Stevens powers Kent to quarter-finals

Kent booked their place in the quarter-finals of the Friends Life t20 with a 15-run win over Essex in front of a packed house at Chelmsford

The Bulletin by Liam Brickhill15-Jul-2011
Scorecard
Kent booked their place in the quarter-finals of the Friends Life t20 with a 15-run win over Essex in front of a packed house at Chelmsford. Allrounder Darren Stevens was Man of the Match after starring with both bat and ball, striking a brutal 41 and following that up with four cheap wickets to derail Essex’s middle order, but the night was not without controversy.Stevens entered the fray in the 13th over after the departure of Azhar Mahmood with Kent well-placed at 95 for 2, but didn’t get off the mark until the seventh ball he faced and had just 5 to his name when he uppercut Ravi Bopara to third man, where Scott Styris creaked in from the rope impressively quickly and showed he still retained the class from his international days with what appeared to be a diving catch, scooping the ball into his fingers millimetres from the turf.The umpires thought that the catch warranted a second look, however, and Styris reacted angrily when Stevens was eventually given not out. Essex have suffered disciplinary breaches more than once this season, and though captain James Foster managed to keep his cool Styris, who had claimed the catch as clean, trotted in for an extended chat with the umpires at the end of the over before being gently ushered away by team-mate Tim Southee.Kent had initially struggled to force the pace on a sluggish pitch that didn’t aid strokeplay, with Essex taking pace off the ball, but Stevens made full use of the reprieve to dominate the bowlers. He mowed Ryan ten Doeschate out of the ground and into the River Can, requiring a change of ball, but the harder, newer ball came on more easily to the bat and Stevens immediately thrashed another six, over long-off.Joe Denly, who chugged along at more or less a run a ball in the first half of the innings but accelerated as he passed fifty, departed soon after, swiping ten Doeschate to Tim Phillips, running in from deep midwicket. Essex might have had a second wicket in the same over when Stevens toe-ended a hoick at ten Doeschate, the ball looping agonisingly over the bowler, who sprinted back and got a hand to it but couldn’t complete the catch.Essex’s death bowlers did all that was asked of them but the luck was with Kent, as pinpoint yorkers were repeatedly inside-edged and squeezed down to the short boundary at fine leg. There were some good shots too, with van Jaarsveld peppering the leg side and Stevens going past 2,000 runs in domestic Twenty20s with a paddle to fine leg from the last ball of the innings as Kent reached 183 for 3 after 32 runs had come from the last 12 balls.If anyone was going to find swing in the placid conditions, it was going to be Charl Langeveldt, who opened with a slip in place and curved several deliveries past the outside edge of Mark Pettini’s bat in the first over. Mahmood also found some help with the new ball and slipped an inswinger under Pettini’s bat to rattle the stumps with the score at 9.Owais Shah repeated Stevens’ earlier feat with the shot of the match, an elegant checked-drive that sailed out of the ground and required another change of ball to kick-start Essex’s chase and by the third over of the innings, the movement through the air had vanishedEssex reached had reached 48 for 1 at the end of the field restrictions, but the introduction of Stevens in the seventh over turned the match as Adam Wheater ran past his second delivery – a slow cutter – and was easily stumped for 27. The required rate had crept above 10 an over when Shah lifted his second six over midwicket off Stevens, who barely touched 70 miles an hour all evening, in the ninth over but Stevens soon got his own back, disturbing Shah’s stumps after the batsman had stepped to leg to give himself some roomStevens struck for the third time in the 11th over as Bopara drove too early at a slow offcutter and popped back an easy return catch. Essex had slipped to 77 for 4 and the rate was fast climbing towards two runs a ball with James Tredwell also finding considerable grip and turn off the spongy surfaceStevens had made canny use of the slower ball in his first three overs, but it was a quicker one that brought him his fourth wicket as he snaked one in between ten Doeschate’s bat and pad to leave Essex tottering at 87 for 5.As had been the case at The Oval on Thursday night, Wahab Riaz was far more effective at the death than he had been at the top of the innings, whipping the ball in at a slippery pace and targeting the blockhole. He pegged back Foster’s middle stump with a dipping full toss after he had scratched around for boundary-free 12, and Essex’s hopes were rapidly fading at 120 for 6 in the 17th over.Kent, perhaps feeling a little too assured of victory, slipped dangerously in the closing overs, both Langeveldt and Riaz no-balling and repeated lapses in the field keeping Essex in the hunt as Graham Napier raced to 26 with five boundaries before he picked out Alex Blake on the midwicket boundary. Styris enlivened the Essex massive with a towering six off Mahmood in the final over, but there were simply too many needed, and the result was sealed when he lifted a slower ball to long-off.”I’ve got to be careful [what I say], with recent histories,” Foster said after the match. “But [Stevens] went on to play a crucial knock and turned out to be a match-winner. It’s frustrating, but you never know, someone else could have come in and scored runs. I don’t blame Steve-o, the umpires told him to hold fire and stay there until they’d had a look. [Umpiring] is a tricky job, I don’t know how many of us guys will go into it after our careers because it’s very difficult.””I turned for the second run, Ravi was in my line [of sight] so I asked the umpires if it carried or not, and they went to check it,” explained Stevens.Kent will now face Leicestershire at Grace Road in the quarter-finals of the competition.

