Sports
Deepti digs deep to deliver India’s four-wicket win
Deepti Sharma gave India the upper hand against England again, although in a more conventional style this time, with a match-winning half-century at Southampton for a 1-0 lead in their three-match ODI series.
The last time these sides met in an ODI in England, in 2022, Deepti scored an unbeaten fifty to rescue her side from an early stumble then ran out Charlie Dean while backing up on the last ball to seal a 3-0 ODI series sweep at Lord’s.
On Wednesday night, Deepti’s unbeaten 62 off 64 balls allowed India to chase down 259 to win by four wickets with 10 balls to spare. Her 90-run partnership for the fifth wicket off 86 balls with Lemimah Rodrigues trumped the corresponding century stand between Sophia Dunkley and Alice Davidson–Richards, who both passed fifty to take England to 258 for 6.
Both sides made a scrappier start than they might have liked to their build-up for the World Cup, which starts in India and Sri Lanka in 11 weeks’ time. India missed chances in the field and made hard work of their pursuit early, while England were forced to defend a modest total after suffering an early batting collapse and ultimately couldn’t take the wickets they needed.
India’s top order made starts but could not convert. Lauren Bell removed the threat of Smriti Mandhana, the leading run-scorer by some way on the T20I leg of the tour, via a faint edge to wicketkeeper Amy Jones for a 24-ball 28 in the eighth over.
Fellow opener Pratika Rawal faced 51 deliveries for her 36 before she was bowled by Sophie Ecclestone to make it 94 for 2 in the 19th.
When Harleen Deol was unnecessarily run out via a direct hit from Davidson-Richards because she left her bat hovering off the ground well beyond the crease while her foot was short of the crease, England were in the contest.
And Dean bettered the hosts’ position when she got one to grip from outside off and strike Harmanpreet Kaur on the knee-roll, England’s review bearing fruit when the ball was shown to be hitting middle stump. At that point, India needed 135 runs at just under a run a ball.
Deepti took control, striking the only six of the match when she launched Bell over deep midwicket to move into the 30s.
She was on 40 when Bell beat her attempted pull and hit the pad, the ball racing away for four leg byes when replays suggested she would have been given out lbw had England reviewed.
Rodrigues was on 48 when she messed up an attempted scoop of Lauren Filer, gloving the ball to Jones to give England another opening.
Deepti brought up her fifty off 52 balls sweeping Dean to deep square leg.
When Dean had Richa Ghosh stumped advancing down the pitch in her final over, India needed 30 runs off 33 balls but Deepti and Amanjot Kaur saw them home.
Dunkley, reprieved on 23 and 43, reached 83 off 92 deliveries before she fell on the final ball of the innings. She shared a 106-run stand for the fifth wicket with Davidson-Richards, who scored 53, to rescue England from 97 for 4.
It could have been worse for the hosts had India held their chances. Davidson-Richards was on 16 when Kranti Goud fumbled an attempted return catch and Nat Sciver-Brunt, England’s captain back from a groin injury which kept her out of the last three T20Is, was put down by Mandhana at midwicket off Sneh Rana before going on to score 41.
Off-spinner Rana went wicketless from seven overs across her four appearances in the T20Is in her comeback to the format after more than two years. But she took 2 for 31 from 10 overs to be the pick of India’s bowlers in this match, Goud the other multiple wicket-taker with 2 for 55 from nine.
Unable to reprise the success of their opening partnership which yielded 424 runs in two matches against West Indies earlier this summer, Jones and Tammy Beaumont both fell cheaply as England slumped to 20 for 1 in the first four overs.
That was thanks to Goud, the 21-year-old right-arm seamer making just her third international appearance. She started inauspiciously with a dot ball then three consecutive wides before sending down an absolute gem that nipped back off the seam, beat Jones’s bat and crashed into the top of off stump.
It took an India review to give Goud her second when she rapped Beaumont on the front pad as she strode across her stumps, with ball-tracking confirming impact on the top of middle and off.
Sciver-Brunt and Emma Lamb repaired the damage with a 71-run partnership for the third wicket. They struggled to find the boundary through overs 13-17, however, as India mixed up their bowling options and it was Rana who removed both in the space of 12 deliveries.
Lamb tried to break the shackles and picked out Harmanpreet at mid-off, and a wonderful catch by Rodrigues at short midwicket sent Sciver-Brunt on her way.
