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Heim Inks Development Deal with 23XI Racing

Published in Racing
Sunday, 23 February 2025 08:21

ATLANTA Corey Heim has signed a multi-year deal with 23XI Racing to join the team as its first development driver.

The 22-year-old, who will continue as part of the Toyota Driver Development Program (TD2), will also race in multiple events throughout the season in the NASCAR Cup Series and the Xfinity Series.

A 12-time winner in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series and winner of the season-opening event at Daytona (Fla.) Intl Speedway, Heim will also continue to serve as 23XIs reserve driver.

Heim, who raced with 23XI last season at Nashville (Tenn.) Superspeedway, will run multiple Cup Series races behind the wheel of the No. 67 Toyota Camry XSE, with veteran crew chief Bootie Barker set to lead the team. Heim is set to make his first Cup Series start of the season in May at Kansas Speedway, where he raced last spring while filling in for Erik Jones in the No. 43 Toyota Camry.

Corey Heim after wining at Kansas Speedway last year. (HHP/Tom Copeland)

Additionally, as part of his development process, Heim will compete in multiple Xfinity Series races with Sam Hunt Racing (SHR) in a Toyota GR Supra supported by 23XI. Last season, Heim competed in 13 races with SHR and has 17 total starts in the Xfinity Series, earning three top-five and five top-10 finishes. Heims first race with SHR will be at Circuit of the Americas, where he will compete in his first road course event in the Xfinity Series.

Its a dream come true to be a part of 23XI, and Im excited for the opportunity to race more Cup and Xfinity races this year. Im blessed to have the chance to compete in all three series as I continue to set my sights on full-time Cup racing when that time comes, said Heim. The success that 23XI has shown in only a few short years has been impressive and Im excited to learn from the organization.

Im also grateful to everyone at Toyota for their ongoing support in my development both on and off the track, and I look forward to strengthening that relationship for years to come.

Our team was fortunate to work with Corey last year and we look forward to growing our relationship with him as our development driver starting in 2025, said Steve Lauletta, President of 23XI Racing. Corey continues to prove he is a talented, hard-working driver, and we plan to make all the resources of 23XI available to support his development within the Toyota family as he progresses in NASCAR.

I couldnt be more excited to have Corey back with us at SHR this year, working alongside 23XI on his professional development, said Sam Hunt, owner of Sam Hunt Racing. Corey has become like a little brother to me we understand each others journeys, and he genuinely cares about the growth and success of SHR long-term. We have had some very strong performances together in the past, so we are looking to continue maximizing our resources and flexing strength as we chase that first organizational win and develop Corey as a Sunday driver.

While Heim will run several races with 23XI and SHR, TRICON will continue to be his primary home for the third straight season, where he drives the No. 11 Safelite Toyota Tundra TRD Pro. His performance has been impressive in the NASCAR Truck Series, including twelve wins and 33 top-five finishes. Heim, the 2023 Regular Season champion, is the youngest driver in Truck Series history to earn 10 wins, and has made back-to-back appearances in the Championship 4 the last two seasons.

Heim will also continue to be a valued part of the TD2 program, which has helped support drivers achieve their dreams of earning full-time NASCAR Cup Series rides. TRD takes an active role in each TD2 drivers development to help them achieve their goals of long-term success in motorsport. The mutual long-term commitment allows TRD to provide additional opportunities on and off the track to encourage and support their personal development.

Corey continues to impress on-track with his racing acumen and talent behind the wheel and also continues to work hard behind the scenes with TRD partners, at TPC, and on the simulator, said Tyler Gibbs, president, TRD U.S.A. We are pleased to have a robust schedule in place for Corey this year and know that he will take advantage of every opportunity to continue to grow as a race car driver.

Everyone at TRD looks forward to a long tenure with Corey as we support him in reaching his ultimate goals in NASCAR competition.

