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All-round Athapaththu, Madavi help Sri Lanka end tour with a win

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Sri Lanka captain Chamari Athapaththu led from the front as Sri Lanka recorded a commanding 93-run win in the third and final ICC Women’s Championship match at the Southend Club, Karachi on Sunday. Pakistan won the series 2-1 courtesy of their eight-wicket and 73-run win in the first two matches.At the end of the series Pakistan occupy the top-spot in the ICC Women’s Championship 2022-25 cycle with four points from three games, Sri Lanka collected two points from their win today – this series was the first in the new championship cycle which will determine the six qualifying spots (top five plus the host) for the ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup 2025.

Today’s win was Sri Lanka’s lone victory in their first tour of Pakistan in 17 years, before the ODIs, the visitors had lost the T20I series by a 0-3 margin.Set a 261-run target, Pakistan were pegged back after a decent start. The hosts slumped from 41 for no loss to 48 for four in nine overs and never recovered from the mini collapse. Second ODI centurion Sidra Amin (19) was the first to go. Her opening partner Muneeba Ali (16) was run out while captain Bismah Maroof (0) and Nida Dar (5) were dismissed in quick succession as Sri Lankan bowlers tightened the screws.Omaima Sohail fought hard for her 40 off 61 balls (four fours) but her dismissal in the 28th over further increase Pakistan woes. Sidra Nawaz (7) and Fatima Sana (12) were dismissed in the search of quick runs as the required run-rate mounted. Diana Baig (0) was run out without facing a ball.

Aliya Riaz stood firm at one end with a fighting half-century (sixth of her career), she was the ninth batter dismissed in an attempt of clearing the boundary. The right-hander hit four fours in her 56 off 82 balls.Athapaththu capped off a brilliant day in the field with a two-wicket contribution with the ball in her six overs. Oshadi Ranasinghe took two wickets while three batters were run out.

Sri Lanka sealed their win with Anam Amin’s wicket in the 42nd over.Earlier, Athapaththu who had struggled to get going on the tour finally displayed her immense batting prowess with a scintillating century to set a solid platform for her side’s imposing total after she won the toss and opted to bat first for the fifth time on the tour (three T2oIs, first and third ODI).The left-hander posted the sixth century of her career off the 82nd ball of her innings, her blazing innings was punctuated with 13 fours and a six and she fell shortly after for 101 with Nida Dar dismissing her in the 31st over of the innings, Sri Lanka were 156 at that stage.Athapaththu is the only century maker for Sri Lanka in the ODI format and her innings today once again proved her immense value to country’s women cricket.

Athapaththu took the attack to the Pakistan bowlers after the early loss of her opening partner Hasini Perera (3) and Hansima Karunaratne (0). The two were back in the dressing room with a mere four runs on the board in two overs.Athapaththu found an able partner in Harshitha Madavi, the duo added 152 for the third-wicket. After Athapaththu’s departure, Madavi kept the scoreboard moving for Sri Lanka. She was eventually dismissed in the 44th over for 75 off 128 balls (three fours). Madavi added 60 for the fourth-wicket with Kavisha Dilhari (28).

Sri Lanka finished their 50 overs at 260 for seven which is their highest total against Pakistan, Anam Amin and Fatima Sana took two wickets apiece for the hosts. (Pakistan Cricket Board)

Brief Scores:

Sri Lanka Women

260 for 7 wkts in 50 Overs (Chamari Athapaththu 101, Harshitha Madavi  75, Kavisha Dilhari  28, Nilakshi de Silva  24 n.o.;Anam Amin 2/43)

Pakistan Women

167 all out in 41.4 Overs (Aliya Riaz 56, Omaima Sohail 40; Oshadi Ranasinghe 2/29, Chamari Athapaththu 2/20)

Player of the match:

Chamari Athapaththu

Player of the series:

 Sidra Amin



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Shanto, Mushfiqur hundreds headline Bangladesh’s day of dominance

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The first hour or so of play on the opening day of the Galle Test belonged to Sri Lanka. But after that, it was all Bangladesh as Najmul Hossain Shanto and Mushfiqur Rahim struck centuries during an unbroken stand of 247, to seize control of day one.

By stumps, Shanto was unbeaten on 136 and had Mushfiqur right behind him on 105 not out. Seamer Milan Rathnayake was the most economical of the Sri Lanka bowlers, his 12 overs going for just 19 runs, but the bulk of the overs were bowled by the spin pair of Prabath Jayasuriya and debutant Tharindu Rathnayake. The wickets were split between Asitha Fernando and debutant Tharindu, but once Shanto and Mushfiqur were set, Sri Lanka rarely caused them trouble.

