Disney Star licenses part of its ICC rights to Zee in landmark agreement

In a first-of-its-kind broadcast agreement, Disney Star* has licensed a part of the ICC rights it recently won for the Indian market to Zee Entertainment Enterprises. The agreement means that Zee will now broadcast the ICC men’s and Under-19 tournaments in India for the 2024-27 cycle, while Disney Star retains the digital rights for the same events.The broadcast rights for the ICC women’s events for the Indian market – both TV and digital – remain with Disney Star.In a media release issued on Tuesday, Disney Star and Zee said the ICC had given an “in-principle” approval to their agreement. On August 26, Disney Star had won the entire ICC rights – both TV and digital – for four years for the Indian market by beating competition from Zee, Sony and Viacom. There are four men’s marquee events in the 2024-27 period, including two T20 World Cups (2024 and 2026), the 2025 Champions Trophy and the 2027 ODI World Cup.Related

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K Madhavan, country manager and president at Disney Star, said “opting to retain only the digital rights” for ICC tournaments for 2024-27, in addition to securing the IPL television rights (2023-27) has allowed the broadcaster to put “in place a balanced and robust cricket offering for our audiences across linear and digital.” Zee’s chief executive officer and managing director Punit Goenka said the agreement reflected a “sharp, strategic vision” for conducting sports business in India.”As a one-stop television destination for ICC men’s cricket events until 2027, ZEE will leverage the strength of its network to offer a compelling experience for its viewers and a great return on investment for its advertisers,” Goenka said. “Long-term profitability and value-generation continue to be our areas of focus across the business, and we will always evaluate all the necessary steps that will enable us to make sports a compelling value proposition for the company. We look forward to working with ICC and Disney Star, to enable this strategic offering for our television viewers in India.”While it is probably the first time that two rival broadcasters have come to such an agreement in a single market, the ICC had included a provision in its bid document about the winner having the opportunity to sub-license rights. The agreement is still subject to the ICC’s final approval, which will come after Disney Star has given the necessary guarantees.To exploit the commercial potential for its rights, the ICC had decided to unbundle the rights and sell them in separate territories for four or eight years, while also separating men’s and women’s rights. After the Indian market, the ICC is scheduled sell the rights for the US, UK and Australian markets separately with the aim of closing all those deals by Christmas.

Australia rest frontline attack from Perth trip, Ellis and Swepson called up

Australia’s frontline attack have all been rested for the first T20I against England in Perth on Sunday as the selectors continue to juggle their resources ahead of the World Cup.Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Pat Cummins and Adam Zampa, along with Glenn Maxwell, will not make the cross-country trip to Perth and instead remain in the east and rejoin the squad the two games in Canberra.Marcus Stoinis, Kane Richardson and Ashton Agar officially return to the squad for the England series having been managed through side injuries over the last few weeks.Related

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Cameron Green has been retained for the England matches while Mitchell Swepson and Nathan Ellis have been added for the first game.”We have a World Cup to win and that is what we have got to peak for,” Cummins said after the opening game against West Indies. “There is no point in burning out in these five games. We’ve been over in India for three games as well.”You might see some people having a rest and in some different roles to make sure we give ourselves the best chance not only for the start of the tournament but the back end if we are there.”Richardson and Mitchell Marsh, who played as a batter only in the first T20I against West Indies as he returns from an ankle injury, have travelled to Perth on Thursday so will therefore miss the second match in Brisbane on Friday.The selectors have taken a cautious approach with players ahead of the World Cup, particularly around flying them to and from Perth in quick succession. Stoinis was left in Perth rather than heading to Queensland while Australia’s main bowlers have avoided two lengthy journeys either side of a match day.”The high-performance team and selectors have planned these matches to ensure our squad get to the World Cup fresh and ready to perform,” national selector George Bailey said.”Some squad members travelled to Perth early to begin preparations slightly earlier than the main squad and a handful of others will not make the trip to Perth. With some players remaining on the east coast, it provides further opportunity for Nathan Ellis and Daniel Sams who both performed well in India.”Likewise Mitchell Swepson was a part of last year’s World Cup squad and continues to provide good depth in our T20 spin bowling department.”After the opening game against West Indies, captain Aaron Finch said they would be using the upcoming matches to try out players in various positions and combinations ahead of the World Cup”We’re going to keep tinkering with things just to try and make sure that we’ve got all bases covered.”Australia squad for England in Perth Aaron Finch, David Warner, Mitchell Marsh, Cameron Green, Steven Smith, Marcus Stoinis, Tim David, Josh Inglis, Matthew Wade, Daniel Sams, Sean Abbott, Ashton Agar, Mitchell Swepson, Nathan Ellis, Kane RichardsonAustralia squad for England in Canberra Aaron Finch, David Warner, Mitchell Marsh, Cameron Green, Steven Smith, Glenn Maxwell, Marcus Stoinis, Tim David, Josh Inglis, Matthew Wade, Daniel Sams, Sean Abbott, Ashton Agar, Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood, Adam Zampa, Kane Richardson

