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Jaiswal sparkles as India nose ahead

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Jaiswal tons helps India stretch their lead to 322 (BCCI)

A scintillating ton from Yashasvi Jaiswal backed up India’s bowlers’ good show on the third day as the hosts got into a strong position.

Jaiswal found an able ally in Shubman Gill with whom he put on a 158-run stand before he was forced to retire hurt due to back spasms. The duo had joined hands when Rohit Sharma was out LBW with India on 30 in the second innings. Just as England were beginning to dream about a comeback, the hopes were snuffed out by a clinical partnership.

Gill began his innings on a fluent note but proceeded to rein himself in when England bowled to their fields, and complemented his equally circumspect partner. Jaiswal saw through 73 balls for his 35 but suddenly decided to unleash himself, carting the veteran James Anderson for boundaries and kickstarting a period of dominance.

He swept, lofted and reverse-swept the spinners constantly and raced away to a hundred of just 122 balls. His second ton of the series, and third overall in Tests, elicited a big leap in celebration. But that in turn proved to damage his back as he was forced to retire hurt after a stroke-filled 104.

As Jaiswal went hammer and tongs, Gill quietly played a mature hand in racking up his second fifty-plus score of the series as India’s lead swelled past 300. But they fumbled towards the end of the day with Jaiswal having to retire hurt and Rajat Patidar getting dismissed to a long hop for the second time in the Test.

It threatened to derail the good work done by them earlier in the day where they had managed to prise out a 126-run first innings lead with some inspired bowling. Despite the absence of Ravichandran Ashwin, India’s four-man attack was lively on the third day, producing chances as the track started taking some turn. Kuldeep Yadav, in particular, proved to be a constant threat getting two wickets for his efforts in the morning session.

The day began with Jasprit Bumrah bagging Joe Root’s wicket for the ninth time in Tests with the batter’s attempted reverse-scoop nestling in the hands of Yashasvi Jaiswal at second slip. Kuldeep then had one turning in sharply to trap Jonny Bairstow LBW plumb in front.

He had one more when Duckett, against the run of play, hit a long hop straight to short cover to bring down the curtains on a monumental innings.

That wicket forced England to be cautious for a while with Ben Stokes and Ben Foakes being circumspect before taking calculated risks. The duo stayed put with a watchful stand as England chipped away at the deficit. Early in the second session, however, Stokes tried to take on Ravindra Jadeja and ended up holing out to long on. It turned out to be a double strike as Foakes chipped the next one, from Siraj, to mid on.

The lower order slipped up quickly thereafter with Siraj yorking both Rehan Ahmed and James Anderson while Tom Hartley was out stumped against Jadeja, giving India a useful lead.

Brief Scores:
India 445 (Rohit Sharma 131, Ravindra Jadeja 112, Sarfaraz Khan 62; Mark Wood 4-114) and 196/2 (Yashasvi Jaiswal 104 rtd hurt, Shubman Gill 65*) lead  England 319 all out (Ben Duckett 153; Mohammad Siraj 4-84) by 322 runs



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Magnitude 7.3 earthquake quake strikes off Mexico coast

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A tsunami warning has been issued for parts of the Pacific after a powerful magnitude 7.3 earthquake struck off the coast of southern Mexico on Friday.

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Can Argentina and Messi beat Spain and Yamal to defend World Cup?

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The Final July 19 visual with the flags of Spain and Argentina is displayed against the Manhattan skyline during the FIFA drone show in New York [Aljazeera]

Four years after their triumph in Lusail Stadium at Qatar 2022, Argentina have the chance to become only the third side to defend a World Cup crown.

They may be led by the legendary Lionel Messi, they may be champions of South America – indeed, the holders may well be the comeback kings of the tournament – but they are not the favourites.

Standing in their way of claiming a first for more than half a century, since Brazil defended their title in 1962, are the European champions – and pre-tournament favourites – Spain.

Al Jazeera Sport looks at why the defending champions are seen as the outsiders for Sunday’s final and what chance they have to upset the odds.

Why are Spain favourites to win the FIFA World Cup 2026 final?

Spain came into the 2026 edition as the number one ranked team in the world and the favourites to lift the trophy, but they lost that mantle mid-campaign to the attacking endeavour of France.

