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Thursday, March 26, 2026 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "Eden Gardens" (4 articles)

New Zealand's Finn Allen celebrates after scoring a century (100 runs) in the end of the 2026 ICC Men's T20 Cricket World Cup semi-final match between New Zealand and South Africa at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata on March 4, 2026. (AFP)
Sport

NZ confidence high for final: Allen

Semi-final hero Finn Allen said New Zealand’s thumping demi-final win over South Africa was a “huge confidence booster” ahead of going for their maiden T20 World Cup title in Sunday’s final. Opener Allen hit the fastest-ever T20 World Cup century, off 33 balls, to give his side a crushing nine-wicket win over South Africa and set up a final against India or England in Ahmedabad on Sunday. Allen blasted 10 fours and eight sixes as New Zealand raced to their victory target of 170 with 7.1 overs to spare at Kolkata’s Eden Gardens. It was a bruising defeat for 2024 runners-up South Africa, who had been unbeaten in the tournament. “They fight hard, they come hard at us, they’ve got good tall, fast bowlers and it makes it challenging for us,” Allen said of Aiden Markram’s South Africa. “Their boys hit the ball hard, so to get one over them is a huge confidence booster for us going into Sunday. They’ve been the in-form team the whole tournament.” The Auckland-born Allen rose to the occasion in the knockout match after ordinary outings in the tournament apart from his unbeaten 84 against the UAE in a group fixture. Allen said his heroics in India would have kept his parents and the nation awake to cheer the team. “I’m sure my parents are up watching the whole game. Hopefully they’re proud. But I think as a nation, I think hopefully everyone gets behind us and rallies around us for Sunday,” said Allen. The final will begin at around 2.30am on Monday morning in New Zealand. “Obviously, difficult time for people to watch back home but I’m sure people were keeping tabs on the game and hopefully they can get up and have a Monday off at work and watch the final.” Allen put on 117 with opening partner Tim Seifert, who made 58, to pummel the opposition attack that included high-quality pacemen Kagiso Rabada and Lungi Ngidi. Seifert was the early aggressor as he raced to 41 off 21 balls before Allen took over and finished with two fours, two sixes and a four to raise his hundred and seal victory. Allen said batting with Seifert makes life easy. “He’s in incredible form, he’s an incredible player and I think he’s just showing the world what he can do,” said Allen. “And I think that makes it easy for me to sit back and have the best seat in the house. So, yeah, it’s good fun batting with Timmy.” New Zealand squeaked into the semi-finals on net run-rate ahead of Pakistan and lost to South Africa by seven wickets in the group stage. But Allen said a five-match T20 series in India that the visitors lost 4-1 ahead of the World Cup prepared them for the grind. “I think it shows the importance of that India series that the boys played before the World Cup,” he said. “Five games on all black soil (pitches) and I think it just shows that as a team we get up for the fight (in) those important fixtures.” 


South Africa’s Aiden Markram celebrates with team-mates after taking the wicket of India’s Ishan Kishan, caught out by Ryan Rickelton in Ahmedabad on February 22, 2026. (Reuters)
Sport

