Kerr and Knott secure Heat victory as thunderstorm strikes

Brisbane Heat 5 for 120 (Tahuhu 3-31) beat Sydney Thunder 7 for 139 (Litchfield 50) by 3 runs (DLS method)A stunning sixth-wicket rescue mission partnership by Brisbane Heat allrounders Amelia Kerr and Charli Knott secured a three-run win over the Sydney Thunder in a rain-affected clash in the WBBL.The duo added 48 from 30 deliveries as a thunderstorm hit Brisbane’s Allan Border Field after 17.2 overs in the run chase and ended the match.Heat were 5 for 120 and three runs ahead of the luckless Thunder using the DLS method.Kerr (22 off 15 balls) and Knott (20 off 16) came together when the Heat were 5 for 72 as seemingly out of the game but played with great common sense.New Zealand international Kerr struck two boundaries from the 17th over to get her side ahead on run rate.She said she had “no idea” how close the Heat were to the required total as the rain tumbled down.”It was tough for us and tough for the bowling team,” she told AAP. “We had to guess what it was but we knew if we played good cricket shots and they weren’t calling (the teams off) our first goal was to chase down the total.”We started the [17th] over well with a boundary and wanted to finish it off well, and thankfully I got it over square leg. I thought Charli Knott played an incredible innings.”Earlier Thunder opener Phoebe Litchfield showed why she is one of the most promising young players in the competition with a quickfire knock that showcased an assortment of savage pulls and drives square of the wicket.The 19-year-old left-hander made an unbeaten half-century in the washed-out clash with the Melbourne Stars on Sunday and continued that form.Thunder captain Rachael Haynes held the second half of the innings together to ensure her side posted a competitive total. Kerr was also outstanding with the ball for the Heat and became the equal highest wicket taker in the WBBL competition with eight.

Josh Inglis 85 keeps Western Australia unbeaten

Josh Inglis issued a reminder to national selectors with a match-winning 85 as Western Australia continued their unbeaten start in the Marsh Cup with a tense two-wicket victory over South Australia at the WACA.Chasing 267, after Redbacks captain Henry Hunt notched his first List A century, Inglis appeared to be guiding WA to a comfortable win until he was part of a late collapse of 5 for 34.Still needing 13 runs, stalwart Andrew Tye eased the nerves with lusty hitting, including the match-winning six off spinner Ben Manenti, as WA reached the target with nine balls to spare.Inglis, playing his third match since missing out on the T20 World Cup after a freak injury playing golf, was back to his belligerent best with nine boundaries and a six in his 70-ball knock.It was WA’s fifth straight victory to skip clear of second-placed South Australia, who have three wins and two losses.”It was a bit dicey towards the end…but it was nice to get over line and AJ (Tye) to hit the winning runs,” Inglis said.After receiving a dressing down from coach Jason Gillespie following their capitulation in the Sheffield Shield earlier in the week, South Australia were far more competitive on a friendlier pitch for batting amid warm conditions nudging 30 degrees.Hunt, who has been tipped as a future Test opener, played the short ball well to continue his good form in Perth after looking a class above his team-mates in the Shield match.”It’s nice to get the first one (century) off but disappointing we couldn’t get the win coming so close at the end,” he said.He found a willing ally in Nathan McSweeney in a second-wicket century stand, but South Australia’s slow start ultimately backfired. Tye became WA’s most prolific wicket-taker in 50-over cricket when he claimed Nathan McAndrew on the last ball of South Australia’s innings.It was his 104th career wicket to overtake Kade Harvey, who is the current WA cricket general manager.

