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Williams stars in Zimbabwe’s record win

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Sean Williams struck 174

Led by Sean Williams’s career-best 174 – his seventh ODI century – Zimbabwe registered a 304-run win over USA, in Harare. Zimbabwe’s fourth successive victory in the tournament was also the second-highest victory margin in ODIs.

Put in to bat, Zimbabwe made a strong start with Innocent Kaia and Joylord Gumbie stitching a 56-run stand for the opening wicket. However, even after Kaia fell on 32, USA couldn’t seize control. Williams and Gumbie added 160 runs for the second wicket to keep Zimbabwe in command. Gumbie fell on 78 but Williams continued to accelerate in the company of Sikandar Raza and Ryan Burl, adding quickfire stands of 88 and 81 respectively. Williams ended up with 21 boundaries and five sixes as Zimbabwe posted 408 for 6.

In response, USA’s chase flattened out early. Richard Ngarava and Ryan Burl ripped through the top order. A couple of run outs also helped as USA lost five wickets within the first 10 overs, with all five batters departing for single-digit scores. A recovery was beyond possible for them. Despite some minor contributions from the rest of the batters, they folded for 104.

Brief Scores:

Zimbabwe 408/6 in 50 overs (Sean Williams 174, Joylord Gumbie 78; Abhishek Paradkar 3-78, Jessy Singh 2-97) beat USA 104 in 25.1 overs (Abhishek Paradkar 24; Sikandar Raza 2-15, Richard Ngarava 2-25) by 304 runs



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Rear Admiral R.Joseph appointed Director General of the Department of Coastal Conservation

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The Cabinet of Ministers approved the resolution furnished by the President in his capacity as the Minister of Defense to appoint Rear Admiral R.Joseph to the post of Director General at the Department of Coastal Conservation with immediate effect.

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Mrs. A.M.S. Malkanthi, appointed Director General of the Department of Treasury Operations

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The Cabinet of Ministers approved the resolution furnished by the President in his capacity as the Minister of Finance, Planning and Economic Development to appoint Mrs. A.M.S. Malkanthi, a special grade officer in Sri Lanka Accountants’ Service currently serving in a post of Additional Director General at the Department of Public Finance to the post of Director General of the Department of Treasury Operations with immediate effect.

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Nervous Pakistan face Namibia with final Super Eight spot on the line

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Salman Agha gives a pep talk [Cricinfo]

After the reality check of the India game, Pakistan have only one goal for this final group match against Namibia – do not lose.

Victory – or a washout – will secure them a Super Eight berth, which they famously failed to qualify for in 2024, at USA’s expense. Should Namibia spring a surprise, it will once more be USA that progress at Pakistan’s expense, and condemn them to a third straight first-round exit at a men’s ICC event.

Pakistan should comfortably have enough to overcome a Namibian side that is winless in Group A. But frayed nerves can play havoc should the Namibians find a way to turn this into a scrap. Against Netherlands in the tournament opener, Pakistan found themselves on the brink of defeat after a couple of wickets during a routine chase saw them dramatically lose their way.

But the loss against India, and the magnitude of the defeat, is likely to have shaken confidence. The one-dimensional bowling plans were clearly exposed by India, with Pakistan in possession of no credible seam option bar a struggling Shaheen Afridi. With the bat, the failure of the top order effectively killed off the game inside the first two overs.

There is likely to be a sweep of changes after the loss against India for Pakistan, with a tweak to their bowling combination that allows more pace. However, they will be aware they need to do a little more than was required of them against USA last week, when a clinical – if not overwhelming – performance proved too much for the Americans.

Namibia do not possess anywhere near the same quality, but, already eliminated, they go into the game with a level of freedom Pakistan do not possess. Their strength lies at the top of the batting order, where they caused discomfort to both the USA and the Netherlands, though not for long enough to convert it into points. They will need to play the perfect game, and for long enough, to cause the upset of the tournament and do their fellow Associates a big favour.

Saim Ayub has established his all-round T20 credentials, but as yet, a standout innings with the bat at an T20 World Cup remains elusive. He came into this tournament in imperious form, but three matches in Sri Lanka have seen him restricted to cameos at best, with 49 runs in three innings. That built on from the 2024 World Cup, where he couldn’t kick on in the two games he played. It has amounted to a T20 World Cup average of 14.40 at a strike rate just above 18, both well below his overall career numbers. Against Namibia, Pakistan may require him to settle nerves, whether it’s with a blistering start that bats the opposition out of the game, or breaks the back of a target. It is, after all, what Pakistan’s continued participation in the tournament could come down to.

Louren Steenkamp may be relatively new to the Namibian side, but he is already among their most explosive run-scorers. With a strike rate of just under 133, only Jan Nicol Loftie-Eaton has scored at a higher rate through his Namibian career. A failure against Netherlands, he has taken charge of the Namibian innings, facing the first ball and getting them off to flyers against both India and the USA. He was particularly tough on Arshdeep Singh, taking 22 runs off nine balls against him, and following up with 58 off 39 against USA. Namibia will need him to bat through the powerplay, and possibly longer, against a Pakistan attack short on confidence, piling pressure on them in a game where the stakes are already high.

Pakistan are expected to ring in the changes after a widely panned performance against India. At least three are certain to happen, with quick bowlers Naseem Shah and Salman Mirza set to come in, while one, or even both, of Fakhar Zaman and Khawaja Nafay being called up for their first games this tournament would not be a surprise. Shaheen looks certain to drop to the bench, with Babar Azam similarly precarious.

Pakistan: Sahibzada Farhan (wk), Saim Ayub, Salman Agha (capt),  Babar Azam/Khawaja Nafay,  Shadab Khan/Fakhar Zaman,  Usman Khan (wk),  Mohammad Nawaz,  Salman Mirza,  Naseem Shah,  Usman Tariq,  Abrar Ahmed

Namibia made a couple of changes to their side for the game against USA, and may make one more here. Fast bowler Max Heingo has endured a difficult start, bowling four wicketless overs across three matches and conceding 52. Jack Brassell is the obvious replacement.

Namibia: Jan Frylinck, Louren Steenkamp,  Jan Nicol Loftie-Eaton,  Gerhard Erasmus (capt),  JJ Smit, 6 Zane Green (wk),  Dylan Leicher,  Ruben Trumpelmann,  Willem Myburgh,  Bernard Scholtz,  Jack Brassell

[Cricinfo]

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