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Elgar stars in South Africa’s first win against India at Wanderers

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Two sessions were washed out due to persistent rain and it took nearly six hours for the fourth day’s play to begin in Johannesburg on Thursday (January 6). But it was worth the wait for South Africa who rode on skipper Dean Elgar’s excellent knock to win the second Test against India by seven wickets. Elgar’s unbeaten 96 not only forced a decider in Cape Town next week, but it also helped South Africa register their first win against India at the Wanderers in six attempts. This was also South Africa’s highest successful chase at this venue since readmission, surpassing the 220 they scored to win the Test against New Zealand in 2006.

After a lengthy wait, the game finally got underway at 19:15 local time and Jasprit Bumrah produced a beauty first up, getting one to seam away sharply from Rassie van der Dussen’s outside edge. He later got one to jump off a length that clipped his glove but went over gully. Van der Dussen was also not too comfortable facing Ashwin who opened the attack with Bumrah. Elgar, meanwhile, was looking solid at the other end as he brought up his fifty with a drill past mid-on for a four off Ashwin. There were also bonus runs from Bumrah who bowled an ineffective bouncer that evaded van der Dussen and the ‘keeper and resulted in five wides, with 21 runs coming in the first five overs of the day.

The target came down to double digits when Bumrah bowled one too full to van der Dussen, who managed to squeeze it away through cover for a couple having previously been struck on the midriff by a delivery that took off. Van der Dussen continued to be troubled by Bumrah’s deliveries that were hitting the crack on a good length but he hung in there and capitalised on anything full, even creaming a cover drive. Bumrah and Mohammed Shami were also a bit too straight to Elgar coming from round the wicket, not challenging the outside edge as much as they would have liked and also allowing him to rotate the strike. Meanwhile, the ball was changed a couple of times due to the wetness of the outfield. But the inconsistent bowling continued as Shami was struck for two successive fours by van der Dussen, who flicked and pulled with authority, while the bowler was also guilty of conceding five wides with a desperate bouncer.

Shardul Thakur was eventually introduced into the attack and he found the outside edge of van der Dussen’s bat but a fielder wasn’t stationed at gully and the result was a four, while the next boundary in the same over was a powerful drive off the back foot. More than 50 runs were scored in the much-delayed first hour of play before Shami struck to end the partnership worth 82 by having van der Dussen edge to Pujara at first slip. Shami had Elgar flashing at one outside off and the ball went over the slip cordon for a boundary while Thakur put down a catch off his own bowling to give Temba Bavuma a reprieve. The required runs came down to fifty when Elgar struck two back to back fours off Shami, driving through mid on and steering the ball past gully.

India’s hopes of putting South Africa under pressure with quick wickets did not materialise as Bavuma settled into a partnership with Elgar and even struck a couple of attractive cover drives to the boundary off Bumrah. Mohammed Siraj, who bowled the 65th over, was taken to the cleaners by Elgar who pulled and steered two successive fours, and also carved a boundary over point in the same over. Those weren’t the only runs in the over as Siraj also gave away five wides and his helplessness reflected that of his team as South Africa marched to victory with Elgar poetically scoring the winning runs with a boundary off Ashwin.

The seeds of South Africa’s victory were sown on the opening day when Marco Jansen bagged four wickets while Kagiso Rabada and Duanne Olivier picked up three wickets to restrict India to 202 in their first innings. KL Rahul, standing in as skipper for an injured Virat Kohli, scored 50 while Ashwin struck 46. But India lacked other notable contributions and folded inside 64 overs. Keegan Petersen and Temba Bavuma then scored half-centuries and helped South Africa edge ahead by 27 runs despite Thakur’s career-best 7 for 61. Cheteshwar Pujara and Ajinkya Rahane hit brisk half-centuries to set South Africa a target of 240, which wasn’t quite enough thanks to a captain’s knock from Elgar who endured multiple body blows and stood towering over the rest in the end.

Brief scores:

India 202 (KL Rahul 50, R Ashwin 46; Marco Jansen 4-31, Kagiso Rabada 3-64, Duanne Olivier 3-64) & 266 (Ajinkya Rahane 58, Cheteshwar Pujara 53; Lungi Ngidi 3-43, Marco Jansen 3-67, Kagiso Rabada 3-77) lost to South Africa 229 (Keegan Petersen 62, Temba Bavuma 51; Shardul Thakur 7-61) & 243/3 (Dean Elgar 96*, Rassie van der Dussen 40; R Ashwin 1-26, Shardul Thakur 1-47) by 7 wickets.

(Cricbuzz)



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Tector and Moondra headline Ireland’s historic series sweep against India

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Ireland celebrate a historic 2-0 series sweep against India [Cricinfo]

So nice they had to do it twice. Ireland have swept the T20 World Champions 2-0. That meant India’s unbeaten run which spanned 16 series and nearly three years has been irrevocably broken. The stars of this supreme result were Harry Tector, who scored a determined half-century to help put 154 on the board, and Jai Mondra, who picked up three wickets in the blink of an eye.

