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Duckett, Crawley flatten India on day headlined by Pant’s bravery

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Rishabh Pant walked out to loud applause at Old Trafford [Cricinfo]

India had one high moment at Old Trafford, the kind that cuts through eras, uniting the hardcore fan, radicalising the casual ones and irritating those who have no idea about cricket because why is a video of a man walking down the stairs wearing weird body armour suddenly blowing up on social? Rishabh Pant’s bravery rendered trivial things like the match situation and its result as he walked out to bat on a fractured foot, which is just as well because by the end of the day his team was losing control of the Manchester Test.

England’s openers alone took a massive bite out of India’s total of 358 as Ben Duckett and Zak Crawley put on a 166-run stand at 5.18 runs an over. It was accidental Bazball though. Neither of them was really looking to score quickly but they were given no choice in the matter by a bowling performance so error prone that packaging it as a highlights reel would be a missed opportunity. There’s a word starting with ‘B’ and ending with ‘looper’ that fits better.

India might contend that they were doing what England had done. Jofra Archer bowled leg stump to left-handers and kept picking up wickets. When the debutant Anshul Kamboi tried that he gave up three fours in the second over. Ben Stokes claimed his first five-for in eight years by pitching the ball right up. When Mohammed Siraj tried that he kept getting driven for boundaries. It took until the last 45 minutes of play for a contest to break out as Ravindra Jadeja removed Crawley for 84 and Kamboj KO’d Duckett for 94.

It is a quirk of the Dukes ball that it isn’t at it’s most threatening when its brand new. The lacquer needs to wear off, whch takes about 10-15 overs. India found ways to manage this period better in the previous Tests (barring maybe the second innings at Headingley) but here they were found rather wanting. Which meant even the last half-hour when they had two new batters, including a skittish Ollie Pope, to prey on and the opposition finally felt some pressure, it didn’t really matter. England gritted it out and went to stumps at 225 for 2 in 46 overs, with batting all the way down to No. 10 to get the other 133 they need to take a first-innings lead.

A largely uneventful morning session got its adrenaline shot when Stokes dismissed the stubborn Shardul Thakur for 41. The BCCI had sent word that Pant, who had injured his right foot on the first day’s play so badly that he required four-wheeled transportation from the pitch to the dressing room, was available to bat if the team needed it. The assumption was he would come out as the last man standing. But, having bucked a diagnosis of six-eight weeks rest to join the squad at the ground, Pant grabbed his bat and his gloves and began to make his way down the stairs at Old Trafford.

Applause rained down from all corners. Cricket has seen its share of wounded warriors. Anil Kumble with a bandage around his head. Graeme Smith with one working arm. Shamar Joseph steaming in with a broken toe. Rick McCosker and his shattered jaw. Moments like these transcend sport. They live on for years and years.

Pant’s willingness to put his body on the line – he is set to miss the fifth Test – ushered India to an above-par total. He finished with 54 off 75 balls and hit the 90th six of his Test career, equalling Virender Sehwag who holds the national record. He also went past 479 runs on this tour, which meant he eclipsed Alec Stewart and now has the highest tally for a wicketkeeper in a Test series in England. Not bad for a man who came to his office wearing a moonboot. Between those wild shots, the back flip celebrations, the silly mistakes, the commentary from behind the stumps, Pant’s heart often goes unnoticed. It shouldn’t. Not when it’s so overwhelmingly big.

Stokes continued his stellar series with the ball, picking up 16 wickets – a new career best going past his efforts on debut in the 2013-14 Ashes. It is often said when he has the ball in hand that he makes things happen. That’s possibly because he’s never afraid of having a punt. Sometimes, he bowls too full and that works because he gets movement both ways – Thakur found that out the hard way. Sometimes, he bowls way too short for way too long and that works because he has the strength to hurry batters up – Washington Sundar found that out the hard way. A peach brought him his fifth wicket – angled in, nipping away, taking Kamboj’s outside edge for a duck.

