
All-round Vaibhav Suryavanshi takes spotlight, Archie Vaughan takes three in Youth Test
Despite England's struggles, there were some bright spots in their first innings. Ekansh Singh and Ralphie Albert both notched up fighting fifties, and the lower order chipped in with valuable runs to cut the first-innings deficit to 101. But the hosts were ultimately bowled out before they could completely claw their way back into the contest.Archie Vaughan, son of former England captain Michael Vaughan, emerged as England's standout bowler. The young off-spinner finished with impressive figures of 3/15, showcasing guile and variation to outsmart the Indian batters. He got the better of Suryavanshi with a clever tossed-up delivery that was mistimed to cover, ending a dangerous knock that could have taken the game out of England's reach.Vaughan struck again shortly after to remove another set batter, putting a temporary halt to India's scoring spree and reminding everyone that England's young talents are ready to fight till the end.With a sizeable lead in hand and two days left in the match, India U-19 hold the upper hand. But the competitive spirit shown by England's young Lions ensures that the remainder of this contest could still offer plenty of drama.- EndsMust Watch
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
18 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Former World Cup-winning coach Gary Kirsten's India captaincy advice for Shubman Gill: Dhoni was an incredible man-manager…
Shubman Gill, the batter, since becoming the captain of the Indian side, has scored three centuries from three Test matches against England in the ongoing Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy. However, the captaincy side of things is still a work in progress. Former World Cup-winning coach with India, Gary Kirsten, gave his take on Gill. 'Well, it's early days. I think he's got great potential. Captaincy is a whole lot of things that you've got to put together. He's a great thinker in the game. He's a good player himself. But there's a whole bunch of things you've got to get right. And I think man management is going to play, like any leader,' Kirsten said in an interview with Rediff. Kirsten, alongside MS Dhoni, helped India to win the 50-over World Cup after 28 years in 2011. Kirsten suggested the trait Gill could pick up from Dhoni. 'Dhoni was an incredible man-manager. If he can get that component of his leadership really fired up, I think he has all the credentials to become a great captain for India.' The other player with whom Kirsten closely worked during the 2011 World Cup was current Indian coach Gautam Gambhir. Gambhir's tenure as coach, especially in red-ball cricket, has not been ideal. With him at the helm, India saw a 3-0 whitewash at home against New Zealand and also lost 3-1 to Australia in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy. Giving his take on Gambhir, Kirsten said, 'Well, I don't know Gautam, the coach, at all.' Kirsten also gave insights into Gambhir's personality. 'Gautam, the player, I absolutely loved. He's got a toughness to him that is very useful. I think he's really strong. But he's got a personality and he's got a style. The big thing is does that personality and style connect with Indian players? That's really what it's going to be about.' Gambhir has won the Indian Premier League title with the Kolkata Knight Riders in 2024 as a mentor. 'He's had success in the IPL. I remember when we split the one-day team and the Test team and we made him the one-day captain against New Zealand before coming to South Africa. And he did a fantastic job,' Kirsten recalled. 'I don't know enough about how it's going or how he's going with the players. But all I do know is that he's got incredible skill in the game of cricket.' 'I'm thoroughly fond of Gautam and I just hope that he's getting the support he needs and that the players are starting to, if not already, kind of warm to him and understand how he wants to operate and whether he can add value to the team,' Kirsten concluded.
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
18 minutes ago
- First Post
Divya Deshmukh stuns 2nd-seed Zhu Jiner at FIDE World Cup: 'Once the game began, it didn't matter...'
