'Nothing behind' England spot-fixing claims, says Mark Wood

England fast bowler Mark Wood has dismissed accusations of corruption made in an Al Jazeera investigation as “like the boy who cried wolf”

George Dobell in Colombo22-Oct-2018England fast bowler Mark Wood has dismissed accusations of corruption made in an Al Jazeera investigation as “like the boy who cried wolf”. In a documentary broadcast on Sunday, the channel claimed it had evidence of spot-fixing in 15 international matches between 2011-12, seven involving EnglandWood, who will return to the England side for the final ODI of the series against Sri Lanka in Colombo on Tuesday, insisted he did not believe suggestions that England players had been involved and suggested that Al Jazeera had, to date, been rather stronger on sensationalism than substance.”Until Al Jazeera bring out anything concrete, where they name someone or show a piece of evidence, I’m not going to believe what they say,” Wood told Talksport.”They keep saying there’s this and that, but never producing anyone or saying there’s any evidence behind it. It’s a bit like the boy who cried wolf. Until they can produce something that I’m worried about then I don’t take any notice of it.”While Wood’s dismissal of the story is no surprise – he was not involved in the England set-up at the time the alleged incidents occurred and you would hardly expect him to cast doubts over his colleagues – it may be more relevant that he believes it has done nothing to disturb the equilibrium in the squad. Indeed, he said it had not even generated a conversation.”I haven’t spoken to any of the other players about it,” he continued in an interview with the BBC. “It’s not news to me. It had no sort of ‘hit’ to it.”If they came up with concrete evidence or they said a name and they could prove something then I would be a bit more worried. But at the moment they keep making accusations and there’s nothing behind it so I’m not too fussed.”Responding to the claims made by Al Jazeera, the ECB said on Sunday that its own investigations had “cast no doubt on the integrity of any England player, current or former”. The documentary marked the second time in recent months that the channel had broadcast allegations about England players’ involvement in fixing. The ICC has called for Al Jazeera to share evidence that may aid further enquiries.

Agar, Paris bowl Western Australia to massive win

A lower-order collapse cost South Australia after half-centuries from Jake Weatherald and Callum Ferguson had given them a fighting chance of saving the match

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Mar-2018Getty Images

A lower-order collapse from South Australia has handed Western Australia victory in the final Sheffield Shield match of the home-and-away season.The Redbacks, 1 for 7 overnight, were tasked with batting out the final day for a draw after the Warriors had set the impossible target of 525 to win.Jake Weatherald and Callum Ferguson went a long way to achieving that goal, posting a 123-run partnership for the second wicket in 39.1 overs before Weatherald fell to Marcus Stoinis for 62.Unperturbed, Ferguson found another capable ally in Travis Head and the pair reached the 60-over mark comfortably. But Head’s dismissal, caught and bowled by Ashton Agar for 47, triggered the Redbacks demise.Jake Lehmann and Alex Ross both fell cheaply before left-arm quick Joel Paris found Ferguson’s outside edge on 92 with a ball that angled in and shaped away from round the wicket.That left Alex Carey and tail nearly 30 overs to survive. Carey lasted just under 13 more overs at the crease before he fell to a top edge attempting a sweep off Agar.The last three also fell to spin in the fading light. Nick Winter edged D’Arcy Short to second slip while defending with five men around the bat. Daniel Worrall played a bizarre slog-sweep moments later only to meekly pop up a top edge to slip to end the match.Agar and Paris both finished with three wickets while Hilton Cartwright was named man of the match for his scores of 83 and 111 not out.

We have to do it the tough way – McCullum

Sunday’s home defeat to KKR has left Royal Challengers Bangalore with just four points at the halfway mark of the league stage

