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Cummins denies Pakistan a heist to remember as Australia go 1-0 up

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Pat Cummins celebrates after hitting the winning run (Cricinfo)

It was the full Pakistan experience at the MCG, a ground where they have so much great history. They were hopeless, then thrilling, then hopeless, then thrilling. And then Australia won, without much conviction. But they did what they do thanks to a sizzling spell from Mitchell Starc  and yet another nerveless chasing masterclass from the ice-cool captain Pat Cummins  in the face of what looked like a match-winning three-wicket haul from Harris Rauf , heroics with bat and ball from Naseem Shah  and some crafty captaincy from new skipper Mohammad Rizwan .

The 25,831-strong crowd looked sparse in the gargantuan MCG. But it sounded like 100,000, and it felt like it was in Lahore, as Pakistan fans drowned out the locals to help keep their side in the game. But there was only so much they could do, as Pakistan found a way to lose despite being on the brink of one of the great ODI heists.

Chasing just 204 after Starc took 3 for 33 from 10 overs, including three maidens, Australia slumped from 139 for 3, after Stevsn Smith  and Josh Inglis  were in control, to 155 for 7 on the back of Rauf’s raucous burst. That became 185 for 8 when Sean Abbott was run out, after he had nearly run out Cummins. But skipper held firm, as he had at Edgbaston, Mumbai, Kolkata and Christchurch over the past 18 months.

His 32 not out won’t go down as his most memorable, but it was the equal of any of his best innings in Australian colours. It was vindication too for his decision to have laser eye surgery in the winter to fix his vision, and some extensive batting work in Sydney with Australian batting consultant and well renown coach Trent Woodhill.

Australia’s chase began poorly with the new opening duo of Matt Short and Jake Fraser-McGurk both falling inside the first four overs.

Fraser-McGurk’s 16 was particularly frantic. But Smith was calm and settled into a stereotypical groove. Any fears on his Test form could well be allayed given how well he handled some excellent fast bowling on a quick pitch.
Australia could have been 55 for 3 when Inglis was dropped by Irfan Khan at gully. Naseem got one to rear from a length and catch the edge but Irfan could not hang on flying high to his right.
That looked like it might have been the last chance. Barring an edge between the keeper and wide slip trying to glide a ball, Inglis was imperious. Coach Jason Gillespie’s four years coaching against Inglis in Australian domestic cricket had not translated to his four-pronged pace attack avoiding dropping short to the West Australian. It cost them three sixes and two fours.

After an 85-run stand, Smith made an uncharacteristic error. He slashed a cut off Rauf straight to backward point to be out for 44.

Pakistan’s insistence on going short to Inglis paid off when he nailed another pull shot off Shaheen only to see Irfan run a long way to hang on to an outstanding catch in the deep.

Rauf, a Melbourne Stars favourite, then had the Pakistan fans in raptures as he cranked up the speed and Australia lost 3 for 0. Labuschagne top edged to deep third, undone by extra bounce. Maxwell nicked the next ball to Rizwan and Australia were 139 for 6.

Aaron Hardie and Abbott steadied briefly but it was fleeting. Hardie fell trying to back away and cut a ball from Mohammad Hasnain that hit the top of middle.

Enter the skipper for another salvage job. It was unconventional as it always is. He was bombed with short balls. But he keep scoring and kept surviving. Abbott was run out when Cummins pushed for a third. But he was there at the end yet again when the winning runs were scored to break the hearts of all those who don’t bleed green and gold.

Earlier, Australia set up the win with the ball. Most of Pakistan’s batters, with the exception of Babar Azam who made a classy 37 off 44, were exposed on a fast and bouncy MCG pitch after being sent in having come straight from the low spinning Test pitches of Multan and Rawalpindi last month. Rizwan top scored with 44 off 71 balls while Naseem made an outstanding 40 off 39 with four sixes from No. 9 to ensure Australia was at least chasing more than 200.

Starc and Cummins, fresh and in rhythm ahead of a big summer, put on a show in front of a very pro-Pakistan crowd. Starc’s 140kph thunderbolts accounted for Saim Ayub on debut and Abdullah Shafique.