Netherlands skittle Zimbabweans

A resurgent Netherlands, fresh from their six-wicket trouncing of a full-strength Bangladesh side in Glasgow three days ago, have handed out similar treatment to the touring Zimbabwe XI

Cricinfo staff23-Jul-2010
Scorecard
A resurgent Netherlands, fresh from their six-wicket trouncing of a full-strength Bangladesh side in Glasgow three days ago, have handed out similar treatment to the touring Zimbabwe XI. Grafting innings from Tom Cooper (49) and Wesley Barresi (47) carried Netherlands to 194 for 9 before Maurits Jonkman and Mudassar Bukhari combined to skittle the Zimbabweans for 136, taking three cheap wickets apiece to seal a 58-run win.The pitch at the VRA Ground in Amstelveen played consistently slow and low during the recent World Cricket League Division One tournament, and conditions were no different today. It appeared Bas Zuiderent had erred after he opted to bat first and Netherlands slid to 48 for 3 in the 18th over, but Cooper held the top order together for the first half of the innings before he was stumped one run short of a half-century of Sean Williams’ left-arm spin.He had done well to see off challenging opening spells from Ed Rainsford and Shingi Masakadza, who removed both Netherlands openers before Nathan Waller’s medium pace did for Tom de Grooth and Zuiderent.Netherlands were tottering at 94 for 5 when Cooper departed, but Barresi and Bukhari staved off the collapse with a 33-run stand before Barresi took his side to within reach of a respectable target by adding a further 50 runs for the seventh wicket with Ruud Nijman. After he was run out with the score at 177, the Zimbabwean opening bowlers returned to pick up another wicket each and keep Netherlands to under 200.The Zimbabweans would no doubt have been confident chasing such a small total, but Zuiderent’s men will have been far more familiar with a bowler-friendly pitch and chipped steadily away at the batting line-up as three partnerships worth more than 20 were put together, but none went past Regis Chakabva and Stuart Matsikenyeri’s 25 for the second wicket.Charles Coventry did his best to inject some life into the middle order with a 37-ball 31, and when he was caught behind off Bukhari the Zimbabweans were 98 for 5 – a very similar position to that midway through the Dutch innings. But none of the lower order came to term with the conditions, Jonkman picking up the last three wickets to fall. With Williams unable to bat after injuring himself in the field, Jonkman sealed the win by disturbing Natsai Mushangwe’s stumps in the 40th over.Despite the fact that only two members of the Zimbabwe XI squad – Coventry and Craig Ervine – are recent regulars in the senior national side, every member of the team has represented their country at some level and few would have backed Netherlands to pull off a convincing win with such ease. The Zimbabweans will have to acclimatise quickly if they are to hold off what is sure to be a spirited attack from a buoyed Netherlands side when the two teams meet again for a four-day Intercontinental Cup game on Sunday.

