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ENG-W vs IND-W 3rd T20I: India Women eye maiden series victory over England

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Riding a wave of momentum, India will look to secure its maiden women’s T20I series triumph over England when it locks horns with the host in the third game of a five-match series in London on Friday.

Harmanpreet Kaur and Co. have been in red-hot form, having handed England a record-shattering 97-run defeat in the series opener before sealing a 24-run win in Bristol—England women’s first-ever T20I loss at the venue—to take a commanding 2-0 lead.

In 2006, India had beaten England in a lone match played in Derby. Since then, the Women in Blue have fallen short in every women’s T20I series against England, both at home and away.

ALSO READ | All records broken and milestones achieved during England Women vs India Women second T20I

This dominant performance comes as a timely boost for India as it ontinues to adapt to English conditions, a crucial exercise in the build-up to next year’s ICC Women’s T20 World Cup to be held in England.

So far, the Indian unit has functioned like a well-oiled machine. Vice-captain Smriti Mandhana, who scored a century, and Harleen Deol were instrumental with the bat in the opener.

In the second match, Amanjot Kaur and Jemimah Rodrigues rescued the visitor from a precarious position with vital half-centuries, propelling India to a formidable total.

However, the spotlight now turns to big-hitting opener Shafali Verma, who will be eager to make a statement. Back in the squad, Shafali has struggled to get going with scores of 20 and 3 in the series. She will be desperate for a defining innings.

ALSO READ | Mandhana moves to third spot in T20Is, Charani debuts in bowlers’ standings

Skipper Harmanpreet, who missed the opener as a precautionary measure following a head injury sustained during a warm-up match, will also look to spend some time in the middle after her two-ball stay in the second match.

The Indian bowling attack has stepped up admirably in the absence of pace spearheads Renuka Singh and Pooja Vastrakar.

Left-arm spinner Shree Charani has emerged as the breakout star in her debut series. The 20-year-old leads the wicket charts with six scalps and also has the best economy rate in the series—a frugal 5.11.

For the host, one of the main issues has been the inability of openers Sophia Dunkley and Danni Wyatt-Hodge to provide a solid start.

While Dunkley has enjoyed some good starts, Wyatt-Hodge has made a total of 18 runs across five innings this summer, including three successive ducks. England’s bowling too has been sub par.

THE SQUADS
England

Natalie Sciver-Brunt (c), Tammy Beaumont (wk), Sophia Dunkley, Amy Jones (wk), Danni Wyatt-Hodge, Alice Capsey, Charlie Dean, Paige Scholfield, Em Arlott, Lauren Bell, Sophie Ecclestone, Lauren Filer, Linsey Smith, Issy Wong.

India

Harmanpreet Kaur (c), Yastika Bhatia (wk), Harleen Deol, Richa Ghosh (wk), Jemimah Rodrigues, Shafali Verma, Amanjot Kaur, Sneh Rana, Sayali Satghare, Deepti Sharma, Kranti Goud, Arundhati Reddy, Shree Charani, Radha Yadav.

Match starts at 11:05pm IST.

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FIFA Club World Cup 2025: Joao Pedro scores brace as Chelsea beats Fluminense to reach final

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New signing Joao Pedro scored twice on his first start as Chelsea eased to a 2-0 win over Fluminense on Tuesday to seal a spot in the final of FIFA Club World Cup 2025.

The Brazilian striker opened the scoring in lethal fashion in the 18th minute of the last-four clash at the MetLife Stadium and struck again shortly before the hour mark as Chelsea set up a showdown with either Real Madrid or Paris Saint-Germain in the final on Sunday.

Signed from Brighton and Hove Albion just last week for a reported £60 million ($79 million), the 23-year-old cut short an off-season holiday and made his debut off the bench in the quarterfinal win over Palmeiras.

He was then given his first Chelsea start up front here in place of the suspended Liam Delap.

Joao Pedro refused to celebrate after either goal against the club with whom he started his career and made 36 top-team appearances before moving to England with Watford in 2020.

The result ends Fluminense’s impressive run at the tournament after the 2023 Copa Libertadores winner had held Borussia Dortmund in the group stage, beaten Inter Milan in the last 16 and knocked out Manchester City’s conqueror Al-Hilal in the quarterfinals.

