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Tag: ICC Cricket World Cup

  • A cricket World Cup is coming to NYC’s suburbs, where the sport thrives among immigrant communities

    A cricket World Cup is coming to NYC’s suburbs, where the sport thrives among immigrant communities

    EAST MEADOW, N.Y. — A towering stadium boasting 34,000 seats and a precisely trimmed field of soft Kentucky bluegrass is rising in a suburban New York park that will host one of the world’s top cricket tournaments next month.

    But on a recent Saturday morning, on the other side of Long Island’s Eisenhower Park, budding young cricketers were already busy batting, bowling and fielding on a makeshift pitch.

    The T20 World Cup will be the first major international cricket competition in the U.S., but the centuries-old English game has been flourishing in the far-flung corners of metro New York for years, fueled by steady waves of South Asian and Caribbean immigration. Each spring, parks from the Bronx and Queens to Long Island and New Jersey come alive with recreational leagues hosting weekend competitions.

    American cricket organizers hope the June competition will take the sport’s popularity to the next level, providing the kind of lasting boost across generations and cultures that soccer enjoyed when the U.S. hosted its first FIFA World Cup in 1994. On Wednesday, retired Olympic sprinter Usain Bolt, an honorary ambassador of the T20 World Cup, visited the nearly complete Eisenhower stadium, along with members of the U.S. cricket squad and former New York football and basketball greats.

    Parmanand Sarju, founder of the Long Island Youth Cricket Academy that hosted Saturday’s practice, said he’s “beyond joyful” to see the new stadium rising atop the ball field where his youth academy began, a sign of how far things have come.

    “When we started more than a decade ago, there was no understanding of cricket, at least at the youth level,” said the Merrick resident, who started the academy to teach his two American-born children the sport he grew up playing in Guyana in South America. “Now they’re building a stadium here.”

    The sport originally took root in the outer boroughs of New York City but has gradually spread as immigrant families, like generations before, moved to the suburbs, transforming communities, said Ahmad Chohan, a Pakistan native who is the president of the New York Police Department’s cricket club, which also plays in Eisenhower as part of a statewide league with roughly 70 teams.

    The World Cup, he said, is a “historic moment.”

    Cricket is the second most-viewed sport in the world after soccer — India star Virat Kohli has 268 million Instagram followers — but it is only played by more than 200,000 Americans nationwide across more than 400 local leagues, according to USA Cricket, which oversees the men’s national cricket team.

    Major League Cricket launched last year in the U.S. with six professional T20 teams, including a New York franchise that, for now, plays some games at a Dallas-area stadium also hosting World Cup matches.

    Venu Pisike, the chairman of USA Cricket, believes the T20 World Cup — the first time the U.S. has competed in the tournament — will mark a turning point.

    The sport is among those slated for the 2028 summer Olympics in Los Angeles — its first appearance at the games in more than a century, he noted. The International Cricket Council, the sport’s governing body, has also committed to growing the U.S. market.

    “Cricket is predominantly viewed as an expat sport, but things will look very different in the next 10, 20 years,” said Pisike. “Americans will definitely change their mindset and approach in terms of developing cricket.”

    Both the Los Angeles games and the upcoming World Cup, which the U.S. is co-hosting with the West Indies, will feature a modern variant of the game known as “Twenty20” that lasts around three hours and is highlighted by aggressive batters swinging away for homerun-like “sixes.” It’s considered more approachable to casual fans than traditional formats, which can last one to five days when batters typically take a more cautious approach. Twenty20 is the format used in the hugely popular Indian Premier League.

    Eisenhower Park will host half the games played in the U.S., including a headlining clash of cricket titans Pakistan and India on June 9.

    Other matches in the 55-game, 20-nation tournament that kicks off June 1 will be played on existing cricket fields in Texas and Florida. Later rounds take place in Antigua, Trinidad and other Caribbean nations, with the final in Barbados on June 29.

    Cricket has a long history in the U.S. and New York, in particular.

    The sport was played by American troops during the Revolutionary War, and the first international match was held in Manhattan between the city’s St. George’s Cricket Club and Canada in 1844, according to Stephen Holroyd, a Philadelphia-area cricket historian.

    As late as 1855, New York newspapers were still devoting more coverage to cricket than baseball, but the sport remained stubbornly insular, with British-only cricket clubs hindering its growth just as baseball was taking off, he said.

    By the end of World War I, cricket had largely disappeared — until immigrants from India and other former British colonies helped revive it roughly half a century later.

    Anubhav Chopra, a co-founder of the Long Island Premier League, a nearly 15-year-old men’s league that plays in another local park, is among the more than 700,000 Indian Americans in the New York City area — by far the largest community of its kind in the country.

    The Babylon resident has never been to a professional cricket match but has tried to share his love for the game he played growing up in New Delhi with his three American children, including his 9-year-old son who takes cricket lessons.

    Chopra bought tickets to all nine games taking place at Eisenhower and is taking his wife, kids and grandparents to the June 3 match between Sri Lanka and South Africa.

    “For me, cricket is life,” he said. “This as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”

    The dense latticework of metal rods and wood sheets that make up Eisenhower’s modular stadium will come down soon after the cup games end, but the cricket field will remain, minus the rectangular surface in the middle known as the pitch.

    Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman said what’s left lays a “world-class” foundation for local cricket teams — and perhaps a future home for a professional team.

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    Follow Philip Marcelo at twitter.com/philmarcelo.

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  • T20 World Cup 2024: India vs Pakistan scheduled on June 9 in New York

    T20 World Cup 2024: India vs Pakistan scheduled on June 9 in New York

    India and Pakistan will face each other in New York in their group-stage match at the T20 World Cup 2024.

    The cricketing rivals have been scheduled to play at the 34,000-seat modular stadium in Long Island on June 9.