Gibson leaves Ducks' win with upper-body injury

Published in Hockey
Sunday, 23 February 2025 08:09

Anaheim Ducks goaltender John Gibson left his club's 3-2 overtime victory over the Boston Bruins after two periods due to an upper-body injury Saturday night.

Gibson, 31, a topic of trade talks, stopped 19 shots before exiting, giving way to Lukas Dostal, who made nine saves en route to a win that was sealed when Leo Carlsson scored with 1:21 left in the extra session.

"We just have to believe in everyone in this room," Anaheim's Frank Vatrano said after the win. "We're a really close group. We all get along. At the end of the day, everyone wants to play in the playoffs. I think for us, it's about not getting too far ahead of ourselves and try to take it game by game."

Any playoff push for Anaheim likely will need Gibson, one of the most reliable netminders on the trade market. Should the Ducks deal him, he will command a hefty price. And should they keep him, the club will be limited in how it might add salary in the offseason.

Gibson has two years remaining on a deal that carries a $6.4 million salary cap hit, and because he has played on some subpar Ducks teams, his numbers don't match his skills in the crease. He was 13-27-2 last season, a year after finishing 14-31-8. Heading into Saturday's return to action from the 4 Nations Face-Off break, he was 9-9-2.

But among a crop of journeyman goaltenders who might be available before the trade deadline, Gibson, a Pittsburgh native and career Duck, stands out as the one who can immediately be a No. 1 for a contender. But the diagnosis of this recent injury looms large for his future.

His club picked up the slack in Boston. Trevor Zegras and Vatrano also scored for Anaheim, which won for the seventh time in the past eight games to climb above .500 for the first time in four months.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Isak's 50th PL goal helps Newcastle edge Forest

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 23 February 2025 09:10

Newcastle United scored four goals in 11 first-half minutes to keep alive their Champions League qualification hopes with a thrilling 4-3 victory over Nottingham Forest at St James' Park on Sunday but had to hold on under heavy pressure in the second period.

Newcastle move into fifth place with 44 points from 26 games, outside the top four on goal difference only. High-flying Forest lost for the second week in a row but remain in third with 47 points from the same number of matches.

Forest led early through Callum Hudson-Odoi's long-range strike but Newcastle roared into life with four quick goals from 18-year-old Lewis Miley, Jacob Murphy and a brace from Alexander Isak, the first a penalty, which gave them a 4-1 half-time lead.

Forest were the better side in the second period and created numerous chances against a nervous home team, as Nikola Milenkovic netted and a late goal by Ryan Yates almost earned the visitors what would have been a deserved point.

"It was a brilliant first half, the reaction after conceding was really good," Isak told Sky Sports. "We dropped a bit second half and conceded sloppy goals. I'm obviously happy to win the game.

"The most important thing was to win. We want to win more comfortably but it was a big win."

It was the proverbial game of two halves, with Newcastle utterly dominant in the first but then meek in the second.

Alexander Isak's impressive scoring season continued against Nottingham Forest.

Richard Sellers/Sportsphoto/Allstar via Getty Images


The home side had five shots on target in the first half and none in the second in a performance that will give manager Eddie Howe plenty of food for thought despite the three points.

"We made mistakes, Newcastle made mistakes also. But it was two totally different halves. We started well, we scored, and they just rolled over us," Forest manager Nuno Espirito Santo said.

"There was nothing else in the first half about us. Every time Newcastle had the ball they scored. In the second half we were much better."

Forest led inside six minutes when Hudson-Odoi drilled a low shot from 30 metres into the bottom left corner, before Newcastle seized control with a goal blitz that started midway through the first half.

Miley was picked out in acres of space in the penalty box and fired low into the net, before the home side went ahead when Murphy bundled in the ball at the back post off his thigh.

Newcastle received a penalty when Lewis Hall's cross from the left struck the arm of jumping Forest defender Ola Aina, which was deemed to be in an unnatural position.

Isak went down the middle with his spot kick and while Forest goalkeeper Matz Sels got a strong hand to it, he could not keep out the ball.