Scorchers suffer double blow with Mitchell Marsh and Phil Salt ruled out of BBL

Perth Scorchers have suffered a major blow to their BBL title defence with Australia allrounder Mitchell Marsh and England batter Phil Salt both ruled out of the entire BBL due to injury.Marsh will miss three months of cricket after undergoing keyhole surgery on his troubled left ankle. He has carried the ankle problem for many years and reinjured it during Australia’s ODI series against Zimbabwe in August, which ruled him out for over a month. It also compromised his preparation for the T20 World Cup and limited his ability to bowl in the tournament.Marsh’s decision to have surgery now will give him a chance to be fit for Australia’s next ODI assignment in India in March.Related

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Salt sustained a grade-two ligament injury on his left shoulder during the third and final ODI against Australia last week in Melbourne. He was diving to save a boundary and also suffered a concussion in the same incident and was subbed out of the game. His arm was in a sling in the rooms after the match to protect his shoulder and following his return to England he consulted a shoulder specialist who recommended he miss both the Abu Dhabi T10 tournament and the BBL.Phil Salt puts his body on the line in vain•Getty Images

Scorchers had already lost Laurie Evans after terminating his contract following a positive dope test. They recruited South Africa star Faf du Plessis for a seven-game stint as a short-term replacement for Evans prior to him heading to South Africa for the new CSA T20 league in January.Scorchers general manager Kade Harvey said the defending champions would look to source further replacements for Marsh and Salt.”Losing Mitch and Phil so close to the start of the season is very disappointing,” Harvey said. “Mitch is one of the best ball-strikers in global cricket with an incredible BBL record, and his leadership and presence around the group is enormous.”Phil has proven his class for England and in T20 tournaments around the world, so it’s unfortunate he won’t pull on the orange this summer.”We’re under no illusions about how difficult it will be to cover the absence of Mitch and Phil, but we take pride in the depth of our squad and have a lot of players capable of stepping up.”In better news for Scorchers, fast bowler Jhye Richardson is expected to be fit for the start of the BBL despite being kept out of Western Australia’s Sheffield Shield match against Queensland this week due to a bruised heel.

Further reading:Using the Impact Player – how have the teams gone about it so far? – by Shashank KishoreTime for the IPL to start keeping time better – by Sidharth MongaHow much impact will the Impact Player rule have? – by Nagraj Gollapudi

Litton to captain Bangladesh in Afghanistan Test, in Shakib's absence

Litton Das will lead the Bangladesh side in the one-off Test against Afghanistan starting on June 14. He takes charge after Shakib Al Hasan’s finger injury ruled him out for at least six weeks during the ODI series in Chelmsford last month. Litton will lead a 15-man squad that includes uncapped players Shahadat Hossain and Musfik Hasan.The visitors are set to arrive on June 10. The home squad gathered for a training camp at the Shere Bangla National Stadium, the Test venue, on Sunday.Taskin Ahmed, who was ruled out of the Ireland Test due to a side strain, comes back to the squad. Zakir Hasan also makes his return after missing the Ireland Test in April. He suffered a thumb injury after being picked in the ODI squad for the first time in March. His return means no place for Shadman Islam, while Shakib and Rejaur Rahman Raja are also out from the previous squad.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Shahadat was a member of the Bangladesh side that won the Under-19 World Cup in 2020, after which he sparkled in domestic competitions. A middle-order batter, he recently made two half-centuries in as many unofficial Tests against West Indies A.Fast bowler Musfik burst onto the scene with a 25-wicket season, averaging 15.92, in the 2022-23 National Cricket League. He took 8 for 73 against Dhaka Division, only the third eight-wicket haul in domestic first-class cricket in Bangladesh. He bowled steadily against India A and West Indies A this season and was also part of a bowling group that Allan Donald worked with earlier this year.Afghanistan will be in Bangladesh in two phases: the first involving the Test, the second involving three ODIs and two T20Is in July.Bangladesh squad: Litton Das (capt), Tamim Iqbal, Zakir Hasan, Najmul Hossain Shanto, Mominul Haque, Mushfiqur Rahim, Mehidy Hasan Miraz, Taijul Islam, Khaled Ahmed, Ebadot Hossain, Taskin Ahmed, Shoriful Islam, Mahmudul Hasan Joy, Shahadat Hossain, Musfik Hasan.

