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New York, Dallas and Florida confirmed as host venues for T20 World Cup 2024

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The USA, guaranteed to qualify for the World Cup, lost all four qualifiers against Zimbabwe, the Netherlands, West Indies and Nepal, in June (pic BBC)

Dallas, Florida and New York have been named as venues for the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup in 2024 when USA hosts the event for the first time.

The tournament, to be co-hosted by West Indies, will be the biggest in history, with 20 teams competing.

A 34,000-seat modular stadium will be built at Eisenhower Park in Nassau County, New York, subject to a permit. Existing venues at Grand Prairie, Dallas, and Broward County in Florida will be increased in size.

The ICC Board awarded the hosting of the event to the West Indies and the USA in November 2021.

“The USA is a strategically important market and these venues give us an excellent opportunity to make a statement in the world’s biggest sport market,” International Cricket Council (ICC) chief executive Geoff Allardice said. “We explored a number of potential venue options in the country and we were hugely encouraged by the enthusiasm the event generated in prospective hosts, reinforcing the growing awareness around cricket’s massive fanbase and its power to unite diverse communities.”

Major League Cricket, the inaugural T20 franchise tournament in the United States, was held for the first time in July.

The World Cup will be held in North America for the first time in June 2024 – and the USA, who have not qualified for a major ICC tournament since the 2004, and West Indies have been granted automatic qualification as hosts.

The ICC said it would utilise modular stadium infrastructure to develop “a world-class state-of-the-art” purpose-built stadium in New York, with two to three months of work scheduled to commence in late January 2024.

“We are very excited about the opportunity to use modular stadium technology to present world-class cricket in a location that has not previously hosted an ICC global event, giving USA cricket fans the chance to watch the world’s best on their doorstep,” Allardice said. “This technology has been used at previous ICC events to increase venue capacity and it’s routinely used in other major sports around the world. “In the USA, it will give us the opportunity to increase the size of the venues in both Dallas and Florida and create what is going to be a stunning venue in New York.”

(BBC)



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Patidar leads the way as Royal Challengers Bengaluru storm into second straight final

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Rajat Patidar made 71 off his last 19 deliveries [Cricinfo]

Rajat Patidar led defending champions Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) into the final with the quickest innings of 90 or more in the IPL, scoring a delightful unbeaten 93 off 33 to take his team to 254 for 5, the highest total in an IPL playoff, against the best attack of the tournament, Gujarat Titans (GT). Having finished in the top two, GT still have a chance to make the final at their home ground in Ahmedabad in Qualifier 2 as they await the winner of the Eliminator between Sunrisers Hyderabad and Rajasthan Royals. The last eight IPLs have been won by the side winning this fixture: Qualifier 1.

Asked to bat first in chase-friendly Dharamsala, RCB came out full of intent and skill despite missing the injured Phil Salt, but GT nearly snuck back in with a period of 22 balls, 18 runs and two wickets of set batters in a single Jason Holder over. In the time that Patidar scored 93 off 33, the other end, including extras, produced 68 off 37 legal deliveries.

Having never scored more than 233, GT needed something special, and only Jos Buttler came close to that with 29 off 11. The RCB fast bowlers ran riot and took out half the side within the powerplay.

RCB would have dearly loved to have Salt back, but his absence allowed them to play Jacob Duffy as the fourth overseas player. Venkatesh Iyer started the innings with two fours off the first two balls, moving around in the crease to try to mess with the lengths of the GT fast bowlers. It took Virat Kohli four balls to lay bat on Kagiso Rabada’s hard lengths, but Venkatesh ramped him for a six first ball even though he got into a tangle.

Even though Rabada came back immediately with the wicket of Venkatesh, the makeshift opener had done his job with 19 off seven. Immediately after the wicket, Kohli charged at Siraj and drove him over mid-off. Some classic batting – a flick off the hip, a late cut and a square cut – from Devdutt Padikkal consigned Rabada to 18 in his second over and brought up the team fifty in just four overs.