The home side added a fourth with Isak scoring his 50th Premier League goal in his 76th appearance. He timed his run into the box to perfection and his shot deflected into the net off the boot of a defender.

Newcastle almost scored a fifth early in the second half when Fabian Schaer's header from a corner came back off the post.

But the hosts inexplicably fell off the pace after that and Forest created chance after chance until Milenkovic flicked the ball into the net from close range.

Yates fired in a third for the visitors as the clock struck 90 minutes but they could not force an equaliser in injury time.

Mascherano hails Messi as Miami's 'soul' in draw

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 23 February 2025 09:10

Inter Miami CF head coach Javier Mascherano has praised the team for its "soul" after his players overcame a first-half red card to earn a draw against New York City FC at Chase Stadium on Saturday to kick off the 2025 MLS season.

Tomás Avilés got Miami's season off to the best possible start with his fifth-minute goal, tapping in from Lionel Messi's square pass.

The Herons' first challenge of the night arrived five minutes later, however, when new signing Fafà Picault picked up an injury 10 minutes into game and had to be substituted.

Shortly afterwards, Avilés brought down NYCFC's Alonso Martínez just outside the box and was shown a straight red card.

Mascherano adjusted the line up to continue the match with 10 men, before an injury to Marcelo Weigandt forced Inter Miami to make more tactical changes. NYCFC capitalised on their advantage, with Mitja Ilenic and Martínez scoring either side of half-time to give them a lead that looked like it would hold until the final whistle.

Miami fought back in the dying moments, however, with Messi again providing that pass for Telasco Segovia's equaliser in the tenth minute of stoppage time.

"In the end, the team ends up scoring because it's a team that has soul, that has heart," Mascherano said. "I think we have to stay with that, with the positive. Less than 72 hours ago we played at minus 24 degrees and today they ran like horses. We have to keep jumping through obstacles that we will have on the way.

"But I am one of those who stay with the positive things. And today, beyond the result, which I think was clearly a result that we deserved, or we deserved victory, I stay with a lot of positive things and with the team. The team has soul, the team has life and we are going to fight."

Mascherano revealed Inter Miami requested the match against NYCFC be moved to Sunday to accommodate players after having to face Sporting Kansas City in the Concacaf Champions Cup just 72 hours prior to the season-opener. The league declined the request.

"Tomorrow we will do the most thorough tests to see what Picault and Weigandt have," the Argentine coach said. "This is what happens sometimes when the games move. We had nothing to do with it being less than 20 degrees in Kansas. We asked to play on Sunday, they didn't accept it, we played.

"You play at minus 24 degrees, it's less than 72 hours ago. Then, you travel and you get a three-hour trip. You get there at five in the morning.

"The players are not robots. They are people, they are human beings. And you have to understand that this is about the players. Without players, football doesn't exist. All of us here don't exist without players."

Mascherano added that his former Barcelona teammate and compatriot Messi remains the main man for Miami as they look to better their Supporters' Shield success from 2024.

"Messi is the soul of this team. You saw this on the pitch. He is a kid playing and he doesn't want to lose," Mascherano said. "So for us it's a big big advantage. So we just need to keep him with this spirit. Because it's not just what he does on the pitch.

"It's what he translates to his teammates and all that he does with his 37 years. He's not just playing in attack, he helps us in defense, running the centre-back, running the whole midfield. So he's magnificent."

Inter Miami will now prepare to host Sporting KC on Tuesday, Feb. 25 at Chase Stadium in Fort Lauderdale, Florida for the second leg of the first-round CCC clash.

Miami triumphed 1-0 over Kansas in the first match via a Messi goal.

Haaland misses Liverpool clash with injury

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 23 February 2025 09:10

Erling Haaland hasn't been named in Manchester City's squad for their clash against Liverpool on Sunday owing to injury.

The Norway international was an unused substitute during City's midweek Champions League loss to Real Madrid after picking up a knock against Newcastle United the previous weekend.

City boss Pep Guardiola confirmed that Haaland was ruled out of the game after undergoing further tests on Saturday.

