India crack ODI code with test match approach against Australia

India's Hardik Pandya (R) bumps fists with Australia's Adam Zampa at the end of the 2023 ICC Men's Cricket World Cup one-day international (ODI) match between India and Australia at the MA Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai on October 8, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 09 October 2023
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India crack ODI code with test match approach against Australia

  • Five-time champions Australia would be particularly upset with their batting as none of their batters managed a fifty
  • India picked a three-pronged spin attack, who collectively conceded 104 runs in 30 overs claiming six wickets

NEW DELHI: When T20 cricket is increasingly influencing batting approach in one-day internationals, India moved the other way on Sunday and adopted a test match approach to accomplish a nervy chase in their low-scoring World Cup opener against Australia.

A day after South Africa overcame Sri Lanka in a 754-run slugfest in New Delhi, bowlers dominated in Chennai where India bundled out Australia for 199 but endured a top order collapse of their own before prevailing by six wickets.

Chasing 200, three of India’s top four batters fell for a duck for the first time in a one-day international.

KL Rahul, who made 97 not out, and Virat Kohli (85) forged a match-winning partnership of 165 to bail out India who reached the target with 52 balls to spare.

Rahul said the piece of advice he received from senior team mate Kohli was to treat it as a test match for a while to arrest their slide.

“Virat said there’s big help (for bowlers) in the wicket, and (we) just have to play proper shots and play like it’s test cricket for some time and see where it goes,” said the wicketkeeper-batter.

“That was mostly the plan, and happy that we could do the job for the team.”

The small target meant both the batters could take their time to get a hang of the wicket when Australian pacers were breathing fire from both ends.

Kohli was also lucky to get a reprieve on 12 when Mitchell Marsh dropped him in what proved a costly mistake for Australia.

Five-time champions Australia would be particularly upset with their batting as none of their batters managed a fifty.

India picked a three-pronged spin attack, who collectively conceded 104 runs in 30 overs claiming six wickets.

Ravindra Jadeja claimed three of them and the left-arm spinner said he too took a test match approach of maintaining a tight line and length rather than trying something extraordinary.

“This was my plan, that I should bowl at the stumps and luckily the ball to Smith turned a little more,” Jadeja said explaining how he dismissed Australia’s top scorer Steve Smith (46).

“My plan was simple. I was thinking that this is a test match bowling wicket, and I shouldn’t experiment too much because everything was happening in the wicket.

“So I was trying to bowl it stump to stump.”

India face Afghanistan in their next match in New Delhi on Wednesday.


Cricket in uncharted territory as T20 World Cup starts in Texas

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Cricket in uncharted territory as T20 World Cup starts in Texas

  • A month-long festival of the fastest, most explosive form of the sport begins with the US taking on Canada in Dallas on Saturday
  • It marks the opening skirmish of the first ever major International Cricket Council event to be held in the US and the West Indies

DALLAS: Cricket ventures into uncharted territory on Saturday as the first ever major tournament to be staged in the United States gets under way in Texas with the opening game of the T20 World Cup.
A month-long festival of the fastest and most explosive form of the sport — which is being shared between venues in Texas, Florida, New York and the Caribbean — begins with the US taking on Canada at the Grand Prairie Stadium on the outskirts of Dallas on Saturday.
It marks the opening skirmish of the first ever major International Cricket Council (ICC) event to be held in part in the United States.
While the bulk of the tournament will be played out in the Caribbean, 16 group stage games in the 20-team tournament will be played on American soil, including the highlight of the group stage — a clash between India and Pakistan due to be played in Long Island, New York.
The rest of the tournament will be held in the West Indies, including the Super Eight stage, the semifinals and the final, which will be played at Kensington Oval in Bridgetown, Barbados.
While cricket is widely played at a recreational level in the United States, with strong presences in all three of the states that have been chosen for games, organizers are realistic about the chances of “converting” mainstream American sports fans.
Instead, they expect that the large immigrant communities from cricket-loving backgrounds, including thousands of India fans in particular, will pack the stadiums.
“I think, number one, we want to celebrate those that are already fanatical lovers of cricket. They deserve to see the best players in the world come into their backyard and have that chance,” T20 World Cup USA, Inc. chief executive Brett Jones told AFP.
“Number two, I think it’s about spiking curiosity in the game,” he said.
The ICC also sees the tournament as a launch pad toward the sport’s return to the Olympics for Los Angeles 2028, when the T20 format will be used.
Major League Cricket, a T20 tournament, was launched last year and also stands to benefit from any growth in interest in the big-hitting, spectacular shortest form.
But it is not only the American market that the ICC is focused upon — the expansion of the tournament has opened up opportunities for newer cricket nations to compete on the big stage.
In recent years, the sport has been able to expand outside of its traditional strongholds with Ireland and Afghanistan earning places in the 12-strong elite with full Test status.
But the ICC see the T20 format as the perfect vehicle for growing the game and this year’s edition will feature three T20 World Cup debutants in the USA, Canada and Uganda.
Nepal, Papua New Guinea and Oman are among the other nations who are relatively new to the big stage and who will be looking to make their mark and grab some attention with an upset win.
With the teams drawn in four groups of five teams, with just the top two advancing, none of the smaller nations are expected to progress beyond the group stage and there is a danger the pool stage could mainly be a ‘weeding out’ process.
India, winners of the first edition in 2007, are the favorites, with their line-up packed with players from the annual Indian Premier League.
Australia, winners of the ODI World Cup last year along with the World Test Championship, opted to leave out their veteran batsman Steve Smith but big-hitting David Warner and pacemen Mitchell Starc and Pat Cummins provide plenty of experience.
Other possible contenders include defending champions England, who will be without the star of their 2022 triumph Ben Stokes, who is managing his fitness after a knee operation. England warmed up for the tournament with a seven-wicket rout of Pakistan in London on Thursday.
Co-hosts West Indies won the tournament in 2012 and 2016 and are hoping that they can benefit from familiarity with the surfaces in the region.
South Africa, New Zealand and Pakistan will all fancy their chances of making an impact in a tournament which always produces surprises.


