Shepherd, Joseph seal West Indies' third consecutive T20I series win over South Africa

Hendricks gave South Africa a good start but a collapse of 7 for 20 in 36 balls knocked them out

Firdose Moonda25-Aug-2024West Indies won a third successive T20I series against South Africa by defending 179 at the Brian Lara Cricket Academy, where they dismantled a chase that was well set up. South Africa were 129 for 3 in the 14th over but lost 7 for 20 in 36 balls and were bowled out for 149 in 19.4 overs to fall short by 30 runs.Akeal Hosein and Gudakesh Motie made the crucial breakthroughs when they removed Tristan Stubbs and Donovan Ferreira, respectively, but then it was over to Romario Shepherd and Shamar Joseph to finish it off. Shepherd ended with 3 for 15 from his four overs and Joseph with a career-best 3 for 31. Between them, they took South Africa’s chances of levelling the series from on track to derailed.West Indies would have known that the total they posted was gettable after they pulled off the highest successful chase at the venue – 175 – two days ago and South Africa were off to a quick start. They raced to 100 inside ten overs but West Indies conceded only one boundary between tenth and 14th overs to force South Africa into making mistakes that ultimately cost them the game.South Africa’s middle order will be a cause for concern as only one batter after No. 3 got past 20 in a match where individual run-scoring accolades were scarce. There were no half-centuries across the two teams but West Indies were clearly the better big-hitting side. They hit 13 sixes compared to South Africa’s six, which was one marker of where the game was won.Shai Hope made an enterprising 41 off 22 balls•AFP/Getty Images

Hope floats and flies

After a match-winning 51 in the opening game, Shai Hope announced his intent in this match when he slog-swept Bjorn Fortuin over midwicket to score his first boundary of the innings. Hope’s pull off Kwena Maphaka in the next over, which went between the wicketkeeper and short fine, opened up a scoring area in the V behind the stumps. Alick Athanaze also exploited that area when he played Lizaad Williams late through third. West Indies finished the powerplay on 43 for 1, before Hope’s best came out. He smashed Aiden Markram for back-to-back sixes over midwicket, with the turn and wind. Two more sixes came when he pulled Maphaka over cow corner and flicked Patrick Kruger over a wide fine leg to underline his preference for leg-side play. Hope scored 39 of his 41 runs on the leg side, and had a third fifty in four innings in his sights, before he reached for a wide Kruger delivery and was caught at deep point.

Kruger doubles up

Hope was Kruger’s first T20I wicket and it was not long before he had his second. After a change of ends, but with the same plan, Kruger struck with the first ball in the 12th over. He maintained a wide line outside off and Roston Chase was enticed into attempting a big shot. He only got enough to find Maphaka on the edge of the point boundary, who took a good low catch to leave West Indies 94 for 3. Kruger is not South Africa’s first-choice allrounder, even in this squad, but has done enough to keep Wiaan Mulder on the bench and perhaps even edge out Ferreira. But West Indies scored 50 runs in their last five overs, with Rovman Powell and Sherfane Rutherford adding 47 off 28 balls for the fifth wicket to give them the edge.Reeza Hendricks gave South Africa a flying start in pursuit of 180•AFP/Getty Images

Reeza’s return

The last ball of Hosein’s opening over was not particularly short, but Reeza Hendricks pulled it for four over midwicket for the first boundary of South Africa’s reply. And it was as though a switch had flipped. Hendricks went on to hit a wide ball from Matthew Forde over point, a full delivery through the covers and then seemed to do nothing more than attempt a back-foot defensive block but timed it well enough to get past mid-off for four more. His coup de grâce came against Chase, whom he hit for 22 runs in five balls, including back-to-back sixes either side of the wicket, to give South Africa fifty inside four overs, and 71 in the powerplay albeit that he fell on the penultimate ball. Hendricks under-edged Shepherd onto his stumps and was out for 44 but showed signs that he was back to his best. In 12 innings before this one, Hendricks had only gone past 40 once and though he would have been disappointed not to get a half-century, he set up the chase well.

Hosein has South Africa on the ropes

Hosein’s first two overs – at the start of the innings – cost 17 runs and he was brought back in the 14th. South Africa were 125 for 3 after 13 with Tristan Stubbs and Rassie van der Dussen both in and scoring quickly. Hosein made a crucial breakthrough, foxing Stubbs. Stubbs tried to loft a slow, flighted ball over long-off but did not get enough on it and was caught by substitute fielder Fabian Allen. Pace-off also did Ferreira in, as Motie had him stumped in the next over, but it was Hosein’s final delivery that put South Africa’s hopes to bed. Van der Dussen tried to hit him over midwicket but only made contact with the inside half of the bat and was caught by Joseph. South Africa were 138 for 6 after 16 overs and needed 42 runs off 24 balls. Joseph and Shepherd took it out of South Africa’s reach and cleaned up the tail before Matthew Forde finished off the match

IPL 2020: AB de Villiers, Dale Steyn, Chris Morris link up with Virat Kohli & Co. in Dubai

