Australia chase another great escape

It’s 103 years since a team won a Test having been bowled out for 88 or less in the first innings of the match

Brydon Coverdale at Headingley22-Jul-2010It’s 103 years since a team won a Test having been bowled out for 88 or less in the first innings of the match. It’s only six months since Pakistan last squandered a lead that should have been match-winning.The Australians are not looking back a century as they embark on the third day at Headingley, where, remarkably, they became the bookmakers’ favourites a day after being skittled for their lowest score in 26 years. Shane Watson dragged Australia back into the match with a six-wicket haul before Ricky Ponting led a batting counterattack, and despite taking a 170-run first-innings advantage, the ghosts of their Sydney meltdown could still haunt Pakistan.”We have seen it before and it might bring back some memories to Pakistan of the Test match in Sydney a few months ago,” Watson said. “They know exactly our fighting spirit as a team and what we are able to really turnaround from that Test in Sydney.”I think that will really start to creep into their minds over the next day or so especially with Ricky and Michael [Clarke] batting very nicely at the moment. We know there is still a lot of hard work to go in this Test and hopefully we will continue to do that over the next couple of days and get the result like we did in Sydney.”The SCG result will certainly be on the minds of the seven Pakistan players in this match who were also present in January. It was certainly being considered by their coach Waqar Younis, who was not in charge back then, and he is confident that with early wickets his men can avoid a repeat.”We had such a Test match back in Sydney recently so we don’t really want to get into that sort of situation,” Waqar said. “We don’t want to lose this Test match. We’re still 34 runs ahead of them, they have to start getting runs on top of us, so it’s still very much an open game for us. Tomorrow, first session is a very important one. If we fetch a couple of wickets it’ll do us good.”The key for Australia is Ponting, who survived a close lbw shout from his first ball when he offered no shot to Mohammad Aamer. Ponting dug in to register the first half-century of the match and by the close of the second day, he and his vice-captain Clarke had delivered Australia a sniff of victory, although Waqar knows removing Ponting will spark the Pakistan bowlers.”If you look at the last Test he struggled against the swing bowling but [today] he managed to get out of that period where we were looking to get him out,” Waqar said. “He’s got 12,000 runs, you’ve got to give him credit. He’s a class act, and he’s looking good, definitely a danger-man for us. If we can fetch him early morning it will be a different story.”

Jolted India in must-win situation

India face Sri Lanka in a must-win encounter for the nth time in a multi-nation tournament

The Preview by Sriram Veera04-Jun-2010

Match Facts

Saturday, June 05, 2010

Start time 0900 (0700 GMT)
The impressive Angelo Mathews is in great all-round form•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

The Big Picture

And so here we are at that stage in a multi-nation tournament where we wonder, ‘Hold on, haven’t we been here before’? India face Sri Lanka in a must-win encounter for the nth time in a multi-nation tournament.On the eve of this tourney Suresh Raina said that his team didn’t have any weaknesses. Seriously? India’s performance in the last ODI against Zimbabwe was one of the more befuddling efforts in the recent times. The openers – especially M Vijay, as Dinesh Karthik managed to end up with a decent strike-rate – seemingly meandered without any purpose on a wicket that didn’t have any demons in it. Even Raina was moved enough to make his displeasure known in the post-match ceremony.India’s problems should have been its inexperienced bowling attack but the batsmen too have blown hot and cold. Not much was expected of the bowlers, especially the seamers, but the batsmen have the potential to play better than they have so far. And the think-tank’s strategy has been puzzling.In their previous game against Sri Lanka when Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli, who were involved in a match-winning partnership, gestured to the dressing room that they wanted to take the Powerplay; they weren’t allowed. If they had taken that Powerplay, they might well have earned a bonus point. And of course it was in the same game that Raina forgot to take the bowling Powerplay and was apparently reminded of his error by an Indian commentator.In Wednesday’s game against Zimbabwe, after setting a low target, Raina had well-spread out fields instead of attacking. To bounce back from such a dismal performance is going to be a tough ask but then India had thumped Sri Lanka without breaking a sweat just a few days ago.Sri Lanka too haven’t been without problems. In the first game, they couldn’t post a good enough total and their bowling looked pretty ordinary. In the second, they didn’t have to work too hard as Zimbabwe never turned up. In the memorable words of Zimbabwe’s new coach Alan Butcher: “frankly today we were rubbish”. Zimbabwe indeed were rubbish that day and Sri Lanka would not know whether they improved after their ordinary outing against India or whether they were made to look good by Zimbabwe’s poor effort.