The pair were opening the batting in ODI cricket for the first time after averaging just 8 as a pair in 12 Test innings together. Their international average dropped to 7.61 when Ayub chopped on trying to drive on the up.

Shafique looked like he was batting in a Test match. He defended, ducked and weaved on his way to 12 from 26 before failing to get his bat out of the way of a rising delivery from Starc wide of off as he tried to sway inside it.

Babar and Rizwan settled but never accelerated. Babar looked in fine touch but felt the pinch of the slow-moving scoreboard. He tried to create a scoring option off the back foot to Adam Zampa but picked the wrong length and lost his off stump.

Cummins welcomed Kamran Ghulam to Australia with a brute of a delivery. The whites of his eyes popped as Cummins’ 142.7kph bouncer reared at his throat. He got his hands up in time but could only glove it to Inglis.

Rizwan’s sluggish rearguard began to pick up steam when he hooked Starc into the stands at fine leg. But he fell to Labuschagne trying to sweep a wide legbreak only to get a top edge onto his helmet that popped up to Inglis.

Some late hitting from Naseem, Shaheen Afridi, and Irfan Khan, in the mould of the man who had presented his debut cap in Wasim Akram, lifted Pakistan from a dire position at 117 for 6 to 203.

Naseem and Shaheen showed the type of intent that Pakistan’s top order could have used, launching five sixes between them after the entire top seven had contributed one, before Shaheen was castled by Starc for 24 off 19.

Naseem feasted on spin, launching Zampa into the stands twice and Maxwell once. But Naseem also launched Sean Abbott over deep midwicket. He holed out to mid-off to end the innings. Had he batted until the end, it might have been enough.
Brief scores:
Australia 204 for 8 in 33.3 overs (Josh Inglis 49, Steven Smith 44, Pat Cummins 32*; Harris Rauf 3-67, Shaheen Shah Afridi2-43) beat Pakistan 203 in 46.4 overs  (Mohammad Rizwan 44, Naseem Shah 40, Babar Azam 31; Mitchell Starc 3-33, Pat Cummins 2-39, AdamZampa2-64) by two wickets
(Cricinfo)


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Trump says US-Iran deal to be signed on Sunday as Tehran casts doubt on timing

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President Donald Trump has said a deal to end fighting between the US and Iran is scheduled to be signed on Sunday, after Iran cast doubt on the timing.

In a post on social media, Trump said the Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping route, would be “open to all” once the deal is agreed.

Pakistan, a key mediator, also said the deal was expected to be finalised within 24 hours and they were “preparing for the electronic signing”.

Before Trump’s comments, Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei expressed caution over the timeline, saying: “We will have to wait and see about the exact date of the signing of the memorandum of understanding, although it will not be tomorrow.”

In a post on Truth Social, Trump wrote: “The Deal is scheduled to get signed tomorrow, and immediately after it is signed, the Hormuz Strait is OPEN TO ALL.”

In an apparent reference to Iran’s enriched uranium stockpiles, Trump said that “at the appropriate time, when all is calm, we will go in and get the Nuclear Dust”, adding it would later be destroyed.

For decades, Iran has been accused by Western countries of trying to build a nuclear weapon. It has denied the accusations saying its programme is for peaceful purposes – to generate electricity and for research purposes.

Trump also warned that if things would not “work out quickly, easily and smoothly”, Washington had “the ultimate alternative, hopefully never to be used again!”

Earlier on Saturday, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said that “we are closer to a peace deal than ever before”.

“With finalisation likely expected in the next 24 hours, Pakistan is preparing for the electronic signing of the peace deal immediately after, followed by technical level talks next week,” Sharif wrote on X.

On Friday, Iran’s Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi said that a deal with the US was close.

The agreement envisaged an end to the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon, he said.

Araghchi told Iran’s state TV that the deal included reopening the Strait of Hormuz and also the lifting of a US blockade of Iranian ports.

However, he said talks on Iran’s nuclear programme would begin later.

