×
CSK vs PBKS, IPL 2026: Shreyas Iyer takes Punjab Kings to five-wicket win over Chennai Super Kings

CSK vs PBKS, IPL 2026: Shreyas Iyer takes Punjab Kings to five-wicket win over Chennai Super Kings

Punjab Kings maintained its hold on the M.A. Chidambaram Stadium as it comfortably chased down 210 with five wickets in hand to consign Chennai Super Kings to its second consecutive IPL 2026 defeat here on Friday, April 3.

Shreyas Iyer (50, 29b, 4×4, 3×6) top-scored for the visitor with a mature half-century, while Priyansh Arya blasted an 11-ball 39 as the 2025 runner-up climbed to the top of the table with its second win in as many matches.

CSK’s improved batting effort came largely without contribution from star batters Ruturaj Gaikwad and Sanju Samson, whose home debut came to a brisk end as he nicked off to Xavier Bartlett for just seven to silence the whistles of the home crowd. The whistles would soon return courtesy of India U-19 captain Ayush Mhatre (73, 43b, 6×4, 5×6), who provided a reminder of his talent with a sparkling fifty.

Mhatre showed impressive aplomb in repeatedly clearing his front foot to thrash the PBKS quicks over the leg-side, and raised his fifty from 29 balls with the first of consecutive straight sixes against Marcus Stoinis.

While Mhatre dominated from one end, Gaikwad struggled to find fluency from the other as he plodded to 28 from 21 balls before falling to the sweep against Yuzvendra Chahal. The ever-skilful Chahal – who didn’t concede a single boundary in his three overs – troubled the CSK batters all evening, and was unlucky to see Mhatre dropped on 59 and 67.

RELATED | CSK VS PBKS HIGHLIGHTS — Shreyas, Priyansh help PBKS chase down 209 against CSK

Gaikwad’s dismissal triggered a PBKS fightback as the visitor pulled the scoreboard from 110 for one to 130 for four. Vijaykumar Vyshak accounted for Mhatre slashing to short third while Marco Jansen trapped Kartik Sharma in front as CSK threatened to lose momentum before its innings could fully launch.

That momentum was restored by an innovative cameo from Sarfaraz Khan. The Mumbai batter relied on touch over power, kickstarting his innings with a trio of boundaries against Arshdeep Singh, and scored prolifically behind the wicket. By the time he fell to Vyshak, the stage was set for Shivam Dube (45, 27b, 5×4, 1×6) to put the finishing touches on the innings with some lusty blows as CSK reached 209 for five.

Punjab Kings’ opening pair of Arya and Prabhsimran Singh have shown a proclivity for running headfirst towards risk, and the pair set the tone again with a blistering opening stand of 61. Arya led the way, starting in sixth gear with a crisp straight drive, and never slowed down, flaying Khaleel Ahmed and Matt Henry for a flurry of boundaries on both sides of the wicket as PBKS raised its fifty in just 3.2 overs.

Priyansh Arya set the tone in the chase with a blistering 11-ball 39, which earned him the Player of the match award.
| Photo Credit:
R. RAGU

lightbox-info

Priyansh Arya set the tone in the chase with a blistering 11-ball 39, which earned him the Player of the match award.
| Photo Credit:
R. RAGU

Henry eventually castled Arya to end his opening salvo, and brought Cooper Connolly to the crease.

Prabhsimran was not quite as fluent as Arya, but picked off boundaries regularly enough to keep the asking rate down until a horrific mixup coming back for two left him short of his ground. Connolly too carved the spinners away for a series of boundaries before slicing an Anshul Kamboj full toss to long-off.

With PBKS well-placed but still not home, Shreyas then took over. The 31-year-old was relentless, mixing towering sixes and shots with an angular blade to maneuver through gaps as he dominated a 59-run partnership with Nehal Wadhera. The PBKS skipper toyed with the CSK bowling, and left a previously-raucous Chennai crowd eerily silent as the game came to a close.

By the time he slashed Kamboj to the off-side sweeper, the result was all but secured, and though Wadhera fell off the very next ball to trigger memories of a middle-order collapse against GT, Shashank Singh and Marcus Stoinis remained calm to finish the game with eight balls to spare.

