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Bowlers, Hope help Windies draw level

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Hope and Carty put on an unbroken 91-run match-winning stand (pic Cricbuzz)

A disciplined bowling effort led by three-fers from Romario Shepherd and Gudakesh Motie, backed by some excellent catching, and a patient Shai Hope half-century helped West Indies draw level in the three-match ODI series with a convincing six-wicket win in rainy Barbados on Saturday (July 29). This was West Indies first ODI win against India in last ten attempts.

Inserting India in, who had rested Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli, the hosts made a stunning comeback with the ball to roll them out for 181 inside 41 despite a solid 90-run opening stand driven by Ishan Kishan’s second successive half-century of the series. On a slow surface that offered both turn and extra bounce, West Indies overhauled the sub-par target with more than 13 overs to spare, on the back of a steady 91* stand between Hope (63*) and Keacy Carty (48*) and a contrasting opening partnership worth 53.

Kyle Mayers was off the blocks quickly, driving and flicking India’s new-ball pair of Hardik Pandya and Mukesh Kumar. He even dispatched the Indian stand-in captain into the stands before Brandon King joined in, going past 1000 ODI runs with consecutive boundaries off Umran Malik. Mayers then welcomed Shardul Thakur into the attack with a stylish flick for six over fine leg to bring up the fifty partnership on the first ball of the ninth over, but fell attempting a repeat of the same one ball later. In the same over, Thakur trapped King LBW to reduce West Indies to 54/2.

Hope’s brisk start – including a six to get off the mark – was the only reason West Indies had managed to move on  quickly but Thakur struck again. A well-directed bouncer took Alick Athanaze completely by surprise, and Kishan had plenty of time to settle under the top-edge.

The captain however ensured West Indies didn’t waste a perfect start like the tourists. Even though he lost Shimron Hetmyer to a Kuldeep Yadav googly soon after, Hope kept the scoreboard ticking just enough to keep them ahead of the DLS par score given the overcast conditions. And once Carty got his eye in, the pair did well to rotate strike effectively and inch closer to the target.

Hope brought up his fifty in 70 balls, also taking his team past the 150-run mark in the process. Despite not exactly dealing in boundaries until the very end, the pair took control of the chase and made sure West Indies scaled the target comfortably, with no further hiccups.

India had decided for more experimentation ahead of the home World Cup, but it didn’t really click barring the efforts of the new-look opening pair. The humid, overcast conditions from the onset offered early swing and Kishan took his time settling in. Shubman Gill (34) meanwhile kept the scoreboard ticking early on, displaying his full range of shots to collect some early boundaries.

The southpaw survived a couple of close calls in early 20s, but went on to outrace Gill to a 51-ball half-century – his second in as many games. However, just as the pair inched closer to the century stand, Motie broke through for the hosts. Gill, in his attempt to take on the spinner, danced down the track to loft a flighted delivery and holed out to the tall Joseph in the deep, triggering a dramatic collapse of 5 for 23 that India never really recovered from.

Kishan became the first of Shepherd’s twin strikes, re-attempting the cut that had fetched him a four earlier in the over – only this time for Alick Athanaze to pouch a stunning take at backward point. Axar Patel, who got a batting promotion at no. 4, was in and out in a jiffy – gloving a short ball to the keeper.

Pandya and Sanju Samson managed to stall West Indies’ march but not for long as Jayden Seales returned to send Pandya packing cheaply off another short one. On the very next ball, Yannic Cariah got Samson outside-edging to the ‘keeper, leaving India reeling at 113/5 as rain arrived to halt the proceedings for the next 45 minutes.

That, however, failed to rob West Indies of the momentum as the wicket procession continued on the other side. Shepherd struck with yet another bouncer, and this time Jadeja top-edged his pull to give a comfortable catch to the right of deep backward square. Three balls later, Athanaze took another sharp catch at backward point to end Suryakumar’s cameo after a run-a-ball 24.

Thakur’s fight took India past the 150-run mark but his stay was short-lived. Joseph struck twice in three balls – separated by a 15-rain break – to open his account late in the day, and Motie wrapped up the proceedings with one ball to spare in the 41st over. Incidentally, this was the 29th time India had been bowled out for under 200 by West Indies – the most by an opponent, surpassing 28 by Pakistan.

