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IND vs NZ | 2nd Test, Day 1: Mayank Agarwal redeems himself with classy century in Mumbai

Breaking the chain of low scores and missed opportunities, Mayank Agarwal brought up his fourth century in the second Test of the series against New Zealand in Mumbai. He reached the landmark with a spanking drive off Daryl Mitchell off 196 balls. Now, he has two double centuries and two centuries to his name.

He had to see off the tough spells with the new ball from Kyle Jamieson and Tim Southee but once he got his eyes in, played some delightful strokes against spinners. He got stuck into the off-spinner William Somerville and kept attacking spinners albeit India lost wickets in the cluster.

He missed out in the first Test in Kanpur and there were question marks over his place with the likes of Shubman Gill in the squad. He was destined to play in the Test series against England before hurting his head and facing concussion to be replaced by KL Rahul right before the start of the first Test in Nottingham.

He was dropped from the playing XI after a series of failures with the bat on the tour of Australia where he was visibly struggling against the likes of Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood.

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Spin twins Mendis, Embuldeniya blow West Indies away as Sri Lanka sweep series 2-0

Twin five-wicket hauls from Lasith Embuldeniya and Ramesh Mendis swept West Indies away for a mere 132 in the second innings and helped Sri Lanka to enforce a clean sweep in a two-match long Test series. Chasing a tough target of 297 runs, West Indies were already on the brink having lost the top five batsmen before reaching 100 runs. The pair of Jermaine Blackwood and Nkrumah Bonner provided resilience with the bat but could only delay what was inevitable on the final day of the Test match in Galle. Earlier on the first day, Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat first. The top-order comprising of Pathum Nissanka and skipper Dimuth Karunaratne ratified the call with a big century opening partnership. However, their acts were not supported by the middle order and the hosts slipped to 204 all out from 106/0 to lose all the advantage. Veerasammy Permaul and Jomel Warrican were the chief destructors for West Indies as they shared nine wickets between them with the former picking up a five-wicket haul. The story was somewhat similar for the Windies with the bat as the top order putting up a strong performance and guiding the team past the 204-run mark. However, all batsmen including the skipper Kraigg Brathwaite wasted their hard-earned starts and could not make big scores and hence the tourists could manage a lead of only 49 runs. The hosts were up and ready with the second bout of battle as Dhananjaya de Silva produced a wonderful century and along with Nissanka, took Sri Lanka to a big score. They posted 345 in their second innings and Sri Lanka asked West Indies to chase 297 runs in the final innings. Their spinners, however, were too good for the conditions and the West Indies batting lineup and they could not muster any sort of big scores to challenge the hosts. Dhananjaya de Silva was adjudged player of the match for his big hundred in the second innings while Ramesh Mendis was adjudged player of the series for his 18-wicket stint with the ball.

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Sunil Narine reveals secrets behind developing his mystery delivery

A true champion would extract opportunities even when he is on the back foot and this is what Sunil Narine did with his bowling. From being called for illegal bowling action in 2020 to being one of the most lethal weapons in Kolkata Knight Riders’ armour, from being asked to make certain tweaks in his action and don a half sleeves shirt instead of full to scalping 16 wickets in 14 matches in the 2021 edition, Narine just turned fortunes for himself. Well, that’s a classic case of how champions work. Talking about his mystery spin, the right-arm bowler revealed how he developed that art and what efforts did it take in the process. “Yeah, it’s something I have been working on for years now. So, it’s not like it’s just yesterday. I have been working on it. I have always asked batsmen what if they see, if they don’t see,” he said in a short film “The Comeback King” that was released on Thursday. “It’s tough knowing that the games are going on and I’m just bowling, I’m just trying to be ready for the committee to look over. My main purpose was to be ready for when that time comes and they clear it that I will be able to go out there and perform,” he added. Former New Zealand coach and KKR head coach lavished praise on Narine and explained how it was next to impossible to negotiate such a delivery. “The interesting thing is, I believe, that he developed this new delivery. His ability to run in with his hand behind his back. People would say we can’t play him. He’s almost too good.” Harbhajan Singh also hailed the way Narine made a comeback and stamped his authority. “You know the champions always come back stronger.”