David Warner on Wednesday scored his first international century since completing a ball-tampering ban as Australia returned to winning ways at the Cricket World Cup with a 41-run victory over Pakistan at Taunton.
Warner made 107 and, with Australia captain Aaron Finch (82), got the defending champions off to a flying start with an opening stand of 146 — the highest partnership for any wicket at this World Cup to date.
Mohammad Amir dragged Pakistan back into the game with career-best figures of 5-30 in 10 overs, but Australia still posted a challenging score of 307, which ultimately proved beyond their opponents.
“It means a lot to a batter to get a century,” man-of-the-match Warner said. “It was a great effort from Pakistan in the end, but our bowlers bowled excellent. They probably got closer than we expected.”
Pakistan, after a middle-order collapse that saw them lose three wickets for 11 runs in 15 balls, were all but beaten at 200-7 in the 34th over.
However, Pakistan captain Sarfaraz Ahmed (40) and big-hitting Wahab Riaz (45) gave them renewed hope with a stand of 64.
Australia, who lost to India on Sunday, were again looking to Mitchell Starc to get them out of a tight spot, as he had done in an earlier win over the West Indies and the fast bowler duly delivered with 2-43.
He had Wahab caught behind off a thin edge, although it needed an Australia review of an original not-out decision to leave Pakistan 264-8.
Two balls later, Amir played on for a duck before Glenn Maxwell ended the match with a brilliant direct hit run-out of Sarfaraz.
Pakistan’s chase started badly when Fakhar Zaman fell for a duck, uppercutting Cummins to Kane Richardson at third-man.
Babar Azam was in superb touch, with 28 of his 30 runs coming in fours, before he mishooked Nathan Coulter-Nile to deep backward square-leg.
Opener Imam-ul-Haq was upping the tempo in his 53 when he gloved Pat Cummins (3-33) down the leg-side to wicketkeeper Alex Carey.
Finch, an occasional slow bowler, grabbed a real bonus wicket when Mohammad Hafeez (46) hit a rank full toss straight to Starc at deep square-leg.
When Shoaib Malik was brilliantly caught for naught by a diving Carey after inside-edging Cummins, Pakistan were in dire straits at 147-5.
Warner and Steve Smith, also returning from a year-long ban for ball-tampering, had been jeered by fans in previous games, but Pakistan fans largely heeded an appeal from Sarfaraz not to boo the pair, preferring to roar chants of “Amir, Amir.”
Warner completed his 15th one-day international hundred when an edge off Shaheen Shah Afridi flew past slip for four.
An elated Warner leaped in the air in celebration, but his 111-ball innings ended soon afterward when he was caught at point off Shaheen, having gone past fifty for the third time in four innings at this World Cup.
“I’m very disappointed,” Sarfaraz said. “We lost three wickets in 15 balls and that’s why we lost.”
“We conceded too many runs in the first 20 overs apart from Mohammad Amir. We came back and restricted them well, but it was a 270, 280 pitch,” he said.
“We made some runs and got starts, but we’ve got to convert them and go long. If you want to win matches, your top four must score runs,” he added.
Australia have three wins in four matches while Pakistan are struggling, with just one victory in their four games so far.
Japan’s Shohei Ohtani is the record-breaking baseball “superhuman” following in the footsteps of the legendary Babe Ruth who has also earned comparisons to US sporting greats Michael Jordan and Tom Brady. Not since Ruth a century ago has there been a baseball player capable of both pitching and hitting at the top level. The 30-year-old’s performances with the Los Angeles Dodgers have consolidated his position as a baseball legend in the making, and a national icon in his native Japan. He continues to find new ways to amaze, this year becoming the first player to hit 50 home runs and steal 50 bases
More than 180 years of horse racing came to an end in Singapore on Saturday, as the Singapore Turf Club hosted its final race day before its track is handed back to the Singaporean government to provide land for new homes. Under an overcast sky, the air-conditioned VIP boxes were full of enthusiasts, socialites and expats, while the grounds and betting halls below hosted mostly older-generation punters. The sun broke through for the last race, the last-ever Grand Singapore Gold Cup. The winner, South African jockey Muzi Yeni, echoed a feeling of loss shared by many on the day. “I’d
PREDICTION: Last week, when Yu’s father made a wrong turn to the former champions’ parking lot, he said that his son could park there after this year With back-to-back birdies on the 18th hole, Kevin Yu fulfilled his driving range-owning dad’s prediction that he would win the Sanderson Farms Championship and become Taiwan’s third golfer to claim a US PGA Tour title. The Taoyuan-born 26-year-old, who represented Taiwan in the Olympic golf at Paris, saw off Californian Beau Hossler in a playoff at the Country Club of Jackson, Mississippi, on Sunday. Having drained a 15-foot putt to claw his way into the playoff, Yu rolled in from five feet on the first extra hole, ensuring he joined Chen Tze-chung (LA Open in 1987) and Pan Cheng-tsung (RBC
LeBron James and eldest son Bronny James claimed a piece of NBA history on Sunday after making their long-awaited first appearance alongside each other for the Los Angeles Lakers. The duo appeared together at the start of the second quarter in the Lakers’ 118-114 preseason defeat to the Phoenix Suns in Palm Desert, east of Los Angeles. While LeBron James impressed with 19 points in just 16 minutes and 20 seconds on court before sitting out the second half, Bronny found the going harder with zero points in just over 13 minutes on court. The younger James attempted just one