Phil Salt sweetens Lancashire reply after Hampshire come a cropper

It was not until early afternoon on the opening day of this match that bashful sunlight finally replaced stubborn haze but no one except Hampshire’s top order seemed put out by the tardiness. Summer arrived in these parts over two weeks ago and with it came the sweet realisation that many first-class cricketers would soon be seen on club or school grounds, much-loved venues that were already being spit and polished for a long-awaited occasion.Hampshire’s collapse to 76 for 7 sharpened the pleasure for Lancashire supporters and Phil Salt’s well-judged 76 not out deepened it, but these trombone-triumphs did not only bring happiness to home supporters. The cricket was also appreciated by neutrals from Devon and Gloucestershire, their satisfaction increased by the consonance between season and setting. Such gentle concord was noted nearly a century ago by Neville Cardus, who knew something about harmony.”When June arrives, cricket grows to splendour like a rich part of the garden in an English summertime,” wrote Cardus in (1930). “In June the game is at the crown of the year; from Little Puddleton to London the fields of village and town are white with players in hot action. Batsmen move along their processional way to centuries at Lord’s, while in a hundred hidden hamlets far and wide some crude but not inglorious Hobbs flings his bat at the ball, and either misses it or feels his body tingle as willow thwacks leather.”There was more missing than tingling on this first day and a good dollop of edging, too, as Hampshire’s batsmen struggled to cope in that early haze and on a pitch offering little more than lively bounce. Inside the first hour, Fletcha Middleton’s ugly prod at a ball from Will Williams had given Salt the first catch of what would be a memorable day for him and Joe Weatherley had driven Tom Bailey to George Bell in the gully.However, the main hatchway of the visitors’ innings did not cave in until the 20-minute spell before lunch that justified Dane Vilas’s decision to insert Hampshire. Having batted with his usual circumspection, Nick Gubbins was leg before to Jack Blatherwick for 16, although the batsman was statuesque for several seconds after seeing Neil Mallender’s raised finger, an attitude with which one could sympathise. The ball clearly pitched outside leg stump and it was unlikely that Gubbins was admiring the copper beeches behind the umpire’s head.But festering doubts were replaced by simple amazement on the point of luncheon when James Vince was bowled by a classic breakback from Williams, the delivery jagging so far off the seam that the Hampshire skipper’s adjustment appeared to widen the gap through which the ball could pass.Rather than arrest Hampshire’s decline, the match’s first interval merely postponed it. The normally adhesive and obstinate Ben Brown was cramped for room when attempting to pull a ball from Bailey and skied a catch to Josh Bohannon. Twenty minutes later, Felix Organ and Liam Dawson had also gone and had not Keith Barker shown some discrimination in making 44 off 71 balls, an already bad day for Hampshire would have assumed show-reel status. As it was, Vilas opted to call on the spin of Tom Hartley, a choice that looked dubious when Barker smacked the slow left-armer into the tennis courts but deeply wise next ball when he was bowled trying to clout him towards the balsam poplars and over the railway line.And there was a fair case that even Barker’s selective aggression was a bad portent for the visitors. For one thing, it suggested that conditions were easing; for another it showed that attacking batting might be possible, even against Hampshire’s highly-rated new-ball attack. Perhaps Salt noted these things as he adjusted to his first Championship game for nearly 13 months; perhaps he was simply looking forward to opening a red-ball innings for the first time since August 2020, when he was a Sussex cricketer. Either way, what followed in the 35 overs after tea established a dominance that Vince’s men will do well to shift and may also have laid the foundations for Lancashire’s first victory of a season that has so far featured five draws and a binbag of frustration.The galling thing for Hampshire was that Salt’s calibrated assault on their seam attack might have been ended almost at its birth. For having clipped Barker through wide mid-on for a fine boundary in the first over of the innings, Salt was immediately dropped by Middleton at second slip. As though realising this might be an enjoyable evening, the opener drove the next ball through the covers and the tone of the session was more or less set.This, though, was no reckless assault, no T20 battering. Salt may have spent much of the last year playing short-form cricket but he clearly still knows how to build an innings against seamers of the quality of Kyle Abbott or Mohammad Abbas. Given the chance to attack, Salt seized it and his approach was followed by his opening partner, George Balderson, who made 51 before being bowled by a fine ball from Dawson that spun back through the left-hander’s gate. By then, though, Lancashire were 115 for 1 and some of Hampshire’s bowling had been ragged on a day in the dirt for visitors who later admitted they had misread the pitch.Salt, by contrast, read things perfectly and so did the crowd as they relaxed into the gentle embrace of their evening’s cricket. Players like outground matches because it allows them to reconnect with the more innocent game they loved in the summers before they were paid to play cricket. But such pleasure is reciprocal. Spectators watch cricketers when the lads batted in junior games, evening encounters, perhaps, where the encouragement from the sides could be heard in the middle. That support is always present on the outgrounds and it was offered to Williams when he dismissed Middleton. Just over a year ago Williams was playing for Bridgwater at venues comparable to Trafalgar Road in the West of England Premier League and now he is not 12 months into a three-year contract with Lancashire.And they’ve travelled for this game, you know, and not only from Petersfield or Basingstoke. There are visitors from Glasgow, if you please, and one club member has taken annual leave from his job in Kuwait, partly because he wants to help out and partly because visiting the cricket club represents his best chance of seeing his family.Outground cricket attracts folk with no particular allegiance; come July it will be the same as Blackpool and Oakham, Scarborough and Cheltenham. More larks have been heard in England this summer but they share their own exultation at Trafalgar Road when Lancashire visit them. It is on such days that caring very much who wins is barely half the point.

