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Miller, Axar and Ashutosh keep Delhi Capital’s IPL alive

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Shreyas Iyer grimaces after another loss for Punjab Kings [Cricinfo]

In a topsy-turvy contest, Delhi Capitals (DC) pulled off the highest successful T20 chase by any team in Dharmasala to hand Punjab Kings (PBKS) their fourth successive loss. Most importantly, the win kept DC’s slim hopes of making the IPL playoffs alive.

The pitch assisted seamers so much that no over of spin was bowled in the whole game – the only time that happened in an IPL match of considerable length was back in 2008.  After being sent in, PBKS rode on Priyansh Arya  and Shreyas Iyer’s half-centuries to post 210 for 5. Iyer later said he felt it was 30 more than the par score. It seemed that way when DC lost three wickets in the powerplay but Axar Patel and David Miller kept them going. Both scored fifties and took DC close.

PBKS’ wayward bowling – they conceded 17 wides – didn’t help them either. Miller’s dismissal gave them a chance to come back into the match. But, with 36 needed from three overs, Ashutosh Sharma, Madhav Tiwari and  Auqib Nabi wrapped up the game with an over to spare.

In the last few days, all the chatter about Arya had been around his dismissals against the short ball. But Mitchell Starc started with a full delivery outside off stump, perhaps looking for early movement. Arya lofted it over cover-point for a six. In the reverse fixture, too, he had opened his account with a first-ball six, that time off Nabi.

When Starc went short, it was too short and sailed over for five wides. Arya launched another six in the over before Prabhsimran Singh capped it off with a four. Starc went for 22, the most he has conceded in the opening over of a T20. He did not bowl another over until the tenth of the innings.

Arya showed no respect to Lungi Ngidi either, welcoming him into the attack with back-to-back sixes. By the end of three overs, PBKS had raced to 51 for no loss.

The ball was still seaming around, and Nabi and Mukesh Kumar used it to put the brakes on the scoring rate. While Arya brought up his fifty off 24 balls, PBKS managed only 21 in the next three overs, with Nabi finishing the powerplay with a two-run over. Prabhsimran struggled for fluency for most of his innings and eventually fell to Mukesh for 18 off 15. Arya fell soon after, caught at deep cover off Tiwari, leaving PBKS at 97 for 2 after nine.

Iyer, batting at No. 3, started positively but Cooper Connolly was slow to get going. As a result, PBKS scored only 33 runs from overs 11 to 14. Connolly finally got his timing right and hit Starc over long-off for a 96-metre six in the 15th over. In the next, he took Ngidi for a four and a six off successive deliveries.

Iyer, anyway, was picking up regular boundaries. After a six-run 17th over by Mukesh, he hit Tiwari for two sixes, the first one taking him to his fifty off 32 balls. However, Tiwari removed Connolly in that over, and when Starc started the 19th by dismissing Marcus Stoinis and Shashank Singh off successive balls, it looked like the innings might peter out. But Suryansh Shedge hit the hat-trick ball over the bowler’s head for a six. He smashed another six and a four off Starc’s remaining three balls to take PBKS past 200.

Playing his first game of the season, Yash Thakur didn’t take long to make an impact. Bowling around the wicket in the second over of the innings, he uprooted Abishek Porel’s middle stump. From the other end, Arshdeep Singh dismissed KL Rahul with a short ball, Marco Jansen completing an excellent diving catch after running 28 metres from first slip towards fine leg. Iyer’s decision to give Arshdeep a third over in the powerplay also paid off as he cramped Sahil Parakh, who was charging down the pitch, with a short ball and had him caught at short third.

Axar and Tristan Stubbs stabilised the innings from 33 for 3. Stubbs was given a life on 9 when Arshdeep dropped him at long-on off Ben Dwarshuis. But Stubbs could add only three more to his tally. After a mix-up with Axar, he failed to beat Connolly’s direct hit at the non-striker’s end.

