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IPL 2025: Suryakumar and Bumrah dazzle in Mumbai Indian’s fifth straight win

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Suryakumar Yadav gets set to unleash some fireworks [Crickinfo]

Mumbai Indians (MI) sealed their fifth consecutive win in comfortable fashion this season to climb to 12 points in ten games. It was a near-perfect day for the hosts in front of 19,000 kids as they defeated Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) for the first time in a league-stage fixture.

Half-centuries from Ryan Rickelton and Suryakumar Yadav – who also became the third-fastest to 4000 IPL runs – helped them set 215 before Jasprit Bumrah’s four-for and Trent Boult’s  three-for sealed a 54-run win.

Mayanak Yadav was back in LSG colours for the first time this season. His pace had dropped but his slower ones were effective and took 2 for 40 in his four overs. Mitchell Marsh and Nicholas Pooran got starts but LSG’s middle order, including an out-of-sorts Rishabh Pant, crumbled again. The chase fizzled out with the their last six wickets falling for 26 runs.

The day began with Mayank being announced as Shardul Thakur’s replacement. He took the new ball and bowled in the mid 130-kph to early 140-kph range. The bumper he tried in the first over got spongy bounce and went above Rickelton’s head. But an overpitched ball next up was thumped down the ground.

In his next over, Mayank tested the middle of the pitch. Rohit Sharma hit two sixes with the pull, one in front of square and one behind. The response was a change in line, length and pace. It worked as Rohit reached out and sliced a slower length ball to short third.

Rickelton could’ve been run-out in the second over but Aiden Markram missed a direct hit from point. Rickelton showed his trust in the pitch as he slogged and pulled balls off a length. He drove a full toss down to take 15 off Prince Yadav’s first over. There were no other chances created in the 66-run powerplay.

Digvesh Rathi came in having not conceded a single six in the powerplay, but Rickelton slog swept him twice for two sixes over midwicket before reaching a 25-ball fifty. Rathi changed ends and bowled quicker and straighter on return. Rickelton’s tried to capitalise on the googly when it was tossed up outside off, but ended up slicing straight to point in the ninth over. He made 58.

Mayank was brought back with Suryakumar new at the crease. That didn’t work as Suryakumar launched him over his head. Jacks then got a couple of boundaries behind square both sides of the wicket. The slower balls, though, did keep the batters down and MI moved to 105 for 2 in 10 overs.

Prince’s reverse-swinging yorker then knocked Jacks over for 29. Suryakumar kept MI’s tempo going by hitting Bishnoi for a four and two sixes in the 13th over, but the 16-run over also saw the dismissal of Tilak Varma.

Suryakumar brought up his 4000th run in the IPL with a ramp off Avesh Khan and got another six off Prince over fine leg again. At 157 for 5 in 15 overs, MI were ready to launch but Mayank set them back when he dislodged Hardik’s leg stump and gave away just five runs in the 16th over. Suryakumar was then dismissed for 54 off 28 balls, but MI kept finding the boundaries.

Rathi’s off-day continued at the death as LSG continued with just five bowlers. The over started with an edged reverse sweep that went for four. It finished with 19 runs as Naman Dhir and Corbin Bosch got under the ball and launched sixes over the leg side. MI soared past 200 with an over to go. Four full tosses from Avesh in the 20th over helped MI post 215.

Aiden Markram was able to slash Boult, who started from around the wicket, through the off side for a couple of fours. Marsh then launched a flick over square leg off Deepak Chahar that nearly went out of the ground.

Bumrah was slightly lucky to get Markram as hi middled flick went straight into the hands of deep-backward square. Pooran got hold of Chahar in his third powerplay over, scything two wide yorkers for six before pulling a short ball for one more as LSG posted to 60 for 1 in six.

With Mitchell Santner out due to a finger niggle and a left-hander on the tear, Jacks was brought on ahead of Karn Sharma and he struck twice. The first ball was lobbed up in the slot but Pooran mistimed a lofted drive to long-off, where Suryakumar took a good catch.

Pant was back at No. 4 but endured another short stay at the crease. He edged a cut for four through third before miscuing a premeditated reverse sweep to Karn at short third. The wicket led to the two overs following the powerplay going for just 13 runs.

