Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) spin bowler Varun Chakravarthy said he still hasn t recovered completely from Covid-19 and is feeling weak and dizzy due to which he hasnt been able to resume training.Chakravarthy was one of the four KKR players to .
Hussey returns home after recovery - Newspaper dawn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dawn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
BBC reports, and means potential call-ups for outsiders such as Ollie Robinson, Craig Overton and James Bracey. The New Zealand-based test players fly to England this weekend and the Black Caps who played in the IPL have departed from India to the UK via the Maldives. Captain Kane Williamson, Kyle Jamieson and Mitchell Santner, and physiotherapist Tommy Simsek, left India on May 11 and chose to head to London, while Trent Boult, and strength and conditioning coach Chris Donaldson, opted to return home after the IPL before flying to England next month. New Zealand s star fast bowler is aiming his comeback for the second England test, starting at Edgbaston on June 10, ahead of the World Test Championship against final India at Southampton from June 18.
After a dynamic summer in Twenty20 cricket, Glenn Phillips was rewarded with his first Black Caps contract.
One blasted the Black Caps’ fastest Twenty20 international century off 46 balls; the other stamped his mark with maiden test and one-day international hundreds. Both Glenn Phillips and Daryl Mitchell put compelling cases, and were rewarded with first-time contracts on New Zealand Cricket’s top-20 on Friday. At the other end of the scale there was more frustration for test spinner Ajaz Patel who made the 20-strong England tour squad but dropped off the contract list after just one year. The left-armer played the last of his eight tests against India in February 2020, and after being sidelined by injury played just two first-class matches last season.
India’s Covid-19 Surge Adds Pressure to Seafarers Stranded at Sea
Shipping companies struggling with cargo bottlenecks are again facing a potential crewing crisis as major ports refuse to accept or replace Indian seafarers amid mounting Covid-19 infections across the South Asian country.
Singapore and Fujairah in the United Arab Emirates are preventing ships from changing crews that traveled to India while some Chinese ports, including the major container gateway of Ningbo-Zhoushan, are entirely barring ships that have traveled to India or Bangladesh over the past three months from calling at cargo terminals.
“It’s a contractual challenge and a well-being mental challenge,” said René Kofod-Olsen, chief executive officer of V.Group, a London-based ship management company that oversees assignments for more than 40,000 seafarers around the world.