logo
Inglis lights way as Punjab power to top-two IPL place

Inglis lights way as Punjab power to top-two IPL place

The Advertiser27-05-2025

Ricky Ponting's Punjab Kings have secured a top-two spot in the Indian Premier League playoffs, and the Australian coach would be forgiven for conveying a large vote of thanks to compatriot Josh Inglis.
Punjab have yet to taste ultimate IPL glories, and there are still two huge steps to take but the Australian pair could be about to deliver something special.
Inglis, Yorkshire-born but every bit an Australian hero after his achievements in securing that famous victory over England in the Champions Trophy earlier this year, smashed 73 as five-time winners Mumbai Indians were humbled by seven wickets on Monday.
Ably assisted by Priyansh Arya, who made 62, wicketkeeper-batter Inglis demolished the Mumbai bowling as Punjab cruised to 3-187 in reply to Mumbai's below-par 7-184.
Inglis's contribution was hailed by Mumbai captain Shreyas Iyer, who was Ponting's record-breaking capture at last winter's player auction.
Iyer said: "Obviously, he's a big match player and we saw that today. So, yeah, fantastic attitude and I hope that he keeps continuing with the same."
Punjab will play qualifier 1 - against Royal Challengers Bengaluru or Gujarat Titans - on Thursday with the winner going directly to the June 3 final. Mumbai, meanwhile, will play eliminator 1 on Friday, also against one of the same pair.
Gujarat are second in the table but could be overtaken by Bengaluru if they beat the already-eliminated Lucknow Super Giants on Tuesday, when the play-off picture will become clear.
Ponting was quick to praise his players but also injected a cautionary note. "I think it's pretty obvious to see that this is a really talented team that are all on the same page and heading in the same direction," he said.
"It's a great achievement till now but really, if you look back, we haven't achieved anything yet. That's the one thing I've been saying to the players since the moment we qualified."
Arya and Inglis, enjoying his first season in the IPL, combined for 109 runs off just 59 balls after Prabhsimran Singh was dismissed by Jasprit Bumrah inside the batting powerplay.
Arya hit Trent Boult for three boundaries off the first four balls he faced from the New Zealander. Arya raised his half-century from 27 balls when he hit Hardik Pandya for six over wide long-on and bashed Jasprit Bumrah for a six over fine leg.
Inglis shrugged off the spin threat of Mitchell Santner, whose first two overs went for 23, while impact player Ashwani Kumar was dropped from the attack after being hammered for 16, in his only over.
Santner finished with 2-41 when he had Arya caught at long-off in the 15th over, and Inglis was out lbw when he missed a paddle shot against the left-arm spinner in the 18th over with Punjab just 14 runs from victory. They won with nine balls to spare.
Suryakumar Yadav's 57, his 14th successive score of 25-plus in T20s, was the cornerstone of Mumbai's total.
Ryan Rickelton, playing in his last IPL game before joining South Africa for the World Test Championship final against Australia in London next month, lashed a 20-ball 27, while Rohit Sharma struggled to 24 when he holed out to long-on against left-arm spinner Harpreet Brar.
With AP
Ricky Ponting's Punjab Kings have secured a top-two spot in the Indian Premier League playoffs, and the Australian coach would be forgiven for conveying a large vote of thanks to compatriot Josh Inglis.
Punjab have yet to taste ultimate IPL glories, and there are still two huge steps to take but the Australian pair could be about to deliver something special.
Inglis, Yorkshire-born but every bit an Australian hero after his achievements in securing that famous victory over England in the Champions Trophy earlier this year, smashed 73 as five-time winners Mumbai Indians were humbled by seven wickets on Monday.
Ably assisted by Priyansh Arya, who made 62, wicketkeeper-batter Inglis demolished the Mumbai bowling as Punjab cruised to 3-187 in reply to Mumbai's below-par 7-184.
Inglis's contribution was hailed by Mumbai captain Shreyas Iyer, who was Ponting's record-breaking capture at last winter's player auction.
Iyer said: "Obviously, he's a big match player and we saw that today. So, yeah, fantastic attitude and I hope that he keeps continuing with the same."
Punjab will play qualifier 1 - against Royal Challengers Bengaluru or Gujarat Titans - on Thursday with the winner going directly to the June 3 final. Mumbai, meanwhile, will play eliminator 1 on Friday, also against one of the same pair.
Gujarat are second in the table but could be overtaken by Bengaluru if they beat the already-eliminated Lucknow Super Giants on Tuesday, when the play-off picture will become clear.