England built on their captain’s hard work with Duckett especially showing how little the margin of error is to him now. He turned a pretty good ball, on the base of off stump, maybe even outside, into a boundary through midwicket that kept two fielders interested right the way through and the crowd absolutely loved it. They went “oooooooohhhhh…yaaaaaaaayyyyyy” as Siraj and Washington were beaten. Given he was able to do that, it was barely a surprise that any time India went too straight, Duckett was able to access the square-leg region to great profit. He went to fifty without a single boundary on the off side and celebrated the landmark with a backfoot punch for four through cover.

Crawley, at the other end, had to be a lot more circumspect. He took 13 balls to get off the mark and those runs came with a reminder of the danger the pitch still posed as a Jasprit Bumrah delivery rose up sharply to rap him on the bottom hand. That is why India would feel like they’ve let themselves down. There was help to the fast bowlers right through the day. Those late wickets they picked up resulted in a mini-session where it was revealed how hard it was to bat out there when the ball was in the right areas. Just that it was difficult to find for a bowling unit that isn’t used to this kind of bounce. Their stock length coupled with the movement on offer kept beating the edge. So they went fuller, only to stray a little too close to the pads or the half-volley mark.

Crawley, in particular, played some sumptuous drives through cover and down the ground, and it looked like the opening partnership itself might see England through to stumps. India did raise their game towards the close and they need to raise it again on the third day to keep themselves in the fight. Otherwise the revellers in the party stand – repurposing the Mitchell Johnson song for Siraj – would be proven right. India bowled to the left. They bowled to the right. Their bowling was, well…

Brief scores: [Day 2 stumps]
England 225 for 2 in 46 overs  (Ben Duckett 94, Zak Crawley 84, Ollie Pope 20*, Joe Root 11*; Ravindra Jadeja 1-37) trail India 358 in 114.1 overs  (Yashaswi Jaiswal 58,KL Rahul 46, B Sai Sudharsan 61, Rishabh Pant 54, Shardul Thakur 41; Ben  Stokes 5-72, Joffra Archer 3-73) by 133 runs

[Cricinfo]

 



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Messi on the brink of history – will it be his last World Cup game?

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Lionel Messi has scored 15 of his 21 World Cup goals in 2022 and 2026 [BBC]

Argentina are one win away from sporting immortality.

Lionel Scaloni’s side are bidding to become just the third team to win successive World Cups, after Italy (1934 and 1938) and Brazil (1958 and 1962).

If they are to pip European champions Spain to the crown, they will need Lionel Messi to be at his best. Again.

Is he the greatest of all time?

Whatever your response to that statement – and it could be debated for hours – it cannot be denied that the Argentine maestro is among the best players to ever set foot on a pitch.

Win on Sunday and Messi will become the first captain to lift the World Cup trophy twice.

After perhaps underwhelming in his first four tournaments, he was outstanding in 2022 – as Argentina won the trophy – and is now just one goal behind Kylian Mbappe in his bid to become the World Cup’s all-time leading scorer.

It is remarkable to think that Messi initially retired from international football back in 2016 before changing his mind.

Sunday’s World Cup final will be his 34th appearance in the competition, but will it be the last we see of Messi in the famous blue and white stripes?

BBC Sport looks at what might be next for the great man – and could he even aim to play at a seventh World Cup in 2030?

If Messi decides to carry on with Argentina to 2030, then he would become the oldest outfield player to appear at a World Cup, at the age of 43 – unless, of course, Cristiano Ronaldo opts to keep going for Portugal.

Not only could Messi add a new record to his long list, but he would have the chance to play in one of the centenary matches held in Argentina at the start of the next World Cup.

Spanish football expert Guillem Balague doesn’t think this is the last fans will be seeing of Messi at the World Cup.

“Even if you hear it is the end, I doubt it but we’ll see. I just see him with the national side, simply because he enjoys it,” he said.

“I don’t see him being at Inter Miami in the MLS, still performing and then saying that’s it and he’s going to play out the rest of his career with Inter Miami.”