"During this nine years, we played many seasons. We had really, really important players and we survived. And this season we had a lot, lot of games we could not survive, but in the specific games, we have to do it," he said ahead of the game.

His injury sees Jérémy Doku named in City's starting lineup for the first time in over a month, while Kevin De Bruyne and Nathan Aké come into the XI in place of Ilkay Gündogan and John Stones.

The England international faces a long period on the sidelines, with Guardiola saying the defender might have to undergo surgery.

City will hope Haaland's attacking threat will be compensated by January signing Omar Marmoush, who scored a first half hat trick against Newcaslte last week.

Guardiola's side go into the game in fourth place, 17 points behind Liverpool the top of the Premier League. The visitors can go 11 points clear of second-placed Arsenal with a win at the Etihad.

Munyonga takes Zimbabwe home in tight finish

Published in Cricket
Sunday, 23 February 2025 08:21

Zimbabwe 141 for 7 (Munyonga 43*, Young 4-24) beat Ireland 137 for 8 (Tucker 46, Gwandu 3-24) by three wickets

Craig Young's four-wicket haul appeared to put Ireland on the ascendancy, but No. 6 Tony Munyonga dragged Zimbabwe out of a hole with an unbeaten 43 to seal a tight three-wicket win for the hosts in Harare.

Their victory with four balls to spare now gives Zimbabwe an unassailable 1-0 lead in the three-game series with the first T20I washed out and the third encounter remaining on February 25.

Young turns perfect replacement

The quick was not in the T20I squad originally, but brought in late to replace the injured Mark Adair. Adair had been Ireland's best bowler in the ODIs, but Young's new-ball spell made up for his absence.

His first ball of the evening was a short ball that Zimbabwe opener Tadiwanashe Marumani half-heartedly pulled towards short fine leg. Three balls later, he dug another one in and took Wessly Madhevere's outside edge to Paul Stirling. Next over, Brian Bennett sliced one to deep backward point and Ireland had the early edge.

Later, when Ireland were desperate for a wicket, his dismissal of Tashinga Musekiwa at what seemed to be a crucial point in the game left him with figures of 4 for 24.

Zimbabwe's lower-middle order steps up

With the early collapse, the experienced pair of Raza and Burl were the perfect batters to follow. Ireland kept the pressure up, but Raza grinded it out with only two fours in his 27-ball 22. He could afford to with a middling target.

Burl's 27 at a strike rate of 135 kept the Zimbabwe innings in touch with the rate. Ireland, though, dismissed both in quick succession with Burl edging Harry Tector behind and Raza hitting down long off's throat to leave Zimbabwe at 64 for 5.

Munyonga, though, showed great maturity in navigating a tricky period by contributing in the 33-run sixth-wicket stand with Musekiwa (15) and another 15 runs with Wellington Masakadza. No. 9 Richard Ngarava struck two crucial fours late in the 19th over off Young before Munyonga hit the winning runs with a thrashing through the covers.

Ireland stutter after rain break

After losing Stirling early, the other opener Lorcan Tucker (46) held fort in the company of No. 3 Tector (28) to lift the innings. Tector, the more enterprising of the two, fell in the eighth over to Raza trying to find a big shot, leaving Ireland at 59 for 2.

But Tucker and No. 4 Curtis Campher failed to gain momentum like Tector, adding only 40 runs in their 5.5 overs together and their dismissals shortly after the rain break came in a phase when Zimbabwe's bowlers kept things tight.

Blessing Muzarabani, Trevor Gwandu and Raza all went for under six an over. Gwandu's dismissals of Tucker, George Dockrell and Neil Rock crippled Ireland's pursuit of a big flourish, while Raza broke two dangerous partnerships. Ireland scored only 16 in the last three overs to finish on a below-par 137 for 8.

