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Ayub’s 53-ball century levels series after Abrar and Salman strangle Zimbabwe

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Saim Ayub scored the fastest ODI century by a Pakistani not called Shahid Afridi (Cricinfo)

Pakistan made up for a lacklustre performance in the first ODI with a near perfect one in the second, crushing Zimbabwe by ten wickets to level the series. Opener Saim Ayub  scored the fastest ODI hundred by any Pakistani other than Shahid Afridi, bringing up three figures in 53 balls as Pakistan coasted to the target of 146 with 32 overs to spare. It finished off an all-round performance after Pakistan’s spinners put Zimbabwe on the back foot after being asked to bowl first, debutant Arbar Ahmed’s 4 for 33 the pick of the bunch as Zimbabwe were bowled out in 32.3 overs.

It was obvious Zimbabwe had fallen well below par in the first innings, but Pakistan had slumped to 60 for 6 in the first ODI, and knew there was a job to be done when they were set a target, however modest. This time, though, there was no drama as the openers started brightly, and continued in the same vein. Ayub led the way, his natural aggression neutering the early threat of Blessing Muzarabani, and giving Abdullah Shafique  the space to work his way into form.

There were a couple of early jitters. Richard Ngarava drew a thick outside edge from Ayub that flew into the vacant second slip region, while an errant drive from Shafique found Sean Williams  at backward point, only for the fielder to shell it.

By now, Ayub had begun to purr. Trevor Gwandu, the first change, was greeted with two cracking shots on the off side, followed up with a four and a six in his second over. That six brought up a 32-ball half-century for Ayub, and he was still only in third gear.

There was little the spinners could do in the absence of scoreboard pressure. Legspinner Brandon Mavuta was dispatched for three successive boundaries at the start of the 14th over, and leaked 47 in the four overs he bowled.

In the first innings, Pakistan’s spinners turned in a dominant performance with the ball, skittling Zimbabwe for 145. After winning the toss and batting first, Zimbabwe made a bright start thanks to Dion Myers’  entertaining 30-ball 33, but a lack of meaningful contributions combined with discipline from Pakistan’s spinners meant Zimbabwe couldn’t get substantial partnerships going.

Tadiwanashe Marumani and Joylord Gumbie were involved in the second run-out in as many matches to break the opening stand. Abrar Ahmed, opening the bowling alongside Aamer Jamal, got sharp turn to get rid of Gumbie for his first ODI wicket before Myers and Craig Ervine began to rebuild.

Ervine was quite content to let Myers be the aggressor, and the 38 the two put together managed to get Zimbabwe back on something resembling level terms. But Salman Agha, perhaps the pick of Pakistan’s spinners on the day, trapped Myers in front and drew a nick from Ervine to peg Zimbabwe back, and from thereon, wickets fell at regular intervals.

Another rebuild, this time from Williams and Raza, was thwarted after Salman had Raza hole out into the off side to reduce Zimbabwe to 97 for 5. The lower-order collapse came when an attempted Williams reverse sweep off Ayub saw him trapped in front, and the remainder went down in a heap.

Zimbabwe lost the last five wickets for 24 runs as Abrar returned to snare his fourth, while Faisal Akram cleaned up Muzarabani to finish the innings off. It looked well under par then, and by the time Ayub was done, that couldn’t have been clearer.

Brief scores:

Pakistan 148 for 0 in 18.2 overs  (Saim Ayub 113*, Abdullah Shafique 32*) beat Zimbabwe 145 in 32.3 overs (Dion Myers 33, Sean Williams 31;  Abrar Ahmed 4-33, Salman Agha 3-26) by ten wickets

(Cricinfo)



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India and Pakistan agree ceasefire after days of cross-border strikes

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India and Pakistan agree to a full and immediate ceasefire  the pause began at 17:00 local time (12:30 BST)

India is adhering to the agreement, but its army remains “vigilant”, officialssay, – Pakistan says it has always strived for peace and security in the region.

The ceasefire is the result of “a long night of talks mediated by the United States,” Donald Trump says.

