
PSL postponed indefinitely as IPL suspends matches for a week amid growing hostilities between India and Pakistan
The Pakistan Cricket Board initially said that the PSL season will be concluded in the United Arab Emirates, but have now taken a more extreme measure.
Tensions have escalated sharply following Indian missile strikes that killed at least 26 people in disputed Kashmir last weekend, which Pakistan has vowed to avenge.
In a statement, the IPL confirmed that updates regarding a new schedule and venues will be announced in due course following consultations with stakeholders and franchisees.
It added: 'While the BCCI [Board of Control for Cricket in India ] reposes full faith in the strength and preparedness of our armed forces, the Board considered it prudent to act in the collective interest of all stakeholders. At this critical juncture, the BCCI stands firmly with the nation.'
Ten English players are currently playing in the IPL, with seven more in Pakistan. All the latter are involved in a WhatsApp group, which has been used to discuss the ongoing situation and share information.
The Professional Cricketers' Association has been offering logistical assistance and support, keeping players informed with up to date security details and government advice. The England and Wales Cricket Board has also been monitoring official channels.
The process of facilitating the departures of overseas players from India has already begun, and the PA news agency understands that a number of English players have already left.
Tom Moffat, the chief executive of the World Cricketers' Association, told the PA news agency: 'It has been concerning to see the situation unfold in India and Pakistan and we hope that the situation de-escalates as soon as possible.
'Cricket is secondary to the health and safety of the people in both countries, including the players competing in the IPL and PSL.
'WCA and our member associations have been in regular contact with impacted players and assisting with advice to help with their individual decisions, supported by our expert security consultants.'
'We are pleased both events have acted on concerns raised.'
The PCB said it had made its decision to attempt to conclude its competition in the UAE as a consequence of India allegedly targeting the match between Quetta Gladiators and Islamabad United in Rawalpindi on Wednesday evening with a surveillance drone.
It follows the postponement of a match on Thursday between Karachi Kings and Peshawar Zalmi that involved three English players – James Vince, Tom Kohler-Cadmore and Luke Wood.
Confirming the switch to Dubai, PCB chair Mohsin Naqvi added: 'The PCB has always stood by the position that politics and sports need to be kept apart.
'However, in view of the extremely irresponsible and dangerous Indian act of targeting the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, which was manifestly done to disrupt the ongoing HBL Pakistan Super League X, the PCB has decided to shift the remaining matches to UAE so that the domestic as well as foreign cricketers, who are our precious guests, can be saved from the possible reckless targeting by India.'
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The Independent
15 minutes ago
- The Independent
Joe Root's history-making habits continue with rise to second-highest run scorer ever
On Tuesday, Ben Stokes felt the briefest of tributes to a teammate was the most eloquent. 'Sometimes less is more,' he argued. 'I don't need to say anything else except he's just the absolute GOAT.' Three days later, Stokes was at the other end as Joe Root put himself second in the all-time standings to the man many an Indian would describe as the greatest of all time, Sachin Tendulkar. Root leapfrogged three legends in one day, leaving Rahul Dravid and Jacques Kallis and Ricky Ponting behind him. He had a status as England's finest ever Test batter – certainly their best in the last half-century – and now only one person in the history of the game has made more runs in this format. Chasing down Tendulkar, still 2,512 ahead of him, will be no simple feat, even for a player at the peak of his powers and a figure who looks younger than his 34 years, but Root has given himself a chance. He has given England an opportunity to clinch the series against India, too, putting them in a commanding position, a score of 544-7 giving them a lead of 186. For him, Root's individual feats may rank second to him to the team's demands but the standing ovation at Old Trafford when he passed Ponting told a tale. This was a seismic achievement from a player with a habit of making history. Root already had more Test runs at Old Trafford than anyone else but he passed 1,000. Root already had more Test runs against India than anyone else but he added 150. Root already had more centuries against them than anyone else but he took his tally to 12, the last two in successive matches. A 38th Test ton put him alongside Kumar Sangakkara; this is the company he keeps on the leaderboards. Fittingly, Ponting was on commentary as Root caressed a single to third man to get his 13,379th run. The Australian had travelled thousands of miles to see himself deposed from second spot. He was generous in his praise. 'Just one more to go,' he said. 