Bryony Smith century blasts South East Stars into home play-off clash

Destructive innings proves too much for Lightning, as Vipers lie in wait in knock-outs

ECB Reporters Network17-Sep-2022South East Stars 281 for 9 (Smith 114, Macdonald-Gay 54) beat Lightning 169 (Boyce 60, Gray 3-29) by 112 runsBryony Smith’s majestic 114 set South East Stars up with a home Play-off clash with Southern Vipers and condemned Lightning to a limp farewell from the regional structure.Stars skipper Smith, who had played in all three of England’s T20I series victory over India last week, returned to smash an exhilarating first Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy century.Ryana Macdonald-Gay’s half-century backed up her captain to pile on 281 at the Uptonsteel County Ground in Leicester, which proved 112 runs too many despite Georgie Boyce scoring 60 on her second appearance since joining from Thunder.Stars will host Vipers at The County Ground, Beckenham on Wednesday, with the winners facing Diamonds at Lord’s on Sunday, September 25.Lightning lost the toss and were asked to field first in their last game as a Loughborough-based region, before moving to Nottinghamshire next year, but started their goodbye strongly as Grace Ballinger bowled Chloe Brewer with an in-swinger.That brought Smith to the crease, and despite four dots to start, destruction wasn’t far away.She never veered too far away from going at a run-a-ball throughout, helped by some luscious early driving, but streaked ahead with four consecutive boundaries off Ballinger to motor into the 40s.Her fourth time past 50 in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy came in 47, but it only took her a further 39 deliveries to become the competition’s 14th centurion in three seasons – and the second fastest to the landmark.Smith’s timing and picking up on poor legside balls were the foundation of the phenomenal innings but so too was her ability to dominate partnerships despite wickets falling regularly. She put on 40 with Kira Chathli, 66 with Jemima Spence (of which Smith scored 45) and 51 with Rhianna Southby.When she departed for 114, having smashed straight at mid-off to end a blistering innings packed with 17 fours and a six over long-on, it felt inevitable that Stars would slump in her wake.But 196 for seven was revived to 267 for eight after a low-risk, high-reward stand between Macdonald-Gay and Alexa Stonehouse. The former wristily found gaps to bring up a maiden List A half-century in 56 balls.It helped Stars end up on a well-above-par 281, although Ballinger’s three for 62 belied her impressive first five overs, while Kirstie Gordon was exemplary with two for 38.Franklin demolished the Lightning top order by bowling Marie Kelly via a chop on, running out Beth Harmer with a direct hit from square leg, and had Michaela Kirk leg before.Lucy Higham was struck in front by Eva Gray to leave Lightning in a heap on 54 for four, but Boyce showcased her impressive skills in a 76-run stand with the increasingly impressive Ella Claridge.The pair got their side back towards a manageable rate, with Boyce collecting a 60-ball fifty. But wicketkeeper Claridge fell for 35 and Boyce 70 within three overs of each other to stunt the hosts again, before the bottom fell out.Macdonald-Gay continued her fine day by bowling Boyce and Sophie Munro, Gray picked up her second and third when Thresa Graves was astonishingly caught at backward point by Southby and Josie Groves tickled behind. Dani Gregory picked up the last wicket of Ballinger with 70 balls to spare.

Jake Libby's unbeaten ton gives Worcestershire upper hand at Hove

Sussex attack toils with returning spinner Jack Carson the only bowler to enjoy success

