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latestmatchupdates · 6 months
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2024 Isuzu T20 Live Score, Live Streaming, Teams, Date, Time and More
The Isuzu Men’s T20 Smash 2024 is scheduled to start on March 29 and conclude on April 13 in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
Organised by Cricket Papua New Guinea (PNG), the Isuzu Men’s T20 Smash 2024 will see as many as four teams compete in a total of 14 matches.
Black Bass Men, Cassowaries Men, Mariners Men, and Mudmen Men are the four teams that will participate in the upcoming domestic T20 tournament.
Each team will play the other three sides twice in a double round-robin format. The top two teams in the standings after all the league matches will qualify for the final.
Meanwhile, the third and fourth-placed teams will square off in the third-place playoff.
The Isuzu Men’s T20 Smash 2024 final will take place on April 13.
All matches in Isuzu Men’s T20 Smash 2024 will be played at Amini Park in Port Moresby.
All PNG international cricketers including the likes of Norman Vanua, Assad Vala, Lega Siaka, Sese Bau, wicketkeeper Hila Vare, Hiri Hiri, and Semo Kamea will feature in the upcoming domestic T20 tournament.
Where to watch Isuzu Men’s T20 Smash 2024 live in India Live streaming of the Isuzu Men’s T20 Smash 2024 will be available on the FanCode app and website in India.
There will be no live telecast of the upcoming T20 tournament on any TV channel in India.
Isuzu Men’s T20 Smash 2024 schedule and live match start times All match times are in India Standard Time (IST)
Friday, March 29
Cassowaries Men vs Mudmen Men - 9:30 AM
Saturday, March 30
Mariners Men vs Mudmen Men - 5:30 AM
Black Bass Men vs Cassowaries Men - 9:30 AM
Sunday, March 31
Mariners Men vs Black Bass Men - 9:30 AM
Monday, April 1
Black Bass Men vs Mudmen Men - 5:30 AM
Mariners Men vs Cassowaries Men - 9:30 AM
Saturday, April 6
Mariners Men vs Mudmen Men - 5:30 AM
Black Bass Men vs Cassowaries Men - 9:30 AM
Sunday, April 7
Mariners Men vs Black Bass Men - 5:30 AM
Cassowaries Men vs Mudmen Men - 9:30 AM
Monday, April 8
Black Bass Men vs Mudmen Men - 5:30 AM
Mariners Men vs Cassowaries Men - 9:30 AM
Saturday, April 13
Third-place playoff - 5:30 AM
Isuzu Men’s T20 Smash 2024 final - 10:00 AM
Isuzu Men’s T20 Smash 2024 teams and squads Black Bass Men: Norman Vanua (captain), Chris Kamea, Frank Naime, Sese Bau, Kelly Galama, Doko Rupa (wicketkeeper), Lekwa Henao Nao, Tony Ura, Daure Aiga, Kabua Morea, Oala Puka, Patrick Nou, Puka Raho
Cassowaries Men: Lega Siaka (captain), Dauncey Tom, Hiri Hiri, Vagi Morea, Chad Soper, Jeremiah Nigani, Peter Karoho, Ware Robin, Hila Vare (wicketkeeper), Nelson Pate (wicketkeeper), Alei Nao, Igo Pako Morea, Suvenia Sean Tau
Mariners Men: Assad Vala (captain), Gaudi Toka, Malcolm Aporo, Nou Gini, Sigo Kelly, Mahuru Dai, Toua Boga Nou, Aue Oru (wicketkeeper), Herea Kilapat, John Kariko, Michael Charlie, Sam Momo, Semo Kamea
Mudmen Men: Charles Amini (captain), Gaba Frank, Vagi Guba, Jack Gardner, Katenalaki Singi, Riley Hekure, Baeau Gabutu, Kiplin Doriga (wicketkeeper), Anthony Tamarua David, Miria Griffin, Nosaina Pokana, Toa Nou, Wallace Opi Nou
Follow: Isuzu T20 Live Score 2024 | Best Betting Sites In India
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doonitedin · 3 years
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T20 World Cup 2021: Scotland beats Papua New Guinea by 17 runs; inches closer to Super 12s
T20 World Cup 2021: Scotland beats Papua New Guinea by 17 runs; inches closer to Super 12s
Richie Berrington slammed a stroke-filled 70 while Josh Davey snapped four wickets as Scotland inched closer to the Super 12s with a comfortable 17-run win over Papua New Guinea in its Group B match of the ICC T20 World Cup 2021 here on Tuesday. Scotland grabbed the top position in Group B with two wins, having shocked Bangladesh in its opening game. Berrington put on 92 runs off 65 balls with…
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sportscrunchind · 3 years
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T20 World Cup 2021: Papua New Guinea Cricket team!
#SportsCrunch: #DoYouKnow the #PNG Team and it's schedule in #T20WorldCup2021? #T20WorldCup #AssadVala #PapuaNewGuinea
Today we bring you the journey of PNG team in T20 World Cup 2021. The ICC T20 World Cup 2021 or T20 World Cup 2021 would be the 7th edition of the T20I Cricket tournament hosted by UAE & Oman during October 17- November 14, 2021. It would be a 16 teams’ competition and a total of 45 matches would decide the tournament winners. Papua New Guinea would be led by Captain Assad Vala & Coach Carl…
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czarsportzglobal · 7 years
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Papua New Guinea go down fighting in 1st match of Australia tour
Papua New Guinea go down fighting in 1st match of Australia tour
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The HEBOU PNG Barramundis went doown fighting against Australian Indigenous Team by 84 runs at Fehberg Park in Brisbane on 27th Aug 2017. Batting first, Indegenous team amassed 347/9 in their 50 overs and then bowled out PNG for 263 in 47.1 overs.
