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Travishek, Klaasen outmuscle Mumbai Indians as Sunrisers Hyderabad chase 244 for fifth straight win

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Ryan Rickelton brought up his century off 44 balls [Cricinfo]

Ryan Rickelton played one of the innings of IPL 2026, an unbeaten 123 off 55 balls, the highest ever score by a Mumbai Indians batter in the tournament’s history. But it still wasn’t enough against the batting might of Sunrisers Hyderabad in another run-fest at Wankhede Stadium. MI went against the grain and batted first for the first time in 22 games at Wankhede Stadium. Led by Rickelton’s sensational ton, they amassed 243 for 5, their highest first-innings score in the IPL. SRH hardly broke a sweat in chasing it down by six wickets and eight balls to spare.

Abhishek Sharma and Travis Head added 129 runs for the opening wicket, with 92 coming in the powerplay. Heinrich Klassen thrashed an unbeaten 65 off 30, while Salil Arora smoked 30 not out off ten balls to hand SRH the fourth highest successful chase in the IPL and their fifth straight win of the season.

Just eight games into the season, MI were already into the fourth opening partnership, this time with Will Jacks and Rickelton. Their powerplay run-rate of 8.55 coming into this game was the fourth-worst of the season. But it was fourth-time lucky for MI.

The two immediately found the pace of the surface, matching each other shot for shot. Jacks ended the first six overs on 38 off 18 with five fours and two sixes; Rickelton ended with 37 off 18 with three fours and three sixes. MI amassed 78 in the powerplay, their second-highest score this season in this phase.

MI raced to 93 in just seven overs but Nitish Kumar Reddy struck a timely blow, getting Jacks to edge a fuller ball to the wicketkeeper. Suryakumar Yadav’s rotten season continued as he top-edged an Eshan Malinga bouncer to deep-backward square leg but Rickelton wasn’t relenting. He began his IPL 2026 with an 81 against Kolkata Knight Riders, but three single-digit scores in the next four games and Quinton de Kock’s surge in form forced him to spend time on the sidelines. But with de Kock injured, Rickelton was back and how.

When Reddy dismissed Jacks, Rickelton struck him for a four and six in the same over to reach a 23-ball half-century, his quickest in the IPL. Pat Cummins and Sakib Hussain were both picked for boundaries before Harsh Dubey was thumped for back-to-back sixes. Rickelton raced through the nineties by thumping Reddy for a four and six in the 15th over and then reached a maiden IPL ton in 44 balls, the quickest by a MI batter ever. He struck at 300 against Reddy [24 off eight], 314.28 against Dubey [22 off seven] and 270 against Hinge [27 off ten]. At the other end, Hardik Pandya also found form, as MI raced to 202 for 3 after 16.

But SRH made a fine comeback in the death overs, led by Malinga, who finished with 1 for 29, an economy of just 7.25. Cummins also bowled a boundary-less 17th over but Rickelton ended the innings on a high with a six and four. Despite that MI added just 41 in the last four overs.

When the second innings began, the win probability was 77.60% in MI’s favour; by the end of the powerplay it had ticked to 58% in SRH’s favour. It was ruthless hitting from Head and Abhishek, who spared no one, not even Jasprit Bumrah. Head rode his luck. No one appealed when he edged Boult to the keeper in the third over. He was dropped twice, too.

In between he smacked the MI bowlers around. Abhishek smoked Boult for a six over extra cover second ball, before taking Bumrah downtown. Head thrashed Boult for three sixes and the duo then took 19 off a Will Jacks over. By the time the powerplay was done, Bumrah had gone for 28 off his first two overs, Boult 29 off two and SRH were going at 15.33 an over. The dew had now taken full effect and MI had little answers.

Head raced to his fifty off 20 balls, but Ghazanfar struck to give MI hope. He first had Abhishek miscue to backward point, and then had the in-form Ishan Kishan chop back on first ball. And when Hardik had Head mistiming to extra cover, SRH had lost three wickets in two overs to go from 129 for 0 to 133 for 3.

With the required rate 11 an over, Klaasen broke free. He first took on Ghazanfar, thrashing him for a four and six, peppering the deep-midwicket fence. Then he crashed four fours in an Ashwani Kumar over to bring the required rate to 9.50 an over. He didn’t spare Bumrah either, sending him over extra cover for a sumptuous six and soon raised a 22-ball fifty by doing the same to Ghazanfar two overs later.

