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Litton, Shamim lead Bangladesh’s rout of Sri Lanka
Bangladesh snapped their six-game losing streak in dominant fashion as they handed Sri Lanka a 83-run defeat in front of a packed house in Dambulla and with it levelled the three match series 1-1.
Litton Das’ 76 off 50 – he put to rest a 13-match run without a fifty – headlined Bangladesh’s innings, but it was Shamim Hossain’s destructive 48 off 27 that shifted the winds in Bangladesh’s favour.
Chasing 178, Sri Lanka’s top order failed to fire – unlike in Kandy – and an excellent Bangladesh effort with the ball and in the field ensured the Sri Lanka middle and lower order were not able to bail them out either.
To the crowd’s credit they hung around as wicket after wicket fell, but as early as the 12th over the droves began to filter out, as the last recognised batter – Dasun Shanaka – fell with just 73 runs on the board. Sri Lanka’s innings lasted just 15.2 overs.
It was the 12th over of the Bangladesh innings that shifted the game in the visitors’ favour, as it brought Shamim to the crease earlier than might have initially been planned. At the time though, the innings looked anything but redeemable.
The openers had thrown their wickets away in what might be described as cosplay efforts of aggression on a good batting surface, while Litton and Towhid Hridoy’s efforts at consolidation had helped their side avert a collapse.
However, when Towhid sliced one to short third and Mehidy Hasan Miraz scooped another to short fine leg, it looked as if all that consolidation had gone to waste. But Shamim’s entry changed the dynamics of the innings, and indeed the game.
Off just second ball he faced he cut one away from close to the stumps. A couple of deliveries later the pace was taken off, but Shamim responded with a bat swing that was even more rapid. Shamim’s next boundaries came against Sri Lanka’s death-bowling specialists – three off Nuwan Thushara, and one each off Maheesh Theekshana and Binura Fernando.
But the expert ball-striking and placement was only a small part of Shamim’s innings. Across his 27 deliveries faced, only five were dots. Shamim was then at the heart of disrupting Sri Lanka’s chase, effecting the run out of Kusal Mendis and holding on to running catch in the deep to remove Avishka Fernando.
His energy was infectious, and even if his eagerness for singles might have eventually led to his – and Jaker Ali’s – downfall in the final over as they sought to steal runs to the keeper, the momentum he had created would create the conditions for Bangladesh’s ultimate victory.
Litton hadn’t come into this game in any great form. He’d scored a pair of 40s this year, but his last 50-plus score in T20Is had come all the way back in June 2024. Even his coach had to acknowledge prior to the game that his skipper wasn’t in the best of form.
So, when Litton sauntered down the track and missed a wide one from Jeffrey Vandersay, it seemed inevitable that lean run was destined to continue. Kusal Mendis, however, was unable to gather this wide legbreak that spun even wider, and Litton survived. He was on 30 at the time.
Had he fallen then, perhaps Sri Lanka might have pressed home their advantage further. But in reality, the more painful missed chance came some six overs later, with Litton shanking an attempted sweep on 56, only to be dropped by Theekshana at mid-off in the 16th over.
By the time Theekshana had dismissed Litton three overs later, he had added a further 20 runs to his total and the momentum had decidedly shifted in Bangladesh’s favour.
Brief scores:
Bangladesh 177/7 in 20 overs [Litton Das 76, Towhid Hridoy 31, Shamim Hossain 48; Nuwan Thushara 1-30, Binura Fernando 3-31, Maheesh Theekshana 1-30] beat Sri Lanka 94 in 15.2 overs (Pathum Nissanka 32, Dasun Shanaka 20; Rishad Hossain 3-18, Shoriful Islam 2-12, Mohamad Saiffudin 2-21, Mustafizur Rahman 1-14, Mehidy Hasan Miraz 1-26) by 83 runs
[Cricinfo]
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Trump unhurt after shots fired at White House correspondents’ dinner
United States President Donald Trump was evacuated from the White House correspondents’ dinner in Washington, DC, after shots were fired outside the event.