It was PNG’s first competitive match since Head coach Jason Gillespie took over the reins for the team few weeks back.…
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maceikblog · 2 years
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Co się dzisiaj działo? #106 16.4.2022
CAF Liga Mistrzów:
Petro-Mamelodi Sundowns 2:1
Al Ahly-Raja Casablanca 2:1
Belouizdad-Wydad 0:1
AFC Liga Mistrzów:
Gia Lai-Yokohama F Marinos 1:2
Kitchee-Chiangrai 1:0
Jeonbuk-Sydney FC 0:0
Ekstraklasa:
Górnik Łęczna-Radomiak 1:0
Stal-Warta 0:1
Bruk Bet-Raków 0:3
Jagiellonia-Pogoń 1:2
Wisła Płock-Lech 0:1
Ewinner 2 liga:
Radunia-Znicz 5:0
Chojniczanka-Motor 1:0
III Liga:
Polonia Środa-Stolem Gniewino 1:3
GKS Przodkowo-Sokół Kleczew 2:0
Kotwica Kołobrzeg-Olimpia Grudziądz 0:2
Unia Janikowo-KP Starogard 3:1
NHL: Bruins-Penguins 2:1
Billie Jean King Cup:
Polska-Rumunia 4:0
Iga Świątek-Andreea Prisacariu 6:0 6:0
Magdalena Fręch/Alicja Rosolska-Mihaela Buzarnescu/Andreea Mitu 5:7 6:3 10-5
NBA, play-offy:
Mavericks-Jazz 93:99 (0:1 w serii)
Grizzlies-Timberwolves 117:130 (0:1 w serii)
PlusLiga: Trefl Gdańsk-Jastrzębski Węgiel 0:3 (1:1 w serii)
PDC European Tour w Monachium, 1 runda:
Boris Krcmar-Luke Woodhouse 6:3
Daniel Larsson-Berry van Peer 4:6
Martin Lukeman-Adam Gawlas 6:3
Wesley Plaisier-Jim Williams 6:3
Keegan Brown-Adam Hunt 6:2
Dragutin Horvat-Scott Waites 1:6
John O'Shea-Chris Dobey 2:6
Kim Huybrechts-Madars Razma 4:6
Alan Soutar-Max Hopp 4:6
Danny Baggish-Thomas Junghans 6:2
Keane Barry-Lukas Wenig 6:4
Jeffrey de Zwaan-Vincent van der Voort 6:5
Martin Schindler-Jermaine Wattimena 6:3
Raymond van Barneveld-James Wilson 6:0
Ryan Meikle-Dave Chisnall 4:6
IPL:
Lucknow Super Giants (199/4, KL Rahul 103*, Avesh Khan 3/30) pokonali Mumbai Indians (181/9, Suryakumar Yadav 37, Jaydev Unadkat 2/32) 18 runami
Royal Challengers Bangalore (189/5, Dinesh Karthik 66*, Josh Hazlewood 3/28) pokonali Delhi Capitals (173/7, David Warner 66, Shardul Thakur 1/27) 16 runami
ICC Cricket World League 2: Oman (277/8, Jatinder Singh 79, Bilal Khan 5/54) pokonał Papuę Nową Gwineę (192, Charles Amini 60, Norman Vanua 3/50) 85 runami
Mistrzostwa Świata w Snookerze: Mark Selby-Jamie Jones 10:7
Futsal Ekstraklasa:
Team Lębork-Piast Gliwice 2:7
Red Devils Chojnice-FC Toruń 4:3
MLB: Pirates-Nationals 2:7 (3-4)
Ekstraliga Rugby:
Ogniwo Sopot-Orkan Sochaczew 11:21
Juvenia Kraków-Lechia Gdańsk 16:12
Arka Gdynia-Skra Warszawa 19:45
Serie A1:
Sala Baganza-San Marino 0:18 (zakończone po 6 ininngach, mercy rule)
drugi mecz
Sala Baganza-San Marino 1:20 (zakończone po 6 inningach, mercy rule)
PGE Ekstraliga: GKM Grudziądz-Sparta Wrocław 49:41
Beach World Tour w Itapemie: Michał Bryl/Bartosz Łosiak-Ondrej Perusic/David Schweiner 21-12 17-21 21-23
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kultejas · 3 years
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World T20: Scotland's second consecutive win, defeating PNG to make Super-12 easy
World T20: Scotland’s second consecutive win, defeating PNG to make Super-12 easy
al amaratRichie Berrington’s half-century from the bowlers led by Josh Davey helped Scotland register their second successive win over Papua New Guinea (PNG) by 17 runs in a Group B match of the ICC T20 World Cup here on Tuesday. Take a strong step towards making a place in 12. PNG’s team chased down the target of 166 runs for Scotland, despite Norman Vanua (47 runs, 37 balls, two sixes, two…
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sportcast · 3 years
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Scotland Move Into Final Round 
5th Match, First Round Group B, Al Amerat, ICC Men's T20 World Cup 
Scotland qualified to enter the 12-team final round of the World T20 cricket championship with a convincing win over underdogs Papua New Guinea at the Al Amerat Stadium in Muscat, Oman on Tuesday.
Defending their score of 165 the Scotts kept the proceedings tight from the very first over, as they were also helped by some poor shot selection by the Papua New Guinea batters who in desperation only succeeded in hitting the ball in the air unable to find the boundary most of the time.
They managed to get up to 148 all out as paceman Josh Davey wrapped up the innings with four wickets for just 18 runs in 3.3 overs.
One of Davey's victims included top scorer Norman Vanua who edged a ball to the keeper for 47.
Earlier Scotland taking first lease of the wicket piled up the runs thanks to a 92-run stand between Matthew Cross (45) and Richie Berrington (70) in 10.5 overs that pulled out the team from 26 for 2 in 3.4 overs.
But Scotland's innings was also checked well in time by Papua New Guinea with two crucial blows to get rid of both batters who were out to catches in the outfield.
The end result was that Scotland scored14 runs in the last two overs to reach a total of 165 all out in the last ball of the 20th over with three of the wickets falling in the last over as paceman Kabua Morea bagged 4 for 31.