Williamson not giving up on the World Cup dream just yet

Kane Williamson has not given up on playing a part in New Zealand’s 2023 ODI World Cup campaign as he takes his recovery from a right knee injury on a “week-to-week” basis.Williamson, who ruptured his ACL while fielding for Gujarat Titans against Chennai Super Kings in the opening game of IPL 2023 on March 31 and underwent surgery in early April, said ensuring the knee mended properly was his overriding priority.”Very much just trying to keep it week-to-week at the moment,” Williamson said on Monday. “I haven’t had such a long-term injury before but talking to other people that have, the journey is a bit of a long one so if you look too far ahead, it probably can become a little bit daunting.Related

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“Whereas, one week at a time, ticking off those small markers, those little wins that are nice to experience. But also knowing that the journey won’t be completely smooth and you have a few setbacks along the way that you have to navigate.”Williamson was a vital cog in New Zealand’s batting unit as they made it to the final of both the 2015 and 2019 editions of the ODI World Cup. They were, however, unable to get over the line both times – losing to Australia in 2015 and England in 2019 in a dramatic Super Over.Williamson, 32, who has scored 6554 runs in ODIs at 47.83, said any training he was doing was “elementary” at the moment and he looked forward to getting back in the nets.”Probably more for sanity and changing things up… just nice to mix up all the gym work and the physio work and rehab specific stuff to spend a bit of time with some of the other guys that are training,” he said. “Super keen to get back in the nets, for sure.”The World Cup will be played in India in October and November.

