Jayawardene missed despite series win

Plays of the Day from the fourth day of he second Test between Sri Lanka and Bangladesh in Colombo

Andrew Fidel Fernando and Mohammad Isam 19-Mar-2013The poor stroke


Nasir Hossain had largely batted responsibly in the series, before the final day, but as he and Mushfiqur Rahim – Bangladesh’s final recognised batting pair – attempted to lift their side to a defendable total, a moment of indiscretion from Hossain saw his team slip even further. He had only arrived at the crease two overs before, after Rangana Herath had removed overnight batsman Mominul Haque, but spotting a flighted Herath delivery on leg stump, Hossain aimed an ambitious lofted drive, against the turn and across the line. The ball dipped beneath the shot, turned to travel through the gap in between bat and pad, and collected off stump.The drops

Aside from his batting, Mahela Jayawardene has been a terrific slip fielder throughout his career, and his absence has been felt in both matches. On the third evening, Angelo Mathews spilt a chance off Herath, but on day four, it was second slip’s turn. Nuwan Kulasekara drew an edge from Sohag Gazi, and even though the ball flew at waist-height, straight to Dimuth Karunaratne, the fielder got himself in a tangle trying to move to the left and couldn’t hold on to the chance. Karunaratne moved to short leg for the spinners and grassed a catch there as well, when he let a bat-pad catch off Tillakaratne Dilshan slip through his fingers.The shot


The mark of a quality batsman in form, it is often said, is when he can drive a ball along the ground through mid-on. Though he might be considered a tailender, albeit the more capable kind, it was Gazi who produced two such strokes on the final day. The first, which rolled along the carpet from the time it left the bat was perhaps never going to reach the boundary, given the length of the outfield grass. But the second was a searing drive struck off Shaminda Eranga, which hurtled past the bowler at shin-height, and gave mid-on no chance of running across to cut it off.The bonus
As early as the seventh over of Sri Lanka’s chase, the Bangladesh defense was crumbling. Jahurul Islam tried an unnecessary throw at the striker’s end with Dilshan inside the crease. The batsmen ran for the overthrow and were gifted another when the same throw was picked up by Tamim Iqbal running in from mid-on, and thrown towards the non-striker’s end, only to have it ricochet far enough for Dilshan and Karunaratne to pick up another run.The single


As soon as Lahiru Thirimanne drove powerfully through the covers with Sri Lanka needing just one to win, everyone, including the Bangladesh fielders, thought the game had ended. The batsmen didn’t bother running, and the fielders didn’t care for chasing after the ball. Non-striker Mathews even moved towards the stumps to uproot one that would serve as a souvenir of his first Test win as captain. Only, the ball had plugged in the slow outfield again, and had come to rest about a foot from the boundary. It took everyone about three seconds to realise this, and the batsmen looked at each other and ambled the final run, while a fielder looked back and trudged after the ball he never ended up collecting.

India's last chance to turn up

Though India lacked the aura of the No. 1 teams of the past, they had the resilience and results. After the first three Tests in England, nothing remains