    Tournament co-host, the United States, will open the ninth edition of the event against its North American neighbour, Canada, on June 1 in Dallas.

    The defending champions, England, are in the same group as Ashes rivals Australia, and will play each other on June 8 in Barbados.

    The International Cricket Council (ICC) announced the schedule on Friday, six months before the expanded 20-team tournament, which runs until June 29 when joint co-hosts, the West Indies, will host the final in Barbados.

    The top two teams from each of the four groups will progress to the Super Eight round in an event that will comprise 55 matches.

    “The T20 World Cup 2024 marks an exciting expansion of our sport with more teams than ever before set to compete in this event,” ICC chief executive Geoff Allardice said.

    Pakistan’s Mohammad Rizwan and Babar Azam celebrate after beating India in the Super 12 stage in 2021 [File: Hamad I Mohammed/Reuters]

    “It’s going to be an incredible spectacle bringing together teams from Africa, the Americas, Asia, East-Asia Pacific and Europe.”

    Florida completes the three US venues to host group stage matches, although the tournament thereafter will solely be staged in the Caribbean.

    The schedule for the 2023 Cricket World Cup, the one-day international equivalent ICC event, was only announced four months before the tournament, leaving fans irked by the timeframe for which to make travel arrangements.

    Cricket West Indies chief executive Johnny Graves said Friday’s announcement marked a “significant milestone” in their preparations.

    “We know that teams, fans and cricket enthusiasts worldwide have been eagerly awaiting this announcement,” Graves said.

    “Now that it is available, it provides a roadmap for the thrilling journey that lies ahead.”

    India were defeated finalists on home soil at the recent 50-over World Cup as Australia upset the odds to win by six wickets in Ahmedabad. They were also left frustrated in the 2021 T20 World Cup, finishing just outside the qualification spot from their Super 12 group.

    Pakistan topped that group, beating India by 10 wickets on the way, but were knocked out at the semifinal stage by Australia. They finished fifth in the group to miss out on a place in the last four at the 2023 50-over tournament in India, where the host nation exacted revenge for the 2021 defeat.

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  • Kashmir students accused of terror for ‘celebrating’ India World Cup loss

    Kashmir students accused of terror for ‘celebrating’ India World Cup loss

    Authorities in Indian-administered Kashmir have arrested seven students under a stringent terror law for allegedly celebrating India’s defeat in the cricket World Cup finals earlier this month, drawing severe criticism.

    The students of Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology (SKUAST) have been booked under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), a law deemed draconian by several rights groups.

    The law, which makes securing bail almost impossible, has largely been used by India’s Hindu nationalist government against political dissenters and Muslim activists.

    A senior police officer in Indian-administered Kashmir told Al Jazeera there was a face-off between the accused and some non-local students on November 19 as they watched a TV broadcast of India playing against Australia at the Narendra Modi Stadium in the western state of Gujarat.

    Australia beat India by six wickets to win a record-extending sixth men’s ICC Cricket World Cup, dashing India’s hopes of a third win after 1983 and 2011.

    “A non-local student submitted a written complaint naming the seven Kashmiri students for abusing and threatening him and raising pro-Pakistan slogans. On the basis of the complaint, the case has been registered under the UAPA,” he said.

    The non-local students at SKUAST’s Shuhama campus in central Kashmir’s Ganderbal district allege the seven Kashmiri students raised anti-India and pro-Pakistan slogans after India lost the game.

    “After finishing the match they [students] started abusing me and targeting me for being a supporter of our country,” read the complaint by the 20-year-old student, who has not been identified by the police.

    The seven students have been charged with Section 13 of UAPA which deals with advocating, abetting, or inciting the commission of any unlawful activity, and Sections 505 and 506 of the Indian Penal Code which deals with intent to incite offence against any other class or community and criminal intimidation.

    As the move to invoke terror charges in a case related to sport was criticised, police on Tuesday issued a statement, defending their action.

    “It is not about dissent or freedom of expression. It is about terrorising others who may be nourishing pro-India feelings or anti-Pakistan feelings,” said the statement.

    A SKUAST official, on condition of anonymity since he was not authorised to speak to the media, told Al Jazeera the non-local students did not complain to the university administration and went directly to the police.

    “If the students would have approached us, we could have sorted the matter out internally. The complaint did not reach us,” he said.

    The official said the arrested students are in their early 20s and are studying fourth-year Bachelor of Veterinary Science.

    “Even if our children made a mistake out of emotional foolishness, the harsh charges on them should be dropped. This will ruin their lives. We are requesting the government to save their future,” a relative of one of the students told Al Jazeera.

    Fearing reprisals from the government, the relative did not want to be named.

    It’s not the first time Kashmiri students have been charged in a case linked to cricket, a game extremely popular in the subcontinent. India and Pakistan, which both claim the Himalayan region of Kashmir in its entirety but rule over parts of it, are also arch-cricketing rivals.

    In October 2021, police in Indian-administered Kashmir filed criminal cases under the same UAPA law against some students of two medical colleges for allegedly celebrating Pakistan’s victory against India in the Twenty20 World Cup. The charges were later dropped.

    In another incident during the 2014 Asia Cup tournament, nearly 60 Kashmiri students were suspended by a college in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh after they allegedly celebrated Pakistan’s win over India.

    Anti-India sentiments in the Indian-administered Kashmir have turned more intense since 2019 when New Delhi unilaterally scrapped its partial autonomy and brought the region under its direct control.

    In a statement, the Jammu and Kashmir Students Association, a local student body, said the students booked under the UAPA belong to poor families. It demanded the dropping of the charges against them.

    “The UAPA charges should be withdrawn as this punishment could ruin their future,” the association said.

