Shrubsole, Taylor put England 1-0 up

ScorecardAnya Shrubsole removed the South Africa top order•Gallo Images

Four wickets for Anya Shrubsole and an unbeaten 41 from Sarah Taylor were the major components of England’s seven-wicket win over South Africa in Benoni, giving new coach Mark Robinson victory in his first match in charge.England’s innings was twice interrupted by rain, with their target eventually revised down to 150 in 35 overs after South Africa had made 196 having chosen to bat first. Amy Jones helped get England’s chase off to a brisk start, hitting six fours in 34 from 27 balls, but she and fellow opener Lauren Winfield fell before the weather closed in with the score on 63 for 2.The target was cut to 194 in 48 overs and England lost captain Charlotte Edwards for 33 before lightning and further rain sent the players off again. On the resumption, Taylor and Heather Knight saw England home with 39 balls to spare.South Africa’s total was based around 90 from opener Trisha Chetty but she did not find enough support from her team-mates. Chetty, who was dropped twice off Katherine Brunt, put on 93 for the second wicket with captain Mignon du Preez but from 119 for 1 they subsided during the final 20 overs to be dismissed with four deliveries left spare.Shrubsole returned to get du Preez for 38 and bagged the first four wickets to fall with her testing inswingers. South Africa lost 5 for 40 before No. 8 Sune Luus provided some resistance but when Knight had Chetty caught behind ten short of a maiden century, the hosts’ hopes of a more imposing total disappeared.The last four wickets fell for 14 in 23 balls as Jenny Gunn and Rebecca Grundy cleaned up the tail before the batsmen avoided major hiccups to put England 1-0 up in the three-match series. Victory also gave England a valuable two points in the ICC Women’s Championship, drawing them level with South Africa in fourth.

Newton confident of New Road future

Worcestershire are confident they have a long-term future at New Road after meetings with the Environment Agency. While the club realise they are not a top priority Mark Newton, the chief executive, was positive about the discussions.”As you would expect, it was a constructive meeting. We totally understand where we are in the list of priorities but the meeting did help us on a number of fronts,” he said. “We are committed to staying at New Road and short term contingency plans are in place if there is another summer flood.”It would be a huge boost if government were to invest hundreds of millions of pounds into flood prevention measures along the River Severn but the reality is people’s homes and personal safety are far more important than a cricket ground. As we do on a regular basis, we will continue our dialogue with the Environment Agency to keep up with future climate change trends.”Cricket returned to New Road earlier this week when Worcestershire took on Warwickshire in a pre-season friendly. It was the first action at the ground since the mid-summer floods last year and the recovery process wasn’t helped when there were further floods during the winter.

Cummins unlikely for Melbourne after 'pretty amazing' Ashes victory

Australia captain Pat Cummins has conceded he is unlikely to feature in the Boxing Day Test and may not play again in the series after his team was able to secure a “pretty amazing” Ashes victory in Adelaide to retain the urn in just 11 days of playing time.For Cummins, who claimed six wickets in the match, it was his first game for five-and-a-half months as he recovered from a back injury and while he said he came through the game well back-to-back Tests was always unlikely for him.”I’m feeling really good, [but] as for the rest of the series we’ll wait and see,” he said. “We had a pretty aggressive build-up knowing that it’s the Ashes there to be won and we thought that was worth it. Now that the series has been won, there might be a sense of job’s done and let’s reassess the risk.Related