Virat Kohli travels alone on a chartered flight to Dubai after completing testing protocols in Mumbai

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Aug-2020″It’s steaming outside,” Dale Steyn remarked after reaching Dubai at 3am on Saturday along with AB de Villiers and Chris Morris to link up with their Royal Challengers Bangalore colleagues.The venue is going to be just one aspect of the IPL experience that will be different this year, what with Covid-19-related protocols and procedures the teams must adhere to, not to mention the vacant stands. Morris confessed to being “a little bit nervous” as they checked into the team hotel where the Indian contingent of players and support staffers had settled in a day before.Virat Kohli, however, didn’t travel with the rest of the Indian players, a Royal Challengers spokesperson told ESPNcricinfo: “Yes, Virat joined the team yesterday. He followed quarantine and testing according to RCB SOP in Mumbai and took a chartered flight directly from Mumbai to Dubai.”Safety of the players and other members of the travelling party is uppermost on the agenda for all the teams, and Royal Challengers are no different. Though they need only 55 rooms, they have booked one entire wing of a luxury hotel, adding up to 150 rooms, and, in Dubai, all the visitors will serve a mandatory six-day isolation and then be tested (for Covid-19) thrice before being allowed to enter the bio-bubble. Their training sessions begin on August 29. “It’s been quite a while since we played the game that we love, so yeah, very tough, very excited to get going, but a little bit nervous too, to be honest,” Morris told the franchise’s media team, while Steyn was more focused on the weather, wondering “how it’s going to be in a couple of weeks” when the action begins.”The travelling was a bit different to normal, but we made it here. I am looking forward to my Covid tests,” de Villiers said. “Got a feel for what we are in for this year, and then I am looking forward to get to know everyone, all the new players, there’s a whole new feel in the side, so very excited.” With the South Africans reaching Dubai, the wait is on for the rest of the overseas players. Australians Aaron Finch, Kane Richardson and Josh Philippe, who are all headed for England for their white-ball exchanges, will reach around the time of the start of the tournament on September 19. Apart from them, the squad includes England’s Moeen Ali and Sri Lanka’s Isuru Udana, and Mike Hesson and Simon Katich from among the support staffers, all of whom, franchise chairman Sanjeev Churiwala said in a press interaction last week, are expected to arrive in the next few days.Along with booking the entire wing of the hotel, “gym facilities, restaurants will be permanently 100% secured for the exclusive use of the team; all hotel staff and service members will also be tested and staying in-house,” he said. One staff member will be positioned outside the bubble for this period to help the team “coordinate with the outside world”.As far as players, and others, taking their families along to the UAE, Churiwala said that the decision had been left to the individuals.”Most of the players this time are not travelling with their families,” he said. “A few of them have decided, it’s a personal choice that they have optioned for, and if at all their families travel with them – in our current assessment it’s a very, very small group – everyone will go through the same bio-bubble procedures and protocols as laid down by BCCI. Without any exception.”

Dimuth Karunaratne believes Sri Lanka have the edge on England

With tourists missing several players from 2018 whitewash, skipper senses ‘clear advantage’ for home side

Andrew Fidel Fernando13-Jan-2021England rested Ben Stokes for this series, left Keaton Jennings out, and have lost Moeen Ali to Covid-19. Although Dimuth Karunaratne sympathises with Moeen in particular, he’s pretty sure all this confers an advantage to his team.Although Karunaratne did not mention them by name, England have also left Ben Foakes out of the first Test, and have not brought Adil Rashid on tour. All five of these players had made a substantial impact during England’s 3-0 whitewash over Sri Lanka in 2018. Stokes had played both key innings, and bowled incisive spells; Jennings had hit a second-innings hundred in Galle, and taken outstanding close-in catches; Moeen had taken 18 wickets; Foakes had top-scored in the series in addition to having kept wicket extraordinarily well; and Rashid had turned the Colombo Test with his legspin.The England side set to take the field on Thursday, however, has several players on their first Sri Lanka tour.Related

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  • With no clear favourites, Sri Lanka vs England is poised to be a thriller

