
Canada cricketers suffer fifth straight loss, beaten by the U.S. by 88 runs
The partnership was an American one-day international record for the sixth wicket, surpassing the previous mark of 75.
The U.S. won the toss and elected to bat at Central Broward Park & Broward County Stadium, finishing at 286 for nine in their allotted 50 overs. In response, Canada was 198 all out in 46.1 overs.
The World League 2 features eight teams — also including Namibia, Nepal, the Netherlands, Scotland and the United Arab Emirates — with each side playing 36 one-day internationals spread across nine triangular series through December 2026.
The top four teams move on to a 10-country World Cup Qualifier that will send the final four teams to the 2027 World Cup.
The bottom four teams can also progress to the qualifier but will have to get there via the Cricket World Cup Qualifier Playoff which includes the top four teams from the Cricket World Cup Challenge League.
Sunday's win moved the U.S. (13-6-0, 26 points) atop the standings, leapfrogging the Netherlands (12-6-0 with two no-results, 26 points). Oman (11-6-0 with two no-results, 24 points) is third and Scotland (9-5-0 with two no-results, 20 points) fourth.
Canada (9-9-0 with two no-results, 20 points) stands fifth after its fifth straight loss.
Canada is ranked 18th in the world in the ICC ODI (one-day international) rankings, compared to No. 15 for the U.S. and No. 16 for Oman.
Jahangir led the U.S. with 89 runs Sunday while Krishnamurthi added 61. The Americans were 103 for five when they started their partnership that ended at 242 for six when Jahangir was caught off a Dilon Heyliger delivery,
Shivam Sharma led the Canadian bowlers with four wickets.
No. 5 batsman Harsh Thaker was Canada's leading scorer with 66 runs. Opener Pargat Singh added 37 and Nicolas Kirton 32.
Canada lost to Oman by 18 runs Friday in a match play called early due to heavy rain. The Canadians were beaten by 15 runs by Oman on May 19 and by 169 runs by the U.S. on May 17.
Canada won promotion to World League 2 from the Cricket World Cup Qualifier Playoff.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 25, 2025.
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USA Today
7 hours ago
- USA Today
Destined for stardom, Megha Ganne a fitting U.S. Women's Amateur champion at Bandon Dunes
BANDON, Ore. — Megha Ganne has done hundreds of pretend victory speeches into Gatorade bottles over the years. The 21-year-old from New Jersey has done plenty of winning in her golf career. She has won over and over as a junior and amateur golfer. She has been destined for stardom since the first time her coach, Katie Rudolph, saw her swing a club on the range at Galloping Hills in New Jersey, where Ganne was in the crowd at a girls golf clinic. The world got its first introduction to Ganne on the big stage at Olympic Club in the 2021 U.S. Women's Open, where she played in the final group on Sunday and became a fan favorite with her bright smile and infectious aura. Ganne has always dreamed of succeeding on the big stages, and she normally does, but Sunday's stage was her grandest achievement yet. Ganne claimed the 2025 U.S. Women's Amateur title at Bandon Dunes, beating 22-year-old Brooke Biermann 4 and 3 in the 36-hole final. Bandon Dunes has become an icon of American golf, where the ocean speaks with crashing waves and the wind lashes those who walks the links-style layout on Oregon's coast. It's a course that demands excellence and brings out the absolute best a player has to offer. It's fitting Ganne won her first USGA title at the iconic venue, where her stardom was able to shine off the reflection of the ocean as her championship backdrop. "She's always been a superstar," Rudolph said. "The same Megha you see right now is the same Megha you've seen when she was 7, 8, 9, 10, all the way up. She's always believed in herself. There was never doubt." Throughout the week, Rudolph took photos of the ocean from above the cliffs and envisioned being able to take a picture with Megha holding the trophy. It's fitting, then, that Ganne ended the match on the par-3 15th hole, which sits perched above the screaming ocean waves beneath it. 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She and Biermann, the recent Michigan State grad who made match play for the first time this week at a USGA championship, each won three holes on the front nine while tying the other three, and Ganne's lead was 3 with nine to play. The turning point came on the par-4 11th, when Biermann's 3-wood drifted about 30 yards left of the green. It took her two shots to get on the putting surface, and she still wasn't inside Ganne's approach, which she said was her best shot of the afternoon, and Biermann conceded the hole. "Five iron, just a knockdown," Ganne said. "It was really windy. Think those back nine holes are more for a ball striker." Images of holding the Robert Cox Trophy danced in Ganne's head, but the job was not done. Biermann responded quickly, curling in a birdie putt on the par-5 13th after Ganne missed her look to get within 3. Then on the par-4 14th, Biermann had about 20 feet for birdie while Ganne was beyond the hole and had a downhill 25 footer. 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After it was over, Ganne set down her trophy and walked over to her parents, Sudha and Hari Ganne, and Rudolph, who were reminiscing about the little girl hitting golf balls on the range that was destined for stardom, now in the record books forever. "I don't know what to do," Ganne said to them while laughing. With star power and skill like hers, Megha Ganne better get used to those winning moments.


Fox Sports
8 hours ago
- Fox Sports
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Fox Sports
10 hours ago
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