Scores: Scotland 165 in 20 (Matthew Cross 45, Richie Berrington 70, Kabua Morea 4 for 31, Chad Soper 3 for 24) Papua New Guinea 148 in 19.3 overs (Norman Vanua 47, Josh Davey 4 for 18)
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newstfionline · 6 years
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The sinking state
By Joshua Keating, Washington Post, July 26, 2018
The central Pacific nation of Kiribati has a few claims to fame. Its flag-bearer at the past two summer Olympics won international attention and became a meme because of his memorable dancing. The country--known under British colonial rule as the Gilbert Islands (the name Kiribati, pronounced KI-ri-bahss, is a local transliteration of “Gilberts”)--has 33 islands spread over more than 1.3 million square miles, making it one of the world’s largest nations in terms of sea area, though one of the smallest in terms of land. But what it gets the most attention for these days is its impending doom: The nation may be one of the first in line to be wiped out by the effects of climate change.
In the century to come, we’re likely to see dramatic alterations to the physical shape of the world as we know it, thanks to rising sea levels and other environmental changes. But the immediate challenges faced by most countries pale in comparison to those of Kiribati, which has an average elevation of less than six feet. The atoll of Tarawa, where nearly half the country’s 110,000 residents live, could soon be substantially underwater. “By 2050, 18-80% of the land in Buariki, North Tarawa, and up to 50% of the land in Bikenibeu, South Tarawa could become inundated,” the government told the United Nations in 2015. Kiribati’s smaller outlying islands could be wiped out even sooner. “The results of sea level rise and increasing storm surge threaten the very existence and livelihoods of large segments of the population,” officials wrote.
Small island states like Kiribati and the Maldives have become symbols of the potential impacts of global warming. They are working to develop first-line defenses against the effects of sea-level rise, including planting mangroves to prevent coastal erosion and improving rainwater-collection systems to protect water quality.
But if none of that works, they may have to consider more drastic options. And so, in 2014, Kiribati purchased about eight square miles on the Fijian island of Vanua Levu for a little less than $9 million, potentially for the purpose of moving its population there one day. “We would hope not to put everyone on one piece of land,” the country’s then-president, Anote Tong, said. “But if it became absolutely necessary, yes, we could do it.” Fiji would become the new home of the nation’s inhabitants, known as the I-Kiribati.
The relocation of people due to climate change isn’t unprecedented. Papua New Guinea has already begun moving the population of the Carteret Islands, a group of low-lying atolls, to the mainland. But this would be the first time an entire country had to relocate because the land on which it was built no longer existed. This raises a new and frightening question: If a country no longer exists in physical form, can it still exist as a political entity? Can a nation just up and move?
Secretary of Foreign Affairs Akka Rimon said, “We don’t have the answer. … Sovereignty exists within the borders of your nation, but what happens when that changes? Nobody has the answer,” she said.
Historically, countries are not physically destroyed; they simply become other countries, the land they occupy controlled by someone else. But at a minimum, to exist, a country needs a government, a population and a piece of real estate within a defined territory--the boot of Italy, the hanging triangle of India, the narrow strip of Chile. The shape of a nation has long been defined by two kinds of lines: the borders that separate it from other countries and the coasts that separate it from the sea. We may understand why political borders are subject to change, but in an era of rising seas and increasingly extreme weather and natural disasters, we have to get used to the fact that coastal boundaries can’t be taken for granted, either.
In a 2013 essay, Jenny Grote Stoutenburg, a law professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder, recommended that, to maintain international recognition, island states facing destruction should reinforce their territory to keep at least some physical structure above water and keep a small group of inhabitants behind, even if the bulk of the population has relocated. The Kiribati of the future, in other words, may be little more than a skeleton crew, a reinforced platform with a flag perched in the open ocean after the rest of the population has moved to another piece of land or to several of them. This is a very different notion of national sovereignty than anything the world has seen before.
A nation ending entirely, with no successor, might be a wholly new event in human history. In grappling with the possibility, some scholars have dusted off models and concepts that predate the modern nation-state.
One is the Sovereign Order of Malta--a Catholic order that controls no physical territory but has existed in multiple locations, including Jerusalem, Cyprus, Malta and Rome, throughout its nearly 1,000-year history. In an odd geopolitical quirk, despite controlling no territory today, the order has diplomatic relations, including embassies, with dozens of countries and observer status at the United Nations.
The order’s sovereign status makes it a throwback to an earlier, more fluid era of international politics, when sovereignty was tied more closely to ruling families or dynasties than to territories with fixed locations. Today, for instance, the historical kingdom of Burgundy is associated with the central French region of that name. But in his book “Vanished Kingdoms,” British historian Norman Davies identifies 15 kingdoms of Burgundy dating back to 410 and occupying locations from the west bank of the Rhine to what is now Switzerland to the Netherlands. Describing the disintegration of Burgundy in the 13th century, Davies writes: “The typical Burgundian count was no longer the ruler of one straightforward fief dependent on one overlord. More often he was head of a complex clutch of lands, titles and claims, assembled over the generations by the combined efforts of his family’s knights, wives, children and lawyers.”
If the vanishing countries of the future are to survive in any form, they’re likely to look less like contemporary nation-states and more like the Knights of Malta or medieval Burgundy, political creations set up to represent a group of people, and their political interests, who will be increasingly dispersed geographically and culturally.
These are not scenarios you’re likely to hear much about in Kiribati. When I visited on my reporting trip, people for the most part agreed that the climate was changing, pointing to shifting rainy seasons and irregular fishing patterns. But they usually didn’t believe that the islands would come to an end.
Many people pointed out, correctly, that the shape of the islands regularly shifted before sea-level rise--and that the impacts of climate change so far had been difficult to disentangle from other factors. Most people I met weren’t making plans to relocate anytime soon.