    Mehbooba Mufti, the last elected chief minister of the region, said the case against the students was “disconcerting and shocking”.

    “Normalising slapping of laws like UAPA on journalists, activists and now students reveals the ruthless mindset of the establishment towards youngsters in [Kashmir),” she wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

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  • Australia legend Gillespie says India ‘ripe for picking’ in World Cup final

    Australia legend Gillespie says India ‘ripe for picking’ in World Cup final

    Australia legend Jason Gillespie has backed his fellow countrymen to pull off one of the great Cricket World Cup final performances against an India side that are “ripe for the picking” on Sunday in Ahmedabad.

    Gillespie, 48, himself was part of the Australian side that dominated world cricket either side of the turn of the century but injury cruelly denied him a place in the triumphant team that beat India in the 2003 final.

    Hosts India have won all 10 of their matches so far at this edition and Gillespie has echoed former New Zealand allrounder James Franklin’s assertion to Al Jazeera that this is the “best” India team of all time.

    Australia, meantime, squeezed past South Africa in the semifinals and the five-time champions have been beaten twice so far in this tournament – including in their opener against the hosts.

    “It would go down as one of the great achievements for Australia, because no one was expecting Australia to do particularly well this World Cup,” Gillespie told Al Jazeera.

    “[But] it’s always fraught with danger to write off an Australian side – doesn’t matter what format. This is what Australia are elite at. They get to World Cup finals, win World Cup finals.

    “We are playing against a powerhouse – the juggernaut that is India, who have all the expectation and all the pressure on them.

    “And don’t be shocked – you heard it from me – don’t be shocked if Australia just pull off one of the great World Cup final performances and come away with that ring and that World Cup.”

    All eyes on Ahmedabad

    Australia headed to the World Cup on the back of a 3-2 one-day international series defeat in South Africa, in which they had taken a 2-0 lead.

    Their performances have grown through the World Cup in India after the opening defeats to the hosts and South Africa, which had made four losses on the bounce to the Proteas heading into the semifinal.

    “Australia are just starting to peak at the absolute right time here, and India are ripe for the picking,” Gillespie continued.

    “They haven’t had their banana skin game yet. Could the World Cup final be that?”

    The closest that India have come to a slip-up in this World Cup was in their opening match against Australia.

    Having been set a mere 200 to win, the hosts lost their first three wickets for two runs.

    Star batters Virat Kohli and KL Rahul rescued the situation and set India on their way in this winning streak.

    “That’ll be in the back of India’s mind,” Gillespie continued. “That and the expectation. What Australia have in their advantage is that all the pressure is on India. All the expectation of a home final.

    Australia, really, have nothing to lose.

    “What Australia do have in the bank is experience – they have won the World Cup many times, and India will be very, very wary of that.”

    Australia need ‘early impact’

    Gillespie claimed 402 wickets for Australia in an international career that spanned 1996 to 2006 for the fast bowler.

    In his opinion, fellow seamers – Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Shami in particular – have elevated this India team to the finest the country has produced.

    The batters have stolen most of the headlines, though.

    Kohli reached a record 50 ODI centuries when he brought up three figures in the semifinal, surpassing Indian legend Sachin Tendulkar’s 49.

    India’s captain, Rohit Sharma, has also been pivotal at the top in this tournament.

    The 36-year-old opener has increased his strike rate significantly to 124 from his overall career average of 91.

    Rohit was one of the three to fall early in the opening match against Australia and Gillespie feels Australia need to get him out early again.

    “Rohit is a legend. He is leading from the front and imposing himself. Australia need to expose the Indian middle order with early wickets,” he said.

    “If the ball is moving slightly off the straight, whether it’s through the air or off the pitch … then Josh Hazlewood is a great matchup against Rohit.

    “But also, Mitchell Starc bowling fast, full, swinging the ball back into Rohit could pose a real danger for him. Australia will be well aware of that.

    “Let’s get Kohli out there early. Let’s put him under the pump.

    “As I said, expectation does funny things with 1.5 billion people willing India on.

    “If Australia can make an impact early, expose that Indian middle order early, I think there’ll be some squeaky-bottom time for the Indian cricket team.”

    ‘One of the great upsets’

    So what is it about the small nation of 25 million people that has seen them lift five World Cups to India, a country of 1.5 billion, who have two titles to their name?

    “It’s clear minds, it’s energy, it’s belief and confidence that comes from evidence, doesn’t it?” Gillespie surmised.

    “The evidence is there – Australia have been there and done that. They’ve succeeded in all conditions all over the world.

    “And what that evidence does is it gives you confidence. It gives you the belief.

    “That’s what the Australian dressing room’s about. And it’s representing our wonderful country. It’s the steps you take to get there. It’s the fabric of what we’re about and how we go about things.

    “I’m all buzzing. I’m really excited for this World Cup final – I think it’s going to be an absolute humdinger.

    “Give India credit, they’ve been incredible, and deservedly should be favourites for this game. But Australia have been at the big dance many, many times, and they’ve won many, many times.

    “India haven’t done that many, many times.

    “I reckon there’s a real chance that Australia could just pull off one of the great upsets.”

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  • Watched by Beckham, Kohli hits record 50th ton as India makes 397-4 vs NZ in Cricket World Cup semis

    Watched by Beckham, Kohli hits record 50th ton as India makes 397-4 vs NZ in Cricket World Cup semis

    MUMBAI, India — Virat Kohli hit a record-breaking 117 to thrill a packed Mumbai crowd containing soccer great David Beckham and help India post a daunting 397-4 against New Zealand in the Cricket World Cup semifinals on Wednesday.

    Kohli reached his record 50th century in one-day internationals, surpassing the mark he shared with countryman Sachin Tendulkar, who was also at the game.

    India skipper Rohit Sharma won the important toss and opted to bat first.