Gubbins, Brown anchor chase as Hampshire go two from two

Nick Gubbins and Ben Brown’s half-centuries maintained Hampshire’s 100 per cent start to the Metro Bank One-Day Cup, as they beat Essex by four wickets.Captain Gubbins eased to a 63 while Brown ended a poor run of form to tot up 59. The pair put on 92 together, before Aneurin Donald’s exciting 47 off 45 all but ended the contest.Australian Beau Webster and South African Simon Harmer had saved Essex from 53 for 4 – shaped by Keith Barker’s 3 for 25 – to reach 236.But after Fletcha Middleton’s quick start, Hampshire never looked in danger and won with just over an over to spare to make it two wins from two in the competition, and condemn Essex to two defeats and a no result.Essex chose to bat, and after rain cut the game back to 45 overs a side, found themselves on the receiving end of a devastating Barker spell.The veteran left-armer pinned Josh Rymell with an in-seamer with his second ball, found Tom Westley slogging across the line to deep square and beat Robin Das for pace with a ball that smashed into the top of off stump.Barker’s 3 for 25 off his nine overs his best List A figures for Hampshire and his best since 4 for 33 for Warwickshire back in 2010.The rampant start saw Essex 27 for 3, which became 53 for 4 when Noah Thain pulled Scott Currie to fine leg, and in danger of replicating their 69 disaster against Notts Outlaws.Webster had already been spilt on 11 but with Harmer they corrected the malaise with an innings-defining 121-run stand.The rebuild was largely played in a risk-free manner, gaining confidence throughout to the stage where both crashed sixes off Dom Kelly.Webster’s fifty came in 78 balls and Harmer’s with a reverse-sweep in 60 balls – but their demise saw the remaining five wickets fall for 62 runs.Hampshire were hampered by Currie being withdrawn from the attack due to two no-balls – not helped but constant drizzle making the ball soap-like – but Gubbins made up the overs with a pair of wickets to return 2 for 24.File photo: Barker took his best List A figures since 2010•Getty Images

Ian Holland picked up 2 for 42 in the death, with Felix Organ dismissing Aaron Beard and Essex ending up on 236.Middleton, on the back of a maiden century, blazed his way out the gates with a 25-ball 36 in a 51-run opening stand. He was caught off a skier and Tom Prest nicked off as Jamie Porter took a quick-fire double.Gubbins was less fluent but, with Brown, glued the innings together to take any possible sting out the chase. The experienced pair putting on 92 for the third wicket, which included Webster bowling medium-pacers to Brown and offspin to Gubbins.The former Middlesex batter had opened his season with 40 but passed that, and reached his half-century in 80 balls before being bowled by Tom Westley’s first delivery. Brown reached his first half-century in all formats since April but fell leg-before to Harmer.However, Donald had already entered and killed the contest with his typically sprightly style – capped off with two towering sixes on the hook.The Welshman fell trying to bring up his half-century with a six to the long boundary and Organ clothed to mid-on, but Barker comprehensively carved a boundary to win it.

Harry Brook's fastest Hundred century in vain as Welsh Fire keep hopes burning

Harry Brook smashed the fastest Hundred century but it proved in vain as Welsh Fire kept alive their hopes of making Saturday’s eliminator with an eight-wicket win over Northern Superchargers at Headingley.Brook reached his ton off 41 balls while crashing a scintillating 105 not out off 42 but found little support as the Superchargers posted 158 for 7. Stephen Eskinazi’s fifty set Fire on their way, before Jonny Bairstow hit 44 and Joe Clarke 42 to lift the visitors to victory.Fire will reach the eliminator if Manchester Originals beat Southern Brave on Wednesday. Superchargers were eliminated with defeat, while the result also ended Trent Rockets and London Spirit’s hopes of finishing in the top three.

Brook played a remarkable lone hand to lead a Superchargers recovery. Matthew Short, Tom Banton and Adam Lyth all departed inside the first 20 balls to leave the Superchargers reeling at 10 for 3, having won the toss.Brook began patiently alongside Adam Hose, but exploded into life after Hose fell to Matt Henry after 33 balls.He produced an audacious ramp over third for six from a searing Lockie Ferguson bouncer and hit Roelof van der Merwe down the ground for another thumping maximum.Brook was running out of partners as Adil Rashid, promoted to No. 6, fell to the left-arm spinner and David Wiese was run out by Tom Abell to leave the total at 92 for 7. But Brook marched on undeterred, reaching 50 from 24 balls, and hit the accelerator by smashing 19 from Luke Wells’ five-ball set.The right-hander combined outrageous power with pure timing, hammering Ferguson down the ground for a six which landed on the Sky Sports commentary pod.