The star turns of Kylian Mbappe and Ballon d’Or holder Ousmane Dembele were ably supported by Michael Olise and Bradley Barcola, with the latter’s Paris Saint-Germain teammate andp starlet of French football, Desire Doue, demoted to his supporting act.

Going into the semifinal clash between the European giants, the French were firmly the favourites to lift the title – as long as they could see off the Spanish.

They could not.

Spain did not give the French a sniff in their 2-0 win and Mbappe, Dembele and co ploughed lone and desperate furrows in their limited attempts to lay the foundations for their team to find their footing.

Having been held by debutants Cape Verde in their opening game of the tournament, the spotlight was on the Spanish thereafter.

They limped past Uruguay, Portugal and Belgium and failed to fire overall – until they met the French.

Now Spain’s confidence is restored – if it was ever even in doubt

What are Spain’s strengths that should concern Argentina?

The question is perhaps easier answered in terms of where are their weaknesses? There don’t appear to be many and that is why their underwhelming performances up to the semifinal were such a surprise.

Coming into the tournament, coach Luis de la Fuente attempted to rally his troops – and the country – by talking of a “united” Spain.

No Real Madrid player was named in the Spanish squad for the tournament, which threw open the question about the credentials of the European champions’ current set-up.

Eight of the 26-man squad play for Barcelona, who last season defended the domestic title with ease.

“For me, the greatest team there is – the very ‌‌greatest – is the Spanish national team,” de la Fuente said.

“I don’t look at where players come from or their background. What matters are Spanish players who are proud to represent their country’s national team and to be part of a united nation.”

It is not only a Catalonia conundrum for de la Fuente to solve.

Of the starting semifinalists in midfield and attack for the Spanish, Fabian Ruiz is the pivot in midfield for Champions League holders PSG, Alex Baena is Atletico Madrid’s darling on the flank, Rodri is Manchester City’s 2024 Ballon d’Or-winning maestro, and the lone frontman, Mikel Oyarzabal, is putting Real Sociedad on the map for the global audience.

The 29-year-old’s five goals at the tournament so far may well give him an iconic status in Spanish football history, if the trophy can be secured.

Then there is Spain’s Barcelona-based spine. Lamine Yamal is the new poster boy of world football – despite a quiet campaign off the back of a pre-tournament hamstring injury – and, alongside Real-rival Mbappe, is seen as successor to Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo as the global superstars of the sport.

The 19-year-old provided many a star turn to help the Spanish win Euro 2024, but his adoring fans await his moment of magic at the World Cup.

Dani Olmo is the orchestrator of attacks, slotting between the defensive duo in midfield and looking to feed the wingers and the striker.

Pau Cubarsi, at only 19 years of age, has made himself a fixture for club and country in the heart of defence.

The might of the Spanish is perhaps best exemplified by the fact that one of the most sought-after talents in the game, Athletic Bilbao’s 24-year-old winger, has hardly had a look-in, despite his key role in their Euro 2024 campaign.

What kind of World Cup final will Spain and Argentina produce?

It is hard to see the final playing out as Argentina’s 2-1 semifinal win against England did – their latest turnaround, having also come from behind to beat Egypt in the last 16.

The English, with stars from Real Madrid, Bayern Munich, Arsenal and – with Anthony Gordon’s recent move – Barcelona, dominated Argentina until Gordon’s 55th minute goal.

Thereafter the shift – helped by England’s retreat – saw Argentina end with 64 percent of the possession across the game.

England are not renowned for keep ball, but Spain are, and they will look to hold the midfield, as the English did until their goal, and limit the attacking threat of Messi by wearing Argentina down.

Should Spain take the lead, at whatever time, do not expect de la Fuente to order all his troops to defend their own box as Thomas Tuchel ill-advisedly instructed England to do to their cost in Atlanta on Wednesday.

Rodri and Ruiz will be ordered to control the game from start to finish. Yamal, Olmo and Baena will be tasked with supporting Oyarzabal at every opportunity and, should it come to it, counter at pace if Argentina have to throw everything at chasing the game as they did against England.

Is Messi Argentina’s best chance against Spain?

Having been the pin-up of Barcelona and Spanish football for nearly two decades, Lionel Messi will be seen as Argentina’s best chance of defending their title.