Published on Apr 03, 2026

Source link
#CSK #PBKS #IPL #Shreyas #Iyer #takes #Punjab #Kings #fivewicket #win #Chennai #Super #Kings

INDIANAPOLIS — There has been a lot of noise around the Fever this week. Virtually none of it has had to do with the product on the court.

In a social media-driven world, the Fever will live under a microscope so long as Caitlin Clark applies her trade in Indianapolis. This week provided the latest stress test for the organization, with lots of voices chiming in after a blowout loss to the Fire, which featured a spat between Clark and head coach Stephanie White during a timeout that went viral.

A week of reflection and downplaying the situation led up to a showdown with one of the league’s top teams in the Dream on Thursday. What followed was a remarkably uneventful, yet much-needed, victory. Indiana controlled the game throughout, save for a stretch early in the second half, and secured a comfortable win to kick off Commissioner’s Cup play.

The situation was a test of the team’s culture, with the response coming on the court.

“It’s been a lot,” Kelsey Mitchell admitted about the noise around the team postgame. “I think it speaks to culture. I think over the last couple of days, from our last day in Portland, from the time we hopped on a plane as a group, our energy shifted as a group. I think that our culture constantly made changes and I think when we have hard conversations as a group, you pour into one another, you get days like this because you’ve actually poured in.

“We did the work the right way. Shout out to our team for not really giving in to what the social media world had to say about us…For us, it was about using this week for the right stuff. Culture is how teams win. I think talent gets us there, but I think team camaraderie and just being honest about where we are as a group keeps us there.”

Mitchell was pivotal not only in building the team’s culture, but also in Thursday’s win. Indiana went into the locker room up 38-29 after controlling the first half, but then surrendered a 14-4 run to open the second half that saw them trail 43-42.

In response, Aliyah Boston, Caitlin Clark and Mitchell all scored in a 44-second span to put Indiana back ahead for good. That was also the start of a heater for Mitchell that saw her score 11 straight points for the Fever, capped off with a pull-up three in transition to extend Indiana’s lead to double digits.

Mitchell finished the game with 25 points on 11-15 shooting overall. It was her fifth 20-point game in the first nine contests. She’s averaging a career-best 21.1 points per game and doing it on her best-ever efficiency from the field (48.6%) as well.

“I just think letting the game flow,” Mitchell said of the key to her hot start offensively this year. “For one, you got to love it and you got to appreciate what the game brings. I think I just try to keep myself in that focus…but I do think that we, as a team, are constantly growing. So I’m only as good as the people around me. We’re in a position where everybody can eat on our team, and I think that I just want to be ready when my number’s called.”

The performance came after Mitchell set the tone for the team during practice as well. After the blowout loss to Portland last Saturday, Indiana held a team meeting on Monday to air things out. The team responded in practice, then did so when it actually mattered, too.

“I thought everybody did a really good job of, No. 1, setting the tone – cause Kelsey’s pace all week has been great – and, No. 2, holding each other accountable to that,“ White said. ”When you do it that way consistently, I mean, we had two good days of practice doing it that way, it carries over.

“When you pour in energy – if you’re struggling, if you’re not making shots, if you’re not in rotation, instead of whining about it and complaining about it, when you pour that energy into the team, and when you pour that energy into lifting one another up, somebody sees you struggling and gives you a pat on the back. I mean, all that matters. All that matters and we’ve got to continue to grow in that area.”

The noise is always going to exist in some form or fashion around the Fever. The best they can do is quiet things down with a performance like Thursday’s. Even still, it feels like one bad game or viral video could throw it all into question again.

But what the Fever did prove on Thursday is that, when those moments come, they have the culture and the camaraderie to weather the storm and still come out the other side.