‘You’re going to create problems for us' – French president Emmanuel Macron appears to tease Kylian Mbappe over proposed Real Madrid transfer after inviting PSG star to state dinner

Emmanuel Macron appeared to joke with Kylian Mbappe about his proposed move to Real Madrid after inviting the PSG superstar to a state dinner.

  • Mbappe meets Macron at Elysee Palace
  • French president seen joking with PSG star
  • Forward set for summer move to Madrid
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Mbappe met with France president Macron and the Emir of Qatari at Elysee Palace on Tuesday after being invited to a state dinner. Macron appeared to joke with Mbappe when he arrived, according to RMC Sport. "You’re going to create problems for us," Macron is believed to have told Mbappe with a smile on his face in what is thought to be a reference to the forward's expected summer transfer to Real Madrid from Qatari-owned Paris Saint-Germain.

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  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Mbappe has been linked with a move to Madrid for a long time, with Macron having previously helped influence the France international's future. The president has admitted he advised Mbappe to snub Los Blancos in 2021 and stay in the French capital. Macron also said last summer he would try to ensure Mbappe stayed at PSG but may now have to resign himself to defeat, with the 25-year-old seemingly destined for a summer switch to the Santiago Bernabeu.

  • WHAT EMMANUEL MACRON SAID

    Macron also spoke about the 2022 Qatar World Cup, which saw Mbappe and France beaten in the final by Argentina: The French president said: "There are also so many beautiful memories, in less serious but as vibrant moments as this 2022 World Cup. Kylian Mbappe’s extraordinary game, the memory of (Randal) Kolo Muani’s saved shot, which still remains bitter in French hearts. 

    "But that’s the thing with the king of sports. They have had a fantastic tournament, with what I think was the most spectacular final in history. France was there with its fans, its security forces, its companies like RATP and its footballers."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR MBAPPE AND PSG

    Madrid are yet to officially announce Mbappe's signing but are expected to do so as soon as it is confirmed Los Blancos can no longer meet PSG in this season's Champions League. Mbappe is expected to receive a world-record signing on fee when he moves to the Spanish giants on a five-year contract. Meanwhile, PSG will look for a replacement and have already been linked with a host of players, including Napoli's Victor Osimhen and Manchester United's Marcus Rashford.

'I deserved to be booked' – Mauricio Pochettino explains furious outburst at Antony Taylor after Chelsea's draw with Man City and apologises to Pep Guardiola for handshake snub

Chelsea boss Mauricio Pochettino has apologised to referee Anthony Taylor for his furious outburst after his side's 4-4 draw with Manchester City.

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Pochettino stormed onto the pitchWas fuming at Anthony TaylorAlso apologised to Pep GuardiolaWHAT HAPPENED?

Pochettino stormed onto the pitch after the final whistle of the 4-4 draw with City on Sunday. The Argentine manager has explained that he believed Raheem Sterling could score on the counter-attack but Taylor instead blew his whistle, prompting Pochettino to both snub a handshake from opposite number Pep Guardiola and take his complaints up with the officiating team. For his protests, he was shown a yellow card, and also needed to be restrained by his coaching staff.

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The game featured a variety of controversial calls, as both sides scored penalties, and Chelsea came from behind to draw level on three separate occasions. Their final equaliser came through former City star Cole Palmer, who scored a spot-kick in the 95th-minute.

WHAT THEY SAID

Pochettino apologised for his outburst after the game, saying: "I need to apologise to Anthony and the officials – in this moment, I felt Raheem could go through on goal.

"I deserve to be booked. I want to apologise to him also [Pep], I was focused on the action."

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The international break will give both sides a rest, but Chelsea will return to action with a trip to Newcastle, while City will host Liverpool.

Marquinhos, Soares and six Arsenal players who could leave in the January transfer window

Though they are set to be busy bringing in new faces, the Gunners might also be open to letting some players move on in the next few weeks

The January transfer window is upon us, and Arsenal are expected to be active as Mikel Arteta once again looks to freshen up his squad ahead of the second half of the season.