CSA to conduct review into South Africa's performance at T20 World Cup

Cricket South Africa will conduct a review into the national men’s team’s performance at the T20 World Cup, which they exited at the group stage following a shock defeat to Netherlands, but will also urge the players to move on quickly from another major disappointment.”It is important that we review what has happened. We are in the process of putting a panel together to ensure the review is very clinical,” Enoch Nkwe, South Africa’s director of cricket (DOC), said after the team’s arrival from Australia. “But the focus is hitting the reset button and not dwelling on the past. It’s important that we close a chapter and look at what lies ahead.”Related

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Nkwe, who started as DOC in July after previously serving as assistant coach to Mark Boucher, has already installed Malibongwe Maketa as an interim coach to take South Africa to a three-Test series in Australia, and will begin the process of recruiting Boucher’s full-time replacement soon. Boucher resigned his post to take up a role with Mumbai Indians in the IPL, with a year left on his contract. All indications are that there will be no knee-jerk changes to South Africa’s set-up, with white-ball captain Temba Bavuma still not ready to make a decision over his future.In the immediate aftermath of South Africa’s defeat on Sunday, Bavuma said he would not be swayed by the emotions of the moment. Three days later he said he was still trying to process things.”The emotions are not as raw, but in terms of the disappointment and the disbelief, that’s still there,” Bavuma said. “It’s going to take me a couple of days.”The entire squad will be given some space over the next few days, even as the opening round of domestic first-class matches begins on Thursday (each team only plays seven games and there are only three rounds before the Tests in Australia), before a decision is taken on when the players will return to action. The bulk of them will be in the Test team, which lies second on the World Test Championship (WTC) points table. Their performance in the Test series in Australia will be crucial in determining whether they will have a shot at the WTC final in June, a time when South Africa could also end up playing in the 50-over World Cup Qualifier, because they are 11th on that table.’The emotions are not as raw, but in terms of the disappointment and the disbelief, that’s still there’ – Temba Bavuma•Associated Press

