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Thousands march in Iran to mourn Raisi on final day of funeral rites
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Thousands have marched in Iran for the final day of funeral rites for President Ebrahim Raisi, who died in a helicopter crash earlier this week.
Raisi, 63, died on Sunday alongside his foreign minister and six others when their helicopter crashed in the country’s mountainous northwest while returning from a dam inauguration.
Thousands of people, holding placards of Raisi and waving flags, marched in the eastern city of Birjand on Thursday morning to bid him farewell.
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who announced five days of mourning for those who died in the crash, led prayers in Tehran on Wednesday for Raisi’s funeral.
Raisi will be laid to rest at the holy shrine of Imam Reza, a mausoleum in the city of Mashhad, where the ultraconservative president was born.
He will become the first top politician in the country to be buried at the shrine, representing a significant honour for the former leader.
Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian will also be buried on Thursday at the shrine of Shah Abdol-Azim in the town of Shahr-e Rey.
(Aljazeera)
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India, New Zealand battle for Group A supremacy
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In a telling remark about Indian cricket last year, Stephen Fleming had said: “Looking at the amount of talent that is on the show… I am very jealous.” The former New Zealand skipper was comparing the talent in India with the resources in New Zealand. He was reminded that New Zealand still constantly manage to beat India in global events. He just shrugged it off with a laugh.
It is no laughing matter, of course. The numbers speak for themselves. A 5-10 record in global tournaments, including a win in the World Test Championship (WTC) final, skews the balance heavily in the favour of the Black Caps. New Zealand also triumphed in the only face-off in this competition, back in the final of the ICC Knockout 2000. Sunday’s clash in the 2025 Champions Trophy will not affect qualification – both teams are already through – but it’ll decide which of these teams finish top of Group A and carry momentum with them into the knockouts.
There may be an underlying reason for New Zealand’s dominance despite the lack of resources. Without the pressure of constant competition, the Kiwis play with a sense of security – they don’t have to prove themselves every day to retain their spots, something KL Rahul touched upon ahead of the game. “There is – I won’t lie,” Rahul admitted, acknowledging the constant competition with Rishabh Pant, on Friday.
Mike Hesson, former coach of New Zealand, gave his take to Cricbuzz on the Black Caps hegemony. “Look, New Zealand players are really well-drilled, very well-coached. They all know their roles very clearly because there’s not a huge amount of competition. They all know that they’re not playing for their place every day. So they understand what’s required to win the game, and they play as a team. And I think that’s a huge advantage in tournament play.
“You don’t get overawed. And in terms of, you know, India’s superiority, obviously they’ve got a lot of talented players, but so do New Zealand… so I wouldn’t underestimate them. And as I said, the key part of the Black Caps’ success is understanding the role definitions and playing as a team on the field, obviously, throwing their body on the line in the field. So they’ve pretty much outfielded everybody, and I would imagine they’ll do the same in the semifinal.”
India, though, can count a victory in their last meeting on the world stage as a positive. They registered a convincing, comprehensive and clinical win in the semifinals of the 2023 World Cup in Mumbai where all in the current top order – Rohit Sharma, Shubman Gill, Virat Kohli, Shreyas Iyer, and KL Rahul – fired. India will aim to repeat that imperious display on Sunday.
India may try to give some game time to those who haven’t played yet. Rohit batted for a long time on Friday night alleviating concerns of a hamstring niggle, yet it may not be a surprise if he decides to rest himself. Mohammed Shami, coming from a knee surgery, and Kuldeep Yadav could be given a break for Arshdeep Singh and Varun Chakaravarthy.
“I am sure there will be some temptation and we have been in these positions before where if there is an opportunity where you can try out the players who haven’t gotten games. They do get a game, but I don’t know if that will happen in a Champions Trophy,” Rahul said on Friday. He then added: “This is my version. I don’t know, it might be very different tomorrow.”
It is unlikely that it’ll be very different from what Rahul thinks.
India may opt to make a couple of changes, though it remains unclear whether they will rest skipper Rohit Sharma. The captain is nursing a hamstring injury, but he appeared to be fine on Friday night after batting for an extended period. Mohammed Shami could make way for Arshdeep Singh, with Varun Chakravarthy potentially coming in for Kuldeep Yadav.