There is already lots of talk about potential new arrivals who could come in and give the Gunners the boost they need to maintain their challenge for the Premier League title.

But what about outgoings? Who could move away from north London over the next few weeks?

GOAL takes a look at six potential candidates who could be heading for the Emirates Stadium exits…

  • Cedric Soares

    It’s been a very difficult season for Cedric Soares so far. The experienced Portugal defender has barely been given a sniff of action by Arteta, making just four appearances in all competitions.

    His only start came in the Carabao Cup defeat by Brighton and he has only been used twice off the bench in the Premier League.

    Even in the Europa League, where he would have expected to get some minutes this season, he has featured just once –  coming on for the final two minutes during the home win against FC Zurich.

    There is no doubt that Soares would have been expecting to get more game time this season. He did have opportunities to move on last summer, but opted to stay to try and fight for his place in the team. 

    But with Ben White now having established himself as first choice right-back and Takehiro Tomiyasu also in front of him in the pecking order, Soares’ chances of getting minutes now seem slimmer than ever.

    So should an opportunity to move on in January arise, it could be an appealing option to the former Southampton man, who still has 18 months left on his contract in north London.

    And Arsenal might not stand in his way, given the options they have in the squad at his position.

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  • Marquinhos

    There was a good chance that Marquinhos was going to be sent out on loan last summer following his arrival from Sao Paulo.

    But the winger's performances in pre-season and the way he handled himself around the training ground convinced Arsenal that it would be a better idea to keep him around the club for at least another six months.

    It was decided that having him train with the first team would be beneficial, not just because he could be used in cup competitions, but because it would also give him the opportunity to acclimatise to his new surroundings and settle into London.

    Marquinhos has gone on to feature five times in all competitions this season, and scored his first goal in the Europa League win at Zurich.

    The winger has made himself a popular member of the squad, but the club are now considering whether a loan move in January would be best for the 19-year-old’s continued development.

    Game time over the second half of the season would be extremely limited at Arsenal, so a move away to a club where he could play on a regular basis could be viewed as an appealing option to all parties.

  • Reiss Nelson

    This one does feel unlikely, given Nelson has featured far more than many expected this season, while the injury he picked up in mid-December makes him far less appealing to teams who would want him to make an instant impact.

    But he is out of contract at the end of the season, so a tempting offer in January could see Arsenal at least consider cashing in on the 22-year-old.

    It’s difficult to imagine Nelson being allowed to leave unless Arsenal brought in another winger, but that is an area where the Gunners are potentially looking to strengthen in January.

    For now, it feels unlikely. But Nelson’s contract situation means a move away can’t be completely ruled out, although he has spoken several times in recent months about is desire to earn himself a new deal at Arsenal.

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    Catalin Cirjan

    The young Romanian has been one of the stars of Arsenal's Under-21s this season.

    Cirjan wasn’t fully fit in the summer, when the vast majority of the club’s top young talents were sent on loan to continue their development.

    But now he has completely recovered from the knee injury that saw him sidelined for more than a year, Cirjan has been showing why he is so highly-rated at Arsenal, producing several eye-catching displays with the U21s.

    Given the way Arsenal now look to utilise the loan market when it comes to their best young players, it would be no surprise should they decide to send the playmaker out to give him a taste of senior football over the second half of the season.

No Estádio do Café, Coritiba mostra poder de reação e derrota o Londrina de virada

MatériaMais Notícias

O torcedor sofreu, mas, no fim, a vitória foi do Coritiba no Estádio do Café. Após ficar duas vezes atrás no placar, a equipe do Coxa conseguiu correr atrás do empate e, no segundo tempo, com Sassá, de pênalti, segurou o placar de 3 a 2 até o final, para delírio dos comandados de Eduardo Barroca.

Com o resultado, a equipe visitante pulou para a segunda colocação na competição, agora com 11 pontos. Já os donos da casa caíram para a quinta posição, mantendo seus 9 pontos.

