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England rush to 3-0 series win as Smith, Buttler star in rain-reduced chase

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Harry Brook leads the celebrations after England's 3-0 series win [Cricinfo]

England were held up by the late arrival of the West Indies team bus at the Kia Oval, then charged to victory like a team determined to beat the traffic. Jamie Smith’s 25-ball half-century, his first in ODIs, led them to 100 for 1 in a reduced eight-over Powerplay, and they cruised to a DLS-adjusted target of 246 with 10.2 overs to spare.

It meant a perfect start to captaincy for Harry Brook, sweeping his first series in permanent charge three-nil to draw a line under England’s wretched white-ball results earlier this year. “It’s a hell of a lot of fun when you’re enjoying it with a lot of mates,” Brook said. “I think we’ve got such a good side. The depth in batting is amazing, and we have a lot of skilful bowlers as well.”

This was England’s first ODI series win since September 2023, and their first series clean-sweep since a three-nil win in the Netherlands which marked the end of Eoin Morgab’s tenure. The result also eases their concerns about automatic qualification for the 2027 World Cup, and leaves West Indies looking nervously over their shoulders at tenth-ranked Bangladesh.

West Indies’ four-mile journey from their Chelsea hotel to Kennington took nearly two hours due to road closures and heavy congestion, and their delayed innings was further interrupted by rain. Sherfane Rutherford, returning from the IPL, hit 70 to hold their innings together but they were reeling at 154 for 7 when he fell to a sharp catch by Brook at mid-on.

It took a counter-attacking eighth-wicket partnership worth 91 off 68 balls between Gudakesh Motie and Alzarri Joseph to take West Indies to 251. Motie walked in at No. 8 after wickets off consecutive deliveries, but smeared Adil Rashid’s hat-trick ball over midwicket for six; he hit five fours and two further sixes on his way to his highest ODI score.

But Smith’s powerful innings made England’s target look puny: he cracked 10 fours and three sixes on his way to 64 off 28, dominating an opening stand of 93 in seven overs. Ben Duckett took on the baton with 58 off 46, Joe Root added a fluent 44 and Jos Buttler finished the rout in style, pulling the winning six after a lively, boundary-laden cameo.

England stuck with the side that snuck over the line in Cardiff and struck three early blows after choosing to bowl. Evin Lewis, returning from a niggle, pulled Brydon Carse to Smith at short midwicket; Brandon King sliced a drive to Jacob Bethell at point off Matthew Potts; and Shai Hope was bounced out by Saqib Mahmood for the second time in the series, caught at long leg.

Keacy Carty and Rutherford led the recovery, adding 62 for the fourth wicket as they enjoyed the value for shots afforded by Brook’s attacking fields. But their rhythm was thrown off by a 97-minute rain delay at the drinks break, after which Carty dragged a wide, 43mph legbreak from Rashid onto his off stump.

Rutherford’s excellent IPL season for Gujarat Titans ended in Saturday’s Eliminator, and his seventh 50-plus score in his first 11 ODI innings was a reminder of what West Indies had missed. He slotted seamlessly into the tempo of a one-day innings, scoring heavily both sides of the wicket, and punched sweetly through straight mid-on when Mahmood overpitched.

He looked like the last hope after Rashid had Justin Greaves caught at short midwicket and Roston Chase edging to slip, but Motie and Joseph made hay. Their stand highlighted the predictability of England’s plans to the lower order, with both batters camping on the back foot in anticipation of a short-ball barrage that duly arrived.

Motie was occasionally streaky, swiping hard over midwicket and mid-off, but Joseph’s hitting was pure and crisp: he swung Jacks back over his head and into the members’ pavilion, and launched Mahmood over deep midwicket. He made 41, his second-highest ODI score, before edging to slip; Potts then ended the innings by cleaning up Motie with a slower ball.

West Indies came out hunting early wickets, but Jayden Seales and the returning Shamar Joseph bowled wayward first spells: Smith whipped several early freebies off his pads then imposed himself on Seales with a flurry of pulls. He was dropped by Greaves off Motie’s first ball, then hit the next four for 4, 6, 4, 6; he was bowled by the sixth, but the damage was done.

“We’ve seen it in Test cricket, how good he is,” Brook said of Smith, who was promoted to open the batting for the first time in this series. “He broke the back of the game there, really… He’s not a slogger, is he? He’s playing proper shots, and putting their bad balls away and putting them under immense pressure.”

