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Hyderabad beats Punjab by 2 runs in IPL despite dropping 3 catches in final over
MALLANPUR, India (AP) — Sunrisers Hyderabad pulled off a dramatic two-run win over Punjab Kings despite dropping three catches in the final over on Tuesday in the Indian Premier League.
Needing 29 off Jaydev Unadkat’s final six balls, Punjab nearly went over the line when Ashutosh Sharma (33 not out) was thrice dropped in the deep with two resulting in sixes before the home team finished at 180-6.
Earlier, 20-year-old Nitesh Kumar Reddy hit his maiden T20 half-century and anchored Hyderabad to 182-9 with a 37-ball knock of 64 after Punjab won the toss and elected to field in its second home game of the season.
Punjab’s top-order fell apart against pace as Jonny Bairstow’s struggling IPL season continued when the Englishman got clean bowled by Pat Cummins for zero while attempting a shot across the line.
Wicketkeeper Heinrich Klaasen’s decision to come up to the wicket against Bhuvneshwar Kumar was rewarded when he got Shikhar Dhawan (14) stumped a ball after the Punjab skipper was dropped in the slip and the home team slipped to 20-3 in the fourth over.
Sam Curran (29) was brilliantly snapped by diving Cummins and Sikandar Raza (28) couldn’t convert a good start before falling to Unadkat in the 14th over.
Shashank Singh, who made unbeaten 46 off 25 balls, and Sharma countercharged in the last three overs, but despite smacking Unadkat for 26 runs they couldn’t take their team home.
Earlier, Hyderabad lost three wickets inside the batting power play for the first time this season with Arshdeep Singh (4-29) dismissing Travis Head (21) and Aiden Markram (0) in one over and Abhishek Sharma (16) getting caught in the covers while driving uppishly against Curran.
Hyderabad used its impact substitute inside the batting powerplay but Rahul Tripathi tried to uppercut Harshal Patel’s (2-30) short ball and was caught behind for 11. Patel also had the key wicket of Klaasen, who was caught on the edge of long-off boundary by Curran, but Reddy’s aggression in the last six overs lifted Hyderabad’s total.
Reddy smacked spinner Harpreet Brar (0-48) for 22 runs in his final over but got a life soon after completing his half-century off 32 balls when Singh dropped a sitter at mid-wicket.
Arshdeep Singh returned and claimed two more wickets in one over for the second time in the innings as Reddy holed out at long-off off a low full toss and Abdul Samad (25) was caught at deep backward point.
Punjab conceded a vital six runs off the final ball when Patel palmed the ball over the fence at long-on as Unadkat attempted a big hit against Curran’s slower and those runs eventually cost the home team in the end.
Hyderabad broke into top five with six points from five games while Punjab is at No. 6 with two wins and three defeats.
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AP cricket: https://apnews.com/hub/cricket
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Iran military heads vow 'crushing' response to Israel as UN atomic chief says nuke sites shouldn't be attacked
Tensions between Iran and Israel remain heightened as Tehran’s military heads on Thursday once again pledged a crushing response to Jerusalem’s strikes last month, and the U.N.’s atomic watchdog is scrambling to prevent a nuclear escalation.
Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency Rafael Grossi traveled to Iran this week to hold high level meetings with Iranian officials in a move to hold Tehran accountable for prior nuclear safeguarding pledges and to get clarity on where Iran’s nuclear program stands.
However, even as Tehran continues to develop its nuclear program despite international attempts to stall it, Grossi also issued a warning message to Israel, stating clearly that Iran’s “nuclear installations should not be attacked.”
UN WATCHDOG WARNS TIME TO ‘MANEUVER’ ON IRAN’S NUCLEAR PROGRAM IS SHRINKING: REPORT
Grossi’s comments came during a news conference Thursday and just three days after Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz on Monday said that Iran was “more exposed than ever [for] strikes on its nuclear facilities.”
“We have the opportunity to achieve our most important goal – to thwart and eliminate the existential threat to the State of Israel,” he added.
The White House has repeatedly warned Israel to not go after Iran’s nuclear sites, though as the Biden administration prepares to leave come January, when President-elect Donald Trump retakes the Oval Office, the U.S. official stance on Israeli strike options could change.