Shree Charani, Player of the Series with 10 wickets in the T20Is, broke the union between Dunkley and Davison-Richards when she had the latter stumped, despite a fumble from wicketkeeper Ghosh.
Dunkley fell on the last ball, bowled by Amanjot’s full-length cutter, a neat cameo of 23 not out from 19 balls by Sophie Ecclestone adding valuable runs but it wasn’t enough.
Brief scores:
India Women 262 for 6 in 48.2 overs (Pratika Rawal 36, Smriti Mandhana 28, Harlene Deol 27, Deepti Sharma 62*, Jemimah Rodrigues 48, Amanjot Kaur 20*; Charlie Dean 2-52) beat England Women 258 for 6 in 50 overs (Emma Lamb 39, Nat Sciver-Brunt 41, Sophia Dunkley 83, Alice Davidson-Richards 53, Sophie Ecclestone 23*; Kranti Goud 2-55, Sneh Rana 2-31) by four wickets
[Cricinfo]
Latest News
Can resourceful New Zealand lock in semi-final spot against already-qualified England?
While Sri Lankan cricket begins another cycle of seething introspection, there is still business to be concluded in Colombo and Pallekele. New Zealand helped turn the home crowd against their own on Wednesday night and will be looking to confirm their own passage to the semi-finals – for the fourth time in the last five T20 World Cups – when they return to Khettarama to take on England, who are already through.
Looking on anxiously will be Pakistan, who shared the points with New Zealand when their Super Eight encounter was washed out and must consequently cling to the possibility of England making it three wins from three and then making up the net run rate deficit in victory over Sri Lanka (with the results margin from both games cumulatively needing to be around 0 runs, assuming the team batting first makes 180).
England’s campaign so far has turned the phrase “winning ugly” into an art form; the two-wicket triumph over Pakistan that sealed their semi-final spot was so defiantly slapdash it might well end up being nominated for the Turner Prize. The quest for the “perfect game” continues. Certainly, there is no danger of them peaking too early.
If there is one unsettling blot on their copybook so far, it is the continuing travails of Jos Buttler. His haunted look after dismissal for a fourth single-innings score in a row against Pakistan told the story of a horror campaign, but there is no sense yet that England are ready to pull the rug on their greatest white-ball batter of all time.
New Zealand are more in need of the win – even if a close-fought loss might do – but, after a dip at the 2024 World Cup when they were edged out in the first group stage by Afghanistan, they look back to their best as a high-functioning tournament side that always makes the best of the resources available to them.
They came into this World Cup with several players battling injury and illness; Michael Bracewell, a key allrounder in subcontinental conditions, was then ruled out without playing a game. But they have won four out of five completed games with Bracewell’s replacement, the unheralded Cole McConchie, one of stars of their come-from-behind win over Sri Lanka – a game in which their five spin-bowling options trumped the four that England are able to call on (assuming the cut to Jacob Bethell’s bowling hand has healed).
No one should be surprised to see them get the job done again. A New Zealand win would put them top of the group, and also end the uncertainty around the semi-final venues, with Mumbai and Kolkata locked in. Pakistan will be hoping desperately it’s not that straightforward.
While Buttler’s lack of form remains the main talking point, Harry Brook did everything he could to make sure the headlines were about him against Pakistan. At the prompting of Brendon McCullum, Brook elevated himself to No. 3 in the order – having dropped down to No. 5 before the World Cup – and the immediate results were spectacular. Having only done the job a handful of times before for Yorkshire and Northern Superchargers, and never at international level, he made full use of the opportunity for a fast start during the powerplay and was consequently more settled when it came to navigating middle-overs spin (his T20 weak spot). A maiden T20I hundred, from just 50 balls, suggests he should be locked in at first drop for the foreseeable.
Kiwis are all about the collective, with handy performance so far sprinkled around, but one area that might be cause for a smidge of concern is the New Zealand middle order. Partly that is down to the top four being so effective – openers Tim Seifert and Finn Allen are their leading run-scorers, closely followed by Glenn Phillips – and partly the abandoned game against Pakistan, which meant they went eight days without playing. Daryl Mitchell and Mark Chapman have both batted three times and missed the chance for middle time against Sri Lanka, before Mitchell Santner and McConchie produced the vital rescue act. New Zealand have discussed pushing Santner higher, but will likely stick with the incumbents in the expectation they will come good (or not be needed).