After Stubbs’ run out, DC were 74 for 4 in the ninth over. It could have been 74 for 5 a ball later but Shedge put down Axar at deep square leg. The DC captain, on 25 at that time, added 64 in 34 balls with Miller to revive the chase.

In dewy conditions, PBKS got the ball replaced after the 13th over. It didn’t bring much relief, though, and Axar hit Stoinis for a hat-trick of fours, bringing up his fifty on the way. However, attempting a six off the following ball, he holed out to long-on.

Miller and Ashutosh took 15 off Jansen in the 16th over. Miller then muscled Dwarshuis for two sixes off the first two balls of the 17th to make DC the favourites. He fell off the next ball trying to hit another six but Ashutosh’s use of angles and Tiwari’s clean hitting shut the door on PBKS.

Brief  scores:
Delhi Capitals 216 for 7  in 19 overs  (Sahil Parakh 13, Tristan Stubbs 12, Axar Patel 56, David Miller 51, Ashutosh Sharma 24, Madhav Tiwari 18*, Auqib Nabi 10*; Arshdeep Singh  2-21, Yash Thakur 2-55, Ben Dwarshuis 1-51, Marcus Stoinis 1-44) beat Punjab Kings 210 for 5 in 20 overs (Priyansh Arya 56, Prabhsimran Singh 18, Shreyas Iyer 59*, Cooper Connolly 38, Suryansh Shedge 21*; Mitchell Starc 2-57, Mukesh Kumar 1-31, Madhav Tiwari 2-40) by three wickets

[Cricinfo]



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Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa has arrived at the Bribery Commission

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Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa has arrived to appear before the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) this morning (12) to provide a statement regarding the alleged SriLankan Airlines Airbus deal.

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US in closely-guarded talks to open new bases in Greenland

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Vice-President JD Vance toured the US military's only base on the territory earlier this year [BBC]

The US has been holding regular negotiations with Denmark to expand its military presence in Greenland, according to multiple officials familiar with the discussions, with talks between both sides progressing in recent months.

US officials are seeking to open three new bases in the south of the territory, a semi-autonomous part of Denmark, as they work to resolve a diplomatic crisis sparked by President Donald Trump when he threatened to seize Greenland by force.

Trump said in January that the US should “own” Greenland to prevent Russia or China from taking it. He said this could happen the “easy way ” or “the hard way”.

The White House confirmed the administration was engaged in high-level talks with Greenland and Denmark, but declined to comment on details of the negotiations. A White House official told the BBC the administration was very optimistic the talks were headed in the right direction.

Denmark has previously expressed a willingness to discuss additional American military bases in Greenland, and its foreign ministry confirmed talks with the US were taking place. “There is an ongoing diplomatic track with the United States. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs will not go into further detail at this time,” a spokesperson said.

US officials have floated an arrangement in which the three new military bases would be formally designated as US sovereign territory, according to one source with knowledge of the negotiations.

The bases would be in southern Greenland and primarily focus on surveillance of potential Russian and Chinese maritime activity in an area of the northern Atlantic between Greenland, Iceland and the United Kingdom known as the GIUK Gap, the officials who spoke to the BBC said.

The two sides have not formally agreed to anything yet and the final number of bases could change, the sources said. One of the new bases would likely be located in Narsarsuaq, on the site of a former US military base that housed a small airport.

Any other new military bases would likely also be located on sites in Greenland that have existing infrastructure such as airfields or ports, which could be upgraded at a lower cost than building new facilities, analysts said.

US officials have not raised the possibility during talks of somehow seizing control of Greenland, something that Denmark and Nato have publicly rejected.

Despite Trump’s threats, the countries have been actively working towards a deal in recent months.

The talks have been confined to a small working group of officials in Washington who have made headway negotiating outside of the spotlight while the administration has been consumed by the war in Iran.

