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Shoaib Bashir seals innings win as Sean Williams stars for spirited Zimbabwe

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Shoaib Bashir claimed 6 for 81 to break Zimbabwe's resistance [Cricinfo]

England began their home international summer with a comprehensive win over Zimbabwe after bowling them out twice inside five sessions and finishing the four-day Test with more than a day to spare. Offspinner Shoaib Bashir, playing in his 16th Test, headlined the final day with his fourth Test five-for – the most by an England player before turning 22 – and second in Nottingham.

The magnitude of the defeat did not wipe the smiles off the faces of the visitors and their boisterous fans, who filled Trent Bridge with noise and colour, and stayed to applaud them in a lap of gratitude afterwards. This was Zimbabwe’s first Test in England in 22 years and a strong expat crowd delighted in brave batting from Sean Williams, Ben Curran, Sikandar Raza and Wesley Madhevere.

Williams fell 12 short of a century and put on 122 for the second wicket while Raza reached a 10th Test half-century and shared a 65-run fifth-wicket stand with Madhevere. Zimbabwe did not disgrace themselves as they came within 45 runs of making England bat again and showed promise ahead of home Tests against South Africa, New Zealand and Afghanistan later this year.

England, meanwhile, have had their first bit of preparation ahead of a massive eight months in Tests which includes a five-match home series against India and the Ashes in Australia. They may have some concerns over their frontline seamers, who lacked some bite. Captain Ben Stokes was the most threatening on his return to bowling after hamstring surgery, and also maintained the highest pace, across his two four-over spells. In total, he bowled 11.2 in the match, while Bashir finished with nine for 143, his best match figures.

Zimbabwe began the day on 30 for 2, 270 runs behind and needing a big batting performance from someone. Williams, an international veteran of 20 years who averages 66.56 in the last five years, delivered. He played a typically energetic knock, laced with boundaries. He hit 16 fours in his innings, nine through the covers and mid-off as England overpitched and occasionally offered width. He also ushered Curran through a cautious knock that spanned 104 balls for 37 runs.

Stokes began the morning’s proceedings and immediately caused problems for Zimbabwe. His third ball was wide and full, Curran drove hard and edged past gully for four. Stokes would have known he’d also planted a seed of doubt and in his next over, he could have reaped the rewards. On 10, Curran drove the ball back to Stokes, who stuck out both hands but could not hold on in his followthrough. That would have stung and more so when Williams smoked Stokes through point and over midwicket later in the over.

Williams reached fifty in the next over with a pinpoint straight drive off Josh Tongue, off the 42nd ball he faced. In the next over, Tongue hit Williams on the bottom forearm, with a delivery that reared up from back of a length and drew blood. Williams was treated on-field and appeared unaffected as he drove a wide Atkinson ball in his favoured region for four more.

Joe Root was used for an over for Tongue to change ends and England went double-spin with the introduction of Bashir. Williams reverse-swept his first ball for four to enter the seventies. At the other end Tongue began a short-ball assault on Curran that almost paid off. Curran, having hauled his way to 29, pulled Tongue to Stokes at midwicket but the England captain could only get fingertips to it.

Curran survived again when Umpire Kumar Dharmasena gave him out lbw after he missed a sweep against Bashir but Curran reviewed. Hawkeye showed the ball was bouncing over the top of the stumps. Williams was not quite as lucky. On 88, he was hit on the pads, given out and reviewed. Replays showed the ball was clipping the top of the leg stump. Having faced 82 balls, he had been on course to reclaim the national record for fastest century that Brian Bennett’s 97-ball effort had taken on the previous day.

Post-lunch, Curran adopted a more aggressive approach and drove Bashir aerially but only as far as Stokes at short cover, for whom the third time was a charm. He had no trouble holding on. That brought Raza and Madhevere together and they took on the spin and the short ball from Sam Cook with confidence. They had a couple of nervy moments: when Bashir induced Raza’s edge once and the ball ricocheted off Jamie Smith and onto the peak of Harry Brook’s cap at first slip, which saved him from being hit on the forehead. Then, Cook got a full ball to jag back into Madhevere and hit his front pad and convinced Stokes to review. Ball-tracking showed it was missing leg stump.