Rattled, GT had to move away from bowling Siraj and Rabada through the powerplay for the first time in eight matches.

Holder and Rashid Khan combined to bring GT back into the contest. Holder kept hitting the hard lengths, and Rashid bowled his first two overs for no boundary. In between, Holder managed to remove Kohli and Padikkal for 43 off 25 and 30 off 19. Not big innings but ones that understood the assignment.

Having gone funky with their selection – no Romario Shepherd in the batting-first XI so they could play an extra bowler if Shepherd was not needed – RCB promoted Krunal Pandya to likely maintain ideal points of entry for Tim David and Jitesh Sharma. While Krunal did his job with 43 off 28, it was the other batter that led to dropping jaws.

Patidar broke the spell off 22 quiet balls with a pulled six off a Holder ball that wasn’t quite short enough. After a boundary-free first over from Kulwant Khejroliya, playing his first game of T20 cricket since last April, Prasidh Krishna created two opportunities in the 14th over. The first one, a leading edge, fell between the converging wicketkeeper and deep third. The second one went straight to Rabada at deep square leg, but was dropped with Patidar on 26 off 20. At the end of the 14th over, RCB were an even 140 for 3, the last time you could say the match was even.

Starting with no-balls from Khejroliya in the 15th over, the flood gates opened for 114 runs in the last six overs. Two of his nine sixes were bona fide highlights reels for the year. The first an extra-cover drive off Rashid from the crease, and then a back-foot drive over cover off Rabada, who by now had the purple cap. That shot off Rabada left even Kohli awestruck.

The GT bowlers didn’t quite try a quick bouncer at him, but Patidar nicely steered a slow bouncer over short fine with a delayed hook. At one point, even a century seemed likely, but he didn’t quite get enough strike.

For the first time ever, both innings of an IPL match started with two fours as B Sai Sudharsan hit Duffy for fours, but the GT openers were not as successful as the RCB top order at upsetting the bowlers’ lengths. Both Shubman Gill and Sudharsan tried charging at Bhuvneshwar, but got only two runs from his first over.

The pressure was mounting, but the first wicket came in an unconventional manner, with Sudharsan losing his bat as he cut Duffy away for four. The bat ricocheted onto the leg stump before the ball could reach the fence. Bhuvneshwar then extended his dominance over Gill with a wobble-seam delivery that got his leg stump. Now Bhuvneshwar leads the head-to-head with six wickets in 79 balls for just 80 runs.

No option left, Buttler came out swinging, looked dangerous, but Josh Hazlewood got the better of him with a knuckle-ball legcutter. The rest was always going to be a formality but RCB carried it out in style. Rasikh Salam bowled a double-wicket maiden to get Nishant Sindhu and Jason Holder to leave GT five down within the powerplay. Duffy ended up with three wickets, Bhuvneshwar reclaimed the purple cap, and only some late damage control from Rahul Tewatiya prevented this from becoming the biggest defeat in an IPL playoff match.

Brief scores:
Royal Challengers Bengaluru 254 for 5 in 20 overs (Venkatesh Iyer 19, Virat Kohli 43, Devdutt Padikkal 30, Rajat Patidar 93*,  Krunal Pandya 43, Jitesh Sharma 15*; Kagiso Rabada 2-54, Jason Holder 2-39, Prasidh Krishna 1-53) beat Gujarat Titans 162 in 19.3 overs (Sai Sudarshan 14, Jos Buttler 29, RahulTewatia 68; Jacob Duffy 3-39, Bhuvenshwar Kumar 2-28, Josh Hazelwood 1-39, Rasik Salam 2-24, Krunal Pandya 2-16)  by 92 runs

[Cricinfo]

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Gibson, Dean knock over New Zealand for 80 as England cruise to series win