South Africa juggernaut faces knockout test

South Africa have hardly put a foot wrong in their march to the Twenty20 World Cup semi-finals, but complacency can have no place against a New Zealand side ‌famed for punching above their weight when the teams meet ​at Eden Gardens Wednesday. The Proteas are the tournament’s only unbeaten side and ‌look a far more rounded T20 ‌unit than the one that ‌fell at the last hurdle in 2024. They beat New Zealand in the group stage and have earned the favourites’ tag that rested with defending champions India before the start of the tournament. India face England in the other semi-final on Thursday. “I’m glad that we’re favourites, because I’ve always felt that as a South African team you want to be able to play as a favourite,” head coach Shukri ​Conrad said, suggesting they were enjoying the spotlight. Since surviving a double Super Over against Afghanistan, Aiden Markram’s side have not taken their foot off the pedal. In ‌Quinton de Kock, Markram and Ryan Rickelton, they ​field a top order capable of banking a powerplay head-start, ​with an explosive middle order offering little respite when the openers do not fire. South Africa complement it with a varied bowling attack. Kagiso Rabada’s hard, Test-match lengths and Marco Jansen’s left-arm bounce have cramped batters, while Lungi Ngidi’s change-ups have been a revelation across phases. Left-arm spinner Keshav Maharaj provides control if conditions grip, with Markram holding himself back for match-ups. South Africa have looked ominous so far but the knockout stage brings its own challenge. Besides, ‌New Zealand can be a ‌tricky opponent. New Zealand opener Finn Allen’s ultra aggression is often the powerplay disruptor alongside a rotating partner - Devon Conway or Tim Seifert. All-rounder Rachin Ravindra’s ability to change gears sets a platform for Glenn Phillips and Daryl Mitchell to attack the back end. Their pace attack does not have a settled look though. The Black Caps are likely to miss the services of fast bowler Matt Henry, who is back home on paternity ​leave. Jacob Duffy or Kyle Jamieson could replace him. Their spin unit looks well covered however. Captain Mitchell Santner’s stump-to-stump trajectory is a key match-up against de Kock and Markram, and Ish Sodhi’s leg-spin could trouble South Africa’s right-hand middle. “We faced them in Ahmedabad, which I think is a venue that they’ve grown pretty used to given that they’ve spent a fair bit of time there,” New Zealand’s head coach Rob Walter said. “The ‌semi-finals will be ​in a different venue. It will provide a different challenge.” 

West Indies’ Shamar Joseph shakes hands with India’s Sanju Samson after the World Cup 2026 Super Eight match at Eden Gardens in Kolkata Sunday. (Reuters)
Sport

Samson’s 97 puts India into semi-final against England

Sanju Samson’s sparkling unbeaten 97 kept alive India’s dream of retaining the T20 World Cup at home as they knocked out the West Indies with a five-wicket win in Kolkata Sunday to set up a semi-final against England. Samson hit 12 fours and four sixes in his superb 50-ball knock in the winner-takes-all final Super Eights match to thrill a capacity 67,000 fans at a pulsating Eden Gardens. After the West Indies smacked an impressive 70 off the last five overs to score 195-4 after being asked to bat, India lost two early wickets but were always up with the required rate. Samson, opening for the second match in succession in this World Cup, led the way. When India slipped to 41-2 Samson was joined by captain Suryakumar Yadav (18) and the pair added 58 for the third wicket. Tilak Varma was next to join Samson and scored 27 off 15 before departing in the 15th over with the score 141-4 and India still needing 55. Samson stood firm and though Hardik Pandya fell for 17 India reached the target with four balls to spare to spark celebrations and fireworks. “It means the whole world to me,” Samson said. “Right from the day I started playing, started dreaming to play for the country, I think this is the day I was waiting for.” Samson said he learned the art of finishing matches “from the greats like Virat Kohli, from Rohit Sharma.” Suryakumar said: “Obviously it’s a great feeling. The way we played, it was a do-or-die game and the boys showed character.” When asked about Samson’s innings, he said: “See I always say good things happen to good people who wait, who have a lot of patience. All his hard work ,what he has been doing behind the doors when he hasn’t been playing, he has got the fruits for it at the perfect stage.” Jason Holder and Rovman Powell earlier put on an unbroken stand of 76 for the fifth wicket to help the West Indies set the defending champions a target of 196 to stay alive. The West Indies sprang a surprise at the top of the order, promoting Test captain Roston Chase to open alongside T20 skipper Shai Hope. That enabled them to bring in an extra spinner, Akeal Hosein, with regular opener Brandon King left out. In their defeat to South Africa last week the West Indies slumped to 83-7 but the new-look opening partnership was more assured. Spinner Varun Chakravarthy got the first breakthrough, bowling Hope for a sluggish 32. Shimron Hetmyer raced to 27 off 12 balls before falling to the faintest of edges off Jasprit Bumrah to make it 102-2. After Chase fell for 40 and Sherfane Rutherford followed, Powell and Holder launched their brutal late assault. Powell finished on 34 not out from 19 balls with two sixes and three fours while Holder was unbeaten on 37 off 22 balls with three sixes and two fours. “Maybe a few short, especially on a chasing ground such as this,” said a disappointed Hope. “Probably could have gone a bit more at the end. Probably could have got more at the start as well,” he added. It could have been better for India but they dropped three regulation catches in a sloppy fielding display, including Chase when he had made just 15. South Africa, the only unbeaten side in the tournament, beat Zimbabwe by five wickets earlier Sunday and will face New Zealand in Kolkata in the first semi-final on Wednesday.The final is in Ahmedabad next Sunday. BRIEF SCORESIndia 199 for 5 (Samson 97*, Tilak 27, Holder 2-38) beat West Indies 195 for 4 (Chase 40, Holder 37*, Bumrah 2-36) by five wickets 

