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Sunil Narine, Venkatesh Iyer outmuscle Royal Challengers Bengaluru at the Chinnaswamy

Sunil Narine marked the occasion of his 500th T20 game by haunting Royal Challengers Bengaluru with the bat as he smashed 47 off 22. Venkatesh Iyer took over the baton from Narine to hit 50 off 30 as KKR negated Virat Kohli’s 59-ball 83* that took RCB to 182 for 6. What looked like an above-par total at the halfway stage was chased down by KKR with 3.1 overs to spare.
Phil Salt got the chase going by smashing his last-season nemesis Mohammed Siraj for two sixes and a four in the 18-run opener over, after which Narine took over. Alzarri Joseph looked to go short and fast, but the small dimensions of the Chinnaswamy stadium meant even mistimed hits from Narine carried over the ropes. Joseph beat him for pace a couple of times, but still conceded two sixes in a 14-run over. Narine then saw through a slower one from Siraj in the fifth over for a six over deep square leg before laying into Yash Dayal in the final over of the PowerPlay, picking up two fours and two sixes in a 21-run over. With that, KKR blazed away to 85/0 in 6 overs.
Mayank Dagar arrived and cleaned up Narine with a full ball, and Salt holed out to the deep square leg fielder off RCB’s impact substitute Vijaykumar Vyshak. That however, wasn’t the way back into the game that RCB thought it was as Venkatesh Iyer walked in to maintain the tempo set by the openers. He gave Dagar the charge for a six down the ground and hit a four off Vyshak to keep RCB on their toes. Faf du Plessis brought back Joseph, which tipped the scales further in KKR’s favour. Venkatesh smashed a short of length slower one for a six over midwicket, pierced the off-side field with a deft cut and then pulled one short ball for a six over fine leg. The ball then flew off the top-edge for a four in a 20-run over.
By the time Yash Dayal dismissed the left-hander, he’d scored a 30-ball 50 and put KKR well on course for a win. Even as Vyshak used change of pace well, there was very little room for RCB to turn the game around from this stage.
Virat Kohli went after Mitchell Starc in the PowerPlay and built a stand with Cameron Green, who carted Narine for two fours and a six in the sixth over. Despite du Plessis’s early exit, RCB picked 61 runs in the PowerPlay to set themselves up for consolidation in the middle-overs.
RCB had two pace hitters in the middle and KKR unleashed slow bowlers to push them on the backfoot. Left-arm spinner Anukul Roy did his job as a solid match-up, conceding just six runs in his two overs despite bowling one in the Powerplay. Narine was treated with disdain even after the PowerPlay, but Andre Russell’s ability to hit the pitch hard and vary his pace restricted RCB’s progress significantly.
He sent Green packing off an innocuous delivery but was bang on for the rest of his spell, finishing with 2 for 29. He beat Kohli too with his change of pace, bowling as many as 11 dots in his four overs. Varun Chakaravarthy, who had been held back for the arrival of Glenn Maxwell, started with a three-run over where he too foxed Kohli repeatedly.
Maxwell and Kohli took the mystery spinner down in the next over as they looked to drag RCB out of the post-PowerPlay slump. They took runs off Harshit Rana and Narine as Maxwell was offered two reprieves through dropped catches. However, Starc, Russell and Harshit bowled three very good over at the death – full of slower ones – to concede just 19 runs. Kohli, who found the going a little tough through the middle, went after Starc in the final over, hitting him for a six. Dinesh Karthik hit Russell for a couple of sixes in the 19th to push RCB ahead after being pinned back in the preceding overs. Starc finished with figures of 0 for 47 as RCB scored 29 off the last two overs to go past the 180-run mark. That however, proved to be insufficient in the end.
Brief Scores:
Royal Challengers Bengaluru 182/6 in 20 overs (Virat Kohli 83*, Cameron Green 33, Glenn Maxwell 20, Dinesh Karthik 20; Harshit Rana 2-39, Sunil Narine 1-40, Andre Russell 2-29) lost to Kolkata Knight Riders 186/3 in 16.5 overs (Phil Salt 30, Venkatesh Iyer 50, Sunil Narine 47, Shreyas Iyer 39*; Yash Daval 1-46, Mayanak Dagar 1-23, Vijaykumar Vyshak 1-23) by 7 wickets
What next?
RCB have a three-day break before hosting Lucknow Super Giants on April 2. KKR head to Vizag where they go up against ‘hosts’ Delhi Capitals on April 3.
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IPL 2025: Marsh, Markram and Rathi shine as LSG edge MI in thriller

Hardik Pandya claimed his maiden T20 five-fer and scored an unbeaten 16-ball 28 but was powerless to prevent Mumbai Indians’ [MI] third loss in four games. They lost to a spirited Lucknow Super Giants [LSG] side, who had Mitchell Marsh and Aiden Markram to thank for powering them to 203, a score that they defended by 12 runs, thanks in large part to a superb spell from 25-year-old Digvesh Rathi, who took 1 for 21.
