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Daryl Mitchell 102, Blair Tickner triple-strike hand New Zealand advantage

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Daryl Mitchell gestures after bringing up his century (pic Cricinfo)
A Daryl Mitchell ton followed by a Mat Henry blitz put the hosts in pole position for the first time in the Christchurch Test, as New Zealand’s lower order wrestled control away from Sri Lanka on a riveting third day of play at the Hagley Oval. Blair Tickner further pressed home the advantage, picking up three wickets in the final session, as the visitors ended 65 runs ahead with seven wickets in hand; but the momentum still lay with the hosts.
Much of the damage was down to the efforts of Henry, whose 72 off only 75 balls from No. 9 knocked the wind out of Sri Lanka’s sails at a point when they might have been entertaining thoughts of obtaining a considerable a first-innings lead. And like any good onslaught, Henry’s destructive cameo came about unexpectedly and brutally.
Seemingly catalysed by the wicket of Mitchell – who had fought his way to 102 from 193 deliveries – over the course of a subdued if not attritional day of cricket barring a brief period prior to lunch, Henry, having trundled to 20 off his first 45 deliveries, produced 52 off his next 30.
Dhananjaya de Silva’s offbreaks were the first to get the treatment, as two slogs over cow corner for six were followed by a back-foot scythe through cover. That was just the entree, before Henry feasted off Kasun Rajitha a few overs later, taking the until-that-point miserly seamer for 24 in an over, which included five consecutive boundary blows – including a monumental straight six.
By the time Henry fell – courtesy a yorker from Asitha Fernando – New Zealand’s deficit had instead transformed into a five-run lead. Henry’s heroics almost obscured Neil Wagner at the other end, who scored 27 off 24 balls in the process. To add to all of that, Tim Southee’s quickfire 25 from 20 deliveries meant New Zealand’s last four added a decisive 126 runs off 124 balls after they were 188 for 6 at one stage, still 167 behind Sri Lanka’s first-innings total.
And prior to Henry’s devastating intervention, New Zealand’s gains had been steady if not exactly express. Leading the way was Mitchell. The first hour of play saw the Sri Lankan seamers being unable to replicate the consistency of the previous day, perhaps guilty of trying to force the issue; and Mitchell had a large role to play in this.
His frequent shifts in the crease – either by shuffling down the track or taking guard a foot in front of the crease – made it particularly difficult for Rajitha and Asitha to maintain consistent lengths. Over the course of his innings, Mitchell accumulated runs without really pressing the issue. And by the time he fell, he had brought his side within 64 runs of Sri Lanka’s score, before Henry took hold of the game.
All in all, New Zealand scored 211 runs in a little under two sessions, 82 of which would come in that extraordinary hour before tea. Even though that would see New Zealand’s lead stretch to just 18, by the time Sri Lanka’s openers came out to the middle, the shift in momentum between the two camps was palpable.
New Zealand’s bowlers, reinvigorated by their tail-end exploits, were unerring in their lines and lengths; the Sri Lanka batters, by contrast, never looked settled, something highlighted by each of their dismissals: Dimuth Karunaratne was once more caught after edging a drive, Oshada Fernando feathered an ill-advised cut through to the wicket-keeper, and Kusal Mendis was caught in the slips lashing at one outside off barely 20 minutes before stumps.
Angelo Mathews was left holding fort alongside nightwatcher Prabath Jayasuriya, and while Sri Lanka certainly have a lot of batting left, New Zealand remain on the verge of landing a knockout blow.
Brief scores:
Sri Lanka 355 and 83 for 3 (Oshada Fernando 28,Angelo Mathews 20*, Blair Tickner 3-28) lead New Zealand 373 (Daryl Mitchell 102, Matt Henry 72, Asitha  Fernando 4-85) by 65 runs


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Padikkal fifty, Sudeera five-for before India A, Sri Lanka A settle for draw

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Devdutt Padikkal made 67 in India A's second innings [Cricinfo]

Devdutt Padikkal’s half-century and left-arm spinner Dilum Sudeera’s five-wicket haul were the highlights on day four as the first unofficial Test between India A and Sri Lanka A petered to a draw.

India A declared for the second time in the game after setting Sri Lanka A a target north of 300, but were only able to take two wickets in the 15 overs they managed to get in.