Sharda Ugra at The Oval17-Aug-2011As far as world’s No. 1 teams went, India were distinctive because they never really had an aura. In their two-odd years on top, India neither walked the talk like the West Indians of the 1980s and the 90s, nor did they talk the walk like the Australians who followed them. They were never the world’s most athletic Test team nor one that possessed a sharp pace attack.
India were more men of specific skill and deliberate measure and taken lightly only by the delusionally arrogant. While they didn’t have an aura, what they did have though was resilience and results.As of last week, India have none of it. The series against England is gone, the Pataudi Trophy is gone, their No. 1 ranking that they said they did not think about, is gone, and the “good cricket” that took them there is gone with it. For the moment, the Indian cricket team is living in every athlete’s nightmare: being seen as yesterday’s person.At their first day of training after losing ground they had earned over two years, the Indians stepped onto the Kennington Oval in South London, now called the Kia Oval, after a Korean car company; the word Kia roughly meaning “arising from Asia” in Korean. On this tour, however, the Indians have not risen, but fallen. Once in The Oval today though, they just vanished. From the sight of people gathered near the old pavilion jammed in-between the old gasworks, the new arch, a clutter of advertising hoardings and empty seats. The team was actually on the far side of the ground, hidden by the billowing pitch covers on wheels. They sat in a circle, most of them cross-legged and listened to the coach Duncan Fletcher speak.It is not known what Fletcher actually said in the talk that lasted about ten minutes, as the rest of the support staff stood by at the nets waiting for the nuts-and-bolts business to begin. The Indian dressing room in the past few years has been a fairly quiet and relaxed place with captain MS Dhoni playing the strong-but-silent man and the support staff, particularly Fletcher’s predecessor Gary Kirsten and his assistant Paddy Upton being the ones behind the motivational speeches and one-on-ones. The focus in the Dhoni-Kirsten era was more on “personal responsibility” with the aim of turning every man into a self-starter when it came to training and preparation, introducing the idea of frequent “optional” nets and eventually making everyone, “better players and better people.” The method was in perfect sync with the team and the time that Indian cricket found itself in; the results that followed after the last tour of England (under five captains in three forms of the game no less) and just before this one were far from illusion, but magic all the same.On this tour, much of it has worn off and a re-tooling is now required by Dhoni, Fletcher and the squad’s senior management team. The nets at The Oval on Tuesday were, however, optional and barring Praveen Kumar, every other member of the team turned up, including RP Singh, who India will turn to as the singular trump card to prevent the deck from once again collapsing. India’s two previous tries – Sreesanth replacing the injured Zaheer Khan at Trent Bridge and Virender Sehwag returning to open the batting in Edgbaston – have not worked. That Praveen, the most military of the medium pacers, is being hailed as the centre-piece of India’s bowling effort is a tale itself.As every Test of the series has become shorter – Lord’s went into the fifth day, and Trent Bridge and Edgbaston ended around tea on the fourth day, one after and one before – it is the desperation of the Indian response that has increased. This is the first time since Australia in 1999-2000 that India have lost three straight Tests; the big difference being that the quality available to the Class of 2011 is far more skilled than what was available then, both in experience and expertise.And still, the succession of defeats and the numbers on the scorecards have left the dressing room even quieter. When being told that everyone at home was wondering about where their fight had gone, a player said, “We fighting, we trying. Everyone is, everyone wants to succeed. Things just aren’t working out.” The opposition has been so well-tuned that India’s resources, or perhaps, as the talk is about fighting, the weapons, are blunted. They are all amplified by scheduling errors, injuries to key personnel and the lack of cohesion around the squad once the World Cup was won and the IPL dived right into.

The series against England is gone, the Pataudi Trophy is gone, their No. 1 ranking that they said they did not think about, is gone, and the “good cricket” that took them there is gone with it. For the moment, the Indian cricket team is living in every athlete’s nightmare: being seen as yesterday’s person

England spinner Graeme Swann said on Tuesday, “Certainly the break that India had from Test cricket worked in our favour. Since we had English conditions playing Sri Lanka building up to this series, it was a chance for everyone to just get ready and raring. Whereas India had those two matches in the West Indies where it was 100 degrees and not swinging.”Swann also described what the temperatures in the two dressing rooms would be like. “When you’re on a roll, like we seem to be at the moment, it’s very easy to carry that on – because your confidence levels are so high, your confidence levels in your team-mates are so high, you never feel like you are behind the eight-ball. You never feel you’re in a position you can’t win a game from.” When things were going badly, what spread was a virus of a different kind. “We all know because we’ve all been in teams that were in a bit of a bad trot [and] losing games. In a losing situation, [when the shoe is on the other] foot you think, ‘Oh my, we are losing this game, we’re in a no-win situation’.”India’s is that kind of a slump, and The Oval is a no-win situation because the series is not on the line; what is however, are questions about the resolve of Dhoni’s men. Swann was quick to say, “I certainly wouldn’t write off the Indian team because they are a class act and if this wicket is good for batting as it normally is, we have to be absolutely on top our game to keep them under 300.”Among many other things, England’s batsmen have been given one simple dictum to work with, as Ian Bell revealed in a recent interview. They are not to think of themselves merely as batsmen, but also quite simply just numbers-men. In an England dressing room under Andy Flower and Graham Gooch, “you’re not so much a batsman” Bell said, “as a run-scorer”. This is the last chance for India’s to land up