#Fever #lean #team #culture #quiet #noise #needed #win #Dream">Fever lean on team culture to quiet noise in needed win over Dream  INDIANAPOLIS — There has been a lot of noise around the Fever this week. Virtually none of it has had to do with the product on the court.In a social media-driven world, the Fever will live under a microscope so long as Caitlin Clark applies her trade in Indianapolis. This week provided the latest stress test for the organization, with lots of voices chiming in after a blowout loss to the Fire, which featured a spat between Clark and head coach Stephanie White during a timeout that went viral.A week of reflection and downplaying the situation led up to a showdown with one of the league’s top teams in the Dream on Thursday. What followed was a remarkably uneventful, yet much-needed, victory. Indiana controlled the game throughout, save for a stretch early in the second half, and secured a comfortable win to kick off Commissioner’s Cup play.The situation was a test of the team’s culture, with the response coming on the court.“It’s been a lot,” Kelsey Mitchell admitted about the noise around the team postgame. “I think it speaks to culture. I think over the last couple of days, from our last day in Portland, from the time we hopped on a plane as a group, our energy shifted as a group. I think that our culture constantly made changes and I think when we have hard conversations as a group, you pour into one another, you get days like this because you’ve actually poured in.“We did the work the right way. Shout out to our team for not really giving in to what the social media world had to say about us…For us, it was about using this week for the right stuff. Culture is how teams win. I think talent gets us there, but I think team camaraderie and just being honest about where we are as a group keeps us there.”Mitchell was pivotal not only in building the team’s culture, but also in Thursday’s win. Indiana went into the locker room up 38-29 after controlling the first half, but then surrendered a 14-4 run to open the second half that saw them trail 43-42.In response, Aliyah Boston, Caitlin Clark and Mitchell all scored in a 44-second span to put Indiana back ahead for good. That was also the start of a heater for Mitchell that saw her score 11 straight points for the Fever, capped off with a pull-up three in transition to extend Indiana’s lead to double digits.Mitchell finished the game with 25 points on 11-15 shooting overall. It was her fifth 20-point game in the first nine contests. She’s averaging a career-best 21.1 points per game and doing it on her best-ever efficiency from the field (48.6%) as well.“I just think letting the game flow,” Mitchell said of the key to her hot start offensively this year. “For one, you got to love it and you got to appreciate what the game brings. I think I just try to keep myself in that focus…but I do think that we, as a team, are constantly growing. So I’m only as good as the people around me. We’re in a position where everybody can eat on our team, and I think that I just want to be ready when my number’s called.”The performance came after Mitchell set the tone for the team during practice as well. After the blowout loss to Portland last Saturday, Indiana held a team meeting on Monday to air things out. The team responded in practice, then did so when it actually mattered, too.“I thought everybody did a really good job of, No. 1, setting the tone – cause Kelsey’s pace all week has been great – and, No. 2, holding each other accountable to that,“ White said. ”When you do it that way consistently, I mean, we had two good days of practice doing it that way, it carries over.“When you pour in energy – if you’re struggling, if you’re not making shots, if you’re not in rotation, instead of whining about it and complaining about it, when you pour that energy into the team, and when you pour that energy into lifting one another up, somebody sees you struggling and gives you a pat on the back. I mean, all that matters. All that matters and we’ve got to continue to grow in that area.”The noise is always going to exist in some form or fashion around the Fever. The best they can do is quiet things down with a performance like Thursday’s. Even still, it feels like one bad game or viral video could throw it all into question again.But what the Fever did prove on Thursday is that, when those moments come, they have the culture and the camaraderie to weather the storm and still come out the other side.  #Fever #lean #team #culture #quiet #noise #needed #win #Dream

featured a spat between Clark and head coach Stephanie White during a timeout that went viral.

A week of reflection and downplaying the situation led up to a showdown with one of the league’s top teams in the Dream on Thursday. What followed was a remarkably uneventful, yet much-needed, victory. Indiana controlled the game throughout, save for a stretch early in the second half, and secured a comfortable win to kick off Commissioner’s Cup play.

The situation was a test of the team’s culture, with the response coming on the court.

“It’s been a lot,” Kelsey Mitchell admitted about the noise around the team postgame. “I think it speaks to culture. I think over the last couple of days, from our last day in Portland, from the time we hopped on a plane as a group, our energy shifted as a group. I think that our culture constantly made changes and I think when we have hard conversations as a group, you pour into one another, you get days like this because you’ve actually poured in.

“We did the work the right way. Shout out to our team for not really giving in to what the social media world had to say about us…For us, it was about using this week for the right stuff. Culture is how teams win. I think talent gets us there, but I think team camaraderie and just being honest about where we are as a group keeps us there.”

Mitchell was pivotal not only in building the team’s culture, but also in Thursday’s win. Indiana went into the locker room up 38-29 after controlling the first half, but then surrendered a 14-4 run to open the second half that saw them trail 43-42.

