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Harmanpreet century, Goud six-for seal 2-1 series win for India
Harmanpreet Kaur’s century and Kranti Goud’s six-wicket haul handed India a 13-run victory over England and a 2-1 ODI series win in a high-scoring tour finale.
Harmanpreet’s 84-ball 102 asked England to post what would have been a world record run-chase of 319 in their last competitive match before the World Cup in India and Sri Lanka.
Despite a fighting 162-run stand between third-wicket pair NatSciver-Btunt and Emma Lamb, which rescued England from 8 for 2 after Goud had struck twice inside the first three overs of their pursuit, England were found wanting once both those batters were gone.
Goud finished with 6 for 52 to be the pick of India’s bowlers, who met with some resistance at Chester-le-Street which made for a margin of defeat that flattered the hosts.
It wasn’t until the 31st over that India struck again, via Shree Charani’s removal of Lamb for 68 and, once Deepti Sharma had Sciver-Brunt caught behind two runs shy of a century, India seized back control.
Unlike England, India will have three more ODIs before their home tournament when they host reigning champions Australia between September 14-20 with the World Cup starting 10 days after that series concludes.
Although it was a closer-run game than initially promised, India looked a class above England through their batting innings.
Harmanpreet, who became the third Indian player to pass 4000 runs in women’s ODIs, arrested a lean run of form by passing fifty for the first time in 13 innings in the format. Since scoring 54 in the 50-over warm-up match against an ECB Development XI at the start of the tour, her best score in either of the white-ball series against England had been 26 in the fourth T20I.
She was well supported by fifty from Jemmimah Rodrigues, with whom she shared a 110-run stand for the fourth wicket, while Smriti Mandhana and Harleen Deol added 45 runs apiece and Richa Ghosh contributed an excellent 18-ball cameo to go unbeaten on 38.
Rodrigues took a liking to offspinner Charlie Dean, helping herself to three fours twice from consecutive overs accessing all areas of the ground.
Harmanpreet was also dealing largely in boundaries, clipping Linsey Smith over mid-off and sweeping over square leg.
Another four over square leg took her past 90 and, after Rodrigues gloved an attempted pull off Lauren Filer to Amy Jones behind the stumps moments after brining up her fifty, Harmanpreet raised her seventh ODI century with a push through mid-off.
England missed the chance to remove Hamanpreet on 22 with the score 132 for 2 when Filer struck the pad but the home side failed to review with replays suggesting she would have been out. She eventually fell chipping a drive to Sciver-Brunt, who took a sharp diving catch at cover.
After revealing in a pre-match interview that she considered quitting cricket in the aftermath of the off-field drama surrounding England’s T20 World Cup and Ashes failures, Sophie Ecclestone was by far England’s most economical bowler with 1 for 28 from 10 overs. But her counterparts all paid heavily for a solitary wicket each as India’s batters dominated, with 120 runs coming off the last 10 overs.
England’s openers both fell cheaply to Goud the 21-year-old right-arm seamer playing her fifth match for her country. She bowled Tammy Beaumont with a beauty of an in-ducker that slid between bat and pad and had Deepti to thank for removing Jones with a spectacular one-handed catch leaping to her right at short third.
England were 22 for 2 at the end of the powerplay but thereafter Sciver-Brunt and Lamb set about rebuilding the innings with more gusto.
Lamb survived a caught-and-bowled chance to Charani on 58 but Charani made amends a short time later, bowling Lamb on the sweep to put England back under pressure.
No sooner had Sciver-Brunt beaten Sneh Rana’s dive at fine leg for her 11th four of the innings, than Deepti struck to remove the biggest danger.
Sciver-Brunt knew she was gone, as did Deepti, who vigorously called for the DRS without consulting her captain when umpire Jacqueline Williams remained unmoved by her appeal for caught behind. Harmanpreet too signalled for a review as Sciver-Brunt began making her way back to the changeroom, UltraEdge confirming the ball had come off her glove as Ghosh dived, juggled and gathered down the leg side.