England have played the same XI five games in a row and – unless they were to suddenly change their thinking on Buttler, and parachute Ben Duckett in to open – seem likely to stick with that formula. Rehan Ahmed, Josh Tongue and Luke Wood are in the wings, in the event that they wish to test their bench strength.
England: (probable) Phil Salt, Jos Buttler (wk), Harry Brook (capt), Jacob Bethell, Tom Banton, Sam Curran, Will Jacks, Jamie Overton, Liam Dawson, Jofra Archer, Adil Rashid.
After adapting on the fly to seal such a comprehensive win over the home side, New Zealand are also expected to keep the same balance, with the two quicks and five spin options at their disposal. Jimmy Neesham could return if conditions demand another seam option.
New Zealand: (probable) Tim Seifert (wk), Finn Allen, Rachin Ravindra, Glenn Phillips, Daryl Mitchell, Mark Chapman, Mitchell Santner (capt), Cole McConchie, Matt Henry, Ish Sodhi, Lockie Ferguson.
Latest News
India win big to set up knockout clash with West Indies
India set up a virtual quarter-final against West Indies on Sunday with a comfortable win against Zimbabwe on a night that Abhishek Sharma scored his maiden World Cup fifty and India made a small tweak in their batting combination to unleash the second-highest total in T20 World Cups, going two past the 254 Zimbabwe conceded in their last match. Six men batted for India, their innings lasted 15 to 30 balls, and their strike rates ranged from 158.33 to 275. In all, they hit 17 sixes, the most for India in a single T20 World Cup innings.
Zimbabwe asked India to bat first expecting help for fast bowlers. Their reading of conditions was accurate, but the execution was much better from the much more experienced India bowlers, who kept them to 33 in five overs, post which there was hardly any way back.
Zimbabwe, now out of the tournament, dropped two costly catches, taking their tally in Super Eight to five in two matches after having missed just one in the whole first round. A defiant unbeaten 97 from Brian Bennett was the only consolation for them.
Samson breaks up left-hand cluster
India finally admitted their cluster of three left-hand batters at the top was giving offspinners a match-up to exploit, that Suryakumar Yadav was not going to be promoted to No. 3, and sacrificed some lower-order hitting of Rinku Singh to bring in Sanju Samson. Zimbabwe were anyway looking to open with their tall fast bowlers, both of whom Samson hit for sixes down the ground off the back foot in the first two overs. He eventually fell for just 24 off 15, but he was part of India’s biggest opening stand this tournament: 48 off 3.4 overs.
Unlike earlier matches, Abhishek neither charged at the quick bowlers nor gave away his stumps. It took him only three balls to unveil an inside-out drive over extra cover for four. It turned out to be a no-ball as well, and he sent the free hit for a straight four. Abhishek got to 33 off 13 in the powerplay as Zimbabwe refrained from using spin before the field spread out.
As soon as the powerplay ended, Sikandar Raza and Brian Bennett bowled two overs without a boundary to Abhishek and Ishan Kishan. Neither of them panicked, Ishan used power, Abhishek his feet, and both got past the hurdle.
It took only his 26 balls but Abhishek’s maiden World Cup fifty was the second-slowest of his 11 scores of 50 or above in T20Is.
Dropped catches hurt Zimbabwe
Had Zimbabwe held on two pretty straightforward chances, Kishan would have been dismissed for 26 off 19 and Suryakumar for eight off four. The duo ended up with 38 off 24 and 33 off 13. The innings was set up beautifully for Hardik Pandya and Tilak Varma to finish off.
The finishing kick
Hardik Pandya and Tilak Varma added an unbeaten 84 off 31 balls, hitting four sixes each, almost racing each other. Hardik was the only one that ended up with a fifty, but he had a headstart of 12 runs when Tilak came out to bat. Tilak was the quicker one, striking cleanly from the first ball, using space both in front of and behind square. Hardik mainly used power to go down the ground, and caught up with and went past Tilak with two sixes off the last two balls of the innings.
Early movement makes it a bridge too far for Zimbabwe
Arshdeep Singh conceded just one boundary in his first two overs, Hardik extracted appreciable seam movement with the new ball, and at 25 for 0 in four overs, Zimbabwe were looking at 14.5 per over to stay alive in the tournament.
Spinners strike
Axar Patel, left out for the last match because of an abundance of left-hand batters, took two balls to get a wicket, that of the left-hand batter Tadiwanashe Marumani. Varun Chakravarthy took to 19 his streak of taking at least one wicket in a T20I with the wicket of Dion Myers.