ECB Reporters Network13-Sep-2022Worcestershire 289 for 2 (Libby 142*, Pollock 98) lead Sussex 220 (Carson 58, Coles 54, Hudson-Prentice 51, Leach 4-37) by 69 runsJake Libby scored his second hundred in three games against Sussex to put Worcestershire in a strong position after two days at the 1st Central County Ground. The former Nottinghamshire player’s undefeated 142 – his second hundred of the season – helped his side reach 289 for 2, a lead of 69, in the 50 overs possible at Hove between the showers before bad light ended play at 5pm.Libby’s 125 not out had guided Worcestershire to victory over Sussex in a fourth-innings run chase at New Road a year ago and this effort could be a match-defining performance too as they look for the victory that would keep their hopes of promotion in the LV= Insurance County Championship alive.It was his 12th first-class century, second of the season and third against Sussex. Against them back in 2014 he became the first Nottinghamshire batsman for 68 years to score a hundred on debut. It has been a composed and chanceless effort so far, and the 29-year-old got to his century by stylishly forcing Brad Currie off the back foot for successive boundaries through the covers.Libby had added 195 for the first wicket with Ed Pollock, who agonisingly fell for 98, and 54 with Azhar Ali for the second before Jack Haynes (14 not out) joined him in an unbroken partnership of 40.Rain was never far away all day, with the floodlights on from the start, but umpires Nigel Llong and Hasan Adnan deserve every credit for keeping the players on for as much as they did when light but persistent drizzle set in during the afternoon.Apart from an lbw shout by Currie when Pollock was on 45, Worcestershire’s openers made serene progress in the morning session against a Sussex seam attack who could make little headway on a flat pitch.Pollock took two boundaries in the last over before lunch off Faheem Ashraf to move to 98 but in the second over after the resumption he tried to cut offspinner Jack Carson and wicketkeeper Oli Carter held the edge at the second attempt. Pollock’s innings included 16 fours and a six.Carson struck again in his 13th over when he dismissed Azhar for 16 as the former Pakistan captain got in a tangle attempting a pull shot and the ball looped off his bat to Tom Clark at slip.Carson, in his first match after a summer wrecked by knee and ankle injuries, was the pick of the attack despite the lack of assistance from the surface. He and skipper Tom Haines, who bowled eight overs at a cost of only 11 runs, offered control but Sussex’s seamers made little headway while Fynn Hudson-Prentice is only allowed to bowl nine overs in each innings as part of his rehabilitation following a back injury.There was a 90-minute rain break and when play resumed at 4.10pm only six more overs were bowled before bad light forced the teams off. Sussex will have a new ball available immediately on Wednesday but Worcestershire are in the driving seat.

'Wanted to give him a little bit of a challenge' – Rohit on holding Shami back till the last over

“I want to see more consistency in terms of where you want to pitch the ball,” India captain says of the bowling effort

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Oct-20221:43

Takeaways: Mohammed Shami executes India’s final-over masterplan

There was no sign of Mohammed Shami till the last over of the Indians’ warm-up game against Australia. “This was always the plan,” Rohit Sharma said, explaining that the plan was to throw a challenge to Shami, who was returning after a long layoff. But when Shami came on, he made things happen. The Australians, favourites to win with 11 to get off six, lost four off the last four balls, with Shami getting three, to lose by six runs.”Honestly, he is coming back after a long time. So we just wanted to give him an over. This was always the plan from the beginning,” Rohit said on Star Sports. “He comes and bowls at the death. We know how lethal he can be with the new ball. We just wanted to give him a little bit of a challenge, coming and bowling that death over and we saw what it was.”Related

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In the Australians’ chase of the Indians’ 186 for 7, Aaron Finch led the way with a 54-ball 76. The first-wicket stand between Finch and Mitchell Marsh was worth 64 – inside the powerplay – and for the most part, it looked like the Australians would win. But Harshal Patel got Finch with a lower yorker, Virat Kohli pulled off a stunning run-out – and then a one-handed catch backtracking at long-on in the final over – and Shami aced the final over to give India victory, a heartening one after the defeat to a Western Australia XI the other day.”There is definitely room for improvement,” Rohit said. “I am sure we are on it but I want to see more consistency in terms of where you want to pitch the ball. You know, when you play back home and when you play in Australian conditions, you have to change your tactics, change your lengths a little bit. Sometimes, keeping it simple and hitting the ball hard on the deck will be a good option.”It is something we’ve been working on, speaking to the guys about it. But overall, it was a good game for us. Like I said, it was a good pitch. They had a decent partnership in the middle, which put pressure on us a little bit. But our last three-four overs were really good.”Virat Kohli scored a direct hit and took a fantastic one-handed catch in the deep in the space of seven balls•ICC via Getty