Form guide (most recent first)

India LWLLW

Sri Lanka WLWLW

Watch out for…

Virat Kohli averages over 50 in his brief international ODI career. He has been consistent in the opportunities given to him and has looked pretty solid in this tourney. Even in the game against Sri Lanka where Rohit ended up with a ton, it was Virat who played the more solid knock and laid the foundation.Angelo Mathews has impressed with how quickly he has matured in the international circuit. He has been quick to gauge a situation and tailor his batting to the requirements of the match situation. And he has always come across as an intelligent bowler.

Team news

India (possible) 1 Naman Ojha, 2 Dinesh Karthik (wk), 3 Virat Kohli, 4 Rohit Sharma, 5 Suresh Raina (capt), 6 Yusuf Pathan, 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 Amit Mishra, 9 Ashok Dinda, 10 Pragyan Ojha, 11 Abhimanyu Mithun.Sri Lanka (possible) 1 Upul Tharanga, 2 Tillakaratne Dilshan (capt.), 3 Dinesh Chandimal, 4 Angelo Mathews, 5 Chamara Silva, 6 Chamara Kapugedera, 7 Thissara Perera, 8 Suraj Randiv, 9 Nuwan Kulasekara, 10 Dilhara Fernando, 11 Ajantha Mendis.

Stats and trivia

  • Thissara Perera has played six of his eight ODIs against India. All his runs have come against India and at a strike rate of 154.66
  • Amit Mishra has struggled in the ODIs: He has taken eight wickets at an average of 47. His best spell – 3 for 40 – came against Sri Lanka. Mishra’s team-mate Pragyan Ojha has played 9 of his 11 ODIs against Sri Lanka and has picked up 12 wickets at 28.08.

    Quotes

    ” We are not getting a good partnerships from the openers. We have to learn from it. They [the openers] didn’t get runs in last two games. “

Diamonds spinners hold nerve at death after Bess Heath's 60

Linsey Smith, Holly Armitage ensure Finals Day race heads into final round of fixtures

ECB Reporters Network01-Jun-2022Northern Diamonds kept their Charlotte Edwards Cup hopes on course by holding their nerve to defeat Lightning by five runs at Seat Unique Riverside.The home side set an imposing total of 146 after Bess Heath led the way with a great knock of 60, sharing a partnership of 93 with Sterre Kalis. Kalis and skipper Hollie Armitage scored 39 and 30 respectively to lay down a challenge for Lightning.Ella Claridge and Bethany Harmer gave Lightning real hope of chasing down the target, but the Diamonds’ bowlers held their composure under pressure led by Armitage with figures of 4 for 27. Linsey Smith and Emma Marlow also impressed to seal a narrow victory, taking the race for Finals Day into the final game.After winning the toss, Heath and Kalis were in great touch at the top of the innings to put the visitors on the back foot in the power play. Heath made the most of a life after Kathryn Bryce failed to run her out for 1, while Kalis was also afforded a second chance when Teresa Graves put her down on 14 at square leg.Related

