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Mukkamalla 79, Harmeet four-for lead USA’s trouncing of Netherlands
A fired-up USA kept their T20 World Cup campaign alive with a thumping victory, their first over Netherlands in men’s T20Is. After boundary-laden efforts from Saiteja Mukkumala and Shubnam Ranjane powered USA to 196, Harmeet Singh led the spinners’ charge to reduce Netherlands to 66 for 5 on a pitch that offered turn and purchase for slower deliveries. Netherlands then lost 5 for 28 in the end for a 93-run hammering which meant USA are third in Group A.
It was the first evening game of this World Cup in Chennai, where USA got things going as soon as they were asked to bat. Once openers Shayan Jahangir and Monank Patel set the tone with early intent for boundaries, Mukkamalla’s 79 off 51 balls led USA’s innings for nearly 14 overs, with the run rate nearly touching 10 an over. Ranjane then came out all guns blazing in the death overs and set a total Netherlands had never chased before in a T20 World Cup.
USA’s spinners then put the pressure on Netherlands from the get-go. Once Nosthush Kenjige struck in the second over, Harmeet ran through them once he came on in the powerplay to finish with 4 for 21, his second four-for in T20Is.
Even though captain Monank asked his top order at the toss to take five to ten deliveries before taking off, Shayan Jahangir disobeyed by taking the aerial route in the first over with his captain watching at the other end. Jahangir pulled two sixes off short balls in his first five balls for a flying start before being bowled for a 13-ball 20 by Klein. Monank took the responsibility upon himself to keep the run rate soaring, and started with a textbook straight drive that raced to the fence.
Mukkamalla similarly went for the big hits almost right from the start. He fearlessly went aerial again and again, starting with a six off left-arm quick Fred Klaassen, and didn’t take the foot off the pedal even after the powerplay. There was no respite for Netherlands despite several bowling changes as USA kept punishing the loose balls, and traded in singles and doubles against the good ones which gave the experienced Roelof van der Merwe figures of 3-0-36-0 without a single dot ball.
At just 21, Mukkamalla seemed as mature as someone “who has been playing for USA for ten years”, his captain said after the game. Mukkamalla showed that with dazzling strokeplay that saw sixes down the ground, over the covers, against pace and spin, and all while looking steady and elegant at the crease. Monank himself belted three fours and a six at the other end until a short and slow knuckleball from Bas de Leede foxed him completely for a catch for the wicketkeeper.
Mukkamalla, meanwhile, took off from 25 off 20 balls at one stage with four fours in his next five balls that saw two lofted strokes off van der Merwe and two late cuts against Klaassen. The six he smashed off Klein over the covers for his 30-ball fifty stamped his authority further on the bowlers, who all looked at sea. Sanjay Krishnamurthi was also deceived by a slower one that resulted in shattered stumps even as Mukkamalla kept the boundaries coming, and was joined by Ranjane.
Fresh off his quickfire 51 against Pakistan when he took down Shaheen Shah Afridi, Ranjane showed his range of strokes behind the wicket as the Netherlands quicks refused to offer any pace with their range of cutters. That got them two boundary-less overs, the 16th and 17th, as they went for just 12 runs, including Mukkamalla’s wicket for 79.
Ranjane kept shuffling to the off side in anticipation of short and slow balls, which he kept dispatching with slog sweeps, pulls and flicks for 14 runs off the 18th and 13 runs off the 19th over. Logan van Beek conceded just nine runs in the last but USA had managed a steep total by then.
Netherlands had almost no answers for the USA bowlers once Kenjige bowled Michael Levitt in the second over with one that kept very low. Harmeet came on in the fifth over with de Leede attacking, and struck in consecutive overs with his share of luck when he had Max O’Dowd and de Leede hand catches off short and wide deliveries to reduce Netherlands to 53 for 4.
But Harmeet soon found his rhythm. He largely stuck to a stump-to-stump line thereafter, varied his pace from early to the late 80kph, and that helped him rattle Scott Edwards’ stumps and trap van der Merwe lbw. The asking rate had shot up over 12 runs an over at the halfway mark, and Netherlands could never recover.
