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Hetmyer heroics, Shepherd hat-trick headline West Indies’ opening day win over Scotland
Shimron Hetmyer’s explosive half-century carried West Indies to respectability and ultimately victory after a sluggish start to their T20 World Cup opener against Scotland, iced by Romario Shepherd’s stunning five-wicket haul which included a hat-trick.
Head Coach Darren Sammy’s master plan to use Hetmyer’s experience and power up the order at No. 3 continues to pay off. In his three most recent innings in the position, Hemyer had scored 48, 75 and 48 not out against South Africa in the lead-up to this tournament and he saved his best for the big stage.
Smothered by Scotland’s spinners, West Indies had managed just 33 runs in the Powerplay. But Hetmyer negated a slow pitch to lift his side from 58 for 2 in the 10th over to set Scotland a target of 183 with his 64 off 36 balls, 44 of those runs coming in boundaries.
Handy cameos from Rovman Powell, who shared an 81-run stand with Hetmyer for the third wicket off just 37 balls, and Sherfane Rutherford helped push West Indies’ total up. Their dismissals amid some tight bowling at the death by Brad Currie limited the damage for Scotland.
Hetmyer couldn’t steer clear of the action, his brilliant catch reducing Scotland to 37 for 3. But it was Shepherd’s five-for, which included four wickets in five balls in the 17th over that stole the limelight in Scotland’s run chase as the tournament’s late ring-ins fell short.
Just a fortnight after being called into the World Cup as replacements for Bangladesh, Scotland skipper Richie Berrington and New Zealand recruit Tom Bruce produced a 78-run union for the fourth wicket. With them out of the way though, Shepherd tore through the remainder of the line-up as West Indies launched their campaign in style.
Hetmyer shrugged off his late arrival in India – he only landed on Friday afternoon due to a visa issue – to launch a full-blooded assault from the outset. With his side desperately needing to break the shackles, he sent the second ball he faced, off debutant spinner Oliver Davidson, over long-off for six, the first of six maximums in total for Hetmyer’s innings.
He helped himself to two more in three balls off Michael Leask in the next over and from that point it felt like West Indies could finally breathe. But Hetmyer didn’t ease up on Scotland’s spinners, heaving Mark Watt into the stands over deep midwicket and producing a devastating slog-sweep for consecutive sixes in the next over, which went for 17 runs.
A return to seam didn’t provide any respite for Scotland as Safyaan Sharif leaked another 17 runs off the next. Hetmeyer brought up his half-century off just 22 balls in wonderful style with a six off Davidson over deep cover, the fastest fifty by a West Indian at a T20 World Cup. It took a stunner of a catch from Brandon McMullen to remove him, running round to wide long on and diving at full stretch to gather a skied full toss off Sharif in his fingertips.
Akeal Hosein’s theatrical bow to his team-mate summed up Hetmyer’s day after he clung onto a spectacular catch to remove George Munsey and upstage McMullen’s effort which had removed him. Running a long way round from fine leg, Hetmyer launched himself to his right and plucked the ball from the air to collect Munsey’s pull off the bowling of Shamar Joseph. It reduced Scotland to 37 for 3 inside the powerplay.
Jason Holder had already removed Michael Jones for just 1 in the second over and the in-form McMullen, who had slammed a 39-ball 95 against Namibia in their warm-up game, managed just 14 before he shovelled a Shepherd delivery onto his stumps in a botched scoop.
Having removed the threat posed by McMullen, then conceded 15 runs off his second over, Shepherd returned for his third and all but ended the match with four wickets in five balls. His wide yorker to Matthew Cross found Rutherford at point and he had Leask caught by Powell for a first-ball duck. With the 21-year-old Davidson left to face the hat-trick ball, Shepherd beat the inside edge and pinged the top of off stump,
It was Shepherd’s second T20I hat-trick after his effort against Bangladesh in October and thoughts turned to whether he could match Jason Holder’s four wickets in four deliveries against England in their bilateral series in 2022 but Sharif guided the next ball safely into the off side. No matter for Shepherd though when Sharif tried in vain to send the following ball over mid-off but managed only to pick out Holder. Fittingly, Holder and Shepherd combined for the last wicket when Mark Watt advanced to the former and Shepherd dived backwards at short third to take the catch.
After Brandon King carved the first ball of the match, a McMullen loosener, authoritatively through the covers for four, West Indies made a tentative start in the face of some otherwise disciplined Scotland bowling. At the end of the powerplay, West Indies were 33 without loss and in need of some acceleration. King duly advanced down the pitch to Sharif and muscled the first ball after the drinks break down the ground for six and back-to-back fours followed as West Indies took 17 off the over.