India began the day on 48 for no loss and a lead of 170, although B Sai Sudharsan had retired hurt on the third day. Padikkal and Aayush Pandey added 42 runs on the fourth morning before Sudeera removed the latter for 38 for his first wicket. Two balls later, Ravindu Fernando trapped Ruturaj Gaikwad for 1 off 2.

Padikkal went on to make 67 in a knock laced with five boundaries before Sudeera struck in consecutive overs to remove him and Jurel. Shaik Rasheed and Harsh Dubey then added 47 runs for the fifth wicket before Dubey was caught behind off Chamika Gunasekara. Sudeera then snared Rasheed, Saransh Jain and Auqib Nabi in the next over, when India A decided to declare 311 runs ahead. Sudharsan did not return to bat for India A.

Sri Lanka A’s openers had brisk and solid start, but it slightly came apart when Nabi cleaned up Pawantha Weerasinghe for 20 off 19 in the fifth over and Dubey trapped Niroshan Dickwella lbw.

Nuwanidu Fernando and Ashen Bandara then saw the day out, with India A unable to inflict any further damage.

Scores:
India A 452 for 6 dec  in 111.4 overs (Sai Sudharsan 132, Dhruv Jurel 141*, Shaik Rasheed 63; Chamika  Gunasekara 3-84, Dilum Sudeera 2-143) and 189 for 8 dec in 57 overs  (Devdutt Padikkal 67; Dilum  Sudeera 5-49) vs Sri Lanka A 330 in 101.4 overs (Nuwanidu Fernando  84, Ashen Bandara  70, Sahan Arachchige 72; Auqib  Nabi 4-58) and 70 for 2 (Pawantha Weerasinghe 20; Auqib  Nabi 1-18, Harsh Dubey 1-25). Match ended in a draw

Dilum Sudeera captured  five wickets [Cricinfo]

[Cricinfo]

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Canada score late to beat South Africa and reach last 16 at World Cup 2026

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Canada's Stephen Eustaquio, centre, celebrates after scoring [Aljazeera]

Canada beat South Africa 1-0 thanks to a stoppage-time strike by Stephen ⁠Eustaquio from distance to reach the FIFA World Cup last 16 for the first time in their history.

Eustaquio received the ball on the edge of the ⁠South Africa penalty area and hammered it past diving goalkeeper Ronwen Williams in a thrilling conclusion to the first knockout-round match of the tournament on Sunday.

South Africa, who had seemed ⁠content to play for extra time and a possible penalty shootout, made a few furious but unsuccessful attempts to level before the final whistle as the sun broke through the clouds at Los Angeles Stadium.

Canada will next face either the Netherlands or Morocco on July ‌4 in Houston for a place in the quarterfinals.

“It’s about the two years we’ve been together,” Canada coach Jesse Marsch told the team in a huddle after the final whistle.

“Think about how we talked about sticking to the plan – you guys showing your character. You guys are Canadian heroes here.”

Chances were scarce in a cagey first half, with little to separate the sides, who were both playing ⁠in the knockout rounds for the first time.

Canada’s best opening ⁠came just before half-time when a corner sparked a scramble in the South Africa box. Moise Bombito sent a header goal-wards, which was cleared off the line by Aubrey Modiba, before Tajon Buchanan’s close-range effort struck ⁠Williams in the chest.

Moments later, Richie Laryea went down in the area, prompting Canadian appeals for a penalty, but the decision ⁠not to award a spot kick stood after a ⁠VAR review, prompting loud boos from Canada’s red-clad army of supporters dominating the stands.

Marsch continued to protest as the teams left the field at half-time, with Bombito appearing to urge him away from the referee.

Frustration ‌for Canada only grew early in the second half, as South Africa appeared in no rush to press the issue.

Canada had another chance just before the second-half hydration ‌break, ‌when Tani Oluwaseyi’s shot hit the keeper, and Jonathan David was unable to head the ricochet home, thanks to an excellent defensive effort by Mbekezeli Mbokazi to clear the ball.

Eustaquio dedicated the win to “all Canadians” when he spoke to reporters after the match.

“I think it was an amazing goal. When I shot, I thought everyone shot with me. Everyone added a little power to it when it went into the back of the net.

” It started when we came out of group stage. Belief is a big part of it. We will now get either Netherlands or Morocco. Anything can happen. If we keep working like we are doing, we might even win it.”

[Aljazeera]

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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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