By the start of the 17th over, SRH’s required rate was just 8 an over. Reddy fell to Boult but Arora showed his big-hitting prowess. He caressed Boult past backward point first ball but the standout was a no-look straight six against Bumrah, who finished with figures of 4-0-54-0 . He then went 4, 6, dot, 6 against Hardik, finishing with a cross-batted swipe over deep midwicket. This was the highest ever successful run chase at Wankhede at the IPL, and MI’s fourth loss at the venue this season.

With the win, SRH have moved to third on the points table, while MI remain ninth.

Brief scores:
Sunrisers Hyderabad 249 for 4 in 18.4 overs (Abhishek Sharma 45, Travis Head 76, Heinrich Klaasen 65*,  Nitish Kumar Reddy 21, Salil Arora 30*; Trent Boult 1-41, AM Ghazanfar 2-51, Hardik Pandya  1-31) beat Mumbai Indians 243 for 5 in 20 overs (Will Jacks 46, Ryan Rickelton 123*, Naman Dhir 22, Hardik Pandya 31; Praful Hinge 2-54, Eshan Malinga 1-29, Sakib Hussain 1-39, Nitish Kumar Reddy 1-31) by six wickets

[Cricinfo]



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Attacks on Ebola centres intensify in eastern DRC amid outbreak fears

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Health workers wearing protective equipment gather to disinfect the isolation area for Ebola patients at the General Referral Hospital of Mongbwalu [Aljazeera]

Attacks on Ebola health facilities are intensifying in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) as the World Health Organization warns the outbreak could worsen in the DRC and Uganda

On Thursday, the Rwampara health centre was stormed by a group of angry residents demanding the bodies of relatives who had died from Ebola, according to local sources. The incident was also confirmed by partners of the Congolese government involved in the response in the area.

A day later, a tent provided by Doctors Without Borders, also known by its acronym MSF, at a hospital in Mongbwalu in Ituri province was set on fire.

“Following the death of a patient showing symptoms of Ebola virus disease in one of the tents, healthcare staff isolated the body in line with strict health protocols,” the NGO Alliance for International Medical Action (ALIMA) said in a statement sent to Al Jazeera.

It said that while the body was being prepared for burial, tensions flared, resulting in the burning of two tents.

“Despite this incident, the teams were also able to secure the body of the deceased patient in preparation for a dignified and safe burial, in accordance with Ebola response standards,” ALIMA added.

Health workers in Ebola-hit areas of the eastern DRC have repeatedly faced resistance from communities over strict burial protocols, which require specialised handling of bodies to prevent further transmission of the virus. Aid agencies said the tensions are often driven by fear, rumours and mistrust of medical teams.

“Some people here believe that Ebola is a business,” said Gloire Idriss, a resident of Rwampara who witnessed the scene. “When healthcare providers refuse to hand over the bodies of those who have died from Ebola, people think they might be trafficking their organs.”

The Congolese health minister has said the bodies of Ebola victims remain highly contagious and must be handled only by trained teams in protective gear.

“Let us bury the deceased safely,” Roger Kamba told Radio France Internationale. “The dead must not take others with them into the grave.”

A health worker wearing protective equipment prepares disinfectant materials as she gets ready to disinfect the isolation area for Ebola patients at the General Referral Hospital of Mongbwalu in Mongbwalu [AFP]
A health worker wearing protective equipment prepares disinfectant materials as she gets ready to disinfect the isolation area for Ebola patients at the General Referral Hospital of Mongbwalu in Mongbwalu [Aljazeera]

In the eastern DRC, it is customary for relatives and neighbours to gather at the home of the deceased to pay their last respects, and some mourners touch the body as a final act of farewell.

“When my daughter died of Ebola last month, the medical team came to bury her. We didn’t get to say our final goodbyes. It still upsets me that I had to watch her funeral helplessly without our cultural rites,” said Lokana Jean, a 40-year-old resident of Mongbwalu. Name changed for privacy reasons.

“Under normal circumstances, I would have held her close and felt her final warmth,” he told Al Jazeera.

As of Saturday, nearly 180 people had died from the disease and close to 800 cases had been recorded, according to the Congolese Ministry of Public Health.