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PRIMEIRO TEMPO

Mesmo jogando com a força de sua torcida, a equipe do Londrina sabia das dificuldades que teria em campo. Com isso, nos primeiros 10 minutos, tentou pressionar a equipe do Coritiba, porém sem causar sustos na defesa adversária.

Na sequência, até meados dos 20 minutos, poucos eram os lances de perigo para os dois lados. Em umas das tentativas com chance real para abrir o marcador, o goleiro Muralha foi testado, porém não deu rebote no chute deWilliam Matheus.

Relativamente melhor no duelo, já que o Coritiba até conseguia criar algumas jogadas, o Londrina, aos 25, conseguiu marcar seu gol. Em jogada iniciada no cruzamento de Marcelinho, o atacante Júnior Pirambu conseguiu cabecear e marcar. 1 a 0.

Mas a equipe visitante não quis saber de desanimar e, minutos mais tarde, aos 34, chegou ao empate. Em chute na entrada da área, a bola de Ruy acabou desviando e acaba indo no canto do goleiro Matheus Albino. 1 a 1.

Com a igualdade no placar, foi a vez do Londrina não deixar o adversário crescer no jogo. Sendo assim, aos 39, outra vez ele, Júnior Pirambu, marcar seu segundo tento, mandando uma bomba no ângulo de Muralha, após sair da marcação. 2 a 1.

Até os acréscimos, os comandados de Barroca tentaram novamente deixar tudo igual. E conseguiram. Se de um lado Pirambu estava em dia inspirado, o meia Ruy também vivia uma tarde iluminada e, em cobrança de falta na gaveta, Matheus Albino ainda tentou defender, mas a bola acabou no fundo das redes. 2 a 2.

SEGUNDO TEMPO

Diferente de como foi na etapa inicial, as equipes iniciaram pressionando uma à outra. No entanto, foi o Coritiba quem teve a grande oportunidade de ficar em vantagem no jogo, ao ser marcado um pênalti em Sassá. Na cobrança, o próprio atacante, com estilo, deixou o dele. 3 a 2.

Com a vantagem no placar, o Coxa tentou manter o embalo e continuou indo pra cima do Londrina. No entanto, até meados dos 30 minutos, buscava lançamentos para seu campo de ataque visando Sassá, mas a bola não chegava no jogador, fazendo com o que o Leão tentasse trabalhar para buscar o empate.

Na reta final de confronto, até os acréscimos dados pelo árbitro, o Londrina tentou de todas as formas. Porém nenhuma finalização foi suficiente para encontrar seu tento, dando a deixa para a arbitragem soprar o apito.

'Nobody wants to lose like this' – Mashrafe

Mashrafe Mortaza has rallied around the batsmen who took Bangladesh close, but lost their wickets as a win against India was within their grasp

Andrew Fidel Fernando in Bangalore 23-Mar-20161:23

‘Everything was all right till last three balls’ – Mashrafe

Mashrafe Mortaza has rallied around the batsmen who took Bangladesh close, but lost their wickets as a win against India was within their grasp. Mushfiqur Rahim hit successive fours in the final over to leave his team needing two runs to win, off three balls. But both he and Mahmudullah holed out to midwicket in consecutive deliveries, transforming Bangladesh’s strong position into a weak one.”I am not going to blame anyone,” Mashrafe said. “The whole dressing-room felt disappointed after the loss. We needed two off the last three balls, and we had two set batsmen at the crease and one still in the shed. It becomes very hard for everyone when we end up losing three wickets in that situation.”Mashrafe conceded that Mushfiqur could have batted more sensibly, but refused to cast aspersions on his behaviour. Having brought the equation to two from three balls with a four, Mushfiqur celebrated the shot animatedly as he approached bowler Hardik Pandya – who himself had been animated when he took the catch of Mohammad Mithun earlier in the innings.”If we were calculative at that stage, it wouldn’t have given us much risk. There were no fielders in the circle. If we had taken a single [off the delivery that Mushfiqur got out], it would have set us up in a better position. It would have helped if we thought like that. We just couldn’t do it that way.”Mushfiqur could have been more careful, but at the same time, since he got us close – maybe he celebrated because of that. There’s nothing to be negative about, because any batsman would get boosted up after those two fours.”Mashrafe did describe the loss as something that would be hard to swallow though. Bangladesh have lost all three games in the Super 10s stage of the tournament so far, and have one more match against New Zealand, after which they will head home.”The loss was a shocking thing for all of us. Nobody wants to lose like this. It is hard to explain but it is quite disappointing. And it’s always difficult to take something from it. Being a professional player, we have to play hard cricket in the last match. If we can do something there we can take something back home. We have to fight hard.”Bangladesh had done well until that stage however. India were strong favourites to win the match in front of a baying home crowd, but were outplayed in large sectors of the match.”Leave out the last three balls, we played brilliantly. We did everything to win otherwise. We came back after they had two good overs towards the end. We played well at nearly every moment.”

