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Head, Abbott, Stoinis subdue South Africa to seal 3-0 win for Australia
Australia swept the T20I series 3-0 with another dominant performance in Durban. They completed their sixth-highest successful chase in the format after South Africa recovered from 122 for 6 in the 14th over to post a competitive target but then dropped four catches in defence.
Travis Head (on 53 and 55) and Josh Inglis (on 12 and 40) were put down twice each and shared in an 85-run third-wicket stand to steady Australia after two early losses. Inglis was dismissed for 42 but Head went on to put on 58 with Marcus Stoinis and finish with 91 to put victory beyond doubt.
South Africa will be frustrated with their inability to do enough to challenge Australia, despite fielding an experimental XI throughout the series. Their team had two debutants this time, and there were four across the three matches. Of those, Donovan Ferreira was the most successful and scored 48 runs off 21 balls to give their innings heft.
Earlier, Reeza Hendricks and Aiden Markram put on 58 for the second wicket and Hendricks and Tristan Stubbs’ third-wicket stand was worth 46 but no other partnership got past 11 runs. Sean Abbott followed up well from Marcus Stoinis’s start and only Nathan Ellis conceded at more than 10 runs an over.
Stoinis was tasked with opening the bowling once again today and he delivered. On a surface that Mitchell Marsh described as “tacky”, Stoinis’ second ball seemed to stick before it kicked up to catch the edge of Temba Bavuma’s dangling bat. Head took a well-judged catch diving forward to send Bavuma back for his second first-baller of the series. Stoinis stuck to hard lengths in his second over but debutant Matthew Breetzke was in too much of a hurry to see him off. Breetzke tried to hit Stoinis over mid-on but spliced the ball straight to Tim David. South Africa were 12 for 2 in the third over.
Ellis took a double-wicket maiden to end South Africa’s powerplay in the second match, and Abbott repeated the feat in the 14th over of the final fixture to pin the hosts back. Stubbs looked dangerous on 25 off 15 balls and looked to hit a full ball through deep midwicket for a couple but lofted it to the fielder stationed there. Three balls later, Abbott disguised his slower ball, and Bjorn Fortuin chipped it to Marsh at short extra cover. By that stage, South Africa had lost three wickets in seven balls and were in trouble at 122 for 6.
The fifth-most expensive player at the SA20 auction last year finished with a batting average of 18.22 and three wickets at the tournament. But he showed his worth on his first international outing with an innings of authority. His first runs came when he danced down the track to send Tanveer Sangha over long-on for six before watching wickets fall at the other end. With consolidation needed, Ferreira took matters into his own hands. He hit Sangha for six again and then took 15 runs off Stoinis’ final over and 12 off Nathan Ellis. The shot of his innings was the 92-metre six he hit over extra cover off Ellis, which he smacked with full power before holding the pose to admire his own work.
South Africa had to wait for the third match before they saw the back of the Australian captain and they managed it fairly early in the innings. Marsh ensured Australia moved on quickly from the first ball dismissal of Matthew Short and scored three successive boundaries off Lizaad Williams’ opening over and looked set to dominate again. But his attempt to send Gerald Coetzee over the midwicket only got the toe-end of the bat and went high up in the air. Fortuin settled under it and took a good catch as South Africa breathed a collective sigh of relief. Marsh’s average in this series? Only an eye-watering 186.
South Africa’s premier left-arm spinner ruptured his Achilles tendon less than six months ago and was expected to be out of action for the rest of the year. But, in the 19th over of South Africa’s innings, he strode to the middle with his team on 176 for 7 to try and finish strong. He hit the last ball of the innings over Ellis’ head for six. Welcome back. Of course, batting is not the reason we were all waiting to see Maharaj and all eyes were on him when South Africa took the field.
He pulled off a fine stop in the powerplay to deny Head a boundary and was soon called on to bowl. Maharaj could have had a wicket with his second ball but Josh Inglis was put down on 12. That over went on to cost 20.
In terms of numbers and results, Maharaj won’t be happy with the way things went. But just the fact that he got onto the park, played some shots and turned his arm over made this day a success for him, who is likely to be named in the ODI World Cup squad on Tuesday.
Brief scores:
Australia 191 for 5 in 17.5 overs (Head 91, Fortuin 2-36) beat South Africa 190 for 8 in 20 overs (Ferreira 48, Abbott 4-31) by five wickets (with 13 balls remaining)
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Delhi Capital’s fourth shot at elusive trophy as Royal Challengers Bengaluru look to make winning a habit
The grand finale of WPL 2026 carries a distinct India-South Africa flavour, much like the World Cup final two months ago. But the epicenter is Vadodara and not Navi Mumbai, the traditional home of Indian women’s cricket. However, that won’t make the occasion any less special.
The marquee names line up symmetrically. Shafali Verma and Jemimah Rodrigues on one side; Smriti Mandhana and Richa Ghosh on the other. Marizanne Kapp and Laura Wolvaardt on one side, Nadine de Klerk on the other.
Threading between these big stars are two high-impact overseas allrounders from West Indies and Australia, each having contributed to their team’s journey to the final in their own way.