At the 15-over mark, the contest was evenly poised: LSG stood at 146 for 3, MI at 143 for 3. Mumbai, historically strong chasers, seemed on course for a late surge. But that’s when Rathi made his mark. The legspinner delivered a crucial spell, conceding just 10 runs from his first three overs. Skipper Rishabh Pant even reserved an over of his for the death, and Rathi stood tall in the 18th, giving away just 11 against a rampaging Hardik Pandya. Across his four overs, Rathi bowled eight dots and conceded just a single boundary-proving to be the difference.
On the flip side, it was a night to forget for Impact Sub Tilak Varma. The rising star struggled to find fluency, scratching his way to 25 off 23 balls with just two boundaries. MI ultimately made the bold call to retire him out in the penultimate over, a move that underlined their desperate search for momentum.
LUCKNOW SUPER GIANTS
PowerPlay: Marsh takes charge
Phase Score: LSG 69/0 (RR: 11.50; 4s/6s: 10/2)
Mitchell Marsh could have been dismissed for just 4, and Trent Boult should’ve added yet another first-over wicket to his tally. But Mumbai Indians made a crucial blunder – they didn’t appeal for a clear nick. It proved costly. The Aussie powerhouse, fondly known as ‘The Bison’, tore into MI’s bowlers with brute force and clean timing. Marsh plundered nine boundaries and two towering sixes, driving straight and through the line with disdain even as the ball offered swing and the pitch served up uneven bounce.
He faced 30 deliveries in the PowerPlay – the most by any batter in that phase in IPL history – and made every ball count, hammering 60 runs off them in a whirlwind display.
Middle Overs: Markram holds firm even as MI chip away
Phase Score: LSG 77/3 (RR: 8.55, 4s/6s: 5/4)
Marsh fell to the very first ball he faced after the PowerPlay, chipping a return catch to Vignesh Puthur. The dismissal cracked open a window for Mumbai Indians to claw back, and skipper Hardik Pandya made the most of it. He struck with a sharp short ball to remove the dangerous Nicholas Pooran for just 12. Pandya wasn’t done yet. He extended Rishabh Pant’s lean start to IPL 2025, as the LSG captain mistimed a short ball that held up on the pitch, spooning a simple catch to mid-off. In the space of just 24 balls, LSG had lost three key wickets for 38 runs and were suddenly wobbling. That’s when Markram stepped in, steadying the innings with composure and control. He found an ideal partner in Ayush Badoni, and together they stitched a crucial 51-run stand off just 31 deliveries, dragging the LSG innings back on course
Death Overs: Hardik grabs maiden T20 five-fer but LSG breach 200
Phase Score: 57/5 (RR: 11.40; 4s/6s: 6/2)
Markram completed a 34-ball half-century but LSG’s push for late runs was pegged back by Pandya’s continued excellence. The MI skipper used his cutters into the wicket efficiently and forced LSG’s batters to hit to the longer boundaries. Three such deliveries accounted for Markram, David Miller and Akash Deep as Pandya completed his maiden T20 five-fer. Between those wickets, however, LSG still found useful runs, notably from the bat of Miller, who struck three fours and a six in his 14-ball 27 to power LSG to 203 – only the second 200+ score in Lucknow.
MUMBAI INDIANS
PowerPlay: Openers fall but Naman Dhir keeps MI on track
Phase Score: 64/2 (RR: 10.67; 4s/6s: 4/4)
Mumbai Indians lost both openers early, but Naman Dhir’s explosive cameo kept the chase alive. The returning Akash Deep made an immediate impact, removing Will Jacks in his first over as the Englishman mistimed a pull to deep square. Shardul Thakur then repeated the dose, dismissing Ryan Rickelton in identical fashion. Promoted to No.3, Dhir counterpunched in style. He tore into Deep in the fourth over, smashing 21 runs with two sixes and two fours – an over that flipped the PowerPlay back in MI’s favour. Suryakumar Yadav, easing his way in, added a six of his own as Mumbai raced to 64 for 2 after six overs, with Dhir blazing his way to 35 off just 15 balls.
Middle Overs: Suryakumar keeps MI in the hunt
Phase Score: 79/1 (RR: 8.78; 4s/6s: 11/0)
MI surged to 86 for 2 in just eight overs before Digvesh Rathi broke the momentum with a crucial breakthrough. His carrom ball snuck through Dhir’s defence, drawing a faint inside-edge that crashed into the stumps and ended the batter’s sparkling 24-ball 46. The 69-run third-wicket stand had laid a strong platform, but Rathi’s tidy spell began to apply the brakes. The young spinner was impressive, conceding just 10 runs in his first three overs. Tilak Varma, in particular, struggled to get going against him, battling to find rhythm. But Suryakumar Yadav kept the scoreboard ticking, finding regular boundaries to keep the chase alive. At the end of 13 overs, MI needed 79 from 42 balls-with the game finely poised. The India T20I captain got to a 31-ball half-century with a boundary off Ravi Bishnoi and another off Akash Deep to bring the equation to 61 off 30.