The ups and downs of South Africa’s last three years – since former CEO Thabang Moroe made the decision to overhaul the coaching system and install a team director who was then swiftly replaced with a coach, Boucher – have been witnessed first-hand by Nkwe. He was the interim team director on a disastrous tour to India in 2019, and then served for almost two years under Boucher before resigning, citing concerns with the team culture. His return in an overseeing role saw him replace Graeme Smith as DOC, which was followed by Boucher’s resignation. If that sounds chaotic, imagine what it must have been like being involved in it, as Nkwe confirmed. “As a system, we have gone through a lot,” he said. “We went through a bit of a turmoil.”Asked whether he thought the sum total of the off-field events (the example above is only a small sample) affected the team, Nkwe said he wouldn’t use it as an excuse. “One thing I have been proud of this team over the last couple of years is that they’ve been able to go on the park and compete and try and win games,” he said. “They’ve been able to close off all the noise and whatever is happening off the field. Somehow we found a way to get to a point where we remain competitive. I believe the team has come through that very well.”Still, he admitted the World Cup exit was “disappointing”, and that the culpability had to fall somewhere, perhaps with CSA. “We will always take full accountability,” Nkwe said. “When the results are poor, there will be fingers pointed at the organisation in terms of what has happened in the past and whether there was enough support. Whether the team loses or wins, we are always going to be supporting the team and asking ourselves questions about what more we can do.”And the last of those is where Nkwe’s focus now lies. He did not want to get into whether he agreed with the decision to leave out in-form players like Reeza Hendricks or persist with out-of-form players like Kagiso Rabada because “I don’t get involved in selection”, but said there will be a “clear strategy going forward.” With an ICC event every year for the next eight years, South Africa’s emphasis is on “How do we prepare better for World Cups coming?”Given that they’ve never won a World Cup, it’s fair to assume no one really has the answers, but Nkwe has made clear that he’s going to try finding them. “There is a culture we are driving internally to make sure we put cricket in a good healthy space,” he said. “There’s a lot of work behind the scenes and what we are all working towards is getting our national teams to reach No.1 and win World Cups. We are now at the point where we can make a difference and that will be our focus. There’s so many opportunities as an organisation to change it all. Hopefully next year we can be in a different position celebrating our team winning a World Cup.”

WBBL: Burns, Ecclestone's stunning knocks take Sixers closer towards final

Sydney Sixers were on the verge of securing a spot in the WBBL final after Erin Burns and Sophie Ecclestone lifted them to an amazing five-wicket win over the Brisbane Heat.In reply to Heat’s 163 for 5 in Wednesday night’s top-of-the-table clash at North Sydney Oval, Sixers were in all sorts of trouble at 72 for 5 after 12 overs.With them needing 92 off 48 balls, Burns (51 not out off 32 balls) and Ecclestone (47 not out off 25 balls) whacked the Heat attack to all areas of the park to seal a famous victory with three balls to spare.The result extended Sixers’ lead at the top of the table to three points over the second-placed Heat, who have only one match remaining. It means only the third-placed Hobart Hurricanes can still catch Sixers.Hurricanes must win their remaining two games and hope the Sixers lose both of theirs in order to snatch the top spot. Whoever finishes on top secures a direct berth in the final.It marks a remarkable turnaround for the Sixers, who collected the wooden spoon last season despite boasting a star-studded squad. Wednesday’s result proved the fighting spirit within the side.Sixers needed 12 runs off the final over and Ecclestone did the job by smacking Nicola Hancock for a six, a four and a two.”I’m absolutely buzzing,” Burns, who played a crucial role in getting the team over the line in her 100th WBBL match to continue an outstanding season in the middle order, said. “I’m just so stoked we got over the line as a team. It’s always been a battle against Heat.”You kind of dream of these moments to be able to get your team home. I’m not necessarily the one that got us home – Eccy [Ecclestone] bombing sixes and fours towards the back-end was beautiful to watch.”The match was also memorable for Sixers pacer Kate Peterson, bowling in a game for just the third time this season, who snared 4 for 17 off four overs.Heat had themselves recovered from 101 for 5 with Jess Jonassen hitting 38 off 21 balls in a sixth-wicket stand of 62 in 29 deliveries with Amelia Kerr.