With 10 balls of the innings remaining Brook was on 76 but he surged to his century with two more sixes and four fours as 30 came from those final 10 deliveries, becoming the third man to hit a Hundred century after Will Smeed and Will Jacks.Momentum was with the hosts but Eskinazi soon set about changing that. The right-hander hit two sixes from Reece Topley’s second set, before being given a life as Topley and Matthew Potts left a high catch to each other.Eskinazi made the most of his reprieve, crashing his way to 50 from just 19 balls, including three sixes, with Fire well placed on 66 without loss after 40 balls.The introduction of Rashid applied the brakes – especially to Bairstow, who had just eight from his first 18 balls. Rashid then made the key breakthrough, bowling Eskinazi for 58 with a googly from the 51st ball, with Fire needing 82 more to win.Bairstow began to find his fluency as he and new batter Clarke both launched sixes off Wiese, before Callum Parkinson’s 10-ball set ended badly with a six off Bairstow followed by a no-ball which cost four runs.Fire were cruising to the win, needing 19 from 20 balls, but Brook emerged again with a stunning boundary catch to remove Bairstow for 44 – looping the ball up first to himself and then to Hose to avoid carrying it over the rope.But Clarke took his side home, hitting 42 from 22 to keep Fire’s hopes burning.

Ameen, Maroof fifties lead Pakistan to consolation win

Half-centuries from Sidra Ameen and Bismah Maroof led Pakistan to an eight-wicket win in the final ODI and prevented South Africa from sealing a 3-0 series sweep. After failures in the first two ODIs, Pakistan’s top order came good, taking charge of a chase of 186 and completing the task in just 38 overs.Ameen put on a 39-run opening partnership with Safaf Shamas, before Maroof joined her in a 110-run second-wicket stand that put Pakistan firmly in control. Both reached their half-centuries before Ameen was lbw to Nadine de Klerk for 68 off 82 balls.Aliya Riaz’s entry was a cue for Pakistan to hurry to their target; she hit three fours in a Masabata Klaas over and raced to an unbeaten 19 off 14, while putting on an unbroken 37, off just 31 balls, with Maroof, who finished not out on 60 off 98. It was the former Pakistan captain’s 19th ODI fifty.South Africa chose to bat, and lost their captain Laura Wolvaardt before they had put a run on the board, with Sadia Iqbal bowling her in the first over. Tazmin Brits and Laura Goodall steadied the innings with a 35-run partnership off 41 balls, but the complexion of the game changed when Goodall retired hurt in the eighth over.Lara Goodall retired hurt briefly•PCB

By the time Goodall came back in the 17th, South Africa had lost Brits and Sune Luus, and the returning No. 3 was out just two balls later to leave South Africa 64 for 4.Marizanne Kapp and de Klerk helped them recover somewhat with a 36-run stand for the fifth wicket, but Pakistan kept a lid on the scoring: there was only one boundary hit from the 14th to 30th overs. It was in an effort to break out of this strangle that Kapp fell, failing to clear mid-off off Iqbal.Delmi Tucker added a further 37 with de Klerk, but the innings began to unravel thereafter, as South Africa slipped from 137 for 5 to 145 for 8, with a run-out costing them the wicket of keeper-batter Sinalo Jafta.Nos. 10 and 11 stuck around at the crease, with Ayabonga Khaka and Klaas spending a cumulative 29 balls at the crease while adding 15 and 25 with de Klerk, who was last out for 60 off 95 balls. South Africa were bowled out in 48.1 overs, with Sadia, Nashra Sandhu and Nida Dar picking up two wickets apiece.

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