Australia v India: second men’s one-day international – live

A picture


5th over: India 14-0 (Rohit 8, Gill 6) Xavier Bartlett takes the ball from Mitchell Starc and Shubman Gill is quick to pick up a single through square leg,Rohit adds a couple more to deep midwicket,A more comfortable over for India,4th over: India 11-0 (Rohit 6, Gill 5) A second maiden from Hazlewood to Rohit,The Australia pacer works away at his usual line and length outside off and Rohit has little interest in taking him on.

Hazlewood crashes the ball into Rohit’s pads with the last delivery and a half-hearted appeal goes up.But that was close, and replays show it was only umpire’s call for height that would have saved Rohit.3rd over: India 11-0 (Rohit 6, Gill 5) Gill cuts directly to Mitch Owen at point and Rohit sets off from the non-striker’s end.With no movement from Gill, Rohit scampers back and dives for his crease as a direct hit takes out all three stumps.Rohit is narrowly over the crease but that is a wake up call.

Gill finally gets the scoreboard ticking over with the first boundary of the innings through extra cover.A lovely stroke! A single to backward square puts Rohit on strike and he dispatches a fuller ball over square leg to the rope.2nd over: India 1-0 (Rohit 1, Gill 0) Josh Hazlewood begins with a maiden and no surprise that India are cautious against the metronomic Australian quick after he caused the top order so much trouble in Perth.Rohit leaves the second ball of the over and is fortunate to watch it bounce over middle and off – but that was close.1st over: India 1-0 (Rohit 1, Gill 0) Mitchell Starc takes some time to get his inswinger firing and Rohit is content to defend to the off side.

The former India skipper eventually chases a wider ball but fails to make contact.A straight delivery allows Rohit to clip a single off his pads as Gill times his first ball with Starc finally getting movement in the air.The players are in position at a sunny Adelaide Oval and Mitchell Starc has the nostrils flaring at the top of his mark.Here we go for the second ODI between Australia and India …Greg Boyle wins the race to drop in the first email of the afternoon.And he’s talking to the right person about wanting to see Cooper Connolly given more of a chance – with bat and ball – to impress.

“I’d like to get a better look at Cooper Connolly,He’s a young bloke who is copping it a bit with a general perception that he’s lucky to be in the side,The selectors clearly think he’s got a bit of something about him,I hope for his sake he can have a big break through knock and show the cricketing public what he’s about,”ICYMI overnight: Australia’s all-conquering women’s team continued on their merry way at the Cricket World Cup, this time with a commanding victory over England.

Raf Nicholson reports – through gritted teeth – on the game.Ever get the feeling of deja vu? In Indore on Wednesday, Australia took up where they had left off at the MCG in January: Alana King bowled unplayable balls, Annabel Sutherland and Ash Gardner piled on the runs, and one side left the other for dust.It is the World Cup instead of the Ashes, but the result – a six-wicket win for Australia, with 57 balls to spare – was horribly familiar.Virat Kohli – and perhaps Rohit Sharma – is thought to be on his last tour of Australia and can turn to fond memories of previous visits to Adelaide Oval.The India star famously hit twin centuries in a Test at the iconic venue in 2014, though might be more concerned with getting off the mark today after a duck in the ODI series opener.

The 36-year-old has had a love-hate relationship at times with fans on these shores, but surely shirt colours won’t matter today for what is expected to be his last international innings in Adelaide.Dan Gallan looks at the players – like Kohli – who appeal to opposition fans as much as their own.Kohli’s numbers in Australia speak for themselves.Against the Aussies in one-day internationals he has piled up 2,451 runs in 51 matches at an average north of 53.In Tests he’s tallied 2,232 runs at 43.

76 in 30 outings.His nine hundreds are the most he registered against any opposition and his twin-ton display in Adelaide in 2014 stands as one of the greatest individual performances in the country.Like a true blue Aussie he leaned into the fight and gave as good as he got.Shubman Gill (c), Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli, Shreyas Iyer, Axar Patel, KL Rahul (wk), Washington Sundar, Nitish Kumar Reddy, Harshit Rana, Arshdeep Singh, Mohammed Siraj.Kuldeep Yadav remains a surprise omission and Shubman is hopeful of a better showing with the bat than India produced in Perth.

Looks like a pretty good surface,We would have bowled first as well,It’s never easy when the rain coming in and out [in Perth], starting and stopping, but hopefully the weather looks good today and we’ll have no stoppage,Batting first you know hopefully we get plenty of runs on the board,We’re going with the same team.

Here is the #TeamIndia XI for the 2️⃣nd #AUSvIND ODI 👍Updates ▶ https://t.co/aB0YqSCClq pic.twitter.com/IYWFmKJ5WyMitchell Marsh (c), Travis Head, Matthew Short, Matthew Renshaw, Alex Carey (wk), Cooper Connolly, Mitchell Owen, Xavier Bartlett, Mitchell Starc, Adam Zampa, Josh Hazlewood.Alex Carey returns behind the stumps with Josh Philippe unlucky to make way after a strong perhaps with the gloves and with the bat in Perth.

Xavier Bartlett gets his opportunity at the expense of Nathan Ellis.Adam Zampa is in for Matthew Kuhnemann.The Australia skipper is all smiles after his powerful knock and victory in the series opener.I think everyone loves to play here.We always get amazing crowds and hopefully both teams can put on a great show for what’s expected to be a big crowd today.

