Latest News
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
Latest News
Zimbabwe take on Ireland with clarity about Super Eights path
When Ireland arrived in Kandy on Sunday afternoon, with just two points after three games, their chances of qualifying for Super Eights may have seemed fanciful. But courtesy an outstanding Sri Lankan chase against Australia on Monday night, the possibilities for Group B have been thrown wide open.
Sri Lanka have qualified, but Ireland now know that a win against Zimbabwe on Tuesday will keep them in with a very real chance of qualification – provided Sri Lanka also beat Zimbabwe in their final match.
If those very specific set of circumstances – including Australia beating Oman – occur, then Australia, Zimbabwe and Ireland could all end on four points each, separated solely by net run-rate.
But that might be getting ahead of ourselves. Zimbabwe simply need to win against Ireland to end all speculation, and considering they’re coming off a stunning 23-run victory over Australia, it would take a brave person to back against them.
Captain Sikandar Raza is also not one to allow his team to let their guard down. He has emphasised the need to maintain focus, warning that earlier performances will “count for nothing if the team slips up now.
Ireland, meanwhile, have lost to Sri Lanka and Australia earlier in the tournament but their dominant 96-run win over Oman – including a tournament-high of 235 – will have provided a timely boost in confidence. They also come in with a chip on their shoulder, over constant comparisons to Associate nations, something they will be keen to put right with a win over Zimbabwe.
Lending more unpredictability to this game is that the historical rivalry is remarkably balanced, with both sides having won eight apiece of their 18 T20I meetings.
With the extra bounce on offer, the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium is one of the rare Sri Lanka grounds where more wickets have fallen to seam (201) than spin (154). It would be no surprise if seamers from both teams prove to be the difference on Tuesday.
In Richard Ngarava, Blessing Muzarabani and Brad Evans, Zimbabwe have a pace triumvirate that can be the envy of any side in this tournament. They’ve taken 16 wickets amongst them, and managed to brush past Australia even with Ngarava out of the XI. Moreover, Muzarabani has won two Player-of-the-Match awards.
In Mark Adair, Ireland have the quintessential work horse. Despite making his debut after Josh Little and Barry McCarthy, he’s played more T20Is – 100 – than the other two and managed to pick up 142 wickets. He also loves bowling against Zimbabwe; his 24 wickets are the most he has taken against an opposition. With Little finding his form last time out with a first three-for since March 2024, Ireland will know any chance of success depends on how quick their seam-bowling unit find their rhythm.
Ireland are unlikely to change a winning combination after their exploits against Oman.
Ireland (probable XI): Tim Tector, Ross Adair, Harry Tector, Lorcan Tucker (capt & wk), Curtis Campher, George Dockrell, Gareth Delany, Mark Adair, Josh Little Barry McCarthy, Matthew Humphreys
Zimbabwe would have had a close eye on the pitch Sri Lanka played Australia on, but the only expected change is the return of Richard Ngarava who missed out last time as a precaution.
Zimbabwe (probable XI): Brian Bennett, Tadiwanashe Marumani (wk), Dion Myers, Sikandar Raza (capt), Ryan Burl, Tashinga Musekiwa, Brad Evans, Wellington Masakadza, Graeme Cremer, Blessing Muzarabani Richard Ngarava
[Cricinfo]
Latest News
Nissanka ton stuns Australia, puts Sri Lanka in Super Eights
Sri Lanka survived an early onslaught to qualify for the 2026 T20 World Cup Super Eights, leaving Australia right at the exit door and hoping for a miracle.
The returning captain Mitchell Marsh and the returning-to-runs Travis Head were brutal in taking Australia to 104 in the first 50 legal deliveries, but some spectacular fielding and spin bowling helped Sri Lanka take 10 for 77 off the last 70 balls.
In front of a partying full house in Pallekele, Sri Lanka’s two most prolific batters, Pathum Nissanka and Kusal Mendis, brought out both the axe and paper cuts to slice through the chase. Nissanka, who had earlier dropped Glenn Maxwell and then dismissed him with a stunner, went on to score an unbeaten hundred and take Sri Lanka home with two overs to spare.