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Lightning were to rue those missed opportunities as Kalis and Heath poured on the runs for the home side. The two batters cruised past the 50 partnership for the opening stand in only 40 balls, and surpassed the highest stand for the first wicket for the Diamonds in the 2022 campaign.Heath brought out her reverse-sweep to perfection to bring up her fifty, dispatching Marie Kelly for two boundaries in the 12th over to reach the milestone. The opening stand was only ended when Kalis mistimed her drive off Lucy Higham to Claridge.Heath and Armitage kept the pressure on the visitors and pressed over the 100-run mark. Piepa Cleary prised out Heath for a fine innings of 60, stumped by Sarah Bryce while overbalancing.Late wickets from the visitors prevented the Diamonds surpassing 150, but the hosts were well placed after posting 145 for 5 from their 20 overs.Marlow made an instant breakthrough for the Diamonds to remove Kelly to put Lightning on the back foot in the first over but they responded through Harmer and Claridge, who raced to their 50 partnership from 40 balls, matching the earlier effort from Kalis and Heath.Armitage brought herself into the attack and secured a vital breakthrough to dismiss Harmer lbw for 35, ending the partnership for the second wicket for 74.Sophie Munro ensured the game would have a tense finish with a quick-fire 16 from 10 balls but Armitage held her composure when it mattered the most to dismiss Munro, Graves and Cleary.Sarah Bryce still kept Lightning in the game, leaving them needing 10 runs from the final over. But, the Diamonds held their nerve under pressure as Smith bowled Higham and had Ballinger caught by Phoebe Turner to guide her side over the line.

PCB puts on hold plan for Australian drop-in pitches

The board is set to hire a consultant to look into the feasibility of the idea

Umar Farooq24-Mar-2022The PCB’s plan to bring drop-in pitches from Australia has been delayed. The board is now likely to hire a consultant who will first advise it on whether it is feasible to have the Australian-made pitches in Pakistan. Instead, ESPNcricinfo understands the PCB is likely to get soil in from Australia and seed it at multiple venues as part of a trial.The original plan was to have two readymade pitches as a short-term solution to help Pakistan prepare for the upcoming T20 World Cup, which is to be held in Australia in October-November. It was also part of a broader plan to overhaul the standard of pitches across the country – a key plank in the chairmanship of Ramiz Raja.Related

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The company given the contract to import the drop-in pitches has been asked to hold the purchase, which, in any case, would have been a fairly lengthy process, potentially taking up to 10 months. The PCB had signed an MoU with the investment company Arif Habib Group, which was to bear the PKR 37 crore (USD 2 million approx) procurement cost. That money is still likely to be used in the development of pitches.Since he took over as PCB chairman, Ramiz has been vocal about various issues that he sees afflicting Pakistan cricket. Pitches have become his most urgent priority. “Until pitches are fixed, we aren’t going anywhere as it’s the heartbeat of cricket,” he had told ESPNcricinfo last year in December.”It is Ramiz’s vision and mission to improve the quality of the pitches at all international and domestic cricket venues,” a PCB spokesperson told ESPNcricinfo. “In this regard, we’ve hired an Australian expert on drop-in pitches as a consultant, who will tour Pakistan in April and visit all potential venues for a complete assessment and evaluation before suggesting next steps.”As we don’t have experts on drop-in pitches, we need to have a feasibility about everything around it. There are several critical elements to the success of this initiative, including weather conditions, usage of the venues, soil requirements and overall design and outlook of the venue.”The MCG, like a number of Australian venues, features a drop-in pitch•Getty Images

Drop-in pitches are prominent in Australia and New Zealand, where a number of stadiums host multiple sports. A portable turf pitch is installed whenever a cricket match is to take place. In Pakistan, however, the PCB either leases out cricket stadiums or owns them directly, and cricket is the only sport played at these venues. The PCB maintains all stadiums through the year, employing their own curators for each venue.Pitches have been in the spotlight during Pakistan’s ongoing Test series against Australia, in general for their flat, docile nature. In particular, the surface in Rawalpindi came in for heavy criticism after just 14 wickets fell over five days of a drawn first Test, and it ultimately earned a “below average” rating from the ICC.Soon after, Ramiz conceded that the pitch had been prepared, in part, to nullify Australia’s strengths and account for injury-enforced absences in the Pakistan side. The nature of that pitch was in contrast to Rawalpindi’s reputation as the most seam-friendly of Pakistan’s main venues.In fact, Pakistan’s pitches since the return of Test cricket to the country in late 2019 and until this series had been widely viewed as sporting surfaces with something in them for batters, fast bowlers and spinners.But the surfaces for the first two Tests against Australia in Rawalpindi and Karachi pushed the PCB to hire Australian curator Toby Lumsden to assist the local curator while preparing the pitch for the ongoing third Test in Lahore, in a bid to produce a more helpful track for spinners. But the Test match has been dominated by the fast bowlers, who took 17 of the 20 wickets to fall on the first three days.