Sreshth Shah is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo. @sreshthx

Kohli began the game against Pakistan 15 runs short of 14,000, and passed the milestone during India's successful chase of 242, leading his team to victory with an unbeaten hundred, his 51st in the format. He reached his century by hitting the winning runs, a cover-driven boundary off part-time spinner Kushdil Shah.

Kohli is only the third batter to score 14,000 in ODIs after Sachin Tendulkar, who reached the landmark in 350 innings, and Kumar Sangakkara, who took 378 innings. Kohli got to 14,000 in 63 fewer innings than Tendulkar.

He is currently averaging over 57 in the format, while Tendulkar (44.19) and Sangakkara (41.73) were averaging in the early 40s when they got to 14,000 runs. He is also the fastest to 14,000 runs in terms of balls faced, needing 14984 balls, much quicker than both Tendulkar and Sangakkara, who needed 16292 and 17789, respectively. Tendulkar and Sangakkara also marked their milestones with a hundred, although both came in defeats.

Kohli has been the fastest to every such 1000-run milestone since he went past 8000 ODI runs in 175 innings in June 2017. Overall, he is third on the list of highest run-scorers in ODIs, poised to overtake Sangakkara (14,234) in second place. Tendulkar tops the list with 18,426. Kohli also holds the record for most hundreds in ODIs; he had surpassed Tendulkar's tally of 49 during the 2023 ODI World Cup.
Earlier in the match against Pakistan, Kohli had broken the record for the most catches as a fielder for India in ODIs, moving to 158.

Big picture: New Zealand primed for semi-finals

New Zealand are in their element. They came into the Champions Trophy after an unbeaten run to the tri-series title against South Africa and Pakistan, whom they beat convincingly once again in the tournament opener.
Will Young and Tom Latham struck centuries to set up a 300-plus score before Matt Henry and Will O'Rourke stifled Pakistan in the powerplay. Their three spinners tightened the grip with impactful spells and the contest fizzled out early in the chase. It was a near-perfect performance from a well-drilled unit.

Another win against familiar opponents Bangladesh in Rawalpindi will confirm their place (and India's as well) in the semi-final, an admirable achievement after losing several frontline bowlers to injuries pre-tournament.

Bangladesh's ODI side has lost its mojo in the last couple of years. Their top order includes Soumya Sarkar and captain Najmul Hossain Shanto, both of whom bagged ducks as they slumped to 35 for 5 against India. They may have not got anywhere near 228 had Jaker Ali, who made 68, not been dropped first ball by Rohit Sharma.

Towhid Hridoy made his maiden ODI century but suffered from cramps at the end of his innings. Fortunately for him, Rawalpindi will be cooler than Dubai. Bangladesh will also be buoyed by the news that their senior batter Mahmudullah is likely to play against New Zealand after missing out against India with a hamstring niggle.

Bangladesh's bowling was steady against India but they need more from the likes of Taskin Ahmed, Rishad Hossain and Mehidy Hasan Miraz. They could also do with more firepower in Nahid Rana, their fastest bowler. New Zealand have never faced him before, so the surprise factor could be to Bangladesh's advantage in a game they must win to keep their Champions Trophy campaign alive.

Form guide

Bangladesh: LLLLL (last five completed ODIs, most recent first)
New Zealand: WWWWL

In the spotlight: Towhid Hridoy and Glenn Phillips

A century was a long time coming for the impressive Towhid Hridoy. It has taken him more than two years, and 34 matches, to score one. He was tested by a potent Indian attack but showed off his shots. With a hundred in the bag, he has the platform to push on, but Bangladesh will hope he displays more durability after coming down with cramps and struggling for impact towards the end of his innings in Dubai.
Glenn Phillips is an electric cricketer. His catch to dismiss Mohammad Rizwan in Karachi, leaping high and to his left at backward point, is one of the moments of the tournament - an effort that would make the best goalkeepers feel envy. His fielding aside, Phillips' attacking batting down the order gives New Zealand acceleration towards the end of their innings. He is also a capable offspinner and he can keep wickets too. Is there anything Phillips can't do?

Team news: What if Mahmudullah and Ravindra are fit?