Bennett shines, cause for concern for India
In the end, India were comfortable victors by 72 runs, but they will not like that Varun went for 35 runs, conceding three sixes, and that their sixth bowler Shivam Dube had a terrible night out with 46 off two overs. Thanks to South Africa’s win over West Indies earlier in the day, India were under no pressure to secure a big win so they did experiment more than they usually would have.
Zimbabwe ended up getting 184 thanks largely to Bennett, who showed he had a higher gear in him after he went the first round scoring in the 130s without a single six. Here he hit six sixes and scored at 164.4. As the hundred approached, though, Arshdeep shut Zimbabwe out with three wickets in two overs, which also meant Bennett was starved of strike in the end. Arshdeep went past Jasprit Bumrah as India’s leading wicket-taker in T20 World Cups.
Brief scores:
India 256 for 4 in 20 overs (Sanju Samson 24, Abhishek Sharma 55, Ishan Kishan 38, Suryakumar Yadav 33, Hardik Pandya 50*, Tilak Varma 44*; Richard Ngarava 1-62, Blessing Muzarabani 1-42, Tinotenda Maposa 1-40, Sikandar Raza 1-29) beat Zimbabwe 184 for 6 in 20 overs (Brian Bennett 97*, Tadiwanashe Marumani 20, Sikandar Raza 31, Tony Munyonga 11; Arshdeep Singh 3-24, Varun Chakravarthy 1-35, Axar Patel 1-35, Shivam Dube 1-46) by 72 runs
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Sri Lanka must plan smarter to compete in World Cups, says Atapattu
Former captain Marvan Atapattu has warned Sri Lanka that muddled planning and last-minute tinkering will continue to leave them stumped on the world stage after another sobering exit from the T20 World Cup.
The former champions crashed out of the Super Eight stage with a game to spare following three straight defeats, their meek loss to New Zealand on Wednesday a bitter pill to swallow in front of a packed house. Sri Lanka were second best from the toss to the post-mortem, barely laying a glove on the Kiwis.
“Our planning has to be better than this,” Atapattu told Telecom Asia Sport, pulling no punches. “You pick your players two years before a World Cup and help them evolve. You keep backing them once you have identified talent. That is how you go into a World Cup. Here, two months before the tournament, we aren’t sure who is going to be our captain.”
Atapattu said chopping and changing on the eve of a global event was a recipe for disaster.
“Your core players need to remain the same set of guys whom you have backed. There can be injuries and loss of form and you deal with them accordingly, but wholesale change is an indication that there’s no planning,” he added.
He also flagged concerns over the granting of No Objection Certificates for franchise leagues, warning that Sri Lanka risked burning the candle at both ends.
“You have to protect your centrally contracted players. There’s no point if your key player is injured for a World Cup,” Atapattu said.
Sri Lanka were forced into late reshuffles after calling up replacements for three players, most notably missing leg-spinner Wanindu Hasaranga, who pulled out after the opening game with a hamstring strain. His absence left a gaping hole in the middle overs.
Atapattu was equally critical of the kind of surfaces Sri Lanka have dished out at home, arguing low, slow turners offer a false sense of security.
“Play on good pitches. Then your bowlers, in particular, learn the art of containing free-flowing batters,” he remarked. “If you only play on surfaces that suit you, you are not preparing for global events.”
Pointing to England’s meticulous build-up, Atapattu said smart preparation separated contenders from also-rans.
“Look at England. Before the World Cup, they came to Sri Lanka and spent two weeks here. That is smart work,” he said. “We often play teams like Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Zimbabwe and when we beat them, we think our cricket is in good shape. But when we play the big boys, we are found out.”
-
Features6 days agoWhy does the state threaten Its people with yet another anti-terror law?
-
Features6 days agoReconciliation, Mood of the Nation and the NPP Government
-
Features6 days agoVictor Melder turns 90: Railwayman and bibliophile extraordinary
-
Features5 days agoLOVEABLE BUT LETHAL: When four-legged stars remind us of a silent killer
-
Features6 days agoVictor, the Friend of the Foreign Press
-
Latest News7 days agoNew Zealand meet familiar opponents Pakistan at spin-friendly Premadasa
-
Latest News7 days agoTariffs ruling is major blow to Trump’s second-term agenda
-
Business5 days agoSeeing is believing – the silent scale behind SriLankan’s ground operation
