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Sutherland’s sublime century and Hamilton’s night-time burst flatten India
Annabel Sutherland continued to produce heroics on the WACA ground after an imperious century was followed by superb bowling under lights late on day two as Australia moved to the brink of a crushing victory over India in the pink-ball Test.
On what has been a challenging surface, Sutherland made batting look like a breeze with her commanding 129 off 171 balls in Australia’s first innings grinding down India’s attack amid sweltering heat hitting 40 degrees Celsius.
It was her third straight Test ton and continued her affection for the WACA ground having memorably made 210 against South Africa two years ago. Sutherland’s average in Test cricket is now an astonishing 89.37 after 10 innings and her four tons are the most by an Australian.
Australia’s first innings was dominated by Sutherland and Ellyse Perry, with the pair combining for a 128-run fourth-wicket partnership. Perry, playing as a specialist batter after recovering from a quad strain, cracked 76 off 116 balls and in the process became Australia’s all time leading run scorer in Test cricket after passing Karen Rolton, who made 1002 runs from 1995-2009.
She backed up in the final session with the wickets of Jemimah Rodrigues and captain Harmanpreet Kaur as India capitulated in their second innings. There was the slim chance of another two-day Test in this Australian season but debutant Pratika Rawal and Sneh Rana held firm in the last 25 minutes.
Trailing by 125 runs, India’s second innings started disastrously when Darcie Brown claimed a wicket on the second delivery with Smriti Mandhana bowled off the inside edge in shades of her first innings dismissal.
Left-armer Lucy Hamilton continued her outstanding debut when she nicked off Shafali Verma before Rodrigues came out blazing. But she had something of a brain fade after unfurling the ramp shot to disastrous results before Harmpanpreet was caught at third slip.
Hamilton was keen to wrap things up after dismissing Deepti Sharma – a superb set-up with a bouncer followed by a fuller delivery which zipped between bat and pad – and Richa Ghosh within the space of three deliveries.
Even though India hung on to reach stumps, Australia are almost certain to claim victory and a decisive 12-4 triumph in the multi-format series.
There remains an unknown whether skipper Alyssa Healy will bat again in the final match of her legendary international career.
Australia resumed at 96 for 3 at the start of the day’s play and were ominously poised after Sutherland and Perry defied India’s surge under lights on the previous night.
They relished the easier batting conditions under the baking sun as India quickly wilted with their new pace attack unable to conjure the type of rampant swing that troubled the Australia batters late on day one.
Harmanpreet desperately rang the changes, with six bowlers used in the opening hour and she resorted to spin which only accounted for one of the 13 wickets on the first day.
Perry reached a 70-ball half-century in style when she smashed Rana over the deep midwicket boundary for just the second six of her Test career.
She also showed deft touch to pierce gaps in the field and keep a flagging India side feeling flustered. Sutherland also reached her half-century in 70 balls and she was in fine touch with arguably her best stroke of the session being a glorious straight drive that rocketed to the boundary.
It appeared that the pair were in for the very long haul until Perry out of nowhere was hit on the pads by Deepti after playing back to a delivery that didn’t bounce as much as she expected.
India’s catching has been mostly outstanding – the one facet where they’ve bettered their counterparts so far in this match – other than Rana dropping a straightforward chance at slip on Beth Mooney’s second ball.
Mooney was scratchy but still provided support for Sutherland in an important 56-run partnership that soared Australia into a first innings lead. Sutherland went into the tea break unbeaten on 93 and she didn’t have long to wait to reach her milestone although it was reached in ungainly fashion after a top-edge flew to the boundary.
She raised her bat to all parts of the terraces, where her father James Sutherland – the former Cricket Australia chief executive – was beaming with pride just like he did last month at the same ground when Will Sutherland scored a century for Victoria in the Sheffield Shield.
Australia had moved into a commanding position with India looking on the brink of spiralling until they unexpectedly hit back with four quick wickets. Mooney was brilliantly caught at short extra cover by Rodrigues, who snared her third brilliant catch of the innings.
