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Landslide early warnings issued to Badulla, Hambantota, Kandy, Kegalle, Kurunegala, Matale, Matara and Ratnapura Districts extended till 5PM on Tuesday (21)
The landslide early warning centre of the National Building Research Organization has extended the land slide early warnings issued to the Badulla, Hambantota, Kandy, Kegalle, Kurunegala, Matale, Matara and Ratnapura districts until 5PM on Tuesday (21)
Accordingly, level III (Red) landslide early warnings issued to the Divisional Secretaries Divisions of Kegalle, Galigamuwa and Aranayake of the Kegalle district have been extended.
Level II (Amber) landslide early warnings have been issued to the Divisional Secretaries Divisions of Haputhale in the Badulla district, Thumpane in the Kandy district, Bulathkohupitiya, Yatiyanthota, Ruwanwella, Warakapola and Mawanella in the Kegalle district, Rideegama and Polgahawela in the Kurunegala district, Pasgoda in the Matara district, Kalawana, Imbulpe, Kolonna, Elapatha, Weligepola, Kuruwita, Ratnapura, Eheliyagoda, Godakawela, Balangoda and Opanayake in the Ratnapura district.
Level I (Yellow) landslide early warnings have been issued to the Divisional Secretaries Divisions of Haldumulla, Passara and Welimada in the Badulla district, Walasmulla in the Hambantota district, Gangawata Korale, Udapalatha, Udunuwara, Pathadumbara, Medadumbara and Ududumbara in the Kandy district, Dehiowita and Rambukkana in the Kgalle district, Ukuwela in the Matale district, Mulatiyana and Kotapola in the Matara district, Kiriella, Pelmadulla, Nivithigala, Ayagama and Kahawatta in the Ratnapura district
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Mitchell upstages Rahul as New Zealand level series
Daryl Mitchell and Will Young powered Bew Zealand’s highest successful chase in India to end their eight-match losing streak against India. They might not have been chasing that high a total had it not been for a masterful KL Rahul century when the ball gripped the surface in the afternoon. India’s fast bowlers were superb in the early goings, reducing New Zealand to 46 for 2, but from the moment Mitchell targeted Kuldeep Yadav on his introduction, New Zealand didn’t look back.
The pitch quickened up in the cooler evening even though there was no dew, Kuldeep went for 82, Mitchell and Young added 162, Mitchell went on to get his eighth hundred, Rajkot’s new stadium had its first successful chase in five ODIs, and the high-scoring Indore was set for a decider. Rahul’s century in the afternoon was his eighth in 85 innings, an impressive feat in itself, which puts Mitchell’s eighth in his 53rd innings in elite echelons, especially given how Mitchell has been a career middle-order batter.
Mitchell now has 2553 runs, which, for a start to an ODI career, is matching Shubman Gill, who looked imperious in getting 56 off 53 earlier in the piece. Kyle Jamieson and Zak Foulkes started well with the ball, conceding just 10 in the first five overs, but, led by Rohit Sharma’s charge, Gill carried India to 70 for 0 in 12 overs. Rohit, though, was already showing signs of getting stuck: his innings had phases of 1 off 11, 18 off 9, and 5 off 18, ending with a catch at deep cover off Kristian Clarke.
Gill and Virat Kohli still looked in control even though debutant left-arm spinner Jayden Lennox started with five overs for just 18 runs. The slowness of the pitch was apparent when Gill’s pull off Jamieson ended up with short midwicket. Michael Bracewell then put the squeeze on in the middle overs with fast bowlers getting the wickets. Kohli played Clarke on, which tends to happen in such conditions, and Shreyas Iyer hit Clarke straight to mid-off.
The game had changed dramatically once the balls became soft. The first 100 legal balls produced 99 for 1 with 15 fours and a six, the next 100 went for just 58 for 3 with two fours. It was only Rahul, who injected some momentum into the innings.
At full strength, India will probably want Hardik Pandya and Axar Patel at Nos 6 and 7, but they must try their other options. Given the conditions, Jadeja fought hard for his 27 off 44, but fell to the returning Bracewell. Nitish Kumar Reddy didn’t do much wrong in his 21-ball 20, but India were still short of the power they needed to go past 300.
Rahul scored 112 off 92 out of the 169 that came while he was at the wicket for 28.3 overs, playing some delightful shots along the way, including a reverse-swept four, the only sweep of any kind played by India in 23 overs of spin, which went for just 2 for 89. By comparison, New Zealand played 13 sweeps for 23 runs in 18 overs of spin.
