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Hartley 7-fer fashions England’s famous win
In further vindication of England’s alternative (and aggressive) approach to Test cricket, Ben Stokes’s side secured a famous victory over India in Hyderabad on Sunday. England did so by overturning a first-innings deficit of 190 runs – second on the list of biggest deficits overturned to win a Test in India, behind India’s famous win over Australia at Eden Gardens in 2001. That this was India’s fourth defeat in 47 home Tests in 12 years establishes the extent of England’s achievement in the series opener.
England were closing in on their remarkable victory early in the final session, before the eighth-wicket pair of Ravichandran Ashwin and KS Bharat showed that there was more in this exceptional Test to ebb and flow. Tom Hartley however, stood tall in the dying moments of the final session to pull the game to England’s corner, finishing with a seven-wicket haul. He first broke the Ashwin-Bharat stand that lasted 21.4 overs and threatened to take the game away from the visitors, when he cleaned up Bharat.
Ben Stokes triggered the option of extending play by half-an-hour in search of the win. Straightaway, Hartley got his sixth when Ashwin gave him the charge and missed with a wild swing to get out stumped. Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj lived dangerously, like a typical final-wicket pair would, and came agonizingly close to dragging the game to the final day. Hartley once again arrived – this time in the final over of the day – to lure Siraj into stepping out and getting stumped. With that, Hartley capped off his dream debut with figures 7 for 62 and gave England a 28-run victory.
Life post the Tea break began in circumspect fashion for India as they lost the two batters from the previous session very early. Axar Patel, who grew into the game towards the end of the middle phase, fell first off a tame caught and bowled dismissal, giving Tom Hartley his fourth wicket. Joe Root then trapped KL Rahul leg before off a ball that straightened from round the stumps.
India’s attempt to slowly recover via Ravindra Jadeja and Shreyas Iyer was thwarted by a moment of brilliance from Ben Stokes when the former pushed a full toss from Root towards mid-on and dashed off for a quick single. The Indian batter was beaten by Stokes’s incredible effort that saw him dive to collect the ball, release it quickly with an underarm throw and hit the stumps directly.
India lost their fourth wicket of the session for the addition of just 24 runs since Tea when Jack Leach got Iyer to prod at a full ball angled into him and nick it to Root at first slip. From 119 for 7, Ashwin and Bharat arrested India’s freefall. The two navigated past the tough early stages when England played with a spring in their step and the real belief of taking a 1-0 lead in the series. However, all they could do was delay the eventuality.
In the morning session, England did a fine job of consolidating on all the defiance they put up on Day 3 from the precarious position of 163 for 5 when they still trailed India.Ollie Pope ignited the fire on Saturday evening and kept it burning on Sunday morning as he nearly got an incredible double-century. A feisty rear-guard effort from him and Hartley carried England forward with an 80-run stand that put India in a spot of bother. Hartley was adventurous in his 52-ball stay for 34 runs that pushed England to 420 and set India a tricky target of 231.
Hartley and Pope then combined once again to make early inroads, as Jaiswal was caught at forward short leg and Gill at silly point. Rohit Sharma tried to sweep and reverse-sweep his way out of trouble like Pope and the rest of the England batters, but was then dismissed leg before by Hartley with a ball that didn’t turn as much as the Indian captain anticipated.
India’s middle and lower-order failed to withstand the pressure that Stokes put them under with his proactive bowling changes and aggressive fields. The 20,000-odd crowd that turned up on each day of the Test was treated to a game for the ages, even as India eventually finished second best.
Brief scores:
England 246 (Ben Stokes 70; Ravichandran Ashwin 3-68, Ravindra Jadeja 3-88) and 420 (Ollie Pope 196, Ben Duckett 47; Jasprit Bumrah 4-41, Ravichandran Ashwin 3-126) beat India 436 (Ravindra Jadeja 87, KL Rahul 86, Yashasvi Jaiswal 80; ) and 202 (Rohit Sharma 39; Tom Hartley 7-62) by 28 runs
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Death toll rises to 607, missing persons reduce to 214 at 1800hrs today (5)
The situation report issued by the Disaster Management Centre at 1800hrs today (5th December) confirms that 607 persons have died due to the adverse weather conditions while the number of missing persons has reduced to 214.
The number of persons affected topped the 2 million mark (2,082,195).

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Sri Lanka Navy takes delivery of Ex-USCGC DECISIVE
The Sri Lanka Navy (SLN) formally took delivery of the EX- United States Coast Guard Cutter, USCGC DECISIVE, provided by the United States to SLN, at a ceremony held at the United
States Coast Guard Yard in Baltimore on 02 Dec 25. The event was also attended by the Commander of the Navy, Vice Admiral Kanchana Banagoda.
The ship formally joined the SLN fleet on 02 December under the pennant number P 628 and the main mast of the ship will fly the National Flag effective from that date.
Aiming to strengthen and develop partnerships to overcome common challenges in the maritime domain, the U.S. Coast Guard has previously provided 03 ships to SLN and they are currently patrolling island waters under the names of ‘Samudura’ (P 621), ‘Gajabahu’(P 626), and ‘Vijayabahu’ (P 627).
As an extension of partnership ties that bring value to each other’s services, Ex-USCGC DECISIVE was transferred as the fourth ship to be handed to SLN.