    Shreyas Iyer scored his second consecutive hundred in the tournament – 105 off 70 balls – as India reached the highest score in a World Cup knockout game.

    The Wankhede Stadium was packed for a special occasion with a galaxy of cricket, soccer and Bollywood stars in attendance.

    Beckham attended the game as a UNICEF goodwill ambassador.

    Tendulkar had scored 49 hundreds in 452 ODI innings, while Kohli got to this milestone in 279 innings. Kohli reached his 50th ODI 100 off 106 balls in the 42nd over, jumping with joy and then bowing down to his cricket idol Tendulkar.

    Kohli put on 93 runs with Shubman Gill (80), who retired hurt after scoring 79 off 65 balls. Then Kohli put on 163 runs off 128 balls with Iyer.

    The teams are known adversaries at this stage of the World Cup — it is a repeat first semifinal from 2019, when New Zealand beat India by 18 runs in a rain-affected game spanning two days. Like four years ago, India finished the league stage atop the standings. It won all nine games to finish with a perfect score of 18.

    New Zealand, the runners-up in 2019, finished fourth after the first stage with five wins from nine games – winning its first four, then losing four on the bounce before a victory in its last game against Sri Lanka confirmed qualification for the knockouts.

    New Zealand retained the same XI from that win for the semifinal.

    India has also fielded an unchanged lineup from its win over over the Netherlands on Sunday.

    South Africa and Australia will contest the second semifinal at Kolkata on Thursday.

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    AP cricket: https://apnews.com/hub/cricket

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  • Virat Kohli scores 50th ODI hundred to break Sachin Tendulkar’s record

    Virat Kohli scores 50th ODI hundred to break Sachin Tendulkar’s record

    Kohli scored his 50th hundred in the ICC Cricket World Cup semifinal against New Zealand at Mumbai.

    India’s Virat Kohli has scored his 50th one-day international (ODI) hundred to break fellow countryman Sachin Tendulkar’s record.

    The former India captain hit his 50th century in the ICC Cricket World Cup semifinal against New Zealand at Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai on Wednesday.

    Kohli reached the milestone on 106 balls, hitting eight fours and two sixes in the first knockout match of the tournament.

    India were 71-1 when he arrived in the middle after captain Rohit Sharma’s dismissal.

    Kohli celebrated his 35th birthday by scoring his 49th century, that brought him level with Tendulkar, in the match against South Africa earlier this month.

    The Delhi-born batter reached his fifty from 59 balls with four boundaries and a six, which came off Tim Southee.

    Kohli reached his 50th ODI hundred in his 279th match, while Tendulkar required 452 to reach 49 centuries.

    Rohit is third on the list of ODI century makers, with 31 from 253 innings.

    Kohli made 12 on his India debut in 2008 when opening the innings as the side were bowled out by Sri Lanka for 146 ahead of an eight-wicket defeat in Dambulla.

    Three years later, at the Wankhede Stadium, Kohli would lift the ICC Cricket World Cup, alongside Tendulkar, as India overcame co-hosts Sri Lanka by six wickets.

    Kohli made his Test debut in 2011, scoring 4 and 15 against the West Indies in Jamaica, and has gone one to score 29 centuries in 111 matches.

    He also has one century in 115 T20 internationals.

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  • India beat Netherlands for perfect Cricket World Cup group stage win record

    India beat Netherlands for perfect Cricket World Cup group stage win record

    Iyer and Rahul tons help India to a 160-run win over the Netherlands, who finish at the bottom of the group standings.

    Shreyas Iyer and KL Rahul hit hundreds as Cricket World Cup hosts India geared up for the semifinals with a crushing 160-run victory over the Netherlands to keep their 100 percent record intact with nine group wins.

    After their colleagues had departed following breezy fifties on a good M Chinnaswamy Stadium track, Iyer (128 not out) struck his fourth one-day international (ODI) ton before Rahul (102) exploded as the duo lit up the stage on the Hindu festival of Diwali to get India to 410-4 on Sunday.

    Requiring a record World Cup chase to win, the bottom-placed Dutch side got good starts from Max O’Dowd (30), Colin Ackermann (35), Sybrand Engelbrecht (45) and Teja Nidamanuru (54), but they never threatened and were dismissed for 250 in 47.5 overs.

    Mohammed Siraj (2-29) overcame a throat injury suffered in a dropped catch to dazzle alongside Kuldeep Yadav (2-41), Jasprit Bumrah (2-33) and Ravindra Jadeja (2-49) to secure victory for India, who face New Zealand in the semifinals on Wednesday.

    Iyer reached his century in 84 balls and finished with 10 fours and five sixes while Rahul needed only 62 balls for his ton, getting there with two huge sixes in the last over that took India past 400.

    The duo forged a 208-run partnership – the highest fourth-wicket stand in World Cups – as India scored 126 runs in their final 10 overs to post the third total above 400 in the event.

    India put the Netherlands to the sword after winning the toss and opting to bat as skipper Rohit Sharma (61) and Shubman Gill (51) smashed boundaries at will to give them a superb platform with 91 runs in the powerplay.

    Gill was severe on the bowlers with three fours and four sixes, but the world’s top-ranked batsman found the man in the deep while taking on a short one from Paul van Meekeren after reaching his 12th half-century.

    INTERACTIVE - Men's World Cup-prize-money-trophy-award-winner-2023-1695558421

    The Netherlands chipped away and were rewarded when Bas de Leede had Rohit caught at wide long-on, but Virat Kohli (51) and Iyer took India past 200 runs in the 29th over with a 71-run stand.

    Kohli delighted the crowd with a wide array of shots after a shaky start to his quest to reach 50 ODI tons and eclipse Sachin Tendulkar’s record, but Roelof van der Merwe briefly silenced fans by breaking his stumps with a flatter one.