Two changes are expected for Bangladesh as they look to include Mahmudullah and Nahid. Who will they replace though?

Bangladesh (probable): 1 Tanzid Hasan, 2 Soumya Sarkar, 3 Najmul Hossain Shanto (capt), 4 Mehidy Hasan Miraz, 5 Tohwid Hridoy, 6 Mushfiqur Rahim (wk), 7 Jaker Ali, 8 Rishad Hossain, 9 Tanzim Hasan, 10 Taskin Ahmed, 11 Mustafizur Rahman

New Zealand rested Rachin Ravindra against Pakistan after he was struck on the forehead while fielding during the tri-series just before the Champions Trophy. Since then, Devon Conway has scored of 97, 48 and 10 as an opener while Young scored a hundred in the previous game. So if New Zealand want to bring Ravindra back, who do they leave out?

New Zealand (probable): 1 Will Young, 2 Devon Conway, 3 Kane Williamson, 4 Daryl Mitchell, 5 Tom Latham (wk), 6 Glenn Phillips, 7 Michael Bracewell, 8 Mitchell Santner (capt), 9 Nathan Smith, 10 Matt Henry, 11 Will O'Rourke

Pitch and conditions: Rawalpindi could be cloudy

This time, there will be no industrial fans and outdoor heaters to dry the pitch, as was the case ahead of the last international match - a Test against England - at this venue. Rawalpindi is generally good for batting, with a bit of help for fast bowlers as long as the ball is new and shiny. The forecast for Monday is cloudy weather with the temperature expected to drop below 20C after sunset.

Stats and trivia: Bangladesh's most frequent ODI opponents

  • Bangladesh beat New Zealand in their previous Champions Trophy meeting, in Cardiff in 2017. The head-to-head record in the competition thus stands at 1-1.
  • New Zealand have been Bangladesh's most frequent opponents in ODIs since 2015. New Zealand have dominated the head-to-head with 17 wins and three defeats in 21 matches.
  • Against Pakistan, Young and Latham became the second New Zealand pair to score centuries in the same match in an ICC ODI tournament. The first pair was Ravindra and Conway, who hit hundreds against England in the 2023 ODI World Cup.
  • Jaker and Hridoy's 154-run partnership for the sixth wicket against India was a record stand for Bangladesh. The previous highest partnership for that wicket also involved Jaker, who had added 150 with Mahmudullah in Bangladesh's previous ODI, against West Indies in December 2024.
  • Quotes

    "Yeah, we've got a few plans for Bangladesh, but I think we obviously - we have to wait and see what the wicket does. If it is pretty flat I think it is probably similar stuff to what we've been operating in in Karachi. It's hitting that hard length for a long period of time and then we know they have some destructive players in their line-up as well."
    New Zealand captain Mitchell Santner

    "(Preparation time) has to be enough. That's what the tournament gives us. That's what we are using. Yesterday was a good practice. The Islamabad Club ground has really good facilities. We had a good session. We will have a sharp session today, and we will be ready for tomorrow."
    Bangladesh head coach Phil Simmons

    Mohammad Isam is ESPNcricinfo's Bangladesh correspondent. @isam84

    Bangladesh's top order has to stand up and be counted for the side to have any chance against New Zealand, according to head coach Phil Simmons. Bangladesh were soundly beaten by India in their first game, and this is a do-or-die game for them.

    Simmons said Bangladesh had given the game away with their poor starts with both bat and ball against India. "We lost in batting in overs one to ten, and the same in bowling. We have to make sure we win in those areas," Simmons said. "We need to assess and put together our batting better in the first ten overs. The middle and lower order have done really well so it is up to our top-order batsmen to put things together in the first 10 or 15 overs, especially."

    Bangladesh had slipped to 35 for 5 in the ninth over in that game in Dubai. Soumya Sarkar fell in Mohammad Shami's first over before captain Najmul Hossain Shanto gave Virat Kohli a catch at cover in the second. Tanzid Hasan and Mehidy Hasan Miraz didn't last too long either, while Mushfiqur Rahim fell for a golden duck.