“We have a clear advantage against this team, because they’ve got a few new players,” Karunaratne said. “From the last series they played against us, Stokes is not in their squad and Jennings is not in the team. And Stokes is the guy who balanced their team. The players in the current squad don’t have much experience in these conditions.”That said, we shouldn’t take it easy. They’ve prepared well, and I’ve seen how well they’ve prepared. They’ve also been playing cricket and they were the first ones to start playing Tests again after Covid hit. Their fitness levels are still up there. We only started again against South Africa, and because of the injury concerns, we’ve lost players.”Despite the overall confidence, Karunaratne was still wary of the threat England’s spin attack posed. Left-arm spinner Jack Leach, England’s best bowler from the 2018 series will play again. He took 18 wickets at 21.38 on that trip. Offspinner Dom Bess, who has 19 wickets from 15 bowling innings so far, will also be in the XI.”I think their spinners are just as dangeorous this time. Leach is there, and he’s the man who did a lot of of work in the last series here. It’s unfortunate that Moeen Ali, who did a good job, can’t play the series. Dom Bess has done a good job for England as well, so we never underestimate their bowlers. We always knew what they are capable of in their bowling lineup.”But we know what the conditions are, so we have a few plans against them. They’d played a practice game here before the last series, and we have that footage and everything. We are trying to play our normal, fearless game. We learned a lot of things in the past series, and we’re not going to make those mistakes again.”Sri Lanka’s batsmen, though, are playing a Test at home for the first time in 16 months, and have returned from South Africa only eight days ago, having played on fast, bouncy pitches there. Karunaratne does not think readjusting to home conditions will be too big a challenge, even if rain has hampered what little preparation time they had in the approach to this Test.”Playing in Sri Lanka is difficult anyway, but we’ve all been playing in Sri Lanka since we started cricket, and I don’t think the fact that we’ve been abroad for a month will make it too difficult to come back to these conditions. Yes, we haven’t played for a while, but there was a domestic tournament last year as well as the LPL. We can’t give the excuse that we were playing in different conditions and found it hard to switch. These are our conditions.”

Azhar Ali anchors Worcestershire to second straight win

Glamorgan beaten despite Kellaway 82 as Salter announces retirement

ECB Reporters Network04-Aug-2023Worcestershire Rapids made it two wins out of two in the Metro Bank One-Day Cup as their spinners and Pakistan batter Azhar Ali played key roles in the win over Glamorgan at New Road.Josh Baker and Brett D’Oliveira shared five wickets as Glamorgan were bowled out in 40.2 overs in front of a 3,500 crowd despite an excellent knock of 82 on his List A debut by 19-year-old Ben Kellaway.Azhar, who won the competition in 2019 when part of the Somerset side, then made an accomplished 78 to see Rapids, despite a late flurry of dismissals, to a four-wicket victory with 8.3 overs to spare.Worcestershire are looking full of confidence after their run to the quarter-finals in the Vitality Blast and back-to-back wins to fuel their LV=Insurance County Championship promotion challenge. And with only three call-ups to the Hundred, they are looking like a side who could mount a substantial challenge in the 50-over competition.Kellaway’s previous first-team experience was confined to two Vitality Blast appearances this summer but the rookie professional confirmed his promise. He at least gave Glamorgan a total to defend after Baker and D’Oliveira again bowled impressively after sharing six wickets in the opening win over Durham.

Baker is slowly but surely regaining his form and rhythm after a lengthy lay-off with a back problem. D’Oliveira is sometimes reluctant to bowl himself when in the captaincy role but has played a full and effective part with the ball under One-Day skipper Jake Libby.Libby put Glamorgan into bat and opener Tom Bevan survived two lbw shouts in the opening over from Joe Leach. Bevan and Ed Byrom provided a useful platform in accumulating 36 runs from the opening seven overs but then the game swung Worcestershire’s way.Bevan drove loosely at Ben Gibbon and was taken by Azhar at first slip and then Colin Ingram had the misfortune to be run out at the non-striker’s end after Gibbon deflected a straight drive from Byrom onto the stumps.Dillon Pennington bowled a probing spell and was rewarded with a double breakthrough as he continued the form shown in the last two Championship games which yielded 14 wickets.Byrom tried to shoulder arms but only inside-edged a delivery onto the stumps and his next over accounted for Billy Root who was caught behind of a ball which nipped away.Kellaway had one early slice of good fortune when edging Pennington just wide of second slip but otherwise looked composed and reeled off a series of fine strokes in adding 65 in 12 overs with captain Kiran Carlson.But the introduction of Baker and D’Oliveira brought about a decline in Glamorgan’s fortunes as the last six wickets fell for 62 runs in 14.1 overs. Carlson tried to hit D’Oliveira over the top but only found Kashif Ali at long-on and then Alex Horton turned D’Oliveira to midwicket and ventured a few paces out of his crease but failed to beat Libby’s throw to keeper Ben Cox.Kellaway completed a 48-ball half-century with seven boundaries but wickets fell at regular intervals at the other end. Andy Gorvin played back to D’Oliveira and was bowled and Harry Podmore cut Baker into the hands of Matthew Waite at backward point. Jamie McIlroy pushed forward to Baker and was also bowled before Kellaway’s fine knock brought and end to the innings when he lofted D’Oliveira to long-on.D’Oliveira was caught behind off an inside edge after attempting to drive Podmore but then Azhar and new signing Rob Jones featured in the decisive stand of exactly 100 in 20 overs. Jones, on loan from Lancashire before beginning a three-year deal next summer, and Azhar suffered few alarms.Azhar hit Ben Morris for a six over long-off and then leg-glanced the next ball for four to complete the century stand. It came out of the blue when Jones went down the wicket to Carlson and fell to a splendid catch by Bevan at long-on.Azhar’s fine innings ended when he was stumped down the leg side off a wide from Carlson, having struck two sixes and four fours in his 104 ball knock. Kashif and Ben Cox looked as if they wanted to end proceedings in double quick time but both perished to Carlson, at long on and long off respectively, while Waite sliced Gorvin to short third.Glamorgan’s defeat came on the day that Andrew Salter, their long-serving, offspinning allrounder, announced he will retire from professional cricket at the end of the season. Salter, 30, was player of the match when Glamorgan beat Durham to win the Royal London Cup at Trent Bridge two years ago.”Coming to the realisation that my career is drawing to a close, the overriding emotion is one of gratitude,” Salter said in a statement. “Thank you to the fans for creating some unforgettable atmospheres, none more so than the One-Day Cup final in Trent Bridge. I will cherish that moment forever.”

