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Mirza, Ashraf’s new-ball demolition job hands Pakistan consolation win

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Salman Mirza ran through Bangladesh's top order [Cricinfo]

Pakistan ended their Bangladesh tour with a 74-run win in the third T20I in Dhaka. They bowled out the home side for 104 runs, after posting 178 for 7, a marked improvement from the last two games when their batting hardly stood up.

Sahibzada Farhan who took Fakhar Zaman’s place, top scored with 63 off 41, with 54 runs coming from boundaries. He provided Pakistan with a blistering start, after which Hasan Nawaz and Mohammad Nawaz struck quick runs to take them to the highest total at the Shere Bangla National Stadium since 2021.

Later it was newcomer Salman Mirza the left-arm quick, who blew through Bangladesh’s top-order, as the home side slipped to 34 for 6. Bangladesh’s batting was in sharp contrast to that of Pakistan who finally got their groove upon being sent to bat first.

Farhan got Pakistan off to a flyer that lasted beyond the powerplay. He clattered Mahedi Hasan for a six in the third ball of the match, before sweetly flicking Shoriful Islam in the next over. Farhan laid into Taskin Ahmed in the sixth over, that went for 15, including a beautiful straight six.

Mehidy Hasan wasn’t spared either. Farhan smacked him for two sixes in the seventh over, one straight and slogged over midwicket. He finished the over by reaching his fifty, the second of Farhan’s career. Saim Ayub got into the act a little later, but soon after striking his first six, he fell to Nasum Ahmed. It broke the 82-run opening stand.

Farhan fell for 63 in the twelfth over, having struck five sixes and six fours in his 41-ball stay. There was hope that Farhan’s start would help the rest of the Pakistan’s batters. However, Mohammad Haris couldn’t quite capitalize despite getting three lives in his short time at the crease. Litton Das missed a difficult stumping chance in the tenth over, before Nasum dropped Haris at fine-leg. He also survived a lbw decision, before Taskin removed him with a catch at deep third. Haris finished with 5 off 14 balls.

Hasan Nawaz slammed three sixes in his 17-ball stay, one of them a slice over cover, but Mahedi’s tumbling catch from mid-off stopped him on 33. Hussain Talat then fell cheaply, before Mohammad Nawaz creamed two sixes and as many fours, in his 16-ball 27. Both his sixes came off Mohammad Saifuddin, one struck over deep square-leg, and the next one the cover boundary.

Pakistan’s first wicket was slightly fortuitous, but all credit goes to Mirza. Tanzid swished at a wide delivery outside off-stump, but wicketkeeper Haris didn’t appeal. Mirza insisted he heard something, which convinced Pakistan captain Salman Agha. A healthy deviation was spotted upon review.

Faheem Ashraf then struck twice in his next two overs, first removing Litton for 8, before Mehidy holed out to mid-on for 9. Mirza then bowled two superb deliveries in the fifth over to reduce Bangladesh to 25 for 5. Both times, he got the ball to cut through Jaker Ali and Mahedi and rattle their stumps.

Salman bowled Shamim Hossain with one that spun into the left-hander, as Shamim tried to play back. Mohammad Naim holed out to a simple catch at mid-off.

Saifuddin’s 34-ball 35 took Bangladesh past their lowest total of 70 and while Nos 9 to 11 all got boundaries, they didn’t hold on for long. Talat removed Nasum for 9. Hasan Nawaz took a fine catch running in from backward square leg to remove Taskin Ahmed, before Saifuddin struck couple of sixes off Ahmed Daniyal. Shoriful was the last man to go with Abbas Afridi taking a superb catch at long-on.

Brief scores:
Pakistan 178 for 7 in 20 overs  (Sahibzada Farhan 63, Saim Ayub 21, Hasan Nawaz 33,Salman Agha 12, Mohammed Nawaz 27; Shoriful Islam 1-39,  Taskin Ahmed 3-38, Nasum Ahmed 2-22, Mohammed Saifudeen 1-28) beat Bangladesh 104 in 16.4 overs (Mohammed Naim 10, Mehidy Hasan Miraz 10, Mohammad Saifuddin 35*,  Nasum Ahmed 13; Salman  Mirza 3-19, Faheem Ashraf 2-13, Ahmed Daniyal 1-16, Salman Agha 1-12, Hussain Talat 1-36, Mohammed Nawaz 2-04) by 74 runs

[Cricinfo]



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Prabhsimran, Gaikwad, Tilak score fifties in DLS loss to Afghanistan A

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Prabhsimran Singh made 84 off 69 balls [SLC]

After a close-fought win against Sri Lanka A, India A continued their tri-series campaign with a defeat to Afghanistan A in a rain hit match in Dambulla. Prabhsimran Singh, Rutraj Gaikwad and Captain Tilak Varma all hit half-centuries to take India A to a big total, but Afghanistan A’s batters did enough to help them edge the game on DLS. Here are the key talking points from the game.