Wes Hall inducted into ICC Hall of Fame

Former West Indies fast bowler Wes Hall was inducted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame during the lunch break on the opening day of the Sabina Park Test between West Indies and Australia. He became the fourth cricketer to receive the honour this year after Betty Wilson, Anil Kumble and Martin Crowe.Hall, 77, received his commemorative cap from fellow Hall of Famer Courtney Walsh, and is now the 18th cricketer from the Caribbean to be bestowed with the award.Hall, who played 48 Tests for West Indies between 1958 and 1969, said he was “privileged” and “honoured” to receive the award which put him in the company of the “many greats of the game”.”Anytime you get these kind of encomiums, it is memorable,” he said. “It is fantastic to receive the award in the West Indies and in front of adoring fans, which makes it even more special. I have represented the West Indies as a cricketer, as the team manager, and as the President of the WICB, so I will treat this as something I value and will always remember.”Cricket has been extremely good to me and I was happy to give back to the game. This honour, presented to me by the ICC, is one I will cherish. It is not just for me but for the people of the West Indies.”Hall took 192 Test wickets at an average of 26.38. Overall, he played 170 first-class matches, collecting 546 wickets. He picked up a five-for on nine occasions in Tests, including 5 for 63 in the second innings of the famous tied Test against Australia in Brisbane in 1960, where he bowled the last over of the match with the hosts needing six runs with three wickets in hand.During the 1958-59 tour of India and Pakistan, Hall took 46 wickets from eight matches. In the third Test against Pakistan in Lahore, he became the first West Indies bowler to claim an international hat-trick.After retirement, he become an ordained minister as well as the Minister of Tourism and Sports in the Barbados government. Hall also managed the West Indies touring sides and in 2001, took over as the president of the WICB. In 2012, he was knighted in the Queen’s birthday honours list for his “services to sport and the community”.

'Unusual bounce' the Wellington secret

It is perhaps not the catchiest moniker, but New Zealand are back at Fortress Wellington Regional Stadium for their quarter-final against West Indies

