned down the tie and ended up costing Delhi Capitals (DC) the game. Ten days later, Miller was in a similar situation once again. Except on Saturday, he won the game for DC with a ball to spare, handing Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) their second defeat of the season and first at home.

It came to DC needing 15 off the final over bowled by Romario Shepherd, who was bowling his first of the game. Miller had missed out on the first ball – a hittable delivery on leg stump that cost RCB just one run – and Tristan Stubbs also managed only a single next ball, leaving DC needing 13 off four balls. Miller completed his redemption arc with 6, 6, 4 off the next three balls to stun the Chinnaswamy into silence.

Virat Kohli and Phil Salt gave RCB a swift start on a slower-than-usual Chinnaswamy pitch after they were asked to bat first. Kohli nicked the second ball he faced from Auqib Nabi, between slip and short third, and Mukesh also found swing in his opening over. But nothing could stop Kohli from shimming out of his crease twice and pumping Mukesh for a pair of fours over cover. However, when he tried to treat Lungi Ngidi in a similar way in the last over of the powerplay, the seamer shifted his line wider of off and had Kohli caught at sweeper cover, the only man on the boundary on the off side, for 19 off 13 balls.

In comparison, Salt had managed just 13 off his first 13 balls, but turned up the tempo when he took Nabi for 4, 6, 4 in the fifth over. When he cracked Kuldeep Yadav over wide long-off for six, he brought up his half-century off 30 balls. Salt hit Kuldeep for another six before the left-arm wristspinner pushed one away from Salt’s swinging arc and had the batter holing out to wide long-off this time for 63 off 38 balls. The slowness in the surface also played a part in Salt’s dismissal.

Kuldeep and his captain Axar Patel combined to slow RCB down even further. Axar, who had delayed his introduction into the attack until the tenth over, possibly because of the presence of Devdutt Padikkal, managed to have the left-hand batter caught at long-on, though he had erred too full.

Tim David rose above the conditions and ran away to 26 off 15 balls. His drilled six off Ngidi in the 12th over had Kohli off his seat in the dressing room and the Chinnaswamy erupting in joy. Axar, though, played killjoy when he drew an outside edge from David that landed into the hands of short third. David had denied Jitesh Sharma, who was struggling at the other end, strike and turned down a single off the previous ball, but Axar shifted his line wide of off and bested David with turn.

Rajat Patidar had already been dismissed by Mukesh Kumar for 8 off four balls and Shepherd couldn’t fire either, Kuldeep trapping the West Indian allrounder lbw for 1. The pressure piled on RCB as they went 25 balls without a boundary until Jitesh found it in the 18th over. It should have been a catch at short third, but the ball evaded Mukesh’s outstretched left hand and snuck away to the deep-third boundary. Mukesh, who had landed face-first into the ground, left the field in discomfort, having completed his quota of four overs.

RCB didn’t score a boundary in their last two overs and only scored two in their last six overs. At the innings break, former RCB captain Faf du Plessis reckoned that the hosts were ten runs short.

The first two overs from Bhuvneshwar Kumar in RCB’s defence was a passage of play straight out of Test-match cricket. With two slips in place, Bhuvneshwar got the new ball to swing both ways and tore through DC’s top order.

He produced the opening breakthrough when he pinged Nissanka’s pad with a big inswinger in his first over. He then went bang bang in his second to dismiss Karun Nair and Sameer Rizvi. DC had brought Nair at No. 3 at his domestic home ground at the expense of a finisher in Ashutosh Sharma, but an outswinger from Bhuvneshwar had Nair carving a catch to deep third for a run-a-ball 5.

Three balls later, Bhuvneshwar had Rizvi caught behind with another outswinger. Jitesh dived full length to his right and pulled off a one-handed screamer, reducing DC to 18 for 3 inside three overs.

KL Rahul and Stubbs brought DC back into the contest with contrasting half-centuries. By the end of the powerplay, DC were 50 for 3, with Rahul contributing 31 off 18 balls. He played some glorious shots, including a flicked six over square leg off an off-stump ball on a Test-match length from Josh Hazlewood.

Rahul scored 22 off ten balls from Hazlewood, extending his T20 tally against him to 135 off 78 balls. Nobody has a better head-to-head record against Hazlewood in T20s.

Rahul also lined up wristspinner Syuash Sharma, but when he tried to attack Krunal Pandya, the left-arm spinner fired in a 103kph dart and had an advancing Rahul holing out for 57 off 34 balls in the 11th over.

Stubbs was on 18 off 17 balls by the time Rahul was dismissed. He picked up the pace in the 13th over, when he hit Rasikh Salam for a pair of fours, including one down the ground off a slower variation. Without taking too many risks, Stubbs added 47 for the fifth wicket with Axar before the latter retired hurt on 26 off 19 balls.

DC required 42 off 25 balls. Hazlewood and Bhuvneshwar returned and ramped up the pressure on DC with their wide yorkers and reverse-swinging stump yorkers.

Stubbs briefly diffused the tension in the 18th over when he latched onto a slower bouncer from Bhuvneshwar and launched it over square leg for six. It was Stubbs’ first six off the 40th ball he faced and first boundary for DC after four overs.

Despite that six, Bhuvneshwar conceded only 12 off the over, and Rasikh followed it up with a tight penultimate over, giving away ten runs.

With 14 to defend off the last over, Patidar called up Shepherd, who got away with his first ball when he missed his length. Stubbs then pinched another single off the next ball. Shepherd then cracked under pressure and kept missing the yorker as Miller crashed him for 6, 6, 4.

The first six came off a full toss, which was swatted into the second tier over midwicket. Shepherd then served up a wide half-volley and Miller biffed him over extra-cover for six more. On the next ball, Miller sealed the win with a flicked four to the midwicket fence off a full toss.

Brief scores:
Delhi Capitals 179 for 4 in 19.5 overs (Tristan Stubbs 60*, KL Rahul 57, Axar Patel 26, David Miller 22*; Bhuvneshwar Kumar 3-26, Krunal Pandya 1-24, ) beat Royal Challengers Bengaluru 175 for 8 in 20 overs (Phil Salt 63, Virat Kohli 19, Devudutt Padikkal 18, Tim David 26, Jitesh Sharma 14, Krunal Pandya 12; Mukesh Kumar 1-32, Lungi Ngindi 2-39, Axar Patel  2-18, Kuldeep Yadav 2-32) by six wickets

[Cricinfo]

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