Grossi’s trip to Iran comes at a pivotal time for geopolitics as the U.S. under the Trump administration is expected to take a more hardline approach against Iran, though it remains unclear how Washington’s policies in the region could change.
Iran appears undeterred by Trump’s or Israel’s threats, and its top government and military officials have repeatedly said Tehran will issue a retaliatory blow following Israel’s attacks in late October.
IRAN THREATENS TO USE MORE POWERFUL WARHEADS AGAINST ISRAEL IN NEXT ATTACK: REPORT
In a Thursday meeting with family members of Major Sajjad Mansouri – who was reportedly killed during the Oct. 26 Israeli strikes – Commander-in-Chief of the Iranian Army Major General Seyyed Abdolrahim Mousavi promised a “crushing” blow to Israel.
“We will determine the time and manner of our response. There will be no hesitation when the time comes, and our reply will surely be crushing,” he said according to Tehran-based news outlet Iran Front Page News, echoing threats issued by Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei earlier this month when he said Tehran would issue a “crushing response.”
Similarly, Deputy Commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Ali Fadavi on Thursday said, “The entire world will bear witness as the complete downfall of the Zionist regime fulfills the triumph of righteousness over falsehood.”
“This is a divine promise: the party of God shall prevail, and the party of evil shall face defeat,” he added, according to the Iran International news outlet.
IRAN-LINKED ATTACKS AGAINST US SKYROCKET BY 600% SINCE OCT 2023 HAMAS ATTACK ON ISRAEL: REPORT
Israel has ramped up its attacks against Iran-backed proxies like Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Islamic Jihad terrorist organization in Syria.
The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) struck militant positions in the capital cities of Beirut and Damascus on Thursday, hitting terrorist infrastructure sites and command centers, according to the IDF.
The Lebanese Health Ministry said six people had been killed and 15 wounded in the Israeli airstrike that hit a southern Beirut apartment building, reported Haaretz.
Residents in Beirut were allegedly advised to evacuate ahead of the strikes, though it is unclear how many of the causalities were terrorists or civilians.
Another 15 were reportedly killed in Damascus while 16 more were injured in the strikes.
Senior Advisor to Khamenei Ali Larijani reportedly visited Damascus on Thursday and is scheduled to head to Lebanon as the head of a high-ranking delegation, according to an Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson, reported state-owned Islamic Republic News Agency.
The spokesperson reportedly said Larijani “would meet with high-ranking Syrian officials, including the prime minister and the speaker of the Lebanese parliament, to discuss the most recent development of the region.”
It remains unclear if he was in Damascus or Beirut at the time of the strikes.
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'Hostile' hackers infiltrate Hungary's defence procurement agency
The Hungarian government confirmed the hack by a non-state group but said that no sensitive data about the country’s military was compromised.
The IT systems of Hungary’s defence procurement agency were infiltrated by foreign hackers but no sensitive data that could harm the country’s national security was accessed, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s chief of staff said on Thursday.
Gergely Gulyas said the government was investigating the hack by a “hostile foreign, non-state hacker group”. The most sensitive information that could have been accessed was plans and data about military procurement, the official said in a press briefing.
“Nothing that could harm Hungary’s national security was made public,” said Gulyas, who did not say when the incident occurred or name the group.
It is unclear whether any of the information skimmed by hackers might have included data that could compromise NATO, of which Hungary is a member.
The hack was carried out by a group called INC Ransomware, which downloaded and encrypted all the files from the servers of the Defence Procurement Agency, according to local media.
The hackers have reportedly posted dozens of screenshots of the material online, showing details of the air and ground capabilities of Hungary’s military, data on procurement, and the personal details of army staff.
The hacker group has demanded $5 million (€4.7 million) to unblock the data and not make it public, Hungarian media reported.
The EU’s top cybersecurity official said earlier this year that there had been a huge increase in disruptive cyberattacks since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Ransomware attacks and those targeting public institutions were of particular concern, and most incidents were tried out in Ukraine before being expanded to EU countries, according to Juhan Lepassaar, head of the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity.
Hungary, which shares a border with Ukraine, has been modernising its army since 2017 by buying equipment from tanks to air defence systems, and has begun building a domestic defence industry.
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