India, Bangladesh to host 2025 and 2027 Men's Asia Cups

The 2025 edition will be a T20 tournament and the 2027 one an ODI event, serving as precursors to the respective format’s World Cups

Edited PTI copy29-Jul-2024India will host the next edition of the Men’s Asia Cup cricket tournament in the T20 format in 2025 as a precursor to the T20 World Cup scheduled in the country in 2026, the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) stated in its Invitation for Expression of Interest (IEOI).Since 2016, when the tournament was first played as a T20 event, the Asia Cup has been used as a dress rehearsal for the global event and played in the format in which the World Cup will be held.The 2023 edition, hosted by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), was held in a ‘Hybrid Model’ as India refused to travel to the neighbouring country and played their matches in Sri Lanka.The 2027 Asia Cup will be held in the ODI format in Bangladesh as the 50-over World Cup is scheduled in South Africa in the same year.The T20 Asia Cup in India and the 50-over continental event in Bangladesh in 2027 will comprise 13 games each as there are 26 matches allocated in the said period.”‘Men’s Asia Cup Tournament’ means the biennial senior men’s cricket tournament organised and administered by the ACC involving designated Members, and shall include participation by the teams from Afghanistan, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and one Non Test playing Member of ACC selected through qualifying events,” the ACC stated in its IEOI statement.India are the defending Asia Cup champions, and have won three of the last four editions of the tournament. They beat Sri Lanka by 10 wickets in the final of last year’s 50-overs edition in Colombo.

'Critical' BBL to finish in early February, priority to get crowds back

The tournament starts on December 13; Scorchers begin defence against Sixers

Andrew McGlashan14-Jul-2022The BBL will once again stretch into early February as it faces a “critical” season to rebound from the disruption of Covid-19, which has seen it at the centre of the rights dispute with Seven, as Cricket Australia prioritises the return of crowds to stadiums.Last season’s edition came to a conclusion across the Australia Day weekend at the end of January, but this time the final will be on February 4. This is largely the trade-off for the tournament starting later in December with the first game on the 13th of the month compared to December 5 last year.”We’ve been clear since the end of last season given the disruption of two years that rebounding really strongly this season is such a critical thing for us to achieve,” Alistair Dobson, the general manager of Big Bash leagues, told ESPNcricinfo. “This season is one of if not the most important seasons we’ve had in recent years.””Right at the top of list was crowds and attendances at games. We are still learning broadly about what fans’ behaviours are in terms of getting back to big sporting events. We are watching the winter codes really closely and hearing from them about the opportunities and challenges.Related

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“We have certainly had one if not both eyes on how we can schedule a season that gives families, kids, and everyone who loves the BBL the chance to get back to the games. So that’s certainly been our key priority along with all the other things we keep in mind, particularly around our broadcasters and club workloads.”The opening game, which sees Sydney Thunder play Melbourne Stars in Canberra, takes place the day after the completion of the Australia-West Indies Test series in Adelaide. CA has scheduled the opening Test of the season in Perth so, along with the traditional day-night match having also been completed, it means there will be no clashes between Tests and BBL. The cancellation of the South Africa ODI series has now also freed up January after the Sydney Test.Australia’s tour to India is expected to start in early February but the league is confident that players will be available until the end of the finals series.The likes of Glenn Maxwell should now be available for the whole competition after the South Africa ODI series was cancelled•Getty Images

“Starting after the day-night Test is the best place, that mid-December window is a bit more traditional, a bit closer to the school holidays,” Dobson said. “We do our best to schedule as many matches if not all of them inside the summer holiday window and we’ve been able to finish the regular season within that January period.”Without any other day-night Tests in the window we have a clear run at primetime, then post the Sydney Test we have a great run of weekend and afternoon matches.”Defending champions Perth Scorchers will get their campaign underway with a home match against Sydney Sixers at Optus Stadium in a re-run of the last two finals. Scorchers were only able to play one game at home last season due to Western Australia’s border restrictions. They then have a run of four home games out of five in late December and early January.

