Naseem Shah returns to red-ball cricket as Pakistan names test squad for Bangladesh series

Naseem Shah returns to red-ball cricket as Pakistan names test squad for Bangladesh series
Pakistan's Naseem Shah (R) celebrates with his captain Babar Azam after taking the wicket of India's Shardul Thakur (not pictured) during the Asia Cup 2023 one-day international (ODI) cricket match between India and Pakistan at the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium in Kandy on September 2, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 07 August 2024
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Naseem Shah returns to red-ball cricket as Pakistan names test squad for Bangladesh series

Naseem Shah returns to red-ball cricket as Pakistan names test squad for Bangladesh series
  • Rawalpindi will host the first test from Aug. 21-25 while the second test match will be played at Karachi from Aug. 30-Sept. 3
  • PCB said Bangladesh will arrive in Pakistan on Aug. 17 for two-test series that is part of ICC’s World Test Championship

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan fast bowler Naseem Shah has returned to red-ball cricket after 13 months as the selectors on Wednesday named a 17-member squad for this month’s home test series against Bangladesh.

Rawalpindi will host the first test from Aug. 21-25 while the second test match will be played at Karachi from Aug. 30-Sept. 3.

The Pakistan Cricket Board said Bangladesh’s test team will arrive in Pakistan on Aug. 17 for the two-test series which is part of ICC’s World Test Championship.

Political unrest in Bangladesh has already delayed the departure of its men’s A cricket team to Pakistan by at least 48 hours. Bangladesh A was due to arrive in Islamabad on Wednesday for two four-day games and three 50-over white-ball matches against Pakistan Shaheens from Aug. 10-27.

“The PCB has been in contact with the Bangladesh Cricket Board and it is expected that the revised schedule of the Pakistan Shaheens versus Bangladesh ‘A’ series will be announced shortly,” the PCB said in a statement.

Shan Masood will captain Pakistan against Bangladesh in the test series while middle-order batter Saud Shakeel was named vice-captain in place of Shaheen Shah Afridi.

The selectors recalled fast bowler Mohammad Ali, who last played against England in 2022, while uncapped batters Mohammad Hurraira and Ghulam Ali were rewarded for their outstanding performances in domestic cricket.

Opening batter Imam-ul-Haq, allrounder Faheem Ashraf, left-arm spinners Mohammad Nawaz and Noman Ali and offspinner Sajid Khan, who toured Australia earlier this year, were dropped while fast bowlers Mohammad Wasim and Hasan Ali were not considered due to injuries.
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Pakistan squad: Shan Masood (captain), Saud Shakeel, Aamir Jamal (subject to fitness), Abdullah Shafique, Abrar Ahmed, Babar Azam, Kamran Ghulam, Khurram Shahzad, Mir Hamza, Mohammad Ali, Muhammad Hurraira, Mohammad Rizwan, Naseem Shah, Saim Ayub, Salman Ali Agha, Sarfaraz Ahmed, Shaheen Shah Afridi.


LIV Golf to tee off 2025 season in Saudi Arabia

LIV Golf to tee off 2025 season in Saudi Arabia
Updated 04 September 2024
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LIV Golf to tee off 2025 season in Saudi Arabia

LIV Golf to tee off 2025 season in Saudi Arabia
  • Riyadh, Adelaide, Hong Kong and Singapore to host first 4 events of the league’s third full season

RIYADH: LIV Golf has announced that the league will launch its third full season in February 2025, teeing off in marquee global markets across Asia, Australia and the Middle East.

Fans can sign up to LIV X for free to receive exclusive access to tickets, including pre-sale information on hospitality and grounds passes for events featuring team and individual competitions, live music and activities for all ages.

“As we set our sights on 2025, LIV Golf is gearing up for our most ambitious season start, to date,” said LIV Golf Commissioner and CEO Greg Norman.

He said that since the tournament’s debut in 2022, LIV Golf has played 34 tournaments in nine different countries across four continents.

“We are a global league with a global footprint, and we’re excited to kick off next season with four truly international events that will deliver our unique blend of elite golf, entertainment and culture to fans around the world.”

The league will begin the 2025 season Feb. 6 to 8 with LIV Golf Riyadh, marking its debut in Saudi Arabia’s capital city.

The Riyadh Golf Club venue will host events including the Aramco Team Series, the Saudi Open presented by the PIF, and the PIF Saudi International powered by SoftBank Investment Advisers in December.