Sreshth Shah in Bengaluru30-Apr-20182:17

‘We had our chances, unfortunately we missed them’ – McCullum

Royal Challengers Bangalore made four changes for their game against Kolkata Knight Riders. Tim Southee finally turned up at the 2018 IPL, while Manan Vohra and M Ashwin were also thrown into the mix. But there was one forced change, and that left a smile on the faces of the KKR bowlers.A viral infection forced AB de Villiers to miss Sunday’s game at the Chinnaswamy, and the void showed in the RCB batting. At 74 for 1 after 9.4 overs, RCB had the platform to launch into the KKR attack. But with only a handful of experienced batsmen to follow, their No. 3 Virat Kohli opted to play cautiously, scoring only 20 runs off his first 18 balls. If de Villiers was playing, Kohli’s approach would perhaps have been different, and RCB might have begun accelerating slightly earlier.There’s also the aspect of mental pressure that KKR did not have to deal with. Instead of having to bowl against two of the world’s most feared T20 batmen, they had to now bowl at just the one.”Yeah, it’s obviously a couple of smiles on the bowler’s faces,” Chris Lynn said, when asked how his team reacted to the news of de Villiers’ absence. “We know AB, in the form he is, is always a dangerous batsman but we couldn’t take the foot off the throat because Baz (Brendon McCullum) is such a good striker of the ball. [We had] a little half-smile but we knew we still had a job at hand.”There were no smiles for RCB, though, who slipped to seventh on the points table after their loss, and when asked if de Villiers was missed, the man who replaced him was quick to agree.”We definitely missed AB de Villiers,” McCullum said. “He’s probably the best player in the world and one of the best we’ve seen in the history of the game, so for him to be absent was a huge blow for us. He’s a tough customer as well, so obviously he’s pretty ill to not take the field today.”He’s desperate to get out there, so hopefully he’ll be back in the next game. He’s such a key player for us, and such a good leader. A good man to have around.”BCCI

RCB would want de Villiers to be fit when they face Mumbai Indians on Tuesday. It’s a virtual must-win for both sides since they’re both tied on four points after seven games. After that the terrain gets tougher since RCB go on the road for four straight away games, but looking ahead, McCullum still believes his team can win the IPL.”It’s tough when you’re losing a few games, and not getting the results you want, but you just have to be strong in your own group’s mind on what you’re trying to achieve,” he said. “Some people may doubt you, none of that matters, you just have to believe amongst your group that you have the ability to be standing there at the end of the competition with a trophy in your hand.”We’re going to go on the road soon, and it’ll be nice to get a win before we get on the road. We’re going to have to do it tough, and that’s our fault because we didn’t get the results earlier.”RCB did this in 2015 and 2016, when they strung together a series of wins to make a late surge into the playoffs. And with two other teams on the same number of points as them, RCB are just one win away from putting pressure on the fifth-placed Rajasthan Royals and fourth-placed KKR.”The environment at RCB is fantastic,” McCullum said. “Now’s the time to stay tight as a unit, delivering on our potential as players, and then transitioning that into points.”With de Villiers expected to be fit for the Tuesday game, perhaps the back end of the season is when RCB will – once again – make their mark.

Babar Azam ruled out of tour with fractured forearm

Babar was on 68 when he was struck by a short ball from Ben Stokes and retired hurt

ESPNcricinfo staff25-May-20181:43

Babar to miss ‘four to six weeks’ – Pakistan physio

Babar Azam has been ruled out of the remainder of the Test series against England after fracturing his forearm following the blow he took from Ben Stokes on the second day at Lord’sBabar was on 68 when he was hit on his left arm – he was not wearing an arm guard – and after assessment in the middle he retired hurt. He did not go straight for an x-ray but did not return to bat for the remainder of day. Cliff Deacon, the Pakistan physiotherapist, said an injury like Babar’s would see him out of action around four to six weeks.”We decided we were going to do a precautionary x-ray at the end of the day’s play,” Deacon said. Unfortunately, the x-ray confirmed there was a fracture. The fracture’s in the forearm, it’s one of the two bones in the forearm in the distal third of the arm, just above the wrist. That’s why he couldn’t hold his bat properly.”The Pakistan management have decided not to call up a replacement batsman. The squad includes Usman Salahuddin, Fakhar Zaman and Sami Aslam as spare specialist batsmen.Babar has been billed as Pakistan’s next big batting hope after a strong start to his international career. However, it has been his limited-overs form that has really stood out, with him averaging 53.00 and 51.11 in T20Is and ODIs respectively while his Test numbers have remained more modest.Before this match he was averaging under 25 in Tests, and is yet to score a hundred, making the injury, coming as it did when he was playing so well, all the more ill-timed.

Sri Lanka need to find their best against brute force Australia

Sri Lanka have never beaten Australia in ODIs but they have the advantage of playing at home

Madushka Balasuriya03-Oct-20252:44

Can the Australia batting juggernaut be stopped?