As cutters and slower ones were being rewarded on this pitch, it was only apt that Shadley van Schalkwyk picked three more wickets to add to his two four-fors in the first two games. His wobble-seam delivery early on accounted for Colin Ackermann in the powerplay, his legcutter went through Aryan Dutt, and he wrapped things up in the 16th over to stretch his lead at the top of the wicket-taking charts with his tally of 11 wickets
Brief scores:
USA 196 for 6 in 20 overs (Monak Patel 36, Shayan Jahangir 20, Saiteja Mukkamalla 79, Shubnam Ranjane 48*; Logan van Beek 1-28, Kykle Klien 1-35, Fred Klassen 1-32, Bas de Leede 3-37) beat Netherlands 103 in 15.5 overs (Max O’Dowd 13, Bas de Leede 23, Scott Edwards 20, Roelof van der Merwe 10; Nosthush Kenjige 1-20, Harmeet Singh 4-21, Shadley van Schalkwyk 3-21, Mohammad Mohsin 2-19) by 93 runs
[Cricinfo]
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Teacher recruitment examinations will be conducted in accordance with the relevant court decisions – PM
Prime Minister Dr. Harini Amarasuriya stated that the forthcoming two teacher recruitment examinations will be conducted in accordance with the relevant court decisions pertaining to the ongoing legal proceedings and further noted that, taking into consideration the requests received, steps have been taken to make a request to Court’s approval to revise the conditions of the effective date of degree completion.
The Prime Minister made these remarks while addressing a meeting held at Monaragala Royal College to brief education authorities of the Monaragala District on the new education reforms.
Under the new education reforms, Smart Boards will be provided to 132 schools in the Monaragala District as part of the program to equip secondary schools with modern technology. As a symbolic step under this initiative, Smart Boards were presented to 10 secondary schools under the Prime Minister’s patronage. This program is being implemented with the intervention of the Digital Task Force operating under the Prime Minister’s Office. It was also emphasized that a new digital policy, formulated with special attention to child protection, will be introduced in April.
As part of her visit to the Monaragala District on the 13 th of February, the Prime Minister observed the implementation of the new learning methodologies introduced for Grade One under the new education reforms. She visited Kumbukkana Sri Shanmugam Tamil Maha Vidyalaya and Maduruketiya Maha Vidyalaya in Monaragala to observe the educational activities of Grade One students.
Considering the increase of student numbers and the development of infrastructure facilities, the Prime Minister also approved a proposal submitted by the School Development Society to rename Maduruketiya Maha Vidyalaya as Monaragala Dharmaraja Maha Vidyalaya.
Teachers briefed the Prime Minister that the new education system, supported by revised workbooks and activity-based learning methods, has proven to be effective, with students participating enthusiastically.
Addressing education officials further at the meeting held at Monaragala Royal College, the Prime Minister stated:
“Although this will not provide a complete solution to the existing teacher vacancies, these examinations can offer considerable relief. According to the Court’s previous determination, the effective date of degree completion had been set as 30.06.2025. However, considering numerous requests and following the cabinet approval we have sought Court’s consent to revise this date. We will act in accordance with the decision granted.
Funds allocated for school infrastructure must be utilized transparently and in line with proper planning, and progress must be reported accordingly. We cannot move forward by dividing ourselves along national, provincial, rural, or urban lines. As education authorities, you must make swift and accurate decisions based on correct data.
Further, discussions are already underway within the Piriven Committee of the Ministry of Education to develop Piriven education and to address the issues faced by Piriven teachers.”
The event was attended by the members of the Maha Sangha, Uva Province Governor Attorney-at-Law Kapila Jayasekara, Deputy Minister of Trade and Commerce R.M. Jayawardhana, Member of Parliament Ajith Agalakada, Uva Provincial Education Secretary Nihal Gunarathne, and several officials from the education sector.



[Prime Minister’s Media Division]
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Low-pressure area is likely to form over the southeastern Bay of Bengal around 15th February
Special Weather Bulletin issued by the Natural Hazards Early Warning Centre of the Department of Meteorology
Issued at 10.30 a.m. on 13 February 2026
A low-pressure area is likely to form over the southeastern Bay of Bengal around 15th February.
