Tag: Harmanpreet Kaur

  • IND-W Vs NZ-W ODI Live Streaming: When, Where To Watch India Women vs New Zealand Women Match Live Telecast On TV, Mobile Apps? Know Squad Details | cricket news

    The Indian women’s team is ready to lock horns with New Zealand in a three-match Women’s ODI series, starting Thursday, October 24. All the matches will be taking place at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad. After a terrible run in the T20 World Cup 2024, the Indian women’s team will be looking to do well. Richa Gosh is left out from the squad as she is preparing for her board exams.

    The New Zealand women’s cricket team on the other hand will look to continue their winning momentum as they lifted the T20 World Cup trophy in the UAE.

    India vs New Zealand Women’s ODI series Live streaming details

    When to watch India vs New Zealand Women’s ODI series?

    The India vs New Zealand Women’s ODI series will begin on Thursday, October 24 at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad.

    What time will the India vs New Zealand Women’s ODI series start?

    All three games of India vs New Zealand Women’s ODI series will start at 1:30 PM IST.

    Where to watch India vs New Zealand Women’s ODI series?

    The India vs New Zealand Women’s ODI series will be aired live on Sports 18.

    How to live stream the India vs New Zealand Women’s ODI series?

    Fans can livestream India vs New Zealand Women’s ODI series on the Jio Cinemas app in India.

    India women’s team squad: Harmanpreet Kaur (C), Smriti Mandhana (VC), Shafali Verma, Dayalan Hemalatha, Deepti Sharma, Jemimah Rodrigues, Yastika Bhatia (wk), Uma Chetry (wk), Sayali Satgare, Arundhati Reddy, Renuka Singh Thakur. , Tejal Hasabnis, Saima Thakor, Priya Mishra, Radha Yadav, Shreyanka Patil.

    New Zealand women’s team squad: Sophie Devine (C), Suzie Bates, Eden Carson, Lauren Down, Izzy Gaze, Maddy Green, Brooke Halliday, Polly Inglis (WK), Fran Jonas, Jess Kerr, Amelia Kerr, Molly Penfold, Georgia Plimmer. , Hannah Rowe, Lea Tahuhu.

  • Asia Cup 2024: ‘Won The Final But For Other Team,’ Harmanpreet Kaur Faces Social Media Backlash After Poor Show In India vs Sri Lanka Women’s Match | cricket news

    Captain Chamari Athapaththu’s turbo-charged fifty combined well with the steady half-century of Harshitha Samarawickrama as a resilient Sri Lanka carved an eight-wicket win over defending champions India to bag their maiden women’s Asia Cup title here on Sunday. This is the second time in nine Asia Cup editions (WODI and WT20I) across formats that India has lost a final.

    The last time India lost the final was against Bangladesh in 2018 in Kuala Lumpur. Tasked with hunting down a strong target of 166, Sri Lanka served well by Athapaththu (61b, 43b, 9×4, 2×6) and Samarawickrama (69 not out, 51b, 6×4, 2×6) and finished at 167 for two in 18.4 overs. Athapaththu and Samarawickrama added 87 runs as the Lankans always stayed ahead of their opponents.

    The stand for the second wicket was also of contrast as Samarawickra was the yin to the yang of her aggressive leader. Athapaththu fetched her fifty in 33 balls, and Samarawickrama went past her mark in 43 balls and their shot selection too was vastly differing.

    After a while when everything came down to the fielding and bowling of India, they had a chance where Harshitha Samarawickrama tried to play a shot over mid-on for a four against Deepti Sharma but gave away an easy. However, captain Harmanpreet Kaur standing at that fielding position dropped a sitter and it very much likely cost India any chance of getting in the final when runs were coming easy for Sri Lanka.

    Fans on social media were not impressed with Harmanpreet Kaur’s captaincy or performance as a player in the Asia Cup 2024 final as she could only score 11 with the bat and had a day to forget in the field.