Big picture: Sri Lanka need to up their game

If there were even the faintest doubt about who the favourites for the 2025 Women’s World Cup were, they were put to bed as swiftly as an Ashleigh Gardner blade swing after Australia’s dominant win over New Zealand in their tournament opener.In Indore, Australia started fast and stumbled, but like an unrelenting force, they just kept coming. In the end, their victory was less about outplaying New Zealand and more about brute-forcing the result. As far as early tournament markers go, it was an impressive one.Against India in their opener, Sri Lanka too set an early marker of the sort of side they are. They had India reeling at 124 for 6 but then proceeded to drop each of the next four chances that came their way to let the hosts claw themselves back into the contest and register a fairly comprehensive win eventually. Discipline followed by indiscipline; bad undoing the good.Related

  • 'Good to start with best teams' – Sri Lanka's Athapaththu ready for Australia after India

Sri Lanka have not played an ODI against Australia since 2019, but they know what they need to do. Resilience has been a buzzword for Chamari Athapaththu, and in that sense it’s clear that any lingering hang-ups from that opening defeat will be well behind them come Saturday. But execution might be the more pertinent declaration if they’re to show their best selves against the defending champions.With free entry being granted to the stadium, Sri Lanka will also be hoping for substantial home support. They’re also very familiar with the Khettarama surface, as the high-performance centre where the national players train is located there. So while Sri Lanka have never beaten Australia in an ODI, the conditions for an upset are nevertheless in place.

Form guide

Australia WWLWW (last five ODIs most recent first)
Sri Lanka LLLWWVishmi Gunaratne’s form is a concern for Sri Lanka•ACC

In the spotlight: Ashleigh Gardner and Vishmi Gunaratne

Like the surprise manifestation of a final boss’ second health bar after you think you’ve finally got them beat, Ashleigh Gardner sits spearheading Australia’s lower middle order. Her 115 off 83 against New Zealand served to highlight not just the resilience of this Australian outfit, but their entire aura. While her role is a challenging one, it’s invaluable in that it affords the licence for those above her to play with freedom, while allowing her to provide guidance to those below her. And it means that while she is at the crease, Australia are never beat.In August 2024, Vishmi Gunaratne struck her maiden ODI hundred against Ireland. Her three innings in the lead-up to that read 40, 50, 44. But in ten innings since then, she has not been able to cross 36. While Athapaththu would be the obvious pick for this section, if Sri Lanka are to challenge Australia, they need the rest of their batting to chip in in a big way. Gunaratne has been out of sorts, but Sri Lanka will be banking on her rediscovering her groove even though it’s her first ODI against Australia.

Team news: Brown or Schutt?

Australia are unlikely to make any changes to the batting, though it remains to be seen if Darcie Brown continues in place of Megan Schutt.Australia (probable): 1 Alyssa Healy (capt & wk), 2 Phoebe Litchfield, 3 Ellyse Perry, 4 Beth Mooney, 5 Annabel Sutherland, 6 Ashleigh Gardner, 7 Tahlia McGrath, 8 Sophie Molineux, 9 Kim Garth, 10 Alana King, 11 Darcie BrownSri Lanka played their first-choice XI against India, and it’s unlikely there will be any changes.Sri Lanka (probable): 1 Hasini Perera, 2 Chamari Athapaththu (capt), 3 Harshitha Samarawickrama, 4 Vishmi Gunaratne, 5 Kavisha Dilhari, 6 Anushka Sanjeewani (wk), 7 Nilakshika Silva, 8 Sugandika Kumari, 9 Inoka Ranaweera, 10 Achini Kulasuriya, 11 Udeshika PrabodhaniAshleigh Gardner scored a brilliant hundred against New Zealand•Getty Images

Pitch and conditions: Rain could play spoilsport

The pitch at the R Premadasa Stadium has traditionally offered up an even contest between bat and ball. However, efforts have been made recently to make it more batting-friendly, so there may not be as much in it for the spinners as usual. As for the weather, there is a distinct chance of rain in Colombo throughout the afternoon.

Stats and trivia: Australia 11-0 Sri Lanka

  • Sri Lanka have lost each of their 11 ODIs against Australia.
  • Athapaththu is 80 runs away from 4000 ODI runs.
  • Gardner’s 51 wickets are the most by an Australian since the 2022 World Cup. They are the joint-third-most in that period among all players.

