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England in pole position after Crawley-Root onslaught
It’s the third day of a Test match that’s generally called the moving day but with the weather forecast grim for the last two days of the game, England made their move on day two. And in some style. James Anderson set the tone by striking off the very first ball of the day to remove Pat Cummins while Chris Woakes registered his maiden Ashes fifer to soon wrap the innings up. Australia only managed to muster 18 more to their overnight score and ended with a middling total of 317.
The visitors did get the perfect start with the ball as Mitchell Starc removed Ben Duckett early but little did they know that it would be among the very few moments of joy that they would experience in the day. England’s faith in Moeen Ali for the number three role got vindicated as the left-hander stitched up a fifty, while also sharing a century stand with Zak Crawley, although both batters looked a bit shaky in the first session.
However, come the second session, the script changed dramatically. Whether it was the surface easing up a bit with all the sun beating down or Australia’s lack of clarity with the ball, both batters appeared in top gear. Particularly Crawley who was at his fluent best with those imperious drives, cuts and pulls, taking the Aussie bowlers to the sword. Moeen also laced some typically elegant drives before perishing to an ambitious shot that was taken stunningly by Usman Khawaja at mid-wicket.
Moeen’s dismissal, though, brought us to what was the center-stage phase of the day. A double-century stand at more than run-a-ball is treasured even in ODI cricket, and here Joe Root combined with Crawley to add 206 off just 178 balls in a red-ball game. The second session run rate went above seven runs-per-over while the pattern remained the same for a major part of the final session until Crawley’s dismissal. The opener, who registered his maiden Ashes ton, looked set for a double hundred before chopping one onto the stumps.
Root continued to up the tempo although things were relatively comforting for Australia since Crawley’s exit. England’s no.4 soon fell to an unplayable delivery from Josh Hazlewood – a hard length ball that shot through low after pitching to knock Root over. It was the kind of dismissal that would have ironically pleased England more than Australia, given the state of the game as it was evidence of the surface showing some variable bounce.
Skipper Ben Stokes and Harry Brook preferred to water down their aggression to prevent further damage today, with the plan clearly to go hell for leather on day three. There were a few instances again of variable bounce with Stokes being the frequent sufferer and all this adds to England’s advantage with the lead already 67 and six wickets still left in the shed. Australia, missing the presence of a specialist spinner, was largely made to look clueless with the ball adding to questionable tactics.
Brief scores:
Australia 317 (Mitchell Marsh 51, Marnus Labuschagne 51; Chris Woakes 5-62) trail England 384/4 (Zak Crawley 189, Joe Root 84; Mitchell Starc 2-74) by 67 runs
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US and Iran begin talks on initial peace deal in Switzerland
US and Iranian officials have started direct talks in Switzerland after signing an initial agreement to end the war last week.
The deal includes a commitment to reach a final agreement within 60 days, as well as an end to fighting on “all fronts” – including in Lebanon – and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.
But more clashes between Israel and iran backed Hezbollah in Lebanon prompted Iran to announce it had shut the shipping route on Saturday – though tracking data shows vessels have continued to pass through it.
After talks started, President Donald Trump said on social media that Iran “must immediately stop their highly paid PROXIES in Lebanon from causing trouble”.
He threatened to “hit Iran very hard again” if they did not.
Before the talks began, Vice-President JD Vance had said the US hoped for progress on “the nuclear issue” and Lebanon, while Tehran said it would be “demanding that the other side fulfil its commitments”.
At the Swiss resort of Bürgenstock, Vance said Trump had asked negotiators to “turn over a new leaf”. He added that if Iran’s leadership was willing to give up being a “driver of regional instability” and “nuclear weapons ambitions for the longer term”, then the US “is willing to fundamentally transform our relationship with that country”.
Iran has insisted its nuclear programme is peaceful.
Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said in a statement that negotiations for a final deal were contingent on enforcing existing commitments – including stopping all military operations. Sunday’s talks were focused on implementation, he said.
Vance was joined by Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and special envoy Steve Witkoff.
For the Iranians, parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi arrived in Switzerland late on Saturday.
The delegations were joined by Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and the head of the country’s armed forces, Field Marshal Asim Munir.
Pakistan has acted as a mediator throughout the war, and hosted a previous round of negotiations between the US and Iran.

The US and Iranian presidents signed the initial agreement earlier this week, aiming to end the war with immediate effect.
[BBC]
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Matthews, Taylor make it three in three for West Indies
West Indies spinners set up a third straight victory as they strangled Sri Lanka’s batters before Stefanie Taylor steadied a nervy chase to see them home by five wickets in Bristol. The result brings the West Indies joint-top of Group 2 with England – only trailing on net run rate – while Sri Lanka’s hopes of progression took a bashing.