From Feb. 14 to 16, the league will return to The Grange Golf Club for LIV Golf Adelaide, reigning winner of the World’s Best Golf Event at the World Golf Awards.

This past April, the tournament welcomed more than 94,000 fans to the South Australia venue which reset the bar for LIV Golf fandom across the three days.

The event saw the return of the popular Watering Hole on the par-3 No. 12, had a standout performance by individual champion Brendan Steele, and played host to the league’s first team playoff, won by the all-Australian Ripper GC and captain Cam Smith.

Two weeks after Adelaide, the league will have its second consecutive year of competition at Hong Kong Golf Club from March 7 to 9.

Annual host to some of the region’s most prestigious golf events for the last 60 years, Hong Kong Golf Club will be a challenging test for the sport’s biggest stars, including defending individual champion Abraham Ancer as well as team champions Crushers GC and captain Bryson DeChambeau.

The following week, from March 14 to 16, LIV Golf will return to Sentosa Golf Club for the third consecutive year of LIV Golf Singapore. The event will have reigning individual champion Brooks Koepka and team champion Ripper GC attempt to defend their titles on the club’s Serapong course, recently voted the World’s Best Golf Course.

LIV Golf’s 2024 regular season concludes next week in Illinois at LIV Golf Chicago, from Sept. 13 to 15 at Bolingbrook Golf Club.

The following week, the 13 teams travel to Texas for the season-ending LIV Golf Dallas Team Championship, from Sept. 20 to 22 at Maridoe Golf Club.


Judd Trump was ‘thinking about going home’ before sensational comeback in Riyadh

 Judd Trump was ‘thinking about going home’ before sensational comeback in Riyadh
Updated 04 September 2024
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Judd Trump was ‘thinking about going home’ before sensational comeback in Riyadh

 Judd Trump was ‘thinking about going home’ before sensational comeback in Riyadh

RIYADH: Judd Trump sealed a sensational comeback win at the Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters on Tuesday, rallying from 4-0 behind to beat Wu Yize 5-4.

The world No. 1 was staring defeat in the face at the mid-session as China’s Wu surged ahead, moving within touching distance of a stunning upset.

But Trump — who admitted afterward that he was “thinking about going home” and looking for flights back to the UK — stormed back in the second half of the match.

The former world champion — nicknamed “The Ace in the Pack” — returned from the break in blistering form, reeling off a century break and three half-centuries to level the tie.

He then clinched victory in the decider, setting up a highly anticipated last-16 showdown against his great friend and world No. 19 Jack Lisowski on Wednesday.

Live from the Green Halls, Riyadh, Tuesday’s action saw the world’s top-16 players enter the competition after qualifying for round five automatically.

Seven-time world champion Ronnie O’Sullivan booked his place in the last 16 with a 5-1 win against Lei Peifan, 2024 world champion Kyren Wilson overcame Lui Hongyu, and Neil Robertson claimed a big win against Mark Selby.

The Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters continues on Wednesday with eight matches to determine the quarterfinal lineup.


Bangladesh revels in ‘Tigers burning bright’ after Pakistan triumph

Bangladesh revels in ‘Tigers burning bright’ after Pakistan triumph
Updated 04 September 2024
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Bangladesh revels in ‘Tigers burning bright’ after Pakistan triumph

Bangladesh revels in ‘Tigers burning bright’ after Pakistan triumph
  • Bangladesh’s first-ever Test series win over Pakistan seen as victory to savor a month after unrest ousted autocratic PM Sheikh Hasina
  • Yunus took over after Sheikh Hasina fled to India as protesters marched on her palace in Dhaka to end 15 years of iron-fisted rule last month