Rajasthan Royals retain captain Sanju Samson

Buttler, Archer, Livingstone, and Jaiswal are the frontrunners for the remaining three slots

Nagraj Gollapudi25-Nov-2021Sanju Samson is the first player Rajasthan Royals have retained for IPL 2022. ESPNcricinfo has learned that the 27-year old will continue as captain after agreeing to an INR 14 crore per season contract this week.Samson, it is learned, was first on the list of players Royals wanted to keep before the retention window closes on November 30. The frontrunners for the remaining three slots (in no particular order) are – wicketkeeper-batter Jos Buttler, fast bowler Jofra Archer, allrounder Liam Livingstone – and uncapped opener Yashasvi Jaiswal.Samson joined Royals in 2018 for INR 8 crore. He was elevated to the captaincy last season and though he couldn’t take the team into the play-offs he still finished 2021 with 484 runs at a strike-rate of 137.Ben Stokes (INR 12.5 crore), Archer (INR 7.2 crore) and Buttler (INR 4.4 crore) also cost the Royals big money but they’ve been big-impact players. Archer even won Player of the Tournament in 2020 but had to sit this year out due to injury. The Royals management is keen to hold onto their star fast bowler, however, his fitness has become a point of debate.Buttler is expected to sign off on the retention soon but Stokes’ position is unclear. Although the talismanic allrounder took a break from cricket in 2021, and has only just returned to training, the key question concerning him is money and whether the franchise will have enough of it to make an offer.As per the IPL rules, a team can retain a total four players of which a maximum of two can be overseas. This arrangement costs INR 42 crore but still leaves the owner with INR 48 crore to spend at the auction. Royals are expected to seal the final three retentions by November 28. And, while they are paying Samson INR 14 crore, INR 16 crore will be debited from their account since he is the first of four players the franchise has chosen to keep.

Buttler, Wood deliver another win while chasing for 2-1 England lead

Kohli’s unbeaten 77 off 46 in vain as India’s top order wilts against England’s searing pace

Andrew Miller16-Mar-20211:53

Gambhir: Buttler one of the best T20 batters in the world

England 158 for 2 (Buttler 83*, Bairstow 40*) beat India 156 for 6 (Kohli 77*, Wood 3-31) by eight wicketsIt was a contest defined by fast bowling of the highest quality, in particular from Mark Wood, but it took a Duking between the two star batsmen on either side to settle the third T20I, as Jos Buttler’s 83 from 52 trumped a masterful 77 not out from 46 balls from Virat Kohli, to re-establish England’s series lead in the third T20I at Ahmedabad.Between them, the two men made 160 unbeaten runs from 98 balls, compared to 137 from 132 from the remaining nine batsmen on either side – a reflection on another tricky two-paced surface, and a ratio that might have been more comprehensive still but for Jonny Bairstow’s late flurry of boundaries, as his 40 not out helped seal England’s second eight-wicket win of the series with 10 balls remaining.The margin of England’s victory proved to be as dominant as their opening gambit, but they were made to work harder than might have been anticipated at 87 for 5 after 15 overs, with Wood’s figures of 3 for 14 in three overs confirming the extent to which he had scorched India’s top-order with speeds that touched 155kph/96mph.Powerplay permutations
There hasn’t been much in the way of cat-and-mouse antics when India have been batting in the powerplay – more dog-eat-dog. And for the second time in three matches, either side of Ishan Kishan’s pyrotechnics on Sunday, it was England’s red-hot fast bowlers who made India’s top order go “woof!”From 22 for 3 on Friday, India limped to 24 for 3 today – including a remarkable 25 dot-balls out of 36 – with Wood, who sustained a bruised ankle in the first game, proving his fitness beyond any doubt with a furiously up-and-at-em display.Even the slowest ball of Wood’s first two-over spell was too quick for the awfully out-of-sorts KL Rahul, who played all round a pacy inducker to be bowled for a four-ball 0 – taking his tally for the series to one run from 14 balls after 1 from 4 on Friday, and Sunday’s six-ball duck.Jos Buttler’s strokeplay is no-holds barred•BCCI