Divya Deshmukh defeated Chinese second-seed Zhu Jiner, who had a 5-0 record against her before Wednesday's meeting, in 49 moves to have one foot in the FIDE Women's World Cup quarter-finals. read more Chinese Grandmaster Zhu Jiner and Indian International Master Divya Deshmukh in action during Round 4 of the FIDE Women's World Cup in Batumi, Georgia. Image credit: FIDE The FIDE Women's Chess World Cup resumed action on Wednesday after the players enjoyed a break in the 'Free Day' on Tuesday. And among the players standing out in Game 1 of the fourth round was India's Divya Deshmukh, who has one foot in the quarter-finals after her stunning victory over Chinese Grandmaster Zhu Jiner in Batumi, Georgia. The 19-year-old International Master had a 0-5 record against the Chinese second-seed, including three defeats in the Classical format. The poor record against Zhu become was something of a mental block for Deshmukh heading into the opening game of Round 4 on Wednesday, but she managed to overcome it by focusing on 'playing the pieces' and not the opponent. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD 'Actually I expected it to be worse. It's good to know that it's just 5-1. I didn't have any specific preparations. Since I had a bad score, I guess there was some sort of a mental block. But, I just tried to think that I'm playing against the pieces, so it doesn't really matter who I'm against,' Deshmukh said in an interview with FIDE after her stunning victory over Zhu in 49 moves. 'Once the game began, it didn't matter who I was playing against. I think I also got a favourable opening and the position was quite comfortable,' she added. 🇮🇳 IM Divya Deshmukh wins Game 1 of Round 4 against 🇨🇳 GM Zhu Jiner.#FIDEWorldCup — International Chess Federation (@FIDE_chess) July 16, 2025 Deshmukh sets sights on 2-0 against Chinese second-seed Zhu The second Classical game of the fourth round takes place on Thursday with the tie-breaks set to take place on Friday in case two players finish level on scores. And Deshmukh has made it clear that she has a 2-0 on her mind against her opponent, ranked sixth on the latest FIDE Women's Classical ratings – 12 places above her. 'I guess it's a normal game. I don't think it's anything special, but of course I have to give my best and see how it goes. It will be pretty great if I can score 2-0 right?' Deshmukh added. Besides Deshmukh, Zhu's compatriots GM Lie Tingjie, Song Yuxin and Tan Zhongyi won their opening games while playing as white. Each of the remaining Indians in the tournament – GMs Koneru Humpy, Harika Dronavalli and R Vaishali – collected draws. FIDE Women's Chess World Cup 2025 Round 4 Indian player results (white first): STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD – IM Divya Deshmukh (India) 1-0 GM Zhu Jiner (China) – GM Alexandra Kosteniuk (Switzerland) 0.5-0.5 GM Koneru Humpy (India) – GM R Vaishali (India) 0.5-0.5 IM Meruert Kamalidenova (Kazakhstan) – GM Kateryna Lagno (FIDE) 0.5-0.5 GM Harika Dronavalli


New Indian Express
40 minutes ago
- New Indian Express
Freestyle Chess: Praggnanandhaa and Erigaisi make cut; Carlsen out of title contention
LAS VEGAS: Grandmaster R Praggnanandhaa took down world number one Magnus Carlsen en route the top-bracket quarterfinals along with Arjun Erigaisi at the USD 750,000 Freestyle Grand Slam Tour here. Praggnanandhaa continued the recent trend of Indian players outsmarting Carlsen and sent the Norwegian's campaign haywire on Wednesday. Carlsen has in recent weeks also been beaten by reigning world champion D Gukesh, who is not competing here. The 19-year-old Praggnanandhaa was in his elements as he effectively deployed his pieces right from the word go and even though Carlsen got some chances, Praggnanandhaa crashed through with some imaginative manoeuvres. The loss against Praggnanandhaa had such a cascading effect on Carlsen that he lost another game against Wesley So in the next round and was shockingly eliminated from the top bracket by Levon Aronian of United States 2-0 in the final tiebreaker for the fourth spot that ensued. The 16-player event was divided into two groups of eight each and the top four from each pool advanced to the quarterfinals after playing once with each of the other participant. The rules have been framed in such a way that those who do not make the top bracket in the first set of qualifiers can no longer win the event and Carlsen can at best finish third if he wins the remaining matches. Erigaisi was the other Indian from the second group who made it to the quarterfinals. It was a fine come-from-behind performance by Erigaisi, who faced some initial struggles.