Andrew McGlashan17-Mar-2015It is perhaps not the catchiest moniker, but New Zealand are back at Fortress Wellington Regional Stadium – more colloquially known as the ‘Cake Tin’ – for their quarter-final against West Indies and the secret to their impressive record of 15 wins and seven defeats at the ground is the make-up of what’s beneath their feet.Mike Hesson, the New Zealand coach, talked of an “unusual bounce” which takes opposition teams time to adjust to and makes home advantage even more of a boost. England found that to their cost earlier in the tournament when they were bundled out for 123, although that was as much to do with the swing obtained by Tim Southee than anything odd happening off the 22 yards. Since that match, three innings totals have been in excess of 300, with Sri Lanka chasing down 310 for the loss of one wicket.There is, though, further recent evidence that New Zealand’s attack can exploit the conditions. At the end of January, Pakistan were bowled out for 210 and the previous year they removed India for 216, although between those two matches one was lost to Sri Lanka. There was a period from 2007 to 2011 when New Zealand’s bowlers certainly dominated as they bundled out Australia (148), England (130), West Indies (128) and Pakistan (124).”It’s quite an unusual bounce which takes a little while to get used to and we’ve played enough games there that our guys have adapted to that,” Hesson said. “Sides that haven’t been there in recent times will need to adjust.”I don’t want to give too much away but it’s a different surface, it’s a drop-in and it had a big gap underneath it, now it’s got some rubble or shingle underneath so it bounces a bit differently than it has in the past. We’ve had some recent experience of that.”Tim Southee will return to the scene of his 7 for 33 when he faces West Indies in the quarter-final•Associated PressThe figures of Southee at the ground certainly stand out – after his haul against England, he now has 21 wickets at 12.00 from six ODIs. Although he has not bowled poorly since that heady day, his 2 for 65 against Australia at Eden Park was followed by wicketless outings against Bangladesh and Afghanistan, so it is a timely return to a happy hunting ground.”When you go out on a ground where you’ve performed well you do feel good about it,” Hesson said. “He had great rhythm that day and the ball swung beautifully for him. Let’s hope it’s a nice still day and he can swing it around corners again.”New Zealand returned to training at a blustery Basin Reserve on Tuesday following a short break after finishing the group stage unbeaten. They will have Wednesday off before a rigorous practice day on Thursday. Hesson continued to be positive about the outlook for Adam Milne who missed the Bangladesh match with a shoulder injury.However, Hesson certainly will not be taking a break from cricket on Wednesday with a keen eye on the quarter-final between South Africa and Sri Lanka. If New Zealand progress to the semi-final at Eden Park, they will play the winner of that match.”That’s a massive game on our side of the draw,” he said. “It’ll be interesting in Sydney and winning the toss and batting over there is pretty important if it’s going to turn. Most of the support staff will sit down and watch it, some of the players will and some will want to get away and not think about it. They all deal with it a little bit differently. I pretty much watch every ball.”

Tigers put down after falling for 46

Multan Tigers could not recover from being bowled out for 46 in the first innings, as they crumbled to an innings defeat against Karachi Dolphins inside three days. Tigers, having been inserted, were dismissed in 13.5 overs, with only one batsman managing double-digit scores. Six batsmen fell for ducks, and the team’s second-highest source of runs came from the 10 extras, as Mir Hamza led Dolphins’ attack with 6 for 16, while Adeel Malik collected 4 for 21.Dolphins immediately followed it up with a strong batting performance, as Rameez Raja (82), Yasir Mushtaq (62), Mohammad Waqas (68) and Babar Hussain (50) all raised fifties to push the score to 450, earning them a massive lead of 404. Tigers fared better in their second essay, but it still wasn’t enough to Dolphins bat again. Gulraiz Sadaf top-scored with 82 and Abdul Rehman Muzammil chipped in with 66, but nobody else was able to cross 26, as Tigers were bowled out for 222, meaning that Dolphins won by an innings and 182 runs. Shahzaib Ahmed was the pick of Dolphins’ bowlers in the second innings, taking 5 for 53, while Hamza and Malik shared four wickets between them.First innings tons from Jamaluddin and Akbar Badshah, and a 12-wicket match haul from Taj Wali sent Peshawar Panthers on their way towards a comprehensive nine-wicket victory against Lahore Lions at the Gaddafi Stadium. Batting first, Lions were blown away by a seven-wicket haul from Wali (7 for 63) and dismissed for 221, with only Raza Ali Dar (51) and Saad Nasim (71) managing to compile half-centuries.Panthers, in reply, got to 345 to bat themselves into a dominant position. Jamaludding struck one four and seven sixes during his 116- his second century in four games, while Badshah’s 117 included 10 fours, as Panthers earned a lead of 124. Wali once again did not allow Lions to settle in their second innings, as he claimed 5 for 58 to complete a career-best haul of 12 for 121. Lions were bowled out for a below-par 166, meaning that Panthers needed only 43 to win.They chased down that total in 7.2 overs, thanks to a 44-run stand between Musadiq Ahmed and Adil Amin.

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