Instead, I heard a lot of frustration that the rest of the world seems to take notice of the I-Kiribati only to tell them they’re doomed. Several people I spoke with had already given interviews about climate change to foreign reporters. “In my case, you are the fifth person,” remarked Teewata Aromata, the director of Te Toa Matoa, an organization for people with disabilities. “People come and ask us the same questions. They see pictures of us and think we are drowning in the ocean.”
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newbisskey · 5 years
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Cricket Feed ICC Qualify T20 Today Match Biss Key Code 2019 Cricket Feed ICC Qualify T20 AsiaSat 5 at 100.5°East Freq: 3927 V 7200 Du-SAMACOM Biss Key : FD AC EF 98 DE BA F2 8A
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Exactly one year before the T20 World Cup in Australia next year, fourteen teams will battle it out in 51 games in the Qualifier tournament. The T20 World Cup Qualifier 2019, that begins on the 18th of October 2019, will be played till 2nd November 2019. It adopts a round-robin format (where teams will be divided into groups of seven each) which will be followed by the playoffs. Out of these fourteen teams, six will qualify to the next stage. They will then meet Bangladesh and Sri Lanka in the first round of the World Cup. These eight sides will further be divided into two groups of four each. The best teams will then advance to the Super 12s stage of the T20 World Cup 2020. All the matches of this tournament will be played in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) – Dubai and Abu Dhabi. Being the hosts, the UAE has qualified directly for this T20 World Cup Qualifier tournament. With Zimbabwe currently serving a ban, Nigeria has replaced them in the tournament. Fixtures Oct 18, Fri Scotland vs Singapore, 1st Match, Group A ICC Academy, Dubai 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Hong Kong vs Ireland, 2nd Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Netherlands vs Kenya, 3rd Match, Group A ICC Academy, Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Oman vs United Arab Emirates, 4th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 9:00 PM 03:30 PM GMT / 07:30 PM LOCAL Oct 19, Sat Papua New Guinea vs Bermuda, 5th Match, Group A ICC Academy, Dubai 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Scotland vs Kenya, 8th Match, Group A ICC Academy Ground No 2, Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Netherlands vs Namibia, 7th Match, Group A ICC Academy, Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Jersey vs Nigeria, 6th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Ireland vs United Arab Emirates, 9th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 9:00 PM 03:30 PM GMT / 07:30 PM LOCAL Oct 20, Sun Papua New Guinea vs Namibia, 10th Match, Group A ICC Academy, Dubai 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Canada vs Jersey, 11th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium Nursery 1, Abu Dhabi 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Hong Kong vs Oman, 13th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Bermuda vs Singapore, 12th Match, Group A ICC Academy, Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Oct 21, Mon Scotland vs Papua New Guinea, 14th Match, Group A ICC Academy, Dubai 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Hong Kong vs United Arab Emirates, 15th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Ireland vs Oman, 16th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium Nursery 1, Abu Dhabi 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Kenya vs Bermuda, 17th Match, Group A ICC Academy, Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Canada vs Nigeria, 18th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 9:00 PM 03:30 PM GMT / 07:30 PM LOCAL Oct 22, Tue Scotland vs Namibia, 19th Match, Group A ICC Academy, Dubai 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Singapore vs Netherlands, 20th Match, Group A ICC Academy, Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL United Arab Emirates vs Jersey, 21st Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium Nursery 1, Abu Dhabi 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Oct 23, Wed Namibia vs Bermuda, 22nd Match, Group A ICC Academy Ground No 2, Dubai 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Oman vs Nigeria, 23rd Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium Nursery 1, Abu Dhabi 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Singapore vs Kenya, 24th Match, Group A ICC Academy Ground No 2, Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Ireland vs Canada, 25th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Hong Kong vs Jersey, 26th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 9:00 PM 03:30 PM GMT / 07:30 PM LOCAL Oct 24, Thu Netherlands vs Papua New Guinea, 27th Match, Group A ICC Academy, Dubai 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL United Arab Emirates vs Nigeria, 28th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium Nursery 1, Abu Dhabi 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Hong Kong vs Canada, 29th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium Nursery 1, Abu Dhabi 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Scotland vs Bermuda, 30th Match, Group A ICC Academy, Dubai 9:00 PM 03:30 PM GMT / 07:30 PM LOCAL Oct 25, Fri Papua New Guinea vs Singapore, 31st Match, Group A Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Ireland vs Jersey, 32nd Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium Nursery 1, Abu Dhabi 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Namibia vs Kenya, 33rd Match, Group A Dubai International Cricket Stadium , Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Oman vs Canada, 