    Still, Kohli surpassed South Africa’s Quinton de Kock (591) as the leading batsman of the 2023 tournament with 594 runs.

    In reply, the Dutch were never in the chase and kept losing regular wickets including Kohli striking with his gentle medium-pace to claim a first ODI wicket in nine years.

    With the Dutch crawling in their reply, Rohit threw the ball to Kohli who sent back opposition captain Scott Edwards, caught behind in his second over off a ball drifting down the leg side.

    It was only Kohli’s fifth career ODI wicket and first since 2014.

    The innings folded in 47.5 overs with Rohit ending using his part-time off spin to send back Nidamanuru.

    Rohit last picked an ODI wicket in 2012 and this was only his 10th career wicket.

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  • Who has made it through to the Cricket World Cup semifinals?

    Who has made it through to the Cricket World Cup semifinals?

    The semifinals will be played on November 15 and 16, with the final taking place on November 19.

    After 45 games of round-robin cricket over more than five weeks, 10 teams have finally been whittled down to four at the 2023 Cricket World Cup.

    Hosts India topped the standings and will play fourth-placed New Zealand in the first semifinal. Second place South Africa take on third-placed Australia in the other.

    The final will take place at the vast Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad on November 19.

    There will be no third-place playoff this year.

    Check out the semifinal schedule below:

    November 15

    India vs New Zealand, 2pm local time (08:30 GMT) – Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai

    November 16

    South Africa vs Australia, 2pm local time (08:30 GMT) Eden Gardens, Kolkata

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  • India’s star all-rounder Hardik Pandya out of Cricket World Cup with injury

    India’s star all-rounder Hardik Pandya out of Cricket World Cup with injury

    Fast bowler Prasidh Krishna called up in his place after Pandya missed India’s past three games with ankle injury.

    India vice-captain Hardik Pandya has been ruled out of the remainder of the 2023 Cricket World Cup with an ankle injury.

    Pandya, 30, was injured trying to stop the ball with his left foot off his own bowling in India’s win over Bangladesh on October 19.

    The all-rounder missed India’s past three games and fast bowler Prasidh Krishna has now been called up in his place.

    “Tough to digest the fact that I will miss out on the remaining part of the World Cup,” Pandya posted on messaging platform X, formerly known as Twitter on Saturday.

    “I’ll be with the team, in spirit, cheering them on every ball of every game.

    “Thanks for all the wishes, the love, and the support has been incredible.

    “This team is special and I’m sure we’ll make everyone proud.”

    The balance that Hardik, who picked up five wickets at the tournament, brought to the Indian side was seen as crucial to the hosts’ hopes of lifting the trophy.

    Victories against England, New Zealand and Sri Lanka without him have quelled many fears.

    Mohammed Shami, 33, has been the player that India have turned to so far to fill the gap left by Pandya and the right-arm seamer has claimed 14 wickets in those three matches.

    Krishna, 27, has played in 17 one-day internationals and two Twenty20s for India claiming 33 wickets.

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  • Clinical India beat Pakistan to maintain perfect Cricket World Cup record

    Clinical India beat Pakistan to maintain perfect Cricket World Cup record

    India steamrollered Pakistan by seven wickets in a lopsided blockbuster match at a heaving Narendra Modi Stadium to maintain their unblemished 50-overs World Cup record against their archrivals.

    The western Indian city had been in the grip of cricket fever ahead of the tournament’s most anticipated match on Saturday, and India got themselves in the driving seat early by bundling out their opponents for 191 inside 43 overs.

    With Babar Azam (50) and Muhammad Rizwan (49) in the middle, a total of about 300 looked within Pakistan’s reach, only for them to collapse in a heap, failing to last their full 50 overs.

    India’s skipper Rohit Sharma led the chase with a blistering 86, and the two-time champions eventually romped home in 30.3 overs to maintain their unbeaten record against Pakistan in the history of the tournament.

    They also joined 2019 runners-up New Zealand as the only two teams to win their first three matches in the tournament so far.

    Indian fast bowler Jasprit Bumrah was player of the match with figures of 2-19 off nine overs.

    Rohit hit the ball to all parts of the ground with his delightful flicks and pulls to entertain an almost all-Indian crowd at the world’s biggest cricket stadium after Pakistanis were effectively banned from attending.

    India lost Shubman Gill and Virat Kohli – both for 16 – before Rohit and Shreyas Iyer, who hit the winning four to reach 53, put on 77 runs for the third wicket and placed India comfortably on course for victory.

    Rohit fell attempting another hit off Shaheen Shah Afridi to get caught at mid-wicket, but Iyer and KL Rahul took the team home with ease.

    Bowlers set up victory after India elected to field and Bumrah, Kuldeep Yadav, Mohammed Siraj, Hardik Pandya and Ravindra Jadeja took two wickets each.

    Pakistan were bowled out in 42.5 overs, losing eight wickets for 36 runs in 80 balls. They now have two wins and one defeat in the 10-nation tournament.

    ‘One of those days’

    The total was Pakistan’s third lowest against India in the World Cup after their 173 in Sydney (1992) and 180 at Manchester (1999).

    Pakistan started strongly but lost their openers before skipper Azam and Rizwan attempted to rebuild and hit back in their stand of 82.

    Azam reached his 50 off 57 balls with a boundary but fell in the next over, bowled by Siraj as the crowd roared to see the back of the world’s number-one ODI batsman.

    Yadav soon struck twice in an over to send back the left-handed Saud Shakeel and Iftikhar Ahmed, bowled around the legs for four after the ball deflected off the batsman’s gloves.

    Bumrah denied Rizwan his 50 with a slower-off cutter that rattled the stumps as Pakistan slipped to 168-6.