Key dates

December 13 Opening night
December 24 Hobart Hurricanes vs Melbourne Renegades
December 26 Sydney Sixers vs Melbourne Stars and Perth Scorchers vs Adelaide Strikers
December 31 Sydney Thunder vs Hobart Hurricanes and Adelaide Strikers vs Melbourne Stars
January 1 Melbourne Renegades vs Perth Scorchers and Brisbane Heat vs Sydney Sixers
January 25 Regular season concludes
January 27 Eliminator
January 28 Qualifier
January 29 Knockout
February 2 Challenger
February 4 Final

Sixers also have a run of home matches over the Christmas period with three consecutive games at the SCG from December 22 to December 28.The two Melbourne derbies will take place on January 3 (MCG) and January 14 (Marvel) and the Sydney head-to-heads on January 8 (Showground Stadium) and January 21 (SCG).Hobart Hurricanes will host their traditional Christmas Eve fixture, this year against Melbourne Renegades, which will be one of 12 afternoon games albeit three of them are in Perth so broadcast at primetime in the major east coast market.There will be a double-header on Boxing Day (Sixers vs Stars and Scorchers vs Strikers) and New Year’s Day (Renegades vs Scorchers and Heat vs Sixers). The regular season comes to an end on January 25 with finals week beginning on January 27 with the Eliminator.Matches will also be played at three new venues: Albury, Cairns and North Sydney Oval.The tournament will have a draft for overseas players this season, which is likely to be held midway through August.It is expected that the X-Factor and Bash Boost point playing conditions will be scrapped but the Power Surge – where two overs of the powerplay are taken after the 10th over – will remain.There is also hope that DRS will be in place for the first time after Covid border restrictions halted attempts to introduce it in recent seasons although it remains a complex undertaking.”It creates an incredible logistical challenge around having to move significant [DRS] kit from one day to the next with a couple of games a day,” Dobson said. “But we are into the final phase with them and we are confident we’ll be able to resolve any of those issues.”

BBL12 fixtures

December 13: Sydney Thunder vs Melbourne Stars, Manuka Oval
December 14: Adelaide Strikers vs Sydney Sixers, Adelaide Oval
December 15: Brisbane Heat vs Melbourne Renegades, Cazalys Stadium (Cairns)
December 16: Melbourne Stars vs Hobart Hurricanes, MCG
December 16: Sydney Thunder vs Adelaide Strikers, Sydney Showground
December 17: Perth Scorchers vs Sydney Sixers, Optus Stadium
December 18: Melbourne Renegades vs Sydney Thunder, Marvel Stadium
December 19: Hobart Hurricanes vs Perth Scorchers, University of Tasmania Stadium
December 20: Adelaide Strikers vs Sydney Thunder, Adelaide Oval
December 21: Melbourne Renegades vs Brisbane Heat, GMHBA Stadium (Geelong)
December 22: Sydney Sixers vs Hobart Hurricanes, SCG
December 23: Melbourne Stars vs Perth Scorchers, CitiPower Centre
December 23: Brisbane Heat vs Adelaide Strikers, Gabba
December 24: Hobart Hurricanes vs Melbourne Renegades, Blundstone Arena
December 26: Sydney Sixers vs Melbourne Stars, SCG
December 26: Perth Scorchers vs Adelaide Strikers, Optus Stadium
December 27: Sydney Thunder vs Brisbane Heat, Sydney Showground
December 28: Sydney Sixers vs Melbourne Renegades, SCG
December 29: Brisbane Heat vs Sydney Thunder, Metricon Stadium
December 29: Perth Scorchers vs Melbourne Stars, Optus Stadium
December 30: Melbourne Renegades vs Sydney Sixers, GMHBA Stadium (Geelong)
December 31: Sydney Thunder vs Hobart Hurricanes, Lavington Sports Ground (Albury)
December 31: Adelaide Striker vs Melbourne Stars, Adelaide Oval
January 1: Melbourne Renegades vs Perth Scorchers, Marvel Stadium
January 1: Brisbane Heat vs Sydney Sixers, Gabba
January 2: Hobart Hurricanes vs Adelaide Strikers, Blundstone Arena
January 3: Melbourne Stars vs Melbourne Renegades, MCG
January 4: Sydney Sixers vs Brisbane Heat, North Sydney Oval
January 4: Perth Scorchers vs Sydney Thunder, Optus Stadium
January 5: Adelaide Strikers vs Hobart Hurricanes, Adelaide Oval
January 6: Melbourne Stars vs Sydney Sixers, MCG
January 7: Melbourne Renegades vs Hobart Hurricanes, Marvel Stadium
January 7: Perth Scorchers vs Brisbane Heat, Optus Stadium
January 8: Sydney Thunder vs Sydney Sixers, Sydney Showground
January 9: Hobart Hurricanes vs Melbourne Stars, Blundstone Arena
January 10: Adelaide Strikers vs Melbourne Renegades, Adelaide Oval
January 11: Brisbane Heat vs Perth Scorchers, Gabba
January 12: Melbourne Stars vs Adelaide Strikers, MCG
January 13: Sydney Thunder vs Perth Scorchers, Sydney Showground
January 14: Adelaide Strikers vs Brisbane Heat, Adelaide Oval
January 14: Melbourne Renegades vs Melbourne Stars, Marvel Stadium
January 15: Hobart Hurricanes vs Sydney Thunder, Blundstone Arena
January 15: Sydney Sixers vs Perth Scorchers, SCG
January 16: Melbourne Stars vs Brisbane Heat, MCG
January 17: Sydney Sixers vs Adelaide Strikers, C.ex Coffs International Stadium
January 18: Perth Scorchers vs Hobart Hurricanes, Optus Stadium
January 19: Sydney Thunder vs Melbourne Renegades, Manuka Oval
January 20: Adelaide Strikers vs Perth Scorchers, Adelaide Oval
January 20: Brisbane Heat vs Hobart Hurricanes, Gabba
January 21: Sydney Sixers vs Sydney Thunder, SCG
January 22: Brisbane Heat vs Melbourne Stars, Gabba
January 22: Perth Scorchers vs Melbourne Renegades, Optus Stadium
January 23: Hobart Hurricanes vs Sydney Sixers, Blundstone Arena
January 24: Melbourne Renegades vs Adelaide Strikers, Marvel Stadium
January 25: Hobart Hurricanes vs Brisbane Heat, University of Tasmania Stadium
January 25: Melbourne Stars vs Sydney Thunder, MCG
January 27: Eliminator, TBC
January 28: Qualifier, TBC
January 29: Knockout, TBC
February 2: Challenger, TBC
February 4: The Final, TBC