Berrington turned to left-arm spinner Davidson in the eighth over and he conceded just four off it. He was joined next over by experienced off-spinner Leask, who struck with his second ball which skidded on from its leg-stump line to take out Shai Hope’s off stump. With one ODI to his name, against UAE in 2022, Davidson claimed his maiden international wicket in the next, removing King as Munsey swallowed a catch at backward point. But with Hetmyer at the crease, Scotland’s elation was short-lived.
Brief scores:
West Indies 182 for 5 in 20 overs (Brandon King 35, Shai Hope 19, Shimron Hetmyer 64, Rovman Powell 24, Sherfane Rutherford 26; Brad Currie 2-23, Safyaan Shariff 1-46, Oliver Davidson 1-23, Michael Leask 1-42) beat Scotland 147 in 18.5 overs (George Munsey 19, Brandon McMullen 14, Richie Berrington 42, Tom Bruce 35, Matthew Cross 11, Mark Watt 15; Romario Shepherd 5-20, Jason Holder 3-30, Shamar Joseph 1-26, Gudakesh Motie 1-29) by 35 runs
[Cricinfo]
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Hantavirus-hit cruise ship on way to Canary Islands after three evacuated
Two people in a serious condition who were evacuated from a cruise ship with a confirmed outbreak of deadly hantavirus have arrived in the Netherlands for treatment, operator Oceanwide Expeditions has said.
A third passenger in a stable condition was on board an evacuation flight that has been delayed, the operator added.
The MV Hondius is now sailing towards Spain’s Canary Islands after being anchored for three days near Cape Verde, an archipelago nation off the West African coast.
The three evacuees were British, Dutch and German. Oceanwide Expeditions said the 65-year-old German evacuee was “closely associated” with a German woman who died on board the ship on 2 May.
The British evacuee has been identified by several media outlets as 56-year-old ex-police officer Martin Anstee, who is understood to be in a “stable condition” in the Netherlands.
A 41-year-old Dutch crew member is also among those who have been evacuated.
Separately, Dutch media reported on Thursday that a KLM flight attendant had been admitted to hospital in Amsterdam with hantavirus symptoms.
The stewardess reportedly came into contact with a 69-year-old Dutch woman after she was briefly on board a KLM plane in South Africa but was deemed too ill to fly.
The 69-year-old later died, and her death is being investigated as a suspected hantavirus case by South African health authorities.
Three people who were aboard the ship have died since it set sail from Argentina a month ago.
Meanwhile, two US states have confirmed to the BBC that they are monitoring three passengers who had returned to the US after disembarking earlier. All are currently not displaying symptoms.
Georgia’s public health department said two residents were being monitored and were in good health, showing no signs of infection.
Arizona’s health department said one resident was being monitored, but was not symptomatic.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has also confirmed a man who had travelled back to Switzerland after disembarking the ship tested positive for hantavirus and is receiving care at a hospital in Zurich.
“The patient had responded to an email from the ship’s operator informing the passengers of the health event,” World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a statement.
A total of 146 people from 23 different countries remain aboard the MV Hondius under “strict precautionary measures”, Oceanwide Expeditions said.
In its latest update, the World Health Organization (WHO) said eight cases of hantavirus – three confirmed and five suspected – have so far been identified in people who were on the ship.
South African health authorities have said the Andes strain of hantavirus – prominent in Latin America, where the cruise originated – was found in two of the confirmed patients after tests were carried out by the country’s National Institute for Communicable Diseases.
Experts have observed the Andes strain spreading between human patients in previous outbreaks. South Africa says efforts to trace all contacts remain underway.
Officials have said that one of the deceased had the virus, while the other two deaths are under investigation.
The three deaths on board include the 69-year-old Dutch woman who left the MV Hondius when it stopped at the island of St Helena on 24 April. Her husband died on board on 11 April, but is not a confirmed case.
The Dutch woman travelled to South Africa, where she died on 26 April. WHO official Dr Maria Van Kerkhove told the BBC that health experts were carrying out contact tracing on the flight she took.
KLM Airlines on Wednesday issued an advisory saying the woman had also briefly been aboard one of their flights from Johannesburg to Amsterdam on 25 April before the crew decided not to let her fly due to her medical condition.
The third fatality – a German woman – is not a confirmed case either. Her body remains on the ship.
