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India stars face New Zealand upstarts in a series of divided priorities

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Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma are back in action (Cricinfo)

It isn’t often that India get a 22-day break from international cricket. Rarer still for the most commercially lucrative team and players to be missing in action at the height of holiday season. Everybody will want to make up for the lost time when India return to action with the three-ODI series against New Zealand.

This might be the least relevant of the three formats at the moment, but it is also the only one that the two biggest Indian stars of the last decade now play. The format India the country is most in sync with.

New Zealand, though, haven’t got the memo. Eight of their squad of 15 haven’t played in India before. Two haven’t played any international cricket. One hasn’t played an ODI. Five have played fewer than 10. Part of it is forced: Mitchell Santner, Matt Henry and Mark Chapman are managing their return from injuries, Will O’Rourke and Nathan Smith won’t even make it back in time, Tom Latham is on paternity break, but increasingly big stars are refusing retainers with NZC. Kane Williamson is not available for this tour because it clashes with SA20.

Bilateral ODI cricket couldn’t mean any more different to two Full Member nations. And yet it is New Zealand who are on a nine-match winning streak, one short of their longest ever.

After a great debut series as Test captain in England, Shubman Gill had a wretched second half of 2025. A neck injury proved crucial to India’s Test series defeat to South Africa at home, then he missed the ODIs and eventually lost his T20I spot for the upcoming World Cup. As he sought to begin his comeback to action with some domestic cricket, he fell ill again. A return to runs will do India’s Test and ODI captain a world of good.

Gill’s opposite number, Michael Bracewell  is also the opposite as a player: not a prodigy earmarked for greatness, but a utility player nudging 35 years of age. His most famous performance in international cricket remains in an ODI in India when he nearly pulled a win out of the jaws of defeat with a 140 in Hyderabad almost two years to the day. It is as a fingerspinner against a full-strength Indian batting that he will be tested the most.

Shreyas Iyer has had poorer luck than Gill. He plays only one format in international cricket, and there he grievously injured himself while taking a catch in Australia. Back after almost three months, he was nearly bitten by a dog as he went to pet it at an airport. All is well, though, and he can now resume as the vice-captain of the side. Jasprit Bumrah continues to miss the ODIs, but Mohammed Siraj  k and is likely to push Prasidh Krishna out of the XI.

India (probable):  Shubman Gill (capt.), 2Rohit Sharma, 3Virat Kohli, Shreyas Iyer, KL Rahul (wk),  Washington Sundar,  Ravindra Jadeja,  Harshit Rana, Kuldeep Yadav, Arshdeep Singh, Mohammed Siraj

New Zealand’s XI will look remarkably different to the one that completed the whitewash of West Indies at home. Perhaps the first call to make will be whether Devon Conway keeps wicket for the first time in ODIs. If not, Mitchell Hay will play his first ODI since April.

New Zealand (probable):  Devon Conway (wk),  Nick Kelly,  Will Young, Daryl Mitchell,  Henry Nicholls, Glenn Phillips,  Michael Bracewell (capt.),  Zak Foulkes,  Kyle Jamieson,  Michael Rae,  Adithya Ashok

[Cricinfo]



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Seifert, Allen fifties help New Zealand gallop to record-breaking win against UAE

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Tim Seifert and Finn Allen helped New Zealand soar (Cricinfo)

There was the odd hiccup or two. Glenn Phillips bowling the 18th over and giving up 27 runs. James Neesham turning a leg bye into an all-run four with an overthrow. But in the end, New Zealand  wrapped up the win that was expected of them against UAE  – with all ten wickets and 27 balls to spare – and look in good shape to make the Super Eights.

Finn Allen and Tim Seifert  knocked off the entire target of 174 by themselves. In the course of doing that, they recorded the highest partnership  for any wicket, by any side, in the T20 World Cup.

An even-paced pitch and its location on the square – making one side of the ground smaller than the other – resulted in the batters really enjoying themselves.

Muhammad Waseem and Alishan Sharafu  are the most accomplished players in the UAE line-up and they stepped up – together – to put on a 107-run partnership. It is their second highest for the second wicket in T20Is.

