Connect with us

Latest News

Cummins, Zampa and Starc trigger stunning Lankan collapse

Published

on

Zampa picked up a four-wicket haul (pic Cricbuzz)

Australia produced a dramatic fightback as Sri Lanka lost their last nine wickets for just 52 runs in their World Cup encounter in Lucknow on Monday (October 16) to bowl them out for 209. Pat Cummins (2-32) started the turnaround for Australia by getting rid of both the Lankan openers after they had put on a century stand. Sri Lanka would have fancied a total of 300 or above with the kind of start they got but once the opening stand was broken, Australia kept chipping away at the wickets to restrict their opponents to a meager total. Adam Zampa (4-47) and Mitchell Starc 2-43) sliced through the middle and lower order to leave Sri Lanka on the mat.

Opting to bat, Sri Lanka couldn’t have asked for a better start to their innings as Pathum Nissanka and Kusal Perera stroked fifties to set the platform upfront. The initial part of the innings had a very similar pattern to Australia’s game against South Africa at this venue with the Aussie bowlers not quite hitting their straps. There was just a bit of help for the quicks in the pitch and definite turn on offer but the bowling wasn’t consistent enough. Australia didn’t help their cause by misusing their reviews as they failed to review an LBW call off Glenn Maxwell against Perera. The fact that they had burnt a review off the very first ball of the innings forced Cummins to take a defensive stand.

With both openers cruising, Australia needed something special to stage a fightback and skipper Cummins was the one who provided it. With this pitch being at the center meant extremely long square dimensions and the Australian captain’s short ball ploy worked as Nissanka top-edged a pull to deep square leg. A little while later, Cummins got one to sneak through Perera’s slog off the inside edge to give Australia a serious shot at turning things around. Unlike the game against the Proteas, Australia’s fielding and catching was top-notch, more like the Australia that we’ve been accustomed to seeing, particularly in World Cups.

Zampa had an erratic start to his spell while the openers were batting, largely due to Perera’s presence but with two right-handers to work with, the leg spinner thrived in his second spell. The in-form Kusal Mendis was sent packing, courtesy a deceptive leg break with the top-edge taken brilliantly by David Warner who covered a lot of ground to his left from deep square leg. Australia now had serious momentum and started to put pressure on Sri Lanka’s batters who were simply not able to withstand the onslaught. The surface wasn’t the easiest to start on and wickets kept falling like nine pins.

Sri Lanka had slipped from 157/1 to 166/4 in the blink of an eye, and the score read 177/4 when a brief rain delay interrupted proceedings. It seemed like a welcome break in play for Sri Lanka who’d have wanted to use that time to regroup. However, the fall of wickets only picked up in speed on resumption as the last six wickets fell for just 32 runs. Starc started by getting Dhananjaya de Silva to chop on to the stumps before Zampa ran through the middle and lower order along with the left-arm pacer. Maxwell came back to put the final touches on what has been a clearly underwhelming performance from Sri Lanka’s batters.

Brief scores:
Sri Lanka
209 in 43.3 overs (Kusal Perera 78, Pathum Nissanka 61; Adam Zampa 4-47, Pat Cummins 2-32, Mitchell Starc 2-43) vs Australia



Latest News

Six US soldiers killed in Iranian strike on Kuwait base

Published

on

By

Six American soldiers were killed in an Iranian strike against a military facility in Kuwait on Sunday, the US has confirmed.

US Central Command originally said three soldiers died in the incident but officials confirmed on Monday that the death toll had doubled, after one person succumbed to their injuries and two more bodies were found in the rubble.

Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth confirmed a US bunker in Kuwait was hit after a missile was launched during Iran’s original retaliation evaded air defences.

The six deaths are the only fatalities confirmed by the US military since it launched a new war against Iran with Israel.

Hegseth said a “powerful weapon” struck a “tactical operations centre that was fortified”, without providing further details about the site’s location.

Three US military officials with direct knowledge of Iran’s attack told the BBC’s US partner CBS News that the service members were in a makeshift office space in Kuwait.

They questioned whether the building had been adequately fortified, telling CBS News a trailer was being used as an office, with 12ft (3.7m) steel-reinforced concrete barriers to shield it.

The US has a long-standing defence relationship with Kuwait, and more than 13,000 American soldiers are stationed in the Gulf nation.

Iran has responded to attacks against it by launching missiles at Gulf countries allied with the US. Bahrain, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Oman and Qatar have all also seen strikes.

Separately in Kuwait, the US confirmed three fighter jets were downed after what it described as an incident of “friendly fire” on Monday.

Footage showed the jets spiraling to the ground. The pilots involved all managed to eject and survived the incident.

