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Ekansh Singh hundred steadies England U19s on rain-shortened day

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Kent's Ekansh Singh made a century for England U19s [Cricinfo]

Ekansh Singh completed a superb hundred on a second day of England’s Youth Test against India that was severely truncated by rain.

Only 28-and-a-half overs were possible between the cloudbursts but that was long enough for Kent right-hander Singh to compile 117 sprinkled with three sixes and 14 fours. Singh was last out, as England’s youngsters totaled 309, having shared an eighth-wicket stand of exactly 100 with James Minto who made 46.

Naman Pushpak finished with 4 for 76 for India who lost teenage starlet Vaibhav Suryavanshi for 20 in reaching 51 for 1 before a thunderstorm ended play shortly after 5pm

Overnight and morning rain delayed the start until 12.30pm and the showers returned 22 minutes later to drive the players off again. The intervening period was long enough for Ekansh to treat the smattering of spectators to four boundaries, including two sumptuous cover drives.

It was 2.15pm before the game resumed but Ekansh had lost none of his rhythm, twice driving the ball back past the stumps for four as he continued to deal exclusively in boundaries on the day until he moved into the 90s. His battle with strike bowler Aditya Rawat was an engaging one, the seamer producing two excellent yorkers both superbly dug out by the batter. There would be no nervous 90s, Ekansh raising his 100 in the grand manner with a huge six over long-on.

Minto provided great support, an uppercut over the slips for six resulting in a lost ball, necessitating the third change of the cherry in the short afternoon session.

The 100-stand was raised before Minto chipped one straight back to Pushpak after which the end came swiftly. Alex Green became Pushpak’s fourth victim, before Singh holed out on the long-on boundary.

India’s reply began in explosive fashion with Suryavanshi and his skipper Ayush Mhatre playing almost a shot a ball. The latter top-edged one over the slips before being given a life by Ralphie Albert when he spilt him at cover, Alex French the unlucky bowler.

Suryavanshi meanwhile took a heavy toll of Green, nonchalantly driving him over mid-off for six before slashing one backward of square for another maximum. However, youthful impetuosity got the better of him when he pulled Green’s next delivery down the throat of fine leg – something of a waste, especially given three balls later the rain returned, forcing an early tea.

Only 15 minutes more play was possible – just long enough for India to raise their 50.

Brief scores: [Day 2 stumps]
India Under-19 51 for 1in 9 overs (Ayush Mhatre 24*; Alex Green 1-34)trail England Under-19 309 in 81.3 overs (Thomas Rew 59, Ekansh Singh 117, James Minto 46; Aditya Rawat 2-64, RS Ambrish 2-56, Naman  Pushpak 4-76) by 258 runs

[Cricinfo]



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England bat; Nepal hand debut to Sher Malla

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Sher Malla made his debut against England [Cricinfo]

Rohit Paudel warned Harry Brook that a used pitch at Wankhede Stadium could play into his team’s hands as Nepal were asked to bowl first in their first-ever international match against England.

Sunday afternoon’s game will be played on the same strip where India’s powerhouse batting line-up eked out 161 for 9 against United States on Saturday night. Brook won the toss and chose to bat first with conditions in mind, but Paudel said that Nepal’s players “love slow tracks” and that they hoped the surface would suit them.

“We love slow tracks, and it’s a used wicket so I think it will spin a little bit,” Paudel said. “I think, if that happens, it will help our team… To be honest, we would have bowled first. Looking at the conditions, I think chasing is a good option.”

Young spinner Sher Malla made his T20I debut for Nepal, while Lokesh Bam was preferred to the veteran Sompal Kami in the middle order.

Nepal play all four of their group games at the Wankhede and will be cheered on by thousands of their fans in Mumbai. “Playing all the games here will always be an advantage to the team playing all four games here,” Paudel said. “As a team, playing in Asian conditions always helps Nepal.”

Brook predicted that the pitch would get worse as the game wore on. “We feel like the pitch is going to be in the best shape for the first innings, and then hopefully we can bowl well and defend our score in the second innings… It looked like there was a little bit of spin in it, and a little bit of bounce, so hopefully we can utilise that in the second innings.”