The logic behind their strokeplay really stood out. Sharafu (55 off 47) backed away against Mitchell Santner and carved him over cover point for four. That shot was about getting the odds in his favour – hitting with the turn and to the short boundary. Waseem (66 off 45) backed his upper cut off Matt Henry’s slower bouncer because short third was inside the circle. It was high-percentage cricket in a high-pressure situation.ll

New Zealand’s bowlers had a really tough time against India in the bilateral series leading up to this World Cup. Huffing and puffing against UAE, who had crumbled to 81 all out in a warm-up game in Chennai against Italy, isn’t the kind of confidence boost they’re in need of

Phillips bowling in the death was odd. The four overs leading up to it had brought only 17 runs and two wickets. This one over alone yielded 27, including a wide, a no-ball four and a free-hit six. All while frontline quick Jacob Duffy had two overs left.

Glenn Phillips celebrates in the field, New Zealand vs UAE, T20 World Cup 2026, Chennai, February 10, 2026
Glenn Phillips was excellent in the field (Cricinfo)

Alle and Seifert knocked off almost half the target in the powerplay itself. The 78 runs they put on together included nine fours and four sixes, which amount to a balls per boundary ratio of 2.77. This is a strength Santner had alluded to in the pre-match press conference ahead of the Afghanistan game, and it came good to take New Zealand to a 2-0 record in the group of death.

Allen showed game awareness when he played out UAE’s pinpoint accurate spin bowler, Haider Ali,  and took down their quicks with ease instead. He had tried to do too much against Mujeeb Ur Rahman and lost his stumps during their previous match against Afghanistan. Here, even when Haider tempted him with mid-off up, he held back his big shots.

Seifert backed up his 39-ball fifty on Sunday with a 23-ball fifty today, continuing his path to becoming a high-volume batter instead of his previous version, where he was a high-variance batter. He didn’t have any trouble taking on Haider as the game neared its conclusion, reverse-hitting him for a six and then a four. New Zealand’s bash brothers were in full flow so the chase didn’t last beyond the 16th over.

Brief scores:

New Zealand 175 for 0  in 15.2 overs (Tim Seifert 89*,  Finn Allen 84*) beat United Arab Emirates 173 for 6 in 20 overs  (Mohamed Waseem 66, Alishan  Sharafu 55, Mayanak Kumar 21;  Matt Henry 2-37, Jacob Duffy 1-16, Lockie Ferguson 1-35, Mitchell Santner 1-23, Glenn Phillips 1-30) by ten wickets

(Cricinfo)

 

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Wanindu Hasaranga ruled out of T20 World Cup with injury

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Sri Lanka allrounder Wanidu Hasaranga has been ruled out of the 2026 T20 World Cup with a hamstring injury he suffered during their opening game aga8nst Ireland in Colombo on Sunday.

Although he completed his spell, taking 3 for 25 in four overs to derail Ireland’s spirited chase of 164, Hasaranga had an MRI scan on Monday that revealed a serious tear in his left hamstring. The report was seen by a specialist in the UK before he was ruled out on Tuesday.

The tear is understood to be related to a previous hamstring injury,  though it is not a recurrence exactly. Hasaranga has battled injury for several years now, including a foot complaint

The ICC is yet to approve a replacement but Hasaranga is likely to be replaced in the squad by fellow legspin-bowling allrounder Dushan Hemantha. Although Hemantha, 31, brings roughly the same skillset, he has had only sporadic opportunities at the top level. He has played three T20Is, and has taken four wickets in those matches, with an economy rate of 7.85. Sri Lanka may also drop him straight into the XI – aside from the spinners who played on Sunday, there are no spinners in reserve in the squad.

Hasaranga’s loss is a substantial blow to Sri Lanka’s campaign nevertheless. He is the team’s most accomplished bowler in this format, and has been outstanding with the ball at T20 World Cups, taking 40 wickets and maintaining an economy rate of 6.01 across 20 innings.

Sri Lanka’s second group game is against Oman on February 12 in Pallekele, followed by Australia on February 16 in Pallekele, and finally Zimbabwe in Colombo (RPS) on February 19.

(Cricinfo)

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Royal Navy of Oman Vessel “SADH” arrives at Port of Colombo

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The Royal Navy of Oman Vessel “SADH” arrived at the Port of Colombo on a logistics replenishment visit on Tuesday  (10 Feb 26). The Sri Lanka Navy welcomed the visiting ship in
compliance with naval traditions.

The 75m – long ship is commanded by Lieutenant Commander Shaheen Saud Abdul Rahman AI Balushi.

The port call will facilitate professional interaction and goodwill exchanges between the two navies.

During the stay in Colombo, crew members of the ship are expected to visit some tourist attractions in the city of Colombo.

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