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Jamaica draw 0-0- with Brazil and qualify for knockout stage

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Jamaica had two draws and a win in the group stages as they remained unbeaten (pic BBC)

Jamaica qualified for the knockout stages of the Women’s World Cup for the first time as Brazil went out of the competition in disappointing fashion.

It was a cagey encounter in Melbourne and Jamaica put in a stubborn defensive display to ensure their impressive tournament still has another chapter.

But Brazil, who recalled striker Marta to the starting XI, could not find the goal they needed and failed to progress for the first time in 28 years.

Marta, 37, is the all-time leading scorer in men’s or women’s World Cups with 17 goals but will not feature again, with her sixth tournament in Australia coming to an end having made three group-stage appearances.

After this goalless stalemate, Jamaica could face Colombia or Germany in the last 16

(BBC)



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Kuhnemann cleared of suspect bowling action by ICC

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This was the first time Matt Kuhnemann had been reported for a suspect action since starting pro cricket in 2017 [Cricinfo]

Left-arm spinner Matt Kuhnemann has been cleared to bowl in international cricket by the ICC. He had been reported for a suspect action following the two-Test series in Sri Lanka where he had picked up 16 wickets in the series as Australia won 2-0.

Kuhmemann, who had never previously been reported in a professional career dating back to 2017, was tested in Brisbane and learnt of the outcome on Wednesday.

“He…underwent an independent bowling assessment at the National Cricket Centre in Brisbane on 15 February, where it was revealed that the amount of elbow extension for all his deliveries was within the 15-degree level of tolerance permitted under the ICC Illegal Bowling Regulations,” an ICC statement said.

Kuhnemann could have continued playing domestic cricket while his action was assessed although the thumb he dislocated during the BBL has kept him out of action since. It is not known yet if he will be fit in time for Tasmania’s next Sheffield Shield game against Queensland in Hobart from March 6. He is a strong chance of being selected for the Test tour of West Indies in June and July.

During the testing process, Kuhnemann went through a session that lasted more than one hour, where he was asked to bowl at a similar speed and with similar revolutions to what he did in the second Test in Galle. ICC experts were at hand to observe the proceedings as Kuhnemann bowled, wearing markers on his body and surrounded by several high-speed cameras and a 3D motion analysis system.

“We are pleased for Matt that this matter is now resolved,” Ben Oliver, CA executive general manager national teams said in a statement. “It has been a challenging period for Matt, however he has carried himself exceptionally well.

“He has had the full support of Australian cricket and he can now move forward to the next phase of his international career with great confidence.”

Not long after he had been reported, his Australia team-mates rallied behind him, with Steven Smith, Australia’s captain in Pat Cummins’ absence, saying, “It’s come as a bit of a surprise to me. He has been playing for eight years in professional cricket and nothing has been said in that amount of time.

“I am thinking of him, at present, he has to go through the process. We’re confident he will pass. He will go through that process back home. We wish him all the best.”

Kuhnemann has taken 25 wickets in five Tests at 22.20.

[Cricinfo]

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All-round Sciver-Brunt and bowlers give Mumbai third straight win

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Nat Sciver-Brunt scored a smashing half-century [BCCI]

Nat Sciver Brunt put on an exceptional all-round show to propel Mumbai Indians to top of the table with an eight-wicket win over UP Warriorz in Bengaluru. She took three wickets and followed it up with an impressive and unbeaten 75 off 44 balls to chase down the target of 143 with 18 balls remaining.

Warriorz initially rode on the efforts of Grace Harris’  quickfire 45 and Vrinda Dinesh’s solid 33 but lost eight wickets for 54 runs to eventually end up with a below-par total.

Sciver-Brunt and Hayley Matthews stitched together a solid 133-run stand for the second wicket and made the chase look easy. Though Matthews struggled her way to a 50-ball 59 after getting a life early on, Sciver-Brunt’s boundary-laden knock made sure MI raced to their third win in four attempts. Warriorz are fourth on the points table now with two wins after five games.

With 252 runs from four matches, Sciver-Brunt is now the leading run scorer of this WPL,  overtaking Ellyse Perry’s 235.

She came in early when MI were 6 for 1 in the fourth over, with Matthews struggling to get her timing and rhythm back. Chinelle Henry was swinging the ball both ways, making it difficult to score off in the powerplay. But Sciver-Brunt took only five balls to prove that wrong.

She welcomed Saima Thakor with a hat-trick of fours in the sixth over by sending the ball to long-on, deep square leg and deep cover. She played deep in the crease, put her bottom hand to good use and effortlessly maneuvered the ball to both sides of the pitch.

When there was width on offer, she cut fiercely, and when the length was short, she pulled behind and in front of square and toyed with the Warriorz bowlers. She brought up her fifty off 29 balls with nine fours and brought the equation down to 54 off 47 balls. This included a hat-trick of fours off Henry as well, in the 11th over.

From there, it was cakewalk for MI as Matthews also found her feet and started hitting boundaries. Overall, Sciver-Brunt struck 13 fours in her 44-ball stay.