Catching the winds of change

Snappy but predictable offering brings order to a chaotic 12 months

Josh Burrows14-Feb-2009

The year gone by was one of seismic shifts as Twenty20’s flashing blades got to
work cutting the heart out of Test cricket. It may not be long before books that review
the past 12 months become a sought-after vintage, though this may overstate the value
of the well organised .Jonathan Agnew, editor for the 10th time, damns the Stanford Super Series as
“controversial and wholly unnecessary”, and writes succinct but unremarkable features on, among others, Jimmy Anderson’s resurgence and Michael Vaughan’s falling star. The year ends in early November, having started in October 2007.Mark Baldwin’s chronological and comprehensive round-ups of the domestic
competitions are excellent and accompanied by carefully compiled stats (though you
might need a magnifying glass to decipher some). There are tidy features on Mushtaq
Ahmed, Graeme Hick, Graham Napier’s 58-ball 152 not out, the ruinous weather
and each of the four domestic competition winners, though Mark Ramprakash’s century
of centuries goes almost unnoticed.After Justin Langer has told us why Australia will win the 2009 Ashes, a few
pages are dedicated to each of the Test-playing nations. Tony Cozier’s analysis
of the lucrative West Indian revolution is the highlight: “Everything that happened
during the Stanford Super Series week in Antigua represents a good news story for West Indies cricket.”This is a snappy but largely predictable offering and as a glossy compendium it
would have been improved by bigger, better and more varied photos. So who might
buy it? Durham fans desperate for any and every piece of literature documenting their
Championship-winning season? Or perhaps Allen Stanford, who had as much to do with
cricket in 2008 as anyone and has probably never heard of ?Jonathan Agnew’s Cricket Year 2008
by Jonathan Agnew
A&C Black £24.99


'I don't miss penalties twice' – Chloe Kelly celebrates after scoring winning penalty for Lionesses against Spain in Euro 2025 final

Chloe Kelly says she "doesn't miss penalties twice" after firing the Lionesses to Euro 2025 glory in a dramatic final shootout.

Kelly misses penalty against ItalyScores winning spot-kick in Euro 2025 finalSays she "doesn't miss penalties twice"Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Substitute Kelly scored the winning spot-kick as England beat Spain to defend their Euros title in Basel, Switzerland, on Sunday night. This came days after the winger, who scored the winner at Wembley in the Euro 2022 final, missed her penalty in extra-time against Italy in the semi-finals, before ultimately tapping in the rebound that sent the Lionesses into the final. Following the victory, the 27-year-old revelled in her team's triumph.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportWHAT KELLY SAID

She told BBC One: "I am so proud of this team. So grateful to wear this badge. So proud to be English. I was cool, I was composed. I knew I was going to hit the back of the net. I don't miss penalties twice. Unbelievable. All the staff behind us and Sarina Wiegman – she has done it again! Unbelievable. It is going to be crazy. I hope the whole of England comes out to support us and shows their love to these girls as they deserve it."

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The Lionesses' triumph cemented Sarina Wiegman's status as one of the world's best managers, and this was the first time an England team has won a major trophy on foreign soil. To beat the tournament favourites, two years on from their World Cup final loss to Spain, makes this achievement all the sweeter.

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT?

Kelly and her fellow Lionesses will now celebrate this victory long into the night, before enjoying a well-earned rest in the coming weeks. But in not too long, many will be back for pre-season as they prepare for the new domestic season.

Antoni Milambo salary: How much does Feyenoord wonderkid earn per week and annually in Eredivisie?

Everything you need to know about Antoni Milambo's salary details playing for Feyenoord

Dutch attacking midfielder Antoni Milambo is a product of the Feyenoord academy, having joined the club’s youth system in 2015. He made his senior debut for Feyenoord in 2021 at just 16 years old, becoming the youngest-ever player to feature for the club, a record previously held by Georginio Wijnaldum.

Milambo has impressed when called upon, scoring crucial goals and making significant contributions in the attacking third.

The Dutch youngster signed a contract extension with Feyenoord in January 2024, keeping him at De Kuip until 2027.

According to his current deal, Milambo earns a substantial wage for a player of his age.

But exactly how much does he earn though?

GOAL delved into the numbers with Capology and found out!

*

Antoni Milambo's wages at Feyenoord in numbers

Under Milambo's current contract with the Eredivisie side, the Dutch player receives a weekly salary of €13,269, totaling approximately €690,000 annually.

Player

Nationality

Weekly wages in Euros

Annual wages in Euros

Antoni Milambo

Dutch

€13,269

€690,000

AdvertisementAFPTop earners at Feyenoord

Justin Bijlow is the top earner at Feyenoord, with Calvin Stengs and David Hancko in second and third positions.

Ramiz Zerrouki and Igor Paixao are fourth and fifth in the earnings list.

Player

Nationality

Weekly wages in Euros

Annual wages in Euros

Justin Bijlow

Dutch

€56,538

€2,940,000

Calvin Stengs

Dutch

€47,115

€2,450,000

David Hancko

Serbian

€45,192

€2,350,000

Ramiz Zerrouki

Algerian

€33,846

€1,760,000

Igor Paixao

Brazilian

€33,846

€1,760,000

Top earners in Eredivisie

Jordan Henderson, formerly of Liverpool, has the highest salary in the Eredivisie. Sergino Dest from PSV is next. Daniele Rugani, an Italian player, is third, with Ajax's Brian Brobbey and Steven Berghuis in fourth and fifth.

Player

Club

Weekly wages in Euros

Annual wages in Euros

Jordan Henderson

Ajax

€90,000

€4,680,000

Sergino Dest

PSV

€75,385

€3,920,000

Daniele Rugani

Ajax

€75,385

€3,920,000

Brian Brobbey

Ajax

€57,692

€3,000,000

Steven Berghuis

Ajax

€56,731

€2,950,000

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AFPHighest paid players in the world

Eredivisie player salaries are significant but lower than those of top global footballers, with none in the highest ranks.

The top five earners are in the Saudi Pro League, with Cristiano Ronaldo at Al Nassr having the highest salary.

Karim Benzema, formerly of Real Madrid, is second, followed by Riyad Mahrez, previously with Manchester City and now at Al-Ahli, in third.

Sadio Mane and Kalidou Koulibaly, both from Senegal, are in fourth and fifth places, respectively.

Player

Club

Weekly wages Euros

Annual wages Euros

Cristiano Ronaldo

Al Nassr

€3,846,154

€200,000,000

Karim Benzema

Al Ittihad

€1,923,077

€100,000,000

Riyad Mahrez

Al Ahli

€1,003,846

€52,200,000

Sadio Mane

Al Nassr

€769,231

€40,000,000

Kalidou Koulibaly

Al Hilal

€667,308

€34,700,000

'When you want to drown your dog, you say it has rabies' – Adrien Rabiot's lawyer accuses Marseille of telling 'completely false' story over Jonathan Rowe feud to justify midfielder's exit

Adrien Rabiot’s lawyer has hit back at Marseille, accusing the club of using a false story to justify putting the midfielder on the transfer list.

Rabiot placed on transfer list just a year after joiningClub cited locker-room clash with Jonathan RoweLawyer claims Marseille hiding true reasons behind exitFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Marseille announced this week that Rabiot has no future at the club, only a year after his arrival. The midfielder’s dismissal followed a heated altercation with Jonathan Rowe in the locker room after a 1-0 loss to Rennes in their Ligue 1 opener. Both players were banished from training by coach Roberto De Zerbi, and with Rowe already expected to leave amid interest from Sunderland and Bologna, Rabiot now finds himself pushed out as well.

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Speaking on , Rabiot’s lawyer Romuald Palao strongly rejected the club’s explanation. He accused Marseille of telling a "completely false" story to justify moving the midfielder from the club. Palao stressed that the Rabiot family has maintained cordial relations with the club’s management and insisted the altercation with Rowe had been blown out of proportion.

WHAT ADRIEN RABIOT'S LAWYER SAID

Rabiot’s lawyer made it clear that Marseille’s explanation did not convince him or the player’s camp.

"But yes, if you like, what the club has communicated, we have doubts. Yes, of course we have doubts," he said.

"We can't move on from… what happened in the locker room, that's what happened in the locker room. But when the club says that the player's behaviour has changed since the Netherlands, that's false. It's completely false! When you want to drown your dog, you say it has rabies.

"So indeed, there is a story that is a bit contrived. And then they use Friday's episode to oust Adrien. Why? I don't know. You have to ask them, you have to ask them the question."

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR ADRIEN RABIOT?

Marseille are set to host newly promoted Paris FC on August 23, still searching for their first win of the new Ligue 1 season. Meanwhile, Rabiot could soon be on the move, with several clubs keeping close tabs on the midfielder’s situation.

Benjamin Sesko gives up part of his salary in bid to secure Man Utd transfer as striker jets in for medical with Ruben Amorim's side

Benjamin Sesko has reportedly sacrificed part of his salary and his agency’s commission to finalise a move to Manchester United, despite Newcastle offering higher wages. The Red Devils have reached a full agreement with RB Leipzig for the Slovenian striker in a deal worth €85 million (£73.7m/$100m). Medical and contract signing are set to follow shortly.

  • Sesko waives salary to force Manchester United move
  • Newcastle offered more but Sesko chose Old Trafford
  • RB Leipzig to host friendly with Man Utd as part of deal
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Manchester United have won the race for Sesko after reaching an agreement worth €85 million with RB Leipzig. The 21-year-old striker had been heavily courted by Newcastle, but opted for a move to Old Trafford instead. As per Sky Germany, a medical and contract signing until 2030 are scheduled within the next 72 hours.

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    As per the report, to push the deal through, Sesko agreed to waive part of his salary despite Newcastle’s higher offer. His agency, led by Elvis Basanovic, also gave up a portion of their commission. These sacrifices helped ensure the deal with Manchester United crossed the line. Sesko has now landed in Manchester to complete his move to Ruben Amorim's side.

  • TELL ME MORE…

    Sky Germany also added that as part of the transfer agreement, Manchester United and RB Leipzig will play a friendly in Germany. The match is expected to generate around €1.5–2 million for the Bundesliga club. A sell-on clause has also been included in the final deal.

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  • Getty

    WHAT NEXT FOR SESKO?

    The 22-year-old is set to undergo medical tests before putting pen to paper. Once signed, Sesko will join United’s pre-season preparations ahead of the 2025-26 campaign. RB Leipzig will receive the agreed bonus instalments as part of the structured payment.

تقييم محمد صلاح في مباراة ليفربول وأتلتيك بلباو

خاض النجم المصري محمد صلاح مباراة فريق ليفربول الودية الأخيرة، في إطار الاستعدادات التحضيرية للموسم الجديد المرتقب 2025/26، وذلك مساء يوم الإثنين ضد أتلتيك بلباو.

واستضاف ملعب “الأنفيلد” المباراة الودية الثانية بين فريقي ليفربول وأتلتيك بلباو، والتي سبقها أخرى حسمها الريدز بأربعة أهداف مقابل هدف.

وشارك محمد صلاح في الودية الثانية، كأساسي وارتدى شارة القيادة وخاضها حتى النهاية، حيث حقق ليفربول فوزًا صعبًا بثلاثة أهداف مقابل هدفين (لمطالعة التفاصيل كاملة من هنا).

وتمكن محمد صلاح من تسجيل هدف ليفربول الأول، في الدقيقة 14 من عمر الشوط الأول، بعد أسيست من زميله الوافد الجديد هوجو إيكتيكي.

وأهدر محمد صلاح فرصة تسجيل هدف ثاني له ورابع لكتيبة آرني سلوت، بعدما أضاع ضربة جزاء بغرابة في الدقيقة 81.

وحسبما ذكرت شبكة “ليفربول إيكو” الإنجليزية، فإن محمد صلاح تحصل على تقييم بلغ 7/10.

وكتبت الشبكة بعد المباراة: “سجل محمد صلاح هدفه الأول في فترة ما قبل الموسم من خلال لمسة حاسمة واثقة، وسط مؤشرات أخرى على تفاهمه مع فلوريان فيرتز”.

وأضافت “إيكو” عن صاحب الـ33 عامًا: “هذا إلى جانب إهداره ضربة جزاء (سدد الكرة بشكل قوي بعيدة عن المرمى)”. ملخص لمسات محمد صلاح في مباراة ليفربول وأتلتيك بلباو

'Asthmatic' Bangladesh players skip training on eve of Sri Lanka match due to air pollution in Delhi

Only eight Bangladesh players trained on eve of the Sri Lanka game in Delhi, as high air-pollution levels continue

Mohammad Isam05-Nov-2023

Chandika Hathurusinghe wore a mask during Bangladesh’s training session on Saturday•BCB

Only eight Bangladesh players turned up for training in Delhi on Sunday, the eve of their World Cup match against Sri Lanka, while the others decided not to risk exposure to the severe air pollution in the city. Bangladesh coach Chandika Hathurusinghe said that those who didn’t come were “asthmatic” and did not want to risk training given the poor air quality.Bangladesh had already cancelled one training session on Friday evening, and Sri Lanka did the same on Saturday afternoon. Bangladesh trained with 13 players on Saturday evening before the lower attendance on Sunday afternoon.”Our doctor has kept a close eye on players. Some of the players didn’t turn up for practice because they are asthmatic, so they stayed in indoors,” Hathurusinghe said. “And even for practice, we’re very conscious. We train what we have to train, and they go back into the dressing room. They don’t spend time unless they’re bowling or batting. We have taken some measures to minimise our exposure before the game.”Related

Hathurusinghe: Our batting let us down with 'high expectations'

Plenty of repair work to be done for both Bangladesh and Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka and Bangladesh players impacted by air pollution in Delhi

Bangladesh cancel training because of air pollution in Delhi

Hathurusinghe said that while selection for the game would not be influenced by the air quality, the team is wary of the long-term effects of playing in such conditions. “We need to practice and still be careful about the long-term effect of these conditions,” he said. “Air quality is affecting both teams. It is not ideal. But we have no choice. We have to play in the conditions that’s in front of us.””The team selection won’t depend on air quality. It will depend on conditions, our strength and opposition.”The Sri Lanka team manager team manager Mahinda Halangoda said they would be guided by the ICC advice.”Definitely we will be looking at the index. But obviously, we will be guided by the ICC and I think they have a medical panel here and, so, they will be giving us instructions,” Halangoda told PTI. “Today when we came, we were told to wear masks. But it depends on what the outside index is, and then we’ll make a call on it. We didn’t make a request to change (the venue). But we were asking the ICC what would happen because when we came here, we saw the Bangladesh team had cancelled (training) and we saw the outside environment.”So, we just asked them what’s the plan. They said they will have a discussion, and then they’ll come back. I think they have installed some equipment here, and they’ve got specialists to check and they are helping them out. They have already informed us that they are planning to go ahead. So, we will do exactly what the ICC tells us to do.”According to the ICC’s guidelines on air quality, as well as a pulmonologist (lung specialist) whom the organisers have been consulting, an Air Quality Index (AQI) reading of below 200 is considered safe for play in most cases. A higher AQI could put play in jeopardy but it is only a guideline rather than a hard cut-off.The AQI reading in the vicinity of the ground, the Arun Jaitley Stadium, was over 400 on Sunday afternoon, having hit 500 at some points during the day. An air emergency had been declared in Delhi on Thursday, as the AQI rose above 400 in several places across the city, forcing the government to close schools for two days and impose restrictions on construction and vehicle traffic. AQI levels in areas of the city are expected to be in the severe category till Tuesday, November 7.An ICC spokesperson told ESPNcricinfo on Saturday that the situation was being monitored. “The ICC and our hosts the BCCI take the well-being of all participants seriously and are monitoring the air quality in Delhi,” the spokesperson said. “We are taking expert advice to assess the situation.”BCCI staff have been taking air-quality readings from handheld devices at the ground. They will continue to do so leading into the game to determine whether the air quality is at a safe level for play. The organisers will also undertake mitigation measures such as turning on the sprinklers before play, which is expected to help lower pollution levels in the immediate vicinity of the ground. They will also ask players to remain inside their dressing rooms, where air purifiers will be operational, rather than in the dugout. ESPNcricinfo understands that match officials will treat the air pollution just as they would the weather, in deciding whether conditions are fit for play or not, and taking the players off the field when needed.

Phoebe Litchfield shows class to set up comfortable Superchargers win

Georgia Wareham takes key wickets as defending champions Invincibles suffer second defeat

Thomas Ridley11-Aug-2023

Phoebe Litchfield brought up a half-century•PA Photos/Getty Images

Impressive Australian pair Phoebe Litchfield and Georgia Wareham led Northern Superchargers to a straightforward 14-run victory against the Oval Invincibles at Headingley.The classy and composed Litchfield hit 68 from 45 balls, as she combined with skipper Hollie Armitage in a partnership worth 94, which helped the Superchargers reach 143 for 4, recovering well after losing both their openers early to South African international Marizanne Kapp. Wareham then impressed with the ball, taking 2 for 20, including the strange dismissal of England Ashes star Alice Capsey.Cordelia Griffith offered some resistance with a quickfire 30 off 15 deliveries, which included three fours and one six, but it was not enough for Invincibles.Invincibles now face an uphill challenge to make it three back-to-back titles, with only three points on the board having played half their games in the group stage. Superchargers, meanwhile, will be eyeing up a top three spot with their second victory of the week, which leaves them on six points from four games.Litchfield led the way for the Superchargers, helping her team recover from 15 for 2 after Kapp took two early wickets, including that of India international Jemimah Rodrigues, who was bowled for a golden duck.Following the powerplay, the Superchargers found their rhythm with Litchfield and Armitage regularly finding the boundary with some brilliant shots. Skipper Armitage was trying to lead her team to a big score but had to depart for 42 off 33 after chipping a Capsey delivery to mid-off.The first six of the innings did not come until the 86th ball, when the inventive Litchfield smashed a full toss from Ryana McDonald-Gay over the midwicket boundary. Five balls later she was dismissed for 68 off 45 balls as she clubbed an Eva Gray delivery straight to the fielder at long-off. Superchargers finished on 143 for 4, with Bess Heath hitting the final ball for four.After a good start to the Invincibles chase, former Supercharger Lauren Winfield-Hill was bowled for 15 – but Grace Ballinger had bowled a no-ball and the resulting free hit was dispatched to the boundary. However, Winfield-Hill didn’t capitalise on her reprieve as she was caught at mid-on off the bowling of Alice Davidson-Richards for 19.Capsey was then bizarrely dismissed as she advanced down the pitch to Wareham but completely lost sight of the ball and it made its way to wicketkeeper Heath, who whipped off the bails at the second time of asking with the 19-year-old England international watching on still some way down the pitch.Linsey Smith then got the key wicket of Kapp, who departed for 4 as she drilled a wide one straight to the impressive Litchfield in the covers.Superchargers asserted their dominance with the dismissal of Paige Scholfield, who pulled a Wareham delivery straight to Smith on the square-leg boundary, and Invincibles saw their hopes of victory fade when stand-in captain Suzie Bates, who stepped into the role because Dane van Niekerk was missing with a thumb injury, cut a Kate Cross delivery straight to Rodrigues at point.Griffith did show some resistance for Invincibles with a quickfire 30 from 15 deliveries, but it was not enough to stop Superchargers’ victory charge.

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