The first half wasn’t too shabby either, as KL Rahul first and then Suryakumar Yadav hit quick half-centuries to put a good score on the board.”I thought we batted well. Just towards the end, we could have added 10-15 runs more,” Rohit said. “That’s something that we have been talking about. We want the set batter to bat as long as possible and till the end, which Surya did to some extent. Yeah, overall, it was a great batting effort. It was a good pitch to play on, nice bounce, we could trust our shots and that’s exactly what some of the guys did.”The large square boundaries at the Gabba was a new thing for at least some of the batters, too.”You have to be smart when you plan your batting on grounds like these. Hitting boundaries and sixes, of course, sounds nice, but you cannot forget pushing the ball in the gap, running between the wickets really hard and trying to get eight-nine runs in an over,” Rohit said. “[It’s] also a quite safe plan to have and it’s something we have been talking about.”When we played in Perth [against WA XI] as well, the practice game, one side of the boundary would be large and it was a great practice for us today.”

'Themselves to blame' – Ricky Ponting finds no excuse if Australia don't make semi-final

The defending champions are currently on the brink of elimination ahead of their last group match against Afghanistan

Alex Malcolm03-Nov-2022Former Australia captain Ricky Ponting believes there will be some questions asked of Australia’s T20I team if, as the defending champions, they don’t progress to the semi-final of a home World Cup.Ponting, who had led Australia to two 50-over World Cup triumphs and also captained a team that made the semi-final in the inaugural World T20 in 2007, has been surprised by Australia’s form in the lead-up and throughout the ongoing tournament.”If they don’t make it through, there’ll be some questions asked I’m sure, because I had them in the top three coming here,” Ponting said on Thursday.Related

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“I thought the final would be between two of Australia, India and England. The reason I say that was no one gave Australia a chance in the last [World Cup] over in the UAE in conditions that didn’t suit. But then, they’re [currently] in home conditions, and conditions that all of these guys have been brought up [in] and played a lot of cricket [in].”I thought that everything was just sort of aligning itself quite nicely for the Aussies to make it through. But even their form coming in wasn’t great either with the lead-up that they had, and they did play a lot of T20 games coming here. So there can’t be any excuse as far as preparation is concerned.”Australia are currently on the brink of elimination ahead of their last group match against Afghanistan in Adelaide. Unless one of New Zealand or England lose their final matches or Australia make up the large net run-rate difference with a thumping win over Afghanistan, then the hosts will miss the semi-finals just 12 months after winning the title for the first time.Australia had lost five of their last nine T20Is heading into the tournament, and were down and out too before rain in Canberra ruined their match against England. They also lost their only warm-up game against India in Brisbane after being in control of the chase, before getting hammered by New Zealand in the opening Super 12s match.It might end up being Australia’s only loss of the tournament, but it left their net run rate in tatters, and could well be the reason they miss out on the semi-finals. They have also dropped three catches in this tournament so far, looking back at which they will feel they were critical, particularly from an NRR perspective.Against New Zealand, Finn Allen was put down on 19, and went on to make 42 off 16 balls to rip the game away from Australia at the SCG. Ireland’s Lorcan Tucker was dropped on 35 at the Gabba. Had it been taken, it would have left Ireland at 89 for 7 and given Australia a chance to have a huge NRR boost if they could bowl Ireland out for under 110. Instead, Tucker went on to make 71 not out and pushed Ireland to 137.Thus, Ponting believes Australia have been off in their execution across all departments.”It’s there and then the moments in games that you just have to get right, and you have to nail in World Cups,” he said. “And looking back to the last one [T20 World Cup], Australia nailed all the big moments. They haven’t so far in this tournament, and that’s quite often the difference.”I think Australia have been just that little bit off in probably all departments, to be honest. They’ve been a little bit sloppy in the field. A lot of their bowling hasn’t been great, and their batters probably haven’t scored the runs that they should have either – particularly probably at the top of the order. If they don’t make it through, they obviously only have themselves to blame.”