Quotes

“The beauty of a World Cup is you play every different side and you have to prepare. You don’t really get time to learn. You’ve got to come out firing. But I think our group’s got some awesome heads on our shoulders and we are able to assess conditions and adapt to whatever’s thrown at us.”
“We’re playing against the best team. The world champions. But if we can execute the right plan at the right time, I know we can beat any team. But execution is the most important thing, rather than the skill and the mindset. So we’ll have to play our best game tomorrow.”

'Smithy needs that big score to tick the last box' – Mark Taylor

Taylor, one of Smith’s mentors, thinks the captain needs one dominant hundred to complete his reintegration into the Australia side

Daniel Brettig31-Jul-2019Should the Australian touring team want a few pointers on how to deal with a febrile Edgbaston crowd over the next five days, they would do well to ponder the experiences of Mark Taylor.22 years ago he was right at the centre of the storm leading Australia into a Test match that has gone down in history as the loudest and most raucous Test match ever played in England. Taylor entered the match in the grips of what might easily have been a career-ending slump, 11 Tests and 19 innings without passing 50, and ended it on the losing side.But along the way he found a way to carve out a century that broke the sequence, and helped to take the heat out of an issue that was threatening to engulf the team. 1-0 down but having righted the ship, Taylor’s men went on to claim the series, 3-2. Asked to recall how he dealt with an Edgbaston crowd that was in tumult in day one, when the Australians were shot out for 118 having been 50 for 8, Taylor had recollections that may well be relevant to Steven Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft in particular.”In 1997 when I went out to bat in that second innings, I made a conscious effort to look at the crowd,” Taylor told ESPNcricinfo. “When I looked around as I walked out, I didn’t see people booing me and wanting to continue my slump. I saw people, yes, wanting England to win, but also saw people wanting good cricket. Maybe that’s looking through rose-coloured glasses, but I remember when I made my hundred in that game that I took my helmet off and I looked around and I could see people were genuinely thrilled for me.”They’re the same crowd that’s going to be there on Thursday. Yes, sure they’re going to bring in bits of sandpaper and they’re going to talk about what happened in South Africa and what have you. And they’re going to hope that England are going to win the first Test. But at the same time they’re also going to want to see some good cricket, that’s the way I’ve always looked at crowds, and therefore they haven’t really worried me that much over the years – that’s how I would be approaching it.”Mark Taylor (centre) celebrates Australia’s 1997 Ashes triumph with Steve Waugh (left) and Ian Healy (right)•Getty Images

Taylor is in England to commentate on the series for Nine, and was reminded of 1997 via the unusual sleeping hours familiar to many an Australian just arrived in the UK. “I woke up at 5am because I was a bit jetlagged and they were going through Edgbaston Test matches. It got to 1997 and I watched it,” he said. “The crowd, I didn’t realise they were that loud, I don’t remember them being that loud.”And when they won on the final day, Alec Stewart hit Warney to the extra cover boundary, the crowd stormed onto the field, they were nuts. I didn’t remember that, I just remembered thinking we had to improve. If your head’s in the crowd, it means you’re not worrying about your own game. I think Smithy, Warner and Cam Bancroft, they shouldn’t be thinking about the crowd, they should be thinking about how they play their best cricket, and if they do that, they’ll keep that crowd quiet.”As captain of Australia, Smith had listed Taylor as one of his mentors, and the pair have maintained contact over the past year, vexed as it was by the decision of the Cricket Australia Board – of which Taylor was then a member – to ban Smith and Warner for a year, and Bancroft for nine months. The intense and introspective visage of Smith has been noticeable to many since he arrived in England, and Taylor believes that the 30-year-old needs the validation of a Test century to feel more at ease with the world.”I think with Smithy, what he needs, and is still yearning for, is a big score,” Taylor said. “We saw in the World Cup semi-final that he’s still a class player – he looked a class above the rest in that innings. I think when he makes a big score, hopefully in this series, that’ll be him fully back in the Australian side. There’s probably a part of him that would still like to captain the side again, and maybe he will, but I think he also loves the game and playing the game so he’s happy enough at this stage to be back.”He’d love to be making runs like he was 18 months ago. When he makes a big score and raises the bat for a Test match hundred, that’ll be a great sign for Australian cricket that he is back. I think David Warner has already got himself back with the World Cup, so Smithy now needs that big score to tick the last box.”Talking to Steve Waugh, one of the things he noticed from this team and someone like Smithy is how many balls he hits, and that’s one of the biggest differences he’s seen with the training. In our day we had net sessions and liked to hit balls, but nowhere near the volume of balls that someone like Steve Smith does. He’s in a different stratosphere in terms of ball hitting. He had a 45-minute net today, that’s a huge net, that’d be three nets from yesteryear – you used to get about 15 minutes.”Mark Taylor watches the replay of his dismissal on the big screen during the 6th Test of the 1997 Ashes•PA Photos