In hindsight, the decision to shunt Kishan down to No. 3 was an error from India – not least because it encouraged Eoin Morgan to throw the opening over to Adil Rashid once again, who served up a diet of cautiously negotiated googlies to the right-handers and conceded five runs in a tidy agenda-setting over.Rohit, back in the team after a post-Test break, was never able to settle in his 17-ball 15. Jofra Archer and Wood both missed return catches in his skittish stay – the latter a significantly sharper chance than the first – but in the end, the two quicks combined in a canny piece of pace bowling, as Wood followed his quarry down the leg-side, and cramped his attempt at a pull for Archer to swallow the top-edged chance.Kishan, meanwhile, found himself faced with a wholly more problematic scenario than he had faced on Sunday. He was made to hop from the outset as Wood greeted him with a trio of splice rattlers, before Archer in his followthrough came close to pulling off a run-out one over later. Instead it was Chris Jordan who sawed him off, banging in the bouncer for Buttler to run back for the top edge.Imperious Kohli
His team-mates struggled to make any headway on a difficult deck, but Kohli showed once again – in his second imperious half-century in as many games – that haste and speed are not remotely the same thing. His poise during England’s first-half surge transmitted some much-needed calm to India’s dug-out; but his acceleration at the back end was astonishing, as India’s run-rate began to spike like Gujarat’s Covid cases.Kohli had ticked along to 28 from 29 balls by the end of the 15th over – and at 87 for 5, a total in the region of 120, much as they had made on Friday, seemed the upper end of India’s ambitions.They had lost two more wickets in that time too – Rishabh Pant, run out for 25 after responding too slowly to a fumble from Buttler, and Shreyas Iyer, whose scalping at deep backward epitomised the Route One violence that had put England so firmly on top – a shimmy this way, a shimmy that… it made no odds to Wood, who simply pounded the middle of the pitch once more, and extracted a flappy upper-cut.But then, as Archer returned for his third over, Kohli flicked the switch for India. His first six of the night was a streaky top-edge over fine leg – a direction of travel that Archer had said after the first game he was “at peace” with, because at least it implied he was winning the battle. Kohli’s next two, back to back off Wood, were extraordinary – a huge pull over midwicket as he shuffled two metres outside off to pre-meditate the short ball, then a drill over long-off as he correctly anticipated 150kph yorker.Virat Kohli went for his shots early•BCCI