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“We’ll work it out over the next couple of days, I doubt I’ll be playing Melbourne, and then we’ll have a chat about Sydney. But certainly before the series it was, while the series was live, let’s take on the risk and have a crack at it, now it’s done, I think we’ll need to have a chat about it.”Jamie Smith and Will Jacks raised the slim prospect of a remarkable England chase on the final day in Adelaide but Australia always had runs in the bank, although had to contend with the loss of Nathan Lyon to what looked like a series-ending hamstring injury.However, Mitchell Starc claimed three wickets on the final day – the vital one of Jacks courtesy of a spectacular catch at first slip by Marnus Labuschagne – and Scott Boland closed out the match.”It feels pretty awesome. Yeah, amazing,” Cummins said at the presentation. “It’s a series we’ve been thinking about for a long time. It wasn’t easy today, but we got it done. It’s a pretty excited changing room in there.”The relentlessness of Australia’s attack stood out throughout the game, while the fielding was superb and Alex Carey produced another masterclass behind the stumps.”I think that’s when we’re at our best, this cricket team,” Cummins said about maintaining the pressure on England. “You can’t really rush things here in Australia. I think you kind of will it to happen, but it doesn’t really work that way. It’s good old-fashioned grind a lot of the time. I loved the toil from all the guys today. It got a little bit closer than I would have liked, but I’m pretty happy.”He also praised the way his team responded to various challenges that came their way, including the loss of Lyon. “I think that’s one of the things I’m most proud about in this group,” he said. “Nothing ever really happens perfectly, there’s always something that gets thrown up.”Over the last few years, this groups have shown [it can] just crack on. Even I missed the first couple of games, Steve stepped right in and it was smooth and seamless. There’s always things that crop up; Nathan Lyon doing his hammy with a couple of hours left today.”The boys just go, okay, that’s happened. Let’s crack on. What’s next? I think that’s one of the big reasons why we’ve had our success over the last couple of years.”On his own comeback, he added: “The last two months have been a bit of a grind. [I gave] myself every chance, but it’s all worth it when you get days like this, packed crowd and retaining the Ashes.”

Inspired Punjab trounce Mumbai

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Brett Lee bowled a matchwinning spell of 4-0-9-1 out of which 75% of his deliveries were dot balls ©
 

Football’s truism – money alone can’t buy you a winning team – found its echo in cricket as the Mumbai Indians, the IPL’s most expensive franchise, lost their third consecutive game in a row to find themselves one place above the bottom of the table. They were outplayed by Kings XI Punjab, who secured their first win of the tournament with a fine team performance studded by some moments of individual brilliance.For all of that, this match had lots for the purist too, as it showed Test skills can be used to great effect in cricket’s newest format. Kumar Sangakkara used classical shots in his innings, while Piyush Chawla bowled attacking legspin to rattle the Mumbai batsmen and concede just 16 runs off four overs.At the toss, Harbhajan Singh explained the decision to field first by saying his side preferred chasing. But their pursuit of a competitive, though not impossible, target was crippled by wickets falling at regular intervals – six of them between the ninth and fifteenth overs – as the line-up, once again lacking Sachin Tendulkar, came up against some inspired Punjab bowling.Leading the line was Brett Lee, who conceded nine runs off his four overs as he mixed scorching pace with athleticism and exuberance to dismiss the Mumbai openers. After going past the 150kph-mark in his first over, he took a brilliant return catch in the next to remove Sanath Jayasuriya before running out Luke Ronchi off the following ball with a fluid diving throw even as the batsman chased after him a yard behind.More athleticism was on display as Yuvraj Singh plucked out a blinding one-handed catch by stretching to left at covers to dismiss Shaun Pollock.At the other end of the spectrum was the teenager Chawla, all twirls and swirls as he bowled Dwayne Bravo and Saurabh Tiwary with deliveries that stayed straight. His figures at the end read two for 16 runs off four, incredible for a spinner in Twenty20.The most consistent display of class and grace came earlier in the day, from Sangakkara. Though he missed getting a hundred, Sangakkara managed to overtake Brendon McCullum as the tournament’s leading run-scorer – and he did it in style.For his first scoring shot, a drive through extra-cover for four, he transferred his weight perfectly from back to front foot and then arrested his follow-through halfway through the shot. Out of place in such a setting, perhaps, but no one was complaining.He used his wrists to great effect; to reach his fifty – off 23 balls – with a cut-glide to point and to flick to fine leg. And the purists would have been delighted when he was joined by Mahela Jayawardene, who thrilled with an equally wrist-driven flick for six to fine leg. Jayawardene, though, didn’t stay for long, and was caught for 12 trying to sweep fine. Yuvraj matched them in grace with a six driven over long-on. The biggest six of the innings, though, was hit by Lee – he lifted a fuller delivery off Dhawal Kulkarni in the final over high in the sky over long-off.But barring Sangakkara, no other Punjab batsman built an innings of consequence – the next highest score was 18. Yet, if you look at their shots, Punjab’s batsmen look like they can entertain and deliver on a good day. Mumbai, on the other hand, will be desperately hoping Sachin Tendulkar is fit for their next match against Deccan Chargers on Sunday.