Authorities in Ituri have introduced measures to try to slow transmission, including limits on public gatherings, suspension of wake services and a ban on moving bodies between locations.

Rodriguez Kisando, a doctor specialising in health and the environment, said violence targeting Ebola treatment facilities is being driven by rumours and misinformation.

“When an epidemic breaks out, rumours spread quickly. If accurate information is not shared fast, people will believe anything, and that is when violence takes hold,” he told Al Jazeera.

He warned that attacks on treatment centres along with patients fleeing before completing care could speed up the spread of the disease.

“As long as there are scenes of violence and sick people escape from Ebola treatment centres before they are cured, the disease will continue spreading. This is extremely serious,” he said.

Residents gather to inspect the remains of Residents gather to inspect the remains of a burnt medical tent at the General Referral Hospital of Mongbwalu [AFP]
Residents gather to inspect the remains of a burnt medical tent at the General Referral Hospital of Mongbwalu [Aljazeera]

Amid a sharp decline in international aid, Congolese authorities said the national treasury is covering a large share of the response, and shortages are becoming more visible.

ALIMA said resources for detecting, treating and preventing Ebola remain severely inadequate and called for more international support.

A senior Congolese official involved in the response in Rwampara, speaking on condition of anonymity, said treatment centres were overwhelmed.

“We are receiving new confirmed cases almost every day. The resources we have are not enough for the scale of the outbreak,” he said.

Authorities in Ituri and North Kivu are urging residents to wash their hands regularly, keep their distance from the sick, cook food thoroughly, avoid self-medication and trust response teams.

The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention has placed 10 African countries on high alert: South Sudan, Rwanda, Kenya, Tanzania, Ethiopia, the Republic of Congo, Burundi, Angola, the Central African Republic and Zambia.

The DRC, Uganda and South Sudan have agreed to strengthen cross-border coordination, including surveillance, early warning systems, border monitoring and improved laboratory and response capacity.

[Aljazeera]

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Oil prices fall amid mixed signals on US-Iran peace deal

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Vessels sail in the Strait of Hormuz, Iran, on May 22, 2026 [Aljazeera]

Oil prices have fallen sharply amid tentative hopes for a deal to end the US-Israel war on Iran.

Brent crude, the primary benchmark for global oil prices, fell about 5 percent on Sunday as US President Donald Trump gave mixed signals on the prospects for a permanent end to the conflict.

Brent futures for July stood at $98.47 a barrel as of 01:05 GMT, down about 9 percent from a month ago but still up by more than a third compared with before the start of the war.

Japan’s benchmark stock index, the Nikkei 225, surged more than 3 percent in morning trading, hitting an all-time high after closing at a record peak on Friday.

Trump said in a social media post on Sunday that negotiations with Tehran were proceeding in an “orderly and constructive manner”, but he had instructed officials “not to rush into a deal”.

“Both sides must take their time and get it right. There can be no mistakes!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

Trump’s remarks came after he raised hopes for a breakthrough on Saturday by announcing that a deal had been “largely negotiated,” with the terms including the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.

“Fundamentally, there is no change to the underlying picture, where 10-11 million barrels per day of crude oil continue to be shut-in for every day the Strait of Hormuz remains shut,” June Goh, a senior oil market analyst at Sparta in Singapore, told Al Jazeera.

“However, markets are expecting a gush of 100 million barrels of crude oil from the stranded ships to flow out once the deal is in place.”

Goh said markets are likely to remain on edge for some time after any deal is finalised.

“Sparta estimates still about three to six months required to get everything back to status quo, including time to bring production and refineries back online,” Goh said.

Iran has effectively blockaded the strait since the start of the war in late February, disrupting about one-fifth of the global oil trade.

The US has imposed its own blockade of Iranian ports since mid-April, further disrupting commercial shipping in the waterway.

In his Truth Social post on Sunday, Trump said the US blockade would remain “in full force and effect until an agreement is reached, certified, and signed”.

[Aljazeera]

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Kuldeep and Rahul help Delhi Capitals sign off with big win

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KL Rahul ended his IPL 2026 with a solid fifty [Cricinfo]

Chasing the fourth playoffs spot, Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) entered their match against Delhi Capitals (DC) at Eden Gardens hoping Mumbai Indians beat Rajasthan Royals at the Wankhede Stadium. In that case, KKR would have needed to chase down their target in about 12 overs to pip Punjab Kings on net run rate and finish in the top four. But with Mumbai losing, both PBKS and KKR were knocked out, reducing this match to a dead rubber as early as the fourth over of the first innings.