Australia captain Mitch Marsh wins the toss for the second time in the series and once again elects to field,The sun is shining and the pitch looks like a tasty one for the batters, but India captain Shubman Gill admits he would have preferred to bowl this afternoon,Hello and welcome to live coverage of the second one-day international between Australia and India at Adelaide Oval,With this a short and sharp three-match ODI series, the hosts are just one win away from securing victory after easing through the first meeting on Sunday,The summer of cricket got off to a damp start in Perth with the ODI interrupted multiple times by rain but the forecast is much more promising today in Adelaide and both sides should be allocated the full 50 overs.

India were unlikely to see out their overs in Perth even before the game was reduced to 26 overs, with their top order unable to handle the pace and bounce of Josh Hazlewood (2/20), Mitchell Starc (1/22) and Nathan Ellis (1/29).KL Rahul (38) and Axar Patel (31) lifted the tourists to a competitive total but India – and perhaps even Australia – fans will be hoping that Virat Kohli can have more impact on his farewell tour after being caught for a rare ODI duck in Perth.Australia captain Mitchell Marsh (46no) and the impressive Josh Philippe (37) made light work of the chase as the hosts won by seven wickets.First ball will be at 2pm local time in Adelaide / 2.30pm AEDT / 9am IDT.

The toss and team news will be coming up shortly.Meanwhile, let us know your thoughts and predictions – shoot me an email or find me @martinpegan on Bluesky or X.Let’s get into it!
A picture

Georgina Hayden’s recipe for parmesan and sage jacket potato gnocchi | Quick and easy

If I’m going to the effort of making jacket potatoes (and by effort I mean putting them in the oven for an hour), I will almost always pop in a few extra spuds to make gnocchi for a later meal. The difference between shop-bought and homemade gnocchi is vast, especially the vac-packed, long-life kind, which are dense and can be heavy. Freshly made gnocchi, with fluffy baked potatoes, however, are light as air, pillowy and silky. If that sounds intimidating, let me reassure you that this recipe is really forgiving, and much easier than making fresh sheet pasta. I love them served simply, as here, with a slightly nutty sage butter and lots of parmesan

A picture

How to make the perfect strata – recipe | Felicity Cloake's How to make the perfect…

Also known variously as “breakfast casserole” and “egg dish”, strata is an American brunch favourite that, according to the great US chef Sohla El-Waylly, is best described as “the love child of frittata and bread pudding”, while the dish’s name comes from the fact that it’s assembled in layers. Like all the best leftovers recipes, those layers are eminently flexible, but what all strata have in common are stale bread and eggs. The rest is largely up to you.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link

A picture

Scottish hospitality coalition urges chancellor to protect whisky industry

A coalition of drinks, tourism and farming bodies has urged the chancellor to protect the Scottish whisky industry from a steeper sales slump and further job losses by freezing spirits duty in her budget next month.The grouping, which includes the Scottish arms of the National Farmers’ Union, the Institute of Directors and UKHospitality, has written to Rachel Reeves to argue that a freeze in duty would be a “strategic investment” that could increase tax revenues.They said recent rises in spirits duty had taken the overall tax paid on the average bottle of whisky to at least £12, or 70% of the retail price, contributing to about 1,000 redundancies in whisky production since last year’s budget, when spirits duty rose.“The current duty regime, combined with wider economic headwinds, is placing significant strain on both producers and venues,” the joint letter said. “Some businesses are halting investment or looking abroad, while others are being forced to cut jobs

A picture

‘I felt my soul leave my body’: 13 readers on the worst meal they ever cooked – from ‘ethanol risotto’ to gravy cake

There are lots of potential errors a home cook can make, whether mistaking a bulb of garlic for a clove or experimenting with a banana sauce for pork. Here are some culinary experiments to avoidI’m very fond of steamed vegetables with lemon and black pepper. When I was pregnant, my loving partner took it upon himself to cook for me. We didn’t have any lemons. We did have kiwis

A picture

670 Grams, Birmingham B9: ‘A cascade of small, meaningful bowls that just ooze flavour’ – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants

Birmingham’s dining scene often leans towards the intense. I recall a hazy afternoon seven years back at the Digbeth Dining Club, a ramshackle food market inside an old factory with few seats, loud music, breakfast cocktails and baos; it was a thoroughly chaotic way to take on board calories. More recently, I loved the city’s Albatross Death Cult, which served 12 courses of scintillating, seafood-focused finickiness to a pounding, darkwave industrial-goth soundtrack.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link

A picture

‘£30 for a ready meal?!’ Do Charlie Bigham’s new dishes really beat going to a restaurant?

Like Tesla cars and the ending of the Sopranos, Charlie Bigham ready meals seem to be rather divisive. On the one hand, people clearly love them: about 31m dishes were sold in the past year alone. On the other hand, they generate a heap of mockery. The critique seems to be that only a gullible idiot would shell out up to a tenner on an oven-ready fish pie, chilli con carne or – as one commentator once memorably labelled it – a tray of “Tory slop”.Those critics will be sharpening their kitchen knives because Bigham, who is a kind of Tim “Wetherspoons” Martin for centrist dads, has just announced the launch of his Brasserie range: deluxe versions of his meals with prices that fetch up to … wait for it … £30! Thirty whole English pounds!With a menu consisting of venison bourguignon, coq au vin, confit duck (all at £16