After showing glimpses of his talent in the tri-series opener against Sri Lanka A, Vaibhav Sooryavanshi put on a more impactful display against Afghanistan A. He lay down the marker early, cutting the first two balls he faced through cover point for fours.

He predominantly targeted the off side, driving or slashing anything offering width, finding the cover and point boundaries with ease, helping India A reach 50 in 4.5 overs.

He didn’t hit a six, but hit nine fours before a nick to the keeper off Abdollah Ahmadzai sent him back for 44 off 22 balls.

At the other end, Prabhsimran also started well, even if he wasn’t quite as explosive as his 15-year-old opening partner. He drove fuller balls through the covers and when the bowlers pulled their lengths back, he was happy to walk down the track and put away some punchy square drives.

He brought up a 39-ball half-century in the 14th over, driving left-arm wristspinner Zahir Khan straight of mid-off to get to the milestone. He finished that over with a deft touch to beat short third.

Prabhsimran picked up three more boundaries through and over the mid-off region across the next two overs, taking India A to 140 for 2 at the first drinks break, and also bringing up a half-century stand with Gaikwad off just 38 balls.

His first 12 boundaries all came through the off side, before he drove two Zahir full-tosses past mid-on to take India A to 150 in the 18th over. He eventually got out on 84 while trying to paddle-scoop Afghanistan A captain Imran Mir, and only managed a feather touch to the keeper.

Gaikwad, fresh off a century against Sri Lanka A, started off from where he left off, meeting his first ball with a glorious back-foot cover drive. That was his only boundary during his partnership with Prabhsimran, and he was happy to go at around a run a ball while Prabhsimran did the heavy lifting.

Once Prabhsimran fell, Gaikwad was joined by Tilak, and the two kept the scoreboard ticking mainly through singles and doubles, in the effort to ensure India A had the platform for a big finish. They shared a 78-run stand, during which Gaikwad brought up his half-century.

Gaikwad eventually got out trying to up the tempo, lobbing a top-edged slog off medium-pacer Farmanullah to midwicket.

Tilak also brought up a second consecutive half-century, before Suryansh Shedge and Anukul Roy applied the finish to take India A to 349 for 9 in their allotted 49 overs.

After a short delay during the first innings, more rain followed during the innings break, delaying the restart. Afghanistan A began their chase needing 294 from 38 overs. With the light likely to start fading, and with floodlights not in action, the match was most probably going to be decided by DLS.

Afghanistan A openers Hassan Eisakhil and Imran started off quickly, with Eisakhil the initial aggressor. India A’s new-ball bowlers Anshul Kamboj and Arshad Khan failed to threaten, until Arshad drew a top edge from Eisakhil with a bouncer in the eighth over, and later in the same over had the Afghanistan opener pulling another short ball to deep square leg.

Among the spinners, Roy looked the most dangerous, trapping Khalid Taniwal lbw with an arm ball, but Vipraj Nigam and Ayush Badoni were mostly ineffectual.

This allowed Imran and Bahir Shah to keep the scoring rate ahead of the DLS par score without losing wickets. Imran made 75 not out off 70 deliveries while Shah was on 51 off 52 after Eisakhil’s 29-ball 34.

Rain and bad light eventually stopped play at 5.28pm, with Afghanistan A four runs ahead on DLS.

SCORES:
Afghanistan A 177 for 2 in 25.5 overs  (Imran 75*, Bahir Shah 51*; Anbukul Roy 1-24) beat India A 349 for 9 in  49 overs (Prabhsimran Singh 84, Vaibhav Sooriyavanshi 44, Rutraj  Gaikwad 66, Tilak Varma 66, Suryansh Shedge 40; Abdollah Ahmadzai 5-68, Farmanullah 3-85)by 4 runs (DLS method)

[Cricinfo]

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India-born Nikhil Chaudhary called into Australia T20I squad

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Nikhil Chaudhary trained with Australia's squad in Brisbane before they departed for Pakistan but was not initially in the squad [Cricket Australia]

Tasmania and Hobart Hurricanes legspinning allrounder Nikhil Chaudhary, who was born in India, has been called into his maiden Australia T20I squad as a replacement for the rested Travis Head.