England named their team on the eve of the match, with Luke Wood preferred to Jamie Overton. “We wanted to go with two out-and-out seamers up top with the new ball to see if we can get it to swing and get a few early wickets in the powerplay,” Brook said. “Pretty much everything else was already settled.”

England’s build-up to the tournament has been overshadowed by Brook’s now-infamous night out in Wellington last October, but he has tried to draw a line under the incident. “I’m feeling good,” he said. “I’m feeling good with the bat, and hopefully I can make some good decisions as captain as well – on and off the field.”

England:  Phil Salt,  Jos Buttler (wk),  Jacob Bethell,  Tom Banton,  Harry Brook (capt),  Sam Curran,  Will Jacks,  Liam Dawson,  Jofra Archer,  Adil Rashid,  Luke Wood.

Nepal:  Aasif Sheikh (wk),  Kushal Bhurtel,  Rohit Paudel (capt),  Dipendra Airee,  Aarif Sheikh,  Lokesh Bam, Gulsan Jha,  Karan KC,  Sher Malla,  Nandan Yadav,  Sandeep Lamichhane.

[Cricinfo]

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Seifert and Phillips conquer Afghanistan spin to script convincing New Zealand win

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Tim Seifert controlled the powerplay overs for New Zealand despite Mujeeb Ur Rahman's strikes [Cricinfo]

New Zealand may have felt a sense of deja vu after Gulbadin Naib’s half-century andMujeeb Ur Rahman’s double-strike in their opening game of the 2026 T20 World Cup in Chennai. But Tim Seifert’s own half-century and a punchy knock from Glenn Phillips offset the early damage caused by Afghanistan and set New Zealand on the path to victory in the group of death, which also includes fellow title-contenders South Africa.

After Afghanistan opted to bat in a day game, they posted 182 for 6, on the back of Naib’s 35-ball 63, which looked like an above-par total on a challenging Chepauk surface, which offered substantial bounce, especially in the early exchanges, and some grip to the slower bowlers.

That total looked a whole lot bigger once Mujeeb blasted out Finn Allen and Rachin Ravindra in the second over of the chase off back-to-back balls.

Phillips, however, kept out the hat-trick ball and combined aggressively with Seifert to loosen Afghanistan’s grip on the game. They snatched it from Afghanistan’s hands when they cracked Rashid Khan for 14 in his first over. Rashid – and Afghanistan – never really recovered from that as New Zealand wrapped up the chase with five wickets and nearly two overs to spare.

Brief scores:

New Zealand 183 for 5 in 17.5 overs (Tim Seifert 65, Glenn Phillips 42, Mark Chapman 28, Daryl  Mitchell 25*, Mitchell Santner 17;  Mujeeb Ur Rahman  2-31, Azmatullah Omarzai 1-40, Rashid Khan 1-36, Mohammad Nabi 1-18) beat Afghanistan182 for 6 in 20 overs (Rahmanullah Gurbaz 27, Ibrahim Zadran 10, Gulbadin Naib 63, Sediqullah Atal 29, Daevish Rasooli 20, Azmatullah Omarzai 14, Mohammad Nabi 10*; Matt Henry 1-27, Jacob Duffy 1-30, Lockie Ferguson 2-40, Rachin Ravindra 1-14) by five wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Afghanistan to bat first against New Zealand

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Rashid Khan and Mitchell Santner greet each other at the toss [Cricinfo]

Afghanistan won the toss and elected to bat first in the 2026 T20 World Cup Group D encounter against New Zealand..

New Zealand XI Finn Allen, Tim Seifert (wk),  Rachin Ravindra,  Glenn Phillips,  Mark Chapman,  Daryl Mitchell,  Mitchell Santner (capt),  James Neesham,  Matt Henry,  Lockie Ferguson,  Jacob Duffy

Afghanistan XI  Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk),  Ibrahim Zadran,  Sediqullah Atal,  Darwish Rasooli,  Azmatullah Omarzai,  Gulbadin Naib,  Mohammad Nabi,  Rashid Khan (capt),  Fazalhaq Farooqi,  Ziaur Rahman,  Mujeeb Ur Rahman

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