In response, Aliyah Boston, Caitlin Clark and Mitchell all scored in a 44-second span to put Indiana back ahead for good. That was also the start of a heater for Mitchell that saw her score 11 straight points for the Fever, capped off with a pull-up three in transition to extend Indiana’s lead to double digits.

Mitchell finished the game with 25 points on 11-15 shooting overall. It was her fifth 20-point game in the first nine contests. She’s averaging a career-best 21.1 points per game and doing it on her best-ever efficiency from the field (48.6%) as well.

“I just think letting the game flow,” Mitchell said of the key to her hot start offensively this year. “For one, you got to love it and you got to appreciate what the game brings. I think I just try to keep myself in that focus…but I do think that we, as a team, are constantly growing. So I’m only as good as the people around me. We’re in a position where everybody can eat on our team, and I think that I just want to be ready when my number’s called.”

The performance came after Mitchell set the tone for the team during practice as well. After the blowout loss to Portland last Saturday, Indiana held a team meeting on Monday to air things out. The team responded in practice, then did so when it actually mattered, too.

“I thought everybody did a really good job of, No. 1, setting the tone – cause Kelsey’s pace all week has been great – and, No. 2, holding each other accountable to that,“ White said. ”When you do it that way consistently, I mean, we had two good days of practice doing it that way, it carries over.

“When you pour in energy – if you’re struggling, if you’re not making shots, if you’re not in rotation, instead of whining about it and complaining about it, when you pour that energy into the team, and when you pour that energy into lifting one another up, somebody sees you struggling and gives you a pat on the back. I mean, all that matters. All that matters and we’ve got to continue to grow in that area.”

The noise is always going to exist in some form or fashion around the Fever. The best they can do is quiet things down with a performance like Thursday’s. Even still, it feels like one bad game or viral video could throw it all into question again.

But what the Fever did prove on Thursday is that, when those moments come, they have the culture and the camaraderie to weather the storm and still come out the other side.

#Fever #lean #team #culture #quiet #noise #needed #win #Dream">Fever lean on team culture to quiet noise in needed win over Dream

INDIANAPOLIS — There has been a lot of noise around the Fever this week. Virtually none of it has had to do with the product on the court.

In a social media-driven world, the Fever will live under a microscope so long as Caitlin Clark applies her trade in Indianapolis. This week provided the latest stress test for the organization, with lots of voices chiming in after a blowout loss to the Fire, which featured a spat between Clark and head coach Stephanie White during a timeout that went viral.

A week of reflection and downplaying the situation led up to a showdown with one of the league’s top teams in the Dream on Thursday. What followed was a remarkably uneventful, yet much-needed, victory. Indiana controlled the game throughout, save for a stretch early in the second half, and secured a comfortable win to kick off Commissioner’s Cup play.

The situation was a test of the team’s culture, with the response coming on the court.

“It’s been a lot,” Kelsey Mitchell admitted about the noise around the team postgame. “I think it speaks to culture. I think over the last couple of days, from our last day in Portland, from the time we hopped on a plane as a group, our energy shifted as a group. I think that our culture constantly made changes and I think when we have hard conversations as a group, you pour into one another, you get days like this because you’ve actually poured in.

“We did the work the right way. Shout out to our team for not really giving in to what the social media world had to say about us…For us, it was about using this week for the right stuff. Culture is how teams win. I think talent gets us there, but I think team camaraderie and just being honest about where we are as a group keeps us there.”

Mitchell was pivotal not only in building the team’s culture, but also in Thursday’s win. Indiana went into the locker room up 38-29 after controlling the first half, but then surrendered a 14-4 run to open the second half that saw them trail 43-42.

In response, Aliyah Boston, Caitlin Clark and Mitchell all scored in a 44-second span to put Indiana back ahead for good. That was also the start of a heater for Mitchell that saw her score 11 straight points for the Fever, capped off with a pull-up three in transition to extend Indiana’s lead to double digits.

Mitchell finished the game with 25 points on 11-15 shooting overall. It was her fifth 20-point game in the first nine contests. She’s averaging a career-best 21.1 points per game and doing it on her best-ever efficiency from the field (48.6%) as well.

“I just think letting the game flow,” Mitchell said of the key to her hot start offensively this year. “For one, you got to love it and you got to appreciate what the game brings. I think I just try to keep myself in that focus…but I do think that we, as a team, are constantly growing. So I’m only as good as the people around me. We’re in a position where everybody can eat on our team, and I think that I just want to be ready when my number’s called.”