Trump was rushed offstage at the Washington Hilton hotel on Saturday evening after gunfire broke out outside the ballroom where the annual media gala was taking place.
The president, First Lady Melania Trump, and Trump’s Cabinet were unharmed in the attack.
In a news conference after the incident, Trump said a man armed with multiple weapons had charged a security checkpoint and was “taken down” by the Secret Service.
Trump described the suspect as a “very sick person” and a “thug” who had attacked the US Constitution.
A Secret Service officer was shot in the attack, but he was saved by his bulletproof vest and was “doing great”, Trump said.
“As you know, this is not the first time in the past couple of years that our republic has been attacked by a would-be assassin who sought to kill,” the president said.
“In light of this evening’s events, I ask that all Americans recommit with their hearts in resolving our differences peacefully,” Trump said.
Asked by a reporter if he believed he was the target of the attack, Trump responded: “I guess”.

The Secret Service said the shooting had occurred at a “screening area” and that one individual was in custody.
“The condition of those involved is not yet known, and law enforcement is actively assessing the situation,” the agency said.
Shortly before his news conference, Trump posted images on Truth Social of the suspect face down on the ground, as well as a clip of a surveillance video showing a man running past security personnel, who then drew their guns and opened fire.
Jeanine Ferris Pirro, the US attorney for the District of Columbia, said the suspect would be charged with using a firearm during a crime or violence and assault on federal officers using a dangerous weapon.
FBI director Kash Patel said officers had begun examining the suspect’s background and urged members of the public with any relevant information to come forward.
“No piece of information is too small; no piece of information is inadequate. We will evaluate it all,” Patel said.
Multiple US media outlets identified the suspect as Cole Tomas Allen, 31, of Torrance, California.
Trump, a ferocious critic of journalists who has sued multiple media outlets, had been due to speak at the annual celebration of press freedom for the first time as president.
Footage from the dinner’s venue showed Trump and other attendees taking cover behind their table after shots rang out, as people yelled “Get down!” and “Stay down!”
Trump was then rushed from the scene as heavily armed members of his security detail swarmed the table.
Al Jazeera producer Chris Sheridan said he heard what he believed to be five gunshots outside the ballroom.
“We could smell the powder. We immediately dove to the ground. It was directly behind me,” Sheridan said.
“I couldn’t tell how many feet away, but it was definitely behind the doors to the entrance to the ballroom.”
Sheridan said that while there was “airport-level” security around the ballroom itself, anyone with a ticket to the dinner could enter the hotel and descend to the lower level where the ballroom is located.
“You could have gotten down to the lower level, the ballroom level, and been outside,” he said.

World leaders including Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum condemned the attack and expressed their relief that Trump was unharmed.
“Violence has no place in a democracy and must be unequivocally condemned,” Modi said in a post on X.
Trump has been targeted in multiple assassination attempts, including a near-miss shooting during his 2024 presidential campaign.
Thomas Crooks fired eight shots at Trump during a campaign event in Butler, Pennsylvania, killing one bystander and wounding the then-candidate’s right ear, before he was shot dead by the Secret Service.
“Today, we need levels of security that probably nobody has ever seen before,” Trump said at Saturday’s news conference, before pledging to reschedule the press dinner.
“We’re not going to cancel things out, because we can’t do that,” Trump said.
“We wanted to stay tonight. I will tell you, I fought like hell to stay… But it was protocol. They said, ‘Please, sir.’”
[Aljazeeera]
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Sooryavanshi ton in vain as Sunrisers Hyderabad raze a 229 chase
Twelve days after defeating Rajasthan Royals [RR] by nullifying Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, Sunrisers Hyderabad [SRH] defeated them in spite of an astonishing innings from the boy wonder.