DHAKA: Bangladesh’s new leader led the celebrations after a first-ever Test series win over Pakistan, with commentators calling it a victory to savour a month after unrest ousted the autocratic former premier.
“Heartiest congratulations on behalf of the government and myself,” 84-year-old Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhummad Yunus told captain Najmul Hossain Shanto in a phone call after the win on Tuesday.
“The whole nation is proud of you,” he added, according to a statement from the office of Yunus, after the 2-0 clean sweep over Pakistan was sealed with a tense six-wicket victory in Rawalpindi.
Yunus took over after Sheikh Hasina fled to India as protesters marched on her palace in Dhaka to end 15 years of iron-fisted rule.
The Dhaka Tribune splashed across its front page a photograph of the grinning team above a signboard with the simple message: “Winners.”
“The Tigers are burning bright,” the newspaper commented, praising an “emphatic victory.”
“There is genuine hope that, much as Bangladesh is experiencing a new beginning after the fall of the Sheikh Hasina government on August 5, this could be the dawn of a new era for Bangladesh cricket,” it added.
“This series win is emblematic of broader transformation within Bangladesh,” it read, saying the victory embodied the “resilience, determination, and the spirit of a nation that wants to achieve more than what was expected of it.”
Bangladesh won independence from Pakistan in 1971.
It was Shakib al Hasan, 37, who lost his job as a lawmaker for Hasina’s Awami League party after the student-led revolution, who hit the winning runs on Tuesday to spark jubilation.
“We can’t express feelings with words, we are really happy,” said captain Najmul. “I think before we came here we were looking to win, and the way everyone did their job made me really happy.”
Dhaka’s Daily Star newspaper called it a “surreal series victory” and “watershed moment.”
“A triumph spurred by belief,” the Star’s headline read.
“Inside two weeks, Bangladesh dragged themselves out of seemingly unwinnable positions, not once but twice, in foreign conditions against an opponent whom they had lost to 12 times out of 13 previous encounters in Tests,” it added.
Bangladesh next travel to India for A two-match Test series beginning on September 18.
Bangladesh have never won a Test against India in 13 attempts with Najmul calling it a “challenging series.”
But Bangladesh had similarly never beaten Pakistan in 14 matches before their first Test win by 10 wickets, which was also in Rawalpindi.
Political tensions between India and Bangladesh are running high, with 76-year-old Hasina being hosted by old ally New Delhi.
Bangladeshi students who led the uprising are demanding she return from India to be tried for the killing of protesters during the revolt.


Hart beats Baker to Paralympic dressage gold as USA win three equestrian medals

Hart beats Baker to Paralympic dressage gold as USA win three equestrian medals
Updated 04 September 2024
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Hart beats Baker to Paralympic dressage gold as USA win three equestrian medals

Hart beats Baker to Paralympic dressage gold as USA win three equestrian medals
  • Hart’s best previous result at the Paralympics was a team bronze medal in Tokyo
  • Fiona Howard won gold for the US in the Grade II category on Diamond Dunes and Roxanne Trunnell took silver on Fan Tastico H in Grade I — which has the most severely impaired riders

PARIS: Rebecca Hart won the dressage gold medal aboard Floratina at the Paris Paralympics and the US won two other equestrian medals on Tuesday.

Britain’s Natasha Baker, a six-time gold medalist, was the favorite but finished third in the Grade III category for riders with severe impairments in both legs but minimal or no trunk impairment.

“It’s been 25 years of trying to get to this point and being close many, many times,” said the 39-year-old Hart. “To actually get it, I feel like I’m going to wake up at any moment. It’s just surreal. It feels like a dream.”

Hart’s best previous result at the Paralympics was a team bronze medal in Tokyo.

Fiona Howard won gold for the US in the Grade II category on Diamond Dunes and Roxanne Trunnell took silver on Fan Tastico H in Grade I — which has the most severely impaired riders.

“I couldn’t have asked for a better (horse) to do my first Paralympic Games,” the 25-year-old Howard said.

She praised the impact of team veterans Hart and Trunnell, who is also 39.

“It’s helped me so much,” Howard said. “All my teammates have been to at least one (Paralympic) Games and numerous world championships.”

Howard got distracted by her surroundings in the regal gardens at the Palace of Versailles, once the home of French royalty.

“I had to refocus myself,” she said. “It’s such a beautiful venue.”

It was Trunnell’s fourth Paralympic medal after two individual golds and a team bronze at the Tokyo Games in 2021. She contracted a virus in 2009 that caused swelling in her brain and left her needing a wheelchair.

 

US men reach wheelchair basketball semis

The US routed France 82-47 in men’s wheelchair basketball to advance to the semifinals.

The Americans, looking for their third straight gold medal, will face Canada on Thursday for a spot in the final.

Tuning out the spirited French crowd, the Americans never trailed and held France to just 36 percent shooting.

Jake Williams poured in 23 points and had 10 assists, and Brian Bell scored 20 and pulled down 14 rebounds. Christophe Carlier led France with 11 points.

Britain faces Germany in the other semifinal.

 

Two records in the 1,500

Alexandr Kostin won the T12 1,500 meters for athletes with minor visual impairment, in a Paralympic record time of 3 minutes, 44.43 seconds, four seconds faster than the previous mark.