Ayush Badoni got off to a watchful start. He was on seven off seven balls before making room and and slashing Karn for two fours and a six. Marsh hit two fours off Hardik Pandya’s sole over but slowed down from 31 off 17 to 34 off 24. Hardik rang in the changes as five different bowlers were used between the eighth and 13th overs.

The asking rate rose close to 12 when Boult, on return, got Marsh with a slower ball and reduce LSG to 110 for 4. Badoni and David Miller continued the trend of the earlier partnership with Miller, the new batter, getting off to a quick start (21 off 13) while the set batter slowed down.

Badoni got away with an undetected edge in the 14th over but fell to a slower ball from Boult to end with 35 off 22 after being 30 off 15.

Bumrah returned with LSG needing 76 off 30 balls and got three wickets, starting with Miller’s. Bumrah followed Miller with a low full toss that was flicked to Bosch at deep midwicket. A dipping slower yorker had Abdul Samad early into the shot and knocked middle stump back. A pace-on yorker smashed Avesh’s off stump. At 142 for 8, the game was effectively done.

Bishnoi was able to launch a couple of sixes, the second of which was off Bumrah and brought out smiles and fist-pumps, but Bosch and Boult cleaned up the tail and completed MI’s 150th IPL win comprehensively.

Brief scores:
Mumbai Indians 215 for 7 in 20 overs (Ryan Rickelton 58, Rohit Sharma 12, Will Jacks 29, Suryakumar Yadav 54, Naman Dhir 25*, Corbin Bosch 20*; Mayank Yadav 2-40, Prince Yadav 1-44, Digvesh Rathi 1-48, Ravi Bishnoi 1-41, Avesh Khan 2-42) beat Lucknow Super Giants 161 in 20 overs  (Ayush Badoni 35, Mitchell Marsh 34, Nicholas Pooran 27,David  Miller 24, Ravi Bishnoi 13*; Jasprit Bumrah 4-22, Trent Boult 3-20, Will Jacks 2-18, Corbin Bosch 1-26) by 54 runs

[Cricinfo]



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Brian Bennett blazes century but England scent three-day win after follow-on

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Brian Bennett recorded the fastest Test hundred by a Zimbabwean [Cricinfo]

The inequality between England and Zimbabwe as Test nations has been reflected on the field over the first half of this one-off Test match at Trent Bridge. Thursday’s flow of runs for the former was followed by a cascade of wickets from the latter, as Zimbabwe finished day two following on, 30 for 2, after being dismissed for 265 in their first innings, still 270 shy of England’s mammoth 565 for 6 declared.

And yet, the story on Friday was not of the dominating team, but of the dominated, as a lone hand by opening batter Brian Bennett to the tune of 139 made this one-way traffic watchable. Bennett’s second century in the format now ranks as Zimbabwe’s fastest, clocking in at 97 deliveries, and only their third against England.

The 21-year-old, playing in his seventh Test, now has four fifty-plus score in 12 innings. He did not take a backward step, with 104 of his runs from fours, most of them sweetly struck, including three in a row off Gus Atkinson that took him to three figures. Boundary numbers 18 (a square drive) and 19 (a punch down the ground) moved him to 99, before Atkinson offered enough width for a back-cut that was steered expertly through deep third.

An impassioned celebration was matched in the stands, as pockets of Zimbabwe supporters erupted with glee, in amongst a strong ovation from locals. And he kept all enterained with further crisp strikes, particularly down the ground, before England finally decided to test him with short deliveries.

They were vindicated when Josh Tongue, playing his first Test since the 2023 Ashes encounter at Lord’s, dug the penultimate legal delivery of the 53rd over into the armpit of Bennett, who fended to Ollie Pope at short leg. An acrobatic take was soon for nothing as replays showed Tongue had overstepped.

Bennett’s reprieve, on 139, was the fourth he had been given. But he could not make it count this time as the same duo combined legally to remove the right-hander in similar fashion, albeit with a far simpler take for Pope. Just 13 overs of play later, Bennett was making a second walk back, trapped LBW by Atkinson as the first to go in the follow-on innings for just one from nine deliveries.