Sophia Dunkley was run out in a mix-up with Alice Davidson-Richards, who turned her back as her partner chanced Goud’s arm at point only to see Ghosh break the stumps with Dunkley a long way from home.
Rodrigues took two excellent catches in the deep to remove Dean and Ecclestone before Goud dismissed Davidson-Richards and Filer with consecutive balls to seal her five-for then claimed a bonus sixth when she had Lauren Bell caught by Harmanpreet as England were bowled out with one ball remaining.
Brief scores:
India Women 318 for 5 in 50 overs (Smriti Mandhana 45, Harlene Deol 45, Harmanpreet Kaur 102, Jemmimah Rodrigues 50, Richa Ghosh 38*; Sophie Ecclestone 1-28) beat England Women 305 in 49.5 overs (Nat Sciver-Brunt 98, Emma Lamb 68, Alice Davidson Richards 44; Kranti Goud 6-52, Shree Charani 2-68) by 13 runs
[Cricinfo]
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Israel says it’s killed Ali Larijani, Iran’s security chief and Basij commander
Israel has claimed two high profile assassinations of Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, according to Israel’s Defence Minister Katz, and the commander of the internal Basij militia, Gholamreza Soleimani, neither of which Iran has commented on or confirmed
Iranian state media published a handwritten note by Larijani, it is not clear whether it is intended as proof of life. Larijani’s note published on his social media outlets commemorates memory of Iranian sailors killed, hose funeral is expected to be held on Tuesday, in the US attack on their boat in international waters.
if confirmed, Larijani would be the highest level assassination in the war since United States-Israeli strikes killed the former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, and several members of his family on the first day of the war they launched on February 28.
Larijani was last seen publicly on Friday, attending the al-Quds day rally in support of Palestinians in Tehran, along with Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian.
Larijani has been a political figure in the Iranian hierarchy for years, at one time leading the nation’s nuclear negotiations with the West. He was also previously the Iranian Speaker of the Parliament.
The Israeli military also claimed in a post on X Tuesday that it had killed Gholamreza Sileimani, the commander of the Basij unit, the internal security paramilitary militia of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
[Aljazeera]
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Devon Conway, bowlers star as New Zealand make it 1-1
New Zealand levelled the five-match T20I series against South Africa with a dominant performance in Hamilton. After being put in to bat on a surface the women’s sides praised for its batter friendliness, New Zealand relied on Devon Conway’s experience to post a challenging target.
They may even have felt they left a few runs out there as few stayed with Conway with the 48-run opening stand their highest. South Africa’s spinners were particularly expensive as Keshav Maharaj and George Linde conceded 78 runs in the six overs they bowled.
In the end, New Zealand scored exactly the same number of runs as they posted just over a month ago against South Africa, in the group game of the T20 World Cup. Then, South Africa eased to the target with 17 balls to spare. This time, they were bowled out for their 10th lowest score in the format: an exact mirror of what New Zealand’s line-up did in the first match. Only Linde scored more than 30 as Ben Sears and Lockie Ferguson took six wickets between them in an incisive display of quick bowling.
With South Africa women winning earlier in the day, both the men’s and women’s series are locked at 1-1.
Conway collects his highest in two years
Conway didn’t get any games at the T20 World Cup but showed he still has plenty to offer with an innings that provided a solid foundation for New Zealand to build on. He was productive on the leg-side from the get-go, when he flicked the first ball of the match through mid-wicket for four and scored 80% of his runs in that half of the field. That included both his sixes: the slog-sweep off Keshav Maharaj in the over after the Powerplay and his launch over long-on off Wiaan Mulder which brought up his fifty off 39 balls. Conway has not scored this many runs in 20 T20I innings, since February 2024. He was ready to up the ante as New Zealand entered the last five overs and tried to pull Wiaan Mulder but was cramped for room and top-edged. New Zealand were 124 for 4 with 27 deliveries remaining.