As an opening batsman, the 1997 century gave Taylor three out of three in the first Tests of the series he played in England, also including 1989 and 1993. Those innings and their circumstances have left him thinking that Warner and Bancroft may well be hoping to be sent in to bat on Thursday, for a chance to capitalise on nervous bowlers while also feeling like the pressure is off them.”Making that hundred on day one at Headingley was huge for me and the team at the time. AB went after the bowling, which helped, and I got a lot of confidence from the fact that they sent us in,” Taylor said. “I used to love being sent in as an opening batsman, because I always felt that took the pressure off me as a batsman, the opposition captain thinks it is going to do plenty, so they put you in. Straightaway the onus is on the bowling team to bowl you out, not necessarily you to make runs, even though that is your job.”I batted out there with Boony and Swamp for a while and it didn’t do a lot. It swung a little bit, then AB came in and took them on and before you knew it we were 2 for 120 and I thought ‘hey this is going alright’. In 1993, there’d been a lot of rain around and they put us in again, and then Slats and I both made runs to be 0 for 100. Slats made 50 in his first Test, I made 100, and once again, bowling first can be a huge disadvantage if you don’t get it right.”More than two decades since the 1997 century, Taylor still carries the air that helped him so much as captain of Australia: jovial, confident but not arrogant, and conscious that life could be so much worse than not making enough runs. “I’ve always tried to look at cricket as a game,” he said.”I remember Rick McCosker said that to me at Newcastle Sports Ground in about my second season: ‘just remember it’s a game’. That’s what it is. It can be all-consuming sometimes and I’ve even felt that in the last couple of years on the board. But you’ve got to remember you’re talking about a game of cricket. People are supposed to be enjoying this, players are supposed to be enjoying it, fans are supposed to be enjoying it, and it’s nothing more than that.”Whether Australia wins or loses the Ashes is not going to change the world. So when I walked away from games of cricket during my slump, I’d go home to my wife and, I wouldn’t laugh about it, but there was no reason why I was making low scores. My eyes were OK, my fitness was OK, my wife wasn’t leaving me, my kids weren’t ill, there was nothing I could put my finger on that suggests I shouldn’t be making runs. Eventually, fortunately at Edgbaston I did make runs.”Of course, by 1997, the Australians were filled with memories of beating England in the previous four series, a history that imbued them with confidence. Taylor reckons that for Tim Paine’s 2019 team, the challenge is not dissimilar to that of 1989, when England were not exactly flying, but Australia faced uncertainty about their own quality and a barren recent history in England, having not won a series there since 1975.”Looking at the 1990s when we won six Ashes in a row, things changed in 1989, with us coming over, considered an ordinary side, world’s worst side, and we won,” Taylor said. “England had rebel tours going on and all of a sudden they were in disarray. We belted them again in Australia, came back in 1993 and belted them again here. All of a sudden we were getting bigger and bigger and England were trying to regroup.”By the end of the 1990s they were playing better, 1997 was a closer series. But we had this belief, even with me playing badly at the start, that we were going to beat them, even 1-0 down we had this belief, and England didn’t have the belief they were going to beat us. It wasn’t until 2005 when Michael Vaughan’s team turned it around in a big way and beat a very good Australian side. I didn’t think England would beat Australia until 2009, yet they won in ’05.”England have had belief since then that at least here in this country. There’s a lot of talk about the pitches and the balls, a lot of those things to me are almost red herrings. It’s who’s going to play the better cricket and win those big sessions. But it’s changing the belief in their head as much as anything. I think they’ve got the talent to win this series and win it well. But they’ve got to believe it. They won’t be thinking about 2001 and not winning here since, but they will be thinking are we good enough to beat this England team. I think they are.”