General Gregory Guillot, the head of US Northern Command, gave a broad sense of the negotiations during congressional testimony in March. He said the US was seeking to open new bases, but the sources close to the talks described new details that paint a picture of regular high-level meetings that have progressed in recent months.

The delicate diplomatic effort is being led by Michael Needham, a senior state department official who has been tasked with crafting a deal that satisfies Trump while also respecting Denmark’s redlines around protecting its borders.

“Needham is running point” on Greenland, said a senior diplomat with knowledge of the talks. Behind the scenes, the person said, the administration is “approaching it very professionally”.

The teams have met at least five times since mid-January. Needham is usually accompanied by one or two US officials from the state department or National Security Council, several sources said. His counterparts in the room include Jesper Møller Sørensen, Denmark’s ambassador to the US, and Jacob Isbosethsen, the top Greenlandic diplomat in Washington.

Trump’s special envoy to Greenland, Republican Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry, hasn’t taken part in the negotiations and is largely absent from the diplomatic process, three sources said.

“He was supposed to be more of like a rah-rah cheerleader of the idea that we could just flex our muscles and take over Greenland as a security asset,” said a close Landry ally who asked not to be named. Landry “has never been to any of the actual talks.”

Landry’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

The US currently has one military base in Greenland, down from approximately 17 military facilities during the height of the Cold War. Pituffik Space Base is located in northwestern Greenland – it monitors missiles for NORAD but is not configured to conduct maritime surveillance.

Some current and former officials, as well as Arctic security experts, told the BBC that Washington could have advanced its interests in Greenland without threatening a Nato ally in such strong terms.

“Why threaten an ally with a military operation or invasion when what you want is something that could be negotiated quite easily?” said one former senior US defence official.

Others, however, praised the co-operation between the US and Denmark.

“Wherever the US and our allies leave a vacuum, that vacuum is often filled by China and Russia,” retired General Glen VanHerck, the head of Northern Command and North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) from 2020 to 2024, told the BBC.

Behind closed doors, negotiators have sought to reach a compromise under the framework of an existing decades-old security agreement between the US and Denmark.

The 1951 pact grants the US a wide berth to expand its military operations in Greenland. The Danish government must approve any US military expansions in the territory, but Denmark has historically supported America’s military operations there and has never rejected a US request to expand its presence, Arctic security experts said.

Representatives of the Greenland government in Washington declined to comment. The US state department also declined to comment.

Trump expressed interest in the US gaining greater access to Greenland during his first term as president. But his renewed interest earlier this year set off a diplomatic crisis that highlighted tensions between Nato and the Trump administration.

[BBC]

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Trump says Iran ceasefire is on ‘massive life support’

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[file pic]

US President Donald Trump has said the month-long ceasefire between the US and Iran is on “massive life support”.

He told reporters in the Oval Office on Monday that while the ceasefire remained in place, it was “unbelievably weak”.

Following Trump’s comments, Iranian parliamentary speaker Mohammad Ghalibaf wrote on X that Iran’s armed forces were, “ready to respond and to teach a lesson for any aggression.”

Iran laid out its demands to end the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz in a counter-offer sent to the US on Sunday. Trump rejected the proposal, calling it “totally unacceptable” and a “piece of garbage”.

After Trump’s comments, Esmail Baghaei, a foreign ministry spokesperson for Iran, said Tehran’s proposals were “responsible” and “generous”.

After his comments saying Iran’s armed forces ready to respond, Ghalibaf said in a separate post on X that there was “no alternative but to accept the rights of the Iranian people as laid out in the 14-point proposal”.

“The longer they drag their feet, the more American taxpayers will pay for it,” he said.

Tehran’s offer includes an immediate end to the war on all fronts – a reference to the continued Israeli attacks against Iran-supported Hezbollah in Lebanon – a halt to the US naval blockade of Iranian ports and guarantees of no further attacks on Iran, according to Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency.

[BBC]

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