Carey equals world record, Buckingham bags six in South Australia win

The Australia keeper equalled the world record and set an Australia List A record with eight catches while Buckingham took 6 for 41

AAP14-Feb-2024Alex Carey took a world record-equalling eight catches in an innings for South Australia in their Marsh Cup win over Queensland.It was the 32-year-old Test wicketkeeper’s first 50-over game since being dropped from the Australian side at last year’s World Cup in India and he had a day to remember. Five of Carey’s catches were taken off the bowling of player of the match Jordan Buckingham, who finished with a career-best 6 for 41 in the Bulls’ total of 218 at Karen Rolton Oval in Adelaide on Wednesday.The Redbacks won by five wickets in the 45th over with Thomas Kelly blasting 81 off 66 deliveries and captain Nathan McSweeney making 52.Carey had earlier equalled the List A world record when he caught a skier to dismiss last man Matt Kuhnemann. Carey finished the innings equal with two previous world record holders who achieved the feat in English domestic cricket. The first to claim eight catches in an innings was Somerset wicketkeeper Derek Taylor in 1982. The feat was then achieved by Worcestershire gloveman James Pipe in 2001.Carey’s new mark is an Australian List A record on its own. Former Australia wicketkeeper Peter Nevill had eight dismissals in an innings for NSW against a Cricket Australia XI in 2017, but two of them were stumpings.Carey made the difficult look easy with his best catch a stunning diving effort down the leg side to dismiss Jack Wildermuth first ball off Buckingham.Wildermuth got a good piece of a glance that seemed certain to be going to the boundary. Carey dived full length and with his left arm on the ground somehow managed to glove the ball cleanly.He also took a well-judged running catch towards fine leg to get rid of Queensland stand-in skipper Marnus Labuschagne for 74 off 99 deliveries.Carey’s heroics came amidst an incredible spell of fast bowling by Henry Thornton. Thornton had 2 for 7 off his first six overs, beating Labuschagne at least six times with deliveries that cut both ways. Thornton dropped a tough caught and bowled chance off Labuschagne when he was yet to reach double figures.It took all of the Test No.3’s skill to negotiate a spell that Glenn McGrath in his pomp would have been proud of.The win was South Australia’s first in the competition this season, though they and the Bulls were already out of contention to play in the final.

Punjab crash out after tie; Puducherry stun Mumbai

Saurashtra, TN, Kerala advance; Gaikwad, Bharat pile on the runs while Dhawan fails again

Hemant Brar14-Dec-2021Ruturaj Gaikwad struck his fourth century in five games but his side, Maharashtra, failed to qualify for the knockout stage of Vijay Hazare Trophy 2021-22. Punjab, meanwhile, crashed out after their tie against Goa. Elsewhere, Puducherry stunned defending champions Mumbai, who finished the tournament with a solitary win from five games.

Quarter-finalists: Himachal Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Saurashtra, Kerala, Services

Pre-quarter-finals (all in Jaipur):
Vidarbha vs Tripura
Karnataka vs Rajasthan
Uttar Pradesh vs Madhya Pradesh

Saurashtra were the only Elite team to finish the group stage unbeaten, while Tripura topped Plate group with five wins from as many matches. Here’s how the last round of the group stage panned out.