Chaudhary, 30, played 14 matches for Punjab between 2017-19, including 12 T20s across the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy (inter-state) as well as two List A games in the Vijay Hazare Trophy.

He travelled to Australia to visit his uncle in Queensland in 2020 when Australia shut its international borders due to the Covid pandemic. Chaudhary remained in the country and currently holds a temporary visa that is valid until 2027. He does not yet have permanent residency or citizenship but his five years living in Australia allows him to qualify to play for the national side under ICC rules despite not yet being a citizen. He has had three excellent seasons in the BBL for Hurricanes after being spotted by then Hurricanes bowling coach, now Sydney Sixers coach, James Hopes while playing grade cricket in Brisbane.

Chaudhary played a key role in Hurricanes’ BBL title in 2024-25 and has since made his List A and first-class debuts for Tasmania, including making a maiden Sheffield Shield century and taking a maiden five-wicket haul.

Chaudhary trained with Australia’s squad in Brisbane before they departed for Pakistan but was not initially in the squad with Joel Davies called in as a spinning allrounder. But the absence of Head has opened the door for Chaudhary to be called in.

“Nikhil has been a player of national interest for some time,” Australia selector Tony Dodemaide said. “He was a standby player for this tour, joining the squad at pre-season camps in Brisbane and comes in as a replacement for Travis Head.

“The panel has been impressed by his BBL form, particularly last season, leading to his addition to the squad. He has also been part of the Delhi Capitals setup in this year’s IPL.

“Nikhil will gain invaluable experience in Bangladesh and will be in contention to play his first game for Australia when we sit down to pick a team for the opening T20 fixture here next week.”

The last India-born male to represent Australia was legspinner Rex Sellers who played his sole Test in Kolkata in 1964. Former Australia women’s captain Lisa Sthalekar represented Australia 187 times across all forms after being born in Pune.

Australia are still hopeful T20I captain Mitchell Marsh will be fit for the series after being ruled out of the two preceding ODI series against Pakistan and Bangladesh due to an ankle injury. Marsh was seen having a net session in Dhaka during the second ODI.

Australia also welcome in fresh faces for the T20I series with Davies, Tim David, Spencer Johnson, Josh Philippe and Aaron Hardie joining the squad having not been part of the ODIs.

[Cricinfo]

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Men’s ODI World Cup 2027 set to run from October 4 to November 21

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Australia are the current men's ODI champions [Cricinfo]

The 2027 men’s ODI World Cup, which will be played in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Namibia, has been provisionally inked into the calendar to run from October 4 to November 21 that year. ESPNcricinfo has learned the dates were agreed upon at the ICC board meeting in Ahmedabad in May with the finer details set to be confirmed at the ICC’s AGM in Edinburgh in July.

It is understood that South Africa’s eight venues will likely host the bulk of the matches – at least 41 of the 54 games – with Zimbabwe due to stage between eight and 10 games, and Namibia, three. Zimbabwe will also have three venues instead of the original two, with Victoria Falls joining Harare Sports Club and Queens in Bulawayo. The Fale Mosi-oa-Tunya International Cricket Stadium will be completed later this year and is set to host domestic cricket before an official inauguration next May. South Africa were initially in talks to travel to Zimbabwe this August to open the stadium as an international venue, but that has been pushed back.

The 2027 ODI World Cup will be the first in Africa since the 2003 tournament, though South Africa has since hosted the 2007 T20 World Cup, the 2009 Champions Trophy and the 2023 Women’s T20 World Cup. Zimbabwe and Namibia recently co-hosted the Under-19 men’s World Cup. It will return to a 14-team tournament after being played between 10 teams in the previous two editions. The teams will be divided into two groups of seven, before the top three from each group advance to the Super Six stage. As Full Members, South Africa and Zimbabwe automatically qualify but Namibia are part of the qualification process.

That World Cup will also be the first ICC event of the 2027-2031 Future Tours Programme (FTP), which governs bilateral international engagements between sides and which is set to be finalised at ICC meetings in Hong Kong later this year. It is understood that some initial discussions have taken place but the major sticking point around the crafting of the FTP is the structure of the World Test Championship and its possible expansion.

The ICC is set to take a final decision on whether to include all 12 Full Members (currently Zimbabwe, Ireland and Afghanistan are not part of the WTC) and if one-off Tests can be played as part of the WTC schedule. ESPNcricinfo understands a decision could be taken at the AGM in July, after which the full FTP will be fleshed out.

[Cricinfo]

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