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Melbourne rain keeps men’s T20 World Cup final on tenterhooks

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There will be some nervous looks skywards over the coming days in Melbourne with rain threatening the men’s T20 World Cup final between England and Pakistan at the MCG on Sunday, raising the prospect of the reserve day being needed and even a shared trophy.There is currently a 95% chance of rain forecast for Sunday with between 15 and 25mm falling. “Very high (near 100%) chance of showers. The chance of a thunderstorm, possibly severe, with heavy falls possible,” the Bureau of Meteorology was saying as of Friday morning.

The reserve day is allocated on Monday, but that also has an uncertain forecast with again a 95% chance of rain and falls between 5 and 10mm.For the knockout matches in the tournament a minimum of 10 overs per side is needed to constitute a match, compared to five overs during the group stages.

The first priority will be to complete a shortened match on Sunday if required, meaning the overs will be reduced before the reserve day is activated. If the game has started on Sunday but can’t be completed then it will resume on the reserve day from the position it was halted. Once the toss has taken place, the game is considered live.If the game begins on Sunday and there is a reduction of overs but play does not have a chance to restart due to weather then the game will resume as a 20-over contest on the reserve day.

While there is only 30 minutes extra time allocated to the original day of the final, if the reserve day is used there are two hours extra available with play starting on the Monday at 3pm local time.

“If the reserve day is allocated, every effort will be made to complete the match on the scheduled day with any necessary reduction in overs taking place and only if the minimum number of overs necessary to constitute a match cannot be bowled on the scheduled day will the match be completed on the reserve day,” the playing conditions read.

“If the match has started on the scheduled day and overs are subsequently reduced following an interruption, but no further play is possible, the match will resume on the reserve day at the point where the last ball was played.”

If there is not enough time over the two days to achieve the minimum overs the trophy would be shared. The 2002-03 Champions Trophy between India and Sri Lanka ended in such a way although under the playing conditions at the time a new game was started on the reserve day. Both matches were abandoned at virtually the same point. In the 2019 ODI World Cup, the semi-final between India and New Zealand at Old Trafford was played across two days.

Melbourne has been badly hit by rain during this tournament with three Super 12 matches abandoned without a ball bowled: New Zealand vs Afghanistan, Afghanistan vs Ireland and Australia vs England. The England-Ireland game in Melbourne was also curtailed by rain, but Ireland were able to take a famous win on DLS.

Aside from the South Africa-Zimbabwe game in Hobart which was also a no result, the rest of the tournament has largely escaped the rain during what has been a wet start to summer across the east and south east of Australia.The forecast was also poor leading into the India-Pakistan game at the MCG but cleared to allow a full game with the contest developing into one of the best T20 matches of all time. Organisers, players and supporters will hope the final is graced with the same good luck.

(Cricinfo)



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Australia ahead after Cummins, Rabada and Ngidi dominate pulsating second day

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Pat Cummins led from the front [Cricinfo]

For two hours in the middle of day two, Australia  had one hand on the WTC mace after taking a 74-run first-innings lead at Lord’s. For the next two, South Africa did their utmost to prise their fingers from it, and for the one after that, Alex Carey and Mitchell Starc fought them off with a 61-run eighth-wicket partnership. As things stand, Australia still have a few fingers on the mace after a gripping day of Test cricket.

It was, once again, a day for bowlers. Fourteen wickets fell on day two, the same number as the first day, for a total of 28 wickets in six sessions.

Pat Cummins stole the early headlines when he became the first visiting captain to take a five for at Lord’s and then went on to pluck his 300th Tet wicket. Then it was over to Kagiso Rabada and Marco Jansen, who had Australia 44 for 3 before Lungi Ngidi, back in the Test side after ten months and coming off a poor first innings, redeemed himself with three wickets in a nine-over spell that broke Australia open.

Where things stand at the end of the day is that South Africa will already have to pull off the fourth-highest sucessfyl chase at Lord’s, and do it against Australia’s unrelenting attack. That means it’s probably still advantage Australia after a breathless seven-and-half-hours in a final that has hit fast-forward.

South Africa resumed the day on 43 for 4, 169 runs behind Australia’s 212, and on a go-slow. Temba Bavuma had laboured his way to 3 off 37 overnight as South Africa’s innings ground yo a halt. but he showed more initiative on the second morning. He struck two glorious lofted drives in Mitchell Starc’s second over of the day and looked to be finding his touch. Bavuma was on 17 before he was given out lbw off a Josh Hazlewood delivery that nipped in and struck his back pad, and he reluctantly reviewed. To everyone’s disbelief including Bavuma’s, Snicko showed an inside-edge. Bavuma went on to drive Hazlewood and Starc over the covers and pull Cummins into the stands for six in what looked like an increasingly authoritative stay at the crease.