    Player of the match Jasprit Bumrah took 2-19 [Amit Dave/Reuters]

    Playing in front of his home crowd, Bumrah had a spring in his step and struck again in the next over to get Shadab Khan out for two before Pandya and Jadeja combined to wrap up the tail.

    “You try to analyse the wicket as soon as possible so when we started bowling, we came to know that the wicket was on the slower side and a hard length would make run-scoring more difficult,” Bumrah said after the match.

    “There was no consistent turn but it was turning a little bit and I count my slower ball as a spinner so I thought it might be an option. I was trying to do that and it gripped – it was one of those days.”

    Pakistan captain Babar rued his side’s batting collapse.

    “We started well. We had a good partnership [with Rizwan]. We planned to play normal cricket and build a partnership. Suddenly we had a collapse in the middle overs, and we didn’t finish well.

    “With the new ball we were not up to the mark. If we were it might have been a different situation. If we took early wickets, we could have won the match.”

    The hotly-anticipated match raised enormous interest, with city hotels booked and desperate fans even booking full-body checkups at local hospitals to be sure of a place to sleep.

    A prominent hotel in the city usually charges 6,000 rupees ($72) for a deluxe room, but on Friday, Saturday and Sunday the price for a day had been hiked to 70,000 rupees ($841).

    Only a trickle of Pakistanis, many expatriates, made it to the game after fans from across the border endured visa delays.

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  • Five big names who will miss the 2023 Cricket World Cup

    Five big names who will miss the 2023 Cricket World Cup

    For professional athletes, representing their country in a global sporting event is usually their driving ambition and winning it is the crowning glory of their careers.

    For most cricketers, the one-day international (ODI) World Cup is such a tournament, but many top-class players miss out on the quadrennial tournament – often because of injury, but sometimes due to tactical decisions or bust-ups.

    Here are five top players who are missing out on the 2023 ICC Cricket World Cup, hosted by India from October 5 to November 19.

    Tamim Iqbal: Bangladesh

    Bangladesh’s most prolific batsman in the ODI format and one of their all-time greats was left out when the squad was announced belatedly last week. Selectors said the 34-year-old’s persistent back injury forced him out of the final squad as they didn’t want to “take a risk” in the 46-day tournament.

    The left-handed opener has scored 8,357 runs, including 14 centuries, in 243 ODIs for the South Asian side, but has been in and out of the side over the past few years due to injury. He announced and then reversed a shock retirement earlier this year.

    A day after Bangladesh named their squad, the former captain lashed out at the board for “creating barriers” preventing his inclusion. The drama continued as Bangladesh’s captain Shakib Al Hasan called Iqbal’s statements “childish and immature”.

    Given the controversy, the batter’s injuries and age, it is unlikely that he will be part of Bangladesh’s squad in the 2028 edition of the tournament.

    Naseem Shah: Pakistan

    Shah has been a key component of Pakistan’s recent bowling attack, ably sharing the responsibility of opening the bowling with Shaheen Shah Afridi. The 20-year-old keeps the batters in check from one end at an impressive economy rate of 4.68 in 14 matches, while Afridi attacks from the other.

    Shah has also built a reputation for finishing off run chases when he comes in to bat lower down the order – just ask Afghanistan.

    But Pakistan were forced leave Shah out of the World Cup squad after he suffered a major shoulder injury during Pakistan’s Asia Cup match against India last month. He is likely to be out injured for three to four months, according to Pakistan’s selectors.

    Jason Roy: England

    It was a roller coaster of emotions for Roy as he was named in England’s provisional World Cup squad, then left out when the defending champions named their final 15.

    Roy was a vital member of England’s white-ball revolution that began under former captain Eoin Morgan after a dismal run at the 2015 edition, and he was one of their leading run scorers (443 runs in seven matches) when they turned things around to win their first World Cup four years later at Lord’s.

    The 33-year-old opening batter has not been a permanent fixture in the England side due to injury and missed out on making a case for his inclusion in the World Cup squad as he suffered back spasms during last month’s ODI series against New Zealand.

    England’s coach Matthew Mott said Roy’s exclusion from the squad was “the toughest decision” he has made and insisted that the batter was happy to be among the reserves for the tournament.

    Captain Jos Buttler said the “brutal nature of sport” means that good players often miss out on big tournaments.

    Jason Roy, centre, was a key member of England’s 2019 World Cup winning squad [File: Andrew Boyers/Action Images via Reuters]

    Wanindu Hasaranga: Sri Lanka

    Hasaranga has earned a reputation as Sri Lanka’s biggest cricket star of the past few years.

    The lethal leg-spinning all-rounder has three five-wicket hauls amongst his 67 wickets in ODI cricket, backed up with four half-centuries in 832 runs.

    But the all-rounder suffered an injury during the Asia Cup and was not able to fully recover in time for the squad announcement, Sri Lanka Cricket said in a statement.

    The 26-year-old’s absence will be a major blow to the 1996 champions considering he was the leading wicket-taker in the last two T20 World Cups and has been their most prolific bowler in recent years.

    Hasaranga will be considered as a replacement player should a member of the travelling squad suffer an injury.

    Michael Bracewell: New Zealand

    New Zealand’s 2022 ODI player of the year will miss the tournament due to an Achilles injury suffered during an English county match in June.

    The 32-year-old’s absence has dealt a big blow to the 2019 runners-up, who play the World Cup opener on October 5 against defending champions England.

    Bracewell can bat up and down the order, bowl decent off-spin and is also able to keep wickets. His batting average of 42.5 comes at an impressive strike rate of 118.60 in ODI cricket.

    New Zealand coach Gary Stead said Bracewell is a “great team man”.

    “We’ve seen his exceptional skills in all three facets of the game and he was shaping as an important player for us at the World Cup in India.”