Yuka Saso survives brutal starts of US Women’s Open that sent Korda to an 80

Updated 31 May 2024
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Yuka Saso survives brutal starts of US Women’s Open that sent Korda to an 80

  • Saso: I made really good putts. I think I was more lucky than playing good
  • The wind was swirling at some of the higher points on the course, and the greens were firm and bouncy, just how the USGA likes it

LANCASTER, Pennsylvania: Former champion Yuka Saso leaned on her putter to survive a brutally tough start to the US Women’s Open on Thursday, an opening round that featured Nelly Korda making a 10 on her third hole and only four players barely beating par.

Saso had three big par putts to start the back nine at Lancaster Country Club, rolled in two medium-length birdie putts toward the end of her round and finished with three putts from the collar of the 18th green for bogey and a 2-under 68.

It felt even lower than that considering all the carnage around her. The leading 10 players from the women’s world ranking had an average score of 75.5 — including Korda’s 80 — and only two-time major champion Minjee Lee was not over par.

“It’s a US Open. It’s a major. It’s the biggest major championship, and I think it’s one of the most difficult weeks that we’ll play,” Saso said. “I don’t tell myself to be confident or anything like that.”

Saso, who seized on a Lexi Thompson meltdown in 2021 to win the Women’s Open at Olympic Club, led by one shot over Andrea Lee, Wichanee Meechai of Thailand and recently crowned NCAA champion Adela Cernousek of France.

Cernousek, a junior at Texas A&M, had company among amateurs. Three of them were in the group at even-par 70 — US Women’s Amateur champion Megan Schofill, Catherine Park and 15-year-old Asterisk Talley, who is coming off her first USGA title at the US Women’s Amateur Four-ball Championship.

Lee, who picked up her second major in the Women’s Open at Pine Needles two years ago, holed out from 15 feet just off the green at the par-3 17th to get back to even par.

“Just come back and try and beat the course again,” she said.

The rest of the LPGA Tour’s biggest stars took a beating, none as bad or as shocking as Korda. The No. 1 player in women’s golf, Korda arrived at Lancaster having won six of her last seven tournaments. Three holes into her opening round, she was sent reeling.

Korda hit from a back bunker into a stream on the par-3 12th hole, and then pitched into the stream from the other side twice on her way to a 10. She added four bogeys over the next 15 holes and signed for an 80, matching her highest round as a professional.

“Not a lot of positive thoughts, honestly,” Korda said. “I just didn’t play well today. I didn’t hit it good. I found myself in the rough a lot. Making a 10 on a par 3 will definitely not do you any good at a US Open.

“Yeah,” she concluded, “just a bad day at the office.”

It was a bad day for so many others. Rose Zhang, who ended Korda’s five-tournament winning streak three weeks ago in New Jersey, looked to be shellshocked when she walked off the 18th green with yet another three-putt bogey and a 79.

Lydia Ko and Brooke Henderson each shot 80. The average score for the field was 75.2.

The wind was swirling at some of the higher points on the course, and the greens were firm and bouncy, just how the USGA likes it. The 156-player field produced just over 900 scores of bogey or worse — in Korda’s case, a septuple bogey.

