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Sri Lanka to chase 219 for victory after Smith’s counterattack stretches England lead
Sri Lanka will chase 219 for victory in the third and final Test after bowling England out for 156 in their second innings.
A spell of incisive swing bowling led by Vishwa Fernando kept the tourists in the contest before Jamis Smith’s brutal rearguard signalled an England fightback on the third afternoon at The Oval.
Sri Lanka’s bowlers were making the ball move in what were by far the brightest conditions of the match so far, despite a couple of short interruptions for what amounted to sun-showers. Vishwa was particularly devastating with his late inswingers pinning Joe Root and Harry Brook lbw.
But then Smith pummelled 67 runs off 50 balls, including 20 runs off one Milan Rathnayake over to lead England’s recovery from 82 for 7 to 140 for 8. Smith scored 52 off the last 19 balls he faced before he fell on the final ball before tea, picking out short midwicket to give Vishwa his third and England a lead of 202.
By the time Olly Stone fell to give Lahiru Kumara his fourth wicket and Asitha Fernando had Shoaib Bashir also caught behind by Nishan Madushka, standing in for injured keeper Dinesh Chandimal, England had stretched their advantage to 218.
Two early strikes had given Sri Lanka hope during a morning session extended because of bad weather over the first two days as Ben Duckett and Ollie Pope – the standout performers of England’s first innings – fell cheaply.
The tourists grabbed hold of their chance in the afternoon as England lost a further five wickets before Smith marched to the crease and picked off 10 fours and a six.
Josh Hull and Stone had preserved England’s advantage after Sri Lanka resumed on 211 for 5, trailing by 114. Despite three of their players passing fifty, no one went on to a big score that might have pushed them ahead of England, who retained a 62-run advantage on first innings.
Duckett was caught at mid-on off Asitha’s 12th delivery to depart for just 7, having made an aggressive 86 in the first innings, and Kumara came on for the last over before lunch and removed Pope with his fourth ball, edging onto his stumps, also for 7.
Dan Lawrence was one of only three England batters to reach double figures in their second innings so far with 35 runs that represented his best score of a difficult series.
He smashed Asitha for six over long-off and, two balls later, carved deftly through point for four. But, having bettered his previous series best by one run, he was brought undone by a Kumara delivery that moved away late and kissed the edge of the bat before landing in keeper Dinesh Chandimal’s gloves.
Vishwa entered the attack in the 15th over and he struck third ball with a superb inswinging yorker that hit Root on the boot directly in front.
Brook had come under fire for his petulant reaction to Sri Lanka’s successful bid to frustrate him by bowling outside off stump in the first innings. This time, he succumbed to another late inswinger which nailed the front pad with pin-point accuracy on leg stump in Vishwa’s next over.
Kumara had Chris Woakes caught behind for a six-ball duck but then Chandimal had to be helped off the field after diving stop a wayward delivery down the leg side to Gus Atkinson, apparently hurting his lower back in the process. Atkinson was trapped lbw by Rathnayake, having faced 14 balls for his 1 before Smith got stuck in.
Earlier, debutant Hull made amends for dropping Dhananjaya de Silva during a gloomy second evening when had the Sri Lanka skipper caught for 69 with his 11th ball of the day, his attempted pull sailing off the top edge to deep backward square.
That sparked a procession of five wickets for 52 runs in 13. 3 overs, Hull, Stone and Woakes sharing four of the five wickets to fall with Atkinson off the field nursing a thigh injury and spinner Shoaib Bashir taking the last.
Brief scores: [at end of England 2nd innings]
England 325 and 156 (Smith 67, Kumara 4-21, Vishwa 3-40) lead Sri Lanka 263 (Dhananjaya 69, Kamindu 64, Nissanka 64, Stone 3-35, Hull 3-53) by 218 runs
{Cricinfo]
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Ambidextrous spinner Shashini Gimhani in Sri Lanka’s T20 World Cup squad
Batter V8shmi Gunaratne, wristspinner Shashini Gimhani and seamer Kavya Kavindi have been picked in Sri Lanka’s squad of 15 for the Women’s T20 World Cup in England starting on June 12.