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  • Security concerns hit Pakistan’s World Cup warm-up match in Hyderabad

    Security concerns hit Pakistan’s World Cup warm-up match in Hyderabad

    Indian board says Pakistan’s match to be played behind closed doors due to persisting security concerns.

    Pakistan’s warm-up match against New Zealand ahead of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2023 will be played behind closed doors, the Indian cricket board, hosts of the mega event, says as security concerns and restrictions continue to mar Pakistan’s participation in the tournament nine days before its launch.

    Pakistan and New Zealand are scheduled to play their first pre-tournament match on Friday at Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium in Hyderabad, capital of the southern Indian state of Telangana.

    However, in a statement on Monday, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) said that “the match will 1695719465 take place behind closed doors as per the advice of the local security agencies”.

    It added that the match coincides with “festivals on the day and large gatherings are expected around the city”.

    Tickets for the match, along with nine other warm-up fixtures, went on sale last month, and fans have now been told they will receive a full refund for this match.

    Pakistan decries ‘unequitable treatment’

    The BCCI’s announcement came hours after the Pakistan contingent for the World Cup were finally issued visas less than two days before their departure for India.

    The delay in receiving visas for the players and coaching staff put the team’s plans in disarray with decades-old thorny ties between the two countries coming to the fore once again.

    On Monday, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) had written to the International Cricket Council (ICC), the sport’s world governing body, to raise concerns over the “unequitable treatment towards Pakistan”, a PCB spokesperson told Al Jazeera.

    “It’s a matter of disappointment that Pakistan team has to face uncertainty ahead of the tournament,” the spokesperson said.

    Last month, the tournament’s marquee group stage match between India and Pakistan in Ahmedabad was rescheduled to a day earlier, on October 14, after local police said they would not be able to provide adequate security.

    The original date for the match clashed with the first day of the Hindu festival of Navaratri, local police said after the tournament’s schedule was announced.

    Cricket fans in Pakistan have said they are facing long delays in acquiring visas for India and have been slammed with restrictions on their movement should they travel across the border to watch the matches.

    “Our travel agent has told us we will not be allowed to go anywhere except the stadium and our hotel once we reach Ahmedabad,” Khursheed Ali, a Pakistan supporter, told Al Jazeera.

    “Who would want to travel under such restrictions? We want to go and explore our neighbouring country but simply can’t.”

    Pakistan and India have been bitter rivals since their independence from British rule in 1947. They have fought three wars since and have stern restrictions on cross-border movements of their citizens.

    Direct flights between India and Pakistan have been suspended for more than four years after a souring of ties over New Delhi’s move to revoke the semiautonomous status of Indian-administered Kashmir.

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  • Soccer official says the India-Pakistan game could be a turning point for sports

    Soccer official says the India-Pakistan game could be a turning point for sports

    Cricket contests between India and Pakistan are difficult to organize but soccer may have shown the region’s most popular sport how to build bridges.

    The national football teams met Wednesday for the first time since 2014, with Sunil Chhetri scoring a hat-trick as No. 101-ranked India beat No. 195-ranked Pakistan 4-0 at Bangalore in the opening game of the South Asian championship.

    There may have been an on-field brawl after India coach Igor Stimac was red carded for preventing Pakistan from taking a throw-in late in the first half, but just having the game at all was a cause for satisfaction at a time of so much uncertainty in cricket ahead of the World Cup.

    “It could be a turning point,” Haroon Malik, leader of the committee running the Pakistan Football Federation, told The Associated Press in the wake of the game. “Football unites the world and we need to enjoy playing each other and we need to have fun.

    “The emotion of playing India is always special.”

    That’s certainly the case in cricket, where both teams are among the world’s elite. The last India-Pakistan cricket encounter was at the World Twenty20 tournament in Australia last October, when more than 90,200 fans packed the Melbourne Cricket Ground to witness India scrape to a narrow, last-ball victory.

    It’s not lost on anyone that most recent meetings have been on neutral turf.

    India and Pakistan have met in only 60 test matches dating back to 1952, a remarkably low figure considering the proximity of the countries.

    The last bilateral test series was in late 2007, when India hosted three tests, and the last time India traveled to India for a test series was in early 2006.

    In the limited-overs format, the last eight one-day international meetings have been on neutral turf — including World Cup group games at Adelaide, Australia in 2015 and at Manchester, England in 2019.

    India’s cricketers haven’t played in Pakistan since July 2008, less than a year before a terrorist attack on the Sri Lankan team’s bus during a test match at Lahore in 2009. International cricket was suspended in Pakistan until Zimbabwe toured in 2015. New Zealand, England and Australia have all toured there in the last 18 months but India indicated last October it would not travel to Pakistan to play in the Asia Cup in August and September.

    On June 15, the Asian Cricket Council announced that the six-nation tournament will be split between Pakistan and Sri Lanka, where India is expected to play its games.

    In response, Pakistan hasn’t yet approved its team to travel to India for the 50-over World Cup, which is due to start in October.

    There were no heavy overtones for soccer’s South Asian Cup, although Pakistan players only received their visas two days before the game and there were some travel delays which disrupted match preparations.

    Soccer’s world governing body, FIFA, last July ended Pakistan’s 15-month suspension for “third-party interference” and retained Malik as head of the “normalizing committee” running the national federation after years of infighting by groups of officials

    The national team comprises Pakistani players from lower-tier leagues around the world, meaning little time for overseas and domestic-based players to practice together before events such as the SAFF tournament.

    “For the record, the governments of India and Pakistan have been super supportive” Malik said. “It would not have happened otherwise. It took longer than it should have, but there were processes that had to be completed and were completed.”

    The All India Football Federation declined to comment on the proceedings but has been supportive.