Winning the toss and opting to bat is usually the obvious call in Galle, but this time in particular, with conditions more favourable than usual for batters, Shanto was rightfully chuffed when the toss fell his way. That smile though, had become closer to a grimace when he stood at the non-striker’s end watching a third Bangladeshi batter fall with not even 50 on the board.

When Mushfiqur walked out to join him, Shanto himself had faced just three deliveries; it took him only until his sixth though to show that he would not be cowed by the situation, skipping down the track and smoking one back over Tharindu’s head. That set the tone, if not outright aggression and displayed resolute confidence.

Tharindu had at that point been building up a head of steam. Mominul Haque had gone after him, but the ambidextrous spinner had the last laugh. And prior to that, he had removed opener Shadman Islam. Shanto though, made it a mission to put Tharindu off his rhythm; he would end the morning session having struck at better than run-a-ball against the spinner, and would continue to target him as a release valve of sorts throughout the day. Of Shanto’s 15 boundaries (14 fours and a six), ten came off Tharindu.

Tharindu eventually settled in and brought down his economy rate, but Shanto and Mushfiqur continued steadily on, the run rate always hovering around 3-3.5 an over. The session counters reflected as much – 90, 92 and 110. The last session might have been less, after Sri Lanka began utilising defensive lines for the first hour, but they got tired in the final hour and it allowed Bangladesh to tick along at nearly four an over during that period.

Considering the batter-friendly nature of the pitch, an argument could be made for Bangladesh perhaps having been able to go harder at the Sri Lankan bowlers, but even with the pitch taking less turn on day one than what it has in the past, the conventional wisdom in Galle has been to bat first and long, and Bangladesh are set up to do just that.

Sri Lanka for most of the morning, would not have imagined proceedings ending up like this. The day had begun with a felicitation and a guard of honour for the retiring Angelo Mathews, and then just 4.3 overs into the day’s play, Asitha got one to seam away and catch Anamul Haque’s edge.

Tharindu then added to the celebratory mood, grabbing two wickets in consecutive deliveries (across two overs), a dream start to his Test career. But then things took a turn with the experience of Shanto and Mushfiqur coming into play.

Sri Lanka too were guilty of perhaps over-bowling the debutant when it was clear he was being targeted, while they could also have possibly refrained from pairing him with Milan, who was creating pressure at one end only for it to be alleviated at the other. For instance, it took until an hour after the lunch break for Jayasuriya to be reintroduced, and by that time, both batters had neared fifties.

That said, both Shanto and Mushfiqur batted with clear purpose and it meant that when Sri Lanka erred, they were waiting and ready to capitalise.

Brief scores:
Bangladesh 292 for 3 in 90 overs (Monimul Haque 29, Najmul Hossain Shanto 136*, Mushfiqur Rahim 105*, Tharindu Rathnayake 2-124) vs Sri Lanka

[Cricinfo]

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Netherlands win epic contest after three Super Overs against Nepal

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Michael Levitt and Max O'Dowd were in action all the way through [Cricinfo]

Historic scenes unfolded in Glasgow as the Netherlands-Nepal game went into a third Super Over, with Netherlands prevailing in a thrilling contest. This was the first time any men’s professional match – T20 or List A – had gone into a third Super Over, and it was Netherlands who eventually came on top in a topsy-turvy encounter.

With Nepal requiring 16 to win the match in the final over of regular time, Nandan Yadav hit fast bowler Kyle Klein for 4, 2, 2, 4 and took the game into the first Super Over.

Left-arm spinner Daniel Doram was tasked with bowling the over, and he went for 19 with Kushal Bhurtel smashing him for two sixes and a four. Doram had conceded just 14 in his four overs and picked up three wickets during regular time. Michael Levitt then launched a six the first ball and Max O’Dowd went 6 and 4 off the final two balls to take the game into a second Super Over.

Lalit Raibanshi was then smashed for two sixes off his first three balls but came back well as Netherlands were kept to 17 in Super Over No. 2. Rohit Paudel crashed a six first ball while Dipendra Singh Airee hit a four as the equation came down to seven off the final ball. Airee then smashed Klein over cow corner to take the game into a third Super Over for the first time.

Offspinner Zach Lion-Cachet started the third Super Over, and grabbed the wickets of Paudel and debutant Rupesh Singh as Nepal failed to score a run. Levitt then held his cool and thumped Sandeep Lamichhane for a six over long-on to finally end a thrilling contest.

Earlier defending 152, left-arm pacer Ben Fletcher had a dream start to his T20I career, getting Lokesh Bam caught behind with a full and wide delivery. Klein then had Anil Sah caught at mid-on as Nepal slipped to 9 for 2 in 2.1 overs. But Bhurtel and Paudel took the attack to Netherlands.