Ponting was quick to praise his players but also injected a cautionary note. "I think it's pretty obvious to see that this is a really talented team that are all on the same page and heading in the same direction," he said.
"It's a great achievement till now but really, if you look back, we haven't achieved anything yet. That's the one thing I've been saying to the players since the moment we qualified."
Arya and Inglis, enjoying his first season in the IPL, combined for 109 runs off just 59 balls after Prabhsimran Singh was dismissed by Jasprit Bumrah inside the batting powerplay.
Arya hit Trent Boult for three boundaries off the first four balls he faced from the New Zealander. Arya raised his half-century from 27 balls when he hit Hardik Pandya for six over wide long-on and bashed Jasprit Bumrah for a six over fine leg.
Inglis shrugged off the spin threat of Mitchell Santner, whose first two overs went for 23, while impact player Ashwani Kumar was dropped from the attack after being hammered for 16, in his only over.
Santner finished with 2-41 when he had Arya caught at long-off in the 15th over, and Inglis was out lbw when he missed a paddle shot against the left-arm spinner in the 18th over with Punjab just 14 runs from victory. They won with nine balls to spare.
Suryakumar Yadav's 57, his 14th successive score of 25-plus in T20s, was the cornerstone of Mumbai's total.
Ryan Rickelton, playing in his last IPL game before joining South Africa for the World Test Championship final against Australia in London next month, lashed a 20-ball 27, while Rohit Sharma struggled to 24 when he holed out to long-on against left-arm spinner Harpreet Brar.
With AP
Ricky Ponting's Punjab Kings have secured a top-two spot in the Indian Premier League playoffs, and the Australian coach would be forgiven for conveying a large vote of thanks to compatriot Josh Inglis.
Punjab have yet to taste ultimate IPL glories, and there are still two huge steps to take but the Australian pair could be about to deliver something special.
Inglis, Yorkshire-born but every bit an Australian hero after his achievements in securing that famous victory over England in the Champions Trophy earlier this year, smashed 73 as five-time winners Mumbai Indians were humbled by seven wickets on Monday.
Ably assisted by Priyansh Arya, who made 62, wicketkeeper-batter Inglis demolished the Mumbai bowling as Punjab cruised to 3-187 in reply to Mumbai's below-par 7-184.
Inglis's contribution was hailed by Mumbai captain Shreyas Iyer, who was Ponting's record-breaking capture at last winter's player auction.
Iyer said: "Obviously, he's a big match player and we saw that today. So, yeah, fantastic attitude and I hope that he keeps continuing with the same."
Punjab will play qualifier 1 - against Royal Challengers Bengaluru or Gujarat Titans - on Thursday with the winner going directly to the June 3 final. Mumbai, meanwhile, will play eliminator 1 on Friday, also against one of the same pair.
Gujarat are second in the table but could be overtaken by Bengaluru if they beat the already-eliminated Lucknow Super Giants on Tuesday, when the play-off picture will become clear.
Ponting was quick to praise his players but also injected a cautionary note. "I think it's pretty obvious to see that this is a really talented team that are all on the same page and heading in the same direction," he said.
"It's a great achievement till now but really, if you look back, we haven't achieved anything yet. That's the one thing I've been saying to the players since the moment we qualified."
Arya and Inglis, enjoying his first season in the IPL, combined for 109 runs off just 59 balls after Prabhsimran Singh was dismissed by Jasprit Bumrah inside the batting powerplay.
Arya hit Trent Boult for three boundaries off the first four balls he faced from the New Zealander. Arya raised his half-century from 27 balls when he hit Hardik Pandya for six over wide long-on and bashed Jasprit Bumrah for a six over fine leg.
Inglis shrugged off the spin threat of Mitchell Santner, whose first two overs went for 23, while impact player Ashwani Kumar was dropped from the attack after being hammered for 16, in his only over.
Santner finished with 2-41 when he had Arya caught at long-off in the 15th over, and Inglis was out lbw when he missed a paddle shot against the left-arm spinner in the 18th over with Punjab just 14 runs from victory. They won with nine balls to spare.
Suryakumar Yadav's 57, his 14th successive score of 25-plus in T20s, was the cornerstone of Mumbai's total.
Ryan Rickelton, playing in his last IPL game before joining South Africa for the World Test Championship final against Australia in London next month, lashed a 20-ball 27, while Rohit Sharma struggled to 24 when he holed out to long-on against left-arm spinner Harpreet Brar.
With AP