Elite A: Rishi Dhawan show takes Himachal to quarter-finals

Himachal Pradesh qualified for the quarter-finals, thanks to their captain Rishi Dhawan’s unbeaten 91 off 58 balls and 3 for 51 with ball, as they beat Odisha by 63 runs at the Brabourne Stadium. Rishi was well-supported by Nikhil Gangta, Shubham Arora and Prashant Chopra – all of them scored half-centuries to lift Himachal to 360 for 5. Mayank Dagar then picked up 6 for 59 as Odisha were bowled out for 297.Faiz Fazal too led from the front, scoring an unbeaten 102 off 110 as Vidarbha chased down Jammu and Kashmir’s 233 with five wickets in hand at the Bandra Kurla Complex. In Thane, KS Bharat piled up 156 off 138 balls, studded with 16 fours and seven sixes, as Andhra beat Gujarat by 81 runs. That resulted in Himachal, Vidarbha, Andhra and Odisha tied with 12 points each but a superior net run rate meant Himachal topped the group. On the same basis, Vidarbha trumped Andhra and Odisha for a spot in the pre-quarter-finals.Manish Pandey’s 90 was a bright spot in Karnataka’s loss to Bengal•BCCI

Elite B: TN in quarter-finals despite loss, Puducherry stun Mumbai

After bowling out Baroda for a mere 114 in Mangalapuram, Tamil Nadu themselves were all out for 73. However, their superior net run rate meant they made it to the quarter-finals despite a four-way tie. Karnataka had a similar fate in Thumba. Despite Manish Pandey’s 85-ball 90, they lost to Bengal by four wickets but were saved by their net run rate. They will now face Rajasthan in the pre-quarter-final.In Thiruvananthapuram, Puducherry stunned defended champions Mumbai. Chasing 158, Mumbai were bowled out for 139 as offspinner Fabid Ahmed picked up 4 for 16 from his ten overs. For Mumbai, Aakarshit Gomel scored 70 but no other batter could reach even 20.

Elite C: Saurashtra’s unbeaten run, Shikhar’s torrid time

Prerak Mankad and Samarth Vyas scored a half-century each as Saurashtra beat Delhi by four wickets in Mullanpur to continue their unbeaten run. Shikhar Dhawan was once again out cheaply, for 12, and ended the tournament with 56 runs from five innings.Ankit Rajpoot picked up a hat-trick on his way to a maiden five-for in List A as Uttar Pradesh beat Haryana by 78 runs in Mohali despite Harshal Patel’s 3 for 56 and 67 with bat. Uttar Pradesh will now face Madhya Pradesh pre-quarter-finals. In Chandigarh, Chama Milind’s 6 for 63 went in vain as Hyderabad lost to Jharkhand by 36 runs.Ankit Rajpoot’s hat-trick helped UP beat Haryana to qualify for the pre-quarterfinals•BCCI

Elite D: Gaikwad’s fourth ton but Maharashtra fail to qualify

Chasing a mammoth 310, Gaikwad led from the front with a 132-ball 168 as Maharashtra beat Chandigarh by five wickets in Rajkot. Gaikwad hit 12 fours and six sixes in what was his fourth hundred of the tournament, and while Maharashtra registered four wins from five games, they were behind Kerala and Madhya Pradesh in terms of net run rate.Sachin Baby’s unbeaten 83 helped Kerala book a quarter-finals spot as they romped home by five wickets against Uttarakhand. Kerala captain Sanju Samson also struck 33 off 36 balls. Meanwhile, Madhya Pradesh beat Chhattisgarh by three runs in a low-scoring game to make it to the pre-quarter-finals even though their star player Venkatesh Iyer scored only 1 and didn’t bowl.

Elite E: Punjab-Goa tie changes the scenario

Anmolpreet Singh and Gurkeerat Singh Mann’s hundreds helped Punjab put up 288 for 8 against Goa in Ranchi but Snehal Kauthankar’s unbeaten 148 ensured the game ended in a tie. As a result, Punjab finished third in the group. Had they won, they would have been through to the quarter-finals as they had the best net run rate in the group.Ravi Chauhan’s 61 helped Services defeat Rajasthan by 16 runs, which meant both Services and Rajasthan finished with 16 points each. While Rajasthan had a superior net run rate, the Punjab-Goa tie meant only two teams were tied on the points for the top spot. Therefore, head-to-head result got precedence over net run rate, resulting in Services going into the quarter-finals and Rajasthan into the pre-quarter-finals.In a dead rubber, Riyan Parag scored 66 off 67 balls before picking up 2 for 35 from his ten overs as Assam beat Railways by 62 runs.

Plate: Tripura trounce Meghalaya in virtual knockout

Coming into their last group match, both Tripura and Meghalaya had four wins each but legspinner Amit Ali’s 5 for 26 made it a one-sided contest as Meghalaya were bowled out for 116. Tripura chased that down with nine wickets in hand. They will now face Vidarbha in the pre-quarter-final.Elsewhere in Plate group, Bihar downed Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur beat Sikkim and Nagaland defeated Mizoram but all those games were inconsequential as far as the qualification for the pre-quarter-finals was concerned.

