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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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Wijesundara set for debut as injury-hit Sri Lanka struggle to make up XI
Sri Lanka have been hit by a spate of injuries and an illness ahead of the secondbTest against West Indies, in North Sound, a game they must win to take something away from the series after suffering an innings defeat in the first.
The injuries have forced the team management to pick from a squad of 13, rather than the 17 they took on tour. The seam-bowling department has been especially hard hit, with Lahiru Kumara and Vishwa Fernando both going down with injuries.
The most serious injury, however, seems to be that of opener Pathum Nissanka, who left the squad on June 30 to undergo surgery on an injured wrist in the United Kingdom. Lahiru Udara will take Nissanka’s place at the top of the order for the second Test. Nissanka’s surgery casts a cloud over his Lanka Premier League participation as well.
Vishwa, meanwhile, has not sufficiently recovered from back and side pain to become available for the second Test. And Sri Lanka’s quickest bowler in the squad, Kumara, remains unavailable after having walked off the field with a hamstring complaint (a recurring injury) having delivered just one over in the previous Test.
These injuries, plus Kasun Rajitha’s modest performance in the first Test, have paved the way for seamer Isitha Wijesudera’s Test debut.
In addition, offspin-bowling allrounder Ramesh Mendis has contracted a bacterial infection on tour. As such, he is also unavailable for selection. Prabath Jayasuriya – Sri Lanka’s top specialist spinner over the last three years – will enter the XI.
(Cricinfo)
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Ronaldo scores as Portugal come back to win, Croatia denied by late VAR
Substitute Goncalo Ramos’s headed goal edged Portugal into the last 16 of the FIFA World Cup 2026 after a gripping 2-1 win against Croatia.
Ramos connected with a superb pass from Rafael Leao in the fourth minute of stoppage time on Thursday to snuff out a Croatia team that had created the lion’s share of the chances in sapping evening heat in Toronto.
In a dramatic ending, Croatia thought they had equalised in the dying seconds, but Josko Gvardiol’s goal was chalked off for offside.
The Croatians were left stunned by the decision, while Portugal’s players celebrated.
Cristiano Ronaldo played his role in the victory, stroking home a penalty that cancelled out Ivan Perisic’s opener.
It was Ronaldo’s first-ever goal in the knockout phase of the World Cup, and his remarkable international career will have another chapter when Portugal face Spain in Dallas on Monday.
Perisic had stunned the Portuguese by slotting the ball under the advancing Portugal goalkeeper Diogo Costa in the 53rd minute.
Within minutes, Ronaldo had the ball in the net after controlling a long pass, but his effort was disallowed for offside.
But Portugal got level when Renato Veiga was grabbed by Croatia’s Nikola Vlasic in the penalty area, and after a VAR check, the referee pointed to the spot.
Ronaldo stepped up to convert the penalty with ease, hitting the ball straight down the middle of the goal and pumping his fists with joy afterwards.
In a pulsating game, Manchester City forward Mateo Kovacic’s low shot was pushed onto a post by goalkeeper Costa’s fingertips.
Still, Croatia pushed, and Petar Sucic had the ball in the net, but the assistant referee’s flag was up for a clear offside.
Ronaldo was withdrawn in the 81st minute to allow Ruben Neves to come on.
Croatia continued to create more chances than their opponents, and Mario Pasalic came so close to winning the game with a header at the far post, but it bounced just wide.
But when Ramos connected, the net bulged, and Portugal were through.
(Aljazeera)
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Lister replaces injured Sears for ODI series in the West Indies
Ben Sears has been ruled out of the upcoming series of five ODIs in the West Indies because of an ankle injury. Ben Lister has been called into the 16-man squad as Sears’ replacement and will assemble “over the coming days” with the squad in Guyana, where the first three games will be played.
Sears had experienced some ongoing pain in his ankle since the four-day Test against Ireland in May, and it flared up during the final day of the third Test against England at Trent Bridge, which New Zealand won to take the series 2-1. The decision to withdraw him from the ODIs in the Caribbean and send him home “for further treatment” is “precautionary”, as New Zealand Cricket put it.
Lister, who made his ODI debut in 2023, has featured four times in the format, picking up six wickets. He was in the squad the last time New Zealand played ODIs, away against Bangladesh in April.
Injuries to key fast bowlers have been a major concern for New Zealand in recent times.
Jacob Duffy, who missed the recent Test series in England while on paternity leave, has returned to the ODI squad for the West Indies, but Blair Tickner has had to sit this one out to undergo surgery on his ankle. Senior fast bowlers Will O’Rourke, Kyle Jamieson and Matt Henry have been rested for the series following their heavy workloads during the England Tests.
“Having a stable of fast bowlers is critical and you ask any selectors around the world from any country, you’re going to get the same answer,” Gavin Larsen, New Zealand’s head selector, said on Wednesday. “I’m touching wood here, [but] we are in a reasonably good position at the moment in New Zealand cricket where we’ve got a number of good quality fast bowlers. So the intention, certainly, is to carefully manage those bowlers.
“But look, already you can see off the back of three Test matches against England, you can see the attrition rate. I’m glancing down and seeing four names that are back on the physio table or under the knife, so I’m very conscious of that. The depth of those fast bowlers is crucial and us managing their workloads and their return-to-play processes is critical.”
Apart from Duffy, the squad now has in its fast-bowling attack Nathan Smith, Kristian Clarke, Matt Fisher and Lister, with frontline spin options in returning captain Mitchell Santner, Michael Bracewell and Jayden Lennox.
The first three ODIs will be played in Providence, Guyana, on July 11, 13 and 16, and the fourth and fifth games at Kensington Oval in Barbados on July 19 and 21.
New Zealand squad for ODI series in the West Indies
Mitchell Santner (capt), Michael Bracewell, Mark Chapman, Kristian Clarke, Jacob Duffy, Matthew Fisher, Dean Foxcroft, Mitchell Hay (wk), Nick Kelly, Tom Latham (wk), Jayden Lennox, Ben Lister, Daryl Mitchell, Henry Nicholls, Nathan Smith, Will Young
[Cricinfo]
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