Hayley Matthews was central to West Indies’ effort, arguably setting up the win inside the opening powerplay. Having put Sri Lanka into bat, the West Indies reduced them to 24 for 4 inside the powerplay, a position from which Sri Lanka never truly recovered. Mathews picked up innings best figures of 3 for 15.
Then with the bat, Matthews did her part in a 28-run opening stand with Deandra Dottin, and while Sri Lanka plugged away with wickets through the middle overs, a combination of poor catching, excess extras and Taylor’s stewardship ensured West Indies’ chase was never truly under threat.
Even on a surface where batting isn’t the easiest, any opportunities need to be grabbed when defending a sub-par total – which is precisely what Sri Lanka had managed having been bowled out for 98.
Sri Lanka however struggled to capitalise on the opportunities afforded to them, while simultaneously gifting too many free runs. Twenty-three extras were given away across the innings, with 13 of those coming in wides.
Moreover Sri Lanka dropped three catches across the innings – two of them coming shortly after the fall of a wicket; momentum is everything in a low-scoring game, and Sri Lanka were guilty of giving it up too easily. There were also a handful of close run-out chances that went begging.
It meant that West Indies, who had looked uneasy across their chase, were not punished for their mistakes – which in itself was a result of mistakes induced by the pressure created by the Sri Lankan bowlers and fielders outside of their costly errors.
Having someone with the experience of Taylor in the middle order would be a boon for most any side, and she showed her value once again on Sunday. After a solid opening stand, West Indies had slipped from 2 for 36 to 5 for 70. Another couple of wickets and those remaining 29 runs might have felt closer to 50.
However Taylor offered just the calmness required in such a situation, content to deftly rotate the strike and ensure there were no further hiccups. Her six off a free hit was the only six of the game, but highlighted her ability to capitalise on the situation at hand. Fittingly she struck the winning runs – tellingly, dropped at midwicket.
Sri Lanka average barely over 6 an over against spin since the end of the last T20 World Cup, and West Indies were well-suited to exploit that potential weakness with a team stacked with spin options.
First on that list was skipper Matthews, who opened the bowling and struck three times in a three-over spell inside the powerplay. On a surface that was tacky, she cleverly didn’t attempt to do too much, simply keeping her lines and lengths tidy.
In a period that crippled the Lankan innings before it had even truly begun, Vishmi Gunaratne offered up a leading edge – one spectacularly plucked out of the sky by Matthews – before Chamari Athapaththu went far too early on a pull as she saw her left bail dislodged. Harshitha Samarawickrama meanwhile was done in by some extra bounce, which meant she struggled to keep down a cut straight to point.
When Chinelle Henry had Imesha Dulani caught at mid-on, Sri Lanka had lost their fourth wicket inside the powerplay with just 24 runs on the board.
Ashmini Munisar – drafted into XI to add even more spin options – and Karishma Ramharack picked up three wickets between them as well, as Sri Lanka lost seven of their 10 wickets to spin, eventually being bowled out for 98 with two balls to spare.
With the top and middle order offering little by way of impetus, a rescue job for the ages was needed and Nilakshika de Silva set about her task.
Her 30 off 26 came largely came across two stands of 34 and 23 with Kavisha Dilhari and Kawya Kavindi. Those were two of just three double-digit partnerships across the Sri Lankan innings, as Sri Lanka’s innings stuttered into gear.
But once Nilakshika fell, looking to take on the fielder at deep square leg, the innings once more ground to a halt. Sri Lanka managed 60 for 3 in the middle overs, but without Nilakshika the death overs fetched just 15, as West Indies’ spinners solidified their hold on the game.
SCORES:
West Indies women 99 for 5 in 16.1 overs (Hayley Matthews 17, Deandra Dottin 12, Stefanie Taylor 27*, Jannillea Glasgow 10*; Nimasha Meepage 1-18, Kavisha Dilhari 2-22, Chamari Athapaththu 1-13) beat Sri Lanka women 98 in 19.4 overs (Imesha Dulani 17, Kavisha Dilhari 21, Nilakshika Silva 30, Kavya Kavindi 17; Hayley Matthews 3-15, Chinelle Henry 1-12, Afy Fletcher 1-24, Aaliyah Alleyne 1-15, Ashmini Munisar 1-16, Karishma Ramharack 2-15) by five wickets
[Cricinfo]
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Sooryavanshi thumps fastest List A fifty as India A win tri-series
In what may have potentially been his last innings as an uncapped player, Vaibhav Sooryavanshi smashed the fastest List A half-century, off 11 balls, in an innings that eventually ended as an audacious 29-ball 94. That helped India A beat Sri Lanka A by 66 runs in the tri-series final in Dambulla on Sunday.
Sooryavanshi came into the final on the back of four starts that yielded 117 runs. But the focal point of his tour had been his scrap with the Sri Lanka A players at the end of a tense group fixture four days ago. Amid talks of a reprimand and a fine, Sooryavanshi returned to let his bat do all the talking this time.