England Under-19 end first day on happy note

India Under-19 skipper Ajay Ratra won the toss in the first ‘Test’ againstthe England Under-19 and elected to bat at the Wankhede stadium in Mumbaion Tuesday. They were bowled out for 257 in 78.5 overs.In reply, England Under-19 openers Nikki Peng (18) and Gary Pratt (4)negotiated the medium pace duo of Nitin Agarwal and Siddarth Trivedi to endthe day at 24 for no loss off 9 overs.Little could Ratra have realised that his decision to bat would not be ahappy outing for the hosts as they were bowled out in two and a halfsessions. Alind Naidu top scored with 83 while skipper Ajay Ratra chippedin with 43. Kyle Hogg bagged three for 33. He was well complimented byJustin Bishop who took three for 24. Andrew McGarry and Monty Panesarpicked up two wickets each.The first session of the day belonged to the English bowlers as theyrestricted the hosts to 101 for four. Justin Bishop and Kyle Hogg took twowickets each in the session swinging the pendulum towards the tourists.The tempo of the game swung both ways during the day. After the bowlersmade their mark in the first session, the post lunch session saw a bravefightback from the Indian middle order batsmen. Ajay Ratra and Alind Naiduput on a face saving 106-run partnership off 183 balls for the sixthwicket. Ratra played second fiddle in the partnership as he was rotatingthe strike regularly. Naidu on the other hand was more aggressive in hisapproach cutting and pulling anthing bowled short at him. He was confidentof his shots and playing them well, before a lapse in concentration causedhim his wicket and a well deserved century.Some late order resistance came in the form of a quickfire innings fromVidhyut Sivaramakrishnan (18 off nine balls). He hit two massive sixes andone four.The hosts could not hold out the English side as they were dismissed on thefirst day. The tourists in reply batted sensibly, playing out the nineovers before stumps were drawn on the first day. Medium pacer SiddarthTrivedi rapped Gary Pratt on the pads with the first ball of the inningsbut the appeal was turned down by umpire SK Sharma. Nikki Peng was the moreaggressive of the two openers and hit three balls to the fence. Peng waslucky to be at the crease as he was dropped in the slips off the bowling ofNitin Agarwal.

The bouncer that wasn't, and a lot of late spin

Sourav Ganguly lies flat after being copped by Hashim Amla © AFP
 

The bouncer that didn’t bounce
There was concern before the start of the match that this track, given the cracks, might just turn out to be dangerous to the physical well-being of the batsmen. Any such fears were dispelled when Ishant Sharma, bowling between 135-140ks, could get most of his deliveries to end up ankle high for Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who had come up a bit for him. Nothing summed the low bounce better than the attempted bouncer by Ishant in the fourth over. Dug in his own half, the ball came up till Neil McKenzie’s waist, who accepted the unwrapped gift from outside the off stump, and hit it past mid-on.How early is too early?
Given that Sreesanth and Ishant were spraying the new ball around in the first three or four overs, not utilising the low bounce, it was surprising that Dhoni took 47 minutes and eight overs before falling upon Harbhajan Singh. Perhaps he wanted the pacers to stay on until they created enough rough. But once Harbhajan came, he stayed. He bowled 15 overs without break, from No. 8 to 36, and came back on in the 50th. In all, the medium-pacers bowled 15 overs out of the first 50.The blow
Hashim Amla is usually a delicate batsman who doesn’t really rely on power for his runs. But the one shot he got down to give an almighty swing to, had lethal results. When he swept Harbjajan, the ball was headed only one way and that was smack into Sourav Ganguly at forward short leg. He showed superb reflexes to turn around, and that must have saved him as the ball struck him flush on the helmet. Ganguly went off for about a session, came back, and took a swirling skier at midwicket.Bailed out
Harbhajan, Jacques Kallis, and the bails seem to have started an interesting three-way relationship, which sometimes leaves Harbhajan frustrated and sometimes Kallis. After Harbhajan suffered from the bails that wouldn’t budge in Ahmedabad, Kallis suffered the agony this time. Moving back and across to a big off-break, Kallis would have thought he had done well to cover it, but the ball hit his thigh, then the back of his gloves, and then gently, cruelly on to the stumps. The bail fell this time.