Solid Elgar, aggressive Verreynne set the tone for South Africa

South Africa captain Dean Elgar made a trademark century but it was the form of wicketkeeper Kyle Verreynne that will most please the tourists on day one of the four-day clash with a Cricket Australia XI.Left-hander Elgar is South Africa’s best and most experienced batter and he reinforced those credentials at Allan Border Field.Verreynne, batting at No. 6, made an unbeaten counterattacking 76 off 86 balls with his vicious pulls and cut shots a highlight.Middle-order batter Temba Bavuma won’t bat in the first innings due to an elbow complaint but Elgar said he hoped he would in the second innings.”It was nice to get a good knock,” Elgar said of his own innings. “Personally I have been in good form back home as well and I’d like to think I think I am match fit and match ready which is a nice thing coming into a really important series. It was nice to see some other batters put their hands up as well.”South Africa’s batting had a fragility about it on the recent Test tour of England. Their pace attack is world class but it will be scoring runs for the bowlers to defend that will be the key against Australia in the three-Test series which begins on December 17 at the Gabba.Sarel Erwee (25), Rassie van der Dussen (27) and Khaya Zonda (18) all made starts but it was Verreynne who showed the aggression and confidence that will be vital against Australia’s pace attack.He made his maiden Test century against New Zealand in Christchurch earlier this year and looks a player of class.Left-arm orthodox spinner Matthew Kuhnemann was the pick of the bowlers and did not get discouraged when the batters went after him. He made his ODI debut for Australia this year and enjoyed bowling on his home track.Elgar was strong on the leg side and played one glorious swivel pull shot for four off Jordan Buckingham to stamp his class. His driving on the off side was also of the highest quality.He went to tea unbeaten on 99 and brought up his century with the first ball after the break before being bowled by Chris Tremain.Verreynne and Keshav Maharaj (34) then added 89 at better than a run-a-ball for the sixth wicket.

Chawla, Rohit star as Mumbai earn first points in last-ball thriller

Mumbai Indians held their nerve with the last ball of a scrappy, tension-fuelled basement battle against Delhi Capitals to claw themselves off the bottom of the IPL standings with their first win in three attempts this season, and condemn their opponents to a fourth consecutive loss in a season that is no closer to offering up any answers to their numerous issues.Piyush Chawla rolled back the years, and ripped his googlies, to serve up game-shaping figures of 3 for 22 either side of a pair of chalk-and-cheese fifties from David Warner and Axar Patel, but despite a timely half-century from Rohit Sharma and 41 from 29 from Tilak Varma, Mumbai were forced to scramble over the line, into the teeth of a magnificent final over from a pumped-up Anrich Nortje.With just five runs to defend against Cameron Green and the impact sub, Tim David, Nortje nailed his yorkers to perfection, and was let down only by his fielders – first by a bad drop from Mukesh Kumar at midwicket to reprieve David and then, with two runs needed from his final ball, a poor loopy shy from Warner at mid-off that allowed David to dive home for the second run and so avoid the Super Over.In truth, it was a contest in which Mumbai had bossed the key moments – first through Chawla’s mid-innings incisions, then with the scalping of five wickets in the final ten balls of Delhi’s innings that had kept their target to a gettable 173. The early exchanges of the run-chase had fallen in the visitors’ favour too, with Rohit’s 65 from 45 including a 29-ball fifty that provided the impetus for a 68-run powerplay. But after Mumbai failed to kill the chase when the going was still good, Nortje – armed with two death overs and aiming fast, full and furious throughout – so nearly saved the day.ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Chawla shows he’s still got it

At the age of 34, and more than a decade after his last appearance for India, Chawla may be a touch more weather-beaten these days, but his googly has lost none of the startling impact it first made more than half a lifetime ago in 2005 when, aged 15, he bowled Sachin Tendulkar in a Challenger Trophy fixture. Two of his three wickets today were pitch-perfect wrong’uns to Rovman Powell and Lalit Yadav respectively, to rip the heart out of a Delhi batting line-up that, Axar’s cameo aside, was never allowed to emerge from second gear.In an unbroken spell from the seventh to the 13th overs, Chawla returned the exceptional figures of 3 for 22, with only a brace of Warner boundaries disrupting his otherwise complete hold over Capitals’ batters. After a threatening Manish Pandey skipped to the pitch but was beaten in flight to scuff a legbreak to long-off, Powell and Lalit were confounded in consecutive overs by a pair of leg-stump-seeking googlies, the former thumping the pad, the latter plucking the stump clean out.The only real blot in Chawla’s copybook was a bad miss at mid-off as Warner, then on 37, clattered a drive clean through his grasp. He left the field soon after his spell, apparently nursing a sore finger for his efforts, although compared to the hapless Suryakumar Yadav’s spill on the boundary’s edge off Axar, it was a fairly routine miss. Poor Suryakumar, desperate for a break amid a terrible run with the bat, wore a full-blooded slog on the forehead as it burst through his fingers, and left the field with suspected concussion. Though he did eventually appear at No. 4 in Mumbai’s chase, he soon wished he hadn’t, as a first-ball flick off the hip to fine leg completed his fourth golden duck in his last six innings.Axar Patel raced to a 22-ball half-century•BCCI