The counter-punches kept on coming as England tried to claw their way towards their 20-over exit. Hardik Pandya, more hit-and-miss than his magisterial captain, still landed two vital wipes in his 15-ball 17 as Jordan and Archer offered too much width on their short balls. But the finesse was all Kohli’s, as he ramped Archer over fine leg, then unfurled arguably the shot of the night in Jordan’s final-over, a wristy clip through wide long-on to combat a well-disguised legcutter.Kohli’s agony at handing over the strike via a penultimate-ball leg bye was palpable, and sure enough, Pandya couldn’t connect well enough as Archer completed a good running catch in the covers. Nevertheless, his highest T20I score against England had established a target of 157 that was riches in the circumstances. And had it not been for Buttler’s masterclass, it might conceivably have proven competitive.Buttler stands on no ceremony
After the deck-hitting dramatics of England’s quicks, Jason Roy can’t have been the only person to be taken aback by the hooping movement that Bhuvneshwar Kumar extracted in his opening Powerplay over. He responded by slashing two boundaries in Kumar’s second over – the second an ambitious ramp through third man – then holed out on the reverse sweep two balls later, his short but sharp stay confirming the sense that India’s total was significantly better than it appeared on paper.Buttler, however, was in no mood to wait around. Yuzvendra Chahal was greeted with a pair of wafts over long-on for six in his first over, and a brace of fours in his second, either side of a 16-run over off Shardul Thakur, whom he cuffed over square leg for another six to drive England along to 57 for 1 in the powerplay – more than double the total that India had mustered, for a third of the damage.From 43 from 17 balls, Buttler’s job in the short term had been done, and he visibly reined himself in thereafter – priming himself to be lurking at the death if needed, and challenging his team-mate Dawid Malan to set the tempo in the interim. In the wider context of the contest, Malan’s 18 from 17 balls was a perfectly adequate contribution. However, his solitary boundary was a top-edged swat for six, and the manner of his departure, stumped off Washington Sundar in his first visible attempt to force the pace, did little to assuage the concerns that he might not be exactly the player England need at No. 3. When a No. 1-ranked batsman with a higher T20I average than Kohli is a team’s most notable batting concern, it’s fair to surmise that that department is in good order.

Shubman Gill, Karun Nair make South Africa A toil

India’s reserve opener made 92 to further establish his red-ball credentials; Nair ended the day unbeaten on 78

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Sep-2019Stumps Vernon Philander, Lungi Ngidi and Senuran Muthusamy, three bowlers who could line-up together in the XI for South Africa’s first Test against India in Visakhapatnam, had to go through the grind on the first day of South Africa A’s second four-day fixture against India A in Mysuru. They managed just one wicket between them in 35 overs as the Indians got to a healthy 233 for 3 in 74 overs before bad light forced early stumps.Shubman Gill, who is unlikely to feature in that Test but is part of the India squad, provided yet another reminder of why he’s rated so highly. Opening the innings, he struck a 137-ball 92, courtesy 12 fours and a six, before becoming the third Indian wicket to fall. Karun Nair, the man with whom Gill forged a 135-run third-wicket stand, continued his good form from the Duleep Trophy to remain unbeaten on 78. His first-class scores for the season before this one read: 20, 90, 166* and 99.ALSO READ: Shubman Gill interview: ‘Mindset, not game should change.’When play ended for the day, Nair was batting alongside India A captain Wriddhiman Saha, unbeaten on 36. Rishabh Pant’s Test position isn’t yet under scrutiny, but with a potentially tough examination coming up against South Africa, Saha, who has been named the second wicket-keeper in the Test squad, will have an opportunity to further press his credentials.Abhimanyu Easwaran, who opened alongside Gill, and Priyank Panchal, who came in at No.3 with Gill opening, scored 5 and 6 respectively. Abhimanyu, coming off a match-winning 153 in the Duleep Trophy final that potentially set him in line for a Test call-up, was the first to go lbw to Ngidi in the sixth over. Panchal followed 11 overs later when he was out to Wiaan Mulder’s medium pace.From there, Gill and Nair drove home the advantage before Gill fell eight short of his fifth first-class century, shortly before the tea interval. In his 15-match first class career, the 21-year-old now has two centuries and two double-centuries, the last of which was an unbeaten 204 against West Indies A in a second innings, which lifted India A from the pits of 14 for 3 to set up a declaration and eventually push for victory.