In the end, KKR lost this game as well. After DC rode on KL Rahul’s 30-ball 60 to post 203 for 5, KKR were 126 for 3 after 13 overs. Kuldeep Yadav then dismissed Ajinkya Rahane and Rinku Singh off successive deliveries to derail them. Eventually, KKR were all out for 163 in 18.4 overs.

After opting to bowl, KKR started with left-arm spinner Anukul Roy to left-hand batter Abishek Porel. After two dots, Porel picked up two successive fours to make it a ten-run over. Left-arm seamer Saurabh Dubey, though, was effective. Sharing the new ball, he found movement off the seam and also used the slower ball to good effect. He conceded only five runs from his two overs in the powerplay and had Porel caught behind. Porel was dropped by Tejasvi Dahiya off Kartik Tyagi off 18 but could add only four more to his tally.

In the last over of the powerplay, Sahil Parakh also got a reprieve. He was on 7 when he reversed-swept Sunil Narine towards cover-point where Rinku grassed the chance. Narine eventually had him caught at extra cover for 24 off 17.

Rahul showed his class once again, especially against Narine. In the eighth over, he stepped out twice in a row and hit him for a six and a four. In the spinner’s next over, he launched him over long-on from the crease for another six. In all, Rahul hit Narine for 21 off nine balls. He reached his fifty off 25 balls before dragging Roy to long-on.

After Rahul’s wicket, Axar Patel and David Miller kept DC going. They added 41 off just 25 balls before Axar holed out to long-on trying a third six off Varun Chakravarthy’s final over. He made 39 off 25 balls. Dubey conceded only eight in the 18th over but Miller spoiled his figures somewhat in the 20th by hitting him for two sixes. The seamer had the last laugh, though, as he had Miller caught at mid-off off a full toss. Dubey was denied a third wicket by Dahiya, who dropped Ashutosh Sharma off the final delivery of the innings. Ashutosh, once again, played a handy knock of 18 not out off 11.

Finn Allen opened his account with a first-ball four off Mitchell Starc. In the bowler’s next over, he hit him for a six and a four off successive balls. From the other end, Rahane smashed back-to-back sixes off Auqib Nabi to take KKR to 43 after four overs. Lungi Ngidi provided some relief when he had Allen chopping on in a four-run fifth over. With Axar conceding only eight in the sixth, KKR ended the powerplay on 55 for 1.

Just when it looked like KKR were falling behind the asking rate, Rahane and Manish Pandey combined to hit Axar for three sixes in a 21-run eighth over. But Ngidi struck once again – he dismissed Pandey for 25, courtesy an excellent diving catch by Starc at long-on. In the next over, Kuldeep had Cameron Green caught at long-off, leaving KKR 96 for 3 in the tenth over.

Rahane brought up his fifty, his second of the season, off 31 balls but Kuldeep had him and Rinku caught in the deep off successive deliveries to dent KKR’s chase. He missed the hat-trick only because Porel put down Dahiya behind the stumps. Dahiya couldn’t capitalise on the reprieve and fell to Axar soon after.

When substitute fielder Sameer Rizvi’s direct hit from long-off found Rovman Powell short at the non-striker’s end, the end was swift. There was no Narine with the bat, as Allen had replaced him as Impact Player during the first innings itself, and the lower order didn’t have the skills to deal with Starc and Ngidi. All told, KKR lost their last seven wickets for 37 runs.

Brief scores:
Delhi Capitals 203 for 5 in 20 overs  (Abhishek Porel 22, KL Rahul 60, Sahil Parakh 24, Axar Patel 39,David Miller 28, Ashutosh Sharma 18*; Anukul Roy 1-23, Saurabh  Dubey 2-28, Sunil Narine 1-38, Varun Chakravarthy 1-35) beat Kolkata Knight Riders 163 in 18.4 overs (Ajinkya Rahane 63,Finn Allen 20, Manish Pandey 25,  Rovman Powell 29; Mitchell Starc 2-26,  Lungi Ngidi 3-27, Axar Patl 1-38, Kuldeep Yadav 3-29) by 40 runs

[Cricinfo]

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