A pair of contrasting fifties

Axar and Warner fell within three balls of one another, in the midst of a four-wicket 19th over from Jason Behrendorff that also featured ducks for Kuldeep Yadav and Abishek Porel, but there their tales converged. Axar departed with 54 from 25 balls at a strike-rate of 216; Warner with 51 from 47, at almost exactly half his team-mate’s tempo (108.51).It was Warner’s third half-century of Capitals’ campaign, but all three have come from more than 40 balls – 43 on this occasion – and his lack of celebration was tell-tale evidence of another stodgy display.On the one hand, at least he was there, providing some grit to the oyster that his middle-order team-mates – the debutant Yash Dhull included – could not muster. On the other hand, the carefree fluency of Axar told a different tale, of an innings in which too many scoring opportunities had been squandered.Axar is in the midst of a startling coming-of-age as a batter of some repute and his maiden IPL fifty was a knock of high pedigree – four fours, five sixes, each of them launched down the ground including a Riley Meredith slot-ball that brought up his fifty from 22 balls. For five consecutive overs from the start of the 14th to the end of the 17th, he was Capitals’ solitary source of momentum, with Warner contributing a mere five from nine at the other end.Rohit Sharma brought up his fifty in 29 balls•BCCI

The Hitman cometh

Despite Warner’s struggles to push his tempo, 41% of respondents to a mid-broadcast poll said they would still prefer him over Rohit at the top of their IPL order, which perhaps says much about the criticisms the latter has endured since India’s disappointing T20 World Cup. But those doubts dissolved in the midst of an enervating powerplay onslaught, as Rohit romped towards a 29-ball fifty that offered the sort of proactive backbone that Capitals’ own innings had lacked.Rohit set the tone for Mumbai’s chase in Mukesh’s opening over, with a clip for four off the pads followed by a violent slap for six over deep midwicket. When Nortje also strayed into his slot two overs later, he too was launched emphatically into the stands, as Mumbai’s openers cantered along at more than 11 an over in the powerplay.At the other end, Ishan Kishan started like the clappers against the quicks as well, with three fours in his first four balls from the left-arm seam of Mustafizur Rahman. But, much as Chawla had derailed Delhi’s intentions, so Kishan was less sure-footed against the spinners – after making 28 from his first 15 balls, he managed just three runs from his next 10 before Rohit – cold-blooded at both ends of the pitch – effectively retired him out with a call for a non-existent run to point.

Mumbai fall over the line

By this stage, perhaps Capitals’ likeliest matchwinner hadn’t yet made his bow. Kuldeep’s left-arm wristspin duly made its entry in the ninth over, but with Tilak’s rubbery wrists and feet producing a brace of sixes in his only two overs, he was denied the chance to emulate Chawla’s impact. And when Tilak responded to a fallow run of 11 runs in three overs by smoking Mukesh for a four and two sixes in his first three balls, the contest seemed cooked with 34 needed from the last 27.Mukesh, however, was not yet done. Tilak’s next shot in anger picked out Pandey at deep midwicket, and when Suryakumar’s miserable match ended one ball later, all eyes were suddenly back on Rohit. A cathartic four through midwicket eased the pressure a touch, but when Mustafizur fired in a wide yorker, Rohit could only toe-end an attempted steer through to the keeper. Suddenly Mumbai had two men yet to face, and an angsty finale to negotiate. Despite Nortje’s unstinting efforts, Green and David did just enough – the killer blows landing within the final three balls of an otherwise fine effort from Mustafizur, as each man picked off a six that left Nortje with just too little to defend.