    Simmons said that the openers must assess conditions quicker. He said that Bangladesh should take inspiration from all the big scoring the tournament, especially how Australia chased down 352 against England. That game was in Lahore, Bangladesh take on New Zealand in Rawalpindi, the first of this tournament's matches at the venue. "This is a big-scoring ground. We saw the score in Lahore yesterday. We are looking at 300-plus here," Simmons said. "In the last five matches, we made 300 a couple of times. So we have the ability to do it. We didn't start well in the last game, but still we got to 200 [231]. If we start well, we will get there [300]."

    Bangladesh are facing a familiar opposition in New Zealand - they have faced them most frequently in bilateral cricket than anyone else since 2015. This match will have a different vibe than a bilateral game, though, Simmons said. "All the games in this tournament are pressure games. These are the top-eight teams in the world, and you expect every game to be hard. They are definitely playing well but tomorrow is a new day. We will try to make sure that they don't play as well as they have been playing."

    New Zealand won their first game in convincing fashion against Pakistan and if they win here, they will be through to the semis. Their captain Mitchell Santner said his batters' form in the last couple of weeks has given the dressing room a lot of confidence. "I think obviously the lead-in we had with that tri-series [against Pakistan and South Africa], it was a good time for guys to get time in the middle. I think at different stages of every game we have played, different guys have stepped up, which is probably the most pleasing thing.

    "I think the guys took a lot of confidence in that going into that first game against Pakistan, but then also here into Bangladesh. Again, it's probably a reset, it's a different surface, a different team. But I think the way the guys have been planning and netting and stuff has all been good stuff."

    Bangladesh are waiting on the fitness of Mahmudullah who missed the first game as well due to hamstring issues, having injured himself during training. He batted in the nets in Rawalpindi ahead of the New Zealand game.
    Simmons hopes Bangladesh will also draw inspiration from the venue being Rawalpindi, the scene of their 2-0 Test series win against Pakistan last year. "I hope it does [inspire the team]. To come into Pakistan and beat Pakistan is not an easy thing. I hope it has a significant bearing on how they think about this ground."

    India 244 for 4 (Kohli 100*, Iyer 56, Afridi 2-74) beat Pakistan 241 all out (Shakeel 62, Kuldeep 3-40, Hardik 2-31) by six wickets

    In the biggest match of the year, with his mortality showing more than it ever used to, Virat Kohli showed he's still got it, that maybe, just maybe, the little he's lost wasn't going to define him. He ticked off 14,000 runs in ODI cricket, brought up his 51st ODI century, set up India for a semi-final spot and essentially crossed out Pakistan from the 2025 Champions Trophy. The holders and the hosts need other results to go their way to stay alive in the tournament now.
    India went into the game as favourites. They proved worthy of that seeding by limiting Pakistan to 241, Hardik Pandya putting in the kind of performance that should make him illegal. An allrounder capable of dismissing the opposition's best batter, and then coming back to take down their top-scorer, isn't just a name on the sheet. He is the secret sauce.
    And Kuldeep Yadav was the spice. His left-arm wristspin is so rare and he made it rarer by finding a way to be quick through the air without compromising on turn or accuracy. So that means unless batters pick him out of the hand, they are always going to be guessing. Three Pakistan batters guessed wrong. All three were death-overs wickets. Pakistan were setting up to explode at the death. Kuldeep just wouldn't let them. The injury hasn't affected his menace.

    Pakistan were able to produce moments. Shaheen Shah Afridi sending down a 143kph inswinging yorker to shatter Rohit Sharma's stumps. Abrar Ahmed conjuring a carrom ball from hell to get rid of a rampaging Shubman Gill. But when it came to capitalising on them, they just couldn't. The result was a world champion side that was renowned for pulling games out of the fire now seems to do the first part right - they definitely got into trouble in Dubai - but the other part, the important part is going so very wrong. Pakistan were 151 for 2 in the 34th over before they were bowled out for 241 with the most inexperienced member of the India side dictating terms, Harshit Rana and his slower balls were just impossible to hit.