Mandhana, spinners demolish Australia as India top Group B

Australia were hit by a concussion to Alyssa Healy, their Player of the Match in the last three games, that ruled out her participation in the chase

The Report by Akshay Gopalakrishnan17-Nov-2018India’s spinners choked out a weakened Australian line-up with relentless accuracy to send them crashing to 119 all out, and a 48-run defeat in their final Group B game at the Providence Stadium in Guyana. The win meant India finished atop the Group B table, undefeated after four games. They will now face the loser of West Indies v England on Sunday, while the winner takes on Australia in the semifinals.The win was set up by Smriti Mandhana, whose belligerent 83 hauled India to a competitive 167 – their highest in T20Is against Australia – after they had elected to bat. Known for her free-willed stroke-making, Mandhana capitalised on some erratic Australian bowling to set the foundation for a winning score.Australia were hit hard by an injury to Alyssa Healy, the Player of the Match in their last three encounters. Healy was involved in a nasty collision with Megan Schutt, as both bowler and keeper went for a catch in the 19th over of the Indian innings. Healy seemed to cop a hard blow around her left shoulder as Schutt crashed into her before spilling the catch. She went down immediately upon impact and was taken off the field, handing over the gloves to Beth Mooney. It was subsequently revealed that the wicketkeeper-batsman had suffered a mild concussion and wouldn’t take part in the chase.Even with her absence, India needed to bring out their best game against the might of this Australian line-up. Their chances always hung on how well their slower bowlers would be able to tie down the opposition. And sure enough, five of the six bowlers used by Harmanpreet Kaur, including herself, were spinners.India trialled with pace just for one over first-up – the very first of the innings – and immediately Australia hit their groove, Mooney finding the boundary twice and pinching 11 off Arundhati Reddy. The message was clear: deny Australia pace and take them out of their comfort zone.Getty Images

Kaur heeded to it the very next over, bringing in Anuja Patil, the offspinner. It cost just three, further reinforcing the strategy. From there, India unsparingly kept the leash on. When Villani pulled Deepti Sharma’s offbreak into the hands of deep midwicket at the start of the fifth over, it became clear that Australia were in a scrap against lack of pace. Mooney’s start was snuffed out next ball, when she was bowled around her legs.The only time Australia found any momentum was against the easy pace of Reddy. As in her first, she was taken apart for a brace of boundaries in her second over, the last of the Powerplay, which also turned out to be her last.The passage immediately after the Powerplay marked the worst of the slowdown. After Ashleigh Gardner launched Poonam Yadav for six over long-off in the ninth over, Australia went 34 balls without a boundary. They also lost two wickets in the interim.Radha Yadav, bowling from several yards behind the crease to slow it up even further, had Meg Lanning caught at deep midwicket when the Australian captain tried to force a sweep. And when Gardner was out, trying to clear long-off, to Poonam in the next over, the heart of Australia’s batting had been ripped out. Ellyse Perry dazzled with an unbeaten 39 thereafter, but with the rest of Australia’s line-up crumbling in the face of a mounting required rate, their resistance ended in 19.4 overs.These struggles were a far cry from how India had begun their own innings. Mandhana launched a boundary-laden assault that offset the early loss of Taniya Bhatia in no time. Mandhana boldly stepped down the pitch to pace and moved sharply around the crease to make room when the bowlers tightened their lines. Australia fed her strengths with a generous mix of full and short balls, and Mandhana didn’t let a single one go unpunished.The loss of Jemimah Rodrigues in the seventh over only eased some of the load on Mandhana, as Kaur matched her aggression with some imperious hits of her own.Known for her blazing starts but a tendency to not capitalise on them, Mandhana showed she was in for the long haul this time around, when she raised a fifty, off 31 balls, in the tenth over. The duo’s partnership was thrown a lifeline when Healy missed a stumping, with Kaur on 26. Kimmince broke the stand at 68. But Mandhana continued to strike them big and hard, in the process becoming the second-fastest Indian batsman, after Mithali Raj, to 1000 T20 international runs, as she put the game beyond Australia.