CA deny Lynn NoC over injury concerns

His troublesome right shoulder forces decision; CA want him ready for the domestic one-day competition in September

Melinda Farrell30-Jun-2018Concerns surrounding a shoulder injury caused Australian authorities to deny Chris Lynn a No Objection Certificate for the Global T20 tournament, currently taking place in Toronto.Organisers announced Lynn as a marquee player for Edmonton Royals in the inaugural Canadian competition, but he has been absent for the start of the tournament. ESPNcricinfo understands the decision to deny Lynn a NOC was shared by Cricket Australia, Queensland and Brisbane Heat.Lynn’s long term issues with his troublesome right shoulder flared up when he dislocated it while diving in the field during the Australia’s Tri-Series Final win over New Zealand in February. He had been playing with the issue for some months, despite its severe restrictions on his ability to throw and field.
As a result of the injury, the Australian batsman was ruled out of the Pakistan Super League, where he was signed by Lahore Qalandars, but he was sufficiently recovered to play 16 games in six weeks for Kolkata Knight Riders in the IPL.At the conclusion of the IPL, scans showed Lynn’s shoulder had recovered to the point it was deemed stable and sound and required no surgery. Lynn was, however left out of Australia’s ODI and T20 teams that were whitewashed on the recent tour of England.ESPNcricinfo understands that management decided he needed further rehabilitation in order to recover full range and strength in his shoulder. It is understood there is still a strong chance Lynn will be deemed fit to play for Trinbago Knight Riders in the Caribbean Premier League, but CA’s main priority is to have him ready to compete in Australia’s domestic one-day competition, the JLT Cup, in September.A fully-fit Lynn, able to move and dive freely in the field in addition to his powerful batting, would be a major asset for Australia leading into next year’s World Cup.Lynn’s importance to Australia’s ODI side has been heightened after Steven Smith and David Warner were banned for their involvement in the ball-tampering scandal in South Africa. Both players were granted NOCs to compete in the GT20 competition.Far from the only late withdrawal from the tournament, Lynn was replaced by Andre Fletcher in the Edmonton Royals squad. The three Pakistan players called into the squad for the T20I tri-series have been replaced by Anton Devcich at Toronto Nationals, Umar Akmal at Edmonton Royals and Dwayne Smith at Montreal Tigers.Separately, Rumman Raees was replaced by Mohammad Sami in the Nationals squad while South African Christiaan Jonker was replaced by Farhaan Behardien for Montreal Tigers. The three Sri Lankans in the Montreal Tigers squad have been replaced by Moises Henriques, Peter Siddle and Kevon Cooper.

Karnataka government holds RCB accountable for Bengaluru stampede

RCB awaits the report of the CID investigation that is in its final stages

Shashank Kishore17-Jul-2025The Karnataka government has held Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) accountable for the stampede that occurred outside M Chinnaswamy Stadium on June 4, resulting in 11 deaths and injuries to more than 50 people.The findings were outlined in the government’s status report, which was made public on Thursday, two days after the Karnataka High Court rejected the government’s request to keep it confidential and ordered its release.In the status report, a copy of which has been accessed by ESPNcricinfo, the government said: “The RCB Management, in association with its event management partner, DNA Networks Private Limited, and the Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA), unilaterally decided to hold the victory celebration without prior consultation with the police and without obtaining the necessary permissions or license for such celebration.”As per the report, KSCA CEO Subhendu Ghosh submitted an intimation on behalf of DNA Entertainment to the Cubbon Park police on June 3 around 6.30pm about RCB’s intention to organise a victory parade should they win the IPL final that was scheduled the same evening in Ahmedabad.Related

  • Bengaluru at risk of losing Women's World Cup games

  • No police clearance yet for Chinnaswamy to host Maharaja T20

  • Karnataka High Court orders state government to disclose report

  • Tribunal observes RCB 'created nuisance' without prior permission

  • BCCI forms committee to prevent incidents like Bengaluru stampede

However, the police denied the request due to “insufficient information regarding the expected gathering size, arrangements made as well as the proposal being made on very short notice.”The report, which largely details the sequence of events right from when the request was first made, further underlines how RCB went ahead and posted an invitation on their social media channels at 7.01am on June 4, announcing a victory parade from Vidhana Soudha to the Chinnaswamy Stadium.The report further said that the posts on RCB’ s official social media handles, including one that had Virat Kohli announcing plans to celebrate with the fans in Bengaluru, garnered immense engagement online.While citing Licensing and Controlling of Assemblies and Processions (Bangalore City) Order, 2009, to underscore RCB’s procedural violations for crowd gathering, the report stated, “It is pertinent to note that a mere intimation was given by the organisers.”There was no requisition for permissions in the prescribed format, nor was any necessary information provided to the concerned departments to anticipate the gathering and make adequate preparation.”Meanwhile, lawyers arguing for the government, challenged the Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT) order that revoked the suspension of IPS officer Vikash Kumar and four others, who were held responsible for the stampede and subsequently dismissed by chief minister Siddharamaiah. They argued that the tribunal had overstepped its jurisdiction.The government contended that managing such a large crowd at just 12 hours’ notice was an impossible task and questioned the officer’s [Vikash & team] handling of the situation. “What was the officer doing? Did he take any action? Instead of issuing prohibitory orders under the Police Act, they proceeded with arrangements for the celebration,” the government stated.RCB continues to await the report of the CID investigation that is in its final stages. Members of RCB’s top brass as well as those from DNA have all submitted their testimonies over the past month. A set date for the judgment is yet to be made public.