    “The AIFF has gone all out to have us come and play and the South Asian Football Federation has been actively assisting too,” Malik said. “The spirit of unity is an important part of any sport and I hope that football can lead the way.”

    It could take some time for the spirit of unity to be restored in cricket.

    Former Pakistan captain Javed Miandad told reporters earlier this week that Pakistan should not play at the ICC Cricket World Cup if India does not visit first for the Asian tournament.

    “We should refuse until they visit,” Miandad said. “Sports is something which strengthens ties and builds relations. But, I strongly believe that until India come to Pakistan, we have no reason to go there either.”

    ___

    AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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  • Sports pitch for level playing field in cricket-mad Pakistan

    Sports pitch for level playing field in cricket-mad Pakistan

    ISLAMABAD (AP) — On Islamabad’s outskirts, burly men bind together in a scrum on a rugby pitch that has seen better days. The sign bearing the club’s name is worn. The floodlights are too costly to use, given high electricity prices and the paltry $135 total that the club earns in membership fees every month.

    Watching the players, coach Mohammed Zahir Uddin said ruefully: “There’s only one game in Pakistan.”

    That would be cricket, the country’s most popular sport, a juggernaut when it comes to sponsorship, broadcasting rights and capturing the public’s imagination.

    Cricket has totally eclipsed other sports, even ones Pakistan excelled at. Field hockey, Pakistan’s national sport, once propelled the country to Olympic gold and global glory, but it has waned in popularity and participation. Pakistan dominated the squash world for decades, only to become a shadow of its former self.

    Prospects are even bleaker for a sport like rugby, which has no heyday or heroes in Pakistan.

    “There’s no support from the bodies that there ought to be in terms of funding, spreading the word,” said Hammad Safdar, who captains Pakistan’s national rugby team. “The majority of sports have the same issue. That’s why, in terms of performance, in the later stages when there’s a test, we lack because there’s no foundation.”

    Pakistan hosts the South Asian Games next year, the biggest sporting tournament to be held in the country for 20 years. It won 143 medals the last time it hosted, including 38 gold. But years of neglect of sports could affect its medal tally this time.

    Advocates of sports under cricket’s shadow say they don’t have the environment to thrive or take top prizes, with a lack of investment and interest. Even universally loved soccer has its struggles in Pakistan. Infighting and government interference have led to suspensions from the global body FIFA, stunting its growth at home and chances overseas.

    Pakistan, with a population of 220 million, has a national government sports budget of around $15.3 million, far smaller than others in the region. The Pakistan Sports Board, which oversees all sports in the country and their federations, did not respond to interview requests.

    Rugby gets no government money but a grant from the global rugby body. If it needs more, it asks the chairman or president of the Pakistan Rugby Union to give from their own pockets.

    The national rugby pitch in the eastern city of Lahore is on army land. It lacks changing rooms. It has no seating, so organizers rent chairs for tournaments. Rugby development coach Shakeel Malik concedes it’s hard to attract funding without results, but that it’s hard to get results without funding.

    Cricket, which gets no government funding, has a budget of around $66 million. It shot into the stratosphere with a 1992 World Cup win by a national team captained by Imran Khan, who later went on to enter politics and served as prime minister from 2018-2022.

    Pakistan has never dominated cricket the way it once did in in squash and hockey; it has only two world championships to its name, and the national team is notoriously unpredictable. But it’s a big business with infrastructure to nurture talent, a thirst for empire building, rampant commercialism, and a steady supply of domestic and international matches for TV. It’s so embedded in Pakistani life that the prime minister approves the appointment of the cricket board chairman.

    Its rise in the 1990s coincided with the beginning of the end for hockey and squash.

    Pakistan was the superpower of squash for decades, winning the British Open 17 years in a row by 1963. Specifically, one family, the Khans, ruled the sport. The last of the dynasty — Jahangir Khan, a former World No. 1 racket-wielding machine — was unbeaten for hundreds of matches. He won the British Open 10 years in a row until his final victory in 1991.

    Khan told The Associated Press that even he doesn’t understand how the family amassed as many trophies as they did, without facilities and investment. “Even today, Pakistan’s name comes first in squash, and so does this family’s name,” he said, speaking at the squash complex named after him in Karachi.

    He’s pained by its decline. Pakistan is now 65th in the world men’s squash rankings. Khan said the sport failed to build on his family’s legacy.

    He argues that mismanagement had undermined the sport and that players need to show more achievement to attract sponsorship. “If people have set a bar, it’s up to you to make the most of it and build on it. Funding is not a solution. You produced a world champion when you had nothing.”

    And there is also cricket’s stranglehold. “It’s not necessary to have all the talent playing one thing,” he said.

    In the heyday of field hockey, people turned out in the tens of thousands to watch matches, said Samiullah Khan, a player who helped win Pakistan a stack of medals in the sport at the Olympics, World Cup and Asian Games until the 1990s.

    “It hurts my heart” to see the current state of hockey, he said. He said Pakistan’s teams didn’t adjust to changes like the synthetic turf and rule-changes in Europe that, in his view, turned the sport into “a free-for-all.”

    “Hockey became like any other sport, like rugby. The power left, the skill left,” he said.

    But there is hope, and a love that lingers for hockey. In a Karachi suburb, about a dozen young women pad up for practice on a team with the Karachi Hockey Association.

    Kashmala Batool, 30, has been playing hockey for almost half her life. “It’s our national game,” she said. “Despite it not getting support or government funding, the enjoyment we get playing our national game can’t be found in any other.”

    Shazma Naseem, the goalkeeper, started out in college and has been playing at the national level for five years. She sees the enthusiasm her parents still have for the sport and feels a duty to keep it going.

    “It’s absolutely our job, to have played hockey so well, to have made our name in it, so that future generations know about hockey, that this is also a game.”

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