The performance came after Mitchell set the tone for the team during practice as well. After the blowout loss to Portland last Saturday, Indiana held a team meeting on Monday to air things out. The team responded in practice, then did so when it actually mattered, too.

“I thought everybody did a really good job of, No. 1, setting the tone – cause Kelsey’s pace all week has been great – and, No. 2, holding each other accountable to that,“ White said. ”When you do it that way consistently, I mean, we had two good days of practice doing it that way, it carries over.

“When you pour in energy – if you’re struggling, if you’re not making shots, if you’re not in rotation, instead of whining about it and complaining about it, when you pour that energy into the team, and when you pour that energy into lifting one another up, somebody sees you struggling and gives you a pat on the back. I mean, all that matters. All that matters and we’ve got to continue to grow in that area.”

The noise is always going to exist in some form or fashion around the Fever. The best they can do is quiet things down with a performance like Thursday’s. Even still, it feels like one bad game or viral video could throw it all into question again.

But what the Fever did prove on Thursday is that, when those moments come, they have the culture and the camaraderie to weather the storm and still come out the other side.

#Fever #lean #team #culture #quiet #noise #needed #win #Dream

Welcome to Sportstar’s Highlights of Day 1 of the first Test between England and New Zealand at Lord’s in London.

PLAYING XI

New Zealand: Tom Latham (c), Devon Conway, Kane Williamson, Rachin Ravindra, Daryl Mitchell, Tom Blundell (w), Glenn Phillips, Nathan Smith, Kyle Jamieson, Matt Henry, William ORourke

England: Emilio Gay, Ben Duckett, Jacob Bethell, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith (w), Ben Stokes (c), Gus Atkinson, Ollie Robinson, Josh Tongue, Shoaib Bashir

TOSS

New Zealand opts to field.

PREVIEW

England will have a chance to prove it has learned from its Ashes drubbing when it faces New Zealand in the first Test of its home season at Lord’s on Thursday.

The English were swept aside 4-1 in Australia in a series that ended in January, sparking renewed criticism of Brendon McCullum’s men over their ultra-aggressive “Bazball” style of cricket.

Attacking cricket has been the hallmark of McCullum’s four years as England coach, starting with a thrilling series win over New Zealand in 2022.

But it has failed to deliver series wins against either Australia or India, and McCullum accepts England must display greater cricket intelligence if it is to improve.

Click here for the full preview

WHEN AND WHERE TO WATCH

The first Test between England and New Zealand is being televised on the Sony Sports Network. The match can also be live streamed on SonyLIV.

THE SQUADS

England: Ben Duckett, Emilio Gay, Jacob Bethell, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith (w), Ben Stokes (c), Shoaib Bashir, Josh Tongue, Ollie Robinson, Gus Atkinson, Sonny Baker.

New Zealand: Tom Latham (c), Devon Conway, Kane Williamson, Rachin Ravindra, Daryl Mitchell, Tom Blundell (w), Dean Foxcroft, Nathan Smith, Zakary Foulkes, Blair Tickner, William O’Rourke, Henry Nicholls, Glenn Phillips, Kyle Jamieson, Matt Henry.