Alex Lees leads Durham dominance over Kent

Former England opener racks up big hundred to put seal on Durham’s campaign

ECB Reporters Network28-Sep-2024Kent 96 for 3 (Finch 34, Ackermann 1-1) trail Durham 360 (Lees 144, Bedingham 66, Parkins 6-109)A sparkling century from Alex Lees gave Durham the upper hand in their Vitality County Championship clash with Kent despite a six-wicket haul from Matt Parkinson.Play was abandoned without a ball bowled on days one and two after heavy downpours at the Seat Unique Riverside, so Lees was on a mission to get quick runs with so much time lost in the game. Lees (144 off 180) was well backed up by Emilio Gay, who made 52, and David Bedingham, who made a swashbuckling 66, as the hosts made 360 in their first innings.Matt Parkinson led a Kent fightback after tea as he picked up figures of 6 for 109 to give the visitors some hope.Kent’s reply didn’t get off to the best start as they lost early wickets but Harry Finch and Jack Leaning combined for a partnership worth 72 to stall the hosts but they closed on 96 for 3, still 264 behind Durham.Kent captain Leaning won the toss and elected to bowl, with Ben McKinney and stand-in skipper Lees opening for the hosts. Lees found his groove early on with a lovely cover drive off the bowling of Grant Stewart.McKinney joined the party as he crunched a glorious shot to the boundary and Lees then reached his run-a-ball fifty with eight boundaries in the Durham skipper’s knock. Kent struck back, with Nathan Gilchrist removing McKinney for 23 after he was caught in the covers.Gay, who is on loan from Northamptonshire ahead of his permanent move to the North East next year, came in and elegantly flicked one off his pads for four. Lees continued to motor, combining well with Gay, and he carved a Stewart delivery for four to third man.After lunch, Lees resumed unbeaten on 95 and reached his fourth century of the season from 115 balls just minutes later. Gay impressed on his home debut looking calm at the crease and he manipulated the field well with the number three reaching his fifty from 92 balls. However, he didn’t last much longer as he feathered a Jas Singh delivery down the legside and it was caught well by Harry Finch behind the stumps.Bedingham wasted no time getting into the groove as Division One’s leading run scorer hit back-to-back sixes over the legside boundary off the bowling of Singh. Bedingham continued to hit the Kent attack around the park with the South African international reaching fifty from 30 balls, which included three fours and four sixes.Bedingham then smashed a Stewart full toss over the ropes, but he went for one maximum too many as he was caught off the bowling of Matt Parkinson for a 38-ball 66. Kent then got a second wicket in quick succession as Lees fell for an excellent 144 after he was caught at mid-wicket off the bowling of Stewart.Ollie Robinson then holed out for five, giving Matt Parkinson his second of the afternoon, and Bas de Leede quickly followed for a duck. Durham resumed after tea and 16-year-old James Minto, who is making his home debut, hit his first six in first class cricket as he smashed a Matt Parkinson delivery down the ground for six. However, the teenager’s joy did not last as the leg spinner bowled him for 25.Matt Parkinson then got his fourth as Daniel Hogg edged to slip and he then got his twin brother Callum out caught and bowled to wrap up his five wicket haul. The former Lancashire man then got his sixth as Durham were bowled out for 360.Kent’s reply got off to the worst possible start with Tawanda Muyeye caught behind off the bowling of Daniel Hogg for five. Kent then lost a second wicket as de Leede sent Jaydn Denly’s off-stump flying for 12.Finch and Leaning then came together and combined well with some lovely shots, but Colin Ackermann bowled Finch for 34 just before the close to leave Kent three down at stumps.

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