Milnes seven-for, Imam century keeps Yorkshire on a roll

Sussex pay price for a lack of acceleration, though local seagull steals the show, and banana

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay 24-Aug-2025Yorkshire, the outstanding team in Group B of the Metro Bank One Day Cup, made sure of qualification for the climax of the competition with their sixth win in seven games. The Sussex Sharks, meanwhile, with one game remaining, cannot progress.A second wicket stand of 196 in 33 overs between Imam-ul-Haq and James Wharton provided the foundation of Yorkshire’s ultimately comfortable win, with 14 balls to spare. Imam continued his outstanding form with 106 from 105 deliveries, with ten fours and three sixes, while Wharton struck a List A best 85 from 103 balls.But the pair’s failure to accelerate put Yorkshire under some pressure when they lost both batsmen in successive overs, followed by the quick dismissal of Finlay Bean. That meant they needed 58 off seven overs, and 51 off six, before some late hitting by Matt Revis and George Hill saw them over the line.The Sussex innings was one of two halves, in which they scored 97 in the first 25 overs and 187 in the second as Matt Milnes took seven wickets for 38 runs, Yorkshire’s third-best bowling figures in List A cricket and their best since 1997. Milnes also took a hat-trick and almost managed a second.Sussex have had a number of batting collapses in this year’s competition and here they managed two, losing three wickets for six runs in 12 balls early in their innings and then three in three balls to Milnes towards the end.Between these low points, however, they staged a remarkable recovery, led by Oli Carter, whose 94 from 79 deliveries was , and it required some late hitting by his best score in List A. The first building blocks of the Sussex fightback were put down by Charlie Tear (35) and John Simpson (65) who came together at 24 for three and put on a patient 60 from 15 overs.But it was the partnership between Simpson and Carter, who added 79 for the fifth wicket in 12 overs, which transformed the match before a depth charge from Danny Lamb, who thumped 53 from 45 deliveries, gave his side a challenging total.Carter reached his fifty from 55 balls when he pulled Hill for the second of his five sixes (there were also seven fours) and it was then that he accelerated, judging length very well and scampering his runs when he failed to find the boundary.He was out in the 45th over, caught as he attempted to ramp Milnes. Jack Carson lifted his first ball to long-on and then Archie Lenham was lbw to give Milnes his hat-trick. But the bowler almost had three in three when he dismissed Tom Haines and Tom Clark with successive deliveries and then saw Hudson-Prentice scoop his first delivery just short of midwicket.Shortly after this, a Sussex-supporting seagull descended on Milnes, who was fielding at long leg, and robbed him of his banana.

Devon Conway included in New Zealand A squad to face West Indies

Henry Nicholls and Will Young will also be part of a strong batting order

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Nov-2020Devon Conway will get his first representative opportunity since qualifying for New Zealand having been named in the A squad to face West Indies in Queenstown.Conway completed his qualification period in August and has been part of New Zealand training camps during the winter. He has started the Plunket Shield in solid form with two half-centuries in six innings for Wellington.”It’s an exciting time for Devon who’s had to wait for his opportunity at this level after some outstanding form on the domestic scene,” New Zealand head coach Gary Stead said.Another player recently qualified, Michael Rippon, the allrounder who previously played for Netherlands and bowls left-arm wristspin, has also been included in the squad.Henry Nicholls, an incumbent in the Test side, has been selected following a delayed start to his season due to a calf injury. He is set to return in the Plunket Shield this week before linking up for the New Zealand A matches which will allow him further time in the middle ahead of next month’s Test series.Will Young, who has been on the cusp of international selection previously, will also be part of a strong batting line-up.Canterbury captain Cole McConchie will lead the side with Dane Cleaver taking the gloves.”It’s been a year like no other and we’re very fortunate to be preparing for such an action packed summer,” Stead said. “The complexities of the international schedule, along with the size of the touring squads and the length of time they will spend in the country has enabled us to build a very strong A programme.”The flip-side of this is that pressure will be put on our player pool this season and we need to be smart with how we use our resources, therefore we’ll likely add and subtract from this squad as we go along.”It’s great to get Henry back on the park after what I know has been a frustrating winter with his left calf injury…we’re confident if he comes through both games unscathed he’ll be ready for the first Test in Hamilton”Plenty of eyes will also be on the four Otago bowlers who have been rewarded for their strong performances so far this year and in recent seasons.”New Zealand A will assemble in Queenstown next Wednesday with Bob Carter and Paul Wiseman leading the coaching staff.New Zealand A squad Joe Carter (Northern Districts), Dane Cleaver (Central Districts), Devon Conway (Wellington), Henry Cooper (Northern Districts), Jacob Duffy (Otag), Ken McClure (Canterbury), Cole McConchie (Canterbury, capt), Henry Nicholls (Canterbury), Michael Rae (Otago), Rachin Ravindra (Wellington), Michael Rippon (Otago), Ben Sears (Wellington), Sean Solia (Auckland), Nathan Smith (Otago), Blair Tickner (Central Districts), Will Young (Central Districts)

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