Tector, playing his 100th T20I, was brought to the crease in the second over. His first runs were off the inside edge. The rest were both timely and thought out. He held the innings together for Ireland and in doing so highlighted just why he is a valued member of this side. Tector absorbed the pressure at one end, willing to countenance risk only when the odds were in his favour, like when Suryansh Shedge, in the middle of leaking 22 runs in a over bowled a free hit ball that was full toss. That went for six. Ben Calitz, at the other end, was a little more willing to go for his shots. Their 65-run partnership, off 44 balls, formed the backbone of a total of 154. At that point, Cricinfo’s forecaster only gave Ireland an 18% chance of victory.

Shivam Dube picked up two wickets in two balls and broke the partnership that was the biggest threat to India. He had Calitz caught at deep point, a wicket created by good process. Dube led the batter to the square boundary which was a lot bigger than the straight one. He also made it harder for Calitz to access his power by bowing wide of off stump and making him reach out. Gareth Delany came out at the fall of that wicket and was undone by a wobble seam delivery that nipped back in and crashed into his stumps. It could’ve been the ball of the series were it not for what Moondra did in the chase.

Picked in place of Prasidh Krishna, and making his T20I debut, Prince picked up three wickets and went for less than run a ball. He was able to do so because he had threat whether he went short and into the pitch or full and into the blockhole. His final two wickets came in the last over of the innings, which he was given ahead of the more established Harshit Rana. One was back of a length to dismiss Tector. The other was a slower ball to topple Liam McCarthy. This varied skillset that he has, on top of the pace he can produce, might just have marked him out as a very real prospect for the 2027 ODI World Cup.

That was a sign in the crowd and it had plenty of airtime as Moondra dismissed Sanju Samson with the first ball of the chase – a venomous inswinger – and added Abhishek Sharma before that over was out. It was only the fourth time in the entire history of T20Is that both openers had fallen for golden ducks.

A modest target might have been helping India hold their nerve with the scoreboard reading 1 for 2 but Moondra kept making it difficult. The left-arm quick highlighted the slowness of the pitch when he had Shreyas Iyer dragging a wide ball back onto his stumps and then was part of an incident that revealed just how much this series has got under the opposition’s skin. He delivered the ball that led to Ishan Kishan’s run-out – off a direct hit by Ross Adair – and the batter left the field wringing his hands at Tilak Varma. India were 35 for 4. Their composure had been shattered.

India went 48 deliveries without a boundary off the bat, between the fifth and 13th overs. This was a function of both the conditions and their sorry state. The Belfast pitch was loathe to let the ball come onto the bat. Also, it was covered with enough grass that any scrambled/wobble seam delivery was getting purchase. Tilak and Axar appreciated the situation they were in and tried to take the game deep. The 12th over though wasn’t that. Matt Hollard dismissed Axar with a bit of extra bounce. Dube came out and even he, who scores a majority of his runs in boundaries, could only find two.

Ireland were brave to pair him up with a left-arm spinner in the death. Matt Humprheys knowing he was at the unfavorable end of the match-up did the only thing he could. He denied the short straight hit. A deliberate ball halfway down the pitch ended up in deep square leg’s hands – the long boundary was used perfectly – and broke India’s chase. Tilak fell seven balls later for 55 off 46 and soon that was that.

Scores:
Ireland 154 for 8 in 20 overs  (Ross Adair  16, Harry Tector 53, Lorcan Tucker 15, Benn Calitz 37, George Dockrell 19; Arshdeep Singh 2-35, Harshit Rana 1-17, Prince Yadav 3-22, Shivam Dube 2-25) beat India 153 for 9 in 20 overs (Ishan Kishan 12, Shreyas Iyer 10, Tilak Varma  55, Axar Patel 14, Shivam Dube 20, Harshit Rana 21; Matt  Hollard 3-26, Jai Moondra 3-32, Mathtthew Humpreys 1-28, Harry Tector 1-40) by one run

[Cricinfo]

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Roach’s 300th wicket headlines West Indies’ innings win over Sri Lanka

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Kemar Roach starred with four wickets [Cricinfo]

Kemar Roach rampaged his way to his 300th Test wicket, Jayden Seales, Shamar Joseph and Alzarri Joseph all bowled menacing spells, and West Indies blasted Sri Lanka out for 101, completing a behemoth innings-and-217-run victory.

Gaining significantly more movement in the air and off the surface than Sri Lanka’s quicks had, West Indies’ fast bowlers threatened to take wickets right through day four’s 27.2 overs. It was Roach that was getting the ball to hoop most, however, finding massive inswing into the right-hander, often late in the ball’s trajectory, to threaten the pads and stumps of the right-handers he bowled to, and the outside edges of the left-handers.