Duckett had twice top-edged Alzarri Joseph over long leg for six, and was then dropped by Rutherford in the same spot. He cut and swept Motie for three consecutive boundaries before slashing to cover off Chase, who then put Brook down early on off a disheartened Seales. Root’s dismissal was inconsequential, as Buttler’s 41 not out off 20 gave his successor a winning start.

Brief scores:
England 246 for 3 in 29.4 overs (Jamie Smith 64, Ben Duckett 58, Joe Root 44,Harry Brook 26*, Josh Buttler 41*; Roston Chase 1-19) beat West Indies 251 for 9 in 40 overs  (Keacy Carty 29, Sherfane Rutherford 70, Gudakesh Motie 63, Alzarri Joseph 41; Saqib Mahmood 2-48, Brydon Carse 2-57, Matthew Potts 2-51, Adil Rashid 3-40) by seven wickets (via DLS method)

[Cricinfo]



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Record prize money on offer at Australian Open

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The 2026 Australian Open, which is the first Grand Slam event of the season, starts on 18 January (BBC)

The Australian Open will offer a record prize pot of £55m at this year’s tournament – but players are said to be “disappointed” it does not represent a greater share of the Grand Slam’s total revenue.

Total prize money of A$111.5m represents a 16% increase on last year and is the largest player fund in the tournament’s history.

The singles champions will receive $4.15m (£2.05m) – a 19% increase on the amount which 2025 winners Madison Keys and Jannik Sinner took home.

All singles and doubles players competing at the season-opening Grand Slam will get a minimum increase of 10%.

“This increase demonstrates our commitment to supporting   tennis careers at every level,” said Tennis Australia chief executive Craig Tiley.

The move comes after a group of leading players ramped up the pressure on the Grand Slam tournaments  in October over increased prize money and greater player welfare.

But they are “likely to be disappointed” their key demands of the Australian Open and other Grand Slams have been “largely ignored”, a source close to the players’ group told BBC Sport.

(BBC Sports)

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ICC to Bangladesh: play in India or forfeit points

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Bangladesh are scheduled to play their first three matches of the T20 World Cup in Kolkata (Cricinfo)

Conflicting reports have emerged from the ICC’s call with the BCB on Tuesday over Bangladesh travelling to India to participate in the upcoming men’s T20 World Cup.

ESPNcricinfo has learned that in a virtual call on Tuesday, the ICC told BCB that it was rejecting the latter’s request to play Bangladesh’s matches outside India due to security concerns. The ICC is understood to have told the BCB that Bangladesh will need to travel to India to play the T20 World Cup or risk forfeiting points. The BCB, though, has claimed no such ultimatum has been relayed to them by the governing body.

There has also been no official communication issued by either the BCCI or BCB on the outcome of Tuesday’s call, which was arranged by ICC after BCB wrote in on Sunday asking to “consider” moving Bangladesh’s matches outside India.

The development comes nearly a month before the 20-team tournament starts in India and Sri Lanka from February 7 and concludes on March 8. Bangladesh, placed in Group C, are scheduled to play their first three matches in Kolkata: on February 7 (vs West Indies), February 9 (vs Italy) and February 14 (vs England) with their final group game, against Nepal, in Mumbai on February 17.

The BCB’s decision to write to ICC was triggered by the BCCI “instructing” Kolkata Knight Riders to  release  Bangladesh fast bowler Mustafizur Rahman, who the franchise had bought in the IPL auction in December for INR 9.2 crore.

The BCCI’s decision was notified to media by its secretary Devajit Saikia. However, Sakia did not provide the reason behind KKR being asked to release Mustafizur, who was the only Bangladesh player bought at the 2026 auction.

It is understood that the IPL Governing Council never met to discuss the situation, so questions remain about who exactly was involved in the Mustafizur decision other than Saikia.

(Cricinfo)

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UK and France to send troops to Ukraine if peace deal agreed

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(Pic BBC)

The UK and France have signed a declaration of intent on deploying troops in Ukraine if a peace deal is made with Russia, UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has announced.

After talks with Ukraine’s allies in Paris, he said the UK and France would “establish military hubs across Ukraine” to deter future invasion, while French President Emmanuel Macron later said thousands of troops may be deployed.

Allies also largely agreed robust security guarantees for Ukraine and proposed that the US would take the lead in monitoring a truce. But the key issue of territory is still being discussed.

Russia has repeatedly warned that any foreign troops in Ukraine would be a “legitimate target”.

Moscow has not yet commented on the announcements made in the French capital.

Russian President Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, and Moscow currently controls about 20% of Ukrainian territory.

(BBC)

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