    Check out the reactions here…

    Captain Harman in the finals

    Got out early. Dropped a sitter of Harshita who eventually won the match for her team. pic.twitter.com/1oawTuI01k TukTuk Academy (@TukTuk_Academy) July 28, 2024

    EGO Queen Harman Well Deserved #WomensAsiaCup2024 pic.twitter.com/yifsZHiL5G Rahul (@msdfanboy007) July 28, 2024

    Captain Harman dropped a sitter that could have been the trophy. pic.twitter.com/5IXn49UpAy TukTuk Academy (@TukTuk_Academy) July 28, 2024

    Full tosses, misfields, dropped catches, slot balls, and an under-pressure angry Harman. Our script in crunch games never changes. Manya (@CSKian716) July 28, 2024

    Athapaththu scored through almost every reachable place on the field, and her assault on left-arm spinner Tanuja Kanwar, who she biffed for two fours and six in her first over, was stunning. But at the other end, Samarawickrama lacked the power of her senior but she offset that with clever placings, such as reverse sweeps off left-arm spinners Deepti Sharma and Radha Yadav. But she picked up the tempo when Sri Lanka reached a rather safer zone, muscling a slog-swept six off Yadav over mid-wicket.

    In between, Deepti managed to bowl Athapaththu around her legs with a fuller delivery that sparked celebrations among the Indians, who till then looked lethargic on the field. But those merriments were premature as Samarawickrama found an able sidekick in Kavisha Dilhari (30 not out, 16b, 1×4, 2×6) as the duo added 73 runs off just 40 balls for the unbeaten third wicket to guide their side home. But an equal share of the credit should go to the Lankan bowlers as well for stifling a set of free-flowing India batters.

    Smriti Mandhana’s conditions-defying half-century (60, 47b, 10×4) had powered India to a fighting 165 for six and she received reasonable backing from Jemimah Rodrigues (29, 16 balls, 3×4, 1×6) and Richa Ghosh (30, 14 balls) , 4×4, 1×6). But largely it was a tight contest for them against a plethora of Lankan spinners.

    The home side included only one pacer in their ranks – Udeshika Prabodhani and the rest were slow bowlers. The Sri Lanka bowlers indeed made good use of a slow pitch as well, leaving the Indian batters a frustrated lot often.

    It was evident from the struggles of Shafali Verma (16, 19 balls), who found it difficult to time her shots. Mandhana had a massive slice of fortune when she was on 10 as her weak chip-off spinner Dilhari (2/36) was put down at covers by Samarawickrama. The left-hander made the hosts pay for that mistake with some gorgeous shots, especially against Prabodhani whom she carted for three fours in the sixth over as India reached 44 for no loss. But Verma soon fell leg before to Dilhari after getting pinged on her pads while trying a tweak to the on-side. (Riyan Parag Credits Gautam Gambhir For Surprising Three-Wicket Haul In First T20I Against Sri Lanka)

    As the Power Play came to an end, Mandhana had to resort to some improvisations such as scoops behind the stumper to get her boundaries. The Indian vice-captain, who brought up her fifty in 36 balls, also often had to make room for herself or shuffle across the stumps to find the ropes because the ball was not exactly coming onto her bat.

    While Mandhana managed to beat the slowness of the deck, it consumed Harmanpreet and Uma Chetry, who got a promotion to No. 3. At 87 for three in the 12th over, India needed a move-on and it was given by an aggressive Rodrigues in the company of Mandhana, making 41 runs off 25 balls for the fourth wicket.

    However, the run out of Rodrigues and the dismissal of Mandhana pushed India to 133 for five in 16.5 overs. Ghosh played a typical swift innings that contained a massive slog-swept six off Dilhari over the mid-wicket.In the company of Pooja Vastrakar, Ghosh milked 31 runs for the sixth wicket that carried India past the 160-run mark. (With PTI Inputs)

  • Women’s Asia Cup 2024: India Play Pakistan On July 21; Check Full Schedule Here | cricket news

    Defending champions India have been clubbed with arch-rivals Pakistan, UAE and Nepal in group A of the women’s Asia Cup T20 Championships which is scheduled to get underway in Dambulla, Sri Lanka on July 19. The nine-day affair, will feature eight teams. — one extra than the last edition. Unlike last time, the eight teams will be split into two groups with Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Thailand and Malaysia placed in Group B.

    The top two teams from each group will qualify for the semifinals on July 26. The final is scheduled on July 28. India is the most successful team in the history of the tournament with seven titles so far.