Roach’s 300th wicket was the ninth of Sri Lanka’s innings, Asitha Fernando’s stumps being clattered by a full one speared in from wide of the crease. He was mobbed by adoring team-mates who seemed to take even more delight in his milestone than him, and was later presented a West Indies Test shirt with the number 300 on it to commemorate the occasion. He is the first West Indies bowler since Curtly Ambrose to the milestone. Among fast bowlers, only Courtney Walsh, Ambrose, and Malcolm Marshall have more wickets for West Indies than him.

Sri Lanka were woeful with the bat, and played like a team fatigued from 160.5 overs in the field on days two and three. Dinesh Chandimal was the only batter who managed even some semblance of resistance, batting out 60 balls for his 43. No other batter in the top six managed a double figure score. Some were pinged in front by balls that jagged in. Others nicked off against deliveries that moved away. Two – Kamindu Mendis and Kusal Mendis – had the tops of their off stumps pinged after they had left the ball. West Indies bowled exquisite lines, and rarely bowled a bad ball. Even Sri Lanka’s exceedingly rare boundaries tended to come from full deliveries when the bowlers had gone looking for swing.

After Roach opened the day’s wicket-taking in the first over, swinging a ball into Nishan Madushka’s pads, Seales struck in his own first over, getting nightwatcher Kasun Rajitha to edge to the cordon. Soon after, Shamar Joseph struck twice, pinging Kamindu’s off stump as he shouldered arms, before pinging Dhananjaya de Silva’s front pad to catch him lbw. Late in the session, Alzarri got himself a wicket too, in similar fashion. Having got a ball to leave Kusal, he had the next one jag back into Kusal, who had also let the ball hit his off stump uninterrupted.

Sri Lanka went to lunch at 81 for 6 and it only took West Indies 6.1 further overs to remove the remaining batters. Roach struck twice in two overs to get to his 300th, and after some strong words exchanged with Lahiru Kumara and Sonal Dinusha, Seales took the final wicket to complete a stunning victory.

West Indies, essentially, have dominated this Test from start to finish. And they were so spectacularly dominant in days three and four, they crushed an opponent that had been expected to compete.

Scores:
West Indies 626 for 9 dec in 160.5 overs (Amir Jangoo 233, Roston Chase 194; Milan  Rathnayaka 5-124) beat Sri Lanka 308  in 71.5 overs (Dhananjaya De Silva 120, Dinesh Chandimal 54; Justin  Greaves 3-39) & 101 in 31.2 overs (Dinesh Chandimal 43; Kemar  Roach 4-51, Jayden Seales 3-14, Shamar Joseph 2-19)  by an innings and 217 runs

[Cricinfo]

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Sri Lanka women rue missed opportunities

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With two Player of the Match awards, Nilakshika Silva was the standout performer during the women's T20 World Cup. Not too often Sri Lankan players outperform their captain

Sri Lanka’s women flew home from Manchester yesterday reflecting on what might have been after a semi-final place slipped through their fingers by the narrowest of margins. Sri Lanka and West Indies both finished on six points with three wins apiece, but the Caribbean side progressed thanks to a superior net run rate.

Much of the soul searching centred on those fateful 90 minutes in Bristol. Having lost a crucial toss on a green top and been asked to bat first, Sri Lanka got their approach horribly wrong. Instead of weathering the new ball storm, they went on the offensive, losing their top three inside the first two overs and effectively conceding the contest. West Indies later struggled to chase down the modest target, suggesting that a more measured approach might have yielded a very different outcome. Hindsight, however, is always a wonderful thing.

One of Sri Lanka’s proudest achievements was knocking defending champions New Zealand out of the tournament. It was their first ever victory over the White Ferns in a Women’s T20 World Cup and one of the biggest upsets of the competition.

Missing out on a semi-final also meant missing out on a lucrative prize purse of USD 800,000, the equivalent of around USD 50,000 for each member of the squad.

While there were plenty of regrets, this was nevertheless Sri Lanka’s finest campaign at a Women’s World Cup. More importantly, by finishing among the top three in the group they secured automatic qualification for the 2028 Women’s T20 World Cup, which will be hosted by Pakistan.

Captain Chamari Atapattu led from the front, producing a memorable campaign highlighted by the first century by a Sri Lankan at a Women’s T20 World Cup. However, her fellow top-order batters Vishmi Gunaratne and Harshitha Samarawickrama failed to make the expected impact, with Vishmi eventually losing her place for the final two matches.

Nilakshika de Silva was outstanding, producing match-winning knocks against New Zealand and Scotland while excelling in the field with some exceptional catching. On this occasion, she even outshone her captain, something that does not happen very often.

Among the emerging talents, two youngsters caught the eye. Fast bowler Mithali Ayodha impressed with her lively sling arm action and ability to generate pace, while Kaushani Nuthyangana was a bundle of energy behind the stumps, displaying sharp glovework and infectious enthusiasm throughout the tournament.

Rex Clementine in Manchester

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