Shamim's 71 keeps Rangpur Riders in the hunt for a place in final

Barishal eliminated despite Mehidy Hasan Miraz’s 69

Mohammad Isam12-Feb-2023Rangpur Riders 172 for 6 (Shamim 71, Talukdar 29, Khaled 2-23) beat Fortune Barishal 170 for 3 (Mehidy 69, Mahmudullah 34, Shanaka 2-23) by four wicketsRangpur Riders kept themselves in the hunt for a place in the BPL final after beating Fortune Barishal in Eliminator by four wickets. They will now face the losing side from Qualifier 1, starting later this evening.The match went down to the wire with Riders needing eight runs in the last over. Mahedi Hasan, though, settled the matter with two fours – the first a scoop and the second a thick outside edge – off Kamrul Islam, with three balls to spare. But it was Shamim Hossain, batting at No. 3 for the first time this season, who kept Rangpur’s chase intact. He struck four fours and as many sixes in his 51-ball 71, his highest T20 score, before holing out to long-on off Khaled Ahmed.Rangpur had lost Mohammad Naim for a duck in the first over of their 171-run chase when the left-hander skied Shakib Al Hasan. Rony Talukdar and Shamim shook off the early wicket with a 61-run stand. Talukdar struck two fours and two sixes in his 17-ball 29, before holing out to deep cover.Rangpur captain Nurul Hasan and Nicholas Pooran, who returned to the BPL after four years, fell in quick succession. Shakib trapped his opposite number with a classic arm-ball, before taking Pooran’s catch in the covers off a Khaled full-toss.Batting first, Barishal posted 170 for 3, an underwhelming total given how well they were batting in the middle overs. Andre Fletcher, who arrived for Barishal last night, added 46 for the first wicket with Mehidy Hasan Miraz, before Mahmudullah took the side to 115 for 1 in the 14th over. It seemed like the perfect base but Mehidy and Mahmudullah fell in the space of 11 balls, leaving the rest of the Barishal batters to go big. But Karim Janat and Bhanuka Rajapaksa could add only 44 runs in the last 4.5 overs.Dasun Shanaka was the pick of the bowlers for Riders with figures of 2 for 23 from his three overs but it was Dwayne Bravo who dried up the scoring with his variations even if he didn’t pick up a wicket.

Root's mantra: To be 'consistently useful' within evolving England set-up

His returns have dipped as the McCullum-Stokes partnership has flourished, but he’s finding his niche in the side once more

Vithushan Ehantharajah20-Feb-2023A score of 57 for someone who has 84 fifty-plus scores – 28 of them hundreds – is small fry in the grand scheme of things. But Joe Root’s knock in England’s second innings of the first Test against New Zealand carried something more. A sense he is starting to fit in under the new regime.That might sound a little like heresy when talking about one of only two Englishman to pass ten thousand Test runs, second only to Sir Alastair Cook by 1,772 on the all-time run-scorer’s list, with time on his side to become No 1. Not to mention the fact that he’s averaging 50.68 since Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes took charge of the Test side at the start of last summer, after Root had stepped down as captain.But the 19 innings so far have been one of rediscovery. While the team has gone from strength to strength, a tenth win in 11 matches coming in Mount Maunganui, Root has lost his sense of equilibrium out in the middle. It began midway through the 2022 season, averaging 11.50 in the home series against South Africa, then just 25 on batting-friendly surfaces in Pakistan.Related