Chinelle Henry has been an unheralded star for Delhi Capitals (DC). Her three-for in the Eliminator may have gone unnoticed in the larger scheme of things, but it was as important as Shafali and Lizelle Lee’s opening stand or Rodrigues’ cameo. For Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB), Grace Harris has filled an even larger void. In Ellyse Perry’s absence, she has become the powerplay enforcer, dominating attacks and setting up games for the likes of Ghosh and de Klerk to finish.
The prospect of these two sides pitted against each other in the final seemed an unlikely prospect even during the auction. Mumbai Indians appeared the obvious front runners, having retained the core that delivered two titles in three seasons.
RCB, meanwhile, were without Perry, and when they opted to replace her with an uncapped Indian fast bowler in Sayali Satghare, fully aware that Pooja Vastrakar would be unavailable for much of the season, the knives were out. Satghare has since become a key strand in RCB’s seam attack.
Thursday’s final also brings a contrast to their journeys to the final. RCB took the route DC did for three seasons running – winning six out of their eight games to top the group. DC have scraped through a sequence of must-win games and will now play their third knockout in five days.
DC are chasing that elusive fourth attempt at glory to help bring silverware to a franchise that is yet to win a major; RCB is looking at making winning titles a habit, attempting a hat-trick of wins (IPL included).
In each of the three previous finals, the winner of the Eliminator has gone on to win the title. Will Thursday be any different?
RCB are likely to back Vastrakar to play as a specialist batter. While she has begun bowling in the nets, a call has been taken to ease her in, given she has returned to competitive cricket after 15 months. Arundhati Reddy’s lack of form is the only other area of concern that could potentially bring in legspinner Prema Rawat into the equation.
RCB (probable): Smriti Mandhana (capt), Grace Harris, Georgia Voll, Richa Ghosh (wk), Radha Yadav, Nadine de Klerk, Pooja Vastrakar, Shreyanka Patil, Sayali Satghare, Arundhati Reddy/Prema Rawat, Lauren Bell
DC are likely to be unchanged. In fact the 13 players they’ve used this season are the fewest resources a team has used across four WPL seasons.
DC (probable): Shafali Verma, Lizelle Lee (wk), Laura Wolvaardt, Jemimah Rodrigues (capt), Marizanne Kapp, Chinelle Henry, Niki Prasad, Sneh Rana, Minnu Mani, Nandani Sharma, N Shree Charani
[Cricinfo]
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Sparkling Aaron George ton seals record chase, powers India into U19 WC final
On a batting beauty at the Harare Sports Club, India’s assembly line of batting talent was out in full splendour in the Under-19 World Cup semifinal. There were two centurions in a statement innings from Afghanistan, but Uzairullah Niazai and Faisal Shinozada’s knocks – glorious as they were – were rendered footnotes by a superb century from Aaron George, who led India’s record chase of 311 with the kind of composure that belied his low scores from earlier in the tournament.
Afghanistan 310/4 in 50 overs (Faisal Shinozada 110, Uzairullah Niazai 101; Kanishk Chouhan 2-55, Deepesh Devendran 2-64) lost to India 311/3 in 41.1 overs (Aaron George 115, Vaibhav Sooryavanshi 68, Ayush Mhatre 62; Nooristani Omarzai 2-64) by 7 wickets.
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Pakistan PM Sharif on India boycott: ‘A very considered stance, and we should completely stand by Bangladesh’
Shehbaz Sharif, the Pakistani Prime Minister, has said Pakistan’s decision to boycott the game against India at the men’s T20 World Cup 2026 was a show of solidarity with Bangladesh, after their removal from the tournament.. It is the first time any official from either the Pakistan state or the PCB has publicly touched upon the reasons for the boycott.
“We have taken a very clear stand on the T20 World Cup that we won’t play the match against India because there should be no politics on the sports field,” Sharif told members of his cabinet on Wednesday. “We have taken a very considered stance, and we should completely stand by Bangladesh, and I think this is a very appropriate decision.”
The Pakistan government put out a post on Sunday saying that while the team would participate in the T20 World Cup, it would not take the field in the February 15 group game against India. The post, which came after a week in which Pakistan’s participation in the tournament had become uncertain, did not give any reason for the decision.
The PCB has not spoken publicly on the matter, but the ICC issued a response a few hours after the X post, in which it said it hoped “that the PCB will consider the significant and long-term implications for cricket in its own country as this is likely to impact the global cricket ecosystem, which it is itself a member and beneficiary of.”
It is not known whether the PCB has officially notified the ICC, or whether there has been any contact between the two bodies. The ICC had said that it “expects the PCB to explore a mutually acceptable resolution, which protects the interests of all stakeholders.”
The Prime Minister’s comments confirm, however, that the boycott decision is linked to what the PCB chief Mohsin Naqvi – the interior minister in Sharif’s government – called the ICC’s double standards in excluding Bangladesh from the T20 World Cup.
Bangladesh were replaced in the world event after their government refused to let the team travel to India, where they were based for their games. The government, citing security concerns, wanted Bangladesh to play their games instead in Sri Lanka, the co-hosts for the event, and where Pakistan will play all their games.
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