Warner: It's been challenging for our batters at home

The Delhi Capitals batting unit has struggled “to work out what the best total is” at their home venue this season because of “slow” and “inconsistent” pitches at the Arun Jaitley Stadium, according to their captain David Warner.Warner was speaking after DC’s penultimate league game against Punjab Kings in Dharamsala, where his side scored their first 200-plus total of the season and won by 15 runs.”I think playing on a nice wicket helps … it’s been challenging for us back at home with a lot of slow wickets and inconsistent pitches, it’s good to get the guys here for some momentum … at your home venue you want a bit of consistency and that’s been the difficult thing. We haven’t been able to work out what the best total is there.”Related

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It was an opinion shared by Rilee Rossouw, who scored his maiden IPL half-century against the Kings in Dharamsala.”It’s long overdue, let’s put it that way,” Rossouw said on finally reaching the milestone in his 13th IPL match across three seasons, the first of which was in 2014. “The wicket was really good to bat on, we haven’t had many of those this season and it was just good to be on a batting wicket.”DC have won only two out of six home games so far this season, and their scores at the Arun Jaitley Stadium have read: 162 for 8, 172, 128 for 6, 188 for 6, 187 for 3 and 136 for 8.However, their away record has been poor as well, with three wins out of seven games and scores of 143 for 9 in Lucknow, 142 for 9 in Guwahati, 151 for 9 in Bengaluru, 144 for 9 in Hyderabad, 130 for 8 in Ahmedabad, 140 for 8 in Chennai, and 213 for 2 in Dharamsala.DC were the first team to get knocked out of contention for the playoffs after losing their first five games of the season. They did manage to win four of their next five, but two more losses ended their hopes of finishing in the top four.Their final league game is against the Chennai Super Kings in Delhi on May 20.

Masood carries Yorkshire hopes after du Plooy 170 gives Derbyshire a glimmer

Shan Masood holds the key for Yorkshire with the LV=Insurance County Championship match against Derbyshire in the balance after a pulsating third day at Chesterfield. The Yorkshire captain was unbeaten on 68 but his team lost late wickets chasing 212 and closed on 147 for 6 with 65 more runs needed.Derbyshire skipper Leus du Plooy made a superb 170 and shared a fifth wicket stand of 277 with Haider Ali who scored 146 as the home side made 453 to set up a thrilling finale.Matthew Fisher and Dom Bess both took three wickets before Derbyshire’s innings ended when Suranga Lakmal was hit by a short ball and replaced by concussion substitute Zak Chappell.Yorkshire seemed to be cruising on 140 for 3 but spinners Mark Watt and Alex Thomson took three wickets in four overs to raise Derbyshire’s hopes of pulling off a remarkable victory.The visitors prospects of chasing a less-demanding target quickly evaporated on another hot morning at Queen’s Park. Although they bowled a lot better than on the second day, there were few problems for du Plooy and Haider after they negotiated the opening burst from Ben Coad and Fisher.Fisher made du Plooy work for his hundred, opening with a maiden to the Derbyshire skipper, before a short ball was pulled to the midwicket boundary.The stand had become the second-highest by Derbyshire at Chesterfield when Haider moved across his stumps to work George Hill to leg and was lbw although the ball looked to be going down. It had been an outstanding innings from Haider, who scored 100 of his runs in boundaries and with du Plooy had given his team a chance of pulling off a memorable victory.If Yorkshire thought his departure would open the door, they were disappointed as du Plooy and Brooke Guest survived against the new ball to go in at lunch with a lead of 97.Du Plooy reached his 150 from 272 balls and the stand with Guest was worth 67 when a ball change did the trick for Yorkshire. Guest scooped a catch to short midwicket when Bess got one to grip but there was more frustration for the visitors when du Plooy came down the pitch and Jonny Tattersall failed to complete a difficult stumping.Bess was hoisted for six by Alex Thomson but in his next over, du Plooy’s superb innings ended when he edged a big drive and was caught at slip. The England spinner had bowled a lot better after a chastening second day and Watt’s attempt to reverse sweep him ended in Tattersall’s gloves.Ben Aitchison drove Fisher low to cover and after Thomson pulled Bess out of the ground, Lakmal was hit on the back of the neck after ducking into a short ball from Fisher.He was able to walk off the field but could not continue and was retired out with Chappell replacing him and opening the bowling with Yorkshire facing a much bigger target than they would have anticipated when Derbyshire were 17 for 4 on day two.Adam Lyth and Finlay Bean reduced the target by 38 before Bean drove Thomson low to cover and the spinner almost had Masood first ball when an edge just evaded Wayne Madsen at slipLyth and Masood took the score to 63 but the return of Watt at the Lake End brought an immediate reward when Lyth was lbw going back and across to a quicker ball. With Dawid Malan unable to come in until the fall of the fifth wicket after being off the field with a groin problem. Hill joined Masood but was run out when he failed to beat Aitchison’s throw from point.Masood and Tattersall were steering Yorkshire home but Tattersall was lbw to one that kept low from Thomson before Watt removed Fisher and Matthew Revis to give the game another twist.