Debutant Kranti Gaud had a tougher time of it in the day conditions after impressing under lights, but her persistence was rewarded when she bowled Ashleigh Gardner.
Sutherland had made batting look far easier than everyone else, but her brilliant knock finally ended when she wearily holed out as Australia were in danger of letting their stranglehold slip.
But Hamilton and Alana King added an important 34-run partnership for the ninth wicket as Australia stretched their innings into the final session. Hamilton showed why she is rated a potential allrounder after making 23 off 54 balls – the third highest score of the innings.
They batted long enough to ensure that India’s batters had to face the music under the lights.
Brief scores:
India Women 198 in 62.4 overs and 105 for 6 in 29 overs (Pratika Rawal 43*; Lucy Hamilton 3-32, Annabel Sutherland 2-15) trail Australia Women 323 in 90.4 overs (Annabel Sutherland 129, Ellyse Perry 76; Sayali Satghare 4-50, Kranti Gaud 2-72. Deepti Sharma 2-67) by 20 runs
[Cricinfo]
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India offered sanctuary to Iranian ship three days before US sank it
The Iranian warship Iris Dena was given permission by India to dock three days before it was torpedoed by a US submarine, India has said.
Foreign Minister S Jaishankar said Iran had sought permission for three of its ships to dock at Indian ports on 28 February – the day the US and Israel began a war on Iran – and permission was granted by India on 1 March.
The ships’ movements between 1 and 4 March are not clear and nor is why only one of them made it to India.
The sinking of the Iris Dena, with 130 sailors on board, in international waters off Sri Lanka’s southern coast on 4 March marked a dramatic widening of the war – and raised questions about India’s authority in its backyard.
It was the first military strike outside the Middle East since the US and Israel launched their war on Iran. President Donald Trump has said destroying Iran’s navy is one aim of the assault.
The three Iranian ships – Iris Dena, Iris Bushehr and Iris Lavan – had all participated in a military exercise hosted by India between 15 and 25 February in the coastal city of Visakhapatnam.
They left Indian waters on 25 February and were likely to have been in international waters on 28 February – when the US and Israel began attacking Iran.
“The Iranian side had requested permission on 28 February for three ships in the region to dock at our ports. This was accorded on 1 March,” Jaishankar told parliament on Monday. “Iris Lavan actually docked on 4 March in Kochi. The crew is currently in Indian naval facilities. We believe that this was the right thing to do.”

On 4 March, Iris Dena sank after being hit by a torpedo fired from a US submarine, killing at least 87 of its crew members.
According to the Indian Navy, the Iris Dena was operating about 20 nautical miles – roughly 23 miles (37km) – west of Galle in waters that fall under Sri Lanka’s designated search-and-rescue zone on the day it was struck.
The US tracks vessels across the world’s oceans, and a quarter of its submarine fleet of 65-70 is at sea at any given time, according to analysts.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said last week the US had “perpetrated an atrocity at sea, 2,000 miles away from Iran’s shores” and that the warship was “struck in international waters without warning.”
Later, Sri Lanka said it had provided sanctuary for Iris Bushehr on 5 March, a day after it requested for docking following an engine malfunction.
Eventually, India also confirmed that Iris Lavan was docked in its southern city Kochi.
The BBC has written to the Iranian embassy in India and India’s external affairs ministry seeking clarification on the movements of the three Iranian naval vessels after Delhi granted them permission to dock.
US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth has touted the attack on Iris Dena as an example of America’s military prowess, claiming it was “the first sinking of an enemy ship by a torpedo since World War Two”.
While it is the first time since 1945 that an American submarine has sunk an enemy ship this way, the UK and Pakistan have both sunk vessels using torpedoes since then.
The Iris Dena was one of about 20 Iranian navy vessels destroyed since Israel and the US launched co-ordinated strikes on Iran.