Ex-USCGC DECISIVE, a ‘B-Type Reliance Class 210-foot Cutter’, measures 64m in length, and having endurance of 6000 NM at cruising speed. Further, she has been designed for a
crew of 100 and is equipped with weapons and machinery.
The ship which was used by the U.S. Coast Guard has rendered exceptional service during her tenure by curbing illegal activities, including smuggling of narcotics in U.S. waters.
Sri Lanka inherits an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) that is seven times larger than the landmass. In such a backdrop, the Navy is determined to deploy this vessel in wide-ranging
operations that include the conservation of marine resources in the region and the search and rescue of naval and fishing communities in distress. Thereby, the Navy will be able to utilize
this vessel efficiently in the future to achieve the national aspiration, while ensuring safe and secure seas for all economic affairs.
The formal handing over – taking over ceremony was also distinguished by the presence of the Deputy Chief Acquisition Officer and Director of Domain & Integration Services U.S. Coast
Guard, James L. Knight, Deputy Assistant Secretary of War for South and Southeast Asia, Dr. Andrew Byers, the Ambassador of Sri Lanka to the United States, Mahinda Samarasinghe, Commanding Officer designate of P 628, Captain Gayan Wickramasuriya as well as a group of officials from the Embassy of Sri Lanka in United States and the State Department
of the United State
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Hope holds firm as West Indies drag New Zealand into fifth-day battle
A depleted New Zealand attack – effectively reduced to just two-and-a-half frontline bowlers – was made to toil as a defiant West Indies rearguard stretched the contest into a fifth day on an increasingly docile Hagley Oval surface.
Forced off the field on day three by an eye infection, Shai Hope returned with sunglasses under his helmet to compile an unbeaten 116. It followed his first-innings 56 and marked his second century in three innings, a seamless extension of the defiance he showed while stonewalling India for long periods in New Delhi in October.
If Hope was the fulcrum, Justin Greaves was the anchor beside him. He reined in his instincts to play a composed, almost uncharacteristically restrained hand to finish 55 not out off 143 balls. His unbroken fifth-wicket partnership with Hope was worth 140 as New Zealand’s attack toiled under the blazing Christchurch sun.
Nathan Smith did not come out to bat and spent the entire innings off the field with a side strain. When Matt Henry left the field after the 35th over – later heading to hospital next door for scans – with West Indies 92 for 4, New Zealand may have hoped to finish off the game quickly.
But with his bowling resources rapidly thinning, Tom Latham – already standing in with the gloves due to Tom Blundell’s torn hamstring that ruled him out of not just this Test but the next – was left to lean heavily on Rachin Ravindra and Michael Bracewell’s part-time spin around pacer Jacob Duffy. On a surface that only got easier to bat on against the old ball, Hope and Greaves settled in and applied themselves admirably.
Having begun with positive intent, Hope was tested periodically with the short ball, Duffy setting a square leg halfway to the rope along with a short leg and fine leg for the pull. Hope mostly swayed and ducked out of harm’s way, and on the rare occasions he was tempted into the shot, he did well to keep it down. He brought up his fourth Test century off 139 deliveries.
Duffy employed a similar plan to Greaves, whose natural game is far more instinctive. But to his credit, Greaves appeared to take a cue from Hope, choosing restraint instead. He played only when the ball was at his body, using his height to ride the bounce and fend safely. While he was a lot more enterprising against spin, the fundamental of his knock was crease occupation.
Hope and Greaves laid down the template for those who perished prior to their arrival. Tagenarine Chanderpaul and John Campbell were put through a stern new ball test by Foulkes and Henry as they repeatedly tested both their edges in an engaging first spell. Chanderpaul’s propensity to shuffle across got him into trouble more often than not, and was out to a short ball that he inside-edged to the keeper for 6 off 45 balls.
Campbell – out an over earlier – was taken out by Foulkes as he jabbed at an away-swinger with no feet movement as Bracewell took a superb low catch at second slip. In the overs prior to his dismissal, Campbell wore a blow on his boot as he smashed one back off an inside-edge, making him groan in discomfort. This may have eventually had a hand in his dismissal.
Alick Athanaze never got going, and the frustration of being unable to score had him attempt a pull, only to be rushed into the stroke by Bracewell. He only managed to toe-end a pull to mid-on. And when Roston Chase fell in eerily similar fashion to his dismissal in the first innings – nibbling at a Henry away-swinger while being rooted to the crease – West Indies were collapsing swiftly and were 72 for 4.
A four-day defeat loomed until Greaves and Hope dug in to give West Indies some hope even as New Zealand’s tired attack wheeled away in the hope of a mistake. That wasn’t to come, as West Indies took the fight into the final day even though hopes of scaling down the 531-run target they were set seem just a pipe dream for now.
Earlier in the morning, New Zealand surprised many by choosing to bat on. Perhaps this was to give their bowlers more rest on a placid surface, considering the slew of injuries. Kemar Roach picked up three of the four wickets to fall, finishing with figures of 5 for 78 to take his wickets tally to 290.
Brief scores:
West Indies 167 and 212 for 4 (Shai Hope 116*, Justin Greaves 55*; Jacob Duffy 2-60) trail New Zealand 231 and 466 for 8 dec (Rachin Ravindra 176, Tom Latham 145; Kemar Roach 5-78) by 319 runs
(Cricinfo)
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