    The marquee clash between India and Pakistan is scheduled for July 21. “We are excited to see the increased participation and competitiveness among the teams, reflecting the growing popularity and importance of women’s cricket. This expansion, from six teams in 2018 to seven in 2022 , and now eight, is a testament to our commitment to the women’s game and the burgeoning talent pool in Asian cricket,” Asian Cricket Council (ACC) president, Jay Shah was quoted as saying in a statement accessed by ESPNCricinfo.

    The Asia Cup, which will feature only female umpires like last time, holds importance in the build-up to the T20 World Cup scheduled to be held in Bangladesh starting in September.

    Schedule:

    Jul 19 — Pak vs Nep, Ind vs UAE

    Jul 20 — Mal vs Tha, SL vs Ban

    Jul 21 — Nep vs UAE, Ind vs Pak

    Jul 22 — SL vs Mal, Ban vs Tha

    Jul 23 — Pak vs UAE, Ind vs Nep

    Jul 24 — Ban vs Mal, SL vs Tha

  • WPL 2024: Why MI-W Captain Harmanpreet Kaur Missed Mega Clash Vs Smriti Mandhana's RCB-W

    Explained: Why MI-W skipper Harmanpreet Kaur missed the clash against RCB-W.

  • WPL 2024: All franchises retained their top players for the next season, see complete list

    Women’s Premier League (WPL) The franchise has decided to retain all its marquee players. in the second season also Harmanpreet Kaur Meg Lanning will play for Mumbai Indians, Meg Lanning will play for Delhi Capitals and Smriti Mandhana will play for Royal Challengers Bangalore only. The five franchises had only time till October 15 to ‘retain’ players for WPL 2024.

    Mumbai won the first title

    The five franchises have retained 60 players, including 21 foreign cricketers, while 29 have been retired. Apart from Harmanpreet Kaur, the Mumbai team has retained Haley Mathews, Yastika Bhatia, Natalie Sciver Brunt, Amelia Kerr and Isabelle Wong. Delhi team has retained 15 players. At the same time, UP Warriors have kept their core group the same.

    List of retained and dropped players of 5 WPL teams

    Delhi Capitals

    Retained players: Alice Capsey, Arundhati Reddy, Jemimah Rodrigues, Jess Jonassen, Laura Harris, Marianne Capp, Meg Lanning, Meenu Mani, Poonam Yadav, Radha Yadav, Shefali Verma, Shikha Pandey, Sneha Deepti, Tanya Bhatia, Titas Sadhu.

    Released players: Aparna Mandal, Jasia Akhtar, Tara Norris.

    gujarat giants

    Retained players: Ashley Gardner, Beth Mooney, D Hemalatha, Harleen Deol, Laura Wolvaardt, Shabnam Shakeel, Sneh Rana, Tanuja Kanwar.

    Released players: Annabel Sutherland, Ashwini Kumari, Georgia Wareham, Hurley Gala, Kim Garth, Mansi Joshi, Monica Patel, Parunika Sisodia, S Meghna, Sophia Dunkley, Sushma Verma.

    Mumbai Indians

    Retained players: Amanjot Kaur, Amelia Kerr, Chloe Tryon, Harmanpreet Kaur, Hayley Matthews, Humaira Kazi, Isabelle Wong, Jintimani Kalita, Natalie Sciver, Pooja Vastrakar, Priyanka Bala, Saika Ishaq, Yastika Bhatia.

    Release Player: Dhara Gujjar, Heather Graham, Neelam Bisht, Sonam Yadav.

    Royal Challengers Bangalore

    Retained players: Asha Shobhana, Disha Cassatt, Ellyse Perry, Heather Knight, Indrani Roy, Kanika Ahuja, Renuka Singh, Richa Ghosh, Shreyanka Patil, Smriti Mandhana, Sophie Devine.

    Released players: Dane Van Niekerk, Erin Burns, Komal Zanzad, Megan Shutt, Poonam Khemnar, Preeti Bose, Sahana Pawar.

    UP Warriors

    Retained players: Alyssa Healy, Anjali Sarwani, Deepti Sharma, Grace Harris, Kiran Navgire, Lauren Bell, Lakshmi Yadav, Parshvi Chopra, Rajeshwari Gaikwad, S. Yashashree, Shweta Sehrawat, Sophie Ecclestone, Tahlia McGrath.

    Release Player: Devika Vaidya, Shabnam Ismail, Shivli Shinde, Simran Shaikh.