[BBC]
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Afghanistan-Sri Lanka white-ball series set to be postponed due to West Asia conflict
The white ball series between Afghanistan and Sri Lanka, scheduled to be held in the UAE from March 13 to 25, is likely to be postponed indefinitely due to the ongoing military conflict in West Asia.
While neither ACB nor SLC has issued an official statement, ESPNcricinfo has learned that both boards have agreed the series cannot take place in the UAE, keeping the ongoing crisis in mind. While both boards are still discussing alternatives, the bilateral series is unlikely to be shifted elsewhere due to logistical challenges.
The series comprising six white-ball matches was scheduled to start on March 13 starting with the three T20Is. The T20I leg was scheduled in Sharjah – on March 13, 15 and 17 – while the three ODIs were scheduled in Dubai on March 20, 22 and 25.
The series was set to be Afghanistan’s first under Ibrahim Zadran’s leadership, with the opener taking over the reins from Rashid Khan after a group-stage exit in the World Cup.
Last week, six matches of the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup League 2 in Nepal involving Oman, UAE and the hosts were postponed because of the conflict.
The travel plans of several teams that were in India and Sri Lanka for the men’s T20 World Cup have also been disrupted owing to airspaces being closed or limited in West Asia.
Despite being knocked out over the last week, the contingents from West Indies and South Africa have been stuck in Kolkata, and received clarity only on Sunday, that they will be flying out on Tuesday.
[Cricinfo]
Latest News
Sri Lanka appoint Gary Kirsten as men’s head coach
Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) has officially announced the appointment of Gary Kirsten as the new head coach of the men’s national team. Kirsten, who comes with a hefty coaching pedigree, will take over the reins on April 15 on a two-year contract that runs until April 14 2028.
The former South Africa batter will take over a Sri Lankan side seeking stability and a blueprint for consistency in the modern game. While outgoing head coach Sanath Jayasuriya was undoubtedly a household name, Kirsten is without question the most blockbuster appointment to the position in Sri Lanka’s history.
He famously guided India to their 2011 ICC Cricket World Cup victory. And under his tenure, South Africa reached the top of the Test rankings. Most recently, he served as a consultant for Namibia during the 2026 ICC Men’s T20 World Cup.
As a player, Kirsten was a stalwart for South Africa, amassing over 14,000 international runs and becoming the first from his country to reach 100 Test matches.
Kirsten hopes to join a long line of non-Sri Lankan coaches who have significantly influenced the nation’s cricketing history. This tradition includes Dav Whatmore, who orchestrated the historic 1996 World Cup win; Tom Moody and Trevor Bayliss, who led the team to World Cup finals in 2007 and 2011; and Chris Silverwood, the most recent foreign head coach before Sanath Jayasuriya took over as interim and then full-time coach in late 2024.
The appointment comes at a critical juncture following the team’s limp exit from the 2026 T20 World Cup, and marks a pointed departure from the post-2024 World Cup pivot towards coaches with more local knowledge.
Jayasuriya, who officially resigned as head coach following the tournament’s conclusion, will now lead the High Performance Centre. Sri Lanka enjoyed historic home successes in 2024 under his leadership – including a first ODI series win against India in 27 years – but their recent World Cup campaign ended in the Super Eight after disappointing losses to England and New Zealand.
Sri Lanka’s campaign was marked by competing philosophies, with batters in particular seemingly lacking clarity in their roles. SLC, in a media release, stated that the “appointment of the new head coach is part of Sri Lanka Cricket’s efforts to revamp the structure of the National High Performance Center,” and Kirsten will first and foremost be tasked with establishing a clear path to success.
With the 2027 men’s ODI World Cup set to be held in his native South Africa, alongside Namibia and Zimbabwe, Kirsten’s intimate knowledge of those conditions would have also likely played a role in his hire, but SLC will be hoping that his impact will be longer lasting and help build a winning culture similar to those he helped established in India and South Africa.
[Cricinfo]
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