Iran state media claimed the Iranian military had shot down the jets, without providing evidence.

Continue Reading

Latest News

Israel attacks presidential office in Tehran as reported death toll in Iran rises to 787

Published

on

By

Israel says it has carried out new attacks on Iran’s “leadership compound” in Tehran, including the presidential office

One reporter inside Iran says ‘every part” of Teheran has been hit since Saturday, while new pictures show explosions in the east of the city.

The number of people killed since US-Israeli attacks began has reached 787,  the Red Crescent says.

Elsewhere, Israel says ground troops will ‘advance and seize aditional strategic areas in Lebanon in order to stop attacks on Israel

The US embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, has been hit by two drones, seemingly from Iran

And the gas price on international markets has risen again – up 30% at one point o Tuesday morning, after 50% increases on Monday

Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump has again criticised Keir Starmer for initially denying access to British bases.

The US and Israel struck Iran on Saturday, killing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Iran has retaliated with a wave of attacks across the region. On Monday, the US told Americans across the Middle East to “depart now”.

[BBC]

Continue Reading

Latest News

Trump says Iran war projected to last 4 to 5 weeks, could go ‘far longer’

Published

on

By

US President Donald Trump speaks in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, the United States [Aljazeera]

United States President Donald Trump has said the plan for the Iran war initially “projected four to five weeks”, adding the US military has the “capability to go far longer than that”.

Speaking on Monday from the White House, Trump outlined his administration’s justification for going to war against Iran alongside Israel, saying that Iran posed “grave threats” to the US, even as he again claimed that US strikes on Iran in June of last year led to the “obliteration of Iran’s nuclear programme”.

Trump also said that Iran’s ballistic missile programme was “growing rapidly and dramatically, and this posed a very clear, colossal threat to America and our forces stationed overseas”.

“The regime already had missiles capable of hitting Europe and our bases, both local and overseas, and would soon have had missiles capable of reaching our beautiful America,” Trump said, repeating a claim his administration has repeatedly made in the run-up to Saturday’s attack, for which US government officials have not provided any evidence.

The statements were significant, with Trump appearing to pivot from claims that Iran posed an immediate threat to the US. Instead, he characterised the Iranian government as potentially posing a longer-term threat.

“The purpose of this fast-growing missile programme was to shield their nuclear weapon development and make it extraordinarily difficult for anyone to stop them from making these – highly forbidden by us – nuclear weapons,” Trump said.

“An Iranian regime armed with long-range missiles and nuclear weapons would be an intolerable threat to the Middle East, but also to the American people,” Trump said.

“Our country itself would be under threat, and it was very nearly under threat,” Trump said.

Under both US domestic law and international law, attacks on a foreign country must be in response to an immediate threat. Under the US Constitution, only Congress can declare war, while the president can act unilaterally in response to an imminent threat.

Trump has released two video speeches since the US and Israel began their attacks, including saying in a recorded message released yesterday that Iran had waged a “war against civilisation”.

He also predicted there would likely be more US military personnel deaths after the Pentagon confirmed the first three members of the military killed in the Middle East on Sunday.

To date, at least 555 people have been killed in Iran, 13 have been killed in Lebanon, 10 killed in Israel, three killed in the United Arab Emirates, and two killed in Iraq, with Oman, Bahrain and Kuwait each reporting one death amid Iranian retaliations in the region.

On Monday, shortly after the Pentagon confirmed a fourth member of the US military had died, Trump did not give a clear timeline for the operations.

He said “Right from the beginning, we projected four to five weeks, but we have capability to go far longer than that.”

Trump added that the military had originally projected four weeks to “terminate the military leadership” of Iran.

To date, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and several other top officials, including the head of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), have been confirmed killed in US-Israeli strikes.

“We’re ahead of schedule there by a lot,” Trump said.

Trump spoke shortly after Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth took questions from reporters for the first time since the attacks began.

Hegseth appeared to respond to concerns from Trump’s own “Make America Great Again” (MAGA) movement about entering into a prolonged war.

Trump had vowed to end US interventionism during his presidential campaign, promising to focus on domestic needs over adventurism abroad.

“This is not Iraq. This is not endless,” Hegseth said.

“This operation is a clear, devastating, decisive mission. Destroy the missile threat, destroy the navy, no nukes,” he said.

“Israel has clear missions as well, for which we are grateful, capable partners,” he said, without defining Israel’s mission.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has long called for the toppling of Iran’s government

Hegseth further vowed to fight the war “all on our terms, with maximum authorities, no stupid rules of engagement, no nation-building quagmire, no democracy building exercise, no politically correct wars”.

[Aljazeera]

Continue Reading

Trending