Thompson, likely playing in her final US Women’s Open after announcing she will no longer play a full schedule after this year, started her back nine by going from bunker to bunker to bunker to thick rough and taking triple bogey. She shot 78.

Saso picked up 5.7 shots on the field with her putter, and it carried her to the lead.

“I made really good putts. I think I was more lucky than playing good,” Saso said.

She has a shot at a peculiar slice of victory this week if she were to win and become the only Women’s Open champion to play under two flags.

Saso won as a Filipino at the Olympic Club and the following year — before turning 21 — declared her citizenship to be Japan (her father is Japanese). A big week could also thrust her into position to get back to the Olympics under a different flag.

That feels like a long way off, especially after such a hard day of work.

“There’s so much golf left,” Saso said. “The golf course is very difficult and the conditions are very tough, especially with the wind with it swirling and when it’s blowing 15 mph with the firm greens and fast greens.”

It didn’t seem to hurt the amateur, particularly Cernousek. She dropped only two shots, one of them on a three-putt from 40 feet on the 14th hole, and held her nerve to break par. She was amazed seeing her name on every scoreboard.

“I was like, ‘Wow!’ I was watching every leaderboard on the course,” she said.

Talley is one of two 15-year-olds in the field at Lancaster and played well above her years with smart decisions when she got out of position. Her one gaffe came on the par-5 seventh hole when she only advanced her second shot about 50 yards out of the thick rough, laid up and then put it in the water fronting the green. She made a triple bogey.

But Talley — her mother says Asterisk is Greek for “Little Star” — followed with a nine-hole stretch of three birdies and six pars, not dropping another shot until the 17th,

“I feel like I could have done a lot better today, but I’m not mad at all about my round,” Talley said. “I was hearing everybody even par is a good round today. I wish I could have been a couple under par.”


Real Madrid might stands in the way of Dortmund fairytale in Champions League final

Updated 31 May 2024
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Real Madrid might stands in the way of Dortmund fairytale in Champions League final

  • Madrid’s rich Champions League tradition means there are also a number of personal feats at stake on Saturday
  • The English Football Association (FA) have invested £5 million ($6 million) into improving safety and infrastructure at Wembley

LONDON: Borussia Dortmund face the acid test after a fairytale run to Saturday’s Champions League final as a star-studded Real Madrid roll into Wembley expecting to be crowned European champions for a 15th time.

No club can come close to the Spanish giants’ success in the competition and they are strong favorites against a Dortmund side that have beaten the odds just to make it to London.

Madrid’s habit of somehow getting over the line when it matters in the Champions League has been exemplified in their run to the final.

Carlo Ancelotti’s men withstood a barrage from defending champions Manchester City to win their quarterfinal tie on penalties before another legendary late fightback at the Santiago Bernabeu to beat Bayern Munich in the last four.

The Spanish champions rightly travel to the English capital with confidence as they look to cap a memorable season.

Madrid have lost just twice in 54 games in all competitions, storming to the title in La Liga by 10 points and thrashing Barcelona 4-1 to lift the Spanish Super Cup along the way.

“I came here because I wanted to win, and to expect it,” said Madrid midfielder Jude Bellingham, who left Dortmund for the Spanish capital 12 months ago.

“It is a bit greedy almost, but you have to be confident when you’re playing with so many great players.”

Bellingham’s career path shows the scale of the task awaiting Dortmund.

Plucked from English Championship side Birmingham as a teenager, he was molded and developed by the German giants before being picked off by Madrid for a transfer fee in excess of €100 million ($109 million).

Without him, Dortmund struggled domestically this season, finishing fifth in the Bundesliga, 27 points adrift of Bayer Leverkusen.

Yet, Edin Terzic’s men have saved their best for the Champions League stage to reach the final for the third time in the club’s history and first since they lost at Wembley to Bayern Munich 11 years ago.

Dortmund topped the group of death featuring Paris Saint-Germain, AC Milan and Newcastle.

PSV Eindhoven and Atletico Madrid were then seen off before a heroic defensive display kept out PSG over two legs in the semifinals.

“They’ve prepared their season around the run in the Champions League,” added Bellingham.

“They’ve played amazingly, the character and mentality they’ve shown in a lot of games. They’ve had a tough run to the final as well and you have to respect that.”

As impressive as keeping out Real-bound Kylian Mbappe was in the last four, Dortmund realize they must go to another level if Madrid are to lose a European final for the first time since 1983.