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It was in Pakistan that his career average dropped below 50 after moving it back to that figure – and beyond – with a stellar 2021. His McCullum-Stokes average is only as high as it is thanks to scores of 115 not out, 176, 86 not out and 142 not out in his first eight innings under their watch. That patch, he explains, came about through liberation from soul-crushing leadership duties.”I think if I’m being brutally honest with all, there was the initial relief of coming out of the captaincy,” Root explained. “Now I’m just trying to find out what my role is within this team.”It sounds silly having the experience I have, but you want to be involved and want to be a part of it. You want to heavily contribute, and I felt like I’ve not been able to do that the last few Test matches.”It’s nice in a small way to have a little bit in that second innings – runs wise and performance wise. I felt like I found a really good tempo in how I wanted to bat. I didn’t feel like I was in fifth gear, I felt like I was playing quite reserved in some respects but still scoring very quickly and I think that’s the beauty of the nature of this team. Because we can bounce off each other and already in a short space of time, some good relationships have been developed in that batting group and it’s leading to some wonderful results.”Tempo is the right word, here. The knock on day three at the Bay Oval came at a strike rate of 91.93, as England looked to take the game into the twilight period when they would get a second crack at New Zealand’s top order. Time rather than runs was the main focus, allowing Root to play his more natural game. Stuart Broad, who removed four of the top order that evening to leave New Zealand 28 for 5 after England eventually set them a target of 394, put it best: “Rooty found that ODI rhythm”.This is not so much a crisis of confidence or identity, but getting swept up in the wave of attacking batsmanship rather than riding it. The strength of the tides over the last nine months has evidently been too great to resist.”I’ve always bounced off the guys at the other end and tried to play what’s right in front of me. In the recent past it’s a case of … the rhythms of the game, I’ve maybe got a bit caught up in it. But I’m not too far away from what’s given me success.”I didn’t feel I tried to force it second innings and when I’m playing well that’s one of my strengths: I can score freely and I can rotate the strike. As soon as there are sweepers out, a deep point, I can drop it and get off strike, keep the scoreboard moving. I’ve not performed for a little while, so I had bit between my teeth second innings and it’s given me a little sharpener, a kick up the backside, that this is how I need to play my cricket. How I can be consistently useful in this group.”Is he overthinking all this? Talk of working out a format he has more or less cracked feels like he is. It does feel like he is workshopping a new sound when the classics still have their pull amid the techno blaring around him.He insists he’s not, and you will have to take that at face value. He has always been a batting purist rather than an obsessive, grooving in the nets until he feels comfortable rather than drained. “I’ve not gone full Matt Fitzpatrick on it,” he countered when asked if this professional introspection has involved any note taking. Fitzpatrick, a 28-year-old English golfer who won the 2022 US Open, has recorded every shot he has taken since the age of 15.And yet, there is a new club in Root’s bag that has become a lightning rod for what is perceived as unnecessary tinkering to a seemingly flawless square-on, high-elbowed approach. The now infamous square-on, reverse lap over the slips first got an airing in 2021 against Mohammed Siraj, but has been brought out regularly over the last year under Stokes where freedom of expression is encouraged.Tim Southee and Neil Wagner were on the receiving end last summer, and he used it during his recent ILT20 stint with Dubai Capitals. It looked in good order during the warm-up match, lifting Jarrod McKay over the fence in Hamilton on his way to a tidy 77.It also worked in the first innings at Mount Maunganui, Wagner again on the receiving end for four which took Root to 13. Alas, six balls later, an attempt to repeat the trick was caught well by Daryl Mitchell at second slip.Speaking to Wisden Cricket Monthly, he explained the rationale behind the “minimal risk” shot as a counter to a bowler operating on “sixth stump to a 7-2 off-side field”. The vacancy down at third man also increased its value, which was presumably the rationale behind the reverse sweep off Michael Bracewell that brought about his dismissal in the second innings. That was arguably much worse than his downfall in the first given it came at the start of the last over before the first break on day three.”Sometimes you get a good ball,” he joked. “In the book it’s caught first slip, isn’t it?””It was calculated: it was to get them to bowl both sides of the wicket, change their plans and in that middle session, force the game. You take calculated risks. I’ve got where I’ve got to by trusting my gut. It just didn’t quite work out: I just sort of middled the edge of it.”So, will he pack it away? No chance.”It’s not going to stop me playing it. Maybe just be smarter about playing it, having played it once, maybe look at my movements … because he bowled it wider. You have to give the bowler credit in some respects. But yeah, it’s now part of my Test game and I’ll continue to utilise it when it’s the right time.”