Sooryavanshi scored his second IPL hundred, getting there off just 36 balls, and struck a six every third ball before his dismissal. The rest of RR’s batting, however, struggled around him. Sooryavanshi made 103 off 37 balls, and his colleagues and extras combined to score 125 off 83.
It wasn’t clear at the innings break whether 228 for 6 would be enough for RR, on a day when Punjab Kings (PBKS) had broken the T20 record by chasing down 265 with an over to spare. It wasn’t, and this was because SRH were able to fire at both ends where RR only went from one. A red-hot Jofra Archer dismissed Travis Head in the first over, but Abhishek Sharma and Ishan Kishan quickly took over, enjoying their share of luck in a match where the two teams combined to put down seven chances (there had been nine drops in the Delhi Capitals-PBKS game).
Individually, neither Abhishek nor Kishan matched Sooryavanshi for pace of scoring. Together, though, they comfortably outscored Sooryavanshi and Dhruv Jurel, who had put on RR’s biggest partnership – 112 off 62 balls for the second wicket. Abhishek and Kishan put on 132 off just 55, and when Donovan Ferreira broke their partnership, SRH needed just nine an over in the last 10. They got home with an over and a half to spare.
Praful Hinge had made an eye-catching debut in the reverse fixture, taking a match-winning four-for that began with the wicket of Sooryavanshi. On this day, Sooryavanshi had his revenge. He faced five balls of Hinge in the first over of the match, after SRH had chosen to bowl. First a dot – a play and miss. And then 6, 6, 6, 6. Hinge began short and kept getting gradually fuller, and Sooryavanshi put everything away: a pull, a whip over backward square leg, and two clean, flowing hits down the ground.
It took until the last ball of the second over for Sooryavanshi to get on strike again, and now he was facing Pat Cummins – playing his first competitive game since the Adelaide Ashes Test in December – for the first time in his life. Cummins bowled a good short ball, angling across the left-hander and climbing, but Sooryavanshi picked the length in a flash and swatted it for another six, well in front of square. He had faced six balls and hit five sixes.
Sooryavanshi was never going to keep up that rate of scoring, but he didn’t slow down by much at all. He finished the powerplay on 51 off 16, along the way getting to a 15-ball half-century for the third time this season, and getting to 1000 runs in fewer balls than anyone in T20 history. He had also enjoyed one major slice of luck, Aniket Verma putting him down off Eshan Malinga on the leg-side boundary, when he was on 32.
Sooryavanshi kept hitting boundaries at an absurd rate even when the fields spread, showing he could innovate to disrupt bowlers’ plans: a reverse-swat over backward point, for instance, forced left-arm wristspinner Shivang Kumar into a fuller, straighter follow-up that he launched over wide long-on for six.
Another attempt at innovation – he opened up and shaped to reverse-scoop – led to his wicket off a Sakib Hussain yorker in the 14th over, but he had hit his Bihar team-mate for 6, 4, 6 before that to bring up his century. It was only his second-quickest century in the IPL – his maiden hundred, against Gujarat Titans last year, had come off 35 balls.
He now has the second and third quickest centuries in the history of the IPL. He’s only 15.
While the Sooryavanshi whirlwind raged at one end, SRH’s bowlers found life significantly easier at the other. Jurel struggled for fluency early on, and despite a late flurry of boundaries only managed 51 off 35. Riyan Parag, enduring a miserable season, was out for 7 of 9, bowled by a terrific Cummins yorker with late tail.
Cummins and Eshan Malinga used the yorker brilliantly at the back end of the innings, and only Ferreira (33 off 16) managed to break free of SRH’s post-Sooryavanshi shackles.
Archer produced a chance with the first ball of SRH’s innings, his pace, bounce, constricting line, and angle from over the wicket producing a nervy jab and edge from Travis Head. Jurel, diving left, put it down.
There were two plays and misses in the next three balls (one was adjudged wide), and then a bit of width that Head carved for six. But just when Jurel may have wondered how costly his miss would be, Archer bowled another Test-match jaffa, squaring Head up, and this time the edge settled nicely in Jurel’s gloves.