As frustrating as England found Bennett’s enterprise, they were never really up against it, barring a period when his 65- and 60-run stands with Craig Ervine and Sean Williams respectively had the visitors sitting relatively pretty on 156 for 2. By the end, the hosts were able to tick off a few nuggets that may come to benefit them when India arrive next month.

Harry Brook’s morning cameo – eventually the last man to fall, for 58 – was a broadly useful hit out against a weary attack who were still a man down with left armer Richard Ngarava unable to take the field after his back spasm on day one. Five overs into Zimbabwe’s first innings, Sam Cook  having become the first England debutant to bowl the first ball in his maiden innings since Martin McCague did so here in 1993 against Australia, registered his maiden Test wicket when Ben Curran edged to Brook at second slip.

That would be Cook’s lot from his opening 17 overs in the format, 1 for 72 and a fair few narrow misses, including Bennett edging through the cordon and past his own stumps on 16 and 32 respectively. But there was better luck for Shoaib Bashir,   who became the youngest English bowler to take 50 Test wickets with the first of his 3 for 62 that has now more than doubled his first-class haul this summer. His first two across three matches for Glamorgan had come at a grim average of 152.00.

There was also encouragement for Ben Stokes,  who bagged two wickets in 11 deliveries in his first appearance of the year after replacing Bashir in the attack following a botched caught-and-bowled attempt that split the off-spinners left ring finger.

Brought on first change at the Radcliffe Road End after 12 overs, Bashir started with a full toss that was guided through extra cover by Ervine, before producing a beauty to take the left-hander’s edge, low to Brook at first slip. A bit of bounce then did for Williams, who played onto his stumps.

It looked like Bashir was done for the day when Sikandar Raza, on three, danced down the wicket and smashed back at the bowler, who put in a valiant effort to his right to claim the return catch. Bloodied, and with two balls remaining in his 13th over, Bashir had to leave the field, with Stokes using the opportunity to bowl for the first time since his hamstring operation at the start of the year.

Having teased an over here or there to taper into form, citing bowling as the hardest thing to get right following an extended period out, Stokes almost made an immediate impact. His first legal delivery – having started with a front-foot no ball – squared up Bennett on 89 but was shelled inexplicably by Root at first slip.

The error meant Stokes had to make do with a remarkable spell of two dismissals in 11 balls rather than three in 14. He was finally on the board with a devilish delivery that turned Raza inside-out – this time an edge flying through to Jamie Smith behind the stumps – before Wessly Madhevere was unpicked by the surprise inswinger after a diet of outswingers, handing the No.6 batter a 10-ball duck.

Bashir eventually returned in the evening session, and made up for lost time with an immediate pearler when reintroduced to the attack for the 57th over, bowling Tafadzwa Tsiga through the gate with a classic off-break. An aborted caught-and-bowled chance off Blessing Murzarabani was a wilfully missed opportunity for a fourth, his injured finger clearly a factor, but the end came quickly when Atkinson found the tall quick backing away for the ninth and final dismissal.

Atkinson soon had his third of the day when Bennett was undone by a lack of bounce, and Ervine’s tame bunt to short leg – another for the Tongue-Pope combo – was followed by a slow trudge off from the Zimbabwe captain.

Even allowing for Bennett’s brilliance, it has been a tough couple of days for otherwise willing opponents. Day three promises to be tougher still.

Brief scores:
Zimbabwe 265 in 63.2 overs (Brian Bennett 139, Craig Ervine 42, Sean Williams 25, Tafadzwa Tsiga 22; Gus Atkinson 2-58, Shoaib Bashir 3-62, Ben Stokes 2-11) and [f/o] 30 for 2 in 10 overs (Sean Williams 22*, Ben Curran 4*; Gus Atkinson 1-01)trail  England 565 for 6 dec in 96.3 overs (Ollie Pope 171, Ben Duckett 140, Zak Crawley 124, Harry Brook 58; Blessing Muzarabani 3-141)  by 270 runs

[Cricinfo]

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IPL 2025: Kishan, Sunrisers Hyderabad quicks dent Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s chances of a top-two finish

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Ishan Kishan kept Sunrisers Hyderabad racing away after the openers fell [Cricinfo]

Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) proved to be the banana peel they were feared to be for Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB), who still remained one point behind the table leaders Gujarat Titans with Punjab Kings (PBKS) now breathing down their necks with one game in hand.