Published on Jun 04, 2026

#ENG #1st #Test #Day #Highlights #Zealand #collapses #England #bowled">ENG vs NZ, 1st Test, Day 1 Highlights: New Zealand collapses after England bowled out for 140  Welcome to        Sportstar’s Highlights of Day 1 of the first Test between England and New Zealand at Lord’s in London.PLAYING XINew Zealand: Tom Latham (c), Devon Conway, Kane Williamson, Rachin Ravindra, Daryl Mitchell, Tom Blundell (w), Glenn Phillips, Nathan Smith, Kyle Jamieson, Matt Henry, William ORourkeEngland: Emilio Gay, Ben Duckett, Jacob Bethell, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith (w), Ben Stokes (c), Gus Atkinson, Ollie Robinson, Josh Tongue, Shoaib BashirTOSSNew Zealand opts to field.PREVIEWEngland will have a chance to prove it has learned from its Ashes drubbing when it faces New Zealand in the first Test of its home season at Lord’s on Thursday.The English were swept aside 4-1 in Australia in a series that ended in January, sparking renewed criticism of Brendon McCullum’s men over their ultra-aggressive “Bazball” style of cricket.Attacking cricket has been the hallmark of McCullum’s four years as England coach, starting with a thrilling series win over New Zealand in 2022.But it has failed to deliver series wins against either Australia or India, and McCullum accepts England must display greater cricket intelligence if it is to improve.Click here for the full previewWHEN AND WHERE TO WATCHThe first Test between England and New Zealand is being televised on the        Sony Sports Network. The match can also be live streamed on        SonyLIV.THE SQUADSEngland: Ben Duckett, Emilio Gay, Jacob Bethell, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith (w), Ben Stokes (c), Shoaib Bashir, Josh Tongue, Ollie Robinson, Gus Atkinson, Sonny Baker.New Zealand: Tom Latham (c), Devon Conway, Kane Williamson, Rachin Ravindra, Daryl Mitchell, Tom Blundell (w), Dean Foxcroft, Nathan Smith, Zakary Foulkes, Blair Tickner, William O’Rourke, Henry Nicholls, Glenn Phillips, Kyle Jamieson, Matt Henry.Published on Jun 04, 2026  #ENG #1st #Test #Day #Highlights #Zealand #collapses #England #bowled

Click here for the full preview

WHEN AND WHERE TO WATCH

The first Test between England and New Zealand is being televised on the Sony Sports Network. The match can also be live streamed on SonyLIV.

THE SQUADS

England: Ben Duckett, Emilio Gay, Jacob Bethell, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith (w), Ben Stokes (c), Shoaib Bashir, Josh Tongue, Ollie Robinson, Gus Atkinson, Sonny Baker.

New Zealand: Tom Latham (c), Devon Conway, Kane Williamson, Rachin Ravindra, Daryl Mitchell, Tom Blundell (w), Dean Foxcroft, Nathan Smith, Zakary Foulkes, Blair Tickner, William O’Rourke, Henry Nicholls, Glenn Phillips, Kyle Jamieson, Matt Henry.

Published on Jun 04, 2026

#ENG #1st #Test #Day #Highlights #Zealand #collapses #England #bowled">ENG vs NZ, 1st Test, Day 1 Highlights: New Zealand collapses after England bowled out for 140

Welcome to Sportstar’s Highlights of Day 1 of the first Test between England and New Zealand at Lord’s in London.

PLAYING XI

New Zealand: Tom Latham (c), Devon Conway, Kane Williamson, Rachin Ravindra, Daryl Mitchell, Tom Blundell (w), Glenn Phillips, Nathan Smith, Kyle Jamieson, Matt Henry, William ORourke

England: Emilio Gay, Ben Duckett, Jacob Bethell, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith (w), Ben Stokes (c), Gus Atkinson, Ollie Robinson, Josh Tongue, Shoaib Bashir

TOSS

New Zealand opts to field.

PREVIEW

England will have a chance to prove it has learned from its Ashes drubbing when it faces New Zealand in the first Test of its home season at Lord’s on Thursday.

The English were swept aside 4-1 in Australia in a series that ended in January, sparking renewed criticism of Brendon McCullum’s men over their ultra-aggressive “Bazball” style of cricket.

Attacking cricket has been the hallmark of McCullum’s four years as England coach, starting with a thrilling series win over New Zealand in 2022.

But it has failed to deliver series wins against either Australia or India, and McCullum accepts England must display greater cricket intelligence if it is to improve.

Click here for the full preview

WHEN AND WHERE TO WATCH

The first Test between England and New Zealand is being televised on the Sony Sports Network. The match can also be live streamed on SonyLIV.

THE SQUADS

England: Ben Duckett, Emilio Gay, Jacob Bethell, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith (w), Ben Stokes (c), Shoaib Bashir, Josh Tongue, Ollie Robinson, Gus Atkinson, Sonny Baker.

New Zealand: Tom Latham (c), Devon Conway, Kane Williamson, Rachin Ravindra, Daryl Mitchell, Tom Blundell (w), Dean Foxcroft, Nathan Smith, Zakary Foulkes, Blair Tickner, William O’Rourke, Henry Nicholls, Glenn Phillips, Kyle Jamieson, Matt Henry.

Published on Jun 04, 2026

#ENG #1st #Test #Day #Highlights #Zealand #collapses #England #bowled

Post Comment