“Our goal wasn’t to qualify for the final, our goal is to win the Champions League,” said Dortmund fan turned coach Terzic.

“And if you want to win the Champions League, you have to beat the champions. Now the absolute champion in the history of soccer and especially in this competition is waiting for us. The ultimate boss.”

Madrid’s rich Champions League tradition means there are also a number of personal feats at stake on Saturday.

Ancelotti can extend his record as the only coach to win the European Cup four times.

Dani Carvajal, Luka Modric and Toni Kroos, in the final club game of his career, could match Madrid legend Paco Gento as the only player to win the competition six times as a player.

UEFA will be hoping the focus is on the protagonists on the field come full-time to ensure their decision to return to Wembley for a major final is not questioned.

Three years ago, the final of Euro 2020 was marred by violence as ticketless fans stormed the stadium doors to gain entry.

UEFA were also forced to apologize to Liverpool fans for the organization of the 2022 Champions League final in Paris that an independent review found “almost led to disaster.”

The English Football Association (FA) have invested £5 million ($6 million) into improving safety and infrastructure at Wembley, which is also set to host the Euro 2028 final.

“We never foresaw events like that for the Euros final and I’m not sure we will again but we’ve learned lessons and additional measures have been implemented,” said the FA’s director of tournaments and events Chris Bryant.


Riyadh the ‘capital of world boxing,’ says promoter Frank Warren ahead of 5vs5 event

Updated 30 May 2024
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Riyadh the ‘capital of world boxing,’ says promoter Frank Warren ahead of 5vs5 event

  • Warren was joined by rival promoter Eddie Hearn and the fighters for the final press conference before Friday’s weigh-in

RIYADH: Boxing promoter Frank Warren on Thursday called Riyadh the “capital of world boxing” at a press conference ahead of Saturday’s “5vs5” event featuring the best fighters of the Queensberry and Matchroom stables.

Warren was joined by rival promoter Eddie Hearn and the fighters for the final press conference before Friday’s weigh-in and the main event at the Kingdom Arena in the Saudi capital.

Both emphasized the importance of the fight card and praised the Kingdom’s hosting of the event.

On his boxer Malik Zanad’s fight against Russia’s Dmitry Bivol, Warren said: “We have here two undefeated boxers, as you know. We lost a great fight (Fury's loss to Usyk), but I think we now have another great fight.”

He continued: “We have (Malik) Zanad, a man hungry for victory, used to boxing away from home; he went to Australia and defeated Gerard Pamplon, he is facing Bivol, who I consider one of the best boxers, with a record of 22 wins and no losses.

“Both have perfect records, but obviously, one of them will lose this fight, and I have often seen last-minute substitutes come in, seize the moment, and win the title.”

Libyan fighter Zanad agreed. 

“I fight because I strive for victory, I thank everyone for this opportunity, and you will see a performance in this fight that will make you say I could have been a world champion a long time ago, but now is the opportunity to become a world champion, and I will become a world champion soon, inshallah, I will achieve that,” he said.

Bivol was more philosophical about his chances.

“It depends on how the fight goes, I may need to adapt and change, this is professional boxing, and you must be able to change your style, starting from the training phase, to make it easier in the ring,” he said.

“In the first round, the fight may be tactical, and in the second round, it may become more aggressive. You have to be ready for all possibilities, and I am prepared for everything,” he added.


Paqueta to stay in Brazil squad ahead of Copa America as he fights spot-fixing charges in England

Updated 30 May 2024
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Paqueta to stay in Brazil squad ahead of Copa America as he fights spot-fixing charges in England

  • He was charged with misconduct on May 23 and faces a long ban if found guilty by English soccer authorities
  • Paqueta immediately took to social media to deny the charges

RIO DE JANEIRO: Lucas Paqueta can continue to play for Brazil while he fights spot-fixing charges by the English Football Association, his national team said Thursday.
Paqueta, who plays his club soccer for West Ham, is alleged to have deliberately received yellow cards during Premier League matches to influence betting markets.
He was charged with misconduct on May 23 and faces a long ban if found guilty by English soccer authorities.
Paqueta immediately took to social media to deny the charges, vowing to “fight with every breath to clear my name,” but has until Monday to formally respond to the allegations. The English FA has acknowledged that Paqueta may request for an extension before issuing his official response.
In a long statement on Thursday, the Brazilian Football Confederation said it was aware of the allegations and contacted the English FA for information.
Based on the English FA’s responses, confederation president Ednaldo Rodrigues Gomes said Paqueta will stay in Brazil’s squad ahead of the Copa America starting June 20 and remains free to play in upcoming friendlies against Mexico and the United States.