'The way his career has gone over the last five years, there's absolutely no reason why not.' Ponting had a point. Since the start of 2021, Root has made 5586 runs at 56.42 with 21 hundreds. It has taken him from the ranks of the very good to the great. There can be a smiling ruthlessness to Root; a class, too. The shot that took him level with Dravid was a beautifully timed cover drive off his back foot. There was a serenity to Root, a capacity to make batting look natural. On days like this, he is England's elegant accumulator, pressing home their advantage with an exercise in calm run-making. Until he was stumped off Ravindra Jadeja, Ollie Pope was a greater danger to him than the Indian bowlers. On 22, Root could have been run out by yards after Pope's bad call but Jadeja missed the stumps. Root then looked untroubled until, extracting bounce with the second new ball, Mohammed Siraj beat him on 98. He almost bowled him off his pads. Even a man with so many centuries may have been afflicted by the nervous nineties, albeit briefly. It may have helped, though, that Jasprit Bumrah left the field after one over with the second new ball; he could instead leg glance the debutant Anshul Kamboj for four to bring up his century. It was a second hundred by a Yorkshireman to be applauded at Old Trafford in two weeks after Jonny Bairstow 's blitz of sixes in the Roses Twenty20. After Bairstow's brutality came Root's artistry. He made India look distinctly average. It made it all the odder that Washington Sundar was not called upon until the 69th over. He struck twice in swift succession with clever use of flight and drift. Pope was caught at slip, Harry Brook, lured down the pitch and playing for turn that never arrived, stumped. After four second-innings wickets at Lord's, the off-spinner has felt underused. It felt a fruitless toil for his teammates as England enjoyed three century partnerships. Pope had been dropped by Dhruv Jurel, but with the wicketkeeper standing up to seamer Kamboj, and made 71; each of the top four reached 70 but, typically, Root was the one to convert it to a bigger score. Stokes was the fifth half-centurion, making his first 50 of the summer. The captain was not always fluent. The new ball left a red mark in a particularly painful place when he was struck there. He fell flat on his face reverse sweeping Jadeja. But when he started to get more expansive and ambitious, he departed, retiring hurt with cramp. It promoted a belated Indian revival, Jamie Smith and Chris Woakes going as Bumrah and Siraj produced a couple of hostile deliveries. So Stokes resumed his innings, though not fully comfortable. Liam Dawson accompanied him to the close. India found themselves a long way behind in the game. And Ponting, Kallis and Dravid now find themselves behind Root.


The Independent
15 minutes ago
- The Independent
Joe Root goes second on Test run-scorer list as England take charge versus India
Joe Root had another red-letter day in his extraordinary career, leaping from fifth to second among the all-time Test run-scorers with a majestic 150 as England ran roughshod over India. Root put Rahul Dravid and Jacques Kallis in his rear-view mirror before following up a 38th Test ton by reaching 120 to eclipse Ricky Ponting's tally of 13,378 runs on day three of the fourth Rothesay Test. Only Sachin Tendulkar's near-sacred haul of 15,921 runs is in front of Root, who closed to within 2,512 after an innings that formed the backbone of England's 544 for seven and a significant lead of 186. Ben Stokes retiring hurt after going to his first fifty of 2025 may have put a dampener on proceedings at Emirates Old Trafford but he re-emerged before the close, having dealt with cramp in his left leg. Root therefore kept top billing, sharing stands of 144 alongside Ollie Pope, who contributed 71, and 142 with Stokes, who went to stumps on 77 not out, to build on the foundations laid by Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett the day before. England are firm favourites to claim an unassailable 3-1 series lead this weekend and not even a late cluster of wickets could disguise a bad day for the tourists. It might have turned out differently had Ravindra Jadeja thrown down the stumps from backward point when Root was on 22 after England resumed on 225 for two in response to India's 358. Some miscommunication with Pope left Root haring to get to the non-striker's end after a push into the off-side but he was not in the frame as the ball whizzed harmlessly by. Pope and Root were otherwise in sync running between the wickets, which drove India to distraction, Indeed Root's nudges in front of and behind point took him to 30 then 31, going past Dravid and Kallis. A 104th 50-plus Test score – only Tendulkar has more – followed, by which time Pope also had a half-century. He was put down on 48 by substitute wicketkeeper Dhruv Jurel, standing up to the stumps as he attempted to combat England's number three from advancing to Anshul Kamboj. With India short of ideas, Washington Sundar was belatedly introduced in the 69th over and he made the breakthrough after lunch, finding a hint of drift which Pope pushed at and edged to a lone slip. India elected against taking the second new ball when it was due after 80 overs and had another breakthrough immediately when Harry Brook was drawn out of his crease by Sundar and stumped for three. But Root, regarded as one of the world's best players of spin, was unflustered by Sundar and Jadeja twirling away and he was in the 90s and England in the lead when India took the new ball after 90.2 overs. Mohammed Siraj hit Root's pad on 98 and the ball dribbled past leg stump, before the former England captain moved joint fourth on the list of Test centurions, equalling Kumar Sangakkara, when glancing fine for his 12th four off Kamboj, operating at the other end with Jasprit Bumrah off the field. After reaching his 25th Test hundred since turning 30 four-and-a-half years ago, Root opened his blade and ran the popgun Kamboj into the offside for a single to go past Ponting on the stroke of the tea interval. England's lead stretched into three figures and beyond after the break with Root totally at ease although Stokes appeared increasingly discomforted, furiously stretching his left leg before walking off the field on 66. He did not appear to be limping as he headed towards the pavilion and England confirmed it was nothing more substantial than cramp. Root's excellent knock ended when he overbalanced attempting to defend against Jadeja and was undone by drift and turn past the edge, with Jurel whipping off the bails for a second stumping. Jamie Smith and Chris Woakes came and went without much fanfare, prompting Stokes to re-enter the fray. He did not appear unduly untroubled as he and Liam Dawson, who went to the close on 21 not out in his first Test innings in eight years to add ballast to the lower order, negotiated the final few overs.