Death Overs: Shardul, Avesh hold nerve in tense finish
Phase Score: 48/2 (RR: 9.5, 4s/6s: 4/1)
LSG had a chance to break the partnership but Avesh Khan and Akash Deep fluffed an opportunity to effect a run-out. The former though atoned for that gaffe when he dismissed Suryakumar for 67 (42) after the batter walked across his crease to lap a ball but hit it too square and found the fielder at deep square-leg. That brought Pandya to the middle and the MI skipper drove the first ball – a full-toss – for four. But LSG continued to stack up good overs and Rathi bowled a very good 18th over before Shardul Thakur gave away just seven in the penultimate over when MI made the decision to pull Varma out. Avesh Khan was handed 22 runs to defend in the last over. He started on the back foot, conceding a six off the first ball, but held his nerve brilliantly thereafter. He nailed his yorkers under pressure, closing out a thrilling contest and sealing LSG’s second win of the season.
Brief scores:
Lucknow Super Giants 203/8 in 20 overs (Mitchell Marsh 60, Aiden Markram 53, Nicholas Pooran 12, Ayush Badoni 30, David Miller 27; Trent Boult 1-38, Ashwani Kumar 1-39, Vignesh Puthur 1-31, Hardik Pandya 5-36) beat Mumbai Indians 191/5 in 20 overs (Suryakumar Yadav 67, Naman Dhir 46, Ryan Rickelton 10, Tilak Vaema 25, Hardik Pandya 28*; Shardul Thakur 1-40, Akash Deep 1-46, Avesh Khan 1-40, Digvesh Rathi 1-21) by 12 runs
What’s next for the teams?
Mumbai Indians will return home to take on RCB on Monday (April 7). LSG will play the following day, against holders KKR in Kolkata.
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Sun directly overhead Kahawa, Meetiyagoda, Elamaldeniya, Ambakolawewa and Bundala at about 12:13 noon today (05th)

On the apparent northward relative motion of the sun, it is going to be directly over the latitudes of Sri Lanka from 05th to 14th of April this year.
The nearest areas of Sri Lanka over which the sun is overhead today (05th) are Kahawa, Meetiyagoda, Elamaldeniya, Ambakolawewa and Bundala at about 12:13 noon.
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Worst week for US stocks since Covid crash as China hits back on tariffs

Stock market turmoil deepened on Friday, as China hit back at tariffs announced by US President Donald Trump, raising the likelihood of an extended trade war and damage to the global economy.
All three major stock indexes in the US plunged more than 5%, with the S&P 500 dropping almost 6%, capping the worst week for the US stock market since 2020.
In the UK, the FTSE 100 plunged almost 5% – its steepest fall in five years, while Asian markets also dropped and exchanges in Germany and France faced similar declines.
Trump, who has vowed to remake the global trade order, dismissed concerns about the market shock, noting that the US labour market is strong.
“Hang tough,” he urged his followers on social media. “We can’t lose.”
The global stock market has lost trillions in value since Trump announced sweeping new 10% import taxes on goods from every country, with products from dozens of countries, including key trading partners such as China, the European Union and Vietnam, facing far higher rates.
Analysts say the moves, some of which are due to go into effect as soon as Saturday, amount to the biggest tax increase in the US since 1968.
They expect the measures to lead to a contraction in trade, and have warned they could drive many countries into an economic recession.
China responded to Trump on Friday by hitting US goods with import taxes of 34%, curbing exports of key minerals and adding American firms to its blacklist, describing Trump’s actions as “bullying” and a violation of international trade rules.
Other countries appear to be hoping they will be able to negotiate deals, despite conflicting signals from the White House about its appetite for talks.
Maroš Šefčovič, the trade commissioner for the EU, which has been planning to retaliate, said on Friday that he had had a “frank” two-hour exchange with US officials, and wrote on social media the trade relationship needed a “fresh approach”.
“The EU’s committed to meaningful negotiations, but also prepared to defend our interests,” he said. “We stay in touch.”
Trump’s moves are consistent with promises he made on the campaign trail last year.
But they were more far-reaching than some analysts had expected, triggering the worst week for the stock market since 2020, when the Covid-19 pandemic led to global shutdowns and other disruption.
The sell-off started with firms such as Apple and Nike, which rely heavily on suppliers in Asia. But on Friday, it moved into sectors that would typically not face the direct impact of tariffs, such as consumer staples, healthcare and utilities.
“Candidly the mood is pretty sour and it should be,” said Mike Dickson, head of research and quantitative strategies at Horizon Investments in the US, warning that it will take weeks to understand the impact of Trump’s tariffs.
[BBC]
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