South Africa’s death bowling misses a trick
With Conway dismissed, and New Zealand 126 for 5 after 16 overs, South Africa had the opportunity to keep the hosts under 160 but their death bowling plans faltered. Nqobani Mokeona, the 19-year old, bowled a good 17th over that cost only seven runs and finished with excellent figures of 0 for 22 in four overs. Gerald Coetzee’s final over went for eight runs and brought the wicket of Jimmy Neesham before Ottneil Baartman’s last over cost 10 runs.
Keshav Maharaj came on to bowl at the end, and it went awry. Cole McConchie advanced on him to hit the first ball for six and then Josh Clarkson plundered 16 runs off the four deliveries. Maharaj’s plan to go wide of the stumps didn’t work as Clarkson chased it and finished unbeaten on 26* off nine balls. What may irk Maharaj most is that he had another option. Wiaan Mulder, playing a T20I for the first time since September 2024, bowled two overs for 14 runs and could have had one towards the end of the innings. South Africa conceded 42 runs in the last three overs.
New Zealand’s hat-trick of early strikes
South Africa were off to a solid start on 24 without loss after the first three overs but then trouble struck. In the fifth over, Connor Esterhuizen thought he had carved Sears in front of backward point, but Tim Robinson timed his jump well to take a good catch. In the next over, Mulder, opening for the first time in T20Is, worked his way to 16 off 20 balls before he also tried to cut but was beaten by turn and bounce from Mitchell Santer and caught in the covers. With both openers dismissed early, South Africa would have been looking for a big performance from Tony de Zorzi, the No.3 who was originally part of the T20 World Cup squad. But the left-hander fell victim to the McConchie curse (remember he dismissed Quinton de Kock and Ryan Rickelton in the T20 World Cup semi-final?) and top-edged a sweep to short fine. South Africa were 31 for 3 in the seventh over.
Santner gets Smith again and Sears steals the show
It’s gone from tough to tougher for finisher Jason Smith, who has been dismissed by New Zealand’s captain in successive matches. Smith was stumped for 10 in the first T20I off Santner’s bowling, as he lunged forward, and this time was caught for 12 as he top-edged a sweep. Smith handed a simple catch to Sears at short fine and will be concerned with his lack of runs on the tour so far. Sensing an opportunity to finish things off quickly, Santner brought Sears back on to replace and kill the game. Sears responded to plan and used the short ball well. He had both Dian Forrester and Gerald Coetzee caught on the pull to leave South Africa 91 for 7 after 13 overs and the game all but over. South Africa were bowled out in the 16th over.
Brief scores:
New Zealand 175 for 6 in 20 overs (Devon Conway 60, Tom Latham 11, Nick Kelly 21, Mitchell Santner 20, Cole McConchie 18*, Josh Clarkson 26*; Gerald Coetzee 1-28, Otnell Baartman 1-31, Keshav Maharaj 1-45, George Linde 1-33, Wiaan Mulder 2-14) beat South Africa 107 in 15.3 overs (Wiaan Mulder 16, Rubin Hermann 19, Jason Smith 12, Dian Forester 10, George Linde 33; Ben Sears 3-14, Lockie Ferguson 3-16, Mitchell Santner 2-19, Cole McConchie 1-24, James Neesham 1-10) by 68 runs
[Cricinfo]
Latest News
Israel claims to have assassinated commander of Iran’s Basij militia unit
The Israeli military has claimed in a post on X Tuesday that it has killed Gholamreza Soleimani, the commander of the Basij unit, the internal security paramilitary militia of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
“Guided by precise intelligence from Military Intelligence, the Air Force conducted a targeted strike yesterday in the heart of Tehran, eliminating Gholamreza Soleimani, commander of the Basij unit over the past six years,” it said on Tuesday.
Iran has not commented on, nor confirmed this claim.
If confirmed, Soleimani would be the highest level assassination in the war since United States-Israeli strikes killed the former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, and several members of his family on the first day of the war they launched on February 28.
The US Treasury records Soleimani’s birth year as 1965. He has been sanctioned by the United States, the European Union, and other countries for his alleged role in suppressing dissent through the Basij.
[Aljazeera]
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