Chamari Athapaththu was named captain of the team and will be representing Sri Lanka in her tenth T20 World Cup.
Rashmika Sewwandi, Dewmi Vihanga, Inoka Ranaweera were left out of the squad that played the series against Bangladesh earlier this month.
Gimhani, 17, is an ambidextrous wristspinner who has played seven T20 internationals, having made her debut as Sri Lanka’s youngest international at the age of 15.
The squad will depart for England on June 3.
Sri Lanka are in Group 2 along with England, New Zealand, West Indies, Ireland and Scotland. They play the opening game of the tournament against England at Edgbaston on June 12, followed by fixtures against New Zealand in Southampton (June 16), West Indies in Bristol (June 21), Ireland also in Bristol (June 23), and Scotland in Manchester (June 26).
The top two teams from Groups 1 and 2 qualify for the semi-finals at The Oval on June 30 and July 2. The final is on July 5 at Lord’s.
Sri Lanka squad for Women’s T20 World Cup
Chamari Athapaththu (capt), Hasini Perera, Vishmi Gunaratne, Harshitha Samarawickrama, Imesha Dulani, Nilakshika Silva, Kavisha Dilhari, Hansima Karunarathne, Kaushini Nuthyangana, Sugandika Dassanayaka, Nimasha Madushani, Shashini Gimhani, Kawya Kavindi, Malki Madara, Mithali Ayodhya
(Cricinfo)
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Messi to represent Argentina at sixth World Cup
Lionel Messi will play in a sixth World Cup as he captains holders Argentina at the 2026 tournament.
The forward, who will turn 39 during the tournament, was named in Lionel Scaloni’s 26-man squad on Thursday after leading his country to a third World Cup triumph in Qatar four years ago with a penalty shootout victory over France.
With 26 appearances, Messi holds the current record for the most World Cup matches by any player – and will join Portugal forward Cristiano Ronaldo, 41, as the only male players to appear in a sixth edition of football’s biggest event this summer.
Aston Villa’s Emiliano Martinez, who was named the goalkeeper of the tournament in 2022, has been selected, as have Manchester United’s Lisandro Martinez and Tottenham’s Cristian Romero, who missed the end of the Premier League season with a knee injury.
Liverpool midfielder Alexis Mac Allister and Chelsea midfielder Enzo Fernandez are also among the five British-based players in the squad for the finals, which will be held in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
Atletico Madrid’s Julian Alvarez and Inter’s Lautaro Martinez are among 17 players who lifted the trophy in 2022 returning to bid to retain it.
Argentina are in Group J and begin their campaign in Kansas City against Algeria (Wednesday, 17 June, 02:00 BST), before they play two games in Dallas, against Austria (Monday, 22 June, 18:00 BST) and Jordan (Sunday, 28 June, 02:00 BST).
Messi had been substituted during Inter Miami’s latest Major League Soccer match on Monday, but his club said he had not sustained an injury and was suffering from “muscle fatigue” in his left hamstring.
He has made 198 appearances for Argentina and will reach the 200-mark if he plays in both of his country’s friendly matches – against Honduras in Texas (Sunday, 7 June, 01:00 BST) and then against Iceland in Alabama (Tuesday, 9 June).
Notable absentees include in-form Aston Villa attacker Emi Buendia, whose Europa League final stunner was named goal of the tournament, forward Paolo Dybala, whose season at Roma has been disrupted by injury, and 18-year-old Real Madrid winger Franco Mastantuono.
With one cap, Benfica winger Gianluca Prestianni also misses out, after Fifa said he would sit out the first two games of the tournament for abusing Vinicius Jr.
Argentina World Cup squad
Goalkeepers: Juan Musso (Atletico Madrid), Geronimo Rulli (Marseille), Emiliano Martinez (Aston Villa).
Defenders: Leonardo Balerdi (Marseille), Nicolas Tagliafico (Lyon), Gonzalo Montiel (River Plate), Lisandro Martinez (Manchester United), Cristian Romero (Tottenham), Nicolas Otamendi (Benfica), Facundo Medina (Marseille), Nahuel Molina (Atletico Madrid).