With eight goals at the tournament already – and set to be named the Golden Boot winner barring an Oyarzabal hat-trick or better – Messi put to bed any doubt about his ability to continue to lead the way for Argentina at the age of 39.

Although he was an isolated figure for most of the last-four victory against the English, it was Messi who laid on two assists as Argentina produced their late comeback. Lautaro Martinez was the beneficiary on one of those occasions as he headed home the injury-time winner for his third goal of the tournament. Beyond those three, no other player for either side has reached three goals.

Martinez, who leads the line for Italian club Inter Milan, is once again likely to start from the bench in the final, with the Atletico Madrid duo of Julian Alvarez and Giuliano Simeone required to make the running on the flanks.

Behind those three will be the wall that the English could not conquer.

It starts with the three powerful midfielders who will run all game, Alexis Mac Allister, Leandro Paredes and Enzo Fernandez, who scored his side’s equaliser in the semifinal.

Can Argentina’s defence keep Spain and Yamal at bay?

At the heart of the Argentina defence are a pair that divide opinions. Former England and Manchester United defender Gary Neville has described Lisandro Martinez and Cristian Romero as the “best, worst centre-half pairing in the world”.

They seem to give a goal away between them every single game,” Neville said on the Overlap Podcast.

“But you watch them, they are scoring goals, heading the ball, they’re literally everywhere – it’s incredible.

“They absolutely at times can be unbelievable, but the next, it’s the sublime to the ridiculous.”

Romero, who plays for Tottenham Hotspur in the English Premier League, described the comments as “ridiculous”.

The pair, who are both 28, will leave nothing behind by the time the final kick is struck in the tournament and Martinez will not flinch at criticism.

Neville’s former United teammate Paul Scholes has previously said the club will not win the title with Martinez at centre-half – his 1.75 metres height, being one of the main reasons for the comment.

However, the Old Trafford crowd have taken Martinez to heart due to his commitment to the cause, and their struggles at the back in the last two seasons have been put down to the defender’s prolonged absences through injury.

Oyarzabal stands six centimetres taller than Martinez, but it is unlikely that balls thrown endlessly into the box by Spain will settle the final.

Moreover, the headlines are likely to be written by Barcelona’s past, present and, likely, future – but will it be the magic of Messi or Yamal that leaves their mark on this World Cup?

The game’s sales folk and financiers will be just as hopeful as the fans that it is a moment of beauty from one of the superstars that illuminates, not only the final, but leaves their unmistakably and irreplaceably marketable imprint on the 2026 finale.

(Aljazeera)

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Anushka Sanjeewani, Vishmi Gunaratne return for Pakistan ODIs

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Vishmi Gunaratne played at the recent T20 World Cup[Cricbuzz]
Sri Lanka have recalled wicketkeeper Anushka Sanjeewani for the upcoming three-match ODI series against Pakistan, with the selectors naming a 15-member squad led by Chamari Athapaththu on Friday (July 17).

Sanjeewani last featured for Sri Lanka at the 2025 ODI World Cup before being left out in favour of Kaushani Nuthyangana, who has instead been dropped from the squad now. A fit-again Vishmi Gunaratne, who missed Sri Lanka’s last ODI assignment against Bangladesh in April, is also back in the squad.

Sri Lanka have also handed out a call-up to teenage pacer Rashmika Sewwandi, leaving out Malki Madara from the squad that beat Bangladesh 2-1. Besides Madara and Nuthyangana, Piumi Wathsala and Sugandika Kumari have also been omitted.

Sri Lanka will face Pakistan in the first one-dayer on July 23, with the remaining fixtures to be held on July 25 and 28. All matches will take place at Mahinda Rajapaksa International Cricket Stadium in Hambantota.

Sri Lanka squad for Pakistan series: Chamari Athapaththu (c), Vishmi Gunaratne, Hasini Perera, Harshitha Samarawickrama, Hansima Karunaratne, Kavisha Dilhari, Nilakshika Silva, Anushka Sanjeewani, Chethana Vimukthi, Inoka Ranaweera, Nimasha Meepage, Imesha Dulani, Dewmi Vihanga, Rashmika Sewwandi, Kawya Kavindi

[Cricbuzz]

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