In the end it took a moment of magic, and the return of Stokes, to separate the pair. He went short to Madhevere and found extra bounce, Madhevere attempted a cut but found an outside-edge and the ball seemed to be heading over second slip. Brook jumped, stuck his right hand up and plucked the ball out of the air, to everyone’s surprise. Madhevere looked back, astonished that he had to go while Stokes placed his hand over his mouth a la Stuart Broad, who celebrated in the same way when Stokes himself pulled off a blinder in the Ashes a decade ago on the same ground.

With Madhevere went Zimbabwe’s last real hope of making England bat again and the result was only a matter of time. Tafadzwa Tsiga was bowled by Bashir when he came down the track to a ball that turned in and through the bat-pad gap. Zimbabwean emotions see-sawed as Raza reached fifty in the next over when he creamed Stokes through the covers for his eighth four but in the over after that Blessing Muzarabani slog-swept Bashir straight to Root at deep midwicket. Bashir bagged his fifth when Raza, who had added two more fours to his count, tried to heave him over the leg side and managed a leading edge which Brook pouched.

Fittingly, Bashir finished things off when he struck Chivanga on the back pad as he played inside the line and was hit in front of middle and off. Richard Ngarava, Zimbabwe’s No.11, did not bat in either innings after leaving the field on the first day with a back injury.

Brief scores:
England 565 for 6 dec in 96.3 overs (Ollie Pope 171, Ben Duckett 140, Zak Crawley 124, Harry Brook 58; Blessing Muzarabani 3-141) beat Zimbabwe 265 in 63.2 overs (Brian Bennett 139, Craig Ervine 42, Sean Williams 25, Tafadzwa Tsiga 22; Gus Atkinson 2-58, Shoaib Bashir 3-62, Ben Stokes 2-11) and [f/o] 255 in 59 overs (Sean Williams 88, Ben Curran 37, Sikandar Raza 60, Wesley Madhevere 31;  Shoaib Basheer 6-81)    by an innings and 45 runs

[Cricinfo]



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Israeli attacks on Lebanon kill at least five people, including journalist

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Lebanese journalist Amal Khalil, who worked for the daily Al Akhbar newspaper, reports near a destroyed bridge in Qasmiyeh, Lebanon, Sunday, March 22, 2026 [File: Aljazeera]

Israeli attacks have killed five people in southern Lebanon, including a journalist, Lebanon’s National News Agency (NNA) reported, further straining a fragile ceasefire.

An initial Israeli strike hit a car in at-Tiri, a village in south Lebanon, killing two people inside, NNA said on Wednesday.

Israel’s military said it struck two vehicles in southern Lebanon that departed from a military structure used by the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah.

The NNA reported that a later air strike on a building in the same village wounded a journalist, who was trapped under rubble. Amal Khalil, who worked for the local media outlet Al Akhbar, was later found dead at the scene, her employer confirmed.

Reporting from Tyre, southern Lebanon, Al Jazeera’s Heidi Pett said two journalists from local media outlet Al Akhbar had travelled to the site of the first attack in at-Tiri.

“Amal Khalil and Zeinab Faraj had gone to the site of an earlier Israeli drone strike on a car, which reportedly killed two civilians in the town of at-Tiri,” Pett reported.

“For several hours … the Red Cross and rescue workers tried to reach those two journalists. They were unable to do that for a long time due to continued Israeli attacks in the area.”

Faraj was brought to a local hospital and was reportedly in “very serious condition and will be requiring surgery”, Pett reported.

Lebanon’s Ministry of Health had earlier said Israel “pursued” the journalists by “targeting” the building where they took shelter.