34th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 9:00 PM 03:30 PM GMT / 07:30 PM LOCAL Oct 26, Sat Ireland vs Nigeria, 35th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Netherlands vs Bermuda, 36th Match, Group A Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Namibia vs Singapore, 37th Match, Group A Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai 9:00 PM 03:30 PM GMT / 07:30 PM LOCAL Oct 27, Sun Hong Kong vs Nigeria, 39th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium Nursery 1, Abu Dhabi 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Papua New Guinea vs Kenya, 38th Match, Group A Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai 11:30 AM 06:00 AM GMT / 10:00 AM LOCAL Oman vs Jersey, 40th Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Scotland vs Netherlands, 41st Match, Group A Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL United Arab Emirates vs Canada, 42nd Match, Group B Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi 9:00 PM 03:30 PM GMT / 07:30 PM LOCAL Oct 29, Tue TBC vs TBC, Play off 1 – A2 v B3 Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL TBC vs TBC, Play off 2 – A3 v B2 Dubai International Cricket Stadium , Dubai 9:00 PM 03:30 PM GMT / 07:30 PM LOCAL Oct 30, Wed TBC vs TBC, Play off 3 – A4 v Loser of Play-off 1 Dubai International Cricket Stadium , Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL TBC vs TBC, Play off 4 – B4 v Loser of Play-off 2 Dubai International Cricket Stadium , Dubai 9:00 PM 03:30 PM GMT / 07:30 PM LOCAL Oct 31, Thu TBC vs TBC, 5th Place Play-off ICC Academy, Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL Nov 01, Fri TBC vs TBC, Semifinal 1 – B1 v Winner of Play-off 1 Dubai International Cricket Stadium , Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL TBC vs TBC, Semifinal 2 – A1 v Winner of Play-off 2 Dubai International Cricket Stadium , Dubai 9:00 PM 03:30 PM GMT / 07:30 PM LOCAL Nov 02, Sat TBC vs TBC, 3rd place Play off Dubai International Cricket Stadium , Dubai 3:40 PM 10:10 AM GMT / 02:10 PM LOCAL TBC vs TBC, Final Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai 9:00 PM 03:30 PM GMT / 07:30 PM LOCAL Squads Bermuda Dion Stovell (c), Terryn Fray (vc), Okera Bascome, Onais Bascome, Oronde Bascome, Derrick Brangman, Deunte Darrell, Allan Douglas, Malachi Jones, Kamau Leverock, George O’Brien, Delray Rawlins, Macai Simmons, Sinclair Smith, Charles Trott, Rodney Trott, Janeiro Tucker. Canada Navneet Dhaliwal (c), Rizwan Cheema, Nikhil Dutta, Romesh Eranga, Jeremy Gordon, Dillon Heyliger, Abraash Khan, Nicholas Kirton, Nitish Kumar, Junaid Siddiqui, Ravinderpal Singh, Hamza Tariq (wk), Rodrigo Thomas, Srimantha Wijeratne, Saad Bin Zafar Hong Kong Aizaz Khan (c), Kinchit Shah (vc), Ahsan Abbasi, Haroon Arshed, Waqas Barkat, Aarush Bhagwat, Kyle Christie, Mohammad Ghazanfar, Raag Kapur, Ehsan Khan, Nizakat Khan, Waqas Khan, Scott McKechnie (wk), Nasrulla Rana, Shahid Wasif Ireland Gary Wilson (c), Mark Adair, Andrew Balbirnie, David Delany, Gareth Delany, George Dockrell, Shane Getkate, Kevin O’Brien, Boyd Rankin, Simi Singh, Paul Stirling, Harry Tector, Stuart Thompson, Lorcan Tucker, Craig Young Jersey Charles Perchard (c), Corey Bisson, Dominic Blampied, Harrison Carlyon, Jake Dunford (wk), Nicholas Ferraby, Nick Greenwood, Anthony Hawkins-Kay, Jonty Jenner, Elliot Miles, Rhys Palmer, William Robertson, Ben Stevens, Julius Sumerauer, Benjamin Ward Kenya Shem Ngoche (c), Sachin Bhudia, Emmanuel Bundi, Aman Gandhi, Dhiren Gondaria, Irfan Karim, Pushpak Kerai, Jasraj Kundi, Alex Obanda, Collins Obuya, Nelson Odhiambo, Lucas Oluoch, Elijah Otieno, Rakep Patel, Rushab Patel Namibia Gerhard Erasmus (c), Jan Frylinck (vc), Stephan Baard, Karl Birkenstock, Niko Davin, Zane Green, Zhivago Groenewald, Jean-Pierre Kotze, Tangeni Lungameni, Bernard Scholtz, Ben Shikongo, JJ Smit, Christi Viljoen, Pikky Ya France, Craig Williams Netherlands Pieter Seelaar (c), Colin Ackermann, Philippe Boissevain, Ben Cooper, Ryan ten Doeschate, Scott Edwards (wk), Brandon Glover, Timm van der Gugten, Fred Klaassen, Paul van Meekeren, Roelof van der Merwe, Max O’Dowd, Shane Snater, Antonius Staal, Tobias Visee Nigeria Ademola Onikoyi (c), Sylvester Okpe (vc), Abiodun Abioye, Sesan Adedeji, Vincent Adewoye, Daniel Ajekun, Chima Akachukwu, Daniel Gim, Segun Ogundipe, Isaac Okpe, Chimezie Onwuzulike, Leke Oyede, Sulaimon Runsewe, Mohameed Taiwo, Codi Yusuf Oman Zeeshan Maqsood (c), Aqib Ilyas (vc), Khawar Ali, Fayyaz Butt, Sandeep Goud, Aamir Kaleem, Kaleemullah, Bilal Khan, Mehran Khan, Naseem Khushi, Suraj Kumar (wk), Sufyan Mehmood, Khurram Nawaz, Jay Odedra, Jatinder Singh Papua New Guinea Assad Vala (c), Charles Amini (vc), Simon Atai, Sese Bau, Kiplin Doriga, Riley Hekure, Hiri Hiri, Jason Kila, Nosaina Pokana, Damien Ravu, John Reva, Lega Siaka, Chad Soper, Norman Vanua, Tony Ura Scotland Kyle Coetzer (c), Richie Berrington, Matthew Cross (wk), Josh Davey, Alasdair Evans, Ollie Hairs, Michael Leask, Calum MacLeod, George Munsey, Adrian Neill, Safyaan Sharif, Tom Sole, Hamza Tahir, Craig Wallace, Mark Watt Singapore Amjad Mahboob (c), Vinoth Baskaran, Surendran Chandramohan, Tim David, Avi Dixit, Aritra Dutta, Rezza Gaznavi, Anantha Krishna, Navin Param, Janak Prakash, Rohan Rangarajan, Manpreet Singh (wk), Sidhant Singh, Aryaman Sunil, Selladore Vijayakumar United Arab Emirates Ahmed Raza (c), Ashfaq Ahmed, Sultan Ahmed, Waheed Ahmed, Mohammad Boota, Darius D’Silva, Zawar Farid, Imran Haider, Zahoor Khan, Rohan Mustafa, Ghulam Shabber (wk), Rameez Shahzad, Junaid Sidique, Chirag Suri, Muhammad Usman Broadcast Details All the T20 World Cup Qualifier 2019 games that will be played at the Dubai International Stadium and Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium will be broadcast. The in-match clips and highlights can be checked on the T20 World Cup website.