Morris shows off batting string to his bow

South Africa’s attempts to stay alive in the ODI series against England seemed to have ended when Reece Topley took the one-handed catch in his follow through that dismissed Farhaan Behardien, the last recognised batsmen in their line-up. Had Chris Morris not been picked for this match, it probably would have been.But the IPL’s newest dollar-millionaire is not just a bowler who can bat a bit. He has spent a lot of time working on his ability to build an innings and he has already shown that.On Test debut last month, Morris scored 69. Before that, he made 86 batting at No. 8 for his franchise, the Titans, in a first-class match to set them up for a match-winning total. After that, he hit an unbeaten 45 off 16 balls for them in a List A game to do the same. Morris knew he could probably see South Africa over the line if he had someone with him to do the same. Then, he lost David Wiese at the end of the 41st over and South Africa still needed 56 runs.”When Dave got out, I thought we were in a bit of strife,” Morris said at the post-match press conference. “I know KG can bat but…”Rabada was dismissed three balls later. South Africa needed 53 with Morris on 14 when he was dropped by Adil Rashid in the deep on the next delivery he faced. He knew he had to make it count.”Luckily they dropped me. I just thought that it’s an opportunity to play cricket for your country. If it’s the arc you can hit it far. I’ve played a lot of cricket here and I know the altitude helps,” he said.Before Morris moved to the Centurion-based franchise, he played at the Wanderers for the Lions and the Johannesburg-crowd did not forget their prodigal son. As AB de Villiers put it, “I think it was [the fans] that pushed us over the line,” and although the sell-out crowd would have helped, it was actually Morris who took South Africa to the line and Imran Tahir who took them over it.Morris credited the “work I have done on my batting in the last couple of months,” with some of it but admitted there’s still some work to do. With scores level, he was bowled by a googly from Rashid, who earned some redemption for dropping him, after Morris failed to read the delivery. “I didn’t pick that for anything. That wasn’t my best. He can have it,” Morris said.De Villiers would not have been thinking the same thing. When Morris went, the South African captain’s stress levels rose after they had been on a rollarcoaster through the game. “We didn’t need a nine-downer tonight. I was taking a bit of strain there in the change-room,” de Villiers said.”We could have made it easier for ourselves. We were a bit naughty there. My run out and a couple of other wickets were a little bit soft. We could have finished it earlier and with more wickets in hand.”In fact, de Villiers also thought they could have given themselves less to chase after reducing England to 108 for 6 at the halfway stage. “We had the opportunity to bowl them out for 150 but I was still very happy with 260 odd,” de Villiers said. He would have been because at that point, Eoin Morgan thought it “was South Africa’s game to lose after we fell 30 or 40 runs short.”England have posted totals of close to 400 and over 300 in the series so far and Morgan was “surprised it has taken us this long to fall this short.” Although England have now squandered a 2-nil advantage, Morgan was still full of praise for players like Joe Root, who scored a second successive century and Chris Woakes, who managed an impressive return on his recall including an athletic run out of de Villiers.”Joe’s run of form has been magnificent for the side,” Morgan said. “And Woakesy got the ball to move around. The game ebbed and flowed but it was our game to win.” Now it is anyone’s series to win, with the decider to take place in Cape Town on Sunday.