    A game in an ICC event and a rivalry with history bursting out of it eventually became so one-sided that its last few moments were dominated by an individual pursuit. Axar Patel turned down an easy two so Kohli could pursue his hundred. The crowd in Dubai loved that. There were 12 runs to get for India's victory and 12 runs to get for their hero's century and they chanted his name over and over. Pakistan were nowhere to be found. Ever since a collapse of 3 for 11 in 19 balls, this game turned pear-shaped for them.

    Mohammad Rizwan had banked on the innings going so differently. He came in at 47 for 2 and hit his first ball for four and then decided run-scoring was not for him. He was 24 off 50. He barely hit the ball in anger. He point blank refused to. At the other end, Saud Shakeel was at least making an effort to turn the good balls he was facing into singles. When he got to fifty, he had weathered only 29 dot balls. At the same time, Rizwan at the other end, had racked up 40. India did well by denying him spin to start his innings. But still, this was a better pitch than the opening game in Dubai a few days ago. It wasn't flat, but it had a little more pace in it, and it got better under lights. Rizwan, though, batted like it was cursed. He was worried bad things would happen if he tried to hit the ball hard.

    And it kinda did. Rizwan fell trying to hit Axar out of the ground and his wicket triggered a collapse. Shakeel fell in the next over and Tayyab Tahir followed soon after. India, having spent 320 deliveries across two matches searching for a wicket in the middle overs, had found three in the space of four. Pakistan were 165 for 5. Soon they would be 200 for 7, having to negotiate the last 7.1 overs of the innings with their tail exposed.

    India's discipline never let Pakistan off the hook and leading the way was Hardik, banging the ball just short of a length on a pitch that was offering a bit of grip and some tennis-ball bounce. He took out Babar Azam at a time when India's lead fast bowler, Mohammed Shami was off the field, with a lovely ball that nipped away after pitching and he did Shakeel for lack of pace just after the left-hander had smacked him for four. He just always knew what to do to exploit the conditions and make the batter's life miserable. On the back of his work, Kuldeep and Rana bowled 6.4 death overs for 28 runs and picked up four wickets.

    Gill was the star of India's chase early on, a conscious effort to keep his front foot from moving too far forward and across leaving him excellently placed to take advantage of Afridi and his full length deliveries when there was no swing on offer. When he rammed the Pakistan fast bowler down the ground and then one-upped it by coming down the track and lifting the ball into the sightscreen, it looked like it was going to be his day. Abrar intervened with a ball that drifted in through the air, tempting the right-hander to close the face of his bat, and turned away to rattle middle and off stump. Gill was stunned.

    Kohli, too, offered a shrug of his shoulders. He looked vulnerable against Abrar too and was almost bowled playing back to him. But against the quicks, he was vintage. He went past 14,000 runs with a crisp cover drive off Haris Rauf. All of Pakistan's best bowlers offer pace on the ball. And that is Kohli's happy place. A batter of his quality needs to be made uncomfortable at the crease when he is new. He had been dismissed five times in his last six ODIs by legspin. Pakistan had one of those and they felt they couldn't go to him.

    It doesn't take long for Kohli to set the tempo when he is allowed to do so. Even though he only hit three of his first 62 balls to the boundary, he already had fifty runs to his name. He knows how to score quickly without looking for big shots. The ball wasn't stopping on the surface as much under lights. Things were working in his favour again. He almost knew he was going to get a hundred. He demanded an explanation when Axar turned down a second run off a wide in the 42nd over when it was clear to everybody else that all he was doing was make sure Kohli had the best chance to get to three-figures with time running out. When he did, off the last ball of the match, Kohli looked to the dressing room and literally said "I told you. Relax". That was how easy this was. That was how inevitable he was.

    Alagappan Muthu is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo

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