His partnership with David Bedingham grew to 64 and it took a moment of magic in the field to separate them. Bavuma drove Cummins in the air and to the right of Marnus Labuschagne, who dived full length at cover and pouched it with both hands.

Bavuma’s dismissal sent South Africa back into their shell. Bedingham and Kyle Verreynne scored 17 nervy runs in the next 52 balls and both looked vulnerable: Bedingham was drawn into a false stroke by Hazlewood and Verreynne was on 1 when he edged Beau Webster just short of Smith at second slip. But the moment of controversy came when Bedingham edged Webster onto the flap of his pad. Alex Carey moved towards him in an attempt to take a catch and the ball bobbled into and then out of Bedingham’s pad flap. At that moment, Bedingham reached for the ball and dropped it close to his foot. Usman Khawaja and Steven Smith began appealing for obstructing the field, and there was some excitement before it was decided the ball was dead. Bedingham responded by hitting the next ball, a half-volley, for four and South Africa went to lunch on 121 for 5, 91 runs behind.

More drama ensued after the break when Cummins hit Verreynne on the pad as he shuffled across, and the ball deflected to fine leg. Verreynne attempted a run, Cummins turned to appeal, and the pair collided, by which point a throw had come in and there was also the chance of a run-out. Cummins asked for a review on the lbw and replays suggested the ball would have gone on to hit leg stump. Three balls later, Jansen handed Cummins a simple return catch, and at 126 for 7, South Africa were in disarray.

Cummins completed his five-for when he had Bedingham caught behind off a thin edge three overs later and then got his 300th when Rabada nailed a pull to Webster at deep square. Cummins finished with 6 for 28 in a final analysis that included six maiden overs out of 18.1 and barely a bad ball. Crucially, he gave Australia an important lead that could still have a decisive say on this game.

The same could be said of South Africa’s collapse. They lost 5 for 12 in 35 balls; Australia had lost 5 for 20 at around the same time on day one.

South Africa came out looking flat as Labuschagne took Rabada’s opening over for seven. Rabada and Jansen bowled three no-balls in the first four overs, but started to find their rhythm when Rabada hit Labuschagne on the pad in his third over and then induced an outside edge.

In the next over, Jansen thought he had Khawaja caught behind and Bavuma burned a review to see daylight between bat and ball. It took until the 11th over for things to start happening for South Africa. For the second time in the match, Rabada struck twice in an over, against the same two batters. Khawaja was caught behind poking outside off and Cameron Green edged to third slip. Smith sought to restore order with a straight drive that went for four. Australia went to tea on 32 for 2, 106 ahead.

As was the case on day one, the evening session could only be described with one word: mayhem. Jansen bowled a marathon spell either side of the break and was into his eighth over when he offered Labuschagne a full one that was just short of driving length, and he nicked off.

Khawaja, Labuschagne and Green had collectively scored 49 runs in this match, the worst return by an Australian top three since 1890.

Then came Ngidi. After three unspectacular overs post-tea, he went fullish and straight. Smith missed and was hit on the back pad and Bavuma was convinced to review again and was successful this time. Ngidi then hit Webster on the back pad with a ball that tailed in and the No. 6 reviewed unsuccessfully. In the next over, Wiaan Mulder beat Travis Head’s inside-edge and the ball ricocheted off his pads onto the stumps, and then came the delivery of the evening: Ngidi’s yorker to Cummins. It thudded into middle and off and Australia were 73 for 7.

But just as South Africa may have started to sniff something special, their momentum drained away. Carey and Starc put on 61 for the eighth wicket at a good clip – 4.31 runs an over – before Rabada had one last word on the day. He got the ball to move back into Carey from around the wicket and had him out lbw in an over peppered with no-balls. All told, Rabada bowled five on the day and six in the match and South Africa have overstepped 19 times.

They’ll worry about that as much as what could have been in the final over when Jansen dropped Starc at gully, off Mulder, off the third-last ball of the day. By then, South Africa had moved the fielders behind the bat closer in, as several balls had dropped short, and Jansen’s attempts to juggle were not as successful as they had been on the first day. Australia go into the third day with a lead of 218 runs and two wickets in hand.