Craig Overton abuse of Zaidi raises disciplinary questions

It has emerged that Craig Overton, the Somerset allrounder who was banned for two games at the end of last season after accumulating nine penalty points, allegedly told Sussex’s Ashar Zaidi to “go back to your own f***ing country”.Overton denied the claims – made by umpire Alex Wharf and Zaidi’s team-mate Michael Yardy – but was charged with a Level One offence for “using language that is obscene, offensive or insulting and/or making an obscene gesture” during Somerset’s Championship fixture at Hove in September. He subsequently missed the final game of the season and still has one match left to serve.The decision by the ECB’s Cricket Discipline Commission to pursue the lowest level of offence, reported by the , contrasts with its handling of the case involving Yorkshire captain Andrew Gale in 2014. Gale was given a further two-match ban after using the term “Kolpak” when arguing with Lancashire’s Ashwell Prince; while batting in a Championship match at Old Trafford, Gale told Prince to “f*** off back to your country you Kolpak f***er”.A Level Two charge was initially brought against Gale by the umpires, resulting in a two-match ban, and he was then given a further punishment by the CDC for bringing the game into disrepute. Gale missed the match at Trent Bridge in which Yorkshire clinched the title and was also barred from lifting the trophy.Overton, who was named in the England Performance Programme the same month, escaped a similar fate. He was spoken to at the time by Wharf and the other standing umpire, Ian Gould, along with ECB cricket liaison officer Graham Cowdrey and Somerset’s head coach, Matthew Maynard. Overton subsequently played no further part in the game, with the club saying he had suffered a hand injury.On Thursday evening, Jason Gillespie, Yorkshire’s head coach, indicated the club had questions for the ECB. “There is a strong chance that @YorkshireCCC will be seeking clarification on this,” he wrote on Twitter. Gale, meanwhile, tweeted a link to the Guardian, saying: “Interesting article, take a read…”The ECB has rejected any suggestion of impropriety in the process concerning Overton, stressing that the CDC is “an independent body which operates at arm’s length”.The governing body said in a statement: “Following the incident, the on-field umpires sought advice from the ECB’s Cricket Department who referred the matter directly to the Chairman of the Cricket Discipline Commission, Mr Gerard Elias, QC.”After reviewing the umpires’ report, the Chairman of the CDC gave clear guidance that this should be reported as a Level One offence and no further action should be taken. The automatic penalty for a Level One offence was subsequently applied and this took Craig Overton to nine points, the threshold for an automatic suspension.”The Cricket Discipline Commission is an independent body which operates at arm’s length from ECB. Craig Overton’s selection for the EPP squad would have played no part whatsoever in the CDC’s ruling in this matter.”ECB refutes any suggestion of interference or bias in the proper disciplinary process.”Zaidi, who was born in Pakistan but played for Sussex using a British passport, is understood not to have heard the comment directed towards him. It was included in reports made by Wharf and Yardy, who was standing at the non-striker’s end, afterwards.After submissions were made by all parties, the CDC brought a Level One charge against Overton, which, as his third breach of the season, triggered an automatic ban.According to the ECB’s regulations, a Level Three charge covers “using language or gesture that offends, insults, humiliates, intimidates, threatens, disparages or vilifies another person on the basis of that person’s race, religion or belief, colour, descent, national or ethnic origin, age, disability, gender, sexual orientation or background”.Overton and his twin brother Jamie have been identified as England stars of the future. Both were called up to the ODI squad during the summer and Jamie is currently involved with the Lions’ T20 series with Pakistan A in the UAE.

Confidence from win makes us favourites – Collingwood

Paul Collingwood isn’t too concerned about the lack of centuries from the England top order © Getty Images
 

Success breeds success in international sport. The England camp is a much more relaxed place now that the team is back to winning ways. The players have their families in tow and have taken over a marina on the northern side of Napier, where the third and final Test gets underway on Saturday. According to Paul Collingwood, the confidence gained from their 126-run victory in Wellington on Monday has reinstalled them as series favourites. “If we put in the performance we can do,” said Collingwood, “we should win.”England’s Wellington win was not without its flaws. Their catching was appalling and the top six batsmen once again made starts without threatening to build a big innings. But, having endured nine barren months since their last Test victory against West Indies in Chester-le-Street, Collingwood was content to be thankful for small mercies. “We still have areas to improve on, but we’d have taken that performance at the start,” he said. “We have a hell of a lot of positives to take into the next game.”It was a massive relief, and great to win,” said Collingwood, who joked that there’d been a few cobwebs gathering on the team’s victory song-sheet. “That’s what we play the game for. We’d gone a long time without a Test win so that starts preying on your mind, but I’m used to that over the years with Durham. It’s just one of those things. You’ve got to be confident in your ability to put in the big performances. You have to back yourself to go out there and do that, and there were some top performances last week.”Most of those performances, however, came at the bottom end of the team sheet. Tim Ambrose’s debut century was the stand-out batting performance, while the three seamers – James Anderson, Stuart Broad and Ryan Sidebottom – all excelled in helpful conditions. Collingwood was the pick of England’s specialist batsmen with a brace of half-centuries, but he knows full well that, on what is expected to be a flat and friendly track, the watching public will be expecting some centuries this week.Collingwood, however, warned that the more an issue was made of England’s lack of hundreds, the harder it would be to end the drought. “You can put too much pressure on yourself,” he explained. “You play your best cricket when you’re relaxed and reacting to the ball, and enjoying yourself with a smile on your face. You play your worst when you think ‘I must do this, I can’t do that.’ That’s when you start doing things wrong. If you say ‘I mustn’t drop short because he’ll smash it,’ that’s what you end up doing. That’s how life works, on a cricket pitch anyway.”Of the top six, only Alastair Cook has managed three figures this winter, and that innings came in a dead rubber at Galle before Christmas. Collingwood himself hasn’t made a Test hundred since June, while Kevin Pietersen – normally so dominant – has gone 10 consecutive innings without so much as a fifty. “We’re just one big ton away from opening the floodgates again,” said Collingwood. “It’s up to one of us to go out there and do that.”Apart from the reintroduction of Andrew Strauss at the expense of Ravi Bopara (and the odd rejig in the batting order), England’s top six has been unchanged since the Headingley Test last May, a situation that contrasts starkly with the treatment meted out to Steve Harmison and Matthew Hoggard after their failures in the first Test. But Collingwood denied that the players were stuck in the comfort zone.