Sun finally rises for Sunrisers as Abtaha Maqsood seals victory at 21st attempt

Scrivens, Grewcock, Villiers in the runs as habitual stragglers get off to flying start

ECB Reporters Network22-Apr-2023Sunrisers 288 for 7 (Villiers 70, Grewcock 69, Scrivens 67) beat Southern Vipers 162 (Bouchier 57, Maqsood 5-30) by 126 runsSunrisers finally won a Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy match at the 21st time of asking as they thrashed two-time winners Southern Vipers by 126 runs.Grace Scrivens, Jodie Grewcock and Mady Villiers all scored half-centuries as Sunrisers totted up 288 at the Ageas Bowl.And despite Maia Bouchier getting off to a flier with 57 off 48 balls, Vipers’ star-studded side folded to Abtaha Maqsood’s five for 30 to get bowled out for 162.Sunrisers had suggested they would be a stronger proposition after a 100 percent record from their five pre-season run-outs, and now have a second victory as a region – following a single Charlotte Edwards Cup success in 2021.Nineteen-year-old Scrivens laid the foundations for the historic victory with a stunning 67.Scrivens will play for England at some point, the question is when? She was the third top run-scorer in last season’s Trophy before setting the Women’s Under-19 T20 World Cup on fire with 293 runs in seven innings, with her captaincy helping England to the final.It was no surprise that six of the eight regional captains picked her as the most exciting young player in the competition, with four predicting her to be the PCA’s Domestic Women’s MVP.Any extra expectation on her was shrugged off as she punished England fast bowler Lauren Bell with five boundaries inside the first five overs to start with a bang. Any width was nailed to the boundaries with supreme power.Sunrisers had chosen to bat first and lost Lissy Macleod to a clumsy piece of running, but Scrivens and fellow teenager Grewcock set the foundations for a decent score on a pitch perfect for batting.Northamptonshire-reared Grewcock rotated the strike, while Scrivens cruised to a 64-ball half-century – brought up with a luscious cover drive. The duo added 93 before Scrivens was stumped by the quick hands of Vipers debutant Rhianna Southby.Grewcock took a more active part with Villiers – who was dropped twice early on but motored through the gears. Grewcock reached her maiden professional fifty in 94, balls while Villiers quickly followed in 44 – an innings with included an outrageous six over cover.Their stand of 117 allowed the last ten overs to be used as a thrashing, with 86 runs coming and five wickets coming. Eva Gray clubbed 25 in 14 balls to headline the late-innings fireworks.Linsey Smith picked up three for 59, and whilst Georgia Adams was wicketless, she only conceded 34 in her 10 overs.Ella McCaughan fell swinging Kate Coppack to deep square leg in the fifth over and Georgia Elwiss was scratchy before picking out mid-on.But Bouchier was dominant in her strokeplay to give Vipers some control. She had scored 41 of a 58-run stand with Elwiss, with shots off her legs a real joy.Her fifty came in 39 balls, only to york herself when attempting to advance to Maqsood. Danni Wyatt and Adams fell in quick succession to leave Vipers 111 for five – with three wickets falling for just five runs.Villiers, capped 17 times by England, then bowled Charlie Dean and Linsey Smith in the same over – she ended with three for 52.Maqsood picked up her fourth when Mary Taylor’s leading edge chipped to Coppack before completing her five-for and the victory by bowling Alice Monaghan.