His turbocharge laid the foundation of an India A innings that stuttered at different times to eventually post 377 for 9, when 400-plus looked well on the cards. That they finished with what they did was largely down to Anukul Roy, who, like Sooryavanshi, also comes from the town of Samastipur.
Roy smashed 39 off just 15 balls, courtesy four sixes, to give the India A innings a late lift after they had slumped to 334 for 8, and were in danger of being bowled out with a few overs to spare. As it turned out, that wasn’t Roy’s only contribution. He also picked up two vital wickets with his left-arm spin, including that of the set Vijaykanth Viyaskanth to break a 77-run seventh-wicket partnership that kept Sri Lanka A’s hopes alive.
However, the wicket of Wanuja Sahan for a 69-ball 62, the highest contribution of Sri Lanka A’s innings, proved to be the clincher, with Sri Lanka A eventually being bowled out for 311 in the 48th over. Roy aside, legspin-bowling allrounder Vipraj Nigam and fast bowler Yash Thakur picked up three wickets each to play their parts in a fine win.
The performance that would be long remembered, though, was Sooryavanshi’s. Before raising his half-century off just 11 deliveries, each of his first five balls was sent to the boundary. Sooryavanshi kept going hard, and had the fastest List A century in sights until he fell to Sahan Arachchige, the offspinner and Sri Lanka A captain, in the ninth over. By then, India A had raced to 132 in just 8.5 overs.
Sooryavanshi smashed an incredible ten fours and eight sixes in his innings, before falling while attempting to hit a ninth six, out caught at mid-off after failing to get the elevation. It was the second time in two games that he was dismissed by Arachchige. In the Super Over fixture against Sri Lanka A, Sooryavanshi had sliced a tossed-up delivery to point as he lost shape. On Sunday, he backed away to clear the infield, buy only managed to find Viyaskanth at mid-off.
Sooryavanshi’s hitting, especially over extra cover on the up – it was reminiscent of the shot he hit off the very first delivery he faced in the IPL last year – was mighty impressive. As was his ability to play on the minds of the bowlers by getting inside the line of short deliveries to pull or help them over the leg-side boundary. The one shot that exhibited Sooryavanshi’s range, and presence of mind, was the ramp over the wicketkeeper off a delivery from Kugathas Mathulan, whose lengths he had struggled to get underneath in a gun Super Over the last time they met.
Here, having seemingly been beaten for pace, Sooryavanshi still managed to lay a neat little deflection. although he had arched back, and was nearly squatting in an effort to initially bail out of the stroke. One ball prior to that, Sooryavanshi had a small crowd guffawing at his ability to scythe a wide yorker over backward point for six.
While Sooryavanshi was at the crease, India scored 35% of their eventual score of 377. After his dismissal, the rest managed just 245 off 41.1 overs, when it seemed like India A would sail past the 400-run mark. Through the middle overs, Tilak Varma and Ruturaj Gaikwad put together an 84-run partnership for the third wicket to consolidate the innings.
Tilak scored 67 but ended up consuming 90 balls. After his dismissal, India A lost three quick wickets and were in danger of being bowled out for under 350. However, Roy’s late fireworks and an entertaining cameo of 27 from Nigam, who had struck his maiden List A fifty in the previous game against the hosts, gave India A a much higher total to defend.
Sri Lanka A’s chase needed one of their top three batters to bat big. Instead, they were all removed by Yash Thakur. Niroshan Dickwella was bowled attempting to back away to flay a length ball over cover, Avishka Fernando was out nicking to slip, and Nuwanidu Fernando flicked a leg-stump half volley to the lone fielder at deep-backward square leg.
Thakur aside, India A debutant Ashok Sharma was mighty impressive with his speeds, even though he got taken apart for runs in his first spell. While speed guns were absent, Ashok repeatedly hustled batters with his pace and late movement. He also dismissed Sadeera Samarawickrama, one of Sri Lanka A’s most accomplished batters, for a 44-ball 52 just when he was beginning to shift gears. From there on, Sri Lanka A kept losing wickets until a late flourish from Sahan kept them alive, only for those hopes to be dashed by India A’s spinners.
SCORES:
India A 377 for 9 in 50 overs (Vaibhav Sooryavanshi 94, Rutraj Gaikwad 40, Tilak Varma 67, Anukul Roy 39; Kugathas Mathulan 2-82, Ravindu Fernando 2-72, Wanuja Sahan 2-39) beat Sri Lanka A 311 (Wanuja Sahan 62, Sadeera Samarawickrama 52, Vijayakanth Viyaskanth 39; Yash Thakur 3-45, Vipraj Nigam 3-60,Anukul Roy 2-42) by 66 runs
[Cricinfo]
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