While 284 seemed a good effort for the conditions India had to face when they were batting, ODI cricket in India is seldom that straightforward. You have to almost always score above par because batting gets easier in the night even when there is no dew.
It is also imperative you do a lot of damage with the new ball when defending totals in India. For some reason, the new ball seamed more for India than it did for New Zealand, which threw them a bone. Mohammed Siraj, Harshit Rana and Prasidh Krishna were excellent in their first spells of five overs each, conceding just 53 in their 15 overs put together, getting rid of Devon Conway and Henry Nicholls. With the ball still seaming, Gill tried to get Reddy into the game before spin came on, but Mitchell started transferring the pressure back when he lofted hard length from Reddy down the ground for a six.
Prasidh and Jadeja still kept scoring under wraps, which meant New Zealand would have to take risks when Kuldeep was introduced at 82 for 2 in 20 overs. The second ball he faced from Kuldeep, Mitchell charged him and cleared deep midwicket not by much. He followed it up with a lap sweep for four. This was enough for Kuldeep to go largely defensive and flat. The one time he tossed up a wrong’un, he drew a false shot from Young, but it fell short of long-off. He eventually got Young for 87 off 98, which perhaps only saved him from the ignominy of the costliest analysis of his career by two runs.
That the returning fast bowlers couldn’t extract the same amount of grip from the surface with the older balls compounded India’s problems. Young, who had struggled his way to 40 off 61, and Mitchell batted in cruise mode once they had neutralised the Kuldeep threat. Mitchell, who narrowly missed out on a hundred last game and also dropped a catch that could have given New Zealand an outside chance, was reprieved twice in the 36th over when Jadeja missed a run-out from close range and Prasidh dropped him in the deep. However, needing only 98 in 15 overs, it can be argued New Zealand would still have won from there.
When Glenn Phillips drove Kuldeep for a four in the 40th over, the ask, which never reached seven an over, was now down to under a run a ball. Despite doing most things right, India were beaten handsomely by the transformation in the conditions. India would have batted first if they had won the toss anyway.
Brief scores:
New Zealand 286 for 3 in 47.3 overs (Daryl Mitchell 131*, Will Young 87; Prasidh Krishna 1-49) beat India 284 for 7 in 50 overs (KL Rahul 112*, Shubman Gill 56; Kristian Clarke 3-56) by seven wickets
[Cricinfo]
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Shafali Verma, Lizelle Lee hand Delhi Capitals first win in thriller
There was a sense of deja vu as the equation for Delhi Capitals (DC) came down to 6 off 6, and Marizanne Kapp couldn’t put bat to ball to make it 6 off 5. Three nights ago, they had lost after needing 7 off 6. On Wednesday, Kapp creamed the next ball through cover to ease the nerves. But Ecclestone followed it with two more dots before DC were left needing 1 off the final ball. Laura Wolvaardt, who was dismissed in the last over against Gujarat Giants (GG), then sealed DC’s first win in WPL 2026 when she crunched the cover drive on the final ball and dealt UP Warriorz (UPW) their third defeat on the trot.
It should not have been this tough for DC after Lizelle Lee and Shafali Verma set base with a 94-run partnership. Lee hit her second half-century in a row, smashing eight fours and three sixes, before Jemimah Rodrigues injected momentum into the chase with a 14-ball 21. This was after UPW’s batting collapse, which kept them to 154 for 8. Lanning scored her first fifty of the season against her old team but the middle-order couldn’t contribute much with Kapp and Shafali picking up two wickets each.
Lanning put away the first ball she faced to the square leg ropes to become the third player to pass 1000 runs in the WPL. She then pierced the gap at backward point with her favourite cut shot to bookend the second over, bowled by Minnu Mani, with a four. It helped that Phoebe Litchfield was languid at the other end, after UPW lost Kiran Navgire, sent to open, on the third ball. Lanning and Litchfield added 47 for the second wicket before the latter fell.
After slowing down a little, Lanning seemed to find her touch once the field opened up. She lapped Sneh Rana, who struck with her first ball to have Litchfield stumped, through fine leg. The stroke of the game came in the ninth over when Lanning planted her front foot and launched Chinelle Henry over the sight-screen for the only six of the UPW innings. With Harleen Deol for company, Lanning completed her fifty in 32 balls and the pair added 85 for the third wicket. At 130 for 2 after 15 overs, UPW had the perfect platform for the final assault
On paper, UPW have a power-packed batting line-up. But for a third game in a row, they underfired. It all began when Lanning pulled Nandani Sharma’s short ball straight in the hands of Henry at deep square leg. Shweta Sehrawat then drilled the second ball she faced just over Nandani’s head. But the 17th over, bowled by Shafali Verma, yielded just three runs before UPW retired Deol out.