NNA reported that an Israeli strike targeted the main road linking the town with Haddatha “to prevent ambulance teams from reaching the two journalists”.

Lebanon’s Information Minister Paul Morcos condemned the Israeli attack on the journalists.

“We strongly condemn this assault, holding Israel fully responsible for their safety, and affirming the necessity of immediately ensuring their protection and guaranteeing freedom of media work,” Morcos said on X.

The Israeli military statement said it “does not target journalists and acts to mitigate harm to them” while also denying preventing rescue services from reaching the site of the attack in at-Tiri.

Last month, an Israeli attack on a clearly marked press vehicle killed three journalists in southern Lebanon.

Separately on Wednesday, two people were killed and several others wounded in an Israeli attack on the town of Yohmor al-Shaqif, also in southern Lebanon, NNA reported.

The Lebanese armed group said it attacked an Israeli artillery position in southern Lebanon with a drone, in response to what it said was an Israeli violation of the ceasefire.

The Israeli military said it had intercepted “a hostile aircraft” launched ‌‌by Hezbollah towards Israeli soldiers in southern Lebanon.

Hostilities between Hezbollah and Israel reignited on March 2 after Israel killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Up until then, the Iran-backed group had not attacked Israel since a November 2024 ceasefire, despite near-daily breaches of the deal by Israel.

More than 2,400 people have been killed in Lebanon since Israel launched its offensive and subsequent invasion of southern Lebanon. Israel has seized a belt of territory at the border where its troops remain.

The latest attacks come on the eve of planned ⁠⁠talks in Washington between Lebanese and Israeli ambassadors as Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said Beirut would seek an extension of the 10-day, United States mediated ceasefire, which is set to expire on Sunday.

The US-brokered ceasefire in Lebanon emerged separately from Washington’s efforts to resolve its ⁠⁠conflict with Tehran, though Iran had called for Lebanon to be included in the agreement.

[Aljazeera]

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Wolvaardt seals series for South Africa with blazing hundred

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Laura Wolvaardt hits down the ground [Cricket South Africa]

South Africa completed their highest successful chase in T20Is and sealed the five-match series against India with two matches to spare. They were led to 193 by their captain Laura Wolvaardt, who reached her third T20I century, and her fastest, off 47 balls. Wolvaardt shared a 183-run partnership with Sune Luus, whose 64 runs off 42 balls were the perfect support act. The pair were so dominant that South Africa won the match with 21 balls remaining.

The result means South Africa have won all three of their home series this season – against Ireland, Pakistan and now, India – in preparation for June’s T20 World Cup.

Put in to bat, India would have felt they gave themselves a chance of staying alive in the series when they posted their highest total against South Africa. Their innings included three fifty-plus partnerships and appeared well paced after the tone was set by Shafali Verma. After starting relatively slowly (21 off 24 balls) and surviving a short ball barrage from South Africa’s seamers, Shafali accelerated and finished with her highest score in seven innings. When she was dismissed, Harmanpreet Kaur picked up where she left off and smashed 66 of 38 balls to put India in a strong position. Until Wolvaardt got to the crease.

The South African captain continued her rich vein of form as she scored her joint-highest T20I score, her fifth successive fifty-plus score in international cricket, third half-century of the series and both her and South Africa’s fastest fifty and hundred in the format. Her partnership with Luus was South Africa’s second-highest for the first wicket and has all but confirmed the pair as the team’s T20 World Cup openers.

India start well, then stumble briefly

It has become the pattern of the series that India, thanks largely to Shafali, have enjoyed strong starts and this was their best of the series. After losing wickets in the powerplay of the last two matches, their first-wicket stand was unbroken after six over in this one. Their 51 runs may have been fewer than what they would have wanted (they scored 58 in the powerplay in match two) but it meant that they were giving themselves a better chance of avoiding a middle-order collapse. But the ghosts of Durban peeped through when left-arm spinner Nonkululekho Mlaba was brought on immediately after the fielding restrictions were lifted. Her first over cost only four runs and in her second, she took two wickets in two balls. Smriti Mandhana holed out to deep mid-wicket, where Nadine de Klerk took a good catch, and Jemimah Rodrigues, top-edged a sweep to short fine for a first ball duck. India were 68 for 2 after nine overs and nerves would have been jangling.