Brief scores:
India 181 all out in 40.5 overs (Ishan Kishan 55; Romario Shepherd 3-37, Gudakesh Motie 3-36) lost to West Indies 182/4 in 36.4 overs (Shai Hope 63*, Keacy Carty 48*; Shardul Thakur 3-42) by 6 wickets


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Cricket journalist and broadcast legend Qamar Ahmed dies aged 88

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Qamar Ahmed receives a memento from Moin Khan on the occasion of covering his 400th Test match in 2014 [Cricinfo]

Qamar Ahmed, the cricket journalist and broadcaster, as well as a former first-class cricketer, has passed away in Karachi, Pakistan. He was 88 years old.

Ahmed – or ‘Q’ as he was fondly and widely known to his fellow journalists – was for a long time, arguably Pakistan’s most accomplished and best-known cricket journalist and broadcaster, a career he embarked upon in London after leaving behind a fledgling first-class career in Pakistan in the 1950s. Eventually he would travel the world covering international cricket for a number of newspapers and magazines, and news agencies such as Reuters and AFP. He also worked for the BBC.

Additionally, he also did broadcast work for various TV channels and radio stations, including for TVNZ during the 1992 World Cup  in Australia and New Zealand – which Pakistan won. He covered every single World Cup until the 2007 one in the Caribbean. By then he had stopped covering ODIs – “pyjama cricket,” as he called it – and focused purely on Tests. The third Test between Pakistan and Sri Lanka in Sharjah in January 2014, marked his 400th Test as a journalist – only a handful have covered more.

His long and well-travelled career meant he was an eyewitness to many of Pakistan cricket’s most seminal moments, including that 1992 World Cup triumph. He was in the hotel rooms of players when the famous pay dispute of 1976-77 happened, paving the way for the professionalisation of Pakistan’s cricketers. He was also present on Pakistan’s tour of the West Indies in 1992-93, when four players – Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis, Mushtaq Ahmed and Aaqib Javed – were briefly detained for marijuana possession, chronicling it in his book ‘Testing Times’. He was also present during the terror attacks on the Sri Lanka cricket team in Lahore in March 2009. Not just Pakistan’s moments either: Q was witness to Sunil Gavaskar’s 10,000th run, Richard Hadlee’s 400th wicket, Anil Kumble’s  10-for, cricket’s 1000th Test and its 2000th in 2011.

He was also the writer of the autobiographies of Hanif Mohammad and Waqar Hasan. His last book, ‘Far More than A Game’ came out in 2020 and was a memoir of his life in the game. It was a rich life, and it meant he was a lively raconteur around press boxes and cricket circles. The most popular of his stories invariably revolved around some of Pakistan’s biggest stars in the 1970s and 80s, such as Imran Khan and Javed Miandad, both of whom were regular guests at his London home. Many of them are too salacious to publish here but are well-known to journalists who had spent time with Q. Indeed, a visit to Q’s London home was a fixture for touring cricketers (and journalists) of the time, an opportunity to enjoy not only his generous hospitality and company but also – and this was not to be missed – his culinary skills.

These relations were reflective of a different era for the sport and journalism, when there was less distance between journalists and their subjects. Q could count for instance, Mushtaq Mohammad, one of Pakistan’s most influential captains and allrounders, and Zaheer Abbas,  one of their greatest batters, among his closest friends. But in truth, there are few cricketers from that time who would not have come across or engaged with Q. Another of his closest friends was the late actor Mohammad Ali, one of the great superstars of the Pakistan film industry . He was also the subject of some of Q’s funniest stories and proof of a rich life outside the game.

Even though he had stopped covering cricket regularly over the last few years, he remained a fixture in cricket circles. Last October, he attended the UK’s Cricket Media Club lunch (of which he was a member) and was the recipient of a generous and cheery birthday toast. He seemed, as ever, in good health, the result of a disciplined lifestyle and, no doubt, an athletic early career.

Indeed, it was as a left-arm spinner in Pakistan’s fledgling domestic circuit that he first rose to prominence in the mid-1950s. He did well enough across 17 first-class matches to push for a Pakistan spot, most notably for the 1957-58 tour to the Caribbean. Living in Hyderabad, however, meant he was outside the radar of selectors who, in those days, focused on the urban centres of Lahore and Karachi. Still, he does hold the rare distinction of having dismissed all the Mohammad brothers, including Hanif, Sadiq and Mushtaq on their debuts; his friendship with Mushtaq began, no doubt, when they made their first-class debuts in the same game.