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thisdaynews · 5 years
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Trump’s Greenland Gambit Might Be Crazy. It’s Also a Window Into the Future.
New Post has been published on https://thebiafrastar.com/trumps-greenland-gambit-might-be-crazy-its-also-a-window-into-the-future/
Trump’s Greenland Gambit Might Be Crazy. It’s Also a Window Into the Future.
President Donald Trump’s much-mocked desire to buy Greenland, which was rebuffed by the Danish government to his great displeasure, might be the closest he has come to acknowledging the gravity of global warming—though hardly the sort of acknowledgment one might hope for. According to theWall Street Journalarticle that first broke the news about Greenland, Trump’s interest was piqued when advisers spoke of the island’s “abundant resources and geopolitical importance.” The reason those resources—including reserves of coal and uranium—are available for exploitation is because of Greenland’s rapidly melting ice sheet. Its geopolitical importance has been greatly increased by the melting of Arctic Ocean ice, which has made new shipping routes accessible and opened up a new theater of strategic competition for the United States, Canada, Russia, the Nordic countries and, increasingly, China.
Trump probably doesn’t realize it, but he’s not the first president in recent years to look at the coming impact of climate change and decide to buy land. And with dislocated populations and scarcer resources looming on the horizon, he might not be the last.
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In 2014, the pacific island nation of Kiribati purchased 7.7 square miles of land of the Fijian island of Vanua Levu for a little less than $9 million. A nation of 33 low-lying atolls, Kiribati is one of the countries that’s most vulnerable to sea level rise. According to the government’s climate action plan, submitted to the 2015 U.N. Climate Change Conference in Paris, a substantial portion of Kirbati’s capital island, Tarawa, where nearly half of its 110,000 people live, could be inundated by 2050. Smaller outlying islands could disappear even sooner.
Then-President Anote Tong described the Fiji purchase as an insurance policy, telling the media, “We would hope not to put everyone on [this] one piece of land, but if it became absolutely necessary, yes, we could do it.” At the Paris summit, Tong thanked the government of Fiji for opening the doors to his people.
The purchase made international headlines, with Kiribati described as the first country to purchase land abroad specifically for relocation because of climate change. But it was a little more complicated than that. For one thing, since the purchase, there’s been little in the way of preparation for any mass relocation of Kirbati’s population. The administration that followed Tong’s is mostly dismissive of his plan. The government’s story on what the land was intended for also changed several times—sometimes it was described as for relocation, sometimes for agriculture to provide food security for Kiribati. The land itself consists of steep hills and mangrove swamps, not particularly suitable for either habitation or agriculture. It’s also already home to several hundred Solomon Islanders who have lived there since the 19th century.
When I interviewed Tong at his home in Tarawa in 2016 for my book,Invisible Countries,he told me, “It’s a statement to the international community that our situation is serious. But, apart from that, it’s a damn good investment.” If all goes well, he told me in language that would likely make sense to the current, real estate-minded U.S. president, “in 50 years we can sell the land.”
Looking ahead, Kiribati might offer a model for other countries. Food security in an increasingly crowded world could be another factor that drives governments to purchase land abroad. This is arguably already happening. Chinese state-run firms have been accused of a new “land grab,” having gobbled up agricultural land in Africa and Latin America. In 2008, the South Korean company Daewoo Logistics negotiated a lease on 3.2 million acres of farmland in Madagascar, nearly half the island’s arable land. The deal was highly controversial and contributed to the protests that led to the overthrow of Madagascar’s government in 2009.
But these deals and the Kiribati purchase differ in an important way from Trump’s Greenland gambit: They did not actually involve the transfer ofsovereigntyfrom one country to another. The land in Fiji is still the territory of Fiji, even if the government of Kiribati owns it. The small population that lives on the land didn’t suddenly become citizens of Kiribati overnight. It’s more akin to the sovereign wealth funds of countries like Norway or Qatar gobbling up New York real estate. You don’t need a passport to visit these buildings in Manhattan.
The actual purchase of sovereign territory was once relatively common. Blockbuster deals like the Louisiana Purchase, the Alaska Purchase and the Adams-Onís treaty, through which Florida was acquired, were key to America’s early territorial expansion. Today, this is almost unheard of. (One possible exception: In 2011, Tajikistan agreed to cede 386 square miles of territory to China under a deal, the terms of which were not publicized at the time.)
Why has the market for territory gotten so tight? In large part, it’s because the world’s landmass is now dominated not by large colonial empires, but by nation-states that zealously guard the territory they control. Moreover, thanks to prevailing notions like nationalism and popular sovereignty, the people who live within those nation-states expect to have some say in the matter of what country they live in.
Germany learned this the hard way after 1871, when, after its victory in the Franco-Prussian war, it demanded payment from France in the form of real estate, as countless victorious powers had done since time immemorial. But even though the French government agreed to transfer the provinces of Alsace and Lorraine, the people who lived there refused to accept that they were now Germans, and France nursed a grudge until it won the provinces back in World War I. Times had changed, and, as historian Martin Van Creveld has written, German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck came to view the annexation as the worst mistake of his career.
A century and a half later, Trump too wants to take over a territory whose people don’t believe their sovereignty is something to be traded like poker chips between leaders hundreds of miles away; Greenland, though part of Denmark, is a semi-autonomous territory with its own government managing its domestic affairs. This isn’t the first time Trump has expressed some premodern ideas about territorial conquest—he has on several occasions argued that the United States should have “kept the oil” after invading Iraq—but he’s going to have a hard time finding negotiating partners for his expansionist dreams.
Still, just because Trump’s Greenland purchase is a nonstarter, doesn’t mean our notions of territorial control won’t get a little more fluid in the future, particularly as climate change physically reshapes the planet. Perhaps some countries will be forced to pick up and move. There’s historical precedent for this. In his book,Vanished Kingdoms, the British historian Norman Davies identifies 15 different locations called “Burgundy,” dating back to the 5th century and occupying locations from the west bank of the Rhine to what is now Switzerland to the Netherlands. These countries more closely resembled family-run holding companies than a modern nation-state. But relocation is a pretty alien concept in a world where countries are first and foremost thought of as particular pieces of land.