US officials have confirmed some of the details of the agreement, saying economic benefits for Iran would depend on Tehran meeting its obligations.

Previous reports from the US had suggested Lebanon may not be part of this deal – with Iran reportedly insisting on it.

In recent months, variations of an agreement have been expected several times but have not been completed in the later stages.

The war began with US and Israeli strikes across Iran on 28 February, prompting Iran to attack Israel and US-allied states in the Gulf – as well as effectively closing the Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping route for the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas.

Despite having agreed a ceasefire in April, the US and Iran have exchanged intermittent fire, including two rounds of tit-for-tat strikes this week.

[BBC]

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Litchfield, spinners hand Australia big win over South Africa

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Sophie Molineux starred with two wickets [Cricinfo]

Australia may have come into this Women’s T20 World Cup with doubts over their invincibility after entering a tournament without a title for the first time since 2017, but a strong all-round show in their opening match against South Africa all but quelled those theories.

A quickfire innings from Phoebe Litchfield aided by cameos from Georgia Wareham and Annabel Sutherland propelled Australia to 172 for 8, before their four-pronged spin attack squeezed South Africa to register a net-run-rate-boosting 65-run win. South Africa were bowled out for 107, their second lowest total in a completed T20I innings against Australia, to receive a jolting start to a campaign they entered as one of the favourites.

South Africa’s perilous new-ball pair, Marizanne Kapp and Shabnim Ismail, was reunited with the latter’s retirement reversal. They gave the perfect start, dismissing Australia’s openers inside four overs and keeping the batters in check with the subtle movement they generated. But Litchfield isn’t one to take an over-cautious approach. She switched gears by using her feet to hit Kapp for successive fours in the penultimate over of the powerplay. In the next, she hit Ismail for a sequence of 4, 4, 6 to help Australia finish the powerplay on 52 for 2.

Litchfield missed Australia’s last warm-up game because of a quadricep issue. In her first proper outing in the tournament, she raced to a 23-ball fifty. It took a change-up from Ayabonga Khaka to get rid of her for 50 off 24. The others, including extras, had contributed 11 off 17 at that stage.

Despite walking in in the fourth over, Ellyse Perry had faced only four balls by the time Litchfield was dismissed in the seventh. She could afford to take her time because of how Wareham got into her act quickly. She managed to find the boundary in each of her next two overs before both Perry and Wareham took three fours off Khaka’s second over, the 12th of the innings.

They continued to raise the pace of Australia’s scoring and added 58 off 38 for the fifth wicket. Their partnership only ended when Laura Wolvaardt grabbed at screamer at extra cover to end Wareham’s stay for 32 off 22. Two overs later, Perry fell for a 26-ball 36. Twice in the innings Australia lost wickets in quick succession; the phase between those gave them a base to put up a score that would eventually prove enough.

With two right-handers in the middle after Litchfield’s fall, South Africa introduced left-arm spinner Nonkululeko Mlaba and she struck with her second ball. Ashleigh Gardner looked to take her down but miscued her inside out shot straight to extra cover. She bowled three overs in the middle phase and also accounted for the set Perry’s wicket in the 16th over.

This performance of Mlaba’s showed a glimpse of why she has been so successful in T20Is for a while now – her 41 wickets since the start of 2024 are the most for South Africa. However, her effort ended up in a losing cause.

In a departure from their tactics from the warm-up fixtures, Sophie Molineux took the new ball against South Africa, and the move paid off early. Sune Luus moved back to pull a length ball across the line but it skidded on to trap the South Africa opener lbw in the first over. Kim Garth was at her accurate best from the other end, castling Annerie Dercksen who batted one-drop.

But Molineux had seen enough to not feed South Africa the pace that their batters so enjoy. She kept rotating her bowlers and the fast bowlers bowled only four overs. Alana King, perhaps brought in because of her superior ODI record against South Africa, almost struck in her first over. Nadine de Klerk, batting at No. 4, slog swept her straight to deep midwicket but Gardner parried it over for a six.