The drama wasn’t done yet; the last ball of the over was a searing bouncer, and Kishan, taking his eyes off the ball while looking to fend it away, edged it for six over fine leg.
That proved to be a bit of a sign in the early exchanges. There was luck early on for Abhishek too; an edge over slip in the second over off Nandre Burger, and two missed chances – one from Shimron Hetmyer who lost the ball in its flight, one from Ravindra Jadeja who put down a sitter – in the fourth and fifth overs.
Either side of those chances, the two left-handers peppered the boundary, particularly by piercing or going over the off-side ring when the bowlers offered width. Some of this was down to mis-executed plans: Tushar Deshpande, for instance, looked to hide the ball away from their hitting arc with protection square and behind square on the off side, but he didn’t quite find the line control on the day.
The presence of two left-handers also meant RR went with the part-time offspin of Parag and Ferreira before either of their frontline spinners. By the time Ravi Bishnoi and Jadeja came on in the 11th and 12th overs, the match was nearly done, and they ended up bowling just an over each. Heinrich Klaasen (29 off 24) and Nitish Kumar Reddy (36 off 18) took SRH to the doorstep of their target before both fell late in the chase.
Brief scores:
Sunrisers Hyderabad 229 for 5 in 18.3 overs (Abhishek Sharma 57, Ishan Kishan 74, Heinrich Klassen 29, Nitish Kumar Reddy 36; Jofra Archer 2-34, Brijesh Sharma 2-44,Donovan Ferreira 1-14) beat Rajasthan Royals 228 for 6 in 20 overs (Yashasvi Jaiswal 10, Vaibhav Sooryavanshi 103, Dhruv Jurel 51, Donovan Ferreira 33, Shimron Hetmyer 11; Praful Hinge 1-49, Pat Cummins 1-27, Eshan Malinga 2-38, Sakib Hussain 1-62, Nitish Kumar Reddy 1-20) by five wickets
[Cricinfo]
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Prabhsimran, Shreyas upstage Rahul’s 152* to mow down record T20 chase
Punjab Kings (PBKS) overpowered Delhi Capitals (DC) and pulled off the highest successful T20 chase in an IPL bash where 265 met 264. They mowed down the target with six wickets and seven balls to spare. The opening blitz from Priyansh Arya and Prabhsimran Singh – they hit 116 together in the powerplay – and captain Shreyas Iyer’s chancy yet composed 71 not out off 36 balls upstaged KL Rahukl’s unbeaten 152 off 67 balls on a flat Delhi pitch.
Before the start of the chase, ESPNcricinfo’s Forecaster had PBKS’ win probability pegged at 14.83%. It zoomed up to 65.35% after Arya and Prabhsimran went on a ruthless boundary-hitting spree in the powerplay. Both openers fell in successive overs to spin, but Shreyas then took charge of the chase and increased that count to 100%.
Rahul’s knock could’ve been cut short on 12 had Shashank Singh not dropped a regulation catch at deep square leg. Shashank lost his shape and ended up knocking the ball away to the boundary. After dropping at least three chances in their previous game against Lucknow Super Giants (LSG), Shashank spilled another chance on Saturday, leaving coach Ricky Ponting upset in the dugout.
Shashank fumbled again in the fifth over of the powerplay, running to his right from sweeper cover and letting the ball roll into the boundary. By the time the powerplay ended, DC ran away to 68 for 1, their highest powerplay score this season.
Rahul was responsible for 35 of those from 16 balls, having repeatedly hit the ball over the top. Rana was also quick off the blocks, moving to 22 off 13 balls. Prabhsimran and Arya later made those powerplay scores look pedestrian.
In the past, Rahul often slowed down after the powerplay, but on Saturday, he didn’t allow the momentum to let up. He step-hit Yuzvendra Chahal for six over long-on in the seventh over and proceeded to step out of his crease and pick the legspinner away for back-to-back fours in the 11th over. By then, Rahul had already raised his half-century off 26 balls. He got another life on 51 when he popped up a return catch, but Vijaykumar Vyshak couldn’t hold onto it.