The predicament of Kiribati and other low-lying island states has also prompted some environmental law scholars to propose ideas like “ex-situ nationhood,” under which governments would maintain some level of political sovereignty and a role in international institutions, even after territory they used to represent becomes uninhabitable. These might end up looking less like currently existing states than entities like the Sovereign Order of Malta (not to be confused with the country of Malta)—a religious order dating back to the Middle Ages that is recognized as politically sovereign by 106 countries and enjoys observer status at the United Nations, despite controlling no territory and having no citizens. The scenario might seem far-fetched, but traditional notions of sovereignty and citizenship might no longer hold up in a world of growing migrant populations and statelessness.
It probably wasn’t what he had in mind, but Trump’s Arctic dreams could point toward an era in which both the countries of the world and the physical land they sit on are a lot less fixed than they are now.
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fsl11predict-blog · 5 years
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ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup League 2019: Scotland vs Papua New Guinea, 5th Match
ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup League 2019: Scotland vs Papua New Guinea, 5th Match
ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup League 2019: Scotland vs Papua New Guinea, 5th Match
PAPUA NEW GUINEA
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PREDICTIONS
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SCOTLAND
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SCOTLAND
admin
August 19, 2019
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The host team Scotland is going to face Papua New Guinea at Mannofield Park, Aberdeen on Tuesday. Scotland is one of the strongest team of this tri-series. In the first match, Scotland had to face a defeat against Oman by 8 wickets but they had not put their heads down. They had come with a huge winning spirit in their next game and had won the matches against Papua New Guinea and also Oman. They had defeated Papua New Guinea by 3 wickets and Oman by 85 runs which is a very pretty good score for the team.
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On the other hand, Papua New Guinea has not won a single game of this series. Hence, there are more chances for Scotland to win this game also.
Match Details
Scotland vs Papua New Guinea, 5th Match on Tuesday, August 20, 2019, at Mannofield Park, Aberdeen, at 11 AM local (10 AM GMT) (3 AM IST)
Probable Players
Papua New Guinea Squad: Lega Siaka, Norman Vanua, Hiri Hiri, Charles Amini (VC), Sese Bau, Gaudi Toka, Kiplin Doriga (wk), Simon Atal, Nosaina Pokana, Assad Vala (c), Tony Ura, Damien Ravu, Riley Hekure, Chad Soper
Scotland Squad: Richie Berrington, Calum MacLeod, Michael Leask, Kyle Coetzer (c), Matthew Cross (wk), George Munsey, Alasdair Evans, Adrian Neill, Tom Sole, Hamza Tahir, Craig Wallace (wk), Main Safyaan Sharif, Mark Watt
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czarsportzglobal · 6 years
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Cricket PNG announce teams and squads for 2018 HEBOU Shield
Cricket PNG have started the preparations for National squad members and hopefuls for the upcoming ICC World T20 Asia-Pacific qualifiers in Samoa by announcing the 2018 HEBOU Shield tournament from 23rd Jul – 05th Aug, 2018 at Amini Park ground.
Four teams will take part in the competition captained by Assad Vala (Mariners), Charles Amini Jnr (Black Bass), Norman Vanua (Mudmen) and Tony Ura…
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maceikblog · 2 years
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Co się dzisiaj działo? #88 29.3.2022
Krykiet, mecz jednodniowy:
Nowa Zelandia(204/3, Will Young 103*, Blair Tickner 4/50) pokonała Holandię (202, Michael Rippon 67 & 2/32) 7 wicketami
Australia (313/7, Travis Head 101, Adam Zampa 4/38) pokonała Pakistan(225, Imam-ul-Haq 103, Haris Rauf 2/44) 88 runami
mecz Twenty20: Malezja (180/3, Virandeep Singh 59*, Sharvin Muniandy 4/32) pokonała Papuę Nową Gwineę (172, Tony Ura 56, Norman Vanua 2/31) 8 runami
IPL: Rajasthan Royals (210/6, Sanju Samson 55, Yuzvendra Chahal 3/22) pokonali Sunrisers Hyderabad (149/6, Aiden Markram 57*, Umran Malik 2/39) 61 runami
Challenger w Lugano: Piotr Matuszewski/Gijs Brouwer-Mirza Basić/Damir Dzumhur 1:6 4:6
Challenger w Marbelli: Jan Zieliński/Hugo Nys-Yannick Hanfmann/Adrian Menendez Maceiras 4:6 2:6
Turniej ITF w Monastyrze: Michał Dembek-Hanwen Li 4:6 6:7(3)