Harmanpreet hits out

The Indian captain chose the right occasion to get to her first T20I fifty against South Africa and to take India to their highest score of the series so far. After sharing a second-wicket stand of 73 off 42 balls with Shafali, Harmanpreet kept things together when Shafali was dismissed and put pressure on South Africa at the death. She was on 34 when Shafali eventually fell to the short ball and then took on Chloe Tryon by taking three boundaries off her second over. On 48 in the 18th over, Harmanpreet hit Nadine de Klerk over her head for a pinpoint straight four, her seventh of the innings and the shot that took her to fifty. She saved her most destructive shots for the final over, when she hit Tumi Sekhukhune over mid-wicket for a huge six and then tucked into a full toss and sent it over fine leg for six more. Her partnership with Richa Ghosh grew to 51 off 26 balls and ended things off strongly for India.

Wolvaardt whacks it

Undaunted by the task her team faced, Wolvaardt took on the bowling from the first ball when she sent Renuka Singh for four. Three more boundaries came off Kashvee Gautam and before Wolvaardt iced the cake with a straight six down the ground. She was dropped on 31, by Mandhana at extra cover, and responded even more aggressively. In Renuka’s third over, Wolvaardt hit her second six over long-on, sent a low full toss down the ground for four and then made room to slice one over point. Wolvaardt’s fifty came in the fifth over and there was no stopping her. Her on-side dominant play was a standout for the rest of the innings – she scored 84 of her 115 runs on that side of the field, including all her sixes. It didn’t all go her way, though. Wolvaardt was put down again, on 85, by Harmanpreet at extra cover and reached her century with a drive through long-on. Wolvaardt was eventually caught at deep mid-wicket with South Africa 11 runs away from victory.

More injury concerns for India?

India came into this series without Amanjot Kaur, who has a back injury, and will now be concerned about Arundhati Reddy, who left the field with what appeared to be a side strain. Arundhati bowled the fourth and sixth over without issue but when she was brought back for the 10th, she looked uncomfortable and two balls into it, needed on-field assistance. She recovered sufficiently to finish her over but made more work for herself when she gave away five wides and had to bowl an extra ball, but then could not continue. Back-up wicket-keeper Uma Chetry fielded in Arundhati’s place at first, before Anushka Sharma took over for the rest of the game.

Brief scores:
South Africa Women  193 for 1 in 16.3 overs (Laura Wolvaardt 115, Sune Luus 64*; Shreyaka Patil 1-30) beat India Women  192 for 4 in 20 overs (Smriti Mandhana 37, Harmanpreet Kaur 66, Shafali Verma 64, Richa Gosh 18*; Nonkululeko Mlaba 2-31, Nadine de Klerk 1-27)  by nine wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Jadeja, Archer and Burger lead Royals to scrappy win against Lucknow Super Giants

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Jofra Archer was among the wickets early yet again [Cricinfo]

It wasn’t the high-scoring spectacle that people might have expected, especially with Vaibhav Sooryavanshi in the house, but that didn’t make the contest any less compelling. Rajasthan Royals defended 159 to consign Lucknow Super Giants to their fourth straight loss of IPL 2026,  and their third in a row at home.

RR owed their batting lift to Ravindra Jadeja, who top scored with 43 not out off 29. His unbeaten 49-run stand with Impact Player Shubham Dubey, whose entry in the 16th over left RR without an extra bowler, pushed their total up to 159 – 40 too many for LSG.