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Ready for war': Aussie Opetaia alert to Italian ambush
'Ready for war': Aussie Opetaia alert to Italian ambush

West Australian

timean hour ago

  • West Australian

'Ready for war': Aussie Opetaia alert to Italian ambush

Like the 27 challengers who have come before him, Jai Opetaia is swatting away Claudio Squeo's threat to derail the Australian boxing superstar's undisputed world title dream. Opetaia (27-0, 21KOs) will place his IBF and The Ring cruiserweight belts on the line against the unbeaten Squeo (17-0, 9KOs) on Sunday. Despite entering the bout as a 15-1 underdog, the Italian is promising to prove the doubters wrong and pull off one of boxing's great boilovers at the Gold Coast Exhibition Centre. "This is a big opportunity to shock the world, the people writing you off," Squeo said through a translator on Friday. But with a multi-million-dollar pay day and a place in Australian boxing immortality also at stake, Opetaia is having none of it. With much bigger fish to fry, the 29-year-old is vowing to win whatever way is required, knowing a loss is non negotiable ahead of a succession of potential super fights that could propel him to Hall of Fame status. "I believe I can beat him in the pocket, I believe I can outbox him. We are just going to fight smart," Opetai said. "We've got to choose our battles and just wait til Sunday." The fight comes almost three years after a then-unfancied Opetaia defied two jaw fractures to beat champion Mairis Briedis and claim his two straps. Opetaia has fought five times since, with the Briedis rematch last year his only genuine challenge, and is yet to land a shot at the other three belts in his division. Badou Jack owns the WBC belt but it is WBO and WBA champion Gilberto Ramirez who is firmly in Opetaia's sights. The Mexican two-weight champion is due for a mandatory defence later this month and insistent he will face Opetaia next. Should both win, as most predict they will, Opetaia will be in line to finally secure a unification blockbuster against Ramirez later this year. An Opetaia-Ramirez mega-money four-belt stoush would sit nicely on the undercard to September's historic duel between Canelo Alvarez and Terence Crawford in Las Vegas. Little wonder why Opetai's priority is to see off Squeo however he needs to, saying he's even ready to slug it out for 12 full rounds if that's what it takes. "Once that bell goes every time, man, it's on and I'm ready for 12 rounds of war," he said. "I've got no doubt he's going to come forward. That's got to be his game plan. "We've just got to be patient. We just stick to our game plan, do what we do and we put on clinics. "So on Sunday, I love to put on a clinic. We always do the goods, we always put on good performances. "We are some hard-noses. We've been in the trenches the last couple of weeks. I'm riding in the wave. You know how I train to stop people."

'Ready for war': Aussie Opetaia alert to Italian ambush
'Ready for war': Aussie Opetaia alert to Italian ambush