One of his favourite stories was that he dismissed Hanif in the game before Hanif made his world record 499. The punchline was that Hanif had made 129 by the time Q got him, and that he holed out to long-on. He was still turning that left arm over in media games until the mid-2000s, and standing as umpire after he stopped playing, his love for the game undimmed until the very end.

[Cricinfo]

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Stafanie Taylor, spinners help West Indies overcome Scotland threat

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Stafanie Taylor took home the Player-of-the-Match award after batting at No. 7 for the first time in T20Is [Cricinfo]

Stafanie Taylor navigated a huge scare at the hands of Scotland as West Indies scrapped their way to a second win of the Women’s T20 World Cup.

Taylor, playing her first match of the tournament, injected much-needed impetus to the West Indies’ innings with a boundary-laden 47 not out off just 19 deliveries striking at 247.36 after West Indies had slumped to 85 for 5 in the 15th over of the match.

A spirited half-century by just-turned 21-year-old opener Darcey Carter while battling a leg injury took Scotland close to victory in the face of a nervy performance with the ball and in the field from West Indies. She shared half-century partnerships with Latherine Fraser and Ailsa Lister, but Hayley Matthews’ 3 for 19 in four overs, which included 13 dot balls, gave her side just enough hope to hold onto and Aaliyah Alleyne’s  three wickets in the 19th over stifled Scotland just as they threatened to take the match away once more.

Fraser had been outstanding for Scotland with 2 for 34, a spectacular catch on the boundary’s edge to remove opener Qiana Joseph and the sharp run-out of Shemaine Campbelle, West Indies’ star in their nail-biting victory over New Zealand on Saturday.

West Indies became bogged down by a disciplined Scotland bowling attack complemented by excellent fielding all round. But, led by Taylor, they scored 69 runs in the last six overs to set Scotland a sizeable target – one the qualifiers came far closer to reaching than their opponents would have liked.

Taylor came in with her side floundering and in desperate need of someone to give their innings a belated jump start. Jahzara Claxon struck West Indies’ first six on the last ball of the 17th over, heaving a short one down the leg side from Kathryn Bryce over cow corner as she and Taylor looked to accelerate. But Bryce, stationed in the same spot in the field four balls later, claimed a straightforward catch to remove Claxton and give Fraser her second wicket.

Taylor picked off boundaries down the ground and over the covers then launched twin sixes back over the bowler’s head and over deep extra cover before a third, 83m maximum over deep midwicket to give West Indies’ bowlers plenty to defend.

Scotland were sharp in the field from the outset and their bowlers kept a lid on West Indies’ openers Matthews and Joseph, who managed just 13 runs in the first three overs. Rachel Slater was particularly frugal, conceding only a wide from her opening over. An out-of-sorts Matthews produced a premeditated release shot over midwicket for four off Gabriella Fontenla, who was making the ball swing nicely. But it was Joseph’s attempt to properly break the shackles which proved her undoing and demonstrated just how up for the contest Scotland were.

Fraser offered a contender for catch of the tournament so far when Joseph muscled a Slater delivery to deep midwicket. Fraser leapt to pluck the ball from the air just inside the boundary then showed wonderful spatial awareness to avoid touching the sponge with her elbow by mere centimetres as she landed. By the end of the powerplay, West Indies were 33 for 1 and Matthews had scored 12 off 17. She managed just two more before backing away to a quicker delivery from Fraser and losing her middle stump as Scotland celebrated a spectacular start.

Sarah Bryce dropped a tough chance behind the stumps off Campbelle, on 28 when she walked past a Fraser delivery which deflected off the keeper’s gloves and ran through fine leg to the boundary. She made no mistake as sister Kathryn, who had frustrated West Indies with her superb lengths, lobbed one up outside off as Deandra Dottin advanced and turned to see her bails whipped off.

West Indies had only found the boundary seven times up to that point, at the end of the 13th over, so they were scampering singles wherever they could get them. There was to be no reprise of Campelle’s previous innings when she was run-out by Fraser on the next ball and then Kirstie Gordon pinned Chinelle Henry lbw to plunge West Indies further into danger.

Scotland began the run chase at a far more impressive clip than their opponents, Carter reeling off four boundaries in the first three overs and Fraser again in the action with 13 runs off six deliveries. Carter appeared to hurt her leg while trying to work a Matthews delivery down the leg side and she received a life on 19 when Joseph dropped what should have been a sitter for Campbelle high behind the stumps. Running between the wickets became increasingly laboured for Carter but she refused to give up and she raised her ninth half-century in T20Is off 53 balls.