“I haven’t realized that I have won gold yet,” said Kostin, who, as a Russian, is competing as a neutral. “It feels like I’m sleeping through a magical dream.”

Yeltsin Jacques of Brazil also set a record in the T11 1,500 for athletes with severe visual impairments who use guides.

Jacques won in 3:55.82, breaking the world and Paralympic records he set in winning the Tokyo gold.

“After everything I’ve been through — injury, illness — to come here and get a medal, it’s very special,” Jacques said.

 

Cuban wins long jump again

Cuban long jumper Robiel Yankiel Sol Cervantes secured his second consecutive Paralympic gold at 7.41 meters, winning by nine centimeters.

China’s Hao Wang was second and Russia’s Nikita Kotukov third at 7.05 under a neutral banner.

“It means a lot to me to win back-to-back Paralympic titles,” Cervantes said. “I only wish I could have improved my distance because I had trained for that.”

Cervantes dedicated his victory to his late grandmother.

“I have a debt to her because she left me a task that I couldn’t achieve today, to jump eight meters,” Cervantes said. “I was training a lot for that. It wasn’t today, but let’s move on.”

 

China sweep women’s 50m backstroke

In the women’s 50 meters backstroke final, Chinese swimmers took the top three spots.

Lu Dong won the gold medal ahead of He Senggao and Liu Yu in the S5 class, for swimmers with severely impaired movement in the torso and legs or missing limbs.

The 32-year-old Lu, who lost both arms after being hit by a car at the age of six, is now an eight-time gold medalist and has achieved the feat of winning gold at each of the last four Paralympic Games.

“I’m really excited and happy to have the gold again today,” Lu said.

”(Our secret) is to support each other,” He commented when asked about China’s sweep of medal in the category. “That’s how we got all the medals, we support each other.”

The men’s 50 meters backstroke S5 final saw the same scenario as three Chinese swimmers also claimed all three medals.

Yuan Weiyi won the race at La Défense Arena, beating Guo Jincheng and Wang Lichao.


Soler climbs to Vuelta 16th stage honors, O’Connor hangs on to lead

Soler climbs to Vuelta 16th stage honors, O’Connor hangs on to lead
Updated 04 September 2024
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Soler climbs to Vuelta 16th stage honors, O’Connor hangs on to lead

Soler climbs to Vuelta 16th stage honors, O’Connor hangs on to lead
  • Spain’s Soler (UAE Team Emirates) got the measure of Filippo Zana and Briton Max Poole for the stage honors
  • Roglic has put himself in a strong position to claim a record-equalling fourth Vuelta which finishes with a time-trial in Madrid on Sunday

LAKES OF COVDONGA, Spain: Marc Soler emerged from the mountain gloom to claim Tuesday’s Vuelta a Espana 16th stage summit finish, with Ben O’Connor narrowly holding on to the leader’s red jersey.

After Monday’s rest day it was back to work with a vengeance for the peloton, the day’s ride culminating with a daunting 12.8km climb up Lagos de Covadonga at 1,100m altitude.

Spain’s Soler (UAE Team Emirates) got the measure of Filippo Zana and Briton Max Poole for the stage honors.

“This is very special. I haven’t won a lot with this team and so after three years, to win at the Vuelta is special,” said Soler, finally hitting the mark after three third-place finishes in the last week.

O’Connor held on to the red jersey — for at least another day.

But three-time Vuelta winner Primoz Roglic, 11th on the day, sliced almost one minute off his lead.

The Slovenian goes into Wednesday’s 17th stage now just five seconds adrift of the Australian who crossed the line 20th.

Roglic will inevitably be ruing the 20sec penalty he picked up on Sunday for using his team car’s slipstream to help join the pack after a change of bike.

While Soler, O’Connor and Roglic all had reason to celebrate in their own right, Tuesday’s stage proved disastrous for Wout van Aert.

The Belgian, leading the sprinters’ points classification after three stage wins in this year’s race, crashed heavily with around 50km to go.

Despite getting back on his bike he pulled up shortly after, nursing his knee sitting on the bonnet of his Visma team car.

Van Aert has endured a tough 2024, suffering multiple fractures after a bone-crunching high speed fall in March in the Tour of Flanders which forced him to miss the remaining Spring one-day classics.

Roglic, meanwhile, has put himself in a strong position to claim a record-equalling fourth Vuelta which finishes with a time-trial in Madrid on Sunday.

Wednesday’s 17th stage is a 143km ride from Arnuero to Santander with a chance for the sprinters or a breakaway to take the spotlight.