With its exit goes the prospects of a South American winner of the first 32-team edition of the Club World Cup, with Chelsea claiming back-to-back victories against Brazilian opposition to reach the final.

AS IT HAPPENED | FLUMINENSE VS CHELSEA HIGHLIGHTS

As always seemed most likely, the trophy will be claimed by one of Europe’s superpowers, with the final now guaranteed to be between two of the last five winners of the UEFA Champions League.

Chelsea coach Enzo Maresca was without the suspended Levi Colwill and Delap but midfield lynchpin Moises Caicedo returned after sitting out the win over Palmeiras in Philadelphia due to a ban.

The Premier League side was simply too strong for its opponent in a game watched by 70,556 fans on a hot afternoon just outside New York City.

Chelsea went ahead thanks to a wonderful strike by its new forward, who controlled the ball on the edge of the box after Thiago Silva had cleared a Pedro Neto cross.

Joao Pedro took a touch and curled a shot beyond veteran goalkeeper Fabio into the far corner, before holding up his hands apologetically towards the Fluminense fans massed behind the goal.

The team from Rio de Janeiro was an intermittent threat, and Hercules – match-winner against Al-Hilal in the last eight – almost equalised in the 25th minute.

He played a one-two with German Cano and lifted the ball over goalkeeper Robert Sanchez, but Marc Cucurella got back to clear off the line.

Fluminense was then awarded a penalty 10 minutes before the interval when a set-piece delivery by Rene struck the arm of Trevoh Chalobah in the box.

However, French referee Francois Letexier overturned the decision following a VAR check.

Chelsea got its second on 56 minutes, just after Fluminense had sacrificed one of its three centre-backs to send on an extra attacker.

Enzo Fernandez released Joao Pedro on the break, and the forward who scored 10 goals in the Premier League last season for Brighton produced another clinical finish in off the bar.

There were chances for Chelsea to score further goals after that, but the new boy’s double strike sufficed.

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Wimbledon 2025: Carlos Alcaraz blazes past Cameron Norrie into semifinals

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Carlos Alcaraz said ahead of his Wimbledon quarterfinal against Cameron Norrie that playing the left-handed British player can be a nightmare and for a few minutes it looked as though the defending champion might be in for a fright on Tuesday.

The Spaniard fell 0-40 down in his opening service game against the unseeded Norrie on Centre Court, but quickly snapped out of his slumber to seal a 6-2, 6-3, 6-3 victory that should send shudders down the spine of anyone hoping to de-throne him.

There were hundreds of empty seats at the start as fans sought refreshment after watching women’s top seed Aryna Sablaneka’s protracted last-eight victory.

ALSO READ | Anisimova weathers Pavlyuchenkova fightback to reach Wimbledon semis

By the time most of them returned to cheer on the underdog, Alcaraz was in full flow having blazed through the opening set in 28 minutes with a barrage of brilliance.

The tone was set and although Norrie tried his best to dig in, raising his fist in mock triumph as he held serve late in the third set, Alcaraz mercilessly extended his current match winning streak to 23.

Alcaraz, 22, reached his eighth Grand Slam semifinal and will continue his quest for a third successive Wimbledon title against American Taylor Fritz.

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Wimbledon 2025: Anisimova weathers Pavlyuchenkova fightback to reach Wimbledon semis

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Amanda Anisimova collapsed flat on her face in sheer relief after she survived an astonishing and unexpected fightback from Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova to secure a 6-1 7-6(9) victory and reach the Wimbledon semifinals for the first time.

With Anisimova leading 6-1 5-2, Pavlyuchenkova was left wishing she could disappear through a Wimbledon trapdoor as the American 13th seed bamboozled her opponent with a potpourri of blazing backhands, ferocious forehands and nifty footwork.

But just when it seemed that 23-year-old Anisimova had one foot in the last four, Pavlyuchenkova suddenly came alive and won three games on the trot.

The Russian, 34, saved two match points in the process in the 10th game, including hitting a gutsy dropshot winner that completely caught Anisimova by surprise.

With the world number 50 suddenly believing that she could turn the match around, Anisimova looked like the one on the verge of tears, mouthing to her support group “one more point” as the Russian kept earning set points in the tiebreak.

Anisimova somehow saved all five set points against her before finally sealing victory when Pavlyuchenkova netted the ball on the American’s fourth match point.

Anisimova will next meet world number one Aryna Sabalenka for a place in the final.

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