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Dani Gibson and Charlie Dean picked up three wickets each [Cricinfo]
England’s bowlers demolished New Zealand’s batting line-up to set up an emphatic seven-wicket win in the third and final T20I at Hove for a 2-1 series victory.
Career-best figures of 3 for 14 for Dani Gibson combined with 3 for 13 for stand-in skipper Charlie Dean allowed England to bounce back from a 14-run loss in the second game in Canterbury on Saturday, bowling New Zealand out for a paltry 80 with five balls to spare.
That previous defeat was made all the more disappointing for the hosts by the fact that they had their opponents in a similar precarious position at 11 for 4 before the White Ferns hit back. There were to be no similar batting heroics this time from Sophie Devine, or anyone else for that matter, as the visitors collapsed to 33 for 6 on the back of another excellent powerplay by Libsey Smith in which she took 1 for 6 from two overs before Gibson chimed in with the big wickets of Melie Kerr and Devine.
Sophie Ecclestone returned to the bowling attack after missing the second match with a tight hamstring and bowled with excellent economy to take 1 for 11 and Issy Wong bowled Jess Kerr, New Zealand’s top scorer with just 20, to finish with 1 for 20.
England lost both openers inside the powerplay, but reeled in the target with 6.1 overs remaining.
New Zealand’s performance was cause for concern in their last competitive match before next month’s T20 World Cup, where they will be the defending champions. England may expect a tougher contest from India when they meet for a three-match T20I series starting on Thursday, but are yet to regain regular opener Danni Wyatt-Hodge and captain Nat Sciver-Brunt ahead of their home World Cup.
Both New Zealand openers were out to premeditated reverse sweeps. Suzie Bates replaced Georgia Plimmer at the top of the order, having dropped right down in the series opener in Derby and sat out the second game, as the White Ferns looked to avoid another poor start with the bat. But Bates managed just 3 off 11 before she spooned a typically miserly Smith straight to backward point. Izzy Gaze had struck Wong for four and six through fine leg and long-on but when Dean brought herself into the attack in the final over of the powerplay, she struck with her third ball, which turned in, beat the bat and crashed into the stumps.
With their side in deep trouble, the softest dismissals were to come as Gibson struck twice in her first over. Melie Kerr picked out Maia Bouchier at mid-on then Devine, who scored 45 and 87 in her two previous innings this tour, could only shake her head in dismay, almost as the ball was being gathered at mid-off from her miss-hit attempt at a lofted drive. Devine was out for a five-ball duck and from 29 for 2, the White Ferns were 30 for 4.
New Zealand were pinning their hopes on experienced duo of Maddy Green and Brook Halliday for a rescue mission but when Dean pinned the latter on the front pad, it took a smart review by England’s acting captain to reveal a fairly straightforward lbw. Then Ecclestone chimed in with a beauty that rearranged Izzy Sharp’s stumps.
New Zealand had lost 5 for 5 in the space of 3.1 overs, then Gibson returned to remove Green, thanks to a sound catch by Bouchier, running round from midwicket to wide long-on. From 58 for 7 the tail fell away, Smith claiming her second when Nensi Patel failed to review an lbw given as the ball struck her in the stomach kneeling to sweep, but replays showed impact was outside the line.
Alice Capsey, opening again while Wyatt-Hodge is on maternity leave, couldn’t reprise her unbeaten 74 from the first match of the series in Derby, which England won convincingly, also by seven wickets. She was trapped lbw by offspinner Patel’s first delivery which pitched on middle and turned onto the inside of Capsey’s thigh pad. Fellow opener Sophia Dunkley managed 22 off 21 before she fluffed a pull straight to mid-on from Bree Illing.
New Zealand missed an opportunity to remove Heather Knight on 4, sweeping towards deep square leg where Halliday strode in and dived forward to get both hands to the ball very low before it popped out of her grasp as she hit the ground. But even when Melie Kerr had Knight caught at backward point off a reverse sweep, New Zealand couldn’t haul themselves out of the mire left by their batters.
Brief scores:
England Women 81 for 3 in 13.5 overs (Sophia Dunkley 22, Mala Bouchier 19*, Heather Knight 18; Bree Illing 1-20, Nensi Patel 1-07, Melle Kerr 1-18) beat New Zealand Women  80 in 19.1 overs (Isabella Gaze 17, Maddy Green 14,  Jess Kerr 20; Linsey Smith 2-15, Issy Wong 1-20, Sophia Ecclestone 1-11, Charlie  Dean 3-13, Dani Gibson 3-14) by seven wickets
[Cricinfo]
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Solid Royal Challengers Bengaluru, surging Gujarat Titans clash for direct final ticket