John Turner stars with three wickets on debut as Hampshire hold off Middlesex

Defending champions record third straight win despite Holden half-century

ECB Reporters Network06-Jun-2023Hampshire seamer John Turner starred with three wickets on his Vitality Blast debut as the defending champions recorded their third straight win, holding off rock-bottom Middlesex at Radlett.The 22-year-old captured the wicket of Middlesex captain Stephen Eskinazi with his first ball in the tournament, finishing with 3 for 30 as the Hawks successfully defended a modest total of 164 for 6.Max Holden’s first Blast half-century of the summer, with 53 from 31 balls, had given the Seaxes hope of finally breaking their duck in the South Group as he and Ryan Higgins (43 from 35) added 60 for the fourth wicket.But Hampshire’s death bowlers held their nerve to ensure the home side remain winless in the competition, equalling their longest losing start to a campaign of seven defeats in 2006 and 2009.Hampshire skipper James Vince, who had smashed a match-winning 88 not out in the sides’ first meeting of the tournament, missed out this time after driving Josh de Caires’ second ball tamely to mid-off.But Ben McDermott was soon into his stride, pummelling Blake Cullen for successive boundaries and dispatching both Tom Helm and de Caires over the fence as he and Toby Albert shared a partnership of 56 from 38.Luke Hollman’s tight three-over stint of 2 for 12 broke the stand, luring Albert into a mistimed reverse sweep and the leg-spinner also prised out the big-hitting McDermott, caught at long-off just short of his half-century.
With Joe Weatherley and Aneurin Donald both holing out as de Caires recorded his best T20 figures of 2 for 34, the Hawks had lost three wickets for just 11 runs and they responded by shifting Chris Wood up the order to No.7.That move paid off as the quick hrashed 31 from 21 and he and Ross Whiteley, with an unbeaten 28 from 20, hauled Hampshire above 150 but Higgins, with four consecutive dot balls in the penultimate over, ensured they fell short of par.However, their total looked more than substantial after two overs of the Middlesex reply, with just two extras on the board and both openers back in the pavilion with ducks against their name.Eskinazi was caught miscuing a pull to midwicket off Turner’s first delivery and Joe Cracknell followed five balls later, leg before – but Holden and Pieter Malan kick-started the innings with a stand of 43 from 23.Malan, having advanced to 18 with two powerful leg-side blows off Wood, attempted to do the same against Nathan Ellis just before the end of the powerplay and was caught in the deep.Holden displayed a knack of picking out the gaps, carving Scott Currie to the cover boundary and clipping his next ball to leg for four more as Middlesex kept pace with the required run-rate.The left-hander brought up his 50 from 26 balls and Higgins was a more than capable foil in their partnership, bisecting the leg-side fielders perfectly to register successive fours off Wood.But Liam Dawson tilted the contest back in Hampshire’s favour, tempting Holden to top-edge a pull to short fine leg and Turner claimed his third wicket before Vince raced from mid-off and dived to pouch a skier from Higgins.Despite two boundaries by Martin Andersson to keep Middlesex in contention, a target of 15 from the final over proved too steep.

Ahuja and Patil star as India A win Women's Emerging Teams Asia Cup

Bangladesh A were skittled for 96 after Vrinda Dinesh top-scored with the bat to help set a 128-run target

PTI21-Jun-2023The spin duo of Shreyanka Patil and Mannat Kashyap starred with the ball after a sedate batting effort to guide the India A team to the Women’s Emerging Teams Asia Cup title with a 31-run win over Bangladesh A in the final in Mong Kok.Electing to bat, India A first posted a modest 127 for 7 before the bowlers rose to the occasion with Patil (4 for 13) and Kashyap (3 for 20) sharing seven wickets between them to bundle out Bangladesh A for 96 in 19.2 overs. Off-break bowler Kanika Ahuja also chipped in with two wickets.It was complete spin-show from the Indians with off-spinner Patil and slow left-arm orthodox Kashyap ruling the roost on a slow Mission Road Ground pitch. Sobhana Mostary scored 16, while Nahida Akter remained stranded on 17 not out for Bangladesh A.Vrinda Dinesh was the top-scorer for India with 36 off just 29 balls while Ahuja remained unbeaten on 30 off 23 balls. It was a struggle for Indian batters as only four of them managed double-digit scores with Bangladesh A bowlers picking up wickets at regular intervals, not allowing India to build any substantial partnership. Besides Vrinda and Ahuja, wicketkeeper Uma Chetry (22) and skipper Shweta Sehrawat (13) were the other two Indian batters to reach double figures.For Bangladesh, slow left-arm orthodox bowler Nahida Akter (2/13) and off-spinner Sultana Khatun (2/30) picked up two wickets apiece.India progressed to the final after their semifinal against Sri Lanka was washed out without a ball being bowled on Tuesday.In a bizarre run of events, India played only one game in the run-up to the final, their opener against hosts Hong Kong, which they won by nine wickets. India’s other three matches, including the semifinal against Sri Lanka, were washed out without a ball being bowled. In fact, rain played spoilsport throughout the tournament, forcing as many as eight games to be washed out.