The US president is likely going to portray himself as a global peacemaker as all-out conflict has been averted.

(BBC)

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Diver dies working on tycoon’s sunken superyacht

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The recovery process is expected to take several weeks [BBC]

A diver has died during preliminary operations to recover British tech tycoon Mike Lynch’s superyacht from the waters off the coast of northern Sicily, local police said.

The accident happened on Friday while the diver was underwater in Porticello, police said, adding the precise cause of death was still unknown.

According to local Italian media, the diver was a 39-year-old Dutch national who worked for a specialist salvage company.

It comes as salvage ships arrived earlier this month to waters off the small port of Porticello, near Palermo, where the Bayesian vessel sank during freak weather last August.

Seven of the 22 people onboard the Bayesian last summer were killed, including  Lynch 59, and his 18 year old daughter Hannah..

Morgan Stanley International bank chairman Jonathan Bloomer, 70, and his wife, Judy, 71, US lawyer Chris Morvillo, his wife Neda Morvillo and the yacht’s chef Recaldo Thomas who was originally from Antigua, also died in the sinking on 19 August.

Fifteen people managed to escape on a lifeboat including a one-year-old and Mike Lynch’s wife Angela Bacares.

The cause of the sinking is still under investigation with naval experts saying a yacht of Bayesian’s calibre should have been able to withstand the storm and certainly should not have sunk as rapidly as it did.

PA Media Hannah Lynch and Mike Lynch smiling at the camera and embracing each other in a street.
Hannah and Mike Lynch were among seven people who died when the Bayesian sank [BBC]

The salvage operation is being overseen by British marine consultancy TMC Marine and led by Dutch-based companies Hebo, a maritime services company from Rotterdam, and SMIT Salvage, with support from Italian specialists.

About 70 specialist personnel have been deployed to Sicily from across Europe to work on the recovery operation

On Thursday, the team said on-site preparations were on schedule and “significant progress” had been made over the past five days.

Analysis of the yacht and the surrounding seabed confirmed there had been no change to its condition since the last inspection, meaning plans to raise the vessel can now go ahead.

Work to move the Bayesian into an upright position and lift it to the surface was scheduled to begin later this month – subject to suitable weather and sea conditions.

Before the vessel is transported to port, sea water will be pumped out of it.

PERINI NAVI PRESS OFFICE The Bayesian yacht with the lower parts of its white sails visible above the whole of its brown deck. The cabins have white roofs and the hull of the boat is black. About half a dozen people in red tops are visible on deck.
The Bayesian left the Sicilian port of Milazzo on 14 August before it sank on 19 August [BBC]

Before the Bayesian is raised it will be held in position by steel slings, as salvage workers detach the vessel’s extensive rigging and 72m (236ft) mast, thought to be one of the tallest in the world.

These will then be stored on the seabed and recovered after the team has recovered the ship’s hull, which investigators say is a primary source of evidence.

There has not been any pollution from the yacht reported, with conditions being monitored and efforts made to secure its tank vents and openings.

A BBC graphic showing the keel operating on a vessel
Inquest proceedings in the UK are looking at the deaths of Mike Lynch and his daughter, and Mr and Mrs Bloomer, who were all British nationals.

Lynch and his daughter were said to have lived in the vicinity of London, and the Bloomers lived in Sevenoaks in Kent.

The tycoon founded software giant Autonomy in 1996 and was cleared in June last year of carrying out a massive fraud over the sale of the firm to Hewlett-Packard (HP) in 2011.

The boat trip was a celebration of his acquittal in the case in the US.

[BBC]

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Sri Lanka Coast Guard commence clearing oil spill in Maduru Oya Reservoir

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The Sri Lanka Coast Guard launched an operation to clear the oil spill  caused by the crash of a Sri Lanka Air Force Bell 212 helicopter into the Maduru Oya Reservoir, during a training flight on 09 May 2025.

The  efforts to clear the oil spill  are ongoing and will continue today, 10 May.

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