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Royal Challengers Bengaluru [RCB]  might look at Gujarat Titans [GT] across the ring in Qualifier 1 of IPL 2026, and wonder if they helped create this monster. When GT went to Bengaluru on April 24, they were still a conservative side straddling the middle of the table, and happy with a 57-ball hundred from their opener. But they have been a changed unit since RCB cruised to that chase of 206 against them that day.

Since that match, the halfway point for GT, their run rate has increased by nearly a run per over. That is 20 runs per innings. By the time they faced RCB next, they were giving more importance to balls remaining than to wickets in hand while chasing. When batting first, GT were looking to score above par; there has been a pair of 229s in the two matches they have batted first in since that Bengaluru debacle.

The thing with GT is that they have a team with such strong basics that they don’t need to make only subtle changes to their approach. Their control rate has gone from 80% to 75%. A little more risk, a lot more rewards. Their bowling has only become more streamlined over this period with Jason Holder adding constant threat to an already good attack. The result is a 6-1 win-loss record in the second half of their tournament.

RCB, though, have been solid throughout, carrying forward the change in approach that took them to the title last year. They won five in the first half and four in the second. They have consistently looked to finish matches early or set above-par scores when batting first. A second consecutive top-two finish is just rewards for being the most consistently good side over this period.

They will want to make it straight from Dharamsala to Ahmedabad, where they won their first title last year. Not only to make the final but to also hope to avoid meeting GT in a final at their home, something that should be the right of defending champions. Not least because GT are on a four-match winning streak at home, which includes two wins despite losing the toss.

RCB have used the fewest number of players this IPL, a sign of a settled unit. It would certainly have been fewer if not for the injury to Phil Salt,  who is now back in India and racing against time to be ready in time for the playoffs. If he doesn’t make it, though, it brings in the temptation to drop Suyash Sharma for Jacob Duffy considering Suyash has not had a great IPL, and night games in Dharamsala can negate spinners. In fact, Dharamsala hosted the only completed match this season where no spin was used.

Venkatesh Iyer has made a case for himself in the limited opportunities he has got, but Salt should be a no-brainer as opener if he is fit.

Royal Challengers Bengaluru (probable): Virat Kohli,  Phil Salt/Venkatesh Iyer,  Devdutt Padikkal, Rajat Patidar (capt), Jitesh Sharma, Romario Shepherd, Tim David, Krunal Pandya,  Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Jacob Duffy/Suyash Sharma,  Josh Hazlewood, Rasikh Salam

GT have played the second-fewest number of players. They seem to have their first XI figured with Nishant Sindhu being persisted with as the extra batter. Their only doubt remains around the Impact Player: extra fast bowler in Prasidh Krishna or extra spinner in R Sai Kishore or Manay Suthar.

Gujarat Titans (probable): Shubman Gill (capt), B Sai Sudharsan,  Jos Buttler (wk), Washington Sundar, Jason Holder,  Rahul Tewatia,  Nishant Sindhu,  Rashid Khan,  Arshad Khan,  Kagiso Rabada,  Mohammed Siraj,  Prasidh Krishna/R Sai Kishore/Manav Suthar

[Cricinfo]

 

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