Messi’s 2026 World Cup has been nothing short of sensational. He has scored eight goals in seven games – two goals behind tournament top scorer Mbappe – and has carried Argentina into the final with a series of virtuoso performances.

Argentina boss Scaloni hailed Messi as the greatest player ever, saying: “He is history, a legend. I feel proud, he is the best footballer the world has ever seen and reaching a final at 39 is something unbelievable – and that is why I said we must enjoy him.

“With Diego Maradona, we still miss him but Messi is still with us so we must enjoy him.

“I have no idea if this is Leo’s last game, you will have to ask him. We haven’t discussed it.”

His displays in North America continue a quite remarkable late career resurgence for Messi at World Cups. Fifteen of his 21 tournament goals have come since his 35th birthday.

Having already lifted the World Cup in Qatar in 2022, Messi showed he had the motivation to keep going in 2026. The question is whether that continues to 2030.

“I feel that he hasn’t said the last word yet,” said Balague. “He finishes games, 120-minute games, at 39.

“In the first 90 minutes against Cape Verde, he covered 6.5km and 62% of that is walking.

“You can add a bit more walking. The passion is still there. All of that means he’s not going to leave the national side.”

There is also the factor of Messi playing at a World Cup in front of a home crowd.

The 2030 World Cup will have six host nations. While the majority of matches will take place in Spain, Portugal and Morocco, at least one game will be played in each of Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay. A world stage game in front of an Argentine crowd may be too much for Messi to resist.

Messi himself hinted that the 2022 final would be his international swansong.

“I am very happy for finishing my journey in World Cups in a final, to play the last game in a final. That is really very gratifying,” he said before the 2022 showpiece.

“There are a lot of years from this year to the next one. I don’t think I will be able to do that. To finish this way is brilliant.”

That has obviously proved to not be the case. So regardless of what might be said after the 2026 final, keep an eye on 2030.

[BBC]

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Lizaad, Traveen and Bhanuka steer Jaffna Kings to five wicket win

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Lizaad Williams and Traveen Mathew captured three wickets each while Bhanuka Rajapaksa contributed an unbeaten 61 off 37 balls to steer Jaffna Kings to a five wicket win with an over to spare when they took on Dambulla Sixers in the 4th match of the Lanka Premier League played at the SSC ground on Sunday afternoon.\

Scores:
Dambulla Sixers 130 in 19.3 overs [Sahibzada Farhan 11, Dinesh Chandimal 17. Niroshan Dikwella 23, Reeza Hendricks 18, Pavan Rathnayaka 27; Dilshan Madushanka 1-31, Shakib Al Hasan 2-12, Dunith Wellalage 1-31, Lizaad Williams 3-14, Traveen Mathew 3-19]

Jaffna Kings 133/5 in 19 overs [Avishka Fernnado 15, Ibrahim Zadran 21, Bhanuka Rajapaksa 61*, Dunith Wellalage 11*; Dushmantha Chameera 2-29, Maheesh Theekshana 1-11, Vishwa Lahiru 1-11]

 

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Akif Javeed and Sam Harper star in Galle Gallants five wicket win

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Sam Harper led Galle Gallants' chase [Cricinfo]

Galle Gallants registered their second win in LPL 2026 by defeating Colombo Kaps by five wickets at the SSC ground on Saturday [18] night

Scores:
Colombo Kaps 189/8 in 20 overs [Kusal Mendis 79, Sadeera Samarawickrema 15, Kamindu Mendis 10, Ben McDermott 57, James Neesham 12*; Dasun Shanaka 1-16, Mohammed Nawaz 1-39, Akif Javed 4-40, Eshan Malinga 1-42]

Galle Gallants 191/5 in 19.2 overs [Sam Harper 65, Lasith Croospulle 17, Mehidy Hasan Miraz 13, Charith Asalanka 28, Sahan Arachchige 38*, Mohammed Nawaz 16*; Hasan Mahmud 2-31, Wanuja Sahan 2-19, James Neesham 1-26]

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