Challenger w Oreiras: Daniel Michalski/Dragos Nicolae Madaras-Vit Kopriva/Adam Pavlasek
FIFA World Cup, kwalifikacje:
AFC
Japonia-Wietnam 1:1
Iran-Liban 2:0
Syria-Irak 1:1
ZEA-Korea Południowa 1:0
Oman-Chiny 2:0
Arabia Saudyjska-Australia 1:0
CAF
Nigeria-Ghana 1:1 (1:1 w dwumeczu, awans Ghany)
Senegal-Egipt 2:0 po karnych (2:1 w dwumeczu, awans Senegalu)
Algieria-Kamerun 1:2 po dogrywce (2:2 w dwumeczu, awans Kamerunu)
Maroko-DR Konga 4:1 (5:2 w dwumeczu, awans Maroka)
Tunezja-Mali 0:0 (1:0 w dwumeczu, awans Tunezji)
UEFA
Polska-Szwecja 2:0 (awans Polski na Mistrzostwa Świata)
Portugalia-Macedonia Północna 2:0 (awans Portugali)
Turniej ITF w Pretorii: Maja Chwalińska/Valeriya Strakhova-Mana Ayukawa/Joanne Zuger 0:6 4:6
Mistrzostwa Europy U21, kwalifikacje:
Polska-Węgry 1:1
San Marino-Łotwa 0:0
Energa Basket Liga: Asseco Gdynia-Spójnia Stargard 76:74
Puchar Narodów Afryki, kwalifikacje: Gambia-Czad 2:2 (3:2 w dwumeczu)
ULEB Eurocup: Joventut-Śląsk Wrocław 97:79
Turniej WTA w Miami: Alicja Rosolska/Erin Routliffe-rosjanka/Elise Mertens 3:6 6:3 9-11
EHF European League: Lemgo-Wisła Płock 28:31
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maceikblog · 2 years
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Co się dzisiaj działo? #87 28.3.2022
FIFA World Cup, kwalifikacje CONCACAF:
Kanada-Jamajka 4:0 (Kanada awansowała do turnieju)
Salwador-Kostaryka 1:2
USA-Panama 5:1
Honduras-Meksyk 0:1
NHL: Penguins-Red Wings 11:2
NCAA March Madness, Elite Eight: North Carolina Tar Heels-St. Peters Peacocks 69:49
Challenger w Marbelli: Katarzyna Kawa-Nastasja Mariana Schunk 1:6 6:7(5)
Energa Basket Liga: King Szczecin-Trefl Sopot 98:73
mecz towarzyski piłkarzy: Wyspy Zielonego Przylądka-San Marino 2:0
krykiet, IPL: Gujarat Titans (161/5, Rahul Tewatia 40*, Mohammed Shami 3/25) pokonali Lucknow Super Giants (158/6, Deepak Hooda 55, Dushmantha Chameera 2/22) 5 wicketami
mecz Twenty20: Nepal (183/9, Aasif Sheikh 43, Sandeep Lamichhane 3/22) pokonała Papuę Nową Gwineę (168, Norman Vanua 52, Chad Soper 2/24) 15 runami
Turniej ATP w Miami:
Łukasz Kubot/Marin Ćilić-Tomislav Brkić/Nikola Cacić 2:6 1:6
Hubert Hurkacz-rosjanin 7:5 4:6 6:3
Turniej WTA w Miami:
Iga Świątek-Madison Brengle 6:0 6:3
Alicja Rosolska/Erin Routliffe-Asia Muhammad/Ena Shibahara 6:4 3:6 10-6
Iga Świątek-Cori Gauff 6:3 6:1
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maceikblog · 2 years
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Co się dzisiaj działo? #84 25.3.2022
krykiet, mecz testowy, dzień 5: Australia (391 & 227/3d, Usman Khawaja 91 & 104*, Pat Cummins 5/56 & Nathan Lyon 5/83) pokonała Pakistan (268 & 235, Abdullah Shafique 81 & Imam-ul-Haq 70, Naseem Shah 4/58 & 1/23) 115 runami
dzień 2: Indie Zachodnie (232/8, Joshua Da Silva 54*,Jayden Seales 3/40)-Anglia (204, Saqib Mahmood 49, Chris Woakes 3/48)
ICC Puchar Świata Kobiet: Australia (136/5, Beth Mooney 66*, Jess Jonassen 2/13) pokonała Bangladesz (135/6, Lata Mondal 33, Salma Khatun 3/23) 5 wicketami
mecz jednodniowy: Papua Nowa Gwinea (292/8, Charles Amini 77, Norman Vanua 3/62) pokonała Nepal (286/8, Rohit Paudel 126, Dipendra Singh Airee 2/30) 6 runami
mecz Twenty20: mecz Nowa Zelandia-Holandia został odwołany z powodu deszczu
Qatar Masters, 2 runda: 2. Adrian Meronk
SDC Open, 2 runda: 84. Marcin Gradecki
NCAA March Madness, Sweet Sixteen:
Gonzaga Bulldogs-Arkansas Razorbacks 68:74
Villanova Wildcats-Michigan Wolverines 63:55
Duke Blue Devils-Texas Tech Red Raiders 78:73
Arizona Wildcats-Houston Cougars 60:72
FIFA World Cup, kwalifikacje:
CONCACAF
Jamajka-Salwador 1:1
Panama-Honduras 1:1
Meksyk-USA 0:0
Kostaryka-Kanada 1:0
CONMEBOL
Brazylia-Chile 4:0
Kolumbia-Boliwia 3:0
Paragwaj-Ekwador 3:1
Urugwaj-Peru 1:0
CAF
DR Konga-Maroko 1:1
Kamerun-Algieria 0:1
Mali-Tunezja 0:1
Egipt-Senegal 1:0
Ghana-Nigeria 0:0
Volta Ciclista a Catalunya, 5 etap:
47. Łukasz Owsian (66 w generalce)
E3 Classic:
Maciej Bodnar, Łukasz Wiśniowski, Kamil Gradek i Filip Maciejuk nie ukończyli wyścigu
Challenger w Bielu: Kacper Żuk-Antoine Escoffier 7:6(2) 6:2
Challenger w Zadarze: Daniel Michalski-Dalibor Svrcina 6:3 6:1
Mistrzostwa Świata w hokeju kobiet, dywizja IIIB:
Estonia-Bośnia i Hercegowina 10:1
Serbia-Izrael 6:0
(turniej wygrały Estonki i awansowały do dywizji IIIA)
Puchar Świata w skokach, konkurs w Planicy:
11. Kamil Stoch
15. Jakub Wolny
18. Piotr Żyła
20. Andrzej Stękała
26. Dawid Kubacki
Turniej WTA w Miami:
Alicja Rosolska/Erin Routliffe-Irina Begu/Monica Niculescu 7:6(3) 7:6(4)
Iga Świątek-Viktorija Golubic 6:2 6:0 (Iga w kolejnym rankingu będzie notowana na 1 miejscu)
PlusLiga: Ślepsk Suwałki-Trefl Gdańsk 2:3
mecz towarzyski piłkarzy: San Marino-Litwa 1:2
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