Hasaranga, Mendis, Samarawickrama lead SL's win in campaign opener

Sri Lanka’s top four scored fifties before Hasaranga ran through UAE with figures of 6 for 24

Deivarayan Muthu19-Jun-20231:35

Samarawickrama: ‘Hasaranga is a champion bowler’

Sadeera Samarawickrama and Kusal Mendis led a quartet of half-centuries from Sri Lanka as they dominated UAE and enjoyed a winning start to their World Cup Qualifier campaign in Zimbabwe.Openers Dimuth Karunaratne and Pathum Nissanka also struck fifties as Sri Lanka posted 355 for 6. Their attack was without Dushmantha Chameera, who was sidelined with a shoulder strain, but Wanindu Hasaranga bagged career-best List A figures of 6 for 24 to wreck UAE’s chase. Maheesh Theekshana and Dhananjaya de Silva backed Hasaranga up as UAE were rolled over for 180 in 39 overs.Allrounder Ali Naseer stood out amid the UAE rubble, following up his sharp spell of 2 for 44 in his ten overs with a sprightly cameo. Since making his ODI debut against West Indies earlier this month in Sharjah, Naseer has made scores of 58, 57, 13, and 34 in four innings in addition to fronting up to bowl the difficult overs.Related

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On Monday, Sri Lanka’s top four saw him off and lined up the other bowlers. Mendis treated wristspinner Karthik Meiyappan with contempt, taking him for 36 off 18 balls. Having sussed out that Meiyappan was repeatedly dipping into his wrong’un and not threatening the stumps enough, Mendis attacked him with a variety of sweeps. Contrastingly, Hasaranga and Theekshana didn’t give up the stumps and didn’t give UAE’s batters as many chances to employ the sweep.Samarawickrama also played a number of inventive strokes during his 64-ball 73, the pick of them being a ramped four off Naseer in the 44th over. Samarawickrama had initially shaped to scoop the ball over short fine leg, but Naseer shifted his line even wider of off. Samarawickrama was so switched on that he changed his shot at the last instant and ramped it over wicketkeeper Vriitya Aravind. He had forged a 105-run partnership for the third wicket with Mendis off 77 balls, which formed the cornerstone of Sri Lanka’s innings.Before they had got together, Nissanka and Kartunaratne had also done their bit by countering the early-morning swing and seam movement. Karunaratne was the more fluent of the two openers and was responsible for six of the nine fours Sri Lanka had scored in the powerplay.But Sri Lanka had to wait until the 48th over for their first six. Charith Asalanka injected greater urgency into the innings when he shanked Muhammad Jawadullah over wide long-on for six. Then in the next over, he launched Rohan Mustafa for another imposing six. Hasaranga joined the hitting spree in the final over, thumping Zahoor Khan for three fours off four balls.Wanindu Hasaranga registered his career-best List A figures•ICC/Getty Images

Hasaranga then ran rings around UAE in their chase, though some of their players have played with – or against – Hasaranga during the inaugural ILT20. They struggled to pick his wrong’un in particular as the wristspinner went on to record his maiden five-wicket haul in ODI cricket.”He [Hasaranga] is world-class, one of the best bowlers in the world right now,” Aravind said at his post-match press conference. “We did look at videos and tried to analyse what he does. But of course once you are playing it, it is a different story. Credit to him, he bowled really well today.”Naseer aside, UAE captain Muhammad Waseem (39) and vice-captain Aravind (39) were the only batters to pass 30 in the chase.When the two teams last met at the T20 World Cup in Australia in 2022, Meiyappan picked up a hat-trick, and overshadowed Hasaranga, who was his senior during his IPL stint as a net bowler at Royal Challengers Bangalore.On Monday, it was Hasaranga, the master, who bossed his protégé and UAE.

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