Dinesh Chandimal handed two-match over-rate ban

Thisara Perera will captain Sri Lanka in their Nidahas Trophy matches against India on Monday and Bangladesh on Friday

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Mar-2018An over-rate ban will force Dinesh Chandimal to miss Sri Lanka’s last two round-robin matches in the Nidahas Trophy. Match referee Chris Broad imposed a two-match suspension on Sri Lanka’s captain, and fined the team’s players 60% of their match fee, after ruling that the side fell four overs short of their target during their match against Bangladesh on Saturday.The allrounder Thisara Perera will captain Sri Lanka in Chandimal’s absence.Bangladesh captain Mahmudullah, meanwhile, has been fined 20% of his match fee, and the rest of the team 10%, after the side was ruled to have fallen one over short of the time target.According to the ICC’s code of conduct, a team falling short by up to and including two overs is said to have committed a “minor over rate offence”, and a “serious over rate offence” if it is short by more than two overs. The team’s captain receives two suspension points for a serious over rate offence, which equates to a ban from one Test, two ODIs or two T20Is, whichever comes first.Chandimal pleaded not guilty to the offence, and Broad announced his verdict after a hearing on Sunday afternoon, involving the match officials and Sri Lanka’s team management. If Sri Lanka commit another serious over-rate offence in a T20I within 12 months of this offence with Chandimal as captain, he will receive between two and eight suspension points for committing a second offence.

Makwetu, Rolfes lead South Africa into quarter-finals

South Africa joined New Zealand as the second quarter-finalists from Group A after they dumped defending champions West Indies out of the tournament

Shashank Kishore in Mount Maunganui17-Jan-2018South Africa joined New Zealand as the second quarter-finalists from Group A after they dumped defending champions West Indies out of the Under-19 World Cup in Mount Maunganui.The result capped off an incredible evening, where South Africa were comfortably behind the game for the first 40 overs after being put in. Then, in a ferocious display of lower-order hitting, wicketkeeper Wandile Makwetu made an unbeaten 99, with 37 of those coming in the last three overs off which South Africa blasted 58. The last 10 overs fetched 112 as they posted 282 for 8.Wandile Makwetu unleashed an onslaught•International Cricket Council

On a cold, rainy evening where there was enough moisture underneath the surface, South Africa’s pace bowling trio of Gerald Coetzee, Thando Ntini and Akhona Mnyaka came hard at West Indies. By the 21st over, the top four were dismissed for 87. As the asking rate spiralled, Kirstan Kallicharan and Alick Athanaze fought back to put together 90 for the fifth wicket to bring the target close to double digits.But in a bid to hit out, Kallicharan, who oozed class and confidence in his 50-ball 44, was trapped lbw by medium pacer Hermann Rolfes off the third ball of his new spell in the 39th over to leave West Indies 177 for 5. It left the lower order needing to rally around Athanaze.But they had other ideas, looking to tee off instead of rotating strike and bringing the well-set batsman back on strike. This resulted in two more wickets in quick succession that helped South Africa close out the game. Athanaze, who took a while to set himself in and consolidate to make his second youth ODI half-century, was the ninth man out for 76, trying to take it upon himself to inch closer to the target.It left West Indies wondering what may have been had the middle order shown a little more application and better shot selection. The final nail was drilled by Coetzee in the 46th over as their campaign went pear-shaped with one to play. This meant a potentially high-voltage match between New Zealand and South Africa on Saturday was reduced to a dead rubber.South Africa had started cautiously and had progressed to 77 for 2 by the 18th over when the game came alive courtesy a controversial decision. West Indies had opener Jiveshan Pillay out obstructing the field when they appealed for what seemed a harmless pick-up of the ball from the batsman after it had stopped besides the stumps off an inside edge.This led to a break in play for four minutes as the third umpire deliberated the matter with the on-field umpires. Pillay, who carefully constructed 47 to keep South Africa chugging along, accepted the decision and walked back without a trace of dissent even as most at the ground were stunned by the very basis of the appeal, even if West Indies were within their rights to make it.South Africa’s lower middle order didn’t let this passage of play distract them. While run-scoring was difficult, they took the innings right till the end. In what turned out to be a game-changer, Jeavor Royal put down a sitter at deep midwicket to reprieve Makwetu on 49 in the 44th over. He would go on to smash 50 more in an exhilarating passage where West Indies’ bowlers kept missing their lengths.

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