Brief scores:
Australia 212 in 56.4 overs and 144 for 8 in 40 overs (Marnus Labuschagne 22, Alex Carey 43;  Lungi Ngidi 3-35, Kagiso Rabada 3-44) lead South Africa 138 in 57.1 overs (David Bedingham 45, Temba Bavuma 3; , Pat Cummins 6-28, Mitchell Starc 2-41) by 218 runs

[Cricinfo]

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Cummins turns the screw as South Africa crash at Lord’s

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In a pulsating day of Test cricket, it was Pat Cummins who turned the tide with a captain’s spell for the ages, breathing life back into Australia’s World Test Championship campaign. Trailing and under the pump after a modest first innings, Cummins dug deep and delivered a spell that not only levelled the playing field but tilted it firmly in Australia’s favour.

At one stage, South Africa looked to be tightening the screws, inching away at 126 for five. But after lunch, Cummins returned with fire in his belly and thunder in his boots. What followed was a breathtaking collapse – South Africa folded for 138, losing their last five wickets for just 12 runs in the space of 34 balls. The Lord’s faithful watched in disbelief as the Australian skipper ran through the tail like a hot knife through butter.

Cummins finished with six for 28 – his best at the Home of Cricket – and in the process, joined the elite 300-wicket club. It was not just a captain’s effort with the ball; it was a rallying cry, a statement of intent.

The Proteas, who had been on top in the morning, suddenly found themselves on the ropes. Their lower middle order crumbled under pressure, riddled with soft dismissals, a comical run-out thrown in for good measure – turning the Lord’s slope into a South African slide.

From promising to pitiful, the collapse wasn’t so much triggered by demons in the pitch as it was by lapses in temperament. Day one had been tailor-made for the quicks – gloomy skies, nip off the seam, and swing on tap. But on day two, the sun was out, and the conditions far friendlier. Yet, South Africa batted as if the clouds were still hanging over their heads.

For a side with several players seasoned in County Cricket, the meek surrender was hard to digest. They were expected to weather the storm, but instead, they walked straight into it without a raincoat.

The final word? A familiar tale in Protea folklore – another high-stakes final, another slip-up when it mattered most. The game hasn’t yet run away from them, but they’re chasing leather and momentum now, and Pat Cummins has well and truly bowled Australia back into contention

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Dilni dazzles with record breaking long jump feat

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Dilni Rajapaksha of Lyceum International, Wattala established a new meet record in the Under 16 girls’ long jump. (File Pic)

Emerging athlete  Dilni Rajapaksha of Lyceum International, Wattala produced the most impressive long jump feat of the day and Mayon Rajasinghe won back to back golds for St. Joseph’s Darley Road as the Junior National Athletic Championship commenced with record breaking performances at Diyagama on Thursday.

Dilni erased her own meet record  (5.80m -2024) with a feat of 5.96 metres to win the Under 16 girls’ long jump.

Dilni established herself as a promising jumper last year and her achievements yesterday left enthusiasts comparing the long jump performances of the Under 18  and Under 16  age categories. Incidentally, the Asian Youth Championship medallist Dilki Nehara of Sri Sumagala Balika, Panadura who competed in the Under 18 girls’ long jump in the morning had her winning jump measured at 5.91 metres.

The opening day was notable for several record breaking performances in field events.

Dilki Dewmini of Visakha Vidyalaya, Colombo established a new meet record in the Under 16 shot put with a throw of 12.68 metres. She shattered her own meet record established last year as she became the first athlete to clear the 12 metres mark at these championships.

Mayon Rajasinghe won two golds on the opening day of the Junior National Athletics Championship. (Pic by Kamal Wanniarachchi)

Taxila Central thrower Shalomi Jayakody became the first athlete to clear the 40 metres mark in the Under 18 girls’ hammer throw as she rewrote record books with a throw of 40.81 metres.

In the Under 16 boys’ hammer throw, S.M. Karunarathne of Taxila Central cleared 40.68 metres to create a new meet record.

In track events, Matara Central athlete Nuhansa Kodituwakku won the Under 20 girls’ 800 metres ahead of Lyceum International Wattala athlete Humansi Pradeepani. She returned a time of 2:10.72 seconds.

In the Under 18 age category, Rusith Nimsara of St. Servatius’ College, Matara won the boys’ long jump with a feat of 6.97 metres, while Tharusha Mendis of Lyceum International excelled in the boys’ high jump with a season’s best of 2.08 metres.

Mayon Rajasinghe dominated both the shot put and the javelin throw in the Under 16 age category. The Josephian cleared 15.19 metres to win the shot put before throwing the javelin to a distance of 58.13 metres to clinch the second gold.

by Reemus Fernando ✍️

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