Fellow legspinner Wareham eventually dismissed de Klerk and picked up two more towards the end. Molineux also returned in the 14th over to dismiss Wolvaardt with South Africa’s asking rate mounting. Australia’s spinners picked up 8 for 72 in 12.4 overs. A satisfying win to send a timely reminder to the other teams, after being challenged at various points in the game.

SCORES:

Australia Women 172 for 8 in 20 overs (Phoebe Litchfield 50, Ellyse Perry 36, Georgia Wareham 32, Annabelle Sutherland 21, Mlaba 2-22, Nicola Carey 13*; Marizanne Kapp 1-29, Shabnim Ismail 1-33, Ayabonga Khaka 2-33,  Nonkululeko Mlaba 2-22, Nadine de Klerk 2-35) beat South Africa Women  107 in 16.4 overs (Laura Wolvaardt 44, Nadine de Klerk 25, Matizanne Kapp 12; Sophie Molineux 2-17, Kim Garth 1-13, Alana King 2-26, Georgia Wareham 3-13, Ashleigh Gardner 1-16 ) by 65 runs

[Cricinfo]

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Campbelle, Matthews outmuscle New Zealand to land famous victory

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Shemaine Campbelle powered West Indies to a famous victory [Cricinfo]

Shermaine Campbelle converted her maiden T20I fifty into a mighty, match-seizing knock of 90 not out from 62 balls, as West Indies did to the defending champions, New Zealand, what they had done to England in another famous victory in Dubai at the last T20 World Cup – and outmuscled them in a raw display of power-hitting that induced error, after error, after error from a shell-shocked fielding unit.

No fewer than seven clear-cut chances went begging for New Zealand’s fielders – not to mention the opportunities that didn’t go to hand quickly enough – as Campbelle crashed seven fours and three sixes to overhaul a taxing target of 163 with a solitary ball to spare.

The back of the chase was broken in a 74-run stand for the second wicket with her captain, Hayley Matthews, who regained her composure after the shocking second-over run-out of her opening partner, Qiana Joseph, to set the tempo with 48 from 37 balls.

New Zealand’s missed opportunity was summed up by the inordinate tension of the contest’s closing moments. With just four runs to defend, New Zealand’s oldest stager, Sophie Devine, did her damnedest to pull off a miracle.

Despite two runs off the first ball of the over, she restricted West Indies to two scrambled leg-byes from the next four, with an air-shot from Jahzara Claxton adding to the tension. But Campbelle put her head down for one last charge, and beat Izzy Gaze’s breaking of the stumps by a whisker to land a famous win.

Barbecued, and beef

If only New Zealand’s fielders had stood up to Matthews with the same intent that her own opening partner had shown, in what briefly looked like being the true flashpoint of the night.

The innings was just ten balls old when Matthews, fresh from lacing back-to-back fours through deep third off Bree Illing, patted a third shot in the same direction and instinctively set off for a single. There was never a run as point charged in, but rather than accept her own fate, she chose to jog past a dumbfounded Joseph, and sacrifice her instead.

Joseph was livid, and bumped shoulders with her captain while giving her a piece of her mind as she stalked back to the pavilion. Her indignation could have been righteous just two Matthews balls later, when a top-edged sweep sailed high to deep backward square, but Izzy Sharp made a meal of the opportunity.

Matthews was somewhat chastened for the remainder of a 35-run powerplay, and hampered too by an attack of cramp after pulling out a dive for a tight second run. But the longer she lurked, the more uncomfortable New Zealand seemed around her.

New Zealand drop the ball – literally

A 13-run seventh over played its part in Melie Kerr’s crass review for lbw that came straight off the toe of Matthews’ bat, whereupon Campbelle – barely less of a threat on a run-a-ball 19 – survived a clanger of a stumping chance from Gaze as she ran straight past Devine’s first ball of the night.

Melie Kerr thought she’d broken through when Campbelle missed a reverse sweep on 24 but was shown to have been struck outside the line, but when Matthews landed her lustiest blow of the night – a massive inside-out six over extra cover – the wheels came off New Zealand’s fielding effort. Nensi Patel immediately dropped a leading edge off her own bowling to give Matthews another life… one ball later, Melie Kerr spilled a dolly on the cover ring, as Campbelle miscued a hoick down the ground.