The Guardian
15 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Joe Root hits new milestones as century cements England dominance against India
It was Joe Root day in Manchester on Friday, where 20,000 people sat and admired a true master at work. Inevitable is a dangerous word in cricket, such is the fickle nature of the sport, and yet all that transpired felt as close to this as is possible: the likeliest of outcomes once Root gamboled out in the morning under an azure blue sky. The first expectation was that England, though still trailing India by 133 runs, would take full control of this fourth Test match and, sitting 2-1 up, the series as a whole. Ben Stokes, Ben Duckett and Zak Crawley had inflicted such damage 24 hours earlier that it was going to take something remarkable from the tourists to turn things around. And there was also a strong suspicion that Root, on 11, would probably end the day with only Sachin Tendulkar above him in the sport's all-time run-scoring charts. Compiling 150 from 248 balls, his 38th Test century and another for his personal Louvre, this was very much achieved, with a trio of all-time greats surpassed and his career tally now sitting at 13,409 runs. Tendulkar, who retired with 15,921, is now the final boss left to conquer. Not that Root seemed too fussed when, on the stroke of tea, he guided the increasingly innocuous Anshul Kamboj for a single behind square to move past Ricky Ponting's 13,378-run stash. If anything he was sheepish here, offering a little wave of the bat in appreciation of the crowd's applause as the numbers flashed up on the big screen. But then Root is as team-first a cricketer as they come — No Ego Joe, if you will — and will probably have drawn more satisfaction from England's position at stumps. It was a pretty healthy one, too, the hosts closing on 544 for seven and leading by 186 runs. There is rain forecast on Sunday but Shubman Gill's men will need to get there first. There were support acts, of course; the Richard Ashcrofts to Root's Oasis. Ollie Pope made a frisky 71 that, over the course of 38 overs, added 144 for the third wicket alongside Root. Pope did not always exude a sense of permanence – he still jabs at the ball – but his role in a death-by-a-thousand-cuts morning of singles was important. And Stokes continued what is becoming very much his series, that long-awaited five-wicket haul on day two followed by a punchy 77 not out. Though it was paused for a spell on 66 – a battle with cramp forcing him to retire hurt for a spell – the England captain will go into day three eyeing a first Test century for two years. For India there was a brief spell in the afternoon when the door that Root and Pope were bolting shut creaked ajar just a slither. Washington Sundar made a mockery of his 68-over wait to have a bowl, with the drift witnessed at Lord's harnessed once more to see Pope jab to slip and have Harry Brook gormlessly stumped on three. England were 349 for four, still trailing by nine, and the second new ball was overdue. It was a fleeting pushback from the tourists, however, and soon their weary bodies started to fall apart. Jasprit Bumrah left the field after one over with the new ball due to an apparent ankle twinge. Mohammed Siraj got one delivery to rear up and clang Stokes in the box, only to soon follow his strike partner into the away dressing room with a hobble. Sign up to The Spin Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action after newsletter promotion Both men eventually returned, to their credit, and while Stokes was off the field getting treatment there was a brief flurry of wickets to give the Indian supporters a few moments of cheer. The problem for them, however, was that among them was the sight of Chis Woakes being knocked over by a ball from Siraj that kept remarkably low. When India's time to bat again comes, it will be anything but straightforward. But as much as the tourists frayed at the edges on this third day, most teams would have struggled with Root in such a rich vein of form. The only real inconvenience came when he was eventually stumped off Jadeja in the evening session, accidentally treading on the ball and, for a split second, giving rise to fears of something more sinister. That aside this was another display of Root's command of the crease, with his ability to pick up length early and manipulate the field to his will still so remarkably innate. A half-century from 93 balls, his century from 178 and little risk taken along the way. Provided Root stays fit and hungry enough – and the latter feels unlikely to diminish given his unbridled love for batting – he will surely top the lot one day.