After five overs, Scotland were 51 without loss, but then Matthews made the crucial strike, beating Fraser on the sweep with a faster ball that kept low. That sparked a collapse of four wickets for seven runs in the space of two overs. Matthews removed Kathryn for a second-ball duck, miscuing to mid-off and claimed her third when she trapped Megan McColl lbw attempting a reverse sweep.

Three balls earlier, McColl had been dropped by Campbelle, running from behind the stumps almost to midwicket and, shortly after McColl was dismissed, Campbelle left the field, apparently feeling unwell, to be replaced by substitute wicketkeeper Mandy Mangru. Carter and Lister stuck at their task, however, in the face of some wayward bowling and clumsy fielding as the tension started to show on West Indies. Dottin, playing her 150th T20I, sent down three wides in a row to start the 18th over then, after two fours in three balls to Carter, she broke down in tears. Her team-mates rallied round her and she managed to concede just one more run.

With Scotland needing 22 runs off the last two overs, Alleyne finally ended Carter’s knock with a return catch off a top edge then removed Lister and Gordon with consecutive balls. While West Indies continued to struggle with their ground fielding, they scraped home as Joseph removed Slater and Fontenla in the space of three balls right at the end.

SCORES:
West Indies Women  153 for 6 in 20 overs (Qiana Joseph 13, Hayley Matthews 14, Shermaine Campbelle 36, Deandra Dottin 14, Jahzara Claxton 16, Stafanie Taylor 47*; Kathryn Bryce 1-30, Rachel Slater 1-23, Katherine  Fraser 2-34, Kirstie Gordon 1-36) beat Scotland Women 146 in 20 overs (Darcey Carter 59, Katheryne Fraser 20, Ailsa Lister 33; Aaliah Alleyne 3-11, Hayley Matthews 3-19, Afy Fletcher 2-16, Qiana Joseph 1-29) by seven runs

[Cricinfo]

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111st Colombo Championships begin today‎

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Janaka Fonseka, Managing Director, Vision Care, Sriya Munasinghe, President (SLTA Playing Section ), Prasantha Dissanayake (Captain SLTA Playing Section), and officials from SLTA and and Vision Care pose to mark the Vision Care sponsorship

The Vision Care 111st Colombo Tennis Championships 2026 will begin today at the Sri Lanka Tennis Association (SLTA) clay courts in Colombo with a record number of entries and the biggest prize fund in the tournament’s history worth Rs. 3 million, officials announced at a press conference.

‎The prestigious three-week championship, one of Sri Lanka’s oldest and most respected ‘A’ Grade tournaments, is expected to bring together the country’s leading players while providing a major stage for emerging talent from across the island.

‎SLTA Playing Section President Sriya Munasinghe said the tournament continues to play a key role in developing local tennis and helping young players progress to higher levels.

‎”This is one of the oldest ‘A’ Grade tournaments in Sri Lanka. We are honoured to host it once again on our six clay courts, especially with a record number of entries this year,” Munasinghe said.

‎He said the championship offers valuable opportunities for players from all regions, including Ampara and Matara, and helps identify future stars of Sri Lankan tennis.

‎SLTA Playing Section Captain Prashanth Dissanayake said the governing body aims to raise the standard of the competition through greater investment and long-term development plans.

‎”Last year we offered Rs. 2.5 million in prize money, and this year the prize fund has increased significantly. We believe greater investment will raise the standard of competition and strengthen Sri Lankan tennis,” Dissanayake said.

‎He revealed plans to eventually transform the event into a major South Asian tournament under the name “Colombo Open”.

‎”We dream of this becoming the Colombo Open, attracting the best players from South Asia. This is not only about tennis but also about building a sporting identity for Sri Lanka,” he said.

‎The tournament will feature Men’s and Women’s Singles and Doubles, Mixed Doubles, Junior Singles and Doubles from Under-12 to Under-18 age groups, as well as several Senior events for players over 35 years.

‎Vision Care will continue as the title sponsor for the 12th successive year, highlighting its long-standing commitment to Sri Lankan tennis.

‎Vision Care Optical Services Managing Director Janaka Fonseka said the company was proud to continue supporting the championship and promoting healthy lifestyles through sport.

‎”We believe sport is vital for the health of the nation and are proud to continue supporting the Colombo Championships,” Fonseka said.

‎Wilson will be the Official Ball Partner.

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