Nepal raced to 52 for 2 in five overs before Doram ended Bhurtel’s brisk stay on 34. The runs dried up after the powerplay, with Doram taking charge. He got rid of Airee and then Kiran Thagunna as Nepal could only reach 97 for 5 after 15 overs. With 56 required off the last five overs, it was Rupesh who got Nepal going with a four and six but fell soon after. Paudel and Karan KC kept Nepal in it before the game ran into overtime.

In the first innings, seamer Nandan took the new ball for Nepal and was taken for two back-to-back fours by O’Dowd before the opener planted fast bowler Karan over the ropes. But the introduction of spin changed the narrative.

Rajbanshi struck with his first ball, sending O’Dowd back. Lamichhane was introduced into the attack after six overs and made an immediate impact. He first flattened Levitt’s middle stump with his second ball and four balls later had Netherlands captain Scott Edwards caught at deep backward square leg.

Lamichhane then struck for a third time to dismiss Noah Croes. Saqib Zulfiqar’s late blows, however, took Netherlands past 150.

Brief scores:
Netherlands 152 for 7 in 20 overs (Michaell Levitt 20, Max O’Dowd 19, Teja Nidamanuru 35, Vikramjit Singh 30, Zack Lion-Cachet 11, Saqib Zulfiqar 25*; Sandeep Lamichhane 3-18, Nandan Yadev 2-18, Lalit Rajbansi 1-22, Kushal Bhurtel 1-24) beat Nepal 152 for 8 in 20 overs (Rohit Paudel 48, Kushal Bhurtel 34, Kiran Thagunna 15, Rupesh Singh 19, Nandan Yadav 12*; Kyle Klein 1-32, Ben Fletcher 1-40, Zach Lion-Cachet 1-22, Daniel Doram 3-14, Vikramjit Singh 2-30)via a third Super Over

Super Over 1:

Nepal 19/1  [Rohit Paudel 1*, Kushal Bhurtel 18; Daniel Doram 1-19]
Netherlands  19/0 [Michaell Levitt 6*, Max O’Dowd 12*, Extras 1]

Super Over 2:

Netherlands 17/1 [Scott Edwards 09, Max O’Dowd 07, Extras 1; Lalit Rajbanshi 1-17]
Nepal 17/0 [Rohit Paudel 07*, Dipendra Singh Airee 10*]

Super Over 3:

Nepal 0/2 in 0.4 overs  [Rohit Paudel 00, Dipendra Singh Airee 00*, Rupesh Singh 00; Zach Lion-Cachet 2/00]
Netherlands  6/0 in 0.1 over  [Michaell Levitt 06*, Zach Lion Cachet 00*]

[Cricinfo]

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Tharindu’s double blow keeps Bangladesh in check at lunch

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Tharindu Rathnayake, on Test debut, struck twice after the first hour [Cricinfo]

A morning that had begun with a felicitation and guard of honour for the retiring Angelo Mathews, ended with a new face taking the plaudits as debutant Tharindu Rathnayake grabbed two wickets to help Sri Lanka edge the first session of the first Test of the new WTC cycle.

Bangladesh however had the experienced pair of skipper Najmul Hossain Shanto and Mushfiqur Rahim at the crease as lunch was called, with the pair having put on 45 so far.

Rathnayake was one of two debutants for the hosts, alongside top-order batter Lahiru Udara, and was into the attack as early as the eighth over. With three of Bangladesh’s top five being left-handed, the ambidextrous spinner opted to bowl his right-arm off breaks throughout the morning, and he was in the thick of it almost immediately with an unsuccessful lbw review in just his second over against Mominul Haque.

His third over, following a change of ends, saw a tough chance dropped at slip by Dhananjaya de Silva – Mominul the batter once more – but in in his fourth he got his reward. Shadman Islam, who had been reserved in his 14 off 53, pressed forward to one that was flighted around off. The drift, dip and turn did the rest as Dhananjaya made no mistake this time, holding on to a low chance.

An over later, Tharindu would eventually get Mominul as he would once more attempt the cut, but this time the edge was snaffled by Dhananjaya – nearly identical in position at left shoulder height to the one that was dropped two overs earlier.

Asitha Fernando, meanwhile, had got the ball rolling in the fifth over of the morning, getting one to seam away from Anamul Haque and grab the edge.

Tharindu’s debut spell however wasn’t cheap; his 10 overs went for 52 runs, with Mominul, Shanto and Mushfiqur all taking the attack to him.

It meant that while Sri Lanka would have been happy with the session, on a fairly batter friendly surface Bangladesh will feel confident in their ability to turn this position around over the coming sessions.

Brief scores: Day 1 Lunch
Bangladesh 90 for 3 (Monimul Haque 29, Najmul Hossain Shanto 25*, Mushfiqur Rahim 20*; Tharindu Rathnayake 2-52) vs Sri Lanka

[Cricinfo]

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