The win meant RR snapped their two-match losing streak to jump to No. 2 on the points table. LSG, meanwhile, were ninth, having the same number of points as Mumbai Indians and Chennai Super Kings, both whom have a game in hand.

For the first time in his young IPL career, Sooryavanshi was searching for answers. He began with two fours off his first two deliveries, but didn’t score another run in his next eight. This included a sequence of five dots from left-arm seamer Mohsin Khan.

Hard lengths pinned Sooryavanshi back. Then Mohsin bowled deliveries that kissed the surface and darted away late, with some lift. Off the sixth ball, the pressure got to Sooryavanshi and a hoick across the line ended with Digvesh Rathi running back from extra cover to take a well-judged catch. RR had gone from 32 for 0 to 32 for 3 after four overs.

The first two blows were struck by Mohammed Shami, who overturned a sequence of three consecutive boundaries from Yashasvi Jaiswal by having him glove a sharp bumper to a leaping Rishabh Pant. Then he had Dhruv Jurel nicking a perfect outswinger for a golden duck.

Brought on in the seventh over for his first game after nearly a year on the sidelines due to a stress fracture, Mayank Yadav bowled at speeds in excess of 140kph four times in his opening over. His speeds didn’t translate into effectiveness though, with Shimron Hetmyer flicking a 150kph delivery in his second over for six over deep square. Both Hetmyer and Riyan Parag looked in decent nick until they fell in quick succession, leaving RR 77 for 5 in the 11th.

Parag picked out the long pocket as an attempt to play the helicopter landed in long-on’s hands, while Hetmyer was dismissed by the canny Prince Yadav, whose slower ball had him mis-time one to mid-off.

It wasn’t the most fluent innings. Nor was it a huge struggle. This was Jadeja batting with a revised total in mind and he didn’t take a risk until the last two overs. Between overs 12 and 18, RR hit just three boundaries, but Jadeja found his range at the end, ransacking 20 off Mayank’s final over to take the score to 159. He was helped by a cameo from Dubey, who was brought in for his first game this season. The last two overs produced 32.

Jofra Archer didn’t take a first-ball wicket for a fourth consecutive game but he didn’t have to wait too long. In his second over, he delivered a vicious bumper that hurried Aiden Markram into a mistimed pull and a top edge to the wicketkeeper Jurel.

Between Archer’s first two overs, Nandre Burger also had Rishabh Pant caught behind off a bottom edge. LSG were sinking at 11 for 3, with Ayush Badoni the first wicket via a run out. Pooran survived a probing short-ball examination from Archer and showed signs of kicking-on after enduring a horror start to the season. There was a sumptuous flick, two back-to-back fours off Brijesh Sharma, but Jadeja defied the match-up odds and had him caught at long-on for a 25-ball 22.

Amid the chaos, Mitchell Marsh played himself in. Every time he looked to accelerate, wickets kept falling. Yet, he was quick to pounce on anything short from Ravi Bishnoi and Jadeja, bringing up a measured half-century even as the asking rate rose past 10. His dismissal to Burger in the 16th over with LSG needing 55 off 27 was the end of the contest, with Brijesh and Archer sealing victory in 18 overs. Brijesh finished with 2 for 18, while Archer took 3 for 20.

Brief scores:
Rajasthan Royals 159 for 6 in 20 overs (Yashasvi Jaiswal 22, Riyan Parag 20, Shimron Hetmyer 22, Ravindra Jadeja 43*, Donovan Fereirra 20, Shubham Dubey 19*; Mohammed Shami 2-30, Prince  Yadav 2-29,  Mohsin Khan 2-17) beat Lucknow Super Giants 119 in 18 overs (Mitchell Marsh 55, Nicholas Pooran 22,  Himmat Singh 15; Jofra  Archer 3-20, Nandre Burger 2-27, Brijesh Sharma  2-18, Ravindra Jadeja 1-29, Ravi Bishnoi 1-23)  by 40 runs

[Cricinfo]

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