The general public are requested to be attentive to the future forecasts and bulletins issued by the Department of Meteorology in this regard
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Kolkata the stage as England, Scotland resume auld rivalry
Scotland vs England. The sense of occasion isn’t lost on Scotland captain Richie Berrington. Earlier this week, Berrington dared to dream of the headlines should his side beat England in Kolkata a matter of hours before the Scotland rugby team face England in the Six Nations with the Calcutta Cup on the line.
Both Scotland teams are underdogs but, unlike their rugby counterparts who are licking their wounds after a poor showing against Italy last weekend, Berrington’s men are coming off the back of a resounding 73 run win over an Italian team making their debut at this tournament and ruffling some feathers along the way.
“That rivalry has always been there between Scotland and England, obviously a long history there between the two nations, it’s there in every sport,” Berrington said. “But yeah, next Saturday’s going to be exciting. We’ve also got the Scotland rugby team taking on England the same day, so it would make quite a nice headline if Scotland has two wins on the Saturday.”
As banana skins go, this should be one England back themselves to avoid. But it will be no easy stroll, especially with another unexpected obstacle down the road in Italy, surprise 10 wicket winners against Nepal, who had themselves pushed England to the max in their opening match of this T20 World Cup.
Both of England’s remaining group-stage opponents pose an element of the unknown, a point noted at the start of the tournament by Mark Watt, Scotland’s veteran left-arm spinner making his fifth World Cup appearance. “Quite funny thinking about the England analysis team trying to find club cricket games of some of our youngsters,” Watt said. “We’ve all had a laugh about that.” England have never played Italy and, in their only previous T20I meeting with Scotland – at the last World Cup in Barbados – George Munsey and Michael Jones staged an unbroken opening partnership worth 90 before the match was washed out.
Only Jofra Archer and Adil Rashid remain from the bowling line-up which took the field that day, the latter going at 13 runs an over from his two overs. And while those figures are reminiscent of Rashid’s three wicketless overs at 14.00 against Nepal, he turned that around against West Indies, where he was easily the pick of England’s bowlers in a losing cause on a turning Wankhede pitch.
If they trip up in their first outing in Kolkata, where Scotland have already played their first two matches of this World Cup, England’s last group encounter with Italy becomes crucial. So too does Scotland’s final clash with Nepal. On paper, England’s progression to the Super 8s should be assured, but they absolutely cannot take their Associate opponents lightly.
So far, this campaign has shown England need more consistency from their enviably deep batting line-up. Half-centuries to Jacob Bethell and Harry Brook still required the back-up of Will Jacks’ 18-ball 39 against Nepal and, even then, it took Sam Curran’s sublime death bowling to let them escape with victory. Against West Indies, it was Curran who ran out of partners and captain Brook believed his charges were too careful chasing. For Scotland, they need more than just the few plucky moments they produced in a 35-run loss to West Indies. They need everything to fire, as it did against Italy, and then some, to be in with a shot.
Three consecutive single-figure scores across this tournament and the Sri Lanka series that preceded it leave Tom Banton searching for runs, particularly amid calls for Harry Brook to leapfrog him into the No. 4 spot. An unbeaten 54 in a Player-of-the-Match performance against Sri Lanka in the second of their three games in the lead-up suggests the touch is there. Now he must rediscover it at a time when his side needs it most.
Having managed just one run against West Indies as Munsey too departed cheaply after a promising start, Michael Jones further highlighted the importance of Scotland’s opening duo with a 30-ball 37 in a 126-run stand – Munsey struck 84 off 54 – that set up victory over Italy. With the quality of the opposition now magnified, it is imperative that he supports his partner with an even bigger contribution to a union that could prove critical in getting enough runs on the board against England.
England confirmed an unchanged XI on the eve of the match, with Jamie Overton preferred to Luke Wood in the attack.
England: Phil Salt, Jos Buttler (wk), Jacob Bethell, Tom Banton, Harry Brook (capt), Sam Curran, Will Jacks, Liam Dawson, Jamie Overton, Jofra Archer, Adil Rashid
Brad Wheal, who replaced Safyaan Sharif for the win over Italy, said Scotland had not made any decisions on their side.
Scotland: (possible) George Munsey, Michael Jones, Brandon McMullen, Richie Berrington (capt), Tom Bruce, Michael Leask, Matthew Cross (wk), Mark Watt, Oliver Davidson, Brad Wheal, Brad Currie
[Cricinfo]
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