In the absence of Matheesha Pathirana, who walked off with a calf injury in his first over, their spinners contributed six wickets to go with excellent closing from Dushmantha Chameera. Australia’s lead spinner Adam Zampa, among the best T20 spinners of all time, took no wicket and was lucky to go for only 41 in his four overs.
Brief scores:
Sri Lanka 184/2 in 18 overs [Pathum Nissanka 100*, Kusal Mendis 51, Pavan Rathnayake 2*; Marcus Stoinis 2-41] beat Australia 181/10 in 20 overs [Mitchell Marsh 54, Travis Head 56, Josh Inglis 27, Glenn Maxwell 22; Dushmantha Chameera 2-56, Maheesh Theekshana 1-37, Dushan Hemantha 3-37, Dunith Wellalage 1-33, Kamindu Mendis 1-19] by eight wickets
[Cricinfo]
Latest News
New Zealand eye Super Eight spot against Canada
A win against Canada in their first T20I against them on Tuesday will firm up New Zealand’s spot in the Super Eight. This result will also knock out Canada; South Africa have already qualified for the next round from Group D with three wins in as many games.
New Zealand have faced Canada just three times in international cricket so far – each time in ODI World Cups. Their most recent meeting coming in the 2011 edition in Mumbai. They have won all three games and are poised to make it 4-0 against Canada in World Cups, despite the absence of Lockie Ferguson. The fast bowler has returned home for the birth of his first child and is expected to link up with the side ahead of the Super Eight. In Ferguson’s absence, Kyle Jamieson, who wasn’t even in the main squad in the first place, is set to make his T20 World Cup bow.
As for Canada, they had their moments against South Africa and UAE but they have failed to convert those into wins. On Friday in Delhi, they had UAE at 66 for 4 in the 13th over in a chase of 151, but they left the door ajar for Aryansh Sharma and Sohaib Khan to sneak home. Canada can’t afford such slip-ups against New Zealand – and then Afghanistan – if they are to notch up a win in this World Cup.
Kyle Jamieson doesn’t quite have Ferguson’s express pace, but can bang it away on a hard length and stifle the opposition batters. He also has some slower variations in his repertoire and his high-arm release could pose a big threat, especially to batters who are facing him for the first time.
Once known as “Vettori” in Canada’s club cricket circuit, Saad Bin Zafar will run into the team that was once captained by one of his heroes. The Canada left-arm spinner often attacks the stumps and keeps it tight, as his economy rate of 6.02 across 67 T20Is suggests. At 39, Saad knows he won’t be playing the game for long and will be eager to cause a few upsets on the big stage.
Jamieson is set to slot in for Ferguson unless New Zealand want to give veteran legspinner Ish Sodhi a game.
New Zealand (probable): Tim Seifert (wk), Finn Allen, Rachin Ravindra, Glenn Phillips, Daryl Mitchell, Mark Chapman, Mitchell Santner (capt), Jimmy Neesham, Kyle Jamieson, Matt Henry, Jacob Duffy
Canada are likely to play the same XI that lost to South Africa and UAE.
Canada (probable): Dilpreet Bajwa (capt), Yuvraj Samra, Navneet Dhaliwal, Nicholas Kirton, Shreyas Movva (wk), Harsh Thaker, Saad Bin Zafar, Jaskaran Singh, Dilon Heyliger, Kaleem Sana, Ansh Patel
[Cricinfo]
-
Life style2 days agoMarriot new GM Suranga
-
Business1 day agoMinistry of Brands to launch Sri Lanka’s first off-price retail destination
-
Features2 days agoMonks’ march, in America and Sri Lanka
-
Midweek Review6 days agoA question of national pride
-
Business6 days agoAutodoc 360 relocates to reinforce commitment to premium auto care
-
Opinion5 days agoWill computers ever be intelligent?
-
Features2 days agoThe Rise of Takaichi
-
Features2 days agoWetlands of Sri Lanka:
