Ranji Trophy final: Disciplined MP keep Mumbai in check

Ranji Trophy final: Disciplined MP keep Mumbai in check

From a position of 120 for 1, a four-man Madhya Pradesh attack reduced Mumbai to 228 for 5 on the first day of the Ranji Trophy final. Having lost the toss, MP would have probably taken a stumps score of 248 for 5 at the start of the day. Having played an extra batsman who can bowl some spin, and left out pacer Puneet Datey, the couple of frontline MP pacers and spinners persevered throughout a somewhat tricky day for batting, their discipline making it tougher to score for Mumbai.
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Well into the third session, the skies remained heavily overcast, the old ball moved around a bit even after 60 overs. The spinners also found some turn and bounce on what appears to be essentially a dry surface, with rough areas already starting to develop from the bowlers’ follow-throughs.
On a day on which there wasn’t a runaway standout performer on either side, Yashasvi Jaiswal scored a chunk of Mumbai’s runs, falling 22 short of what would have been a fourth successive first-class century. His captain Prithvi Shaw rode his luck at the other end in an opening stand of 87 that created a decent base for Mumbai, from which they had some cushion to reduce the impact of the setbacks that were to come later.
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MP tried to surprise Mumbai as they opened the bowling with left-arm spinner Kumar Kartikeya. He found a bit of extra bite from a slightly damp morning surface. Jaiswal went through a couple of nervy moments; he tried a slog-sweep and missed, tried to give Kartikeya the charge and was fortunate that his sliced mishit cleared deep mid-on and sailed just over the boundary.
While Jaiswal played a tight game overall, Shaw led an utterly charmed life. A sharp Kartikeya drifter burst in to take an inside edge that popped above forward short leg’s reach. The luckless seamer Gaurav Yadav, deceptively nippy off the surface, went past Shaw’s edge five times in an over without reward. He got a couple to cut back in alarmingly and a couple more to nibble away outside off. In between, Shaw also threw his bat after a wide one.

Shaw still managed to last 79 deliveries, and if he stays in the middle for that long, he does make a contribution. He was bowled for 47, missing a full, straight ball angled into him, his attempted straight drive finding thin air comfortably outside the line of the Anubhav Agarwal delivery.
After this breakthrough, whenever Mumbai began to build a partnership, MP would strike. The next four stands were 33, 27, 38 and 43, all promising more, and all cut short by a combination of MP’s persistence and soft dismissals.
Bowlers stick to their jobs
Armaan Jaffer does not have the consistently effortless finesse of his uncle, but does have a hint of that elegance when he whips through midwicket. But there was nothing elegant about how he pushed at Kartikeya with hard hands and the ball carried all the way to midwicket.
Suved Parkar came in and got another start but off-spinner Saransh Jain’s delivery stopped on him; he had already set himself up on the back foot to whip it hard and ended up lobbing it to midwicket.
Jain bowled beautifully through the day, tossing it up high, varying his pace, inviting the drive outside off with only mid-off and sweeper in, and extracting bounce. He could probably have been a little fuller, the length with which he dismissed Hardik Tamore.
It was a pitch where many edges did not carry to the cordon. Two fell short of the wicketkeeper and first slip off Tamore alone, the hesitant ’keeper-batsman enjoying several slices of fortune. When an edge did carry, Tamore was put down at second slip, a sharp, low chance albeit.

Jain kept trying to lure Tamore into the cover drive, but in trying to be extra watchful after the drop, Tamore pushed inside the line of a full ball that didn’t turn much and edged to slip.
All along, MP kept tweaking the field. There was an in-out one for Kartikeya to Jaiswal, with three deep leg-side men and three close-in catchers. Seeing the ball was not coming on, they employed a couple of short midwickets and short covers each at different times. To Sarfaraz Khan, they had Jain bowling straighter with a 6-3 onside field.
Sarfaraz had walked out to a raucous reception from the couple of hundred fans, with shouts of ‘Sarfaraz best hai’ and ‘vada pav’ ringing around an otherwise empty M. Chinnaswamy Stadium. But contrary to his free-hitting reputation, and as he often does in this format, he barely took risks. Boasting a strike rate in the early 70s in first-class cricket, he downed the shutter for the day, moving to 40 off 125 balls. He did try a couple of hard sweeps, which is a natural shot for him, but found the field.
There was at least one good leg-before shout against every Mumbai batsman, but none of them went in MP’s favour. And in the absence of the Decision Review System (DRS) for an occasion as important as the biggest match of the domestic calendar, they had no recourse.
Nevertheless, Agarwal and Yadav continued to run in with energy late into the day for a collective 36 overs. With the second new ball only two overs old, both will hope they get more of a go with it on the second morning than they did with the first cherry.
Brief scores: Mumbai 248/5 (Jaiswal 78, Shaw 47) vs Madhya Pradesh

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Eyeing Asian Cup berth, India face Hong Kong in battle for top spot

Eyeing Asian Cup berth, India face Hong Kong in battle for top spot

A Sunil Chhetri-inspired India would look to end the final leg of the Asian Cup Qualifiers on a high when they face Hong Kong in a battle for the group D top spot on Tuesday.
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With two wins each, both teams have six points but Jon Anderson’s side are ahead of the hosts on goal difference, and the match would determine the direct qualifiers for next year’s 24-team continental finals.
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First place in the group would take the Blue Tigers into the finals for an unprecedented second successive time and fifth overall.
Hong Kong, on the other hand, are eyeing their first Asia Cup qualification since 1968.
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Ranking wise India (106) may be ahead of Hong Kong (147) but the latter have displayed the best attacking and defensive play among the four group D teams so far in the competition.
While Hong Kong have easily outclassed their respective opponents, India have stuttered along.
After a patchy show against Cambodia, where Chhettri scored a double, it took an injury-time winner by Abdul Sahal Samad to seal three points.

After Chhetri had seen his 86th minute free-kick cancelled out two minutes later by Zubayr Amiri’s header, Sahal sealed three points.
Notably, even if any of the two teams go on to lose or draw, they can still qualify as one of the five best second-placed teams.

A second-place finish would leave them waiting for results in other groups to determine whether they would take one of the five best runners-up spots.
As for the team news, the Blue Tigers have been on the job with Chhetri leading from the front with three goals from the first two matches.
With 83 International goals in his pocket, Chhetri would look to close in on Argentine maestro Lionel Messi (86).

The Kerala Blasters striker’s stoppage-time winner would mean that the Indian coach Igor Stimac would have a “happy headache” in picking the starting XI.
It remains to be seen whether the Croatian World Cup semifinalist brings him in the starting line-up. Another player who has impressed the most in the first two matches is Aashique Kurunnian who has been brilliant with his speed and control.
At a time when Manvir Singh has failed to make an impact, Aashique has shone bright and played a key role in their turnaround against Afghanistan.
Manvir Singh has failed to make an impact. (Twitter/Indian Super League)
“The three points that we got against Cambodia will mean nothing if we don’t get three points against Hong Kong,” Stimac said on the eve of the match.
“We are at the point zero at the moment. We played well, that’s why we made it look easy. Of course, Hong Kong will be a different challenge.” India’s defence would also brace for a big test against Hong Kong who have scored five goals in the first two matches.
For Hong Kong, Matt Orr has been in rich form as the 25-year-old striker has scored a goal each in both the matches, and he would be a threat to the Indian defence with his aerial control and finishes.

“Of course we have to change our tactics against India. India have a strong team but for us the situation is really positive and we’re motivated to win,” Hong Kong coach Anderson said. Kickoff: 8.30pm IST.

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While You Were Asleep: Sahal wins it for India, England hit rock bottom in Nations League, Shanaka denies Australia, Kyrgios faces racist abuse

While You Were Asleep: Sahal wins it for India, England hit rock bottom in Nations League, Shanaka denies Australia, Kyrgios faces racist abuse

An injury-time goal by Sahal Abdul Samad helped Indian eke out a 2-1 win over Afghanistan Indian football team seal a 2-1 win against Afghanistan in the third round match in Kolkata. The dramatic victory kept India’s hopes of qualifying for next year’s Asian Cup finals afloat.

90+2’ GOOOOALLL!!
Sahal scores just at the stroke of full time from Ashique’s low cross inside the box!
AFG 1️⃣-2️⃣ IND #AFGIND ⚔️ #ACQ2023 🏆 #BlueTigers 🐯 #BackTheBlue 💙 #IndianFootball ⚽ pic.twitter.com/4i4lXHtzwpBest of Express PremiumAt biotech startup event, typhoid RT-PCR, cataract detection via WhatsAppPremium‘Hoping for more direct tax than expectations this fiscal; looking at cry...PremiumThe shot of Rajiv getting hit — history in a framePremiumNeed to create, awaken symbols of Dalit culturePremium
— Indian Football Team (@IndianFootball) June 11, 2022
Denied for 83 minutes, India won a free-kick on the edge of the box after Ashique Kuruniyan was brought down. Sunil Chhetri stepped up and curled the ball past the wall and into the back of the net to score his 83rd goal for India. However, those celebrations were short-lived as in the 88th minute, as Zubayr Amiri produced a sensational header in the 88th minute of the match and pulled Afghanistan level.
But Sahal’s strike into the bottom corner in the 92nd minute swung the result in India’s favour and ensured they remain level on six points at the top of Group D with Hong Kong.
England, Italy play a goalless draw
Gareth Southgate’s England has another frustrating outing in the ongoing Nations League. A sluggish 0-0 draw against the European Champions Italy had left England at the bottom of Nations League Group A3.

The boss provides his assessment of tonight’s #NationsLeague draw against Italy:
— England (@England) June 11, 2022
England did had their chances to win the match but they failed to grab their opportunities. Mason Mount hit the corssbar, while Raheem Sterling missed the target from a close range. During the post-match interview, England’s manager Southgate rightly mentioned that they lacked sharpness up front.
It was the first meeting between these two nations since the Euro 2020 final at Wembley last year. Only 2,000 school children were allowed to attend despite a UEFA ban.
The result has jeopardised England’s chances of progressing in the Nations League. Finishing bottom would bring relegation. The draw is enough for Italy to claim the top spot.
Shanaka led from the front
Sri Lanka Dasun Shanaka led a stunning fightback as the hosts clubbed 59 runs from the final three overs to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat against Australia in the third and final T20I match.
Shanaka’s magnificent knock of 54* off just 25 balls helped Sri Lanka to a four-wicket win. Australia take the series 2-1.

Chasing down 59 in the final three overs is the most scored by any team to win a game in the last three overs. 🤩#SLvAUS #CheerForLions pic.twitter.com/CKTVfnrcLz
— Sri Lanka Cricket 🇱🇰 (@OfficialSLC) June 11, 2022
Shanaka had been under pressure leading into the game as Sri Lanka had lost nine out of 10 games this year under his captaincy. But on Saturday at Pallekele Stadium in Kandy, he gave the capacity crowd something to cheer about with his audacious stroke play. Shanaka hit five fours and four sixes during his match-winning knock against the World T20 champions.
Australia skipper Aaron Finch opted to bat after winning the third toss in a row. They put on 176 for 5 in the 20 overs. Chasing a target of 177, Sri Lanka were reeling at 108/6 but an unbroken 69-run stand for the seventh wicket between Shanaka and Chamika Karunaratne helped Sri Lanka to win the match. Sri Lanka needed 59 runs off the final three overs and went on to win with one ball to spare.
Kyrgios faced racist abuse from Stuttgart crowd
Red-hot Andy Murray stormed into the final of the Stuttgart Open following 7-6, 6-2 win over Nick Kyrgios on Saturday.
However, Murray’s opponent Nick Kyrgios said that he faced racist abuse from the crowd during the match.

“I’m an entertainer. I’ve played this sport since I was 7 years old. I’ve worn my heart on my sleeve ever since I stepped on a tennis court. Yes, I’m human, I don’t deal with my emotions well all the time. I stopped caring about what people thought and their opinion on what I should be. I play this game to give people a show. To feel something, different from ordinary tennis,” Kyrgios wrote on Instagram.
“But one thing I won’t ever tolerate is spectators heckling and blasting abuse to athletes. It’s been happening personally to me for a while, from racist comments to complete disrespect.

“For years it’s been something I’ve brushed off but especially in Indian wells and today all the way in Stuttgart, it’s made me realise that people seem to think it’s normal. Im seeing it happen in other sports, and to many other athletes. We are playing FOR YOU, whether you are backing the opponent or not.
“You may not think it’s a big deal, but it could affect someone’s life more than you think. Wake up to yourselves. Not just in tennis, but in every other sport. My young athletes, coloured or not, I hope that this message is heard so you don’t ever have to feel alienated, or embarrassed to be you and to perform on the world stage,” he added.
Murray will play his first grass-court singles final since winning Wimbledon in 2016 when he plays second-seeded Italian Matteo Berrettini in Sunday’s final.

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Diamond League: After eighth national steeplechase record, ex-coach says ‘human engine’ Avinash Sable can go even faster

Diamond League: After eighth national steeplechase record, ex-coach says ‘human engine’ Avinash Sable can go even faster

During races and training sessions in India, steeplechase athlete Avinash Sable craved competition, because he was miles ahead of other runners at home. Now Sable, 27, is getting a taste of running against the best in the world.
Soufiane El Bakkali, the Tokyo Olympics gold medallist, was the toast of the home crowd during the Rabat Diamond League on Sunday night. El Bakkali found an extra gear on the home stretch to stave off the challenge of Ethiopia’s Lamecha Girma. Like in Tokyo, two of the world’s best had pushed each other to the limit to produce an exciting finish.
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El Bakkali produced a world-leading time of 7 minutes, 58.28 seconds and looks to be the favourite for the World Championships next month. Sable, used to leading races at home, didn’t really challenge the top three at any point in the race yet his fifth-place finish was special for the army man from drought-prone Beed in Maharashtra. His 8:12.48 in an elite field of runners was a national record, and the eighth time he has rewritten the mark. He is bound to go faster, his long-time coach Amrish Kumar said.Best of Express PremiumExplained: Delhi’s deep ties in Gulf were delinked from faith, now ...PremiumUPSC Key-June 6, 2022: Why and What to know about ‘Black Money’ to ‘Gait ...PremiumRoad to 2024: Friendless and snubbed, why Congress has no ally shedding t...PremiumUPSC Essentials: Key terms of the past weekPremium

Record ⚠️
Avinash Sable created new National Record in 3000 meters Steeple Chase in @Diamond_League Rabat 2022. Performance 8m:12s.48ms. Rain continues @Adille1 @anjubobbygeorg1 @ril_foundation @jswsports @KritikaBhasin13 @jon_selvaraj @AndrewAmsan @rahuldpawar @WorldAthletics pic.twitter.com/o5OsZAfuFm
— Athletics Federation of India (@afiindia) June 5, 2022
Kumar, a South Asian Games gold medallist in steeplechase, has good reason to be optimistic. “This year, if he is injury-free, Avinash can clock 8:04. Actually, he could have run this fast last year at the Tokyo Olympics but had tested positive for Covid-19 twice. It affected his training and he also didn’t get an exposure tour after contracting Covid.
“This year, he is getting back to his best and with the World Championships and Commonwealth Games coming up, he could spring a surprise. I believe he could have won bronze at the Tokyo Olympics (Kenya’s Benjamin Kigen finished third with 8:11.45). Maybe, this year he will,” Amrish, who coached Sable till the Tokyo Olympics, said.
Kigen finished eighth in Rabat, a small victory for Sable.
Army coach Amrish calls Sable a ‘human engine’. When Sable moved to steeplechase from cross-country running in early 2017, he joined an experienced group of athletes who were much faster than him. “Within a year, he not only bettered the other runners in the group but also broke the national record. The reason I call him a human engine is because running is his life.
“He trains, eats, rests, trains. He has a one-track mind and it only focuses on running. He is hardy, strong and blessed with endurance. Maybe I am putting two and two together but he hails from a place which is very hot and has water issues. His body is used to enduring a lot from a young age,” Amrish said.
Tough beginning
As a Class-1 student, Sable used to walk and jog 12 kilometres to school and back to Mandava village in Beed. His parents Mukund and Vaishali grew wheat on their farm and also worked as daily contract labourers. To uplift his family and have a steady job, Sable joined the Indian Army.
From the freezing cold in Siachen to the scorching summers in Lalgarh Jattan, Rajasthan, Sable faced extreme weather during his early postings. He was spotted by Amrish during a cross-country race in Hyderabad. The 27-year-old had finished eighth in that race but Amrish noticed the natural running style.
“When I asked him to take up steeplechase in January 2017, he was willing but a little apprehensive. Maybe it was because of the hurdles. But I had told him back then that he would break the national record not once but many times. Just before he travelled for the Diamond League, we had a conversation. We discussed how many seconds he would break the national record by,” Amrish said.

Sable is currently training in Colorado Springs with distance coach Scott Simmons. In May, he proved he is an all-rounder by breaking Bahadur Prasad’s 30-year-old 5,000m national record in a high-quality field in San Juan Capistrano. Sable is also the half-marathon record holder.

Amrish believes no distance running record is safe if Sable remains fit and hungry. “I am predicting that he will also break the 10,000m national record,” his long-time coach said. “With Sable, your predictions never go wrong.”

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Asian Cup qualifiers without general public irks Sunil Chhetri

Asian Cup qualifiers without general public irks Sunil Chhetri

National football icon Sunil Chhetri didn’t hide his disappointment at no tickets being sold to the general public for the Asian Cup Group D qualifiers to be played at the Salt Lake Stadium from June 8-14, and felt it deprived the Indian team of home advantage at a time when it needs crowd support the most.
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About 20,000 complimentary tickets have been issued, which has resulted in the organisers getting the stadium rent-free. Public sale of tickets would have forced the All India Football Federation (AIFF) to fork out around Rs 16 lakh per day.
The Indian team would be playing in Kolkata, the country’s football hub, after a gap of nearly three years and Chhetri would have liked the crowd in his corner as he tried to lead India to the continental championship.Best of Express PremiumUPSC Key-June 3, 2022: Why and What to know about ‘Good Taliban Bad Talib...PremiumIn words and between the lines, the messages in RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat&#...PremiumRemembering Paul Brass: A scholar of identity politics and violence in No...PremiumTony Fadell Interview: ‘I see pain-killing products all over, you just ha...Premium
“When Mohun Bagan played at 4 o’clock (in the AFC Cup), there were 38,000 people. How is it that we are finding it difficult to sell tickets (for 8.30 pm kick-offs) when the national team is playing? The same thing happened in Mumbai. If there are no fans for the game, I understand. When the national team is playing in the Northeast, in Kerala, it’s jam-packed. It doesn’t make sense,” said the veteran marksman.
The sparse crowd in the stands will make a mockery of home advantage, Chhetri said.
Sunil Chhetri (Illustration: Suvajit Dey)
“The least I was expecting was 30,000 because at 4 o’clock, they came for Mohun Bagan. We are happy that we are hosting it (the tournament), but (such little turnout) it would make no difference. When we come to play (here) for Bengaluru FC against Mohun Bagan and East Bengal, we feel it as an away side and it’s intimidating. So, they should fill (the stands) and then we can say we have home advantage. If in a stadium of almost 90,000, only 10,000-15,000 people turn up, then what’s the point of having home advantage? We go to training, there are 100 people, man! (So) I don’t understand how?”
He said Kolkata was one of the places where the national team can expect good support.

“There are a few places in my country where you go to play for the national team and we know you are going to get support. Kerala is one of them. Of course, Kanteerava (in Bengaluru) is one of them. But Kolkata is right up there and you feel special here, because they (fans) love their football.”
Lack of star power
Organisers, on the other hand, have cited lukewarm response to a tournament featuring teams from footballing backwaters as the reason for less crowd. India has a FIFA ranking of 106, ahead of Hong Kong (147), Afghanistan (150) and Cambodia (171).
“Look at the teams playing and their rankings. Do you think fans will throng the stadium? I don’t see more than 10,000 spectators turning up,” a former top AIFF official said.
The Salt Lake Stadium has a capacity in excess of 70,000.
Salt Lake Stadium.
“The Bengal government has issued instructions that all tickets should be free. See, printing tickets is not an issue but how to distribute them, whom to distribute to is an issue. Yes, they (state government) are giving (us) the stadium free and that’s why tickets (for the matches) have to be free. But we are giving 20,000 tickets, not a very small number,” AIFF director (competition) Anil Kamath told The Indian Express, informing that the complimentary tickets would go to the state football associations, different clubs, government offices and from there “to public”. According to him, some tickets would be directly distributed to the public online.
The AIFF is currently helmed by the Supreme Court-appointed Committee of Administrators (CoA), although tournaments are organised by the Federation’s secretariat. CoA member and former India captain Bhaskar Ganguly made his displeasure known. “I told Mr Kamath, if we would have been informed about this earlier, we could have taken the matter to the state government. The state government allowed 100 per cent turnout for IPL matches only a few days ago. We might have helped the organisers in this regard. Now, it’s probably too late. India are playing at home and they deserve crowd support,” Ganguly told this paper.

Chhetri admitted that the Indian team’s recent performances left a lot to be desired. “A little bit of negative feeling from the fans that we haven’t been doing well of late. That might be the reason. Last time we played here against Bangladesh and the result (1-1) wasn’t good, the performance wasn’t great. But the support was unbelievable. We will try our best to give them better memories than what we gave them against Bangladesh.”

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