The already-qualified Black Caps too will be tempted to give players carrying niggles a breather before the knockouts. That said, Daryl Mitchell, is fit again after missing the Bangladesh game with illness. Who he replaces in the XI will be a dilemma for Santner and Stead given the player who replaced Mitchell, Rachin Ravindra, hit a fine hundred. Incidentally, Ravindra, who was injured before his return against Bangladesh, was replaced by Will Young, who also has a century in this tournament
India Playing XI: Rohit Sharma (c), Shubman Gill, Virat Kohli, Shreyas Iyer, KL Rahul (wk), Hardik Pandya, Axar Patel, Ravindra Jadeja, Harshit Rana, Arshdeep Singh, Varun Chakaravarthy
New Zealand Playing XI: Will Young, Devon Conway, Kane Williamson, Rachin Ravindra, Tom Latham (wk), Glenn Phillips, Michael Bracewell, Mitchell Santner (c), Matt Henry, Kyle Jamieson, William O’Rourke.
[Cricbuzz]
Foreign News
European leaders back Zelensky after Trump clash
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European leaders have rallied behind Volodymyr Zelensky after Donald Trump’s furious exchange with the Ukrainian president in the White House.
The leaders of Germany, France, Spain, Poland and the Netherlands were among those who posted social media messages backing Ukraine – with Zelensky responding directly to each one to thank them for their support.
The Ukrainian president has arrived in London to attend a summit hosted by UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer who “retains unwavering support for Ukraine”, Downing Street said.
It comes after extraordinary scenes in the Oval Office on Friday as US President Trump clashed with Zelensky, telling him to make a deal with Russia “or we are out”.
[BBC]
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Bowlers, Klaasen and van der Dussen complete England rout
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South Africa comfortably completed a thorough thrashing of an out-of-sorts England with a seven-wicket victory in Karachi, heading to the semis in style. They’d locked in their spot in the top-four by the halfway stage after bundling out England for just 179. Heinrich Klaasen made a seamless return to the side after missing the tournament opener through injury, notching up his fifth successive half-century in the format. Rassie van der Dussen scored his fifty too, and added 127 runs for the third wicket with Klaasen before wrapping up the game in the 30th over.
The England bowlers started slightly better than their batters as Jofra Archer struck twice in the PowerPlay. Tristan Stubbs fell for a five-ball duck in his first-ever opening gig in professional cricket when he played a ball onto his stumps in the third over. Saqib Mahmood then offered Ryan Rickleton a reprieve but Archer ensured that didn’t matter as he knocked back the stumps of the other opener in the ninth over. But England struggled to break through any further as van der Dussen and Klaasen put their side comfortably on course to surmount the small target ahead of them.
Jos Buttler tried throwing everything at the pair in search of a wicket. One of England’s best bowlers – Adil Rashid – tried in vain from both ends to break the partnership. Buttler even brought back Archer for his eighth over, in just the 21st of the innings. Klaasen back foot-punched the quick twice to mark his first game of the tournament with a 41-ball 50. By the halfway of the chase, van der Dussen brought up his fifty. With just six to get, Rashid ended the partnership with the wicket of Klaasen but David Miller sealed the chase with a straight six in the 30th over.
This humbling end to England’s woeful Champions Trophy campaign originated in the first half, when Buttler chose to bat in the hope of repeating what South Africa did to Afghanistan at the venue. What transpired though was disappointingly contrasting for his side. Marco Jansen sent the trio of Phil Salt, Jamie Smith and Ben Duckett packing by the seventh over. A 62-run partnership between Joe Root and Harry Brook turned out to be the best England could offer, as their downward spiral hastened once Keshav Maharaj dismissed Brook, through a sensational catch from Jansen.
Root, who started well, was then cleaned up by Wiaan Mulder, while Maharaj lured Liam Livingstone out of his crease to have him stumped. Jos Buttler and Jofra Archer showed a modicum of resistance in a 42-run stand but that barely moved the needle for England. Mulder dismissed the latter and finished with figures of 3-25 in 7.2 overs as England folded in the 39th over. Any hopes that Archer kindled with his opening spell were clinically crushed by the South African batters as the chase was wrapped up with 125 balls to spare.
Brief Scores:
England 179 in 38.2 overs (Joe Root 37; Wiaan Mulder 3-25, Marco Jansen 3-39, Keshav Maharaj 2-35) lost to South Africa 181/3 in 29.1 overs (Rassie van der Dussen 72*, Heinrich Klaasen 64; Jofra Archer 2-55) by 7 wickets
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