After four matches, Warriorz took a cue from the WBBL and the Hundred and promoted Harris to open for the first time in WPL after her struggles in the middle order. The move felt just right as she looked in her element from the start.

With Navgire falling in the first over, it was up to Harris and Vrinda to steady the innings on a pitch that was holding up a bit, and the duo shared 79 runs off 52 balls to give Warriorz a solid start.

Harris began with a scoop against Sciver-Brunt and punished Shabnim Ismail for three fours on the bounce in the second over. She kep attacking and smashed 6, 4, 4, 6 off Matthews in the fourth. She swept and pulled towards square leg, muscled the ball to long-on, and rolled her wrists to bisect the gap between mid-on and midwicket.

On the other hand, Vrinda – who had scored only 40 in the previous four matches – looked in much better touch and played second fiddle to Harris. She played a lofted cover drive elegantly to start the third over and followed it with a hook in the same over. Unlike Harris, Vrinda found boundaries on the off side with classy cover drives in her 30-ball 33.

The first two partnerships gave Warriorz 81, the most for them in this WPL so far.

It was something the Warriorz captain Deepti Sharma had admitted recently, that they needed to do better in the middle overs. But they couldn’t as Warriorz squandered a strong start by losing wickets in heaps, again, to lose the plot. From 81 for 1, they collapsed to 123 for 7, losing five of those wickets in the middle overs for 30 runs.

It began when Amelia Kerr removed Harris in the 10th over after the batter was dropped on 44 by Ismail off Jintimani Kalita in the previous over. Offspinner Sanskriti Gupta then bowled a momentum-changing 11th over when she dismissed both Vrinda and Tahlia McGrath in the space of four balls. Warriorz slowed down and did not quite recover after that over.

Overall, they have lost the most wickets (24) in the middle overs (7 to 16) in this WPL so far and have been the slowest too (6.72) in that phase. With no individual brilliance rescuing them this time, their streak of two losses was broken.

Brief scores:
Mumbai Indians Women 143 for 2 in 17 overs (Nat Sciver-Brunt 75*, Hayley Matthews 59; Sophie Ecclestone 1-29, Deepti Sharma 1-25) beat UP Warriorz Women 142 for 9 in 20 overs (Grace Harris 45, Dinesh Vrinda 33, Shweta Sehrawat 19, Uma Chetry 13; Nat Sciver-Brunt 3-18, Shabnim Ismail 2-33, Hayley Matthews 1-38, Amelia Kerr 1-24, Sanskriti Gupta 2-11) by eight wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Country’s top speedsters to feature in the Battle of the North

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by Reemus Fernando

St. John’s College Jaffna and their arch rivals Central College Jaffna have a success story to celebrate when they meet in the annual Battle of the North Big Match at Central College ground on Thursday.

For the first time in the historic match, the two schools have in their ranks players who have represented the national youth team.

Ranjithkumar Newton who captains Central team and St. John’s Kugadas Mathulan were among country’s top speedsters selected to represent the Youth team late last year. The two pacemen did well during the Youth Asia Cup.

Hence both Mathulan and Newton are expected to lead the pace attacks of the two schools.

St. John’s are captained by J. Ashnath. They encountered fluctuating fortunes this season. Their report card shows two outright victories against two defeats at the end of ten matches. They could not complete their full quota of matches in the tournament proper and that has made them fight for their place in the Division II Tier ‘A’ tournament. They have taken the first step successfully in the relegation matches beating St. Peter’s College Negombo by an innings and 56 runs to keep alive their chances of remaining in the top Tier of Division II tournament.

Central too had two victories against two defeats and will be eager to conclude the Tier B tournament on a successful note.

When the two teams meet it is St. John’s who lead the talley 38-29.

St. John’s College Team

 

(Seated from left) A. Sansajan (Coach), S. Thileepan (Master in Charge), U. Abijoyshanth, J. Ashnath (Captain), V. S. B. Thuseetharan (Principal), M. Randyo (Vice Captain), K. Mathulan, C. A. Aravinthan (Prefect of Games). (Second row-standing from left) S. John Nathenia, E. Vandat Mario, S. Vinukshan, R. Anushanth, S. Aatharsh, V. Sanjay, Y. Sarujan, K. Sanjuthan, D. Larun. (Back row- standing from left) N. Krishan, G. Methun, S. Kirshan, A. John Stafford Arnold, R. Nithursijan.

Central College Team

(Seated from left) V.Paruthy, K.Balakumar (Prefect Of Games), R.Newton (Captain), S. Indrakumar (Principal), T.Abilash (Vice captain), F. Kulendran Shelton (Coach), S. Similton, S. Manimaran (Master in Charge). (Second row standing from left) S. Thison, M. Karthikan, S. Niyanthan, N. Sajith, K. Mathusuthan, T. Venujan, R. Akshayan, M. Thison, A. Abishek, P. Navinthan, A. Sharalan, S. Danushan. (Back row from left) U. Voltan, J. Jenoshan, V. Harish, S. Sarujan.

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