Deol hit four fours in her first 13 balls to be on 25, and then was on 47 off 36 before head coach Abhishek Nayar called her in. Chloe Tryon, who made her debut after being on the bench three seasons for Mumbai Indians, replaced Deandra Dottin in the XI but fell for 1 off 3 balls. UPW could never get the finishing kick as they lost 6 for 20 in 4.2 overs to end up with a below par total. UPW’s middle-order woes came to haunt them after they lost 4 for 11 in their previous game against Royal Challengers Bengaluru and three wickets for one run against GG.
Lee got to her second successive fifty in 30 balls with DC 87 for 0 at the ten-over mark. Shafali fell when she tried to reverse sweep Asha. Deepti ran to her left from short third to pull off a diving catch. Lee holed out to long-on off Deepti 19 balls later to give UPW an opening. A 14-ball boundaryless phase at the death, that included Rodrigues’ wicket, raised UPW’s hopes, but it was not to be.
Brief scores:
Delhi Capitals Women 158 for 3 in 20 overs (Lizelle Lee 67, Shafali Verma 36, Laura Wolvaardt 25*, Jemimah Rodrigues 21; Deepti Sharma 2-26, Asha Sobhana 1-20) beat UP Warriorz Women 154 for 8 in 20 overs (Meg Lanning 54, Phoebe Litchfield 27, Harleen Deol 47, Shweta Sehrawat 11; Shafali Verma 2-16, Marizanne Kapp 2/24, Nandani Sharma 1-29, Sneh Rana 1-20, Shree Charani 1-29) by seven wickets
[Cricinfo]
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USA’s Ali Khan claims having been ‘denied’ India visa ahead of T20 World Cup
Ali Khan the USA fast bowler of Pakistan origin, has claimed in a caption to a story on Instagram that he has been “denied” an Indian visa. USA are scheduled to play India in Mumbai on February 7, the opening day of the 2026 T20 World Cup.
Khan, who is currently in Colombo for a USA training camp, posted on Tuesday without giving any further details. ESPNcricinfo has approached the USA team manager for comment.
USA are yet to announce their squad for the 2026 T20 World Cup but it is expected the final 15 will be chosen from the 18 that are at the camp in Sri Lanka. It is understood that the squad will be picked by the USA coaching group, while the team administration and logistics are being overseen by the ICC, which took charge following the suspension of USA Cricket late last year.
Khan, 35, is one of three USA players of Pakistan origin currently at the camp in Colombo; Ehsan Adil – who has played three Tests for Pakistan – and Mohammad Mohsin are the other two. The ICC has made no official comment on the situation but is understood to be trying to facilitate the matter and is confident it will be resolved.
A number of associate teams in the tournament – Oman, UAE and Italy – will be looking on with interest, given their squads are likely to include a number of players of Pakistan origin, or with Pakistani nationality.
ESPNcricinfo understands that England’s two squad members of Pakistan heritage, Adil Rashid and Rehan Ahmed, are both still awaiting their visas. While the matter is expected to be resolved in time for the tournament, their situation is complicated by the need to apply in-person. Rehan is currently in Australia at the BBL, while Rashid is in Dubai.
Last September, the ICC had informed all participating teams that securing visas to India and Sri Lanka, the co-hosts of the T20 World Cup, would be the responsibility of the respective boards but it would facilitate paperwork if needed. In the case of USA, with the suspension of USAC, that responsibility would lie with the ICC.
Worsening diplomatic and political ties between India and Pakistan have made visas an complicated issue in recent years, even for players who are nationals of other countries. England’s Shoaib Bashir and Saqib Mahmood had faced delays in obtaining visas but were granted them eventually, as was the case with Australia’s Usman Khawaja. The visas for the Pakistan team were also delayed ahead of their travel to India for the 2023 ODI World Cup.
USA, who got a direct entry for the 2026 T20 World Cup after making the Super Eights stage in the 2024 tournament, are scheduled to play three of their four group A matches in India. Their first match is against defending champions India on the opening day (February 7) of the T20 World Cup in Mumbai, followed by Pakistan in Colombo (February 10) and then two matches in Chennai – against Netherlands (February 13) and Namibia (February 15).
[Cricinfo]
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