Rahul went on to bring up his fastest IPL century, off 47 balls. He reached the landmark with a drilled drive down the ground off Marco Jansen in the 15th over. He celebrated by crossing his arms in the form of an ‘X’ and had more than 28,000 fans at the Arun Jaitley Stadium celebrating with him.
At the other end, Nitish Rana looked set to bring up a hundred of his own until Xavier Bartlett had him caught by Shreyas at mid-off for 91 off 44 balls to snap a 220-run stand – the highest for DC. In the 11 balls prior to his dismissal, Rana had cracked 44 off the Australia quick, including a sequence of 6,4,4,4,4,6 in the 12th over that cost PBKS 28 runs.
Rana wasn’t as fluent against Chahal, but Rahul had made up for it at the other end. Rahul went from 100 to 150 in just 19 balls. He got there with a superbly controlled upper cut off a lifter from Arshdeep Singh on the penultimate ball of the innings.
Rahul became the first Indian to score 150 or more in the IPL and third overall behind only Chris Gayle’s 175* against Pune Warriors India (PWI) in 2013 and Brendon McCullum’s 158* against Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) in 2008. He batted through 20 overs and vaulted DC to their highest total. At the innings break, Rahul was so knackered that he was panting for breath through his interview on a 41-degree day in Delhi.
Prabhsimran and Delhi boy, Arya, then left the crowd breathless in the chase with their unfettered assault in the powerplay. It began with Arya pumping a fairly blameless length delivery on off from Auqib Nabi over midwidcket for six and ended with four by Prabhsimran, which propelled PBKS to 116 for 0 in six overs. It was the second-highest powerplay score in the history of the IPL, falling nine short of levelling the record set by Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) against DC at this very venue in 2024.
PBKS had passed fifty in the third over when Arya crunched Axar Patel for six and then Prabhsimran muscled them past hundred in the final over of the powerplay with an over full of fours against seamer Mukesh Kumar.
DC clawed back into the contest when their spinners Axar and Kuldeep Yadav dismissed PBKS’ openers in the seventh and eighth overs. Kuldeep struck again in the tenth over when he stormed through Cooper Connolly’s defences with a zippy wrong’un, leaving PBKS at 145 for 3 in the tenth over. Shreyas then managed the chase so well that PBKS ended up winning with more than an over to spare.
Shreyas got cracking when he pumped legspinner Vipraj Nigam into the sight screen in the 11th over. Nigam had come into the DC side as a concussion sub for Lungi Ngidi, who was taken to the hospital in an ambulance after suffering a blow to his head while attempting a catch off Arya at mid-off. Nigam created a chance to dismiss Shreyas on 28, but Karun Nair, who came in as a fielding sub, dropped a sitter at long-off in the 15th over. Two balls later, Nair dropped Shreyas once again, this time at long-on off Kuldeep.

Lungi Ngidi banged his head on the ground while he looked to take a catch [Cricinfo]
Shreyas went 4,6,6 off the next three legal balls to tilt the game PBKS’ way. The second six over long-on brought Shreyas a half-century off 26 balls. He also lined up T Natarajan for a brace of sixes to rush PBKS home along with Shashank.
Brief scores:
Punjab Kings 265 for 4 in 18.5 overs (Priyansh Arya 43, Prabhsimran Singh 76, Cooper Connolly 17, Shreyas Iyer 71*, Nehal Wadhera 25, Shashank Singh 19*; Axar Patel 1-44, Kuldeep Yadav 2-46, Vipraj Nigam 1-24) beat Delhi Capitals 264 for 2 in 20 overs (Pathum Nissanka 11, KL Rahul 152*, Nitish Rana, 91; Arshdeep 1-49, Xavier Bartlett 1-69) by six wickets
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