Green did manage to buck the trend when Matthews finally holed out to long-on off Jess Kerr, and she then bettered that effort three overs later with a startlingly composed take at the opposite end of the ground, reaching up then clawing down a typically huge mow for the fences from Deandra Dottin.

In between whiles, however, West Indies had galloped out of sight. Campbelle battered a brace of huge sixes off Melie Kerr, either side of another drop off her own bowling, to march through to a 39-ball fifty. She then added another in Kerr’s final over, when – with 27 needed from three – the time was nigh for the pain train to arrive at its destination.

Gaze starts with a blaze

New Zealand’s composure hadn’t seemed quite so brittle at the outset of the contest, while Gaze was launching their innings with enterprise in glorious batting conditions. Twice in the opening over she guided Zaida James behind square on the off-side, and she had picked off eight fours in the first five overs, almost before her new opening partner, Georgia Plimmer, had had a look-in.

In a sign of things to come, Gaze did benefit from a significant let-off, when Matthews failed to cling onto a regulation return chance in the third over, stooping to her right. Her frustration was compounded when Gaze took her for three more fours in her next over to march along to 37 from 23 balls. At 49 for 0 in the sixth over, the defending champions were playing with the freedom that their captain, Melie Kerr, had promised on the eve of their campaign.

Stars align for Alleyne

Aaliyah Alleyne was an unassuming means for West Indies to come roaring back into the contest. Defiantly medium-pace, albeit with a high nagging action, she put the skids under New Zealand with three prime wickets in six balls. Plimmer was the first to succumb, as she looked to launch a short ball high over the leg-side but picked out the bucket hands of Deandra Dottin at deep backward square.

Then, after Kerr had announced her intentions with a ramp for four through deep third, Alleyne ripped the guts out of New Zealand’s innings with a rinse-and-repeat pair of breakthroughs. Kerr tried to launch her next delivery clean down the ground, but found herself cramped for room as Alleyne shaped the full length into her pads, and Karishma Ramharack scooped up her nothing shot at mid-on.

Moments later, after a first-ball single for the incoming Devine, Gaze gave it away in identical fashion. Another fluffed drive through the line looped off the toe of the bat for Ramharack to seal the deal once more. At 56 for 3 in the eighth over, that flying start was a thing of the past.

Halliday, Green hold the line for NZ

New Zealand had hinted at a changing of the guard at the toss, when it was confirmed that Suzie Bates would be missing from their XI for the first time in the entire history of the Women’s T20 World Cup. Their other old stager, however, had another important holding role to perform. Just weeks after an incredible knock of 87 from 57 balls had rescued New Zealand from 11 for 4 against England, Devine joined Brooke Halliday in a vital injection of impetus.

She made just 22 from 15 balls before succumbing to another sharp catch in the deep, this time from Claxton, but the stand of 45 from 29 balls helped to signal New Zealand’s charge through the back end. Halliday took control, alternating powerful thumps down the ground with well-timed reverse-sweeps to make 40 from 32, before Alleyne – inevitably – induced another scuff to mid-on, to close out the impressive figures of 4 for 27.

New Zealand weren’t done yet, however. Green put the hammer down in the closing overs, making 35 not out from 22, including a lusty straight six off Afy Fletcher, and four fours from her final eight balls as West Indies struggled to close out a battling display in the field. Ultimately, their struggles weren’t a patch on those that they’d inflict on their opponents.

SCORES:

West Indies Women 163 for 3 in 19.5 overs  (Hayley  Matthews 48, Sherfaine Campbelle 90*; Jess Kerr 2-17 ) beat New Zealand Women  162 for 6 in 20 overs ( Issabella Gaze 39, Sophie Devine 22, Brooke Halliday 40, Maddy Green 35*; Hayley Matthews  1-31, Deandra Dottin 1-22, Aaliyah Alleyne 4-27) by seven wickets

[Cricinfo]

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