Buttler joins 10k club as Lancashire close in on quarter-finals

A blistering 83 off 36 balls by England captain Jos Buttler clinched two precious points for Lancashire Lightning as they improved their chances of securing a place in the Vitality Blast quarter-finals with a 27-run win against Derbyshire Falcons.Buttler hit six sixes in his knock as he and England team-mate Liam Livingstone constructed a devastating second-wicket partnership of 101 runs off just 41 balls, with Lancashire reaching an intimidating 177 for 4 off 15 overs in a game delayed by 80 minutes due to rain.In reply, Falcons reached 150 for 7 with 45 from Harry Came the only real highlight on a chastening night for Derbyshire, who drop to seventh.Lightning began their innings relatively conservatively, scoring 23 off their first three overs before Phil Salt fell in the fifth, caught at point by Zak Chappell off Mattie McKiernan for 16.With Livingstone joining Buttler at the crease, the fireworks began with the white-ball specialists targeting Chappell, whose second over went for 20 runs and included a towering six from the skipper that landed on the roof of Emirates Old Trafford’s newly-constructed hotel.

Livingstone repeated the trick in the eighth over, this time depositing the ball on the roof of the already-built Hilton hotel, before Buttler took over hitting the unfortunate Alex Thomson for three consecutive sixes in the ninth over.By the time Buttler was out, caught by Leus du Plooy off Zaman Khan, he had become only the ninth player to hit 10,000 T20 runs, and Falcons were left ruing their decision to insert the home side.Cameos from Luke Wells and Daryl Mitchell added to the six count and with Livingstone finishing unbeaten on 47, Lightning were just one short of their record number of maximums in an innings with 12.”I really enjoyed that,” Buttler said. “It was a lot of fun batting out there with Livi. He puts so much pressure on bowlers. Any time you can extend the partnership like we did tonight it’s hard to control the scoring rate.”Faced with a daunting task, Falcons began brightly with opener Came doing his best to find the boundaries but he soon lost Luis Reece and Haider Ali for company as the accurate seamers of Tom Bailey bore fruit.Related

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When the talismanic Wayne Madsen found Luke Wood on the boundary off Mitchell for just 16 with the score 52 for 3, it felt like a hard task had become virtually impossible.Wells accounted for skipper du Plooy for 12 with a smart caught-and-bowled before Came departed stumped off Tom Hartley for a well-made 45.A stunning catch from Rob Jones in the deep off McKiernan gave Wells a second wicket and with 38 runs required off the last over the game was up for Falcons as Lightning went second in the North Group, requiring just one win from their final two games to qualify.