None of the three people who were medically evacuated on Wednesday have tested positive for hantavirus so far, but two are showing symptoms.
It comes as the UK’s Health Security Agency said two British people were self-isolating at home in the UK after potential exposure tothe virus on the ship. They left the vessel earlier in its journey and did not have symptoms.
On board, there were 19 passengers and four crew members listed as British, according to figures released by Oceanwide Expeditions on Tuesday.
This included Anstee, who was evacuated on Wednesday.
Hantavirus typically spreads from rodents, but health experts believe that in this case, it may have passed between humans who were in close contact.
Testing to confirm whether other people on the ship have contracted the virus is ongoing. Health officials have stressed that the risk of transmission to the wider public is low.
The vessel had been anchored near Cape Verde before it set off towards the Canary Islands on Wednesday.
Spanish authorities agreed to the move, but the Canary Islands’ president has opposed the plan.
“I cannot allow [the boat] to enter the Canaries,” Fernando Clavijo told Spain’s Onda Cero radio. “This decision is not based on any technical criteria and nor have we been given enough information.”

Spain’s Health Minister Mónica García said that everyone on board will undergo a medical assessment when they arrive in Tenerife and, if fit to travel, those from abroad will be repatriated to their home countries.
Spaniards will be sent to a defence hospital in Madrid to quarantine.
The evacuation would “avoid contact” with Canary Island citizens and there would be “no risk” to them when it arrives in Tenerife in the coming days, Garcia said.
Dr Van Kerkhove said the way hantavirus is transmitted “is very different than COVID and flu”.
“We’re not talking about casual contact from very far away from one another,” she said, but “really physical contact”.
[BBC]
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India to host Zimbabwe for maiden women’s bilateral series
The India and Zimbabwe women’s teams are all set to play an international fixture against each other for the first time when Zimbabwe tour India for white-ball fixtures this October.
The tour comprises three T20Is and three ODIs and will be Zimbabwe’s first visit to India; India are yet to tour Zimbabwe for bilateral fixtures.
The three T20Is will be played in Raipur on October 16, 18 and 20, and the ODIs are on October 23, 25 and 28 in Baroda.
The fixtures were announced by the BCCI on Wednesday, along with two home series for the India A women’s side against Australia A in September and England A in December. Both those series comprise three T20s, three List A games and one multi-day fixture.
The India Under-19 women’s team will also host Sri Lanka U-19 in June and July for three T20s and three 50-over games, and England U-19 in November and December for five T20 fixtures.
The Australia A men’s side will tour India for two multi-day fixtures and three one-dayers in September and October, while the Australia U-19 side will visit India for two multi-day fixtures and three one-dayers also in September and October.
[Cricinfo]
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Oil prices drop and stock markets rise after reports of deal to end Iran war
Oil prices have dropped and global stock markets have risen following reports that the US and Iran are close to a deal to end the war.
Brent crude futures, the global benchmark oil price, fell to $97 (£73) a barrel after the reports before rebounding to over $101. The price was over $108 earlier in the day.
The FTSE 100 index of London’s largest public firms and Germany’s Dax index closed over 2% up while the French Cac 40 was up 3%. Asian indexes also ended the day higher while the US S&P 500 was up by more than 1% over the day.
The market movements come after Axios reported that the US believes it is close to a one-page document which will end the war and set up detailed nuclear talks.
Hours later, an Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson told Iranian Students’ News Agency that the US proposal to end the war with Iran was still being considered.
However, not long after that, Trump suggested a deal could still be a way off.
He said on Truth Social that any agreement by the Iranians is “a big assumption” and that a failure to come to a deal will result at bombardments “at a much higher level and intensity ” than was the case during Operation Epic Fury.
Oil prices are still much higher than the $70 a barrel they were hovering around before the start of the US-Israel war with Iran, which has caused caused production and transportation of oil in the region to slump.
Central to the conflict is Iran’s threat to attack oil ships crossing the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway south of the country, in response to US-Israeli strikes since 28 February.
About a fifth of global oil and gas shipments usually cross the strait, which has been effectively closed for weeks. Global gas prices have also soared since the conflict began.
As for stock markets, the big European bourses are lower than they were at the end of February, while the S&P 500 climbed by more than 1%.
The main Asian markets all rose on Wednesday, with the South Korean Kospi closing up 6.45%, the Hong Kong Hang Seng ending the day up 1.22%, and the Japanese Nikkei finishing 0.38% higher.
The Hang Seng is down since the start of war, but the other two are up.
[BBC]
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