India’s Jasprit Bumrah (right) greets his teammate Ravindra Jadeja as they leave the ground at the end of play on the second day of the first Test against South Africa at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata Saturday. (AFP)
Sport

India close in on win after South Africa collapse

Veteran spinner Ravindra Jadeja took four wickets to put India in sight of victory on a manic day two of a low-scoring opening Test Saturday.South Africa were 93-7 at stumps to lead by 63 runs in their second innings on an Eden Gardens pitch that has made batting decidedly tricky.Fifteen wickets fell during the second day and K L Rahul’s 39 - from 119 balls - in India’s first innings remains the highest individual score of the match.Proteas skipper Temba Bavuma tried to replicate Rahul’s obduracy, making an unbeaten 29. Corbin Bosch, on one, was with him when play was called off due to bad light.Spinner Simon Harmer had dragged the visitors back into the contest with figures of 4-30 that helped bowl out India for 189 with the hosts taking a slender lead of 30.“Playing in India you know you will be under pressure and I thought we fought back well today in restricting them,” Harmer told reporters.“Cricket’s a funny game, we could be sitting here Monday night with a completely different story. South Africa manage to get to 150 and bowl India out for 80.”“If there is one thing that this team has showed it’s that they can fight when the backs are against the wall,” added Harmer.Jadeja’s 27 was key to India’s first innings total and the 36-year-old all-rounder showed the other side of his game with some testing left-arm spin.South Africa found themselves in a hole when Kuldeep Yadav and Jadeja removed the openers Ryan Rickelton and Aiden Markram either side of the tea break.Jadeja kept up the pressure as he struck twice in one over to send back Wiaan Mulder, caught behind by Rishabh Pant for 11, and two balls later Tony de Zorzi who was caught off his glove and thigh pad by Dhruv Jurel at short-leg.He had South Africa in more trouble when he spun the ball sharply to bowl Tristan Stubbs for five to bring the house down at the iconic venue that had over 47,000 fans according to official data.The biggest cloud on India’s horizon was the absence of skipper Shubman Gill who retired hurt on four with a neck problem. He did not return to resume his innings and nor did he field, with vice-captain Pant leading the team.Earlier, India lost regular wickets to survive just 62.2 overs in response to South Africa’s first innings total of 159.“Even we didn’t expect the wicket to deteriorate so quickly,” India bowling coach Morne Morkel said.“I thought it to be a good wicket in the first couple of overs, but that’s the beauty of playing in the sub-continent that you need to adapt and react quickly. We have quality with both seam and spin and that covers both bases.”The hosts resumed on 37-1 with overnight batters Rahul and Washington Sundar, who made 29, extending their partnership to 57 in a grinding first hour.Pant hit a 24-ball 27 on a pitch with inconsistent bounce and more turn expected.Sundar hit two fours and one six in his otherwise laboured knock before falling caught behind to Harmer.Gill walked out to loud cheers but his stay was limited to three balls as he swept Harmer for a four at backward square-leg and then held his neck in pain. The physio soon arrived and Gill walked back to the pavilion.Rahul kept up his hard work from day one when he made 13 off 59 balls and on day two looked more assured until his departure off Keshav Maharaj.India went into lunch at 138-4 and Jurel started with two fours after the break before Harmer had him caught and bowled for 14 to trigger a collapse.Jadeja took India into the lead with a boundary but fell lbw to Harmer and India slipped further when pace bowler Jansen had Kuldeep caught behind for one.Harmer cleaned up Axar Patel to end the Indian innings. Jansen returned figures of 3-35.BRIEF SCORESSouth Africa 159 and 93 for 7 (Bavuma 29*, Jadeja 4-29) lead India 189 (Rahul 39, Harmer 4-30, Jansen 3-35) by 63 runs