Midfielders: Leandro Paredes (River Plate), Rodrigo de Paul (Inter Miami), Valentin Barco (Strasbourg), Giovani lo Celso (Real Betis), Ezequiel Palacios (Bayer Leverkusen), Alexis Mac Allister (Liverpool), Enzo Fernandez (Chelsea).
Forwards: Julian Alvarez (Atletico Madrid), Lionel Messi (Inter Miami), Nicolas Gonzalez (Atletico Madrid), Thiago Almada (Atletico Madrid), Giuliano Simeone (Atletico Madrid), Nico Paz (Como), Jose Manuel Lopez (Palmeiras), Lautaro Martinez (Inter Milan).
[BBC]
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Portugal breaks hottest May day record as Europe swelters in heatwave
Portugal has set a new hottest day in May with 40.3C recorded in the central town of Mora, as countries in western Europe grapple with sweltering-hot weather.
The temperature recorded on Wednesday bests Portugal’s previous record of 40C set in May 2001.
Ministers in France are meeting to assess the country’s preparedness for heatwaves, while tennis number one Jannik Sinner bowed out of the French Open after suffering from the heat. Meanwhile, Italian authorities have issued a red heatwave alert for the capital, Rome, where it could top out at 32C on Thursday.
The heatwave is forecast to continue into the weekend, with Germany, Spain and Switzerland having also faced unusually hot conditions.
Parts of Portugal will peak above 35C on Thursday and Friday before the heat begins to recede, according to the nation’s meteorological office.
French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu chaired a ministerial meeting on Thursday afternoon to develop a readiness plan for extreme heat events, including combatting forest fires and ensuring adequate water supplies over the summer.
Baccalaureate exams – the French equivalent of A-levels – will continue during the heatwaves, despite some schools having to shut their doors due to inhospitable temperatures inside.
A primary school in Souston, in the Landes region, will remain shut on Thursday and Friday after it reached 53C inside earlier in the week, a local official told French media.
Education Minister Édouard Geffray told BFMTV that exam centres would be able to choose rooms with the most shade, adding that exams would go ahead “simply because the students are prepared and… there is also a schedule according to which they expect their results”.
The decision has attracted criticism from education unions and teachers, with one telling French radio of teachers “forced to bring in their own fans”.
A survey by France’s secondary school union found nearly 78% had recorded temperatures above 30C this week, and said it had received reports of teachers bringing in screwdrivers to prise windows open.

Seventeen departments of France – in the north-west, as well as Paris – are under an orange alert, indicating people should be “very vigilant” about the weather.
Temperatures are expected to reach 33C in Paris on Thursday, and top out at 34C on both Saturday and Sunday.
Police have announced measures to ease traffic in the capital until Saturday, including only allowing lower-emission cars on roads and lowering speed limits. A single fare for the entire public transport network will be offered at the same time.
At the French Open in Paris, Sinner appeared to be cruising to a victory before suddenly taking a turn for the worse.
The Italian complained of dizziness and feeling lethargic before hitting a wall.
“It was a tough spot to be in,” he commented afterwards, but added: “Really it was nothing against the heat, nothing against the weather. It was just me today, but it happens.”
Meanwhile, Italy’s red alert in Rome – as well as in Florence, Bologna, Brescia and Turin – is the first of the year, warning of “possible negative effects on the health of healthy, active people”.
Temperatures will climb to 35C in Madrid over the weekend. Though the current spell does not officially qualify as a heatwave in Spain, the nation’s meteorological office has said the heat is that usually seen in July and August.

The immediate cause of the heatwave is a “heat dome” – an area of high pressure that becomes “stuck”, trapping warm air underneath it.
While it is difficult to link individual extreme weather events to climate change, scientists say climate change makes heatwaves more frequent and more intense.
Over the last 30 years, Europe has been warming by 0.56C per decade, according to the Copernicus climate service – enough to make heat extremes significantly more severe.
The UN warned on Thursday that global average temperatures are likely to continue at or near record levels this year and for the next four years.
The 11 hottest years ever recorded all happened from 2015 onwards, and the UN’s weather and climate agency said this trend was predicted to continue, with a new hottest-ever year “likely” before 2031.
[BBC]
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