 
 
Of the top six, only Alastair Cook has managed three figures this winter. Collingwood hasn’t made a Test hundred since June, while Kevin Pietersen has gone 10 consecutive innings without a fifty
 

“With the records they have, they’ve proved they can play against different bowlers and in different conditions,” said Collingwood. “We’ve come up against some good bowling, certainly in the India series [in July and August] when they were swinging it both ways, and in Sri Lanka, which is a difficult place to score hundreds. I wouldn’t put it down to desire or concentration or anything like that. We believe we are better players than that.”Owais Shah is England’s reserve batsman in this series, but he was overlooked for Bopara in Sri Lanka, and seems to have slipped further down the pecking order without actually doing anything right or wrong. “Nobody’s position is safe, but that’s always been the case,” said Collingwood. “There’s always going to be people waiting in the wings, and you need to do your job in the England side or your position is in doubt. That’s healthy for the England cricket team. As long as we win Test matches, hopefully we’ll stick together as a batting unit and keep developing in different conditions.”Looking ahead to the Napier Test, Collingwood hinted that England’s approach with the bat would be more purposeful, but stopped short of promising a run-fest. “We’ll score as quickly as we feel we can without taking a risk, that’s generally what we’ve tried to do,” he said. “The first goal is to get 400 on the board to put pressure on the opposition. How quickly we score them goes down to how well they bowl at us. We’re not going to be reckless and go out and say we’ll score at four and a half an over. The pitch dictates that.”I wouldn’t say there’s more pressure than usual,” he said. “It wasn’t going to be a canter coming over here. They bat right down to Nos. 7 and 8 and they’ve got a lot of skill in the bowling, so they are a tough side to beat. We were expected to come over here and steamroller them, but that wasn’t the kind of thoughts in our minds. We knew we’d have to play well and play tough cricket, and we got well beaten in the first game.”

Ranjit Bali powers J&K to knockout berth

Jammu & Kashmir stormed into the knockout phase of the Ranji Trophywith a four wicket triumph over Himachal Pradesh in their final NorthZone league tie at the Maulana Azad Stadium in Jammu. J&K finishedthird in the zonal standings with 24 points from their five games,behind Punjab (40) and Delhi (29).The win was enabled by a sporting declaration from Himachal skipperAnurag Thakur who set the hosts a fourth innings target of 251 in 77overs. An invaluable 138 from opener Ranjit Bali helped J&K across thefinishing line with more than 13 overs to spare. It was a spectacularrecovery by J&K who trailed by 140 in the first innings, narrowlyavoiding the follow-on.Resuming at 55/4, Himachal declared just over ten overs into themorning. In that period they exactly doubled their score, losing twowickets in the process. The closure was applied at the fall of onedrop Rahul Panta for a run-a-ball 66 (4 fours, 2 sixes).A 131 run third wicket stand between Bali and Ashwini Gupta (43) putJ&K firmly on the road to victory. After the latter’s departure at193, Bali carried on unperturbed until he was bowled by Nischal Gaurjust sixteen runs short of victory. His 138 arrived from 180 balls andfeatured 14 fours and 4 sixes. J&K lost two more wickets before thewinning runs came in the 64th over.

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