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

'Ready for war': Aussie Opetaia alert to Italian ambush

Like the 27 challengers who have come before him, Jai Opetaia is swatting away Claudio Squeo's threat to derail the Australian boxing superstar's undisputed world title dream. Opetaia (27-0, 21KOs) will place his IBF and The Ring cruiserweight belts on the line against the unbeaten Squeo (17-0, 9KOs) on Sunday. Despite entering the bout as a 15-1 underdog, the Italian is promising to prove the doubters wrong and pull off one of boxing's great boilovers at the Gold Coast Exhibition Centre. "This is a big opportunity to shock the world, the people writing you off," Squeo said through a translator on Friday. First face off done. War ready. 😤 This Sunday on @DAZNBoxing Jai Opetaia (@jaiopetaia1) June 4, 2025 But with a multi-million-dollar pay day and a place in Australian boxing immortality also at stake, Opetaia is having none of it. With much bigger fish to fry, the 29-year-old is vowing to win whatever way is required, knowing a loss is non negotiable ahead of a succession of potential super fights that could propel him to Hall of Fame status. "I believe I can beat him in the pocket, I believe I can outbox him. We are just going to fight smart," Opetai said. "We've got to choose our battles and just wait til Sunday." The fight comes almost three years after a then-unfancied Opetaia defied two jaw fractures to beat champion Mairis Briedis and claim his two straps. Opetaia has fought five times since, with the Briedis rematch last year his only genuine challenge, and is yet to land a shot at the other three belts in his division. Badou Jack owns the WBC belt but it is WBO and WBA champion Gilberto Ramirez who is firmly in Opetaia's sights. The Mexican two-weight champion is due for a mandatory defence later this month and insistent he will face Opetaia next. Should both win, as most predict they will, Opetaia will be in line to finally secure a unification blockbuster against Ramirez later this year. An Opetaia-Ramirez mega-money four-belt stoush would sit nicely on the undercard to September's historic duel between Canelo Alvarez and Terence Crawford in Las Vegas. Little wonder why Opetai's priority is to see off Squeo however he needs to, saying he's even ready to slug it out for 12 full rounds if that's what it takes. "Once that bell goes every time, man, it's on and I'm ready for 12 rounds of war," he said. "I've got no doubt he's going to come forward. That's got to be his game plan. "We've just got to be patient. We just stick to our game plan, do what we do and we put on clinics. "So on Sunday, I love to put on a clinic. We always do the goods, we always put on good performances. "We are some hard-noses. We've been in the trenches the last couple of weeks. I'm riding in the wave. You know how I train to stop people."

Aussie boxer given title chance due to pregnant pause
Aussie boxer given title chance due to pregnant pause

West Australian

time2 hours ago

  • West Australian

Aussie boxer given title chance due to pregnant pause

Cherneka Johnson has the chance to become undisputed world champion after the Australian boxer was called in to replace Denmark's Dina Thorslund, who has announced her pregnancy. Already the WBA bantamweight world champion, Johnson will have the biggest fight of her career, stepping into the ring on July 11 (local time) at Madison Square Garden to take on the IBF champion, American Shurretta Metcalf. Because of her pregnancy, Thorslund voluntarily relinquished her WBO belt, while the WBC approved her title as Champion in Recess. A victory would make 30-year-old Johnson Australia's first undisputed world champion in the four-belt era after George Kambosos fell short in his quest to pull off the feat against Devin Haney in 2022. The 10-round showdown with Metcalf (14-4-1, 2 KOs) is on the first-ever all-women's professional boxing card at the famous New York venue. It's headlined by the third battle between Ireland's Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano of Puerto Rico. Signing with an American promoter, it is the first fight in the US for Johnson (17-2, 7 KOs). "It's a dream come true to fight at Madison Square Garden," said Johnson, who is New Zealand-born but lives on the Gold Coast and fights under the Australian flag. "This feels like a true 'pinch me' moment. "Not only will I be defending my title, but I'll also become the undisputed champion ... the magnitude of this moment isn't lost on me, and I'm ready to rise to it." Meanwhile, Andrew Moloney's comeback fight has been locked in less than a year after he announced his retirement following a controversial loss. Australia's former super flyweight world champion was ordered to fight Mexico's Argi Cortes in an IBF eliminator, with the pair squaring off in Monterrey, Mexico, on July 19 (local time). The winner will become the mandatory challenger to Willibaldo Garcia, who edged fellow Mexican Rene Calixto to claim the vacant IBF crown. The chance comes less than a year after 34-year-old Moloney quit the sport in a rage after losing on points to Pedro Guevara for the interim WBC super flyweight title.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store