Marsh's fitness key to Green's Test spot

Mitchell Marsh’s fitness could determine whether Cameron Green is dropped for the first time in his Test career for the final Ashes Test at The Oval.Marsh, who helped Australia negotiate 30 overs on Saturday at Old Trafford alongside Marnus Labuschagne, was nursing some soreness during the game and did not bowl on the third day.He and Green, whose absence from the Headingley Test because a minor hamstring injury opened the door for Marsh to flay a century, were both accommodated in Australia’s XI for the Old Trafford Test by the omission of Todd Murphy – the first time Australia had not fielded a specialist spinner in 11 years – but he is likely to return for the last Test.Related

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If Marsh is unable to bowl Green’s position might be safe although Australia’s coach Andrew McDonald said runs were the most important factor for whoever bats No. 6. However, having that extra pace option has been vital in managing the workload of the main quicks.”The team has played three quicks and one spinner and we have gone that way numerous times in the past,” McDonald said. “We have had the luxury of allrounders, or in particular Cameron Green, that’s changed the shape of the team over time. Runs were premium first and foremost.”

Green’s challenging Ashes

Green has struggled to find fluency with the bat on this tour, where he has averaged 19.14 against India and England and was again tentative at Old Trafford, though he got a borderline lbw decision against Chris Woakes in the first innings.So far in his 24-match Test career, the only games Green has missed have been through injury – a broken finger suffered against South Africa last December which also ruled him out of the start of the India series, then the hamstring niggle on this tour.Mitchell Marsh followed his Headingley hundred with more runs at Old Trafford•Clive Mason/Getty Images

Green has only had two nights at home in almost six months, having followed the India tour with a full IPL for Mumbai Indians. It was after that campaign that he squeezed in a brief trip back to Perth and joined Australia’s training camp in the UK a couple of days later than others.”He’s had a different experience,” McDonald said. “He’s had the IPL, and people probably draw some conclusions that that’s affected the way he’s gone about things here. But…I think he’s in a good space. I think you’ll see a lot of our batters are working on the right things, and the way they go about it runs are just around the corner.”

IPL adds new layer for all-format Green

In the last 12 months Green has become an all-format player and secured a huge AUD$3.15 million deal at the IPL, where he went on to score his maiden T20 hundred when he smashed 100 off 47 balls against Sunrisers Hyderabad.”He’s still young, he’s still learning his trade, this is his first time in these conditions,” Labuschagne said during the Old Trafford Test. “With the IPL there wasn’t heaps of time to adjust but I think he’s doing a good job.”Last year Green spoke about the challenge of switching between formats when he was part of Australia’s T20 World Cup squad and then had a slow start to his Test season. On that occasion the lack of time in the middle was a factor with him being largely unused during the World Cup, only playing the final game against Afghanistan. He was also unable to play any Sheffield Shield cricket.It’s a situation that may confront him again this year with the ODI World Cup in October and November, though there is a possibility he won’t be selected for the T20 series in India which follows that tournament and may be able to get some Shield cricket for Western Australia ahead of the Test series against Pakistan.However, there is a good chance that Marsh now has the lead in the allrounder pecking order after his impressive return to Test cricket – a thrilling century at Headingley and two important innings at Old Trafford.

Neser could come into consideration for The Oval

Alongside Marsh, Australia will also assess the fitness of Mitchell Starc after he landed heavily on his shoulder during the second day’s play, though he was able to resume bowling the following morning. What appeared to also be a leg problem has been attributed to cramp.If there was a need to change the pace attack, Michael Neser could play his first match of the series ahead of Scott Boland, who has largely been dominated by England.”[There were] two separate incidents where he dived and landed on the point of his shoulder…then the other one he slipped down on the rope and sort of extended the shoulder joint,” McDonald said of Starc. “So he’s looking worse for wear and a little bit sore. All indications are that he’ll be right to go but that’ll be assessed.”Everyone’s on the table, every selection. And Michael [Neser] knows that. He was a serious consideration here and he was under consideration at Leeds also, so you’re always sort of balancing those who are up and running in the series versus freshness.”

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