Ishan Kishan, who had fizzled out after his century in the first match with just 125 runs off 117 in ten innings since then, anchored a hyper-aggressive SRH to 231. He was as efficient an anchor could be: scoring an unbeaten 94 off 48, including 54 out of the last 86 runs SRH made as he ran out of hitting partners.

Led by Phil Salt,  RCB stayed abreast with the asking rate for 14 overs, but then endured a collapse of 7 for 16 to lose by 42 runs, a net-run-rate blow that could dent their chances of ending in the top two. They have fallen below PBKS’ net run rate, who are level with them on points.

The pitch looked tricky to everyone, but within one over of batting there, Travis Head and Abhishek Sharma decided this was perhaps the best pitch they had batted on all year. They decided they needed 230-240 and went looking accordingly. Abhishek started the charge with 34 off 17, hitting three sixes and perishing trying to hit a fourth. Head was slightly slower in his 17 off ten, and was outdone by a Bhuvneshwar Kumar knuckle ball.

Two wickets down in the powerplay, SRH saw no reason to slow down. Heinrich Klassen got a couple of gifts from Suyash Sharma and smacked 24 off 13 before mis-hitting a third gift. Aniket Verma made all this look pedestrian as he hit sixes off even good balls in his nine-ball 26.

The only problem was, none of them could carry on, leaving SRH at 145 for 4 in the 12th over.

He looked sedentary in comparison but Kishan was 40 off 22 when Aniket got out. Especially with Nitish Kumar Reddy and Abhinav Manohar falling in quick succession to Romario Shepherd, it was on Kishan to make sure SRH had a finishing kick.

Kishan took charge, faced 12 balls out of 18 in his seventh-wicket stand of 43 with Pat Cummins, and ended up one hit short of another century. The hitting was clean but he had to dial down the risk a little. He did play a ramp in between.

Aware of the behaviour of the pitch, SRH looked to go into the pitch and run their fingers on the ball often. RCB, though, showed why they were so close to the top of the table. Each of the first 14 overs featured at least one boundary.  Virat Kohli started the charge with 43 off 25, Salt took over spectacularly with 62 off 32, and SRH were just hanging in.

Reddy hasn’t had the best season with the bat, was untidy in the field, but then started the turnaround with the wicket of Mayank Agarwal in the 11th over. Cummins came back with the wicket of Salt, but RCB stand-in captain Jitesh Sharma hit a six first ball, and Rajat Patidar looked in decent touch. Even with those two wickets falling, RCB kept the asking rate under two runs a ball.

Reddy came back to bowl the first over without a boundary in the 15th, and then Eshan Malinga delivered the big blows. Banging the ball in in the first half had probably aided a bit of reverse. He kept nailing the yorkers, changing up with the odd slower ball. He ran out Patidar, drew a return catch from Shepherd, and handcuffed the injured Tim David, who seemed to have done his hamstring when fielding.

The dramatic slide continued to the end of the innings.

Brief scores:
Sunrisers Hyderabad 231 for 6 in 20 overs (Ishan Kishan 94*, Abhishek Sharma 34, Travis Head 17, Heinrich Klassen 24, Aniket Verma 26, Abhinav Manohar 12, Pat Cummins 13*; Bhuvenshwar Kumar 1-43, Lungi Ngidi 1-51, Suyash Sharma 1-45, Krunal Pandya 1-38, Romairo Shepherd 2-14, Krunal 1-38) beat Royal Challengers Bengaluru 189 in 19.5 overs (Phil Salt 62, Virat Kohli 43, Mayank Agrawal 11, Rajat Patidar 18, Jitesh Sharma 24; Pat  Cummins 3-28, Jaydev Unadkat 1-41, Eshan Malinga 2-37, Harsh Dubev 1-20, Nitish Kumar Reddy 1-13)  by 42 runs

[Cricinfo]

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Veteran actress Malini Fonseka passes away at the age of 78

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It has been reported that veteran Sri Lankan actress and former member of parliament,  Malini Senehelatha Fonseka, popularly known as ‘Malini Fonseka’ or the “Queen of Sri Lankan Cinema,” has passed away this morning (24) at the age of 76, while receiving treatment at a private hospital in Colombo.

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